Good morning! Here is your news briefing for Friday September 25, 2020
THE DAILY SIGNAL
September 25 2020
Happy Friday from Washington, where congressional Democrats’ vow to pack the Supreme Court meets opposition from a bipartisan coalition of former public officials. Fred Lucas reports on that and the Trump administration’s plan to cover preexisting medical conditions and prohibit “surprise” billings. On the podcast, a friend talks about a likely Supreme Court nominee. Plus: liberals’ unreasonable stance on the high court, and a new documentary examines claims about climate change. On this date in 1957, escorted by Army paratroopers deployed by President Dwight Eisenhower to enforce a court order, nine black students begin classes at formerly all-white Central High School in Little Rock, Arkansas.
A bipartisan group dominated by former state attorneys general is pushing back against proposals from congressional Democrats and progressive activists to pack the Supreme Court by adding more justices.
From Kavanaugh’s nomination to his swearing-in ceremony, The Daily Signal was there—providing much-needed context and sharing the facts with our millions of readers.
“As a friend, even, she makes you feel inferior because she’s so generous and she’s so humble and she’s so warm and fun and normal,” says Carter Snead, a Notre Dame professor.
The notion that Democrats, if they controlled the White House and the Senate, would not seek to immediately replace Ginsburg before the election is absolutely, positively hysterical.
Politicians, media figures, and Hollywood elites who maintain lavish lifestyles while advocating restrictions on carbon dioxide emissions are on full display in a new documentary.
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THE RESURGENT
THE EPOCH TIMES
Morning Brief:Robert Hunter Biden, son of former U.S. Vice President Joe Biden, made millions of dollars worth of “questionable transactions” with Chinese nationals connected to the Chinese regime and military
“By three methods we may learn wisdom: First, by reflection, which is noblest; Second, by imitation, which is easiest; and third by experience, which is the bitterest.”
CONFUCIUS
HOW THE SPECTER OF COMMUNISM IS RULING OUR WORLD is a must-read for every freedom-loving individual. The book reveals the ways in which the communist specter has burrowed into the minds of today’s people. It charts communism’s global advance and explains how this specter has embedded itself in nearly every facet of today’s society — from education to the judicial system — and the path humanity must take to escape its grip.
”We had canceled our local newspaper over 5 years ago because the news was obviously slanted toward progressives. We even considered receiving a newspaper by mail from a city several hours away, but saw that it was owned by the same group as our local newspaper. I received a copy of The Epoch Times in the mail and tried it for 3 months. I was soon hooked! It covers some of the same news on FOX News television, but deeper. It also covers a wider range of topics than FOX News that I find very valuable and informative.”
Robert Hunter Biden, son of former U.S. Vice President Joe Biden, made millions of dollars worth of “questionable transactions” with Chinese nationals connected to the Chinese regime …Read more
One suspect is in custody after two Louisville Metro police officers were shot on the night of Sept. 23 following an announcement related to the death of …Read more
President Donald Trump praised Amy Coney Barrett on Sept. 24, just hours after House Republicans encouraged him to choose her for his next Supreme Court nomination. “She’s …Read more
Two senior Republicans in Congress are warning that widespread problems with mail-in voting coupled with Democrats’ efforts “to change state election laws and procedures at the last … Read more
President Donald Trump on Sept. 24 said he’ll respect the November election results if the Supreme Court rules that Joe Biden won, coming after he made comments …Read more
A German company owned by the Russian billionaire who wired Hunter Biden $3.5 million received a contract to build part of the World War II Museum in …Read more
With over SIX MILLION activists in our grassroots network, FreedomWorks is one of the strongest pro-freedom advocates in the country. We’re conducting this brief survey to gauge conservatives ahead of the 2020 election. Every time she gets in front of the cameras, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi is pushing for a “vote-by-mail” scheme. “Vote-by-mail” has proven to be less secure than casting a paper ballot in person. Will you please click here to begin your 2020 Election Protection Survey?
Commentary I was about to write about why Michael Bloomberg could have seen fit to spend millions paying the fines of Florida felons so they can vote, … Read more
Commentary Two police officers were shot in Louisville, Kentucky, on Sept. 23, 2020, during the demonstrations that followed the announcement that officers would not be directly criminally …Read more
If you find the taste of chicken breast, hard-boiled eggs, or protein bars too boring, there is a tasty alternative for getting your daily dose of protein: …Read more
For years, the Chinese Communist Party has aggressively sought to modernize its military, with a focus on anti-satellite weapons, hypersonic missiles, and cyberspace.
Steel Dossier Posed Possible “National Security Threat”
From CBS’s Catherine Herridge: The primary sub-source for the Steele dossier was deemed a possible “national security threat” + the subject of 2009 FBI counter-intel probe. According to new records, those facts were known to Crossfire Hurricane team in December 2016 (Twitter). From Ari Fleischer: To investigate if Trump colluded w Russia, the FBI relied on info, paid for by the Clinton campaign, based on a source suspected by the FBI of being a Russian agent. The FBI then hid from the FISA court who paid for the info and the fact the source might be a foreign agent (Twitter). Powerful thread from Kimberly Strassel includes this: “…here’s the real kicker, per these documents out from @LindseyGrahamSC The FBI KNEW about this prior CI investigation into the source in DECEMBER OF 2016. It KNEW it was relying on information from a suspected Russian spy!’” (Twitter). From another story: Nowhere in the 57 pages is it shown that the Crossfire Hurricane investigators who questioned Danchenko ever asked him about his actions in 2008 which led him to be classified by the FBI as a “threat to national security.” Bottom line — the FBI investigators running Crossfire Hurricane were happy to have the assistance of a suspected Russian Intelligence Asset to assist the FBI in their efforts to drive Donald Trump from office (Red State). From Josh Hawley: This is the biggest scandal and the gravest abuse of the law in FBI history. Using Russian spies to interfere in a presidential election. Talk about collusion (Twitter).
2.
Julio Rosas: Reuters is Wrong, Riots Were Not “Mostly Peaceful”
Julio Rosas, the Townhall journalist who regularly reports from the middle of these riots, details the Louisville riots step by step, with video evidence (Townhall). From the Daily Caller: More than 300 people in 29 states and Washington, D.C. have been charged for crimes ranging from damaging federal property to attempted murder “under the guise of peaceful demonstrations,” the Justice Department said in a Thursday statement (Daily Caller). From Andy Ngo last night, with video evidence: First Unitarian Church in Louisville is welcoming black protesters & rioters as the curfew comes into effect. Some are making sure whites stay out. They threaten to beat up those who don’t comply (Twitter). Dr. Albert Mohler, a resident of Louisville, details the case and the aftermath (Briefing). Biden’s statement indicates he has no idea what really happened (Red State).
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3.
Politico Deems Barrett Religion “Troubling” Justifying Religious Attacks
So, the writer insists, they have every right to attack her faith (Politico). A breakdown of the errors in the piece (NY Post). Meanwhile, from Mitch McConnell on Democrats attacking a yet-to-be-named candidate: … former Vice President Biden has already cut to the front of the line. Just yesterday he offered the following assessment, prior to learning who he was assessing. Quote: ‘Women’s rights as it relates to everything from medical health care is going to be gone.’ This is former Vice President Biden yesterday. Good luck deciphering what he’s trying to say. It sounds like more of the same old junk. Perhaps the nation will soon watch this man in his late 70s condescend to explain women’s healthcare to one of the brilliant women whom President Trump indicates he is considering (Red State).
4.
Three Arrested in Texas for Mail-Ballot Fraud
From the story: In an announcement with potential significance for the November elections when voting by mail is expected to increase significantly because of the threat of COVID-19, Paxton said Gregg County Commissioner Shannon Brown, Marlena Jackson, Charlie Burns and DeWayne Ward orchestrated a vote-harvesting scheme to help win Brown win the Democratic primary two years ago.
Strachan: Good Churches See Growth During Lockdown
From the piece: Undeterred by the hysteria and difficulty ripping through our society, many quiet and unspectacular churches continue to do what they have always done: they preach and teach the Bible. Nothing fancy; nothing new. While submitting to the government as much as possible (per Romans 13), they have not ceded ecclesial lordship (principially or practically) to Caesar (Eph. 1:22-23). In different forms and circumstances, they are doggedly feeding the flock during our national lockdown. Such ministry is having a real effect. Line-upon-line preaching is yielding sheep-upon-sheep growth.
Woman Tasered After Refusing to Wear Mask at Football Game
She was at an outdoor middle school game. From Ed Morrissey: There wasn’t anyone outside her family “bubble” within six feet of her breath; in fact, it doesn’t look like there was anyone within twenty feet of her until the police officer approached. Besides that, this game was played outdoors, where transmission risk is minimal anyway. Masks make sense indoors or where participant density is significant, but in this case the transmission risk from woman was likely zero. A request to put the mask back on should have sufficed, or even a ticket requiring a fine, but what transpires in this video exponentially increased the risk of transmission. How did that serve the public good that the mask mandate is supposedly serving?
Marching 1.8 miles to pray for our country (Prayer March). The same day (evening) Focus on the Family is having an online event to support the pro-life cause (Focus).
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The shark fin ban championed by the late Rep. Kristin Jacobs goes into effect Oct. 1, and a group of ocean conservation advocates is planning to recognize her legacy with a mural.
Jacobs, who died of cancer in April, spent years advocating for the measure, which makes the import and export of shark fins. It’s no secret in the Legislature — the bill signed by the Governor earlier this month was designated the “Kristin Jacobs Ocean Conservation Act.”
In July, the team at Shark Allies launched a GoFundMe campaign to commission a mural in her honor.
A new mural will celebrate the life and work of Kristin Jacobs.
The fundraising goal was $4,000. As of Thursday evening, Shark Allies had raised more than double that thanks to a flood of contributions from around the state.
Among the donors were several of Jacobs’ colleagues in the Legislature. House members chipping in include Reps. Nick Duran, Shevrin Jones, Anika Omphroy and Toby Overdorf, who put forward the amendment naming the act after Jacobs. Among the Senators on the list were Lauren Book, Lizbeth Benacquisto, Jason Pizzo and Travis Hutson, who sponsored the companion bill.
The lobbying corps was also well represented, with Nick Iarossi of Capitol City Consulting, Taylor Biehl of Capitol Alliance Group, BillieAnn Gay, Ron Greenstein, Tracy Mayernick of The Mayernick Group, Christian Minor, Kim McDougal of GrayRobinson, Diana Padgett, Shannon Shepp, and Heather Turnbull of Rubin Turnbull & Associated among the many lobbyists on the list.
What are the organizers going to do with the surplus?
“The Shark Allies team will now create a second installation commemorating the historic passing of this bill, in Florida’s sharkiest location,” organizer Laurel Irvine wrote Thursday evening. “Thank you to each and every one of our donors thus far, you are making this a reality.”
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Representing Florida’s 6th Congressional District isn’t Michael Waltz’ only job. The first-term Congressman is also a Lieutenant Colonel in the U.S. Army National Guard.
Waltz has served in the military for more than two decades and had a distinguished career.
Being a member of Congress is Lt. Col. Michael Waltz’s side gig.
The Florida native has completed multiple combat tours in Afghanistan, the Middle East and Africa. Before he became the first Green Beret elected to Congress, Waltz was also worked as the Director for Afghanistan policy at the Pentagon.
Today, Waltz will be promoted to the rank of Colonel in a ceremony officiated by U.S. Army Secretary Ryan McCarthy, who was one of Waltz’s former classmates at the Virginia Military Institute.
The ceremony will begin at 10 a.m. and will be streamed over Zoom. Those interested in watching can register online.
Good news about a great person: Tara Reid makes partner at Strategos Group — Lobbyist Tara Reid is now a partner at Strategos Group. A longtime associate at the firm, Reid has moved up the ranks over the past five years. She now becomes the first woman to make partner from the firm’s internal ranks. “The election of Tara Reid as a Strategos Partner is not an honor bestowed, but rather a recognition earned through five years of focus, drive, and a continued willingness to learn,” Strategos managing partner Adam Giery said. “This nomination was personal, as I have grown to trust and rely on her leadership and guidance. Inviting her to the Partnership, a moment that transformed my life, is a career highlight.”
Situational awareness
—@RealDonaldTrump: Florida looking good!
—@SenateMajLdr: The winner of the November 3rd election will be inaugurated on January 20th. There will be an orderly transition just as there has been every four years since 1792.
—@MarcoRubio: As we have done for over two centuries we will have a legitimate & fair election It may take longer than usual to know the outcome, but it will be a valid one And at noon on Jan 20, 2021, we will peacefully swear in the President
—@AOC: I am voting early and in person. What’s your voting plan?
—@RealStanVG: The campaign flags that say Trump 2020 No More Bullshit are so confusing. I can’t figure it out. He’s been President for nearly 4 years. What is it you want — Trump or No More Bullshit?
—@RonnieWhittaker: I remember being ED of Republican Party of Florida when we were trying to clean up a mess left to us & scrutiny was relentless from outside. I mean relentless & we were earnestly working to uncover possible criminality. Shoes on the other foot now & I see lotsa shoulder shrugs.
—@Conarck: Kinda crazy to think about the many COVID skeptics who went from claiming SARS-CoV-2 is a bioweapon developed by the Chinese government to advocating for mass infection in search of herd immunity.
Days until
First presidential debate in Indiana — 4; Preakness Stakes rescheduled — 8; Ashley Moody’s 2020 Human Trafficking Summit — 11; first vice presidential debate at the University of Utah — 13; NBA season ends (last possible date) — 19; second presidential debate scheduled in Miami — 21; NBA draft — 21; Wes Anderson’s “The French Dispatch” premieres — 21; NBA free agency — 23; Florida Chamber’s Future of Florida Forum — 25; HBO debuts 2000 presidential election doc ‘537 Votes’ — 26; third presidential debate at Belmont — 27; “The Empty Man” premieres — 28; 2020 General Election — 39; NBA 2020-21 training camp — 47; The Masters begins — 48; “No Time to Die” premieres — 56; Pixar’s “Soul” premieres — 56; College basketball season slated to begin — 61; NBA 2020-21 opening night — 68; Florida Automated Vehicles Summit — 68; “Death on the Nile” premieres — 83; “Wonder Woman 1984” rescheduled premiere — 91; Super Bowl LV in Tampa — 135; “A Quiet Place Part II” rescheduled premiere — 148; “Black Widow” rescheduled premiere — 163; “Top Gun: Maverick” rescheduled premiere — 280; Disney’s “Shang Chi and The Legend of The Ten Rings” premieres — 287; new start date for 2021 Olympics — 301; “Jungle Cruise” premieres — 309; Disney’s “Eternals” premieres — 406; “Spider-Man Far From Home” sequel premieres — 409; Steven Spielberg’s “West Side Story” premieres — 441; “Thor: Love and Thunder” premieres — 505; “Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness” premieres — 558; “Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse” sequel premieres — 739.
Sally
“Northwest Florida gets ‘major disaster’ declaration. What does this mean for residents?” via Jim Little of the NWF Daily News — Trump has declared a major disaster exists in Florida from Hurricane Sally. However, the declaration from the White House contains no mention of assistance for individuals. The White House news release said Trump issued a major declaration on Wednesday, unlocking Federal Emergency Management Agency aid for local governments and nonprofits for emergency work and repair in Escambia County. Emergency Protective Measures are actions taken by a community before, during, and following a disaster to save lives, protect public health and safety, or eliminate immediate threat of significant damage to improved public and private property through cost-effective measures, according to FEMA.
Hurricane Sally is now officially a ‘major disaster.’ What does that mean, exactly? Image via WBTM.
“3 Skanska barges still stuck under Pensacola Bay Bridge, repair timeline unknown” via Kevin Robinson of the Pensacola News Journal — At least seven spans of the Pensacola Bay Bridge will have to be partially or fully replaced due to damage from loose Skanska barges, but as of yet, there is no timeline for the repairs, according to the Florida Department of Transportation. Several barges owned by Skanska USA, the contractor leading a $400 million bridge replacement project, collided with the Pensacola Bay Bridge after coming unmoored during Hurricane Sally. In a news release Thursday, FDOT said assessments of the damage to the structure are still ongoing, but some of Skanska’s barges were still creating complications. “Three of the contractor’s barges remain on or under the structure, and the removal of those barges will have to be done with great caution,” the release said. “The contractor has prioritized the removal of the barges and will work closely with FDOT to ensure the least amount of additional damage possible to the bridge in this effort.”
“Cotton fields, other crops in Okaloosa take severe hit from Sally” via Tony Judnich of the NWF Daily News — High winds combined with more than 20 inches of rain from Hurricane Sally delivered a severe beating to farms in north Okaloosa County, with this year’s cotton crop taking the hardest and most expensive hit. “Most of our cotton is lying on the ground right now,” Jennifer Bearden, the University of Florida/Institute of Food & Agricultural Sciences Extension agriculture agent in Okaloosa County, said Wednesday. “We were about a month away from harvesting when the storm hit. We’re looking at about a 50% yield loss on our cotton.” That equates to about a $1 million loss, a number that could grow even higher, she said. Following the storm, Bearden has been able to survey nearly 2,200 acres of the 2,500-3,000 total acres of cotton in the county.
“Pensacola oyster farmer says Skanska barge smashed through farm, ruined 800,000 oysters” via Kevin Robinson of the Pensacola News Journal — A Pensacola oyster farmer claims a rogue Skanska barge plowed through his farm, dragging almost 800,000 oysters to shore and causing him an estimated $500,000 in losses. During Hurricane Sally, 22 barges owned by the construction company Skanska USA came unmoored and scattered across Pensacola and Escambia bays. The vessels reportedly crashed into bridges, washed up in backyards and, in the case of Travis Gill, ran roughshod over his life’s investment. Gill, the owner of the DeLuna Oyster Co., launched his one-man business in 2017. He said he made a small investment at first to see if the farm was viable, and after building up a good reputation and solid clientele base decided to go “all-in and get a bunch of oysters.” Until recently, his plot in the waters just of Pensacola’s southeastern shore boasted about 65 floating oyster cages.
“Replica of Christopher Columbus’s ship, Niña, barely avoided Pensacola Bay’s rocks in Sally” via Colin Warren-Hicks of the Pensacola News Journal — On his first voyage to the New World, Columbus encountered an ingenious people called the Tainos, who warned the explorer of dangerous windstorms that often brewed in their home waters of the Caribbean Sea. They believed the cyclones to be earthly manifestations of a wrathful god known as “Huracán,” and on his second voyage to the Americas, Columbus and his sailors were the first-ever Europeans to encounter such a storm — what is now, referred to in English as a “hurricane.” Columbus’ flagship, the Niña, survived the tropical storm of 1495 just as a modern-day replica of the Niña survived a near shipwreck when Hurricane Sally struck its mooring in Pensacola last week. The quick action of her crew is all that saved the ship from the rocks of Pensacola Bay.
Much like the actual Niña, the replica weathered a major storm. Image via the Pensacola News Journal.
“Blue Angels announce Friday flyover to uplift community after Sally” via Jake Newby of the Pensacola News Journal — The U.S. Navy Blue Angels announced that the team will conduct a flyover throughout Pensacola on Friday to pay tribute to the resiliency of the community in the aftermath of Hurricane Sally. The flyover is scheduled for at 8 a.m. Friday. “I am very appreciative of the Blue Angels for this incredible show of support for the people of Pensacola as we begin the long recovery from Hurricane Sally,” Pensacola Mayor Grover Robinson said in a news release Thursday announcing the news. “This storm has impacted so many people in our community during a time when many of us were already facing challenging times, but I know we will recover. Pensacola is a strong, resilient community, and we will be even stronger once we get through this together.”
SCOTUS watch
“Ruth Bader Ginsburg eulogized as a ‘rock star’ and ‘fighter’ while mourners gather to say goodbye” via Robert Barnes, Jessica Contrera, Ann E. Marimow and Samantha Schmidt of The Washington Post — Chief Justice John Roberts eulogized Ginsburg as a “rock star” whose legal victories as a crusading lawyer for women’s rights and decisions over 27 years on the Supreme Court moved the nation closer to the goal of “equal justice under law.” “Among the words that describe Ruth: Tough. Brave. A fighter. A winner,” a red-eyed Roberts said during a ceremony in the Supreme Court’s Great Hall. “But also: Thoughtful. Careful. Compassionate. Honest.” Dozens of black-clad former clerks lined the steps of the marble building as Supreme Court police officers delivered Ginsburg’s coffin to the Great Hall, where justices traditionally have been remembered. The brief ceremony presented a snapshot of 2020 at the court. All eight justices wore masks. Justice Sonia Sotomayor added a clear plastic face shield; Justice Samuel Alito looked as if he had been skipping haircuts.
Ruth Bader Ginsburg’s colleagues on the Supreme Court described the late Justice as a ‘fighter’ and ‘rock star.’ Image via AP.
“Judge’s faith becomes early flashpoint in Supreme Court fight” via Ben Schreckinger of POLITICO — Before Trump has even announced his Supreme Court pick, conservatives are fighting to make the conservative Christian views of one of the leading contenders, 7th Circuit Judge Amy Coney Barrett, off-limits in any potential confirmation hearing. Some critics of Barrett are invoking “The Handmaid’s Tale,” a dystopian feminist novel in which conservative Christians have stripped away women’s rights, as a symbol of their fear that her conservative religious beliefs could reshape American society. Supporters are raising claims of anti-Catholic bigotry, both in response to the critics and in anticipation what they say would be the onslaught to come if Barrett were nominated. “We will be watching this carefully,” said Bill Donahue, president of the Catholic League, an anti-discrimination group. Citing alleged anti-Catholic bias, the group called for five high-profile Democratic Senators to recuse themselves if Barrett or the other leading contender, 11th Circuit Judge Barbara Lagoa, who is also Catholic, are nominated.
“Barbara Lagoa would bring an atypical background to the Supreme Court” via Corinne Ramey and James V. Grimaldi of The Wall Street Journal — Lagoa, a Cuban-American who spent the bulk of her judicial career in Florida’s state courts, has emerged as a leading potential U.S. Supreme Court pick who could mobilize voters in a key battleground state. If nominated and confirmed, Judge Lagoa would bring an atypical background to the high court: The only child of Cuban exiles, she attended a public university and has limited experience in the federal court system. She spent more than a decade on an intermediate state appeals court, a brief stint on her state’s highest court, and has been on the Atlanta-based 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals for less than a year. She would be the U.S. Supreme Court’s second Latina justice.
“Lagoa helped give GOP key legal win. Should she have recused?” via Mary Ellen Klas and Jay Weaver of the Miami Herald — Lagoa, the daughter of Cuban exiles in Miami who has rocketed onto the president’s shortlist for the U.S. Supreme Court, has earned a reputation as a conservative jurist with solid credentials who tends to side with business and government in her rulings and believes courts should stick to the plain meaning of the law. But perhaps the most divisive decision in her 15 years as a judge was voting as a new member of the federal appeals court in Atlanta, which recently handed the Republicans and Trump a political gift: Lagoa joined the majority in a 6-4 ruling to restrict the right of nearly 800,000 Florida felons who have completed their prison sentences.
Barbara Lagoa delivered a major ruling for the GOP, but some are raising the possibility that she should have recused herself. Image via AP.
“What Amy Coney Barrett actually said about election-year Supreme Court vacancies” via Aaron Blake of The Washington Post — Barrett appears to be the odds-on favorite to become Trump’s Supreme Court pick this weekend. But some are citing comments she made in 2016 to suggest that she opposed filling the kind of vacancy she might soon fill. They aren’t looking closely enough at what she said. Barrett, who was then a law professor at the University of Notre Dame, spoke to CBSN in February 2016, shortly after Justice Antonin Scalia died. Republicans had just controversially declared that they would block whomever President Barack Obama nominated for the seat because it was a presidential election year. In the course of her answer, she noted that a Democratic president replacing arguably the court’s most conservative justice would shift the court significantly. Some argued that she was saying that such a thing was wrong or that she opposed such a thing in an election year. That’s a stance that would be at odds with what’s happening today, when she or any other Trump nominee would replace one of the court’s most liberal justices, Ginsburg, in this election year, and shift the court substantially to the right.
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 Thursday, the CNN average remains 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 Thursday, Biden is staying steady at a 77 in 100 chance of winning compared to Trump, who now has a 22 in 100 shot. FiveThirtyEight also ranked individual states by the likelihood of delivering a decisive vote for the winning candidate in the Electoral College: Pennsylvania leads with 32.6%, while Florida comes in second with 11.6%. Other states include Wisconsin (9.5%), Michigan (8.3%), Arizona (6.4%), North Carolina (5%), Ohio (4.7%) and Nevada (2.8%).
In the latest survey of recent polling, Joe Biden is still clinging to his lead over Donald Trump.
PredictIt: As of Thursday, the PredictIt trading market has Biden dropping slightly to $0.57 a share, with Trump moving down to $0.45.
Real Clear Politics: As of Thursday, the RCP average of polling top battleground states gives Biden a lead over Trump 49.7% to 42.9%. The RCP model has Biden averaging at +6.8 points ahead.
The Economist: As of Thursday, 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
“Donald Trump says coronavirus ‘sounds like a beautiful place in Italy’” via A.G. Gancarski of Florida Politics — In Jacksonville, the President delivered what was largely a familiar series of applause lines, but a relatively new one: “The people call it coronavirus. It sounds like a beautiful place in Italy,” the Trump quipped to some applause. He then reminded the thousands on hand that the virus that has killed 200,000 Americans was from “China,” and adding that Florida has done a great job fighting it. He gave Jacksonville Mayor Lenny Curry props, saying “we wanted to have our Republican National Convention right here in Jacksonville … but we got hit hard with the China virus.” DeSantis called Biden “China’s errand boy,” saying Biden would offer a “Weekend at Bernie’s presidency” controlled by the radical left.
Donald Trump arrives in Jacksonville for what the campaign billed as the ‘Great American Comeback’ rally. Image via News4Jax.
“Election ‘Day’ begins in Florida with millions of ballots heading out to voter mailboxes” via Anthony Man of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — Election Day is still more than five weeks away, but presidential voting in Florida is about to begin — in a big way. On Thursday alone, elections offices in Broward and Palm Beach counties will send out more than 635,000 vote-by-mail ballots, kicking off an unprecedented shift in when and how people vote. By the weekend, people will have their ballots and start voting, before candidates Trump and Biden meet for their first debate. And by the end of next week, ballots will be in the hands of or on their way to more than 4.7 million Florida voters.
“As Trump exudes pandemic optimism, Democrats still see worry — and an advantage” via Josh Dawsey and Michael Scherer of The Washington Post — Standing in front of thousands of unmasked supporters packed together on an airport tarmac here Saturday night, Trump gave his regularly rosy assessment of the coronavirus pandemic. “We’re rounding the turn,” Trump said to cheers. “We’re rounding the corner of the pandemic.” The president is betting his political future on convincing voters that a recent dip in coronavirus cases, hospitalizations and deaths signals a coming end to the national nightmare and is a reason to reassess his handling of the pandemic and vote for him. He is zigzagging the country for a series of packed events, sometimes indoors, always with a packed and mostly unmasked crowd, preaching that the situation is rapidly improving while largely ignoring a death toll that this week surpassed 200,000 Americans amid fears that the country could have a second wave as temperatures drop.
“Republicans hope Supreme Court fight boosts 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 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 battleground 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 Gardner in Colorado, fighting for their political lives in Democratic-leaning states, even as they predict it could bolster other vulnerable Senators.
“Republicans try to ‘both sides’ Trump’s comments on peaceful transfer of power” via Aaron Blake of The Washington Post — Trump declined to commit to a peaceful transfer of power if he loses the 2020 election, ratcheting up previous rhetoric baselessly casting doubt on the legitimacy of what polls suggest is a likely defeat. In response, congressional Republicans have assured there will be a transfer of power, but they have mostly refused to rebuke Trump personally. And increasingly, they’ve suggested this is a “both sides” issue. In a series of tweets Thursday morning, Republicans from Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell to Sen. Marco Rubio to the third-ranking House Republican, Rep. Liz Cheney, promised a peaceful transfer of power and emphasized its importance in our constitutional republic. But in each of their statements, Trump was basically Voldemort. There was no suggestion that they were responding directly to Trump or that he actually said something wrong.
Donald Trump refuses to acknowledge there will be a ‘peaceful transition’ in 2021.
“After the White House said Trump would accept the results of the election, he once again suggests it may be tainted.” via Michael Crowley of The New York Times — A day after Trump’s refusal to commit to a peaceful transfer of power drew rebukes from Democrats, nervous distancing from Republicans and attempts at reassurance from the White House, Trump weighed in again Thursday and said that he was not sure the November election could be “honest” because mail-in ballots are “a whole big scam.” “We want to make sure that the election is honest and I’m not sure that it can be,” Trump told reporters before leaving the White House for North Carolina. Trump was responding to a reporter’s question about whether he would consider the November election results legitimate only if he wins. Instead of repeating his press secretary’s assurance earlier in the day that he would accept the results of a “free and fair” election, Trump instead launched into his latest complaint about mail-in ballots, which he has repeatedly asserted without evidence are likely to be tainted by widespread fraud, and suggested that the election will not, in fact, be fairly decided.
“‘An election between Trump and democracy’: Bernie Sanders sounds alarm on President refusing defeat if he loses” via Joey Garrison of USA Today — Calling the November election a “struggle to preserve American democracy,” Sanders warned Americans on Thursday to prepare for a doomsday scenario in which Trump could try to declare victory prematurely by seeking to discredit absentee ballots counted after Election Day. Striking a somber and urgent tone, the Vermont Senator and former Democratic presidential candidate steered clear of his bread-and-butter progressive causes in a speech from an empty auditorium at George Washington University. He instead addressed a fundamental principle of a democracy. “What I am going to talk about is something that, in my wildest dreams, I never thought I would be discussing,” Sanders said, beginning his 30-minute speech. “And that is the need to make certain that the President of the United States, if he loses this election, will abide by the will of the voters and leave office peacefully.”
“Trump faces challenges even in red states, poll shows, as women favor Biden” via Alexander Burns and Jonathan Martin of The New York Times — Trump is on the defensive in three red states he carried in 2016, narrowly trailing Biden in Iowa and battling to stay ahead of him in Georgia and Texas, as Trump continues to face a wall of opposition from women that also endangers his Party’s control of the Senate, according to a poll. Trump’s vulnerability even in conservative-leaning states underscores just how precarious his political position is, less than six weeks before Election Day. While he and Biden are competing aggressively for traditional swing states like Wisconsin, Pennsylvania and Florida, the poll suggests that Biden has assembled a coalition formidable enough to jeopardize Trump even in historically Republican parts of the South and Midwest.
“Democrats’ mail voting pivot” via Alexi McCammond and Margaret Talev of Axios — Democrats spent the early months of the coronavirus pandemic urging their base to vote absentee. But as threats of U.S. Postal Service delays, Team Trump litigation and higher ballot rejection rates become clearer, many are pivoting to promote more in-person voting as well. Democrats are exponentially more likely to vote by mail than Republicans this year and if enough mail-in ballots are lost, rejected on a technicality or undercounted, it could change the outcome of the presidential election or other key races. 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.”
“Trump’s team hunts for votes in person, while Biden’s works the phones” via Julie Bykowicz of The Wall Street Journal — Republican campaigners, wearing Trump T-shirts and face coverings, fanned out on a recent sunny afternoon across the suburban streets of Emmaus, Pennsylvania. At house after house, doors opened, and people stepped out — almost always without masks, but staying generally 6 feet apart. Joe Vichot, a Lehigh County Republican Party official, stood on a front porch with Bob and Annamae Letteer, who said they planned to vote in person for Trump. “But if you know somebody who doesn’t want to go or is concerned, make sure you give them a mail-in. You don’t want to lose the vote,” Mr. Vichot said. The couple nodded in agreement. Republicans have much of the country to themselves for such in-person interactions.
“‘Biden has no ground game in Florida.’ Will Mike Bloomberg’s money change that?” via David Smiley of the Miami Herald — Progressive activists backing Biden in Florida made millions of phone calls, sent hundreds of thousands of text messages and written thousands of letters to convince voters to support the Democratic presidential nominee. But one thing they’re largely not doing — and growing increasingly worried about — is talking to voters face-to-face. With the number of coronavirus cases down from their July peak in Florida, the state’s largest left-leaning grassroots organizations and political field operations are making a last-minute push to get back in front of voters in a crucial battleground state where Trump’s campaign has been on the ground since June.
Will an influx of money from Michael Bloomberg in Florida take the place of a good ground game for Biden? She Image via AP.
“‘Something’s in the water’: Florida Republicans see surge in voter registration” via Marc Caputo and Gary Fineout of POLITICO — Republicans have closed the traditional voter registration gap with Democrats to a 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 Biden’s campaign to refrain from door-to-door canvassing or holding voter registration drives due to the potential spread of the coronavirus and fears of muddying his messaging on the pandemic. In the absence of such efforts, a concerted drive by 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.
“Despite Trump’s actions against immigrants, these Latino voters want four more years” via Paulina Villegas of The Washington Post — The Latino support for Trump could be deemed counterintuitive considering he rose to power on an anti-immigration platform and inflammatory rhetoric. In the 2015 speech that launched his presidential campaign, Trump called Mexican immigrants “rapists” and drug dealers. In the years following his election, images of immigrant children in overcrowded detention centers dominated the news. The coronavirus pandemic has disproportionately affected and killed people in the Latino community. Yet many of his Latino supporters in the Copper State, overwhelmingly of Mexican descent, point to Trump’s business-oriented policies, such as lowering taxes and lifting regulations, as more consequential actions that, they say, have benefited wages and employment levels in their communities. This, along with religious conservatism are the reasons they want to see him reelected.
“Trump looks for ways to win over voters on health care after failing to deliver on promises” via Josh Dawsey and Yasmeen Abutaleb of The Washington Post — 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 the 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.
“Nearly 500 former senior military, civilian leaders signal support for Biden” via Karen DeYoung of The Washington Post — Nearly 500 retired senior military officers, as well as former Cabinet secretaries, service chiefs and other officials, have signed an open letter in support of Biden, the Democratic presidential nominee, saying that he has “the character, principles, wisdom and leadership necessary to address a world on fire.” The letter, published Thursday morning by National Security Leaders for Biden, is the latest in a series of calls for Trump’s defeat in the November election. “We are former public servants who have devoted our careers, and in many cases risked our lives, for the United States,” it says. “We are generals, admirals, senior noncommissioned officers, ambassadors and senior civilian national security leaders. We are Republicans and Democrats, and Independents. We love our country.”
“‘No one owns this corner’: Trump, Biden supporters argue over use of Gardens intersection” via Jodie Wagner of the Palm Beach Post — A public street corner that borders two of northern Palm Beach County’s busiest roadways has become a tug-of-war between supporters of Trump and his 2020 Democratic rival, Biden. The northwest corner of PGA Boulevard and Military Trail is one of Palm Beach Gardens’ most visible, and since 2016 it has drawn hundreds of the president’s supporters for raucous Friday afternoon rallies at what they call “Trump corner.” Five weeks ago, Biden supporters began holding rallies of their own at the intersection, opting for Wednesday afternoons so as not to conflict with the Trump gatherings. “We didn’t want to rival Trump’s people,” said Eric Jablin, a former Mayor of Palm Beach Gardens.
