Good morning! Here is your news briefing for Tuesday December 1, 2020
THE DAILY SIGNAL
Dec 01, 2020
Good morning from Washington. If Joe Biden becomes the president, how will his administration handle President Donald Trump’s actions? Tony Perkins analyzes. Meanwhile, in Arizona, some state lawmakers are asking questions about the election results. Fred Lucas reports. Plus: Rachel del Guidice talks to Dakota Wood about the state of the U.S. military, and Cal Thomas looks at how religious freedom is under fire. In 1824 on this day, it becomes clear that the House of Representatives will be deciding who’s the victor of that year’s presidential election, with no one capturing enough electoral votes to win outright. Ultimately, John Quincy Adams emerged the winner.
On the same day that Arizona certified former Vice President Joe Biden as the winner of the state’s electoral votes, state lawmakers held a fact-finding meeting on allegations of voter fraud.
In totalitarian societies, governments suppress the church and religious worship. That’s because dictators think citizens should worship them as the highest authority.
Former Trump adviser Carter Page is suing the Justice Department, the FBI, and others, saying that he was the victim of “unlawful spying” as part of the investigation of the Trump campaign.
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DAYBREAK
Your First Look at Today’s Top Stories – Daybreak Insider
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Police Cuts Lead to Highest Homicide Rate in Seattle in Decades
And it is just the beginning as the mayor seeks more cuts (NY Post). It’s a scenario being played out in city after city (National Review).
2.
Arizona and Wisconsin Certify Election Results
Biden certified as the winner in both (USA Today). From another story: …in Georgia, state officials announced a limited investigation into allegations of voter fraud, although they said it was very unlikely to overturn Mr. Biden’s win there (Washington Times). According to Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger, “There are currently over 250 open cases from 2020 and we have 23 investigators to follow up on that. Some of these include, a charge Gwinnett County that absentee ballots outnumber absentee envelopes. This is the kind of specific charge that our office can investigate and ascertain the truth” (Daily Wire). Compared to the mess that returned power to Chavez in Venezuela, Mary O’Grady explains voters in America get to air their grievances and “court challenges out to be allowed to play out” (WSJ). According to Rasmussen, even 30 percent of Democrats believe it is “very likely” their own party cheated to win (Red State). Meanwhile, the editorial board of National Review issued a rebuke of Trump for the way he has handled the election results (National Review).
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3.
Schumer Tells Donors Death of RGB Killed Democrats’ Chances of Taking Senate
He also blamed Cal Cunningham who “couldn’t keep his zipper up” (Axios). From Erick Erickson: Wait what? The media assured us the rush to confirm ACB would sink the GOP (Twitter). From Guy Benson: Zipper comment will get attention, but this sounds like a concession that ACB confirmation was a net benefit to the GOP & doesn’t evince much confidence about GA (Twitter).
4.
Lockdowns, Shutdowns Lead to Massive Spike in Suicides in Japan
From the story: The National Police Agency said suicides surged to 2,153 in October alone, with more than 17,000 people taking their own lives this year to date, CBS reported. By comparison, fewer than 2,000 people in the country have died from COVID-19 in 2020.
Biden Choice for Head of Office of Management and Budget Criticized by Both Sides
With Senator John Cornyn saying Neera Tanden, seen above, “stands zero chance of being confirmed.” She has spent much of her time since the announcement deleting tweets (Daily Wire). Sanders is particularly upset with the Tanden pick, though progressives are generally pleased with most of Biden’s choices (Politico). Meanwhile, from another story: Jen Psaki, who was named to serve as President-elect Biden’s White House press secretary, is facing fresh scrutiny over a photo that shows her wearing a Russian hat that bears the communist hammer-and-sickle logo (Fox News). Meanwhile, the media excitement over Biden’s “all female” press team didn’t seem to notice Trump’s all female press team (Fox News).
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6.
Bar Fights Back Against New York City, Declares Itself an “Autonomous Zone”
After they were fined and stripped of their liquor license. From the story: Keith McAlarney and Danny Presti, the owners of Mac’s Public House in Staten Island, posted signs Nov. 20 labeling their business an “autonomous zone” and declaring that they “refuse to abide by any rules and regulations” put in place by Democrats New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio or New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo (Daily Caller). Meanwhile, more hypocrisy as the LA County Supervisor, leading a smothering lockdown, was caught dining at a restaurant after voting to ban such activities (Fox Los Angeles). A California restaurant named their patio dining area after the restaurant where Gavin Newsom displayed his own vulgar hypocrisy (PJ Media).
Because that’s what we do now. From the story: The National Football League has reportedly fined the New Orleans Saints $500,000 and snatched back a seventh-round draft pick because some players did not wear masks during postgame celebrations.
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6400 N. Belt Line Rd., Suite 200, Irving, TX 75063
AshBritt Environmental has hired former Rep. Holly Raschein as its new director of government relations.
AshBritt is one of the top rapid-response disaster recovery companies in the nation. In her new role, Raschein will direct the company’s policy objectives at the local, state, and federal levels.
“AshBritt Environmental is excited to welcome a leader of Holly’s caliber and expertise to the AshBritt team,” CEO Brittany Perkins Castillo said.
“Holly’s leadership, including during Hurricane Irma, commitment to community members, and her passion for protecting and preserving the environment aligns with our company’s mission to help communities recover after a disaster. With Holly’s knowledge and impressive government experience, tremendous opportunity lies ahead.”
Raschein was elected to the House in 2012, representing a district that covers the Florida Keys and parts of south Miami-Dade County. She served eight years in the Legislature before leaving due to term limits this year.
Congratulations to Holly Raschein, the newest lobbyist for AshBritt Environmental.
As a lawmaker, Raschein was made environmental issues a priority and championed legislation to protect Florida’s fragile ecosystem and precious natural resources. During her tenure, she served as Chair of the House Agriculture and Natural Resources Appropriation Subcommittee and Chair of the House Natural Resources and Public Lands Subcommittee.
In 2017, she coordinated state and local emergency response, cleanup, and restoration in the wake of Hurricane Irma, which made landfall in her district as a Category 4 storm.
“I have long been a fan of the work AshBritt Environmental does in Florida and across the country,” Raschein said. “The company’s track record in environmental services and disaster recovery is unparalleled in the industry, and I look forward to working alongside this talented leadership team.”
Her first day on the job is Tuesday.
___
Former legislative assistant Mauricio‘Monty’ Montiel is joining Marin & Sons as a lobbyist.
In his new role, Montiel will focus on the company’s Tallahassee practice, representing clients before the Florida Legislature. He will also be a part of the firm’s South Florida lobbying efforts.
Montiel previously served as a legislative assistant for then-Republican Rep. Carlos Trujillo. He went on to work for then-Republican Rep. Manny Diaz before Diaz left the House for a Senate bid. Diaz brought on Montiel to his Senate team after winning the Senate District 36 contest in 2018.
Congratulations also to Mauricio ‘Monty’ Montiel, who is joining Marin & Sons as a lobbyist.
Montiel’s experience in the Legislature will undoubtedly assist him at the firm’s Tallahassee operation and representing clients in meetings with lawmakers. Montiel also has connections to South Florida. Both Trujillo and Diaz, whom Montiel has worked for, are based in Miami-Dade County.
Marin & Sons is a public relations and communications firm. In addition to its Miami office, the firm also has an office in Tallahassee. The firm’s footprint also stretches outside Florida, with offices in New Orleans, Louisiana, Columbia, South Carolina and Washington, D.C.
___
“Donald Trump science adviser Scott Atlas leaving White House job” via The Associated Press — A White House official confirmed that the Stanford University neuroradiologist, who had no formal experience in public health or infectious diseases, resigned at the end of his temporary government assignment. Atlas confirmed the news in a tweet. Atlas has broken with government experts and the overwhelming consensus of the scientific community to criticize efforts to encourage face covering to slow the spread of the virus. Just weeks ago, he responded on Twitter to Michigan’s latest virus restrictions by encouraging people to “rise up” against the state’s policies. His views also prompted Stanford to issue a statement distancing itself from the faculty member, saying Atlas “has expressed views that are inconsistent with the university’s approach in response to the pandemic.”
Scott Atlas makes his exit. Image via AP.
Situational awareness
Tweet, tweet:
—@SenRickScott: Communist China can no longer hide behind its lies. I’ve been saying it for months: China lied about Coronavirus from the start (with the help of the WHO). This isn’t about pointing fingers; it’s about accountability & taking responsibility for the damage this pandemic has done.
—@RepMichaelWaltz: The sculpting of the statue for hometown hero Mary McLeod Bethune has begun in Italy! Bethune’s statue will represent Florida in the U.S. Capitol, so all who see it will learn about her inspiring work for civil rights and education in our state and across the nation.
—@RepStephMurphy: There is responsible and effective leadership, and then there is this. The Governor is essentially waving the white flag of surrender as this invisible enemy ravages our health and our economy. If we do not contain the virus, Florida’s economy will never return to normal.
—@MaryEllenKlas: @GovRonDeSantis‘s sums up his COVID containment strategy. There is no call for collective duty and reads like a libertarian playbook. He says it’s ‘no lockdowns, no fines, no school closures’ and it’s up to individuals to decide if they want to prevent community spread.
—@DanDaley: Today, I refiled Jaime’s Law in honor of 14-year-old Jaime Guttenberg, who tragically lost her life in the shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas. Jaime’s Law seeks to close the ammo loophole by requiring background checks on ammunition purchases.
—@jessicabakeman: So the Mayor of the City of Miami, the immediate past Mayor of Miami-Dade County, and the newly elected Mayor of Miami-Dade County have now all tested positive for COVID-19.
—@NateSilver538: A lot of this is underwhelming — 3,456 vs. 2,986 isn’t “the starkest [of] discrepancies” — and seems to fall into the category of things that many countries (not just China) were doing, especially early in the pandemic.
—@TripGabriel: AZ’s election was certified by its Governor and Attorney General, both Republicans. “We do elections well here in Arizona,” said Gov. Doug Ducey. Yet, driven by Trump‘s phony fraud, a stabbed-in-the-back narrative is in the making among elements of the party base.
—@KevinMKruse: ATLAS SHRUGGED
Tweet, tweet:
Days until
Florida Automated Vehicles Summit — 2; Florida Chamber Foundation’s virtual Transportation, Growth and Infrastructure Solution Summit begins — 7; the Electoral College votes — 13; “Death on the Nile” premieres — 16; NBA 2020-21 opening night — 21; “Wonder Woman 1984” rescheduled premiere — 24; Pixar’s “Soul” premiere (rescheduled for Disney+) — 24; Greyhound racing ends in Florida — 30; Georgia U.S. Senate runoff elections — 35; the 2021 Inauguration — 50; Super Bowl LV in Tampa — 68; Daytona 500 — 75; “A Quiet Place Part II” rescheduled premiere — 79; “Black Widow” rescheduled premiere — 93; “No Time to Die” premieres (rescheduled) — 122; Children’s Gasparilla — 130; Seminole Hard Rock Gasparilla Pirate Fest — 137; “Top Gun: Maverick” rescheduled premiere — 213; Disney’s “Shang Chi and The Legend of The Ten Rings” premieres — 220; new start date for 2021 Olympics — 234; “Jungle Cruise” premieres — 242; St. Petersburg Primary Election — 266; St. Petersburg Municipal Elections — 336; Disney’s “Eternals” premieres — 339; “Spider-Man Far From Home” sequel premieres — 342; Steven Spielberg’s “West Side Story” premieres — 374; “Thor: Love and Thunder” premieres — 438; “Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness” premieres — 491; “Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse” sequel premieres — 672.
Dateline Tallahassee
“Jeff Brandes’ bill would enshrine alcohol to-go into Florida law” via Janelle Irwin Taylor of Florida Politics — Sen. Brandes wants to enshrine into law an executive order allowing restaurants to sell mixed drinks, beer and wine to-go. Brandes filed a bill last week that would permit restaurants to sell mixed drinks in sealed containers, cans or bottles of beer, wine-based beverages, and bottles of wine as part of a to-go order as long as the order contained at least one food item. There is no limit on how many alcoholic beverages could be sold. The bill would not apply to bars or establishments whose revenue is derived by less than 51% of food and nonalcoholic drink sales. The bill is based primarily on DeSantis’ March executive order permitting the same.
Jeff Brandes is looking to enshrine drinks-to-go in Florida law. Image via Gary He/Eater.com.
“South Florida lawmaker again files ‘Jaime’s Law’ to require background checks for bullet sales” via Brooke Batinger and Lisa J. Huriash of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — A state lawmaker filed a bill that would require background checks for ammunition buyers, after the same bill failed in committee in the 2020 Legislative Session. Known as “Jaime’s Law,” the proposal honors Jaime Guttenberg, one of the 17 people killed in the 2018 Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School massacre. Rep. Dan Daley, a Coral Springs Democrat, and a Stoneman Douglas graduate, first filed the bill in the 2020 Legislative Session. It never made it to the House floor. “Our hope this year is to get a hearing,” he said. “Last year, it never saw the light of day.”
“With pandemic economy in frame, Chuck Clemons refiles e-fairness legislation” via Renzo Downey of Florida Politics — Lawmakers will again consider legislation ensuring the state collects sales tax from online purchases, an issue elevated this year during the COVID-19 pandemic. Rep. Clemons filed a bill Monday requiring internet retailers and online marketplaces to collect state sales tax on items delivered within Florida, which the Newberry Republican says closes an online sales tax loophole. Whether businesses collect the taxes themselves, Floridians are expected to pay sales tax for those sales. However, the state misses out on millions of tax dollars annually from customers who don’t submit their required sales taxes.
“Anthony Sabatini pulls trigger on ‘campus carry’ legislation” via Jason Delgado of Florida Politics — Rep. Sabatini filed a bill Monday that would allow people with a concealed firearm license to carry a weapon onto Florida colleges and universities. The measure, HB 6001, seeks to delete a provision that restricts permit holders from carrying a firearm on campus grounds. Florida’s current statute limits registered students and faculty to carrying stun guns and nonlethal electric weapons on campus. “The current prohibition of the concealed carry of a firearm makes campuses LESS safe and violates the spirit of the Second Amendment,” the Howey-in-the-Hills Republican tweeted. Notably, this is not Sabatini’s first crack at the proposal. He filed a similar campus carry bill in both the 2019 and 2020 Legislative Session.
“Bill filed to strip state of power to require residents to get vaccinated” via Jeffrey Schweers of the Tallahassee Democrat — With a COVID-19 vaccine potentially weeks away from national distribution, Sabatini filed a bill that would eliminate the state’s power to require mandatory vaccines during a pandemic. Known for several unsuccessful lawsuits challenging local government mask mandates, Sabatini filed the legislation (HB 6003) on the first day of bill filing for the 2021 Legislative Session that begins March 2. The bill, if passed and signed into law by DeSantis, would not take effect till July 1. The measure comes nearly nine months after the first cases of the coronavirus pandemic were announced in Florida, and as the state experiences a third wave of COVID-19 infections.
Anthony Sabatini has certainly been busy.
Happening today — On the agenda of the Public Service Commission meeting includes a Florida Power & Light proposal to add more vehicle-charging stations, part of a five-year pilot program for “fast charging” stations operated in some cases by the utility. FPL needs approval for “tariffs,” which involve pricing structures. If approved, the program begins on Jan. 1. The meeting starts at 9:30 a.m. and will be livestreamed on The Florida Channel or online. Participants by phone can contact the PSC Office of General Counsel at (850) 413-6199.
“Kristen Arrington, Melony Bell plan 2022 reelection bids” via The News Service of Florida — After winning a House seat in the August primary, freshman Democrat Arrington opened a campaign account to run again in Osceola County’s House District 43. Arrington topped five other candidates in the Democratic primary and did not face a general-election opponent. Meanwhile, Rep. Bell, a Fort Meade Republican, opened a campaign account to run again in House District 56 in DeSoto, Hardee and part of Polk counties. Bell, who was first elected to the House in 2018, captured 67.3% of the vote in this month’s election.
Corona Florida
“Florida adds 6,659 coronavirus cases, 98 deaths Monday” via Anastasia Dawson of the Tampa Bay Times — Florida added 6,659 coronavirus infections and 98 deaths, continuing its steady climb toward logging one million cases since the start of the pandemic. The state’s total number of confirmed coronavirus cases has risen to 999,319, just below the nearly 1.16 million cases recorded in Texas and 1.2 million cases in California. In the past nine months, the Florida Department of Health has added 18,834 coronavirus-related deaths. With a population of 21.48 million, Monday’s report means that roughly 1 in every 21 Florida residents has now tested positive for COVID-19. About 27% of regular hospital beds statewide and 24% of adult beds in Florida’s intensive care units were available for new patients on Monday.
“Ron DeSantis says no new lockdowns, mask mandates, or any other anti-COVID-19 measure in Florida” via Steven Lemongello and Richard Tribou of the Orlando Sentinel — DeSantis ruled out imposing any further coronavirus restrictions or a mask mandate, despite rising case numbers across the state and nation. DeSantis said there would be “no lockdowns, no fines, no school closures. No one’s losing their job because of a government dictate. Nobody’s losing their livelihood or their business.” “That is totally off the table,” he said. Monday’s event at Boggy Creek Elementary was DeSantis’ first news conference in weeks, meant to highlight a new order allowing schools to stay open for the rest of the year.
Ron DeSantis vows no more COVID-19 shutdowns, mask mandates or other measures. Image via Colin Hackley.
“Where has the Governor been since his last press conference? Vaccine prep” via Renzo Downey of Florida Politics — Before Monday, DeSantis had not fielded questions from reporters in more than a month despite making multiple promises to give answers. Following Monday’s announcement that schools will remain open for the spring semester, DeSantis’ first question, courtesy of WFTV’s Cierra Putman, was where has he been as COVID-19 cases are on the rise in Florida. “We’ve been doing a lot of work on preparing for the vaccine,” DeSantis said. Nearly 1 million people have tested positive for the coronavirus in Florida as cases surge across the country. The day after Election Day, DeSantis held a briefing in the Capitol touting Florida’s orderly election while the prolonged tallies in other key states were just beginning.
“Pointing to closing ‘blunder,’ DeSantis says schools should bring struggling students back in-person” via CD Davidson-Hiers of the Tallahassee Democrat — Florida public schools will remain open in 2021, and families will continue to have the option to keep students at home during the COVID-19 pandemic, DeSantis announced. The caveat is part of a new emergency order issued by Richard Corcoran, Florida’s education commissioner. In the order, which is dated Nov. 30, Corcoran writes that schools must provide written notification to parents about the students’ academic struggles. Parents must provide a written receipt of their intent to keep their students at home.
“Court refuses to revisit school reopening ruling” via Jim Saunders of The News Service of Florida — An appeals court Monday refused to reconsider a decision that backed DeSantis and Education Commissioner Corcoran in a legal battle about the state’s push this summer to reopen schools amid the COVID-19 pandemic. The 1st District Court of Appeal, with no explanation, issued two orders that denied motions by the Florida Education Association teachers union and other plaintiffs for a rehearing in the case. In October, the plaintiffs asked for a rehearing before a three-judge panel or by the full appeals court, a request known as seeking an “en banc” hearing.
“‘Grim Reaper’ says beach closure suit was not frivolous” via the News Service of Florida — Saying that a lower-court judge “plainly encouraged” an appeal, a Northwest Florida attorney is disputing that his decision to continue pursuing a case against DeSantis over COVID-19 beach closures was frivolous or in bad faith. Santa Rosa Beach attorney Daniel Uhlfelder, who filed the lawsuit this spring to try to force DeSantis to close beaches statewide to prevent the spread of the disease, responded Friday to an order by the 1st District Court of Appeal to show why he and his lawyers should not face sanctions for pursuing the appeal. A panel of the Tallahassee-based appeals court on Nov. 13 rejected the case and suggested that the appeal and other documents filed by Uhlfelder “appear to be frivolous and/or filed in bad faith.”
Daniel Uhlfelder, shown dressed as the Grim Reaper, insists his beach closure lawsuit is not frivolous.
Corona local
“All five First Coast counties blast past 10% COVID-19 positive test rates” via Drew Dixon of Florida Politics — The five-county First Coast region has cracked 66,000 cases of COVID-19 while every county in the region has exceeded a 10% positivity rate, according to Florida Department of Health data released Monday. There were a total of 66,055 people infected in the Northeast Florida region. Out of that figure, 937 people have died from coronavirus on the First Coast. All five counties recorded notable jumps in the rate for positive test results. Four out of the five counties in the region were below 10% on Saturday. Duval County, which had 43,978 infections and 604 deaths, went from 8.35% positivity to 10.59%.
“College football’s coronavirus issues are mounting. Just look at Miami’s schedule” via Matt Baker of the Tampa Bay Times — Although the complications that come with playing college football during a pandemic have been present all season long, the challenges are mounting. Consider everything that has happened with No. 9 Miami’s game this Saturday. Before the pandemic, the Hurricanes would have played this weekend only if they won the ACC’s Coastal Division. In August, the ACC’s updated schedule pushed back the season’s start and finish. Saturday became Miami’s regular-season finale against North Carolina. That changed two weeks ago because of positive coronavirus tests within the ‘Canes’ program. The ACC moved multiple games around. Miami’s home contest against the Tar Heels turned into a road trip to Wake Forest. Barely 28 hours later, the plan changed again.
The challenges of playing college football during a pandemic are mounting.
“Southwest Florida house-buying numbers keep climbing in latest data, but will a vaccine kill the frenzy, along with COVID-19?” via Phil Fernandez of the Naples Daily News — I’ve been reporting for months now that some of our habits will have changed forever long after the pandemic goes along the wayside with polio and the other menaces of the day, hopefully. Cleaner hands. Well, that’s a good thing. Fewer hugs. Miss those. Buying Southwest Florida homes like literally there’s no tomorrow. Probably not. Not that the latest numbers suggest there will be a change any time soon. But around the corner is this vaccine that is supposed to cure all our ills but may have an undesired side effect on the local residential market, industry officials say.
“Keys Commissioner says he’s improving after being hospitalized with COVID-19” via Gwen Filosa of FL Keys News — Monroe County Commissioner Craig Cates says he is improving after being hospitalized with COVID-19. “We have a long road of recovery but won’t stop fighting,” Cates posted on his Facebook page. This month, Cates, his wife, Cheryl, and their daughter Crystal were airlifted from Lower Keys Medical Center to Jackson Memorial Hospital in Miami, all ill with the novel coronavirus. “I’m out of ICU and in an intermediate recovery room working on my breathing strength,” Cates posted Sunday. Monroe County on Sunday reported 32 new cases of COVID-19 and no further deaths. The Keys have 3,353 cases and 27 deaths.
Monroe County Commissioner Craig Cates is improving after his exposure to coronavirus.
“Can masks save Lakeland from a second shutdown?” via Maya Lora and Sara-Megan Walsh of The Lakeland Ledger — Lakeland has been without a mask mandate since Oct 5. Polk County, as a whole, never had one. During the summer surge, Polk averaged 279.3 cases a day in July, dropping to about 100 cases per day in September. Now, its average daily cases stand at 141.6 and continue to rise, based on the Florida Department of Health’s daily reports. Lakeland Mayor Bill Mutz said he would bring a mask mandate back to the table if Polk’s positivity rose above 10% for more than 14 days. Mutz said the city saw the greatest control over COVID-19’s spread when the mask mandate was in effect. The anti-mask movement remains strong in Polk. Without a mandate, Julie Townsend, executive director of the Lakeland Downtown Development Authority, said she had seen mask use drop significantly.
Corona nation
“Moderna applied for emergency FDA vaccine authorization and says first injections could begin by Dec. 21.” via Denise Grady and Karen Zraick of The New York Times — As the drugmaker Moderna said it applied to the Food and Drug Administration on Monday to authorize its coronavirus vaccine for emergency use, health secretary Alex Azar reiterated that distribution would begin quickly after the expected approvals of the Moderna and Pfizer vaccines vaccine. If approved, Moderna said that injections for Americans could begin as early as Dec. 21. The company also said complete data from a large study show its coronavirus vaccine to be 94.1% effective, a finding that confirms earlier estimates. Stéphane Bancel, the company’s chief executive, said in an interview that it was “on track” to produce 20 million doses by the end of December, and from 500 million to a billion in 2021.
Moderna’s coronavirus vaccine is touted as more than 94% effective. Image via AP.
“Federal system for tracking hospital beds and COVID-19 patients provides questionable data” via Charles Piller of Science Magazine — The central pandemic data tracking system run by the Department of Health and Human Services, dubbed HHS Protect, reported that on 16 November, 71% of the state’s hospital beds were filled. Wisconsin officials who rely on the data to support and advise their increasingly strained hospitals might have concluded they had some margin left. Yet a different federal COVID-19 data system painted a much more dire picture for the same day, reporting 91% of Wisconsin’s hospital beds were filled. An analysis suggests HHS Protect’s data do not correspond with alternative hospital data sources in many states.
Corona economics
“RESET Task Force shares policy recommendations for COVID-19 economic recovery” via Jason Delgado of Florida Politics — A coalition of pro-business groups released a report spotlighting strategies to help Florida’s COVID-19 battered economy rebound. The executive and legislative policy recommendations are a product of the coalition’s RESET task force, which focused on 10 subject areas ranging from health care and hospitality to legal reform and retail. The Associated Industries of Florida, Florida Retail Federation, National Federation of Independent Business, and Florida Restaurant & Lodging Association led the task force. The task force’s acronym, RESET, stands for “Restore Economic Strength through Employment and Tourism.” The group’s final report outlines several key recommendations.
“Pent-up demand drives October tax revenue” via News Service of Florida — Florida for the first time since spring beat a monthly revenue forecast that had been in place before the coronavirus pandemic slammed into the state, according to an October report released Monday by state economists. The Legislature’s Office of Economic & Demographic Research report indicated that general revenue taxes coming into the state during October were $35.4 million over a pre-pandemic forecast made in January. They also were $313.5 million above a prediction that was revised downward in August, giving the state three consecutive months of beating that lowered forecast.
More corona
“Virtual charter schools are booming, despite a checkered reputation” via Anya Kamenetz and Robby Korth of WJCT — Across the country, entirely virtual K-12 charter schools have experienced a pandemic-induced “surge,” as one sector observer put it. K12 Inc., one of the biggest in the business, has reported a 57% enrollment increase, taking it up to 195,000 students; Connections Academy, another heavy hitter, has reported a 41% jump, and the list goes on. Virtual charter schools have been around for a couple of decades. In that time, they’ve been both relatively niche and highly controversial. Free to families but paid for by taxpayers, they enrolled about 300,000 full-time students in the 2017-18 school year, according to the National Education Policy Center.
Virtual charter schools are making a pandemic-induced ‘surge.’
Presidential
“Wisconsin becomes last contested state to confirm Joe Biden won” via Mark Niquette and Amanda Albright of Bloomberg — Wisconsin became the last contested battleground state to make Biden’s victory over Trump official, as the President and his allies failed to halt vote certifications to overturn the outcome of the election. Wisconsin Elections Commission Chair Ann Jacobs officially confirmed the election result on Monday, sending it to Democratic Gov. Tony Evers to appoint the electors who will cast the state’s 10 Electoral College votes for Biden when they meet on Dec. 14, unless a court intervenes. Jacobs’s action also starts five days for the Trump campaign to appeal the outcome of a recount.
Wisconsin becomes the final contested state to certify Joe Biden’s victory. Image via AP.
“Where Georgia Democrats succeeded, Florida Democrats failed. Why?” via Kirby Wilson of the Miami Herald — More than a week after Election Day, 150 miles north of the Florida border, cars packed into the parking lot of the local civic center. Progressives came to hear one of their U.S. Senate candidates, Jon Ossoff, speak. Everyone in that crowd who was asked why Georgia turned blue in 2020 started with the same two words: Stacey Abrams. At the same time, Orlando state Rep. Anna Eskamani hosted a Zoom town hall to unpack what went wrong for Florida Democrats in 2020. Florida Democrats don’t have a Stacey Abrams. Over the past decade, progressive politics in the Sunshine State has consisted of minor and fleeting victories scattered throughout long stretches of irrelevance and outright incompetence.
Transition
“Biden, Kamala Harris form inaugural committee” via Quint Forgey of POLITICO — Biden and Harris announced the formation of a Presidential Inaugural Committee ahead of their swearing-in on Jan. 20. The senior leadership of the committee, which will be responsible for organizing inauguration-related activities, consists of CEO Tony Allen and executive director Maju Varghese. Allen is president of Delaware State University, and Varghese served as chief operating officer and senior adviser to the Biden-Harris campaign. Nevada state Sen. Yvanna Cancela and Erin Wilson, the Biden-Harris campaign’s national political director, will both serve as deputy executive directors on the inaugural committee.
Joe Biden and Kamala Harris set up an inaugural committee. Image via AP.
“Biden bets on a diverse Cabinet and staff to handle the problems of a diverse nation” via Eugene Scott of The Washington Post — Throughout his campaign, Biden has promised that his administration would come into government ready to hit the ground running and that it would reflect the country it would lead. His initial picks seem to make good on that: He has showcased a team featuring prominent “firsts” of their gender or race in crucial positions, and with the experience that critics say the Trump administration lacked. So far, the former Vice President’s Cabinet and Cabinet-rank nominees include Harris as well as a Black woman, a Latino immigrant, a Jewish American, and other picks from underrepresented groups in American leadership. And the list of potential candidates for the remaining positions appears more diverse than any in history.
“It’s Major: Pets poised for a return to the White House” via Kevin Freking of The Associated Press — Major Biden is getting an early start in the spotlight as a presidential pet after a play date ended with his owner, Biden, suffering a broken foot. As if that weren’t enough for one weekend, it was also confirmed that Major will have to share the White House with, of all things, a cat. It’ll get better, Major. In a few weeks, Major, fellow German shepherd Champ and the TBD feline are expected to make the move to the White House. The arrival of the Biden pets will also mark the next chapter in a long history of pets residing at the White House after a four-year hiatus during the Trump administration.
D.C. matters
“America the Beautiful’ is White House theme for Christmas” via The Associated Press — “America the Beautiful” is this year’s Christmas theme at the White House. First Lady Melania Trump says it pays tribute to and showcases the “majesty” of the United States. Ornaments on the official Christmas tree in the Blue Room were designed by students from across the country who were asked by the National Park Service to highlight the people, places, and things that make their states beautiful. First responders and front-line workers, coping with a pandemic that has killed more than 266,000 people in the United States and infected more than 13 million others, are recognized with a tree and other decorations in the Red Room.
The theme of the White House Christmas is ‘America The Beautiful.’ Image via AP.
“Debbie Wasserman Schultz making bid for one of the most powerful leadership jobs in Congress” via Anthony Man of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — U.S. Rep. Wasserman Schultz is nearing the end of an audacious, yearlong campaign to leapfrog colleagues with more seniority and land one of the most powerful jobs in Congress: chairwoman of the House Appropriations Committee. Even if she falls short — assuming Wasserman Schultz has a good showing — it would represent a comeback from the political turmoil of four years ago, when she resigned as chairwoman of the Democratic National Committee after stolen internal emails showed party staffers weren’t neutral in the 2016 presidential primary. A dismal showing would be politically embarrassing. A vote by the 222 members of the House Democratic majority is likely in the first few days in December.
Statewide
“State, companies wrangle over opioid profits” via Dara Kam of The News Service of Florida — Cardinal Health is fighting Florida’s attempt to glean how much profit the company made distributing pain medications. The wrangling comes in a lawsuit, filed more than two years ago by the Florida Attorney General’s office, seeking unspecified damages against drug manufacturers, retailers and distributors. The case is one of the myriad similar legal challenges throughout the country. The Florida litigation includes a tangle over records sought by Attorney General Ashley Moody in the state’s effort to collect information about pain pill distribution and prescriptions. Pasco County Circuit Judge Kimberly Sharpe last week gave Walgreen Co. 90 days to turn over dozens of categories of dispensing data from 1996 through the present from prescriptions for 39 different drugs.
Ashley Moody wants to know exactly how much profit was made due to the opioid epidemic. Image via Law.com.
“Court backs FDOT in toll dispute” via The News Service of Florida — An appeals court overturned a circuit judge’s ruling that ordered the Florida Department of Transportation to return more than $53,000 in toll charges to a company that leases trailers to trucking customers. Tropical Trailer Leasing argued that the state improperly charged tolls through its “toll by plate” system, which captures photographic images of license plates and bills owners for tolls. The company argued that the truck operators — not the trailer leasing company — should be responsible for paying tolls. Then-Leon County Circuit Judge Karen Gievers sided with the argument, issuing an injunction and ordering the Department of Transportation to refund $53,628, according to Monday’s ruling by a panel of the 1st District Court of Appeal.
Former Gov. Jeb Bush, ExcelInEd hosting ‘EdPalooza’ this week — Former Gov. Bush and the Foundation for Excellence in Education (ExcelInEd) will host an education conference through Thursday. “EdPalooza” is billed as “an exciting, thought-provoking, action-inducing convening for anyone and everyone who wants to have an impact in education.” The event will be held via livestream from 11 a.m. to 5:15 p.m. each day. The agenda includes more than 100 Palooza sessions where attendees will be able to engage with policy experts on topics such as educational equity, early literacy, early college, and the future of assessments to education-to-workforce. Events also include several “EdVision” keynotes, including a conversation between former President George W. Bush and former Education Secretary Margaret Spellings. A full schedule and registration are available online.
Happening today — The deadline for students who graduated from high school for the 2019-2020 academic year to meet SAT or ACT test-score requirements to qualify for Bright Futures scholarships. Gov. DeSantis announced the extension in September after the 2019-2020 academic year due to interruption by the coronavirus pandemic.
“2020’s ‘insane’ hurricane season is officially over. Is it a sign of things to come?” via Alex Harris of the Miami Herald — It was clear way back in mid-September when the National Hurricane Center had already exhausted its regular list of names and turned to the Greek alphabet, that 2020 would be a hurricane season for the record books. It definitely was that. The season, which formally ends every Nov. 30, produced a stunning 30 named storms — breaking the 2005 record of 28. The eyebrow-raising number of storms could even grow a bit after the season’s formal end. Two systems wandering around harmlessly in the open Atlantic may yet gain strength and potentially, names. It all raises the question: Is 2020 a harbinger of things to come? So far, scientists say, they don’t see enough change in historical patterns to think so.
“Florida gas prices stay flat through Thanksgiving weekend” via Malena Carollo of the Tampa Bay Times — Florida’s gas prices are holding flat after hitting the lowest Thanksgiving weekend average in 12 years. Prices at the pump were $2.03 across the state for a gallon of regular unleaded gas, even from the same time last week, AAA, the Auto Club Group said. That made Thanksgiving Day prices the lowest since 2008 when gas cost $1.91 per gallon on average. Tampa Bay prices dipped slightly to $1.98 per gallon Monday, 1 cent lower than last week. While prices have held over the past few days, AAA spokesman Mark Jenkins said, they could inch up slightly over the week. That’s because optimism over potential COVID-19 vaccines pushed up crude oil prices to their most expensive since before the pandemic.
“Dozens of skimmers found at Florida gas stations” via The News Service of Florida — A recent inspection of 1,148 pumps at 38 gas stations in Orange County turned up seven electronic “skimmers” used to steal credit-card or debit-card information, the Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services said. The finds follow similar inspections this month that turned up three skimmers at 121 stations between Pensacola and Live Oak, six at 28 facilities in Sunrise, 15 at 34 stations in West Palm Beach, two at 56 stations in Hernando County, and eight at 31 stations in St. Lucie County. The department said motorists should not use open or unlocked pumps where tamper-evident security tape has been cut or removed or that otherwise appear unusual.
Card skimmers are found at gas stations all across Florida.
“UF receives donation of 27,000 acres of Osceola County land” via Kevin Spear of the Orlando Sentinel — The University of Florida announced it has accepted one of the largest donations of land to a university in taking possession of an undeveloped tract in south Osceola County larger than any Central Florida city but Orlando. The 27,000-acre parcel spans grazing land, citrus groves and extensive forests of longleaf pine. The university said it would maintain the landscape as a living laboratory for teaching and research in land and forest management, water storage and conservation, and insect and wildlife ecology. The property was donated by Elisabeth DeLuca, whose deceased husband was a founder of Subway. A conservation easement for the property was transferred to Ducks Unlimited, a group dedicated to promoting hunting and wetlands conservation.
