Good morning! Here is your news briefing for Friday October 9, 2020
THE DAILY SIGNAL
October 9 2020
Happy Friday from Washington, where the Trump administration is skewering liberals’ vow to add more justices to the Supreme Court. It’s a hot topic as our Rob Bluey interviews a top White House spokesman. President Trump should make sure Americans know more about coronavirus testing, Marie Fishpaw and Dr. Kevin Pham write. “Problematic Women,” which we meant to include yesterday, focuses on why Supreme Court nominee Amy Coney Barrett’s faith shouldn’t be an issue. Plus: California’s reparations silliness, and Trump’s welfare reforms. On this date in 1936, Hoover Dam begins to turn the Colorado River’s power into electricity transmitted over 266 miles for use in Los Angeles.
Apparently, when California’s one-party government cannot find solutions to current existential crises, it turns to divisive issues that have little to do with the safety and well-being of its citizens.
Brian Morganstern, the White House’s deputy communications director, talks about President Trump’s health; liberals’ threat to pack the Supreme Court; and the confirmation hearings for Amy Coney Barrett.
Much of welfare reform, including the transformational 1996 reforms, has focused on the necessity of work expectations in a few key federal transfer programs.
Mary Vought explains why questioning Barrett about her religious views is unconstitutional. Her husband, she recalls, faced similar scrutiny in his own Senate confirmation hearing.
The high court dissolves a judge’s order that would have prevented South Carolina from applying a requirement for a witness signature to absentee ballots.
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THE RESURGENT
THE EPOCH TIMES
Morning Brief: Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden said he will reveal his position on “packing” the U.S. Supreme Court after the election is over.
OCTOBER 9, 2020
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BIL KEANE
Good morning,Democratic presidential candidate and former Vice President Joe Biden says he will reveal his position on packing the Supreme Court after the “election is over.”Biden and his running mate, Sen. Kamala Harris (D-Calif.), have refused on multiple occasions to answer the question.
Communism is neither a trend of thought, nor a doctrine, nor a failed attempt at a new way of ordering human affairs. Instead, it should be understood as a devil — an evil specter forged by hate, degeneracy, and other elemental forces in the universe.
When Calvary Chapel San Jose Pastor Mike McClure reopened his church for indoor services, it was May 31, the Day of Pentecost on the Christian calendar. “If … Read more
More than 14,000 scientists and medical practitioners have signed a petition against lockdown measures put in place to curb the spread of COVID-19, the disease caused by … Read more
Vice President Mike Pence and challenger Sen. Kamala Harris (D-Calif.) sparred over a series of topics at the 2020 vice presidential debate, which was largely calm and policy-focused. … Read more
The British defense committee reported on Oct. 8 that there’s “clear evidence of collusion between Huawei and the Chinese state” and urged the government to urgently remove … Read more
News that U.S. President Donald Trump appears to be recovering quickly from COVID-19, the disease caused by the CCP virus, appears to have disappointed Chinese state-run media, … Read more
Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer wants to ban from hearings and floor votes any colleague who tests positive for the CCP virus, a proposal that Republicans say … Read more
Let’s face it: There’s a lot to worry about these days if you hope to protect your hard-earned savings and retire comfortably.The U.S. has entered a red zone of debt that threatens to worsen along with the pandemic and experts warn your retirement could be at SERIOUS risk.Goldman Sachs has identified one asset class that deems virus resistant: Gold. Gold dramatically outperforms other safe havens in 2020 and has officially become, “the currency of last resort.”Convert vulnerable assets into pandemic-proof gold & silver for a worry-free retirement. Free Copy: #1 Retirement Playbook
Vice President Mike Pence had his work cut out for him in his debate with Sen. Kamala Harris on Oct. 7. Not only were the poll numbers (real or imagined) running against his ticket … Read more
During the 1960s and 1970s, when African-American revolutionaries launched street violence in cities across the United States, their close ideological and personal working relationship with the Chinese Communist Party … Read more
There is a growing consensus among food and health policy leaders in America that transitioning to a plant-based diet is essential for our health … Read more
“Every system you could possibly think of produces some kind of racial or sexual or class discrepancy. And this allows the radicals to be radicals eternally…”
Next Debate Uncertain as Debate Commission Makes Last-Minute Change
The Commission unilaterally made the debate virtual. Trump wasted no time responding, saying on Fox Business Network, “I am not going to waste my time on a virtual debate. That is not what debating is all about.” Sen. Ted Cruz also came to Trump’s defense on Fox and Friends saying, “I think they’re very happy for Joe not to leave his basement for another minute between now and Election Day, and if the commission sticks to we’re going to do it virtually, I think the president is right to say I’m not going to participate in this charade” (Breitbart). Hugh Hewitt: That the #NeverTrump Debate Commission sucker-punched Team Trump is shocking. It has no standing in law. It is supposed to be a half-way house for the parties to meet in and agree on debate formats. It’s diseased and drunk on power, and obviously anti-@realDonaldTrump” (Twitter). Sen. Tom Cotton—on with Hugh: “I have to say, I’m shocked that the Debate Commission didn’t even consult with President Trump’s campaign before making this radical change. I mean, they consult with the campaigns when they talk about the height of the podiums, Hugh, and the size of the notepads that will be on the podiums” (Hugh Hewitt).
2.
Kamala Harris Being Fact-Checked
In the debate Wednesday night, Kamala Harris stated, “The American people know that Joe Biden will not ban fracking. That is a fact.” But Biden and Harris have both repeatedly expressed support for getting rid of fracking. Biden has said that there would be “no” place in his administration for fossil fuels in his administration and he would make sure they are “eliminated” (Twitter). Biden also is on video saying, “I guarantee you we’re going to end fossil fuels” (Twitter). Harris, on the other hand, said during a CNN town hall that, “there’s no question I’m in favor of banning fracking” (Twitter). From the Federalist: She also lied frequently, and perhaps in ways that were too easily caught. She lied about Abraham Lincoln (PJ Media), she repeated the false Charlottesville hoax (Twitter), and she falsely claimed Trump called COVID a hoax (YouTube). She tried to defend Biden on fracking but did so in a way that reminded voters of how he’s been all over the map on whether he zealously seeks to ban fracking or definitely does not want to (Federalist). From Townhall: The Russian bounties story that the Left tried to weaponize against Trump as evidence he was a bad commander-in-chief was tossed around. It’s not corroborated (Townhall).
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3.
President Trump, COVID-19 and the Message of Courage
President Trump has been roundly criticized by elite media for his message against fear in the face of COVID-19. But there is a long history of presenting a message of courage—even when the facts are fearful. Lance Morrow: Bravado and defiant panache have their uses in the conduct of leadership. Think of Lord Nelson at the Battle of Copenhagen, when he put his telescope to his bad eye so that he might claim he did not see his commander-in-chief’s signal flags ordering retreat. He then led on to victory. A medical emergency like a pandemic calls more for prudence than for showmanship and more for truth than for gallant lies. Up to a point. Mr. Trump always errs on the side of bravado. But he isn’t wrong to urge Americans to be brave, and not to disable their lives and economy by surrendering to fear itself (WSJ).
4.
Violent Protests in Wisconsin Include Attacks on Private Residences
Following a court ruling that found an officer’s use of his weapon was justified. From the story: Hundreds of people marched Wednesday night after Milwaukee County District Attorney, John Chisholm, announced suspended Officer, Joseph Mensah, will not face charges in the February fatal shooting of Alvin Cole, 17, outside Mayfair Mall. Police said around 8:40 p.m., projectiles, including glass bottles, large rocks and bricks, were thrown at law enforcement.Wauwatosa police declared an unlawful assembly and directed them to disperse. The group proceeded westbound, where members of the group broke the windows of several residences and businesses. (Fox 6). Julio Rosas has the details where city residents did not take well to the violence (Townhall).
5.
Associated Press: Don’t Discuss Those Pesky Riots and the Looting
From AP: “Focusing on rioting and property destruction rather than underlying grievance has been used in the past to stigmatize broad swaths of people protesting against lynching, police brutality or for racial justice, going back to the urban uprisings of the 1960s” (NY Post). From Nikki Haley: For the AP to no longer use the word “riots” isn’t journalism — it’s propaganda. And it ignores and insults the entrepreneurs whose stores have been burned, the families whose neighborhoods have been shattered, and every American who knows our country is better than this (Twitter).
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6.
Trump Approved to Return to Public Events on Saturday
The Hill: White House physician Sean Conley said Thursday that President Trump would be able to make a “safe return” to public events on Saturday, less than two weeks after being diagnosed with the novel coronavirus (TheHill). Kayleigh McEnany provided an update Thursday night, complete with vital signs (Twitter).
7.
Pelosi Talks of Removing Trump Via 25th Amendment
Fewer than 30 days before an election, she wants him removed due to health concerns (Daily Caller). From Jenna Ellis: The fact Nancy Pelosi mentioned the 25th Amendment today shows she is willing to to pervert it in the same way she was the Impeachment Clause. Democrats should never have power (Twitter).
8.
California Governor Encourages Diners to Mask Between Bites
Yes. From the Office of the Governor of California: Going out to eat with members of your household this weekend? Don’t forget to keep your mask on in between bites (Twitter). Of course, the on-and-off of the mask raised questions from some: “Should we wash our hands after touching our mask each time we remove it between bites? What if I’m eating chips and salsa and I go for a double dip? Is that technically two bites since it’s the same chip?” another person asked (CBSNews). CBS is still waiting clarification from Gov. Newsom.
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First on #FlaPol — Joe Jacquot on Thursday departed from Gov. Ron DeSantis’ general counsel team to spend more time alongside his family.
The University of Florida law graduate worked with DeSantis since January of 2019 while his family remained in Jacksonville. Weekly, he would commute to the Governor’s Office and then return to Jacksonville to spend weekends with his family.
Director of Communications Fred Piccolo told Florida Politics that Jacquot will move on to work in private practice and leaves with the Governor’s full support.
“It has been an honor to serve you and your administration,” Jacquot wrote in his resignation letter. “I have a deep respect for your principled leadership, relying upon and furthering our constitutional democracy.”
Jacquot submitted his resignation to DeSantis roughly two weeks ago, though he requested that he remain on board for a chance to litigate the Florigrown case before the Florida Supreme Court.
He got that chance on Wednesday.
Ron DeSantis’ general counsel Joe Jacquot is taking a position in the private sector.
Among his accomplishments, Jacquot led the legal team which navigated the Governor’s Office through the Phase 3 reopening plan amid the COVID-19 pandemic.
He also oversaw the Governor’s judicial appointment process. During his tenure, five Justices were appointed to the Florida Supreme Court.
Before serving as the Governor’s General Counsel, Jacquot worked in the private sector at Foley and Lardner LLP and at Black Knight Financial Services, according to his Linkedin profile. He also served as an adjunct professor at Florida State University where he taught a constitutional course at the FSU College of Law.
Notably, Jacquot served for four years as the Deputy Attorney General for Florida’s Attorney General Office. According to his Linkedin bio, he “led an office of 1100 employees, including 425 lawyers and an annual budget of $189 million.”
During his time there, he argued before the U.S. Supreme Court in Florida v. Powell.
“I wish you and the First Lady all the best,” his resignation letter concluded.
___
The Florida League of Cities is rolling out a new initiative focused on educating and engaging Floridians on home rule.
“Building Stronger Cities: Organizing, Empowering, Delivering,” is the brainchild of FLC President and Orlando City Commissioner Tony Ortiz. The cornerstone of the campaign is a new website, BuildingStrongerCities.com, along with print, video and digital resources for residents and elected officials to help them engage with state lawmakers.
“Educating and sharing knowledge with my community has always been one of my biggest goals as a public servant,” Ortiz said. “Now, as president of the League, I’m excited to expand that goal on a statewide level through my Building Stronger Cities initiative.
FLC President Tony Ortiz is looking to boost interaction between citizens and lawmakers.
“Working together, we’re going to help every resident learn the ways of government so they will know what to expect from legislators and learn that legislation should be based upon the needs of the people. By being more informed and more engaged, residents will feel more empowered to protect their cities and their right to make local decisions. That’s how we build stronger cities and, ultimately, a stronger Florida.”
The initiative’s prime directive is building support for local decision-making. To accomplish that goal, the League is providing tools and resources that can be used by local governments and residents, all of which are available on the Building Stronger Cities website.
The website includes pages dedicated to informing city officials as well as residents, with each offering its own collection of unique content tailored to its respective audience.
Situational awareness
—@ProjectLincoln: I like presidents who don’t skip debates.
—@FManjoo: The problem with the electoral college is we spend 10x more time talking about fracking to please some folks in PA than we do the entire west coast being on fire.
Tweet, tweet:
—@RyanEGorman: An indoor, packed rally in the midst of a White House #COVID19 outbreak is an interesting approach to winning back the senior and white, college-educated women vote in #Florida.
—@RepRodriguez118: I am proud of @HCAhealthcareprotecting taxpayer dollars. I’ve never known them to do anything different!
Days until
Amazon’s annual Prime Day begins — 4; Apple announces new iPhone — 4; NBA season ends (last possible date) — 5; stone crab season starts — 6; second presidential debate (tentatively) scheduled in Miami — 6; Wes Anderson’s “The French Dispatch” premieres — 7; NBA free agency (tentative) — 9; Florida Chamber’s Future of Florida Forum — 11; HBO debuts 2000 presidential election doc ‘537 Votes’ — 12; third presidential debate (tentative) at Belmont — 13; “The Empty Man” premieres — 14; 2020 General Election — 25; NBA 2020-21 training camp — 32; The Masters begins — 34; NBA draft — 40; Pixar’s “Soul” premieres — 42; College basketball season slated to begin — 47; NBA 2020-21 opening night — 54; Florida Automated Vehicles Summit — 54; “Death on the Nile” premieres — 69; “Wonder Woman 1984” rescheduled premiere — 77; Greyhound racing ends in Florida — 83; Super Bowl LV in Tampa — 121; “A Quiet Place Part II” rescheduled premiere — 134; “Black Widow” rescheduled premiere — 149; “No Time to Die” premieres (rescheduled) — 175; “Top Gun: Maverick” rescheduled premiere — 266; Disney’s “Shang Chi and The Legend of The Ten Rings” premieres — 273; new start date for 2021 Olympics — 287; “Jungle Cruise” premieres — 295; Disney’s “Eternals” premieres — 392; “Spider-Man Far From Home” sequel premieres — 395; Steven Spielberg’s “West Side Story” premieres — 427; “Thor: Love and Thunder” premieres — 491; “Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness” premieres — 544; “Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse” sequel premieres — 725.
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. Some outlets offer a poll of polls, gauging how President Donald Trump or former Vice President Joe Biden are doing in select areas, then averaging the surveys 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 has Biden remains at 53% compared to a steady 42% 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 has moved up to an 85 in 100 chance of winning compared to Trump, who stayed steady at 15 in 100 shot. One model still has no Electoral College victory, bringing the election to the House. FiveThirtyEight also ranked individual states by the likelihood of delivering a decisive vote for the winning candidate in the Electoral College: Pennsylvania leads with 25%, while Florida is second with 17%. Wisconsin dropped to third with 15 % Other states include Michigan (8.6 %), Minnesota (5.2%), Arizona (5.1%), North Carolina (4.3%) and Nevada (3.2%).
Donald Trump continues to trail Joe Biden in the latest round of battleground state polling. Image via AP.
PredictIt: As of Thursday, the PredictIt trading market has Biden dropping to $0.67 a share, with Trump rising a bit to $0.37.
Real Clear Politics: As of Thursday, the RCP average of polling top battleground states has Biden leading Trump 51.6% to 41.9%. The RCP average also has Biden averaging at +9.7 points ahead.
Sabato’s Crystal Ball — Recent rosy polling for Biden in the presidential race may represent an artificial sugar high for the challenger. In recent days, Joe Biden’s significant lead nationally has widened. At this point, Trump needs to be making up ground — not treading water or falling further behind. Eleven rating changes across four categories of races (President, Senate, House, and Governor) almost exclusively benefit Democrats.
The Economist: As of Thursday, their model predicts Biden is “very likely” to beat Trump in the Electoral College. The model is updated every day and combines state and national polls with economic indicators to predict a range of outcomes. The midpoint is the estimate of the electoral-college vote for each party on Election Day. According to The Economist, Biden’s chances of winning the electoral college has remained steady at 9 in 10 (91%) versus Trump with 1 in 10 (9%). They still give Biden a 99% chance (better than 19 in 20) of winning the most votes, with Trump at only 1% (less than 1 in 20).
Presidential
“Donald Trump says he won’t take part in virtual debate” via Axios — Trump told Fox Business’ Maria Bartiromo on Thursday that he will not take part in a virtual second presidential debate. “I’m not going to waste my time on a virtual debate. It’s not what debating is all about. … It’s ridiculous,” the President said. Trump campaign manager Bill Stepien, who also tested positive for coronavirus, said in a statement that the campaign will “pass on this sad excuse to bail out Joe Biden and do a rally instead.” Stepien also claimed that Trump “will have posted multiple negative tests prior to the debate,” which has never been publicly confirmed by the president’s doctors.
Donald Trump refuses to participate in a virtual debate. Image via AP.
“Joe Biden to attend town hall event after Trump pulls out of second debate” via Jacob Knutson of Axios — Biden will appear at a town hall event hosted by ABC News and moderated by George Stephanopoulos in Philadelphia on Oct. 15, the network announced on Thursday. The second presidential debate was set for Oct. 15 until Trump, and then Biden, backed out on Thursday. Trump first refused to attend the debate after the Commission on Presidential Debates announced that it would be held virtually, and Biden indicated that he too would skip it if Trump would not show.
“Susan Page responds to debate critics: ‘The refusal to answer a question, I thought, could be telling’” via Jeremy Barr of The Washington Post — Page has no regrets about how she chose to moderate the debate between Vice President Mike Pence and Sen. Kamala Harris. “I felt good about how it went,” Page told The Washington Post as she headed to the airport in Utah on Thursday morning. “I felt it was a relatively civil debate, and one that was focused on issues that mattered to voters.” Page faced criticism for failing to ask enough follow-up questions or cut short the candidate who talked beyond the allotted time, in this case, Pence, who repeatedly ignored her very diplomatic pleas to wrap up his answers in adherence to the agreed-upon rules of the debate.
“Down in the polls and yearning for an October surprise, Trump lashes at his most loyal allies” via Aaron Blake of The Washington Post — There was much about Trump’s interview with Fox Business host Bartiromo that reeked of desperation and an incumbent president fighting for his political life. He decided to go down the “unlikable” path with Sen. Harris and called her a “monster.” He said he wouldn’t participate in a virtual debate with Biden next week. He suggested he might win heavily blue New York state. He even cast doubt on polls showing him down by double digits. But perhaps nothing in the interview reflected his precarious position quite like what he said about some of his most loyal allies.
“Pollster who predicted Trump’s 2016 win shows president up 3 points in Florida” via the staff of Hannity — A new InsiderAdvantage/Matt Towery, Sr., poll released today shows Trump leading Joe Biden by three points among likely voters in Florida. The results of the question “If the election were held today, who would you vote for?” showed Trump with 46% and Biden with 43%. The survey of 400 likely Florida voters was conducted by a mixed sampling including IVR to landlines and live phone calls to cell phones. It is weighted for age, race, gender, and political affiliation. It has a margin of error of plus or minus 4.9%. It was conducted Oct. 6-7.
“Trump eyes Florida rally on Saturday, leaving quarantine behind” via Steve Contorno of the Tampa Bay Times — In what could be a violation of his own administration public health protocols, President Trump is eyeing a return to the campaign trail as soon as Saturday — and he’s talking about Florida. “I think I’m going to try doing a rally on Saturday night if we have enough time to put it together,” Trump told Fox News’ Sean Hannity during his Thursday night program. “But we want to do a rally in Florida, probably in Florida, on Saturday night.
“Trump administration turns to immigration as vote nears” via Ben Fox and Elliot Spagat — It had the ingredients of a Trump campaign speech: dangerous immigrants, attacks on Democrat-run cities, even a mention of “America First.” But it was Chad Wolf, acting secretary of the Department of Homeland Security, announcing a routine, and relatively minor, enforcement operation Wednesday at a Washington news conference. “It’s not about Republicans, it’s not about Democrats, it’s not about elections,” Wolf insisted, twice, to reporters. Yet it was the third time in a week the administration rolled out actions to appear tough on immigration, reviving an issue that was at the heart of Trump’s successful 2016 campaign, but largely on the back burner in the current one.
“Trump creates the unreality he needs to steal the election” via Molly Roberts of The Washington Post — What on Earth is Trump doing? We have absolutely no idea — and not only because the White House won’t tell us. Recent days have been a mess of chaos and melodrama: conflicting reports about the President’s battle with COVID-19 from his doctors punctuated by tweets of “LOVE!!!” from the patient; a potentially dangerous surprise SUV ride followed by an early hospital discharge; an Evita-esque spectacle staged from a White House balcony complete with the ceremonial removal of a medical mask. The President is now back at the White House convalescing, yet it’s impossible to ascertain how sick he really is. Wondering about the date of the President’s last negative test? Forget about it.
“Sad state: Moment drunk ex-Trump campaign manager Brad Parscale moans his wife won’t have sex with him during ‘gun suicide’ arrest” via Mollie Mansfield of The Sun — The moment drunk ex-Trump campaign manager Parscale moaned that his wife won’t have sex with him during his “gun suicide” arrest was caught on bodycam footage. “I just couldn’t accept she isn’t having sex with me,” Parscale, 44, sobbed to a female police officer on Sept. 27. He continued: “I just couldn’t accept it. Not in months. I couldn’t accept it. I just kept asking her.” Cops dashed to Parscale’s home in Fort Lauderdale last month after his wife Candice reportedly told them he had “multiple firearms” and was threatening to harm himself. Further footage heard Parscale claiming that his wife was plotting to steal his money.
Former Donald Trump campaign manager Brad Pascale gets hauled off by Ft. Lauderdale police. Image via Ft. Lauderdale PD.
“Beer brouhaha: Florida brewery cancels two Trump events after social media backlash” via Phillip Valys of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — There’s a brewery brouhaha at Holy Mackerel Beers in Wilton Manors after two planned — and now-canceled — Trump events raised the ire of the city’s LGBT community. Wilton Manors residents and LGBT rights groups bombarded Holy Mackerel’s Facebook page Wednesday morning with negative reviews and angry messages calling for a boycott of the taproom and barbecue restaurant. At one point, the brewery shut down its Facebook page to stem the flood of messages, owner Frank Barecich said. By Wednesday afternoon, hours after the social-media kerfuffle, Holy Mackerel canceled both Trump events and posted a mea culpa on its Facebook page.
Assignment editors — Florida Trump Victory will host a ‘Back the Blue MAGA Meet-Up’ with former Attorney General Pam Bondi, 1:15 p.m., Lou’s Police Distributors, Inc., 7815 W. 4th Avenue, Hialeah. To confirm your attendance, email Kailey Cotter kcotter@donaldtrump.com with your name and outlet.
“Biden campaign sells out ‘truth over flies’ swatter after fly lands on Pence during debate” via Morgan Gstaler of The Hill — The Biden campaign quickly sold out of a “Truth Over Flies” fly swatter it was offering inspired by a viral moment from Wednesday’s vice presidential debate. During the event in Utah on Wednesday night, a fly landed on Pence as he debated against Democratic vice presidential nominee Harris. The Biden campaign quickly offered for $10 through its website a blue fly swatter, saying it “swats away flies and lies.” As of Thursday morning, Biden’s online store sold out the stock of nearly 35,000 fly swatters, according to the campaign.
The Joe Biden campaign wasted no time capitalizing on the buzz of the moment.
Assignment editors — Biden for President Florida will host a virtual phone bank kickoff with special guest Valerie Biden Owens, Biden’s sister and longtime adviser, 3 p.m. Media interested in attending should RSVP here no later than 1 p.m. ET. Members of the public who wish to attend can RSVP here.
“Officials gather information in Mike Bloomberg probe” via News Service of Florida — State law-enforcement officials have moved from a “review” phase into an “information gathering process” as they look into Bloomberg helping Florida felons pay outstanding legal costs so they could register to vote. “In a preliminary inquiry — where we are now — we start to obtain documents and conduct research,” Gretl Plessinger, a Florida Department of Law Enforcement spokeswoman, said in an email Thursday. No timeline has been set for the investigation. Attorney General Ashley Moody asked for the investigation on Sept. 23 after Bloomberg raised at least $16 million for the Florida Rights Restoration Coalition. Democrats have labeled the investigation request political theater.
Must Watch
New ads
“DNC launches anti-Trump ad in Tampa market blasting virus response” via Janelle Irwin Taylor of Florida Politics — The ad, entitled “Had enough?” begins running in the Tampa market Thursday and is part of a six-figure ad buy, according to the DNC. The ad includes ominous data points about the virus including deaths and job losses. It comes the day after Pence squared off with Harris Wednesday night in the pair’s first and only debate before the Nov. 3 election. Pundits widely believe Harris’ strongest points in the debate came in the first 15 minutes when she hit Trump and his administration over their failed COVID-19 response.
EDF Action Votes ad touts Joe Biden’s ‘bold plan’ on climate change — EDF Action Votes launched a $1 million ad campaign highlighting the stark contrast between Trump’s and Biden’s plans to tackle climate change. The ad says Biden’s plan will “create millions of clean energy jobs while protecting our beaches from drilling and rising waters and boosting Florida’s economy.” The ad, “Deserves” is geared toward Hispanic voters and will run on premium streaming services in the Tampa area. EDF is airing the ad in English and Spanish in the Tampa media market.
Lin-Manuel Miranda stars in new pro-Biden ad — United for Progress PAC and Bloomberg are hitting the airwaves with a new TV and Radio ad campaign starring Lin-Manuel Miranda, the award-winning actor, composer and lyricist who created Broadway’s HAMILTON. The ads, titled “Vote Joe,” highlights Biden’s work to secure access to affordable and quality health care for millions of Latinos through the creation of Obamacare, as well as the former Vice President’s efforts to help the nation recover from the 2009 recession and his commitment to work on behalf of Puerto Rico. The Spanish-language TV ad will air in the Tampa and Orlando Markets. The radio ads will air in Spanish and English.
America First Policies backs SCOTUS pick with another ad — America First Policies hit the airwaves with another ad supporting Amy Coney Barrett‘s confirmation to the Supreme Court. The ad, titled “Serve You,” lets Barrett do the talking: “I would assume this role to serve you. Judges are not policymakers and they must be resolute in setting aside any policy views they might hold. And if the Senate does me the honor of confirming me, I pledge to discharge the responsibilities of this job to the very best of my ability.” AFP said it will run Thursday through Oct. 13.
Bill Kristol, Billy Crystal encourage Jewish voters to back Biden — The Jewish Democratic Council of America is out with a new ad starring political pundit Kristol and comedian Crystal. JDCA said the two are backing Biden “despite their different political views and backgrounds.” JDCA Executive Director Halie Soifer added, “Our nation is in crisis, and Joe Biden is the leader we need to address COVID-19, rising White nationalism, Trump’s assault on our democracy, and Republican efforts to deprive millions of Americans of access to affordable health care.” The ad was directed by Rob Reiner, written by Phil Rosenthal and produced by Wake Up & Vote in partnership with Jews Defending American Values. It has a 30-second and 90-second cut.
To watch the ad, click on the image below:
Voters are voting
2020
“Cook Political Report: Democrats could gain 15 more seats in House two years after ‘blue wave’” via Mica Soellner of the Washington Examiner — In a new report by the nonpartisan election forecaster the Cook Political Report, seven House races have shifted in the Democratic Party’s favor, including the contest for the North Carolina seat vacated by White House Chief of Staff Mark Meadows, which moved from “Likely Republican” to “Lean Republican.” The new report on the House found the GOP’s chances of taking back the lower chamber increasingly depressed. Even if the 25 races listed as a “tossup” are split evenly, Democrats could gain five or six seats.
Mark Meadows’ former House seat could flip to blue. Image via AP.
“Turning Point USA tied to fake accounts, Facebook says” via Ben Collins and Kevin Collier of NBC News — Facebook said it has taken down hundreds of fake accounts created by a marketing company that worked with the young conservative group Turning Point USA to invade the comments sections of mainstream publishers and denigrate Democratic politicians. The marketing company, Rally Forge, worked on behalf of Turning Point USA to create 200 fake identities on Facebook and 76 on Instagram, as well as 55 Facebook pages, the social media giant said in a blog post. The identities “used stock profile photos and posed as right-leaning individuals from across the U.S.” and their “sole activity on our platform was associated with this deceptive campaign,” Facebook said.
“With Florida’s hotel workers still jobless, unions pivot to canvass for Democrats” via Bianca Padro Ocasio and Taylor Dolven of the Miami Herald — The recent ground efforts from workers pitching Democratic presidential candidate Biden and county mayoral hopeful Daniella Levine Cava are part of mobilization plans some unions crafted ahead of 2020. Before the COVID-19 crisis, unions like UNITE HERE Florida were planning to fan out throughout the state. Since the pandemic devastated the union’s dues-paying members, the groups are now fighting for their own survival and revisiting their preelection plans. They’ve flown experienced organizers in from around the country, hoping they can duplicate in Florida the Democratic victory they saw in Nevada, where the 60,000-member culinary union was able to successfully mobilize voters in 2016 for former Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton.
“The tale of two congressional races in Tampa Bay” via Peter Schorsch of Florida Politics — The national Democrats thought they had located a prized recruit to finally challenge U.S. Rep. Vern Buchanan in Florida’s 16th congressional district. They’re savior? State Rep. Margaret Good, who had previously beaten Buchanan’s son, James, in a Special Election in 2018. The storyline almost wrote itself. Until Good screwed it all up. The turn of the year started with Good committing a few election law violations. OK, candidates can’t be perfect. Then it moved to the ugly divorce with her longtime campaign manager Kevin Lata.
Margaret Good seemed to be the Democratic savior for Vern Buchanan’s seat. It’s not working out that way.
“Controversial fliers in Panama City removed; organizers point to voter intimidation” via Jacqueline Bostick of the Panama City News-Herald — Controversial fliers posted on city utility poles along Beach Drive were removed Monday after Panama City officials received complaints. “The signs were removed because they were in violation of the city’s codes,” officials wrote in an email Tuesday. The city cited local laws that restrict signs to private property and from being attached to utility or phone poles located in a public right of way. The messages included ominous phrases, such as, “Where we go one, we go all,” “Midnight Riders,” “[Q]uestion everything,” and “#fightback.”
Leg. campaigns
“Equality Florida blasts Jason Brodeur over bill to limit same-sex couple adoptions” via Scott Powers of Florida Politics — The state’s biggest advocacy organization for LGBTQ rights is spending $125,000 to blast Republican former Rep. Brodeur for his record on gay rights, specifically regarding gay and lesbian couple adoptions. Equality Florida Action, the political action committee for Equality Florida, announced it is campaigning against Brodeur in his bid to be elected to the open seat in Senate District 9. Brodeur faces Democrat Patricia Sigman in one of the hottest-contested Senate races in the state, representing Seminole County and southern Volusia County.
Equality Florida is slamming Jason Brodeur on his stance on same-sex adoptions.
“Closely watched Senate District 39 race is heating up. Here’s who’s running.” via Samantha J. Gross of the Miami Herald — Former South Miami state Rep. Javier Fernández and Doral Rep. Ana Maria Rodriguez, campaigning with a backdrop of a presidential election, are vying to replace term-limited Republican incumbent Anitere Flores in a seat that includes South Miami-Dade and all of Monroe County. Republicans see the race as a prime opportunity to defend the seat, which Flores won in 2016 when she ran to replace Democrat Dwight Bullard after the Senate district lines were redrawn. Democrats have identified it as one of the most flippable seats in the Legislature and have poured resources into the race.
“Drake Buckman, Fiona McFarland preach independence but stake out party positions” via Jacob Ogles of Florida Politics — A debate between Buckman and McFarland in House District 72 showed both candidates calling for less partisanship. But both also largely sided with positions taken by party leadership in Tallahassee. Buckman, a Sarasota Democrat, slammed a planned toll road through the Florida Heartland. McFarland, a Sarasota Republican, took a stance against Medicaid expansion. Both candidates indicated disagreement with a proposed overhaul of Florida’s primary system, a rare issue putting both state parties in lockstep. But each candidate made clear they intend to put the local needs and values of the greater Sarasota community ahead of party priorities.
“Florida adds 3,306 coronavirus cases, 170 deaths” via Natalie Weber of the Tampa Bay Times — Florida reported 3,306 coronavirus cases Thursday, adding to the 726,013 total infections tracked in the state since March. The state added 170 deaths, raising the total number of deaths statewide to 15,254. There is often a delay between when someone dies and when authorities add their death to Florida’s total count of coronavirus fatalities. Thus, the change in deaths does not necessarily reflect the number of people who died from the virus the previous day. On average, the state has announced 91 deaths per day over the past week. The state reported results for 77,485 Florida residents Thursday. It has recorded about 60,736 resident test results per day on average this week.
“Florida is moving forward with reopening. Are we in for a second surge?” via Romy Ellenbogen of the Tampa Bay Times — When DeSantis announced Florida would move into Phase 3 of reopening with no capacity restraints on businesses, he pointed to a decline in the number of coronavirus infections across the state. There were fewer cases, fewer people in the hospital, and lower positivity rates, he said. Florida has seen a general decline since a strong surge peaked in July when hospitals experienced an influx of positive patients and deaths spiked. Over the summer, the state recorded hundreds of new fatalities every day for weeks. But public health experts fear that the latest reopening may spur yet another surge in infections and deaths.
Ron DeSantis is pushing ahead with the full reopening. Health care workers are bracing for another wave. Image via AP.
“Inside a Florida hospital, coronavirus cases wane as strained staff brace for a fall surge” via Abigail Hauslohner of The Washington Post — Nearly two dozen people critically ill with the novel coronavirus were recently being treated at Tampa General Hospital, 10 of them on ventilators. More than a dozen others with noncritical cases filled beds in a dedicated ward. This is what a lull looks like. Florida was a hot spot of the coronavirus pandemic this summer. The state’s intensive care units, including those at Tampa General, were pushed to the brink as the virus spread out of control. The spike came weeks after Gov. DeSantis quickly reopened much of the state, casting it as a return to normalcy.
“After testing mishap, Quest is still vying for coronavirus testing business in Florida” via Romy Ellenbogen of the Tampa Bay Times — A month ago, DeSantis cut ties with Quest Diagnostics, the commercial laboratory responsible for handling the vast majority of Florida’s coronavirus testing caseload. The company reported a 75,000-test backlog to the Florida Department of Health in one day, skewing the state’s daily tracking of COVID-19 infections, deaths and positivity rate. Stripped of its contract to work with the state government, Quest is now marketing in Florida and offering rapid COVID-19 tests to patients through its own private business.
“Purple Florida: Lawmakers prepare to navigate COVID-19 in politically divided state” via Jacob Ogles of Florida Politics — GrayRobinson hosted a virtual bipartisan panel of House personalities entitled “Purple State Politics: Discussing Florida’s Unique Geographical and Political Diversity.” Two Republicans, Rep. Alex Andrade and House candidate Michelle Salzman, streamed in from the Panhandle, while Reps. Dan Daley and Nick Duran logged on from South Florida. While there were some partisan jabs, both playful and philosophical, there seemed agreement the challenges in the next year will require pragmatism. The leaders also seemed to agree the COVID-19 pandemic would deliver consequences that last for a long time, both in public health and Florida’s economy.
More local
“Party on? As COVID-19 restrictions subside, FSU students head back to Tallahassee clubs” via Jensen Kervern of the Tallahassee Democrat — After DeSantis lifted nearly all COVID-19 restrictions on businesses, restaurants and bars across the state, students didn’t hesitate to take full advantage of Tallahassee’s recently resurrected nightlife. Bajas Beachclub on West Pensacola Street, which was closed by the state in late June for violating closure orders, held their grand reopening Saturday, Oct. 3, and students arrived in droves, eagerly standing shoulder-to-shoulder in the parking lot. The consensus from the crowd suggests many students don’t see COVID-19 as an immediate threat. In fact, every student that spoke with the Tallahassee Democrat claimed to have had the virus.
With restrictions lifted, the FSU party life is getting back to normal. Image via the Tallahassee Democrat.
“Ron DeSantis ruling gives Florida and Georgia option to increase TIAA Bank Field capacity” via Garry Smits of The Florida Times-Union — DeSantis has given sports teams the ability to pack as many fans as they want into their stadiums under a clarification his office issued about the Phase 3 reopening of the state. Two of the state’s NFL teams aren’t taking any chances. But officials at the University of Florida and the University of Georgia are currently not saying whether they will seek more capacity for their 98th meeting overall and 88th in Jacksonville.
“With holidays on the horizon, COVID-19 still being spread in Okaloosa County” via Tom McLaughlin of Northwest Florida Daily News — Okaloosa County residents continue to share COVID-19 with one another at an alarming rate, and this week Health Department Director Dr. Karen Chapman warned residents to “consider CDC guidelines” in planning holiday celebrations. In her weekly report sent out Tuesday, Chapman said that for the past four days the county had seen a decline in the percentage of those tested turning up positive for the coronavirus. The numbers actually dropped below the goal of 5 percent on Oct. 3-4, but “as of yet no sustained decline over a two-week period” has been confirmed. “COVID-19 transmission continues,” Chapman reported. The number of cases reported in the county has averaged about 30 per day since Sept. 21.