“Constitutional crisis over electors? Bob Poe says Florida’s been there, done that” via Scott Powers of Florida Politics — In December 2000, Florida Democratic Party Chair Poe was ready to fly to D.C. at to try to formally submit names of Florida’s 25 Presidential Electors to vote for Al Gore in the Electoral College. That could have sparked a constitutional crisis, one that is emerging again this year, as a possibility for the 2020 election, Poe said. All of this was on Poe’s mind after reports that Trump‘s reelection campaign has been encouraging various state Republican parties and legislative leaders to submit lists of Electors loyal to Trump regardless of who wins the popular vote. “The law says that the Legislature is the one that makes the ultimate decision, and they could do whatever the hell they want,” Post said.
The possibility of using Republican electors in the place of a popular vote is nothing new for Florida, says Democrat Bob Poe.
“‘Preposterous’: Joe Gruters says there’s no secret plan for Legislature to assign Florida electors” via Jacob Ogles of Florida Politics — If Trump’s team wants the Florida Legislature to simply assign the state’s electoral votes, nobody told Gruters. That’s notable considering Gruters serves both as chairman of the Republican Party of Florida, and holds a seat in the Florida Senate. “It’s idiotic and preposterous,” said Gruters, a Sarasota Republican. “Think about it. Nobody has discussed anything like that with me.” Gruters’ account somewhat undermines a report in The Atlantic claiming members of Trump’s campaign team have spoken with leaders in swing states with Republican-controlled legislatures about the subject. The piece suggests a strategy has been explored: Challenging vote totals and leaving legislatures to decide who electors vote for in the Electoral College.
New ads
Joe Biden ad highlights veteran support — Biden released a new ad in Florida featuring an Army veteran who lost his legs in the line of duty. “I gave two legs for this country. I got friends that never came back home. The guys who had their caskets draped with our nation’s colors — those are the real heroes. And you mean to tell me you call them ‘suckers,’ ‘losers?’ With all due respect, I think you missed it on this one,” retired Master Sergeant Cedric King says, referring to Trump’s comments on soldiers. “We need someone in the White House who understands what it means to serve. I know Joe Biden understands the sacrifices that troops make and that’s the guy that I want leading this country.”
New ad bashes Trump’s coronavirus response, praises Biden’s ‘steady, strong’ leadership — Priorities USA Action, the Latino Victory Fund, the American Federation of Teachers, and Mike Bloomberg joined forces to launch a new ad targeting Hispanic voters in Florida. The Spanish-language ad, “Los Olvidados,” has multiple versions, each geared toward the segments of Florida’s diverse Hispanic community. But they all have the same goal: contrasting “Trump’s failure to grasp the severity of the coronavirus crisis — causing the deaths of over 200,000 Americans — with Joe Biden’s steady, strong leadership.” The ad is running as part of Priorities USA Action and the American Federation of Teachers’ previously announced a $1.9 million ad buy in Miami. It will also air as part of the Priorities USA and Latino Victory Fund’s $6 million Spanish-language ad buy funded by Bloomberg.
“Are Florida Republicans obsessed with pedophilia in the age of QAnon?” via Jacob Ogles of Florida Politics — Florida’s Attorney General calls on Netflix to drop a foreign film because it could feed the appetite of pedophiles. A Congressman makes the case for his reelection on legislation to ban sex dolls modeled after children. Another wants to terminate pensions for federal employees should they get convicted of molesting minors. To read Florida’s headlines in the lead-up to a contentious presidential election, pedophilia stands as one of society’s most urgent challenges in 2020. Voices like Ashley Moody, Vern Buchanan and Ross Spano increasingly target kid touchers — perhaps the easiest political boogeyman to hate in the history of democracy, and not necessarily wrongly so. That may seem entirely unnoteworthy, but the timing becomes suspect considering another simultaneous political phenomenon.
“John Morgan calls Florida minimum wage a ‘slave wage,’ doubles down on $15 pay initiative” via Jason Delgado of Florida Politics — Morgan went on the offensive Thursday in support of Amendment 2, an initiative which would incrementally raise the state’s minimum wage to $15 an hour by 2026. The ballot initiative from Florida For A Fair Wage has been a top priority for the influential attorney and will be proposed to voters Nov. 3. On Thursday, it was the subject of a USA Today live discussion between supporters and opponents. Morgan was joined by Ben Pollara, a senior adviser for the campaign to pass the amendment. Together, the pair pressed against oppositional talking points and fired warning shots to businesses big and small. “You gotta up your game and do a better job if you want to be competitive,” Morgan said during the online forum. “I would tell small businesses you have a lot more to worry about — Amazon and Walmart and Target — than you do raising the minimum wage to $10 an hour.”
“Business groups back ballot measure to undercut future constitutional amendments” via Jason Garcia of the Orlando Sentinel — Some of Florida’s biggest business-lobbying groups are lining up behind a controversial measure on the November ballot that would make it harder to amend the Florida Constitution. The Florida Chamber of Commerce has endorsed the measure, which is being sponsored by a secretive nonprofit called “Keep Our Constitution Clean” and would require any future proposed constitutional amendments be approved in two separate, statewide referendums. So has the Florida Farm Bureau. Earlier this month, a think tank led in part by executives from Florida Power & Light and Publix Supermarkets, released a “voter guide” recommending a “yes” vote on the amendment, which will be Amendment 4 on this year’s ballot.
“In CD 7, Leo Valentin launches Spanish-language ad declaring he’s ‘one of us’” via Scott Powers of Florida Politics — Dr. Valentin, a Republican congressional candidate, is launching a new Spanish-language television spot slamming Democratic Rep StephanieMurphy, and concluding that Valentin “is one of us.” The commercial is the first from Valentin for his Nov. 3 General Election contest against Murphy for Florida’s 7th Congressional District. It’s not the first spot in which Valentin contrasts himself with Murphy, however. He used that strategy to win the Republican primary in August. The 30-second “Nuestro Dr. Leo Valentín” will be running on Orlando television and digital platforms. The spot opens with unflattering images of Murphy as text as a narrator criticizes her for sending jobs to China, an apparent reference to her husband’s sporting goods business.
“No protesters arrested in Pinellas, Anna Paulina Luna takes to Twitter with outrage” via Kelly Hayes of Florida Politics — A video has been circulating across social media platforms showcasing a confrontation between several protesters and a couple at a restaurant in St. Petersburg and candidate Luna for Florida’s 13th Congressional District has been quick to share it, despite a night of overall peaceful protests. The Pinellas County Sheriff’s Office and the St. Petersburg Police Department made no arrests between Wednesday and Thursday involving the protesters. The protests in Pinellas County Wednesday night followed a Kentucky grand jury’s decision in the Breonna Taylor case that did not yield any criminal charges. “This is my home and district … a ‘protester’ calls the woman an ‘ugly a** white woman’ after harassing this couple at dinner … NOT peaceful protest. This is harassment and not who we are as a nation. I condemn this as well as the racial commentary,” Luna tweeted along with the video of the incident.
“Ad stresses Vern Buchanan effectiveness, bipartisan record” via Jacob Ogles of Florida Politics — A 30-second ad from Rep. Buchanan’s reelection campaign stresses the seven-term incumbent’s effectiveness passing legislation. The new spot, entitled “Few Can Match,” began airing on broadcast in Florida’s 16th Congressional District on Thursday. The ad shows pictures of three Presidents, Trump, Barack Obama and George W. Bush, signing legislation. It notes the Longboat Key Republican has introduced 22 pieces of legislation that eventually became law. “It’s a record of accomplishment few can match,” a narrator states. It’s a quick summary of the same foundation message unrolled by the Buchanan campaign in a nearly four-minute mini-documentary earlier this month.
Leg. campaigns
FRSCC launches site on Florida Democrats’ PPP loan — Florida Republican’s state Senate campaign arm has launched a website detailing the timeline surrounding the Florida Democratic Party’s application, acceptance, and the eventual return, of a Paycheck Protection Program loan. The Florida Republican Senatorial Campaign Committee website relies on reporting from several news sources, questions statements made by party officials, and makes the case that the FDP has tried to cover up how it was granted the loan since PPP rules don’t allow political parties to receive funds. View the website here.
“José Javier Rodríguez, Ileana Garcia trade barbs over alleged ‘scare tactics’ in SD 37 race” via Ryan Nicol of Florida Politics — Sen. Rodríguez is defending himself in a new ad against what he calls “lies” and “scare tactics” from his Republican opponent, Garcia. On Thursday, Garcia was doing the same after a negative mailer went out criticizing her policy positions. Garcia was a late entrant to the race, filing for the seat on June 1 after earning support from Senate GOP leadership. The two have sparred throughout the campaign though, particularly on the issue of socialism. Both candidates are of Cuban descent. Non-party affiliated Alex Rodriguez is also seeking the Senate District 37 seat. The new mailer accuses Garcia of supporting the caging of immigrant children and backing the arming of teachers trained under the state’s Guardian program, among other issues. “He sent out a flyer with some pretty pathetic things,” Garcia told Florida Politics. “Like caging kids, arming librarians, and said I did not address common sense solutions? I’ve never been in office.”
>>>Rodriguez released a new 30-second ad addressing the ‘lies’ his opponent has spread. To watch the video, click on the image below:
“Chris Latvala brings in $44K, largest haul of campaign following COVID-19 battle” via Kelly Hayes of Florida Politics — Latvala reported his highest fundraising period in his most recent campaign finance disclosure in the race for House District 67. For the period spanning Sept. 5 through Sept. 18, Latvala raised $44,650, growing his total contributions to $195,185. Latvala was in the hospital battling COVID-19 during most of the fundraising period, first admitted Aug. 29 through Sept. 1 and then returning Sept. 4 through Sept. 13. He has now recovered, after what he called “the hardest thing I have ever faced in my life.” Because Latvala was unable to campaign or fundraise during most of the latest reporting period, Latvala’s numbers are particularly impressive and show he has a network of support to help him through this reelection campaign. Latvala faces Democratic opponent Dawn Douglas, who has not yet filed a report for the most recent period, which is due by Friday evening. Although Douglas saw her highest numbers last period, her finances struggle to compete with Latvala’s.
Down ballot
“In Miami-Dade Mayor debate, candidates brag about supporting police and their budgets” via Joey Flechas and Doug Hanks of the Miami Herald — Both candidates for Miami-Dade Mayor pledged to keep police spending intact in a race where “defund the police” has become an attack line. Candidates Esteban “Steve” Bovo Jr. and Daniella Levine Cava both sit on the Miami-Dade County Commission, and earlier this month they voted for the $9 billion 2021 budget one of them will inherit in November. It increases the county’s police budget by about 1% to $782 million and continues allocating to police and jails about 45 cents of every dollar of property taxes and other general funds that Miami-Dade collects from businesses and residents. Miami-Dade’s police unions endorsed Bovo, who has represented the Hialeah-area District 13 on the commission since 2011.
Daniella Levine Cava says she is supporting the police. So is her opponent. Image via the Miami Democratic Party.
Corona Florida
“Florida coronavirus cases tick up in September, stalling progress” via Langston Taylor of the Tampa Bay Times — Florida’s coronavirus cases have risen again, if only slightly, and it’s not just an issue of college students. For the first time since early July, statewide numbers of new cases of the virus have increased throughout September, albeit a small uptick, nowhere near as sharp as the early summer. And current COVID-19 hospitalizations, one of the most timely ways to measure the spread in how many people are sick, are no longer dropping sharply but have instead flattened out. In a few large counties, the count is going back up again. From all indications, far fewer people are infected with the virus right now than during the spring and summer. But it’s possible the state’s steady progress has hit a bump in the road. The weekly average in new cases dropped a bit Thursday but remains higher than it was two weeks ago.
“2,541 more Florida coronavirus infections push total cases past 693,000” via Tiffini Theisen of the Orlando Sentinel — Florida added 2,541 coronavirus cases Thursday to push the statewide total to 693,040 infected. With 177 new virus fatalities reported statewide, 13,795 Florida residents are now dead. Each report includes deaths from several previous days, as it can take two weeks or more for fatalities to be logged. The U.S. death toll from the coronavirus topped 200,000 on Tuesday, by far the highest in the world, hitting the once-unimaginable threshold six weeks before an election that is certain to be a referendum in part on Trump’s handling of the crisis. The number of dead is equivalent to a 9/11 attack every day for 67 days. And it is still climbing.
“Ron DeSantis: State to preempt local governments on restaurant restrictions” via Renzo Downey of Florida Politics — DeSantis says Florida will prohibit local governments from shutting down or placing additional hurdles on restaurants as the state prepares to move forward with the reopening process. DeSantis told reporters that the Department of Business and Professional Regulation has the authority to prevent cities and counties from shuttering businesses. “We license the restaurants, so it’s a DBPR thing,” the Governor said. “We believe that we would be able to ensure, based on our licensure ability, their ability to operate.” Restaurants “need certainty” and “we can’t have these businesses dying,” he added, also noting that Florida is “the most open large state in the country by far.” Under current DBPR measures, interior dining rooms or restaurants can open at 50% capacity while outdoor seating is also available. However, those limits could be changing.
Ron DeSantis is threatening to take away local control regarding restaurant closures. Image via AP.
“‘That’s what college kids do.’ DeSantis wants protections for partying students” via Andrew Atterbury of POLITICO Florida — DeSantis suggested that Florida could create a “bill of rights” to protect college students who face expulsion for attending parties under the strict COVID-19 guidelines schools are attempting to enforce. Calling the policies “incredibly draconian” at a public health event, the Republican Governor said the state is exploring its options for students without going into much detail. The idea comes as school leaders in Florida and beyond threaten stiff penalties for breaking social distancing rules in an effort to keep coronavirus transmission low and campuses open throughout the full semester. School leaders last month, at the dawn of the fall semester, came down hard on students and Greek organizations that gathered in large groups, defying school health guidelines. Fraternities were suspended, students were sent home from their dorms, all in an attempt to curb COVID-19 outbreaks that could cause colleges to close wholesale.
“Losing your hair can be another consequence of the pandemic” via Pam Belluck of The New York Times — Doctors say they too are seeing many more patients with hair loss, a phenomenon they believe is indeed related to the coronavirus pandemic, affecting both people who had the virus and those who never became sick. In normal times, some people shed noticeable amounts of hair after a profoundly stressful experience such as an illness, major surgery or emotional trauma. Now, doctors say, many patients recovering from COVID-19 are experiencing hair loss, not from the virus itself, but from the physiological stress of fighting it off. Many people who never contracted the virus are also losing hair, because of emotional stress from job loss, financial strain, deaths of family members or other devastating developments stemming from the pandemic.
Corona local
“South Florida ICE detainees required to go attend court regardless of whether they have COVID” via Monique O. Madan of the Miami Herald — Immigration detainees in South Florida are being required to attend court hearings with other migrants even if they have COVID-19, two sources with the Department of Justice confirmed Wednesday. The news that detainees who have the coronavirus are being taken out of medical isolation to attend court hearings was revealed Wednesday morning during a Miami immigration court hearing at the Krome detention center in West Miami-Dade. Across South Florida, because of the pandemic, some detainees are appearing in person before a judge and others via video.
“School district’s COVID-19 dashboard wrong on Day 1” via Sonja Isger of the Palm Beach Post — In a rush to publish an online dashboard that noted every case of COVID-19 within the Palm Beach County School District on the first day of in-person learning, the information posted was wrong, district officials said Wednesday. Eight of the 19 positive cases reported among employees were miscounted. They involved conflicting tests, unconfirmed tests, or people who were no longer sick or not on the property when campuses opened Sept. 16, the district’s risk and benefits manager, Don Noel, said after the correction to the dashboard was made.
“A lawyer tried to shut down PBC public school campuses. It didn’t go great.” via Andrew Marra of the Palm Beach Post — The court hearing started with an audacious goal: shutting down Palm Beach County’s public school campuses to the more than 55,000 students attending in person each day. It ended, instead, with a skeptical judge explaining basic legal principles Wednesday to the attorney hoping to do the closing. On paper, Boca Raton attorney Barry Silver represented eight school district educators who argued, in a lawsuit filed last week, that requiring them to teach on campus during a pandemic was so dangerous to their health it was illegal. It turned out at least one teacher named in the lawsuit had been included without his consent. Of the others, just one showed up for a virtual hearing Wednesday.
Attorney Barry Silver tried to close Palm Beach County schools. It did not go as planned.
More local
“Nassau County votes in favor of ending mask mandate” via News 4 Jax — During a special meeting, Nassau County commissioners voted Wednesday evening in favor of ending its mask mandate, according to a county spokesperson. Sabrina Robertson, with the County Manager’s Office, said the board voted 3-2 to end the mandate, which is effective at noon Thursday. Masks will still be required at all county facilities. Robertson said residents are still strongly encouraged to wear masks when unable to socially distance and that businesses can still implement their own mask mandates. An executive order outlining the new guidelines will be issued Thursday.
“Collier schools not releasing student, employee quarantine numbers” via Rachel Fradette of Naples Daily News — Collier County’s School District is not releasing how many students and employees have had to quarantine due to close contact with more than 60 positive COVID-19 cases reported at school sites so far this year. Forty-four Collier students and 19 employees have tested positive since the first day of school on Aug. 31, according to the district’s dashboard as of 4 p.m. Wednesday. Two weeks into the school year, after previously stating no plans to share COVID-19 case data, the district announced the tracking dashboard on Sept. 11 with 27 positive cases tracked. In an email, district spokesman Chad Oliver stated the dashboard focuses on positive cases as a true indicator of the illness. “To focus on quarantine numbers could lead to a series of inferences about COVID-19 positivity that may not be the case,” Oliver wrote.
“Florida A&M University to students: Spring break probably canceled. FSU may follow” via Byron Dobson of the Tallahassee Democrat — Spring break may not be included on the spring academic calendar, Florida A&M University Provost and Vice President for Academic Affairs Maurice Edington told trustees Thursday. Edington said FAMU administrators have been working internally on the spring calendar and their decision could come this week, Edington said during the Board of Trustees meeting. He said FAMU is working on aligning its calendar with Florida State University because of the partnership at the FAMU-FSU College of Engineering. “We are finalizing our plans internally (and) hopefully meeting by tomorrow, but it looks like there will be no spring break at our campus,” Edington said. “I just want to share that with you while we work to finalize that decision.”
“FSU to Seminoles football fans in the stands: Get tested and put on a mask or leave” via Jim Henry of the Tallahassee Democrat — Florida State football fans not wearing a mask during home games will be asked to put on a mask or leave the event, according to the university’s updated, stricter policies released Thursday. Additionally, FSU students planning to attend home football games for the remainder of the season must test negative for COVID-19 during the week before games, FSU Athletics Director David Coburn said in the release. Mandates also include that students who do not get tested during the available periods will not be eligible for a football ticket. Students, allotted 4,000 tickets for each home game this season, must also sit in their assigned seats at home games. The updated policy goes into effect immediately ahead of FSU’s Oct. 3 contest against Jacksonville State.
Corona nation
“Coronavirus cases rise in 22 states” via Sam Baker of Axios — 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. The U.S. is now averaging roughly 43,000 new cases per day, a 16% increase from a week ago. The biggest increases are largely concentrated in the West and Midwest, though Maine and New Jersey also saw their new infections tick up over the past week. Testing was up by almost 22% over the same period. The U.S. is now conducting about 860,000 coronavirus tests per day. 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 and see friends and family over the holidays. Mask adherence is already only so-so. And flu season will set in at the same time.
“Massive genetic study shows coronavirus mutating and potentially evolving amid rapid U.S. spread” via Chris Mooney, Joel Achenbach and Joe Fox of The Washington Post — Scientists in Houston released a study of more than 5,000 genetic sequences of the coronavirus that reveals the virus’s continual accumulation of mutations, one of which may have made it more contagious. The new report, however, did not find that these mutations have made the virus deadlier or changed clinical outcomes. All viruses accumulate genetic mutations, and most are insignificant, scientists say. Coronaviruses such as SARS-CoV-2 are relatively stable, as viruses go, because they have a proofreading mechanism as they replicate. But every mutation is a roll of the dice, and with the transmission so widespread in the United States, which continues to see tens of thousands of new, confirmed infections daily, the virus has had abundant opportunities to change, potentially with troublesome consequences, said study author James Musser of Houston Methodist Hospital.
“Virus cases surged in young adults. The elderly were hit next.” via Roni Caryn Rabin of The New York Times — As millennials mingled in bars and restaurants over the summer, and students returned to college campuses, coronavirus infections surged among young adults. From June through August, the incidence of the virus was highest among adults ages 20 to 29, according to research published on Wednesday by the C.D.C. Young adults accounted for more than 20% of all confirmed cases. But the infections didn’t stop with them, the researchers found: Young adults may have also seeded waves of new infections among the middle-aged, and then in older Americans. The new data show that outbreaks linked to parties, bars, dormitories and other crowded venues are hazardous not just to the 20-somethings who are present, but to more vulnerable Americans with who they are likely to come into contact.
Corona economics
“New jobless claims level off, but cuts keep hitting hotels, theme parks” via Jay Cridlin of the Tampa Bay Times — The long tail of economic stabilization remains relatively flat as the number of Americans filing new unemployment claims last week stayed about the same as the week before. About 870,000 new claims were filed for the week ending Sept. 19, according to the U.S. Department of Labor. That’s a slight uptick from the previous week, and it hews close to the average for the last month. The new number reflects adjustments for normal seasonal employment, a change in methodology the Department of Labor implemented a month ago. Without the seasonal adjustments, unemployment claims rose to 824,542, an increase of more than 28,000 from the previous week. Overall, Americans filed more than 26 million claims for all types of unemployment insurance for the week ending Sept. 5, the most recent week for which those statistics are unavailable. The rate of unemployment for the nation’s workforce of more than 160 million was 8.4% in August, a drop of more than 42% from April.
As jobless claims level off, hotels and theme parks in Central Florida continue COVID-19 layoffs.
“Airline workers in Orlando, elsewhere worry about jobs as CARES Act deadline nears” via Kevin Spear of the Orlando Sentinel — The initial $32 billion in payroll support that airlines received from the CARES Act prohibit job cuts until after September. Airline CEOs and union leaders have been lobbying Congress and the White House for further airline payroll support. United Airlines, meanwhile, warned Florida officials this summer that it would cut nearly 500 workers at Orlando’s airport in early October. “We believe air travel will remain at historic lows until at least through the beginning of 2021,” said Robert Martinez Jr., president of the International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers. “That’s why we are calling on Congress to provide airline workers … another round of relief that we so desperately need.” While pushing for federal help, airlines are attempting to get revenues back on track. Delta has been holding public events at its major cities in the U.S., conveying a commitment to regaining travelers’ confidence.
“Darden Restaurants reduces corporate staff as sales remain down during pandemic” via Austin Fuller of the Orlando Sentinel — Darden Restaurants revealed it has cut 11% of its corporate workforce at its Orlando headquarters and in other leadership positions as the owner of Olive Garden continues to endure slower sales during the coronavirus pandemic. The company, which also owns LongHorn Steakhouse and other chains, said that same-restaurant sales were down 29% for the quarter ending Aug. 30 compared with the same quarter last year, but reported net earnings of $37 million from continuing operations. At the same time, Darden has brought back thousands of its furloughed hourly employees in the past few months. Darden shared details on the early retirement incentive program and corporate restructuring that led to the smaller corporate workforce on an earnings call.
More corona
“Lockdown Lite is Europe’s new strategy for fighting COVID-19” via Naomi Kresge, Rachel Chang and Jason Gale of Bloomberg — Fresh off a summer of relative freedom after harsh lockdowns at the beginning of the pandemic, Europe is trying a new strategy to halt the coronavirus’ next surge: Lockdown Lite. Unlike the blanket stay-at-home orders that characterized responses to COVID-19’s first wave, a partial lockdown isn’t designed to stop transmission completely. Instead, the idea is to home in on hot spots — certain neighborhoods, nightclubs or private parties, for example — while leaving large parts of the economy open for business. With death rates running at only a small fraction of the levels last spring despite surging infections in France, Spain, the U.K. and other countries, governments want to avoid draconian measures that caused their worst recessions in memory.
Customers wearing protective masks observe social distancing measures while waiting in line at a coffee shop in Melbourne.
“Beyond COVID, Regent Seven Seas world cruise sets booking record for 2023” via Richard Tribou of the Orlando Sentinel — Regent Seven Seas reported some good news amid the continuing shutdown from the coronavirus pandemic: a record booking day for its planned 2023 world cruise. Booking opened Wednesday for the cruise dubbed Beyond the Horizon, which aims to be the longest world cruise offered by the line since 2011, visiting six continents, 42 countries and 72 ports on a 143-night cruise leaving Jan. 7, 2023 from Miami. “Our world cruises are always highly anticipated, and I am delighted with the response to our latest global voyage, especially considering the unprecedented public health challenges we are currently navigating,” stated line President and CEO Jason Montague. The line, the luxury brand of Norwegian Cruise Line Holdings LTD, is currently not sailing due to the COVID-19 pandemic, but like all cruise lines, hopes to return to cruising following strict health guidelines, including required negative tests taken within five days to 24 hours ahead of embarkation when sailing from the U.S.
Statewide
“Annette Taddeo bill requires state to notify ex-felons of outstanding fines and fees” via Ryan Nicol of Florida Politics — Democratic Sen. Taddeo wants the state to shoulder the burden of informing ex-felons seeking to reclaim their right to vote about any outstanding financial obligations. The Republican Legislature approved a law last Session requiring ex-felons to pay all fines, fees and restitution before their voting rights are restored under Amendment 4. Some groups have challenged the law. That challenge is moving through the court system, but the most recent federal appellate court ruling upheld Republicans’ legislation. While Democrats have opposed the law on principle dubbing the measure a “poll tax” there are practical concerns as well. Tracking whether payments have been made isn’t as easy as it sounds. There is no one central location housing that information. Local counties typically record whether financial obligations have been met, but those challenging the GOP law argue the databases are not updated.
Annette Taddeo is filing a new bill that would inform ex-felons how much they owe in fines and restitution.
“Supreme Court rules against Parkland victims’ families in case against school district” via Rafael Olmeda and Lisa J. Huriash of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — The Broward County School Board won’t be forced to pay more than $300,000 to the families and victims of the Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School shooting, the Florida Supreme Court ruled. The Supreme Court’s ruling came after it weighed whether government agencies should recognize a mass shooting as more than one devastating tragedy. The attorneys for Stoneman Douglas families and victims said the gunshots in the Parkland mass shooting were separate instances: The Parkland school shooter killed 17 people and wounded 17 more on Feb. 14, 2018. And many people at the school were traumatized by hearing the gunshots and fleeing for their lives, not knowing for sure whether they were running to or from danger. The families’ attorneys argued that each plaintiff filing a claim against the school board should be able to receive $200,000.
“’AOB’ fight goes to Supreme Court” via The News Service of Florida — A constitutional dispute about the use of the insurance practice known as “assignment of benefits” has gone to the Florida Supreme Court. Anchor Property and Casualty Insurance Co. wants the Supreme Court to overturn a ruling by a panel of the 5th District Court of Appeal in a case stemming from a home damaged by Hurricane Irma in 2017. Homeowner Wayne Parker filed a damage claim with Anchor, his insurer, and then entered into an assignment of benefits agreement with Speed Dry, Inc. Under the agreement, Speed Dry would do repair work, handle claim negotiations and receive direct payment from the insurer, according to last month’s appeals-court ruling. But Anchor refused to pay Speed Dry, leading to a lawsuit.
“New technology may help in the fight against blue-green algae” via Karl Schneider of Naples Daily News — A new tool will soon be deployed in Florida in an attempt to eliminate blue-green algae in freshwater systems. Florida Gulf Coast University’s Everglades Wetland Research Park in Naples received a $1 million grant from the Florida Department of Environmental Protection to introduce buoys equipped with sonic technology meant to kill harmful cyanobacteria. “An ultrasonic wave goes through the water and disturbs algal cells, especially some of the blue-green algae,” said Bill Mitsch, director of the research park. “(The algae) thereby loses its ability to stay in the water column and drops to the bottom of the lake.”
“Taskforce navigates Florida panther protection during toll road meeting” via Karl Schneider of Naples Daily News — Car collisions are the deadliest reported threat for the endangered Florida panther, and the public rallied behind the state animal during a task force meeting Wednesday for the southern section of a proposed statewide toll road system. Of the 18 recorded panther deaths this year, the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission’s website says 15 were caused by car collisions and one by a train. The task force met to work on a draft report for its portion of the Multi-use Corridors of Regional Economic Significance. The final report is due to the state in mid-November. M-CORES has three task forces, each assigned to its own section of the overall toll road system. The proposed sections of the toll roads are the Suncoast Connector, the Northern Turnpike Connector and the Southwest-Central Connector, which would run from Collier County to Polk County.
“‘You’ve got an extra $120 million’: David Tepper ditches Florida, moves back to New Jersey” via Matt Friedman of POLITICO — Billionaire hedge fund manager Tepper, whose 2015 move to Florida caused a substantial hit to New Jersey’s annual tax revenue, is once again a New Jerseyan, according to one of the state’s top elected officials. During a debate Thursday in the New Jersey Senate over a bill that would increase the tax rate on residents with incomes of more than $1 million, Republican Sen. Joe Pennacchio used Tepper’s decision to domicile in Florida as an example of how the wealthy would flee New Jersey because of the higher tax rate. Senate President Steve Sweeney interrupted to say Tepper, who had lived in Livingston before the Florida move, had moved back. “Just so you know, Senator, he called me and told me. He said, ‘You’ve got an extra $120 million coming from me,’ so use someone else as an example,” Sweeney said, adding that Tepper returned “last January.”
Billionaire David Tepper left New Jersey for Florida’s low tax environment. He’s going back.
Webinar to discuss raising capital in cannabis industry — Alliant Insurance Services is hosting a webinar on how cannabis businesses can raise capital amid the downturn in company valuations that began in 2019 and were made worse by the ongoing coronavirus pandemic. The event will tackle several options, ranging from self-funding and family loans to crowdfunding and venture capital. Alliant National Cannabis Practice Leader Greg Winter is set to host the webinar, with participants including Jacob Levin of Advanced Flower Capital, Matt Hawkins of Entourage Effect Capital, Michael Schwamm of Duane Morris LLP, Ruth Epstein of BGP Advisors, Scott Greiper of Viridian Capital Advisors and Tony Cappell of Chicago Atlantic. It begins at 2 p.m. Participants must register online.
D.C. matters
“Full appeals court to take up ex-Congresswoman’s case” via Jim Saunders of The News Service of Florida — In a partial victory for former U.S. Rep. Corrine Brown, a full federal appeals court agreed Thursday to take up her challenge to a conviction on fraud and tax charges in a charity scam. The 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals vacated a decision by a three-judge panel that upheld the Jacksonville Democrat’s conviction and agreed to rehear the case as a full court, a move known as holding an “en banc” hearing. The three-judge panel was sharply divided in January on whether the conviction should be withheld. Chief Judge William Pryor wrote a scathing dissent to the 2-1 decision, and Brown’s attorneys subsequently asked the full court to take up the case.
Corrine Brown is getting yet another day in court.
Local notes
“El Nuevo Herald managing editor resigns” via Nora Gámez Torres of the Miami Herald — Nancy San Martín, the managing editor of el Nuevo Herald, resigned on Thursday, according to the vice president of news for McClatchy, the parent company that also publishes the Miami Herald. San Martín leaves “after years of powerful, award-winning work for this newsroom and the community it serves,” Kristin Roberts said in an email sent to the newsrooms of both newspapers on Thursday. “There will be a moment soon for the team to wish her well and to thank her for her dedication and commitment.” The resignation comes two weeks after a reader flagged racist and anti-Semitic content published in LIBRE, a paid, independent supplement sold by the advertising team and printed and distributed to el Nuevo Herald subscribers.
Nancy San Martin is leaving el Nuevo Herald. Image via the Miami Herald.
“City issues construction permit for $41 million Amazon fulfillment center” via Karen Brune Mathis of Jax Daily Record — The city issued a permit Sept. 23 for construction of the Amazon.com fulfillment center in North Jacksonville at a cost of almost $41.2 million. Evans General Contractors of Savannah is the contractor for the 1,011,900-square-foot warehouse on about 52 acres in Imeson Park at northeast North Main Street and Zoo Parkway. Seattle-based Amazon.com Inc. announced Sept. 2 that it will open the 500-job Jacksonville fulfillment center in fall 2021 to pick, pack and ship small items, including apparel, accessories and footwear. “The expansion of Amazon’s footprint in Jacksonville illustrates increased confidence in our economy and reputation as a center for logistics in the southeastern United States,” Curry said in a news release Sept. 2.
“Crestview High School bulldog pack apologizes for Instagram post referencing ‘Trail of Tears’” via Savannah Evanoff of the NWF Daily News — Crestview High School’s Bulldog Pack, a group that promotes school spirit while developing leadership skills, is facing criticism after posting a photo on Instagram before the football team’s Friday night game against the Choctawhatchee High School Indians. The photo depicts two students holding up a poster that reads, “Hey Indians get ready to live in a Trail of Tears.” The caption read, “Fun times and clever minds in Bulldog Pack.” Some comments expressed anger over the reference to the Trail of Tears, in which 3,500 Native Americans died while being forced to give up their lands east of the Mississippi and to migrate on foot to what is now Oklahoma. Dexter Day, the principal of Crestview High School, said via email that he addressed the post.
“Prosecutors drop charges against Patriots owner Robert Kraft after cops bungled sex sting” via Marc Freeman of the Orlando Sentinel — Florida prosecutors on Thursday dropped all criminal charges against New England Patriots owner Kraft, ending a flawed case that began with a police prostitution sting using secret video cameras at a Palm Beach County massage parlor early last year. State Attorney Dave Aronberg, angry and defiant in a Zoom session with reporters, said he had no choice but to stop the prosecution after an appellate court last month ruled videos of Kraft and 24 other men charged must be thrown out because the cops used an unlawful warrant. While declaring that the Jupiter Police Department “did the right thing in pursuing the investigation,” Aronberg also said he had no regrets about the failed effort to obtain convictions. Aronberg also took shots at Kraft’s immense wealth, citing the billionaire businessman’s ability to afford top criminal defense lawyers, unlike poorer defendants.
“‘Verbal altercation’ lands at least one Lynn Haven corruption suspect in hot water” via Tom McLaughlin of the NWF Daily News — The sentencing date for the five original defendants in a still-expanding Bay County corruption case uncovered following Hurricane Michael has been pushed back to Dec. 14. But one of those defendants, Erosion Control Specialist owner David Mitchelle White, has been notified that if he’s not on his best behavior he could be awaiting sentencing day behind bars, or even be sentenced early. Former Lynn Haven City Attorney Adam Albritton, who is also accused of federal crimes, could face revocation of his release agreement as well. White received a stern warning from U.S. District Court Judge Robert Hinkle early in September following an Aug. 27 “verbal altercation” with Albritton. Albritton is facing more than 60 criminal charges for his role in the same criminal enterprise for which White is to be sentenced. Among the charges he faces include claims he was taking thousands of dollars in kickbacks from White in exchange for creating fraudulent contracts through which ECS could profit mightily.
“Pembroke Park Mayor used the town’s resources for personal gain, inspector general says” via Austen Erblat of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — Pembroke Park Mayor Ashira Mohammed engaged in ethical misconduct by repeatedly misusing her access to town resources for personal matters — most recently to promote her campaign for state representative on the town’s Facebook page, Broward County’s inspector general concluded in a report released Thursday. A paid member of the mayor’s campaign for state House posted from Mohammed’s Facebook account to the town’s Facebook page to influence votes and sway the Aug. 18, 2020, Primary Election in her favor, violating a state law that prohibits officials from interfering with elections, the inspector general concluded. The law, Florida’s “Little Hatch Act,” forbids officials from using their official authority to interfere with an election.
Pembroke Park Mayor Ashira Mohammed (center) is accused of using public funds for personal gain.
