Good morning! Here is your news briefing for Thursday September 24, 2020
THE DAILY SIGNAL
September 24 2020
Good morning from Washington, where President Trump says COVID-19 is on the wane as a vaccine draws closer. Only 1% of counties are home to half the deaths, two Heritage Foundation experts write. As the president warns about a storm of unsolicited mail-in ballots, House Republicans describe a looming crisis. On the podcast, a friend introduces a top Supreme Court candidate. Plus: a mightier military; another NYT revision of history; and, on “Problematic Women,” remembering Ruth Bader Ginsburg. On this date in 1789, Congress passes legislation creating a six-member Supreme Court; that same day, President George Washington signs it and nominates a chief justice and five associates, all confirmed by the Senate two days later.
“This expansive and late shift to all-mail voting will create conditions ripe for election crime, errors, inaccuracy, and delay,” states a new report from House Republicans.
The project’s editors originally wrote that they understand 1619 to be “our true founding” because it was the year slaves arrived in the Virginia colony. Now that statement is gone.
“For lower court judges, all Supreme Court precedent, including Roe v. Wade … is settled law,” Lagoa wrote while being vetted for her current judgeship.
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THE RESURGENT
THE EPOCH TIMES
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“The supreme quality for leadership is unquestionably integrity. Without it, no real success is possible.”
“Communism is neither a trend of thought, nor a doctrine, nor a failed attempt at a new way of ordering human affairs. Instead, it should be understood as a devil — an evil specter forged by hate, degeneracy, and other elemental forces in the universe.”
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A video released by the Chinese People’s Liberation Air Force on September 19 depicted nuclear armed bombers carrying out simulated attacks on a US Air Force base in Guam.
Policemen Shot, Louisville Erupts as BLM Rioters Take to Streets
Following a legal decision they didn’t like in the Breonna Taylor case (NY Times). Two officers were shot (Fox News). Video as the gunfire began. Caution: Not-safe-for-radio language (Twitter). Reuters declared the shooting of police “mostly peaceful” (Twitter). From the black Kentucky Attorney General Daniel Cameron as he gave news of the charge: “Our reaction to the truth today says what kind of society we want to be. Do we really want the truth, or do we want a truth that fits our narrative?” (WSJ). Denny Burk called Cameron’s statement “a message favoring the rule of law, due process, and justice. The stuff that civil rights, freedom, and democracy are built upon (Twitter). Before the riots began, a U-Haul arrived with riot equipment. It was brought by someone with Soros connections (Red State). Rioters continued the new trend of harassing diners (Twitter). They marched in St. Paul (Twitter). They chanted in the streets of New York (Twitter). They rioted in Atlanta (Twitter). In Austin, they arrested people who clogged the streets (Twitter). In Dallas, white BLM protestors shouted expletives at a black woman trying to drive down the street (Twitter). From Erielle Davidson: I wish the Democrats were as upset about rioting and burning down cities as they were about the constitutionally sound nomination of a judge (Twitter). From Larry Elder: In recent years at least as many unarmed whites have been killed by police as have unarmed blacks. For 2020 as of June, per Washington Post, police shot and killed 14 unarmed blacks and 25 unarmed whites. Name…one…unarmed…white…victim (Twitter).
2.
Portland Sees Increase of Violence Due to Police Fund Reduction
And blacks are the victims. According to the story, the Portland mayor now admits cutting police funding was a mistake.
Sometimes when you create a monster, it eats you. Party loons want a leader who can somehow subvert the constitution (Politico). From Josh Kraushaar: Remarkable that the party that’s decidedly more divided in this SCOTUS fight are the Democrats (Twitter).
4.
McConnell Blisters Schumer Over Hypocrisy
Going back to the treatment of Bork and on through Kavanagh. He explains how it was Schumer who began the filibuster of candidates (Hot Air). Interesting story on Barrett’s take down of qualified immunity in a case of horrible misuse (Reason). The public knows surprisingly little about the members of the Supreme Court (National Review). From Kevin McCarthy: If Nancy Pelosi tries to impeach President Trump for appointing a Supreme Court Justice—as the Constitution requires him to do—we will take steps to remove her as Speaker (Twitter).
5.
Hunter Biden Received Millions form Wife of Ex-Moscow Mayor
From the story: The investigation launched after Finance Committee Chairman Charles Grassley (R-IA) publicly raised conflict-of-interest concerns about the sale of a U.S. company to a Chinese firm with ties to Hunter Biden a month before Congress was notified about a whistleblower complaint that was the catalyst for Democrats’ impeachment of President Donald Trump. The Senate’s investigation relied on records from the U.S. government, Democrat lobbying groups, and interviews of numerous current and former officials (Daily Wire). From the Wall Street Journal editorial board: Senate committee Chairmen Ron Johnson and Chuck Grassley on Wednesday released the findings of their year-long investigation into the problems that the business dealings of Hunter Biden, Joe’s son, presented to the Obama-Biden administration. The report makes clear Hunter was profiting off his father’s position—in Ukraine, and notably in China. Foreigners knew they were buying influence by association (WSJ).
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6.
California Governor Bans Sale of Gas-Powered Cars by 2035
Gavin Newsom has decided he can do this by executive order.
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Florida voters are clamoring for clean energy, be it solar, wind, or something else.
A new poll released by Conservatives for Clean Energy-Florida found voters — by an overwhelming margin — prefer an “all of the above” approach when it comes to replacing fossil fuels with something cleaner.
Floridians are looking for anything as an alternative for fossil fuels.
Still, the Sunshine State wouldn’t be living up to its name if solar wasn’t a focus, and the majority expressed interest in expanding Florida’s solar energy production as part of an overall clean energy strategy to reduce the state’s dependence on carbon-based energy.
This general favorability also carried through to specific energy policies like net metering for solar energy users. For example, 77% of respondents supported the concept of net metering to give solar energy users a billing credit based on the energy they feed back into the grid.
“The polling numbers show that more and more Floridians understand the varied economic and environmental benefits of clean energy,” said George Riley, executive director of CCE-Florida. “These are the same individuals that have the capability to make waves at the ballot box this fall as they consider the importance of energy to their personal lives.”
According to the poll, there may be waves indeed — 73% of respondents said that they would be more likely to vote for a political candidate that supported increasing the development and use of renewable energy resources like solar energy.
The sentiment held across party lines, with four out of five self-described moderates and more than half self-described conservatives agreeing that a candidate’s stance on clean energy would impact how they vote.
___
Tim Sadberry is the new staff director for the Senate Appropriations Committee, replacing Cynthia Sauls Kynoch in the role.
“Tim Sadberry has many years of state budget experience. His reputation, integrity, and work ethic precede him. We have a very difficult job ahead of us and I am pleased that Tim has joined the team,” incoming Florida Senate Chief of Staff Kathy Mears said.
The new post is a homecoming of sorts for Sadberry, who worked as the committee’s Deputy Chief of Staff from September 2016 through January of last year.
His resume also includes stints as a staffer on the Senate Civil and Criminal Justice Appropriations subcommittee and the Health and Human Services Appropriations Subcommittee.
Most recently, Sadberry served as the Chief Financial Officer for the Florida Department of Elder Affairs, where he was responsible for overseeing the agency’s budget and administrative operations.
Additionally, the Florida State University alumnus has also held positions at several other state agencies, including the Department of Juvenile Justice, the Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services and the Department of Management Services.
Situational awareness
—@CindyMcCain: My husband John lived by a code: country first. 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 @JoeBiden.
— @Deepa_Shivaram: A reminder that it has been 42 days since [Kamala] Harris was tapped as the VP pick. There are 42 days until Election Day. The Senator has not once formally taken questions from the press.
Tweet, tweet:
—@NateMonroe: The transformation of Ron DeSantis from a pragmatic, even kind of likable Governor — who seemed to recognize the limitations of his razor-thin margin of victory over a self-described socialist — to a full-blown George Wallace-style election prop completed this week.
—@Aronberg: Spoiler alert: There’s nothing improper about donating to pay off court fees so indigent returning citizens can register to vote. In fact, some would call it a #Mitzvah.
Days until
First presidential debate in Indiana — 5; Preakness Stakes rescheduled — 9; Ashley Moody’s 2020 Human Trafficking Summit — 12; first vice presidential debate at the University of Utah — 14; NBA season ends (last possible date) — 20; second presidential debate scheduled in Miami — 22; NBA draft — 22; Wes Anderson’s “The French Dispatch” premieres — 22; NBA free agency — 24; Florida Chamber’s Future of Florida Forum — 26; HBO debuts 2000 presidential election doc ‘537 Votes’ — 27; third presidential debate at Belmont — 28; “The Empty Man” premieres — 29; 2020 General Election — 40; NBA 2020-21 training camp — 48; The Masters begins — 49; “No Time to Die” premieres — 57; Pixar’s “Soul” premieres — 57; College basketball season slated to begin — 62; NBA 2020-21 opening night — 69; Florida Automated Vehicles Summit — 69; “Death on the Nile” premieres — 84; “Wonder Woman 1984” rescheduled premiere — 92; Super Bowl LV in Tampa — 136; “A Quiet Place Part II” rescheduled premiere — 149; “Black Widow” rescheduled premiere — 164; “Top Gun: Maverick” rescheduled premiere — 281; Disney’s “Shang Chi and The Legend of The Ten Rings” premieres — 288; new start date for 2021 Olympics — 302; “Jungle Cruise” premieres — 310; Disney’s “Eternals” premieres — 407; “Spider-Man Far From Home” sequel premieres — 410; Steven Spielberg’s “West Side Story” premieres — 442; “Thor: Love and Thunder” premieres — 506; “Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness” premieres — 559; “Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse” sequel premieres — 740.
Sally
“Nikki Fried urges Donald Trump to approve major disaster declaration for Hurricane Sally” via Jason Delgado of Florida Politics — Agriculture Commissioner Fried penned a letter to Trump on Wednesday, urging him to approve a Major Disaster Declaration request for Hurricane Sally impacted counties. A major disaster declaration would make a variety of federal assistance programs available for area residents and public infrastructure reconstruction. “This approval and a subsequent USDA Secretarial disaster declaration are critical for those impacted to receive federal resources needed to recover, including our agricultural producers in the Panhandle who experienced significant crop losses due to this storm,” Fried wrote. Fried also sent letters to DeSantis, the USDA Farm Service Agency, the Florida State Executive Director, U.S. Senators Marco Rubio and Rick Scott, and other Panhandle Congress members.
Nikki Fried urges Donald Trump to declare a federal ‘major disaster’ declaration for recovery from Hurricane Sally. Image via AP.
“Okaloosa emergency crews responded heroically during Hurricane Sally action” via Tom McLaughlin of Northwest Florida Daily News — Prestorm preparation for a worst-case scenario and a Floridian knack for riding out a storm gave rescue workers the leg up they needed to come through without loss of life or even serious injury. However, there were a couple of close calls that required heroics on the part of first responders. Perhaps the most harrowing rescue took place Wednesday about noon at Horsehead Creek near Laurel Hill when a vehicle was swept off the road in heavy rain and into the swiftly rising water. Charles Rainey and Randall Hatfield, two Almarante Fire Department volunteers, and the county’s Swift Water Rescue Team led the rescue effort, according to Charles Carroll, Almarante’s fire chief. They were assisted by other members of the department.
“Perdido Keys?! Hurricane Sally cuts eastern tip of barrier island into three sections” via Kevin Robinson of the Pensacola News Journal — Hurricane Sally gouged three breaches into the eastern tip of Perdido Key, separating the isolated stretch of barrier island into three small islands. The impacted area is undeveloped, sandy shoreline east of Johnson Beach and just south of Robertson Island. Even before the hurricane, the region was inaccessible by road and was primarily used by hikers and boaters as a recreation spot for camping, kayaking and swimming. The three new channels created by Sally may make the farthest corner of the island even more remote. The impacted area is part of the Gulf Islands National Seashore, and Park Superintendent Dan Brown said it was not the first time this has happened.
“Navarre Beach lost about 100 million cubic yards of sand during Hurricane Sally” via Annie Blanks of the Pensacola News Journal — Navarre Beach lost an estimated 100 million cubic yards of sand during Hurricane Sally, and officials are racing to tally the full extent of the damage to secure as much funding as possible to restore the beach. The sand loss is the worst at the easternmost and westernmost points of the beach, officials said. There, at high tide, there’s only about 30 feet of beach in between the mean high water line and the dunes; the sand is gray and hard, and the dunes are clearly eroded. “There’s a lot of damage on the west and east end, but if you walk in the middle of the beach, it looks like it was untouched,” said Santa Rosa Commissioner Dave Piech.
Navarre Beach lost millions of cubic yards of sand due to Hurricane Sally. Image via WUWF.
“‘Miniaturized canyon’ left in Pace neighborhood after Hurricane Sally washout” via CD Davidson-Hiers of the Pensacola News Journal — When Cassie and James Nisewonger went to sleep Sept. 15, the vacant lot next to their home in Pace was a normal subdivision lot, covered in grass. But as Hurricane Sally stomped through the Panhandle on Sept. 16, the yard fell away as if a trapdoor had opened in the ground. Left behind was a massive washout that swallowed their mailbox, their yard and ate away at the pavement from the cul-de-sac in front of their house. The lot next door was gone. Six days later, what looks like a miniaturized canyon roughly 75 feet from their house was still widening with every rainfall. “Basically, our whole lives are on pause,” Cassie said a week after the storm hit.
“Emergency teams continuing survey of Walton hurricane damage” via Jim Thompson of Northwest Florida Daily News — Federal and state disaster assessment teams are continuing to work in Walton County in the wake of Hurricane Sally. In the meantime, county public works crews are making progress in getting flooded and otherwise damaged roads reopened. Some motorists, however, have gotten impatient with the progress of work on local roads, and are moving barricades to get through — or at least, try to get through — closed sections of local routes. “Even those Type 3 barricades (tall metal barricades with orange and white strips painted with reflective paint), if somebody wants to move them, they can move them,” said Buddy Wright, program manager for the county’s public works department. “We’ve had a few of them stolen,” he told Walton County commissioners this week.
“Fall hurricane outlook: Florida has a 50/50 chance at another strike” via Ryan Truchelut of WeatherTiger — Florida hurricane climatology has three distinct peaks. The first, in mid-June, is driven by weak but wet Gulf Coast tropical storms; the second in early and mid-September is associated with the overall peak of the season and long-tracking threats from the east. The third peak is in mid-October, with late-season landfalls focused on South Florida and the Florida Gulf Coast. Hurricane impacts in these areas are as common in October as September. Current anomalies in the Atlantic closely resemble the historical September SST pattern most strongly correlated with a busy final third of hurricane season. Predictive analytics indicate that an additional hurricane strike somewhere in Florida is as likely as not before the end of the season.
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 Wednesday, the CNN average is steady with Joe Biden still leading 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 Wednesday, 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 34.6%, while Florida comes in second with 11.9%. Other states include Wisconsin (9.6%), Michigan (6.4%), Arizona (6.3%), North Carolina (5%), Nevada (3.5%) and Minnesota (3%).
In a survey of recent polling, Joe Biden remains the favored candidate.
PredictIt: As of Wednesday, the PredictIt trading market has Biden dropping slightly to $0.58 a share, with Trump moving up to $0.46.
Real Clear Politics: As of Wednesday, the RCP average of polling top battleground states gives Biden a lead over Trump 50% to 42%. It is the first time Biden has hit the 50% mark. The RCP model has Biden averaging at +7.1 points ahead.
The Economist: As of Wednesday, their model still predicts Biden is 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 15%. They still give Biden a 97% chance (better than 19 in 20) of winning the most votes, with Trump at only 3%.
Presidential
“What to look for in the Trump-Joe Biden debates” via Jonathan Bernstein of Bloomberg — We’re within a week of the presidential debates, and Fox News anchor Chris Wallace, who will moderate the first round, has now released some likely topics. To begin with, debates typically don’t have a significant effect on the election outcome. That’s not surprising. Most attentive voters are partisans and have already decided to support their party’s candidate. The smaller number of attentive voters who have decided to defect have generally done so by now. And the even smaller group who really have no party preference? They, too, may well have decided by this point. Most of the undecided voters by now are those who don’t typically pay much attention to politics, and hardly any of them will watch the debates. Most people who do watch, moreover, will conclude that the candidate they like won the debate, although sometimes comments by pundits afterward may shift their views.
There will be several things to watch out for in the first Joe Biden/Donald Trump debate.
“Trump and Biden in tight races in Florida, Arizona” via Scott Clement, Dan Balz and Emily Guskin of The Washington Post — Trump and Biden are locked in close races in Florida and Arizona, according to a pair of Washington Post-ABC News polls in two Sun Belt battlegrounds that the President won in 2016 that are crucial to his hopes for reelection in November. In Florida, likely voters split 51% for Trump to 47% for Biden, while registered voters split 47% for Trump to 48% for Biden. In Arizona, Trump’s margin is even smaller, at 49% to Biden’s 48% among likely voters. Among Arizona’s registered voters, Trump is at 47% and Biden at 49%. All these differences are within the polls’ margins of sampling error.
“Trump 4 points ahead of Joe Biden in Florida; poll shows first lead in state for President all year” via Anthony Man of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — For the first time in 2020, a major, reputable public opinion poll finds Trump leading Biden, the Democrat, in Florida. The Washington Post-ABC News poll released Wednesday shows likely Florida voters favoring Trump over Biden 51%-47%. Statistically, with the poll’s margin of error at plus or minus 5 percentage points, the two candidates are tied. One poll isn’t conclusive. Polling from different pollsters on different days produce different results. For months, highly rated independent polls have had varying, generally small, leads for Biden. A CNBC/Change Research survey released Wednesday showed Biden ahead by 3 points, 49%-46%. A St. Pete Polls survey also showed Biden leading by 3 points, 50%-47%.
“Republicans hope Supreme Court fight boosts Donald Trump’s reelection bid, helps GOP hold Senate majority” via Rachael Bade, Josh Dawsey and Paul Kane of The Washington Post — Republicans are shifting their campaign focus toward the looming Supreme Court fight over replacing the late Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg in hopes that it will inject a last-minute boost into Trump’s reelection bid and the battle for the Senate majority. But some in Trump’s orbit are questioning that strategy, privately fretting that the move to quickly confirm a conservative replacement for the liberal icon will backfire and energize the left in key battlegrounds states. And behind the scenes, some Senate GOP advisers also acknowledge that this could spell bad news for at least two GOP incumbents, Susan Collins in Maine and Cory Gardner in Colorado, fighting for their political lives in Democratic-leaning states, even as they predict it could bolster other vulnerable senators.
“Biden and the claim he ‘opposed taking out Osama bin Laden’” via Glenn Kessler of The Washington Post — A reader contacted The Fact Checker saying he and his wife had recently visited an area near Pittsburgh and were moved to request a fact check. “Before the holiday we saw on TV wall-to-wall ads — trust me, every hour on all stations — on how Vice President Biden opposed taking out Osama bin Laden,” the reader wrote. “Some of these ads are with wounded veterans or relatives of deceased soldiers pronouncing Biden ‘too soft’ to lead, unwilling to stand up, etc. The theme is clear.” These ads are being aired by Preserve America PAC, which has said it would air a $30 million advertising blitz attacking Biden. There are four ads, such as this one, mostly featuring wounded veterans but also the parents of Kayla Mueller, a human rights activist killed in Syria in 2015. Biden is vulnerable on bin Laden, mostly because of the way he has described his own advice to President Barack Obama. Earlier this year, we gave Biden Three Pinocchios when he denied having told Obama not to go after the al-Qaida leader at the time Obama’s advisers were debating the issue.
“Trump rails on crime-plagued, liberal cities. Jacksonville might surprise him” via Nate Monroe of The Florida Times-Union — When Trump stops in Jacksonville on Thursday for a campaign rally, he will confront a certain version of the boogeyman he has frantically railed against to throngs of his hotblooded supporters: A major city choking on violent crime. But unlike the urban hellscapes of Trump’s fever dreams, Jacksonville is no liberal bastion. Here, every lever of power is firmly controlled by Republican politicians. And the precipitous uptick in violent crime in recent years is not the result of draconian cost cuts imposed on the police, or indifference from city officials to law and order. Jacksonville just passed a budget that will spend a whopping $484 million, nearly 40% of its total $1.3 billion municipal budget, on the Jacksonville Sheriff’s Office next year. That comes after several years of increased spending on the police.
While Donald Trump blames ‘Democratic-run’ cities for an increase in crime, Republican-led Jacksonville could come as a surprise. Image via WJCT.
“Trump’s courtship of Florida Latinos continues Friday with an event in Miami” via David Smiley of the Miami Herald — Trump will meet Friday with Hispanic voters in the Miami area, according to his campaign. After holding a political rally in Jacksonville Thursday night, the President will travel to Miami-Dade County, where he will participate in a Latinos for Trump roundtable, his campaign announced Wednesday. The campaign did not specify a location for the 10 a.m. event. Trump’s appearance continues his aggressive courtship of Hispanic voters in Miami-Dade, where a recent Bendixen & Amandi International poll found the President splitting the Latino vote with Democratic presidential nominee Biden. Statewide polls have found Biden leading Trump with Hispanic voters, but with less support than what 2016 Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton had when she lost Florida to Trump.
“President’s trademark in Cuba is trademark Trump. His tough talk to exiles is all an act” via Andres Oppenheimer of the Miami Herald — The revelation that Trump registered his Trump trademark in Cuba in 2010 to build hotels and golf courses on the island confirms one more time what more than a dozen people who know him have told me over the years: He’s a man with no principles. Before he hired a Cuban attorney to register his business in Cuba, Trump had vowed to a Cuban American audience in Miami that we would not invest on the island while the Castro dictatorship remained in power. “I will go when Cuba is free,” he said in a speech to the Cuban American Foundation in 1999.
“Treasury yields would jump on a Democratic sweep, Goldman says” via Vivien Lou Chen of Bloomberg — Treasury yields would be jolted higher by Democrats winning the U.S. presidency and control of both houses of Congress, say Goldman Sachs Group Inc. strategists Praveen Korapaty and Avisha Thakkar. In a note published Wednesday, they said the benchmark 10-year note’s yield could rise 30 to 40 basis points over the month following the Nov. 3 election. The adjustment would reflect the possibility of substantially higher federal spending, they said. The 10-year yield, around 0.68% on Wednesday, has been stuck in a tight range as volatility in the world’s biggest debt market hovers near a record low, suggesting traders expect little movement until the election.
“Cindy McCain formally endorses Joe Biden” via Tarini Parti of The Wall Street Journal — Cindy McCain, the wife of the late GOP Sen. John McCain of Arizona who was a frequent critic of Trump, officially endorsed Democratic presidential nominee 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.” Cindy McCain added that although she and Biden didn’t always agree on issues, “he is a good and honest man. He will lead us with dignity.” “She didn’t support Donald Trump in 2016 either, and he’s President now,” said Trump campaign spokesman Tim Murtaugh. The McCains in 2016 withdrew their support for Trump.
In a rebuke of Donald Trump, Cindy McCain endorses Joe Biden.
“Florida is about to mail out 5 million ballots, testing Biden and Trump’s strategies” via David Smiley, Aaron Leibowitz and Rob Wile of the Miami Herald — For months, Trump and Biden, the Democratic nominee, have strategized on voter turnout, election officials have braced for an autumn like no other, and the U.S. Postal Service has vowed to be ready to handle a record number of mail ballots going out in the nation’s largest swing state. Now it’s time for millions of Floridians to vote. Starting Thursday, and continuing for seven days, more than 4.7 million domestic mail ballots will go out to Florida voters, marking the unofficial start of the state’s marathon 40-day election. More than 1 million of those ballots will be mailed in Miami-Dade and Broward counties alone.
New ads
New Trump ad blasts Biden record on Puerto Rico — Trump’s reelection campaign Wednesday put out a new Spanish language TV ad titled “Reconstruyendo,” claiming Biden’s policies have devastated Puerto Rico’s economy and led businesses to relocate to China. Trump, the ad contends, has delivered record investments in Puerto Rico’s infrastructure and has worked to bring the pharmaceutical industry back to the island. “Like a typical politician, Joe Biden pretends to care about Boricuas when he needs our votes, but during his five decades in Washington he never did anything for us except vote to eliminate Section 936, which collapsed our economy,” said Juan Carlos Benitez of Latinos for Trump. The ad will run on TV and digitally in “key areas” of Florida.
DNC ad makes final push for voter registration — The Democratic National Committee on Wednesday announced new digital ads aimed at getting more voters on the rolls. The ads direct viewers to IWillVote.com, where they can learn how to register to vote or check their registration status. The ad features the late U.S. Rep. John Lewis, a civil rights icon, speaking about the right to vote, referring to it as “the most powerful nonviolent tool we have to create a more perfect union.” The ads will run on Facebook, Instagram, and YouTube as part of a seven-figure investment in voter registration across in battleground states, including Florida.
“Vote-by-mail ballots start to go out Thursday” via The News Service of Florida — Potentially millions of ballots could hit the mail starting Thursday for the Nov. 3 general election in Florida. County supervisors of elections are required to send out their first big batches of vote-by-mail ballots between Thursday and Oct. 1. Hillsborough County Supervisor of Elections Craig Latimer said in a news release that his office will put more than 355,000 ballots in the mail on Thursday. Hillsborough County has already sent out more than 6,800 ballots to overseas and military voters. Overall, more than 4.7 million vote-by-mail ballots have been requested by Florida’s 13.89 million voters. As of Wednesday, Democrats statewide had requested 2.18 million ballots to 1.48 million sought by Republicans.
“Poll: Minimum wage amendment poised to pass” via Jacob Ogles of Florida Politics — An amendment increasing Florida’s minimum wage appears poised to pass. But measures changing how Florida conducts primary elections and amends the state constitution face a difficult road. That’s according to results from a statewide St. Pete Polls survey. The poll shows nearly 65% of voters ready to vote yes on Amendment 2, which would gradually raise the state’s minimum wage to $15 an hour by 2026. Around 23% of voters would vote against the measure if the election were held today, and nearly 13% remain undecided. Still, the level of support easily clears the 60% threshold required for voters to amend Florida’s Constitution. The ballot initiative from Florida For A Fair Wage has been a top priority for influential Orlando attorney John Morgan and has been cleared by the Florida Supreme Court for the November ballot.
“DCCC adds Alan Cohn to Red to Blue program to flip CD 15” via Janelle Irwin Taylor of Florida Politics — The Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee is adding Cohn to its Red to Blue program, spotlighting Democrats’ hope that Florida’s 15th Congressional District is ripe for flipping. Cohn is running in CD 15 against Republican Scott Franklin who ousted incumbent Ross Spano in the Aug. 18 Republican primary. Cohn defeated fellow Democrat Adam Hattersley for his party’s nomination. The DCCC’s Red to Blue program is a highly selective effort that provides Democratic candidates in flippable districts with financial and institutional resources to help grow Democratic representation in the U.S. House of Representatives. The program provides funding as well as strategic guidance, staff resources and candidate training.
New ad touts Vern Buchanan as bipartisan champion — A new ad from U.S. Rep. Buchanan’s reelection campaign pitches the longtime Republican congressman as the bipartisan choice for Florida’s 16th Congressional District. “It’s a record of accomplishment few can match. Vern Buchanan is rated as one of the most effective and bipartisan members of Congress. Twenty-two bills signed into law under three presidents from both parties,” a narrator says. “Bills protecting veterans, strengthening Medicare, safeguarding the environment, even preventing cruelty to animals. No matter the issue or the odds Vern Buchanan gets the job done for Florida and America.” Buchanan faces Democratic state Rep. Margaret Good on Election Day.
“Partisan groups continue going negative in CD 26 contest” via Ryan Nicol of Florida Politics — A new slate of negative ads is dropping in the race for Florida’s 26th Congressional District as opposing partisan groups look to push their candidate of choice. The race features Democratic Rep. Debbie Mucarsel-Powell defending her seat against Republican candidate Carlos Giménez, who currently serves as the Miami-Dade County Mayor. Two groups released negative ads, with one ad each going after Giménez and Mucarsel-Powell. Wednesday morning, another pair of attack ads dropped as the race for one of the most competitive congressional seats in the state heats up. The Congressional Leadership Fund announced a new ad Wednesday titled, “Warlord.” The ad largely rehashes an attack pushed during Mucarsel-Powell’s 2018 congressional bid focusing on her husband, Robert. According to a Daily Beast report, Robert Powell worked as an attorney at several firms owned by a Ukrainian man named Ihor Kolomoisky.
“Florida AG calls for criminal inquiry into Michael Bloomberg’s $16M felon voter donation” via Matt Dixon and Gary Fineout of POLITICO — Florida‘s Republican attorney general on Wednesday urged the FBI and state authorities to investigate former New York Mayor Bloomberg‘s pledge to spend $16 million helping convicted felons regain their voting rights in the nation’s largest swing state. Ashley Moody said in a letter to top law enforcement officials that she was asked by DeSantis, another Republican, to review the donation Bloomberg announced on Tuesday. Moody said she quickly decided additional scrutiny was warranted. The move comes just two weeks before Florida’s voter registration deadline and 12 days after a federal appeals court upheld a restrictive new state law that requires former felons to clear court debts before registering to vote.
“Voters without masks will be allowed into polls on Election Day, Broward 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.
Leg. campaigns
“South Florida police unions back Democratic incumbent José Javier Rodríguez in SD 37” via Ryan Nicol of Florida Politics — Two police unions are endorsing Democratic Sen. José Javier Rodríguez in a high-profile South Florida Senate race. The Florida Fraternal Order of Police and the South Florida Police Benevolent Association both announced Wednesday they are supporting Sen. Rodríguez. Republican candidate Ileana Garcia and nonparty affiliated Alex Rodriguez are also seeking the seat. “In law enforcement, our top priority each day is to serve the citizens of our community by putting their well-being first,” said Al Palacios, president of the FOP, Lodge 133. “Sen. José Javier Rodríguez has been a strong partner in carrying out that mission and we are proud to support his reelection to District 37.”
South Florida police unions give the nod to José Javier Rodríguez in his bid for reelection.
“Elizabeth Fetterhoff, Patrick Henry stress bipartisan messaging in battleground HD 26” via Jacob Ogles of Florida Politics — Rep. Fetterhoff never had any reason to think reelection would be easy. Former Rep. Henry knows firsthand that’s never the case in House District 26. After Fetterhoff unseated Henry by 61 votes in 2018, it became all the more clear this jurisdiction remains one of Florida’s hottest battlegrounds. With a rematch in November, the now-incumbent believes her record will stand up with voters and help her win by a larger margin. “We’ve done a great job over the past two years, and we were obviously more effective than Patrick Henry his two years,” she said. But the Democrat feels confident as he looks to retake his office. “She’s more afraid of me than I am of her,” he said.
Down ballot
“Daniella Levine Cava drops Spanish-language ad touting support from Annette Taddeo” via Ryan Nicol of Florida Politics — Democratic Sen. Taddeo is featured in a new Spanish-language ad supporting Levine Cava in the Miami-Dade County mayoral race. Taddeo endorsed Levine Cava in Aug. 2019, making her an early Levine Cava backer. “She is the embodiment of good government and a true champion of the people,” Taddeo said at the time. “I am excited to campaign side-by-side with Daniella and make history as we elect Miami-Dade’s first woman as our next Mayor.” Now, Taddeo is featured in a 30-second spot set to run on Spanish-language radio.
“Everglades trust endorses Levine Cava in Miami-Dade mayoral race” via Ryan Nicol of Florida Politics — The Everglades Trust, a nonpartisan environmental group, is endorsing Levine Cava for Miami-Dade County Mayor. “No region in Florida has more to gain by a stable, healthy Everglades ecosystem, or stands to lose more, than the people and economy of Miami-Dade County,” said Everglades Trust Executive Director Kimberly Mitchell in a Wednesday statement. “The Everglades and coastal estuaries do not care about partisan politics, and neither does the Everglades Trust. We are calling on Democrats, NPAs, Republicans — all voters — to get behind a clean water champion and elect Daniella Levine Cava as the next Mayor of Miami-Dade County.”
Corona Florida
“Support for Ron DeSantis’ COVID-19 response split even” via Renzo Downey of Florida Politics — Approval for DeSantis‘ COVID-19 response broke even in a poll released Wednesday, a slight recovery after ticking below 50% in recent polling. That’s according to the latest in a series of CNBC and Change Research battleground state polls released twice per month. The latest iteration saw the Governor’s approval rating on the issue elevate from 48% to 50% in the last two weeks. Opposition fell from 52% to 50%. Amid his calls in recent months to reopen schools, support for the Governor’s coronavirus fell to 42% in August, the lowest level since the pollsters asked the same question in mid-April. In that first poll, he also recorded 42% support. DeSantis’ recent low appears to have mostly recovered. The survey took results from likely 2020 voters Sept. 18-20. Between that survey and the previous one Aug. 4-6, the pandemic largely continued to subside in Florida.
A recent survey splits voters’ opinion on Ron DeSantis and his COVID-19 response
“Group offers proposal for liability protections” via The News Service of Florida — Forty lobbyists and association representatives met over the summer to discuss ways to protect businesses from what some fear will be a flood of lawsuits related to COVID-19. Co-chaired by Marc Salm, vice president of risk management at Publix, and William Large, president of the Florida Justice Reform Institute, the group, dubbed the RESET Task Force, finalized a proposal that would exempt “essential businesses” from any COVID-19 related litigation and would change litigation rules for “nonessential businesses” that could be sued. The task force is not proposing that the changes be applied retroactively to cover businesses. Essentially, the group is proposing that scores of businesses identified as “essential” in executive orders issued by DeSantis be given immunity from COVID-19 related suits.
“DEM employees can’t double-dip on COVID-19 and Sally ‘extraordinary pay’” via Renzo Downey of Florida Politics — Division of Emergency Management employees that received extraordinary pay for COVID-19 in a week cannot also receive extraordinary pay for Hurricane Sally. Emails obtained by Florida Politics show the policy outlined by the Division apply to career service personnel, who are the majority of employees and selected exempt service employees, which include middle management workers. Those additional hours instead count toward regular hours, according to DEM’s Deputy Director Kevin Guthrie. “If you are CS/SES and you are claiming more than six hours in extraordinary pay per week in COVID-19 extraordinary pay, you are not eligible for Sally extraordinary pay,” reads one of Guthrie’s emails. Similar to overtime, extraordinary pay is 1.5 times the rate of regular pay.
Corona local
“Miami ALF shut down for breaking COVID-19 rules and endangering residents, state says” via Michelle Marchante of the Miami Herald — A small assisted living facility in Southwest Miami-Dade was ordered to shut down this week over several COVID-19 violations, including failing to properly care for residents with symptoms and allowing people who tested positive to enter. The 24-hour, six-bed ALF at 5111 SW 112th Ave. was licensed to Kevin’s ALF Corp. The for-profit corporation is registered to Zairys Garit, who is also listed as its president, according to records from the Florida Department of State’s Division of Corporations. Inspectors with Florida’s Agency for Health Care Administration, which oversees assisted living facilities, visited the ALF last Wednesday to conduct a survey. The emergency order was signed and filed in Tallahassee Monday by the agency secretary.
“Judge to decide whether schools are safe to open” via Scott Travis of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — A judge is expected to rule soon whether it’s up to the courts to decide if Palm Beach County schools are safe to open. A six-hour hearing was held Wednesday afternoon and evening over a lawsuit seven teachers filed against the school district. Palm Beach Circuit Judge Glenn Kelley gave the parties 24 hours to submit additional briefs. His ruling could come Friday or early next week. Kelley asked questions that suggested he may believe the decision on whether to open schools, as well as whether to allow teachers to work remotely, is best left up to local school boards. The lawsuit was filed Friday in hopes of preventing school opening. Kelley allowed the school to open at least temporarily until he made a final ruling. Students returned to campus Monday.
More local
“More than 15,700 OCPS students want to return to campuses next month” via Leslie Postal of the Orlando Sentinel — More than 15,700 students in Orange County Public Schools want to return to campuses in October, a switch that means fewer teachers will be able to work from home, the district announced late Tuesday. About 70% of the school district’s students have been doing school online since classes began in August, a choice parents made because of concerns about the coronavirus. The district let parents make a new choice for the second quarter of the school year, which begins Oct. 13. Superintendent Barbara Jenkins said 15,792 students want to return to “brick and mortar” campuses next month. That amounts to about 13% of the 122,469 students who had been doing online lessons at home through the district’s LaunchEd platform.
Orange County Public Schools Superintendent Barbara Jenkins says nearly 16,000 students want to return to brick-and-mortar schools. Image via I4 Business Magazine.
“Port Orange teacher’s aide dies from COVID-19, brother dies a day later” via LobbyTools — A teacher’s aide at an elementary school in Port Orange has died after contracting COVID-19, the Volusia County school district said. Her brother, an emergency medical worker, died a day later. Teaching paraprofessional Shyla Pennington died with COVID-19 on Saturday, Volusia school officials said in a news release. She had been a teacher’s assistant in the district for 18 years. It wasn’t clear in information from the district whether Pennington had been working at Sugar Mill since schools reopened, where she may have contracted the virus, or what steps may have been taken by school officials to determine whether others were in contact with her. The school was open this week.
Corona nation
“U.S. cases rise 0.6%; France imposes new limits” via Bloomberg News — New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio said a recent uptick of COVID-19 cases in neighborhoods of south Brooklyn requires “urgent action.” Missouri’s Governor said he has tested positive for the virus. France imposed new restrictions on bars and public gatherings in several cities as it tries to tamp down a resurgence of the virus. The U.K.’s Chancellor of the Exchequer canceled his planned fall budget and prepared to set out a fresh round of job-support measures, a day after Prime Minister Boris Johnson urged Britons to work from home to curb an outbreak. Johnson & Johnson has begun dosing as many as 60,000 volunteers in a study of its COVID-19 vaccine, the first big U.S. trial of an inoculation that may work after just one shot.
“Thousands of American troops to take part in COVID-19 early-detection study” via Ben Kesling and Nancy A. Youssef of The Wall Street Journal — Thousands of Defense Department personnel are slated to take part in a COVID-19 early-detection study that looks to identify troops with barely perceptible symptoms and quarantine them early. If successful, the study, which will collect data on the troops, could point the way to a widely used, noninvasive method of detecting COVID-19 symptoms even before a patient feels sick. Researchers said they hope to learn more through the study about what it means to be asymptomatic. Officials plan for more than 5,000 largely U.S.-based troops in the coming weeks to join a joint study between the Defense Department and Koninklijke Philips NV, a global health technology company, to use bio-measuring devices like smartwatches that identify people infected with COVID-19, quarantine them and treat the illness.
Thousands of Defense Department personnel will take part in a COVID-19 early detection study. Image via Bloomberg.
“FDA poised to announce tougher standards for a COVID-19 vaccine that make it unlikely one will be cleared by Election Day” via Laurie McGinley and Carolyn Y. Johnson of The Washington Post — The F.D.A. is expected to spell out a tough new standard for an emergency authorization of a coronavirus vaccine as soon as this week that will make it exceedingly difficult for any vaccine to be cleared before Election Day. The agency is issuing guidance to boost transparency and public trust as it approaches the momentous decision of whether a prospective vaccine is safe and effective. Public health experts are increasingly worried that Trump’s repeated predictions of a coronavirus vaccine by Nov. 3, coupled with the administration’s interference in federal science agencies, may prompt Americans to reject any vaccine as rushed and potentially tainted. The stakes are high: polls show the relentless politicization of the race to develop a vaccine is taking its toll. Pew Research Center recently reported that the percentage of people who said they would get the vaccine if it were available today has dropped to just over 50% from 72% in May.
“Single-dose vaccine tested as U.S. experts say no corners cut” via The Associated Press — A huge international study of a COVID-19 vaccine that aims to work with just one dose is getting underway as top U.S. health officials sought Wednesday to assure a skeptical Congress and public that they can trust any shots the government ultimately approves. Hopes are high that answers about at least one of several candidates being tested in the U.S. could come by year’s end, maybe sooner. “We feel cautiously optimistic that we will be able to have a safe and effective vaccine, although there is never a guarantee of that,” Dr. Anthony Fauci, infectious disease chief at the National Institutes of Health, told a Senate committee. But Trump is pushing for a faster timeline than many experts say is adequate to fully test the candidates. On Wednesday he tweeted a link to news about the new Johnson & Johnson vaccine study and said the Food and Drug Administration “must move quickly!” “President Trump is still trying to sabotage the work of our scientists and public health experts for his own political ends,” Sen. Patty Murray, a Democrat from Washington state, said before ticking off examples of pressure on the FDA.
