The Morning Dispatch: An Assassination in Iran

Plus: A conversation with some of the women of the GOP’s freshman congressional class.

Happy Monday! We at Morning Dispatch HQ want to extend a hearty thank you to James Sutton, whose internship came to an end last week. He was an enormous help with this newsletter every day, and will be missed!

And no, we don’t want to talk about the game last night.

Quick Hits: Today’s Top Stories

  • Mohsen Fakhrizadeh—an Iranian scientist known for his significant involvement in the country’s nuclear program—was killed in an ambush attack over the weekend. Iranian officials have insinuated Israel was behind the attack; Israeli officials have yet to comment.
  • Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko—who claimed a sixth term earlier this year following an election widely viewed as illegitimate—reportedly said he would step down once the country adopts a new constitution. It’s unclear as of now what that process would look like.
  • President-elect Joe Biden suffered a few hairline fractures in his foot over the weekend after slipping while playing with his dog. Biden’s doctor said the president-elect will “likely require a walking boot for several weeks.”
  • Biden announced senior members of his White House communications staff on Sunday. Deputy campaign manager Kate Bedingfield will become White House communications director, while Obama administration alum Jen Psaki will serve as White House press secretary.
  • President Trump officially pardoned Michael Flynn—his former national security adviser—on Wednesday. Flynn pleaded guilty in December 2017 to lying to the FBI about the contents of his communications with the Russian ambassador.
  • The Supreme Court voted 5-4 to block New York from instituting new coronavirus restrictions on the number of attendees allowed at religious services. “The regulations cannot be viewed as neutral because they single out houses of worship for especially harsh treatment,” the majority opinion reads.
  • Initial jobless claims increased by 30,000 week-over-week to 778,000 in the week ending November 21, the Labor Department reported on Wednesday. More than 20 million people remained on some form of unemployment insurance as of the week ending November 7, compared with just under 1.5 million people during the comparable week in 2019.
  • New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio announced Sunday that approximately 200,000 students in the city—primarily pre-K and elementary school students—will return to in-person learning next week. School closures in the city will no longer rely on the 3 percent test positivity threshold negotiated with teachers unions.
  • President Trump’s ongoing efforts to overturn the results of the election continue to sputter. Wisconsin over the weekend completed the limited recount requested by the Trump campaign, and President-elect Joe Biden’s lead in the state grew by 87 votes. The Pennsylvania Supreme Court on Saturday rejected a GOP effort to invalidate 2.5 million ballots in the Keystone State, and, one day earlier, Trump-appointed Judge Stephanos Bibas rejected a separate Trump campaign lawsuit in Pennsylvania. “Voters, not lawyers, choose the President,” Bibas wrote.
  • The United States confirmed 143,301 new cases of COVID-19 yesterday per the Johns Hopkins University COVID-19 Dashboard, with 11.1 percent of the 1,286,770 tests reported coming back positive. An additional 829 deaths were attributed to the virus on Sunday, bringing the pandemic’s American death toll to 266,009. According to the COVID Tracking Project, 93,219 Americans are currently hospitalized with COVID-19.

Iranian Nuclear Scientist Killed in Friday Ambush

Prominent Iranian nuclear scientist Mohsen Fakhrizadeh—long considered the father of Iran’s nuclear program—was killed in an ambush on Friday. Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif said there were “serious indications” that Israel was responsible for the attack, but Israeli officials have thus far declined comment and no country has yet claimed responsibility.

No matter the culprit, the killing brings the Islamic Republic to a crossroads, as Fakhrizadeh is just the latest domino to fall in a series of covert attacks on Tehran’s top officials this year. The United States killed top military general Qassem Suleimani in an airstrike in January, and Israeli agents took out the deputy emir of al-Qaeda, Abu Muhammad al-Masri, in the streets of Tehran just a few months later.

Fakhrizadeh’s assassination is particularly notable for its timing, just months before the Biden administration—likely to be more amenable to Iranian interests than its predecessor was—is set to come into power. If Iran responds to Fakhrizadeh’s death with a state-sponsored attack on the United States or one of its allies, the country would almost certainly be jeopardizing the possibility of sanctions relief that would come with President-elect Biden’s proposed reentry into the 2015 Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA), or Iran nuclear deal. President Trump left the JCPOA in 2018.

“To restore its economy Iran must agree to either a full or partial return to the Iran nuclear deal,” Karim Sadjadpour, an Iran expert at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, told the Wall Street Journal. But “to restore deterrence and regime pride, Iran must avenge the deaths of Fakhrizadeh and Soleimani. The latter will significantly complicate the former.”

Still, some experts fear Iranian military retaliation of some sort remains a possibility. “Iran has attacked or tried to attack Israeli diplomats before, most recently in Georgia, India, and Thailand,” Dr. Michael Rubin.  a former Pentagon official and resident scholar at the American Enterprise Institute, told The Dispatch. “The high profile of Qassem Suleimani and Fakhrizadeh, however, likely means Iran will try to make a more spectacular attack.”

GOP Women Narrow Democratic Majority in the House

Two years after the 2018 midterm elections devastated the ranks of Republican women in the House, female GOP candidates across the country defied polls and regained critical congressional seats. At least 28 Republican women won House races this year—doubling their numbers in the chamber—and at least nine of those women flipped blue congressional districts red.