“Tampa Electric CEO plans to step down” via The News Service of Florida — Nancy Tower, president and chief executive officer of Tampa Electric Co., will retire in mid-2021, the utility’s parent company, Emera Inc., announced. Tower was named president and CEO in 2017 after serving as Emera’s chief corporate development officer. She joined Emera in 1997, according to the Tampa Electric website. The announcement said a “rigorous recruitment process” to find a successor will start this fall. “Nancy has had an impressive career at Emera, and she has been a key part of Emera’s growth story,” Scott Balfour, president and chief executive officer of Emera, said in a prepared statement.
Smoldering
“Tammy Duckworth introduces bill to ban federal law enforcement from wearing camouflage” via Steve Beynon of Stars and Stripes — Sen. Duckworth introduced a bill Wednesday that would ban the use of camouflage uniforms by federal law enforcement following criticism during the summer that federal agents assigned to control racial protests looked like National Guard troops. “The Trump administration’s decision to deploy federal law enforcement officers outfitted in camouflage uniforms in response to those protesting the death of George Floyd and other Black Americans blurred the lines between military service members and law enforcement officers while causing even more fear and division,” Duckworth said in a statement. The Clear Visual Distinction Between Military and Law Enforcement Act would essentially outlaw camouflage for federal police. The measure does not apply to the military, including National Guard and military police troops supporting law enforcement during protests. There is an exception for federal agents who might need to wear camouflage to blend into their surroundings to conduct an operation.
Tammy Duckworth files “The Clear Visual Distinction between Military and Law Enforcement Act,” a bill banning domestic law enforcement from wearing camouflage. Image via AP.
“Lawsuit claims Facebook groups led to fatal shootings in Kenosha” via Angelica Sanchez of Fox 13 — The lawsuit alleges Facebook failed to take down a “group and event page” that encouraged violence during nights of protests and unrest in Kenosha. Four people are behind a federal lawsuit against Facebook, accused shooter Kyle Rittenhouse, and a former Kenosha alderman. Facebook reportedly received hundreds of complaints over certain pages — and did not take them down until the fatal shooting. The federal lawsuit is seeking an injunction that could force the social media platform to prohibit violent rhetoric, militias, and hate groups from the site. “Right-wing Militia groups need to stop operating,” said Jennifer Sirrine, attorney for 21st Century Law, co-counsel for the plaintiffs. “Take down these pages that promote and incite violence.”
Top opinion
“Chris Corr: ‘Rigor Gap’ could leave Florida’s students less prepared for future workplace” via Florida Politics — A gulf between what schools ask of students and what the state requires in standardized testing is the “Rigor Gap” — the gaping chasm between students doing enough to satisfy classroom expectations but falling perilously short on related final exams. Many students and their parents get a false sense of security about how well Florida’s youth are learning. As a Florida Council of 100 study shows, the Rigor Gap is leaving students less prepared for success at the postsecondary level or in the workplace. It is vital to Florida students, colleges, and employers that when students graduate high school, they have mastered the standards that educators and experts have set as being key to success in college and the workplace.
Opinions
“Florida’s cities aren’t burning down, Governor” via the Tampa Bay Times editorial board — DeSantis must have plenty of time on his hands. How else do you explain, with Florida gripped in a pandemic, the tourist economy reeling and key parts of the state still half-shuttered, him parachuting into Polk County to declare open season on “disorderly assemblies?” Is Florida burning? Have the laws against rioting been repealed? Or is this exactly what it seems, the Republican governor doing a solid for his patron by indulging in a taxpayer-subsidized political stunt for Trump? 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.
“Unconstitutional fixes for nonexistent problems” via Naples Daily News editorial board — Let’s not mince words. The anti-protest plan Ron DeSantis presented Monday is unconstitutional as hell — a direct blow to the principles of free expression upon which this nation was founded. It’s clearly meant to intimidate people engaged in peaceful protest, and strike a false law-and-order stance in an election year. If enacted as written, it carries a big price tag for local governments. And as the cherry on top, it seems to encourage people to ram their cars into crowds of protesters. And all this, the Governor says, is necessary because he wants to stop “rioting and looting.” Do you remember all the rioting and looting we saw here in Southwest Florida? Neither do we. That’s because it never happened. In fact, protests across Florida have been, with very few exceptions, orderly and often focused on reconciliation.
“Pinellas school officials are in denial about simultaneous teaching” via the Tampa Bay Times editorial board — Pinellas County’s top school officials don’t want to hear the unvarnished truth about the difficulties of teaching kids sitting in classrooms and those tuning in from home at the same time. They made that clear in recent days by refusing a request to survey teachers on simultaneous teaching, waving aside an opportunity to gather information about an important issue that has a profound impact on how much kids are learning. There is a logical conclusion: District officials are scared of what teachers will say. They fear having to respond to a torrent of complaints and to fix a system that isn’t working, at least for many teachers. Instead, they’ve buried their heads in the sand. We all know how well that turns out. In reaction to the pandemic, Pinellas offered the choice of attending classes at school or online. Many teachers have students in class and online at the same time, instead of separate classes for each. The idea is to keep classrooms partially full, which helps with social distancing during the pandemic. But the results have been less than ideal.
Sunrise
DeSantis says he’s going to start overriding restrictions imposed by local governments to prevent the spread of COVID-19.
Also, on today’s Sunrise:
— The Governor made that announcement after hosting a Zoom conference with three academics who — by the most amazing coincidence — all agree with him
— Trump brings his reelection campaign to Florida with a rally in Jacksonville
— And finally, a Florida Man is suing McDonald’s for more than a million dollars, claiming he broke a tooth after biting a bone in a Chicken McNugget.
Facing South Florida with Jim DeFede on CBS 4 in Miami: The Sunday show provides viewers with an in-depth look at politics in South Florida, along with other issues affecting the region.
Florida This Week on Tampa Bay’s WEDU: Moderator Rob Lorei hosts a roundtable featuring Polk County Sheriff Grady Judd; Micah Kubic, Executive Director of the ACLU of Florida; Polk County Supervisor of Elections Lori Edwards and Tampa Bay Times Tallahassee correspondent Kirby Wilson.
Political Connections Bay News 9 in Tampa/St. Pete: A preview of the first presidential debate; reaction to DeSantis’ bill targeting violent protests; and conversations with Florida’s 15th Congressional District candidates Scott Franklin and Alan Cohn.
Political Connections on CF 13 in Orlando: Host Ybeth Bruzual will interview candidates Keith Truenow and Crissy Stile, both running for House District 31, about unemployment, educations and initiatives they will pursue if elected.
This Week in Jacksonville with Kent Justice on Channel 4 WJXT: Rep. Jim Clyburn, a South Carolina Democrat; Rick Mullaney of the Jacksonville University Public Policy Institute, and policy adviser John Allen Newman.
This Week in South Florida on WPLG-Local10 News (ABC): Rep. Ted Deutch, Broward County Public Schools Superintendent Robert Runcie; Maria Elvira Salazar, a Republican candidate for Florida’s 27th Congressional District and Mark Alonso, president and CEO of the United Way of Miami-Dade.
Listen up
Battleground Florida with Christopher Heath: Jacob Perry is a former campaign consultant who passed on running two different presidential campaigns this cycle. He currently publishes the email newsletter, Monticello. In this episode we’ll talk about running congressional races in Florida, what D.C. doesn’t get about the Sunshine State, filling the vacancy on the U.S. Supreme Court, and the worst campaign promise you could make.
Dishonorable Mention: Rep. Latvala, activist Becca Tieder, Ernest Hooper and communications expert Dr. Karla Mastracchio discuss politics and culture. La Follette returns to the podcast to talk about his bout with COVID-19, asking why this virus is so politicized. The hosts also discussed free speech in the media, and if there should be consequences for speech. As we are getting closer to #ElectionDay2020 the hosts ask how they plan on voting this year. What are good unbiased resources to learn about local and state candidates?
Fluent in Floridian: New Yorker turned Floridian; Council for Educational Change Executive Director Dr. Elaine Liftin got her start as a singer on Broadway. While attending Hunter College, she became intrigued by the challenge of education and, upon graduating, began her teaching career in South Florida. Liftin has dedicated her career to education advocacy and believes “if every child can get a quality education, every child can succeed.”
podcastED: Stand Up for Students President Doug Tuthill talks with Gina Riley, clinical professor of adolescent special education at Hunter College, about “learning through living.” Author of “Unschooling: Exploring Learning Beyond the Classroom,” Riley has direct experience with the topic, having been a 20-year-old self-determined mother who raised her son using this discipline.
Tallahassee Business Podcast from the Tallahassee Chamber presented by 223 Agency: Sue Dick talks with JH Leale, one of the founders of Tallahassee Foodies, a community made up of residents focused on “Celebrating Local Flavor.” Leale explains that the group was originally created by his wife, Jennifer, to connect with some work friends who loved to discuss and try local restaurants, but it quickly became a popular resource for the entire community. Now with over 48,000 highly engaged members and a well-known name in the community, Tallahassee Foodies is leading a charge to help local restaurants recover from COVID-19 that they call the “Tallahassee Restaurant Blitz.”
The New Abnormal from host Rick Wilson and Molly Jong-Fast: You know our politics are beyond f****d up when the showrunner of Veep says he can’t compete with real-life Washington. “I mean, we did a Supreme Court episode. And as sort of horrible and tragic as our Veep worldview was, we have lapped it, maybe even double lapped it,” David Mandel tells Jong-Fast and Wilson. “I shake my whatever to Mitch McConnell. He really has outdone himself, the best comedy writer of our generation … And he’s literally about to punch the country in the penis. I mean, I’m sorry. There’s no other way of saying it. It’s literally a dick punch.” (To which Wilson quips, “that would be so on-brand for 2020.”)
The Yard Sign with host Jonathan Torres: Anibal Cabrera, Christian Leon and Torres talk with special guest Mike Perotti about Ginsburg, a SCOTUS replacement, and The Law Enforcement Protection Act.
Aloe
“Americans load up on candy, trick or treat — or not” via Dee-Ann Durbin of The Associated Press — Americans may not know if trick or treating will happen this year because of the pandemic, but they’re buying a lot of Halloween candy while they wait to find out. U.S. sales of Halloween candy were up 13% over last year in the month ending Sept. 6, according to data from market research firm IRI and the National Confectioners Association. That’s a bigger jump than the usual single-digit increases. Sales of Halloween chocolate alone are up 25%. Earlier Halloween displays at some chains, like dollar stores, Meijer and ShopRite, likely helped boost sales. But Americans may also be in a mood to celebrate after months of pandemic anxiety. Cassandra Ambrosius, who lives in central Wisconsin, was surprised to see bags of Halloween candy at the grocery in early September; her husband snapped one up. She expects to buy more bags as Halloween gets closer because she thinks people in her neighborhood will figure out how to trick or treat safely.
Despite a lower-key Halloween, candy is still flying off the shelves. Image via AP.
“Amazon launches new Alexa-enabled hardware” via Ina Fried of Axios — Amazon debuted a range of new Ring, Fire TV and Echo hardware on Thursday, including more environmentally sustainable versions of its audio and video gear. Among the products introduced are a cloud gaming service, a home monitoring drone and new spherical designs for its Echo and Echo dot smart speakers. Amazon, like rivals Google and Apple, typically gives its consumer hardware a launch ahead of the holidays. Apple has already introduced new iPads, while Google has scheduled a Sept. 30 event, where it is expected to debut new audio and video gear, alongside updated Pixel phones. Amazon also played up improved privacy controls and the work it is doing to lessen the environmental impact of its new products.
“Amazon’s new Ring security camera will fly around your home” via Matt Day and Edward Ludlow of Bloomberg — Amazon.com Inc. has built a camera on a small drone designed to fly around the house and investigate suspicious activity. The Ring Always Home Cam moves autonomously and is equipped with an indoor camera, giving users multiple viewpoints of their homes. The drone can take a path around the home that’s predetermined by the user and only records when in flight, not when docked, the company said. The device will be available in 2021 for $250, the company said during a livestream event on Thursday. Ring, based in southern California, makes internet-connected doorbells and home cameras. Since Amazon’s acquisition of the startup in early 2018, it has seen sales surge. Ring has also been beset by privacy concerns, from hacks of its products due to weak passwords, to reports of employees sharing unencrypted user videos. On Thursday, Ring said it would enable end-to-end encryption for user videos.
“No UM students. No FSU coach. Few fans. But plenty of electricity in dramatic rivalry” via Susan Miller Degnan of the Miami Herald — It’s among college football’s fiercest rivalries, and despite this strange, unpredictable year, it will continue for its 65th installment in prime-time on national television. The No. 12 Miami Hurricanes (2-0, 1-0 Atlantic Coast Conference) face the unranked Florida State Seminoles (0-1, 0-1) at 7:30 p.m. Saturday (ABC) at Hard Rock Stadium. And no matter how different it seems because of the COVID-19 pandemic — a 13,000 attendance limit, no FSU head coach (more on that later), no UM students, no marching bands, and no alcohol at an event which usually spurs its share of inebriated, supercharged fans — of one thing you can be sure: four-quarters of heart-and-soul drama.
“Disney: Polynesian Village Resort creating new South Seas look” via Pete Reinwald of Bay News 9 — Disney’s Polynesian Village Resort plans an array of tropical South Seas changes, including what it trumpets as “beautifully redone” guest rooms and a bold new entryway, in time for its scheduled reopening in the summer of 2021. Walt Disney World Resort Portfolio Executive Zach Riddley wrote in the Disney Parks blog that visitors’ arrival experience “is about to take on a whole new look.” It will happen in time for the resort’s 50-year anniversary, he wrote. The new entry will feature a thatch-style, open-truss roof and a facade that will complement the colors of the resort’s longhouses, multiroom structures that carry names from islands in the South Pacific. Changes to the entry area also will include chandeliers that get their inspiration from fishing nets, glass boats, and bamboo. “The new chandeliers will match the existing grand chandelier in the resort lobby, artfully bridging interior and exterior spaces,” Riddley added.
Happy birthday
Best wishes to U.S. Rep. Mario Diaz-Balart, Christina Johnson of On 3 Public Relations, Travis Mitchell of Data Targeting, Tara Reid of Strategos Public Affairs, and Pinellas state Republican committeewoman Nancy Riley.
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Good morning. Coming to you bleary-eyed following another successful socially distant team gathering last night. It was exciting until people started showing off their iOS 14 widgets, then us Android users just got bored cuz we’ve had them forever. Yawn.
MARKETS
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*As of market close
Stimulus: House Democrats will reportedly bring a $2.4 trillion coronavirus relief bill to the negotiating table. That’s about $1 trillion less than their previous proposal, but talks have stalled so compromise is in the air.
Jobless claims: They ticked up to 870,000 last week, a stable but very high number compared to pre-pandemic levels. Some good news? The overall number of people receiving unemployment benefits fell to 12.6 million, showing that some employers are re-hiring.
The Covid era has been even better for the housing market than it’s been for Peloton instructors’ Instagram followings.
When quarantines forced us to jury-rig encyclopedia standing desks, we had to spend more quality time with the weird beige paint in the living room…and started shopping for new homes.
Record-low mortgage rates, spurred by the Fed’s moves to lower borrowing costs across the economy, have also helped strike up demand for housing.
New data out this week showed the housing market stayed strong throughout the summer. In August, U.S. new-home sales increased at the fastest rate since 2006, the government reported yesterday, marking four straight months of growth.
Only problem? We’re running out of homes to sell
At the current pace of sales, it would only take 3.3 months to run out of inventory. The supply/demand mismatch is pushing prices skyward, especially since sellers aren’t exactly rushing to host open houses these days.
The supply squeeze has bolstered the home construction industry in a big way. Single-family housing starts for August reached the highest annual rate since February.
Actually, there’s one more (major) problem
With the economy still in the basement, people are straining to pay their mortgages. According to industry analyst Keith Jurow, “several million” people will have gone nine months without making a payment when the Federal Housing Finance Agency’s foreclosure and eviction moratorium expires at the end of the year.
17% of FHA-insured mortgages were delinquent in July, per the Department of Housing and Urban Development. In NYC, 27.2% of mortgages were.
Bottom line: The housing market is one of the few sectors to experience a true V-shaped recovery following the initial hit from the pandemic. But without enough houses for sale, the newfound demand is driving what some experts are calling an affordability crisis, in which higher home prices strip away the benefit from lower interest rates.
Yesterday, Fortnite maker Epic Games, Tinder owner Match Group, and filmmaker Spotify teamed up with 10 other companies to launch the Coalition for App Fairness, a nonprofit that will advocate for legal and regulatory changes to app stores.
Target #1: Apple. The company’s controversial App Store fees are at the center of a legal fight Epic launched this summer. Epic added in-app payments to the Fortnite app that sidestepped Apple’s customary 30% cut, which prompted Apple (and later Google) to kick Fortnite off its store. Epic sued, Apple countersued, and now the app proletariat are organizing a revolution against the Big Tech Bourgeoise.
They’ve got demands
Ten, to be exact. The coalition argues Apple and other app marketplaces exploit developers with high commissions, stifle competition, and prioritize their own products and services.
In an unofficial response, Apple updated its website yesterday to reiterate how its platform benefits developers and users. The company said 28 million people globally use its developer program.
Looking ahead…this Team Rumble is going down in the courts. The next hearing for Apple’s countersuit against Epic is Monday.
Hint: He founded Europe’s most valuable tech company.
Daniel Ek, the 37-year-old founder and top dog at Spotify, promised to invest roughly a third of his personal wealth (1 billion euros, or $1.2 billion) into European tech startups yesterday, with a focus on “moonshot projects” in machine learning, biotech, and materials science.
Tired of the 17-hour flight from Stockholm to San Francisco Intl., Ek wants to create a European counterweight to Silicon Valley. “Some of the most promising tech talent in Europe leaves because they don’t feel valued here,” he said at the Slush tech conference.
Why is Europe behind?
When your continent’s most recognizable tech exports are Spotify, Skype, and the guillotine, it means you’re playing catchup to Big Tech powerhouses in the U.S. and China. In Sweden, Spotify’s birthplace, just three startups have reached unicorn status (>$1 billion valuation), per CB Insights: Klarna, Northvolt, and Oatly.
In August, U.S. tech stocks reached a market cap greater than all European stocks combined.
Big picture: Some argue Europe’s stronger regulations and a lack of funding are responsible for the disparity. Ek’s trying to tackle that last one.
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Amazon’s slowly chipping away at its goal of connecting every device in your home to the internet, from the toilet seat to the rice cooker. Yesterday afternoon, the company showed off new gadgets and services, including…
Upgraded Echo devices with a fresh, spherical design
An in-car security system from Ring (Amazon’s home security unit), available first for Tesla drivers
Luna, a cloud gaming service to compete against Microsoft’s xCloud and Google Stadia
But the craziest part…
A $250 home security camera that lives on a fully autonomous drone. The Always Home Cam can show users any room inside their house (you get to pick where it’s allowed to fly).
Amazon covered the propellers to prevent damage and added obstacle avoidance technology…but we’ll see how well those work when the toddler and house cat team up.
Zoom out: Amazon said its new devices will get the “climate pledge friendly” stamp of approval. The company emphasized ways it’s reducing its environmental impact, from low-power mode to using recycled materials.
To read more about Amazon’s master strategy, sign up for Emerging Tech Brew, which will hit your inbox later today.
The Senate Commerce Committee will issue subpoenas to the CEOs of Twitter, Google, and Facebook if they don’t agree to testify on Oct. 1 about a legal immunity shield known as Section 230.
E.W. Scripps, a local TV station leader, is buying independent broadcaster ION Media in a $2.7 billion deal backed by Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway.
Lufthansa and United are trying out pre-flight Covid testing in an effort to boost passenger numbers. Then again, dogs might also do the trick.
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FRIDAY PUZZLE
How many numbers from 1 to 999 contain the letter “A” in their English spelling?
Good morning and welcome to Fox News First. Here’s what you need to know as you start your day …
Barr says primary ‘source’ of anti-Trump dossier faced FBI probe for possible Russia ties
The primary “source” of the anti-Trump Steele dossier was the subject of an FBI counterintelligence investigation from 2009 to 2011 for suspected contact with Russian intelligence officers, Fox News has learned.
Attorney General Bill Barr penned a letter to Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., on Thursday, responding to requests as part of the panel’s review into the origins of the Russia probe.
“In connection with your Committee’s investigation of these matters and ongoing hearings, you have been asking us to accelerate this process and to provide any additional information relating to the reliability of the work of Christopher Steele and the so-called ‘Steele dossier,’ as long as its release would not compromise U.S. Attorney John Durham’s ongoing criminal investigation,” Barr wrote.
“A footnote in the Inspector General’s report contains information, which up till now has been classified and redacted, bearing on the reliability of the Steele dossier,” Barr wrote. “The FBI has declassified the relevant portion of the footnote, number 334, which states that ‘the Primary Sub-source was the subject of an FBI counterintelligence investigation from 2009 to 2011 that assessed his or her contacts with suspected Russian intelligence officers.'”
Barr added that at his request, the FBI has prepared a declassified summary of certain information from the counterintelligence investigation into the source, which he has shared with the committee. CLICK HERE FOR MORE ON OUR TOP STORY.
In other developments:
– Lindsey Graham: Latest bombshell tied to Russia investigation ‘makes me mad’
– Hannity: Steele dossier sub-source revelation is ‘irrefutable evidence of massive FISA court fraud’
– Durham assumed parts of John Huber’s Clinton Foundation review: source
Justice Dept. orders Pennsylvania county to change ballot practices after ‘troubling’ findings
The Justice Department sent a letter to Luzerne County in Pennsylvania on Thursday, ordering it to change its practices after multiple military ballots supporting President Trump were found discarded.
The issue surfaced earlier in the day when Justice announced it had recovered a small number of discarded ballots. While the department would not say where it had found the ballots, it did say there were nine recovered — seven of which were cast for President Trump, while the other two were sealed by Luzerne County before the FBI recovered them,
In his letter to county officials, U.S. Attorney David Freed indicated additional ballot materials were found in a dumpster. Freed said the investigation yielded “troubling” findings, including that the county allegedly improperly opened ballots.
“Even though your staff has made some attempts to reconstitute certain of the improperly opened ballots, there is no guarantee that any of these votes will be counted in the general election. In addition, our investigation has revealed that all or nearly all envelopes received in the elections office were opened as a matter of course,” Freed’s letter read.
“It was explained to investigators the envelopes used for official overseas, military, absentee and mail-in ballot requests are so similar, that the staff believed that adhering to the protocol of preserving envelopes unopened would cause them to miss such ballot requests. Our interviews further revealed that this issue was a problem in the primary election — therefore a known issue — and that the problem has not been corrected,” he added.
“While the assigned investigators are continuing their work including reviewing additional discarded materials, it is imperative that the issues identified be corrected.” CLICK HERE FOR MORE.
In other developments:
– Pennsylvania election officials sound alarm over ‘naked ballot’ ruling, warning it could jeopardize 100,000 votes
– More than half a million votes already cast in 2020 election
– Philadelphia election official urges GOP state legislature to outlaw secrecy envelopes for mail-in ballots
– Pennsylvania Supreme Court extends state mail ballot deadline to 3 days after election
Public support dropping for racial justice protests, poll suggests
A new poll shows support for protests like those engulfing Louisville, Ky., following a grand jury decision in the Breonna Taylor case has fallen from a peak reached soon after the death of George Floyd in Minneapolis police custody in May.
The survey by the Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research finds 44% of Americans disapprove of protests in response to police violence against Black Americans, while 39% approve. In June, 54% approved of the protests.
The survey was conducted before Wednesday’s announcement that a former Louisville police officer would be charged in the Taylor case, though not directly for her death.
Floyd’s death had also sparked a renewed focus on the shooting that killed Taylor during a drug raid on the night of March 13.
The poll also found that 35% of White Americans approve of the protests now, while 50% disapprove. Just three months ago, 53% of White Americans approved of the protests while 34% disapproved.
Among Latinos, 31% approve, compared with 44% in June; 63% of Black Americans support the protests, down from 81%, with more now saying they neither approve nor disapprove. CLICK HERE FOR MORE.
In other developments:
– Louisville protesters arrested near church that offered safe refuge: report
– Louisville officer shot in the line of duty shows up for roll call 1 night later
– Charles Barkley reacts to Breonna Taylor case, dismisses ‘defund the police’ as ‘crap’
– Louisville Dem who backed ‘Breonna’s Law,’ criticized state AG, arrested in unrest: report
TODAY’S MUST-READS:
– Laura Ingraham: ‘Midwest finally has its moment’ in this election, and Illinois is a warning
– McMaster rejects CNN question on whether military would remove Trump if he doesn’t concede
– Alex Berenson: ‘Wear a mask’ social pressure has ‘real consequences’
– Fox News Poll: Tight race in Ohio, Biden tops Trump in Nevada and Pennsylvania
– Trump touts return of Pac-12’s college football season: ‘You’re welcome!!!’
THE LATEST FROM FOX BUSINESS:
– Justice Department asks judge to allow US to bar WeChat from US app stores
– Innocent Madoff investors must pay back profits, court rules
– Trump to give Medicare beneficiaries checks to pay for medicines
#TheFlashback: CLICK HERE to find out what happened on “This Day in History.”
SOME PARTING WORDS
Sean Hannity, on Thursday’s edition of “Hannity,” reported that text messages and notes from FBI agents revealed they were openly worrying about former FBI Director James Comey’s “Operation Crossfire” investigation into the 2016 Trump campaign. After the election, Hannity continued, the FBI agents appeared so worried about the partisan, conspiratorial nature of what they had done, they “purchased professional liability insurance.”
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On Tuesday, President Donald Trump signed an executive order barring “training that promotes race stereotyping, for example, by portraying certain races as oppressors by virtue of their birth.” White House
Last week, President Trump gave a speech decrying the teaching of “critical race theory” and the New York Times’ 1619 project, and announced the creation of “a national commission to promote patriotic education.” White House
The right is generally supportive of the commission and skeptical of critical race theory.
“The commission, at least as presently envisioned, will not dictate anything to anyone. There is precedent for such a commission. In 1973, Congress created the American Revolution Bicentennial Administration, which oversaw the pageantry of public patriotic events in 1976. The Statue of Liberty–Ellis Island Centennial Commission performed a similar function in 1986 for the symbols of America’s immigrant roots…
“The national Commission on the Bicentennial of the United States Constitution in 1987, chaired by Chief Justice Warren Burger, partnered with the Smithsonian, the National Endowment for the Humanities, the American Bar Association, the National Park Service, and the Daughters of the American Revolution to educate Americans on the history and blessings of our national charter…
“Informed patriotic education was once seen as a necessary component of citizenship. No prior generation of American leaders would have argued that we should be indifferent to whether our citizens know their own history and the Founding ideals on which the nation rests. Abraham Lincoln returned often to the unique history of America, not only to hold together the nation in crisis but to call it to its highest ideals.” The Editors, National Review
“A straight line connects critical race theory to modern progressivism to the riots in the streets. All are predicated on the idea that America was founded on racism and that all of our institutions—across government, law, culture, and society—are mere camouflage for racial domination and oppression…
“Critical race theorists, and their adherents in the new progressive movement, would replace the American system of individual rights, equality under the law, and meritocracy with a system of identity-based distribution of power. In one of the discipline’s founding texts, Critical Race Theory: The Cutting Edge, author Richard Delgado explains that these ideas are ‘marked by a deep discontent with liberalism, a system of civil rights litigation and activist, faith in the legal system, and hope for progress.’ It is a profoundly nihilistic vision, which explains, in part, the character of recent street protests. The rioters and looters in Portland, Seattle, and Chicago are not fighting for any positive value; they are waging a war of simple negation.” Christopher F. Rufo, City Journal
“Critical theory and its relative, critical race theory, are not like traditional theories that limit themselves to explaining and understanding certain precise areas of human motivation and behavior. Rather, critical theory is activist-oriented and emphasizes political organizing. Many of its advocates think of themselves as revolutionaries whose primary purpose is to critique and transform society as a whole…
“Advocates of critical race theory downplay the accomplishments of the civil rights movement and generally reject rights-based remedies, such as color blindness, role modeling, and the merit principle. They attack the very foundations of the classical liberal legal order that includes equality theory, legal reasoning, rationalism, and neutral principles of constitutional law… The law itself is not viewed as a neutral tool by proponents of critical race theory. Rather, it is considered part of the problem, structured to oppress minorities while preserving a system they believe is steeped in white supremacy.” Scott Powell, The Federalist
Some argue, “Much of what Trump said about Howard Zinn and his bestselling book A People’s History of the United States is accurate. Indeed, earlier this year I wrote a positive review of conference participant Mary Grabar’s book in which she carefully demolishes Zinn… [but] many of the most serious critiques of Zinn have been written by liberal and left-wing historians, not by conservatives…
“There is good history and bad history, and either can be written by historians on the left or on the right. There is no such thing as left-wing history or right-wing history. There is only historical research and the conclusions drawn from evidence… Trump wants the mirror opposite of history as written by Howard Zinn; he wants to go back to the old days when history was taught in such a way that students would unreservedly love the United States… That such a curriculum might in and of itself be indoctrination was never obviously considered.” Ron Radosh, The Bulwark
Dated But Relevant: “Historians, journalists, and politicians frequently accuse one another of twisting history to advance political agendas—and the accused parties always deny the charge. By contrast, the 1619 Project’s curriculum openly encourages such historical revisionism. Its ‘reading guide’ aims to ensure that students don’t miss core partisan talking points…
“For the essay ‘Capitalism: In Order to Understand the Brutality of American Capitalism, You Have to Start on the Plantation,’ the reading guide asks: ‘What current financial systems reflect practices developed to support industries built on the work of enslaved people?’ One answer, suggested in the key terms, is home mortgages—because slaves were once used as collateral. Another acceptable answer is the collateralized debt obligation, a complex structured-finance product developed in the 1980s…
“To understand their country, students should read America’s Founding documents and the works of great figures like Frederick Douglass and Abraham Lincoln, and grapple with history’s circumstantial and moral complexities—not ‘reframe’ history to make it fit partisan purposes. They should be taught about the moral abomination of American slavery—but not that ‘slavery is our country’s very origin,’ or that its legacy is baked into all our social institutions, allegations that cannot stand up to any fair-minded examination of American history.” Max Eden, City Journal
From the Left
The left is critical of the commission and advocates for curricula that teach American history in all its complexity.
“[Is it] really controversial to point out that the early American economy ran in large part on slave labor, or that Founders who claimed to believe in human equality did not actually let anyone besides white, male landowners participate in the political process[?]…
“Some historians have criticized parts of the 1619 Project for failing to describe the varied conditions under which African-descended residents of the Americas lived during the colonial era, and for overstating the degree to which the preservation of slavery motivated American revolutionaries relative to other concerns. But even one of the most prominent scholars to make such criticism, for example, also says that ‘overall, the 1619 Project is a much-needed corrective to the blindly celebratory histories that once dominated our understanding of the past—histories that wrongly suggested racism and slavery were not a central part of U.S. history.’” Ben Mathis-Lilley, Slate
“Conservatives often convince themselves that when liberals point to societal problems and conditions that demand remedial action — the large number of Americans in poverty, or our high rates of homicide, or the fact that American police kill so many people — it’s because they hate America. By contrast, when conservatives complain about problems and conditions they don’t like — increasing secularism; the fact that automated customer service systems give you an option for Spanish — they’re only being patriotic, because the things they don’t like about America are betrayals of its true spirit…
“Every successful presidential candidate promises the voters rewards both material and emotional. They say they’ll improve our lives in tangible ways — better health care, higher wages — but they’ll also make us feel how we want to feel, alter the nation’s spirit to align it with what we would like it to be… This is the message Trump wants those supporters to hear: We’re done talking about slavery and racism. You don’t have to do any soul-searching, you don’t have to question how American institutions operate, and you sure as hell don’t have to feel guilty about anything.” Paul Waldman, Washington Post
“Critical race theory grew out of a generational response to the ebb and flow of the civil rights movement, according to a seminal 1993 book on the theory, Words That Wound: Critical Race Theory, Assaultive Speech, and the First Amendment… the book notes the late 1970s as a time when ‘the civil rights movement of the 1960s had stalled, and many of its gains were being rolled back.’ That’s when a post-civil rights generation of scholars recognized that while segregation had been [officially] repealed, there was still inequality to be addressed…
“[The authors] defined critical race theory as a movement and framework that recognizes how racism is ‘endemic’ to American life. In other words, critical race theory rejects the belief that ‘what’s in the past is in the past’ and that the best way to get beyond race is to stop talking about it. Instead, America must reckon with how its values and institutions feed into racism.” Fabiola Cineas, Vox
“The Baby Boom Generation of historians challenged the notion that history textbooks should focus exclusively on presidents and legislators. That approach, they said, missed huge swaths of the lived experience of Americans… Historians from the 1970s, 1980s, and 1990s integrated issues of racism, sexism, nativism, class conflict and more into our understanding of our country and broadened the canvas of actors who were considered important, including marginalized and disenfranchised peoples who struggled for their rights…
“There is nothing unpatriotic about a clear-eyed view of our nation’s past. Indeed, understanding the problems and failures at the center of our nation is to take our history seriously. Of course, there will be serious disputes about the American history, such as which ideas guided the nation’s founders and over the different ways that racism has impacted contemporary American life. But let the historians hash this out with our professional standards of archival evidence and historiographical argumentation. We have [it] covered.” Julian Zelizer, CNN
“Listening to Trump, one would think that a rigorous examination of slavery and its implications was a central fixture of American classrooms. Recent surveys, however, show that young people in America have enormous gaps in what they understand about the history of slavery in this country. According to a 2018 report from the Southern Poverty Law Center, only 8 percent of high-school seniors surveyed were able to identify slavery as the central cause of the Civil War. Two-thirds of students did not know that a constitutional amendment was necessary to formally end slavery… Telling the truth about slavery is not ‘indoctrination.’” Clint Smith, The Atlantic
Some argue, “The [1619] project’s defects became clear to me back in December, after four colleagues and I pointed out factual errors in the discussion of slavery and the American Revolution in the project’s lead essay. We later learned that a university historian contacted by a fact-checker had warned about these errors, but the project’s editors chose to ignore her. The mistakes concerning Britain, the Atlantic slave trade and the origins of the Revolution still appear on the Times’ website, despite a subsequent no-fault ‘clarification.’ The project has also tried to back off its original attention-grabbing claim…
“The real choice isn’t between Trump’s rendition of our history and the 1619 Project’s. It’s between ideological distortion and legitimate historical writing, with its respect for facts, its skepticism about pat answers and, above all, its refusal to shape the past to fit a fixed political agenda.” Sean Wilentz, Washington Post
A libertarian’s take
“The federal government shouldn’t dictate what local schools across the country teach—and in the past, conservatives have rightly denounced the idea that it should… Whoever is in charge, that’s a recipe for a biased and propagandistic version of history. Can individual states, cities, or school districts do much better? Some will, some won’t—but the beauty of a decentralized system is that 1) it’s easier for parents and teachers to change the bad parts of a local curriculum than it is a national one, and 2) it leaves room for parents to pull their children out of schools that don’t do well at this, or at something else, and enroll them a school that does better…“The best antidote for politicized lessons and public-school propaganda is school choice. When parents can choose between a range of local education options—traditional public schools, traditional private schools, charter schools, online schools, small-group-based ‘education pods,’ homeschooling, etc.—we leave fewer kids trapped in schools whose values don’t align with their families and communities—and less room for whoever is in the White House to try to set everyone’s lessons from on high.” Elizabeth Nolan Brown, Reason
🚨 Breaking: Palantir, the data-mining unicorn, is expected to fetch a lofty valuation of $22 billion “in the latest sign of investors’ voracious appetite for new shares,” The Wall Street Journal reports (subscription).