“A single-shot coronavirus vaccine from Johnson & Johnson will be tested in 60,000 people” via Carolyn Y. Johnson of The Washington Post — The first coronavirus vaccine that aims to protect people with a single shot has entered the final stages of testing in the United States in an international trial that will recruit up to 60,000 participants. The experimental vaccine being developed by pharmaceutical giant Johnson & Johnson is the fourth vaccine to enter the large, Phase 3 trials in the United States that will determine whether they are effective and safe. Paul Stoffels, chief scientific officer of J&J, predicted that there may be enough data to have results by the end of the year and said the company plans to manufacture 1 billion doses next year. Three other vaccine candidates have a head start, with U.S. trials that began earlier in the summer, but the vaccine being developed by Janssen Pharmaceutical Companies, a division of J&J, has several advantages that could make it logistically easier to administer and distribute if it is proved safe and effective.
“Anthony Fauci to a meddling HHS official: ‘Take a hike’” via Alexis Madrigal of The Atlantic — In an email to The Atlantic, Fauci directly addressed the two Trump-administration officials at the center of the recent controversy around political interference in the efforts of scientists and public-health experts to inform Americans about the pandemic: Michael Caputo, a spokesperson for the Department of Health and Human Services, and Caputo’s former science adviser, Paul Alexander, who attempted to censor what scientists, including Fauci, said about the coronavirus. In the email to Madrigal, Fauci wrote: “Caputo enabled Alexander. Alexander is the one who directly tried to influence the CDC (he may have succeeded, I cannot really say) and even me (I told him to go take a hike).”
Anthony Fauci tells an HHS official attempting to muzzle him to ‘take a hike.’
“Feared coronavirus outbreaks in schools yet to arrive, early data show” via Laura Meckler and Valerie Strauss of The Washington Post — Thousands of students and teachers have become sick with the coronavirus since schools began opening last month, but public health experts have found little evidence that the virus is spreading inside buildings, and the rates of infection are far below what is found in the surrounding communities. This early evidence, experts say, suggests that opening schools may not be as risky as many have feared and could guide administrators as they chart the rest of what is already an unprecedented school year. “Everyone had a fear there would be explosive outbreaks of transmission in the schools. In colleges, there have been. We have to say that, to date, we have not seen those in the younger kids, and that is a really important observation,” said Michael Osterholm, director of the Center for Infectious Disease Research and Policy at the University of Minnesota.
Coronavirus worsens segregation at schools — School segregation is getting worse and coronavirus is to blame. As reported by Maya King and Nicole Gaudiano of POLITICO Pro, students of color attending school in-person are showing up to campuses that lack proper coronavirus safety precautions and those that choose to attend virtually are falling victim to the digital divide — one in three Black, Latinx and Native American families do not have high-speed internet access at home. Conversely, in wealthy, often majority-White school districts, students are attending school in small “learning pods” which cost parents hundreds or thousands of dollars. “COVID isn’t just revealing racial inequities, it’s reproducing it. It’s making it worse,” said Cornell University professor Noliwe Rooks.
Corona economics
“Popcorn farmers are sitting on mountains of unsold popcorn, in part due to closed movie theaters” via Michael Hollan of FOX 13 Tampa Bay — The popcorn market may have popped. With movie theaters shut down, people are obviously eating less movie theater snacks. This has left the farmers who supply theaters (and other venues) with a massive surplus of unsold food. Popcorn farmers who typically sell to movie theaters and other venues (bars, concert halls, sporting events, etc.) are struggling amid the pandemic. For these farmers, the summer months usually mean big business. But this year, it’s a different story. While microwave popcorn brands have reportedly seen sales surge, many farmers who provide corn to theaters and other similar venues (typically in 50- to 100-pound bags) don’t have the equipment or infrastructure to switch their sales models.
Closed movie theaters are causing a glut of unused popcorn.
More corona
“France raises its COVID-19 alert level in several areas.” via The New York Times — France raised its COVID-19 alert level in a number of areas across the country Wednesday, and the authorities ramped up restrictions on public gatherings in several cities to prevent the health system from buckling under an influx of patients. The new measures, which will take effect in the coming days, include the total closure of all bars and restaurants in the cities of Aix-en-Provence and Marseille and a ban on public gatherings of more than 10 people in Paris and a handful of other French cities. Olivier Véran, the Health Minister, said at a news conference Wednesday evening that the situation in France was “continuing to deteriorate.”
“Lights, camera … COVID-19! The perils of shooting amid a pandemic” via Bryn Elise Sandberg of the Hollywood Reporter — As Hollywood forges its way back into production in the midst of a pandemic, industry leaders say that embarrassing oversights like these are all but inevitable in a situation as complex and unprecedented as this, but that shouldn’t deter efforts to get cameras rolling again. “Logistics for production shoots are complicated to begin with. Add the extra layer of all the safety protocols and testing that has to be figured out and, yes, you’re going to have some of it fall through the cracks,” says California film commissioner Colleen Bell. “None of this is easy — but frankly, I give the industry a lot of credit for adapting so quickly.” Indeed, after months of planning and schedule shifting, filming is starting to kick up in earnest. 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% increase in film permit requests from July to August.
California Film Commissioner Colleen Bell describes the significant challenges of restarting the industry amid COVID-19. Image via Variety.
“Adam Silver says next NBA season will likely start in 2021” via Tim Reynolds of NBA.com — NBA Commissioner Silver said Tuesday that his “best guess” is that next season will not start until at least January, plus acknowledged that the later-than-usual schedule could mean top U.S. men’s players miss next summer’s Tokyo Olympics. Silver, a guest in a series of panel discussions on CNN, did not indicate that any decisions are finalized. The league was originally hoping for a Dec. 1 start to next season, then shifted its focus to the chance of a late December start, and now the target has apparently moved again. “I continue to believe that we’re going to be better off getting into January,” Silver said in a discussion with Bob Costas during part of the “Citizen by CNN” event. “The goal for us next season is to play a standard season … an 82-game season and playoffs. And further, the goal would be to play games at home arenas in front of fans, but there’s still a lot that we need to learn.”
“Cruise lines won’t allow passengers to roam freely in port cities when sailings resume” via Ron Hurtibise of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — Forget the tequila shots, straw markets and jewelry stores. If cruise lines are allowed to resume operations anytime soon, passengers won’t be permitted to roam freely around port cities. Proposals to limit the spread of COVID-19 call for allowing passengers to disembark only if they are signed up for an excursion sponsored by the cruise line, one of a series of health protocols developed by an industry eager to resume operations after a six-month COVID-19 shutdown. Will passengers be eager to board ships that they won’t be allowed to leave unless they pay for an excursion? “I wouldn’t like that at all. That would stop me from cruising,” said Scott Braun, a Miami resident and avid cruiser.
Statewide
Appointed — Joshua Hawkes to the 2nd Circuit Court, Jennifer Swenson to the 10th Circuit Court, Gilberto Perez to the 20th Circuit Court, Stefanie Morris to the Leon County Court, and Barry Dickson to the Escambia County Court.
“IBM drops challenge the Medicaid contract” via The News Service of Florida — IBM has withdrawn its challenge to a decision by the state Agency for Health Care Administration to award a major Medicaid contract to Deloitte Consulting. A notice was filed at the state Division of Administrative Hearings that said IBM had voluntarily dropped its protest. The technology contract, which is estimated to be worth $135 million, has drawn scrutiny because the Agency for Health Care Administration decided to award it to Deloitte this summer amid an uproar — and litigation — about problems with an online unemployment-compensation system that the company helped develop. IBM and Accenture, which unsuccessfully sought the Medicaid contract, filed separate challenges to the Agency for Health Care Administration’s decision. Accenture also withdrew its challenge this month.
“Still no answers from task forces looking into proposed Florida toll roads” via Jeffrey Schweers of the Tallahassee Democrat — More than a year after convening, the three toll road task forces charged by the Florida Legislature to evaluate and make recommendations on the state’s most ambitious public works project in decades still have no answers to fundamental questions. No demonstration of need. No final route selected. No cost estimate. No feasibility study to show if it will even pay for itself. “The biggest takeaway is this is a project of hundreds of millions of dollars and no demonstrated need for the roads. And we can’t guarantee the roads will pay for themselves,” said Lindsay Cross, government relations director for Florida Conservation Voters.
Happening today — A task force of the Florida Department of Transportation will hold a meeting to discuss one of three M-CORES toll road projects — the plan to extend the Suncoast Parkway from Citrus County to Jefferson County. The meeting begins at 9 a.m. Register online at FloridaMCORES.com/events-calendar. The meeting is also open to the public at the Lafayette County Courthouse County Commission room, 120 West Main St., Mayo, or at Madison Golf & Country Club, 445 Country Club Road, Madison.
“Citizens insurance grows amid ‘unhealthy’ market” via Jim Turner of The News Service of Florida — Citizens President and CEO Barry Gilway pointed to problems due primarily to litigation and rises in costs of reinsurance. “The growth is becoming extraordinary,” Gilway said during an online meeting of the Citizens Board of Governors. “And you can gloss over these numbers, but the impact they have on the overall operations is significant.” After peaking near 1.5 million policies in 2012, Citizens has spent years trying to shed policies and move them into the private market. A healthy number for Citizens is considered around 420,000 policies — roughly the amount it had in 2019. But Gilway said Citizens likely will be above 540,000 policies by the end of this year, moving from 4% of the market to 5%.
Citizens Property Insurance head Barry Gilway warns of an ‘unhealthy’ market.
“Richard Corcoran encourages ‘everyone’ never to read The Washington Post and The New York Times” via Danielle Brown of Florida Phoenix — At a public board meeting, Education Commissioner Corcoran said he would encourage everyone “never to read” The Washington Post or The New York Times. Those two storied newspapers have won numerous Pulitzer Prizes over the years. But in a new era of “fake news” during the Trump administration, media outlets have been assailed by critics. Corcoran’s disparaging remarks came during a State Board of Education meeting, when Corcoran, a Republican and former state House Speaker, spent time to criticize the media over education coverage. “You’re going to see reports from time to time … the reporting on this is just all off,” said Corcoran. Andrew Spar, president of the Florida Education Association (FEA), said that Corcoran’s tendency to disparage the media falls in line with methods from DeSantis and Trump.
“Florida Council of 100 releases study showing ‘rigor gap’ in Florida classrooms” via redefinED — A detailed study by the Florida Council of 100 in cooperation with the Florida Department of Education includes data indicating the state can do more to align efforts on student growth by helping students and families in real-time. Coming on the heels of last year’s dismal National Assessment of Educational Progress scores, the study shows a substantial “rigor gap” between the grades Florida high school students receive and their mastery of content required to pass end-of-course exams in Algebra I and Grade 10 English Language Arts. Among the findings: Seventy-two percent of English 2 students and 55% of Algebra I students who did not pass the corresponding end-of-course exam received a course grade of C or higher.
“As choice expands, public schools keep rising” via Ron Matus in the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — Florida recently got good news about its public education system that, unfortunately, few Floridians got to hear: Sunshine State schools, the butt of jokes 20 years ago, now rank No. 3 in America in K-12 achievement, according to no less a fair judge than “Education Week.” No. 3? Florida? The rankings are based on a thoughtful mix of academic gauges, including graduation rates, the results on college-caliber Advanced Placement exams, and math and reading scores on the National Assessment of Education Progress. Florida’s No. 3 ranking (behind Massachusetts and New Jersey) is its highest ever, after more than a decade in or near the Top 10.
D.C. matters
“Trump says no meeting planned with Barbara Lagoa for Supreme Court, she is on his list” via Michael Wilner of the Miami Herald — Trump said he does not have a meeting planned with Judge Lagoa but she is on his list for a nominee to replace the late Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg on the Supreme Court. He said there were five women candidates that he was considering for the vacancy and he would announce the nominee on Saturday at 5 p.m. at the White House. “I think it will be a great nominee, brilliant nominee,” Trump said a news conference. When asked whether he would be meeting with Lagoa, Trump said, “She is on my list, I don’t have a meeting planned, but she is on my list.” The President had earlier this week suggested they might meet in Florida. But White House Chief of Staff Mark Meadows said in an earlier statement Wednesday that “there are no plans to conduct interviews in Florida.”
Donald Trump has not yet met with Barbara Lagoa, a possible candidate for the Supreme Court. Image via AP Photo/Wilfredo Lee.
“Trump’s businesses raked in $1.9 billion of revenue during his first three years in office” via Dan Alexander of Forbes — Trump never really got out of business. Sure, he handed day-to-day management of his companies to his children, like a lot of tycoons who get preoccupied with other interests late in life. But the President held on to ownership of his assets after taking office, ensuring that he would continue to generate money while serving in the White House. From 2017 to 2019, the President’s businesses raked in an estimated $1.9 billion of revenue. It’s a significant sum, no matter how you look at it. Documents from various sources help show where the money comes from and roughly how much of it turns into profit. An analysis that relies on those documents and conversations with industry experts, broken down for the first time in the forthcoming book White House, Inc., provides an unprecedented look at the President’s finances, which he has worked so hard to shield from public scrutiny.
“Marco Rubio, Rick Scott make the case for Lagoa directly to Trump” via Alex Daugherty of the Miami Herald — Florida’s two U.S. senators have made personal appeals to Trump to replace Ginsburg on the Supreme Court with Lagoa, a Miami native. In interviews with the Miami Herald, Republican Sens. Scott and Rubio said they spoke to Trump about their preference for Lagoa, a federal judge on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 11th Circuit in Atlanta and former Florida Supreme Court justice. Lagoa is considered a top finalist for the lifetime appointment along with Amy Coney Barrett, a federal judge on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 7th Circuit in Chicago.
“Matt Gaetz rips bandage off GOP voter suppression charade” via Joe Henderson of Florida Politics — In case there ever was any doubt, Florida Republicans really don’t want felons who served their time in prison to vote. Ever. They will do whatever they can get away with to keep that from happening. Don’t try to pretend they won’t. Oh, they might say otherwise when microphones are around, but Florida’s resident representative blabbermouth, U.S. Rep. Gaetz, ripped the bandage off that charade. He demanded an investigation into Bloomberg’s gambit to pay the fines and fees of some Florida felons. “It’s not every felon. It’s just those which they have specifically identified as the Biden voters,” Gaetz told Lou Dobbs on Fox Business. “That’s offering a bribe, an inducement, for someone to behave a certain way in voting.”
Matt Gaetz demonstrates that Florida Republicans have no desire for ex-felons to vote. Image via AP.
“House passes Stephanie Murphy bill making Medal of Honor possible for Alwyn Cashe” via Scott Powers of Florida Politics — The possibility of a Medal of Honor for the late Army Sgt. First Class Cashe of Oviedo came a step closer Tuesday when the U.S. House of Representatives approved a bill making it possible. By unanimous consent late Tuesday, the House passed House Resolution 8276, introduced by Democratic Rep. Murphy of Winter Park and co-sponsored by Republican Rep. Michael Waltz of St. Augustine Beach and Republican Rep. DanCrenshaw of Texas. HR 8276 would waive a five-year time statute of limitations that has expired for normal consideration for Medal of Honor awards by directly authorizing the President to award the medal “for acts of valor during Operation Iraqi Freedom.”
“Former South Florida Congresswoman Ileana Ros-Lehtinen under federal investigation” via Jim DeFede of CBS Miami — Former Congresswoman Ros-Lehtinen is under federal investigation by the Justice Department for allegedly spending campaign money on personal trips and vacations for her and her family, CBS Miami has learned. In recent weeks, former members of her staff have been subpoenaed to either provide records or appear before a grand jury regarding tens of thousands of dollars of expenditures by Ros-Lehtinen, including a 2017 trip to Walt Disney World with her children and grandchildren. The investigation is being run by the Public Integrity Section of the Justice Department in Washington, D.C. After announcing April 30, 2017, that she would not seek reelection in 2018, Ros-Lehtinen transferred more than $177,000 from her reelection campaign account to IRL PAC, a political action committee that she controlled.
Local notes
“Bay County debt committee approves $50 million bond to cover Hurricane Michael costs” via Tony Mixon of the Panama City News Herald — The Bay County debt committee has agreed to seek a $50 million bond to add onto the $250 million the county has already borrowed to cover Hurricane Michael expenses. The Bay County Commission must still give final approval for the bond. The county to date has paid back $100 million of the $250 million they’ve borrowed. The debt committee had three options to choose from and had a wide selection of competitive interest rates, according to County Manager Bob Majka. Out of the three, the committee chose a deal with Truist Bank out of Pensacola for $50 million on a 1.06% fixed interest rate. The interest rate is favorable in comparison $250 million the county borrowed after Hurricane Michael.
“Hillsborough commissioners clash over economic incentives” via C.T. Bowen of the Tampa Bay Times — Not that Commissioners Sandy Murman and Pat Kemp were that chummy anyway. Murman, a Republican, is challenging the reelection of Kemp, a Democrat, in the race for the District 6 countywide commission seat in November. Murman must vacate her District 1 seat after 10 years because of term limits. A key difference is their stands on publicly financed incentives to private companies for economic development projects. Murman favors them, part of her laserlike focus on jobs. Kemp says she does so only in some targeted instances of recruiting industries offering high-wage employment. So, a dust-up over a planned Home Depot warehouse near Gibsonton and a second, smaller warehouse project provide political fodder for both.
There is no love lost between Pat Kemp and Sandy Murman.
“Lifesaving drone could be coming to Manatee County 911 response system” via Lia Fernandez of WTSP — Manatee County leaders are partnering with a private drone company to become one of the nation’s first government agencies to use autonomous drones as part of a 911 emergency response. “I do believe that this is the future of public safety,” said Jake Saur, Manatee County’s public safety director. The drone is designed by an Orlando-based company called Archer First Response Systems. The founder and CEO of AFRS, Gordon Folkes, said this technology can save lives by getting the necessary equipment to victims quicker than ever before. “If this drone were to drop an AED, Narcan or a tourniquet the 911 telecommunicator would continue to instruct the caller or bystanders on how to operate that until EMS can arrive,” Saur said. In a 6-1 vote, Manatee County commissioners approved a one-year pilot program of the system.
Smoldering
“Allegations of racism have marked Trump’s presidency and become key issue as election nears” via Greg Miller of The Washington Post — In unguarded moments with senior aides, Trump has maintained that Black Americans have mainly themselves to blame in their struggle for equality, hindered more by lack of initiative than societal impediments, according to current and former U.S. officials. After phone calls with Jewish lawmakers, Trump has muttered that Jews “are only in it for themselves” and “stick together” in an ethnic allegiance that exceeds other loyalties, officials said. Trump’s private musings about Hispanics match the vitriol he has displayed in public, and his antipathy to Africa is so ingrained that when first lady Melania Trump planned a 2018 trip to that continent he railed that he “could never understand why she would want to go there.”
Allegations of Donald Trump’s racism is becoming a top issue in his reelection effort.
“‘It’s undemocratic.’ Miami-Dade law enforcement, residents discuss proposed protest bill” via C. Isaiah Smalls II of the Miami Herald — DeSantis’ proposed bill to discourage violent protesters dominated conversation Wednesday during the Miami-Dade County Community Relations Board meeting. For nearly an hour, representatives from several local law enforcement agencies and residents discussed the ramifications of this potential legislation. “What this legislation does is penalize those who are protesting police brutality,” Chire Regans, a teaching artist at Pérez Art Museum Miami, said. Formally called the “Combating Violence, Disorder and Looting and Law Enforcement Protection Act,” the bill would enact harsher penalties for destructive protesters. Blocking traffic without a permit and participating in assemblies of more than six people that end in injury or property damage would be considered felony offenses.
“Sarasota protesters marched in streets for George Floyd; proposed law would make that a felony” via Zac Anderson of the Sarasota Herald-Tribune — After Floyd’s death in Minneapolis in May hundreds of protesters took to the streets of Sarasota for a week of sustained demonstrations calling for racial justice. Aided by police, who blocked off roadways to prevent cars from converging on protesters, the crowds marched up and down Main Street, stalling traffic on that road and other busy streets, including U.S. 41, Fruitville Road and U.S. 301. Many of the protesters were high school and college students. A group of young women, college students who were friends from their days at Pine View School, knelt in the rain one day and chanted “I can’t breathe” as they blocked the intersection of Fruitville Road and U.S. 301. If new legislation proposed by DeSantis becomes law, those women could be charged with a third-degree felony if they obstruct traffic during an unpermitted protest in the future.
“DeSantis’ protest bill questioned by Tampa Bay’s top cops, not just ‘far-left’” via Jack Evans, Kathryn Varn, Tony Marrero and Dan Sullivan of the Tampa Bay Times — When Fox News’ Tucker Carlson asked DeSantis earlier this week who would oppose the protest-crackdown legislation DeSantis unveiled Monday, the governor had one answer: “The far left.” In the days since, opposition and reservations have come from politicians on that side of the aisle, not just the “far left,” but from a variety of Florida Democrats, and from elsewhere. Anti-racism protesters called it racist and dangerous. Defense attorneys said it goes too far. And even some of Tampa Bay’s top lawmen had mixed feelings. “Some things are there that would potentially make sense under the right circumstances,” Pinellas County Sheriff Bob Gualtieri said. “But I can also see just some blanket categorical that would legitimately give people pause and give people concern where you wouldn’t just accept it as it’s proposed.”
“Anti-riot plan seems timed for election season” via Bill Cotterell of the Tallahassee Democrat — The Republican Governor had a problem in a big election year. It wasn’t the worst crisis confronting the nation, but it seriously offended a lot of people. Worst of all, his opponents were exploiting it politically, and there wasn’t much he could do to take credit for combating a situation steadily spreading across the state and nation. And so, about 50 years ago, Gov. Claude Kirk called a news conference and directed his general counsel to start filing “friend of the court” briefs in pornography prosecutions. Kirk went around the state, in that campaign year of 1970, declaring that he and President Richard Nixon would not let American youth be corrupted by films and magazines so shocking to the 1950s generation.
“New Port Richey Police say an officer who gave information to a ‘Back the Blue’ protester is no longer on the force” via Justin Garcia of Creative Loafing — The New Port Richey Police Department said it no longer employs an officer who allegedly gave a pro-police Facebook user information on the whereabouts of a Black Lives Matter demonstration. On Sept. 4, Facebook user Jason Guralny shared a picture of himself wearing military gear and multiple pistols, and posted, “So BLM is bringing a bunch of people to downtown NPR tonight??” Guralny wrote in the post, “Hold on, let me get dressed.” The caption included the hashtags #backtheblue, #notinourtown and #blackgunsmatter. In the comments captured in screenshots and shared by Black Lives Matter Pasco County, Guralny made threats toward protesters. Guralny’s threats were made toward a protest that was scheduled for that night. However, the event was canceled, but former New Port Richey police officer Corey Oliver jumped in the comments to casually give the armed vigilante police information.
“Reports that city is ‘defunding’ its police department are ‘reprehensible’” via Mike Diamond of The Palm Beach Post — City commissioners Tuesday blasted state Rep. Mike Caruso for claiming that the city is “defunding” the police. What he (Caruso) has done is “reprehensible,” said Mayor Shelly Petrolia, going on to say Caruso is “a candidate who uses lies and fears to advance himself.” “We are not defunding the police and he knows that. People are saying they will not patronize our downtown area because of what he has been saying and the way it has been picked up by the media.” The issue developed after The Palm Beach Post reported last week that the city was cutting $421,411 from the overtime budget of the police department. The budget document prepared for the city said the cuts will result in an increase in crime. Sims later retracted the comments, claiming they were mistakenly included in the budget document and should have been removed.
Mike Caruso is getting pushback for suggesting Delray Beach is ‘defunding’ its police force.
“Desmond Meade says ‘resolve’ strengthen after pardon decision” via Dara Kam of The News Service of Florida — Meade, a former drug dealer who has garnered international accolades after leading the drive to pass a 2018 constitutional amendment to restore voting rights for felons, said he’s been waiting two decades to have his civil rights, which include the right to sit on juries and run for public office, restored. “If a person with my record would have to wait, what does that say for everyone else?” said Meade. “So, my resolve is strengthened.” Meade appeared before the state Board of Executive Clemency — comprised of DeSantis and the Florida Cabinet — to seek a pardon. But Chief Financial Officer Jimmy Patronis raised questions about domestic violence incidents in the past involving Meade’s ex-wife and brother.
Top opinion
“Florida’s cities aren’t burning down, Governor” via the Tampa Bay Times editorial board — DeSantis and two of the state’s top Republican leaders rubbed shoulders with law enforcement Monday to announce a crackdown on violent protests. Speaking at the Polk County Sheriff’s Office, DeSantis called for a law in the 2021 legislative session that would hand felony penalties to protesters who block traffic without a permit and to those who gather in small groups at events that result in injuries or property damage. DeSantis said the measure would be a “focal point” of the legislative session that begins in March, and he also vowed to withhold state funding from any local government “that slashes the budget for law enforcement.” This is a solution in search of a problem. Though protests against police violence against Black Americans have become violent in some cities since demonstrations erupted across the country this summer, the protests across Florida and the Tampa Bay area have been largely peaceful.
Opinions
“The election that could break America” via Barton Gellman of The Atlantic — The danger is not merely that the 2020 election will bring discord. Those who fear something worse take turbulence and controversy for granted. The coronavirus pandemic, a reckless incumbent, a deluge of mail-in ballots, a vandalized Postal Service, a resurgent effort to suppress votes, and a trainload of lawsuits are bearing down on the nation’s creaky electoral machinery. Something has to give, and many things will, when the time comes for casting, canvassing, and certifying the ballots. Anything is possible, including a landslide that leaves no doubt on Election Night. But even if one side takes a commanding early lead, tabulation and litigation of the “overtime count” could keep the outcome unsettled for days or weeks.
“Bloomberg raises big bucks to help Florida’s ex-felons vote. We’ll take a little credit for that” via the Miami Herald Editorial Board — Last week, the Editorial Board urged Bloomberg to “write a big old check” to help ex-felons in Florida vote in the presidential election. The editorial was picked up by several national outlets. This week, he announced that he has raised almost $20 million for the cause. Bravo! After decades of being denied the right to vote, most former prisoners in the state still are being denied access to the ballot box, even though, in 2018, a solid majority of voters approved a constitutional amendment allowing them to cast a ballot. DeSantis and the Republican Legislature erected what they knew would be a roadblock.
“Florida’s hospitality industry creates opportunity; Amendment 2 kills it” via Mike Quillen and John Horne for the Sarasota Herald-Tribune — The restaurant and hospitality industry is deeply invested in creating long-term economic value in our communities. We are our nation’s second-largest private-sector employer; the largest employer of first-time job seekers and increasingly, the employer of choice for first-time job seekers, seniors and others seeking supplemental income. Not only do we employ on the front end of the economic spectrum; we recirculate economic stimulus through many farmers, ranchers and vendors. And we proudly give back to our communities, supporting schools, law enforcement, military, veterans and untold numbers of charitable foundations through our philanthropy. The nation’s hospitality industry is working hard to come back from COVID’s devastating economic downturn, but here in Florida, our gains will be lost and jobs will be destroyed if Florida voters pass Amendment 2. We urge Floridians to vote no on Amendment 2 because it hurts the workers it claims to help, drives up costs for everyone and will combine with COVID to devastate Florida’s economy long-term.
Today’s Sunrise
Florida is preparing for the arrival of Trump. He’s holding a rally at Cecil Airport in Jacksonville — much to the dismay of some Florida veterans.
Also, on today’s Sunrise:
— Anyone attending the President’s rally will have to sign a liability waiver that takes away their right to sue if the contract COVID-19.
— Speaking of coronavirus, the Education Commissioner Richard Corcoran says the reopening of public schools has been a model for the rest of the country.
— As for those 18,000 students and teachers now in quarantine because of COVID-19, Corcoran says the health department is being too strict. He said that as the Department of Health reported 203 more fatalities from COVID 19 … and almost 2,600 new cases of coronavirus.
— A deep dive into the clemency hearing for Meade, a former felon who is executive director of the Florida Rights Restoration Coalition. He asked for a pardon and it didn’t happen.
— And finally, a Florida Man who stole blood from a clinic … a veterinary clinic.
“Bus-size asteroid to zoom by Earth, ducking below satellites” via Marcia Dunn of The Associated Press — An asteroid the size of a school bus is headed our way, but NASA says the space rock will zoom safely past Earth on Thursday. The newly discovered asteroid will come within 13,000 miles of Earth, well below many of the communications satellites orbiting the planet, scientists said this week. The closest approach will occur Thursday morning over the southeastern Pacific Ocean. Once it’s gone, the asteroid won’t be back to Earth’s neighborhood until 2041. Scientists estimate the asteroid is between 15 feet and 30 feet. By asteroid standards, that’s considered puny. Asteroids of this size hit Earth’s atmosphere and burn up once every year or two, said Paul Chodas, director of the Center for Near-Earth Object Studies at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory. There could be as many as 100 million of these little asteroids out there.
Happy birthday
Best wishes to Jessica Love of GrayRobinson, as well as Javi Correoso of Uber, Minnie Cora Merritt of the Board of Governors, and Jocelyn Mund.
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Good morning and welcome to Fox News First. Here’s what you need to know as you start your day …
Louisville police officers shot amid Breonna Taylor protests; suspect in custody
At least two police officers were shot in Louisville, Ky., on Wednesday night as protesters flocked to the streets to rally against a grand jury’s decision regarding three officers who were involved in a March drug raid that left Breonna Taylor dead, authorities said.
The grand jury indicted one of the officers, former Louisville Metro police Officer Brett Hankison, for wanton endangerment over stray bullets that found their way into a neighboring family’s home. He was fired in June.
Shortly after a police news conference, reports emerged on social media that a third police officer may have been injured.
Wednesday’s two police victims were being treated at a hospital for non-life-threatening injuries, interim Louisville Metro police Chief Robert Schroeder told reporters around 10 p.m. ET.
President Trump on Wednesday night tweeted he was “Praying for the two police officers that were shot tonight in Louisville, Kentucky. The Federal Government stands behind you and is ready to help. Spoke to @GovAndyBeshear and we are prepared to work together, immediately upon request!”
Louisville Mayor Greg Fischer tweeted late Wednesday, “Our hearts go out to the two @LMPD officers who were shot. Please pray for them and their families, & pray for our city, and all who are in pain today. For anyone who is still out, please go home tonight. Violence doesn’t get us closer to a fair, just and equitable city.” CLICK HERE FOR MORE ON OUR TOP STORY.
In other developments:
– Louisville protesters grab signs, shields other supplies from U-Haul truck: video
– Breonna Taylor case evidence does not ‘prove a homicide’ by police, Andy McCarthy says
– Reporter recalls shooting in Louisville as Breonna Taylor protests rage: ‘People started to scatter’
– New details emerge from night Breonna Taylor was shot after review of over 1,200 crime scene photos
– LeBron James on Breonna Taylor case: ‘The most DISRESPECTED person on earth is THE BLACK WOMAN!’
Rand Paul says he’ll refer Senate panels’ report on Bidens, Ukraine to DOJ for criminal probe
U.S. Sen. Rand Paul, R-Ky., plans to refer the Senate Homeland Security and Finance committees’ report on its investigation into Hunter Biden’s overseas business dealings to the Justice Department later this week for a criminal investigation, he told “The Story” on Wednesday.
“I think riding on Air Force Two and doing business is illegal … and probably a felony,” Paul told host Martha MacCallum. “I think it’s illegal to take money from a Russian politician’s wife, $3.5 million — was it reported accurately?”
Paul was referencing items from the new report, which details Hunter Biden’s role on the board of Ukrainian natural gas firm Burisma Holdings and his alleged “extensive and complex financial transactions.”
The Senate committees revealed they had obtained records that “show potential criminal activity relating to transactions among and between Hunter Biden, his family, and his associates with Ukrainian, Russian, Kazakh and Chinese nationals. CLICK HERE FOR MORE.
In other developments:
– Hannity: Senate GOP’s Hunter Biden report should ‘immediately disqualify’ Joe Biden from presidency
– Kim Strassel: New report reveals Biden’s ‘wink-nod’ approach to Hunter’s business dealings overseas
– GOP-led committees release interim report on Hunter Biden, Burisma probe
– Senate Homeland Security Committee authorizes subpoenas for testimony from Obama officials as part of Russia probe
Acting DHS boss takes aim at ‘fabricated’ complaints, reports at confirmation hearing
Acting Homeland Security Secretary Chad Wolf on Wednesday fired back at a series of allegations about his time in charge of the Department of Homeland Security as he was questioned by senators during a hearing to confirm him to the role permanently.
Wolf has held the position in an acting capacity since last year, replacing then-acting Secretary Kevin McAleenan. President Trump formally nominated Wolf for the position last month.
DHS has been in the crosshairs over a number of issues, including the treatment of illegal immigrants, intelligence surrounding potential foreign interference in elections and its approach to handling anarchist violence in cities like Portland, Ore.
His testimony came amid reports the consulting firm where Wolf’s wife is an executive received more than $6 million in DHS contracts since September 2018. NBC reported the consulting company had a long history of federal contracts but worked for DHS after Wolf became Transportation Security Administration chief of staff in 2017.
Wolf said he found out about the contracts in response to media inquiries but had no role in procurements.
“Whether I was chief of staff, acting secretary, under secretary or any other position at the department, I have no role in procurements, I don’t even see procurements until they are released, in the news, on the street,” he said. CLICK HERE FOR MORE.
In other developments:
– DHS chief Wolf says border crossers now are mostly single adults coming for economic reasons
– Wolf says ‘lone, homegrown’ terror threat is top DHS focus 19 years after 9/11
– DHS ‘will never abdicate this moral and legal duty’ to protect US from rioters: Chad Wolf
TODAY’S MUST-READS:
– Trump predicts Supreme Court will decide outcome of election as he pushes quick confirmation
– Former NFL player Marcellus Wiley rips Black Lives Matter after it removes page on disrupting ‘nuclear family structure’
– Mark Steyn blasts Seattle’s hiring of former pimp as alternative to police: ‘This is a joke’
– Portland mayor realizes defunding police ‘was a mistake’: cop union leader
– NY Times chairman Arthur Sulzberger Jr. retiring, handing role to son
– Coronavirus testing czar claims he’s ‘never been pressured’ by Trump to ‘change the guidance’
THE LATEST FROM FOX BUSINESS:
– WeWork sells majority stake in China business, cutting costs
– Airline passengers want to see barriers to boost confidence: industry executives
– AOC calls on Cuomo, de Blasio to raise NY taxes: report
#TheFlashback: CLICK HERE to find out what happened on “This Day in History.”
SOME PARTING WORDS
Laura Ingraham told viewers of “The Ingraham Angle” on Wednesday night that riots in the aftermath of a Louisville grand jury indicting one of three officers in the Breanna Taylor case were “being fueled in part by a lie.” The lie, she said, was “that America is a systemically racist country” that hasn’t made progress on race issues since the 1950s and 1960s.
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Thursday, September 24, 2020
Breonna Taylor
“Hours after a Kentucky grand jury brought no charges against Louisville police for Breonna Taylor’s death and protesters took to the streets, authorities said two officers were shot and wounded Wednesday night… The violence comes after prosecutors said two officers who fired their weapons at Taylor, a Black woman, were justified in using force to protect themselves after they faced gunfire from her boyfriend. The only charges were three counts of wanton endangerment against fired Officer Brett Hankison for shooting into a home next to Taylor’s with people inside.” AP News
“[Kentucky Attorney General Daniel] Cameron said Wednesday that officers both knocked and announced their presence at Taylor’s apartment, a conclusion he said his team reached based on officers’ statements and a corroborating witness — a civilian.” Louisville Courier-Journal
The left welcomes Louisville’s police reforms but is disappointed by the indictment.
“After this horrific killing spawned local outrage and garnered national attention, Louisville voted to ban no-knock warrants. Many jurisdictions around the country have followed suit…
“Though Ms. Taylor’s death was partially tied to a specific kind of warrant, the [Louisville police] department has agreed to more oversight over warrants in general — commanding officers will be required to review and approve all search warrants. The department will also implement a system to identify officers who repeatedly violate standards, a system that might have flagged one of the officers involved in Ms. Taylor’s killing. The police department also will encourage officers to live in the community and take part in community service…
“These are welcome measures that may do much good, particularly if they are accompanied by robust accountability efforts that ensure the reforms aren’t walked back after the national gaze turns elsewhere. Still, there is so much a settlement like this cannot do: It cannot change the fact that Black women too often have lethal brushes with the law, simply because of the company they have once kept; it cannot change the fact that too many cases are ignored, as Ms. Taylor’s case could easily have been without the tireless efforts of advocates; and it cannot bring her back.” Editorial Board, Washington Post
Brett Hankison “had a record of sexual assault allegations against him that were all dismissed. Meanwhile, Hankison is also being sued by a man who says Hankison harasses suspects with unnecessary arrests and by planting drugs on them. While the system will formally track such complaints, the allegations against Hankison were already known — and didn’t bar him from staying on the job… the reforms presented in Louisville are so far only scratching the surface of problems that run deep through policing’s core.” Fabiola Cineas, Vox
“The victims are identified by their initials – ‘C.D.,’ ‘T.M.,’ and ‘Z.F.’ – but there is no mention of ‘B.T.’ The woman whose death helped to galvanize mass protests and a racial reckoning in America was quite literally erased by the justice system… Wanton endangerment is a Class D felony that means the accused put someone at risk of death or serious injury by behaving in a way that shows ‘extreme indifference to the value of human life.’ Other examples in the same [class D felony] category include shoplifting, possessing illegal drugs or stalking–crimes that are hardly on the same level as shooting rounds into a civilian’s apartment.” Angelina Chapin, The Cut
“Collectively, the three officers fired more than 30 rounds… An evaluation of a use of force case requires more than a distillation of provocation. It requires an evaluation of the reasonableness of the amount of force used, and whether the officers used more force than was necessary to neutralize the threat. We are left without insight into whether that evaluation was made, let alone contemplated, and whether the logic was guided by the same benefit of the doubt afforded to police officers in officer-involved shootings but denied to civilians accused of similar actions…
“The fact that Taylor, who neither held nor fired a gun at the officers, was the ultimate recipient of that lethal force underscores the true tragedy. Disturbingly, it seems her death was summarily dismissed as collateral damage. The mere phrase ‘collateral damage’ evokes a visceral reaction. But so does the realization that they decided to prosecute an officer for prospective loss of life, but none of the officers for the actual loss of life. It confounds the mind as much as the soul. But until there is a judicial reassessment of how we evaluate the reasonableness of an officer’s use of lethal force, it is justice that will end up being collateral damage.” Laura Coates, CNN
“At a time when advocates across the country are calling for reprioritizing funding for traditional law enforcement, it’s essential that reforms also include the removal of draconian and overly punitive drug laws, which are at the heart of why so many Black people are harassed, arrested and imprisoned by police in the first place. Black people are almost four times as likely as their white counterparts to be arrested on marijuana charges, despite similar rates of consumption…
“We need a public health approach to drugs and increase access to health and social services for people involved with the drug market. Several studies have found that addiction treatment also decreases crime. But in cities across the United States, the allocation to public health is often less than what is spent on overtime for police.” Kasia Malinowska-Sempruch, Salon
From the Right
The right argues that the indictment was the right decision but worries about the self-defense implications of common police practices.
