Good morning! Here is your news briefing for Tuesday November 3, 2020
THE DAILY SIGNAL
November 3 2020
Good morning from Washington, where businesses’ windows are boarded up in anticipation of post-election violence. Virginia Allen reports. Hearing traditional media claim voter fraud is nothing to worry about? Hans von Spakovsky has the facts—and also a personal essay explaining why he cares so deeply about election integrity. Plus: Melanie Israel on abortion and the 2020 presidential candidates, and Katie Gorka on the curriculum that’s turning your kids into activists. Looking for an in-depth analysis of the election Wednesday? Join Heritage Foundation leadership for a tele-town hall on Nov. 4 at 2 p.m. ET for a discussion about what the election results mean for the future of America. Click here to register.
Rather than implementing policies to combat violent crime, Cook County State’s Attorney Kim Foxx is contributing to it by enacting her “progressive” agenda.
Throughout my childhood I heard stories from my refugee parents of what life is like in a dictatorship. This made me realize how dependent our freedom is on preserving a secure, fair, and safe election…
“Younger generations, many of whom were born after the fall of the Berlin Wall, are looking more longingly toward this socialism idea,” says Chris Cargill of the Washington Policy Center.
As Peter Wood of the National Association of Scholars notes, the “new civics” is in fact a form of anti-civics. It does not teach students how our government works, but how to be activists.
I was expecting to see a few businesses with plywood over their windows but I did not anticipate to see what could be described as a city preparing to come under attack.
Former Biden business partner Tony Bobulinski reported that Hunter Biden kept Joe Biden in the loop about a key deal and arranged for Bobulinski to meet his dad to talk about the business venture.
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THE EPOCH TIMES
NOVEMBER 3, 2020 READ IN BROWSER
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DWIGHT D. EISENHOWER
Good morning,Today is Election Day. This year, an unprecedented 95 million ballots have been cast beforehand, 60 million of them by mail.This massive turnout by mail could delay the results, as some states—such as Pennsylvania—allow for the counting to continue days after the election.Read The Epoch Times’ coverage to stay up to date on all the latest election news.
People rely on the media for the latest news and analysis. Topics that the media cover become matters of grave social concern. Issues that go unreported are ignored and forgotten. In the States, the media are traditionally regarded as the guardians of the truth and societies’ core values. But unfortunately, this becomes less and less true. Many media sources and platforms are mainly enthusiastic about promoting their ideology. In doing that, they ignore certain news or report it misleadingly.Right On Times news portal will change that. We will bring all news sources to you, especially those often ignored by “mainstream” media. We will let you see all the stories and let you discover the truth yourself.We will deliver the truth through unbiased news.
The question of the COVID-19 pandemic was placed in the first and most important place in the two formal presidential debates and the vice presidential debate. Read more
The Chinese Communist Party is really trying to get you to vote for Joe Biden. They want you to think that your life depends on it. Actually, to a great extent, the survival of the CCP just might depend on it. Read more
‘Comical drawings’, ‘Mental flash’, “‘M*A*S*H’ setting” , ‘Juno‘s Greek counterpart’, ‘Prefix with knock or lock’, and ‘Dazzle’ are some of the clues in this crossword puzzle.
Bradley Birkenfeld, one of the biggest whistleblowers in U.S. history, exposed the UBS, which is the world’s largest bank, and how it helped the ultra-wealthy commit tax fraud through offshore banking.
While ABC News claims “The Trump campaign needs the polls — virtually all of them — to be wrong” (ABC News) the truth is, just a few need to be off by a little. According to the FiveThirtyEight collection of polls, Trump is down but within the margin of error in North Carolina, Georgia, Arizona and Florida. All he needs is to close those races and beat the Pennsylvania average, which is still under 5 percent (Twitter). The Real Clear Politics average of polls has it even closer, with Trump leading in Iowa, Ohio, North Carolina and Georgia, while slightly down but inside the margin of error in Florida, Arizona and Pennsylvania (Twitter). Clinton had a 4-point lead in Pennsylvania in 2016 (270towin). The 2016 state by state polling averages (270towin).. A look at why Biden might not have Nevada sewn up after all (Red State). A look at Biden’s recent, unpresidential comments (Townhall). Sports analyst Clay Travis says there are a “staggering” number of people in sports media who are voting for Trump but afraid to admit it (Daily Wire). As “can I change my vote” trends on Google, the answer depends on the state. It is not an easy thing to pull off (Fox News). William McGurn features pollster Matt Towery, one of the very few who got 2016 right and who believes Trump is going to do it again (WSJ). Nick Trainer, the Trump campaign’s director of battleground strategy, breaks down why they believe today will be huge for Trump. He looks at the Biden early voting advantage in key states that has evaporated over the past two weeks, and what they expect from Trump voters today (Washington Examiner). Salem will cover the election through the entire evening, beginning at 6 p.m. Eastern with Hugh Hewitt and most of the syndicated hosts (Radio Online).
2.
Biden Campaigns in Pennsylvania with Anti-Fracking Lady Gaga
Violence in Chicago Reveals Police Targeted at Startling Rate
From the story: Statistics from the Chicago Police Department released Sunday and reported by the Chicago Sun-Times show 67 officers have been shot at, with 10 of them struck by bullets. The uptick is four times more than last year, when 17 officers were shot at, two being struck by gunfire.
California Retailers Folding as State Legalizes Shoplifting
The story notes, due to laws enacted by progressives, “Shoplifting has essentially been decriminalized, and retailers that apprehend thieves can be sued.” So, as groups of shoplifters enter the stores, the often verbally abused clerks must stand back and allow it.
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While Election Day sometimes feels all-encompassing and of the utmost importance, let’s pause for a moment and reflect on the news that The Process has lost one of its most well-liked members. Lobbyist Janet Mabry died Monday after a recurrence of breast cancer.
For longtime friend Allison Carvajal, life will never be the same. “Janet probably had the bluest eyes on the planet … and the biggest laugh,” Carvajal said. “She was one of the strongest women I ever knew. She was super-opinionated, and she wasn’t afraid to share it.”
Carvajal worked for Mabry 32 years ago when she was in grad school and the two remained friends throughout the years, representing massage therapists together for 15 years. “The people that I met because of Janet made my career,” she said. The independent lobbyist was 67 years old and lived in Gulf Breeze, and had long-term relationships with other clients, including trial lawyers and mobile home communities.
“At the end of the day, if even if we were on the opposite end of an issue, we could sit and have a drink, there was not a lot of animosity,” Carvajal said. “She was absolutely full of life. And one of the best friends I’ve ever had.”
Arrangements have not been finalized. Mabry is survived by her husband, Mike; two daughters, Mykel and Lizzie; and two grandsons she “doted on” called her Marmee. “From ‘Little Women,” Carvajal explained. “We made fun of her for picking that name …. What the hell is a Marmee?”
___
— Every presidential race is consequential, but none so much as this year. The civilized world’s fate is literally on the ballot in the race between President Donald Trump and former Vice President Joe Biden.
Voters will decide and have been deciding for weeks leading up to Election Day, what that fate looks like. Is it four more years of Trump, his tweets and hyper-conservative policies? Or is it Biden’s America, one he plans to restore to unity and civility?
A win for either Joe Biden or Donald Trump could affect several major players in Florida. Image via AP.
While a lot is at stake for everyday Americans, there are insiders whose careers may very well hinge on Tuesday’s (or whenever final results reveal themself) outcome.
Pollsters will be judged on accuracy. Political consultants will face either scrutiny or praise over strategies. Elections supervisors will have to answer for any hiccups in balloting.
Here are 10 Florida politicos who have a lot riding on this year’s outcome.
— RonDeSantis: The Governor coasted into office on, what most observers believe, was on the President’s coattails. In the primary two years ago, Trump’s endorsement was largely credited for DeSantis’ win over the GOP establishment’s prodigal son, Adam Putnam.
So it’s no surprise that DeSantis has remained a close ally, not just on policy but on his much-derided response to COVID-19.
Where Trump goes in Florida, DeSantis almost exclusively followed.
Trump said it best himself.
“You know if we don’t win it, I’m blaming the Governor,” Trump said at an Ocala rally in mid-October. “I’ll fire him somehow. I’m going to fire him. I will find a way.”
While Trump can’t fire the Governor, voters can in 2022. Whether Trump wins or loses, DeSantis’ loyalty to the President will surely follow him through his reelection. But if Trump loses, DeSantis might have hope to distance himself from Trump world before 2022.
🥇 — GOP2024: DeSantis, along with U.S. Sens. Marco Rubio and Rick Scott, are all rumored to be potential candidates for President in 2024. All three support Trump, though Rubio, and to some degree, Scott, have been far less gushing in their approval than DeSantis.
If style is on the ballot, DeSantis’ at times mimics Trump. Rubio possesses a more traditional conservative tone while Scott has no qualms with hitting the Fox News circuit with various critiques of what he sees as liberal extremism bordering on socialism.
A Trump 2020 win might not be good news for DeSantis’ 2022 reelection bid, but it certainly would be for an eventual presidential bid.
To a lesser degree, it would be for Rubio and Scott, too, though both would have an easier time distancing themselves from Trump than DeSantis.
— MattGaetz: Republicans don’t need to worry about losing Florida’s 1st Congressional District. The ruby-red district holds a more than 167,000 voter advantage for the GOP, a 53% to 25% registered voter margin.
But that doesn’t mean Gaetz is safe. Gaetz is one of Trump’s top and most vocal allies in Congress. If Trump loses the election, it could leave Gaetz vulnerable to a primary challenge in two years. But if Trump wins, it solidifies the duo’s allegiance and strengthens Gaetz’s standing on Capitol Hill.
This year, Gaetz’s easy race in a district that will no doubt keep him in office, as allowed him to continue unabated in his fiery advocacy for a controversial President. While some Republicans this year have tried to distance themselves from Trump to avoid a potential blue wave, Gaetz has only doubled down.
Whether or not that plays in his favor will largely be decided with Tuesday’s election.
— Nikki Fried — It probably helps her gubernatorial ambitions if Trump wins. However, deep down, we know the Democrat Agriculture Commissioner loves her country too much to worry about that.
— Wilton Simpson — No matter the outcome Tuesday, he’ll still be Senate President-Designate. That’s in large part because he backed legitimate challengers in SD 3 and SD 37, forcing Dems to play defense rather than double down on the battlegrounds.
🐘 — Joe Gruters: The party chair became a statewide figure leading Trump to a surprise win in 2016. Now he’s worked like crazy to deliver again. He’s got a hot-and-cold relationship to DeSantis; the Governor tapped the Sarasota Republican for the role but squabbled over staffing for the state Party for months before DeSantis’ press secretary took on the executive director post. His future as party chair probably depends less on whether Trump wins another term and more on if the President just wins Florida. At least he’s all but locked down reelection to the Senate.
— Chris Sprowls — It could go either way. The incoming Speaker knows that as well as anyone. Speaker-D is trying to overcome Trump’s drag in some battleground seats, but rarely has an incoming leader personally worked harder. His Twitter feed is constantly updated with updates from where he’s working the ground game. Want to know how his night’s going? Pay attention to the results in HD 21, 26, 30, 60, 72 and 103.
— Florida Man Steve Schale — The Democratic strategist has shied away from making any outright predictions, but he says he’s more confident in a Biden win today than he was a week ago. Tonight will show whether he can still read the tea leaves or he’s just as stumped as the rest of us.
— RickWilson: The GOP strategist turned Never-Trumper has never been so famous as he is now, thanks to his leadership of The Lincoln Project, a group of current and former Republicans bent on sending Trump packing.
The group is known for its unrelenting videos attacking the President. Never have Democrats been so pleased to agree with Republicans.
But his slight toward the incumbent President could prove problematic after this election, what with charges of being a RINO sure to follow regardless of the election outcome, but surely more so if Trump wins.
If Trump loses, however, Wilson’s star could be bright. His whole shtick is simple: he wants to return the GOP to sanity and steer it back to its conservative roots centering on fiscal conservatism and social freedoms.
Thanks to being the OG Never-Trumper, Rick Wilson is as popular as ever.
— BrianBallard: The Florida lobbyist has made tens of millions of dollars positioned, as POLITICO noted, as” the most powerful lobbyist in Trump’s Washington.” If Trump wins another four years, it’s backup the truck time for Ballard Partners. But what happens if it’s no longer Trump’s Washington?
Can a lobbyist survive being a Trump loyalist in a post-Trump world?
♀ — PamBondi: Bondi is part of the Ballard Partners operation and was an early supporter for Trump, unlike others in the GOP who backed more traditional conservatives in 2016 like Marco Rubio or Jeb Bush.
So like Ballard, her future in politics could be make-or-break depending on the election outcome. With four more years of Trump, Bondi is poised for success, whether through Ballard Partners or with a position in Trump’s White House.
Without a Trump victory, she could find herself roaming the halls of Trumpworld has-beens.
— JohnMorgan: It took him twice, but Morgan successfully pushed and bankrolled Florida’s medical marijuana law. Now he’s hoping for success again with a minimum wage push, Amendment 2 on the ballot, that would raise the state’s minimum wage to $15 an hour by 2026.
If it wins, Morgan is two for two. If it fails, he’s out the more than $4.6 million he and his law firm dumped into the initiative.
— PeteAntonacci: The Broward County Supervisor of Elections is already under a microscope. Appointed just shy of two years ago by then-Gov. Scott, Antonacci was tasked with cleaning up a horrendous election operation in Broward County.
The microscope zoomed in further though after Antonacci asked Gov. DeSantis to appoint him chief judge of the Florida Division of Administrative Hearings. It begs the question: are Antonacci’s decisions not to require masks in polling places an effort to stoke fear in voting? Is he looking to do favors for DeSantis at polling places in deep-blue Broward?
Because one thing is for sure, a Trump overperformance in Broward would sure make the big guy happy.
— PatBainter: The genius-level, media-averse GOP consultant is the architect of Simpson’s win-the-cycle-before-the-first-shot-is-fired strategy. Winning just one of the competitive Senate seats will be a victory for Team GOP. Can they win both? Can they find an upset in SD 3 or 39?
🤷♂ — RyanTyson: The Republican pollster doesn’t make predictions, but all of his numbers point to a Trump win in Florida and the country. There’s an argument to be made that Tyson is one of the most important figures in the entire race because, without his numbers, GOP morale would have sunk. We’ll know soon how right he is.
Insider’s guide
Florida is once again poised to play a central role in the presidential election.
That means people worldwide will be looking closely at the results as they come in and analyzing them closely for any hint of the final results.
Most Floridians know our state is unlike any other, but for those who don’t — or need a refresher — The Southern Group has prepared a crash course in Florida politics.
Florida 2020 could just as easily be called “Florida 101.” Inside you’ll find a rundown of the state’s different regions and how each voted in the past few election cycles.
Things to keep an eye on tonight: Who’s leading in Duval? Is Seminole’s Democratic conversion complete? Is SW Florida still a GOP stronghold? Will Cubans in Miami-Dade keep Florida red?
Want a quick lesson in Florida’s 2020 election? The Southern Group has a primer to get you up to speed. Image via AP.
Any one of those could be the make or break in the presidential election. They could have major consequences in the makeup of the state’s congressional delegation and state Legislature.
The Southern Group has also prepped a Twitter list of the state’s most in-the-know candidates, surrogates, politicos and data pros so you can get the up-to-the-minute context as returns come in.
Nobody knows how the election will go, but one thing is certain: If you read through Florida 2020 and subscribe to the list, you’ll look like a political savant at your election watch party.
Situational awareness
Tweet, tweet:
—@RealDonaldTrump: The Supreme Court decision on voting in Pennsylvania is a VERY dangerous one. It will allow rampant and unchecked cheating and will undermine our entire systems of laws. It will also induce violence in the streets. Something must be done!
—@AlexBurnsNYT: Plenty of Dems are worried that Trump won’t concede defeat if he loses @SpeakerPelositold me she is not among them “I don’t have any anticipation that this president will act in a way that is, for the first time, presidential — and why would I care?”
—@MarkWarner: Folks: this is an unusual election. Our intelligence community has warned that the period immediately before and after Election Day is going to be uniquely volatile, and our adversaries will seek to take advantage of that. Don’t make their jobs any easier.
—@MaggieNYT: Folks around the President say he’s in a great mood. So far at his first rally, it’s been a grievance list about polling, [Barack] Obama, [Hillary] Clinton. “People should move more quickly,” he says, appearing to refer to his desire to see someone face prosecution over the origins of Russia probe.
—@JenMercieca: Trump’s fans are using his strategies of force to gain compliance: intimidation at the polls & in the streets, fascist flag flotillas & parades, bullhorns & foghorns, shutting down roadways & bridges & forcing Biden’s bus off the road. They are not trying to persuade.
Tweet, tweet:
Tweet, tweet:
—@SamCornale: I’ve said it a bunch on this here internet site, but @BernieSandersand his team have stepped up in a huge, huge way. The Democratic surrogate game is out. of. control. this year. And it’s going to show.
—@CrowleyReport: It is not too late for @JebBush to tell us who he supports for President. Will he have the courage to do it?
—@MacStipanovich: I am reminded tonight of the story we were told of the grizzled Gunnery Sergeant who said to his men in the landing craft heading for the beach at Iwo Jima: “I will shoot the first son of a bitch who says, ‘Well, this is it.’”
— @Fineout: On radio on Monday night, @GovRonDeSantissays, “the media is the most divisive force in our society.”
—@FredJPiccolo: One thing I’ll say before the chaos of tomorrow is that I give credit to everyone who put their name on the ballot. There’s a lot of chirping by people on the sidelines, but it takes a lot of guts, and it hurts a lot of the family to put your name on the ballot. Kudos to all.
—@ChrisHayes: Scott Atlas posting national aggregate hospital data means he’s actually too stupid to understand the most basic aspects of the problem or trying to mislead people or both.
Days until
NBA 2020-21 training camp — 7; Apple announces new Macs with Apple chips — 7; FITCon Policy Conference begins — 9; The Masters begins — 9; NBA draft — 15; Pixar’s “Soul” premieres — 17; College basketball season slated to begin — 22; NBA 2020-21 opening night — 29; Florida Automated Vehicles Summit — 29; the Electoral College votes — 41; “Death on the Nile” premieres — 44; “Wonder Woman 1984” rescheduled premiere — 52; Greyhound racing ends in Florida — 58; the 2021 Inauguration — 78; Super Bowl LV in Tampa — 96; “A Quiet Place Part II” rescheduled premiere — 107; “Black Widow” rescheduled premiere — 121; “No Time to Die” premieres (rescheduled) — 150; “Top Gun: Maverick” rescheduled premiere — 241; Disney’s “Shang Chi and The Legend of The Ten Rings” premieres — 248; new start date for 2021 Olympics — 262; “Jungle Cruise” premieres — 270; Disney’s “Eternals” premieres — 367; “Spider-Man Far From Home” sequel premieres — 370; Steven Spielberg’s “West Side Story” premieres — 402; “Thor: Love and Thunder” premieres — 466; “Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness” premieres — 519; “Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse” sequel premieres — 700.
The final 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 Trump or Biden are performing 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 Monday, the final preelection CNN average still has Biden at 52% compared to an equally 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 meetingCNN’s standards for reporting and which measure the views of registered or likely voters. The poll of polls does not have a margin of sampling error.
FiveThirtyEight.com: As of Monday, Biden remains with an 89 in 100 chance of winning compared to Trump, who drops to a 10 in 100 shot. FiveThirtyEight also ranked individual states by the likelihood of delivering a decisive vote for the winning candidate in the Electoral College: Pennsylvania leads with 36.6%, while Florida is second at 13.8%. Michigan is now third with 7.1%. Other states include Arizona (6.2%), Wisconsin (6.2%), North Carolina (5.2%), Georgia (3.9%) and Nevada (3.6%).
PredictIt: As of Monday, the PredictIt trading market has Biden dropping to $0.64 a share, with Trump rising to $0.42.
Real Clear Politics: As of Monday, the RCP average of General Election top battleground state polling has Biden leading Trump 50.7% to 44%. The RCP General Election polling average has Biden at +6.7 points ahead.
The final models show Joe Biden in the lead. Image via AP.
Sabato’s Crystal Ball: Our final Electoral College ratings show Biden at 321 electoral votes and Trump at 217. Democrats are narrow favorites to capture a Senate majority, 50-48 with two toss-ups — the two Georgia races, both of which we think are likely to go to runoffs. We have Democrats netting 10 seats in the House. If one goes by the polls, Biden should be favored in Florida, albeit only by a little. Yet we have seen the Democrats (and even the polls) come up short in the Sunshine State so often, including in the Democratic wave year of 2018, that we needed unmistakable signs to pick them there this time. We just don’t see those signs in this complex state with lots of moving parts.
The Economist: As of Monday, their model predicts that Biden is still “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 better than 19 in 20 (96%) versus Trump with less than 1 in 20 (4%). They still give Biden a greater than 99% chance (better than 19 in 20) of winning the popular vote, with Trump at less than 1% (less than 1 in 20).
“The trouble with election projections” via Jill Lepore of The New Yorker — The 2020 presidential election is likely to smash records. Turnout may well be higher than in any election in the past century. More young people are voting, more people of color are voting, and more people are voting early and by mail. The tallying, too, stands a chance of setting records: in how long it takes for the ballots to be counted, in how widely the results diverge from preelection predictions, and if the vote is close in how fiercely the results are contested in the courts, in the states, in Congress, and the streets. All this uncertainty has been driving people to horse-race the polls. Liberals, it seems, pay more attention to polls than conservatives do, and some research suggests that, in 2016, preelection polls helped deliver the White House to Trump.
The call
“Show your work: AP plans to explain vote calling to public” via David Bauder of The Associated Press — The Associated Press, one of several news organizations whose declarations of winners drive election coverage, is pulling back the curtain this year to explain how it is reaching those conclusions. The AP plans to write stories explaining how its experts make decisions or why, in tight contests, they are holding back. If necessary, top news executives will speak publicly in interviews about the process, said Sally Buzbee, senior vice president and executive editor. Given the high interest in the presidential race, the complicating factor of strong early voting, and Trump’s warnings about potential fraud, television executives are making similar promises of transparency.
The Associated Press is pulling back the curtain in 2020 to explain how it decides to call elections. Image via AP.
“Networks pledge caution for an Election night like no other” via Michael M. Grynbaum of The New York Times — Batches of ballots that will be counted at different times, depending on the swing state. Twitter gadflies and foreign agents intent on sowing confusion. A president who has telegraphed for months that he may not accept results he deems unfavorable. Television executives overseeing this year’s election night broadcasts are facing big challenges. And the world will be watching. “Frankly, the well-being of the country depends on us being cautious, disciplined, and unassailably correct,” said Noah Oppenheim, the NBC News president. “We are committed to getting this right.”
“NBC News Decision Desk: How we call races on election night 2020” via John Lapinski, Stephanie Perry and Charles Riemann of NBC News — Early on election night, the NBC News Decision Desk uses exit poll data to determine whether uncompetitive races can be called. Most races are called based on analyses of precinct- and county-level vote returns. The analyses also examine differences between early and Election Day votes. In close contests, a careful analysis of how much of the vote has not been counted is a crucial part of the process. No race is projected until the Decision Desk is at a minimum of 99.5% confidence of the winner. NBC News will not project a winner in a race until after the last scheduled poll closing time in a state.
“Election Day will be the media’s D-Day. The skill we need most is the one we’ve never mastered.” via Margaret Sullivan of The Washington Post — Almost two months before the 2016 presidential election, Dave Wasserman, an editor at the nonpartisan Cook Political Report, wrote a prescient piece. The mirage could turn into a constitutional crisis if Trump falsely challenges the lagging mail ballots as illegitimate, he’s laid all the groundwork for just that, and provokes mayhem within his base. (Mailed votes may be of greater benefit to his challenger Biden because more Democrats were among those requesting the ballots.) At that point, it could become not just a political version of hell but an almost literal one.
“Twitter names 7 outlets to call election results” via Sara Fischer of Axios — Twitter on Monday provided more details about its policies around tweets that declare election results, and it named the seven outlets it will lean on to help it determine whether a race is officially called. The list includes ABC News, AP, CNN, CBS News, Decision Desk HQ, Fox News and NBC News, all outlets that experts agree have verified, unbiased decision desks calling elections. Some conservatives have alleged that Twitter is biased against them. In the past few weeks, data from the Stanford Cable TV Analyzer shows that Fox News has discussed Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey and Big Tech censorship at length.
Twitter names seven trusted news outlet to call the presidential election. Image via AP.
“Twitter and Facebook will warn users about election posts that prematurely declare victory.” via Mike Isaac, Kate Conger and Daisuke Wakabayashi of The New York Times — Facebook, Twitter and YouTube plan to take a series of steps on Election Day to prevent the spread of misinformation, particularly around the results and the integrity of voting. At Facebook, an operations center staffed by dozens of employees, what the company calls a war room, will work to identify efforts to destabilize the election. The team, which will work virtually because of the coronavirus pandemic, has already been in action, Facebook said. Facebook’s app also will look different. To prevent candidates from prematurely and inaccurately declaring victory, the company plans to add a notification at the top of News Feeds, letting people know that no winner has been chosen until news outlets verify election results.
Presidential
“A record early vote, last-minute lawsuits and sheets of plywood mark the end of a campaign transformed by the pandemic.” via David Montgomery and Nick Corasaniti of The New York Times — There were plenty of reminders Monday that the 2020 campaign has been anything but normal. There were the staggering early vote totals, with a record 97.6 million people already casting their ballots by mail or in person, and predictions that the total turnout would break the record set in 2016 when nearly 139 million people voted. There was the legal wrangling that has been a feature of this campaign even before Election Day, with a federal judge in Texas on Monday rejecting Republican efforts to invalidate more than 127,000 votes. And there were efforts to set expectations, as the Biden campaign and social media giants reminded voters that the election results might not be known on Tuesday.
“Win or lose, Donald Trump and Joe Biden’s parties will plunge into uncertainty” via Lisa Lerer of The New York Times — Fighting for his political survival from the second floor of his campaign bus last week, Sen. John Cornyn warned a small crowd of supporters that his party’s long-held dominance in this historically ruby-red state was at risk. But while the three-term Texas senator demonized Democrats at length, he didn’t spend much time talking up the obvious alternative: Trump, the leader of his party, the man at the top of his ticket. Asked whether Trump, the man who redefined Republicanism, was an asset to Cornyn’s reelection effort, the senator was suddenly short on words. “Absolutely,” he said stone-faced.
Win or lose, Donald Trump’s GOP will face turmoil. Image via AP.
“As Election Day arrives, Trump shifts between combativeness and grievance” via Maggie Haberman, Alexander Burns and Jonathan Martin of The New York Times — Trump arrives at Election Day toggling between confidence and exasperation, bravado and grievance, and marinating in frustration that he is trailing Biden, who he considers an unworthy opponent. “Man, it’s going to be embarrassing if I lose to this guy,” Trump has told advisers. Trailing in most polls, Trump has careened through a marathon series of rallies in the last week, trying to tear down Biden and energize his supporters, but also fixated on crowd size and targeting perceived enemies like the news media and Dr. Anthony Fauci.
“‘Non-scalable’ barrier goes up around White House before election” via WFLA — On Monday, the White House, already encircled by multiple layers of protection, got another barrier — a “non-scalable” fence around the perimeter. Photos and video showed workers unloading stacks of fence segments and setting them up Monday. According to CNN, the fences are the same style of security barrier put in place over the summer after the killing of George Floyd. The material is extremely stable, hard to cut and has holes so small that it is difficult to get a handhold. NBC News first reported that the fences would go around the entire White House grounds, the Elipse and Lafayette Square.
“Biden turns to Pennsylvania as he hammers Trump’s presidency” via Annie Linskey of The Washington Post — On the final Sunday before an election that could secure the prize that has eluded him in two previous national campaigns, Biden hardened his pitch in the state that more than any other could decide the presidency, offering himself as the candidate best equipped to halt the nation’s raging coronavirus pandemic and heal its economic decline. His campaign events in Philadelphia marked the kickoff to a 36-hour blitz of Pennsylvania, broken only by an added side trip to next-door Ohio, where a victory would offer another pathway to the 270 electoral votes the winner needs. As Biden focused on a narrow corner of the country, Trump scoured multiple states to ensure that his loyal followers come out to vote.
“The 8 states where the White House will be won: POLITICOs preelection guide” via POLITICO — The reason is that the race remains close in most of the eight swing states POLITICO has identified as critical battlegrounds — Arizona, Florida, Georgia, Michigan, Minnesota, North Carolina, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin. While Biden leads in every one of them, his advantage is tenuous. By almost every traditional yardstick for measuring elections, Trump seems on the verge of being denied a second term. Even so, he can’t be counted out. Florida ultimately boils down to two big wagers. Democrats are betting they can turn out enough low-propensity, new and blue-leaning independent voters — along with more senior citizens than usual — to carry the state. The GOP gamble hinges on turning out their more numerous high-propensity voters.
“Biden leads Trump by double digits nationally, USC poll suggests” via David Lauter of the Los Angeles Times — Trump heads into the final, frenetic 48 hours of campaign 2020 having lost ground among key groups that powered his drive to the presidency four years ago, the final USC Dornsife poll of the election shows. Biden leads Trump by double digits nationally, 54% to 43% in the poll’s daily tracking, a margin that has remained almost unchanging since summer. Biden’s support has ticked down just slightly from the high it reached after the first debate between the two candidates in late September, but overall, the poll has barely budged since USC began its daily tracking of the race in August.
“Two final swing state polls give Biden a slight edge over Trump in Ohio and Florida.” via Neil Vigdor of The New York Times — Florida and Ohio, two states that Trump can least afford to lose in his bid for reelection, continued to tilt toward Biden, in two final battleground state polls conducted by Quinnipiac University and released on Monday. In Florida, a state that both candidates have visited in the final week of the campaign, Biden led Trump 47% to 42%, though nine% of those polled said they were still undecided. The poll had a margin of error of plus or minus 2.4 percentage points. In Ohio, Biden led Trump by 47% to 43%, with 8% of likely voters still undecided. The poll had a margin of error of plus or minus 2.6 percentage points.
“To Trump, ‘the polls that matter’ point to victory. The rest are ‘fake.’” via Maggie Haberman of The New York Times — When Trump talks about polling, his focus is very much on survey-takers that he thinks are good for him. Polls that show him trailing Biden — virtually all national polls — are simply “fake news.” The President’s blinkered view has created something of an alternate universe, one not governed by polling averages or independent analysis but by declarative statements that, at times, feel as if they are coming out of nowhere. This month, Trump proclaimed on Twitter that he was “winning BIG in all of the polls that matter.” Such polls seem to boil down to Rasmussen Reports and the Trafalgar Group.
“Why Trump can’t afford to lose” via Jane Mayer of The New Yorker — No American President has ever been charged with a criminal offense. But, as Trump fights to hold on to the White House, he and those around him surely know that if he loses, the presumption of immunity that attends the presidency will vanish. Given that more than a dozen investigations and civil suits involving Trump are currently underway, he could be looking at an endgame even more perilous than the one confronted by Richard Nixon. The Presidential historian Michael Beschloss said of Trump, “If he loses, you have a situation that’s not dissimilar to that of Nixon when he resigned. Nixon spoke of the cell door clanging shut.” Few people have evaded consequences more cunningly. That run of good luck may well end, perhaps brutally, if he loses to Biden.
“Three words that haunt Biden: ‘Dewey defeats Truman’” via Niall Ferguson of Yahoo! Finance — I can see the headline already: “Biden Defeats Trump.” With just two days remaining before the final votes are cast, Trump’s obstacles to reelection look insurmountable. The pandemic he wished would miraculously go away is entering its third wave. The economy is recovering but after a savage recession. He is two points further behind in the polls than John McCain was in 2008 and almost as far behind as George H.W. Bush was in 1992. In recent columns, experienced pundits have dared to contemplate a landslide victory for Biden. My Halloween treat for one and all is 72 years old, dating back to just before Biden’s sixth birthday. It is a newspaper front page, dated Nov. 3, 1948, and it carries the immortal headline, “Dewey Defeats Truman.”
“Biden camp quietly raises money for postelection court brawl” via Elena Schneider and Natasha Korecki of POLITICO — Biden’s campaign fundraising efforts have quietly turned toward raising additional money for a possible post-Election Day legal fight with Trump that could stretch through November. In recent calls, Biden allies and donors discussed preparations to counter potential lawsuits from Trump and his campaign. They detailed how close results in key states could set off prolonged, expensive legal fights, according to two people who participated in those calls. If vote totals are close or contested, the funds would support the efforts of dozens of lawyers working for Biden’s campaign, including some who have already deployed to key battleground states as part of voter protection programs.
“In a sea of Biden signs, these Trump supporters went looking for the ‘silent majority’” via Robert Samuels of The Washington Post — The canvassers rolled into the suburban subdivision in a last-minute effort to rescue the reelection of Trump. But it was instantly clear from the view across the well-manicured front lawns that this would be a hard sell. “A lot of Biden-Harris signs around here,” said Nzinga Johnson, a communications assistant for the state GOP. “I’m surprised,” replied Apostle Wiggins, a pastor. “I did my research, and this area is supposed to be pretty red.” The latest polls showed a competitive race between Trump and Biden in a state that swung for Republicans in the past two presidential elections.
“Kamala Harris could be quietly on the brink of a historic leap” via Chelsea Janes of The Washington Post — Sen. Harris was in the midst of a frenzied campaign swing last year when a mother introduced her two young Black daughters, and Harris asked their names. The younger sister, Maya, looked down, too shy to answer, so Harris lifted her chin and looked her in the eyes, saying, “You always hold that chin up.” Older Jasmine then told Harris, “If you don’t make it, I’ll take your place.” Harris responded, “Well, now we have a plan.” Her potential to become the first woman close to the presidency has gotten less attention than previous female candidacies.
Kamala Harris is on the cusp of making history.
“As voting ends, battle intensifies over which ballots will count” via Jim Rutenberg, Michael S. Schmidt, Nick Corasaniti and Peter Baker of The New York Times — With the election coming to a close, the Trump and Biden campaigns, voting rights organizations and conservative groups are raising money and dispatching armies of lawyers for what could become a state-by-state, county-by-county legal battle over which ballots will ultimately be counted. The deployments, involving hundreds of lawyers on both sides, go well beyond what has become normal since the disputed outcome in 2000 and are the result of the open efforts of Trump and the Republicans to disqualify votes on technicalities and baseless charges of fraud at the end of a campaign in which the coronavirus pandemic has severely tested the voting system.
“Federal judge rejects GOP effort to throw out 127,000 early ballots in Texas” via Axios staff reports — A federal judge on Monday rejected a Republican request to invalidate 127,000 ballots that had already been cast via drive-through voting stations across Harris County, Texas. Harris County, which includes the city of Houston, is the most populous county in Texas and voted for Clinton over Trump by 160,000 ballots in 2016, according to Bloomberg. The ruling comes one day after the Texas Supreme Court denied a nearly identical effort by Republicans in Harris County. Texas, which hasn’t backed a Democrat for president since 1976, has been rated a tossup by the Cook Political Report. Biden securing the state’s 38 electoral votes would virtually guarantee his path to the White House.
“Judge blocks Trump campaign’s effort to stop mail-in ballot counting in Las Vegas” via Oriana Gonzalez of Axios — A Nevada judge on Monday rejected a lawsuit from Trump’s reelection campaign that sought to temporarily halt the processing of mail-in ballots in Clark County, which includes Las Vegas. The Trump campaign and Republicans have raised unsubstantiated doubts around voter registration and mail-in ballots across the country, with the lawsuit in the Democratic-leaning Clark County just the latest example. The president has baselessly claimed that mail-in ballots encourage fraud. Carson City District Court Judge James Wilson‘s decision allows Clark County to continue counting and processing the mail-in ballots submitted for the election without any delays.
“How to stress-eat your way through Election Day with free food” via Alexis Benveniste of CNN Business — Election Day may be a stressful or emotional time for many, and a bunch of fast-food chains are stepping up with free comfort food to help you cope. Are these deals little more than gimmicks to get you in the door (or app) to spend more money? Absolutely. But hey, everyone needs to eat. And the fast-food industry, a zero-loyalty business with razor-thin margins, relies on these short-term promotions to boost sales from time to time.
Prez. in FLA
“Early votes have been counted. Who has the Florida advantage going into Election Day?” via David Smiley and Howard Cohen of the Miami Herald — Assuming everyone voted according to their party, the two-week early voting period that ended Sunday could be good news for the challenger in the presidential race in a state many call a must-win to take the White House. For the first time in two weeks, Florida Democrats cast more ballots than Republicans on Sunday, helping Democratic nominee Biden pad his advantage over Trump in the nation’s biggest battleground heading into Election Day. According to figures posted Monday morning by the Florida Division of Elections, just over 100,000 Democratic votes were processed Sunday, the final day of early voting in Florida.
“Florida’s Election Day voters carried Trump to victory in 2016. Will they do it again?” via Alex Daugherty and David Smiley of the Miami Herald — Trump had a huge Election Day in 2016 that carried him to victory in must-win Florida. Can he do it again? Trump likely heads into Tuesday facing a deficit. About 108,000 more Democrats than Republicans had voted through Sunday, the final day of in-person early voting. But that doesn’t take into account independents and minor party voters, or party switchers. Campaign operatives on both sides of the aisle believe Biden is likely winning independents, though they disagree on the margins. There is a general consensus that when the polls open Tuesday at 7 a.m., Trump will need his supporters to outnumber voters backing Biden.
Donald Trump is pushing hard for votes in Florida. Image via AP.
“Even with massive Florida voter turnout so far, the presidential race hinges on who shows up at the polls Tuesday” via Anthony Man and Aric Chokey of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — Voters in Florida, determined to make their voices heard in the presidential election, continued to smash voting records over the weekend. The outcome now depends on who shows up to vote on Tuesday. Just who votes on Election Day is impossible to predict, in no small part because the coronavirus pandemic has turned everything upside down. In past elections, Florida Republicans did better with mail-in-voting, and Democrats did better with early voting. Democrats, who polls show are more concerned about COVID-19 than Republicans, moved to mail voting in droves this year.
“’A really tough state’: Florida enters Election Day to close to call” via Matt Dixon and Gary Fineout of POLITICO — For Democrats, the good news looks like this: Broward County, a party stronghold, is turning out voters at a rate three percentage points higher than statewide turnout. The electorate has grown more diverse. Some 100,000 more registered Democrats than Republicans will have voted by Election Day. The party has roughly 200,000 more “sporadic voters” — people who don’t always cast ballots — than Republicans, giving Democrats greater potential to expand their base. “There are definitely places I feel good about,” Steve Schale, who runs pro-Joe Biden super PAC Unite the Country, told reporters. “Most of the I-4 corridor I feel good about. Broward and Palm Beach County, turnout looks good.”
“The 2 big bets that will decide Florida” via Marc Caputo of POLITICO — The Republican gamble hinges on turning out their more numerous high-propensity voters on Election Day — a time-honored practice for the Florida GOP. For the past three general elections here, Republicans have prevailed with that strategy. by casting a record number of absentee ballots by mail, Democrats amassed a big cushion over Republicans, who came out in force during the state’s in-person early voting period that ran from Oct. 19 through Sunday. While Republicans boast of having 167,000 more high-propensity voters than Democrats, registered Democrats outnumber Republicans by 2 percentage points on Florida’s voter rolls. And Democrats are still turning out higher numbers of new voters and voters who didn’t cast ballots in the last two general elections.
“Barack Obama says South Florida ‘can deliver the change that we need’” via The Associated Press — Obama is criticizing Trump for casting doubt on the results of Tuesday’s upcoming election, likening him to strongmen elsewhere in the world. Addressing a Monday evening drive-in rally in Miami on Democratic presidential nominee Biden’s behalf, Obama said his successor has suggested he may “declare victory before all the votes are counted tomorrow.” … “That’s something a two-bit dictator does,” Obama said. “If you believe in democracy, you want every vote counted.” Obama said if a Democrat was acting like Trump, “I couldn’t support him.” Obama stressed the need to have a high turnout Tuesday, as data has shown a higher share of Miami-Dade County Republicans have voted than their Democratic counterparts.