1 big thing: Apocalypse scenario
Illustration: Aïda Amer/Axios
Arming for post-election combat, Democratic lawyers are getting ready to challenge any end runs by President Trump, including swapping electors chosen by voters with electors selected by Republican-controlled legislatures.
Democrats are particularly concerned about Pennsylvania, where the GOP controls the statehouse, Axios’ Alayna Treene and Hans Nichols have learned.
On the other side, a Trump campaign adviser told Axios that lawyers will litigate where needed, including suing in key states that have changed election laws to allow for an extended time to vote or count ballots.
Why it matters: Legal experts are increasingly worried about how the next president will be chosen if election mechanics fall apart and we face a constitutional crisis.
Democrats are running a separate effort to try to block any state recounts, like Florida’s in 2000, from being cut short by the Supreme Court.
Across the country, the Biden campaign has enlisted thousands of lawyers and volunteers for voter protection efforts.
The context: Trump’s refusal to commit for a second time yesterday to a peaceful transfer of power, together with an article in The Atlantic about worst worst-case scenarios, is drawing new attention to brutal fights that could jeopardize a final outcome.
The big picture, per the N.Y. Times (subscription):“Even as early voting has gotten underway, some pivotal states are still litigating how ballots should be cast and counted, creating uncertainty that is being fanned by President Trump.”
Ben Ginsberg, a top GOP election lawyer who has criticized Trump’s claims about election fraud, says the president could ask for state recounts and even contest particular state results.
Democrats are compiling lists of Black women they want Joe Biden to consider for the bench if he’s elected — with an eye toward people from outside the traditional legal establishment, Axios’ Alexi McCammond and Hans Nichols write.
Why it matters: A President Biden would need to find picks who could try to wrangle liberal victories from the court’s conservative majority.
Where it stands: Biden has stayed silent on who he might appoint to the Supreme Court, and says he won’t release a list of potential nominees like President Trump did in 2016.
But he has pledged to select a Black woman.
What we’re hearing: Ketanji Brown Jackson, a district court judge in D.C., is an obvious contender. She was on President Obama’s shortlist to replace the late Justice Antonin Scalia, and has standard qualifications for modern nominees — Harvard Law, prominent clerkships and a spot on the federal bench.
But many progressive advocates told Axios they want Biden to think differently — to not only add sex and racial diversity to the court, but to also inject some different life experience and professional background.
Other names being discussed:
Leondra Kurger, a justice on the California Supreme Court.
Leslie Abrams Gardner, a federal district judge in Georgia (and Stacey Abrams’ sister).
Sherrilyn Ifill, president of the NAACP Legal Defense Fund.
Melissa Murray, a professor at NYU Law who clerked for Justice Sonia Sotomayor and would likely follow Sotomayor’s model of judging.
Keeanga-Yamahtta Taylor, an academic teaching at Princeton and an author and activist on racial justice.
Barbara Ransby, who teaches history at the University of Illinois-Chicago and is a longtime political and civil rights activist.
Between the lines: All of the current justices graduated from Harvard or Yale law school. All but one were promoted to the Supreme Court from federal appeals courts.
None of them has an advocacy background, or have ever run for office, or served as public defenders, or on a state supreme court.
3. Youth accounted for 20% of coronavirus cases this summer
A crowd of people outside a bar in Iowa City last month. Photo: Joseph Cress/Reuters
The CDC sayspeople in their 20s accounted for more than 20% of all COVID cases between June and August, bringing the median age of coronavirus patients to 37, down from 46 in the spring.
Why it matters, from Axios’ Marisa Fernandez: Young people are less vulnerable to serious illness. But they contributed to community spread over the summer — meaning they likely infected older, higher-risk people, especially in the South.
In the era of social distancing, President Trump tweeted these two pics from his rallies this week: Above, Pittsburgh on Tuesday. Below, Jacksonville last night.
5. Where school could be riskiest
Schools in Southern and Midwestern states are most at risk of coronavirus transmission, according to an analysis by Coders Against COVID that uses risk indicators developed by the CDC, Axios’ Caitlin Owens writes.
Schools haven’t become coronavirus hotspots, the WashPost reported this week. But that doesn’t mean they’re in the clear as we head into winter.
In Pennsylvania, Democrats fear that the problem could cause 100,000+ votes to be invalidated.
“Naked ballots” are mail ballots that arrive without inner “secrecy envelopes,” the Philly Inquirer explains.
“Pennsylvania uses a two-envelope mail ballot system: A completed ballot goes into a ‘secrecy envelope’ that has no identifying information, and then into a larger mailing envelope that the voter signs.”
The context: The Pennsylvania Supreme Court ruled last week that ballots had to be rejected if not enclosed in the proper secrecy envelope — a victory for President Trump’s campaign in the pivotal state. (AP)
At President Trump’s rally in Jacksonville last night, he reveled in an article by The Federalist (Redstate co-founder Ben Domenech is publisher) disclosing a court filing in the Michael Flynn case that quotes FBI text messages from 2016, including one saying: “[T]rump was right.”
[O]n the FBI’s “Lync” messaging system in October of 2016, FBI employees exchanged messages [that included] “I’m tellying [sic] man, if this thing ever gets FOIA’d, there are going to be some tough questions asked.”
Snapchat today teams up with The National Constitution Center on an augmented reality lens experience paying tribute to Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, as she becomes the first woman to lie in state in the U.S. Capitol.
The lens will work in front of the U.S. Capitol, by pointing Snapchat’s camera — the primary screen when you open the app — at the Capitol building and tapping on the screen.
Using a type of technology called Landmarker Lenses that weaves together an augmented reality experience into the physical world, a viewer will see one of RBG’s … quotes … against the sky above the Capitol.
At the end, a light shines out of the dome.
9. Remembering Harold Evans, crusading editor
Jon Meachamrecalls for Random House that Sir Harold Evans — editor of The Sunday Times of London, and U.S. publisher of “Primary Colors,” who died in New York at 92 —”was a Renaissance figure who saw the past in the present”:
Sprightly and urbane, charming and tireless, Evans was an editor, publisher, and writer of remarkable scope and skill. In the atomized cultural climate of the first decades of the twenty-first century, it can be difficult to appreciate how large he loomed as the editor of The Sunday Times in London and then in his sundry posts in the New World, including his years in the 1990s as the publisher of Random House.
College football, with all that sweet bowl cash on the line, turned out to be pandemic-proof, AP’s Ralph Russo writes.
The Pac-12 reversed itself and set Nov. 6 to start a seven-game season.
“This has nothing to do with money,” said University of Oregon President Michael Schill, head of the Pac-12’s CEO Group.
The Mountain West followed up a few hours later by announcing it is aiming to kick off Oct. 24.
Nine of the 10 top conferences will now complete seasons by Dec. 20, the day the College Football Playoff selection committee is scheduled to pick teams to play for the national championship and in the most lucrative bowls.
As soon as today, the Mid-American Conference could make it 10 out of 10.
The bottom line: This every-conference-for-itself college football season looks like it will have five different start dates.
Some teams could play as many as 12 games while others get in only six.
Mike Allen
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Vice President Mike Pence said the Trump administration would work aggressively to protect the integrity of November’s election as he promised the president would respect the will of the people.
Indiana’s two senators are publicly backing their fellow Hoosier, Judge Amy Coney Barrett, who lives in South Bend and is a top contender for President Trump’s pick for the Supreme Court vacancy following the death of Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg.
President Trump’s opportunity to fill a Supreme Court seat weeks before Election Day is delivering an eleventh-hour jolt to his reelection campaign, according to early analysis of social media data in battleground states.
The White House sought Thursday to tamp down a firestorm over whether President Trump would commit to a peaceful transfer of power if defeated in November, as the president’s allies argued his comments were misconstrued and it was the Democrats who failed to accept the 2016 election results.
The sight of militiamen in a major U.S. city terrified some and thrilled others after videos of dozens of armed, camouflage-wearing men walking around downtown Louisville Wednesday night surfaced online.
The Trump administration has doled out tens of billions of dollars in aid to farmers hit by the coronavirus pandemic-induced recession and is looking to provide them more funds in upcoming legislation.
A congressional special election has been called in Minnesota, increasing House Republicans’ chances of dominating state delegations in the event of a tied Electoral College after Nov. 3.
2020 Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden has reached majority support in Nevada, Ohio, and Pennsylvania, bad news for President Trump six weeks before Election Day, according to new Fox News polls.
U.S. Attorney John Durham discovered that the primary sub-source for British ex-spy Christopher Steele’s discredited dossier was investigated by the FBI as a possible “threat to national security,” but the bureau never told the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court and used the dossier anyway.
President Trump touted a new healthcare reform plan Thursday in the swing state of North Carolina, but what he laid out consisted mostly of executive orders that would lack the force of law.
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Sep 25, 2020
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AP MORNING WIRE
Good morning. In today’s AP Morning Wire:
Both US parties vow an orderly election in spite of Trump attacks.
In despair, protesters take to America’s streets for Breonna Taylor.
UN: China, Russia and US clash over pandemic responses.
Justice Ginsburg is first woman to lie in state at US Capitol.
TAMER FAKAHANY DEPUTY DIRECTOR – GLOBAL NEWS COORDINATION, LONDON
The Rundown
AP PHOTO/SCOTT APPLEWHITE
Despite Trump attacks, both parties vow orderly election; Crowd jeers as Trump pays respects at court to Ginsburg
President Donald Trump’s outright refusal to commit to a peaceful transfer of power if he loses the Nov. 3 presidential election is drawing swift blowback from both parties in Congress.
But Trump was unfazed, seemingly intent on furthering a narrative to undermine public trust in the vote, declaring anew that he’s not sure the election can be honest.
Democratic House members pressed Trump’s Cabinet to go on record to support the election outcome. Republican Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell vowed an “orderly transition” as has been done since the nation’s founding.
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said voters must be trusted to make the decision.
Trump was booed as he paid respects to late Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg. Trump and first lady Melania Trump — both wearing masks — went to the court and stood silently at the top of the steps of the court and looked down at Ginsburg’s flag-draped coffin.
Ginsburg’s death has sparked a controversy over the balance of the court just weeks before the November presidential election. Trump is expected to name a replacement on Saturday. Moments after Trump arrived at the court, booing could be heard from spectators who then chanted “Vote him out.”
Biden Strategy: Joe Biden had no public events scheduled Thursday as he concentrated on preparing for next week’s debate. But it wasn’t the first time he had laid low, and that is worrying some Democrats. Since he chose California Sen. Kamala Harris as his running mate on Aug. 11, Biden has had 23 days where he either didn’t make public appearances, held only virtual fundraisers or ventured from his Delaware home solely for church.
He made 12 out-of-state visits during that period, including a trip to Washington scheduled for Friday to pay respects to the late Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg. During the same time, President Donald Trump had 24 trips that took him to 17 different states, not counting weekend golf outings. Will Weissert, Alexandra Jaffe and Alan Fram have that story.
AP PHOTO/JOHN MINCHILLO
Despairing but determined protesters take to US streets for Breonna Taylor, asking what’s next?
People dismayed that the police officers in Kentucky who shot Breonna Taylor haven’t been charged with her death have vowed to persist in their fight for justice.
Some of them raised their fists and shouted “Black lives matter!” Others tended to the letters, flowers and signs grouped together in a square in downtown Louisville. All of them said her name, report Clare Galofaro, Dylan Lovan and Angie Wang.
Many took to the streets in several U.S. cities to call for reforms to combat racist policing. At least 24 people were detained in Louisville after a second night of protests. Authorities alleged some protesters broke windows at a restaurant, damaged city buses, tried to set a fire and threw a flare into the street.
The protesters disbanded around 11 p.m. after negotiating with police in riot gear, who also pulled back.
The big question for a city torn apart by Taylor’s death and the larger issue of racism in America was how to move forward.
Portland Protests: Police in the city have declared an unlawful assembly at a demonstration where a fire was set outside a police union building late last night. Several photos and videos posted online showed flames erupting outside the doors of the Portland Police Association office. The fire was quickly extinguished. On Wednesday night people hurled several firebombs at officers in Oregon’s largest city during a demonstration over the lack of charges in Taylor’s shooting death in Kentucky. Portland has already seen nearly four months of nightly protests over racial injustice and police brutality.
Police Shooting Wisconsin: A white 17-year-old accused of killing two protesters days after Jacob Blake was shot by police in Kenosha faces a hearing to return him to Wisconsin to face trial on homicide charges that could put him in prison for life. Kyle Rittenhouse was arrested at his home in Illinois, a day after prosecutors say he shot and killed two and injured a third on the streets of Kenosha on Aug. 25. His attorneys have said Rittenhouse acted in self defense and are trying to portray him as an ”American patriot.” A court hearing in Illinois today is set to determine whether to send Rittenhouse to Wisconsin to face charges.
AP PHOTO/SILVIA IZQUIERDO
At UN, China, Russia and US clash over pandemic responses; Virus disrupting Rio’s Carnival for first time in a century
China, Russia and the United States have traded diplomatic blows at the United Nations over responsibility for the coronavirus pandemic.
The sharp exchanges reflect the deep divisions among the three veto-wielding council members. Those disputes have escalated since the virus first emerged in the Chinese city of Wuhan.
Brazil Carnival:A cloud of uncertainty that has hung over Rio de Janeiro throughout the coronavirus pandemic has been lifted, but gloom remains — the annual Carnival parade of flamboyant samba schools won’t be held in February for the first time in a century. Brazil is suffering one of the worst virus outbreaks and death tolls in the world. And while the decision is being characterized as a postponement of the event, no new date has been set, reports Marcelo de Sousa from Rio. “Carnival will only really happen when the whole world can travel. It’s a spectacle the world watches, brings income and movement here. I have no hope for 2021,” one samba school drummer said.
Mideast Wedding Busters: Police in the Arab world have been disrupting long-awaited wedding parties in recent weeks, with officers barging in, kicking out guests and slapping hefty fines on the party’s organizers. Grooms and wedding band members have been detained. The tough action has been triggered by resurgent virus cases as officials from the Palestinian territories to the United Arab Emirates attribute an infection spike in part to such large-scale weddings.
But in a region where marriage is the cornerstone of society, the gateway to independence and the only culturally acceptable context for a sex life, young couples are plowing ahead, despite the potentially deadly risks, report Isabel Debre and Mohammed Daraghmeh.
Israel’s Virus Czar: A leading Israeli public health expert, who was named the country’s coronavirus czar in mid-July, had been hailed as Israel’s best hope for halting a fast-growing number of cases. Now, two months later, Israel is suffering from one of the world’s worst outbreaks and heading into a tough new lockdown. Dr. Ronni Gamzu has faced withering criticism from opponents, pushback from Israel’s political leadership and the stark fact that the number of new cases shows no sign of declining. Tia Goldenberg interviewed him for this story.
Britain’s Bungles: There’s a dreaded feeling of deja vu after Boris Johnson’s government’s bungled response to the virus the first time around. Now many scientists fear it’s about to do it again. The virus is on the rise once more in the U.K., with confirmed infections at their highest level since May. The surge has brought new restrictions on daily life, the prospect of a grim winter of mounting deaths. Scientists say the government is repeating its mistake of March, when it did not act quickly. They cite continuing failings with social distancing measures, a struggling testing program and mixed messages from the Conservative government, Jill Lawless reports from London.
Six Months Stranded: A group of 25 residents from remote Easter Island has been stranded far from home for half a year now due to the virus. Children remain separated from their parents, husbands from their wives. One woman is due to give birth any day now without her husband by her side. The group is stranded on Tahiti in French Polynesia. Many arrived in March planning to stay for just a few weeks. But they got stuck when the virus swept across the globe and their flights back home on LATAM airlines were canceled, Nick Perry and Eva Vergara report.
Ginsburg, who died last week at age 87, also will be the first Jewish-American to lie in state and just the second Supreme Court justice. The first, Chief Justice William Howard Taft, also had been president.
Ginsburg’s casket will be brought to the Capitol for a private ceremony in Statuary Hall attended by her family and lawmakers, and with musical selections from one of her favorite opera singers. Joe Biden and his wife, Jill, planned to attend.
South Korea says North Korean leader Kim Jong Un has apologized over the killing of a South Korea official who may have crossed the disputed sea border while trying to defect. It’s extremely unusual for a North Korean leader to apologize to rival South Korea on any issue. South Korea’s presidential office said Kim in his message of apology called the incident “unexpected” and “unfortunate.” South Korea earlier said the man disappeared from a boat monitoring unauthorized fishing. It accused North Korea of fatally shooting him and burning his body in what may have been an anti-virus measure.
Turkey and some human rights groups accuse Greece of large-scale summary deportations of migrants without access to asylum procedures. A group of Afghan migrants says that after reaching the Greek island of Lesbos, authorities rounded them up, mistreated them, put them in life rafts and abandoned them at sea. Associated Press journalists on a government-sponsored ride-along on the Turkish coast guard vessel saw it pick up the 37 migrants, including 18 children, from two life rafts in the Aegean Sea on Sept. 12.
The federal government has put the first Black inmate to death since the Trump administration this year resumed federal executions after a nearly two-decade pause. Christopher Vialva, 40, was convicted and sentenced to death in the slaying of a religious couple visiting Texas from Iowa when he was 19. Vialva was the seventh federal execution since July and the second this week. Five of the first six were white, a move critics argue was a political calculation to avoid uproar.
Evel Knievel’s son is on a collision course with the Walt Disney Co. and Pixar over a movie daredevil character named Duke Caboom. A federal trademark infringement lawsuit filed in Las Vegas accuses the moviemaker of improperly basing the “Toy Story 4” character on Knievel. His famous stunts in the 1960s and ‘70s included motorcycle jumps over the Caesars Palace fountain in Las Vegas and a rocket shot into Snake River Canyon in Idaho.
Good morning, Chicago. On Thursday, Illinois saw a spike in coronavirus cases, as officials reported 2,257 newly diagnosed cases and 30 additional confirmed deaths.
Thursday also marked the beginning of early voting for some Illinois counties, which has been encouraged by election authorities because of COVID-19. Voters in Northern Illinois must’ve taken that advice to heart — the Tribune’s Kelli Smith reported that some looking to cast their ballots experienced hourslong wait times.
Meanwhile, the pandemic has led some parents and educators to embrace outdoor preschools. Many of them hope the move will be permanent.
Here’s more coronavirus news and other top stories you need to know to start your day.
Lt. Gov. Juliana Stratton warned Thursday that Illinoisans could face an across-the-board income tax hike of at least 20% if voters reject a proposed constitutional amendment to shift the state from a mandated flat-rate tax to a graduated-rate tax based on income.
For weeks, Democratic Gov. J.B. Pritkzer’s administration has cautioned that severe budget cuts could be on the way if voters don’t approve the proposed amendment to overhaul Illinois’ income tax system. But Stratton’s threat that all taxpayers, regardless of income, could face a tax hike unless the amendment passes on Nov. 3 appeared to represent a new shift in strategy for the Pritzker administration.
Six months into the pandemic, the new virus has infected more than 28,000Illinois long-term care residents andkilled more than 4,000. It’s also fueled debate over the Illinois Department of Public Health’s oversight of a mostly for-profit industry. That includes how the agency cut back inspections, at times breaking state law, as the virus raced through facilities.
If Adam Hollingsworth — the so-called Dreadhead Cowboy — had to do it all over again, he said he would still gladly make the unauthorized gallop on the Dan Ryan Expressway to spotlight violence against children in Chicago this year.
The urban horseman enjoyed local celebrity as an activist and Mayor Lori Lightfoot’s census ambassador before being charged with felony animal cruelty following his ride earlier this week. But on Thursday, he pleaded for help from the mayor’s office and Chicago’s pantheon of famous and socially conscious rappers to make the criminal case go away.
Getting the flu shot this year is going to look different in Illinois as patients and medical facilities adapt to the COVID-19 pandemic. The changes come as experts stress the importance of getting the flu shot this year, both to keep people healthy during the pandemic and to preserve health care resources in case COVID-19 surges again during the winter.
On a September afternoon that still felt like summer, a small group in boots and waders drove out to a creek near Elgin, sloshed through cold, bubbling water, knelt down and dug their bare hands into the ground. For hours. For days. And all for a mollusk.
President Trump said he will announce his Supreme Court nominee Saturday following the death of Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg.
And after serving only three years as a federal judge on the Chicago-based 7th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, the frontrunner for the seat appears to be Amy Coney Barrett. Lynn Sweet and Jon Seidel have the story…
Whether Democrats will agree to the Republicans’ plans to take testimony is unclear. Also unclear is what testimony current company officials could give, as none of them have been implicated directly in any of the alleged wrongdoing.
Welcome to The Hill’s Morning Report. Thankfully, it is Friday! 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; Friday, 202,819.
Lawmakers in both parties pushed back Thursday against President Trump’s refusal this week to commit to a peaceful transfer of power should he lose the presidential contest to Joe Biden.
Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) tweeted his response without referencing Trump, who for months has argued without evidence that mass mail-in voting will be “rigged” and subject to fraud. The president tells his supporters to request absentee ballots or vote in-person. He has also suggested they vote twice, which is illegal.
“The winner of the November 3rd election will be inaugurated on January 20th. There will be an orderly transition just as there has been every four years since 1792,” McConnell wrote. He did not respond when asked what might happen if Trump loses and refuses to step down (NBC News).
Other Republicans who issued similar statements included Sen. Mitt Romney (Utah) and Sen. Susan Collins (Maine), who is in a precarious reelection battle. Romney wasted no time before tweeting his rebuke following Trump’s evening remarks on Wednesday: “Any suggestion that a president might not respect this Constitutional guarantee is both unthinkable and unacceptable,” the Utah senator wrote.
As The Hill’s Alexander Bolton reports, Trump’s refusal to dismiss the idea that he might contest election results for weeks after ballots are tallied put Senate Republicans on the defensive. Democrats, reeling from the death of Ruth Bader Ginsburg, pounced on Trump’s comments as an opening to regain some political momentum and mobilize Democrats and some of the small percentage of voters who say they are undecided.
Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) commended McConnell for issuing his statement. “That was a real change,” she added.
Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.), delivering his first major speech since losing the Democratic primary, addressed his progressive supporters from an empty hall at George Washington University and warned them about what he sees at stake.
“This is not just an election between Donald Trump and Joe Biden,” said Sanders, who is backing the former vice president with an urgent call to arms in the final six weeks of the contest. “This is an election between Donald Trump and democracy – and democracy must win” (USA Today).
White House Press Secretary Kayleigh McEnany, asked by reporters to explain Trump’s intentions, said several times that “the president will accept the results of a free and fair election. He will accept the will of the American people.” She did not elaborate on whether the president believes a contest in which he loses in the Electoral College after millions of mailed ballots have been tallied can be, in his estimation, “free and fair.”
CNN: A list of times the president has said he won’t accept election results or won’t leave office if he loses.
CBS News: How the 2020 campaign is being waged in the courts.
Fox News: Trump campaign bracing for a legal battle over the election, forming “coalition” of lawyers.
The Guardian: Biden assembles an army of attorneys for a post-election legal fight.
👉 Bloomberg TV, Thursday interview with Ben Ginsberg, former national counsel to the campaigns of former President George W. Bush and Romney:
“If you were to bet on history, which is always a good bet, then it’s likely there will be a winner on election night. You’ll know that if Joe Biden is winning Florida or Donald Trump is winning the three states Hillary Clinton won narrowly [in 2016], which were New Hampshire, Minnesota and Nevada. And if that occurs on election night, then you may not know the winner in every state, but the pattern is pretty clear in the country as a whole.
“If those `tells’ don’t happen on election night, then you have to deal with the fact that there are so many more absentee ballots in some of the key states, like Pennsylvania, Wisconsin and Michigan, that won’t get results for a week, two weeks, maybe three weeks. Once that happens, that’s when the recount process under state law is allowed to commence, so that pushes the timetables back, if there are close elections, way past where we started in Florida [in 2000].
“The deadlock-in-the-Electoral College scenario is the least likely, I think, but again, not impossible. We’re talking about it more this year, and the more discussion there is, especially by a president of the United States, about elections being rigged or about the votes being cast being fraudulent, it increases the chances there won’t be a clear winner in the Electoral College, that there will be competing slates. … Really, almost everything depends on the two candidates and their rhetoric and what they say about this, and what they tell to their supporters and how they react.” [Video time stamp 23:37]
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.
CONGRESS: The White House and Democratic negotiators indicated Thursday that talks are on the verge of resuming on another coronavirus relief package after weeks of circling each other and inaction after breaking off discussions in early August.
Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin told the Senate Banking Committee on Thursday that he and Pelosi have agreed to restart negotiations on a new package nearly two months after talks stalled out in early August.
“I’ve probably spoken to Speaker Pelosi 15 or 20 times in the last few days on the [continuing resolution],” Mnuchin told the Senate Banking Committee during a hearing alongside Federal Reserve Board Chair Jerome Powell. “And we’ve agreed to continue to have discussions about the CARES Act.”
Pelosi also confirmed that negotiations are expected to resume, telling reporters: “We’ll be hopefully soon to the table with them.”
The comments from the pair of negotiators come amid a months-long deadlock over a fifth coronavirus relief package, which has stalled over the inability for the two sides to agree on the size and scope of a potential deal. Pelosi and House Democrats have maintained that any deal must be north of $2 trillion, with the White House and Republicans capping a package at $1.3 trillion (The Hill).
As The Hill’s Mike Lillis writes, Pelosi is pushing ahead with the Democratic effort with or without agreement from the White House or Republicans and asked her committee heads to draft a new Democratic relief package. The hope is to bring the bill — which is expected to be in the range of $2.2 trillion, according to House Ways and Means Chairman Richard Neal (D-Mass.) — to the floor next week if a bipartisan deal is not struck in the interim.
“The contours are all there; I think it’s about [a] time frame and all of that,” Neal said Thursday. “The Ways and Means Committee wrote most of it to begin with … so we’re just going to revisit a lot of it.”
The Hill: Anxious Democrats amp up pressure for vote on COVID-19 aid.
The Washington Post: Pelosi abruptly shifts course, restarts relief push amid signs economy is straining.
Market Watch: Powell says lack of fiscal package adds to downside risk.
Yahoo Finance: Jobless claims: Another 870,000 Americans filed new unemployment claims last week.
Congress is also set to approve a clean government spending bill next week as the Senate prepares to take up the package and pass it shortly before the Wednesday night deadline and avert a partial government shutdown.
Senate Republicans are expected to hold a vote on final passage of the continuing resolution (CR) on Tuesday evening or Wednesday, which would keep the government funded through Dec. 11. The House passed the bipartisan bill on Tuesday evening.
”I just heard on the floor a minute ago from the staff that we’re going to come back Tuesday evening and vote on the CR,” said Sen. Richard Shelby (R-Ala.), chairman of the Senate Appropriations Committee (The Hill).
> Senate Commerce Committee Chairman Roger Wicker (R-Miss.) says his panel will issue subpoenas to the chief executives of Twitter Inc., Alphabet Inc’s Google and Facebook Inc. if they do not agree to testify at a hearing on Oct. 1. The hearing will discuss a legal immunity known as Section 230 that technology companies have when it comes to liability over content posted by users (Reuters).
The Hill: Trump’s push for win with Sudan amps up pressure on Congress.
IN FOCUS/SHARP TAKES
2020 POLITICS & ELECTIONS: The president is attempting to shore up his stance on pre-existing medical conditions, a key campaign issue, even as he continues to support a lawsuit seeking to overturn those protections in ObamaCare and Democrats continue to use health insurance coverage as a cornerstone campaign issue, especially during the pandemic.
As The Hill’s Peter Sullivan details, the legal challenge to the Affordable Care Act has gained increased attention after Ginsburg’s death. The Supreme Court is scheduled to hear oral arguments on Nov. 10. Democrats pan Trump consistently over his push to “repeal and replace” the 2010 law. The president on Thursday signed a largely symbolic executive order focused on showing his support for mandated insurance coverage for pre-existing health conditions, one of the most popular provisions of ObamaCare across parties. Trump boasted of lowering insurance premiums and drug prices while opposing surprise medical bills.
“The historic action I am taking today includes the first-ever executive order to affirm it is the official policy of the United States government to protect patients with pre-existing conditions,” Trump said during a speech in North Carolina, a key swing state. “So we’re making that official.”
Trump said in August he would unveil a health care plan before the election. The White House said his “vision” speech on Thursday was that plan.
The Hill: Pelosi slams Trump’s executive order on pre-existing conditions: “It isn’t worth the paper it’s signed on.”
The Washington Post: Trump looks for ways to win over voters on health care after failing to deliver on promises.
The Washington Post: Trump settles for rebranding rather than repealing ObamaCare.
The Hill: Tightening polls in key swing states raise pressure on Biden.
Florida Times-Union: Trump makes “law and order” a centerpiece of his Thursday rally in Florida.
> House fight: Democrats who are pining to turn Texas blue are aiming high as they make a play to defeat Rep. Dan Crenshaw (R-Texas), hoping his district could be a bellwether in their effort to flip the Lone Star State.
Crenshaw’s seat in the 2nd District is one of several in Texas that Democrats are contesting this cycle, and the party has grown bullish that the high-profile freshman Republican could be knocked off on Nov. 3. However, as The Hill’s Tal Axelrod writes in a story that will publish later this morning, while several other Democratic House contenders are either competing for open seats or in districts with lesser-known incumbents, the party could face trouble in its bid to defeat Crenshaw, considered a rising star in the party and among the most impressive in his class of lawmakers.
Democrats have put their weight behind Sima Ladjevardian, a prominent attorney with a compelling life story, as they push to flip the suburban Houston district.
The New York Times: Women favor Biden, according to poll results in red states.
Close races in Georgia, Iowa and Texas show Trump’s vulnerability and suggest that Biden has assembled a formidable coalition, according to a New York Times/Siena College poll.
The Hill: Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.), speaking of his campaign: “I’m getting killed financially.”
The Hill: Disinformation, QAnon efforts targeting Latino voters ramp up ahead of presidential election.
AARP: COVID-19 threatens voting in nursing homes as election approaches.
OPINION
The truth About people of praise, by Peggy Noonan, columnist, The Wall Street Journal. https://on.wsj.com/302F3KL
Trump’s TikTok deal would only make the problem worse, by Josh Rogin, columnist, The Washington Post. https://wapo.st/2HvXukD
COVID-19 facts obscured by the politics of fear, by Marc Siegel, opinion contributor, The Hill. https://bit.ly/33VJsjH
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 for a pro forma session at 9 a.m. The full House is out of session on Monday for Yom Kippur and will return Tuesday.
The Senate convenes on Monday at 2:45 p.m. for a pro forma session.
The U.S. Capitol: The casket of Justice Ginsburg will lie in state in Statuary Hall today, making her the first woman to receive such an honor. Because of precautions tied to the coronavirus, the ceremony inside the Capitol will be for invited guests only (The New York Times).
The president will campaign today in three states and Washington, D.C. Starting in Doral, Fla., Trump will participate in a roundtable at 11 a.m. focused on wooing Latino voters. Trump will fly from Miami to Atlanta and speak about economic opportunities for Blacks at 2:40 p.m. in Cobb Galleria Centre. The president will fly from Atlanta to Washington, D.C., to participate in a fundraiser with supporters at Trump International Hotel at 6:45 p.m. Trump will then fly from Washington to Newport News, Va., to headline a rally at 9 p.m. (The Washington Post), and return to the nation’s capital. … On Saturday at 5 p.m. in the Rose Garden, Trump will announce his nominee to the Supreme Court. At 7 p.m. on Saturday, the president will hold a campaign rally in Middletown, Pa., at the Harrisburg airport.
Economic indicator: The Census Bureau will report at 8:30 a.m. on U.S. durable goods in August. Analysts expect gains for the fourth consecutive month.
➔ COURTS: A federal judge in California late on Thursday said the once-every-10-years U.S. Census, which has not been completed, must continue through the end of October and cannot end this month as the administration had sought. U.S. District Judge Lucy Koh in California ruled that a shortened schedule would likely yield inaccurate results (The Associated Press).
➔ STATE WATCH: In Kentucky, Louisville Mayor Greg Fischer pleaded for calm a day after peaceful protests in his city turned violent and a gunman shot and wounded two police officers after a decision not to prosecute Kentucky police officers for killing Breonna Taylor in March. Activists took to the streets and vowed to press on for racial justice and police reforms after a grand jury Wednesday decided not to bring homicide charges against the officers who burst into Taylor’s apartment during a drug investigation gone wrong (The Associated Press). … A state public health official in Virginia on Thursday sought to stop Trump’s planned campaign rally for 4,000 supporters in the state tonight because the gathering violates Gov. Ralph Northam’s (D) coronavirus executive order against gatherings of that size. The effort was unlikely to stop or alter the rally, which like many hosted by the Trump campaign both outdoors and indoors does not heed social distancing or mask-wearing requirements (The Associated Press).
➔ CORONAVIRUS: The number of newly confirmed cases of the coronavirus are rising once again in the U.S., building a new crescendo of disease that is likely to exceed earlier waves of infection in a pandemic. With U.S. schools back in session and the weather cooling, cases have begun to rise in recent weeks as the U.S. averages about 40,000 new cases a day over the past week, increased from 34,000 cases a day earlier this month (The Hill). … Great Britain announced a new program on Thursday to boost the financial situation of workers hurt by the COVID-19 pandemic in an effort to stop layoffs. Chancellor Rishi Sunak, Britain’s top treasury official, rolled out a plan to lawmakers on Thursday to subsidize wages for workers who have had their hours slashed by the pandemic in an attempt to prop up the economy. The new initiative would replace a furlough worker program that expires next month (The Associated Press). … SinoVac, a Chinese pharmaceutical company, said Thursday that it’s coronavirus vaccine should be ready for worldwide distribution in early 2021 for distribution, and is expected to apply to the Food and Drug Administration to sell CoronaVac if it passes the final round of testing. The news comes despite the U.S. common practice of blocking sales of Chinese vaccines due to strict regulations (The Associated Press).
➔ Outer space: NASA reported that an asteroid roughly the size of a school bus whizzed by Earth early Thursday morning, traveling from about 13,000 miles away over the Pacific Ocean. Scientists said it posed no danger because of its “tiny” size and distance from an already stressed-out planet (The Hill).
THE CLOSER
And finally … 👏👏👏 Bravo to the winners of this week’s Morning Report Quiz! Relying on savvy guesses or perhaps expert Googling, readers knew their history about the late Justice Ginsburg and her life.
Puzzle masters who aced this week’s quiz with at least four correct answers: Eric Chapman, Lori Benso, Mary Anne McEnery, Paul Blumstein, J. Patrick White, Donna Nackers, Daniel Bachhuber, Candi Cee, Patrick Kavanagh, Pam Manges, John Donato, Mike Roberts, Terry Pflaumer, Mark Neuman-Scott and Phil Kirstein.
They knew that the Supreme Court welcomed eight Jewish justices to date. Ginsburg was the first Jewish woman on the high court.
Justice Felix Frankfurter rejected Ginsburg from a clerkship in 1960 because of her gender.
Ginsburg served alongside 15 fellow justices during her 27 years on the Supreme Court.
In 2013, she became the first high court justice to officiate a same-sex wedding. Ginsburg performed the ceremony for Michael Widomski and David Hagedorn, who left a photograph of their marriage with the justice at the court on Sunday (photo below).
Write-in bonus answer:Ginsburg’s “Notorious R.B.G.” nickname was a spoof on the moniker of rapper “Notorious B.I.G” (also known as Biggie Smalls or Biggie).
