Good morning! Here is your news briefing for Tuesday November 10, 2020
THE DAILY SIGNAL
November 10 2020
Good morning from Washington, where Attorney General William Barr has authorized federal prosecutors to look into “substantial allegations” of election irregularities. A manufacturer of voting machines used in 15 states is suddenly under the microscope, Fred Lucas reports. On the podcast, Heritage Foundation election expert Hans von Spakovsky examines the Trump campaign’s lawsuits in five states. Plus: GOP attorneys general seek election integrity in Pennsylvania; transparency in medical costs; and how coronavirus restrictions spark unemployment. On this day in 2001, two months after the terrorist attacks of 9/11, President George W. Bush uses an address to the United Nations to ask for help in fighting terrorism around the globe.
It “has to be investigated to see whether or not there was misbehavior, or fraud, or mistakes made by election officials that throw the outcome of the election in … particular areas,” says Hans von Spakovsky.
Dominion Voting Systems made equipment used in Arizona, Georgia, Michigan, Nevada, North Carolina, and Pennsylvania. The company has donated as much as $50,000 to the Clinton Foundation.
Nearly a dozen state attorneys general are urging the Supreme Court to review the constitutionality of a Pennsylvania court decision that allowed ballots to be accepted for three days after Nov. 3.
According to a ranking of states by their level of COVID-19 restrictions, the 10 states with the fewest restrictions averaged 5.9% unemployment, while the 10 with the most averaged 8.2% unemployment.
Facebook removes a pro-Trump group called Stop the Steal that is organizing public calls for election integrity as several states continue to count ballots.
Should there be a recount in Wisconsin? What changes before the election mattered and why? Hans von Spakovsky has an in-depth look at the 2020 election, and what’s next.
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AESOP
Good morning,We’ve created a new feature at the top of our homepage to help you stay up to date on the latest election-related news.It provides an overview of the current situation, including recounts and ongoing litigation, in seven states.
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I should like to begin by offering Donald Trump some prophylactic advice. Whether he continues as president for another two and a bit months or until Jan. 20, 2024, he has to be concerned about the future of his legacy… Read more
The 2020 presidential election was a disaster. Claims of corruption and unfair manipulation abound. Lawsuits are multiplying. Recounts impend. Read more
Some benefits of playing Sudoku may include reducing anxiety and stress, and improving concentration, problem-solving skills, logical thinking, and memory.
Many conservatives in Hollywood say they have been silenced, and worry that speaking on their political views could damage their ability to find work in the film industry.
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DAYBREAK
Your First Look at Today’s Top Stories – Daybreak Insider
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In late stage trials. From the story: Pfizer’s announcement Monday that its vaccine for Covid-19 was 90% effective in late-stage trials is the best news of a dismal 2020. If the interim results hold, this could lead to a mid-2021 pandemic exit—and perhaps spare us from the lockdown instincts of the coronavirus team that Joe Biden announced Monday. The 90% rate is far above most expectations. The Food and Drug Administration has set a 50% effectiveness rate for considering expedited approval, and Europe has said it may approve a vaccine that is less than 50% effective. Annual flu vaccines are only 30% to 60% effective, and that’s in a good year (WSJ). Another story notes “Pfizer’s vaccine was developed using genetic sequencing on computers without using fetal cells. As a consequence, the pro-life Charlotte Lozier Institute listed the vaccine as “ethically uncontroversial” (National Review). From another story: Senator Ben Sasse (R., Neb.) on Monday issued a harsh rebuke of New York Governor Andrew Cuomo’s comments that it is “bad news” that a coronavirus vaccine may come out while President Trump is still in office. “What on earth is Governor Cuomo talking about?” Sasse said in a statement. “This is great news and everyone — Republicans and Democrats and apolitical folks – should all be jointly thrilled about the possibility of an effective vaccine” (National Review).
2.
Barr Investigating “Substantial Allegations” of Voter Fraud
From the story: Barr declared it “imperative that the American people can trust that our elections were conducted in such a way that the outcomes accurately reflect the will of the voters” and that the DOJ had an obligation to ensure that the voters could have “full confidence” in the process (Red State). From Georgia governor Brian Kemp: Georgia’s election result will include legally cast ballots – and ONLY legally cast ballots. Period (Twitter). From Georgia Voting System Implementation Manager Gabriel Sterling: ”We are going to find that people did illegally vote. That is going to happen. There are going to be double voters. There are going to be people who did not have the qualifications, for a registered voter, to vote in this state. That will be found.” But, he says, there won’t likely be enough to overcome the difference (Mediaite). Kentucky’s Attorney General joined the lawsuit challenging mail-in ballots in Pennsylvania (Washington Times). Erick Erickson explains how difficult it is to change a statewide election on voter fraud claims (Twitter). Congressman Doug Collins will lead the Georgia recount effort on behalf of Trump (NY Post).
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3.
Democrat Running for Senate in Georgia Dodges Court Packing Question
Because he, like the other ultra-progressives, will do anything to gain power (Daily Wire). From Bobby Jindal: President-elect Biden should view the Democrats’ losses as a blessing. The honeymoon with his party’s progressive base was never going to last long. They were willing to shelve their purity tests and radical policy requirements while the specter of Trump loomed. Now that he’s gone, expect a reversion to the mean. Mr. Biden won’t be able to implement much of their agenda and, as an old white guy, doesn’t have the benefit of identity politics to relieve the pressure (WSJ). From Hugh Hewitt: Now it’s on to Georgia, where on Jan. 5 two Senate seats will be decided in runoff elections. Major questions hang in the balance: Will the Supreme Court be packed, military spending slashed, medicine socialized and U.S. energy independence “transitioned” away? If Republican Sens. David Perdue and Kelly Loeffler are returned by Peach State voters, Americans will have divided government and compromise. If left-wing Democratic challengers Jon Ossoff and Raphael Warnock win, the nation will be saddled with the radical outcomes above (and no doubt many others), along with having Sen. Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) as Senate majority leader (Washington Post). Apparently, the RNC is shifting efforts away from Wisconsin and into Georgia for the Senate battle (CNBC).
4.
Man Heading Biden Covid Task Force Believes It’s Immoral to Live Past 75
From Jim Geraghty: This is the man who Joe Biden has selected to help save the country from a virus that is particularly dangerous to the elderly. In other news, Joe Biden turns 78 on November 20 (National Review). Biden will soon find out it’s easier, and a lot more fun, to have Ocasio-Cortez on the other side (Red State).
5.
CNN’s Jake Tapper: Trump Supporters Should Worry About Future Employers
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🦠 — This grim number — The U.S. has surpassed 10 million cases of COVID-19. It took just 10 days to go from 9 million to 10 million, which is the shortest period of time ever to add 1 million cases to the nation’s toll. The U.S. is the first nation in the world to reach 10 million cases.
— Keep an eye on Rick Scott’s ambitions — Scott is seeking to lead the National Republican Senatorial Committee, which is up for a vote Tuesday. This is important for two reasons. First, if he wins, he will defend Republicans’ position in the Senate in 2022, a tough year in which 21 GOP seats will be on the ballot, including two open races where Republicans are retiring. Second, the post is often sought by those looking to boost their profile, another breadcrumb along the way in Scott’s rumored 2024 presidential ambitions.
Rick Scott is making strategic moves that could put him on the presidential ballot in 2024. Image via AP.
🐤📃 — Worth a follow — Florida Politics’ has updated its Twitter lists to include the new crop of state Representatives, state Senators and members of Congress elected last week. Check them out and follow them to stay in the loop with what’s going on in Washington and Tallahassee.
👨⚕ — The doctor is in — Dr. Patrick Hwu is taking over as Moffitt’s new President and CEO. Hwu comes from MD Anderson, where he served as the Head of the Division of Cancer Medicine and oversaw 2,500 employees, $4.6 billion in revenues, and more than $100 million in grant funding.
— Not your daddy’s Surplus Lines Association — The group celebrates its 60th anniversary, and what a long way it has come. What once represented the marine and aviation industries primarily, FSLA now represents insurance solutions for industries dealing in artificial intelligence, autonomous vehicles, COVID-19 and sea-level rise. The group is seen as the “problem solvers of the insurance industry.” Read more about the FSLA here.
Situational awareness
Tweet, tweet:
—@LarrySabato: This was NOT an especially close election. #PresidentElectBiden won 306 EVs plus a 4-5 million-votes plurality. You want close? Look at 1960, 1968, 1976, 2000, among others. NETWORKS — Stop feeding this false storyline.
—@Timodc: I don’t think there’s enough appreciation for the fact that GOP Senators/Congressmen, most of the conservative commentariat/@FoxNews, and leaders of industry are all pretending like they think there might be election fraud just because the President’s feelings are hurt.
—@JohnJHarwood: top echelon of Republican Party has a clear choice: a) acknowledging the obvious reality that [Joe] Biden won and will become President Jan 20 b) acquiescing, from some combination of fear/ambition/profit/delusion, in Trump’s fantasy that it’s in doubt no contest they’re going with b)
—@JustinTrudeau: I just spoke with @JoeBiden, and congratulated him again on his election. We’ve worked with each other before, and we’re ready to pick up on that work and tackle the challenges and opportunities facing our two countries — including climate change and COVID-19.
Tweet, tweet:
—@AriFleischer: After a lifetime of hearing that voter fraud is real, it seems to me that this is the perfect opportunity to find out if that’s true — or not. Even if the margin is too big to turn around the election, it’s worth a full and deep dive to learn whether or not there is cheating.
—@LucyMcCaldwell: Imagine if your job on the [Donald] Trump campaign were to listen to the messages left on the fraud hotline.
—@AGlorios: Yep. I briefly flirted with challenging @GovRonDeSantis as an R in his next primary last night just because even tho I am not an R (yes I am nonpartisan) I know I could make a better conservative health care plan than him. And boy, did those ads sound nasty in my head.
—@FiveThirtyEight: For many, watching Alex Trebek was ritualistic — the way a day ends and a night begins. It was also a way to get real facts, a brief respite from the “alternative facts” so prevalent over the past few years.
Days until
PS5 release date in North America, Australia, Japan, South Korea and New Zealand — 1; FITCon Policy Conference begins — 2; The Masters begins — 2; NBA draft — 8; Pixar’s “Soul” premieres — 10; College basketball season slated to begin — 15; Atlantic hurricane season ends — 20; Florida Automated Vehicles Summit — 22; the Electoral College votes — 34; “Death on the Nile” premieres — 37; NBA 2020-21 opening night — 42; “Wonder Woman 1984” rescheduled premiere — 45; Greyhound racing ends in Florida — 51; the 2021 Inauguration — 71; Super Bowl LV in Tampa — 89; “A Quiet Place Part II” rescheduled premiere — 100; “Black Widow” rescheduled premiere — 114; “No Time to Die” premieres (rescheduled) — 143; “Top Gun: Maverick” rescheduled premiere — 234; Disney’s “Shang Chi and The Legend of The Ten Rings” premieres — 241; new start date for 2021 Olympics — 255; “Jungle Cruise” premieres — 263; St. Petersburg Primary Election — 297; St. Petersburg Municipal Elections — 357; Disney’s “Eternals” premieres — 360; “Spider-Man Far From Home” sequel premieres — 363; Steven Spielberg’s “West Side Story” premieres — 395; “Thor: Love and Thunder” premieres — 459; “Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness” premieres — 512; “Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse” sequel premieres — 693.
Presidential
“Donald Trump supporters launch small, disparate efforts to fight election results as no GOP or Trump allegations of irregularities have been proved” via Robert Klemko, Annie Gowen, Holly Bailey and Scott Wilson of The Washington Post — Trump’s refusal to accept the presidential election results is being reinforced in pockets of denial nationwide. Still, the anger continues to fall short of a coherent resistance movement that would threaten to overturn the vote. In states where Trump won and in one where he lost a close race, elected Republicans and GOP voters called for the continuation of efforts to challenge the results, which in Pennsylvania give President-elect Biden a roughly 45,000-vote margin of victory.
Donald Trump supporters protest election results; the anger is fueled by Trump’s accusations of irregularities. Image via AP.
“GOP-led states back Trump’s legal drive to challenge election” via Josh Gerstein and Zach Montellaro of POLITICO — A coalition of Republican attorneys general filed an amicus brief at the U.S. Supreme Court urging the justices to formally take up and resolve a dispute from Pennsylvania over a ruling that the state’s Supreme Court issued granting three extra days for the receipt of mail-in ballots cast. The 10 attorneys general aligned their states with arguments from Trump’s presidential campaign, the Pennsylvania Republican Party and a pair of GOP state legislative leaders that the Pennsylvania Supreme Court’s decision usurped powers that the Constitution reserves for state legislatures.
“Most Republican lawsuits challenging election results in battleground states haven’t gone far” via Kevin McCoy, Donovan Slack and Dennis Wagner of USA Today — Even before Democrat Biden was projected to be the winner of the presidential election, Trump’s campaign and Republican allies started pursuing lawsuits over voting and ballot counting. Cases filed in five key states alleged ballots had errors because voters were required to use Sharpies, observers didn’t have enough access to monitor ballot counting, and that late-arriving mail ballots were improperly mixed with legal votes. Judges have dismissed most cases quickly, often for lack of evidence.
“Ashley Moody signs on to Pennsylvania ballot brief” via The News Service of Florida — Attorney General Moody signed to a brief aimed at convincing the U.S. Supreme Court to overturn a ruling that allowed Pennsylvania elections officials to count some late-arriving absentee ballots. Moody was one of 10 Republican attorneys general who filed the brief in a challenge to a decision by the Pennsylvania Supreme Court that allowed counting absentee ballots received up to three days after the Nov. 3 election. The case is one of a flurry of lawsuits filed by Republicans alleging potential ballot fraud in various states.
Tweet, tweet:
“Mitch McConnell backs Trump’s refusal to accept election results” via Andrew Desiderio and Marianne Levine of POLITICO — Senate Majority Leader McConnell and GOP lawmakers on Monday refused to recognize Biden as the President-elect, defending Trump as he continues to launch unsubstantiated allegations about widespread voter fraud. Like other Republicans, McConnell neither repeated Trump’s false claims that Democrats are trying to “rig” and “steal” the election nor publicly pressured the president to concede. Trump has continued to assert that there were widespread irregularities in several states but has provided no evidence. He has falsely claimed on Twitter that he won the election.
“Lindsey Graham’s curious and conspiratorial argument for why Trump should fight election results” via Amber Phillips of The Washington Post — Within the Republican Party elite, few have been as adamant that widespread fraud is costing Trump the election than Sen. Graham. And he’s using highly conspiratorial language to try to bring the rest of his party along with him. “If Republicans don’t challenge and change the U.S. election system, there will never be another Republican president elected again,” Graham said. That’s a strong statement worth analyzing because it reflects where the Trumpian wing of the Republican Party stands on this election. Graham said that mail balloting probably led to voting irregularities and fraud on a scale that swayed the election.
“’She is a master’: Joe Biden’s campaign manager told the political future — and was right” via Chris Smith of Vanity Fair — Jen O’Malley Dillon probably won’t be appearing regularly as a talking head, period, unlike her predecessors as managers of winning presidential campaigns. But for steering Biden across the 270-vote Electoral College line in his third run for the White House, in the middle of a pandemic, against a uniquely potent and craven incumbent president, Dillon deserves just as much fame and credit as those who have come before her. There is, of course, plenty of credit to go around inside the Biden and Democratic worlds. Yet no one did more than Dillon, the rare and most powerful new kid in Biden’s inside circle, who today becomes the first woman ever to manage a winning Democratic presidential campaign.
“‘I loved John McCain’: Inside Arizona’s GOP movement to defeat Donald Trump” via Bryan Bender and Maggie Severns of POLITICO — Two years and two months before Arizona rebuked Trump, hundreds of Republican leaders of the Grand Canyon State crowded into North Phoenix Baptist Church to bid farewell to their hero and mentor, McCain. They were met with a tearful eulogy from a special friend of McCain’s. “My name is Joe Biden. I’m a Democrat. And I loved John McCain,” the former Vice President began, sharing anecdotes from their decadeslong friendship and recounting their bipartisan victories in the Senate. He called McCain his “brother” and lauded his heroic American story, “grounded in respect and decency.”
“Citing no evidence, Georgia’s U.S. Senators demand elections head resign” via Mark Niesse and Greg Bluestein of The Atlanta Journal-Constitution — Georgia’s two U.S. senators called on the state’s top elections official, a fellow Republican, to resign Monday in a shocking attempt to appease Trump and his supporters ahead of Jan. 5 runoffs for likely control of the U.S. Senate. U.S. Sens. Kelly Loeffler and David Perdue provided no evidence to back up claims of unspecified “failures” with the November election that was overseen by Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger, who said flatly that he’s not stepping down: “It’s not going to happen.”
Tweet, tweet:
“Man featured at Rudy Giuliani news conference is a convicted sex offender” via Matt Friedman of POLITICO — The first person Giuliani, the attorney for Trump, called up as a witness to baseless allegations of vote counting shenanigans in Philadelphia during a news conference last week is a sex offender who for years has been a perennial candidate in New Jersey. “It’s such a shame. This is a democracy,” Daryl Brooks, who said he was a GOP poll watcher, said at the news conference. Trenton political insiders watched with bemusement as Brooks took the podium. Brooks was incarcerated in the 1990s on charges of sexual assault, lewdness, and endangering a minor’s welfare for exposing himself to two girls ages 7 and 11, according to news accounts.
Transition
“Trump-to-Biden handoff stalls as President rejects outcome” via Jennifer Dlouhy of Bloomberg — Trump’s reluctance to concede the race to Biden risks delaying the vital work of handing over the reins of government to the next administration. Already, what started as a 78-day window for transition work between Election Day and the Jan. 20 swearing-in ceremony has been shortened amid vote counts in battleground states. So far, it’s just a modest trim — nothing like the 37 days that George W. Bush had to formally prepare for his presidency in 2000, after the Supreme Court’s Dec. 12 ruling in Bush v. Gore. But Trump has signaled that it could get longer.
For Joe Biden, the transition of power is expected to be a rough road. Image via AP.
“Pressure mounts on federal agency to affirm Joe Biden victory” via Alex Thompson of POLITICO — Former Republican White House officials and veterans of past presidential transition are calling for the government to begin the formal transfer of power from Trump to Biden. “While there will be legal disputes requiring adjudication, the outcome is sufficiently clear that the transition process must now begin,” the nonpartisan Center for Presidential Transition wrote in a letter exclusively obtained by POLITICO. “We urge the Trump administration to immediately begin the postelection transition process and the Biden team to take full advantage of the resources available under the Presidential Transition Act,” they wrote.
“Biden warns of ‘dark winter’ ahead with COVID, urges mask-wearing” via Tyler Pager of Bloomberg — President-elect Biden warned on Monday that the U.S. was facing a “dark winter” as the coronavirus continues to spread unabated, taking a somber tone to address the country even as scientists celebrated positive news about a potential vaccine. “There’s a need for bold action to fight this pandemic. We’re still facing a very dark winter,” he said in remarks after meeting with his newly appointed coronavirus task force. Biden cannot take the reins of the country’s response until he’s inaugurated on Jan. 20, so he used the crux of his speech to implore Americans to wear masks and continue practicing social distancing.
Assignment editors — President-elect Biden will deliver remarks in Wilmington, Delaware on Texas v. California, the Trump Administration’s lawsuit to overturn the Affordable Care Act, and his plan to expand access to quality, affordable health care. Joining Biden is Vice President-elect Kamala Harris, 2 p.m., livestreamed on the Biden-Harris Presidential Transition Twitter page. Media interested in receiving print pool reports should sign up for the press list atjoe.link/presslist.
“Biden’s DOJ must determine whether Trump should be prosecuted” via David Yaffe-Bellany and Billy House of MSN — Biden won the presidency promising to bring Americans together. But now his administration is sure to come under pressure from some Democrats to risk exacerbating divisions by investigating and prosecuting Trump. Although Biden has said that prosecuting a former president would be a “very unusual thing and probably not very good for democracy,” he also vowed in an NPR interview in August that he wouldn’t “interfere with the Justice Department’s judgment of whether or not they think they should pursue the prosecution of anyone that they think has violated the law.”
“Biden may have trouble unearthing Trump’s national security secrets” via Natasha Bertrand of POLITICO — From tearing up documents and hiding transcripts of calls with foreign leaders to using encrypted messaging apps and personal email accounts for government business, the Trump White House’s skirting of records preservation rules could limit the incoming Biden administration’s visibility into highly sensitive foreign policy and national security secrets. The mysteries have swirled over the past four years: What was really said during Trump’s many phone calls and one-on-one meetings with Russian President Vladimir Putin? What has Trump’s son-in-law Jared Kushner discussed with Saudi Arabia’s Prince Mohammed bin Salman on WhatsApp?
Joe Biden will have a difficult time untangling Donald Trump’s foreign dealings, particularly with Vladimir Putin. Image via AP.
“An early look at who might be in Biden’s inner circle in the White House” via Mike Memoli, Carol E. Lee and Kristen Welker of NBC News — Biden is focused on building the team that will enter the White House with him on Inauguration Day, his “Day One staff,” as he looks to fill several thousand jobs in his administration, according to multiple people familiar with the process. Biden plans to announce these positions likely later this week. Longtime Biden adviser Ron Klain is among those leading the effort to fill these roughly 200 positions in the White House and at some key government agencies, these people said. Once that’s complete, they said Biden would turn to building out his Cabinet.
“With pick for treasury secretary, Biden will tip hand about his economic agenda” via Rachel Siegel of The Washington Post — Biden faces a crucial decision in the coming weeks that could dictate how he plans to run his administration and shepherd the nation’s economy: whom to nominate as treasury secretary. A leading candidate is Federal Reserve governor Lael Brainard, who served as a senior Treasury Department official in the Barack Obama administration. Brainard has broad policymaking experience, particularly during economic crises, and wide respect among international foreign ministries and central banks from her time as the department’s top diplomat.
“Trio of Central Florida Democrats pushed for Biden administration” via Scott Powers of Florida Politics — Democratic U.S. Reps. Stephanie Murphy and Val Demings and former Democratic Lieutenant Governor nominee Chris King are being discussed for spots in President-elect Biden‘s administration. For now, it’s largely a grassroots draft movement, amplified by supporters of the trio of Central Florida Democrats, led by various local political leaders such as former Rep. Dick Batchelor and former Orange County Mayor Linda Chapin. Chapin said she is hearing from sources that Biden’s transition team is considering Murphy for some sort of National Security Council post.
“Alvin Brown to lead HUD? Here’s what Jacksonville insiders think” via A.G. Gancarski of Florida Politics — Former Jacksonville Mayor Brown may be a key part of the incoming Biden administration. Brown was more recently a staffer for the Biden campaign, which took increasingly Democratic Duval County even as it failed to carry Florida. Brown, in a prominent role, may help to shore up Northeast Florida, say some. Word is that his selection is heavily advocated by Rep. James Clyburn, the South Carolina Democrat who helped Biden recalibrate his campaign when it looked poised to fall apart ahead of the South Carolina primary. This week’s response varied to the rumor, with many prominent locals contacted by Florida Politics not being quick to respond.
Tweet, tweet:
2020
“Worried pollsters admit huge problem” via Sara Kehaulani Goo of Axios — Four years later, it’s still easy to hate on the polls. Even if they called the presidential race “right” this time, the national polls vastly underestimated support for Trump once again, leading to a major industry soul searching about how to fix some fundamental problems. Without data to provide a beacon for elections, there isn’t much else to go on. With a sharply divided public consuming increasingly partisan-skewed information, America has depended on data and statistics to provide clarity and reasonable expectations going into elections. Trust in the numbers has largely been eroded, and now they’re more subject to partisan attack and spinning.
“Voters approve charter amendment and make Florida the epicenter of Rights of Nature in the U.S.” via Joseph Bonasia for the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — On Election Day, a breathtaking 89% of Orange County voters approved the Right to Clean Water Charter Amendment. Orange County is now the largest jurisdiction in the nation to pass this kind of legislation. This is an indisputable, bipartisan mandate from the citizens of Orange County. Approval of the amendment — also known as the Wekiva River and Econlockhatchee River Bill of Rights — shows that the rights to clean water and healthy ecosystems are not to be subordinated to polluters’ interests. The amendment gives citizens the right to sue corporate polluters in court without showing they have been personally harmed, as state law requires.
Corona Florida
“Florida adds nearly another 4K COVID-19 cases Monday” via the staff of Florida Politics — With coronavirus cases on the rise in Florida and daily diagnoses reaching new heights nationwide, state health officials counted 3,924 new COVID-19 cases in their Monday update. Now 847,821 people have tested positive for the COVID-19 virus, including 11,451 nonresidents. The Department of Health also confirmed 58 deaths since Sunday, raising the death toll among Florida residents to 17,179. In addition to the death toll, 212 nonresidents have also died in the state. For all but one day in the past two weeks, the percent positivity rate has been above 5%. On Oct. 28, it was 4.9%. On Sunday, the rate was 8.1%, higher than all recent days apart from Friday, when 8.3% of results came back positive.
Florida reaches another milestone in COVID-19. Image via AP.
“COVID-19 hospitalizations top 2,900” via The News Service of Florida — The number of people hospitalized with “primary” diagnoses of COVID-19 has substantially increased during the past two weeks, topping 2,900 on Monday. The total of 2,902 hospitalizations late Monday afternoon was up from 2,777 on Sunday. It also was up from 2,474 a week earlier and 2,252 two weeks earlier. The increase in hospitalizations has come as the state has seen thousands of new COVID-19 cases each day. Miami-Dade County had the most people hospitalized late Monday afternoon at 402. It was followed by Broward County, with 277; Hillsborough County, with 219; Palm Beach County, with 194; Duval County, with 162; Pinellas County, with 148; and Orange County, with 143.
Let’s ask Fred Piccolo — “Experts wonder and warn: Is Florida the nation’s test case for COVID-19 herd immunity?” via Mary Ellen Klas and Ben Conarck of the Miami Herald — The answer from Ron DeSantis is an emphatic yes. And, whether Floridians know it or not, he is pursuing a policy that will allow the virus to spread freely in the state until most of the population becomes infected or is vaccinated with a yet-to-be obtained vaccine while attempting to protect those thought to be most vulnerable. Two months after a deadly summer surge and months before a realistic goal to begin rolling out a vaccine, the governor issued an order that opened up nearly every part of commerce, ended restrictions on restaurant dining, and barred local governments from enforcing mask mandates and social-distancing rules.
“Inmate COVID-19 cases increase” via The News Service of Florida — Florida’s prison system had a significant increase in recent days in inmates testing positive for COVID-19, with the overall total approaching 17,000 inmates since the pandemic started. According to the department, the numbers showed an additional 246 inmates had tested positive since a Friday count and that an additional 324 inmates tested positive during the past week. In all, 16,944 inmates have tested positive. At least part of the recent increase came at Walton Correctional Institution, where 315 inmates were reported to have tested positive as of Monday. Department reports last week showed that hundreds of inmate test results were pending at the Northwest Florida prison.
“As COVID-19 starts to spike, Ron DeSantis’ orders limit South Florida leaders from taking action to curb virus” via Skylar Swisher and Mario Ariza of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — As hospitalizations rise, South Florida leaders — representing the hardest-hit region in the state — will have little flexibility to craft a local response that differs from DeSantis’ approach. DeSantis barred local governments in September from enforcing mask mandates with fines, closing restaurant dining rooms or implementing any measure that “may prevent an individual from working or from operating a business.” The Republican governor has staked his political career on a strategy that his critics say amounts to a “herd-immunity” approach. That philosophy involves letting the pandemic burn itself out through mass infection.
“Tommy Hazouri weighs canceling Jacksonville City Council meeting after Scott Wilson gets COVID-19” via David Bauerlein of the Florida Times-Union — Jacksonville City Council President Hazouri canceled the Tuesday meeting of City Council after fellow Council member Wilson learned he had tested positive for the COVID-19 virus. Hazouri’s memo sent at about 4 p.m. Monday to council members cited “health and safety concerns” of COVID-19. “We can ill afford to have a council meeting and expose anyone further to contracting the virus,” Hazouri said. He said it’s a matter of protecting the health of the Council members, city staff and the public that shows up in council chambers for the meetings at City Hall. City Council meets every two weeks, so the next scheduled meeting is Nov. 24, but the canceled meeting Tuesday could be rescheduled by Hazouri before then.
“Does Key West need a COVID-19 curfew? City leaders will decide” via Gwen Filosa of the Miami Herald — As confirmed cases of COVID-19 continue to rise in the Florida Keys, the Key West City Commission on Tuesday will consider a nightly curfew. The city on Friday announced an emergency meeting had been set for 10 a.m. Tuesday at City Hall and on Zoom to discuss starting a midnight to 7 a.m. curfew. Monroe County restricted restaurant hours for a while earlier this year, from late July through early September, to keep people off the streets overnight. “We’ve got to tighten up right now before the holidays,” Key West Mayor Teri Johnston. “We’ve got to take some additional precautions.”
“Sarasota City Commissioner Kyle Battie tests positive for COVID-19” via Timothy Fanning of the Sarasota Herald-Tribune — Newly elected District 1 Commissioner Battie tested positive for COVID-19 last Friday ahead of a swearing-in ceremony at City Hall. Shortly after a rapid test revealed Battie tested positive for the virus, the 52-year-old was ushered into his office and virtually attended the meeting. Battie was not late for the meeting, as was previously reported. Battie, who volunteered to take the test ahead of Friday’s meeting, said he feels fine but is experiencing a dry cough. Battie also said he recently recovered his sense of taste and smell but has lost his appetite. He said he would quarantine until his symptoms subside and tests negative for COVID-19.
Sarasota City Commissioner Kyle Battie tests positive for COVID-19. Image via the City of Sarasota.
“On day of possible COVID-19 vaccine breakthrough, CDC Director Robert Redfield visits FAMU, FSU” via Byron Dobson of the Tallahassee Democrat — On Monday, Director Dr. Redfield heard from FAMU and FSU leaders at both campuses and those directly involved in implementing protocols established in reopening plans for both universities, including updates on campus-operated COVID-19 testing operations. The Florida Department of Health arranged Redfield’s campus visits. Both visits were closed to the media and advanced details of his schedule were not released. Shortly after noon Monday, FAMU President Larry Robinson escorted Redfield, along with Florida’s Surgeon General Scott Rivkees and Florida’s Deputy Secretary and Health Shamarial Roberson — who earned her doctorate in public health from FAMU — inside for a presentation attended by about 15 people, including staff members.
Corona nation
“Pfizer’s early data shows vaccine is more than 90% effective” via Katie Thomas, David Gelles and Carl Zimmer of The New York Times — The drugmaker Pfizer announced that early analysis of its coronavirus vaccine trial suggested the vaccine was robustly effective in preventing COVID-19, a promising development as the world has waited anxiously for any positive news about a pandemic that has killed more than 1.2 million people. Pfizer, which developed the vaccine with the German drugmaker BioNTech, released only sparse details from its clinical trial, based on the first formal review of the data by an outside expert panel. The company said that the analysis found that the vaccine was more than 90% effective in preventing the disease among trial volunteers who had no evidence of prior coronavirus infection.
Pfizer may have found a vaccine with more than 90% efficacy. Image via AP.
“Pandemic on course to overwhelm U.S. health system before Biden takes office,” via Dan Goldberg and Alice Miranda Ollstein of Politico — The United States’ surging coronavirus outbreak is on pace to hit nearly 1 million new cases a week by the end of the year — a scenario that could overwhelm health systems across much of the country and further complicatePresident-elect Biden’s attempts to coordinate a response. Biden, who is naming his own coronavirus task force Monday, has pledged to confront new shortages of protective gear for health workers and oversee the distribution of masks, test kits and vaccines while beefing up contact tracing and reengaging with the World Health Organization.
“President-elect Biden announces coronavirus task force made up of physicians and health experts” via Yasmeen Abutaleb and Laurie McGinley of The Washington Post — Biden announced the members of his coronavirus task force, a group made up entirely of doctors and health experts, signaling his intent to seek a science-based approach to bring the raging pandemic under control. Biden’s task force will have three co-chairs: Vivek H. Murthy, surgeon general during the Obama administration; David Kessler, Food and Drug Administration commissioner under Presidents George H.W. Bush and Bill Clinton; and Marcella Nunez-Smith, associate dean for health equity research at the Yale School of Medicine. Murthy and Kessler have briefed Biden for months on the pandemic. Biden will inherit the worst crisis since the Great Depression, made more difficult by Trump’s refusal to concede the election and commit to a peaceful transition of power.
“Utah Governor declares emergency, issues mask mandate: ‘We cannot afford to debate this issue’” via Andrea Salcedo of The Washington Post — For months, even as coronavirus cases have dramatically risen in his state, Utah Gov. Gary R. Herbert has refused to order residents to wear a mask. But on Sunday, after the state’s worst week yet and amid fears that hospitals could soon be overwhelmed, he reversed course. In a video posted to Twitter late on Sunday, Herbert also declared a two-week state of emergency. He announced a spate of other restrictions aimed to curb infections, which the governor noted are “growing at an alarming rate.” “Our hospitals are full,” Herbert said in the clip. “This threatens patients who rely on hospital care from everything from COVID-19 to emergencies like heart attacks, strokes, surgeries and trauma. We must work together to keep infections low until a vaccine is available.”
Corona economics
“Tourism stocks rally on news of possible COVID-19 vaccine” via Ron Hurtibise of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — Stocks of beleaguered tourism companies rose sharply Monday after drugmaker Pfizer’s announcement that its coronavirus vaccine was 90% effective in early trials. The gains for airlines, hotels and cruise lines occurred amid a broader stock market rally reflecting investors’ hopes that a vaccine could soon return economic life back to normal in the United States and beyond. Arguably, no industry has more riding on stopping the pandemic than the cruise industry. Carnival Cruise Line shares closed up 39.3%, to $19.25, on the vaccine news. Royal Caribbean rose 28.8% to $75.43, and Norwegian gained 26.8%, closing at $21.51. All have announced that cruises, suspended since March, won’t resume in 2020.
Wall Street took the news of the possible vaccine very well. Image via AP.
“Florida gas prices hit five-month low amid coronavirus surge concerns” via Malena Carollo of the Tampa Bay Times — Florida gas prices hit a five-month low this week. According to AAA, the Auto Club Group, state gas prices averaged $2 Monday, down 4 cents over the week and 17 cents since last month. Tampa Bay prices were even lower at $1.93 per gallon, on average, down 6 cents from last week and 25 cents from last month. The bay area had the third-lowest gas prices in the state Monday. “Demand concerns related to surging cases of COVID-19 continue to weigh on the global fuel market, leading to lower prices at the pump,” said Mark Jenkins, AAA spokesman.