“Florida to feel ‘coldest temperatures of the season.’ Frozen iguanas possible” via Michelle Marchante of the Miami Herald — When you wake up early Tuesday, you can say goodbye to hurricane season and hello to December and chilly temperatures. A front is expected to bring the “coldest temperatures of the season” this week, according to the National Weather Service. You also “can’t rule out an isolated falling iguana or two,” the weather service said. In case you need a reminder, iguanas are coldblooded, which means they slow down or become immobile when temperatures drop into the 40s. If you happen to see a frozen iguana, don’t worry, they are still breathing and will go back to normal once it warms up outside.
Lobbying regs
New and renewed lobbying registrations:
Matt Bryan, David Daniel, Thomas Griffin, Jeff Hartley, Lisa Hurley, Teye Reeves, Smith Bryan & Myers: Palm Beach County Tax Collector
Natalie Kato, Lewis Longman & Walker: The Clorox Company (Nutranext)
Steven Marin, Marin and Sons: Atlantic Pacific Communities, The Corradino Group, Inter Miami CF, MASTEC, Neogenomics Laboratories, University of Miami
Ethan Perry: Department of Economic Opportunity
Orlando Pryor, Strategos Public Affairs: Humana Medical Plan
Lisa Saliba: Executive Office of the Governor
Jason Steele, Smith & Associates: White Water Farms
Ronald Watson, Watson Strategies: American Freedom Information Institute
Local notes
“Miami-Dade’s new Mayor tests positive for COVID-19, starts quarantine” via Douglas Hanks of the Miami Herald — Miami-Dade Mayor Daniella Levine Cava tested positive for COVID-19 on Monday and is experiencing mild symptoms, according to a spokeswoman. The county’s new Mayor linked her diagnosis to her husband, a doctor, contracting the virus from exposure to a patient. Levine Cava, 65, revealed the test result on a Twitter post. She said she’s “quarantining at home” with her husband, Dr. Robert Cava. A spokeswoman, Rachel Johnson, said Levine Cava has not been in contact with county employees since Wednesday and plans to participate in Tuesday’s County Commission meeting by phone.
Newly installed Miami-Dade County Mayor Daniella Levine Cava tests positive for COVID-19. Image via Miami-Dade County.
“Commission to consider oyster harvesting ban” via The News Service of Florida — Members of the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission will be asked on Dec. 16 to finalize the suspension of wild-oyster harvesting in Apalachicola Bay for the next five years. The issue, which will be part of a two-day online Commission meeting, stems from efforts to improve the oyster population and revitalize the collapsed fishery. Commissioners on July 22 directed agency Executive Director Eric Sutton to issue the ban through executive order. However, on Oct. 7, commissioners agreed to hear more input from residents in the Northwest Florida area about the $20 million revitalization plan.
“Martin County resident tests positive for West Nile virus, the first case in 20 years” via Catie Wegman of TC Palm — The Florida Department of Health confirmed a positive human case of West Nile virus in Martin County on Monday, the first in two decades, FDOH data shows. It is unknown when the last time a Martin County resident would have tested positive for the illness, as readily available information only dated back to 2000. St. Lucie and Indian River counties also haven’t seen a human case since at least 2003. “It’s unusual in that aspect,” Martin County health department spokesperson Renay Rouse said of the positive human case. “However, it does happen, and pretty strange things have happened in 2020.” It is most commonly spread to people by the bite of an infected mosquito, according to the CDC. There are no vaccines to prevent it or medications to treat it in people. Most people infected do not feel sick and it is rarely fatal.
“How climate change could spark the next home mortgage disaster” via Zack Colman of POLITICO — Hialeah has been the gateway to the American middle class for thousands of Cuban immigrants. Behind the vibrant life in Hialeah is a troubling reality: flooding. Heavy rains overran the streets this year, last year, almost every year. And the problem is projected to get worse: Some scientists fear the city could be underwater within the lifetimes of some current residents. Despite that grim prognosis, the federal government keeps pumping mortgage money into Hialeah, as it does in hundreds of other communities now facing grave dangers from climate change.
“This Giving Tuesday, Tampa Bay nonprofits hope for some relief” via Divya Kumar of the Tampa Bay Times — Giving Tuesday couldn’t come soon enough for a hurting nonprofit sector, Tampa Bay industry experts say. The Community Foundation of Tampa Bay launched a nonprofits needs list in March to directly connect donors with nonprofits. Since its creation, the list has raised more than $3.6 million for nonprofits. But it still has more than 276 requests pending for more than $19 million in unmet needs. “The needs have been greater this year,” said Wilma Norton, the foundation vice president. “Giving Tuesday every year is really a reason for nonprofits to get their message out a little more broadly. It taps into people who are not regular givers.”
“USF honors college named for Judy Genshaft will get new building soon“ via Divya Kumar of the Tampa Bay Times — Initial construction has begun on the new Genshaft Honors College at the University of South Florida. The five-story, 85,000-square-foot building soon will rise on USF Genshaft Drive, north of the Muma College of Business. It will feature classrooms, study areas, faculty and adviser offices, event spaces, a computer lab and performance spaces. A groundbreaking ceremony is scheduled for Tuesday. Construction is projected to be finished by late fall 2022. The college, which was created in 2002 and later named after Genshaft, the former USF president, has raised $43 million in private gifts for the building. Genshaft and her husband, Steven Greenbaum, announced an initial donation of $20 million in May 2019.
A new honors college is named after former USF President Judy Genshaft.
“Florida politicos join forces on downtown St. Pete condo tower” via Janelle Irwin Taylor of Florida Politics — What do you get when politics meets real estate? An 18-story, 81-unit condo tower in downtown St. Petersburg. Nick Hansen, a former adviser to Sen. Brandes and, most recently, a former executive with the medical marijuana dispensary company MedMen, and Jim Rimes, a prominent Republican consultant, are part of the team planning the Reflection tower on Mirror Lake. The first six floors of the building will include parking and about 5,300 square feet of ground-floor retail. The residences will be located on floors seven through 17, with the top floor dedicated to rooftop amenities with a view.
Top opinion
“Trump’s disgraceful endgame” via National Review editorial board — Behind in almost all the major polls, Trump stormed within a hair’s breadth in the key battlegrounds of winning reelection, and his unexpectedly robust performance helped put Republicans in a strong position for the post-Trump-presidency era. This is not nothing. But the President can’t stand to admit that he lost and so has insisted since the wee hours of Election Night that he really won — and won “by a lot.” What America has long expected is that losing candidates swallow those feelings and at least pretend to be gracious. If Trump’s not capable of it, he should at least stop waging war on the outcome.
Opinions
“The long darkness before dawn” via Donald G. McNeil Jr. of The New York Times — This holiday season presents a grim reckoning. The United States has reached an appalling milestone: more than one million new coronavirus cases every week. Hospitals in some states are full to bursting. The number of deaths is rising and seems on track to easily surpass the 2,200-a-day average in the spring. Some epidemiologists predict that the death toll by March could be close to twice the 250,000 figure that the nation surpassed only last week. By late December, the first doses of vaccine may be available to Americans, federal officials have said. Priorities are still being set, but vaccinations are expected to go first to health care workers, nursing home residents, and others at the highest risk.
“The COVID-19 vaccine is a gift from science. Accept it.” via the South Florida Sun-Sentinel editorial board — In three separate announcements in recent weeks, three scientific teams at different pharmaceutical companies have given a weary, frightened world what it needs: a verifiable path to defeat the coronavirus pandemic. Imagine again going to work and school, to restaurants and concerts without significant risk of infection. We are likely to get there in 2021 because a safe, effective COVID-19 vaccine appears on pace for emergency regulatory approval. This gift of science will be ready — if we accept it. Wait, if we accept it? The big question about a COVID-19 vaccine has shifted from efficacy to whether enough Americans will agree to receive it. Skepticism of inoculations is frustratingly widespread, despite overwhelming scientific evidence that they work.
“It doesn’t matter if DeSantis doesn’t like Joe Gruters” via Peter Schorsch and Jacob Ogles of Florida Politics — In 2010, Gruters was 1 of 67 county GOP chairs in Florida. Fast-forward 10 years and Gruters, while still not a household name, has built a helluva resume. Now Gruters wants another term as Florida GOP Chair. Everyone’s on board except for maybe one important person: DeSantis. But here’s the rub … does it matter who DeSantis likes? Because DeSantis doesn’t really like anyone. DeSantis doesn’t like Rick Scott or Susie Wiles. He didn’t like his congressional colleagues. Oh, and in case you missed it, DeSantis definitely doesn’t like the media. So let’s not hold it against Gruters that DeSantis doesn’t like him — that’s just the default position for DeSantis.
On today’s Sunrise
Gov. DeSantis has emerged from his postelection cocoon. The last time DeSantis spoke with reporters was the day after the election when he bragged about the smooth vote count in Florida, promising he would have more to say in a couple of days.
Also, on today’s Sunrise:
— But instead of waiting until the end of the week, we had to wait until the end of the month. The reason was the Governor announced the state would allow students to continue with virtual learning next semester and schools would not face financial penalties. And while the number of COVID-19 cases is rising in Florida, DeSantis says the schools will remain open.
— Florida is about to reach another grim milestone in the COVID-19 pandemic. With today’s casualty figures, Florida will have more than 1 million cases of coronavirus. Only Texas and California have more.
— If you’re listening to this podcast, it means you’ve also survived another hurricane season; 2020 was the most active season since we started keeping records. Florida avoided the worst of it … except for the Panhandle.
— An education reform group created by former Gov. Bush is holding a three-day virtual event. Patricia Levesque with the Foundation for Excellence in Education says it’s for everyone who believes now is the time to retool our schools — and wants to get it right. EdPaloosa 2020 and it starts today. Former President George W. Bush and his younger brother Jeb are both taking part.
— And finally, a Florida Man to be released after more than 30 years in jail for a nonviolent marijuana offense, and a Florida Woman shot at her son’s funeral.
“NORAD Santa Tracker launches Tuesday” via Lolita Tegna of The Associated Press — Santa doesn’t start his rounds for another 24 days, but the NORAD Santa Tracker is set to launch on Tuesday with information and games ahead of the big night. Despite the coronavirus pandemic, the North American Aerospace Defense Command will track Santa just as it has done for 65 years. But there will be some changes: Not every child will be able to get through to a volunteer at NORAD’s call center to check on Santa’s whereabouts, as they have in years before. This year, due to safety restrictions forced by the COVID-19 pandemic, the number of volunteers has been drastically cut to what NORAD expects will be fewer than 10 people per shift.
NORAD Tracks Santa will provide daily updates to its 2.1 million social media followers. image via AP.
“Orlando company rolls out virtual visits with Santa, Mrs. Claus” via Kate Santich of the Orlando Sentinel — An Orlando marketing firm has introduced virtual one-on-one visits with Santa during this socially distanced holiday season, giving kids a chance to share their wishes with the jolly old elf via cellphone, tablet or computer. Chit-Chat With Santa costs $28 to $35 for a video call lasting up to 10 minutes, with options for Mrs. Claus or a personalized video message. Don’t tell the kiddos, but parental input is critical. The service was launched by 82 South, billed as an “experiential” marketing company based in Orlando’s Baldwin Park. It’s available without downloading an app.
“FGCU Athletics Turns 20: What does the future hold for Eagles after skyrocketing to success?” via Adam Fisher of the Naples Daily News — FGCU held its first sporting event 20 years ago this fall. Since then the school has gone from NAIA to NCAA Division I, won dozens of conference championships, and every team sport has qualified for the NCAA tournament multiple times and won at least one tournament game. “If you would have asked me at the beginning what the next 10 years would look like, I would have been completely wrong,” said women’s basketball coach Karl Smesko, whose team’s first season was 2002-03. “If you asked me 10 years ago what the next 10 years would be like, I would have been completely wrong again.”
Happy birthday
Happy birthday to Brian Bautista of The Southern Group, Michael Van Sickler of the Tampa Bay Times, Mitch Wertheimer, and Amy Young.
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Good morning. We’ve officially made it to December. Can’t decide whether this year went really slow or really fast…
MARKETS
NASDAQ
12,198.74
– 0.06%
S&P
3,621.63
– 0.46%
DOW
29,638.64
– 0.91%
GOLD
1,780.00
– 0.45%
10-YR
0.845%
– 0.10 bps
OIL
45.06
– 1.03%
*As of market close
Stimulus: Congress has returned to D.C. for a quick legislative sesh ahead of the holidays. The most urgent action item for lawmakers is to avert a government shutdown when a spending bill expires Dec. 11, but business and economic leaders are hoping Congress can sneak in a much-needed stimulus bill, too.
Economy: Fed Chair Jerome Powell and Treasury Secretary Steve Mnuchin will testify before the House today following their recent tug-of-war over the Fed’s emergency lending programs.
Yesterday, President-elect Joe Biden announced the top captains of his economic team. Let’s hop right in.
The Treasury oversees money production, raises revenue (i.e., taxes), and ensures the economic gears of the country are greased and turning.
Confirming recent reports, former Fed Chair Janet Yellen was nominated to become the first woman to head the Treasury. Here’s a refresher on what her nomination means. And consider following her on Twitter (she’s new to the platform and could use some more followers).
Yellen’s proposed No. 2 is Adewale “Wally” Adeyemo, president of the Obama Foundation and former economic adviser to 44. He’d be the first Black man to serve as deputy secretary.
The Office of Management and Budget (OMB) is responsible for drafting the annual budget proposal and approving new regulations.
Center for American Progress CEO Neera Tanden was nominated as director. She’d be the first woman of color to head the OMB, but of all Biden’s early nominees, she may face the toughest confirmation battle.
Council of Economic Advisors: Think of it as the president’s personal econ think tank, responsible for crafting policy and economic forecasting.
Cecilia Rouse, dean of Princeton’s School of Public and International Affairs, was nominated as chair. She served on the council under Obama and would become the CEA’s first Black chair.
Big picture: Other economy-related roles Biden needs to fill include secretaries of Commerce, Labor, and Transportation and the U.S. trade representative. All nominees will require Senate confirmation (though control of the Senate is in flux until Georgia’s runoff races in January).
Reading between the noms
Biden’s roster features prominent labor economists and inequality experts, which could signal an early focus on spreading the wealth, protecting workers, and ensuring an equitable pandemic recovery, the NYT reports.
To get that done, this squad is expected to embrace more deficit spending.
Looking ahead…with a slowing recovery, worsening pandemic, and one month until ~12 million U.S. workers lose federal unemployment benefits, Biden’s team will face the economic equivalent of Alabama in Week 1.
Stocks: Global equities had their best month since 1988 thanks to 1) promising news that a coronavirus vaccine would get approved before the end of the year and 2) society not collapsing following the presidential election (though President Trump has still not conceded almost one month after Election Day).
Small-cap stocks, Wall Street lingo for smaller companies that are publicly traded, had their best month ever—up 19%.
It’s not totally surprising. Small-caps are often the first to signal an economic recovery, per Reuters.
Cryptocurrency: Bitcoin, the world’s largest cryptocurrency, hit an all-time high yesterday, summiting the peak it set about three years ago. Analysts point to greater commitments from big finance players—like PayPal and Square—for driving last month’s 40% rally.
Non-cryptocurrency: The dollar had its worst month since July, which is a sign investors stayed away from the safe haven asset and piled into riskier bets.
Commodities: Gold, also considered a safe haven for investors, had its worst month since 2016.
Shares of Nikola fell nearly 27% yesterday after GM announced it was pulling out of a deal to take an 11% equity stake in the electric truck company.
The backstory: GM gave Nikola a stamp of approval in early September with a $2 billion investment to co-develop Nikola’s all-electric Badger pickup trucks. It stood by that agreement even as a short seller alleged that Nikola and former CEO Trevor Milton were misleading investors and committing an “intricate fraud.”
The nowstory: GM and Nikola are entering into a non-binding “potential agreement” that scraps the equity stake and Badger trucks. It does leave GM the option to supply fuel-cells for Nikola’s commercial semi-trucks…if it feels like it.
Bottom line: The new arrangement gives GM some breathing room should Nikola fully crash and burn, but it doesn’t fully sever its relationship with a one-time EV darling.
Sometimes rarely coming to an agreement can be a good thing, because the few times you do, you know it’s special.
Like when your spouse admits that buying matching jet skis would be friggin’ awesome.
The Motley Fool cofounders, Tom and David, understand how exceptional it is to agree on anything—probably because they’re brothers.
In fact, in their 27 years of partnering together at the Fool, they’ve only agreed on the exact same stock 27 times—thus issuing the incredibly rare “All-in” buy alert.
Historically, “All-in” stocks have had an average return of 1,352%—and they just issued the alert again for a tiny internet company that sits in the middle of the advertising market (a market 10x bigger than the online streaming industry).
Frankly, that sounds way better than ripping up the open sea on a personal water vehicle.
Yesterday, Facebook agreed to buy customer-service platform Kustomer for a reported $1+ billion, per the WSJ.
What it does, aside from confusing autocorrect: Kustomer condenses customer outreach across text, email, chatbot, and social apps into a single screen, allowing businesses to build a clearer portrait of who’s eyeing their goods.
Those kapabilities are especially important now that the pandemic has pushed more shoppers to e-commerce.
Why Facebook wants in: Kustomer rounds out a growing suite of services Facebook offers to the millions of businesses that use its platforms. Over 175 million people chat up businesses on WhatsApp each day.
And Facebook has made its platforms more shopper-friendly in recent months, such as adding payment and hosting services to WhatsApp and a shopping tab to Instagram.
Zoom out: The deal is subject to regulatory approval. Worth noting, Facebook’s relationship with regulators is worse than our relationship with turkey leftovers five days in. The Federal Trade Commission and state attorneys general are soon expected to announce plans to sue Facebook over its alleged habit of…buying promising startups and squashing competition.
Yesterday, beleaguered sportswear company Under Armour and NBA superstar Steph Curry announced the launch of Curry Brand, a signature line of clothing, shoes, and other golf and basketball products.
It’s all about the youths
According to a Piper Sandler survey, Under Armour is No. 1 on the list of brands “no longer worn” by male teens. Translation: It’s just not cool anymore. So Under Armour is taking a page out of Nike-Jordan Brand’s playbook to try and turn things around with younger consumers.
It’ll be a challenge: Under Armour’s stock is down almost 23% this year and sales were essentially flat year-over-year in Q3. Its e-comm biz did grow over 50% last quarter but, during the pandemic, so did any business with a functioning website.
Zoom out: Even with Steph’s marketing chops, Curry Brand alone probably won’t be able to right Under Armour’s ship. Nike’s powerful Jordan Brand accounts for just ~9% of the company’s overall revenue.
WHAT ELSE IS BREWING
Moderna applied for emergency use authorization from the FDA for its Covid-19 vaccine.
Exxon Mobil will write down the value of its natural gas properties by up to $20 billion and give spending a major haircut next year.
Salesforce will announce a deal to buy Slack today after market close, per CNBC.
DeepMind, the British AI group owned by Alphabet, cracked a 50-year scientific problem related to “protein folding.” It’s being called a breakthrough moment for the field.
Sunday was the busiest day at U.S. airports since the pandemic began—nearly 1.2 million passengers passed through TSA checkpoints.
Wednesday afternoon football? Don’t tell your boss. The Steelers-Ravens game, originally slated for Thanksgiving, has been moved to 3:40pm ET on Wednesday due to the Ravens’ Covid outbreak. The game has been postponed three times.
BREW’S BETS
If a board meeting is actually productive, it’s probably thanks to. It’s the board meeting software that helps digitize board processes, reduce meeting preparation, and increase effectiveness. .*
Tech Tip Tuesday: Manage your bookmarks with Raindrop.io and keep track of the 54 articles you want to read with OneTab.
The Trump campaign is filing a lawsuit Tuesday which claims, in part, a “willful disregard of the law on multiple occasions” on the part of election officials in Wisconsin. The president’s attorneys say irregularities in the state affect some 220,000 absentee ballots. Absentee ballot requests must be on file before the ballots themselves can be accepted, according to Wisconsin law. Trump’s lawyers argue that ballots were accepted and counted without ballot requests having been recorded.
SAY WHAT? Trump’s Sacred Number, Biden the Superhero?
The New York Times asks How Will Biden Deal With Republican Sabotage? Apparently, if the GOP doesn’t just rubber stamp everything a Democrat president wants, it’s practically terrorism. By contrast, four years of constant investigation into everything a Republican president does is… good governance?
A headline on CNN’s website reads Why Joe Biden’s broken foot reveals how different his White House will be from Donald Trump’s. Don’t read too much into it. No, really, don’t even bother. It was a slow news day, apparently.
MSNBC bemoans the fact that The top infectious disease expert in government can’t get the president to listen to him. The expert in question is, of course, Anthony Fauci, the man who in March told 60 Minutes that people shouldn’t be wearing masks. Apparently, this was before Fauci became an expert.
Joe Biden is said to have tapped Center for American Progress head Neera Tanden to head the Office of Management and Budget, should he become president. A spokesman for one Republican senator said Tanden has no chance of being confirmed due to her “endless stream of disparaging comments” about Republicans.
During an interview on Sunday with Fox News’s Maria Bartiromo, President Trump vented his frustration at Georgia’s Governor Brian Kemp, a Republican, for remaining silent over what appears to be a less-than-honest election ballot count. “I’m ashamed that I endorsed him,” Trump said.
Kamala Harris, who is for the time being the presumed vice president-elect, came under fire on Saturday for tweeting about how she and Joe Biden were committed to helping small businesses. Harris was an outspoken supporter of rioters who had looted and burned hundreds of small businesses across the country. Her campaign staff even donated money to bail violent rioters out of jail.
Something political to ponder as you enjoy your morning coffee.
One by one, the president’s supporters – both within his party and in the media – are backing away from the fight over an obviously tainted election result. The latest Trump ally to abandon him is media personality Heraldo Rivera. “Enough is enough now,” Rivera said on Fox News, expressing concern that Trump’s continued attacks on the Georgia vote count will discourage Republicans in that state from voting in the crucial Senate runoffs in January. When history finally judges the 2020 election to have been a fraud, how will it judge those who stood by and allowed it to happen, whether they be politicians, journalists or just ordinary Americans?
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“A top Iranian security official on Monday accused Israel of using ‘electronic devices’ to remotely kill a scientist who founded the Islamic Republic’s military nuclear program in the 2000s… Israel, long suspected of killing Iranian nuclear scientists over the last decade, has repeatedly declined to comment on the attack.” AP News
From the Left
The left is generally critical of the assassination, arguing in favor of diplomatic solutions.
“Israel never carries out such brazen acts without the explicit sanction and knowledge of its American partners. So the Trump administration must have certainly known about the assassination in advance…
“What the last four years of [the] Trump presidency have demonstrated—in large part building on the expansion of executive powers overseen by President Obama—is a dangerous American penchant for conducting extrajudicial killings of foreign officials and citizens. In the last decade, extrajudicial assassinations have become a central implement of the American foreign-policy agenda—a remarkably perilous norm…
“If the United States continues to behave unlawfully on the international stage, it is only a matter of time before other countries begin to emulate this behavior. And why would they not, when the supposed beacons of democracy themselves flagrantly transgress the norms that they expect others to abide by?” Keyvan Shafiei, American Prospect
“By all accounts, while Iran retains some institutional knowledge about warheads and other weapons systems—knowledge that will survive the killing of one man like Fakhrizadeh—its military ambitions were successfully hemmed in for a few years by the JCPOA. While Iran now retains more low enriched uranium than permitted under the JCPOA, there’s been almost no reporting to indicate that it has resumed nuclear weapons research…
“The establishment, and particularly conservative, media has largely ignored this fact, instead presenting Iran as on the verge of deploying nuclear weapons and contributing to regional proliferation—unlike Israel, which has dozens of unacknowledged nuclear weapons that could reach Iran…
“Like the deservedly mocked Friedman Unit, which described U.S. success in Iraq as always six months away, Western hawks see Iran as ever on the verge of deploying a weapon it seems to have little interest in developing… The assassination of nuclear scientist Mohsen Fakhrizadeh is a reminder of how badly the U.S. needs a new approach to Iran. Is Biden up to the task?” Jacob Silverman, New Republic
“The assassination of Fakhrizadeh was quite likely not just a crime but also an attempt to humiliate Biden himself… Biden’s first and most important task upon assuming office will be to defuse this crisis. To do so, he’ll have to move beyond the safe zone of simply reiterating a desire to resume the nuclear deal with Iran…
“Rather, Biden will have to make a bolder call condemning those who tried to sabotage his foreign policy. If the evidence points in that direction, this will include calling out Israel and possible accomplices like Saudi Arabia. This will be a hard task, but it is absolutely essential, and not just for the sake of Iran policy. If Biden is going to have any success as president, he has to show he’s willing to fight those who are trying to undermine him.” Jeet Heer, The Nation
Some argue that “There has been a great deal of speculation that Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu ordered the killing to sabotage attempts by the Biden administration to reconstitute the Obama-era nuclear deal that he loathes… Maybe so, but an earlier round of killings of Iranian nuclear scientists — four dead and one wounded between 2010 and 2012 — helped make a diplomatic solution more, not less, likely…
“If recent history has taught us anything, it is that Iran can keep developing nuclear weapons no matter how many of its scientists are killed by assassins, how many of its centrifuges are felled by cyberattacks, or how much of its economy is damaged by sanctions. Since Trump foolishly pulled out of the nuclear deal in 2018 despite Tehran’s compliance, Iran has increased its uranium stockpile eightfold… The only way to stop the Iranian nuclear program is through a new nuclear deal. For the sake of Israel, the United States and the entire world, let us hope that Fakhrizadeh’s death makes a diplomatic breakthrough more, not less, likely.” Max Boot, Washington Post
“Yes, Israel and the Sunni Arab states want to make sure that Iran can never develop a nuclear weapon. But some Israeli military experts will tell you today that the prospect of Iran having a nuke is not what keeps them up at night — because they don’t see Tehran using it. That would be suicide and Iran’s clerical leaders are not suicidal. They are, though, homicidal. And Iran’s new preferred weapons for homicide are the precision-guided missiles…
“That is why Israel has been fighting a shadow war with Iran for the past five years to prevent Tehran from reaching its goal of virtually encircling Israel with proxies in Lebanon, Syria, Iraq and Gaza, all armed with precision-guided missiles. The Saudis have been trying to do the same versus Iran’s proxies in Yemen… If Biden tries to just resume the Iran nuclear deal as it was — and gives up the leverage of extreme economic sanctions on Iran, before reaching some understanding on its export of precision-guided missiles — I suspect that he’ll meet a lot of resistance from Israel, the U.A.E. and Saudi Arabia.” Thomas L. Friedman, New York Times
From the Right
The right praises the assassination, arguing that Iran must be met from a position of strength.
“It’s true that there are hardliners in Iran who oppose negotiating with the Great Satan and more pragmatic types who favor ‘diplomacy’ as a way to get the U.S. sanctions lifted. Some claim the Fakhrizadeh assassination gives the hardliners the upper hand. But probably not; decision-making ultimately rests with Ayatollah Khamenei, and if he sees negotiations with Biden as offering the best hope to rescue Iran from its economic plight and get funds flowing again for ‘exporting the revolution,’ the assassination isn’t likely to stop him…
“More plausible is that the timing has to do with Israel’s wanting to make the most of the highly pro-Israel, anti-mullahs Trump administration’s remaining time in office — and quite possibly, with the U.S. administration’s own desire to make the most of that time.” P. David Hornik, PJ Media
“Last week the Times reported that [Trump] asked his national security team for options on attacking Iran’s enrichment facilities before Biden takes office but was talked out of it. Bombing Iran risks regional war, he was told… Iran hasn’t — yet — retaliated for the strike that killed Quds Force supremo Qassem Soleimani early this year. Trump and Netanyahu may have looked at that and reasoned that they could get away with targeting Fakhrizadeh as well, knowing that even if Iran does respond (the anniversary of Soleimani’s death is approaching and U.S. officials are reportedly anxious about it) it probably won’t be on a scale that guarantees war. Maybe taking out the Iranian nuclear brain trust is what the U.S. and Israel have settled on in lieu of bombing…
“With Biden about to take office, it’s arguably in Iran’s interest not to respond to today’s assassination and hope for a more conciliatory White House on January 20. But there’s only so much Biden will be able to do for them, at least initially. He won’t want to look weak right out of the gate; even if he approaches Iran about reinstating the nuclear deal, they may demand concessions that he’s unable to make, like ‘compensating’ them for all of the damage to their economy inflicted by Trump’s sanctions…
“Plus, even if Iran would ideally prefer not to respond to U.S./Israeli operations like Fakhrizadeh’s assassination, at a certain point the need to save face internationally will usurp their patience. They’ve now lost two hugely important military figures in less than a year and imposed no penalty on the people responsible.” Allahpundit, Hot Air
“The Iranians have, in the past, chosen to play down the importance (and therefore the success) of these killings. Here they’re doing the opposite — and it’s a very tricky situation for them…
“It’s not just that the regime has allowed several of its scientists to get killed, it’s that they’ve been killed in such similar ways: in their cars on the street; with magnetic bombs slapped on by passing motorcyclists; by gunshots or now, possibly, a combination of both. If I were an Iranian nuclear scientist, I’d be asking a simple question: if you can’t protect Fakhrizadeh how are you going to protect me?…
“Some say that Israel may have struck now as it had a final window under Trump. Biden, it is thought, might not be so accommodating to this sort of stuff. I’m not so sure. Israel would almost certainly seek a US greenlight to kill a major politician or general. That’s not so for almost anonymous nuclear scientists. Rather, it seems to me that someone somewhere has relayed a simple message: administrations may change, security concerns do not.” David Patrikarakos, Spectator USA
“The killing of Iranian nuclear scientist Mohsen Fakhrizadeh should be a message to Joe Biden and his nascent administration. Even as Iranian intelligence has pushed aggressively to expand its external influence via regional proxies, its domestic counterintelligence capabilities have significantly weakened. This is only the latest in a series of attacks that underscore the extent to which foreign intelligence services have been able to penetrate the country…
“This comes two weeks after intelligence leaks showed a top al Qaeda leader, who had been enjoying sanctuary in Tehran since the destruction of al Qaeda’s headquarters in Afghanistan nearly two decades ago, had been killed by Israeli operatives in an operation that was outsourced by U.S. intelligence. Earlier in the summer, Iran was rocked by a wave of unexplained explosions around the country, hitting at least one nuclear site… Mr. Biden should factor in this weakness as he prepares to negotiate with Tehran.” Kamran Bokhari, Wall Street Journal
“The evident huge increase in Mossad operations inside Iran isn’t only a byproduct of President Trump’s sympathy. It is an early sign of a new post-American order. Mr. Biden and his officials may try to twist Jerusalem’s arm to go easier on Iran. Good luck. The president-elect’s looming defense cuts will be more telling. The Middle East is all about power politics, and Mossad has begun to show what a committed First World intelligence service can do against a Third World Islamist state whose own security apparatus is increasingly decrepit.” Reuel Marc Gerecht, Wall Street Journal
⚡ Breaking: Vice President-elect Harris plans to name Tina Flournoy, currently chief of staff to former President Clinton, as her chief of staff in the White House, a source familiar with transition planning tells me, confirming a report by Yashar Ali.
Why it matters: There’s been intense fascination about this post among top Democrats, with Harris likely to remain a power in the party for many years to come.
Please join Niala Boodhoo, Caitlin Owens and me today at 12:30 p.m. ET for a World AIDS Day and Giving Tuesday virtual event. Register here.
Today’s Smart Brevity™ count: 1,199 words … 4½ minutes.
1 big thing: The REAL star wars
Illustration: Aïda Amer/Axios
Nations around the world are shoring up defensive and offensive capabilities in space, Axios Space author Miriam Kramer writes.
Why it matters: Using space as a warfighting domain opens up new avenues for technologically advanced nations to dominate their enemies. But it can also make those countries more vulnerable to attack in novel ways.
From anti-satellite tests to establishing new military branches, space is becoming an integral theater for militaries around the world.
U.S. Space Command issued a rare statement in July calling out what it described as an “anti-satellite weapons test” after a Russian satellite appeared to release a projectile near another Russian satellite.
China reportedly has the technology to blind enemy satellites, according to a March report from CSIS.
What we’re watching: Some experts believe the U.S. is falling behind in efforts to secure its space infrastructure.
While the U.S. is ahead of every other nation in its capabilities from orbit, the country’s national security satellite infrastructure — which depends on a relatively small number of extremely expensive spy satellites — is vulnerable.
U.S. communities along the Mexico border are among the safest in America, with some border cities holding crime rates well below the national average, according to FBI statistics gathered by Axios race and justice reporter Russell Contreras.
Why it matters: FBI crime data from 2019 contradicts the narrative by President Trump and others that the U.S.-Mexico border is a “lawless” region suffering from violence and mayhem.
Crime in U.S. border cities remains low even though sister cities in Mexico are among the most dangerous in North America because of cartel violence.
From Brownsville, Texas, to San Diego, safe border cities have majority-Hispanic populations and poverty rates above the national average.
An Axios analysis of crime data from 11 border communities found that all had a lower violent crime rate than Sioux Falls, S.D.
Reality check: Violent crime has been dropping in El Paso since 1993 and was at historic lows before a border fence was authorized by Congress in 2006.
3. The Wuhan files: Leaked Chinese documents show flawed response
Security workers in protective suits prepare to administer COVID to airport workers in Shanghai last week. Photo: AP
CNN’s Nick Paton Walsh reports that in a file marked “internal document, please keep confidential,” local health authorities in the province of Hubei, where the virus was first detected, list 5,918 new cases on Feb. 10, “more than double the official public number of confirmed cases.”
Why it matters: “This larger figure was never fully revealed at that time … China’s accounting system seemed … to downplay the severity of the outbreak.”
Health experts told CNN the 117 pages of documents had “global consequences” and “laid bare why what China knew in the early months mattered.”
Spotted outside a church in New Westminster, British Columbia.
💉 Article of the day … “The Long Darkness Before Dawn: With vaccines and a new administration, the pandemic will be tamed. But experts say the coming months ‘are going to be just horrible,'” by the N.Y. Times’ Don McNeil (subscription).
5. Bulls abound
Illustration: Sarah Grillo/Axios
Investors are again throwing caution to the wind and growing more uniform in their bets that stocks will rise, Dion Rabouin writes in Axios Markets.
Why it matters: They’re responding to positive vaccine news and the run-up in global equities punctuated last week by the Dow hitting 30,000 points.
What we’re watching: The resurgence of traders’ risk appetite has some urging caution, as unanimity in either excitement or fear historically has proven to be a contrarian signal for the stock market.
“Stay-at-home order,” not lockdown. “Protocols,” not mandates.
Pollster Frank Luntz has identified effective vocabulary for getting the public to take COVID seriously, Sara Fischer writes in her weekly Axios Media Trends.
Why it matters: Much of the language used by the government, business and the media is politicizing the virus, causing large swaths of the population to tune out, Luntz told Axios.
This is particularly true for Republicans, according to a study Luntz conducted in conjunction with the de Beaumont Foundation.
Polling shows Republicans tend to take COVID less seriously, in part because the vocabulary used to describe safety measures feels invasive of their constitutional rights.
Luntz’s Rx:
Americans consider a “pandemic” more “significant, serious, and scary” than “COVID-19” or “coronavirus.”
Saying “eliminating” or “eradicating” the virus is more effective than using “defeating” or “crushing” the virus, because war-like language can politicize the issue.
Emphasis on the speed of vaccine development turns the public off, Luntz said. People are looking for something safe, assured and effective. The administration’s framing around “Operation Warp Speed,” and getting a vaccine out quickly, undermines public trust that the vaccine is safe.
Governors are preparing to face one of the toughest moral choices they’ll confront in office: how to allocate limited vaccine stocks among outsized shares of vulnerable Americans, Jonathan Swan reports.
New Mexico Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham, who’s in contention to lead HHS in the Biden administration, told Axios: “It really is all going to depend how much vaccine are we going to have access to, and how quickly. … If you can’t get it done quickly, it’s problematic.”
She described a nightmare scenario: The federal government gives her sufficient doses to initially vaccinate every nursing home resident and every hospital worker in her state, but not nearly enough to cover the one in three adults statewide with chronic disorders.
Salesforce’s likely acquisition of Slack — not yet a done deal, but expected to be announced this afternoon — represents a big gamble, Scott Rosenberg and Ina Fried report.
For Slack, challenged by competition from Microsoft, the bet is that a deeper-pocketed owner like Salesforce, with wide experience selling into large companies, will help the bottom line.
For Salesforce, the hope is that adding a hot, widely recognizable brand to its portfolio will give its business-service portfolio an edge.