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DRIVING THE DAY
BREAKING OVERNIGHT … AP: “Judge says 2020 census must continue for another month,”by Mike Schneider in Orlando, Fla.: “A federal judge has stopped the 2020 census from finishing at the end of September and ordered the once-a-decade head count of every U.S. resident to continue for another month through the end of October, saying a shortened schedule likely would produce inaccurate results.
“U.S. District Judge Lucy Koh in California made her ruling late Thursday, two days after hearing arguments from attorneys for the Census Bureau, and attorneys for civil rights groups and local governments that had sued the Census Bureau in an effort to halt the 2020 census from stopping at the end of the month. Attorneys for the civil rights groups and local governments said the shortened schedule would undercount residents in minority and hard-to-count communities.”
ALL OF A SUDDEN, IT APPEARS AS IF COVID relief has exploded back onto the scene. Please allow us to translate, before you get too worked up. This may or may not be a real thing. We trend toward the latter — it’s not a real thing — but read on …
— OUR COLLEAGUES HEATHER CAYGLE, SARAH FERRIS and JOHN BRESNAHAN scooped that Speaker NANCY PELOSI had her leadership team in her office early Thursday afternoon, and they discussed passing a $2.4 TRILLION stimulus bill sometime next week — after Wednesday.
— IF THAT BILL MAKES IT TO THE FLOOR, Covid relief is most likely dead for the time being — it will just be a messaging bill to help Democrats out.
— IF PELOSI DOESN’T PUT IT ON THE FLOOR, it probably means that she thinks she could get a deal, and vote on that instead.
— AGAIN, REPEATING HERE FOR YOU: Republicans say their upper limit is at $1.3 trillion to $1.5 trillion. DEMOCRATS are at $2.4 trillion. We laid out the contours of a possible bill a week ago — but there have been no talks. And the two sides have not moved one inch. Sources told us last night that Treasury Secretary STEVEN MNUCHIN and PELOSI had not spoken Thursday.
— WE’RE NOT ENTIRELY SURE why putting a bill on the floor at the same price tag as the offer last week would move anyone to the table.
— PRESIDENT DONALD TRUMP’S instinct is to spend money — Republicans know it, and Democrats know it. If it were up to MNUCHIN, Dems and Rs believe there would be a deal. But MARK MEADOWS is around for a reason — the chief of staff represents the angst of Senate Republicans and House Republicans, who don’t want to spend this money right now.
— THE DEM CALCULUS IS TOUGH: House Dem leadership wants to help moderates by giving them a vote, but the left — and unions — don’t want her to go too far to appease them. And, of course, Senate Minority Leader CHUCK SCHUMER and Senate Dems are battling for control of the Senate, and that affects how much they are willing to bend.
IS EITHER SIDE GOING TO CAVE? If your answer is probably no one, then you are in line with the thinking of most smart people in the Capitol.
SPEAKING OF FREE CASH — “Trump says he’s sending seniors $200 drug coupons,”by Rachel Roubein and Susannah Luthi: “President Donald Trump is promising to send $200 drug discount cards to 33 million seniors, an election year bid aimed at saying he’s lowering sky high prescription drug costs for older Americans.
“‘Nobody’s seen this before, these cards are incredible,’ Trump said Thursday during a speech on health care. ‘The cards will be mailed out in coming weeks, I will always take care of our wonderful senior citizens. Joe Biden won’t be doing this.’
“Sending coupons to that many Medicare beneficiaries would cost at least $6.6 billion. Two senior White House staff said the money can be used as part of a Medicare program, called the 402 demonstration, that tests innovations that could save money or improve the quality of care in Medicare.”
— STAT: “That regulation has also not yet been implemented — meaning the Trump administration is effectively pledging to spend $6.6 billion in savings that do not currently exist.”
Happy Friday.
DRIVING TODAY: RBG will lie in state in the Capitol. The BIDENS and Sen. KAMALA HARRIS (D-Calif.) will come to pay their respects.
FRONTS … N.Y POST:“Another day of hidin’, help us find Biden … Where’s Joe?” … NYT(two-column lead): “PRESIDENT AGAIN REJECTS PROMISE TO HONOR A VOTE”
— WAPO’S SEUNG MIN KIM: “White House starts outreach to key senators on Supreme Court pick”: “The White House has started its outreach to key senators who will play influential roles in the confirmation fight for President Trump’s yet-to-be-named nominee to the Supreme Court, a sign that the administration is preparing to move rapidly once the president reveals his pick Saturday afternoon.
“White House officials have asked several members, both Democratic and Republican, of the Senate Judiciary Committee if they would like to meet personally with the nominee starting next week, according to two officials directly familiar with the invitations.
“The administration has not disclosed the identity of the nominee in its outreach to senators, but Trump’s choice is widely believed to be Judge Amy Coney Barrett of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 7th Circuit.
“The courtesy one-on-one meetings between a Supreme Court nominee and senators are a traditional fixture of the confirmation process. Depending on the senator, the visits range from quick photo ops to lengthy, in-depth discussions about a nominee’s judicial philosophy.”
— MERIDITH MCGRAW and NANCY COOK: “Trump walks abortion tightrope on SCOTUS pick”: “In 2016, Trump vowed to appoint Supreme Court justices who would ‘automatically’ overturn Roe v. Wade. Now the White House is insisting there is no such abortion litmus test for Ruth Bader Ginsburg’s replacement.
“The change in tone reflects the tightrope Trump is currently walking on abortion with conservatives — and especially religious conservatives — ahead of the November election. Trump needs to both nod to concerns of powerful religious groups that have spent years trying to overturn Roe, the 1973 Supreme Court decision that cemented legal abortion, while not turning off the sizable faction of more moderate religious voters and Republicans who support legal abortion.”
KNOWING BARBARA LAGOA — “How Barbara Lagoa’s fight for Elian Gonzalez shaped her legal career,”by Gary Fineout in Tallahassee: “While she was not in the spotlight like some of the other attorneys who worked on the case, Lagoa spent time with Gonzalez family members and played a key role in sharpening the legal attack on President Bill Clinton’s administration, which wanted to send the young boy back to Cuba. …
“Lawyers who worked with Lagoa passionately recall how the case left Lagoa and others ‘heartbroken’ and outraged after the seizure of Gonzalez. … Attorneys and acquaintances who know Lagoa said the case shaped her judicial philosophy, which calls for adhering to the ‘black letter’ of the law, as Lagoa herself said during numerous judicial interviews.”
OBAMA and HARRIS are raising money together next week, per Bloomberg’s TYLER PAGER and JEN EPSTEIN.
DAVID SIDERS and HOLLY OTTERBEIN: “‘Everyone sees the train wreck coming’: Trump reveals his November end game: “After more than four years of non-stop voter fraud claims, insinuations that he might not accept the presidential election results and at least one float about delaying the November election, it’s no secret. Trump’s refusal to commit to a peaceful transition of power this week — and his choice not to walk back his remarks Thursday in the face of widespread unease — merely broadcast his strategic intent in terms both parties can understand.
“As a result, Republicans can no longer truthfully deny that Trump may be unwilling to leave office in the event he is defeated. And Democrats must now confront the possibility they may not have the power to stop him.”
BOSTON GLOBE’S VICKY MCGRANE in Portsmouth, N.H.:“Trump campaign says it built a turnout machine in N.H. for November. Democrats are skeptical”: “Four years after Trump’s chaotic 2016 campaign lost New Hampshire by fewer than 3,000 votes, the president’s political strategists appear to see an opportunity here. Backed by a $350 million national data operation, they contend they’ve deployed a much more sophisticated ground game that will give them the boost they need to win the state and its four electoral votes.
“The campaign has showered the state with attention in recent weeks, from President Trump’s Aug. 28 rally in Londonderry, to Eric Trump’s rally-the-troops visit to Portsmouth on Sept. 17 — which coincided with a surprise trip by Melania Trump for an event at Concord Hospital — and a campaign stop in Gilford on Tuesday by Vice President Mike Pence.”
TRUMP’S FRIDAY: THE PRESIDENT is in Miami. He will have an 11 a.m. Latinos for Trump roundtable, and then will fly from Miami to Atlanta at 12:25 p.m. At 2:40 p.m., he will speak about “Black Economic Empowerment: The Platinum Plan” at the Cobb Galleria Centre. At 4:05 p.m., he’ll leave Atlanta for D.C., and will head to the Trump Hotel for a roundtable with supporters, before heading back for Andrews at 7:55 p.m. for Newport News, Va., for a 9 p.m. rally. He’s expected back at the White House at 11:30 p.m.
TV TONIGHT — PBS’ “Washington Week” with Bob Costa: Carl Hulse, Seung Min Kim and Nina Totenberg.
SUNDAY SO FAR …
CNN
“State of the Union”: Jill Biden.
FOX
“Fox News Sunday” (live from Cleveland, ahead of the first presidential debate, hosted by Brit Hume):Sen. John Kennedy (R-La.) … Ken Starr … Laurence Tribe. Panel: Karl Rove, Katie Pavlich and Juan Williams.
CBS
“Face the Nation”: Sen. Chris Coons (D-Del.) … Jeh Johnson … Doug Parker … Scott Gottlieb.
ABC
“This Week”: Sen. Mike Lee (R-Utah). Panel: Chris Christie, Rahm Emanuel, Sara Fagen and Leah Wright Rigueur.
NBC
“Meet the Press”: Panel: Yamiche Alcindor, Peter Baker, Lanhee Chen and Claire McCaskill.
Sinclair
“America This Week with Eric Bolling”: Kayleigh McEnany … Sen. Marco Rubio (R-Fla.) … Rep. Matt Gaetz (R-Fla.) … Hank Newsome … Ilya Shapiro … Tom Fitton … Kimberly Klacik.
Gray TV
“Full Court Press with Greta Van Susteren”: Sen. Rick Scott (R-Fla.) … Sen. Chris Van Hollen (D-Md.).
FOR FEINSTEIN’S OFFICE … SAN JOSE MERCURY NEWS: “Dianne Feinstein’s husband identified as UC regent who recommended less qualified student,”by Emily Deruy: “Richard Blum, a wealthy investment banker and Sen. Dianne Feinstein’s husband, was revealed Thursday as the mystery University of California regent in a state audit earlier this week who inappropriately penned a letter that likely helped a borderline student gain admission to UC Berkeley.
“The explosive audit released Tuesday found that dozens of students were admitted to the most selective UC campuses over more qualified applicants because of exaggerated athletic abilities, connections and wealth.
“The audit did not name the individuals involved, instead using generic terms like ‘coach’ and ‘donor.’ The auditor’s office said the lack of identification was meant to protect student privacy. But in response to a specific question from the Bay Area News Group about the identity of the regent, spokeswoman Margarita Fernandez said the report refers to Richard Blum.
“In a phone interview Thursday, Blum was unapologetic, saying he did not recall the specific incident mentioned in the audit but that he has written letters on behalf of students to chancellors at various UC campuses for years.
“‘This is the first time I’ve heard that maybe I did something that wasn’t right,’ Blum said. ‘I think it’s a bunch of nonsense.’”
TRANSITION WATCH … NANCY COOK: “As the president rails against mail-in ballots and ‘Sleepy Joe Biden,’ assistant to the president Chris Liddell has spent weeks mapping out a possible handover of power to Democrat Joe Biden.” POLITICO
IF BIDEN WINS … Bloomberg’s SALEHA MOSHIN and JEN EPSTEIN on LAEL BRAINARDas a possible Treasury secretary.
SPORTS BLINK — “‘You’re welcome!!’: Trump takes credit for Pac-12 football revival,” by Juan Perez Jr.: “‘You’re welcome!!!’ the president tweeted, following a unanimous vote by university officials to allow Pac-12 football teams to begin seven-game, conference-only seasons on Nov. 6, as long as they get approval from state and local health authorities.
“Each of the nation’s five wealthiest and most powerful college football conferences are now back in action, as the president continues to seize on the issue of restarting fall sports as a campaign attack against Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden.” POLITICO
VALLEY TALK — “Inside Facebook’s year of reckoning on political ads,” by Nancy Scola: “As public complaints mounted that Facebook was refusing to police dangerously deceptive U.S. political ads, the company stuck for nearly a year to a hard line CEO Mark Zuckerberg had drawn: ‘I don’t think it’s right for a private company to censor politicians or the news in a democracy.’ …
“Those involved in the discussions over political ads say Facebook officials spent nearly a year wavering between its founder’s declarations on free expression and a desire to avoid becoming a presidential-election villain yet again. … Inside Facebook, the mood is still rattled as executives stare in the face of the chaos injected into the race by both Covid-19 and President Donald Trump’s high-pitched claims of election fraud. ‘“Holy s—,” is what we’re thinking most of the time, like everybody,’ one Facebook executive said of the current feeling about the U.S. election inside Facebook.” POLITICO
SPOTTED: House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy at Cafe Milano on Thursday night. … Rep. Jim Costa (D-Calif.) and Lyndon Boozer walking together past Bobby Van’s on New York Avenue on Thursday night.
FIRST IN PLAYBOOK — Merry Lin is joining the Asia Group as a principal. She most recently was a senior adviser on the National Economic Council, and has also worked at the NSC, Treasury and CIA across multiple administrations.
TRANSITION — Rhonda Craig is now comms director for Rep. Kweisi Mfume (D-Md.). She previously was a national urban fellow and policy analyst at the California Wellness Foundation.
WEEKEND WEDDING — Liz Crampton, agriculture reporter for POLITICO, and Andrew Bahrenburg, a legislative aide for Sen. Patrick Leahy (D-Vt.), got married Saturday on Lake Champlain in Vermont.Pic
WELCOME TO THE WORLD — Michael Irwin, senior director of technology operations and cybersecurity at POLITICO, and Michael Zurat, solutions architect at GDIT, on Wednesday welcomed Matthew James Irwin, who came in at 6 lbs, 14 oz and joins big brother William. Pic
— Hayley Matz Meadvin, a director at Precision Strategies and a Biden alum, and David Meadvin, president of Laurel Strategies, recently welcomed Lainey Reid Meadvin, who joins big brother Cooper.Pic
BIRTHDAY OF THE DAY: Jack Howard, SVP of congressional and public affairs for the Chamber of Commerce. A fun fact about him: “I was a successful ‘Phone A Friend’ on ‘Who Wants to Be a Millionaire’ back when 40 million people were watching.” Playbook Q&A
BIRTHDAYS: Rep. Mario Diaz-Balart (R-Fla.) is 59 … Rep. Doris Matsui (D-Calif.) is 76 … Rep. Gregory Meeks (D-N.Y.) is 67 … former Defense Secretary Robert Gates is 77 … Barbara Walters is 91 … NPR’s Tamara Keith … HuffPost senior justice reporter Ryan Reilly … April Greener, research director for Speaker Nancy Pelosi (h/t Shana Mansbach) … Tim Hogan … Gary Carpentier of the Small Business Administration … POLITICO’s Bob King … Bloomberg’s John Lauinger … George Hornedo (h/t Kam Mumtaz) … Sloane Carlough, NRCC deputy general counsel, is 3-0 … Shivonne Foster Jones … Jeff Roe, founder of Axiom Strategies (h/ts Samantha Dravis and Catherine Frazier) … Kiley Smith … Chrissy Harbin of the Ex-Im Bank … Madeline Fry Schultz of Philanthropy magazine … Missy Owens of Coca-Cola … Dori Rutherford … Nicco Mele, managing director at the Draper Richards Kaplan Foundation (h/t Jon Haber) … Evan Berland, director of U.S. corporate comms at GSK … Josh Tyrangiel is 48 …
… Rita Norton, SVP for government affairs at AmerisourceBergen … Lila Shapiro … Jake Suski is 37 … New York Assembly Speaker Carl Heastie is 53 … Jack Zahora … Marc Benioff, CEO of Salesforce, is 56 … Monica Wagner … Danny Yadron … Harrison Godfrey …Emily Threadgill … Brian Beutler … Ed Newberry, global managing partner at Squire Patton Boggs … John Elias … Vivyan Tran … Rachel Chaney … Michigan Lt. Gov. Garlin Gilchrist II … Lauren Loftus … Sophie Reagan … Justin Ward … Pat Hart … Steve Wozencraft … Marco De León (h/t Ben Schreckinger) … George Sallas … former Rep. Jerry Costello (D-Ill.) is 71 … Dena Kozanas … Kirsten Hartman … Nathaniel Ennis … Mallory Ward … Seth Bopp … Amalia Halikias … Carmiel Arbit … Amber Pfau … Mimi Hall … Dave Peluso … Rob Ritchie … Marissa Levin … The Messina Group’s Jack Davis … Tim Connolly … Jeannie Doherty … Philip Dufour … Shawn Burke (h/ts Teresa Vilmain) … Mickayla Stogsdill, policy specialist at Arnold & Porter … California Assemblymember Jesse Gabriel … Wisconsin state Rep. Jonathan Brostoff
“All Scripture is breathed out by God and profitable for teaching, for reproof, for correction, and for training in righteousness,” (2 Timothy 3:16, ESV).
By Brian Myers on Sep 25, 2020 12:54 am
Brian Myers: The angst we have seen over the last several days about the next Supreme Court pick shows Jefferson’s fear about the judiciary is realized. Read in browser »
By Caffeinated Thoughts on Sep 24, 2020 08:00 pm
Iowa Press hosted an Iowa 2nd Congressional District debate between former State Senator Rita Hart and State Senator Mariannette Miller-Meeks. Read in browser »
By Caffeinated Thoughts on Sep 24, 2020 06:23 pm
The FAMiLY Leader Foundation will host Vice President Mike Pence for a special event at the Community Choice Credit Union in Des Moines, Iowa on October 1, 2020. Read in browser »
By Shane Vander Hart on Sep 24, 2020 12:54 pm
On the question of whether she supports expanding the Supreme Court beyond nine justices, Theresa Greenfield went from a definite no to having no opinion. Read in browser »
By Cameron Cloud on Sep 24, 2020 07:32 am
Cameron Cloud: I am concerned that we seem to have forgotten that assembling is an essential element of the expression of our faith. 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 will participate in a Latinos for Trump roundtable in Florida Friday. Later, the president will deliver remarks on Black economic empowerment in Georgia, meet with supporters in D.C., then hold a campaign rally in Virginia. Keep up with the president on Our President’s Schedule Page. President Trump’s Itinerary for 9/25/20 – note: …
Republican Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton announced charges Thursday against four people, including a county commissioner, for allegedly carrying out a mail ballot fraud scheme in the 2018 Democratic primary. Gregg County Commissioner Shannon Brown and three others “targeted young, able-bodied voters to cast ballots by mail by fraudulently claiming the voters were ‘disabled,’ in …
Political ads are a dime a dozen and usually just straight-forward mud-slinging, but for 2020, Texas Republicans take the award for the best political ad ever… really. 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 …
The FBI recovered several military mail-in ballots that had been discarded by someone at the Luzerne County Board of Elections in Pennsylvania. According to a U.S. Attorney’s Office statement, several ballots had been discarded at the Board of Elections office. All of the ballots had been cast in favor of President Donald Trump. The investigation …
The Department of Justice announced today that more than 300 individuals in 29 states and Washington, D.C., have been charged for crimes committed adjacent to or under the guise of peaceful demonstrations since the end of May. To date, of the 94 U.S. Attorneys’ Offices (USAOs), more than 40 USAOs have filed federal charges alleging …
A mob shouted expletives at outdoor diners and sat at an elderly couple’s table in St. Petersburg, Florida Wednesday. The large group, donning signs and raised fists, chanted “stand up, fight back” in front of the restaurant, according to a video posted to Twitter by Tampa Bay Times reporter Josh Fiallo. One man sat down …
CINCINNATI—Last Wednesday, September 16, U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) officers in Cincinnati intercepted smuggled narcotics in a shipment of powdered drinks imported from Mexico. The shipment contained 15 pounds of methamphetamine, with a street value of approximately $230,400. CBP Narcotic Detector Dog Bruno was working incoming freight from Mexico when he alerted to a …
Over 120 people were arrested during riots in Louisville, Kentucky following a grand jury decision to charge one of three officers involved in the death of Breonna Taylor, who was killed during the execution of a narcotics warrant in March. A total of 127 people were apprehended between Wednesday and Thursday for damaging businesses, jumping …
President Donald Trump travels to Jacksonville, Florida, Thursday to hold a Great American Comeback rally. The president is scheduled to speak at 7 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.
White House Press Secretary Kayleigh McEnany holds a briefing Thursday to update the nation on recent developments. The briefing is scheduled to begin at 1:00 p.m. EDT. Content created by Conservative Daily News and some content syndicated through CDN is available for re-publication without charge under the Creative Commons license. Visit our syndication page for details and …
The U.S. Postal Service is investigating the discovery of several trays of mail found in a Greenville, Wisconsin drainage ditch Tuesday. The mail trays contained mail that had been collected from customers and should have been delivered to a post office. The discarded mail was found near the intersection of highway 96 (W. Wisconsin Ave) …
A large crowd gathered to pay their respects to Ruth Bader Ginsburg, whose body lay in repose in front of the doors to the Supreme Court on Wednesday. The eight other Supreme Court justices met in person for the first time in over six months to pay their respects, the Associated Press reported. Ginsburg died …
The Chinese Communist Party’s propaganda campaigns in the U.S. are “increasing in intensity,” Secretary of State Mike Pompeo warned in a speech to Wisconsin state lawmakers Wednesday. Speaking at an event in Madison, Pompeo described the Chinese Communist Party’s (CCP) multi-faceted influence effort, in which operatives directly lobby public officials, to use front groups to …
Foreign money flowing to Hunter Biden triggered alarm bells at banks as “potential criminal financial activity,” according to a Senate investigation released Wednesday. The Senate investigation cited numerous transactions that banks flagged in reports to the Treasury Department’s Financial Crimes Enforcement Network. In one of the transactions, Chinese billionaire Ye Jianming’s company sent $100,000 to …
President Donald Trump travels to Charlotte, North Carolina, Thursday where he will make a speech on his vision for the future of healthcare in America. The stop in Charlotte comes as the president heads to Jacksonville, Florida, for a campaign rally Thursday night. President Trump is scheduled to speak at 4:30 p.m. EDT. Content created …
Justice Brett Kavanaugh was appointed to the Supreme Court in October 2018 after a highly contentious confirmation process. Progressive groups, some media and activists warned that Kavanaugh was the fifth vote needed to overturn Roe v. Wade, but those warnings have not come to fruition. Now, as President Donald Trump weighs who will fill the …
I hope you are all having a happy one, my Kruiser Morning Briefing friends. Remember when Fridays used to be slow news days? Knock on wood that this will remain a quiet one.
You know, I want to feel bad for the fact that Joe Biden’s evil wife keeps letting him embarrass himself in public but then I remember that he wasn’t the greatest guy before becoming the medicated, senile shell of a human being that is currently running for president.
Harsh? Maybe.
Inaccurate? Not at all.
The charade is becoming more difficult for Team Harris-Biden to keep up these days. When Grandpa Gropes isn’t pathetically slurring his way through yet another teleprompter fail, his handlers have him on a short leash and are yanking him out of the spotlight well before lunchtime on a lot of days. But, hey, this is the guy who is supposed to become president and restore a sense of “normalcy” to America or some crap.
It’s looking more and more that the only thing that Biden can return to is bed very early every day.
Our own VodkaPundit Stephen Green wrote a post yesterday examining BIden’s inability to see the clock strike eleven on most mornings:
Presumably, Biden is so exhausted from his rigorous morning routine of plug and denture maintenance that he only has energy enough to campaign fewer than two out of every three days.
To his credit, Biden did manage to campaign for six days in a row during the first week of September. But since then, he’s ditched his own presidential campaign eight out of the last 18 days.
That’s not a good look for a man who is supposed to have energy enough to hold the most demanding office in the world.
I had a conversation with Bill Whittle on this same topic earlier this week, and Bill reminded me of his newly minted Whittle’s Law: When they let the optics look this bad, it’s because the alternative optics would look even worse.
There was a lot of talk — in conservative media anyway — back in 2016 about Hillary Clinton’s obviously frail health. Granny Maojackets was an Olympic decathlete compared to the drooling, doddering freak that is Joe Biden in 2020.
Ever-derelict in their duties, American mainstream media isn’t remarking at all about this low-T campaign that Biden is running. If Biden were a Republican, they would be in an almost sexual frenzy speculating about his decline and inability to campaign.
Mr. Green also notes in his post that Biden’s commie sidekick running mate hasn’t exactly been picking up his slack:
Deepa Shivaram is NBC’s embed with the Harris half of the campaign and she tweeted on Tuesday that “the senator has not once formally taken questions from the press.”
These are truly nightmarish times that we are living in when millions of people are going to vote for a ticket that they are too embarrassed to have be seen in public. They’re doing it simply because they’re fueled by an unnatural hatred for the president. It’s a rage that’s fueled by media lies too. Every one of my Democrat friends who I’ve spoken with recently has ticked off a laundry list of reasons that they were outraged over Trump and none of them have been factual.
Well, at least we know that Joe Biden won’t be losing any sleep over it.
FBI analysts thought agency’s handling of Michael Flynn case was a “nightmare” . . . FBI analysts who had knowledge into the investigation of former national security adviser Michael Flynn were concerned about the agency’s conduct, with some speculating that certain agents wanted Hillary Clinton to be president. According to court filings from Flynn’s lawyers, one FBI employee said the case against the former general was a ‘nightmare.’ The concerns were expressed by FBI employees in the early days of the federal investigation into Flynn’s ties with Russia sometime in August 2016. One FBI analyst speculated that the investigation showed that some agents ‘wanted a Clinton presidency’ and not a ‘wild card like Trump.’ Daily Mail
Source of Steele dossier was investigated by FBI as possible Russian spy . . . The primary “source” of the anti-Trump dossier authored by ex-British intelligence agent Christopher Steele was the subject of an FBI counterintelligence investigation from 2009 to 2011 for suspected contact with Russian intelligence officers, Fox News has learned. Attorney General Bill Barr penned a letter to Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., on Thursday responding to requests as part of the panel’s review into the origins of the Russia probe. Fox News
Coronavirus
New wave of Covid-19 cases builds . . . Confirmed COVID-19 cases are rising again in the United States, building a new crescendo of disease that is likely to exceed earlier waves of infection in a pandemic that has already killed more than 200,000 on U.S. soil. As Americans venture back to school, to the workplace and — in spite of warnings from public health officials — to bars and restaurants, cases have begun to rise in the last two weeks. The United States has averaged about 40,000 new cases a day over the past week, up from a recent low of about 34,000 cases a day earlier this month. The Hill
Virus becoming more contagious . . . Scientists in Houston on Wednesday released a study of more than 5,000 genetic sequences of the coronavirus that reveals the virus’s continual accumulation of mutations, one of which may have made it more contagious. The new report, however, did not find that these mutations have made the virus deadlier or changed clinical outcomes. All viruses accumulate genetic mutations, and most are insignificant, scientists say. Washington Post
Politics
Stimulus talks resume . . . Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin said Thursday that he and Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) have agreed to revive negotiations over a stalled follow-up coronavirus relief bill. “I’ve probably spoken to Speaker Pelosi 15 or 20 times in the last few days on the CR,” Mnuchin told the Senate Banking Committee during a hearing with Federal Reserve Board Chair Jerome Powell, referring to a continuing resolution to extend government funding, “and we’ve agreed to continue to have discussions about the CARES Act.” The Hill
WH says Trump to accept “free and fair election,” but president unsure it can be honest . . . President Donald Trump said Thursday he isn’t sure the election could be ‘honest’ – just minutes after his press secretary asserted that he would accept the results of the election so long as it was ‘free and fair.’ Trump’s comments once again raised unproven charges about mail-in ballots. ‘We want to make sure the election is honest but I’m not sure that it can be,’ Trump said, once again raising doubts about an election he has warned will be ‘rigged.’ It came after White House press secretary Kayleigh McEnany provided a conditional statement to the press – saying Trump ‘will accept the results of a free and fair election.’ Daily Mail
Pelosi refuses to rule out religious test for Supreme Court nominees . . . Here is the question Nancy Pelosi dodged: “Do you agree that Article VI, which bans religious tests from being a qualification for office, do you think that that should apply to Supreme Court nominees as well”? The significance, of course, is that President Trump is likely to nominate Catholic conservative Amy Coney Barrett to the Supreme Court. And Democrats are going to apply a religious test, at least partially because the Catholic Church opposes abortion. So Pelosi is unwilling to agree with the Constitution. But that’s nothing new when it comes to liberal jurisprudence. White House Dossier
A day in the campaign: Trump vs. Biden . . . President Trump has what’s known Thursday as a full working day. First he motorcades down to the Supreme Court to pay his respects to Ruth Bader Ginsburg. Then he will get in his chopper on the South Lawn, take it to Joint Base Andrews, and travel to Charlotte, North Carolina to outline his new health care plan. Then, he’ll leave Charlotte and move on to Jacksonville, Florida, where he will hold a campaign rally likely lasting well over an hour. He will finally head to the Miami area, where he will stay overnight. Meantime, in Delaware, the Biden campaign informed reporters at about 9:30 am ET that they were free to go, because Joe Biden will not be doing anything at all. This is completely typical. Happens almost every day. White House Dossier
Trump offers healthcare plan protection those with preexisting conditions . . . President Donald Trump on Thursday evening signed a series of executive orders which he said constituted part of a long-promised health care plan. Speaking before a crowd in Charlotte, N.C., Trump said that his plan would would offer “better care, with more choice, at a much lower cost, and working to ensure that Americans have access to the care they need.” He detailed a set of concrete policy goals: affordable insurance, cutting prescription drug costs, ending surprise billing, increasing price transparency, and protecting patients with preexisting conditions. Washington Free Beacon
White House suggests CNN anchor Keilar caused shooting of Louisville cops . . . White House Press Secretary Kayleigh McEnany blasted CNN anchor Brianna Keilar Thursday over comments she made in response to the grand jury decision in the Breonna Taylor case, suggesting Keilar’s rhetoric led to Wednesday night’s shooting of two Louisville police officers. On Wednesday, Keilar slammed Kentucky Attorney General Daniel Cameron’s remarks condemning “mob justice.” “I question the judgment of the Kentucky attorney general saying quote ‘Mob justice is not justice.’ He said that it becomes revenge,” the “CNN Right Now” anchor began. “That word, ‘the mob’ and the president having said that ‘if Joe Biden wins, the mob wins.’ That’s what he says, We know this is very politically loaded language.” Fox News
Dianne Feinstein husband helped unqualified student get into Berkeley . . . Richard Blum, a wealthy investment banker and Sen. Dianne Feinstein’s husband, was revealed Thursday as the mystery University of California regent in a state audit earlier this week who inappropriately penned a letter that likely helped a borderline student gain admission to UC Berkeley. The explosive audit released Tuesday found that dozens of students were admitted to the most selective UC campuses over more qualified applicants because of exaggerated athletic abilities, connections and wealth. San Jose Mercury News
Dems prepare bill limiting Supreme Court terms to 18 years . . . Democrats in of the House of Representatives will introduce a bill next week to limit the tenure of U.S. Supreme Court justices to 18 years from current lifetime appointments, in a bid to reduce partisan warring over vacancies and preserve the court’s legitimacy.
The new bill would allow every president to nominate two justices per four-year term. “It would save the country a lot of agony and help lower the temperature over fights for the court that go to the fault lines of cultural issues and is one of the primary things tearing at our social fabric,” said California U.S. Representative Ro Khanna. Reuters
HHS spokesman Michael Caputo has metastatic head and neck cancer . . . Michael R. Caputo, the East Aurora political consultant at the center of controversy over the Trump administration’s Covid-19 messaging, has been diagnosed with cancer. Assemblyman David J. DiPietro, R-East Aurora, acting as Caputo’s spokesman, said Thursday that the Health and Human Services spokesman on leave from his assistant secretary post has “squamous cell carcinoma, a metastatic head and neck cancer which originated in his throat.”
Hollywood terrified of offending China . . . Did you watch the Marvel comics superhero film Dr Strange and wonder why British actress Tilda Swinton stood in for a Tibetan mystic? Or sit through 2012 action film Red Dawn, in which the U.S. is occupied by Communist forces, and were puzzled as to why the hordes of invaders are, er, North Korean? Yet in both cases, Hollywood was terrified of offending China, as it was when it interfered with a range of films including Bond movie Skyfall, Mission: Impossible III, Top Gun: Maverick and Iron Man 3. The reason is simple: money. China is now the second most lucrative film market in the world and is soon expected to overtake the U.S. Daily Mail
International
China erases mosques and previous shrines in Xinjiang . . . Chinese authorities have in recent years closed and demolished many of the major shrines, mosques and other holy sites across Xinjiang that have long preserved the culture and Islamic beliefs of the region’s Muslims. The effort to close off and erase these sites is part of China’s broader campaign to turn the region’s Uighurs, Kazakhs and members of other Central Asian ethnic groups into loyal followers of the Communist Party. The assimilation drive has led to the detention of hundreds of thousands in indoctrination centers. New York Times
Money
Pandemic jobs recovery loses momentum . . . The pandemic jobs recovery has lost momentum in recent weeks, putting added pressure on Congress to enact more relief. The number of new applications for unemployment benefits ticked up to 870,000 last week, the Labor Department reported. New claims have not budged significantly in recent weeks, meaning that the labor market is still shedding jobs at rates unthinkable prior to the pandemic.
And half of adults who say they were laid off because of the coronavirus pandemic remain unemployed. Washington Examiner
JP Morgan, Goldman drop US growth forecasts . . . JPMorgan Chase & Co. joined Goldman Sachs Group Inc. economists in dropping forecasts for U.S. economic growth in coming months thanks to the failure of Republicans and Democrats to seal a fiscal-stimulus deal. “We are further lowering odds of getting the $1-1.5 trillion in additional stimulus that had seemed quite likely as recently as July,” Michael Feroli, JPMorgan’s chief U.S. economist, wrote in a note Thursday. Bloomberg
You should also know
Nationwide Breonna Taylor protests continue . . . Protesters fought running battles with police on bicycles and blocked off intersections by setting dumpsters ablaze in Seattle last night as nationwide protests continued for a second night. Demonstrators have gathered across the country to express their anger after it was announced that the officers who shot black woman Breonna Taylor in her Louisville, Kentucky apartment during a drug raid last March wouldn’t be charged with her death. In New York City, several hundred protesters marched through the Big Apple while chanting Taylor’s name, and in St Louis, crowds gathered to occupy several lanes of a freeway. Daily Mail
Support for race-related protests declines . . . A new poll shows support for protests like those engulfing Louisville following a grand jury decision in the Breonna Taylor case has fallen from a peak reached soon after the death of George Floyd in Minneapolis police custody in May. The survey by the Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research finds that 44% of Americans disapprove of protests in response to police violence against Black Americans, while 39% approve. In June, 54% approved of the protests. Fox News
Guilty Pleasures
Chris Christie threatened to sit on Mike Bloomberg . . . New Jersey governor Chris Christie once threatened to sit on Mike Bloomberg — during a bizarre, jealous rant involving the Queen of England. The asinine threat is alleged in former governor David Paterson’s dishy new memoir, “Black, Blind & in Charge.” It was July 8, 2010. Paterson was leading New York and Christie was the Garden State’s top exec as they awaited the arrival of Queen Elizabeth at Ground Zero, where the royal was to lay a wreath. Then-New York City Mayor Bloomberg had yet to arrive, and Christie was seething about the city honcho, Paterson recounts. “I was told by the protocol people that nobody escorts the Queen but Prince Philip,” the rotund Jersey chief executive sniped to Paterson. “But I bet you that Bloomberg is going to try to stand in front of us both and escort her.” Christie was definitely not OK with it. “Well I’m not putting up with it this time,” Paterson remembers Christie snapping. “If he tries it today, I want you to trip him and I’m gonna sit on him,” Christie plotted. New York Post
Definitely assault with a deadly weapon.