More corona
“Most recovered COVID-19 patients left with heart damage, study shows” via Katherine Fung of Newsweek — A new study published Monday in the JAMA Cardiology Journal found that 78% of recovered COVID-19 patients had permanent heart damage. The study from the University Hospital Frankfurt examined the cardiovascular MRIs of 100 people who had recovered from the coronavirus. The heart images showed that almost 80% of recovered COVID-19 patients had structural changes to their hearts. Sixty percent of patients had ongoing myocardial (heart muscle) inflammation even after recovery. The majority of the patients were not hospitalized and recovered at home, with symptoms ranging from none to moderate.
“The pandemic is taking a toll on parents, and it’s showing in alcohol consumption rates” via Sarah Hosseini of The Washington Post — In a May survey conducted by the Research Triangle Institute International, researchers polled 993 people from across the United States about their drinking habits before the pandemic hit and after. It found an average person’s drinks per day increased by 27%; the frequency of a person’s drinking that “exceeds drinking guidelines” increased 21%, and binge drinking increased by 26%. Researchers also found that being female or Black was associated with significant increases in at least one measure. Respondents with children in the household had greater-than-average increases in all three.
Alcohol consumption has spiked among parents during the pandemic.
“How the coronavirus surprised Italy again” via Chico Harlan and Stefano Pitrelli of The Washington Post — After being so devastated by the coronavirus in the spring, Italians saw the ability to reclaim aspects of a normal life as a matter of national pride. They flocked to outdoor cafes and reserved spots at the beach. They put on their masks, resumed using public transportation and returned to their offices. They relished having successfully brought the virus in check. Italy’s worst-to-first pandemic rebound seemed to offer a model for the world. But now that Italy has been caught up in Europe’s second wave, startled by the virus once more, pride has given way to recriminations and a crisis of confidence. There’s a growing sense that the country and the continent misplayed their second chance.
Dateline: Tally
“Jimmy Patronis appoints three to Citizens Property Insurance Board of Governors” via Jason Delgado of Florida Politics — Chief Financial Officer Patronis announced three appointments on Monday to the Citizens Insurance Board and Florida Insurance Guaranty Association. Patronis appointed Medallion Homes CEO Carlos Beruff to Citizens Board Chair and Burr & Forman attorney Scott Thomas to the Citizens’ Board of Governors. Additionally, Patronis appointed Dean Mead shareholder Marc Dunbar as the Florida Insurance Guaranty Association representative for the group.
“Chris Sprowls recommends upping House members’ allotted bills to seven” via Renzo Downey of Florida Politics — Among the new rules House Speaker-designate Sprowls is proposing for the coming Legislative Session, the incoming Speaker wants representatives to be able to file an additional bill each. Since 1998, House rules have allowed members to file up to six bills. Still, the Clearwater Republican wants lawmakers to be able to file seven bills, citing a growing “scope and complexity of the issues overseen by the State Legislature.” A memo sent to House members Monday proposed that change. Rules regarding which bills count toward a representative’s limit would go unchanged. Another suggestion would reduce the number of proposed committee bills by keeping 7000-level bills reserved for significant policy and necessary housekeeping.
Incoming Speaker Chris Sprowls wants to allow lawmakers to file one more bill each.
“Shevrin Jones proposal would make it harder for police to claim ‘qualified immunity’” via Ryan Nicol of Florida Politics — Jones says he’ll introduce a bill during the 2021 Session to gut the controversial “qualified immunity” doctrine for police officers. Jones announced the push Monday as part of his 2021 Legislative Session agenda, which he dubbed the “People’s Agenda.” The modern “qualified immunity” doctrine stems from a 1982 U.S. Supreme Court case. Many courts have interpreted the doctrine to say police officers cannot be sued for violating a person’s rights unless a court has already ruled that behavior is unconstitutional.
“Storm forces rescheduling Board of Ed meeting” via The News Service of Florida — A State Board of Education meeting planned for Tuesday in Miami has been rescheduled because of Tropical Storm Eta. The meeting is now slated for 9 a.m. Nov. 18 at Tallahassee Community College, according to the Florida Department of Education website. Among the expected topics is a presentation about what is described as a “rigor gap.” That presentation comes after the Council of 100, an influential group of business leaders, released a study pointing to a “rigor gap” between grades that high school students receive and their ability to pass end-of-course exams in Algebra 1 and 10th-grade English language arts, according to a board agenda item.
Statewide
“Tropical Storm Eta causes flooding in South Florida” via Patricia Mazzei and Frances Robles of The New York Times — South Florida awoke to streets turned into shallow rivers on Monday after Tropical Storm Eta soaked the region overnight. It dumped rain inland, caused storm surge along the coast, and left hundreds of thousands of people without electricity. According to the National Weather Service, more than 13 inches of rain fell in some areas, flooding front yards and back patios, threatening mobile home communities, and creating dangerous driving conditions. By 11 a.m. on Monday, three flash-flood emergency alert warnings had screeched over cellular phones, each time extending the danger period.
Tropical Storm Eta is battering South Florida with heavy rain and wind. Image via AP.
“$15 minimum wage supporters in Florida are ‘ready to fight’ legislation that undercuts Amendment 2” via Caroline Glenn of the Orlando Sentinel — Backers of raising Florida’s minimum wage to $15 per hour say they’re prepared for a fight if the Republican-controlled Legislature or business groups try to undercut Amendment 2. The amendment, which passed Tuesday night with the 61% supermajority needed to become law, raises the minimum wage to $10 in 2021 and then $1 a year until it reaches $15 in 2026. The current state minimum wage is $8.56. Although studies found the proposal could lift millions of households out of poverty, it was vehemently opposed by business groups, including the Chamber of Commerce and Florida Restaurant & Lodging Association, which argued it would force small businesses already struggling through the pandemic to eliminate jobs and or shut down completely.
“Court to hear antitrust fight between health insurers” via Jim Saunders of The News Service of Florida — Oscar Insurance Company of Florida went to the 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals after a district judge sided with Florida Blue in the dispute, which is rooted in Oscar’s entrance in 2018 into the market for individual health insurance policies in the Orlando area. Oscar contends that Florida Blue engaged in “manifestly anticompetitive conduct” by threatening to cut off independent agents who also sold Oscar policies, according to a brief filed in the Atlanta-based appeals court. “Altogether, Florida Blue’s threats have caused hundreds of brokers to avoid working with Oscar, leaving the vast majority of Florida brokers captive to Florida Blue and denying Oscar the ability to compete,” the brief said.
“$1.2 million grant awarded for various Florida military installation projects” via Jason Delgado of Florida Politics — The Florida Defense Support Task Force Grant Program awarded $1.25 million to help five military installation projects across the state. The grant winners include the Santa Rosa County Board of County Commissioners, Clay County Development Authority, Polk County Board of County Commissioners, Orlando Economic Partnership and the South Florida Progress Foundation. The funding will be used for various community support and growth projects at several Florida military installations. “These grant awards demonstrate the state of Florida’s commitment to our defense communities,” DeSantis said. “Florida continues to be the most military-friendly state in the country and supporting service members and their families is an honor and responsibility we hold high.”
D.C. matters
“Obamacare faces Supreme Court remade by Trump” via Susannah Luthi of POLITICO — Trump will leave office without making good on his pledge to wipe out Obamacare. But the Supreme Court he reshaped will soon indicate if it’ll finish the job. The court will hear a lawsuit Tuesday that likely represents Republicans’ last chance to knock out a health care law they’ve opposed for over a decade, and that Biden is vowing to expand. One of the most-watched participants at the oral arguments will be Trump’s latest appointee to the high court, Amy Coney Barrett. Democrats during last month’s confirmation hearings portrayed her as the pivotal vote who could bring about the law’s demise amid an intensifying pandemic that’s sickened millions.
Many are watching Amy Coney Barrett carefully as the Supreme Court considers a suit attempts to wipe out Obamacare.
“Trump will lose special Twitter protections in January” via Reuters — Trump will be subject to the same Twitter rules like any other user when Biden takes office on Jan. 20, the social media company confirmed this week. Twitter places “public interest” notices on some rule-breaking tweets from “world leaders” that would otherwise be removed. Such tweets from political candidates, elected or government officials are instead hidden by a warning and Twitter takes actions to restrict their reach. But the company said this treatment does not apply to former officeholders. It first hid one of his tweets behind a “public interest” label in May when the president violated the company’s policy against glorifying violence.
“Use of helipad at Mar-a-Lago ends with Trump’s term on Jan. 20” via William Kelly of the Palm Beach Daily News — For nearly four years, Mar-a-Lago has functioned as the “winter White House” of Trump. One of the perks of that status was a helipad approved by the town, so Marine One could whisk the president in and out of the 17.5-acre estate without jamming traffic. But helicopter trips to and from the helipad at Mar-a-Lago will no longer be permitted come Jan. 20, the day Trump’s chief executive powers transfer to Biden. When it approved the 50-foot, 8-inch-deep concrete helipad on the west lawn of ocean-to-lake estate, the Town Council stipulated it was “for business relating solely to the office of the president.”
“Mike Pence takes Florida vacation as Biden formulates virus strategy” via The Associated Press — One week after Election Day, Penceappears ready to take some time off. According to the Federal Aviation Administration, Pence is scheduled to travel to Sanibel, Florida, Tuesday through Saturday. Pence has vacationed on the island along Florida’s Gulf Coast several times previously. The trip comes as Trump has pledged to continue trying to contest the outcome of the election and President-elect Biden is ramping up his transition efforts. Biden and Vice President-elect Harris are being briefed virtually on the coronavirus pandemic by a task force of experts their transition team announced Monday.
“George Stephanopoulos’ Rep lobbies for him to become next host of ‘Jeopardy!’” via Tony Maglio and Sharon Waxman of The Wrap — Following Alex Trebek’s death on Sunday at age 80, Stephanopoulos’ rep is lobbying for the ABC News anchor to become the next host of the hit game show “Jeopardy!,” a highly placed person with knowledge of the situation told TheWrap. Stephanopoulos’ agent Alan Berger did not respond to TheWrap’s request for comment, but a knowledgeable individual close to the “Good Morning America” co-host denied that he was “actively” pursuing the role.
George Stephanopoulos is being floated as a replacement for Alex Trebek on Jeopardy. Image via AP.
Local notes
“What’s Eta done to Miami area roads? Cars sink on streets and a truck hangs off highway” via David J. Neal of the Miami Herald — Tropical Storm Eta has demonstrated with life-threatening clarity the dangers of being a driver in the storm. Several streets in or near downtown Miami, including the Brickell area and the Bayshore Drive area, could’ve been easier negotiated by raft than Range Rover. Drivers abandoned their stalled and sinking cars downtown and others had to navigate a flooded swath of Miami Gardens. “Some roads are completely underwater,” the Lauderhill Fire Rescue Public Information Office tweeted Monday morning at 8:03 with photographic evidence. “Canals have merged with roads and some fire hydrants are nearly submerged. Please stay home and stay safe.”
Tropical Storm Eta is causing havoc on Miami Street. Image via Miami Police Department.
“A $15 minimum wage? Here’s how Miami business leaders are responding” via Yadira Lopez, Rob Wile and Carlos Frias of the Miami Herald — Many Florida workers are getting a raise. Last week, more than 60% of Florida voters approved a measure to raise the state’s minimum wage from $8.56 to $15 per hour by 2026. Opponents argued it would kill small businesses; proponents said the current wage is too low. Both businesses and workers won’t see the increase any time soon. The change doesn’t take effect until Sept. 30, 2021, when the state’s minimum wage rises from $8.56 per hour to $10 per hour. The wage then will rise by $1 per hour every Sept. 30 until Sept. 30, 2026, when it reaches $15 per hour. Here’s how local business leaders responded to Tuesday’s passage.
“Katrina Brown told to start 33-month prison term in January; seeks to stay free on appeal” via Steve Patterson of The Florida Times-Union — Former Jacksonville City Council member Brown has been told to report by Jan. 29 to Coleman Federal Correctional Institution in Sumter County to begin a 33-month prison sentence, her lawyer has told court officials. The low-security facility with a minimum-security women’s camp is the same place former U.S. Rep. Corrine Brown served 27 months of a fraud sentence before being reassigned to home confinement in April. The location for Katrina Brown to serve her time was left undetermined when she and former City Council member Reggie Brown were sentenced last month for dozens of fraud convictions involving plans for opening a barbecue sauce plant. None of the Browns are related.
Top opinion
“Florida becomes a paragon of smooth elections” via the Tampa Bay Times editorial board — Florida has shaken its reputation for bungling elections. In fact, the state has become an example of how to do it right. Smart policies and lots of practice with tight elections allow our supervisors of elections to count votes quickly as does the state’s embrace of mail-in voting. Tabulating nearly all the votes in hours instead of days helps people maintain faith in the elections process. That should be reason enough to follow Florida’s lead. We’re looking at you Nevada, Arizona, Pennsylvania and Georgia. Florida’s current success came the hard way, borne out of the 2000 elections debacle, which made “hanging chad” a household phrase and kept the country on edge for weeks about who would be the next president.
Opinions
“Trump is now sabotaging national security to soothe his bruised ego” via Dana Milbank of The Washington Post — So this will be Trump’s parting gift to the nation: He is deliberately sabotaging the national security of the United States. His refusal to accept the results, even though it wasn’t a particularly close election, has taken an insidious new turn now that his political appointee in charge of authorizing the start of the Biden transition is refusing to give the OK. The delay undercuts all aspects of the government’s functioning and leaves the country needlessly vulnerable to security threats. In 2000, the delayed transition “hampered the new administration in identifying, recruiting, clearing, and obtaining Senate confirmation of key appointees,” the 9/11 Commission concluded.
“The Trump legal team’s latest voter fraud Hail Mary” via Aaron Blake of The Washington Post — Debunking Trump’s and his allies’ myriad, baseless voter fraud allegations is basically a game of whack-a-mole at this point. They pop up repeatedly and haphazardly, but they’re rather easy to knock down, often with just a couple of minutes and the Google machine. That’s both a good thing and a bad thing because such specious theories are still being pursued, despite the carcasses of the many debunked predecessors failing to dissuade both their perpetrators and their adherents. But few of these theories are as dubious as one that cropped up this weekend.
Today’s Sunrise
Republicans are still having trouble coming to grips with the presidential election.
Also, on today’s Sunrise:
— While the rest of the world congratulates Biden, the guys running Florida’s government are in a state of denial. Gov. DeSantis, Sens. Scott and Rubio are all encouraging Trump to keep fighting in court. But Pulitzer Prize-winning columnist Eugene Robinson says no amount of recounts and lawsuits will change the electoral mathematics.
— Robinson spoke during a virtual meeting of the Forum Club of the Palm Beaches.
— And now for something completely different: Equal time for prayer. The Forum Club began its meeting with a rabbi praying for peace and healing.
— The opposing viewpoint came from TV evangelist Kenneth Copeland.
— After a six-hour delay, Florida’s Department of Health finally releases the latest COVID-19 casualty count: 58 new fatalities, almost 4,000 new cases and no explanation for the delay.
— And finally, checking in with a couple of Florida Men. One will make you proud; the other … not so much.
“Matching cheese boards on Zoom? Very 2020: Here are tips for a cozier Zoom Thanksgiving” via Katie Workman of The Associated Press — We all know Thanksgiving is going to look different this year. If you’re lucky, you might live where the weather will still be nice and you have space to create an outdoor Thanksgiving with appropriate social distancing. The rest of us are preparing for the fact that an in-person Thanksgiving with all of our loved ones is unlikely because of pandemic safety concerns. For us, 2020 will be the year of the Zoom Thanksgiving. So how do we make that feel OK? From shared menus to organized games and discussions, some planning and coordination can go a long way. “The idea is to still feel unified in some way,” says Etsy trend expert Dayna Isom Johnson.
Some strategies can help you have the best Zoom Thanksgiving possible.
“How to tell your family you’re not coming home for the holidays” via Rachel Miller of Vice — The holidays tend to make people emotional, as does admitting that your kid is growing up and developing a life of their own. As such, these conversations can be super fraught. Feeling confident in your decision is, I think, one of the most important aspects of communicating news someone else doesn’t want to hear. In general, it’s kind and courteous to let someone know as early as possible that you won’t be attending an event they’re expecting you at, and your family deserves that same respect. Try to resist the urge to talk them out of feeling upset. The tone of this conversation should match how your family talks about holidays in general.
“Red Lobster is offering Cheddar Bay Biscuit gift boxes for the holidays” via CBS 15 — Red Lobster announced Monday that it is offering limited-edition gift boxes filled with its beloved Cheddar Bay Biscuits this holiday season. “Whether you’re searching for a unique gift to give a loved one you can’t physically be with, or looking to reward yourself for finishing a tough year strong, our Cheddar Bay Biscuit gift boxes are guaranteed to serve up some much-needed warmth and comfort this holiday season,” Deanna Kotch, Red Lobster’s marketing vice president, said in a statement. The holiday biscuit boxes will be available online starting Nov. 16. They will cost $1 more than an unboxed half-dozen order of biscuits, and they can be picked up from the restaurant or delivered to your door where available.
“Retail might be struggling, but the rich are buying rare books” via James Tarmy of Bloomberg — Even as independent bookstores struggle to survive, rare books and manuscripts have proved a rare bright spot in the industry. “It’s almost like two businesses,” says Kenneth Gloss, the owner of Brattle Book Shop in Boston. “As far as the general used-book business, it’s been off.” His third floor of rare and antiquarian books, though, is doing nearly as well as it ever has. The same phenomenon has occurred in categories as disparate as jewelry and classic cars. Rich people are still rich, and they’re still spending serious amounts of money on things that bring them joy — and perhaps, a return on investment later.
“SeaWorld sets Christmas, Hanukkah, Kwanzaa festivities, adds ice skating for visitors” via Dewayne Bevil of the Orlando Sentinel — SeaWorld Orlando’s holiday plans for 2020 include a new Christmas-carol show, celebrations for Hanukkah and Kwanzaa and theme-park visitors being able to ice skate at Bayside Stadium. “It’s a Wonderful Night: A New Story to Tell” will be produced at the park’s Nautilus Theater with limited capacity and physical distancing. SeaWorld says it will feature more than 30 carols “with clever surprises and lighthearted laughs.” The park will observe Hanukkah from Dec. 10 through Dec. 18 with a lighting of the menorah. Kwanzaa festivities will be held Dec. 26 through Jan. 1. In addition, Christmas, Hanukkah and Kwanzaa will be celebrated in the park’s Sesame Street Land as characters perform holiday songs.
“Tampa Bay malls prepare for socially-distanced Santa Claus” via Sara DiNatale of the Tampa Bay Times — As the number of coronavirus cases continues to spike in Florida and across the country, malls like International Plaza are announcing pandemic changes for its visits and photos with Santa and his elves. Malls and their retail tenants are still recovering from the period they were forced to close at the pandemic’s onset. Most malls use New Jersey company Cherry Hill Programs to create their Santa experience. International, Tyrone Square, the Westfield malls — Citrus Park, Brandon and Countryside — all use Cherry Hill, which has laid out clear COIVD-19 plans. That means the Santa experience in Tampa Bay will be similar no matter which mall you visit.
Happy birthday
Happy birthday to our friend, the newly engaged Samantha Sexton.
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Good morning. Who knows what today will bring, but the main theme from yesterday’s news? Light at the end of the tunnel.
MARKETS
NASDAQ
11,897.97
+ 0.02%
S&P
3,603.28
+ 2.67%
DJIA
29,583.33
+ 4.45%
GOLD
1,865.00
– 4.44%
10-YR
0.957%
+ 14.20 bps
OIL
40.40
+ 8.78%
*As of market close
Markets: Stocks boomed after Pfizer’s early-morning vaccine announcement. The S&P and Dow closed short of a record high.
Energy: Oil had its best day in six months for the same reason. Remember, at one point in the spring oil prices went negative because no one wanted to take possession of the stuff.
Yesterday morning, Pfizer said its Covid-19 vaccine was over 90% effective in late-stage clinical trials. The news exceeded the expectations of health officials like Dr. Fauci, signaled a new hope for controlling the pandemic, and finally gave us grounds for 7am Monday mimosas.
The mRNA vaccine, developed with Germany’s BioNTech, targets spike proteins, which the coronavirus uses to latch onto human cells.
The trial: Over a three-week period, researchers administered two vaccine doses to 43,538 volunteers; around half received the vaccine, the other half placebos.
The results: Across all participants, Pfizer logged 94 total Covid-19 cases, with a 90% effectiveness rate for the vaccinated group. There were some side effects, but it doesn’t look worse than a flu shot. Still, time for the disclaimers part of this program:
Results haven’t been peer-reviewed, and the study is ongoing. Pfizer will wrap it up after reaching 164 positive cases.
We don’t know if the vaccine prevents asymptomatic transmission or severe Covid cases that cause hospitalization.
Next steps
The FDA needs follow-up data to make sure Pfizer’s vaccine isn’t making participants grow tails. The company hopes to have that ready as early as next week and could seek “emergency use” approval from the FDA after.
If it gets it, Pfizer says it can produce 50 million doses by the end of 2020 and 1.3 billion in 2021. However, each patient requires two doses, so cut those numbers in half for how many people may actually receive it.
The U.S. would need 375 million doses to cover 75% of its adult population. The government already secured 100 million for $2 billion.
Approval isn’t the only roadblock. Pfizer’s product is harder to move around than an octopus ice sculpture. The vaccine must remain at -94°F, which limits where it can be transported. Moderna’s vaccine, widely viewed as the next-most-promising candidate, can sit out at a relatively balmy -4°F.
Big picture: Besides potentially turning economic forecasts upside down and putting the prospect of a first date back on your 2021 schedule, Pfizer’s announcement shows a vaccine could be more effective than the 50% bar set by the FDA. More effective = more people willing to go get it.
And an effective vaccine can’t come fast enough. Yesterday, the U.S. passed 10 million Covid-19 cases as President-elect Joe Biden urged Americans to practice social distancing and wear masks.
Pfizer’s promising vaccine news sent shockwaves through financial markets, turning pandemic darlings into nightmares and forgotten clunkers into emergent stars.
Biggest gainers
No stocks reacted better to the news than the beaten-down travel, entertainment, and real estate industries.
Cruise operator Carnival Corp rose 39%, AMC Theaters jumped 51%, and SL Green, the largest office owner in Manhattan, closed up 37%.
The airline exchange-traded fund, JETS, soared 16%.
Medical implant makers and dental stocks also had a great day, as investors predicted that patients needing non-essential medical procedures would soon return to the operating table.
Some didn’t take it as well…
Peloton (-20%), Zoom (-17%), Etsy (-17%), and Clorox (-11%)—all companies that benefited from the sweeping social changes brought on by the pandemic—came crashing down.
Zoom out: While Pfizer’s vaccine appears to speed up timelines, there’s still a ways to go before we control the pandemic and any of these violent intraday swings solidify into long-term trends.
Supreme, a brand that has gotten more mileage out of a simple red and white color scheme than Santa himself, was acquired by VF Corp yesterday for $2.1 billion.
What that $2.1 billion is getting: Supreme is not your typical multi-billion dollar brand with a scant brick-and-mortar footprint and limited distribution. It’s built a cult following by expertly hyping its merch drops, mainly through its social media channels.
Supreme, which does 60% of its sales online, will play a key role in what VF CEO Steve Rendle calls a “hyper-digital business model transformation.”
Is it a good match?
VF Corp, which also owns Vans, The North Face, and Timberland, is confident that its existing expertise in the athletic-activewear and streetwear space will keep the Supreme brand “cool,” but others in the retail industry aren’t so sure. Web Smith, writer of the e-commerce newsletter 2PM, argued in a tweet that “Supreme’s ownership chose mass distribution” when it should have focused on enhancing the brand’s powerful “mystique.”
Get your mind out of the gutter, and allow us to explain.
We can’t stop caressing ourselves when we’re wrapped in a cloud of soft, ethically-sourced, luxurious cashmere that can only be a NAADAM sweater.
Since day one, NAADAM has been creating cashmere with a conscienceby working to protect the planet and promote ethical conditions for the animals behind the softest cashmere you’ve ever put your paws on.
Seriously. You won’t be able to get your hands off your own bod. So when annoying people ask you why you keep touching yourself, just tell them, “I’m wearing a NAADAM cashmere sweater of elevated and rich quality that is durable, soft, and sustainable.”
They’ll understand.
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Will the third time be the curse for the Affordable Care Act? The 2010 healthcare bill, aka Obamacare, is facing the Supreme Court once again.
The case: California v. Texascenters around the “individual mandate,” an ACA provision requiring Americans to get health insurance or pay $695+ in taxes. The mandate survived a 2012 challenge on the grounds that Congress was within its rights to levy taxes, but in 2017, a Republican-majority Congress reduced the tax penalty to $0.
The latest plaintiffs, 18 red states led by Texas, argue that the zeroed-out mandate is unconstitutional because it’s no longer a tax. As a result, they want the entire ACA gone.
A federal district judge agreed, it got appealed, and now the defendants (20 blue states led by California) want the Supreme Court to step in.
Will they? The addition of Amy Coney Barrett gave the Supreme Court a 6–3 conservative majority, but it’s not clear whether conservative judges will agree with the plaintiffs’ reasoning.
Zoom out: Repealing the ACA is controversial because, without a replacement, an estimated 20 million people could lose health insurance and 135 million with preexisting conditions could lose protections—something politicians on both sides want to avoid.
2020 has revealed some “must-haves” for businesses: Entertainment companies need a streaming service, social media sites need Stories, and fast food chains need a plant-based burger.
McDonald’s finally caved to peer pressure yesterday, saying it will launch a new plant-based meat line, the McPlant, in some markets next year.
McDonald’s will join rivals like Burger King (Impossible Whopper) and Dunkin’ (Beyond Sausage) in changing its menu to match increased consumer demand for veggie alternatives.
Zoom out: McDonald’s, which beat earnings estimates last quarter, is pursuing a strategy that shows business is less about creating magic from scratch and more about borrowing ideas and making them your own. It’s launching a long-awaited loyalty program (pioneered by Starbucks) and planning to roll out a crispy chicken sandwich in the style of Popeyes.
+ While we’re here…shares in Beyond Meat, the company that co-developed the McPlant patty, cratered more than 20% after hours following a bad earnings miss.
WHAT ELSE IS BREWING
Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell did not recognize Joe Biden as president-elect yesterday and said President Trump is “100% within his rights” to conduct legal inquiries into election results.
The EU said it would impose tariffs on up to $4 billion of U.S. goods in retaliation for illegal aid given to Boeing. It also said it’s hopeful for better trade relations when President-elect Joe Biden takes charge of the White House.
The FDA granted emergency use authorization to Eli Lilly’s monoclonal antibody treatment for Covid-19, bamlanivimab.
SoftBank’s Vision Fund posted a $7.6 billion profit last quarter, but four directors resigned from the tech conglomerate’s board in a governance shakeup.
Marketers are focusing on the pandemic in their holiday campaigns, according to Reuters.
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Tech Tip Tuesday: So you want to buy a new Xbox or PlayStation…but can your TV even render their graphics? Find out if your TV can handle new gaming consoles and then browse the best TVs for gaming.
Lazy fare: 12 top-notch frozen pizzas to keep in your freezer, as seen in our recommendations newsletter, The Essentials.
Slightly less lazy: Thisspicy infographic features nine DIY spice blends.
Marketing jobs: In Part 3 of our series on how to land a marketing job during a pandemic, we walk you through best practices for getting a gig in PR and comms. Read up here.
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Also on Monday, “[Joe Biden] named the members of a team of public health and science experts to develop a blueprint for fighting the coronavirus.” AP News
Both sides are encouraged that an effective vaccine may soon be available:
“The good news about the success shown in the Pfizer vaccine data is just the boost our spirits need… We still have some months to go but there may be a light at the end of this nightmare and that is something we can all embrace. All of the 44,000 clinical trial participants for the Pfizer vaccine across the globe must be pleased today.” Karen Townsend, Hot Air
“It’s fantastic news and a historic scientific accomplishment. Not only do we have the first effective vaccine, but the data also looks robust. Instead of evaluating the shot at the first possible moment, Pfizer waited for more data, which gives weight to the impressive results. There are still unknowns about the vaccine, and with limited supplies available until next year and two shots needed to complete treatment, it won’t end a rampant pandemic overnight. The news does, however, substantially boost the chances of a quicker and easier resolution.” Max Nisen, Bloomberg
Other opinions below.
From the Right
“The apparent breakthrough is a credit to the innovative capacity of the private pharmaceutical industry… The contribution from Operation Warp Speed, the Trump Administration vaccine effort, will nonetheless be critical in distributing a vaccine to market. The feds have promised Pfizer $1.95 billion to deliver 100 million doses to the federal government that will then be given to Americans free of charge…
“The vaccine news, assuming it holds, also vindicates President Trump’s oft-expressed optimism. He had hoped this breakthrough would come in October, before Election Day, and he was off by a week. He can still take credit for mobilizing the government to accelerate the approval of vaccines and therapies in what is likely to be record time. He streamlined bureaucratic reporting lines and prodded the FDA to collaborate with vaccine developers to consider results in nearly real time.” Editorial Board, Wall Street Journal
“New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo, whose record as the nation’s most incompetent state-level manager of the COVID crisis is unrivaled… spent much of the campaign insisting that Donald Trump was personally interfering in the process of developing a safe vaccine so that it could be brought to market before the election. Given that the election cycle ended nearly a week ago, he should be able to admit at this point that this fanciful outcome did not materialize. And yet, Cuomo just cannot bring himself to dispense with the hysteria…
“To the extent that there was any substance to Cuomo’s criticism, it was in a conjectural critique of the private health-care system, which he speculated would be ‘slow’ (slower than the public sector, somehow) and implicitly discriminates against at-risk populations such as minorities…
“Cuomo’s claim that at-risk populations will be discriminated against doesn’t comport with what Centers for Disease Control Director Robert Redfield told Congress in September—that the most at-risk populations and frontline health-care workers will have privileged access to a vaccine. The governor’s contentions are also untethered to what public health experts have advised the Biden administration to do, which is to lean heavily on and financially support the private sector to facilitate the distribution and refrigeration of a vaccine on an unprecedented scale.” Noah Rothman, Commentary Magazine
“A lot of media folk lambasted President Trump for predicting [a vaccine this year], but thank goodness he appears to have been right on target…
“Now that all the votes have been cast Mr. Trump’s opponent, former Vice President Joe Biden, will likely be more comfortable acknowledging how similar his Covid plan is to the Trump plan. During the campaign Mr. Biden shamefully claimed that Mr. Trump was responsible for U.S. virus deaths. Now there seems to be an implicit acknowledgment that Team Biden agrees with the White House on key aspects of the federal response and doesn’t want to disrupt them…
“If Mr. Biden is certified as the winner of the election, he and all Americans will be able to enjoy a rebounding economy and an increasingly effective medical response to Covid. The latter will directly save many lives and indirectly save more by making it nearly impossible for state and local politicians to maintain their misguided lockdowns.” James Freeman, Wall Street Journal
From the Left
“Just because Trump got most things about the virus wrong doesn’t mean he got everything wrong. It is incumbent on those of us who are his critics to acknowledge that so far Operation Warp Speed — the effort to develop and distribute a covid-19 vaccine — appears to be succeeding far beyond initial expectations…
“‘Going from where we were in January and February — where we are going to be hit by this tsunami — to very likely having a vaccine, or more than one vaccine, that is proven safe and effective within a year, is staggeringly impressive, and would only have happened with strong and effective federal action,’ Robert Wachter, chair of the department of medicine at the University of California at San Francisco, told The Post. He called the vaccine effort ‘nearly flawless’ — words that he found hard to say, he admitted, because he has strongly (and rightly) criticized the administration’s overall response to the virus.” Max Boot, Washington Post
“While the vaccine could be an economic gamechanger, it will take months before doses are widely available — and the US economy badly needs help now in the form of stimulus… Economists have urged Congress to consider providing enhanced unemployment benefits, forgivable loans to small businesses, aid to the travel industry and funds that prevent a wave of layoffs by local governments hit by massive revenue shortfalls…
“‘The vaccine is great. It makes everyone feel better. But at the end of the day, the pandemic is as bad as it’s ever been,’ said [Mark Zandi, chief economist at Moody’s Analytics]. ‘We still have a lot of unemployed people, small businesses struggling to survive, airlines running on fumes.’…
“The vaccine progress should minimize fears from deficit hawks that Uncle Sam is going to be on the hook for never-ending support to the economy. ‘The fact the vaccine is in sight could make us feel comfortable spending this money,’ said Constance Hunter, chief economist at KPMG. ‘We can give you this bridge to the other side because we know it won’t be the world’s longest bridge.’” Matt Egan, CNN
“With President-elect Biden announcing his coronavirus task force on Monday, there is sure to be a tug of war between the outgoing Trump administration and the incoming Biden administration on whose guidance the nation should follow during these lame-duck months…
“For example, the most important first decision for any vaccine that reaches the point of public distribution will be how best to determine which groups receive it first. Healthcare workers? Police officers? Military personnel? The BioNTech-product will initially have at most a 50 million dose supply for worldwide (not just US) use, demonstrating the need — soon, hopefully — for this type of decision. Prior to the vaccine announcement, the Trump administration had not laid out a clear public health plan.” Kent Sepkowitz, CNN
“Like many decisions Biden is likely to make over the coming weeks and months, his task-force lineup may be radical only by comparison to the president’s — when he wasn’t threatening to disband it, Trump’s COVID-19 task force included very few infectious-disease experts, favoring instead a number of his political allies and advisers. If it’s not especially courageous to staff a pandemic-fighting task force with people who know how to fight pandemics, it’s now oddly novel — and quite reassuring.” Katie Heaney, The Cut
☕ Good Tuesday morning!Today’s Smart Brevity™ count: 1,493 words … 6 minutes.
Situational awareness: President-elect Biden’s transition team is warning that it may take “legal action” if the Trump administration’s General Services Administration fails to make an official determination that Biden has won the election, Hans Nichols reports.
📡 Please join Ina Fried today at 12:30 p.m. ET for an Axios virtual event on the future of 5G, featuring Verizon Chairman and CEO Hans Vestberg and Qualcomm President Cristiano Amon. Register here.
1 big thing: Valerie Biden Owens previews brother’s governing style
Valerie Biden Owens in Wilmington on Sunday. Photo: “Axios on HBO”
Valerie Biden Owens, her big brother’s closest political adviser for 49 years, told me in an interview for “Axios on HBO” that President-elect Joe Biden plans to ignore the distractions of President Trump while building and launching a government.
“He’s never going to see Donald Trump again,” Owens said Sunday in Wilmington, in her first on-camera interview since Joe Biden became president-elect. “Donald Trump is going off the stage on January 20th. … That’s history, that’s past.”
Why she matters: Owens stays behind the scenes, and rarely gives interviews.
She’s the ultimate gatekeeper, adviser and confidant — Biden’s “judgment barometer,” as one friend told me. She was the last word on some of the campaign’s biggest decisions, and a voice always pushing him to “Just be Joe.”