These successful candidates are as diverse as the areas of the country they represent, running on an assortment of issues from slashing regulations, to promoting local industries, to fighting socialism as it exists in our federal government. Charlotte recently spoke with several of these representatives-elect—Ashley Hinson of Iowa, Michelle Fischbach of Minnesota, Stephanie Bice of Oklahoma, and Nancy Mace of South Carolina—about their races and the state of fiscal conservatism going forward. Here are some highlights:

Why is the diversity of this GOP freshman class so important?

“Our freshman class is very representative of the country. You have women, you have veterans, you have minorities,” Ashley Hinson said, adding that intellectual diversity is another important hallmark of the incoming class. “The variety of perspectives under one roof is broad. And I think that’s fine. And that’s what we need to get back to understanding and accepting in this country—it’s okay to have disagreements, even with people you mostly agree with.”

Stephanie Bice, in addition to being the first Iranian American elected to Congress, will also be the first female class president representing 42 incoming Republicans after being chosen by her peers during the House orientation. “There were two women who ran for that position, myself and Michelle Park Steel. I think it’s only fitting that, in the 100th anniversary year of women’s right to vote, the largest incoming freshman class women on the GOP side would be represented by a woman,” she said.

“Republican women doubled our numbers during this cycle and I’m reminded that it’s not just Democratic women who are breaking glass ceilings,” said Nancy Mace. “Republican women have a place in history for breaking barriers as well.”

 

Worth Your Time

  • Tim Alberta’s latest for Politico is the story of, as he puts it, “Michigan’s fake voter fraud scandal.” There have been no shortage of post-election shenanigans in Michigan, a state Joe Biden won by nearly 155,000 votes: Republicans on the Wayne County canvassing board initially refused to certify the county’s election results, and President Trump invited GOP members of the state’s legislature to the White House for a meeting. But Aaron Van Langevelde, a relatively anonymous GOP election official, put an end to it all last week. “In the end, it wasn’t a senator or a judge or a general who stood up to the leader of the free world,” Alberta writes. “There was no dramatic, made-for-Hollywood collision of cosmic egos. Rather, the death knell of Trump’s presidency was sounded by a baby-faced lawyer, looking over his glasses on a grainy Zoom feed on a gloomy Monday afternoon, reading from a statement that reflected a courage and moral clarity that has gone AWOL from his party, pleading with the tens of thousands of people watching online to understand that some lines can never be uncrossed.”
  • In a three-part series for the Carroll Times Herald, reporter Jared Strong tells the story of a group of friends in Iowa who contracted COVID-19 after a neighborhood game of euchre. “It had been about two weeks since [Joan] invited a small group of her closest friends over to her house for a game of cards, when they talked about this and that and ate pie, and her best friend Nina helped her play because it seemed like forever since her arthritic fingers had worked the way they should,” Strong writes. “On Sept. 26, daughter Barb, who had recovered from the virus, got a phone call that Joan was fading fast. None of her family could be with her in those final hours and minutes. A nurse aide named Hannah held Joan’s hand as she took her last breaths and was gone.”
  • recent study from Constança Esteves-Sorenson and Robert Broce analyzed how compensation impacts one’s intrinsic motivation for various tasks. Brigitte Madrian spoke to the studies’ authors in a piece for The MIT Press Reader. “Traditional economic models posit that paying the mouse to eat a cookie will increase the reward from cookie eating, encouraging the mouse to eat more cookies,” Madrian writes. “But psychologists offer a compelling counterargument: that paying the mouse to eat cookies will crowd out the mouse’s intrinsic pleasure from such consumption, reducing the likelihood that the mouse will want to eat cookies in the future absent compensation.”
  • In a piece for Tablet, Armin Rosen takes a look at how the Drudge Report—once “the most coveted and agenda-setting real estate in right-of-center media”—has transformed over the past several years. “The Drudge Report once cycled through 40-50 links in a single five-hour period,” Rosen writes. “The page is now updated only once or twice a day and almost never reacts to breaking news, as if it’s being run by someone who simply doesn’t care anymore. Traffic has reportedly lagged, with Comscore data suggesting a 45% plunge in the year before this past September.”

Presented Without Comment

Toeing the Company Line

  • In his latest French Press (🔒), David expressed gratitude for the strength of American democracy. “For the last three weeks, the most powerful man in the world—the person who commands arguably the most powerful military in the history of the world and retains the devotion of legions of followers—rejected the legitimacy of an election, persuaded tens of millions of his fellow citizens to reject the legitimacy of that same election, and yet never once possessed a remotely plausible path to retaining power,” he wrote. “Behold the majesty of the American system of government.”
  • John Bolton, who served as national security adviser under Donald Trump from 2018-19, writes that conservatives need to portray more optimism and confidence moving forward, more “morning in America” than “American carnage.” He writes: “We can thereby regain the voters Trump alienated, but also keep those whom he attracted. Blue-collar families who left the Democratic party in 1980 were called ‘Reagan Democrats,’ and those who have voted for Trump are essentially their contemporary counterparts. The proposed ‘conversation’ may be lengthy, but there is every reason to believe it will succeed with enough work.”


Reporting by Declan Garvey (@declanpgarvey), Andrew Egger (@EggerDC), Audrey Fahlberg (@FahlOutBerg), Charlotte Lawson (@charlotteUVA), and Steve Hayes (@stephenfhayes).

Photo by Iranian Defense Ministry/Handout/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images.