“At a time when Americans have watched too many public officials abdicate their responsibilities to uphold the law, Kentucky Attorney General Daniel Cameron on Wednesday proved to be an encouraging exception… Mr. Cameron’s manner was calm and deliberate, always returning to facts and law. His handling of a difficult task ought to reassure Americans who worry about police who use excessive force, but also about the riots following some police shootings and cases of politicized justice…
“Mr. Cameron said his ‘heart breaks’ for the Taylor family, that Breonna’s death is a ‘tragedy,’ and that ‘as a black man’ he understands the pain the community feels. But he says this has made his team all the more determined to get to the facts. Now, he says, it is up to the community: ‘Our reaction to the truth today says what kind of society we want to be. Do we really want the truth, or do we want a truth that fits our narrative?’” Editorial Board, Wall Street Journal
“On MSNBC, retired African American Los Angeles Police Department Sgt. Cheryl Dorsey criticized Cameron for not filing additional charges against officers: ‘Let me say this as a Black woman… he does not speak for Black folks. He’s skinfolk but not, he is not kinfolk… He does not speak for all of us. This was not a tragedy, this was a murder. He should be ashamed of himself.’ Louisville attorney Dawn Elliot, who is also Black, said earlier that Cameron needs to stop ‘eating the coon flakes the White House is serving’ and criticized him for supporting President Trump…
“It’s sad that Blacks on the left seek to force, bully and shame other Blacks to operate in emotion and fear. It’s sad that we can’t all collectively grieve for another Black life lost without running away totally from facts and reason. It’s sad that so many prominent African American leaders wholly endorse and promote the kind of reckless emotion that has caused so much pain and destruction of our cities over the past few months. This is an emotional moment, but we must not let our emotions get in the way of facts, and we must not let preconceived narratives influence rash decisions. We must not allow our country to be dictated to by the whims of the left-wing media and mob rule.” Rob Smith, Fox News
“I understand the charges against Hankinson. One of the first things I ever learned when I began regularly taking self defense firearm courses is to 1) know your target and 2) know what’s behind your target. Firing into vertical blind-covered windows is neither of these things and not just a stated violation of Louisville Police Department policy, but also of gun training, period…
“Kentucky has both Castle Doctrine and a stand your ground law — meaning you can protect yourself without duty to retreat… By all accounts Walker was well within his rights as a legal gun owner woken up in the middle of the night to loud noises…
“No-knock raids coupled with Castle Doctrine are a legal paradox and concerning threat to the right of self defense. Yes — the AG says the Taylor case wasn’t a no-knock raid and stated that the officers did knock and announced their presence, confirmed by a witness, but Walker maintains he didn’t hear, didn’t know they were police and thought the couple was being robbed… It’s completely possible that the officers announced and Walker didn’t hear them. It’s possible to believe that he thought it was a home invasion or robbery.” Dana Loesch, Substack
Dated But Relevant: “Recall Walker’s 911 call. If he was telling the truth in the moment, even immediately after the shootout, he didn’t know what was happening. Many of these dynamic entries take place late at night, triggering absolute chaos in a home when people were moments before sleeping soundly. Cops are yelling, dogs are barking, and armed men are sprinting through your home in the dark. In that moment—absent immediate clarity regarding the officers’ identity—multiple state statutes give you the right to reach for a gun the Constitution permits you to possess…
“Something (or some things) have to give, and those ‘things’ are no-knock raids and qualified immunity. Individual liberties should not be sacrificed on the altar of police drug raids, and victims of civil rights abuses should be entitled to receive compensation for their losses, including their injuries and wounds… Supreme Court precedent has empowered these conflicts, but legislatures can change the law. Widespread no-knock raids are incompatible with civil liberties, including one of the most basic civil liberties of all—the fundamental right of self-defense.” David French, The Dispatch
A libertarian’s take
“The March 13 shooting, which has figured prominently in recent protests against police brutality, followed a sadly familiar pattern. Hankison and two other plainclothes officers broke into Taylor’s home around 12:40 a.m., awakening her and her boyfriend, Kenneth Walker, who mistook the armed invaders for robbers… This sort of operation is inherently dangerous because the same tactics that police use to catch their targets off guard, in the hope of preventing resistance, predictably lead to that very result as residents exercise their constitutional right to armed self-defense. That scenario has played out again and again in cities across the country for decades…“The problem is the attempt to forcibly prevent Americans from consuming arbitrarily proscribed intoxicants, which is fundamentally immoral because it sanctions violence as a response to peaceful conduct that violates no one’s rights. That problem cannot be solved by tinkering at the edges of drug prohibition.” Jacob Sullum, Reason
🌞 Good Thursday morning. Election Day is 40 days away. Today’s Smart Brevity™ count: 1,441 words … 5½ minutes.
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1 big thing: The blowout scenario
Joe Biden speaks at an outdoor Black Economic Summit in Charlotte yesterday. Photo: Kevin Lamarque/Reuters
Joe Biden or President Trump could win the election narrowly — but only one in a popular and electoral vote blowout.
Polls show the possibility for Biden is quite plausible: He is winning in Wisconsin, Michigan and Pennsylvania, and essentially even in Florida — all Trump states in 2016.
And remember: Trump lost the popular vote by 3 million last time to a much more unpopular Democrat, Hillary Clinton.
Why it matters: A Biden blowout would mean a Democratic Senate, a bigger Democratic House and a huge political and policy shift nationwide.
The reason this scenario is worth reflecting on is both the consequences, and because campaign advisers in both camps see it as a possibility.
Biden, thanks in part to changing demographics, is running close or better in red states Texas, Georgia, Arizona, Iowa and North Carolina.
In 2018, Democrats saw record turnout, especially among women. The early requests for ballots in key states suggest the enthusiasm persists at record levels.
Democrats are raising money like rich Republicans — and, in fact, have a lot more than Trump and his allies, even though they are out of power.
Between the lines: The N.Y. Times’ Nate Cohn puts it this way: “[A] Biden landslide is just as real a possibility as a Trump victory.”
“If Mr. Biden outperformed today’s polls by just two points, he would be declared the winner early on election night and have a good shot at the largest electoral vote landslide since 1988.”
The bottom line: Trump has few paths to the presidency if he loses Florida or in the upper Midwest. His team believes Minnesota is a state he lost that he could now win, but polls suggest otherwise.
So, once again, his best and maybe only chance is to lose the popular vote and replicate razor-thin wins in the same states as last time.
After months of urging absentee voting, top Democrats are now promoting in-person voting as threats rise from mail delays, litigation and ballot rejections, Axios’ Alexi McCammond and Margaret Talev write.
Why it matters: Democrats are exponentially more likely to vote by mail than Republicans. If enough mail-in ballots are lost, rejected on a technicality or undercounted, it could change the outcome.
In Colorado, former Gov. John Hickenlooper, who’s running against Sen. Cory Gardner, told Axios that he’s encouraging voters to physically take their mail-in ballots to a dropbox and to do so “early, really early.”
At the Democratic convention, President and Mrs. Obama both encouraged Democrats to vote early any way they can, including in person.
Biden campaign officials say they’ve always encouraged people to vote however they are most comfortable, and that they’ve never exclusively stressed one method over another.
“For us it’s always been about how we can get people to vote early no matter what, and that’s our number one priority,” said Jenn Ridder, national states director for the Biden campaign.
Last week, Joe Biden and Dr. Jill Biden early-voted in person, a day ahead of a Delaware primary.
3. Breonna Taylor result energizes racial-justice movement for fall
Police and protesters converge in Louisville yesterday. Photo: John Minchillo/AP
Demonstrators were already filling downtownLouisville, with huge pre-made signs, while authorities were still on camera trying to explain why no one would be charged with Breonna Taylor’s death. The violent reaction shows outrage at the country’s law enforcement system “has in no way ebbed,” the WashPost writes:
“If anything, the anger has continued to build with each new case of a Black man or woman who dies at the hands of police.”
⚡ Two Louisville Metro Police officers were shot in downtown Louisville, sustaining non-life-threatening injuries, eight hours after the grand jury decision was announced, the Louisville Courier-Journal reports.
Anger, frustration and sadness over the decision not to charge Kentucky police officers for Taylor’s death poured into America’s streets, AP reports:
Hundreds of demonstrators chanted Taylor’s name and marched in New York (photo above),L.A.,Washington, Philadelphia and Vegas.
People gathered in downtown Chicago’s Millennium Park, chanting demands for justice as passing drivers on Michigan Avenue honked their horns.
Among celebrities on social media, “[t]he general sentiment was that the charge proved that Black lives do not matter, with many Black stars quoting author James Baldwin about being ‘in a rage almost all the time.'” —L.A. Times
4. Biden’s mail voting danger
The more you dislike President Trump, the more likely you are to vote by mail, Axios’ Margaret Talev and David Nather write from exclusive data from SurveyMonkey and Tableau.
Why it matters: The new data shows just how strongly the mail-in vote is likely to favor Joe Biden — with potentially enormous implications in swing states due to the greater risk of rejection with mail ballots.
The data suggests this could be a big factor in the battleground states of Arizona, Nevada, Michigan, Wisconsin, Florida and Pennsylvania.
Today, SurveyMonkey and Tableau, in partnership with Axios, are launching a data-rich interactive tool for the 2020 election. It features self-service visual analytics that will allow us — and you — to go deep to examine variables, including voting intentions by race and age, that could determine the election.
How it works: The tool tracks the Trump vs. Biden race nationally and at the state level. But it also offers a closer look at what really drives voter differences on everything from approval to the environment to immigration.
Results can be filtered by location, time period, party ID, and other variables such as race, gender, age, education level, issue and intensity of response.
5. Trump refuses to pledge peaceful transfer of power
Asked at a White House briefing last evening if he would “commit to making sure that there is a peaceful transferal of power after the election,” President Trump refused:
“Well, we’re going to have to see what happens. You know that. I’ve been complaining very strongly about the [mail-in]ballots. And the ballots are a disaster.”
“[G]et rid of the ballots and … we’ll have a very peaceful — there won’t be a transfer, frankly; there’ll be a continuation.”
That mindset has Third Way, the center-left think tank, warning in a new deck that Trump is using “both familiar and novel” ways to interfere with the election.
Third Way explains possible shenanigans with the count, electors, courts, state legislatures and Congress.
Matt Bennett, Third Way co-founder, told me: “If all the votes are counted, Biden will win. But all year — and especially in the past few days — Trump has made clear that he is trying to steal this election from voters.”
“This deck aims to ring a four-alarm fire to ensure that Democrats are running and funding a full-scale election protection counterforce.”
The coronavirus is surging once again across the U.S., with cases rising in 22 states over the past week, Axios’ Sam Baker and Andrew Witherspoon write.
There isn’t one big event or sudden occurrence that explains this increase.
We simply have never done a very good job containing the virus, despite losing 200,000 lives in just the past six months, and this is what that persistent failure looks like.
What’s next: There’s every reason to believe the next several months will be a particularly high-risk period.
Colder weather will cause people to move indoors, where the virus spreads more easily. People will travel over the holidays. Mask adherence is already only so-so. And flu season will set in at the same time.
California Gov. Gavin Newsom moved yesterday to “ban the sale of new gasoline-powered cars to combat climate change starting in 2035, a move that could help reshape the nation’s automobile market,” the S.F. Chronicle reports.
Newsom signed an executive order “mandating that all new passenger vehicles sold in California in 15 years be zero-emission — a category that includes battery-powered electric cars and those that run on hydrogen fuel cells.”
8. Virus cuts incomes 10% worldwide … CEO optimism rises
One of the starkest stats I’ve seen on the pandemic:
The income earned by workers around the world fell 10%+ in the first nine months of 2020 because of the pandemic, the Financial Times (subscription) reports from International Labour Organization figures.
24 percent of CEOs said that business conditions never declined, have recovered, or will likely recover by the end of the year. Forty percent said they expect business conditions to recover in 2021, and 36 percent said they expect business conditions to recover in 2022 or later.
Simon & Schuster announced that Bob Woodward’s “Rage” sold 600,000 copies in the U.S. in Week 1 (pre-orders, sales of print books, ebooks, audiobooks and e-audiobooks).
The publisher ordered a fourth printing that will bring the number of hardcover copies in print to 1.3 million.
Here’s the N.Y. Timesbestseller list for Oct. 4, out yesterday:
10. Americans splurge on candy
Spotted yesterday in Freeport, Maine. Photo: Robert F. Bukaty/AP
Despite the uncertainty about trick or treating, Americans are buying a lot of Halloween candy while we wait, AP’s Dee-Ann Durbin writes:
U.S. sales of Halloween candy were up 13% over last year in the month ending Sept. 6. Sales of Halloween chocolate alone are up 25%.
Earlier Halloween displays at some chains — including dollar stores, Meijer and ShopRite — likely helped boost sales.
But we’re also splurging after months of pandemic anxiety.
Mike Allen
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A third officer was charged with recklessly firing rounds into a neighboring apartment unit. The outcome of the investigation into the death of the 26-year-old woman has inflamed racial protests nationwide.
By Kevin Williams, Tim Craig and Marisa Iati ● Read more »
Democrats had big hopes for Texas, but the party’s Senate candidate lags behind longtime Republican incumbent John Cornyn six weeks before Election Day.
Democrats are shooting themselves in the foot by threatening to stack the Supreme Court with sympathetic justices and raising the specter of impeachment, according to Republican strategists who see an opportunity to paint Joe Biden as intent on upending constitutional norms.
VILNIUS, Lithuania — Marina Garbuz, 27, insists it was her constitutional right to observe election voting at a school in Minsk Aug. 9, even though she and her 1-year-old daughter were threatened by authorities.
Fox News host Tucker Carlson says the majority of media coverage revolving around the death of Breonna Taylor has engaged in false messaging to push a political narrative before the upcoming election.
CEOs said they worry that economic recovery will stall if Washington fails to approve another relief package, hours before stocks accelerated losses through the end of the day.
Dr. Scott Atlas, the Stanford radiologist-turned-White House adviser, on Wednesday accused Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Director Robert Redfield of “misstating” coronavirus data.
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AP MORNING WIRE
Good morning. In today’s AP Morning Wire:
Exclusive: Palm oil labor abuses linked to world’s top brands, banks.
Dismay and anger over Breonna Taylor charges spill into America’s streets.
Election 2020: Trump won’t commit to peaceful transfer of power if he loses.
UNGA: World leaders criticize haphazard response to pandemic.
TAMER FAKAHANY DEPUTY DIRECTOR – GLOBAL NEWS COORDINATION, LONDON
The Rundown
AP PHOTO/BINSAR BAKKARA
Exclusive: Palm oil labor abuses linked to world’s top food and cosmetic brands, banks
An AP investigation into the invisible workforce of millions of laborers toiling in the palm oil industry in Malaysia and Indonesia found many suffering from exploitation — including child labor, outright slavery and allegations of rape.
One Indonesian man trapped on a Malaysian plantation run by government-owned Felda, one of the world’s largest palm oil companies, told AP in a desperate phone call: “I am not a free man anymore. I desperately want to see my mom and dad. I want to go home!”
The AP interviewed more than 130 current and former workers from two dozen palm oil companies who came from eight countries and labored on plantations across Malaysia and Indonesia. Almost all had serious complaints about their treatment, with some saying they were cheated, threatened, held against their will or forced to work off unsurmountable debts.
AP PHOTO/JOHN MINCHILLO
Dismay over lack of charges for Breonna Taylor’s death spills into America’s streets; Gunfire in Louisville
It has happened before on numerous occasions when justice was sought in the U.S. for the loss of a Black person’s life at the hands of white police.
Anger, frustration and sadness over the decision not to charge Kentucky police officers for Breonna Taylor’s death has poured into America’s streets. Protesters lashed out at a criminal justice system they say is stacked against Black people.
Activists, celebrities and ordinary Americans have been calling for charges since Taylor was shot multiple times by white officers who entered her home during a narcotics investigation in March.
A grand jury returned three charges of wanton endangerment against fired Officer Brett Hankison over shooting into a home next to Taylor’s with people inside.
Hundreds of demonstrators chanted Taylor’s name and marched in New York, Portland, Chicago, Washington, D.C., Philadelphia and Las Vegas.
Charging Cops: The outcome in the Taylor case demonstrates the vast disconnect between the public’s perception of what justice should look like and the limits of the law when police use deadly force. Activists and others have been calling for months for the officers who shot at Taylor to be charged with murder. But in the end none were. The long-awaited decision came amid calls for police reform across the U.S. spurred by the death of George Floyd in Minneapolis and other Black Americans by law enforcement, Alanna Durkin Richer reports.
Breonna Taylor Reaction:For months, actors, sports stars, musicians and other celebrities have been calling for justice for Breonna. Here are some of their quotes decrying the decision.
AP PHOTO/EVAN VUCCI
Trump won’t commit to peaceful transfer of power if he loses November election
President Donald Trump has again refused to commit to a peaceful transfer of power if he loses the Nov. 3 presidential election.
Trump’s Democratic challenger, Joe Biden, responded by asking, “What country are we in?”
It is highly unusual that a sitting U.S. president would express less than complete confidence in the American democracy’s electoral process. But Trump also declined four years ago to commit to honoring the election results if rival Hillary Clinton won, Aamer Madhani and Kevin Freking report.
Voter Voices: The death of Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg has set off a contentious political fight in Washington. But talking with dozens of voters in battleground states since then, many cited health care, the economy and personal complaints about Trump and Biden before mentioning the Supreme Court vacancy, Jill Colvin reports.
Ginsburg Memorial: She was remembered at the court in front of grieving family, colleagues and friends as a prophet for justice who persevered against long odds to become an American icon. Crowds grew outside as thousands waited for a chance to pay their respects.
On Friday, Ginsburg will lie in state at the Capitol, the first woman to do so and only the second Supreme Court justice after William Howard Taft, who had also been president. Rosa Parks, a private citizen not a government official, is the only woman who has lain in honor at the Capitol.
World leaders have used their speeches at this year’s virtual gathering of the United Nations General Assembly to slam the haphazard response to a microscopic virus that has taken nearly 1 million lives and unleashed economic havoc in its relentless march across the globe.
Kazakhstan’s president called it “a critical collapse of global cooperation.”
Countries large and small spoke about struggling to deal with the impact of the pandemic without international coordination, issuing pleas for the world to work together to combat the scourge and other global problems.
Global Vaccine Pleas: If the U.N. was created from the ashes of World War II, what will be born from the global crisis of COVID-19? Many world leaders at this week’s virtual summit hope it will be an affordable vaccine made available to all countries, rich and poor.
But with the U.S., China and Russia opting out of a collaborative effort to develop and distribute a vaccine, and some rich nations striking deals with pharmaceutical companies to secure millions of doses, the U.N. pleas are likely in vain, Cara Anna reports.
U.S. Vaccine: A huge study of a single-dose COVID-19 vaccine is getting underway as U.S. health officials seek to assure a skeptical public they can trust any shots the government ultimately approves. Trump is pushing for a fast decision, but the Food and Drug Administration’s chief has pledged that action will be based on science, not politics.
Hopes are high that answers about at least one of several vaccine candidates could come by year’s end. The one-dose contender from Johnson & Johnson will be tested in 60,000 people in the U.S. and several other countries, Lauran Neergaard and Ricardo Alonso- Zaldivar report.
South Korea says North Korean troops shot a South Korean official who may have attempted to defect, and set his body on fire after they found him in waters near the rivals’ disputed sea boundary. According to Seoul, the man disappeared from a government ship that was checking on potential unauthorized fishing. A defense official says the man might have tried to defect to North Korea and may have been shot in line with the North’s stringent anti-coronavirus rules.
The high-profile case of an alleged gang rape of a 17-year-old girl at a luxury Cairo hotel in 2014 has morphed into a government crackdown against potential witnesses to the crime. Several people have been detained and the developments have worried rights activists. The activists fear the Egyptian government is making an example of those who came forward with information about the alleged rape and say this will discourage other victims and witnesses from speaking out.
Smoke from the West Coast wildfires has tainted grapes in some of the nation’s most celebrated wine regions. The resulting ashy flavor could spell disaster for the 2020 vintage. The smoke from this year’s blazes has been especially bad — thick enough to obscure vineyards, which are drooping with clusters of grapes almost ready for harvest. Growers are trying to assess the extent of the smoke damage in California, Oregon and Washington.
Authorities now say 70 pilot whales have been rescued from Australia’s worst mass stranding and the focus is shifting to removing 380 carcasses from Tasmania state waters. Another 20 surviving whales could potentially still be saved and vets are considering euthanizing four others. An estimated 470 whales had beached themselves along the remote west coast of the island state.
Meanwhile, all the time we’ve spent at home the last six months has had an impact on the travel patterns in the city. The Tribune’s Kori Rumore broke down how COVID-19 and staying at home changed how Chicago gets around.
Here’s more coronavirus news some and other top stories you need to know to start your day.
On Wednesday, Black joined about 100 community residents and activists who blocked off a trucking route on the South Side in a peaceful protest after a Kentucky grand jury decided not to charge any Louisville police officers for their role in Taylor’s killing. Later in the evening, about 300 people gathered at the east end of a dark Palmer Square Park and other groups gathered by The Bean in Millennium Park.
Balloting for the Nov. 3 general election kicks off Thursday with the opening of some early-voting polling sites while election officials across the state begin to mail out ballots to some of the more than 1.7 million applicants and brace for an unprecedented surge in both types of voting because of the COVID-19 pandemic.
The Boystown banners are coming down. Business leaders in Chicago’s largest LGBTQ neighborhood announced Wednesday that they would stop marketing the area as Boystown, following complaints that the 30-year-old name excludes women and gender nonbinary people.
A lone cowboy rode out from obscurity this summer and into local fame, an oddball bright spot in a bleak year. The Dreadhead Cowboy — born Adam Hollingsworth — became a social media sensation, “our Batman,” a mainstay at Black Lives Matter protests, the mayor’s census ambassador, a friend to children across the city.
The summer heat has come and gone. With the weather starting to cool down, the time for fall activities — like apple picking and pumpkin patches — is here. If you’re looking for a way to get out of the house for a few hours because of the coronavirus pandemic, here is a list of apple orchards and pumpkin patches around the Chicago area.
Hundreds of demonstrators flooded Chicago streets from Auburn Gresham to Logan Square on Wednesday evening, decrying a grand jury decision not to charge police officers in the fatal Louisville, Kentucky, shooting of Breonna Taylor. Manny Ramos, Ben Pope, and Madeline Kenney have the story…
A Kentucky grand jury brought no charges against Louisville police for the killing of Breonna Taylor during a drug raid gone wrong, with prosecutors saying that two officers who fired their weapons at the Black woman were justified in using force to protect themselves after they were shot at.
Sources told the Sun-Times that Mayor Bradley Stephens acted after being approached by members of his nephew Donald E. Stephens III’s department with concerns about his leadership and conduct.
A parent started an online petition calling on CPS to reduce the amount of screen time for the youngest students. But not all families think the requirements are too burdensome.
He’ll be remembered for his extraordinary talent, and he’ll be remembered for knee injuries that robbed him of his speed and agility, writes columnist Rick Morrissey.
Chicago police’s use of no-knock warrants has come under scrutiny recently, with several lawsuits filed against officers who allegedly used them to search the homes of people who’ve done nothing wrong.
Mayor Lori Lightfoot said there will be a citywide moment of silence and reflection at 7 p.m. — the same time protesters planned to gather in Millennium Park.
Since a trio of state House Democrats held a news conference Monday playing the recordings and denouncing state Rep. Amy Grant, Democrat Ken Mejia-Beal has taken in $158,828.90 in donations – bringing his total campaign war chest to $417,185.90
A male Capitol Police officer allegedly used the department’s computer to solicit sex on Craigslist. Another stored sex toys in his police vehicle. A male commander asked a female subordinate to have sex with him in his hotel room. Court filings show all received some form of relatively light punishment. None got demoted or fired. Read More…
The looming fight over confirming a Supreme Court nominee will put members of the Senate Judiciary Committee in the spotlight, particularly Texas Republican John Cornyn, a former state Supreme Court judge whose reelection campaign has not been one of the marquee races in the battle for control of the Senate this year. Read More…
If you’re waiting for the perfect time to switch jobs in Washington, there isn’t one. The revolving door can always trip you on the way out, no matter how carefully you plan. For staffers who left Capitol Hill last year, the timing was especially rough. Read More…
Click here to subscribe to Fintech Beat for the latest market and regulatory developmentsin finance and financial technology.
Christina Henderson’s colleagues in Senate Minority Leader Charles E. Schumer’s office were a bit taken aback when she told them of her plans to run for D.C. city council. “They were like, ‘Really? You wanna run for political office?’” Indeed she is, for an at-large seat on the 13-member council. Read More…
The fact that Stacey Plaskett, as a 22-year-old recent college graduate, called all the time was the thing that impressed the congressman the most. “Ron de Lugo told me the only reason they were giving me this job was because of my persistence,” she says of her first boss on the Hill, the Virgin Islands’ first ever delegate to Congress. Read More…
Congress, theoretically, has until lawmakers return to their districts and states in the coming days for the campaign recess to pass another coronavirus relief bill before Election Day. But according to CQ Roll Call’s latest Capitol Insiders Survey of congressional aides, lawmakers might as well pack it in now. Read More…
President Donald Trump, trailing in public polling and lagging in fundraising, wants a new Supreme Court justice confirmed before the election to be able to break potential ties on the court over election litigation. Read More…
CQ Roll Call is a part of FiscalNote, the leading technology innovator at the intersection of global business and government. Copyright 2020 CQ Roll Call. All rights reserved Privacy | Safely unsubscribe now.
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Welcome to The Hill’s Morning Report. It is Thursday! 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; Thursday, 201,910.
Just days before announcing his choice of a woman to join the Supreme Court, President Trump hinted that he’d made up his mind and was ready to dare Senate Democrats to oppose a nominee he hopes will have enough Senate support to be confirmed in November.
“They are outstanding women,” Trump said of five female finalists he has been considering since Friday to fill the vacancy following the death of Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg. “The person I will be putting up is highly qualified, totally brilliant, top-of-the-line academic student, the highest credentials. All of them have that, but the highest credentials. … You’ll see on Saturday who that is. I can’t imagine why a Democrat won’t vote for this person.”
Trump, who will announce his choice at 5 p.m. on Saturday, interviewed federal judge Amy Coney Barrett on Monday. She returned to the White House on Tuesday to meet separately with the president’s legal team and advisers. The president said Florida Judge Barbara Lagoa, who was also considered a top contender, “is on my list.” But he said he had no plans to meet with her.
CNN: Barrett, a judge with the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 7th Circuit, emerges as a favorite ahead of Saturday’s announcement.
Trump’s suggestion that his nominee could win Democratic votes for confirmation before Election Day or in a lame-duck session after the next president is known is a taunt more than a prediction. Senate Democrats insist they are united in their opposition to a confirmation to the Supreme Court days before the elections. Among the 53 Republicans, Sens. Susan Collins (Maine) and Lisa Murkowski (Alaska) have objected to moving ahead until after ballots are counted.
Collins says she will vote no on a Trump nominee before Nov. 3. GOP senators say they trust her to navigate the tricky politics of her Senate contest. But a preelection vote would set up a high-profile break with the president just days before Election Day, which strategists warn puts Collins in a squeeze. The high court is a contentious issue among some Maine residents because of Collins’s 2018 vote to confirm Trump nominee Brett Kavanaugh as an associate justice (The Hill).
The president’s appetite for partisan drama while accusing the opposition party of playing politics could be complicated during planned confirmation hearings in mid-October if conservative senators try to draw out the nominee about Roe v. Wade. That’s what Sen. Josh Hawley (R-Mo.) and Sen. Tom Cotton (R-Ark.), both seen as potential 2024 presidential aspirants, may try during televised hearings. The Hill’s Alexander Bolton reports that conservatives are feeling emboldened about a court opening that could shift the ideological balance. Hawley wants Trump’s nominee to be explicit about her stance on Roe, which some Senate colleagues see as a potentially risky strategy.
The Atlantic: Trump takes away a lifeline for swing-state senators.
Politico: “This is the ultimate base play”: Trump looks for Catholic vote from court fight.
> Hundreds of masked mourners, many of them women of all ages who traveled long distances, lined up in Washington on Wednesday to pay their respects to Ginsburg, whose casket rested at the front of the Supreme Court building following a eulogy delivered by Chief Justice John Roberts and attended by justices, court colleagues, family members and friends. The president will visit the court today (The New York Times).
> Some Democrats worry that Senate Judiciary Committee ranking member Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.), 87, could fumble the upcoming Supreme Court confirmation battle. “I’m really surprised and taken aback by this. Because I try to be very careful and I’m puzzled by it,” Feinstein responded. “My attendance is good, I do the homework, I try to ask hard questions. I stand up for what I believe in.” Some Democrats privately fear that Feinstein, the oldest senator and one who is seen as reliant on staff preparation, could mishandle questioning or strategy and harm the party’s chances of winning back the majority. A group of Feinstein’s colleagues privately want Senate Minority Whip Dick Durbin (D-Ill.) or Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse (D-R.I.) to serve as the top Democrat on the Judiciary panel for the upcoming nomination hearings, which are expected to be contentious (Politico).
The Hill: Sen. Kamala Harris (D-Calif.) faces pivotal moment with Supreme Court battle.
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.
2020 POLITICS & ELECTIONS: With less than six weeks until Election Day, former Vice President Joe Biden continues to hold the advantage. However, there are some troubling signs that continue to give Democrats agita ahead of the November contest.
The Washington Post: Biden makes his first campaign stop of the campaign in North Carolina to discuss education and housing disparities with Black voters (pictured below).
The Hill’s Niall Stanage writes in his latest Memo that while Trump trails Biden on a number of issues, he has shown resilient strength on his handling of the economy — perennially the most important issue for many voters. A number of polls also show that Trump’s supporters are more enthusiastic than Biden’s.
The most important moment of the campaign since each party’s national conventions is also on deck as the first presidential debate is Tuesday, which will be the former vice president’s biggest test to date. How he fares in Cleveland could play a crucial role one way or another, even considering there are two other debates between the two nominees before Election Day.
Despite Trump’s advantages on the economy and enthusiasm, Democrats remain hopeful that the other key issues in the campaign will play equally important roles and keep him from a second term in the White House, including the president’s handling of the COVID-19 pandemic.
Wednesday also brought another series of polls. In the six key battleground states — Arizona, North Carolina, Florida, Michigan, Wisconsin and Pennsylvania — Biden holds a 4-point advantage overall, according to CNBC and Change Research surveys. As The Hill’s campaign team detailed yesterday, Biden leads by 9 points in Wisconsin, 8 points in Michigan, 6 points in Arizona, 4 points in Pennsylvania, 3 points in Florida and 2 points in North Carolina. Biden campaigned Wednesday in Charlotte, N.C.
However, new ABC News-Washington Post polls show Trump holding 1-point leads over the former VP in Florida and Arizona among likely voters. Additionally, a new Monmouth University survey also has Trump leading by a single point in Georgia, which has not backed a Democratic nominee since 1992.
The Wall Street Journal: Trump’s team hunts for votes in person, while Biden’s works the phones.
Politico: The Republican National Committee is wiring cash to Texas. Is it a 2020 battleground?
The Hill: When asked about committing to a peaceful transition of power, Trump predicts he’ll win. “There won’t be a transfer. There will be a continuation,” he said.
> Senate races: Colorado has moved toward former Gov. John Hickenlooper (D), who is challenging Republican Sen. Cory Gardner, according to a new analysis. The nonpartisan Cook Political Report shifted the contest from “toss-up” to “lean Democrat” (The Hill).
> Surrogate watch: Secretary of State Mike Pompeo is positioning himself as a key backer for the president weeks before the election, an almost unheard-of role for America’s top diplomat but one the former GOP congressman has embraced as he holds political ambitions of his own.
As The Hill’s Laura Kelly and Max Greenwood write, Pompeo appeared Wednesday in Wisconsin to address the state legislature in the Capitol. The visit was purportedly about foreign policy but has come under fire for being largely political and an attempt to promote Trump’s agenda in a key swing state ahead of November. Wednesday’s stop also comes nearly a month after Pompeo made an appearance at the Republican National Convention from Jerusalem while on official business, a move that critics pointed out violated his own guidelines banning State Department employees from participating in political events and has spurred an investigation by House Democrats over whether he violated the Hatch Act.
The Hill: Hopes for DC, Puerto Rico statehood rise.
The Hill: Employers sign on to give time off for voting.
IN FOCUS/SHARP TAKES
CONGRESS: An 87-page investigatory report released jointly on Wednesday by the GOP-controlled Senate Homeland Security and Finance committees contained no evidence that Biden improperly manipulated U.S. policy toward Ukraine or committed any misdeed while serving in the Obama administration. Committee Chairman Ron Johnson (R-Wis.) had boasted for weeks that the results of his panel’s probe would demonstrate Biden’s “unfitness for office.” Instead, the report released six weeks before Election Day rehashed unsubstantiated allegations that echo an active Russian disinformation campaign helped along by Trump. The investigation, as reported by news outlets over many months, reiterated that Hunter Biden had leveraged his father’s name in lucrative global business deals. It also concluded, as had been reported months ago, that the younger Biden’s work for Burisma Holdings, a Ukrainian energy company that was then mired in a corruption scandal while the former vice president helped shape American policy toward Kyiv, created an appearance of a conflict of interest that concerned some in Obama’s State Department (The New York Times).
> While Senate Republicans took aim at the Bidens, House Democrats on Wednesday turned the tables on Republicans and released a package of proposed “post-Trump reforms” intended to check the executive branch and prevent future abuses of power. The proposals include measures to restrain the president’s power to grant pardons and declare national emergencies, to prevent federal officials from enriching themselves and to accelerate the process of enforcing congressional subpoenas in court. It also includes provisions to protect inspectors general and whistleblowers, increase penalties for officials who subvert congressional appropriations or engage in overt political activity, and safeguard against foreign election interference (The Washington Post).
> In yet another example of partisan brickbats flying on Capitol Hill this week, Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas) blocked a Senate resolution on Wednesday that would have honored Ginsburg and her judicial career. He objected to an amendment from Democrats referencing the justice’s dying wish, as quoted by her granddaughter, that the vacancy she created not be filled until after the election. Cruz objected that the amendment was partisan. Senate Minority Leader Charles Schumer (D-N.Y.) said he disagreed and would not modify the amendment. Cruz objected again, and the nonbinding resolution did not pass (The Texas Tribune).
Here we go again: Debates start Tuesday, by Karl Rove, columnist, The Wall Street Journal. https://on.wsj.com/2HrcDDM
Supreme Court battle will have less effect in the election than you think, by former Rep. Steve Israel (D-N.Y.), opinion contributor, The Hill. https://bit.ly/3coVkP0
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
The House will meet at 9 a.m. and begin legislative business at 11 a.m. Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) will hold her weekly press conference from the Capitol at 10:45 a.m. The House Foreign Affairs Committee at 10 a.m. will conduct oversight focused on recent decisions by political appointees affecting U.S. international broadcasting efforts and career federal personnel changes at the United States Agency for Global Media.
The Senate convenes at 10 a.m. and resumes consideration of Roderick Young to be a judge with the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia. The Senate Banking Committee will focus on how COVID-19 is affecting the U.S. economy with testimony from Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell and Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin at 10 a.m.
The president will pay his respects to Ginsburg with a visit this morning to the Supreme Court, where the late justice’s casket lies in repose today. Trump holds a campaign rally in Jacksonville, Fla., at 7 p.m.
The vice president will travel to Eau Claire, Wis., and Minneapolis for a campaign bus tour. In Wisconsin, Pence will visit Midwest Manufacturing and tout the president’s record on manufacturing. In Minneapolis, he will participate in a listening session with law enforcement officers who support Trump’s reelection.
The Supreme Court: Ginsburg’s casket will lie in repose for a second day in the portico of the court building. The public can visit today from 9 a.m. until 10 p.m. Ginsburg will lie in state in the Capitol’s Statuary Hall on Friday.
Economic indicator: The Labor Department will release a report at 8:30 a.m. on filings for jobless benefits for the week of Sept. 19.
➔ STATE WATCH:Kentucky Attorney General Daniel Cameron (R) on Wednesday in Louisville announced that a state grand jury brought no charges against police for the killing of Breonna Taylor, 26, during a drug raid gone wrong. Prosecutors on Wednesday said two officers who fired their weapons at the Black woman were justified in using force to protect themselves (The Associated Press). The grand jury handed down three counts of wanton endangerment against officer Brett Hankison for shooting into Taylor’s neighbors’ homes during the raid on the night of March 13. The charges were not for any culpability in Taylor’s death. Hankinson was previously fired from the force (The Hill). The charges dismayed and angered demonstrators overnight in Louisville and in cities including Atlanta and Washington, D.C. Protests in Louisville were largely peaceful, but scuffles broke out between police and protesters and some demonstrators were arrested before two officers were shot while investigating reports of gunfire Wednesday night. Both officers are expected to recover and a suspect was in custody in the shootings (The Associated Press). Backstory: How did Taylor land in the middle of a deadly drug raid? (The New York Times investigation).
➔ CORONAVIRUS: Johnson & Johnson on Wednesday began an enormous late-stage human trial in the United States and in other countries to test the effectiveness and safety of a single-dose vaccine to ward off COVID-19 infection. Results are expected next year (The Associated Press). … Missouri Gov. Mike Parson, a Republican who has opposed the idea of mandatory mask-wearing, tested positive for COVID-19 (The Associated Press). … Members of the president’s White House coronavirus task force testified on Wednesday that the public should trust in the science of medicine, public health and vaccine development tied to the coronavirus (The Hill). Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, scolded Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.), an eye doctor, for what Fauci said were incorrect statements and unfounded conjecture about COVID-19 (The Hill). Also testifying before the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee were Brett Giroir, an assistant secretary at the Health and Human Services Department; Food and Drug Administration (FDA) Commissioner Stephen Hahn and Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Director Robert Redfield. … Commenting on the FDA’s proposed strengthening of federal vaccine approval protocols that would lengthen clearance before public use, Trump told reporters on Wednesday that he believed it sounded “political” and the White House “may or may not approve it.” … The Hill’s Jessie Hellmann reports that scientists believe rising numbers of U.S. infections and continued deaths from the coronavirus will collide with a projected high-risk influenza season as Americans transition their winter activities indoors. … The coronavirus pandemic has been brutal to all forms of arts and entertainment and the Metropolitan Opera in New York City is part of the wreckage. It canceled its season through September 2021 (The New York Times).
➔ CLIMATE CHANGE: Companies are increasingly setting their own goals for carbon neutrality in the absence of a federal plan to address global warming, bracing their business for the stark financial realities wrought by climate change. But while the patchwork of climate goals may score points with consumers and increase pressure for major action, a corporate-led climate movement will still leave the U.S. lagging behind its global counterparts (The Hill).
THE CLOSER
And finally … It’s Thursday, which means it’s time for this week’s Morning Report Quiz! Inspired by Ginsburg’s death, we’re eager for some smart guesses about the life of the late Supreme Court justice, who is being honored across Washington this week.
Email your responses to asimendinger@thehill.com and/or aweaver@thehill.com, and please add “Quiz” to subject lines. Winners who submit correct answers will enjoy some richly deserved newsletter fame on Friday.
Ginsburg was the first Jewish woman to serve on the Supreme Court. How many Jewish justices have served on the court in its history?
Six
Seven
Eight
Nine
In 1960, which Supreme Court justice rejected Ginsburg from a clerkship because of her gender?
Felix Frankfurter
Abe Fortas
Earl Warren
John Marshall Harlan
During her 27 years on the Supreme Court, with how many fellow justices did she serve?
13
15
17
19
Ginsburg became the first Supreme Court justice to ___ in 2013?
Appear in person on “Saturday Night Live”
Officiate a same-sex wedding
Perform at the Met
All of the above
Write-in bonus question: Ginsburg’s affectionately invented nickname “Notorious RBG” was a creative spoof on which entertainer’s moniker?
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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WITH 40 DAYS LEFT until Election Day, it seems as though the United States is well on its way to becoming a banana republic.
— THE PRESIDENT WILL NOT COMMIT TO A PEACEFUL TRANSFER OF POWER … WEDNESDAY NIGHT AT THE WHITE HOUSE: Q: “Will you commit to making sure there’s a peaceful transferral of power after the election?” PRESIDENT DONALD TRUMP: “Well, we’re going to have to see what happens, you know that. I’ve been complaining very strongly about the ballots and the ballots are a disaster. … Get rid of the ballots and we’ll have a very peaceful — there won’t be a transfer frankly. There will be a continuation. The ballots are out of control. You know it. And you know who knows it better than anybody else? The Democrats know it better than anybody else.” More from NYT’s Michael Crowley
C’MON, MAN … JOE BIDEN told reporters this late Wednesday: “What country are we in? I’m being facetious. I said what country are we in? Look, he says the most irrational things. I don’t know what to say.” Sen. Mitt Romney (R-Utah) has spoken out
— THE PRESIDENT suggested the White House might reject the Food and Drug Administration’s more stringent standards for a vaccine. “Well, I tell you what, we’re looking at that. That has to be approved by the White House. We may or may not approve it. That sounds like a political move.” Lauren Morello and Adam Cancryn on what that means
—POLICE APPEARED to run over a man’s head with bicycles in Seattle.
IF THIS CHAIN OF EVENTS UNFOLDED in another country in another era, the State Department might express concern, perhaps warn against travel. And we, as Americans, would say we’re glad to live in the United States. But, alas …
THE NEWS CYCLE today is going to be absolutely dominated by the president’s suggestion there might not be a peaceful transfer of power. It will be all the chatter in the hallways of the Capitol, where many lawmakers are just weeks from being on the ballot themselves.
… AND, APOCALYPTIC TIMES? … MEL ZANONA, SARAH FERRIS and JOHN BRESNAHAN: “‘The hits just keep coming’: Congress stumbles from crisis to crisis”: “Ancient Egypt only had 10 plagues. The 116th Congress says, ‘Hold my staff.’ The House and Senate have spent the last two years staring down some of the most consequential political events of recent decades: the longest-ever government shutdown; a presidential impeachment; a deadly global pandemic; a deepening economic recession that has led to Depression-era levels of unemployment; a long-overdue national reckoning over race and police brutality; and growing tension with China and Iran and even Saudi Arabia.
“But there’s more. This includes natural calamities, from fire tornadoes to wildfires to murder hornets; the death of civil rights icon John Lewis and other influential figures in politics; QAnon extremists marching toward the halls of Congress; and a polarizing president who is known for creating his own conflicts.
“And now — [40] days before the election and with the Senate majority up for grabs — there’s a brutal fight over a politically prized Supreme Court seat, with members of both parties eying scorched-earth tactics in ever-more intense partisan warfare, even if it wreaks permanent damage on the institution as a whole.”