Reflecting the soaring confidence in Biden’s camp, Owens replied, “Sure” and “Absolutely” when I asked her if he would run for a second term:
“He’s transitional in that he’s bringing in all these young people and bringing [us] back again [so] we’re not a divided country. … But sure. He’s going strong.”
Owens said that despite the current celebrations, the president-elect recognizes the scale of the calamities he faces — and the constraints of a narrowed House Democratic majority, and possible Republican control of the Senate.
“He is the most experienced person to ever enter the White House in American history, because of his 36 years in the Senate and then his eight with President Obama. So he’s very clear eyed,” she said.
“But … he really, really believes that where we are now in this country, we have such a tremendous opportunity to make things better for all Americans.”
Owens sketched a radically different governing style than the past four years:
She said Biden will engage “progressives or conservatives or Republicans or liberals or Democrats and independents. … He will bring respect back to governing.”
“We all know him as a great talker,” she said with a laugh. “I mean: There goes Biden again — as I’m doing right now — talking and talking. But my brother’s even a better listener.”
I asked her what she’ll call him when he’s in the White House.
“Joey. Joe,” Owens said. “If he calls me First Sister, I’ll call him Mr. President.”
Days after Republicans defied expectations by picking up seats in the House, Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.) cited a junior member of Congress — Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-N.Y) — as one of the reasons he was able to raise so much money.
“Well, she runs the floor,” McCarthy told me on “Axios on HBO” last night when I asked why Republicans respond so vociferously to AOC.
“That wing of the party, the socialist wing of the party, they are the new power of the Democratic Party. … You watched on the floor. Legislation couldn’t be passed unless AOC agreed with it.”
Why it matters: House Democrats underperformed Biden in down-ballot races across the country, and they’re scrambling to figure out why.
Rep. James Clyburn (D-S.C.), the top African-American lawmaker in the House, had a similar message, telling Alexi McCammond for “Axios on HBO”: “Stop sloganeering. Sloganeering kills people. Sloganeering destroys movements.”
“This foolishness about you’ve got to be this progressive or that progressive. That phrase “defund the police” cost Jaime Harrison tremendously. I’m not saying it was the only problem,” Clyburn said.
Rep. Ro Khanna (D-Calif.) defended his colleagues in the Progressive Caucus, saying it’s “normal” and “healthy” to have disagreements in a big-tent party — while pushing back on the idea that slogans like “defund the police” are the reason Democrats lost.
“Eighty-something percent in the exit polls said they trusted Donald Trump more on the economy than they trusted the Democrats. That’s a sobering, shocking statistic,” Khanna told Jonathan Swan on “Axios on HBO.”
The best coronavirus news so far … Pfizer yesterday took a huge step toward a COVID-19 vaccine, reporting that its candidate was effective in over 90% of uninfected clinical trial patients, Dan Primack writes.
Reality check: It’s a giant and welcome development, but the pandemic will be with us long after vaccine distribution begins.
The Pfizer vaccine isn’t a silver bullet. Its efficacy is much higher than the 50% threshold set by the FDA, but could still leave tens of millions of vaccinated Americans at risk.
This means that many pandemic protocols are likely to remain in place, either by law or by habit, and some businesses already are preparing for this new normal — including startups that developed new products and services during the pandemic.
By the numbers: Pfizer expects to have 50 million doses available by year-end and 1.2 billion doses available during 2021.
Each regimen requires two shots, so halve those figures to determine the number of people who can be treated.
The U.S. government has already purchased 100 million doses, with an option to buy another 500 million. That could theoretically cover America’s 255 million adults, and most of those under 18 (although Pfizer just began testing on teens and no vaccine developer has yet enrolled kids).
And this is just for the Pfizer vaccine. Three others are in Phase 3 clinical trials in the U.S.
The U.S. Space Force is slated to swear in its first officer in space just as the scope and mission of the military’s newest branch are being defined, Axios Space reporter Miriam Kramer writes.
Why it matters: The military branch launched by President Trump will continue to be shaped by a new administration with potentially different ideas about how to protect U.S. national security in space.
The state of play: NASA astronaut and Air Force colonel Mike Hopkins is expected to launch to the International Space Station aboard a SpaceX capsule on Saturday with three other crew members.
Despite the tight count in key states, Joe Biden matched the election results Trumpworld labeled a “mandate” in 2016, Axios contributor Glen Johnson writes. The president-elect:
Received 75.7 million votes as of yesterday, with counting still underway in vote-rich California. That’s roughly six million more than the record 69.5 million votes Barack Obama received in 2008, and marks the second consecutive time a Democrat has beaten Trump in the popular vote.
Will win 306 electoral votes if he wins all the states where he’s currently leading — matching Trump’s 2016 tally over Hillary Clinton.
President-elect Joe Bidenisn’t likely to pursue a full reset with China, but he quickly must decide which of the Trump administration’s many policies to keep and which to scrap, Axios China reporter Bethany Allen-Ebrahimian writes.
Why it matters: In a world struggling against the common threats of climate change, nuclear proliferation and an ongoing pandemic, the U.S. must find a way to both challenge and cooperate with a rising authoritarian superpower.
The Trump White Housepursued a “whole-of-government” approach to countering China’s growing power, leaving Biden to preside over agencies that have implemented a dizzying number of China-related initiatives.
Governments around the world are preparing to work with President-elect Biden — but they still have to navigate what could be a bumpy final 10 weeks of President Trump, Axios World editor Dave Lawler writes.
Split screen: Around the time Biden was holding his first call as president-elect with a foreign leader, Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, Trump was firing Defense Secretary Mark Esper.
Trump isclearing out his national security team — the directors of the FBI and the CIA are likely to be next.
The state of play: Most world leaders ignored Trump’s protestations and congratulated Biden shortly after his victory was declared on Saturday
Leaders of China, Russia and Mexico are still waiting to recognize Biden’s victory, perhaps in part because they don’t want to provoke Trump.
Two nationalists with close ties to Trump — Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan and Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro — have also been silent.
Facebook and other social media platforms aim to serve users across the political spectrum. But as America’s tribal partisan split deepens after a divisive election, more users may start choosing to stick with their own kind, managing editor Scott Rosenberg writes from the Bay Area.
Why it matters: No competitor will be able to match Facebook’s size any time soon, or maybe ever. But the nation’s sharp schism makes it harder to keep users on both left and right engaged.
The latest: Parler, a still-tiny Twitter-like social network that touts itself as “bias-free” and has become a haven for conservative platform immigrants, hit the top of the App Store charts in the days following Trump’s loss.
Parler is no threat to Facebook at the moment. But an alternative could get momentum if Trump smiled on it or moved to it.
Risk assets had a very good day after Pfizer’s bombshell vaccine news, as the market priced in a return to pre-pandemic life that will benefit risk at the expense of safety, Axios Markets editor Dion Rabouin writes.
Golf was a physical and mental safe haven for millions of Americans with cabin fever this year, and even moderate retention of the sport’s newcomers could help buoy an entire industry for years to come, Axios Sports reporter Jeff Tracy writes.
By the numbers:
More rounds: September saw a 25.5% increase in the number of rounds played year-over-year — the fifth straight month to surpass last year’s totals.
More sales: Equipment sales increased 42% year-over-year in the third quarter to just over $1 billion. It was the industry’s second-best quarter ever.
Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell and other Republican officials offered support for the president’s attempts to contest the election outcome, despite the lack of any evidence of widespread fraud.
By Amy Gardner, Ashley Parker, Josh Dawsey and Emma Brown ● Read more »
Prominent conservatives say that the prospects for fiscal policy in a Joe Biden administration are favorable in light of the likelihood that Republicans maintain control of the Senate.
MADISON, Wisconsin — Republicans in Wisconsin are raising questions about the large number of people, particularly new voters, who avoided having to show a photo ID to vote by listing themselves as “indefinitely confined.”
The Trump campaign filed a lawsuit in Pennsylvania on Monday asking a federal court to block the Democratic secretary of state from certifying the state’s election results amid claims of voter irregularities and wrongdoing.
Stocks hit all-time highs Monday following the news that Pfizer expects to petition the Food and Drug Administration for authorization of its coronavirus vaccine by the third week of November after early clinical trial results showed its efficacy as high as 90%.
President Trump’s term in office is coming to an end without any breakthrough agreements with Russia, to the “deepest regret” of a top diplomat in Moscow.
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ASSOCIATED PRESS
AP Morning Wire – Nov 10, 2020
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AP MORNING WIRE
Good morning. In today’s AP Morning Wire:
President-elect Biden targets virus as his White House transition begins.
Republicans back Trump as he fights election results, transition.
Drugmaker Pfizer says COVID-19 vaccine is looking 90% effective.
Europe runs low on ICU beds, hospital staff as virus surges again.
TAMER FAKAHANY DEPUTY DIRECTOR – GLOBAL NEWS COORDINATION, LONDON
The Rundown
AP PHOTO/CAROLYN KASTER
Biden targets the virus as his White House transition begins; President-elect defends health care law as high court mulls its fate
President-elect Joe Biden has made his intentions strikingly clear: his incoming administration is singularly focused on reining in the pandemic.
Biden offered the cautious but impassioned argument for Americans to double down on individual efforts to stem the disease even as the stock market and Donald Trump reacted exuberantly to pharmaceutical giant Pfizer announcing progress with its vaccine trial.
But Biden warned Americans against complacency as infection rates have soared in recent days across the U.S. to record highs.
Democratic state officials have welcomed a science-based approach from the president-elect. While some Republican governors aren’t ready to agree that Biden won last week’s elections, some are imposing more restrictions in an effort to slow the spread of the virus.
The high court ruled eight years ago to leave intact the essential components of the law, but is now controlled 6-3 by a conservative majority. The speech reflects the importance Biden is putting on health care as he prepares to take office in January amid the worst pandemic in more than a century, Will Weissert reports.
Supreme Court: A week after the election, Republican elected officials and the Trump administration are advancing their latest arguments to get rid of the Affordable Care Act, a long-held Republican goal that has repeatedly failed in Congress and the courts. Arguments are scheduled today in the Supreme Court’s third major case over the 10-year-old law, popularly known as “Obamacare,” Mark Sherman reports.
Much at stake as Supreme Court weighs future of ‘Obamacare.’ Whether the Affordable Care Act stays, goes, or is significantly changed, will affect the way life is lived in the U.S. From protections for people with pre-existing conditions, to insurance subsidies, to free birth control —” Obamacare” deals with it all.
Black Voters: They were the main constituency to push Biden to victory in the presidential race. Activists tell the AP that the Biden campaign owes Black voters and the organizers who worked tirelessly to turn them out for that victory. According to AP VoteCast data, an expansive survey of the electorate, 9 in 10 Black voters nationwide supported Biden over Trump. Black organizers say they intend to follow through with a set of demands for the new administration, Kat Stafford, Aaron Morrison and Angeliki Kastanis report.
AP PHOTO/EVAN VUCCI
GOP backs Trump as he fights election results, transition; Barr tells Justice to probe election fraud claims if they exist
The Trump administration has willfully catapulted the presidential transition into tumult.
Some Republicans, including Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, rallied behind Trump’s efforts to fight the election results. Few acknowledged Biden’s victory.
Even as Biden began assembling experts to face the surging pandemic, the federal agency that needs to greenlight the beginnings of the transition of power held off.
And the White House moved to crack down on those not deemed sufficiently loyal as Trump continued to refuse to concede the race.
Presidential Concessions: Losing candidates for the nation’s highest office have conceded to their opponents in private chats, telegrams, phone calls and nationally televised speeches. Al Gore even conceded twice in the same race in the year 2000. Trump isn’t expected to concede at all — not even with a tweet. There’s no law that says he has to concede, but if he doesn’t, Trump will be the first presidential candidate in modern times to ignore a tradition that has marked peaceful transitions throughout American history. Most concession speeches are gracious — less about the loser and more about closure for the country, Deb Riechmann reports.
COURTESY OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MARYLAND SCHOOL OF MEDICINE VIA AP
”Offer some hope”: Drugmaker Pfizer says COVID-19 vaccine is looking 90% effective; Europe runs low on ICU beds, hospital staff
“We’re in a position potentially to be able to offer some hope,” Pfizer’s senior vice president of clinical development, told the AP.
The announcement doesn’t mean, however, that a vaccine is imminent. The interim analysis, from independent data monitors, looked at 94 infections recorded so far in a study that has enrolled nearly 44,000 people.
Pfizer did not provide any more details about those cases, and cautioned the initial protection rate might change by the time the study ends. The shots are made by Pfizer and its German partner BioNTech.
Europe Intensive Care: ICU space is dwindling across the virus-ravaged continent as beds fill again with coronavirus patients. France’s critical care beds are 92% full and one hospital in the south has brought in refrigerated trucks for a feared influx of bodies. In Belgium, a slowing curve this week eased pressure on nurses and physicians dealing with the hardest cases. But many parts of Eastern Europe, previously spared the harrowing peak in spring, are expecting to reach capacity in their critical care units within weeks. Officials say they were braced for a wave of illness this fall, but no one was prepared for the severity they’re now seeing, Lori Hinnant reports.
Europe Restrictions:Portugal and Hungary have become the latest European countries to impose curfews against the renewed tide of infections and deaths sweeping the continent and filing its hospital emergency wards. Portugal’s restrictions kicked in Monday. A curfew will start Tuesday midnight in Hungary. But glimmers of hope emerged from France, Belgium and elsewhere that tough restrictions might be starting to work, Barry Hatton, Justin Spike and John Leicester report.
Latin America Education: The U.N. children’s agency UNICEF says an estimated 97% of children in Latin America and the Caribbean aren’t in school, seven months after the continent’s first cases of coronavirus were discovered. It warns of a “generational catastrophe.” An estimated 137 million children are missing out on education as a vast number of the region’s schools closed with no end in sight, Scott Smith reports.
Pandemic Thanksgiving: U.S. health officials say small household gatherings have contributed to the rise in COVID-19 cases. But there’s no need to cancel the cherished holiday. Spending time with loved ones is important for health too. The virus spreads more easily when people are crowded together inside, so experts encourage new outdoor traditions such as hiking as a family. Guest lists for indoor feasts should be small enough so people can sit six feet apart while unmasked, Carla K. Johnson reports.
Kremlin says Putin won’t congratulate Biden until Trump’s legal challenges end
Russian President Vladimir Putin has no plans to congratulate President-elect Joe Biden until legal challenges to the U.S. election are resolved and the result is official, the Kremlin has said.
which was called by major news organizations on Saturday, Jim Heintz reports from Moscow.
But Donald Trump’s team has promised legal action and refused to concede his loss. He has alleged large-scale voter fraud, so far without any evidence.
Putin promptly offered congratulations to Trump in 2016, an election Moscow is widely accepted to have interfered with to assist Trump, but his rival then, Hillary Clinton, also conceded the day after the vote.
The leaders of China, Mexico, Brazil and Turkey also are not yet offering congratulations.
Armenia and Azerbaijan have agreed to halt fighting in the Nagorno-Karabakh region of Azerbaijan under an agreement signed with Russia that calls for deployment of nearly 2,000 Russian peacekeepers and territorial concessions. Nagorno-Karabakh has been under the control of ethnic Armenian forces backed by Armenia since a 1994 truce ended a separatist war. Clashes had been sporadic since then, but full-scale fighting began in September. Several cease-fires were almost immediately violated. However, this agreement appears more likely to take hold because Azerbaijan has made significant advances.
Cities in South Florida mopped up after Tropical Storm Eta flooded some urban areas with a deluge that swamped entire neighborhoods and filled some homes with water that didn’t drain for hours. After striking Nicaragua as a Category 4 hurricane and killing nearly 70 people from Mexico to Panama, the storm swept over South Florida. Florida officials say the heavy rain damaged one of the state’s largest COVID-19 testing sites. Eta is the 28th named storm in a busy hurricane season and the first to make landfall in Florida. Theta then formed over the northeast Atlantic, becoming the basin’s 29th named storm, to eclipse the 2005 record.
Saeb Erekat, a veteran peace negotiator and prominent international spokesman for the Palestinians for more than three decades, has died. He was 65. The American-educated Erekat was involved in nearly every round of peace negotiations between Israel and the Palestinians going back to the landmark Madrid conference in 1991. Over the next few decades Erekat was a constant presence in Western media, where he tirelessly advocated for a negotiated two-state solution to the decades-old conflict, His Fatah party announced his death in a statement, weeks after he was hospitalized with the coronavirus.
Chinese consumers are expected to spend tens of billions of dollars on everything from fresh food to luxury goods during this year’s Singles’ Day online shopping festival, as the country recovers from the pandemic. The shopping festival, which is the world’s largest and falls on Nov. 11 every year, is an annual extravaganza where China’s e-commerce companies, including Alibaba, JD.com and Pinduoduo, offer generous discounts on their platforms. Last year, shoppers spent $38.4 billion on Alibaba’s e-commerce platforms Tmall and Taobao.
Good morning, Chicago. On Monday, Illinois health officials reported more than 10,000 new confirmed and probable COVID-19 cases for the fourth consecutive day, with 10,573, and 14 more deaths. The state seven-day positivity rate increased to 11.4%, up from 10.6% just a day earlier.
Meanwhile, you may have seen the headlines Monday morning that the company Pfizer announced preliminary results on their COVID-19 vaccine — suggesting it was more than 90% effective. Although many saw the news as a glimmer of hope, a number of questions remain. Here’s what we know, and don’t know, about the vaccine.
Here’s more coronavirus news and other top stories you need to know to start your day.
With the coronavirus continuing to surge largely unabated, Gov. J.B. Pritzker said Monday that he would impose a 10-person limit on gatherings in parts of suburban Chicago and much of southern Illinois and suggested a statewide stay-at-home order is back on the table as a possible step to bring COVID-19 under control.
DuPage, Kane, Will and Kankakee counties, along with the state’s 20 southernmost counties, will come under the stricter rules, which also include a limit of six people per table for outdoor restaurant and bar service, beginning Wednesday. They join the northwest region, home to Rockford, DeKalb and Galena, in facing the next level of restrictions in Pritzker’s 11-region reopening plan.
Joe Biden is looking to build out his nascent White House staff with more traditional Washington insiders, a notable departure from four years in which President Donald Trump filled his team with outsiders and government antagonists.
Buoyed by mail-in ballots counted since election night, Rep. Lauren Underwood now has a slim advantage over Republican challenger Jim Oberweis in the extraordinarily close race to see who will represent the sprawling, suburban 14th Congressional District.
Hall of Fame manager Tony La Russa, hired by the Chicago White Sox last month, was charged with driving under the influence after a February arrest in Arizona, ESPN reported Monday, citing court records.
With dining rooms shut down across the state, restaurants wasted no time in pivoting to be ready for Thanksgiving. Menus range from full meals to elements you can add to your own, and run the gamut from traditional turkey, stuffing, mashed potatoes to those featuring duck or pork or fried chicken. We’ve rounded up offerings across the city and suburbs.
Marchers shouted “defund the police!” during huge protests in Chicago and across America this year, but President-elect Joe Biden isn’t likely to do that, according to former Mayor Rahm Emanuel, an unofficial Biden campaign adviser, and others.
During his campaign, Biden said he didn’t support defunding police. He said he’d spend $300 million to hire cops and provide training as long as police departments met “basic standards of decency.”
Black Lives Matters, which led protests over George Floyd’s killing and other police-involved deaths, celebrated Biden’s victory in cities across America. “But if their agenda is not met, there will be protests again,” said Fred Waller, former chief of operations for the Chicago police. Frank Main and Fran Spielman have the story…
From the South Side to North Side, West Side to East, Black Chicagoans celebrated with much excitement the finally announced presidential election results — making Kamala Harris the first Black and South Asian American and first woman vice president.
“With President Biden, it will be more likely that we see increased pressure for funding for states and municipalities,” Chief Financial Officer Jennie Huang Bennett told the City Club of Chicago.
Former Mayor Rahm Emanuel, an unofficial adviser to his campaign, says the president-elect has been clear he won’t defund police — a demand of Black Lives Matter, other groups.
“The virus is winning the war right now,” Gov. J.B. Pritzker said in announcing the tighter restrictions Monday in Will, Kankakee, Kane and DuPage counties. They also will apply in parts of southern Illinois.
The Gold Coast resident founded JACPAC, the nation’s first Jewish women’s political action committee, was a major fundraiser for President-elect Joe Biden, other Democrats.
The Chicago Teachers Union, which paid for the survey, is calling for an independent mediator to be brought in to help resolve differences with Chicago Public Schools.
In the first 10 months since cannabis was fully legalized, dispensaries sold over $500 million worth of recreational weed and more than $300 million in medical pot.
Welcome to The Hill’s Morning Report. It is Tuesday! 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, 237,584; Tuesday, 238,251.
President Trump, out of public view on Monday, continued to contest ballots in Pennsylvania and other states while also firing Defense Secretary Mark Esper, adding new turbulence to an unsettled government nearly a week after Election Day.
In a day filled with leadership split screens, President-elect Joe Biden named a pandemic advisory board as part of his push for “bold action” to defeat the coronavirus, urging Americans to wear masks to help avert more fatalities. “It doesn’t matter who you voted for,” Biden said. “It doesn’t matter your party. We could save tens of thousands of lives if everyone would just wear a mask for the next few months.”
Trump and Biden separately cheered a breakthrough from Pfizer that set off a surge of optimistic trading in financial markets after the company’s CEO described an effective COVID-19 vaccine in clinical trials (CNBC).
Elsewhere in the Trump administration on Monday, pediatric neurosurgeon Ben Carson, the secretary of the Department of Housing and Urban Development, announced he contracted COVID-19, possibly during an election night celebration at the White House that included chief of staff Mark Meadows, who is among staff members who have recently tested positive for the coronavirus (The Associated Press).
At NASA, Administrator Jim Bridenstine, a former GOP congressman from Oklahoma appointed by Trump in 2018, indicated he did not doubt that Biden would be the 46th president, announcing he would leave the agency anticipating ideological differences (Aviation Week).
Trump’s decision to purge Esper, the second Defense secretary he has fired after disagreements, was not a surprise and may be part of a larger clearing-out still to come. Axios reported that next on the president’s chopping block may be FBI Director Christopher Wray and CIA Director Gina Haspel.
In a lengthy interview with Military Times, Esper said he has no regrets about how he handled Trump’s demands and resulting disagreements, arguing he tried to be a guardian for an apolitical military. “At the end of the day … you’ve got to pick your fights,” he said. “I could have a fight over anything, and I could make it a big fight, and I could live with that — why? Who’s going to come in behind me? It’s going to be a real ‘yes man.’ And then God help us.”
The Associated Press: Christopher Miller, the director of the National Counterterrorism Center, will serve as acting Defense secretary, sidestepping Deputy Defense Secretary David Norquist.
The Washington Post: White House lawyer and former GOP political operative Michael Ellis has been selected to be the top lawyer at the National Security Agency. The appointment by the Pentagon general counsel was made under pressure from the White House. Ellis previously worked as chief counsel to Rep. Devin Nunes (R-Calif.).
Trump’s political appointees inside departments and agencies are being told that the election results remain in dispute and that a transition to a Biden administration has not begun (CNBC).
The Associated Press: At the General Services Administration, which by law provides federal transition office space and funding to an election winner, Administrator Emily Murphy has not yet “ascertained” that Biden is the president-elect. The reluctance to hand the transition keys to Biden and his team, under terms outlined in a memorandum of understanding signed by both parties months ago, is a puzzle to some members of Congress, who amended a 1963 law several times over the years to avoid exactly the kind of transition limbo created by lawsuits still pending and the president’s reluctance to concede defeat.
The New York Times: GSA’s Murphy is the Trump appointee who stands between Biden and a smooth transition.
The New York Times: Trump plans to form a leadership political action committee, which can accept donations up to $5,000 from an unlimited number of contributors, in hopes of influencing his party when he’s out of office.
The Wall Street Journal: Sen. Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) says Trump is within his rights to pursue legal challenges.
The New York Times: Attorney General William Barr waded into Trump’s election challenges on Monday by handing prosecutors the authority to investigate “specific allegations” of claims of voter fraud before the results of the presidential contest are certified. Barr opened the door to investigating unfounded Republican claims about ineligible voters in Nevada and assertions of backdated mail-in ballots in Pennsylvania. Within hours of Barr’s authorization, Richard Pilger, the Justice Department official who oversees investigations of voter fraud, stepped down from the post.
The New York Times: Some lawyers at two firms representing Trump in election-related lawsuits (Jones Day and Porter, Wright, Morris and Arthur) are worried that helping the president advance arguments that lack evidence may serve to undermine the integrity of American elections. Trump’s team is raising money to file new challenges.
Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) said on Fox News Radio on Monday that he encouraged the president during a Sunday phone call to consider running for the presidency again in 2024. “I would encourage President Trump … to not let this movement die, to consider running again,” he said. Trump is discussing the idea with advisers (Axios).
Axios: Russian President Vladimir Putin declines to congratulate Biden while Trump contests the election.
The Hill: Republican Sens. Susan Collins (Maine), Mitt Romney (Utah), Lisa Murkowski (Alaska) and Ben Sasse (Neb.) offered their congratulations to Biden as president-elect.
CORONAVIRUS: The U.S. finally experienced a breakthrough on the coronavirus front on Monday as Pfizer Inc. announced that the late-stage clinical trial data for its COVID-19 vaccine candidate was more than 90 percent effective, boosting optimism as cases continue to rise across the country.
Pfizer is expected to apply in the coming weeks to the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for emergency use approval, with the first round of doses hopefully being delivered before the end of the year. Widespread distribution of the vaccine, which Pfizer is developing with BioNTech, is expected in 2021.
Anthony Fauci, the head of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, hailed the reported efficacy of the vaccine as “extraordinary,” having said last year that a vaccine with 60 percent efficacy would be acceptable.
“Not very many people expected it would be as high as that,” Fauci said, referring to the 90 percent figure. “It’s going to have a major impact on everything we do with respect to COVID” (The Associated Press).
The vaccine news sent the markets into overdrive, with the Dow Jones Industrial Average topping out at gains of 1,600 points before finishing up 835 points (nearly 3 percent) after a tech selloff. The S&P 500 gained 1.2 percent. The Dow futures market was also up more than 100 points as of press time, foreshadowing gains at the opening bell (CNBC).
The Pfizer vaccine is one of four undergoing large-scale trials in the U.S. A vaccine produced by Moderna is likely not far behind, with the company also expected to file an application with the FDA by the end of the month.
Praise came in from all sides of the aisle for the development, including from Vice President Pence, who lauded the public-private partnership forged by the president as part of Operation Warp Speed — the U.S.’s effort to develop and distribute a vaccine to the masses. However. Pfizer was not a participant in that program, having decided against receiving funding from the U.S. government since development on the vaccine began.
However, the two sides agreed in July on a deal for the U.S. to purchase 50 million doses of the Pfizer vaccine for nearly $2 billion, contingent on clearance with the FDA. In September, Albert Bourla, Pfizer’s chief executive officer, told “Face the Nation” that Pfizer and BioNTech did not sign on with Operation Warp Speed to free the company of political pressure.
“I wanted to liberate our scientists from any bureaucracy. When you get money from someone that always comes with strings. … I didn’t want to have any of that,” Bourla said. “Basically, I gave them an open checkbook so that they can worry only about scientific challenges, not anything else. And also, I wanted to keep Pfizer out of politics.”
Bloomberg News: Pfizer vaccine’s funding came from Berlin, not Washington.
The Hill: Biden lauds Pfizer’s COVID-19 vaccine news, but urges country to remain cautious.
The New York Times: Eli Lilly’s antibody treatment gets emergency FDA approval.
Meanwhile, case numbers continue to climb across the U.S., having hit the 100,000 new infections mark for the fifth day in a row on Sunday.
Bloomberg News also reported that David Bossie, a longtime Trump ally who was tapped to run the president’s post-election legal effort across multiple states, tested positive for the coronavirus on Sunday. Bossie, along with Carson, was at the election night event at the White House.
The New York Times: New York City is dangerously close to a second wave of COVID-19, the mayor says, as new rules loom.
Reuters: Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelensky contracts coronavirus.
IN FOCUS/SHARP TAKES
CONGRESS & MORE POLITICS: Rep. Cheri Bustos (D-Ill.) announced Monday that she will step down from her post atop the House Democratic campaign arm after an underwhelming campaign cycle where House Democrats sustained unexpected losses after projecting that they would gain seats ahead of the 117th Congress.
In a statement, Bustos announced that she will not run for a second term atop the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee as the party airs grievances over who to blame for the unforeseen losses, which erupted in a House Democratic Caucus call late last week.
“For the first time in a decade, our Caucus will serve in a House Majority with a Democratic President. After four years of this Administration’s chaos and broken promises, there is now no limit to what we can achieve as we work to Build Back Better for the communities we serve,” Bustos said. “That is why, rather than seek a second term as Chair of the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee, I will instead focus my work on exciting legislative possibilities in the years to come.”
According to Dave Wasserman of the Cook Political Report, Democrats hold a 222-205 advantage over the GOP in the lower chamber, with Republicans leading in six of eight races that are still up for grabs. The GOP is on the verge of earning its ninth seat pick-up as Republican Michelle Steel leads Rep. Harley Rouda (D) in California’s 48th Congressional District. With 98 percent of precincts reporting, Steel leads by a 1.8-percent margin.
Following Bustos’s announcement, two House Democrats launched bids to take over the DCCC for the 2022 cycle: Reps. Tony Cárdenas (Calif.) and Sean Patrick Maloney (N.Y.). The closed-door, secret-ballot leadership elections are set for next week (The Hill).
> Senate battle: Georgia Republican Sens. David Perdue and Kelly Loeffler launched a joint offensive against Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger (R), calling on him to resign over accusations that he failed “to deliver honest and transparent elections.”
In a joint statement, Perdue and Loeffler, who are both facing runoff elections in January, said that Georgia’s elections had become “an embarrassment,” and that the 2020 general elections had “shined a national light on the problems.”
“We believe when there are failures, they need to be called out – even when it’s in your own party,” Perdue and Loeffler said. “There have been too many failures in Georgia elections this year and the most recent election has shined a national light on the problems. While blame certainly lies elsewhere as well, the buck ultimately stops with the Secretary of State” (The Hill).
Shortly after, Raffensperger fired back, saying that the state was a “resounding success” from “an election administration perspective” even though the president trails Biden in the state. He added that he will not resign and argued that Perdue and Loeffler should focus on their own races rather than his job status.
“Let me start by saying that is not going to happen. The voters of Georgia hired me, and the voters will be the one to fire me,” Raffensperger said. “I know emotions are running high. Politics are involved in everything right now. … My job is to follow Georgia law and see to it that all legal votes, and no illegal votes, are counted properly and accurately. As Secretary of State, that is my duty, and I will continue to do my duty. As a Republican, I am concerned about Republicans keeping the U.S. Senate. I recommend that Senators Loeffler and Perdue start focusing on that.”
> Sen. Joe Manchin (D-W.Va.), a lonely Democrat in a red state, shot down the ambition voiced among some progressives (including Senate Minority Leader Charles Schumer of New York) of expanding the Supreme Court beyond nine justices and/or jettisoning the legislative filibuster next year. “That won’t happen because I will not be the 50th Democrat voting to end that filibuster or to basically stack the court,” Manchin told Fox News on Monday (The Hill).
The Hill: Most Republicans avoid challenging Trump on election.
The Hill: Senate roadblocks threaten to box in Biden.
The Hill: State-level elections marked by unprecedented stability.
How Vaccines Prove Their Safety, by Kevin N. Sheth and Serena Spudich, opinion contributors, The Wall Street Journal. https://on.wsj.com/3n87fVx
Republicans: Unshackle yourselves from the Trump craziness, by Matt Bai, contributing columnist, The Washington Post. https://wapo.st/35gebKd
WHERE AND WHEN
The House meets at 10 a.m. on Thursday and will not meet for votes until Monday.
The Senate meets at noon and will resume consideration of James Ray Knepp II to be a judge with the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Ohio.
The president has no public events.
Vice President Pence will join Senate Republicans for lunch in the Capitol at 1 p.m. He is expected to leave for a vacation in Sanibel, Fla., through Saturday.
Secretary of State Mike Pompeo will take questions from reporters at 1 p.m. at the State Department.
President-elect Biden and Vice President-elect Kamala Harris will discuss the Affordable Care Act and a GOP challenge before the Supreme Court today. Biden will speak in Wilmington, Del., at approximately 2 p.m.
➔ FUTURE FOCUSED: The Hill’s Rebecca Kheel reports on five defense issues that could quickly crop up for Biden, including the Pentagon budget, U.S. troops in Afghanistan and the New START treaty with Russia. … Mexican President Andrés Manuel López Obrador refuses to acknowledge the results of the U.S. election because he is a Trump ally. U.S.-Mexico relations pose a challenge for the Biden administration and Congress (The Hill). … Biden is expected to take a tough stance with Russia, which could impact the congressional debate about funding for future election security measures (The Hill). … On energy and climate change, Biden is expected to place early markers in 2021 with executive orders and a push for investments in clean energy initiatives (The Hill).
➔ PARKS & PERKS: The Veterans Affairs Department granted veterans and Gold Star families lifetime free passes to U.S. nationals parks, wildlife refuges and public lands controlled by the Interior Department beginning on Wednesday, in honor of Veterans Day (NPR).
➔ SUPREME COURT: Justices will hear arguments today dealing with the latest GOP challenge to ObamaCare, with a ruling anticipated in June. Court watchers say a number of outcomes are possible with a 6-3 majority. The most extreme scenario would be a ruling to strike down the entire law (The Hill).
➔ I’M LOVIN’ IT?: McDonalds announced on Monday that it will test a meat-free burger in a number of markets, calling it the “McPlant.” The fast food giant is expected to use the burger to expand its plant-based menu options (CNBC).
THE CLOSER
And finally … Call it a Major moment for rescue pets. News media around the world are all a-wag about Biden’s adopted German shepherd, who was initially fostered by the Biden family as a pup. In a long line of White House pets, Major will live in the executive residence, snoozing beside handsome Biden canine Champ, who joined the family first and was purchased from a breeder.
The duo have their own Twitter account, in case you missed it.
News reports celebrate Major Biden as the first rescue dog to live in the White House, adopted from the Delaware Humane Society (The Washington Post and News10). Former President Lyndon Johnson’s beloved dog Yuki (found as a stray in a Texas gas station) was just as lucky, but without the middleman.
Chelsea Clinton’s cat Socks also was a rescue pet who received fan mail from children and made the cover of the 1998 book, “Dear Socks, Dear Buddy.”