The bottom line: The wager is that making the right corporate combination can work transformational magic on the united businesses, and make 2+2 equal 5.
That’s a bet tech companies keep making — even though most of the time, they lose.
Abolitionist Harriet Tubman (1822-1913) stands with a group of formerly enslaved people she helped lead to freedom. Photo: Bettmann/Getty
A database that gathers records about the lives of enslaved Africans and their descendants is undergoing a massive, crowdsource-powered expansion to unlock Black Americans’ genealogical histories, organizers tell Russell Contreras.
Why it matters: The initiative, to be unveiled today by Enslaved.org, is the latest to reconstruct lost or incomplete timelines and records from the 1600s-1800s, as the U.S. and other nations reckon with systemic racism.
How it works: The general public and outside researchers can submit family histories, runaway slave ads, or documents of purchase to Enslaved.org.
Users can search their names and town histories and connect the experiences of enslaved people, from voyages to the changing of names.
10. Bad Bunny is Spotify’s most-streamed artist of 2020
Puerto Rican superstar Bad Bunny is Spotify’s most-streamed artist of the year with 8.3 billion streams globally, AP reports.
The Latin Grammy winner and hitmaker, who released a new album last week, leads a top five list that includes Drake, J Balvin, Juice WRLD and The Weeknd.
In the U.S., late rapper Juice WRLD was the most-streamed artist on Spotify. His album “Legends Never Die” was the platform’s most-streamed album in the U.S., while Roddy Ricch’s “The Box” was the country’s most-streamed song.
Top album: With more than 3.3 billion streams, Bad Bunny’s sophomore solo album “YHLQMDLG” tops Spotify’s list of most-streamed albums globally.
Top song: The Weeknd’s single, “Blinding Lights,” is Spotify’s most-streamed song of the year, with 1.6 million streams globally.
The certification of President-elect Joe Biden’s victories in the battleground states of Arizona and Wisconsin dealt a fresh blow to President Trump’s quest to overturn results as a chorus of Republicans and Democrats offered support for the election’s integrity.
By Amy Gardner, Emma Brown and Rosalind S. Helderman ● Read more »
MIAMI — The politics of Miami’s Cuban American population, at times, has as many shades as the coffee with milk they order at the city’s many coffee windows. But the victory of Joe Biden has turned the group more solidly red, experts and voters say.
Trump legal team member Joe diGenova said Chris Krebs, a former cybsersecurity official at the Homeland Security Department fired by President Trump, should be shot.
California’s attorney general on Monday urged the Supreme Court to reject a petition from a group of California churches disputing the state’s coronavirus restrictions.
President-elect Joe Biden’s pick to run the Office of Management and Budget has a history of defending British ex-spy Christopher Steele’s discredited anti-Trump dossier.
California Republican Rep. Mike Garcia cemented his place as the congressman for the 25th Congressional District after his opponent Democratic Assemblywoman Christy Smith conceded Monday night.
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December 01, 2020
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AP MORNING WIRE
Good morning. Tamer Fakahany in London is on vacation this week, so your AP Morning Wire will be bringing you a selection of the AP news stories that your fellow readers are finding most interesting and newsworthy at this moment.
Obviously, these weeks are a time filled with momentous news, particularly in the areas of U.S. politics and the continuing coronavirus pandemic. You can follow AP’s comprehensive virus coverage here, and much of our politics news – including coverage of the presidential transition – can be found here.
BETHLEHEM, West Bank (AP) — The coronavirus has cast a pall over Christmas celebrations in Bethlehem, all but shutting down the biblical town revered as Jesus’ birthplace at the height of the……Read More
WILMINGTON, Del. (AP) — With unemployment still high and the pandemic threatening yet another economic slump, President-elect Joe Biden is assembling a team of liberal advisers who have long… …Read More
A disproportionately large number of poor and minority students were not in schools for assessments this fall, complicating efforts to measure the pandemic’s effects on some of the most vulnerab…Read More
MEMPHIS, Mo. (AP) — As Dr. Shane Wilson makes the rounds at the tiny, 25-bed hospital in rural northeastern Missouri, many of his movements are familiar in an age of coronavirus. Masks and glove…Read More
SRINAGAR, India (AP) — Amid the long-raging deadly strife in Indian-controlled Kashmir, another conflict is silently taking its toll on the Himalayan region’s residents: the conflict between man…Read More
ROUEN, France (AP) — The panicked 22-year-old is led to Consultation Room No. 2, with its easy-mop floor and honeycombed meshing over the window. Behind her, the psychiatric…Read More
CHICAGO (AP) — President-elect Joe Biden is considering former Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel, a substantial and somewhat divisive figure in Democratic Party politics, to serve …Read More
BERLIN (AP) — Police in southern Germany have opened an investigation into the disappearance of a large wooden sculpture of a phallus from a mountainside where it appeared w…Read More
World champion Lewis Hamilton tested positive for COVID-19 and will miss the Sakhir Grand Prix this weekend, his Mercedes-AMG Petronas F1 Team said Tuesday. The team issued …Read More
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Good morning, Chicago. On Monday, Illinois health officials announced 6,190 new confirmed and probable cases of COVID-19 and 85 additional fatalities. The case numbers were lower than in recent weeks — but that doesn’t necessarily mean that the virus spread is slowing. Health experts warned it’s likely because fewer people got tested over Thanksgiving weekend and many testing sites curtailed their hours.
Meanwhile, the U.S. may be weeks away from getting its first coronavirus vaccine approved for adults, but when will it be approved for children? Here’s what experts say.
Here’s more coronavirus news and other top stories you need to know to start your day.
Officials enforcing coronavirus orders shut down a party attended by about 300 people in Wicker Park over the weekend and earlier this month cited a business for hosting a party with more than 600 attendees, the city of Chicago said in a news release.
Since restrictions on indoor service at restaurants and bars and tighter crowd limits went into effect on Oct. 30, the city said it has shut down five businesses for one day and closed four others until they have a reopening plan in place. In addition, the city said it has issued 20 citations and 54 “orders to correct” to bars, restaurants and other businesses.
Legislation at the heart of the bribery scandal that has ensnared House Speaker Michael Madigan as well as former Commonwealth Edison executives enhanced the utility’s bottom line but failed to produce promised benefits for consumers, according to a report released Tuesday by Illinois PIRG, a public interest advocacy group.
According to text messages shared with the Tribune, Ryan McCaskey, Acadia’s chef and owner, promised employees that a planned going-away party would be an “extra naughty” affair. He said he would supply dollar bills to tip the strippers.
A Chicago alderman who long championed the city’s anti-puppy mill ordinance has reversedhis position and wants to lift a key restriction on pet shops, a move that comes after he received donations from a Lincoln Park store owner whose business sells primarily purebred and designer dogs.
City officials shut down a party with about 300 attendees in a basement venue in Wicker Park over the weekend. Police were called to the illegal party early Sunday at The Vault, where no one was following social distancing protocols or wearing face coverings, the Department of Business Affairs and Consumer Protection said.
The venue was one of more than 300 businesses — including one that allegedly held a party with 600 people — cited for violations one month into citywide orders against indoor gatherings, dining and drinking. David Struett and Mitch Dudek have the story…
“[Fauci] said the massive number of indoor gatherings by people visiting family and friends across the nation will very likely bring a post-Thanksgiving surge,” said Pritzker.
More than 300 businesses — including Wildberry Pancake and the Chicago Sports Complex — have been cited one month into citywide orders against indoor gatherings and dining.
The Illinois Public Interest Research Group says electricity customers are paying 37% more in delivery charges at a time when energy prices are low nationwide.
Welcome to The Hill’s Morning Report. It is Tuesday! The start of December! We get you up to speed on the most important developments in politics and policy, plus trends to watch. Alexis Simendinger and Al Weaver are the co-creators, and readers can find us on Twitter @asimendinger and @alweaver22. Please recommend the Morning Report to friends and let us know what you think. CLICK HERE to subscribe!
Total U.S. coronavirus deaths reported each morning this week: Monday, 266,875; Tuesday, 268,087.
Congress gets back to work this week as the spread of COVID-19 hits new records and employers, economists and workers continue to beg lawmakers to succeed where they’ve failed since May and pass a coronavirus relief bill that President Trump would sign as soon as politically possible.
The odds of striking a stimulus deal before the close of the 116th Congress are incredibly low, but that has not stopped a bipartisan group of legislators from attempting to rekindle discussions after months of touch-and-go talks between the Trump administration and Democratic negotiators.
According to The Hill’s Jordain Carney, the group includes Republican Sens. Mitt Romney (Utah), Rob Portman (Ohio) and Susan Collins (Maine) along with Democratic Sens. Chris Coons (Del.), Joe Manchin (W.Va.), Mark Warner (Va.), Michael Bennet (Colo.) and Dick Durbin (Ill.), the No. 2 Senate Democrat. Specifically, the group is hoping COVID-19 relief provisions can be included as part of the must-pass government funding package.
The deadline to fund the government with either a full-year budget or a short-term stopgap measure is Dec. 11.
The talks represent the first signs of life toward a fifth coronavirus-related package, with the most recent bill having been passed more than seven months ago. However, the gulf between Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) and Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) remains as wide as ever. The GOP leader continues to eye a targeted package of roughly $500 billion, while Pelosi is still pushing for a bill in excess of $2 billion.
The Associated Press: Congress returns with virus aid, federal funding unresolved.
Politico: Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis (R), a Trump ally, wants a COVID-19 relief bill to bolster relief for unemployment.
Bloomberg News: Former Obama White House national economic adviser Austan Goolsbee on Monday said the U.S. economy is “inches away from having permanent damage that we did not have to have” when Congress and the Trump administration allowed provisions of the pandemic-focused CARES Act to expire. Goolsbee, an economist, said the hurdles for any agreement now turn on Georgia runoff elections in January, and GOP ambitions to retain the Senate majority. “The politics of this whole thing are quite complicated in the lame duck,” he lamented.
Senate Democrats on Wednesday will welcome a newcomer to their ranks: Arizona’s Mark Kelly, a Democrat and former astronaut who defeated Republican Sen. Martha McSally (Ariz.) on Nov. 3, will be sworn in as a senator at 12 p.m., his office said.
More than a dozen members of the House and Senate tested positive for COVID-19 in the days before Thanksgiving, underscoring the risks when hundreds of lawmakers travel back and forth and gather to work in the Capitol. House Democrats delayed returning to session until Wednesday and are urging members to stay in Washington over the weekend, hoping next week to complete an overflowing agenda to end a dramatic 2020 (The Hill).
The Hill: Industry groups want Congress to extend reductions in alcohol excise taxes that expire at the end of the year.
More politics: Trump’s bashing of Georgia officials over presidential election results worries Republicans who think he could divide the state’s GOP ahead of Senate runoff contests on Jan. 5. Runoffs against two incumbent senators depend heavily on turnout (The Hill and The New York Times). …Arizona on Monday certified Biden’s election victory (The Associated Press), and Wisconsin certified, too (Milwaukee Sun-Sentinel). Arizona Gov. Doug Ducey (R), who incurred multiple attacks from Trump on Monday, defended the state’s election process (CNN). … Sen. Lisa Murkowski (R-Alaska) said on Monday that Trump should concede the election (The Hill). … Trump ally and Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Lindsey Graham of South Carolina said the president should attend the inauguration for the good of the country — “if Biden winds up winning” (The Hill). … And here’s one giant reason Trump has not conceded: His fundraising appeals to supporters to help him battle false claims of election fraud fuel his political machine, which has already hauled in an astonishing $150 million to $170 million (depending on reporting), which can underwrite his political activities and some personal overhead after he leaves office (The Washington Post and The New York Times).
LEADING THE DAY
CORONAVIRUS: In a world filled with doom and gloom, more promising news emerged on Monday as Moderna announced that it will be applying for emergency use authorization for its COVID-19 vaccine, with the first doses set to be doled out shortly before Christmas.
The pharmaceutical giant said that it will be applying for emergency use authorization with the Food and Drug Administration (FDA), with a group of FDA experts set to do a final review of Moderna’s vaccine on Dec. 17. The vaccine, which is 94.1 percent effective, according to the company, would then be distributed, with the first set of shots used to immunize Americans being released on Dec. 21.
Stephen Hoge, the president of Moderna, told NBC on Monday night that there will be “trucks rolling within hours” of the vaccine receiving authorization.
“We’re quite optimistic actually, that the vaccine is — the data speaks for itself — and they’ll be supportive,” Hoge told “Nightly News” anchor Lester Holt.
The Moderna meeting will take place exactly a week after the same group meets to likely approve Pfizer’s vaccine, likely giving the U.S. authorization of two vaccines before Christmas. In a tweet, Trump called on the FDA to “ACT QUICKLY.”
The New York Times: Moderna applies for emergency FDA approval for its coronavirus vaccine.
Fox News: Novavax delays U.S. coronavirus vaccine phase three clinical trial.
White House chief of staff Mark Meadows, who recently recovered from COVID-19 and is tracking his boss’s tweets, is concerned that FDA is not working fast enough to approve a Pfizer vaccine and summoned FDA Administrator Stephen Hahn to an in-person White House meeting today, Axios reports. Hahn for months has worked to hold ground for FDA scientists, and that’s the posture he took in a comment to Axios for its report: “We want to move quickly because this is a national emergency, but we will make sure that our scientists take the time they need to make an appropriate decision. It is our job to get this right and make the correct decision regarding vaccine safety and efficacy,” he said.
With the coming approvals, U.S. officials are growing optimistic about the prospect of vaccinating any and all who want to receive a vaccine by early summer. Lt. Gen. Paul Ostrowski, the director of supply, production and distribution for Operation Warp Speed, predicted that 300 million doses of COVID-19 vaccines will be available by June.
“100 percent of Americans that want the vaccine will have had the vaccine by that point in time,” Ostrowski told MSNBC. “We’ll have over 300 million doses available to the American public well before then.”
NBC News: COVID-19 vaccines face a varied and powerful misinformation movement online.
However, COVID-19 continues to spread at a rapid pace, leaving hospitals struggling to control the ever-climbing number of patients. In November alone, 4.2 million people in the U.S. tested positive for the virus — a 2.2 million increase over the October totals (NBC News).
According to The Hill’s Peter Sullivan, the surging case count is threatening to overwhelm hospital systems across the U.S., with the likely post-Thanksgiving rise expected to make matters worse. According to the Transportation Security Administration, more than 1.1 million people were screened at airports on Sunday, marking the busiest travel day since mid-March.
Anthony Fauci, the head of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, warned that the country could see another spike “superimposed” on the already bleak situation following the holiday. As of Monday night, more than 93,000 people were hospitalized with COVID-19 in this country, a record number that is growing.
CNN: The Wuhan files: Leaked documents reveal China’s mishandling of the early stages of COVID-19.
The Hill: Rep. Austin Scott (R-Ga.) becomes the 26th House member to test positive for COVID-19.
The Hill: Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine (R) is the target of impeachment filings because of tough restrictions he ordered to battle COVID-19.
The Washington Post: Lawmakers request new Government Accountability Office studies on the pandemic’s effects on the aviation industry.
> Departures: Scott Atlas, a neuroradiologist, resigned on Monday from his post as the president’s special adviser on the coronavirus pandemic. Atlas was considered a special government employee when he joined the White House in August. He completed a 130-day detail this week.
As The Hill’s Brett Samuels notes, Atlas was a subject of criticism for many within and outside of the administration. Atlas, who is not an infectious diseases expert, pushed a widely disputed herd immunity theory in which some argue that older, at-risk populations should be protected while younger, healthier people would be free of restrictions.
The Washington Post: White House planning a packed season of holiday parties.
> Sports: The virus is also starting to wreak havoc on the NFL season, forcing the league to rejigger its schedule once again on Monday and displacing another franchise temporarily due to newly imposed restrictions.
For a third time, the NFL postponed the Baltimore Ravens-Pittsburgh Steelers game, which is now set for Wednesday at 3:40 p.m. on NBC. The postponement also means there will be a pair of games on Monday night and one more on Tuesday night (ESPN).
Meanwhile, the San Francisco 49ers will play its Week 13 and Week 14 home games in Glendale, Ariz., at State Farm Stadium, the home of the Arizona Cardinals. The move comes after Santa Clara County halted all contact sports for the next three weeks (ESPN).
IN FOCUS/SHARP TAKES
NEW ADMINISTRATION: Democratic senators on Monday urged their colleagues to hold confirmation hearings before Jan. 20 for former Federal Reserve Chair Janet Yellen, Biden’s pick to be Treasury secretary. By following a model also used to seat some Cabinet nominees in the past, early hearings would allow for a Senate floor vote on or soon after Inauguration Day. It was a signal that Yellen, to be introduced by Biden along with other economic team members this afternoon in Delaware, is a bipartisan shoo-in for a role critical to the government during a pandemic-driven economic downturn.
This year, however, it will not be certain until after runoff elections take place in Georgia which party will hold the Senate majority to control committees and floor votes for Biden’s nominees.
The Senate Finance Committee’s top Democrat, Sen. Ron Wyden of Oregon, told Reuters that Yellen’s confirmation hearing should take place before Biden is sworn in as president, as happened for Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin on Jan. 19, 2017, when Trump was president-elect.
Four years ago, the Senate confirmed Mnuchin on Feb. 2, 2017, by a vote of 51-48. But the chamber moved faster on Inauguration Day to approve Trump nominees James Mattis to be Defense secretary and John Kelly to lead the Department of Homeland Security. Three days later, the Senate confirmed Mike Pompeo to be CIA director.
Senate Minority Leader Charles Schumer (D-N.Y.) on Monday said, “The Senate should follow precedent and hold hearings on President-elect Biden’s nominees in January immediately after the Georgia elections, before the inauguration.” On Jan. 20, 2009, the Senate confirmed six of President Obama’s Cabinet picks, compared with seven for then-President George W. Bush on Jan. 20, 2001. Within weeks, Bush had his entire Cabinet through the Senate and in place (The Hill).
While Yellen’s approval by the Senate is seen as all but certain, the outlook for Neera Tanden, Biden’s choice to lead the Office of Management and Budget, is uphill. Criticized from all sides, Tanden (pictured below), the president and CEO of left-leaning think tank Center for American Progress, faces the toughest confirmation battle among Biden’s nominees thus far, report The Hill’s Alexander Bolton and Naomi Jagoda.
A spokesman for Sen. John Cornyn (R-Texas) said Sunday that Tanden has “zero chance of being confirmed,” raising questions about why Biden would nominate someone for a key role who has been so unstinting and public when finding fault over the years with GOP senators. Tanden, a prolific presence on Twitter and television, also faces opposition from the left, including from allies of Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.).
Biden’s latest economic nominees and appointees also include his choice to be deputy Treasury secretary (economist Wally Adeyemo) and a trio of labor economists to guide policy from the White House Council of Economic Advisers (Cecilia Rouse, Jared Bernstein and Heather Boushey) (The Hill).
Biden’s reported choice to lead the White House National Economic Council, Brian Deese, has been widely praised by former Obama administration officials, but his post-government work advising Blackrock clients on sustainable and long-term investment returns has some progressives up in arms. At the very least, under the incoming administration’s ethics rules, Deese’s financial holdings would come under close scrutiny (The Hill).
Politico: The quiet frontrunner: How Biden landed on Yellen for Treasury secretary.
> The European Union on Monday invited Biden to an in-person summit next year in addition to a virtual gathering. The in-person meeting is to coincide with Biden’s possible visit with NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg (Prensa Latina).
> Iran: Biden’s campaign pledge to engage with Tehran is complicated by Friday’s assassination of Iran’s top nuclear scientist, which Iran blames on Israel. The organized and dramatic killing could limit Biden’s running room to put the United States back in the Iran nuclear deal, which is opposed by Israel’s government and by Trump (The Hill).
Gerald F. Seib: Here’s where Biden will face early foreign-policy decisions.
The Hill: Democrats who want Biden’s Cabinet to be as diverse as possible when all is said and done are keeping the pressure on the president-elect.
Government Executive: Biden’s transition agency review teams made contact or met with more than 50 agencies (as of the day before Thanksgiving), according to Jen Psaki, now the incoming White House press secretary.
Politico: Biden and Vice President-elect Kamala Harris announced an inaugural committee of their own to work with members of Congress and other Washington officials. Plans for the oaths of office, guest lists, customary afternoon parade and evening balls during a pandemic have not been revealed.
OPINION
How Biden can break the Senate stonewall, by Rahm Emanuel, The Wall Street Journal opinion contributor. https://on.wsj.com/2JgJPzc. (Note: The former Clinton-era White House adviser, former House member, ex-White House chief of staff for the 44th president, former Chicago mayor and more recently a paid TV political analyst is reportedly a potential Biden candidate to be Transportation secretary).
Presidents should use the pardon power more — just not like Trump, by Charles Lane, columnist, The Washington Post. https://wapo.st/3qdoOG5
A MESSAGE FROM MASTERCARD
As the pandemic has accelerated the adoption of electronic payments, Mastercard has also been working with businesses and consumers to deliver innovative solutions that extend beyond the card, and we are working tirelessly to ensure our financial system is inclusive. Learn More.
WHERE AND WHEN
The House meets on Wednesday.
The Senate meets at 10 a.m. The Senate Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs Committee is conducting a hearing titled “The Quarterly CARES Act Report to Congress” at 10 a.m. with testimony from Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin and Fed Chairman Jerome Powell.
The president has no public events scheduled.
Vice President Pence leads a White House Coronavirus Task Force meeting at 3 p.m.
Biden and Harris today will receive the President’s Daily Brief. They will introduce nominees and appointees formally announced by the president-elect and vice president-elect on Monday. The event showcasing members of the incoming administration’s economic team is scheduled at 12:30 p.m. in Delaware.
➔ INTERNATIONAL: Ali Shamkhani, secretary of Iran’s Supreme National Security Council, alleged during Monday’s funeral that Mohsen Fakhrizadeh, the scientist who founded the Iranian nuclear program, that Israel used “electronic devices” to assassinate him. Israel has declined to comment on the killing (The Associated Press).
➔ TRUMP ADMINISTRATION: Federal Communications Commission (FCC) Chairman Ajit Pai announced on Monday that he will formally depart the agency on Jan. 20. Pai said that his tenure atop the FCC was the “honor of a lifetime.” Biden will now have the opportunity to either promote one of the two Democrats on the commission — Jessica Rosenworcel and Geoffrey Starks — or bring in a new chair from outside the agency (The Hill).
➔ SUPREME COURT: The conservative-majority Supreme Court on Monday sounded reluctant to issue an immediate ruling that would halt Trump’s plan to count — and later subtract — immigrants residing in the United States illegally from the once-per-decade population count used to apportion seats in the U.S. House and allocate federal resources to states. The question of whether Trump can lawfully exclude the undocumented population from the census may be more fully litigated in coming weeks (The Hill).
THE CLOSER
And finally … Cyber Monday is set to be the biggest online shopping day in U.S. history, Reuters reports. American consumers, who drive the bulk of the economy, were on track to purchase $12.7 billion in goods online, surpassing Black Friday, according to the latest industry estimates. Because of the coronavirus, items such as groceries, alcohol and clothing went into customers’ digital shopping carts, along with electronics, phones and smart devices after weeks if not months of promotions to beat this year’s holiday shipping crush and accomplish the deal-hunting online.
Today, by the way, is “Giving Tuesday,” a worldwide cyber pause for generosity, donations, charitable giving and commitments to help those in need. If ever there was a year to share kindness and extra cash with others, this is it.
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Congress focuses this week on negotiating a government funding deal and determining whether consensus can be reached to enact additional COVID-19 relief before year’s end. The House is set to vote on a bill to ban breeding and private ownership of big cats that was featured in the Netflix show “Tiger King.” Read More…
ANALYSIS — House Republican leader Kevin McCarthy has already guaranteed that his party will take back the chamber in two years. Promising victory in 2022 isn’t outlandish or unreasonable. It’s merely premature, especially given our weird politics these days. Read More…
Neera Tanden, President-elect Joe Biden’s pick for White House budget director, faces a rocky road to confirmation. The president of the left-leaning Center for American Progress since 2011, Tanden has been something of a bomb-thrower, earning enmity from both the left and the right. Read More…
Click here to subscribe to Fintech Beat for the latest market and regulatory developmentsin finance and financial technology.
OPINION — The case against Neera Tanden is comically weak. It all comes down to mean partisan tweets and following the Obama administration’s lead on Social Security. It all seems so vaporous — and so refreshingly normal. Read More…
In what appears to be another pickup for House Republicans, election officials certified Monday that GOP state Sen. Mariannette Miller-Meeks won Iowa’s 2nd District by a mere six votes. Her Democratic opponent, former state Sen. Rita Hart, has not conceded and could challenge the result in court. Read More…
Christopher Krebs, the former top U.S. cybersecurity official who oversaw election security efforts for the November ballot, cited the new and widespread availability of paper ballots to dismiss spurious claims by President Donald Trump and his allies about fraud and rigged voting. Read More…
Conservative justices on the Supreme Court contemplated punting a ruling on President Donald Trump’s attempt to exclude undocumented immigrants from congressional apportionment during oral arguments Monday in the case. Read More…
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POLITICO PLAYBOOK
POLITICO Playbook: Trump’s making a list, checking it twice
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DRIVING THE DAY
HAPPY DECEMBER! … 10 DAYS until the government runs out of funding.
THERE HAS BEEN DISCUSSION in the White House of excluding the following Hill Republicans from the W.H. Christmas party this year: Sens. SUSAN COLLINS (Maine), MITT ROMNEY (Utah), LISA MURKOWSKI (Alaska) and BEN SASSE (Neb.) and Reps. ADAM KINZINGER (Ill.) and LIZ CHENEY (Wyo.). We’re told this has been reversed — that they may get an invite — but this has dominated West Wing chatter in the last few days. WaPo’s Josh Dawsey on the extensive plans for W.H. Christmas parties
THE SENATE CAME BACK INTO SESSION Monday evening, and all the chatter was about the impending confirmation process and the next presidency, which, if you are living on Planet Earth, will include JOE BIDEN as president and KAMALA HARRIS as VP.
WITH THE BIDEN PRESIDENCY comes a whole new host of power dynamics. Namely, Republicans are going to have to get accustomed to living with a president of another party, and we’re watching that happen in real time.
WE PICKED UP ON SOME INTERESTING NUGGETS — on our own, in gaggles and in the Hill pool — that will help enhance your understanding of the BIDEN administration, its challenges on Capitol Hill, how it’s putting together its Cabinet and how power will flow in D.C.
— NEERA TANDEN IS UNDER ATTACK. It’s too early to declare TANDEN’S nomination to be the director of OMB dead, but man, is she taking a lot of incoming. Sen. JOHN CORNYN (R-Texas) said TANDEN is “radioactive,” and said it was a “misstep” by the BIDEN team to plan to nominate her. Sen. JOHN THUNE (R-S.D.) — the No. 2 Senate Republican — said she’s been very “partisan” in her assessment of Republican senators, who will now have to vote for her. “I’m not, you know, disqualifying anybody, but I do think that it gets a lot harder obviously if they send folks from their, you know, progressive left that are kind of out of the mainstream. And, but, you know, if and when the time comes, we’ll obviously hopefully be able to consult with them and then, if they send people here that are qualified, give them a fair process.”
— SPEAKING OF THAT, we wondered if Republicans think: DOES EVERY NOMINEE DESERVE A VOTE? Sen. JOSH HAWLEY (R-Mo.) didn’t seem to think so. “Oh, I think what’s sauce for the goose is sauce for the gander. I think that the Democrats deprived President Trump of a working government for four years. I can’t imagine that a Republican Senate would immediately turn around and say that I’m just gonna roll over and give a President Biden — if that’s who should become president — give him whatever he wants. So I’d say if I’m them, I suit up, because I think it’s going to be a tough fight.” Of course, Democrats didn’t control the Senate for any of Trump’s presidency, but his demeanor here is interesting.
— CORNYN said Monday evening to a group of us that there has to be “complete transparency” as to Secretary of State-designate TONY BLINKEN’S clients in foreign countries.
— THE NEW POWER CENTERS.COLLINS, ROMNEY and Sen. JOE MANCHIN (D-W.Va.) will spend a lot of time getting courted over the next few years, and they know it. In a closely divided Senate, they are going to be the swing votes. COLLINS kept her powder dry on TANDEN on Monday — even as her colleagues dumped all over her. “I did not know her, much about her, but I’ve heard that she’s a very prolific user of Twitter. … I really don’t have anything further to say.” MANCHIN is the subject of this story by LUKE BROADWATER on A21 of the NYT.
CASE IN POINT … HAPPENING TODAY … BIPARTISAN COVID RELIEF BILL COMING OUT … MANCHIN, COLLINS, MURKOWSKI, ROMNEY and Sens. BILL CASSIDY (R-La.), MARK WARNER (D-Va.) and ANGUS KING (I-Maine) will hold a news conference at 10 a.m. at the Senate Swamp. They say House members will be joining, but as of about 5:30 this morning, they had no names to share.
— HOW SHOULD YOU VIEW THIS? This is a development, but keep it in context. Congress is run by the leadership, and most every deal comes … from the leadership. At best, this is a guideline for what a chunk of the Senate is willing to accept. But view this as a Senate version of the Problem Solvers Caucus. And that went nowhere.
Good Tuesday morning. HAPPENING TODAY … Treasury Secretary STEVEN MNUCHIN and Fed Chair JEROME POWELL will testify at Senate Banking at 10 a.m. Topic: a quarterly update on the CARES Act.
SOME CHANGES ON THE POLITICO CONGRESS TEAM … JOHN BRESNAHAN — who joined POLITICO before it was POLITICO — announced Monday he will be leaving the publication after 14 years. Bres — the Capitol Hill bureau chief — is one of the best colleagues, best reporters and best people around. He is a big part of making POLITICO what it is today. One of the many great things about POLITICO is that there is always homegrown talent waiting in the wings for the next big assignment. BURGESS EVERETT and HEATHER CAYGLE will be the new Capitol Hill bureau chiefs. Likewise — they are great people, tremendous reporters and great friends to all who work with them. And they will be a terrific team. The staff memo
ANOTHER HOUSE REPUBLICAN HAS CORONAVIRUS … REP. AUSTIN SCOTT of Georgia tested positive.Atlanta Journal-Constitution
PEOPLE ARE STILL GIVING TRUMP MONEY … NYT’S SHANE GOLDMACHER and MAGGIE HABERMAN: “Trump Raises $170 Million as He Denies His Loss and Eyes the Future”: “President Trump has raised about $170 million since Election Day as his campaign operation has continued to aggressively solicit donations with hyped-up appeals that have funded his fruitless attempts to overturn the election and that have seeded his post-presidential political ambitions, according to a person familiar with the matter.
“The money, much of which was raised in the first week after the election, according to the person, has arrived as Mr. Trump has made false claims about fraud and sought to undermine public confidence in the legitimacy of President-elect Joseph R. Biden Jr.’s victory.
“Instead of slowing down after the election, Mr. Trump’s campaign has ratcheted up its volume of email solicitations for cash, telling supporters that money was needed for an ‘Election Defense Fund.’ In reality, the fine print shows that the first 75 percent of every contribution currently goes to a new political action committee that Mr. Trump set up in mid-November, Save America, which can be used to fund his political activities going forward, including staff and travel. The other 25 percent of each donation is directed to the Republican National Committee.” … WaPo’s Josh Dawsey and Michelle Ye Hee Lee on Trump’s fundraising
WHERE THINGS STAND FOR TRUMP’S CHALLENGE TO THE ELECTION — “Judge: ‘Precious little proof’ in Georgia election fraud suit,”by Josh Gerstein: “A judge handling an election-fraud lawsuit brought by allies of President Donald Trump said the case was backed by ‘precious little proof,’ but went on to issue a restraining order aimed at blocking three Georgia counties from making any changes to their voting machines as he considers whether to permit a forensic examination of those systems, according to court records.
“U.S. District Court Judge Timothy Batten Sr. made the comments during an hour-long Sunday night court hearing on a lawsuit filed last week by Sidney Powell, a firebrand attorney who briefly joined Trump’s legal team in recent weeks before being dismissed from it. The hearing was held via Zoom and not announced in advance on the court’s docket or accessible to the press or public, but it was transcribed by a court reporter who provided the transcript to POLITICO on Monday evening.
“The transcript shows that Batten repeatedly wavered on whether to grant any relief to the Republican plaintiffs in the case, before settling on the narrow relief limited to three counties.”
NYT’S LISA LERER, RICHARD FAUSSET and MAGGIE HABERMAN: “As Trump Attacks Georgia Republicans, Party Worries About Senate Races”: “President Trump’s sustained assault on his own party in Georgia, and his repeated claims of election fraud in the state, have intensified worries among Republicans that he could be hurting their ability to win two crucial Senate runoff races next month.
“The president has continued to claim without evidence that his loss in the new battleground state was fraudulent, directing his ire in particular at Gov. Brian Kemp and Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger, both conservative Republicans, whom he has accused of not doing enough to help him overturn the result. …
“Mr. Trump’s broadsides have quietly rattled some Republicans in the state, who fear that concerns about the fairness of the presidential election could depress turnout for the Senate races, which will determine whether Democrats or Republicans control the chamber.” NYT
KNOWING JEN PSAKI — TYLER PAGER and RYAN LIZZA: “Inside the unlikely return of Jen Psaki”: “Jen Psaki made it very clear: She had no plans to join Joe Biden’s administration. Psaki, who has been overseeing the confirmation process on the transition team, said she was just helping out her old colleagues and friends before handing off the baton. Then, on Sunday night, Biden announced that Psaki would be serving as press secretary, one of the most high-profile and demanding jobs in the White House.
“Psaki emerged as the frontrunner for the job late in the process, over the last week or so, according to a source familiar with the decision. She and Biden had a chance to discuss the job last Tuesday in Wilmington when she was there for the public rollout of his national security team.
“Psaki’s ascension to the top spokesperson’s role — one that she wanted and for which she was twice a runner-up for in the Obama administration — fits with the president-elect’s pattern of turning to experienced Washington operatives to fill the top positions in his administration. And it signals Biden’s intention to run a White House free of the kind of briefing-room drama that defined his predecessor’s tenure, from Sean Spicer’s claims about the size of Trump’s inauguration crowd to Kayleigh McEnany’s misleading statements about the pandemic.
“Ultimately, Psaki beat out other top contenders for the role, including Symone Sanders and Karine Jean-Pierre, because of her strong rapport with the former vice president combined with her expertise on economic and foreign policy issues and her experience conducting high-profile press briefings, multiple people familiar with the selection said.”
— TIMELY OP-ED! EMANUEL in the WSJ:“How Biden Can Break the Senate Stonewall:Start with issues that cross party lines. For some ideas, look to November’s state ballot measures.”
TRUMP’S TUESDAY — The president has nothing on his public schedule. VP MIKE PENCE is slated to meet with the coronavirus task force at 3 p.m. in the Situation Room.
PLAYBOOK READS
MEGAN CASSELLA and BEN WHITE: “The quiet frontrunner: How Biden landed on Yellen for Treasury secretary”: “Two days after Joe Biden selected Kamala Harris to be his running mate in August, both Democrats sat down for a virtual briefing on the economic fallout from the coronavirus. They were joined via video conference by a handful of economic experts — two longtime Biden advisers, two from academia and one whose name stood out from the rest: former Federal Reserve Chair Janet Yellen.
“The meeting made headlines for being one of the first times the Biden campaign announced who it was turning to for economic expertise. But few at the time predicted that the 74-year-old Yellen was likely to join Biden’s Cabinet after a lengthy public sector career that [included] breaking the glass ceiling as the first female chair of the Fed.
“In the end, however, it was Yellen’s unrivaled experience, along with her perceived ability to win support across the political spectrum, that made her a top contender within the campaign and transition as far back as the summer, even as others — including Federal Reserve Board Governor Lael Brainard and Roger Ferguson, a former vice chair at the central bank who leads investment manager TIAA — drew most of the speculation.”
— “Americans face new COVID-19 restrictions after Thanksgiving,”by AP’s Tammy Webber and Heather Hollingsworth: “Americans returning from Thanksgiving break faced strict new coronavirus measures around the country Monday as health officials brace for a disastrous worsening of the nationwide surge because of holiday gatherings over the long weekend.
“Los Angeles County imposed a stay-at-home order for its 10 million residents, and Santa Clara County, in the heart of Silicon Valley, banned high school, college and professional sports and decreed a quarantine for those who have traveled more than 150 miles outside the county. In Hawaii, the mayor of Hawaii County said trans-Pacific travelers arriving without a negative COVID-19 test must quarantine for 14 days, and even those who have tested virus-free may be randomly selected for another test upon arrival. New Jersey is suspending all youth sports.”
