Good morning! Here is your news briefing for Friday November 13, 2020
THE DAILY SIGNAL
November 13 2020
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Happy Friday from Washington, where President Trump may turn out to be like a tragic hero in a Hollywood Western. Victor Davis Hanson explains why. On the podcast, Heritage Foundation scholar Ryan T. Anderson unpacks a Supreme Court case that could determine foster parents’ religious freedom. Plus: celebrating a little-known document that foreshadowed America’s founding; what the election drama has taught us; and the media’s brazen role in the results. Five years ago today, a cell Islamic State cell stages a string of terrorist attacks across Paris, killing 131 and injuring over 400. |
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THE EPOCH TIMES
NOVEMBER 13, 2020 READ IN BROWSER
Red Rock Secured—COVID-19 continues to send shockwaves throughout the stock market, your retirement is more fragile than ever… Protect your money with the #1 Retirement Playbook We sincerely hope you have been enjoying the Morning Brief and Breaking News emails we have been sending you! Like most people, during the US election, you likely cannot get real news through the media. To help keep you informed during these critical times, we would like to offer you a special invitation: Subscribe to The Epoch Times for 4 months for just $1: NOTE: This is our lowest priced offer ever, and it is available for a very limited time. Offer Ends Soon Cancel anytime “I pay no attention whatever to anybody’s praise or blame. I simply follow my own feelings.” WOLFGANG AMADEUS MOZART Good morning,I am glad to share with you that The Epoch Times’ mobile app is currently the No. 1 downloaded app on the Apple App store in the Magazines & Newspapers category.This is something we couldn’t have done without you, our readers! Thank you. “People ignore the fact that social problems are caused by unleashing the evil side of man. As they create more and more laws, ignoring the crux of the matter, a vicious cycle is formed, and society begins its step-by-step march toward totalitarianism.” Let’s face it: There’s a lot to worry about these days if you hope to protect your hard-earned savings and retire comfortably.The U.S. has entered a red zone of debt that threatens to worsen along with the pandemic and experts warn your retirement could be at SERIOUS risk.Goldman Sachs has identified one asset class that deems virus-resistant: Gold. Gold dramatically outperforms other safe havens in 2020 and has officially become, “the currency of last resort.”Convert vulnerable assets into pandemic-proof gold & silver for a worry-free retirement. Free Copy: #1 Retirement Playbook Election 2020: The Art of the Steal A coup d’état is taking place in America right now. Elected officials in this country are selected by the citizens at the ballot box, not by fiat based on the predilections of… Read more Biden Is Wrong: A $15 Minimum Wage Would Hurt Far More People Than It Would Help Presidential nominee Joe Biden wants to raise the minimum wage to $15 per hour. Biden says that all workers should be able to earn a living wage. Read more The Epoch Times Election Map:The Most Accurate, Unbiased Election Map Available, With Minute-by-Minute Updates ‘Joule fraction’, ‘Twin-crystal’, ‘Watch pocket’, ‘Catskills resort area’, ‘Vatican vestment’, ‘Adds juices’, ‘Red giant in Cetus’, and ‘Hard to hear, perhaps’ are some of the clues in this crossword puzzle. During his 2020 election monitoring project, Dr. Robert Epstein found stark data showing Google election bias, he says, and he’s only just started to pore through all the data that was collected. Copyright © 2020 The Epoch Times, All rights reserved. You are receiving this email because you opted in to receive newsletter communications from The Epoch Times. Our mailing address is: The Epoch Times 229 W 28th St, Fl.5
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AXIOS
Axios AM
☕ It’s Friday the 13th! Today’s Smart Brevity™ count: 1,078 words … 4 minutes.
🗳️ 3 realities for President Trump:
- CNN and NBC joined Fox and AP in calling Arizona for President-elect Biden. The two uncalled states, Georgia and North Carolina, together couldn’t flip the winner.
- China — after at first holding back, along with Russia — congratulated Biden and Vice President-elect Harris.
- The U.S. cybersecurity agency (part of Homeland Security) said: “The November 3rd election was the most secure in American history. … There is no evidence that any voting system deleted or lost votes, changed votes, or was in any way compromised.” (Statement.)
Illustration: Eniola Odetunde/Axios
With political polls looking close to useless, newsrooms are increasingly turning to internet trends, demographics and local news in an effort to crack America’s baffling political code, Axios’ Sara Fischer writes.
- Why it matters: This election proved that polls aren’t the only way to measure public opinion trends. Other measures, like social media, may give us a window into enthusiasm among populations that polls are missing.
- It’s “well past the time to start realizing that what people say on Facebook and in comments sections is what they actually mean,” Ben Collins, a reporter on the “dystopia” beat for NBC News, tells Axios.
Newsrooms are investing more heavily in coverage of social media and internet trends as a way to observe political sentiment from a wider group of people.
- News executives told Axios they also plan to double down on investments in local reporting, to better understand political momentum in battlegrounds.
- NPR plans to expand its collaborative coverage with local member stations, executives told Axios.
Illustration: Aïda Amer/Axios
A host of alarming new signs suggest that the U.S. economy is on track to deteriorate even faster than had been forecast. A huge reason: A year-end COVID rescue package now looks unlikely, Axios’ Alayna Treene and Dan Primack report.
- Why it matters: One of the biggest failures of the current administration and Congress will be an urgent test of President-elect Biden’s theory that Republicans will be willing to work with him in a post-Trump Washington.
Danger signs are stacking up:
- COVID-19 cases, hospitalizations, and deaths are up throughout the country, in the absence of any national containment strategy.
- Some state and local governments are reinstituting, or talking about reinstituting, lockdowns and school shutdowns.
- Many restaurants that survived via outdoor eating will soon be forced to take down their tents as cold weather arrives.
Ron Klain, in his first interview since being named incoming White House chief of staff, said President-elect Biden will deliver on a campaign promise by naming “a COVID coordinator who works in the White House, who has direct access to him and will be briefing him daily.”
- Klain told MSNBC’s Lawrence O’Donnell that the official will work with a team on vaccine distribution, and fixing testing and supply-chain problems.
Klain said Biden has said that on his first day, he’ll “issue a nationwide masking mandate, requiring that people wear masks where the federal authority extends, and then urging governors and other local officials to impose mask mandates.”
- “So, we’re going to start from Day 1 really moving to get this virus under control.”
⚡ The backdrop: For the first time, the U.S. yesterday reported more than 150,000 new coronavirus cases in a single day.
- California became the second state, after Texas, to pass 1 million total cases.
This is a good moment to pause and remember the long game — the generations who built America before us, and will run it after us.
- This was the Washington Monument at sunset yesterday.
President Trump greets supporters as he departs Trump National Golf Club in Sterling Va., on Sunday. Photo: Steve Helber/AP
CEOs talked privately last week about collective action if President Trump’s refusal to concede became an imminent threat to democracy, AP reports:
- Last Friday, more than two dozen CEOs of major U.S. corporations held an hourlong video conference to game out what to do if Trump refuses to leave.
- Yale Management Professor Jeffrey Sonnenfeld, who convened the meeting, said the CEOs discussed making public statements and pressuring GOP legislators in their states, who could try to redirect Electoral College votes.
On Saturday, the Business Roundtable — which represents CEOs of the most powerful companies in America — congratulated President-elect Biden and Vice President-elect Harris.
- The executives who participated in the video conference are from Fortune 500 finance, retail, media and manufacturing companies.
- Sonnenfeld wouldn’t identify them, because they attended the meeting with the condition that their names be kept confidential.
- Yale historian Timothy Snyder, author of “On Tyranny,” and NYU constitutional law professor Richard Pildes spoke to the group.
What’s next: Sonnenfeld said he spoke Wednesday with six or seven CEOs, who said that if there were “seditious riots” at Trump rallies — or more mass firings like Trump’s ouster of Defense Secretary Mark Esper and other Pentagon officials — they want to reconvene to talk about acting faster as individuals.
- Sonnenfeld said the CEOs referred to a Benjamin Franklin quote at the signing of the Declaration of Independence: “Yes, we must, indeed, all hang together, or most assuredly we shall all hang separately.”
President Obama — whose “A Promised Land” will be out Tuesday — told Scott Pelley of “60 Minutes” that false vote-fraud claims “appear to be motivated in part because the president doesn’t like to lose, and never admits loss.”
- “I’m more troubled by the fact that other Republican officials, who clearly know better, are going along with this, are humoring him in this fashion.”
- “It is one more step in delegitimizing not just the incoming Biden administration, but democracy generally. And that’s a dangerous path.”
- Video.
📚 Read an excerpt from “A Promised Land,” via The Atlantic.
Sen. David Perdue, whose upcoming Georgia runoff will help determine which party controls the Senate, has been President Trump’s top loyalist in the upper chamber, Juliet Bartz writes from the “Axios on HBO” Trump Loyalty Index.
Illustration: Sarah Grillo/Axios
The progress toward a coronavirus vaccine has raised hopes for a recovery in passenger air travel, Axios’ Joann Muller writes.
The problem: Most cargo flies in the belly-holds of passenger aircraft — not on cargo planes — and one in four airplanes have been grounded during the pandemic because people aren’t flying.
- Just providing a single dose to the world’s 7.8 billion people would fill 8,000 747 freighter planes, says the International Air Transport Association.
Photo: Amanda Searle/HBO
The new HBO series “Industry” uses Gen Z characters and a London setting for a fresh look at finance, Axios’ Kia Kokalitcheva writes.
- Why it matters: The show airs at a time of reckoning for the corporate world over continued sexism and racism.
Set at Pierpoint & Co., a fictional elite investment bank, the show chronicles what happens to a group of young new hires as they compete for a few permanent spots at the firm.
- It features Harper (Myha’la Herrold), a Black woman from New York who’s determined to succeed at Pierpoint despite her low-income background, and Yasmin (Marisa Abela), who seeks to prove herself as more than a pretty, privileged face.
📬 Thanks for starting your day with us. Invite your friends to sign up for Axios AM/PM.
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THE WASHINGTON TIMES
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THE WASHINGTON EXAMINER
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ASSOCIATED PRESS
Nov 13, 2020 View in Browser AP MORNING WIRE Good morning. In today’s AP Morning Wire:
TAMER FAKAHANY
The Rundown AP PHOTO/MARY ALTAFFER Top federal, state officials say Nov. 3 election most secure in US history; Trump, stewing over election loss, silent as virus surges
In the most direct repudiation yet of President Donald Trump’s efforts to undermine the integrity of the Nov. 3 vote, a coalition of federal and state officials say they have no evidence that votes were compromised or altered in last week’s presidential election, rejecting unsubstantiated claims of fraud advanced by Trump and many of his supporters.
The definitive statement from cybersecurity experts, which trumpets the Nov. 3 election as the most secure in American history, also echoes repeated assertions by election experts and state officials that the election unfolded smoothly, Eric Tucker and Frank Bajak report.
“While we know there are many unfounded claims and opportunities for misinformation about the process of our elections, we can assure you we have the utmost confidence in the security and integrity of our elections, and you should too,” the statement said. “When you have questions, turn to election officials as trusted voices as they administer elections.”
Trump’s Withdrawal: The president has publicly disengaged from the battle against the coronavirus at a time when the disease is tearing across America at an alarming pace. Stewing after his re-election loss to President-elect Joe Biden, Trump remains angry that an announcement about progress on developing a virus vaccine came after Election Day.
And aides say the president has shown little interest even as new cases are skyrocketing and hospitals in parts of the country say intensive care units are nearing capacity. Public health experts worry that Trump’s refusal to take aggressive action will only worsen the effects of the pandemic, Aamer Madhani and Zeke Miller report.
Republican Fissures: The GOP’s most powerful figures in Washington are still standing behind Trump and his unsupported claims of voter fraud. But new cracks are emerging from leaders in Utah to Ohio to New Hampshire who believe it’s time for the administration to treat Joe Biden like the president-elect he is. A significant Republican faction on Capitol Hill is saying that Biden should at least begin receiving intelligence briefings to ensure that he’s prepared for national security challenges when he’s inaugurated on Jan. 20, Steve Peoples, Lisa Mascaro and Kathy McCormack.
Legal Challenges: The Justice Department has begun looking into two specific allegations of voting irregularities. One claim from the Trump campaign is that thousands may have improperly voted. The other is an allegation from a postal worker in Pennsylvania that a postmaster had instructed workers to backdate ballots mailed after Election Day. Neither case appears to hold much water, according to probe details.
But the first accusation has U.S. military personnel in Nevada concerned they have been drawn into unsubstantiated fraud claims, Michelle L. Price, Mike Balsamo and Anthony Izaguirre report.
AP FACT CHECK: Trump tweets a false tale of ‘deleted’ votes. Trump’s Twitter claim that an election technology firm “deleted” or “switched” large numbers of votes for him, giving many to Joe Biden, is a baseless theory that’s not grounded in real data, Ali Swenson and Amanda Seitz report.
Biden Health Care: The president-elect is unlikely to get sweeping health care changes through a closely divided Congress, but there’s a menu of narrower actions he can choose from to make a tangible difference on affordability and coverage for millions of people, Ricardo Alonso-Zaldivar reports.
Biden Staffers: Black policy leaders will play a pivotal role in Biden’s transition, marking one of the most diverse agency review teams ever. Of the 500-plus team members announced this week, more than half are women, and Black men and women are leading more than one-quarter of the teams. The diversity is significant because the teams will be responsible for evaluating the operations of federal agencies that have a broad impact on Americans’ lives, Kat Stafford reports.
China: It became one of the last major countries today to congratulate Biden on being elected. The president-elect is expected to make few changes to U.S. policy toward Beijing on trade, technology and other conflicts that have soured relations. China, along with Russia, avoided joining the throng that congratulated Biden last weekend. A foreign ministry spokesman said: “We respect the choice of the American people. We congratulate Mr. Biden and Ms. Harris.” Joe McDonald reports from Beijing.
EXPLAINER– Is Georgia’s upcoming ballot ‘audit’ a recount? The state says it’s going to be tallying, by hand, nearly 5 million ballots that were cast in its very close presidential election. It’s a bit confusing, but essentially county election offices over the next week will be counting every ballot again — only this time by hand — to confirm the accuracy of the election, Christina A. Cassidy reports.
Experts say it’s likely some discrepancies will surface. They say final vote tallies may be different, and that’s OK given the large number of ballots being counted a second time using an entirely different method. State election officials say the point of the audit is to show the scanners counted ballots properly. It was not prompted by allegations of fraud.