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Georgia Republicans David Perdue and Kelly Loeffler, who both face runoffs that could decide control of the Senate, are sounding the same notes on the biggest test of Trump loyalty currently facing members of the GOP. Read More…
With Joe Biden outspoken about cracking down on social media companies specifically because he doesn’t think they do enough to stop the spread of disinformation, the election performance review for Twitter and Facebook could carry significant weight. Read More…
West Virginia Democrat Joe Manchin III wants to make clear that he will not be the 50th vote in favor of eliminating the legislative filibuster or expanding the size of the Supreme Court in a potential 50-50 Senate. Read More…
Click here to subscribe to Fintech Beat for the latest market and regulatory developmentsin finance and financial technology.
The 2010 health care law will come before the Supreme Court for a third time Tuesday, with the potential to shake up a health care industry already dealing with the COVID-19 pandemic and preparing to work with a new administration. Read More…
California Rep. Tony Cárdenas and New York Rep. Sean Patrick Maloney are competing to succeed Rep. Cheri Bustos as chair of the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee. Texas Rep. Marc Veasey has also been mentioned as a potential candidate for the position. Read More…
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POLITICO PLAYBOOK
POLITICO Playbook: The last gasp of Trumpism
Presented by
DRIVING THE DAY
PRESIDENT DONALD TRUMP is bending the federal bureaucracy to his benefit. Senate Republicans are taking his side. The attorney general has authorized prosecutors to probe election irregularities — a hugely controversial move, considering there is no evidence of irregularities. Sens. DAVID PERDUE and KELLY LOEFFLER, Georgia Republicans, called on the Georgia secretary of state to resign after TRUMP lost the state. Even in statehouses around the country, Republicans are investigating the election: Republicans in Harrisburg, Pa., are calling for an audit, and Republicans in Lansing, Mich., have subpoenaed election officials.
YOU’RE WITNESSING what might be the last gasp of Trumpism.
IF TRUMP HAS a dominant ideology, it’s that people on his side — his administration and his party — should be unbendingly loyal to him. And what you’re seeing right now is the political and governmental machinery that he controls succumb to his anger at losing the election. And, with 71 DAYS until Inauguration Day, this kind of behavior has a rapidly approaching termination date.
OF COURSE, as with anything in his universe, this strain of Trumpism is a game, of sorts, an act in which the cast is aiming to please TRUMP.
BUT, IN REALITY, all of this is a bit less than meets the eye. Senate Republicans are suggesting the president’s time is limited, and he needs to produce evidence — and soon. Georgia Secretary of State BRAD RAFFENSPERGER said he isn’t resigning. JOE BIDEN’S team is mulling legal action to force the government to begin the transition. A.G. BILL BARR’S memorandum says: “investigations ‘may be conducted if there are clear and apparently-credible allegations of irregularities that, if true, could potentially impact the outcome of a federal election in an individual State’” — a lot of caveats there.
BUT ALL THAT SAID,TRUMP is planning to launch a leadership PAC to keep doling out money to Republicans, so he’s clearly not planning to go far. NYT’s Maggie Haberman on the PAC
WHO IS ON BOARD? — “GOP-led states back Trump’s legal drive to challenge election,”by Zach Montellaro and Josh Gerstein: “Republican-controlled state governments on Monday began throwing their weight behind President Donald Trump’s legal drive to challenge the results of last week’s presidential election.
“A coalition of Republican attorneys general filed an amicus brief at the U.S. Supreme Court urging the justices to formally take up and resolve a dispute from Pennsylvania over a ruling that the state’s Supreme Court issued in September granting three extra days for the receipt of mail-in ballots cast in last Tuesday’s election.”
DRIVING THE DAY … BIDEN will deliver remarks on health care in the afternoon in Wilmington, Del. KAMALA HARRIS will join him. The two will also hold briefings with transition advisers.
— VP MIKE PENCE will attend the Senate GOP lunch at 1 p.m. … TRUMP continues to have nothing on his public schedule.
BREAKING OVERNIGHT … AP/JERUSALEM: “Erekat, longtime spokesman for the Palestinians, dies at 65,” by Joseph Krauss: “Saeb Erekat, a veteran peace negotiator and prominent international spokesman for the Palestinians for more than three decades, died on Tuesday, weeks after being infected by the coronavirus. He was 65.
“The American-educated Erekat was involved in nearly every round of peace negotiations between Israel and the Palestinians going back to the landmark Madrid conference in 1991. Over the years, he was a constant media presence. He tirelessly argued for a negotiated two-state solution to the decades-old conflict, defended the Palestinian leadership and blamed Israel — particularly hard-line leader Benjamin Netanyahu — for the failure to reach an agreement.”
ICYMI … MARK ESPER gave an interview to the Military Times on Wednesday, in anticipation of being fired. The interview… Sen. JIM INHOFE (R-Okla.) — the chair of the Senate Armed Services Committee — said he was not given a heads-up about the firing.
Good Tuesday morning.
NEW … THE NRCC SPIKES THE FOOTBALL … The House GOP election arm has this new memo about its wins in 2020: “Just how dominant was House Republicans’ performance? Republicans won 28 of the 29 most competitive House races as projected by Nate Silver and FiveThirtyEight.” The memo
SEN. JOE MANCHIN, in a BURGESS EVERETT/HEATHER CAYGLE joint about Dem messaging: “Sen. Joe Manchin (D-W.Va.) said no one in the party could work harder than Schumer but said: ‘Chuck has to understand we need to take a strong look at ourselves.’ ‘I’ve watched the last three elections: 2016, ‘18 and ‘20. We truly should have been in the majority and it didn’t happen,’ said Manchin, who won reelection two years ago in a deep red state. ‘Whatever our message is, it hasn’t worked. And I would hope that our leadership from the top to bottom understands that. It has not worked. And if we’re going down that path again, we’re in trouble.’”
THE CORONAVIRUS IS RAGING … 10.1 MILLION Americans have tested positive for the coronavirus. … 238,251 Americans have died.
“Maryland saw a record-high number of infections on Monday for the third consecutive day, leaping past Virginia to record the highest rate of spread in the greater Washington region. Local leaders are considering additional restrictions to battle the rising caseloads, a trend that health experts say is unlikely to reverse ahead of the holiday season.
“The rolling seven-day average of new coronavirus infections on Monday in D.C., Virginia and Maryland stood at 2,727 — the sixth straight daily high, and up from an average of 1,313 daily cases at the start of October.
“Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan (R) said Monday that his state has ‘reached a critical turning point’ in the pandemic. The state’s coronavirus test positivity rate exceeds 5 percent for the first time since June 24, while virus-related hospitalizations are at the highest level since June 17.”
“The drug, a laboratory-brewed antibody that imitates the immune system’s attack on the virus, is made by Eli Lilly & Co. Health experts have championed the class of medicine as a powerful tool to change the course of the pandemic and work as a bridge to a vaccine. It is in the same family of medication as an experimental treatment President Trump received when he was stricken with covid-19, the illness the novel coronavirus causes.
— WSJ: “Pfizer Covid-19 Vaccine’s Next Big Challenge: Giving It to Enough People,”by Max Colchester and Drew Hinshaw: “With Pfizer Inc.’s Covid-19 vaccine on track to be authorized as early as next month, Western governments are facing an enormous logistical challenge: getting enough people shots of new vaccines.
“While previous vaccination programs have spread over years and focused on specific demographics such as children or the elderly, governments are hoping to do something they never have done before and inoculate a majority of the population in a matter of months.
“Even for rich nations with developed vaccination programs, that presents a host of problems including building new databases to track who is getting the shot, working out ways to encourage mass uptake among younger people, ensuring adequate supply and running large-scale inoculation centers where the shots can be safely and quickly administered.
“Those challenges mean that even if a vaccine is soon approved, it could be many months before it is administered to enough people to ease the need for lockdown measures that have been recently reimposed across the West.”
— “Experts say no need to cancel Thanksgiving, but play it safe,” by AP’s Carla Johnson: “A safe Thanksgiving during a pandemic is possible, but health experts know their advice is as tough to swallow as dry turkey: Stay home. Don’t travel. If you must gather, do it outdoors.” AP
GETTING THE CREW BACK TOGETHER … NYT’S MICHAEL CROWLEY: “An Obama Restoration on Foreign Policy? Familiar Faces Could Fill Biden’s Team”: “An Obama redux would be a source of enormous relief to establishment insiders, who are desperate to see seasoned hands regain control of national security. But that likelihood is also causing disquiet among some younger, more liberal Democrats impatient with their party’s pre-Trump national security instincts, which they consider badly outdated. …
“They are almost certain to include Antony Blinken, a deputy secretary of state and deputy national security adviser under Mr. Obama who previously worked for Mr. Biden in the Senate; Avril Haines, a deputy at Mr. Obama’s Central Intelligence Agency and on his National Security Council; Susan E. Rice, Mr. Obama’s last national security adviser; and Michèle Flournoy, the Pentagon’s top policy official under Mr. Obama.”
PLAYBOOK READS
AFTER-ACTION REPORT — DAVID SIDERS: “Biden coalition built on broad but unstable foundation”: “Joe Biden has already surpassed 75 million votes, a record total with ballots still being counted. He reclaimed the Rust Belt and expanded his party’s geographic reach into two Republican-heavy states, Georgia and Arizona. The defining characteristic of the Biden coalition — the template Democrats will be working from in the midterm elections and in 2024 — is that it’s broad. It’s also precariously thin.
“The Obama coalition of young people, women and people of color turned out in large numbers for Biden, especially in large metropolitan areas. Biden improved modestly on Hillary Clinton’s margins from four years ago across most segments of the electorate, though he appears to have done less well with Latinos. But Biden also relied on support from disaffected Republicans and independents, while containing Trump’s massive advantage with working-class whites — a tenuous alliance Democrats will not be able to bank on in future elections.
“In its breadth, the Biden coalition represents a toehold for Democrats to appeal to a variety of voting blocs across the spectrum. But its limitations were laid bare in the party’s down-ballot disappointments. It failed to deliver a Senate majority, left the Democratic House majority with a weakened hand and face-planted in legislative contests in states like Pennsylvania, New Hampshire and North Carolina. It’s an ominous sign for the party as it prepares for runoff Senate elections in Georgia in January and midterm elections in two years.”
BUSINESS BURST — “The Economy’s Struggles Will Shape Joe Biden’s Presidency,”by WSJ’s Jon Hilsenrath: “Joe Biden will likely spend much of the next four years trying to make up lost economic ground. Though the economy has recovered from a large portion of the damage caused this spring by the pandemic and shutdowns, the process is incomplete. Many economists expect the next stages to be difficult. The economy is showing signs of slowing after the initial post-shutdown bounce, and recent history points to grinding recoveries, not quick bouncebacks.
“The pandemic is also driving structural shifts in some industries that could permanently change how Americans spend and how companies do business—meaning dislocations for workers as the economy adjusts. ‘We have gotten half of a bounce,’ said Nicholas Bloom, a Stanford University economics professor. ‘The rest of it is probably going to take another two years or longer.’
“That challenge will shape Mr. Biden’s presidency. The president-elect has plans for aggressive new spending programs on clean energy and infrastructure, ambitions to raise taxes on high-income households and a desire to increase regulation of energy and other sectors. But he faces difficult debates with Republicans about what fiscal policy would be effective in the unfinished recovery.”
— “Wall Street braces for climate change scrutiny under Biden,”by Zachary Warmbrodt: “Big Wall Street banks, facing the prospect that Democrats will impose new rules to force lenders to deal with natural disasters and rising sea levels, are positioning themselves as eager allies with a Joe Biden administration in fighting climate change.
“Banks are accelerating efforts to get ahead of the issue and make clear to Biden’s team that they want a place at the table when decisions are made. JPMorgan Chase, Bank of America, Citigroup and Goldman Sachs are among the firms that have committed to hundreds of billions of dollars’ in investments that they say will reduce carbon emissions. The head of the Institute of International Finance, which represents global financial firms, pledged to Biden economic adviser Jared Bernstein that the industry would be ‘a willing and active partner’ on climate.
“But Biden’s win would expose U.S. banks to intense scrutiny for their role in providing billions of dollars of financing each year to fossil fuel production that contributes to climate change. Leading Democrats want to go even further by forcing lenders to abide by disclosure rules and stress tests to make sure they aren’t the source of a new crisis. The fear is that destructive climate events – as well as a costly transition to a lower-carbon economy – will wreak havoc on the banks’ portfolios and destabilize the financial system.”
WAPO’S ELLEN NAKASHIMA: “White House official and former GOP political operative Michael Ellis named as NSA general counsel”: “The appointment was made under pressure from the White House, said a person familiar with the matter. … Ellis, who was chief counsel to Rep. Devin Nunes (R-Calif.), a staunch supporter of President Trump and then-chairman of the House Intelligence Committee, has been at the White House since early 2017 …
“Ellis also has figured in the controversy over Trump’s effort last year to pressure Ukraine’s president to undertake what a whistleblower said was a politically motivated investigation of Joe Biden and his son Hunter.”
MEDIAWATCH — Josh Barro will rejoin Business Insider as a columnist. He is currently a business columnist for New York magazine. He’ll continue to host shows on KCRW. … David Wertime is joining Protocol as executive director, building a China technology-focused team. He most recently has been editorial director for China at POLITICO and author of the China Watcher newsletter, which he’ll continue to write for now.
FIRST IN PLAYBOOK — Amy Smith has joined Leidos as deputy for government affairs and VP for congressional affairs. She most recently was senior director for international operations and policy at Boeing, and is a longtime Hill veteran.
TRANSITIONS — Kelley McCormick, Deb Eschmeyer and Joanna Rosholm have launched a new consultancy, Original Strategies. McCormick was most recently at Under Armour, Eschmeyer at Eschmeyer Strategies and Rosholm at Snap. … Nathaalie Carey has been named SVP for industry affairs and social responsibility at Nareit. She most recently was executive deputy commissioner at the New York State Department of Labor. …
… BAE Systems has added Tammy Kupperman Thorp as a media director and Branden Cobb as a digital director. Thorp was most recently with CNN, and Cobb was most recently with the XFL’s New York Guardians. … The Philanthropy Roundtable will add Jessica Browning as VP of conferences and events and Caitlin Summers as director of conferences and events. They both were previously at the American Enterprise Institute, Browning as managing director of development and strategic events and Summers as director of development events.
WELCOME TO THE WORLD — Robb Walton, a principal at BGR Group, and Jennifer Walton, VP of federal government relations at Pfizer, welcomed Catherine Mary Walton on Monday afternoon. She came in at 6 lbs, 14 oz. Pic
— John Stone, a principal at BGR Group, and Lizzie Stone welcomed John “Jack” Edward Stone, their second son, on Thursday.
— Adam Lustig, manager of state policy at Trust for America’s Health, and Meghan Lustig, director of policy and comms at Education Finance Council, on Thursday welcomed Noah Tucker Lustig, who came in at 8 lbs, 2 oz and 20 inches. Pic
BIRTHDAY OF THE DAY: Alan He, Capitol Hill producer for CBS News. A fun fact about him: “At work I carry around an L.L. Bean tote with my name Sharpie’d on it. The rationale being if it’s accidentally left behind at a congressional stakeout it hopefully won’t trigger a suspicious package alert. I’ve never actually forgotten the bag on the Hill, but one time I did leave it at a bar. The girl sitting next to me found it and reached out — she’s now my girlfriend.” Playbook Q&A
BIRTHDAYS: Rep. Bill Johnson (R-Ohio) is 66 … Howard L. Rosenberg … NPR congressional reporter Sue Davis (h/t Tim Burger) … Jim Kuhnhenn, co-founder of WaVe Communications … Mary Jordan, WaPo national political correspondent … Michael Hacker … Amanda Ashley Keating, SVP at the Glover Park Group … Geoff Brewer, editorial director at Gallup … Elizabeth Greener, director of comms at the American Forest Foundation … USA Today’s Alan Gomez … energy consultant Howard Marks is 76 … Kate Gould, senior policy adviser to Rep. Ro Khanna (D-Calif.) (h/t Heather Purcell) … LaRonda Peterson … Florida International University’s Carlos Becerra … Andy Blomme of NeighborWorks America … Elliot Ayres … POLITICO’s Jeff Daker and Bryarly Richards … Benjamin Pauker … former Sen. Saxby Chambliss (R-Ga.) is 77 … former Rep. Brad Ashford (D-Neb.) is 71 … former Rep. Silvestre Reyes (D-Texas) is 76 … Cary Justice …
… ABC’s Josh Margolin is 5-0 … Harry Giannoulis, president of the Parkside Group (h/t Chris Lapetina) … Kylie Gudzak … Pierce Stanley … Misty Marshall … Jessica (Cole) Buchanan … Julie Weber … Ellen Bredenkoetter … Aaron Brown is 72 … Jeremy Stoppelman is 43 … Raphael Sonenshein is 71 … Brian Romick … Gabriela Ayala … Zach Lowe … Jane Cherry … Andy Diaz … Jean Weinberg of Bloomberg Philanthropies … Tim Garraty … Jared T. Miller … Robyn Patterson … Allison Kelly … Elias Alcantara … Elizabeth Brotherton-Bunch … Nate Treffeisen … Christina Brown … Elizabeth (Ladt) Sullivan … Ben Engwer … Kristin Stiles … Andrew Mims … Jeremy Nordquist, government affairs director at Nebraska Medicine … Blake Deeley … Miranda Lilla … Zachary Enos … Tom Cosgrove … Matt Lough is 51 … Marla Romash … Andrea Dukakis … Wisconsin state Senate Minority Leader Janet Bewley (h/ts Teresa Vilmain) … Barry Kramer is 78
“A Republic must either reserve its Virtue or lose its Liberty” – Rev. John Witherspoon, Signer of Declaration of Independence – American Minute with Bill Federer
A descendant of Protestant Reformer John Knox, Witherspoon was educated at the University of Edinburgh, Scotland, and afterwards served as a Presbyterian pastor.
His writings brought him to the attention of the trustees of the College of New Jersey, who sent Benjamin Rush and Richard Stockton to Scotland to persuade him and his wife, Elizabeth, to come to the American colonies.
Benjamin Rush and Richard Stockton later joined John Witherspoon in signing the Declaration of Independence.
Sailing to America in 1768, John Witherspoon became the President of the College of New Jersey, which was later renamed Princeton University.
There, Witherspoon taught 12 members of the Continental Congress, and 9 of the 55 writers of the U.S. Constitution, including James Madison.
Witherspoon’s other Princeton students included:
1 U.S. Vice-President,
3 Supreme Court Justices,
10 Cabinet Members,
13 Governors,
28 U.S. Senators,
49 U.S. Congressmen,
37 judges, and
114 ministers.
John Witherspoon was elected as a delegate from New Jersey to the Continental Congress.
He declared:
“Gentlemen, New Jersey is ready to vote for independence … The country is not only ripe for independence, but we are in danger of becoming rotten for the want of it!”
On note, is that John Witherspoon, a clergyman, signed the Declaration of Independence.
Clergymen were often the most educated individuals in their communities.
Whereas most Church of England ministers held allegiance to the King and left for England when the Revolution began, patriot pastors supported the American cause.
Pastors preached on the topics of:
self-government;
government from the consent of the govern;
purpose of government to secure God-given rights;
rights of conscience;
equality before the law;
freedom to speech;
freedom to assemble;
freedom of press;
self-defense;
the right to possess and bear arms;
no taxation without representation; and
trial by a jury of peers, rather than a partisan, king appointed judge.
President Calvin Coolidge acknowledged in his address at the 150th Anniversary of the Declaration of Independence, in Philadelphia, July 5, 1926:
“The principles of human relationship which went into the Declaration of Independence … are found in the texts, the sermons, and the writings of the early colonial clergy who were earnestly undertaking to instruct their congregations in the great mystery of how to live.
They preached equality because they believed in the fatherhood of God and the brotherhood of man. They justified freedom by the text that we are all created in the divine image, all partakers of the divine spirit …
Placing every man on a plane where he acknowledged no superiors, where no one possessed any right to rule over him, he must inevitably choose his own rulers through a system of self-government …
In those days such doctrines would scarcely have been permitted to flourish and spread in any other country …
In order that they might have freedom to express these thoughts and opportunity to put them into action, whole congregations with their pastors had migrated to the colonies …”
Coolidge added:
“Rev. Thomas Hooker of Connecticut as early as 1638, when he said in a sermon before the General Court that:
‘The foundation of authority is laid in the free consent of the people … The choice of public magistrates belongs unto the people by God’s own allowance.’
This doctrine found wide acceptance among the nonconformist clergy who later made up the Congregational Church.
… The great apostle of this movement was the Rev. John Wise of Massachusetts.
He was one of the leaders of the revolt against the royal governor Andros in 1687, for which he suffered imprisonment …
His works were reprinted in 1772 and have been declared to have been nothing less than a textbook of liberty for our Revolutionary fathers …
… That these ideas were prevalent in Virginia is further revealed by the Declaration of Rights, which was prepared by George Mason and presented to the general assembly on May 27, 1776.
This document asserted popular sovereignty and inherent natural rights, but confined the doctrine of equality to the assertion that ‘All men are created equally free and independent.’
It can scarcely be imagined that Jefferson was unacquainted with what had been done in his own Commonwealth of Virginia when he took up the task of drafting the Declaration of Independence …”
Coolidge continued:
“These thoughts can very largely be traced back to what Rev. John Wise was writing in 1710. He said … ‘Democracy is Christ’s government in church and state.’
Here was the doctrine of equality, popular sovereignty, and the substance of the theory of inalienable rights clearly asserted by Wise at the opening of the eighteenth century, just as we have the principle of the consent of the governed stated by Hooker as early as 1638.
When we take all these circumstances into consideration, it is but natural that the first paragraph of the Declaration of Independence should open with a reference to Nature’s God and should close in the final paragraphs with an appeal to the Supreme Judge of the world and an assertion of a firm reliance on Divine Providence …”
Coolidge concluded:
“In its main feature the Declaration of Independence is a great spiritual document …
Equality, liberty, popular sovereignty, the rights of man – these are not elements which we can see and touch … They have their source and their roots in the religious convictions …
Unless the faith of the American in these religious convictions is to endure, the principles of our Declaration will perish. We cannot continue to enjoy the result if we neglect and abandon the cause …
If anyone wishes to deny their truth … the only direction in which he can proceed … is … backward toward the time when there was no equality, no rights of the individual, no rule of the people …
… The duly authorized expression of the will of the people has a divine sanction …
The ultimate sanction of law rests on the righteous authority of the Almighty …
It was in the contemplation of these truths that the fathers made their Declaration and adopted their Constitution …
Their intellectual life centered around the meeting-house. They were intent upon religious worship … While scantily provided with other literature, there was a wide acquaintance with the Scriptures …”
President Coolidge continued:
“We live in an age of science and of abounding accumulation of material things. These did not create the Declaration. Our Declaration created them.
The things of the spirit come first.
Unless we cling to that, all our material prosperity, overwhelming though it may appear, will turn to a barren sceptre in our grasp … We must not sink into a pagan materialism.
We must cultivate the reverence which they had for the things that are holy. We must follow the spiritual and moral leadership which they showed.
We must keep replenished, that they may glow with a more compelling flame, the altar fires before which they worshipped.”
Because of the activism of Rev. John Wise, his hometown of Ipswich, Massachusetts, calls itself “The Birthplace of American Independence.”
Through his wife, John Wise was a great-uncle of John Adams.
Rev. John Wise stated in a sermon at Chebacco Parish of Ipswich (Essex), circa 1700:
“The first human subject and original of civil power is the people … and when they are free, they may set up what species of government they please. The end of all good government is … the good of every man in all his rights, his life, liberty, estate.”
Many of the founders, or their wives, were children of ministers or deacons.
Many graduated from institutions founded as seminaries to train clergy and missionaries.
Numerous founders were both political leaders and, at some time in their career, chaplains, ministers or preachers, such as:
Abraham Baldwin (Georgia);
Lyman Hall (Georgia);
John Peter Muhlenberg (Pennsylvania);
Frederick Muhlenberg (Pennsylvania)
Robert Treat Paine (Massachusetts);
Jonathan Trumbull (Connecticut);
Hugh Williamson (North Carolina);
Many founders supported Bible organizations, societies for the propagation of the faith, and abolitionist societies.
Often overlooked by secular scholars is that when the founders set up state governments:
nine of the original state constitutions required all officeholders to be Protestant;
three required officeholders to just be Christian;
and one, Rhode Island, had no religious requirement, as it was thought that unscrupulous politicians would be tempted to say they believe just to be elected, and that would be hypocritical.
Since religion was under states’ jurisdiction, the founders placed a restraining order on the power of the Federal government – the First Amendment.
Supreme Court Justice Joseph Story wrote in Commentaries on the Constitution, 1833:
“The whole power over the subject of religion is left exclusively to the State governments, to be acted upon according to their own sense of justice and the State Constitutions.”
In the Continental Congress, John Witherspoon served on 120 Congressional Committees.
He was a primary proponent of the separation of powers, insisting that since man had a fallen, selfish, human nature, there needed to be checks be placed on the power of government.
Rev. Witherspoon explained:
“The corruption of our nature … is the foundation-stone of the doctrine of redemption.
Nothing can be more absolutely necessary to true religion, than a clear conviction of the sinfulness of our nature and state …”
He continued:
“Men of lax and corrupt principles take great delight in speaking to the praise of human nature, and extolling its dignity, without distinguishing what it was at its first creation from what it is in its present fallen state …
The evil of sin appears from every page of … the history of the world …
Nothing is more plain from Scripture … than that man by nature is in fact incapable of recovery without the power of God specially interposed.”
The same day the Continental Congress declared a Day of Fasting, May 17, 1776, Rev. Witherspoon told his Princeton students:
“If your cause is just, if your principles are pure, and if your conduct is prudent, you need not fear the multitude of opposing hosts.
He is the best friend to American liberty, who is most sincere and active in promoting true and undefiled religion, and who sets himself with the greatest firmness to bear down profanity and immorality of every kind.
Whoever is an avowed enemy of God, I scruple (hesitate) not to call him an enemy of his country …”
Witherspoon added:
“It is in the man of piety and inward principle, that we may expect to find the uncorrupted patriot, the useful citizen, and the invincible soldier …
God grant that in America true religion and civil liberty may be inseparable and that the unjust attempts to destroy the one, may in the issue tend to the support and establishment of both.”
Witherspoon’s sacrifice for the patriotic cause was personal, as he lost two sons in the Revolutionary War.
When peace was made with Britain, John Witherspoon exhorted all in his “Thanksgiving Sermon” to live for:
“… the Glory of God, the public interest of religion and the good of others, as civil liberty cannot be long preserved without virtue.
A Republic must either preserve its virtue or lose its liberty.”
By Shane Vander Hart on Nov 09, 2020 02:42 pm
On Sunday, Sidney Powell, attorney for General Michael Flynn (U.S. Army, Ret.), told Maria Bartiromo of Fox News that they have identified “at least” 450,000 ballots in key states with a vote for Joe Biden for President and no one else.
“We have identified at least 450,000 ballots in the key states that miraculously only have a mark for Joe Biden on them, and no other candidate,” she said.
Bartiromo responded.
“You have a list of numbers of ballots with only Joe Biden on the ticket,” she said. “You say it’s 98,000 ballots in Pennsylvania, 80,000 to 90,000 in Georgia, another 42,000 in Arizona, 69,000-to 115,000 in Michigan and 62,000 in Wisconsin.”
Watch:
Look, I think if there is evidence of voter fraud, it should be investigated. I’m on record saying there should be a manual recount of counties in Michigan that used the voting software where one county had a “glitch,” which impacted 6,000 votes.
So, yes, investigate evidence of fraud and whistleblower claims of fraud. The Trump campaign should issue a challenge if they think they have evidence of voter fraud.
What Powell says sound nefarious when you don’t have context.
Could some of those ballots be fraudulent? Possibly.
Instead of dealing with assumptions and suspicions, I want to deal with facts and context. Historically, Americans cast more votes for President than they do down-ballot. That is just a fact.
For instance looking at U.S. House races:
2000: Republicans received 3.46 fewer votes in House races than they did for President. Democrats received 4.41 million fewer votes.
2004: Republicans received 6.08 million fewer votes in House races than they did for President. Democrats received 6.05 million fewer votes.
2008: Republicans received 7.69 million fewer votes for House than they did for President. Democrats received 4.26 fewer votes.
2012: Republicans received 2.70 million fewer votes for House than they did for President, Democrats received 6.27 million fewer votes.
2016: Republicans received 188,987 MORE votes for House than they did for President. Democrats received 4.07 million fewer votes.
Do you see a trend here? Just because someone under voted does not mean it was fraudulent. It could be, but you can’t assume that it is. Using this logic, any ballot cast for just President Donald Trump and no one else would also have to be considered fraudulent.
By Caffeinated Thoughts on Nov 09, 2020 01:22 pm
DES MOINES, Iowa – On Monday, Iowa House Republicans elected a leadership team to guide the 59 member House Majority caucus through the 89th General Assembly.
State Rep. Pat Grassley, R-New Hartford, was re-elected to continue serving as Speaker of the House. Grassley was first elected Speaker in 2019 and previously served as Chairman of the Appropriations, Agriculture, and Economic Growth committees. Grassley farms with his father and grandfather in Butler County.
“I want to thank the members of the House Republican caucus for continuing to put their trust in me to lead us forward. It is an honor to lead this impressive group of public servants as we work to improve the lives of Iowans,” he said.
“As we look towards the 2021 session, House Republicans will continue to govern in the same way that has put us in the Majority for the last decade. Iowans expect strong leadership from their state lawmakers and that’s what we will do. We will continue to bring a thoughtful and conservative approach to the state budget, ease the pressure of our worker shortage by addressing the issues of child care, housing, and broadband, and help Iowans get back to work, school, and normal life in a safe and responsible manner,” Grassley added.
State Rep. Matt Windschitl, R-Missouri Valley, was re-elected as House Majority Leader. He was first elected Majority Leader in 2019 and previously served as Speaker Pro Tem. Windschitl works for Doll Distributing in Council Bluffs.
“I am incredibly grateful to the House Republican caucus who have again entrusted me to serve as their Majority Leader. This is an honor that I do not take lightly, and I will continue to fulfill the duties of the office in a way that matches the values of this caucus and Iowans,” he said.
“While our membership has changed by expanding our majority, the principles held by the House Republican caucus remain the same. We will continue to give the hard-working taxpayers of Iowa a seat at the table, enhance freedoms and liberties, and prioritize the needs of Iowans every way we can. Iowans made a very clear decision on election day with their votes, and it shows that our state motto is what they embrace and hold dear, ‘Our liberties we prize, and our rights we will maintain.’ House Republicans will work tirelessly to fulfill this motto every way we can,” Windschitl added.
State Rep. John Wills, R-Spirit Lake, was re-elected as Speaker Pro Tem, a position he has held since 2019. Wills works as the Clean Water Coordinator for the Dickinson Soil And Water Conservation District.
State Rep. Mike Sexton, R-Rockwell City, was re-elected as Iowa House Majority Whip, a position he has held since 2019. Sexton owns two small businesses that focus on agricultural compliance and also farms in Calhoun County.
Assistant Leaders will be elected at a later date.
Iowa House Republicans will open the 89th General Assembly with a strong majority of 59 members, including 14 new members. The 2021 legislative session begins Monday, January 11.
By Shane Vander Hart on Nov 09, 2020 11:08 am
As of Monday morning, Parler and MeWe are the #1 and #4 downloaded free apps in the iPhone app store. Parler is also the top free Android app in the Google Play store, MeWe has not broken the top 20 for Android phone users.
In the iPhone app store, Parler beats out TikTok and YouTube for the top spot. MeWe places ahead of Instagram, Facebook, Facebook Messenger, and Snapchat. Twitter is in 12th place in the ratings.
Top 12 Free Apps in the iPhone App storeIn the Google Play app store for Android phone users, Twitter doesn’t break into the top ten, and Facebook is behind MeWe.
Starting late last week there has been a grassroots effort to encourage conservatives to leave Facebook and Twitter over censorship concerns.
Parler promotes itself as the “world’s town square.” They write, “Speak freely and express yourself openly, without fear of being ‘deplatformed’ for your views. Engage with real people, not bots. Parler is people and privacy-focused, and gives you the tools you need to curate your Parler experience.”
“Based in Henderson, Nevada, Parler is the solution to problems that have surfaced in recent years due to changes in Big Tech policy influenced by various special-interest groups. Parler is built upon a foundation of respect for privacy and personal data, free speech, free markets, and ethical, transparent corporate policy,” their website says.
It functions more like Twitter, but users can write longer posts.
MeWe functions more like Facebook.
“MeWe is inspired by trust, control, and love for social media users,” the MeWe Network says.
While Parler’s driving motivation for launching was free speech, MeWe’s focus is privacy.
“MeWe began in Albuquerque, New Mexico, as a vision hatched over a dinner between good friends who were early founders of social media. With Facebook all the rage, they felt something critically human was getting lost: the spirit of our democracy and the backbone of our privacy. The big technology companies, you know who they are, had reverted to treating us as commodities. They somehow mistook people signing up to use their services as a welcome invitation to target, track, spy, and sell our information to advertisers and the government. All in all, it felt pretty creepy,” their “about” page reads.
Launched in 2006, Caffeinated Thoughts reports news and shares commentary about culture, current events, faith and state and national politics from a Christian and conservative point of view.
President Donald Trump has no public events on his schedule for Tuesday. Keep up with the president on Our President’s Schedule Page. President Trump’s Itinerary for 11/10/20 – note: this page will be updated during the day if events warrant All Times EST No public events White House Briefing Schedule None Content created by Conservative Daily …
White House Coronavirus Task Force member Dr. Anthony Fauci said Monday that a coronavirus vaccine developed by Pfizer may be distributed by the end of the year. Pfizer announced Monday that its vaccine was 90% effective at preventing coronavirus infection during clinical trials. “It is really a big deal,” Fauci said in an interview on …
White House Press Secretary Kayleigh McEnany and RNC Chairwoman Ronna McDaniel hold a press conference Monday along side members of the Trump campaign to inform Americans on the status of the 2020 vote count. Content created by Conservative Daily News and some content syndicated through CDN is available for re-publication without charge under the Creative Commons …
Stop The Steal Caught Blue handed! We are watching an election being stolen before our eyes–the Devil always overplays his hand. Greedy and arrogant, the Democrats stuffed ballot boxes and blatantly kicked out poll watchers from observing the vote count. President Trump has every right to ask for recounts in disputed swing states in order …
Burning at the stake is out of fashion, so Democrats and RINOs decided to eliminate Trump in a squalid, sleazy, and shameful election. Whatever happens with the election results, Donald Trump owns the Republican Party. Many weak Republicans (RINOs) never recognized Trump as a political leader, mainly because he was not one of them. He …
Presidential candidate Joe Biden appeared on video Monday discussing the outcome of a meeting with his personal COVID-19 council. The appearance comes as votes are still being tallied in the 2020 election. Content created by Conservative Daily News and some content syndicated through CDN is available for re-publication without charge under the Creative Commons license. Visit …
New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo on Monday said it was “bad news” that a potential coronavirus vaccine has been developed while President Trump is in office. The New York Democrat also said that he is working with other governors to potentially “stop” the Trump administration’s plan to distribute vaccines for coronavirus, saying that its current …
With enough of the states finally counting all of the votes, Joe Biden will become the 46th President of the United States. In a bitterly fought election, Biden ends up with slightly over 50% of the vote and Trump has just under 48%. Biden supporters are gleeful. Trump supporters fearful. The divide between the policies of …
This results analysis is done at the county/precinct level in each state in order to forecast a winner. To avoid pre-conceptions tilting the forecast: No state will be called before a statistically-significant number of votes have been counted. Depending on which precincts report, a “call” may come sooner or laterNo state will be called purely …
Happy Tuesday, fellow travelers on the Kruiser Morning Briefing Way. Has it really only been a week?