PLAYBOOK METRO SECTION — “Metro budget cuts weekend service, half of bus routes and closes 19 stations amid dire financial forecast,” by WaPo’s Justin George: “Metro is proposing the elimination of weekend rail service in its budget for the first time as the transit agency’s financial struggles deepen amid the coronavirus pandemic.
“The drastic action is one of several deep cuts Metro officials say they will have to make to survive the next fiscal year as fare revenue forecasts appear bleak and Congress remains unable to reach an agreement on a coronavirus relief package that could include aid to transit agencies.
“Facing a nearly $500 million deficit, Metro is also proposing to cut 2,400 positions through attrition, buyouts and layoffs on top of 1,400 the agency is seeking to eliminate this year. Its 360-route service would be slashed by more than half as the agency raids its capital budget to keep up with preventive maintenance.” WaPo
TRANSITIONS — Richard Verma is now EVP of global public policy and regulatory affairs at Mastercard. He most recently was vice chair and partner at the Asia Group, and is the former U.S. ambassador to India. … Sharon Parrott will be president of the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities starting Jan. 1, taking over from president and founder Robert Greenstein. She currently is SVP for federal policy and program development. … Rosemary Boeglin has joined theBiden transition confirmation comms team. She previously worked rapid response for the Biden-Harris campaign, and is a Bernie Sanders campaign alum. …
… Mattie Duppler is now manager of public policy at Amazon. She previously was president of Forward Strategies and a senior fellow at the National Taxpayers Union. … Phylicia Woods is now executive director of the Cancer Policy Institute at the Cancer Support Community. She previously was director of federal relations for the American Cancer Society Cancer Action Network. … Laura Brounstein is joining CLEAR as head of content and storytelling. She previously worked on the Biden campaign, and is a WeWork alum.
WELCOME TO THE WORLD — Jane Lucas, counsel in Alston & Bird’s health care and public policy group, and Chris Lucas, co-head of U.S. government affairs at BNY Mellon, welcomed Claire Ellen Lucas on Nov. 19. She joins big sister Grace. Pic
— Dax Tejara, executive producer for ABC’s “This Week,” and Veronica Bautista, a producer for CNN’s “The Lead with Jake Tapper,” welcomed Sofia Melffi Tejara early Monday morning. Pic
BIRTHDAYS: Sen. Gary Peters (D-Mich.) is 62 … Sen. Rick Scott (R-Fla.) is 68 … Rep. Lance Gooden (R-Texas) is 38 … incoming White House press secretary Jen Psaki (h/t Doug Farrar) … Karen Tumulty, WaPo political columnist … Shin Inouye … Natalie Wyeth Earnest (h/ts Ben Chang) … Bill Manger … Tessa Gould … Hayley D’Antuono, special assistant to the president and director of operations to the first lady … NPR’s Carrie Johnson … Jason Maloni, president of JadeRoq … Kyle Lierman … POLITICO’s Elizabeth Ralph, Jacqueline Feldscher, Carlos Prieto, Joshua Sztorc and Oliver Von Trapp … Joel Miller … Charlie Anderson, senior adviser for Sen. Michael Bennet (D-Colo.) … National Journal’s Josh Kraushaar is 39 … Barbara Martin, co-founder and co-CEO of the Brand Guild, is 5-0 (h/t Amy Clark) …
… Sara Guerrero, who starts today as press secretary for Rep. Sylvia Garcia (D-Texas) (h/ts Kevin Tierney and Tony Hernandez) … Ed Fox … Tyler Haymore … Sean Higgins … Raul Alvillar … Drew Zinecker … Marylouise Oates (h/ts Max Schwartz and Jon Haber) … Wisconsin Lt. Gov. Mandela Barnes is 34 … Paul Fanlund … Karuna Koppula … Terri New … Donnie Fowler … Tyler Hendricks … David Seldin of the University of Pittsburgh … Randy Bauer (h/ts Teresa Vilmain) … Jack Sewell … Jake Senkbeil … Jenny-Lynn Buntin … Ani Toumajan … Wayne Ting … Jared Scott Small … Alex Howard … Safra Catz, CEO of Oracle, is 59 … Natalie Ravitz … Yochi Dreazen … Jordan Lieberman is 45 … Mona Salama … Katie Wetstone … Bruce Young … Becky Weissman … Berry Kurland … Tim Purdon
“Amazing Grace, How Sweet the Sound …” – John Newton, William Wilberforce, & the fight to end slavery in the British Empire – American Minute with Bill Federer
These were the words of John Newton, a former slave ship captain, who died DECEMBER 21, 1807.
At age 11, his mother died and he went to sea with his father.
Young John Newton fell in love with Mary Catlett while on shore leave, but overstaying his visit, he missed his ship’s departure.
In 1744, he was caught by a “press gang” and dragged onto the ship HMS Harwich where he was forced to be a sailor.
Newton tried to desert but was caught, stripped to the waist and flogged with 8 dozen lashes.
John Newton later wrote in a letter:
“Like an unwary sailor who quits his port just before a rising storm, I renounced the hopes and comforts of the Gospel at the very time when every other comfort was about to fail me.”
His reckless behavior caused him to be traded to a slave ship.
Being a continual problem, Newton was intentionally left on a slave plantation in Sierra Leone, West Africa.
There, the African slave dealer, Amos Clowe, made Newton a slave of his wife, Princess Peye, an African duchess, where he suffered abuse and mistreatment.
Years later, Scottish Missionary David Livingstone mentioned John Newton and the Muslim Arab slave traders’ shocking treatment of African slaves (Missionary Travels and Researches in South Africa, London, October 1857):
“It was refreshing to get food which could be eaten without producing the unpleasantness described by the Rev. John Newton, of St. Mary’s, Woolnoth, London, when obliged to eat the same roots while a slave in the West (Africa) …”
David Livingstone continued:
“A party of Arabs from Zanzibar were … at a village in the same latitude as Naliele town … The Arabs mentioned … they … disliked the English, ‘because they thrash (criticize) them for selling slaves’ …
… I ventured to tell them that I agreed with the English, that it was better to let the children grow up and comfort their mothers when they became old, than to carry them away and sell them across the sea …
After many explanations of our abhorrence of slavery, and how displeasing it must be to God to see his children selling one another.”
Livingstone described the Arab Muslim slave trade as “a monster brooding over Africa.”
John Newton was finally rescued from Africa but continued his immoral life in the slave trade, deriding Christians with blasphemy that shocked even sailors.
He wrote in 1778:
“How industrious is Satan served.
I was formerly one of his active under-temptors and had my influence been equal to my wishes I would have carried all the human race with me. A common drunkard or profligate is a petty sinner to what I was.”
In 1747, Newton was on the slave ship Greyhound.
The ship was caught in a storm so terrible that he was convinced they would sink.
He prayed for the first time in his life.
Someone gave him a copy of Thomas a Kempis’ Imitation of Christ and the Bible, which he began to read.
Newton continued in the slave trade for a time, but endeavored to treat slaves humanely.
Newton finally left the slave trade, married Mary Catlett in 1750, and moved to Liverpool, where from 1755 to 1760 he worked as a surveyor of tides.
He wrote:
“I am not the man I ought to be, I am not the man I wish to be, and I am not the man I hope to be, but by the grace of God, I am not the man I used to be.”
It is a pity it should be so; but experience testifies, that a long course of ease and prosperity, without painful changes—has an unhappy tendency to make us cold and formal in our secret worship.
But troubles rouse our spirits, and constrain us to call upon the Lord in good earnest—when we feel a need of that help which we only can have from His Almighty arm.
Afflictions are useful, and in a degree necessary, to keep alive in us—a conviction of the vanity and unsatisfying nature of the present world, and all its enjoyments; to remind us that this world is not our rest, and to call our thoughts upwards, where our true treasure is, and where our heart ought to be.
When things go on much to our wish, our hearts are too prone to say, ‘It is good to be here!'”
While in Liverpool, Newton met the evangelistic preacher George Whitefield and John Wesley, the founder of Methodism.
He was inspired to become a minister and taught himself Greek and Hebrew.
Newton was turned down by the Anglican Archbishop of York, but persisted and was eventually ordained in 1764.
He was assigned to the village of Olney, Buckinghamshire, where he humbly proclaimed the saving power of Christ.
In 1767, poet William Cowper moved to Olney, and with his help, Newton composed songs for their weekly prayer meetings.
William Cowper wrote in the poem “Winter Walk at Noon,” 1785:
“Nature is but a name for an effect,
Whose cause is God.”
Newton and Cowper’s songs were first published in 1779 in a collection titled “Olney Hymns.”
The Olney Hymns include:
“Oh! for a Closer Walk with God,”
“God Moves in a Mysterious Way,” and
“There is a Fountain Filled with Blood,” which has the lines:
“The dying thief rejoiced to see
That fountain in his day;
And there may I, though vile as he,
Wash all my sins away
Wash all my sins away,
Wash all my sins away;
And there may I, though vile as he,
Wash all my sins away.”
This is a reference to God, being just, judges every sin, but being love, He provided the Lamb to take the judgment for our sins, washing them away.
Revelation 1:5: “Jesus Christ, the faithful witness, the firstborn from the dead, and the ruler over the kings of the earth. To Him who loved us and washed us from our sins in His own blood.”
Isaiah 53: “Surely he took up our pain and bore our suffering, yet we considered him punished by God, stricken by him, and afflicted.
But he was pierced for our transgressions, he was crushed for our iniquities; the punishment that brought us peace was on him, and by his wounds we are healed …
… The Lord has laid on him the iniquity of us all.
He was oppressed and afflicted, yet he did not open his mouth; he was led like a lamb to the slaughter, and as a sheep before its shearers is silent …
He was cut off from the land of the living; for the transgression of my people he was punished …
Yet it was the Lord’s will to crush him and cause him to suffer … The Lord makes his life an offering for sin …
My righteous servant will justify many, and he will bear their iniquities … For he bore the sin of many, and made intercession for the transgressors.”
John Newton moved to London in 1780 to become rector of St. Mary Woolnoth Church.
He counseled:
“God could have over-ruled every difficulty in your way, had he seen it expedient. But He is pleased to show you, that you depend not upon men—but upon Himself …
He who has begun a good work in you, is able to carry it on, in defiance of all seeming hindrances, and make all things (even those which have the most unfavorable appearances) work together for your good.”
Newton continually preached against slavery and published his ghastly experiences in the slave trade in 1788.
On John Newton’s tomb, and on a church plaque, is written:
“John Newton,
Clerk,
once an infidel and libertine,
a servant of slaves in Africa,
was, by the rich mercy
of our Lord and Saviour
Jesus Christ,
preserved, restored, pardoned,
and appointed to preach the faith
he had long labored to destroy.”
Many influential leaders in England attended John Newton’s services.
In 1795, a famous British member of Parliament, William Wilberforce, came to have a living faith in Jesus Christ through the help of Newton.
Wilberforce initially wanted to become a preacher, but Newton persuaded him to serve God by fighting slavery in the British Parliament, as Britain was the world’s largest slave trader in the 19th century.
In 1983, President Ronald Reagan wrote in “Abortion and the Conscience of the Nation” (The Human Life Review):
“Prayer and action are needed to uphold the sanctity of human life. I believe it will not be possible to accomplish our work of saving lives, ‘without being a soul of prayer.’
… The famous British member of Parliament William Wilberforce prayed with his small group of influential friends, the ‘Clapham Sect,’ for decades to see an end to slavery in the British empire.”
Eric Metaxas wrote in his post, “BreakPoint: Wilberforce and the ‘Necessary Evil'” (July 26, 2018):
“Historian Christopher D. Hancock wrote, the slave trade ‘involved thousands of slaves, hundreds of ships, and millions of pounds [sterling]; upon it depended the economies of Britain and much of Europe …'”
Metaxas continued:
“After his dramatic conversion to Jesus Christ in 1785, the heretofore unfocused Wilberforce made three consequential decisions that ended up changing the world:
first, stay in politics, at a time when conventional wisdom held that politics was too dirty a business for Christians;
second, work for the abolition of the slave trade in Britain; and,
third, work for moral reformation in society.”
The movie, Amazing Grace (2006) starred Ioan Gruffudd as William Wilberforce and Albert Finney as John Newton.
“My walk is a public one … My business is in the world, and I must mix in the assemblies of men or quit the post which Providence seems to have assigned me.”
Wilberforce later added:
“A man who acts from the principles I profess reflects that he is to give an account of his political conduct at the judgment seat of Christ.”
Fighting the entrenched, deep-state slavery interests for 11 years, Wilberforce wrote:
“So enormous, so dreadful, so irremediable did the trade’s wickedness appear … that my own mind was completely made up …
Let the consequences be what they would; I from this time determined that I would never rest until I had effected its abolition.”
Parliament finally passed an act abolishing the slave trade in 1807, but it took 26 years to abolish slavery throughout the British Empire.
Eric Metaxas wrote further:
“So it was … on July 26, 1833, that the Emancipation Act passed its third reading in the House of Commons, ensuring the end of slavery in the British Empire, some three decades before the bloody Civil War would end it in America.
When an aged Wilberforce heard the news, he said, ‘Thank God I have lived to witness [this] Day.’ He died three days later.”
President Reagan wrote:
“Wilberforce led that struggle in Parliament, unflaggingly, because he believed in the sanctity of human life.
He saw the fulfillment of his impossible dream when Parliament outlawed slavery just before his death.”
Due in large part to the efforts of John Newton and William Wilberforce, slavery became an issue that politicians in the British Parliament wanted to avoid being associated with at all costs.
During the Civil War, Britain was on the verge of recognizing the Confederacy, as it used cotton from the Southern states in its textile industry.
When Lincoln’s Emancipation Proclamation was published in England, it was immediately popular with the working class.
U.S. Minister to Britain Charles Francis Adams, grandson of John Adams, helped convince England’s politicians to stay neutral in the war, thus dealing a severe blow to the Confederacy’s trade and economy.
Henry Adams, the great-grandson of John Adams, wrote in “Why Did Not England Recognize the Confederacy”:
“On October 13, 1862, Lord John Russell, British Foreign Secretary, sent our a call for the Cabinet to assemble … Mediation in the American Civil War was the subject to be brought up …
It was expected that … it would be voted to … recognize the South as an independent nation … The day passed and no action was taken.
Everyone, including the American minister, Charles Francis Adams, believed that … a decision to recognize the South was reversed …
Charles Francis Adams … accounted for this shift … because … the preliminary Emancipation Proclamation was made known, and that approval of the Proclamation by the working classes of England made it impossible thereafter to recognize a slave-holding people as a nation.”
John Newton wrote:
“Although my memory’s fading, I remember two things very clearly: I am a great sinner and Christ is a great Savior.”
“This is faith: a renouncing of everything we are apt to call our own and relying wholly upon the blood, righteousness and intercession of Jesus.”
“If you once love Him, you will study to please Him.”
“Whoever is truly humbled — will not be easily angry, nor harsh or critical of others. He will be compassionate and tender to the infirmities of his fellow-sinners, knowing that if there is a difference — it is grace alone which has made it! He knows that he has the seeds of every evil in his own heart. And under all trials and afflictions — he will look to the hand of the Lord, and lay his mouth in the dust, acknowledging that he suffers much less than his iniquities have deserved.”
Considered the most popular Christian hymn ever, John Newton’s word began:
By Shane Vander Hart on Nov 30, 2020 04:20 pm
Right before Thanksgiving, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled against New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo blocking his executive order that would have limited worship services to ten people in “red zones” and 25 people in “orange zones.”
Their ruling provides a stinging rebuke of Gov. Cuomo’s measures and offers a temporary injunction until the Second Circuit Court of Appeals can rule in December on the issue.
Justices Samuel Alito, Amy Coney Barrett, Neil Gorsuch, Brett Kavanaugh, and Clarence Thomas were in the majority. Chief Justice John Roberts and Justices Stephen Beyer, Elana Kagan, and Sonia Sotomayor dissented. The Supreme Court reversed itself in previous similar cases that denied injunctions on COVID-19 restrictions impacting churches in California and Nevada by a five to four vote.
Justice Barrett’s addition to the court replacing the late Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg tipped the scales in the opposite direction.
The unsigned majority opinion made several points as to why they provided injunctive relief for the Catholic Diocese of Brooklyn, Agudath Israel of America, and other houses of worship that find themselves under similar circumstances.
The regulations are not neutral.
“(T)he regulations cannot be viewed as neutral because they single out houses of worship for especially harsh treatment,” they wrote.
Churches, mosques, synagogues, and temples are limited to ten people during worship services or other religious activities if they are located in a “red zone.” However, “essential” businesses can admit as many people as they wish.
Likewise, in “orange zones,” worship services are limited to 25 people, while even “non-essential” businesses can allow as many people as they wish.
These are restrictions that are far more strict than those applied in California and Nevada.
“These categorizations lead to troubling results. At the hearing in the District Court, a health department official testified about a large store in Brooklyn that could ‘literally have hundreds of people shopping there on any given day.’ Yet a nearby church or synagogue would be prohibited from al- lowing more than 10 or 25 people inside for a worship service.” they noted.
“Because the challenged restrictions are not ‘neutral’ and of ‘general applicability,’ they must satisfy ‘strict scrutiny,’ and this means that they must be ‘narrowly tailored’ to serve a ‘compelling’ state interest,” the majority added.
While preventing the spread of COVID-19 is a compelling state interest, the majority noted that Gov. Cuomo’s order is not “narrowly tailored.”
“Not only is there no evidence that the applicants have contributed to the spread of COVID–19 but there are many other less restrictive rules that could be adopted to minimize the risk to those attending religious services,” they added.
Gov. Cuomo’s restrictions cause irreparable harm.
“There can be no question that the challenged restrictions, if enforced, will cause irreparable harm,” the majority opinion reads.
They noted that limiting attendance to ten or 25 will keep most of the church or synagogue membership from attending in person. Catholics cannot partake in communion while watching Mass at home. The essential traditions of the Orthodox Jewish faith also require personal attendance.
“The loss of First Amendment freedoms, for even minimal periods of time, unquestionably constitutes irreparable injury,” the majority wrote, quoting the Supreme Court’s plurality opinion in Elrod v. Burns in 1976.
Justice Gorsuch, in a concurring opinion, pointed out the harm it causes in the Orthodox Jewish community.
“In the Orthodox Jewish community that limit might operate to exclude all women, considering 10 men are necessary to establish a minyan, or a quorum,” he wrote.
“In ‘orange zones,’ it’s not much different. Churches and synagogues are limited to a maximum of 25 people. These restrictions apply even to the largest cathedrals and synagogues, which ordinarily hold hundreds. And the restrictions apply no matter the precautions taken, including social distancing, wearing masks, leaving doors and windows open, forgoing singing, and disinfecting spaces between services,” Justice Gorsuch added.
There is no public interest.
The majority noted that the state of New York failed to demonstrate that Diocese churches or Orthodox Jewish synagogues contributed to the spread of COVID-19.
The state also did not demonstrate that public health would be harmed if less restrictive measures were required.
“Members of this Court are not public health experts, and we should respect the judgment of those with special expertise and responsibility in this area. But even in a pandemic, the Constitution cannot be put away and forgotten. The restrictions at issue here, by effectively barring many from attending religious services, strike at the very heart of the First Amendment’s guarantee of religious liberty,” the majority wrote.
Justice Gorsuch added in his concurring opinion, “The only explanation for treating religious places differently seems to be a judgment that what happens there just isn’t as ‘essential’ as what happens in secular spaces. Indeed, the Governor is remarkably frank about this: In his judgment laundry and liquor, travel and tools, are all ‘essential’ while traditional religious exercises are not. That is exactly the kind of discrimination the First Amendment forbids.”
He added this problem is not limited to New York, pointing back to the previous Supreme Court cases.
Justice Gorsuch noted the Supreme Court had tolerated California and Nevada’s executive actions because of the “newness” of the disease.
“At that time, COVID had been with us, in earnest, for just three months. Now, as we round out 2020 and face the prospect of entering a second calendar year living in the pandemic’s shadow, that rationale has expired according to its own terms. Even if the Constitution has taken a holiday during this pandemic, it cannot become a sabbatical,” he wrote.
Looking at Chief Justice Roberts’ rationale in supporting California Gov. Gavin Newsom’s order, Justice Gorsuch pointed to “a particular judicial impulse to stay out of the way in times of crisis.”
“But if that impulse may be understandable or even admirable in other circumstances, we may not shelter in place when the Constitution is under attack. Things never go well when we do,” he added.
“It is time—past time—to make plain that, while the pandemic poses many grave challenges, there is no world in which the Constitution tolerates color-coded executive edicts that reopen liquor stores and bike shops but shutter churches, synagogues, and mosques,” Gorsuch concluded.
Launched in 2006, Caffeinated Thoughts reports news and shares commentary about culture, current events, faith and state and national politics from a Christian and conservative point of view.
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First Lady Melania Trump reveals the 2020 White House Christmas Decorations. Content created by Conservative Daily News and some content syndicated through CDN is available for re-publication without charge under the Creative Commons license. Visit our syndication page for details and requirements.
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In light of stunning allegations of voter fraud currently under active investigation, why would a number of Republicans be calling for Trump to concede? Here’s a List of Republicans Who Have Turned Their Backs on Trump, Calling for Him to Concede Recently, I heard talk radio callers wonder about this: The gist of the answers …
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Happy March 276th, 2020, dear Kruiser Morning Briefing friends. None of this is real.
Remember way back around March 90th or so when we were all so optimistic that we thought the end of the year and the change of the calendar might bring some respite?
GOOD TIMES.
As we move inexorably towards what will probably be a nightmarish sequel year rather than a relief, things just seem to get weirder and weirder.
There is, however, one thing that we can rely on to remain the same: CNN is the Enemy of the People and everyone who works for them is more than likely doing something unspeakable to a helpless marmoset as you read this.
DO YOU EVEN KNOW HOW ADORABLE MARMOSETS ARE, PEOPLE? Shame on you, Wolf Blitzer, shame on you.
Throughout the pre-election phase of the Chinese Bat Flu plague, CNN’s function was to lie as much as possible about the pandemic and keep the panic porn spreading much faster than the virus itself. The goal was to scare people into voting for Joe Biden, a candidate who even Joe Biden didn’t like.
Now that they feel that their strategy worked, the network thought it would dip its toes into the truth-telling pool on Monday. Remember, CNN has been journalism-averse for a great many years now, so any attempts at being real reporters are now super awkward and clumsy.
The fun began when CNN proclaimed that it had an “exclusive” about China and the plague:
To say that CNN is a little late to the party on this one would be doing things with the word “understatement” that are probably illegal in thirty countries. I know this year seems like it’s been a decade long, but I can still remember way back to last summer, when the bulk of CNN’s “reporting” involved chiding President Trump for repeatedly making the point that the coronavirus not only came from China, but that China was not at all forthcoming regarding the particulars of it. It was “racist” to be honest about what was going on.
You know what I don’t hear a lot of anymore? Fellow conservatives trying to convince me that Jake Tapper is not as bad as the other mainstream media hacks. That was a problem for years. I’ve maintained all along that Tapper was scum like the rest of them, but he was a favorite on the Right for a while for reasons I could never fathom. The bloom seems to be off Jakey boy’s rose now for the people on our side who used to give me grief for pointing out that he was awful.
That CNN’s on-air personalities were able to “report” this news with straight faces shows how far gone the American political MSM is. The execs probably thought that going through this dog and pony show would give them a little you-know-what covering for the egregiously biased advocacy they have been engaged in. As is so often noted these days, they don’t seem to know that everyone has internet now.
There may have been a time when CNN might be able to reorient itself and at least dabble in journalism on occasion. That time has passed. Four years of the most toxic Trump Derangement Syndrome on cable television brought them to a position where they’re relegated to splitting an audience with the other kids on the prog block over at MSNBC. There is a very real chance that CNN’s already bottom-dweller ratings could get even worse under a Biden administration. That was always the danger of their one note, journalism-free, “hate Trump” strategy: what happens if Trump’s gone?
Full disclosure: I am going to greatly enjoy watching these pathological liars continue to flail.
Welcome to today’s top news. Sorry about the late send today!
Leading the News . . .
Fauci: You will be able to get vaccine at CVS by April . . . Dr. Anthony Fauci has said that Americans will soon be able to walk into a CVS or Walgreens to get their COVID vaccine, in an encouraging sign for the nation. Dr. Fauci, the nation’s top public health expert, spoke to Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg on Monday in a Facebook Live chat. ‘By the time we get to April they will have likely taken care of the high priority and then the general population of normal, healthy young men or women, 30, 40 years old, no underlying health conditions, can walk into a CVS or a Walgreens and get vaccinated. Daily Mail
Coronavirus
Calif. Gov. Newsom warns of “drastic” new lockdown order . . . California Gov. Gavin Newsom on Monday said a “drastic” new lockdown order might be necessary if coronavirus cases in the state continue to surge to their highest levels since the start of the pandemic. Newsom said officials are considering stay-home orders for areas with the highest case rates as it tries to head off concerns that severe coronavirus cases could triple hospitalizations and overwhelm intensive care beds. Fox News
El Paso mayor blames shopping for Covid spike . . . The Mayor of El Paso, Texas, which is reeling from a staggering surge in coronavirus cases, says ‘COVID fatigue’ and shopping at large retailers are to blame for the spike. Margo revealed that contact tracers have connected a wave of positive infections from big box stores. I think people just… the consensus is people just had COVID fatigue and they let down,’ Mayor Dee Margo said. ‘We did a deep dive in our contact tracing for the week of November the 10th through the 16th and found that 55 percent of the positives were coming from shopping at large retailers, what we’d term as the big box stores,’ Margo said. Daily Mail
Scott Atlas resigns as Trump coronavirus advisor . . . Dr. Scott Atlas, President Trump’s special adviser on the coronavirus pandemic, formally resigned from his post on Monday. Atlas, who spoke with the president on Monday, joined the administration in August, and was considered a Special Government Employee, serving a 130-day detail. Atlas’ role is set to expire this week. Atlas, who had been criticized throughout his tenure for calling for a reopening, and saying that lockdowns are “extremely harmful” to Americans, said that “although some may disagree with those recommendations, it is the free exchange of ideas that lead to scientific truths, which are the very foundation of a civilized society.” Fox News
Politics
Hannity says Trump should pardon himself and his family . . . Fox News host Sean Hannity called for President Trump to protect himself preemptively against new federal investigations when he leaves office. Hannity recommended that Trump use his pardon power as the head of the executive branch to make him immune to future prosecutions related to the Russia investigation. Hannity said he was in favor of Trump pardoning himself and his family if a Biden administration prosecutes him. Washington Examiner
There will be no such thing as an objective investigation of Trump. If he doesn’t pardon himself, he will be hounded in court for the rest of his life by prosecutors seeking to punish him for being president.
Biden OMB nominee deletes 1,000 tweets . . . Looks like Neera Tanden got a little carried away hating on the people who now will have to vote to confirm her. According to the Washington Examiner: Neera Tanden, President-elect Joe Biden’s pick for budget director, has deleted over a thousand tweets in anticipation of a tough confirmation vote. Many of Tanden’s deleted posts were critical of Republican senators, whose votes she will likely need for confirmation, as well as prominent conservatives and journalists. White House Dossier
Obama criticizes Americans for clinging to “cheap gas and big cars” . . . Barack Obama, in his latest memoir, criticized Americans for liking “cheap gas and big cars” more than they care about “the environment” – even during a catastrophic event like the 2010 Deepwater Horizon oil spill. The comments came during a section in Obama’s 700-page book, “A Promised Land,” released earlier this month. Fox Business
Kamala Harris demeans charity . . . IKamala Harris congratulated a group of people who would be helping out on Thanksgiving. “It’s the difference between charity and duty,” Harris says. “Charity — I got a little extra, I’ll help you out — versus duty. Duty to your fellow human being. It’s what we all should understand is the price that we pay for living on this earth, that we have a duty.” Okay, but why diminish charity, people parting with their hard-earned money to help others, sometimes at great cost to themselves. Because the Bidens and the Harris’s are not charitable. Kamala Harris and her husband last year earned $3 million and gave $35,000 to charity, just over 1 percent. White House Dossier
Democrats aren’t as concerned as Republicans with charity. They give less of it, counting on the government to do the job.
Ohio Republicans seek to impeach GOP Gov. DeWine . . . A group of Ohio Republicans has officially filed articles of impeachment against Gov. Mike DeWine (R) in response to his coronavirus orders. Allegations charge “mismanagement, malfeasance, misfeasance, abuse of power, and other crimes include, but are not limited to, meddling in the conduct of a presidential primary election, arbitrarily closing and placing curfews on certain businesses, while allowing other businesses to remain open.” The Hill
Enjoy the Christmas decorations while you can, because next year they are “holiday decorations.” And her theme, “American the Beautiful,” will become “America Atones for its Sins.”
Biden enviro picks to focus on “environmental justice” . . . Biden is vetting three environmental justice leaders to head up the White House agency that will take the lead in coordinating efforts to safeguard communities disproportionately affected by pollution, according to sources familiar with the process. The shortlist for head of the White House Council on Environmental Quality (CEQ) signals a focus by the incoming Biden administration on environmental policies that aim to ensure improved clean air and water for poor and minority communities that have historically taken the brunt of industrial pollution. The Biden transition team is considering Mustafa Santiago Ali, Cecilia Martinez and Brenda Mallory to lead the CEQ, according to three sources familiar with the process. Reuters
Even the TV equipment gets angry about how 60 Minutes provides Democrats a forum to help themselves.
Biden team not so “transparent” about his foot injury . . . Reporters covering Mr. Biden were not allowed to see him enter the doctor’s office Sunday, despite multiple requests. Leaving the doctor’s office to head to an imaging center for his CT scan, Mr. Biden was limping, though he walked without a crutch or other aid. Mr. Biden’s team did not answer additional questions Monday about his health or the accident. Washington Times
And the dog has said next to nothing.
Grassley returns to work after weathering Covid . . . Sen. Chuck Grassley returned to his Senate office Monday after testing positive for Covid-19 and completing a quarantine earlier this month, and he called on Congress to pass additional coronavirus relief legislation. Grassley, who is 87 and the most senior Republican in the chamber, tested positive for the virus on November 17, but remained asymptomatic throughout his quarantine, the Iowa Republican said in a statement, which said his return was cleared by his doctors. CNN
National Security
Iran moving to stop nuclear inspections . . . Iran’s parliament on Tuesday approved a bill that would suspend U.N. inspections of its nuclear facilities and require the government to boost its uranium enrichment if European signatories to the 2015 nuclear deal do not provide relief from oil and banking sanctions. The vote to approve the bill, which would also require approval by the Guardian Council, a constitutional watchdog, was a show of defiance after the killing of a prominent Iranian nuclear scientist last month. Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei has the final say on all nuclear policies. Associated Press
I imagine Biden is urgently researching how quickly he can cave.
International
UK businesses may use app requiring patrons to prove vaccination . . . Some types of businesses in the U.K. could require potential patrons to show them an app as proof that they were vaccinated against the coronavirus in order to enter, the BBC reported. Nadhim Zahawi, England’s vaccine minister, said the government is looking at implementing an immunity passport by adding an individual’s vaccine status into an existing COVID-19 app that is used for contact tracing. Daily Mail
Money
World economy to bounce all the way back by end of 2021 . . . The Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development predicted Tuesday that the world economy will bounce back to its pre-pandemic levels by the end of next year – though that recovery will be uneven across the countries and big risks remain.In a report on the state of the economy, the OECD said that progress on coronavirus vaccines means that the outlook has improved for the first time since the pandemic began. Associated Press
You should also know
Seattle homicides highest in a decade as city cuts police . . . Seattle Mayor Jenny Durkan plans to sign a new city budget that will reduce the police budget by 18% despite homicides reaching record highs not seen in a decade. Council members overwhelmingly voted last week to cut funds for police training, overtime and to eliminate dozens of vacant positions within the Seattle Police Department after months of contentious talks. The reductions fall short of the 50% local activists demanded amid nationwide protests against police brutality and racial injustice. New York Post
Guilty Pleasures
Stewardess selling sex between flights . . . British Airways is investigating reports that one of its Heathrow-based stewardesses is selling sex – and her undergarments – during and in between flights. Photos of the flight attendant’s risqué advertisements on social media were first reported by The Sun. The photos show her in a variety of suggestive poses while in uniform on the plane. For $33 a passenger can be the new owner of her underwear, twice that will be a “securing fee” where a prospective “client” can meet her at a hotel, according to the paper. Passengers are also promised unspecified “adult entertainment on-board” if the price is right. “All you have to do is give me a sum of money and you’ll be treated to a whole different experience of your choice,” she allegedly wrote. Fox News
Hmm. Talk about a layover.
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THE DISPATCH
The Morning Dispatch: Hospitals in the Danger Zone
Plus: Joe Biden rolls out his economic policy team.
Happy Tuesday! Yesterday, we were sad to say goodbye to James, our intern since August. But today, we are thrilled to welcome Haley Byrd to The Dispatch as an associate editor covering Congress. Haley joins us from CNN and, before that, The Weekly Standard. Everyone give her a big TMD greeting in the comments!
Quick Hits: Today’s Top Stories
Pharmaceutical company Moderna applied for emergency use authorization (EUA) with the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) yesterday for its COVID-19 vaccine. The EUA for the vaccine, which Moderna says is 94.1 percent effective, could be granted as soon as late December.
President-elect Biden on Monday received his first President’s Daily Brief—a top-secret document compiling U.S. intelligence secrets and natural security concerns—since winning the election.
Biden on Monday also announced his intent to nominate several figures to top economic posts in his administration, including Janet Yellen, Cecilia Rouse, Jared Bernstein, and Neera Tanden.
Arizona and Wisconsin became the latest battleground states to certify and finalize their election results confirming Joe Biden’s victory in their respective contests.
Federal Communications Commission Chairman Ajit Pai announced plans to resign come January 20, the day that President-elect Joe Biden is inaugurated. By cutting his term several months short, Pai gives Democrats a quicker path to a majority on the Commission.
The United States confirmed 157,370 new cases of COVID-19 yesterday per the Johns Hopkins University COVID-19 Dashboard, with 9.7 percent of the 1,620,782 tests reported coming back positive. An additional 1,149 deaths were attributed to the virus on Monday, bringing the pandemic’s American death toll to 267,987. According to the COVID Tracking Project, 96,039 Americans are currently hospitalized with COVID-19.
COVID-19 Hospitalizations Continue to Surge
Readers who follow our daily COVID-19 charts have likely noticed we’re bumping up against 100,000 Americans currently hospitalized with the coronavirus, well past our previous two peaks of approximately 60,000 in both April and July. The figure more than doubled in November alone, from 47,520 on the first of the month to 96,039 yesterday.
The middle of the country is being hit particularly hard right now. Between 20 and 25 percent of inpatient hospital beds in Illinois, Nebraska, and South Dakota are currently occupied by COVID-19 patients, according to data from the Department of Health and Human Services. More than 80 percent of ICU beds are full in Minnesota, North and South Dakota, Michigan, Missouri, Texas, Oklahoma, and Kansas, among others.
Utah’s Republican Gov. Gary Herbert issued a state of emergency a few weeks ago aimed at slowing the rate of transmission to protect hospital capacity in the state. “Our hospitals in Utah are among the best in the world,” he said in an address to his constituents. “But they cannot give the best care when hospitals are at capacity and medical professionals are exhausted and spread too thin.”
New York’s Democratic Gov. Andrew Cuomo expressed similar concerns yesterday, announcing a series of emergency actions as hospitalizations in the state surpassed levels not seen since May. “We are not going to live through the nightmare of overwhelmed hospitals again,” he told reporters.
In some ways, the geographically dispersed nature of the United States’ most recent surge—as opposed to the incredibly concentrated hotspots we saw in the spring—may be a blessing in disguise. “There are no hospitals in this country that come anywhere near the COVID hospitalizations per hospital bed as there was in New York and New Jersey, Connecticut, Massachusetts,” Dr. Howard Forman—a health policy professor at Yale University and clinician at Yale New Haven Hospital—told The Dispatch. “As bad as Illinois has gotten, as bad as Indiana has been getting, as bad as Nebraska and Nevada are getting, it is almost impossible for me to imagine them getting to the level of New York.”