COVID 45
“One week at the White House was America’s pandemic in a microcosm” via Robert Langreth and Michelle Fay Cortez of Bloomberg — The White House outbreak, consuming the highest levels of the U.S. government, is a superspreader event with geopolitical shock waves. It’s driven several of the country’s top military leaders into quarantine and could ultimately put thousands of ordinary people, including staff at the White House and Trump’s Bedminster, New Jersey, golf club and their families, in danger. And it’s a microcosm of the Trump administration’s handling of the pandemic from the beginning: All along, it has bet on quick fixes over unglamorous preventive measures like masks, social distancing, and contact tracing.
The White House as a coronavirus hotspot is sending geopolitical shock waves.
“White House again refuses to disclose Trump’s last negative coronavirus test” via Jacob Knutson of Axios — White House communications director Alyssa Farah declined to tell reporters when Trump last tested negative for COVID-19 on Thursday, saying that “the doctors would like to keep it private.” It marks at least the eighth time since Trump tested positive for the virus one week ago that White House officials have refused to disclose the information. The detail could help determine when he contracted the virus, who he exposed, and the timeline of his illness. The White House is scrambling to respond to the outbreak as the list of officials who have tested positive for the virus, which includes senior officials like Stephen Miller and Hope Hicks, continues to grow.
“Democrats rip Trump for suggesting Gold Star families could have given him COVID-19” via Quint Forgey and Connor O’Brien of POLITICO — Top congressional Democrats condemned Trump after the commander in chief suggested that he might have contracted COVID-19 from Gold Star family members who were too close to him when telling stories of their loved ones who died in the line of duty. Democrats said Trump’s comments, made in an interview, disrespected military families and shifted blame for his administration’s shortcomings on the coronavirus. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said in her weekly news conference on Capitol Hill that Trump’s comments underscore the need for the administration to disclose when the president last tested negative for the coronavirus.
“COVID-19 survivors see callousness, not compassion, in Trump’s bout with the virus” via Griff Witte of The Washington Post — Ken Holmes, a retired maintenance worker in Wisconsin, never had much in common with Trump, or much affection for him. But when the President caught a potentially lethal virus that had nearly killed Holmes this year, the 64-year-old saw a rare opportunity for connection. Trump, Holmes thought, might finally understand what he had come to learn through painful experience: The novel coronavirus is a monster that commands respect. “He can still make this right,” Holmes thought. But then Trump stood on the White House balcony Monday night, theatrically ripped off his mask while gasping for breath, and proclaimed the virus was nothing to fear.
“The creepy Trump meme taking over Twitter” via Kaitlyn Tiffany of The Atlantic — When Trump announced that he and his wife, Melania, had tested positive for COVID-19, the replies were full of well-wishing, as well as admonishments from others for not being careful. Less expected was a whole host of messages full of indecipherable hexes, pictures of demons, and cursed images of all kinds. “The dead are resurrected day and night without anyone knowing,” reads one tweet written in Punjabi and paired with an image of what appears to be a young female ghost. Others are in Amharic, an Ethiopian language, and say things like “Arise from the ashes of your wickedness and repent before our Lord Lucifer pays your debts.”
“White House security official contracted COVID-19 in September” via Jennifer Jacobs of Bloomberg — A top White House security official, Crede Bailey, is gravely ill with COVID-19 and has been hospitalized since September, according to four people familiar with his condition. The White House has not publicly disclosed Bailey’s illness. He became sick before the Sept. 26 Rose Garden event Trump held to announce his Supreme Court nominee Amy Coney Barrett that has been connected to more than a dozen cases of the disease. A White House spokesman declined to comment on Bailey. He is in charge of the White House security office, which handles credentialing for access to the White House.
“D.C. urges Rose Garden ceremony attendees to get tested for COVID-19” via Marisa Fernandez of Axios — The Washington, D.C. Department of Health asked attendees and White House staff at the Rose Garden celebration for the introduction of Supreme Court nominee Coney Barrett on Sept. 26 to seek medical advice and get tested for COVID-19 by their local health department. The outbreak tied to the White House contributed to an increase in the District’s caseload. D.C. experienced a 26% increase last week, rising from some 40 new cases per day to about 50. Before the outbreak, D.C. Mayor Muriel Bowser had not publicly commented on any of the White House’s coronavirus practices, which have violated several D.C. virus regulations.
The Mayor of D.C. recommends that everyone at the Rose Garden ceremony be tested.
“Mitch McConnell says he hasn’t been to White House since August, citing COVID-19 protocols” via Dominic Torres and Clare Foran of CNN — Senate Majority Leader McConnell said he hasn’t been to the White House since early August, citing a difference in coronavirus protocols at the White House and in the Senate. “I haven’t actually been to the White House since August the 6th because my impression was their approach to how to handle this is different from mine and what I insisted that we do in the Senate, which is to wear a mask and practice social distancing,” McConnell said at a Kentucky event in response to a question about whether he believes Trump should be disclosing more information about his recent coronavirus diagnosis.
Corona nation
“Under Mike Pence, politics regularly seeped into the coronavirus task force” via Mark Mazzetti, Noah Weiland and Sheryl Gay Stolberg of The New York Times — At the task force, grim science-based projections were sometimes de-emphasized for rosier predictions, and guidance from public health agencies, about schools and summer camps, for example, was sometimes massaged by the vice president’s staff. Interviews with task force members, government public health officials and current and former White House officials show how public health considerations were sometimes at odds in the task force with the White House’s imperative for 2020: winning reelection on the basis of a strong economy.
“CDC expands COVID-19 risk warning to include overweight people” via Emma Court of Bloomberg — The link between extra pounds and severe COVID-19 grew stronger as the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said that people who are merely overweight, not just the obese, may be at high risk of serious disease from the infection. The warning, posted on the agency’s website Tuesday, means about two-thirds of Americans could face higher risks. Metabolic changes tied to excess weight reduce the immune system’s ability to fight disease, which likely plays a role when it comes to coronavirus outcomes, said Barry Popkin, a nutrition professor.
Corona economics
“Trump tells House GOP leader he wants a ‘big deal’ on COVID-19 relief” via Alayna Treene and Jonathan Swan of Axios — Within a day of tweeting that he was calling off bipartisan talks for a coronavirus stimulus deal, Trump phoned House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy and indicated he was worried by the stock market reaction and wanted a “big deal” with Speaker Pelosi, per two sources familiar with the call. Trump was spooked after seeing the instant drop in the stock market and intense backlash to his tweet, and he has since directed Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin to push for a more comprehensive relief bill before the election. He wants a deal that would go beyond securing aid for the struggling airline industry and extending the small business Paycheck Protection Program.
Donald Trump is telling GOP leaders to cut a ‘big deal’ with Nancy Pelosi. Image via AP.
“Nancy Pelosi signals no relief for airlines without bigger COVID-19 deal” via Heather Caygle, Sarah Ferris and Sam Mintz of POLITICO — Pelosi is refusing to move a stand-alone coronavirus bailout for airlines unless the administration also agrees to a broader stimulus package, sowing further confusion in the already tangled talks that have dragged on since early summer. “I have been very open to having a single stand-alone bill for the airlines or part of a bigger bill. But there is no stand-alone bill without a bigger bill,” Pelosi told reporters Thursday at her weekly news conference. Pelosi’s comments appeared to be a change in direction for Democrats, one day after she and some top lawmakers had privately discussed moving ahead with an airlines-only relief bill as soon as this week.
“Millions brace for more layoffs, hunger and utility shut-offs as stimulus talks break down” via Eli Rosenberg and Heather Long of The Washington Post — Americans left in the lurch by Trump’s sudden decision to abandon negotiations over a long-delayed stimulus package expressed disbelief, disgust and desperation about Trump’s abrupt move. More than a dozen unemployed workers and struggling business owners affected by the move said that while they are familiar with Washington’s dysfunction, they are stunned by the latest decision by Trump and Republicans to break discussions off. Many said they are counting on an influx of financial support, as they watched bank accounts dwindle since the expiration of most of the previous aid programs in August.
“Jobless claims up as layoffs continue” via News Service of Florida — First-time unemployment claims jumped last week in Florida, as a growing number of major entertainment and travel-related businesses cut hours and lay off employees. The U.S. Department of Labor estimated 40,200 new unemployment claims were filed in Florida during the week that ended Oct. 3, up from 32,373 the prior week. The new total was the largest number for one week since the start of September and since DeSantis lifted most business restrictions. Disney World, Universal Florida and Baggage Airline Guest Services announced thousands of new layoffs this week, the Regal cinema chain suspended operations at all movie theaters, and the P.F. Chang’s restaurant chain further cut hours for nearly 800 employees across the state.
“Carnival reports $2.9 billion loss, still assessing testing options for Nov. 1 cruises” via Taylor Dolven of the Miami Herald — Carnival reported a net loss of $2.9 billion for the three months ending in August 2020. In a filing to the Securities and Exchange Commission, the company said it had a cash burn rate during the three-month period of $770 million as it nears the end of its seventh month without cruises in the U.S., its most lucrative market. The company said it is preparing to restart cruises in the U.S. as soon as Nov. 1. The industry has committed to what it’s calling “100% testing” of passengers before boarding but is not offering specifics about what testing will be used, when it will be done, and whether the passenger or the companies will pay for it.
More corona
“Prepare for a ‘marathon’ and two years of wearing masks to battle COVID-19, says prominent Spanish virologist” via Barbara Kollmeyer of MarketWatch — Margarita del Val heads up a cross-disciplinary initiative by the Spanish National Research Council. She said no one can count on one single measure, but lifestyle changes will be required. “We have to get used to wearing a mask and taking a couple of measures for a couple of years, and integrate them into our daily lives, forget about them, they will turn into something that is useful to you,” she said. “We will get over this in some years, but we don’t have to expect this is going to be a hundred-meter run. It’s going to be a marathon.”
Spanish virologist Margarita del Val warns that COVID-19 will lead to several ‘lifestyle changes.’
“Disney slams California Governor after he slows reopening of California theme parks” via Chris Woodyard of USA Today — Disneyland and other large theme parks in the Golden State won’t be reopening anytime soon, California Gavin Newsom said. In fact, he said the state “is in no hurry in putting out guidelines,” the rules that theme parks would need to operate safely as the coronavirus pandemic continues to rage. His grim pronouncement marked a turnabout from last month, when Newsom said he expected the guidelines to be issued “very, very shortly” as the state negotiated with the industry. Newsom’s latest declaration comes as a blow to Disneyland and to the city of Anaheim, east of Los Angeles, where what is normally the Happiest Place on Earth is the largest employer.
“Airbnb hosts now must follow mandatory cleaning protocol — or risk getting kicked off the platform” via David Oliver of USA Today — Airbnb hosts and guests are now required to adhere to mandatory mask, social distancing and cleanliness guidelines amid the coronavirus pandemic. According to an announcement from the short-term rental platform, hosts and guests must now wear masks and practice social distancing while interacting with one another, and by Nov. 20, homes need to implement the company’s five-step cleaning process. Airbnb’s “enhanced clean” program was developed in conjunction with health experts and includes a five-step cleaning procedure as well as social distancing guidelines.
“A disrupted Thanksgiving leaves the turkey business guessing” via Kim Severson of The New York Times — Just how many whole turkeys will Americans cook this year for a holiday whose wings have been clipped by the pandemic? “That’s the big question on the tip of everybody’s tongue,” said Stew Leonard Jr., who expects to sell 20 percent fewer big turkeys at the seven stores his family owns in the Northeast. All indications are that the holiday gatherings that used to bring together dozens of people to share one or two turkeys will be scuttled in favor of smaller celebrations. That could lead to a run on small turkeys, a higher-than-usual demand for parts like whole breasts, and higher prices across the board.
Statewide
“Democrats propose plan to improve Florida’s unemployment benefits, process” via Lawrence Mower of the Miami Herald — Democratic lawmakers announced they will propose a major overhaul to the state’s broken unemployment system that includes nearly doubling weekly benefits and tripling the number of weeks someone could receive those benefits. Maximum weekly benefits would rise to $500 per week, instead of the current $275. Minimum weekly benefits would rise to $100, from the current $32. And self-employed workers would, for the first time, be eligible for state benefits. The proposed bill, still in draft form, also addresses some of the problems that have frustrated millions of Floridians who have filed for unemployment after losing their jobs in the pandemic this year.
“‘A historic year for gun sales’: Florida background checks surge amid pandemic, protests” via Julius Whigham II of The Palm Beach Post — More than 1 million people in Florida requested background checks to purchase firearms during the first nine months of 2020, according to statistics from the Florida Department of Law Enforcement. In another indication that many are buying guns for the first time, there have been more than 80,000 new applications for concealed weapons permits since July 1, according to the Florida Department of Agriculture. There also have been more than 36,000 applications for permit renewals. The 1 million gun license background checks marks the first time since 2016 that Florida had that many and just the second time at least since 2004, the FDLE’s data shows.
It’s been a banner year for gun sales in Florida.
D.C. matters
“What the potential death of the Affordable Care Act means for Florida” via Kirby Wilson of the Tampa Bay Times — Few states would be more affected than Florida by the demise of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, also known as “Obamacare.” The Trump administration is currently arguing before the Supreme Court that the entire law should be terminated. Millions of Floridians get insurance through the law. The Supreme Court could very well strike down the law. Democrats could make the Supreme Court case a nonissue after November. Florida has a law that mandates coverage of preexisting conditions. Sort of.
Local notes
“Lake Worth Beach Commissioner Omari Hardy resigns … with some parting words” via Jorge Milian of The Palm Beach Post — Hardy vacated his seat on the Lake Worth Beach city commission this week, but he did not go quietly. Hardy, a Democrat, needed to resign from his seat to qualify for the Nov. 3 election for HD 88. His resignation ended a turbulent tenure marked by angry squabbles with other board members, most notably a nasty, high-decibel spat with Mayor Pam Triolo in March. “I don’t think she’s been much of a leader over the past several months and, really, over the past several years,” Hardy said of Triolo. “She has no problem cutting a ribbon or standing on a parade float or making remarks at an event, but she works hard to avoid tough decisions.”
A nasty exchange between Lake Worth Beach Mayor Pam Triolo and Commissioner Omari Hardy has led to Hardy’s departure.
“Parkland families must turn over some mental-health records to School Board, judge rules” via Rafael Olmeda and Megan O’Matz of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — The victims of the Marjory Stoneman Douglas shooting, and their families, will have to turn over some records of their mental health treatment since the tragedy, a Broward judge ruled. But it’s not clear how many victims will have to comply, or how much information they will have to disclose as part of a lawsuit accusing the Broward School Board of failing to protect the students from the shooter’s Valentine’s Day 2018 rampage. Broward Circuit Judge Patti Englander Henning saved the most contentious issues of her ruling for a later date, giving the Broward School Board and the plaintiffs a chance to work it out before she issues a comprehensive ruling that could leave both sides unhappy.
“Miami-Dade is one storm away from a housing catastrophe. Nearly 1M people are at risk” via Rene Rodriguez and Yadira Lopez of the Miami Herald — Housing advocates have long feared that the city is one storm away from disaster; nearly a third of all housing structures in Miami-Dade County built before 1990 are at risk of wind damage, mold contamination and even complete devastation from a hurricane. According to U.S. Census figures, nearly one million people could be left homeless in a worst-case scenario — the majority of them among the poorest of the county’s residents. About 70.2% of the county’s 1,016,653 single-family homes, condos and town houses were built before 1990, two years before Miami-Dade and Broward adopted a stricter “High-Velocity Hurricane Zone” building code standard after Hurricane Andrew. Bringing all that housing stock up to code would cost billions of dollars.
“Hollywood Mayor vows to rebuild after fire engulfs several businesses on Broadwalk” via Wayne K. Roustan, Ben Crandell and Amy Beth Bennett of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — Flames swept along a row of businesses on Hollywood’s Broadwalk early Thursday, damaging several businesses including the Little Venice restaurant and Blue Wave Bar & Grill. The fire is another blow to local restaurants and businesses already struggling amid the COVID pandemic. Mayor Josh Levy, a Hollywood native, said the building involved has always been a prominent destination on the Broadwalk, both for its central location and as a source of “great pizza and great sandwiches.” Arriving Thursday morning to find it turned into “a charred twist of metal and burned plastic,” Levy pledged to expedite the rebuild of “people’s dreams and livelihoods.”
“Investigators interview Orlando, Orange County Mayors in airport probe” via Jason Garcia of the Orlando Sentinel — Orlando Mayor Buddy Dyer and Orange County Mayor Jerry Demings met last month with investigators looking into possible Sunshine Law violations on the board that runs Orlando International Airport. Carson Good, the chairman of the Greater Orlando Aviation Authority’s governing board, and airport Executive Director Phil Brown were also interviewed earlier in the summer. None of the four would discuss interviews in any detail. But Dyer said the probe is focused on a meeting in August 2019 in which the five gubernatorial appointees on the seven-member airport board attempted to replace the agency’s top attorney with two new lawyers who would have been given unadvertised, no-bid contracts.
Both Buddy Dyer and Jerry Demings are under the microscope for possible Sunshine Law violations.
“When Orlando theme parks self-report ride injuries, details can be left out” via Gabrielle Russon of the Orlando Sentinel — The public doesn’t always learn how badly people get hurt in the most serious accidents in Florida’s major theme parks because of a self-reporting system that lacks government oversight. Critics say Universal, Disney and other parks can downplay what happens without facing consequences. As part of a nearly 20-year-old agreement, Universal, Disney, SeaWorld, Busch Gardens and Legoland self-report visitors’ health problems on rides to the Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services as long as they require at least 24 hours of hospitalization.
“Skanska a ‘very frustrating partner’ legislators say after Pensacola Bay Bridge meeting” via Jim Little of the Pensacola News Journal — Pensacola legislators voiced frustration at Skanska’s lack of public response to the community’s concerns about the damage the Pensacola Bay Bridge suffered during Hurricane Sally. “This was a great positive, productive meeting full of a lot of consummate professionals, but there was one very notable absence,” Rep. Andrade said following a closed-door meeting with the Florida Department of Transportation officials at Pensacola City Hall. “I would challenge any single person watching any of these videos in any of these streams to put a face to Skanska.”
“After losing it all to flooding again, Bristol Park residents desperate for long-term fix” via Kevin Robinson of the Pensacola News Journal — Many residents of Bristol Park in Cantonment have lost it all to flooding multiple times, and they stand to lose it all again anytime there is significant rainfall. In 2014, more than 160 homes were flooded during record rainfall, and dozens of people had to be rescued by boat as rising floodwaters forced them to take shelter on rooftops. In 2016, FEMA awarded Escambia County $6 million through its Hazard Mitigation Grant Program to purchase about 23 acres of property in Bristol Park. Many said they believe the best option is for FEMA or the county to buy all of the homes in the neighborhood and turn the whole community into a stormwater retention lake.
“Realtors pressure St. Pete to loosen development rule in flood-risk zone” via Josh Solomon and Zachary T. Sampson of the Tampa Bay Times — As a key vote looms before the City Council to potentially allow more development in flood-prone areas, one of Florida’s powerful special interest groups is making a late push. A political committee of Florida Realtors, which lobbies for the real estate industry, sent a mailer to some residents encouraging them to urge council members to pass the changes. “Protect private property rights in St. Pete,” one version says, highlighting “outdated development restrictions” while steering people to a website with a form email to send to city leaders. The same website was used years ago to advocate against a change to the way the city designated historic neighborhoods.
“31-year-old man suffers 8-inch laceration from shark attack off Miami Beach” via CBS Miami — A 31-year-old man was taken to the hospital Wednesday afternoon following a shark attack off Miami Beach. According to Miami Beach PD, the man was bitten by a blacktip shark near 10 Street, resulting in an 8-inch laceration below the knee. As a precaution, Miami Beach Fire Rescue took the victim to Ryder Trauma Center, where he’s in stable condition. Double red flags are being flown at the lifeguard towers between 5 Street and 15 Street, warning beachgoers not to enter the water. Miami Beach police said there appeared to be a number of baitfish schools in the area.
Smoldering
“Born with two strikes” via Toluse Olorunnipa and Griff Witte of The Washington Post — Throughout his lifetime, George Floyd’s identity as a Black man exposed him to a gantlet of injustices that derailed, diminished and ultimately destroyed him, according to an extensive review of his life based on hundreds of documents and interviews with more than 150 people, including his siblings, extended family members, friends, colleagues, public officials and scholars. The picture that emerges is one that underscores how systemic racism has calcified within many of America’s institutions, creating sharply disparate outcomes in housing, education, the economy, law enforcement and health care.
“Kentucky attorney general seeks to ban Breonna Taylor grand juror from discussing proceedings” via Marisa Iati, Hannah Knowles and Abigail Hauslohner of The Washington Post — Kentucky Attorney General Daniel Cameron filed a court motion seeking to bar an unidentified grand juror in the Taylor case from speaking about the proceedings, which the juror alleges Cameron has publicly mischaracterized. The motion comes the same day as the city of Louisville released a trove of documents from the police department’s internal investigation into the fatal shooting of Taylor while officers carried out a search warrant in March. The documents show other Louisville officers criticizing the raid and cast doubt on the police department’s justifications for the warrant, a key question addressed only in passing in recently released audio of the grand jury proceedings.
Kentucky Attorney General Daniel Cameron is trying to silence a grand juror in the Breonna Taylor case.
“As election draws closer, the NBA continues calls to vote” via Tim Reynolds of The Associated Press — Udonis Haslem is honest about it: Elections simply have not been overly important to him. That is, until now. He’s been a registered voter since 2004, so it’s not like he’s been unaware of the process or how it works. But it’s also been far from a passion project for Haslem, the Miami Heat forward who serves as a team captain and tries to set an example for every other player in the locker room. So, this year, that meant getting involved in the election process. “Growing up in my household, voting was never a conversation,” Haslem said. “Voting was never a conversation when I went to school.”
“‘Speak up!’ — ‘Sesame Street’ tackles racism in TV special” via Mark Kennedy of The Associated Press — “Sesame Street” has always pressed for inclusion. Now in the wake of the national reckoning on race, it’s going further, teaching children to stand up against racism. Sesame Workshop, the nonprofit, educational organization behind “Sesame Street,” will later this month air the half-hour anti-racist special “The Power of We” and hopes families will watch together. The special defines racism for younger viewers and shows how it can be hurtful. It urges children who encounter racism or hear someone else be the victim of it to call it out. “When you see something that’s wrong, speak up and say, ‘That’s wrong’ and tell an adult,” 6-year-old Gabrielle the Muppet advises.
Top opinion
“No more presidential debates this year? Not a problem. We’ve seen enough.” via Margaret Sullivan of The Washington Post — With these dispiriting events still fresh in one’s mind, a sensation of welcome relief flooded in when the presidential debate commission announced that, given Trump’s recent COVID-19 diagnosis and general public health concerns, the second Trump-Biden debate would not be done in person next week but rather remotely. The decision made good sense. For safety’s sake, the candidates should not be on a stage together, with or without those unimpressive plexiglass dividers. Even if masked and socially distant, debate staff and audience members would be in harm’s way.
Opinions
“Democracies are still falling for China’s lies” via Marco Rubio for The Telegraph — With another week comes another empty promise from the Chinese Communist Party (CCP). This time, the hollow gesture was a pledge to fight climate change. In statements before the UN General Assembly last week, credulous politicians lauded Beijing’s declaration that it would become carbon-neutral by 2060. European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen said she was “encouraged” by the pledge, while Barack Obama administration climate envoy Todd Stern welcomed it as “big and important.” What exactly are they expecting will happen?
“The man who pretended not to notice” via David Frum of The Atlantic — We saw a weird moment when a fly landed on Pence’s snow-white hair and the vice president did not react at all. No doubt, it’s a conundrum, what to do in such a situation. If Pence had shooed the fly and the fly had refused to shoo, that would have been bad. So he did nothing. And that doing nothing somehow in one powerful visual moment concentrated everything. It symbolized the whole Pence vice presidency. Through all of the scandals and the crimes and the disasters of the past four years, Pence was the man who pretended not to notice. And now there was a fly on his head, and he pretended not to notice that too.
“When a fly ruins your image” via Vanessa Friedman of The New York Times — The TV-watcher-in-chief, with his penchant for “central casting” his administration, could not have been pleased with the mockery it engendered on his favorite social media platform. The fly was the black spot in the ointment of Pence’s image, which has always seemed to belong to a Lego set, or a Build-a-Bear experience (build a politician!). From dark suit to the pristine white shirt and favored red ties to snowy hair that appears practically painted on, it’s as if he came straight out of a mold. Harris looked like her own person. By Thursday morning her reply to Pence’s mansplaining interruptions had already made it onto merch. No flies on her.
“Who to blame for state’s voter registration system failure? No, not Russians, the culprits are closer to home” via Frank Cerabino of The Palm Beach Post — The search for “bad actors” in Florida’s election process shouldn’t be confined to hackers overseas. This week, when Florida’s voter registration website crashed on the final day to register for the upcoming election, Secretary of State Laurel Lee suggested that the shutdown may have been a result of a cyberattack from foreign hackers. But after a brief investigation, it turned out the culprit was actually Florida’s own elections officials. “The servers were configured in a way that reduced its capacity to a fraction of a fraction of what it was capable of,” Florida’s chief information officer James Grant told The Associated Press on Wednesday. That’s like supermarkets taking turkeys off their shelves the days before Thanksgiving.
Today’s Sunrise
Florida’s unemployment office had so much trouble sending out checks during the COVID-19 crisis, it’s trying to get some of that money back.
Also, on today’s Sunrise:
— Democrats have been complaining about the unemployment system for months and they’ve produced a fix. Sunrise checks out their bill to raise benefits and change the mindset at the state unemployment office.
— The state has passed another statistical milestone in the COVID-19 crisis: More than 15,000 Floridians have now been killed by the coronavirus. When you include victims from other states or countries who died in Florida, the total is now 15,248.
— Republican leaders in Tallahassee are refusing to call a Special Session to deal with COVID-19, but rank-and-file lawmakers say it’s going to be their No. 1 issue in March when the 2021 Session begins.
— And finally, a Florida man who doesn’t know if the Holocaust actually happened, but he does know one thing for sure — he’s getting his job back.
Dishonorable Mention: Rep. Chris Latvala, activist Becca Tieder, Ernest Hooper and communications expert Dr. Karla Mastracchio discuss politics and culture. The hosts discuss the first debate between Trump and Biden, reacting to the President’s lack of denouncing White supremacy during the debate and race relations in the U.S. They also discuss DeSantis opening the state back up with no mandatory restrictions. Also, the Tampa Bay Lightning are Stanley Cup champions.
Inside Florida Politics from GateHouse Florida: Trump’s coronavirus infection has taken him off the campaign trail in a must-win state. Journalists Zac Anderson, John Kennedy and Antonio Fins discuss how the president’s illness could impact the race in Florida, what the Trump campaign is doing to compensate, some new polls showing the state of the race and the demise of the second presidential debate, which had been scheduled for Miami.
podcastED: Stand Up for Students President Doug Tuthill catches up with Louis Algaze who became Florida Virtual Schools’ president and CEO in July 2019. Since the two last spoke in May, Florida’s fully accredited online public-school district has seen an increase of 3,700 students and now fulfills more than 200,000 part-time flexible course requests statewide and beyond. Tuthill and Algaze discuss what has worked thus far for FLVS as well as improvement opportunities that will allow the school to continue providing virtual instruction for the great number of families who want it. Algaze also reflects on his surprise at the last-minute jump in the number of families interested in virtual classes even after school districts reopened with in-person instruction.
Tallahassee Business Podcast from the Tallahassee Chamber presented by 223 Agency: Christic Henry joins Sue Dick for a discussion on National Women’s Small Business Month. As a small-business owner herself, Henry champions the U.S. Small Business Administration for declaring October to celebrate and support Women-Owned Small Business. Henry is heavily involved in the Tallahassee community and advocates for members of the business community to play an active role in making Tallahassee the best it can be.
The New Abnormal from host Rick Wilson and Molly Jong-Fast: Kathy Griffin joins Jong-Fast and Wilson for a special episode recorded right after the vice-presidential debate. The gang thought Harris was the clear winner but they couldn’t stop looking at the vice president’s eye. “The close-up shots of Mike Pence’s bleeding eyeball were like watching an eighties horror movie. I expected some sort of snake to come running out of it at any minute,” Wilson said. And that was before the fly stuck to his head. “It’s almost like it gets inflamed during the debate. And the fly was doing some triage,” said Griffin.
The Yard Sign with host Jonathan Torres: Guests Anibal Cabrera, Chris VerKuilen and Torres talk post-debate breakdown, Trump’s COVID and Florida in Phase 3 reopening.
Weekend TV
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 attorney and former Rep. Sean Shaw; Deborah Tamargo, President of the Florida Federation of Republican Women; USF-St. Petersburg Emeritus Professor of Government and Politics Darryl Paulson; and Professor Dan Ruth of the Honors College at USF-Tampa.
Political Connections Bay News 9 in Tampa/St. Pete: A recap of the vice presidential debate; host Holly Gregory will interview Donald Trump, Jr.; and Senior Hispanic Advisory for the Biden Campaign Cristobal Alex will discuss Hispanic outreach in Florida.
Political Connections on CF 13 in Orlando: An hourlong special edition on women voters and the 2020 election. Anchor Ybeth Bruzual will host a panel of five suburban female voters from different political viewpoints who will discuss the issues that matter to them and how they are shaping their decision during the 2020 presidential election.
This Week in Jacksonville with Kent Justice on Channel 4 WJXT: Dr. Michael Binder of the University of North Florida Public Opinion Research Laboratory; Dr. J.R. Woodward, a Sociology professor at Florida State College at Jacksonville; Dr. Daniel Cronrath, a professor of Political Science Florida State College at Jacksonville.
This Week in South Florida on WPLG-Local10 News (ABC): Broward County State Attorney candidate Gregg Rossman; Florida International University professor, Department of Politics and International Relations KathrynDePalo-Gould; Sean Foreman, Barry University professor, Department of History and Political Science.
Aloe
“‘The Late Show’ brings back cast of ‘The West Wing’ for another rare Friday show” via Peter White of Deadline — “The Late Show”’s Stephen Colbert is back with his second original Friday night show in a row, and he’s bringing the cast of “The West Wing” with him. Martin Sheen, Allison Janney, Richard Schiff, Bradley Whitford and creator Aaron Sorkin will appear on the CBS talk show Friday, October 9. Last Friday, Colbert aired an episode of “The Late Show” after Trump contracted COVID-19. This comes ahead of the October 15 launch of “The West Wing” special on HBO Max. The cast of the NBC show is getting back together for a theatrical presentation of the “Hartsfield Landing” episode from Season 3.
The Late Show with Stephen Colbert is highlighting the ‘West Wing’ reunion to be shown Oct. 15 on HBO Max.
“‘The Right Stuff’ becomes a Disney+ series that’s spared the need for speed” via Brian Lowry of CNN — Expanded into an eight-hour series, “The Right Stuff” doesn’t feel the need for speed. What it loses in momentum, however, this Disney+ series gains in its characterizations, offering a satisfying voyage back into the stories of the men at the center of the Mercury 7 space program, as well as the women that loved and/or endured them. Unlike the 1983 movie adaptation of Tom Wolfe‘s book — which deftly cut between the celebrated astronauts and the unheralded exploits of test pilot Chuck Yeager — the focus here is squarely on the former. Yet with more time to fill, the series is as much about their personal lives as their escape-the-bonds-of-Earth exploits.
Happy birthday
Best wishes to state Rep. Ben Diamond, former Rep. Janet Adkins, our friend, Keyna Cory of Public Affairs Consultants, Diane Rado of The Florida Phoenix, top legislative aide Clayton Clemens, Mike Grissom of Becker, journalist Tia Mitchell, former Senate President Joe Negron, and lobbyist Ron Watson.
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Good morning. On this hallowed Leif Erikson Day, we feel compelled to dispel a common myth—the Vikings never wore helmets with horns. The costume was popularized by Wagner operas in the 1870s. Hope that didn’t totally ruin your morning!
MARKETS
NASDAQ
11,420.98
+ 0.50%
S&P
3,446.85
+ 0.80%
DJIA
28,425.71
+ 0.43%
GOLD
1,897.80
+ 0.37%
10-YR
0.769%
– 2.60 bps
OIL
41.23
+ 3.20%
*As of market close
2020: The next two presidential debates are up in the air after President Trump said he wouldn’t debate Joe Biden in a virtual format next week, which had been proposed by the Commission on Presidential Debates.
Markets: You may think the world is devolving into chaos, but stocks are the dog in that meme saying, “this is fine.” They kept climbing yesterday as the Dow hit its highest level in a month.
In a big milestone for the self-driving industry, Waymo said yesterday it will open up its autonomous ride-hailing service to the general public in metro Phoenix, AZ.
That means in the next few weeks, people in the Phoenix area can a) hail a taxi like they would a Lyft or an Uber b) hop in a car that’ll know where they want to go and c) be taken to that destination. The only difference? The car will be driving itself.
Now, we’re supposed to be detached business reporters, but we just have to say…
Great googly moogly that’s cool.
How we got here
Waymo, Alphabet’s self-driving vehicle division, has been testing its cars in the Phoenix area since 2016, slowly upgrading its tech and capacity to eventually roll out a fully fledged commercial service.
Hundreds of human guinea pigs have been experimenting with the robotaxi service through the Waymo One app. The announcement yesterday expands the current program in two ways:
Existing customers of Waymo One can start taking their friends and family along for the ride.
By November, Waymo will make the app available to more people (aka the “general public”) in the Phoenix area.
We’ve managed to get through 200 words of a story without mentioning Covid-19, which unfortunately must make an appearance now. The pandemic has forced Waymo to limit the scope of its service by restricting it to fully driverless rides. It’s working on installing barriers in its vehicles so down the road it can plunk a human safety driver in the front seat and address a larger geographical market.
Zoom out: Other car companies like Tesla and GM are racing to introduce driverless vehicles, but Waymo has recently separated itself from the pack. This spring, it raised $3 billion to accelerate the rollout of its commercial service, the first time it’s cashed a check from a company not associated with Google.
840,000 Americans applied for first-time unemployment benefits last week, a number that remains extremely high relative to pre-pandemic levels and much worse than the bleakest weeks of past recessions.
As you can see in the Yahoo Finance chart above, jobless claims are way down from their peak in the spring. But they hit a wall this summer and refuse to drop much further.
What’s going on? The current economy has a “remarkable level of churn,” writes the NYT’s Ben Casselman. Plenty of companies are reopening and rehiring workers, while others are closing down and cutting jobs because of lower demand.
Looking ahead…negotiations for a stimulus deal are also experiencing what you might call a remarkable level of churn, meaning lawmakers haven’t made much progress in working out a compromise. Yesterday, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi rejected a standalone package for airlines without a larger deal in place.
Vibes in the biz world yesterday? Dads in Vans and teachers on TikTok. Iconic but aging blue-chip companies made big moves to show they’re down with the kids.
IBM announced a spinoff. The company will break up with the segment that manages IT infrastructure for clients—which accounts for almost a quarter of Big Blue’s staff and sales (~$19 billion in annual revenue). IBM is chasing customers who are increasingly fleeing those services for cloud computing. Shares climbed almost 6%.
Morgan Stanley agreed to acquire money manager Eaton Vance for $7 billion…and the ink on its E-Trade buyout is just barely dry. The bank is scooping up passive fund managers as consumers increasingly avoid swashbuckling stock pickers trying to beat the market.
McDonald’s reported a positive Q3. McD’s same-store sales were juiced nearly 5% in the quarter, in part by a collaboration with rapper Travis Scott. The promotion touted Scott’s favorite meal—which was so popular it caused ingredient shortages. A partnership with reggaeton superstar J Balvin is next.
Tomorrow is World Mental Health Day. Today, we want to try and help you improve something that can go a long way toward feeling more mentally healthy: sleep habits.
Their technology helps change the way you think about sleep. Instead of sleep being the forgotten third of your life, WHOOP prioritizes sleep for you so you can repair muscle and memory, improve recovery and immune system, and feel better all day.
Yesterday, Jack Dorsey’s payments company Square bought 4,709 bitcoins for $50 million, or about $10,600 per coin. That represents about 1% of Square’s total assets as of Q2.
The backstory: Square dipped its toes in the bitcoin pool, then waded in to hip-level.
In 2014, the company started letting merchants accept the cryptocurrency.
In 2018, it enabled the buying and selling of bitcoin on its payments app, Cash App.
Last year, it created an independent team called Square Crypto that focuses exclusively on supporting open-source work in bitcoin.
Now, Square is cannonballing into the decentralized deep end after revenue from bitcoin operations grew 367% annually in Q1.
It’s not a sure thing. In its 11-year run, bitcoin has stumbled under wild volatility and high transaction costs. But it’s up to nearly $11,000 currently from $7,100 in January, and Square is bullish. “We believe that bitcoin has the potential to be a more ubiquitous currency in the future,” said CFO Amrita Ahuja.
The feeling of getting a 5/5 on the Brew’s Weekly News Quiz has been compared to playing a Draw Four Wild card on someone who’s about to win Uno. It’s that satisfying.
Thirteen men were arrested in a foiled plot to kidnap Michigan Governor Gretchen Whitmer.
WarnerMedia is restructuring to cut costs and it could shed thousands of jobs, per the WSJ.
Dollar General is going more upscale with a new chain called “popshelf.”
GoPuff, the delivery startup beloved in Philly, raised $380 million at a $3.9 billion valuation.
Instacart is now worth $17.7 billion after its latest fundraising round.