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THE DISPATCH
The Morning Dispatch: Lukashenko Pushes on Despite International Backlash
Plus, the Justice Department announces inquiry into discarded ballots in Pennsylvania.
Happy Friday! As if we needed another reminder of these fraught times, the United States Senate yesterday approved by unanimous consent a resolution reaffirming “its commitment to the orderly and peaceful transfer of power called for in the Constitution of the United States.” Mildly reassuring!
Quick Hits: Today’s Top Stories
The United States confirmed 32,392 new cases of COVID-19 yesterday per the Johns Hopkins University COVID-19 Dashboard, with 3.2 percent of the 1,021,284 tests reported coming back positive. An additional 781 deaths were attributed to the virus on Thursday, bringing the pandemic’s American death toll to 202,738.
President Trump’s refusal to commit to a peaceful transfer of power were he to lose the election was met with criticism from Republican officials on Thursday. “The winner of the November 3rd election will be inaugurated on January 20th. There will be an orderly transition just as there has been every four years since 1792,” Sen. Mitch McConnell tweeted. Rep. Liz Cheney, the third-ranking Republican in the House of Representatives, promised: “The peaceful transfer of power is enshrined in our Constitution and fundamental to the survival of our Republic. America’s leaders swear an oath to the Constitution. We will uphold that oath.”
U.S. Attorney John Durham—ordered last year by Attorney General Bill Barr to look into the origins of the FBI’s Trump-Russia probe—found that one of the main sources for the infamous Steele dossier was the subject of an FBI counterintelligence investigation in 2009, according to details released to Congress.
Joshua Wong, one of the most prominent leaders of the Hong Kong pro-democracy movement, was arrested by Hong Kong police for attending an unlawful assembly in October 2019.
Gov. Andrew Cuomo announced Thursday that New York would form a committee to review the safety of coronavirus vaccines approved by the federal government and plan for the logistics of vaccinating New York’s population. On Wednesday, President Trump told reporters he might reject the Food and Drug Administration’s new, tougher vaccine approval process because it “sounds like a political move.”
President Trump promised to send prescription discount cards to 33 million senior citizens in the weeks before the November 3 election, though the source for the nearly $7 billion in new spending is unclear. The White House proposal to send the cards, which would theoretically cover $200 in prescription copays, comes one week after negotiators for the pharmaceutical industry rejected a request from the administration to provide similar $100 so-called “Trump Cards,” citing proximity to the election.
The Pac-12 reversed its original postponement of the football season, announcing Thursday teams will play a seven-game season starting November 6.
Lukashenko’s Autocracy Continues to Alienate International Community
In a ceremony secretly planned and carried out at Independence Palace in Minsk on Wednesday, Alexander Lukashenko was sworn in for a sixth term as president of Belarus, slightly more than a month after he “won” an election many outside observers (and Belarusian citizens) viewed as illegitimate. The backlash to his power grab—from protesters in the streets of Minsk, opposition political leaders, and the international community—was immediate. “Lukashenko’s attempt to preserve his legitimacy only points to the fact that his previous authority has ended, but Belarusian citizens did not give him a new mandate,” said opposition candidate Svetlana Tikhanovskaya from exile in Lithuania.
Despite the state’s violent crackdown on protesters, mass demonstrations have rocked the streets of Belarus since Lukashenko declared victory with an implausible 80 percent of the vote early last month. In a statement on Wednesday, the opposition Coordination Council—formed by Tikhanovskaya immediately after Lukeshenko’s re-election—urged Belarusians to continue political resistance to the regime. “We support the infinite peaceful civil disobedience, ignoring any and all instructions from the illegal authorities, peaceful actions in the streets of cities and towns,” it reads.
More than 400 protesters were detained in Minsk on Saturday, according to the Interior Ministry. On Wednesday, Belarus police arrested and tear gassed more than 150 protesters. When asked if Lukashenko’s renewed campaign of violence against demonstrators would demoralize the opposition’s cause, Matthew Rojansky, an expert on Eastern Europe at the Woodrow Wilson Center, predicted just the opposite.
DoJ Investigating Nine Ballots Being Discarded in Pennsylvania
In the closing days of the 2016 campaign, then-candidate Donald Trump griped to anyone who would listen that the election was rigged against him, and that Hillary Clinton and the Democrats were going to steal it from him. “Millions of people … are registered to vote that shouldn’t be registered to vote,” he told Fox News’ Chris Wallace in the third presidential debate, adding that he will “look at” whether to accept the election results “at the time.”
“I’ll keep you in suspense, okay?”
The words should ring a bell to anyone who’s been following the news this week, as Trump is following a similar playbook: refusing to commit to the peaceful transfer of power if he loses, making unfounded claims about massive voter fraud, declaring the election “rigged” months in advance.
The only difference? He now has the power of the presidency at his disposal.
On Thursday afternoon, the Department of Justice issued a press release saying the Office of the United States Attorney and FBI had begun “an inquiry into reports of potential issues with a small number of mail-in ballots at the Luzerne County Board of Elections.” Investigators, the press release went on to say, recovered nine military ballots that had been discarded. “All nine ballots were cast for presidential candidate Donald Trump.”
The investigation itself is, of course, perfectly reasonable. The functioning of our democracy relies on every legitimate vote being counted, and any irregularities like the one outlined above should be scrutinized.
In David’s latest French Press, he argues that the grand jury’s decision in the Breonna Taylor case—where one of three officers involved was indicted for wanton endangerment but no one was charged for Taylor’s death—“was both lawful and deeply unjust.”
Referencing a previous newsletter, David made the case that, although the police officers involved in this specific case likely followed the law as written, the law as written “place[s] police and lawfully armed citizens on a violent collision course.”
“In a series of opinions reaching back more than two decades, the Supreme Court has permitted the use of no-knock police raids not just to preserve life, but also to preserve evidence. It has also granted officers specific legal privileges even when they’ve violated citizens’ constitutional rights, including, a) exemptions from the exclusionary rule (which blocks the use of unlawfully obtained evidence in criminal trials) for raids that violate knock-and-announce requirements and, b) exemptions from attempts to impose heightened obligations for the use of force when officers are violating the Fourth Amendment by unlawfully intruding in a citizen’s own home.
Police departments across the country have taken advantage of this wide latitude. They’ve sought no-knock warrants liberally. They’ve blurred the line between no-knock and knock-and-announce with ‘quick knock’ practices. And they’ve engaged in surprise, late-night violent entries into private dwellings for the sole purpose of preserving evidence.”
Meanwhile, David notes, the District of Columbia v. Heller Supreme Court decision guaranteed citizens a constitutional right to defend themselves at home with a handgun. Other states have enacted stand-your-ground-laws or laws recognizing the “castle doctrine.” These doctrines “in general hold that a person does not have a duty to retreat when he is lawfully present in a place and he reasonably believes he faces an imminent threat of death or serious bodily harm,” David writes.
The result? If cops are raiding a home in the middle of the night executing a no-knock or ‘quick knock’ warrant, but the armed homeowner is unaware they are police, he or she has the right to open fire. And once police are fired upon, they can also shoot back. “A gun battle can commence with both parties acting completely lawfully,” David writes.
And that appears to be what tragically occurred in the case of Breonna Taylor. David walks through the details in the full French Press, but here’s his conclusion:
In the contest between the rights of a woman to sleep peacefully in her own home and for her boyfriend to defend it against violent entry and the right of the state to make a violent entry, the law should prefer the homeowner. No, that doesn’t mean removing from police the ability to defend themselves. It means dramatically restricting their ability to make a violent entry in the first instance. It means revitalizing the Fourth Amendment, and reviving its importance in our constitutional republic. ‘The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated, and no Warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by Oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized.’
Yesterday, the grand jury correctly applied the law to the facts, and its decision not to charge the officers who fired the fatal shots was almost certainly correct. But Breonna Taylor’s death was still deeply unjust, and the injustices will continue until the law is reformed.
The Verge has acquired dozens of leaked audio tapes, messages, and screenshots from internal company-wide meetings at Facebook as the social media company navigates controversies over Trump, protests, and the pandemic. The leaked recordings make clear a central tension at the company: The divide between the progressive rank-and-file and Facebook’s leadership, who are committed to keeping Facebook as a neutral arbiter. “If we want to actually do a good job of serving people, [we have to take] into account that there are different views on different things,” CEO Mark Zuckerberg says in one recording, “and that if someone disagrees with a view, that doesn’t necessarily mean that they’re hateful or have bad intent.” Unsurprisingly, that claim didn’t sit well with many Facebook employees.
Will President Trump face any significant political cost for his decision to advance a Supreme Court nominee before November 3? According to New York Times elections reporter Nate Cohn, there hasn’t been any seismic shift in presidential election polling since Justice Ginsburg’s passing one week ago. “The most recent New York Times/Siena College polls of Texas, Iowa and Georgia found no serious evidence that the Supreme Court vacancy has affected the race for the White House,” Cohn writes. “Nor did the polls find much reason to think this would shift the race in the weeks ahead.”
“One of the more peculiar political dynamics during the last four years has been this president’s dogged determination to play into the hands of his opponents and to make his critics’ fears worse,” National Review’s senior editorial staff write in an editorial responding to Trump’s comments about the peaceful transfer of power. The media and several top Republican officials have rightfully condemned the authoritarian tenor of the president’s words, and it’s important to note they bear absolutely zero constitutional authority. “There is, in fact, no chance that this president — or any president — will successfully remain in the White House having lost an election,” the editors write. “Nevertheless, all systems rely upon buy-in, and every demurral helps to chip away a little at the rock on which the country has been built.”
David and Sarah are joined by Federal Elections Commission Chairman Trey Trainor on the latest episode of Advisory Opinions, for a discussion of the ins and outs of federal election law. They also dive deep on the questions of legality surrounding police raids after the grand jury announcement in the Breonna Taylor case. Plus, SCOTUS.
In Thursday’s Midweek Mop-Up (🔒), Sarah spoke with New York Times campaign reporter Reid Epstein about what it’s like covering Democrats in 2020. Epstein tells Sarah about his numerous experiences being ghosted by high profile politicians, the love-hate (well, mostly hate) relationship between campaign operatives and campaign reporters, and the time he rode a Ferris wheel with Cory Booker and Amy Klobuchar.
On the site today, Audrey looks at what happens to voter confidence when both sides accuse the other of trying to sabotage the election. “An RNC survey from May found that 62 percent of voters believe there is widespread fraud in U.S. elections, and another poll from the Democracy Fund and the UCLA Nationscape Project found that 46 percent of Americans say that they are “not too confident” or “not at all confident” that the November election will be conducted fairly and accurately.”
“This week, America’s West Coast found itself on fire. Millions of acres have burned across California, Oregon and Washington. The smoke clouds have been so immense that…”
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Anti-Catholic Bias Against Amy Coney Barrett
Memory of Brett Kavanaugh’s confirmation in 2018 make it clear to all that the upcoming hearings and vote will be brutal, likely filled with vicious character attacks. Frontrunner Amy Coney Barrett is already facing her share of brutal attacks against her Catholic faith. On Thursday, Politico published a hit piece openly declaring that her religious beliefs ought to be a pertinent factor in her hearings, in which the writer, Villanova professor Massimo Faggioli, intimates that her involvement in Catholic group People of Praise is akin to cult membership.
Aside from supporting the ludicrous supposition that using a nominee’s personal religious convictions as disqualifying is not in violation of the Constitution’s ban on religious tests, the article held some glaringly false information. Adrianna San Marco noted two such lies for The Federalist. She wrote,
“There are two major inaccuracies the religion professor’s op-ed, both of which Politico has yet to correct. First, Faggioli argues that any “vow of obedience” taken by Barrett must be called into question…
This sentence implies that Opus Dei members, followers of the Catholic Church, take vows, when in fact, they do not.…
The second falsehood perpetuated by Faggioli is the notion that members of the People of Praise, a charismatic Christian community, take part in secretive vows and hierarchies…
Had Faggioli bothered to research the covenant before writing he would have found the very clear answer to his accusations”
Due to a lack of substantive arguments against Barrett, the left has decided to play on the fear of cults to slander an innocuous group. Faggioli even evoked Opus Dei, the shadowy Catholic sect featured terrifyingly in The da Vinci Code,which is about as serious and accurate as op-eds like this, which is to say not at all.
Peggy Noonan highlighted the politically moderate nature of People of Praise for the Wall Street Journal; she likewise referenced the very liberal Pope Francis’s promoting a member of the group to the role of auxiliary bishop. Hardly the act of a dark, shadowy conservative Catholic cult.
Senate Enacting Religious Tests… Again
This op-ed and similar comments are not the first time Barrett’s faith has been used against her in a hearing determining her fitness as a judge. During her confirmation for the Seventh Circuit, Sen. Diane Feinstein used both Barrett’s involvement in People of Praise and the devoutness of her faith as indications that she ought not be a Federal Judge, stating, “the dogma lives loudly within you and that’s of concern.”
These comments are redolent of questions Judge Brian Buescher faced during his Senate hearings, when Sens Mazie Hirono and Kamala Harris questioned how his involvement in the Knights of Columbus, a fraternal Catholic service organization, could harm his ability to be a judge. SeveralCatholic bishops expressed fear of a rise in anti-Catholic bigotry in politics under a Biden/Harris presidency, regardless of Biden’s Catholicism. The current slew of attacks against Barrett demonstrate that their fears about the left are wholly warranted.
SOCTUS Nominee Announced Tomorrow
President Trump has announced that he will name his nominee for the Supreme Court tomorrow at 5 pm, before his rally in Middleton, Pennsylvania. Earlier this week, claimed to have narrowed the field down to five choices and vowed to select a woman.
Mollie Hemingway broke down the pros and cons of the two likely choices, Judges Amy Coney Barrett and Barbara Lagoa, and dark horse pick Sen. Mike Lee, all included on Trump’s published list of potential nominees.
What to Read – Brideshead Revisited
Catholicism is under a microscope in the public and political landscape at present. What better time is there to read one of the best novels about being Catholic? Evelyn Waugh’s Brideshead Revisited is my favorite novel, and it feels especially relevant this week.
It follows Charles Ryder and his developing relationship with the aristocratic Flyte family. Beginning with a deep and intimate friendship with the younger son Sebastian while the pair are at Oxford and ending with a doomed affair with the older daughter Julia years later, Charles grows deeply entrenched with the family, witnessing the disparate effects of the matriarch’s devout Catholicism on her husband and four children.
Following Charles through his parallel loves of Sebastian and Julia, leading ultimately to his inevitable conversion, is a marvel of storytelling and character work. The characters are richly drawn, dropping his typical satire for a deeply emotional character study with profound resonance on the human condition supplemented with stunning prose.
Paulina Enck is an intern at the Federalist and current student at Georgetown University in the School of Foreign Service. Follow her on Twitter at @itspaulinaenck
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Sep 25, 2020 01:00 am
Today in history, on September 25, 1396, a major military encounter with Islam that demonstrated just how disunited Christendom had become took place. Read More…
Sep 25, 2020 01:00 am
Was Stalin the dictator a continuation of Lenin and his policies or a perversion of them? Professor Ronald Grigor Suny helps provide an answer. Read More…
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Police say that two brothers were killed in a gunfight after they forced their way into a home in a suburb of Chicago, Illinois. The brothers allegedly walked up to the home in Waukegan at about 10 a.m. on Tuesday armed with one revolver and forced their way in when a woman who was renting the home answered the door. She was babysitting a t … Read more
The left’s finger-wagging is especially rich coming from the camp that spent years casting skepticism on the results of the 2016 election, and who continue claiming Trump is planning to rig the results this time too.
You can’t make this stuff up. Now loving your country despite her many sins, and not wanting taxpayer dollars to teach kids to hate their country, is ‘what dictators do.’
After nearly a year, questions remain unanswered about whether the Chinese coronavirus was natural or man-made and whether its release into the world was accidental or malicious.
Democrats’ entire rebuttal to Republican objections to impeachment was predicated on Hunter Biden’s innocence, but this week’s explosive Senate report shows Democrats were the ones initiating a cover-up.
Will we learn from the awful effects of China’s ‘one-child’ policy before the next foolhardy government population control policy causes further suffering?
Christos A. Makridis, Jonathan Jakubowski, and Peter Range
Critics of President Trump have made several arguments against the importance of the presidential election for pro-life policy. Let’s investigate these one by one.
‘Who is funding all of this? That is a central question. Too few have tried to answer it,’ Carlson said, as clips of people unloading a truck of riot supplies played.
The Transom is a daily email newsletter written by publisher of The Federalist Ben Domenech for political and media insiders, which arrives in your inbox each morning, collecting news, notes, and thoughts from around the web.
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On the latest episode of Two Mikes, Dr. Michael Scheuer and Colonel Mike discussed the death of Ruth Bader Ginsburg. The Supreme Court Justice was known for her strict embrace of both feminism and abortion without restrictions.
If you want to hear nice things about Ruth Bader Ginsburg, this isn’t the episode for you. It’s challenging to mourn someone who was responsible for the deaths of millions of pre-born babies.
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.
Mainstream media is garbage. Let’s get that out of the way from the start. They call domestic terrorists “peaceful protesters” while skipping over the tarnished pasts of the Black Lives Matter idols whose deaths caused all the turmoil. If they’re not covering for Antifa or pretending like people like George Floyd and Jacob Blake are saints, they’re incessantly attacking President Trump and Republicans.
Don’t get me wrong. By no means am I suggesting that Floyd or Breonna Taylor deserved to die based on their associations with criminal activities. Their deaths were tragic and avoidable. But people are murdered every day who do not get anywhere near the degree of coverage that the BLM heroes get. At times, it’s even worse than just not giving as much coverage as it should. In the case of Rowan Sweeney, his murder is getting ZERO coverage for one inconvenient reason. His death does not match the prescribed narrative that mainstream media is allowed to discuss.
Rowan Sweeney was a four-year-old Caucasian boy who died in his mother’s arms after being shot by a Black man. The suspect, 24-year-old Kimonie Bryant pictured above, turned himself in after killing Sweeney and injuring four adults. According to PJ Media:
The father of the deceased 4-year-old child spoke at a press conference prior to the suspect turning himself in.
“Rowan was the sweetest boy,” he said. “’Rowan was the best. He is so young. He didn’t deserve any of this… buddy, I’m so sorry for you, buddy. I love you.”
“Just be a man,” David Sweeney said as he held a photo of his son. “You took my son from me. He was my baby boy. You took him because you’re sick.”
“You took my son from me…you can live with that for the rest of your life,” he said before the name of the suspect was announced.
Authorities believe Bryant gained entry to the home via the front door and started shooting in the living room prior to fleeing on foot, Fox News reported.
One of the male victims was hit with two shots in the back of the head while another was struck two times in the back.
As our EIC noted, mainstream media refuses to say Rowan Sweeney’s name.
Rowan Sweeney is not being covered by anyone in mainstream media.
There will be no rioting over his tragic death.
Unlike those who #BLM riots for, Rowan Sweeney was innocent.
Rowan Sweeney was tragically taken from this world, but mainstream media refuses to say his name. He was a 4-year-old Caucasian boy murdered by a Black man. That makes his story verboten to the propaganda pushers of 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.
To date, Dr. Anthony Fauci has not been asked a question that should seem obvious to the average American. Considering many of the COVID-19 precautions and protocols in place across the country have come as a direct result of his rhetoric, it should be known whether or not he has financial interests in anything that he recommends. Considering he made most of his money in the medical patent markets, he’s one who knows how to turn a profit off of perceived need and fear.
But nobody has asked him publicly or on the record. Or, to be more precise, nobody has published or released his answer to such a question if ever it was asked. There is a very tight bubble around him whenever he takes questions from the media. Does part of that bubble mean not asking if he gains anything from his medical recommendations? Newsmax White House Correspondent Emerald Robinson pondered this on Twitter in regards to Dr. Fauci’s push for COVID-19 vaccines.
Not a single American journalist has asked Dr. Fauci if he has a financial interest in any of these vaccines that he keeps pushing.
The White House is pushing to have a vaccine breakthrough before the election. Meanwhile, many prominent Democrats, including both members of the Harris-Biden ticket, have stated they do not trust President Trump on he vaccine. It’s as if they believe the President has his chemistry set out in the Oval Office working on the vaccine itself. It’s ludicrous. Still, millions of Americans will refuse the vaccine which is one of the reasons Dr. Fauci is pushing it so hard. He’s practically taking pre-sale orders.
Will Dr. Fauci make money off of a COVID-19 vaccine? One would think that knowing this would be important and that it would behoove mainstream media to ask. Instead, we have crickets. Dumb, complicit crickets.
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.
Texas is turning purple. At least that’s the rumor from many in the Lone Star State who see Republican congressional retirements as opportunities and a party trying to pull itself out of disarray at the state level. But freshman Congressman Dan Crenshaw has other ideas. He wants to keep Texas red while working towards contributing to the Nancy Pelosi retirement fund by helping the GOP regain control of the House of Representatives.
It won’t be easy. Democrats are putting a lot of money and effort towards winning big in Texas. That task includes keeping some of the seats they picked up in 2018 and taking seats that are currently filled by Republicans who are not running for reelection. To fight this, Crenshaw has combined forces with five GOP candidates, all of whom have strong chances of either defending a seat being vacated by a Republican or taking back a seat recently won by a Democrat. Meanwhile, he hopes to earn his own first reelection bid.
The group released a campaign video today that plays on the military experience of four of the six candidates in the group. It’s done in a “Mission: Impossible” style as Crenshaw skydives out of a plane to recruit his campaign partners. The group, whose website is Texas: Reloaded, is made up of Wesley Hunt, Genevieve Collins, Beth Van Duyne, Tony Gonzales, and August Pfluger.
As Texas goes, so does much of the country. It’s imperative that the Texas GOP under the leadership of Allen West and these six stellar candidates come out on top in November.
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.
House Judiciary Committee Chair Jerry Nadler is 73-years-old. While there are many politicians of the same age who are able to function properly for their duties, he’s not one of them. His health has been questioned by friends and foes and he has been caught on multiple occasions dozing off in the middle of congressional hearings.
Conservative entertainer and commentator Joy Villa is testifying today before Congress about racial diversity. While there, she noticed the Congressman was falling asleep. Again. So she snapped a picture and shared it on social media.
It’s long past time for the 13-term Congressman to retire. Americans like Joy Villa deserve to testify before a congressional committee that has a chair who can stay awake long enough to hear her.
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.
Yesterday I wrote about the increasing tide of emotionalism surrounding Leftists in the political arena, and what better way to follow that up with than another installment of White Fragility Rebuttal, where I go through Robin DiAngelo’s crowning achievement. Chapter 11 is pack full of the emotionalism as we near the end of her work.
In Chapter 11, Robin DiAngelo describes how white women crying is an act of racism. Yes, really. It all goes back to the idea of Assassins Creed Racism that I explained in chapter 5. Basically, white women crying reminds black people of when white women accused black men of raping them. This Assassins Creed Racism bleeds today and thus an act of racism by white women.
While Robin DiAngelo is not wrong to suggest that tears can have selfish motivations behind them, she ultimately wants you not to cry but to act. She is trying to motivate action from a sense of guilt. This is manipulative and manipulative in a very similar matter to how churches can wrongfully invoke guilt to achieve an desired action. With White Fragility, it is not the logic that made this book popular. Robin DiAngeo either validates one’s conceived sense of self-superiority, or intentionally tries to manipulate them with sleazy sales tactics.
COVID-19 may take down an independent news outlet
Nobody said running a media site would be easy. We could use some help keeping this site afloat.
Colleagues have called me the worst fundraiser ever. My skills are squarely rooted on the journalistic side of running a news outlet. Paying the bills has never been my forte, but we’ve survived. We have ads on the site that help, but since the site’s inception this has been a labor of love that otherwise doesn’t bring in the level of revenue necessary to justify it.
When I left a nice, corporate career in 2017, I did so knowing I wouldn’t make nearly as much money. But what we do at NOQ Report to deliver the truth and fight the progressive mainstream media narrative that has plagued this nation is too important for me to sacrifice it for the sake of wealth. We know we’ll never make a ton of money this way, and we’re okay with that.
Things have become harder with the coronavirus lockdowns. Both ad money and donations that have kept us afloat for a while have dropped dramatically. We thought we could weather the storm, but the so-called “surge” or “2nd-wave” that mainstream media and Democrats are pushing has put our prospects in jeopardy. In short, we are now in desperate need of financial assistance.
The best way NOQ Report readers can help is to donate. Our Giving Fuel page makes it easy to donate one-time or monthly. Alternatively, you can donate through PayPal as well. We need approximately $11,500 to stay afloat for the rest of 2020, but more would be wonderful and any amount that brings us closer to our goal is greatly appreciated.
The second way to help is to become a partner. We’ve strongly considered seeking angel investors in the past but because we were paying the bills, it didn’t seem necessary. Now, we’re struggling to pay the bills. This shouldn’t be the case as our traffic the last year has been going up dramatically. June, 2018, we had 11,678 visitors. A year later in June, 2019, we were up to 116,194. In June, 2020, we had 614,192. We’re heading in the right direction and we believe we’re ready talk to patriotic investors who want to not only “get in on the action” but more importantly who want to help America hear the truth. Interested investors should contact me directly with the contact button above.
Election year or not, coronavirus lockdowns or not, anarchic riots or not, the need for truthful journalism endures. But in these times, we need as many conservative media voices as possible. Please help keep NOQ Report going.
Join fellow patriots as we form a grassroots movement to advance the cause of conservatism. The coronavirus crisis has prompted many, even some conservatives, to promote authoritarianism. It’s understandable to some extent now, but it must not be allowed to embed itself in American life. We currently have 8000+ patriots with us in a very short time. If you are interested, please join us to receive updates.
President Trump is going to be blamed, just as he’s blamed for pretty much anything bad by Democrats and mainstream media. That’s a common theme that has been pervasive throughout the last four years, and in the vast majority of cases this theme is false. It’s not that the White House does everything perfectly, but they generally do what’s best for America. Democrats, on the other hand, do not, and mainstream media is complicit in promoting the propaganda that they’re innocent while Republicans are the ultimate form of evil in America.
The sad and avoidable death of Breonna Taylor at the hands of law enforcement should be a catalyst for police reforms, especially as they pertain to no-knock warrants. There is conflicting information about whether they had a no-knock warrant, but it’s clear that they knocked and identified themselves before forcing their way into the house. As I noted yesterday, either execute the no-knock warrant or knock and wait. The fact that they did what appears to be a combination of the two likely contributed to Taylor’s demise, but that’s a discussion for another time.
What can be considered unambiguous is that Democratic policies and their feckless leadership in cities like Louisville, Portland, Seattle, Minneapolis, Chicago, and Austin directly contribute to the rampant lawlessness. There’s a very clear reason why these cities seem to be most vulnerable to domestic terrorism. All of them have Democratic “leadership” at the city level and usually at the state level as well. That should tell us something, but Democrats try to rebuke the insinuations while mainstream media ignores the correlation. It’s 2020, so such things can be expected. That doesn’t mean we have to accept it and it should definitely mean we need to fight back.
In the latest episode of NOQ Report, I talked about the dangers that Democrats pose to these cities and why we need to make sure voters are aware of these Democratic failures before the election. They are trying to spin this to be President Trump’s fault. After all, it’s happening under his watch. But despite claims by some conservatives that the President needs to supersede Democratic leaders in these cities and states, we need to be careful. If federal primacy engages in questions of law and order when Democratic mayors and governors denounce it, we could find we’re wishing for something that is turned against us in the future. Imagine a hypothetical Democratic president who decides to use federal law enforcement on issues that should also be localized. We will not have a strong argument against it if some conservatives persist in calling for action by the President.
Federalism works for many reasons. One of those reasons pertains to law enforcement jurisdictions. It’s incumbent on law enforcement, city, and state leaders to request assistance from Washington DC. We should oppose the federal government taking too proactive of a role in local law enforcement issues, including riots. We would oppose a national mandate on gun control, for example, and right-leaning cities and states should be able to choose whether or not to enforce such a mandate. But if a Democratic president decides to send in federal law enforcement to enforce it, we must be able to say with consistency that such things are wrong. To be consistent, the federal government must allow local, city, and state law enforcement to do their jobs without interference until they explicitly request assistance.
The real takeaway here pertains to the election narrative. It’s imperative that we educate and inform those within our circles about the truth of these riots. They are happening in Democrat-run cities because Democrats embrace the spirit of lawlessness. This new variation of their party has allowed identity politics to suppress any sense of law and order they may have had. It’s easy for Republicans to say that Democrats have always been this way, but that’s simply not true. Democrats haven’t always allowed their cities to be overrun by riots. They’re just wont to do it today because the alternative—embracing law and order—puts them at odds with their base as well as with the big-money donors like George Soros who helped them get elected.
There is absolutely no reason why the people couldn’t make the connection between Democratic leadership and the domestic terrorism spreading across this country. Still, many don’t see it. We do everything we can to make them see the truth.
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:Another False Narrative
The narrative that we have been given by the left-wing media for the last six months about what happened on that tragic night in Louisville when Breonna Taylor died was completely wrong. Our hearts break for Ms. Taylor’s family. She should not have died.
But the evidence was submitted to a grand jury, and on every major point the media and their progressive allies were spreading false information.
The police did not go to the wrong address.
It was not a no-knock warrant.
The police officers identified themselves.
They entered the house and her boyfriend, Kenneth Walker, fired first, shooting an officer in the leg.
There is zero evidence that the tragic events resulting in Taylor’s death had anything to do with race.
The “no-knock raid” aspect of this case is so disturbing to many people, including conservatives, that Kentucky Senator Rand Paul introduced federal legislation to ban no-knock warrants and named the legislation after Taylor.
Daniel Cameron, the conservative black attorney general of Kentucky who announced the grand jury’s decision yesterday, also announced the facts that were contrary to the left’s false narratives. I urge you to watch his announcement.
The left insists that Taylor was a victim of unacceptable police violence. Well, a grand jury determined otherwise. Officers returned fire after they were fired on. br>
Last night, knowing full well the poisoned atmosphere we are in, commentators at CNN and MSNBC threw gasoline on the fire they knew was smoldering in Louisville and in other U.S. cities. They ignored the facts and declared that racist police killed another black woman and nothing would happen to them.
In fact, one CNN legal analyst went so far as to suggest that Attorney General Cameron “undermined his credibility” when he condemned mob violence. Another MSNBC commentator denounced Cameron as “skinfolk but not kinfolk.” In other words, he may have black skin, but he’s not really black, as Joe Biden might put it.
This is how extreme the so-called “progressive left” has become.
By the way, radical anti-Semite Linda Sarsour is in Louisville, stirring up trouble. And there is evidence that Soros-funded rent-a-mobs were also involved in yesterday’s violence.
After enough gasoline was poured on the fire, and a sniper attempted to murder two Louisville officers, the Biden campaign finally issued a statement saying violence wasn’t acceptable.
High Chance Of Survival
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) recently released five pandemic planning scenarios to help assist government health officials in making their decisions. These planning scenarios haven’t gotten much attention, but they should. What’s most revealing are the projected COVID-19 fatality rates based on various age groups.
Here are the fatality rates based on what the CDC predicts is the most likely outcome:
0-19 years: 0.00003
20-49 years: 0.0002
50-69 years: 0.005
70+ years: 0.054
In other words, the survivability rates for these respective age groups are:
0-19: 99.997%
20-49: 99.98%
50-69: 99.5%
70+: 94.6%
Clearly, the virus is a threat to those over 70 years of age. But the vast majority of Americans are not at serious risk. We also know this is true because in spite of the daily hysteria about COVID outbreaks on college campuses in recent days, there have been virtually no serious cases.
Dr. Andrew Bostom analyzed the data and discovered that out of more than 48,000 reported cases of coronavirus among college students there were only 2 hospitalizations and zero deaths.
Meanwhile, Dr. Robert Redfield, the director of the CDC, testified before the Senate yesterday and told senators that “more than 90% of the population remains susceptible” to COVID-19.
In other words, Dr. Redfield believes that 10% of the population has already had it. If 10% has had it, that’s 30 million people who have had COVID-19. But there have been 200,000 deaths. That’s a death rate of approximately 0.7%, less than one percent. For perspective, a bad flu season is about 0.50%.
Meanwhile, there were nearly 850,000 COVID tests administered around the country yesterday. Out of those tests, just under 40,000 new cases were discovered, for a 5% positivity rate.
Yesterday, 1,138 deaths were attributed to the coronavirus, well less than half of the spring peak.
Nothing To See Here
The Biden campaign and its big media allies are well on their way to making the shocking Senate report about the corruption of the Biden family a one-day story. So, it’s always useful do a little thought experiment.
What do you think the media atmosphere would be like today if the Senate produced a report finding that Eric Trump received a $3.5 million payment from the wife of the former mayor of Moscow and had paid for prostitutes who may have been involved in human trafficking?
I suspect we’d be on the verge of another impeachment inquiry.
Whether it’s Hunter Biden, Chris Heinz (John Kerry’s stepson) or Chelsea Clinton, it must be wonderful to be the child of a prominent Democrat politician. Once your parents have served in office, you’ve got it made without any evidence that you can actually produce anything.
Trump’s children were successful in their own right and long before he ran for office. In fact, their father’s political career has cost them money.
So Democrat kids get big fat contracts from questionable foreign entities, while the sons and daughters of conservatives lose their contracts.
Where’s Joe?
The Biden campaign strategy is hard to explain. They seem to think that they are being successful by making the election a referendum on Trump, as if Biden has nothing to do with the race. So he’s being kept up “under wraps,” perhaps so there’s less risk of Biden making himself the news. But more and more liberals are questioning this strategy.
Even the left-wing New York Times is complaining. This headline says it all: “When Joe Biden’s In Town, But It’s Hard To Tell.” The Times article goes on to note that Biden’s campaign appearances are “scarcely publicized” and often “quiet, eerie and almost entirely fan-free.”
Biden’s Florida campaign is almost entirely dependent on billionaire Michael Bloomberg, who may well be in trouble for essentially paying ex-felons to vote for Joe Biden.
Perhaps most disturbing, the Democrat presidential nominee almost never takes questions from the press. Perhaps there’s a growing fear of what might happen if someone asks a question his teleprompter can’t answer!
Values Voter Summit
The Values Voter Summit continues tonight at 8:00 PM ET.
American Values, my non-profit public policy organization, is a proud co-sponsor of the Values Voter Summit.
Register herefor your free digital pass. Tonight’s speakers include:
Dr. Bill Bennett Dr. Ben Carson Pastor Jack Hibbs Sen. James Lankford Dr. Carol Swain Tim Wildmon And many more!
Tags:Gary Bauer, Campaign for Working Families, To share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
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.
If you call 911 in a large American city, there is no guarantee that anyone will answer promptly and send out police to aid the endangered. So gun sales have soared. Some people who never before owned weapons, or even opposed the use of firearms, are now terrified to remain unarmed. Self-protection often outweighs abstract ideology.
According to a recent Gallup poll, most Black Americans favor maintaining or increasing police presence. Often, city officials who support cutting back on law enforcement still expect their own homes and property to be constantly policed. The same is often true of activist elites who live far from the inner city.