Senate Georgia: Trump won’t be on the ballot in January as Georgia voters settle two Senate runoffs that will determine who controls the chamber at the start of Biden’s tenure. But the contests offer the first measure of Trump’s imprint on the GOP since his defeat, Bill Barrow, Jonathan Lemire and Alan Fram report. ST. LOUIS POST-DISPATCH VIA AP PHOTO/COLTER PETERSON US virus surge sends states, schools into retreat; States ramp up for biggest vaccination effort in US history
The coast-to-coast resurgence of the coronavirus in the U.S. is sending deaths, hospitalizations and new infections soaring. The crisis is deepening at hospitals.
The situation is so dire in North Dakota that the governor this week said nurses who test positive but have no symptoms can still work. Idaho clinics are struggling to handle the deluge of phone calls from patients.
School systems in Detroit, Indianapolis, Philadelphia and suburban Minneapolis are giving up on in-person classes, and some governors are reimposing restrictions on bars and restaurants or getting more serious about masks, Michelle R. Smith and Sean Murphy report.
Vaccination Drive: With a COVID-19 vaccine drawing closer, public health officials are gearing up for the biggest vaccination effort in U.S. history. It will be a monumental undertaking to distribute hundreds of millions of doses, prioritize who’s first in line and ensure that people who get the initial shot return for the necessary second one.
The push could begin as early as next month when federal officials say the first vaccine may be authorized for emergency use and deployed to high-risk groups such as health care workers. Dr. Anthony Fauci says he hopes shots will be available to all Americans in April, May and June, Candice Choi and Michelle R. Smith report.
AP PHOTO/ALESSANDRA TARANTINO Some welcome signs of hope in Germany, France but virus still strains hospitals; A day in the life of an Italian virus ward doctor
The surge of coronavirus cases appears to be slowing in Germany and France, generating hopes that the two European heavyweights are beginning to regain control over the pandemic. But authorities said hospitals are still crowded and are likely to face further strains in the coming weeks, Geir Moulson reports from Berlin.
Countries across Europe have implemented varying virus restrictions in recent weeks as they try to tamp down a resurgence, with numbers of confirmed cases hitting records.
The U.K. posted its biggest one-day jump in confirmed infections, reporting 33,470 new cases. The figure was over 10,500 more than the number of positive tests a day earlier and pushed total cases in the U.K. to almost 1.3 million. More than 50,000 people have died from COVID-19 in Britain — Europe’s deadliest toll, Danica Kirka reports from London.
In Greece, dozens of medical workers protested at hospitals, demanding more staff be hired as the country struggles to contain a spike of infections that has led to a new lockdown, Elena Becatoros reports from Athens.
European governments and the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation have pledged to provide hundreds of millions of dollars for a global effort to ensure that virus vaccines are quickly available to poor countries. The funds will go to vaccine development and distribution efforts coordinated by the World Health Organization. The United States, China and Russia are not taking part.
Day in the Life: Photos capture virus ward doctor running from dawn to dark in Italy.
India Festival: The crowds filling shopping areas ahead of the Diwali festival of lights are raising hopes of India’s distressed businesses after months of lockdown losses. But the huge crowds of people — many not wearing masks — are spawning fears of a new coronavirus surge, Ashok Sharma and Shonal Ganguly report.
BIDEN FORIEGN POLICY
It’s a deeply contentious issue that several U.S. presidents have tussled with: Israeli settlements in the occupied West Bank and east Jerusalem that several administrations, the United Nations and many countries have deemed as violating international law.
The next two months could provide a key test for Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and President-elect Joe Biden. Netanyahu may seek to take advantage of the final weeks of the settlement-friendly Trump administration to rush forward a new frenzy of settlement construction.
But doing so would risk antagonizing the incoming administration in Washington. Netanyahu seems more likely to proceed with caution, with Biden expected to renew talks with Iran over its nuclear program, Israel’s top security concern, Tia Goldenberg reports from Jerusalem.
VIDEO: The first steps Biden may take on foreign policy. AP Diplomatic Writer Matt Lee expects 80% to 90% of the executive orders Trump has signed during his term to be reversed by Biden.
Pompeo: After refusing to acknowledge Trump’s loss, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo is heading overseas to Europe and the Middle East, to countries where leaders have all congratulated Biden on his victory. The trip is aimed at shoring up the outgoing Trump administration’s policies and will include visits to Israeli settlements in the occupied West Bank that have been avoided by previous secretaries of state. Other Top Stories The U.N. migration agency says at least 74 migrants have drowned after a Europe-bound ship capsized off the coast of Libya. The tragedy is at least the eighth shipwreck in the central Mediterranean since Oct. 1. The boat was carrying over 120 migrants, including women and children, when it capsized off the coast of the Libyan port of al-Khums. Only 47 people were rescued by the Libyan coast guard and fishermen. Thick mud and debris coated many villages around the Philippine capital of Manila after a typhoon caused extensive flooding that killed 39 people and sent others fleeing to their roofs. Thousands have been rescued. The military chief of staff said amphibious assault vehicles usually used in counter-insurgency operations were being used to rescue people and the military was still searching for the missing. Eta is racing off the southeast U.S. coast, spreading heavy rain and gusty winds after blustering across north Florida. One death in Florida was linked to the storm, along with scattered flooding. Forecasters said the tropical storm was off the South Carolina coast and expected to head further out into the Atlantic. The storm triggered flash flooding, multiple water rescues and road closures in South Carolina. US one dollar bills are king in Zimbabwe, beset by a continuing economic crisis, as shoppers rely on them to buy their daily bread and other small purchases. Crisp new notes are not coming into the country, so enterprising traders are repairing old ones for desperate customers. Formal businesses reject such notes, forcing people to sell them to traders for a fraction of their original value. Informal street markets will usually — with some negotiation — accept the glue-patched notes. GET THE APP
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CHICAGO TRIBUNE
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CHICAGO SUNTIMES
He went to the hospital in the morning. By mid-afternoon, he was dead from COVID-19.
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THE HILL
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ROLL CALL
POLITICO PLAYBOOK
DRIVING THE DAY
THE PRESIDENTIAL INAUGURATION is 69 DAYS from today, and we know surprisingly little about how it will all unfold. So, with the help of JOHN BRESNAHAN, we have some details for you.
THIS INAUGURATION — Jan. 20, 2021 — will be different than any inauguration in history.
SEN. ROY BLUNT (R-Mo.) is chairing the Joint Congressional Committee on Inaugural Ceremonies. He held a meeting Thursday morning with Speaker NANCY PELOSI, House Majority Leader STENY HOYER, House Minority Leader KEVIN MCCARTHY, Senate Majority Leader MITCH MCCONNELL and Sen. AMY KLOBUCHAR (D-Minn.), the ranking Democrat on the Rules panel, to discuss the details. THIS GROUP is the JCCIC.
TYPICALLY, the bulk of the inaugural details would be handled by staffers, while lawmakers jockey to get friends and supporters tickets to the inaugural balls. But these are far from normal times, and the lawmakers themselves must figure out how to safely stage an event that includes the world’s most powerful people and hundreds of thousands of spectators in the middle of this pandemic.
TO START, this event will be smaller than previous inaugurations, but by how much, we don’t know. MARIA LOHMEYER, an aide to former Speaker JOHN BOEHNER who helped run the 2016 inauguration, has been brought on to help run the January event. She presented different scenarios to the lawmakers in the Thursday meeting.
THEY DISCUSSED masks, testing and spacing. They also spoke about mandatory testing for anyone on the podium near President-elect JOE BIDEN. Also at issue: where to hold the traditional inaugural lunch. The POTUS/VP lunch is typically in Statuary Hall. They may move it to Emancipation Hall in the Capitol Visitors Center for more space.
HE SPEAKS … Incoming chief of staff RON KLAIN told LAWRENCE O’DONNELL on MSNBC on Thursday night that BIDEN has spoken to some Republican senators and governors, but MCCONNELL and BIDEN still haven’t connected: “He has not spoken, though, to Sen. McConnell. Look, I think Sen. McConnell still seems to be insisting somehow that President Trump won the election. He didn’t. There will be a time and a place for Joe Biden and Sen. McConnell to talk.”
BARACK OBAMA told SCOTT PELLEY of CBS’ “60 MINUTES” that Republicans going along with DONALD TRUMP’S baseless claims of widespread election fraud are dangerous. “I’m more troubled by the fact that other Republican officials who clearly know better are going along with this, are humoring him in this fashion,” Obama said. “It is one more step in delegitimizing not just the incoming Biden administration, but democracy generally. And that’s a dangerous path.” The clip
BREAKING OVERNIGHT … CHINA has congratulated BIDEN and KAMALA HARRIS on their victory. WaPo
Good Friday morning. TODAY is Friday the 13th.
DRIVING TODAY: PELOSI will hold her weekly news conference at 10:45 a.m. … Looking for new members of Congress? They’ll be heading to a briefing in the CVC Auditorium at 11 a.m.
BOSTON GLOBE: “One of the most important political operatives you’ve never heard of: Mass. native Jennifer O’Malley Dillon is the first woman ever to run a winning Democratic presidential campaign,” by Zoe Greenberg and Victoria McGrane: “Dillon, 44, is the second woman ever to run a winning presidential campaign, and the first to achieve victory for a Democratic candidate. (Kellyanne Conway was the first overall, steering President Trump’s campaign for three months in 2016). A veteran operative who had helped run both Barack Obama campaigns, she was widely courted in the Democratic primary, and led Beto O’Rourke’s campaign before taking over Biden’s in the spring.”
WHITE HOUSE MEMO … NYT’S MAGGIE HABERMAN: “Trump Floats Improbable Survival Scenarios as He Ponders His Future”: “At a meeting on Wednesday at the White House, President Trump had something he wanted to discuss with his advisers, many of whom have told him his chances of succeeding at changing the results of the 2020 election are thin as a reed.
“He then proceeded to press them on whether Republican legislatures could pick pro-Trump electors in a handful of key states and deliver him the electoral votes he needs to change the math and give him a second term, according to people briefed on the discussion.
“It was not a detailed conversation, or really a serious one, the people briefed on it said. Nor was it reflective of any obsessive desire of Mr. Trump’s to remain in the White House. ‘He knows it’s over,’ one adviser said. But instead of conceding, they said, he is floating one improbable scenario after another for staying in office while he contemplates his uncertain post-presidency future. … The president has insisted to aides that he really defeated Joseph R. Biden Jr. on Nov. 3, but it is unclear whether he actually believes it. And instead of conducting discreet requests for recounts, Mr. Trump has made a series of spurious claims, seizing on conspiracies fanned on the internet.”
WAPO’S DAVID NAKAMURA on a PRESIDENT IN HIDING: “As Trump stews over election, he mostly ignores the public duties of the presidency”: “On Thursday, six American service members were killed in a helicopter crash during a peacekeeping mission in Egypt. Tropical Storm Eta made landfall in North Florida, contributing to severe flooding. The number of Americans infected with the novel coronavirus continued at a record-setting pace, sending the stock market tumbling.
“At the White House, President Trump spent the day as he has most others this week — sequestered from public view, tweeting grievances, falsehoods and misinformation about the election results and about Fox News’s coverage of him. Neither he nor his aides briefed reporters on the news of the day or reacted to Democratic leaders who accused Republicans of imperiling the pandemic response by ‘refusing to accept reality’ over the election results.”
THE TRANSITION …
— “Biden team reaching out to former Mattis officials for help with transition,” by Lara Seligman: “President-elect Joe Biden’s team has had initial discussions with people who worked for former Defense Secretary Jim Mattis about helping with the transition at the Pentagon and possibly serving in the new administration, according to three people familiar with the move.
“The conversations are in the early stages, particularly as President Donald Trump has so far blocked the start of the official transition process, said the people, all former Trump administration officials who spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss sensitive personnel issues.”
— “Biden’s Penchant for Bold Stimulus to Test His Deal-Making Skills,” by WSJ’s Jake Schlesinger: “The president-elect’s instinct for bold stimulus this time will run smack into the constraints of a closely divided Senate that may end up being controlled by Republicans hostile to more big spending. That will test Mr. Biden’s skills at bipartisan deal-making. Through the course of this year’s campaign, he repeatedly cited his experience working across the aisle—citing as one example the 2009 American Recovery and Reinvestment Act.” WSJ
‘MOST SECURE IN HISTORY’ … CISA STATEMENT: “The November 3rd election was the most secure in American history. Right now, across the country, election officials are reviewing and double checking the entire election process prior to finalizing the result.
“When states have close elections, many will recount ballots. All of the states with close results in the 2020 presidential race have paper records of each vote, allowing the ability to go back and count each ballot if necessary. This is an added benefit for security and resilience. This process allows for the identification and correction of any mistakes or errors. There is no evidence that any voting system deleted or lost votes, changed votes, or was in any way compromised.”
NYT FRONT PAGE: “OFFICIALS REBUKE TRUMP ACCUSATION OF DELETED VOTES”
THE PURGE CONTINUES … WAPO: “Two senior Homeland Security officials forced out as White House firings widen,” by Nick Miroff and Ellen Nakashima
DEM CIVIL WAR RAGES ON — SARAH FERRIS, HEATHER CAYGLE and ALLY MUTNICK: “Inside the House Democrats’ post-election reckoning”: “Interviews with nearly three dozen lawmakers, aides and consultants reveal a growing acknowledgment that the party’s campaign arm made several key strategic errors: it underestimated Donald Trump’s popularity, relied too much on polls and failed to heed the warnings of its most vulnerable members.
“A dozen races remain uncalled, and Democrats caution they won’t have all the answers for months. But many in the party are warning that the biggest priority for the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee must be overhauling its message. They say it needs to craft a proactive campaign that counters GOP attacks on everything from Medicare for All to fracking — if they have any hopes of keeping their majority in 2022.
“‘There were ads being run all over the country about socialism and about the Green New Deal and in some parts of the country that didn’t help,’ Rep. Emanuel Cleaver (D-Mo.) said in an interview. ‘I think it would be irresponsible for a person in our family — in the Democratic Caucus family — who is concerned about it not to mention it.’ Others were more blunt: ‘From my standpoint, as a moderate Democrat … it’s crystal clear we need a different message than what we’ve been having,’ added Rep. Kurt Schrader (Ore.).”
— WAPO’S PAUL KANE: “House Democrats’ down-ballot leadership races offer a look at a post-Pelosi future”
— “Elissa Slotkin Braces for a Democratic Civil War,” by Tim Alberta in Holly, Mich.
TRUMP’S FRIDAY — The president will receive an update on Operation Warp Speed at noon in the Oval Office.
BIDEN and HARRIS will meet with transition advisers.
TV TONIGHT — PBS’ “Washington Week” with Bob Costa: Evan Osnos, Ashley Parker and Rachel Scott.
SUNDAY SO FAR …
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ABC
“This Week”: John Bolton … Jon Ossoff. Panel: Rachel Scott, Julie Pace and Evan Osnos.