“Jill Biden will visit Tampa and St. Pete on Election Day” via 10 Tampa Bay — The Trump and Biden campaigns are making their last-minute pushes for votes in battleground states, including Florida. And that will run all the way through Election Day. Dr. Jill Biden will travel to Tampa and St. Petersburg on Tuesday as she makes her final case for voters to elect her husband. Meanwhile, Mr. Biden will focus on visits to Scranton and Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; and Democratic vice presidential nominee Harris will campaign in Detroit on Nov. 3.
Shot — “Rick Scott ‘absolutely’ expects Florida results Tuesday night” via A.G. Gancarski of Florida Politics — Scott, a former two-term Governor of the state, expects Floridians to know who won the state’s electoral votes Tuesday night. The Senator commented on Monday on the Fox News Channel’s America’s Newsroom, saying he “absolutely” expects results on Tuesday night. “We’ll be able to announce a winner tomorrow night,” Scott said, expressing confidence in the state’s 67 supervisors of elections to handle the processes smoothly in their counties. The first-term Republican Senator, who rallied with Trump in Opa-locka Sunday night, was sure to remind viewers that he had, in fact, worked toward the President’s reelection.
Chaser — “’Be ready for a recount’: Scott talks lessons of 2018 Senate race” via A.G. Gancarski of Florida Politics — “Be ready for a recount,” the first-term Republican said on Newsmax, in response to questions about the recount in the 2018 U.S. Senate race and potential parallels with the race between Trump and Biden. Scott told host Sean Spicer that “you’ve got to be ready for a recount,” given the likelihood of yet another close election in the state. “Be ready for a recount. You’ve got to be ready for a recount. You’ve got to assume you’re going to have a recount,” the Senator told Spicer. “Unfortunately, we have to have in these races now a lot of lawyers. We’ve gotta have a lot of people watching the polls,” Scott said.
“If Tuesday’s margins are thin, lawyers are ready to fight for every Florida vote” via Mary Ellen Klas of the Miami Herald — The ghost of 2000 hovers over Election Day. People shudder that another razor-thin presidential election in the nation’s largest battleground state could mean weeks of legal challenges as both parties jockey to use the courts to shave votes from their opponent and count every vote for their candidate. And this time, the list of grievances is much longer than it was in 2000. Elections experts and lawyers say the potential line of Election Day and postelection lawsuits could involve questions over voters who are turned away from the polls, allegations of voter suppression and intimidation, questions about voter intent and how to interpret marks on the ballot, and challenges to people who were not on the rolls but voted anyway.
“Trump or Biden? Former President George W. Bush won’t reveal who he voted for” via WFLA — We may never know who former President Bush voted for in the 2020 presidential race. After famously selecting “none of the above” on Election Day in 2016, a Bush spokesman said there are no plans to reveal who the former President or First Lady voted for this year. According to The Dallas Morning News, spokesman Freddy Ford said Bush is “retired from presidential politics” and added the couple’s votes would be kept private. According to the Morning News, Bush and his wife, Laura, voted in person on October 15. There was some speculation the 43rd president might publicly back Democrat Biden. However, that never happened.
George W. Bush isn’t saying which way he voted. Image via AP.
“Celebrities spent millions so Florida felons could vote. Will it make a difference?” via Lawrence Mower and Langston Taylor of the Tampa Bay Times — The multimillion-dollar effort by Michael Bloomberg, LeBron James and other celebrities to pay off lingering court fines and fees for Florida felons could make almost 13,000 of them eligible to vote in Tuesday’s election, an analysis found. Although the modest increase in eligible felons falls far short of expectations, it could be large enough to make a difference in a key state where polls indicate that the presidential contest is once again a tossup. Among four of the state’s largest counties — Hillsborough, Pinellas, Palm Beach and Polk, about 32%, or 1,518, of the 4,700 felons who had their fines and fees paid by the nonprofit Florida Rights Restoration Coalition are registered to vote in the upcoming election, according to the review.
“Meet the Republican voter whose ballots were rejected by Florida more than anyone else’s” via Meleah Lyden and Alex Deluca of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — In battleground Florida, where political campaigns are won or lost by the narrowest of margins, the numbers of rejected mail ballots may be enough to swing the election either way. Already more than 15,000 mail ballots in Florida have been declared ineligible ahead of next week. Political fortunes have been decided in Florida by less. The problem is disturbing, especially to Democrats since they represent nearly half the 4.5 million people in Florida who voted by mail so far. About 21% of the 4.5 million were not affiliated with any party.
“Post office still working on backlog of 180,000 pieces of mail, including some ballots” via Aaron Liebowitz and Rob Wile of the Miami Herald — The USPS said in a court filing late Monday that around 180,000 delayed pieces of mail have been discovered at a South Miami-Dade County post office where dozens of undelivered ballots were found Friday. With Election Day one day away, postal employees were still sorting through mail at the Princeton facility Monday, according to the filing in U.S. District Court in Washington, D.C. No additional ballots had been found Monday. The filing said all but one of the 62 ballots had been delivered, though it wasn’t clear how many had already been filled out by voters and how many had never even been delivered to voters.
New ads
DNC War Room announces final ad (for real this time) — The DNC War Room on Monday released its final ad of the cycle. Titled “November 3,” the ad highlights what is at stake in the election and empowers voters to make a change on Tuesday. The English version of the minute-long spot will air in Wilkes-Barre, PA; Milwaukee, WI; Grand Rapids, MI; and cable in Washington, D.C. The Spanish version, narrated by actress Stephanie Beatriz, will air in Orlando, FL; Phoenix, AZ; and on national Spanish cable. Since June, the DNC War Room has released 17 television ads to hold Trump accountable for his failed record.
Billie Jean King asks voters to make a plan in new DNC ad — The Democratic National Committee released a new digital ad on Monday. Titled “History Makers,” the ad features history-making tennis player King urging Americans who haven’t cast their ballots to make a plan to vote on Election Day. “We are history makers,” King says. “Together, we are 90 million reasons a brighter future lies just ahead — the 90 million Americans who voted early, the most votes ever cast before Election Day … Help us make this election have the highest turnout in American history. Be a history maker — vote on Election Day.” The ad is running on digital platforms like YouTube in key battleground states, including Florida.
“55% of Americans believe 2020 Election Day will be most stressful day of their lives!” via Chris Melore of Study Finds — With political divisions reaching historic highs, a survey finds a majority of the country believe their most stressful day of 2020 hasn’t even arrived yet. The poll examining mental health reveals 55% of Americans think Election Day 2020 will be the most stress-filled day of their lives. The OnePoll survey examined the current mental health of 2,000 adults, focusing on the stress caused by COVID-19 and the presidential race. Nearly six in 10 people can’t imagine being more stressed than they already are this year, while 67% want the year to be over now. The study, commissioned by Feelmore Labs and Cove, reveals Millennials (61%) and Generation X (58%) feel the Election Day strain more than anyone else. Only one-third of Baby Boomers feel the same way about the upcoming vote.
COVID-19, the economy and political unrest is making Election Day the most stressful day ever for a majority of Americans.
“The year of the vote: How Americans surmounted a pandemic and dizzying rule changes so their voices would be heard” via Amy Gardner of The Washington Post — In a year when the act of voting felt more precarious than ever, more than 94 million had voted in the 2020 election, casting their ballots early or by mail in record numbers in virtually every state in the nation. Tens of millions more will don masks and warm clothes in many places to vote the old-fashioned way, in person, on Election Day. They’ll do it despite, and in many cases, because of the isolation and obstacles of this unusual year. Those who have voted have lost jobs or loved ones to the pandemic or have battled the coronavirus themselves. They have withstood rain and heat and lines, risked exposure to the virus and navigated dizzying rule changes about signature requirements.
“The tumult of a nation divided by politics is spilling into the voting lines” via Eileen Kelley, Mario Ariza, Susannah Byran and Wells Dusenbury of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — The disharmony of America is leading to clashes at South Florida’s polling places as voting brings the two angry sides into each other’s space. Social media videos, police reports and interviews show that the nation’s divide has turned the private and sacred right of democracy into a stressful and contentious experience bordering on intimidation. Police have been called out dozens of times as dueling partisans turn to amplified speakers, airhorns, sirens and even cowbells in the tumult. The result is arguments, shoving, baiting, name-calling, blocked access and harassment near poll entrances. It’s become so extreme that one local candidate hired people to protect her.
“Polling places are unable to avoid the politics of mask-wearing” via Neena Satija, Emma Brown, Michael Kranish and Beth Reinhard of The Washington Post — A voter’s personal experience casting a ballot has long been shaped by decisions of local elections officials, who control many of the ground rules and allocate resources for voting operations. Now, as historic numbers of Americans cast early ballots for the 2020 presidential election in the middle of the worst public health crisis in a century, they’re encountering disparate policies on masks, too. The issue of wearing masks, particularly indoors where public health officials have said they are crucial to reducing coronavirus transmissions, is adding another flashpoint to arguments about balancing individual rights and safeguarding public health.
“Lines, lawsuits and COVID: 5 big questions confront election officials before voting ends” via Zac Montellaro of POLITICO — How will in-person voting go? Despite huge turnout already, tens of millions of voters have yet to cast their ballots. Will there be voter intimidation? Trump’s militant language to recruit volunteers and his repeated and unfounded claims of widespread fraud have led to fears of poll problems. Can the Postal Service deliver ballots on time? Will Americans be patient — or will someone declare victory early? Results are never final on U.S. election nights. Polls have shown that Americans are prepared. How will lawsuits affect the vote count? Lawyers have warned that a close election could spawn a wave of litigation in multiple battleground states that ends at the Supreme Court, Bush v. Gore-style.
“As Election Day approaches, many Americans abroad are grateful for the distance” via Ruby Mellen of The Washington Post — The past four years have not always been an easy time to be an American overseas, and the run-up to the 2020 presidential election is no exception. According to a Pew survey of 13 countries, international approval of the United States has spiraled to the lowest levels since the organization began tracking it. The coronavirus pandemic has exacerbated the trend, the U.S. response to which has alarmed experts worldwide and ground much international travel to a standstill, disrupting the lives of those split between countries. A half-dozen Americans based outside the United States said that a defining aspect of life abroad in recent times has been watching attitudes toward America shift.
“In service-heavy Florida, minimum wage boost is on ballot” via Mike Schneider of The Associated Press — Joseph Gourgue wishes he could help out his children and grandchildren financially. Still, his $9 an hour wage as a wheelchair attendant at Orlando International Airport doesn’t let him. Gourgue, 61, is hoping a gradual increase in Florida’s minimum wage paves the way for him to be able to help his children pay for weddings or buy gifts for his two grandchildren. Florida voters this election cycle are deciding whether to raise the state’s minimum wage to $15 an hour over the next six years. “I would save up money. I want to be able to help out my grandkids before I go,” Gourgue said. “I can put the money back into the economy.”
Many Florida service workers will benefit from the minimum wage hike of Amendment 2, but business owners say they will be the ones who suffer, Image via AP.
“State GOP far out raises Democrats” via The News Service of Florida — The Republican Party of Florida raised more than $18 million from Aug. 14 through Thursday, dwarfing the amount raised by the state Democratic Party. The GOP reported raising $18,069,093 and spending $20,635,487 during the period, while the Florida Democratic Party reported raising $4,271,245 and spending $8,563,102. Among large recent contributions to the Republican Party were $500,000 last week from Las Vegas casino magnate Sheldon Adelson, reports show.
“The race for Miami’s perennial tossup seat starts leaning Democratic” via Patricia Mazzei of The New York Times — It felt like 100 degrees on a recent Saturday when Carlos A. Giménez, the Republican candidate in Florida’s most competitive congressional race, stood on a busy street corner in the Miami suburbs with a gaggle of masked relatives and campaign volunteers, waving signs at the honking cars. The driver of a souped-up Toyota Corolla revved his engine. A street vendor took advantage of the political gawkers to step in between traffic lanes, selling fresh guavas for $5 a bag. On the opposite corner, a homeless man seized the moment and held up a piece of cardboard where he had scrawled, “Biden Harris.” Many, if not most, people recognized Mr. Gimenez, the mayor of Miami-Dade County.
“Poll shows Jacksonville Republican Wyman Duggan headed to reelection in HD 15” via A.G. Gancarski of Florida Politics — A fresh survey from St. Pete Polls suggest that while Democrats have made gains in Jacksonville’s House District 15 this cycle, the Republican in the state House should survive them. The survey of 315 likely voters in the Westside Jacksonville district shows that incumbent Rep. Duggan is poised to defeat Democratic challenger Tammyette Thomas when the votes are counted Tuesday night. Running in a D+3 district, Duggan is the choice of 50% of the voters surveyed, with Thomas the choice of 41%. When the field is narrowed to voters who have already voted (87% of the sample), the numbers narrow, with Duggan leading by only three points. This suggests that the voters on Election Day will be Republican or Republican-leaning.
“Poll: Fiona McFarland surges as race for HD 72 goes down to the wire” via Jacob Ogles of Florida Politics — A final St. Pete Polls survey in House District 72 shows McFarland with a small lead on Democrat Drake Buckman. The poll, commissioned by Florida Politics, shows McFarland the choice of 48% of likely voters, Buckman the pick for 47%, and another 5% undecided. Pollsters report a 4.6% margin of error. Respondents were polled on Oct. 31 and Nov. 1, days before the race gets settled. But the results show McFarland surging as the election draws near. A poll taken by the same outfit on Oct. 17 and 18 found Buckman leading 48% to 44%. The same poll shows Joe Biden maintaining an advantage in the district despite Republicans holding a registration edge.
“Ron DeSantis urges Floridians to shoot down $15 minimum wage amendment” via Jason Delgado of Florida Politics — DeSantis urged Floridians to vote against a proposed constitutional amendment that would raise Florida’s minimum wage to $15 an hour. “Now is not the time,” DeSantis said in a statement. “Ballot Amendment 2 would close small businesses, kill jobs, and reduce wages.” The Governor’s statement comes only hours before Florida voters will finally decide on Amendment 2. If passed, the amendment would bump the minimum wage to $10 an hour in 2021. It would then rise $1 each year until it hits $15 in 2026. The amendment’s proponents argue a higher wage would lift many out of poverty, increase consumerism, and reduce social program dependency.
Ron DeSantis is urging Florida voters to reject Amendment 2. Image via Twitter.
“Campaign for sales tax raises $1.7 million as charter school advocates join in support” via David Bauerlein of the Florida Times-Union — The campaign for a half-cent sales tax for schools is steaming toward Election Day Tuesday with broad backing from the Duval County School Board, charter school advocates, business groups, Mayor Lenny Curry, teacher unions, builders, the former and current owners of the Jaguars, and even a motorcycle club that’s riding in favor of the referendum. Supporters of traditional public schools and charter schools have had their share of battles, but they’re on the same page, at least for the referendum. They’ve channeled more than $1.7 million to two political committees working to pass the tax.
“Police reform at center of Jacquelyn McMiller, Kevin Anderson battle for mayorship in Fort Myers” via Jacob Ogles of Florida Politics — A bust of Robert E. Lee just left a Fort Myers Park after years of objections from Black residents. Is the city now ready to elect its first Black female Mayor? It’s one of the questions tacitly at play in the seat of Lee County. Mayor Randy Henderson’s resignation this year to run for Congress triggered a Special Election early. Now, former police officer and current City Councilman Kevin Anderson faces longtime Dunbar leader Jacquelyn McMiller for the city’s highest office. Anderson was the top vote-getter in an August primary. But McMiller has seen significant help flow in from the Florida Democratic Party as leaders look to boost candidates in down-ballot races.
“Orange Democrats warn of mysterious ‘Stay home’ robocalls on election’s eve” via Steven Lemongello and Mario Ariza of the Orlando Sentinel — A mysterious robocall on the day before Election Day telling people to “stay home” is raising red flags among Orange County Democrats. But it’s unclear if the calls have anything to do with the U.S. election because they may have been heard first in Canada. Orange County Democratic Chair Wes Hodge said the call, which features a robotic voice and only lasts about eight seconds, was received by at least 13 Democrats in the county. “This is just a test call,” the voice says. “Time to stay home. Stay safe and stay home.”
“Brevard PACs deal in wide range of murky influence near and far” via Jim Waymer of Florida Today — How do politicos get around the $1,000 per candidate limit on campaign contributions in Florida, so they don’t have to pull punches with opponents? They create a political action committee, or dozens of them, swapping donations with allies from near and far, and then letting the attack ads rip. It’s extremely complex and all part of how politics is played around the state. And it’s 100% legal. A political action committee, or PAC, is an organization created under the Internal Revenue Code that is allowed to pool unlimited campaign contributions from various sources and donate those funds to campaigns for or against candidates, ballot initiatives or legislation, as long as they itemize the expenses, in Florida at least.
“Jack Sanborn, former Santa Rosa TDC member, accused of stealing campaign sign” via Annie Blanks of the Pensacola News Journal — An arrest warrant has been issued for Milton resident Sanborn, a longtime former board member of the Santa Rosa County Tourist Development Council, after he was accused of stealing a political sign. According to a news release from the State Attorney’s Office issued Monday afternoon, Sanborn is wanted on suspicion of one count of petit theft for the alleged theft of a political sign. The charge is a second-degree misdemeanor that is punishable by up to 60 days in county jail and a maximum fine of $500.
Corona Florida
“COVID-19 hospitalizations increase” via The News Service of Florida — As of a Monday afternoon count, 2,474 people were hospitalized with primary diagnoses of the virus, according to the state Agency for Health Care Administration website. While hospitalization numbers fluctuate daily, the number reported Monday was more than 200 higher than on any of the four previous Mondays. Miami-Dade County had 332 people hospitalized Monday with primary diagnoses of COVID-19, the largest number in the state. It was followed by Broward County, with 239; Hillsborough County, with 174; Palm Beach County, with 153; Orange County, with 149; Duval County, with 135; and Pinellas County, with 127, the state numbers show.
“Reported COVID-19 cases climbed in October in Collier County, but reported deaths declined” via Dan DeLuca of Naples Daily News — The number of COVID-19 cases reported in Collier County rose sharply in October, a troubling sign heading into what medical experts believe will be a difficult winter battle with the novel coronavirus. At least a portion of this increase can likely be attributed to rising cases at Collier schools and colleges as well as the decision by DeSantis to move the state into Phase 3 reopening on Sept. 27. The move allowed for full customer capacity for restaurants, bars, nightclubs, and gyms. At the time, some epidemiologists said the governor’s decision came too soon and would lead to a jump in cases.
“Fort Lauderdale Mayor criticized for not quarantining after coronavirus exposure” via Naomi Feinstein of the Miami New Times — Even though Dean Trantalis and his chief of staff were among the city workers who had been exposed, the Mayor, who is up for reelection, has been out on the campaign trail this week, defying the quarantine orders suggested by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control. Kevin Cochrane, a four-year resident of Fort Lauderdale, tells New Times he was startled to see the mayor out and about. “I actually ran into the mayor when he wasn’t wearing a mask, and then, right when I got home, [I] went on Facebook and saw that he had actually been at a campaign event the day before, where he also was seen breaking quarantine, being clustered around two dozen kids who may or may not even know if he was exposed or not,” Cochrane says.
Fort Lauderdale Mayor Dean Trantalis failed to quarantine after a COVID-19 diagnosis. Image via South Florida Gay News.
“Sarasota-Manatee sees highest daily increase in COVID-19 cases since July” via Alan Shaw of the Sarasota Herald-Tribune — According to the Florida Department of Health, Sarasota and Manatee counties reported 304 new cases of COVID-19. Sarasota County had 155 new COVID-19 cases reported and an average positivity rate of 4.9% for the last week, according to the FDOH. Manatee County reported 149 new cases, with an average positivity rate of 6.7% for the last week, according to the FDOH. For both Sarasota and Manatee counties, that’s the highest single-day increase in cases since July. No new COVID-19 deaths were reported in Sarasota County, a total of 344 have died there; no new COVID-19 deaths were reported in Manatee County, a total of 330 have died there.
“AdventHealth recruiting volunteers for COVID-19 vaccine trial” via Naseem S. Miller of the Orlando Sentinel — AdventHealth is now a testing site for Johnson & Johnson’s COVID-19 vaccine trial, aiming to recruit 4,500 adults during the next eight weeks. “We want to bring the vaccine to where it can do the most good — in those communities and groups most at-risk for COVID-19,” according to an AdventHealth statement, encouraging participation by volunteers from diverse backgrounds, including African Americans, Hispanics, seniors, and front-line health workers. Johnson & Johnson’s COVID-19 vaccine trial is one of 11 large-scale trials going through the final phase of testing before a decision for approval.
Corona nation
“White House sidestepped FDA to distribute hydroxychloroquine to pharmacies, documents show. Trump touted the pills to treat COVID-19.” via Christopher Rowland, Debbie Cenziper and Lisa Rein of The Washington Post — For days, Trump had touted the off-label use of the anti-malarial drug hydroxychloroquine as a potential cure for COVID-19, the disease caused by the novel coronavirus, despite a lack of scientific evidence it worked and amid mounting concerns about the dangers to patients with underlying medical conditions. Trump trade adviser Peter Navarro wanted to make sure the administration’s top vaccine expert would be on board with a White House plan to distribute the unproven drug to hard-hit cities. “The first thing out of his mouth was, ‘I want to know what team you are on,’ ” recalled Rick Bright, who at the time was responsible for stockpiling drugs for medical emergencies as director of the federal Biomedical Advanced Research and Development Authority.
Donald Trump trade adviser Peter Navarro is making sure vaccine experts toe the line on an unproved COVID-19 drug.
“Top Trump adviser bluntly contradicts President on COVID-19 threat, urging all-out response” via Lena H. Sun and Josh Dawsey of The Washington Post — A top White House coronavirus adviser sounded alarms Monday about a new and deadly phase in the health crisis, pleading with top administration officials for “much more aggressive action,” even as Trump continues to assure rallygoers the nation is “rounding the turn” on the pandemic. Deborah Birx’s internal report, shared with top White House and agency officials, contradicts Trump on numerous points: While the president holds large campaign events with hundreds of attendees, most without masks, she explicitly warns against them. While the president blames rising cases on more testing, she says testing is “flat or declining” in many areas where cases are rising.
“Doctors begin to crack COVID’s mysterious long-term effects” via Sarah Toy, Sumathi Reddy and Daniela Hernandez of The Wall Street Journal — Nearly a year into the global coronavirus pandemic, scientists, doctors and patients are beginning to unlock a puzzling phenomenon: For many patients, including young ones who never required hospitalization, COVID-19 has a devastating second act. Many are dealing with symptoms weeks or months after they were expected to recover, often with puzzling new complications that can affect the entire body. What is surprising to doctors is that many such cases involve people whose original cases weren’t the most serious, undermining the assumption that patients with mild COVID-19 recover within two weeks.
“COVID-19 burden falls heavily on middle-aged men” via Jon Kamp and Jason Douglas of The Wall Street Journal — In the U.S., federal data show men represent about two-thirds of COVID-19 deaths among middle-aged people, and similar trends have emerged overseas. Scientists say there are a constellation of likely reasons, including health problems like high blood pressure and diabetes, that men tend to have more often, leading to worse COVID-19 outcomes. But researchers also are homing in on potential biological factors, including women’s more able immune systems. And research has shown men are more prone to poor hand hygiene, lax mask-wearing habits and delaying medical care. Identifying the factors at play is important, health experts say, to help guide effective prevention and treatment.
Corona economics
“U.S. economy faces severe strains after election with Washington potentially paralyzed” via Jeff Stein of The Washington Post — America’s economy faces severe new strains in the two months between Tuesday’s election and January, a period when Washington could be consumed by political paralysis and gridlock. This window is typically used by successful presidential candidates to plan for the outset of their administration. Still, several large economic sectors are bracing to be hit by both an increase in coronavirus cases and winter weather arrival. These factors could exacerbate extreme slowdowns in the travel, restaurant and hospitality industries and further depress an oil industry already roiled by low prices. Millions of Americans are also at risk of having their power and water shut off with unpaid utility bills coming due.
COVID-19 and political gridlock sent shock waves through the U.S. economy. Image via AP.
“Unemployment payments top $18 billion” via The News Service of Florida — Florida topped $18 billion paid out in its unemployment system since the COVID-19 pandemic in March. From March 15 to Sunday, the system had paid $18,003,063,834 to claimants, with much of the money coming from the federal government, according to information on the Florida Department of Economic Opportunity website. In all, the state had received 4,508,856 claims during the period, with 2,078,413 claimants paid.
“These are the airlines teetering on the brink of COVID-19 ruin” via Anurag Kotoky and Angus Whitley of Bloomberg — Having a home government with deep pockets is emerging as key in terms of whether an airline will make it through the coronavirus pandemic. According to an analysis by Bloomberg News, carriers in jurisdictions where there is scant support from up high are most likely to go bust. Using the Z-score method developed by Edward Altman in the 1960s to predict bankruptcies, Bloomberg sifted through available data on listed commercial airlines to identify the ones most prone to financial strife. The list now is populated more by carriers in Africa and Latin America, where some have already folded or entered administration.
More corona
“Trump’s dismissal of COVID-19 risk paved way to White House outbreak” via Jennifer Jacobs of Bloomberg — From the pandemic’s earliest days, Trump was of two minds on coronavirus. In public, he was dismissive and belittling of the virus, and those who feared it. In private, for all his bravado, he acted like a man who dreaded catching it. He told his then-chief of staff, Mick Mulvaney, to “stay the hell home” from a trip to India in February because he didn’t want to be around Mulvaney and his lingering cough, according to people familiar with the trip. Even before the virus, Trump was known to dart to the other side of the room if someone sneezed. He used medical wipes labeled “not for use on skin” to scrub his hands, along with the ever-present Purell.
Despite his appearances at rallies and the cavalier attitude about COVID-19 at the White House, Donald Trump personally went to extreme measures not to get the virus.
“As the virus rages, some are convinced it’s too late to stop it” via Mike Baker of The New York Times — In northern Idaho, which is facing record cases and hospitalizations, the local health board last month repealed a requirement that people wear masks in Kootenai County. “I personally do not care whether anybody wears a mask or not,” Walt Kirby said at a public hearing on the issue. “If they want to be dumb enough to walk around out there and expose themselves and others to this, that’s fine with me.” Governors around the country, particularly Republican ones, follow the president’s lead in resisting new restrictions. With the weather cooling and people moving their lives back indoors, the virus has begun an autumn rampage across the country far exceeding the peaks of months prior.
Statewide
“DeSantis declares Ocoee Massacre Remembrance Day” via Desiree Stennett of the Orlando Sentinel — A century after Black Ocoee residents were killed and terrorized by a white mob in response to a Black man attempting to vote, DeSantis on Monday declared Nov. 2 as 1920 Ocoee Election Day Massacre Remembrance Day in Florida. The proclamation followed an Oct. 23 request by the American Civil Liberties Union of Florida and the Orange County Branch of the NAACP. The massacre began on Election Day on Nov. 2, 1920, and lasted into the next day, culminating in a lynching. It is unknown how many people were killed.
“High court rejects appeal from Florida death row inmate” via The Associated Press — The Supreme Court has rejected an appeal from a Florida death row inmate whose conviction was based in part on the testimony of a controversial jailhouse informant. The justices did not comment in refusing to hear the case of James Dailey, who was convicted in the killing of 14-year-old Shelly Boggio in the Tampa area in 1985. According to an investigation, lawyers for Dailey say he was convicted on circumstantial evidence and the word of a jailhouse informant whose testimony has sent dozens of people to prison, including four who were sentenced to death. The other person convicted in Boggio’s killing now says he was solely responsible for her death. That man, Jack Pearcy, is serving a life sentence in prison.
Death row inmate James Dailey has lost his final appeal. Image via ABC.
“Personnel note: Katie Edwards-Walpole joins Becker” via Drew Wilson of Florida Politics — Law and lobbying firm Becker announced that Edwards-Walpole is joining the firm. The former state Representative will serve as a Senior Attorney in Becker’s Government Law and Lobbying group in West Palm Beach, where she will focus on agricultural, water, environmental and land use issues. “We are so happy to land Katie,” said Bernie Friedman, who chairs the Government Law and Lobbying practice. “Her keen legal skills, extensive government background, knowledge of regulatory process and procedures, and large network of contacts throughout Florida will be of great value for Becker and our clients, especially those in the agricultural, environmental and water industries.”
D.C. matters
“Scott breaks with Trump’s ‘Fire Fauci’ call” via A.G. Gancarski of Florida Politics — U.S. Sen. Scott broke with Trump on the future of Fauci on Monday. In response to a “Fire Fauci” chant at his rally in Opa-locka Sunday night, the President hinted at an imminent dismissal of the federal government’s infectious disease specialist. “Don’t tell anybody,” the President said to the South Florida crowd, “but let me wait until a little bit after the election.” Whether that was a serious call or just a joke from the chief executive is unknown, but Scott took pains to distance himself from the President’s desire to undermine the doctor Monday on CNN. “I have a very good working relationship with Dr. Fauci,” Scott told host John King. “I know he’s been working hard.”
Local notes
“The Trump effect in Palm Beach County: His presidency altered business and politics; his personality affected the people” via Antonio Fins, Christine Stapleton, Wendy Rhodes and Alexandra Clough of the Palm Beach Post — In early 2017, Kelly Smallridge was flipping through a PowerPoint presentation at a luncheon when she stopped on a slide with photos of the new President, Trump, and other Palm Beach County-connected members of the administration. “I’m not sure where I am going with this,” said Smallridge, president and CEO of the Business Development Board of Palm Beach County, pointing to the slide. “But, there’s something here.” At the time, Trump had been President for about two months. He had named two local county residents, Wilbur Ross and Ben Carson, to his Cabinet. And while the country was still getting acquainted with the commander in chief, Palm Beach County was getting acclimated to a presidential visit to his Mar-a-Lago club.
“Principal in Holocaust controversy ousted for second time by school board” via Andrew Marra of The Palm Beach Post — Palm Beach County School Board members voted Monday to oust a controversial principal for a second time, reversing an earlier decision to reinstate him as they struggled to navigate roiling outrage over his remarks about the Holocaust. The 7-0 vote was the latest — but possibly not the last — turn in the battle over the career of former Spanish River High Principal William Latson. The veteran administrator was fired last October after sparking national outrage by telling a parent he “can’t say the Holocaust is a factual, historical event because I am not in a position to do so as a school district employee.”
Boca Raton High School Principal (and notorious Holocaust doubter) William Latson has been fired again.
“Sheriff’s report: Joel Greenberg confronted husband of Seminole Tax Collector candidate at early-voting site” via Martin E. Comas of the Orlando Sentinel — Deputies were called to a Seminole County early-voting location last week after Greenberg, the former Seminole County tax collector charged with stalking a political opponent and sex trafficking related to how he accessed a state database, became involved in a confrontation with the husband of the Democratic candidate to replace him, according to a Sheriff’s Office report. Reached Monday, Greenberg denied his involvement and said he wasn’t even at the Lake Mary library branch on Oct 26 when Wayne Dictor, husband of Lynn “Moira” Dictor, told deputies Greenberg approached him in the parking lot. Greenberg said he was at a wedding that day.
“JEA board selects Jay Stowe as next CEO” via David Bauerlein of The Florida Times-Union — The JEA board selected Stowe as the next CEO of the utility during a Monday night special meeting, capping the national search for an executive who will lead JEA after the messy aftermath of a tumultuous sales attempt in 2019. Stowe is the founder of Stowe Utility Group in Chattanooga, Tennessee, and a former executive for the Tennessee Valley Authority. Board members said Stowe came with experience in electric and water utility services, which JEA also provides. “I thought his experience as a CEO, his experience as a municipal power operator in all phases of our business was the thing that really carried the day,” board Chairman John Baker said.
“St. Pete is right up there with the Midwest for people making $60,000” via Bill Varian of the Tampa Bay Times — It may not feel like it, what with runaway rents and home prices, but St. Petersburg ranks highly among the best cities to live in the U.S. on an annual income of $60,000. That’s according to a survey by SmartAsset, an online site that recommends financial advisers. St. Petersburg ranked 23rd on the list, which also gave high marks to many small cities in the Midwest and the northern U.S. The top-ranked cities included Sioux Falls, S.D. at No. 1, followed by Billings, Montana and Lincoln, Nebraska. In fact, St. Pete was the only city in Florida to crack the Top 25, which included surprisingly few cities from the south.
Top opinion
“I voted against Trump, but it doesn’t mean I’m rooting for the Democrats” via Megan McArdle of The Washington Post — I’ve watched so many disaffected conservatives and libertarians explain why they think the Republican Party can only be redeemed by its utter destruction in Tuesday’s elections. And as that wish might be on the brink of coming true, I think it’s worth explaining why at least a few of us aren’t rooting for it at all. Like many people, I didn’t really vote for Biden; I voted against Trump. But I have no hope that doing so will somehow teach the Republican Party not to mess with crypto-racist buffoons who have authoritarian instincts and an itchy Twitter finger. That sort of lesson is the kind of thing that party elites can and do learn, as they maneuver toward a winning electoral coalition.
Opinions
“Now is our time to affirm that the ballot is mightier than the bullet” via Dana Milbank of The Washington Post — Election Day is here, and Americans have reason to be tense. Trump has told confidants he’ll declare victory Tuesday night, even before the votes get counted. Federal authorities were building a “non-scalable” fence around the White House Monday to protect a man who refuses to commit to a peaceful transfer of power. The FBI said Sunday it is investigating a convoy of Trump supporters who apparently attempted to run a Biden campaign bus off a Texas interstate; Trump praised the perpetrators and condemned the FBI.
“The united hates of America” via Carlos Lozada of The Washington Post — It can be the fear of losing status in the face of the country’s racial and demographic transformations; or it can be the anger at never receiving enough status to avoid the threat of harm, harassment, even death at the hands of an unfair justice system. The cultural and political trenches of the Trump years, whether #MeToo and Black Lives Matter, the resurgence of racist forces, or the horrors at the southern border, all intensify the sense of identity. Trump instinctively grasps the power of these sentiments and has aggravated them whenever possible, from the birtherism lie to the demonization of Mexican immigrants to the specter of Cory Booker overrunning White suburbia.
“My party is destroying itself on the altar of Trump” via Benjamin Ginsberg of The Washington Post — Trump has failed the test of leadership. His bid for reelection is foundering. And his only solution has been to launch an all-out, multimillion-dollar effort to disenfranchise voters — first by seeking to block state laws to ease voting during the pandemic, and now, in the final stages of the campaign, by challenging the ballots of individual voters unlikely to support him. This is as un-American as it gets. It returns the Republican Party to the bad old days of “voter suppression” that landed it under a court order to stop such tactics — an order lifted before this election. It puts the party on the wrong side of demographic changes in this country.
“Lincoln Project: We’re fighting for a better America. A Biden era would be a good start.” via Reed Galen, Steve Schmidt, Rick Wilson and Stuart Stevens of USA Today — Last December, we launched The Lincoln Project with a clear mission: Defeat Trump and Trumpism at the ballot box. Today tens of millions of Americans are making their voices heard. We believe they will repudiate this president and his core beliefs. Those of us who formed The Lincoln Project had spent much of our professional lives working to elect Republicans. Many in our former tribe have expressed anger and disbelief that we would turn against our own party to take on a sitting president. In our minds, there was never any other option. The party we once called home exists now as a corrupted shell of its former self, informed by neither principle nor philosophy.
“Too many voters, not enough suppression tactics. Hello, Election Day 2020!” via Frank Cerabino of The Palm Beach Post — Now that Election Day is upon us, it’s a good time to state the obvious. Every vote doesn’t count. We keep repeating that bromide, “every vote counts.” But we know it’s not true. If you don’t believe me, ask the 4.7 million Republican voters in California. Or the 1 million Democratic voters in Missouri. I know. I know. We Floridians are spoiled by our votes counting more than most Americans. And 20 years ago we proved it, by putting George W. Bush in the White House on the margin of just 537 Florida votes. But there are plans in the works to make Florida votes not count either. And you ought to be paying attention to that.
“Tampa Bay schools need to keep masks in place” via the Tampa Bay Times editorial board — This is not the time for area school districts to endanger public safety by abandoning mask mandates. Masks are a valuable tool for limiting the spread of the coronavirus — both on-campus and across the community — and school leaders should keep this simple precaution in place as Tampa Bay continues its march to reopen safely. School districts across the region wisely adopted the mandates as part of a multipronged approach to reopening amid the pandemic. Along with new sanitation protocols and social distancing, the masks have provided another layer of protection and a confidence-boost for students yearning to return to the classroom.
Today’s Sunrise
Our prolonged national nightmare — also known as the 2020 presidential election — is about to reach its conclusion.
Also, on today’s Sunrise:
— The presidential campaigns wrap up in Florida. Trump’s final appearance here before Election Day was a midnight rally at the Opa-locka Airport Sunday.
— Democrats responded with one last appearance by Obama, who was in South Florida last night.
— The polls are open till 7 p.m. The state will begin posting returns online at 8 p.m. once the polls close in northwest Florida counties in the Central time zone. Trump says Democrats are running scared in Florida, but Tallahassee City Commissioner Diane Williams Cox says this election will be like Moses parting the Red Sea.
— The surge in COVID-19 cases continues in Florida as the state Department of Health reported almost 4,700 new infections Monday, as well as 45 additional fatalities. But Trump says lockdowns are the real threat — not the virus — and during his South Florida rally, the crowd urged him to fire Dr. Fauci … the nation’s premiere epidemiologist.
— The President doesn’t actually have the legal authority to fire Fauci, but he hinted it could happen after the election.
— 100 years after it happened, Florida’s Governor declares Nov. 2 to be a day of remembrance for the Black residents of Ocoee who were murdered and terrorized by a white mob after a Black man tried to vote in the election of 1920.
— And finally, checking in with two Florida men: one bagged a gator that had been stalking him for years; the other won a million-dollar lottery jackpot with a ticket he had forgotten.
“After the election, you may be upset. Look for signs of happiness.” via Christopher Spata of the Tampa Bay Times — It was a year ago this week that happiness appeared in St. Petersburg. The signs are red and yellow and simple with the lone word “happiness” and a little heart below. They’re made to last about 20 years, said Gary King, the 75-year-old retired marine mechanic and sand sculptor from Treasure Island, who began nailing them to poles along busy thoroughfares last November. There are now, to his count, more than 140 of them. Some were placed by special request after strangers messaged him online, hoping “happiness” might come to their corner of the city. King says that driving around putting up the signs is his therapy, after a lifetime marked by trauma and PTSD.
Gary King brings signs of happiness around the St. Petersburg area. Image via Facebook.
Happy birthday
Happy birthday to Reps. Delores Hogan Johnson and Susan Valdes, Clay Barker, Nicole Graganella, Capital City Consulting’s Kenny Granger, and former Sen. Jack Latvala.
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Goodmorning. After Yosemite selfies, bathroom selfies, and big fish you caught off the Florida coast selfies, ballot selfies are some of the most popular renditions of the genre. But be careful out there today—only 25 states plus D.C. have permitted you to take a picture with your completed ballot.
Happy voting!
MARKETS
NASDAQ
10,909.27
– 0.02%
S&P
3,304.97
+ 1.07%
DJIA
26,924.90
+ 1.60%
GOLD
1,895.00
+ 0.80%
10-YR
0.848%
– 3.10 bps
OIL
36.93
+ 3.19%
*As of market close
Markets: In the calm before the storm, stocks rebounded from last week’s sell-off. Pro investors are looking at a wide variety of indicators, such as individual county results, to tease out whether Biden or Trump will prevail.
Economy: Good news from the manufacturing sector, which in October expanded at its fastest pace in two years and saw new orders hit their highest level since 2004. This is the last major economic data release before the election.
Once upon a time, Americans learned the results of an election when a messenger on horseback galloped into town. Eventually that turned into radio, then the dependable delivery of Walter Cronkite, and now…280 characters on Twitter.
In 2020, social media platforms have become a go-to source for election information—and misinformation. So if you’re one of the millions of Americans who’ll be “working” today with a social media feed open on your second monitor, here’s what to expect.
The run-up
Russian interference in the 2016 election and subsequent bouts with fake news have forced social media execs to enact new policies targeting misinformation, election interference, and conspiracy theories. Changes include…
Labels: Facebook and Twitter started slapping warning signs on more false and misleading content, including posts from the president.
Advertising: Last fall, Twitter and TikTok banned all political ads. Facebook created a publicly available database for transparency and banned new ads from running this week.