New York was, of course, the epicenter of the pandemic for much of the spring and early summer, and its hospital system was overwhelmed as a result. This—along with Gov. Cuomo’s decision to send hospitalized elderly COVID-19 patients back to nursing homes—played a major role in New York City’s catastrophic death rate in March and April.
“I think that a lot of the deaths from before compared to now were just that the hospital system was overwhelmed,” said Dr. Benjamin Daxon, a Mayo Clinic anesthesiologist who has treated COVID-19 patients for months. The COVID-19 case fatality rate has fallen precipitously from its 6 percent peak in May to just under 2 percent now, but Daxon attributes that improvement more to organization than medical breakthroughs.
“We really don’t have that many new therapeutics,” he added, when we asked about the impact of emergency use authorizations for Regeneron’s monoclonal antibody treatment and remdesivir. “There’s a few things to maybe help in the early stages of COVID. But we really aren’t that much more adept at treating the [disease] now than we were several months ago. It’s just that I think we’re more composed.”
Daxon said healthcare professionals didn’t know what they were up against back in March and April. “People were confused as to what to do,” he noted. “Maybe this drug works, maybe this therapy works. But now that we’ve had some time to kind of test things out, we’ve got a better sense of ourselves. And realistically, we do what we do for every other disease: Judicious fluid management … and frankly, not overreacting to every little thing, which is a lot of what happened in the spring—and understandably so.”
So when experts talk about a “strain on the healthcare system,” what exactly do they mean? Could the problem be solved by Congress passing an additional coronavirus relief package that provides funding for more hospital beds and personal protective equipment? Not exactly.
Daxon said the recent stress has come from shortages not of money, machines, or equipment, but of doctors and nurses. With hospitals overwhelmed, “you’re going to have people doing critical care medicine who are not trained in critical care medicine,” he noted. And even those who are trained in critical care medicine will be less effective. “If I take care of 50 people, I’m going to have a much higher percentage of people that die than if I take care of 10 people. Once you stretch me too thin, I miss a lab value, I’m not as attuned to subtleties in my patients.”
When the COVID outbreaks were more regional—the Northeast in the spring, the South and Sun Belt over the summer—health care professionals in less affected areas could travel to where they were most needed, and many of them did. Daxon, for example, uprooted from his home in Minnesota to spend a week treating COVID patients in New York City (and wrote an excellent piece for The Dispatch about his experience).
“I was able to go to New York because we had no surge in southeast Minnesota,” he told The Dispatch yesterday. “Now everybody has a surge. If we get overwhelmed, there’s no reinforcements. There’s nobody who’s able to come and help us.”
“Right now,” Forman added, “our system on a national basis is pretty tapped out.”
And Daxon worries that healthcare workers—nine months into the pandemic—are pretty tapped out emotionally as well. “I worry that the healthcare workers are going to have an unbelievable amount of burnout from all of this,” he said. “I think there’s a growing sense of frustration amongst [them] with people in the population at large who don’t appreciate that it’s a terrible disease and it’s spreading because of, in part, negligence on the part of everyday Americans who forego recommendations. And it feels like a slap in the face to a lot of people.”
Forman emphasized that—with vaccines likely to be approved in the coming weeks and distributed widely in the next couple of months—we are now in the home stretch. “Every death avoided is no longer a death deferred, it’s a death avoided,” he said. “Back in March or February, I think the arguments about how we maintain the economy was a much more resonant argument, that at least you could talk about. Right now, we’re talking about, what can you do individually, or in your community, or in your municipality to just save lives. … These lives are saveable. They’re not just deferrable. They’re saveable.”
Biden Announces Economic Team
President-elect Joe Biden unveiled on Monday a list of economic policy experts he intends to nominate to top positions in his administration, starting with Janet Yellen—erstwhile chairwoman of the Federal Reserve—as Treasury Secretary. With the exception of Neera Tanden—Biden’s pick for Office of Management and Budget Director whose unpopularity with Republicans may threaten her prospects in the Senate—most of Biden’s nominees are center-left, Obama-era bureaucrats who are unlikely to face backlash during their confirmation hearings.
Tony Fratto—founder of Hamilton Place Strategies and a former deputy press secretary in the George W. Bush administration—called Yellen Biden’s “safest bet” for Treasury Secretary, saying she speaks to the relatively moderate tenor of the incoming president’s economic policy. “There isn’t anyone in [Biden’s economic team] who’s been proposing wildly radical ideas,” Fratto told The Dispatch yesterday. Instead, he said we will see the “normal kinds of arguments on economic policy that we’ve had for a long time.”
Yellen, for example, has generally been viewed as a consensus pick (in part due to her somewhat hawkish views on the national debt) and is expected to work across the aisle with Senate Republicans if she is confirmed. “I believe she would get a favorable view,” outgoing Senate Finance chair Sen. Chuck Grassley said on Monday. Sen. John Cornyn echoed that sentiment yesterday, and Sen. Pat Toomey told The Dispatch last week that, while he and Yellen had their “fair share of disagreements” while she was at the Federal Reserve, he has “no doubts about her integrity or technical expertise.” If confirmed, Yellen would be the first woman to serve as Treasury Secretary.
The president-elect tapped Adewale “Wally” Adeyemo—who served as Deputy Director of the National Economic Council in the Obama administration—to be Yellen’s Deputy Treasury Secretary, and selected Princeton University labor economist Cecilia Rouse to serve as chairwoman of the Council of Economic Advisers (CEA), where she will work alongside fellow CEA appointees Jared Bernstein (Biden’s chief economist when he was vice president) and Heather Boushey (the president of the Washington Center for Equitable Growth). Biden has reportedly picked Brian Deese—an economic adviser in the Obama administration and more recently head of sustainable investing at asset manager BlackRock—to lead the National Economic Council.
Axios’s Alayna Treene reported last week that some Democrats are expecting Biden to choose a “sacrificial lamb” nominee for Republicans to tank, “thus easing the passage of other nominees.”
That sacrificial lamb may be Tanden, Biden’s nominee for director of the Office of Management and Budget (OMB). Tanden is the current President and CEO of the Center for American Progress, a center-left think tank in Washington, and has for years drawn criticism from both sides of the aisle for her personal attacks on elected officials and unwavering devotion to Hillary Clinton.
Sen. Rob Portman expressed hope that Biden would withdraw Tanden and pick someone else. Cornyn on Monday called Tanden Biden’s “worst nominee so far.”
“I think, in light of her combative and insulting comments about many members of the Senate, mainly on our side of the aisle, that it creates certainly a problematic path,” he added. Sen. Susan Collins said she doesn’t know much about Tanden, other than “she is a prolific user of Twitter.” The prospective OMB head seems to have deleted more than 1,000 tweets over the past few weeks, many of them critical of Republican senators.
It would, of course, be a bit silly for GOP members of Congress to tank a nominee for mean tweets given all the mean tweets they’ve overlooked the past four years. But Tanden’s red flags extend beyond social media. While serving as a top aide for then-presidential candidate Hillary Clinton in 2008, Tanden reportedly punched (Tanden says “pushed”) a ThinkProgress reporter in the chest for asking her boss a question about the Iraq War. Following Clinton’s loss in 2016, Tanden floated unsubstantiated conspiracy theories that Russian hackers manipulated actual vote totals in Donald Trump’s favor.
Criticism of Tanden doesn’t just come from the right: Her Clinton support in 2016 earned her no goodwill with the Bernie Sanders wing of the Democratic Party. The Vermont senator sent CAP a letter in 2019 accusing the think tank of “mudslinging” and “personal attacks,” writing that “Tanden repeatedly calls for unity while simultaneously maligning my staff and supporters and belittling progressive ideas.”
But generally speaking, the economic picks Biden announced yesterday continue the trend of the national security team he revealed last week: Relatively uncontroversial, establishment Democrats. Yellen and Co. will likely advocate aggressive fiscal stimulus and a return to boilerplate liberal tax-and-spend policies.
“This group is decidedly progressive, and I am certain I will disagree with many of their policy objectives and conclusions,” conservative economist Michael Strain of the American Enterprise Institute said yesterday. “But they are an excellent team for a Democratic administration, and each of these nominees deserves to win Senate confirmation. They are expert, competent professionals—and that is what Biden will need to help get the economy back on track.”
The president-elect is expected to formally introduce his nominees in Wilmington, Delaware later today alongside Vice President-elect Kamala Harris.
Worth Your Time
Chris Krebs, President Trump’s former head of the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency, was fired earlier this month after he publicly pushed back against the president’s baseless and conspiratorial claims that the election was rigged against him. Krebs recently spoke to 60 Minutes’s Scott Pelley about Team Trump’s ongoing efforts: “It was upsetting, because what I saw was an apparent attempt to undermine confidence in the election, to confuse people, to scare people. It’s not me, it’s not just CISA. It’s the tens of thousands of election workers out there that had been working nonstop, 18-hour days, for months. They’re getting death threats for trying to carry out one of our core democratic institutions, an election.”
The editors over at National Review don’t hold back in their latest editorial criticizing President Trump’s barrage of legal challenges aimed at altering the presidential election’s outcome. “The Trump team (and much of the GOP) is working backwards, desperately trying to find something, anything to support the president’s aggrieved feelings, rather than objectively considering the evidence and reacting as warranted,” they write. “Flawed and dishonest assertions like this pollute the public discourse and mislead good people who make the mistake of believing things said by the president of the United States.”
The Washington Post dove into court records, interviews, and physical evidence to detail the life of Samuel Little, the country’s most prolific serial killer. Little, who claims to have killed at least 93 people across 19 states and 30 years, was able to evade detection by targeting women on the margins of society, whose absence would go unnoticed. “Little’s decades of impunity underscore a troubling truth about the U.S. criminal justice system: It is possible to get away with murder if you kill people whose lives are already devalued by society.”
Over the Thanksgiving break, the Supreme Court struck down New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo’s coronavirus-inspired occupancy limits on places of worship. David and Sarah break down the decision on yesterday’s episode of Advisory Opinions, before turning to a host of abortion-related lawsuits and the U.S. census case.
Let Us Know
Have you, or someone you know, been hospitalized with COVID-19? What was your/their experience like?
Are you, or someone you know, a healthcare professional treating COVID-19 patients? What has your/their experience been like?
Regarding the comment that we’re reaching a critical stage because our ICUs are approaching 80% capacity…I live in Houston, home to the Tx Medical Center. This summer when elective procedures were halted for fear of overrunning our ICUs, Dr Marc Boom, head of the TMC and a real advocate for masking and distancing, said our ICUs are ALWAYS close to full. Hospitals don’t make any money having a whole wing of expensive equipment and highly trained staff sitting around with nothing to do. Also there are always flex spaces that you can ramp up the level of care in an area for an extended period of time.
So every time we hear a government official down here warn us to go back inside and stop all social gatherings because the ICUs are filling up, it seems a little disingenuous. We don’t know what to believe anymore.
In NYC, where I live, the biggest issue is rent. Evictions have been shown to be a severely impoverishing life event. And, of course, a shelter is a super-crowded condition. So evictions now are a life-threatening event.
Kemberlee Kaye: “So looking forward to and needing the Christmas season this year. Plan to milk every drop of gratitude, celebration, thankfulness and fun out of the celebration of Jesus’ birthday.”
Mary Chastain: “#NY22 is a total mess. But what else is new? This district apparently loves drama because this seems to happen every election year.”
Leslie Eastman: “Leah Baldacci’s recent post on Smith College Professor Jodi Shaw, who is a whitleblower drawing attention to the blatant racism of critical race theory, is truly chilling. It shows that colleges have become mad men’s laboratories of indoctrination instead of science labs of free speech.”
Vijeta Uniyal: “The European Union has condemned the targeting of Iran’s nuclear weapons chief. Mohsen Fakhrizadeh, who led Iran’s clandestine nuclear weapons program, was killed in an explosion near Iranian capital Tehran on Friday. “This is a criminal act and runs counter to the principle of respect for human rights the EU stands for,” the EU foreign policy spokesperson told reporters on Saturday. The EU foreign policy-chief Josep Borrell paid “condolences” to the family of the slain nuclear weapons mastermind.”
Stacey Matthews: “I’m so glad the media has finally gotten back to some hard-hitting reporting, like filing ‘breaking news’ stories about how Joe Biden and his wife Jill will soon be getting a cat. Yay journalism!”
David Gerstman: “Fuzzy Slippers blogged about how Candace Owens fought Politifact and Candace Owens WON.”
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‘Freedom Force’ Forms in House to Fight Left-Wing Squad
Joe Biden might have won the White House, but election night was also a repudiation of the far left’s radical ideology down-ballot. And now, a number of newly-elected Republican House members have come together to create what they are calling the “Freedom Force”–a group that will vehemently oppose “The Squad” of progressive Democrats Ihan Omar, Ayanna Pressley, Rashida Tlaib, and Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez. Rep.-elect Burgess Owens of Utah, a former NFL player, told Laura Ingraham, “This group will give a contrast to the hard left. We have ‘Freedom Force’ versus ‘The Squad.'” Defending American entrepreneurism and free enterprise will be one central mission of the newly-forced Freedom Force. On Fox News over the weekend, Owens said, “Business ownership is the foundation of our freedom, it’s where our middle class comes from. We have different cultures, backgrounds, colors. But what we have in common is that we have a love for our country and we’re going to make sure we stay free.”
Indeed, the Freedom Force is made up of a diverse group of new lawmakers including Reps.-elect Owens, Nicole Malliotakis, Michelle Steel, Stephanie Bice, Victoria Spartz, Carlos Giminez, Maria Elvira Salazar, and Byron Donalds. The contrast between the Squad and the Freedom Force in many ways symbolizes the ongoing battle for the soul of the nation. On one side you have an ideology that despises our nation and all it stands for, wants top-down government control of every aspect of American life, and seeks to dismantle capitalism. On the other side you have patriots who firmly believe in our founding principles, wish to give Americans the freedom to live out their individual dreams, and want to remove government as a barrier to entrepreneurism.
Every single Republican in the House should be a “freedom force,” and quite frankly, so should the Democrats! Supporting freedom should not be controversial. But for too long in this country, leftists have used their allies in education, media, and pop culture to push a poisonous ideology–an ideology that worships government and could destroy this nation. It’s refreshing to finally see Republicans fight back.
The Swamp Is Back! Biden Cabinet Full of D.C. Careerists, Insiders
Throughout the campaign, then-candidate Joe Biden hardly answered any questions about what he would actually do, on policy, as president. But some recent developments, most notably his cabinet pick announcements, give us a window of what we can expect. The days of entrenched, D.C. careerists at the helm are returning; put simply, the swamp is back!
Tony Blinken as Secretary of State means a return to Obama-era interventionist foreign policy of policing the globe, wars, and illegal drone strikes. It is easy to forget that more drone strikes were carried out during Barack Obama’s first year in office than were carried out during George W. Bush’s entire presidency. Biden said nothing for eight years as Vice President as a total of 563 strikes targeted a variety of countries, killing between 400 to 800 civilians according to government reports. This is likely to become business-as-usual again with Blinken in charge.
Biden’s choice for Director of National Intelligence, Avril Haines, and other picks additionally represent a continuation of Obama-era interventionist foreign policy moves, such as the 2009 Afghanistan troop surge or military action in Libya in 2011.
Big government bureaucrats are also likely to threaten school choice under a Biden Administration. Four people on Biden’s transition team are from the nation’s largest teachers’ unions. COVID-19 lockdowns, and the resulting closure of schools in spite of data that shows in-person learning is not a threat to students or teachers, has shown the need for school choice in our inner cities. Every family–regardless of socioeconomic status–deserves the opportunity to send their children to the best school possible. But Biden has signalled that he is prepared to side with teachers unions over students, which could mean charter schools and homeschooling will come under attack. While well-to-do families can simply put their children in private schools, many other families do not have that option.
NYC Will Reopen Schools After Anti-Science Shutdowns
New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio announced this weekend that schools will reopen on December 7 in phases. He said, “It’s less concern about the spread when it comes to younger kids. Whatever happens ahead, we want this to be the plan going forward. We know what we didn’t know over the summer, we know what works from actual experience.”
Several weeks ago de Blasio shut the city’s public school system, even though study after study shows that in-person learning does not pose a threat to students, staff, or the broader community. Remote learning has largely been a failure that has widened the achievement gap between students from wealthy families and those from poor families. It has been a disaster for working parents, especially single working parents, who are trying to hold down a job while staying home and caring for their children. Hopefully, New York City’s anti-science school shutdowns will be a thing of the past.
Three Fantastic Christmas Cookie Recipes
‘Tis the season for baking! There’s nothing like taking some freshly-baked goods out of the oven on a frosty winter day. I often give out jars full of cookies to friends and family. Below are three of my favorite Christmas cookie recipes, easy for a baker of any level to tackle. Enjoy!
Kristin Tate is an author and columnist focused on taxation and government spending. Her latest book, The Liberal Invasion of Red State America, was published by Regnery Publishing in 2020. She is a Robert Novak Journalism Fellow at the Fund for American Studies, examining the size, scope, and cost of the federal workforce. Kristin also serves as analyst for the nonprofit group Young Americans for Liberty, aiding the organization in its mission to promote limited government and fiscal responsibility. You can follow her on Twitter at @KristinBTate.
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Dec 01, 2020 01:00 am
Football has always been reviled by the left. Now leftists are salivating at the chance to put the last nail in the sport’s coffin. Read More…
Dec 01, 2020 01:00 am
Religious liberty is at the heart of our national identity. For a top liberal opinion-maker to say defending it is just “politics” is horrifying. Read More…
Dec 01, 2020 01:00 am
Fueled by political flat-earthers who flout the obvious and repeat the lie, the left hopes that running out the clock will unseat Trump and win the day. Read More…
Dec 01, 2020 01:00 am
The Allies’ dilemma when they cracked the “Enigma” code and the Elgar funeral march of the same name, are apt analogies for the Democrats’ conduct in 2020. Read More…
About those ‘spike anomalies’ in Pennsylvania …
Dec 01, 2020 01:00 am
A bunch of votes that are dumped into the election results faster than they could have been processed by the voting machines, using the maximum possible speed as provided by the manufacturer of the machines. Read more…
Media coverage of election fraud
Dec 01, 2020 01:00 am
In spite of a flood of media reports that there was no election fraud, Rasmussen Reports polling company reports that 75 percent of Republicans and 30 percent of Democrats surveyed believe that it is very likely that a second term was stolen from President Trump. Read more…
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Chinese sociologist Dr. Li Yi says that it’s just a matter of time before China takes over the United States’ GDP. What are the details? According to a Monday report from … Read more
The Federalist staff and writers spent some time thinking over what we’ve missed in 2020: big things, little things, surprising things. What are yours?
In the aftermath of a tight election outcome, it seems that while many matters are important to consider, one is more pressing: We are struggling to love our neighbors.
According to leaked documents from Chinese authorities, China deliberately underreported the severity of its early coronavirus outbreak. The Federalist was vilified for reporting this months ago.
Atlas said that the bigger issue with the scientific debates about COVID-19 is that there is currently no way to offer dissent from corporate media’s views on issues without facing retribution.
Trump once called Edward Snowden a traitor who embarrasses the United States, and he was right. Pardoning Snowden would be an affront to Trump’s America-first agenda.
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by Tony Perkins: While most Americans were at home prepping for the big day, nine Supreme Court justices were still at the office Wednesday night, cooking up something else: a rebuke of New York City’s COVID restrictions. In her coming out party, new Justice Amy Coney Barrett made her presence felt — casting the tie-breaking vote that only solidified the working mom’s standing as a rock-solid defender of religious freedom.
The rookie justice, in her first major case, didn’t wait long to prove her supporters right. After just four weeks on the job, Barrett has made it crystal clear that the balance of power has officially shifted. For the first time in years, someone other than Chief Justice John Roberts cast the deciding vote on a fundamental constitutional question. And to the delight of conservatives, it was a vote that reminded Americans that religious liberty doesn’t take a back seat to the whims of liberal leaders as they navigate the challenges of a virus. Joining forces with Justices Clarence Thomas and Samuel Alito, President Trump’s trio of Barrett, Neil Gorsuch, and Brett Kavanaugh sent a blunt warning to states that the pandemic is no excuse to tamper with the First Amendment.
“[E]ven if the Constitution has taken a holiday during this pandemic,” Gorsuch insisted, “it cannot become a sabbatical.” His pointed message was meant for Governor Andrew Cuomo (D-N.Y.), who’s made it his mission to keep churches and synagogues closed for months under the guise of “public safety.” Sick and tired of the unfair treatment, Brooklyn’s Catholic Diocese and two Jewish congregations took the governor to court, insisting that religious communities had been “singled out” for “blame and retribution” during the spiking virus cases. In what New York City calls “red zones,” only 10 people can worship together. One level lower, in the “orange zones,” that number is capped at 25 — even if the churches have capacity for 1,000 people.
The hypocrisy, Gorsuch wrote, is astounding. In Cuomo’s New York, “People may gather inside for extended periods in bus stations and airports, in laundromats and banks, in hardware stores and liquor shops. No apparent reason exists why people may not gather, subject to identical restrictions, in churches or synagogues — especially when religious institutions have made plain that they stand ready, able, and willing to follow all the safety precautions required of ‘essential’ businesses and perhaps more besides. The only explanation for treating religious places differently seems to be a judgment that what happens there just isn’t as ‘essential’ as what happens in secular spaces.”
Governor Cuomo, he pointed out, “is remarkably frank about this: In his judgment, laundry and liquor, travel and tools, are all ‘essential’ while traditional religious exercises are not. That is exactly the kind of discrimination the First Amendment forbids.” It’s past time, he argued, “to make plain that, while the pandemic poses many grave challenges, there is no world in which the Constitution tolerates color-coded executive edicts that reopen liquor stores and bike shops but shutter churches, synagogues and mosques.”
Not surprisingly, the radical governor didn’t take kindly to the ruling — complaining openly about the president’s justices. “We know who he appointed to the court. We know their ideology.” Asked to compare this decision to the Nevada and California cases that went the Left’s way, Cuomo shrugged. “You have a different court [now]…” And on that, he’s exactly right. Wednesday’s win wouldn’t have been possible without Justice Barrett — and she wouldn’t have been possible without the president’s gutsy judicial agenda.
“Liberals have often marveled at how religious conservatives could so fervently back a decidedly imperfect man in President Trump,” one Washington Post columnist wrote. “This case, in which all three of Trump’s appointees formed the majority’s backbone, shows why they did.” At the end of the day, whether he has four years in the White House or eight, one thing’s for certain: the impact of Trump’s judges will keep conservatives celebrating for years. ——————————- Tony Perkins is President and writes for Family Research Council.
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by Gary Bauer: Denigrating Faith
During a recent interview, Barack Obama lamely attempted to explain why President Trump made gains with Hispanic voters in this year’s election. Of course, the fear of socialism was nowhere in his answer.
He is incapable of admitting that once you’ve experienced socialism in places like Cuba or Venezuela, you won’t look so kindly on a party that includes socialists like Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and her Squad.
Instead, Obama pointed to the faith of some Hispanics, saying that evangelical Hispanics overlooked Trump’s racist remarks about Mexicans and policies that put “undocumented workers in cages” because they agreed with him on issues like abortion and marriage.
Of course, I disagree with Mr. Obama’s analysis. The media always grossly distorted the president’s remarks, and Obama built those so-called “cages.”
But Obama’s comment was just another indication that the left doesn’t understand evangelical Christians or Orthodox Jews. The left’s faith is identity politics. Obama was frustrated that evangelical Hispanics did not define themselves based on race, and that they made their faith a higher priority.
This is why the left thought it could threaten the Little Sisters of the Poor with bankruptcy and jail. But the Little Sisters refused to compromise their faith and their mission to serve the poor.
Meanwhile, liberal governors are using emergency powers to define what is “essential,” and they are declaring that churches and synagogues aren’t essential. But millions of Americans believe faith is absolutely essential.
In fact, religious liberty was so essential to our founding fathers that they specifically included it in the First Amendment to the Constitution.
As COVID restrictions get more onerous, houses of worship have borne the brunt of some of the worst decisions by state and local politicians. Abortion clinics and marijuana dispensaries were declared “essential,” while churches and synagogues were closed in spite of the First Amendment’s guarantee of religious liberty.
Many conservatives were disappointed this summer when the Supreme Court refused to intervene in a Nevada lawsuit that argued churches were being held to a different standard than casinos.
I am pleased to report that the Supreme Court did intervene late last week in a case challenging New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo’s shutdown of churches and synagogues. In a 5 to 4 decision, the Supreme Court issued an injunction against Cuomo’s order. Writing for the majority, Justice Neil Gorsuch declared:
It is time — past time — to make plain that, while the pandemic poses many grave challenges, there is no world in which the Constitution tolerates color-coded executive edicts that reopen liquor stores and bike shops but shutter churches, synagogues, and mosques.”
And what a difference one justice makes. We lost the Nevada case on a 5 to 4 ruling by Chief Justice John Roberts. This time, we prevailed with Justice Amy Coney Barrett defending religious liberty instead of Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg restricting it.
Confronting Iran
While Americans were celebrating Thanksgiving, Israel allegedly carried out a targeted strike against Iran’s top nuclear scientist, Mohsen Fakhrizadeh. The Israeli strike should be a reason for decent human beings all over the world to celebrate. After all, we cannot tolerate a Holocaust-denying regime obtaining nuclear weapons.
Yet former Obama CIA Director John Brennan condemned the assassination as “criminal” and “highly reckless.” No, what’s criminal and highly reckless is turning a blind eye to Iran’s regional aggression, its terrorist activity and its nuclear ambitions.
Unfortunately, Brennan is representative of the kind of people a Biden Administration will be filled with, people who want to negotiate with and do business with a regime that chants “Death to America! Death to Israel!”
Brennan and other Obama-era officials suggested that the assassination of Fakhrizadeh was merely an attempt by Trump to handcuff Biden’s diplomatic efforts with Iran, which are expected to begin in earnest early next year.
First of all, we don’t know if the U.S. had anything to do with the strike. But it is worth remembering what happened around this time four years ago at the end of the Obama presidency and before Trump took office.
Then-President Obama ordered our U.N. ambassador not to veto a condemnation of Israel by the U.N. Security Council that suggested Israel had no claim to Jerusalem, Judea and Samaria. That’s what Obama and Biden were doing on their way out of office. They were attacking our ally Israel.
In stark contrast, Donald Trump is spending every minute he has doing everything he can to take out enemies of the free world.
Confirmation Conflicts
Some of Joe Biden’s nominees are coming under fire from the left and the right over their lobbying work in the Washington swamp. It turns out that Antony Blinken, Avril Haines and Michele Flournoy worked for a left-wing lobbying firm whose client list remains secret.
Responding to reports that WestExec is not obligated to release its client list, Senator John Cornyn tweeted, “The Senate is not obligated to confirm anyone who hides this information.”
For example, it is widely suspected that WestExec has lobbied on behalf of companies connected to the Chinese government. The speculation is grounded in some truth given that WestExec advertises its ability to “manage China-related risk in an era of strategic competition.”
Speaking of China, the Trump Administration is sanctioning two more Chinese companies affiliated with the communist regime and its military. Semiconductor Manufacturing International Corporation (SMIC), China’s largest maker of semiconductors, and China National Offshore Oil Corporation (CNOOC), a major Chinese energy company, are being added to the U.S. blacklist.
The move is the latest in a series of actions by the Trump Administration to “target what it sees as Beijing’s efforts to enlist corporations to harness emerging civilian technologies for military purposes.”
Media Malfeasance
The media have been having celebrating and praising Joe Biden for naming “an all female press team” as if it was some unique accomplishment. As you might expect, Trump Press Secretary Kayleigh McEnany had something to say about that.
McEnany tweeted that President Trump, First Lady Melania Trump, Vice President Pence and Second Lady Karen Pence have “all female senior press teams.”
————————- Gary Bauer (@GaryLBauer) is a conservative family values advocate and serves as president of American Values and chairman of the Campaign for Working Families
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… Say the wrong thing on Facebook and lose your license and your business. by Daniel Greenfield: The National Association of Realtors claims to have 1.4 million members. There will be fewer members before long as the association begins purging conservative real estate agents.At the center of the storm was an addition to Article 10 which covers various forms of discrimination. But unlike all the previous sections which addressed how real estate professionals interacted with customers, Article 10-5 is catchall cancel culture that controls what real estate agents say on social media on their own private accounts and in their free time.This goes far beyond being made to bake a cake. Even if you’re at home and you post something opposed to gay marriage or illegal migration, you can lose your business.As the NAR claims, a realtor’s “speech and conduct reflect on the REALTOR® organization whether said publicly on a business social media profile, or privately on a personal one.”
When you’re a real estate agent, you no longer have the right to personal opinions.
Article 10-5 immediately transformed 1.4 million people into subordinates at the mercy of NAR brass who have the authority to determine what political or religious views they can hold.
“It means that we never take our hands off, no matter where we are, no matter what we do, we are always licensed and we are always a member of the National Association of Realtors,” New York State Association of Realtors President Jennifer Stevenson warned.
Never taking your “hands off” is endemic to socialist tyrannies and has no place in America.
Jennifer is a Democrat donor. The NAR’s PAC directs a majority of its cash to Democrats. That included $3,000 to subsidize the bigotry of Rep. Ilhan Omar and $5,000 to Rep. Rashida Tlaib.
But that’s the kind of hatred that the National Association of Realtors is comfortable subsidizing.
“No matter where we are,” means never being able to say anything that offends someone like Jennifer without fear of being sanctioned, fired, or losing your business. Jennifer, an NAR board member, and others will be looking over your shoulder every time you post anything on Facebook. Any leftist offended by anything an NAR member posts has an easy recourse.
“Doesn’t this mean that if I post my opinion online and someone doesn’t agree with it, that I can lose my membership and be forced out of the business?” the NAR FAQ asks.
The answer is yes. Anyone can bring an “ethics” complaint which will lead to a “hearing” with “witnesses” and “counsel”. Posting that illegal migration is wrong or that Islamic terrorism is a threat can now lead to a real estate agent facing a hearing. And if they lose that hearing, then not only will they be expelled from the NAR, but the state real estate licensing authority will be told that the agent violated the “public trust” which can lead to the loss of their license.
Say the wrong thing on Facebook and lose your license, your business, and your livelihood.
The NAR is wrongly characterizing personal views that are privately expressed as “discriminating”, treating it as a violation of “ethics” in a commercial enterprise, and then reporting it to state licensing authorities as a violation of the “public trust”.
This is cancel culture on a national level by one of the country’s most abusive organizations which had already been sued by the Department of Justice for multiple antitrust violations.
What constitutes saying the wrong thing?
Article 10-5 bans “harassing speech, hate speech, epithets, or slurs based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status, national origin, sexual orientation, or gender identity.”
In an era when supporting President Trump is considered “hate speech”, how are these terms going to be defined? Exhibit 2 of Appendix XIII to Part Four of Article 10-5 of the NAR has an easy answer. Everything that some leftist doesn’t like now violates the NAR’s rules.
Hate speech is any speech that is “intended to insult, offend” because of “some trait”. Any remarks that can be seen as “disparaging” or “shaming”, or can be characterized as a form of “innuendo”, about a protected group is covered under “epithets”. That would cover the use of the term “illegal alien”, any discussion about Islamic terrorism, or transgender compulsion.
Harassment, for example, includes “inappropriate conduct, comment, display, action, or gesture based on another person’s sex, color, race, religion, national origin, age, disability, sexual orientation, gender identity, and any other protected characteristic.” And that in turn includes, “negative stereotyping” and “the display or circulation of written or graphic material that denigrates or shows hostility toward an individual or group.”
That would, as a practical matter, include the Bible. And certainly particular Bible verses.
The National Association of Realtors has, for all intents and purposes, made quoting Bible verses on a private Facebook profile into an ethical violation leading to a hearing and expulsion.
The NAR board falsely claimed that these speech codes stem from fair housing legal obligations. They do not. Worse still, the NAR’s insistence that, “disparaging a particular protected class is evidence of one’s inability to treat them equally” is a troubling argument that would bar traditional Christians and Jews from membership in the National Association of Realtors. Likewise, Americans who oppose illegal migration, would also be banned.
Article 10-5 claims to be fighting discrimination, but is actually licensing discrimination against 200 million Americans, a much larger class than the ones the NAR claims to be protecting.
The NAR argues that, “bias against protected classes revealed through the public posting of hate speech could result in REALTORS® not taking clients from certain protected classes or not treating them equally, which would lead to violations of the Fair Housing Act.” What this really means is that real estate agents are being sanctioned for discrimination that never actually took place while assuming, for example, that because a traditional Christian or Jew opposes gay marriage that they would be presumed to discriminate against gay or lesbian customers.
Barring traditional religious people from a profession because they are presumed to biased is a bias and a much more egregious form of discrimination than the one it claims to be remedying.
The National Association of Realtors is imposing a political and religious test on members. It has moved the bar from policing interactions with customers to policing personal beliefs.
This is fundamentally un-American. Article 10-5 is McCarthyism wrapped in buzzwords.
Around the same time that the NAR was rolling out its speech codes, the Justice Department sued the group for multiple antitrust violations accusing it of anti-competitive behavior.
This isn’t the first time that the NAR has been sued over antitrust violations, but it should lead to action, if not at a federal level, then at a state level. In some states, not being a member of the NAR makes being a real estate agent all but impossible. In many, it makes it difficult.
As a socialist oligarchy squeezes conservatives out of public life, elected officials should fight back before it’s too late against the powerful institutions which have taken over American life. These institutions, financial, academic, corporate, and trade associations are engaging in a sustained campaign of political and religious suppression under the guise of fighting against discrimination. This campaign is the greatest form of discrimination in America in generations.
The only way to stop the squeeze is to squeeze the squeezers. If there’s no room for conservatives in the NAR, there should be no room for the NAR in conservative states.
—————————- Daniel Greenfield is a Shillman Journalism Fellow at the Freedom Center, is an investigative journalist and writer.
Tags:Daniel Greenfield, FrontPage Mag, National Association of Realtors, Imposes Cancel Culture, on 1.4 Million PeopleTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
Trump fully pardons Michael Flynn, while his former 2016 campaign advisor files a lawsuit. by Thomas Gallatin: “It is my Great Honor to announce that General Michael T. Flynn has been granted a Full Pardon,” President Donald Trump announced via social media just before Thanksgiving. He added, “Congratulations to [Gen. Flynn] and his wonderful family, I know you will now have a truly fantastic Thanksgiving!” It was surely welcome news for Trump’s former national security advisor, who was one of the early victims of Barack Obama’s deep-state cabal that was aligned against Trump. And so ends the legal jeopardy for a man who served and sacrificed for his country for 30 years.Of all the pardons Trump has thus far distributed, no one was more deserving than Flynn. As the National Review editors succinctly put it, “Flynn should never have been the subject of an FBI investigation; the FBI’s behavior in interviewing Flynn was reprehensible; and the pardon restores the appropriate balance of prosecutorial power, which was put askew by the misconduct of federal district-court judge Emmet Sullivan.” Reprehensible indeed.Flynn was coerced into agreeing to plead guilty to lying to the FBI because of threats from partisan Democrat members of Robert Mueller’s investigative team, which was hot on the trail of the bogus Russia-collusion delusion. His guilty plea was used by Democrats and the mainstream media as cover for the fact that their collusion hoax was baseless. It further allowed the Mueller team to hold a cloud of illegitimacy over Trump’s presidency for nearly two years, wasting millions of taxpayer dollars in the process.On top of this injustice was Judge Emmet Sullivan’s biased and politically motivated conduct against Flynn. Rather than acting as an impartial arbiter, Sullivan injected himself into the judicial process first by accusing Flynn of treason and then later acting as prosecutor against him following Attorney General William Barr’s decision to drop the case due to unearthed instances of malpractice by the DOJ. Sullivan refused to drop the case and instead aimed to hold up any decision on Flynn while hoping for a Joe Biden election victory and a new attorney general reversing Barr’s decision on Flynn. Sullivan worked to essentially force Trump’s hand, thereby allowing him to hide behind and fuel the false Democrat/Leftmedia narrative of Trump abusing his power to protect his corrupt friends. Sullivan’s politically motivated behavior is, to put it mildly, despicable.