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Gray TV
“Full Court Press with Greta Van Susteren”: Rep.-elect Darrell Issa (R-Calif.) … Rep. Mikie Sherrill (D-N.J.) … Tom Frieden.
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FOX
“Fox News Sunday”: Ken Starr … Laurence Tribe. Panel: Guy Benson, Gillian Turner and Donna Brazile. Power Player (re-air): Alex Trebek.
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Sinclair
“America This Week with Eric Bolling”: Megyn Kelly … Bill O’Reilly … Rudy Giuliani … Steve Bannon … Alex Vogel.
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NBC
“Meet the Press”: Panel: Al Cardenas, Jeffrey Goldberg, María Teresa Kumar and Carol Lee.
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CBS
“Face the Nation” is off this week, preempted by the Masters.
PLAYBOOK READS
SCOTUS WATCH … JOSH GERSTEIN: “Alito’s politically charged address draws heat”: “Supreme Court Justice Samuel Alito delivered an unusually inflammatory public speech Thursday night, starkly warning about the threats he contends religious believers face from advocates for gay and abortion rights, as well as public officials responding to the coronavirus pandemic. Speaking to a virtual conference of conservative lawyers, the George W. Bush appointee made no direct comment on the recent election, the political crisis relating to President Donald Trump’s refusal to acknowledge his defeat or litigation on the issue pending at the Supreme Court.
“However, Alito didn’t hold back on other controversial subjects, even suggesting that the pressure Christians face surrounding their religious beliefs is akin to the strictures the U.S. placed on Germany and Japan after World War II. ‘Is our country going to follow that course?” Alito asked. ‘For many today, religious liberty is not a cherished freedom. It’s often just an excuse for bigotry and can’t be tolerated, even when there is no evidence that anybody has been harmed. … The question we face is whether our society will be inclusive enough to tolerate people with unpopular religious beliefs.’
“Alito argued that some recent Supreme Court decisions, including the landmark ruling upholding a constitutional right to same-sex marriage, fueled intolerance to those who believe marriage should be limited to unions between one man and one woman. ‘Until very recently, that’s what the vast majority of Americans thought. Now, it’s considered bigotry,’ he said.”
THE CORONAVIRUS IS RAGING … 10.5 MILLION Americans have tested positive for the coronavirus. … 242,430 Americans have died.
— “Virus surge: Schools abandon classes, states retreat,” by AP’s Michelle Smith and Sean Murphy: “School systems in Detroit, Indianapolis, Philadelphia and suburban Minneapolis are giving up on in-person classes, and some governors are reimposing restrictions on bars and restaurants or getting more serious about masks, as the coast-to-coast resurgence of the coronavirus sends deaths, hospitalizations and new infections soaring.
“The crisis deepened at hospitals, with the situation so bad in North Dakota that the governor this week said nurses who test positive but have no symptoms can still work. Idaho clinics struggled to handle the deluge of phone calls from patients. And one of Utah’s biggest hospital systems is bringing in nearly 200 traveling nurses, some of them from New York City.
“The virus is blamed for more than 242,000 deaths and over 10.5 million confirmed infections in the U.S., with the country facing what health experts say will be a dark winter because of disregard for mask-wearing and other precautions, the onset of cold weather and crowded holiday gatherings.” AP
— “Red state governors reject Biden on mask orders,” by Dan Goldberg, Rachel Roubein and Alice Miranda Ollstein: “President-elect Joe Biden says he’ll personally call red state governors and persuade them to impose mask mandates to slow down the coronavirus pandemic. Their early response: Don’t waste your time.
“Almost all of the 16 Republican governors who oppose statewide mask mandates are ready to reject Biden’s plea, they told POLITICO or declared in public statements — even as they impose new restrictions on businesses and limit the size of public gatherings to keep their health systems from getting swamped.”
TIKTOK LATEST — “U.S. Backs Down on TikTok,” by WSJ’s John McKinnon and Georgia Wells: “The Commerce Department said Thursday it wouldn’t enforce its order that would have effectively forced the Chinese-owned TikTok video-sharing app to shut down, in the latest sign of trouble for the Trump administration’s efforts to turn it into a U.S. company.
“The Commerce Department’s action delayed implementation of an order, set to take effect on Thursday, that would have barred companies from providing internet-hosting or content-delivery services to TikTok—moves that would effectively make it inoperable in the U.S. The U.S. crackdown on Chinese social-media apps has been led by President Trump, and it is unclear how President-elect Joe Biden will address the situation. Many members of Congress in both parties, however, have sounded alarms about potential Chinese data-gathering and surveillance in the U.S.” WSJ
PLAYBOOKERS
Send tips to Eli Okun and Garrett Ross at politicoplaybook@politico.com.
TRANSITIONS — Kailee Tkacz Buller will be president of the Institute of Shortening and Edible Oils, as current president Robert Collette retires. Tkacz Buller most recently was chief of staff to Deputy Agriculture Secretary Stephen Censky. … Kanya Bennett is now senior policy counsel and legislative coalition manager at the Bail Project. She previously was senior policy counsel at the ACLU.
WELCOME TO THE WORLD — Jared Roscoe, counsel and senior director at SoftBank Group International, and Amara Craighill, a design associate at Thomas Pheasant Interiors, welcomed Maya Hunter Roscoe just before noon Thursday. She came in at 7 lbs, 13 oz. Pic … Another pic
— Gary McElyea, U.S. state and local policy lead at Coca-Cola, and Alison Ebers-McElyea welcomed Emma Joyce McElyea on Wednesday afternoon. She joins big sister Nora. Pic … Another pic
BIRTHDAY OF THE DAY: Zach Gillan, VP of public affairs at S-3 Group. A fun fact about him: “I spent much of my childhood in the early ’90s at my father’s yoga studio in Houston. At the time, you could count Houston’s yoga studios on one hand. Being around the business showed me that it’s possible to love what you do for a living — even if you have to stray off the beaten path to accomplish it.” Playbook Q&A
BIRTHDAYS: Sen. Dan Sullivan (R-Alaska) is 56 … Texas Gov. Greg Abbott and first lady Cecilia Abbott … Massachusetts Gov. Charlie Baker is 64 … Max Miller … Joe Cirincione is 71 … CNN’s Eric Bradner … Merrick Garland is 68 … POLITICO’s Sue Allan, Joyce Liu, Mariana Fernandez Aponte and Cole Thomas … Ken Rudin … Geoff Freeman, president and CEO of the Consumer Brands Association … Lindsay Drewel … Jon Wadsworth, partner at Atlas Advocacy (h/t Matt Smith) … Jared Goldberg-Leopold … Jared Parks, VP at the Herald Group … Lauren Essary (h/t Eamon Smith-Fagan) … Todd Priest, president of Todd Priest & Associates, is 56 (h/t Melinda Andrade) …
… Washington Times’ Seth McLaughlin is 44 … NBC’s Bradd Jaffy … Tanya Brown … John Lapp … Martha McKenna (h/ts Teresa Vilmain) … Dominique Mann … Jeff Rossen is 44 … Addie Whisenant … Harry Hurt III is 69 … Peter Arnett is 86 … Jonathan Topaz … Michael Schwab is 34 … Jeff Blattner (h/t Jon Haber) … Ken Klukowski … Meg Lombardo … Nochi Dankner is 66 … Saul Kripke is 8-0 … Ayaan Hirsi Ali is 51 … Leah Breen … Ruth Wattenberg … Tim Alford … Robert Arlett … Kevin Pailet … Ari Morgenstern … Brad Clark … Nikki Blank … Miranda Moreno … Camille Uzel … David Alexander … Sherine El-Nahas … Robert Hastings … Chuck Thies … Marion Steinfels … Terry Adamson
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AMERICAN MINUTE
Pilgrims experimented with Communism – and rejected it! – American Minute with Bill Federer
Pilgrims experimented with Communism – and rejected it! = American Minute with Bill Federer
- Company Charter Colonies;
- Royal Crown Colonies;
- Proprietary Colonies.
- Maryland was originally given by King Charles I as private property to Lord Baltimore in 1632;
- The Carolinas were originally given by King Charles II as private property to seven lord proprietors in 1663;
- New York was originally given by King Charles II as private property to his younger brother, the Duke of York, in 1664;
- Pennsylvania was given by King Charles II as private property to William Penn in 1681.
CAFFEINATED THOUGHTS
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CONSERVATIVE DAILY NEWS
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PJ MEDIA
The Morning Briefing: What To Do About Media’s Horrible 2020 Election Malpractice
The Mainstream Media Betrayal of Journalistic Responsibility Is Complete
Happy End of Another Week, my dear Kruiser Morning Briefing friends. I’m ready for a three day happy hour.
Here we are, facing a Friday the 13th in 2020. I’ve never been superstitious before, but now I wouldn’t be surprised to see cackling wraiths descending from the sky on flying albino rattle snakes by the end of the day.
FLYING ALBINO RATTLE SNAKES, PEOPLE.
Anyway, it’s Friday, and I often like to TGIF by beating up on the thoroughly execrable mainstream media. What the Democratic advocacy corps that masquerades as our journalist class has been up to since the election has plumbed new depths of unforgivable. That’s saying a lot when discussing people who spend every day exploring ways to be almost criminally irresponsible.
Am I adequately conveying my dislike for these cretins?
After lying daily for months to get the drooling husk that once was Joe Biden elected president, they’ve spent the days since the election slandering any American who has expressed an interest in making sure that any irregularities in ballot counting are exposed.
Yesterday I happened upon something written in The New York Times that was so ridiculous I at first feared that the author was concussed. The article was an exploration of Republicans’ “distrust of news” and the gist of it was that all of us right-wing nutjobs are getting all of our news from crackpot disinformation sites that don’t undergo any rigorous fact checking. We don’t trust the news because the various bulls**t whisperers on the Right are telling people that they shouldn’t, according to the blameless lambs at the Times.
As one of those bulls**t-whispering crackpots, I naturally took umbrage with that.
The combined Townhall Media Mothership universe (PJ Media, Townhall, HotAir, RedState, Bearing Arms, and Twitchy) is by far one of the largest “right-wing media outlets” in America. We are absolutely crawling with fact-checkers, both internally and externally. We are a for-profit company that very much enjoys those profits. If there is even a hint of anything awry, we can get fact-checked and throttled by more than one of our revenue drivers. Because of that, we rigorously check everything prior to publication.
The notion that we are skipping about the media landscape saying whatever the hell we want to is patently absurd. It’s even more absurd coming from the Times, which spreads misinformation and opinion as fact with impunity. I’m not even a journalist, I’m a comedian who also happens to be a bomb-throwing (RHETORIC ALERT!) conservative opinion writer. Even so, I’m subject to more rules than any Times writer will ever face.
I’m not only subject to more rules, I’m also just a better person than 99.9999999% of the filth who parade as journalists in the mainstream media. Yeah, I like to push buttons and stir up emotions, but I also like to keep things on the truth side of the aisle. I’m honest about my bias.
As for journalism, the open cheering of Biden’s election throughout the MSM is proof positive that it is dead forever in all of the dinosaur media.
Old media is dying, that is true. New media is ascendant and has gained a prominence that prompts non-truth screeds like the Times article. They’re lashing out because they see the writing on the wall.
Sadly, the MSM numbers are still huge, especially in network news. The shift in the media landscape is a slow one, but it is picking up.
We need to begin exploring bigger, louder, and harsher ways of exposing the vile pathological liars in the MSM. There can be no letting up. Should Grandpa Gropes make it to the White House, they no doubt will be emboldened and double-down on their truth-free ways.
I’ll be over here in Crackpot Land, whispering to the ever-vigilant rightwing masses as we keep pushing back against the anti-American MSM falsehood machine.
Any Way This Turns Out, the Lefty Kids Are Gonna Have a Rough 2021
FAIR QUESTION
PJM Linktank
Me: Republicans Need to Win Both GA Runoffs for Senate Majority That’s Outside the Margin of Romney
Appeals Court Clears Harvard of Admissions Bias
Secretary of Labor Bernie Sanders? God Help Us
BREAKING: Huge Legal Victory for President Trump in Pennsylvania
Brady White Files: Big-City Cop Explains Why He Left That Police Department for Good
Trump’s Pentagon Shakeup: Rewarding Loyalists or Something More Nefarious?
Cop-Hating Portland City Commissioner Calls Police on Her Lyft Driver
Republican Sen. Lankford Says He Will Intervene if Biden Can’t Access Intel Briefs
FLASHBACK: Joe Biden Agreed With Voter Who Called Trump an ‘Illegitimate’ President
VodkaPundit: Insanity Wrap #86: Hello President Biden, Goodbye Lower- and Middle-Class Wage Growth
Video: Church Militant’s Exclusive Interview with Raymond Ibrahim on Islam and the West
Andrew Yang Tweet Sparks Call for Biden Supporters to Move to GA to Vote for Him
Pennsylvania, Michigan, Wisconsin: Here’s an Update on Team Trump’s Lawsuits and Recounts
Obama Now Worries He May Have Gone Too Soft on America’s Alleged Racist Oppression
VIP
Apple M1 Chip Is a Gauntlet Thrown at Intel: Can They Recover?
VIP Gold
From the Mothership and Beyond
Schlichter: Go On the Offensive In Georgia
Arizona Republican Party Files Lawsuit to Enforce Hand Count By Precinct
#Flopsweat. WATCH: Adam Schiff and Joy Reid Fret Over Republican-Led Investigations
Ex-Clinton Aide Details the ‘Stealthy Road’ to a Trump Victory That’s Being Overlooked
Arizona’s Secretary of State’s Anti-Trump Tweets Resurface
The commies are coming. Biden Campaign Comms Director Won’t Rule Out a National Lockdown
Michigan State GOP Lawmakers Ask for Full Election Audit
Does Trump Really Plan to ‘Wreck’ Fox News? His Tweetstorm on Thursday May Provide Some Clues
OK, trying this: Use Coffee Grounds to Eliminate Household Odors
FL Governor Wants To Get Tough On Looters
NC’s Mark Robinson Is The Warrior We Need
Here we go: ACB Gets Her First Crack At The Second Amendment On Friday
“The Squad” Grows, But That’s An Opportunity
The Looming Legal Fights Over Our 2A Rights
Bret Baier Finally Addresses Erroneous Call of the House… A Full Week After the Election
Media and Joe Biden Are Flaming Hypocrites: Here’s What They Said Before About Calling Races Early
Is It Crazy To Have Questions About Election Integrity, Or Crazy To Suggest There’s Nothing To See?