BREW’S BETS
This student lawyer boosted conversion to 98%. Stanley from Tate Law used VideoAsk and Typeform to reach more people who needed student debt relief. VideoAsk allows Stanley to not just introduce himself via video, but turn that video into an interaction that can drive revenue. See how VideoAsk and Typeform can help you.*
Nobel prose: The committee has spoken, and Louise Glück has won 2020’s Nobel Prize in Literature. Read her Pulitzer Prize-winning poem about reincarnation, “The Wild Iris,” and The New Yorker’s 2012 analysis of her body of work.
Follow Friday: Rupi Kaur put a spotlight on Instagram poetry, and the space has since filled with low-word-count wizards…
Today’s Friday Puzzle is for people with a little time to kill. We’ll give you a series of letters that represent the first letter of various words. Those words, when grouped together, form the contents of a larger category.
It’s simpler than it sounds. For example, R, O, Y, G, B, I, V = the names of the colors comprising a rainbow (Red, orange, yellow, green, etc.).
H, O, M, E, S
M, V, E, M, J, S, U, N
A, T, G, C, L, V, L, S, S, C, A, P
Z, O, T, T, F, F, S, S, E, N, T
Okay this one’s impossible but we’re going to ask it anyway: G, J, T, J, J, J, A, M, W, J
FRIDAY PUZZLE ANSWER
1. The Great Lakes: Huron, Ontario, Michigan…
2. The planets: Mercury, Venus, Earth…
3. The Zodiac symbols in order: Aries, Taurus, Gemini…
4. Numbers spelled out: zero, one, two, three, four…
5. The first name of the first 10 U.S. presidents: George, John, Thomas…
Good morning and welcome to Fox News First. Here’s what you need to know as you start your day …
Trump blasts Biden over silence on court-packing, claims Dem wouldn’t last a full term
President Trump berated Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden during an exclusive interview on “Hannity” on Thursday night after the former vice president refused yet again to say whether he’d support efforts to expand the Supreme Court.
Earlier in the day, Biden said at a campaign stop in Phoenix that he would reveal his position on court-packing “when the election is over.”
“I think what he said was so disrespectful to the process and to the people,” Trump told Fox News host Sean Hannity. “But what that means, really, is that they’re going to do it, because obviously, that means 100 percent that’s what they’re going to do. They’re going to end the filibuster and they’re going to do things that you wouldn’t have thought.”
Meanwhile, Republican lawmakers have vowed to confirm Judge Amy Coney Barrett to the Supreme Court before the Nov. 3 election. Barrett was nominated to fill a vacancy created when Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg died in September. Trump has warned that Democrats would move to “pack” the court with progressive justices if they take control of the Senate next year.
The president told Hannity if Biden were victorious, he “won’t be president for three months” before his running mate, Sen. Kamala Harris, D-Calif., “takes over” control.
“She’s the most liberal person in the Senate. She’s not a socialist, she’s a step beyond socialism,” Trump added. CLICK HERE FOR MORE ON OUR TOP STORY.
In other developments: – PROGRAMMING ALERT: Trump to appear on ‘Tucker Carlson Tonight’ in first on-camera interview since COVID-19 diagnosis
– Trump suggests he may hold weekend rallies in Florida, Pennsylvania after receiving green light from doctor
– Trump can return to ‘public engagements’ this weekend, White House physician says
– Tucker Carlson: Vice presidential debate showed Democrats would pack the court in the name of diversity
– Trump says he won’t participate in virtual debate after debate panel announces changes: ‘Not going to waste my time’
– Mark Levin accuses Democrats of seeking ‘monopoly power over our government’
– Hannity: Democrats attempting ‘biggest power grab in history’
‘Squad,’ other progressives look to push Biden to the left, release agenda
Political progressives — including the freshman “Squad” lawmakers — unveiled their vision for America under a Biden-Harris administration on Thursday, seeking to draw voters to the Democrats’ ticket and providing a roadmap on how to push Joe Biden leftward.
The Working Families Party’s “People’s Charter” calls for free public health care, universal child care, millions of green jobs, canceling student debt, a $15 minimum wage and shifting money away from police departments and toward investments in schools and communities.
One of the plan’s backers, Rep. Ro Khanna, D-Calif., said the agenda would be the legislative blueprint for what progressives in the House would push for during a Biden-Harris administration.
“The aim is a clear agenda that progressives in the House will advance focuses on these big items,” Khanna told Fox News. “We will push for Medicare-for-all during the pandemic. We will push for the creation of millions of good jobs in communities left behind. And we will advance a bold vision to tackle climate change and have a liveable planet, which is the aspiration of the Green New Deal. I expect at least 80 to 100 House Democrats will support the basic principles and agenda.”
The release of the ambitious plan followed Wednesday’s vice presidential debate, where Sen. Kamala Harris, seen by the left as a lifeline into a Biden administration, distanced herself from progressive priorities — including the Green New Deal, which she once co-sponsored. CLICK HERE FOR MORE.
In other developments:
– Biden says he doesn’t support Green New Deal, but his campaign website calls it ‘crucial framework’
– AOC responds after Biden says Green New Deal ‘not my plan’ during debate
– Sanders plans to ‘mobilize’ the left, launch aggressive agenda push ‘the day after’ Biden is elected
– Sally Pipes: Biden a moderate? Sanders, AOC plans for candidate suggest this instead
Pelosi wants to ‘stage a coup,’ Republicans say, after speaker refers to 25th Amendment
Republicans were baffled by House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s Thursday suggestion that she might introduce a bill allowing a body appointed by Congress to invoke the 25th Amendment to remove President Trump from office as he recovers from the novel coronavirus.
The 25th Amendment allows for the vice president to become acting president if the president is deemed “unable to discharge the powers and duties of his office.” Currently, the vice president and Cabinet can invoke that amendment.
“Tomorrow, by the way, tomorrow, come here tomorrow,” Pelosi said. “We’re going to be talking about the 25th Amendment.”
Pelosi was referring to a bill she plans to unveil Friday with Rep. Jamie Raskin, D-Md., that would allow Congress to establish a permanent body to determine whether the president is fit for office: an Oversight Commission on Presidential Capacity. The bill is expected to reflect legislation that Raskin introduced in 2017.
Still, Pelosi would have to convince Senate Republicans to go along with it. Plus, Vice President Mike Pence would also have to sign the declaration, which would be highly unlikely. CLICK HERE FOR MORE.
In other developments:
– Dr. Marc Siegel tells Pelosi to ‘stop pontificating’ about Trump’s condition
– Meadows slams Pelosi suggestion that steroids influencing Trump’s judgment
– VP nominee Kamala Harris likely to be in spotlight at Amy Coney Barrett conformation hearing
– Biden: Trump calling Harris a ‘monster’ is despicable
TODAY’S MUST-READS:
– Media blames Trump for inciting militia group’s alleged kidnapping plot against Whitmer
– Debate moderator Steve Scully raises eyebrows with tweet asking Scaramucci ‘should I respond to Trump’
– Texas mayoral candidate arrested for mail-in ballot fraud
– ‘Boobytrap’ political sign slices Michigan township worker’s fingers
– Meet the alleged mom of Putin’s secret twins who seems to be missing
THE LATEST FROM FOX BUSINESS:
– Justice Department sues Yale University over admissions practices
– Virgin Hyperloop unveils West Virginia as location for Hyperloop test center
– Crypto CEO shows the door to workers who disagree with company’s ‘apolitical’ mission
#TheFlashback:CLICK HERE to find out what happened on “This Day in History.”
SOME PARTING WORDS
Tucker Carlson used Thursday night’s “Tucker Carlson Tonight” monologue to focus on the vice presidential debate that happened a night earlier. He said if you saw the debate, you’d think the Biden campaign was starting to regret the nominee’s choice of Sen. Kamala Harris for his running mate.
“Maybe on paper, Harris made sense as the old guy’s running mate – apparently she did, but onstage [she’s] not appealing to put it mildly — unless you enjoyed being lectured and schooled by substitute teachers who tried to mask their insecurity with aggression, you probably don’t want four more years of that,” Carlson said.
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Fox News First was compiled by Fox News’ Jack Durschlag. Have a great weekend and stay safe. Thank you for making us your first choice in the morning! We’ll see you in your inbox first thing Monday.
Editor’s Note: We’re taking a brief hiatus for Columbus Day; be back in full swing Wednesday!
Presidential Debate Chaos
“The campaign’s final debates between President Donald Trump and Democrat Joe Biden were thrown into uncertainty Thursday… The chair of the nonpartisan Commission on Presidential Debates told The Associated Press that the final debate, scheduled for Oct. 22, was still slated to go on with both candidates present as planned. But next Thursday’s debate seemed to be gone, after the Trump team objected to the commission’s format change. The whipsaw day began with an announcement from the commission that the town hall-style affair set for Oct. 15 in Miami would be held virtually. The commission cited health concerns following Trump’s infection as the reason for the change…
“Trump, who is eager to return to the campaign trail despite uncertainty about his health, said he wouldn’t participate if the debate wasn’t in person. Biden’s campaign then suggested the event be delayed a week until Oct. 22, which is when the third and final debate was already scheduled. Next, Trump countered again, agreeing to a debate on Oct. 22 — but only if face to face — and asking that a third contest be added on Oct. 29, just before the election. But Biden’s advisers rejected squaring off that late in the campaign.” AP News
From the Right
The right is critical of the commission, arguing that the campaigns should determine the format of the debates.
“Maybe the real solution is to get rid of the commission, as well as the moderators who are making themselves too much a part of the proceedings… we favor doing away with moderators and having microphones that give each candidate, say, two minutes to speak at a time. The candidates can use their time as they see fit before the microphone goes dead when the time runs out. The questions would come from the candidates and their campaigns, not some outside party who may have her own agenda. Surely the candidates know the best questions to put to their rivals…
“The Commission on Presidential Debates doesn’t control these events as a birthright. It’s a nonprofit, supposedly nonpartisan outfit run by Washington grandees and first sponsored debates in 1988. Its debate sponsorship has since become a tradition, but its judgment on moderators and timing is suspect. By the time of this year’s first debate on Sept. 29, millions of people had already voted. Its unilateral decision Thursday for a virtual debate is another example of its high-handedness. The candidates and parties ought to take back control over these debates.” Editorial Board, Wall Street Journal
“The original design of the party-controlled general-election debate has slowly morphed from Republican Party-Democratic Party negotiation into something wholly different: a free-standing group of self-anointed, self-important Beltway Brahmins. Slowly but surely, the organization added staff, raised funds, expanded its ‘mission’ and deepened its own sense of entitlement… They have gradually accreted power: to pick sites, format and moderators… they announced their diktat without even a phone call to either candidate…
“The commission was last seen falling back in disarray, and the campaigns were negotiating, again as was intended, between themselves. Maybe the dates would be moved? I suggest the president name a stage and a date, name his own moderator and invite Biden to join him along with a moderator of the Democratic nominee’s choosing. The moderators could alternate questions and leave the men who would be president to talk to each other for 10 minutes at a time. Who knows what would happen? A debate might break out.” Hugh Hewitt, Washington Post
Some argue that “Joe Biden may or may not be looking for a pretext to ditch the remaining two presidential debates, but one person still contagious with a pandemic virus ain’t exactly a pretext. In fact, it should be more or less assumed that anyone with an active and contagious COVID-19 infection doesn’t belong at a presidential debate, even if they’re a candidate…
“Why does the debate have to be in one place? We’re Zooming everywhere now, from kindergartens to Congress… Trump will likely push for an in-person town hall, of course, as he likes retail campaigning. But this isn’t a bad back-up plan, and under the circumstances, should be considered Plan A until we know more about the arc of Trump’s recovery.” Ed Morrissey, Hot Air
Others note that “The CDC guidelines currently state that a patient who no longer has a fever, while not on fever-reducing medications, has improving symptoms, and is 10 days beyond symptom onset is no longer infectious. According to the CDC, this period may be extended in severe cases, but this does not apply to President Trump…
“Yesterday’s update from the president’s physician noted that he has been fever-free for four days and symptom-free for 24 hours. His bloodwork is also positive for detectable levels of antibodies to the COVID-19 infection. This makes it even less likely he is shedding virus [particles] capable of causing an infection. It also states that his oxygen saturation level and respiratory rate are all in the normal range… [Biden is] traveling to Nevada on Friday to campaign in person. With the CDC announcement yesterday confirming that the virus is airborne, this is a much bigger risk than being distanced on a stage with a recovered patient.” Stacey Lennox, PJ Media
“[Trump is] right: Americans should see candidates off the cuff, responding to difficult questions. Biden, after all, has plainly been reading scripts even at ‘live’ remote events for weeks now. It’d be easy for his aides to slip him talking points outside the camera’s view — though he’d need to avoid reading things like ‘topline message,’ as he did in answering one reporter’s foreign-policy question. The CPD says it’s worried about safety, but Oct. 15 is (for Trump) well past the 10 days the CDC advises quarantining after COVID-19 symptoms appear. Alternately, the commission could’ve discussed Trump’s offer to move the final two debates back a week.” Editorial Board, New York Post
From the Left
The left worries that holding the debate in person may be too risky given Trump’s diagnosis.
“Donald Trump has tested positive for Covid-19, as have more than a dozen people close to him, including several sitting senators, members of his debate prep team, several members of his staff, his campaign manager and his own wife, first lady Melania Trump. The organizers of his next debate with Democratic nominee Joe Biden, which was scheduled for Thursday of next week, wisely announced a plan to move the debate to an online format. After all, who in their right mind would put a coronavirus patient in an enclosed room with other people, including vulnerable American voters and at least one other senior citizen, for at least 90 minutes of yelling[?]…
“While a virtual debate would be less optimal for Trump, it would be of far greater benefit to viewers. We would have an opportunity to actually hear each candidate articulate their vision for our country without being interrupted or bulldozed. It could be a real debate, not a contest of who can yell the loudest and talk over the other most effectively. If that puts Trump at a disadvantage because he is unable to debate ideas, well, the American people deserve to know that. And if the President truly does refuse to participate in the debate, then let Joe Biden show up alone and answer audience questions.” Jill Filipovic, CNN
“The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommends people who have Covid-19 stay away from others for at least 10 days following the appearance of symptoms, and notes that patients who — like Trump — were hospitalized and needed oxygen may be wise to self-isolate for [up to] 20 days. The debate date would seem to fall after the 10-day window but before the 20-day mark, based on what is publicly known about the onset of the president’s symptoms…
“The ability of the Commission for Presidential Debates and the advising Cleveland Clinic to conduct debates safely was called into question during the first event, during which Trump’s family declined to wear face masks throughout the proceedings. Wednesday night [at the VP debate], some Pence supporters — including his wife, Karen Pence — failed to follow masking protocol. And following the first debate, the city of Cleveland reported at least 11 people became infected; city officials said the cases originated from the pre-debate planning and setup.” Ella Nilsen, Vox
“There is a little bit of precedent for presidents threatening to withdraw from a debate in order to change their terms. President George H.W. Bush refused to debate under the commission’s plans in 1992. But he eventually agreed to some debates. And Jimmy Carter refused to participate in the first debate in 1980 because it included independent John Anderson. I would say, though, in both the 1980 and 1992 cases, neither incumbent was rewarded for their intransigence…
“If he skips the debate and holds a rally instead, it could end up damaging him, considering how many voters don’t think he’s taken the coronavirus seriously enough. Such an event would seem to play right into that narrative.” Geoffrey Skelley, FiveThirtyEight
“For many months now, Trump has required large swaths of the Republican Party to, alternately, either treat the coronavirus as no big deal, or acknowledge it as a fearsome foe, but only to the degree that this showcases how heroic his near-total triumph over it truly was. But most voters don’t see it this way. New polling shows large majorities don’t believe the virus is under control and want more government action against it even if it holds back the economic recovery. Voters think Biden (who embodies that position) will better handle the virus by lopsided margins…
“This unprecedented year has inspired great innovation. But the idea of hosting a virtual debate isn’t one of them. Bringing people together remotely and televising it is not anything new, including in politics and presidential debates. On October 13, 1960, the third presidential debate between John F. Kennedy and Richard Nixon was hosted virtually. Kennedy was in New York, whereas Nixon was in Los Angeles, and the two were shown on a split screen…
“And in 1967, Robert F. Kennedy and Ronald Reagan participated in a debate called ‘Town Meeting of the World.’ Moderator Charles Collingwood was in London with a group of students who asked questions. Reagan and Kennedy responded via satellite… The precedent of hosting virtual debates was made sixty years ago. Kennedy did it. Nixon did it. Why not Trump?” Kerry Flynn, CNN
One group of Americans needs a fresh stimulus package more than any other: the 2.4 million Americans — and rising — who have been unemployed for more than six months, Axios chief financial correspondent Felix Salmon writes.
Why it matters: While the economic recession looks like it ended in April, rising long-term unemployment acts as a drag on the broader economy. Without new stimulus, the number of jobless could end up being almost as bad as the Great Recession.
The backstory: In April, for the first time since 2001, fewer than 1 million people were unemployed for more than six months.
That same month, the surge of coronavirus-related layoffs peaked. Today almost 1.5 million of those laid-off workers are still unemployed, and the ranks of the long-term jobless are rising at a rate not seen since the financial crisis.
The biggest job losses have been in leisure and hospitality, where the workforce is 3.8 million people smaller than it was in February. The food services industry is down 2.3 million jobs.
Harvard projectionsshow long-term unemployment peaking in early 2021. Depending on the speed of the recovery, it’s likely to reach 3.9 million people at best — and 5.1 million in a worst-case scenario.
Mark Zandi, chief economist at Moody’s, sees a peak of 5 million long-term unemployed as a baseline scenario, cautioning that with stimulus talks having broken down, the number could be more than double that “if we botch it.”
The bottom line: We’re only at the end of the beginning of the pandemic.
Attorney General Bill Barr has begun telling top Republicans that the Justice Department’s sweeping review into the origins of the Russia investigation will not be released before the election, a senior White House official and a congressional aide briefed on the conversations tell Axios’ Alayna Treene.
Why it matters: Republicans had long hoped the report, led by Connecticut U.S. Attorney John Durham, would be a bombshell containing revelations about the Obama administration and intelligence community, from 2016 probing of connections between the Trump campaign and Russia.
“This is the nightmare scenario,” a GOP congressional aide told Axios. “Essentially, the year and a half of arguably the number one issue for the Republican base is virtually meaningless if this doesn’t happen before the election.”
Barr has made clear that Republicans shouldn’t expect any further indictments or a comprehensive report before Nov. 3, our sources say.
The Justice Department declined to comment. The White House did not respond to a request for comment.
What’s happening: Barr is communicating that Durham is taking his investigation extremely seriously and is focused on winning prosecutions.
The general sense of the talks, the sources say, is that Durham is not preoccupied with completing his probe by a certain deadline for political purposes.
Behind the scenes: Trump has grown increasingly frustrated with Barr and the Justice Department for not moving more quickly on the investigation.
What’s next: Top Republicans are planning to pressure Barr to get ahead of Durham and temper expectations for the timing of the report’s release, as well declassify more documents connected to the probe.
3. Tech’s new fight: Domestic meddlers adopt foreign techniques
Illustration: Aïda Amer/Axios
Social media platforms are scrambling to crack down on domestic actors who have picked up foreign meddling techniques to try to influence the 2020 election, Axios’ Sara Fischer and Ashley Gold report.
Why it matters: While foreign election interference remains a major concern, domestic actors can be more effective operators.
“Domestic actors understand the political actions in their country the best, and have a strong motivation to want to change that discussion,” Nathaniel Gleicher, Facebook’s head of cybersecurity policy, said on a call with reporters yesterday.
What’s happening: The crackdown has resulted in a spate of action against U.S.-based conservatives.
Facebook said yesterday that it took down a “coordinated inauthentic behavior campaign” run on behalf of pro-Trump student group Turning Point USA and Inclusive Conservation Group, an organization ostensibly focused on trophy hunting in Africa.
The operation used fake personas to comment on stories posted by the WashPost, Fox News, MSNBC, CNN, N.Y. Times, etc.
It’s the latest example of Facebook punishing a conservative group or individual for spreading misinformation with fake accounts.
The company said Wednesday that it’s banning from its platforms all accounts, groups and pages related to QAnon, the fringe far-right conspiracy.
In June, it removed over 200 accounts linked to white supremacy groups.
Facebook this week also restricted the reach of conservative radio host Mark Levin.
And, in a reversal of what have become their usual roles, Facebook moved faster than Twitter to quash coronavirus misinformation from President Trump, taking down his post. (Twitter hid it behind a label flagging it as false.)
A Marine opens the West Wing front door yesterday. Photo: Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images
President Trump, who’s still contagious, said he’s feeling “really good” and might campaign in Florida tomorrow and Pennsylvania on Sunday, per Reuters.
“While Trump has released several videos on Twitter, he has not appeared in public since he returned home from the hospital on Monday.”
5. “When our leaders speak, their words matter”
Rally at the Michigan Capitol last evening in support of Gov. Whitmer. Photo: Nick King/Lansing State Journal
Hours after police foiled an alleged plot to kidnap her, Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer argued in a speech that President Trump’s words had been a “rallying cry” for extremists, AP reports from Lansing.
“When our leaders speak, their words matter,” Whitmer said. “They carry weight. When our leaders meet, encourage or fraternize with domestic terrorists, they legitimize their actions and they are complicit.”
There’s no indication in the criminal complaint that the men arrested were inspired by Trump.
The backdrop: “The Wolverine Watchmen militia group didn’t just plot to kidnap Gov. Gretchen Whitmer, but they were on a mission to attack the state Capitol and target police officers at their homes as part of a broader mission to instigate a civil war,” the Detroit Free Press reports.
6. Axios-SurveyMonkey poll: V.P. debate was … presidential
The vice presidential debate got far better reviews in early polling than the first presidential debate, with respondents in an Axios-SurveyMonkey poll calling it “civil,” “informative,” and even “presidential,” Axios’ David Nather writes.
The dominant reaction to the debate was relief, with 36% of the respondents saying they felt relieved when it was over.
Words the poll’s 2,708 respondents used to describe Vice President Pence: “professional,” “strong” and “excellent” (from Republicans), “liar,” “rude” and “evasive” (from Democrats).
Some of the words used to describe Sen. Kamala Harris: “strong,” “professional” and “confident” (from Democrats), “liar,” “lies” and “untruthful” (from Republicans).
P.S. … Several Michigan swing voters who are sticking with President Trump think that if Joe Biden gets elected, Harris will be running the show — a view reinforced by the debate, Axios’ Alexi McCammond reports from a 13-person focus group.
7. Nobel aims to “turn the eyes of the world” to millions who are hungry
Via CNN
The UN’s World Food Program, one of the largest humanitarian organizations in the world, was awarded the 2020 Nobel Peace Prize this morning.
Last year, it “provided assistance to close to 100 million people in 88 countries” and the committee praised its efforts as “a driving force in efforts to prevent the use of hunger as a weapon of war and conflict.”
8. V.P. debate is second most-watched ever
Nearly 58 million people watched Wednesday’s debate between Vice President Pence and Sen. Kamala Harris, making it the second most-watched VP debate in TV history, Axios’ Sara Fischer writes.
9. Former Wilson College is now Princeton’s first college named for a Black woman
Princeton University, which said in June that it was dropping Woodrow Wilson’s name on campus because of his racist views, will tear down Wilson College and replace it on the site as Hobson College, named for boardroom powerhouse Mellody Hobson, one of the most senior women in finance.
Why it matters: Hobson College will be the first residential college at Princeton named for a Black woman. (Princeton’s residential colleges are complexes of dormitories and social space.)
Mellody Hobson and the Hobson/Lucas Family Foundation made the lead gift for the new college. Construction will begin in 2023.
“My hope is that my name will remind future generations of students — especially those who are Black and brown and the ‘firsts’ in their families — that they, too, belong,” Hobson said in Princeton’s announcement.
The backstory: Hobson’s “career as co-CEO of Ariel Investments began with a summer internship in 1989. She also … serves on the boards of Starbucks and JPMorgan Chase. Previously, she served as a director of Estée Lauder and board chair of DreamWorks Animation SKG,” Princeton said.
After a fly on Vice President Pence’s head captivated social media, the Biden campaign sold 35,000 “Truth Over Flies” fly swatters within hours, per Bloomberg.
Mike Allen
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President Trump pulled out of the virtual debate, and his team proposed a later event. Joe Biden made plans for a town hall, and his campaign turned down a later debate.
Joe Biden, whose lead is widening in the polls, is up on Wall Street, too. Many investment strategists suggest that his presidency could be a blessing for the economy and the stock market.
The Baltic states form a virtual isthmus jutting out from the rest of the NATO alliance and butting up against the heavily fortified Russian military outpost in Kaliningrad, which has the capability to impose anti-access/aerial denial over the region.
The next presidential debate will remain a virtual format, casting doubt on whether or not the event between President Trump and former Vice President Joe Biden will even occur.
Previous comments from Democratic vice presidential nominee Kamala Harris on the Supreme Court loom over Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden, who is refusing to answer a crucial question on the issue of the high court.
Thousands of Michiganders are wondering if criminal charges and fines levied against them are still valid after the Michigan Supreme Court last Friday ruled Gov. Gretchen Whitmer’s COVID-19 executive orders issued after April 30 are illegal.
Puerto Rico congressional Rep. Jenniffer Gonzalez-Colon is opposing President Trump’s nomination of Justin Peterson to Puerto Rico’s financial oversight board, saying she is concerned the appointment creates the appearance of a conflict of interest.
Iowa Democrat Theresa Greenfield raised $28.7 million in the third quarter for her bid to oust Republican Sen. Joni Ernst, another example of the Democratic fundraising tsunami that could sweep the GOP Senate majority from power.
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said Thursday she’s backing a measure that would give Congress the power to determine whether the president is fit to remain in office by requiring him to undergo a medical exam.
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Oct 9, 2020
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AP MORNING WIRE
Good morning. In today’s AP Morning Wire:
Trump says he is ready for rallies, few health details; debate date uncertain.
‘Violent extremist’ plots against Michigan governor, police, 13 charged.
Virus fills French ICUs anew, doctors ask what went wrong
BREAKING: U.N.’s World Food Program wins Nobel Peace Prize.
TAMER FAKAHANY DEPUTY DIRECTOR – GLOBAL NEWS COORDINATION, LONDON
The Rundown
AP PHOTO/JACQUELYN MARTIN
Trump says he’s ready for rallies but details slim on health; Next debate date with Biden uncertain; Pelosi’s 25th Amendment bid
Donald Trump is champing at the bit to get back on the campaign trail, insisting he is ready to resume campaign rallies and feels “perfect” one week after his diagnosis with the coronavirus that has killed more than 210,000 Americans.
His doctor says the president has ”completed his course of therapy” for the disease.
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention says individuals can discontinue isolation 10 days after the onset of symptoms, which for Trump was Oct. 1, according to his doctors.
His physician says Trump will be able to safely “return to public engagements” on Saturday. The White House, meanwhile, continued to decline to share when Trump last tested negative for the virus — which would help pinpoint when he was infected,
Debate About Debates: The final debates between Trump and Joe Biden have been catapulted into deep uncertainty. The campaigns are offering dueling proposals for remaining faceoffs that have been upended by the president’s coronavirus infection. The nonpartisan Commission on Presidential Debates says the final debate, scheduled for Oct. 22, is still slated to go on in person as planned. But it says Trump’s campaign hasn’t yet said whether he’ll participate.
Next Thursday’s town hall-style debate seems to be a non-starter now. The commission wanted it conducted virtually because of his virus, but Trump objected, saying it must be face-to-face. Zeke Miller and Will Weissert report.
Trump Still Contagious? The president says he doesn’t think he’s contagious anymore, but medical experts say that’s impossible to know a week after his COVID-19 diagnosis. Current testing methods can tell when a person has been infected with coronavirus, when their immune system kicks in, and when the virus is cleared, Marion Renault reports.
25th Amendment: The tensions between House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Trump are worsening as she questions his fitness to serve. Pelosi announced legislation that would create a commission to allow Congress to intervene under the 25th Amendment to the Constitution and to remove the president from executive duties. Pelosi says Trump needs to disclose more about his health after his virus diagnosis. The president tweeted back that “Crazy Nancy is the one who should be under observation.” Lisa Mascaro has that story.
MICHIGAN OFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR VIA AP
13 ‘violent extremists’ charged in plots against Michigan governor, police
A stunning abduction plot in Michigan has been foiled by federal agents.
The FBI says that four had planned to meet Wednesday to “make a payment on explosives and exchange tactical gear.” The FBI quoted one of the accused as saying Whitmer “has no checks and balances at all.”
The government used informants and undercover agents to thwart the plot. The U.S. Attorney in western Michigan says the men are “violent extremists.”
Governor’s Speech: Hours after police foiled the plot to kidnap her, Gov. Whitmer argued in a speech that President Trump’s words had been a “rallying cry” for extremists. She said Trump has spent the last seven months of the pandemic “denying science, ignoring his own health experts, stoking distrust, fomenting anger and giving comfort to those who spread fear and hatred and division.”
She also singled out Trump’s presidential debate comments, when he didn’t condemn white supremacist groups and told one far-right extremist group to “stand back and stand by.” Trump in turn criticized Whitmer’s remarks, saying she should thank him because federal authorities foiled the plot.
AP PHOTO/JEAN-FRANCOIS BADIAS
Virus fills French ICUs anew, medics ask what went wrong; US Doctors and nurses battle virus skeptics
Intensive care wards across France are filling up again with COVID-19 patients. Doctors are scrambling to create new ICU beds elsewhere to accommodate the sick, and asking what went wrong.
In Springfield, Missouri, the families of some of those hospitalized with the virus don’t believe it is real. One doctor there says: “The majority of people don’t understand and can’t picture what we are seeing. That has been frustrating for all of us. It wears.”
Combating virus skeptics is a battle across the U.S..
At a Wisconsin hospital, some refuse to be tested. In Georgia, hospital visitors try to get in with fishnet masks.
Others demand to be prescribed the anti-malaria drug hydroxychloroquine that President Trump has championed, even though experts say it is not effective against COVID-19. It’s unclear how Trump’s bout with the virus will affect the situation, but some doctors aren’t optimistic, reports Heather Hollingsworth.
Upper Midwest: A surge of coronavirus cases in Wisconsin and the Dakotas is forcing a scramble for hospital beds and raising political tensions, as the region emerges as one of the nation’s most troubling hot spots. The three states now lead all others in new cases per capita, after months in which many residents and politicians rejected mask requirements while downplaying the risks of the disease. It is increasingly apparent that those choices have come with costs, Adam Geller and Stephen Groves report.
New York: Hundreds of businesses in NYC neighborhoods where cases have spiked were closed as city and state officials moved to quash a coronavirus uptick before it spread more widely. All nonessential businesses in areas designated red zones by Gov. Andrew Cuomo were shuttered and houses of worship were ordered to operate with no more than 10 people inside. Public and private schools were closed within both the red zones and in surrounding areas designated orange zones, Jim Mustian reports.
Many of the neighborhoods where restrictions have been imposed are home to large Orthodox Jewish communities. Leaders of those communities have complained of being singled out for enforcement. And after months of grappling with the pandemic, prompting changes to holidays, mourning and prayers, new limits on worship and other activity in some areas are raising tensions, Elan Schor reports.
New restrictions put the spotlight on two Belgian classics this week: Beer and surrealism. Since bars in Brussels were forced to close for at least a month while restaurants were allowed to remain open, the question is: when is a bar a bar, when is a bar a restaurant, what’s a brasserie really, and when is “café” a coffee house? And more importantly, does the distinction really help contain the pandemic?
The northernmost sheikhdom in the United Arab Emirates, Ras al-Khaimah, hopes a brand new adventure camp showcasing its wide-open spaces, fresh air and socially distanced mountain peaks can aid in reviving its tourist industry amid the pandemic. And if that doesn’t work, there’s the bug eating, a signature of the camps named after the British adventurer and survival instructor Bear Grylls.
The announcement was made in Oslo by Berit Reiss-Andersen, the chair of the Nobel Committee. “The pandemic has increased the need for food aid,” she says. “A lack of food increases conflict.”
The Norwegian Nobel Committee maintains absolute secrecy about whom it favors for arguably the world’s most prestigious prize. There were 318 candidates — 211 individuals and 107 organizations. The prize comes with a $1.1 million cash award and a gold medal.
Further coverage in this developing story can be found here.
The fighting between Armenia and Azerbaijan is echoing around the Mideast. Syrian activists say Turkey has also sent hundreds of Syrian fighters to the conflict to back its ally, Azerbaijan, and several dozen have been killed. A small number of Lebanese Armenians have travelled on their own to fight in defense of their ancestral land, according to members of the community in Beirut. Armenia has accused Azerbaijan of shelling a historic cathedral in the separatist territory of Nagorno-Karabakh, where nearly two weeks of heavy fighting have killed hundreds of people.
Hurricane Delta is spinning across the Gulf of Mexico toward an expected landfall in coming hours along the U.S. Gulf Coast. The dangerous storm is apparently set to target the same area of southwest Louisiana battered by Hurricane Laura six weeks ago. Businesses have already boarded up and people have rushed to stock up on last-minute supplies or leave for safety elsewhere. Devastation is still widely evident from Laura, a late August hurricane blamed for more than 30 deaths. Landfall is expected later today.
A 17-year-old accused of killing two protesters days after Jacob Blake was shot by police in Kenosha is due back in court today as his attorneys fight efforts to send him to Wisconsin to stand trial on homicide charges. No immediate decision is expected during the scheduled hearing in Illinois. At Kyle Rittenhouse’s last court hearing in late September, his attorneys asked for more time to prepare their opposition to his extradition from Illinois.
Suspended officials at the agency that runs the Voice of America news outlet have filed suit against it, accusing its CEO and his top aides of trying to turn it into a vehicle to promote President Trump’s agenda. The lawsuit says the actions of U.S. Agency for Global Media CEO Michael Pack and his senior advisers violate the “statutory firewall” intended to protect VOA from political interference.
Good morning, Chicago. On Thursday, Illinois health officials reported 3,059 new known cases of COVID-19 as well as 32 more deaths. This is the first time cases topped 3,000 in almost five months, except for a day in early September when the state caught up on a testing backlog. The recent spike in cases has also led the seven-day positivity rate to increase to 3.7%.
Meanwhile, have you been wondering what’s going to happen to outdoor dining when winter hits? If so, you’re not alone — in fact, there was a whole competition to determine the best plan for it. The winners for Chicago’s Winter Design Challenge were announced on Thursday — here’s what they came up with.
Here’s more coronavirus news and other top stories you need to know to start your day.
Nearly 1 in 5 Chicago residents who sent blood-spot samples to Northwestern University researchers tested positive for antibodies to the coronavirus that causes COVID-19, according to preliminary results of an ongoing study.
That 20% infection rate is higher than the scientists anticipated based on earlier research, said Dr. Elizabeth McNally, director of the Center for Genetic Medicine at the Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine. One study by other Northwestern researchers tested hospital workers from across the Chicago region and found antibodies in less than 5%.
Republican President Donald Trump and his rhetoric bear a “measure of responsibility” for a stunning plot the FBI alleges was aimed at kidnapping Michigan Democratic Gov. Gretchen Whitmer, Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot said Thursday.
When they lost to Donald Trump four years ago, Democrats’ largest drops in votes centered on Detroit, Milwaukee and Cleveland – a trio of Midwestern cities with large Black populations. Joe Biden’s campaign is confident it will get a strong rebound in Black voter turnout this time, but visits to the three cities in key battleground states reveal a shakier situation and a lingering lack of enthusiasm for the former vice president.
The Chicago Bears finally took down Tom Brady on Thursday night at Soldier Field. Kicker Cairo Santos made a 38-yard field goal with 1 minute, 13 seconds to play to lift the Bears to a 20-19 victory over the Tampa Bay Buccaneers on national TV. Here’s what Tribune football scribe Brad Biggs has to say about it.
If one thing deserves to go on during this freak show of a year, it’s Halloween. So if you’re wondering how to how to carry out the holiday’s festivities safely, one Tribune editor takes you through how he built his invention for greeting trick-or-treaters: the candy chute.
A Chicago couple who sued after buying an allegedly problematic Lincoln Square home that was featured on HGTV’s “Windy City Rehab” filed an emergency motion Thursday to block the show’s host, Alison Victoria, from selling her own home in Bucktown while the lawsuit plays out.
James and Anna Morrissey fear Victoria is “fraudulently attempting to sell and liquidate whatever equity she has in her personal home and transfer the funds to an LLC she co-owns with her boyfriend as a tactic to shield her personal assets from a judgment collection in the Morrisseys’ lawsuit,” the Morrisseys’ attorney said in a statement. Tom Schuba has the story…
In addition to the contest outcome, Mayor Lightfoot also announced a new initiative between the Illinois Restaurant Association and DoorDash to provide financial support to Chicago restaurants to help cover the costs of winterizing their outdoor dining areas.
The couple’s latest legal maneuver seeks to prevent Victoria from “selling any property which she owns or controls,” namely her home at 1831 N. Paulina.
The state now has logged an average of about 2,100 new cases per day over the last two weeks, almost triple the state’s rate in early July — but still shy of the roughly 2,500 cases that were being added per day in early May.
The R&B singer’s lawyers say they’re “shocked” by the judge’s decision, noting that anonymous juries are usually only called for “in the most extreme circumstances.”
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 reported each morning this week: Monday, 209,725; Tuesday, 210,195; Wednesday, 210,909; Thursday, 211,834; Friday, 212,784.