DRIVING TODAY … Treasury Secretary STEVEN MNUCHIN and Fed Chair JEROME POWELL will be in front of Senate Banking at 10 a.m. … Speaker NANCY PELOSI will have her weekly news conference at 10:45 a.m. … House Minority Leader KEVIN MCCARTHY will have his news conference at 11:30 a.m.
SUPREME COURT CORNER …
— GABBY ORR: “Trump looks for Catholic vote from Court fight”: “Trump and his aides are betting that Catholic voters will feel enough of a kinship with either of the women he is eyeing for the vacancy — 7th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals Judge Amy Coney Barrett, a Catholic mother of seven, or 11th Circuit Judge Barbara Lagoa, a Catholic mother of three — that his nomination of one of them will lock in a majority of the Catholic vote just in time for the November election.
“On the other hand, they are hoping Catholic voters who have already swung toward Biden, due to grievances with the president’s behavior or policies, will return to Trump’s column if the former vice president remains quiet as Senate Democrats and progressive activists knock the faith of his impending nominee.”
— BURGESS EVERETT and MARIANNE LEVINE: “‘This is an illegitimate nomination’: Some Democrats snub Trump’s pick”: “President Donald Trump hasn’t announced a Supreme Court nominee yet, but some Democrats have already decided there’s no point in meeting with her, no matter who it is.
“These Senate Democrats say it’s a no-brainer to shun whoever Trump chooses to replace the late Ruth Bader Ginsburg. A meeting would be fruitless not just because Trump is likely to pick a hard-line conservative, but because they’re still furious Majority Leader Mitch McConnell stonewalled Merrick Garland in 2016.
“‘This is an illegitimate nomination,’ said Sen. Jeff Merkley (D-Ore.), who said he had ‘no intention’ of meeting with the nominee. ‘I personally have no desire to pretend it’s acceptable.’ ‘No,’ said Sen. Bob Casey (D-Pa.). ‘Why would you meet with somebody if you already know where they’re going to be on every case?’ Or, as Sen. Mazie Hirono (D-Hawaii) put it: ‘Whatever she has to say to me, she should say it under oath.’” POLITICO
FIRST IN PLAYBOOK —PROTECT OUR CARE has expanded a six-figure ad campaign to target Sens. Dan Sullivan (R-Alaska), David Perdue (R-Ga.), Steve Daines (R-Mont.), Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) and John Cornyn (R-Texas), calling for the senators to allow the winner of the election to fill the Supreme Court vacancy. The group is planning to expand the campaign to television at a later date. The original campaign focused on Sens. Cory Gardner (R-Colo.), Joni Ernst (R-Iowa) and Thom Tillis (R-N.C.). The ads:Alaska, Georgia, Montana, South Carolina and Texas
WAPO’S JOSH DAWSEY and YASMEEN ABUTALEB: “Trump looks for ways to win over voters on health care after failing to deliver on promises”: “President Trump is pushing advisers to deliver health-care ‘wins’ in the final weeks of the campaign, leading to a frenzied rollout of proposals as polls show the president’s handling of the coronavirus pandemic and health-care policy are two of his biggest vulnerabilities in his reelection bid.
“Trump is scheduled to deliver a speech Thursday in Charlotte, broadly outlining how he would approach health-care policy in a second term, though the speech is likely to be light on details. Instead, Trump will tout the administration’s efforts to lower drug prices, address surprise medical bills and improve health-care price transparency, according to two senior administration officials and an outside lobbyist familiar with the plans.”
“POLITICO-Harvard poll gauging their attitudes heading into the presidential election. While the economy is typically a top voter issue in presidential elections, it’s taken on new urgency with millions out of work because of the pandemic. The new poll shows that unlike some past elections, issues that are deeply personal to Americans’ everyday lives, rather than policy debates that can be more abstract, rank among the most important priorities that will influence voters.”
VERY COOL … THE COOK POLITICAL REPORT has a “Swingometer” which allows you to adjust the turnout and support of different demographic pockets to see how they may affect the Electoral College.
TROUBLE FOR BIDEN? — “‘Something’s in the water’: Florida Republicans see surge in voter registration,” by Marc Caputo and Gary Fineout in Miami: “Republicans have closed the traditional voter registration gap with Democrats to an historically small margin in Florida, triggering a wave of Democratic apprehension in the nation’s biggest swing state.
“Top Florida Democrats and longtime activists have increasingly groused in private that they feel pressure from Joe Biden’s campaign to refrain from door-to-door canvassing or holding voter registration drives due to the potential spread of coronavirus and fears of muddying his messaging on the pandemic.
“In the absence of such efforts, a concerted drive by President Donald Trump’s Florida campaign to register voters has helped cut the state’s long-standing Democratic advantage to fewer than 185,000 voters, a gap of just 1.3 percentage points, according to data from the Florida Division of Elections released this week.” POLITICO
TRUMP’S THURSDAY — The president and first lady Melania Trump will depart the White House at 9:45 a.m. en route to the Supreme Court. They will arrive at 9:55 a.m. and pay their respects to Ruth Bader Ginsburg, returning afterward to the White House. The president will leave the White House at 2:40 p.m. headed for Charlotte, N.C., where he’ll deliver remarks on health care at 4:30 p.m.
TRUMP will depart at 5:45 p.m. and travel to Jacksonville, Fla., for a 7 p.m. campaign rally. He’ll spend the night in Doral, Fla.
“Over the years, the Israeli leader has developed a reputation among the staff at the U.S. president’s guesthouse for bringing special cargo on his trips to Washington: bags and suitcases full of dirty laundry, according to U.S. officials familiar with the matter. The clothes are cleaned for the prime minister free of charge by the U.S. staff, a perk that is available to all foreign leaders but sparingly taken advantage of given the short stays of busy heads of state.”
LILI BAYER: “How Orbán broke the EU — and got away with it”: “The EU’s failure to deal with what it has branded as serious democratic backsliding by one of its own members has implications that go beyond its relationship with Hungary. With other countries such as Poland facing similar accusations, it raises the question of whether the bloc can hold together as a community of values.”
WHAT IN THE WORLD? … ROLL CALL: “Capitol Police disciplinary reports show pattern of misconduct,” by Chris Marquette: “A male Capitol Police officer allegedly used the department’s computer to solicit sex on Craigslist, send sexually explicit emails and attempt to buy an illicit drug from Qatar, according to filings in one officer’s gender discrimination lawsuit that summarizes internal department documents.
“Another male officer allegedly stored sex toys in his Capitol Police vehicle, photographed himself masturbating, and took photos of a handcuffed, partially nude woman in the back of the car, the lawsuit states. A male commander allegedly asked a female subordinate to have sex with him in his hotel room. The officers all received some form of punishment, described by an expert on police conduct as light. None of them were demoted or fired.”
BEYOND THE BELTWAY — “Newsom bans new gas cars — and begs Trump for a fight,” by Colby Bermel, Carla Marinucci and Alex Guillén with a Sacramento dateline: “California Gov. Gavin Newsom ordered the state Wednesday to ban new gas vehicles within 15 years, a rebuke to President Donald Trump and other federal leaders already challenging the state’s strict fuel economy rules.
“Newsom made clear that he wants to use California’s gigantic market as a hammer to force automakers to focus on electric vehicles. He said the move is a necessary step to combat climate change as his state battles historic wildfires that have scorched more than 3.6 million acres this year.
“But California Republicans immediately seized on Newsom’s order as an overstep in a year of unprecedented executive decisions on coronavirus closures. And Trump could use it as another cudgel to portray Democrats as out of touch by forcing drivers into electric vehicles still spurned by the vast majority of Americans.
“After signing his executive order, Newsom seemed to welcome Trump criticism. He sent a fundraising email within hours drawing a contrast between Trump’s actions on auto emissions and his own. And he braced for a presidential tweetstorm.” POLITICO
SPOTTED: Reince Priebus traveling with Secretary of State Mike Pompeo on Wednesday to and from Wisconsin, where Pompeo spoke about China in the state Senate chamber.
TRANSITION — Austin Hacker is now press secretary and digital director for the House Oversight Committee. He previously was press secretary and digital director for the House Natural Resources Committee.
WELCOME TO THE WORLD — Will Rabbe, a producer at MSNBC, and Brittany Prime, a partner at WinCo Fundraising, recently welcomed George William Rabbe III. Pic
BIRTHDAY OF THE DAY: Sharon Yang, politics and government outreach manager at Facebook. A fun fact about her: “I am in a book about Banksy, ‘Banksy In New York.’ I love street art, and in 2013 Banksy had a ‘residency’ in NYC for one month. I visited specifically to document his pop-up pieces that were going up around the city, from Brooklyn, Queens, Manhattan, etc. One morning, I caught a fresh Banksy mural on the Upper West Side. I got a photo with it snapped by well-known street art photographer Martha Cooper, and the image ended up in the book.” Playbook Q&A
BIRTHDAYS: Lou Dobbs is 75 … former Defense Secretary Ash Carter is 66 … Michael Kennedy, VP of global government relations and public policy at VMWare (h/t Eva Bandola) … AP’s Alexandra Jaffe is 31 … Earth Day Network’s Olivia Altman … Craig Shirley is 64 … CNN’s Nicky Robertson (h/t Sarah Mucha) … Will Nuckols … Ken Suggs (h/ts Jon Haber) … Nate Blake, senior manager of public policy at Amazon, is 44 (h/t wife Kristene) … 43 Alumni for Biden’s Kim Fuller (h/t Kris Purcell) … Hope Hall … Mike Morey, partner at SKDKnickerbocker … Andrew Bower … Shawn McCoy, principal at Blue Zone Partners, is 36 (h/ts Tom and Charlie Szold) … photojournalist Mike Kamber is 57 … David Nelson, director of executive office operations at the National Restaurant Association, is 32 … Patrick Davis … Alan Popovsky … Missy Owens … Morgan Jackson … WSJ’s Katy Stech Ferek … CAP’s Phil Wolgin … former Rep. Joseph Kennedy II (D-Mass.) is 68 … Chris Altchek … Doug Kmiec is 69 … Adam Rice, director of public affairs for the American Securities Association (h/t Jon Evans) …
… Will Allison, director at FTI Consulting (h/t Brian Reisinger) … Will Booher … POLITICO’s Lisa Leonard, Brian Kidd, Jalyn Sanders and Bisha Wanzala … Claiborne Hancock,founder and publisher of Pegasus Books (h/t David Andelman) … Curt Viebranz … Katie Burke, chief strategy officer and global chair of practices and sectors at Edelman, is 45 (h/t Tim Burger) … Jessica Schumer … Lara Barger of Hadron Strategies … Suzanne Mackowiak … Debra Masters … Katherine Hess … Scott Wallace, founder of the Wallace Global Fund and co-founder of Kennedy Democrats (h/t Andrew Laureti) … Joe Householder of Hill and Knowlton Strategies (h/t Richard Keil) … Katrina Mendiola … Michael Teter … Jon Davidson … Dave Contarino … Connolly Keigher (h/ts Teresa Vilmain) … Kelsey Coates … Derek Pangallo … Joe DeSantis … Sara DuBois … Katherine McLane … Taryn Rosenkranz … Ericka Andersen Sylvester … Jason Putorti … Page Austin … Moe Tkacik … Daniel Buk … Stevens C. Berry … Sam Parker … Tony Anthony … CJ Mahler, health care policy specialist at Arnold & Porter
Good morning. You know when something doesn’t work right, a person shouts “technical difficulties!” then everyone laughs nervously? That person is us right now explaining why our email was a few hours late yesterday.
Sorry about that. Glad to once again be in your inbox at this egregiously early hour.
MARKETS
NASDAQ
10,632.99
– 3.02%
S&P
3,236.97
– 2.37%
DJIA
26,764.25
– 1.92%
GOLD
1,862.00
– 2.39%
10-YR
0.673%
– 0.20 bps
OIL
39.57
– 0.58%
*As of market close
Markets: If yesterday’s S&P 500 chart were a hill you were biking on, you would not have to pedal much. Stocks fell throughout the day, led by drops in all the Big Tech names.
World: In a “Speech from the Throne” delivered by Canada’s Governor General, Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau pledged more support for businesses and the creation of 1 million jobs as his government tries to squash a second wave of coronavirus cases.
When the summer of 2020 began, protests against racial injustice were erupting across the U.S. following the killings of George Floyd, Breonna Taylor, and Ahmaud Arbery. Corporate America reacted with promises to strengthen commitments to racial equality.
Now as the leaves change, the legal system weighed in on punishment for the police officers involved in one of those catalytic deaths. A grand jury yesterday indicted Brett Hankison, a former Louisville police officer, with “wanton endangerment” for recklessly firing shots into the homes of Taylor’s neighbors; no charges filed were related to her killing.
And the business world is still working out how to follow through on its promises. It was a busy day:
Wells Fargo CEO Charlie Scharf apologized for a June memo, reported on Tuesday by Reuters, in which Scharf said a “very limited” talent pool was the reason for the lack of Black employees at the bank. 4.1% of Wells Fargo’s senior workforce was Black in 2018, down from 8% in 2015.
Scharf’s comment echoed past justifications for the financial industry’s abysmal track record with diversity, but critics argue it’s a cover-up for insufficient recruiting efforts.
Elsewhere on Wall Street, Citi made a hefty pledge. It earmarked over $1 billion for initiatives that help close the U.S.’ racial wealth gap and provide economic resources for people of color. That means investments in Black-owned businesses, boosting credit access in communities of color, and helping increase Black homeownership.
Cisco made a pledge of its own. The networking equipment company vowed to increase the number of Black employees in entry-level to manager positions by 25% in the next three years. Cisco has no Black people on its executive leadership team.
And Mars dropped its offensive Uncle Ben’s brand. The food giant will rename the rice product Ben’s Original, which will retain the aspects of the brand not linked to racist stereotypes.
Yesterday, prescription drug pricing app GoodRx went public on the Nasdaq under the ticker GDRX. It opened at $46/share, well above its $33 IPO price, and closed the day up 53% for a market cap of $19.4 billion.
The backstory: You know how medications sometimes cost $6 but other times cost $7,439? GoodRx wants to help by offering coupons for prescription drugs and helping you comparison-shop.
Because here’s the thing about medicine…it makes pain/sickness/eczema go away. So most people don’t hesitate to pay the amount they’re charged and often don’t know they have options.
Business-wise, GoodRx is in decent shape. It’s been consistently profitable since 2016, earning revenue by collecting fees from the pharmacy benefit managers it works with. It made almost $55 million in profit in H1 of 2020, up 75% from the same period last year…but by the cofounders’ own admission, healthcare reform would wipe it off the map.
Yesterday, California Governor Gavin Newsom issued an executive order that calls for a ban on the sale of new gasoline-powered cars in the state by 2035.
An announcement like this a few years ago might have resulted in legacy automakers shaking their treads, but in 2020’s red-hot electric vehicle market, they’re honking their approval.
Ford released a statement saying it’s “proud to stand with California,” noting it’s in the process of trying to “electrify our most iconic nameplates like the F-150 and the Mustang Mach E.”
Also yesterday, Volkswagen unveiled its new all-electric SUV for the U.S. market. The ID 4 (pictured above) costs just under $40,000, has a not-quite-Tesla range of 250 miles, and hopes to further cleanse consumers’ palates of the Dieselgate emission scandal of 2015.
Bottom line: Gov. Newsom’s order, combined with the 15 countries that have adopted similar goals, shows that government regulation and automakers’ heavy EV investments are finally aligning.
On Tuesday, Echelon Fitness released a $500 workout bike “in collaboration with Amazon” called the EX-Prime Bike. Those quotation marks are sarcastic air quotes as much as they reflect Echelon’s actual language because…
There was no collaboration
On Tuesday evening, Amazon disavowed any connection to the bike. “Echelon does not have a formal partnership with Amazon,” a spokesperson told Bloomberg. “This bike is not an Amazon product or related to Amazon Prime.”
Tell that to Peloton, whose stock fell as much as 7% when news broke that Amazon was supposedly peddling into living rooms.
Bottom line: Even though Amazon has nothing to do with the bike, the episode once again highlighted concerns around Peloton’s luxury prices. Its forthcoming cheaper treadmill costs $2,495 and its cheapest bike will set you back $1,895, potentially leaving it vulnerable to lower-cost alternatives like the one Amazon just unintentionally pump faked.
—MKM Partners analyst Bill Kirk to Aurora Cannabis.
Shares of the Canadian marijuana producer fell 29% yesterday after reporting quarterly results that were less dank than expectations.
Shares hit a four-year low. Remember, four years ago…weed wasn’t even legal in Canada (that happened in 2018).
What’s going on? Aurora misjudged the market for legal cannabis in Canada, focusing on premium products instead of more popular budget items, reports MarketWatch.
And that’s what Kirk was getting at. “Aurora grows more stuff that people don’t want than they grow stuff people want,” he said.
Looking ahead…Miguel Martin, Aurora’s third CEO this year alone, admitted the company “slipped from its top position in Canadian consumer,” and his focus is to get back to the top “immediately.”
Whether you say it “FYE-nance” or “fih-NAHNCE,” “finance” can be a daunting word. That’s partly because it refers to several different overlapping universes—there’s corporate finance, personal finance, government finance, and…finance finance, aka what it is all those well-dressed folks in lower Manhattan get up to all day.
That’s where we come in. The expert curators at Morning Brew have tapped industry pros, sifted through years of blog posts, and read every shareholder letter Warren Buffett’s ever sent to bring you a 10-step guide to the best resources in finance.
What you won’t find: Fluffy websites that tell you what you already know, like “the stock market doesn’t equal the economy.”
What you will find: Insightful case studies, podcasts, articles, and more that will give you a 101-level understanding of finance without putting you to sleep.
This article is part of Morning Brew’s Syllabus Series. Read last week’s edition on Marketing 101 here.
WHAT ELSE IS BREWING
Johnson & Johnson has started Phase 3 trials of its single-dose coronavirus vaccine. It’s the fourth company to begin the final stage of the testing process in the U.S.
JPMorgan is close to settling allegations of manipulating metal and Treasuries markets (a tactic known as “spoofing) for almost $1 billion, per multiple reports.
Disney delayed the release of more movies, including Marvel’s Black Widow and Spielberg’s West Side Story.
They were on the Internet before it was cool. is the OG of online financial services, and they aren’t just for trading. They provide a across investing, retirement, banking, and guidance—all at your fingertips. .
*Paid Advertisement
BREW’S BETS
Will you ever wear slacks again? We don’t know, but we’re friends with a few retail experts who might. So we invited them to a Retail Brew event next Monday to discuss the uncertain future of the apparel industry. Learn more here.
Unwind Wednesday:
Play a game: Test your hand at being the Avatar by interacting with the elements, or think of a character and see if Akinator can guess the right answer.
If all you need is a face, refresh this site for AI-generated punims.
Studio Ghibli just released 400 free-to-use movie stills.
BREW’S BOOKSHELF
Francis Scialabba
Every other Thursday, Brew’s Bookshelf brings you a few of our favorite business-related reads. This week, we’re sharing a trio of books in honor of National Hispanic Heritage Month.
Barrio America by A.K. Sandoval-Strausz traces how Latino immigrants rehabilitated struggling U.S. cities in the late 20th century.
Translation Nation by Héctor Tobar tells the stories of Hispanic Americans across the country redefining ideas of what it means to be American.
The Undocumented Americans by Karla Cornejo Villavicencio explores the physical and psychological toll of being undocumented in America, including her own story.
For all our book recs from the past few months, check out the Brew’s Bookshelf home page.
FOR THE GRAM
To celebrate National Punctuation Day, how about a throwback to our grammar quizzes? See if you spot the punctuation errors in these sentences from the WSJ editors.
He invited Mr. Mulally to visit him and his wife Lisa at their home in Ann Arbor, Mich.
Mr. Crowley showed up at the reception area, upbeat and smiling. “Hello Lindsey, how are you?” he asked cheerfully.
Pakistan’s Prime Minister Imran Khan is expected next month.
Need a flow chart to follow “Game of Thrones?”
FOR THE GRAM ANSWERS
This sentence implies Mr. Mulally has multiple wives. Assuming (and we will) he only has one, you should set off Lisa’s name with commas: “…his wife, Lisa, at their home…”
This one’s a common mistake: A comma should precede Lindsey’s name as well: “Hello, Lindsey, how are you?”
If there is only one person with a certain title or standing that you are writing about, the WSJ uses commas to separate their name as an apposition: “Pakistan’s prime minister, Imran Khan, is…”
Because the question mark is not part of the Game of Thrones title, it should go outside the quotation marks.
By Caffeinated Thoughts on Sep 23, 2020 12:10 pm
On the Caffeinated Thoughts Podcast, Pastor Ron Smedley of Mission Recovery discusses with Shane Vander Hart the addiction crisis our nation faces and how the Church can help. Read in browser »
Launched in 2006, Caffeinated Thoughts reports news and shares commentary about culture, current events, faith and state and national politics from a Christian and conservative point of view.
President Donald Trump and First Lady Melania Trump will go to the Supreme Court of the United States on Thursday to pay respects to Justice Ginsburg. Later, the president will travel to North Carolina where he will remarks on the America First Healthcare Vision. In the evening, the president will travel to Jacksonville, North Carolina, …
The Thin Blue Line flag was banned from a football field after multiple complaints about a high school football team charging the field with it, local outlet News4Jax reported Tuesday. Social media posts criticized the football team at Duncan U. Fletcher High School in Neptune Beach, Florida, for carrying the flag, which is an America flag …
Thousands Expected To Attend Franklin Graham’s First-Ever Prayer March On Washington Bernadette Breslin on September 23, 2020 Thousands of people are expected to convene in Washington D.C. Saturday for Franklin Graham’s inaugural Prayer March, according to organizers. Tens of thousands have expressed interest in the Prayer March, the Billy Graham Evangelistic Association (BGEA) told the …
A Michigan auto worker filed a federal unfair labor practice complaint Tuesday alleging that the United Auto Workers union continued charging her membership fees after she dropped her membership. Meagan Holmes, an inspector at plastic auto parts manufacturer Ventra Evart, filed the charges against United Auto Workers (UAW) with the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB), …
Attorney General William Barr said Tuesday that there is no concept more misunderstood in American public discourse than the “separation of church and state.” Barr spoke at the virtual National Catholic Prayer Breakfast Tuesday morning where he accepted the Christifideles Laici Award for “exemplary selfless and steadfast service in the lord’s vineyard.” The attorney general …
From day one, the Trump HR operation has been the Chernobyl of Human Resources. Instead of hiring some of the 63 million people who voted for Trump, the administration made a point of hiring people for whom the Trump administration was a bit beneath their dignity. At least a few of the appointee failures could …
Today, on behalf of the Trump Administration, the Department of Justice sent draft legislation to Congress to reform Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act. The draft legislative text implements reforms that the Department of Justice deemed necessary in its June Recommendations and follows a yearlong review of the outdated statute. The legislation also executes President Trump’s …
President Donald Trump said Wednesday that he will sign an executive order requiring that any baby born alive will receive proper medical care. The announcement came while the president delivered remarks at the 2020 National Catholic Prayer Breakfast. It would seem unnecessary to have to put something like this in-place, but pro-abortion extremists have stretched …
President Donald Trump holds a news conference Wednesday to update the nation on recent developments. The president is scheduled to appear at 6:00 p.m. EDT. Content created by Conservative Daily News and some content syndicated through CDN is available for re-publication without charge under the Creative Commons license. Visit our syndication page for details and requirements.
At his rally in Ohio on Monday and again at his rally in Pennsylvania on Tuesday President Trump said he would announce his pick for Supreme Court Justice to fill RBG’s seat on Saturday around 7 pm. Trump has released a list of five judges and the most favored is Amy Barrett. Barrett is in …
“He Who Shall NOT Be Named…” Protect George Soros! Never criticize him! That’s what the so-called Main Stream Media (MSM) are telling us. It’s now no longer permissible to criticize the billionaire. Even Fox News wouldn’t allow it—they quickly shut up Newt Gingrich, who wanted to tell us how Soros was funding the campaigns of …
The political fools who control the lives of formerly free Americans are wringing their hands because they’ve learned that Wuhan virus testing shows a possible up-swing in positive test results among those newly tested. Of course the only thing that has been discovered with these recent tests are cases of people who have tested positive, …
Joe Biden, Nancy Pelosi, Hillary Clinton and other Democratic Party elites all demand that the vacancy on the Supreme Court get filled. At least, that’s how they felt just 4 short years ago. Not long ago, Joe Biden said that “the American people deserve a fully-staffed court of nine.”We agree. Fill the seat! pic.twitter.com/K8GpnAMEly— Ronna …
Johnson & Johnson began its final round of testing for its COVID-19 vaccine Wednesday. The study is one of the most expansive to occur so far, involving 60,000 volunteers across the United States, Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Peru, Mexico and South Africa, the Associated Press reported. The vaccine is the latest to begin its final testing …
Hunter Biden’s financial dealings with Ukrainian, Russian and Chinese businesses created potential “criminal financial, counterintelligence and extortion concerns,” according to a report by two Senate committees. The report details a series of wire transfers between Biden and a businessman with extensive ties to the Chinese Communist Party. The report, written by the Senate Homeland Security …
The Commission for Presidential Debates announced the topics that President Donald Trump and 2020 presidential candidate Joe Biden will discuss at the first presidential debate next week. Topics to be covered include both Trump’s and Biden’s records, the Supreme Court, the coronavirus pandemic, the United States economy, race and violence in the United States, and …
President Donald Trump delivers remarks in honor of veterans of the Bay of Pigs. The president is scheduled to speak at 11:00 a.m. EDT. Content created by Conservative Daily News and some content syndicated through CDN is available for re-publication without charge under the Creative Commons license. Visit our syndication page for details and requirements.
As we watch the nation continue to explode in protests/riots over the George Floyd killing by a police officer in Minneapolis and across the country, there is a narrative that goes well beyond the incident of George Floyd. The narrative says that there is a crisis of systematic racism that drives poverty. Hence, there is …
Happy Thursday, dear Kruiser Morning Briefing friends. I do hope that you are all sailing into the weekend with the wind at your backs.
Well, here we go again.
A grand jury gave its decision in the Breonna Taylor shooting and — SHOCKER — the lefties weren’t satisfied and responded with mostly peaceful protests riots.
Once again, the outrage is being fueled by a narrative that is largely fact-free. It wasn’t a “no-knock” police raid as we’ve been hearing ad nauseam but that really doesn’t matter. The antifa/BLM/Harris-Biden mob doesn’t need any factual reason to riot. Any misrepresentation of a police incident will do.
The Louisville mob shot two cops to kick off its turn in the riot spotlight.
Wednesday night’s violence followed five days of heightened violent rhetoric from leftists following the death of Ruth Bader Ginsburg.
As has been well documented, the civil unrest that has been plaguing the United States in tandem with the actual plague has been thriving in places where elected Democratic officials are giving the rioters direct and indirect support. Far from being placated by the capitulation of local officials, the mob has been empowered and keeps finding excuses to riot.
There is a lot of talk of civil war and revolution coming from these criminals.
Because they’ve been allowed to riot with very little pushback from police for several months, the rage mob has a greatly inflated sense of its badassery. It’s easy to be a tough guy when you’re protected by numbers and you’re beating up a Best Buy window.
When they’re not being coddled and hiding behind their masks during a live riot, they’re busy hiding behind their keyboards, like this antifa Twitter tough guy who was threatening my Townhall colleague Julio Rosas last night.
Social media and pro-riot Dems have spawned thousands of thugs who probably wouldn’t last long in an encounter with anyone who wasn’t outnumbered and who actually fought back. These are emo wusses who are driven by hurt feelings, after all. In reality if you got any one of them isolated and said “BOO!” loudly they’d probably soil themselves and begin sobbing.
They think they want anarchy and revolution but they only want it in safe spaces that are little more than riot gated communities.
Step up, antifa, bring your masked soy boy brigades away from places where you know you’re operating largely consequence-free. Mike Tyson once said something to the effect of, “Everybody has a plan until they get punched in the face.” Safe money says that your plans wouldn’t amount to much after the first punch in the face.
If Joe Biden wins the election we may see the riots move more and more away from city centers. These rabid animals aren’t going to stop even if President Trump is out of office. Should that happen, they won’t fare as well unless the Harris-Biden administration decides to aid and abet them. Don’t rule that possibility out.
If, however, they get ambitious and decide to try and have the street war they think they want, they’re going to find it.
In a hurry.
Dianne Feinstein Is About to Get Rich Off of Her Art
Police not charged in Breonna Taylor shooting . . . A state investigation into the fatal police shooting of Breonna Taylor has laid bare the final moments of her life, revealing the 26-year-old EMT was killed while standing next to her boyfriend after she was shot by cops six times. According to investigators’ findings, Taylor was struck by the gunfire while standing in the hallway of her home alongside boyfriend Kenneth Walker. Earlier reports had said Taylor was sleeping in bed when officers barged in and opened fire. It also confirmed cops did indeed knock while serving a warrant at apartment 4 of 3003 Springfield Drive in the early hours of March 13. Daily Mail
Protestors take to the streets nationwide after Breonna Taylor decision . . . A riot was declared in Portland over night with cops pelted with Molotov cocktails as thousands took to the streets across America after a decision not to indict any police officers over the death of Breonna Taylor. Protesters took to the streets of Washington, DC, Philadelphia, Chicago, Atlanta, Denver, Dallas, Oakland, and other major cities to vent their anger over the decision not to prosecute any officers for murder in the fatal March shooting of the 26-year-old EMT from Louisville. In New York City, demonstrators packed into a plaza while one protester took a megaphone and threatened ‘an eye for an eye’. A crowd of hundreds was chanting ‘Say her name, Breonna Taylor,’ and then started marching in the street in downtown Brooklyn, past onlookers and honking cars. They were accompanied by musicians, setting a steady drum beat. Daily Mail
Two Louisville police officers shot; suspect arrested . . .Two Louisville Metro Police Department officers were shot during protests on Wednesday night following a grand jury’s decision in the shooting death of Breonna Taylor. Interim Police Chief Robert Schroeder told reporters during a preliminary briefing that the officers sustained non life-threatening injuries. One was in surgery, and the other was alert and in stable condition, he said. USA Today
Biden sides against cops . . . Joe Biden released a statement questioning whether justice ‘could be equally applied in America’ after a grand jury declined to indict three officers involved in the shooting death of Breonna Taylor. In a statement issued last night, the former vice-president said: ‘In the wake of her tragic death, we mourn with her mother, family, and community and ask ourselves whether justice could be equally applied in America. Daily Mail
Coronavirus
Trump says he may reject stricter FDA vaccine standards . . . President Donald Trump said Wednesday that the White House may not approve tougher FDA guidelines for authorizing the emergency use of any coronavirus vaccines. “That has to be approved by the White House,” Trump said. “We may or may not approve it.” Trump also suggested that the FDA’s decision to revise the standards, first issued in June, “was a political move more than anything else.” The president has repeatedly vowed that a vaccine would be available by Election Day, although prominent scientists within his administration have said it’s extremely unlikely. Politico
Trudeau: Canada is already in second wave of coronavirus . . . Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is warning Canadians that the second wave has arrived in many parts of the country. “We’re on the brink of a fall that could be much worse than the spring,” Trudeau said Wednesday during a 12-minute takeover of suppertime television. “It’s all too likely we won’t be gathering for Thanksgiving [Oct. 12], but we still have a shot at Christmas.” Politico
Dogs trained to detect the virus . . . Dogs trained to detect the novel coronavirus began sniffing passenger samples at Finland’s Helsinki-Vantaa airport this week, authorities said, in a pilot project running alongside more usual testing at the airport. The dogs’ efficiency has not been proven in comparative scientific studies so passengers who volunteer to be tested and are suspected as carrying the virus are instructed to also take a swab to confirm the result. Reuters
Politics
Trump won’t commit to transfer of power . . . President Trump wouldn’t commit to a peaceful transfer of power after the November election and predicted the outcome would be decided by the Supreme Court, a reason he wants to quickly fill the vacancy left by the death of Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg. “I think this will end up in the Supreme Court. And I think it’s very important that we have nine justices,” Mr. Trump said Wednesday. Trump was asked if he would commit to a peaceful transfer whether he won or lost in November. “Well, we’re going to have to see what happens,” he responded. “I’ve been complaining very strongly about the ballots …The ballots are out of control.” Pressed on the question, the president said, “Get rid of the ballots and … we’ll have a very peaceful. There won’t be a transfer. Frankly, there’ll be a continuation.” Wall Street Journal
This is being described as an authoritarian move. All he is saying is that we have to understand whether the election has been done fairly and the votes counted accurately before we can declare a winner. And that it will probably go to the Supreme Court. He’s not saying he wouldn’t abide by the Court’s decision.
Trump allies see political gold in Dems’ extreme response to pending SCOTUS pick . . . Democrats are shooting themselves in the foot by threatening to stack the Supreme Court with sympathetic justices and raising the specter of impeachment, according to Republican strategists who see an opportunity to paint Joe Biden as intent on upending constitutional norms. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi has declined to rule out impeaching President Trump if he races to fill Ruth Bader Ginsburg’s seat, while the party’s Senate leader, Chuck Schumer, hinted to allies that he would be open to increasing the size of the bench in order to overwhelm a conservative majority. Those messages are a gilt-edged way to mobilize the Trump base on Nov. 3, according to a former White House official. “The court-packing stuff is a gift wrapped in a big red bow,” he said. Washington Examiner
Pelosi: Christ would not want Trump honored at National Catholic Prayer breakfast . . . This seems pretty rich from the leader of the party of abortion on demand and limits on freedom of religious expression by business owners. According to the Washington Examiner: House Speaker Nancy Pelosi on Wednesday bashed Catholic supporters of President Trump ahead of his appearance at the National Catholic Prayer Breakfast. “What would Christ do? We always say that,” Pelosi said. “Well, there’s a big difference between what Christ would do and what they’re honoring this morning.” White House Dossier
Trump to sign “born alive” executive order . . . President Donald Trump announced Tuesday that he intends to sign the Born Alive Executive Order to protect babies born alive after failed abortions.
The president spoke Tuesday morning at the virtual National Catholic Prayer Breakfast where said Catholics are “amazing people, great, great people,” and thanked religious Americans for their prayers for him and his wife. He also said that he will safeguard “the eternal truth that every child, born and unborn, is made in the image of God.” Daily Caller
Judge says Eric Trump must testify before Election Day . . . A judge in New York on Wednesday ordered Eric Trump to comply with a subpoena from the state’s attorney general in the coming weeks, rejecting an effort from the president’s son to stall a deposition until after Election Day. The New York attorney general’s office is investigating whether the Trump Organization, of which Trump is an executive vice president, has been illegally inflating its assets in order to get tax breaks and attract investors. The Hill
White House officials accused of making false claims to block Bolton book . . . White House officials were accused on Wednesday of improperly trying to block former national security adviser John Bolton from releasing his best-selling memoir by falsely claiming it contained classified information. The accusation was made in a letter filed with a federal court in Washington by a lawyer for former National Security Council official Ellen Knight, a career official who oversaw the prepublication review of Bolton’s ‘The Room Where It Happened.’ Knight had by late April cleared the memoir for its planned June 23 publication, only to then see the process ‘commandeered by political appointees seemingly for a political purpose,’ leading to a U.S. Department of Justice lawsuit to block publication, her lawyer Kenneth Wainstein said in the letter. Reuters
Report links Hunter Biden to prostitution or trafficking ring . . . Hunter Biden allegedly sent “thousands of dollars” to people who appear to be involved in the sex industry, according to Wednesday’s report released by Senate Republicans. The report claims unspecified records show that Biden “has sent funds to non-resident alien women in the United States who are citizens of Russia and Ukraine and who have subsequently wired funds they have received from Hunter Biden to individuals located in Russia and Ukraine.” “The records also note that some of these transactions are linked to what ‘appears to be an Eastern European prostitution or human trafficking ring.’ ” New York Post
Trump to pay respects to Ginsburg at Supreme Court . . . President Trump will pay his respects to Ruth Bader Ginsburg Thursday by visiting her casket at the Supreme Court. “The president will pay his respects to the late justice on Thursday at the U.S. Supreme Court where she will be lying in repose,” White House deputy press secretary Judd Deere told reporters on Wednesday. The casket arrived at the Supreme Court on Wednesday morning. A private ceremony is being held for family and friends. White House Dossier
Where do they get phrases like this, “lying in repose”? Of course, she is in repose. She’s very reposed. In fact, she is so reposed, she is deceased. The phrase is meant to distinguish from lying “in state,” which you can only do in the U.S. Capitol. She will eventually make her way there, but while at the Supreme Court, she is in repose.
National Security
China pouring billions into the Caribbean . . . China has poured billions of dollars of investment into the Caribbean while signing tax and trade deals in an attempt to wrest the region out of the West’s sphere of influence and bring it under the sway of Beijing. The Chinese government has invested at least $7 billion in six Caribbean nations since 2005, records show – building roads, ports and the five-star Baha Mar casino and resort in the Bahamas – though the true figure is thought to run well into the tens of billions. While some of the money arrives as part of trade and investment deals, much of it is offered as ‘soft loans’ for infrastructure projects that are harder to track and typically come with requirements to use Chinese contractors for the work. The loans also provide long-term leverage for Beijing over the cash-strapped island nations. Daily Mail
China peddling communist propaganda in US state and local governments . . . The Chinese Communist Party is engaged in an effort to infiltrate and conduct espionage on state and local U.S. governments, the latest front in a growing proxy war between America and the Communist regime, according to Secretary of State Mike Pompeo. “CCP campaigns targeting state-level officials, and local interests, have been in full swing for years, and they’re increasing in intensity,” Pompeo said. “The Party and its proxies aim to make Americans receptive to Beijing’s form of authoritarianism.” Washington Free Beacon
International
North Korean troops killed missing South Korean official . . . North Korean troops shot dead a South Korean fisheries official who went missing earlier this week, before dousing his body in oil and setting it on fire in what was likely an effort to prevent a coronavirus outbreak, South Korea’s military said on Thursday. South Korea’s military said evidence suggested the man was attempting to defect to the North Why the 47-year-old official was shot was not known, but North Korean troops appear to have been acting under anti-coronavirus orders, South Korea’s military said. Reuters
Money
Airlines face desolate future as attempts to reopen crumble . . . Almost eight months into the pandemic, with cities reentering lockdown and a vaccine likely months away, it’s apparent there will be no quick comeback. International air traffic in July was 92% below 2019 levels, and there was little sign of improvement in August, according to the International Air Transport Association (IATA). More than 400,000 airline jobs have been cut since February. Bloomberg
You should also know
California to ban gasoline-powered cares after 2035 . . . On Wednesday, Governor Gavin Newsom ordered regulators to phase out the internal combustion engine and ban the sale of all new gasoline-fueled cars after 2035. With that, California became the first state in America to impose such a prohibition and delivered the biggest jolt yet to automakers already under pressure to give up fossil fuels and deliver a new generation of electric vehicles. Bloomberg
Guilty Pleasures
Tesla owners locked out of their cars . . . Tesla drivers locked out of their cars after a complete network outage hit its internal service and customer mobile app were able to get back in after about an hour. The hitch comes a day after the company lost $50 billion in its market value due to its failed ‘Battery Day.’ The mobile app holds a digital key and and only owners who have a physical version have been able to access and drive their vehicle – leaving those without stranded. Daily Mail
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THE DISPATCH
The Morning Dispatch: Is the Supreme Court Trump’s Last Resort?
Happy Thursday! Big stuff happened yesterday. Let’s get to it.
Quick Hits: Today’s Top Stories
The United States confirmed 49,002 new cases of COVID-19 yesterday per the Johns Hopkins University COVID-19 Dashboard, with 5.8 percent of the 847,306 tests reported coming back positive. An additional 1,233 deaths were attributed to the virus on Wednesday, bringing the pandemic’s American death toll to 201,957.
President Trump said Wednesday he wants to seat a new Supreme Court justice as quickly as possible because he thinks the election “will end up in the Supreme Court,” and “I think having a 4-4 situation is not a good situation.” Asked by a reporter if he would commit to a peaceful transfer of power if he loses, Trump demurred. “We’re going to have to see what happens,” he said. “I’ve been complaining very strongly about the ballots. And the ballots are a disaster.”
A grand jury in Louisville yesterday indicted one of the three police officers involved in the death of Breonna Taylor, charging him with three counts of wanton endangerment. Despite a mayoral curfew and restricted movement in the city center, protests broke out around Louisville after the decision. According to police, two officers were shot and wounded during the chaos. Both are expected to recover, per the police chief.
Preliminary data shows little evidence that reopened schools have been focal points of coronavirus transmission so far this fall, the Washington Post reports.
Senate Republicans released the results of their probe into Hunter Biden’s involvement with Ukrainian energy company Burisma yesterday, arguing that Biden’s tenure on the Burisma board while his father headed U.S. policy toward Ukraine was “very awkward” for U.S. officials operating in the region and “cast a shadow” over U.S.-Ukraine policy at the time.