Good times.
If President Trump has been Public Enemy No. 1 to the Democrats for the last four years, Mitch McConnell hasn’t been very far behind on that list. The Trump/McConnell one-two punch has kept the Democrats on their heels since January of 2017 and it has been a delight to watch.
With President Trump out of the public eye for the most part this past week the GOP faithful were long overdue for a hit of Cocaine Mitch.
On Monday, McConnell hit the Senate floor to give one of his patented, icy-veined speeches that drops off a load of “what’s what” that leaves a lot for everyone on both sides of the aisle to chew on for a while.
He began by giving a clinical assessment of the last week, highlighting the many positives about this election, something that there has been precious little of on social media.
On Monday, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) celebrated Republican victories in the 2020 elections and defended President Donald Trump’s decision to challenge the preliminary results of the presidential race. He emphasized that “no states have yet certified their election results” and noted that the American system is actually built to allow for legal challenges in the case of serious election concerns.
“According to preliminary results, voters across the nation elected and reelected Republican senators to a degree that actually stunned prognosticators,” McConnell noted. “Likewise, the American people seem to have reacted to house Democrats’ radicalism and obstruction by shrinking the House speaker’s majority and electing more Republicans. And then there’s the presidential race.”
“Obviously, no states have yet certified their election results. We have at least one or two states that are already on track for a recount. And I believe the president may have legal challenges underway in at least five states,” the majority leader began.
“The core principle here is not complicated,” McConnell insisted. “In the United States of America, all legal ballots must be counted, any illegal ballots must not be counted. The process should be transparent or observable by all sides and the courts are here to work through concerns.”
“Our institutions are actually built for this. We have the system in place to consider concerns and President Trump is 100 percent within his rights to look into allegations of irregularities and weigh his legal options,” the majority leader added.
As he delivered the last two paragraphs, his tone of voice was that of an elder lecturing a petulant child who knows better but needs reminding. He’s right, of course. We’re only one week out from election day and there is absolutely nothing wrong with making certain that everything is on the up and up. As has been pointed out several times in recent days, if the Democrats are so sure that there is nothing amiss, why would they care if there is some extra counting?
The most laughable thing we’ve been subjected to since the election is the Democrats’ caterwauling about Republicans not accepting the results and deliberately trying to make people doubt the integrity of the process.
McConnell had some choice words for them about that:
“Let’s not have any lectures, no lectures, about how the president should immediately, cheerfully accept preliminary election results from the same characters who just spent four years refusing to accept the validity of the last election and who insinuated that this one would be illegitimate too if they lost again — only if they lost,” the majority leader added. In fact, millions of Americans signed a petition urging the electors to vote for Hillary Clinton after Trump won in 2016.
“The people who push this hysteria could not have any more egg on their faces than they do right now,” McConnell declared.
After listening to the Democrats scream “RUSSIA!” and “NOT MY PRESIDENT!” since 2016 I’m kind of hoping this gets dragged out a little longer just to annoy them. They deserve much worse as payback for their unconscionable behavior of the last four years. Much, much, worse. If all the retribution they have to deal with is a few days of being aggravated on social media because Trump doesn’t concede when they want him to then they’ve gotten off lightly.
It is fun watching their heads explode over this.
So let the legal process play out. Slowly.
Then we can all go out and buy #Resist swag and start talking about impeachment.
Manchin ends liberal hope for court packing, filibuster end . . . Democratic Sen. Joe Manchin committed not to vote to pack the courts or end the legislative filibuster. The centrist West Virginia politician made the declaration on Fox News’s Special Report on Monday, alluding to the remaining possibility of an even party split in the Senate (50 Republicans and 48 Democrats, with two independents who caucus with them), meaning that presumptive Vice President-elect Kamala Harris could be a tiebreaker. “If one senator does not vote on a Democratic side, there is no tie, and there is no bill,” Manchin said about that possible scenario, adding, “when they talk about, whether it be packing the courts or ending the filibuster, I will not vote to do that.” Washington Examiner
Coronavirus
Fauci says vaccine could be distributed by end of year . . . White House Coronavirus Task Force member Dr. Anthony Fauci said Monday that a coronavirus vaccine developed by Pfizer may be distributed by the end of the year. Pfizer announced Monday that its vaccine was 90% effective at preventing coronavirus infection during clinical trials. He said that if the process goes smoothly, as he expects, “we may have doses that we’re able to give to people by the end of November, beginning of December.” Daily Caller
Vaccine won’t end Covid immediately . . . Lockdowns and social distancing will still have to continue to keep the virus under control while medics scramble to get the vaccine to millions of people. There is also the chance that that the jab won’t work perfectly – experts have warned that the first vaccines may not be totally effective, meaning other measures might still be needed. Daily Mail
US allows emergency use of first Covid-19 antibody drug . . . U.S. regulators on Monday authorized emergency use of the first experimental antibody drug for COVID-19 in patients who are not hospitalized but are at risk of serious illness because of their age or other conditions. The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) granted emergency use authorization (EUA) to Eli Lilly & Co’s bamlanivimab based on trial data showing that a one-time infusion of the treatment reduced the need for hospitalization or emergency room visits in high-risk COVID-19 patients. The drug is a monoclonal antibody – a widely used class of biotech drugs which in this case is a manufactured copy of an antibody the human body creates to fight infections. Reuters
First time this section has been stocked with good news. A week AFTER the election. Go figure.
Covid hospitalizations at highest level ever . . . There were just over 59,000 COVID-19 patients in hospitals across the United States on Monday, the country’s highest number ever of in-patients being treated for the disease, with new infections at record levels for the sixth consecutive day. The harsh statistics tallied by Reuters cemented the United States’ position as the nation worst affected by the coronavirus pandemic, even as drugmaker Pfizer Inc PFE.N provided some hope with successful late-stage tests of its vaccine. Reuters
Ben Carson, David Bossie positive for coronavirus . . . Housing and Urban Development Secretary Ben Carson and David Bossie, an outside White House adviser, have both tested positive for Covid-19, becoming the latest figures in President Donald Trump’s orbit to contract the virus. Bossie, a longtime Trump ally who was tapped to lead the effort to contest the presidential election, tested positive Sunday, according to a person familiar with the situation. Bossie did not immediately respond to a message seeking comment. Politico
They both attended Trump’s election night party at the White House.
Politics
Attorney General Barr authorizes probe of voting fraud allegations . . . Attorney General Bill Barr authorized federal prosecutors to investigate allegations of “voting irregularities” in the 2020 election on Monday — despite little evidence of voting fraud in the contest. In a memo sent by Barr Monday evening, he said Justice Department prosecutors could investigate specific allegations of voter fraud before the election results are certified in December. The memo added, however, that “specious, speculative, fanciful or far-fetched claims should not be a basis for initiating federal inquiries.” New York Post
Biden spokesman accuses Facebook of not doing enough censoring . . . A representative of U.S. president-elect Joe Biden lashed out at Facebook Inc., alleging that the social media giant is “shredding the fabric of our democracy” in the aftermath of the election. “In the days after Election Day, Facebook is flooded with thousands of calls for violence,” Bill Russo, a Biden campaign spokesman, said in a tweet. “Some of them are taken down, but many are left up for hours, if not days.” Russo also cited theories about a fraudulent U.S. election going viral on Facebook, despite no evidence of widespread fraud. Bloomberg
In case you had any illusions about where we were headed.
Trump accuses networks of election “tampering with inaccurate polls . . . Donald Trump has accused Fox News of ‘tampering with the election’ because its polls were ‘so inaccurate’ along with those by other networks and newspapers. The president launched into a series of irate tweets Monday night where he threw the blame for his election defeat onto the media. He accused several outlets of ‘election interference’ because their polls were ‘so far off’ in several states. Daily Mail
Fox news cuts from Trump campaign press conference . . .
Fox News anchor Neil Cavuto broke into coverage of Kayleigh McEnany’s Trump campaign press conference Monday and abruptly pulled the plug following unsubstantiated and “explosive” claims of voter fraud. Shortly following White House Press Secretary McEnany’s claim that the Democratic party was “welcoming fraud” and “welcoming illegal voting,” Cavuto appeared. “Whoa, whoa, whoa, I just think we have to be very clear,” Cavuto said, referring to McEnany’s statements. “She’s charging the other side is welcoming fraud and welcoming illegal voting. Unless she has more details to back that up, I can’t in good countenance continue showing you this.” USA Today
Trump’s attacks on Fox News and the return fire are likely the prelude to an upcoming war between Fox News and a news outlet Trump will start.
Libertarians may have thrown the election to Biden . . . Just as the Greens hurt Al Gore in 2000, it looks like the libertarians may have cost President Trump the election. According to an opinion piece in the Wall Street Journal: Did the Libertarian Party throw the election to Joe Biden? Maybe. At this writing nominee Jo Jorgensen’s vote total exceeds Mr. Biden’s margin over President Trump in Arizona, Georgia, Nevada and Pennsylvania, enough to change the outcome. White House Dossier
I just marvel are Republicans and others on the right or center-right who were willing to do things that resulted in Joe Biden being elected. Is leftism the better alternative to President Trump?
GOP says thousands in Wisconsin may have circumvented voter ID requirement . . . Republicans in Wisconsin are raising questions about the large number of people, particularly new voters, who avoided having to show a photo ID to vote by listing themselves as “indefinitely confined.” When requesting an absentee ballot, Wisconsin law allows voters to self-certify if they are “indefinitely confined” to their residence because of age, physical illness, or are disabled for an indefinite period of time. Doing so allows them to submit an absentee ballot without having to show any form of photo ID, although they must have a ballot witness sign off. This year, the number of indefinitely confined voters soared amid the coronavirus pandemic. Washington Examiner
Detroit election worker files affidavit that colleagues coached voters to back Biden . . . What? Fraud in the city of Detroit? Round up the usual suspects! According to the Washington Examiner. A Detroit election worker claimed in an affidavit that she witnessed other employees “coaching” voters to vote for Joe Biden. The affidavit came on Monday as part of a lawsuit filed against parties in Detroit and Wayne County, where Detroit is located. In it, a city employee named Jessy Jacob alleges wrongdoing. White House Dossier
Trump campaign suit claims two-tier voting system existed in Pennsylvania . . . The Trump campaign filed another lawsuit in the swing state of Pennsylvania on Monday, alleging officials there created “an illegal ‘two-tiered’ voting system” which unfairly favored mail-in ballots. According to the suit, Democratic-leaning counties gave voters a chance to “cure” mailed ballots which were defective before Election Day, while Republican counties followed the law and did not provide a notice and cure. New York Post
Supreme Court to being hearing Obamacare case today . . . The fate of Obamacare will again go before the Supreme Court on Tuesday, with the health care of millions of Americans potentially hanging in the balance. For the third time in its 10-year life, the Affordable Care Act will be litigated before the highest court in the land, in the case of California v. Texas. At the heart of the case is the question of whether a 2017 tax cut package that eliminated Obamacare’s monetary penalty for not having health insurance renders the whole program unconstitutional. New York Post
National Security
Trump fires Defense Secretary Esper . . . President Trump dismissed Defense Secretary Mark Esper on Monday, saying in a Twitter post that he had “terminated” his Pentagon chief and replaced him with a new acting secretary, signaling the start of a shake-up in the remaining weeks of the Trump administration. The acting secretary appointed by Mr. Trump is Christopher Miller, who had just become the director of the National Counterterrorism Center in August after being confirmed by the Senate. Mr. Esper opposed the use of the Insurrection Act of 1807, which allows presidents to deploy active-duty forces to control American streets. Wall Street Journal
International
Armenia, Azerbaijan sign peace deal . . . Armenia, Azerbaijan and Russia have signed an agreement to end military conflict over the disputed enclave of Nagorno-Karabakh. Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan called the deal “incredibly painful both for me and both for our people”. It follows six weeks of fighting between Azerbaijan and ethnic Armenians. The region is internationally recognised as Azerbaijani but has been run by ethnic Armenians since 1994. BBC
Money
Vaccine euphoria pushed stocks higher . . . Stock markets and commodities continued to push higher on Tuesday, after the euphoria of a coronavirus vaccine had sent global equity indexes soaring to an all-time high and shaken bond yields higher. Having surged 4% on Monday on the vaccine breakthrough from U.S. and German drugmakers Pfizer and BioNTech there was little surprise that Europe saw the pace drop, though things were still moving forward. Reuters
You should also know
MSNBC analyst was writing Biden speeches . . .
Presidential historian Jon Meacham was reportedly let go as an MSNBC contributor after he apparently failed to disclose to the network that he was a speechwriter for President-elect Joe Biden, including the victory speech he gave on Saturday night. Meacham had been “playing a larger role than was previously known” behind the scenes, “both writing drafts of speeches and offering edits on many of Mr. Biden’s big addresses, including one he gave at Gettysburg last month and his acceptance speech at the Democratic National Convention.” Fox News
George Stephanopoulos wants to host jeopardy . . . Following Alex Trebek’s death on Sunday at age 80, George Stephanopoulos’ rep is lobbying for the ABC News anchor to become the next host of the hit game show “Jeopardy!,” a highly placed person with knowledge of the situation said. Stephanopoulos’s agent Alan Berger did not respond to TheWrap’s request for comment, but a knowledgeable individual close to the “Good Morning America” co-host denied that he was “actively” pursuing the role. However, the highly placed person told TheWrap that Stephanopoulos has his eye on the lucrative position and that his agent was lobbying hard at ABC, where he serves as ABC News’ chief anchor and political correspondent. The Wrap
McDonald’s to launch The McPlant . . . McDonald’s is finally testing its own plant-based burger: the McPlant. The fast food chain today announced that it has developed its own plant-based meat substitute in partnership with popular food company Beyond Meat, and will begin testing the faux-meat burger it in select markets next year. Daily Mail
Guilty Pleasures
Woman makes husband stop at elections office so she can vote . . . There are civic duties and there are motherly responsibilities – and one pregnant Florida woman fulfilled both Tuesday as she stopped to vote on her way to the hospital to give birth, according to local reports. She had already gone into labor by the time she arrived at the Orange County Supervisor of Elections Office in Orlando Tuesday, a spokesperson told local media. The wife reportedly waited in the car as her husband went inside, waited in line, and asked for poll workers to help his wife vote early, according to Gonzalez. “He’s like ‘Yeah, she’s about to have a baby, but she won’t go to the hospital to have a baby until she votes,’” Gonzalez told the outlet. “I was like, OK, what can I do to facilitate her to vote? Where is she? Where can I go to help?” Fox News
You know, there is something to be said about the civic commitment of voting in person rather than just mailing it in. And this woman exemplifies that, and I have no idea how she voted.
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THE DISPATCH
The Morning Dispatch: Vaccines on the Horizon
Plus: Combing through the GOP’s election lawsuits.
People who were given two doses of the COVID-19 vaccine being developed by Pfizer and BioNTech experienced 90 percent fewer symptomatic COVID-19 cases than those given a placebo, according to an early analysis of Phase 3 trial data released yesterday. Dr. Anthony Fauci called the results “extraordinary.”
The FDA issued an emergency-use authorization for bamlanivimab, an antibody therapy from drug manufacturer Eli Lilly that has been used to treat patients with mild to moderate cases of COVID-19.
President Trump fired Defense Secretary Mark Esper via tweet yesterday, announcing Director of the National Counterterrorism Center Christopher Miller as his replacement on an acting basis. Esper had reportedly been on the ropes for months after breaking with Trump on the president’s Lafayette Plaza photo-op.
Armenia and Azerbaijan signed a peace agreement yesterday after Azeri forces captured the strategic city of Shusha in the Nagorno-Karabakh region. Azeri President Ilham Aliyev said the agreement would “return our territories without any further bloodshed.” Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan called signing the agreement “unspeakably painful” and “an extremely difficult decision.”
Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell yesterday stood by President Trump’s ongoing decision not to concede to President-elect Biden, saying in a floor speech that “President Trump is 100 percent within his rights to look into allegations of irregularities and weigh his legal options.”
The Biden transition team is calling on Emily Murphy, the administrator of the General Services Administration, to issue a letter of “ascertainment” and formally recognize Joe Biden as the incoming president. Legally, many aspects of the presidential transition cannot begin until she does so. The Trump White House reportedly instructed senior government leaders to not cooperate or communicate with the Biden transition team.
White House Chief of Staff Mark Meadows and HUD Secretary Ben Carson have tested positive for the coronavirus, as has David Bossie, a Trump adviser who was set to head up the effort to contest election counts in Nevada and Georgia.
The United States confirmed 146,244 new cases of COVID-19 yesterday per the Johns Hopkins University COVID-19 Dashboard, with 9.9 percent of the 1,482,184* tests reported coming back positive. An additional 636 deaths were attributed to the virus on Monday, bringing the pandemic’s American death toll to 238,202. According to the COVID Tracking Project, 59,275 Americans are currently hospitalized with COVID-19. (*The JHU Dashboard testing numbers glitched again yesterday, so we got the new test number from the COVID Tracking Project.)
Excellent News on the Vaccine Front
Monday morning, the nation received perhaps the single best piece of COVID news since the dawn of the pandemic: Pharmaceutical giant Pfizer announced that its long-awaited coronavirus vaccine is more than 90 percent effective in preventing the disease, and that it plans to ask the FDA for an emergency authorization later this month. The news sent stocks surging with the hope that the end of the pandemic—while still agonizingly far off—is at least in sight.
The news was not a surprise: Several of the leading vaccine developers have been steaming through Phase III trials over the last few months. Dr. Moncef Slaoui—chief adviser for the White House’s vaccine development program Operation Warp Speed—estimated on September 3 that we might start seeing that data by late October or early November, which would put the nation on track for modest doses of the vaccine by the end of the year, and a full rollout in early 2021.
But there was always the danger of some sort of snag or setback if a promising vaccine suddenly showed unexpected side effects or disappointingly low efficacy rates. Monday’s news was the opposite: The 90 percent effectiveness claimed by Pfizer far surpasses the 70-percent effective rate some experts had anticipated. To receive emergency authorization, the FDA said over the summer, a vaccine would need to prevent serious disease in at least 50 percent of the vaccinated population.
President Trump has for months now been laying the groundwork to claim the 2020 election was “rigged” against him. Those allegations went into hyperdrive on Saturday after the Associated Press, Fox News, and other networks declared former Vice President Joe Biden the winner of the presidential election. As of Tuesday morning, the Trump campaign has initiated lawsuits to contest election results in several key battleground states that swung blue in the presidential race, including Arizona, Pennsylvania, Nevada, Michigan, and Georgia. But with vote margins in these states in the tens of thousands—and only 214 electoral votes in the bag—Trump faces a monumental uphill climb if he hopes to substantiate his claims of widespread voter fraud in the court of law, and have it impact the outcome.
Nevertheless, he and his backers have taken to the court of public opinion—on Twitter, cable news, and beyond—to spread baseless conspiracies furthering the idea of a coordinated nationwide effort among Democrats and election officials to steal his presidency. On Monday, Trump campaign manager Jason Miller said on Fox Business that the word “concede” is “not even in our vocabulary right now.” Trump’s personal lawyer, Rudy Giuliani, said as much again on Fox News’s Sunday Morning Futures, claiming that “at this point, it would be wrong for him to concede.”
Attorney General William Barr authorized a federal investigation into “substantial allegations” of voting irregularities, despite bipartisan assurances from state officials of a successful election. And the president himself, far from acknowledging defeat, has repeatedly and falsely declared a victory over his Democratic challenger.
On November 4, Defense Secretary Mark Esper, anticipating his days were numbered, sat down with Meghann Myers of the Military Times for an exclusive interview. Their wide-ranging conversation covers Esper’s efforts at reforming the Defense Department, but also touches on his rocky relationship with President Trump, pushed to the brink by Esper’s refusal to call up active-duty troops during the rioting in Washington, D.C., this summer. Esper said he broke with the president “to kind of break the fever, if you will, because I thought that was just a moment in history where … if somebody doesn’t stand up now and say something and kind of push the pause button, then … it could spiral.”
In the wake of his company’s promising vaccine news yesterday, Pfizer CEO Dr. Albert Bourla spoke to Axios’ Dan Primack on the Re:Cap podcast to discuss the latest developments. Bourla said he never expected the vaccine to have above a 90 percent efficacy rate, and that he learned of the results Sunday at 2 p.m. Asked why Pfizer did not take Operation Warp Speed money for the development of its vaccine, Bourla said, “I wanted to liberate our scientists [from] any bureaucracy that comes with having to give reports and agree how we are going to spend the money in parallel or together.”
Presented Without Comment
stephen fowler covers Georgia’s election! @stphnfwlr
In case you missed a portion (or all) of our What’s Next event yesterday, all the sessions are available to stream online! From Karl Rove and Joe Trippi on last week’s election results, to Lis Smith and Mo Elleithee on the future of the Democratic Party, to Rep. Mike Gallagher and Amb. Mark Green on America’s role in the world, to Reince Priebus on the future of the GOP, there was lots of good stuff to chew on. The fun continues today, with discussions featuring Sen. Tim Scott, Rep. Liz Cheney, Sen. Ben Sasse, Gov. Larry Hogan, and more. Plus, the rescheduled conversation on evangelicalism between David and Dr. Russell Moore. See you at 11 a.m.!
In yesterday’s post-election of The Sweep, Sarah turns to pollster-friend-of-the-Dispatch Kristen Soltis Anderson for a breakdown of why unweighted exit polls are hot garbage that “even raccoons turn down.” Then, a very helpful explainer on just how gargantuan (and unfeasible) a task pulling off widespread voter fraud would be. “All of these votes have to be counted at the precinct level. But 9 out of 10 registered voters vote. That means you’d have to spread the ballots out over about 150 to 200 precincts to ensure you don’t trip any alarm bells when the vote totals exceed the number of registered voters or come remarkably close to it, which means you’d need at least that many conspirators.”
William Jacobson: “THERE ARE A LOT OF FALSE AND MISLEADING STORIES, DON’T GET DISTRACTED – Stay focused on the prize”
Kemberlee Kaye: “Blue check mark media propagated Russian collusion hoaxes for YEARS, trotted out a skeezy porn lawyer (presently incarcerated) as reliable, wanted us to believe Justice Kavanaugh was a gang rapist — with ZERO evidence but can’t wait for court proceedings on an election? You are right to ask the questions our media refuses to ask. Do not accept the gaslighting. Do not “fall in line” because everyone else is parroting the same garbage. Demand answers. Stand firm.”
Mary Chastain: “I have a compromised immune system. Give me the vaccine. NOW. Also, please, please, please get your flu and pneumonia vaccines. Please.”
Fuzzy Slippers: “Today’s the day! Be sure to tune in to the Gibson’s Bakery v. Oberlin College appeal oral argument. This is a week where we can anticipate that wrongs begin to be righted for Gibson’s . . . and for our nation.”
Stacey Matthews: “No, the fireworks that went off in London over the weekend and the church bells that rang in Paris were not in celebration of any alleged Biden election victory, mainstream media.”
Leslie Eastman: “California Democratic political leaders are vying for the US Seat held by Kamala Harris, despite the fact Team Trump will pursue every legal avenue to obtain a fair vote count. If Governor Gavin Newsom can find a replacement even more loathsome than Harris, he will. Picking hacks and nincompoops is his special skill.”
David Gerstman: “Kemberlee Kaye blogged about the blatant hypocrisy demonstrated by New York officials in allowing mass celebrations commemorating President Trump’s apparent defeat and their enforcement actions against the New York Jewish community. She’s not the only one.”
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What to Expect Under a President Biden
Assuming Joe Biden takes office this January, he will likely take a number of immediate and drastic actions that could lead the country in a radically different direction. If Democrats do not win two Senate runoff elections in Georgia this January, Republicans will maintain control of that chamber of Congress; therefore, according to the Washington Post, Biden’s transition policy teams are focusing heavily on executive power. One advisor told the outlet he expects executive actions will be “used freely in a Biden administration at this point, if the Senate becomes a roadblock.”
Here are some measures that could be taken soon after Biden in sworn in:
-Mandatory masking
While the president has no authority under the Constitution to implement a federal mask mandate, Biden has said he will pressure governors and mayors to mandate masks in public. The federal government could withhold funding from states that do not go along with Biden’s “suggestions.”
-Passing student loan debt forgiveness
Chuck Schumer is reportedly already pressuring Biden to “eliminate” $50,000 in student debt by executive order during his first 100 days in office–a plan that has been increasingly embraced by left-wing politicians over the last few years. Of course, such a measure would force blue collar, working-class Americans who could not afford college to subsidize the debt of middle and upper-middle class graduates who earned non-practice liberal arts degrees from expensive private colleges.
-Rolling back Republican tax cuts
Biden has pledged to repeal the 2017 Republican-passed tax cuts, which saved the average US household at least $1,610 annually. Throughout his campaign, the former Vice President continued to incorrectly state that the tax cuts only benefited the nation’s top 1% of earners.
-Enacting “climate justice”
Democrats including Biden have long pushed for “climate justice”–a blanket term that involves funneling tax dollars to a variety of “green” initiatives and government boondoggles. Measures are likely to include reversing energy rollbacks, creating new financial regulations that could strangle the market, banning fracking, and rejoining the Paris Agreement. A Biden administration is also expected to make climate part of COVID-19 relief by forcing federal taxpayers to subsidize development of clean energy and funding for states to expand inefficient renewable energy.
Vaccine Announced Hours After Biden Declares Himself President
On the first business day after Biden declared himself president-elect, Pfizer announced a COVID-19 vaccine that reportedly prevents 90% of people from catching the virus. The Trump administration paid Pfizer $1.95 billion for 100 million initial doses of the vaccine. the company says it could have 50 million doses ready by the end of this year. Following the announcement, shares in Pfizer were up 9 percent and global markets rocketed.
Trump celebrated the news, writing on Twitter, “Stock market up big, big vaccine coming soon. Report 90% effective. Such great news!” Many of the president’s supporters are skeptical of the announcement’s timing. His son, Don Trump Jr., wrote on Twitter, “The timing of this is pretty amazing. Nothing nefarious about the timing of this at all right?”
Michelle Obama Trashes Trump Supporters While Calling for Unity
The same leftists who shrieked “Resist!,” “Surveil!,” and “Impeach!” now claim the country needs unity and Biden will bring it as president. But how can they be united with people they openly despise? On Saturday, Michelle Obama tweeted that Democrats should reach out to Trump supporters who supported “lies, hate, chaos, and division.”
Other left-wingers are going further, by calling to publish names of those who worked for President Trump in order to shame them. Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez tweeted on Friday, “Is anyone archiving these Trump sycophants for when they try to downplay or deny their complicity in the future? I foresee decent probability of many deleted Tweets, writings, photos in the future.”
A former Barack Obama staffer, Michael Simon, responded by tweeting a link to a website called the “Trump Accountability Project,” which says it aims to embarrass and hold people accountable who worked for the Trump administration or his campaign.
COVID Is Woke
It seems as though COVID is a woke virus–it infects Trump supporters, church goers, and business owners, while left-wing rioters and Democrats in general are immune. Check out these large groups of leftists, celebrating after Biden declared himself the next president. The lockdown-cheering media and progressives didn’t make a peep about these gatherings being “super spreaders.”
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.
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Nov 10, 2020 01:00 am
What would George Patton do? He would look for the aggressive move against which there is no defense, no antidote, no counterpunch, and he would give all he’s got. Read More…
Nov 10, 2020 01:00 am
Earth to Democrats: climate change and systemic racism are Jobs for Gentry programs that stick it to the middle class and do nothing for the poor. Read More…
Nov 10, 2020 01:00 am
With the left ascendant, it’s important to understand just how wrong Biden was when he said that America worked well with Hitler before World War Two. Read More…
Biden really is violating the Logan Act
Nov 10, 2020 01:00 am
With news that Joe Biden is starting to talk to foreign leaders, people are thinking about General Flynn’s martyrdom – but Biden truly is in the wrong. Read more…
‘Aggressive federalism’ can save America
Nov 10, 2020 01:00 am
Either we comply to be ruled by the liberal elite, or we bring about a fundamental change in how our republic is structured and governed. Read more…
Stop the steal!
Nov 10, 2020 01:00 am
This is not the time for Trump supporters to give up. This is the time to increase our support for our beleaguered President and our democracy. Read more…
He who pays the piper…
Nov 10, 2020 01:00 am
If government, be it federal or state, pays for and/or provides one’s health care or insurance, in full or in part, expect it to have a say in personal health-related matters. Read more…
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Dear Readers: We just posted a special new Crystal Ball webinar, which you can watch at this direct link on YouTube. Center for Politics Director Larry J. Sabato talks with Christopher Krebs of the Department of Homeland Security about protecting the integrity of the election and working to make 2020 the “most protected, secured election in modern history.”Krebs is the director of the Department of Homeland Security’s Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA). This is the government agency that, among other important responsibilities, monitors both internal and external threats to American elections. Previously he was Assistant Secretary for Infrastructure Protection. He has also held impressive positions within the private sector, including on Microsoft’s U.S. Government Affairs team where he led the company’s U.S. policy work on cybersecurity and technology issues.
He holds a J.D. from George Mason University — BUT, more importantly for us, Krebs is a graduate of the University of Virginia, where he received a bachelor’s degree in environmental sciences.
Coming up this Thursday, our Crystal Ball webinar will feature the 22nd annual American Democracy Conference. We’ll be hearing from New York Times columnist Jamelle Bouie; CNN commentator Tara Setmayer; Republican strategist Chris LaCivita; and Democratic strategist John Lapp. That program will be posted at 2 p.m. on Thursday on our YouTube channel, UVACFP.
— The Editors
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It was a sometimes violent study in contrasts Saturday when a large group of supporters of President Donald Trump faced off with Antifa militants in Olympia, Washington, after numerous media outlets declared former Vice President Joe Biden the 2020 election victor.What happened?As chronicled on video by reporter Katie Daviscourt, … Read more
At issue was President Trump’s request for an order changing the way Pennsylvania absentee and mail-in ballots are being reviewed at the Philadelphia Convention Center.
As long as leftists continue to weaponize identity politics and dress us down as if we are mindless cattle, their candidates will continue to lose support from minorities.
By trying to name and shame Trump supporters, the ‘Trump Accountability Project’ betrays a preference for Soviet-style retribution over a commitment to basic decency.
It is because we hope in an eternal savior that we joyfully continue our daily lives. We don’t need a week off of classes or work to mourn an election. Our daily joys have suffered no loss of meaning.
The next president of the United States will be officially determined, according to our careful and deliberative constitutional routine, on December 14, 2020.
The resistance leader called on supporters to thank and amplify Republican voices who had ‘publicly acknowledged the victory and encouraged people to move on.’
President Trump needs a skunkworks team coming up with as many political land mines as possible to embed in the landscape against Democrats if Republicans are forced to retreat from the White House in January.
If the GOP holds on to the Senate, Democrats’ far-left base will be denied the presidency, a legislative agenda, and their chance to transform America — and they know it.
The Transom is a daily email newsletter written by publisher of The Federalist Ben Domenech for political and media insiders, which arrives in your inbox each morning, collecting news, notes, and thoughts from around the web.
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by Gary Bauer: Update – The Recount Effort: It’s been six days since the election. The media, including Fox News, and some Republicans, are demanding that the president concede.
Al Gore took 36 days to concede. Stacey Abrams, the 2018 Democrat candidate for governor of Georgia, never conceded. Neither did Hillary Clinton really. She still blames Russia for her loss!
Some people are suggesting that the race is not that close. They’re wrong. Just a little over 85,000 votes separates Trump and Biden in Arizona, Georgia, Nevada and Wisconsin. That’s 85,000 votes out of more than 140 million votes cast.
Here’s where things stand as of now:
President Trump is not conceding. When asked about a possible concession, a senior campaign advisor told reporters, “That word is not even in our vocabulary right now.”
The Trump campaign has filed lawsuits in Arizona, Georgia, Nevada and Pennsylvania.
Justice Samuel Alito has ordered Pennsylvania to secure and segregate mail-in ballots received after Election Day.
The president is expected to hold rallies in the days ahead as the legal challenges work their way through the courts.
Meanwhile, many media commentators, including Fox News hosts except Sean Hannity, Tucker Carlson and Laura Ingraham, are all reading the same talking points. They are demanding that the president present evidence now about cheating and fraud.
Do these people not understand how the legal system works? First, you allege a crime. Then you file a lawsuit. In proceedings before the court, you have what is called “discovery.” That’s when you can require election officials to produce information.
The biggest indication that cheating and fraud happened is that in every swing state that Biden won, poll watchers were kept out of polling locations and party observers were kept out of ballot processing rooms. (Here, here and here.) Ballot integrity means that you cannot allow ballots to fall into the possession of one party while the ballots are being counted.
The evidence of likely fraud is that in many cases Democrats continued counting, even in defiance of court orders, without anyone from the Trump campaign or the GOP being allowed to observe the process.
If a cop sees someone hiding in an alley in the middle of the night and asks him to step out of the shadows but he instead swallows something, the officer has probably cause to arrest him.
When the big city Democrats prevented Republicans from observing the ballot counting process, that is probable cause to assume that cheating was taking place.
Does Fox think we are as dumb as Democrats think we are?
Incredible News
The news we knew was coming, but which Joe Biden and his media allies didn’t want us to know, was announced this morning. Pfizer reports that its COVID-19 vaccine not only works, but works at a level of effectiveness that many didn’t think was possible. The vaccine stops 90% of the spread of the coronavirus.
I would like to know when Pfizer knew this. Is it purely a coincidence that this great breakthrough was discovered six days after the election? But I digress.
Joe Biden based virtually his entire campaign on one simple theme, and he said it repeatedly, “Donald Trump has done nothing to stop the coronavirus.” That was, of course, a bald-faced lie that was never once fact-checked by any of the keepers of truth known as the “fake news media.”
I won’t bore you by going through the details of the mass production of ventilators, breakthrough drugs and therapies, the shutdown of the economy to “flatten the curve.”
But the most important thing Trump did was ensure that every day we were getting closer to the only answer to the virus. It’s not masking. It’s not social distancing. It’s not shutting down the economy. It always was the development of an effective vaccine.