Meanwhile, on Friday, Trump’s former campaign adviser, Cater Page, filed a $75 million lawsuit against the U.S. government, the DOJ, the FBI, and individuals involved in procuring illegal FISA warrants to surveil him. Among the individuals included in the suit are former FBI Director James Comey, former Assistant FBI Director Andrew McCabe, former FBI agent Peter Strzok, and former FBI lawyer Lisa Page. Trump called Page’s lawsuit “good news,” while also asking, “Where are they with Comey, with McCabe, with Brennan, with all these people? They lied, they leaked, they spied on our campaign.” Precisely. Yet with a Leftmedia absolutely committed to promoting Biden and uninterested in the truth, the prospect of holding to account those guilty of perpetrating one of the biggest scandals in U.S. history seems unlikely.
———————– Thomas Gallatin writes for The Patriot Post.
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by Bill Donohue: Reaction to the U.S. Supreme Court ruling limiting attendance at houses of worship:
Just before midnight on Thanksgiving eve, New York State Gov. Andrew Cuomo, a professed former altar boy, took it on the chin when the U.S. Supreme Court ruled 5-4 that his executive order limiting occupancy in houses of worship could not stand. It was blocked pending a review by the 2nd Circuit Court of Appeals.
Though Cuomo had already rescinded his order, the occupancy limits he imposed—10 in red zones and 25 in orange zones—were seen as executive overreach; the restrictions were imposed because of Covid-19 concerns. The high court knew he could reinstate his restrictions, which is why it did not pass up the opportunity to decide this case.
The Supreme Court said that “even in a pandemic, the Constitution cannot be put away and forgotten.” It was a win for the Diocese of Brooklyn and Agudath Israel of America.
The Catholic and Jewish institutions argued that declaring religious services to be “non-essential,” while labeling pet stores, hardware stores and other secular entities “essential,” was a serious First Amendment infringement on their religious liberty. Cuomo dug himself a hole when he admitted in a press conference that his order is “most impactful on houses of worship.”
One of the most interesting aspects of this case was the reaction to the ruling.
We would expect secular militants to be angry, and they were. No organization has exerted more time, money, and energy using Covid-19 as a pretext to abridge religious liberties more than Americans United for Separation of Church and State. This is an organization founded by anti-Catholics after World War II; to this day it remains hostile to Catholics, as well as to some other religious affiliations. It filed an amicus brief in this case.
“So far this year, Americans United has filed 40 other amicus briefs in courts across the country in similar cases involving requests for religious exemptions from COVID-19 public health orders.” That was its official reaction to the high court decision affirming religious liberty. In addition, it has issued over two dozen news releases and opinion pieces on this subject, all of which stress that it would be unconstitutional to allow religious exemptions to public health restrictions.
What was most illuminating was the reaction of liberal religious publications and organizations. They were in a jam: if they approved of the Supreme Court ruling, it would put them on the side of religious conservatives; if they disapproved, it would put them on the side of secular militants. So what did they do? They punted. For the most part, they took the cowardly way out and said nothing.
America and Commonweal are liberal Catholic media outlets. They said not a word. The National Catholic Reporter is a dissident media source that rejects many Church teachings; it also said nothing. Sojourners, a liberal Protestant publication, and Religion News Service, which hosts a variety of liberal religions writers, also went mute.
Crux, a liberal Catholic website, posted one piece by its editor, John Allen. He tried ever so hard to be objective, but he ultimately failed. “Contrary to popular mythology, most secular liberals aren’t hostile to religion, merely indifferent.” That may be true for individuals, but it is certainly not true of secular liberal organizations that opine and act on religious liberty issues. That’s what counts.
The silence on the part of religious liberals to the Supreme Court ruling is daunting. It shows their uneasiness with granting churches and other houses of worship the same rights as afforded many secular institutions. Indeed, it says much more than that. Religious media outlets should be expected to affirm a special place in constitutional law for religious institutions—that is what the First Amendment ordains! Their failure to do so is telling.
————————- Bill Donohue (@CatholicLeague) is a sociologist and president of the Catholic League
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by Paul Jacob, Contributing Author: “One can squint and see ballot measures as a kind of super-survey of the electorate, with much larger samples and actual stakes,” wrote Sasha Issenberg over the weekend in The Washington Post. “The results then can be interpreted as a pure representation of voter preferences on discrete issues, without the vexing overlay of partisan polarization, incumbency, candidate personalities, scandal or gaffes.”*
Which “can be seductive,” he warns in an essay entitled, “Ballot measures don’t tell us anything about what voters really want.”
Nothing?
Mr. Issenberg is willing to toss out these results because “ballot measure contests operate within a framework so different from elections for public office — with few financial limits”** and “lopsided spending.”
He cites Florida’s Amendment 2, pushing the state’s minimum-wage up to $15, where the yes-side spent nearly 10 times as much as the no-side. And California’s victorious Proposition 22, which he argues “declined to protect gig workers” even though that is exactly what it does, and where supporters also outspent opponents roughly ten to one.
Issenberg also points to marijuana-related issues passing while widely outspending opponents. “In New Jersey, where more than two-thirds of voters said yes to legalization,” he explains, “supporters spent 65 times more than the leading opposition committee . . .”
But that only amounts to proponents spending half-a-million, which doesn’t go very far in Jersey.
While Issenberg, the author, journalist, and UCLA political science teacher, acknowledges that “a higher minimum wage and marijuana legalization are broadly popular” and don’t require greater spending, he argues that lopsided “multiples” of spending, like in New Jersey, “are unimaginable in the world of people running for office.”
Really?
Just try. Numerous candidates for office run without any opposition at all or completely token competition. Take Illinois’s 4th congressional district, where incumbent Democrat Jesús Garcia outspent his Republican challenger by a margin of 704 to one — $593,219 to $843.
Look at the ballot measures decided weeks ago. Don’t squint; put your glasses on, if you need them. And unlike Issenberg, believe your eyes.
This is Common Sense. I’m Paul Jacob.
—————— Paul Jacob (@Common_Sense_PJ) is author of Common Sense which provides daily commentary about the issues impacting America and about the citizens who are doing something about them. He is also President of the Liberty Initiative Fund (LIFe) as well as Citizens in Charge Foundation. Jacob is a contributing author on the ARRA News Service.
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by Marvin L. Covault, Lt General, US Army retired: When was the last time you heard someone say, “Wow, I can’t wait to see another campaign ad on TV”? In 2020 candidates spent about $14 billion dollars on their campaigns. 14 billion. Most of it a waste of money. Most of it we did not want to hear/see/read. And then there were the billionaires who openly tried to buy elections with tens and hundreds of millions of dollars. The whole thing is disgusting.
If there are two thoughts that emanate from 2020 it is the need for new election standards (see WE NEED A NEW LAW FOR NATIONAL ELECTIONS published 22 Nov, 2020) and campaign finance reform.
Campaign finance PRO AND CON: There are those who believe strict disclosure requirements and donation limits impinge upon the rights to privacy and free expression, hampering participation in the political process. Others claim that current federal campaign laws do not go far enough to mitigate corruption and the influence of undisclosed special interests.
My positions on financial contributions to a political campaign are as follows:
– One, it should be an action between the candidate and the voter. Period.
– Two, the politicians will complain, “How can I get outside financing?” You shouldn’t be able to and that’s good news.
– Three, the lobbyists will complain, “How am I going to influence the candidate?” You won’t be able to, and that’s good news.
– Four, the candidates will complain, “How can I afford TV advertising?” You may have to cut back on campaign spending and that’s good news.
Let’s begin by defining campaign financing that is being practiced today.
COMMUNICATION COSTS: This category applies primarily to unions, trade groups and other member organizations who expressly advocate the election or defeat of a federal candidate. Comment: Why should a few leaders of organizations with millions of members think they know best who an individual voter should support?
INDEPENDENT EXPENDITURE, aka DARK MONEY: Money spent on political advertising in support of or against a particular candidate from outside a candidate’s own election organization. Generally, there is no limit placed on independent expenditures.
Comment: “No limit” is a euphemism for out of control. There is a reason it’s called “dark money”. The nonpartisan Campaign Legal Center said the dark-money provision ensures “that the door to foreign dollars in U.S. elections remains wide open through secret contributions to these ostensibly nonpolitical groups that run campaign ads without any disclosure of their donors.”
SOFT MONEY: Unlimited amount of money given to a political party from any source, including individuals, corporations and unions. These contributions cannot be used to advocate for the election or defeat of a particular candidate. Comment: the political party is not running for reelection, candidates are. Soft money is soft on reality.
POLITICAL ACTION COMMITTEES: A group organized for the purpose of raising and spending money to defeat and elect candidates. There are two types of political action committees:
One, political committees established and administered by corporations, labor unions, membership organizations or trade associations. These committees can only solicit contributions from individuals associated with the sponsoring organization. Comment: Is “solicit” from subordinates synonymous with “contribute or else…….”?
Secondly, committees not sponsored by or connected to corporations, labor unions, membership organizations or trade associations and are free to solicit contributions from the general public. Comment: Remember the “general public” includes all the billionaires.
SUPER PACS: Groups who raise unlimited sums of money from corporations, unions, associations and individuals, then spend unlimited sums to overtly advocate for or against political candidates. Comment. “Unlimited” also has unlimited downsides. How beholding can a candidate become to the PAC members and their policy positions?
HARD MONEY: Money given directly to a political candidate by an individual. Comment: Finally, we have something that begins to make sense.
The Federal Election Commission (FEC) is a federal regulatory agency charged with administering and enforcing the nation’s campaign finance laws. The commission was created by the US Congress 1975. The FEC is authorized to, 1) “disclose campaign finance information” and 2) “enforce the provisions of the law, such as limits and prohibitions on contributions.” Comment: They cannot accomplish either mission very well given the “unlimited” and “undisclosed” elements contained in campaign finance laws, rules and procedures.
Here is how to fix it, all of it, with one simple law. The law should say:
Campaign financing for all federal candidates will consist of one, and only one, source. The source is the voter who is geographically associated with the candidate. For example, any registered voter in the US may donate to a presidential candidate; any registered voter in a state may contribute to their US senatorial candidates; and any registered voter in a congressional district may contribute to a House of Representative contest.
Comment of paragraph 1: Why does a contributor need to be a registered voter? A successful democracy provides rights and privileges equally to every citizen. But along with those cherished rights and privileges comes responsibilities. Freedom isn’t free; this is perhaps most obvious to those who have served/are serving in the US military. But every citizen should be responsible enough to register to vote a be prepared to support democracy with a vote. Civics 101: 1) Be proud to be a citizen. 2) At age 18 register to vote. 3) Use your freedom of speech to verbally support your candidates and/or make a campaign contribution. 4) Vote in every election. About 100 million eligible voters did not vote in the 2016 election.
2. The amount that can be contributed by any single registered voter to any single candidate cannot exceed $1000. This $1000 limit also applies to the candidates themselves.
Comment on paragraph 2: The candidates will scream, “but I cannot campaign on that small amount of money”. Yes, you can. Every candidate will be under the same restrictions. For the first time, the contribution playing field will be leveled. We-the-people will not be subjected to a continuous barrage of ads we don’t watch/listen to/or read about. The billionaires, just like you, can contribute a total of $3000; $1000 to a presidential candidate, a Senator (or both Senators on the rare occasion when both are running) and a Representative.
3. Anyone found to have contributed more than $1000 to a single candidate will be guilty of a federal offence and subject to a fine of $25,000 each offence.
4. Every contribution must contain the social security number of the contributor and each candidate must keep scrupulous accounting records of every contribution that can be accessed, sorted and reviewed by both name and SSN.
5. Concurrently, every federal candidate must scrupulously and continuously account for every campaign expenditure
6. For every national election, the Federal Election Commission will have temporary auditors operating in all 435 Congressional Districts and will have open access to every candidate’s campaign finance records. The FEC auditors operating in each Congressional District will also audit senatorial and presidential campaigns. FEC auditors will, throughout the campaign, audit candidates’ books with the objective of aligning contributions and expenditures.
7. During each calendar year of a national election, the FEC will create some number of panels consisting of five retired federal judges for each panel. All accounting irregularities will be immediately referred to a FEC panel of judges. If the panel finds conclusive evidence of gross campaign finance irregularities, the candidate is subject to being disqualified.
8. The Democrat and Republican National Committees will not distribute any funds to any candidates.
Conclusions: During the primary season leading up to the 2020 elections, Senator Bernie Sanders announced that he raised $34.5 million from an average donation of $18.53 in the fourth quarter of 2019. Yes, small donations from dedicated voters can add up to enough money.
How many times have we heard the accusation that some politician is beholden to some lobbyist or some corporation because they were bought and payed for with campaign contributions? The answer is too often; this can be and should be stopped.
In 2016, 60 Minutes broadcast an expose unveiling the outrageous phone banking operations of an uncontrollable D.C. political machine. They reported, “Your newly elected Congressional representative is expected to spend half of his or her working hours dialing for dollars at a secret phone bank near Capitol Hill.” Did you elect a full-time telemarketer or a lawmaker?
This entire campaign finance mess can be cleaned up with one, simple, 300-word, 8-paragraph, one-page law. If you agree with this law send it to your US Representative and Senators.
Voter fraud and voter apathy are threatening our democracy. They both can and must get fixed with election and campaign finance reform laws.
——————–
Marvin Covault, Lt.Gen (Ret) shared this article. H/T McIntosh Enterprises.
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—————————– Tags:On The Lookout, Gov Walz, cares more about, enforcing lockdowns, for business, than he does, mobs burning them downTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
by Daniel Greenfield: After failing to deal with months of violent riots in Portland, Oregon Governor Kate Brown announced that she instead wanted the police to go after families celebrating Thanksgiving.
When asked whether Oregonians should call the police on their neighbors if they have more than 6 people in their homes for Thanksgiving, she replied, “This is no different than what happens if there’s a party down the street… they call law enforcement.”
Except law enforcement has no interest in replying.
The Marion County Sheriff’s office, whose jurisdiction includes the state capital, declined, stating, “We cannot arrest or enforce our way out of the pandemic.”
When Governor Cuomo of New York, whose order forcing nursing homes to accept infected coronavirus patients may have killed as many as 11,000 senior citizens, tried to enlist law enforcement in his crackdown on Thanksgiving, the sheriffs of New York also wouldn’t do it.
The Steuben County Sheriff’s Office assured that “the men and women of the Steuben County Sheriff’s Office will not be peeking in your window or attempting to enter your property to count the number of persons at your table on Thanksgiving.”
“I can’t see how devoting our resources to counting cars in our citizens’ driveways or investigating how much turkey or dressing they’ve purchased is for the public good,” the Saratoga County Sheriff’s Office objected.
“This national holiday has created longstanding family traditions that are at the heart of America, and these traditions should not be stopped or interrupted by Governor Cuomo’s mandates,” the Erie County Sheriff’s Office declared.
“With regard to the Thanksgiving Executive Order, the Fulton County Sheriff’s Office will NOT be enforcing it,” another office stated, “So don’t feel a need to hide cars, cover with leaves or walk 3 blocks so your house doesn’t become a target of the Governors EO.”
Democrats and their media have blamed this rebellion on Republican sheriffs in conservative areas, but Suffolk County Sheriff Errol Toulon Jr is a black Democrat and his office still opted out of the “enforcement of Thanksgiving gatherings”.
While Governor Cuomo fumed that this Irish Democracy was, “frightening to democracy”, a Buffalo print shop began selling stickers of Cuomo’s giant head peering into windows.
Next door in New Jersey, Governor Murphy threatened to be, “as all over it as we can be.”
Then he was caught on a viral video dining out with his family. Meanwhile, the Howell Township police chief stated, “I wasn’t going to have my police officers going knocking on doors and ruining somebody’s holiday just to check how many people are inside their house.”
The law enforcement rebellion wasn’t new in California. It had been going on for some time.
After Governor Newsom issued his latest curfew, the sheriffs of Los Angeles County, Orange County, Riverside County, Sacramento County, Tulare County, Fresno County, El Dorado County, and others announced that they would not be enforcing it with either tickets or arrests.
And no one would be tampering with Thanksgiving.
“The Sacramento County Sheriff’s Office will not be determining—including entering any home or business—compliance with, or enforcing compliance of, any health or emergency orders related to curfews, staying at home, Thanksgiving or other social gatherings,” the Sacramento County Sheriff stated. “We will not dispatch officers for these purposes.”
“From the very beginning, we have not enforced these orders. We are not going to make criminals out of normally law-abiding citizens,” Fresno County Sheriff Margaret Mims said.
“It’s not knocking on people’s doors on Thanksgiving and saying, ‘You’ve had more than eight or 10 people,’ and it’s not to make criminals out of everyday working people,” Butler County Sheriff Richard Jones said.
The law enforcement uprisings in New York, California, Oregon, and Ohio are part of a larger trend with local police departments indicating that they don’t want to be the mask police.
A study in the Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology Online found that only 10% of police departments surveyed were acting as the mask police while 70% encouraged following the rules. This attitude by law enforcement forced some of the biggest cities in the country to bypass the police and utilize other means of enforcing their lockdowns and arbitrary decrees.
In Los Angeles, violators were threatened with having their water and power shut off. In New York City, a legion of city inspectors were pulled away from other duties to swarm Orthodox Jewish areas in Brooklyn after Governor Cuomo announced a crackdown on religious Jews.
The use of inspectors rather than police has become a widespread and illegal tactic for targeting small businesses, but has reached its limit as most businesses can’t survive if they close down.
The early months in the pandemic saw a boom in surveillance technologies, including drone flybys and infrared remote scans, but most police departments didn’t want anything to do with them.
A small number of police departments adopted the drones and made headlines for all the wrong reasons. Not only did most people hate them, but they also proved to be useless. Police departments that tried using the drones to break up large gatherings found that people wouldn’t listen. And the surveillance capabilities of the drones had been vastly overhyped.
As the Black Lives Matter riots broke out, police departments shifted away from coronavirus enforcement to cope with the violence and avoid being caught up in viral videos. It was around this time that the increased crime rate brought on by the riots and the mass jailbreak of prison inmates to protect them from the virus tied up the resources of underfunded departments.
Coronavirus enforcement, something most departments and officers didn’t want to do anyway, was the first casualty of the new dangerous environment brought on by the BLM riots.
Law enforcement had only been able to commit the spare resources to coronavirus enforcement because of a drop in crime rates early in the lockdowns, but once crime rates soared and cities and counties hit highs that hadn’t been seen in decades or generations, all of that ended. The budget cuts brought on by the collapse of small businesses and police defunding also left local law enforcement without enough resources to even answer calls, let alone play mask police.
And most law enforcement personnel are resentful of having been hung out to dry, robbed of resources and political support by Democrat governors and mayors, and then told to enforce widely unpopular shutdowns and mask fines by those same politicians.
Democrat politicians can’t defund the police and expect them to shut down Thanksgiving.
“It’s ironic on the heel of these cries to ‘defund the police’ and limit their response to what some perceive as non-emergency calls that the police department is now being asked to police family gatherings during the holiday season,” the president of Akron’s police union objected.
Not all law enforcement personnel have opted out of coronavirus enforcement. Elected sheriffs have the easiest time shrugging crackdowns away. Urban police chiefs appointed by mayors can’t put out dismissive press releases as easily, but they have made it a very low priority.
The struggle to enforce coronavirus lockdowns and codes without much support from police departments is a sign of just how challenging the post-police vision of the Democrats will be.
Democrats have turned to inspectors to fine small businesses and pull their licenses, but the inspectors are running into angry small business owners and patriotic crowds.
The Anne Arundel County Health Department was forced to cancel evening enforcement and daytime enforcement in rowdier bars. It also had to stop sending female inspectors. After Democrat Milwaukee health inspectors faced a backlash for harassing a pro-Trump rally, they no longer go anywhere without a police escort. That defeats the purpose of police defunding.
The bigger purpose of police defunding is to fundamentally shift enforcement priorities from fighting crime to pursuing social agendas, and while police departments dutifully rack up hate crime citations and participate in community policing events, their mission hasn’t changed.
The coronavirus lockdowns succeeded in dividing the country and destroying small businesses on an unprecedented scale, but they failed to turn America into East Germany. Instead the fault lines of the pandemic revealed that much of the country would not go along with the crackdown.
And the men and women of law enforcement, for the most part, did the right thing.
Even in difficult times, that ought to give us hope for the future of our country. And this Thanksgiving, it is another thing about this great nation to be thankful for.
————————– Daniel Greenfield (@Sultanknish) is Shillman Journalism Fellow at the David Horowitz Freedom Center and an investigative journalist and writer focusing on radical Left and Islamic terrorism.
Tags:Daniel Greenfield, Cops Refused, to be, Thanksgiving PoliceTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
by Penna Dexter: The chaos that characterized much of our electoral process this year is no shock and here’s why:
When Democrats retook the House of Representatives two years ago, they surprised many of their constituents with the bill they unveiled as their first priority. H.R.1 did not become law, but this election gave us a look at some of its core ideas.
In the name of “election reform,” H.R.1 would provide a vehicle for the federal government to dictate how states run their elections—a massive power grab. It contains various provisions aimed at attracting voters who are likely to support leftist candidates and causes.
The bill mandates that states register voters automatically using government databases, including federal welfare rolls. It makes college and university campuses voter registration hubs. It requires that states register voters at age sixteen, two years in advance of their eligibility to vote. Expanding voter rolls is okay. Diluting them with people who are not interested enough to register themselves is a bad idea.
And then there are the provisions that allow for chaos and opportunity for fraud. Do any of these sound familiar?
H.R.1 mandates that states offer early voting, preferably several weeks of it. And states would have to allow Election Day and online voter registrations. The most powerful tool of all for chaos is the bill’s requirement for “no fault” absentee ballots. These are what we now know as mail-in ballots, which allow anyone to vote by mail for any reason. What could go wrong? We now know.
Let me repeat. H.R. 1 did not become law. The Wall Street Journal’s Kim Strassel highlights the Speaker’s attempt to “jam some of its provisions into coronavirus bills.” But, as Ms. Strassel points out, they weren’t needed. We had the coronavirus, giving the Left the opportunity to launch “scores of lawsuits to force states to adopt its provisions.”
This reimagining of the electoral process brings murky outcomes and will destroy free elections.
———————– Penna Dexter is an author, lecturer, visiting professor and radio host and contributor on nationally syndicated Point of View and the “Probe” radio programs.
Tags:Penna Dexter, Viewpoints, Point of View, Reimagining Elections /b> To share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
by Dr. Walter E. Williams: Some of the confusion in thinking about matters of race stems from the ambiguity in the terms that we use. I am going to take a stab at suggesting operational definitions for a couple terms in our discussion of race. Good analytical thinking requires that we do not confuse one behavioral phenomenon with another.
Let’s start with “discrimination.” Discrimination is the act of choice, and choice is a necessary fact of life. Our lives are spent discriminating for or against different activities and people. Some people shop at Wegmans and thus discriminate against Food Giant. Some students discriminate against George Mason University in favor of attending Temple University. Many people racially discriminate by marrying within their own race rather than seeking partners of other races. People discriminate in many ways in forming contracts and other interrelationships. In each case, one person is benefitted by discrimination and another is harmed or has reduced opportunities.
What about prejudice? Prejudice is a useful term that is often misused. Its Latin root is praejudicium, meaning “an opinion or judgment formed … without due examination.” Thus, we might define a prejudicial act as one where a decision is made on the basis of incomplete information. The decision-maker might use stereotypes as a substitute for more complete information.
We find that in a world of costly information, people seek to economize on information costs. Here is a simple yet intuitively appealing example. You are headed off to work. When you open your front door and step out, you are greeted by a full-grown tiger. The uninteresting prediction is that the average person would endeavor to leave the area in great dispatch. Why he would do so is more interesting. It is unlikely that the person’s fear and decision to seek safety is based on any detailed information held about that particular tiger. More likely, his decision to seek safety is based on tiger folklore, what he has been told about tigers or how he has seen other tigers behave. He prejudges that tiger. He makes his decision based on incomplete information. He uses tiger stereotypes.
If a person did not prejudge that tiger, then he would endeavor to seek more information prior to his decision to run. He might attempt to pet the tiger, talk to him and seek safety only if the tiger responded in a menacing fashion. The average person probably would not choose that strategy. He would surmise that the expected cost of getting more information about the tiger is greater than the expected benefit. He would probably conclude, “All I need to know is he’s a tiger, and he’s probably like the rest of them.” By observing this person’s behavior, there’s no way one can say unambiguously whether the person likes or dislikes tigers.
Similarly, the cheaply observed fact that an individual is short, an amputee, black, or a woman provides what some people deem sufficient information for decision-making or predicting the presence of some other attribute that’s more costly to observe. For example, if asked to identify individuals with doctorate degrees in physics only by observing race and sex, most of us would assign a higher probability that white or Asian men would have such degrees than black men or women. Suppose you are a police chief and you’re trying to find the culprits breaking into cars, would you spend any of your resources investigating people in senior citizen homes? Using an observable attribute as a proxy for an unobservable or costly-to-observe attribute lies at the heart of decision theory.
Lastly, is there a moral dimension to discrimination and prejudice? Should one be indifferent about whether he attends Temple University or George Mason University and thus makes his decision by flipping a coin? Is it more righteous to use the same technique when choosing to marry within or outside his race? Is it morally superior to be indifferent with respect to race in marriage, employment and socializing? Can one make a rigorous moral case for government coercion to determine whether one attends Temple University or George Mason University, marries outside of his race, or is indifferent about the racial characteristics of whom he employs?
——————– Walter Williams (@WE_Williams) is an American economist, social commentator, and author of over 150 publications. He has a Ph.D. and M.A. in Economics from the UCLA and B.A. in economics from California State University. He also holds a Doctor of Humane Letters from Virginia Union University and Grove City College, Doctor of Laws from Washington and Jefferson College. He has served on the faculty of George Mason University in Fairfax, Virginia, as John M. Olin Distinguished Professor of Economics, since 1980. Visit his website: WalterEWilliams.com and view a list of other articles and works.
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by Caroline Glick: Last month, in a small town in West Virginia, a 74-year-old husband and his invalid wife were hospitalized for several days after eating rotten food the husband fished out of a dumpster.
For the past decade and a half, former Pentagon intelligence analyst and operative Col. (retired) Lawrence (Larry) Franklin and his wife Patricia have lived in utter destitution. During his 35 years of service, Col. Franklin was celebrated as a brilliant, fearless intelligence officer by his colleagues and bosses at the Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA), in the U.S. Air Force and in the Office of the Secretary of Defense. Now, the aging hero who saved countless U.S. servicemen lives in war zones is a broken man. Col. Franklin subsists on the meager wages he earns from washing dishes, cleaning septic tanks and parking cars, while also taking care of his invalid wife.
Col. Franklin’s fall from grace is a tale that cries out for justice.
In 2003, Col. Franklin, a survivor of the 9/11 attack on the Pentagon, was working as the Iran desk officer in the Office of the Secretary of Defense. Then-Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld needed constant information on Iran: namely, its efforts to undermine the U.S. war efforts in Iraq and Afghanistan, its sprawling terror networks and its burgeoning nuclear weapons program.
In the framework of his duties, Col. Franklin was authorized to share intelligence with U.S. allies, including Israel. He had a long-standing, warm relationship with Israeli military and intelligence officers dating back to his tenure as Air Force Defense Attaché in Israel during the 1990s. Col. Franklin also had close contacts with officials who worked on Iran-related issues for the pro-Israel lobby AIPAC.
Throughout his presidency, George W. Bush‘s Iran policy was a bundle of contradictions. The State Department and the CIA supported appeasing Iran and wishing away the threat it posed to U.S. forces in Iraq and Afghanistan, as well as growing evidence of its nuclear program. Rumsfeld, then-Vice President Dick Cheney and some members of the National Security Council believed Iran could not be appeased, that its threat needed to be confronted head-on.
Facing a split among his top advisors, Bush opted for incoherence, refusing to issue clear guidance that would put him on one side against the other.
Col. Franklin’s long years studying and contending with Iran as an intelligence analyst and operative convinced him that the hawks were right. In a conversation with Newsweek earlier this week, he explained that in the lead-up to the 2003 U.S.-led invasion of Iraq, he became aware that Iran intended to turn the impending war in Iraq into a new Vietnam War by waging an insurgency against U.S. forces with unconventional terror and militia forces. Concerned that President Bush was insufficiently aware of Iran’s intentions, Col. Franklin discussed the Iranian threat with senior AIPAC officials in the hopes that they would communicate his concerns to National Security Council officials who, in turn, would report them to the president.
There was nothing out of the ordinary in Franklin’s actions. National security officials in all parts of the U.S. government often meet with civilian lobbyists, think tank scholars and other relevant officials, and discuss the issues of the day with them in the hopes of advancing their policy goals.
What Franklin hadn’t realized, at the time, was that the feud within the Bush administration regarding Iran was no mere policy dispute. As Franklin soon discovered, there was a deep-seated anti-Semitic edge to the positions of some of the administration’s Iran doves. They believed that Israel mischaracterized Iran as a threat to serve its own interests. Israel’s Jewish American supporters inside and outside government, these officials insisted, were trying to push the U.S. to adopt confrontational positions against otherwise-harmless Iran in support of the Jewish state. This anti-Semitic view was shared by some FBI investigators, who saw Jewish American support for the U.S.-Israel alliance as a sign of potential treason.
Beginning in 2003, some officers in the FBI and the DIA began investigating Jewish Pentagon and AIPAC officials for alleged spying for Israel. When they noticed Col. Franklin, a devout Irish Catholic, meeting with AIPAC officials, they brought him in for a series of friendly conversations.
In his telephone conversation with Newsweek this week, Col. Franklin recalled the intense anti-Semitism of the investigators. One of them, who served as a Middle East area specialist in the DIA, had a Hezbollah flag on his desk. The man insisted that the terror group that killed 243 Marines in Beirut in 1983, and was long viewed as the most dangerous terror group in the world, was not actually a terror group at all. An FBI agent bragged to Col. Franklin about his uncle who had served as a Nazi general in World War II.
Initially unsuspicious of their intentions, Col. Franklin willingly spoke to the investigators without legal counsel. But as his interrogations went on, he realized that his interlocutors were only interested in information about Jews—particularly, Jews at the Pentagon. The investigators subscribed to a conspiracy theory that placed American Jews and Israel at the heart of America’s troubles. When their bigotry became obvious, Col. Franklin stopped cooperating and confronted his investigators from the DIA and FBI about their anti-Semitism. They, in turn, accused him of being a closet Jew and opened an espionage probe against him.
In mid-2004, 30 agents escorted Franklin to his home and conducted a 10-hour search. They interrogated his elderly father and his 15-year-old son. They found classified documents that Col. Franklin had brought home from work so that he would be able to study them until late at night, while he cared for his ailing wife.
Col. Franklin, along with the two AIPAC officials, were charged with “spying for Israel.” While the charges against the AIPAC officials were dismissed five years later, Col. Franklin, bankrupt, had already pleaded guilty for taking home classified documents and having an “unauthorized discussion” with the AIPAC officials about a “classified subject”—despite the fact he shared no classified information with them.
Wanting to make an example of Col. Franklin, prosecutors in the case asked the judge to sentence him to 12 years in prison. But after the charges against the AIPAC officials were dismissed and after receiving letters of support for Col. Franklin from members of the top echelon of the U.S. national security community, who attested to his unswerving patriotism and enormous contribution to U.S. national security, the judge sentenced Col. Franklin to 10 months in a halfway house in order to enable him to work and take care of his wife. But because of his felony conviction, Col. Franklin was stripped of all his military benefits and pensions, rendering him destitute and incapable of properly supporting his family.
Time has proven the prescience of Franklin’s warnings. Iran is now on the precipice of a nuclear arsenal. It has fueled wars in Syria, Lebanon, Gaza, Iraq, Afghanistan and Yemen. And as Col. Franklin warned, the Pentagon last year released previously classified details about Iran’s direct role in killing U.S. forces in Iraq. According to the Pentagon data, Iran was directly responsible for one out of every six soldiers killed in combat in Iraq from 2003 through 2011.
Col. Franklin’s personal suffering speaks to the main goal of his persecutors. The fact is that his “crime” happens all the time in Washington. Government employees remove classified documents from classified locations all the time. Whether it is Hillary Clinton‘s server, former CIA Director John Deutch’s transfer of classified information to his unclassified home computer or thousands of mid-level bureaucrats who print out documents (as Col. Franklin did) to work from home, the decision to charge Col. Franklin with a felony count of mishandling classified documents—rather than demote him, reprimand him or charge him with a misdemeanor—constituted an inherently selective, and therefore prejudicial, prosecution. So too, his communications with the AIPAC officials were not a crime. The Justice Department dropped the charges against the AIPAC officials because they couldn’t prove either criminal intent or harm caused to the U.S. government. Moreover, the Justice Department had to acknowledge that its conversations with Col. Franklin were no different than its conversations with countless other administration officials far more senior than Col. Franklin.
The problem with Col. Franklin’s plight isn’t simply that he is a long-suffering innocent patriot. It’s that Col. Franklin was targeted and prosecuted, and his life was destroyed, to advance an anti-Semitic political agenda. That agenda sought to make an example of a mid-level bureaucrat in order to send a signal to other public servants that they shouldn’t oppose a policy of appeasing Iran, and that they must have nothing to do with Jews inside or outside of government who consider Iran a threat to America.
Earlier this week, Col. Franklin’s pro bono lawyer Allen Lowy submitted an official request to President Donald Trump to pardon Col. Franklin and restore his military and civilian service pensions and benefits. As the U.S. and its allies look toward a Biden administration that is committed to reinstating Obama’s policies of nuclear appeasement toward Iran and—at best—diffidence toward Israel, a pardon for Franklin would send a clear message that patriotic concern about Iran, a U.S. enemy, and thinking well of Israel and American Jews are not crimes.
————————– Caroline Glick is contributes to numerous publications including Newsweek and the Director of the David Horowitz Freedom Center’s Israel Security Project. For more information on Ms. Glick’s work, visit carolineglick.com.
Tags:Caroline Glick, Call for Late Justice, for Col. Larry Franklin, Newsweek, To share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
by Conrad Black: The rising chorus of those demanding the finalization of Joe Biden’s election victory or merely deluging the president with sanctimonious claptrap about “affirming the system” and being a gentleman and practitioner of fair play and good sportsmanship, ignores both the law and the underlying significance of the arguments.
It can scarcely be coincidental that in 44 states the election went off smoothly and in most of them almost all of the votes were counted effortlessly within about six hours of the closing of the polls. There have been no allegations whatever of irregularities or skulduggery by Republican-governed states apart from Georgia.
The Democrats began a comprehensive assault on the electoral system several years ago in many states; they consecrated great resources to electing the secretaries of state who effectively administer federal elections within their states; they agitated and litigated in many states to change voting practices and to facilitate ballot harvesting through unsolicited mass mailings to the entirety of the voter rolls and the collection and delivery of ballots with increasingly dubious verification that they represent the will of the voters ostensibly casting them.
Many of these processes were challenged and proved unsuccessful. But the movement to alter the election process decisively in favor of those who could exploit mass mailings to the whole voters’ lists, which inevitably include a great many people who have died or moved, was greatly strengthened by the onset of the coronavirus pandemic.
The public health crisis was seized upon as an excuse for a general move to mail-in voting. President Trump warned that this was an open door to massive electoral fraud but the media generally ignored this and the Democrats responded with another campaign of malicious falsehoods accusing the administration and, in particular, the postmaster general of engaging in “voter suppression” and reducing the effective right to vote of minorities.
Neither the Democrats nor the national political and social media organizations that made their campaign for them (in deference to the infirm and inarticulate candidate, Joe Biden), had any expectation of a close election. So out of touch were Democratic leaders with their former supporters in the working- and lower-middle classes, and so unreservedly did they drink their own bathwater as administered by their puppet polling organizations, they assumed that the ability they had acquired to manipulate votes could be confined to the four democratically governed states of Michigan, Nevada, Pennsylvania, and Wisconsin, as well as Georgia.
In a phrase borrowed from their effort to deny Mr. Trump election in 2016, this was “an insurance policy.”
It is difficult to interpret the voting results from those states in any other light. The president led all of them on election night; most or all of the counting inexplicably stopped, and large ballot ”drops” in the middle of the night miraculously delivered the states to Mr. Biden, with the further assistance of completely inadequate procedures for verification of authenticity and counting oversight by both parties.
The president alleged fraud from the beginning and the response from the beginning has been that he and those making the argument for him failed to produce convincing evidence. This is in some cases a genuine lack of familiarity with how civil lawsuits proceed: a statement of claim is made, and the evidence is adduced later.
In other cases, it is the predictable attempt of the media to discredit the Trump challenges in advance by heaping abuse on its credibility and relying upon all those NeverTrump Republicans who have been hiding under their beds for the past four years to come out and fatuously urge acceptance of the result, even if some aspects of it are suspect.