CDC Director Robert Redfield said Wednesday that more than 90 percent of Americans have yet to be exposed to COVID-19, suggesting that the nation is nowhere near a level of “herd immunity” that could end the pandemic without access to a vaccine.
Johnson and Johnson announced Wednesday that its coronavirus vaccine has entered Phase III clinical trials, making it the fourth vaccine developer to hit that milestone this year.
Is the Supreme Court Trump’s Last Resort?
The biggest headline from President Trump’s public statements yesterday was undoubtedly his refusal to commit to the peaceful transfer of power if he loses November’s election. “We’re going to have to see what happens,” he said when asked by a reporter. “I’ve been complaining very strongly about the ballots. And the ballots are a disaster.”
“Get rid of the ballots and you’ll have a very—we’ll have a very peaceful—there won’t be a transfer frankly, there’ll be a continuation,” he said.
The comments were dangerous, irresponsible, and unbecoming of the presidency. “Fundamental to democracy is the peaceful transition of power; without that, there is Belarus,” Sen. Mitt Romney said in response. “Any suggestion that a president might not respect this Constitutional guarantee is both unthinkable and unacceptable.”
But as we’ve discussed before—and as David broke down on Dispatch Live last night—there are a series of mechanisms in place that would prevent Trump’s autocratic impulses from having any real effect if he were to lose. Come Inauguration Day, if Joe Biden has been certified as the winner of the election, the powers of the presidency—including the role of commander in chief—are transferred over to him. Trump can complain and tweet all he wants, but he’d be doing it from somewhere other than 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue.
Some less-viral comments from Trump earlier in the day, however, may end up playing a much bigger role than the aforementioned bluster. Days from announcing the third Supreme Court appointee of his term, President Trump on Wednesday reiterated his desire for that appointee to be confirmed to the bench before the election as a bulwark against what he called the “scam that the Democrats are pulling.”
“I think [the election] will end up in the Supreme Court,” Trump said. “And I think it’s very important that we have nine justices. … I think having a 4-4 situation is not a good situation.”
If you’ve been checking in on our COVID-19 graphics in recent days, you probably noticed that, after weeks of decline following their peak in late July, the seven-day rolling average of new confirmed cases is starting to tick back up again. We’re still a far cry from the approximately 70,000 daily cases we were seeing several weeks ago with near-10 percent test positivity, but we may be entering another cycle of transmission rates trending in the wrong direction.
For much of the past few months, critics of the U.S.’s state and national coronavirus response—of which there are many—have pointed to the relative squashing of the virus in other regions across the globe. Europe, with its somewhat similar culture and climate, was the perfect foil.
Not anymore. After months of comparative calm, Europe’s second wave of the virus appears to be well underway. Spain and France have even surpassed the United States on a rate basis, new COVID-19 cases per million. And it’s creating some tensions across the pond.
“The United Nations must hold China accountable for their actions,” President Trump said during the 75th session of the U.N. General Assembly on Tuesday. In a scathing eight minute speech that had been prerecorded at the White House, the president placed blame for the pandemic squarely on China’s early mishandling of the coronavirus and deception on behalf of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP). The same day as the opening General Debate, the United States death toll from COVID-19 topped 200,000.
President Xi Jinping, in contrast, took on a conciliatory tone—borrowing a page from the American diplomatic playbook and co-opting the language of democracy. But, as Thomas Joscelyn writes in his latest for Vital Interests(🔒), “his intended target was no less obvious.”
“Xi’s speech was peppered with phrases that sound like a progressive American was speaking. Consider his use of the phrase ‘interconnected global village.’ Those words were uttered in the context of combating COVID-19. Xi wants to turn the pandemic narrative around, portraying his China as a responsible global leader in combating the virus. But there is additional context for his wording.
The CCP uses international institutions such as the U.N. to protect its own tyranny. When Xi speaks of ‘democracy’ and ‘multilateralism,’ he means China should have at least an equal say in how those same institutions are run.”
As the world’s dominant superpowers posture in an international blame game, European onlookers have taken notice. “The world today cannot be reduced to the rivalry between China and the United States, irrespective of the global weight of these great powers,” said French President Emmanuel Macron on Tuesday. But the continuing public health and economic fallout of the pandemic has begun to stir up friction in Europe as well, as the continent confronts an impending second wave of the virus.
Look ma, we’re in the New York Times! This article by Marc Tracy is an interesting look into how a growing number of journalists are forsaking traditional web publication tactics to hawk their skills directly to readers on subscription sites like Substack, the newsletter startup that happens to host our own content. Give it a read if you’d like a glimpse into the business side of what we do around here.
Over at Commentary, friend of the The Dispatch Christine Rosen has a good piece digging into how the New York Times has been busy editing out the more controversial and less defensible parts of the 1619 Project, a work of revisionist history specifically designed to reframe the foundational moment of American history as the year 1619, the year the first enslaved Africans set foot on Virginia soil. “If changes made by the Times and BLM signaled a good-faith effort to revisit their ideological positions, or perhaps even reform their thinking with regard to our country’s founding principles or the importance of strong families, such revisions would be welcome,” Rosen writes. “In fact, since they were done in a way that hindered transparency, and with no accompanying discussion by leaders of why such changes were made, one can only conclude that the alterations were done to shield both of these ideological movements from criticism.”
Elizabeth Bruenig, the Times’ resident Catholic leftist, writes that 60 years after the election of John F. Kennedy, the lack of controversy around Joe Biden’s Catholicism should not be cause for celebration for Catholics. Before their full assimilation into American culture, “Catholics were suspected of the worst sins of illiberalism: dogmatism, anti-intellectualism, tyranny, malice,” Bruenig argues. “And yet, Catholics were also responsible for articulating some of the best critiques of liberalism, citing callous individualism, gross inequality, exploitation and indifference as some of the philosophy’s excesses.” For Bruenig, the price of admission into the American mainstream has been the loss of a distinctively Catholic politics. “Perhaps Catholics have earned the right to no distinction,” she concludes, “the freedom of having no special moral obligations. And what a wide, barren, featureless liberty it is.”
This was one of our favorite Dispatch Podcasts in a while. Sarah, Steve, Jonah, and David debated the prudence of pushing through a Supreme Court nominee before the election; Steve is not a fan of the “deal” David and Jonah have proposed in recent days. The gang then turns to Amy Coney Barrett, the 1619 Project, and next week’s (!) presidential debate.
Jonah’s latest G-File (🔒) defends the grand Supreme Court bargain he, David, and others proposed this week, where some Senate Republicans would pledge not to confirm a nominee until after the election in return for some Senate Democrats promising not to pack the court or create new states. “If all that matters is power, then prudential arguments are nothing more than spin,” he writes. “If you have the power to do X, you can do X—debates over ‘should’ are for suckers. How will that position help down the road when Democrats try to do everything they can in the face of hollow GOP objections that they ‘shouldn’t’?”
The latest piece in the “Biden Agenda” series is up, this time from Frederick Hess on higher education. Hess predicts a Biden victory would lead to some kind of free college and a plan for debt forgiveness, never mind the cost, and a return to Obama’s Title IX guidance, never mind that it led to hundreds of lawsuits.
William Jacobson: “CBS News Feature About Gibson’s Bakery v. Oberlin College Wins Emmy Award — Gibson family attorneys: “As David Gibson’s last television interview, it’s a fitting tribute to a man who fought tirelessly to preserve his family’s reputation and demonstrate that the truth still matters.””
Kemberlee Kaye: “‘Cocaine Mitch got to Sen. Romney and now Sen. Murkowski says she’s willing to consider Trump’s SCOTUS pick, leaving Sen. Collins on a very lonely island as she faces what polls suggest is a tough re-election battle.”
Mary Chastain: “I knew when I covered Ukraine at Breitbart that Hunter Biden’s appointment to Burisma would come back to haunt him. But he’s a Democrat so nothing will probably happen.”
Leslie Eastman: “It is quite clear that the leftist lunatics who intend to descend upon the Supreme Court justice confirmation process in the next few weeks are hoping to use their Handmaid costumes again!”
Stacey Matthews: “There will be no charges filed in the case of a Mason, Michigan man who Hot Air reports ‘didn’t have a very high opinion of the massive, mail-in voting scheme his state was adopting for the presidential election.’ The man’s offense was to set up front yard display featuring an actual toilet with a sign behind it that read ‘“Place Mail In Ballots Here!” The Associated Press got cutesy in a tweet they wrote about the story, noting that ‘a Michigan prosecutor flushed’ the complaint, which was filed by Barb Byrum, the Democratic clerk of Ingham County.”
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Actions of Officer Who Killed Breonna Taylor Ruled ‘Justified’
After a grand jury indicted only one of the Louisville police officers involved in Breonna Taylor’s fatal shooting, protesters took to the streets in Louisville, some peaceful, manynot. Late last night, Interim Police Chief Robert Schroeder confirmed that two Louisville police officers were shot during the riots. At that time, both officers are in stable condition, though one was undergoing surgery. One suspect is in custody.
Many felt the single indictment, which was based on charges related to endangering Taylor’s neighbors—not charges linked to her death—fell short of justice. However, Attorney General Daniel Cameron maintained his team conducted a thorough investigation of the tragic encounter.
The city issued a curfew from 9 p.m. until 6:30 a.m., and the National Guard was activated to help with patrolling. More on the charges—or lack thereof—from The Wall Street Journal:
“Attorney Ben Crump, who is representing Ms. Taylor’s family, said in a statement that the grand jury’s decision was “outrageous and offensive to her memory” and “yet another example of no accountability for the genocide of persons of color by white police officers.” .. Police said that despite having secured a no-knock warrant—which allows police to storm a residence without first announcing their presence—they banged on the door several times and announced themselves. Mr. Cameron said that claim was backed by evidence that his office reviewed.
Attorneys for Ms. Taylor’s family have said police burst in without warning. Thinking they were intruders, according to the attorneys, Ms. Taylor’s boyfriend, Kenneth Walker, shot at them, striking Sgt. Mattingly.
Sgt. Mattingly responded by firing six times and Detective Cosgrove by shooting 16 times, Mr. Cameron said. “Mattingly and Cosgrove were justified in the return of deadly fire, after having been fired upon by Kenneth Walker,” he said.
Ms. Taylor was struck six times, though medical evidence showed only one of the shots was fatal, Mr. Cameron said. … The FBI is continuing an inquiry into potential civil-rights violations. … Last week, the city of Louisville said it would pay $12 million to Ms. Taylor’s estate as part of a legal settlement with her family. The agreement also required the city to implement policy changes, including a mandate for police commanders to approve all search warrants.
Mr. Cameron said he would create a task force to review the process for securing and executing search warrants. And he said that while Ms. Taylor’s death was a tragedy, he said his job was to set aside emotions and investigate facts.
“There is no doubt that this is a gut-wrenching, emotional case, and the pain that many people are feeling is understandable,” he said.”
Corrupt—Maybe Criminal
In 2017, prior to Joe Biden entering the presidential race, the U.S. Senate launched an investigation into Hunter Biden’s business dealings with foreign individuals and entities during and after his father’s vice presidency. The final report was released yesterday, and it uncovered a $3.5 million wire transfer to Biden from Elena Baturina, the richest woman in Russia and the widow of Yury Luzhkov, the former mayor of Moscow. For what? No one exactly knows.
“Other items,” reports The Federalist, “include accusations that Hunter Biden paid Eastern European hookers who might have been trafficked.”
And in China, “a series of businessmen working with Hunter Biden to establish a private equity firm investing Chinese capital in major American projects were also shown to possess deep ties within the Chinese Communist Party. The same Chinese business leaders also reportedly opened up a line of credit allowing Hunter Biden, Joe Biden’s brother James Biden, and James’ wife Sara to go on a more than $100,000 shopping spree that included extravagant items such as airplane tickets and high-tech products from Apple.”
As our former BRIGHT editor Erielle Davidson put it, “The Hunter Biden debacle is crony capitalism at its best and blatant corruption at its worst. Let’s not mince words. It’s INCREDIBLY shady. Most of Hunter’s foreign business exploits matched time periods in which his father was overseeing relations with that particular country.”
Media coverage of the report (such as this gem from Politico) predictably downplayed the report, leaving out any mention of the $3.5 million wire transfer despite previous obsessions with “R-U-S-S-I-A!” (I guess that obsession only applies to one side.) One can only imagine what the headlines would read if this was one of President Trump’s sons accepting millions in foreign cash.
Joe Biden, who last year said he had “never spoken” to his son about his overseas business dealings, will certainly have some explaining to do—that is, if any reporters are brave enough to do their jobs.
Programming Note
Authors Mollie Hemingway and Carrie Severino will be joining Independent Women’s Forum TODAY at 3pm ET to discuss the latest on the Supreme Court opening and their book, Justice on Trial: The Kavanaugh Confirmation and the Future of the Supreme Court. When IWF chose to feature Hemingway and Severino’s book, we (obviously!) didn’t realize how timely and relevant it would be to today’s news. But alas, there’s a major battle before us and you don’t want to miss their insight. (I’m just hoping that Democrats don’t make them write a sequel.) Register for the event here.
Kelsey Bolar is a senior policy analyst at Independent Women’s Forum and a contributor to The Federalist. She is also the Thursday editor of BRIGHT, and the 2017 Tony Blankley Chair at The Steamboat Institute. She lives in Washington, DC, with her husband, daughter, and Australian Shepherd, Utah.
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Sep 24, 2020 01:00 am
What conceited Democrats aren’t grasping is that President Trump, master of the deal, has everything on the table, too. Read More…
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The move to replace RBG will create the nastiest, dirtiest fight we have ever seen in our politics. But the Republicans hold the White House and the Senate to do exactly this. Read More…
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If the franchise is so very precious, if voting is a “sacred” right, then government must do everything it can to protect the integrity of our elections. Read More…
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States of Play: Ohio
After Trump maxed out the Buckeye State’s rural areas and small town areas, can Biden max out the suburbs?
By Kyle Kondik
Managing Editor, Sabato’s Crystal Ball
Dear Readers: Today at 2 p.m. eastern, we’ll be devoting our new episode of our Sabato’s Crystal Ball: America Votes webinar series to previewing the debates, which start next week. We’ll go through some of the most famous debate moments and discuss what they tell us about the looming clashes between Donald Trump and Joe Biden.You can watch live at our YouTube channel (UVACFP), as well as at this direct YouTube link. You can find previous episodes of the show at our YouTube channel, as well as other recent UVA Center for Politics panels and programming.
Additionally, an audio-only podcast version of the webinar is now available at Apple Podcasts, Spotify, and other podcast providers. Just search “Sabato’s Crystal Ball” to find it.
This week, we continue with our States of Play series. In 2016, Crystal Ball Managing Editor Kyle Kondik wrote the book The Bellwether, about why his home state of Ohio is so often at the center of presidential elections. Though the state lurched right in November of that year, there’s evidence Ohio may still be in a position to vote with the Electoral College winner — certainly if Trump wins, and possibly if Biden does as well. This is our fifth installment of our detailed look at the key states of the Electoral College; previous editions featured Pennsylvania, Georgia, Wisconsin, and North Carolina.
— The Editors
KEY POINTS FROM THIS ARTICLE
— Ohio insiders believe that the state is closer than last time, and that Donald Trump is struggling mightily in suburban areas.
— Still, Ohio should vote considerably to the right of the nation, thanks to its high percentage of white voters who don’t have a four-year college degree — a strong group for Trump — and its smaller-than-average nonwhite population, a group that is very Democratic.
— Suburban areas in general, and the Cincinnati and Dayton areas in particular, would likely be a key part of a Biden path to victory. But Trump is still better-positioned to win the state.
Ohio may be back in play in 2020
With Joe Biden generally leading nationally in the range of 6-8 points, Donald Trump is playing defense in a number of states that he won relatively comfortably in 2016.
One of those is Ohio, the traditional bellwether state that took a sharp right turn four years ago.
No Republican has ever won the White House without Ohio, and the state has typically voted to the right of its brethren in the industrial North. For instance, Ohio voted for George W. Bush twice, in 2000 and 2004, even as Bush was twice losing Michigan, Pennsylvania, and Wisconsin. Barack Obama carried Ohio twice, but his margin was narrower than it was in many other places in the region. And while Donald Trump carried Ohio by eight points, he captured that trio of “Blue Wall” states each by less than a point apiece.
There’s not a ton of recent public polling data in Ohio, and the data we do have do not tell a consistent story. Rasmussen Reports, a pollster that has generally produced national numbers that are more favorable for Trump than other pollsters, had Biden leading by four points in Ohio right after the Republican National Convention. Meanwhile, Morning Consult and the Democratic pollster Civiqs had Biden down five and three points, respectively, in the Buckeye State earlier this month. Yesterday, Lauren Copeland of Baldwin Wallace University, which helps produce the Great Lakes Poll of several states in the region, released polling showing Ohio about tied.
Certainly one would expect Ohio to vote significantly to the right of the nation again in 2020. But the fact that Ohio is apparently not totally locked down for Trump is an indication of the immense amount of work the president needs to do across the Midwest in the final 40 days of the campaign.
Trump was in Ohio on Monday, visiting the Toledo and Dayton areas in the western half of the state. Meanwhile, Joe Biden will step foot in Ohio for next week’s presidential debate in Cleveland, but it’s unclear whether he will campaign in the state beyond that.
Let’s look back at what happened in Ohio in 2016, and then ahead to what we might see in November.
The best case scenario for Trump is that he wins the state comfortably again, with that margin indicative of enduring strength in other parts of the region.
The best case scenario for Biden is that his improved margins with white voters helps him cut Trump’s towering margins in rural and small town areas, and that the realignment toward Democrats in suburban areas and with white voters with a four-year degree that effectively skipped Ohio in 2016 hits the state in force this November.
The 2016 Ohio story
There are a few eye-popping data points that illustrate how the 2016 presidential race knocked Ohio from its decades-long perch as the state most consistently reflective of national presidential voting patterns and pushed it more firmly into the hands of Republicans.
Based on data compiled by Daily Kos Elections, four of the 10 congressional districts nationwide that shifted most strongly toward the Republicans from 2012 to 2016 were in Ohio. That included the district that moved further right than any of the nation’s other 434 districts: Appalachian OH-6, which runs along the state’s eastern border and shifted from giving Mitt Romney a 13-point victory in 2012 to giving Donald Trump a 43-point margin in 2016.
The others in the top 10 were OH-13, a usually very Democratic Akron-to-Youngstown district held by Rep. Tim Ryan (D), a fringe 2020 presidential candidate; OH-7, another northeast Ohio district that covers some rural areas, parts of exurban Cleveland, and part of Stark County (Canton), historically a swing county that cut hard to Trump in 2016 (and then stayed Republican in 2018); and OH-4, a sprawling district stretching from western to northern Ohio held by polarizing Rep. Jim Jordan (R).
These shifts at the congressional district level are borne out by isolating the state’s three big urban counties: Cuyahoga (Cleveland), Franklin (Columbus), and Hamilton (Cincinnati). Together, these counties cast a little less than 30% of the statewide vote, and Hillary Clinton effectively matched Barack Obama’s 2012 showing in these counties: Her collective margin in them was only about 5,600 votes worse than Obama’s. Meanwhile, in the state’s 85 other counties, Clinton’s margin lagged roughly 608,000 votes behind Obama’s. (Ohio has cast a little more than 5.5 million presidential votes in each of the last four elections.)
Trump won the state by eight points while losing nationally by two, meaning Ohio voted 10 points to the right of the nation. Ohio had not voted so differently than the nation since 1932, Franklin Roosevelt’s first election.
The American electorate, demographically, can be split into three groups: white without a four-year degree, white with a four-year degree, and nonwhite. According to the Center for American Progress’ post-2016 demographic analysis by Rob Griffin, Ruy Teixeira, and John Halpin — the Center for American Progress is left of center, but the numbers produced by this report are widely respected — the 2016 national electorate was roughly 45% non-college white, 29% college white, and 26% nonwhite.
Republicans win big margins among the white non-college group, Democrats win even bigger margins with nonwhites, and the white college group is competitive but trending Democratic: Hillary Clinton won white college voters by seven points nationally, according to the study, after Barack Obama had won them by less than a point.
Trump dominated in Ohio for three key reasons:
1. Ohio’s electorate was 57% non-college white — a dozen points larger than the nation as a whole — and that group shifted strongly toward Trump in Ohio in 2016.
2. Just about 16% of Ohio’s voters are nonwhite, a significantly smaller share than the nation.
3. White voters with a four-year degree make up a very similar proportion of Ohio’s electorate — 28% instead of 29% nationally — but the group did not become more Democratic from 2012 to 2016 (the group basically split down the middle in both elections).
That Clinton did no better than Obama in Ohio with white voters with a four-year degree may come as a surprise to observers (it did to this one), because Clinton did run better in some highly-educated suburban areas in the state despite her big statewide deficit. For instance, in highly-educated Upper Arlington in suburban Columbus — the electorate there likely has substantially more than double the share of college graduates as the state electorate as a whole — an eight-point Romney victory in 2012 turned into a 15-point Clinton win in 2016, according to numbers compiled by the Columbus Dispatch. But not all suburbs are created equal, and the Dispatch’s accounting of suburban areas around Akron, Cleveland, Columbus, Cincinnati, Dayton, Toledo, and Youngstown found that the aggregate presidential vote in these suburbs was split in both 2012 and 2016 (Trump won them by a point after Obama and Romney effectively tied).
With the suburbs as a wash, Trump’s dominance in small town, non-urban/suburban Ohio — as exemplified in the strong shifts in some of the congressional districts noted above — helped him win the state comfortably.
What’s going on in 2020?
Informed Ohio observers generally still see Trump as having an edge in Ohio, but most would be surprised if he matches his 2016 margin. Part of this is a widely-held belief in both parties, backed up by their district-level polling, that the numbers in the suburbs have moved this time after collectively staying stagnant from 2012 to 2016, and Trump has lost a significant amount of ground. State Sen. Peggy Lehner (R) recently told the Associated Press that Trump’s support has “crashed” in her suburban Dayton district.
The tantalizing possibility for Biden is that Ohio got the Republican end of the realignment in 2016, and now it’s getting the Democratic end in 2020.
How much ground Trump has lost in the suburbs is unclear, but there is some polling that helps shed a light.
Democrats have released several polls of Ohio’s 1st Congressional District, where Rep. Steve Chabot (R) is trying to hang on against Kate Schroder (D), a health care executive. Biden has consistently led in the Cincinnati-based district, albeit by small margins (the most recent Democratic survey had him up just one), after Trump carried the district by seven points. We have not seen any publicly-released data from Republicans in this district, although Congressional Leadership Fund — a major outside group connected to House GOP leadership — has booked money in the district, an acknowledgement that Chabot needs air cover.
Trump’s margin, at the very least, is likely to be smaller in OH-12, a suburban/exurban/rural district north and east of Columbus. This district, held by Rep. Troy Balderson (R), hosted a very competitive special election in 2018, and Biden could actually carry it if he has a good night, although the likeliest outcome appears to be a Trump win, albeit reduced from 2016’s 11-point margin.
So there are places where one can imagine Biden doing markedly better than Clinton. But where else? Elections from 2018 may provide something of a roadmap.
Overall, the Democratic showing in Ohio two Novembers ago was a disappointment. While Sen. Sherrod Brown (D-OH) won a seven-point reelection victory over an overmatched Republican opponent, then-Rep. Jim Renacci (R, OH-16), Republicans held the state’s five elected executive positions — governor and a number of other row offices like attorney general and secretary of state — by close but clear margins: roughly 3.5-6.5 points apiece.
Map 1 shows four recent top races in Ohio by congressional district: Barack Obama’s (D) three-point win in 2012; Donald Trump’s (R) eight-point win in 2016; Sherrod Brown’s (D) seven-point win in 2018; and now-Gov. Mike DeWine’s (R) four-point win the same year. Thanks to Crystal Ball Associate Editor J. Miles Coleman for producing the map.
Map 1: Recent Ohio elections by congressional district
Somewhat conveniently for illustrative purposes, the gap between Obama’s 2012 and Trump’s 2016 Ohio victories and that of Brown and DeWine’s respective 2018 wins is about 11 points apiece.
First off, the 2012 and 2016 maps illustrate the differences laid out above: Both Obama and Clinton only won four of the state’s 16 congressional districts — the state has a GOP gerrymander that has led to Republicans consistently winning the other 12 districts — but Clinton’s margin was a couple of points worse than Obama in OH-11 (a Cleveland-to-Akron district drawn to be majority Black) and OH-3 (a Columbus-based district designed to take in as many Democratic voters as possible); 15 points worse in the Toledo-to-Cleveland OH-9; and 21 points worse in the Akron-to-Youngstown OH-13. Those latter two districts cover a lot of white working-class territory where Democratic strength appears to be waning.
As noted above, a number of the less densely-populated and already-red Republican districts became way redder from 2012 to 2016.
Meanwhile, the previously-mentioned OH-1 (Cincinnati and suburbs/exurbs) and OH-12 (Columbus suburbs/rural) hardly changed at all from 2012, while some other districts — OH-14 and OH-16 in northeast Ohio, OH-15 running from suburban Columbus to Ohio University in southeast Ohio, and OH-10 covering Dayton and some more rural turf to its east — shifted right by about 5-10 points apiece, less than the state’s overall 11-point presidential swing toward the GOP.
The 2018 maps illustrate how Brown won relatively easily while DeWine won a closer race. DeWine carried all of the 12 usually Republican districts, while Brown actually carried nine of the state’s 16 districts: the four usually Democratic ones, plus five other districts discussed in the previous paragraph (OH-1 and OH-10 in southwest Ohio, OH-12 and OH-15 in central Ohio, and OH-14 in northeast Ohio). These districts cover a lot of suburban turf.
DeWine did worse than Trump in 14 of the state’s 16 congressional districts, but the two exceptions were OH-1 (Cincinnati) and OH-10 (Dayton), where Trump and DeWine won basically the same margins. Both DeWine and his lieutenant governor, Jon Husted, have strong ties to the Dayton area. Additionally, DeWine is quite possibly a better fit for some suburban voters in these districts than Trump might be this year. Brown, meanwhile, carried both districts.
The two districts cover some key swing areas of the state, and in order to win Ohio, Biden likely needs to replicate or at least come close to Brown’s showing in both of them.
That’s because the flip side of the coin is that Biden is very unlikely to do as well as Brown did in eastern Ohio. In fact, he probably would be lucky to do as well as Richard Cordray, the 2018 Democratic gubernatorial nominee.
Cordray, like Clinton, did poorly in eastern Ohio relative to previous Democratic performance — but not as poorly. Cordray lost the extremely Trumpy OH-6 by 32 points — an 11-point improvement on Clinton’s 2016 showing. Cordray also restored, to some degree, Democratic margins in OH-13, the Akron/Youngstown district. He carried it by 16 points, nine points better than Clinton.
Brown only lost OH-6 by 18 points, or 25 points better than Clinton. Brown carried OH-13 by 25 points, nearly reaching Obama’s 2012 figure. Expecting Biden to match either of these Brown performances in eastern Ohio is extremely unrealistic given what appears to be Trump’s unusually strong appeal in the region.
In fact, one of the big question marks for this November is whether Trump can actually do better in some of the places where he overperformed so dramatically in 2016. Could he, for instance, win by 50 points in OH-6, as opposed to 43?
Ohio observers seem to believe Trump is holding up well in eastern Ohio but also that he doesn’t seem likely to do better and could very well do a bit worse. But Appalachia in general seems to love Trump: West Virginia, the only state that is entirely classified as part of the Appalachian region, gives Trump his highest approval rating of any state, according to 50-state polling calculations by both Ipsos — as part of Ipsos’ relaunched Political Atlas site, to which the Crystal Ball contributes race ratings — and Civiqs. This probably translates in some ways to the Appalachian portions of eastern Ohio and western Pennsylvania.
Biden may have an easier time making inroads with non-Appalachian white voters, such as those in northwest Ohio, a Republican but swingy area (OH-5 will be an important district to watch there).
One rough shorthand for measuring the presidential race in Ohio might be to look at the state as two halves, divided by Interstate 71, which cuts from northeast to southwest (see Map 2).
Map 2: Interstate 71 in Ohio
It may be that about the best Biden could hope for in the eastern half of Ohio — which contains all of its Appalachian counties — would be to replicate Cordray’s numbers from 2018. And even that may not be feasible.
Meanwhile, on the western side, Biden’s goal might be to look more like Sherrod Brown, particularly in places like Greater Cincinnati and Dayton, where Cordray did no better than Clinton (at least in OH-1 and OH-10) but where Brown actually carried these typically Republican-leaning congressional districts.
This is an oversimplified way of looking at the state — and, if you want to be pedantic, portions of both of those districts are technically east of 71 — but it acknowledges Trump’s strength in eastern Ohio and points to more potential for Biden west of 71 than east of it.
Ultimately, the Crystal Ball still rates Ohio as Leans Republican. It may be that the gubernatorial race from 2018 provides a decent proxy for what we might expect in Ohio, albeit with different voting patterns — Trump running better than DeWine in the eastern part of the state and approximating his incredibly impressive 2016 showing, Biden running better than Cordray in the western, and Trump still emerging victorious, albeit by a margin roughly half that of 2016.
If Biden were to win Ohio, though, Trump’s path in the Midwest — and to a second term — would be blocked.
That Trump spent precious time in Ohio earlier this week suggests that the battle for the state is not yet finished. In 2016, the Trump campaign felt good enough about Ohio that Trump skipped the state in his final tour of swing states the three days before the election. Whether Trump can do so again the final weekend of this campaign might tell us something about how well his campaign believes he’s doing.
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One former Louisville Metropolitan Police Department officer was charged Wednesday in the death of Breonna Taylor, with the two other involved officers avoiding charges altogether, USA Today re … Read more
Interim Louisville Chief of Police Robert Schroeder announced both officers are ‘stable’ and a suspect was arrested, but he is ‘very concerned about the safety of our officers.’
Demonstrators took over streets and launched fireworks at police, joining other cities erupting following a grand jury verdict they didn’t like in Breonna Taylor’s case.
Following Jesus means remembering Christ’s command to forgive and to pray for our enemies. It means letting go of malice and bitterness, even under fire.
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The shooting of two police officers in Louisville yesterday highlighted a night of violence that spread through many Democrat-led cities across the nation. Riots were rampant in Louisville, Austin, Portland, Seattle, and the other usual suspects following an announcement of “light” charges against one of the officers who shot and killed Breonna Taylor.
The interim chief of the Louisville Metro Police Department said that a suspect was in custody after the shooting of two officers during the violent protests over the death of Breonna Taylor.
Interim Police Chief Robert Schroeder said in a short media briefing on Wednesday evening that the two officers were in stable condition, and that one was undergoing surgery.
Schroeder said that police were responding at about 8:30 p.m. to a call of shots being fired at the corner of First and Broadway streets when more shots rang out and two police were struck.
Those police were taken to University Hospital with non-life threatening injuries.
Many took to social media with concerns about why the riots were allowed to get so out of hand. Law enforcement at every level has known there would be protests and likely riots for over two days when Louisville announced they would be releasing the results of the grand jury investigation of the officers involved in the shooting. As our EIC noted yesterday, the riots were definitely going to happen and had very little to do with Breonna Taylor herself.
There were attacks on law enforcement reported in multiple cities, including Seattle and Portland. According to Tayler Hansen and Andy Ngo:
But the violence was not just isolated to attacks on law enforcement. Many independent journalists reported attacks, including Savanah Hernandez, a journalist based out of Austin who has gone to several hotspots since the Black Lives Matter and Antifa riots began in the spring. She was hit in the head and had her phone stolen.
Prior to the video starting someone had just walked up behind me and punched me in the head
With all of this unrest, one has to ask why more wasn’t done to prevent it. Again, they had over 48 hours to prepare. The National Guard was called into Louisville, but clearly it was not enough to prevent this level of violence. As journalist Jack Posobiec said in a video he posted last night, fingers shouldn’t just be pointed at local and state leaders. FBI Director Christopher Wray did not do enough to prepare for or prevent the domestic terrorism that everyone knew was coming.
Anyone who has been paying attention could see this brewing from a mile away. We had 48+ hours to prepare. It’s inexcusable for this level of chaos and violence to be happening in America.
COVID-19 may take down an independent news outlet
Nobody said running a media site would be easy. We could use some help keeping this site afloat.
Colleagues have called me the worst fundraiser ever. My skills are squarely rooted on the journalistic side of running a news outlet. Paying the bills has never been my forte, but we’ve survived. We have ads on the site that help, but since the site’s inception this has been a labor of love that otherwise doesn’t bring in the level of revenue necessary to justify it.
When I left a nice, corporate career in 2017, I did so knowing I wouldn’t make nearly as much money. But what we do at NOQ Report to deliver the truth and fight the progressive mainstream media narrative that has plagued this nation is too important for me to sacrifice it for the sake of wealth. We know we’ll never make a ton of money this way, and we’re okay with that.
Things have become harder with the coronavirus lockdowns. Both ad money and donations that have kept us afloat for a while have dropped dramatically. We thought we could weather the storm, but the so-called “surge” or “2nd-wave” that mainstream media and Democrats are pushing has put our prospects in jeopardy. In short, we are now in desperate need of financial assistance.
The best way NOQ Report readers can help is to donate. Our Giving Fuel page makes it easy to donate one-time or monthly. Alternatively, you can donate through PayPal as well. We need approximately $11,500 to stay afloat for the rest of 2020, but more would be wonderful and any amount that brings us closer to our goal is greatly appreciated.
The second way to help is to become a partner. We’ve strongly considered seeking angel investors in the past but because we were paying the bills, it didn’t seem necessary. Now, we’re struggling to pay the bills. This shouldn’t be the case as our traffic the last year has been going up dramatically. June, 2018, we had 11,678 visitors. A year later in June, 2019, we were up to 116,194. In June, 2020, we had 614,192. We’re heading in the right direction and we believe we’re ready talk to patriotic investors who want to not only “get in on the action” but more importantly who want to help America hear the truth. Interested investors should contact me directly with the contact button above.
Election year or not, coronavirus lockdowns or not, anarchic riots or not, the need for truthful journalism endures. But in these times, we need as many conservative media voices as possible. Please help keep NOQ Report going.
Join fellow patriots as we form a grassroots movement to advance the cause of conservatism. The coronavirus crisis has prompted many, even some conservatives, to promote authoritarianism. It’s understandable to some extent now, but it must not be allowed to embed itself in American life. We currently have 8000+ patriots with us in a very short time. If you are interested, please join us to receive updates.
There has been a common theme on Twitter since the 2016 election season. If a conservative calls for violence, they will almost certainly be suspended or banned altogether. If a progressive calls for violence, they may get a warning but will probably get kudos and even retweets from Twitter staff. That’s what we’ve learned to expect from an organization that is staffed heavily by left-leaning employees. Many are full blown radical progressives using their jobs to participate in social justice activism.
All the while, Twitter’s top brass will tell anyone publicly, including Washington DC, that they have no bias. But that narrative is demonstrably false as we can see by today’s big trending topic, “Burn Louisville.” Following news that Breonna Taylor’s alleged killer, former Louisville police officer Brett Hankison, will not be charged with murder, calls for massive riots and wanton destruction in the city and around the country flooded social media. These riots will have very little to do with Taylor’s death as I noted earlier, but that’s not important to Twitter. All that’s important to Twitter employees is that cities burn and their revolution continues to get legs. Here are some direct calls for violence. There have likely been tens of thousands of these, perhaps more.
Twitter has not placed warnings on these calls for people to riot. They are letting it ride. But as radio host Joe Pagliarulo pointed at, Twitter was quick to slap a warning on a Tweet by President Trump that they believed called for violence. It did not, but by Twitter’s skewed understanding, they thought it did.
Twitter blocked @realDonaldTrump‘s tweet that violence will be met with force alleging it promoted violence.. but Burn Louisville can trend with no recourse? At least give the appearance of being even-handed, @Jack.
“Joe Pags,” as he’s called on his radio show, we referring to a Tweet by the President in June warning Antifa and Black Lives Matter rioters in Washington DC not to try to create what was built in Seattle that month. The Capitol Hill Autonomous Zone (CHAZ), which was later renamed the Capital Hill Organized Protest (CHOP), in Seattle was a six-block area near the East Precinct where multiple shootings and rampant crime took place when anarcho-communists took over. When reports came in that such an autonomous zone was being planned for the nation’s capital, the President issued a warning. Twitter labeled it as “abusive behavior.”
There will never be an “Autonomous Zone” in Washington, D.C., as long as I’m your President. If they try they will be met with serious force!
According to Twitter, a conservative presidential warning against violence is considered to be… violence. But leftists calling for actual violence are acceptable and even encouraged on Twitter. Got 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.
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.
In saner days, reactions to a so-called “light” indictment of former Louisville police officer Brett Hankison would likely have included protests (actual peaceful protest), editorials, vigils, and calls by politicians for action. 2020 has not been made up of sane days since February at the latest, so we can expect the news about Breonna Taylor’s alleged killer’s charges to bring rioting, demands to defund police, severe racial tension, and calls by politicians for extreme measures. That’s what 2020 has devolved into.
But lost in the narrative about no-knock warrants and a citizen’s right to defend themselves will be the real reason for all the chaos that is about to ensue. Breonna Taylor’s death was tragic and likely avoidable, but she isn’t the real reason for the riots. She’s just another excuse to riot presented by Neo-Marxist agitators who have been actively trying to burn down cities across America for months. These agitators don’t care about Breonna Taylor or no-knock warrants. They don’t even really care about police brutality or systemic racism despite pretending to be fighting both. Their only interest is using this tragedy to spark hatred, anarchy, and the long-awaited revolution they’ve been trying to initiate for years.
Black Lives Matter will be at the forefront and Antifa will grab some headlines, but the people representing them on the streets are just pawns. Even most of the agitators are pawns to a higher and much more nefarious force. The agitators may know more about the plan than the useful idiots who will be the tip of the rioting spear, but only negligibly. They believe they are starting a revolution to bring about anarcho-communism and to take down hegemonic authority in all its forms. They are being misled. The revolution they’re really starting on the orders of their puppetmasters is one designed to destroy America, all of it, and all of their agitators’ goals will be tossed to the wayside if they’re successful. Again, they’re just pawns.
To the Neo-Marxist puppetmasters, Breonna Taylor is George Floyd. She’s Jacob Blake. She’s every person of color whose death has sparked wanton destruction and inner-city chaos in Democratic-controlled areas across the nation. She’s someone who can be used to fan the flames of their growing insurrection. The circumstances of both her life and death are irrelevant to the evil people at the top of the revolutionary food chain. She, too, is just a pawn to them, even in death. Especially in death.
This is a moment when Americans, our representatives in government, and the leaders within the criminal justice system should be talking about the efficacy of no-knock warrants for drug-related crimes. The story being told about the circumstances the night Breonna Taylor was killed tells us two things. First, no-knock warrants are dangerous when done as a half-measure. Reports indicate they did, indeed, knock and attempt to identify themselves rather than simply busting down the door first. If they had initiated the no-knock warrant as it’s supposed to be initiated, it’s unlikely Breonna Taylor’s boyfriend, Kenneth Walker, would have been able to retrieve his legal firearm to fire at the police officers. If they had knocked and waited to issue the warrant without going in, they likely also would have avoided confrontation. But by knocking, waiting, and then coming in, they created a circumstance that led to tragedy.
The second thing to understand is that no-knock warrants are dangerous, even when initiated properly, and therefore should not be used for crimes short of kidnapping or threats of violence. It’s understandable to use a no-knock warrant if lives may be in danger, but drug-related no-knock warrants are designed to help law enforcement collect evidence before it’s discarded or destroyed. That’s simply not worth the risk. A standard warrant should be enough to make the majority of proper drug busts and for those who are able to discard their drugs before law enforcement can enter, it’s incumbent on law enforcement to work harder to collect evidence otherwise. Risking the lives of those in their home, whether they’re drug dealers or not, is inappropriate. In fact, it can be deadly.
But none of that matters today, at least not as far as the Black Lives Matter and Antifa “activists” are concerned. They aren’t interested in reforms. They want police to be eliminated by budget cuts, violence, intimidation, or a combination of the three. We should be making things better for this nation by learning from how poorly the situation was handled, a situation that led to an unnecessary death. Instead, the “activists” who will be destroying lives and property tonight and in the future only want us to learn one thing: Fear.
Justice has NOT been served.
Rise UP. All across this country. Everywhere. Rise up for #BreonnaTaylor
The anarchy that will rise surrounding Breonna Taylor’s killing will not make law enforcement better. It will not make anyone safer. It will not bring about positive change. Breonna Taylor’s death will be used to spark the revolution Neo-Marxists have planned for a long time.
COVID-19 may take down an independent news outlet
Nobody said running a media site would be easy. We could use some help keeping this site afloat.