How California Can Extend the Red Wave
Jake Tapper Becomes Triggered by ‘CNN Is Not a News Organization’ Claim, Then Receipts Get Dropped
Weird. How I Got Caught Up in a Global Romance Scam
Another Flipped Seat: Democrat Max Rose Concedes In New York’s 11th Congressional District
GA SecState: Hand Recount Will Be Accurate — And Won’t Change The Overall Result
Republican Declares Victory In Closest House Race In The Country (But There’s Going To Be A Recount)
Told ya. Four Trump Insiders Say: “2024 Is Going To Happen”
Maintaining Hope in a Time of Lies
More intolerance from the LGBTQ mob. Target pulls book on ‘the transgender craze’ from its shelves
James Woods: ‘I tweeted ONE WORD, and Twitter attaches a fraud disclaimer’
Inside Rome’s Secure Vault for Stolen Art
Smells Like Onion
The Kruiser Kabana
This show was so weird.
It’s the end of the week as we know it (and I feel fine).
___
Kruiser Twitter
Kruiser Facebook
PJ Media Senior Columnist and Associate Editor Stephen Kruiser is the author of “Don’t Let the Hippies Shower” and “Straight Outta Feelings: Political Zen in the Age of Outrage,” both of which address serious subjects in a humorous way. Monday through Friday he edits PJ Media’s “Morning Briefing.” His columns appear twice a week.
WHITE HOUSE DOSSIER
THE DISPATCH
The Morning Dispatch: Long Winter Ahead
Plus: China cracks down on pro-democracy legislators in Hong Kong.
The Dispatch Staff | 2 hr | 3 |
Happy Friday! Approach your day with the confidence and conviction of Chris Krebs—the director of the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency within the Trump administration—knowing he’s about to be fired and debunking all of the president’s election-related misinformation on his way out.
Quick Hits: Today’s Top Stories
- A group of federal and state elections officials pushed back on President Trump’s continued baseless claims about widespread voter fraud. “The November 3rd election was the most secure in American history,” reads a joint statement from the Election Infrastructure Government Coordinating Council and Election Infrastructure Sector Coordinating Council executive committees. “There is no evidence that any voting system deleted or lost votes, changed votes, or was in any way compromised. … We can assure you we have the utmost confidence in the security and integrity of our elections, and you should too.”
- Several more Republican lawmakers—Sens. Chuck Grassley, Lindsey Graham, John Cornyn, John Thune, Rob Portman—said on Thursday that the Trump administration should grant Joe Biden access to classified intelligence briefings to kickstart the transition process.
- Other network decision desks officially joined Fox News and the Associated Press in calling Arizona for Joe Biden yesterday, all but assuring the president-elect will finish the contest with 306 electoral votes—the same number President Trump won with in 2016.
- Seven military members of a peacekeeping force—including five Americans—were killed in Egypt on Thursday when a helicopter crashed in the Sinai Peninsula. One American survived the crash, and is being treated at an Israeli hospital.
- In a small victory for the Trump campaign, a Pennsylvania appeals court ruled on Thursday that counties must throw out mail ballots from voters who did not provide requisite identification by the state’s November 9 deadline. The small number of votes affected by the ruling had yet to be counted, so the decision will not take a bite out of Joe Biden’s 55,000-vote lead (which is still growing) in the state.
- A federal appeals court panel ruled on Thursday that Harvard University’s consideration of race in its admissions process is a constitutional means of diversifying its student body. The ruling is the latest move in an affirmative action case brought in 2014 by plaintiffs who allege that the school discriminates against Asian-American applicants.
- A Justice Department probe concluded that, while prosecutors overseeing the 2008 non-prosecution deal involving Jeffrey Epstein demonstrated “poor judgment,” no action will be taken against them because they did not break the law.
- Initial jobless claims decreased by 48,000 week-over-week to 709,000 last week, the Labor Department reported on Thursday. More 21 million people were on some form of unemployment insurance during the week ending October 24, compared to 1.5 million people during the comparable week in 2019.
- The United States confirmed 146,086 new cases of COVID-19 yesterday per the Johns Hopkins University COVID-19 Dashboard, with 10.1 percent of the 1,448,154 tests reported coming back positive. An additional 804 deaths were attributed to the virus on Thursday, bringing the pandemic’s American death toll to 242,423. According to the COVID Tracking Project, 67,096 Americans are currently hospitalized with COVID-19.
Off the Edge of the COVID Map
We reported Tuesday on the excellent news regarding COVID vaccine development, after Pfizer—just one of several pharmaceutical companies conducting Phase III trials—announced early results demonstrating better-than-expected efficacy. While frontline workers and those in particularly vulnerable populations may start being vaccinated on an emergency basis in a handful of weeks, it will be several months until there’s enough supply for widespread adoption. Asked when he estimates any American who wants a vaccine will be able to receive one, Dr. Anthony Fauci said “probably by April.”
But we’ve got a long winter to get through between now and then. And if recent COVID data—coming as colder weather pushes more and more Americans indoors—is any indication, it’s only going to get longer. Over the past week, the country has confirmed an average of more than 130,000 new coronavirus cases per day, up from an average of just under 49,000 per day a month ago. The number of Americans hospitalized with the virus has increased nearly 90 percent month-over-month. And more than 10,000 deaths have been attributed to the virus since the beginning of November alone. According to the Kaiser Family Foundation’s criteria, every state in the country besides Vermont and Hawaii qualifies as a COVID hotspot.
A study published in Nature science journal this week used cell phone mobility data to determine where most COVID infections happened early on in the pandemic, from March to May. About eight in 10 infections could be traced back to restaurants, gyms, coffee shops, or other crowded indoor spaces. “Restaurants were by far the riskiest places, about four times riskier than gyms and coffee shops, followed by hotels,” one of the studies’ authors told the New York Times.
The world has adjusted since March, however, and more recently public health officials are tracing new infections back to smaller, more casual social gatherings. From dinner parties, to game nights, to sports leagues, to carpools, peoples’ coronavirus “bubbles” are growing in size again as pandemic fatigue wears on.
Big Trouble in Little Hong Kong
On Wednesday, four pro-democracy legislators in Hong Kong—Dennis Kwok, Kenneth Leung, Kwok Ka-ki and Alvin Yeung—were forced out of office in a move by the mainland Chinese government to crack down further on dissenting voices in the semi-autonomous city. Their ouster was prompted by the Chinese National People’s Congress’ passage of a resolution declaring that the city government could remove politicians who “fail to uphold the Basic Law of the Hong Kong SAR of People’s Republic of China.”
The move caused 15 other members of the Legislative Council associated with the pro-democracy movement to resign in protest, rendering Hong Kong’s government essentially devoid of any opposition to the Chinese Communist Party. “Under authoritarianism, the road to democracy will be extremely long and arduous,” one of the pro-democracy legislators who is stepping down—Wu Chi-wai—told reporters. “But we will absolutely not be defeated by its pressures.”
The “Basic Law” in question is Hong Kong’s semi-constitution, adopted after the city’s 1997 handover from British to Chinese control. The law includes freedoms of speech, press, and assembly, and it stipulated that Hong Kong was to remain semi-autonomous from China until at least 2047. But the Chinese government has steadily encroached on these rights over the last few years. Chief Executive Carrie Lam, Hong Kong’s leader, said that the pro-democracy politicians undermined the parts of the Basic Law that said Hong Kong was part of China.
Allison Sherlock, a China analyst at the Eurasia Group, says the actions by the Chinese government (acting through the government of Hong Kong) are a sign that the windows of legally permissible dissent are closing for Hong Kongers. “The issues for [the pro-democracy faction] are going to get more and more granular as there’s less space for them to push back,” she said in an interview with The Dispatch. One possible clash, Sherlock noted, could be over the attempt by the government to insert patriotic, pro-Chinese material into school curricula.
Worth Your Time
- Will Trump’s nationalist economic policy agenda have any staying power in the GOP after he leaves the White House? Bloomberg columnist and American Enterprise Institute economist Michael Strain doesn’t think so, arguing we are about to witness a departure from the president’s populist approach to trade, spending, and immigration. “Under pressure from business leaders, I expect the center of gravity in the party to recover its pre-Trump support of free trade and globalization,” Strain writes in his latest Bloomberg column. Even if Republicans keep up their hawkishness toward China, Strain believes “the days of Republican support for tariffs against U.S. allies”—not to mention hostility toward international institutions like NATO and the WTO—“are over.”
- Cable news and social media are festering with baseless conspiracy theories suggesting that widespread voter fraud cost Donald Trump the election. FiveThirtyEight’s Kaleigh Rogers notes that we should have seen this wave of election disinformation coming; Trump has been priming his base for such nonsense since 2015. “Even before he was president, Trump was alleging election fraud without producing evidence. During his 2016 campaign he claimed the election was “rigged” in favor of Clinton, predicted widespread voter fraud and announced he would accept the results of the election only if he won,” she writes. “When people are already primed to think about a topic in a certain way, it can lead them to seek out information that confirms their existing beliefs.
- “It is counterintuitive but true: Joe Biden would benefit from Republican control of the Senate.” So begins George Will’s latest Washington Post column, in which he argues that a divided government may help insulate the president-elect from progressives’ unrealistic policy agenda while solidifying Mitch McConnell’s reputation as one of the most effective Republicans of the century. A Biden-McConnell bipartisan alliance, Will argues, will also help to restore long lost institutional norms that have crumbled during the Trump presidency: “With a combined 72 Senate years (so far), Biden and McConnell are custodians of the Senate’s institutional memory.”
Presented Without Comment
Toeing the Company Line
- “A combination of intimidation, disinformation, and equivocation are persuading tens of millions of Americans that the 2020 election was illegitimate,” David writes in his latest French Press newsletter (🔒). In a scathing critique of the “conservative media-entertainment complex,” David explains how Trump-friendly media personalities were able to convince MAGA-loving Americans—with virtually zero credible evidence—that the election was rigged against the president. “While there are many notable and valuable exceptions, the industry is now overrun with proponents of propaganda and vindictive rage. We are watching it corrupt the GOP and poison the GOP base step by painful step.”
- On Thursday’s episode of the Advisory Opinions podcast, David and Sarah explain the legal context surrounding the president’s ongoing election litigation efforts and give us the lowdown on the latest voter fraud conspiracy theories. Plus, they break down Supreme Court oral arguments for the Affordable Care Act case and preview a deeper discussion on the race-based admissions lawsuit at Harvard.
- Russian and Chinese officials have thus far kept relatively quiet about the U.S. presidential election. But that silence has been broken by state-backed media conglomerates in both countries. “I’ve been following China’s and Russia’s English-language, state-backed sites every day since the election,” reports Thomas Joscelyn in his latest Vital Interests newsletter (🔒). “They are littered with commentary and reports that are intended to amplify political discord within the U.S.”
- National Review’s Kevin Williamson joins Jonah on the latest episode of The Remnant for a heaping helping of rank punditry, book talk, and eggheadery.
Reporting by Declan Garvey (@declanpgarvey), Andrew Egger (@EggerDC), Audrey Fahlberg (@FahlOutBerg), Charlotte Lawson (@charlotteUVA), James P. Sutton (@jamespsuttonsf), and Steve Hayes (@stephenfhayes).
Photograph by Paul Hennessy/NurPhoto/Getty Images.
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LEGAL INSURRECTION
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THE DAILY WIRE
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DESERET NEWS
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LARRY J. SABATO’S CRYSTAL BALL
THE BLAZE
Listen live to Blaze Radio Tune in to the next generation of talk radio, featuring original content from hosts like Glenn Beck, Pat Gray, Stu Burguiere, Steve Deace and more!
One last thing … Senate Judiciary Committee Ranking Member Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.) has written a letter to Chairman Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.), urging her colleague to stop processing President Donald Trump’s judicial nominees.She says the panel should hold off on such business now that the election is over and allow Democratic presidential nominee Joe … Read more
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NOQ REPORT
ARRA NEWS SERVICE
ARRA News Service (in this message: 13 new items) |
- Attorneys General Hit Pennsylvania’s State of Confusion
- A Prayer And A Warning, Georgia On Our Minds, Left-wing Violence
- Leftists Embrace Enemy Lists
- What Would a Biden Presidency Mean For Israel?