Slowing virality: Twitter added extra friction to retweets, and Facebook and Instagram are lightly pressing the brake on viral content this week. So, yes, it’s Zuck’s fault your post only got 15 likes.
Big picture: Many of these new policies are controversial, inconsistent in enforcement, and still in flux, OneZero reports. Not all experts think it’s been enough to protect voters.
Today’s plan
There’s a reason Facebook calls its election ops center a “war room.” Platforms have expanded their arsenals this election cycle to help voters through a confusing time.
Election hubs: Facebook, Instagram, Twitter, and Snapchat are highlighting election information like where votes are still being counted, which results have been verified, and how ballot counting works.
Confirming results: Platforms are also using labels to limit candidates’ abilities to prematurely declare victory when those victories aren’t yet confirmed.
What counts as official? Yesterday, Twitter said it’s using seven news outlets with verified decision desks. It will require corroboration from at least two outlets or an announcement from state election officials.
Odds and ends: TikTok will show live Associated Press results. Pinterest is labeling or deleting content that undermines election integrity. And Facebook’s WhatsApp and Messenger platforms are limiting message forwarding to prevent misinformation from going viral.
As you rush to send off one last email or tidy up that spreadsheet before heading out to vote, just know you’re not alone—balancing the work day with Election Day is a headache for millions of Americans.
A 2017 Pew Research survey revealed that 14% of voters don’t vote because they are too busy or have scheduling conflicts.
This year, more companies are stepping up to the plate, clearing any surprise all-hands from the cal to give employees time to make it to the polls today.
More than 1,700 organizations have joined Time to Vote, a nonpartisan initiative spearheaded by Patagonia, Levi Strauss, and PayPal that encourages employee participation in elections. Four hundred orgs were involved in 2018.
And if “encouragement” isn’t enough, employers are legally required to give workers time off to vote in 30 states.
Zoom out: This Election Day, many employees won’t have to choose between their professional and civic duties. Nearly 100 million Americans have already voted, more than two-thirds of the total turnout in 2016.
But you can use it to create generational wealth like the 1%.
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Two mall landlords, CBL Properties and Pennsylvania Real Estate Investment Trust (PREIT), filed for bankruptcy on Sunday.
With most brick-and-mortar retail getting walloped by the pandemic, this news was a “when, not if” scenario. More than 30 of CBL’s retail tenants have also gone bankrupt this year, including JCPenney, Ann Taylor-owner Ascena Retail Group, and Pier 1 Imports.
During the strictest lockdown periods in the spring, Tennessee-based CBL barely collected any rent—just 27% of what it was owed in April and a third in May.
Zoom out: Malls in general are in bad shape, but CBL and PREIT in particular? Not positioned well. They own so-called “B-class” malls, which are located in less affluent/less urban areas. As retailers across the country shrink their real estate footprints, experts think these B-class properties will be among the first casualties.
+ While we’re here…Friendly’s, a Northeast diner chain and classic post-school hangout spot, also declared bankruptcy. Just writing that brought back a flood of memories.
As our collective obsession over a mullet-donning, big cat-peddling zoo owner earlier this year shows, Netflix has a profound ability to drive collective cultural moments. The streaming platform is at it again with The Queen’s Gambit, a show about a fictional chess prodigy whose popularity has many viewers confronting the uncomfortable question: Is chess actually cool?
The numbers say yes
According to data from Apptopia, daily U.S. downloads of the top four mobile chess games across the Apple and Google app stores are up 63% since the show debuted.
Chess-mania had been building even before The Queen’s Gambit. Hours watched of chess on the streaming platform Twitch roughly doubled every month from January until May.
Zoom out: It is jarring to some purists that the ancient game of chess is finding new life on the backs of modern tech platforms, but those highest up in the game are open to it. “I’ve always wanted to bring it to the masses,” says Hikaru Nakamura, a hugely popular chess streamer on Twitch and the top-ranked blitz chess player in the world.
WHAT ELSE IS BREWING
Walmart has ended its yearslong partnership with Bossa Nova Robotics to use robots for inventory tasks in its stores.
Clorox sales grew 27% from a year ago and profit doubled. Times have never been better for cleaning products companies.
Apple will hold an event Nov. 10 called “One More Thing.” Tech watchers think the company will reveal computers running on its own processors, rather than Intel’s.
Rental car companies have rebounded from the industry collapse in the spring thanks to a) rising used car prices and b) general skittishness toward air travel, the WSJ writes.
Wingstop is testing bone-in thighs because chicken wings are getting so expensive.
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BREW’S BETS
In marketing and on the job hunt? Marketing Brew put together an excellent guide to landing a position at creative and media agencies, featuring interviews with top execs. Check it out.
Tech Tip Tuesday: 1) Google “how to vote” to bring up a curated block of information from Google that you can personalize by state or 2) take a breather on this website. On your phone, you can click the three lines in the upper right-hand corner to customize the experience.
Election grab bag: Four soothing hours of ballot counters counting ballots; election-fueled Google search trends; and a roundup of deals, discounts, and freebies to celebrate after you’ve voted.
The political world is all too real right now, so for one brief moment let’s escape to the White House as depicted in Hollywood scripts. Which of the following actors did not play a president in a film or television series?
Billy Bob Thornton, Julia Louis-Dreyfus, Nicholas Cage, or Samuel L. Jackson
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Tuesday, November 3, 2020
Good morning and welcome to Fox News First. Here’s what you need to know as you start your day … Trump or Biden? America heads to the polls — wondering when final result will be known
Voters will cast their ballots nationwide Tuesday to choose whether the next president of the United States will be Donald Trump or Joe Biden, even as tens of millions have already voted either early or through the mail.
By the time the polls close, a presidential election cycle that began more than three years ago — in July 2017 when former Rep. John Delaney of Maryland declared he was running for the Democratic nomination — will draw to a close as well.
But in 2020, many states, including key swing states, may count their votes more slowly than during typical years. There are also cases — such as in Pennsylvania and North Carolina — where elections boards will count ballots that are mailed on or before Election Day but are received days later.
Pennsylvania will accept ballots for up to three days after Election Day and North Carolina will accept ballots for nine days.
States that take longer to count their mail votes are likely to see vote counts that favor Trump early on Tuesday night as in-person totals come in and then a swing toward Biden later in the evening and potentially in the following days. CLICK HERE FOR MORE ON OUR TOP STORY.
In other developments:
– Could the 2020 election come down to one county?
– Howard Kurtz: Media may face premature victory claims in powder-keg election
– Sen. Kennedy calls Trump ‘an insult to the political elite’ who never ‘talks down’ to the working class
– Pennsylvania bakery’s election-themed ‘cookie poll’ is now showing clear front-runner
– Biden brings ‘anti-fracking activist’ Lady Gaga to Pa. rally, draws Trump campaign criticism
Trump warns Biden’s ‘far-left supporters’ may ‘loot and rob’ if they don’t like election outcomes
President Trump opened his second-to-last-ever rally for the presidency by touting his law-and-order message in Kenosha, Wis., on Monday night.
He said Democrats were “waging war on our police” as a “Back the blue!” chant broke out among the crowd.
The president then took aim at Joe Biden, warning that the Democratic presidential nominee was beholden to the progressive wing of his party — a faction that threatened to cause destruction in U.S. cities if the election outcome is not to their liking.
“Biden’s far-left supporters are threatening to loot and rob tomorrow if they don’t get their way,” Trump said. “Rioting, looting and arson will be prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law. I’m telling you that right now.”
Earlier in the day, Trump warned a crowd in Pennsylvania that Biden posed a threat to the state’s energy industry.
“A vote for Biden will be a vote to ban fracking, outlaw mining, explode energy costs and destroy Pennsylvania,” the president said. CLICK HERE FOR MORE.
In other developments:
– Trump rallies supporters in North Carolina amid final sprint before Election Day
– Trump says Supreme Court decision on Pennsylvania ballots is ‘dangerous,’ ‘will ‘induce violence’
– Pro-Trump boaters hold final San Diego Bay parade before Election Day
– 2020 presidential election ballots cast so far
Stars rally behind Biden, but Trump matches celebrity cash thanks to one showbiz leader
Democrat Joe Biden’s record-breaking fundraising haul was aided by broad support from celebrities who have poured at least $13.1 million into boosting his White House bid.
Roughly 6,165 people involved in show business and professional sports rallied behind the former vice president by donating to Biden’s presidential campaign and pro-Biden political action committees, according to campaign finance data compiled by the Center for Responsive Politics exclusively for Fox News.
In comparison, roughly 525 people in the entertainment world donated money to help reelect President Trump, the donor data through Oct. 14 shows.
While Trump, the former reality TV star, had far fewer celebrity backers for his reelection effort, he matched Biden’s celebrity donor total of about $13 million thanks to one wealthy entertainment leader.
Isaac “Ike” Perlmutter, chairman of Marvel Entertainment, which produces action-hero movies, gave a pro-Trump super PAC $10.5 million in September to help boost Trump’s efforts to win a second term.
Perlmutter, a billionaire Israeli-American executive, lists Palm Beach County in Florida as his address and has wielded influence with Trump as a pal and member of the president’s Mar-a-Lago club, according to ProPublica. Perlmutter donated to the pro-Trump America First Action group.
In total, data obtained by Fox News tracked $26.3 million in donations from nearly 6,700 individuals who listed an occupation related to show business or professional sports who gave to Trump or Biden’s presidential campaign or other groups supporting them. CLICK HERE FOR MORE.
In other developments:
– Lady Gaga’s pro-Biden video hit for mocking rural Americans
– 7 celebrities who have raised money for Biden
– Stars who have endorsed Trump for president
– Jon Voight slams Biden, says Trump ‘must win’ election
– What Hollywood has said about Biden and Trump
TODAY’S MUST-READS:
– Tucker Carlson: Why Donald Trump’s supporters love him so much
– Pennsylvania AG hit for predicting Trump will lose election before votes even counted
– Hannity: Democrats in a ‘full-fledged panic’ after Trump barnstorms swing states to massive crowds
– California police seek shirtless man, bikini-clad woman after American flag, hat snatched from Trump supporter
– Brady’s 2 TD passes, Succop’s 4 field goals lift Buccaneers
THE LATEST FROM FOX BUSINESS:
– California ballot initiative on gig workers could be among costliest in state’s history
– Trump-Biden election’s potential impact has 44% of business execs worried for their organization
– Facebook, Twitter to label candidate posts declaring premature victory on Election Day
– What a Trump or Biden victory would mean for your money
– Walmart abandons shelf-scanning robots, lets humans do work
#The Flashback: CLICK HERE to find out what happened on “This Day in History.”
SOME PARTING WORDS
Tucker Carlson discussed President Trump’s popularity with voters during Monday’s edition of “Tucker Carlson Tonight.” Carlson cited Trump’s rally in Butler, Pa., on Saturday night when “tens of thousands of people turned out to see him.”
“The crowd obscured the horizon,” Carlson said. “It looked like the pope came to Butler. When was the last time a political speech drew that many people? Well, the media didn’t ask and attacked the rally as a ‘super-spreader event.’”
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The Cleveland Clinic and the Bipartisan Policy Center have put together a helpful guide on health safety measures for those heading to the polls in person; if you’re not registered to vote, you can check here if your state has same-day voter registration
If you haven’t yet dropped off your mail-in ballot, you can do so today at an official drop box or your county election office
This is it. You’ve read the case for each candidate and our final polling update (here’s also a neat tracker from the WSJ of what the candidates have said about the issues); all that’s left is to count the votes. If you’re like most people (TFS team included), you’re probably relieved that it’s over, if somewhat anxious about the outcome.
Over the next few days, there will be many ‘hot takes’ that’ll become irrelevant within a few hours, and worse, there may be significant amounts of misinformation and disinformation that’ll take time to sort out. The election won’t be decided any faster or differently if we’re frantically refreshing Twitter and/or election results pages; we may, however, give ourselves an ulcer.
In that vein, we’re going to spend the rest of the week offering alternatives selected by TFS team to get your mind off of the election, whether that means waiting for votes to be counted or coming to terms with the results. We hope you’ll indulge us in our foray into the unknown. As always, please reach out any time with thoughts / questions / feedback.
For those looking for community and grounding, Braver Angels is offering religious and secular 15 minute gatherings between 7:00 pm and 2:00 am Eastern Time tonight. Led by a diverse array of religious and secular leaders, anyone is invited to join these gatherings during the night–as often as you need or feel moved.
Flesh wounds and rabbit stew abound in this classic, satirical, and comedic take on the legend of King Arthur and the quest for the Holy Grail. Monty Python leads a group of loyal knights to secure the Grail before a competing unit of French troops do the same. Along the way, they encounter rebellious serfs, a cave monster, and questions about swallow-to-coconut weight ratios, all of which assemble to create a journey of hysterical proportions. – Joe Vigliotti
Author and historian Daniele Bolelli narrates this podcast with epic tales from humanity’s past. Some episodes focus on events, some on individuals, and some on ideas. Bolelli is a gripping storyteller who combines meticulous research and personal insight to explore human nature and bring history to life.
– Spenser Dopp
Sean Connery (RIP) stars in the first James Bond movie. Bond discovers a plot to disrupt the upcoming space launch, and of course saves the day (and the world) with his notorious panache.
– Jihan Varisco Hidden Figures (Disney Plus, Amazon Prime):
Strong female characters + dramatic arc that’ll have you on the edge of your seat + SPACE! What more can I say?
– Annafi Wahed
What to Read
The Wizards of Armageddon, by Fred Kaplan (Amazon, Bookshop):
Captivating narrative of the strategists – both academics and government officials – who shaped US nuclear policies following the end of WWII. Based on declassified documents, published papers, and direct interviews, Kaplan weaves a fascinating account of the challenges confronting policymakers in a world with nuclear weapons.
– Jihan Varisco
In one sense the book is about a young man who leaves behind the comfort of his “normal” American upbringing to explore great American wildernesses, but that leaves out so much of what makes the story so compelling. Call it heroic or tragic, call it reckless LARPing or a spiritual journey, it’s probably all of these things and more.
– Brian Bellinger
Perfume: The Story of a Murderer, by Patrick Süskind, translated by John E. Woods (Amazon, Bookshop):
As a young orphan, Grenouille travels throughout 18th-century France, distinguishing objects from a great distance by smell alone. With time, this savante of scent unlocks the component elements of every person’s unique body smell – only to learn that he himself has no humanizing odor. Grenouille follows his obsession to craft the perfect recipe for a unique body scent, occasionally the product of orange rinds, dung, and murder. This is a must read for anyone curious about enfleurage for scent extraction and the animalistic forces that motivate human behavior.
– Monica Felix
A fun (if at times extremely frustrating) expand-and-conquer style board game. The gameplay is fairly simple once you figure out all the rules, but what makes it really great is the interaction with fellow players; you can play repeatedly with the same group and have a new outcome every time. Having to rely on your opponents for necessary supplies makes for dynamic gameplay where you’re half cooperating, half sabotaging, and constantly competing to win. There are also multiple expansion packs and other versions of the game, so if your group gets weary of the original landscape, you can take to the seas or to space to change things up.
– Brian Bellinger Geoguessr(Quiz):
This geography game is a lot of fun, and you won’t find anything else like it on the Internet. Basically, you’re plopped down on a random road somewhere in the world, in Google Maps Street View. Then you have to click and move around to try to discover where you are from reading street signs, looking at buildings and landmarks, and so on. When you think you know, you drop a pin on a world map. The closer you are, the more points you get.
– Owen Clarke
Arnold Schwarzenegger’s home fitness program(Activity):
Also known as what I *won’t* be doing today.
– Annafi Wahed
🗳️ Good morning and welcome to Election Day — Tuesday, Nov. 3, 2020 — a day you’ll always remember. Soak it in, maybe keep a diary on your phone (something simple, or you won’t do it), and take care of yourself.
Thank you to the Axios AM audience — the most interesting, demanding and delightful breakfast table in the world — for trusting us along the journey, and for all that we’ve learned from each other.
If you missed Jim VandeHei’s eight tips for a safe, sane election night, now’s a good time to check them out — or share them if they served you.
🎧 See you all night on Axios.com, and on 5-min. pop-up editions of our “Axios Today“ and “Axios Re:Cap“ podcasts, with hosts Niala Boodhoo and Dan Primack joining forces.
Today’s Smart Brevity™ count:1,193 words … 4½ minutes.
1 big thing … Scoop: Biden’s plan to assert control
Left, President Trump speaks Sunday night in Opa-locka, Fla. Right, Joe Biden puts on shades yesterday in Beaver County, Pa. Photos: Brendan Smialowski/AFP, Drew Angerer/Getty Images
If news organizations declare Joe Biden the mathematical president-elect, he plans to address the nation as its new leader — even if President Trump continues to fight in court, advisers tell me.
Why it matters: Biden advisers learned the lesson of 2000, when Al Gore hung back while George W. Bush declared victory in that contested election, putting the Democrat on the defensive while Bush acted like the winner.
So if Biden is declared the winner, he’ll begin forming his government and looking presidential— and won’t yield to doubts Trump might try to sow.
Biden’s schedule for today includes a clue to this posture: He “will address the nation on Election Night in Wilmington, Delaware.”
Biden campaign manager Jen O’Malley Dillon told reporters yesterday that even if all the votes aren’t counted tonight, the campaign should have “a very good sense of where we’re headed”:
“We’re not really concerned about what Donald Trump says. … We’re going to use our data, our understanding of where this is headed, and make sure that the vice president is addressing the American people.”
To show momentum, Biden may begin transition announcements quickly, starting with senior staff appointments.
That way, core aides won’t have to worry about their own jobs, but will immediately be able to get to work.
Biden plans to adopt what one confidant called “a healing tone,” and begin talking about the path forward in battling the coronavirus.
Look for Biden to embrace science, and talk up the role of Dr. Anthony Fauci, after Trump threatened Sunday to try to fire the trusted official.
From there, the transition would move with unprecedented speed:
Biden had eight years in the White House, and he’s surrounded by aides with decades of government experience.
So the transition has made the most thorough agency-by-agency preparations in history, including offices no one’s thinking about.
Biden has blueprints for staffing every single agency, and has extensive plans for executive orders, including ones to undo Trump actions.
Look for Biden to send all-business signals: He won’t pack the courts, and is unlikely to push for repeal of the Senate’s filibuster rule and its 60-vote requirement anytime soon.
Instead, look for Biden to push to pass as much as possible under the banner of budget reconciliation, which requires just a simple majority.
The Democratic data firm that predicted an election-night “red mirage” — a theoretical early lead by President Trump, based on in-person votes, that Joe Biden overtakes as more mail-in ballots are counted — says late turnout modeling shows that could still happen, Axios White House editor Margaret Talev writes.
Updated voting data from Hawkfish, funded by Mike Bloomberg, says Trump may look as if he’s on track to cross 270 electoral votes based on early returns, only to be overtaken once all mail-in ballots are counted.
Why it matters: It’s a reminder that both parties believe the race is closer than swing-state or national polls make it look.
States have different ways of tabulating early votes: A “blue mirage” could occur in states that instantly tabulate mail-ins, while in-person tallies lag.
Between the lines: The “red mirage” is a data-based argument to remind us that we shouldn’t expect to know the winner before we go to bed.
🎬See Margaret’s“Axios on HBO” segment about the “red mirage.”
3. 📺 Watching the battlegrounds
If it’s close, we could face a days-long waiting game to find out who the president-elect will be — especially if it comes down to Pennsylvania, where we might not know the results until at least Friday, Axios’ Stef Kight writes.
Election officials in some states, including Georgia and North Carolina, expressed confidence in being able to have clear (but not final) results tonight or tomorrow.
Most key states — except Pennsylvania, Wisconsin and Michigan — have begun processing absentee ballots.
Arizona, Florida and large counties in Texas have already started counting.
Michigan could take until Friday.
Reality check: No matter what anyone says on election night, waiting for mail ballots to be counted is normal and happens in every election.
Joe Biden salutes after speaking yesterday at Cleveland Burke Lakefront Airport in Ohio.
President Trump held a “Make America Great Again Victory Rally” yesterday at chilly Fayetteville Regional Airport in Fayetteville, N.C.
5. Cable ramps up news about news
On cable news, mentions of “misinformation” and “disinformation” have skyrocketed in the past few weeks, surpassing mentions of “Social Security,” “climate change” and “immigration,” Sara Fischer writes in her weekly Axios Media Trends newsletter, out later this morning.
The data, from the Stanford Cable TV News Analyzer, measures “minutes mentioned” about issues by networks over time, going back to 2010.
Viewership of stories about media disinformation and bias surged from September to October, according to Parse.ly:
A 717% increase in views on stories related to disinformation.
A 357% increase in views on stories about censorship.
204% more views on stories about media bias.
Between the lines: Journalists have focused on covering misinformation as a defensive maneuver against President Trump’s “fake news” charge.
Who Americans voted for in 2016 was a strong predictor of how they reacted to the pandemic, Axios’ Caitlin Owens writes from a new study in Nature.
“Partisan differences in physical distancing were linked to higher growth rates of infections and fatalities in pro-Trump counties than necessary,” the authors write.
Using geotracking data of about 15 million people per day, the study found that counties that voted for President Trump in 2016 saw a 24% decrease in movement and visits to non-essential services between March 9 and May 29 of this year. Counties that voted for Hillary Clinton saw a 38% drop.
This partisan gap remained after factoring in variables like counties’ coronavirus case counts, population density, income, racial makeup and age makeup.
The partisan gap increased with time.
The partisan response is likely at least partially attributable to Americans’ polarized media consumption.
The Ohio State political scientist Tom Woodshows that “2020’s momentous political events … seemingly had precisely zero effect on national presidential polling”:
“Baby Shark Dance,” the kid-friendly earworm launched in 2015, has become the most-viewed YouTube in history — over 7 billion views — passing “Despacito” (also 7 billion+), by Puerto Rico’s Luis Fonsi and Daddy Yankee.
How we got here, from creator PinkFong: “Baby Shark” recorded “a 20-week-streak on the Billboard Hot 100 and #6 on the Official Singles Chart, the highest position ever achieved by a children’s song in history.”
The viral dance challenge #BabySharkChallenge generated over 1 million cover videos around the world.
More than 98 million Americans had cast ballots by Monday evening, but turnout in some key battleground states lagged behind that in other parts of the country.
By Amy Gardner, Kayla Ruble, Michelle Ye Hee Lee and Emma Brown ● Read more »
GRAND RAPIDS, Michigan — President Trump ended his election campaign in the place that set him on a course to victory in 2016, appealing to the people of Michigan to power him to another come-from-behind victory.
A California judge ruled that Gov. Gavin Newsom’s executive order requiring mail-in ballots to be sent to every registered voter in the state was unconstitutional.
Political appointees at the Department of Homeland Security hailed the Trump administration’s border security accomplishments over the past four years and lambasted Twitter for its censorship of an official’s tweet.
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ASSOCIATED PRESS
AP Morning Wire – Nov 3, 2020
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AP MORNING WIRE
Good morning. In today’s AP Morning Wire:
Election Day: Trump, Biden cede campaign stage to voters for verdict.
Anxious US nation awaits; Businesses fear unrest, board up premises.
US faces nurse shortage in virus spike; Europe locks down.
Deadly terror attacks carried out at Kabul University and in Vienna.
TAMER FAKAHANY DEPUTY DIRECTOR – GLOBAL NEWS COORDINATION, LONDON
The Rundown
AP PHOTO/RON HARRIS
Trump, Biden cede campaign stage to voters for Election Day verdict; Huge turnout expected despite virus, political rancor
A momentous U.S, Election day is here on Nov. 3, 2020: it’s one that perhaps will be punctuated by tumult and claims of irregularities and legal challenges, dynamics that have been for the most part, the year 2000 aside, foreign to the modern American democratic process.
Nearly 100 million Americans voted early and now it falls to Election Day voters to finish the job, ending a campaign reshaped by the coronavirus and marked by tensions over who could best address it, Jonathan Lemire, Zeke Miller and Alexandra Jaffe report.
Biden entered Election Day with multiple paths to victory. Trump has a narrower, but still feasible road to clinch 270 Electoral College votes. Control of the Senate is at stake, too, which will help determine how the next president is able to implement his policies.
Voting: The day is unfolding with a large chunk of the electorate having already cast their ballots. Voters took advantage of absentee balloting and early in-person voting amid a pandemic and worries about whether the Postal Service would deliver their ballots on time. Trump has been claiming without evidence that mail ballots will lead to widespread voter fraud and has threated to file lawsuits to stop the counting of late-arriving ballots in some states. Christina A. Cassidy and Anthony Izaguirre report.
Legal Challenges:Trump says he’s planning an aggressive legal strategy to try prevent Pennsylvania from counting mailed ballots received in the three days after the election. The deadline for receiving and counting absentee ballots in the battleground state is Friday, an extension ordered by Pennsylvania’s top court. But it’s not clear what other legal issues may arise on Election Day. Since the 2000 presidential election, which was ultimately decided by the Supreme Court, both parties have enlisted legal teams to prepare for the possibility that voting wouldn’t settle the contest, Mark Sherman reports.
Trump ”Army’‘:His campaign is poised to deploy an “army” of volunteers and paid staff to watch elections precincts in Democratic-leaning areas. They’ll aim to gather accounts of ballot fraud that might then be used to challenge the validity of the vote count, Michael Biesecker and Garance Burke report.
Ballot Scramble; Down to the wire with the threat of court battles looming, Biden supporters of scrambled to rally swing-state voters to drop off ballots, go to precincts in person and deliver a victory so clear-cut as to render inevitable litigation meaningless, Matt Sedensky reports.
Explainer: ‘So 2020’ is a new phrase that made its way into America’s political lexicon this year. It has come to describe all things unexpected, unsettling and unprecedented. This includes: the vitriolic political discourse that has deepened the U.S. partisan divide, the scary pandemic, economic woes, social upheaval after police killings of Black people, and natural disasters, Deb Riechmann reports. There are also new terms: ”cancel culture,” a term that has come to signify intolerance to free speech, and QAnon, a right-wing, pro-Trump conspiracy theory.
Dixville Notch: Two tiny New Hampshire communities that vote for president just after the stroke of midnight on Election Day have cast their ballots, with one of them marking 60 years since the tradition began. The results in Dixville Notch, near the Canadian border, were a sweep for Biden who won the town’s five votes. In Millsfield, 12 miles to the south, Trump won 16 votes to Biden’s five.
AP PHOTO/DAVID GOLDMAN
Anxious nation awaits with ”raw exposed nerves”; Fearing unrest, businesses have boarded up premises
Americans are exhausted from constant crises, on edge because of volatile political divisions and anxious about what’s to come.
A Trump supporter in Texas who is focused on ”law and order” said, “If we let that other guy in, all hell is going to break loose.”
A Chicago woman also feels dread from the other side of the spectrum: “I just feel like I’m this raw exposed nerve all the time, and the anxiety of all this and the chaos of ‘what’s he going to destroy next?’” she said about Donald Trump.
Boarding Up: In downtown Washington, the sounds of hammers and power tools echoed through the streets on Election Day eve as workers boarded up dozens of businesses. In New York City, businesses from Macy’s flagship store to high-end shops in Manhattan’s chic SoHo neighborhood had already covered their windows. Similar scenes played out in some other major cities, with business owners fearing the election could lead to the sort of unrest that broke out earlier this year.
Just a short walk from the White House, construction workers carried large sheets of plywood. For block after block, most stores had their windows and doors covered. Activists are preparing for another long-term occupation of Black Lives Matter Plaza, one block from the White House.
Hospitals compete for nurses as US virus cases surge; Europe locks down, anger mounts
U.S. hospitals are scrambling to hire more nurses as the pandemic surges, leading to stiff competition and increased costs.
Experts say the situation is especially difficult in rural areas and at small hospitals. To alleviate the shortage, nurses are being trained in areas where they have limited experience, hospitals are scaling back services and health systems are turning to short-term travel nurses to help fill the gaps. Meanwhile there is evidence that some nurses are choosing to retire or take less stressful, safer jobs, Tammy Webber reports.
Europe’s Lockdowns: Many European countries are tightening restrictions. France began a nationwide lockdown Friday, Germany began a partial ”wave-breaker” lockdown Monday and Austria started one Tuesday as authorities across the continent scramble to slow a rapid rise in infections that threatens to overwhelm their health care systems.
Britain will follow suit on Thursday, closing restaurants, bars, gyms, pools and many other leisure activities. Italy, Greece and Kosovo also announced new measures.
In some places, the new rules — which vary in strictness — are prompting violent protests by people frustrated at once again having to forgo freedoms, Geir Moulson reports from Berlin.
Across the world from another, two cities, Kabul and Vienna, suffered terror attacks within hours of each other, both from attackers with Islamic State group connections.
It was the second assault on educational institutions in the Afghan capital in as many weeks amid a soaring rise in violence and chaos across Afghanistan even as Taliban insurgents and government negotiators hold peace talks in the Gulf state of Qatar, Tameem Akhgar and Kathy Gannon report.
The IS affiliate has declared war on the country’s minority Shiites and has claimed a number of vicious attacks since emerging in eastern Afghanistan in 2014.
As the attack unfolded, students and teachers fled the part of campus where the law and journalism schools are located, while hand grenades exploded and automatic rifle fire could be heard. Scores of Afghan special forces surrounded the campus, shepherding teachers and students to safety.
The Interior Minister said two men and two women have died from their injuries.
A suspected attacker, who was carrying an assault rifle and a fake suicide vest, was shot and killed by police. Initial investigations indicate that he had sympathized with the Islamic State group.
Authorities are still trying to determine whether further attackers may be on the run. People in Vienna have been urged to stay at home today, Philipp Jenne and Frank Jordans report.
Rescuers in the Turkish coastal city of Izmir have pulled a young girl out alive from the rubble of a collapsed apartment building four days after a strong earthquake hit. The girl, identified as 4-year-old Ayda Gezgin, was taken to an ambulance wrapped in a thermal blanket to cheers and applause from rescue workers. The death toll in the earthquake reached 102, after rescuers retrieved more bodies elsewhere. The U.S. Geological Survey rated the quake 7.0 magnitude.
A dangerously powerful Hurricane Eta is churning toward Nicaragua’s Caribbean coast with potentially devastating winds. Heavy rains are already causing rivers to overflow across Central America. The Category 4 hurricane had sustained winds of 150 mph. The U.S. National Hurricane Center warns that Eta could strengthen further, perhaps reaching Category 5, before making landfall today. Authorities in Nicaragua and Honduras have moved people from outer islands and low-lying areas to shelters.
Voters across Puerto Rico are choosing new leaders today they hope can help heal a U.S. territory wracked by corruption, hurricanes, earthquakes and the pandemic. The six candidates seeking to become the island’s next governor include Pedro Pierluisi of the pro-statehood New Progressive Party. He is the territory’s former non-voting representative in Congress and briefly served as governor following huge street protests last year that led to the resignation of Gov. Ricardo Rosselló.
Nepal has reopened its famous peaks and trails for foreign adventurers in hopes of providing much needed income for hundreds of thousands of guides, porters and workers who have been unemployed for months because of the pandemic. For now the reopening will come with restrictions and mainly be limited to those seeking to climb or trek its peaks. Visitors now need to get prior approval, give details of their itinerary, hire a local outfitting company and have health insurance that covers COVID-19 treatment.
In the Know: No slowdown in spending meant no September swoon for Southwest Florida real estate. That resulted in another surge in prices. Also, what happened to Addicted to Fitness and an election blog preview.
In case you didn’t know it already, today is Election Day. If you haven’t registered to vote yet — it’s not too late. You can still do so in Illinois, and this is how. If you are planning on heading to the polls, here are some things you should keep in mind.
You can follow along with our election coverage all day: we’ll be following local races here, and what’s happening around the country here. And don’t forget to bookmark this page to watch the results come in after the polls close tonight.
Here’s more election news and other top stories you need to know to start your day.
Illinois voters who didn’t cast an early or mail-in ballot go to the polls Tuesday to wrap up a contentious political season complicated by pandemic restrictions that have forced them to largely watch from afar.
It may take some time for the votes to be counted and there’s no guarantee results will be quickly available in key races. Nor is the election likely to put to rest the ongoing potential for social discontent and violence in what has been a year of civil unrest.
Democratic Gov. J.B. Pritzker on Monday urged patience in the coming days as election authorities grapple with historic levels of mail-in ballots, and said the Illinois National Guard is in a “state of readiness,” amid the possibility of election-related unrest.
The race for the White House between Republican President Donald Trump and Democratic nominee Joe Biden will be determined in 13 key battleground states and a pair of congressional districts. Here’s a breakdown of the battleground map and each state’s rating, according to the Cook Political Report, and the latest polling averages from fivethirtyeight.com.
Political anger is on the rise, studies and interviews indicate, with some members of both major parties viewing the opposition as not just mistaken, but morally wrong and even dangerous. Slogans have taken on an unkind edge, with some Democrats posting “Flush the Turd” yard signs featuring a cartoon image of President Donald Trump’s hair, and Republicans countering with “Donald Trump 2020″ and an unprintable sentiment about “Your Feelings.”
The 2020 United States presidential election is here and we’re hours away from watching results roll in from our couches (or from our beds, or lying on the floor, depending on your mood). Whatever the case, we’ve collected some election deals and comfort foods from 10 Chicago restaurants and bars to help your evening along.
More than 3.6 million Illinoisans — or more than two out of five registered voters — have already cast their ballots for Tuesday’s election, but officials caution that some races — including the fate of the proposed graduated income tax amendment — “may not be known” for up to two weeks.
As of Monday, more than 1.83 million people voted early in-person, and another 1.76 million had already returned their ballots by mail.
With 2.35 million mail ballots sent to Illinois voters, that means some 587,000 could still be returned. As long as they are postmarked no later than Tuesday and arrive within two weeks of Election Day, they will be counted and added to the official count. Rachel Hinton has the story…
With more than 8.3 million voters registered for the 2020 general election, state election officials estimated that 43% of registered voters already voted.
“We’ve seen online organizing activities of extremists turn into real life violence,” said David Goldenberg, executive director of the Anti-Defamation League’s Midwest region. “And that’s why all of us need to take this seriously.”
State health officials report 6,222 new COVID-19 cases, 20 deaths. The new cases bring the state’s total case count to 423,502. There have been 9,810 deaths in Illinois.
In what could be his final budget hearing appearance, Joe Ferguson pressured CPD to realign police beats for the first time in 50 years, speed compliance with a federal consent decree and support efforts to end the “code of silence.”
Top mayoral aides will start briefing aldermen Tuesday on the mayor’s plan to confront a capital funding shortage. “Government has always led the charge in investing and putting people to work,” said Ald. Gilbert Villegas. “This is no different.”
“We’re prepared to add more, we don’t want to, but if we need to we have some more,” a parishioner said of the vigil, which is slated to last until Nov. 9
Welcome to The Hill’s Morning Report. It is Tuesday — Election Day!. 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, 230,996; Tuesday, 231,562.
President Trump and former Vice President Joe Biden continue today with their starkly different closing arguments, contrasting their visions and values while warning that the other guy is too weak, misguided and unmoored from everyday Americans (The Hill).
Whether standing in line today to cast ballots or completing them early, the U.S. electorate has been determined to participate despite the risks of a pandemic and an unsettled view about the state of democracy.
Americans inhabit different political universes, writes The Hill’s Niall Stanage. The final days of the election included an apparent attempt by Trump supporters to run a Biden campaign bus off the road, emergency court rulings about early voting and reports that the president plans to declare victory before all the returns are tallied. Merchants boarded up storefronts in case of violence, tech platforms are on guard for misinformation and election experts are counseling patience. Meanwhile, voters’ exhaustion and fears run deep.
Tonight’s election dramas could play out in at least five key states: Florida, Pennsylvania, North Carolina, Arizona and Georgia, reports The Hill’s Jonathan Easley. If Biden wins any of the five, he’s likely to lock up at least 270 electoral votes and become the next president. Trump’s campaign insists his chances of reelection appear bright in Florida and Arizona while losses in Wisconsin, Michigan and Pennsylvania would put the brakes on racking up enough electoral votes (NBC News).
The Hill: Biden’s lead over Trump narrows in Florida; contest a dead heat in Arizona and North Carolina.
Here’s a LIST of when polls close in the states and territories. Which states offer the earliest clues about whether Trump or Biden will be the next president? Americans might go to bed without a clear idea, reports The Wall Street Journal. The Guardian pulled together insights from three leading experts about what to anticipate, complete with caveats and hedges. FiveThirtyEight reports what to watch, state by state. And NBC News, which insists its coverage tonight will be data focused rather than breathlessly leaning in, says the real show starts at 7 p.m., when polls begin closing in seven states, including Georgia (16 electoral votes) and eastern Florida (29 in the Sunshine State). A half-hour later, polls close in two important swing states, North Carolina (15) and Ohio (18). Need an interactive map to play around with the math? Try 270toWin.
Trump says he wants all votes tallied in 50 states tonight, but state laws do not require any such feat and it won’t happen because it never does. Some states will certify election results this week, while others will do so next month. Ballotpedia has the list of state deadlines HERE. And many states will be busy for days and perhaps weeks opening, scanning, checking and certifying absentee and mailed ballots.
Nearly 100 million Americans voted before polls opened today, according to the U.S. Elections Project, representing more than 72 percent of the total 2016 turnout. It’s an astonishing nationwide embrace of early voting in all forms.
The last polls are in, and as The Hill’s Julia Manchester reminds us, Biden led Trump in national polls for more than a year as well as in most state-based surveys released before today. Even with Democratic Party fears that Trump could replicate his 2016 shocker by winning narrowly in a few key states, Democrats say they’re cautiously confident about a Biden victory. Manchester presents a rundown of where the contest stands, according to polling.
The New York Times: Pollster Robert Cahaly of Trafalgar Group has Trump winning Florida, Arizona and Michigan. He was right in 2016.
News outlets that rely on projections anchored in Associated Press data have gone to some trouble to explain how they pore over polling, election data, voter registrations, early voting and state-based information to project a winner, even if 100 percent of precincts have not reported.
The New York Times: Networks pledge caution for an election night like no other.
Twitter names seven news outlets (ABC News, The Associated Press, CNN, CBS News, Decision Desk HQ, Fox News and NBC News) to call election results (Axios). … What to expect from Facebook, Twitter and YouTube today as returns come in (The New York Times).
On the ground, security remains an issue tied to the election, and officials in both parties have asked the public to be vigilant. Businesses have boarded up in cities nationwide (The Hill). … In Washington, D.C., the perimeter of security around the White House and Lafayette Square in the downtown area have been fortified with tall fencing and other precautions (NBC News). … In Washington state, officials on Monday touted security enhancements made over the years and the state’s long history of voting by mail as reasons voters should be confident. But they encouraged members of the public to keep their eyes open for voter manipulation and misinformation (The Associated Press). … In Indianapolis, some buildings and businesses were boarded up to prepare for possible unrest related to the election (The Associated Press). … The Department of Justice announced on Monday it would monitor compliance today with federal voting rights laws in 18 states, accepting complaints from the public. … Some governors have mobilized National Guard troops as part of election security, leading to the question, can Trump call up troops to quell unrest that might occur today or later? (Reuters). … International election monitors will be in at least seven states to observe America’s democracy in action (The Hill).
The Hill: Federal law enforcement braced for election-related unrest.
In case of mischief, misinformation or mayhem, Republicans and Democrats have separate armies of legal experts ready to contest or defend ballots, election laws and groups of voters, reports The Hill’s John Kruzel. Election law experts say the linchpin of court challenges is evidence — and speed. The Supreme Court left open the possibility of disqualifying mail ballots that arrive in Pennsylvania after Nov. 3, and Trump on Sunday said he would like to invalidate late-arriving ballots. “We’re going to go in the night of, as soon as that election is over, we’re going in with our lawyers,” he told his supporters (NBC News).
The Hill: Unprecedented early voting gives Democrats hope, while Republicans count on today’s turnout.
The Associated Press: Trump talks up election fraud and threatens legal challenges.
Reuters: Possible post-election legal “fight of our lives.”
Check your registration status, explore voting options in your state and get access to the latest, official information from election authorities in our Voting Information Center on Facebook and Instagram.
MORE POLITICS: The fight for Senate control is in the hands of roughly 10 races nationwide including a number of swing states as well as some states that are Republican strongholds. Political watchers brace for a lengthy wait to determine which party holds the majority.