Large swaths of the American West are now charred by out-of-control wildfires. Some governors and many federal bureaucrats blame the conflagrations on climate change. But those who actually live within forests, or on mountains and foothills, that are historically vulnerable to wildfires know that the epic droughts of 2013-2015 killed or dried out millions of acres of trees and vegetation.
Yet most of these decaying trees were never removed by authorities. They now predictably provide the fuel for the current wildfire Armageddon.
A few veteran forest managers have been proverbial voices in the wilderness in recent years. They warned that ignoring dead trees, limiting the sort of domestic animal grazing that reduces dead brush and dry foliage, forbidding timber companies from harvesting decaying timber, and preventing periodic controlled burns were collectively a prescription for the very disasters that now cloud Western skies with fires, smoke and air pollution.
In other words, pragmatic people once understood that tens of millions of dead trees were not to be left alone as mulch for premodern ecosystems. In the present, the dried-up vegetation has served as veritable napalm, causing traditional fall wildfires to blow up into biblical conflagrations that consume homes, property and people.
The public trust in science depends on its consistency, its transparency and its divorce from politics and ideology. There can be no left or right, liberal or conservative, blue-state or red-state slant if scientific expertise is to be taken seriously.
Unfortunately, during the COVID-19 pandemic, the very opposite has sometimes occurred.
The World Health Organization initially swore that the virus was not transmissible by humans, did not warrant travel bans or mask-wearing, and was not a significant global threat. The organization’s Chinese patrons had given WHO an unscientific party line. And its director then branded the propaganda with superficial scientific authority.
American experts at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and other federal health agencies were often inconsistent on travel bans, testing, masks, quarantines and medical therapies, and intolerant of dissident medical research. Authorities rarely could consistently explain to the public how the virus was spread; why children, who were rarely stricken, were kept from attending school; and whether quarantines were aimed at flattening the curve of infection, eliminating it altogether or just waiting out the virus.
The elderly were rightly deemed the most vulnerable. But then, inexplicably, they were often exposed to newly arriving infected patients in their long-term care facilities.
When millions of people hit the streets to protest the death of George Floyd at the hands of Minneapolis police, many health care professionals ignored the supposedly dangerous mass meetings that they had earlier insisted were major public health threats.
More than 1,000 health professionals, sympathetic to protests, even signed an open letter declaring that social activism was, for the moment, more important than social distancing.
When supporters of President Donald Trump then went to open-air rallies, many medical experts suddenly called these assemblies dangerous to public health. In truth, either both or neither types of public outings are dangerous.
For six months, experts have given the American public contradictory and weaponized election-year directives on masks, social distancing, lockdowns, school closures and workplace policies.
All of these matters of public health reveal the disasters that follow when common sense is ignored and ideology reigns.
Most Americans know that only the police can protect the vulnerable in times of social chaos.
Most people instinctively sense that when vast swaths of dead trees are not removed from dense forests, they will eventually serve as kindling for raging firestorms.
And when scientific expertise offers ever-changing, inconsistent and occasionally absurd public health advice, then people turn to their own instincts and innate common sense to protect themselves and their livelihoods.
Experts, not common-sense citizens, have been failing America.
———————– 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.
Tags:Victor Davis Hanson, Civilization, Requires, Collective Common Sense, National ReviewTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
. . . Today’s woke violence – yesterday’s red tactics.
by Joseph Hippolito: The unprecedented violence perpetrated by Antifa and Black Lives Matter embodies two of the Left’s biggest tactics in its quest to fundamentally transform the United States.
One is to force a race war by radicalizing African-Americans to a violent degree. The other involves making mayhem more intimidating by spreading police and firefighters as thinly as possible, thereby limiting their ability to respond quickly.
Manning Johnson, an African-American, spoke about the first tactic from personal experience. Describing himself as a “dedicated ‘comrade’ ” and a “professional revolutionist,” Johnson belonged to the Communist Party USA for 10 years. He served as a union organizer, director of agitation propaganda, and a member of the party’s national committee. Johnson even ran as the party’s candidate for a Congressional seat in New York.
But when the Soviet Union and Nazi Germany concluded their non-aggression pact in 1939 — nine days before Germany invaded Poland and began World War II — Johnson left the party. Following the war, Johnson testified about Communist activities to various legislative committees. In 1958, one year before his death, Johnson wrote about his experiences in Color, Communism and Common Sense.
Why did Johnson become a Communist at 21?
Like other Negroes, I experienced and saw many injustices and inequities around me based upon color, not ability,” he wrote. “I was told that ‘the decadent capitalist system is responsible,’ that ‘mass pressure’ could force concessions but ‘that just prolongs the life of capitalism;’ that I must unite and work with all those who more or less agree that capitalism must go.
“To me, the end of capitalism would mark the beginning of an interminable period of plenty, peace, prosperity and universal comradeship. All racial and class differences and conflicts would end forever after the liquidation of the capitalists, their government and their supporters. A world union of Soviet States under the hegemony of Russia would free and lead mankind on to Utopia.
“Being an idealist, I was sold this ‘bill of goods’ by a Negro graduate of the Lenin Institute in Moscow.”
That graduate probably was Harry Haywood, who joined the Communist Party in 1925 and studied in Moscow soon afterwards. Johnson credited Haywood with playing a major role in convincing Stalin to incorporate blacks into the American Communist leadership during the Communist International’s 1928 meeting in Moscow.
“Stirring up race and class conflict is the basis of all discussion of the Communist Party’s work,” Johnson wrote. “The evil genius, Stalin, and the other megalomaniac leaders in Moscow ordered the use of all racial, economic and social differences, no matter how small or insignificant, to start local fires of discontent, conflict and revolt.
“Black rebellion was what Moscow wanted. Bloody racial conflict would split America. During the confusion, demoralization and panic would set in.”
Johnson’s own training reflected that strategy. Once he joined the party, Johnson received “two years of practical training in organizing street demonstrations, inciting mob violence, how to fight the police and how to politically ‘throw a brick and hide,'” he wrote. Johnson then attended a school where he studied “red political warfare,” he wrote, in which he “learned to use secret codes, ‘mail drops,’ organize clandestine meetings, ‘shake police shadows'” and grasped “the nature of communist sabotage and espionage.”
Compare Johnson’s descriptions with BLM’s activities, beyond the obvious similarities of arson, looting, assault, harassment — even murder.
“We actually have an ideological frame,” co-founder Patrisse Cullors told a left-wing podcast. “Myself and Alicia in particular, we’re trained organizers. We are trained Marxists. We are super-versed on ideological theories.”
Cullors studied under Eric Mann, a left-wing organizer who worked with the Black Panthers and the Weather Underground in the 1960s. “Alicia” is fellow co-founder Alicia Garza, who also created the Black Futures Lab, a BLM subsidiary that organizes African-Americans and develops policies. The Black Futures Lab, states its website, “is a fiscally sponsored project of the Chinese Progressive Association.”
The CPA dedicates itself to promoting the interests of China’s government and Communist Party in the United States, which include Marxist revolution.
As an organization led by “trained Marxists,” BLM also opposes capitalism, the nuclear family and religion, especially Christianity. BLM agitators burned Bibles in Portland, Ore. and chanted “(Fornicate) your Jesus!” at a black street preacher in Charlotte, N.C.
Regarding the family, BLM stated its position before deleting it from its website:
“We disrupt the Western-prescribed nuclear family structure requirement by supporting each other as extended families and ‘villages’ that collectively care for one another, especially our children, to the degree that mothers, parents, and children are comfortable.”
That position not only restates Karl Marx’s demand to end the nuclear family. It alludes to the alternatives Leon Trotsky advocated.
“Abolition of the family!” Marx wrote. “On what foundation is the present family, the bourgeois family, based? On capital, on private gain. In its completely developed form, this family exists only among the bourgeoisie.”
Trotsky proposed “a finished system of social care and accommodation: maternity houses, crèches, kindergartens, schools, social dining rooms, social laundries, first-aid stations, hospitals, sanatoria, athletic organizations, moving-picture theaters, etc.” that would bind “all generations in solidarity and mutual aid,” he wrote.
Even the quest to defund the police embraces Marxist ideology. These words Mann wrote in 1999 express attitudes that are all-too-familiar to today’s Americans:
The Black Panthers in particular argued that the prisons and police were colonial instruments, and thus bourgeois concepts of ‘crime’ or ‘innocence and guilt’ could not be used to justify the military occupation of an oppressed community. The demands to free all political prisoners including all black men and women were based on the assumption that the greatest danger to the black community was not black-on-black crime, but police-on-black crime. Armed self-defense groups, community patrols to monitor police behavior and the demands for the most stringent police review boards were efforts to structurally reduce police brutality by placing the police under black civilian authority.The protesters in this video epitomize Mann’s thinking. Their leader asks, “Who do we protect?” They respond, “Black criminals.”
Garza succinctly summarized BLM’s objectives and ideology at a left-wing conference in 2015:
“It’s not possible for a world to emerge where black lives matter if it’s under capitalism, and it’s not possible to abolish capitalism without a struggle against national oppression and gender oppression.”
BLM and Antifa would have found a kindred spirit in Robert Williams, a black activist in the mid-20th century. In the final third of his career, Williams embraced radical Marxism and history’s worst political mass murderer, Mao Zedong. Williams’ newspaper, The Crusader, advocated “an urban guerrilla war of self-defense” to foment revolution, he wrote in 1964.
Such a war, Williams wrote, would involve violent sabotage on a large-scale. Guerillas would derail trains and fire Molotov cocktails, acid bombs, hand grenades, machine guns, bazookas and rocket launchers from rooftops to kill law enforcement and make streets impassable. Kitchen matches placed in air-conditioning ducts would cause explosions that destroy buildings.
But perhaps Williams’ favorite technique was arson.
“The most aggressive and irrepressible arm of the overall organization would be the fire teams,” he wrote in 1965. “The mission of these thousands of active fire teams would be setting strategic fires. They could render America’s cities and countryside impotent. The fire teams roving in automobiles would find unguarded rural objectives even more accessible. A few teams could start miles and miles of fires from one city to the other.”
Such arson would have two goals. One would be to overwhelm first responders and the military.
“State forces would be forced to spread their ranks and would not be able to sustain massive troop concentrations in a single community,” Williams wrote. “The heat and smoke generated from the fires would render some of the highways impassable to repressive troop reinforcements. The rural countryside covers vast areas and would require exhaustive man power, equipment and security forces.”
The second goal would be to create mass terror.
“The psychological impact would be tremendous,” Williams wrote. “By day the billowing smoke would be seen for miles. By night the entire sky would reflect reddish flames that would elicit panic and a feeling of impending doom.”
Given Antifa’s popularity in Oregon’s largest city, some members might be implementing Williams’ plan. Despite denials from law enforcement in Portland, numerous Oregonians recorded videos of arsonists caught in the act. One man arrested for arson in Washington even attended anti-police rallies.
Perhaps more incriminating is Antifa’s message to its members: “Be water. Spread fire.” A sheriff’s deputy from Oregon’s Clackamas County even connected Antifa to the state’s wildfires. Those comments got him placed on leave.
Johnson’s epitaph as a “professional revolutionist” resounds with even greater force today:
I saw Communism in all its naked cruelty, ruthlessness and utter contempt of Christian attributes and passions. And, too, I saw the low value placed upon human life, the total lack of respect for the dignity of man, the betrayal of trust, the terror of the Secret Police and the bloody hand of the assassin . . .————————- Joseph Hippolito shared this article on FrontPage Mag.
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by Ralph Benko: We are enjoying, or suffering, an epoch of the toppling of statues. Now consider the recent demand for the “contextualization” (meaning the embedding of critical plaques) on, among others, the Washington Monument and Jefferson Memorial. What’s really going on?
It will come as a surprise to some, especially anti-big-government libertarians and my fellow paleoconservatives, that Washington, D.C., was abolished … 150 years ago. Yet its ghost persists. This persistence would not have surprised Ronald Reagan (whose name still adorns, however temporarily, the main airport serving our nation’s capital.) Reagan, in 1964: “A government bureau is the nearest thing to eternal life we’ll ever see on this earth.”
When D.C. was first created it included two incorporated cities, Georgetown and Washington. Both were abolished (although nobody, as a colloquial matter, seems to have noticed) in 1871 when the Congress revoked these cities’ legal existence and replaced them with the District of Columbia. As an aside, in the “the more things change, the more things stay the same” department an early D.C. governor undertook infrastructure projects costing 3 times the amount authorized, bankrupting the District.
We’ve seen the denaming of Mount McKinley in Alaska and, recently, Princeton’s Woodrow Wilson school. Why not dename a gargantuan obelisk on the national mall and a domed colonnade on the tidal basin? While at it, why not persecute those who persist in referring to America’s capital by its deadname, “Washington?” While at it, why not change Columbia, an allusion to that imperialist Columbus?
Let me tell you why. Doing so represents a step away from liberal republicanism and toward totalitarianism.
President Franklin “Big Government” Roosevelt commissioned and dedicated the memorial to the libertarian Jefferson. FDR concluded his dedication: “He believed, as we do, that the average opinion of mankind is in the long run superior to the dictates of the self-chosen. During all the years that have followed Thomas Jefferson, the United States has expanded his philosophy into a greater achievement of security of the nation, security of the individual and national unity, than in any other part of the world. It may be that the conflict between the two forms of philosophy will continue for centuries to come; but we in the United States are more than ever satisfied with the republican form of Government. …”
FDR, a social democrat (not “democratic socialist”), could also recognize himself as, as he was, a liberal (as in libertarian) republican. He knew that his predecessors like Washington and Jefferson were worthy to be exalted in spite of their faults. Their sin of slaveholding is, as it deserves to be, condemned. That said, to tarnish the monuments to their heroic, noble, achievement of creating a liberal republic — one that eventually eradicated slavery — by “contextualizing” is tone deaf and wrong-headed. The context of that context is all wrong.
Abhorring slavery, I stand in opposition to the denamers and “contextualizers,” extensions of “cancel culture,” itself a euphemism for the suppression of our freedoms of speech and of the press. I, an old school liberal republican reprobate, deplore every totalitarian impulse. And that is what this is.
The left’s playbook was written by Antonio Gramsci, who died a martyr imprisoned by the Italian fascists for his real (rather than mob rule “antifa”) antifascism. Gramsci was that rara avis, a liberal, non-totalitarian, Communist. One of Gramsci’s most powerful contributions to political thought, something now fallen into enemy hands, was the concept of “cultural hegemony.”
The hard left is actively working to eradicate the classical liberal republican culture conscientiously created by America’s founders. The left is attempting to obliterate, or at minimum create a revisionist, history to advance another political order. What order? Totalitarianism.
George Orwell anticipated this. “Cancel culture” is the action of the ThinkPol, the “Thought Police,” prosecuting “Thought Crimes,” political adjuncts to “Newspeak,” the foundation of the totalitarian cultural hegemony. Orwell anticipated the current effort to rename or, by “contextualizing,” defame America’s founders as intrinsic to the “pro-fa” crusade under way.
Orwell spelled it out in The Principles of Newspeak. “The purpose of Newspeak was not only to provide a medium of expression for the world-view and mental habits proper to the devotees of Ingsoc [English Socialism], but to make all other modes of thought impossible. It was intended that when Newspeak had been adopted once and for all and Oldspeak forgotten, a heretical thought — that is, a thought diverging from the principles of Ingsoc— should be literally unthinkable, at least so far as thought is dependent on words.”
As one of those few remaining fluent in Oldspeak let me give it to you straight up. Abolish Washington? Been there, done that.
Dename or defame the Washington Monument and Jefferson Memorial? Washington Monuments Falling Down, Falling Down, Falling Down? One giant leap for totalitarianism.
————————————- Ralph Benko is Chairman, The Capitalist League and contributor to the ARRA News Service. H/T Newsmax.
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by Bill Donohue: It now looks like President Trump will nominate Amy Coney Barrett to fill the vacancy on the U.S. Supreme Court. He met with her twice this week. He also admitted that he did not meet with Barbara Lagoa, widely believed to be Barrett’s strongest competitor.
Barrett, who was subjected to a round of anti-Catholic commentary in 2017 when she was being considered for the appellate job she now holds, is not likely to endure a second round of bigoted attacks. That’s because those who made those remarks paid a heavy price for doing so.
I am proud that the Catholic League played a major role in putting these unjust critics of Barrett on the defensive. More than any other Catholic organization, we led the fight against Barrett’s foes.
To date we have issued 10 new releases on this subject, garnering 32 media hits—we have been cited on TV, radio, newspaper, and internet stories. Most important, we mobilized Catholics to contact Senator Charles Grassley, who chaired the Senate Judiciary Committee when Barrett was being considered for the appellate position. They did so in droves.
On September 17, 2017, I wrote to Senator Dick Durbin and Senator Dianne Feinstein objecting to their line of questioning. In both instances, Catholic-baiting questions and comments were made. What made this news release special was providing our subscribers with Grassley’s email address: we urged them to request that the senator speak to the issue of anti-Catholicism.
In my statement to the media, I said, “Senator Durbin and Senator Feinstein came perilously close to applying a religious test to circuit court nominee Amy Coney Barrett. Such a test is unconstitutional.” On October 31, 2017, Grassley took to the floor commenting on Barrett’s critics, noting that “Others have spoken on the issue of a ‘religious test’ but I’ll remind my colleagues the Constitution” bars such a measure. He added that “we received many letters on this topic.”
I was accurately quoted in Politico today saying the Catholic League staff has been scanning internet sites looking for instances of anti-Catholic bigotry, but so far “red flags” have been scarce. This explains why we have not issued a statement condemning such discourse. “There’s not enough there right now,” I said. “People are being more careful this time around.”
Of course, not everyone has been shy about going after Barrett’s Catholicism. Villanova University professor Massimo Faggioli, a Catholic dissident, says the Democrats should not hold back in questioning her religious beliefs. Wandy Felicita Ortiz, a New York writer, attacked Barrett’s religious convictions by saying the nominee “hates your uterus.” Newsweek had to apologize for claiming that Barrett inspired The Handmaid’s Tale (a story about religious fanatics).
Many commentators, not all of whom are sympathetic to Barrett, have warned against playing the anti-Catholic card. Some have made principled arguments while others have observed that it would backfire.
S.E. Cupp advises Democrats that a repeat of the bigoted attacks on Barrett will only get Trump reelected. Bonnie Kristian, writing for Yahoo News, says that an attack on Barrett’s faith is the “wrong way” to go. Democratic Senator Joe Manchin flatly said, “It’s awful to bring in religion. It truly is.” Professor Jonathan Turley, who says he is “fervently secular” in his views, opined that Democrats should leave Barrett’s religious beliefs alone.
The Jewish Forward argued that questioning her religious convictions “should be off limits.” Father Tom Reese, who is not a Trump supporter, said, “The Democrats are making a big mistake if they talk about her religion.” Brandeis University professor Eileen McNamara said it best: “Let’s keep the focus during this nomination and confirmation fight—whenever it comes—on the Constitution, not on the Baltimore Catechism.”
If Amy Coney Barrett is indeed President Trump’s pick, the ugly proceedings she endured three years ago are not likely to be repeated. But we can never be complacent. We therefore request that everyone ask Senator Lindsey Graham, chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee, to be on the alert for Catholic-baiting questions and remarks.
Contact Graham’s chief of staff, Richard Perry: Richard_Perry@lgraham.senate.gov.
————————— Bill Donohue (@CatholicLeague) is a sociologist and president of the Catholic League.
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by Robert Romano: Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) is under enormous pressure from his Democratic colleagues not to confirm whoever President Donald Trump may nominate to replace the late Ruth Bader Ginsburg on the Supreme Court before the election.
But in truth, there is simply no reason, neither constitutional nor political, for Trump and McConnell to wait at all.
The Constitution simply states, in Article II, Section 2, “The President… shall nominate, and by and with the advice and consent of the Senate, shall appoint … judges of the Supreme Court…”
Meaning, under the law, when there is a vacancy on the nation’s high court, President Trump can make his nomination whenever he wants, and the Senate, led by McConnell, can confirm that nominee as soon as possible.
In 2018, Justice Brett Kavanaugh was confirmed just a month before the midterm elections. And in 2016, former President Barack Obama attempted to get Merrick Garland confirmed to the late Antonin Scalia’s Supreme Court seat even though it was an election year, but failed.
Democrats lost the Senate in 2014, and at that point lost the right to dictate what goes on the floor. Elections have consequences. Parties always play for all the marbles. Meaning, McConnell was able to block Garland but pave the way for Justices Neil Gorsuch and Brett Kavanaugh and whoever replaces Ginsburg. That’s the high stakes game and in every game there are winners and losers. The only principle at stake is power. The rest is just window dressing.
In both the cases of Kavanaugh and Garland, the nominations were made, but depending on who had the Senate majority, the outcome was entirely different. Since, 2014 Republicans have had the Senate majority, and so unsurprisingly, Kavanaugh was confirmed, and Garland was rejected.
The constitutional hurdle is set in stone: The President can make a nomination, and the Senate can either say yes or no.
And so will it be with whoever President Trump nominates to replace Ginsburg. The only other hurdle for Trump and Republicans is merely political, but so far, it looks like McConnell should have the votes, making this process much easier than the Kavanaugh confirmation, which had little to no margin for error.
With Kavanaugh, Republicans had a narrow 51 to 49 majority, but after 2018, they picked up a net two seats, where now it’s 53 to 47. This should be easy pickings for McConnell.
Senate Republicans can afford to lose, say, Sen. Susan Collins (R-Maine) and/or Sen. Lisa Murkowski (R-Alaska), and still have more than enough votes to easily confirm the nomination right now.
So, if Trump and McConnell have the votes, then the only question is that of timing. Should the confirmation be before the election, or afterward?
Given the gravity of the vote — where it will cement a 6 to 3 Republican-appointed majority on the Supreme Court — it is probably safer for Republicans politically to push for the vote prior to the election.
After all, a lot can change after the election.
If the Supreme Court seat is on the ballot in November and the fate of the Ginsburg seat is uncertain, former Vice President Joe Biden and Democrats can use that to drive turnout not only in the presidential race against President Trump, but also House and Senate elections.
In 2016, Republicans successfully used the vacant Scalia seat to drive turnout and win to keep that seat. In 2020, it could work in reverse for Democrats, who are now playing defense — unless the seat is already filled.
So, why wait?
If Trump and McConnell can successfully replace Ginsburg before the election, that could very well take the wind out of the sails of Democrats. The smart play is to vote on the nominee now and demoralize the opposition so that they feel like they have nothing left to fight for. Stay tuned.
———————— Robert Romano is the Vice President of Public Policy at Americans for Limited Government.
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by Drew Gonshorowski & Norbert Michel: As Heritage Foundation researchers have demonstrated throughout the coronavirus pandemic, the spread of COVID-19 in the U.S. has been heavily concentrated in a small number of states—and among a small number of counties within those states.
As our research has pointed out, state-level figures do not adequately describe the concentrated nature of the spread of COVID-19.
Moreover, even though the U.S. saw a rapid rise in cases during the summer, the overall levels of concentration have remained fairly consistent.
For instance, as of Sept. 15, the 30 counties with the most COVID-19 deaths accounted for 26% of all the cases in the U.S. and 40% of all deaths, much greater than those counties’ share of the population (18.4%). That is, just 1% of the counties in the U.S., representing just over 18% of the population, are responsible for almost half of the country’s COVID-19 deaths.
The Heritage Foundation’s newest interactive graphic allows individuals to see more detail on these concentrations among the counties with the most deaths as well as those with the fewest.
For instance, the graphic allows users to select data from the five counties with the most deaths, all the way up to the 50 counties with the most deaths. It also allows visitors to select data from counties with no deaths, all the way up to counties with 10 or fewer.
Once a category is selected, the graphic provides the percentage of counties represented by that category, the percentage of the population contained in those counties, and the percentage of all U.S. COVID-19 deaths in those counties.
For example, as of Sept. 15, 60.6% of all counties are reporting 10 or fewer deaths. These counties represent 13.1% of the population, and account for only 2.7% of total COVID-19 deaths in the U.S.
In contrast, the five counties with the most COVID-19 deaths represent just 0.2% of all counties, but they account for 16% of all COVID-19 deaths in the U.S., nearly three times their population share of 6.5%.
A list of the 50 counties with the most deaths is also provided, and that list has not changed very much since April. New York, for instance, recorded 32,745 deaths as of Sept. 15.
In fact, New York City has exerted an outsized influence on the national COVID-19-related death rate. Removing New York City’s deaths moves the U.S. from eighth place in the world in deaths per million to 13th place.
The New York City metropolitan statistical area even has an outsized influence on the overall statistics for the state of New York.
Removing counties in the New York City metropolitan statistical area from the state’s totals drops the death rate for New York state to 348 per million, nearly 80% lower than the state’s rate when the New York City metropolitan statistical area is included (1,674).
That’s well below the national average and would move New York state from second place to 23rd place in deaths per million.
The same exercise with COVID-19 cases in the New York City area has a similar effect on the state’s totals.
Specifically, when withholding the New York City metropolitan statistical area cases, the overall case rate for New York state plummets by 71% (from 22,065 to 6,505), a level that is well below the national average.
Removing the New York City metropolitan statistical area moves the state of New York from sixth in case rate among U.S. states to 42nd place.
As new Heritage Foundation research shows, as of Aug. 22, the death rate of 2,196 per million residents recorded in the New York City metropolitan statistical area is almost twice that of its nearest rival, Detroit, at 1,177.
Furthermore, the gap between New York City’s COVID-19-related death rate and those of cities that have experienced more recent outbreaks is even more pronounced. The New York City metropolitan statistical area’s death rate is more than triple those of Phoenix and Miami—two cities that have recorded higher rates of infection than New York. It is four and a half times that of Los Angeles and nearly six times that of Houston
Now that COVID-19 testing has increased dramatically and many state and local governments have relaxed stay-at-home orders, it’s even more critical to study the trends in deaths along with cases.
To make studying these trends easier, The Heritage Foundation now has two interactive COVID-19 trackers. One tracks trends in cases; the other tracks trends in deaths.
The trackers describe whether the trend of cases—or deaths—is increasing or decreasing over the prior 14 days, and provides a visual depiction of new cases—or deaths—during that time period.
These tools help put the concentrated nature of the pandemic in perspective with county-level data. They show just how difficult it can be to use only one metric to gauge whether a county—or state—is doing well. Readers are invited to explore the information in the tracker and check back frequently for updates, as well as to explore the other visual tools on Heritage’s COVID-19 resources page.
———————————- Drew Gonshorowski focuses his research and writing on the nation’s new health care law, including the repercussions for Medicare and Medicaid, as a policy analyst in the Center for Data Analysis at The Heritage Foundation. Norbert Michel studies and writes about housing finance, including the reform of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, as The Heritage Foundation’s research fellow in financial regulations. H/T The Daily Signal.
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by Mario Murillo Ministries: Nothing horrifies and bewilders me more than Christians who do not appreciate what a gift of mercy it was that Donald Trump was elected. They have no clue of the nightmare that would be our world, right now, if Hillary Clinton had won.
The ingratitude of Christians toward this miracle of God is mind-boggling. But there is something even more astonishing: Christians who can’t see that Joe and Kamala would be a worse fate than Hillary.
About the picture. It is ominous and grotesque, and rightly so. It not only depicts the mental state of Biden, it shows the sinister way Kamala will overpower Biden. But the real horror arrives after the ones who are their puppet-masters overpower both of them.
This is because they will get rid of America. They will fold America into a nameless unit of a single global power. They will destroy our borders, our history, our values—everything that makes us free and American. The people behind Joe and Kamala want only one thing: world domination.
How did these people decide on Joe and Kamala? Long before Joe began declining mentally, he was unfit to lead. Kamala brutally failed during her run for President because the public got to know her. Is this the best they could do? Yes, it is, if you understand what they wanted in their candidates. They didn’t want qualified leaders, they wanted people who were so vacuous that their every move could be controlled. And, Bingo! They found them.
How on earth did they think they could pull this off? At any other time—under any other circumstances, the very idea of these two running for office would merely be a sad joke. So, how did this happen? The powers that be, believe America hates Trump as much as they do. They believe in this hatred so deeply that they believe even candidates as pathetic as Joe and Kamala could still win.
The agenda of these would-be world rulers must be stopped. At all costs, it must be stopped. There used to be elections between liberals and conservatives. But now, this election is all about good versus evil. That some Christians still don’t get that, is alarming. It is just plain denial to think there is very little difference between Republicans and Democrats. The pastors who tell you that are living in a bygone era. That day has long since passed. They are on automatic pilot, and are not operating in spiritual discernment.
Every believer must stop Joe and Kamala. No Christian in possession of the facts—who has even an inkling of what the Bible teaches—can reach a different conclusion.
Stopping them is the natural extension of our faith.
It is blazingly clear that the Democrat Party doesn’t want you. They want to close down your church permanently. They want your children to be forced to learn propaganda about sexuality and gender that the Word of God calls perversion. They want to kill babies, even after they survive abortions. The middle ground is gone.
It boils down to this question: what are you doing to stop the evil of Joe and Kamala? What are you doing to protect the morals and freedoms of your children and grandchildren? What are you doing to save America?
Stopping evil is the elephant in the room for lukewarm believers. They want to deflect. They bring up the poor, or immigrants, or some other peripheral social issue as a way of easing their conscience about Democrats. When they do that, they only come off as pathetic. How can the bone of social justice that Democrats throw out as a distraction, compare to the holocaust of killing babies in and out of the womb?
It is the inescapable moral duty of believers to stop them. The question is, “How do we stop them?” That creates another mind-freeze in lukewarm Christians. The only way to stop them is to vote for Donald Trump. There really is no other alternative. Nothing else works.
You can convince yourself that by not voting, or by voting for someone else, you are doing what is right. I am sorry, but you are not. Elections are the single opportunity for us to choose leadership. And the only way to stop the wrong people from winning is to vote for the right people.
Here is what is coming if the Left wins:
They will defund the police. Close down churches. Codify immorality. Fire people who don’t agree with the LGBTQ agenda or who speak against it. Churches will be forced to hire gay applicants. Abortion will be expanded under a state-run and funded Planned Parenthood. They will let socialism kill our economy and lower your standard of living, permanently. The state will take your guns. The state will raise your children. America will no longer be a Constitutional Republic. The Bill of Rights will be nullified. Forget the America you knew and prepare to be a client-state of globalists.
Can you live with that? Can you live with making your children and grandchildren live with that? Dear brothers and sisters in Christ, can you live with the fact that you didn’t stop this?
———————— Mario Murillo is an evangelist Mario Murillo, Minister, Blogger.
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by J.B. Shurk: The first presidential debate is next Tuesday, and I don’t see Biden surviving. His campaign has been playing “hide the Crypt-Keeper” since spring, occasionally proving to the public that he’s still ticking by having him tussle with a teleprompter while “objective journalists” participate in make-believe interviews. Biden’s cognitive decline is now so steep that he begins reading pre-written answers to pre-written questions, forgets what he’s doing halfway through, and settles for stringing syllables together that sound English-y in a non–native speaker sort of way. He is a man forever in search of a thought but finding none, while the press corps propping up his campaign pretends otherwise. All I hear when Old Joe speaks is Grampa Simpson saying, “If I’m not back at the home by nine, they declare me legally dead and collect my insurance.” That might be his best excuse for getting out of the debate in Cleveland. If America sees the real “Sundown” Joe after dusk, this race is over.
Don’t do it, Joe! Getting murdered on national television is no way to end a 47-year career as a Washington welcome mat. It would be better to concede the contest right now than to endure the beating coming your way. Even if he plays nice, President Trump is going to smack you around so viciously that you’ll forget that China’s Xi is your real daddy. You’ll leave the debate stage looking more charred than a Kenosha business after a BLM “peaceful protest.” Better to get in the ring with UFC fighter Colby Covington and endure his beating than take what President Trump has on tap. Run, Joe, run! You don’t want what’s coming.
With only days remaining to find a good place to hide, though, Slow Joe sure does sound as though he’s gonna show. Isn’t that why his campaign has been airing him out lately and dragging him from one painted circle in desolate isolation to the next while he struggles through limited remarks before running away from handpicked reporters who ask only flattering “yes or no” questions? We haven’t seen this much energy from the Biden campaign since Jill chose Kamala to be her running mate. There’s been speculation for months that the basement-dwelling, hair-sniffing groper would never submit himself for examination next to President Trump where the nation could so easily judge the president’s vitality against Biden’s rigor mortis. Standing side by side, President Trump will appear to have sucked the life right from Biden’s Washington establishment corpse. But here we are only days away from Round One of Trump vs. Chump, and Team Grope still hasn’t thrown in the towel.
I can think of only three explanations.
(1) Hidin’ Biden is about to announce the mother of all dog-ate-my-homework excuses for not showing up. The smart money was always on some last-minute demand that Joe be surrounded by Candy Crowley–like “fact-checkers” to interrupt President Trump’s answers with Ministry of Truth real-time spin. (It’s amazing that having 99% of “journalists” actively working on their behalf still isn’t sufficient for the Democrats to win this election; in their minds, a fair debate requires President Trump to go up against his opponent, the moderator, and a team of Democrat political operatives posing as reporters all at once while he’s busy bringing peace to the Middle East.) But now the more likely subterfuge would take advantage of Justice Ginsburg’s passing. If the Biden campaign releases a statement in the next few days claiming that Joe refuses to debate unless President Trump agrees to hold off on nominating a new Supreme Court justice, the press will be absolutely giddy. How brave! And smart! What a real leader! The grifters at the Lincoln Project will be beside themselves. Ol’ Hidin’ can run away from the coming beating under the cover of Justice Ginsburg’s funerary procession, and Jake Tapper and Chris Wallace will applaud his cowardice. It will be just like when Obama prostrated himself before Iran and called it courage, so it would be nothing new for Joe.
(2) Perhaps the Democrats don’t expect their Trojan horse candidate to survive the first debate, either. There’s no faster path toward swapping Kamala Harris for the Washington relic with a segregationist past than to push Old Joe’s body past its natural limits. Obama’s former sidekick can sacrifice himself on the altar of diversity by ensuring that Obama’s preferred candidate is crowned queen before voting has really begun. Kamala was always the candidate of the deep-pocketed money class, the Hollywood glams, and the “new guard” Obama loyalistsrunning the DNC, but she failed so spectacularly during the campaign that she was forced to bow out of the race two months before the Iowa caucuses. Now the power behind the Democrat curtain can turn one of last year’s biggest losers into the official nominee just by riding Old Joe Biden to his grave. For the Democrats, everything’s for the “greater good,” right? From their point of view, what could possibly be better than juicing Ol’ Sundown with one of “Dr. Feelgood’s” magic concoctions of steroids and amphetamines that sends him up the debate stage in such euphoria that he hardly notices when his heart explodes? There’s a reason President Trump keeps bringing up the possibility of a drug test for Joe before next Tuesday. Joe Biden on speed doesn’t make his incoherence suddenly comprehensible. It pushes him right to death’s door and leaves Kamala Harris, a woman who has proven she will say and do anything for power, one ballot-harvested election away from the Oval Office.
(3) Hidin’ Biden and the Democrats may actually believe that Joe can beat President Trump mano a mano. That seems crazy, but then again, it seemed crazy six months ago when the Democrats decided to run for election by looting small businesses, beating up strangers, and burning American cities to the ground. Never underestimate the power of the Democrats’ “reality distortion field” to convince them that real, everyday Americans are behind their radical agenda to rip up the Constitution, topple the Washington Monument, and usher in a Marxist utopia that rules over the heartland for a thousand years. Every step of the way, the Democrats have underestimated Donald Trump. They expected Hillary to destroy him with ease. They expected the Mueller-Weissmann special counsel inquisition to save Washington from the voters’ reckoning. They expected President Trump to cower from their use of the CIA and FBI to remove him from office. They expected his use of tariffs against China and his realignment of power in Asia to backfire against him. They expected his push for Middle East peace to fail. They expected his moves to strengthen our relationship with Poland and other Central European countries to achieve nothing. They expected his pro-American economic growth policies, strong defense of America’s heritage, and bold support for the unborn to somehow turn off black and Hispanic Americans. Every step of the way, they’ve miscalculated.