- Sens. Boozman and Cotton Sign Pro-Life Amicus Brief
- The Price of Freelancing Is Eternal Vigilance
- The Self-Identity Scam
- Grassley’s Letter To DOJ: Hunter, James Biden’s Actions ‘Potentially Make Them Agents Of The Chinese Government’
- Time to Audit
- The Most Masked European Countries Have The Biggest Coronavirus Surges
- Navy’s Newest Ship to Be Named for Marine Sgt. Maj. John Canley, Vietnam War Hero
- ICYMI: Here’s the Latest on Litigation Over Election Results
- What Would a President Biden’s Immigration Plan Look Like
Attorneys General Hit Pennsylvania’s State of Confusion
Posted: 12 Nov 2020 10:25 PM PST by Tony Perkins: “The Pennsylvania Supreme Court has violated the U.S. Constitution,” said Louisiana Attorney General Jeff Landry. General Landry, my state attorney general, joined me on “Washington Watch” yesterday. He was part of ten state attorneys general who filed a brief urging the U.S. Supreme Court to overturn the Pennsylvania court’s ruling. In the weeks before the election, the Pennsylvania Supreme Court ruled that mail-in ballots could be received until up to three days after the election. The ruling changed a provision in Pennsylvania election law, which clearly stated that mail-in ballots had to be received by 8 p.m. on Election Day. And that, said Landry, violates the U.S. Constitution. “The U.S. Constitution spells out the way that the president is going to be elected in this country,” he said. It gives state legislatures the responsibility for “setting out the time, place, and manner of the elections.” Landry said the Pennsylvania General Assembly had outlined the rules for receiving mail-in ballots, and the Pennsylvania Supreme Court overruled them, but “that’s not the job of the courts.” Those late-arriving mail-in ballots proved to be a much bigger deal than anyone expected, as President Trump’s Election Night lead in Pennsylvania slowly eroded away. Now, Landry and nine other state attorneys general have asked the Supreme Court to take a closer look at Pennsylvania’s mail-in ballot rules. But for Landry, the issue is bigger than which candidate received more legal votes in Pennsylvania, although that may very well decide the election. The broader issue is about whether we’ll agree on the way we choose our leaders, said Landry. “It is imperative that in today’s world where the country is so divided that we ensure that the one thing we’re united on is our election.” And that’s a problem when “courts com[e] in and substitute[e] themselves as the legislature,” or when the media prematurely calls the election. I couldn’t agree more. America needs transparent, fair elections so we can all confidently accept the results. You’d think the Democrats would understand this after they spent four years refusing to accept the legitimacy of President Donald Trump. It remains to be seen whether President Trump will succeed in challenging Pennsylvania’s election results, whether that will affect the outcome by a large enough margin, or whether the U.S. Supreme Court will get involved. Regardless we must pray and work to uphold the rule of law so we can have confidence in our elections and our leaders. Tony Perkins (@tperkins) is President of the Family Research Council . Article on Tony Perkins’ Washington Update and written with the aid of FRC senior writers. Tags: Tony Perkins, Family Research Council, Attorney General, Pennsylvania, state of confusion To share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks! |
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A Prayer And A Warning, Georgia On Our Minds, Left-wing Violence
Posted: 12 Nov 2020 10:07 PM PST by Gary Bauer: One of the pleasures I had during this rugged campaign year was getting to know Rev. Franklin Graham, the president of Samaritan’s Purse, a global humanitarian aid ministry. I’ve joined him at the United Nations to witness the first major speech on religious liberty by a U.S. president. And I was one of the group of leaders who met with Graham over dinner the night before the astonishingly successfully Prayer March in Washington, D.C., which by some estimates was attended by as many as 150,000 people. Yesterday, in one of his frequent calls to prayer for the president, Graham clearly explained what kind of danger we are facing as a nation from within. He also outlined the growing assault on religious liberty that would occur under a Biden Administration, which would likely escalate the attacks on Christian businesses and nonprofits that we saw in the Obama Administration. In a tweet, Graham said, “It seems our nation is under attack—attack from within, from socialists who want to bring anarchy to our streets. The hard-won freedoms that we have enjoyed in America are very much at stake. Pray for the President, our Commander-in-Chief, as he leads the nation during these turbulent times, that God would give him wisdom, grace, and understanding for times such as these.” Georgia On Our Minds For example, if a mail-in ballot is in an envelope that arrives after the deadline, the envelope was likely disposed of by ballot counters in cities such as Philadelphia, Milwaukee and Atlanta. But in the meantime, Georgia will determine whether Republicans retain a slim majority in the U.S. Senate and will be able to block the worst plans of Nancy Pelosi and the increasingly radicalized Democratic Party. Both Senate races there will be decided by runoff elections in January. The two Republican senators in Georgia have radical opponents. One is Raphael Warnock, who has a record of radicalism that he doesn’t hide from. Warnock once hosted Cuban dictator Fidel Castro to speak at his church. Warnock is also a fan of Jeremiah Wright. If that name sounds familiar it’s because Wright was Barack Obama’s pastor and mentor in Chicago. But even Obama knew to run for cover and disassociate from Wright when the pastor’s sermon declaring that the U.S. got what it deserved on 9-11 became public. Warnock hasn’t run from Wright; in fact, he’s defended Wright’s outrageous comments. The Democrat running for the other seat is Jon Ossoff, who’s just as dangerous. Ossoff supports open borders, socialized medicine, the Green New Deal and defunding the police. If both Republican incumbents lose, the Senate will be 50-50 and whoever is vice president will break the tie on incredibly important matters, including the rules of the Senate, Second Amendment rights, religious liberty and on and on. If even one of the Republican incumbents loses, Majority Leader Mitch McConnell will have a one-vote margin in the Senate and be at the mercies of people like Mitt Romney and Lisa Murkowski, and we all know what that’ll mean. The Left is pouring all of their resources into these two runoff campaigns. Some Democrats and liberal pundits are even encouraging liberals to move to Georgia in order to vote there and sway the outcome of those races. That may not be legal, but it’s an indication of just how much the left wants this. They know that if they get control of Senate, they may be able to enact the most radical parts of their agenda. Like everyone else, we at Campaign for Working Families are weary after a long campaign season. But we plan to do everything we can to retain those two Senate seats, including making a six-figure outlay from our Super PAC, Campaign for American Values, and from our regular PAC, Campaign for Working Families. Left-wing Violence Last week, Antifa demonstrators took to the streets of Denver, chanting, “No Borders! No walls! No USA at all!” Marchers carried a sign that read, “Death to Fascism and the Liberalism That Enables It.” And even as their preferred candidate was anointed the winner of the presidential election by the media, these very real left-wing fascists attacked the Democrat Party headquarters in Portland. They smashed windows and spray painted “F— Biden” and “No Presidents.” Somehow, I don’t think these radicals are listening to calls for “unity.” But this is just further evidence that government at every level – local, state and federal – must take the threat of left-wing anarchy and political violence far more seriously. These Marxist cells must be exposed and their supporters must be prosecuted. Tags: Gary Bauer, A Prayer And A Warning, Georgia On Our Minds, Left-wing ViolenceTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks! |
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Leftists Embrace Enemy Lists
Posted: 12 Nov 2020 09:37 PM PST Americans will “unify” under the Left’s totalitarian banner … or else. As Americans will ultimately realize, Biden left two important words off that statement: “Or else.” In short, leftists want to define unity and healing solely on their own terms, and those terms are crystal clear: One either “repents” for the “sin” of defying their “superior” wisdom by having supported President Donald Trump, or one will be made an “unperson,” in every Orwellian sense of the word. Former First Lady Michelle Obama let America know exactly who is being targeted. “Let’s remember,” she lectured, “that tens of millions of people voted for the status quo, even when it meant supporting lies, hate, chaos, and division.” Biden himself also let it be known exactly who was being targeted — less than a month ago. On October 24, he called Trump supporters “chumps” at a rally in Pennsylvania. A week after that, he called them “ugly people” at a rally in Minnesota. Unsurprisingly, this rhetoric pales in comparison to that of other leftists. A Twitter exchange between Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and self-described Barack Obama staffer Michael Simon reveals the compilation of a Stalin-style enemies list has begun in earnest. “Is anyone archiving these Trump sycophants for when they try to downplay or deny their complicity in the future?” Ocasio-Cortez tweeted last week. “I foresee decent probability of many deleted Tweets, writings, photos in the future.” “Yes, we are,” replied Simon. “The Trump Accountability Project (@trumpaccproject) Every Administration staffer, campaign staffer, bundler, lawyer who represented them — everyone.” These two are joined by “conservative” Washington Post columnist Jennifer Rubin. “Any R 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,” she proclaimed. “We have a list.” CNN’s Jake Tapper offered up a similar threat: “I truly sympathize with those dealing with losing — it’s not easy — but at a certain point one has to think not only about what’s best for the nation (peaceful transfer of power) but how any future employers might see your character defined during adversity.” Anyone still remember how the Left defined its own character during adversity? For four years, the outpouring of hate, hysteria, and name-calling, the exhortations for in-your-face confrontations — and, ultimately, the looting and burning of American cities — reached unprecedented levels. And through every day of it, Trump supporters were vilified, assaulted, and even murdered, all while the globalist oligarchs running Big Tech, the media, academia, Hollywood, and virtue-signaling corporations relentlessly reminded every one of those supporters they were bigoted, xenophobic, racist, irredeemable deplorables wholly beneath contempt — and utterly unworthy of consideration. And now, on the cusp of regaining power they will attempt to make permanently unassailable, many of these self-professed champions of “tolerance,” “diversity,” and “inclusion” are in hot pursuit of a time-tested totalitarian agenda: Taking revenge against one’s perceived enemies. Does it get more “or else” than that? In 2014, Communist China established a Social Credit System that went fully operational this year. In 2019, columnist Steven W. Mosher explained how it works. “A low social credit score will exclude you from well-paid jobs, make it impossible for you to get a house or a car loan or even book a hotel room,” he wrote. “The government will slow down your internet connection, ban your children from attending private schools and even post your profile on a public blacklist for all to see.” Mosher further noted that “one of the ways that people can improve their own social credit score is to report on the supposed misdeeds of others.” Compare that to the statement of purpose on the Trump Accountability Project website. “We should welcome in our fellow Americans with whom we differ politically,” it states. “But those who took a paycheck from the Trump Administration should not profit from their efforts to tear our democracy apart. 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.” If you can’t spot a distinction between the two worldviews, that’s because there is none, just as there is no distinction between China’s ambitions and those of former Clinton administration cabinet member Robert Reich, who also advocates for a Truth and Reconciliation Committee that will “name every official, politician, executive, and media mogul whose greed and cowardice” enabled the Trump administration. “There are hotheads and bellicose ideologues on both sides of the political spectrum,” columnist Jeff Jacoby insists. “But that doesn’t describe most voters, and it doesn’t describe Biden.” Really? During a CNN town hall in Pennsylvania on September 17, “level-headed” Joe Biden blamed Trump for every single coronavirus death in the entire nation. “If the president had done his job … from the beginning, all the people would still be alive,” Biden asserted. “All the people — I’m not making this up. Just look at the data. Look at the data.” Better to look at the proverbial writing on the wall. Better to ask oneself what kind of people simultaneously call for unity while vowing to destroy the lives of their opponents. And not just those directly involved in supporting Trump. For the dedicated incrementalists on the Left, that is merely the opening volley. It won’t be long before even the most ordinary Americans who fail to march in lockstep with progressive dogma — “any R,” as Rubin puts it — will be targeted for destruction. In her effort to explain the depredations of Nazi Germany, American political philosopher Hannah Arendt noted, “Evil lost its distinctive characteristic by which most people had until then recognized it. The Nazis redefined it as a civil norm.” Is America ready for a “civil norm” of enemy lists, aided and abetted by the treasure trove of data Big Tech routinely extracts from Americans, often without their knowledge or consent? On Tuesday, pop star and outspoken Democrat Katy Perry was accused of perpetuating white supremacy because she urged her fans to reach out to Trump-supporting family members. That’s a good thing, as many equally “woke” Americans will soon discover that enemy lists are as expansive as those in charge choose them to be — and that the line between “social justice warrior” and “social pariah” is exceedingly thin. Unity? As Jacoby and other equally niave Americans will ultimately discover, there’s no split-the-difference, “why can’t we all get along” compromise between Liberty and tyranny. Tags: Leftists, Embrace Enemy Lists, Arnold Ahlert, The Patriot PostTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks! |
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What Would a Biden Presidency Mean For Israel?
Posted: 12 Nov 2020 08:44 PM PST Biden may have a “deep feeling for Israel,” but does he care about its protection?
by Hugh Fitzgerald: Let’s be charitable. Let’s consider the best case to be made for Biden “as a friend of Israel,” which just appeared from a veteran Israeli journalist, Raphael Ahren: “Biden a veteran friend of Israel, settlement critic, may be at odds over Iran,” by Raphael Ahren, Times of Israel, November 7, 2020: It would be heartening, too, if Joe Biden fully understood the meaning of U.N. Resolution 242, which offers an independent basis – beyond that conferred by the Mandate for Palestine — for Israel’s right to retain territory that it won in the Six-Day War, territory that it needs to hold onto in order to have, in the language of the resolution, “secure [i.e. defensible] and recognized boundaries.” I suspect that in Biden’s nearly fifty years in Washington, despite the hundreds of times he must have spoken feelingly about Israel, he has never read either the Mandate for Palestine or U.N. Resolution 242, as explicated by its author, Lord Caradon. Now is the time for him to do both. “During his decades in politics Biden — who has Jewish grandchildren, as two of his three children married Jews — met countless world leaders. But he still describes his interaction with Golda Meir as “one of the most consequential meetings I’ve ever had in my life.” “Less known is a meeting with her successor Menachem Begin a few years later, which The New York Times at the time described as a “highly emotional confrontation.” In June 1982, a few days after the start of the Lebanon War, known as Operation Peace for the Galilee, Begin met with the Senate Foreign Relations Committee in Washington. Several lawmakers grilled him over Israel’s alleged disproportionate use of force. “A young senator rose and delivered a very impassioned speech — I must say that it’s been a while since I’ve heard such a talented speaker — and he actually supported Operation Peace for the Galilee,” Begin told Israeli reporters after he returned to Jerusalem. The senator — Biden — said he would go even further than Israel, adding that he’d forcefully fend off anyone who sought to invade his country, even if that meant killing women or children. “I disassociated myself from these remarks,” Begin said. “I said to him: No, sir; attention must be paid. According to our values, it is forbidden to hurt women and children, even in war… Sometimes there are casualties among the civilian population as well. But it is forbidden to aspire to this. This is a yardstick of human civilization, not to hurt civilians.” “But while Biden had sympathy for Jerusalem’s actions in Lebanon, he let it be known that he opposed Israel’s West Bank settlement enterprise. He warned Begin that Israel “was losing support in this country because of the settlements policy,” according to The Times.Biden was right. Israel has been “losing support” because of its “settlements policy.” But that doesn’t make that policy wrong. The decline in support is merely testimony to the deficiencies of Israel’s hasbara, and the success of Palestinian and other Arab propaganda efforts. “War is deceit,” Muhammad said, and the Palestinians are past masters at this kind of warfare. Apparently those efforts won over Biden himself. Instead of accepting what he has been fed by those propagandists, he owes it to the Jewish state that he keeps insisting he feels so deeply about, to investigate the moral, historic, and legal claims of Jews to the West Bank (a.k.a. Judea and Samaria) on which those settlements have been built. It was “a lively discussion” that he thought was “very helpful,” Begin concluded.Begin, a noble and also tragic figure (for the way he was treated with such hostility and contempt by Jimmy Carter at Camp David, while Anwar Sadat, who was getting back the entire Sinai, was seen by Carter as a veritable Prince of Peace) stood his ground at Biden’s implied threat of a cut in aid. And his performance likely made a deep impression on Biden, for since that exchange with Begin, Biden has always said that he would never cut aid to Israel to force a change in its policy. We’ll soon have a chance to see if he still means it. Tags: Hugh Fitzgerald, FrontPage Mag, Biden Presidency, Mean For IsraelTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks! |
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Sens. Boozman and Cotton Sign Pro-Life Amicus Brief
Posted: 12 Nov 2020 07:58 PM PST
by Jerry Cox, Contributing Author: Last week the pro-life group Americans United for Life filed an amicus brief on behalf of U.S. Senators John Boozman, Tom Cotton, and 100 other pro-life members of Congress. AUL filed the brief in federal court in defense of good restrictions that the U.S. Food and Drug Administration places on abortion drugs like RU-486. It’s good to see Arkansas’ U.S. Senators taking a strong, pro-life stance once again. Sens. Boozman and Cotton both voted to confirm Judge Amy Coney Barrett to the U.S. Supreme Court in October. In 2015 they repeatedly called for investigations into Planned Parenthood after undercover videos showed Planned Parenthood officials discussing the harvest and sale of fetal tissue. In 2016 they joined with Arkansas four U.S. Congressmen in signing an amicus brief defending pro-life legislation in Texas. In 2018 they co-sponsored a bill that would have banned most abortions in the U.S. after the fifth month of pregnancy. They also urged congress to de-fund Planned Parenthood. In 2019 they co-sponsored federal legislation requiring states to report abortion data to the U.S. government. And last January both Sens. Boozman and Cotton participated in the annual March for Life in Little Rock.