Deaths worldwide from the coronavirus after 10 months now exceed 1 million.
The debate over the presidential debates rages on, reports The Hill’s politics team. And President Trump is mulling a return to campaign rallies this weekend in Florida and Pennsylvania (The Hill).
To recap a ping-pong 24 hours: Thursday started with the Commission on Presidential Debates announcing that the next presidential debate, which had been scheduled for Thursday next week, would be virtual because of concerns that Trump might still spread COVID-19.
Trump told Fox Business’s Maria Bartiromo that he would not participate in a virtual format and was pulling out. Trump campaign manager Bill Stepien accused the commission of working to protect Biden.
The Hill: The president called Fox Business Network to vent for nearly an hour on Thursday morning. He suggested that Biden would die early on in his administration if elected and called Sen. Kamala Harris (D-Calif.) a “monster.”
The Biden campaign responded, calling for the final debate scheduled for Nashville, Tenn., on Oct. 22 to be changed to a town hall-style format, which was the original format for the second presidential debate in Miami.
But the Trump campaign later pushed back on the notion of scrapping the Florida debate after all, and said the president would participate in both remaining debates if the dates were shifted and conducted in person.
“We agree that this should happen on October 22, and accordingly, the third debate should then be shifted back one week to October 29,” Stepien said in a statement.
However, former Vice President Joe Biden and his campaign team rejected Trump’s effort to rework the debate calendar and formats.
The Hill: The White House doctor says Trump’s coronavirus treatment has concluded and that it will be safe for the president to return to public events beginning Saturday.
NPR: Trump’s campaign chairman, who also has COVID-19, says that with the president’s health clearance from his doctor, there is “no medical reason” to switch the next debate to a virtual format.
The Associated Press: Upshot: Trump-Biden debates uncertain; Oct. 22 still likely.
“We accepted the three dates — Sept. 29, Oct. 15, and Oct. 22 — in June. Trump chose today to pull out of the October 15th debate. Trump’s erratic behavior does not allow him to rewrite the calendar, and pick new dates of his choosing,”Kate Bedingfield, Biden’s deputy campaign manager, said early on Thursday.
The former vice president then accepted an invitation to instead headline an ABC News town hall event next Thursday in Philadelphia.
The head-spinning developments emerged less than 24 hours after the first and only vice presidential debate between Vice President Pence and Harris.
The Hill: Trump, Biden campaigns clash over debate timing, formats.
Niall Stanage, The Memo: If Trump does not debate Biden again, he would forfeit one of the few big-audience opportunities remaining to change the course of a campaign he appears to be losing.
Deadline: 59 million people watched the Pence vs. Harris debate, making it the second most-watched vice presidential debate since the event began in 1976, according to Nielsen. The most watched? Biden vs. former Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin (R) in 2008, which attracted an audience of 70 million people.
Pollster and GOP political analyst Frank Luntz, who questioned a focus group of self-identified undecided voters immediately following the Pence-Harris event, told Bloomberg TV that the group thought Pence bested Harris in demeanor and “presidential” qualities. They objected to what they saw as the senator’s “condescending” expressions, Luntz told anchor David Westin. “There’s a certain decorum you expect from your candidate and she did not live up to it.”
If Trump walks away from one or both of the remaining debate opportunities, he effectively cedes the election because he is unlikely to close the gap with Biden, who is leading in national and battleground polls, Luntz said (Bloomberg TV).
The Hill: In South Carolina’s Senate race, Democratic challenger Jaime Harrison asked Sen. Lindsey Graham (R) to take a COVID-19 test before they debate tonight. Graham responded that he has listened to medical experts, followed their advice and “will continue to follow the guidance of my doctors, not my political opponent.”
👉👉 Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer (D) was at the center of a foiled plot by militia members to kidnap her and start a civil war, according to federal law enforcement officials on Thursday. In a dramatic case described as domestic terrorism, authorities announced felony charges against 13 militia members, including some affiliated in the Wolverine Watchmen group, who allegedly embarked on a mission to also attack the state Capitol and target police officers at their homes (Detroit News, Detroit Free Press, The Hill). Whitmer’s orders early this year to impose strict precautions against the coronavirus and Trump’s criticisms of her put the governor in the crosshairs of demonstrators who accused her of tyranny and compared her to Adolf Hitler.
Whitmer, who has been in office since last year, on Thursday thanked law enforcement, denounced extremist groups and accused the president of being “complicit” for not condemning right-wing hate groups (Detroit Free Press). Mugshots of the suspects are HERE. Whitmer said authorities informed her of the plot several weeks ago. According to the FBI affidavit, individuals connected with the Watchmen group purchased items including a Taser and night goggles, conducted surveillance at Whitmer’s cottage, and discussed blowing up a bridge to divert police, kidnapping Whitmer, 49, and taking her to Wisconsin to face a “trial” for treason.
At Facebook, we continue to take steps to improve our platforms such as tripling our safety and security teams, building privacy tools, and more. Updated internet regulations will set standards for addressing today’s toughest challenges.
CONGRESS: The twists and turns surrounding a potential coronavirus stimulus package continued on Thursday as Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) refused to accept a stand-alone bill to give aid to the airlines without a comprehensive deal and the president indicated that he is once again open to discussions on a broader bill before Election Day.
Pelosi told reporters during her weekly press conference that the House Democrats will not sign on to a piecemeal approach, including a stand-alone emergency measure to provide federal relief to airlines, which say they will soon lay off thousands of employees. The Speaker continues to argue that more assistance to businesses and individuals hurt by the pandemic requires a large-scale measure from Congress and the president.
“The comment I made to the administration last night was: We’re happy to review what that stand-alone bill would look like as part of a bigger bill — if there is a bigger bill,” Pelosi told reporters in the Capitol. “But there is no stand-alone bill” (The Hill).
According to a Pelosi spokesman, Pelosi and Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchinspoke for 40 minutes on Thursday afternoon to determine “whether there is any prospect of an imminent agreement” on a bill, with Mnuchin reaffirming that is what the president wants.
Meanwhile, Trump inched back to the negotiating table on Thursday. In an interview with Fox Business, Trump told Bartiromo that the two sides are “starting to have some very productive talks.” According to Axios, he also told House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.) that he wants to strike a “big deal.”
However, there still remain a number of obstacles. In the most recent proposals, the two sides were roughly $600 billion apart on overall price tags and $250 billion apart on funds for state and local governments — which remains the main sticking point in any deal.
“We were talking about a single bill, a stand-alone bill, and the particulars within a singular bill,” she said. “So the question is: If there were to be a stand-alone bill, what does that look like? And the only point about negotiations is, ain’t gonna be no stand-alone bill unless there’s a bigger bill. And it could be part of that, or it could be in addition to it.”
The Washington Post: White House, Congress continue pressing on economic relief package but Pelosi bristles over Trump approach.
The Associated Press: Stocks climb again on Wall Street with hopes for stimulus.
CNBC: A second wave of layoffs looms as coronavirus stimulus talks stall.
The Associated Press: COVID-19 relief pushes U.S. budget deficit to a record $3.1 trillion.
As talks continue, Pelosi also raised eyebrows on Thursday as she and House Democrats announced they will release legislation today to create a commission to determine whether a president is fit for office amid concerns over Trump’s status with COVID-19.
Pelosi’s office announced that she and Rep. Jamie Raskin (D-Md.) will formally introduce the bill at a news conference on Capitol Hill on Friday morning. Earlier Thursday, she hinted to reporters that “we’re going to be talking about the 25th Amendment” (The Hill).
> Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.), 78, made a stunning comment on Thursday, saying that he has not been at the White House since early August in part because of the lack of seriousness in their handling of the novel coronavirus on the premises.
McConnell made the remark during a stop in Kentucky, saying that while he speaks with Trump frequently, he has not been at the White House since Aug. 6.
“Because my impression was their approach to how to handle this was different from mine and what I insisted we do in the Senate, which was to wear a mask and practice social distancing,” McConnell told reporters.
At a second stop in Kentucky, McConnell added that he had avoided going to the White House because he “personally didn’t feel that they were approaching the protection from this illness in the same way that I thought was appropriate for the Senate.”
The GOP leader’s comments came amid a COVID-19 outbreak at the White House, with Trump, first lady Melania Trump, top aide Hope Hicks and press secretary Kayleigh McEnany among the roughly two dozen people in the Trump orbit to test positive for the virus (The Hill).
McConnell added that the president “seems normal” in their discussions this week (Bloomberg News).
MORE 2020 POLITICS: As of Thursday, more than 6.6 million people in the United States had already voted, according to the U.S. Elections Project created by University of Florida Professor Michael McDonald, who tracks early voting using a comprehensive website to display tallies in real time.
In the states that report requests for mail ballots by party, 44 percent have been requested by Democrats and 25.8 percent by Republican voters, according to the U.S. Elections Project.
The Hill’s Reid Wilson reports that Democrats are building a steady lead in early voting, suggesting with 25 days to go that Trump will begin Election Day trailing.
For example, The Associated Press reports that the president’s path to 270 Electoral College votes has narrowed compared with his achievement four years ago in Wisconsin and other Midwestern states and in Pennsylvania.
The outcome in those states may remain uncertain for days after Nov. 3 because of deadlines for mail voting and state laws barring officials from counting ballots before Election Day.
The Associated Press: Biden, Harris aim to tip battleground Arizona for Democrats.
NATIONAL SECURITY: Washington scrambled to make sense Thursday of Trump’s plans for Afghanistan after he said all U.S. troops “should” be “home by Christmas.” The suggestion, delivered in a Wednesday evening tweet, came just hours after his own national security adviser said the U.S. military would draw down to about 2,500 troops in Afghanistan by early next year. Trump tells voters while campaigning that troop withdrawals are part of his 2016 promise to end so-called forever wars (The Hill).
> Congressional races in crosshairs: The nation’s top intelligence official told lawmakers last month that the number of members of Congress subject to foreign election interference is higher than previously known, sources told The Hill. Director of National Intelligence John Ratcliffe gave a ballpark estimate of dozens to around 50 members of Congress targeted, but he declined to identify who they are or how the interference is occurring.
OPINION
Airline workers are essential. Will Congress keep them flying? by Faye Malarkey Black, opinion contributor, The Hill. https://bit.ly/2Ib0YcC
How the Democrats can pack the court and de-escalate at the same time, by D. Benjamin Barros, opinion contributor, The Hill. https://bit.ly/2GMcAly
A MESSAGE FROM FACEBOOK
We support updated internet regulations.
We support new regulations that hold companies, including Facebook, accountable on issues including:
— Combating foreign election interference
— Protecting people’s privacy
— Enabling safe and easy data transfer between platforms
The Senate holds a pro forma session at 10 a.m. The full chamber has recessed for legislative business until Oct. 19.
The president is at the White House recovering from COVID-19. His doctor said he expects Trump to be ready for a “return to public engagements” after Saturday, his 10th day since diagnosis with the coronavirus.
The vice president had been scheduled to vote in Indiana today, but postponed that trip. He will be in Washington today. On Saturday, Pence will campaign in Orlando, Fla., and on Monday he will be in Columbus, Ohio.
Biden-Harris campaign events: The former vice president will campaign in Las Vegas today with two events, including an afternoon speech at a drive-in event.
➔ NOBEL PEACE PRIZE: The United Nations’ World Food Program (WFP) became the 2020 recipient of the Nobel Peace Prize early this morning for its work to address worldwide hunger. In 2019, the humanitarian organization gave aid to 100 million people across 88 countries. “I think this is the first time in my life I’ve been without words,” WFP’s head David Beasley told The Associated Press. “I was just so shocked and surprised.” Here are some of the many candidates promoted for the esteemed prize this year (including Trump): (Time).
➔ CORONAVIRUS: In the United States, the daily caseload of the virus has hit its highest level since mid-August, worrying state officials (The Wall Street Journal). … “Saturday Night Live” on Thursday dropped Morgan Wallen, a country music singer, as its musical act for this weekend’s show after he broke COVID-19 protocols for the show. In a video posted on social media on Thursday, Wallen apologized for breaking the show’s rules. He was shown on TikTok maskless while at a crowded bar and a party last weekend in Alabama. Comedian Bill Burr will host Saturday’s show (The Associated Press). … Airbnb announced on Thursday that hosts must comply with new enhanced cleaning procedures in a bid to attract and calm the nerves of guests during the COVID-19 pandemic (The Associated Press). … The NFL is moving Sunday’s game between the Tennessee Titans and Buffalo Bills to Tuesday night at 6 p.m., under the condition that there are no more positive tests in the Titans organization. If there are, the game will be postponed (ESPN).
➔ HURRICANE DELTA: Forecasters said Delta would likely crash ashore this evening somewhere on southwest Louisiana’s coast. The question was whether it would remain at devastating Category 3 strength, with top winds of 120 mph, or begin to weaken (The Associated Press).
THE CLOSER
And finally … 👏👏👏 Bravo to the winners of this week’s Morning Report Quiz! Relying on savvy guesses (along with some grade-A Googling), readers knew their history about presidential illnesses.
Here are all the quiz kings and queens out there who aced this week’s quiz: Patrick Kavanagh, Donna Nackers, Terry Pflaumer, Michael E. Nix, Sandy Walters, Eric Chapman, J. Patrick White, John Donato, Candi Cee, Ki Harvey, William Chittam, Pam Manges and Ricca C. Slone.
They knew that a 1944 memo written by a surgeon who examined former President Franklin D. Roosevelt saying that he would not survive four more years in the White House was made public in 2011.
Former President William Henry Harrison, who died 32 days into his presidency, succumbed to pneumonia nine days after becoming ill.
Former President Woodrow Wilson (pictured below) did not suffer from prostate cancer during his two terms in office.
Finally, former President Grover Cleveland had surgery to remove a cancerous tumor from the roof of his mouth on a friend’s yacht under the guise of a vacation intended to hide the surgery.
The Morning Report is created by journalists Alexis Simendinger and Al Weaver. We want to hear from you! Email: asimendinger@thehill.com and aweaver@thehill.com. We invite you to share The Hill’s reporting and newsletters, and encourage others to SUBSCRIBE!
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BREAKING: PRESIDENT DONALD TRUMP did not get the NOBEL PEACE PRIZE. It went to the WORLD FOOD PROGRAMME “for its efforts to combat hunger, for its contribution to bettering conditions for peace in conflict-affected areas and for acting as a driving force in efforts to prevent the use of hunger as a weapon of war and conflict.” The announcement…CNN
THE TRUMP ADMINISTRATION HAS PROVEN that the 18 acres on which the White House sits are a logic-free zone. Don’t waste your time trying to make sense of anything that comes out of there or that goes on there, because it’s a fool’s errand, and you’ll just end up with a headache and a clenched jaw.
EXAMPLES: canceling a debate, rescheduling a debate and then suggesting that debate should be back on. … And then there’s how the administration has handled Covid relief, something that should’ve been so relatively easy, but has turned into a massive mess.
TRUMP has spent the last few days vacillating between two completely different, irreconcilable poles: not wanting a Covid relief bill, because it includes a “bailout” of blue states, and wanting a “big deal,” which will definitely include a bailout of blue states. Square that circle. Or, better yet, don’t. NYT’s Emily Cochrane on the on-again-off-again nature of talks
SO, LET’S NOT FOCUS ON WHETHER Treasury Secretary STEVEN MNUCHIN and Speaker NANCY PELOSI will strike some sort of compromise, because it’s ultimately unknowable. We’ve described the hurdles — a huge money difference, policy differences, etc. — between the two parties at the moment. It’s damn hard and seemingly unlikely. Will MNUCHIN get his way and try to roll Republicans? Maybe, depending on the president’s mood and who has talked to him last.
LET’S FOCUS ON TWO DIFFERENT DYNAMICS: what needs to happen between now and passage, and why PELOSI, MNUCHIN and TRUMP might be fooling us.
LET’S START WITH THIS: THERE ARE 25 DAYS between now and Election Day, and Washington is at least pretending it is going to do something historic: pass a $1 trillion-plus package and confirm a Supreme Court justice in the lead-up to the election.
SO … HERE’S WHAT HAS TO HAPPEN:
THEY NEED A DEAL: The two sides have to come together on the top-line number, and the policies within the bill. … ONCE THAT HAPPENS, they need to draft the bill. This takes three or so days at absolute best. There are some major policy differences, and drafting is always a hassle. … THEN THEY MUST RELEASE THE BILL. The bill is going to have to sit out for a day or so. PELOSI has to take it to House Democrats, and Senate Majority Leader MITCH MCCONNELL has to take it to Senate Republicans (more on that soon). … It will take at least three days to pass this bill in the House, and a week to pass it in the Senate.
SO, WE’RE TALKING ABOUT A TWO-WEEK PROCESS at a minimum to pass a deal that’s not yet wrapped up. Layer on a Supreme Court confirmation hearing and floor vote.
POLITICAL HURDLES … WAKE UP WHITE HOUSE! IT’S GO TIME!: To get a deal, the White House needs to empower MNUCHIN to get something done — something they haven’t done yet; TRUMP needs to expend serious political capital to get a big vote in the House as a signal to the Senate that it has cover voting for this. If he thought tax reform and USMCA were a big deal, then he hasn’t seen anything yet; and then TRUMP needs to grease the skids for a big and very quick vote in the Senate.
IN SHORT, the time has come for the White House to act seriously about this effort — if they want to get it done.
SENATE MINORITY LEADER CHUCK SCHUMER, of course, is going to need many Democratic votes — 30? 40?
OK, HERE’S WHY THEY MAY BE YANKING OUR LEGS: There’s a theory that’s rattling around the Capitol that all of the principals are engaged in an intricate game of smoke and mirrors right now. IS MNUCHIN DRAGGING OUT THESE negotiations to juice markets? … IS TRUMP trying to push a negotiation to set PELOSI up to blame? IS PELOSI simply going with the flow?
DRIVING TODAY: PELOSI and Rep. JAMIE RASKIN (D-Md.)will introduce legislation to create a panel to decide whether a president is physically and mentally able to serve.WaPo’s Felicia Sonmez on the 25th Amendment panel
Happy Friday.
HAVE THEY LEARNED NOTHING? — “Few Covid safeguards as Trump campaign restarts rallies,” by Dan Goldberg, Alice Miranda Ollstein and Rachel Roubein: “The Trump campaign is hitting the road after being sidelined by the coronavirus for a week, while taking few precautions to ensure the rallies don’t become new hot spots.
“While President Donald Trump recovers at the White House, Vice President Mike Pence, members of Trump’s family and other proxies are fanning out to battlegrounds like Arizona, Florida, Nevada and North Carolina. Trump’s campaign manager, Bill Stepien, also currently infected, is floating the idea of having the president hold a live rally next Thursday instead of participating in a virtual debate with Joe Biden.
“Many state and local officials say they’ve gotten little to no notice from the campaign about these events. And while many events are outdoors, some have not followed state and city limits on large crowds, the campaign isn’t requiring face coverings and social distancing doesn’t appear to be enforced, even though Trump officials with recent exposure to the virus will be speaking.
“Pence made an appearance at an outdoor event in Boulder City, Nev., on Thursday after the campaign agreed to limit attendance to a state-mandated capacity of 250. The Secret Service and campaign were supposed to enforce a mask mandate, but many attendees didn’t wear face coverings.” POLITICO
KAYLEIGH MCENANY, the White House press secretary who has also tested positive for the coronavirus, posted this doctor’s note pre-clearing TRUMP to participate in events as early as Saturday.
DEEP DIVE … WSJ: “Coronavirus Hit the U.S. Long Before We Knew,”by Rob Barry, Joel Eastwood and Paul Overberg: “The Wall Street Journal interviewed disease detectives and reviewed hundreds of pages of new research to piece together how the coronavirus infiltrated the wealthiest nation on earth. The latest genetic, epidemiological and computational research suggests it was spreading inside the country before anyone started looking.”
LATEST NUMBERS FROM JOHNS HOPKINS: More than 7.6 MILLION Americans have tested positive for the coronavirus. … 212,784 have died.
ALEX ISENSTADT and NATASHA KORECKI: “Inside Donald Trump’s Election Day poll-watching army”: “[T]he campaign has established what it says is a 50,000-plus army of volunteer observers across an array of battleground states like North Carolina and Pennsylvania, where operations are already underway. Poll watchers monitor everything from voting machines to the processing of ballots to checking voter identification. They are not permitted to interact directly with voters but, depending on local regulations, they can relay problems to local election officials or campaign higher-ups.
“The Trump deployment is the culmination of months of detailed planning, aggressive volunteer recruitment, and reconnaissance trips to key states. President Donald Trump has been personally briefed on the program, which is overseen by nearly two dozen full time staffers.
“It underscores how — to the alarm of voting rights advocates and Democrats — Trump and his reelection effort have turned the idea of voter fraud and irregularities into a centerpiece of the campaign. The prospect of a prolonged vote-counting fight that will extend far beyond Nov. 3 appears very real.”
THE NEW MAP … NYT’S JONATHAN MARTIN and SYDNEY EMBER in Peoria, Ariz.: “Day After Debate, the Campaign’s Focus Moves to Arizona”: “[T]here are few signs of a comeback here for Mr. Trump’s campaign. Surveys of Arizona by The New York Times and Siena College in September and October showed the president polling at around 40 percent, a danger zone for an incumbent president so close to the election.
“Even if the president is able to win one of the three Great Lakes states — Michigan, Ohio and Wisconsin, with polls showing him trailing in all three — that decided the presidency in 2016, his path to re-election would be greatly imperiled if he cannot hold Arizona. He’s struggling here in large part because women and nonwhite voters have flocked to Mr. Biden, who, along with Ms. Harris, sought to appeal to some of those voters on Thursday.”Jonathan Martin and Alex Burns with a Phoenix dateline, looking at Trump’s struggles in the Sun Belt
DOWN BALLOT — “‘It’s a money bomb’: Parties rush to surprising Alaska Senate race,”by James Arkin: “In their quest for the Senate majority, Democrats are pushing the battleground map as far north as it will go. New money from outside groups and small dollar donors are flooding into Alaska, where independent Al Gross, who is backed by state and national Democrats, is aiming to unseat first-term GOP Sen. Dan Sullivan. The race has been on the edges of the Senate map for months, potentially competitive but receiving far less attention than some more expensive and geographically closer contests.
“But now a new influx of outside spending and grassroots dollars into Gross’ campaign have given Democrats a major financial edge in the state in the final four weeks. A new super PAC formed Monday is dropping $4 million into the race, the largest outside investment so far and a signal of optimism among party leaders. And Gross announced that his campaign raised $9 million over the past three months, a staggering sum that would have been enough to fund an entire campaign.”
HILLARY speaks to THE ATLANTIC’S ISAAC DOVERE … ISAAC: “There are also those who, every time you speak up, say some version, ‘Why won’t she just go away?’ What would you say to them?” CLINTON: “Well, look, I think some of it is guilt on the part of people who are promoting that. It’s like, ‘Oh God, he really did turn out to be Putin’s puppet. Get her off the stage before anybody remembers that I ridiculed her about that.’ I get all that. I mean, that’s human nature. I understand that. But it has no impact whatsoever on me. I’m looking forward to relaxing and not worrying every day when Biden is president.”Atlantic Q&A…Podcast
BETTER FOR THE GOP … UT/TEXAS TRIBUNE: TRUMP 50, BIDEN 45 … JOHN CORNYN 50, MJ HEGAR 42
TRUMP’S FRIDAY — The president has no public events.
ON THE TRAIL … BIDEN will travel to Las Vegas. He will make a stop at an East Las Vegas community shop. He will also deliver remarks at a drive-in event.
TV TONIGHT — PBS’ “Washington Week” with Bob Costa: Susan Page, Yamiche Alcindor and Jerry Seib.
SUNDAY SO FAR …
CBS
“Face the Nation”: RNC Chair Ronna McDaniel … Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer … Leonard Schleifer … Scott Gottlieb.
FOX
“Fox News Sunday”: Sen. Ben Sasse (R-Neb.) … Sen. Chris Coons (D-Del.). Panel: Brit Hume, Susan Page and Peter Baker. Power Player: Don McGahn.
Gray TV
“Full Court Press with Greta Van Susteren”: Larry Kudlow … Sen. Tim Kaine (D-Va.). Panel: Annie Linskey and Kevin Cirilli.
NBC
“Meet the Press”: Bill Gates. Panel: Hugh Hewitt, Hallie Jackson, María Teresa Kumar and Jake Sherman.
Sinclair
“America This Week with Eric Bolling”: Jason Miller … Rudy Giuliani … Michael Knowles … Rob Smith … Bob Unanue.
ABC
“This Week”: Panel: Rachel Scott, Rahm Emanuel, Julie Pace and Lanhee Chen.
BEN SCHRECKINGER: “Broidy charge pulls back curtain on Trump-era sausage-making”: “The Department of Justice unveiled a charge of illicit lobbying against former Republican National Committee deputy finance chair Elliott Broidy on Thursday. The government’s charging document, which builds on the August charge of a Hawaii-based political consultant, sheds new light on an only-in-Donald-Trump’s-America tale of influence-peddling. The convoluted global saga ropes in ’90s-era rapper Pras Michel, Russiagate figure Rick Gates, Steve Bannon’s mysterious Chinese funder, the alleged mastermind of the 1MDB scandal, and a failed effort to set up a game of golf between Trump and a now-former Malaysian prime minister.
“Broidy is charged with a single count of conspiring to violate the Foreign Agents Registration Act over his alleged efforts to obtain favorable treatment from the federal government on behalf of the accused mastermind of the massive 1Malaysia Development Berhad, or 1MDB, fraud and to facilitate Beijing’s attempted extradition of a fugitive billionaire seeking asylum in the U.S. Thursday’s release of criminal information signals a plea deal. A spokesman for Broidy, Nate Miller, declined to comment.” POLITICO
THE LATEST IN MICHIGAN — “13 charged in plots against Michigan governor, police,” by AP’s David Eggert in Lansing, Mich., and Ed White in Detroit: “Agents foiled a stunning plot to kidnap Michigan Democratic Gov. Gretchen Whitmer, authorities said Thursday in announcing charges in an alleged scheme that involved months of planning and even rehearsals to snatch her from her vacation home.
“Six men were charged in federal court with conspiring to kidnap the governor before the Nov. 3 elections in reaction to what they viewed as her ‘uncontrolled power,’ according to a federal complaint. Separately, seven others linked to a paramilitary group called the Wolverine Watchmen were charged in state court for allegedly seeking to storm the Michigan Capitol and seek a ‘civil war.’” AP
— @realDonaldTrump tweetstorm Thursday night: “Governor Whitmer of Michigan has done a terrible job. She locked down her state for everyone, except her husband’s boating activities. The Federal Government provided tremendous help to the Great People of Michigan. My Justice Department and Federal Law Enforcement announced…
“… today that they foiled a dangerous plot against the Governor of Michigan. Rather than say thank you, she calls me a White Supremacist—while Biden and Democrats refuse to condemn Antifa, Anarchists, Looters and Mobs that burn down Democrat run cities…
“I do not tolerate ANY extreme violence. Defending ALL Americans, even those who oppose and attack me, is what I will always do as your President! Governor Whitmer—open up your state, open up your schools, and open up your churches!”
MEDIAWATCH — “WarnerMedia Plans Thousands of Job Cuts in Restructuring,” by WSJ’s Drew FitzGerald, Joe Flint and Benjamin Mullin: “AT&T Inc.’s WarnerMedia is restructuring its workforce as it seeks to reduce costs by as much as 20% as the coronavirus pandemic drains income from movie tickets, cable subscriptions and television ads, according to people familiar with the matter.
“The overhaul, which is expected to begin in the coming weeks, would result in thousands of layoffs across Warner Bros. studios and TV channels like HBO, TBS and TNT, the people said. Rivals including Walt Disney Co. and Comcast Corp.’s NBCUniversal have also cut jobs in recent months as the film and TV business struggles.” WSJ
SPOTTED at a Zoom party Thursday night for Bob Bauer and Jack Goldsmith’s new book, “After Trump: Reconstructing the Presidency” ($14.43 on Amazon), hosted by Ben Wittes, Hilary Rosen and Tammy Haddad: Valerie Jarrett, Sylvia Burwell, Bill Kristol, Ben Ginsberg, Craig Newmark, Mike Allen, Carol Melton, Tina Tchen, Mona Charen, David Priess, Norm Eisen, Sally Quinn, Jeremy Bernard, Matt Olsen, David Cohen, Anita Dunn, Amy Dacey, Matt Miller, Scott Mulhauser, Leon Wieseltier, Natasha Bertrand, Shawna Thomas, Margaret Talev, Kelley McCormick, Marcy Stech, Barton Gellman and Dan Meyers.
WELCOME TO THE WORLD — Joshua Marcuse, head of strategy and innovation at Google, and Cathryn J. Marcuse on Sept. 28 welcomed Marshall Abraham Marcuse, who came in at 8 lbs and 20 inches.
BIRTHDAY OF THE DAY: Aaron Blake, senior political reporter at WaPo’s The Fix. A trend he thinks doesn’t get enough attention: “The answer for me will almost always be redistricting, as someone who spent plenty of time covering it a decade ago. When it comes to things that will actually impact people’s lives — given the frequent gridlock in D.C., etc. — people don’t realize how much it matters who draws those maps and how they impact control of each state legislature, etc. It’s definitely something I’m keeping an eye on come early November. It’s just such a difficult story to tell and distill, but an important one.” Playbook Q&A
BIRTHDAYS: Miles Taylor …NPR’s Juana Summers … Justin Barasky, senior adviser at the DSCC …Rachel Pearson … Jason Kaplan, VP at SKDKnickerbocker … Clare Krupin … former Rep. Tom Perriello (D-Va.) is 46 … Virginia Hume … C-SPAN founder Brian Lamb is 79 … Ryan Ramsey … Chris Kofinis, CEO of Park Street Strategies … Gabriel Snyder … Peter Billerbeck of House Foreign Affairs … Russell Moore, president of the Ethics & Religious Liberty Commission of the Southern Baptist Convention, is 49 … David Bibo,FEMA acting associate administrator for response and recovery … Jodie Kelley, CEO of the Electronic Transactions Association … Becki Donatelli … ABC News’ Justin Fishel is 41 … former British PM David Cameron is 54 …
… Amy Dacey, executive director of the Sine Institute at American University (h/t Jon Haber) … Tom Petrillo … Shailagh Murray … Lenny Speiller (h/ts Teresa Vilmain) … Russell Dye, comms director for Rep. Jim Jordan (R-Ohio) … Kat Skiles, CEO and video producer at Narrative Creative Agency … Monica Hinojos-Capes … David Jacobson is 69 … Vivek Kundra … Jordan Littlejohn … Facebook’s Carrie Adams … Arianna Skibell … Valerie Berg … Michael Marcialis … Michael Smith, CEO and founder of MDSA Strategic Communications … Dana Wolfe … Rob Caruso … Ben Rush … Julia Schechter, director at SKDK … Tarresha Poindexter … Annastacia Langthorn … Michael Tubman … Elizabeth Shappell Lattanner … David Cohen … Zack Hale … Leah Fabel Young
He was a Brigadier-General in the War of 1812, fighting in the decisive Battle of Moravian Town, or Battle of the Thames, where the British and their ally, Indian Chief Tecumseh, were defeated.
This secured the Territory for the United States.
President James Madison appointed Lewis Cass as Governor-General of the Michigan Territory, 1813-1831.
Cass made Indian treaties, organized townships and built roads.
In 1820, just 14 years after Lewis and Clark returned from discovering the source of the Missouri River, Lewis Cass led an expedition to northern Minnesota in search of the source of the Mississippi River.
This was necessary in order to define the border between the U.S. and Canada.
He mistakenly identified Cass Lake as the river’s source.
Cass’ expedition geologist Henry Rowe Schoolcraft was later able to correctly identify the source of the Mississippi River as Lake Itasca in 1832.
President Andrew Jackson appointed Lewis Cass as Secretary of War in 1831, then minister to France in 1836.
Lewis Cass was elected a U.S. Senator from Michigan, 1845-48, 1849-57.
He was the Democrat Presidential Candidate in 1848.
Cass was Secretary of State for President James Buchanan, 1857-1860.
Senator Lewis Cass wrote from Washington, D.C. in 1846:
“God, in His providence, has given us a Book of His revealed will to be with us at the commencement of our career in this life and at its termination;
and to accompany us during all chances and changes of this trying and fitful progress, to control the passions, to enlighten the judgment, to guide the conscience, to teach us what we ought to do here, and what we shall be hereafter.”
Cass delivered a Eulogy for Secretary of State Daniel Webster, December 14, 1852:
“‘How are the mighty fallen!’ we may yet exclaim, when reft of our great and wisest;
but they fall to rise again from death to life, when such quickening faith in the mercy of God and in the sacrifice of the Redeemer comes to shed upon them its happy influence this side of the grave and beyond it …”
Cass added, regarding Daniel Webster:
“And beyond all this he died in the faith of the Christian – humble, but hopeful –
adding another to the long list of eminent men who have searched the Gospel of Jesus Christ, and have found it to be the word and the will of God.”
Seventeen States have places named for Lewis Cass, including:
– 1 building;
– 1 fort;
– 1 river;
– 2 lakes;
– 3 parks;
– 4 schools;
– 9 counties;
– 10 streets;
– 10 cities; and
– 30 townships.
Cass stated:
“Independent of its connection with human destiny hereafter, the fate of republican government is indissolubly bound up with the fate of the Christian religion,
and a people who reject its holy faith will find themselves the slaves of their own evil passions and of arbitrary power.”
The State of Michigan placed a statue of Lewis Cass in the U.S. Capitol’s Statuary Hall.
The name “Michigan” is from the Ojibwa Indian word “mishigamaa” which means “large lake.”
Michigan was originally governed under the Northwest Ordinance of 1787, which stated:
“SECTION 13. For extending the fundamental principles of civil and religious liberty, which form the basis whereon these republics … are erected …
SECTION 14. ARTICLE I. No person, demeaning himself in a peaceable and orderly manner, shall ever be molested on account of his mode of worship or religious sentiments in the said territory …
SECTION 14. ARTICLE III. Religion, morality, and knowledge being necessary to good government and the happiness of mankind, schools and the means of education shall forever be encouraged.”
Michigan’s first State Constitution was approved by the U.S. Congress and Michigan became the 26th State in 1837.
The Constitution of Michigan, written in 1835, stated in Article I, Bill of Rights:
First. All political power is inherent in the people …
4. Every person has a right to worship Almighty God according to the dictates of his own conscience …
6. The civil and religious rights, privileges and capacities of no individual shall be diminished or enlarged on account of his opinions or belief concerning matters of religion …
13. Every person has a right to bear arms for the defense of himself and the state.”
The Constitution of the State of Michigan, 1908, stated:
“Preamble. We, the people of the State of Michigan, grateful to Almighty God for the blessings of freedom … establish this Constitution …”
“Article II, Section 3. Every person shall be at liberty to worship God according to the dictates of his own conscience …”
“Article XI, Section 1. Religion, morality and knowledge being necessary to good government and the happiness of mankind, schools and the means of education shall forever be encouraged.”
As recent as 1931, the Michigan Penal Code stated (Act 328 of 1931, 750.102):
“Any person who shall wilfully blaspheme the holy name of God, by cursing or contumeliously reproaching God, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor.” (CL 1948.)
“Any person who shall use any indecent, immoral, obscene, vulgar or insulting language in the presence or hearing of any woman or child shall be guilty of a misdemeanor.” (CL 1948.)
United States District Court (1965) Western District of Michigan, in the case of Reed v. van Hoven, 237 F. Supp. 48, 51 (W.D. Mich. 1965), rendered the opinion:
“The child is not the mere creature of the state.”
In the 19th and early 20th century, immigrants came to Michigan from Germany, Britain, Ireland, Poland, Belgium, Scandinavia, Finland, and Holland.
On June 8, 1925, before the
Norwegian Centennial Celebration,
at the
Minnesota
State Fair Grounds,
President Calvin Coolidge
stated:
“The voyage of the little sloop Restaurationen, which in 1825 brought the first organized party of Norwegian immigrants to this country …. created a sensation among those inured to the sea. It was claimed that she was the smallest vessel that had ever made the trans-Atlantic crossing …
Most of her passengers seemed to have been members of a Norwegian religious community intimately related to the Quakers, and it appears that one of their reasons for coming to this country was that they had not enjoyed entire liberty of religious opinion at home …
The children of Israel … left Egypt to escape from bondage and to recover their religious liberty …
America with … its institutions of religious liberty, of education and economic opportunity, of constitutional rights, of the integrity of the law, are the most precious possessions of the human race.”
Between 1870 to 1910, over a million Swedish Lutheran
immigrants settled in the United States, largely in the North Central region.
The Constitution of the State of Minnesota, adopted 1857, stated:
“Preamble. We, the people of the State of Minnesota, grateful to God for our civil and religious liberty, and desiring to perpetuate its blessings … establish this Constitution …
Bill of Rights, Article I, Section 16. The right of every man to worship God according to the dictates of his own conscience shall never be infringed.”
Minnesota State Court (1927) in the case of Kaplan v. Independent School District of Virginia, 214 N.W. 18 (Minn. 1927), stated:
“The legislature has … seen the need of moral training …
What is more natural than turning to that book for moral precepts which for ages has been regarded by the majority of the peoples of the most civilized nations as the fountain of moral teachings? … The New Testament of the Bible — rules to which neither Jew nor atheist can reasonably take exception …
This government was founded on the principles of Christianity by men either dominated by or reared amidst its influence …
Intolerance touching religion, the Bible … seems to grip the atheist and the disbeliever as intensely.
