Good morning! Here is your news briefing for Monday December 7, 2020
THE DAILY SIGNAL
December 7 2020
Good morning from Washington, where the dominant media doesn’t find a conservative woman’s barrier-breaking on Capitol Hill worth reporting. Kelsey Bolar spotlights the hypocrisy. What’s the deal with the left’s about-face on freedom of expression? Victor Davis Hanson has thoughts. On the podcast, a loyal Daily Signal subscriber describes his battle with COVID-19. Plus: Joe Biden’s abortion-friendly extremism; social media sites that welcome free speech; and remembering Walter Williams’ championship of liberty. On this date in 1941, a surprise aerial assault by Japan on the Pearl Harbor naval base at Oahu, Hawaii, wrecks much of the U.S. Pacific fleet, destroys over 200 planes, kills 2,400 Americans, and wounds another 1,200.
The left is Victorian—increasingly puritanical, regressive, and hypersensitive. Even totalitarian censorship and book-burning have weirdly become part of their by-any-means-necessary methods.
Ever since Joe Biden became the likely next president, the media has been bending over backward to celebrate historic “firsts” for women—if they’re liberal.
Allen Muench was fighting for his life when he checked into a hospital last month with COVID-19. After just 36 hours under the care of doctors and nurses, Muench says, he “felt like a new person.”
If administrators deliver on their promises, sweeping changes will introduce new courses, shift hiring priorities, rebalance student demographics, and revise conduct standards.
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THE EPOCH TIMES
DECEMBER 7, 2020 READ IN BROWSER
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Can you remember the last time a presidential election was contested like the 2020 election?
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Americans are losing faith in the judicial system.
Now more than ever, Truth and Tradition matter.
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“People of faith do not consider physical demise to be one’s true death, since the soul goes to heaven or is born again in the cycle of reincarnation. The Communist Party uses killing as an instrument to plant the seeds of terror in the minds of the people, forcing them to accept its evil ideology. Through the destruction of morality, people’s souls are fated to damnation. The Communist Party aims not just to destroy man’s physical body, but also his soul.”
The decades-long communist assault on America is reaching a climax.With America’s presidential election now in disarray, the ChineseCommunist Party (CCP)’s infiltration in the U.S. is closer to the topthan ever.Let’s reject the CCP
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We have communist China at our gates, ready to take over.
The CCP has carefully studied the U.S. system over the decades and now has successfully taken advantage of our open society and has infiltrated our country. Honest journalism has never been more important than right now.
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DAYBREAK
Your First Look at Today’s Top Stories – Daybreak Insider
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California Sheriff Rips Governor, Refuses to Enforce Covid Orders
In the video, Riverside County Sheriff Chad Bianco said “While the governor’s office and the state has threatened action against violators, the Riverside County Sheriff’s Department will not be blackmailed, bullied, or used as muscle against Riverside County residents in the enforcement of the Governor’s orders” (New York Post). Orange County Sheriff Don Barns also rejected calls to enforce the insanity. He said in a statement “Orange County Sheriff’s deputies will not be dispatched to, or respond to, calls for service to enforce compliance with face coverings, social gatherings, or stay-at-home orders only” (ABC 7).
2.
Democrat Warnock Still Declines to Say If He’d Vote to Pack Court
In a debate with Senator Kelly Loeffler Sunday, Democrat Raphael Warnock dodged the question with this absurd statement: “I know that’s an interesting question for people inside the Beltway to discuss. They’re wondering when in the world are they going to get some Covid relief” (Washington Times). Senator Loeffler quite accurately kept referring to him as “radical liberal Raphael Warnock” (National Review).
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3.
Los Angeles Restaurant Owner Shut Down as Movie Sets Up Food
The emotional, viral video from the owner of the Pineapple Hill Grill and Saloon reveals how hypocritical the Covid shutdown is in the state of California (Red State). From a local reporter covering the story: In an “interview” with @SpecNews1SoCal, L.A. County Supervisor @SheilaKuehl says the story we broke about her restaurant visit after her vote to ban outdoor dining is a “non story”, and she she calls our team at @FOXLA a “cartoon network” for covering it (Twitter).
4.
Giuliani Tests Positive for Covid-
After traveling quite a bit on behalf of the President (NY Post). From Giuliani late yesterday: Thank you to all my friends and followers for all the prayers and kind wishes. I’m getting great care and feeling good. Recovering quickly and keeping up with everything (Twitter). The statement from the White House (Twitter).
5.
Biden Goes Extreme Pro-Abortion with HHS Secretary
From Kristen Waggoner: ADF had to go all the way to the Supreme Court to stop Becerra from forcing religious pro-life pregnancy centers to advertise for abortions. He is an extremist who has no regard for conscience or protecting life. There’s nothing moderate about this pick. Nothing (Twitter). From Dr. Albert Mohler: Biden’s choice of Xavier Becerra as HHS Secretary shows the abject lie of the “moderate” Biden and sets up a fight the Republicans in the Senate had better not lose. Conservatives in Georgia—are you paying attention? All eyes are on you. Voter registration ends Monday! (Twitter).
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6.
Lancaster City Council Gives “Vote of No Confidence” to LA Country Public Health Director
The beginning of breaking away from the tentacles of Los Angeles. The vote was unanimous.
Study Finds U.S. Media Covers Covid Far More Negatively
Even covering good news as bad. From the story: This imbalance in media coverage has created a climate of fear that has real consequences. Millions of children have skipped their routine vaccinations this year. The consequent drop in immunizations will leave every community in the U.S. in greater danger of such highly contagious diseases as measles, whooping cough, and even polio. The same type of fear-based response led to elective surgeries being canceled by either patients or the hospitals scheduled to conduct them
Brian Babin (R-TX) Introduces a Bill Stating Voters Must be Alive to Cast Ballots
From the Daily Wire: The bill comes amid charges by President Trump and others of voter fraud, especially that the ballots of deceased individuals were cast absentee in the 2020 presidential election (Daily Wire). From Babin’s press release: “We’ve uncovered some fraudulent plans to register a bunch of dead people to vote down in South Florida, and it’s the easiest thing in the world for these local counties to purge their voter list of deceased individuals. All they have to do is to go to the Social Security system and cross check against their deceased Social Security recipients on their list and then purge them off of the voter list” (House.gov).
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Good Monday morning. A couple of housekeeping notes.
— The deadline to secure advertising in the Winter edition of INFLUENCE Magazine, featuring the 30-under-30 Rising Stars of Florida politics, is this Friday. If you would like to reserve your space in this edition, please email me at Peter@FloridaPolitics.com.
— Speaking of advertising, if you would like to lock in 2020 prices for advertising on FloridaPolitics.com — or you want to pay for your 2021 ads now after the lucrative 2020 election cycle you just enjoyed — please email me to discuss opportunities and special rates.
For the best, the time is now.
— Don’t forget to sign-up for our new direct text service, which provides exclusive first-look updates about the 2021 Session and state government. Just last week, these texts were first on your phone with news about Senate committee assignments and the race for the Florida Democratic Party’s chair.
Here’s a micro-scoop about a good person to start the week (go easy on us, it’s the slow time of the year). Lisa Vickers, who just finished a tour of keeping the trains running on time in the Senate President’s office, is headed to the Department of Revenue, where she will serve as Deputy Executive Director. She previously served in that position for Dr. Jim Zingale when he was Executive Director.
Congratulations to Lisa Vickers, newly named Deputy Executive Director for the Department of Revenue.
Situational awareness
—@RealDonaldTrump: .@RudyGiuliani, by far the greatest mayor in the history of NYC, and who has been working tirelessly exposing the most corrupt election (by far!) in the history of the USA, has tested positive for the China Virus. Get better soon Rudy, we will carry on!!!
—@JasonPinter: Rudy Giuliani is having the worst year for a lawyer since Saul Goodman agreed to represent Jesse Pinkman.
—@MaggieNYT: One of the striking things about Giuliani being massless so often is he was noticeably one of the few around [Donald] Trump wearing a mask at the Trump Hotel many months ago. He’s gone in other direction.
—@KenDilanianNBC: On Fox, White House spokeswoman Kayleigh McEnany just acknowledged the [Joe] Biden victory: “If we lose these two Senate seats, guess who’s casting the deciding vote in this country for our government? It will be Kamala Harris.”
—@JimVandehei: President Trump is considering a made-for-TV grand finale: a White House departure on Marine One and final Air Force One flight to Florida for a political rally opposite Joe Biden’s inauguration, sources familiar with the discussions tell Axios.
—@EWErickson: The FEMA camps weren’t real. Jade Helm wasn’t real. The stolen election is not real. You people who believe this stuff and then want to try to convince people Jesus is real are undermining your ability to witness. Thank God the Holy Spirit can work without you.
—@ScottforFlorida: .@GOPChairwoman and @TommyHicksGOP have done an incredible job leading our party over the last few years. I support their bids to continue as Chairwoman and Co-Chair of the Republican National Committee. They’re best equipped to move our Party forward!
Tweet, tweet:
Tweet, tweet:
—@MattGaetz: I totally agree that the Populist Right & Populist Left often have a great deal in common when battling the bought-and-paid-for Establishment Center. @AOC and I even reflect on this occasionally during votes. We should work together more when aligned. Count me in!
—@BSFarrington: So, who’s laughing and who’s praying right now?
Tweet, tweet:
Days until
Florida Chamber Foundation’s virtual Transportation, Growth and Infrastructure Solution Summit begins — 1; the Electoral College votes — 7; “Death on the Nile” premieres — 10; NBA 2020-21 opening night — 15; “The Midnight Sky” with George Clooney premieres on Netflix — 16; “Wonder Woman 1984” rescheduled premiere — 18; Pixar’s “Soul” premiere (rescheduled for Disney+) — 18; Greyhound racing ends in Florida — 24; Georgia U.S. Senate runoff elections — 29; the 2021 Inauguration — 44; Super Bowl LV in Tampa — 62; Daytona 500 — 69; “A Quiet Place Part II” rescheduled premiere — 73; “Black Widow” rescheduled premiere — 87; “No Time to Die” premieres (rescheduled) — 116; Children’s Gasparilla — 124; Seminole Hard Rock Gasparilla Pirate Fest — 131; “Top Gun: Maverick” rescheduled premiere — 207; Disney’s “Shang Chi and The Legend of The Ten Rings” premieres — 214; new start date for 2021 Olympics — 228; “Jungle Cruise” premieres — 236; St. Petersburg Primary Election — 260; St. Petersburg Municipal Elections — 330; Disney’s “Eternals” premieres — 334; “Spider-Man Far From Home” sequel premieres — 336; Steven Spielberg’s “West Side Story” premieres — 368; “Thor: Love and Thunder” premieres — 432; “Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness” premieres — 485; “Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse” sequel premieres — 666.
Dateline Tallahassee
“Even Ron DeSantis’ staff urged him to require masks, but he didn’t” via Steve Bousquet of The South Florida Sun-Sentinel — DeSantis should listen to his own people more often. We know that at least twice during this terrible pandemic, they tried to coax him into telling people in Florida to wear face masks to halt the spread of COVID-19. Mayors from both parties pleaded with the Republican Governor to improve two-way communication and expand contact tracing. It didn’t happen. DeSantis chose loyalty to Trump and the Republican base, and he wouldn’t do it. In fact, Hialeah Mayor Carlos Hernandez, an outspoken critic of the state’s response, was blocked from attending a round table with DeSantis.
Ron DeSantis wore a mask during a meeting with Miami-Dade Mayors, but when his staff urged him to tell Floridians to wear masks, he balked. Image via AP.
“Michael Grieco brings back bill to end state-sanctioned Confederate holidays” via Ryan Nicol of Florida Politics — Newly-filed legislation from Democratic Rep. Grieco aims to stop three Confederate holidays from being recognized by the state. Florida law designates former Confederate President Jefferson Davis‘s birthday on June 3 as a state-recognized holiday. The same goes for former Confederate General Robert E. Lee‘s birthday on Jan. 19. Confederate Memorial Day, on April 26, is also a state-sanctioned holiday. The legislation from Grieco, a Miami Beach Democrat, isn’t the first attempt at removing those holidays from the books. Similar bills have been filed in recent years, but the GOP-controlled Legislature has not moved them forward.
“Mixed drinks to go: Jennifer Bradley files booze delivery bill” via A.G. Gancarski of Florida Politics — Sen. Bradley of North Central Florida’s Senate District 5 is looking to make takeout mixed drinks a permanent option and has filed legislation to do just that. Bradley’s SB 148 would revise the current beverage law to allow restaurants to deliver mixed drinks with meals, continuing a practice begun during the pandemic at DeSantis’ direction. The alcohol delivery would have to be accompanied by food. If the bill becomes law, it takes effect in July. Bradley described herself as “laser-focused on helping our small businesses” when discussing the bill earlier in the fall.
Corona Florida
“DeSantis not planning statewide campaign in Florida to urge coronavirus vaccine use” via John Kennedy of The Sarasota Herald-Tribune — With Florida recently passing the 1 million mark for COVID-19 cases, the prospect of a vaccine being available in coming weeks looms as a potential bright spot in the state’s troubled battle with the coronavirus. But DeSantis’ administration has no plans for a wide-scale campaign encouraging Floridians to be vaccinated. DeSantis said the state’s focus would be on vaccinating residents of the state’s more than 4,000 nursing homes, long-term care facilities and group homes. “The long-term care facilities are, I think, a big priority, because that’s where 40% of the mortalities nationwide have occurred,” DeSantis said.
Ron DeSantis does not have a plan to promote the upcoming vaccine. Image via USA Today.
“Florida adds 8,436 coronavirus cases and 96 deaths” via Anastasia Dawson of the Tampa Bay Times — The Florida Department of Health reported 8,436 coronavirus cases and 96 deaths Sunday, bringing the overall number of known infections in the state to 1,058,074. That means roughly 1 in every 19 Floridians has tested positive for the virus, according to state data. The number of deaths attributed to the virus since March 1, when Florida’s first known coronavirus cases were reported, is 19,423, the third-highest death toll in the nation. The number of coronavirus deaths has continued to rise this week. By Sunday, the state was averaging 98.1 per day. Only two other states have reported caseloads exceeding 1 million people.
“Florida right to keep remote learning option for schools” via the Tampa Bay Times editorial board — The state’s decision to allow remote classes to continue in the spring is good news for parents, children, and school districts alike. With the pandemic still surging, families should have the option to choose whether in-classroom instruction or online learning works best for their own situation. Students struggling remotely will have access to new resources, and the extension gives school districts the certainty they need to plan and budget for the coming semester. The Department of Education released a new emergency order for the second semester on Monday that keeps live remote classes available as an option.
Corona local
“Nearly a quarter of Florida’s new 8,436 COVID-19 cases come from Miami-Dade” via Michelle Marchante of the Miami Herald — Florida’s Department of Health on Sunday confirmed 8,436 additional cases of COVID-19, bringing the state’s known total to 1,058,074. Also, 93 new resident deaths were announced, bringing the resident toll to 19,177. Four new nonresident deaths were also announced, bringing the nonresident toll to 246. Sunday is the first time in three days that the state’s single-day case count is less than 10,000. Testing was also down compared to the previous days though fewer tests are usually processed during the weekend. Testing, like hospitalizations, helps officials determine the virus’ progress and plays a role in deciding whether it is safe to lift stay-at-home orders and loosen restrictions.
Miami-Dade is responsible for the lion’s share of new coronavirus cases. Image via AP.
“‘Months before we can restore normalcy.’ Miami-Dade officials plead for federal COVID-19 aid” via Howard Cohen of the Miami Herald — South Florida elected officials, including Miami-Dade Mayor Daniella Levine Cava, spent part of Saturday morning at a food distribution site on Miami Beach pleading, “praying and beseeching the federal government to come to our aid” as the COVID-19 pandemic surges through the state. Levine Cava’s pleas were echoed by Miami Beach Mayor Dan Gelber, City of Miami Mayor Francis Suarez, and Miami Beach Commissioner David Richardson at the food distribution site at 22nd Street and Collins Avenue. The officials held a video news conference to urge Congress to extend a stimulus package to fund ongoing food distribution events.
“The ‘COVID slide’: More South Florida students are failing” via Scott Travis of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — More students are failing at their schoolwork as they learn at home during the COVID-19 crisis, according to new school district data. The percentage of students getting F’s has more than doubled, with more skipping school and performing poorly on assessments. South Florida districts have reviewed practice tests, report card data, attendance, and other measures to get a glimpse into how severe the “COVID slide” is. Schools were closed for months due to the pandemic, and most students are still learning at home.
Remote learning is causing a ‘COVID slide’ among South Florida students. Image via AP.
“The new snowbird: Young, and working remotely to wait out the pandemic” via Lois K. Solomon of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — There’s a new generation of snowbirds flocking to South Florida this season. They’re young, mobile, and working remotely because COVID-19 has closed their offices. All they want is good weather and decent Wi-Fi. In their 20s, 30s and 40s, many lived in New York and New Jersey until the pandemic made them think twice about life in the big city or its suburbs. Call them snow-chicks, the offspring of our beloved seasonal snowbirds. These chicks have a lot to get used to in their new Florida environment, including relatively lax rules about mask-wearing. Many newcomers from the North have found Florida’s mixed messages about masks jarring as COVID-19 enters its peak.
“Jerry Demings signs order to fine Orange Co. businesses for not masking” via Scott Powers of Florida Politics — In defiance of DeSantis‘ efforts to prevent or at least discourage local coronavirus mandates, Demings signed an executive order requiring business in the county to require social distancing and mask-wearing or face fines. Demings’ executive order is directed at businesses he said are “bad actors” that are few, but accelerating the new resurgence of COVID-19 pandemic. That action is his Executive Order 2020-51, which will take place at 12:01 a.m. Sunday. It will affect the entire county, including businesses in Orlando and all the incorporated suburbs.
“Death at Freedom Square” via Leonora Lapeter Anton, Kavitha Surana, and Kathryn Varn of the Tampa Bay Times — Last spring, the coronavirus stormed through Seminole Pavilion and another nursing home at Freedom Square of Seminole. Forty people have died, among the largest tolls at long-term care facilities in the state. Nine months into the pandemic, the virus has killed more than 19,000 Floridians. About 40% of the deaths have been among senior care residents. More than 2 out of 3 coronavirus deaths are connected to nursing homes and assisted living centers in Pinellas County alone. By the end of April, more than half the 95 residents at Seminole Pavilion had tested positive. They died in waves, at hospitals and hospices across the county.
Why did COVID-19 spread so fast through Seminole’s Freedom Square?
“COVID-19 drives labor shortage, even amid high unemployment rates” via Maya Lora of The Lakeland Ledger — Despite persistently high unemployment rates, Polk County employers are struggling to fill open positions for the holiday season. According to the latest report from the Florida Department of Economic Opportunity, Polk County’s unemployment rate in October was 7.3% without seasonal adjustments. That number has shrunk considerably from 13.2% in July but is still much higher than the 3.4% reported in October 2019. If you scroll through Indeed job postings or the Jobs in Polk County Facebook group that boasts more than 17,500 members, you might think finding a job would be easy. Susan Hames, the business development manager for Rita Staffing, said it’s definitely an employee’s market. But it’s also more complicated than that.
“Key West scales back New Year’s Eve because of coronavirus” via The Associated Press — The city of Key West is scaling back its normal New Year’s Eve celebrations following recent surges in the spread of coronavirus. Key West Mayor Teri Johnston signed an emergency order Friday that sets an islandwide curfew from 10 p.m. to 6 p.m., running Thursday, Dec. 31, through Sunday, Jan. 3. The curfew does not apply to unincorporated Monroe County, which includes the remainder of the Florida Keys, said county Mayor Michelle Coldiron. When the curfew takes effect, all nonessential businesses will be required to close by 10 p.m. Officials said the emergency directive was enacted to lessen the chance of a potential public health emergency brought on by holiday crowds that typically fill the city’s downtown areas.
Corona nation
“The U.S. has passed the hospital breaking point” via Robinson Meyer and Alexis C. Madrigal of The Atlantic — Since the beginning of the pandemic, public-health experts have warned of one particular nightmare. They said that the number of coronavirus patients could exceed hospitals’ capacity in a state or city to care for them. Now several lines of evidence are sending us the same message: Hospitals are becoming overwhelmed, causing them to restrict whom they admit and leading more Americans to die needlessly. The number of hospitalized patients has increased nearly every day: Since November 1, the number of people hospitalized with COVID-19 has doubled; since October 1, it has tripled.
Coronavirus cases are putting a severe strain on U.S. hospitals.
Meanwhile … “CDC recommends people wear masks indoors when not at home” via Taylor Telford of The Washington Post — The CDC is urging “universal mask use” indoors for the first time as the country shatters records for coronavirus hospitalizations and deaths ahead of the holiday season. The CDC has for months encouraged mask-wearing in public spaces with people outside the household. The new guidance asks people to put on masks anywhere outside their homes. In its weekly Morbidity and Mortality Report, the CDC warned the U.S. has entered “a phase of high-level transmission” as colder weather and the ongoing holiday season push Americans indoors, and said that “consistent and correct” use of face masks is critical to taming the virus.
“Will the U.S. ever have a national COVID-19 testing strategy?” via Mike Stobbe and Matthew Perrone of The Associated Press — As the coronavirus epidemic worsens, U.S. health experts hope Biden’s administration will put in place something Trump’s has not, a comprehensive national testing strategy. Such a strategy, they say, could systematically check more people for infections and spot surges before they take off. The health experts say it would improve from the current practice, which has professional athletes and students at elite universities getting routine tests while many other Americans stand in line for hours if they get tested at all.
“COVID-19 means more preschool-age kids won’t be ready for kindergarten” via Alida Wong of USA Today — For America’s low-income children, high-quality opportunities to prepare for kindergarten were already in short supply before the pandemic hit. Nationally, child care was out of reach for many Americans, costing as much as $9,600 on average last year, an analysis by Child Care Aware of America found. Head Start, a federal early-childhood education program designated for low-income families, served just 36% of eligible 3- to 5-year-olds. Early Head Start reaches even fewer families, enrolling only 11% of eligible infants and toddlers. As a result, as many as half low-income children already were starting kindergarten without being ready for it.
COVID-19 is taking a toll on preschoolers and readiness for kindergarten.
“Donald Trump’s Operation Warp Speed promised a flood of COVID-19 vaccines. Instead, states are expecting a trickle.” via Christopher Rowland, Lena H. Sun, Isaac Stanley-Becker and Carolyn Y. Johnson of The Washington Post — Federal officials have slashed the amount of coronavirus vaccine they plan to ship to states in December because of supply constraints, sending local officials into a scramble to adjust vaccination plans and highlighting how early promises of a vast stockpile before the end of 2020 have fallen short. Instead of delivering 300 million or so doses of vaccine immediately after emergency-use approval and before the end of 2020 as the Trump administration had originally promised, current plans call for availability of around a tenth of that, or 35 to 40 million doses.
Corona economics
“Bleak outlook as unemployment benefits end for millions” via The Associated Press — Unemployment has forced aching decisions on millions of Americans and their families in the face of a rampaging viral pandemic that has closed shops and restaurants, paralyzed travel, and left millions jobless for months. Now, their predicaments stand to grow bleaker yet if Congress fails to extend two unemployment programs set to expire the day after Christmas. If no agreement is reached in negotiations taking place on Capitol Hill, more than 9 million people will lose federal jobless aid that averages about $320 a week, and that typically serves as their only source of income.
When the unemployment runs out, many Americans will be up the creek without a paddle.
More corona
“U.S. and Europe head in opposite coronavirus directions” via Dave Lawler of Axios — While the U.S. continues to set records for new coronavirus cases, European countries have managed to turn their own terrifying spikes around. As some states in the U.S. crack down to head off the worst, the debate in countries like the U.K. and France has shifted to whether and how to lighten their own restrictions before the holidays. America’s surge lagged two to three weeks behind Europe’s. However, responses in U.S. states have been uneven and generally less severe than in most European countries. Daily case counts are already rising significantly in most U.S. states, and they’re likely to tick up further following Thanksgiving gatherings around the country.
There is a complete divergence in how the U.S. and Europe are addressing coronavirus.
“A 104-year-old World War II veteran from Alabama has survived COVID-19” via Amanda Jackson of CNN — An Alabama man battling the coronavirus was released from the hospital just in time to celebrate his 104th birthday. Major Lee Wooten, a World War II veteran, recovered from the virus last week in Madison, Alabama. Staff at Madison Hospital gave him a special send-off when he was discharged on Tuesday, two days before his birthday. His granddaughter, Holly Wooten McDonald, posted Facebook updates about his recovery. Wooten requested a chocolate milkshake on the way home from the hospital, she said. “I wish I had gotten a picture of pop-pop pulling his mask over his nose to get to that milkshake as fast as he could,” she wrote.
“As pandemic threatens Britain’s mental health, these ‘fishermen’ fight back” via Megan Specia of The New York Times — The group of seven volunteers in high-visibility vests, equipped with GPS trackers and radios, gathered in the parking lot of a nature preserve on the outskirts of town. “We’ll take the red route,” Rick Roberts said, shining his flashlight over a map of the woodland, as his breath formed a cloud in the cold, late-November air. The charity has also found itself increasingly responding to mental health calls at residents’ houses. Last week, workers were called out to the home of a 28-year-old man whose wife said he was threatening to end his life. He had already written a suicide note. They spoke with him before calling the ambulance and police services, and referred him for counseling.
“Europe’s deadly second wave: How did it happen again?” via Josh Holder, Matina Stevis-Gridneff and Allison McCann of The New York Times — By early June, scarred and battered, Europe was emerging from the depths of its fight against the coronavirus pandemic. Strict lockdowns in most countries had lifted health care systems off their knees, just as the United States and others were fighting record caseloads. The weather was warming up, the European Union was encouraging borders to reopen and Europeans were desperate for a break. They paid dearly for it. A devastating second wave has forced reluctant governments back into lockdowns or restrictions and inflicted new scars on European economies. The optimism of the summer is gone, replaced with the realization that loosening precautions led to thousands of deaths just months before vaccines may arrive.
Europe is experiencing a devastating second wave. How?
“EU eyes Dec 29 approval for 1st virus vaccine, later than U.S.” via Frank Jorand, Maria Cheng, and Samiel Petrequi of The Associated Press — The European Union drug agency said it may need four more weeks to approve its first coronavirus vaccine, even as authorities in the United States and Britain continue to aim for a green light before Christmas. The European Medicines Agency plans to convene a meeting by Dec. 29 to decide if there is enough safety and efficacy data about the vaccine developed by Pfizer and BioNTech for it to be approved. The regulator also said it could decide as early as Jan. 12 whether to approve a rival shot by American pharmaceutical company Moderna Inc, which submitted its request to U.S. and European regulators this week.
“A gamble pays off in ‘spectacular success’: How the leading coronavirus vaccines made it to the finish line” via Carolyn Y. Johnson of The Washington Post — On a Sunday afternoon in early November, scientist Barney Graham got a call at his home office in Rockville, Maryland, working relentlessly to develop a vaccine to vanquish a killer virus. The significance of the news was clear right away to Graham: There could be not one but two vaccines by year’s end. If the Pfizer vaccine worked well, odds were good for a vaccine from biotechnology firm Moderna, since they both relied on the spike protein that Graham’s lab helped design and technology never before harnessed in an approved vaccine. For months, people had asked Graham about the pressure he must have been feeling on the leading edge of an all-hands effort to invent the tools that could end the pandemic.