As The Hill’s Alexander Bolton writes, power in the Senate depends on the outcome of contests in Michigan, North Carolina, Iowa and Georgia. Eyes are also on Alaska and Kansas, two states that were written off for Democrats months ago, only to be in play in the final weeks of the election cycle.
The large number of competitive races and the likelihood that counts will be delayed because of absentee ballots and legal disputes may lead to temporary limbo for a few weeks until results are certified. Seats occupied by Georgia Republican Sens. David Perdue and Kelly Loeffler could shift; both could face runoffs in early January.
Today in North Carolina, Sen. Thom Tillis (R) is the underdog to Democrat Cal Cunningham in a contest that could prove crucial to Republicans in the party’s quest to hold the majority.
As The Hill’s Alex Gangitano reports on the ground in Lexington, N.C., Tillis has consistently trailed Cunningham, who is embroiled in a sex scandal after admitting to an extramarital affair. Tillis still trails the Democratic challenger among white college graduates, independents, women and suburban voters.
Cunningham has gotten a boost from the top of the ticket. Biden’s race with Trump helped the Senate challenger with Democratic turnout. The extramarital affair also does not appear to have diminished his standing with voters; polls remain largely unchanged since revelations about his behavior. Cunningham held at least a 20-point lead among voters who cast ballots by Saturday.
The Associated Press: Control of Senate at stake as Trump’s allies face Democrats.
> Bringing down the House: House Democrats are expected to expand their majority on election night, but a handful of competitive races will show whether Republicans can hang on or are facing a wipeout.
Strategists in both parties are closely watching several races that are likely to be early indicators of further Democratic expansion in the suburbs and in what once were deep-red enclaves, including Texas. The Hill’s Cristina Marcos lays out 10 contests to watch tonight.
NPR: Federal judge dismisses effort to throw out drive-thru votes In Houston.
The Nevada Independent: Judge rejects Trump campaign effort to slow down, amend Clark County mail ballot counting and processing system.
IN FOCUS/SHARP TAKES
CORONAVIRUS: The spread of the novel coronavirus continues to worsen across the United States as the country set new records on Monday. Hospitals have been left to scramble to find and retain enough nurses and staff to treat COVID-19 patients, especially in rural areas.
Alarm bells are also going off within the administration. Deborah Birx, coordinator of the White House coronavirus task force (pictured below), used an internal report sent to top administration officials to urge “much more aggressive action” to combat the virus.
“We are entering the most concerning and most deadly phase of this pandemic … leading to increasing mortality,” Birx said a report on Monday. “This is not about lockdowns — It hasn’t been about lockdowns since March or April. It’s about an aggressive balanced approach that is not being implemented” (The Washington Post).
Trump continues to point to the increase in COVID-19 testing as the reason for the rising case totals, although his assertion has been refuted as too simplistic by public health and infectious disease experts. The president’s campaign rallies since he recovered from his October bout with the virus have taken place mostly outdoors among thousands of supporters, many of whom refuse to wear masks and ignore advice to maintain social distancing because such a large percentage of people (perhaps 50 percent) who transmit COVID-19 are asymptomatic.
The autumn surge of coronavirus cases and hospitalizations is straining health care providers, especially at smaller hospitals and in rural regions as they struggle to maintain enough nurses to handle COVID-19 patients. According to The Associated Press, nurses are undergoing training to work in fields where their experience is limited, while hospitals are rolling back services in order to care for virus patients who are in critical condition. Experienced hospital nurses are opting to quit, according to the report, transitioning to less stressful nursing jobs because of the burnout.
Reuters: As U.S. COVID-19 cases break records, weekly deaths rise 3 percent.
The New York Times: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention study says pregnant women face higher risk of severe illness.
The Associated Press: Another restaurant chain, Friendly’s, hits a wall in pandemic.
In Europe, France recorded a single-day record of confirmed COVID-19 cases on Monday, reporting 52,518 new infections as hospitalizations also are on the rise. On Monday, the number of people hospitalized due to the virus increased by more than 1,000 for the fourth time in eight days as the French endure a second national lockdown (Reuters).
Reuters: Italy to tighten COVID-19 curbs, but holds back from lockdown.
The Wall Street Journal: Europe considers testing everyone for COVID-19 — “You have nothing to lose.”
OPINION
We’ve been here before — and odds are we’ll make it through once more, by Charles Lane, columnist, The Washington Post. https://wapo.st/3ekFEx4
Trump Is terribly flawed, but the alternative is simply terrible, by Gerard Baker, editor at large, The Wall Street Journal. https://on.wsj.com/3jS6u0S
A MESSAGE FROM FACEBOOK
Explore Facebook’s Voting Information Center
More than 39 million people have visited our Voting Information Center, which makes it easy to check your registration status, explore voting options in your state and prepare to vote safely.
The House is out of Washington until after the election.
The Senate will return to work on Nov. 9.
The president this morning will visit a Republican National Committee annex in Arlington, Va., to thank campaign workers and supporters. Trump plans to watch election returns at the White House with family, friends and Vice President Pence.
Biden-Harris campaign events: Biden and Sen. Kamala Harris (D-Calif.) will campaign on Election Day, working to encourage people who may not have decided how or if they will vote. Biden will appear in his home town of Scranton, Pa., and also in Philadelphia — the third consecutive day he’ll be in the Keystone State (The Hill). Harris will campaign in Detroit today, hoping to help drive up minority voter participation in Michigan. The former vice president’s wife, Jill Biden, will talk to voters in St. Petersburg, and Tampa, Fla., and make a stop in Cary, N.C. Later, both Bidens are scheduled to appear this evening in Wilmington, Del., joined by Harris and her husband, Doug Emhoff.
➔ SUPREME COURT: Justice Amy Coney Barrett joined her colleagues for the first time on Monday in oral arguments by phone. Her input will draw more attention on Wednesday during arguments in a major LGBTQ rights case heard the morning following the elections (CNBC).
➔ ADMINISTRATION: On Wednesday, the United States will leave the Paris climate accord. The decision, set in motion in a Trump letter one year ago, is official on Nov. 4 (The Hill). … If voters give Trump a second term, his administration could have major impacts with expansions of offshore drilling and changes to the way the Environmental Protection Agency makes regulatory and enforcement decisions (The Hill). … The Associated Press reports that a second Trump second-term agenda would look a lot like the president’s first four years in office. … ObamaCare’s annual open enrollment period kicked off Sunday, and experts say it’s more important than ever to have health insurance. Millions more people will be looking for coverage this year after losing their jobs and the importance of having insurance will likely be highlighted by the risk of COVID-19 infection (The Hill).
➔ TECH: The Department of Commerce said on Monday it will continue to defend the president’s executive order seeking to limit the use of the widely popular video sharing app TikTok in the United States after a federal judge ruling last week presented a new legal hurdle for the administration’s push to curb the use of the Chinese-owned app (The Hill).
THE CLOSER
And finally … 🐳 On the southern edge of the port city of Rotterdam, Netherlands, a whale on Monday saved the day for a metro rail driver as his train shot through the air 30 feet above ground, past the end of an elevated stretch of tracks and landed on the tip of a giant sculpture’s graceful tail.
In a play on words, the news wires called the accident a “fluke,” and it was such a visual sensation that officials had to scatter a crowd, worried that the aerial near-miss might breach COVID-19 restrictions against congregating (The Associated Press).
The name of the decades-old sculpture? “Saved by the whale’s tail.”
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DRIVING THE DAY
HAPPY ELECTION DAY. DONALD JOHN TRUMP is going into today facing a significant chance of becoming the first one-term president in nearly three decades. JOSEPH ROBINETTE BIDEN is pushing into states that supported TRUMP in his quest to become the oldest first-term president, and the 15th former VP to ascend to the Oval Office.
THE THROUGHLINE of this campaign and the last several months of our country’s history is the TRUMP administration’s handling of the coronavirus and the economic fallout from the pandemic. Nothing more, nothing less. A quarter-million Americans are dead. Millions have gotten the virus. Businesses have been shut down for months. Americans’ routines have been flipped upside down. And the White House has said it would do nothing different if given the imagined opportunity. The administration tried to defy science — and the rest of the developed world — by suggesting that large gatherings are fine, masks are of questionable efficacy and the virus will disappear on its own in due course. Of course, that won’t happen.
TRUMP had a miraculous recovery from Covid-19. Will his political bounceback be as stunning?
— HERE’S THE QUOTE YOU NEED TO READ: “‘WE ARE ENTERING the most concerning and most deadly phase of this pandemic … leading to increasing mortality,’ said the Nov. 2 report from Deborah Birx, coordinator of the White House coronavirus task force. ‘This is not about lockdowns — It hasn’t been about lockdowns since March or April. It’s about an aggressive balanced approach that is not being implemented.’”
EVEN ON ELECTION DAY, you have government experts saying the TRUMP administration screwed up. TRUMP clearly doesn’t like ANTHONY FAUCI, because in his view the doctor spoke out of turn — “uncalled for” is what we heard earlier this week from White House people. Now BIRX has taken an even harder line.
THERE ARE NO VACCINES at the ready. No widely available therapeutic. No new Covid relief package. No preparation to combat the expected winter spread of this virus.
THIS PRESIDENT SEEMS TO HAVE BEEN BEEN OVERWHELMED BY EVENTS. Nothing has broken through in the campaign besides his handling of the coronavirus. Not the trade deal he cut, not the regulations he has rolled back and not the tax legislation he squeezed through Congress, which turned out to be his only major legislative achievement. It’s basically been all about Covid-19.
THE ULTIMATE QUESTION is: Do voters believe that the situation truly is cosmic and out of his control, or is it at least partially of his making?
WE WERE RAPPING WITH our colleague JOHN BRESNAHAN about this, and he made a good point: One-term presidents typically get overwhelmed by events. GEORGE H.W. BUSH had a sagging economy. JIMMY CARTER had the hostage crisis in Iran, a lackluster economy and the sense that the U.S. was out of control and on a bad track. LYNDON BAINES JOHNSON had Vietnam.
WILL TRUMP join that group?
TRUMP IN KENOSHA, Wis., via ZEKE MILLER: “This isn’t about — yeah, it is about me, I guess, when you think about it.”
AND, EVEN DOWN BALLOT, it is about TRUMP as well. Senate Republicans are bearish about races in Arizona and Colorado, and worried about Iowa, Georgia and North Carolina.
REPUBLICANS believe they’ll lose more seats in the House, as well, where they could be facing an early Obama era-size minority. NANCY PELOSI will likely extend her run as speaker, and will wield even more power next year.
AP’S JONATHAN LEMIRE, ZEKE MILLER and ALEXANDRA JAFFE, with a Pittsburgh dateline: “In the closing hours of a campaign shadowed by a once-in-a-century pandemic, President Donald Trump charged across the nation Monday delivering an incendiary but unsupported allegation that the election is rigged, while Democratic challenger Joe Biden pushed to claim states once seen as safely Republican.”
— LEMIRE TWEET: “On the campaign’s final day, Trump was a torrent of grievance and combativeness. He angrily decried the media’s coverage while complaining that he was being treated unfairly by, in no particular order, China, the Electoral College system and Jon Bon Jovi.”
— POLITICAL MEMO from NYT’SMAGGIE HABERMAN, ALEX BURNS and JONATHAN MARTIN: “As Election Day Arrives, Trump Shifts Between Combativeness and Grievance”: “His mad dash to the finish is a distillation of his four tumultuous years in office, a mix of resentment, combativeness and a penchant for viewing events through a prism all his own — and perhaps the hope that everything will work out for him in the end, the way it did four years ago when he surprised himself, his advisers and the world by winning the White House.
“But by enclosing himself in the thin bubble of his own worldview, Mr. Trump may have further severed himself from the political realities of a country in crisis. And that, in turn, has helped enable Mr. Trump to wage a campaign offering no central message, no clear agenda for a second term and no answer to the woes of the pandemic. …
“What confounds some Republicans is how little Mr. Trump is discussing last month’s confirmation of Justice Amy Coney Barrett to the Supreme Court; some G.O.P. senators have made that achievement a centerpiece of their campaigns. … Campaigning in Kentucky this weekend in pursuit of his seventh term, Senator Mitch McConnell, the majority leader, repeatedly trumpeted Justice Barrett and the other two Trump-nominated judges on the high court while not mentioning Mr. Biden’s name once.”
DRIVING THE DAY — THE PRESIDENT will visit the Trump campaign HQ in Virginia at 9:55 a.m. Afterward, he’ll return to the White House.
JOE BIDEN will be in Scranton, Pa., and Philadelphia. JILL BIDEN will be in St. Petersburg and Tampa, Fla., and Cary, N.C. Sen. KAMALA HARRIS (D-Calif.) will travel to Detroit. DOUG EMHOFF will be in Columbus, Ohio, for a voter mobilization event. BIDEN will speak at an event in Wilmington, Del., in the evening. Jill Biden, Harris and Emhoff will join him.
NYT FRONT PAGE(banner headline): “ANXIETY MOUNTS WITH RACE AT A BITTER END”
ALSO — FOUR SQUARE HOST Eugene Daniels will break down the latest Election Day news from across the country along with chief political correspondent Tim Alberta, chief Washington correspondent Ryan Lizza and national political reporter Laura Barrón-López. The group will be joined throughout the show by colleagues from across the newsroom to cover exit polling, Trump’s and Biden’s campaign strategies, and their favorite moments of this long and winding election. Register to watch
FIRST ELECTION DAY VOTES — AP/DIXVILLE NOTCH, N.H.: “Two tiny New Hampshire communities that vote for president just after the stroke of midnight on Election Day have cast their ballots, with one of them marking 60 years since the tradition began. The results in Dixville Notch, near the Canadian border, were a sweep for former Vice President Joe Biden who won the town’s five votes. In Millsfield, 12 miles (20 kilometers) to the south, President Donald Trump won 16 votes to Biden’s five.”
BIG PICTURE — “Win or Lose, Trump and Biden’s Parties Will Plunge Into Uncertainty,”by NYT’s Lisa Lerer in Plano, Texas: “This year’s election seems likely to plunge both Republicans and Democrats into a period of disarray no matter who wins the White House. With moderates and progressives poised to battle each other on the left, and an array of forces looking to chart a post-Trump future on the right (be it in 2021 or in four years), both parties appear destined for an ideological wilderness in the months ahead as each tries to sort out its identities and priorities.
“The questions facing partisans on both sides are sweeping, and remain largely unresolved despite more than a year of a tumultuous presidential campaign. After Democrats cast their eyes backward several generations for a more moderate nominee, does a rising liberal wing represent their future? And what becomes of a Republican Party that has been redefined by the president’s populist approach, and politicians like [Texas Sen. John] Cornyn who have been in the long shadow of Mr. Trump for four years?”
A LOOK BACK — JOHN HARRIS column: “On Election Day, Democrats Are Haunted by the Ghosts of Al Gore and Hillary Clinton”: “As we wait for the results of the 2020 election—with at least a little and, potentially, quite a lot of time to kill—it is worth pondering the randomness of history. A slight turn here or there, a little more of this or a little less of that, and we live in a very different world. There is no more vivid recent example of the phenomenon than the two tragic figures of Democratic politics over the past generation: Al Gore and Hillary Rodham Clinton.
“Both had limitations as politicians, and by their own reckonings made errors in their campaigns. But let’s never forget that both also won the popular vote. Were it not for arguably illegitimate and inarguably freakish circumstances they would have both won the presidency, too. Instead the White House ambitions that they had spent their professional lives advancing were broken like an eggshell and squashed like a gooseberry.
“It has been a star-crossed start to the 21st century, which will be one-quarter over by the time whoever is elected today finishes his term. When it comes to Gore and Clinton, no one can say where paths not taken would have led. But both figures invite tantalizing, even agonizing, flights of counter-factual speculation. The lull before this evening’s storm is a fitting moment to ponder might-have-beens.”
LOOK AHEAD … “Also on the ballot: The future of Trump’s family political dynasty,”by Meridith McGraw and Nancy Cook: “Now, in the final stretch of the election, the Trump clan has been on a mission to save this iteration of the family venture: cultural warriors, GOP takeover artists, and, perhaps, a budding political dynasty. In a frenzied tour across battleground states, Trump’s family members are making a personal pitch to voters that it’s not just their father who should stay in power, it’s them as well.
“If Trump pulls off another upset win, it will cement his family’s standing in American society. The Trumps will set the cultural and political dialogue for the better part of a decade. They’ll continue to elbow their way through the halls of Washington and the GOP. They might run for office.
“But if Trump loses, a family brand built on ‘winning’ will be dealt an embarrassing defeat after years of successfully side-stepping creditors, bankruptcies and cultural comeuppance. Republicans might turn on the Trumps. MAGA politics may fade. And the Trumps likely can’t retreat back into the glitzy world of New York galas. Nor do they want to. Instead, they’ll try to do what they always do, according to over a dozen current and former senior administration officials and close associates of the Trump family: Keep the Trump brand alive. Expand the family business. Export it when possible.”
DEMS PUSHING INTO RED AMERICA: “Dems embrace the left in some GOP strongholds,” by Sarah Ferris and Heather Caygle: “Democrats in 2018 seized the House on the momentum of dozens of centrist candidates who beat the odds in Trump country with their middle-of-the-road, inoffensive appeal.
“But several of the Democrats with the greatest odds of flipping GOP seats in 2020 don’t hail from the center — but from the Medicare for All and Green New Deal-touting left flank. Nearly a dozen Democrats in some of the nation’s most competitive districts, from Texas to Iowa to Nebraska, are running on unabashedly liberal platforms, betting that their brand of progressive populism — single-payer health care, aggressive climate action and eschewing special interest money in politics — can win even in GOP strongholds.
“They’re running on, rather than away from, left-wing policies that many elected Democrats remain hesitant to embrace. And with final election forecasts predicting Democrats could net up to 20 new seats, these progressives’ prospects look increasingly strong. Meanwhile, as the GOP conference shrinks and moves to the right, an even more polarized House is likely.” POLITICO
COURT WATCH — “Federal judge allows Texas’s Harris County to count ballots cast via drive-through voting,” by WaPo’s Neena Satija, Brittney Martin and Aaron Schaffer: “A federal judge on Monday rejected Republicans’ attempt to invalidate more than 100,000 ballots cast via drive-through voting in Harris County, Tex., home to Houston. But he also cautioned those who have not yet voted to avoid using those centers on Election Day.
“‘If I were voting tomorrow … I would not vote in a drive-through just out of my concern as to whether that’s legal or not,’ said U.S. District Judge Andrew Hanen, an appointee of President George W. Bush, noting that an appellate court could overrule him.” WaPo
AGENCY DRAMA — “Health agencies resist Trump civil service executive order,” by Adam Cancryn and Sarah Owermohle: “President Donald Trump’s executive order making it easier to fire federal employees is meeting fierce resistance within the Food and Drug Administration, amid fears the White House is planning a purge of senior health officials it views as disloyal. The order — which Trump issued on Oct. 21 — would strip certain civil service and due process protections from career federal employees who make policy.
“FDA officials see it as laying the groundwork for an across-the-board effort to replace longtime career scientists with political allies in a second Trump term. Tensions between the agency and Trump’s inner circle have grown over the past couple of months, as White House aides have sparred with the FDA over efforts to fulfill the president’s vow of a coronavirus vaccine before Election Day.
“Multiple top FDA officials have raised concerns about the executive order directly to Commissioner Stephen Hahn in recent weeks, voicing sharp opposition to the prospect of determining which employees would be eligible, said two health officials with knowledge of the matter.” POLITICO
THE CORONAVIRUS RAGING …
— “Hospitals competing for nurses as U.S. coronavirus cases surge,”by AP’s Tammy Webber in Fenton, Mich.: “As the coronavirus pandemic surges across the nation and infections and hospitalizations rise, medical administrators are scrambling to find enough nursing help — especially in rural areas and at small hospitals.
“Nurses are being trained to provide care in fields where they have limited experience. Hospitals are scaling back services to ensure enough staff to handle critically ill patients. And health systems are turning to short-term travel nurses to help fill the gaps.
“Adding to the strain, experienced nurses are ‘burned out with this whole (pandemic)’ and some are quitting, said Kevin Fitzpatrick, an emergency room nurse at Hurley Medical Center in Flint, Michigan, where several left just in the past month to work in hospice or home care or at outpatient clinics.”
— “Coronavirus caseload sets record in Virginia as infections jump across D.C. region,”by WaPo’s Dana Hedgpeth, Lola Fadulu, Michael Brice-Saddler and Erin Cox: “Virginia is recording more coronavirus infections than at any point during the pandemic, creating a new peak in caseloads Monday as numbers rise across the Washington region. The seven-day average of new cases across Virginia, Maryland and D.C. stands at 2,274, eclipsing a previous record of 2,218 cases that had stood since May 31.
“Health experts blame colder weather and lax usage of precautions that decrease the virus’s spread, and say the holidays will be a particularly challenging period to wrest control of the pandemic.”
— Rebecca Robbins is joining the NYT as a reporter focused on Covid-19 vaccines. She previously was a San Francisco health tech correspondent at Stat. Talking Biz News
TRANSITIONS — Jessica Donlon is now general counsel of the House Oversight Committee. She previously was deputy general counsel for oversight at OMB. … Carlos Ignacio Suarez is now senior deputy assistant administrator for Latin America and the Caribbean at USAID. He previously was COS to Carlos Trujillo, the U.S. ambassador to the Organization of American States.
BIRTHDAY OF THE DAY: Minh-Thu Pham, co-founder of New American Voices and senior adviser at Connect-Frontier. A fun fact about her: “I’m pretty good at finding four-leaf clovers, but I haven’t figured out how to translate that into anything useful. If anyone has ideas, let me know.” Playbook Q&A
BIRTHDAYS: Sen. Mazie Hirono (D-Hawaii) is 73 … Rep. Jaime Herrera Beutler (R-Wash.) is 42 … Michael Dukakis is 87 … Anna Wintour … CAA’s Rachel Adler … Katie Packer Beeson, founding partner of Burning Glass Consulting … Jenn Pellegrino, OANN White House correspondent (h/t Eric Bolling) … Jared Rizzi … Jeff Brownlee, senior political research analyst at Americans for Prosperity … Phyllis Cuttino, executive director of the Climate Action Campaign … Paul Brathwaite, chief strategist at Federal Street Strategies, is 5-0 (h/ts Jon Haber) … POLITICO’s Anthony Adragna, Renuka Rayasam and Ryan Hendrixson … Gabby Adler is 4-0 (h/t Jesse Ferguson) … Amie Kershner … Christie Stephenson, press secretary for Rep. Hakeem Jeffries (D-N.Y.), is 31 (h/t Meredith Kelly) … Quentin Fulks … O. Kay Henderson … Evelyn Nieves … former Rep. Lynn Woolsey (D-Calif.) is 83 … Matthew Kirincic … James Kanter … Erica Moody …
… Charlie Hurt …Michael Haft, co-founder of Compass Coffee (h/t girlfriend Sofia Rose Gross) … Katie (Cook) Romano … Dennis Miller is 67 … Kam Mumtaz of Tesla global comms (h/t George Hornedo) … Bob Van Heuvelen … Kelli Kedis Ogborn … Robina Suwol … Jack Weller … Robin (Levy) Gray, director of external comms for Southern Company Gas … Amy Rosenbaum … Heidi Peterson … Scout Tufankjian … Rowan Morris, managing director at Guggenheim Partners, is 35 … Edelman’s Lauren Greco … Anne Mahlum … Brian Babcock-Lumish … Mindi Walker … Chris Falls … Ben Kirshner … Christian Haines … Pearce Godwin … Julian Baird Gewirtz … Liz Rolnik … Joe Cohen (h/t Nadia Szold) … David Case … Vinny Minchillo is 59 … Jack McLaughlin … Shawn Rusterholz … Christie Findlay … Mark Helmke … Barbara Zheutlin … Satya Rhodes-Conway … Stuart Rosenberg … Katie Fricchione … Sky Gallegos (h/ts Teresa Vilmain)
“KING, n. 1. The chief or SOVEREIGN of a nation; a man invested with supreme authority over a nation, tribe or country; a monarch. Kings are absolute.”
Kings have “subjects” who are subjected to their will.
The word “citizen” is Greek, and has the connotation of co-ruler, co-sovereign, co-king.
“Polis” is the Greek word for city, and “politics” was simply the “business of the city.”
The Greek city-state of Athens had about 6,000 citizens, and every citizen had to be at the marketplace everyday to talk politics.
Citizens who refused to get involved in the politics were liable to penalties.
If citizens were not involved, they did not know what was going on, so they were called “idiotes.”
W.D. Ross wrote in Aristotle (London, Methuen, 1937, p. 247):
“Aristotle’s … citizen is not content to have a say in the choosing of his rulers; every citizen is actually to rule … not merely in the sense of being a member of the executive, but in the sense … of helping to make the laws of his state.”
The word “demos” means “people” and “cracy” means “to rule.”
A “democracy” is where the citizens are king – ruling directly.
The word “democracy,” in the broad sense, generally refers to people being involved in ruling, but as a specific political system, “democracy” only ever worked on a small, city-wide basis, where everyone could be present at every meeting.
Larger than a city, it broke down, as not every citizen could be there everyday.
A “republic” is where the citizens are king, ruling indirectly, through their representatives.
Republics could grow larger, as citizens could take care of their families and farms, and send representatives in their place to go to the market everyday to talk politics.
Americans pledge allegiance to the flag “and to the republic for which it stands.”
We are basically pledging allegiance to us being in charge of ourselves.
Webster’s 1828 Dictionary defined “REPUBLIC” as:
“A state in which the exercise of the sovereign power is lodged in representatives elected by THE PEOPLE.”
When someone protests the flag, they are effectively saying, “I don’t want to be king anymore – I protest this system where the people rule themselves.”
A “constitutional” republic is where a constitution lays out the rules of how to elect representatives, what their functions are, and what are the limitations of their power.
The experiment of an American republic began at a time when most of the world was ruled by kings, sultans, emperors, czars, and chieftains.
Nearly a century before Europe’s “Age of Enlightenment,” Pilgrims and Puritans fled from the King of England to settle New England.
In 1636, a Congregational minister, Rev. Thomas Hooker, and his church, fled again from Puritan Massachusetts to found Hartford, Connecticut.
His church members asked him to preach a sermon on how they should set up their government.
Rev. Hooker preached a sermon, May 31, 1638, explaining:
“Deuteronomy 1:13 ‘CHOOSE YOU wise men and understanding and known among your tribes and I will make them heads over you captains over thousands, captains over hundreds, fifties, tens …'”
Rev. Hooker continued:
“The choice of public magistrates belongs unto THE PEOPLE by Gods own allowance … The privilege of election … belongs to THE PEOPLE … according to the blessed will and law of God …
They who have power to appoint officers and magistrates it is in their power also to set the bounds and limits of the power and places unto which they call them …
The foundation of authority is laid firstly in the free consent of THE PEOPLE.”
In Hartford’s Travelers Square there is a bronze statue of Connecticut’s first settlers with a plaque, which reads:
“In June of 1635, about one hundred members of Thomas Hooker’s congregation arrived safely in this vicinity with one hundred and sixty cattle. They followed old Indian trails from Massachusetts Bay Colony to the Connecticut River to build a community.
… Here they established the form of government upon which the present Constitution of the United States is modeled.”
Acknowledging how rare America’s republic was, Thomas Jefferson wrote in 1801 to Joseph Priestley (ME 10:229):
“We can no longer say there is nothing new under the sun. For this whole chapter in the history of man is new.
The great extent of our republic is new. Its sparse habitation is new. The mighty wave of public opinion which has rolled over it is new.”
President Theodore Roosevelt stated in 1903:
“In NO other place and at NO other time has the experiment of government of the PEOPLE, by the PEOPLE, for the PEOPLE, been tried on so vast a scale as here in our own country.”
Signer of the Constitution Gouverneur Morris stated:
“This magistrate is not the king. The PEOPLE are the KING.”
John Jay, the First Chief Justice of the U.S. Supreme Court, wrote in Chisholm v. Georgia, 1793:
“The PEOPLE are the SOVEREIGN of this country.”
Signer of Constitution James Wilson stated at the Pennsylvania Convention to ratify the U.S. Constitution:
“SOVEREIGNTY resides in THE PEOPLE; they have not parted with it.”
Thomas Jefferson wrote to William Johnson, 1823:
“But the Chief Justice says, ‘There must be an ULTIMATE ARBITER somewhere.’ True, there must … The ULTIMATE ARBITER is THE PEOPLE.”
James Madison wrote in Federalist No. 46, 1788:
“The ULTIMATE AUTHORITY … resides in THE PEOPLE ALONE.”
Chief Justice John Marshall wrote in the case of Cohens v. Virginia, 1821:
“THE PEOPLE made the Constitution, and THE PEOPLE can unmake it. It is the creature of their own will, and lives only by their will.”
Abraham Lincoln stated in a debate with Stephen Douglas:
“THE PEOPLE of these United States are the rightful MASTERS of both congresses and courts.”
President Andrew Jackson wrote to William B. Lewis, August 19, 1841:
“THE PEOPLE are the government, administering it by their agents; they are the government, the SOVEREIGN POWER.”
President James K. Polk stated December 7, 1847:
“The PEOPLE are the only SOVEREIGNS recognized by our Constitution …
The success of our admirable system is a conclusive refutation of the theories of those in other countries who maintain that a ‘favored few’ are born to rule and that the mass of mankind must be governed by force.”
Instead of Europe’s “divine right of kings,” President Grover Cleveland stated of the United States, July 13, 1887:
“The SOVEREIGNTY of SIXTY MILLIONS of FREE PEOPLE, is … the working out … of the divine right of man to govern himself and a manifestation of God’s plan concerning the human race.”
General Omar Bradley stated in 1948:
“In the United States it is the PEOPLE who are SOVEREIGN … The Government is theirs to speak their voice and to voice their will.”
President Gerald Ford stated at Southern Methodist University, September 13, 1975:
“Never forget that in America our SOVEREIGN is the CITIZEN …
The State is a servant of the individual. It must never become an anonymous monstrosity that masters everyone.”
Ronald Reagan opened the John Ashbrook Center in 1983, stating of America’s founders:
“The Founding Fathers understood that only by making government the servant, not the master, only by positing SOVEREIGNTY in THE PEOPLE and not the state can we hope to protect freedom.”
Opening the Constitutional Convention, George Washington exclaimed:
“The event is in the hand of God.”
Romans 13:1 “Let everyone be subject to the governing authorities, for there is no authority except that which God has established.”
In America, God allowed our founders to set up a system where the PEOPLE are the governing authority.
Politicians are simply elected servants, hired and fired by the will of the PEOPLE through the election process.
Of course, America’s founders held the assumption was that there would be no voter fraud in the election process.
If you think of our “democratically-elected constitutional republic” as amazing genetically-engineered seed, which has the potential to yield a great harvest.
But what do you do with seeds? You plant them in soil.
The soil is the beliefs held by the people.
The last century has seen multiple examples of the failure of “nation-building,” where a dictator is overthrown, a new nation is set up with a constitution, only to have it quickly revert back to dictatorship.
This has been the case in former Soviet states, which had 70 years of atheism plowed into its soil, and in Middle Eastern Islamic states, which have no concept of equality before the law of men and women, infidels and non-infidels.
What most political science classes miss it that our seed – “democratically-elected constitutional republic” is designed to work in “Judeo-Christian” soil.
John Adams wrote October 11, 1798:
“Our Constitution was made only for a moral and religious people. It is wholly inadequate to the government of any other …”
He added:
“We have no government armed with power capable of contending with human passions unbridled by morality and religion.
Avarice, ambition, revenge, or gallantry, would break the strongest cords of our Constitution as a whale goes through a net.”
Another question that needs to be asked is, if the PEOPLE are KING, who are the COUNSELORS to the KING?
In 374 AD, the Christian Roman Emperor Theodosius I went to church in Milan, Italy, where the pastor was the Bishop St. Ambrose.
Imagine what it must have been like to be Bishop St. Ambrose with the Emperor sitting in your church pew.
Yet that is exactly what is the case in America.
A recent Pew poll reports that 65 percent of Americans identify themselves as Christian.
This is down from 70 percent just a few years ago in 2015, but still a majority.
Back in 1965, 96% of Americans belonged to some Bible-based faith:
69 % Protestant
24 % Catholic
3 % Jewish
Most Christians attend church and listen to their pastors.
The pastors in America are, in a sense, counselors to the KING.
With that in mind, a scene from the movie The Lord of the Rings provides an allegory.
King Theodon’s kingdom was being overrun and on the verge of being destroyed as he had been asleep – under a spell.
A wicked counselor to the King named Wormtongue, had been whispering in the King’s ear to stay asleep.
Another counselor to the King was Gandalf, who broke the evil spell and woke up the king up.
King Theodon dramatically comes to his senses and takes his sword.
This scene demonstrates two different kinds of Pastors:
one kind of pastor, like Wormtongue, are those who whisper in the ear of the “KING-PEOPLE” to stay asleep even though their kingdom faces destruction;
the other kind of pastor, like Gandalf, are those who want the “KING PEOPLE” to wake up and take responsibility to rule – a responsibility for which they will be held accountable before God.
Pastors who claim to be more spiritual by only preaching the Gospel really do not believe the Gospel.
For if they really believed the Gospel, they would be involved wanting to preserve the freedom to preach the Gospel — to keep churches open in face of overreaching state governors who issue unconstitutional mandates shutting down church services!
The most important thing is to bring people to Christ, yet the second most important thing is to preserve the freedom to do the most important thing!
It is the pastors’ job to wake up the King!
In America, each citizen, in a sense, gets to be the king of his or her own life, and together, co-kings of the country.
Each citizen has the voluntary opportunity of willingly surrendering their lives to Jesus – the King of Kings.
Psalm 110:3 “Thy people shall be willing in the day of thy power.”
Just as Jesus saves through Christians preaching the Gospel;
and Jesus’ love is expressed through His followers caring for the needy;
would it not follow that Jesus being King is manifested through members of His Body taking responsibility for what happens in their communities!
Consider an illustration:
Imagine traveling through a kingdom to visit a KING, and on the way, you witness all kinds of crime and corruption.
As you enter the KING’s chamber, he reluctantly looks up at you and asks, “Did you see all the crime and corruption as you came in here … I wish someone would fix this mess.”
You reach over and tap the KING on shoulder, telling him that HE is the KING, that this is HIS kingdom, and that HE is the one accountable to God to fix this mess!
That is like citizens in America watching television, seeing all kinds of crime and corruption, and saying “I wish someone would fix this mess.”
Hello — a finger should reach through the TV screen and tap you on the shoulder saying “you are the KING. You are the one accountable to God to fix this mess.”
Someone may say, yes, but I need someone to tell me what to do.
Since when does the King sit on his throne and yell out, can someone tell me what to do? “Hey butler, cook, can someone come over and tell me what I suppose to do.”
No — in America, it is your job to get educated on the issues, seek God’s will, and tell your representatives what is supposed to happen. You are the King!
Voting is not just a privilege, but a responsibility.
Pastors need to warn their church members, “You do not just have the right to vote in America, you will be held accountable to God for what happens in America!”
If you allow schools to teach little children sexually immoral things, that Jesus would never teach, He will hold you accountable.
Those pushing sexually promiscuity try to guilt-trip Christians into being more “christian” than Christ, saying, if you are really christian, you will tolerate their agenda.
Yet, Jesus Christ said:
“From the beginning of the creation God made them male and female,”
and
“Whoever causes one of these little ones who believe in Me to stumble, it would be better for him if a millstone were hung around his neck, and he were thrown into the sea. “
James Wilson wrote in his Lectures on Law, 1790-91:
“In a free country, EVERY CITIZEN forms a part of the SOVEREIGN POWER: he possesses a vote.”
Not to VOTE is to abdicate the throne!
Some say, “Don’t vote, just trust God!” Yet the Founding Fathers considered this apathetic attitude “tempting God.”
During the Revolution, Connecticut Governor Jonathan Trumbull wrote:
“To trust altogether to the justice of our cause, without our utmost exertion, would be tempting Providence.”
Billy Graham stated:
“Bad politicians are elected by good people who don’t vote.”
Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr., criticized silent pastors:
The first well-recorded instances in history of people choosing their leaders was ancient Israel.
When they came out of Egypt, Moses’ father-in-law Jethro gave advice to Moses. Exodus 18:21 states:
“Moreover thou shalt provide OUT OF ALL THE PEOPLE able men, such as fear God, men of truth, hating covetousness; and place such over them, to be rulers of thousands, and rulers of hundreds, rulers of fifties, and rulers of tens.”
Deuteronomy 1:3-13:
“Moses spake unto the children of Israel … How can I myself alone bear your cumbrance … TAKE YOU wise men, and understanding, and KNOWN AMONG YOUR TRIBES, and I will make them rulers over you.”
Deuteronomy 16:18-19
“Judges and officers SHALT THOU MAKE THEE IN ALL THY GATES which the Lord thy God giveth thee throughout thy tribes.”
One of America’s first elections occurred in Woburn, Massachusetts, which was founded in 1642 by Captain Edward Johnson, a contemporary of Governor John Winthrop.
Captain Edward Johnson described the town’s original election in Wonder-Working Providences of Sion’s Saviour in New England, 1654:
“The number of faithful people of Christ … gather into a church …
Having fasted and prayed … they joined together in a holy Covenant with the Lord and with one another …
Those who are chosen to a place in government, must be men truly fearing God, wise and learned in the truths of Christ …
Neither will any Christian of a sound judgment vote for any, but those who earnestly contend for the faith.”
Alexis de Tocqueville wrote of elections in Democracy in America, 1835:
“If a political character attacks a (religious) sect, this may not prevent even the partisans of that very sect from supporting him;
but if he attacks all the sects together, every one abandons him and he remains alone …
Moreover, all the sects of the United States are comprised within the great unity of Christianity.”
President Calvin Coolidge commented on elections in a Radio Address, NOVEMBER 3, 1924:
“I therefore urge upon all the voters of our country, without reference to party,
that they assemble … at their respective voting places in the exercise of the high office of American citizenship,
that they approach the ballot box in the spirit that they would approach a sacrament, and there, disregarding all appeals to passion and prejudice, dedicate themselves truly and wholly to the welfare of their country …”
Coolidge ended:
“When an election is so held, it … sustains the belief that the voice of the people is the voice of God.”
On September 20, 2001, President George W. Bush addressed Congress after the 911 Islamic terrorist attack:
“Our enemy is a radical network of terrorists … They hate our freedoms – our freedom of religion, our freedom of speech, OUR FREEDOM TO VOTE.”
President Calvin Coolidge stated in 1924:
“The history of government on this earth has been almost entirely … rule of force held in the HANDS OF A FEW.
Under our Constitution, America committed itself to power in the HANDS OF THE PEOPLE.”
John Adams wrote:
“Thirteen (State) governments thus founded on the natural authority of THE PEOPLE alone.”
Ronald Reagan stated in 1961:
“In this country of ours took place the GREATEST REVOLUTION that has ever taken place IN THE WORLD’S HISTORY …
Every other revolution simply exchanged one set of rulers for another …
Here for the first time in all the THOUSANDS OF YEARS of man’s relation to man …
the founding fathers established the idea that YOU and I had WITHIN OURSELVES the GOD-GIVEN RIGHT and ABILITY to DETERMINE OUR OWN DESTINY.”
On November 6, 1944, Franklin D. Roosevelt stated in Hyde Park, NY:
“Tomorrow … the people of the United States again vote as free men and women, with full freedom of choice – with no secret police watching over your shoulders.
And for generations to come Americans will continue to prove their faith in free elections …”
FDR added:
“In the midst of fighting … our soldiers and sailors and airmen will not forget election day back home.
Millions of these men have already cast their own ballots, and they will be wondering about the outcome of the election, and what it will mean to them in their future lives … for the cause of decency and freedom and civilization …”
FDR concluded:
“We need strength and wisdom which is greater than is bequeathed to mere mortals. We need Divine help and guidance …
People of America have ever had a deep well of religious strength, far back to the days of the Pilgrim Fathers.
You will find it fitting that I read a prayer …
‘Almighty God … Thou hast gathered our people out of many lands and races into a great Nation. We commend to Thy overruling providence the men and women of our forces by sea, by land, and in the air …
Enable us to guard for the least among us the freedom we covet for ourselves … Preserve our union against all the divisions of race and class which threaten it …
May the blessing of God Almighty rest upon this whole land; May He give us light to guide us, courage to support us, charity to unite us.'”