Arkansas is very fortunate to have a congressional delegation that stands up for the sanctity of innocent human life. Tags: Jerry Cox, Family Council, Sens. Boozman and Cotton Sign Pro-Life Amicus Brief To share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks! |
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The Price of Freelancing Is Eternal Vigilance
Posted: 12 Nov 2020 06:34 PM PST by Paul Jacob: Californian voters have largely reversed an assault on “gig” workers in that state by passing Proposition 22. Prop 22 is a response to Assembly Bill 5, enacted in California in 2019. The idea was to reclassify many freelancers so that companies could no longer treat them as independent contractors. Instead, to keep giving them work, companies would have to convert erstwhile freelancers to regular employees. Doing so would mean paying additional costs. Instead, many companies simply stopped working with California-based freelancers. Freelancers of all ideological stripes protested the new law. Rideshare firms Uber and Lyft were a major target of the legislation. Cabbies who work with them are contractors, not employees. Because of AB5, Uber and Lyft have been on the verge of leaving California — meaning a “victory” only for unions and others who hate market competition. Now these firms, and many freelancers, can apparently keep operating in the state. Mission accomplished? Not so fast. A national version of AB5 sits in Congress, lying in wait. It has been endorsed by House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, 215 Democratic co-sponsors, and Joe Biden, who may or may not be the next president of these not-so-United States. (Recounts are being conducted and allegations of election fraud are being investigated.) If we end up with a President Biden, he may well push for a national version of AB5. Especially if the Democrats get at least 50 U.S. Senators after runoffs in Georgia are decided. Stay vigilant. Protect our right to work. This is Common Sense. I’m Paul Jacob. Tags: Paul Jacob, common sense, price for Freelancing, Eternal Vigilance To share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks! |
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The Self-Identity Scam
Posted: 12 Nov 2020 06:12 PM PST by Bill Donohue: To prove his own existence, Descartes famously said, “I think, therefore I am.” To prove their own identity, we now have people saying, “I identify as X, therefore I am X.” In my lifetime, never have I seen more intellectual dishonesty than exists today. Many live in a world of fiction. Adult men and women, especially those drugged by higher education—they are overwhelmingly white—are playing a child’s game of pretend. They pretend to be someone they manifestly are not. Males claim to be female and females claim to be males. Not too long ago, they would be placed in an asylum. Now they are running diversity programs on Wall Street. I recently had to fill out a form before I underwent a routine medical procedure. Most of the questions were unexceptional. But there was one page—an entire page—that asked questions about my gender. [This was factually incorrect: gender refers to socially learned roles deemed appropriate for men and women. I should have been asked about my sex.] One of the options I was given was “non-binary,” meaning neither male nor female. Another option I had was to check off “intersex, genderqueer or gender non-conforming.” At least the guy who pretends he is a woman may get a beer at half price on ladies night. What do these poor folks qualify for? After answering that I am male, one of the questions asked whether I identify as a male. Another asked what pronouns I would like the medical staff to use when speaking to me. I was given choices such as “she/her, he/him, they/them.” I have never met a “them” and would not care to meet such a creature in a restroom. At this point, I refused to cooperate. I put a big X across the page, adding that this is all nonsense. Two healthcare persons saw this and just smiled. They knew it was nonsense too. But they did not want to lose their job by admitting that those who insist on this form are certifiably insane. If only they were certified as insane. Then we could get them committed. Unfortunately, those responsible for this madness have graduate degrees. They are mind-control freaks. They want us to affirm their sick politics. Moreover, they have infested the vast majority of professions throughout the nation. The corporate boys and the government bureaucrats—taking their cues from screwed-up educators—are attempting to shove down our throats this preposterous self-identity scam. It’s not just male-female identity that is a victim of subjectivism. Race is as well. Remember Rachel Dolezal? She was the white gal who said she was black. Her parents are white. She later admitted she was a liar. She is not alone. Jessica A. Krug, who is white, changed her name to Jessica La Bombalera and claimed to be black. She is a real gem. She actually got the prestigious Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture to award her financial support so she could write a book about slavery. One day she came clean. She admitted that she lied about “my lived experience as a white Jewish child in suburban Kansas City.” One of her other lies was to say she was from Spanish Harlem, where I used to work. Funny, I recall a lot of my students’ names, but I never met a La Bombalera. That one I would remember. Oh, I forgot to say that Jessica was recently forced to retire from George Washington University: it was learned that she is white. She was a professor of African American history. There are men who have sex with men and claim they are not homosexuals; many social scientists believe them. We have Catholic women, many of whom are ex-nuns, who call themselves a priest, claiming they were “ordained” by feminist ex-Catholics. Indians, who came to America from Asia, consider themselves to be Native Americans (our elites agree). And so on. It is important not to lose our sense of humor over this scam. I loved what happened over the summer when a male cop had to conduct a body search of a female rioter on the street. Her fellow rioters screamed at him, “You can’t search her, you’re a man.” To which he replied, “No I am not—I self-identify as a woman.” I myself have said on TV that some people think I am a big Irishman. “I am not,” I say. “I identify as a Chinese dwarf.” Not sure just how far the elites will push these delusional ideas, but it is clear that it all stems from the postmodern assault on truth. Once truth doesn’t matter—the law allowing two men to marry—everything is possible. This has happened before. In the last century, Jews were identified as less than human. We know what happened. In fact, Hitler is on record saying there is no such thing as truth. Now he is in good company—legions of professors in the arts and sciences agree with this assessment. Are they so drunk with ideology that they can’t connect the dots? You got it. Tags: Bill Donohue, Self-Identity, ScamTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks! |
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Grassley’s Letter To DOJ: Hunter, James Biden’s Actions ‘Potentially Make Them Agents Of The Chinese Government’
Posted: 12 Nov 2020 05:53 PM PST by Hank Berrien: On Monday, Iowa GOP senator Charles Grassley, the chairman of the Senate Finance Committee, fired off a letter to U.S. Attorney General William Barr in which he stated, “… the actions by Hunter Biden and James Biden on behalf of CEFC, Ye Jianming, and other officers connected to CEFC, potentially make them agents of the Chinese government.” Grassley began the letter by stating that he had served “in both the Obama and Trump administrations, I have conducted oversight of the Department of Justice’s (DOJ) lax and selective enforcement of the Foreign Agents Registration Act (FARA).” He explained, “FARA is an important statute that was designed not to prohibit activity but rather to require individuals to register with the DOJ if they are acting as an agent of a foreign government or enterprise to influence U.S. policy or public opinion. This helps ensure transparency and accountability in the public policy arena. FARA is a content-neutral law and does not require any entity or individual to refrain from certain types of speech or activities.” Grassley noted, “FARA requires individuals to register with the Department of Justice if they act, even through an intermediary, ‘as an agent, representative, employee, or servant’ or in ‘any other capacity’ at the behest of a foreign principal, including a foreign political party, government, or corporation, for purposes of engagement with a United States official to influence U.S. policy or the public.” He warned: Grassley noted that Ye and Hunter Biden “formed a lucrative financial relationship that resulted in Hunter Biden receiving millions of dollars” while Ye and CEFC gained access to lucrative U.S. opportunities. “When the available evidence is taken as a whole, it is clear that CEFC intended to make inroads in the United States for the purpose of expanding its business and used Hunter Biden and his business associates to help effectuate that intent. In pursuit of its goals, it appears that CEFC may have taken action to influence U.S. policy and public opinion in its favor and gain access to several U.S. politicians in an attempt to curry favor for potential business transactions,” Grassley wrote. Grassley concluded, “Based on the information acquired to date, CEFC was controlled by a foreign government, received financial support therefrom, and may have engaged in activity to influence the U.S. Government and public for the benefit of the communist Chinese government. Accordingly, the actions by Hunter Biden and James Biden on behalf of CEFC, Ye Jianming, and other officers connected to CEFC, potentially make them agents of the Chinese government for purposes of longstanding public disclosure laws. The American public deserves to know when foreign entities are operating in and attempting to influence U.S. policy and public opinion.” Tags: Hank Berrien, DailyWire.com, Grassley’s Letter, To DOJ, Hunter, James Biden, Actions, Potentially Make Them Agents, Chinese Government To share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks! |
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Time to Audit
Posted: 12 Nov 2020 05:14 PM PST How legal are the mail-in ballots? Mostly legal, as in mostly peaceful protest? Count all legal ballots.
Editorial Cartoon by AF “Tony” Branco Tags: AF Branco, editorial cartoon, time to audit, mail-in, ballots To share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks! |
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The Most Masked European Countries Have The Biggest Coronavirus Surges
Posted: 12 Nov 2020 03:51 PM PST by Daniel Greenfield: “If we just wore these masks,” Joe Biden said, at the final presidential debate, holding up a mask like a totem, “we can save 100,000 lives.”
The Democrat nominee’s plan for fighting the coronavirus was all about wearing masks. And indeed the only notable element of Biden’s plan has been a national mask mandate.But would that actually work? Would it even save one life, never mind 100,000? Few European countries have been more mask-obsessed than France. In July, France issued a national mask mandate compelling everyone to wear masks indoors in public spaces. Anyone caught not wearing a mask would face a fine of around $150. In August, Paris and a number of other regions imposed mask rules for anyone leaving the house. Forget the stereotype of the Parisian nonchalantly dangling a gauloise between two yellowing fingers. “You’re not allowed to smoke on the street without a mask; you can’t take it off, so you must find another way,” Deputy Mayor Anne Souyris snapped. How were Parisians to smoke without taking off their masks, cutting holes in them, or setting them on fire? In a nod to another French obsession, cyclists were temporarily exempted, but AI was deployed on the metro to automatically detect which passengers weren’t covering their faces. Some cynics suspected that this had something to do with France’s mask surplus. After buying a billion masks from China, the worldwide hub of the fashion industry ramped up its own mask production, but the demand wasn’t there leaving manufacturers with a 40 million mask surplus. The initial drive to produce 5 million masks a day had left a lot of masks, many of them fashionable fabric masks, useless but pretty, sitting in warehouses with nowhere to go. As the summer heat wore on, inspectors marched through French workplaces to check that everyone was masked. In a nod to class privileges, bosses were allowed to unmask in their private offices, but workers were forced to keep masks on unless they had 13 feet of space. Still, 78% of French people polled claimed that they studiously wore their masks. How well did that work out? France recently passed 1.1 million confirmed cases and hit a record of over 52,000 cases in one day. While the media has been warning that the numbers are spinning out of control in the United States after this country passed 80,000 cases in a day, France’s numbers are far worse. America, after all, has a much larger population than France. Despite its strenuous mask regime, France became the country with the fifth largest number of cases, falling behind larger countries like America and Russia. And it’s not alone. In Spain, where 86% of people wear masks, the government has declared a six month state of emergency with nightly curfews and gatherings limited to 6 people. The only legal reason to leave your house after 11 PM or before 6 AM is to go to work or deal with an emergency. Spain hit the 1 million mark even before France did. And that’s despite a nationwide mask mandate back in May, along with a ban on public smoking, making it one of the first European countries to go all in on masks. Even though masks became more widespread in Spain than most of the rest of the continent, and the country whose totalitarian past lies close to the surface, has unleashed some of the toughest lockdown measures, this is now Spain’s third coronavirus resurgence. Italy, where 81% wear masks, responded to yet another spike with a fourth set of lockdown restrictions, shutting down gyms and theaters, while forcing restaurants and bars to close by 6 PM. No one is allowed to watch soccer games in person or go to wedding receptions. Despite all the masks, Italy still holds the record for the second-highest death toll in Europe. Meanwhile in Sweden, only 5% wear masks. The authorities have never recommended them believing that they are a waste of time. Sweden has used a soft lockdown that avoided fines and mandates. And the media in lockdown countries has spent the months lambasting Sweden and warning the rest of the world not to use it as a model. But Sweden isn’t alone. In Denmark hardly anyone wears masks. And in Norway, less than a sixth do. In the UK, where less than a third of Britons wear masks, the death rate is only a little higher than Italy, and it still hasn’t hit the 1 million mark despite a larger population. In Europe, as in America, masks are a cultural, not medical, practice. The people likeliest and unlikeliest to wear them have cultural similarities. And they wear them for the same reason that the Biden campaign embraced wearing masks, not as a plan, but as a cultural symbol. Wearing masks is not a plan to stop the virus, but it is a fetish of conformity. That is why so many politicians use the language of “respect” rather than medicine to encourage the practice. Medical practices don’t need to be respected. Cultural beliefs, especially irrational ones, do. The discomfort of wearing masks, especially in the hot southern countries like France, Spain, and Italy, perversely seem to affirm their effectiveness in the same way that some mouthwash manufacturers make their brands taste astringent to seem more medicinal. People are trained to think that what is medically effective is also physically uncomfortable. When the Black Death arrived, medieval Europeans resorted to a variety of practices and cures, some useful and many useless, some that had roots in a legitimate concept of illness, others that were little more than voodoo, to deal with a pandemic that had no easy answers. The obsession with masks, an actual useful medical tool transformed into a cargo cult fetish, has echoes of the medieval misuse of legitimate medical practices during the Black Death. In some medical environments masks may offer potential benefits, but mandating that entire populations wear them accomplishes nothing except keeping the French textile industry employed. That and the assorted unhealthy consequences of constantly wearing a mask. But whether it’s using a severed snake to try and draw out the Black Death or wearing a mask, people in an outbreak feel the need to grasp at some means of controlling the threat. And they become angry at anyone who doesn’t appear to respect their chosen control mechanism. Wearing a mask is meant to prevent the spread of the virus, not to protect the wearer. A CDC study showed that 88% of those infected wore masks. But the medieval logic of masks falsely assumes that wearing a mask protects you from the virus and that the virus only spreads due to those who don’t wear masks. And that creates natural scapegoats for the pandemic. The Biden campaign and the Democrats are cynically cashing in on these pandemic fears. “We’re in a circumstance where the president thus far and still has no plan, no comprehensive plan,” Biden ranted at the debate. “What I would do is make sure we have everyone encouraged to wear a mask all the time.” France, Italy, and Spain tried that. It didn’t work. The European countries most obsessed with masks are doing the worst. Nearly universal mask wearing in those countries has done little to prevent a surge. Democrats have a weakness for wanting to be like the Europeans. But the only thing the Biden mask mandate would do is turn us into France. The French wore masks through the summer heat only to have three times the cases per capita and per day as the Americans who never adopted a mask mandate. Maybe, instead of Americans adopting the Biden mask mandate and becoming more like France, it’s time the French tried a little bit of freedom and being more like Americans. Tags: Daniel Greenfield, Most Masked European, Countries Have,. Biggest Coronavirus SurgesTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!> |
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Navy’s Newest Ship to Be Named for Marine Sgt. Maj. John Canley, Vietnam War Hero