Presidential
“Trump challenges vote results while urging turnout in Georgia” via Aamer Madhani, Ben Nadler, and Zeke Miller of The Associated Press — Trump is pressing his grievances over losing the presidential election, using a weekend rally to spread baseless allegations of misconduct in last month’s voting in Georgia and beyond even as he pushed supporters to turn out for a pair of Republican Senate candidates in a runoff election in January. “Let them steal Georgia again; you’ll never be able to look yourself in the mirror,” Trump told rallygoers. Trump’s 100-minute rally before thousands of largely maskless supporters came not long after Georgia’s Republican Governor rebuffed him in his astounding call for a special legislative session to give him the state’s electoral votes, even though President-elect Biden won more votes than any other candidate.
Donald Trump goes to Georgia to air grievances.
Trump calls Georgia Governor to pressure him for help overturning Joe Biden’s win in the state” via Amy Gardner, Colby Itkowitz and Josh Dawsey of The Washington Post — Trump called Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp on Saturday morning to urge him to persuade the state legislature to overturn Biden’s victory in the state and asked the Governor to order an audit of absentee ballot signatures, the latest brazen effort by the President to interfere in the 2020 election. Hours before he was scheduled to hold a rally in Georgia on behalf of the state’s two GOP senators, Trump pressed Kemp to call a special session of the state legislature for lawmakers to override the results and appoint electors who would back the President at the electoral college.
“Georgia Governor rebuffs Trump’s call for special session to overturn election results, top official says” via Felicia Sonmez of The Washington Post — Trump’s flailing efforts to overturn the results of the November election were dealt their latest blow Sunday as Georgia Lt. Gov. Geoff Duncan said the state’s Governor would not call a special session of the legislature. Duncan’s statement came hours ahead of highly anticipated debates in Georgia’s two Senate runoff elections, which could determine which party controls the upper chamber. In an interview, Duncan said he “absolutely” believes that Gov. Kemp will not accede to Trump’s demand that he persuade the state legislature to appoint electors who would override the popular vote and nullify Biden’s victory in the state.
“What Pennsylvania’s election could have looked like if it counted votes like Florida” via The Associated Press — Polls had only been closed in Florida for a few hours last month when elections offices started closing up shop for the night, too. Almost all the votes were counted and reported, and there just wasn’t much left to do at that moment. News organizations had already projected Trump as the state’s winner. For example, things in Tampa shut down by 1 a.m., the county supervisor of elections said. Meanwhile, in Philadelphia, elections officials weren’t even halfway through a 50-hour stretch without sleep, at the start of a round-the-clock vote-counting process that would continue for days.
Transition
“Biden and Trump vie to project authority, making for a tense transition” via Matt Viser and Ashley Parker of The Washington Post — When Biden put his weight behind a coronavirus aid package recently, it energized an effort that had seemed dead and nudged political adversaries to the bargaining table, with success now looking far more likely. Meanwhile, Trump spent last week demanding that a major defense bill nod to his cultural and political agenda, threatening a veto if it wasn’t changed. But even some faithful Republican supporters shrugged him off, embracing a final draft that not only ignores Trump’s demands but rebukes some of his moves as commander in chief.
“Inauguration planners rethink how to party in age of virus” via The Associated Press — Biden’s swearing-in itself will not be virtual. But guests should be prepared to socially distance and wear a mask. Lawmakers are also considering requiring a COVID-19 test for anyone on the platform near the President-elect, said Paige Waltz, a spokesperson for the joint congressional committee charged with overseeing the event. The VIP platform can hold 1,600 people. Lawmakers also generally distribute tickets for positions nearby. While no hard decisions have been made, the committee is looking at cutting the numbers on both accounts. No decisions have been made on whether the official inaugural balls should go forward. Some advocacy groups are already going virtual with their galas.
A pandemic inauguration will be a party, within reason. Image via AP.
“‘Old-school revolving door’: Private-sector ties complicate Biden’s efforts to staff incoming administration” via Michael Scherer, Tom Hamburger and Carol D. Leonnig of The Washington Post — Biden’s secretary of state nominee, Antony Blinken, founded a consulting firm that promises corporate clients a bridge from “the Situation Room to the Board Room.” Incoming National Economic Council director Brian Deese and Deputy Treasury Secretary nominee Wally Adeyemo recently held jobs at BlackRock, the world’s largest asset management firm. Biden’s advisers have tried to confront the apparent conflicts directly, with extensive ethics training and detailed rules that bar, in most cases, transition officials from working on issues that could benefit a recent employer or client.
“Pentagon blocks visits to military spy agencies by Joe Biden transition team” via Greg Miller and Missy Ryan of The Washington Post — The Trump administration has refused to allow members of Biden’s transition team to meet with officials at U.S. intelligence agencies that are controlled by the Pentagon, undermining prospects for a smooth transfer of power. The officials said the Biden team has not been able to engage with leaders at the National Security Agency, the Defense Intelligence Agency, and other military-run spy services with classified budgets and global espionage platforms. The Defense Department rejected or did not approve requests from the Biden team this week, the officials said, despite a General Services Administration decision on Nov. 23 clearing the way for federal agencies to meet with the incoming administration representatives.
D.C. matters
“Betsy DeVos extends moratorium on federal student loan payments through end of January” via Danielle Douglas-Gabriel — DeVos extended the suspension of federal student loan payments through the end of January, giving Congress and the incoming Biden administration time to put in place a longer moratorium. The payment freeze, which was first introduced in March and later extended, had been set to expire on Dec. 31. Until now, the Trump administration had declined to say whether the President or DeVos would take action to stop millions of Americans from being thrown back into repayment as the economy continues to struggle.
Betsy DeVos wants to push an extension of the student loan payment pause. Image via AP.
“Matt Gaetz votes for landmark federal bill to decriminalize marijuana” via Kevin Robinson of NWF Daily News — Gaetz was among a handful of Republican congressmen who supported new federal legislation to decriminalize marijuana. On Friday, the U.S. House of Representatives passed the MORE (Marijuana Opportunity Reinvestment and Expungement) Act by a vote of 228-164. The bill would remove marijuana from the list of scheduled substances under the Controlled Substances Act and eliminate criminal penalties for individuals who manufacture, distribute, or possesses marijuana. The MORE Act still has to go before the Republican-controlled Senate, and in remarks before Friday’s vote, Gaetz opined the legislation was destined to fail there.
Statewide
“No one can stop anti-gay therapy in Florida — for now. How LGBTQ advocates are rethinking their battle strategy.” via Rafael Olmeda of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — Gay rights and mental health advocates in South Florida are trying to come up with new ways to fight conversion therapy, the practice of mental health counseling aimed at “curing” teenagers with unwanted feelings of homosexuality or questions about their gender identity. Reeling from a recent federal ruling that cleared the way for psychologists in the southeastern U.S. to offer counseling, opponents are openly questioning whether the legal momentum has shifted so far to the right that court battles are doomed to fail. Critics of conversion therapy and counseling say it’s damaging to the mental health of youths seeking counseling.
Conversion therapy in Florida isn’t going away. But the battle is heating up.
“Luminar’s 25-year-old founder Austin Russell becomes billionaire after IPO” via Noah Manskar of The New York Post — The founder of a startup that helps cars drive themselves just became a billionaire, and he’s barely old enough to rent a car on his own. Luminar Technologies CEO Russell secured a hefty fortune after his company’s stock market debut this week. The Florida-based firm, which he founded when he was just 17, makes so-called lidar scanners that use lasers to give autonomous cars a three-dimensional view of the road and what’s around them. Russell is one of the first billionaires to emerge from the self-driving vehicle market. Luminar has inked a deal to supply lidar units for Volvo vehicles and secured partnerships with Daimler Truck and Mobileye, Intel’s autonomous vehicle unit.
2020
“Florida GOP Chair Joe Gruters may face reelection hurdles despite leading red wave” via Zac Anderson of The Sarasota Herald-Tribune — Trump gave a shoutout to Gruters during a rally in Tampa shortly before the election. Then the President delivered an ultimatum. “He’ll be out of here so fast if we don’t win this election … he’ll be gone,” Trump said. Gruters delivered, helping Trump carry Florida by a margin three times larger than his 2016 victory. But the Sarasota state senator still could face hurdles as he seeks to hold onto his job as Florida GOP chair, although the President isn’t one of them. DeSantis has yet to publicly state whether he favors Gruters staying on as Florida GOP chair through 2022 when DeSantis is up for reelection.
Joe Gruters delivered Florida to Donald Trump and Republicans. That won’t make his reelection any easier. Image via Facebook.
“The Miami-Dade GOP will choose a new leader next week. Will Democrats stand pat?” via David Smiley of The Miami Herald — On the heels of an election that dramatically changed the outlook of Miami-Dade County politics, Democrats and Republicans will convene next week to choose local leaders for their respective parties. Miami-Dade Democrats appear likely to stick with current Chairman Steve Simeonidis despite an underwhelming performance last month by the party’s candidates in partisan races up and down the ballot. Republicans, meanwhile, will close out a banner 2020 by choosing a replacement for outgoing Chairman Nelson Diaz. The new chairperson of the Miami-Dade GOP, when Republicans hold a Dec. 10 socially distanced vote on local leadership, is likely to be County Commissioner Rene Garcia.
“After leaving GOP, David Jolly weighs his political future in Florida as an independent” via Steve Contorno of the Tampa Bay Times — There’s no cellphone service in the central Pennsylvania mountains where Jolly is waiting out the pandemic with his young family. He spends most days walking the woods or adding another beam to the two-story pole barn he’s determined to build by hand. “Good thinking time,” Jolly called it. Lately, Jolly has a lot to think about. The former Florida congressman is itching to run for public office in 2022, possibly for the U.S. Senate, though Governor isn’t out of the question. The state needs leaders willing to compromise, he said, who put people over partisanship.
“Georgia Senate candidates bring the heat in televised faceoff” via A.G. Gancarski of Florida Politics — Sunday night saw Sen. Kelly Loeffler face off with her challenger, Rev. Raphael Warnock, for what could be the only debate of either runoff election in the Georgia Senate races. The stakes? Simply put, control of the Senate. If Warnock and Jon Ossoff both win their races with Loeffler and Sen. David Perdue, the Senate is 50/50, with Vice President-elect Kamala Harris as the tiebreaker. When asked to explain one thing or another, both candidates found a way to wriggle out of specificity, using the finite speaking time to press home familiar attacks larded with hot button talking points.
A debate where the stakes are control of the Senate.
Lobbying regs
New and renewed lobbying registrations:
Angela Bonds, French Brown, Marc Dunbar, Martha Edenfield, Chris Moya, Jennifer Ungru, Dean Mead: Gaggle Net
Richard Kravitz: Patient Services
Nick Iarossi, Ron LaFace, Megan Fay, Andrew Ketchel, Capital City Consulting: Adobe, Monroe County Board of County Commissioners
Local notes
“$65 million ‘loan’ is a boon for Jaguars and a bitter pill for taxpayers” via Nate Monroe of The Florida Times-Union — City officials and representatives with the Jacksonville Jaguars have obscured the degree to which a locally unprecedented $65 million public subsidy will burden taxpayers and, in turn, benefits team owner Shad Khan and his business partner, Cordish Companies, who are planning to build an entertainment district next to TIAA Bank Field. In theory, developers are supposed to contribute about 20% of the public loan total to seed a trust account that will grow and make the city whole over time. But Khan and Cordish may never pay a dime to compensate taxpayers. Instead, the lender is set to provide both the loan and the money to pay itself back.
Shad Khan wants to develop an entertainment district. But taxpayers are balking at the price tag.
“Public interest groups take aim at Pasco Sheriff’s data-driven policing programs” via Neil Bedi and Kathleen McGrory of the Tampa Bay Times — Civil liberties groups are vowing to take action after an analysis revealed organized harassment of Pasco County residents and data-driven profiling of Pasco’s schoolchildren by the Sheriff’s Office. One public interest law firm has sent mailers, looking for plaintiffs for a potential lawsuit against the policing agency. Several prominent civil rights groups are weighing legal action and public advocacy campaigns. The moves will bring a new level of scrutiny to Sheriff Chris Nocco’s intelligence-led policing initiative, which has grown for almost a decade with little notice or oversight.
Top opinion
“Be careful expanding ‘Stand Your Ground’ — it denied my son justice” via Sandy Modell of The Orlando Sentinel — The images of lawless looters and protesters taking over entire neighborhoods in American cities in recent months apparently horrified DeSantis as much as they horrified me. In September, he responded to the anti-police protests that followed the death of George Floyd by proposing the “combating Violence, Disorder and Looting and Law Enforcement Protection Act” to impede violent and disorderly assemblies. I fully understand how Floridians may like the idea of expanding the state’s “Stand Your Ground” self-defense law to combat looting and lawlessness. However, they should understand how misinterpretations of Stand Your Ground have turned it into Florida’s License To Kill law.
Opinions
“America may not be so lucky next time” via Benjamin L. Ginsberg of The Washington Post — What if the 2020 election had been as close as it was in 2000, and the outcome hinged on a state with a truly narrow margin? How would the country have fared under a Trump-style assault on democracy’s foundations? Trump’s attempts to negate millions of votes by challenging state certifications revealed cracks in those foundations. Some shoring-up is clearly needed before the next election cycle begins. A good place to start might be with a bipartisan commission appointment that would propose election reforms to Congress and the states.
“As much as we want to tune Trump out, ignoring him is a luxury we cannot yet afford” via Ruth Marcus of The Washington Post — People are understandably tempted to indulge the urge to move on from Trump’s presidency, exhausted by the years of Trumpian norm-breaking and comforted by the prospect that he will soon be gone. He remains the President, possessed of enormous power until noon on Jan. 20. Afterward, he will command legions of followers who accept as gospel his delusional rendering of reality, which leads to the paradox inherent in my contention that Trump cannot safely be ignored. The evidence that elected Republican officials are summoning the courage to stand up to him is, so far, disappointingly scant, too.
On today’s Sunrise
Florida’s Department of Health reported an average of almost 100 fatalities and 10,000 new cases per day over the past week — and Miami-Dade’s new Mayor believes it will be worse before the end of the year.
Also, on today’s Sunrise:
— Local governments often feel like they’re on their own during the COVID-19 crisis. Gov. DeSantis says he won’t be imposing any mandatory requirements to stop the disease’s spread. He signed an executive order prohibiting local governments from collecting fines for people who violate local mask mandates or safety measures. So much for the state.
— And at the federal level, Senate leaders have spiked every proposal for a new COVID relief package to help average Americans deal with the fallout … much to the dismay of Miami Beach Mayor Gelber.
— The Governor of New Jersey tells Congressman Gaetz he’s no longer welcome in the Garden State after tweeting pictures from a Young Republican event where no one wore a mask, practiced social distancing, or obeyed crowd size limits. He also called Gaetz “Congressman Matt Putz.”
— Key West pulls the plug on the raucous New Year’s celebration that draws tens of thousands of people. There will be a 10 p.m. curfew on New Year’s Eve.
— The election may be over, but that didn’t stop Trump from holding a campaign rally this weekend in Georgia about 20 miles north of the Florida line. Trump’s rally was to support the pair of Republicans in a runoff for the U.S. Senate, but the President spent most of the time claiming he could not have lost the election unless someone cheated. He still believes he can overturn the vote — somehow.
— And finally, a Florida Woman’s arm became tiger food at the Big Cat Rescue sanctuary.
“Jupiter and Saturn to align in the sky this month as ‘Christmas Star’” via Chris Ciaccia of Fox 13 — The two largest planets in the solar system, Jupiter and Saturn, will look like a double planet after sunset on Dec. 21, 2020, the start of the winter solstice. Between Dec. 16 and Dec. 25, the two planets will be separated by less than a full moon. Back in 1614, German astronomer Johannes Kepler suggested that the conjunction of Jupiter and Saturn may be what was referred to as the “Star of Bethlehem” in the Nativity story, while others have suggested that the “three wise men” could have been a triple conjunction of Jupiter, Saturn and Venus. NASA says the conjunction will appear “spectacular” with a backyard telescope or even with the naked eye. The two planets won’t be this close to each other again until March 15, 2080.
Was the ‘Star of Bethlehem’ actually a convergence of planets?
“Florida’s largest drive-thru Christmas light show opens at Daytona International Speedway” via Zack Perry of WFTS — The Daytona International Speedway has transformed into a drive-thru holiday wonderland featuring over a million Christmas lights. Take a drive behind the Ticket and Tours building, through the state-of-the-art motor sports facility, and conclude in the Midway display area outside the facility. Magic of Lights is located at the intersection of International Speedway Boulevard and Bill France Boulevard in Daytona, Florida. Tickets start at $25 per car.
“How Disney World is encouraging mask-wearing in a very magical way” via Erik Swann of Cinema Blend — Parks like Hollywood Studios have also found more creative and magical ways to encourage visitors to wear their masks. Just recently, a Hollywood Studios performer reminded patrons to wear their masks right before leading them in a singalong of one of Frozen’s famous songs, “Do You Want to Build a Snowman?” Of course, this other method of enforcing masks has to be the cutest. A Disney employee from the social distancing squad has a unique way of encouraging children to wear their masks. This is done by showing them that if a Mickey Mouse plush can wear a mask, they can as well.
“Jeff Bezos says Blue Origin will take the first woman to moon’s surface” via Reuters — Bezos’ space company Blue Origin will take the first woman to the moon’s surface, the billionaire said on Friday as NASA nears a decision to pick its first privately built lunar landers capable of sending astronauts to the moon by 2024. “This (BE-7) is the engine that will take the first woman to the surface of the Moon,” Bezos said in a post on Instagram. Blue Origin has vied for lucrative government contracts in recent years and is competing with rival billionaire Elon Musk’s SpaceX and Dynetics, owned by Leidos Holdings Inc, to win a contract to build NASA’s next human lunar landing system to ferry humans to the moon in the next decade.
Jeff Bezos wants to put a woman on the moon.
Happy birthday
Best wishes to one of Southwest Florida’s finest, Vickie Brill.
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Good morning. There are just over 2 million seconds left in the year. But who’s counting?
Hope everyone has a great start to the week.
MARKETS YTD PERFORMANCE
NASDAQ
12,464.23
+ 38.91%
S&P
3,699.12
+ 14.50%
DOW
30,218.26
+ 5.89%
GOLD
1,840.10
+ 21.06%
10-YR
0.970%
– 95.00 bps
OIL
46.22
– 24.49%
*As of market close
Markets: As you can see from all the neon green above, the U.S.’ major stock indexes have posted solid gains in 2020 (the tech-heavy Nasdaq more so than the other two, of course). And they’re kicking off this week at record highs.
Brexit: The UK and the EU are racing to strike an agreement this week to avoid a “no deal” Brexit that could cause chaos for the British economy and the markets. If you can remember, the actual Brexit referendum took place in June 2016.
This week, Western nations are set to administer their first doses of the coronavirus vaccine, capping a remarkable scientific achievement that will save an untold number of lives and help the global economy recover from a historic recession.
Some countries have already started their vaccine programs. Russia began inoculating its citizens on Saturday with its Sputnik V vaccine, and about 1 million Chinese people have already been vaccinated.
The arrival of vaccines marks the beginning of the end of this dark chapter in human history, but also the beginning of the beginning. In the U.S., priority will be given to healthcare workers and residents of long-term-care facilities, and healthy folks might not receive a vaccine until April.
The debate over timing
On Thursday, the FDA is expected to vote on approving the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine for emergency use, and it could be administered to Americans the next day.
The timing of that vote has been controversial. The UK approved the same vaccine last Wednesday, and is set to start inoculating people tomorrow, a few days ahead of the U.S. Some experts questioned why the FDA would wait weeks after Pfizer asked for approval (Nov. 20) to hold a vote as thousands of Americans die from Covid every day.
FDA insiders told Stat News this interim time period was necessary to analyze the raw data and give the vaccine the thorough check it needs, considering it’ll be administered to hundreds of millions of people.
In further defense of the FDA’s process, last week the U.S.’ top infectious disease official, Dr. Anthony Fauci, called the UK ruling “rushed,” which ticked off some British health officials. Fauci later apologized and said UK regulators had his full confidence.
Bottom line: Investors have been zeroed in on the promising news of the Covid-19 vaccines while mostly ignoring the U.S.’ spiraling outbreak and bleak jobs report from Friday.
As of 11:59pm last night, 33 million Californians, about 84% of the state’s population, were subject to new stay-at-home restrictions aimed at preventing a Covid-19 catastrophe at hospitals.
Those restrictions, which are triggered when a region’s ICU capacity falls below 15%, require a halt to in-person dining and the closure of businesses such as wineries, nail salons, and zoos.
Many business owners are outraged with what they say are exceedingly strict and randomly applied rules. In a video that went viral Saturday, a Sherman Oaks restaurant owner showed a catering tent set up for a film crew (allowed, since entertainment workers are considered essential in California) right next door to her own outdoor dining patio, which sits empty because of the ban.
The county health department responded that, unlike diners, film crews are regularly tested for Covid and must follow other strict health practices.
Bottom line: California leaders are struggling to address the growing public health crisis (LA County hit a record number of cases four times last week) and simmering anger from devastated small businesses.
While the bitcoin vs. gold debate has grabbed the attention of metalheads recently, less precious metals like copper, iron ore, and nickel have quietly been some of the best-performing assets of the year, the WSJ reports.
Prices of raw materials tend to rise when the U.S. and China are playing nice in the trade sandbox, but most importantly, when they’re making a lot of stuff.
Demand for electric cars and new homes, in particular, has turned manufacturing into the LeBron of the global economy, carrying the J.R. Smiths—travel, leisure, and services.
Plus, the U.S. and China’s geopolitical game of chicken led to uncertainty for mining companies, which slowed investment in new mines from 2016 on. Now, prices are skyrocketing because demand is far outstripping supply.
Looking ahead…appetite for metals is growing as more countries invest in renewable energy systems like wind turbines which are “at least five times more copper-intensive than conventional power,” according to a report from Jefferies.
This holiday season, we’re thinking on our feet and treating everybody on our list—ourselves included—to the supreme comfort of Bombas socks.
Everyone has a thing. And Bombas are the perfect gift to say, “Hey, I remember that thing.” Whether it’s gripper socks for the yoga addict, hiking socks for the nature lover, or Merino Wool socks and tees for those who love to be cozy from head to toe.
Plus, when you give the gift of Bombas, they donate a pair to someone in need—so every pair you give doubles as a gift for someone else’s feet too. They’ve donated over 40 million pairs of socks so far.
This global pandemic has given us a few magical moments you have to savor. The most recent happened Saturday night, when Brigham Young University played Coastal Carolina in a college football game dubbed “Mormons vs. Mullets.”
These two teams were not supposed to play one another. Earlier in the week, Liberty University had to cancel on Coastal because of a Covid-19 outbreak, and Coastal needed to find an opponent—ideally a good one, considering the team was undefeated and wanted to beef up its résumé.
Enter BYU, whose program also needed another marquee win. The two schools got to talking and on Thursday agreed that BYU would make the cross-country trip to play Coastal in Conway, South Carolina, not far from Myrtle Beach.
The matchup was helped along by ESPN execs, who know a thing or two about programming flexibility during the pandemic.
And the game itself was thrilling—Coastal Carolina eked out a win that came down to the last play.
Zoom out: Sports leagues and TV networks have learned that, without a bubble, you should prepare for logistical headaches. A few days ago, the NBA released only half of its regular-season schedule to give itself the wiggle room the NFL wishes it had.
IPOs: The IPO bonanza we’ve been talking about for months is finally here. Airbnb, one of the U.S.’ most valuable private startups, is expected to start trading on Thursday at a market cap of more than $31 billion. Food delivery giant DoorDash could be worth even more than that when it goes public on Wednesday.
Stimulus: Talks picked up momentum last week after top Democrats supported a compromise bill with a much lighter price tag. At the same time, lawmakers must pass a spending measure to avert a government shutdown on Friday.
Earnings: There aren’t any blockbusters this week, but some interesting companies reporting quarterly financials include Stitch Fix (Monday); Chewy (Tuesday); and Lululemon, Costco, and Oracle (Thursday).
Economic data: We’ll learn more about inflation with the Consumer Price Index reading on Thursday.
Everything else:
Today is the anniversary of the attack on Pearl Harbor in 1941.
Hanukkah starts at sundown on Thursday.
The videogame Cyberpunk 2077 will be released on Thursday after several delays and an astronomical budget.
WHAT ELSE IS BREWING
Goldman Sachs is considering moving its asset management arm from New York to South Florida, Bloomberg reports.
Paysafe, the private equity-backed online payments company, is reportedly close to a $9 billion deal to go public via SPAC.
Tesla released its first diversity report. Black employees account for 4% of leadership positions, and women make up 17% of those leadership roles.
Mastercard is reviewing its relationship with the parent company of Pornhub after NYT columnist Nicholas Kristof wrote that the site fails to adequately block violent content and child videos.
The Hartford Courant, the U.S.’ oldest continuously published newspaper, will close its physical offices.
YouTuber Logan Paul will face Floyd Mayweather Jr. in an exhibition boxing match that will make both men gobs of money. Feb. 20 is the date.
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For the first time this weekend, many Americans were introduced to Coastal Carolina’s odd nickname—the Chanticleers (pronounced SHON-ti-cleer). So, what is a Chanticleer?
A fierce rooster originally from The Canterbury Tales
A spear-like weapon typically used in jousting tournaments
A species of aggressive fish found in the waters off the coast of South Carolina
An insect-eating plant and cousin of the Venus flytrap
ANSWER
It’s actually the rooster. If you’re curious, here’s the whole story.
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THE FACTUAL
07 DEC 2020
View in browser
Facts, not fear.
TRENDING TOPICS 1. Georgia Senate debates 2. Biden foreign policy 3. New health agency leaders 4. French security law protests 5. Dr. Birx’s Covid concerns
FEATURED UNDER-REPORTED STORIES
Nations protecting oceans • Biden’s climate centrism • Dystopia of sneaker markets
Incumbent Republican Sen. Kelly Loeffler and her Democratic challenger, Rev. Raphael Warnock, faced off Sunday night in [their first debate]. The two candidates also sparred over religion, policing and the coronavirus pandemic. “I don’t think we should defund the police, but we certainly do need criminal justice reform,” [Warnock] said. Loeffler made a point to highlight her pro-life, anti-abortion stance, and called-out Warnock for being a Christian man who supports a woman’s right to choose.
…
Sen. David Perdue, Georgia’s senior senator who is also facing a runoff, declared he would not participate in a single debate against [Democratic challenger Jon Ossoff]. While he refused to debate, [the debate host, the Atlanta Press Club] chose not to cancel the debate. Instead, [Ossoff] repeatedly called out Perdue’s absence as he took questions from panelists while standing next to an empty podium.
…
The Senate majority is only at stake in these elections because if both Warnock and Ossoff win, Democrats will hold 50 seats in the Senate, and Vice President-elect Kamala Harris would be the tie-breaking vote. Voting is already underway in the Peach State, with hundreds of thousands of absentee ballots already having been mailed out to voters, and over 40,000 of those ballots have already been returned and accepted.