Instead of fostering this spirit of intolerance … it is more
desirable … in the public school the pupils perceive that there is that in our principles of government which recognizes the religious element of man and guarantees protection to its free exercise …
and that divergent views of others concerning religion and worship should be tolerated.”
In the early 20th century, many African-Americans migrated into the northern states.
Asian immigrants came from Japan, and after the Vietnam War, several thousand Hmong came to Detroit, as featured in the 2008 Clint Eastwood film Gran Torino.
Southeast Michigan has one of the largest Middle Eastern communities outside of the Middle East, estimated at over 300,000.
Though a small number came in the late 1880s, a major wave began when the Turkish genocide of Assyrians took place in the early 1920s, causing Chaldo-Assyrians to flee Syria and Iraq to Michigan.
Most were Christian, being Chaldean, Maronite, Melkite, and Eastern Orthodox.
In the 1970s and early 1980s, fundamental Muslims began a civil war in Lebanon, even blowing up the U.S. Marine barracks, causing many Lebanese immigrated.
Many worked in the grocery, construction, and automotive industries.
As of 2016, there are approximately 160,000 Chaldeans in Michigan.
A wave of Muslim immigration to Michigan can be traced to a legend that Henry Ford, perhaps in an effort to undercut unions, met a Yemeni sailor at port, and told him his automobile factory paid five dollars a day, which was a significant amount.
The sailor spread the word, beginning an Arab Muslim chain of family migration to Detroit from Syria, Lebanon, Iraq, Yemen, Palestine, and other countries in the Middle East.
Henry Ford hired more Arabs than African-Americans or other minorities.
An Arab Muslim community grew up around Ford’s first factory in Highland Park, resulting in them building one of the first mosques in the United States.
When Ford opened his new factory in Dearborn, the Arab community moved with it.
The largest mosque in America was dedicated in Dearborn, Michigan.
As more immigrants arrived after the Gulf War in 1991 and the Iraq War in 2003, the Michigan-Minnesota region became one of the largest Arab Muslim populations outside the Middle East.
Whereas earlier generations of Muslim immigrants are more amenable to American life, dress, values, and culture, the more recent generation of immigrants include fundamental adherents.
A new Islamist tactic to reduce Christians to a subservient dhimmi status is “equity.”
In classic communist “class-struggle” style, fundamental sharia practicing immigrants want to portray themselves as “victims,” and project their intolerance on the tolerant host culture, accusing them of having “white privilege” and “Christian privilege.”
Whereas Christians are taught to overlook offenses, Islamists are raised in a cultural which has a predisposition to being offended, and demands others give up their freedoms so as not to offend them.
Where Judeo-Christian beliefs gave birth to concepts of individual rights, individual conscience, individual worth and equality; fundamental Islamic beliefs are honor-shame community-based, where one’s worth is predominantly as a member of the group, the community, the “ummah.”
If a person leaves it, they could be subject to being ostracized, targeted, or physically threatened with an honor-killing.
Islamists want to enjoy religious liberty, but not grant it to others.
They argue that Christians can practice separation of church and state, but fundamental Muslims cannot, as their faith is a complete system which cannot be separated: religiously, culturally, politically, and militarily.
Therefore, their reasoning goes, Muslim students should have a favored status to bring their religion into the schools but Christian students should not.
As Minnesota and Michigan move away from their foundations in western civilization they are experiencing an increase in lawlessness and calls to defund the police.
In the not too distant past, Michigan Governor John Engler signed a Proclamation in 1996, acknowledging the founding Judeo-Christian values:
“WHEREAS, the observance of Christian Heritage Week encourages Americans to affirm our nation’s spiritual roots and is a time to renew and inspire the joy we find in our faith, friends, family, and community members
WHEREAS, It is eminently fitting and proper that we observe CHRISTIAN HERITAGE WEEK as a special time to acknowledge our many blessings and express gratitude to God, while recognizing the need for strengthening religious and moral values in our land; NOW,
THEREFORE, I, John Engler, Governor of the State of Michigan, do hereby declare November 24-30, 1996, as CHRISTIAN HERITAGE WEEK in Michigan,
and I encourage the citizens of the Great Lakes States to recognize the importance of Christian beliefs and values to the life and culture of our state and nation.
Given under my hand on this first day of July in the year of Our Lord one thousand nine hundred and ninety-six and of the Commonwealth one hundred and fifty-nine. John Engler, Governor.”
“For in him all the fullness of God was pleased to dwell, and through him to reconcile to himself all things, whether on earth or in heaven, making peace by the blood of his cross,” (Colossians 1:19-20, ESV).
By Caffeinated Thoughts on Oct 08, 2020 06:12 pm
U.S. Rep. Cindy Axne, D-Iowa, and former U.S. Rep. David Young, R-Iowa, met for a second debate on WHO-TV in Iowa’s 3rd Congressional District race. Read in browser »
By Shane Vander Hart on Oct 08, 2020 05:29 pm
U.S. Senator Joni Ernst’s ad highlights her sister who has type 1 diabetes and her fight to force insurance companies to cover Iowans with pre-existing conditions. Read in browser »
By Shane Vander Hart on Oct 08, 2020 12:58 pm
President Donald Trump said he would not waste his time on a virtual debate, Biden campaign wants town hall debate to be rescheduled to October 22. 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 has no public events on his schedule for Friday. The president is working from the White House while he recovers from COVID-19. Keep up with the president on Our President’s Schedule Page. President Trump’s Itinerary for 10/9/20 – note: this page will be updated during the day if events warrant All Times …
No matter where you look in the world, you can find the negative impact of big, intrusive government. The Socialism of Venezuela has destroyed the formerly comfortable lives of the citizens of that nation. The capitalism of the energy industry that made Venezuela wealthy has been ended by the Socialist regime in power and only …
U.S. Attorney John Durham has reportedly opened a new front in his investigation into the origins of the Trump-Russia probe. According to a report, Durham is seeking grand jury testimony from computer scientists behind an allegation that Donald Trump’s real estate company had a secret communications channel with Alfa Bank. The Alfa-Trump theory was first …
MAGA Fly Bugs Kamala Mike Pence easily won the debate against Kamala Harris last night, but a fly stole the show. The contest between the Vice President and Kamala was predictable and sedate compared to President Trump’s debate with Joe Biden. Pence is a good speaker and he easily held the nasally Harris at bay. …
Facebook announced Wednesday that it will indefinitely halt political ads on its site beginning Nov. 3, the day of the presidential election. The company’s policy change was enacted to prevent “confusion,” Facebook’s vice president of integrity Guy Rosen said in a Wednesday blog post. Facebook will also take measures to prevent voter intimidation and voter …
If political debates were desserts, last week’s Presidential Debate would be Baked Alaska with sparklers, and tonight’s Vice Presidential debate would be Tapioca. True, there were no fireworks in the Vice Presidential Debate moderated by USA’s Susan Page and held at Kingsbury Hall in Salt Lake City, Utah. In the place of pyrotechnics was mundane …
Two Senate Republicans have accused CIA Director Gina Haspel of withholding documents regarding intelligence the spy agency provided the FBI in its investigation of the Trump campaign. In a letter to Haspel, Sens. Ron Johnson and Chuck Grassley said that CIA officials have refused to schedule a phone call to discuss the document request. “More …
Over 70% of respondents to an unscientific, online Drudge Report poll indicated that they believed Vice President Mike Pence won Wednesday’s debate against vice presidential nominee Sen. Kamala Harris. Seventy-two percent (around 175,519 people) voted that Pence was the victor in the first and only vice presidential debate, while 28% (around 69,000 people) said the …
John Ratcliffe, the director of national intelligence, said Wednesday he has sent nearly 1,000 pages of documents to the Justice Department to help with an investigation led by U.S. Attorney John Durham into the origins of the Trump-Russia probe. “At my direction, the Office of the Director of National Intelligence has now provided almost 1,000 …
Happy Friday, my favorite people. I truly hope that all of my Kruiser Morning Briefing friends are full of #TGIF.
A quick, but necessary Morning Briefing today. This isn’t a news thing. It’s pure opinion from yours truly.
That’s really kind of what we’re all here for though, isn’t it?
I usually don’t like to go all apocalyptic gloom and doom about an election but I feel the need for a little conservative emo at the moment.
I’m not a fan of Donald Trump’s re-election simply because I’m a Republican and loathe the Democratic alternative. I’m a fan because he is the second greatest conservative president in history. The first was Ronald Reagan, of course.
(Side note: We don’t include Abraham Lincoln in discussions like this because he is a stand-alone figure in history.)
I am the resident pessimist here at the Townhall Mothership about the president’s re-election chances. I wish I could take comfort from my friends and colleagues who feel that Trump has got this election but I just can’t find my way to what I feel is irrational exuberance.
I wish I could, because I really do feel that this is a watershed election.
I will now examine the political landscape as I see it.
We are on the precipice as a nation right now. We’re faced with a choice between people who value life and liberty and people who want to take your guns, keep you from going to church, and criminalize speech.
If Donald Trump isn’t re-elected the American experiment is over.
Done.
Dead.
There is no way to spin the existential crisis nature of this election. Those on my side of the aisle know that we’re toast if the Democrats win. Those on the other side will find out that they’re the most dispensable idiots in the New World Order.
The reality is this: vote for Donald Trump or kiss every constitutional amendment you ever cared about goodbye.
The Democrats will be coming after your 1st, 2nd, 5th, and 14th amendment rights as soon as they can. A Dem president will certainly abrogate your rights via executive order. That can be easily undone with a regime change, of course.
They aren’t shy about any of this now. Hit the Google button kids and you will see that I am right.
Vote Trump or we’re all in gulags learning Mandarin.
Militiamen sought to kidnap Michigan Gov. Whitmer and start a civil war . . . The Wolverine Watchmen militia group didn’t just plot to kidnap Gov. Gretchen Whitmer, but they were on a mission to attack the state Capitol and target police officers at their homes as part of a broader mission to instigate a civil war, authorities said Thursday in announcing felony charges against 13 militia members accused in a sensational case of domestic terrorism. Attorney General Dana Nessel referred to the accused as “extremists” who are hoping to recruit new members “by seizing on a moment of civil unrest” to wreak havoc on the country. She identified the militia group as the Wolverine Watchmen, whose members are accused of, among other things, conducting surveillance outside Whitmer’s vacation residence, using code language and encrypted messages to throw off police and planting a bomb under a bridge to divert law enforcement. Detroit Free Press
Trump outraged by Whitmer attack . . . President Donald Trump lashed out at Democratic Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer for attacking him after six people were arrested for planning to kidnap her. Trump tweeted, “Rather than say thank you, she calls me a White Supremacist—while Biden and Democrats refuse to condemn Antifa, Anarchists, Looters and Mobs that burn down Democrat run cities.” Daily Caller
Coronavirus
Being overweight, not just obese, a risk for the coronavirus . . . People who are overweight, and not just obese, are at a higher risk of becoming severely ill with COVID-19, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has now concluded – meaning that over two thirds of Americans are of concern. The new warning was posted on the agency’s website on Tuesday. It had previously been known that obese people – around 40 per cent of American adults – were at greater risk from the virus. Now, the CDC believes that even overweight people – about 32 per cent of adults – are also more susceptible to coronavirus. Daily Mail
A third of Americans believe virus was sent by God . . . As people reckon with the global upheaval that the coronavirus pandemic has caused, the vast majority of the United States believes that there is a lesson to be learned from everything the virus has wrought this year. A survey from the Pew Research Center found that a resounding 86% of respondents “believe there is a lesson or set of lessons for humankind to learn from the coronavirus outbreak.” Slightly more than one-third, 35%, of all respondents took that statement a step further and said that the coronavirus was a lesson sent by God. Only 13% of respondents said that there was no lesson to be learned from the coronavirus. Washington Examiner
Covid-19 outbreak kills thousands of minks on Utah farm . . . A coronavirus outbreak has killed thousands of minks in Utah fur farms over a ten-day window beginning in late September, forcing cautionary quarantines at nine farms in the state. The virus was likely transferred from workers to the animals, though there are no signs that the minks have infected any humans, according to Dr. Dean Taylor, the state veterinarian investigating the outbreak. “We genuinely don’t feel like there is much of a risk going from the mink to the people,” Taylor said. New York Post
Politics
Confusion clouds remaining debates . . . After the nonpartisan Commission on Presidential Debates said Thursday that next week’s debate, set for Oct. 15, would be virtual “to protect the health and safety of all involved,” Trump abruptly pulled out, calling it “ridiculous” to “sit behind a computer and do a debate.” After his campaign then called for revising the debate schedule — one on Oct. 22, as scheduled, and a new one on Oct. 29 — the Biden campaign rejected their proposal, saying it was the president’s choice to pull out of next week’s event. As for the final debate on Oct. 22, “Donald Trump can show up, or he can decline again. That’s his choice,” said Biden deputy campaign manager Kate Bedingfield in a statement. The Hill
Few Covid safeguards as Trump campaign restarts rallies . . . While President Donald Trump recovers at the White House, Vice President Mike Pence, members of Trump’s family and other proxies are fanning out to battlegrounds like Arizona, Florida, Nevada and North Carolina. Many state and local officials say they’ve gotten little to no notice from the campaign about these events. And while many events are outdoors, not all of them are – Donald Trump Jr. on Thursday held a shoulder-to-shoulder indoor rally at a Holiday Inn in Panama City Beach, Fla., where few in the crowd wore masks. Meanwhile, some events have not followed state and city limits on large crowds, the campaign isn’t requiring face coverings and social distancing doesn’t appear to be enforced, even though Trump officials with recent exposure to the virus will be speaking. Politico
I understand people have free choice. But attracting people to rallies where thousands congregate without social distancing or masks is wrong, and it’s killing people.
Trump considers holding rallies in Florida and Pennsylvania this weekend . . . Trump on Thursday night said he will attempt to hold a rally in Florida on Saturday in what could be his first public engagement since contracting the coronavirus. “I think I’m going to try doing a rally on Saturday night if we have enough time to put it together,” Trump told Fox News’ Sean Hannity. The president added he’s eyeing another rally in Pennsylvania the following night. “It’s incredible what’s going on. I feel so good,” Trump told Hannity. New York Post
Experts worried about early Trump return . . . White House physician Dr. Sean P. Conley predicted in a memo released Thursday that President Trump could safely “return to public engagements” on Saturday, based on the date on which he tested positive for the coronavirus and his response to treatments. The document said that the president had completed his “course of therapy for Covid-19” and had “remained stable and devoid of any indications to suggest progression of illness.” But news of Mr. Trump’s potentially imminent return to public appearances or the campaign trail was met with skepticism and alarm from medical experts, who suggested it was premature and questioned whether the end of his isolation met guidelines from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. New York Times
Trump to hold virtual town hall on Rush Limbaugh show . . . Conservative radio host Rush Limbaugh said President Trump will be holding a “virtual rally” on his show Friday. “I’m thrilled to announce that our commander in chief, President Donald Trump, will be right here tomorrow hosting the largest virtual rally in radio history,” Mr. Limbaugh announced Thursday. Mr. Limbaugh said more details would be available later on his website, where he said listeners would be able to submit their own questions for the president. Washington Time
Trump handling of pandemic hits new low . . . Americans are steadily losing confidence in President Donald Trump’s handling of the coronavirus pandemic, with his net approval on the issue that has dominated the U.S. election hitting a record low in a new Reuters/Ipsos poll. The poll taken Tuesday through Thursday, after Trump’s COVID-19 infection and weekend hospitalization, found 37% of American adults approved of the president’s handling of the pandemic and 59% disapproved. Reuters
Pelosi launches commission on using 25th Amendment to remove Trump . . . Speaker Nancy Pelosi wants to form a commission to evaluate President Donald Trump’s mental health and his ability to hold the office of the presidency, she announced on Thursday. The commission would be part of the process to invoke the 25th amendment and comes amid fears the medication Trump is taking for his COVID treatment is affecting his mental health.
Trump, meanwhile, claimed Pelosi is crazy, should be under observation and accused her of plotting a government coup. Daily Mail
Trump tells Barr he should prosecute Obama and Biden . . . President Donald Trump said in a televised interview that he has spoken to Attorney General Bill Barr about the high-stakes Durham probe and received assurances the government has ‘plenty’ of evidence to bring charges against his main political rivals.
He made the extraordinary statement – which if accurate would be a breach of normal firewalls between prosecutors and the executive in a politically charged investigation – in an appearance on the Fox Business Network, where he also pronounced himself cured of the coronavirus. Daily Mail
It doesn’t take people long to become full of themselves once they get to Washington.
Trump coughing during Hannity interview . . . Trump coughed at least once during a 30-minute phone interview on Thursday night, and appeared to mute his mic at another point after clearing his throat. The interview with Fox News host Sean Hannity came nearly a week after Trump revealed his coronavirus diagnosis, and in it he revealed that he has yet to test negative for the virus. First, a few minutes into the interview as he was discussing the presidential debates, Trump began to sound hoarse and cleared his throat. Several seconds of silence followed, before Trump said ‘excuse me’ and continued speaking. Daily Mail
Cruz says he raised concerns with Trump about Kavanaugh and Gorsuch . . . Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas) said Thursday that he raised concerns with President Trump in 2017 and 2018 over plans to nominate Neil Gorsuch and Brett Kavanaugh to the Supreme Court, foreshadowing criticisms that conservatives have had with Trump’s first two nominees. But with the president’s third high court nominee — Judge Amy Coney Barrett — Cruz said he has made a study of her record and now feels very comfortable with Trump’s “exceptionally qualified” pick. The Hill
Former Hunter Biden business partner headed to jail . . . A federal appeals court ruled this week that a former business partner of Hunter Biden’s must face sentencing for his role in a scheme to defraud a Native American tribe in South Dakota. The three-judge panel overturned a lower court’s decision to throw out charges against Devon Archer, the former Biden business associate. Devon Archer will face sentencing on Jan. 21, the 2nd Circuit Court of Appeals ruled on Wednesday. Daily Caller
Trump 2020 sign boobytrapped with razor . . . A Michigan city worker was injured by a Trump 2020 political sign that had razorblades fastened along the bottom of it. The 52-year-old Commerce Township building inspector was removing the campaign signs along a roadway. The signs were in violation of the town’s ordinance that requires them to be 33 feet from the road. Deputies from the Oakland County Sheriff’s Office said the victim reached down to grab one sign when three of his fingers were sliced by the razorblades. Daily Mail
National Security
Navarro accuses China, Democrats of working together to beat Trump . . . White House Trade Adviser Peter Navarro on Thursday night said the Chinese government censored Wednesday night’s vice presidential debate in a “calculated” effort to deceive people.
Navarro made the claim in a Fox News interview when asked by host Martha MacCallum to comment on reports that feeds of debate stopped working in China. “What China does is they regularly monitor international broadcast,” Navarro said. “You got your seven or 10 second delay. And this was quite calculated on their part . . . What we have is the Democrat Party and the Chinese Communist Party effectively making common cause in the defeat of Donald J. Trump,” he said. New York Post
International
United Nations World Food Program given Nobel Peace Prize . . . The United Nations’ World Food Program on Friday won the 2020 Nobel Peace Prize for its efforts to combat hunger and food insecurity around the globe. The announcement was made in Oslo by Berit Reiss-Andersen, the chair of the Nobel Committee. The Nobel Committee said that the coronavirus pandemic has added to the hunger faced by millions of people around the world and called on governments to ensure that WFP and other aid organizations receive the financial support necessary to feed them. USA Today
Money
Rich Americans protecting their fortunes from Biden . . . Wealthy American families are being told by their advisers that they should act now or risk losing millions of dollars later. That’s in case Democrats win back the White House and U.S. Senate in November. Former Vice President Joe Biden has proposed substantially higher taxes on the rich, including making it much harder to avoid a 40% levy on large estates. By transferring fortunes to the next generation now, the wealthy can exploit the generous estate tax rules ushered in by President Donald Trump. Bloomberg
Of course they are. Democrats always assume the rich are stupid and will just pay their new taxes. And then when they don’t Democrats have to collect from the middle class.
Weed stocks surge as Harris vows to decriminalize pot . . . U.S.-listed shares of major cannabis producers surged on Thursday after Democratic vice president nominee Kamala Harris said marijuana would be decriminalized at a federal level in the United States under a Biden administration. During Wednesday night’s debate with Vice President Mike Pence, Harris said she and Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden would also expunge the criminal records of people convicted of marijuana-related offenses in the past. Reuters
Good news for Tegridy Farms.
You should also know
Hurricane Delta presents worst-case scenario for Louisiana . . . Hurricane Delta is expected to make landfall on Friday after roaring across the Gulf of Mexico as a havoc-wreaking storm that strengthened to a 120-mph Category 3 “major” hurricane. Delta’s latest path presents a “worst-case scenario” for Lake Charles and southwestern Louisiana, a city and region still broken by Hurricane Laura six weeks ago, though its effects will be felt all the way into Mississippi. People along the coast spent Thursday boarding up their homes, filling up their cars with gas and stocking up on food. USA Today
Trump administration sues Yale over race-based admissions . . .The Trump administration sued Yale University on Thursday, accusing the school of violating federal civil rights law by discriminating against applicants based on their race. The Justice Department lawsuit is the most drastic action the Trump administration has taken to combat the use of race in university admissions, a practice that has repeatedly been upheld by the Supreme Court. But race-based affirmative action is considered vulnerable under the conservative majority on the high court, which would expand further if the Senate confirms President Donald Trump’s nominee, Amy Coney Barrett. Politico
Guilty Pleasures
Priest arrested for alleged threesome on church altar . . . A Louisiana priest who was arrested for obscenity last week was allegedly caught having sex with two dominatrices on the altar of his church, court documents revealed, according to reports. A witness in Pearl River, northeast of New Orleans, called police on Sept. 30 after allegedly viewing Rev. Travis Clark, 37, through a window in a state of undress on the altar romantically engaged with two high-heeled, corseted women. Clark was allegedly partially dressed in his priestly attire. The group had allegedly set up stage lighting and appeared to be recording the encounter on a cell phone. Fox News
Biden-Harris fly swatters quickly sell out . . . The buzz around the fly that landed on Mike Pence’s head during Wednesday night’s vice presidential debate led to the Biden-Harris campaign selling – and then selling out of – “Truth Over Flies” fly swatters. Nearly 35,000 of the fly swatters were sold after the debate, the Biden campaign confirmed. The campaign’s online store listed the swatters as sold out Thursday. USA Today
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Quick Hits: Today’s Top Stories
The United States confirmed 52,097 new cases of COVID-19 yesterday per the Johns Hopkins University COVID-19 Dashboard, with 5.0 percent of the 1,040,651 tests reported coming back positive. An additional 904 deaths were attributed to the virus on Thursday, bringing the pandemic’s American death toll to 212,657.
The Commission on Presidential Debates announced Thursday morning that the next presidential town hall debate scheduled for Oct. 15 will be held virtually to “protect the health and safety of all involved.” The Biden campaign accepted the new terms, but the Trump campaign did not, releasing an early morning statement saying Trump will hold a rally instead of debate remotely. The remaining two debates are in flux as the two campaigns haggle over the details, but the Trump campaign appeared to be considering reversing course late Thursday night.
The Justice Department charged six people for plotting to kidnap Democratic Michigan Governor Gretchen Whitmer and have her stand “trial” for treason prior to the November election, according to a criminal complaint unsealed on Thursday. The group began meeting in June, and its members were allegedly unhappy with Whitmer’s coronavirus restrictions.
President Trump said via Twitter on Wednesday that the U.S. military should have all its remaining troops in Afghanistan “home by Christmas,” contradicting national security advisor Robert O’Brien’s comments hours earlier that the U.S. would reduce its presence in Afghanistan to 2,500 troops by early next year.
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Treasury Secretary Steve Mnuchin spoke over the phone on Thursday about a coronavirus relief bill, resuming bipartisan negotiations just two days after the president put them to a halt. A deal is not imminent, or even likely, but negotiations are not as dead as they seemed earlier this week.
The Trump administration placed additional sanctions on Iranian banks on Thursday. Treasury Secretary Steve Mnuchin said the sanctions “will continue to allow for humanitarian transactions to support the Iranian people,” but the move sparked criticism from European allies who warn it will prevent the importation of medical supplies, food, and coronavirus relief packages into Iran.
Biotechnology company Moderna Inc. said Thursday it will not enforce patents on its experimental COVID-19 vaccine during the pandemic and may offer patent licenses to other drugmakers.
Facebook removed a network of accounts connected to pro-Trump youth group Turning Point USA and marketing firm Rally Forge for “coordinated inauthentic behavior,” using fake accounts to spread misinformation about presidential candidates Donald Trump and Joe Biden.
Initial jobless claims last week modestly exceeded expectations, with 840,000 Americans filing for unemployment insurance, a slight downtick from 849,000 the week prior.
More than 57 million people watched Wednesday’s debate between Vice President Mike Pence and Sen. Kamala Harris according to preliminary Nielsen ratings of the eight biggest channels, a measurable increase from the 37 million people who watched Pence and Sen. Tim Kaine face off in 2016. The total viewership was likely even higher due to internet streamers and radio listeners, who were not included in the Nielsen ratings.
If Donald Trump Was Trying to Lose the Election, What Would He Be Doing Differently?
Before we get started today, let’s make one thing clear: Donald Trump is losing the presidential race. Badly. Joe Biden’s average lead in national polls has crept up to 10 percentage points—the highest FiveThirtyEight has had it all cycle—and the former vice president’s numbers in battleground states are increasingly not far behind. He’s got a 9-point lead in Minnesota, an 8.3-point edge in Michigan, 7-point margins in both Wisconsin and Pennsylvania, and 4.2-point advantages in both Florida and Arizona. Even if the polls underestimate Trump’s support by as much as they did in 2016, Biden would still win the presidency with approximately 335 electoral votes.
Now for the caveats. Not everyone who responds to a poll ends up making it to the polls; Trump’s campaign, with its apparent ground-game advantage, might be better placed to juice turnout. Biden supporters are far more likely to vote by mail than Trump supporters and mail-in ballots are significantly more likely to be disqualified than in-person ones. Polls could theoretically be underestimating Trump’s support by even more than they did in 2016. Oh, and there are still 25 days left: plenty of time for the narrative to change and the race to tighten. Donald Trump still has a chance—FiveThirtyEight pegs it at 15 percent as of last night—to turn this thing around.
But if the president’s behavior this week is any indication, it’s almost as if he doesn’t want to. While Trump was at Walter Reed last weekend, we heard rumblings of an effort among the president’s advisers to use his COVID-19 affliction as an opportunity to reset the campaign. Conservative columnist Marc Thiessen made the case in a Washington Post op-ed. “The president should deliver an address to the nation on his recovery and the way forward in the battle against the virus,” Thiessen wrote. “He should begin by thanking Joe Biden for his graciousness during this difficult moment and talk about how moved he was by the prayers of millions of Americans—including many who do not support him—for his and the first lady’s recovery. He should discuss his experience fighting [COVID-19] in deeply personal terms and express his empathy and solidarity with the millions of Americans who have struggled with it.”
Fighting between Armenia and Azerbaijan continues over the disputed Nagorno-Karabakh region, where the Azeris launched an offensive in late September. Internationally recognized as a part of Azerbaijan, the territory is largely populated and governed by separatist Armenians. As both sides ignore calls by the international community to reinstate the ceasefire, onlookers fear that Turkey’s involvement on behalf of Azerbaijan will compel NATO to get involved too.
Almost two weeks after the renewed combat broke out, it remains unclear which side struck first. The severity of the conflict now surpasses that of the 2016 Four Day War, which killed 350 service members and civilians. But neither Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev nor Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan appear ready to back down, each accusing the other of carrying out unprovoked attacks against civilian populations.
“Armenia doesn’t want peace. They want to keep our lands under occupation forever. They don’t want to change [the] status quo,” President Aliyev said in an interview with Al Jazeera on Saturday. “I think Armenian government overestimated their so-called importance on [the] global arena, overestimated the possible international support to them and made very serious mistakes provoking us, attacking us and now they are suffering the very serious defeat.”
Yesterday, Prime Minister Pashinyan of Armenia doubled-down on Azerbaijan’s culpability in spurring on the fighting, chastising the country’s leadership for accepting military aid from Turkey. “Bearing in mind that there are terrorist groups fighting on the Azerbaijani side which are involved in the hostilities who are recruited and transported to the conflict zone by Turkey, he said, “I think the international community in this situation should decisively act now and recognize the independence of Karabakh.”
Facebook announced on Tuesday that the tech platform will step up its efforts to censor posts and accounts linked to QAnon. We’ve spoken and written about the threats that this pro-Trump conspiracy theory poses to the future of the GOP, the church, and society at large. But how prudent is Facebook’s decision to ban QAnon adherents from the platform entirely? “The sheer scale of the logistical task involved with sorting through billions of pieces of content a day makes any hope at even-handed moderation a fantasy,” writes Matt Taibbi in his Substack newsletter this week. “Once companies go down the road of quashing ‘harm,’ there are really only two possible outcomes: an ever-expanding game of speech Whac-a-Mole, or a double standard.”
During Wednesday’s vice presidential debate, Kamala Harris dodged Mike Pence’s question about whether Joe Biden would pack the court if he wins the election. On Thursday, Biden himself said voters will “know my opinion on court-packing when the election is over.” The Biden campaign’s strategic ambiguity on this question has riled up conservatives, who fear the degradation of the judicial branch should a president expand the court beyond its current nine justices. In The Atlantic this week, Emma Green argues that Democrats also deserve a direct answer from the Biden campaign on the question so they know what they’re in for if he wins. “If Democrats want to take the radical step of court packing in pursuit of their revenge, a drawn-out, bloody battle surely lies ahead,” Green writes. “November’s election is a referendum on the chaos of the last four years. But the election might not end the chaos—it might just bring a new era.”
President Trump announced Thursday morning that he will not participate in the October 15 virtual debate against Joe Biden. Is the president bluffing? Or is he simply trying to hide his COVID-19 symptoms from the American public? Our Advisory Opinionshosts have some thoughts. Tune in for Sarah and David’s recap of the vice presidential debate and preview of the forthcoming Amy Coney Barrett Senate confirmation hearings. Plus, they discuss the strategic ambiguity of Biden’s court packing comments, and the criminal allegations against Texas attorney general Ken Paxton.
David’s latest French Press (🔒) takes on what he calls “pro-life partisanship,” when the “health of the [political] party becomes inseparable from—and often, as a practical matter, superior to—the value of the idea.” Yes, President Trump has been nominally anti-abortion, David writes, noting Trump addressed the March for Life. But Planned Parenthood received record taxpayer funding in 2019, and there is “no definition of ‘pro-life’ that fits the president’s extraordinary and consequential decision to repeatedly mislead Americans about the danger of COVID-19.”
“My family and my company are leaving California. It’s heartbreaking. My parents moved to California four decades ago. I grew up here. For 33 of the 36 years I’ve spent on this planet, I’ve lived here…”
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No Answer on Court Packing Until Election
Want to know Joe Biden’s position on court packing? Yesterday, he finally gave a concrete timeline as to when he will be announcing his position on the subject: after the election. Both he and VP nominee Kamala Harris have been avoiding the question since the nomination of Judge Amy Coney Barrett to fill Ruth Bader Ginsburg’s Supreme Court seat, and he’s now confirmed that voters will not have this crucial piece of information before they decide whether or not he deserves their support.
Biden’s excuse for the evasion is that the answer would be newsworthy and garner attention, stating, “I know it’s a great question and I don’t blame you for asking, but you know the moment I answer that question, the headlines in every one of your papers will be about that other than focusing on what’s happening now.”
The reason every headline would focus on Biden and court packing should he respond to the simple and obvious question is because it is vitally important. With lifetime appointments and the final say on the Constitutionality of legislation, the two Justices Biden would nominate could have influence that extends long beyond the Biden presidency. Though there is only one answer to the question that would merit such secrecy: he wouldn’t need to evade unless he was planning on packing the court.
Refusal to Debate
In the aftermath of President Trump’s COVID-19 diagnosis, there are many questions surrounding how the campaign would continue through the next month, particularly with two debates left. The debate commission had decided to move the upcoming ones virtual, an idea which the president refused to entertain. Yesterday morning, he told Fox Business, “I’m not going to waste my time on a virtual debate.” When Trump’s doctor publicized that he may be ready to return to in-person events as soon as Saturday, the Trump campaign called for a return to the in-person format, for fear that the controlled virtual environment is being set to unduly favor Biden.
De Blasio Threatens Jewish Protestors After Allowing Riots in NYC
Remember when violent protesters and rioters took to the streets of New York, unhindered by Mayor Bill de Blasio? He certainly appears not to, as last night he threatened Orthodox Jewish protestors fighting lockdowns, “There’ll be no tolerance for assaults, for damage to property, for setting fires – anything like that is unacceptable.” His comments come in reaction to a reporter being pinned against a wall and verbally and physically assaulted on Wednesday. This type of violence is obviously unacceptable, but it is curious that de Blasio did not have this same level of concern during the weeks of violence. Where were the “consequences” then?
Justice Department Files Discrimination Suit Against Yale
As Americans become increasingly aware of racial bias across the country, the Justice department is fighting back against a blatant and open example of discrimination in higher education: Yale’s systemic discrimination against Asian and white students in college admissions. The lawsuit, filed yesterday, argues that, due to race-based quotas, white and Asian applicants are only respectively one-fourth and one-eighth as likely to be accepted as equally qualified Black applicants. The lawsuit reads:
“Because Yale claims that its race discrimination is necessary to admit sufficient numbers of racially-favored applicants, mostly Black and Hispanic applicants, Yale signals that racially-favored applicants cannot compete against Asian and White applicants. This kind of race discrimination relies upon and reinforces damaging race-based stereotypes.”
What to Listen – Van Halen
Eddie Van Halen is easily one of the greatest guitar players of all time, and arguably the best. His iconic riffs and peerless solos were the best rock had to offer. I grew up on his music, introduced to Van Halen by my dad as a kid, and instantly was amazed.
My personal favorite song in Van Halen’s catalogue is You Really Got Me, a cover of the equally excellent Kinks song of the same name. I regularly alter between the epic Van Halen cover (especially when played directly after Eruption) and the exciting harmonies of the Kink’s live version from One for the Road. This week, the edge obviously goes to Van Halen.
In the aftermath of his death on Tuesday, here are some Van Halen songs to celebrate his legacy:
Running with the Devil
Hot for Teacher
Ain’t Talkin Bout Love
Eruption
Jamie’s Cryin’
And the Cradle Will Rock
Everybody Wants Some
Ice Cream Man
You Really Got Me
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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Oct 09, 2020 01:00 am
Oversampling of Democrats, and signs of panic among Democratic operatives. Are pollsters repeating the same mistakes of 2016? Read More…
Oct 09, 2020 01:00 am
No amount of eye rolling, smirking, or duplicity from Harris could prevent Vice President Mike Pence from calmly swatting away all of her falsehoods. Read More…
Oct 09, 2020 01:00 am
A compelling historic parallel exists between Trump and another outspoken New Yorker and similarly ostracized Republican — Theodore Roosevelt. Read More…
A man was caught on cellphone video kicking a 16-year-old girl in the face after he chewed her out for not wearing a mask and was “racially abusing her” on a bus in the United Kingdom — and then a fellow passenger body slammed the man to the floor, threatened to “murder” him, stomped on his head, and threw him off the bus, the … Read more
‘Mr. Trump was shown on the South Lawn of the White House hundreds of feet away from the mansion, but it appeared to be a digital backdrop as leaves blowing in the wind behind him could be seen repeating on a loop.’
Sixty to 70 Black Lives Matter activists ‘targeted’ the black officer, vandalized his girlfriend’s home, and fired a shotgun at his back door in August. Riots erupted this week when he was not charged.
An impressive array of academics signed a letter to the Pulitzer Prize Board calling for it to revoke the prize it ceremoniously awarded to Nikole Hannah-Jones for the New York Times’ 1619 Project.
I don’t care about the tone of his tweets nor if his opponents think he’s rude. I’ve seen that he is a patriot who genuinely loves the United States of America and its people.
Despite Scully’s history working for Joe Biden and Democratic Sen. Ted Kennedy, the Commission on Presidential Debates chose him to moderate the second presidential debate in Miami.
It is obvious the left has it in for Tolkien and his work. This could not stop a major company like Amazon from wanting to profit off Tolkien’s hugely popular Legendarium.
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Would Joe Biden and Kamala Harris ban fracking. That depends on who they’re talking to at the time. If they’re talking to radical leftists, fracking is evil and a Biden-Harris administration will “push it out,” as Biden once claimed. If they’re talking to a moderate audience or to a national audience, they claim to be unambiguously opposed to a ban on fracking. In fact, there’s nothing but ambiguity in the Biden-Harris plan for fracking, and that should concern every American who doesn’t contribute to the Justice Democrats or the Sunrise Movement.
But fracking isn’t their only problem. Ask them about packing the courts. If you think you’ll get a yes-or-no answer, keep dreaming. They absolutely refuse to state a policy on it because they know that either answer will make them lose favor from one wing or the other in their party. It’s a stark difference from what President Trump has done since before his election. Regardless of the audience, he has stayed consistent with his messaging. If he has a policy, he’ll announce it. If asked about it, he’ll answer. That, arguably more than anything else, is what differentiates his style from that of his opponents.