Posted: 12 Nov 2020 03:24 PM PST by Gina Harkins: Another Navy expeditionary sea base will be named for a Marine Corps hero who earned the Medal of Honor for heroism in Vietnam. The Navy announced on the Marine Corps’ 245th birthday that a future mobile sea base will be named for retired Sgt. Maj. John Canley, who was awarded the nation’s top valor award in 2018 for saving scores of his comrades during one of the Vietnam War’s deadliest battles. “ESB-6 will be named USS John L. Canley to honor a man who has exemplified all that has made our service strong, and our nation thrive,” Navy Secretary Kenneth Braithwaite said Tuesday. “Then-Gunnery Sergeant Canley led his men through the Battle of Hue City, going above and beyond the call of duty as he carried wounded Marines to safety and drove the enemy from a fortified position.” Canley said he was surprised to find out this week he’d have a ship named for him, calling it a fitting tribute since he spent considerable time at sea during his career. He’s more grateful for what it will mean to the troops who fought alongside him in the brutal battle more than five decades ago, he added. “They’ll be so excited to know that there’s been a little recognition since 1968,” Canley told Military.com. Braithwaite said the expeditionary sea bases will deploy future Marines while carrying the names of those from the service’s past. Those the mobile bases are named for, he said, embody the sea services’ core values. “The future crew of USS John L. Canley, both sailors and Marines, will carry on his legacy, character and professionalism throughout the lifespan of this vessel,” Braithwaite added. Canley was serving as a company gunnery sergeant with 1st Battalion, 1st Marines, when he led more than 140 men through the weeklong 1968 battle to retake Hue City. The Marines were heavily outnumbered, but Canley repeatedly braved enemy fire to bring his Marines to safety, advising and reorganizing his men when their company commander was seriously injured. He was originally awarded the Navy Cross for his actions in Hue City, but some of the Marines Canley led through the battle spent years fighting to see the award upgraded. Their efforts paid off when President Donald Trump announced two years ago that Canley would receive the Medal of Honor in a White House ceremony. Canley will be the fourth Marine hero to have an expeditionary sea base named for him. Three others have been named for Lt. Gen. Lewis Burwell “Chesty” Puller, Chief Warrant Officer 4 Hershel “Woody” Williams, and Lance Cpl. Miguel Keith. Puller is one of the most decorated Marines in the Corps’ history. Williams earned the Medal of Honor for heroism in World War II, and Keith was posthumously awarded the medal for heroism in Vietnam. The ships, according to the Navy, will support a variety of missions, including those carried out by special operations forces. The 785-foot ships have a four-spot flight deck and can carry a crew of nearly 150. The floating bases could prove vital in future missions in the Pacific, where the Marine Corps is preparing for possible missions to counter China. Canley said he likes the idea of his namesake ship helping get Marines the equipment they need in a fight. “As long as they have equipment and the training,” he said, “I don’t care what the situation is — with the right leadership, the Marines are undefeatable.” Marine Commandant Gen. David Berger said in Tuesday’s announcement that Canley represents a generation of Marines “who have sacrificed and fought for our way of life.” “His actions in Vietnam forever changed the lives of so many Marines around him,” Berger said. “His legacy will continue to live on.” Tags: Gina Harkins, Military.com, Navy’s Newest Ship, to Be Named, Sgt. Maj. John Canley, Vietnam War Hero To share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks! |
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ICYMI: Here’s the Latest on Litigation Over Election Results
Posted: 12 Nov 2020 03:02 PM PST
by Rachel del Guidice: Supreme Court Justice Samuel Alito ordered county election boards in Pennsylvania to comply with guidance requiring them to keep ballots received after 8 p.m. Election Day “in a safe, secure, and sealed container separate from other voted ballots,” as Newsweek and other outlets reported Friday. How could Alito’s directive affect returns for the presidential election? Additionally, The Associated Press reported that 24 Wisconsin counties had completed canvassing of election results as of Monday morning, but that “all 72 must be in before President Donald Trump could call for a recount.” How long will that take, and will other states besides Georgia recount? Jason Snead, executive director of the Honest Elections Project, joins the discussion. We also cover these stories:
Rachel del Guidice: I’m joined today by Jason Snead. He’s the executive director of the Honest Elections Project and also a former colleague of mine at The Heritage Foundation. Jason, it’s great to have you with us. Jason Snead: It’s great to be here. Del Guidice: Well, Jason, to start off with the question that’s really foremost on everyone’s minds, do you think there was any voter fraud in this election or any potential voter fraud? Snead: Well, there’s always voter fraud in any election to some degree. We know that because you can look at the convictions, it’s on the Heritage voter fraud database. And you see that in essentially every election cycle there are people who are willing to cheat, willing to take illegal steps to try to rig or steal elections. So the media narrative that you get that voter fraud just does not exist in any way, shape, or form is simply erroneous, and it has a lot more to do with political spin than with reality. The question now seems to be, is there evidence of widespread, organized, systemic fraud that could’ve thrown a presidential election? That’s been certainly alleged by the president, by folks involved in his campaign, and his campaign’s legal team. And I think that we’re waiting to see what evidence they’ve got to back up those assertions. So I think that we need to be, of course, keeping a close eye on that. We need to be careful not to believe necessarily every claim of fraud that we see. But I think beyond any doubt whatsoever, fraud does occur, and it probably occurred in the 2020 election as well. Del Guidice: Since you’re saying it probably did occur, how do you think, Jason, this should be handled and investigated? Snead: I think it should be handled carefully and deliberately. And I think that if the facts ultimately do merit prosecutions against individuals who did commit fraud, then I think the prosecutions would be justified. But what we, I think, need to also be careful about is jumping to conclusions too quickly about the degree to which fraud occurred. There are undoubtedly instances that are more credible than others that have already come to light. For instance, I saw a report out of Wisconsin that, I believe it was four felons voted in the 2020 election despite being apparently ineligible to do so. I believe that they were all on parole or probation. So that sort of a thing, to my mind, would obviously be very credible. But I think that in terms of some of the grander concerns, I think that we need to see what evidence we’ve got and examine that very carefully. Del Guidice: I’m curious about your perspective on one of the big headlines yesterday. Attorney General Bill Barr announced that he will allow the [Justice Department] to investigate voter fraud. What all does this mean, and is this appropriate? Snead: Well, I certainly share the attorney general’s perspective, at least in so far as he spelled it out in the letter, that credible accusations of fraud or malfeasance in the elections absolutely need to be investigated. One of the most difficult things about this area of law and policy is that proving that fraud occurred is a very difficult thing to do. And sometimes what happens is claims of fraud, even credible ones, wind up not getting investigated or not getting prosecuted, particularly after an election is over, for various reasons. So I certainly share the sense that if you’ve got a concern that fraud could impact the election of 2020, that it ought to be investigated. And there’s really two reasons to do that, right? One is that, of course, if the concern is valid and if fraud did occur, then you absolutely want to get to the bottom of that and bring the people who are responsible to justice. But the flip side of that is that if fraud did not occur, then you want to be able to say with certainty that it did not happen, and here’s the evidence to rebut the concern that it did. Because at the end of the day, you want to be able to tell voters that the election was conducted fairly, that it was conducted honestly, and that the result can be trusted. I don’t think that you can tell voters that if the response to every single concern that gets raised either about mischief or mismanagement, which is another part of this conversation, the mismanagement of elections or bureaucratic incompetence, if all of those concerns are simply going to be brushed aside, I think that sends the wrong message to voters. And I’m not sure that you can seriously say that you’re taking seriously the credibility of democracy if you’re just ignoring all problems. Del Guidice: Speaking of potential issues of voter fraud, The Federalist reported on Monday that there might have been incidents of curing of ballots in Wisconsin. And this is where officials count a ballot that is legally disqualified or difficult to read. How, Jason, do you think this should be responded to, and are there other instances of voter irregularities that you’ve heard of yourself? Snead: We’ve been looking at some of the concerns about irregularities and trying to determine, frankly, what actually has happened in some of these places like Philadelphia, like Detroit, and elsewhere, and understand what some of the problems were. I think that really one of the things when it comes to counting ineligible ballots and concerns about the process—which, that’s what a lot of the lawsuits that have been filed are about, is really about the process. One of the overarching concerns that often is getting left out of media coverage is the fact that all across the country, states, particularly battleground states, wound up either changing their election rules or having those rules essentially changed for them in the course of often very partisan, very politicized lawsuits that were brought by groups on the left, including the [Democratic National Committee] itself, where they were suing to invalidate voter identification and verification requirements for absentee ballots, to try to legalize ballot harvesting, to really change the rules. And it’s sort of similar in some respects to changing the rules of baseball in the middle of the seventh inning. No one would really think that that was entirely fair or trust that the only reason for changing the rule is just for the benefit of the fans, not because the umpire was picking favorites or picking sides. But that’s what was going on. So that risks not only, of course, the credibility of the election, but it also risks confusion about what the rules actually are. And so I think that one of the big lessons that we need to take away from 2020 is that rules should not be changed, particularly not through partisan lawsuits, close to an election because that really risks the integrity of the entire process. Del Guidice: Well, Jason, even though the Biden campaign has claimed victory in the presidential election, the Trump campaign has filed lawsuits with current litigation pending in, I think, at least five states. I know in Pennsylvania, Nevada, Michigan, Georgia, and Arizona. Can you sort of walk us through the latest on what’s happening on those efforts? Snead: Well, as I said, pretty much all of these cases at this point are talking about procedural issues that deal with the counting of votes. So for instance, trying to get ballots that were received after a statutory deadline for the receipt of absentee ballots segregated. That happened in Pennsylvania. Concerns about poll watching. Concerns about ballots. In Maricopa County, [Arizona], I saw one lawsuit there about ballots where the concern is about an apparent over-vote situation where, for one reason or another, the machine was reading a ballot that was cast and counting it anyway. And the problem when you’ve got an over-vote situation is that that would essentially cancel out the votes of that particular person for, in this case, president. So we’ve got a lot of concerns about procedure. And some of these, of course, could affect the vote count. And any lawsuit that does affect the vote count should be taken seriously. What we’re now seeing, really what we’re now waiting to see, I think, is some of the lawsuits that could potentially affect the outcome of the election to the degree that would be necessary to overcome [former Vice President Joe] Biden’s lead in places like Pennsylvania where the separation between them is several—I think it’s about 40,000 votes, 45,000 votes at the time that we’re recording this. Del Guidice: On Friday, Newsweek reported that Supreme Court Justice Samuel Alito made an order saying that all county boards of election must comply with guidance that requires them to keep ballots received after 8 p.m. on Tuesday in a safe, secure, and sealed container separate from other voter ballots. What is your perspective on this directive from Justice Alito? And what’s the update on what’s happening here as we’re now getting into the middle of the week? Snead: Well, the order that Alito gave to segregate ballots is mostly to preserve the ability for any postelection litigation that impacts those late-arriving ballots to actually be carried out and potentially to invalidate those votes, depending on the outcome of the litigation. The backstory here is that going into Election Day, there was a torrent of legal activity in Pennsylvania because you had a situation where the left was suing the state. The secretary of state was trying to enter into a consent decree to change the state’s ballot receipt deadline from Election Day to several days after the election. And eventually, that wound up going to the United States Supreme Court, and the court deadlocked and split, four justices to four justices, allowing a ruling by the Pennsylvania state Supreme Court upholding that extension to be in effect for this election. Now that case in Pennsylvania is back before the Supreme Court. There’s a cert petition pending. A number of states filed amicus briefs supporting the court taking that case. My group has filed one, as well as others, supporting the court taking the case and deciding the issue once and for all—whether or not a court can indeed extend the statutory deadline or whether that power is vested in the legislature and the federal Constitution. And there are some variations on that question in other states as well. So the order from Justice Alito is preserving the segregation of ballots that arrived after 8 p.m. on Election Day so that in the event that the court does take up the issue and in the event that it does rule that those ballots are constitutionally invalid, that you still know what ballots are actually affected, what the numbers are, and then you can have a remedy available to you. Del Guidice: In terms of recounts, some states, and I know the Trump campaign is asking for those, The Associated Press reported this week that 24 counties in Wisconsin had completed their canvassing of last week’s election results as of Monday morning, but that also two counties must be in before the Trump campaign could call for a recount. How long, Jason, do you think it will be before Wisconsin does a recount? And are there other states that you expect recounts from? Snead: I’m not sure how long we’ll be waiting on Wisconsin, but I do expect that there will be recounts. There could potentially be a recount in Arizona. There could be a recount in Georgia. Pennsylvania seems unlikely that if there is a recount that it would seriously affect the vote tallies just because, historically speaking, recounts don’t usually result in significant changes to the numbers. We’re talking something on the order of hundreds or maybe a couple thousand votes at the outside. So I think that probably a recount is going to be most significant in places like Arizona and Georgia where it’s relatively closely divided. Del Guidice: Per the Congressional Research Service, the Electoral College will be meeting in just about a month to cast their votes. And since this is just about a month away, maybe a month and a few days, how far do you think litigation will be able to progress before this vote happens? Snead: I think that we’ve got a long way to go before we get to the meeting of the Electoral College. Of course, if you’re looking for some historical precedent here, look back to 2000 with Bush v. Gore, when the Supreme Court issued its ruling right before the safe harbor deadline. The safe harbor deadline is the statutory deadline that Congress has set that states have to certify their elections and impanel a seat of electors for the Electoral College. And as long as they get it in before that date, then it’s not subject to second-guessing by Congress. And so that extended right up until that deadline. So we could be looking at litigation that could stretch for the next four or five weeks until we get to the safe harbor deadline in early December this year. And I guess the alternative argument here is that the litigation could be resolved before that, but certainly we could be in for a scenario where it goes the full distance. Del Guidice: Going back briefly to election irregularities, the Public Interest Legal Foundation filed a lawsuit last month alleging that 21,000 dead people were on the Pennsylvania voter rolls before Election Day. Jason, do you think that this impacted the election outcome, having these 21,000 people that shouldn’t have been registered still on the voter rolls? Snead: I certainly think that it’s a concerning situation anytime you see that a state is not adequately maintaining its voter rolls because there are actually two federal laws that require that states take action to maintain clean, accurate, and reliable voter registration records. And the reasons are pretty obvious, right? If you’re talking about having an honest and fair election, that starts with having clean voter rolls so that you actually know how many voters there are in your community and who is eligible and who is not to cast a ballot. That’s a very important thing to understand. And every year you’ve got about 10% of the U.S. population that moves. You’ve got many millions more who either pass away or become ineligible because they’re, say, convicted of a felony. So the voter rolls are not static things. They have to constantly be