So maybe they’re really about to send Joe Biden into his own bloodbath at the hands of President Trump this Tuesday, and they really are too stupid to know what’s about to happen. One way or another, come September 29, it’s lights out for Sundown Joe.
Hat tip to “Surfthewaves.”
———————- J.B. Shurkshares articles at the American Thinker.
Tags:J.B. Shurk, Will Biden, Survive the First Debate?, American ThinkerTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
by Seton Motley: March’s Democrat FREAK OUT!!!™ about what is really but a bad flu – was designed to justify Democrats shutting down the Donald Trump economy. br>
Because the pre-Democrat FREAK OUT!!!™ Donald Trump economy – was incredible. Main Street and Wall Street both – were flourishing.
“Waters of the United States (WOTUS) Rule: This rule is incredibly controversial among farmers; it’s seen as one more layer of land regulation in what can already seem like an overwhelming pile….
“Estate Tax: The estate tax resonates in the agriculture community in a similar way: farmers, much more than other industries, tend to pass down land and assets through generations and have long been concerned about the cost of taking over a parents’ farm….
“The Renewable Fuel Standard: Biofuel is extremely divisive; many farmers rely on it, while others criticize its sustainability and actual impact on the environment and climate. But both sides are furious at the EPA thanks to a May 2015 announcement in which the EPA, after several missed deadlines, set a goal for biofuel production that was some 20 percent lower than was originally planned. ‘We are going to end the EPA intrusion into your family homes and your family farms,’ read the (Trump) speech….
“The Affordable Care Act: The Affordable Care Act, better known as Obamacare, has attracted intense anger from farmers….
“Minimum Wage For Farm Workers: Organizations like the New York Farm Bureau, associated with the larger Farm Bureau, oppose the minimum wage increase, claiming it would depress profits even further.”
How’s Trump done on the Farmer Five? How’s five-for-five grab you?
Another key component of farmers’ support for Trump was his promise to address the awful anti-America trade deals – and the awful anti-America trade practices in which the planet engages.
President Trump and Chinese negotiators signed a hard-fought trade agreement on Wednesday that provides big wins for U.S. farmers…a historic breakthrough in the lopsided business dealings between the world’s two biggest economies that Mr. Trump achieved through his unconventional use of tariffs.”
In this great big world there is a LOT of anti-America trade chicanery. Unaddressed for decades by our Republican-Democrat bipartisan Uni-Party – and not yet directly addressed by Trump.
But Trump has already advanced the ball a great deal, so….
All of the above is accumulated – from the world that existed prior to the Democrat China Virus FREAK OUT!!!™ shutdowns.
Very rudimentary common sense would dictate:
Biden and the Democrats should not be able to insist on shutting down the economy – then blame Trump and the Republicans for the inevitable economic collapse – and get away with it.
Unfortunately, very rudimentary common sense is these days in very short supply.
Except in our blessed rural areas. Our hinterland residents seem to have remained largely un-addled by the institutional stupidity sweeping the country.
I hope our farmers – and everyone else – remember the pre-Democrat-shutdown economy.
And vote accordingly.
—————————– Seton Motley is the President of Less Government and he contributes articles to ARRA News Service. Please feel free to follow him him on Facebook.
Tags:Seton Motley, Less Government, Will (Rural-Farm) Voters, Remember the Pre-China Virus, Donald Trump EconomyTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
… Amy Coney Barrett is likely President Trump’s SCOTUS nominee, hence the attacks.
by Douglas Andrews: “The dogma lives loudly within you.”So said Democrat Senator Dianne Feinstein on September 6, 2017, as she “questioned” Judge Amy Coney Barrett during her Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals confirmation hearing. Feinstein must’ve forgotten about the Constitution’s Article VI “no religious test” clause, and she must’ve had no idea that her catchy little anti-Catholic smear would one day be a potent rallying cry for Barrett’s supporters.But here we are.
President Donald Trump will announce his nominee to replace Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg on the Supreme Court on Saturday, and Barrett has emerged as the strong favorite. “I’m saving her for Ruth’s seat,” the president had reportedly said when he decided on Justice Brett Kavanaugh to fill Anthony Kennedy’s seat in 2018.
At the time of Feinstein’s bigoted comment, a few leading voices spoke out against it. These included John Jenkins, president of the University of Notre Dame, where Barrett was then a law professor. “I am one in whose heart ‘dogma lives loudly,’ as it has for centuries in the lives of many Americans, some of whom have given their lives in service to this nation,” wrote Jenkins in an open letter to Feinstein. “Indeed, it lived loudly in the hearts of those who founded our nation as one where citizens could practice their faith freely and without apology.”
We could end this column right here, with those potent words. But we’ll soldier on a bit longer, because we need to explore the real dogma here, which is the religiously intolerant dogma — even the atheistic dogma — that today “lives loudly” both on the Left and within the Democrat Party.
The attacks on Barrett began in earnest yesterday, with the mainstream media taking the lead. As National Review’s Zachary Evans reports, “Barrett is reportedly a member of People of Praise, an interdenominational Christian community organization. A Tuesday article from Reuters questioned whether the group was similar to a totalitarian cult from the novel The Handmaid’s Tale, while a story from Newsweek initially asserted that Margaret Atwood, the author of the novel, used People of Praise as inspiration for the book’s fictional cult.”
That was a shameful and reckless falsehood, perhaps even an outright lie, and Newsweek was forced to correct it. But you’ll have to scroll and scroll and scroll to find where Newsweek “regrets the error” in a story that still smears Barrett and those Catholics.
Nebraska Senator Ben Sasse, though, had already heard enough. “These ugly smears against Judge Barrett,” he said, “are a combination of anti-Catholic bigotry and QAnon-level stupidity. People of Praise is basically a Bible study — and just like billions of Christians around the world, Judge Barrett reads the Bible, prays, and tries to serve her community. Senators should condemn this wacky McCarthyism.”
The secular religion of the Left is nothing new, but its numbers are growing, and so is its intolerance for people of faith. These days, leftists don’t merely reject Christianity; they ridicule it. Unless they can use it to take power — in which case they embrace it. As columnist Elle Reynolds puts it, “The media loves to fawn over the pious and heartfelt Catholicism of Joe Biden. Now they’re talking about the Catholic faith of Amy Coney Barrett, the frontrunner to be appointed to the U.S. Supreme Court. But you’ll notice a very different tone. The key differences are their adherence to their faith’s actual teachings, as well as their political leanings.”
Joe Biden is a fake Catholic, an abortion-on-demand Catholic. Judge Amy Coney Barrett, on the other hand, is a real Catholic, an honest adherent of the faith. Which is why the Left is hell-bent on destroying her.
——————— Douglas Andrews writes for The Patriot Post.
Tags:The Anti-Religious, Dogma of the Democrats, Douglas Andrews, Patriot PostTo 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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The Federal Bureau of Investigation announced Thursday that it was investigating issues with mail-in ballots in Pennsylvania’s Luzerne County after recovering at least nine votes that had been improperly discarded.
Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg’s death has landed like an atomic bomb on a trench war. Only six weeks remain until the 2020 general election, and the battle over replacing the progressive icon is on.
Donald Trump on Saturday unveils his nomination to the U.S. Supreme Court, the third of his presidency. Credit a man who looks like the undertaker but acts like the corpse for the more expressive, energetic politician picking three justices instead of one.
We went from Never Trump to Never Constitution in a nanosecond, it seems.
Entrenched foes of the president base their opposition on the unproven allegation Donald Trump is staining our democracy and defiling the Constitution. That arc now has reached almost full circle as the president’s enemies, desperate to deprive him of any victory, are concocting harebrained compromises outside the clear boundaries of the Constitution related to the next Supreme Court justice.
When the coronavirus restrictions prevented Middle East Studies academics from getting together in groups, they took their support for Palestine online. BDS organizations have been sucking up bandwidth for many months, pursuing their academic boycotts of Israel, comparing it to Apartheid South Africa, and decrying the evils of its colonial settlers.
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September 25, 2020 – Having trouble viewing this email? Open it in your browser.
Morning Rundown
RBG makes history as the first woman to lie in state at the Capitol: Two days after late Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg’s casket arrived at the Supreme Court, the pioneer of women’s rights will make history today when she becomes the first woman to lie in state at the U.S. Capitol. Since 1852, 34 men have received the honor. Three days of mourning began Wednesday with a ceremony inside the Supreme Court’s Great Hall attended by family, friends and her fellow justices. Chief Justice John Roberts called Ginsburg a “fighter” for equal justice and said, “Her voice was soft, but when she spoke, people listened.” On Thursday, President Donald Trump visited Ginsburg’s casket and the public booed him, chanting, “Vote him out!” Trump is expected to announce his Supreme Court nominee tomorrow when public services for Ginsburg conclude.
Breonna Taylor decision ignites protests in New York, Chicago and Seattle: Breonna Taylor’s family is expected to speak at a press conference this morning in response to a Kentucky grand jury’s decision to indict a former Louisville police officer for allegedly endangering her neighbors during the shooting that killed her, but not charge him or any of his fellow officers in her death. Former Louisville officer Brett Hankison was indicted on three counts of first-degree wanton endangerment for his involvement in the shooting at Taylor’s home the night of March 13, but was not charged in her death. In response to the grand jury’s decision, many took to the streets of cities including Louisville, New York City, Seattle and Washington, D.C., to voice their frustration and anger. More than 100 people were arrested in Louisville, including State Rep. Attica Scott of the Kentucky House of Representatives, and one protester in Seattle died from injuries she suffered when a car barreled into a Black Lives Matter protest on a closed freeway. The driver remains in custody on $1.2 million bail. Now, all eyes are on the FBI, which is currently investigating whether Taylor’s civil rights were violated during the shooting. “It is our hope that through the FBI’s investigation, we will get the justice for Breonna that the grand jury refused her,” lawyers for Taylor’s family said in a statement on Wednesday.
How much black licorice is too much?: A 54-year-old Massachusetts man has died after eating a bag and a half of black licorice every day for a few weeks, The Associated Press reported Thursday. Now, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration is issuing a warning about the treat, which, if eaten in excessive amounts, can trigger a series of health issues. For those 40 or older, the FDA said that “eating two ounces of black licorice a day for at least two weeks could land you in the hospital with an irregular heart rhythm or arrhythmia.” According to Dr. Alexandra Lambert, glycyrrhizin, which is found in licorice and other old-school candies, can “cause low potassium levels in the body, which can lead to abnormal heart rhythms, high blood pressure, swelling, lethargy and congestive heart failure in some people.” Lambert added that black licorice can also “interact with some medications, herbs and dietary supplements.” The FDA’s advice? Stop eating licorice immediately if you’ve been having irregular heart rhythm or muscle weakness, and no matter what your age, don’t eat large amounts of it at one time.
NASA pledges to land 1st woman on moon by 2024: It’s one small step for woman, one giant leap for womankind. NASA has announced that it plans to land the first woman on the moon by 2024. In an official update to its Artemis Plan earlier this week, NASA tweeted images of astronauts underwater in preparation for moonwalks. “We’re going back to the Moon for scientific discovery, economic benefits and inspiration for a new generation of explorers,” NASA administrator Jim Bridenstine said in a press release. “As we build up a sustainable presence, we’re also building momentum toward those first human steps on the Red Planet.”
GMA Must-Watch
This morning on “GMA,” Rachel Hollis joins us from Dallas to talk about her new book, “Didn’t See That Coming.” Plus, Tory Johnson has more Deals and Steals on jewelry, footwear and blue light glasses. And ahead of Saturday’s Farm Aid Festival, we’ll chat with performers Jack Johnson and Eric Burton of Black Pumas, who will perform their duet, “Colors”. All this and more only on “GMA.”
Democrats are gearing up for a Supreme Court showdown as President Donald Trump casts doubt on the integrity of the U.S. election, again. And a secret “man-cave” has been found in New York City’s famed Grand Central Terminal.
Here’s what we’re watching this Friday morning.
SCOTUS showdown: Democrats pick their strategy, while Trump tries to woe evangelicals with pick
The strategy could be a political winner for Democrats because it has urgency: A case involving the Affordable Care Act is headed back to the Supreme Court one week after Election Day, jeopardizing health care for millions of Americans in the middle of the coronavirus pandemic.
And Trump, who is supporting the Texas-led lawsuit to invalidate the Affordable Care Act, also known as Obamacare, has repeatedly indicated that he would nominate judges who would rule against it.
The disagreement has come down to a fight over two candidates who are federal appeals court judges — Amy Coney Barrett and Barbara Lagoa.
Trump has heard from evangelical leaders who argue that his religious supporters might be less enthusiastic about a nominee like Lagoa — a Cuban American federal appellate judge in Florida who they say doesn’t have enough of a paper trail to demonstrate conservative credentials.
Others have told Trump that they’ll only accept a nominee like Barrett, a former clerk to the late Justice Antonin Scalia, who they say has a clear conservative and anti-abortion record
Trump has said that he’ll announce his nominee Saturday and that he wants the Senate to confirm his pick before the Nov. 3 election.
Meantime, Trump was greeted withboos and chants of “vote him out”while he paid his respects to Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg at the Supreme Court on Thursday morning.
Always a trailblazer, Ginsburg will be the first woman and first Jewish person to lie in state at the U.S. Capitol.
“It’ll be a major focus,” Sen. Dianne Feinstein of California, the top Democrat on the Judiciary Committee, said of health care and the coming confirmation fight in an interview Thursday. (Photo: Bill Clark / CQ-Roll Call, Inc via Getty Images file)
2020: Trump escalates attacks on election integrity as Republicans rush to reassure the Constitution will be respected
On Thursday, Trump once again questioned the integrity of the U.S. election, saying he didn’t think there could be an “honest” election with some states sending ballots to all registered voters.
“We want to make sure the election is honest, and I’m not sure that it can be. I don’t think that it can be with this whole situation, unsolicited ballots – they’re unsolicited – millions being sent to everybody and we’ll see,” Trump said from the White House driveway.
But top Republican lawmakers dismissed Trump’s refusal to commit to a peaceful transfer of power if he loses the 2020 election, seeking to deliver reassurances that the process outlined in the Constitution will be orderly and legitimate.
“The winner of the November 3rd election will be inaugurated on January 20th. There will be an orderly transition just as there has been every four years since 1792,” Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., tweeted Thursday.
Senate Majority Whip John Thune, R-S.D., also told reporters that the peaceful transition of power is a “fundamental principle in this democracy” and he expects that to apply to the 2020 election just as it has in every election since the late 18th century.
Still, the Trump campaign on Thursday accused the Democrats of “trying to steal the election” after seven military ballots cast in favor of the presidentwere found “discarded” in Luzerne County, Pennsylvania— despite no immediate allegations of any malfeasance.
News Analysis: Biden’s campaign is trying to win at the ballot box, while Trump is maneuvering to hold power, writes NBC News’ Jonathan Allen.
Louisville protesters march for second night after Breonna Taylor decision
Hundreds of demonstrators gathered in Louisville, Kentucky, Thursday night, a day after two police officers were shotduring protests against a grand jury’s decision not to file charges in the killing of Breonna Taylor.
After months of demands by people across the country for police accountability, demonstrators spilled into the streets to voice their support for Taylor’s memory and for her grieving family.
Some called for Kentucky Attorney General Daniel Cameron torelease all the evidence in the case while others carried “Black Lives Matter” and “United Not Divided” signs and questioned whether justice would ever be served in Louisville, Kentucky.
One of the two officers shot during protests Wednesday night suffered a wound to the abdomen and remains in a hospital,authorities said Thursday. The other officer was shot in the hip and has been released from the hospital.
“We are extremely fortunate that these two officers will recover,” interim Police Chief Robert Schroeder said.
The shooting suspect has been charged with 14 counts of wanton endangerment and two counts of assault.
A team of more than a dozen French prosecutors and police investigators is investigating allegations of corruption associated with the Tokyo Olympics bid, according to a top French prosecutor with oversight of the investigation.
The scope of the scheme has surprised some French investigators, who anticipate that the investigations could broaden to include other major events.
“Corruption in some form must exist in every major sporting event,” a law enforcement source said. “The possibilities of briberies are endless.” (Photo: Eugene Hoshiko / AP file)
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Innocent investors who profited from Bernie Madoff’s massive Ponzi scheme must still pay back their profits, an appeals court ruled.
THINK about it
What’s finally hurting Trump with evangelicals? Many religious voters have woken up to the fact that he simply lacks basic Christian kindness, Doug Pagitt, executive director of Vote Common Good and an evangelical pastor, writes in an opinion piece.
Live BETTER
Love sweet potato, but don’t know what to do with it? Try these 10 sweet potato dishes that are perfect for fall.
Shopping
Looking to replace that old sofa now that you’re at home all the time? Wayfair is hosting Way Day, a two-day sale event featuring deep discounts on furniture and more.
One fun thing
A fridge with beer. A large flat screen TV. A futon.
At least three employees apparently used the unauthorized lounge to “hang out, get drunk and party,” the Metropolitan Transit Authority’s inspector general said in a report released Thursday.
“Many a New Yorker has fantasized about kicking back with a cold beer in a prime piece of Manhattan real estate — especially one this close to good transportation,” inspector general Carolyn Pokorny said in a statement.
“But few would have the chutzpah to commandeer a secret room beneath Grand Central Terminal and make it their very own man-cave, sustained with MTA resources, and maintained at our riders’ expense.”
Imagine having your own “man cave” under Grand Central Terminal’s hallowed halls. (Photo: Evan Agostini / AP file)
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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Thanks, Petra Cahill
NBC FIRST READ
From NBC’s Chuck Todd, Mark Murray, Carrie Dann and Melissa Holzberg
FIRST READ: Here’s how Trump is using the federal government to help his re-election campaign
Want to know how President Trump is using the machinery of the federal government to benefit his campaign in the final six weeks of the election?
BRENDAN SMIALOWSKI/AFP via Getty Images
Here’s what Trump and his administration did in just the last 24 hours:
First, he issued an executive order saying his administration would protect those with pre-existing conditions – even though it has backed a lawsuit before the Supreme Court that would strike down those protections (and other provisions) in the Affordable Care Act.
The problem here? “The order states that protecting pre-existing conditions was ‘the policy of the United States’ but did not provide any legislative guarantees that Americans would not lose such protections if the ACA were nixed by the Supreme Court,” per NBC News.
Then Trump promised to send seniors $200 gift certificates to help with their Medicare prescription drugs – with no real way to pay for it or constitutional justification for how his administration (and not Congress) has the power of the purse here.
And finally, the Justice Department issued a press release Thursday saying it had started an inquiry into a handful of military ballots in Pennsylvania, bewildering lawyers and election experts because the release revealed the ballots were cast in favor of Trump, Politico writes.
“It is really improper for DOJ to be putting out a press release with partial facts,” Loyola Law School professor Justin Levitt told Politico. “And it is career-endingly improper to designate the candidate for whom the votes are cast. There is no federal statute on which the identity of the preferred candidate depends.”
The first two actions – the executive order on the pre-existing conditions and then those $200 gift certificates to seniors – gave the illusion of activity. But they don’t DO anything, at least not yet.
And the third – that DOJ press release – is trying to cast doubts on the legitimacy of the election.
DATA DOWNLOAD: The numbers you need to know today
7,013,069: The number of confirmed cases of coronavirus in the United States, per the most recent data from NBC News and health officials. (That’s 48,742 more than yesterday morning.)
204,057: The number of deaths in the United States from the virus so far. (That’s 1,034 more than yesterday morning.)
98.48 million: The number of coronavirus tests that have been administered in the United States so far, according to researchers at The COVID Tracking Project.
$4.5 billion: How much New Jersey will borrow as it faces an alarming budget shortfall created by the impact of coronavirus.
$200: The amount on prescription drug discount cards that the president is pledging to send Medicare recipients right before the election. (The source of funding for them remains unclear.)
2020 VISION: Biden remains ahead… in Ohio.
Three Fox News state polls among likely voters that were released last night:
It’s a fascinating race between two high-profile candidates, and one that shows how candidates can largely follow the national dynamics while including some important local flourishes too.
TWEET OF THE DAY: Ain’t too proud to beg
Talking policy with Benjy: The electric slide
California Gov. Gavin Newsom announced this week the state would look to require all new cars sold to be electric by 2035, throwing the weight of the world’s fifth-largest economy behind a rapid transition to clean energy. Existing and used cars could still be gas-powered, NBC’s Benjy Sarlin writes.
While Joe Biden’s own climate plan does not name a target date for ending gas-powered cars, it relies heavily on encouraging quick adoption of electric vehicles with investments in new infrastructure like charging stations. Trump has mocked electric cars in speeches and rolled back President Obama’s auto efficiency standards.
Newsom’s announcement is also a continuation of an ongoing fight with the Trump administration, which has already tried to revoke the state’s authority to set its own emissions standards. That’s one environmental case among many that a right-drifting Supreme Court could end up settling in the president’s favor.
But even just the threat of potential regulations can spur action. Auto companies previously reached a voluntary agreement with California on efficiency standards, enraging Trump. And top automakers are already planning a major pivot to electric vehicles, in part because they anticipate more regulation both in the US and abroad. The United Kingdom has also set 2035 for its own transition to electric vehicles, for example.
The Social Networks
Social media companies are making a push to register voters, particularly younger generations whose turnout has historically lagged behind older groups, NBC’s Anna Karl and Gracie Lund report.
Facebook estimates that as of September 21, they have already helped register 2.5 million users across Facebook, Instagram, and Messenger — on their way to a goal of 4 million by the election. The social network also says that, as of Monday, 39 million people have visited the Voter Information Center through either Facebook or Instagram.
Snapchat, which Pew estimates is used by 62 percent of 18-29 year-olds, says it has registered over 750,000 users — double the amount recorded in 2018.
And while Twitter has yet to release any estimates, the app claims that the app is making its “biggest push ever” to register its users through alerts, hashtags, and prompts appearing on all homepages.
THE LID: Out of work, out of cash
Don’t miss the pod from yesterday, when we looked at how unemployment benefits are running out for millions of Americans — and who’s hit hardest.
ICYMI: What ELSE is happening in the world?
Senate Democrats are poised to focus on health care in the Supreme Court fight.
Mitch McConnell says “there will be an orderly transition” as Democrats rings alarm bells over Trump’s comments about the election.
A group of GOP senators is trying to ban transgender girls from competing in girls sports.
Some evangelicals aren’t fans of potential court pick Barbara Lagoa.
One other controversy involving Lagoa – she refused to recuse herself from a Florida felon voting rights case.
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi is back to fighting for more coronavirus relief.
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Eye Opener
Cities across the U.S. saw another night of unrest over a grand jury’s decision to not charge any police officers for Breonna Taylor’s death. Also, the Senate unanimously passed a resolution reaffirming its commitment to a peaceful transfer of power. All that and all that matters in today’s Eye Opener. Your world in 90 seconds.
Advancing knowledge, not imposing diversity, should be the goal of federal research funding.
By Heather Mac Donald The Wall Street Journal September 25, 2020
“The disruption in schooling caused by the global pandemic will have consequences for student learning across the board. But there’s little doubt that the harm will be disproportionately felt by children in lower-income households…”
By Marcus A. Winters Economics21 September 24, 2020
“Eastern Pennsylvania’s Berks County exemplified the pivotal role that rural voters played in Trump’s victory.”
By Charles F. McElwee The Philadelphia Inquirer September 24, 2020
Adapted from City Journal
Making threats, metaphorical or not, against one’s political opponents only makes our smoldering political atmosphere hotter.
By Steven F. Hayward City Journal Online
September 24, 2020
On September 24, Massachusetts Governor Charlie Baker joined the Manhattan Institute to discuss the lessons he has learned from leading the commonwealth during these daunting times and, more broadly, from his efforts to transform government services and improve the ability to live, work, and learn in Massachusetts.
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.
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.
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 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.
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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REALCLEARPOLITICS MORNING NOTE
09/25/2020
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Carl Cannon’s Morning Note
Ballot Chaos; Biden and Latinos; Quote of the Week; Attend Our Virtual Briefing
By Carl M. Cannon on Sep 25, 2020 09:19 am
Good morning, it’s Friday, Sept. 25, 2020, the day the week when I reprise an instructive or inspirational quotation. Choosing today’s source was easy: “the notorious RGB.” You’ll forgive me, but Ruth Bader Ginsburg said so many interesting and profound things, and said them so well, that I couldn’t limit myself to one. I chose five, but it could have been 50.
First, I’ll point you to RealClearPolitics’ front page, which presents our poll averages, videos, breaking news stories, and aggregated opinion pieces spanning the political spectrum. We also offer an array original material from our own reporters, columnists, and contributors this morning, including the following:
* * *
Warning Signs in Pennsylvania of Mail Ballot Chaos in November. Mark Hemingway reports on court decisions and other factors likely to complicate an already contentious battle in a key state.
Latino Support Lagging for Biden? We Don’t Buy It. Headlines warning of diminished Latino support for the ticket ignore history and seem to be based on a single Florida poll, argue Lionel Sosa, Maria Cardona & Albert Morales.
Amy Coney Barrett, Clear Second Amendment Backer. The circuit court judge on President Trump’s short list for Supreme Court justice has a solid record on Americans’ right to own guns, John R. Lott Jr. writes.
An Answer to Urban Violence: Take Politics Out of Policing. Illinois Senate candidate Mark C. Curran Jr. argues that city police chiefs could better respond to urban unrest if they reported to civilian review boards rather than mayors.
Joe Biden’s China Dilemma. In RealClearEnergy, Rupert Darwall asks whether, as president, Biden would push a climate-change agenda with Beijing or act to protect Taiwan, since doing both appears to be impossible.
Biden’s Long History of Voting Against Catholic Values. In RealClearReligion, Tom McClusky examines the nominee’s record in the Senate.
Will the President Socialize Health Care? In RealClearHealth, Christopher Sheeron warns against an executive order to ban surprise medical bills.
Copyright Law Favors Oracle in Dispute With Google. In RealClearPolicy, Curt Levey assesses the computer code case, which the Supreme Court will consider next month.
* * *
— “What is the difference between a bookkeeper in New York City’s garment district and a Supreme Court justice? One generation. … In America, land of opportunity, that prospect is within the realm of the achievable.” — RBG, in remarks made at a swearing-in ceremony of immigrants, National Archives, Dec. 18, 2018.
— “Dissents speak to a future age. It’s not simply to say, ‘My colleagues are wrong and I would do it this way.’ But the greatest dissents do become court opinions and gradually over time their views become the dominant view. So that’s the dissenter’s hope: that they are writing not for today, but for tomorrow.” — interview with Nina Totenberg, aired on National Public Radio, May 2, 2002.
— “I’m dejected, but only momentarily, when I can’t get the fifth vote for something I think is very important. But then you go on to the next challenge and you give it your all. You know that these important issues are not going to go away. They are going to come back again and again. There’ll be another time, another day.” — to ABC News correspondent Lynn Sherr, at the first Ruth Bader Ginsburg Distinguished Lecture on Women and the Law, New York, Nov. 15, 2000.
— “[T]he first thing we do is we go around the room, each justice shaking hands with every other. And that’s a symbol of the work that we do as a collegial body. That is, you may be temporarily miffed because you receive a spicy dissenting opinion from a colleague, but when we go to sit on the bench … it’s a way of saying, ‘We’re all in this together.’ We care about this institution more than our individual egos and we are all devoted to keeping the Supreme Court in the place that it is, as a co-equal third branch of government and, I think, a model for the world in the collegiality and independence of judges.” — to Brian Lamb of C-SPAN, 2010.
— “To make life a little better for people less fortunate than you, that’s what I think a meaningful life is.” — a conversation with Jane Shaw, dean for religious life at Stanford University, Feb. 6, 2017.
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?
South Korean elections get limited attention in the United States. But maybe they should get more. The April 2020 South Korean national election to select National Assembly (like the U.S. Congress) members resulted in an overwhelming victory for the party of incumbent President Moon Jae-in. This surprised many, if not most, observers. Concerned South Korean citizens raised immediate charges of election fraud.
As our nation is wracked by Chinese-inflicted pestilence, natural disasters and revolution in its streets, we clearly are in need of God’s grace. That is especially true on the eve of a presidential election that may well determine the survival of this constitutional Republic.
Fortunately, this weekend will see a concerted effort to appeal for divine intervention. The occasion will be The Return, a day-long act of contrition and prayer in this country and around the world.
Thanks to the vision of a formidable faith leader, Pastor Kevin Jessip, and the hard work of hundreds of other prominent clerics and laymen, this National and Global Day of Repentance will appeal for God’s forgiveness and his blessing. Nothing – nothing – could be more needed or, we pray, more restorative.
Find out how you can participate and help with this vital mission at TheReturn.org.
This is Frank Gaffney.
DAVID GOLDMAN, Author of How Civilizations Die, Best known for his series of essays in the Asia Times under the pseudonym Spengler:
The upcoming IPO of Ant Group Technology
Analyzing the potential deal between Oracle, Walmart and ByteDance
The digitizing of health care information in China
JEFF NYQUIST, Has written for Newsmax, WorldNetDaily, SierraTimes, Financial Sense and Epoch Times, Author of the book Origins of the Fourth World War and The New Tactics of Global War:
Why is China an enemy of the United States?
The criminal activity of the Chinese Communist Party
Is there a Chinese connection to the revolutionary activity in the United States?
BRAD THAYER, Professor of International Security Studies a Tallinn University, Has worked for the U.S. Department of Defense, the Rand Corporation and served as a senior analyst for the National Institute for Public Policy:
What is Han Centrism?
China’s desire to become the dominant world power
ROBERT CHARLES, Former Assistant Secretary of State at the State Department’s Bureau of International Narcotics and Law Enforcement Affairs in the Bush Administration, Author of Eagles and Evergreens:
The organization of the protests in the United States
President Trump’s upcoming Supreme Court nomination
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AMERICAN INSTITUTE FOR ECONOMIC RESEARCH
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September 25, 2020
A Warning from Two Hedge Fund Managers: Rigged to Fail
By Ethan Yang | “At the end of the day, we should all learn from history. We have seen which monetary policies work and which ones fail. We know what a drunk looks like and we know an unsustainable market when we see one. Eventually there are…
Do New York Times Headline Writers Believe Their Headlines?
By John Tamny | “The New York Times might think about this as it publishes alarmist headlines that obscure actual truths reported within the paper. It’s sad when we lose our grandparents and old people more broadly, but it’s tragic to read of…
Abolishing California Passenger Cars Could Reduce Global…
By Alan Reynolds | “Governor Newsom claims the right to dictate what sort of new cars Californians can buy, but not until 2035. When 2035 arrives, a different California Governor and legislature will surely ignore Newsom’s political time bomb.
By Robert Hughes | Sales of new single-family homes rose to the fastest pace since September 2006. Total sales rose 4.8 percent in August to a 1.011 million seasonally adjusted annual rate and are up an astonishing 43.2 percent from a year ago.
By Robert Hughes | Initial claims for regular state unemployment insurance totaled 870,000 for the week ending September 19, up 4,000 from the previous week’s upwardly revised tally of 866,000. The latest week is the 27th week of historically…
By Robert E. Wright | “Despite the Founders’ dislike of political faction, critics might retort, we have had political parties since the early 1790s and the economy has grown at modern rates ever since. That is right, but America has managed to…
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…
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.
Jason Bond, Co-Founder and Head Trading Coach at RagingBull.com is already scouting the stocks benefiting from the vaccine chatter. He’s been profiting to the tune of $10,000 in the last few weeks and he’s keeping his Watchlist in the loop. Every Sunday Jason is sending out a FREE WATCHLIST of what he feels are his highest conviction trades that week. Get the FREE WATCHLIST NOW!
The “woke mob” is in a rage after NBA legend Charles Barkley offered up some much needed common sense yesterday prior to the Los Angeles Lakers and Denver Nuggets playoff game. In a league that, like the NFL, is seeing ratings impacted…
Authored by Paul Joseph Watson via Summit News, A video out of the UK shows a man being arrested outside a Starbucks for not wearing a mask while asking police officers where they were during multiple Black Lives Matter demonstrations…
Police in the swing-state of Wisconsin are investigating how three trays of mail which included absentee ballots ended up in a ditch , after the mail was found at 8 a.m. Tuesday morning near a highway before it was immediately turned…
The global economy can seem like an abstract concept, yet, as Visual Capitalist’s Iman Ghosh notes , it influences our everyday lives in both obvious and subtle ways. Nowhere is this clearer than in the current economic state amid the…
” I was never an evil monster until you decided that I was… I never cared if you were ‘ gay ‘ until you started shoving it in my face, and the faces of my children. I never cared what color you were, until you started blaming my race…
This week Kyle Rittenhouse’s defense team published never-before-seen footage from the deadly Kenosha shooting which drove headlines after the Aug.25 incident, which came amid chaos in rioting two nights following the Jacob Blake police-related…
A criminally undervalued company awaits results in one of the richest mining districts in the world. This junior base metals miner just began drilling a project next to two of the biggest mines in the world. The move comes in advance of an imminent recovery for this often-overlooked base metal. The stock is a bargain for now – but it may not be for long. GET THE FREE REPORT NOW!
On the menu today: a long look at whether the country would be better off if Supreme Court justices were limited to 18 years on the highest court, a new survey shows the public turning away from the protesters, and a tweet from the New York Times reveals some remarkable skepticism.
Democrats in of the House of Representatives will introduce a bill next week to limit the tenure of U.S. Supreme Court justices to 18 years from current lifetime appointments, in a bid to reduce partisan warring over vacancies and preserve the court’s legitimacy.
The new bill, seen by Reuters, would allow every president to nominate two justices per four-year term and comes amid heightened political tensions as Republican … READ MORE
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“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
All Americans urged to search their name on this popular data website. YOU may be surprised by what’s publicly available on you. Look up your name. Read more…
On Wednesday night antifa-BLM mob set off the Mother-of-All-Molotov Bombs in downtown Portland. The rioters threw what appeared to be a massive Molotov Cocktail or… Read more…
John Durham, the Connecticut U.S. Attorney appointed by Attorney General William Barr to investigate the Trump-Russia collusion hoax investigation by the Obama administration and Deep… Read more…
Attorney Sidney Powell joined Lou Dobbs on Thursday to discuss the ongoing persecution of General Michael Flynn. During her interview Sidney warned corrupt deep state… Read more…
A church in Louisville has opened their doors as a sanctuary for rioters because they are exempt from the curfew imposed by the mayor. Rioters… Read more…
Texas – Gregg County Commissioner Shannon Brown, Marlena Jackson, Charlie Burns, and DeWayne Ward were arrested on charges in connection with an organized ballot harvesting… Read more…
Former US Senate candidate Dr. Shiva Ayyadurai, the inventor of Email, accused Massachusetts officials of illegally destroying over 1 million ballots in a US Senate… Read more…
Multnomah County district attorney Mike Schmidt has dropped the most serious charges against Joseph Robert Sipe, the *ALLEGED* rioting terrorist who *ALLEGEDLY* threw a giant… Read more…
Former Alaska Republican Governor Sarah Palin who was also John McCain’s Vice President pick in 2008, sent a message to Alaska Republican Senator Lisa Murkowski,… Read more…
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