It is unfortunate that there appears to be some dissension amongst the president’s counsel, as the formidable and battle-proven Sidney Powell, counsel for Lt. General Michael Flynn and a former prosecutor who has lifted the rock on the corruption of the entire plea-bargain system and of American criminal justice generally, has apparently had a falling out with Rudy Giuliani, the most prominent of the president’s lawyers.
Ms. Powell said on Saturday that the coming lawsuit in Georgia would be “Biblical,” and it was confirmed in a separate statement by Jordan Sekulow, another member of the president’s legal team, that the lawsuit — when it comes — will be a shocking revelation of manipulation and vote altering. There are strenuous allegations of programs for election-rigging built into the electronic vote counting equipment, and extravagant claims of financial connections to Venezuela and other Communist regimes.
There is room to criticize the tactics of Mr. Giuliani and Ms. Powell in opening up their case before what they called ”the court of public opinion” before they had anything ready for a court of law, and getting their claim so far out ahead of any production of evidence invited skepticism about such extraordinary unsubstantiated charges.
Tactical suavity has never been one of the hallmarks of the Trump political phenomenon, and although he warned for months prior to the election of the dangers of unprecedented voting fraud by use of the mail, he and his party seem not to have been very well prepared for it.
But the president’s declared objective remains to assure that all legal votes are counted and that no illegal votes are counted, and although that becomes difficult when the anonymity of voting has been preserved by separating mailed ballots from anything that might be used to authenticate them, there remain enough questions about the sudden arrival of lopsided bulk votes for Biden and the lack of bipartisan oversight of counting to justify and require meticulous review.
If the operation of the system on the tight deadlines imposed by the Constitution, as well as the evident reluctance of Chief Justice Roberts to touch a case that could determine the outcome of the presidential election preclude any remedy, Republicans will have to remember that the authority resides with the state legislatures to send delegates to the Electoral College.
It is possible, based on all we know now, that the president’s counsel, whether the estimable Sidney Powell is among them or not, will not be able to raise a case that gets to the Supreme Court in time. It is possible that for all the fanfare and the herniating masses of affidavits, there will not be a case that rises above the traditional occurrence of voting irregularities and appears not to disturb the result of the election.
But if profound doubts are raised about the validity of the apparent election result, and there is not adequate access to the courts to address them, Republican state legislators should be ready to act where possible to prevent injustice by their choice of Electoral College members.
Any such suggestion clashes violently with American civic traditions. But for the single apparent reason that he has assaulted the functioning of the almost permanent federal state and the elected representatives in both parties who protect it, President Trump has been unprecedentedly and often illegally harassed and obstructed since even before he was elected.
If it is now attempted to remove him illegally from the presidency, every constitutional means, including the explicit right of state legislators to determine the identity of those who vote in the Electoral College, should be applied to maintain the Constitution.
Special counsel John Durham has dragged his feet unconscionably in not producing a timely analysis of the shady origins of the Trump-Russia collusion fraud. Durham followed upon John Huber, whom former Attorney General Jeff Sessions claimed was investigating the same subject, but he didn’t do anything.
There is a disconcerting pattern of endless illegal harassments and obstructions of President Trump and every available legal means must be used to assure that he is not pushed out of office improperly, and by the same measure, if he has lost the election, that that result is the consequence of a fairly conducted and tabulated election.
————————- Conrad Black is a Canadian writer with an interesting past. Article shared in The New York Sun
Tags:Conrad Black, The New York Sun, How Odd, 44 States Voted, Without Allegations, Of SkullduggeryTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
by Michelle Malkin: Participants in Pfizer and Moderna’s COVID-19 vaccine clinical trials can’t stop blabbing. The media is overflowing with testimonials explaining “Why I Volunteered” or “What It Was Like To Participate In The Clinical Trial For Moderna’s COVID-19 Vaccine.” Loudmouth liberal writer Molly Jong-Fast publicly begged for beatification:
“Call Me the Joan of Arc of Coronavirus Vaccine Trials,” Jong-Fast’s ode to herself in The New York Times implored.
A striking number of advocacy journalists milked their status as clinical trial enrollees, including Washington Post staffer Walter Isaacson, CNN affiliate anchor Dawn Baker, USA Today writers Jackie Hajdenberg and Lindy Washburn, BBC science journalist Richard Fisher, Reuters writer Steve Stecklow and John Yang of the “PBS Newshour.” They describe their experiences in emotional terms — “empowering,” “making history” and “a miracle for genetic medicine.” Most did not bother to hide their pro-Big Pharma perspectives.
Given their breaches of journalistic neutrality, it’s hard to imagine they were able to contain themselves at the lab, either. They downplayed vaccine side effects and promoted universal immunization. Jong-Fast wrote that a doctor involved in her trial divulged to her that “people had so few symptoms that they thought they were in the placebo arm of the study.”
The flood of public comments from these zealous media cheerleaders and other clinical trial volunteers who’ve posted online raises alarming questions about the integrity of the clinical trial process. Pfizer and Moderna’s phase III clinical trials are randomized and placebo-controlled, meaning each person has an equal chance of receiving the vaccine or a placebo. The studies are also supposed to be “double-blind,” meaning that neither the volunteers nor the clinical trial investigators knew which group received which shots (although the administrators of the shots know who’s getting what).
Blinding prevents patients’ beliefs about the treatment from influencing the outcome of the study and also prevents investigators from inadvertently revealing clues about which treatment the subjects are receiving. But scores of comments on Twitter and Facebook from trial volunteers have exposed a phenomenon I call “crusader bias” that should trouble any adherent of good science. I will be submitting all of my findings to the FDA this week as public comments in advance of the Dec. 10 hearing on the Pfizer COVID vaccine.
Dozens of self-identified Moderna and Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine volunteers joined a private Facebook group originally dedicated to discussing Moderna investments this year to dish about their experiences. I obtained screenshots that showed volunteers discussing antibody test results they got on their own from commercial labs while the trials are still ongoing. They are trading information on how to get antibody tests, sharing their symptoms and plotting how to drop out of their trials and enroll in new ones if they suspect they didn’t get the vaccine.
mong the clinical trial volunteers’ gossipy disclosures, many of which threaten the integrity of the blinding procedure in the still-ongoing trials:
–One woman, K.C., told the Facebook group that her shot during the Pfizer vaccine trial “was covered in a bunch of tape, but the part I could see was dark.” A man, T.R., responded by posting a picture of his vial, partially covered in tape with a dark liquid visible. “They made me turn my head, but I got a peek,” K.C. told T.R.
–Another volunteer, J.D.T., said that “someone working at study site” told him “the placebo and the vaccine are different colors.”
–Two participants discussed being able to guess if they got the vaccine based on whether the administrator rushed into the room to inject volunteers. “The vaccine has to remain at a certain temp so once ready, it has to go. Pays to ask a lot of questions,” one advised the other.
–N.K.D., a woman identifying herself as a pathologist who works “at a private lab” told her fellow volunteers that she tested “negative right before the first dose” during a Moderna clinical trial and negative “two weeks after first dose.” She shared information on how to get antibody rapid testing done and offered to do them at her lab in Little Rock.
–When one volunteer expressed her concern that antibody testing was “kind of ‘cheating'” and “against the rules of the study,” another argued “My trial site said go for it. There is nothing in the legal documentation that says you cannot.”
–“Screw it,” said another volunteer who initially worried about jeopardizing his clinical trial’s scientific integrity. “I’m jumping on board and taking an antibody test.”
On Twitter, Icahn School of Medicine microbiology professor and clinical trial volunteer Benjamin tenOever boasted that he had “two adverse-free shots and ‘sky high’ antibody levels after four weeks.” He said he paid for the antibody test from a commercial lab facility, presumably not part of the still-ongoing clinical trial. He gloated: “The future is bright. Thank you @Pfizer.” Swedish infectious disease physician and European medicines regulator Rebecca Chandler responded bluntly:
“This is ethically concerning.”
Indeed. The science on COVID-19 testing and vaccine trials is not “settled.” It’s unsettling in the extreme.
——————- Michelle Malkin is mother, wife, blogger, conservative syndicated columnist, and author. She shares many of her articles and thoughts at MichelleMalkin.com.
Tags:Michelle Malkin, COVIDGATE (Part Two),: Clinical Trials, Crusader BiasTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
by Catherine Mortensen: Nothing feels right about what is happening in America. Not the fraudulent election results, not the politicized court rulings, and not the biased media coverage. All have converged in a perfect storm to steal this election from Donald Trump. I don’t believe for one second that Creepy, Sleepy, Hidin’ Joe Biden won this election. If he is sworn into office, it will be the result of a well-orchestrated voter fraud scheme, biased judges, and a mainstream media-Big Tech alliance to censor the news.
From the moment he came down the Trump Tower escalator in 2015 to announce his candidacy for office, Establishment forces have tried to take Trump down.
Excuse me if I’m not willing to “unite” under a Biden-Harris administration. For the past four years I’ve endured the fake news stories of Russian collusion, impeachment (I can’t remember on what grounds), children in cages, Melania’s wardrobe, Ivanka’s wardrobe, Trump’s diet, and on and on. I’m experiencing PTSD just writing about the trauma the media and establishment forces have inflicted on conservatives for the past five years.
The dishonest and distorted reporting from the media never ends. This week, President Trump directed the head of the federal agency responsible for presidential transitions to begin releasing funds for a potential Biden presidential transition. At the same time, the president clearly stated he is conceding nothing and will continue his legal challenges against widespread voter fraud.
Here is the Yahoo News headline: “In latest blow to Trump, GSA administrator releases transition funds to Biden.” Yahoo goes on to explain, “Trump has pursued a legal strategy to try to overturn the will of the voters in key battleground states where Biden was declared the winner.”
Declared the winner? By whom? By the media?
Trump is simply doing right by the American people, doing his job in preparing for a possible transition of power.
Not even a mention of Trump’s continued fight to ensure fair and honest elections.
“What does GSA being allowed to preliminarily work with the Dems have to do with continuing to pursue our various cases on what will go down as the most corrupt election in American political history? We are moving full speed ahead. Will never concede to fake ballots & ‘Dominion.’”
What does GSA being allowed to preliminarily work with the Dems have to do with continuing to pursue our various cases on what will go down as the most corrupt election in American political history? We are moving full speed ahead. Will never concede to fake ballots & “Dominion”.
In an earlier tweet, the president praised his political appointee in charge of presidential transitions.
“I want to thank Emily Murphy at GSA for her steadfast dedication and loyalty to our Country. She has been harassed, threatened, and abused – and I do not want to see this happen to her, her family, or employees of GSA. Our case STRONGLY continues, we will keep up the good…
“…fight, and I believe we will prevail! Nevertheless, in the best interest of our Country, I am recommending that Emily and her team do what needs to be done with regard to initial protocols, and have told my team to do the same.”
…fight, and I believe we will prevail! Nevertheless, in the best interest of our Country, I am recommending that Emily and her team do what needs to be done with regard to initial protocols, and have told my team to do the same.
As a Christian, I am taught to be a peacemaker. I try to be a peacemaker in all that I do and say. But nothing about “turning the other cheek” in this situation feels right to me. Nothing.
Donald Trump isn’t perfect. Everyone who voted for him knew that four years ago. We were clear-eyed about who he is. He’s no Boy Scout. But he is a fighter. He is honest. He is the first president to ever be criticized for keeping his campaign promises. Sure, the ride was bumpy these past four year. But that’s because the media and the entrenched bureaucracy in our government fought Trump tooth and nail over everything he did. They could not stand the thought of an outsider coming in and making changes to the status quo. D.C. insiders profit off the status quo. If the problems get solved, they are no longer needed.
The Left wants to pretend Trump never existed. Like the Civil War statues they are tearing down, they are already tearing down Trump’s legacy. They are just so eager to return to the status quo. I am not. I’ve seen what a return to freedom looks like. I’m never settling for the status quo again. What that means in practical terms, I don’t know. But I sure as heck won’t be “uniting” under a Biden-Harris administration.
————————- Catherine Mortensen is the Vice President of Communications at Americans for Limited Government. She is a former TV news anchor, elected official, Capitol Hill communications director, and spokesperson at the National Rifle Association.
Tags:Catherine Mortensen, Excuse me, Not Willing, to unite behind, BidenTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
Trump’s “Make America Great Again” agenda will be codified as his party’s own. Victor Davis Hanson: Donald Trump is nearing a crossroads.Those who allege that he has endangered the tradition of smooth presidential transitions by not conceding immediately after the media declared him the loser suffer amnesia.When Trump was elected in 2016, the Washington establishment lost its collective mind. The top echelon of the FBI and CIA were still spreading a fraudulent Christopher Steele dossier paid for by the campaign of his opponent, Hillary Clinton, and the Democratic National Committee.Shortly before Trump’s inauguration, President Barack Obama called Vice President Joe Biden, national security adviser Susan Rice, Deputy Attorney General Sally Yates and FBI Director James Comey into the Oval Office. The purpose of the meeting was reportedly to collate progress reports about how best to continue government surveillance of Trump’s designated national security adviser, Michael Flynn, and thereby disrupt the transition.
Flynn’s name was soon unmasked, apparently by Obama administration officials, and then illegally leaked to the press.
The harassment during the transition became thematic for Trump’s next four years, which saw false evidence submitted to federal courts and other classified documents illegally leaked.
No prior president has faced such hysterical opposition bent on removing him from office by a special prosecutor, concocted charges that he should be deposed under the 25th Amendment, and, finally, a failed attempt at removal via impeachment.
The president’s private phone calls to foreign leaders were leaked. Media darlings and anonymous opponents within the government boasted of sabotaging Trump’s initiatives. Washington analysts and retired military officers hyped coup scenarios about how best to use force to remove him from office.
So it is a bit rich for the media to now warn of Trump’s dangers to the spirit of smooth presidential transitions. Such protocols were deliberately rendered null and void in 2016.
But all that is past. What matters now are the interests of the country first and Trump’s constituents second. So Trump has a number of pathways.
One is to keep addressing legitimate reports of voter irregularities. He can continue to ask the courts to set aside any illegal votes that do not conform to state voting laws. His supporters demand and deserve no less than the investigation of all charges of serial voting impropriety.
But Trump within days will have to prove that any such crimes and lapses warped state counts enough to have wrongly elected Joe Biden president. Trump realistically has perhaps a week or so left to make his case or concede.
Then, to maintain the Senate majority for Republicans and to save the very rules and protocols of the Senate, the Supreme Court and Constitution, Trump will have to barnstorm Georgia. His challenge will be to enthuse his conservative base to reelect the state’s two incumbent senators, David Perdue and Kelly Loeffler.
After that?
Trump’s “Make America Great Again” agenda will be codified as his party’s own. He has a year or more to decide whether he wishes to play kingmaker among would-be Republican congressional and presidential candidates or run himself for a second term. The two options are ultimately not mutually exclusive.
By then there is some chance that the country will have been turned off by a hard-left shift by Biden, surrogate to the Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez wing of his party. Such extremism caused Democrats to lose House seats in 2020.
Trump can bask in a successful first term that remade the Republican Party into a multiracial coalition of the broad middle class. His Middle East and China resets will unlikely be altered by future presidents.
Trump finally did close the border to illegal immigration. His initiatives to revitalize America’s interior ended the notion that industrial decline was inevitable rather than a silly choice.
But Trump’s other alternative is bleaker. Currently, Trump-affiliated lawyers claim they can prove their bombshell allegations of historic voting fraud by leftists and foreign interests. They further claim that Trump was robbed not of a close election but of a veritable landslide, constituting the greatest scandal in U.S. history.
But so far none of these advocates have produced the requisite whistleblowers, computer data or forensic evidence to prove their astounding charges. If they do not produce it in a few days, and if Trump pivots to put his fate in their hands, then the pilloried Republicans may well lose the Senate races in Georgia. And with that historic setback he would endanger his legacy, his influence and perhaps a crack at a second presidential term.
In blunter terms, Trump may be forced to choose within days whether he wishes to emulate Andrew Jackson, the aggrieved victim of the crooked bargain of 1824 that denied him victory in that year’s presidential election. Jackson stormed back in 1828 to an overwhelming populist victory fueled by a righteously aggrieved following.
Otherwise, Trump would risk being reduced to the status of sore presidential losers like Al Gore and Hillary Clinton. For all their media accolades, Gore and Clinton never really accepted their losses in 2000 and 2016, respectively. Despite their supposed magnanimity, Gore and Clinton turned ever more bitter, shrill and conspiratorial — and ended up caricatured and largely irrelevant.
————————- Victor Davis Hanson (@VDHanson) is a senior fellow, classicist and historian and Illie Anderson Senior Fellow at the Hoover Institution where many of his articles are found; his focus is classics and military history. He has been a visiting professor at Hillsdale College since 2004. Hanson was awarded the National Humanities Medal in 2007 by President George W. Bush. H/T McIntosh Enterprises.
Tags:Victor Davis Hanson, President Trump, Faces Critical Choice, Political FutureTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
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Morning Rundown
CDC meeting to determine who will get the COVID-19 vaccine first: An advisory committee from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention is scheduled to vote today on who will get the first round of COVID-19 vaccines. The Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices, which is made up of experts from around the country, will not only weigh in on who should receive the vaccines and when, but also the recommended schedule for vaccinating children. “What the ACIP wants to do is make sure that there is a fair, equitable and transparent distribution of these vaccines within the community, and that the tiers we identify and we vote on represents the tiers that will get the best, the most benefit from a limited supply of vaccine initially,” ACIP head Jose Romero told ABC News. The planning for who can get vaccinated has been broken down into phases based on the amount of vaccine available. In the first round, “Phase 1a,” health care workers treating COVID-19 patients will receive the vaccine, and then state governors and public health departments will decide who’s next. Vaccine officials predict that once the Food and Drug Administration grants emergency use authorization, there will be a very limited supply of vaccine doses in the early stages of distribution. Pfizer has said there will be about 6.4 million doses, which is enough for about 3 million people, and Moderna expects to have 20 million doses immediately available if its vaccine is authorized.
Trump in denial about defeat as Arizona and Wisconsin certify Biden’s win: While President Donald Trump has begun to openly acknowledge that his days in the White House are drawing to an end, he is still not publicly recognizing the legitimacy of his defeat. But on Monday, Arizona and Wisconsin certified the results of the 2020 election, affirming President-elect Joe Biden’s victory. “This election was conducted with transparency, accuracy and fairness in accordance with Arizona’s laws and election procedures — despite numerous unfounded claims to the contrary,” said Arizona’s Secretary of State Kathy Hobbs. Still, Trump remains convinced that the election was stolen from him and said in an interview with Fox News that he intends to dedicate “125%” of his energy to proving it in the weeks to come.
Baby born from 27-year-old frozen embryo breaks record: Molly Everette Gibson may only be a few weeks old, but she has already made history. Weighing 6 pounds, 13 ounces, Molly, who was born on Oct. 26 to parents Tina and Ben Gibson in Tennessee, spent more than 27 years frozen as an embryo before being transferred to her mother’s uterus on Feb. 10. This marks the longest time an embryo has been frozen before resulting in a live birth, according to research staff at the University of Tennessee Preston Medical Library. The previous record was set by Molly’s sister, Emma Wren Gibson, in 2017; the embryo had been frozen for more than 24 years. “When Tina and Ben returned for their sibling transfer, I was thrilled that the remaining two embryos from the donor that resulted in Emma Wren’s birth survived the thaw and developed into two very good quality embryos for their transfer,” said National Embryo Donation Center lab director and embryologist Carol Sommerfelt, who thawed Molly’s embryo. “This definitely reflects on the technology used all those years ago and its ability to preserve the embryos for future use under an indefinite time frame.”
‘Pandemic’ is 2020’s Word of the Year: It would have been unthinkable a year ago, but Merriam-Webster announced that its Word of the Year is “pandemic.” “Sometimes a single word defines an era, and it’s fitting in this exceptional — and exceptionally difficult — year, a single word came immediately to the fore as we examined the data that determines what our Word of the Year will be,” Merriam-Webster stated in its announcement. According to the publishing company, the first big spike for people looking up the word “pandemic” happened on Feb. 3, the same day that the first COVID-19 patient was released from a Seattle hospital. “By early March, the word was being looked up an average of 4,000%,” the statement read. Other words that also saw huge spikes in searches included coronavirus, defund, mamba — which saw a surge after the death of Kobe Bryant, and icon, which spiked after the deaths of John Lewis in July and Ruth Bader Ginsburg in September.
GMA Must-Watch
This morning on “GMA,” we’re revealing our final Book Club pick for 2020! Plus, Jennifer Garner joins us to talk about the latest product launch from her company Once Upon a Farm, which makes organic, cold-pressed baby foods. And skin care influencer Hyram Yarbro joins us live to share his easy steps for maintaining great skin this year, plus the top items everyone should have as part of their skin care routine. All this and more only on “GMA.”
A polarizing figure on President Donald Trump’s coronavirus task force resigned, anti-vaccine groups grow louder, and Arizona certifies President-elect Joe Biden’s victory in the battleground state.
Here is what we’re watching this first day of December.
Controversial White House coronavirus adviser Scott Atlas resigns
Dr. Scott Atlas, the controversial White House coronavirus adviser, has resigned.
“I am writing to resign from my position as special adviser to the president of the United States,” Atlas said in a resignation letterposted to Twitter late Monday, which is dated Dec. 1 and addressed to President Donald Trump.
Atlas, a neuroradiologist on leave from the Hoover Institution, a conservative think tank affiliated with Stanford University, has no background in infectious diseases. He has spread misinformation about the virus, including questioning the efficacy of masks, and urged the White House to embrace a strategy of “herd immunity.”
His stance was at loggerheads with many other members of the coronavirus task force.
In a statement reacting to his resignation, his peers at Stanford’s medical school said late Monday that “Dr. Scott Atlas’ resignation today is long overdue and underscores the triumph of science and truth over falsehoods and misinformation.”
Dr. Scott Atlas defended his record on the coronavirus task force in his resignation letter, writing that he “always relied on the latest science and evidence.” (Photo: Alex Brandon / AP file)
Kids lost ground when Covid shut schools — especially Black and Latino students
When the Covid-19 pandemic forced the closure of most U.S. schools last spring, students were thrown into new and unfamiliar ways of learning.
The true toll the disruptions have taken on student learning won’t be known for months or years, but new reports from national education-testing organizations have begun to offer an early look at that impact.
All this week, NBC News will have in-depth coverage on the “Race for a Vaccine”across its programs and platforms, including NBC Nightly News with Lester Holt, TODAY, Dateline NBC, MSNBC, NBCNews.com and NBC News NOW.
Follow ourlive blogfor all the latest Covid-19 developments.
The certification of Arizona’s 11 Electoral College votes came as President Trump and his allies continue to allege without evidence rampant voter fraud in Arizona and other battleground states that Trump lost.
At the same time the vote was being certified in Phoenix, Trump campaign lawyer Rudy Giuliani was at a hotel about two miles away pushing a number of unfounded conspiracy theories aimed at undermining the election results.
But the state’s Republican Gov. Doug Ducey and other election officials stood by the voting process Monday.
“We do elections well here in Arizona. The system is strong, and that’s why I have bragged on it so much,” Ducey said as he oversaw the certification.
In other transition news, Biden is expected to introduce members of his economics team, including Neera Tanden, his pick to lead the Office of Management and Budget, on Tuesday in Wilmington, Delaware.
OK, we all probably overindulged on Thanksgiving. But that doesn’t have to feel permanent. Here’s how to lose weight after 40, according to experts.
Shopping
Giving Tuesday: What it is and how to get involved.
One different thing
Even with the pandemic, kids’ once a year visit with Santa Claus is still on.
But it’s going to look a little different. Santa is social distancing behind plexiglass, elves are taking temperatures and kids are wearing masks.
But Santa has a message for kids: It’s OK.
“We’re doing this to help save lives. And to protect us and each other from getting the virus,” Santa told NBC News’ Rehema Ellis. “We will get through this.”
From NBC’s Chuck Todd, Mark Murray, Carrie Dann and Melissa Holzberg
FIRST READ: Trump’s fights with fellow Republicans have political consequences beyond 2020
President Trump is leaving office the same way he started his political career – by attacking fellow Republicans.
But the fights he’s picked with Gov. Brian Kemp and Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger in Georgia, as well as with Gov. Doug Ducey in Arizona, are different than those insults at John McCain, Mitt Romney, Jeb Bush and Rick Perry in 2015.
ANDREW CABALLERO-REYNOLDS / AFP
One, they’re taking place with the top elected leaders in onetime GOP-leaning states that just turned blue in 2020 – and with one of them (Georgia) holding twin runoffs in January that will decide the control of the Senate.
And two, Trump is upset that these Republican officials aren’t helping him overturn election results in states that he narrowly yet clearly lost.
Let us repeat that again: He. Wants. Them. To. Reverse. The. Results.
“ALL 15 counties in Arizona — counties run by both parties — certified their results,” Ducey replied to Trump via Twitter. “That’s the law. I’ve sworn an oath to uphold it, and I take my responsibility seriously.”
“Georgia law prohibits the governor from interfering in elections,” Gov. Kemp’s spokesman said in a statement, per NBC’s Vaughn Hillyard.
These intraparty fights not only complicate the Senate runoffs in Georgia, but also future statewide contests in these two states.
As NBC’s Ed Demaria reminds us, Ducey might be the best Republican on paper who could win both a GOP Senate primary and a general election in Arizona in either 2022 or 2024. But what if Trump decides to sink his chances?
And that’s the dilemma for Republicans if Trump – once out of office – becomes the face of the GOP opposition to Biden.
Does he use his powers to help the party? Or exact revenge?
TWEET OF THE DAY: Hail to the Beep
NYT: Trump has raised $170m since Election Day
“President Trump has raised about $170 million since Election Day as his campaign operation has continued to aggressively solicit donations with hyped-up appeals that have funded his fruitless attempts to overturn the election,” the New York Times reports, citing one person familiar with the matter.
Here’s the rub: The fine print on the president’s call for donations to his “Official Election Defense Fund” show that the vast majority of donations don’t necessarily support a recount at all. Most of the money instead is headed for the president’s personal leadership PAC, which he’ll be able to use to fund his post-presidential political activity, and to the Republican National Committee.
It’s not surprising, but it’s still astonishing.
Data Download: The numbers you need to know today
6,238,766: Joe Biden’s lead in the popular vote at the time of publication.
13,624,624: The number of confirmed cases of coronavirus in the United States, per the most recent data from NBC News and health officials. (That’s 170,294 more than yesterday morning.)
268,990: The number of deaths in the United States from the virus so far. (That’s 1,394 more than yesterday morning.)
192.77 million: The number of coronavirus tests that have been administered in the United States so far, according to researchers at The COVID Tracking Project.
96,039: The number of people currently hospitalized with coronavirus
35: The number of days until the Jan. 5 Senate runoffs.
50: The number of days until Inauguration Day.
Biden roles out his economic team
“President-elect Joe Biden on Tuesday will formally introduce his picks for his economic policy team, including Janet Yellen for treasury secretary,” NBC’s Geoff Bennett and Rebecca Shabad write.
BIDEN CABINET/TRANSITION WATCH LIST
STATE: Tony Blinken (announced)
TREASURY: Janet Yellen (announced)
HOMELAND SECURITY: Alejandro Mayorkas (announced)
UN AMBASSADOR: Linda Thomas-Greenfield (announced)
DIRECTOR OF NATIONAL INTELLIGENCE: Avril Haines (announced)
OMB DIRECTOR: Neera Tanden (announced)
DEFENSE: Michèle Flournoy, Jeh Johnson, Illinois Sen. Tammy Duckworth
Today’s Runoff Watch checks in on the enormous amount of money pouring into Georgia over the next few months.
As of now, there’s been $293 million devoted to both runoffs (this includes TV and radio advertising already spent and booked, per Advertising Analytics). The special runoff (Loeffler vs. Warnock) has $158 million devoted to it, compared to the other runoff’s (Perdue vs. Ossoff) $135 million, with Republican groups outspending Democrats in both.
If no one else commits a dime to either race, the special runoff alone (from Nov. 4 on) will have more TV and radio spending in it than every single 2020 Senate race except for three (North Carolina, Iowa and Arizona). And in the Perdue-Ossoff runoff, that $135 million spent and booked between Nov. 4 and Jan. 5 is virtually the same amount spent on the race by Election Day.
But of course, it’s almost certain that there will be a lot more money flooding the state as both parties dig deep into the piggybank to help decide control of the Senate.
THE LID: Man! I feel like a woman
Don’t miss the pod from yesterday, when we looked at the rise of women in Congress and now in Joe Biden’s Cabinet picks.
SHAMELESS PLUG
All this week, NBC News will have in-depth coverage on the “Race for a Vaccine” across its programs and platforms, including NBC Nightly News with Lester Holt, TODAY, Dateline NBC, MSNBC, NBCNews.com and NBC News NOW.
ICYMI: What ELSE is happening in the world?
Joe Biden is outpacing or exceeding Barack Obama and Donald Trump’s timelines for choosing Cabinet members.
Some progressives aren’t happy about the business ties of some of Biden’s top picks for White House jobs.
Politico looks at how Janet Yellen became Biden’s pick for Treasury secretary.
Plus: Bar food police strike in New York, study finds COVID-19 circulating in the U.S. last December, and more…
Republicans aim to sneak anti-Section 230 regulation into defense spending bill. The chairman of the Senate Commerce Committee may insert this measure into a new defense bill, as part of a compromise with President Donald Trump. If Democrats go with it, Trump will reportedly overlook the bill’s move to rename military bases honoring Confederate leaders.
Section 230 of federal communications law—the “internet’s First Amendment”—is a federal law that helps ensure free speech online while also protecting the right of private entities to moderate content as they see fit.
It’s become a bipartisan target since it makes it harder for elected officials and other government authorities to shut down speech they don’t like or threaten private businesses if they refuse to give in to political whims when it comes to deciding what content to allow or promote. (It also has a lot of foes in failing industries who want a government-mandated leg up on their competitors.) Legislation to limit or abolish Section 230 hasbecome popular in Congress, where lawmakers from both parties have introduced such measures. But with the exception of the 2018 sex-ad law FOSTA, most of these have gone nowhere.
Now, some officials are taking a different tack. Instead of pushing a standalone attack on Section 230, Sen. Roger Wicker (R–Miss.)—chair of the Senate Commerce Committee—will allegedly introduce an anti-Section 230 bit into the latest defense spending bill.
“The Trump administration is pressing Congress to repeal [Section 230] as part of a must-pass end-of-year defense-spending authorization bill,” reportsAxios. “A source familiar with the negotiations told Axios that Sen. Roger Wicker … has proposed that his bill limiting Section 230 protections be included in the National Defense Authorization Act.”
But Axios reporters Ashley Gold and Margaret Harding McGill suggest this strategy has minimal chance of working out:
The White House has pushed lawmakers to insert a repeal of Section 230 into the NDAA, as part of a compromise that would have President Trump sign the bill even though he’s opposed to a provision that renames military bases that are named for Confederate leaders.
But Senate Republicans are instead trying to negotiate an alternative that would combine multiple bills aimed at reforming the law, including the bipartisan Platform Accountability and Consumer Transparency Act and Wicker’s Online Freedom and Viewpoint Diversity Act, a Hill source familiar with the matter told Axios.
Let’s hope neither finds its way to the final measure. Not only is a defense spending authorization no place for these actions, but their passage would make also be bad for national security by ensuring American’s continued plunge from tech dominance.
Risking ceding the future of the Internet to China… in a defense bill. https://t.co/Hftwkd87jw
Reason‘s annual webathon starts today! Throughout the week, we’ll be soliciting donations for Reason‘s journalism, with a goal of raising $200,000 this year. Help us out?
Besides the warm fuzzy feeling that comes with your (tax-deductible) support for free minds and free markets, people who donate this week will also get some cool Reason swag. And if you help us reach our goal early, you’ll stop seeing the annoying pop-up solicitations on this site earlier. Everybody wins!
FREE MARKETS
Bar food police strike in New York. State alcohol regulators are cracking down on bars that don’t serve enough food with their booze. “The New York government is allowing the State Liquor Authority to aggressively enforce rules that require drinking establishments to serve food with alcoholic beverages they sell during the COVID-19 pandemic,” note Jarrett Dieterle and Shoshana Weissmann at the Washington Examiner:
Perhaps not surprisingly, this has led to some ridiculous situations. For example, Pint Sized (a Saratoga Springs craft beer bar) was hit with an expected $1,500 fine for failing to serve what regulators deemed was enough veggies per pint of beer. Pint Sized was attempting to comply with New York’s rule by offering simple bowls of canned vegetables, beans, or chili to each customer.
It turned out that customers were understandably unable to keep up with all the bowls of food landing on their tables. The bar’s staff started to feel guilty about food waste, with good reason given the struggles of food banks during the pandemic, and elected to cut back portions to one bowl of food per table of customers. When undercover agents from the State Liquor Authority ordered brews at Pint Sized and received an insufficient amount of food alongside their drinks, the agency fined the bar.
FREE MINDS
More evidence suggests that COVID-19 was circulating in America before the start of this year. From the Wall Street Journal:
The new coronavirus infected people in the U.S. in mid-December 2019, a few weeks before it was officially identified in China and about a month earlier than public health authorities found the first U.S. case, according to a government study published Monday.
The findings significantly strengthen evidence suggesting the virus was spreading around the world well before public health authorities and researchers became aware, upending initial thinking about how early and quickly it emerged.
Scientists at the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention found evidence of infection in 106 of 7,389 blood donations collected by the American Red Cross from residents in nine states across the U.S., according to the study published online in the journal Clinical Infectious Diseases.
QUICK HITS
There are now just 11 prison systems allowing visitation from family as the current wave of the coronavirus slams into penitentiaries. In at least two states, Missouri and Minnesota, corrections officials are only allowing visits at one penitentiary. https://t.co/ihOYiy2xX1
• Reminder: “Human beings have raised fears about the addictive nature of every new media technology since the 18th century brought us the novel, yet the species has always seemed to recover its balance once the initial infatuation wears off.
• Libertarian Party (L.P.) presidential nominee Jo Jorgensen’s 1.2 percent vote share was impressive, “even while amounting to just a third of [Gary] Johnson’s 2016 haul,” writesReason Editor at Large Matt Welch. “With no name recognition, no money, and no media, the Jorgensen campaign helped cement the L.P.’s decadelong transformation into the third party in the United States.
• “People with untreated mental illnesses are 16 times more likely than other civilians to be killed during an encounter with police,” notes Laura Williamson at USA Today. How do we work to change that?
• Norway has criminalized derogatory speech about transgender people as part of its general “hate speech” statute. “People found guilty of hate speech face a fine or up to a year in jail for private remarks, and a maximum of three years in jail for public comments, according to the penal code,” Reuters reports.
• Coleman Hughes on the highly controversial and now-infamous Robin DiAngelo book White Fragility:
White Fragility has two unstated assumptions about nonwhite people in general, and black people in particular. The first is that we are a homogenous mass of settled opinion with little, if any, diversity of thought—a kind of [Critical Race Theory]-aligned hive mind. I could marshal all the opinion polls in the world to refute this calumny, but it wouldn’t move DiAngelo an inch. She needs nonwhites to think as a unit, or else her thesis falls apart. How could she tell whites to shut up and listen to the consensus view of nonwhites if that consensus doesn’t exist?
The second unstated assumption in White Fragility—and this is where the book borders on actual racism—is that black people are emotionally immature and essentially child-like. Blacks, as portrayed in DiAngelo’s writing, can neither be expected to show maturity during disagreement nor to exercise emotional self-control of any kind. The hidden premise of the book is that blacks, not whites, are too fragile.
Elizabeth Nolan Brown is a senior editor at Reason, where she writes regularly on the intersections of sex, speech, tech, crime, politics, panic, and civil liberties. She is also co-founder of the libertarian feminist group Feminists for Liberty.
Since starting at Reason in 2014, Brown has won multiple awards for her writing on the U.S. government’s war on sex. Brown’s writing has also appeared in The New York Times, Los Angeles Times, The Daily Beast, Buzzfeed, Playboy, Fox News, Politico, The Week, and numerous other publications. You can follow her on Twitter @ENBrown.
Reason is the magazine of “free minds and free markets,” offering a refreshing alternative to the left-wing and right-wing echo chambers for independent-minded readers who love liberty.