For many allies, President-elect Joe Biden’s victory brought a collective sigh of relief, a signal that countries around the world expect U.S. foreign policy to return to more familiar waters. But what will this anticipated shift actually mean? After four years of President Trump’s more confrontational, unconventional strategy of interacting with allies, Biden seeks to reiterate U.S. commitment to alliances, multilateral bodies, and, above all, the willingness of the U.S. to act as a reliable partner on the world stage. At the same time, few desire a mere return to the pre-2016 status quo.
This week, The Factual used 43 articles from 36 sources across the political spectrum to explore the likely trajectory of Biden’s foreign policy and how it represents change from, or continuity with, the Trump era. The active issues in the global space are numerous, so we’ve focused specifically on three topic areas — NATO, coronavirus, and climate change — and three focus countries — China, Iran, and North Korea — to demonstrate how foreign policy is likely to play out in a Biden administration.
In California [where he is currently Attorney General], Xavier Becerra has been at the forefront of legal efforts on health care, leading 20 states and the District of Columbia in a campaign to protect the Affordable Care Act from being dismantled by his Republican counterparts. He has also been vocal in the Democratic Party about fighting for women’s health.
…
Mr. Becerra said in 2017 that he would “absolutely” support Medicare for all, a proposal for government-run health care that Mr. Biden has explicitly rejected. A source familiar with the selection said Mr. Becerra would support the president-elect’s call for strengthening and preserving the A.C.A. and would not be pushing Medicare for all while in office.
…
Dr. Rochelle Walensky, the chief of infectious diseases at Massachusetts General Hospital, will be tapped to lead the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, according to a person familiar with Mr. Biden’s deliberations. Dr. Vivek Murthy, who served as surgeon general under President Barack Obama, will reprise that role for Mr. Biden.
A largely peaceful march against the contested global security law and police violence in Paris degenerated after hooded and black-clad vandals disrupted the demonstration for the second weekend in a row. Clusters of hooded youths set fire to vehicles, smashed shop windows and hurled stones and molotov cocktails at police, who responded with water cannons and teargas.
…
The “liberty marches” – combined with the annual union day of protests against “unemployment and precariousness” held on the first Saturday in December – reflected ongoing fierce opposition to article 24 of the new security law. The article makes it punishable to publish photographs or videos identifying police with “intent” to cause psychological or physical harm, and is seen as a direct attack on press freedom.
…
The government has promised to completely rewrite article 24, but a report by United Nations experts last week expressed concern about other parts of the legislation that has already been passed by MPs in the Assemblée Nationale, describing it as “incompatible” with international law and human rights. The report expressed particular concern about giving police powers to monitor crowds with drones and facial recognition.
Dr. Moncef Slaoui, the head of the White House operation “Warp Speed” said Sunday that the vaccine could be administered to some Americans by the end of this week. [Dr. Deborah Birx, the White House coronavirus response coordinator] said she was “thrilled” with the development of the vaccine, but said it wouldn’t be available to the “most vulnerable Americans” until February and encouraged Americans to take precautions, including masks, proper hygiene, and physical distancing, in the interim.
…
Days before the Thanksgiving holiday, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, warned Americans against traveling, still, millions of Americans traveled, further exacerbating the reality that the ongoing rise in cases nationally, which began in September, would worsen in the coming weeks as new cases are diagnosed.
…
On Wednesday, the US surpassed 100,000 people hospitalized at one time for the first time during the pandemic, breaking the previous record. The US the same day shattered the record for single-day deaths, with more than 2,800 new deaths reported, according to data from Johns Hopkins University.
The driving force behind President Trump’s legal efforts, Rudy Giuliani, has tested positive for COVID-19. The 76-year-old states on Twitter that he is feeling well and receiving care. Jenna Ellis, also part of the legal team, said that despite the situation, the team’s efforts “won’t be affected and we press on.” President Trump also tweeted his support saying, “by far the greatest mayor in the history of NYC, and who has been working tirelessly exposing the most corrupt election (by far!) in the history of the USA, has tested positive for the China Virus. Get better soon Rudy, we will carry on!!!”
Biden’s already more popular than Trump’s ever been, claims a headline on the CNN website. That fantastical assertion is based on a poll that gives Biden a 55% approval rating. Of course, it’s entirely possible that Biden was at 7% approval until the pollsters started using a Dominion machine to tabulate the results of their survey.
Barbra Streisand is, as always, firmly in control, according to The New York Times. No.
Salon, a bastion of journalistic integrity, is going after the media for not being tough on President Donald Trump. A Salon headline reads: Some in media are supposedly “going hard” on Trump – But it’s too little and too damn late. Yes, believe it or not, Salon is accusing the media of a “herd mentality” by being “slightly tougher” on Trump now that he’s “a loser.” In the immortal words of novelist Charles Dickens: “You can’t make this s–t up.”
Pivotal Georgia Debates – A Failure to Communicate?
The Georgia debate between GOP Senator Kelly Loeffler and Raphael Warnock provided little in the way of insight. It seems that voters are already decided and it all comes down to who can turn out the base.
Axios claims that President Trump will hold a major rally in Florida on inauguration day if Joe Biden becomes president. No confirmation or denial has yet been given by the president’s team, but it would certainly create a media storm if he did so.
Rudy Giuliani has tested positive for COVID. The former NY Mayor who is leading Team Trump’s legal challenges to the election said that “I’m getting great care and feeling good. Recovering quickly and keeping up with everything.”
China Is Building a DNA Database, and the Future Just Got Scarier
Something political to ponder as you enjoy your morning coffee.
Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti may just have learned a lesson about appeasement. After siding with Black Lives Matter protestors during the poorly named “Summer of Love,” and making huge cuts to the police department, the same protestors are back demanding that he refuse any position in Washington DC. The protestors say that his poor handling of transportation and homelessness should put an end to his Swamp dreams. The police – guarding Mr. Garcetti’s home – engaged in brawling with protestors. So what did his pandering to the mobs really achieve? Perhaps the life lesson to take away from this is that you don’t feed the crocodile in the hope that he will eat you last.
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FOX NEWS
JUST THE NEWS
Just The News: Daily Newsletter
DAILY NEWSLETTER
State Department viewed Burisma lobbying campaign as ‘aggressive, threatening, bullying’
Officials acutely aware, concerned about Hunter Biden role on Ukrainian firm’s board, memos show. Watchdog calls for special prosecutor to examine.
“U.S. President Donald Trump campaigned in Georgia on Saturday for two Republican senators at a rally… Trump urged the crowd to vote for Republican candidates in the Georgia runoff election on Jan. 5 despite his unsubstantiated claims of significant electoral fraud in the state… he gave considerable time in his remarks to allegations, made without evidence, of widespread fraud in the nationwide election.” Reuters
“Attorneys Sidney Powell and L. Lin Wood urged Georgians not to participate in a runoff vote that will determine control of the Senate in January until state officials address unsubstantiated claims that President-elect Joe Biden won the White House through voter fraud. Powell and Wood are not working for the Trump campaign in an official capacity but have waged legal battles on his behalf. Speaking to the president’s supporters at a press conference in Atlanta, Powell said state residents should not vote until Georgia overhauls its procedures and ends the use of Dominion voting machines.” Fox News
“Georgia voters will determine which party controls the U.S. Senate in two January [5] runoff elections. Republican Sens. David Perdue and Kelly Loeffler face competitive challenges from Democrats Jon Ossoff and Raphael Warnock, respectively.” CNBC
From the Left
The left condemns Trump’s claims of fraud and urges Georgians to vote Democrat.
“Republicans are in damage-control mode in the Georgia runoffs, launching a nascent effort to delegitimize Trump-aligned lawyers who have led calls for a potential GOP boycott of the January races… There are two main problems with this. One is that some top GOP figures — including Trump — have in the past and very recently promoted Wood’s and Powell’s work. The other is that Trump continues to send very mixed messages about whether Republicans should or will turn out to vote…
“Trump has now repeatedly promoted the idea that it’s not worth it to elect Republicans if they don’t stand sufficiently with him… Trump retweeted a user who said ‘why bother’ electing Republicans if they might turn out to be like Arizona Gov. Doug Ducey (R) and Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp (R), both of whom Trump has attacked for certifying Biden’s win in their states.” Aaron Blake, Washington Post
“The [election fraud] conspiracy, to be real, would have had to enlist Attorney General Bill Barr, Republican governors and election officials across the country and a plan so complex that it denied victory to Trump while allowing Republicans to gain seats in the House and deprive Democrats of a majority in the Senate… In the face of death threats, Republican officials are pleading with him to cool the temperature. But Trump is shoveling more coal into the boiler.” Frida Ghitis, CNN
“[During the Sunday debate] Kelly Loeffler refused to acknowledge that President Trump lost the election. She refused to admit that Joe Biden received the most votes. She refused to accept the math… Loeffler was not emotionally present. She spoke in flat notes and seemed to have a handful of set responses that she mixed and matched with every question that arose…
“When Warnock, who grew up in public housing, pointed out that she was the wealthiest person in the U.S. Senate and that such privilege is a hindrance to understanding the plight of clock-punching Americans, she described her own beginnings as humble, noting that she was raised on a farm and waitressed when she was a teenager. When she was asked how she would connect with Black Americans after deriding the Black Lives Matter movement, she pointed to her humble beginning growing up on a farm. When accused of being more supportive of the wealthy than ordinary Americans, she brought up her humble youth on a farm.” Robin Givhan, Washington Post
“Perdue and Ossoff were also supposed to face each other Sunday, just before Loeffler and Warnock. But Perdue refused the invite from the Atlanta Press Club, as he has refused other debate invitations during the high-stakes runoff campaign. Why?… A New York Times report published this week identified Perdue as ‘the Senate’s most prolific stock trader by far, sometimes reporting 20 or more transactions in a single day.’… And they look to have been the swampiest of swampy trades…
“For instance, ‘as a member of the Senate banking, housing, and urban affairs committee since 2017, Mr. Perdue bought and sold shares of a number of financial companies his panel oversaw, including JPMorgan Chase, Bank of America and Regions Financial.’… Salon has reported that Perdue purchased Pfizer stock one week before the pharmaceutical giant publicly revealed that it would be developing a coronavirus vaccine… Ossoff has a message for the voters of Georgia: ‘If Senator Perdue doesn’t want to answer questions, that’s fine, he just shouldn’t run for re-election to the U.S. Senate.’” John Nichols, The Nation
“Here is what you could expect if Democrats [win both senate seats]: A strong coronavirus aid bill to help schools, businesses and people pushed to the edge by pandemic-related job loss, hunger, evictions and other hardships… A higher federal minimum wage. Two dozen states raised their minimum wage this year; eight are phasing in a $15-an-hour minimum over several years…
“A House-passed bill to strengthen the ACA. It would add insurance subsidies for higher income families and pressure 14 holdout states to expand Medicaid to millions more low-income people. It would also allow Medicare to negotiate for lower prescription prices… it’s up to you, Georgia.” Jill Lawrence, USA Today
From the Right
The right urges Trump and GOP voters to focus on keeping the Senate majority.
“Perhaps Republican voters will ignore all of this come January. But there is a reason that parties seek unity before important elections. At best, Wood-Powell are distracting from the GOP message in the races and, at worst, convincing persuadable Georgians that it is the Republican Party that needs to be checked, not Biden. Certainly, the Wood-Powell logic supports sitting this one out. There is no reason to bother voting if Georgia is controlled by politicians on the take who use technology to predetermine the outcome of elections. Who needs actual agents of the Democratic Party if this is what the most fervent Trump allies are saying?” Rich Lowry, New York Post
“Wood has a history of helping the Democrats. He funded John Edwards’s presidential campaign. He funded Barack Obama’s campaign. He funded various other Democratic Senate campaigns to help Harry Reid and Chuck Schumer. He has funded a variety of progressive Democrats in Georgia in both gubernatorial races and state legislative races… Wood, who did not vote for Donald Trump in the [2016] Georgia presidential primary but did vote for Obama [in 2008], wants you to let the Democrats destroy the Trump legacy. Will Georgia Republicans believe his lies or stand and fight?” Erick Erickson, Substack
“The argument that the country needs a GOP Senate to check a President Biden and Speaker Nancy Pelosi should resonate with voters now that it’s clear President Trump has lost. The problem is that Mr. Trump keeps stepping on that argument, and muddling the GOP message, with his claims that Democrats in Georgia and elsewhere stole the election… If Republicans lose [these Senate] seats, President Trump will be the main reason, and the main casualty will be his legacy…
“At least for now [Trump] can say, with justification, that he helped the GOP gain seats in the House and avoid a rout in the Senate. But that narrative changes for the worse if the GOP loses in Georgia after Mr. Trump divided his own party to serve his personal political interest. He needs a GOP Senate nearly as much as Mr. McConnell does.” Editorial Board, Wall Street Journal
“With a Republican Senate, Biden can say goodbye to plans to pass legislation that would raise taxes, implement a Green New Deal, ban guns, cater to unions, expand Obamacare, and implement a whole host of other liberal priorities. With Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell at the helm, Biden won’t be able to confirm radical nominees to the Cabinet or judiciary. Instead, he’ll be forced to offer more centrist choices if he wants vacancies to be filled…
“But if Democrats sweep in Georgia, Schumer will be in charge of the Senate floor. Sen. Joe Manchin will be the only thing standing in the way of the liberal agenda. Republicans will be stuck on the sidelines, forced to sit and hope Manchin holds his ground under enormous pressure from his party and resists cutting backroom deals with Schumer. There isn’t much reason to be confident that this will work out. During his time in the Senate, Manchin voted with Schumer a majority of the time, and as high as 86% during one Senate term during the Obama era.” Editorial Board, Washington Examiner
“Mr. Perdue and Ms. Loeffler’s biggest advantage is the Democrats they’re running against. Both are distinctly left-of-center in a state that isn’t. Mr. Ossoff has aligned himself with Sen. Bernie Sanders, complimenting the Vermont socialist for his views on health care and opposition to corporations. ‘His advocacy,’ Mr. Ossoff gushed, ‘is welcome, is necessary, is appreciated.’…
“[Meanwhile] Mr. Warnock has endorsed the Green New Deal… [He has] declared from his own pulpit that police have a ‘gangster and thug mentality’ and ‘act like bullies.’ He even told parishioners, ‘You cannot serve God and the military.’ Aren’t there better ways to explain Matthew 6:24 than to insult every person of faith who has worn our country’s uniform?” Karl Rove, Wall Street Journal
🇺🇸 Good Monday morning. It’s Pearl Harbor Day, a time for humble gratitude to the Greatest Generation.
Today’s Smart Brevity™ count: 1,193 words … 4½ minutes
🎬 Tonight on “Axios on HBO,” at 11 p.m. ET/PT on all HBO platforms … Chris Krebs, fired as head of U.S. election cybersecurity, tells Jonathan Swan about “one type of threat” from President Trump. (Clip)
And tune in for the results of a year-long Axios national security investigation, which will also be an “Axios Investigates” takeover edition of tomorrow’s Axios AM.
💻 Join us tomorrow at 12:30 p.m. ET for an Axios Virtual Event on the future of healthcare payments.Register here.
1 big thing: Administration promises normality in 2021
Despite new signs of tight supply, Health and Human Services Secretary Alex Azar tells me for “Axios on HBO” that every American will be able to get a coronavirus vaccine by the second quarter of 2021.
“My expectation is that next year, we return to normalcy in our lives thanks to the incredible work of Operation Warp Speed and these vaccines, as well as the therapeutics,” Azar said in an interview in his private conference room.
Reality check: A lot would have to go right in order to meet Azar’s 2021 timeline. But it’s not outside the realm of what experts see as realistic in a best-case scenario, Axios health care editor Sam Baker writes.
A CNN analysisof the expected size of 27 states’ first shipment “showed that none were getting enough vaccine … to vaccinate all their first priority group, including health care workers and long-term care residents.”
The WashPost reportedon Sunday’s front page that vaccine shipments will start as “a trickle” compared to the flood that states were expecting.
I asked Azar if we can expect packed college-football and NFL stadiums next fall.
“That is my hope,” he said.
The U.S. death count is now over 280,000.
Azar told me: “We’ve saved hundreds of thousands, if not millions of lives.”
See the full “Axios on HBO” interview tonight at 11 p.m. ET/PT on all HBO platforms.
World leaders will convene virtually on Saturday to mark the fifth anniversary of the Paris Climate Agreement, which President-elect Biden has pledged to rejoin on Day One, Amy Harder writes in her “Harder Line” column.
Given the limitsof Biden’s domestic political agenda, the pledge is likely to lean more heavily than ever before on non-federal action, which there’s been a lot of over the last four years.
Action by states, cities and private business could cut U.S. emissions up to 37% by 2030 compared to 2005 levels, according to a 2019 report by a consortium of environmental groups and former state leaders.
That percentage could rise to nearly 50% if the federal government reengaged, the report said.
3. 📚 Scoop: Bob Woodward’s next book — and his new co-author
When Bob Woodward called President Trump to warn him that “Rage” would be “a tough book,” Trump replied, as Woodward recounted on “60 Minutes”: “Well, I didn’t get you on this book. Maybe I’ll get you on the next one.”
He’ll get a chance sooner than he thought.
Bob Woodward and Robert Costa, both of The Washington Post, are teaming up to write a book on the final days of the Trump presidency and the first phase of the Biden presidency.
It’ll be Woodward’s 21st book, all published by Simon & Schuster, and Costa’s first.
“We’re two pure reporters — what happened and why — and this is a perfect landscape for that kind of work,” Woodward told me.
No title or publication date are being given, but I’m told this’ll be done on a compressed timeline.
Robert Barnett represented both. Jonathan Karp, CEO of Simon & Schuster, will edit the book.
Woodward will remain an associate editor of The Post, and Costa will remain a national political reporter, on leave.
Costa is also moderator and managing editor of “Washington Week” on PBS, a job he’s held since 2017. And he has been a political analyst for MSNBC and NBC News since 2015. Costa is expected to focus entirely on the book in the coming year, according to a person familiar with the project.
⚡ Also in Woodwardland … After working feet away from Bob in his Georgetown home office for six books and 13 years, editor and researcher Evelyn M. Duffy is going full-time with her book-doctor practice, Open Boat Editing.
“While working in-house with Woodward, Duffy spent nights and weekends building her company, … editing book proposals and manuscripts for journalists and other nonfiction writers.” Follow her: @_EvelynMDuffy.
4. “Lost generation”: Surge of warnings on remote learning
Graffiti in front of New York City Hall during a Nov. 19 protest by parents and students against closing schools. Photo/Mark Lennihan/AP
“A flood of new data — on the national, state and district levels — finds … students of color and those in high-poverty communities fell further behind” with virtual schooling, the WashPost reports.
“[T]he shift to remote school in the spring set white students back by one to three months in math, while students of color lost three to five months.”
5. Mental health takes huge pandemic hit
Americans’ mental health is the worst it’s been in two decades, Axios’ Caitlin Owens writes from a new Gallup poll.
In 2016, then-Vice President Biden walks with then-Rep. Xavier Becerra (right) to a meeting of the House Democratic Caucus. Photo: Tom Williams/CQ Roll Call
President-elect Biden picked California Attorney General Xavier Becerra for HHS secretary and a Harvard infectious disease expert, Dr. Rochelle Walensky, to head his CDC.
Other members of his health team will include Anthony Fauci as chief medical adviser, Vivek Murthy [Corrected] as surgeon general and Jeff Zients as coronavirus coordinator. Go deeper.
Hans Nichols’ thought bubble: In selecting Becerra for HHS, Biden solved a demographic challenge that followed pressure from the Congressional Hispanic Caucus and, in particular, Mexican-American lawmakers.
Not only did he grant them a high profile pick, but he also gave it to someone that many of them served with in the House.
Flashback … Axios 5 days ago: “Hispanic lawmakers press Biden to name Becerra or Perez for attorney general.”
7. Visa, Mastercard confront Pornhub after Kristof column
Montreal office of Pornhub’s owner, MindGeek. Photo: Kristoffer Tripplaar/Sipa USA via Reuters
Nick Kristof gets results. Credit card giants Visa and Mastercard said they’re reviewing their relationship with Pornhub after the N.Y. Times columnist documented that the website offers videos of rape and underage sex.
Kristof’s columnin yesterday’s Sunday Review section, “The Children of Pornhub,” shows that the site displays revenge pornography and other examples of explicit video taken without consent of the participants:
“Pornhub became my trafficker,” a woman named Cali told [Kristof]. She says she was adopted in the United States from China and then trafficked by her adoptive family and forced to appear in … videos beginning when she was 9. Some videos of her being abused ended up on [the site] and regularly reappear there, she said. …
[A]side from limiting immunity so that companies are incentivized to behave better, here are three steps that would help: 1.) Allow only verified users to post videos. 2.) Prohibit downloads. 3.) Increase moderation.
PayPal last year stopped processing payments to Pornhub, which is owned by the pornography conglomerate MindGeek, AP reports.
Visa said that if Pornhub is violating the law or bank policies, the website will be prohibited from accepting Visa.
Mastercard promised “immediate action” if the allegations are substantiated.
Amex said it prohibits use of the card on “digital adult content websites.”
Pornhub said it employs moderators to screen every upload, and that it removes illegal material. But Kristof showed oceans of it remains.
Above, during a debate last night carried nationally by CNN and Fox News, Sen. Kelly Loeffler (R-Ga.) referred more than a dozen times to her opponent in the Jan. 5 runoff, the Rev. Raphael Warnock of Atlanta’s Ebenezer Baptist Church, as “radical, liberal Raphael Warnock,” per the Atlanta Journal-Constitution.
“She also refused multiple times to answer whether President Donald Trump had lost the 2020 election.”
Below, Democratic challenger Jon Ossoff debates an empty podium after Sen. David Perdue (R) declined to attend. Go deeper.
9. Local governments fight to retain trust
Rapid City, S.D., in April.
As coronavirus infections pile up in rural America, counties and towns are relying on an “unofficial and almost intangible resource: the bond of trust between citizens and the government closest to them,” write Felicity Barringer and Francisco L. Nodarse of Stanford’s Bill Lane Center for the American West.
Why it matters: Local governments have always garnered more trust than “distant” ones. They now risk losing it at a time when their communities, often home to more vulnerable populations and fragile health care systems, are being ravaged by the virus.
The rush has come despite the president’s relative inattention to governing since his electoral defeat last month, driven in part by ideologically minded aides, including Cabinet members eager to burnish their own legacies.
By David Nakamura, Juliet Eilperin and Lisa Rein ● Read more »
CIA insiders believe Darrell Blocker, one of the highest-ranking African Americans to have served in the clandestine service, could be the best candidate to restore morale to an agency bruised by four years of President Trump.
Two government infectious disease experts sidelined by the Trump administration in the early days of the pandemic, Drs. Nancy Messonnier and Anne Schuchat, are poised to become prominent figures on President-elect Joe Biden’s coronavirus task force.
Georgia Democratic Senate challenger Raphael Warnock argued 2018 Democratic gubernatorial Stacey Abrams’ refusal to concede was different from President Trump’s lawsuits contesting this cycle’s White House race.
President-elect Joe Biden has chosen Democratic California Attorney General Xavier Becerra as his nominee-designate to head his Health and Human Services Department, a crucial post amid the COVID-19 pandemic.
Fox News Sunday host Chris Wallace made it clear to a top Trump administration official that Joe Biden is indeed the president-elect, following his declared victory in November.
A top member of the Trump administration lashed out at what he said were baseless accusations published by the Washington Post on Friday alleging that the Trump administration has refused Joe Biden’s transition team the ability to visit certain military spy agencies.
Dr. Moncef Slaoui, the Trump administration’s vaccine czar, gave positive insight on a potential reduction in COVID-19-related deaths that could come within the first few months of vaccine distribution.
A Minnesota restaurant owner lost her food license after breaking coronavirus restrictions but says she won’t back down and will teach her daughters about the Constitution in the process.
Actor Matthew McConaughey lashed out at people on the “far-left,” calling them “arrogant” and condescending in an interview with fellow actor Russell Brand.
A new 2020 Republican primary poll features three members of the Trump family garnering support for the party’s nomination during the next presidential election cycle.
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Dec 7, 2020
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AP MORNING WIRE
Good morning. In today’s AP Morning Wire:
With the world watching, the UK gears up for a massive vaccination plan.
Americans warned not to let their guard down; California locks down.
Trump lawyer Giuliani in hospital after positive COVID test.
Ethiopia’s Tigray conflict stokes humanitarian and virus crises.
TAMER FAKAHANY DEPUTY DIRECTOR – GLOBAL NEWS COORDINATION, LONDON
The Rundown
POOL VIA AP/GARETH FULLER
World’s eyes on the UK: Huge vaccination plan to roll out this week
It’s a critical moment of reckoning in the global battle against the coronavirus pandemic.
Shipments of the vaccine developed by American drugmaker Pfizer and Germany’s BioNTech have been delivered to hospitals across the U.K. in super-cold containers ahead of the nation’s biggest-ever immunization program.
Around 800,000 doses of the vaccine are set to be administered. The British Health Secretary has reportedly dubbed Tuesday “V-Day,” in an attempt to reference the country’s finest hours in World War II.
Last week the U.K. became the first country to authorize the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine for emergency use. In trials, the vaccine was shown it has 95% efficacy. Pan Pylas reports from London.
Indonesia’s government says 1.2 million doses of a COVID-19 vaccine developed by China-based biopharmaceutical company Sinovac Biotech arrived in the country.
Chancellor Angela Merkel’s chief of staff says he expects coronavirus vaccinations to start in Germany “in the very first days” of the new year.
Europe’s Nursing Homes: Virus cases among the elderly are on the rise again across the continent, causing havoc and spiraling death tolls in nursing homes despite the lessons of a tragic spring. Authorities are in a race to save lives as they wait for crucial announcements on mass vaccinations. Most countries are ramping up screening of workers and residents, trying to prevent asymptomatic virus carriers from infecting others.
Portugal has deployed military units to train nursing home staff in disinfection. In France, Germany and Italy, visits by relatives are being restricted or banned. In Spain, facilities have been designed for recovering virus patients who, while still contagious, have nowhere to isolate or keep active, Aritz Parra reports from Madrid.
South Korea Spike: The health minister says the Seoul metropolitan area is now a “COVID-19 war zone,” as the country reported another 615 new infections and the virus appears to be spreading faster. It has recorded more than 5,300 new infections in the past 10 days and today was the 30th day in a row of triple-digit daily jumps. Most of the new infections were detected in the Seoul area where health workers are struggling to stem clusters tied to restaurants, schools, hospitals and long-term care facilities.
AP PHOTO/RICHARD VOGEL
Health officials warn Americans not to let their guard down; Most of California locks down
With the U.S. facing what could be a catastrophic winter, top health officials are warning Americans not to let their guard down against the coronavirus just because a vaccine could be on its way shortly.
Most of California went back into lockdown last night.
The virus is blamed for over 282,000 deaths and more than 14.7 million confirmed infections in the U.S. New cases per day have rocketed to an all-time high of more than 190,000 on average.
They say such a strategy could systematically check more people for infections and spot surges before they take off. Some experts say the lack of such a system is one reason for the national explosion in cases, hospitalizations and deaths, Mike Stobbe and Matthew Perrone report.
Rural California: Several counties in California that appeared to dodge the virus in the spring are now seeing some of the most alarming spikes in infections statewide. Each day brings dire new records in hospitalizations and deaths. But in rural areas outside the state’s big cities, the backlash against tough new restrictions is growing, especially in conservative areas, Jocelyn Gecker and Rich Pedroncelli report.