“Do not be conformed to this world, but be transformed by the renewal of your mind, that by testing you may discern what is the will of God, what is good and acceptable and perfect,” (Romans 12:2, ESV).
By Shane Vander Hart on Nov 02, 2020 07:14 pm
So, what’s with the Constitutional Convention question on Iowa’s ballot? Shane Vander Hart explains why this question is on the ballot every ten years. Read in browser »
By Shane Vander Hart on Nov 02, 2020 11:57 am
Republicans lead Democrats by 20,590 registered voters in Iowa, and Republicans have outpaced Democrats in their voter registration efforts since July. Read in browser »
By John Gustavsson on Nov 02, 2020 08:00 am
John Gustavsson: It is important to view Q not first and foremost as a political movement, but as a mass delusion best explained and viewed through the lens of psychology. 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.
It’s Election Day – GO VOTE! President Donald Trump will visit the RNC Annex in Arlington, Virginia, on Tuesday. Keep up with the president on Our President’s Schedule Page. President Trump’s Itinerary for 11/3/20 – note: this page will be updated during the day if events warrant All Times EST 9:45 AM Depart the White …
Three polls taken after the last Presidential debate indicate that Joe Biden will lose his home state of Pennsylvania and the election. (See THIS POST to read about my methodology) Susquehanna, Trafalgar and Insider Advantage all released polls in the past few days that show Biden trailing Trump by up to 2 points in the …
On November 2, 2020, President Donald Trump signed an executive order to form the 1776 Commission – a group to formulate a plan “to better enable a rising generation to understand the history and principles of the founding of the United States in 1776.” Full Text of President Trump’s Executive Order to Form the 1776 …
You live in a dark blue or deep red state. Your one vote isn’t going to make any difference, so why waste the time to go stand in line just to increase an election year statistic by one? Make the Popular Vote More Representative of the Truth First, you’ll help destroy the narrative that Trump …
President Donald Trump holds a Make America Great Again rally in Grand Rapids, Michigan, on Monday. (Related: New polls spell trouble for Biden) This is the fifth of five rallies for the day. The president is scheduled to speak at 10:30 p.m. EST. Live Stream of Trump’s Rally in Grand Rapids, MI 11-02-2020 See ALL …
President Donald Trump holds a Make America Great Again rally in Kenosha, Wisconsin, on Monday. (Related: New polls spell trouble for Biden) This is the fourth of five rallies for the day. The president is scheduled to speak at 7:00 p.m. CST. Live Stream of Trump’s Rally in Kenosha, WI 11-02-2020 See ALL of Trump’s …
President Donald Trump holds a Make America Great Again rally in Traverse City, Michigan on Monday. (Related: New polls spell trouble for Biden) This is the third of five rallies for the day. The president is scheduled to speak at 5:15 p.m. EST. Live Stream of Trump’s Rally in Traverse City, MI 11-02-2020 See ALL …
President Donald Trump holds a Make America Great Again rally in Scranton, Pennsylvania on Monday. (Related: New polls spell trouble for Biden) This is the second of five rallies for the day. The president is scheduled to speak at 2:15 p.m. EST. Live Stream of Trump’s Rally in Scranton, PA 11-02-2020 See ALL of Trump’s …
It was the best of times, it was the worst of times, it was the age of justice, it was the age of mob rule, it was the age of free speech, it was the age of censorship, it was the age of truth, it was the age of lies, and it was the age …
Around 300 people participated in a “Trick or Trump” Halloween Fortnite tournament hosted by Bryson Gray and Gamers for Trump on Saturday afternoon. Over 400 people registered for the tournament, organizer Stephanie Lien D’Urso told the Daily Caller News Foundation. Gray told the first-place squad “dankline” that to receive their winnings of $2,000 that they …
It’s Your Choice America- Choose Wisely! This year’s presidential election is even more important than the one in 2016. Hillary spouted empty platitudes while she tried to look ‘historic.’ This time the Democrats aren’t bothering to hide their agenda. They want mask wearing made permanent. They want economic shutdowns. They want to destroy our culture. …
Establishment media outlets have largely downplayed and dismissed new revelations about Hunter Biden’s foreign business dealings and how much his father, Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden, may have known about those dealings. Media outlets have offered a variety of rationales for downplaying the revelations, which have come from newly surfaced emails and from one of …
Sen. Lindsey Graham said Sunday he will be “shocked” if a Justice Department probe into the origins of the Trump-Russia investigation does not lead to more indictments. In an interview on Fox News’ “Sunday Morning Futures,” Graham also said that John Durham, the U.S. attorney leading the investigation, will release a report on his findings …
Yes, Donald Trump is a force of nature. The more adversity he faces, the more energized he becomes. Of how many can you really say that about today? WATCH LIVE: President Trump speaks at MAGA victory rallies with less than 48 hours to Election Day No basement. No empty parking lot. And no ‘badakathcare’. President …
Don Lemon: Mr. Lemon recently stated on the air that he was going to “drop” some of his friends because they listen to the conservative views of Fox News and these friends really believe that conservatism and limited government are the best way to run a nation. Their conservative leanings make them unacceptable to him …
President Donald Trump holds a Make America Great Again rally Monday in Fayetteville, North Carolina. This is the first of five rallies for the day. The president is scheduled to speak at 11:45 p.m. EST. Live Stream of Trump’s Rally in Fayetteville, NC 11-02-2020 See ALL of Trump’s rallies HERE. Content created by Conservative Daily News …
If You Experience An Election That Lasts More Than Four Weeks…
Happy Election Day, my dear Kruiser Morning Briefing Friends. I was told there would be nachos.
Are we having fun yet?!?!?
Our long national nightm…
Nah. I’m not going to go there. Would I prefer that our primaries and campaigns were shorter? Yes. I am, however, still grateful for the opportunity to vote, despite the efforts of so many to denigrate our elections. I’m one of those old-fashioned weirdos who still likes to vote on election day. The honor and the thrill of it never diminishes and this is approximately my seventeen millionth election. In the beginning, my opposition to mail-in voting was mostly about tradition. It was a long time before all of the fraud stuff began to play upon my brain.
I suppose I should get my non-prediction out of the way. The exuberance and confidence of my friends and colleagues about Trump’s reelection hasn’t rubbed off on me. I still can’t pretend to have the slightest idea about how this all will play out. There are encouraging signs, to be sure, but I wouldn’t dismiss the power of the one-note COVID panic porn campaign that Biden has run.
The only gut feeling I’ve had for a while is that, if Trump wins, it will probably be an Electoral College blowout. That’s pure gut, by the way. I don’t do the interactive electoral maps or crunch any numbers. I do read VodkaPundit’s “Wargaming the Electoral College” series though. Still, I’m just going by instinct with this opinion.
The one thing that I do know for certain is that people should not pay attention whatsoever to exit polls. They’re garbage. They exist to give brain-dead network news talking heads something to babble about before any real results come in. Don’t get sucked into the madness.
Rather than deal with the MSM at all, why not spend your quality results-stalking time with us here at PJ Media?
I will be hosting an election day episode of the “War for the White House” podcast with Townhall’s Storm Paglia and our own VodkaPundit. I’ll have that posted here shortly after we are done recording.
For election results and commentary you can join us on hour live blog, which will begin at 1 PM EST and go until I fall asleep at my desk in the wee hours of Wednesday morning. It’s all hands on deck for this one, and we do like to have our irreverent fun when covering debates or elections. A presidential election is our Super Bowl, so we will be partying no matter how the day goes. Trust me friends, you will enjoy “hanging out” with us much more than listening to a bunch of stuffed shirts on television. The link for the festivities will be live on the Home Page at 1 PM EST.
Once again, we’ve partnered with the venerable Decision Desk HQ, which is one of the seven outlets that Twitter has approved for reporting election results. We will of course be giving you results in the live blog but there is also a menu for results near the top of our Election 2020 page.
While I may have no idea how the election itself will go, I do know for sure that we are going to have a lot of fun covering it. We know that we have the most astute, witty, and good-looking readers out there, which is what makes our work so enjoyable.
Since we are on the side that doesn’t let everything about politics turn us into screaming banshees, let’s go enjoy ourselves.
“Don’t make me cry”: Emotional Trump stages last rally as crowd chants “We love you” . . . President Donald Trump told his crowd of supporters in Michigan not to make him cry as they repeatedly chanted ‘we love you’ last night as he wrapped up his pitch for a second term in the White House with his adult children at his side.
‘Don’t make me cry, don’t make me cry,’ Trump, who was wearing a MAGA hat, told his large crowd of chanting supporters in Grand Rapids. ‘If I started to cry they’d have a big story. They’d say the president broke down and cried, and I don’t know if that’s good for us. Maybe it brings me up four or five points, but I don’t care.’ He was joined by his adult children: Donald Trump Jr and his girlfriend Kimberly Guilfoyle, Eric Trump and Lara Trump, Tiffany Trump, and Ivanka Trump and Jared Kushner. Speaking of election day, Trump told the crowd: ‘I think we’re going to win everything. I think tomorrow is going to be one of the greatest wins in the history. ‘This is not the crowd of somebody who is going to lose the state of Michigan. This is not the crowd of a second place finisher.’ Daily Mail
Coronavirus
Covid “nano-particle” vaccine could trigger strong immune response . . . Scientists say they have developed an experimental coronavirus vaccine candidate that is far more potent than others currently being investigated. In trials conducted in mice, the team from the University of Washington School of Medicine said its vaccine triggered a 10-times stronger immune response to the infection than seen in COVID-19 survivors. What’s more, it also provoked a strong memory cell response, in which the body remembers the invading virus to produce antibodies more quickly if infected. Daily Mail
Birx warns of “deadly new phase” . . . Dr. Deborah L. Birx, who has carefully straddled the line between science and politics as she helps lead the Trump administration’s coronavirus response, delivered a stark private warning on Monday, telling White House officials that the pandemic is entering a new and “deadly phase” that demands a more aggressive approach. The warning, contained in a private memo to White House officials as the nation’s daily coronavirus caseload has broken records and approached 100,000, amounted to a direct contradiction of President Trump’s repeated — and inaccurate — assertions that the pandemic is “rounding the corner.” New York Times
Study adds reassurance about long-term immunity . . . A small but key UK study has found that “cellular immunity” to the pandemic SARS-CoV-2 virus is present after six months in people who had mild or asymptomatic COVID-19 – suggesting they might have some level of protection for at least that time. Scientists presenting the findings, from 100 non-hospitalised COVID-19 patients in Britain, said they were “reassuring” but did not mean people cannot in rare cases be infected twice with the disease. Reuters
Politics
Enthusiasm building for Trump . . . If anything, what we are seeing in the closing moments of this race is more passion than ever for President Trump. Some of you have noted to me that the support seems more fervent than it was in 2016. This is another reason I believe Trump is going to win, in addition to those I cited in my piece for NBC News. I submit that there has been no president in the modern era, and perhaps ever, has been elected as a protest against the other candidate and not because of who they are. Let’s face it. Nobody cares about Joe Biden. White House Dossier
Trump closes in on Biden in national poll . . . The point of this is not so much whether polls are wrong or right. It’s that the same pollsters, who have been polling daily, now find that Trump is within striking distance of actually winning the popular vote. According to Investors Business Daily: The latest Trump vs. Biden poll shows a much tighter race between former Vice President Joe Biden and President Donald Trump with just one day to go. The IBD/TIPP presidential poll suggests Trump has widened his advantage among rural voters, nosed ahead among independents, and narrowed the gap among black and Hispanic voters. Today’s Trump vs. Biden poll update finds the Democratic challenger leading the Republican incumbent by 3.2 points, 48.8%-45.6%, in a four-way presidential poll of likely voters. Biden’s lead was 5.1 points on Sunday. White House Dossier
Biden campaign: Trump cannot be declared winner on election night . . . So who is threatening not to accept the results of the election? According to the Washington Examiner: Joe Biden’s campaign manager, Jen O’Malley Dillon, preemptively countered an expected move from President Trump to declare himself the victor of the presidential election on election night before all votes are counted and before analysts can accurately project a winner. White House Dossier
Biden joined by Lady Gaga to declare “big win” against Trump in final rally . . . Joe Biden gave the last speech of his presidential campaign just like Hillary Clinton did four years ago: with a rally headlined by pop star Lady Gaga and strong hopes of victory against Donald Trump. “Folks, I have a feeling we’re coming together for a big win tomorrow,” the Democratic nominee told a crowd at an Election Eve drive-in rally in Pittsburgh. “Tomorrow, we can put an end to a presidency that has left hard-working Americans out in the cold. Tomorrow we can put an end to a presidency that has fanned the flames of hatred. Tomorrow we can put at end to a presidency that has failed to protect this nation,” he went on. New York Post
Lady Gaga at his final rally? I think that tells you everything you need to know.
Twitter warns on Trump tweet about Pennsylvania . . . Twitter and Facebook on Monday night added warnings to an election eve message from President Trump that called a Supreme Court decision on voting in Pennsylvania “very dangerous.” The president had bashed the recent ruling, which allowed absentee ballots in the crucial battleground state to be received for three days after Election Day. “The Supreme Court decision on voting in Pennsylvania is a VERY dangerous one,” Trump wrote in posts on both social media platforms. New York Post
Pennsylvania Democrat AG sparks outrage by saying Trump has lost the state . . . The Attorney General of Pennsylvania Josh Shapiro, who is a Democrat, has sparked outrage after suggesting on Twitter that President Trump may have lost the ability to win the crucial swing state, with 20 electoral votes, more than 24 hours before the polls even close. ‘If all the votes are added up in PA, Trump is going to lose,’ Shapiro wrote on Twitter on Monday evening. ‘That’s why he’s working overtime to subtract as many votes as possible from this process.’ Daily Mail
Mystery British businessman bets $5M on Trump victory . . . An unnamed British former-banker has bet £3.9million on Donald Trump coming out on top in the US presidential election. Betting insiders believe the businessman’s enormous $5million pledge is the biggest number ever wagered in politics. The financier – who is based overseas and whose name has not been released – placed his bet with private bookmaker in Curacao in the Caribbean after speaking to ‘Trump camp insiders’. Daily Mail
Trump “public charge” immigration rule tossed by judge . . . A federal judge in Chicago issued a nationwide halt Monday to President Trump’s attempt to make more immigrants have to prove self-sufficiency in order to win a path to citizenship. Judge Gary Feinerman ruled the government cut too many procedural corners in issuing what was known as the “public charge” rule. Homeland Security had asked him to confine his ruling to a limited geography and to delay its effectiveness while it was appealed. The Obama appointee rejected both requests, announcing a nationwide policy. Washington Times
Yale professor compares Hitler favorably to Trump . . . A Yale University professor and psychiatrist compared President Donald Trump to Adolf Hitler in a series of tweets and said Hitler, unlike Trump, improved the lives of his followers. “Donald Trump is not an Adolf Hitler,” Bandy X. Lee tweeted Monday. “At least Hitler improved the daily life of his followers, had discipline, and required more of himself to gain the respect of his followers. Even with the same pathology, there are varying degrees of competence.” She continued: “A refusal to make comparisons has been a problem, when they have such similarities. Donald Trump’s death count is higher than Hitler’s at the same period.” Washington Free Beacon
National Security
Cities prepare for rioting and looting . . . Businesses in major U.S. cities are preparing for another round of rioting, looting, and vandalism, which they anticipate will follow Tuesday’s presidential election. Plywood boards now cover blocks of storefronts in New York City, Chicago, Los Angeles, and elsewhere, as some business owners worry the election could stoke another wave of civil unrest that strained the country this summer. Business associations and local police are coordinating safety strategies with retailers to prepare for violent protests. Stores and restaurants in New York City’s Times Square boarded up their windows as of Monday afternoon. Washington Free Beacon
Be prepared. Because I believe Trump is going to win, as you know, and that is going to, well, annoy a few very violent people what want to destroy the country and know how to stir things up.
International
Four killed in Islamist attack in Vienna . . .
At least four people were killed and more than a dozen seriously injured in Austria’s capital Vienna late Monday in an assault that government officials said was connected to a radicalized person who “sympathized” with the Islamic State terror group. Police shot and killed one suspected attacker – his death brought the total death toll to five – who was carrying an assault rifle and a fake suicide vest. Authorities were still trying to determine Tuesday whether further attackers may be on the run. People in Vienna were urged to stay at home if possible. USA Today
Money
Apple to launch MacBooks with own chip . . . Apple’s 15-year relationship with Intel Corp. will officially begin to unwind next week when new Mac computers are revealed. Apple and overseas suppliers are ramping up production of three Mac laptops with Apple processors: new 13-inch and 16-inch MacBook Pros and a new 13-inch MacBook Air, according to people familiar with the matter. Foxconn, known also as Hon Hai Precision Industry Co., is assembling the two smaller laptops, while Quanta Computer Inc. is building the larger MacBook Pro. The smaller models are further ahead in production and at least those two laptops will be shown at next week’s event. Beyond the processor switch, the devices won’t have significant design changes. Bloomberg
You should also know
Trump creates 1776 commission to promote patriotic eduction . . . President Donald Trump on Monday created a “1776 Commission” to promote “patriotic education” and counter lessons that he says divide Americans on race and slavery and teach students to “hate their own country.” On the eve of Election Day, Trump directed the commission’s creation, via executive order, to “better enable a rising generation to understand the history and principles of the founding of the United States in 1776 and to strive to form a more perfect Union.” Politico
Blacks now less likely to be violent crime victims than whites . . . Violent crime against Black Americans has dropped 43% over the past 14 years, and they are now less likely to be victims of violent crime than White or Hispanic people, according to data from the Bureau of Justice Statistics. The surprising study undercuts claims by racial justice activists that there is a war on Black people and the Trump administration’s narrative that violent crime is rising in urban areas. “If you look at this data, it refutes the idea that crime is out of control in Black communities but also the racial justice narrative that Whites are murdering us,” said Wilfred Reilly, who teaches political science at Kentucky State University and is also a Black man. Washington Times
2020 is the best year ever for gun sales . . . With the election looming, 2020 became the all-time best year for gun sales in American history.More than 16.5 million guns were sold through the month of October, according to a Washington Free Beacon analysis of FBI data released on Monday. That’s about 1.6 million more than all of 2016—the previous record holder. It also represents four million more sales than in 2019—an increase of over 33 percent. The National Shooting Sports Foundation, the gun industry’s trade group, also estimated nearly seven million people purchased a gun for the first time between January and October. Washington Free Beacon
US reviewing first new Alzheimer’s treatment in decades . . . U.S. health experts this week will decide whether to recommend approval for Biogen’s Alzheimer’s drug, which could become the first new treatment for the mind-wasting disease in decades even as serious questions persist over whether data show if it works. In a field littered with unrelenting failure, Biogen believes in aducanumab it has the first drug that can treat an underlying cause, and therefore slow progression, of Alzheimer’s. But its path to approval has been anything but smooth or assured. Reuters
Guilty Pleasures
Trump wins Pennsylvania cookie poll . . . A ‘cookie poll’ that has accurately predicted the outcome of the last three elections has named its winner. A Pennsylvania bakery has said that it’s Trump-themed cookies are ‘vastly’ outselling the Biden-themed alternative by a margin of almost 6 to 1. Owner Kathleen Lochel has told Fox News that some customers have even been driving from out to state to pick up the treats. ‘Right now, Donald Trump is still in the lead… we’ve sold about 28,000 [Trump] cookies to 5,000 [of Biden’s],’ Lochel said on Monday, adding that with pending orders, she expected Trump cookie sales to get close to 29,000. Daily Mail
Here’s the dilemma we all must ask ourselves: If the Biden cookie tasted better, would you buy it instead of the Trump cookie?
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THE DISPATCH
The Morning Dispatch: Judgment Day
What to watch and what to expect on a historic election night.
Happy Tuesday! Tune in to a special edition of Dispatch Live tonight at 10 p.m. ET / 7 p.m. PT. Sarah, David, Steve, and Jonah will be breaking down the early election results, and what conclusions we can—and can’t—draw from them. Details here!
Quick Hits: Today’s Top Stories
At least 22 people were killed and 22 more were injured in a terror attack on Kabul University in Afghanistan. The shootings, which Afghanistan’s President Ashraf Ghani denounced as a “despicable act of terror,” have been claimed by the Islamic State of Iraq and Levant.
Several people were injured and several more are believed to be dead in what Austria’s interior minister Karl Nehammer called “an apparent terror attack” in Vienna’s Inner City district. One attacker was killed in the exchange of gunfire and the other is “on the run,” according to Nehammer.
President Donald Trump alluded to plans to fire Dr. Anthony Fauci—the leading federal infectious disease expert—after the election. Following chants from a Florida crowd to “Fire Fauci,” Trump responded, “Don’t tell anybody, but let me wait until a little bit after the election.” Joe Biden fired back during a campaign event in Ohio: “Elect me, and I’m going to hire Dr. Fauci, and we’re going to fire Donald Trump.”
A November 2 report from White House coronavirus adviser Dr. Deborah Birx leaked to the Washington Post sharply contradicts President Trump’s optimistic tone on the COVID-19 pandemic. “We are entering the most concerning and most deadly phase of this pandemic … leading to increasing mortality,” Birx wrote. “This is not about lockdowns—It hasn’t been about lockdowns since March or April. It’s about an aggressive balanced approach that is not being implemented.”
The Vatican reportedly stepped back from Pope Francis’ apparent defense of civil union laws, saying that his comments in the documentary Francesco were taken out of context and do not change the Church’s doctrinal stance on homosexual acts.
Hurricane Eta is expected to make landfall today in Central America as a Category 4 storm, bringing flash flooding and destructive winds to Nicaragua and Honduras.
Despite widespread concern in recent months over high rates of mail-in ballot invalidation, election officials in many states are thus far finding the share of ballots being rejected is lower than in previous cycles.
The United States confirmed 82,761 new cases of COVID-19 yesterday per the Johns Hopkins University COVID-19 Dashboard, with 5.8 percent of the 1,417,885 tests reported coming back positive. An additional 540 deaths were attributed to the virus on Monday, bringing the pandemic’s American death toll to 231,507. According to the COVID Tracking Project, 48,470 Americans are currently hospitalized with COVID-19.
A Morning Dispatch Guide to Election Day
Well, today’s (maybe) the day! President Trump formally filed paperwork to qualify as a candidate for the 2020 election on January 20, 2017—just hours after he was inaugurated. Former Vice President Biden officially threw his hat in the ring a few years later, on April 25, 2019. By this time tomorrow, there’s a chance we’ll know the winner of the election that seemed it would never end.
We include the “maybe” and the “there’s a chance” intentionally—and not just because technically speaking, electoral votes won’t be cast until mid-December. There’s a legitimate chance we won’t have enough votes counted tomorrow night to declare a winner with any degree of certainty. And contrary to what some may have you believe, that’s ok!
“The nation needs to be prepared for the idea that they won’t have a conclusive result on Election Night,” Ohio’s Republican Secretary of State Frank LaRose told us last month. “And that’s not a sign that something nefarious is happening. That’s the process playing out as it was designed to play out.”
States always take days, or even weeks, to certify their vote tabulations. “All results are unofficial on Election Night,” North Carolina State Board of Elections Executive Director Karen Brinson Bell said. “We’ll have a certification period that in North Carolina is 10 days, then the counties will meet on November 13, and the state board will meet on November 24 to certify results.”
But in certain states, even those unofficial results may come in slower than usual tonight, due in large part to expanded absentee and mail-in voting and laws preventing election officials from counting those ballots prior to Election Day. Administrators in key battleground states Pennsylvania and Michigan, for example, have cautioned that their states may not have complete unofficial results until Friday. “Now, we may be making announcements before then, we may even be done sooner than that,” Michigan Secretary of State Jocelyn Benson told us last month. But she added that she’s “trying to manage everyone’s expectations so that they know what to expect.”
Some counties and states have indicated they will count in-person, Election Day votes before turning to mail-in and absentee ballots. Others will have the bulk of their mail-in ballots ready to go right as the polls close. Because of the voting-method partisan gap that’s manifested in recent months—Republicans more likely to vote in person, Democrats more likely to vote by mail—early tabulations may lead to what experts have deemed “blue mirages” or “red mirages.” If Florida looks deep blue right at 7 p.m.—or Pennsylvania ruby red an hour later—give it a minute. All the ballots will be counted.
The Trump team is already trying to cast doubt on this process. Senior campaign aide Jason Miller told ABC News on Sunday that “many smart Democrats” believe that “President Trump will be ahead on Election Night, probably getting 280 electoral [votes]” and speculating that Democrats will then “try to steal it back after the election.” President Trump tweeted last night that the Supreme Court’s decision on voting in Pennsylvania “will allow rampant and unchecked cheating” and “will also induce violence in the streets.”
The decision, of course, does not permit cheating of any kind. This is not remotely how the process works.
“Hey guys, please ignore this type of garbage,” Utah’s Republican Lieutenant Governor Spencer Cox said in response to Miller’s comments. “The truth is that elections are never decided on election night. In Utah (and most states) it takes 2 weeks to finalize counting and certify results. It really doesn’t matter who is ahead on election night, it only matters when every eligible vote is counted and each county canvasses and certifies the vote totals.”
Does this mean we won’t know the winner until Friday?
Not necessarily—and in fact, it’s quite possible we will have a general sense of the outcome tonight if things break a certain way. Here’s what you should be paying attention to as polls close.
Generally speaking, there are eleven states that will be key to determining which candidate hits the 270-vote Electoral College threshold: Florida, Georgia, North Carolina, Pennsylvania, Ohio, Michigan, Wisconsin, Minnesota, Iowa, Nevada, and Arizona. Without those states, Biden has 217 electoral votes in the bank, and Trump has a little over 164. Therefore, Biden can effectively block Trump’s path to 270 by securing just 53 of the remaining 157 electoral votes up for grabs—and the former vice president is favored in nine of those eleven states. Trump, meanwhile, has to come close to running the table in those 11 states to secure four more years in the White House. (Texas is a swing state this year too, but if Biden wins there, Trump’s path goes out the window.)
So what will we know tonight? Not Pennsylvania, and not Michigan; this is why Biden’s campaign manager felt comfortable saying “under no scenario will Donald Trump be declared a victor on Election Night.” (Trump has reportedly told advisers he is considering declaring a premature victory if it looks like he’s “ahead” on Tuesday night, charges he later denied.)
But if Biden is comfortably ahead in two or more of Florida, North Carolina, Ohio, Georgia, or Arizona—all of which will have a sizable portion of their ballots counted tomorrow night (click that link, it’s a super helpful FiveThirtyEight guide to results timing by state)—Trump is in real trouble.
When you’re watching the returns come in, we recommend you go either directly to Secretary of State websites themselves or reliable aggregators like Decision Desk HQ, Associated Press, and Fox News. Be wary of websites or TV anchors claiming 100 percent of votes are in if outstanding mail-in ballots remain. Ignore candidates declaring premature victories. We have an incredible system of elections across the 50 states—and their administrators are confident the results will be fair and accurate. Be patient, and let the process play out.
Back in August, Declan wrote a piece about “the coming wave of disinformation,” and how bad actors—both foreign and domestic—may work to sow seeds of doubt about our electoral process. Experts warned him of misleading viral videos purporting to show voter fraud, or voter suppression, or voter intimidation. “An awful lot of the time, if you reverse search the video or the photo, you find out it happened five years ago in a different country,” said Ben Nimmo, the director of investigations at Graphika, a network analysis firm.
Declan checked back in with Nimmo yesterday. Here’s what he had to say:
The main thing to watch out for on election day and in the immediate aftermath is false claims of election violations that could be designed to de-legitimize the outcome. There’s been a tiny verified volume of election fraud in the past few electoral cycles: it’s much easier to make a false claim of fraud than it is to actually commit it. In the same way, we might see foreign influence operations trying to claim that they’ve already swung the election. It’s much easier to claim that than to do it.
The most important thing for people to do is just be wary. Don’t take lurid claims of interference or fraud at face value. Don’t share dramatic stories. It will probably take longer than usual for the results to become clear this year, because of the volume of postal voting. There will be the temptation to spend every minute looking for updates. Instead, step back. Influence operations try to make people angry or afraid, because that’s when they’re easiest to manipulate. The best response is to be wary, and not over-expose ourselves to every minute of the news cycle.
You heard the man! As you go about your Election Day activities, be sure to slow down and verify what you’re sharing—not everything is what it may appear at first glance. And if all else fails, send stuff our way and we’ll get our Dispatch Fact Check team on it.
What Sarah’s Watching
One of our favorite additions to the Dispatch menu of options in recent months has undoubtedly been Sarah’s twice-weekly Sweep newsletter focusing on campaigns and elections. Today’s edition won’t be her last one—there will be plenty to Mop Up in the coming days and weeks—but it might just be her magnum opus. In it, she breaks down 19 different counties she views as bellwethers for the presidential election, as well as 15 different senate races to keep an eye on as the next few days unfold.
There’s too much good stuff in there for us to include all of it, so we highly recommend you take the time to read the whole thing here and keep a copy with you as watch returns tonight. Here’s her sneak peek of the counties that could tip Florida:
Florida
The FiveThirtyEight polling average shows Biden up 2 points in Florida—within the margin of error—but the momentum has been with Trump. Trump does not have a realistic path to a second term without Florida; Biden does. Florida has four counties that flipped to Trump from Obama in both of his elections, and we’ll look at each of them below.
Pinellas: Out of all the counties on this list and in this country, this is the one to watch for me, because if Trump wins Pinellas, he’s won Florida and we’re in for a long night (month?). This county is in the Tampa/St. Petersburg area, and with more than 450,000 votes up for grabs, it’s the largest of the counties in Florida that flipped for Trump. Obama won this county both times—by eight in 2008 and by six in 2012—and Trump won it by just over a point in 2016. One recent poll of this county has Biden winning by more than 13 points. But in 2018, Andrew Gillum, the Democrat running for governor, and Senator Bill Nelson, a Democrat running for reelection, both won this county—albeit by small margins—despite losing their elections.
St. Lucie: Tucked between Orlando and Miami on the Atlantic side, with around 150,000 voters, St. Lucie is part of what’s called the Treasure Coast. Obama won this county by 12 (‘08) and eight (‘12) points and then Trump won it by just over two points in 2016. But just like Pinellas County, this county voted for both Gillum and Nelson in 2018.
Jefferson County: Unlike Pinellas and St. Lucie, Jefferson County, which neighbors Tallahassee on the east, flipped after going for Democrats in 2008 and 2012 and stayed that way in 2018. In fact, Trump won the county by five points in 2016 but Ron DeSantis, now the Republican governor of Florida, increased that lead and won it by almost seven points two years later. Even though there are only around 7,000 voters in the county, it will be a bellwether that Trump will almost certainly need a win to stand a chance of taking the state.
Monroe County: Welcome to the Florida Keys. Believe it or not, these 35,000 or so voters may make the difference in 2020. Despite Obama’s back-to-back victories in the county, Trump won Monroe County by a comfortable seven points. In 2018, Democrat Bill Nelson won the county by 16 votes (you read that correctly) and Republican Ron DeSantis won it by 1,333 votes. Keep an eye on this one; it could be a squeaker!
Worth Your Time
Still haunted by the state polling errors from the 2016 presidential race, many Democrats fear that Trump will defy the odds again and emerge victorious this week, despite a preponderance of data suggesting otherwise. But Trump-friendly Washington Post columnist and senior fellow at the Ethics and Public Policy Center Henry Olsen thinks that these concerns among Democrats are completely unwarranted. “Democrats need not fear,” he writes. “This, my sixth published biennial election prediction essay, is perhaps my easiest: Former vice president Joe Biden will win comfortably unless we experience the greatest polling failure in modern history. Democrats will also gain control of the Senate and expand their majority in the House.”
Or will they? Although Biden has maintained a steady national polling lead over Trump for months now—and still carries most battleground states by a comfortable margin—FiveThirtyEight’s Nate Silver is here to remind us that Trump can still win. The incumbent’s reelection chances are veryslim, but as Silver points out in a must-read piece, a 10 percent chance of winning the Electoral College is not zero. “All the election models are bullish on Biden,” he writes, “but they are united in that a Trump win is still plausible despite his seemingly steep deficit in polls.”
In what has been alternately referred to as poll-watching and voter intimidation, the Trump campaign is making a last-ditch effort to recruit supporters for an organization called the Army for Trump. It may not matter—Trump could win outright, or Biden could. According to The Atlantic’s McKay Coppins, the group is tasked with policing local voting sites and compiling video and photographic evidence of any perceived suspicious activity—and the campaign may have motives for collecting such material beyond just ensuring electoral honesty. “If the president decides to contest the election’s results, his campaign could let loose a blizzard of misleading, decontextualized video clips as ‘proof’ that the vote can’t be trusted.”
Something Fascinating
It’s no secret that media and information ecosystems are siloed off nowadays. There’s no longer a Walter Cronkite figure that everyone trusts; people are able to find thinkers, writers, and commentators that affirm their own beliefs.
It’s worth spending a few minutes playing around with this online tool, created by Tristan Edwards, to see how this phenomenon manifests itself in reality. You can filter through different media “bubbles”—from liberal to conservative, socialist to alt-right—and better understand how people can reach the conclusions that they reach depending on what media they consume.
In their Election Eve episode of the Advisory Opinions podcast, David and Sarah break down some pivot counties in key swing states and talk through the 15 Senate races they’re watching closely this week. Plus, a controversial election lawsuit in the Lone Star state.
Assuming you haven’t already had your fill of horse-race stuff by now, Andrew and Audrey both have pieces up at the site today diving into unexpectedly tight Senate races: Kansas and Montana, respectively.
Let Us Know
You know those cheesy questions moderators like to ask candidates at the end of debates? We’ve got one.
Name one positive thing that would come from the candidate you are not supporting winning the election.
Great question! I had to work hard to come up with an answer!
I desperately want Biden to win, but if Trump becomes president again, here is what might not be so bad.
1. The people I love who support Trump will be happy. I will think the world is burning down, but they will sleep easy thinking that the country is going in the right direction. I’ll gain some joy from knowing they are happy.
2. While I think it is best to invest in programs that work to give us all an equal chance, those programs are expensive! Maybe if Trump gets in we will spend less money and maybe the economy will get better when COVID is over? Again, I like investing in people, but cutting spending might be a silver lining. I don’t ever feel like I know enough about economics to have strong feelings about this. I just know I don’t like how much money we owe and wish we could find a way to spend less.
3. I’ll never have dinner interrupted by a call from someone conducting a poll again.
4. This might be good for Dispatch readership! I think part of the magic for why the Dispatch took off like it did was a resistance to Trump. Four more years might make you guys more popular(:
Stacey Matthews: “Failed 2016 Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton made a bold declaration Monday. “The election will be over when all the votes are counted,” she tweeted. So does this mean she’s finally accepted the results of the 2016 election?”
David Gerstman: “Fuzzy Slippers criticized the media for preemptively blaming President Trump for any violence that might occur in the wake of today’s election. In truth the media has been setting the stage for this for over the past four years. For example a July 2016 hyperbole-filled Washington Post editorial asserted, “Mr. Trump is a unique and present danger [to the Constitution.]” Once Trump is branded such a danger, there are no limits in the actions justified to stop him. In 2018, Post editorial writer, Christine Emba, wrote, “No, civility isn’t dead, but the normal rules of engagement are no longer the best fit for this quite abnormal time.” While she wrote that violence is out of bounds, it’s pretty clear that she was justifying harassing administration official whom she deemed beyond the pale. It’s hard to see how Emba’s call for incivility wouldn’t become an excuse for violence. And the calls for unrest from the Left, continue.”
Samantha Mandeles: “Happy Election Day, America! If you haven’t yet, please GO VOTE! Your voice matters.”
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How One State Could Decide the Election
Perhaps there is no state that better reflects the past and present of the United States than Pennsylvania. With two major cities, vast rural areas, and a post-industrial Rust Belt character, the state bridges nearly every demographic divide. On Tuesday, Pennsylvania–which went for Donald Trump in 2016–will be of paramount importance to both campaigns.
If Joe Biden takes Hillary Clinton’s former “Blue Wall” by winning Minnesota, Michigan and Wisconsin, and Trump holds Ohio and the Sunbelt states, Pennsylvania’s 20 electoral votes will likely decide who ends up in the White House next year. Trump is currently behind by 4.3 percent in Pennsylvania, according to the current RCP average. If there is a polling discrepancy anywhere close to 2016, the state is in a dead heat. And there is a real possibility that the polls are more inaccurate this election than they were four years ago due to constant social and media demonization of the president during his first term.
Further aiding Trump is the fact that the PA GOP has seen some promising trends in the last few years. In 2016, there were nearly 900,000 more registered Democrats than Republicans in the state; by 2019, there were 800,000 more Democrats than Republicans. Today, the gap has narrowed by a further 100,000. As Pennsylvania’s 2.3 million seniors make up an increasingly large share of the state’s total population, its most liberal city has slipped in vote share—today Philadelphia’s 1.584 million people represent 8.08 percent of it’s the state’s population, down from 8.32 percent in 2010. Don’t think that 0.24 percent less makes a difference? Consider that Trump won the 2016 election by just 0.72 percent.
And then there’s the critical policy issue of energy. Biden made a major error in the final debate. By stating his goal was to end fossil fuels, he may have tipped the balance in the nation’s second-largest producer of natural gas. Biden’s plans would cost the state—which recently saw a renaissance due to hydraulic fracturing—at least 600,000 jobs. For rural Pennsylvanians voting with their pocketbooks, this represents a mortal threat to their families’ wellbeing.
We May Not Go to Bed Knowing Who Won
A massive surge of mail-in ballots this election cycle means that we may not know who will be sworn in as the next president until days–maybe even weeks–after November 3. Election officials will need extra time to count the mail-in ballots and some states, including Pennsylvania and North Carolina, are now allowing mail-in ballots received days late to be counted as well.
“Already this year, several states needed additional time to count ballots in this year’s primaries, causing delays of a week or more before the release of results in some key races in New York and Kentucky. In many cases, the longer counting periods were attributed to a surge in mailed ballots owing to the coronavirus pandemic, a trend that is expected to continue in November. Election officials stress that accuracy is more important than speed.”
Democrats have pushed for mass mail-in voting, citing the pandemic, and encouraged automatically mailing ballots to voters–even though such measures have allowed for fraud in past state elections. Democrats have brushed off concerns from Republicans, including Trump, that vote-by-mail fraud could impact the election, arguing that such voting methods hae not caused “widespread” fraud in the past. As Republicans point out, however, widespread mail-in voting on a national level has never been enacted in the past.
Cities Brace for Left-Wing Violence on Election Night
Left-wing groups like Antifa and Black Lives Matter have acted violently throughout much of the year, causing widespread property damage and physically assaulting people in cities around the country. Now there are real concerns that these groups will erupt in violence if Trump appears to be winning on election night. Businesses in major cities are already boarding up their storefronts, predicting chaos and civil unrest on election night. Despite left-wing violence raging all year, and no instances of widespread violence by right-wingers, media outlets like the Washington Postand New York Times are inciting fear of violence by Trump supporters should Biden Win–while ignoring the greater possibility of the opposite scenario.
There is a culture of permissive violence exploding from today’s left-wing; and bit by bit, over the last four years, the behavior became normalized and then escalated. It started with violence-inciting rhetoric and behavior from prominent Democrats:
Eric Holder said of conservatives, “When they go low, we kick them.”
Leftists like Biden, Barack Obama, and Kamala Harris tell their supporters that Trump and his voters are racist, as though it’s a given fact.
Kathy Griffin proudly held up Trump’s decapitated head, Madonna fantasized about blowing up the White House, and a play in Central Park glorified Trump’s death.
The logical extension is real violence and harassment. Liberal mobs shout conservatives like Ted Cruz and Sarah Sanders out of restaurants. Steve Scalise was shot by a crazed left-winger. And Antifa and BLM loot and burn down businesses with near impunity on a near weekly basis. Left-wing violence has been on the rise since the day of Trump’s inauguration, when police indicted more than 200 rioters. The riots injured six cops and caused millions of dollars in damage. And instead of calling for peace and civil discourse, liberal leaders encourage more of this despicable behavior.