This president cleaned out the regulatory underbrush, turned the job over to the scientists and put into place Operation Warp Speed, which allowed production of vaccinations immediately. He has already established a military-led distribution program, and he did it all more quickly than ever before in the history of medicine.
Let nobody be confused: Today’s announcement under any reasonable analysis is the Pfizer/Trump vaccine. Today’s huge surge in the stock market is the Trump/Pfizer vaccine bull market.
The avalanche of investment that is going to be unleashed over the next six months in our economy, unless a Biden/Harris Administration takes office in spite of evidence of voter fraud and kills it with socialism, will be the Trump investment explosion.
But here’s a predication that I have no hesitancy in making: Just as the media tried to claim that the economic boom of Trump’s first three years was just a continuation of the Obama economy, in short order they will claim, if he wins the recounts, that this is “the Biden recovery.”
Here’s a question: The vaccine is coming out under Trump. Is it still a Trump vaccine? Inquiring minds want to know. Will Democrats like Kamala Harris take it? If not, it will be easier to distribute to those who do want it.
Biden’s Call For Unity
Joe Biden is acting like he has clearly won the election, which he hasn’t. In a speech Saturday, Joe Biden claimed that his campaign was a “battle for the soul of America,” and that we must “restore the soul of America.” Then he returned to the rote rhetoric he’s been using about unity and working together.
But he just accused half the country of stealing the soul of America, and yet now we’re going to work together? If people can’t see through that, they haven’t learned anything about how this game has been played for decades.
Biden declared, “To make progress, we must stop treating our opponents as our enemy.” He also said that “this grim era of demonization in America” must end now.
The left has spent the past four years demonizing Donald Trump and his supporters as “racists,” “Nazis” and literally “the enemy,” as agents of Russia. And yet now we’re supposed to put all that behind us, join hands and sing Kumbaya.
All the protective boards covering Washington, D.C., businesses are coming down. We were told that no matter who won, there would be riots because the country has been so divided by Trump. We all knew that was a lie.
We all knew that only one side was going to riot if it lost. The left was planning more “resistance” if Trump won. Conservatives don’t riot. They don’t destroy private property. But Marxists do because they despise private property.
Actor James Woods had a great response to the left’s demand for unity, tweeting:
“And just like that the rioting and looting has ceased overnight. And now the half of the country that pummeled America like a battered wife is telling her to put on sunglasses, hide her black eye, be a good girl, and ‘come together as one.'”
Romney Still Doesn’t Get It
The poster boy for people who don’t get it is none other than Mitt Romney, the man whose weakness guaranteed us four more years of Barack Obama.
Romney, always looking to excel at virtue signaling, was the first Republican senator to offer his congratulations to Joe Biden and Kamala Harris before the election has been settled. Trump wants to make America first, but Romney never misses an opportunity to be first in surrendering to the left.
Romney not only congratulated Biden and Harris, he said that he and his wife knew them both to be “people of good will and admirable character.” Really, Mitt? Of course, Romney never called out Biden and Harris for repeatedly lying and smearing the president’s character.
So Biden and Harris, who both support abortion on demand throughout all nine months of pregnancy, are people of admirable character?
Even though they are committed to making faith-based voters pay for abortions and will appoint judges who will restrict liberty, including the religious liberty of Mormons, they are people of good will?
And this is why conservatives have always been suspicious of Romney. Remember when he was on his heels and snapped back with that ridiculous phrase, “I was a severely conservative governor”?
Someday someone will write a psychology textbook about why the GOP produces so many Quislings and why it approaches the Democrat Party like a crouching dog that has been routinely abused.
A Strange Way Of Unifying
Meanwhile, some on the left appear to be rejecting Biden’s call for unity. They are keeping a “list” of every Trump Administration staffer, lawyers and leaders of conservative organizations who publicly defended the president.
They are promising to make them unelectable, unemployable and unacceptable “in polite society.” There was a strong whiff of imprisoning them.
By the way, Biden has problems in his own party. Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez is lashing out at “incompetent Democrats” who failed to fully embrace her radical agenda.
Schumer’s Threat
After November 3rd, the Senate is currently tied at 48 Republicans, 48 Democrats, with four races still undecided: Alaska, North Carolina and both Georgia seats.
Assuming Republicans hold Alaska and North Carolina, taking Republicans to 50 seats, the Senate majority will be decided by the results of two runoff elections in Georgia during the first week of January.
A narrowly divided Senate has serious ramifications for either President Trump’s second term or a President Biden’s first term.
Senate Democrat Leader Chuck Schumer is, of course, planning for the latter, and he has big plans. Over the weekend Schumer declared, “Now we take Georgia, then we change America!”
And by change, Schumer means higher taxes, more abortions, socialized medicine, left-wing judges, a massive amnesty, severe limits to your Second Amendment rights and more.
Help us save our Senate majority!
————————- 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, Incredible News, Biden’s Call For Unity, Schumer’s Threat To share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
by Marvin L. Covault, Lt General, US Army retired: Our ability to legally vote and ensure that our vote is properly counted is one of the underpinnings of a successful democracy, right up there with freedom of speech.
Is voter fraud a problem in the United States?
Yes.
How prevalent is voter fraud?
The correct answer is, no one knows for sure because fraud is a crime and folks don’t go around advertising that they are breaking the law.
Let’s take a snapshot of the current voter/voter registration problem across America and from that get an idea of why we do not yet know the results of the 3 November presidential election.
Generally, voter registration rolls are notoriously inaccurate and out of date, containing the names of voters who are deceased, have moved, or otherwise have become ineligible.
Millions of main-in ballots were sent out to potential voters. Many thousands of those ballots arrived in the mail for individuals who no longer reside at a registered address thereby risking that those ballots could have been stolen and voted.
California: A couple years ago it was determined that 1.5 million individuals were registered even though they no longer were eligible to vote.
Actual cases: Disregarding several warnings, Mr. “Smith” was convicted of registering his four dogs and his deceased father to vote. Or take Mr. “Valdez”, an illegal alien from Mexico who voted multiple times under a false identity. Mr. “Jones” was involved in a scheme with eight other individuals where they solicited hundreds of false and/or forged signatures on voter registration forms by offering homeless people $1 and/or cigarettes for their participation. Other cases out of California include individuals who forged the signatures of voters, being paid $5 per signature.
North Carolina: In 2018 in the 9th Congressional District race was overturned because of illegal vote harvesting that included altering and forging absentee ballots.
Oregon: A survey found that five percent of registered voters admitted that other people marked their ballots (5% of 2.2 million registered voters equals 110,000 potential fraudulent actions). Additionally, 2.4% said someone else signed their ballots. It is suspected the actual number was much higher, given that most people would not want to admit being a party to a crime. Likely tens of thousands of mail-in ballots have been cast in Oregon by individuals other than the registered voter.
New Jersey: A candidate bribed voters with $50 payments for mail-in ballots.
The Election Assistance Commission found that 28.3 million ballots in federal elections between 2012 and 2018 were lost or disappeared in the mail.
Virginia: An investigation found 592 examples where registrants were simultaneously registered in another state. There are about 11,600 dead people on Virginia’s voter rolls, all of whom would have receive mail-in ballots.
New Mexico: The Public Interest Legal Foundation found more than 3,000 individuals registered multiple times; 1,700 registrants who are dead; 1,500 voters aged 100 or above, 64 of whom are over 120 years old. All of these supposed voters would have received mail-in ballots.
These are just a few examples of the ongoing voter fraud and election board stupidity in America. Collecting these examples just took a few minutes on Google. Imagine if we went state by state and searched out voting and voter registration investigations.
Absentee and mail-in ballots are the tools of choice of election fraudsters because they can operate outside the supervision of election officials, making it easier to steal, forge, or alter ballots, as well as to intimidate voters.
——————————- Marvin Covault, Lt.Gen (Ret) shared this article. H/T McIntosh Enterprises.
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by Mike Huckabee: Important Reminder
Let’s not get caught up in the left’s false narratives that there’s “no evidence” of vote fraud (people have already been arrested for it) or that Biden’s popular vote lead is beyond the “margin of fraud.” That’s due to states like California that aren’t in dispute; we’re talking about very slim margins in a handful of battleground states.This isn’t an either/or situation. It’s entirely possible that there was widespread vote fraud but not enough to determine the winner. If it is proven that Biden won legitimately, then I will accept him as President, just as I did Obama, despite our policy differences. I won’t do what the other side did and spend however long Biden is President screaming that he’s “illegitimate” or “not MY President!” I will show the respect due the office that many Democrats never showed to Trump.But I also want all allegations of voting irregularities investigated; any incidences of fraud prosecuted to the full extent of the law, whether they determined the election or not; and laws changed and tightened to prevent it ever happening again. Democrats dispense a lot of balloon juice about all Americans having their voices heard in elections. They even declared Stacy Abrams a hero and a party leader for challenging her loss in Georgia. They’ve whined for four years about the legitimacy of the 2016 election (“without evidence,” to use their favorite phrase.) So since every fraudulent vote negates the legal vote of a citizen, I assume they’ll join me in my demand for transparency, law changes, and investigations of claims like this, from a Nevada whistleblower who put it in a sworn affidavit to the Department of Justice.I also assume that someday, pigs will fly.
Do This Right; Why It Is Important That Trump Not Concede!
Where to start on the situation we as a nation are now facing? First, let’s get one thing clear: Does anyone think for ONE SECOND that –- given all the anomalies of this election and the strange turnaround that completely changed the outcome –- if the situation were reversed and Trump were ahead, the Biden campaign would say, “Yes! The people have spoken! Donald Trump has won re-election! We’re leaving now.”? Anyone?
Of course they wouldn’t. They’d recount close states and find every bit of evidence of voter fraud that might have influenced the outcome –- which this year, I must point out, is all coming from the Democrat side. They’d NEVER go quietly. (Recall Gore in 2000 –- that took well over a month.) So anyone –- including the media –- saying it’s over and Trump should concede need to put a cork in it until we determine the actual vote count.
The left NEVER accepted Trump as the duly-elected President, even though he was. They concocted a story about Russians and STILL push it, though exhaustive investigation found no evidence. They undermined him –- and demeaned us –- at every turn. They tried to remove him with a sham impeachment. Now, they expect us to slump away defeated after a few days while they coronate his opponent? NO.
Biden is already pretending to be the President-elect, giving speeches saying “the people have spoken.” Actually, the media have spoken, but they don’t decide this. They DON’T certify the vote. Still, they just can’t wait, so this is the kind of headline we’re seeing everywhere.
When Democrats say “the people have spoken,” that’s not what they mean. They refer to the ballot count, which may or may not reflect the people’s will. They want to freeze it before it can be shown that “the people” might want something very different from what THEY want to give them.
My staff and I have been looking through almost countless reports about this to see what is partisan spin (from both sides) and what might actually reflect reality. Here’s some good sense from AMERICAN THINKER.
The author, Jay Valentine, is clear that he supported Trump and has tried hard to contain his confirmation bias, but he has a degree in statistics and sees plenty of reason to examine the result. Not only is this NOT OVER, he says, but it’s “scary for Biden.” That’s why the Biden campaign and the media (but I repeat myself) are in such a hurry to declare him the winner and get everybody used to the idea.
Valentine first looks at Philadelphia and the order from Justice Alito to keep late ballots separate. Remove those, and Trump wins Pennsylvania. (Of course, there are scores of eyewitness accounts that suggest outright fraud in Philadelphia, also in Pittsburgh.) Valentine thinks Trump will win the state.
Here’s a story we found about Pennsylvania accepting mail-in ballots for this election at almost 30 times the rate predicted by historical rejection numbers. Hmm…
Valentine also finds numerous anomalies in Nevada and Wisconsin. For example, Wisconsin election clerks were told to fill in ballots themselves where critical information had been left off. This information is supposed to be resolved before Election Day. Such ballots don’t count, at least according to retired Wisconsin Supreme Court Justice Michael Gableman, who said on local radio that the statute is “very, very clear. If an absentee ballot does not have a witness address on it, it’s not valid.” The Wisconsin GOP “estimates that thousands of witness addresses may have been changed.” Here are more details concerning Wisconsin.
Michigan is a mess, too, especially Detroit, where many accounts have emerged about GOP observers being ejected or otherwise barred from seeing the process. Here’s just one.
By the way, don’t look for such reporting through a Google search. They’ve “fact-checked” it and found it all to be “false.” Not so.
“Voter fraud is kind of like larceny,” Valentine says. “A little is okay. It is even kind of entertaining…” (like all those jokes we’ve told about dead “Democrats” voting) “…But voter fraud on this scale is just not sustainable. It does not pass the common sense test…The overwhelming number now goes beyond humor and rubs our faces in it.”
Trump has, as he puts it, “gone to the mattresses.” We’ll just see what the “will of the people” is.
Also, Mark Levin had a MUST-SEE program this Sunday on LIFE, LIBERTY & LEVIN. Here’s a great clip of him with guest Ken Starr; if you missed it Sunday night, the show in its entirety should be online soon.
As they discussed, it was a deliberate choice to have legislators direct the process for choosing electors for their states, to keep it as close to the people as possible. This “got lost in the Pennsylvania shuffle,” Starr said, calling what the governor did through the state supreme court to change the rules “a constitutional travesty.” Justice Alito has stepped in to say, in effect, that “the legislature is the boss.” That’s why he’s having late ballots counted and kept separately, pending a decision by the full Court about the power of the state legislature.
“To ‘count every vote’ may be a crime” under state law, Starr said, perhaps even under federal law. You don’t count every ILLEGAL vote. “It’s shameful,” he said, “that Vice President Biden’s people and the Vice President himself are saying ‘Count every vote’ and selling a lot of t-shirts.”
Levin observed, “The Democrats…want to vote earlier and earlier and count later and later.” Yes, to create unreliability and chaos. (I would add that it keeps early voters from being able to change their minds.) Starr cited two cities, Detroit and Philadelphia, for having “a sordid history of voter fraud,” involving “criminal convictions” that in Pennsylvania involved the sitting state senate majority leader, who went to jail.
Imagine someone actually going to jail over this!
As Levin said, there have been over 300 lawsuits this year in key states, to “stack the deck” with the methodology by which votes are cast and counted, setting us up for the current mess. (I should mention that we previously reported Clinton attorney Marc Elias of the firm Perkins Coie being particularly active in this process.)
Levin also hosted constitutional scholar and election law expert Hans von Spakovsky, senior legal fellow at the Heritage Foundation and a former commissioner for the Federal Election Commission. He was also counsel to the assistant attorney general for civil rights in the DOJ, in charge of enforcing voting rights law. He spoke about those 300+ lawsuits, which had “a common theme.”
“They all tried to get the security protocols that are in place for absentee or mail-in ballots eliminated,” he said. Signature requirements, signature comparisons, limits on ‘vote harvesting,’ voter ID –- they wanted it all out the window. Is that to ensure we “count every vote,” or that we “count every ballot, real or not”?
Be sure and watch the entire interview, as well as Levin’s closing statement — you’ll see why the media and the Biden campaign (same thing) do NOT get to call this election; why it might very well turn out differently; and why it’s so important, whatever the outcome, that this be done right.
Sidney Powell Takes Lead For Trump
If you saw Maria Bartiromo’s SUNDAY MORNING FUTURES yesterday, you know that legal powerhouse Sidney Powell — known for her determination in defending Michael Flynn — has taken a leading role in Trump’s election challenge in a number of states. Lawsuits are expected to be filed Monday, including at least one in Pennsylvania.
Powell claimed that “there has been a massive and coordinated effort to steal this election from ‘we the people of the United States of America,’ to delegitimize and destroy votes for Donald Trump, [and] to manufacture votes for Joe Biden. They have done it in every way imaginable, from having dead people vote in massive numbers, to absolutely, fraudulently creating ballots that exist, only voting for Biden.”
As the WASHINGTON EXAMINER reports, Powell said on the show that at least 450,000 ballots –- this includes 98,000 in Pennsylvania, 80-90,000 in Georgia, 42,000 in Arizona, 69-115,000 in Michigan and 62,000 in Wisconsin –- have already been identified in key states that “miraculously” have just a mark for Biden in the presidential race but no other mark down the ballot, not even for big races such as for U.S. Senate. (That in itself is not proof of ballot box-stuffing, but it’s very unusual and highly suggestive of it.) She said that if you look at the ballots in Florida, “where things were done right,” you can see how the rest of the balloting should have gone.
She also said an “algorithm” was used to calculate the number of votes they’d need to flip and they used computers to do this. She suspects the same method was used to cause Doug Collins and John James to lose their races. “There were many people affected by this. We have got to fight tooth-and-nail in federal court to oppose this abject fraud and the conspiracy behind it.”
But the news that made headlines was her claim that the software used in voting machines manufactured by Dominion Voting Systems, a company in which top Democrats hold significant interest, flipped votes from Republican to Democrat or added votes that didn’t really exist. She said the “glitches” that happened never should have. (Maria also mentioned the “stop-downs” as returns came in as something she’d never seen.) For more details, the WASHINGTON EXAMINER has a report.
If Powell does have evidence of this, she didn’t present it on the show. She did say that some Democrats should be angry about this, too, naming Bernie Sanders as someone who may have lost primary elections through this same tactic.
This is something that absolutely must be checked out. Dominion machines are in use in 28 states and Puerto Rico, including ALL the battleground states where Trump’s team is contesting the vote count.
In answer to Maria’s question about investigation by the Department of Justice, Powell said she didn’t know where they were on it, but that they need to be investigating. (I realize they don’t announce when they are investigating, but in this case they need to be on it, fast.) Powell also noted that they now have an affidavit from a postal worker who swears he was told to back-date ballots. She also said there are “at least three major federal issues” for the Supreme Court to resolve.
Tags:Mike Huckabee, Morning Edition, Important Reminder, Do This Right; Why It Is Important, That Trump Not Concede! Sidney Powell Takes Lead, For Trump, Drops Big NewsTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
. . . To hold “Trump sycophants” accountable for their “complicity.” by Mark Tapson: Even as last week’s election results are being contested and the Democrats’ massive voter fraud is being exposed, the supporters of empty-suit candidate Joe Biden are already claiming victory and chafing at the bit to implement their radical agenda. And in contrast to his hypocritical call to “put away the harsh rhetoric” and unify Americans after the purported divisiveness of Donald Trump, Biden’s supporters have already begun threatening their political opponents with vicious retribution for supporting their #MAGA nemesis.True to their totalitarian nature, newly-reelected New York Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and other high-profile Democrats tweeted Friday that Trump supporters essentially should be blacklisted for their role in advancing his unacceptable agenda to make America great again. “Is anyone archiving these Trump sycophants for when they try to downplay or deny their complicity in the future?” the socialist Ocasio-Cortez tweeted. “I foresee decent probability of many deleted Tweets, writings, photos in the future.”“Lol at the ‘party of personal responsibility’ being upset at the idea of being responsible for their behavior over last four years,” she added later. It takes enormous chutzpah to accuse Republicans of misbehavior in our current, thuggish “cancel culture” marked by rampant leftist violence.“Complicity” is a loaded word, which she no doubt chose intentionally. It means participation in criminal or wrongful activity. The implication, of course, is that both President Trump and his supporters are not simply political opponents but are legally guilty of wrongdoing and must be punished.
In a democratic political system, one party “punishes” the other by beating it in elections. Losing the election – being denied the opportunity to implement your agenda – is the punishment. The opposing parties then move forward together in an often uneasy or even contentious coexistence until the next election. But totalitarians by definition reject coexistence; after seizing power they punish their opponents literally and brutally, out of pure vindictiveness and with the intent to eradicate any opposition once and for all.
In a related tweet on Friday, Never-Trumper columnist Jennifer Rubin, the Washington Post’s token “conservative” (until she officially dropped the label from her bio two months ago), embraced her inner totalitarian: “Any [Republican] now promoting rejection of an election or calling to not to follow the will of voters or making baseless allegations of fraud should never serve in office, join a corporate board, find a faculty position or be accepted into ‘polite’ society,” Rubin stated with eyebrow-raising directness. “We have a list.”
We have a list. The left is gleefully boasting about putting together an enemies list to ostracize – no, to destroy – Trump supporters. This echoes unhinged Rep. Maxine Waters’ reprehensible call two years ago to her supporters to publicly confront and harass Trump cabinet members: “Let’s make sure we show up wherever we have to show up. And if you see anybody from that Cabinet in a restaurant, in a department store, at a gasoline station, you get out and you create a crowd. And you push back on them. And you tell them they’re not welcome anymore, anywhere.”
Not welcome anymore, anywhere. This kind of ugliness goes far beyond agreeing to disagree. It is a rabble-rousing call to wage mob intimidation against fellow Americans, ostracize them from what Rubin calls “polite” society, and ruin their livelihoods. This is a totalitarian threat.
And who has this enemies list? Other social media users announced on Friday the launch of an ominous new initiative: the Trump Accountability Project, the purpose of which, as Emily Abrams, former campaign staffer for failed presidential candidate Pete Buttigieg, tweeted, is “to make sure anyone who took a paycheck to help Trump undermine America is held responsible for what they did.”
“We must never forget those who furthered the Trump agenda,” the Trump Accountability Project website states. “We should welcome in our fellow Americans with whom we differ politically. But those who took a paycheck from the Trump Administration should not profit from their efforts to tear our democracy apart.”
Don’t assume that the Party of Tolerance and Inclusiveness will “welcome” Trump supporters under a Joe Biden-Kamala Harris regime, or that their retribution will be limited to paid employees of the Trump administration. As the Massachusetts Daily noted, in addition to campaign workers, political appointees, and Trump donors, the Trump Accountability Project site originally added to its hit list “Individuals and Organizations that publicly endorsed either of Trump’s campaigns for President, in 2016 or 2020. – This means you.” So paid or not, anyone who publicly declared they were voting for Trump is a target. [That part of the statement disappeared from the website by Saturday morning, no doubt because it exposed just how broad and “inclusive” their vengeful scope really will be.]
We have already witnessed innumerable violent examples in the recent past, caught on video, of just how “welcoming” the left is to Trump supporters even while Trump is still in office. Are we now expected to believe that, if Biden is confirmed as President, the Democrats will treat Trump voters with any less cruelty, as long as the latter didn’t receive an actual paycheck bearing Trump’s signature?
The website continues: “The world should never forget those who, when faced with a decision, chose to put their money, their time, and their reputations behind separating children from their families, encouraging racism and anti-Semitism, and negligently causing the unnecessary loss of life and economic devastation from our country’s failed response to the COVID-19 pandemic.”
Every one of these points is either misleading, an outright lie, or pure Democrat projection. Temporary separation of illegal alien families at the border is for the protection of the children and a check against human trafficking — not, as the left insists, just capricious cruelty (nor did it originate with Trump; Barack Obama, with Biden as Vice President, separated families as well). It is the Democrats who have divided us with their inherently racist identity politics. It is the Democrats who openly express anti-Semitism (Ilhan Omar, anyone? Rashida Tlaib? Linda Sarsour? Black Lives Matter?), not Trump, who is widely-considered the most pro-Jewish and pro-Israel American president ever. It was not Trump but Democrat state leaders like the incompetent New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo and tyrannical Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer who exacerbated the “unnecessary loss of life and economic devastation” from the coronavirus.
Right-wing social media reaction to these threatening tweets was swift and defiant. Conservative actor and Twitter gadfly James Woods tweeted to AOC, “Are you literally making lists? I understand you’re an ignorant nitwit who’s never had a passing acquaintance with a history book, but political lists are EXACTLY what Communists do: Lenin, Stalin, Pol Pot, Castro. So put me at the top of your list, you moron. I’d be honored.”
Republican Senator Marsha Blackburn too proudly offered her name to the list: “If by undermining America you mean stopping Democrat socialists, not defunding police and blocking the Green New Deal, add me to your list,” she wrote, adding the hashtag #MAGA.
Today’s Democrat Party – proudly far-left, anti-Constitution, anti-capitalism, and anti-American – has demonstrated through its ruthless “cancel culture,” its violent assaults and mob harassment against conservatives, and its lawless urban rampages which the media dishonestly dismiss as “mostly peaceful protests,” that it is totalitarian to the core. Can anyone seriously doubt that, given enough power, and aided and abetted by today’s media propagandists, the left would not merely eject conservatives from their “polite” society, but would establish re-education camps and eventually even gulags for those who hold “incorrect” opinions? It has happened everywhere that totalitarianism reigns. All freedom-loving Americans must defy and vigorously denounce the left’s call to exact revenge upon their political opponents.
————————— Mark Tapson is the Shillman Journalism Fellow on Popular Culture at the David Horowitz Freedom Center. Article shared on FrontPage Mag
Tags:Mark Tapson, Frontpage Mag, The Left Goes Full-Fascist, an Enemies ListTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
Tags:In the Dark of the Night, Although Biden, projected presidential winner, by the Media, many feel, the left has stolen, the election from, President TrumpTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
Americans for Limited Government: Pfizer and BioNTech announced today they have a vaccine that is more than 90% effective in preventing COVID-19 in participants without evidence of prior SARS-CoV-2 infection in the first interim efficacy analysis. Americans for Limited Government President Rick Manning issued the following statement in reaction to the news:
“President Donald Trump was ridiculed and scoffed at by bureaucrats at the FDA when he repeatedly stated that a vaccine was nearing completion, possibly by election day.“Today’s announcement by Pfizer Corporation that they have a vaccine that is 90% effective just six days past election day is proof that the President was right. What is alarming is that it is also proof that FDA officials, who knew that the President was telling the truth, instead chose to feed the lie that a vaccine was in the far distant future.
STOCK MARKET UP BIG, VACCINE COMING SOON. REPORT 90% EFFECTIVE. SUCH GREAT NEWS!
“This is exactly the swamp that the President has been taking on, fighting back using the media as their willing allies. It is also more evidence that President Trump’s Project Warp Speed was absolutely necessary to bring treatments, tests and vaccines to markets safely and rapidly rather than bowing to the public health bureaucrats, who would rather have people die than give up control over their fiefdoms.
“As you watch the stock market soar on the Pfizer news, America needs to give President Trump the thanks for not hiding in his basement, but instead fighting the bureaucracy to allow America’s best scientists the opportunity to develop medicines and vaccines that save hundreds of thousands of lives that would have been lost to the COVID virus.”
—————————– Interview Availability: Contact Americans for Limited Government at 703-383-0880 or at media@limitgov.org.
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by Paul Jacob, Contributing Author: “America, in the aggregate, seems just as stupid as it was four years ago,” Philip Kennicott, The Washington Post’s Pulitzer Prize-winning art and architecture critic, declared over the weekend.
Last week’s election was not, Mr. Kennicott correctly concludes, “a repudiation of Trumpism.” He finds “horrifying” the fact that six million or so more Americans voted for Trump over last go-around.The problem? “White supremacy,” which he says is “existential, precognitive and pervasive”; Trumpism is its “colloquial alternative.”
“I’ll leave his policies and his politics — to the extent that he ever had policies or coherent politics — to the pundits,” Kennicott punts.
A master of mere assertion, he declares the MAGA crowd filled with “not just avowed racists who have publicly supported the president but also those who downplay the problem, or align with it for personal gain, or are simply unwilling to acknowledge its history and persistence.”
Trumpeting “our unique brand of ugliness,” Kennicott can’t see the city for the slums.
Moral uglinesses are evident here and worldwide. But the U.S. is uniquely recognized around the globe for freedom and human rights.
“Trumpism is embedded in America and can be fought only through rigorous self-discipline, through constant surveillance of the thoughts we think, the words we use and the assumptions we make,” writes Kennicott. “Now we know it not as a perverse blemish on American culture but as foundational to American culture. That’s progress.”
Not true. Not progress. But the Post scrivener does sum up progressivism’s current cultural revolution: “constant surveillance of the thoughts we think.”
He didn’t like this past election or the one four years ago. He won’t like 2022 or 2024 any better.
This is Common Sense. I’m Paul Jacob.
————————— Paul Jacob (@Common_Sense_PJ) is author of Common Sense which provides daily commentary about the issues impacting America and about the citizens who are doing something about them. He is also President of the Liberty Initiative Fund (LIFe) as well as Citizens in Charge Foundation. Jacob is a contributing author on the ARRA News Service.
Tags:Landscape, with Trumpians, Paul Jacob, Common SenseTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
by Robert Romano: In Pennsylvania, where former Vice President Joe Biden leads President Donald Trump in current counting in the race for 2020, it is still not known how many of the ballots were received after 8 p.m. on Election Day — the state law imposed deadline for submitting ballots.
Under Pennsylvania law, it states unambiguously, “No absentee ballot under this subsection shall be counted which is received in the office of the county board of elections later than eight o’clock P.M. on the day of the primary or election.”
Sadly, the Pennsylvania Supreme Court arbitrarily extended that deadline to Nov. 6 at 5 p.m., in violation of state law, and then the U.S. Supreme Court kicked the can down the road, apparently hoping that it would not matter in the presidential contest.
Here’s the problem.
The ballot deadline extension was never only going to affect the race for President — it was always going to affect every House of Representatives race in Pennsylvania, and every other local race or initiative that was on the ballot.
What a short-sighted decision by the Chief Justice John Roberts-led Supreme Court.
In the House, right now it looks like Democrats will lose by about 14 net seats based on who’s leading, down to just 219 votes, barely a majority. But in three races, Pennsylvania’s 17th Congressional District, the race is too close to call, and there’s no telling if the races for the 7th and 8th Congressional Districts, which are kind of close, were unduly impacted by this lawless action.
There is no question that the nation’s highest court should take up this case, brought by the Republican Party of Pennsylvania, which states, “Given the results of the November 3, 2020 general election, the vote in Pennsylvania may well determine the next President of the United States—and it is currently unclear whether all 67 county boards of elections are segregating late-arriving ballots. Thus, without an immediate order from this Court, RPP could lose its right to ‘a targeted remedy’ ‘if the State Supreme Court’s decision is ultimately overturned.’”
Here, the Pennsylvania GOP is referring to the response by Justice Samuel Alito to the original writ for certiorari, stating, “the Court’s denial of the motion to expedite is not a denial of a request for this Court to order that ballots received after election day be segregated so that if the State Supreme Court’s decision is ultimately overturned, a targeted remedy will be available.”
And now, Alito has ordered the Commonwealth to segregate the late mail-in and any morning after ballots ballots, noting, “neither the applicant (PA GOP) nor the Secretary has been able to verify that all boards are complying with the Secretary’s guidance, which, it is alleged, is not legally binding on them.”
And that is exactly what the Pennsylvania legislature did when it adopted the statute, which remains unamended. The Commonwealth’s Supreme Court acted lawlessly to assume the constitutional powers of the Pennsylvania legislature.
This is a straight-up “say what the law is” case for the Supreme Court with the newly seated Justice Amy Coney Barrett, who under no circumstances should recuse herself, no matter what the Washington, D.C. establishment says.
Now, it is possible Trump will lose the contest for the White House even with the late mail-ins, but the case still matters a whole lot in those House seats, which could potentially wrest control of the House away from House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) and make former Vice President Joe Biden a lame duck on day one.
The Constitution has been blatantly violated by the Pennsylvania Supreme Court and then the Supreme Court, in punting the case when it is supposed to hear “all cases, in law and equity, arising under this constitution.”
Well, the “times, places, and manner of holding elections” arises under the Constitution. The consequences of not curing this defect now will have reverberations, not just in the contest for 2020, but in every election.
The Supreme Court must act, even if it won’t change the outcome for the White House.
The case is still ripe. It could very well determine the majority in the House of Representatives, and with the Senate up in the air — and Biden threatening to pack the Supreme Court by abolishing the Senate filibuster and amending the Judiciary Act of 1869 — this case could change the course of American history.
Or, it might not change the outcome of those House races at all. But we’ll never know if illegally cast ballots, those received after 8 p.m. on Election Day, are allowed to be counted.
This comes down to whether the rule of law can be changed arbitrarily in an election. Electoral integrity begins and ends with ensuring equal protection of the laws so that the same rule, the one prescribed by the state legislature, applies to everyone. That should be the beginning and the end of the Supreme Court’s inquiry.
The late ballots must be thrown out. There is simply too much at stake. And God save America if they were not properly segregated and the court has to order a new election in Pennsylvania. This is not just about the presidency. There’s even more at stake. This could ultimately determine whether we have Democratic one-party rule or not.
———————— Robert Romano is the Vice President of Public Policy at Americans for Limited Government.
Tags:Robert Romano, Americans for Limited Government, Trump Campaign Lawsuit, Against Pennsylvania’s, Late Ballots, Could Flip, the House To the GOPTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
by Jay Valentine: Like many, I spent the last few nights waking up at 2:03 A.M., no reason, then looking at my phone for news, any news, that might be positive for President Trump. I survived on Rush, Bongino, Mark Levin. When the news continued to be ugly, I even checked in on ridiculous bloggers promising that ballots were watermarked and D.J. (our household name for a president we love) was actually launching a sting on the Deep State.
Enough already. Stop the madness.
Hey, I have a degree in statistics, and I have some level of critical thought. If there is such pessimism in my tribe, I am not going along.
So today, I started to dig into the numbers, and as I did, I fought my confirmation bias at every step.
I realized that I, like millions of others, had been numbed into despondency by the overwhelming press, media, social media push to certify President-Elect Biden. (I put that in there so you can see how repellent it is.)
Hey guys, this thing is not only not over; it is scary for Biden. I mean really scary, and most of all, the media know it. Thus, the rush to get everyone in line with the narrative that a 78-year-old, early-dementia former V.P., who could not draw a crowd larger than a dozen, just beat D.J. in a fair election.
Process that for a moment.
Start with Pennsylvania. Biden, as of this writing, is at 290 electoral votes. Pennsylvania is 20.
I read the Justice Alito opinion, and it is pretty clear that he wants the after election night at 8:00 P.M. votes separated for a reason. Biden is going to lose at the Supreme Court, and they know it. Four justices already said the Pennsylvania Supreme Court cannot adjust voting rules. A new arrival, Justice Barrett, says she is there to apply the rules in the Constitution. OK, wanna bet she does?
Remove the after 8:00 P.M. ballots, and Biden loses Pennsylvania. Biden 270.
Let’s visit Nevada. I have lots of friends in California who have condos in Nevada to evade state taxes. There are not a couple of people doing this; there are tens of thousands. Everyone knows it, and California seeks them out.
Our old pal Harry Reid knows it as well, and he apparently has them voting in droves in this election. Probably not a big D.J. constituency. Within 72 hours of the election, the Trump team found, validated over 3,500 of them. I do not suspect that Trump’s people stopped counting.
Every one of these is a ballot reduction for Biden
Nevada, as of now, is well within reach for DJ and the Trump team — particularly when the California crowd is reduced. And a few of them may testify since a false vote is a very bad thing, with jail time if convicted. Maybe a bigger story here.
Remember where we are, people. Biden is at 270 after a highly probable Supreme Court decision (read Alito and concurring opinions).