updated. But despite the fact that it is not only legally required but it’s just common sense to be cleaning up your voter rolls and removing old, outdated, or duplicative entries, that has become a very contentious process. Many states quite deliberately drag their feet in this and do not prioritize list maintenance, even actively resist engaging in the practice. And there are a lot of outside groups on the left that will sue states trying to stop them. So I look at examples like this as just further evidence of the fact that states are often not doing enough in this area and need to be doing more. Because, again, to get back to an earlier point, you want to be able to show voters that the system works, that it works well, that you can trust the results. And when you see information like that coming out, that’s a very concerning thing because, yes, not only does that open up the door to fraud, but it also sends up a red flag that maybe the system is not working as well as it should. Del Guidice: On that note, Jason, as we wrap up, many voters right now are concerned about fraud and how ballots are being counted. Do you have concerns about election integrity, specifically in this 2020 election? Snead: Well, I do. And in fact, I’ve been concerned from the beginning because we saw almost immediately when the pandemic hit and all of the closures started that there was a concerted push to take advantage of that situation to push a political agenda that amounted to reshaping elections and doing away with lots of the basic safeguards: verification, identification, ballot harvesting bans. You saw legislation being pushed in Congress. You saw litigation being brought in nearly every state by some very deep-pocketed liberal organizations, including the Democratic Party itself. It was a concerted strategic push to undermine the safeguards and the rules that, by and large, Americans support and that undergird the system and provide, I think, some great benefits to help with democracy. So I do have concerns that going forward, not only in terms of how we’re processing 2020, but then looking to future elections, I have concerns about this trend continuing where the process of voting itself is increasingly politicized, the rhetoric surrounding it is increasingly toxic. And you’ve now got a baseline standard that really began back in 2018 with Stacey Abrams refusing to concede to her opponent in the gubernatorial race to now where you basically got a situation where if my side doesn’t win, then I think that the entire process is rigged. I think that’s a very difficult place to be if we’re talking about the election system writ large. We need to talk about this from the issue of principles, not politics. Preserving the integrity of our elections goes hand in hand with preserving the credibility of democracy. And I think that we need to be fighting for fair, transparent voting processes protected with things like voter ID laws, protected with ballot harvesting bans that make sure that everyone knows that their vote counts and that their voice is going to be heard Del Guidice: What a strong note to end on. Jason, thank you so much for joining us on “The Daily Signal Podcast.” It’s great having you. Snead: Thank you. Tags: Rachel del Guidice, Jason Snead, ICYMI, Here’s the Latest on, Litigation Over, Election ResultsTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks! |
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What Would a President Biden’s Immigration Plan Look Like
Posted: 12 Nov 2020 02:15 PM PST by Numbers USA: During his first weeks in office, Joe Biden and his Democrat administration are expected to quickly start dismantling President Trump’s incredibly effective immigration agenda. Biden has promised that his administration will move to fully restore the Obama-era program that shields 640,000 undocumented immigrants who were brought to the U.S. as children from deportation, even expanding the program to allow new applications. He also intends to rescind President Trump’s travel and immigration restrictions on 13 countries who are known backers of international terrorism. Biden has promised to also implement a 100-day freeze on deportations while his administration issues guidance narrowing who can be arrested by immigration agents. And as reported by CBS, a source familiar with Biden’s plans said new guidance would be designed to curb the mythical so-called “collateral arrests,” which are apprehensions of immigrants who are not the target of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement but are apprehended because they are in the country illegally. At the border, Mr. Biden has pledged to discontinue the Trump administration’s policy of requiring migrants to wait in Mexico for the duration of their U.S asylum cases. A source familiar with the Biden team’s planning, according to CBS, ‘said the incoming administration will also withdraw from the three bilateral agreements Mr. Trump brokered with Guatemala, El Salvador and Honduras that allow the U.S. to send rejected asylum-seekers to those countries and have them seek refuge there.’ Mr. Biden’s team is also planning to begin the process of terminating the extremely effective “public charge” rule the Trump administration implemented to deny green cards and immigrant visas to applicants who U.S. officials determine to rely on taxpayer-funded benefits like Medicaid, food stamps, and Section 8 housing vouchers. Biden has also promised to dramatically increase refugee admissions, moving away from the 15,000 spots set by Mr. Trump and raising the cap to 125,000. In addition, Jennifer Molina, a spokeswoman for the Biden campaign, said the projected incoming administration will also create a “task force” to help locate and reunify “separated families.” “President-elect Joe Biden will restore order, dignity, and fairness to our immigration system. At its core, his immigration policy will be driven by the need to keep families together,” she speciously stated. “The Trump administration had an extraordinary preoccupation with immigration issues and they invested an enormous amount of attention and single-minded focus on immigration,” Meissner, who is also a senior fellow at the “non-partisan” Migration Policy Institute, told CBS News. “An administration that wants to undo those changes would have to devote a similar amount of time and effort — and arguably more, because you don’t want to just be undoing things. You want to be moving a proactive agenda as well.” Finally, CBS reports that “Biden has promised to introduce legislation that would allow the nation’s estimated 11-14 million undocumented immigrants to legalize their status, but such an effort — which has proved elusive for two decades — would need to be approved by a divided Congress.” Tags: NumbersUSA, What Would, President Biden’s, Immigration Plan Look LikeTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks! |
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NBC MORNING RUNDOWN
Friday, November 13, 2020
Good morning, NBC News readers.
President-elect Joe Biden put another state on the Electoral College scoreboard. New Jersey’s governor made a desperate plea to Covid-fatigued residents. And a gigantic gator takes a stroll on a Florida golf course amid Tropical Storm Eta.
Here’s where things stand this Friday morning.
Biden wins Arizona, NBC News projects President-elect Joe Biden has won Arizona, NBC News projects.
The state’s 11 electoral votes further cements Biden’s projected presidential victory, bringing his Electoral College lead over President Donald Trump to 290-217.
Biden, whose margin of victory in the state is just over 11,000 votes, is the first Democratic presidential candidate to win the state since former President Bill Clinton in 1996.
Biden’s victory in the state known for its conservative Republican stalwarts like the late Sens. John McCain and Barry Goldwater, adds further pressure on Trump, who has yet to concede the election.
A coalition of federal agencies involved in election security and representatives for election officials from each state refuted the widespread claims of voter fraud by the president and right-wing conspiracists in a statement Thursday.
“The November 3rd election was the most secure in American history,” the Election Infrastructure Government Coordinating Council said in a statement. “There is no evidence that any voting system deleted or lost votes, changed votes, or was in any way compromised.”
The statement comes as more Senate Republicans and former national security officials are pushing for Biden to receive intelligence briefings, a key step in the transition to the White House.
Over 150 former national security officials urged the General Services Administration in a letter Thursday to move forward with the transition, including security briefings.
While few Republicans have broken with Trump to congratulate Biden, even Trump allies like Sens. Chuck Grassley and Lindsay Graham said Biden should begin receiving the presidential-level security briefings on Thursday.
China also acknowledged Biden’s win on Friday, issuing a terse statement saying: “We respect the choice of the American people and we extend our congratulations to Mr. Biden and Ms. Harris.”
Relations with China will loom large for the next administration with one major question being: Can Biden pick up the pieces of global trade after Trump’s grueling tariff wars?
Covid-19 vaccine to the rescue? Experts say not so fast. We need to make it through this winter first Pfizer’s announcement Monday of a potentially effective coronavirus vaccine triggered a wave of hope and optimism, renewing some expectations that life in the U.S. could return to normal sometime next year.
Normal, however, is still a ways away. A vaccine, even one with promising early results, cannot do anything to stop a grueling winter, with outbreaks growing rapidly across the country and record hospitalization rates threatening to overwhelm health care resources.
Governors and other state officials have a blunt message about Thanksgiving: Don’t hold large gatherings this year.
New Jersey Gov. Phil Murphy made a desperate plea with coronavirus-fatigued residents on Thursday to keep following health guidelines.
After Murphy rattled off a long series of numbers showing how the virus is spiking in the Garden State, a reporter asked what he’d say to state residents tired of Covid-19 protocols. “You know what’s really uncomfortable and annoying? When you die. That’s my answer,” the exasperated governor replied. “This is not forever. We’re in a sprint right now and we’re just asking people to bear down.”
Georgia Democrats aim to keep voters fired up for Senate control Democrats know this year’s election was as much about Trump as anything else, but without him on the ballot, they are working to find other ways to keep voters engaged.
In Georgia, party officials, labor leaders and progressive activists are mounting an aggressive campaign to keep their base mobilized and register new voters ahead of a Dec. 7 deadline before people return to the ballot box for potentially two runoffs for Senate seats on Jan. 5.
Democrats are doing what they can to stoke enthusiasm, but recognize they have an uphill climb in the historically conservative state.
“With record turnout this time around, I think that people understand what’s at stake. They’re going to rise up one more time,” said Democratic challenger Raphael Warnock. Democratic Senate candidates Raphael Warnock, left, and Jon Ossoff arrive at a get-out-the-vote event in Jonesboro, Ga., on Oct. 27. (Photo: Brynn Anderson / AP)
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THINK about it Secretary of State Mike Pompeo’s transition “joke” makes a laughing stock of America’s global diplomacy, journalism professor Ilene Prusher writes in an opinion piece.
Live BETTER Many families are rethinking Thanksgiving this year. Here are some ideas for how to make it safe, but still special.
Shopping Early Black Friday sales are already on. We asked retail experts which are the best ones to hit.
Whoa! That’s some gator Another one for the gotta-see-it-to-believe-it category this week.
A massive alligator was spotted creeping around the grounds on a Naples, Florida, golf course on Wednesday as Tropical Storm Eta was bearing down.
While large alligators are not an uncommon sight in Florida, this one gained attention for its rather prehistoric appearance.
Not sure I’ll be hitting those links anytime soon after seeing that creature…
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NBC FIRST READ
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From NBC’s Chuck Todd, Mark Murray, Carrie Dann and Melissa Holzberg
FIRST READ: Trump spends post-election week spreading misinformation and chaos as the virus rages on
The past week after news organizations like NBC News projected Joe Biden the winner of the 2020 presidential election has epitomized the last four years of the Trump presidency.
You have a president who’s been unable to admit he lost. (NBC News last night called Arizona for Biden, which brings his electoral vote total to 290, with Biden still ahead in Georgia – which would increase that to 306.)
REUTERS/Tom Brenner
You have his administration officials still carrying out his orders. (GSA Administrator Emily Murphy has yet to recognize Biden’s victory, preventing immediate funding for his transition.)
You have most of the Republican Party – though not all of it – either supporting Trump’s claims or trying to stay silent. (Yet more and more cracks within the GOP are beginning to emerge.)
You have plenty of chaos. (See the firing of Defense Secretary Mark Esper and the staff shakeup at the Pentagon.)
You have lots of misinformation. (Just check out this dangerous and factually incorrect tweet from the president.)
You have little to no president-ing going on. (Trump has not delivered public remarks since Nov. 5, and there’s been no movement whatsoever in passing new coronavirus relief.)
And most important of all, it’s all coming during the worst spike yet in new coronavirus cases and hospitalizations since the virus arrived in the country. (There have been nearly 1 million new coronavirus cases and 7,500 deaths in the U.S. since Trump’s last remarks on Nov. 5, per NBC’s Peter Alexander and Sally Bronston.)
The coronavirus – and the federal government’s response to it, or lack thereof – represents arguably the biggest American public policy failure since Vietnam.
And you have a president who’s been trying to convince the American people he wants to keep his job, despite the election results, but who hasn’t been doing the work of president.
History is going to look back on this past week … and it’s not going to be a pretty chapter.
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TWEET OF THE DAY: Missing in action
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Data Download: The numbers you need to know today
5,310,123: Joe Biden’s lead in the popular vote at the time of publication
11,434: Joe Biden’s lead in Arizona, where NBC News projected him as the winner overnight
10,629,682: The number of confirmed cases of coronavirus in the United States, per the most recent data from NBC News and health officials. (That’s 165,615 more than yesterday morning.)
244,093: The number of deaths in the United States from the virus so far. (That’s 1,139 more than yesterday morning.)
162.36 million: The number of coronavirus tests that have been administered in the United States so far, according to researchers at The COVID Tracking Project.
67,096: The number of people currently hospitalized with coronavirus
53: The number of days until the Jan. 5 Senate runoffs.
68: The number of days until Inauguration Day.
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The uncalled states at publication time
Arizona: NBC News projected it for Joe Biden on Thursday
Georgia: Biden is ahead by 14,149 votes, 49.5 percent to 49.2 percent (99% in)
North Carolina: Trump is ahead by 71,399 votes, 50.0 percent to 48.7 percent (98% in)
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Georgia Runoff Watch by Ben Kamisar
Today’s Runoff Watch looks at the money in the Georgia runoff races — while NBC still rates GOP Sen. David Perdue’s race as too close to call, the spending landscape certainly looks like the candidates are expecting to see two runoffs.
As of Thursday, there had been a combined $45 million spent on both runoffs, per our friends at Advertising Analytics. And there are tens of millions more booked on TV in the coming weeks.
Perdue has already booked $19.4 million on TV and radio from Friday through the election, with Democrat Jon Ossoff with just $1.2 million booked so far, per Advertising Analytics.
In the other Senate race, GOP Sen. Kelly Loeffler has booked $21.2 million to Democratic Rev. Raphael Warnock’s $2.2 million.
Outside groups and party committees are already beginning to ready the cavalry as well, setting early expectations for an uber-expensive set of races.
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THE LID: How it happened
This week on The Lid, we’re looking inside the electorate at how Joe Biden got to 270. Don’t miss yesterday’s pod on how young voters showed up for Joe Biden.
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SHAMELESS PLUG
NBC’s Lester Holt will anchor a second broadcast edition of “Nightly News Kids Edition” this Saturday, November 14 on NBC at 10:30 am ET (or check your local listings). NBC News correspondents will walk viewers through what comes next in the political process with President-elect Joe Biden and what a vaccine is and how it works as Covid-19 cases continue to rise across the country.
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ICYMI: What ELSE is happening in the world?
China is now congratulating Biden as the winner.
GOP senators are starting to push for Biden to get security briefings.
Corey Lewandowski is the latest Trump official to test positive for Covid.
Trump is floating improbable plans as he tries to figure out a way to stay in power.
Biden has been in conversations with GOP officials, his newly-named chief of staff says.
American businesses are going bankrupt – as Washington remains unable to pass more relief.
POLITICO profiles Elissa Slotkin.
Biden is signaling a crackdown on Wall Street.
Justice Alito is laying down some markers on Covid restrictions.
The Midwest is facing a severe lack of hospital beds.
Far-right protestors are planning to gather in DC Saturday.
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MANHATTAN INSTITUTE
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LOUDER WITH CROWDER
You gotta be f*cking sh*ting me with this. New York Governor Chris’ Idiot Brother is back at it with his tyrannical shutdowns (see … MORE
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