Can states prohibit religious charter schools, as they currently do, or does the Supreme Court’s recent Espinoza ruling render such restrictions unconstitutional? Nicole Stelle Garnett, a new adjunct fellow with the Manhattan Institute, explains why current laws prohibiting religious charter schools likely violate the Free Exercise Clause
The above report is Garnett’s inaugural research contribution as an adjunct fellow for the Manhattan Institute, where she also contributes essays to City Journal. In addition to her role at MI, Garnett is the John P. Murphy Foundation Professor of Law at the University of Notre Dame, where she is also a fellow of the Institute for Educational Initiatives and the senior policy advisor for the Alliance for Catholic Education.
The public education establishment is losing customers as more parents take charge of how their kids learn amid the pandemic.
By Larry Sand City Journal Online November 30, 2020
“[C]onservative state leaders looking to salvage a semblance of bipartisanship — or maintain the moral high ground on a partisan basis — should consider replicating Florida’s Hope Scholarship program.”
By Max Eden The Hill November 30, 2020
Based on a new issue brief
“Nobody connects the helpers to the hurting more efficiently than a local charity.”
By Megan Rose Washington Examiner December 1, 2020
Part of our Civil Society Fellows program
Senator Tim Scott will speak with Manhattan Institute director of legal policy James R. Copland later today about the prospects of criminal-justice reform. How does the election change the political prospects for the JUSTICE Act and related, competing reforms? Have subsequent events, including a significant increase in homicides in several major U.S. cities, affected his thinking?
Andy Smarick hosts a conversation tomorrow on American conservatism’s attachment to classical liberalism with Daniel Burns of University of Dallas, James Patterson of Ave Maria University, and Stephanie Slade of Reason.
“DiAngelo’s book does more than rehearse the familiar tenets of Critical Race Theory (CRT) … it also uses simple and direct language to teach white people how to talk about race from a CRT perspective.”
By Coleman Hughes New York Post December 1, 2020
Adapted from City Journal
“As if a second COVID wave weren’t enough, New York’s prospects for economic recovery will face new headwinds — from Albany.”
By E. J. McMahon New York Post December 1, 2020
Adapted from City Journal
Charles Fain Lehman joins Brian Anderson to discuss the nationwide crisis of police recruitment and retention, the strong link between the size of a police force and the local crime rate, and policy changes that could stop the downward spiral.
With the election behind us, the hard work of governing is set to begin anew. As the Manhattan Institute looks to 2021, our task is clear. The country and its cities need a road map for restoring prosperity, preserving public safety, and rebuilding a sense of common cause. With your support, MI will present that path forward. Read more in our Year-End President’s Update.
The Metropolitan Transportation Authority (MTA) is facing its greatest fiscal crisis since its founding in 1968. Deficits for the MTA are projected to total nearly $20 billion by the end of 2024, a vast budget hole dug by vanishing ridership and spiraling costs. What are the MTA’s options going forward and how can New York’s transit agency get back on track?
The next administration and Congress will face a large and growing federal debt. Although everyone recognizes the long-term imbalance between federal spending and revenues, there is ample debate about just how big a problem this is, and the extent to which it should be a priority for lawmakers. On November 12th Jason Furman and Brian Riedl engaged in a collegial debate, moderated by The Wall Street Journal’s Kate Davidson, about debt, deficits, and what to do about them.
As budget cuts, restrictive reforms, and anti-police protests sweep the country, will demoralization turn even the most genuine and lion-hearted cops into “hairbags?” How hard would such a cultural shift in departments be to reverse? On November 10th former Seattle police chief Carmen Best, former Milwaukee police chief Ed Flynn, and law professor Paul Cassell addressed these questions and shared their intimate insights into the culture of policing.
The departure of just a small percentage of New York City’s high-income earners could result in losses of hundreds of millions of dollars in revenue, our new report finds. The report—authored by public-policy researcher Donald J. Boyd and MI director of state and local policy Michael Hendrix, as part of our New York City: Reborn initiative—estimates the associated losses from net out-migration by New York City residents earning $100,000.
Congress and the next administration face a large and growing federal debt. The Congressional Budget Office (CBO) estimates that federal debt will surpass 100% of GDP this year and reach 195% over the next 30 years. And even this scenario optimistically assumes no spending expansion, the 2017 tax cuts expire on schedule, and interest rates remain below normal. In a new issue brief, Brian Riedl focuses on the main driver behind the CBO’s projected $104 trillion deficit—Social Security and Medicare shortfalls.
Parents of bullied children often lament the school’s inability or unwillingness to reverse or stem the abuse. In a new issue brief, Max Eden analyzes Florida’s Hope Scholarship, which leverages school choice to provide bullied students with the opportunity to transfer schools. To inform ongoing and potential state-level debates around anti-bullying voucher or tuition tax credit programs, Eden reviews the basic mechanics of the program, the political origin and debate around its passage, and the program’s implementation to date.
Manhattan Institute is a think tank whose mission is to develop and disseminate new ideas that foster greater economic choice and individual responsibility.
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I want you to think back to the beginning of 2020. All the virtue-signaling over calling COVID the “China virus.” Since, like, the virus came from China and all that. … MORE
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REALCLEARPOLITICS MORNING NOTE
12/01/2020
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Carl Cannon’s Morning Note
Echoes of 1974; Women in Charge; Dark December
By Carl M. Cannon on Dec 01, 2020 08:48 am
Good morning, it’s Tuesday, Dec. 1, 2020. On this date in 1941, Americans awoke with the expectation that they had a reasonable chance of escaping the war inexorably engulfing so much of the world. By the end of that fateful day, U.S. citizens paying attention to the news sensed that this hope was rapidly fading.
Today is also the anniversary of Abraham Lincoln’s 1862 State of the Union address. It came 10 weeks after Lincoln announced the Emancipation Proclamation and less than three weeks after the midterm congressional elections revealed voters’ ambivalence toward that policy. Lincoln’s Republican Party added five new senators, but the Democrats picked up 34 seats in the House, along with the governorship of New York.
Lincoln’s Dec. 1, 1862 speech did not dwell on partisan politics, however. He reached, as usual, much higher — and delivered some of the most memorable words of his presidency:
“Fellow citizens, we cannot escape history. In giving freedom to the slave, we ensure freedom to the free — honorable alike in what we give, and what we preserve. We shall nobly save, or meanly lose, the last, best hope of earth.”
I’ll have a brief word on these two December days, which I’ve written about previously. First, I’d point you to RealClearPolitics’ front page, which presents our poll averages, videos, breaking news stories, and aggregated opinion pieces spanning the political spectrum. We also offer original material from our own reporters, columnists, and contributors, including the following:
* * *
Awakening From a National Nightmare — the Sequel. Today’s political climate reminds Lou Cannon of August 1974, when Gerald Ford assumed the presidency and America began moving past the turbulent Watergate era.
Biden’s Female PR Team? Other Presidents Blazed That Trail. Mark Weinberg has this history lesson.
Pass PPP as a Small-Business Bridge to Post-Vaccine Future. Alfredo Ortiz urges Congress to act as more small businesses find themselves on the ropes.
EU Tries to Plug Budget Holes by Fining U.S. Tech Firms. At RealClearMarkets, Andrew Wilford assails the punitive policies.
Central America Can’t Wait for Help. At RealClearWorld, Jason Marczak and Maria Fernanda Bozmoski write that the pandemic and natural disasters have devastated the region’s already vulnerable economies.
Three Guiding Principles for Patient-Centered Health Care. Carl Schmid and Randall Rutta have advice for President-elect Biden as he assembles a team to shape future policy.
The Pandemic Changed Education; Let’s Change How We Fund It. At RealClearEducation, Adam Peshek argues for funding families, not the buildings that no longer serve them.
A Half-Century of Failed Reforms. Also at RCEd, Katharine B. Stevens laments chronically low achievement in the nation’s public schools despite decades of reforms and vastly increased spending.
* * *
One of history’s most enduring lessons is how difficult it is to appease tyrants, whether they reside in an imperial palace in Tokyo or a plantation house in the antebellum South.
On Monday, Dec. 1, 1941, a single paragraph deep in a wire story out of Manila contained some ominous details: Japan was reinforcing its garrisons in Indochina, where it already had 100,000 troops. As it did so, 16 Japanese warships, including aircraft carriers, swung southward in the Pacific. The Philippines were being surrounded.
That same day, a gozen kaigi (imperial conference) was held in Tokyo. There, Emperor Hirohito approved military preparations for war with the Unites States — and set the date of a surprise attack for Dec. 7. Americans didn’t know that, obviously, but they did learn that Secretary of State Cordell Hull had met with Japanese diplomats in Washington over the weekend, and that after taking a disquieting phone call from Hull, a grim-faced Franklin Roosevelt returned from Warm Springs, Ga., to manage the growing crisis.
The mood had changed rapidly in a single day. The morning of Dec. 1, Americans awoke to Eleanor Roosevelt’s reassuring “My Day” column. The first lady revealed that she had started her Christmas shopping and attended Saturday’s Army-Navy game. In an inadvertent omen, Mrs. Roosevelt also urged Americans to write servicemen stationed during the holidays in far-away places.
But her husband had rushed back to the White House barely 24 hours after arriving in Warm Springs. And the first lady — and the White House press corps — only learned of Franklin Roosevelt’s return when Fala, the president’s dog, wandered into a room where Eleanor was talking with reporters.
Seventy-nine years ago today, FDR had returned to Washington to try and avoid war in the Pacific. But across the sea, caution had been cast to the winds. As Abraham Lincoln had noted sadly in the previous century: “Both parties deprecated war, but … the war came.”
As former Vice President Joe Biden begins his transition into the White House ahead of January’s inauguration day, he seems determined to begin his four-year legacy by revising substantial decisions made by his predecessor, President Donald Trump.
On May 8, 2018, Trump announced one of the most significant decisions of his presidency: Terminating the US participation in the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA) with Iran and reimposing sanctions that had been lifted under the 2015 deal, which was reached during former President Barack Obama’s time in office.
There’s a war on to determine whether our constitutional Republic will survive the 2020 presidential election. The critical battles are being fought not just in courts, newsrooms and government offices across the country, but in state legislatures that have a unique responsibility for the conduct and integrity of their voters’ balloting.
Legislators last week in Pennsylvania and yesterday in Arizona heard from a singularly effective warrior in these battles: retired Army Colonel and cyber- and political-warfare specialist Phil Waldron, who documented the comprehensive effort mounted this year to defraud voters and steal the White House – and how it was done.
Col. Waldron’s testimony decisively rebuts those who insist there’s “no evidence” of fraud in this election. All of us who love this country must ensure that his compelling research and conclusions are given their day in court and in state legislatures now.
This is Frank Gaffney.
MICHAEL CUTLER, Retired Senior Special Agent of the former Immigration and Naturalization Services, Host of the “The Michael Cutler Hour” radio show on Friday evenings on BlogTalk Radio:
Michael Cutler questions Biden’s “science” appointees
Shortfalls of Biden’s “Build, Back, Better” campaign promise
Biden’s immigration policy would “capsize” America
CHRISTINE DOLAN, Senior Correspondent, Just the News, former Political Director of CNN:
Christine Dolan brings to light the Obama-Biden Admin’s scandals
The mainstream media’s election night misstep
GRANT NEWSHAM, Research Fellow, Japan Forum for Strategic Studies:
Lessons about fraudulent elections from South Korea
Why loosing Taiwan would halt American ambitions in Asia
Biden’s China team’s track record
GORDON CHANG, Contributor, The Daily Beast, Author of “The Coming Collapse of China,” “Nuclear Showdown: North Korea Takes on the World” and “Losing South Korea”:
A recent interview by Henry Kissinger on China
The Chinese idea of an international QR code for travel
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WERE YOU FORWARDED THIS EDITION OF THE HOT AIR DAILY?
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AMERICAN INSTITUTE FOR ECONOMIC RESEARCH
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December 1, 2020
Communities in the Pandemic
By Alberto Mingardi | “Are local communities self-organizing because politics is being unduly constrained, limited in its spending capacity, and disempowered, or are they self-organizing because, in spite of consuming more than a third of GDP…
By Ethan Yang | “The main problem with all of this goes far beyond Dr. Briand’s research. This is all representative of an unproductive orthodoxy that exists around Covid-19. An orthodoxy that has a set view on how to think and how to respond to…
A Year of Backsliding in the Fight Against HIV/AIDS
By Fiona Harrigan | “Rather than celebrating the progress made against this devastating, incurable disease, this year’s World AIDS Day is marked with a note of mourning. Lockdowns may shelter people from Covid-19, but no matter how well-intended…
By Joakim Book | “The disdain for private commerce pours through the pages of The Deficit Myth, but never so much so as when Kelton imagines the transition for a newly unemployed worker. Rather than ‘sort boxes at a private retailer,’ she says,…
By George Gilder | “The best testimony to the success of these mutual learning processes is not only the amazing story of Taiwan. It is our very presence on the planet today, some 8 billion learning systems strong, distributed as widely as human…
By Jenin Younes | “The substantial evidence that these mechanisms are not effective, particularly beyond their duration, has been automatically rejected for too long. This is not science: it is politics, and those within the profession who have…
Edward C. Harwood fought for sound money when few Americans seemed to care. He was the original gold standard man before that became cool. Now he is honored in this beautiful sewn silk bow tie in the richest possible color and greatest detail. The tie is adjustable to all sizes. Sporting this, others might miss that you are secretly supporting the revolution for freedom and sound money, but you will know, and that is what matters.
A common narrative of the post-World War II economists was that the State is indispensable for guiding investment and fostering innovation. The truth is that the enriched modern economy was not a product of State coercion. The Great Enrichment, that is, came from human ingenuity emancipated from the bottom up, not human ingenuity directed from the top down.
You’ve made it to December in our annus horribilis. On the menu today: sorting through CNN’s fascinating but not completely illuminating bombshell involving leaked documents from the Hubei, China Center for Disease Control and Prevention, filling in some details about the early days of the pandemic.
More Details on How Beijing Misled the World about the Pandemic
Nick Paton Walsh of CNN unveils a fascinating but ultimately frustrating work of journalism based upon 117 pages of leaked documents from the Hubei Provincial Center for Disease Control and Prevention from the start of the coronavirus pandemic — what the network calls, “the most significant leak from inside China since the beginning of the pandemic,” a leak that “provide[s] the first clear window into what local authorities knew internally and when.”
The first and most significant conclusion confirms what many suspected, that China had significantly more cases than the government’s official numbers claimed: “In a report marked … READ MORE
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Rep. Mark Walker (R-NC) announce he’ll run for the Senate in a race that may end up becoming the most hotly contested and expensive Senate battle in the 2022 midterm elections, Fox News reports.
“Walker is the first candidate to launch a campaign in the race to succeed retiring three-term Republican Sen. Richard Burr. But it’s doubtful he’ll be the only Republican to declare his or her candidacy. The president’s daughter-in-law, Lara Trump, is mulling a bid for the Senate in the state where she was born and raised.”
In a six-figure radio ad being released in Georgia today, Donald Trump Jr. tells the state’s voters that the U.S. Senate — and his father’s accomplishments — are on the line during January’s special election, Axios reports.
The co-author of the million-selling Game Change has a book of his own coming about the 2020 election, the AP reports.
Simon & Schuster announced Monday that John Heilemann is working on a “dramatic, first-hand account” of Joe Biden’s victorious campaigns over his Democratic Party rivals in the primaries and over President Donald Trump in the general election.
Heilemann had collaborated with Mark Halperin on Game Change, about the 2008 race, and on Double Down, about 2012. Their anticipated book on 2016 was cancelled after Halperin faced multiple allegations of sexual harassment.
Jonathan Chait: “White women voted for Trump. Or so you have probably heard. In the immediate aftermath of Donald Trump’s 2016 victory, the finding from early exit polls that 53 percent of white women voted for Trump formed the basis for a million social-media posts, op-eds, and rally placards. That this “fact” is not true is not even close to the biggest problem with its ubiquitous place in progressive social-justice discourse.”
“The 53 percent figure turned out to be erroneous, and corrected analyses eventually pegged Trump’s share of the white female electorate closer to 47 percent. Nonetheless, the impulse that propelled so many writers to blame white women for electing Trump proved strong enough to survive even after the factual basis was undercut. Indeed, left-wing opinion writers continued churning out polemics based on the erroneous 53 percent figure for years.”
“Rudy Giuliani, President Trump’s lawyer who has led the most extensive efforts to damage his client’s political rivals and undermine the election results, discussed with the president as recently as last week the possibility of receiving a pre-emptive pardon before Mr. Trump leaves office,” the New York Times reports.
“Mr. Giuliani’s potential criminal exposure is unclear. He was under investigation as recently as last summer by federal prosecutors in Manhattan for his business dealings in Ukraine and his role in ousting the American ambassador there, a plot that was at the heart of the impeachment of Mr. Trump.”
“The Pentagon policy official overseeing the military’s efforts to combat the Islamic State was fired on Monday after a White House official told him the United States had won that war and that his office had been disbanded,” the New York Times reports.
Neil Irwin: “For the first time since the pandemic shuttered the economy eight months ago, the end is in sight.”
“The development of vaccines that appear to be safe, effective and ready for wide distribution in the months ahead means it’s now possible to envision a post-Covid economy by summer.”
“There is a distinct possibility that the economy could roar back to full health quickly as soon as public health conditions allow. But for that to happen, the United States will need to make it through what might be a cold, dark winter in which damage could be done to the tissue of the economy that prevents that rapid healing.”
American Prospect: “For many in the political establishment, joining the Trump administration was initially considered to be a mark of shame. In 2016, more than 100 Republican staffers signed a Never-Trump letter.”
“Trump alumni may have worried that they might struggle to find new jobs in Washington or Silicon Valley or Wall Street. (And certainly a lot of people have cycled out given the administration’s record turnover.) But almost universally, former Trump appointees are profiting from their time in the White House. Even before Trump concedes the election and leaves the White House, they have been normalized.”
“Despite those initial expectations of a Trump stigma, it’s in fact the people who quit in protest who have suffered most.”
Quinta Jurecic: “Donald Trump will not serve a second term. The litigation launched by his campaign and the Republican Party to overturn the election results has no chance of preventing Joe Biden from swearing the oath of office on January 20—as Trump himself seemed to haltingly recognize last week after his administration finally allowed the presidential transition to begin.”
“But even though the worst has not come to pass, Trump and his team are doing lasting damage to American democracy as the president struggles to come to grips with the reality of his loss. And yet, these lawyers and officials will likely face no real consequences for their actions—and if they do, those repercussions will not be enough to address the scale of the problem.”
A witness in Sidney Powell’s new Michigan lawsuit challenging President Trump’s loss in the state says in a declaration he thinks there’s something fishy about election returns in Edison County, Michigan.
Bridge Michigan notes one problem: There is no Edison County in Michigan.
Ron Brownstein: “The silence of congressional Republican leaders as President Trump’s unfounded claims of election fraud grow wilder and more venomous increasingly resembles the party’s deference to Sen. Joe McCarthy during the worst excesses of his anti-Communist crusade in the early 1950s.”
“In McCarthy’s era, most of the GOP’s leaders found excuses to avoid challenging conspiracy theories that they knew to be implausible, even as evidence of their costs to the nation steadily mounted. For years, despite their private doubts about his charges and methods alike, the top GOP leadership — particularly Senate Republican leader Robert A. Taft, the Mitch McConnell of his day — either passively abetted or actively supported McCarthy’s scattershot claims of treason and Communist infiltration.”
“A significant faction of Senate Republicans didn’t join with Democrats to curb McCarthy’s power until the senator immolated himself with his accusations, in highly publicized 1953 and 1954 hearings, that the Army was riddled with Communists during the presidency of fellow Republican Dwight Eisenhower.”
“A bipartisan group of senators is expected to unveil an approximately $908 billion stimulus proposal on Tuesday, aiming to break a months-long partisan impasse over providing emergency federal relief to the U.S. economy,” the Washington Post reports.
“While trying to contain the spread of the novel coronavirus, Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine (R) has faced throngs of armed protesters at the statehouse and crowds outside his own home. Now, he is now facing efforts from within his own party to push him out of office entirely,” the Washington Post reports.
“A group of four Republican state lawmakers filed a dozen articles of impeachment against DeWine on Monday, saying the governor violated state and federal laws by requiring face masks in public and ordering some businesses to close.”
Joshua Green: “Many Democrats have spent the weeks since the election bickering about who’s to blame for a result that ousted President Trump but also saw the party fall short in its efforts to gain strength in Congress and statehouses.”
“The debate has obscured one area of unquestionable Democratic success: In the four years since Trump’s election, progressives have built an organizing and fundraising behemoth, which just delivered a record 80 million votes for President-elect Joe Biden. Democrats’ fortunes in the Biden era and beyond will hinge on whether they can maintain and grow this juggernaut.”
“The new coronavirus infected people in the U.S. in mid-December 2019, a few weeks before it was officially identified in China and about a month earlier than public health authorities found the first U.S. case,” the Wall Street Journal reports.
“The findings significantly strengthen evidence suggesting the virus was spreading around the world well before public health authorities and researchers became aware, upending initial thinking about how early and quickly it emerged.”
Jay Powell, the Federal Reserve chairman, has warned Congress that the rise in coronavirus cases could “prove challenging for the next few months” even as encouraging news on vaccine development has boosted the outlook for the economy in the medium-term, the Financial Times reports.
The Fed chairman stressed that the economic outlook remained “extraordinarily uncertain” — a phrase he has used throughout the pandemic.
Stuart Rothenberg: “Republicans are already sounding as if they intend to make 2022 about socialism, illegal immigrants and anarchists in the suburbs. But if the economy is strong, COVID-19 is in the rear-view mirror and Biden is popular, the midterm election might well favor the status quo.”
“Though House Republicans have reasons for optimism, nothing is now guaranteed about the political landscape of 2022 — especially since a bitter, defeated Trump is likely to want the limelight during the next few years.”
“President Trump has raised about $170 million since Election Day as his campaign operation has continued to aggressively solicit donations with hyped-up appeals that have funded his fruitless attempts to overturn the election and that have seeded his post-presidential political ambitions,” the New York Times reports.
“Instead of slowing down after the election, Mr. Trump’s campaign has ratcheted up its volume of email solicitations for cash, telling supporters that money was needed for an ‘Election Defense Fund.’ In reality, the fine print shows that the first 75 percent of every contribution currently goes to a new political action committee that Mr. Trump set up in mid-November, Save America, which can be used to fund his political activities going forward, including staff and travel. The other 25 percent of each donation is directed to the Republican National Committee.”
If you’re a regular reader, become a Political Wire member today. You’ll get exclusive analysis, new site features, access to subscription-only newsletters, no advertising and much more.
Join as an annual or monthly member and get instant access to new features.
Or buy a gift membership for that special political junkie in your life.
Rep. Mark Walker (R-NC) announce he’ll run for the Senate in a race that may end up becoming the most hotly contested and expensive Senate battle in the 2022 midterm elections, Fox News reports.
“Walker is the first candidate to launch a campaign in the race to succeed retiring three-term Republican Sen. Richard Burr. But it’s doubtful he’ll be the only Republican to declare his or her candidacy. The president’s daughter-in-law, Lara Trump, is mulling a bid for the Senate in the state where she was born and raised.”
In a six-figure radio ad being released in Georgia today, Donald Trump Jr. tells the state’s voters that the U.S. Senate — and his father’s accomplishments — are on the line during January’s special election, Axios reports.
The co-author of the million-selling Game Change has a book of his own coming about the 2020 election, the AP reports.
Simon & Schuster announced Monday that John Heilemann is working on a “dramatic, first-hand account” of Joe Biden’s victorious campaigns over his Democratic Party rivals in the primaries and over President Donald Trump in the general election.
Heilemann had collaborated with Mark Halperin on Game Change, about the 2008 race, and on Double Down, about 2012. Their anticipated book on 2016 was cancelled after Halperin faced multiple allegations of sexual harassment.
Jonathan Chait: “White women voted for Trump. Or so you have probably heard. In the immediate aftermath of Donald Trump’s 2016 victory, the finding from early exit polls that 53 percent of white women voted for Trump formed the basis for a million social-media posts, op-eds, and rally placards. That this “fact” is not true is not even close to the biggest problem with its ubiquitous place in progressive social-justice discourse.”
“The 53 percent figure turned out to be erroneous, and corrected analyses eventually pegged Trump’s share of the white female electorate closer to 47 percent. Nonetheless, the impulse that propelled so many writers to blame white women for electing Trump proved strong enough to survive even after the factual basis was undercut. Indeed, left-wing opinion writers continued churning out polemics based on the erroneous 53 percent figure for years.”
“Rudy Giuliani, President Trump’s lawyer who has led the most extensive efforts to damage his client’s political rivals and undermine the election results, discussed with the president as recently as last week the possibility of receiving a pre-emptive pardon before Mr. Trump leaves office,” the New York Times reports.
“Mr. Giuliani’s potential criminal exposure is unclear. He was under investigation as recently as last summer by federal prosecutors in Manhattan for his business dealings in Ukraine and his role in ousting the American ambassador there, a plot that was at the heart of the impeachment of Mr. Trump.”
“The Pentagon policy official overseeing the military’s efforts to combat the Islamic State was fired on Monday after a White House official told him the United States had won that war and that his office had been disbanded,” the New York Times reports.
Neil Irwin: “For the first time since the pandemic shuttered the economy eight months ago, the end is in sight.”
“The development of vaccines that appear to be safe, effective and ready for wide distribution in the months ahead means it’s now possible to envision a post-Covid economy by summer.”
“There is a distinct possibility that the economy could roar back to full health quickly as soon as public health conditions allow. But for that to happen, the United States will need to make it through what might be a cold, dark winter in which damage could be done to the tissue of the economy that prevents that rapid healing.”
American Prospect: “For many in the political establishment, joining the Trump administration was initially considered to be a mark of shame. In 2016, more than 100 Republican staffers signed a Never-Trump letter.”
“Trump alumni may have worried that they might struggle to find new jobs in Washington or Silicon Valley or Wall Street. (And certainly a lot of people have cycled out given the administration’s record turnover.) But almost universally, former Trump appointees are profiting from their time in the White House. Even before Trump concedes the election and leaves the White House, they have been normalized.”
“Despite those initial expectations of a Trump stigma, it’s in fact the people who quit in protest who have suffered most.”
Quinta Jurecic: “Donald Trump will not serve a second term. The litigation launched by his campaign and the Republican Party to overturn the election results has no chance of preventing Joe Biden from swearing the oath of office on January 20—as Trump himself seemed to haltingly recognize last week after his administration finally allowed the presidential transition to begin.”
“But even though the worst has not come to pass, Trump and his team are doing lasting damage to American democracy as the president struggles to come to grips with the reality of his loss. And yet, these lawyers and officials will likely face no real consequences for their actions—and if they do, those repercussions will not be enough to address the scale of the problem.”
A witness in Sidney Powell’s new Michigan lawsuit challenging President Trump’s loss in the state says in a declaration he thinks there’s something fishy about election returns in Edison County, Michigan.
Bridge Michigan notes one problem: There is no Edison County in Michigan.
Ron Brownstein: “The silence of congressional Republican leaders as President Trump’s unfounded claims of election fraud grow wilder and more venomous increasingly resembles the party’s deference to Sen. Joe McCarthy during the worst excesses of his anti-Communist crusade in the early 1950s.”
“In McCarthy’s era, most of the GOP’s leaders found excuses to avoid challenging conspiracy theories that they knew to be implausible, even as evidence of their costs to the nation steadily mounted. For years, despite their private doubts about his charges and methods alike, the top GOP leadership — particularly Senate Republican leader Robert A. Taft, the Mitch McConnell of his day — either passively abetted or actively supported McCarthy’s scattershot claims of treason and Communist infiltration.”
“A significant faction of Senate Republicans didn’t join with Democrats to curb McCarthy’s power until the senator immolated himself with his accusations, in highly publicized 1953 and 1954 hearings, that the Army was riddled with Communists during the presidency of fellow Republican Dwight Eisenhower.”
“A bipartisan group of senators is expected to unveil an approximately $908 billion stimulus proposal on Tuesday, aiming to break a months-long partisan impasse over providing emergency federal relief to the U.S. economy,” the Washington Post reports.
“While trying to contain the spread of the novel coronavirus, Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine (R) has faced throngs of armed protesters at the statehouse and crowds outside his own home. Now, he is now facing efforts from within his own party to push him out of office entirely,” the Washington Post reports.
“A group of four Republican state lawmakers filed a dozen articles of impeachment against DeWine on Monday, saying the governor violated state and federal laws by requiring face masks in public and ordering some businesses to close.”
Joshua Green: “Many Democrats have spent the weeks since the election bickering about who’s to blame for a result that ousted President Trump but also saw the party fall short in its efforts to gain strength in Congress and statehouses.”
“The debate has obscured one area of unquestionable Democratic success: In the four years since Trump’s election, progressives have built an organizing and fundraising behemoth, which just delivered a record 80 million votes for President-elect Joe Biden. Democrats’ fortunes in the Biden era and beyond will hinge on whether they can maintain and grow this juggernaut.”
“The new coronavirus infected people in the U.S. in mid-December 2019, a few weeks before it was officially identified in China and about a month earlier than public health authorities found the first U.S. case,” the Wall Street Journal reports.
“The findings significantly strengthen evidence suggesting the virus was spreading around the world well before public health authorities and researchers became aware, upending initial thinking about how early and quickly it emerged.”
Jay Powell, the Federal Reserve chairman, has warned Congress that the rise in coronavirus cases could “prove challenging for the next few months” even as encouraging news on vaccine development has boosted the outlook for the economy in the medium-term, the Financial Times reports.
The Fed chairman stressed that the economic outlook remained “extraordinarily uncertain” — a phrase he has used throughout the pandemic.
Stuart Rothenberg: “Republicans are already sounding as if they intend to make 2022 about socialism, illegal immigrants and anarchists in the suburbs. But if the economy is strong, COVID-19 is in the rear-view mirror and Biden is popular, the midterm election might well favor the status quo.”
“Though House Republicans have reasons for optimism, nothing is now guaranteed about the political landscape of 2022 — especially since a bitter, defeated Trump is likely to want the limelight during the next few years.”
“President Trump has raised about $170 million since Election Day as his campaign operation has continued to aggressively solicit donations with hyped-up appeals that have funded his fruitless attempts to overturn the election and that have seeded his post-presidential political ambitions,” the New York Times reports.
“Instead of slowing down after the election, Mr. Trump’s campaign has ratcheted up its volume of email solicitations for cash, telling supporters that money was needed for an ‘Election Defense Fund.’ In reality, the fine print shows that the first 75 percent of every contribution currently goes to a new political action committee that Mr. Trump set up in mid-November, Save America, which can be used to fund his political activities going forward, including staff and travel. The other 25 percent of each donation is directed to the Republican National Committee.”
Authored by Ivan Pantchoukov via The Epoch Times, Attorney Sidney Powell said on Monday that someone had removed a Dominion Voting Systems server from a recount center in Fulton County , Georgia . “Someone went down to the Fulton center…
Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger (R) – who President Trump last Thursday called an “enemy of the people” for allegedly making some type of “deal” with Democratic operative Stacey Abrams over ballot harvesting – said on Monday…
On Sunday, SpaceWeather said the sun’s solar explosion was measured as an M4.4-category eruption, which produced a shortwave radio blackout over some parts of Earth and a bright coronal mass ejection (CME). “Remarkably, the flare was…
Authored by Jim Quinn via The Burning Platform blog, Yesterday we took advantage of another beautiful Fall day in Cape May. We decided to check out the Cape May Lighthouse State Park. It is at the very end of Cape May. It is an example…
Authored by Michael Snyder via TheMostImportantNews.com, Could it be possible that the phrase “dark winter” has some sort of deeper meaning that most of us are not meant to understand? We have heard that phrase over and over again in…
Authored by Andrea Widburg via AmericanThinker.com, Americans have common sense, so they can understand when they’re being played (for example, when politicians place Americans under house arrest and then ignore their own rules to party…
Simple Options Trading for Beginners retails on Amazon for $19.95 and has 4 out of 5 stars. It was written by a stock market trading veteran with over 44 years of experience. Because of a special promotion, this book is 100% FREE for you today. So get it here now…
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Mark Finchem Arizona state representative Mark Finchem (district 11) on Monday issued a call to withhold the state’s Electoral College votes for Joe Biden because… Read more…
Attorney Sidney Powell joined Lou Dobbs on Monday night to discuss the 2020 election fraud investigations. Powell has filed Kraken cases in Georgia and Michigan… Read more…
Dr. Scott Atlas resigned from his post as a temporary coronavirus advisor to President Trump Monday night. Atlas was brought on in August as a… Read more…
The Trump-hating Arizona Secretary of State on Monday certified the state’s false election results. Secretary of State Katie Hobbs previously called Trump supporters “neo-nazis.” Katie… Read more…
Grassroots Republicans are organizing a hearing Tuesday inside the Binsfeld Office Building in Lansing, Michigan. The hearing will focus on the massive fraud witnessed by… Read more…
Sheila Kuehl All animals are equal, but some animals are more equal than others. LA County Supervisor Sheila Kuehl was caught dining at Il Forno… Read more…
A former FBI special agent spent several hours scouring the over 580,000 registered voters in the Peach State. Derek Somerville found over 57,000 cast ballots… Read more…
“Same as it ever was” – the Talking Heads. Lindsey Graham had some advice for President Trump should Biden steal the election. Newsmax reported: President… Read more…
New York Governor Andrew Cuomo told viewers to watch out for the ‘COVID Grinch’ during the holiday season and Cuomo painted a picture to viewers… Read more…
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The fourth education policy brief to be released by the Hoover Education Success Initiative in 2020, it comprehensively examines the past, present and future of school choice at the federal, state, and local levels, making recommendations on how state governments should proceed amidst uncertainty.
In this interview, Michael Auslin, the Payson R. Treat Distinguished Research Fellow in contemporary Asia, discussed the publication of America in the World 2020, a new special edition of the Great Decisions book series, published by the Foreign Policy Association (FPA). The volume of essays, coedited by Auslin and Noel V. Lateef, FPA president, is directed towards informing citizens about US foreign policy and features contributions by eleven Hoover fellows.
The new conventional wisdom in these unconventional times is that advanced-economy governments can take advantage of today’s ultra-low interest rates to borrow and spend without limit in order to support the economy. But the fact is that there is always a limit, and it may come into view sooner than many realize.
One of the big questions on the table today is whether Trumpism will survive President Trump’s time in the White House. The short answer is: maybe as a political force, but not as an ideology. In fact, when it comes to Trumpism as a set of policies or beliefs, I am inclined to quote Gertrude Stein, who said of her childhood home in Oakland, California, “There is no there there.”
Hoover Institution fellow Victor Davis Hanson discusses the intemperate language of condemnation from the left, including accusing the president of being a dictator or a Nazi.
via Socialism and Free Market Capitalism: The Human Prosperity Project
The Hoover Institution presents an online virtual speaker series based on the scholarly research and commentary written by Hoover fellows participating in the Human Prosperity Project on Socialism and Free-Market Capitalism. Tune in on Thursday, December 3, 2020 at 11:00 am PT.
Time and time again, all sides have stated that Kosovo was a one-time thing and not a formal legal precedent. Invoking it in the case of Nagorno-Karabakh demonstrates an unwillingness to recognize this reality.
Ignorance of Civics is a major contributor to our nation’s current problems and divisions, said Dr. David Davenport, guest speaker at the Coronado Roundtable’s November meeting. Election year 2020 provided a stress test for our system of government, largely because Americans, especially younger Americans, are woefully ignorant of how it works.
The opinions expressed in this publication are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the opinions of the Hoover Institution or Stanford University.
Welcome Haley!
Regarding the comment that we’re reaching a critical stage because our ICUs are approaching 80% capacity…I live in Houston, home to the Tx Medical Center. This summer when elective procedures were halted for fear of overrunning our ICUs, Dr Marc Boom, head of the TMC and a real advocate for masking and distancing, said our ICUs are ALWAYS close to full. Hospitals don’t make any money having a whole wing of expensive equipment and highly trained staff sitting around with nothing to do. Also there are always flex spaces that you can ramp up the level of care in an area for an extended period of time.
So every time we hear a government official down here warn us to go back inside and stop all social gatherings because the ICUs are filling up, it seems a little disingenuous. We don’t know what to believe anymore.
Great point Rebecca.
In NYC, where I live, the biggest issue is rent. Evictions have been shown to be a severely impoverishing life event. And, of course, a shelter is a super-crowded condition. So evictions now are a life-threatening event.