In the latest episode of NOQ Report, JD dives into the dilemma the Democratic Party faces as they juggle between appealing to the passionate radicals in their party and pandering to the moderate middle. It’s a problem President Trump doesn’t have. It’s also a problem that would cause tremendous turmoil in this nation should the President lose his reelection bid.
Imagine having to change your answer based on who you’re talking to at any given moment. That’s the problem the Democratic Party faces, a problem that will spill over to the rest of the nation should they be allowed to gain more power.
COVID-19 may take down an independent news outlet
Nobody said running a media site would be easy. We could use some help keeping this site afloat.
Colleagues have called me the worst fundraiser ever. My skills are squarely rooted on the journalistic side of running a news outlet. Paying the bills has never been my forte, but we’ve survived. We have ads on the site that help, but since the site’s inception this has been a labor of love that otherwise doesn’t bring in the level of revenue necessary to justify it.
When I left a nice, corporate career in 2017, I did so knowing I wouldn’t make nearly as much money. But what we do at NOQ Report to deliver the truth and fight the progressive mainstream media narrative that has plagued this nation is too important for me to sacrifice it for the sake of wealth. We know we’ll never make a ton of money this way, and we’re okay with that.
Things have become harder with the coronavirus lockdowns. Both ad money and donations that have kept us afloat for a while have dropped dramatically. We thought we could weather the storm, but the so-called “surge” or “2nd-wave” that mainstream media and Democrats are pushing has put our prospects in jeopardy. In short, we are now in desperate need of financial assistance.
The best way NOQ Report readers can help is to donate. Our Giving Fuel page makes it easy to donate one-time or monthly. Alternatively, you can donate through PayPal as well. We need approximately $11,500 to stay afloat for the rest of 2020, but more would be wonderful and any amount that brings us closer to our goal is greatly appreciated.
The second way to help is to become a partner. We’ve strongly considered seeking angel investors in the past but because we were paying the bills, it didn’t seem necessary. Now, we’re struggling to pay the bills. This shouldn’t be the case as our traffic the last year has been going up dramatically. June, 2018, we had 11,678 visitors. A year later in June, 2019, we were up to 116,194. In June, 2020, we had 614,192. We’re heading in the right direction and we believe we’re ready talk to patriotic investors who want to not only “get in on the action” but more importantly who want to help America hear the truth. Interested investors should contact me directly with the contact button above.
Election year or not, coronavirus lockdowns or not, anarchic riots or not, the need for truthful journalism endures. But in these times, we need as many conservative media voices as possible. Please help keep NOQ Report going.
Join fellow patriots as we form a grassroots movement to advance the cause of conservatism. The coronavirus crisis has prompted many, even some conservatives, to promote authoritarianism. It’s understandable to some extent now, but it must not be allowed to embed itself in American life. We currently have 8000+ patriots with us in a very short time. If you are interested, please join us to receive updates.
The only thing leftist Democrat Kamala Harris got right in her October 7 debate with Vice President Mike Pence was that her purpose was not to exhibit any supposed “superiority” over Pence, but to use the occasion to contrast herself against President Trump. Unfortunately for Harris, she succeeded on both counts. Not only was she quantifiably the big loser of the night going up against Pence, but she also revealed a truly sinister leftist Democrat alternative universe that would inflict horrendous damage on the nation, were it ever to succeed.
Admittedly, the entire presidential and vice-presidential “debate” forum of recent years has degenerated into a skeletal caricature of what such events were originally intended to be. Back when Abraham Lincoln and Stephen Douglas agreed to engage in front of the public, the goal was to spotlight the issues of the day, and give voters a clear perspective on where each candidate stood. This was particularly important at a time when few alternative sources of information existed.
Sadly though the enormity of high-tech communications has made reporting available to all on a vastly larger scale than even a few decades ago, this does not translate to any guarantee of truth. As the scope of political campaigning has expanded, leftists have been compelled to suppress truth in every possible manner, since reality and truth are the greatest obstacles to their perverse agenda. So it was imperative that “debates” be devoid of real, factual discourse. As a result they have lost any recognizable or useful form.
Even the notion of which candidate “won” a debate is itself an absurdity and distraction. This is not a horse race! The goal of viewers should not be to determine which candidate has the best “one liners,” or does the best job of quick-witted lying on his or her feet. Rather, it should all be about learning what each candidate actually believes, and consequently what the election of each would mean for the country. Of course any honest assessment on that basis is poison to leftist Democrats. So it is guaranteed that they will never allow things to return to such a place.
Still, in the midst of all the chicanery and duplicity of both “debates” we have seen thus far, enough evidence has been revealed to give honest Americans ample warnings as to how each party’s candidate would affect the nation’s future. The contrast between two camps could not be more stark, or more scary!
To grasp just how horrendously the leftist Democrats would devastate every decent aspect of our great America, one need only consider the upheaval of the past nine months. From the moment Americans were made aware of the Wuhan virus, Democrats have been posturing all over the place in response to it. The only thing about which they’ve been absolutely consistent is their obvious intent to shamelessly exploit the virus for political gain.
President Trump quickly responded to the looming danger by banning travel from China; a move that was met with caterwauling from Democrats, who accused him of hatred, bigotry, and overreacting. Yet the moment they realized that the fear and chaos would play well into their political agenda, Democrats instantly pivoted and began pushing for every unconstitutional power grab, ostensibly for the “safety” of the American people.
“Lockdowns,” which are clearly in direct defiance of the Constitution, have been implemented in every “Blue” (leftist Democrat dominated) state and municipality across the country, under the guise of “public safety.” Meanwhile, as honest citizens are being fettered and prevented from functioning in any normal manner, marauding mobs of antifa and BLM anarchists are laying waste to urban areas, looting, vandalizing, assaulting, and even murdering in the name of Marxist/leftist “social justice.” In response, Democrat politicians are either supportive or totally silent, which is tacit support.
Democrat “Lockdown” policies have been onerous and ineffective, driving many Americans out of business, and inflicting unspeakable anguish on those forced into isolation. Drug and alcohol abuse have spiked horrendously. And suicide rates in many areas have greatly exceeded actual deaths from the virus.
In New York leftist Democrat governor Andrew Cuomo sentenced literally thousands among the elderly to death from the disease, on account of his insane and murderous policy of forcing infected patients into nursing homes where the disease spread. Yet all those leftist Fake News minions who claim to care about the plight of the “little guy” have done nothing to hold Cuomo accountable, and instead have deliberately deflected attention from him by claiming that unnecessary deaths are somehow President Trump’s fault.
It is grimly fitting that so many are speculating on the aftermath of the 2020 presidential election as a descent into post-apocalyptic national dystopia. This is most often asserted by leftists, who are actually threatening more tantrums if Americans dare defy their demands that the nation vote Democrat. But in a much more real, and dangerous sense, the fate of the nation is in grave danger if leftist Democrats ever achieve electoral dominance, either now or at any time in the future.
Given the iron fisted suppression of opposition among leftists wherever they dominate, from schools to the corporate world to the sewer that once was the “entertainment” industry, and given the willingness of leftist Democrat governors such as Michigan’s Gretchen Whitmer, California’s Gavin Newsom, and Washington’s Jay Inslee to obsess with power the moment they were able to seize on the Wuhan virus as an excuse, it is beyond naive to think they would ever relinquish that power on their own.
Thankfully, the individuality of the other states has provided a firewall against this despotic onslaught, at least for the moment. But that protection would quickly collapse, along with every other constitutional principle of a free nation, in the immediate wake of a Democrat “victory,” no matter how fraudulently it is achieved.
Bio
Christopher G. Adamo is a lifelong conservative from the American Heartland. He has been involved in grassroots and state-level politics for years. His recently released book “Rules for Defeating Radicals,” subtitled “Countering the Alinsky Strategy in Politics and Culture,” is the “Go To” guide to effectively overcoming the dirty tricks of the political left. It is available at Amazon.
COVID-19 may take down an independent news outlet
Nobody said running a media site would be easy. We could use some help keeping this site afloat.
Colleagues have called me the worst fundraiser ever. My skills are squarely rooted on the journalistic side of running a news outlet. Paying the bills has never been my forte, but we’ve survived. We have ads on the site that help, but since the site’s inception this has been a labor of love that otherwise doesn’t bring in the level of revenue necessary to justify it.
When I left a nice, corporate career in 2017, I did so knowing I wouldn’t make nearly as much money. But what we do at NOQ Report to deliver the truth and fight the progressive mainstream media narrative that has plagued this nation is too important for me to sacrifice it for the sake of wealth. We know we’ll never make a ton of money this way, and we’re okay with that.
Things have become harder with the coronavirus lockdowns. Both ad money and donations that have kept us afloat for a while have dropped dramatically. We thought we could weather the storm, but the so-called “surge” or “2nd-wave” that mainstream media and Democrats are pushing has put our prospects in jeopardy. In short, we are now in desperate need of financial assistance.
The best way NOQ Report readers can help is to donate. Our Giving Fuel page makes it easy to donate one-time or monthly. Alternatively, you can donate through PayPal as well. We need approximately $11,500 to stay afloat for the rest of 2020, but more would be wonderful and any amount that brings us closer to our goal is greatly appreciated.
The second way to help is to become a partner. We’ve strongly considered seeking angel investors in the past but because we were paying the bills, it didn’t seem necessary. Now, we’re struggling to pay the bills. This shouldn’t be the case as our traffic the last year has been going up dramatically. June, 2018, we had 11,678 visitors. A year later in June, 2019, we were up to 116,194. In June, 2020, we had 614,192. We’re heading in the right direction and we believe we’re ready talk to patriotic investors who want to not only “get in on the action” but more importantly who want to help America hear the truth. Interested investors should contact me directly with the contact button above.
Election year or not, coronavirus lockdowns or not, anarchic riots or not, the need for truthful journalism endures. But in these times, we need as many conservative media voices as possible. Please help keep NOQ Report going.
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.
New York City was once a very nice place to live. It was one of the safest big cities in the world and offered a place of cultural diversity in which the various people groups got along. They were New Yorkers first, whatever their racial or ethnic background second. But things have changed under Mayor Bill de Blasio, as Two Mikes discussed with their guest today.
Aaron M. Renn is an opinion-leading urban analyst, consultant, speaker, and writer on a mission to help America’s cities and people thrive and find real success in the 21st century. He focuses on urban, economic development, and infrastructure policy in the greater American Midwest. He also regularly contributes to and is cited by national and global media outlets. He is a columnist for Governing magazine and his work has appeared in the The Guardian (UK), The New York Times, and The Washington Post, along with many others.
Renn was a Senior Fellow at the Manhattan Institute from 2015-2019 and is a Contributing Editor at its quarterly magazine City Journal. Prior to his work in public policy, Renn had 15 year business career in management and technology consulting, where he was a partner at Accenture. He also founded the urban data analytics software platform Telestrian, which continues to underpin his work on cities.
It takes a Bill de Blasio to bring about someone like Rudy Giuliani. Will New Yorkers wake up to the ineptitude of their Democratic leaders or will the continue down their rapid path of decline?
COVID-19 may take down an independent news outlet
Nobody said running a media site would be easy. We could use some help keeping this site afloat.
Colleagues have called me the worst fundraiser ever. My skills are squarely rooted on the journalistic side of running a news outlet. Paying the bills has never been my forte, but we’ve survived. We have ads on the site that help, but since the site’s inception this has been a labor of love that otherwise doesn’t bring in the level of revenue necessary to justify it.
When I left a nice, corporate career in 2017, I did so knowing I wouldn’t make nearly as much money. But what we do at NOQ Report to deliver the truth and fight the progressive mainstream media narrative that has plagued this nation is too important for me to sacrifice it for the sake of wealth. We know we’ll never make a ton of money this way, and we’re okay with that.
Things have become harder with the coronavirus lockdowns. Both ad money and donations that have kept us afloat for a while have dropped dramatically. We thought we could weather the storm, but the so-called “surge” or “2nd-wave” that mainstream media and Democrats are pushing has put our prospects in jeopardy. In short, we are now in desperate need of financial assistance.
The best way NOQ Report readers can help is to donate. Our Giving Fuel page makes it easy to donate one-time or monthly. Alternatively, you can donate through PayPal as well. We need approximately $11,500 to stay afloat for the rest of 2020, but more would be wonderful and any amount that brings us closer to our goal is greatly appreciated.
The second way to help is to become a partner. We’ve strongly considered seeking angel investors in the past but because we were paying the bills, it didn’t seem necessary. Now, we’re struggling to pay the bills. This shouldn’t be the case as our traffic the last year has been going up dramatically. June, 2018, we had 11,678 visitors. A year later in June, 2019, we were up to 116,194. In June, 2020, we had 614,192. We’re heading in the right direction and we believe we’re ready talk to patriotic investors who want to not only “get in on the action” but more importantly who want to help America hear the truth. Interested investors should contact me directly with the contact button above.
Election year or not, coronavirus lockdowns or not, anarchic riots or not, the need for truthful journalism endures. But in these times, we need as many conservative media voices as possible. Please help keep NOQ Report going.
Join fellow patriots as we form a grassroots movement to advance the cause of conservatism. The coronavirus crisis has prompted many, even some conservatives, to promote authoritarianism. It’s understandable to some extent now, but it must not be allowed to embed itself in American life. We currently have 8000+ patriots with us in a very short time. If you are interested, please join us to receive updates.
There is an unambiguous reality about the Supreme Court and the Democratic ticket that must be understood by all. When a campaign goes out of its way to avoid the answer to a question, the answer becomes as apparent as if they’d actually said the words. Joe Biden, Kamala Harris, and their proxies have done everything they can to not answer the question of whether they would pack the Supreme Court if Amy Coney Barrett is confirmed. That means the answer is clearly, “You betcha.”
If the answer were “no,” they would say that. It would help their campaign to do so because the only people who would be upset by it are the radical leftists who want the court packed, and there’s no chance they’d switch their vote to President Trump over the issue. Therefore, the Democrats abstaining from answering a very simple question is an answer unto itself.
But you knew all of this already. If you’re reading this site, you’re probably a conservative. If you’re a conservative, you’ve watched Biden, Harris, and others refuse to answer the question and you’ve already figured out why. Now, the task at hand is to go forth with a message of why packing the court would be a very bad thing. It has nothing to do with ideology; if President Trump said he wanted to pack the court with Barrett and two other originalist judges to make sure his agenda was protected by the highest court in the land, I would be just as against it. As should you. Here’s why…
If more than nine, why not 99?
Our founding fathers got it right. Mostly. They intentionally made the judiciary a slightly less powerful branch of government for a reason. They knew that if judges were empowered to intervene too much, human nature would demand that they do so. The only real mistake they made with Article III of the Constitution was to not set a limit on Supreme Court Justices.
Nine is the right number. It prevents a disastrous balance; there must always be a definitive judgment and an odd number is the easiest way to do that. Fewer than nine and each individual justice becomes too powerful. More than nine and we run the risk of an ideological shift one way or the other that can be insurmountable for decades… except through further court packing.
Our republic has stayed together largely through unwritten agreements. A nine-Justice Supreme Court is one of those. So what happens if that unwritten covenant is broken? If (God forbid) Joe Biden wins and starts packing the court with two additional Justices, that would put it at 6-5 in favor of leftists. But Democrats do not consider Chief Justice John Roberts a leftist, so they would need to add two more to make it a 7-6 leftist majority (though in reality it would be 8-5 with Roberts).
Assuming that all happens in the four years of a Biden-Harris administration, the backlash from conservatives will be harsh. They’ll make sure a Republican candidate wins in 2024 and will flip back the Senate. That means they would have to add 2-4 more Justices to pack the courts in favor of originalists. And the trend goes on and on.
Couple all of this with the likelihood of deaths or retirements sending the court into further lopsided disarray and we could find ourselves with 15, 23, 37… 99 Justices within a couple of decades. That’s not a Supreme Court. That’s a circus.
Singular election purpose
The judiciary branch is separate from the legislative and executive branches for a reason. The founders wanted checks and balances in place that would make it as fair as possible to the Constitution and the American people. In every way possible, the judiciary was intended to be apolitical.
Unfortunately, it has become very political since FDR made it so. As a result, we’ve seen continuous fights over the makeup of the court. While that’s not necessarily a terrible thing in its current form (bad, not terrible), it would get exponentially worse when we start holding national elections with the sole purpose of reshaping the bench. Today, it’s already a major consideration in elections. If court packing becomes a thing, it will be the only major consideration.
We need a judiciary that is neither beholden to nor determined by the state of politics of the day. Supreme Court decisions span over long periods of time, often indefinitely, and must never be made due to immediate political considerations. That’s what the legislative branch is for, to handle the issues of the moment and set a direction for the future. All the judiciary branch is supposed to do is determine if the actions of the legislative and executive branches at the national, state, and local levels are aligned with the Constitution.
Once you introduce court packing into the equation, politics of the day will be all that’s taken into account.
Everything overturned
Okay, so it won’t be everything. But many rulings of the past will be reconsidered as a result of the aforementioned political considerations of the moment. That should terrify everyone, including hardcore leftists. Why? Because a Supreme Court that is built on political considerations will be a Supreme Court that acts as activists of the moment.
One thing of particular interest is Roe v. Wade. Even with Amy Coney Barrett confirmed, it would still be next to impossible for the abortion ruling to be overturned. Why? Because originalists need a compelling reason to overturn past rulings. That’s in their nature. There may be six pro-life Justices, assuming Barrett is confirmed, but that does not mean they will overturn it based on laws coming from the states.
However, if court packing becomes a thing, it’s almost certain that Roe v. Wade will be overturned. Why? Because a conservative future president will run on it as a campaign promise to go along with other forms of judicial activism. With America reeling from the results of a Biden-Harris packed court, they will accept and elect a Republican, likely in 2024, who promises to “reverse” the damage by packing the court even more. And what will be at the top of the list of prerequisites placed on potential Justices by this hypothetical future president? A willingness to strike down Roe v. Wade among others.
Some on the right may argue that this is a good thing. I want Roe v. Wade overturned as much as anyone, but I want it done without sending the nation down the dangerous path of court packing. The reason is simple. If a packed Supreme Court strikes down Roe v. Wade, a future court packed by Democrats will not only reinstate it, but will likely take it even further. We need to win this battle culturally and politically, and that means doing so within the constraints of a nine-Justice Supreme Court system.
Between socialism, open borders, a Green New Deal, and Medicare-for-All, it’s hard to imagine Democrats doing anything more dangerous should they win in November. Sadly, packing the court is the most dangerous of all, and few are addressing it.
COVID-19 may take down an independent news outlet
Nobody said running a media site would be easy. We could use some help keeping this site afloat.
Colleagues have called me the worst fundraiser ever. My skills are squarely rooted on the journalistic side of running a news outlet. Paying the bills has never been my forte, but we’ve survived. We have ads on the site that help, but since the site’s inception this has been a labor of love that otherwise doesn’t bring in the level of revenue necessary to justify it.
When I left a nice, corporate career in 2017, I did so knowing I wouldn’t make nearly as much money. But what we do at NOQ Report to deliver the truth and fight the progressive mainstream media narrative that has plagued this nation is too important for me to sacrifice it for the sake of wealth. We know we’ll never make a ton of money this way, and we’re okay with that.
Things have become harder with the coronavirus lockdowns. Both ad money and donations that have kept us afloat for a while have dropped dramatically. We thought we could weather the storm, but the so-called “surge” or “2nd-wave” that mainstream media and Democrats are pushing has put our prospects in jeopardy. In short, we are now in desperate need of financial assistance.
The best way NOQ Report readers can help is to donate. Our Giving Fuel page makes it easy to donate one-time or monthly. Alternatively, you can donate through PayPal as well. We need approximately $11,500 to stay afloat for the rest of 2020, but more would be wonderful and any amount that brings us closer to our goal is greatly appreciated.
The second way to help is to become a partner. We’ve strongly considered seeking angel investors in the past but because we were paying the bills, it didn’t seem necessary. Now, we’re struggling to pay the bills. This shouldn’t be the case as our traffic the last year has been going up dramatically. June, 2018, we had 11,678 visitors. A year later in June, 2019, we were up to 116,194. In June, 2020, we had 614,192. We’re heading in the right direction and we believe we’re ready talk to patriotic investors who want to not only “get in on the action” but more importantly who want to help America hear the truth. Interested investors should contact me directly with the contact button above.
Election year or not, coronavirus lockdowns or not, anarchic riots or not, the need for truthful journalism endures. But in these times, we need as many conservative media voices as possible. Please help keep NOQ Report going.
Join fellow patriots as we form a grassroots movement to advance the cause of conservatism. The coronavirus crisis has prompted many, even some conservatives, to promote authoritarianism. It’s understandable to some extent now, but it must not be allowed to embed itself in American life. We currently have 8000+ patriots with us in a very short time. If you are interested, please join us to receive updates.
Rush Limbaugh already enjoys radio supremacy with his wildly popular daily show. But Friday’s show may be the most listened-to show in its history as President Trump isn’t just coming on as a guest. He’s going to be hosting a virtual rally as well.
Number one. How incredible was Vice President Pence last night? He was stand-up-and-cheer outstanding. It was just… it was great.
And number two. I’m thrilled to announce that our commander-in-chief, President Donald Trump, will be right here tomorrow hosting the largest virtual rally in radio history. Be sure to tune in. You don’t want to miss this. It will be special. And I am really looking forward to it.
Now, later today, folks, we’re gonna be posting more details on the Rush Limbaugh website and on the Rush Limbaugh Facebook page. So keep a sharp eye out there. And you know what? There’s gonna be a special in-box set up for you to send your questions for President Trump. So be thinking of things you’d like to ask him today, and then get ready for the largest virtual rally in radio history tomorrow.
“The largest virtual rally in radio history.” Taking calls from listeners. President Trump knows how to reach the people. Imagine Joe Biden taking unscripted questions on live radio. He never would. I love our President.
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.
As the coronavirus epidemic got going, one of the constant drumbeats was, “We need more testing.” At the time, I didn’t bother to question the premise. With President Trump’s illness and the White House staff infections, it’s time to take a closer look.
When I went through my medical training, my hospital made every patient for surgery take a battery of tests called a “Multiphasic Health Screening Test.” Supposedly the MHST would allow us to identify high risk patients and get them treated properly before fixing their surgical problems. This high dollar set of lab tests didn’t actually do anything of the sort. Instead, we often found things that weren’t problems. We had to chase them down rabbit holes, and occasionally caused major harm to patients by doing that.
Over time, we learned that there aren’t ANY screening tests that we need to do before surgery. All we need is a good history and physical examination. If those show any problems, then we get more answers. So what are tests good for?
The first proper use of a medical test is to help you treat a patient. Duh… If you are treating a pneumonia, you need to know which bug is causing it, so you do sputum cultures. Then you test that bug against various antibiotics to know which ones will be helpful.
The second proper use of a medical test is medical research. First, we need to know if the test actually measures what you think it measures. There are a host of “holistic medicine” tests that don’t measure anything. Thermograms, or heat pictures, don’t help you find breast cancers. Hormone levels in saliva are useless. The list is endless.
If a test actually measures what it claims to measure, then it’s possible to use it to explore some aspect of medicine, even if it doesn’t help you treat a disease. In this case, it’s useful for developing scientific knowledge.
The third proper use of a medical test applies directly to the coronavirus epidemic. We can test people for COVID-19 as we do “track and trace” work to limit “super-spreader”events. And we can use it in larger scale epidemiology to track how far the epidemic has gone. But this ends the proper use of testing.
We all bought into the original hue and cry that we needed testing. But we forgot that the South Korean success was based on rapid testing that was then used in track and trace efforts. It wasn’t used the way the White House has done.
There’s an easy fiction around testing. Supposedly if I test negative, I don’t have the disease. And that’s simply not true. The Abbot rapid test that the White House uses has a 98.5% accuracy for negatives. That is, if your test is negative, there’s only a 1.5% chance you actually have the bug. As tests go, that’s really good. If your BFF gets tested, the same number applies. But suppose we have a long line of people to test before an event. The easy way to think about it says that there’s only a 1.5% chance of an infected person slipping through. And that’s dead wrong.
Any statistician can do this math in his sleep. For two people it’s 1 – (.985 x .985), or 2.98%. As we increase the number, the risk of missing that one sick person rises. The general formula is 1 – (.985n). That means that by time n reaches 47 people, you have a 50/50 chance of having one person with the virus. 50/50. No, that’s not a misprint. Every time you test one more person, the risk of missing a real disease carrier increases. And that’s with a really good test. Abbot has done a great job. The difficulty is not with Abbott.
By time you get to 306 people tested, you’ll have a 99% chance of missing a sick person. 99%. It’s a virtual certainty.
The problem is simple. There aren’t any tests that have 100% accuracy and specificity. None. To absolutely prevent a sick person from carrying the bug into the White House is therefore a complete impossibility. The scientific minds that set up the screening program for the White House fell into a simple trap. They thought they had a test with 98.5% power to block the virus from the President. They thought in a linear fashion, and didn’t consider the actual implications of what that 98.5% number means.
There are dozens of people who enter the White House daily. After a couple of days, the odds are that someone with the bug would get in. Keeping records from day to day of the regulars would reduce the odds, but ultimately, the virus WILL get in. Screening to keep infection out of the White House was guaranteed to fail.
I’m tempted to speculate about whether the advisers knew this and didn’t bother to tell Trump. We know that Fauci is a Democrat and career bureaucrat. He could have simply “forgotten” to include this. So maybe he got lucky that the cluster of infections fell at a moment that would seem to implicate the Supreme Court nomination party. Ultimately, Donald Trump is likely to pay a large price for simply not making it clear that we must listen to scientific data.
Key scientific facts are that social distancing and mask wearing are useless. But even more, no matter how good your precautions and screening are, the bug will get through. Life isn’t perfect, and nothing we can do is, either. Life spreads diseases. But the most dangerous disease is poverty, and the only measures that prevent other diseases will kill you with poverty.
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.
At last night’s Vice Presidential Debate, Senator Kamala Harris scolded Vice President Mike Pence over the administration’s decision to nominate a Supreme Court Justice less than two months before the election. She invoked Abraham Lincoln, a Republican, who declined to nominate a replacement for Chief Justice Roger Taney who died 27-days before the 1864 election.
According to Harris:
“Abraham Lincoln’s party was in charge, not only of the White House, but the Senate, but Honest Abe said it’s not the right thing to do. The American people deserve to make the decision about who will be the next president in the United States. And then that person can select who will serve for a lifetime and the highest court of our land,” Harris explained. “And so Joe and I are very clear, the American people are voting right now. And it should be their decision about who will serve on this most important body for a lifetime.”
She was correct that Lincoln held the nomination. She is absolutely wrong on the reason why. He did so because it was politically expedient for him to do so. By not nominating anyone, he was able to draw support from those in the various camps of people wanting a particular person to be nominated. In fact, many of them vied for Lincoln’s favor by touting how much they were campaigning on his behalf.
Abe Lincoln held his Supreme Court nomination less than a month before the election because it was politically expedient.
He did it to help him win reelection, not for whatever BS Kamala Harris spewed last night. https://t.co/UJUWPq5FJU
If President Lincoln had made a pick, he would have instantly lost support from some of the camps. By keeping everyone on the hook, they held onto hope that they’re guy would fill the seat. Some have argued that if President Lincoln had made a selection, he would not have won reelection
The Biden campaign continues to revamp their perceptions of history to attack President Trump. From Charlottesville to COVID-19 responses and now to Abraham Lincoln, their deceit is infecting this nation.
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.
Newsom and lawmakers virtue-signal while failing utterly to address the state’s current crises.
by Victor Davis Hanson: California’s state legislature just passed, and Governor Gavin Newsom signed, Assembly Bill 3121 to explore providing reparations to California’s African-American population — 155 years after the abolition of slavery.
Apparently, when California’s one-party government cannot find solutions to current existential crises, it turns to divisive issues that have little to do with the safety and well-being of its 40 million citizens.
California has the highest gas taxes in the nation, even as its ossified state highways remain clogged and dangerous. Why, then, does Sacramento kept pouring billions of dollars into the now-calcified high-speed-rail project?
When fires raged, killed dozens, polluted the air for months, consumed thousands of structures, and scorched 4 million acres of forest, the governor reacted by thundering about global warming. But Newsom was mostly mute about state and federal green policies that discouraged the removal of millions of dead and drought-stricken trees, which provided the kindling for the infernos.
When gasoline, sales, and income taxes rose, and yet state schools became even worse, infrastructure remained decrepit, and deficits grew, California demanded that federal COVID-19 money bail out its own financial mismanagement.
In a time of pandemic, mass quarantine, self-induced recession, riot, arson, and looting, the California way is to borrow money to spend on something that will not address why residents can’t find a job, can’t rely on their power grid, can’t drive safely, can’t breathe the air, can’t ensure a high-quality education for their children, and can’t walk the streets of the state’s major cities without fear of being assaulted or stepping in excrement.
So it is a poor time to discuss reparations, even if there were good reasons to borrow to pay out such compensation. But in fact there are none.
Four points: One, California was admitted to the Union in 1850 as a free state. Its moral insistence 170 years ago that slavery be outlawed precipitated a crisis — and almost sparked the Civil War ten years before it actually began. Despite the efforts of some slave-owning arrivals into California, there was never legal slavery in the state.
Two, about 27 percent of California residents were not born in the United States. Most of the naturalized citizens and undocumented immigrants arrived in the state after the Civil Rights Act was passed in 1964. How, then, do California residents from Asia, Latin America, or Europe owe reparations to the current 6.5 percent of the state’s population that is African American?
Are we to establish a precedent that those who never owned slaves in a society that has no memory of slavery are to redistribute billions of their dollars to those whose grandparents were never slaves?
Three, in a multiethnic, multiracial California — where those identifying as white are a minority, and those of mixed ancestries number in the millions — how does the state adjudicate who owes what to whom?
Is an arriving Mexican immigrant a victim of institutionalized racism in Mexico, or was he part of a Mexican establishment notorious for its racism? In a multiracial state, will we adopt ancient “one drop” Confederate race laws to determine whose DNA qualifies someone for state money?
Should the state pay reparations to the descendants of Jews who fled the Holocaust, of Cambodians who fled Pol Pot’s reign of death, of Armenians who escaped Ottoman barbarity, or of Irish and Chinese who were worked to death on the Transcontinental Railroad?
Four, how will borrowing money to pay some 2 million to 3 million of the state’s 40 million residents make things easier for the African-American population? And are multimillionaire state residents such as LeBron James, Oprah Winfrey, Kanye West, Jay-Z and Beyoncé eligible?
Did it mean nothing that trillions of dollars have been spent over the last half-century on anti-poverty programs, state entitlements, and diversity and inclusion programs?
If per capita economic parity for the black population is truly the state’s concern, then why not allow more charter schools in California’s inner cities? Or deregulate the state’s cumbersome bureaucracy to give small businesses more opportunity and reduce resistance to building low-income housing?
It is said that California fails because its wealthy elites virtue-signal their caring to square the circle of their own impotence to solve the problems in their midst. Californians who live in gated homes often damn walls on the border. Those who depend on imported water damn water transference for agriculture. Those who put their children in private academies damn public charter schools. And those who raise taxes on the middle class have tax experts to find ways of avoiding taxes.
In that context, Assembly Bill 3121 can be understood — as a loud virtue signal to make up for failed responses to concrete crises.
——————————- 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.
Tags:Victor Davis Hanson, California, Illogical Reparations Bill, 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!
by Gary Bauer: Pence Prevails I have been in presidential debates myself. I have watched a lot of presidential debates in person and on TV. I have rarely seen a more effective presentation by a candidate than the one delivered by Vice President Mike Pence last night. He was Reaganesque.
And you know he was effective because a lot of progressive commentators are saying that vice-presidential debates don’t matter!
If you did not watch last night’s vice-presidential debate, even if you are already committed, I still urge you to watch it today. It will help you make the case to other family members, friends and other undecided voters you know.
Here are some additional thoughts:
Moderator Susan Page did a better job than Chris Wallace, who should do everyone a favor and leave Fox News for CNN or wherever else he may feel more comfortable. But her liberal bias was still evident in other ways.
While both candidates spoke for the same amount of time, Page interrupted Pence multiple times. But he was wise enough and calm enough to continue making his point rather than getting into a debate with her.
There was something else that was very telling. Many of the questions Page asked Pence either repeated Democrat talking points or focused on the left’s preferred issues. She seldom pressed Harris in a similar manner.
For example, Biden has made multiple missteps while talking about black Americans, including telling a black radio host “You ain’t black” if you vote for Donald Trump.
Page could have easily asked, “Senator Harris, do you think Joe Biden is speaking appropriately to black Americans when he makes statements like that or refers to them in menial roles like stocking shelves?”
There was nothing from Page about Biden’s ties to communist China. She also could have asked Harris to explain her remark comparing ICE agents to the KKK.
When China did come up, the vice president noted that Joe Biden has spent his entire career cheerleading for communist China. Biden supported terrible trade deals that traded our manufacturing jobs for cheap Chinese goods. There is no sign that Biden and Harris will do anything to reverse this terrible trend.
By the way, when Vice President Pence was going after China, the Chinese communists literally censored him on state media broadcasts of the debate. When Pence was finished, they restored the visual feed as Harris began talking. That speaks volumes about which candidate the communist Chinese are rooting for.
Kamala Harris had a number of shameful moments, and repeatedly lied through her teeth. For example:
The president never called white supremacists “very fine people.” Even CNN has debunked this, but Biden and Harris continue to knowingly stoke racial division in our country. That speaks volumes about their character.
Harris repeated the vile smear that Trump insulted our soldiers and veterans. Twenty-one officials, including John Bolton, have rejected that claim.
Harris said Trump failed to confront Russia over its alleged bounties on U.S. soldiers. Well, that intelligence was unconfirmed and the president was never briefed on it. But we do know that Iran was paying bounties for dead Americans, and Biden and Harris objected when Trump took out Qassem Soleimani. They also want to reward Iran with another outrageous nuclear deal.
Harris lied when she said Joe Biden didn’t want to ban fracking. Biden said in a debate with Bernie Sanders, “No new fracking.” That sure sounds like a ban to me.
Harris even lied about “Honest Abe” delaying a Supreme Court appointment until after his reelection.
But there was another moment that was even worse.
Endangering Public Health Harris was asked if she would take a vaccine developed during the Trump Administration. She answered, “If Donald Trump tells us we should take it, I’m not taking it.”
The vice president rightfully countered that she and Joe Biden were endangering public health by undermining what we all know can stop the virus, which is vaccines. And they are coming in record time.
Here’s something else to consider: Because of a variety of health problems in the black community, the mortality rate among blacks who contract COVID-19 is three times greater than their percentage of the population. Many stories have been written lately about the disparate impact of the virus on minority communities.
When a vaccine becomes available, a strong case could be made that the elderly of all races and minorities in general should be a higher priority to receive the vaccine. But a woman minorities look up to, as the first woman of color to run for vice president, has just told them not to take the vaccine.
Harris just cost lives in the black community. She ought to be ashamed of herself.
The fact that the media are not calling her out for this shows just how committed they are to defeating any conservative president and empowering the far left in America.
And just in case it wasn’t already clear that the left is exploiting the coronavirus for its own political purposes, Jane Fonda said this as she was urging people to vote for the Biden/Harris ticket: “I just think COVID is God’s gift to the left.”
By the way, on the same night that Harris offered a weak rejection of violence, a mob attacked the homes of people in a small Wisconsin town over an event they had nothing to do with. I guarantee you there will be no statement today from Biden or Harris condemning these attacks.
New DevelopmentsPresident Trump spoke on the White House lawn yesterday and praised the medical treatment he received at Walter Reed Medical Center. He highlighted Regeneron, one of the drugs he received to treat coronavirus, as well as another one being developed by Eli Lilly.
The president said he wants to make these drugs widely available and free so that anyone in the hospital struggling with the virus can get the same treatments he received. Regeneron and Eli Lilly are now asking the FDA for emergency use authorizations for their COVID therapeutics.
These developments are happening virtually every day, and the administration is getting virtually no credit. But thanks to the president aggressively cutting through the red tape, the death toll has been declining even though the disease is spreading.
The Next Debate The Commission on Presidential Debates announced this morning that the next presidential debate, scheduled to be held on October 15th, will be conducted virtually with President Trump and Joe Biden appearing from remote locations.
The idea is totally outrageous, and the president quickly rejected the new format, saying, “They’re trying to protect Biden. Everybody is.” He’s right about that. The media are totally in the tank for Biden.
The Trump campaign is now recommending that the second and third debates be delayed a week to October 22nd and October 29th. The Biden campaign, however, does not want another debate after the 22nd.
Here’s the obvious problem with a “virtual debate:” If the candidates were allowed to appear remotely, there’s no way to guarantee that Biden wasn’t being assisted off camera in some way.
For example, what if they had trouble getting his teleprompter to keep up? That would be really embarrassing during a nationally televised debate!
———————– Gary Bauer (@GaryLBauer) is a conservative family values advocate and serves as president of American Values and chairman of the Campaign for Working Families
Tags:Gary Bauer, Campaign for Working Families, Pence Prevails, Endangering Public Health, The Next DebateTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
While small businesses go under, Democrats are bailing out the media.by Daniel Greenfield: The media is dying. Its business model is defunct. Its bias has alienated most of the country. In the latest Pew survey, the only group that still trusts the media are Democrats.
And while so many millions are out of work, Democrats are bailing out the media.
The wave of consolidations and bankruptcies is sweeping like a fire through major papers. Cable news will be a casualty of demographics and the end of bundling. The end of network television is less than a decade away. Brand names like CNN and MSNBC will soon be where Time, Newsweek, and other news magazines ended up once subscriptions collapsed.