Failing Grades: The first report cards of the new U.S. school year are arriving with a lot more Fs than usual, and it’s not just parents who are getting distressed. School districts from coast to coast say the number of students failing classes has risen by as much as two or three times — a sign of the struggles many students are having with distance learning, particularly non-native English language learners, those with disabilities and other disadvantaged students, Carolyn Thompson reports.
Veteran’s Business: When the pandemic dried up 95% of the income coming into Nicole Walcott’s North Carolina business, the U.S. Army veteran dug in her heels and started applying for any grant she could find. Without the financial assistance she’s received from nonprofits like Operation Homefront, Walcott doesn’t believe her alternative wellness center in Fayetteville would be open today. Sarah Blake Morgan reports.
AP PHOTO/JACQUELYN MARTIN
Trump lawyer Giuliani in hospital after positive COVID-19 test; Biden picks California AG Becerra as Health Secretary to lead pandemic response
Another high-profile figure from Donald Trump’s inner circle has been struck by COVID-19.
Giuliani was exhibiting symptoms and was admitted to Georgetown University Medical Center in Washington. The 76-year-old former New York mayor has traveled extensively to battleground states in effort to help Trump subvert his election loss. On numerous occasions he has met with local officials for hours at a time without wearing a mask, Aamer Madhani and Jonathan Lemire report.
The diagnosis comes more than a month after Trump lost his reelection bid and more than two months after Trump was stricken with the virus in early October. Since then, a flurry of administration officials and others in Trump’s orbit have also been sickened, including White House chief of staff Mark Meadows, Ben Carson, the secretary of housing and urban development, and the president’s wife and youngest son.
Biden Health Secretary: President-elect Joe Biden is putting a defender of the Affordable Care Act in a leading role to oversee his administration’s coronavirus response. He has picked California Attorney General Xavier Becerra to be his health secretary. If confirmed by the Senate, Becerra will be the first Latino to head the Department of Health and Human Services. It’s a $1-trillion-plus agency with 80,000 employees and a portfolio that includes drugs and vaccines, leading-edge medical research and health insurance programs covering more than 130 million Americans.
A proposed virus relief bill is expected to get backing from Trump and Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell but it won’t include $1,200 in direct payments to most Americans.
Trump Tactics: Even after he exits the White House, Trump’s efforts to challenge the legitimacy of the election could have staying power. Trump’s tactics have been embraced by a wide array of Republicans, including congressional candidates, state lawmakers, party chairs and conservative legal groups. A former Democratic governor of Michigan says the president is “poisoning democracy” and setting a troubling precedent. The federal government’s own cybersecurity arm declared the presidential election the most secure in American history. Christina A. Cassidy reports.
AP FACT CHECK: Trump floods Georgia rally with debunked conspiracy theories and falsehoods. Calvin Woodward reports.
Inauguration: Public health guidance to avoid big parties in the coronavirus era are about to collide with one of America’s biggest celebrations of all — the swearing-in of a new president. With lots of details still to be worked out, this year’s event honoring Joe Biden is sure to be more subdued than prior inaugural days. A giant parade down Pennsylvania Avenue isn’t likely. Fancy balls may morph into virtual events. As for the swearing-in itself, the inaugural platform on the Capitol’s West Front is going up like always, but it probably won’t be as crowded, Kevin Freking reports.
Ethiopia’s month-long war in its northern Tigray region is hampering efforts to fight one of Africa’s worst coronavirus outbreaks, as the fighting has displaced more than 1 million people and strained humanitarian services to the breaking point.
Some 45,000 refugees from the Tigray war are now living in remote parts of Sudan, where they have taken shelter in crowded camps that have no coronavirus testing or treatment capabilities. Humanitarian officials say the crisis in Tigray remains critical, with medical supplies to fight the virus running low.
Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro’s political alliance has claimed a sweeping victory in congressional elections boycotted by his opponents as being fraudulent. The National Electoral Council announced that Maduro’s United Socialist Party of Venezuela and allied parties dominated the vote. The win gives Maduro sway over the last institution out of his grasp. U.S.-backed Juan Guaidó and the major opposition parties didn’t run in the election. International organizations like the European Union refused to send observers, saying it lacked conditions for a fair election.
In the years to come, Israelis will be able to commute into Jerusalem and Tel Aviv from settlements deep inside the West Bank via highways, tunnels and overpasses that cut a wide berth around Palestinian towns. Rights groups say the new roads being built will set the stage for explosive settlement growth, even if President-elect Biden’s administration convinces Israel to curb its housing construction. The costly infrastructure projects show that Israel intends to keep large swaths of the occupied territory in any peace deal, and would make it even harder to establish a viable Palestinian state.
One of the most intense days in the long-running Brexit trade negotiations started off with little good news about any progress on the talks. The United Kingdom and the European Union seemed still stuck on the same issues that have dogged the standoff for months. The EU chief negotiator held a pre-dawn briefing with ambassadors of the 27 member states to see if a deal is still possible with London ahead of the Jan. 1 deadline, but had no news of a breakthrough. This evening, British Prime Minister Boris Johnson will have a phone call with EU Commission chief Ursula von der Leyen to decide whether to pull the plug on an agreement that could cost hundreds of thousands of jobs on both sides.
A plea from Dr. Anthony Fauci for people to “wear a mask” to slow the spread of the coronavirus tops a Yale Law School librarian’s list of the most notable quotes of 2020. It is an annual update to “The Yale Book of Quotations,” which was first published in 2006. Also on the list is the cry of “I can’t breathe” uttered by George Floyd as he was killed under a police officer’s knee in Minneapolis and several quotes from the presidential campaign. One is Joe Biden telling a student, “You’re a lying dog-faced pony soldier.”
Illinois public health officials on Sunday reported 7,598 new confirmed and probable cases of COVID-19 and 76 additional deaths. A day earlier, Illinois officials reported 208 deaths and crossed the 13,000 mark for COVID-19 fatalities, a little more than a week after marking 12,000 deaths.
Meanwhile, COVID-19 fatalities hit a new record in Illinois nursing homes on Friday. A Tribune analysis found the surge in deaths was particularly steep outside the greater Chicago area, underscoring the challenges of keeping the virus out of long-term care facilities.
Here’s more coronavirus news and other top stories you need to know to start your day.
An acute shortage of influenza vaccine gripped the country in the fall of 2004, forcing the elderly to wait in hourslong lines for a dose. But even as Illinois flu clinics closed for want of the vaccine, the Chicago Bears obtained shots through their prescribing physician and offered them to players — young men in superb physical condition who fell far outside the rationing guidelines established by federal health officials.
That was just one small part of a national ruckus over the vaccine that lasted for months. Along with cries of unfairness came reports of more sinister matters such as theft, smuggling and price gouging. As America prepares to distribute another scarce vaccine, some are wary that history could repeat.
A nationwide shortage of substitute teachers was a chronic problem long before the arrival of the pandemic. But now, a dearth of available subs across the Chicago area has reached a crisis level at many school districts, where the roster of educators available to step in when teachers are absent has dwindled sharply. Many have told school officials the extra income isn’t worth the health risk.
Donald Schroud vowed to create hundreds of jobs by building an industrial park and sports complex on a swath of heavily polluted land he bought in 1994 from one of the last steel companies operating along the Calumet River.
Here are Bears writer Brad Biggs’ 10 thoughts after the Chicago Bears reached their longest losing streak since 2002, dropping their sixth straight game in stunning fashion in a 34-30 loss to Detroit Lions on Sunday at Soldier Field.
The children of Guadalupe Lopez, a beloved 911 dispatcher who died from complications of COVID-19 last month, had a videographer follow them around at their father’s funeral last Monday so they could show their mother and his wife, Maria Lopez, who was hospitalized with the coronavirus.
But Lopez never got to see the video or hear about how her husband received full honors from the Chicago Police Department. Lopez, 56, died from complications of COVID-19 at Loyola University Medical Center in Maywood on Friday night. Madeline Kenney has the story…
It’s part of a suite of CS Week initiatives by the tech giant that include a $5 million grant to take global a CPS program started by Chance the Rapper.
“It’s hard, it’s really hard to grieve, it’s really hard to understand when your heart is just so broken. It’s not fair. It’s not fair what’s happening to our family.”
Iris Martinez was a member of the Illinois Senate until earlier this week, when she resigned to become Cook County clerk of the circuit court. It now falls on Martinez and 10 others to decide who will fill the seat she held for 17 years in the state’s upper chamber.
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Total U.S. coronavirus deaths reported this morning: 282,312.
An imperfect storm of coronavirus tragedy is forming. Infections, hospitalizations and deaths are reaching new crisis proportions. Too many Americans shrug off warnings to stay in place, refuse masks and say they mistrust science. U.S. officials tout vaccine cures that will remain well out of reach for most people and in short supply for others. And amid the misery, the government is about to change hands.
As of this morning, more than 14,760,624 people in the United States have been infected with the coronavirus and more than 282,000 have died. The country has set records for cases, deaths and hospitalizations in recent days even as officials impose new restrictions seeking to curb the virus’s spread (The New York Times).
Against that backdrop, the Trump administration’s leader in charge of the vaccine-focused Operation Warp Speed predicts that in four or five months, vaccines can restore a sense of normalcy. “I think we may start to see some impact on the most susceptible people probably in the month of January and February, but on a population basis, for our lives to start getting back to normal, we’re talking about April or May,” Moncef Slaoui said on CBS’s “Face the Nation” on Sunday (The Hill).
Politico: Governors will let health care providers sort out thorny questions about who gets COVID-19 vaccines first.
The New York Times: Amid pending vaccine triage and federal guidelines, nursing home residents could be given a COVID-19 vaccine by the end of year.
Only about one-tenth of vaccine doses the U.S. government initially promised for distribution this month will be delivered. Federal officials have slashed the amount of coronavirus vaccine they plan to ship to states in December because of constraints on supply, and the shortages highlight how the early promises of a vast stockpile before the end of 2020 are falling short in the United States (The Washington Post).
The New York Times: Want to find out where you may stand in the vaccine line?
To top it off, state and local governments say they are still billions of dollars short of funds required for an effective vaccination campaign (The Hill). After spending more than $10 billion supporting the development of COVID-19 vaccines, the Trump administration spent just $340 million on state and local efforts to distribute such breakthrough drugs. The worry is that the United States will not be ready to distribute any vaccine approved by the Food and Drug Administration.
“We knew vaccines would be in development, so it’s not a surprise we would need to build up the deployment system. Now we could be weeks away from the first doses going out, and we really haven’t invested in any of that work,” said Adriane Casalotti, chief of government and public affairs at the National Association of County and City Health Officials.
As the crisis worsens in the United States, all eyes are on the United Kingdom and Russia, where preparations are well underway to inoculate millions of people with vaccines approved in those countries even as research trials continue.
The Associated Press: The coronavirus vaccine developed by American drug manufacturer Pfizer and Germany’s BioNTech will be administered in the United Kingdom beginning on Tuesday as part of an immunization program that is being closely watched around the world (pictured above). In a not-so-subtle reference to World War II, British officials refer to Tuesday as “V-Day.”
BBC: Russia was set over the weekend to begin inoculations for COVID-19 in Moscow, a city of 13 million people. Thousands of Russians registered to get the first of two shots, but it is unclear how much vaccine Russia can manufacture. Producers are expected to make only 2 million doses by the end of the year. Moscow has reported 2.4 million confirmed cases of COVID-19 in Russia and 42,675 deaths, a fraction of what the United States has recorded.
The Associated Press: In China, provincial governments are placing orders for experimental, domestically made coronavirus vaccines, though health officials have yet to say how effective they are or how they may reach the country’s 1.4 billion people. Developers are speeding up final testing.
The Wall Street Journal: Long a holdout from COVID-19 restrictions, Sweden ends its pandemic experiment.
The Hill: Five questions and answers on COVID-19 vaccines.
CBS News: Scott Gottlieb says U.S. could near 4,000 deaths a day as virus surges.
The Associated Press: Will the United States ever have a national COVID-19 testing strategy?
On the workforce front, the imminent arrival of multiple vaccines has employers weighing whether to mandate employees to receive one in the coming months as they believe they are on firm legal ground to do so. However, as The Hill’s Alex Gangitano reports, enforcement will nonetheless be a challenge, as some in the U.S. have opposed mask mandates and there remains the anti-vax community.
New polling shows that nearly 60 percent of Americans said they would get the vaccine, a 10-point uptick since September but still far below the amount needed to fuel a robust economic recovery.
“While there are likely legal concerns with blanket mandates, if any of our members believed that a requirement at their company was the right thing to do, we would certainly support that within the bounds of the law. Because America’s future depends on folks rolling up our sleeves in a new way,” said Jay Timmons, CEO of the National Association of Manufacturers.
The Hill: Hackers threaten to disrupt COVID-19 vaccine supply chain.
> State Watch: In California, more than 30 million residents are under stay-at-home orders today. The nation’s most populous state reported more than 25,000 new coronavirus infections on Saturday, an all-time, single-day high, and critical care hospital beds have filled up. Under a plan announced last week by Gov. Gavin Newsom (D), regions with less than 15 percent capacity for ICU beds must enact a stay-at-home order (The Washington Post). As the coronavirus slams rural California, many residents still pan the restrictions (The Associated Press). … In New Mexico, the spread of COVID-19, despite tough restrictions and urgent official pleas to residents to cooperate with guidelines, is swamping hospitals. Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham (D) says she will soon be forced to allow hospitals to move to “crisis standards,” which frees them to ration care depending on patients’ likelihood of survival (The Washington Post).
> Trump World outbreak, cont.: Former New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani, 76, the president’s lead personal attorney who has traveled extensively to help the president contest state election results, tested positive for COVID-19 and was admitted to a Washington hospital with symptoms of the virus.
Trump announced Giuliani’s diagnosis on Sunday afternoon. Andrew Giuliani, the former mayor’s son and a White House aide who contracted the virus last month, tweeted that his father is “resting, getting great care and feeling well.”
In recent weeks, Giuliani made appearances, usually unmasked, in Michigan and Georgia. Giuliani was present at a press conference at Republican National Committee headquarters in Washington on Nov. 19. His son, who was also present, tested positive a day later. Boris Epshteyn, who stood close to the former mayor, tested positive on Nov. 25.
The Hill: Arizona legislature shuts down after Giuliani, who testified there last week, contracts COVID-19.
POLITICS & CONGRESS: The battle to determine the Senate majority has reached the final month, and big money is flooding Georgia as Republicans look to retain their advantage in the upper chamber for the 117th Congress.
According to The Associated Press, campaigns and outside groups have spent and reserved $329 million in advertising since Nov. 3, with the expectation that the figure could soar close to $500 million before Jan. 5.
The situation in Georgia took multiple notable turns over the weekend as the president made his first post-election appearance on the campaign trail to stump for Sens. David Perdue (R-Ga.) and Kelly Loeffler (R-Ga.). During the Saturday night rally in Valdosta, Trump aired a number of grievances about his loss to Biden in the battleground state, which supported a Democrat for the first time since 1992.
The event took place a night before Loeffler’s first one-on-one debate against Democrat Raphael Warnock. As Max Greenwood writes, the two candidates sparred over a long list of issues during the hour-long event, with Loeffler repeatedly accusing Warnock of support for “socialist” policies and airing out a number of tried-and-true GOP talking points to attack her Democratic opponent.
As for Warnock, he alleged that the incumbent Republican has used her position to profit from her office. However, Trump’s ongoing efforts to dispute the election outcome dominated the conversation. Loeffler declined to say whether she supported the president’s claims of a “rigged” election, adding that the president had a right to seek recourse in the courts. The president roared in his support, saying it was a “great debate” for the sitting Republican.
Earlier in the night, Democrat Jon Ossoff appeared for a scheduled debate against Perdue, who declined the offer to take part. Instead, Perdue’s spot was represented by an empty podium (The Atlanta Journal-Constitution).
Recently, the incumbent Republican has been under fire over stock transactions, with Democrats accusing him of benefiting from his official position in Washington. Perdue says his trades have already been investigated and that he has been exonerated by the Department of Justice, the Securities and Exchange Commission, and the Senate Ethics Committee, but new information has come to light, putting Perdue on the defensive (The Hill).
The New York Times: The suburbs helped elect Biden. Can they give Democrats the Senate, too?
The Associated Press: Trump’s tactics to overturn the election results could have staying power.
While focus centers on the Georgia contest, Trump’s campaign appearance was also a preview of potential coming attractions as he considers a 2024 White House bid. As The Hill’s Morgan Chalfant and Brett Samuels report, chatter about a possible third bid for the presidency threatens to freeze the prospective field in place.
“Trump is the 800 pound gorilla in the Republican Party right now. For the time being, everyone else is going to make room for him,” said Alex Conant, a GOP strategist and former top aide to Sen. Marco Rubio (R-Fla.). “I think if you’re somebody who is considering a 2024 presidential bid, in many ways you need to wait and see what Trump does because that will clearly impact what sort of campaign you run, if you run one at all.”
Niall Stanage: The Memo: Trump casts long shadow over 2024.
Paul Kane and Scott Clement, The Washington Post: The Post contacted 249 Republicans in the House and Senate. More than 220 have been silent about Biden’s victory in the month since the election, trying to avoid crossing Trump.
> COVID-19 relief: Talks on a fifth coronavirus-related relief package could come to a head this week as centrist senators expressed optimism on Sunday that a bill will be passed before the end of the year.
Sen. Bill Cassidy (R-La.), part of the bipartisan group of lawmakers that has rolled out a $908 billion proposal, told “Fox News Sunday” that language for the bill will be released this week, as Trump has thrown his support behind the package.
“President Trump has indicated that he would sign a $908 billion package. There was only [one] $908 billion package out there, and that’s ours,” Cassidy said (The Hill).
For now, all eyes are on Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.), who has yet to back the bill but has argued in the past week that lawmakers need to pass something sooner rather than later. For months, McConnell has supported a “targeted” $500 billion package.
Time is winding down on the 116th Congress, but the work is not done, as lawmakers still have a number of big-ticket items on the agenda outside of stimulus talks. Included in them is the National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA), as Congress could be on the verge of delivering the outgoing president a major rebuke.
As The Hill’s Rebecca Kheel reports, both chambers are set to bring up the annual defense bill this week, which is chock-full of policy disagreements that break with presidential stances. Trump has threatened to veto the NDAA over the tech and Confederate names fights. However, House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer (D-Md.) maintained this week that there are enough votes in the lower chamber to override a veto, though the situation in the Senate remains up in the air.
Outside of the tech and Confederate name issues, the NDAA also takes aim at a number of Trump-related topics, including his troop withdrawals in Germany and Afghanistan, his relationship with Turkey, and his signature border wall.
The Hill: Power struggle sparks tensions among Senate Democrats.
The Baltimore Sun: Former Sen. Paul Sarbanes (D-Md.), Maryland who championed protection of Chesapeake Bay, dies at 87.
IN FOCUS/SHARP TAKES
NEW ADMINISTRATION: Biden has decided on California Attorney General Xavier Becerra, a former member of the House, to serve as his secretary of Health and Human Services (HHS), choosing a Latino lawyer and politician rather than a governor to help oversee the government’s response to the coronavirus pandemic (Politico and The New York Times). Becerra, 62, is a former chairman of the House Democratic Caucus. He has never served in a health policy position or managed anything as large as a department with 82,000 employees responsible for $94 billion in discretionary domestic spending and $1.3 trillion in mandatory spending.
Biden has selected Rochelle Walensky, the chief of infectious diseases at Massachusetts General Hospital and a Harvard University Medical School professor, to run the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, an agency within HHS based in Atlanta, Politico reported on Sunday and the transition team confirmed this morning in a news release.
Today and Tuesday, members of the Biden transition team are expected to get their first briefings from the Trump Defense Department following days of back-and-forth about how soon the outgoing administration would start to cooperate with President-elect Joe Biden and his transition advisers. The Pentagon’s intelligence agencies will begin information sharing today, CNN reported.
While preparing to inherit an economy Biden last week called “grim,” his advisers are tasked to craft policies that can assist Black and other minority communities that have been disproportionately hurt by the pandemic. It’s viewed as an uphill battle, The Hill’s Marty Johnson and Sylvan Lane report.
On Sunday, Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot (D) told CBS News’s “Face the Nation” that while her city is 30 percent Black, the pandemic’s toll has fallen most heavily on minorities. “We’re seeing people of color, both Black and Latinx, leading in the number of cases infected but also leading in deaths,” she said. Illinois recorded more coronavirus deaths than any other state in the past seven days, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
As Biden weighs candidates to lead the Justice Department, his choice will face confirmation pressures from all sides, reports The Hill’s Alexander Bolton. Attorney General William Barr’s decision before the election to give U.S. Attorney John Durham the sway of a special counsel while probing the origins of the investigation into Russia’s ties to the Trump campaign in 2016 will be an issue among senators. Republicans want assurances that Durham will not be fired, while Democrats say Biden’s attorney general should terminate Durham’s role as a special counsel.
Meanwhile, Barr is said to be weighing whether to leave the Justice DepartmentDOJ before Inauguration Day. Trump was unhappy when the attorney general said during a recent interview that U.S. attorneys and the FBI uncovered no evidence of election fraud that would alter Biden’s victory (The New York Times).
The Washington Post: In its final weeks, the Trump administration accelerates a push to lock in policy and staffing gains.
The other Arizona election challenge: Can voters ignore the state constitution when passing an initiative? by The Wall Street Journal editorial board. https://on.wsj.com/33Leonu
Most presidents build libraries to burnish their legacies. Trump is constructing an alternate universe, by Karen Tumulty, columnist, The Washington Post. https://wapo.st/3ov6HcX
A MESSAGE FROM FACEBOOK
It’s time for updated regulations to promote data portability
We joined tech partners in Data Transfer Project to build a framework that enables people to move their data securely and easily between platforms.
But there’s more to do. We support updated regulations to ensure data is safe, portable and used responsibly.
The Senate convenes at 3 p.m. and will resume consideration of Stephen Schwartz to be a judge on the U.S. Court of Federal Claims.
The president at 10:30 a.m. will award Iowa wrestling icon Dan Gable the Medal of Freedom. Twenty-three members of the Gable clan are traveling to the White House for the event (The Courier). The president will eat lunch with Vice President Pence.
Pence will join the president for the Medal of Freedom event and for lunch. At 2 p.m., the vice president will lead a White House Coronavirus Task Force meeting in the Situation Room.
Biden and Vice President-elect Kamala Harris will receive the President’s Daily Brief and meet with transition advisers.
👉 INVITATION TODAY: Join The Hill’s Virtually Live discussion, “Aspiration & Resilience: Arab Youth in the COVID-19 Era,” at 1 p.m., featuring students and regional business leaders. Like much of the world, the economy of the Middle East region has taken a hit due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Unemployment has been a top issue among young Arabs, and they are looking beyond traditional government and private sector jobs, but COVID-19 has made that more difficult. What are the opportunities in the region that may lead to improving economic growth and why should Americans care about the economic outlook for young Arabs? RSVP HERE.
➔ INTERNATIONAL: SpaceX successfully launched a new Dragon resupply mission on Sunday, sending an upgraded cargo craft to the International Space Station for NASA. The launch marked the company’s 21st cargo mission and its 24th launch of the year. It was also a milestone — the 100th successful launch of a Falcon 9 rocket spanning 101 missions for SpaceX (Space.com).
➔ COURTS: Last week, a federal judge gave immigrants a big win and rebuked the Trump administration over its long-running “acting” secretary at the Homeland Security Department, who is deemed to have exceeded his statutory clout. Separate from the immigration policy battlefield, the ruling may have the effect of complicating Biden’s future executive sway to fill top federal vacancies in cases where the Senate will not or has not confirmed nominees (Vox).
➔ HOLIDAY & COMMERCE: Companies tell their customers that holiday shipments and deliveries will be on time (The Hill), although such assurances may be hope over reality. An estimated 3 billion packages will move through the nation’s strained shipping infrastructure, or about 800 million more deliveries than at this point in 2019 (The New York Times).
And finally … New York City is still talking about the sprucing up of the Rockefeller Center Christmas tree, which received some extra branches to give the conifer a fuller appearance after widespread public drubbing that the 75-foot-tall Norway spruce was a towering but beaten-up specimen of holiday majesty. Makeover trivia: The tree guzzles more than 90 gallons of water each day during its first week on display (New York Post).
With the addition of expert pre-lighting infrastructure adjustments (wired-in branch weaves), the tree won plaudits, even from 2020’s most pandemic-fatigued Scrooges.
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POLITICO Playbook: NEW: Rucker and Leonnig’s next book
Presented by
DRIVING THE DAY
BIG BOOK NEWS … WAPO’S PHIL RUCKER and CAROL LEONNIG will follow up their No. 1 NYT bestseller “A Very Stable Genius” with a book about President DONALD TRUMP’S final year in office. Penguin is the publisher.
— PENGUIN’S DESCRIPTION: “The authors will take readers behind the scenes of the 45th president’s impeachment on charges of abuse of power; his failure to take seriously and contain the COVID-19 virus, even as it ravaged the American people and economy; his deployment of federal officers to shut down the Black Lives Matter protests and to campaign for re-election as the law-and-order president; and Trump’s attempts to discredit not only the 2020 presidential election and Joe Biden’s victory, but our democracy itself.”
THIS IS A REALLY, REALLY BIG WEEK. Government funding expires Friday, and Congress is still trying to figure out its plan on Covid relief. Read BURGESS EVERETT on the politics of this week.
— WE HEAR that Congress is likely to pass a one-week stopgap spending bill to buy another seven days for talks on government funding — that would make the shutdown deadline Dec. 18. Whether Congress eventually settles on a 12-bill omnibus or a three-month stopgap is still not clear. At this point, it seems like a three-month CR or something of that nature is becoming more likely. This would create a natural deadline in March for funding/another Covid relief bill. There seems to be a lot of disagreement about an omni at this point — but no one is ruling anything out.
— COVID RELIEF: The bipartisan group is still talking. They are hung up on liability overhaul — a sticky part of any Covid relief deal. They do appear to have figured out the state and local piece — they will tie it to population, based on revenue loss and expenditures with a cap. Their total is $160 billion, which includes tribes. BUT WILL IT MATTER? Senate Majority Leader MITCH MCCONNELL and Speaker NANCY PELOSI will be the final decision makers. The bipartisan group may just be developing options that the leaders might use, or ignore all together.
THERE’S A NEW URGENCY to include direct payments — those checks to individuals that went out earlier this year. We mentioned this last week, but heard more about it Sunday night from people involved in the talks. And yes, Republicans are chatting this up too — it seems like TRUMP would be supportive. But, again, all eyes on MCCONNELL.WaPo’s Tony Romm on how unemployment, sick leave and housing aid are set to expire in weeks
Good Monday morning.
NYT SCOOP … SHERYL GAY STOLBERG and MIKE SHEAR: “Biden Picks Xavier Becerra to Lead Health and Human Services”: “President-elect Joseph R. Biden Jr. has selected Xavier Becerra, the Democratic attorney general of California, as his nominee for secretary of health and human services, tapping a former congressman who would be the first Latino to run the department as it battles the surging coronavirus pandemic.
“Mr. Becerra became Mr. Biden’s clear choice only over the past few days, according to people familiar with the transition’s deliberations, and was a surprise. Mr. Becerra has carved out a profile on the issues of criminal justice and immigration, and he was long thought to be a candidate for attorney general.