Colleagues have called me the worst fundraiser ever. My skills are squarely rooted on the journalistic side of running a news outlet. Paying the bills has never been my forte, but we’ve survived. We have ads on the site that help, but since the site’s inception this has been a labor of love that otherwise doesn’t bring in the level of revenue necessary to justify it.
When I left a nice, corporate career in 2017, I did so knowing I wouldn’t make nearly as much money. But what we do at NOQ Report to deliver the truth and fight the progressive mainstream media narrative that has plagued this nation is too important for me to sacrifice it for the sake of wealth. We know we’ll never make a ton of money this way, and we’re okay with that.
Things have become harder with the coronavirus lockdowns. Both ad money and donations that have kept us afloat for a while have dropped dramatically. We thought we could weather the storm, but the so-called “surge” or “2nd-wave” that mainstream media and Democrats are pushing has put our prospects in jeopardy. In short, we are now in desperate need of financial assistance.
The best way NOQ Report readers can help is to donate. Our Giving Fuel page makes it easy to donate one-time or monthly. Alternatively, you can donate through PayPal as well. We need approximately $11,500 to stay afloat for the rest of 2020, but more would be wonderful and any amount that brings us closer to our goal is greatly appreciated.
The second way to help is to become a partner. We’ve strongly considered seeking angel investors in the past but because we were paying the bills, it didn’t seem necessary. Now, we’re struggling to pay the bills. This shouldn’t be the case as our traffic the last year has been going up dramatically. June, 2018, we had 11,678 visitors. A year later in June, 2019, we were up to 116,194. In June, 2020, we had 614,192. We’re heading in the right direction and we believe we’re ready talk to patriotic investors who want to not only “get in on the action” but more importantly who want to help America hear the truth. Interested investors should contact me directly with the contact button above.
Election year or not, coronavirus lockdowns or not, anarchic riots or not, the need for truthful journalism endures. But in these times, we need as many conservative media voices as possible. Please help keep NOQ Report going.
Join fellow patriots as we form a grassroots movement to advance the cause of conservatism. The coronavirus crisis has prompted many, even some conservatives, to promote authoritarianism. It’s understandable to some extent now, but it must not be allowed to embed itself in American life. We currently have 8000+ patriots with us in a very short time. If you are interested, please join us to receive updates.
Jabberwocky is a nonsensical poem written by Lewis Carroll about the slaying of a strange creature known as “the Jabberwock.” In Through the Looking-Glass, Alice discovers a book filled with gibberish that, when held up against a mirror, reveals poetic verse. Though she can read the mirrored stanzas of Jabberwocky, she struggles to comprehend their absurd meaning.
In similar form, the presidency of Donald Trump has invited Americans to see their government “through the looking-glass,” as well. What we’ve found these first four years is a media that speaks in riddles and a political system that replaces truth with some reflected version of it. We were warned that Donald Trump’s personal eccentricities made him unsuitable to hold the highest office in the land; instead, his quirkiness has revealed government and media institutions as spinmeisters of the absurd. The American Jabberwock has done everything in its power to devour President Trump, but the American people finally see D.C.’s nonsense for what it is.
The media howled that Russian collusion was real, while mocking President Trump’s assertion that the Obama administration spied on his campaign. After years of partisan investigations, no evidence of mythical “collusion” ever materialized, but a mountain of evidence revealing the CIA and FBI’s coordinated efforts to spy on both the Trump campaign and the Trump transition team became impossible to ignore. Hillary Clinton lied about having paid for the creation of the “Russian dossier” used by the FBI to secure the FISA Court’s blessing to spy on Team Trump. Barack Obama and Joe Biden lied about having no knowledge of the spying operation against Trump associates and lied about their role in the malicious prosecution of General Flynn. Democrat Congressman Adam Schiff spent four years running with one unsubstantiated conspiracy theory after the next in an attempt to remove the president from office, and the national press enthusiastically supported his crusade, even though his lies proved outlandish time and time again.
Both President Trump and Republican Congressman Devin Nunes truthfully told Americans how Obama’s people had abused the intelligence system to leak to the media illegally obtained and out-of-context communications to create the appearance of wrongdoing by Trump associates. The more truth Trump and Nunes told, the more the national media called them both liars. The more lies spread by Adam Schiff and John Brennan and Jim Comey and Peter Strzok and other Obama loyalists, the more the media lavished them with praise.
The Russia story proved how little evidence goes into mainstream reporting. Government sources pushing false narratives are aided and abetted by journalists who can’t be troubled to verify facts or flesh out the motives of anonymous sources. With few exceptions, “investigative” journalism means nothing more than picking up a phone and scribbling down the latest rumor intended to deceive. Jabberwocky journalism insists on painting President Trump as a liar and his assertions as made “without evidence,” while journalists peddle intentional disinformation and call it news. The Russia collusion narrative is disproven, yet journalists won a slew of awards by pushing that fabrication. In contrast, not a single award has been given to those few journalists who followed the facts and slowly but methodically revealed the heart of the scandal to be the Obama administration’s unprecedented use of the intelligence apparatus first to spy on a competing political campaign and then to sabotage the peaceful transfer of power through selective leaking and targeted misdirection. Only journalists reward their own lies, while calling others liars.
Nothing has surprised the American Jabberwock more than President Trump’s ability to survive the scandals created by Washington “insiders” against him. Russia collusion, the Mueller inquisition, the Biden Ukraine bribery scandal miraculously turned into a Trump impeachment, a Chinese pandemic maddeningly turned into a national economic shutdown, and local crime enforcement deaths in Democrat-run cities paradoxically turned into nationwide riots by Democrat-aligned shock troops fomenting revolution, have all been pushed by the national press corps as certain to “take the President down” once and for all.
“The walls have been closing in” for four years, except the more they close, the better President Trump’s overall voter approval has been. His approval with black Americans and Hispanic Americans is higher than ever. His approval with blue-collar workers is higher than it has been for a Republican president since Reagan. His approval with self-described Republicans is higher than the approval for any president of either political party since Eisenhower.
In this “through the looking-glass” Jabberwocky world pushed by Washington insiders in hot pursuit of President Trump, their unrelenting efforts to remove him have actually bolstered his support. How difficult this must be for the political class to understand, especially when any one of these Jabberwocky-created scandals would have succeeded in weakening past Republicans on the national stage beyond political survival.
But there’s the rub! Because President Trump is like no Republican ever elected to office, he seems uniquely made to take on the upside-down world Washington runs. How can you force a president’s removal if he refuses to play by the rules Washington writes? How can you intimidate him into surrender when he is happiest in the middle of a fight? How can you solemnly condemn him as “unfit for office,” when he succeeds in mocking Washington as unfit to govern? Political witch-hunts aren’t won by pretending the inquisitors deserve respect; they are won by reminding the American people that Washington has become Salem. Time and again, Washington builds giant bonfires meant for President Trump’s immolation, and each time, the president roasts his critics instead.
By refusing to respect the will of American voters, the Washington Jabberwock has unintentionally exposed itself as an un-American smear machine devoid of substance. It speaks in half-truths or outright lies; it starts fires and causes upheaval; it spews nonsense but demands respect. President Trump’s uncanny ability to see the monster for what it is and cut it down to size has altered American politics permanently. He may not yet have slain the beast for good, but everyone can now see it bleeding.
COVID-19 may take down an independent news outlet
Nobody said running a media site would be easy. We could use some help keeping this site afloat.
Colleagues have called me the worst fundraiser ever. My skills are squarely rooted on the journalistic side of running a news outlet. Paying the bills has never been my forte, but we’ve survived. We have ads on the site that help, but since the site’s inception this has been a labor of love that otherwise doesn’t bring in the level of revenue necessary to justify it.
When I left a nice, corporate career in 2017, I did so knowing I wouldn’t make nearly as much money. But what we do at NOQ Report to deliver the truth and fight the progressive mainstream media narrative that has plagued this nation is too important for me to sacrifice it for the sake of wealth. We know we’ll never make a ton of money this way, and we’re okay with that.
Things have become harder with the coronavirus lockdowns. Both ad money and donations that have kept us afloat for a while have dropped dramatically. We thought we could weather the storm, but the so-called “surge” or “2nd-wave” that mainstream media and Democrats are pushing has put our prospects in jeopardy. In short, we are now in desperate need of financial assistance.
The best way NOQ Report readers can help is to donate. Our Giving Fuel page makes it easy to donate one-time or monthly. Alternatively, you can donate through PayPal as well. We need approximately $11,500 to stay afloat for the rest of 2020, but more would be wonderful and any amount that brings us closer to our goal is greatly appreciated.
The second way to help is to become a partner. We’ve strongly considered seeking angel investors in the past but because we were paying the bills, it didn’t seem necessary. Now, we’re struggling to pay the bills. This shouldn’t be the case as our traffic the last year has been going up dramatically. June, 2018, we had 11,678 visitors. A year later in June, 2019, we were up to 116,194. In June, 2020, we had 614,192. We’re heading in the right direction and we believe we’re ready talk to patriotic investors who want to not only “get in on the action” but more importantly who want to help America hear the truth. Interested investors should contact me directly with the contact button above.
Election year or not, coronavirus lockdowns or not, anarchic riots or not, the need for truthful journalism endures. But in these times, we need as many conservative media voices as possible. Please help keep NOQ Report going.
Join fellow patriots as we form a grassroots movement to advance the cause of conservatism. The coronavirus crisis has prompted many, even some conservatives, to promote authoritarianism. It’s understandable to some extent now, but it must not be allowed to embed itself in American life. We currently have 8000+ patriots with us in a very short time. If you are interested, please join us to receive updates.
Ruth Bader Ginsburg was a tyrant and wrong on every significant issue. But make no mistake, she was highly intelligent and certainly a worthy rival for the soul of a nation. What will become in the wake of her demise? In truth, the pagans loved the Notorious RBG, but how many could articulate her tenure on the highest court other than the fact that she was a feminist. Put more bluntly people love the Notorious RBG because it is cool to love her. But the idolatry surrounding RBG was not one she necessarily invited upon herself. She was not big on emotionalism, and emotionalism is what the Left has become.
The arguments made by the Pagan leftists have increasingly become anti-intellectual with the rise of Critical Theory. As I describe in great detail, their priestess Robin DiAngelo consistently employs the non-falsifiable fallacy. She’s an intellectual lightweight, yet her book is within their canon. She rakes in five figures per speaking engagement.
So with Ginsburg gone, is the Left doomed to see more DiAngelos and fewer Ginsburgs? Are Sonia Sotomayor and Elena Kagan capable of taking up that mantle? Being a white male, I doubt Stephen Breyer is. But if the left wanted intellectual idols in politics outside the Supreme Court, who would they turn to? Their ideological champions at the moment include Alexandria Ocasio Cortez, Ilhan Omar, and Bernie Sanders. However, Elizabeth Warren is certainly a policy wonk. But it’s fair to say had Elizabeth Warren the ability to achieve pagan god status, she would probably have fared better in the primaries.
We are already seeing the unstoppable wave of emotionalism in the pagan community. Ruth Bader Ginsburg was perhaps the last vestige of logic to a movement that believes “I emote. Therefore, I am.” The movement that is continually pushing the envelop of sedition and revolution has no clear need for replacing high capacity legal minds. After all, the endgame of Critical Theory is to expand the proletariat for some sort of neo-Marxist revolution. And at such occasion, the Left would have no use for their Notorious RBG.
Perhaps it is mercy that Ruth Bader Ginsburg did not live to see the monster she helped create turn on her. But it’s clear that the death of an idol has emboldened the lawlessness that Ruth Bader Ginsburg did not support to complete the takeover of the pagan movement she emboldened.
COVID-19 may take down an independent news outlet
Nobody said running a media site would be easy. We could use some help keeping this site afloat.
Colleagues have called me the worst fundraiser ever. My skills are squarely rooted on the journalistic side of running a news outlet. Paying the bills has never been my forte, but we’ve survived. We have ads on the site that help, but since the site’s inception this has been a labor of love that otherwise doesn’t bring in the level of revenue necessary to justify it.
When I left a nice, corporate career in 2017, I did so knowing I wouldn’t make nearly as much money. But what we do at NOQ Report to deliver the truth and fight the progressive mainstream media narrative that has plagued this nation is too important for me to sacrifice it for the sake of wealth. We know we’ll never make a ton of money this way, and we’re okay with that.
Things have become harder with the coronavirus lockdowns. Both ad money and donations that have kept us afloat for a while have dropped dramatically. We thought we could weather the storm, but the so-called “surge” or “2nd-wave” that mainstream media and Democrats are pushing has put our prospects in jeopardy. In short, we are now in desperate need of financial assistance.
The best way NOQ Report readers can help is to donate. Our Giving Fuel page makes it easy to donate one-time or monthly. Alternatively, you can donate through PayPal as well. We need approximately $11,500 to stay afloat for the rest of 2020, but more would be wonderful and any amount that brings us closer to our goal is greatly appreciated.
The second way to help is to become a partner. We’ve strongly considered seeking angel investors in the past but because we were paying the bills, it didn’t seem necessary. Now, we’re struggling to pay the bills. This shouldn’t be the case as our traffic the last year has been going up dramatically. June, 2018, we had 11,678 visitors. A year later in June, 2019, we were up to 116,194. In June, 2020, we had 614,192. We’re heading in the right direction and we believe we’re ready talk to patriotic investors who want to not only “get in on the action” but more importantly who want to help America hear the truth. Interested investors should contact me directly with the contact button above.
Election year or not, coronavirus lockdowns or not, anarchic riots or not, the need for truthful journalism endures. But in these times, we need as many conservative media voices as possible. Please help keep NOQ Report going.
Join fellow patriots as we form a grassroots movement to advance the cause of conservatism. The coronavirus crisis has prompted many, even some conservatives, to promote authoritarianism. It’s understandable to some extent now, but it must not be allowed to embed itself in American life. We currently have 8000+ patriots with us in a very short time. If you are interested, please join us to receive updates.
Today’s release of an 87-page report from the Senate Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs and the Committee on Finance will yield some interesting headlines. Most in mainstream media will focus on tidbits of unimportant data to downplay the implications. CNN and MSNBC will side with Mitt Romney in saying it was a political ploy. Many of our friends in conservative media will point to the damning aspects that highlight Hunter Biden’s and Joe Biden’s corruption. Most if not all will miss the most important takeaway.
The entire impeachment debacle had one purpose and one purpose only. It was a distraction to keep attention off the ongoing coverup of Obama administration sins surrounding Burisma, Hunter Biden, and Joe Biden. Connections to Moscow, bribes, prostitutes, shady deals across the board… all of this was known by senior members of the Obama administration, including President Obama himself. This is why Joe Biden was assigned to deal with Ukraine instead of someone from the State Department. Biden was told by his boss to clean up his son’s mess.
In the latest episode of the NOQ Report, I broke down the reporting on the 87-page bombshell and drew from the highlights that Ryan Saavedra over at The Daily Wire noted. These were only some of the juicy pieces of information that have been revealed, and kudos to Saavedra for recognizing the connection to impeachment. I expanded on these findings in the podcast.
We cannot ignore the almost certain fact that President Obama was directly involved in this coverup, nor the even more likely fact that Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi rushed into an impeachment investigation specifically to keep the focus on President Trump and not the sins of his predecessor. The Democrats knew Rudy Giuliani was asking all the right questions and William Barr was getting involved. If they didn’t stop it in its tracks, they would have been exposed for using the power of the White House to avoid a series of scandals with the Vice President’s son. That’s why Eric Ciaramella was “volunteered” into being the whistleblower. It’s why the Deep State pushed it to the House through Adam Schiff. It’s why Pelosi launched the investigation a day before the transcript of the Ukraine call was to be released by the White House. They were scrambling to keep the lid on the Obama administration’s direct and high-level involvement with Ukrainian corruption.
In early 2015 the former Acting Deputy Chief of Mission at the U.S. Embassy in Kyiv, Ukraine, George Kent, raised concerns to officials in Vice President Joe Biden’s office about the perception of a conflict of interest with respect to Hunter Biden’s role on Burisma’s board. Kent’s concerns went unaddressed, and in September 2016, he emphasized in an email to his colleagues, “Furthermore, the presence of Hunter Biden on the Burisma board was very awkward for all U.S. officials pushing an anticorruption agenda in Ukraine.”
In October 2015, senior State Department official Amos Hochstein raised concerns with Vice President Biden, as well as with Hunter Biden, that Hunter Biden’s position on Burisma’s board enabled Russian disinformation efforts and risked undermining U.S. policy in Ukraine.
Although Kent believed that Hunter Biden’s role on Burisma’s board was awkward for all U.S. officials pushing an anti-corruption agenda in Ukraine, the Committees are only aware of two individuals — Kent and former U.S. Special Envoy and Coordinator for International Energy Affairs Amos Hochstein — who raised concerns to Vice President Joe Biden (Hochstein) or his staff (Kent).
The awkwardness for Obama administration officials continued well past his presidency. Former Secretary of State John Kerry had knowledge of Hunter Biden’s role on Burisma’s board, but when asked about it at a town hall event in Nashua, N.H. on Dec. 8, 2019, Kerry falsely said, “I had no knowledge about any of that. None. No.” Evidence to the contrary is detailed in Section V.
Former Assistant Secretary of State for European and Eurasian Affairs Victoria Nuland testified that confronting oligarchs would send an anticorruption message in Ukraine. Kent told the Committees that Zlochevsky was an “odious oligarch.” However, in December 2015, instead of following U.S. objectives of confronting oligarchs, Vice President Biden’s staff advised him to avoid commenting on Zlochevsky and recommended he say, “I’m not going to get into naming names or accusing individuals.”
Hunter Biden was serving on Burisma’s board (supposedly consulting on corporate governance and transparency) when Zlochevsky allegedly paid a $7 million bribe to officials serving under Ukraine’s prosecutor general, Vitaly Yarema, to “shut the case against Zlochevsky.” Kent testified that this bribe occurred in December 2014 (seven months after Hunter joined Burisma’s board), and, after learning about it, he and the Resident Legal Advisor reported this allegation to the FBI.
Hunter Biden was a U.S. Secret Service protectee from Jan. 29, 2009 to July 8, 2014. A day before his last trip as a protectee, Time published an article describing Burisma’s ramped up lobbying efforts to U.S. officials and Hunter’s involvement in Burisma’s board. Before ending his protective detail, Hunter Biden received Secret Service protection on trips to multiple foreign locations, including Moscow, Beijing, Doha, Paris, Seoul, Manila, Tokyo, Mexico City, Milan, Florence, Shanghai, Geneva, London, Dublin, Munich, Berlin, Bogota, Abu Dhabi, Nairobi, Hong Kong, Taipei, Buenos Aires, Copenhagen, Johannesburg, Brussels, Madrid, Mumbai and Lake Como.
Andrii Telizhenko, the Democrats’ personification of Russian disinformation, met with Obama administration officials, including Elisabeth Zentos, a member of Obama’s National Security Council, at least 10 times. A Democrat lobbying firm, Blue Star Strategies, contracted with Telizhenko from 2016 to 2017 and continued to request his assistance as recent as the summer of 2019. A recent news article detailed other extensive contacts between Telizhenko and Obama administration officials.
In addition to the over $4 million paid by Burisma for Hunter Biden’s and Archer’s board memberships, Hunter Biden, his family, and Archer received millions of dollars from foreign nationals with questionable backgrounds.
Archer received $142,300 from Kenges Rakishev of Kazakhstan, purportedly for a car, the same day Vice President Joe Biden appeared with Ukrainian Prime Minister Arsemy Yasenyuk and addressed Ukrainian legislators in Kyiv regarding Russia’s actions in Crimea.
Hunter Biden received a $3.5 million wire transfer from Elena Baturina, the wife of the former mayor of Moscow.
Hunter Biden opened a bank account with Gongwen Dong to fund a $100,000 global spending spree with James Biden and Sara Biden.
Hunter Biden had business associations with Ye Jianming, Gongwen Dong, and other Chinese nationals linked to the Communist government and the People’s Liberation Army. Those associations resulted in millions of dollars in cash flow.
Hunter Biden paid nonresident women who were nationals of Russia or other Eastern European countries and who appear to be linked to an “Eastern European prostitution or human trafficking ring.”
Do NOT let mainstream media lull you or anyone you know into ignoring the unambiguous implications here. Impeachment had EVERYTHING to do with keeping the Obama administration out of the Hunter Biden scandal. 100%.
COVID-19 may take down an independent news outlet
Nobody said running a media site would be easy. We could use some help keeping this site afloat.
Colleagues have called me the worst fundraiser ever. My skills are squarely rooted on the journalistic side of running a news outlet. Paying the bills has never been my forte, but we’ve survived. We have ads on the site that help, but since the site’s inception this has been a labor of love that otherwise doesn’t bring in the level of revenue necessary to justify it.
When I left a nice, corporate career in 2017, I did so knowing I wouldn’t make nearly as much money. But what we do at NOQ Report to deliver the truth and fight the progressive mainstream media narrative that has plagued this nation is too important for me to sacrifice it for the sake of wealth. We know we’ll never make a ton of money this way, and we’re okay with that.
Things have become harder with the coronavirus lockdowns. Both ad money and donations that have kept us afloat for a while have dropped dramatically. We thought we could weather the storm, but the so-called “surge” or “2nd-wave” that mainstream media and Democrats are pushing has put our prospects in jeopardy. In short, we are now in desperate need of financial assistance.
The best way NOQ Report readers can help is to donate. Our Giving Fuel page makes it easy to donate one-time or monthly. Alternatively, you can donate through PayPal as well. We need approximately $11,500 to stay afloat for the rest of 2020, but more would be wonderful and any amount that brings us closer to our goal is greatly appreciated.
The second way to help is to become a partner. We’ve strongly considered seeking angel investors in the past but because we were paying the bills, it didn’t seem necessary. Now, we’re struggling to pay the bills. This shouldn’t be the case as our traffic the last year has been going up dramatically. June, 2018, we had 11,678 visitors. A year later in June, 2019, we were up to 116,194. In June, 2020, we had 614,192. We’re heading in the right direction and we believe we’re ready talk to patriotic investors who want to not only “get in on the action” but more importantly who want to help America hear the truth. Interested investors should contact me directly with the contact button above.
Election year or not, coronavirus lockdowns or not, anarchic riots or not, the need for truthful journalism endures. But in these times, we need as many conservative media voices as possible. Please help keep NOQ Report going.
Join fellow patriots as we form a grassroots movement to advance the cause of conservatism. The coronavirus crisis has prompted many, even some conservatives, to promote authoritarianism. It’s understandable to some extent now, but it must not be allowed to embed itself in American life. We currently have 8000+ patriots with us in a very short time. If you are interested, please join us to receive updates.
by Gary Bauer: Confronting Communist China
President Trump addressed the United Nations General Assembly yesterday. Like so many other events this year, the U.N. meeting was held virtually, so the president spoke from the White House. And he wasted no time in confronting communist China.
Just 28 words into his remarks, the president blasted Beijing for failing to contain the coronavirus pandemic that has swept the world. Here’s an excerpt of the president’s remarks:
“Seventy-five years after the end of World War II and the founding of the United Nations, we are once again engaged in a great global struggle. We have waged a fierce battle against the invisible enemy — the China virus — which has claimed countless lives in 188 countries.
“In the United States, we launched the most aggressive mobilization since the Second World War. We rapidly produced a record supply of ventilators, creating a surplus that allowed us to share them with friends and partners all around the globe. We pioneered life-saving treatments, reducing our fatality rate 85 percent since April.
“Thanks to our efforts, three vaccines are in the final stage of clinical trials. We are mass-producing them in advance so they can be delivered immediately upon arrival.”
President Trump condemned China for shutting down domestic air travel and “locking citizens in their homes” while it allowed international flights to “infect the world.”
He ripped the World Health Organization for parroting Beijing’s claim that there was “no evidence of human-to-human transmission, and he called on the U.N. to hold China accountable.
But the president wasn’t done. He also denounced China’s terrible environmental record and abusive trade practices.
If you missed the president’s U.N. address, you can watch it here.
Another Vaccine Advances
Johnson & Johnson announced today that its COVID-19 vaccine has entered late-stage testing. That makes it the fourth vaccine supported by the Trump Administration’s Operation Warp Speed program to advance into Phase 3 testing.
Sixty thousand people in the United States and seven other countries will participate in the voluntary testing, which showed promise in animal trials.
What makes the Johnson & Johnson vaccine unique is that it is a single-shot vaccine, whereas the three other vaccines in Phase 3 testing require a second booster shot weeks later.
President Trump Defends Life
This morning, President Trump announced that he was taking additional steps to defend the sanctity of life. During an address to the National Catholic Prayer Breakfast, the president said:
“Today I am announcing that I will be signing the Born-Alive Executive Order to ensure that all precious babies born alive, no matter their circumstances, receive the medical care that they deserve. This is our sacrosanct moral duty.”
While I am pleased with the president’s announcement, he has unfortunately been forced to take this step because legislation to protect babies born alive after failed abortion attempts was filibustered by 41 Senate Democrats and failed to get a vote in Nancy Pelosi’s House of Representatives.
That’s how extreme today’s Democrat Party has become on the issue of abortion. They refuse to save babies even after they have been born alive!
Among those Democrats who filibustered this important pro-life legislation were: Kamala Harris, Joe Biden’s running mate, and Gary Peters (MI), Jeanne Shaheen (NH), Tina Smith (MN) and Mark Warner (VA), who are facing competitive races this year.
All of them should lose their seats over this issue alone!
Confronting Anti-Semitism
Today, the U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom held a virtual event discussing the growing threat of rising anti-Semitism in Europe amid the coronavirus pandemic. I was pleased to participate in the event along with USCIRF Chairwoman Gayle Manchin and experts from the Trump Administration and the Anti-Defamation League.
I have been warning for years about the dangers of anti-Semitism. But, sadly, there are those who exploited the pandemic to spread their own virulent hatred of Jews. (Here, >here and here.)
You can watch the USCIRF anti-Semitism event here.
Getting Tough On Crime
The department named New York City, Portland and Seattle as “anarchist jurisdictions.” Attorney General William Barr blasted these progressive cities, saying, “When state and local leaders impede their own law enforcement officers and agencies from doing their jobs, it endangers innocent citizens who deserve to be protected.”
Justice Department officials warned that these cities risk losing federal grant dollars unless they take more proactive measures to stop rioting and looting.
That may prove difficult in Seattle, where the left-wing city council just overrode the mayor’s veto to force significant cuts in the police budget.
Hunter & Ukraine A year-long investigation by the Senate Homeland Security Committee and the Senate Finance Committee has uncovered a number of startling findings related to Hunter Biden’s dealings in Ukraine.
The report released today by Senators Ron Johnson and Charles Grassley, chairmen of the respective Senate committees, details “a vast financial network that connected [members of the Biden family] to foreign nationals and foreign governments across the globe.”
As you know, Hunter Biden, son of former Vice President Joe Biden, was appointed to the board of Burisma, a Ukrainian natural gas company, even though he had no experience in the energy industry or Ukraine.
His appointment coincided with the time that his father had been tasked by the Obama Administration with overseeing U.S. policy toward Ukraine. Multiple officials, including then-Secretary of State John Kerry (whose stepson was a business partner with Hunter Biden) were aware of the obvious conflict of interest, but did nothing about it.
Senate investigators discovered that Hunter Biden’s company made millions of dollars from connections with the corrupt Ukrainian oligarch Mykola Zlochevsky, who founded Burisma, as well as millions of dollars from Elena Baturina, the richest woman in Russia. (Perhaps we need another special counsel to investigate this potential Russian collusion!)
The investigation also found evidence that Hunter Biden paid “nonresident alien women” from Russia and Ukraine who were involved in or connected to European prostitution or human trafficking, raising serious concerns for the risk of foreign blackmail.
Values Voter Summit
The Values Voter Summit continues at 8:00 PM ET.
A>merican Values, my non-profit public policy organization, is a proud co-sponsor of the Values Voter Summit.
Register here for your free digital pass and tune in this week to hear amazing speakers, including:
Dr. Bill Bennett
Ambassador Sam Brownback>/li>
Reverend Franklin Graham
Secretary of State Mike Pompeo
Dr. Carol Swain
President Donald Trump
And many more!
Tags:Gary Bauer, Campaign for Working Families, Confronting Communist China, Trump Defends Life, Hunter & UkraineTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
by Newt Gingrich: President Trump has already earned a remarkable number of historic achievements as a candidate and as president. For a man who ran to change the direction of government, he has succeeded more than any analyst would have thought possible.
First, as a brand new candidate, he took on 15 other Republicans and a hostile news media (go back and watch those debates and note how often the most hostile questions and the greatest expressions of scorn and contempt were aimed at candidate Trump).
As the Republican nominee, he defeated the Hillary Clinton machine and the elite media.
However, these two remarkable achievements were never fully acknowledged because victory on election night was repudiated psychologically. The propaganda media of the left, left-wing activists, and Democratic politicians went into hyper aggressiveness to discredit and delegitimize the Trump victory.
No President since Abraham Lincoln in 1860 has had as large a portion of the American people refuse to accept the legitimacy of the victory as Trump faced.
Over the following three years, the anti-Trump bureaucracy, the anti-Trump propaganda media, and the Trump-hating Democrats colluded to make up lie after lie. The New York Timesand The Washington Post won Pulitzer prizes for printing stories based on these lies. False information given to them illegally by Trump-hating bureaucrats who violated their oaths and broke the law because of their self-righteous conviction that anything could and should be done to the man who had usurped Clinton’s presidency.
President Trump stayed on offense through all the attacks. The largest deregulatory effort went on despite them. A giant job creating tax cut passed despite the hostility. The new trade policy focusing on American jobs and American economic interests was implemented despite the rabid hatred. An enormous military buildup began. A bold new program of developing the Moon and moving on to develop Mars was launched. The first new military service in 70 years, the US Space Force, was created.
Despite smears, constant investigations, hysterical accusations, a phony impeachment, President Trump continued to focus on creating the kind of disruptive changes for his supporters voted.
One of the most remarkable, possibly the most remarkable, achievements of the Trump first term was the extraordinarily productive alliance he formed with Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell.
Where Trump was a newcomer to the Washington governing process in January 2017, McConnell had spent his lifetime mastering the system of acquiring and using power in Washington. As he outlines in his remarkable memoir, The Long Game, McConnell’s only ambition in life was to become a United States Senator and ultimately Senate Majority Leader. He is the greatest master of the Senate system since President Lyndon Johnson, and it has really made possible one of the great achievements in Senate history: The approval of more than 300 federal judges – and in a few days, the approval of a third Justice of the Supreme Court.
In President Trump’s first term, he has recentered the federal judiciary away from three generations of liberal bias toward a constitutionally focused, strict construction consensus. That achievement could only have come with the hard work of the Federalist Society and the masterful leadership of Leader McConnell.
The decision to fill the vacant seat on the Supreme Court only seven weeks before the election has to be seen within the context of this endless passion and commitment by President Trump to continue disrupting the old order.
The historic precedents fit the president’s actions. Despite the lies and hysteria of the Democrats, left-wing activists, and the propaganda media, the historic fact is that President Trump is simply following precisely the precedent set in 1800. There is nothing to suggest a President cannot nominate a replacement if a court position is vacant up until the day his or her term ends.
Furthermore, given the hatred and vitriol with which Democrats have tried to destroy President Trump, why should he worry about their hand wringing and whining?
Trump supporters elected him to change Washington.
He has an astonishing opportunity to nominate a third Supreme Court Justice and truly define the judicial tone of America for at least a generation.
Leader McConnell has carefully nurtured his members and seems to have the votes to confirm a nominee if they can meet the standards of intelligence, education, experience, and character which is appropriate for a Supreme Court Justice.
The viciousness of the slurs and slander heaped upon Justice Brett Kavanaugh and his family may be repeated by an anti-religious propaganda media and the hysterically wound up activists of the left.
That will only harden Republican resolve to vote “yes” and will further alienate the Kamala Harris-Joe Biden ticket from the country.
President Trump is about to make history again.
It is fun to watch.
———————- Newt Gingrich (@newtgingrich) is a former Georgia Congressman and Speaker of the U.S. House. He co-authored and was the chief architect of the “Contract with America” and a major leader in the Republican victory in the 1994 congressional elections. He is noted speaker and writer. This commentary was shared via Gingrich Productions.
Tags:Newt Gingrich, President Trump, Makes History, AgainTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
by Michelle Malkin: Wake up. The “community organizers” of the left are in full wildebeest mode. Now is not the time for bending down, rolling over or playing nice. From now until Election Day (and likely until the end of the year), you can expect screaming banshees carrying identical, preprinted signs to turn up in the middle of the night at the private homes of elected politicians, Donald Trump campaign and administration officials, law enforcement officers, judges and conservative leaders.
This is not conjecture. A nationwide agitation force milked the dead body of George Floyd to create the current anarchotyranny. Now, in keeping with her dying wish, the mob will use the fresh corpse of Ruth Bader Ginsburg to try to bully Republicans into submission over President Donald Trump’s rightful Supreme Court nomination. The ultimate goal: obstruction and delegitimization of Trump’s reelection.
On cue, a bunch of demonstrators all in matching yellow-and-black T-shirts from the Sunrise Movement turned out in front of South Carolina Sen. Lindsey Graham’s house in Washington, D.C., this weekend, banging pots, pans and buckets. The disrupters also blasted airhorns, pointed strobe lights at the windows and crashed cymbals to punctuate their collective fit over Ginsburg’s passing. Not a single one was arrested for disturbing the peace.
One organizer shrieked at Graham (who was not at home at the time): “You are an old white man desperately clinging to power that you can’t hold onto much longer because we’re coming for it. And in the meantime, you are not filling that Supreme Court seat. Not on our watch. The people will decide who fills that seat. No justice, no sleep!”
Another threatened: “Anyone who is seeing this can do the same thing to your representative, can do the same thing learning about how to hold them accountable. Make sure they know if they do some evil (expletives), they know there will be consequences for it.”
Shrieker Number One concluded: “We will vote, we will organize, we will strike, and we will keep showing up in your goddamned driveway at the crack of dawn to let you know that WE ARE WIDE AWAKE!”
Who is the Sunrise Movement? It’s as organic as Spam and as genuine as AstroTurf. This full-time rent-a-mob is an adjunct of the Sierra Club (annual budget: $100 million; top donors: Michael Bloomberg, George Soros). The Sierra Club provided five-figure initial seed grants to Sunrise’s educational arm, as well as Beltway office space. Other original funders of Sunrise: The Rockefeller Foundation and Wallace Global Fund (which has also contributed to the George Soros-subsidized Tides Center, Color of Change cancel culture guerilla warriors, and far-left legal policy groups Alliance for Justice and the Brennan Center for Justice).
The Sunrise Movement’s co-founder, Evan Weber, is a former Occupy Wall Street organizer. Two others, Sara Blazevic and Varshini Prakash, are Green New Deal zealots and Bernie Sanders activists who teamed with Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez to push the Democrats even further left. Prakash serves as an advisory board member of Climate Power 2020 along with Soros-funded Center for American Progress head John Podesta, former Obama administration environmental czar Carol Browner, former Obama administration science czar John Holdren, former Obama administration Secretary of State John Kerry, former Obama administration EPA head Gina McCarthy, and former Obama administration U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations Samantha Power.
According to Forbes magazine, Sunrise has 50 full-time staff and $6.5 million in funding. The Sunrise Movement’s political arm “promotes social justice ideals” through sit-ins and neighborhood invasions. “Sunrise School” is recruiting students online on how to plan attacks on private property and get press coverage (like a glowing CNN report Monday that celebrated its “youth organizers”). The goal: “mass civil disobedience.”
For the past three years, the group has established “Sunrise Movement Houses” where “fellows” ages 18-25 move into training centers in key electoral states. The Sunrise website boasts more than 400 “hubs” across the country, from Kodiak, Alaska, to Portland and Seattle, to Santa Fe, El Paso, Milwaukee, Detroit, Des Moines, Boston, Tampa and all points in between.
Most recently, Sunrise has trained its street performers for “defund the police” actions with illegal immigrant rabble-rousers from Soros-funded Mijente and Dream Defenders, as well as the Democratic Socialists of America’s Afrosocialists. In July, Sunrise trainees descended on Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell’s house in Louisville, Kentucky. This weekend, the drum-pounders targeted Graham as well as Sen. Thom Tillis of North Carolina. Republican Senators Pat Toomey of Pennsylvania, Cory Gardner of Colorado and Ron Johnson of Wisconsin are their next targets, as well Supreme Court short list candidate Barbara Lagoa.
They may look and sound like pesky, snot-nosed toddlers having harmless temper tantrums in black pajamas. But these professionally organized punks provide obstructionist boots on the ground for globalist Democratic billionaires and strategic cover for their violent antifa and Black Lives Matter comrades.
Wake up, smell the manufactured chaos, and vote to put these pot-banging brats and their donors in time out. Four more years.
—————————
Tags:ichelle Malkin, Sunrise Movement, The Riotous Left’s, Pot-Banging BratsTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
by John Stossel: “Mother Earth is angry!” says Nancy Pelosi in my newest video.
“The debate is over around climate change!” says California Governor Gavin Newsom, smirking, strangely.
They’re eager to blame climate change for the wildfires in their state. I’m surprised they didn’t say it causes COVID-19, too.
Newsom, ridiculously, says wildfires are another reason to get more electric cars on the road. I wonder if he even knows that electricity for such cars comes from natural gas.
“This catastrophizing around climate change is just a huge distraction,” says environmentalist Michael Shellenberger, author of the new bestseller, “Apocalypse Never,”
Shellenberger says: “Climate change is real, but it’s not the end of the world. It’s not our most serious environmental problem.”
California warmed 3 degrees over the past 50 years, but that’s not the main cause of California’s fires, no matter how often politicians and the media say it is.
Why do they keep saying it?
“If all you have is a hammer, everything looks like a nail,” says Shellenberger. “Every weather event you blame on climate change.”
What actually is to blame, as usual, is stupid government policies.
Forests are supposed to burn. If there aren’t small fires, debris from dead trees and plants accumulate. That provides fuel for big, deadlier fires, that are more likely to burn out of control.
But for years, governments and environmentalists put out every small fire they could, while also fighting logging.
Megafires could have been avoided if forests had just been better managed.
An example is Shaver Lake forest, managed by Southern California Edison. The company thinned that forest, creating fire breaks with selective logging. When the wildfires reached Shaver Lake, they diminished into low intensity “surface fire.” That protected the bigger, older trees.
Forests in America’s west were (SET ITAL)supposed(END ITAL) to burn more often, says Shellenberger. “When Europeans came, they reported California being very smoky and on fire during the summers. And Native Americans burned huge amounts of land.”
“So, for the past years, it’s been unnaturally un-smoky?” I ask.
“It’s what a lot of forest ecosystems require,” answers Shellenberger. “We haven’t had enough fires for maybe 100 years.”
ut it’s hard to convince governments to allow small fires when politicians demand that every fire be put out, and the media call every fire a disaster.
Recently, wildfire hit the ancient redwoods in Big Basin State Park. Politicians and East Coast environmental reporters worried about the redwoods disappearing.
But of course, they didn’t.
“Redwood trees and other old growth, the bark is very thick, it’s fire-resistant,” says Shellenberger.
The politicians didn’t know that. “They’re still standing!” giggled an astonished Newsom after the fire passed.
But “it was exactly what you would expect,” says Shellenberger. “Journalists go, ‘Wow. What a surprise! The ancient redwoods didn’t burn down!’ Nobody’s more alienated from the natural environment, and nobody’s more apocalyptic than environmental journalists.”
Well, maybe politicians.
For years, they and environmentalists increased the risk of big fires by opposing the thinning of forests.
The town of Berry Creek, California, tried to get permits to legally clear their forest. For two years, regulators delayed approval. This year, fire destroyed the town.
Forest Service ecologist Hugh Safford wishes they would “get away from the tree-hugging mentality. It’s the classic ‘not seeing the forest for the trees.'”
This year’s wildfires finally persuaded politicians to allow more people to cut trees down.
“There’s actually widespread agreement on this, says Shellenberger. “The governor of California and President Trump recently signed an agreement to clear much more area. Even the Sierra Club, which opposed the thinning of forests, has now changed its tune.”
It’s about time.
Politicians and environmentalists, eager to raise money, cite climate change and blame fossil fuels for problem after problem.
While climate change is a problem, Shellenberger points out, “the number of deaths from natural disasters declined 90% over the last hundred years. A small change in temperature is not the difference between normalcy and catastrophe.”
————————–
John Stossel is author of “No They Can’t! Why Government Fails — But Individuals Succeed.” Article shared by Rasmussen Reports.
Tags:John Stossel, Rasmussen Reports, Bad Policies, Fuel FiresTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
by Mike Huckabee: If you read the commentary for Tuesday morning, you know that if Democrats take the Senate and White House, their threats of packing the Supreme Court, eliminating the Electoral College, granting statehood to Puerto Rico and DC, and making other seismic changes will be carried out whether or not President Trump fills the vacant Court seat before the election. So Trump may as well DO IT, and, in fact, intends to. As we reported yesterday, the Senate apparently has the votes. So that part of the discussion is over, or at least should be.