Lose Nevada, lose the election.
But wait: it gets better.
Let’s visit Wisconsin. Right now, it is 20,000 votes in Uncle Joe’s direction. Lots of stories out there, well below the Google fold, that there are way more Wisconsin votes than there are registered voters. OK, maybe the dead can vote up there — probably a Midwest thing.
Well, last night, we found that Wisconsin election clerks were told, and followed the direction, to modify mail-in ballots and fill in the blanks where witnesses left out critical info.
I am sure it was just a good customer service thing and they meant no harm. The problem is every such ballot is now toast.
There were “thousands” of such prima facie wrongful votes. Oops. Biden up 20,000 — now that number is in question. No more truckloads of votes coming in, so every ballot D.J.’s team eliminates gets President-Elect Biden one step closer to former V.P. Biden who lives in a basement. Not good here.
North Carolina. That one pretty much looks like as though it is over and D.J. won it. Fox News is rumored to call it for Trump around April 2021.
Remember where we are here. Biden is probably going to lose Pennsylvania, so if he loses even one state, even one Electoral College vote, ouch!
Either D.J. wins outright, or it goes to the House, which means that D.J. has four more years.
We’re not done yet.
Michigan. Oh, yes, the land of the “glitches” in the voting machines. Six thousand votes for Trump given to Biden in one of 47 counties where that software is used. About 150,000 votes in Biden’s favor right now.
Google the 130,000 Biden votes that showed up in the middle of the night, and you can see how the wonderful people at Google are fact-checking this “debunked” story. In fact, for fun, Google “Michigan voter fraud,” and you get literally three pages of “this was fact checked and proven to be false.” Why would Google be so assiduous?
They too see that if Amy votes with the four, Biden is one vote away from the basement.
Lawsuits in Michigan and the other states are being launched, and discovery will take place. Google will not be there.
Voter fraud is kind of like larceny. A little is OK. It is even kind of entertaining.
Dead people have been voting for a hundred years in Democratic cities. It is such a constant that one would think the Republican Party would consider a Dead Voter Outreach program to get their share.
But voter fraud on this scale is just not sustainable. It does not pass the common sense test.
We have bloggers with lots of time on their hands going through voter rolls and showing that person after person who voted in a swing state also fought in the Civil War or maybe the War of 1812. It was funny at first, but the overwhelming number now goes beyond humor and rubs our faces in it.
I think D.J. has to swing one state. Actually, one electoral vote. Not only is this thing not over, but the Biden team must be sweating bullets.
Voter fraud at scale seemed like a really cool idea until D.J. went to the mattresses. Now that he is fighting it out one voter at a time, with the Supreme Court likely to create the starting point at Biden 270, Biden has everything to lose.
Tags:Jay Valentine, Wait Just a Minute!, Some Very Good News, May Be ComingTo 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: There are two types of defeatism percolating through the GOP and the ranks of conservatives.
One is the familiar form of establishment defeatism. The election is over. Let’s concede, and move on.
And against that, the response is plain and clear. Conceding to fraud and a rigged election, listening to transparently phony calls for unity from the socialist party that has been toppling America’s Founders and burning cities, while declaring that anyone who isn’t one of them is a bigot, is not an option.
Elections are not settled by the media.
Conservatives, and all Americans, have a duty to fight for a free and fair election, and for the process that ensures that it’s free and fair.
It’s not those who refuse to concede who are endangering free and fair elections, but those who insist that when the media calls an election, then there’s nothing more to say and no further process to follow.
That’s an un-American attitude.
The conservatives fighting to verify the election and the vote are following the process. Those trying to concede to the media are violating the process and putting an unelected partisan bunch of corporations in charge of determining elections.
Fighting is American. It’s in the best traditions of America. Conceding is un-American.
But the other comes from the most passionate parts of the movement which is that there will never be another election. The country is finished. It’s all over.
That’s why, earlier, I posted my old response to Obama’s takeover from 12 years ago.
If Biden does end up taking over, it will be bad. The eight years of Obama were bad. And this would be his third term with a more radicalized party, base, and country at his back.
The Obama administration spied on political opponents, both for information purposes, Watergate style, and to generate criminal prosecutions, and it used the IRS to target them.
Take that as a starting point for any Biden administration.
It doesn’t mean that America is over. What it will mean is that there are hard times and a hard fight ahead. But that fight is only hopeless if we decide it is.
When you look at California or New York, you see massive abuses and fraud, yes, but you also see Republican parties that have largely given up, and conservatives that are animated by national issues, but pay little attention to local ones. That’s not true across the board, but there’s some truth to it.
I’ve spoken to plenty of Los Angeles conservatives in the last few weeks who had strong views on the national election, but little interest in the local elections and how they would affect them, who had no idea or interest in the Republican candidates running, or most of the measures except those that would affect them personally. Multiply that a million times and you end up with a one-party state.
It’s a two-way street.
Democrats seize enough power to demoralize Republicans, and then the Republicans do the rest of the job for them. There’s still anger and passion, but it’s not directed anywhere productive.
We can’t let that happen to America.
There will be elections. We haven’t reached the terminating line where that stops. But how soon we reach that line also depends on us.
Contesting this election is vital. If it’s lost, then things will be bad. Really bad. But they won’t be over.
They’ll only be over if we give up.
If you’re shaking your head at that, remember that there are still people in Venezuela and Iran protesting in the streets. There are still people fighting in Hong Kong, China and Russia. And as bad as it can get under socialist rule here, we still have quite a few years until it’s as bad as Europe. Never mind Venezuela.
What’s important is not giving up. Not on this election or on this country.
It’s not over.
It’s not over until we decide it is.
——————— 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, Sultanknish, Don’t Despair, FightTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
1.The prophets who said Trump would win were right. He did win. The enemy cannot prove otherwise. All we need now is one more miracle.
The second half of the prophecy—that he would serve 4 more years—is ours to claim. The only right thing to do in the face of the impossible is to believe, pray and obey.
Remember our 2020 bible verse: 2 Chronicles 20:20 “So they rose early in the morning and went out into the Wilderness of Tekoa; and as they went out, Jehoshaphat stood and said, “Hear me, O Judah and you inhabitants of Jerusalem: Believe in the Lord your God, and you shall be established; believe His prophets, and you shall prosper.” It brings hope to remember that God has tested His people this way many times before.
2. Democrats tried to use widespread fake mail in ballots to steal reelection from Abraham Lincoln and the plot was exposed. Traveling to Baltimore in the fall of 1864, Orville Wood, a merchant from Clinton County in northeastern corner New York, uncovered the scheme by Democrats to use mail in ballots to defeat Abraham Lincoln. Wood saw them passing blank papers to one another to be signed with the names of active enlisted men, wounded and dead soldiers, and officers who never existed.
Democrats were brought to trial. A New York Times reporter wrote this: “The honest electors of the state of New York have escaped an extensive and fearful fraud, a fraud that might have subverted the honest will of the people and left the state and the nation at the mercy of those who would make peace with rebellion and fellowship with traitors.” Hypocritically, the New York Times today cheers on the kind of fraud they once condemned.
But the important fact is that it was a miracle that exposed Democrats then, and I expect a miracle to expose them again.
3. A groundswell, the true source of any change in America is just beginning. What changes America are groundswell movements. Ignore FOX, NBC, ABC, CBS, and CNN. It is when the masses are moved to action that real change comes. While they congratulated Admiral Yamamoto for his success at Pearl Harbor he said: “I know the Americans. I fear all we have done is to awaken a sleeping giant and fill him with a terrible resolve.”
At first, I was deeply concerned that the initial shock of the fraud night might drain the fight out of the millions who support Trump. Now I am seeing a giant with a terrible resolve rising. The masses are not going to let this go away no matter how arrogantly Biden is paraded as president by the fake news outlets.
Tags:Mario Murillo, Ministries, Three Reasons, for Hope and Excitement in, This Impossible SituationTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
What Rep. Jim Clyburn Really Meant By “Voter Suppression” How Voting By Mail, Combined With Chronically Inaccurate Voter Rolls, Can Destroy The Foundations of Our Democracy.
Pem Schaeffer
by Pem Schaeffer: Paging Rep. Jim Clyburn (D, SC), House Majority Whip! Rep. Clyburn! Call for Rep. Jim Clyburn! Jim? Are you there, Jim?
I’ve been watching the news closely since election day, but have yet to see Rep. Jim Clyburn, (D, SC) rise to a podium and shed tears over the rampant voter suppression he saw on election day, just as his grievous concerns warned us that it would.
I wonder what happened; why isn’t “our good friend, the Honorable Representative from South Carolina,” on camera telling us how right he was in his predictions? And then at age 78, I realized I was being taught the same lesson I’ve been taught over and over and over in the past, and I still don’t learn it for good.
I watched Clyburn utter his warnings about “rampant voter suppression” assuming he was scared witless that white racist election officials all across the fruited plains would contrive to prevent eligible blacks from voting as the law allows. In retrospect, after a couple of well-placed palm shots to my own forehead, I realized I’d fallen for a classic trap; taking a comment as if it was meant in the seemingly obvious way, when it was actually meant in exactly the opposite way.
asn’t worried about legitimate votes not being cast, he was worried about illegitimate votes not being cast. And we haven’t seen him appear since election day because his fears were never realized; in fact, he may be sipping some fine whiskey with friends as they congratulate each other for how things “worked out.”
I think I can make exactly that case – that instead of suppression of legitimate votes, massive creation of illegitimate votes may well be what we have witnessed, and in all likelihood, it will impose false outcomes upon our nation.
Let me explain. I live in a small town of 21,000 in a small state of 1.3 million. In a state of this size, a town of 21,000 is bigger than most, and we are known as a “service center community” because we have things like hospitals, Wal-Marts, Lowes, and even a choice of supermarkets. Not to mention an elite, highly selective liberal arts college.
After the recent election, I decided to look up the local results, and they were overwhelmingly in favor of Left/Progressives for the most part, which is our tradition. But what really jumped out was that we have 20,700 eligible voters in a town of 21,000, according to local officials.
Anyone who has been involved in elections at more than a cursory level knows that voter registration lists (rolls,) which originate and are maintained at the municipal level, are notoriously out of date and strewn with errors. This is for many reasons, of which the most basic is that there is no robust, consistently applied, national methodology for seeing that they are accurate and up to date. The real tragedy, of course, is that this roll of voters determines who is eligible to vote, having previously registered. Of course, in most places, if you are not registered, you can do so at the polls on election day, and if you have no proof of residence or age or citizenship, you can simply sign an affidavit, and you will be given a ballot just like any long term resident of town.
What could go wrong with this system, right? Let’s start with this: in a town of 21,000, in which approx 3,000 children are in the town’s schools, or too young to enroll, 18,000 seems like a logical upper limit on eligible voters, not 20,700. There are other reasons to think the number should be even lower, but let’s use 2,500 as the number of actually ineligible voters included in the 20,700 figure reported. Even though my town did not use “Voting by Mail,” if they had, at least 2,500 illegitimate ballots would have been distributed across the municipal landscape, with completely unpredictable results, and ripe for mischief of known and unknown types. It is unknowable how many of those ballots would have been returned, and worse, how many would have been rejected, because they would have all correlated with the voter list in effect as of election day. In other words, all manner of voter fraud schemes would have been undetectable.
Now, let’s do a little extrapolation. In my town, at least 14% of the names on the rolls look to be ineligible (3,000/20,700). Close to 150 Million votes have been cast in this election so far. For purposes of discussion, let’s say there were 250 Million voters on the rolls nation-wide. I’m not sure of how many of those were being sent Vote by Mail ballots, but let’s use half as an estimate.
That would mean 125 Million Vote by Mail ballots were sent out nation-wide. I see no reason to think that the voter registration lists driving those mailings were any more or less accurate than the list in my town. That would mean that more than 17 million of those mailed out ballots were illegitimate.
And the worst part is that it is unknowable where those ballots ended up, and what ended up being done with them. But one thing is sure; in an election year where the race for President boiled down to something like a few hundred thousand contested votes, it is abundantly clear that systemically inaccurate voter registration rolls nationwide, coupled with a shotgun distribution of ballots to names on the rolls, who did not request them, and who may well no longer belong on those rolls, is an insult to the notion of election integrity.
Once again, if you think about what you just read, you can readily understand that the historic claims of “voter fraud being virtually unknown” is because in a system like this, it is in most cases unknowable from the git-go. And even if it was, the fact that ballots are “secret” and untraceable after being counted (or even worse, being falsely tallied), further corrupts election integrity.
Which is why political machines in places like Chicago, Philadelphia, and various other bastions of fixed elections have prospered for decades and decades.
And unsurprisingly, why we haven’t heard from Rep. Clyburn since election day. It looks like “our good friend from the State of South Carolina” got all the votes and more he could have possibly wanted to elect his choice for President. Voter suppression? Not on your life. Not even close, Jim.
————————– Pem Schaeffer is a retired engineer who progressed to a position in business development leadership in defense electronics. He lives and writes in Brunswick, Maine, and blogs ot The Other Side of Town.
Tags:Pem Schaeffer, A Thousand Here, A Thousand There, Pretty Soon You’re Talking, Millions of Illegitimate VotesTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
by Judd Garrett: On September 20, 1977, after a 3 year run as one of the top rated TV shows in America, the creators of the sitcom Happy Days decided to have the shows main Character Arthur “Fonzie” Fonzarelli jump a shark on water skis. That episode provided a short-term ratings bump, but then the show went from borderline great to bad quickly. From then on, the watershed moment of when anything goes from really good to bad, is referred to as “jumping the shark”.
On November 3, 2020, the United States of America officially jumped the shark. It appears to me that the best days are behind us as a nation, not because who was elected, but because of the way he was elected, and who was involved.
n 1787, at the close of the Constitutional Convention in Philadelphia, Benjamin Franklin walked out of Independence Hall, and a lady walked up to him and asked, “what have we got, a republic or a monarchy?” Franklin replied, “A republic . . . if you can keep it.” Somewhere in the back of Franklin’s mind he knew how fragile a republic actually is, and he knew at some point in the future, we couldn’t keep it, and America would jump the shark.
For all of their personal shortcomings, the founders were very brilliant men. They created an almost perfect system of government. The foundation of which relies on a balance of power between three separate bodies, the Executive, Legislative and Judicial branches. It was designed to not give any one side a disproportionate amount of power, because they knew inherently that power corrupts, and corruption is poison to a republic. Each branch was designed to keep the other branches power in check.
There was a danger in this structure, though. What happens when the three co-equal branches use their power not to keep the other branches in check but to collude with the other branches to consolidate and enhance their power over the people? The founders foresaw this potential corruption and tried to protect against it by ensuring the freedom of the press in the constitution. They knew that as long as the media was free and not controlled by the government, they would keep all three branches in check from grabbing or abusing power.
Somewhere in the last 40 years, the American media stopped being objective journalists searching for the truth and exposing corrupt politicians, to aligning themselves with individual political parties, reporting on their behalf, pushing their agendas, and even parroting their party’s political talking points. Politicians are going to lie, spin and slant. That’s their nature, but it’s up to the journalist to smack them in the face and say, “no, that’s not true.” But they must do that for all politicians, not just the ones they don’t like. If journalists are only calling out certain politicians and not others, they are spinning and slanting the truth as much as the politicians.
It’s the job of the media to be the skeptic, to question every decision politicians make. They are our voice. They have access to our leaders that the average citizen does not. So, why was it that the same media who criticized the truly peaceful protestors against government mandated lockdowns because they were potentially spreading Covid, openly cheered for the four month long riots that ran through our country that not only killed over 30, injured thousands and caused billions of dollars of damage, but also spread Covid throughout our inner-cities? Because opening the country helped the candidate they didn’t like, and the riots hurt the candidate they didn’t like. The media told us that we can’t protest lockdowns because of Covid, but we can riot in spite of Covid. Everyone in the media knows that doesn’t make sense. There’s no logic and truth to that thinking. They just continued to parrot their favored party’s talking points because it served their agenda.
Everyone in the media also knows that mail-in ballots are susceptible to fraud. Why doesn’t anyone send large sums of cash through the mail? Because there’s a good chance it would get stolen. Each vote in this election determined who gets to decide how we spend $4.5 trillion. Would anybody send $4.5 trillion of cash through the US mail? Would anyone drop $4.5 trillion dollars in a make-shift drop box on a random street corner with no security or surveillance around? Of course not. But that’s what we just did. Not only did the media not question the intelligence of exposing our election to this level of voter fraud, many actually were the defenders and cheerleaders for this fraud because they knew it would only help the candidate that they preferred. That was not their job. Their job was to ask the tough questions to ensure that the elections were fair and fraud-free.
No one in the media finds it strange that the candidate that held a half dozen 50,000+ rallies in small towns throughout Pennsylvania lost the state to the candidate who couldn’t get a hundred people to show up to any rally in Philadelphia or Pittsburgh? Not only does this not pass the smell test. It doesn’t pass the sight, see, taste or touch test. The biggest danger is how willfully on board the media is with this fraud. The same media who pushed the evidence-free fraudulent Russian Collusion hoax for two and a half years refuses to ask the most basic and obvious questions about this election?
No one in the media questioned why is it that the same people who were so afraid of Covid they couldn’t leave their houses to vote in person where everyone was socially distanced and everything that was touched was immediately sanitized, but they felt it was safe to leave their houses to drop their ballots in a drop box on the street corner that had been touched by hundreds of potentially virus ridden hands, breathed on and coughed on by passers-by.
No one in the media wondered why the Democrats and even some in the media incessantly demanded that Donald Trump accept the results of the election before the ballots had been cast, demanding that he verify a potentially fraudulent election before the election was even over, before all the facts and evidence came to light. No one candidate should be told that they must accept the results of the election under any circumstance before the election even occurred. But that was what was demanded of Trump, accept the results no matter what. It only makes sense to demand such a thing if a fraud is already in the process of being perpetrated.
In the old days, there would not need to be party-appointed poll watchers. The poll watchers would have been the journalists, the beat reporter trying to make a name for himself by exposing voter fraud. But our media has decided to look the other way, nothing to see here. There is a staggering lack of journalistic curiosity surrounding the most important aspect of our republic, insuring free and fair elections. You mean to tell me that there’s not one person in the main stream media who says, ‘why is it that the only places where tens of thousands of extra ballots for one of the candidates magically appear after the election are in battleground states where the opposing candidate is winning?’ There is no media curiosity. The media have become cowardly sell-outs.
Now, certain media outlets are calling for new legislation to ensure the integrity of future elections, after refusing to investigate the potential voter-fraud in this election. That’s like Attorney General Robert Kennedy using the power of the federal government to try to take down the mafia after the mafia hand delivered the election to John F Kennedy in 1960. No matter how hard you try, it’s very hard to scrub the blood off your hands.
In the ensuing weeks, we will hear some beautifully written speeches by our politicians littered with words and phrases like “duly-elected”, “election integrity”, “the people have spoken”, “fair and honest process”, and “call for unity”, but none of those words are at all connected to reality. Those words do not describe the abomination we just witnessed.
The powerful will always be tempted by corruption, and ultimately, it’s the media’s job to keep the powerful honest. But once the media has been corrupted, you have lost your country. And you can’t put that toothpaste back in the tube any more than I can un-watch Fonzie jumping the shark.
———————– Judd Garrett writes for Objectivity is the Objective. His most recent non-writing job was as Director of Advanced Scouting with the Dallas Cowboys. He is a frequent contributor on the topics of sports and politics to Real Clear Politics.
Tags:Judd Garrett, Jumping the SharkTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
by Bill Donohue: Catholic League president Bill Donohue comments on this week’s protests:
The difference between the pro-Trump and the pro-Biden protesters in the aftermath of the election is stark. The former were peaceful; the latter were violent.
Nothing symbolizes the difference between the protesters more than what happened on November 5th in Phoenix and Portland. In Phoenix, Trump supporters gathered outside of Arizona’s Maricopa County Elections office to pray; they did so the night before as well.
In Portland, the protesters (they were certainly anti-Trump if not necessarily pro-Biden) vandalized a Catholic church, one known for its outreach to the poor and homeless. Even Oregon Gov. Kate Brown couldn’t believe what happened. “They shattered the windows of a church that feeds Oregonians in need.”
The violence that left-wing activists engaged in has been going on all year. But this week, they kicked it up a notch.
On election night, several arrests were made in Seattle when left-wing activists took to the streets. They left nails in a roadway and destroyed property. That same night in Washington D.C., Trump supporters were stabbed near the White House and a police van was vandalized. In Minneapolis, police were attacked, fires were set, and property was damaged; fourteen were arrested for creating a riot. In Los Angeles, more than 40 people were arrested for creating havoc.
On November 4th, Portland exploded, necessitating the presence of the National Guard. Loaded rifles were taken, as were explosive devices, knives and spray-paint. That same night, left-wing protesters took over downtown Minneapolis and Interstate 94.
Also on November 4th, New York City was the scene of dozens of arrests. Fires were set, the head of the NYPD was attacked, and another officer was assaulted. Devina Singh, a crazed woman with an arrest record, spat in the face of a police officer, taunting him with obscenities.
On November 5th, a protester choked a police officer with a chain and many arrests were made.
Now contrast the Trump haters with the Trump supporters. On November 5th, they showed up in Philadelphia and Milwaukee waving American flags. In Las Vegas, 400 protesters gathered outside of Clark County Election Department blasting patriotic anthems over loud speakers while waving American flags.
Not all protesters are thugs. For the most part, conservatives are prayerful and patriotic. They do not attack the police, set fires, loot and vandalize churches. It is those on the left who act like savages, the ones that Joe Biden and Kamala Harris find it hard to condemn.
——————— Bill Donohue (@CatholicLeague) is a sociologist and president of the Catholic League.
Tags:Bill Donohue, Catholic League, Not All Protesters, Are ThugsTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
by Dick Morris President Donald Trump can still win the presidency.
Here’s how:
Only the Electoral College or the various state legislatures can declare a candidate the winner. To base this decision on network vote totals and projections and to call Biden the president-elect is irresponsible.
The recounts in Arizona, Georgia, and the other states are likely to go heavily for Trump.
Most of the likely errors or invalid votes took place on mailed in ballots. (Machine votes are harder to tamper with). Since Biden won upwards of two-thirds of mail-in votes and absentee ballots, it’s likely that most of the discarded mail ballots will be subtracted from Biden’s total.
The networks currently give Trump 214 electorate voters (270 is the victory level).
Alaska, where Trump has led by 2:1 all week and is now more than half counted will likely throw its 3 votes to Trump giving him 217.
Trump has likewise led in North Carolina (15 votes) all week and his margin of 75,000 has not diminished. He will undoubtedly carry North Carolina.
Like Alaska, the media will not call it for Trump to promote the illusion of a Biden victory. North Carolina would bring Trump’s vote to 232.
The vote count in Arizona shows Trump’s deficit shrinking from 30,000 on Friday to 18,500 on Saturday with about 100K left to count.
After Arizona (11 votes). is fully counted, it will go through a recount subject to the pro-Trump bias identified in point 2. Were he to win Arizona, he would have 243 votes.
In Georgia (16 votes), Biden leads by only 8400 votes, a margin that has been dropping.
Like Arizona, Trump may still win the count and, if not, would have a very good chance of prevailing in the recount. With Georgia, Trump would have 259 votes.
Wisconsin (10 votes) is tallied as having been won by Biden by 21,000 votes but a recanvass is in the offing. Given the facts enumerated earler, there is a very good chance Trump will carry Wisconsin. The recount process in Wisconsin is uniquely fair and transparent — a model for the nation — so Trump may well flip the state.
If he does, he will have 269 votes — one shy of victory.
Then, it comes down Pennsylvania and its 20 votes. The Supreme Court provisionally allowed ballots to be counted if they arrived before Friday, Nov. 6 and were postmarked before election day, Nov. 3, and ordered late votes to be segregated. When Justice Alito was informed that the state had not segregated the late votes, as required in the Court’s decision, Alito reaffirmed the necessity of enforcing the court order.
Joe Biden currently leads by 37,000 votes in Pennsylvania. The number of late arriving ballots likely far exceeds this total (the state has not published this information).
Justice Alioto and a Court majority may throw out the late ballots, likely delivering the state to Trump.
Additionally, for the reasons stated above, a recanvass is likely to give Trump a decisive advantage. If he wins Pennsylvania, he would have 289 votes and a victory.
Will there be a recount in Pennsylvania? The current law requires one if the margin is under 0;.5% and in Pennsylvania it likely will be slightly greater.
There are two ways to trigger a recount:
—First, the U.S. Supreme Court could order one after the vote counters so flagrantly violated Alito’s order to segregate the votes that he had to re-issue it. And remember, four Justices wanted to reconsider whether to allow late ballots entirely but the high court deadlocked 4-4. Now with Justice Barrett in the mix it may take a different view, particularly iff the presidency hangs in the balance.
—Second, Article II Section 1 of the US Constitution reads:
“Each State shall appoint, in such Manner as the Legislature thereof may direct, a Number of Electors, equal to the whole Number of Senators and Representatives to which the State may be entitled in the Congress.”
The Pennsylvania State Legislature, solidly in Republican hands (both houses) may choose to demand a recount before appointing electors. To build the case for doing so, it may hold hearings into the allegations of fraud so as to help the voters of the state understand how flagrantly their votes were mishandled.
Already, the leader of the State Senate in Pennsylvania and the Speaker of the State Assembly have held a press conference announcing their intention to “audit” the vote counting process.
So, as the great Yogi Berra said, “It ain’t over ’til the fat lady sings.”
She hasn’t.
———————— Dick Morris is former presidential advisor and political strategist. He is a regular contributor to Newsmax TV.
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Not only has Nancy Pelosi crowned Joe Biden “president-elect,” but so has Fox News. (The other “news” outlets had been crowning him for weeks.) The other night several Fox News reporters started using that term. But of course the election is not over. Rather, it is in litigation. Time has stopped. That is how the law works. Or, in the tritest of Yogi Berra’s memes, it ain’t over till it’s over.
This week the Trump campaign will presumably outline the case, by presenting evidence of electoral chicanery, that the true results of the 2020 election are not those that have been reported by the news media.
This election is over,” says former Vice President Joe Biden.
Newsflash, Joe? No, this election is most decidedly not over. In the words of Vice President Mike Pence: “It ain’t over til it’s over … and this ain’t over!”
If the president had done his job,” said Joe Biden at a CNN town hall in Moosic, Pennsylvania, on September 17, “all the people would still be alive. All the people. I’m not making this up. Just look at the data. Look at the data.”
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November 10, 2020 – Having trouble viewing this email? Open it in your browser.
Morning Rundown
Early data shows Pfizer’s vaccine is more than 90% effective: In a promising development, an initial glimpse at the data from Pfizer’s ongoing late-stage clinical trial shows that the company’s coronavirus vaccine was “found to be more than 90% effective in preventing COVID-19,” according to an early analysis that included 94 cases of COVID-19 in trial participants. “The vaccine was proven to be very efficacious, overwhelmingly,” said Pfizer CEO and Chairman Dr. Albert Bourla. Vaccine experts were also encouraged by the results as the nation faces a pandemic that’s already claimed more than 237,675 lives nationwide. “This news is really good all the way around,” Dr. Anthony Fauci told CNN. “This is something we should really feel good about.” Upon Pfizer’s vaccine development, U.S. stocks skyrocketed by more than 830 points. Still, experts and biostatisticians are not ready to declare victory just yet, as Pfizer must still demonstrate that the vaccine is safe and go through FDA approvals, which could take up to four weeks. Meanwhile, as the U.S. surpassed 10 million COVID-19 infections on Monday and reported more than 100,000 new cases for the sixth straight day — and the highest number of COVID-19 hospitalizations since July — President-elect Joe Biden warned of a “dark winter” ahead and called for all Americans to wear masks. He also announced his transition COVID-19 advisory board — a team of experts who will help him and Vice President-elect Kamala Harris shape their approach to managing the surge in infections.
Supreme Court weighs future of Obamacare: With the government in transition and new coronavirus cases surging, President Donald Trump and 18 Republican-led states on Tuesday will ask the U.S. Supreme Court to eliminate the Affordable Care Act in its entirety. Ultimately, justices must decide whether the ACA’s individual mandate, requiring Americans to have health insurance, is unconstitutional. If it is deemed unconstitutional, they will determine whether it can be severed from the rest of the law. Millions of Americans rely on the ACA for insurance as well as protections for preexisting conditions, mandates for no-cost preventive care and contraceptive services and a ban on lifetime caps for insurance payouts for those who get sick. Although Republicans have tried and failed dozens of times to repeal and replace the health care law since 2010, polls show its benefits are as popular as ever. In addition to health insurance companies urging the court to uphold the law, some one-time Republican opponents now say it should be kept on the books, but fixed. If the law is struck down, an estimated 21 million Americans would lose health insurance, according to an analysis by the Urban Institute. Protections for 54 million people with preexisting conditions could also disappear.
Health officials urge post-election partiers to get COVID-19 tests: After revelers took to the streets over the weekend to celebrate President-elect Joe Biden’s win, health officials in Philadelphia are urging people to get tested for COVID-19, even if everyone around them wore masks. “The recommendation we are making now is that if people are close to other people outside they should be tested seven days later to make sure they haven’t picked up the virus,” said Philadelphia Health Commissioner Dr. Thomas Farley. “And in the meantime, they should be staying away from other people.” On Saturday, more than 4,000 new COVID-19 cases were announced by the Pennsylvania Department of Health. Philadelphia city officials are also considering restricting activities as the numbers of COVID-19 cases rise, but they have emphasized that the biggest threat remains small private gatherings.
51-year-old woman gives birth to her granddaughter: Julie Loving, a 51-year-old woman who served as the gestational carrier for her daughter and son-in-law, gave birth to her granddaughter with her daughter, Breanna Lockwood, by her side. “It was definitely a surreal process,” Lockwood told “GMA.” “All the feelings came at once, just watching my mom go through everything and all she’s done for me and is continuing to do.” Lockwood, who struggled with infertility for two years, said her doctor told her to consider surrogacy because her uterus was unable to withstand a pregnancy. Loving volunteered right away. After Loving passed a series of tests, she underwent a successful embryo transfer on the first try in February. Her granddaughter, Briar Juliette Lockwood, arrived on Nov. 2. Now Lockwood wants other women struggling with infertility to know that there are “so many ways to become a mother.” “It’s not just pregnancy,” she said. “There’s so many ways to become a parent, whatever option you choose.”
GMA Must-Watch
This morning on “GMA,” Darius Rucker, who is co-hosting the CMA Awards alongside Reba McEntire, joins us live to talk about how the show is different due to COVID-19 and has a special performance of his hit song, “Wagon Wheel.” And the new Miss USA joins us live after being crowned the latest winner. Plus, the new Bachelorette Tayshia Adams sat down with Will Reeve to talk about the season after Clare and Dale left the show. All this and more only on “GMA.”
While President Donald Trump refuses to accept the outcome of the election, senior Republicans have backed his push for investigations, despite no evidence of voter fraud.
Here’s what we’re watching this Tuesday morning.
Trump aides fret about damage from refusal to accept loss, but GOP leaders close ranks
“There needs to be a candid conversation with the president. There is no path to victory,” one person close to Trump told NBC News. The person said Trump “deserves his day in court” but added that continuing to cast doubt on the election results “destroys his legacy.”
Many of those close to the president recognize the legal battles aren’t going to changethe outcome, but few, if any, are telling him that.
On Monday McConnell hailed Republican victories in last week’s election before saying Trump was right not to concede the presidential race.
“President Trump is 100 percent within his rights to look into allegations of irregularities and weigh his legal options,” McConnell said Monday, echoing a line used by other top Republicans in recent days.
Meantime, the head of the branch of the Justice Department that prosecutes election crimesresigned Monday hours after Attorney General William Barr issued a memo to federal prosecutors to investigate “specific allegations” of voter fraud before the results of the presidential race are certified.
Richard Pilger, who was director of the Election Crimes Branch of the DOJ, sent a note to colleagues that suggested his resignation was linked to Barr’s action.
Barr’s memo signaled a change of Justice Department policy, which had previously advised prosecutors that “overt investigative steps ordinarily should not be taken until the election in question has been concluded, its results certified, and all recounts and election contests concluded.”
Barr was not asked or directed by the president, any lawmaker, or anyone in the White House to issue this memo to federal prosecutors, according to a Department of Justice senior official. Barr, however, met with McConnell earlier Monday and did not respond to questions when he left the Kentucky senator’s office.
Follow our live blog for all the latest developments and analysis.
Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky ., did not acknowledge Biden’s win Monday, instead saying the “Constitution gives no role in this process to wealthy media corporations.” (Photo: Susan Walsh / AP)
Esper’s firing raises concerns about national security during Trump’s final days in office
Trump’s decision to abruptly fire his defense secretaryunderscores the national security concerns posed by what is shaping up to be the most volatile and uncertain presidential transition in modern American history, former officials and experts say.
Speculation is rampant inside and outside the government about whether Trump will also remove FBI Director Christopher Wray or CIA Director Gina Haspel, two experienced security hands who have displeased Trump by resisting some of his demands.
“This particular move today creates concern and uncertainty because there are already concerns about the president’s decision-making style and what he might do in the remaining days of his presidency,” Nick Rasmussen, a former head of the National Counterterrorism Center, told NBC News.
Trump appointee slow-walks Biden transition. That could delay action on the pandemic.
The head of the General Services Administration has yet to recognize the incoming Biden administration — a delay that could have consequences for the president-elect’s plan to move swiftly on the coronavirus pandemic.
More than 48 hours after media outlets projected that Joe Biden had won the election, GSA chief Emily Murphyhad not yet signed the letter of “ascertainment” — a previously mostly noncontroversial process since the passage of the Presidential Transition Act of 1963.
Signing the paperwork when a new president is elected triggers the release of millions of dollars in transition funding and allows an incoming administration access to current government officials.
With the ascertainment delayed, the Biden transition team has been prevented from meeting with officials heading Operation Warp Speed and other Trump administration coronavirus efforts.
On Monday, Biden pleaded with Americans to wear masks, kicking off his presidential transition with a message declaring the practice the most effective tool to control the Covid-19 pandemic until a vaccine is distributed.
“It doesn’t matter your party, your point of view, we can save tens of thousands of lives if everyone would just wear a mask for the next few months. Not Democrat or Republican lives, American lives,” Biden said in Wilmington, Delaware, on Monday. (Photo: Carolyn Kaster / AP)
FDA authorizes Covid-19 antibody treatment for emergency use
The move vastly expands doctors’ ability to use the antibody treatment, which is similar to one of the treatments Trump received when he was hospitalized with Covid-19.
Previously, physicians were limited to trying the drug in clinical trials.
The action “provides health care professionals on the frontline of this pandemic with another potential tool in treating Covid-19 patients,” Dr. Patrizia Cavazzoni, acting director of the FDA’s Center for Drug Evaluation and Research, said in a statement.