“But as attorney general in California, he has been at the forefront of legal efforts on health care, leading 20 states and the District of Columbia in a campaign to protect the Affordable Care Act from being dismantled by his Republican counterparts. He has also been vocal in the Democratic Party about fighting for women’s health.”
L.A. TIMES’NOAM LEVEY and SARAH WIRE: “Becerra, a rising star in California politics, has become one of the most important defenders of the Affordable Care Act, leading the fight to preserve the landmark law against efforts by the Trump administration and conservative states to convince federal courts to repeal it. Becerra also has carved out an increasingly important role confronting healthcare costs, using his position to challenge pricing practices of Sutter Health, one of California’s most powerful medical systems.”
— DRAG OUT the supercommittee files! BECERRA was quite firmly against cuts. … BECERRA’S WIFE is a physician. Carolina Reyes — a graduate of Harvard Medical School — is on the board of the California Health Care Foundation.
FLASHBACK … JON ALLEN on Nov. 17, 2009: “California Democrat Xavier Becerra has learned a lesson about calling out Nancy Pelosi. Don’t. In the run-up to this month’s House vote on health care reform,Becerra suggested to the Congressional Progressive Caucus that party leaders gave up too easily on the favored ‘robust’ public option.
“That didn’t sit well with the speaker, and witnesses said she made her displeasure known to Becerra and other top Democrats at a subsequent leadership meeting. ‘I understand I have tire tracks on my back because Xavier threw me under the bus,’ witnesses quoted Pelosi as saying. The speaker went on to accuse Becerra of trying to improve his ‘street cred’ with progressives by undercutting her.”
GET THIS: Now California Gov. GAVIN NEWSOM will have at least two appointments: VP-elect KAMALA HARRIS’ Senate seat, and attorney general. If Newsom picks California Secretary of State ALEX PADILLA for the Harris seat, that would mean he would have the chance to pick three high-profile slots. Just remember, to all those appoint-KATIE-PORTER-to-everything people: Her seat is an R+3, and Republicans could easily win it back in a special election. And, with PELOSI boasting a really tight majority, that’s a suboptimal outcome for Democrats. Jeremy White and Carla Marinucci with the full picture… The health team announcement from the transition
TYLER PAGER SCOOP: “To rebuild CDC, Biden picks Rochelle Walensky”: “President-elect Joe Biden has selected Rochelle Walensky, the chief of infectious diseases at Massachusetts General Hospital, to run the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, according to two people with knowledge of the decision.
“Walensky, who is also a professor of medicine at Harvard Medical School and an expert on AIDS and HIV, will be tasked with rebuilding a critical health agency that has been sidelined by the Trump administration amid a pandemic.
“Walensky will replace Robert Redfield, who assumed the role of director in March 2018, and take a top role in helping the Biden administration curtail the coronavirus pandemic. Biden is planning to announce Walensky along with a slate of top health officials this week, including Xavier Becerra as secretary of Health and Human Services, Jeff Zients as the Covid-19 coordinator and Vivek Murthy as surgeon general. Marcella Nunez-Smith, a professor at Yale who is an expert on health care inequality, will have a senior role focused on health disparities.”
BIG GEORGIA DEBATE LAST NIGHT … ATLANTA JOURNAL-CONSTITUTION: “Loeffler, Warnock face off in heated debate,”by Patricia Murphy: “U.S. Sen. Kelly Loeffler and the Rev. Raphael Warnock faced off in their first, and possibly only, one-on-one debate Sunday night at the Atlanta Press Club, trading barbed attacks in their fight for the right to represent Georgia in the Senate for the next two years.
“Over the course of the hourlong debate, Loeffler referred more than a dozen times to the pastor of Atlanta’s Ebenezer Baptist Church as ‘radical, liberal Raphael Warnock,’ and she warned that U.S. Sen. Chuck Schumer and Washington Democrats want to use the Georgia Senate seat to ram liberal policies through Congress. ‘The Democrats want to fundamentally change America,’ the Republican said. ‘And the agent of change is my opponent, radical liberal Raphael Warnock.’”
— NYT’S ASTEAD HERNDON in Decatur, Ga., on A1:“The Suburbs Helped Elect Biden. Can They Give Democrats the Senate, Too?”: “President Trump bet his re-election on a very specific vision of the American suburb: a 2020 edition of Mayfield from ‘Leave It to Beaver’ in which residents are white, resent minorities, and prioritize their economic well-being over all other concerns.
“The bet fell far short. Mr. Trump lost ground with suburban voters across the country. And particularly in Georgia, where rapidly changing demographics have made it the most racially diverse political battleground in the country, his pitch has been at odds with reality. …
“The result is a swing state where the ‘typical’ suburban voter can take many forms. There’s Kim Hall, a 56-year-old woman who moved to suburban Cobb County eight years ago from Texas and attended a rally for Mr. Ossoff in Kennesaw. And Ali Hossain, a 63-year-old doctor who brags about his kids and cares about the economy; he attended an event for Mr. Ossoff in Decatur. He’s also an immigrant from Bangladesh who has begun organizing for state and national candidates.”
HAS BILL BARR HAD ENOUGH? … NYT’S KATIE BENNER, MIKE SCHMIDT and PETER BAKER: “Barr Is Said to Be Weighing Whether to Leave Before Trump’s Term Ends”: “Attorney General William P. Barr is considering stepping down before President Trump’s term ends next month, according to three people familiar with this thinking. One said Mr. Barr could announce his departure before the end of the year.
“It was not clear whether the attorney general’s deliberations were influenced by Mr. Trump’s refusal to concede his election loss or his fury over Mr. Barr’s acknowledgment last week that the Justice Department uncovered no widespread voting fraud. In the ensuing days, the president refused to say whether he still had confidence in his attorney general.
“One of the people insisted that Mr. Barr had been weighing his departure since before last week and that Mr. Trump had not affected the attorney general’s thinking. Another said Mr. Barr had concluded that he had completed the work that he set out to accomplish at the Justice Department.”
WSJ ON POMPEO’S FUTURE … “Pompeo to Head Home to Kansas With Plenty of Alternatives,”by William Mauldin, Lindsay Wise and Courtney McBride: “In an interview at his State Department office, Mr. Pompeo said he and his wife, Susan, aim to return at some point to Kansas to be with friends, family and their church community. As a congressman, he represented the state’s Fourth District for six years. … [L]ongtime supporters see Mr. Pompeo leveraging his national and international stature for a future run for governor, U.S. senator or, one day, president or vice president. …
“Kansas Republican National Committeeman Mark Kahrs sees Mr. Pompeo as a possible challenger to Kansas Democratic Gov. Laura Kelly in two years. While Mr. Kahrs said he still hopes President Trump will serve a second consecutive term, he believes Mr. Pompeo has a strong claim as Mr. Trump’s successor someday.
“Mr. Pompeo dismisses all the talk of the political future. ‘I haven’t even given what happens on January 21 enough thought to comment,’ Mr. Pompeo said, referring to the day after the inauguration. ‘I haven’t given half a second’s thought to the political races in the state of Kansas.’ …
“Former House Speaker Paul Ryan (R., Wis.) praised Mr. Pompeo in an interview for ‘cutting against the grain’ at the State Department. Another former Republican House speaker, John Boehner of Ohio, who tapped Mr. Pompeo to serve on the House Intelligence Committee when he was a congressman, said: ‘Whatever he’d do, I’d be supportive.’”
— YES, the RYAN and BOEHNER quotes caught our attention too.
TRUMP’S LEGACY — “As Trump rants over election, his administration accelerates push to lock in policy and staffing gains,” by WaPo’s David Nakamura, Juliet Eilperin and Lisa Rein: “President Trump last week recorded a 46-minute video rant regurgitating a litany of baseless accusations of election fraud. He awarded former college football coach Lou Holtz, a close political ally, the Medal of Freedom in an Oval Office ceremony. He threatened to veto a defense budget bill if it fails to include measures to punish social media companies that have flagged his falsehood-laden posts.
“Yet even as Trump has been consumed with his waning political fortunes in a desperate attempt to retain power, his administration has accelerated efforts to lock in last-minute policy gains and staffing assignments that it hopes will help cement the president’s legacy and live on past Jan. 20, when President-elect Joe Biden is sworn in.
“Last week, for example, U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services adopted a longer and more difficult citizenship test that critics said could further curb legal immigration. The Pentagon named 11 new members, including a pair of prominent former Trump campaign aides, to a Defense Department business advisory board. And the president signed an executive order drafted by the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy aimed at protecting civil liberties in the use of artificial intelligence by the federal government.” WaPo
THE PRESIDENT’S WEEK AHEAD (usually comes in Sunday morning’s Playbook, but alas): MONDAY: TRUMP will award the Presidential Medal of Freedom to Dan Gable and will have lunch with VP MIKE PENCE. TUESDAY: TRUMP will speak at an Operation Warp Speed vaccine summit. THURSDAY: The president will eat lunch with states’ attorneys general and will attend the Congressional Ball.
THE JUICE … NATE HODSON — a longtime aide to Rep. CATHY MCMORRIS RODGERS (R-Wash.) — will be the GOP staff director on Energy and Commerce. CMR is the new ranking member.
BIDEN and HARRIS will receive the presidential daily briefing. They will also meet with transition advisers.
PLAYBOOK READS
IN MEMORIAM — WAPO: “Paul Sarbanes, senator from Maryland who led overhaul of corporate accounting rules, dies at 87,”by Bart Barnes: “Paul S. Sarbanes, who as a young Maryland congressman drafted and introduced the first article of impeachment against President Richard M. Nixon and as a five-term U.S. senator tightened the regulation of corporate accounting practices after corruption scandals at Enron and other businesses, died Dec. 6 in Baltimore. …
“Unlike many of his contemporary officeholders, Mr. Sarbanes was uncomfortable with the backslapping, glad-handing and grandstanding that often go with public office. … Sometimes described as a ‘phantom senator,’ he often shunned even perfunctory self-promotion tactics such as issuing news releases and holding news conferences. He was widely recognized for a superb intellect and a quick and nimble mind … What he lacked in charisma, however, he made up for in tenacity.”
KNOWING CHRIS COONS — “Biden’s ambassador to the GOP,” by Burgess Everett: “Chris Coons was in the final two when it came to Joe Biden’s search for a secretary of State. But the president-elect had a simple message when he broke the news that the job would instead go to Tony Blinken.
“‘I need you in the Senate,’ Biden told his Delaware ally during a long conversation on Nov. 16. The next president is telling that to lots of Democrats these days as he tries to staff his Cabinet. But in the Biden era, Coons may actually be the most critical individual Democrat on Capitol Hill — Biden truly needs his help to have any chance at accomplishment in a narrowly divided Congress. …
“Despite Biden’s love for the Senate and for cutting deals, the reality is that more than half the Republicans he last served with are gone — and their replacements often are not exactly looking for compromise. It hasn’t always been straightforward for Coons to maintain GOP relationships during the Trump era either. Coons’ wife, Annie, often has this reaction when he recounts a recent discussion with, say, Trump ally Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.): ‘Oh, my God.’
“‘She says, “How can you possibly? After this, after that, after this?” And I say, “Honey, it’s my job, it’s my job.” And she said: “You seem to actually like them,”’ Coons said in a nearly hourlong interview. He refers to his Senate colleagues as ‘my family.’”
BUSINESS BURST — “Airbnb Boosts IPO Price Range to Between $56 and $60 a Share,”by WSJ’s Maureen Farrell: “Airbnb Inc. plans to boost the proposed price range of its initial public offering, the latest sign that the red-hot IPO market is ending the year on a high note. Airbnb is boosting the range to between $56 and $60 a share, from $44 to $50, people familiar with the matter said. The new range would give the home-rental company a valuation of as much as $42 billion on a fully diluted basis and including proceeds from the offering.
“DoorDash Inc., the food-delivery company that is expected to debut Wednesday, the day before Airbnb, plans to price its shares at the high end of or above its range of $90 to $95 a share—already raised from between $75 and $85, people familiar with the offering said. That would give the San Francisco company, the largest among its peers, a valuation of as much as $36 billion or more, on a fully diluted basis and including proceeds from the offering.”
SPOTTED: Sen. Mitt Romney (R-Utah) at Levain in Georgetown on Sunday.
SPOTTED at JDRF’s virtual 20th anniversary Hope Gala on Saturday, celebrating 50 years since JDRF’s founding: Rep. Jamie Raskin (D-Md.) and Sarah Bloom Raskin, Emily Spitzer, Peter Scher and Kim Tilley, Mimi Schwartz, Patrick Steel and Lee Satterfield, Liz Legg, Caroline Springer, Eric and Cheryl Einhorn, Jonathan Spalter and Carrie Goux, Michelle Whitaker, Leon Harris, David Bartlett, Susan Traver, Patrick Halley, Larry Soler and Doug Lowenstein.
TRANSITIONS — Joe Picozzi is starting as chief of staff at the Manhattan Institute. He previously was confidential assistant to the chief counsel at the RNC. … Sean O’Brien will be executive director of the Congressional Western Caucus. He most recently has been deputy chief of staff and legislative director for Rep. Dan Newhouse (R-Wash.).
ENGAGED — Ben Voelkel, comms director for Sen. Ron Johnson (R-Wis.), proposed to Erin Collins, comms director for Rep. Troy Balderson (R-Ohio), on Saturday in Lincoln Park. They celebrated with friends at a small soiree complete with their dog, Bodie. The couple met at brunch with friends. Pic
— Campbell Matthews, head of public affairs, East for DoorDash, and Drew Millum, lead for Lyft’s Operations Center, got engaged Saturday. He proposed while they were visiting the house they’re moving into in January. They met a few years ago while working together at Lyft. Pic
WEDDING — Abbey Brandon Richards, manager of applications and analytics at the Bipartisan Policy Center and Alec Richards, asset manager at TruAmerica, got married in Las Vegas on Nov. 20. They met as Craigslist roommates while living in a Glover Park rowhouse in 2015. Pic… Another pic
WELCOME TO THE WORLD — Brett Layson, director of government affairs at the Home Depot, and Jordan Layson, director of government affairs at Amgen, welcomed Palmer Layson on Wednesday.
BIRTHDAY OF THE DAY: Priya Dayananda, managing director of federal government affairs at KPMG. How she’s celebrating: “I will be eating Indian fried fish and dal while celebrating my 50th birthday in State College, Pa., at the house I grew up in with my mom, whose birthday is Dec. 1, and my sister, whose birthday is Dec. 5, and my nieces, spouse and our 5-year-old. Ever since I lost my dad, I try to go back home to stay close to where I feel his energy and be around all his books — he was a professor of English literature.” Playbook Q&A
BIRTHDAYS: Sen. Susan Collins (R-Maine) is 68 … Mike Roman … Bonnie Glick, senior adviser at CSIS … Suhail Khan … Roma Daravi, special assistant to the president and deputy director of strategic comms … Ben Fallon … Kate Tummarello, policy director at Engine … Jeannie Lough … Bennett Roth of Bloomberg Government … Kenny Fried … Molly Block, deputy associate EPA administrator … CNN’s Sarah Mucha and Ashley Killough … Doug Henwood … Dafna Tapiero … Anne MacMillan … Sam Runyon … Noam Chomsky is 92 … Tyler Prell … Kathryn McQuade … International Trade Administration’s Sam Schofield … Ericka Reyes …
… Kyle Noyes …NYT’s Dean Chang … Mary Heitman … Sarah O’Brien, VP of executive comms at Facebook (h/t Kevin Lewis) … Christina Freundlich … POLITICO’s Sam Sutton and Devika Modak … Ruthanne Buck … Sachin Chheda … Antha Williams … Jeff Blum (h/ts Teresa Vilmain) … Carole Simpson is 79 … Larisa Alexandrovna Horton … Michael Punke … Adam Culbertson … Cristina Beato … Patrick Lee Plaisance … Emily Hamilton O’Brien … Allie Ciaramella … Sarindee Wickramasuriya … Illinois state Sen. Dan McConchie … Maria Fuentes … Jenny Kordick … Raj Peter Bhakta … Tim Andrews … Karla Gonzalez … Mike Meece … Alice Parker … Kim Bradford
“86 years have I have served him, and he has done me no wrong. How can I blaspheme my King and my Savior?”-declared the aged Polycarp, a disciple of the Apostle John, as he stood in 155 AD before the Roman judge who ordered him to deny his faith or be killed.
During the first three centuries of Christianity, the Church suffered multiple waves of severe government persecution.
One of the notable church leaders who was persecuted in the late 3rd century was St. Nicholas.
St. Nicholas was the most renown saint in early Greek Orthodox tradition, equivalent to St. Peter in Catholic tradition.
He was as popular to Greeks, and later Russians, as St. Patrick was to the Irish, or as Saint Boniface (Winifred) was to the Germans.
Greek Orthodox tradition tells of Saint Nicholas being born around AD 280, the only child of a wealthy, elderly couple who lived in Patara, Asia Minor (present-day Turkey).
When his parents died in a plague, Nicholas inherited their wealth.
Nicholas generously gave to the poor, but he did so anonymously, as he wanted the glory to go to God.
About this time, in the 3rd century, the pietist-monastic movement spread, where sincere converts to Christianity would give away all their money and possessions, then withdraw from the world to live in a cave as a hermit or join a monastery.
One notable incident that occurred during this time in Nicholas’ life was when a merchant in his town had gone bankrupt.
The creditors threatened to take not only his house and property, but also his children.
The merchant had three daughters.
He knew if they were taken it would probably condemn them to tragic lives of forced marriages, sex-trafficking, or prostitution.
The merchant had the idea of quickly marrying his daughters off so the creditors could not take them.
Unfortunately, he did not have money for a dowry, which was needed in that area of the world for a legally recognized wedding.
Nicholas heard of the merchant’s dilemma and, late one night, threw a bag of money in the window for the oldest daughter’s dowry.
Supposedly the bag of money landed in a shoe or a stocking that was drying by the fireplace.
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It was the talk of the town when the first daughter was able to get married.
Nicholas then threw a bag of money in the window for the second daughter, and she was able to get married.
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Expecting money for his third daughter, the merchant waited up.
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When Nicholas threw the money in, the father ran outside and caught him.
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Nicholas made the father promise not to tell where the money came from, as he wanted the credit to go to God alone.
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This was the origin of secret, midnight gift-giving and hanging stockings by the fireplace on the anniversary of Saint Nicholas’ death, which was December 6, 343 AD.
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The three bags of money which Nicholas threw into the house are remembered by the three gold balls hung outside of pawnbroker shops — as they present themselves as rescuing families in their time of financial need.
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As a result, Nicholas became considered the “patron saint” of pawnbrokers.
After Nicholas had given away all his money, he decided to go on a pilgrimage to the Holy Land, where he intended to join the secluded Monastery of Sion.
Before making his final vows to join, somehow the Lord impressed upon him “not to hide his light under a bushel.”
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He decided to go back to Asia Minor, but not before visiting the birthplace of Jesus.
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Mark Twain wrote in Innocents Abroad, 1869, of visiting the Church of the Nativity:
“This spot where the very first ‘Merry Christmas’ was uttered in all the world, and from whence the friend of my childhood, Santa Claus, departed on his first journey, to gladden and continue to gladden roaring firesides on wintry mornings in many a distant land forever and forever.”
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Nicholas returned to the southern coast of Asia Minor, to the busy Mediterranean port city of Myra.
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Unbeknownst to him, the bishop had just died, and the church leaders could not decide who was to be their next bishop.
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One of the church leaders had a dream that the first person to church the next day would be named “Nicholas” and that he was to be their next bishop.
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As his habit was, Nicholas fasted all night and was the first person to church the next day.
The church leaders told him of the dream and that he was to be their next bishop.
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Nicholas was hesitant to accept, as the Roman Emperor was arresting bishops and killing them.
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He finally relented and became the Bishop of Myra.
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Soon after, Nicholas was arrested and imprisoned during Emperor Diocletian’s brutal persecution of Christians.
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There were ten major persecutions of Christians in the first three centuries, and Diocletian’s was the worst.
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Suddenly, Diocletian was struck with an intestinal disease so painful that he abdicated the throne on May 1, 305 AD.
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The next emperor, Galerius, continued the persecution, but he was struck with an intestinal disease and died in 311 AD.
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With no emperor, the Roman Empire was thrown into confusion.
The four major generals decided to fight it out as to who would be the next emperor.
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General Constantine was in York, Britain, when he received the news.
His men surrounded him and shouted “Hail Caesar!”
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Constantine marched toward Rome to fight General Maxentius.
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The day before the Battle of the Milvian Bridge, October 28, 312 AD, Constantine reportedly saw the sign of Christ in the sky.
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The sign of Christ was the first two letters of the Greek name “Christ.”
The first letter “X” is called “Chi” and the second letter “P” is called “Rho.”
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Constantine put the “Chi-Rho” or “XP” on all his military banners.
After his victory, he ended the persecution of Christians with the Edict of Milan in 313 AD — the first time in history that Christians were not persecuted by the government.
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Over the centuries, the sign of Christ was shortened to just the “Chi” or “X.”
It was called the “Christ’s Cross” or “Criss-Cross.”
During the reign of Emperor Constantine, Nicholas was let out of prison.
Now that it was legal to be a Christian, he preached publicly against pagan sexual immorality.
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He condemned the worship of the fertility goddess Artemis or Diana, whose temple was nearby, just as the Apostle Paul did as recorded in the Book of Acts, chapter 19.
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The Temple to Diana at Ephesus was one of the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World, twice as big as the Parthenon in Athens, having 127 huge pillars — and temple prostitutes.
It was the Las Vegas of the Mediterranean world.
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Nicholas’ fire and brimstone preaching led the people of Myra to tear down their local temple to Diana, and shortly thereafter, through the preaching of St. John Chrysostom, Archbishop of Constantinople (AD 397-403), the people tore down the enormous temple to Diana at Ephesus.
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During this time, the Greek Olympics were ended, which were considered pagan, as they competed naked.
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Nicholas preached against divination, human sacrifice, and exposure of unwanted infants, which was the Roman equivalent of abortion.
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Then the first major heresy in church history began.
A church leader named Arius began the Arian Heresy, saying Jesus was a created being and less than God.
The heresy not only split the church, but the Roman Empire.
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To settle it, Constantine ordered all the bishops to come to Nicea.
It was the first time that all the bishops throughout the known world met together.
There they ended the heresy by writing the Nicene Creed.
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The tradition is that St. Nicholas attended the Council of Nicea and was so upset at Arius for starting this heresy that he slapped him across the face.
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Evidently, Jolly Old St. Nick had a little temper!
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Not only did Nicholas confront heretics, but also corrupt government politicians.
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One story was of a Roman governor, in order to cover up his immoral acts, had falsely accused some innocent soldiers and sentenced them to be executed.
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When Nicholas heard of it, he rushed down and broke through the crowd.
He grabbed the executioner’s sword and threw it down, and then publicly revealed, by the power of the Holy Spirit, what evil the governor had done.
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The Governor, realizing that Nicholas had no way of knowing the details except by divine insight from God, fell on his knees and begged Nicholas to pray for him.
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Greek Orthodox tradition attributes many miraculous answers to St. Nicholas’ prayers.
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Once a storm was so violent that fishermen and sailors were unable to get back to shore, so the people begged Nicholas to help.
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He went down to the docks and prayed, and the sea became calm so the fishermen and sailors could return safely to port, similar to the way Jesus calmed the sea as recorded in chapter 8 of the Gospel of Matthew.
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This led to Nicholas later being considered the “patron saint” of sailors.
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When a famine spread across the land, Nicholas asked merchant ships carrying grain from North Africa to Rome, to unload some grain for his people, promising that God would bless them.
On their return trip, they reported that the grain that was left in their ship had multiplied, like the little widow’s meal barrel as promised by Elijah in the First Book of Kings 17:16.
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St. Nicholas died DECEMBER 6, 343 AD.
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In the 5th century a church was built in Myra in his honor.
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When it was damaged in an earthquake in 529 AD, Emperor Justinian rebuilt it.
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In 988 AD, Vladimir the Great of Russia converted to Eastern Orthodox Christianity and adopted Nicholas as the “patron saint” of Russia.
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In the 11th century, Muslim jihad terrorists, the Seljuks Turks, invaded Asia Minor, killing Christians and destroying churches. They also demolished and desecrated the graves of Christian saints.
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Islamic Hadith Sahih Muslim (Book 4, No. 2115) states: “Do not leave an image without obliterating it, or a high grave without leveling it.”
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In a panic, Christians shipped the remains of St. Nicholas to the town of Bari on the southern coast of Italy in the year 1087.
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Pope Urban II dedicated the church, naming it after St. Nicholas — Basilica di San Nicola de Bari.
This officially introduced the Greek St. Nicholas to Western Europe.
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In the 11th century, Muslim Turks intensified their invasion
So many Greek Christians fled that Pope Urban II went to the Council of Claremont in 1095 and called upon European monarchs to send help.
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Europe sent help — it was called the First Crusade.
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In a backwards sense, Western Europe might not have had St. Nicholas traditions if it had not been for Islamic jihadist invading Eastern Europe.
With St. Nicholas’ remains now in Italy, western Europeans quickly embraced the gift-giving traditions associated with him.
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By 1223, so much attention was being given to gift-giving during the Christmas season that Saint Francis of Assisi wanted to refocus the attention back to the humble birth of Christ.
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Francis created the first “creche” or nativity scene, a humble manger of farm animals with the attention being on Joseph, Mary and baby Jesus — the Son of God come to dwell among men: “And the Word became flesh and dwelt among us.” (John 1:14)
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In 1517, Martin Luther began the Reformation.
He considered “saints days” as a distraction from Christ, so he effectively ended saints’ days in Protestant countries, including the popular “St. Nicholas Day.”
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Since Germans like the gift-giving, Martin Luther moved the giving to December 25th to emphasize that all gifts come from the Christ Child.
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The German pronunciation of Christ Child was “Christkindl,” which over the centuries became pronounced “Kris Kringle.”
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As the Catholic saying is that St. Peter is at the Gates of Heaven, a Greek Orthodox tradition developed from the prophecy that Jesus would return at the end of the world to judge the living and the dead, riding a white horse, and that the saints would return with him, riding white horses.
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Revelation 19:11-16:
“And I saw heaven opened, and behold a white horse; and he that sat upon him was called Faithful and True, and in righteousness he doth judge and make war.
His eyes were as a flame of fire, and on his head were many crowns; and he had a name written, that no man knew, but he himself.
And he was clothed with a vesture dipped in blood: and his name is called The Word of God …
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… And out of his mouth goeth a sharp sword, that with it he should smite the nations: and he shall rule them with a rod of iron: and he treadeth the winepress of the fierceness and wrath of Almighty God.
And he hath on his vesture and on his thigh a name written, King Of Kings, and Lord Of Lords.”
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Revelation 19:14 added:
“… And the armies which were in heaven followed him upon white horses, clothed in fine linen, white and clean.”
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As Nicholas was a saint, the reasoning went, he would certainly be one of multitude returning with Jesus, riding a white horse.
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Since St. Nicholas was such a special saint, the story became embellished with him coming back once a year for a mini-judgement day, to check up on the children to see if they are on the right track.
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Over the centuries, the story evolved.
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Saints came heaven, the New Jerusalem, the Celestial City — which turned into the North Pole.
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In Norway there were no horses, so they had St. Nicholas riding a reindeer.
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The Lamb’s Book of Life and the Books of Works were turned into the Book of the “Naughty and Nice.”
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The angels turned into elves.
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In England during Henry VIII’s reign, Christmas celebrations became sort of a Mardi Gras.
Mardi Gras was originally was a religious day at the beginning of Lent, followed by 40 days of fasting before Easter, but now is a lewd party in New Orleans.
Under Henry VIII, the Christmas holiday similarly became a time of partying, carousing, and wassailing–drinking spiced ale from house to house–and throwing some of it on apple trees as luck for a good harvest.
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When Puritans took over England in 1642, they outlawed Christmas as it had become so worldly.
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When Pilgrims first disembarked the Mayflower,
the ship master, Christopher Jones, wrote in his log, December 25, 1620:
“At anchor in Plymouth harbor, Christmas Day, but not observed by these colonists, they being opposed to all saints’ days, etc …
A large party went ashore this morning to fell timber and begin building. They began to erect the first house about twenty feet square for their common use, to receive them and their goods.”
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A year later, at the end of 1621, Pilgrim Governor William Bradford
recorded in Of Plymouth Plantation:
“Herewith I shall end this year – except to recall one more incident, rather amusing than serious.
On Christmas Day the Governor called the people out to work as usual; but most of the new company excused themselves, and said it went against their consciences to work on that day.
So the Governor told them, if they made it a matter of conscience, he would spare them till they were better informed.
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… So he went with the rest, and left them; but on returning from work at noon he found them at play in the street, some pitching the bar, some at stool-ball, and such like sports.
So he went to them and took away their games, and told them that it was against his conscience that they should play and others work.
If they made the keeping of the day a matter of devotion, let them remain in their houses; but there should be no gaming and reveling in the streets.”
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In 1659, when the Puritans were settling Massachusetts, they instituted a five shilling fine for anyone caught celebrating Christmas:
“Whosoever shall be found observing any such day as Christmas and the like, either by forbearing labor, feasting … every such person so shall pay for each offense five shillings as a fine to the country.”
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The strict Puritan leader, Rev. Cotton Mather (1663-1728), told his congregation, December 25, 1712:
“Can you in your conscience think, that our Holy Savior is honored, by Mad Mirth, by long Eating, by hard Drinking, by lewd Gaming, by rude Reveling; by a Mass fit for none but a Saturn or a Bacchus, or the Night of a Mahometan Ramadan? You cannot possibly think so!
A Multitude of the Heavenly Host was heard Praising of God. But shall it be said, That at the Birth of our Saviour for which we owe as high Praises to God as they can do, we take the Time to Please the Hellish Legions, and to do Actions that have much more of Hell than of Heaven in them?”
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But the Dutch loved Christmas and the St. Nicholas traditions.
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The Dutch holiday tradition is that St. Nicholas comes once a year to give presents to good children.
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But the naughty children had something else to look forward to.
St. Nicholas was accompanied by a Moorish costumed helper, Zwarte Piet, who would put naughty children into gunny sacks and take back to Spain where they would be sold into Muslim slavery.
So dreadful was the anticipation of St. Nicholas’ visit, that, according to ancedotal accounts, the night before, Dutch boys would go to sleep with pocket knives in their pockets in case they awoke and had to cut themselves out of Zwarte Piet’s gunny sack.
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Beginning in 1624, Dutch immigrants brought St. Nicholas traditions to New Amsterdam, which became New York in 1664.
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Dutch called Saint Nicholas – “Sant Nikolaus” or “Sinter Klass,” which became pronounced “Santa Claus.”
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Living in New York was Washington Irving, the author of Legend of Sleepy Hallow and Rip Van Winkle.
He coined the name for New York as “Gotham City.”
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Irving also wrote Diedrich Knickerbocker’s A History of New York, 1809.
In it, he described St. Nicholas visiting once a year, but no longer wearing a bishop’s outfit, but a typical Dutch outfit of long-trunk hose, leather belt, boots, a hat, and a pipe.
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Irving described:
“A goodly image of St. Nicholas, equipped with a low, broad-brimmed hat, a huge pair of Flemish trunk hose, and a pipe …
The good St. Nicholas, who had appeared to him in a dream the night before, and whom he had known by his broad hat, his long pipe.”
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Washington Irving wrote further:
“So we are told, in the sylvan days of New Amsterdam, the good St. Nicholas would often make his appearance in his beloved city, of a holiday afternoon, riding jollily among the treetops, or over the roofs of houses, now and then drawing forth magnificent presents from his breeches pockets, and dropping them down the chimneys of his favorites …
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… He never shows us the light of his countenance, nor ever visits us, save one night in the year; when he rattles down the chimneys of the descendants of the patriarchs,confining his presents merely to the children …
The good St. Nicholas came riding over the tops of the trees, in that self-same wagon wherein he brings his yearly presents to children. And he descended hard … And he lit his pipe by the fire …
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… And when St. Nicholas had smoked his pipe he twisted it in his hatband, and laying his finger beside his nose, gave … a very significant look, then mounting his wagon, he returned over the treetops and disappeared …
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… The significant sign of St. Nicholas, laying his finger beside his nose and winking hard with one eye …”
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Irving wrote how Dutch settlers continued the tradition of hanging stockings by the fireplace:
“At this early period was instituted that pious ceremony, still religiously observed in all our ancient families of the right breed, of hanging up a stocking in the chimney on St.Nicholas Eve;
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… which stocking is always found in the morning miraculously filled; for the good St. Nicholas has ever been a great giver of gifts, particularly to children …
Nor was the day of St. Nicholas suffered to pass by without making presents, hanging the stocking in the chimney, and complying with all its other ceremonies.”
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Washington Irving explained that St. Nicholas was not only the patron saint of the Manhattan colony, but the namesake of their first church, begun in 1628, being the oldest corporate body in what is now the United States:
“Finally, that they … should not be required to acknowledge any other saint in the calendar than St. Nicholas, who should thenceforward, as before, be considered the tutelar (patron) saint of the city …
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They built a fair and goodly chapel within the fort, which they consecrated to his name …
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… I am moreover told that there is a little legendary book somewhere extant, written in Low Dutch, which says that the image of this renowned saint, which graced the bow-sprit of the (ship) Goede Vrouw, was elevated in front of this chapel … the great church of St. Nicholas.”
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For over three centuries, St. Nicholas Collegiate Reformed Protestant Dutch Church was the oldest congregation in Manhattan and the most eminent Protestant church in the city, often referred to as “the Protestant Cathedral of New York.”
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President Theodore Roosevelt attended there.
Financial mismanagement resulted in church elders selling it to the Sinclair Oil Company, which demolished it in 1949 to build an office building.
Remaining church members merged with New York’s Marble Collegiate Dutch Reformed Church.
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Clement Moore was a Hebrew professor in New York at the General Theological Seminary of the Protestant Episcopal Church, which was built on land donated by his family in the neighborhood of Chelsea.
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Clement Clarke Moore Park is located in New York City at the corner of 10th Avenue and 22nd Street.
He helped Trinity Church establish a new church on Hudson Street – St. Luke in the Fields.
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In 1823, Clement Moore wrote a poem for his six children titled “A Visit From St. Nicholas”:
‘TWAS the night before Christmas,
when all through the house
Not a creature was stirring,
not even a mouse;
The stockings were hung
by the chimney with care,
In hopes that ST. NICHOLAS
soon would be there …”
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“When, what to my wondering
eyes should appear,
But a miniature sleigh,
and eight tiny reindeer,
With a little old driver,
so lively and quick,
I knew in a moment
it must be ST. NICK …”
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“So up to the house-top
the coursers they flew,
With the sleigh full of Toys,
and ST. NICHOLAS too …”
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“As I drew in my head,
and was turning around,
Down the chimney ST. NICHOLAS
came with a bound …”
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Clement Moore described St. Nicholas as smaller:
“He was chubby and plump, a right jolly old elf,
And I laughed when I saw him, in spite of myself.”
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In 1843, the first lithographic Christmas cards were printed, and Charles Dickens published “A Christmas Carol,” with the characters of Scrooge and Tiny Tim.
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During the Civil War, Harper’s Weekly Magazine had an illustrator named Thomas Nast, famous for creating the Republican elephant and Democrat mule in his political cartoons.
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Nast drew St. Nicholas visiting Union troops with a “North Pole” sign behind St. Nick as a political jab at the Confederate South.
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In the early 1900s, Haddon Sundblom was a artist famous for his creation of the Quaker Oats man and Aunt Jemima Syrup.
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In 1930, Coca Cola hired Sundblom to create a painting of Santa Claus drinking Coke, which he did annually for the next 33 years.
With Coca Cola pioneering mass-marketing to become the most well-known trademark name in the world, Sundblom’s version of Santa Claus became the most recognizable.
Though much has been added on to the story throughout the centuries, underneath it all, there was a godly, courageous Christian Bishop who lived in 4th century Asia Minor, named Nicholas.
Nicholas loved Jesus enough go into the ministry;
he chose being imprisoned by the Romans rather than deny his Christian faith;
he stood for the doctrine of the Trinity;
he preached against sexually immoral pagan temples;
he confronted corrupt politicians; and
most notably of all, St. Nicholas was very generous, giving away all his money, anonymously, to help the poor in their time of need!
President Donald Trump will present the Presidential Medal of Freedom to Dan Gable then have lunch with Vice President Mike Pence. Keep up with the president on Our President’s Schedule Page. President Trump’s Itinerary for 12/7/20 – note: this page will be updated during the day if events warrant All Times EST 12:00_PMPresent the Presidential …
Those foolish people who felt free enough to criticize Joe Biden for predicting a “dark winter” ahead, as opposed to those who agreed with Donald Trump, during the fear-filled first weeks of the covid era when he stated that the future wasn’t all darkness and death and that we’d get through the covid months successfully …
It is Monday my Kruiser Morning Briefing friends. It is also December 7th. Let us never forget what this day in American history means.
So here we go.
As I have written often in the last couple of weeks, the Republicans need to keep their eyes on Georgia. It would appear that the President of the United States of America agrees with me.
President Trump did what he does best over the weekend: he connected with the people. It is a strength of his that the leftists have ignored and it will come back to haunt them. They want to believe that Trump is an outlier here on the Right when in reality he is EVERYTHING.
Please remember that I am a very biased, verbal bomb-throwing opinion writer and not a journalist.
So let us have some fun now.
Look at this:
This is after an election that he supposedly lost.
If any of us live long enough to enjoy the writings of objective historians we will read that Donald Trump was one of the greatest presidents in the history of the United States of America.
Sadly, I don’t think any of us will live that long.
This was Trump at his finest. He IS the Republican party now and he knew that he had to do this. He’s suffering through the fact that China hooked up with the Democrats (yeah, I really believe this) to steal an election from him but he’s still out there swinging for the fences.
i would vote for this guy a thousand times.
As I have been writing over and over again, this is now Donald Trump’s Republican party. This is a good thing. A very good thing. The GOP finally has the testicular fortitude it has lacked for decades. Even if Grandpa Gropes is inaugurated next month, Trump’s presence will dominate Washington.
The mere fact that he can draw the kind of crowd he did in Georgia after supposedly losing an election will give the Democrats nightmares.
I’m already planning a party for his 2024 victory.
That’s not how this works. That’s not how any of this works. N.J. Governor Tells Matt Gaetz He’s ‘Not Welcome’ in the State Again After Attending Young Republican Gala
Barr considering resigning . . . Attorney General William P. Barr is considering stepping down before President Trump’s term ends next month, according to three people familiar with this thinking. One said Mr. Barr could announce his departure before the end of the year. It was not clear whether the attorney general’s deliberations were influenced by Mr. Trump’s refusal to concede his election loss or his fury over Mr. Barr’s acknowledgment last week that the Justice Department uncovered no widespread voting fraud. In the ensuing days, the president refused to say whether he still had confidence in his attorney general. New York Times
Just getting this feeling that now that Trump has likely lost, those who supported him are trying to get back with the cool crowd.
Coronavirus
Giuliani hospitalized with Covid . . . Rudy Giuliani, the former mayor of New York City and President Donald Trump’s personal attorney, has tested positive for COVID-19. Trump delivered the news by tweet, writing “Get better soon Rudy, we will carry on!!!” Giuliani, 76, was admitted to Georgetown University Medical Center on Sunday, two people who were aware of his condition. Andrew Giuliani tweeted that his father was “resting, getting great care and feeling well.” USA Today
Politics
Alito orders Pa. to respond to GOP suit to toss out mail-in ballots . . . U.S. Supreme Court Associate Justice Samuel A. Alito Jr., ordered Pennsylvania officials to respond to Rep. Mike Kelly’s election challenge a day earlier than previously scheduled, which will be on the same day known as the safe harbor deadline. Kelly, a Republican, is seeking to have the court toss all the state’s mail-in ballots on the grounds that universal, no-excuses mail-in voting is unconstitutional and needs a constitutional amendment to authorize its provisions. The safe harbor deadline is the federal cutoff date for states to resolve any remaining election disputes and lock in their slate of electors for the Dec. 14 Electoral College vote. Fox News
Pollster says Biden win “statistically implausible” . . . President-elect Joe Biden’s election victory wasn’t a statistical impossibility but defied key measures according to pollster Patrick Basham. During a Fox News interview set to air Sunday night, Basham says non-polling metrics have a “100% accuracy rate in terms of predicting the winner of the presidential election,” which includes party registration trends, number of individual donations, and Google searches. In an op-ed in the Spectator, Bashman analyzed “peculiarities” from the election that lacked “compelling explanations.” He outlined counting without observers, late-arriving ballots, failure to match signatures on mail-in ballots, and low absentee ballot rejection rates. Washington Examiner
Ilhan Omar husband’s firm got $500K in Covid bailout despite millions from her campaign . . . A D.C.-based consulting firm co-owned by Democratic Minnesota Rep. Ilhan Omar’s husband received millions from her campaign and was also eligible for more than $500,000 in coronavirus bailout money. Public records show that E Street Group, co-owned by Omar’s husband, Tim Mynett, received nearly $135,000 in Paycheck Protection Program (PPP) loans and $500,000 in Economic Injury Disaster loans. Campaign finance filings also show that the firm raked in millions during the 2020 campaign from Omar. Fox News
Jake Tapper compares Trump to venomous snake . . . CNN anchor Jake Tapper wrapped up Sunday’s broadcast of “State of the Union” with a fable that compared President Donald Trump to a venomous snake. Tapper appeared to put the blame on Republican officials, concluding with the question, “Did you not know who this man was when you took him in? “President Trump has been pushing lies and conspiracy theories for years that have made life more dangerous for all kinds of Americans,” Tapper began. Daily Caller
I guess it’s a step up from Hitler.
Intel chief Ratcliffe urges Durham to release interim report . . . John Ratcliffe, the director of national intelligence, urged U.S. Attorney John Durham on Sunday to release an interim report on his investigation into the origins of the Trump-Russia probe, saying that the American public should have record of the investigation in case the Biden administration shuts it down. “I think the American people should know what’s happening in a two-year investigation into this and I hope that that report will be forthcoming,” Ratcliffe said. Daily Caller
This prosecutor has taken way too long dotting every i and crossing every t, and soon he will have nothing once Biden is in charge and shuts him down.
Chris Wallace tells Azar to call Biden “president-elect” . . . Fox News anchor Chris Wallace interrupted Health and Human Services Secretary Alex Azar on Sunday after Azar referred to Joe Biden as “vice president” rather than “president-elect.” “We welcome Vice President Biden to the club,” Azar said on “Fox News Sunday.” “Since the middle of April … the president’s guidelines have called for —”
Before Azar could finish, Wallace interjected, “He’s the president-elect, sir. He’s the president-elect.” Azar did not respond to Wallace. The Hill
Warnock silent on court packing, Marxism in debate . . . Georgia Democratic Senate candidate Raphael Warnock dodged questions about packing the Supreme Court and declined to condemn Marxism in a debate Sunday night against Republican incumbent Kelly Loeffler. The two candidates sparred over economics and coronavirus policy during the hour-long debate, with Warnock accusing his opponent of using her office for personal gain and Loeffler repeatedly describing her Democratic challenger as a “radical liberal.” Washington Free Beacon
Biden says son Hunter won’t be involved in any conflicts of interest . . . Okay, why didn’t that happen when Biden was vice president? He can’t control his son, it’s obvious. Hunter Biden and his activities present a threat to national security in that he is bound to get himself into a situation that could lead to a foreign nation bribing the president. According to the Daily Mail: “Biden was asked about his son Hunter, who was accused of benefiting from business with Ukrainian and Chinese officials when Biden was vice president. “He said neither his son nor any family members would not be involved in any conflicts of interest while he sat in the Oval Office. White House Dossier
Biden to nominate Becerra to be HHS secretary . . . President-elect Joe Biden has made his selections for two key public health positions, sources said on Sunday, as he prepares to take office next month as the coronavirus pandemic rages to new levels across the United States. Biden plans to nominate California Attorney General Xavier Becerra as secretary of health and human services, two sources said, placing the Latino former congressman in a critical role battling the pandemic. Reuters
National Security
Europe warns Iran after it expands nuclear program . . . France, Germany and Britain said on Monday they were alarmed by an Iranian announcement that it intended to install additional, advanced uranium-enriching centrifuges and by legislation that could expand its nuclear program. A confidential International Atomic Energy Agency report obtained by Reuters said Iran plans to install three more cascades, or clusters, of advanced IR-2m centrifuges in its enrichment plant at Natanz, which was built underground apparently to withstand any aerial bombardment. Reuters
International
US to sanction Chinese officials over Hong Kong crackdown . . . The United States is preparing to impose sanctions on at least a dozen Chinese officials over their alleged role in Beijing’s disqualification of elected opposition legislators in Hong Kong, according to three sources, including a U.S. official familiar with the matter. The move, which could come as soon as Monday, will target officials from the Chinese Communist Party as the Trump administration keeps up pressure on Beijing in his final weeks in office. President-elect Joe Biden takes over on January 20. New York Post
Protests erupt across France over surveillance bill . . . Protests turned destructive across France after President Emmanuel Macron’s administration announced a bill that would expand the use of surveillance tools while restricting the ability of citizens to share images of police officers in the media. Thousands of French citizens poured into the city streets of Paris, Marseille, and Lille with signs that read “France, land of police rights” and “Withdrawal of the security law” after the government issued a ban on the sharing of images online “with the manifest aim to harm.” Washington Examiner
Money
Covid relief bill near . . . With U.S. coronavirus deaths topping 281,000 and pressure mounting for aid to a fragile economy, lawmakers and their staff worked through the weekend to put the finishing touches on the COVID-19 package intended to help those facing the greatest need, according to Senate Republican aides. It would set new emergency assistance for small businesses, unemployed people, airlines and other industries during the pandemic. But lawmakers have opted not to include stimulus checks to individuals out of concern that a higher price tag could delay passage. Reuters
Four killed, 32 shot in Chicago over weekend . . .
Chicago authorities reported a violent weekend that saw at least four people killed and 32 others wounded in shootings across the city. In the latest attack, a man was fatally shot on the city’s Northwest Side on Sunday. Officers responded around 5:10 p.m. where they found a male unresponsive in a vehicle with multiple gunshot wounds, the Chicago Sun-Times reported. Fox News
But who cares? They weren’t shot by white police.
San Diego teachers forced to attend white privilege training . . . Teachers in San Diego are reportedly being required to attend a ‘white privilege’ training in which they are asked to commit to becoming ‘anti racist’ and acknowledge that they meet on stolen land taken from Indigenous peoples. The training is mandatory for all teachers within the San Diego Unified School District. As part of the training, the teachers are told to discuss how they would feel if they were told: ‘You are racist.’ Daily Mail
Gun lawsuits flood in after Barrett joins Court . . . Gun-rights activists have filed a slew of new cases in hopes Justice Amy Coney Barrett’s confirmation to the Supreme Court will lead to an expansion of gun protections. Groups like the Second Amendment Foundation, Firearms Policy Coalition, and National Rifle Association have filed numerous federal cases against restrictive gun laws across the country with the intention of taking as many as possible to the Supreme Court. They hope to not only strike down restrictive laws in places like Massachusetts, California, and New Jersey but also further clarify the reach of the Second Amendment. Washington Free Beacon
Guilty Pleasures
Sheep enters hotel, waits for elevator . . . A hotel in Wales shared video of a sheep that wandered into the building and was found standing in a hallway where it appeared to be waiting for the elevator. The Premier Inn in Holyhead posted a video to Facebook showing the sheep, nicknamed Sydney by hotel staff, standing just outside the elevator doors in a hallway. Employees said the sheep had escaped from a nearby field and entered the hotel through the automatic doors. The “sheepish looking guest” was safely returned to its owner, the hotel said. UPI
That’s so weird! Normally sheep take the stairs to their room.
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Kemberlee Kaye: “There are many reasons I’m skeptical of the public school system, and this is just one of them.”
Mary Chastain: “I hope the Senate and the White House approve the bill to decriminalize marijuana. It was nice to hear a representative admit that the war on drugs has been disastrous and hasn’t done a damn thing. A waste of money and resources. Oklahoma has legal marijuana, medicinal and recreational. It is still illegal to drive impaired under any substance. Workplaces still require drug tests. It is not a gateway drug. If you want to try harder drugs you will no matter what. But let’s also look at how we treat addicts in general. It’s a disease. Drug addicts don’t need jail time. They need help. “
Fuzzy Slippers: “Can you imagine if this were a Republican? We’d be deluged with 24/7 coverage about how evil it is to hold back relief for Americans in order to win an election. The leftstream alphabet media would be interviewing Americans across the country to get their reactions to this devastating news and to share how the lack of relief has impacted their families. We’d be getting daily updates of how many Americans have lost their jobs, homes, ability to feed to their families since the obstruction of the relief package for purely political reasons began. But it’s a Democrat Speaker of the House, so we hear *crickets*.”
Leslie Eastman: “As I predicted in a post last week, Californians will begin openly defying lockdown orders that make little sense, don’t work, and are based in politicized science. For example, Orange County, Calif. Sheriff Don Barnes said his deputies would not enforce Governor Gavin Newsom’s new restrictive stay-at-home order which took effect Sunday in parts of the state that have fallen below 15 percent intensive care unit capacity availability in hospitals. “Compliance with health orders is a matter of personal responsibility and not a matter of law enforcement.”
Vijeta Uniyal: “Amid an escalating armed conflict in northern Ethiopia, Israel has kick started an operation aimed at airlifting around 2000 Ethiopian Jews from the country. The first flight of this mission arrived on Thursday carrying 319 members of Ethiopia’s Jewish community. They were greeted by Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and leading members of his government at Ben Gurion airport.”
David Gerstman: “Why didn’t House Speaker Nancy Pelosi agree to a relief bill before the election? Stacey Matthews blogged that in Pelosi’s own words “What was then, before, was not more of this. This has simplicity. It’s what we’ve had in our bills. It’s for a shorter period of time, but that’s okay now, because we have a new President – a President who recognizes that we need to depend on science to stop the virus, a President who understands that America’s working families need to have money in their pockets in a way that takes them into the future, without any of the contraptions of any of the other bills that the Administration was associating itself with before.” (Stacey bolded that phrase too.) In other words, Pelosi was holding up passage of the bill that would grant relief to millions of Americans affected by the shutdown for totally political considerations.
Pelosi, of course, will pay not significant price for her cynicism in the court of public opinion because the New York Times, Washington Post and CNN will discretely look the other way. (Although one reporter who did challenge was from CNN, I doubt this will get much play on the network.)
Another bad part about future relief bills is that they will likely include bailouts for states and governors (for example New York and Gov. Andrew Cuomo) who destroyed their own economies with bad decisions.”
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Happy Monday!Dispatch Live is back on Tuesday, December 8 at 8 p.m ET / 5 p.m. PT. Dispatch members are invited to join us for an hour of lively discussion with your fellow Dispatch members. Sarah, Steve, Jonah, and David will be on hand to discuss all the post-election chaos, the state of the GOP and conservatism, and first impressions of Biden’s Cabinet picks so far.
By signing-up today for a Dispatch membership, you too can join the fun Tuesday night at Dispatch Live. These semi-regular member livestream engagements include Q&A and a Live Chat where members and Dispatch staff can chat during the broadcast.
For Dispatch Live location details and to add this event to your calendar, click here.
Quick Hits: Today’s Top Stories
The Bureau of Labor Statistics reported Friday that the U.S. economy added 245,000 jobs in November, a sharp drop from the 610,000 added in October. The nation’s unemployment rate dropped from 6.9 percent to 6.7 percent, in part because of decreased labor force participation. Of the 22 million jobs lost in the early weeks of the pandemic, about 12 million have been regained.
President-elect Joe Biden has begun putting together his health care team, reportedly selecting California Attorney General Xavier Becerra to run the Department of Health and Human Services, Massachusetts General Hospital infectious diseases chief Rochelle Walensky to head up the CDC, Obama administration Surgeon General Vivek Murthy to serve in that position again, and Obama administration official Jeff Zients as the White House’s COVID-19 coordinator.
The House of Representatives voted 228-164 on Friday to decriminalize marijuana at the federal level, expunge some federal convictions for nonviolent marijuana offenses, and institute a 5 percent excise tax on the drug. The bill now goes to the Senate, where it is almost assuredly not going to pass.
A federal judge instructed the U.S. Department of Homeland Security to resume the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) program, allowing undocumented immigrants brought to the United States as children to apply to the program for the first time since 2017. The ruling could result in hundreds of thousands of new applications.
The Pentagon announced that President Trump ordered the drawdown of a “majority” of U.S. forces in Somalia by early 2021, but many of those troops will reportedly be redeployed to neighboring Kenya. The Pentagon noted it “will retain the capability to conduct targeted counterterrorism operations in Somalia, and collect early warnings and indicators regarding threats to the homeland.”
Trump reportedly contacted Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp over the weekend in an effort to persuade him to call a special session of the state legislature to overturn the election results. Sources say that Kemp declined the president’s request.
Rudy Giuliani, President Trump’s personal attorney, tested positive for COVID-19, Trump announced on Twitter. Giuliani said he’s “getting great care and feeling good.” The Arizona Senate and House of Representatives will be closed this week as a precaution, after Giuliani visited the state and met with several members in recent days.
The United States confirmed 174,693 new cases of COVID-19 yesterday per the Johns Hopkins University COVID-19 Dashboard, with 10.7 percent of the 1,634,532 tests reported coming back positive. An additional 1,102 deaths were attributed to the virus on Sunday, bringing the pandemic’s American death toll to 282,236. According to the COVID Tracking Project, 101,487 Americans are currently hospitalized with COVID-19.
November’s Not-So-Promising Jobs Report
The Bureau of Labor Statistics reported on Friday that the U.S. economy added 245,000 nonfarm jobs in November, far below the 610,000 new hires employers added to their payrolls in October.
Despite this massive slowdown in job growth, the unemployment rate still fell slightly to 6.7 percent in November, down 0.2 percentage points from the month before. “The unemployment rate right now is still lower than it was during pretty much all of Obama’s first term,” Manhattan Institute senior fellow Brian Riedl, who has worked as an economist for Republicans Rob Portman, Marco Rubio, and Mitt Romney, told The Dispatch. “So it’s really a miracle that the unemployment rate is below 7 percent, given what a shock to the economy we’ve had this year. It could have been so much worse.”
Part of that decrease, however, can be attributed to some Americans giving up on looking for jobs entirely. The labor force participation rate is down approximately 2 percentage points since the onset of the pandemic, and the phenomenon is affecting women with school-aged children the most. The number of Americans working plunged from 152.5 million in February to 130.3 million in April; we’ve regained 12 of those 22 million jobs in the seven months since.
President-elect Joe Biden called November’s jobs report “grim” in a statement on Friday, saying it “confirms we remain in the midst of one of the worst economic and jobs crises in modern history.” But not all sectors of the economy are hurting equally.
The transportation and warehousing industries, for example, constituted the bulk of November’s new hires, collectively adding 145,ooo new jobs last month. Online shopping has seen explosive growth this year as more Americans are staying (and working from) home, and with that comes demand for workers in those related sectors.
Even as Americans begin to see an approaching end to the pandemic with the rollout of vaccinations, Juliette Kayyem, former assistant secretary for homeland security, reminds us to check our expectations and exercise patience. As the United States government undertakes the bulk delivery of vaccine doses, prioritizing health care workers and seniors in long-term-care facilities, complications and controversy along the way are inevitable. “Even good planning may not survive contact with reality. Trucks will break down. Vaccine batches will be recalled,” Kayyem writes for The Atlantic. “This is the month when the pandemic began to end, but until the middle of next year or longer, Americans need to get used to the split screen—and to a series of mixed messages.”
Americans look back at the postwar era as an embodiment of a national norm, when confidence in institutions to function honestly and efficiently allowed for successful governance. “But what we thought was confidence was in fact hubris,” writes Kevin D. Williamson in his latest for National Review. “We aren’t going to revert to the middle of the 20th century. In some ways, we are reverting to the middle of the 19th century: populism and agrarian agitation, bitterly partisan media, some pretty terrible ideas about monetary policy, the political weaponization of antitrust law and federal regulation, raging sectional divides,” he argues. “And, in many ways, that ugliness and disruption—and not the brief liberal consensus of the postwar years—is normal: the real normal, the normal normal.”
The coronavirus has many Americans planning to hunker down for the holidays, but others are going forward with travel and gatherings to spend time with friends and family. Pediatrician Aaron Carroll’s advice: Refrain from scolding those people. While shaming others for their behavior during the pandemic may be personally satisfying, it’s counterproductive from a moral and public health standpoint. “The focus on blame is unhelpful, because what really matters is that people do as much as they reasonably can to prevent the spread of the disease, not that everyone adhere to the same set of rigid standards,” Carroll writes. “I understand that Covid-19 shaming is rooted in frustration. We’re angry about our inability to get a handle on the pandemic. But in our quest to scold and lay blame, even when we’re publicly calling out truly bad actors, we’re just making ourselves feel superior, which only makes it harder to achieve the solidarity needed for shared sacrifice.”
In his latest for the New York Times, Ross Douthat endeavors to compile a taxonomy of unexpected believers in the “stolen election” conspiracy theory, looking beyond the “Trumpy or super-partisan” likely suspects. Among them, he writes, are the “conspiracy-curious normie,” the “outsider-intellectual,” and the “recently radicalized”—each contributing to the shocking scale of belief among conservatives that forces conspired to rig the election in favor of Biden. “The voter-fraud narrative is being deployed, often by people more cynical than the groups I’ve just described, to help an outgoing president—one who twice lost the popular vote and displayed gross incompetence in the face of his administration’s greatest challenge—stake a permanent claim to the leadership of his party and establish himself as the presumptive Republican nominee in 2024,” Douthat writes. “And it’s being used to push aside the more compelling narrative that the Republican Party could take away from 2020, which is that Trump’s presidency demonstrated that populism can provide a foundation for conservatism, but to build on it the right needs a very different leader than the man Joe Biden just defeated.”
Friday’s G-File takes aim at the fiasco unfolding for Georgia Republicans. If Kelly Loeffler and David Perdue lose their runoff elections, Jonah argues, many on the right will have no one to blame but themselves. “For a lot of otherwise decent politicians and commentators, doing the right thing was just too damn hard,” he writes. “At every stage, they fed the Trumpian alligator another piece of themselves and said ‘This much, but no more.’ But now all that is left are stumps, and it’s hard to walk in the right direction on stumps or hold your hands up to shout, ‘Stop!’ when you have no hands.”
David’s Sunday French Press delves into the many prominent Christian leaders who have fallen from grace in recent months, including most recently Hillsong East Coast’s lead pastor Carl Lenz. Celebrity is corrupting, David writes, and spiritual authority is particularly susceptible to abuse. “Christian leaders of integrity are … typically keenly aware of the unique dangers of spiritual connection and spiritual authority. Spiritual connection with a person can be especially intimate. Spiritual authority is particularly easy to abuse.”
Georgia election official Gabriel Sterling joined Steve and Sarah on Friday’s episode of The Dispatch Podcast to debunk popular voter fraud myths about his state’s election.
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Should Americans Fight Lockdown Orders?
Over the last several weeks, too many stories about lockdown orders and rules have captured people’s attention because of the unfairness and hypocrisy shown by elected officials. In Sherman Oaks, CA, a restaurant owner posted a video of a nearby film crew that was allowed to have outside dining set up after she was forced to close. From the New York Post:
“Everything that I own is being taken away from me and they set up a movie company right next to my outdoor patio,” she complains in her video, her voice breaking with emotion.She has owned the [restaurant] for ten years, and had just spent some $80,000 to construct the outdoor dining area before the state ordered restaurants go take-out only late last month, the ABC affiliate in Los Angeles reports.
“They have not given us money and they have shut us down. We cannot survive,” she says.
“My staff cannot survive.”
In LA, music, TV, and film productions may resume while restaurants, gyms, and even “non-essential walking” outside isn’t allowed.
On Friday morning, CNBC’s Rick Santelli, decried churches and restaurants being closed while large stores are open. From The Federalist:
“An explosive argument broke out on live TV Friday morning when CNBC On-Air Editor Rick Santelli slammed his colleague Andrew Sorkin, co-host of CNBC’s the “Squawk Box” and financial columnist for The New York Times, for supporting the lockdowns of restaurants and churches.
“You can’t tell me that shutting down, which is the easiest answer, is the only answer,” Santelli said in response to Sorkin’s argument that people are safe from the spread of coronaviurs in big box stores, but not in restaurants.
…
“Therefore, there is actually and should be, an ongoing debate as to why a parking lot for a big box store, like by my house, is jam-packed. Not one parking spot open,” Santelli said. “Why are those people any safer than a restaurant with Plexiglas? I just don’t get it. And I think there’s a million of these questions that could be asked.”
“I think it’s really sad that when we look at the service sector and all the discussions we’ve had about job losses that that particular dynamic isn’t studied more, isn’t worked more, we don’t put more people in a room and try to figure out ways so that these service-sector employees and employers can all come back in a safer way,” Santelli continued.”
Last week, libertarian professor and author Walter Williams passed away and this poignant quote from him has been making the rounds: “Every single tyrant that has ever existed has had, what the tyrant believed to be, a good reason for restricting the freedoms of others. Tyrants do not trust that people behaving voluntarily will do what the tyrant thinks that they ought to do.”
On The Federalist, attorney Ilya Feoktistov makes the case for why Americans should fight lockdown orders. He writes, “Men and women who achieve positions of power are always hungry for more. Fighting for a universal right to party these holidays, through the courts — and, if need be, mass civil disobedience — is a quintessentially American, bipartisan, and winnable cause.”
2020 Election Update… Continued
Georgia runoff election: When is it and how will it work? (Fox News)
Georgia state legislators call for special session to review election (The Post Millennial)
Trump legal team celebrates after Michigan judge allows probe of Dominion voting machines (Fox News)
‘Safe Harbor’ Deadline For Electors ‘Not Constitutional’, ‘Does Not Apply To Disputed States’ (The National Pulse)
McConaughey Discusses Far Left Who ‘Condescend and Patronize’ Conservatives
A few weeks ago I mentioned reading and enjoying actor Matthew McConaughey’s new book, Greenlights. In a recent interview with actor Russell Brand, they discussed the left’s intolerance for opposing views. From the interview:
“I have sensed a lot of condemnation and criticism of what I might describe as ordinary working people — a kind of offhandedness, like, ‘Oh, they’re dumb, they’re voting for Brexit, they’re voting for Trump.’ I don’t like it, and I don’t like to hear it,” said Brand. “I’ve spent enough time with people that are being described in this manner to feel ill at ease with it,” he added. “Do you feel that there is a way of meshing together these apparently disparate groups now? These liberal professional classes, and these, what you might describe as working, ordinary people?”
…
This was not the first time McConaughey called out the left as “condescending.”
In October, McConaughey hammered the “illiberal” left in America as both “condescending and patronizing,” in an interview on the Joe Rogan Experience, and also warned that there is a bias in Hollywood against committed Christians like himself.
“Some people in our industry, not all of them, but there’s some that go to the left so far — as our friend Jordan Peterson [says] — that go to the illiberal Left side so far that it’s so condescending and patronizing to 50 percent of the world that need the empathy that the liberals have,” McConaughey said.”
The Only 2020 Gift Guide You Need for Everyone on Your List
Every year I enjoy working with other BRIGHT editors on our gift guide and we got such great feedback that I added even more to my list, including gifts made in America, made by veteran-owned companies, and gifts that add a touch of luxury under the mask. Read the entire list here.
A Case of the Mondays
Guy Fieri raised more than $21.5 million in seven weeks to assist unemployed restaurant workers (Bloomberg)
Heroic dog praised for key role in 78-year-old owner’s rescue in New Jersey (New York Post)
Last week the First Lady unveiled the 2020 Christmas decorations at the White House. This year’s theme is “America is Beautiful.” The White House describes it as “a tribute to the majesty of our great Nation. From coast to coast, our country is blessed with boundless natural wonders. The timeless treasures represented in this year’s holiday showcase remind us of the true American spirit.” Watch the video here. On Sunday she tweeted photos with the message, “The @WhiteHouse Cross Hall & Grand Foyer overflow with love, joy, peace, hope & faith, revealing the most important gifts of the season. The scene reminds us of the many blessings in our own lives & how grateful we are to call this beautiful land our home. #WHChristmas”
On Saturday, the First Lady traveled with the President to Georgia and wore a stunning coat, as usual From John Binder’s Fashion Notes:
“Melania Trump, alongside President Trump, stepped out onto the South Lawn in a double-breasted red leather Alexander McQueen trench coat featuring a fluted hemline and sharp padded shoulders.The McQueen coat debuted on the Parisian runway in Fall 2019 and retails for about $6,200.
Paired with the statement trench are zebra pony skin stilettos by Manolo Blahnik which are piped at the edges with red leather. Mrs. Trump has worn snakeskin heels and those with stripes, but never a zebra print.
The stilettos are only available used and retail for about $875.”
Mondays with Melania is a weekly feature that highlights what the First Lady is doing and wearing.
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Dec 07, 2020 01:00 am
It’s likely that the Supreme Court will overturn a critical Pennsylvania State Supreme Court ruling on account of the state court’s incorrect use of the legal doctrine of laches. Read More…
Dec 07, 2020 01:00 am
The Supreme Court should declare that only the legislature has a voice in the selection of the president, and interference from every other state official and agency, including the courts, is not recognized different from legislature’s rules is unconstitutional. Read More…
Dec 07, 2020 01:00 am
It is important to consider who he is: a defamation lawyer. And perhaps no one is better equipped or proven at correcting a false narrative than Wood. Read More…
A personal note about Pearl Harbor day
Dec 07, 2020 01:00 am
Pearl Harbor started a chain of events that culminated with America dropping the atomic bomb, something for which I’ve always been grateful. Read more…
No Hurrays for Hollywood intolerance
Dec 07, 2020 01:00 am
While many Hollywood celebrities proudly proclaim their tolerance for different ideas and their open mindedness for all, the reality is quite different. Read more…
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The CEO of a private jet company was reportedly busted for sex trafficking of children across state lines last week. Paul Alexander, 57, was arrested for reportedly bringing girls across state lines, according to the New York Attorney General. Paul Alexander, the CEO of Central Jet Charter, has been charged with sex trafficking after … Read more
A Big Tech-backed ‘fact’ ‘checking’ outfit claimed to debunk explosive evidence for Republicans’ claims of significant election problems in Georgia. It didn’t.
Obama veteran Jennifer Psaki claims she’ll bring honesty back to the White House, but she helped orchestrate the fake news behind the Iran nuclear deal ‘echo chamber.’
Four to six months ahead of possible testing times, the test’s commissioner pre-emptively canceled this only way to measure the effect of varying school shutdown regulations across state lines.
The biggest question the Georgia legislature should ask is whether a California billionaire should be allowed to waltz into the Peach State and finance aspects of their elections.
‘Instead of utilizing resources we have to find ways to safely reopen our schools, there is a contingent of people looking for ways to close our schools,’ says U.S. Rep. Bryan Steil.
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Morning Rundown
FDA days away from its approval meeting for COVID-19 vaccine as UK starts getting shots Monday: Health care professionals in the United Kingdom will administer the first doses of Pfizer’s coronavirus vaccine today and the U.S. may not be far behind. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration will vote on Thursday on the future of the vaccine in the states. “I believe we could see FDA authorization within days,” Alex Azar, the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services secretary, said Sunday on ABC’s “This Week.” “But it’s going to go according to FDA gold-standard processes … and I’m going to make sure it does.” Azar also said that he anticipates that by next year, there will be enough of the vaccine for every American that wants it. Meanwhile, new health data shows that the country has reported more than 100,000 cases every day for more than a month and more than 200,000 cases for the last three days. In California, which recorded its highest daily case count ever — 30,000 cases in a single day — a new lockdown procedure was just put in effect that bans outdoor gatherings of people from different households and outdoor dining.
Obama, Trump rally Georgians to register and vote ahead of deadline: With Monday marking the last day to register to vote in Georgia ahead of January’s runoff elections, President Donald Trump, Vice President Mike Pence, former President Barack Obama and Stacey Abrams all held rallies over the weekend to motivate the masses. The election could have major ramifications. If Democratic candidates Rev. Raphael Warnock and Jon Ossoff win, the makeup of the Senate will be 50-50 and Vice President-elect Kamala Harris will be the tie-breaking vote. “The special election in Georgia is going to determine, ultimately, the course of the Biden presidency, and whether Joe Biden and Kamala Harris can deliver legislatively all the commitments they made,” Obama said during a virtual rally Friday. Meanwhile, at a campaign event Saturday for incumbent Republican Sens. David Perdue and Kelly Loeffler, Trump spent his time on stage pushing baseless claims that the presidential election was stolen from him. “We can fight for the presidency and fight to elect our two great senators,” he said. “And we can do it at the same time.” On Sunday during an interview on “This Week,” Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger said that his office had not found evidence supporting “systemic fraud” in Georgia’s November presidential election.
Prince William, Kate embark on tour to thank front-line coronavirus workers: Prince William and Kate, the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge, embarked on a tour aboard the Royal Train on Sunday to pay tribute to front-line workers, teachers and those who “have gone above and beyond in response to the coronavirus pandemic.” For the next three days, the couple will make stops in England, Scotland and Wales, where they will hear about people’s experiences during the pandemic. The trip will be a special one because it marks the first time that Prince William and Kate will be traveling via the Royal Train for royal engagements. The train is usually reserved for Queen Elizabeth and Prince Philip.
Students surprise professor with sweet farewell message over Zoom: With another semester ending at schools across the country, one group of college students wanted to thank their statistics professor for his kindness during the pandemic. Katherine De Oliveira, a sophomore at The College of New Jersey, instructed her fellow classmates to turn on their Zoom cameras in unison on Dec. 2 to reveal handwritten signs and heartwarming messages for their professor, Adam Shrager. The video has been viewed millions of times on TikTok. “I’m just completely overwhelmed,” Shrager told “Good Morning America” in response to the reaction from the video. “[These kids] just hit something that we all needed.”
GMA Must-Watch
This morning on “GMA,” we’ll look at the spike in Christmas tree sales and how people are trying to keep the holiday spirit alive. Plus, Shaggy joins us to perform “Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas.” And Fran Drescher joins us live to talk about “The Christmas Setup,” Lifetime’s first LGBTQ-themed holiday movie. All this and more only on “GMA.”
Experts say hesitancy over a Covid-19 vaccine will likely shift quickly to heated demand, President Donald Trump’s personal attorney Rudy Giuliani has tested positive for Covid-19, and “The Nutcracker” heads outdoors.
Here is what’s happening this Monday morning.
Experts say they expect attitudes on Covid vaccines to shift dramatically
Americans have made no secret of their skepticism about Covid-19 vaccines, with fears of political interference and a “warp speed” timeline blunting confidence in the shots.
But with two promising options primed for release, likely within weeks, experts in ethics and immunization behavior say they expect attitudes to shift quickly from widespread hesitancy to urgent, even heated demand.
That rollout can’t come soon enough. Cases around the U.S. have continued to surge, and 33 million people in California have been told to stay home while health officials try to save hospitals in crisis.
Meanwhile, President Donald Trump’s personal attorney Rudy Giuliani has tested positive for Covid-19, Trump announced Sunday. Giuliani most recently appeared without a mask during a meeting with Georgia lawmakers Thursday.
News of his infection came after Dr. Deborah Birx, the White House coronavirus response coordinator, expressed frustration with government officials who ignore public health guidance as cases and deaths rise.
Follow our live blog for all the latest Covid-19 developments.
He also created three new senior White House positions intended to signal a more aggressive response to Covid-19, including addressing its disproportionate impact on Black people and Latinos.
Becerra, 62, served 12 terms in the House of Representatives and was a vigorous defender of the Affordable Care Act who led the defense of the law in the Supreme Court last month. If he is confirmed, he would be the first Latino to lead the massive department as the incoming administration tries to elevate more diverse candidates to front-line positions.
Biden has been performing a delicate balancing act, selecting people for his administration who not only would be “accepted by all elements of the Democratic Party,” as he recently put it, but who also stand a reasonable chance of getting confirmed by a Senate that will be in GOP hands if Democrats don’t win next month’s Georgia runoffs.
While progressives have so far failed to persuade Biden to put their favored candidates in top jobs for his administration, they appear to have succeeded in making enough noise to keep out their biggest foes, at least for now.
Trump’s failure doesn’t change the fact thatAmerican democracy is in big trouble, writes Parag Khanna, the author of “The Future is Asian,” in an opinion piece.
With the shopping frenzy sales event behind us, here’s what’s still on sale through the end of December.
One fun thing
“The Nutcracker” is a tradition in Grapevine, Texas. For nearly three decades, the North Central Ballet has performed the iconic show and this year will be no different — although strict pandemic safety precautions mean that it will definitely look and feel a bit different.
An outdoor stage, face masks and socially distant seating are all new additions to the 2020 performance.
“I think everyone is so ready to do something normal, especially at the holiday season,” said Les Jordan, the director of the North Central Ballet.
It’s not just this ballet company that’s gotten creative. Across the country, performers have come up with new ways to bring the iconic holiday show to audiences, including online streaming and outdoor performances.
From NBC’s Chuck Todd, Mark Murray, Carrie Dann and Melissa Holzberg
FIRST READ: High-stakes relief talks could preview Congress’s tone in the Biden Era
The fate this week of the compromise $908 billion coronavirus-relief bill will likely tell us a great deal about how Congress will operate in the Biden Era, especially if Republicans retain control of the Senate.
Either it passes, and serves as a template for how other legislation can clear Congress — i.e., a bipartisan working group (Joe Manchin, Angus King, Mark Warner, Susan Collins, Mitt Romney, Bill Cassidy) reaches a deal, and Nancy Pelosi’s House Democrats and Joe Biden get behind it.
Or it ultimately goes nowhere, and serves as a stark warning that little is happening legislatively in divided Washington – unless Democrats can win control of the Senate in next month’s Georgia runoffs.
Photo by Drew Angerer/Getty Images
“What we did as a group, we came together and said, ‘Listen, we have got to do something,’” Sen. Joe Manchin, D-W.V., said on “Meet the Press” yesterday.
“We looked at basically everything that was going to terminate at the end of December… And we said, ‘That can’t be done. We cannot allow this to happen.’ Democrats and Republicans came together. And we’re moving forward.”
The bill provides $300 per week in unemployment benefits for about four months, $160 million for state and local governments, $288 billion for small businesses – as well as additional funds for schools, vaccine distribution, transportation entities and child care.
Yet some of the sticking points include liability protections for businesses and the bill’s lack of $1,200 direct payments to Americans.
Progress – even if it’s not as much as many Democrats want?
Or continued stalemate?
We’ll likely get an answer this week.
Of course, it’s always easier to pass legislation when Congress faces deadlines during lame-duck sessions.
But we’ll see if THIS group of bipartisan senators has success in breaking this – as well as future – logjams.
Birx and Barr declare their independence from Trump?
Also on “Meet” yesterday, Dr. Deborah Birx went about as far to distance herself from President Trump as we’ve seen her.
Wearing a mask while indoors, Birx said, “So I hear community members parroting … back that masks don’t work. Parroting back that we should work towards herd immunity. Parroting back that gatherings don’t result in superspreading events. And I think our job is to constantly say, ‘Those are myths, they are wrong and you can see the evidence base.’”
She added, “This is not just the worst public health event. This is the worst event that this country will face, not just from a public health side. Yet, we know what behaviors spread the virus and we know how to change those behaviors to stop spreading the virus.”
In addition to Birx’s comments on “Meet” yesterday, the Washington Post reports that Attorney General Bill Barr is considering departing the Trump administration before Inauguration Day.
TWEET OF THE DAY: Closed for business
Data Download: The numbers you need to know today
14,826,735: The number of confirmed cases of coronavirus in the United States, per the most recent data from NBC News and health officials. (That’s 619,973 more than Friday morning.)
283,163: The number of deaths in the United States from the virus so far. (That’s 6,289 more than Friday morning.)
204.06 million: The number of coronavirus tests that have been administered in the United States so far, according to researchers at The COVID Tracking Project.
101,487: The number of people currently hospitalized with coronavirus
As many as 24 million: The number of people who could receive a vaccine by mid-January under an aggressive federal timetable.
7,062,213: Joe Biden’s lead in the popular vote at the time of publication
29: The number of days until the Jan. 5 Senate runoffs.
44: The number of days until Inauguration Day.
Here’s Biden’s health team
This morning, per NBC’s Mike Memoli, President-elect Joe Biden officially announced that he was nominating/appointing California Attorney General Xavier Becerra as his HHS secretary, Vivek Murthy as Surgeon General, Dr. Rochelle Walensky as CDC director and Jeff Zients as Covid czar.
Regarding the Becerra pick, Team Biden showed during the 2020 campaign that it was always eager to respond to the Washington chatter.
And so when Latino Democrats began expressing frustration that they weren’t being represented by Biden’s first Cabinet picks (outside of Alejandro Mayorkas at DHS), you get Becerra as HHS secretary.
Biden Cabinet/Transition Watch List
State: Tony Blinken (announced)
Treasury: Janet Yellen (announced)
Homeland Security: Alejandro Mayorkas (announced)
HHS: Xavier Becerra (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, Rt. Gen. Lloyd Austin
Sunday was debate night in Georgia, and today’s runoff watch is here for those who couldn’t catch it.
Only Sen. Kelly Loeffler and Rev. Raphael Warnock squared off at last night’s debate, with Jon Ossoff debating an empty podium because Sen. David Perdue chose not to attend.
The Warnock and Loeffler event typified the dynamics in their race.
Loeffler defended President Trump’s push to challenge the election by arguing he has “every right to every legal recourse,” tried to thread the needle on arguing for the high stakes of her race without acknowledging directly that Trump lost, and deflected the question about whether members of Congress should be barred from trading stock.
And she spent much of the debate referring to her opponent as “Radical Liberal Raphael Warnock,” as the Democrat defended himself from a slew of opposition research hits from the GOP—including on rhetoric from his sermons and whether he’d support defunding the police (he said he wouldn’t). Warnock also deflected the question of whether he’d support packing the courts.
The two also discussed their approaches to the coronavirus, aid, and the forthcoming vaccine.
THE LID: Opposites attract
Don’t miss the pod from Friday, when we looked at how Biden has kept the streak alive of incoming presidents being the polar opposites of the person they’re replacing in the White House.
Plus: White women and Trump votes, Biden taps California AG as HHS Secretary, and more…
Eager to drive up prostitution arrests in the name of doing something about “human trafficking,” the New York City Police Department (NYPD) doesn’t much care whether any actual violent crime—or even actual prostitution—is taking place. A new investigation by ProPublica examines how the city’s zeal to look tough on trafficking has created yet another avenue for biased law enforcement and means for police to harass nonwhite residents and communities.
In the past four years, only seven percent of New Yorkers arrested for allegedly soliciting prostitution and only 11 percent of those charged with prostitution were white, according to ProPublica.
“Teams of NYPD officers have descended on minority neighborhoods, leaning into car windows and knocking on apartment doors, trying to get men and women to say the magic words: agreeing to exchange sex for money,” write Joshua Kaplan and Joaquin Sapien:
These arrests are based almost entirely on the word of cops, who say they are incentivized to round up as many ‘bodies’ as they can.
Some of their targets were selling sex to survive; others were minding their own business. Almost everyone arrested for these crimes in the last four years is nonwhite, a ProPublica data analysis shows: 89% of the 1,800 charged with prostitution; 93% of the 3,000 accused of trying to buy sex.
Of the dozens of cops, lawyers and other experts ProPublica interviewed for this story, not a single one believes arrest figures for patronizing a prostitute accurately reflect the racial makeup of those who buy sex in New York City.
ProPublica talked to 36 current and former NYPD officers, in addition to “dozens” of people arrested on prostitution charges, and reviewed “hundreds of pages of sealed court records.” They found that—as is typical in these cases, no matter where they take place—defendants were often coerced into pleading guilty to avoid dragging out court dates, legal fees, etc. In cases where defendants did push back, the city often settled.
“Since 2014, the city has paid more than a million in taxpayer dollars to at least 20 people who claimed they were falsely arrested in prostitution or ‘john’ stings,” note Kaplan and Sapien:
Last year, it paid $150,000 to five young Latino men who said they were laughing off a proposition when they were arrested and $20,000 to a West African taxi driver who said in a sworn deposition that he was walking home when a woman asked if he’d walk down the block with her. He told ProPublica he thought she was afraid of walking alone, so he agreed. He was then arrested.
The undercover officer in his case netted 10 arrests in three and a half hours the night she encountered him, earning her four hours of overtime pay.
Eighteen current and former officers who policed the sale of sex in New York City said overtime has motivated them for years. The hours add up over the drive to the precinct, the questioning, the paperwork. “You arrest 10 girls, now the whole team’s making eight hours of overtime,” retired Sgt. Stephen Antiuk said.
Read the whole thing (it gets worse, incredibly) here.
ELECTION 2020
On white women and Trump, the media has long been getting it wrong. After the 2016 election, we got an earful about how more than half of white women in America voted for President Donald Trump and what that said about our white women and our society as a whole. Never mind that “white women who voted in 2016″ is not the same as “all white women in America,” nor the fact that early exit polls showing that 53 percent of white women who did vote were Trump supporters turned out to be wrong. People have been reviving this fake news in 2020, too.