The media is dying, but it’s not about to die gracefully. It just needs to find money. Lots of it.
Big Tech billionaires have bought classic newspapers and magazines like Time, The Washington Post, and The New Republic, but those are vanity projects and even Jeff Bezos doesn’t have enough money to subsidize the entire ossified infrastructure of the media.
But the only people who have more money than the Amazon CEO are the American people.
The media’s Plan A has been sponging off Big Tech companies like Google and Facebook, pressuring them to pour hundreds of millions of dollars into its operations. Its Plan B is blurring the line between lefty activist non-profits and its newsrooms with organizations like Report for America being funded by Facebook and Google to embed activists into local newspapers.
Is that going to pay the media’s bills? No. That’s why there’s Plan C. And Plan C is you.
H.R. 7640: The Local Journalism Sustainability Act was introduced in Congress, backed by a coalition that includes Report for America and the National Newspaper Association, and would offer tax credits for newspaper subscriptions and tax credits for paying the salaries of the radical activists working there. There’s also a $5,000 tax credit for advertising in newspapers.
At a time when millions of Americans are out of work, when families are faced with losing their homes and businesses, Democrats have decided that they should aggressively subsidize a dying industry at the expense of everyone else whose jobs are seen as “non-essential”.
The countless stores, gyms, bars, salons, and other small businesses going out of business in the epidemic of Democrat lockdowns and lootings could use this kind of bailout. But the Democrats insist that their media messaging operations are vital and should be subsidized.
While Rep. Ann Kirkpatrick, who introduced the bill, claims that it will fund “local newspapers”, those local newspapers are largely owned by national operations and hedge funds. While actual local businesses go out of business, Democrats are proposing a bailout for media investors.
Rep. Kirkpatrick’s press release touts support from from the News Media Alliance whose board is stacked with the heads of McClatchy and USA Today, huge national chains with a combined thousands of papers, not to mention the CFO of the New York Times, and a VP at the Washington Post. Are these the local small businesses Democrats want to subsidize?
The Local Journalism Sustainability Act has over 40 Democrat sponsors and nearly 20 Republican sponsors. Democrat sponsors include some of the House’s most extreme figures like Rep. Ted Lieu, Rep. Raul Grijalva, Rep. Eric Swalwell, and Rep. Andre Carson.
H.R. 7640 would be an outrage at any time, it’s a particular outrage when so many Americans are out of work and so many small businesses are going under that Democrats and some Republicans want to provide a $250 tax credit for newspaper subscriptions, a tax credit covering half of $50,000 salaries for media hacks, and $5,000 credits for advertising in newspapers.
Companies that own dozens, hundreds, and thousands of papers are lobbying Congress.
They keep claiming that the bill will help save “local journalism”. But how does the Local Journalism Sustainability Act define local journalism? Not based on the paper, but the readers. As long as 51% of the paper’s readers live in the same state, it’s considered a local paper. Even if the paper is a subsidiary of a national chain whose real headquarters is in New York or D.C.
Or alternatively, they live within 200 miles of each other. Depending on how you measure, Washington Post readers in New York and New York Times readers in D.C. would be “local”.
That’s some “local” journalism. And it’s no accident that it was written this way.
There’s nothing local about this bailout. It will mostly go to subsidize the huge newspaper chains that are lobbying for it, while bribing businesses and readers to fund their failed business model.
Even while Democrats are destroying businesses with viable business models, they’re trying to keep the media alive by exclusively offering tax credits for their political allies.
It’s sleazy, it’s slimy, and it’s just the beginning.
Democrat organizations like Acronym’s Courier Newsroom have been setting up fake local papers while Report for America has been hollowing out papers by embedding radical activists into newsrooms. The Local Journalism Sustainability Act is testing the business model for converting the media into a bunch of political non-profits backed by taxpayers and lefty donors.
Beyond media associations, backing for the Local Journalism Sustainability Act comes from Report for America, and the American Journalism Project, which is advocating the transformation of the media to a non-profit model. Report for America is an initiative of the GroundTruth Project which is backed by the Knight Foundation, the MacArthur Foundation, and the Ford Foundation. The Ford Foundation is a leading backer of Black Lives Matter.
While these donors already back a network of radical messaging operations, proposals like the Local Journalism Sustainability Act allow the media to ease into the transition by having it both ways, maintaining corporate ownership, while having their operations subsidized by tax credits.
As the Left sets up new complex interplays between corporate media and its non-profits, the line between journalism and political advocacy blurs into a strange twilight zone in which non-profits subsidize media operations and taxpayers subsidize corporate chains as if they were non-profits, while creating something that looks very much like a state media operation.
The internet has been slowly digesting the separate parts of the media, and it doesn’t pay the bills. The ads and subscriptions that funded local newspapers were wiped out by the internet. Streaming dooms cable channels and local news, leaving behind a lot of online video. But even digital media is being crushed by social media. Vox, Vice, the Huffington Post, and all the digital lefty outlets were hit with layoffs after facing the impossibility of actually turning a profit.
The media can’t survive on its own terms. Its business model is defunct. Its shakedown strategies aimed at Google and Facebook have silenced countless conservative voices, while pushing social media to spam its content, but won’t preserve the media as a viable institution. The hedge funds and private equity firms that own the media will cut costs, consolidate, and dump. The tech and communications firms that come into possession of media outlets will shrink and then dispose of them. That doesn’t mean that the media will die. It will ‘Pravdaize’.
CNN, MSNBC, and the Huffington Post will be deemed “essential” forms of journalism that must be protected by subsidizing their operations, much as newspapers would be subsidized.
The media will become a public institution. Its funding will come from taxpayers in a thousand different ways and the Local Journalism Sustainability Act is the least of it. Media activists have been cooking up a large package of tax credits, subsidies, law changes, tax code restructurings, and assorted proposals to transform the media from corporate properties into state media.
Imagine PBS and NPR multiplied by a million.
Congress should not be bailing out media tycoons while Americans go hungry. If Americans want local papers, they can buy them. And if they aren’t, maybe it’s time that the big chains asked why they’re losing subscribers and why Americans aren’t buying what they’re selling.
A majority of Americans don’t like and don’t trust the media. They’ve divested from it. The Local Journalism Sustainability Act wants to bribe Americans to read the paper with their own money.
A better idea might be to have the media pay its taxes and let Americans keep their money.
—————————– Daniel Greenfield is Shillman Journalism Fellow at the David Horowitz Freedom Center and a New York writer focusing on radical Islam. H/T ARRA News Service
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by Tyler O’Neil: Liberals often mock conservative Christians for supporting a notorious sinner and philanderer in Donald Trump, but the left has grown increasingly hostile to biblical (small-o) orthodox Christianity. Even the ostensibly moderate Democratic nominee Joseph Robinette Biden Jr. represents an insidious threat to the religious freedom of conservative Christians. He also represents a threat to Roman Catholics, even though he is himself a practicing Catholic.
How could this be? Biden’s rhetoric and policies single out those who adhere to traditional religious beliefs and moral convictions, aiming to limit their ability to live by their consciences and ostracizing them from polite society. The Democrat may outwardly campaign on a platform of unity and diversity, but his candidacy truly represents a threat to traditional religious believers.
Disqualified from the Supreme Court?The most recent evidence of this insidious threat came last week, when a Biden staffer suggested that traditional religious beliefs that homosexual acts are sinful and that marriage is between one man and one woman should be so “taboo” as to disqualify someone from serving on the Supreme Court.
Politico contributing editor Adam Wren noted that President Donald Trump’s Supreme Court nominee Amy Coney Barrett “was a trustee at a South Bend private school that described ‘homosexual acts’ as ‘at odds with Scripture’ & said marriage was between ‘one man and one woman’ years after Obergefell v. Hodges.”
Shadi Hamid, a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution, responded, “Wait, why is this news? Isn’t this the standard position for any orthodox Catholic?”
Nikitha Rai, deputy data director for Pennsylvania at Biden’s campaign, responded to Hamid, saying, “Unfortunately, yes.”
Hamid responded, “to be fair, it’s the standard position for any orthodox Muslim or Jew as well…”
“True,” Rai acknowledged. Yet the staffer insisted that this perspective must be marginalized. “I’d heavily prefer views like that not be elevated to SCOTUS [the Supreme Court of the U.S.], but unfortunately our current culture is still relatively intolerant. It will be a while before those types of beliefs are so taboo that they’re disqualifiers.”
Here’s a @JoeBiden staffer saying that orthodox Christianity, Islam, and Judaism should be made “taboo” and driven from the public sphere. Beneath all the talk of “interfaith” and “pluralism,” this is what they really believe. pic.twitter.com/PrN8S1qaLG
Rai suggested that presidents and the U.S. Senate should apply a religious test for Supreme Court nominations and confirmations. The Constitution explicitly forbids a religious test for service in government. Article VI Clause 3 reads in part, “no religious Test shall ever be required as a Qualification to any Office or public Trust under the United States.”
Nikitha Rai is just one Biden staffer. She doesn’t represent the entire Biden campaign, right? On the contrary, Rai’s insistence that traditional religious beliefs on marriage and sexuality should be taboo fits perfectly with the candidate at the top of the Democratic ticket.
“The dregs of society”In 2018, Biden described conservatives who oppose LGBT activism as “the dregs of society.”
Speaking to the Human Rights Campaign (HRC), Biden attacked people who have “tried to define family” in the U.S. “Despite losing in the courts and in the court of public opinion, these forces of intolerance remain determined to undermine and roll back the progress you all have made. This time they, not you, have an ally in the White House,” he said of President Donald Trump.
“They’re a small percentage of the American people, virulent people, some of them the dregs of society,” Biden added. “And instead of using the full might of the executive branch to secure justice, dignity, safety for all, the president uses the White House as a literal bully pulpit, callously exerting his power over those who have little or none.”
As my colleague Paula Bolyard reported, Biden again spoke to HRC in June 2019. On that occasion, he called the Orwellian Equality Act his first priority. The so-called Equality Act would force biblical orthodox Christians to violate their consciences on LGBT activism. It would also open women’s sports and women’s private spaces to biological males, undercutting fair play and privacy. A broad coalition of diverse groups allied to oppose the Equality Act, including pro-lifers, religious freedom advocates, and radical feminists.
Yet of the Equality Act, Biden said, “I promise you if I’m elected president it will be the first thing I ask to be done. It will send a message around the world, not just at home.”
“This is our soul, da*mit, this is who we have to be… This is our real moral obligation,” the Democrat added. “Using religion or culture to discriminate against or demonize LGBTQ individuals is never justified. Not anywhere in the world.”
Interestingly, while Biden vocally condemns traditional believers in such harsh terms, he has remained curiously silent on the horrific attacks against Catholic statues and churches amid the George Floyd riots this summer — despite his Catholic identity.
———————— Tyler O’Neil is Assistant Editor of PJ Media, Tyler O’Neil is a conservative fundraiser and commentator. He has written for numerous publications.
Tags:PJ Media, Tyler O’Neil, Biden Threatens, Religious Freedom, Suggests Christians, With Certain Traditional Views, Are ‘Dregs of Society’To share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
Significantly, Harris refused to answer whether Biden plans to pack the court. by Thomas Gallatin: The vice presidential debate in Salt Lake City, Utah, between Vice President Mike Pence and Senator Kamala Harris (D-CA) was nearly the polar opposite of the clash in last week’s debate between President Donald Trump and Joe Biden. In fact, the one doing the most interrupting last night was the moderator, USA Today’s Susan Page, whose focus on holding the candidates to two-minute answers and an absurd 15 seconds for rebuttals bordered on the obsessive. That said, while Pence didn’t come away unscathed, he was the clear winner.Harris’s strongest moments came early. She came out blasting Trump and Pence over their response to the COVID-19 pandemic, hyperbolically asserting that it is “the greatest failure of any presidential administration in the history of our country.” Her most potent accusation centered on Trump’s comments to Bob Woodward. “They knew what was happening, and they didn’t tell you,” she declared. “They knew and they covered it up.” It was clear that Biden, Harris, and their fellow Democrats share the same sentiments as Jane Fonda, who said, “COVID is God’s gift to the Left.”However, after weathering the storm of Harris’s hysterical and factually inaccurate retelling of the Trump administration’s handling of the pandemic, Pence deftly countered by observing that Biden’s plan for confronting the coronavirus was essentially the same as Trump’s. “It looks a little bit like plagiarism,” he quipped, “which is something Joe Biden knows a little bit about.” Furthermore, Pence slammed Harris for undermining confidence in a coronavirus vaccine after she said she would refuse a vaccine if Trump recommended it, telling her to “stop playing politics with people’s lives.”As the debate wore on, it become clear that, beyond hitting Trump for COVID-19 and fearmongering over his putative plan to end ObamaCare, Harris had little ammunition and even fewer facts. Even Harris’s histrionics regarding Abraham Lincoln’s supposed refusal to nominate a justice for the Supreme Court during an election year fell flat, primarily due to her condescending quip about teaching Pence a history lesson. Meanwhile, Pence worked to effectively expose the extreme radical policy positions of the Biden-Harris ticket. His biggest moment came as he doggedly went after Harris over her refusal to answer whether she and Biden would pack the Supreme Court. After noting her stonewalling, Pence astutely surmised that a non-answer was in fact an answer in the affirmative — that Biden and Harris would indeed pack the Court.
While Harris was light on facts, she certainly wasn’t thin on bloviation — especially when it came to spouting outright lies, with the biggest being the “very fine people” hoax.Since Biden chose to make this lie the centerpiece of his campaign by claiming it was the very reason he decided to run, Harris, being the good little soldier, had to repeat the demonstrably false claim: “[President Trump] called Mexicans ‘rapists’ and ‘criminals.’ He instituted, as his first act, a ‘Muslim ban.’ He — on the issue of Charlottesville, where people were peacefully protesting the need for racial justice, where a young woman was killed, and on the other side, there were neo-Nazis, carrying tiki torches, shouting racial epithets, antisemitic slurs, and Donald Trump, when asked about it said: ‘There were fine people on both sides.’ This is who we have as the president of the United States — and America, you deserve better. Joe Biden will be a president who brings our country together and recognizes the beauty in our diversity, and the fact that we have so much more in common than what separates us.”
Fortunately, Pence didn’t leave Harris’s slanderous claims unchecked. “You know,” he mused, “I think this is one of the things that makes people dislike the media so much in this country, Susan, is that you selectively edit — just like Senator Harris did — the comments that President Trump and I and others on our side of the aisle make. I mean, Senator Harris conveniently omitted [that] after the president made comments about people on either side of the debate over monuments, he condemned the KKK, neo-Nazis, and white supremacists, and has done so repeatedly. You’re concerned that he ‘doesn’t condemn neo-Nazis’? President Trump has Jewish grandchildren! His daughter and son-in-law are Jewish. This is a president who respects and cherishes all of the American people.”
In the final analysis, Pence was the clear winner as he was strong on substance, policy distinctions, and temperament. He made a clear case for reelecting Trump by highlighting the administration’s impressive accomplishments and exposing the extremism of the Biden/Harris ticket, while displaying a clear concern and love for the nation. Harris was more energetic and clearly comfortable in the role of Biden’s attack dog, but she too often came across as condescending (“I will not be lectured to”) and self-righteous. We were left wondering if Harris even views Trump as a fellow human being. With her incessant laughing, exaggerated smiles, and constant head-shaking (all borrowed from Biden’s 2012 debate with Paul Ryan), what she communicated was that her distain for Trump was her primary motivation for seeking election, not love of country or concern for bettering the lives of American people.
Will Pence’s performance move the needle for Trump? That remains to be seen, but it’s certainly clear that Pence did his boss and his country proud. Harris did what was expected and avoided any major gaffes, but she did nothing to improve her low likability as the real top of the Democrat ticket.
—————————-
Tags:Thomas Gallatin, Patriot Post, VP Debate, Pence Exposes, Harris, Radical Leftist PoliciesTo 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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by Bill Donohue: New York State Gov. Andrew Cuomo and New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio may not get along, but they have one thing in common: an insatiable appetite for power. They love it when they can control people. But they hit a brick wall with Orthodox Jews.
The Catholic League understands the need for reasonable protocols to combat Covid-19, but we object to directives that are discriminatory in application, and this is especially true when religious institutions are subjected to a more burdensome standard than non-religious ones. This is why we support the objections raised by the Orthodox Jewish community in the New York City area. We only wish Catholics would be as aggressive in pushing back against edicts that are patently unjust.
On October 7, Cuomo ordered the shutdown of some neighborhoods, many in Brooklyn and Queens, because of a spike in coronavirus cases. While the target of his directive is the Orthodox Jewish community, he did not hold back in penalizing Catholic churches and schools, even though neither is exhibiting a health problem.
De Blasio issued a new directive that went into effect October 8. Those who do not wear a mask will be fined up to $1,000, and mass gatherings will be subject to fines up to $15,000. His order is hypocritical, discriminatory and wholly indefensible.
Why are so many Orthodox Jews mad? For the same reason why New Yorkers who are not part of their community are mad. Both the governor and the mayor have allowed, and indeed justified, mass gatherings in the form of protests. And now they want us to respect what they say?
Why are non-violent mass gatherings at synagogues and churches subject to shutdowns when violent mobs can roam the streets with impunity? As one Jewish reporter said to New York City’s health commissioner, Dr. Dave Chokshi, “What justification can we tell readers—why do they have to be careful when the mayor carves out exceptions based on his own personal politics?”
The reaction of Borough Park Community Board leader Barry Spitzer was similar. “People in the community have lost a lot of trust in the government, because people were told they can’t pray but thousands of people can gather in the streets to protest, or because rules kept changing from minute to minute without rhyme or reason.” Another Jewish leader opined, “They had no issue with the demonstrations, with the protests with thousands of people in the streets.”
When the mob was taking over bridges, burning police cars, and breaking into stores all over New York, de Blasio never tried to stop them. When asked in June why people cannot go to church or synagogue because of fear of Covid-19 infections, but they can riot in the streets, de Blasio said, “We’re in the middle of a national crisis, a deep-seated crisis. There is no comparison.” He was referring to what he said was “400 years of American racism.”
In other words, if de Blasio agrees with the purpose of a protest—no matter how violent—Covid-19 restrictions can be thrown to the wind. But religious funerals cannot be held.
Now de Blasio has outdone himself. On October 7, he proved once again what a rank hypocrite he is. “There’s a place for peaceful protests,” he said, “but the NYPD will not tolerate people doing harm to others. There will be no tolerance for assaults, for damage to property, for setting fires.”
But when it came to Antifa and Black Lives Matter, de Blasio not only told the cops to tolerate their violence, he told them to stand down and do nothing. He allowed them to harm others, assault others, damage property and set fires. They did it night after night. He had plenty of tolerance for that.
When the governor of New York tells rock stars scheduled to perform at the MTV Video Awards in New York City that they don’t have to abide by his order to quarantine for 14 days, and when the mayor of the City of New York treats people of faith as the enemy—while supporting rioters—it is no surprise that New Yorkers have turned cynical.
DeBlasio and Cuomo have shot whatever moral authority they once had. No one should pay them any heed.
————————- Bill Donohue (@CatholicLeague) is a sociologist and president of the Catholic League.
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If the actual positions of our goofy ruling class won’t do it for you, then . . . what about QAnon?
A few weeks ago, President Trump was asked about QAnon. “At the crux of the theory,” a reporter explained, “is this belief that [Trump is] secretly saving the world from this Satanic cult of pedophiles and cannibals.” She went on to ask the president if that was something he was behind.
“I haven’t heard that, but is that supposed to be a bad thing?”
This may be the most politic and understated response ever given by our impolitic and hyperbolic leader.
Last week, the U.S. House of Representatives took QAnon seriously enough to formally condemn it, asking the intelligence agencies to monitor it closely. Though it is a set of conspiracy theorists, a few enthusiasts apparently have taken criminal actions.
Not included in “the widely supported bipartisan measure”? Seventeen Republicans and “Rep. Justin Amash (L–Mich.),” reported Christian Britschgi on Friday. “The latter argued the resolution posed serious free speech concerns and could be counterproductive.”
Amash had the wit to see that sending the FBI to investigate “conspiracy theorists who believe in a deep state that’s fighting against them” might possibly . . . “just confirm . . . their fears.”
If you are like me, you know little about pedophiles and bupkis about cannibal cults. But if Trump supporters who spin tall tales about Trump directing secret military units to nuke underground nests of alien deviltry unnerve politicians enough to publicly condemn them for doing so, three responses seem rational:
1. Uproariously chortling; 2. Recognition that if pedophile cannibal cults do exist, unearthing them would be helpful; and 3. Wondering on which side in that struggle Congress might place itself.
This is Common Sense. I’m Paul Jacob.
———————- Paul Jacob (@Common_Sense_PJ) is author of Common Sense which provides daily commentary about the issues impacting America and about the citizens who are doing something about them. He is also President of the Liberty Initiative Fund (LIFe) as well as Citizens in Charge Foundation. Jacob is a contributing author on the ARRA News Service.
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by Mary Margaret Olohan: Conservatives are condemning a Washington Post article Tuesday suggesting that Supreme Court nominee Judge Amy Coney Barrett should be questioned during her confirmation hearings next week on her connections with a religious group.
Severino referred to an Oct. 6 Washington Post article, “Amy Coney Barrett served as a ‘handmaid’ in Christian group People of Praise.” The story examines Barrett’s connections to the religious group and suggests that her association with People of Praise might be examined in her upcoming hearings.
“Barrett’s ties to the group, which has conservative stances on the role of women in society and other social issues, did not until after she was questioned by senators considering her nomination to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 7th Circuit in 2017,” the Post reported. “Senators are preparing to question her next week over her nomination to the high court.”
Media previously falsely linked People of Praise’s use of the word “handmaid” to the dystopian novel and Hulu miniseries “The Handmaid’s Tale” before issuing corrections and retractions noting that there is no established link between People of Praise and novelist Margaret Atwood’s “The Handmaid’s Tale.”
Conservatives pointed out that The Washington Post continues to attach negative meaning to the word “handmaid,” a biblical word that has been used in religious contexts to describe women for thousands of years.
“The word ‘handmaid’ appears dozens of times in the King James Bible,” McConnell said in a statement. “It was good enough for the Virgin Mary. But now, because one liberal author put it in the title of an anti-religious novel in the 1980s, the press tries to imply that one of the most brilliant and powerful women in the legal world is anti-woman.”
“It’s no coincidence that people who don’t like originalism are basing their understanding of the word ‘handmaid’ on a novel from the 1980s,” tweeted Christopher Scalia, director of academic programs at the American Enterprise Institute and son of the late Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia.
“You know what’s the most ironic? The whole fake ‘handmaiden’ trope suggests she is against women in leadership, when she is fighting to lead, but the left has their foot on her neck trying to keep her down,” tweeted Concerned Women for America founder Penny Nance.
The Washington Post story was written by Emma Brown—a reporter who wrote about Christine Blasey Ford’s sexual assault allegations against Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh, as The Federalist’s Mollie Hemingway pointed out.
“Democrats are laundering their (admittedly weak) anti-religious smear of Amy Coney Barrett through Emma Brown, the same reporter they used to launch their massive and media-coordinated anti-Kavanaugh operation that so many Americans found so despicable,” Hemingway tweeted.
Tea Party Patriot’s founder Jenny Beth Martin joined in Hemingway’s critique of Brown.
“WashPost’s Emma Brown, who touched off character assassination of Brett Kavanaugh – as documented by@JCNSeverinoand@MZHemingwayin their bestseller, now attacking Amy Coney Barrett,” Martin tweeted. “Same failed playbook will bring same result.”
Brown did not immediately respond to a request for comment from the Daily Caller News Foundation.
Catholic Vote condemned the story as well, saying: “This disgusting attack on Catholics could have been written in the 1830’s. The Washington Post is suggesting that Judge Barrett’s religious faith should be on trial during her confirmation. Democrats playing with fire.”
This disgusting attack on Catholics could have been written in the 1830’s. The Washington Post is suggesting that Judge Barrett’s religious faith should be on trial during her confirmation. Democrats playing with fire. https://t.co/1eNN1iwmqK
Media and Democraticattacks on the Supreme Court nominee have sparked a backlash with both conservatives and Republican lawmakers.
“Stop The Bigotry,” an ad that calls for an end of attacks on Barrett’s faith, and“JFK,” in which former President John F. Kennedy warns against anti-Catholic attacks.
A Morning Consult and Politico poll released Wednesday found that voters are increasingly backing the confirmation of Barrett. Almost half, 46%, of voters polled between Oct. 2 and 4 said that the Senate should confirm Barrett.
These numbers were up 9 percentage points since President Donald Trump first announced he was nominating Barrett on Sept. 26, according to the poll.
————————- Mary Margaret Olohan is a reporter covering social issues for The Daily Caller News Foundation shared on The Daily Signal.
Tags:Mary Margaret Olohan, Kavanaugh Sleaze Machine, Is Back, Washington Post Article, Belittles Barrett, as Handmaid
. . . Executive Action Aims to Reduce Dependence on Chinese Resourcesby Catherine Mortensen: President Donald Trump has made it clear, with or without the help of Speaker Nancy Pelosi and House Democrats, he is moving forward with his promise to put America first. The latest example is in the area of energy independence. The President recently took executive action to ensure that our economic prosperity and national security do not depend on importing natural resources from our adversaries.
His Sept. 30 executive order will allow America to expand domestic mining industry, create well-paying jobs, and reduce our dependence on China for critical, rare earth and other minerals by reducing unnecessary permitting delays. In addition, the president’s actions will ensure that America’s military dominance will not depend on natural resources from China.
Specifically, the order will allow the Department of the Interior to develop a program under the authority of the Defense Production Act to fund mineral processing that protects our national security.
As chairman of the Western Caucus, Congressman Paul Gosar (R-Ariz.) has been trying to achieve this same goal through congressional action for years. However, his efforts have been stymied by House Democrats.
“The Executive Order signed by President Trump is a great step in the right direction,” Gosar said in a statement to Americans for Limited Government (ALG). “The Congressional Western Caucus has been at the forefront of highlighting our unsustainable reliance on foreign adversaries in our critical minerals supply chain and this Executive Order recognizes that fact. Whether it be in our supply chain for medical devices, military aircraft and weapons systems, or even cell phones critical minerals are essential to our everyday life and we have the ability to mine them here in the United States safely and responsibly. I call on Congress to follow the President’s lead and pass some of the numerous critical minerals related bills that we have before us,” Gosar added.
Gosar has introduced legislation to secure our critical minerals supply chain and is sponsoring an amendment in the annual defense bill to end our mineral reliance on China.
“Protecting our minerals supply chain is essential for our economic well-being and security, and I continue to fight for this cause,” Gosar concluded.
Over the last several decades, our nation’s mining industry has suffered due to political inaction, a broken permitting process, and predatory foreign competition from China. As a result, today the United States relies heavily on China jjjjjHHHhhhs sThis for imports of numerous critical minerals that are essential to America’s national security and economic prosperity.
The administration has identified the following critical minerals as essential to our national security: Aluminum (bauxite), antimony, arsenic, barite, beryllium, bismuth, cesium, chromium, cobalt, fluorspar, gallium, germanium, graphite (natural), hafnium, helium, indium, lithium, magnesium, manganese, niobium, platinum group metals, potash, the rare earth elements group, rhenium, rubidium, scandium, strontium, tantalum, tellurium, tin, titanium, tungsten, uranium, vanadium, and zirconium.”
As noted in the order, “For 31 of the 35 critical minerals, the United States imports more than half of its annual consumption.”
“But we don’t have to be reliant on China,” explained ALG president Rick Manning. “We have all these natural resources within our own borders. We have allowed counties like China and Russia to lock up our resources. Congress and past administrations have made it harder and harder to develop what resources we still have access to. President Trump’s action is a no-brainer. It will put Americans to work and improve our national security.”
The action builds upon previous Trump executive actions. During his first year in office, the President took action to implement a federal strategy to ensure secure and reliable supplies of critical minerals. In 2019, he signed five Presidential Determinations finding that domestic production of rare earth elements and materials is essential to the national defense. This newest order will cut down on unnecessary delays in permitting actions and make more funding available to help mining projects.
“While President Trump’s executive actions will make a difference in the short term, for long term prosperity, we really need these priorities and policies to come through congressional action,” concluded Manning. “That’s just another reason why this election is so important. We need not only a President who puts America First, we need a majority of the members of Congress to do the same.”
———————- Catherine Mortensen is the Vice President of Communications at Americans for Limited Government.
Tags:Catherine Mortensen, Americans for Limited Government, A Trump Two-For-One, Creating Jobs, Protecting, National SecurityTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
by Ken Blackwell, Contributing Author: Two weeks ago, I was in a meeting with Vice President Mike Pence to talk about some of the issues facing our great nation. Our discussion ranged from the Supreme Court nomination to the COVID-19 pandemic, and included an outline of the America First Health Plan, President Trump’s plan for the future of our healthcare system. I have to say, I was impressed with the Trump administration’s approach to healthcare, and I think Americans have a lot more to look forward to when it comes to improving our access to quality care.
I say “more,” because President Trump has already done much to improve the state of our healthcare system. Working with a Republican-controlled Congress, President Trump repealed the individual mandate, the mechanism used to force individuals to purchase a qualifying health plan or risk paying a hefty fine. The repeal of the individual mandate has effectively rendered a repressive system,
less so. Yet, many of the ill effects of the mislabelled “Affordable Care Act” —skyrocketing premiums, narrowing networks, reduced choice, and the inability to keep your doctor—have remained.
To foster competition, increase consumer access and control, and lower costs, the Trump administration has embraced patient-centered reforms through executive action and regulation. Perhaps most notably to Ohioans, President Trump’s price transparency rules finally provided the breakthrough we needed on state law designed to prevent surprise medical bills. And while various special interest groups are attempting to block these rules from going into effect, the fact remains that President Trump is moving the ball forward on the fight to improve patient knowledge and control over health care costs.
The Trump administration has also expanded association health plans (AHPs) to improve consumer access to affordable health insurance plans. AHPs allow small businesses to band together to achieve scale and purchase insurance plans generally only accessible to larger organizations. Ohio has embraced AHPs for years and the Trump administration’s work builds on what we’ve already done here in the Buckeye State. Thanks to the expansion of AHPs, more businesses are able to purchase better, more affordable health insurance for their employees.
Short-term plans are also more available thanks to President Trump. These plans allow families to find suitable insurance for a fraction of the cost of an individual market plan. Twice as many insurers offer short-term plans as compared to the individual market, and consumers have eight times as many plans from which to choose. Short-term plans, in particular, benefit Ohioans needing temporary coverage between jobs or before full retirement.
The America First Health Plan also puts an emphasis on the continued expansion of telehealth services. During the COVID-19 pandemic, President Trump ordered the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) to expand the availability of telehealth options to our nation’s seniors. This allowed countless seniors in Ohio and across the nation to access their doctor without having to venture out of their homes. Thanks to President Trump’s leadership on this issue, the Ohio General Assembly is now at work to update our state laws to allow for greater use of telehealth services for patients with private insurance.
And while there are many other aspects of President Trump’s work on health care to applaud, I am particularly excited about his administration’s new rules to allow patients to use pre-tax dollars to access direct primary care and health sharing ministries. Ohio has several dozen direct primary care offices, which provide affordable, quality care without needing insurance. And health care sharing ministries allow families to choose a health plan that meets their health care needs and supports their individual values when it comes to health care decisions.
President Trump has been building a record of improving our nation’s health care system over the past three years. Despite coming into office under Obamacare, President Trump has managed to take incremental steps to increase patient choice and access to more affordable, quality care. I believe the America First Health Plan furthers those efforts to put patients and families back into the driver’s seat of health care, and I look forward to how his plans will continue to benefit all Ohioans, both young and old.
———————- Ken Blackwell (@kenblackwell) is a former ambassador to the U.N., a former Domestic Policy Advisor to the Trump/Pence Presidential Transition Team, and former Ohio State Treasurer and mayor of Cincinnati who currently serves on the boards of numerous conservative policy organizations and is an advisor to the Family Research Council in Washington, D.C. He is a contributing author to the ARRA News Service
Tags:President Trump, Healthcare Plan, More to Look Forward ToTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
by Andrea Widburg: We learned last week that (a) Hillary Clinton approved of faking a Russia-Trump scandal to detract from her unsecured server; (b) that then–CIA director John Brennan briefed Obama and intelligence officials about the plan; and (c) that intelligence officials sent a memo to Peter Strzok tell him of Hillary’s plan. The actual documents were made available on Tuesday. They revealed that Obama knew almost from the beginning that “Russian collusion” was a hoax, while the media’s current cover-up of the newly released documents shows that the Russia hoax will live forever in their reporting.
Brennan’s July 2016 notes of his meeting with Obama and other national security advisers are almost entirely blacked out. What remains, though, establishes that Obama knew as of July that Hillary intended to fake collusion between Trump and the Russians:
We’re getting additional insight into Russian activities from [redacted].Cite [?] alleged approval by Hillary Clinton on 28 July of a proposal from one of her foreign policy advisors to vilify Donald Trump by stirring up a scandal claiming interference by the Russian security services.In the same notes, Brennan wrote 14 bullet point items, only one of which is unredacted. It states, “Any evidence of collaboration between Trump campaign and Russian.” That language may or may not be related to the initials “POTUS” that appear one line above in the margin.
The other initials in the margin are JC (James Comey?), Denis (McDonough?), and Susan (Rice?).
A subsequent September 2016 memo from the White House’s security officials to Peter Strzok addresses the already existing Crossfire Hurricane investigation. The relevant, unredacted information states:
3. [Redacted] Per FBI verbal request, CIA provides the below examples of information the CROSSFIRE HURRICANE fusion cell has gleaned to date [Source revealing information redacted]:a. [Redacted] An exchange [redacted] discussing US presidential candidate Hillary Clinton’s approval of a plan concerning US presidential candidate Donald Trump and Russian hackers hampering US elections as a means of distracting the public from her use of a private email server. [Redacted.] According to open sources, Guccifer 2.0 is an individual or group of hackers whom US officials believe is tied to Russian intelligence services. Also per open sources, Guccifer 2.0 claimed credit for hacking the Democratic National Committee (DNC) this year.The myriad redactions are irksome, considering that they violate Trump’s executive order demanding that agencies produce all relevant documents without redactions:
I have fully authorized the total Declassification of any & all documents pertaining to the single greatest political CRIME in American History, the Russia Hoax. Likewise, the Hillary Clinton Email Scandal. No redactions! https://t.co/GgnHh9GOiq
All Russia Hoax Scandal information was Declassified by me long ago. Unfortunately for our Country, people have acted very slowly, especially since it is perhaps the biggest political crime in the history of our Country. Act!!!
— Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) October 7, 2020
Despite the redactions, the available material answers the famous Watergate question: “What did the President know and when did he know it?” President Obama knew in July that Hillary planned to frame Trump. He nevertheless colluded with the Deep State to spy on Trump’s campaign and, after the election, to carry out a coup against Trump’s presidency. Trump is right to call this “perhaps the biggest political crime in the history of our Country.”
Half of America, however, will never know about this scandalous crime. The mainstream media are either suppressing it or folding, spindling, and mutilating it beyond recognition.
As of 2 A.M. EDT on Wednesday, the New York Times made no mention of the newly released documents. However, it published an article accusing Trump of downplaying “Russian interference in the American political process.”
The Washington Post referenced the documents, but only to accuse Trump of trusting Russian intelligence over American intelligence — even though the newly released materials show that it was Hillary who colluded with Russia.
CNN mentioned the document release but leapt to Brennan’s defense: Brennan claims that director of National Intelligence Ratcliffe is selectively declassifying documents to help Trump. Considering that Trump is demanding that everything should be declassified and that CIA director Gina Haspel is refusing, that’s a bizarre defense.
CNN’s homepage, by the way, has abandoned any pretense of reporting news; it’s purely a Democrat propaganda outlet:
Drilling down into the subtitles under the main headings, that page is, if anything, even worse than it was Tuesday morning, when Tom Bevan first commented upon it:
I’ve consumed a lot of media over the last 20 years since starting RCP. It’s my job. But I have never seen anything as biased and one-sided from a major media outlet as CNN’s front page this morning. pic.twitter.com/6spBXdtVlk — Tom Bevan (@TomBevanRCP) October 6, 2020What the newly released documents confirm is that Democrats are utterly corrupt. They have become a hard-left cabal of people who will do anything — lying, conniving, censoring, manipulating — to maintain political power. Any group of people who want power that much are the last people who should ever be trusted with it.
Tags:Andrea Widburg, American Thinker, Newly Released Documents, Give A Clearer Picture, Russia HoaxTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
by Jordan Davidson: Former White House National Security Adviser Michael Flynn’s defense team filed a motion Wednesday to disqualify D.C. District Court Judge Emmet Sullivan from his position in Flynn’s trials after his blatant demonstration of bias against Flynn beginning in December of 2018.
Flynn previously pleaded guilty to “lying to FBI agents Peter Strzok and Joe Pientka during a Jan. 24, 2017, interview in the White House about conversations Flynn had with Russian Ambassador Sergey Kislyak.” After a probe by the DOJ launched, however, it was discovered that “substantial exculpatory evidence was withheld from Flynn and his attorneys that established that the FBI agents did not believe Flynn had lied during the interview.” It was revealed in September that Flynn was targeted by the Special Counsel Office (SCO) to “get Trump.”