On election night, we could see left-wing violence come to its crescendo.
My Final Prediction
Based on trends from the past four years, plus current polling, I expect the president to hold Arizona, Ohio, North Carolina, Georgia, and Florida and Biden to take Wisconsin, Michigan, and Wisconsin. Pennsylvania will be the deciding state. Here’s my map:
If my prediction holds, whichever candidate wins Pennsylvania wins the White House. What’s your prediction? You can make your own map at 270 to Win.
Kristin Tate is an author and columnist focused on taxation and government spending. Her latest book, The Liberal Invasion of Red State America, was published by Regnery Publishing in 2020. She is a Robert Novak Journalism Fellow at the Fund for American Studies, examining the size, scope, and cost of the federal workforce. Kristin also serves as analyst for the nonprofit group Young Americans for Liberty, aiding the organization in its mission to promote limited government and fiscal responsibility. You can follow her on Twitter at @KristinBTate.
Note: By using some of the links above, Bright may be compensated through the Amazon Affiliate program and Magic Links. However, none of this content is sponsored and all opinions are our own.
Nov 03, 2020 01:00 am
Ballots that arrive after Election Day, and especially after preliminary vote counts have been reported, may well be the biggest threat to election integrity. Read More…
Nov 03, 2020 01:00 am
In Leading America. President Trump’s Commitment to People, Patriotism, and Capitalism, Sean Spicer delves into what civility means in America today. Read More…
What the missing Tucker docs really tell us
Nov 03, 2020 01:00 am
In a politically charged year, the appearance of deliberately intercepted documents days before the election is just as damning as the contents the documents would reveal. Read more…
NPC: Joe Biden, the non-player character candidate
Nov 03, 2020 01:00 am
An NPC is technically a gaming character that’s controlled by the computer and responds according to programming (e.g., “C’mon, man!”). As a meme, it refers to a person with no mind or real thoughts of his own. Read more…
Will the lies and corruption be rewarded?
Nov 03, 2020 01:00 am
Will the endless deceit succeed in winning this election for the liars, or will there be a rebellion by decent people who are sick of the lies? Read more…
Bobby Bowden’s vote for Trump
Nov 03, 2020 01:00 am
Democrats immediately maligned this football great as a racist but for Bowden, it’s always been about freedom, faith, dreams, and love. Read more…
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A Texas elementary school’s administrators say that student resource officers are to blame after a school security test last week went awry. One officer, however, says that the school is way off base. What are the details?According to KJAS-TV, the incident took place on Oct. 27 when two Buna, Texas, Independent School District student resource off … Read more
Yes, Texas saw record early voter turnout. But a majority of those voters appear to be Republicans, and there’s good reason to think Trump is already ahead.
A few weeks after we put up our secret Trump sign, I started to see more go up in my neighborhood. On one nearby street, five formerly bare houses in a row now sport American flags.
While the political universe spent four years orbiting Trump, the Democratic Party steadily radicalized, becoming more responsive to the cultural demands of its far-left fringe.
Through 2020’s disease, uncertainty, government power over religion, and attacks on saints and churches, our bishops have chosen the path of secular popularity, closing their doors and politely nodding along with the elites.
Christians may reasonably disagree over a great many issues of public policy, but we must all reject the Democratic Party’s extremist platform of unrestricted, taxpayer-funded abortion on demand.
From award shows to social media to scripts and lyrics, the Trump era has exacerbated all of Hollywood’s worst impulses, convincing entertainers their primary job was activism.
Fake news is not limited to CNN and the New York Times, and censorship isn’t just on Facebook and Twitter. What is happening in the big cities has filtered down to the towns in the cornfields, too.
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by Gary Bauer: Good News
Since September, polls have shown Iowa to be an extremely competitive state. Six polls found Biden ahead, six polls found Trump ahead and three polls found the race tied.
The final Des Moines Register poll, considered the gold standard of Iowa polling, was released this weekend, and it found President Trump surging to a seven-point lead over Joe Biden.
If the poll is accurate, it’s a hopeful sign for President Trump reaching 270 votes in the Electoral College and for pro-life Senator Joni Ernst winning reelection.
Meanwhile, Rep. Jim Clyburn (D-SC), who is widely credited with saving Joe Biden’s campaign in South Carolina, went on Fox News this weekend to complain about Republican suppression of the vote.
It was an odd thing for Clyburn to complain about when virtually every news story is about the unbelievable turnout we have seen in early voting. According to Politico, more than 93 million Americans have already voted. That’s roughly two-thirds of the total 2016 turnout!
Clyburn’s comments were the sort of thing politicians preemptively say when they are concerned about losing on Election Day.
Bracing For Left-wing Violence
I told you Friday that Campaign for Working Families and other conservative groups are being targeted by a coalition of far-left Marxists known as Shutdown DC. It turns out that many businesses and organizations around the country are bracing for more left-wing violence.
CNN’s Wolf Blitzer tweeted this yesterday afternoon:
“I never thought I would see so many buildings here in the nation’s capital boarded-up on the eve of a presidential election in anticipation of possible unrest. And it’s not just in DC. It’s happening in New York, Los Angeles and elsewhere around the country. So sad!”
What do Los Angeles, New York and Washington, D.C., have in common? There are very few Trump voters there. In 2016, Los Angeles voted 72% for Hillary Clinton. New York City voted 79% for Hillary Clinton. Washington, D.C., voted 93% for Hillary Clinton.
Exactly who are those boards meant to keep out of the businesses? Angry left-wing protestors who will be utterly unhinged in the event that Trump wins again.
According to Joe Biden and the media, all the hate is supposed to be coming from the right. But all these businesses in major Democrat cities are boarding up out of fear of Biden’s voters!
And what does this say about the confidence level on the left?
Most of the businesses in Los Angeles, New York City and Washington, D.C., are owned by liberals too. But they are boarding up their businesses to prevent other liberals from trashing and looting their businesses in the event that another liberal loses the election!
If you’re worried about the lack of unity in America and the breakdown of civility, I completely share your concerns. But much of the violence is coming from the left.
A Stark Contrast
President Trump is barnstorming the country in a full-court press to win reelection. Yesterday, he held five events in Michigan, Iowa, Georgia, North Carolina and Florida. Today, he is holding five events in Pennsylvania, Wisconsin, North Carolina and Michigan.
Joe Biden did one event in Philadelphia yesterday, and he’ll be campaigning in Pennsylvania again tomorrow.
Meanwhile, I have noticed something at the Trump rallies that I haven’t seen before in all my years in politics. I’m not talking about the size of the Trump crowds, which are extraordinary. At least 50,000 people showed up at Trump’s Georgia rally yesterday.
No, I’m talking about the spontaneous chant that frequently breaks out, “We Love You! We Love You!”
At least twice, I have observed that the president’s voice seems to break when he responds, “No, I love you! And I will fight for you until I have no breath left.”
Keep in mind that the people chanting, “We Love You,” have been compared to Nazis and the KKK. They have been called “deplorable” and “irredeemable.” But they chant “We Love You” after Donald Trump tells them about his plans to improve life for every American, including minority Americans.
The fear that many people have about hate and violence springing up in Democrat strongholds stands in stark contrast to the love we are seeing at Trump rallies!
Harris Preaches Marxism
Sen. Kamala Harris released a video yesterday attempting to explain the difference between equality of opportunity, which virtually everyone supports, and “equity,” one of the left’s favorite buzzwords.
It’s not enough to believe in equality of opportunity. The left is now demanding equity or equality of results. Or as Sen. Harris put it, “Equitable treatment means we all end up at the same place.”
This open embrace of Marxism on the verge of the election stunned many observers, including some well-known liberals. Progressive columnist Andrew Sullivan tweeted:
“Why would a vice presidential candidate seemingly endorse full-on Marxism days before a general election? Does she believe government should enforce equality of outcome for everyone? Seriously? ‘Equitable treatment means we all end up in the same place.’ That’s equality of *outcomes* enforced by the government. They used to call that communism.”
President Trump ended his campaign swing yesterday in Miami, Florida. Senator Marco Rubio addressed the largely Hispanic audience, many of whom had fled oppressive regimes in Cuba or Venezuela. Rubio said this:
“People get on rafts to get away from socialism. People risk being eaten by sharks to get away from socialism. People leave behind their homes, their families, their loved ones, their entire lives, to get away from socialism. We are not going to bring to this country the things that people flee!
“Now, I know what they’re gonna say. ‘Not all Democrats are socialists.’ And it’s true: not all Democrats are socialists. But all socialists are Democrats!”
Biden’s Blunders
Every day Joe Biden proves why his staff is desperately trying to limit his appearances.
Speaking to an audience in Philadelphia yesterday, Biden bragged about marrying a “Philly girl,” adding, “I’ve got my Eagles jacket on!” Except it wasn’t a Philadelphia Eagles jacket. It was a Delaware Blue Hens jacket. Nobody in Philly confuses an Eagle with a Blue Hen.
Biden also promised, if elected, to mobilize “trunalimunumaprzure” and to give us all “badakathcare,” whatever that is.
This comes after Biden’s recent claim, “We have put together, I think, the most extensive and inclusive voter fraud organization in the history of American politics.” Well, he might be right about that one.
Meanwhile, Biden is campaigning today in Pittsburgh with Lady Gaga. That kind of star power might be a draw in California or New York, but it could backfire in Pennsylvania.
Lady Gaga made a video where she is supposed to be reaching out to Middle America, but instead it looks like she’s drunk.
She also signed on to Yoko Ono’s anti-fracking initiative. A lot of good people in Pennsylvania work in the energy industry, and the left’s radical policies are why the Pittsburgh boilermakers union endorsed Donald Trump!
Speaking of endorsements, the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette endorsed Donald Trump this weekend, it’s first endorsement of a Republican presidential candidate since 1972.
Decision TimeFor many years, cynics have complained that there was not a “dime’s worth of difference” between the two political parties. That may have been true in the past, but it isn’t anymore. The differences are profound, particularly on the issues and values that matter to voters who have a Christian worldview.
I was asked by Decision Magazine, a publication of the Billy Graham Evangelistic Association, to compare our two major political parties. You can read my analysis here.
———————– 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, Good News, Bracing For Left-wing Violence, Harris Preaches MarxismTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
Against all the money and clout of America’s revolutionary forces, the counterrevolutionary Trump had only one asset, the proverbial people.
Victor Davis Hanson
by Dr. Victor Davis Hanson: Until Donald Trump’s arrival, the globalist revolution was almost solidified and institutionalized—with the United States increasingly its greatest and most “woke” advocate. We know its bipartisan establishment contours.
China would inherit the world in 20 or 30 years. The self-appointed task of American elites—many of whom had already been enriched and compromised by Chinese partners and joint ventures—was to facilitate this all-in-the-family transition in the manner of the imperial British hand-off of hegemony to the United States in the late 1940s.
Our best and brightest like the Biden family, Senator Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.), Bill Gates, or Mark Zuckerberg would enlighten us about the “real” China, so we yokels would not fall into Neanderthal bitterness as they managed our foreordained decline.
We would usher China into “the world community”—grimacing at, but overlooking the destruction it wrought on the global commercial order and the American interior.
We would politely forget about Hong Kong, Taiwan, Tibet, and the Uyghurs. Hollywood would nod as it put out more lucrative comic-book and cartoonish films for the Chinese markets, albeit with mandated lighter-skinned actors.
The NBA would nod twice and trash a democratic United States, while praising genocidal China—becoming richer and more esteemed abroad to make up for becoming boring and poorer at home. The universities would nod three times, and see a crime not in Chinese espionage and security breaches, but in the reporting of them as crimes.
So our revolutionary role would be to play stuffy and snooty Athenian philosophers to the new muscular Roman legions of China.
Given our elites’ superior morality, genius, and sense of self, we would gently chide and cajole our Chinese masters into becoming enlightened world overseers and democrats—all the easier, the richer and more affluent Chinese became.
For now, Trump has stopped that revolution.
Internal Counter Revolutions
Until Trump’s arrival, Big Tech was three-quarters home on the road to Nineteen Eighty-Four. Five or six companies monopolized most American—and indeed the world’s—access and use of the internet. In cynical fashion, Silicon Valley grandees patronized naïve conservatives that they were the supposed embodiment of Milton Friedman libertarianism and 19th century robber baron daring. Yet to their leftist kindred, the moguls of Menlo Park simultaneously whispered, “Don’t worry about such necessary disinformation: we will enrich only your candidates, only your agendas, only your foundations, only your universities—in exchange for your exemptions.”
Antitrust legislation was as much an anathema to good liberals as rigging searches, institutionalizing the cancel culture, and censoring thoughts and ideas were welcomed. For now Trump, almost alone, is battling that revolution.
Until Trump’s arrival, there was increasingly no border at all. Fifty-million foreign-born resided, both legally and illegally, in the United States. Nearly a million annually walked northward across the border with ease and without legal sanction or invitation. To object to illegal immigration and decry its deleterious effects on the entry-level wages of our working poor, on the social safety net of the American needy, and on the sanctity of the law was to be smeared as racist, xenophobic, and nativist.
More than a quarter of California’s current resident population were not born in the United States. That desirous “new demography” since 1988 had flipped California into a caring blue state. Open borders and the end of immigration law enforcement had pushed Nevada, New Mexico, and Colorado into just Democratic societies, and was supposedly soon to transform Texas and Arizona into enlightened states. For now, Trump—with his soon-to-be 400-mile wall, his beefed up ICE, and his war on sanctuary nullification zones—has nearly stopped the revolution to end borders.
Until Trump, the American interior was loser country. In-between the two gilded coasts resided the deplorables, irredeemables, clingers, the smelly Walmart patrons decried in the Page-Strzok text echanges, those John McCain called “crazies,” and Joe Biden has variously called the “dregs,” the “chumps” and the “ugly folks.” They were written off as Morlocks, who were occasionally seen poking about the rotting, rusting skeletons of abandoned steel plants, and for some reason never had proper orthodontics as children.
Obama laughed about the “magic wand” needed to revive these unrevivable people. Larry Summers reportedly called such an idea a “fantasy.” He was said to have praised the meritocracy that properly gives to such losers what they justly deserve. Very caring and very humane elites felt very little for supposedly very expendable riffraff. Translated, that meant on the eve of the Chinese takeover, our clueless deplorables never learned to code, or to borrow $200,000 to get a woke-studies education, and so deserved the opioids they took and the trailers they crashed in.
Few apostates said, “Wait a minute! The United States has cheaper energy than anywhere on earth, a skilled workforce, a huge domestic market, and a still-viable infrastructure. There was a reason why Michigan, Ohio, and Pennsylvania once led the world and why they can again.” Through tax reform, deregulation, trade rebooting, a new foreign policy, and loud jawboning, Trump for a while has stopped the revolution that was destroying our once greatest states.
Until Trump, the woke cultural wars were just about won by the elites. Seeking unity was dead; chest-pounding diversity, often the spark that had ignited history’s multiracial societies, was ascendent.
The melting pot that sought to make race incidental was deemed racist; the salad bowl that made our superficial appearances essential was celebrated. Quite affluent, self-appointed minority leaders, with their quite wealthy white liberal counterparts, established who is, and who “ain’t,” “really” black—the definition resting on whether one was loyally left-wing or disloyally independent-minded.
The success of civil rights was not to be calibrated by black unemployment figures, household income, family businesses, dignity in having leverage over employers, access to competitive parochial and charter schools, or descending abortion rates, but in electing more activists as progressive mayors, liberal city councilmembers, and leftist district attorneys to garner more redistributive state money to hire more careerists like themselves.
Trump, branded a bigot and racist, for now has sought to end that revolution, and measure race relations not by how many minority elites have choice jobs and high incomes, but by how well the entire minority community reaches income and employment parity with the general population—an idea that will earn the “racist” Trump far greater minority support than was expressed for John McCain and Mitt Romney.
Can the Revolution Be Stopped?>We are in the midst of a cultural revolution, for the most part driven by angry middle-and upper-class white youth of Antifa and its sympathizers, wannabes, and enablers. Many are humiliated that they have college pedigrees, lots of multi thousand-dollar debt, plenty of woke-studies classes to their credit, but still have no real jobs, no real knowledge, and no real immediate chances of buying a house, marrying, and raising a family in their 20s.
Nothing in history is more dangerous than the underemployed wannabe intellectual or college graduate, whose cultivated sense of superiority is not matched by his income or standard of living, but who blames “them” for his own self-inflicted miseries and unappreciated genius.
The revolution toppled statues, renamed what it did not like, Trotskyized the past, photoshopped the present, and used language, government, and cultural intimidation to do its best to make America into Animal Farm.
Corporate CEOs in terror washed the feet of the woke. University presidents, fearful for their status and careers, wrote incomprehensible memos admitting their past sins and asking how best to do present penance. Hollywood studio owners promised race and gender quotas, with ample provisions that—in the manner of NBA and NFL owners—adjustments and exceptions could be worked out for themselves.
Somewhere, somehow graduations, dorms, and campus spaces, all segregated by race, became “liberal.” Intermarriage, integration, and assimilation were shamefully illiberal. Standing for the National Anthem was unpatriotic; sitting in disdain for it, cool. Donald Trump fought that revolution too.
What tools did Donald Trump have to wage these many counterrevolutions?
The media? America’s Fortune 400? Academia? The great foundations? The nation’s think tanks? The bipartisan government establishment? The international community? The banks? Wall Street? Corporate CEOs? Silicon Valley? Professional sports? The entertainment industry? Hollywood? The intelligence community? The current and retired top military brass?
In fact, none of them. All had joined or enabled the revolution, on the theory either that their wealth and influence would shield them and their own from its excesses, or like naïve Kerenskyites their status would impress and win over even those who targeted them, or they were inner revolutionaries themselves all along, just waiting to be freed at last by BLM and Antifa.
Against all that money and clout, the counterrevolutionary Trump had only one asset, the proverbial people. He had solely the under-polled and the written-off. They came out to his rallies in the tens of thousands, deluded the pollsters, and told the media less than nothing, but voted and will vote in waves to save America from what it was becoming.
—————————- Victor Davis Hanson (@VDHanson) is a senior fellow, classicist and historian and Illie Anderson Senior Fellow at the Hoover Institution where many of his articles are found; his focus is classics and military history. He has been a visiting professor at Hillsdale College since 2004. Hanson was awarded the National Humanities Medal in 2007 by President George W. Bush. H/T American Greatness.
Tags: Victor Davis Hanson, Donald Trump, CounterrevolutionaryTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
by Virginia Allen: It took rioters only two nights to move through Kenosha, Wisconsin, burning and looting businesses as they went, until parts of the city looked more like a war zone than an American town.
“It’s emotional for us,” Raquel Santiago told The Daily Signal during an Oct. 7 interview, adding: “I don’t even have words to describe what my family [is] going through.”
An estimated 50 or more Kenosha businesses were affected by the riots that followed the Aug. 23 police shooting of a man who didn’t heed officers’ directions, Heather Wessling, vice president of the Kenosha Area Business Alliance, told The Daily Signal in an Oct. 8 interview.
Several weeks after the riots, The Daily Signal traveled to Kenosha to speak with some of the affected business owners.
In a hotel room in downtown Kenosha, with Lake Michigan at their backs, Santiago and her sister Ruth Serrato recounted the night that vandals burned their family business to the ground.
“When you see that your job, all you [have been] working for [for] years, not just you, [but also] your parents and the future, probably of your kids, burning down for something you have nothing to do [with]. … This is just shocking,” Santiago said.
Santiago emigrated to America from Mexico in 1995. Her father, Miguel Anguiano Hernandez, traveled between Mexico and America from the time he was a teenager in the 1950s until he was able to permanently settle his family in Kenosha several decades later.
The ice cream shop was a family endeavor with Hernandez’s wife, Aurora Anguiano, with Santiago and nearly all of 10 other children helping in some way.
“Everyone [had] a role,” Santiago said.
The family’s ice cream shop opened in the Uptown section of Kenosha, an area some in the community say is not safe, Serrato said. But in 16 years of business, she said, the family “never had like a window broke or something like that. Never.”
The peace Serrato and her family experienced for so many years ended abruptly Aug. 24, when rioters flooded Kenosha’s streets for the second night after the police shooting of Jacob Blake, 29, who is black.
A little before midnight Aug. 24, Serrato recalled, she saw in the shop’s camera that the family business was in danger.
“We go in right away and we can do nothing,” Serrato said.
The sisters stood and watched far into the morning of Aug. 25 as their business burned to the ground, “just like a nightmare,” Santiago said.
“You couldn’t even be close because the fire was too big,” she said, adding: [It was] catching building to other building, you only can hope firefighters can stop it. They work so hard, they do the best they can. They are so great people, who try to help. But what can I say, this buildings are next to each other, shoulder to shoulder, and fire was so intense, so hot.
The Good Taste Ice Cream Shoppe is engulfed in flames Aug. 24
in Kenosha, Wisconsin. (Photo courtesy of the Henandez family)
Several days after the fire, the sisters went down to their burned-out ice cream business, thinking that maybe something survived or could be salvaged. But nothing was left.
“Everything burned to the ground,” Santiago said. “Expensive machines, compressors. I mean, things that you cannot even think they’re going to burn because it’s metal. … It’s just garbage.”
Hernandez, Santiago and Serrato’s father, had spent years growing the family business. He “took a great portion of his retirement savings [to purchase] the equipment that that business would need to start an ice cream shop,” Kenosha Area Business Alliance’s Wessling said.
The loss of the business is proving to be especially emotional for the family because Hernandez died last year at the age of 80.
Hernandez and his wife ran a small popsicle business in Mexico before permanently emigrating to America. They dreamed about one day settling in the United States and opening their own business. The Good Taste Ice Cream Shoppe was the fulfillment of years of hard work.
Now, so much of what Hernandez worked for and left for his children and grandchildren is gone.
“This is emotional because [it] is his work, all he was dreaming for,” Santiago said, through tears. “All he was teaching us to do, something good for the family.”
In the wake of Hernandez’s death, the insurance for the shop’s equipment fell through the cracks. The building was covered, but the years of capital the family invested in freezers, compressors, and other machinery needed to make the ice cream is gone.
Despite the terrible loss, the sisters said they remain optimistic that they will be able to resurrect their father’s legacy.
“We think we are rebuilding again, not really now but as soon as possible,” Serrato said.
Organizations such as the Kenosha Area Business Alliance are stepping up to help The Good Taste Ice Cream Shoppe and other businesses destroyed by the riots.
Kenosha is a small town, Wessling said, so “we know the businesses that were affected and we know what their needs are.”
“We can likewise turn around the funds that are needed to rebuild and make sure that the businesses that were affected have access to those dollars,” she said.
When they are able to rebuild, Santiago said, the business will be even stronger because “when you lose something, you appreciate what you have.”
For Santiago, Serrato, and their whole family, hope in the American dream is still alive.
“Definitely America … is changing, but I believe for hardworking people, the dream [is] always going to be there,” Santiago said, adding:
All you have to do is work, work hard to get your dream, and you will get it because we are the example. My father work, he and my mom, they worked and saved. And with hard work, you can get whatever you want.———————— Virginia Allen (@Virginia_Allen5) is a news producer for The Daily Signal.
Tags:Virginia Allen, The Daily Signal, Rioters, in Kenosha, Burned, Immigrant Family’s BusinessTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
by Newt Gingrich: If Vice President Joe Biden wins on Tuesday, America will endure a “dark winter” of shutdowns, financial hardships, psychological isolation, and health problems which are unrelated to COVID-19 but will kill more people than the virus itself.
When Vice President Biden said in the last debate that America is facing a “dark winter,” because of COVID-19, he was setting the stage for another, deeper shutdown.
In preparing us for a shutdown, Biden is following in the footsteps of his advisers – the European leaders who have panicked, the Democratic governors who have imposed public health dictatorships, and the public health establishment which is enjoying its dictatorial prominence.
Consider first the Biden advisers:
Ezekiel Emanuel has warned that we need “‘eight, 10, 12 weeks of really serious pain — limiting social activities, limiting groups.”
In fact, the full scale of Emanuel’s call for pain is even more remarkable:
“So that’s one thing: a nationwide lockdown that lasts eight weeks until we have a number of new cases in the two to three per 100,000 level. To reiterate: We have never, ever, gotten that low and sort of stuck it out nationwide.
“… we needed to not rush the re-openings. One of my big worries is we needed to not reopen indoor bars and restaurants. That has been well documented as a disaster.
“You reopen them and two to four weeks later you get these big bumps in cases. Just terrible. And the reason you get that is because indoors, big crowds for prolonged periods of time exhaling.
“Yelling at football games on the TV or what have you. That’s how you spread the virus, that’s what indoor dining and indoor bars lead to. I think it’s a serious, serious problem.”
Another adviser, Vivek Murthy, warned that we will not return to normalcy until 2022 at the earliest: “If the goal is to return life to some semblance of what it was like pre-pandemic, I don’t see that happening in 2021.”
So, if you would like to stay in the current mess, have your schools closed, your businesses crippled, your life restricted, and endure “really serious pain,” the Biden team is just the team for you.
Beyond Biden’s own advisers there are the examples of the liberal Democratic governors who love dictating to people and destroying jobs. This includes New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo welding shut the gate to a Jewish cemetery. Also, there is Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker who threatened to call out the National Guard to go after restaurants that are not socially spacing (a National Guard he would not call out to stop violence and looting in Chicago during the recent riot). California Gov. Gavin Newsom is urging people to cancel Thanksgiving – and blocking public schools from opening while his own children go to an elite private school. This is in the spirit of Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer, who blocked all boating in the state – except for her husband who took out the family boat. Biden’s allies continuously show a great preference for using the power of government to control individual citizens (including limiting churches and synagogues from holding services). It’s easy to imagine Biden creating a nationwide ban on attending religious or educational meetings.
The other examples for Biden are the Europeans, who have panicked and are closing their economies and communities down for a second time. The economic cost to small business, and the inconvenience and psychological damage of being cooped up for weeks at a time, have led to substantial resistance in Europe as people conclude that the political class is simply incompetent and out-of-touch with the needs and feelings of people.
As a globalist who wants to be part of the elite worldwide leadership gang, it would make sense for Biden to follow France, Spain, Germany, Italy, and Britain into a lockdown.
In Britain, the police are warning they may raid homes that have Christmas parties that are “too large.” The politicians’ alliance with supposed public health experts is creating a petty dictatorship that eliminates almost all of our constitutional rights.
President Trump captured the reality of the choice between courage and fear, optimism and pessimism, trusting the American people and trusting the new police state mentality of the left at a rally in Iowa this weekend:
“It’s a choice between a deadly Biden lockdown – or a safe vaccine that ends the pandemic.
“We launched the largest mobilization since World War II. We are delivering groundbreaking treatments that reduced the fatality rate 85 percent.
“Our excess mortality rate in America is 40 percent lower than in Europe.
“We will mass distribute the vaccine in just a few short weeks – it will quickly eradicate the virus and wipe out the China plague once and for all!
“Joe Biden is promising to delay the vaccine and turn America into a prison state, while letting rioters roam free.
“If we’d listened to Joe on allowing travel from China and Europe, hundreds of thousands more people would have died.
“Now Biden wants a cruel, heartless, nationwide lockdown.
“The Biden lockdown will result in countless deaths and wipe out an entire generation of dreams.
“Europe imposed draconian lockdowns and yet their cases are exploding, their deaths are surging, and their economies are in ruins – the European lockdowns are leading to more suffering, delayed medical care, and financial devastation.
“A vote for Biden is a vote for lockdowns, layoffs, and misery.”
We will find out Tuesday night if the American people prefer a lockdown or a calculated effort to develop a better response.
———————— Newt Gingrich (@newtgingrich) is a former Georgia Congressman and Speaker of the U.S. House. He co-authored and was the chief architect of the “Contract with America” and a major leader in the Republican victory in the 1994 congressional elections. He is noted speaker and writer. This commentary was shared via Gingrich Productions.
Tags:Newt Gingrich, Gingrich Productions, Reject a Shutdown, Reject, Biden’s Dark Winter, Really Serious PainTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
by Dr. Ron Paul: The World Health Organization (WHO) recently admitted that lockdowns cause more harm than good. Following this announcement, one would have expected American politicians to immediately end the lockdowns. After all, the WHO ‘s pronouncements are considered infallible, so much so that social media sites silence anyone who dares challenge the great and powerful WHO. Yet, governors, mayors, and other government officials across the country are ignoring the WHO’s anti-lockdown position.
Instead of admitting that the lockdowns were a mistake, many in the political class, which includes a disturbing number of medical professionals whose positions and prestige depend on government, claim that we cannot return to normalcy until a coronavirus vaccine is in wide use. This suggests that people among the majority of Americans who do not wish to be vaccinated will remain under lockdown or be forced to be vaccinated against their will.
The assault on our liberty will not end with deployment and use of a vaccine. Moncef Slaoui, the chief adviser of the Trump administration’s Operation Warp Speed, a “public-private partnership” in charge of producing and delivering a coronavirus vaccine, has said that those who receive a vaccine will be monitored by “incredibly precise … tracking systems.” Slaoui has also indicated that tech giants Google and Oracle will help the government keep tabs on the vaccinated individuals. So, the vaccine program will lead to an increase in government surveillance!
Slaoui is just the latest “expert” to endorse forcing the American people to relinquish their few remaining scraps of privacy to stop coronavirus. Dr. Anthony Fauci and Bill Gates have urged development of a digital certificate for those vaccinated for coronavirus. People without the certificate would find their liberty severely restricted.
Those who think that the new surveillance system will be limited to coronavirus should remember that Social Security numbers were only supposed to be used to administer the Social Security program. They should also consider that the PATRIOT Act’s expansion of warrantless wiretapping was supposed to be limited to stopping terrorists. However, these powers have been used for a wide variety of purposes. Whenever government is given power to abuse our rights for one reason it will inevitably use that power to abuse our rights for other reasons as well.
Fauci and Gates’ digital certificate could, and likely will, be expanded to include proof individuals have received a variety of other vaccines and medical treatments. The digital certificate could even extend to monitoring a person’s lifestyle choices on the grounds that unhealthy habits make one more susceptible to diseases.
The digital certificate could also be tied to the REAL ID program to deny individuals who have not been vaccinated the right to travel. It could also be combined with a future mandatory E-Verify system to deny unvaccinated individuals the right to hold a job. Those who consider this “paranoia” should consider Britain is already developing a covid passport.
Liberty lost in the “war on covid” will not be voluntarily returned when the coronavirus threat ends — assuming the government ever stop moving the goal posts and declares the coronavirus threat is over. Instead, the people must be prepared to take back their liberty from the politicians. Fortunately, we still have the ability to do so by the peaceful means of educating our fellow citizens and pressuring our elected officials to reverse course. We must all do what we can to use these peaceful tools before we are in a “dark winter” of authoritarianism.
————————– Dr. Ron Paul (@ronpaul), Chairman of the Ron Paul Institute for Peace and Prosperity, is a former U.S.Congressman (R-TX). He twice sought the Republican nomination for President. As a MD, he was an Air Force flight surgeon and has delivered over 4000 babies. Paul writes on numerous topics but focuses on monetary policies, the military-industrial complex,the Federal Reserve, and compliance with the U.S. Constitution.
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by Mike Huckabee: “Fasten your seatbelts. It’s going to be a bumpy night.” More likely a bumpy week. Or…who knows? Tuesday night is probably just the beginning, even if it looks like a landslide. And we’ve got to buckle up for the ride and be prepared to handle anything.
The momentum is certainly there. President Trump is a force of nature, campaigning like a whirlwind, with FIVE rallies on Sunday alone. The new report on GDP growth is record-setting. And to cite just one example of his surging support, Trump is doing remarkably well in (among other battleground states) Pennsylvania, with the stunning news Sunday that the extremely Democrat-leaning PITTSBURGH POST-GAZETTE has done what they haven’t done since 1972 and endorsed the Republican for President. Naturally, they’re embarrassed and disturbed by Trump’s “unpresidential manner and character,” but he’s still the better choice, they say.
But as for the voting, Pennsylvania expects 10 times more mail-in ballots to be sent in than there were in 2016, and it could take days to count them. And in spite of a Supreme Court challenge, they’ll be counting any mail-in ballot postmarked by Election Day and delivered by 5PM on November 6. The Pennsylvania secretary of state says that in prior elections, military and overseas ballots haven’t all come in before “a full week” after Election Day.
She “expects” all the votes to be counted within a matter of days. But take what she says about the time “expected” for counting votes with a grain of salt, as she is a Democrat and also said that “elections have never been called on Election Night.” Huh?
There are more reasons to be hopeful: The Biden family “business” story has taken hold in spite of — and perhaps in part because of — the media and Big Tech’s attempts to silence it or falsely label it “Russian disinformation.” (Incidentally, Twitter’s stock price took a huge hit this week; that may be why they finally relented and unlocked the account of the NEW YORK POST.) Especially in light of the virus that came from Wuhan, China, I don’t think most of the country wants to elect a President whose family is so eager to sell out to the Chinese — and, of course, to give “the big guy” his 10 percent cut.
More about this will have to wait till after the election. But we might see a nationwide sweep to re-elect Trump that is so decisive it overcomes even the anticipated voter fraud surrounding massive mail-in balloting. Most of the Trump-Biden polls are still so ridiculously weighted for Biden that I won’t bother you with them, but electoral maps that actually make some sense show Trump increasingly competitive in the Electoral College.
Trump’s demeanor at the rallies tells us he’s happy, expansive and confident. Contrast this with the anemic Joe Biden’s dark warnings, and you’ll find more and more people agreeing with Karen Townsend at HOT AIR.
While Democrats are sweating about Florida and Michigan, we’re starting to taste victory. But this is no time to take anything for granted, as we need to keep our heads during whatever court challenges and violence we might see in the coming days. (Thousands of lawyers are reportedly spreading out across the country to mount legal challenges.) We’ll be blamed for the chaos, even though this makes no sense.
But former acting Director of National Intelligence Richard Grenell is having none of that. His response is steady as a rock. Here’s what Grenell tweeted in response to Wolf Blitzer’s lament about preparations made on Election Eve for violence: “You’ve fanned the flames for chaos, riots and vandalism. You’ve led the most vicious, negative and political attacks on the President. You fed the American public a Russian collusion lie for 4 years. Stop pretending you are now shocked.”
Here’s just a sample of what leftist protesters are planning for the coming week. Yes, PLANNING. This is all set beforehand, regardless of the vote count, and it could get very nasty.
In light of all this, what I want to preach about a little today relates to the pro-Trump caravan that surrounded a Biden-Harris bus on Saturday. Rick Moran’s excellent commentary at PJ MEDIA offers a strong rationale for the behavior we saw. Yes, everything he says about the hysterical ravings coming from the left is correct. And, yes, we’re sick of having to put up with it.
But look at how the media play it. These aren’t just confident Trump supporters expressing their feelings to the people who have been lying about them and calling them “deplorables” and every other kind of name for the past four-plus years –- they’re “Hitler’s brownshirts” who are “inciting violence.” The act was taken as “hostile” when it was just rowdy enthusiasm. No trace of violence was reported; there weren’t even any traffic violations. When police came to escort the bus, the caravan fell back behind it.
One approving tweet said, “This is the most badass thing I’ve ever seen in my life. Go Texas.”
Compare this with the actual violence coming from the left: Trump supporters literally being shot dead in cold blood, or beaten bloody and unconscious, or kicked right in the teeth. Plus the usual burning and looting. THAT is the kind of violence people are prepping for, Wolf Blitzer. And it’s not coming from us.
But –- and here’s where the preaching comes in –- as we start to taste victory, pray that we remain calm, steady and peaceful as we go into this coming week, whatever happens. I know Saturday was fun, and even inspiring, but it came close to crossing a line. We all know where that line is.
As the fate of our nation hangs in the balance, I’m increasingly confident about the outcome of this election. But until President Trump is safely re-elected and installed in the White House for another four years, we have to be the adults. The outcome could depend on this. Our behavior is a reflection of the candidate we support, as we respond appropriately and effectively to ANY challenge that is thrown at us in the coming days. In the words of ANCHORMAN’s Ron Burgundy, “Stay classy.”
Tags:Mike Huckabee, Morning Edition, A Little Preaching, As We Head Into, Election WeekTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
Arkansas Attorney General Leslie Rutledge released a statement following oral arguments before the U.S. Supreme Court in Rutledge v. Pharmaceutical Care Management Association (PCMA). In this case, Rutledge seeks to protect family pharmacies in Arkansas and to ensure Arkansans’ access to affordable healthcare by defending the State’s power to regulate the abusive payment practices of pharmacy benefit managers (PBMs).
“Arkansans deserve affordable healthcare. By requiring these drug middlemen to be held accountable to pay pharmacies a fair price, we are protecting Arkansans from skyrocketing prescription drug prices and preserving their access to frontline healthcare providers like family pharmacies,” said Attorney General Rutledge. “Our case was one of two landmark healthcare cases before the Supreme Court this term, and it’s time states like Arkansas had the power to protect themselves.”
In the U.S. Supreme Court, Attorney General Rutledge is supported by the U.S. Solicitor General and a bipartisan coalition led by California that includes 44 other states and the District of Columbia.
In 2015, PCMA filed a lawsuit to block enforcement of Act 900, which regulates PBMs, who act as prescription drug middlemen, reimbursing pharmacists for prescription drugs dispensed to insurance beneficiaries. Before Act 900, PBMs often reimbursed pharmacies at less than the pharmacies’ cost to acquire a drug. This practice and other factors caused more than 16% of rural pharmacies to close in recent years. The U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Arkansas ruled in 2017 that Act 900 was preempted by the federal Employee Retirement Income Security Act, and, in 2018, the Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals affirmed that decision.
Tags:U.S. Supreme Court, Hears Oral Arguments, Rutledge V. PCMA, Arkansas Attorney General, Leslie RutledgeTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
by NRA-ILA: While discussion of the Second Amendment and gun control have been noticeably absent from the presidential debates and mainstream media coverage, gun rights are without a doubt on the ballot tomorrow.
On no other issue do the candidates stand in such stark contrast.
This may sound like hyperbole, but Biden’s 47-year history on guns leaves little question as to his position on Americans’ fundamental right to self-defense.
A simple examination of the gun policy page on the Biden campaign’s website reveals that there isn’t a single gun control policy that he doesn’t support.
While many Americans might expect that our courts would intervene to stop such draconian and unconstitutional policies, Biden has a plan for that too. In numerous appearances, Biden and Harris have both refused to reject the idea of packing the United States Supreme Court to ensure that their unconstitutional polices are not struck down.
Make no mistake, a plan to pack the Court is a plan to destroy the Second Amendment. The justices that a potential Biden administration would add to the Court would undoubtedly be hostile to the right to keep and bear arms. Biden and Harris have both made their own position on the Second Amendment clear: they don’t believe law-abiding Americans have any right to possess firearms at all.
With less than 48 hours left in this election, now it’s more important than ever for all NRA members to reject these extreme and unconstitutional gun control polices by voting to reelect President Donald J. Trump.
——————– NRA-ILA Institute for Legislative Action.
Tags:INRA, ILA, NR_ILA, Joe Biden, Kamala Harris, Want to Destroy. the Second AmendmentTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
Tags:AF Branco, editorial cartoon, The Color of Doom, Biden says if he’s elected, there will be, no Red or Blue states, but we know what color they will beTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
by Paul Jacob, Contributing Author: “If Tuesday’s vote sparks unrest,” a weekend Washington Post feature informed, “customers at Fortitude Ranch will be secure behind walls patrolled by armed guards.”
The Post highlighted a pricey survivalist “get away” in West Virginia and hyped for the rest of us “that violence could erupt, especially if the vote count drags on for days without a clear winner.”
Just as an aside, doesn’t it seem like we are getting less information about what happened yesterday and a lot more “news” about what is going tohappen tomorrow?
Anyway, I think we can trust each other. We’ve got to. Not on TV, but in real life.
Part of that trust is believing that one election loss won’t alter all previous societal norms [cough: court-packing]. Yes, elections have consequences, but in a free country, losing an election should not be a scary event. Look at me, I have only voted for one winning candidate in my entire life!!!*
Whatever happens tomorrow . . . or days or weeks later . . . don’t worry. You have rights and there shall be another election before too long. Right?
Rights?
“Eternal vigilance” being the rule about defending basic things like rights, the next election will always be the most important.
Ballot measures in Arkansas, Florida and North Dakota are about the next election.