“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,” noted Jonathan Chait at New York magazine last week.
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. The production line has kept running right through the 2020 elections, which have yielded more shaky early-exit-poll data that has been turned into another round of flagellation of white women for their alleged collective sin.
A Washington Post op-ed by Lyz Lenz, headlined “White Women Vote Republican. Get Used to It, Democrats.,” uses white women’s alleged support for Trump to urge Democrats to stop focusing on winning them. Lenz bemoans “the amount of money and effort that went to flip suburban women, who had no intention of voting Democratic at all, while other groups of voters were taken for granted.”
Lenz’s argument strings together a series of factual and logical missteps, each compounding the last. First, even after acknowledging that the 2016 exit polls showing Trump won white female voters were wrong, she uses the 2020 exit polls anyway. (“Exit polling indicates that Trump’s support had increased among White women.”) Lenz then concedes the figure could, at some point, be “adjusted,” without considering the high probability that the adjustment will in fact negate her premise.
Second, she treats the supposed failure of white women to turn against Trump as a reason Democrats should do less to try to win their votes, while proceeding to treat Trump’s gains among nonwhite voters as a reason Democrats should do more to win their votes. Of course, the whole idea that political parties should ignore constituencies they don’t win is quite odd, but Lenz doesn’t even apply an internally consistent standard to her self-defeating principle.
• We’re in the Reason Webathon home stretch, and today would be an especially awesome time to give, since we have a matching grant that doubles any donation you make! Click here to donate.
• Even with Trump on his way out, Sen. Rand Paul (R–Ky.) continues to spread fake news on behalf of the Trump administration:
They are not, in fact, coming home.
Even not counting the ones he’s moving next door to continue fighting from there, Trump is going to leave office with more troops in Somalia than Obama did. https://t.co/1EYJVydar9
• What does it mean to say “libertarianism is consent culture”?
ICYMI: I joined @FeministLiberty for a panel about how conversations around consent can benefit from a libertarian perspective and how libertarianism can benefit from conversations around consent: https://t.co/vJscCV3zBK
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.
It’s the achievement gap, not systemic racism, that explains demographic disparities in education and employment.
By Heather Mac Donald City Journal Autumn 2020 Issue
“PPP was not perfect — it was too complicated, and some businesses did take undue advantage. But it didn’t fail small businesses or the country. ”
By Nicole Gelinas New York Post December 7, 2020
It does more good for those in need — and comes with the added advantage of helping nonprofits maintain their independence from the government.
By Naomi Schaefer Riley, James Piereson National Review Online December 7, 2020
Tomorrow at noon ET, Senator Mike Lee joins Andy Smarick to discuss his Social Capital Project, the project’s accomplishments to date, and its future aspirations. After the interview, Michael Hendrix moderates a panel with Scott Winship, Kay Hymowitz, and Robert Woodson.
Tomorrow at 4:00 p.m. ET, Reihan Salam will interview veteran journalist Megyn Kelly on a range of topics including the modern media landscape and the rise of independent journalism, what the current and future political climates will mean for open journalism, the continued threat of cancel culture, and more.
Nicole Gelinas joins Seth Barron to discuss the financial shape of the New York region’s transit system, the importance of midtown Manhattan to the city’s economy, the disturbing spike in violent crime on streets and subways, and more.
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.
America’s urban-rural partisan divide deepened with this year’s election, with cities and suburbs becoming bluer as rural areas grew redder. Michael Hendrix hosts a conversation with Kristen Soltis Anderson and Jonathan Rodden to discuss.
On December 2, Andy Smarick hosted a conversation 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.
Senator Tim Scott spoke with James R. Copland 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?
In a new report by Chris Pope evaluates the setbacks in America’s current health-care system that prevent consumers with preexisting conditions from receiving optimal coverage. According to the report, the U.S. should consider creating health-care arrangements which incentivize individuals to purchase health insurance early and maintain coverage continuously, independent of employment.
Expanding DNA databases to include more criminal offenders has a large deterrent effect on crime, according to a new issue brief by economist Jennifer Doleac for the Manhattan Institute. In the brief, part of MI’s Policing and Public Safety Initiative, Doleac discusses these findings and their policy implications, suggesting that DNA databases may be a less invasive, low-cost crime-reduction tool when compared with alternatives.
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
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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This is one blogger’s opinion. But eight months after the initial “fifteen days to flatten the curve,” it feels like we are no longer all in this together. If we ever were all in this together. There … MORE
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REALCLEARPOLITICS MORNING NOTE
12/07/2020
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Carl Cannon’s Morning Note
Party Amity; Takeaways Podcast; War and Blame
By Carl M. Cannon on Dec 07, 2020 10:22 am
Good morning, it’s Monday, Dec. 7, 2020. On this day in 1941, Americans were going about their normal Sunday routines. The Great Depression was finally easing — aided, it must be said, by the war raging in Europe. American factories were churning out wartime materiel for Great Britain; U.S. military recruitment and spending had spiked.
Here in the United States, Americans wanted it both ways. Serving as the “arsenal of democracy,” as Franklin D. Roosevelt promised on Dec. 29, 1940, sounded bold, but what Americans were counting on, right up until Dec. 7, 1941, was that FDR meant it when he promised voters ahead of Election Day 1940 that “your boys are not going to be sent into any foreign war.”
The morning of Dec. 7, a passenger liner out of San Francisco docked in Honolulu just as the bombs began to fall. Gathering on the deck, several of those aboard thought themselves lucky that the U.S. Navy was engaging in such realistic war games just as their ship pulled into port. By then, the military men in Hawaii knew they were under attack. Adm. Husband Kimmel, who had served under FDR in the Navy 25 years earlier — and who had been elevated over dozens of more senior officers to command the Seventh Fleet at Pearl Harbor — understood acutely the implications of the airborne Japanese armada unleashing bombs and torpedoes on his ships and sailors. When a spent .50-caliber bullet came through the window of his office, striking Kimmel harmlessly in the chest — his eyeglass case prevented it from even breaking the skin — the four-star admiral muttered sadly, “Too bad it didn’t kill me.”
I’ll have an observation about political scapegoating in a moment. First, I’d point you to RealClearPolitics’ front page, which presents our poll averages, videos, breaking news stories, and aggregated opinion pieces spanning the political spectrum. We also offer original material from our own reporters and contributors, including the following:
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This Is How Washington Is Supposed to Work. Bill Scher hails the flickering lights of bipartisanship as Congress attempts to fashion another COVID-relief bill.
RCP Takeaways Podcast. In the latest episode, A.B. Stoddard joins the panel to talk about the Georgia Senate runoffs, Joe Biden’s economic team, and how both parties will handle Donald Trump in the post-Trump era.
Politicians Should Leave Gettysburg at Peace. Chuck Raasch makes the case that recent media events, staged at the sacred site by the president’s team and Joe Biden, should be the last.
Washington Must Grant Puerto Rico Statehood. Congress and the White House can no longer stall on the November mandate from the territory’s 3.1 million citizens, insists Carlos “Johnny” Mendez, House speaker of the legislature in San Juan.
Election 2020: The Deplorables Aren’t Done Fighting. Frank Miele argues that many charges of voter fraud can’t be dismissed as “baseless.”
Running Compendium of Election Fraud Charges. RealClearInvestigations has this list.
Subsidizing Isolation in a Global Pandemic. At RealClearPolicy, Savannah Aleckson spotlights unintended consequences of the free smartphones provided through a government program called Lifeline.
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Husband E. Kimmel, who had attended the U.S. Naval Academy, knew immediately what Japan’s attack on Pearl Harbor would mean for him personally. He was eventually relieved of his command, busted down a rank, and personally blamed across the country for the myriad failures that allowed the Japanese to catch America by surprise. He even faced charges, ultimately dismissed, of dereliction of duty. The Roosevelt administration, the Navy brass, even the American people themselves needed someone to blame so they could get on, and quickly, with the business of going to war. So Kimmel and Army Lt. Gen. Walter Short were the sacrificial lambs.
Although this was unfair, it didn’t help Kimmel’s cause that the day before the attack, he gave a rare interview to a reporter in which he downplayed the threat. In that interview, Christian Science Monitor correspondent Joseph C. Harsch, who had just arrived after covering the war in Europe, asked Kimmel whether he believed Japan would attack the United States. Kimmel said he thought the Japanese were “too smart” to risk a two-front war. “No, young man,” he added. “I don’t think they’d be such damned fools.”
Putting aside the merit of this assessment (attacking the U.S. would prove foolish, even suicidal), Kimmel’s hubris ran through the entire U.S. government. On Nov. 27, 1941, Chief of Naval Operations Harold Stark and U.S. Army Chief of Staff George C. Marshall had issued a report warning that Japan might attack a host of targets in the Pacific, including Thailand, Malaya, the Burma Road, and the Dutch East Indies. The top-secret report calculated, correctly as it turned out, that although it was being reinforced quickly, the U.S. garrison in the Philippines wasn’t yet at sufficient strength. What the memo didn’t contemplate, however, was a direct attack on the Philippines, let alone Pearl Harbor.
In various Hollywood renditions of the attack on the 7th Fleet — an attack in which the U.S. aircraft carriers were spared only because they weren’t in port that day — Japanese Adm. Isoroku Yamamoto is said to have remarked ruefully, “I fear that all we have done is to awaken a sleeping giant and fill him with a terrible resolve.” Yamamoto knew the United States. Like FDR, he was a Harvard man, having spent two years in Cambridge studying after World War I. Yet there’s no evidence Yamamoto, who didn’t survive the war, ever made this statement: He was the officer who planned the Pearl Harbor attack.
In any event, “sleeping” is not quite the right metaphor to explain why the U.S. military and the Roosevelt administration were caught off guard at Pearl Harbor. Although it often seems amid the fog of war that we are sleepwalking as the first shots are fired, the real issue — as it has been throughout 2020 — wasn’t that Americans were asleep. The problem was a failure of imagination.
The morning of the attack, as the bombs were raining down, war correspondent Joe Harsch heard the sirens and the commotion and woke his wife and said: “Listen to this, dear. You have often asked me what an air raid sounds like. This is a good imitation.”
They both went back to sleep for a while, then went for a morning swim in the ocean outside their Honolulu hotel, and didn’t realize anything was amiss until they were at breakfast when a woman burst into the dining room and screamed that she was driving her husband down to his ship when planes with red balls under the wings began shooting at their car. She added, ”The battleships are burning!”
In the aftermath of the 2020 elections, Americans are forced to confront the undeniable reality of voter fraud and election abnormalities that undermined the integrity of this election and the constitutional right of every U.S. citizen to free and fair elections.
Frank Gaffney, the Center’s founder and Executive Chairman, Center Senior Analyst for Strategy J. Michael Waller and retired Army Colonel and cyber and political-warfare specialist Phil Waldron will discuss what took place during the election, assess the response by media, social media, and federal and state governments, and discuss recommendations for the way forward to both secure our elections and secure freedom.
In an interview with the New York Times Tuesday, presumptive President-elect Joe Biden reaffirmed his plan to return the US to the 2015 nuclear deal with Iran. The US will rescind its economic sanctions on Iran if it complies with the nuclear deal’s limitations on its nuclear activities. Once this happens, Biden said he will seek to negotiate a new, longer-term nuclear deal with Iran’s ayatollahs. The current deal expires in five years.
Biden insisted the goal of his policy is to prevent Iran from getting the bomb. But practically speaking, Biden’s policy guarantees Iran will develop a nuclear arsenal and the missiles to deliver them. This is true both because the nuclear deal will expire, and Iran will be free to build nuclear bombs as it likes in 2025, and because the 2015 nuclear deal has no effective enforcement mechanism.
Rarely, if ever, has a government initiative with more strategic importance been unveiled in a more low-key way than a “fact sheet” issued by the State Department on Saturday. The facts thus revealed about the Chinese Communist Party’s deep penetration of our capital markets, however, are likely to be shocking to most American investors – and a stunning rebuke to those who have put our money into what the government calls “malign PRC companies.”
According to State’s fact sheet, large numbers of such CCP-tied companies are, either in their own right or via subsidiaries, tapping U.S. exchanges for capital. That means, “The Chinese Communist Party’s threat to American national security extends into our financial markets and impacts American investors.”
The State Department-identified U.S. indexes – and the Exchange Traded Funds that “wrap” them – exposed as these malign companies’ underwriters must divest such assets. Now.
This is Frank Gaffney.
BRADLEY THAYER, Professor of International Security Studies , Tallinn University, former Senior Analyst, National Institute for Public Policy, Author, How China Sees the World:
The Pentagon’s Defense Policy Board recent makeover – what does this mean for US-China Relations
Bradley Thayer argues that for decades Washington has promoted an agenda that relies heavily on “accommodations“
Lessons from the Korean War – The Chinese may be trying to resurrect the Battle of Triangle Hill
George Rasley delves into Attorney General Barr’s decision to appoint John Durham as Special Council
Rasley explains why AG Barr’s comments about election fraud is possibly contrary to the evidence presented by Matt Braynard
Potential proof of voter fraud – Hundreds of thousands of people casted votes from addresses they no longer reside at
DAVID WURMSER, Director, Center for Security Policy’s Program on Global Anti-Semitism, former Middle East Advisor to Vice President Dick Cheney, retired, US Navy Reserves Lieutenant Commander:
David Wurmser theorizes Iran’s response to the assassination of their top nuclear scientist
Will a potential Biden administration evoke a more aggressive Iran
The ever increasing threat Turkey and the Muslim Brotherhood pose to the free world
The Jordanian Royal Monarchy’s dubious ambitions throughout the Middle East
ENGHEBATU TOGOCHOG, Captive Nations Coalition Southern Mongolian Representative, Committee on the Present Danger: China:
History of China’s subjugation of Southern Mongolia since 1949
The Chinese Communist Party’s degradation of Southern Mongolia’s natural resources and environment
The CCP’s 2nd general “bilingual” language education program
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December 7, 2020
Herbert Spencer’s Critique of the Board of Health in 1851
By Phillip W. Magness | “Although Snow’s work revealed the answer to the Cholera problem in 1854, the biggest obstacle to operationalizing this knowledge into fighting the disease was the public health bureaucracy itself and the entrenched…
What is to be Done? The Rise of Hygiene Socialism and the…
By David Hart | “When one lines up the groups which are now appearing to come together in a ‘united front’ against individual liberty – environmental, monetary, cultural, and hygiene socialism – with talk of the need for a “global reset” one…
By Keith Gandal | “People thinking that, regardless of age, they are liable to die if they get Covid, leads to panic if they become ill or get a positive test. In turn, panic likely leads to some unnecessary Covid deaths among all age groups,…
By Dr. Jayanta Bhattacharya | “The public should know that the pandemic will not be here forever. While these are challenging times – and, for many families, life-changing times – like every other pandemic in human history, the COVID-19 pandemic…
The Global Guinea Pig: Airlines to Discriminate Based on …
By Micha Gartz | “Future politicians may be tempted to deny potential immigrant groups entry under the guise of a ‘public health threat.’ Digital health passes could be extended to include: influenza, hepatitis, measles, tuberculosis, Zika, HIV…
By Donald J. Boudreaux | “Although it’s possible to imagine bizarre scenarios in which a country’s rising trade deficits might be evidence of economic decline, none of these scenarios is realistic in the case of the United States. American trade…
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.
On the menu today: As of tomorrow, under U.S. law, the 2020 presidential election is really, really, really over, under something called the “safe harbor deadline.” The Supreme Court might weigh in on Representative Mike Kelly’s suit, which aims to invalidate all of the mail-in ballots in Pennsylvania this year. Meanwhile, the Trump campaign’s last-ditch legal efforts and attempts to sway state legislatures continue in Arizona and Wisconsin . . . with a, er, consistent record of success.
The 2020 Election’s ‘Safe Harbor’ Deadline Is Almost Here
Tomorrow, under U.S. law, the election results in each state become finalized under what is called the “safe harbor deadline.” The law declares that any completed and certified vote count “made at least six days before the time fixed for the meeting of the electors, such determination made pursuant to such law so existing on said day, and made at least six days prior to said time of meeting of the electors, shall be conclusive, and shall govern in the counting of the electoral votes as … READ MORE
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Armed protesters demanding that President Trump’s election loss is overturned gathered outside Michigan Secretary of State Jocelyn Benson’s (D) home this weekend to shout obscenities at her and her 4-year-old son, the Detroit Free Press reports.
First Read: “Either it passes, and serves as a template for how other legislation can clear Congress — i.e., a bipartisan working group (Joe Manchin, Angus King, Mark Warner, Susan Collins, Mitt Romney, Bill Cassidy) reaches a deal, and Nancy Pelosi’s House Democrats and Joe Biden get behind it.”
“Or it ultimately goes nowhere, and serves as a stark warning that little is happening legislatively in divided Washington — unless Democrats can win control of the Senate in next month’s Georgia runoffs.”
President Trump, who hasn’t left the White House extensively other than his rally over the weekend, is currently planning to go to West Palm Beach the week before Christmas, the New York Times reports.
Some of his associates believe he may spend the remaining five weeks of the first term in Florida, while others say that was discussed but isn’t likely.
“Elizabeth Warren is not going to be treasury secretary. Bernie Sanders seems unlikely to lead the Labor Department. And progressives have so far failed to persuade President-elect Joe Biden to put their favored candidates in top jobs for his administration,” NBC News reports.
“But they appear to have succeeded in making enough noise to keep out their biggest foes, at least for now.”
Associated Press: “As Donald Trump’s presidency winds down, his administration is ratcheting up the pace of federal executions despite a surge of coronavirus cases in prisons, announcing plans for five starting Thursday and concluding just days before the Jan. 20 inauguration of President-elect Joe Biden.”
“If the five go off as planned, it will make 13 executions since July when the Republican administration resumed putting inmates to death after a 17-year hiatus and will cement Trump’s legacy as the most prolific execution president in over 130 years. He’ll leave office having executed about a quarter of all federal death-row prisoners, despite waning support for capital punishment among both Democrats and Republicans.”
FiveThirtyEight: “We don’t have a ton of polls of these runoffs yet, but FiveThirtyEight is rolling out its polling averages for both of the contests today to help everyone keep tabs on where things stand…”
“And based on the initial wave of polls conducted since the Nov. 3 general election, both runoff races look very close. In the regularly scheduled Senate race, Republican Sen. David Perdue is roughly tied with Democrat Jon Ossoff, while in the special election, Democrat Raphael Warnock holds a narrow lead over Republican Sen. Kelly Loeffler.”
“Even before the final votes in the 2020 election were tallied, President Donald Trump sent his attorneys to court alleging voter fraud,” NBC News reports.
“When it became clear that he had lost to President-elect Joe Biden, his claims — and his campaign’s court filings — accelerated. Trump attacked cities with large shares of Black voters, who had come out in force for Biden, while his lawyers baselessly alleged a global conspiracy and filed dozens of suits in six states.”
“The legal strategy failed in court after court — not a single incident of voter fraud has been proven in the lawsuits — but experts warn the narrative is laying the groundwork for disenfranchisement of voters across the country.”
Zeynep Tufekci: “In political science, the term coup refers to the illegitimate overthrow of a sitting government—usually through violence or the threat of violence. The technical term for attempting to stay in power illegitimately—such as after losing an election—is self-coup or autocoup—sometimes autogolpe.”
“Much debate has ensued about what exactly to call whatever Trump is attempting right now, and about how worried we should be. It’s true, the whole thing seems ludicrous—the incoherent lawsuits, the late-night champagne given to official election canvassers in Trump hotels, the tweets riddled with grammatical errors and weird capitalization. Trump has been broadly acknowledged as ‘norm shattering’ and some have argued that this is just more of his usual bluster, while others have pointed out terminological issues with calling his endeavors a coup. Coup may not quite capture what we’re witnessing in the United States right now, but there’s also a danger here: Punditry can tend to focus too much on decorum and terminology, like the overachieving students so many of us once were, conflating the ridiculous with the unserious. The incoherence and the incompetence of the attempt do not change its nature, however, nor do those traits allow us to dismiss it or ignore it until it finally fails on account of its incompetence.”
New York Times: “With most of the slow-to-report votes tallied, we finally have a clearer picture of last month’s presidential results. Despite the high polarization in the country that carried over to the reaction to the results — with 70 percent to 80 percent of Republicans still saying they disbelieve that Joe Biden won — in some respects the vote itself was less polarized than in 2016.”
“Compared with 2016, in 2020 there was less difference by race or ethnicity, and urban areas and suburban areas voted more alike. But the economic and education partisan divides widened. Mr. Biden gained in well-educated suburbs and exurbs, often in places that have tended to vote Republican in recent decades, like the Atlanta, Dallas and Phoenix areas.”
“Congressional earmarks, once symbols of political corruption and profligate spending, could be primed for a comeback on Capitol Hill a decade after they were eliminated,” USA Today reports.
“Key leaders on Capitol Hill say it’s time to end the moratorium provided that rules requiring transparency ensure only legitimate projects make the cut. They also say return of earmarks would help build public support for Congress to pass more bills, including a COVID-19 stimulus package or a massive infrastructure bill, if they know there’s something that would benefit them directly.”
A federal judge has rejected a last-minute push by Michigan Republicans who sought an emergency order to overturn President-elect Joe Biden’s victory in the state, saying the effort aimed to “ignore the will of millions of voters,” the Detroit News reports.
Georgia U.S, Senate candidate Jon Ossoff (D) tweeted a chicken emoji after Sen. David Perdue (R) didn’t show up for their scheduled debate saying Perdue’s “handlers won’t let him debate because he could incriminate himself on the Cardlytics emails, the submarine stock trades, or the Regions Bank deal — that alone is disqualifying.”
Politico: “He’s been a national figure since his days as a Vietnam vet protesting the war. He carried his party’s banner in 2004. And as secretary of State, he negotiated a major nuclear deal involving the world’s most powerful countries.”
“Now John Kerry is reporting for duty as Joe Biden’s climate envoy, and the exact parameters of his new role remain undefined, raising concerns that he might create confusion and complicate the Biden administration’s diplomatic lines of effort.”
Playbook: “We hear that Congress is likely to pass a one-week stopgap spending bill to buy another seven days for talks on government funding — that would make the shutdown deadline Dec. 18. Whether Congress eventually settles on a 12-bill omnibus or a three-month stopgap is still not clear. At this point, it seems like a three-month CR or something of that nature is becoming more likely. This would create a natural deadline in March for funding/another Covid relief bill. There seems to be a lot of disagreement about an omni at this point — but no one is ruling anything out.”
Most voters say this year’s unprecedented level of mail-in voting was largely successful and continue to think President Trump should concede the presidential race. Republicans, however, strongly believe Democrats are likely to have stolen the election.
Thirty-one percent (31%) of Likely U.S. Voters think the country is heading in the right direction, according to a new Rasmussen Reports national telephone and online survey for the week ending December 3, 2020.
Ruby Freeman and daughter and elections supervisor Wandrea “Shaye” Moss with Ralph Jones, the voter registration’s chief in Fulton County. The three are suspects in… Read more…
Attorney General William Barr is considering resigning before President Trump’s first term of office expires on January 20, according to a report by the New… Read more…
President Trump on Sunday announced that his personal lawyer Rudy Giuliani tested positive for the China Coronavirus. Giuliani is a hero and has been relentlessly… Read more…
President Donald Trump has announced that Rudy Giuliani has tested positive for the coronavirus. Giuliani has been relentlessly working to expose the election fraud that… Read more…
Data Expert Edward Solomon analyzed the 2020 election results in Georgia and identified another pattern in the data showing ultimately 200,000 votes transferred from President… Read more…
Former New York City Mayor and Trump attorney Rudy Giuliani joined Maria Bartiromo on Sunday Morning Futures this weekend. Rudy told Maria Bartiromo the Trump… Read more…
On November 5th Arizona federal officials raided a home in the Fountain Hills area in Maricopa County. The agents confiscated eight hard drives, three computers… Read more…
This is an update to our earlier report from Sunday night– Ralph Jones, Sr. was identified as the third suspect in the Fulton County Georgia… Read more…
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“For 40 years Walter was the heart and soul of George Mason’s unique Department of Economics. Our department unapologetically resists the trend of teaching economics as if it’s a guide for social engineers. This resistance reflects Walter’s commitment to liberal individualism and his belief that ordinary men and women deserve, as his friend Thomas Sowell puts it, “elbow room for themselves and a refuge from the rampaging presumptions of their ‘betters.’”
By the latest count, President-elect Biden won more than 51 percent of the popular vote in this year’s presidential election, a larger total than received by any candidate challenging an incumbent president since Franklin Roosevelt beat Herbert Hoover in a landslide in 1932.
The summer of COVID-19, quarantines, riot and arson, and an absence of confidence in the sanctity of voting ended with deep wounds on the body politic—wounds we will bear from now on.
by Jose Maria Barrero, Nicholas Bloom, Steven J. Davis via Becker Friedman Institute for Economics at the University of Chicago
Nearly one-quarter (22%) of full workdays will be supplied from home in the United States after the pandemic, compared with just 5% before, and productivity will improve.
The Fed wants to control inflation. Now, it targets the nominal interest rate. But to do that it has to guess what the right real interest rate is. Nominal interest rate = real interest rate plus expected inflation.
It’s easy to dismiss the upcoming Senate elections in Georgia as just another vote to decide two more seats in Congress—and that, ultimately, it may not be all that consequential. I’m sure some of our fellow Americans—and more than a few Georgians—wonder what the point of voting is at all, especially given the outcome of the recent presidential elections.
Author and economist Branko Milanovic of CUNY talks about the big questions in economics with EconTalk host Russ Roberts. Milanovic argues that the Nobel Prize Committee is missing an opportunity to encourage more ambitious work by awarding the prize to economists tackling questions like the rise of China’s economy and other challenging but crucial areas of scholarship. In the conversation, he lays out what those questions might be and discusses what we know and don’t know in these areas.
The President and CEO of the Aurora Institute, Susan Patrick, joins Paul E. Peterson to discuss how schools can continue to adapt and improve their remote learning environments.
From the vantage point of 2020, it can seem hard to imagine Americans uniting over anything, much less a massive rescue operation for starving strangers. The country has become so inward-looking that it has lost focus on the world beyond its shores.
Some acquaintances recently paddled surfboards and kayaks into the Pacific to disperse a relative’s ashes where he loved to surf. During the memorial service, one brother of the deceased expressed concern about the risk from sharks.
Who are those guys? In December 1972, I was in southern Ontario for Christmas after a fairly successful first quarter in the Ph.D. program at UCLA. I had Christmas with my friend and fellow Canadian UCLAer, Harry Watson, at his mom’s (“mum’s” to Canadians) place in Brantford.
Hoover is hiring in its fellows program! This is roughly analogous to an assistant/associate professor position, aimed at new PhDs or people out a few years as postdoc or assistant professor. Information here. Deadline Dec 11.
Hoover Institution fellow Richard Epstein talks about AG Barr appointing John Durham as Special Counsel to continue investigations into various actors around [Russiagate].
Bitcoin made a new record high this week, but it has been a characteristically wild ride. The cryptocurrency eclipsed $19,857 (£14,897) on Monday, topping its December 2017 high of $19,783.
In the home stretch of the 2020 campaign, presidential candidate Joe Biden leaned hard into the issue of climate change, giving a televised climate speech and running climate-focused ads in swing states. His campaign bet that this issue, once considered politically risky, would now be a winner.
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.