In court documents released Wednesday, Flynn’s lawyers allege that Sullivan “cast an intolerable cloud of partiality over his subsequent judicial conduct” and “risk[ed] undermining the public’s confidence in the judicial process” by exhibiting unethical judicial behavior.
“Here, there can be no question that this judge has created the appearance of bias that mandates his disqualification,” the motion says.
Flynn’s lawyers argue that Sullivan is litigating against Flynn despite his judicial position, and violating the impartiality he is sworn to protect.
“[A]ll that must be demonstrated to compel recusal,” then, is “a showing of an appearance of bias … sufficient to permit the average citizen reasonably to question a judge’s impartiality,” the motion states.
Flynn’s hearing on Sept. 29 alone, the defense says, demonstrated the court’s “contempt and disdain” for Flynn. It was in that hearing that the legal team first motioned for Sullivan’s “immediate disqualification,” which he refused to allow to be fully stated for the record.
“It was apparent that the court was desperate to find something wrong,” the defense team notes.
It was in this hearing that the D.C. Circuit Court denied Flynn’s petition for a writ of mandamus that would have forced Sullivan to drop Flynn’s charges, which he previously refused to dismiss after the Department of Justice had filed to drop the charges.
The defense team also alleges that Sullivan “echoed” corporate mainstream narratives from NBC News’s Rachel Maddow and an opinion editorial in the Washington Post by former judge John Gleeson in his handling of the case.
“It was improper for the court to allow extra-judicial media commentary to affect his conduct,” the document states.
Not only did Sullivan use the opinions presented by those mainstream media pundits to inform his procedural decisions against Flynn, but he also appointed Gleeson, who previously wrote opinion editorials about Flynn, as an amicus for the case.
“There is no doubt that, given Judge Sullivan’s comments and actions appointing Mr. Gleeson from his Washington Post opinion piece, the average citizen might reasonably question his impartiality,” the defense team states in the motion.
The motion also alleges that Sullivan secretly accepted outside sourcing and opinions via email about Flynn’s case from Aitan Goelman, counsel to former FBI Deputy Assistant Director Peter Strzok, without following proper protocol or notifying either set of legal counsel.
“A court that appears to be taking its marching orders from extra-judicial sources undermines the public confidence in the judicial system that section 455(a) was designed to protect,” the document states.
———————— Jordan Davidson is a staff writer at The Federalist.
Tags:Jordan Davidson, The Federalist, Michael Flynn, Defense Team, Moves To Disqualify, And Remove Judge Sullivan, From Trial, For Anti-Flynn Prejudice, Unethical BehaviorTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
The last debate where Trump faced both Wallace and Biden went according to script: The Left manipulated, cheated and ambushed Trump, who deftly channeled Chuck Norris in defeating multiple opponents—including electronic devices—and won a victory that will grow in significance in years to come.
But last night, something weird happened. I don’t know, maybe the earpiece guy left his equipment at home. Maybe Biden campaign operatives were sent to the wrong venue. Perhaps the moderator, Susan Page, the Washington bureau chief for USA Today and a longtime member of the DC press, felt guilty about Chris Wallace’s shameful prejudice. But for some reason, Susan decided to be fair.
It must have been fair, because Politico had this to say about Susan Page: “She also drew criticism for her deference to Pence in particular, as he frequently interjected during Harris’ answers.” Get it? Being fair is deference to any Republican candidate.
So, what was the result of a fair debate? Kamala Harris was outed as an incompetent liar. First the “incompetence.”
Here’s how actor James Woods described her performance: “I am astonished how badly she has done in this debate. She simply cannot answer a question, without reverting to a stump speech, pushing a narrative that is basically fantasy on every issue.”
Here’s an example of an exchange between Pence and Harris:
Pence said China is “to blame” for the coronavirus, and, “President Trump is not happy about it.” Pence went on, “China and the World Health Organization did not play straight with the American people. They did not let our personnel into China…until the middle of February.” Adding, “But China has been taking advantage of the United States for decades, in the wake of Biden cheerleading for China. President Trump has stood up to China. We want to improve the relationship, but we’re going to hold China accountable for what they did to Americans with the coronavirus.”
Meanwhile, Sen. Kamala Harris, (D) Calif., slammed the Trump administration over the trade war with China, claiming that the U.S. lost jobs in the midst of it.
But Pence fired back.
“Lost the trade war with China? Joe Biden never fought it,” Mic drop.
Then there were Harris’ facial expressions that in some cases made her look smug, and in other instances, came off as panic. Ben Shapiro said “Harris looks deeply uncomfortable. She should be. She’s losing, and losing badly.”
Then came the lie. Harris says no way did Biden say he would end fracking or abandon fossil fuels. Roll the tape:
— James Woods (@RealJamesWoods) October 8, 2020Pence blasted Harris for refusing to say whether she would support expanding the Supreme Court in order to allow a Democratic President to nominate more liberal justices to the bench. When Pence repeatedly demanded that Harris respond to that, she answered the question by shifting attention to Senate Republicans’ efforts to fast-track Barrett’s confirmation, despite 2020 being an election year.
Then came the Kaboom: Pence replied, “Once again you gave a non-answer, Joe Biden gave a non-answer. The American people deserve a straight answer. And,” he said, addressing the American people, “if you haven’t figured it out yet, the straight answer is they are going to pack the Supreme Court if they somehow win this election.”
If you wish to see for yourself how Pence exposed her dismal failure in California in finding justice for minorities, go to the link below.
Tags:Mario Murillo, Ministries, VP Mike Pence, Outs, Kamala Harris, As An Incompetent LiarTo 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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Morning Rundown
Trump refuses to participate after 2nd presidential debate moves virtual: President Donald Trump announced that he refuses to take part in the second presidential debate, which would have been held virtually next week, so now, former Vice President Joe Biden will instead participate in a town hall hosted by ABC News on Oct. 15. On Thursday morning, the Commission on Presidential Debates announced that the second debate would be a virtual event, as last week, Trump tested positive for COVID-19, which required him to be hospitalized at Walter Reed Medical Center. Biden agreed to the terms of the second debate, but Trump said he would not “waste my time with a virtual debate.” Then, hours later, the Trump campaign said the president would participate in the virtual event but only if it was pushed back to Oct. 22. The campaign also asked to move the final scheduled debate from Oct. 22 to Oct. 29. The Biden Campaign quickly shot down the idea of rearranging the dates of the debates. “Trump’s erratic behavior does not allow him to rewrite the calendar, and pick new dates of his choosing,” Biden’s campaign said. “Donald Trump can show up, or he can decline again. That’s his choice.” Biden’s town hall will allow voters to ask him questions less than a month before Election Day.
FBI says it foiled plot to kidnap Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer: The Justice Department on Thursday announced charges against six individuals in Michigan allegedly involved in a months-long plot to kidnap Democratic Gov. Gretchen Whitmer, a frequent target of President Donald Trump, before the November election. They’ve also been accused of trying to violently overthrow the state’s government. At a news conference on Thursday, Andrew Birge, the U.S. Attorney for the Western District of Michigan, said that Adam Fox, Barry Croft, Ty Garbin, Kaleb Franks, Daniel Harris and Brandon Caserta were arrested Wednesday for their plans to take Whitmer and others hostage at the Michigan State Capitol in Lansing, Michigan. Michigan Attorney General Dana Nessel also said that seven other individuals “linked” to the militia group the Wolverine Watchmen have been charged under the state’s anti-terrorism law. Amid the COVID-19 pandemic, the Michigan State Capitol has been the scene of numerous protests by right-wing activists — some armed and calling for Whitmer’s resignation due to the lockdown order she put in place. The FBI said it first learned of the suspects’ plot after a concerned member of the militia group came forward about the group’s plans. Whitmer called the suspects “sick and depraved men” and lashed out at Trump for “stoking” hate. Tune in this morning on “Good Morning America” for an exclusive interview with Whitmer.
Barbie tackles racism in viral message: Barbie is using her YouTube channel to talk to young girls about the importance of taking a stand against bigotry. In the latest episode of her vlog, which aired Wednesday to nearly 9.7 million subscribers, the iconic doll-turned-influencer and her friend Nikki, who is Black, spoke directly to kids about racism and what it means. “I, and so many other Black people, have to deal with racism all the time,” Nikki said. “It’s really hurtful and it can be scary and sad, and I wanted to share some stories about that today.” After discussing a time when Nikki was racially profiled during a trip to the beach, the two animated pals told their viewers not to make assumptions about people based on how they look. Nikki then encouraged listeners to read up on Black history and to stand up for each other. Lisa McKnight, senior vice president and global head of Barbie & Dolls at Mattel, told “GMA” that they hope Barbie and Nikki continue to “explore these conversations in a kid-friendly format” and “empower our next generation of leaders to become advocates for change.” For tips on how to talk to kids about race, click here.
COVID-19 nurse donates kidney to toddler: Traveling nurse Taylor Pikkarainen saves lives on and off the clock. This past spring while on assignment in New Jersey, Pikkarainen, 27, returned to her home state of Minnesota to help a young boy named Bodie Hall by donating her kidney to him. Bodie was born with congenital nephrotic syndrome, a life-threatening condition that ultimately progresses to kidney failure. When Pikkarainen found out about his need for a kidney through her sister-in-law, a close friend of Bodie’s mom, Gloria, she didn’t think twice about signing up to be a donor. After eight weeks of dialysis, Bodie received Pikkarainen’s kidney on July 9 — her birthday. “It’s hard to put it in words,” Bodie’s mom said of Pikkarainen. “It’s the most amazing gift I think that you can give somebody.” Since the transplant, Bodie has been recovering and even took his first steps. “It just feels really great that he’s healthy and happy,” Pikkarainen said.
GMA Must-Watch
This morning on “GMA,” former Fifth Harmony singer Ally Brooke talks about her new book, “Finding Your Harmony,” and what she learned about herself as a member of the girl band. Plus, Paris Hilton joins us live after recently starting a petition to have her former school closed after allegedly facing abuse as a student. And it’s National Roller Skating Month and we’re celebrating the activity’s long-lasting popularity! All this and more only on “GMA.”
The future of the remaining presidential debates is in disarray, Louisiana is bracing for another hurricane hit and there is a new Nobel Peace Prize winner.
Here’s what we’re watching this Friday morning.
Trump campaign keeps chugging along, showing no signs of acknowledging Covid reality
At a campaign rally in a Phoenix suburb Thursday afternoon, Vice President Mike Pence spoke to a group of a few hundred mostly maskless supporters crowded together in an outdoor lot at TYR Tactical, a company that manufactures body armor equipment for police SWAT teams.
Thanking them for their “outpouring of concern” for Trump’s health, Pence promised the crowd: “He’s going to be back on the road and in the fight before you know it.”
On Thursday, Trump pulled out of the next presidential debate, saying he would not waste his time on it after the Commission on Presidential Debates announced it would take place virtually to protect “the health and safety of all involved.”
In lieu of a debate, Trump said he would hold a campaign rally. He is still being treated for Covid-19, but his doctor said Thursday night that he could be cleared to return to public events by Saturday.
“This debate may be the last best opportunity to score a game-changing moment or otherwise hope to impact the trajectory of this race before it’s too late,” said Liam Donovan, a Republican strategist. “Trump would be doing Joe a real favor by letting him off the hook.”
Listen to our latest Into America podcast, host Trymaine Lee digs deeper into the VP debateand how it played out with one Black woman who voted for Trump in 2016 and is a big fan of Vice President Mike Pence, but also a supporter of Sen. Kamala Harris.
Vice President Mike Pence waves to audience members after speaking at a campaign stop at TYR Tactical in Peoria, Arizona, on Thursday. (Photo:Brian Snyder / Reuters)
‘What are they doing?’ With stimulus talks in limbo, millions grapple with how to get by
Many families across the United States are financially strapped seven months into the pandemic: 25.5 million people remain unemployed and first-time unemployment claims totaled 840,000 last week, a higher-than-expected number.
Support from the Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security (CARES) Act, passed in March, has run out.
Yet to the millions of Americans who remain unemployed because of the economic crisis, the discussions in Washington — or lack thereof —are only causing further anxiety during an especially difficult year.
“Disney just laid off thousands, and the airlines did, too, so why is it taking so long?” asked Harriet Tuch, 71, of Boca Raton, Florida, who was furloughed from her job as a stenographer in March. “They should have something. The House passed something in May…. It’s October, so what are they doing?”
Hurricane Delta strengthens as it takes aim at storm-weary Louisiana coast
Hurricane Delta is gaining strength and size over the Gulf of Mexico as it takes aim for the Louisiana coast, which is still recovering from a powerful Category 4 storm six weeks ago that ripped houses from their foundations, peeled off roofs and tore trailers in half.
The storm is expected to make landfall along the southwest Louisiana coast Friday afternoon or evening.
On Thursday, Delta regained “major hurricane strength,” becoming a Category 3, with maximum sustained winds of 115 mph, the National Hurricane Center said.
It will be the 10th hurricane to make landfall on the mainland U.S. this season, setting a new record.
“We just can’t seem to get a break from the weather,” one Louisiana residenttold NBC News.
The United Nations World Food Program was awarded the 2020 Nobel Peace Prizeon Friday for its efforts to combat hunger and food insecurity around the globe.
“In the face of the pandemic, the World Food Program has demonstrated an impressive ability to intensify its efforts,” said Berit Reiss-Andersen, the chair of the Nobel Committee.
The World Food Program is the world’s largest humanitarian organization addressing hunger and promoting food security. In 2019, it provided assistance to close to 100 million people in 88 countries who are victims of acute food insecurity and hunger.
Officials who ran a pilot family separation program in 2017 determined kids under 12 shouldn’t be separated from their parentsbecause they couldn’t find them again.
THINK about it
Seniors aren’t abandoning Trump because of Covid-19 — but it sure hasn’t helped, Republican strategist Evan Siegfried writes in an opinion piece.
Live BETTER
In a workout rut? Walk off the weight — and those quarantine blues — with these meditative and calorie-burning walking plans.
Quote of the day
“I haven’t actually been to the White House since August the 6th, because my impression was their approach to how to handle this is different from mine.”
It’s October, the time of year for baseball glory, not basketball. But tonight is a big night for basketball fans: Game 5 of the NBA Finals.
The Lakers are up 3-1 in the series against the Miami Heat, and can win the title when they take the court tonight. It would be the Lakers’ 17th championship and the fourth for superstar LeBron James.
But the Heat are not ready to throw in the towel yet.
“We’ve got a chance. We still believe,” Heat center Bam Adebayo said Thursday. “They’re writing us off. Everybody is doubting us. But as long as the people in the locker room and all our coaching staff have belief in us, that’s all that matters.”
They also have some heavenly fans cheering them on.
Meet the sisters of Archbishop Coleman Carroll High School who have captured hearts online with a fun video they sent the team earlier in the season offering to help out as the back-up bench if needed.
If you have any comments — likes, dislikes — send me an email at: petra@nbcuni.com
If you’re a fan, please forward it to your family and friends. They can sign-up here.
Thanks, Petra Cahill
NBC FIRST READ
From NBC’s Chuck Todd, Mark Murray, Carrie Dann and Melissa Holzberg
FIRST READ: The last 10 days have been a wild ride in American political history
Four years ago this week – Oct. 7, 2016 – was one of the craziest days in modern American politics: the Access Hollywood video, the beginning of the WikiLeaks releases and the Obama administration’s announcement that Russia was interfering in the election.
But that day doesn’t hold a candle to the last 10 days in this 2020 election.
Erin Scott//File Photo
Sept. 29: President Trump and Joe Biden clash in unruly and insult-filled debate.
Oct. 2: Trump reveals he tested positive for coronavirus; is flown by helicopter to Walter Reed National Military Medical Center.
Oct. 4: Trump takes a ride in a hermetically sealed SUV with Secret Service agents to wave to gathered supporters.
Oct. 5: Trump returns to the White House, instructs Americans not to be afraid of the coronavirus and says in a video: “And now I’m better, and maybe I’m immune, I don’t know. But don’t let it dominate your lives.”
Oct. 6: Trump scuttles bipartisan negotiations for another coronavirus relief package before the election.
Oct. 7: Vice President Pence and Kamala Harris debate in VP showdown.
Oct. 8: Prosecutors bring charges against men plotting to kidnap Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer before the election; New York Times reports that the president lashed out at his cabinet for not indicting his political rivals; and Trump refuses to participate in a virtual presidential debate, throwing the rest of the debate schedule into limbo.
These last 10 days have been our Oct. 7 from four years ago: a historically ugly debate, a hospitalized president, angry tweets and a thwarted kidnapping of Michigan’s Democratic governor.
And guess what today, Oct. 9, brings us: Trump’s going to call into Rush Limbaugh’s show, and then he’s set to appear on Tucker Carlson’s 8:00 pm ET Fox News program, where he’ll get a medical evaluation from Fox’s on-air doctor.
TWEET OF THE DAY: That about sums it up
Dem Senate candidates are outspending GOP opponents 2-to-1 over the airwaves
If you want to see how the current political and fundraising environment could help Democrats down the ballot in November, just check out these numbers compiled by NBC’s Ben Kamisar below.
Democratic Senate candidates (including independent Al Gross running in Alaska) are outspending their GOP opponents over the TV and radio airwaves by almost a combined 2-to-1 margin, $135 million to $71 million, according to data from Advertising Analytics through Sept. 30.
Now that Dem advantage narrows to a smaller $345 million-to-$288 million edge when you account for outside spending by Super PACs and other groups.
But remember, those outside groups don’t get the same discounted ad rates that campaigns do – so they get less bang for the buck.
DATA DOWNLOAD: The numbers you need to know today
7,643,636: The number of confirmed cases of coronavirus in the United States, per the most recent data from NBC News and health officials. (That’s 53,453 more than yesterday morning.)
213,995: The number of deaths in the United States from the virus so far. (That’s 886 more than yesterday morning.)
112.12 million: The number of coronavirus tests that have been administered in the United States so far, according to researchers at The COVID Tracking Project.
10 percentage points: Joe Biden’s lead over Donald Trump in a new Pew poll.
2020 VISION: Back on the trail?
Last night, President Trump told Sean Hannity on Fox that he was looking to get back to rallies as soon as this Saturday – his physician cleared him to go back to public engagements starting this weekend, according to a Thursday memo.
“I think I’m going to try doing a rally on Saturday night if we have enough time to put it together, but we want to do a rally probably in Florida on Saturday night,” the president said.
But even when asked by Hannity, the president would NOT disclose when his last negative Covid-19 test was, and he said he would most likely receive another test today, adding: “There’s no reason to test all the time.”
That’s a vastly different message than the White House had before the president tested positive when they reasoned their non-socially distanced events on the amount of testing done.
Dr. Anthony Fauci poured some cold water on the president’s recovery on Thursday, saying, “It is entirely conceivable that he is already well on his way to being out of the woods. The one thing that his physicians are well aware of, and anyone who takes care of COVID-19 patients are aware of, is that this is a strange type of a virus – because you can feel good for a few days in a row, and then you could have a really unexpected downturn, where your condition worsens.”
On the campaign trail today: Joe Biden stumps in Las Vegas, Nev.
THE LID: Palmetto Prize
Don’t miss the pod from yesterday, when we checked in on the South Carolina Senate race.
ICYMI: What ELSE is happening in the world?
Here’s the latest on the foiled plot to kidnap Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer.
GOP consultants say Trump’s vow to skip the next debate is “sure to backfire.”
Mitch McConnell says he’s avoided the White House over coronavirus concerns.
Here’s how both parties are preparing for a possibly contested election.
The Louisville police department gathered negative information about Breonna Taylor’s boyfriend after her shooting.
Longtime GOP fundraiser Elliot Broidy is likely to plead guilty after being charged as acting as a foreign agent.
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Chuck, Mark, Carrie and Melissa
CBS
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Eye Opener
Investigators say they broke up an elaborate domestic terror plot against Michigan Governor Gretchen Whitmer. Also, President Trump’s doctor said he anticipates the president can safely resume public events as soon as Saturday. All that and all that matters in today’s Eye Opener. Your world in 90 seconds.
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 launched its New York City: Reborn initiative, will be there to help spark its renaissance.
What does it take to improve a police department? On Tuesday, October 13, join us for our panel featuring Chief J. Scott Thomson, who oversaw Camden’s bold policing restart, Ganesha Martin, who advised on Baltimore’s consent decree, and other police reform experts.
On October 5, Commissioner William Bratton spoke with Rafael Mangual as part of our new Policing and Public Safety Initiative and first annual George L. Kelling Lecture. Introductory remarks were delivered by Reihan Salam and Catherine Coles.
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.
“Lockdowns are typically portrayed as prudent precautions against Covid-19, but they are surely the most risky experiment ever conducted on the public.”
By John Tierney New York Post October 8, 2020
Adapted from City Journal
Wealth inequality is indeed increasing, the country does need more tax revenue, and special interests can get government favors. But in a new issue brief, Allison Schrager and Beth Akers argue that none of these reasons justifies a wealth tax, which could damage the economy while raising little revenue. Instead, a better solution for raising additional revenue would be to remove the many existing distortions in the tax system.
On October 8, the Manhattan Institute hosted a two-part discussion on how the decline in local journalism affects the health of local democracy, and the steps local media organizations are taking to develop sustainable business practices in the modern media landscape.
On October 8, we held a discussion on debts, fiscal policy, and the future of financial markets in the aftermath of today’s crises. The expert panel included John Cochrane of the Hoover Institution, Raghuram Rajan of Chicago Booth, and Simon Johnson of MIT Sloan, moderated by Allison Schrager of the Manhattan Institute.
Heather Mac Donald and Glenn Loury are fearless and independent thinkers on topics from police brutality to academic freedom. On October 6, these scholars discussed where they agree and where they differ in their understanding of this critical and divisive moment in America. This event was held as part of our new Policing and Public Safety Initiative.
In an interview from 2016, Brian Anderson and the late criminologist and Manhattan Institute fellow George Kelling discuss the history of policing in Milwaukee and more.
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
10/09/2020
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Carl Cannon’s Morning Note
Trump’s Path; Health Care; Quote of the Week; Bob Worsley’s ‘Horseshoe Virus’
By Carl M. Cannon on Oct 09, 2020 08:07 am
Good morning, it’s Friday, Oct. 9, 2020, the day the week when I reprise an instructive or inspirational quotation. Today’s comes from John Lennon, who would have turned 80 years old today. He was born on this date in 1940 at Liverpool Maternity Hospital when Britain was withstanding “The Blitz” — the sustained air war by the Luftwaffe that would take the lives of 4,000 civilians in Liverpool alone by war’s end. He died 40 years later in New York City, a victim of senseless violence.
His full name was John Winston Lennon, after one of his grandfathers and the British statesman steering the ship of state in its fight for survival against the Third Reich. In postwar England, John grew up to be a pacifist who wrote and sang songs lamenting war. One of them, “Imagine,” stages periodic comebacks, and is doing so these days. Millions of people love that song — I used to be one of them, but today the lyrics strike me as somewhat at odds with the more iconoclastic opening to the 1969 song “Give Peace a Chance.”
“Imagine” may be a hopeful-sounding hymn, but societies proclaiming an end to God and country — not to mention a functioning economy — turn out in real life to offer precious little hope. Instead of Utopia, they tend to produce poverty, corruption, and gulags. Would John Lennon have come to that same conclusion? We have no way of knowing, as he was cut down in the prime of life in his adopted country, a nation that still hasn’t figured out how to keep firearms out of the hands of murderous lunatics. One thing about Lennon, however: He was always growing and always did his own thinking, as he talked about nonviolence most of his life. I’ll offer one of his observations in a moment.
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:
* * *
Trump’s Narrow Path to Victory (With a Nod to Washington State). Sean Trende’s updated analysis takes cues from one state’s primary results, which have been predictive in the recent past.
SCOTUS Fight Will Highlight GOP’s Health Care Liability. A.B. Stoddard writes that the party’s inability to replace Obamacare with something better be among the themes underpinning Democratic opposition to Amy Coney Barrett.
Don’t Eliminate the Filibuster. Raise the Bar. Nancy Jacobson urges lawmakers to replace today’s “silent” filibuster with the old, more deliberative version.
Five Facts on the Post-Election Day Timeline. RealClearPolicy has this primer from No Labels.
Without Growth, There Is No Stimulus. RealClearMarkets editor John Tamny reiterates a basic lesson in economics as lawmakers — and journalists — consider government responses to the pandemic. John also weighs in on antitrust advocates’ calls to break up Facebook.
We Don’t Need to Be Forced to Care About the Planet. In RealClearEnergy, Jason Reed argues that the private sector is doing more than the government to tackle climate change.
Young Conservatives Want Responsible Climate Action. Also in RCE, Jacob Abel discusses the impact the nation’s growing national debt will have on our capacity to address climate change.
Armenia-Azerbaijan Conflict Is an Opportunity for U.S. Stephen Blank explains in RealClearDefense.
Nazi Germany’s Fatal Mistakes. In RealClearHistory, Steve Feinstein revisits several strategic errors, in particular Hitler’s decision not to develop a long-range bomber.
* * *
In 1969, John Lennon and Yoko Ono staged two “Bed-Ins for Peace.” Styled after the sit-ins of the 1950s and early1960s, and supplemented with the couple’s famed passion for love — and for each other — these sessions were filmed and recorded and much-discussed at the time. John and Yoko gave interviews while doing them, and although Mahatma Gandhi and Martin Luther King Jr. might have raised eyebrows, the counter-culture backdrop was part of their message.
At the Bed-In in Montreal, John said the following:
“When it gets down to having to use violence, then you are playing the system’s game. The establishment will irritate you — pull your beard, flick your face — to make you fight. Because once they’ve got you violent, then they know how to handle you. The only thing they don’t know how to handle is nonviolence and humor.”
The American people needed to know the truth about efforts by the Clinton campaign and the Obama administration to sabotage the president’s campaign sooner.
President Trump made a stunning announcement this week when he ordered the declassification of all documents related to Russian meddling in the 2016 presidential election and the FBI investigation into Hillary Clinton’s misuse of a private email server while she was secretary of state.
In this edition of Center Executive Chairman Frank Gaffney’s new daily TV show Securing America With Frank Gaffney, Congressman Scott Perry (R-PA), a member of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, discusses a new bill he has sponsored against the Chinese Communist Party. Perry said the purpose of this legislation is to have the U.S. government remove the Chinese Communist Party’s sovereign immunity because it is a criminal organization.
Tomorrow is National Day in Taiwan, an occasion of joyful celebration for the island’s freedom-loving people. If the Chinese Communist Party has its way, though, this year’s holiday may be the last one.
In recent months, the People’s Liberation Army has been mobilizing and exercising the array of military capabilities it has assembled for the purpose of attacking, invading and occupying Taiwan. Immense numbers of ballistic missiles, amphibious lift and other naval vessels, fighter, bomber and transport aircraft, and ground combat forces pose an imminent threat.
To its credit, in the face of such Chinese belligerence, the Trump administration has ramped up official visits and other tangible signs of its solidarity with Taiwan. Most recently, National Security Advisor Robert O’Brien sternly warned China against mounting any assault against the island, signaling such a step could gravely miscalculate the U.S. response.
Amen.
This is Frank Gaffney.
DAVID WURMSER, Director of CSP’s new program on fighting global anti-Semitism and defending the US-Israel relationship, Served as Middle East Adviser to Dick Cheney, as Special Assistant to John Bolton and as a research fellow at the American Enterprise Institute, Served in the US Navy Reserve as an intelligence officer at the rank of Lieutenant Commander:
David’s recent Occasional Paper on Peter Beinart’s Anti-Zionism
A continuation of this type of attitude throughout the Democratic Party
Validation of Muslim Brotherhood members by the Obama administration
DOUG FEITH, Senior Fellow and Director of the Center for National Security Strategies at the Hudson Institute, Former Under Secretary of Defense for Policy (2001-2005):
Kamala Harris’ thoughts on foreign policy
What is the United States’ national interest?
GRANT NEWSHAM, Senior Fellow, Center for Security Policy, Senior Research Fellow at Japan Forum for Strategic Studies:
What is “the Quad?”
Mike Pompeo’s meeting regarding this defense alliance
Was the recent South Korean election rigged?
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:
How should US foreign policy be created?
How will Joe Biden craft his foreign policy if he is elected?
What has Vladimir Putin said about the state of US politics?
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AMERICAN INSTITUTE FOR ECONOMIC RESEARCH
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October 9, 2020
What Would Lincoln Do?
By Clifford F. Thies | “Salmon P. Chase, the greatest civil rights lawyer of that day, in particular, campaigned for Lincoln’s re-election. Then, on the day the Senate reconvened, Lincoln sent over a one-sentence message nominating Chase, who was…
By Robert E. Wright | “Ideologues can claim that mathematics is merely a human construct but there really is a real world out there. It has bitten us in the keister before and appears poised to do so again, just for ignoring it. Maybe we should…
By Robert Hughes | NOTE: In response to recommendations resulting from an internal review of state operations, the state of California has announced a two week pause in its processing of initial claims for unemployment insurance benefits.
The Great Barrington Declaration Is Not Saying ‘Lock Up…
By Amelia Janaskie & Micha Gartz | “The Great Barrington Declaration doesn’t deny that Covid-19 may lead to sickness and death in elderly and vulnerable individuals, but its focus is on avoiding the unnecessary physical, mental, social, economic…
The Constitutional Reckoning of State Lockdown Orders
By Ethan Yang | “There is no doubt that the governors across the country have gone off the constitutional deep end in response to Covid-19, exercising powers that are not only unprecedented but unproven. These cases, notably in Michigan and…
Reaching Immunity: A Private Summit of Epidemiologists…
By Taleed Brown | “During the greatest public policy crisis of our lifetimes, this film chronicles what appears to be a turning point, the moment when the moral courage of a few people broke through the pro-lockdown opinion consensus.
“It’s a seemingly impossible task to select the best of Ludwig von Mises (1881-1973) whose teaching and writing career spanned six decades and whose literary output includes several mighty and timeless treatises on political economy. They were not written in isolation from the real and often horrifying events of the 20th century; they were heavily informed by the brilliance and tragedy of his life experiences – including as a refugee forced to flee his home in Vienna – in battling every form of totalitarianism
On the menu today: A slew of new polls show really good news for Republicans, a little bit of fine print on those surveys, and an update on the very-much-in-flux presidential debate schedule.
Everything’s Coming Up Roses!
Earlier this week, Morning Consult released poll numbers that showed Amy Coney Barrett made a terrific first impression and that public support for her confirmation to the Supreme Court was solid and growing:
Democrats are losing the Supreme Court messaging war, new polling indicates, with support for Judge Amy Coney Barrett’s confirmation trending in the GOP’s direction.
Nearly half (46 percent) of voters in an Oct. 2-4 Morning Consult/Politico poll said the Senate should confirm Barrett — up 9 percentage points since President Donald Trump announced her nomination on Sept. 26 — as more voters say the … READ MORE
A property sale gave Sally the resources to support charities long-term. Instead of writing checks, she opened a DonorsTrust donor-advised fund to accomplish this goal. How can DonorsTrust help you? It’s the smart, tax-advantaged, and private way to give.
Using President Trump’s leaked tax records, the New York Times reports on how Trump in 2016 “engineered a sudden financial windfall — more than $21 million in what experts describe as highly unusual one-off payments from the Las Vegas hotel he owns with his friend the casino mogul Phil Ruffin.”
“The new findings cast light on Mr. Trump’s financial maneuverings in that time of fiscal turmoil and unlikely political victory. Indeed, they may offer a hint to one of the enduring mysteries of his campaign: In its waning days, as his own giving had slowed to a trickle, Mr. Trump contributed $10 million, leaving many people wondering where the burst of cash had come from.”
“The tax records, by their nature, do not specify whether the more than $21 million in payments from the Trump-Ruffin hotel helped prop up Mr. Trump’s campaign, his businesses or both. But they do show how the cash flowed, in a chain of transactions, to several Trump-controlled companies and then directly to Mr. Trump himself.”
Sen. Ted Cruz (R-TX) warned that Republicans could see “a bloodbath of Watergate proportions” if voters are angry and broke when casting their ballots this year, CNBC reports.
Said Cruz: “If on Election Day, people are angry and they’ve given up hope and they’re depressed, which is what Pelosi and Schumer want them to be, I think it could be a terrible election. I think we could lose the White House and both houses of Congress, that it could be a bloodbath of Watergate proportions.”
“Two additional White House residence staff members tested positive for the coronavirus in an outbreak there nearly three weeks ago,” the New York Times reports.
“That brings the total number in that outbreak to four people, including three members of the housekeeping staff who work on the third floor of the residence, as well as an assistant to the chief usher, Timothy Harleth.”
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C-SPAN anchor Steve Scully, the moderator of the second presidential debate between President Trump and Joe Biden, was slammed on social media after publicly asking staunch Trump critic Anthony Scaramucci for advice on how to respond to the president, The Hill reports.
Scully appeared to be reaching out to Scaramucci after the president told Fox News host Sean Hannity he believed Scully was a “never-Trumper” who “worked for Biden at one point” in reference to Scully’s time as an intern for the then-Delaware senator.
Scaramucci responded: “Ignore. He is having a hard enough time. Some more bad stuff about to go down.”
Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY) said that Congress likely will not pass another coronavirus stimulus package before the November 3 election, CNBC reports.
New York Times: “On Thursday, in a conference call with a group of lobbyists, Mr. McConnell vented that the party’s Senate candidates are being financially overwhelmed because of small-dollar contributions to ActBlue, the online liberal fund-raising hub.”
“The Seven Springs appraisal, obtained by the Washington Post, appears to have relied on unsupported assertions and misleading conclusions that boosted the value of his charitable gift — and his tax break.”
“The valuation has now become a focal point of what could be one of the most consequential investigations facing President Trump as he heads into the election.”
“President Trump said Thursday he doesn’t think he’s contagious anymore, but medical experts say that’s impossible to know a week after his diagnosis with COVID-19,” the AP reports.
“Most people with COVID-19 can stop isolating and be around others about 10 days after they first showed symptoms… That’s provided their symptoms have improved, they have not had a fever for 24 hours and are no longer on any medication to reduce a high temperature. But there’s no way to know for certain that someone is no longer contagious so soon after falling ill, experts say.”
Peggy Noonan: “It’s not only the past week’s events, not just the polls and their consistency, their upward tick from a lead of 6 or 7 to a lead in some polls of double digits; it’s the data about women and voters over 65.”
“No one will talk about it in public because they’re not idiots. Journalists don’t want to be embarrassed if they’ve got it wrong; Democrats don’t want to encourage complacency; Republicans don’t want to demoralize the troops; and the networks have to keep everyone hopped up on the horse race…”
“But if what a growing number of people are seeing as a real possibility happens, if we are in blowout territory, I think part of the reason won’t be political in any classic sense, or ideological, or having to do with some stupid question about which candidate you want to have a beer with. If Joe Biden wins big, part of the reason, maybe a big part, will be simply that he is normal.”
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Maria Bartiromo opened up her Sunday Morning Futures program in late September with the breaking news that US Attorney John Durham will NOT release his… Read more…
Democrats are desperate. Don’t believe the fake news polls FOR ONE SECOND! Democrat Speaker Nancy Pelosi announced an investigation into President Donald Trump’s mental and… Read more…
Brandon Caserta The FBI announced on Thursday during a press conference that it thwarted a plot by a so-called “right-wing militia” to kidnap and kill… Read more…
Florida – The Sarasota County School District is under fire for caving to pressure from Black Lives Matter activists demanding that their movement be taught… Read more…
The President’s physician Dr. Sean Conley cleared Trump for public engagements starting Saturday. “Since returning home, his physical exam has remained stable and devoid of… Read more…
The Commission on Presidential Debates changed the format for the next debate without consulting President Trump. It is no coincidence that the debate format was… Read more…
A citizen on Wednesday morning found stolen mail, including election ballots, discarded in two Southern California desert towns. According to the San Bernardino Sheriff’s Department,… Read more…
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Shelby Steele is experiencing a revival. For over 30 years, the controversial black American essayist and culture critic has consistently produced some of the most original insights to be found on the precarious issue of race in America and has been met with reactions that range from reverence to revulsion.
In the twentieth edition of the Decision 2020 Report, Hoover fellows assess the economic, national security, and geopolitical implications of innovations in artificial intelligence (AI).
A new book insists there’s a method to Trump’s tweeting on the economy, and explores a string of consumer-friendly victories for which the president gets little credit.
It was the FBI’s first major espionage case. On Feb. 14, 1938, a U.S. Army deserter named Guenther Rumrich, the Chicago-born son of a European diplomat, was arrested after trying to secure 35 blank United States passports by posing as Secretary of State Cordell Hull.
A sharply dressed bearded man stood up near the door of the White House meeting room and bellowed, “HHS, you need to hear the OMB loud and clear: your AKS RIA is DOA!” and exited the meeting.
Cricket or baseball? Can these two bat-and-ball sports, and the nations that support them, find a common language and work toward common goals — not just in sport, but in loose alliance? Four countries that are big into cricket and baseball are also working together trying to keep the world safe for democracy.
interview with Michael R. Auslin via The Chicago Council on Global Affairs
Hoover Institution fellow Michael Auslin explains how the 2020 election could influence US foreign policy towards Japan and whether the new Japanese Premier Yoshihide Suga has the power to successfully continue former Prime Minister Abe’s legacy.
CLAIM: Sen. Kamala Harris (D-CA) said during Wednesday night’s vice presidential debate that Democrat presidential candidate Joe Biden is “responsible for saving America’s auto industry.”
The opinions expressed in this publication are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the opinions of the Hoover Institution or Stanford University.
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