“We have to learn maybe how to live as neighbors:” Veteran Palestinian negotiator Saeb Erekat has died weeksafter testing positive for the coronavirus. He was 65.
Alex Trebek’s final ‘Jeopardy!’ episodes began to air the day after his death with a touching tribute.
See how Stephen Colbert, Seth Meyers, Trevor Noah, Jimmy Fallon, Jimmy Kimmel, and James Corden all react to President-elect Joe Biden’s win and President Trump’s refusal so far to concede.
From NBC’s Chuck Todd, Mark Murray, Carrie Dann and Melissa Holzberg
FIRST READ: In appeasing Trump, the GOP toys with a constitutional crisis
In 2016, Donald Trump won Michigan, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin by a combined 77,000 votes; he got 306 electoral votes; and he received a concession speech by Hillary Clinton and a White House meeting with Barack Obama 48 hours after the election.
In 2020, Joe Biden won those same three states by a combined 214,000 votes (and counting); he’s on track for an identical 306 electoral votes; and Trump, his administration and GOP leaders are still refusing to recognize the outcome.
Photo by MANDEL NGAN/AFP via Getty Images
While it’s easy to dismiss this refusal as the last gasp of Trumpism – Republicans trying to appease the president one last time before he exits the White House – it also feels close to a country stumbling into a constitutional crisis.
Consider:
The top Trump appointee at the General Services Administration has yet to recognize the incoming Biden administration, denying it transition funding and personnel access.
Attorney General William Barrissued a memo to federal prosecutors to investigate “substantial allegations” of voter fraud before the election results are certified – which led to the Justice Department’s head election-crimes prosecutor to resign in protest.
GOP Sens. David Perdue Kelly Loeffler – both likely headed to runoffs in Georgia on Jan. 5 – called for their state’s Republican secretary of state to resign for election “failures” and “mismanagement,” but didn’t cite any specifics.
And Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell recognized the Republican Party’s victories, but not Biden’s.
So far, only four Republican senators – Mitt Romney, Lisa Murkowski, Susan Collins and Ben Sasse – have congratulated Biden and recognized the election results.
That’s it.
Trump lost, but most Republicans are still acting like they’re afraid of him.
TWEET OF THE DAY: Why concessions are important
The uncalled states at publication time
Arizona: Biden is ahead by 14,746 votes, 49.4 percent to 49.0 percent (98% in) Georgia: Biden is ahead by 12,337 votes, 49.5 percent to 49.3 percent (99% in) North Carolina: Trump is ahead by 74,855 votes, 50.0 percent to 48.7 percent (98% in) Alaska: Trump is ahead by 54,598 votes, 62.2 percent to 33.6 percent (61% in)
Data Download: The numbers you need to know today
4,632,113: Joe Biden’s lead in the popular vote at the time of publication
10,196,710: The number of confirmed cases of coronavirus in the United States, per the most recent data from NBC News and health officials. (That’s 141,225 more than yesterday morning.)
240,162: The number of deaths in the United States from the virus so far. (That’s 713 more than yesterday morning.)
158.16 million: The number of coronavirus tests that have been administered in the United States so far, according to researchers at The COVID Tracking Project.
59,275: The number of people currently hospitalized with coronavirus
70 percent: The share of Republicans who say the election was not free and fair.
56: The number of days until the January 5 Senate runoffs.
71: The number of days until Inauguration Day.
Biden to speak on Obamacare as Supreme Court hears oral arguments
The U.S. Supreme Court today hears arguments in the latest challenge to the Affordable Care Act, or Obamacare.
And at 2:00 pm ET, President-elect Biden will deliver remarks on the health care law.
Georgia Runoff Watch by Ben Kamisar
Today in Runoff Watch, Georgia Republican Sens. David Perdue and Kelly Loeffler want the Georgia Secretary of State to resign, but not for any explicit reason.
The two released a joint statement Monday afternoon arguing that “Georgians are outraged” because the “management of Georgia elections has become an embarrassment for our state.”
But missing in the heated statement was any explicit accusation of any wrongdoing by Sec. Brad Raffensperger, outside of the broad claim he “failed to deliver honest and transparent elections.”
It’s a bold way to kick off the runoff (runoffs?) to come in their Senate elections, as President-elect Joe Biden’s lead in the state continues to grow, and hours after the state’s lieutenant governor told CNN he’s seen “no credible examples” of voter fraud in the state yet.
Raffensperger responded in a letter of his own, in which he said he would not resign and that the “process of reporting results has been orderly and followed the law.”
He added that it’s “unlikely” there was enough illegal voting to change the outcome of the presidential race, and he offered some advice to the senators: “As a Republican, I am concerned about Republicans keeping the U.S. Senate. I recommend that Senators Loeffler and Perdue start focusing on that.”
All options are on the table
Biden transition officials are looking at their legal options when it comes to having the General Services Administration prepare an ascertainment letter to officially begin the Biden presidential transition.
The GSA has withheld the letter that would allow the Biden team to have access to classified information, background investigations, appropriated funds to help with transition and access to federal agencies.
“We believe that it’s been very, very clear that we are the winners in this election. They have every right to be afforded access to all government services or anything else that would come traditionally as part of the transition process,” one Biden official told NBC’s Mike Memoli.
Asked what recourse the Biden team has at this point, the official said: “At this point there’s a number of levers on the table, and all options are certainly available. It’s a changing situation and certainly rather fluid. But we do have a number of options on the table that we can, we can pursue.”
Pressed if that included legal actions, the official said: “Legal action is certainly a possibility. But there are other options as well that we are considering.”
ICYMI: What ELSE is happening in the world?
Trump aides are worried behind the scenes that the president is damaging the party and his legacy.
Plus: Obamacare and qualified immunity before SCOTUS, Uber can acquire Postmates, and more…
Attorney General Bill Barr instructed U.S. prosecutors to look into any credible claims of election irregularities in their districts. A Monday letter from Barr is spawning a lot of worries that the Department of Justice (DOJ) backs President Donald Trump’s spurious allegations of voter fraud or is at least attempting to lend credence to them. And yesterday’s protest resignation of Richard Pilger, head of the DOJ branch that oversees election crimes, only added to that effect.
But Barr’s letter doesn’t give the impression that he’s trying to help Trump hijack the election. Rather, he seems to be trying to walk a very fine line and perhaps even stamp out his boss’s conspiracy claims.
There’s no simply ignoring them at this point; not just Trump but other prominent Republicans have backed these claims of fraud, despite the total lack of evidence and the sheer scale that would’ve had to take place for it to have affected the election outcome. (Three states would have to be wrong, by a lot; this isn’t a difference of a few hundred votes in one small area of one state, as with Florida in 2000.) Some listeners may never be convinced otherwise—but if anyone is to be, an inquiry blessed by Trump’s top cop finding no evidence for Trump’s claims is probably about the best there is to offer.
Sponsor Content
Provided these fraud claims are as bunk as they seem, then this is the best way to put them to rest.
Note that Barr isn’t ordering a needle-in-a-haystack search, nor does his letter suggest that the DOJ expects to find anything. Addressed to U.S. attorneys, the assistant attorneys general of DOJ’s criminal, civil rights, and national security division, and the director of the FBI, the letter authorizes inquiries into “substantial allegations of voting and vote tabulation irregularities prior to the certification of elections in your jurisdiction in certain cases.”
That substantial there seems to be giving people the creeps, with its potential to imply endorsement of the allegations. But substantial does not mean substantiated, and there have been a substantial number of allegations from the president and his allies, claiming a substantial interference effort in the U.S. election that would have substantial implications. It’s a weaselly word, perhaps, but not exactly wrong.
Combined with the rest of Barr’s letter, I see no reason to read too much into it. His next sentence tells U.S. prosecutors to conduct inquiries “if”—if—”there are clear and apparently-credible allegations of irregularities that, if true, could potentially impact the outcome of a federal election in an individual State.”
“While it is imperative that credible allegations be addressed in a timely and effective manner,” Barr continues, “it is equally imperative that Department personnel exercise appropriate caution and maintain the Department’s absolute commitment to fairness, neutrality and non-partisanship.”
A bit down the page Barr stresses again that “while serious allegations should be handled with great care, specious, speculative, fanciful or far-fetched claims should not be a basis for initiating federal inquiries.”
And “nothing here should be taken as any indication that the Department has concluded that voting irregularities have impacted the outcome of any election,” Barr writes. He says he is offering this “authority and guidance to emphasize the need to timely and appropriately address allegations of voting irregularities so that all of the American people … can have full confidence in the results of our elections.”
Isn’t that what we want? Trump’s claims can’t be unheard by the many people who have heard them. Many people seem to believe them. No amount of media reporting otherwise—even by Fox News—is going to change their minds. Some amount of official attention to this is going to have to happen, and Barr’s response seems measured and proportionate.
Fox News just cut away from @PressSec, saying the network could not in good conscience continue to air her false claims, for which she has provided no supporting evidence.
Even Trump’s people are dissatisfied…
“This is not what some of us wanted. This is not what I wanted,” a senior Trump campaign official told The Daily Beast. “This will give the president [and others] something to play with for a while, but until Bill Barr actually puts up or shuts up, we’re still where we [have been].”
FREE MINDS
The Supreme Court is considering Brownback v. King, a case involving qualified immunity for police officers. Here’s how it started:
Twenty-one-year-old college student James King was walking between his summer jobs one afternoon. On his walk, he was approached by two plain-clothes officers, Douglas Brownback and Todd Allen, who were assigned to an FBI fugitive task force in Grand Rapids, Michigan. Brownback and Allen were on the lookout for a home invasion suspect. They did not have a clear or recent picture of the suspect, but they knew he was a 26-year-old white male, between 5-feet-10-inches and 6-feet-3-inches tall, who wore glasses, and apparently bought soda from the same gas station around the same time every day. Unfortunately for King, he fit the general description and was walking near the gas station, so Brownback and Allen decided to stop him.
While King at first acquiesced to the stop after spying badges hanging around the officers’ necks, when the officers took his wallet from his pocket, King asked if he was being mugged and tried to run away. The officers tackled him to the ground, and when King put up a struggle, they choked him and punched him repeatedly in the head, causing one onlooker to tell the 911 operator that the officers were “gonna kill this man.” As it turns out, King wasn’t the suspect. And when the state of Michigan nevertheless prosecuted King for resisting arrest, a jury acquitted him of all charges.
“While the issues raised by Brownback v. King may seem abstruse, the implications for King are clear: If the Court decides the 6th Circuit got it wrong, he will not be allowed even to try holding Allen and Brownback accountable for appalling conduct—conduct that the appeals court said a jury could reasonably decide violated his Fourth Amendment rights,” explainsReason‘s Jacob Sullum. “According to the government, that is the outcome demanded by a law Congress passed to help victims of government abuse.”
FREE MARKETS
SCOTUS today will hear oral arguments in California v. Texas, a case challenging the Affordable Care Act (ACA). The case turns on three questions, including a question of whether plaintiffs even have standing to challenge the ACA’s individual mandate—which penalized people for not having health insurance—now that there’s no financial penalty for refusing to comply. From Jonathan Adler at The Volokh Conspiracy:
A threshold issue in California v. Texas, the Affordable Care Act case to be argued on Tuesday, is whether any of the plaintiffs have standing to challenge the so-called “individual mandate.” This is a serious question because in 2017 Congress eliminated the financial penalty that had been used to enforce the mandate. As originally enacted in 2010, the ACA instructed Americans to obtain qualifying health insurance, and threatened to impose a tax penalty on those who failed to comply. Now, however, the instruction remains in the U.S. Code, but the financial penalty for noncompliance is gone.
Ordinarily, plaintiffs who seek to challenge a governmental action must allege that they will suffer a cognizable injury from the government imposition. So, for instance, an oil refinery challenging an environmental regulation would allege that they must spend money installing mandated pollution control equipment or face enforcement actions, backed by fines and other penalties. This injury requirement is rooted in Article III of the Constitution. As such, the Supreme Court has held, if a plaintiff cannot allege a sufficient injury, federal courts have no power to hear their case.
The lack of a penalty to enforce the individual mandate would seem to defeat any claim of standing on behalf of the plaintiffs. Yet the lower courts (and the Department of Justice) have acquiesced to their standing claims.
• “The Trump White House on Monday instructed senior government leaders to block cooperation with President-elect Joe Biden’s transition team, escalating a standoff that threatens to impede the transfer of power and prompting the Biden team to consider legal action,” The Washington Postreports.
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.
Brian Riedl joined Reason to discuss Trump’s fiscal record and Biden’s wish list, how bipartisanship is just another word for more spending, and why even a divided government can’t stop the red ink from flowing anymore.
“Five weeks after the deadline, no federal bailout has materialized, and given the apparent results of the national election, there is no reason to expect one, either.”
By Seth Barron New York Post November 10, 2020
Adapted from City Journal
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 later today 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. Tomorrow at 3:00 p.m. EST, 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.
In a conversation recorded just before Election Day, Bruno Maçães joins Brian Anderson to discuss his striking vision of America’s future. Maçães’s new book is History Has Begun: The Birth of a New America.
Manhattan Institute is a think tank whose mission is to develop and disseminate new ideas that foster greater economic choice and individual responsibility.
52 Vanderbilt Ave. New York, NY 10017
(212) 599-7000
Fox News, MAGA’s former favorite network, has been in the crosshairs this past week. Dishonest post-election coverage coupled with the owner’s wife screaming “WE DID IT” in response to a Biden victory … MORE
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REALCLEARPOLITICS MORNING NOTE
11/10/2020
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Carl Cannon’s Morning Note
COVID Plan; Vaccine Timing; Semper Fi
By Carl M. Cannon on Nov 10, 2020 10:06 am
Good morning, it’s Tuesday, Nov. 10, 2020. Election Day was a week ago, but it seems like a month, doesn’t it? In yesterday’s newsletter, I wrote about Rick Perry’s infamous “Oops” moment. On this date in 2011, Perry’s damage control efforts began in earnest, starting with an appearance on NBC’s “Today” show, where co-anchor Ann Curry asked if he planned to stop debating — or get out of the GOP presidential race altogether.
Texas’ governor responded by dismissing the very thought of quitting. Invoking the spirit of the United States Marine Corps, which was celebrating its 236th birthday that day, Perry said, “If there’s a day to stay in the fight,” he added, “this is it.”
In this case, Gov. Perry had his facts right. The U.S. Marines were indeed commissioned on this date by the Second Continental Congress, meeting in Philadelphia, in an order drafted by John Adams. “Resolved, that two battalions of marines be raised,” the Nov. 10, 1775 order began. The officers and enlisted men must be “good seamen,” it continued, and would be “distinguished by the names of the first and second battalions of American Marines.”
I’ll have more on this storied service branch — and how politicians talk about it — 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, columnists, and contributors, including the following:
* * *
Biden Outlines Familiar Path Forward on COVID. Susan Crabtree recaps the presumed president-elect’s plans.
WH Rips Post-Election Timing on Vaccine. Many on the president’s team felt cheated that the COVID-19 announcement came six days too late to help him at the polls, Philip Wegmann reports.
Media Should Not Have Called This Election. Andy Puzder argues that if the nation is to be unified under a Biden presidency, the mainstream press must investigate, not dismiss, charges of voting irregularities.
Post-Trump Reforms Must Not Serve Partisan Interests. Nick Troiano and Ron Fournier explain how sensible reforms would be politically advantageous for both Republicans and Democrats.
Election Week 2020, as Told Through Its Memes. At RealClearLife, Logan Mahan takes readers on an Internet journey.
China’s Fast Rebound Should Make Investors Bullish. At RealClearMarkets, Ken Fisher spotlights evidence that, COVID headwinds or not, economic gains can return to the U.S., Europe and beyond.
California’s Consumer Protections May Be a National Burden. Also at RCM, Andrew Wilford warns that a new law placing significant compliance burdens on businesses will ripple well past state borders.
* * *
Ronald Reagan served stateside during the Second Word War — and in the U.S. Army, not the Marine Corps — so he seems an unlikely source for a famous line attributed to him. “Some people spend an entire lifetime wondering if they’ve made a difference,” it begins. “The Marines don’t have that problem.” It’s an evocative sentiment, despite being an old saw, not an actual Reagan quotation. Nonetheless, one finds it online (the Internet is like that), in an old Donald Trump tweet, and even in pro-military curio shops.
As president, Reagan did not stint in his praise of the U.S. Marines, as evidenced by a Rose Garden ceremony on this date in 1986.
“Whenever America has called, the ‘Few and the Proud’ have been there, in places with names like Belleau Wood and the Argonne Forest, Guadalcanal, Saipan, Okinawa, the Chosin Reservoir, Khe Sanh, and Grenada,” Reagan said that day. “So, yes, whether raising the flag over Iwo Jima or in the daily duty of guarding our embassies around the world, the Marine Corps spirit has been an inspiration to generations of Americans.”
If you listened closely to the commander-in-chief that day, however, one couldn’t help but think about the devastating 1983 attack on the Marine barracks in Beirut. President Reagan mentioned Grenada, a small Caribbean island liberated from communists (who were being aided by Cuban infiltrators) in 1983, at Reagan’s direction. But he didn’t mention Lebanon, where 241 U.S. servicemen, almost all of them Marines, had been killed on his watch only one day after the Grenada invasion. Reagan certainly hadn’t forgotten it. In his autobiography, he referred to it as “the saddest day of my presidency, perhaps the saddest day of my life.”
My point here is that all of us, even Marines, look back and ponder if the path we’ve chosen “has made a difference.” It’s not a sign of weakness to weigh our choices. It’s human nature. It’s also a lifelong process. The U.S. Marines were among the first sent to Vietnam, and were the last out. Many of them wondered whether it had been worth it; certainly, the families who have loved ones’ names on the wall at the Vietnam Veterans Memorial ask themselves the same thing.
Speaking of that monument, Nov. 10 is also the anniversary of the day in 1982 when it was first opened to the public. The design by 21-year-old Maya Lin was highly contentious at first. Vietnam veteran James H. Webb Jr., a decorated combat Marine, took one look at it and pronounced it “a nihilist slab of stone.” It was, said the future Virginia senator and secretary of the Navy, an anti-war statement — “Jane Fonda’s wall.” Ultimately Webb and others were mollified by the inclusion of three traditional statues of fighting men at the site. What really won critics over, however, was the overwhelming public response to the place, which vets themselves respectfully took to calling “the Wall.” Etched upon the polished black granite are the names of more than 58,000 members of the armed forces killed in Vietnam, or who died later from wounds inflicted there. It is simultaneously a tribute to patriotic sacrifice and a powerful statement in opposition to nation-states solving their differences by going to war.
An organization preparing “civil resistance” to oppose President Trump’s legal election challenges told supporters to “amplify” GOP and corporate voices that have already acquiesced to a Joe Biden win, as part of a strategy to establish Biden’s claim of election victory as a fait accompli.
The group, which calls itself “Hold The Line,” is organized around a document for planned “Civil resistance” in the event President Trump should refuse to vacate office. Its lead author, Hardy Merriman, is the president of the International Center on Nonviolent Conflict (ICNC), and specializes in training activists to oust governments abroad, having done so most notably in the Arab Spring protests that brought the Islamist Muslim Brotherhood to power in Egypt.
“Mexican elections are cleaner than the one that’s still unfolding in the United States,” the Center’s Senior Analyst for Strategy J Michael Waller writes in American Greatness.
“One Mexican election authority is aghast at the fraud he has seen among Democrats in the 2020 election.
“‘The fraud I have seen in Michigan, Pennsylvania, Georgia, and some other states is so evident,’ he said on condition of anonymity, that ‘it rivals the worst of what we have had in Mexico.’
Yesterday, President Trump fired Secretary of Defense Mark Esper. One of several reasons was likely determinative – and must not be repeated by his interim successor.
Last June, as Antifa and the Black Lives Matter organization were rioting in cities across the country, Mr. Trump entertained the idea of invoking the Insurrection Act to restore order with federalized National Guard and perhaps active duty military units. Secretary Esper publicly opposed taking such a step.
The summer’s Marxist revolutionaries are now poised to build on the chaos they previously caused in the hope of driving Donald Trump from office and driving Joe Biden further to the left. Mr. Trump must have a Secretary of Defense and Joint Chiefs of Staff who will execute lawful orders to disperse those who seek not just the end of this presidency, but the end of our constitutional Republic.
This is Frank Gaffney.
GRANT NEWSHAM, Senior Fellow, Center for Security Policy, Senior Research Fellow at Japan Forum for Strategic Studies:
The United States’ relationship with the Chinese Communist Party
What would a Biden administration’s approach to China look like?
Potential election fraud in South Korea
What is the “quad”?
GORDON CHANG, The Daily Beast contributor, Author of The Coming Collapse of China and Nuclear Showdown: North Korea Takes on the World, Latest book: Losing South Korea (2019):
The team Joe Biden is assembling to handle China
China’s history of testing new US presidents
How would the United States’ alliances change with a Biden presidency?
KEVIN FREEMAN, Senior Fellow at the Center for Security Policy, Host of Economic War Room on TheBlaze TV, Author of “Game Plan” and “Secret Weapon”:
Evidence of voter fraud in the presidential election
Kevin’s initiative to expose voter fraud in the United States
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AMERICAN INSTITUTE FOR ECONOMIC RESEARCH
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November 10, 2020
It Was a Mistake to Close Schools, UK Study Concedes
By Jeffrey A. Tucker | “In nine months of this hell, one might suppose there would have been a clear test of whether and to what extent severe outcomes from catching the virus were really associated with school attendance. It has finally arrived,…
By Richard M. Ebeling | “Politics becomes a life and death struggle, a fight to the finish, since the winning side with the majority upper hand is able to impose and enforce its views and values on all in society. Only by limiting government to…
For Better Health and a Stronger Economy, Don’t Lock…
By Benjamin Powell | “Instead of following Europe into a second round of lockdowns, the United States should follow the advice of the top scientists and medical experts who have signed the Great Barrington Declaration. They advise avoiding…
Sweden’s “Dry Tinder” Accounts for Many Covid-19-deaths
By Jonas Herby | “People have been criticizing Sweden’s health and elder care, but the failures of the Covid-19 period are in large part a reflection of the successes during the runup. Swedes did a great job in the two-year runup to March 2020 and…
By Ethan Yang | “Communism and big government ideologies more generally have made the lethal promise that nature can bend to the will of man. That human nature, the laws of economics, and basic political science are merely suggestions.
By Amelia Janaskie | In 2020, most countries in the world locked down their societies with the goal of controlling the Covid-19 pandemic. There were some outliers. Sweden, Belarus, Tanzania, and some US states deployed little in the way of…
Soft, luxurious, and elegant, here is the official AIER scarf. 80% silk and 20% wool, modeled on the Harwood tie. It’s beautifully printed, hinting of the best of the old world and the new. Dimensions: five feet by seven inches.
Jeffrey Tucker is well known as the author of many informative and beloved articles and books on the subject of human freedom. Now he’s turned his attention to the most shocking and widespread violation of human freedom in our times: the authoritarian lockdown of society on the pretense that it is necessary in the face of a novel virus.
Learning from the experts, Jeffrey Tucker has researched this subject from every angle. In this book, Tucker lays out the history, politics, economics, and science relevant to the coronavirus response. The result is clear: there is no justification for the lockdowns.
On the menu today, another serving of what you need to know, regardless of whether or not it’s what you want to hear. First, what is and what is not happening in the presidential transition, and what part of the transition needs President Trump’s approval before it can begin; in Michigan, a Trump campaign lawyer forgets required parts of a filing for appeal, and a separate lawsuits seeks a re-vote in Detroit; and the rapidly approaching deadlines for certifications of the state votes.
America’s Two Diverging Post-Election Tracks
One week after Election Day, the United States is running along two parallel tracks that are starting to diverge.
In one country, President-elect Joe Biden is going about the work of a presidential transition in Wilmington. All major media organizations have projected that Biden has won at least 279 electoral votes and is leading by five-figure margins in Arizona and Georgia. Biden named a task force for the coronavirus — which included the eyebrow-raising selection of Dr. Ezekiel Emanuel, who once wrote that “living too long is also a loss” … READ MORE
“Makes an original and compelling case for nationalism . . . A fascinating, erudite—and much-needed—defense of a hallowed idea unfairly under current attack.” — Victor Davis Hanson
LA Police Will Stop Responding To Traffic Collisions and Downsize Homicide Unit During Crimewave
Even though homicides have spiked 25% in LA this year, the Los Angeles Police Department will be downsizing its homicide unit and will no longer respond to traffic collisions. The LAPD will also be cutting their air support, robbery, and gang and narcotics units. This is the result of $150 million dollars in budget cuts made by the LA City Council in July, at the height of the “Defund the Police” movement on the Left.
“The Pentagon’s acting policy chief resigned on Tuesday after falling out of favor with the White House, raising fears of a post-election purge at the Defense Department,” Politico reports.
“The departure of James Anderson, the acting undersecretary of defense for policy, potentially paves the way for Anthony Tata, President Trump’s controversial nominee for the top policy job who was pulled from consideration due to Islamophobic tweets, to take over the policy shop.”
President Trump and his top allies pressured Sens. Kelly Loeffler (R-GA) and David Perdue (R-GA) to denounce Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger (R) “lest he tweet a negative word about them and risk divorcing them from his base ahead of the consequential runoff,” the Atlanta Journal Constitution reports.
“And shortly after, Trump and some of his inner circle started tweeting attacks at Raffensperger, who was already unpopular with many in the Georgia GOP base long before Tuesday’s vote.”
Sen. Joe Manchin (D-WV) told Fox News that if Democrats are able to win control of the Senate, he will not back his party’s calls to pack the Supreme Court, eliminate the filibuster rule nor any other “crazy stuff” they may intend to put forward under a Biden presidency.
Brookings: “The stark economic rift that Brookings Metro documented after Donald Trump’s shocking 2016 victory has grown even wider. In 2016, we wrote that the 2,584 counties that Trump won generated just 36% of the country’s economic output, whereas the 472 counties Hillary Clinton carried equated to almost two-thirds of the nation’s aggregate economy.”
“A similar analysis for last week’s election shows these trends continuing, albeit with a different political outcome. This time, Biden’s winning base in 477 counties encompasses fully 70% of America’s economic activity, while Trump’s losing base of 2,497 counties represents just 29% of the economy. (Votes are still outstanding in 110 mostly low-output counties, and this piece will be updated as new data is reported.)”
James Hohmann: “Perhaps as consequential as President Trump firing Defense Secretary Mark Esper via tweet on Monday, which has been widely expected for months, was the hiring of Michael Ellis to be the National Security Agency’s general counsel.”
“As one of the most controversial staffers in the White House over the past four years, Ellis has shown himself to be as much a staunch Trump loyalist as anyone else in the administration. But his new job means that he will no longer be a political appointee. Instead, as a civilian member of the senior executive service, he gets protections that will make it quite difficult for President-elect Joe Biden to fire him.”
“Burrowing down into what Trump derides as “the deep state” will give Ellis, a former Republican campaign operative, a powerful platform from which he could seek to complicate or undermine the incoming Democratic administration’s agenda. This is a preview of the sort of behavior from Trump that many on Biden’s transition team expect, and fear, during the lame-duck president’s final 71 days in power, even as he refuses to concede defeat.”
South Dakota Gov. Kristi Noem (R) has enthusiastically taken up President Trump’s efforts to contest the results of the presidential election, asking for online donations to “help us bring it home for the president,” but it appears the donations are set to flow into her own reelection account, NBC News reports.
Sen. Kelly Loeffler (R-GA) may have taken advantage of a loophole in President Trump’s tax bill to fully write off the cost of a private jet she bought to use on the campaign trail, Salon reports.
“Vice President Mike Pence is planning to travel to Sanibel, Florida, on Tuesday — a regular vacation spot for his family — as President Trump fights to try to reverse his re-election defeat,” Bloomberg reports.
“Trump has mounted legal and public relations efforts in four states to try to sow doubt on the election outcome and throw out ballots in order to potentially swing the result in his favor. He has claimed without evidence that Joe Biden benefited from illegal votes. Some of Trump’s allies have noted that Pence has been largely absent from the effort, beyond supportive tweets.”
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Washington Post: “Only a smattering of Republican senators have acknowledged Biden’s victory, and there has been little coaxing on the part of senior GOP lawmakers to help Trump come to terms with his loss. Some said there is value in ensuring the integrity of this year’s results, while others described a chaotic and scattershot operation that they hoped would eventually push Trump to cooperate in a peaceful transfer of power.”
Said one senior Republican official: “What is the downside for humoring him for this little bit of time? No one seriously thinks the results will change. He went golfing this weekend. It’s not like he’s plotting how to prevent Joe Biden from taking power on 20 January. He’s tweeting about filing some lawsuits, those lawsuits will fail, then he’ll tweet some more about how the election was stolen, and then he’ll leave.”
Sen. Chris Coons (D-DE) told CNN that some of his Republican colleagues have said to him in private to “please convey my well wishes to the President-Elect, but I can’t say that publicly yet.”
“As president, Donald Trump selectively revealed highly classified information to attack his adversaries, gain political advantage and to impress or intimidate foreign governments, in some cases jeopardizing U.S. intelligence capabilities. As an ex-president, there’s every reason to worry he will do the same, thus posing a unique national security dilemma for the Biden administration,” the Washington Post reports.
“All presidents exit the office with valuable national secrets in their heads, including the procedures for launching nuclear weapons, intelligence-gathering capabilities — including assets deep inside foreign governments — and the development of new and advanced weapon systems.”
“But no new president has ever had to fear that his predecessor might expose the nation’s secrets as President-elect Joe Biden must with Trump, current and former officials said. Not only does Trump have a history of disclosures, he checks the boxes of a classic counterintelligence risk: He is deeply in debt and angry at the U.S. government, particularly what he describes as the ‘deep state’ conspiracy that he believes tried to stop him from winning the White House in 2016 and what he falsely claims is an illegal effort to rob him of reelection.”
“One of publishing’s most thriving genres of the past four years, books about President Donald Trump, is not going to end when he leaves office,” the AP reports.
“Expect detailed condemnations of the 45th president’s actions and rhetoric, from journalists and former associates, and also flattering accounts from White House allies and pro-Trump pundits. And there might well be a book from Trump himself, who received more than 70 million votes even as he became the first president in nearly 30 years to be defeated after one term.”
Looking back at the presidential election, Trump voters overwhelmingly say they voted for the president, while a sizable number of Biden supporters admit they were voting against Trump rather than for the former vice president.
The Rasmussen Reports Immigration Index for the week of November 1-5, 2020 has fallen to 98.5 from 101.8 the week before, suggesting that prospective President Biden may be at odds with voters if he pursues many of his proposed immigration policies.
Update (2140ET) : In response to AG Barr’s decision, NYTimes reports that Richard Pilger – who oversees voter fraud investigations – has quit: “Having familiarized myself with the new policy and its ramifications… I must regretfully…
Trump campaign files lawsuit in Pennsylvania Ohio Attorney General has joined a bid to ask the US Supreme Court to toss the Pennsylvania Supreme Court’s late-October ruling allowing late ballots to be counted. Two Georgia GOP Senators…
Authored by Pepe Escobar via The Asia Times, Biden is on a double precipice of the worst-ever economic depression coupled with imminent explosions of social rage… The massive psyops is ongoing. Everyone familiar with the Transition…
Authored by Simon Black via SovereignMan.com, On September 18 of the year 96 AD, a fairly obscure and elderly politician named Marcus Cocceius Nerva was proclaimed Emperor of Rome by the Senate. Rome was in chaos at the time; the empire…
Although you probably won’t read much about it in the New York Times or Washington Post, support for President Trump pressing ahead with demands for recounts, or otherwise contesting the outcome of last week’s election, appears to be…
Authored by Jack Phillips via The Epoch Times, As the campaign for Joe Biden attempts to push the General Services Administration (GSA) to approve a transfer of power, the agency said that it has not made an assessment of the situation.
Bill Barr BREAKING TONIGHT: US Attorney General Bill Barr authorized federal prosecutors to pursue “substantial allegations” of voting irregularities before the 2020 presidential election is… Read more…
Father Chad Ripperger Father Chad Ripperger is a respected exorcist in the Catholic Church. The good Father is asking Christians to recite this prayer in… Read more…
What a difference a day makes. Joe Biden and the corrupt Marxist machine is trying to steal Pennsylvania with illegal ballot harvesting and massive midnight… Read more…
In yet another shining example of the mental state of the left, a huge crowd of Joe Biden supporters took turns violently attacking a pillow… Read more…
Michigan Attorney General Dana Nessel sent a ‘cease and desist’ letter to Big League Politics about their exclusive content #DetroitLeaks that outlined poll worker training… Read more…
A totally under-the-radar and likely illegal Democratic absentee ballot-harvesting type of an operation was quietly executed in Georgia last week after Election Day, which may… Read more…
After three reported instances where votes were moved from Republicans to Democrats and another instance where votes disappeared, there is now much concern with the… Read more…
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In the following Hoover Q&A, former Senator Orrin Hatch (R-UT) and Hoover Institution Research Fellow David Davenport discuss “Commonsense Solutions to Our Civics Crisis,” a newly released Hatch Center special report authored by Davenport.
Contrary to popular view, cyberattacks alone are rarely exercises of constitutional war powers—and they might never be. They are often instead best understood as exercises of other powers pertaining to nonwar military, foreign affairs, intelligence, and foreign commerce, for example. Although this more fine-grained, fact-specific conception of cyberattacks leaves room for broad executive leeway in some contexts, it also contains a strong constitutional basis for legislative regulation of cyber operations.
Every year, more than a million immigrants arrive in America, many choosing to take an oath of citizenship. This podcast finds out why, with in-depth guest interviews, introducing you to some of the incredible people who’ve settled in the United States. Your host is Tim Kane, the JP Conte Research Fellow in Immigration Studies at the Hoover Institution at Stanford University.
The academic achievement gap between black and white students has proven resistant to most educational policy changes. Some say that educational expenditures explain the gap, but is that true?
Not long ago, a Republican-controlled Senate blocked most of a Democratic president’s nominations to federal courts and refused to consider his choice to fill a vacancy on the Supreme Court.
[Subscription Required] President Trump’s refusal to accept the presidential election results is being reinforced in pockets of denial nationwide, but the anger continues to fall short of a coherent resistance movement that would threaten to overturn the vote.
COVID ‘CONVEYOR BELT’ — A generation of U.S. kids is in the midst of what educators worry will amount to a largely lost school year. Will they be ready for the next grade?
It’s all but certain that Joe Biden will become the 46th president of the United States. Down the ballot, though, Democrats didn’t fare as well. They lost seats in the House. And Republicans appear poised to hold onto the Senate, provided they win at least one of two upcoming runoff elections in Georgia in January.
Alan Abramowitz, David Brady, and Keena Lipsitz discuss the 2020 election.
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.