EVERYONE knows that if a Democrat President were in the same position as Trump, with a Democrat Senate to confirm his choice, he’d have his new (activist) justice sworn in faster than you can say “Christine Blasey Ford.” The full Court would be able to start hearing cases in October, hardly missing a beat.But the double standard applies once again. The media are completely off their meds. The meltdown on CNN and MSNBC was so predictable that there’s no point in even getting into it. Mostly, they’re wrongly equating one situation (the Merrick Garland nomination), in which the President and Senate were of different parties, with another situation, in which the President and Senate are of the same party. But these scenarios are very different, and the anger we see is coming from their blind partisanship and willful ignorance. I’ll do what I hope you do — ignore it.
Except for one dangerous part of it: They’re encouraging the Democrats to go ahead and “burn it all down”: As soon as they gain power, pack the Court to suit the President, destroying checks and balances. (VOX said this might be “the only solution.”) Add states, to gain senators who vote their way. Get rid of the filibuster completely. “Blow up” the Electoral College and choose the President by straight popular vote (gee, why shouldn’t California and a handful of big cities pick the President?). Maybe even impeach the attorney general, for, um, agreeing with Trump too much. Do whatever it takes to hold onto power. The media apparently learned in journalism school that they’re supposed to be the cheering section for all this.
THE FEDERALIST has a great piece on just how far the media and the Democrats (but I repeat myself) plan to take this.
However, this episode has taken one surprising turn. Under the heading of “even a broken clock is right twice a day,” I have to give credit to Utah Sen. Mitt Romney for seeing the big picture on this issue and putting history and precedent over politics and personal grievance. The LA TIMES wrote that Mitt “made the wrong call,” which means he made the right call. They also left out –- I’m sure deliberately –- the first part of what he said, about the fairness of following the law, so I’ll put that back in:
“My decision regarding a Supreme Court nomination is not the result of a subjective test of ‘fairness’…it is based on the immutable fairness of following the law, which in this case is the Constitution and precedent,” his said. “The historical precedent of election-year nominations is that the Senate generally does not confirm an opposing party’s nominee but does confirm one of its own.”
Romney went on to say that he would follow the Constitution and vote based on the nominee’s qualifications. Good job, Mitt!
House Republicans had something to say about Court-packing, too. Not that Democrats care.
As reported in POLITICO on Monday, Joe Biden refused to tell a reporter whether or not he would pack the Supreme Court if he won. He weaseled out by saying, “It’s a legitimate question. But let me tell you why I’m not going to answer that question: Because it will shift all the focus. That’s what he [Trump] wants.”
“Shift all the focus”? To quote Biden after the passage of Obamacare, “This is a big (bleeping) deal!” The idea of Court-packing is a big deal. Shouldn’t we focus on it right now? If Biden won’t renounce Court-packing, that tells us his party intends to do just that if they get the chance.
This is also one more example of Biden flip-flopping, as he said during the primary race that he “would not get into Court-packing…we’d begin to lose any credibility the Court has at all.”
And so we would. Why can’t he say that now?
Kamala Harris was more forthcoming, in a chilling sort of way. As reported by THE NEW YORK TIMES, she said she was “absolutely open to” packing the Court. Well, of course she is. She and AOC are on the same page, you can bet the farm. (Of course, if they end up in power, they’ll likely take your farm.)
Biden won’t even divulge his own “shortlist” of SCOTUS nominees. Maybe he doesn’t know them or remember their names. But he knows who’s in charge of his party, and he has said he’ll have “the most progressive administration in history.” If you want to see progressive, all you have to do is look at the extremists running New York City, Portland, Seattle and San Francisco. Leftists have way too much power NOW; we’d be crazy to give them more.
Finally, for when you have time, it’s fascinating to look back at what happened when Franklin D. Roosevelt tried to get the House and Senate to pass legislation to help him pack the Court, just so it would rubber-stamp his New Deal programs. Back in 1937, even though these were all Democrats, they reacted with horror at such a power-grab and refused. FDR’s plan flopped spectacularly. If only this were still your great-great-grandfather’s Democrat Party.
Tags:Mike Huckabee,Morning Edition NSERT TAGSTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
The Democratic presidential nominee had embraced one of the most bizarre but—until recently—effective strategies thus far in a presidential campaign. Like some fictive vampire, Joe Biden has been ensconced in a basement tomb and, now pale, he is reemerging into the light and finding the glare all but lethal.
Under the cloak of the coronavirus and national quarantine, Biden essentially had shut down his campaign from late March to the present. Ostensibly, his handlers believed that any downside of appearing to play-rope-a-dope and to avoid unscripted events was more than outweighed by not putting a sometimes frail 77-year-old man with apparent cognitive challenges out on the campaign trail for 16-hour days.
Or as his former boss, Barack Obama, reportedly warned Biden of the looming 2020 ordeal and his apparent fragility, “You don’t have to do this, Joe, you really don’t.” He really didn’t have to—except that Kamala Harris, Beto O’Rourke, Cory Booker, Elizabeth Warren, and Bernie Sanders proved inept messengers of socialism.
The “Summer of Love”
As the media-constructed summer news cycle from May through August wounded Trump—Trump, the Typhoid Mary, COVID-enabler Trump, the mask denialist and bleach drinker Trump, the Herbert Hoover economy-wrecker Trump, the reincarnation of the racist Lester Maddox Trump—Biden kept torpid in his home basement. And that mostly successful sequestration required lots of complicity from our elite.
Mainstream polls, though still wounded from their 2016 washout, once showed Biden had a substantial lead. As Biden snoozed, the media was certainly doing more damage to Trump than an active Biden might ever have inflicted.
In brilliantly diabolical fashion, the now virtual campaign was outsourced to subordinates but not in any traditional sense.
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) and Senator Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) would obstruct economic relief by holding bills hostage to blue-state demands for massive multibillion-dollar bailouts of their insolvency and past profligacy. Trump would then look callous by not expanding on the prior $4 trillion stimulus that allowed many wage earners to make as much on government assistance than they would have had they returned to work. In the Democrats’ logic, printing only $4 trillion in cash would now soon be seen as cold-hearted.
Then there was the media’s role. It was tasked with the sniper’s work of aiming, shooting, and then scurrying off to the next ambush nest. That is, every few days a new media-driven “scandal” would surface to put Trump on the defensive and allow the congealed Biden to remain phlegmatic without much concern. And so it has been lately. We were told Trump didn’t blink an eye when his friend Vladimir Putin was putting bounty money on American soldiers in Afghanistan. When that myth was refuted, next Trump was stealthily yanking away public mailbox stands, no doubt to sabotage mail-in-voting.
Then there was Trump the coup-master, who would never leave the White House after his inevitable November defeat—hence the tolerance of another round of actual coup talk from our retired humanistic generals and admirals.
Next in the queue was Trump as the vile slanderer of American war dead who was terrified to ride in a helicopter to cemeteries, given his dry hair was worth far more than the hassle of praising fallen “suckers” and “losers.”
Bob Woodward, in his sequel to his last 2018 “bombshell” Trump take-down book, waited patiently in line for his new charge that Trump lied about COVID-19 and thus logically was culpable for mass death, even as his top military and intelligence officials knew that he was unfit and needed an “intervention” apparently to remove him. Bottom line: more coup porn as a bonus to Trump, the COVID partner in death.
More of this will come every week until the election. The problem is not whether these media mythologies work to drive down Trump’s polls and eat up the finite days left in the campaign—so far they have had only a hit-and-miss effect.
But rather, will the sheer monotony and predictability of these “walls are closing in” disclosures simply go the way of the Mueller team’s leaked news bulletins of imminent Trump indictment and frog-marching out of the White House?
Like cheap funny money, the currency of these concoctions eventually becomes so ubiquitous and inflated to the point of being worthless. Or perhaps a better metaphor is vaccination: the more the Biden team orchestrates these inert serial “scandals,” the more they provide antibodies and with them immunity to the next assault.
The problem is not that Biden is now necessarily behind in the polls. Rather, there is no backup strategy to stop the slow but steady Trump trajectory.
The big-money donors were given their tasks. On spec, George Soros promised his millions to route through various anti-Trump PACs. Mike Bloomberg said he would chip in $100 million to ensure Trump would lose—on his theory that his millions would not be burned up for nothing if he at least was not on the ballot. Billionaires promised more millions for the Lincoln Project. The old left-wing accusation of “dark money” no longer exists.
In the next seven weeks, many of the Fortune 500 wealthy families will have pledged their assistance to Biden who, as likely as Hillary did in 2016, will outraise Trump. We are reminded again that the new Democratic Party is the alliance of the nation’s richest, in league with those in most need of public assistance, with both sharing an innate disdain for the middle classes.
Then there are the foot soldiers of the Biden campaign, which is the de facto military wing of the Democratic Party. These are the nasal-voiced Antifa veterans, who appear nightly in road-warrior garb to burn and destroy, along with their BLM partners who will riot and loot. Their collective message is that anarchy, chaos, and mayhem are the inevitable wages of a Trump presidency. A vote for the newly rebooted Biden socialist agenda—everything from the Green New Deal to reparations and open borders—supposedly will magically dissipate the carnage by mid-November.
The logic is that the rioters and arsonists now hold the country hostage, as if to say “you can snap out of your fetal position and rise up if you just vote for our puppet Biden.” And Biden himself is also their hostage on the premise that to get nominated he had to renounce his former self, and for the next month or more, if he expects them to help elect him, he will have to keep mum on the violence and wink that he too is now a democratic socialist.
Finally, there is the Biden basement campaign itself. Up until this week, it largely was a stage crew. Flaks wrote scripted questions for preselected obsequious journalists. They set up strategically located stealthy teleprompters. They wrote out Biden’s talking points and canned quotations on Biden’s iPhone. And they sent out a cadre of young contextualizers to the networks to suggest instead that Biden, in virtuoso fashion, was batting away hard-hitting questions with ease.
The Return of Fighting Ol’ Joe from Scranton?
Biden then, not only has a war room, but also an intensive care unit whose task is to deny—and reinterpret—the prior day’s Bidenisms.
And Biden’s rambling themes predictably are twofold: gaffes will usually entail some creepy reference to women as in last week’s macabre riff about a veteran killing a young woman (inspiring stuff for an audience of U.S. military vets?), or the chance for former quartermasters to find jobs in the “second floor” lady’s department in chain stores, or they will be clumsy racial pandering of the sort from “you ain’t black” to shaking with Latino music on his iPhone. Otherwise, it is the usual stuff, such as 200 million Americans—over 60 percent of the U.S. population — already dead from COVID-19.
Again, Biden’s hibernation was predicated on the assumption that Trump, by September, would be imploding from a swarming virus, a recession devolving into depression, a national quarantine mimicking a Communist Chinese shutdown, and the George Floyd death sparking a 1960s-style nonstop mass protest movement.
Trump so far has never run against Biden, given the latter has no agenda that we know of, no plan of competing action other than impromptu homilies and “here’s the deal” generalities. Instead, it has always been Trump versus a virus, a lockdown, a recession, and a riot.
What then brought Biden out to risk blowing up his campaign with five minutes of talk?
Polls seem to be closing. They likely reflect that the public is beginning to think COVID-19 is no longer the bubonic plague, that the recession will be more likely ending in recovery than in a 1929-style depression, that 50 million schoolchildren are in greater danger of ill health shut up at home than in school, and that the violence in our streets no longer has much to do with the death of George Floyd.
Again, the problem is not that Biden is now necessarily behind in the polls, although a few suggest that he may be more or less tied. Rather, there is no backup strategy to stop the slow but steady Trump trajectory. Trump at age 74 seems more like he’s 64; while Biden’s 77 is more akin to 88. Trump can cover three times the ground. As presidents do, he can stage his own October surprise “breakthroughs,” as we saw last week in the Middle East, or at home with an unexpected Durham indictment or two.
Experts assured us nonstop that a repeat of 2016 was impossible. The pollsters had learned their lessons. So did the media that purportedly were no longer so haughty and publicly biased. No president could overcome a year of virus, quarantine, recession, and riots. Trump would be even more outspent than four years earlier. And yet here we are with the clouds of another 2016 perfect storm gathering.
So now, in the 11th hour, Biden is slowly becoming a candidate and not a mere projection on Zoom. The Joe of 1988 and 2008 has returned for a third attempt as the “first” in his family to have gone to college, the fracking scion of Scranton’s “coal” miners, the hard-scrabble guy who took the train to Washington, but this time around as the stealth vessel for a Bernie Sanders agenda.
Don’t expect that Biden suddenly will become comprehensible, much less offer a detailed counterplan to Trump. Instead assume that House and Senate Democrats will obstruct and make more wild accusations. The media will offer more scandals and slanted polls. A new tell-all book will line up for its 10 minutes of fame. An angry former administration employee or yet another “heroic” retired four-star general will emerge to tweet out his disgust. More mass signed letters of “concern” will appear from doctors, or retired military officials, or state department grandees. Still more billionaires will brag that they are giving Biden millions.
Will the return of Joe preserve his fourth-quarter eroding lead? Only if his reentry assumes that Biden will keep mum for six weeks or suddenly and magically sound extemporaneously presidential or the media can selectively edit everything he says.
So Barack Obama was prescient when he feared what a Biden candidacy might do to his legacy or to Biden himself. But I would only slightly reword his warning to read something like the following: “Joe, You don’t have to do this to the country. Joe, you really don’t.”
———————————— Victor Davis Hanson (@VDHanson) is a senior fellow, classicist and historian at the
and Illie Anderson Senior Fellow at the Hoover Institution where many of his articles are found; his focus is classics and military history. Article share by Center for American Greatness.
Tags:A Woke Joe Biden, Ends His Hibernation, Victor Davis Hanson, American GreatnessTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
Tags:Editorial Cartoon, AF Branco, A Peaceful Threat, Prominent Democrats, threaten to burn it down, if Trump, and the Republicans, move ahead with the SCOTUS nominationTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
by Kerby Anderson: The US Senate as an institution is sick and dysfunctional. Senator Ben Sasse, playing the role of physician, provides both an accurate diagnosis and recommended cures. But I fear that the Senate will prefer to remain sick.
His first recommendation is to “cut the cameras” since most of what happens in committee hearings “isn’t oversight, its showmanship.” Senators give speeches that are chopped up and shipped to the local media. The senators aren’t trying to learn since they are actually competing for sound bites.
Senator Sasse also wants to abolish standing committees. The current structure ends up being “20 permanent fiefdoms.” Instead, he proposes temporary two-year committees devoted to making real progress.
His third recommendation is to “pack the floor.” Serious debate, he argues, only happens when senators show up. Most of the time when you see a senator talking on the floor, he or she is speaking to a nearly empty chamber. Changing the rules to allow committees to control some floor time would bring senators to the floor to debate.
Senator Sasse also calls for Congress to “make a real budget.” This certainly is a criticism of the House of Representatives where revenue bills are to begin. Both houses of Congress have budget responsibilities, but “the budget process is completely broken.
He also believes we should “repeal the 17th Amendment.” Ratified in 1913, this replaced the appointment of senators by state legislatures with direct election. The Senate was supposed to be less influenced by election and more responsible to the states. Although it is unlikely that this recommendation will ever be implemented, doing so would likely transform the US Senate back into the deliberative body that it was supposed to be.
The US Senate should take seriously the proposals put forth by Senator Sasse. Unfortunately, I fear they will be ignored.
—————————— Kerby Anderson@KerbyAnderson) is an author, lecturer, visiting professor and radio host and contributor on nationally syndicated Point of View and the “Probe” radio programs.
Tags:Ken Anderson, Senate Sickness, Senator Ben SasseTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
It’s been higher — 94 percent at one point during the Second World War, 91 percent in the 1950s . . . on income above a certain threshold.
Back in the 1890s, the federal government briefly taxed income at 2 percent. It was quickly struck down by the U.S. Supreme Court as unconstitutional.
Those were the days.
In 1913, the 16th Amendment was ratified, giving Congress “power to lay and collect taxes on incomes” overriding the constitutional provisions that the high court had cited in 1895. The first federal rates were 1 percent for the lowest income bracket, 7 percent for the top bracket, on income above $500,000.*
By 1916, the lowest percentage was 2, the highest 25, on income above $2,000,000.
The good news: skyward tax rates aren’t set in stone. The bad news: once a precedent for a new tax has been established, you can expect worse to come.
So what happens if California Assemblyman Rob Bonda gets his way? He seeks a tax of “just” 0.4 percent on the accumulated wealth of “just” “the top 0.15%” wealthiest Californians, “about 30,000 people.” If these wealthiest leave the state, they would still be subject to the tax for ten years(!).
Presumably, this latter, and quite brazen, aspect of an already brazen tax would be subject to constitutional challenges.
If Bonda’s proposal is enacted and upheld, would the scope of its reach stay put at 0.4 percent of holdings and 0.15 percent of Californian taxpayers?
It would not.
This is Common Sense. I’m Paul Jacob.
* That was a lot of money back then — worth $13 million today.
————————— Paul Jacob (@Common_Sense_PJ) is author of Common Sense which provides daily commentary about the issues impacting America and about the citizens who are doing something about them. He is also President of the Liberty Initiative Fund (LIFe) as well as Citizens in Charge Foundation. Jacob is a contributing author on the ARRA News Service.
Tags:Paul Jacob, Common Sense, Just Never Satisfied, Federal income tax state taxesTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
by Ryan Saavedra: Attorney General William Barr has reportedly designated three U.S. cities — all controlled by Democrats — as “anarchist jurisdictions” that are being targeted to be defunded by the federal government for failing to stop violent rioters and for defunding law enforcement departments.
The New York Post reported that Barr signed off on designating New York City, Portland, and Seattle as “anarchist jurisdictions.”
“When state and local leaders impede their own law-enforcement officers and agencies from doing their jobs, it endangers innocent citizens who deserve to be protected, including those who are trying to peacefully assemble and protest,” Barr is expected to say in a statement on Monday. “We cannot allow federal tax dollars to be wasted when the safety of the citizenry hangs in the balance. It is my hope that the cities identified by the Department of Justice today will reverse course and become serious about performing the basic function of government and start protecting their own citizens.”
“My Administration will do everything in its power to prevent weak mayors and lawless cities from taking Federal dollars while they let anarchists harm people, burn buildings, and ruin lives and businesses,” Trump tweeted late on Wednesday. “We’re putting them on notice today.”
My Administration will do everything in its power to prevent weak mayors and lawless cities from taking Federal dollars while they let anarchists harm people, burn buildings, and ruin lives and businesses. We’re putting them on notice today. @RussVought45
Trump’s tweet followed a report from The New York Post that stated that the administration was targeting New York City, Portland, Seattle, and Washington, D.C.
Trump on Wednesday signed a five-page memo ordering all federal agencies to send reports to the White House Office of Management and Budget that detail funds that can be redirected.New York City, Washington, DC, Seattle and Portland are initial targets as Trump makes “law and order” a centerpiece of his reelection campaign after months of unrest and violence following the May killing of George Floyd by Minnesota police.“My Administration will not allow Federal tax dollars to fund cities that allow themselves to deteriorate into lawless zones,” the memo stated. “To ensure that Federal funds are neither unduly wasted nor spent in a manner that directly violates our Government’s promise to protect life, liberty, and property, it is imperative that the Federal Government review the use of Federal funds by jurisdictions that permit anarchy, violence, and destruction in America’s cities.”
The Democrat mayors of Seattle, Portland, and New York City all responded to the news earlier this month that they were being targeted.
New York Democrat Governor Andrew Cuomo made threatening remarks to the president in response to the news earlier this month.
“He better have an army if he thinks he’s gonna walk down the street in New York,” Cuomo said. “New Yorkers don’t want to have anything to do with him.”
“Before Cuomo made the remark threatening the president, he gave a 7-minute statement in which he made personal attacks on the president,” The Daily Wire added. “Cuomo also pinned all the blame for his own much-maligned response to the coronavirus pandemic on the president, falsely claiming that Trump was ‘the cause’ of the coronavirus in New York and accusing Trump of ‘actively’ trying to ‘kill New York City.’”
This story has been updated to include additional information.
——————— Ryan Saavedra via Conservative Review.
Tags:Conservative Review, Ryan Saavedra, AG Barr, To Officially Designate, 3 U.S. Cities, As ‘Anarchist Jurisdictions’To share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
by Jason Ouimet: Respect for the Second Amendment should not be a partisan issue. The vast majority of Americans understand this fact. After all, the Constitution is not a partisan document.
Before the U.S. Supreme Court recognized that the Second Amendment protects an individual right to keep and bear arms in District of Columbia v. Heller, a February 2008 Gallup poll found that 73 percent of Americans possessed this understanding of the Constitution while a mere 20 percent had the incorrect collective-right interpretation. This wide-ranging respect for the Second Amendment holds. According to a November 2019 Rasmussen poll, a mere 24 percent support repealing the Second Amendment.
With a broad bipartisan majority in favor of preserving the Second Amendment, support for the right to keep and bear arms need not break down along party lines. However, the leaders and donor class of the national Democratic Party are intent on making it that way.
Consider the Draft 2020 Democratic Party Platform. The document contains a gun-control plank that is replete with many of the worst gun controls put forward by the party’s most anti-gun politicians.
The platform declares that the party will criminalize the private transfer of firearms by requiring every firearm transaction to take place pursuant to a government background check. The platform expresses support for the elimination of the National Instant Criminal Background Check System’s three-day safety-valve provision, which permits a firearm transfer to proceed three days after a NICS check has been initiated if the FBI has not determined the transferee to be prohibited from possessing firearms. This vital provision ensures that the federal government cannot delay lawful gun transfers indefinitely and ensures that firearms transfers can take place even if the NICS system is overwhelmed. Further, the platform calls for gun owner licensing.
Taken together, these measures would undo the Second Amendment right by turning it into a privilege bestowed by government—something on which no one attempting to exercise a Constitutional right should be forced to rely.
Then there are the even more flagrant violations. Chief among these is a ban on the manufacture and sale of commonly-owned semi-automatic firearms and their magazines. In Heller, the Court made clear that the Second Amendment protects ownership of firearms “in common use at the time” for “lawful purposes like self-defense.” The principal target of such bans is the AR-15. As the AR-15 is the most popular rifle in America and owned almost entirely by law-abiding Americans, it is indisputably “in common use” for “lawful purposes.” Heller author Justice Antonin Scalia and Justice Clarence Thomas reiterated as much in a 2015 dissent from denial of certiorari in the case Friedman v. Highland Park.
While the 2020 Democratic Party draft platform is even more hostile to the Second Amendment than in 2016, this wasn’t always the case. Absent is any recognition of the Second Amendment, a conspicuous omission given the language in previous iterations.
2012: We recognize that the individual right to bear arms is an important part of the American tradition, and we will preserve Americans’ Second Amendment right to own and use firearms.
2008: We recognize that the right to bear arms is an important part of the American tradition, and we will preserve Americans’ Second Amendment right to own and use firearms.
Lip service, perhaps, but there have also been practical changes in the party’s conduct. As Second Amendment attorney and scholar David Kopel pointed out in 2010, 81 House Democrats and 19 Senate Democrats signed onto an amicus brief filed in the U.S. Supreme Court case McDonald v. Chicago supporting incorporation of the individual-rights interpretation of the Second Amendment to the states.
The national Democratic Party’s relatively recent near-uniform contempt for the Second Amendment coincided with billionaire Michael Bloomberg’s decision to employ his almost unlimited wealth in service of dismantling gun rights. After pledging $50 million to confront the NRA in 2013, the former New York City mayor has spent untold millions in federal and state elections to shift the Democratic Party to a radical anti-gun position.
Nevertheless, there is a limit to what money can buy. This year Bloomberg attempted to purchase the Democratic Party outright, seeking its nomination for president. According to ABC News, the would-be oligarch spent more than $1 billion on the venture, only to win American Samoa’s primary. Talk about a bad investment.
In the end, votes are what count. While the current national Democratic Party is being driven by its anti-gun donor class, the party’s servitude need not last forever. Support for the Second Amendment has been, and should be, bipartisan. The way to make this clear to the national Democratic Party and Michael Bloomberg is through the ballot box.
——————- Jason Ouimet is Executive Director, NRA-ILA.
Tags:Jason Ouimet, NRA-ILA, Respect For The Second Amendment, Should Not Be PartisanTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
by Dr. Victor Davis Hanson: The problem with conventional wisdom is not that it is always wrong. The rub is that the majority of “experts” unthinkingly and habitually mouth its validity until they ensure that it becomes static, unchanging, and immune from reexamination and dissent — an intolerant religious orthodoxy that finally become dangerous.
The recent Middle East breakthroughs are a perfect example. Both the Obama and Trump administrations sought quite different ways of navigating through the nearly 75-year-old “Middle East problem,” usually framed as the Israeli–“Palestinian” question.
Obama, in radical fashion, sought to empower and elevate Iran. The so-called Iran deal, the dropping of sanctions, the nocturnal infusions of cash, the exemptions for clear violations of the deal’s protocols, the nefarious work of Hezbollah — all that and more was excused on the theory that a growing Persian Shiite Iranian nexus from Tehran to the Mediterranean was inevitable and would “balance” both Israel and the so-called moderate Sunni Arab states. That realignment might prevent a Middle East war and end the leverage of America’s former Arab allies and Israel over us.
What destroyed the fantasy was not just its sheer idiocy — ensuring that a revolutionary, anti-Western theocracy would soon get nuclear weapons and become “moderate” while empowering its terrorist minions in their destructive agendas in Syria, Lebanon, and the Gulf states, as well as Europe and Latin America.
Instead, we see the futility of embracing Iran in its corollary — the old saw that the Palestinians were still central to the Obama administration’s gambit. That is, an empowered Iran, as the self-described revolutionary and chief patron of the Palestinians, would use its new clout to pressure Israel to offer concessions to the Palestinians, without any corresponding recognition of the Jewish state or reduction in Palestinians’ anti-Zionist bellicosity.
The Arab world then would be forced to rival Iran to regain its anti-Israel credentials, further bolstering the power-broking ability of the much-courted Palestinians. Eventually, Israel would concede and usher in a defiant and completely autonomous West Bank nation. Palestine Inc. would then reciprocate Israeli magnanimity by concluding peace with the Jewish state now confined within its 1967 borders. And so Middle East peace would reign.
The policy was an utter failure on all fronts. Iran saw magnanimity as weakness to be manipulated. The Palestinians usually treated concessions as a sign of enervation to be exploited in expectation of even more concessions. And our own former friends in the Arab world concluded that in extremis they were not really our friends, at least in comparison with America’s newfound friendly former enemies.
The Trump administration’s success thus far was predicated on blowing up such ignorance.
Contrary to conventional opinion, Iran was not ascendant, but more likely a failed state led by fossilized has-been apparatchiks and corrupt theocrats — and dependent on hobbled foreign patrons for weapons and income, whether China, North Korea, or Russia.
Oil sanctions, the growing global ostracism of China, the overreach of Putin in the Middle East, and an embargo of North Korea rendered Iran’s patrons increasingly suspect.
COVID-19, a gift from Iran’s Chinese benefactor, the recession, American oil and gas production, and crushing sanctions destroyed Tehran’s oil income and, with it, its economy. The hit on terrorist mastermind Qasem Soleimani exposed Iran as weak in the eyes of the Middle East. The terror strategist was not just another wannabe Islamist idol, but an irreplaceable evil genius in the arts of Iranian-style destruction and chaos. In other words, Iran’s theocracy was not so much to be feared but revealed as spent, its rhetoric more and more unhinged as its ability to inflict harm eroded.
By the same token, Trump realized that Obama’s failures were his own pathway to success. Fear of Iran solidified the Arab world and led it to confess that Israel was a far less preemptory nuclear danger than Iran would be in just a few years.
The Palestinians were seen variously as Iranian lackeys, Arab turncoats, and hostage-takers holding the entire Arab world at the mercy of Iran while refusing lucrative offers to make peace with Israel.
The U.S., as the world’s greatest producer of gas and oil (and determined to produce even more fossil fuels), was immune from the old Arab oil pressures. Oddly, the Arab world saw newfound fellow oil exporter America as now acting more on principle, rather than only from narrow self-interested desperation to avoid gas lines and oil-fed recessions.
Trump’s apparent quirkiness and unpredictability — taking out Soleimani, bombing ISIS into dispersion, trading insults with Iran — for good or evil, were probably interpreted by the Arab world as not merely a change from past American administrations but a new development that was better to be aligned with than opposed to.
In short, much of the Arab world saw Israel as increasingly benign, if not useful, and the Palestinians and their allies as dangerous liabilities and threats to their own security — and not just in the old-fashioned manner of prompting a war with Israel that others traditionally paid for with their own blood and treasure.
Secretary of State Mike Pompeo and Trump grasped that the conventional idea of the Palestinians as critical to peace in geostrategic terms was a fossilized concept, given that the fate of millions of Arabs rested on the containment of Iran, an end to losing wars with Israel on behalf of the West Bank, and the goodwill of an increasingly self-sufficient and resolved U.S.
We know this is true from the mute silence of the bipartisan establishment to developments since 2017. In 2020, do we hear calls to remove the U.S. Embassy back to Tel Aviv? To promise that the Golan Heights will someday be Syrian again? Does Joe Biden perhaps oppose the rapprochement between Israel and the Arab world? Would he begin funneling money via the U.N. to radical Palestinians again, or delivering more cash to Iran as part of a new Iran deal? Perhaps not.
China Atop the World
There are other recent examples of ossified conventional wisdom. For 30 years, our best and brightest in deterministic fashion declared that China was “ascending” to world mastery. A parlor game for the bipartisan Washington establishment was to translate Communist Party boasts of world hegemony into calibrations of inevitable domination in 2025, or 2023, or 2040.
China’s task was to become an “enlightened” hegemon; ours was to “manage decline.” China would take over policing the world; we would attend to more important matters such as solar panels, global warming, and diversity.
In response to such a fate, we were told, more joint corporate ventures, more outsourcing, more NBA- type fusions, more Chinese students, more patience with Chinese mercantilism and destruction of world-trade protocols, even more silence about the origins of COVID-19, and more contextualization of the reeducation camps, the destruction of Hong Kong democracy, the Trotskyization of a once independent Tibet, and the bullying of Taiwan, Australia, and Japan — all this would reassure the Chinese that the West accepted its newfound exalted station. In response, Beijing would gradually “democratize” as hundreds of millions of its Westernized elites preferred smartphones and Netflix to Mao’s shopworn adages and executed dissidents.
There was no historical evidence that functional capitalism always evolves out of crony-state-managed capitalism, or that capitalism is the natural twin of democracy. There was little likelihood that a racist, chauvinistic, and autocratic — but now affluent — China would suddenly prefer Western liberality to its own proud antidemocratic traditions.
But so many of our elites were invested in Beijing — financially, politically, and psychologically — that anyone who dared talk of a supposedly gloriously robed emperor China as embarrassingly buck-naked was written off as a proverbial silly boy blind to the obvious power and grandeur of China.
Saint NATO
NATO and Germany offer more examples of calcified consensus. Conventional wisdom dictated that American presidents must assume that NATO has remained essentially the same since the 1950s, that a still-traumatized Europe is incapable of defending itself, and that Germany is rarely to be questioned. To suggest otherwise was to return, like a Neanderthal, to 1930s isolationism, appeasement, and nativism.
Yet, for some silly reason, the world kept changing. Europe become the EU, wealthy, and — now sensing few existential enemies — increasingly anti-American. The Cold War ended. China rose; Russia weakened. And a now-united Germany began to issue virtual ultimatums to its neighbors. Yet the taboo about questioning NATO’s relevance remained.
The result was an abstraction of an alliance, with little military capability other than that of the American military — akin to the ancient calcified notion that a hollowed-out Constantinople in the 15th century still remained the majestic 1,000-year bulwark of Christendom in the East.
The European members of NATO resented their patron, increasingly in proportion to their own dependence on the Pentagon. And the now-familiar German bullying grew overt. Germany hectored Eastern Europe on immigration, southern Europe on debt repayment, the United Kingdom on Brexit, and the U.S. on its request to NATO countries that they honor their defense investment promises.
Again, all NATO mirages were predicated on myths that the Germans were always indebted to the U.S. and loved Americans (Germany had long ago become the most anti-American country in Europe); that the U.S. didn’t mind playing out its simplistic Roman hang-ups by protecting enlightened European Athenians (the American public resented European dependence); and that, owing to two previous European-wide wars, Germany was to be dealt with delicately (it had lost both and had a propensity to unite its alienated and often terrified neighbors while respecting the U.S. more when it seemed resolute and capable).
The Trump administration in hit-and-miss fashion grasped all that.
NATO is now spending far more money on its own defense. America is unafraid to jawbone Germany on its surreal deals with Putin, given that opposition to his autocratic Russia was ostensibly one good reason why NATO was supposed to still exist. The supposed master of EU leaders, the time-tried Angela Merkel, will soon leave office. Her legacy is a disastrous immigration policy that has alienated Eastern Europe, and Germany is disliked in southern Europe for its heavy-handed repayment dictates; it proved unable to bully the U.K. into ceasing Brexit, and it lost its NATO clout by refusing to meet its defense obligations.
It was not Trump’s radical unorthodoxy in dealing with NATO that had nearly destroyed the transatlantic alliance, but the earlier blinkered conventional wisdom of past administrations, determined to see no criticism, hear no criticism, and speak no criticism about NATO — and thus never seek any needed alterations and updates.
When conventional wisdom turns into orthodox ignorance, it become deadly. And it so often does because its near-religious dictates can stand no apostates, no one who pulls back the curtain on the projectors of the great and powerful Oz, no empirical observers who insist that the parading and richly robed emperor is quite naked.
———————— Victor Davis Hanson (@VDHanson) is a senior fellow, classicist and historian and Illie Anderson Senior Fellow at the Hoover Institution where many of his articles are found; his focus is classics and military history. He has been a visiting professor at Hillsdale College since 2004. Hanson was awarded the National Humanities Medal in 2007 by President George W. Bush. H/T National Review.
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by Rachel del Guidice: Amy Coney Barrett, a federal appeals judge for nearly three years, is a front-runner to fill the Supreme Court seat vacated by the death Friday of Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg.
In an interview Monday morning with “Fox & Friends” on Fox News Channel and again Monday night in a speech in Ohio, President Donald Trump said that he has narrowed his list of candidates to succeed Ginsburg to four or five women. He said he likely will announce a decision Friday or Saturday.
Many pundits say they think Barrett is at the top of the president’s list. Here are six things to know about her.
1. She Made History on the 7th Circuit
The Senate confirmed Barrett to the Chicago-based U.S. Court of Appeals for the 7th Circuit on Oct. 31, 2017.
Barrett became the first and only woman from Indiana to hold a seat on that appeals court, which also covers cases in Illinois and Wisconsin.
She was on Trump’s list of 25 candidates to replace Justice Anthony Kennedy after his retirement, but the president ultimately chose another appeals judge, Brett Kavanaugh of the D.C. Circuit.
2. Scalia Was a Former Boss
Barrett, 48, clerked for Justice Antonin Scalia, who died in 2016, in 1998-1999.
“That is trial by fire. You get thrown in and it’s an overwhelming amount of work; you know, you are feeling your way, at first,” Barrett said in a February interview on “SCOTUS 101,” a weekly podcast about the Supreme Court that is produced by The Heritage Foundation.
“And the way Justice Scalia ran his chambers is we [law clerks] all had to be prepared to discuss all the cases. So we would have a conference before argument where the four of us would be in his office. And then you are just going toe to toe, everybody is saying what they think,” Barrett said, adding:3. In Football and More, She Teams With Husband
Barrett has seven children, two of them adopted from Haiti, one of whom also has Down syndrome.
The Barrett family remains actively engaged in the Notre Dame community.
“In the football season, our football Saturdays are spent tailgating” with “some friends of ours for many years,” Barrett said on “SCOTUS 101.” “We had an antique, vintage fire truck that we painted green and we had tailgates where all the kids could be running around playing football out on the green.”
“At one point,” she said, “we considered moving to a neighborhood a little farther from campus and our kids really rebelled because they loved the proximity to campus too.”
She said on the podcast that she and her “very wonderful husband” balance their careers and family through teamwork. He is now a partner at SouthBank Legal in South Bend, Indiana.
“I mean, we are totally a team and we share the responsibility. We divide up doctor’s appointments and orthodontist appointments and dentist appointments,” Barrett said. “Obviously there is a lot to do, but in no sense do I bear the lion’s share of it, so his being so willing to help has really made it all possible.”
4. She Was Scolded by a Senator for Her Faith
During her confirmation hearing in September 2017 for the 7th Circuit, Barrett was questioned by Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif., about the influence of her Catholic faith.
“The dogma lives loudly within you, and that’s of concern,” Feinstein said to Barrett.
Barrett responded: “It’s never appropriate for a judge to impose that judge’s personal convictions, whether they arise from faith or anywhere else, on the law.”
5. She Has Addressed Moral Teaching and the Law
Judges shouldn’t conflate their faith with the law, Barrett wrote in a 1998 article in Notre Dame’s Law Review titled “Catholic Judges in Capital Cases” and co-authored with John Garvey.
“Judges cannot—nor should they try to—align our legal system with the Church’s moral teaching whenever the two diverge,” Barrett and Garvey wrote.
6. Students Named Her ‘Distinguished Professor of Year’
Barrett has taught law at her alma mater, the University of Notre Dame, since 2002. Her students named her “Distinguished Professor of the Year” for three different years, The Indy Starreported.
“I have taught a lot of classes. I have been a professor for a long time, so I’ve taught civil procedure and federal courts and constitutional law, seminar and statutory interpretation, one on constitutional theory, and I teach evidence,” Barrett said in the “SCOTUS 101” interview.
She received her bachelor’s degree in English literature from Rhodes College in Memphis, Tennessee, before getting her law degree from Notre Dame. She was executive editor of the Law Review.
“The same impressive intellect, character, and temperament that made Professor Barrett a successful nominee for the U.S. Court of Appeals would serve her equally well as a nominee for the nation’s highest court,” the Rev. John Jenkins, president of Notre Dame, said in a written statement.
———————– Rachel del Guidice is a congressional reporter for The Daily Signal.
Tags:Rachel del Guidice, The Daily Signal, 6 Things to Know, About Supreme Court Prospect, Amy Coney BarrettTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
by Mario Murillo Ministries: Why do I call this a prophetic update? Because we have just had a major collision with a forgotten prophecy from 8 years ago. More on that in a moment.
First, let me tell you about California. We knew, going in, that California was under a vast demonic spell. Demon power here takes on many disguises. Those who would win souls here must face a new level of deception. Not just the typical grungy occult—but a new and sophisticated devil worship.
Satan’s fans aren’t just in the back alleys or garbed in sinister costumes, practicing the dark arts. They are now the average kid, from a good home—a well-to-do home—and they are dabbling, but not totally committed to the dark forces. For many, it is just playacting, a novel way to rebel against their parents, and to hate God.
Why do they hate God?
They are mixing political wokeness with the occult. They side with the devil because they see him as part of the resistance. To many, Satan is a revolutionary figure.
More and more of them here see a connection between their goals of social justice and hating God. God-hating has taken on a new persona. God is merely lumped in with all of their confused agendas.
The sign she is holding says, “Keep God out of California.” However, it appears that their sign is not working, because God is very much present in California. As a matter of fact, the State that gave us Azusa Street and the Jesus Movement seems to be shaking. Not from an earthquake, but from a truth-quake.
The team in Fresno, CA, led by Frank Saldana, sent me their report that says they “have never seen openness to the Gospel like this. The people on the streets gladly take our cards, and eagerly let us pray for them.” The tent will not go up for 18 days yet, but souls are already being saved in Fresno and bodies are being healed.
How can this be, given the increase in demonic activity? Because Satan has yet again overplayed his hand. The lockdown. The extreme violence, perversion, and the silliness of wannabe Satanists has produced a result that is the opposite of what Satan wanted. People want God. People want prayer.
But why am I calling this a prophetic update? Because in November of 2012, I wrote a newsletter that bewildered our partners. Out of the blue, I introduced a subject that had nothing to do with our activities at the time.
In that newsletter from 8 years ago, the banner read, “Does the road to American Awakening go through Fresno?” To this day, I do not know why I took such a wild departure from what we were doing, to write that article. What is really strange, is that although we have archives with newsletters that go back many years…that one is strangely missing. We can’t find a copy anywhere! Only the cover survived.
Did I come across it by accident, after 8 years? Right after we made the announcement that we would reopen our tent crusades in Fresno? I don’t know about you, but our team is pretty stoked by this.
It explains the favor we are seeing in Fresno. Not just on the streets, but also from pastors, leaders and city officials. It explains why people are already being saved and healed on the streets.
It also explains why people are making a pilgrimage from vast distances to attend this particular crusade. They are flying in from Hawaii, New York, Alabama, Kentucky, and even Canada!
I am holding in my hand, right now, a letter from a precious sister who lives in Minnesota. She says she is living with unbearable pain. She says that doctors have tried everything, but to no avail. So, she is coming. She is braving the torture of a long flight. She is coming, expecting her healing!
Does the road to American Awakening go through Fresno? The assurance that it does, is getting stronger every hour!
———————— Mario Murillo is an evangelist Mario Murillo, minister, blogger.
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by Tony Perkins: Filling the Supreme Court vacancy left by the passing of Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg before the 2020 election aligns not just with the Constitution but with historical precedent. As National Review columnist Dan McLaughlin explained yesterday on Washington Watch, there has been a vacancy on the Supreme Court either during an election year or prior to the start of a new administration 29 times in U.S. history, and in almost all those cases, the sitting president has made a nomination. These presidents include George Washington, John Adams, Thomas Jefferson, Abraham Lincoln, Franklin Roosevelt, and most recently, Barack Obama.
The decision to confirm a Supreme Court nominee, of course, lies with the Senate. Historically, as McLaughlin explained, it is when the Senate and presidency are of the same political party that the nominee is confirmed. It is for this reason that President Obama was unable to get his nomination through prior to the 2016 election when the death of Justice Antonin Scalia left a vacancy on the Supreme Court.
“If the president’s party controls the Senate, the president gets his way 17 out of 19 times,” McLaughlin said. “Whereas on the 10 occasions when the opposing party controlled the Senate, only once out of 10 times did the president get his nomination through.”
So, contrary to what members of the Democratic Party might say, for the current Republicans in power not to fill this vacancy would be, as McLaughlin puts it, “a break with all of American history.”
For the Republicans to fail to fill the vacancy now would also be a slap in the face to many conservative voters who show up on Election Day in large part due to their concerns about the Supreme Court and other lower courts. Many social issues are decided by these courts, and conservatives have been hoping to overturn such decisions like Roe. v. Wade for decades now.
McLaughlin likened the situation to a football team on offense which decided at the 10-yard line, ready to score, that they were actually going to stop and wait until the next quarter.
“That would be insane. The fans would go crazy,” McLaughlin said.
Democrats have threatened to “pack the courts” with extra justices if the Republicans go through with a nomination and confirmation prior to the election. Senator Josh Hawley (R-Mo.) warned Republicans to be wary of this when discussing the vacancy on the Supreme Court Monday morning on Fox & Friends.
“They lost the election in 2016, they lost the White House,” Hawley said. “So, listen, if they win back those things, they’ll be able to confirm and nominate their own justices in the future, but to say because they lost elections that now they will break all of our constitutional norms and standards, they’ll pack courts, they’ll conduct impeachment hearings to stop a president from carrying forward his constitutionally authorized privileges and responsibilities — that’s insane.”
McLaughlin acknowledged on Washington Watch that nominating and confirming a judge will give Democrats “a greater incentive to do constitutional mischief.” However, he also reminded listeners that President Franklin Roosevelt tried to pack the courts in 1937, and even with a commanding majority in the Senate, he failed to do so.
“The voters rebelled against it, the newspapers rebelled against it, and even many Democrats rebelled against it,” McLaughlin said. So, even if the Democrats do try such a strategy, McLaughlin believes it is “a fight that Republicans may be able to win, even if the Democrats do get that power.”
———————– Tony Perkins (@tperkins) is President of the Family Research Council . Article on Tony Perkins’ Washington Update and written with the aid of FRC senior writers.
Tags:Tony Perkins, Family Research Center, FRC, Family Research Council, Filling the SCOTUS Vacancy Now, Historical Precedent Demands ItTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
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We have a nationwide Fake News syndicate who blow stories out of proportion and shamelessly distort facts to incite civil unrest and racial disharmony. A Black person dies at the hands of a police officer, whether White or Black, and the media narrative promptly becomes a lamentation over “systemic racism.”
America’s national debt now stands at close to $27 trillion. According to a new report by the Congressional Budget Office, by the end of 2020, federal debt held by the public is projected to equal 98 percent of GDP — and in the following year, this burden will grow to 104 percent of GDP.
“Communism, avowedly secularistic and materialistic, has no place for God,” noted the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. “I strongly disagreed with communism’s ethical relativism. Since for the Communist there is no divine government, no absolute moral order, there are no fixed, immutable principles; consequently almost anything — force, violence murder, lying — is a justifiable means to the ‘millennial’ end.”
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Morning Rundown
Public outrage after Breonna Taylor grand jury decision: One suspect was in custody after two police officers were shot during demonstrations that erupted overnight after a Kentucky grand jury indicted a former Louisville police officer for allegedly endangering the neighbors of Breonna Taylor during the shooting that killed her, but did not charge him in her death. “This is outrageous and offensive to Breonna Taylor’s memory. It’s yet another example of no accountability for the genocide of persons of color by white police officers,” Taylor’s family attorneys Benjamin Crump, Sam Aguiar and Lonita Baker said in a joint statement. Former Detective Brett Hankison, who was fired in June, was indicted on three counts of first-degree wanton endangerment for allegedly putting Taylor’s neighbors’ lives in jeopardy when he fired into the apartment complex on March 13. The charges against Hankison, who fired 10 shots into Taylor’s home, stem from the errant bullets that entered through a neighboring apartment occupied by a child, a man and a pregnant woman, Kentucky Attorney General Daniel Cameron said. Ballistic evidence examined by the FBI showed that only one shot that hit Taylor was fatal — a .40-caliber bullet that was fired by Louisville Metro Police Department officer Myles Cosgrove, he said. Cosgrove fired 16 times into her apartment and Sgt. Jonathan Mattingly fired six shots. Cameron said that none of the shots fired by Hankison struck Taylor. The officers, who were serving a “no-knock” warrant, were returning fire from Taylor’s boyfriend, licensed gun owner Kenneth Walker, who believed a home invasion was in process. Neither Hankison nor the other two officers involved in the fatal encounter were charged in Taylor’s death. If convicted, Hankison could serve one to five years per count. Lawyers for Taylor’s family said in their statement, “It is our hope that through the FBI’s investigation, we will finally get the justice for Breonna that the Grand Jury refused her today.”
President Trump declines to commit to peaceful transfer of power: President Donald Trump has declined to commit to a peaceful transfer of power following November’s election. When asked Wednesday during a press conference how he would behave after the election — win or lose –Trump responded, “Well, we’re going to have to see what happens.” He then went on to stoke baseless fears of widespread voter fraud with mail-in ballots. “Get rid of the ballot and you’ll have a very peaceful — there won’t be a transfer, frankly. There’ll be a continuation.” In response to Trump’s comments, former Vice President Joe Biden’s campaign is referring reporters back to a statement issued on July 19, when the president gave a similar answer about accepting the results of the election to Fox News’ Chris Wallace. “The American people will decide this election,” Biden campaign spokesman Andrew Bates said. “And the United States government is perfectly capable of escorting trespassers out of the White House.”
Prince Harry, Meghan Markle make rare political statement for ‘most important election’: Prince Harry and Meghan, the Duke and Duchess of Sussex, urged Americans to get out and vote during a TIME100 special about the magazine’s annual list of the world’s 100 most influential people. “Every four years, we’re told, ‘This is the most important election of our lifetime.’ But this one is,” Meghan said. “When we vote, our values are put into action, and our voices are heard.” Harry added, “As we approach this November, it’s vital that we reject hate speech, misinformation and online negativity.” Although they never explicitly endorsed a candidate, the couple’s comments are already stirring controversy in the United Kingdom because of the royal family’s strict nonpartisan policy when it comes to politics. Harry also noted in the Time100 special that he has never been able to vote in a national election.
Couple wears original wedding attire in 60th anniversary photos: Lucille and Marvin Stone of Kearney, Nebraska, celebrated their 60th wedding anniversary by taking pictures in the clothing they wore on the day they said “I do.” And the images have garnered thousands of likes on Facebook. “I said, ‘You still have it? And you can wear it? Oh my gosh Lucille, I think that’s an amazing idea,'” photographer Katie Autry told “Good Morning America.” “I think so many people saw their story and it was just a breath of fresh air.” The Stones met while teaching at the same school and married on Aug. 21, 1960. They now have three adult children. Lucille, who came up with the idea to wear their original wedding outfits, told Autry that she had handmade her dress and covered each button with satin fabric. “They’re very humble and they just can’t believe that many people would be interested in them,” Autry said. “Being in their space, you could see how much they care about each other and that’s a rare thing to find.”
GMA Must-Watch
This morning on “GMA,” Chris Rock joins us live to talk about playing a crime lord in the upcoming season of “Fargo.” We’ll also hear about his new quarantine hobby — learning how to swim! And we’re kicking off our “Fall Favorites” from Deals and Steals with products that are $20 and under, including water bottles, pillows and accessories. Plus, zodiac parenting is a new trend and we’ll meet a parent who raises her child based on their sign. All this and more only on “GMA.”
Violence broke out in Louisville, Kentucky, as disappointment turned to anger over the lack of charges in Breonna Taylor’s death. President Donald Trump refused to commit to a peaceful transfer of power if he loses the election and mourners lined up to say good-bye to the “Notorious RBG.”
Here’s what we’re watching this Thursday morning.
Two officers shot during Louisville protests over charges Breonna Taylor case
Two police officerswere shotWednesday night during protests in Louisville, Kentucky, that erupted after a grand jury’s decision not to charge the officer who shot and killed Breonna Taylor. Only one officer was indicted on a charge of wanton endangerment.
About a half-hour before the city’s 9 p.m. curfew, two Louisville Metro police officers were shot while responding to a report of a large crowd and gunfire, interim Police Chief Robert Schroeder told a news conference.
They were taken to Louisville University Hospital with non-life-threatening injuries. A suspect was in custody, Schroeder said.
Shortly after the grand jury’s decisionwas announced Wednesday, demonstrators took to the streets of Louisville protesting Taylor’s killing and the limited charges brought against only one of the officers involved.
Taylor, a 26-year-old Black woman, was shot and killed in
her home on March 13, after police officers with a no-knock warrant broke down her door seeking evidence in a narcotics investigation. The target of the probe did not live at the location.
Former police Detective Brett Hankison was indicted on three counts of first-degree wanton endangerment connected with the shooting that ended in Taylor’s killing. Detective Myles Cosgrove, the officer whose shot killed Taylor, was not charged.
For many of Taylor’s supporters who had put faith in the justice system, the grand jury decision was incredibly disappointing.
“It just seems as though to hold this community hostage, to drag us through this months on end and then to come back with those charges … To me, it’s incredibly offensive, disrespectful and more than that, it speaks to a much larger issue of policing in this country,” said Timothy Findley Jr., a local pastor.
Kentucky’s top prosecutor, Attorney General Daniel Cameron, has come under fire after no direct charges were filed in Taylor’s death.
“People are not happy at this point,” said Dewey Clayton, a political science professor at the University of Louisville. “There’s a lot of anger and frustration and sadness. People feel like they have not gotten justice.”
Trump won’t commit to peaceful transfer of power if he loses to Biden
President Donald Trump was asked Wednesday whether he would commit to a peaceful transfer of power should he lose this fall to Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden. The president declined to do so.
“Well, we’re going to have to see what happens,” Trump said. “You know that I’ve been complaining very strongly about the ballots, and the ballots are a disaster.”
Trump has repeatedly assailed mail-in votingas widely fraudulent and called it a “scam” by Democrats, but he and his campaign have released no evidence to prove it.
There is expected to be a large uptick in voting by mail this year due to the ongoing coronaviruspandemic.
On Wednesday, Trump also reiterated his desire to have the next Supreme Court justice confirmed ahead of the election so the high court could rule on the contest.
“I think this will end up in the Supreme Court, and I think it’s very important that we have nine justices,” Trump said at the White House.
By law, military service members must remain apolitical while in uniform, but most senior officers stay out of the political arena even after they hang up their uniforms. Thursday’s letter was notable for the sheer number of top brass from every branch of the military who chose to endorse Biden.
“We are Republicans, Democrats, and Independents. We love our country. Unfortunately, we also fear for it,” the group of signatories that featured 22 retired four-star military officers wrote.
“The current President has demonstrated he is not equal to the enormous responsibilities of his office; he cannot rise to meet challenges large or small,” the letter says.
Secret, powerful panels will pick Covid-19 vaccine winners. Can they be trusted?
Most Americans have never heard of Dr. Richard Whitley, an expert in pediatric infectious diseases at the University of Alabama-Birmingham.
Yet as the coronavirus pandemic drags on and the public eagerly awaits a vaccine, he may well be among the most powerful people in the country.
Whitley leads a small, secret panel of experts tasked with reviewing crucial data on the safety and effectiveness of coronavirus vaccines that U.S. taxpayers have helped fund.
Many were women and young girls. Ginsburg became a role model after she broke down gender barriers and promoted equality throughout her life.
Some people wore masks that said “vote,” while others wore shirts that said, “Notorious RBG,” with an illustration of Ginsburg in a crown, a reference to the ’90s gangsta rapper the Notorious B.I.G.
The public are invited to pay their respects again today under the portico on the top of the front steps to the Supreme Court building between 9 a.m. and 10 p.m. President Trump will also pay his respects there today.
On Friday, Ginsburg’s casket will be moved to the U.S. Capitol building for another ceremony, and she will be the first woman to ever lie in state. A private interment service will be held at Arlington National Cemetery next week, the court said.
Lucille Wilson, 3, wears a lace collar in honor of Ginsburg while waiting to view the casket.See more images of mourners honoring Ginsburg at the Supreme Court (Photo: Win McNamee / Getty Images
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“No, you misconstrued that, senator. And you’ve done that repetitively,” Dr. Anthony Fauci told Sen. Rand Paul during a Senate hearing Wednesday as they clashed over Covid-19 herd immunity.
Praising the freedom they see in all their children, they singled out the independence of Zaya, who was born a boy.
“We have another daughter who is 13 who has the freedom to be exactly who she is, who she was born to be, to be her most authentic self,” Union said in the video. “She doesn’t ask permission to exist. That is wildly inspiring.”
The family’s embrace of their transgender child has won praise from the LGBTQ+ community.
“We stand as allies with the LGBTQ+ community as proud parents of a transgender child,” Wade has said. “Our daughter Zaya is leading us in our journey, and we’re doing all we can to give every one of our kids the ability to live their truth.”
Thanks for reading the Morning Rundown.
If you have any comments — likes, dislikes — send me an email at: petra@nbcuni.com
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NBC FIRST READ
From NBC’s Chuck Todd, Mark Murray, Carrie Dann and Melissa Holzberg
FIRST READ: Trump is directly challenging a peaceful transition of power. We should take him at his word.
We’re back to the old 2016 question about Donald Trump: Just how seriously and literally should you take him?
Our advice now – after witnessing his Muslim/travel ban, the wall and that vote-fraud commission (remember that?): Prepare for him to follow through – whether or not he’s successful.
Photo by Joshua Roberts/Getty Images
On Wednesday night, Trump wouldn’t commit to a peaceful transfer of power.
“We’re going to have to see what happens. You know that I have been complaining very strongly about the ballots. And the ballots are a disaster,” he said. “Get rid of the ballots and you’ll have a very peaceful — there won’t be a transfer frankly. There’ll be a continuation.”
Before those remarks, he argued he needed to fill Ruth Bader Ginsburg’s Supreme Court seat because he believes the election’s outcome could be decided by the nation’s highest court. “I think this will end up in the Supreme Court. And I think it’s very important that we have nine justices.”
“According to sources in the Republican Party at the state and national levels, the Trump campaign is discussing contingency plans to bypass election results and appoint loyal electors in battleground states where Republicans hold the legislative majority.”
Trump thrives on taking advantage of ambiguities in the law. And guess what – there are plenty of ambiguities in our election laws.
As Gellman writes, “We are accustomed to choosing electors by popular vote, but nothing in the Constitution says it has to be that way. Article II provides that each state shall appoint electors ‘in such Manner as the Legislature thereof may direct.’ Since the late 19th century, every state has ceded the decision to its voters. Even so, the Supreme Court affirmed in Bush v. Gore that a state ‘can take back the power to appoint electors.’”
So the political world should be taking Trump seriously. Mitt Romney is. Sen. Marco Rubio, Rep. Steve Stivers and Rep. Liz Cheney also are out with tweets.
But what about the rest of the GOP?
As Jonathan Last asks in The Bulwark: Who’s willing to bet that Trump will simply walk away if he loses?
“Maybe he won’t be able to pull it off. Maybe Roberts and Gorsuch will stand in the breach. Maybe he’ll wimp out in the end because he’s more of a man-baby than a strongman.
“But just how much are you willing to bet on that?
Because if the answer isn’t ‘everything,’ then it’s time to take this man at his word.”
TWEET OF THE DAY: It’s still mostly crickets so far from other GOPers
DATA DOWNLOAD: The numbers you need to know today
6,964,327: The number of confirmed cases of coronavirus in the United States, per the most recent data from NBC News and health officials. (That’s 36,500 more than yesterday morning.)
203,023: The number of deaths in the United States from the virus so far. (That’s 960 more than yesterday morning.)
97.46 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 200: The number of retired generals and admirals who said in an open letter today that they’re endorsing Biden.
More than 100,000: The number of votes cast early at the polls in Virginia since early in-person voting started Friday.
15 years: The time until California wants to phase out the production of gas-powered cars in the state, per a new executive order by Gov. Gavin Newsom.
2020 VISION: Battleground polls galore!
Lots of battleground polls are out this morning, all among likely voters:
NYT/Siena of Georgia: Biden 45 percent, Trump 45 percent (in the Senate race, it’s GOPer Perdue 41 percent, Dem Ossoff at 38 percent).
NYT/Siena of Iowa: Biden 45 percent, Trump 42 percent (in the Senate race, it’s Dem Greenfield 42 percent, GOPer Ernst at 40 percent).
NYT/Siena of Texas: Trump 46 percent, Biden 43 percent (in the Senate race, it’s GOPer Cornyn 43 percent, Dem Hegar at 37 percent).
Franklin & Marshall of Pennsylvania: Biden 48 percent, Trump 42 percent
On the campaign trail today: President Trump delivers remarks on health care in Charlotte, N.C., at 4:30 pm ET, and he later holds a rally in Jacksonville, Fla…. Vice President Mike Pence stumps in Wisconsin and Minnesota.
Ad Watch from Ben Kamisar
Today’s Ad Watch takes a look at the Colorado Senate race, where new spots from Republican Sen. Cory Gardner and former Democratic Gov. John Hickenlooper include a blast from the past and a call to action in the present.
Gardner’s campaign just put out a new spot that calls back to Hickenlooper’s iconic (if a bit odd) ad from his 2010 gubernatorial campaign. Gardner uses the Democrat’s old pledge against running negative ads (and the image of the candidate taking a shower to cleanse himself of that negativity) against him to question why Democrats are running attack ads on Gardner now.
At the same time, Hickenlooper’s camp is running a new, direct-to-camera spot on the Supreme Court vacancy, criticizing Gardner for supporting the push to confirm a Trump nominee in the Senate in “lightning speed” (while also taking a shot at the Republican’s health care record).
THE LID: You make me feel so young
Don’t miss the pod from yesterday, when we took a second look at where younger voters stand on the 2020 race.
SHAMELESS PLUG!
At 8:00 pm ET on NBC News Now and Peacock is the debut of “Meet the Press Reports” – with the first episode taking a look at the history of presidential debates.
ICYMI: What ELSE is happening in the world?
Check out the “swing the vote” interactive feature that the Cook Political Report’s Dave Wasserman and NBC’s digital team put together.
Biden is leaning into an economic populist pitch in the final stretch of the 2020 election.
A judge has ordered Eric Trump to sit for a deposition before — not after — the election.
The Florida AG wants an investigation into Mike Bloomberg’s effort to pay fines for former felons in Florida who would be able to vote if freed from their debts.
Amy Coney Barrett’s faith has become an early flashpoint for the court frontrunner.
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Eye Opener
Two police officers were shot during protests over a grand jury’s decision to not charge any officers in Breonna Taylor’s death. Also, President Trump praised Kentucky’s attorney general for his handling of the case. All that and all that matters in today’s Eye Opener. Your world in 90 seconds.
Governor Cuomo should seek to reactivate and re-empower the state Financial Control Board to oversee New York City’s finances in response to Mayor Bill de Blasio’s repeated calls for deficit borrowing, according to a new report by E.J. McMahon.
“Forty-five years ago this month, then-Gov. Hugh L. Carey and the state Legislature passed a landmark law, the Financial Emergency Act, designed to rescue Gotham from imminent bankruptcy. … Four decades later, with both the city and state now facing a very different kind of crisis, the FCB can again play a critical role in restoring the city government’s stability.”
By E.J. McMahon New York Post September 24, 2020
Based on a new report
Photo: Michael Loccisano/Getty Images for Food Bank for New York City
“The Covid-19 pandemic and the resulting economic downturn have taken a devastating toll on the entire nation. … But urban decline is not inevitable — it is a choice, and it’s one that our leaders don’t have to make.”
By Michael Hendrix CNN Business September 24, 2020
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.
“For an American working class ravaged by Covid-19’s economic destruction, the promise of tens of thousands of new, high-paying jobs in the offshore wind industry sounds like welcome news. Sadly, however, the economic benefits of job creation will be more than offset by increased energy prices and decreased growth…”
By Jonathan A. Lesser RealClearEnergy
September 23, 2020
Based on a recent report
Massachusetts Governor Charlie Baker joins the Manhattan Institute at 11:00 a.m. ET 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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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 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.
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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By Carl M. Cannon on Sep 24, 2020 09:44 am
Good morning, it’s Thursday, Sept. 24, 2020. On this date in 1896, in the upper Mississippi River state capital of St. Paul, an upper-middle-class couple with Irish roots welcomed a son into the world. The proud father was Maryland-born and Georgetown-educated Edward Fitzgerald. A boy when the Civil War broke out, Edward moved to the North as a young man for a fresh start and a change of scenery. He had his reasons: He was only 12 when his cousin Mary Surratt was hanged for her involvement in the plot to assassinate Abraham Lincoln.
Edward also wed a woman named Mary, although Mary McQuillan, the daughter of an Irish immigrant, went by “Molly.” The couple named their boy after a distant cousin of Edward’s – the author of the “The Star Spangled Banner” — but Francis Scott Key Fitzgerald always went by “Scott” among family and friends. We know him as F. Scott Fitzgerald, a great American novelist and unparalleled chronicler of the Jazz Age.
I’ll offer an observation about his writing in a moment. 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:
* * *
RCP Poll: Catholics Favor Biden, But Who Will Vote Is Key. I lay out the findings of the latest survey conducted in conjunction with EWTN News.
Cancel Culture Comes to the Civil Rights Commission. Scott Yenor describes his ouster from an Idaho panel because he expressed views deemed outside liberal orthodoxy.
Brennan Stifled “Russia Backs Hillary” Intel. The then-CIA director edited a crucial section of the intelligence report on Russian election meddling after analysts disputed his take that Vladimir Putin aided Donald Trump, Paul Sperry reports in RealClearInvestigations.
Hot Air Emanating From the Offshore Wind Industry. In RealClearEnergy, Jonathan Lesser spotlights claims thatwind turbines off the coast of seven states will lead to lower electricity prices.
The Causes of California’s Wildfires. Also in RCE, Steve Milloy points to the state’s history of long droughts, and lagging forest management policies, as more culpable than climate change for the catastrophic damage caused this year.
A Guillotine for the American Dream? In RealClearPolicy, Carl Szabo warns that the symbolism was ominous when anti-capitalist protesters set up a French Revolution-style guillotine outside Jeff Bezos’ home.
* * *
It’s one of the inexplicable caprices of the book business, but “The Great Gatsby” wasn’t a commercial or critical success when it was published in 1925. And when F. Scott Fitzgerald suffered a heart attack in 1940 at age 44, he died not knowing whether he had a place in the American literary canon.
“My God, I am a forgotten man,” he lamented to his wife, Zelda, when his publisher allowed “The Great Gatsby” to go out of print. With its typical level of insight, the New York Times 1925 review of “Gatsby” carried this headline: “Fitzgerald’s Latest A Dud.” Fifteen years later, the NYT obituary said flatly that “the promise of his brilliant literary career was never fulfilled.” Time magazine never even mentioned “Gatsby” in its obit.
In the days before musicians and actors dominated popular culture, writers could be rock stars, and Scott Fitzgerald and his talented but troubled wife fit the bill. It was a marriage destined to be shadowed by alcoholism, mental illness, infidelity, jealousy, and competition (what marriage wouldn’t be?), but when he began writing “Gatsby,” Fitzgerald was atop the world.
“This Side of Paradise,” published in 1920, had made him famous, and the arrival of “The Beautiful and Damned” two years later solidified his reputation as one of the great voices of his generation.
Gertrude Stein, however, would dub Fitzgerald, Ernest Hemingway, and other post-World War I ex-pats in Paris “a lost generation,” a phrase Hemingway would make famous in “The Sun Also Rises.”
But as he began writing “The Great Gatsby” in 1922, Fitzgerald didn’t feel lost at all. He felt he’d found himself as a writer, and he intended to prove it to the world. “I want to write something new, something extraordinary and beautiful and simple and intricately patterned,” he wrote to his editor, Maxwell Perkins.
What did it take for the world to finally see that he made good on this goal? The short answer is that it took another war.
During the Great Depression, the Roosevelt administration had launched programs to employ writers, artists, historians, and photographers as a way of keeping them fed — and getting good press for the New Deal. After Pearl Harbor, the same thinking went into the creation of the Council on Books in Wartime. The Nazis were burning books, so the U.S. government would print them. These “weapons in the war of ideas” would be shipped to the millions of Americans in uniform fighting overseas. Whether they were really weapons is debatable, but they were good for morale and they helped produce a generation of readers in this country.
Printed in a size that could fit in a GI’s pocket, the first shipment of Armed Services Edition paperbacks went out in July 1943. “Some of the publishers think that their business is going to be ruined,” said broadcaster H.V. Kaltenborn. “But I make this prediction. America’s publishers have cooperated in an experiment that will for the first time make us a nation of book readers.”
He was prescient. The books were as popular on ships and in the trenches as magazine pin-up photos. The soldiers and sailors who left England for Normandy on D-Day were given a book along with their rations.
Among the 1,227 ASE titles was “The Great Gatsby.” It had sold a mere 20,000 copies when originally published. The government published 155,000 of them. It’s never been out of print since. “Gatsby” is hardly an entirely positive portrayal of America. But it struck a chord of nostalgia with America’s fighting men, even as it does today among new generations encountering it for the first time. As the book’s narrator says at the end of the story:
“So we beat on, boats against the current, borne back ceaselessly into the past.”
Unrest continues to spread through American cities orchestrated, producing nightly images of assaults and arsons perpetrated by Antifa, BLM, and other hard left revolutionary groups. It is increasingly clear that Americans desire a strong response to defeat these modern-day insurrectionists and that the candidate who seems most prepared to restore order is likely to have a major leg up in the November election.
What should the U.S. government do to restore order? What legal options are available for prosecutors and law enforcement to target these radical groups? Is there a case to be made for major federal conspiracy crimes such as racketeering or seditious conspiracy? Do these groups qualify as domestic or foreign terrorists? What is the best strategy for upholding the law and securing Americans?
As part of Center for Security Policy’s Voter Education Webinar Series, Frank Gaffney, Founder and Executive Chairman of the Center hosted panelists Sam Faddis, retired Army Captain and CIA operations officer, and Jeff Nyquist, an expert on Russian and Communist military and foreign policy.
The panel, entitled Why China is the Most Important National Security Issue in the 2020 Election, aimed to expose the threat posed to the US by the Chinese Communist Party.
North Korea has plagued the United States for nearly 70 years, with the Korean War still legally unresolved. The impoverished country with its rogue regime is no longer a mere threat to American interests and allies in Asia, but has been developing an ICBM force capable of firing nuclear weapons at the United States.
The North Korean threat requires a huge expenditure of American troops in South Korea, and places stresses on the US Navy and Air Force. It is a problem that has to be solved without resort to full-scale war, which is why it appears on the Center for Security Policy’s 2020 National Security Voter Guide list.
Violence broke out once again last night in Louisville because the facts don’t justify prosecutions in connection with the tragic shooting death of Breonna Taylor.
The rioting was clearly planned, aided and abetted by organizers who were caught on tape supplying the not-so-spontaneous mob with signs, shields and other gear. The question occurs: Who is behind such violent protests, in Louisville and other cities across America in recent months?
We know that revolutionary Marxist groups like Antifa and the Black Lives Matter organization are involved in many of them. We know the latter has received hundreds of millions of dollars from corporate sponsors. There is also evidence that the Chinese Progressive Association – a radical group tied to Communist China’s consulates in Boston and San Francisco – has been supporting BLM.
We must defend our Constitution from all enemies, foreign and domestic.
This is Frank Gaffney.
OLIVER “BUCK” REVELL, President of Revell Group, Inc., Executive Vice President of Rogue DNA, Trustee of the Center for American and International Law, Chairman, Board of Directors, Middle East Research Institute, Served for five years as an officer in U.S. Marine Corps, Served 30 years as a Special Agent and Senior Executive of the FBI, Served as First Assistant Director in charge of Criminal Investigations at the FBI:
An analysis of the protests taking place throughout the United States
Is there foreign involvement in these protests and riots?
Assessing the job the FBI is doing with respect to the riots
What can the American people do to help end the protests?
DIANA WEST, Nationally syndicated columnist, Blogs at Dianawest.net, Author of Death of the Grown Up, American Betrayal, and Red Thread: A Search for Ideological Drivers Inside the Anti-Trump Conspiracy:
The notion of self-defense in the United States
The upcoming Supreme Court nomination by President Trump
ROSEMARY JENKS, Director of Government Relations at NumbersUSA.com, Former Senior Legislative Analyst at the Center for Immigration Studies:
President Trump and Joe Biden’s approaches to immigration
The connection between American jobs and immigration
Will the American voters weigh the candidates’ positions on immigration?
There’s a reason today’s best pot stocks trade for pennies. They got pounded in the 2019 cannabis-sector crash. But, there will be new winners because legal marijuana is forecast to become a nearly $50 billion industry. Find new winners with long-term stability, like a company that’s already processing 10 tons a year. This U.S. Processor Could Be Slated For Greatness…
As we reported last night , protesters hit the streets in Louisville, NYC, LA, Denver, Oakland, Washington DC and other cities across the US after a Kentucky grand jury decided that no officers would be charged in the killing of Breonna…
(Update 0010ET): A suspect has been arrested in the shooting of two Louisville police officers. LOUISVILLE – Suspect arrested for shooting 2 PD officers (photo) pic.twitter.com/kF28DprybU — FJ News Reporter (@FJNewsReporter) September…
Authored by ‘Austrian Peter’ via The Burning Platform, A reader recently wrote me a long letter on how he feels about all this ‘Plandemic’ stuff. I thought it would be good to share it as there is so much in it which rings bells of truth…
Over the past decade, the one common theme despite the political upheaval and growing social and geopolitical instability, was that the market would keep marching higher and the Fed would continue injecting liquidity into the system.
Authored by Brandon Smith via Alt-Market.com, The signs really began to become visible at the end of January, 2020; there was an exodus of people brewing, and it was galvanizing fears on both sides of the political spectrum. The pandemic…
Authored by Daisy Luther via The Organic Prepper blog, Dear Friends: 2020 has certainly been quite a year so far, and a defining one for the preparedness movement. No longer are our stockpiles of rice, beans, and hand sanitizer objects…
Simple Options Trading for Beginners retails on Amazon for $19.95 and has 4 out of 5 stars. It was written by a stock market trading veteran with over 44 years of experience. Because of a special promotion, this book is 100% FREE for you today. So get it here now…
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September 24, 2020
Top Twenty Lessons I’ve Learned in 2020
By Jeffrey A. Tucker | Governments are fully capable of doing the unthinkable, and doing so suddenly with no exit plan, little consideration of cost, and a callous disregard for individual rights. The US Constitution and Bill of Rights are largely…
Why So Much Science is Wrong, False, Puffed, or Misleading
By Joakim Book | “The book, while scary and disheartening, is truth-seeking and ultimately optimistic. Ritchie doesn’t come to bury science; he comes to fix it. ‘The ideals of the scientific process aren’t the problem,’ he writes on the last page…
By James L. Caton | “A lack of concern for fiscal discipline by both the U.S. Treasury Secretary and a call for persistent, near zero rates by the Chairman of the Federal Reserve suggests that the Federal Reserve and the U.S. Treasury will act in…
Household Net Worth Hits A Record While Government and…
By Robert Hughes | Fallout from Covid-19 and government policies of lockdowns and restrictions continue to wreak havoc on the economy. While much attention is focused on measures of activity and labor market conditions, new data from the Federal…
By Art Carden | At first glance, a lot of the social problems and resource waste emerging from government intervention seem pretty easy to fix: the government should just stop doing whatever it is doing that is creating the problems and the waste.
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…
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.
On the menu today: The surprising but compelling argument that Brett Kavanaugh now represents the swing vote on the U.S. Supreme Court offers Democrats a hard, tough lesson on how their scorched-earth tactics tend to backfire; looking back at the Sotomayor hearing and how to oppose a nominee without smearing reputations; more questions about Biden’s light schedule; and an invitation you won’t want to miss.
Will Democrats Learn Anything from the Kavanaugh Confirmation Fight?
Greg Stohr of Bloomberg Law makes an observation that should stir deep regrets and recriminations across the American left:
U.S. Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh remains anathema to many liberals. The death of Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg means he also may soon be their best hope to save abortion rights and Obamacare.
Kavanaugh, who prefers narrower rulings than some of his conservative colleagues, would find himself at the court’s ideological center if President Donald Trump succeeds … READ MORE
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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.
“Makes an original and compelling case for nationalism . . . A fascinating, erudite—and much-needed—defense of a hallowed idea unfairly under current attack.” — Victor Davis Hanson
Rioters are now shooting at police in Louisville, according to livestreamers on the ground. It has been confirmed that at least one officer was… Read more…
God protect our President. A Virginia Beach couple was arrested before President Trump’s rally on Monday in Toledo, Ohio. John C Davison and his wife… Read more…
Two Louisville Police officers were shot during the riot over Breonna Taylor on Wednesday evening. Reporters at the scene described hearing at least ten… Read more…
Louisville “protesters” stormed a restaurant and threw tables and chairs on the outdoor patio on Wednesday, following the announcement that officers would not be charged… Read more…
Last night Black Lives Matter protester attempted to assissinate Louisville Police Officers. Two police officers were injured. The suspect was arrested. And now there are… Read more…
Guest post by Collin McMahon A host of world leaders including Viktor Orban, Nigel Farage, Matteo Salvini, Scott Morrison, Narendra Modi, Jair Bolsonaro, and Rodrigo… Read more…
Protests and riots immediately erupted after Kentucky Attorney General Daniel Cameron announced Wednesday that there will be no charges filed against two of the Louisville… Read more…
A Seattle Police officer was struck with a baseball bat by a Black Lives Matter militant after having a barrage of projectiles thrown at him…. Read more…
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In his three-plus decades of service to his country, Hoover senior fellow and former national security advisor H. R. McMaster fought for freedom’s cause and defended America’s national security interests abroad. The author of the newly released book Battlegrounds:The Fight to Defend the Free World shares his world vision—rival powers’ mindsets and warnings of crises to come—with Hoover senior fellows Niall Ferguson and John Cochrane.
After the summer protests and rioting in many large cities, activists demanded a defunding, or at least radical pullbacks, of the police. So-called crime experts often concurred. So some city governments ignored public warnings and diminished their police presence despite a sharp rise in crime in many cities. Looting and arson were often ignored.
Lord Chris Patten, the current chancellor of the University of Oxford and the last governor of British administered Hong Kong, was interviewed by new Hoover Institution Director Condoleezza Rice about the motives behind Beijing’s decision to enact and enforce new national security laws in the special administrative region.
There’s much energy in the cosmos these days around civics education, history education, maybe even “patriotic” history and civics education. Raj Vinnakota’s project on behalf of several private foundations yielded an admirable “landscape analysis,” and the WW Foundation (née Woodrow Wilson National Fellowship Foundation) that Raj now heads launched a “civic spring” project to foster “hands-on civic learning” among young people.
On September 12, 2020, the Taliban and the Afghan government began negotiations in Qatar over the political future of Afghanistan. In accordance with the “Agreement for Bringing Peace to Afghanistan,” signed by the United States and the Taliban on February 29, the negotiations are expected to produce “a permanent and comprehensive ceasefire” between the warring Afghan parties, as well as an “agreement over the future political roadmap of Afghanistan.”
Is economic growth inexorably slowing down? Such is the depressing conclusion of Nick Bloom, Chad Jones, John Van Reenen, and Michael Webb, who showed in a very important paper that it is taking more and more effort to find new ideas. It is also the conclusion of Robert Gordon’s Rise and Fall of American Growth. They promised us flying cars, and all we get tweets.
President Trump caused a stir last week when he celebrated Constitution Day by attacking the “radicals” who “want to burn down the principles enshrined in our founding documents” and calling for a 1776 Commission. It echoed his comments from the Fourth of July, when he warned that “our children are taught in school to hate their own country, and to believe that the men and women who built it were not heroes, but that they were villains.”
President Trump’s remarks about the need to “restore patriotic education” at the White House Conference on American History have provoked a flurry of defenses and counterattacks from academic historians. The defenders dispute the notion that their teaching undermines patriotism, contending that any criticisms they might make of the United States are intended to improve the United States, not destroy it. The counterattackers denounce the President for threatening their academic freedom and advancing a version of history that ignores racism and pays too much attention to dead white males.
Those of you who read Don Boudreaux over at CafeHayek know that he often gives evidence that the average American is way better off than his/her counterpart in the 1960s, 1970s, and 1980s. This is my story comparing now to the 1960s.
Hoover Institution fellow and White House coronavirus task force member, Scott Atlas, talks about the success of Operation Warp Speed (development of a COVID-19 vaccine) at a White House press conference with President Donald Trump.
Hoover Institution fellow H. R. McMaster discusses China’s repression of the truth as well as China’s inability to take some responsibility concerning the spread of COVID-19.
The Hoover Institution hosts China, Hong Kong, and the Future of Freedom: A Dialogue Between Director Condoleezza Rice and Lord Chris Patten on Wednesday, September 23, 2020 from 9:00 a.m. – 10:00 a.m. PDT.
Hoover Institution fellow H. R. McMaster talks about his new book Battlegrounds: The Fight to Defend the Free World and about the need for us to come together to meet the various challenges facing America from climate change to communist China, Iran, and the treatment of General Michael Flynn.
Retired Lt. Gen. H.R. McMaster, who was President Trump’s national security adviser from February 2017 to April 2018, has written a book that will likely confound both the President’s fans and his critics.
RANCHO CUCAMONGA, Calif.– It isn’t just the fintechs credit unions should be focused on, but the “big techs,” according to one expert—who says the reason is clear.
H.R. McMaster is one of the most celebrated modern military leaders in America. His achievements include serving as a captain during the Gulf War, being responsible for fighting the Iraqi insurgency during the war in Iraq, writing the widely-read book Dereliction of Duty, and most recently serving as national security advisor under President Donald Trump.
America’s national debt now stands at close to $27 trillion. According to a new report by the Congressional Budget Office, by the end of 2020, federal debt held by the public is projected to equal 98% of GDP — and in the following year, this burden will grow to 104% of GDP. But its growth doesn’t stop there.
When Americans knew classical history, they could reach beyond partisan differences by drawing on the shared roots of our civilization. American students once learned, for example, about the Greek victory at Marathon in 490 B.C. This kept Greece from being swallowed up by the Persian Empire and ushered in the Golden Age of Athenian democracy which, for all its shortcomings, was a pathbreaking achievement.
The Trump administration has made little effort to honor the president’s promises to make government work. Employee morale is down, public distrust is up, and the swamp has never been so vibrant. Americans know trust in the federal government has declined, believe it is affecting government’s ability to act, blame government performance for a substantial share of the decline, and even say it should be repaired.
Joe Biden is running the most liberal campaign in modern history. Do not take my word for it. Barack Obama said the same in his endorsement of Joe Biden. “He already has what is the most progressive platform of any major party nominee in history.” While the media devotes its coverage to social policy and identity politics, the economic plans of Biden are hardly written about, despite having great potential for harm.
mentioning Lanhee J. Chen via The Peter G. Peterson Foundation Economic Forum
The inaugural series of the Peter G. Peterson Foundation Economic Forum will explore the significant impact and policy implications of the COVID-19 pandemic. As lawmakers enact major programs to address the devastating damage to our health, economy and society, many critical questions remain about the path forward. This Forum series will host conversations that explore lessons learned thus far, ideas for when and how we can safely reopen the economy, and how effective fiscal policy can both aid recovery and prepare us better for the next unforeseen crisis.
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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This email was sent to: rickbulow1974@gmail.com