Sadly, dangerously, they seek to make it much harder and more expensive for citizens to petition issues onto the state ballot and gain an up or down decision from the voters. That’s why Citizens in Charge is fighting to defeat all three.
Proponents shriek that wealthy out-of-state interests must be stopped from changing the state constitution, but not a single word in any of the three amendments even touches on out-of-state funding. Instead, each makes the process more cumbersome and expensive, undercutting grassroots groups while having little effect on moneyed interests.
In North Dakota, voters passed a reform measure in 2018 creating a state ethics commission. The ballot issue was funded by an out-of-state group, and thoroughly despised by state legislators . . . who referred Measure 2 to the ballot.
Measure 2 allows the legislature to veto a vote of the people for a constitutional amendment and require the vote to be held a second time. Beyond the ugly optics of politicians vetoing the people, it will make passing an initiative amendment much more costly — again empowering wealthier interests at the expense of the less well-heeled.
In Florida, a constitutional amendment already requires a 60-percent supermajority vote. Amendment 4 would require the measure win a second time by that supermajority. In the nation’s third largest state, the expense of a second campaign weighs in favor of long-term established political interests and against grassroots reform.
In Arkansas, Issue 2 seeks to further weaken the already weakened term limits and Issue 3 endeavors to wreck the petition process to block a future term limits initiative. Previously, I’ve explained the duo of amendments as the “Lifetime Politicians Ruin Christmas Amendments.” Today, a “Trojan” Horse travels Arkansas telling the tale.
Which is critical because Arkansas legislators refused to clue-in voters. The ballot titles that legislators placed on both measures tell voters precisely zero about the actual constitutional changes being voted upon.
That our own representatives are attempting to knock out an important democratic check on themselves is not “the small stuff.”
We had better sweat it.
And you can help Citizens in Charge fight back. It’s too late to do more toward tomorrow’s votes in Arkansas, Florida and North Dakota. With earned (free) media work and a shoestring budget of Facebook ads, we got our message out in all three states and have a shot to defeat each one.
Help us fight the new bills we know are coming as legislative sessions begin in January. Support our work with activists in Arkansas and North Dakota fighting Issue 3 and Measure 2, respectively, as they go on offense to demand change — perhaps by initiative.
Good luck to America tomorrow, but the campaign to prevent critical grassroots democratic checks from being hobbled and chopped and blocked continues. Because there is another election in 2022.
This is Common Sense. I’m Paul Jacob.
* And I still regret it. Who was it? Well, ours are secret ballots, but I will fully disclose the sordid details in the first three minutes of my podcast this weekend.
—————————- Paul Jacob (@Common_Sense_PJ) is author of Common Sense which provides daily commentary about the issues impacting America and about the citizens who are doing something about them. He is also President of the Liberty Initiative Fund (LIFe) as well as Citizens in Charge Foundation. Jacob is a contributing author on the ARRA News Service.
Tags:Paul Jacob, Common Sense, The Next ElectionTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
Turnout has already reached 9 million in Texas, beating 2016 turnout, with days still to go before election day.
Now, there are several factors to consider here. For starters, the population of registered voters has increased by almost 2 million in 2020 from four years ago.
Counties Hillary Clinton won gained 864,000 new voters, and counties President Trump won gained 990,000.
Of the counties that voted for Clinton, 4.1 million have voted early or mailed it in, and in counties that voted for Trump, 4.9 million have voted, as of Oct. 29.
Turnout in Republican counties is about 54.2 percent and in Democratic counties it is 52.2. percent. Meaning, Republicans seem to be winning early voting in the Lone Star State.
That’s pretty close to last time, and there’s still a few days to go.
Now, assuming that each county will vote at the same percentage for each candidate compared to 2016 gives you a baseline. It will change. Perhaps Biden does do a little better, and if he does it will be because Democrats registered more people in the largest, bluest counties. But a baseline is about the best you can hope for from early vote tallies.
There is no party registration in Texas. There is party affiliation that requires an oath and allows you to vote in primaries which expires every year. But not everyone votes in primaries.
So, the above analysis merely takes into account the increased voter registration by county from 2016 to 2020, and then early voting figures as of Oct. 29, and assuming comparable figures for both candidates.
Each candidate could expand their margins by either registering more people or persuading swing voters, but there is little evidence in polling to suggest a collapse of Republican support for Trump.
Even the New York Times/Siena poll showing Trump up by just 4 points has Trump support among Republicans at 94 percent. Biden’s Democrat support is at 93 percent. It also shows Trump at 55 percent for men and 41 percent for women, and Biden at 36 percent for men and only 51 percent for women.
It seems turnout in the Times/Siena poll is weighted toward Democrats and females, but again, Republican counties are leading in early voting in Texas. I don’t think it will be that close, but on the other hand, Democrats are indeed putting money and resources into eventually turning Texas blue.
They’ll likely fall short this year.
Those assuming that Democrats will turn out heavier than Republicans — perhaps based on Democrats’ mail-in advantage — if that’s how they’re polling other states, could be padding Democrats’ performance in those polls. The evidence from early voting doesn’t seem to show that. We’ll find out on Tuesday. I don’t think it will be that close (within 4 points) in Texas, I think the margin will be more than that.
At least in 2020, barring a shocking collapse of Republican support for President Trump, Texas should be solidly red this year.
———————- Robert Romano is the Vice President of Public Policy at Americans for Limited Government.
Tags:Robert Romano, >Americans for Limited Government, President Trump Says, He’s ‘Way Ahead In Texas!,’ He’s Probably RightTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
by Daniel Greenfield: Why are President Trump’s rallies packed while Biden’s rallies are deserted? Where were all the Democrats who joined in the Black Lives Matter riots, who packed the streets of D.C. for the Women’s March, who are wailing in front of the Supreme Court and burning down Portland?
The Democrats aren’t campaigning for Joe Biden, but against Donald J. Trump.
The Biden-Harris ticket is a placeholder, two candidates picked by Wall Street and Hollywood, by corporate donors looking for the best angle, bringing together a friend of segregationists and the woman who accused him of racism, and then negotiated with the party’s socialist wing to split the difference between the prospective administration’s crony capitalism and socialism.
Nobody’s going to a rally for that.
The 2020 election can be boiled down to love against hate. It pits MAGA against the 1619 Project, those who love this country against those who want to destroy it. At Republican rallies, American flags are waved, at Democrat riots flags, churches, and shops are burned. The active part of the Democrat base won’t show up to a Biden rally because they won’t be allowed to destroy things, and because they’re not animated by the positive, but by the negative.
The Left’s radical change agenda isn’t born out of idealism, but cynicism. To get to the point where it can gather in mobs, topple statues, and tear down the United States, its followers have to believe that this country is fundamentally evil. Critical race theory is so popular because, like the more conventional Marxism before it, it resonates with what the mobs already believe.
Inside all the theories, articles, and plans to remake society is a great emptiness. The members of the mob are moved more by what they oppose than what they support. They can articulate hatred of the police, but not a serious proposal to replace them, they rage against America, but when they erect their CHAZ and CHOP replacements, they boil down into anarchy and violence.
All the plans to build a better world are only sanctimonious pretexts for destroying this one.
Biden isn’t really on the ticket. The destruction of America is the only candidate that the Democrats can put up anymore. When that candidate viscerally embodies the destruction, as only Biden’s boss ever truly did, then the rallies take off and the crowds faint at his word. But when, like Biden, the candidate is a Potemkin village putting up a facade of normalcy for the destroyers, then the crowds stay home, tweet furiously, or knock over a convenience store.
What enrages the radical mob isn’t oppression or injustice. That’s just what they call normalcy, stability, or any attempt to preserve the United States, a neighborhood, or a corner store.
They’re not voting for Biden. Or for anything. They’re not capable of being for things, only against them. The only thing their principles ever amount to is self-righteous outrage.
This election will test if their hate is stronger than the love Americans have for their nation.
Do Americans want to preserve their nation or destroy it in a furious tantrum while insisting that with their superior moral sensibilities they can build something better out of the rubble. The 1619 Project, critical race theory, the cancellation of everyone from Christopher Columbus to George Washington to Abraham Lincoln is an expression of profound disgust and contempt for America.
Make America Great Again is an expression of love for what America was and can be again.
MAGA rallies are filled with bright colors, while the mobs rampaging through American cities wear black. The clashing iconographies of red, white, and blue flags, and black power fists, starkly convey the choice between light and darkness, life and death, and love and hate.
Can hate drive more people to the polls than love? Is the lust to destroy more powerful than the drive to create? That’s the true question on the ballot.
This election isn’t just about the candidates. It’s about us.
The Democrats, like the rest of their leftist brethren, are at their most impassioned when they are running against something they truly hate. Each notable burst of political derangement aimed at a Republican, whether it was Nixon, Reagan, Bush, or Trump, led to an outpouring of ideological ferment, tactical innovation, explosive violence, and artistic creativity. When they lack an object for their hatred, then they recede into political mediocrity and impotent fuming.
The Left is at its best when it is also at its worst. It derives its sense of purpose and meaning not from within, but from hating its enemies. When it has purged all its enemies, its regimes decline into a state of mediocre misery until the great utopian system rots and falls. When there is nothing to fight against, no wars to make or lives to take, it is swallowed up by its emptiness.
Republicans are at their best when they sense an opportunity for national rebirth. Their high points, and there have been few, come when they sense that a sleeping giant is awakening. And then the scattered members of the silent majority who lack the organization and ideological consolidation of their enemies, rise with the tide, ready to rebuild the nation’s greatness.
Republicans and Democrats both need Trump for very different reasons. The Left needs him because it needs someone to hate. Its raptures of hatred inspire it to new extremes. The rage that animates it at the presence of someone like President Trump makes it feel truly alive.
The Left needs to destroy President Trump, but it also needs him to give it a sense of meaning.
And it is in the nature of the Left to destroy those things which give it meaning. Its drive to destroy Trump, like its drive to destroy America, is a manic obsession. After four years, it has the opportunity to truly live out its death wish because it is not only out to destroy America. Deep down, the Left also wants to destroy itself. Its ideologies have always been suicide notes. The sum total of them, from anti-capitalism to environmentalism to critical race theory to degenderization, is a compelling argument for why nothing should be allowed to exist.
Or, as David Benatar, the anti-natalist philosopher and author of Better Never to Have Been: The Harm of Coming into Existence, wrote, “Although it is obviously too late to prevent our own existence, it is not too late to prevent the existence of future possible people.”
That is what is at stake in this election. To call this hate understates the case. The other side of utopia is despair. If the world can’t be perfected, and it can’t, it must be destroyed. And since no amount of perfection can overcome the rage and unhappiness behind the feigned idealism, all the utopian deconstruction of what is eventually ends in barren lands and mass graves.
That is the dark heart that MAGA is running against. It asks Americans not to hope, but to build.
As the days of the calendar take us toward Election Day, a nation must decide between love and hate. Democrats will strive to win an election on the empty dregs of hate. They are running on nothing but antipathy, to President Trump and to America. Republicans must remember that they are not only running against something, but that they are running for their country.
America has had its dark hours, but it rose, grew, and thrived because our drive to build was stronger than our drive to destroy. That is why we came out of every war, no matter how devastating, stronger than ever as long as we believed in the future. When the time came that we no longer believed, even the lightest wars became hopeless affairs we couldn’t recover from.
The Democrats are still caught in that hopeless hate. They have nothing to love. The past is evil. History is a morass of crimes. The nation was stolen through genocide and built on slavery. Every historical hero is soon exposed as a monster. And the future holds more of the same.
The oceans are rising. Global warming will soon turn the parts of the world that aren’t underwater into desert. Mankind and all life on the planet is on the verge of extinction. And human greed is to blame. Wouldn’t it be better if the human race does indeed disappear?
Republicans have a nation and a storied history to love. The heroes of the nation are at their backs. And the future is one of promise or plenty, not misery and extinction. All they have to do is claim it. Hate is strong, but love, when it taps into the wellsprings of nationhood, family, and faith, is far stronger. Rage is powerful, but hollow. It is no match for the great love of a nation.
——————- Daniel Greenfield (@Sultanknish) is Shillman Journalism Fellow at the David Horowitz Freedom Center and an investigative journalist and writer focusing on radical Left and Islamic terrorism.
Tags:Daniel Greenfield, Election, Between Love, and Hate, US ElectionsTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
CRT seeks to con Americans into thinking our nation and our people are fundamentally racist. by Ken Blackwell: Critical race theory (CRT) is based on flawed and destructive assumptions. Its actual purpose is the complete opposite of its stated intent.
Its leftist creators in academia and media claim it encourages racial understanding. The truth is that its cynical methodology further divides us when racial understanding and acceptance is key to our survival as the freest nation on Earth.
Defined by Britannica, CRT is “the view that legal institutions are inherently racist, and race itself, instead of being biological, is a social construct used by white people to further their interests at the expense of people of color.”
As an African American, I assure the reader my skin color is not a social construct, nor is that of my Caucasian friends and colleagues.
CRT is not curriculum, but a movement of the radical Left to use false charges of institutional racism to con Americans into thinking our history was, and remains, foundationally racist — a tactic within a strategy to move the country toward the tyrannical, self-serving Left.
It encourages people to despise traditional values that nurture safety, opportunity, and prosperity. By turning our backs on historical truth, we allow leftists to work their destruction into our fabric deep enough to change the color of the thread — from red, white, and blue to dark, shadowy, and dismal. With its underlying assumption that all white people are racists, CRT is itself racist.
We are not a perfect nation, but we are “perfectible.” We have met challenges like slavery, civil rights, war, and terrorism. In every case, after mistakes and debate, we got it right. If we seek hard truths, address the right issues, and look for quantifiable solutions to issues of race, we will get it right again.
The primary threats to African Americans in minority areas are crime, inferior education, and lack of economic opportunity — and now, violent leftist BLM and Antifa destruction. There are solutions for these problems, and they are more likely to succeed if people with positive intent don’t have to shout over race-baiting leftists promoting hate.
Shamefully, our nation’s capital is a snapshot of educational failures in minority communities. In Washington, D.C., 90 percent of students are African American, and 63 percent of schools underperform. Only 37 percent of students pass post-secondary readiness exams. Black students receive the highest number of suspensions, and chronic absenteeism for this population is 35 percent, compared to 8 percent for white students.
Other big cities with significant black populations perform similarly and have another thing in common — they have all been ruled by liberal Democrat elites for decades, many who promote CRT.
In December 2016, when the national unemployment rate was 4.7 percent, unemployment for black Americans was higher than any other group at 8.2 percent. In February 2020, it had fallen dramatically to <5.8 percent. The Trump administration’s lowering of taxes and regulations gave minority small business owners — who are taxed at individual rates — a chance to expand and hire new employees.
Guided by Sen. Tim Scott (R-S.C.), in 2018 the administration created “opportunity zones” for distressed minority communities to create growth and jobs. By summer 2019, the program incentivized the private sector to invest $75 billion in these neighborhoods. By contrast, leftists have scorched many of our cities, causing untold billions in property damage and leaving many minority and immigrant business owners burned out of their shops and incomes.
Two factors have led to pervasive intra-community or “black on black” crime. First is the lack of educational and employment opportunities for young African Americans. Secondly, liberal policies and the Left’s hedonistic pop culture have destroyed the nuclear black family, with 67 percent headed by single moms, who themselves struggle with lack of quality education and job offerings.
Nearly 90 percent of African American homicide victims are killed by other African Americans. Yet liberal city officials encourage criminality by ignoring lawlessness and often refusing to prosecute offenders. And if you bring up black on black crime and its destructive power, you’re a racist regardless of your race.
Actions work. The Trump administration created the First Step Act that reformed mandatory sentencing and led to roughly 2,700 African Americans being released from prison. It also provides acknowledgment to the black community that people in office are willing to address their concerns.
Critical race theory, banned from federal agencies by President Trump, is yet another weapon in the radical Left’s toolbox to legitimize their heartless power grab. They use African Americans and gullible but well-meaning young minds to push destructive lies about our nation, our people, and our future.
Decades of liberal rule in minority communities have turned them into killing fields. We must turn them back to fields of dreams. We can start by eliminating CRT.
America still strives to live up to its ideals. And we can — with measurable, compassionate, realistic policy solutions, not a program that takes the “soft bigotry of low expectations” to devastating and destructive new lows.
————————- 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. He is a member of the American Constitutional Rights Union Action Fund Board of Directors and he is a contributing author to the ARRA News Service, Article shared on The American Spectator.
Tags:Ken Balkwell, Critical Race Theory, Cynically Undermines, Racial HarmonyTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
Only those who wish the pre-eminence of totalitarian China and Spengler’s long-awaited Decline of the West should be ululating with joy at the thought of a Biden victory
Conrad Black
by Conrad Black: Donald Trump has bumptious, churlish and even juvenile moments that have grated on me as they have on his detractors, but they are insignificant compared to questions that are at stake in Tuesday’s election.
His opponent, Joe Biden, is only in contention because the American media is overwhelmingly anti-Trump, as evidenced by numerous reports out of Harvard and the Pew Research Centre showing that coverage of his administration has been over 90 per cent negative.
This and the media’s frenzied campaign to incite panic over the coronavirus and the practice in some Democratically governed states of allowing ballots apparently postmarked by election day to be counted for an additional six days have lifted Biden out of his candidate protection program.
And, if Biden wins, the politicization of the senior ranks of the FBI and intelligence agencies to try to alter the 2016 presidential election (before and after election day), the greatest constitutional scandal in American history, will be swept under the rug.
So will official curiosity about the $9.44 million the Biden family is alleged by the president to have received from Russia, Ukraine and China while Biden was vice-president. No evidence has surfaced that it influenced government policy, but it has been the subject of colossal campaign untruths and a scandalous effort by the social media to throttle News Corporation, especially the New York Post and Fox News, and even the White House press secretary, to prevent them from discussing the issue.
A Biden victory would be a triumph for the morally bankrupt American national political media and their almost airtight Trump-hate misinformation campaign (slavishly echoed by Canada’s media).
Biden (in Cromwellian terms) is a decayed servitor, a semi-senescent wax-works dummy hiding in his basement as part of the Democratic media’s COVID-19 hysteria campaign.
The media have conducted the Democratic campaign and have helped reduce public respect for the media to below 20 per cent.
Democracy requires a free press that is valued and deserves respect. Validating the media’s disgraceful conduct in this campaign could substantially undermine the prestige and credibility of American democracy in the eyes of Americans themselves.
There has not been a more important American election at least since FDR’s victory for aid to the democracies and an immense arms build-up when he sought a third term in 1940.
Trump’s re-election is the only way of restoring the conditions that he created that effectively eliminated unemployment prior to the onset of the COVID-19 crisis. This, coupled to his near-elimination of illegal immigration (against fierce Democratic resistance), of 500,000 to one million unskilled Latin-Americans a year, generated greater percentage income growth amongst the lowest 20 percent of income-earners than among the top 10 per cent — a noteworthy start on addressing the universal income-disparity problem.
Only a Trump victory will ensure retention of the present relatively low personal and corporate income-tax rates and the avoidance of insane COVID shutdowns. As I wrote here last week, that virus only mortally threatens a small percentage of the population, who can be isolated and protected.
The charge that Trump has botched the COVID crisis, like the fatuous claims that he is a racist and misogynist, is bunk. He inherited a decrepit health crisis response system that required all tests to be made by appointment in hospitals and sent to Atlanta for evaluation.
There were acute shortages of everything that was needed. He managed swiftly through all that and advanced the timetable for a vaccine, which is the only serious defence, by over a year.
Meanwhile, America’s economic performance has been the best in the world — twice as strong as Canada’s, and 60 per cent better even than Japan or Germany. The U.S GDP rebounded in the third quarter at the astonishing annual rate of 33 per cent.
Only a Trump victory will prevent Iran from becoming a nuclear military power within five years and North Korea from resuming its missile tests over Japan and South Korea.
It is unlikely that Biden would maintain a firm but not belligerent economic and strategic containment strategy towards China, co-ordinated with India, Japan, South Korea, and other key allies in south and east Asia and Australasia.
The Democrats are committed to giving the PLO and Hamas a veto over any resolution of their conflict with Israel, and since they do not accept the right of Israel to exist as a Jewish state, that will ensure continued stagnation, attrition and terrorism, financed by a newly re-enabled Iran.
The Trump two-state strategy with strong economic incentives is steadily lining up the support of the Arab world.
Biden would reassume the self-flagellating Paris Climate Accord, and the $100 trillion Green Terror — the Green New Deal assault on the petroleum industry and a bone-cracking rise in electricity costs after closing gas-fired electricity plants. This administration has protected the environment, but not by disemploying millions of people.
Trump will continue to promote private, charter, community,and separate schools that will reverse the steady decline of educational standards generated by the teachers’ unions, to which the Democratic party is bound hand and foot (a familiar problem in Canada).
Although he has been tactically mistaken in not producing his full alternative health-care plan, Trump will not reinforce Obamacare’s destruction of doctor–patient relationships with the Democrats’ hideously expensive socialist alternative.
Only Trump can ensure that the concept of freedom of religion will not be bulldozed by such tyrannical outrages as requiring the Little Sisters of the Poor to pay for the contraception and abortions of their students and employees.
The United States has five per cent of the world’s population and 25 percent of its incarcerated people. Trump has acted on penal reform. The American criminal-justice system is a disgrace, and both Biden and vice-presidential nominee Kamala Harris, the former attorney general of California, are complicit in that disgrace, and won’t do anything about it.
The Democrats are tainted by their intimate dependence upon their corrupt urban political machines and by having maintained a low profile all summer as the worst rioting in America in over 50 years raged across the country. Hooligans burned and stole and vandalized billions of dollars of property, nearly 40 people were killed and over 700 police injured by mobs masquerading as civil rights crusaders.
They tried to destroy statues of some America’s greatest leaders, including those most dedicated to the advancement of African-Americans: Frederick Douglass, Abraham Lincoln and Ulysses S. Grant.
The Democrats would assault the existing constitutional system, including a neutralization of the Electoral College by imposing the victory of the candidate with the most votes nationwide even in states that voted for other candidates, effectively disenfranchising the 25 smaller-population states in the country.
It would also include packing the Supreme Court and a renewed relaxation of entry of illegal migrants and the confirmation of the inability to screen non-citizens as ineligible voters in presidential elections.
The District of Columbia and Puerto Rico would be admitted as states to provide four more Democratic senators, and the lowering of the voting age to 16 would ensure prolonged Democratic predominance.
Trump has stopped all talk of China inevitably surpassing the U.S.
Biden is pathologically mediocre, Harris is a compulsive chucklehead and Trump is a quasi-vulgarian but a very effective executive.
An unusually successful president faces a dual personification of weakness and vacuity.
Only those who wish the pre-eminence of totalitarian China and Spengler’s long-awaited Decline of the West should be ululating with joy at the thought of a Biden victory.
—————————- Conrad Black is a Canadian writer with an interesting past. Article shared in the National Post
Tags:Conrad Black, Unusually, Successful President, May Be Swindled, Out Of VictoryTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
Rep. Wasserman Schultz recently committed to bringing back earmarks, saying it needs to be done “the right way.”
There is absolutely no right way to bring back earmarks. Congress has squandered a horrifying $375.7 billion on earmarks since 1991, wasting $15.9 billion in fiscal year 2020 alone. The current national debt of $27 trillion is going to grow at a record pace over the next decade. However, Rep. Wasserman Schultz doesn’t see the frightful problem with reinstating wasteful pork projects. She incorrectly claims that the GOP’s ban on earmarks was and remains a “campaign messaging stunt,” even though members of Congress on both sides of the aisle have expressed opposition to their return.
CAGW President Tom Schatz said, “At this scary time for the financial future of the country, Rep. Wasserman Schultz fails to see the hideous hazards of earmarks. Bringing back one of the most corrupt, costly, and inequitable practices in history is wickedly cruel to taxpayers who are dealing with mounting personal debt and struggling during the pandemic. Members of Congress need to run far, far away from members like Rep. Wasserman Schultz who want to resurrect self-serving, grotesque pork-barrel spending.
For trying to resuscitate appalling and loathsome earmarks, Rep. Wasserman Schultz is an easy choice for Porker of the Month.
—————— Citizens Against Government Waste is a nonpartisan, nonprofit organization dedicated to eliminating waste, fraud, abuse, and mismanagement in government. For more than two decades, Porker of the Month is a dubious honor given to lawmakers and government officials who have shown a blatant disregard for the interests of taxpayers.
Tags:Citizens Against Government Waste, CAGW, October 2020, porker of the month, Rep. Debbie WassermanTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
by Jack Sanetti: Joe Biden and his first wife, Neilia, had three children: Hunter, Beau and Naomi.
In 1972, Neilia and Naomi, died in a car accident. Joe eventually married hsi current wife Jill.
He already knew her because she had been Hunter’s babysitter at the time of the car accident. (Yeah, THAT seems normal- marry the babysitter). They had a daughter named Ashley. Ashley lives ‘a quiet life’ and is frequently in and out of rehab for various substance abuse issues.
Now sadly, the sanest, most normal one of the 3 surviving kids, Beau, dies in 2015 from a brain tumor. He had been married to Haillie and they had 2 children, a boy and a girl named Natalie, who was 11 yrs old when her dad died.
Enter Hunter Biden, in 2015, to “comfort” his brother’s widow. Mind you, Hunter is married at the time, to Kathleen Biden, since 1993. He starts screwing around with his dead brother’s wife in 2015…his wife Kathleen finds out about it and they separate. Hunter moves in with his dead brother’s wife, Haillie, and her two kids and they have a grand old time. He ultimately gets divorced from Kathleen in 2017. Meanwhile, he starts fooling around with a stripper, while still shacking up with his dead brother’s wife, before his divorce is finalized, and gets the stripper pregnant. Haillie kicks his butt to the curb supposedly for this indiscretion in 2018. He denies the stripper’s baby is his, although a paternity test proves otherwise and eventually marries a woman named Melissa in 2019 after knowing her for 6 days…
Does the tale end there? Why no, no it doesn’t. That just sets the stage…
Enter the laptop from hell…loaded with emails, text messages, photos, child pornography, videos, and other sordid digital images of drug use and rampant weirdness….
Hunter Biden dropped the laptop off in Delaware, his home state, to get it repaired. It seems he dropped it in some water while in a meth-induced state of mind. He then neglected to pay the $85.00 repair fee and the laptop became the repair shop owner’s property for non-payment. When the owner saw what was on it, he was so disturbed that he contacted the FBI. No response. The DOJ? No response. Eventually, it landed in Rudy Giuliani’s possession and he turned it over to the Delaware State Police AFTER making 4 copies of the hard drive. Turns out, there’s quite a lot of child pornography on there…much of it involving children on Hunter’s many trips to China. The Chinese Communist Party uses this as a blackmail tactic… They supply the young girls, they film you, unknowingly, and then they can keep you “in line”, while paying you the big $$$ to do their bidding, like lucrative deals with your VP father.
Millions of dollars were paid to Hunter Biden for favors with the US Govt while Joe Biden was VP under Obama.
For 8 years Hunter made the contacts and split the money with his father, referred to as the “Big Guy” in all emails detailing how their ill gotten gains would be split up amongst all the criminals involved.
Joe Biden sold out his country and used his meth head son to do it. …
But, IT GETS WORSE. Today, on the laptop, emails were released between Beau Biden’s widow, Haillie, and Joe Biden in 2017 and more in 2018 when she and Hunter were still living together. They were casually talking about the continual “sexually inappropriate behavior” she had witnessed from Hunter toward her 14 year old daughter, Natalie, HIS NIECE!..
She told Joe that she felt she had put her children in a dangerous situation by getting involved with Hunter Biden. Joe knew his son was *** around with his niece and he advised his daughter-in-law to go to therapy….. No one went to the police and the abuse escalated. THAT is the main reason she broke off her relationship with Hunter. Among the pictures of Hunter having sex with young Asian children, there were hundreds of provocative pictures of a 14 year old girl, mainly topless, and hundreds more of Hunter Biden, in sexual poses with her, HIS NIECE. She was 14 yrs old and HE WAS 48!!
BOTTOM LINE: ANY MAN WHO CAN’T TAKE CARE OF HIS OWN HOUSE, HAS NO BUSINESS BEING IN THE WHITE HOUSE.
THE END…..but, is it? Nope. Rudy Giuliani says there is more to come, primarily involving Joe Biden getting rich off laundering foreign money through our country, using his son as intermediary. Biden is as dirty and crooked as they come. Hillary looks clean compared to him. Now it makes sense why Obama REFUSED to endorse him as the DNC candidate until he was the last man standing!
———————— Jack Sanetti opinion article shared on other media.
Tags:Jack Sanetti, Joe Biden, Hunter Biden, No Business in, White HouseTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
by John Kartch: In an exclusive to Americans for Tax Reform, here is the story of how Joe Biden told a young middle income voter that he would raise his taxes:
“My name is Nico Parisi, and I attended Joe Biden’s campaign event at Coastal Carolina University on Feb. 27, 2020 in Conway, SC. As a recent graduate from the University, and as an individual who is very engaged in politics, I decided to experience what it would be like to take part in the event of an opposing political party. I had no intentions of having any interaction with anyone, which ended up not being the case.During Biden’s event, he asked the crowd, “By the way, how many of you benefited from that $1.9 trillion dollar tax cut?” As a recent college graduate making a middle class income, I raised my hand, because I did benefit from the TCJA. The tax cuts saved me nearly $1,800 a year, or roughly $150 a month. As a matter of fact, nearly 90% of that room benefited from the tax cuts, so it was amusing to see only my hand raised, of around 300+ people who attended.
Joe Biden noticed my hand in the crowd, and responded “Well that’s good, I’m glad to see you’re doing well already. But if you elect me, your taxes are going to be raised, not cut, if you benefited from that.” I was in shock. Biden insinuated that the only way I could have benefited from the tax cuts was if I was some rich millionaire, which is false. This is an especially interesting assumption, given that I am a 22 year old, recent college graduate, who looks much younger than my age would imply.”The Tax Cuts and Jobs Act — also known as the Trump tax cuts — reduced middle class taxes, as noted even by left-leaning outlets:
Biden likes to lie about the Trump tax cuts by pretending the middle class didn’t receive a tax cut. Biden and Kamala Harris also are on tape 22 times saying they will “eliminate”, “get rid of”, “repeal”, and “end” the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act.
Biden was even called out by CNN for lying about the tax cuts to a Pennsylvania audience of union members. CNN slapped Biden for lying and said: “In reality, it is likely that many of the people in Biden’s audience that day at the Teamsters banquet hall in Pittsburgh benefited from that tax cut.”
A Biden-Harris “elimination” of the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act would most certainly impose a tax increase on middle income households.
Tags:Gary Bauer, Campaign for Working Families, Marxist Thugs, Threaten CWF, Four Days Out, An Active InvestigationTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
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We’re about to make a decision as a country in a presidential election that is fundamental. nIt’s fundamental on a number of levels. Ideologically, we’re about to choose between a president who aggressively champions America as founded, or at least as close to it as modern realities allow, and a Democrat challenger whose handlers are openly socialist.
It was a humiliating habit of mine every four years: I would predict a Republican presidential victory for the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, only to see my predictions crash and burn. In 2016, I didn’t dare go there, predicting a big win for Hillary Clinton and the Democrats not only in Pennsylvania but nationwide. Wrong again. So, that’s not a wise way of introducing a column telling you that I think Donald Trump will win Pennsylvania (and thus the Electoral College and the election) in 2020, but it’s at least an honest admission of my unimpressive predictive abilities. Take it or leave it. And really, my prediction this time is based on lessons learned from last time.
President Trump would be the clear favorite this election day if both, or perhaps just one, of the following promises had been kept. The first was the coming establishment of diplomatic relations between Israel and Saudi Arabia. The second was release of federal prosecutor John Durham’s findings on the Obama–Biden administration’s apparently illegal actions to undermine the Trump 2016 campaign and president-elect Trump’s transition, with possible collusion by foreign powers against the legitimately elected Trump.
You just know that, when 130 million vote in a country of 300 million, millions have not voted.
Those millions would decide Wisconsin, Michigan, Pennsylvania, Arizona, Nevada, Colorado, Florida, North Carolina, Ohio, Iowa, and parts of Maine and Nebraska.
You have to go out and vote. They have to have their votes cast.
If you have voted, you have to get on the phone and email and shame others into voting.
Don’t bother “persuading.” Those who need “persuading” on November 3 don’t matter. G-d created the flavor of “artificial vanilla” for them. Let them stir it and watch it melt.
It is those who know that Trump, backed by a Republican Senate and House, will save us from Pelosi and Kamala and court packing and burning streets, who must be shamed into casting their ballots. Dov Fischer
______________________
Americans take for granted that, when we step into the voting booth and cast our ballots, the choices we make will remain secret unless we voluntarily reveal them. Moreover, regardless of ideological bent, very few voters would approve of any attempt to lift that veil of privacy from the process. Yet the secret ballot was essentially unheard of in the United States until the mid-19th century, and it wasn’t adopted throughout the country until the 1890s. Before then, elections were conducted by voice or by color-coded tickets. The “shy Trump voter” could never survive in such an electoral environment. Thus, it’s unlikely that Trump could have been elected in 2016.
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ABC
November 3, 2020 – Having trouble viewing this email? Open it in your browser.
Morning Rundown
Trump and Biden’s final push for votes: Election Day is finally here, and President Donald Trump and former Vice President Joe Biden have only hours left to make their closing arguments to voters in a race both are calling the most important of their lifetime. Each candidate was out in full force in several battleground states on Monday, trying to drum up support. Trump held rallies in North Carolina, Michigan, Wisconsin and Pennsylvania, while Biden’s team hit the trail in Ohio and Pennsylvania. Pennsylvania is a crucial state for each candidate’s path to the 270 electoral votes needed to win. “Pennsylvania is the most likely tipping-point state,” FiveThirtyEight reported. A lot of Biden’s chances in the Electoral College hinge on what happens in Pennsylvania. Biden has a five-point advantage over Trump in the Keystone State, according to FiveThirtyEight. Other states to watch include Wisconsin, Michigan, Arizona, Florida and North Carolina. Today, Biden will be in Wilmington, Delaware, with his running mate, Sen. Kamala Harris, and Trump will be at the White House, where he has invited 400 people, including family, White House staff, campaign aides and top supporters to join him. ABC News’ election night coverage begins at 7 p.m. ET and don’t miss round-the-clock coverage of the vote on ABCNews.com. Click here for your state-by-state breakdown of election results, with a guide to poll closing times and more races to watch on election night.
Judge rejects GOP effort to throw out 127K ‘drive-thru’ votes in Texas: Federal District Judge Andrew Hanen on Monday rejected a Republican effort to invalidate roughly 127,000 drive-thru votes cast in Harris County, Texas, saying he believes the plaintiffs who brought the case did not have standing to sue — a major victory to Democrats and a blow to Republicans. In June, Harris County, the most populous county in the state, received state approval for the drive-thru method due to safety concerns amid the pandemic. However, Republicans argued that Harris County Clerk Chris Hollins acted on his own by implementing the practice. Despite their claims, Hanen rejected their efforts and ordered Harris County, which includes Houston and the surrounding area, to maintain records regarding all of its drive-thru votes. Hollins announced on Monday evening that the only drive-thru location open on Tuesday would be the Toyota Center, home to the NBA’s Houston Rockets. Now — in addition to legal challenges — concerns about voter suppression, disinformation and the potential for civil unrest are top of mind issues for law enforcement today. Fearing election unrest, many businesses in major cities have boarded up windows and unscalable fencing was temporarily installed around the White House perimeter in preparation of potential protests. While experts say the majority of voters will not experience voter intimidation at the polls today, states and authorities are staying vigilant. Here’s how to spot voter intimidation and what to do.
How to vote if you’ve been exposed to COVID-19: On Election Day, tens of thousands of Americans with newly diagnosed cases of COVID-19 may be wondering whether they’re still allowed to head to the polls. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, those who have been recently diagnosed are still able to vote in person, but will need to take precautions to protect poll workers and other voters. “This includes wearing a mask, staying at least 6 feet away from others and washing their hands or using hand sanitizer before and after voting,” CDC spokesperson Jasmine Reed told ABC News. “These voters also should let poll workers know about their condition when arriving at the polling location.” According to an ABC News analysis, coronavirus cases are rising in every key battleground state; however, the rise in cases does not appear to be preventing voters from casting ballots, nor has it seemed to affect early voting locations across the country. As of Monday, more than 97 million people had already voted.
99-year-old son of sharecropper votes in election: A 99-year-old man who was born the son of a plantation sharecropper is making sure his voice is being heard in this year’s election. Dr. Robert H. Smith Sr., of Jackson, Mississippi, stood in line for 20 minutes with his son to submit his ballot in person last month. “I remember when I couldn’t vote,” Smith, an army veteran and former sociology professor at Florida A&M University, said. “Voting is an experience that every American citizen should have.” Although the U.S. adopted the 15th Amendment in 1870, legally granting Black men the right to vote, the opportunity to exercise that right became a decades-long challenge, with some areas implementing specific requirements such as literacy tests and poll taxes. Smith, who has fought for racial equality for decades, said that the current push for justice is a sign the work is far from over. “There’s much more to be done,” he said.
GMA Must-Watch
This morning on “GMA,” Seth Rogen and his wife, Lauren Miller Rogen, join us for Alzheimer’s Awareness Month to talk about their new initiative for “Hilarity for Charity.” Plus, as many are struggling to sleep during this stressful time, mattress sales are skyrocketing. Becky Worley has some of the best picks from Consumer Reports and what to look for if you’re in the market for an upgrade. And Dr. Jennifer Ashton joins us with tips to stay physically and mentally healthy on Election Day, and healthy snacks to enjoy and keep anxiety at bay. All this and more only on “GMA.”
With nearly 100 million early votes already cast, Trump used his multiple rallies to air grievances against Democrats, Twitter and the Supreme Court while Biden called for an end to “the chaos, the tweets, the anger, the hate.”
“Go out and vote — unless you are going to vote for somebody other than me, in which case, sit it out,” Trump told a crowd of thousands on an airport tarmac in Fayetteville, North Carolina.
“My message is simple: the power to change the country is in your hands,” Biden said at a drive-in rally in Cleveland, prompting the blaring of car horns. “The president doesn’t determine who gets to vote, the voters determine who gets to be the president.”
It’s now “white knuckle” time for Trump and Biden, NBC News’ senior political analyst Jonathan Allen writes in a news analysis. And whether or not the outcome is clear by the time Tuesday ends, the final day of voting is a culmination of four years of political, social and cultural chaos that has further divided an already polarized nation.
Pennsylvania voting issues: 5 things to watch on Election Day
The pressure is on in the all-important battleground state of Pennsylvania where voters, as well as party and state officials, are anxiously preparing for what could be Election Week there.
The state last fall overhauled its election laws, the first major changes in about 80 years. But the new rules, combined with uncertainty over the Covid-19 pandemic and legal issues over mail-in voting, paint an uncertain picture of how the week could unfold.
From mail-in ballot processing to issues with “naked ballots,” here are five things to keep an eye on in the Keystone State.
Harris County, the third most populous in the country, set up drive-thru voting booths during the pandemic; state Republicans have argued it’s illegal. A federal judge rejected that argument.
Voters are engaged and confident heading into the election: How to follow the results
Some good news about the election: Voters are engaged.
As of Monday evening, nearly 97 million Americans had already cast their ballots, according to data from the NBC News Decision Desk/Target Smart, a Democratic political data firm. The Decision Desk projects that number could approach 100 million by Tuesday.
That early vote number represents roughly 71 percent of the total vote cast in all of 2016, when approximately 136.5 million ballots were counted.
And heading into Election Day, 50 percent of adults are confident that the election will be conducted in a fair and equal way, according to new data from the NBC News|SurveyMonkey Weekly Tracking Poll.
How can you stay on top of the election today, and in the coming days and weeks?
Follow our live blog for all the latest twists and turns today.
As Americans head to the polls for a momentous election, the country holds its breath in anticipation of what some fear could be a potential breakdown of law and order or democracy depending on what happens Tuesday, writes NBC News’ Alex Seitz-Wald.
The election is coinciding with a sharp rise inCovid-19 cases and cooling weather, which will make it harder for people to see family and friends, and it follows months of racial reckoning. Psychologists are calling it a “triple pandemic” of stress — the virus, the election and racial reckoning — especially for people of color.
“All three of these things are melding together and producing a synergistic sense of dread and isolation,” said Stephen Stein, a practicing psychologist who is past president of the D.C. Psychological Association.
So probably the only good news there is: You’re not alone.
Our friends at Better have suggested these three breathing techniques to ease your anxiety during these stressful times. Not sure that will help, but we’re trying…
Trump’s 2020 threats are a reminder that Election Day is not the end of the election, Steve Vladeck, a professor at the University of Texas School of Law,writes in an opinion piece.
Live BETTER
Don’t let cold weather — or the pandemic — keep you from socializing this winter. Here are six fun, socially-distant ways to stay connected.
Dixville Notch, New Hampshire, voters maintained their “First in the Nation” voting traditionat midnight on Election Day despite Covid-19.
The community’s five voters produced a clean sweep for one of the presidential candidates.
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: Here are the paths to 270 electoral votes for both Trump and Biden
A political year that began with an impeachment trial and botched results in the Iowa caucuses, and that later brought a deadly pandemic and calls for racial justice into the country, finally brings us to Election Day.
Or Election Week or Election Month – depending how long it takes to count the results.
Photo by Mark Makela/Getty Images
And this morning, we map out the possible paths to 270 electoral votes for both President Trump and Democratic nominee Joe Biden, including how one candidate could get to 270 without knowing the results in Michigan, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin (all three of which are expected to count slowly).
Here’s Biden’s simplest path to 270: win the 2016 Clinton states, plus Michigan, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin.
Here’s Trump’s simplest path: hold on to Arizona, Florida, Georgia, Iowa, North Carolina, Ohio, plus win Pennsylvania.
Here’s another for Biden: win the 2016 Clinton states, Michigan, Wisconsin, LOSE Pennsylvania – but win Arizona and NE-2.
But here’s how Biden could get to 270 electoral votes BEFORE you get to Michigan, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin: win the 2016 Clinton states and NE-2, add Georgia and North Carolina (both of which might have fast results), and that brings Biden to 264 electoral votes. Then he just needs one of Iowa, Ohio or Arizona to reach or surpass 270.
And that’s without Biden having to win Florida.
There are three overall scenarios how Election Night/Week/Month might play out.
Scenario #1: The national polls are correct (Biden is ahead 8-10 points), and we’ll find out a winner tonight.
Scenario #2: Biden is able to win one of Florida, Georgia or North Carolina – and he’s the clear favorite to win – but it takes a day or two to call enough states to get him to 270-plus.
Scenario #3: Trump’s numbers are better than the national polls suggest, and we’re in for a long, hard slog to see who wins Michigan, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin.
But under none of those scenarios does Trump have the ability to wrap it up early.
Biden does.
TWEET OF THE DAY: The first results are in.
Another big difference between 2016 and now
By now, you’ve heard us talk about all of the differences between 2016 and now – Biden’s larger lead, the smaller third-party vote, the fact that Trump is now the incumbent instead of the challenger.
But here’s one more difference that hasn’t gotten enough attention: In 2016, Trump was remarkably disciplined in the final days of the election, especially after the Comey letter.
(For example, Trump fired off 138 tweets and retweets in the final 12 days of the contest, and none were controversial.)
And by our count, Trump fired off more than 80 tweets and retweets in the past 24 hours – compared with those 138 over 12 days in 2016.
DATA DOWNLOAD: The numbers you need to know today
9,381,243: The number of confirmed cases of coronavirus in the United States, per the most recent data from NBC News and health officials. (That’s 92,737 more than yesterday morning.)
232,725: The number of deaths in the United States from the virus so far. (That’s 567 more than yesterday morning.)
148.64 million: The number of coronavirus tests that have been administered in the United States so far, according to researchers at The COVID Tracking Project.
48,470: The number of people currently hospitalized for Covid-19 in the U.S., per the Covid Tracking Project.
More than 61,000: The number of children diagnosed with Covid-19 last week.
10 million: The estimated number of robocalls from a suspicious unidentified caller that have urged voters to “stay safe and stay home.”
96,966,692: The number of people who have voted early, either by mail or in person, according to NBC and TargetSmart.
127,000: The number of drive-through ballots in Harris County, Texas, NOT tossed out after Republicans unsuccessfully attempted to invalidate them through a lawsuit.
AD WATCH from Ben Kamisar
In honor of today’s grand finale, today’s Ad Watch takes a look at the unprecedented spending over this cycle.
Overall, there has been more than $5.3 billion spent on TV and radio ads from the start of 2019 through the ads placed today for the 2020 election cycle, per Advertising Analytics. A whopping $2.2 billion has been spent on the presidential race alone, followed by $1.8 billion on Senate races and $1.1 billion in House races. An additional $220 million was spent on gubernatorial races.
Of that $5.3 billion, Democrats spent 63 percent of it ($3.4 billion), while Republicans spent 36 percent ($1.9 billion).
In the presidential race, Democrats outspent the Republicans by a factor of three (aided by both Biden and former New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg’s presidential campaigns). One-on-one, Biden’s campaign spent more than $514 million on TV and radio ads this cycle, compared with Trump’s more than $258 million.
In the battle for the Senate, North Carolina is poised to take the crown for most TV/radio spending with an unprecedented $251 million, followed by Iowa’s $204 million and Arizona’s $167 million.
And the most expensive race has been New Mexico’s 2nd Congressional District (home to a competitive GOP primary too) at $29 million, followed by New York’s 11th District, one of the seats rated a “toss up” by our friends at the Cook Political Report.
2020 VISION: The top advertising markets of the presidential election
In addition, here are the top advertising markets in the general election for the presidential contest (from April 1 to Nov. 3), according to Advertising Analytics:
Phoenix: $95.3 million Philadelphia: $75.1 million Orlando/Daytona Beach: $72.9 million Miami: $71.3 million Tampa/St. Pete: $69.8 million Detroit: $65.2 million Pittsburgh: $56.1 million Charlotte: $46.7 million Raleigh/Durham: $42.9 million
On the campaign trail today: Joe Biden makes stops in Scranton, Pa., and Philadelphia before heading back to Wilmington, Del., where he’ll watch election returns… President Trump will be watching returns from the White House, per NBC’s Hallie Jackson.
THE LID: Take a breath
Don’t miss the pod from yesterday, when we reminded folks: When watching results, take a breath and keep in mind where in the state the votes are coming from — and whether they’re from Election Day, early in-person voting, or mail ballots.
ICYMI: What ELSE is happening in the world?
Deborah Birx is breaking sharply with the White House, saying in an internal report: “This is not about lockdowns — It hasn’t been about lockdowns since March or April. It’s about an aggressive balanced approach that is not being implemented.”
American voters have the chance to usher in a few libertarian policies this election, courtesy of these state ballot measures.
The 2020 election has so been so dominated by Biden versus Trump insanity that a lot of consequential ballot initiates have been getting short shrift. But today, voters in various U.S. locales will have the opportunity to usher in some pretty exciting—and libertarian—policies, as well as the chance to reject a few really bad ideas.
Let’s start with the good, shall we?
Proposition 22 in California
California’s Proposition 22 would undo some of the damage wrought by A.B. 5, the 2019 state law that reclassified all sorts of independent contractors and freelancers in California as full-fledged employees. Pushed as a way to stick it to disfavored businesses like Uber and Lyft, the law hasproveddetrimentalto workersacross a range of industries, infringing on their ability to work when and how they choose as well as leading to a lot of lost jobs. If Proposition 22 is passed, it would help mitigate these ill effects for people who drive or do deliveries by allowing them to be classified as independent contractors once again.
Sponsor Content
Proposition 207 in Arizona
Arizona residents will get the chance to legalize recreational marijuana sales by voting for Proposition 207 (also dubbed the “Smart and Safe Act”). “If passed, it would allow…adults 21 and older to purchase up to one ounce of cannabis and have up to six plants at their home,” explains Steve Cottrell, president of Curaleaf Arizona. “Adult-use cannabis products would be subject to state and local sales taxes, with an additional 16 percent excise tax.”South Dakota Amendment A
Another marijuana legalization measure, this ballot initiative would create a constitutional amendment “to legalize the recreational use of marijuana and require the South Dakota State Legislature to pass laws providing for the use of medical marijuana and the sale of hemp by April 1, 2022.”
Initiative 190 in Montana
Montana residents also have the chance to approve recreational marijuana. Voting yes on Montana Initiative 190 would mean “legalizing the possession and use of marijuana for adults over the age of 21, imposing a 20% tax on marijuana sales, requiring the Department of Revenue to develop rules to regulate marijuana businesses, and allowing for the resentencing or expungement of marijuana-related crimes.”
Public Question 1 in New Jersey
If New Jersey’s Public Question 1 passes, it will “legalize the possession and use of marijuana for persons age 21 and older and legalize the cultivation, processing, and sale of retail marijuana.”
Initiative 65 in Mississippi
Mississippians get to vote on legalizing medical marijuana. A citizen-led ballot measure, Initiative 65, would OK it for a variety of conditions. Meanwhile, Initiative 65A—a government-led measure that’s been accused of being floated just to confuse voters—would legalize medical marijuana for terminally ill people only.
Initiative 429 in Nebraska
This ballot measure would legalize all sorts of gambling at licensed racetracks. “Currently, Nebraska outlaws gambling, except with respect to the state lottery, licensed raffles, and bingo,” notes Ballotpedia.
Measure 109 in Oregon
Oregon’s Measure 109 would let people legally purchase and consume hallucinogenic mushrooms under the care of a psilocybin administrator. If passed, it would give the Oregon Health Authority two years to “determine who is eligible to be licensed as a facilitator, determine what qualifications, education, training, and exams are needed, and create a code of professional conduct for facilitators,” says Ballotpedia.
Ballot Measure 2 in Alaska and Question 2 in Massachusetts
Ballot initiatives in Alaska and Massachusetts would establish ranked-choice voting, in which voters rank candidates by order of preference instead of just voting for one candidate.
Proposition 25 in California
Voting yes on Proposition 25 will help bring more fairness to the bail system. “A ‘yes’ vote is to uphold the contested legislation, Senate Bill 10 (SB 10), which would replace cash bail with risk assessments for detained suspects awaiting trials,” Ballotpedia explains.
Measure 110 in Oregon
This measure would lessen penalties for all sorts of illegal drugs—including heroin and cocaine—moving personal possession of them from serious criminal infractions to something warranting classes or a small fine.
Alas, this year’s ballot measures aren’t all about legalizing drugs, making the criminal justice system fairer, and negating bad workplace regulations. A number of initiatives also seek to limit liberty and individual rights and roll back positive reforms. Here are a few of the worst:
Proposition 20 in California
This California ballot measure “would undo significant criminal justice system reforms passed by California voters in recent years at the very moment that many other states are finally starting to make needed reforms,” explains policy analyst Alix Ollivier with the Reason Foundation (the nonprofit that publishes this site):
Prop. 20, supported by groups such as the California Correctional Peace Officers Association, seeks to address complaints from law enforcement groups that claim it has become too difficult to prosecute repeat offenders, that more minor offenses should be charged as felonies, and they should be able to take DNA from people that commit minor crimes in efforts to expand the DNA database used to help solve crimes.
The initiative would roll back reforms that have been made to the classification of crimes considered non-violent, create two new crimes that would be added to state law—serial theft and organized theft, and make parole more difficult to attain for those convicted of various crimes.
The measure is largely written as law enforcement’s effort to unwind the statewide criminal justice ballot measures voters passed in 2014 and 2016.
Illinois Allow for Graduated Income Tax Amendment
The state is seeking permission to raise people’s income taxes from a flat rate of 4.95 percent to 7.75 percent for households making over $250,000 and 7.99 percent for households with annual incomes over $750,000. The governor already signed a law to this effect last year, but to enact it requires a constitutional amendment since the state constitution bans a progressive income tax.Proposition 208 in Arizona
Another ballot initiative intended to raise taxes, Arizona’s Proposition 208 would almost double the marginal income tax rate—from 4.5 percent to 8 percent—for high-earning individuals and households. It would also raise taxes on small businesses, since “small businesses pay their taxes on the individual portion of the tax code,” explains Arizona Chamber of Commerce President Glenn Hamer. If Proposition 208 passes, “small businesses will pay a top rate of 8 percent, much higher than the corporate rate of 4.9 percent. We would be the only state in the country to basically double the tax on small businesses, and at a time when so many are struggling.”
Proposition 115 in Colorado
Colorado’s Proposition 115 would criminalize abortion after 22 weeks of pregnancy. “Performing a prohibited abortion would be a Class 1 misdemeanor (the most serious level of misdemeanor in Colorado), which would be punishable by a fine ranging from $500 to $5,000 and not by jail time,” and “medical professionals who are found to have performed a prohibited abortion would have their medical licenses suspended by the Colorado Medical Board for at least three years,” explains Ballotpedia. “Under the initiative, abortions after 22 weeks would be lawful if the physician believes it is immediately necessary to save the life of the pregnant woman.”
Louisiana Amendment 1 Amendment 1 aims to ready Louisiana to curtail abortion access should Roe v. Wade be overturned by amending the state’s constitution to say nothing in it “shall be construed to secure or protect a right to abortion or require the funding of abortion.” As the Wall Street Journalexplains, “should a more solidly conservative U.S. Supreme Court give states more authority to regulate abortion, Louisiana state courts would have less ability to strike down antiabortion laws” if Amendment 1 passes.
The trouble with the label “world music” is that it treats everything produced outside a handful of countries as though they’re a single genre. Keeping the category but calling it “global music” instead doesn’t change that at all. https://t.co/KagOk5ranE
Elizabeth Nolan Brown is a senior editor at Reason, where she writes regularly on the intersections of sex, speech, tech, crime, politics, panic, and civil liberties. She is also co-founder of the libertarian feminist group Feminists for Liberty.
Since starting at Reason in 2014, Brown has won multiple awards for her writing on the U.S. government’s war on sex. Brown’s writing has also appeared in The New York Times, Los Angeles Times, The Daily Beast, Buzzfeed, Playboy, Fox News, Politico, The Week, and numerous other publications. You can follow her on Twitter @ENBrown.
Reason is the magazine of “free minds and free markets,” offering a refreshing alternative to the left-wing and right-wing echo chambers for independent-minded readers who love liberty.
The problem in the American inner city is not racism but drive-by shootings of blacks by other blacks.
By Heather Mac Donald City Journal Online November 2, 2020
Noble-sounding words won’t improve failing cities, especially for minority residents.
By Charles Blain, Joel Kotkin City Journal Online November 2, 2020
“The outcome of Tuesday’s presidential election will reveal whether the feminized, therapeutic culture of the university has become the dominant force in the American psyche.”
By Heather Mac Donald Spectator USA November 2, 2020
Fantasies that modern Republicans are successors to a slaveocracy abuse history and chart a dangerous course toward violence.
By Mitchell G. Klingenberg City Journal Online November 2, 2020
As budget cuts, restrictive reforms, and anti-police protests sweep the country, will demoralization turn even the most genuine and lion-hearted cops into “hairbags?” How hard would such a cultural shift in departments be to reverse? Join us on Tuesday, November 10, as former Seattle police chief Carmen Best, former Milwaukee police chief Ed Flynn, and law professor Paul Cassell address these questions and share their intimate insights into the culture of policing.
The next administration and Congress will face a large and growing federal debt. Although everyone recognizes the long-term imbalance between federal spending and revenues, there is ample debate about just how big a problem this is, and the extent to which it should be a priority for lawmakers. On Thursday, November 12, Jason Furman and Brian Riedl engage in a collegial debate, moderated by The Wall Street Journal’s Kate Davidson, about debt, deficits, and what to do about them.
On October 29, the Institute hosted our annual Civil Society Awards honoring five nonprofits with $25,000 prizes for their work assisting those in need and strengthening our communities around the country. Watch the event above, which features remarks from Darryl “DMC” McDaniels of Run-DMC, award-winning actor Carol Kane, and several inspiring community leaders who are helping people change the course of their lives.
On October 20, we honored three extraordinary individuals during our first virtual Alexander Hamilton Awards: Leonard Leo and Eugene Meyer of the Federalist Society, and Daniel S. Loeb, investor and philanthropist. The event also featured remarks from our chairman, Paul E. Singer; our president, Reihan Salam; and other distinguished guests.
Casey Mulligan joins Allison Schrager to discuss his time on President Trump’s Council of Economic Advisors and the administration’s record on issues such as health care, the economy, immigration, and more. Mulligan’s new book is You’re Hired!: Untold Successes and Failures of a Populist President.
2020 severely tested the governing abilities of our leaders. On October 16, we hosted a discussion moderated by Andy Smarick on practical wisdom and its role in governing today, with philosophy professor Jennifer Frey, science policy director Tony Mills, and education specialist Jocelyn Pickford.
On October 15, we hosted a panel of black police executives and experts speaking to how history, culture, and looming racial tension shaped their experiences on the force.
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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Donald Trump spent the weekend doing what Donald Trump does: Criss-crossing the battleground states, giving rallies, and dunking on all the haters and losers. One specific hater and loser getting the … MORE
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By Carl M. Cannon on Nov 03, 2020 09:42 am
Good morning, it’s Tuesday, Nov. 3, 2020. Election Day. Six presidential elections have been held on this date since the Civil War. The first three (1868, 1896, and 1908) went to Republicans. The next three (1936, 1964, and 1992) went to Democrats, two of them in landslides. Today is the rubber match, although it’s uncertain whether we’ll know by midnight which party prevailed.
No matter how long it takes to tabulate the votes, this year’s election returns will address — and hopefully answer — a series of questions. I’ll list a slew of them in a moment. First I’d point you to RealClearPolitics’ front page, which presents our poll averages, videos, breaking news stories, and aggregated opinion pieces spanning the political spectrum. We also offer original material from our own reporters and contributors, including the following:
* * *
Lindsey Graham’s Struggles and the Shifting of U.S. Politics. Sean Trende revisits Palmetto State coalitions that, in the Trump era, have resulted in a tightened U.S. Senate race.
Trump and Hip-Hop: Despite Discord, an Odd Affinity. Phil Wegmann explores the president’s past and present relationship with rappers, whose unlikely support he’s courted.
Five Indicators of the Trump-Biden Outcome. Sharyl Attkisson dons her prognosticator’s hat.
Drilling and Fracking Equal Jobs. Does Biden Understand That? Kevin Mooney questions how a candidate who needs Pennsylvania could say America must transition away from fossil fuels.
Why Trump’s Land Management Chief Is a Threat to the Land. At RealClearPolicy, Candace Cooper explains her opposition to William Perry Pendley.
Next President’s Energy Policies Will Shape Our Future. At RealClearEnergy, Jason Isaac looks ahead.
Biden Family Corruption Does Matter. Charles Lipson writes that the economy and COVID may have preeminence among voter concerns, but questions about the former vice president’s business dealings should not be cast aside.
Are those BLM Posters Are Here to Stay? J. Peder Zane laments the pervasive ideology of “systemic racism” in America.
Why Businesses Are Boarding Up Ahead of Election Outcome. RealClearMarkets editor John Tamny asks Democrats to assess whose partisans are likely to rabble-rouse should the results not go their way.
Helping Students Make Sense of the 2020 Election: iCivics Shows the Way. At RealClearEducation, American Civics portal editor Mike Sabo spotlights the numerous election resources the website offers for teachers and students.
America’s Two Constitutions. Also at American Civics, Edwin C. Hagenstein reflects on how the U.S. Constitution presupposes a specific set of cultural traits.
* * *
Long lines at many polling places, coupled with early voting estimated at nearly 100 million ballots, suggest a high turnout election — in the middle of an unabated viral pandemic. So COVID-19 apparently hasn’t inhibited voting; perhaps it’s contributed to it. What does a large turnout portend? That question will be addressed tomorrow. With help from my friends at RCP, here are some others:
— Did the coronavirus pandemic blot out voters’ concerns about the economy — and other issues? President Trump still gets good marks from voters on his handling of the economy, but not the pandemic. When it came to COVID-19, he not only didn’t protect Americans from it, he got infected himself. If Trump loses, will the coronavirus that he keeps reminding Americans came from China consign him to a one-term presidency?
— Was the 2020 election really a referendum — or was it a choice? In other words, did Americans cast their votes on Donald Trump’s performance as president or was it a choice between two competing views of America, a framework more favorable to Republicans? Another way of saying this: If Trump manages to win, the culture wars will have trumped the president’s coronavirus many missteps, and all the rest.
— Do the normal rules of political gravity apply to Trump anyway? In 2016, he outperformed his pre-election poll numbers in almost every key swing state. That’s to be expected: He was an outsider facing a career politician who essentially was viewed as an incumbent. But in 2020 Trump is the actual incumbent, one presiding over a troubled economy. Typically, he’d lose ground on Election Day as late-breaking undecideds back the challenger. So, is this guy “President Trump,” which would not bode well for the GOP ticket? Or is he still “Donald J. Trump,” the sui generis slayer of established precedent?
— Does acting “presidential” still matter? Joe Biden’s closing argument to the American people was “Let’s restore honesty and decency to the White House.” Meanwhile, Trump was making fun of Biden’s sunglasses, mocking him for wearing a mask, calling the Biden family “corrupt,” impugning LeBron James and Lady Gaga, and saying that Biden supporter Jon Bon Jovi “kisses my ass.” From his presidential announcement in June 2015 to his last rallies this week, The Donald has conducted himself more like a New York insult comic than a president. The question is whether Americans even care about temperament anymore.
— Has confidence in the election process been undermined? For partisan advantage, each side accuses the other of conspiring to rig the election. Republicans are “suppressing” minority votes, say the Democrats. The Democrats are planning massive fraud with mail-in and absentee ballots, says Trump. What is the long-term damage caused by such tactics?
— Is it time to tinker with the Constitution? If Biden carries the popular vote but loses in the Electoral College, that will make three of the last five presidential elections in which the candidate with the fewest votes was installed as president. Does that result diminish Americans’ respect for government?
— The two dominant political parties are becoming more polarized, but are they also realigning? If so, this raises a host of other questions: Has the Republican Party been more or less permanently recast by Trump’s brand of populism? Has the Democratic Party veered too far left? Where are centrists supposed to go?
— Can we finally stop asking, “But will young Americans vote?” Millennials and Gen Zers are poised to break turnout records for the second election in a row. So the old chestnut about how they don’t vote can be laid to rest. A more salient inquiry is this: What are the long-term implications for a political party (the GOP) that is an anathema to voters under 40?
— Did minority voters cut against type? Hispanic support for Trump surged in Florida late in the game. A few high-profile defections among prominent African Americans gave Trump supporters hope for inroads in this near-monolithic Democratic Party voting bloc. We’ll know soon if this was just meaningless noise.
— Has political campaigning been altered forever? William McKinley, one of the Republicans who won the presidency on a Nov. 3, rarely left his house during the campaign. Before Joe Biden’s “Delaware basement” strategy, McKinley successfully executed his Ohio “front porch campaign.” If Biden wins, will Zoom be established as the essential platform for future candidate outreach, organizing, even focus groups? (Or, if Biden loses, we will look at Trump’s huge end-of-the-campaign rallies and conclude that even William McKinley would have to press the flesh in 21st century America.
— Last question: Who will carry Florida, Pennsylvania, North Carolina, Michigan, and Arizona? Look into your crystal ball — or at the RCP polling averages — because those states will determine the identity of the next president of the United States.
Joe Biden has stumbled into handing President Donald Trump an inadvertent gift. If he plays things right, Trump can splinter the unnaturally broad coalition against him and turn state and local Democrats against their own party’s national machine.
Biden has backed himself into a lose-lose situation that’s ripe for autumn picking. Far past his prime, Biden is now a Trojan Horse for extremists backed by a virtual Manchurian Candidate running mate.
Why old American Communist warhorses like Angela Davis and Bob Avakian are urging a vote for the establishment Democrat: “He is far more likely to take mass demands seriously.”
Far from being “spontaneous” or “mythical,” today’s militant political violence is not only organized, it even has user manuals. In destroying statues and other symbols of American history, the new violent extremist movement cultivates its own history:Indoctrinate people without them realizing it, gradually and slowly, by infiltrating their cultural institutions.
My old boss, Ronald Reagan, famously declared that every generation faces an existential threat to freedom. He warned that liberty is not passed on through the blood stream. It has to be fought for, protected and turned over to the next generation to do the same.
Should we fail to do that, Mr. Reagan, foretold, “We will spend our sunset years telling our children and our children’s children what it was like to live in the United States when men were free.”
I for one have no interest in being consigned to such a fate. I am sure that you don’t either.
If so, on this day, we are all called to do our duty, to cast our ballot, to preserve and defend our Constitution, thereby ensuring that our children and grandchildren will have the chance to do it, too.
If you still can, please vote.
This is Frank Gaffney.
DR. JASON HILL, Professor, Honors Distinguished Faculty, DePaul University:
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November 3, 2020
2020-2030 Could Be the Decade of Economic Malaise
By Ethan Yang | To say the future looks bleak for sound economics and good government would be an understatement. The year 2020 has seen an unprecedented expansion of government intervention that has absolutely devastated the global economy. It is…
By James Bovard | “Americans need to recognize the profound weaknesses revealed this year in democratic governments at every level. A strict adherence to the Bill of Rights is the surest way to reduce post-Election Day perils. If freedom is to…
By Richard M. Ebeling | “All of this because of a political tragedy of the commons created by governments who insist on their right and duty to nationalize decision-making over all the private actions and activities of the citizenry subject to…
ISM Manufacturing Survey Posts Strong Results in October
By Robert Hughes | The Institute for Supply Management’s Manufacturing Purchasing Managers’ Index rose again in October, posting a 59.3 percent reading for the month, up from 55.4 percent in September. The latest result is the fifth consecutive…
By Jeffrey A. Tucker | “We attempted to intimidate a virus with PhDs and political power, hoping that it would shrivel and die, and in so doing dramatically disabled human freedom and social functioning. What do we have to show for it? Massive…
Monopoly vs. Monopoly: Sloppy Definitions Lead to…
By Raymond C. Niles | “A new term is needed for the highly-competitive innovators who achieve large market shares by creatively providing outstanding, innovative, and lower-cost products and services that are of such value that millions of people…
Edward C. Harwood fought for sound money when few Americans seemed to care. He was the original gold standard man before that became cool. Now he is honored in this beautiful sewn silk bow tie in the richest possible color and greatest detail. The tie is adjustable to all sizes. Sporting this, others might miss that you are secretly supporting the revolution for freedom and sound money, but you will know, and that is what matters.
A common narrative of the post-World War II economists was that the State is indispensable for guiding investment and fostering innovation. The truth is that the enriched modern economy was not a product of State coercion. The Great Enrichment, that is, came from human ingenuity emancipated from the bottom up, not human ingenuity directed from the top down.
Today is Election Day. I’m not going to give you a long song-and-dance about why you should vote or whom you should vote for. If you’re reading this newsletter, you probably understand all of that already. You don’t need to vote because your vote will make a difference — in most places and most races, it won’t. You don’t need to vote because without doing so, you’re not allowed to complain — we have a First Amendment, you’re always allowed to complain. You should vote because this is our one form of leverage over those who govern us. This is our authority over their lives instead of the other way around; this is our chance to veto them, if we wish. And remember, all the worst people don’t want you to vote.
On the menu today: looking through Trump campaign manager Bill Stepien’s confident assessment, a couple of things that were supposed to have happened before Election Day that just . . . didn’t, and an event Thursday you won’t want to miss.
The Trump Campaign Lays Out Its Target Turnout Thresholds
Check your registration status, explore voting options in your state and get access to the latest, official information from election authorities in our Voting Information Center on Facebook and Instagram.
Joe Biden signed one of the living room walls in his childhood home today: “From this house to the White House with the grace of God. Joe Biden 11-3-2020.”
“Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Mark Milley held an off-the-record video call with top generals and network anchors this weekend to tamp down speculation about potential military involvement in the presidential election,” Axios reports.
“The nation’s top military official set up Saturday’s highly unusual call to make clear that the military’s role is apolitical, one of the sources said — and to dispel any notion of a role for the military in adjudicating a disputed election or making any decision around removing a president from the White House.”
John Harris: “As we wait for the results of the 2020 election—with at least a little and, potentially, quite a lot of time to kill—it is worth pondering the randomness of history. A slight turn here or there, a little more of this or a little less of that, and we live in a very different world. There is no more vivid recent example of the phenomenon than the two tragic figures of Democratic politics over the past generation: Al Gore and Hillary Rodham Clinton.”
“Both had limitations as politicians, and by their own reckonings made errors in their campaigns. But let’s never forget that both also won the popular vote. Were it not for arguably illegitimate and inarguably freakish circumstances they would have both won the presidency, too. Instead the White House ambitions that they had spent their professional lives advancing were broken like an eggshell and squashed like a gooseberry.”
“It has been a star-crossed start to the 21st century, which will be one-quarter over by the time whoever is elected today finishes his term. When it comes to Gore and Clinton, no one can say where paths not taken would have led. But both figures invite tantalizing, even agonizing, flights of counter-factual speculation. The lull before this evening’s storm is a fitting moment to ponder might-have-beens.”
NBC News: “In a memo to state party insiders Monday morning, Florida Democratic Party Executive Director Juan Peñalosa explained his view that a 120,000-ballot edge for registered Democrats over registered Republicans heading into Election Day would put Biden in range of winning. NBC News, in conjunction with the company TargetSmart, has calculated that 119,552 more Democrats than Republicans had voted early in person or by absentee ballot through Sunday.”
Politico: “Democrats have been clear in their condemnations of the president’s comments, which they consider the most worrisome of Trump’s four years in office, which were often marked by anti-democratic rhetoric.”
“But most Republicans, from critics to allies of Trump, have remained publicly silent. It’s not new for Trump’s party brethren to duck and cover when he says something troubling. But after five years of perfecting the art of explaining how they ‘didn’t see the tweet’ — the much parodied talking point to which Republicans on Capitol Hill often resort — it is shocking but not surprising that they aren’t speaking up now, even when the integrity of America’s electoral system is under attack by their party’s leader.”
Nate Cohn points out that RealClearPolitics polling averages this cycle “just haven’t been a fair average of the polling that’s out there. Instead, cut offs are fairly deliberately set to show better results for Trump.”
“This has been true for a while now, but they really took it up a couple of notches over the weekend. And unfortunately it’s enough that I won’t be using the site anymore for citing polling averages.”
CNN: “If Trump wins reelection, Republicans expect jockeying over 2024 to take time to play out. But if Trump loses, the focus will quickly shift to a group of ambitious Republicans who are likely to be considered as potential White House hopefuls and will help chart the course for the post-Trump era of the Republican Party.”
“President Trump’s top campaign strategist, Jason Miller, has been paid tens of thousands of dollars a month through a third-party campaign vendor rather than taking a salary from the campaign, obscuring the flow of money and apparently concealing how much he makes — an arrangement campaign finance experts say is illegal,” Salon reports.
“Miller, a 2016 senior adviser who joined the re-election campaign in early June, appears to have been paid as recently as July by Citizens of the American Republic, a nonprofit founded by Steve Bannon which is currently part of a federal fraud and money laundering investigation into the former Trump campaign chief, as a vehicle used to fabricate invoices in furtherance of that scheme.”
Sen. Michael Bennet (D-CO) told the Denver Post that he doesn’t want to be education secretary — a job he was considered for under the last Democratic president — if Joe Biden is elected president this week.
Said Bennet: “My plan is to run for reelection to the Senate, and that’s what I’m going to do.”
An exhausted Donald Trump called into Fox & Friends: “We’re feeling very good. We have crowds like nobody has ever had before. I think that translates into a lot of votes, and we’re going to see very soon.”
Sen. Susan Collins (R-ME), who is locked in a close reelection race with Sara Gideon (D), warned to Hugh Hewitt that it could take a week to determine who won Maine’s U.S. Senate race.
Said Collins: “If neither of us gets 50 percent of the vote, then we get into the rather odd ranked choice voting… We probably would not know for certain who won for another week.”
Scenario #1: The national polls are correct (Biden is ahead 8-10 points), and we’ll find out a winner tonight.
Scenario #2: Biden is able to win one of Florida, Georgia or North Carolina — and he’s the clear favorite to win — but it takes a day or two to call enough states to get him to 270-plus.
Scenario #3: Trump’s numbers are better than the national polls suggest, and we’re in for a long, hard slog to see who wins Michigan, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin.
Key takeaway: “But under none of those scenarios does Trump have the ability to wrap it up early.”
The final electoral map of the 2020 presidential election — the consensus found by averaging the top forecasts — shows Joe Biden with 291 electoral votes, Donald Trump with 125 and another 122 across six states rated as Toss Ups.
Click thru to make your own assumptions on the interactive map.
“The Democratic firm that predicted an election-night ‘red mirage’ for President Trump — an early lead it says that Joe Biden will overtake when mail-in ballots are counted — is standing by its prediction, but with a smaller mirage than expected,” Axios reports.
“Updated modeling from analytics firm Hawkfish says Trump may look as if he’s on track to cross 270 electoral votes and approach a 286-252 victory. But in the end, it predicts, Biden could win by as much as 334-204, or a more modest 279-259, once all mail-in ballots are counted.”
President Trump has privately signaled that he has no desire to leave the stage quietly in defeat, the Daily Beast reports.
“The president has talked with aides about potentially continuing rallies after the election… He has recently joked with others about running again in 2024 in the event he is a one-termer, and also to see media, Democrats, and RINO heads explode.”
“Even absent another presidential run, his top congressional and political allies and family members seem poised to inherit the movement that he has birthed.”
An unidentified robocaller has placed an estimated 10 million calls in the past several weeks warning people to “stay safe and stay home,” spooking some Americans who said they saw it as an attempt to scare them away from the polls on Election Day, the Washington Post reports.
Trump voters are much more confident than Biden supporters that the winner of the presidential race will be known today. Among all voters, Democrat Joe Biden is seen as more likely to admit he’s lost than President Trump.
The Rasmussen Reports Immigration Index for the week of October 25-29, 2020 fell back to 101.8 from 105.5 the week before. The latest finding is more in line with earlier surveying and suggests last week was an outlier.
Singer Lady Gaga has come under fire from working class Americans across the country after a video she posted to Twitter shows her not only endorsing Joe Biden, but apparently mocking rednecks in swing states while doing so. This weekend…
Yesterday we published a lengthy election cheat sheet looking at what happens on and after November 3. Due to popular demand, and since there have been some notable changes in the past 24 hours, we update this preview as well as present…
In preparation for any emergencies, including widespread social unrest following election results on Tuesday night, the National Guard has been deployed in several states. Fears of election night chaos have gripped state governments for…
Authored by Tessa Lena via ‘Tessa Fights Robots’ substack, What is “the Great Reset”? The Great Reset is a massively funded, desperately ambitious, internationally coordinated project led by some of the biggest multinational corporations…
Update 2100ET): Police in Vienna have finished their late-night press conference offering more definitive details from Monday’s shooting. Auf unserer Facebookseite gibt es in Kürze einen Livestream zu Pressestatements von BM Nehammer…
The Italian archbishop best known for confronting Pope Francis over the Vatican’s willful blindness to priests who abuse boys has written a letter in which he lashes out at the “global elite”, prompting some to accuse him of sympathizing…
This stock has all of the makings of the next ten-bagger. Its tech will revolutionize healthcare, the FDA has fast-tracked approval and it has little to no competition. FDA approval could come any day now and send the price soaring 1,000% or more. Get in now before it’s too late.
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The Democrat-media complex and fake polls are all claiming Joe Biden is up by 12 points nationally. The fake polls are claiming Biden is up… Read more…
A Philadelphia poll watcher was prevented from entering a polling place in Philly this morning. The poll watcher who presented an ID was not allowed… Read more…
Gavin Newsom California Governor Gavin Newsom (D) for the past 8 months has imposed some of the most abusive and authoritarian Covid restrictions via executive… Read more…
Helmut Norpoth from Stony Brook University released his final predictions for the 2020 election. Norpoth correctly predicted President Trump’s historic win in 2016. This year… Read more…
Numerous radical revolutionaries are plotting a violent takeover of Washington DC and several cities following the presidential election on Tuesday. Win or lose the communists… Read more…
The Trump Campaign on Monday released a statement accusing Democrats of ALREADY cutting election day ads of a “Red Mirage” in order to excuse Joe… Read more…
Twitter is determined to influence the 2020 election. The far left social media giant is doing everything it can to stifle free speech in the… Read more…
Sleepy and creepy Joe Biden invited Pop star Lady Gaga to his final ‘drive in’ rally held in Pennsylvania but Lady Gaga is anti-fracking. It’s… Read more…
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A Trump victory, a Biden victory, or a protracted cliffhanger? Hoover senior fellows Niall Ferguson, H. R. McMaster, and John Cochrane discuss Election Day scenarios, issues that went unaddressed in 2020’s presidential contest, plus what lies ahead for both parties in dealing with their restless bases.
The following Q&A is based on an interview conducted on Hoover’s Area 45 podcast by Virginia Hobbs Carpenter Fellow in Journalism Bill Whalen with senior fellows David Brady and Douglas Rivers about their 2020 presidential election predictions.
In the twenty-second and final edition of the Decision 2020 Report, Hoover fellows analyze the policy implications of government regulation and antitrust litigation against big technology firms.
Scott Sumner posted an excellent Review of Strategies for Monetary Policy (Book information and, yes free pdfs here). By “excellent,” I don’t mean he agrees with everything, especially that I wrote! He read the whole thing, including comments, and provides a concise summary along with insightful critique. I won’t try to summarize his summary — it’s all good.
In the early 1970s, Army Chief of Staff Gen. Creighton Abrams — fresh off a frustrating defeat in Vietnam — unveiled a new, all-volunteer total force military. It combined the active duty, reserve, and guard components into one mutually reinforcing force.
Cyril Morong, an Associate Professor of Economics at Northeast Lakeview College in Universal City, Texas, sent me a letter that he had sent to the Wall Street Journal. The Journal decided not to publish it and I got Cyril’s permission to run it here.
interview with H. R. McMaster via On the Middle East with Andrew Parasiliti
Hoover Institution fellow H. R. McMaster discusses his new book, Battlegrounds: The Fight to Defend the Free World; why the US should not return to the Iran deal, a “political disaster masquerading as a diplomatic triumph”; how Saudi Arabia can be “part of the solution” in the Middle East; whether the US can mitigate the potential loss of Turkey as an ally; how his experiences in combat in two Iraq wars informed his approach to Iraq and the region; why he is optimistic about Iraq’s future; whether the US can sustain domestic support for US Middle East policy; and some remembrances of Professor Fouad Ajami.
The 2020 Conference on Taiwan in the Indo-Pacific Region. Panel 6 was held on Thursday, October 29, 4-5:30pm PDTfocuses on China’s Rise And Prospects For Security And Stability In The Indo-Pacific Region.
Uncertainty is the bane of economic decision-making. Whether to invest, start a new business, change jobs, or a myriad of other questions are difficult choices even in relatively stable times (however one chooses to define “stable”). However, such events as hotly contested national elections turn up the dials of uncertainty and complicate decision-making beyond normal bounds of ambiguity.
The events of one of the most tumultuous years in U.S. history have pushed our representative government to the breaking point.
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.
Best of luck, everyone!
I’m on a social media blackout until Friday for my own sake, and this comments section is slightly on the wrong side of the line.
But I wish all of you and your families well, and no matter the outcomes, look forward to reading what you have to say in the days and years to come.
Even you…Matt?
Great question! I had to work hard to come up with an answer!
I desperately want Biden to win, but if Trump becomes president again, here is what might not be so bad.
1. The people I love who support Trump will be happy. I will think the world is burning down, but they will sleep easy thinking that the country is going in the right direction. I’ll gain some joy from knowing they are happy.
2. While I think it is best to invest in programs that work to give us all an equal chance, those programs are expensive! Maybe if Trump gets in we will spend less money and maybe the economy will get better when COVID is over? Again, I like investing in people, but cutting spending might be a silver lining. I don’t ever feel like I know enough about economics to have strong feelings about this. I just know I don’t like how much money we owe and wish we could find a way to spend less.
3. I’ll never have dinner interrupted by a call from someone conducting a poll again.
4. This might be good for Dispatch readership! I think part of the magic for why the Dispatch took off like it did was a resistance to Trump. Four more years might make you guys more popular(: