Good morning! Here is your news briefing for Tuesday December 15, 2020
1.) THE DAILY SIGNAL
2.) THE EPOCH TIMES
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Our Republic is in a fragile state. For the first time in modern history, we are experiencing widespread and well-planned election fraud.
This must be stopped. We must stand together against this tyranny and injustice.
Our President said of this election fraud, “Nothing is more urgent or more important.”
Our Republic is in a fragile state. Now more than ever, TRUTH is essential. TRUTH will guide us through this time of uncertainty.
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At this critical moment, Americans need to come together to take a stand against fraud and in favor of truth. To choose freedom over communism, and good over evil.
“The only thing necessary for the triumph of evil is for good men to do nothing.”
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“The Communists disdain to conceal their views and aims. They openly declare that their ends can be attained only by the forcible overthrow of all existing social conditions.” This quote is taken from the concluding paragraph of The Communist Manifesto, the principal guide for all communist movements. Violence is the primary means by which communist parties gained power.
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3.) DAYBREAK
Your First Look at Today’s Top Stories – Daybreak Insider
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In his letter he included a word of thanks to the president: I am proud to have played a role in the many successes and unprecedented achievements you have delivered for the American people. Your record is all the more historic because you accomplished it in the face of relentless, implacable resistance (Newsweek). The resignation comes after a tense weekend with the president upset over the fact that news about the Justice Department’s inquiry into Hunter Biden did not come until after the election. From the Hill: Barr’s departure follows a string of other firings and resignations in the administration following the election. Trump fired Defense Secretary Mark Esper and Christopher Krebs, the top U.S. cybersecurity official. Others at the Department of Homeland Security have resigned and Trump’s communications director, Alyssa Farah, also recently left her position in the West Wing (TheHill). The second paragraph of Barr’s letter makes clear his understanding of allegations of Russian collusion in 2016 election: “The nadir of this campaign was the effort to cripple, if not oust, your Administration with frenzied + baseless accusations of collusion with Russia” (CNN). From the Wall Street Journal: He took the job in a Washington marked by no-limits partisanship knowing that he would be criticized no matter what he did. But he wanted to clean up a Justice Department that he rightly knew had been tainted by a corrupt FBI under James Comey and political appointees in both parties who lacked the courage or tenacity to take responsibility for hard prosecutorial judgments (WSJ).
2.
Joe Biden Captures Sufficient Electoral Votes to Secure Presidency
The electoral votes from California put Biden over needed 270 votes to formalize his win in the hotly contested process. Mike Shirkey—Senate GOP leader in Michigan—responded to the tensions and challenges surrounding the process: “Our feelings, our desires, and our disappointments are subordinate to the health of our democracy and the will of the majority,” he said (Politico). The shape of incoming cabinet of Biden administration (WPost). Sen. John Thune: “I understand there are people who feel strongly about the outcome of this election, but in the end at some point you have to face the music,” he said. “And I think once the electoral college settles the issue today, it’s time for everybody to move on” (USAToday).
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3.
As Vaccine Rolls Out, ABC Poll Shows Willingness Among Americans to Receive It
From the story: A nurse in New York was among the first to receive the shot, and health workers throughout the U.S. were also set to receive the newly authorized vaccine developed by Pfizer Inc. and BioNTech SE. Pfizer shipped vaccine vials out Sunday, and hospitals and health departments across the country received them early Monday (WSJ). From ABC: More than eight in 10 Americans say they would receive the vaccine, with 40% saying they would take it as soon as it’s available to them and 44% saying they would wait a bit before getting it. Only 15% said they would refuse the vaccine entirely in the new survey. Meanwhile, 93% of elderly Americans are willing to receive the vaccine, with more saying they will get it right away (57%) rather than further down the line (36%). Eighty percent of U.S. adults under 30 are willing to get the vaccine, but they are more likely to say they will wait (50%) rather than getting it right away (30%) (ISPOS).
4.
Raphael Warnock: GOP Senators Are “Gangsters and Thugs” Who Aim to “Kill Children”
This is the latest in a stream of controversial statements the from the Democratic candidate for Senate in Georgia. The quotes come from a 2017 sermon amidst a vote for a tax cut. From the Free Beacon: “While others were sleeping, members of the United States Senate declared war, launched a vicious and evil attack on the most vulnerable people in America,” said Warnock. “Herod is on the loose. Herod is a cynical politician, who’s willing to kill children and kill the children’s health program in order to preserve his own wealth and his own power” (Free Beacon). Additionally, from Fox News: …. Rev. Raphael Warnock referred to the Nation of Islam as an “important” voice for African Americans during a 2013 speech in which he was comparing the Black power religion’s numbers to “mainline Protestantism” (FoxNews).
5.
Brutal Year for Sports as NFL Ratings Plummet
Leaving networks to restructure deals with advertisers. Wall Street Journal: TV networks are feeling the strains of disappointing NFL ratings, as they are forced to restructure deals with advertisers to make up for the smaller audience, and their opportunity to make money off remaining games during the lucrative holiday season narrows. Some networks also have considered letting advertisers pay less for commercials during NFL games and other programming than they originally pledged. A large amount of the remaining commercial time available in games is being given to marketers as compensation for the underperformance so far, leaving little ad time that can be sold in the final quarter of the season. Last NFL season, not including the playoffs, networks that broadcast the games generated $3.6 billion in TV ad revenue (Wall Street Journal). From the New York Times: In 2020, the sports industry in North America was projected to generate $75.7 billion. Instead, it lost more than a third of its value as leagues suspended play before returning with stripped-down seasons. (New York Times). But: It’s worth noting that NFL fans were given quite the game last night in the Ravens win over the Browns 47-42 (BeacherReport).
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6.
Black Lives Matter Having Buyer’s Remorse With Biden and Harris?
From the New York Post: Black Lives Matter is putting the forthcoming Biden-Harris administration on notice for failing to respond to a meeting request from the group (Twitter). From BLM’s Instagram: As the organization leading the largest global social justice movement, we demand a seat at the table. To ignore us—and the 64,000 of you who have signed our petition—is to ignore our generation’s most pressing demands for transformative justice” (Instagram). Daily Wire reports: “We want something for our vote,” [BLM Co-Found Patrisse] Cullors wrote. “We want to be heard and our agenda to be prioritized” (Daily Wire). After 32 days, they’ve yet to hear back. From Fox News: “For the newly elected administration (that ran on promises of racial justice) to ignore our ongoing request to meet with them and refuse us a seat at the table is demeaning to our movement,” Black Lives Matter Global Network said in an email to supporters on Thursday in urging activists to make noise. “It’s demeaning to our hurt and trauma. It’s demeaning to the countless times we took our protest to the streets to call for justice for our Black brothers and sisters taken from us at the hands of police” (Fox News).
7.
Throwback: Trump Was Mocked for Saying We Could Have a Vaccine in 2020
NBC, writing in May, beginning with a quote from Dr. Stanley Plotkin: “In the best of circumstances, we should have a vaccine — or let’s say vaccines — between 12 and 18 months,” he said. “Whether those circumstances will be the best or not, we don’t know” (NBC). 12 Months would have been in May 2021.
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First in Sunburn — Florida Democratic Party officials Judy Mount and Francine Garcia and Democratic National Committee Member Alan Clendenin top a list of 26 Democratic Party officials endorsing Manny Diaz as the state Party’s new chair.
Diaz, the former Miami Mayor, announced the list of party officials supporting his campaign Monday in a campaign to succeed outgoing Chair, Terrie Rizzo.
Earlier Monday, Cynthia Moore Chestnut, a longtime Democratic elected official and Party leader from Gainesville, announced her own list of endorsements, 18 Black elected officials and Civil Rights activists.
Longtime Democratic leader Cynthia Moore Chestnut is tossing her hat in the ring for FDP chair.
Diaz’s campaign rolled out a list that included Mount, who is the Jackson County Democratic chair and state committeewoman, who was elected in 2016 to be the state party’s 1st vice-chair and a member of the Democratic National Committee; Gracia, who was elected in 2016 to be the state party’s treasurer; Clendenin of Hillsborough County, who also is a DNC member and also chair of the DNC’s Southern Caucus; and Alma Gonzalez of Hillsborough County, a DNC member.
Others include various county chairs, county vice-chairs, state committee members, and Democratic caucus leaders.
“I am excited to endorse Manny because he knows we need to be investing in our local parties and year-round organizing focused on voter engagement to set Florida Democrats up for success, which includes a continued investment in the FDP’s Municipal Victory Program,” Duval County Democratic Chair Daniel Henry said in a news release issued by Diaz’s campaign.
“I am a proud Florida Democrat and so excited to support Manny as the next FDP Chair because we need leadership that will help build our party from the ground up, which includes our party clubs and caucuses, DECs and organizers in counties across the state,” Stephen Gaskill, president of the Florida LGBTQ+ Democratic Caucus said.
“Manny Diaz believes we cannot take any voter for granted and we cannot leave any voter behind, which means investing in party organizations across the state, including small and medium-sized county organizations — this is I am excited Manny is ready and willing to take over leadership of the Florida Democratic Party and get us back on track to win,” Pasco County State Committeewoman Jocelyn Dickman said.
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Good news about a good person — Pierce Schuessler moves to Florida Department of State — Schuessler, most recently a senior policy adviser with Metz Husband & Daughton, is taking a key leadership role under Secretary of State Laurel Lee.Previously, he served as a senior legislative assistant and aide to Senate President Tom Lee, a director of legislative affairs at the Florida Department of Environmental Protection, and began his career in 2009 as a legislative director at the Department of State under then-Secretary Kurt Browning.
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🦠 — Science and COVID, the good and the bad must read: The Atlantic’s latest cover story, published Monday, outlines how science beat the virus but lost in the process. There have been more than 74,000 scientific papers on the pandemic, nearly twice as many as other diseases, yet flawed research along the way made the virus more confusing and led to misguided policies.
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Few films live up to an “instant classic” status. However, by nearly all accounts, Michael Mann’s epic heist movie “Heat” did that and more, having what USA Today called “the greatest action scene of recent times.”
Released 25 years ago this year, Heat was no ordinary crime story; Mann (who wrote and directed) intricately wove myriad plots with a finesse that transcends the genre. It was also one of the most precise and meticulous films for the crime genre and movies in general.
Michael Mann’s classic ‘Heat’ still thrills after a quarter-century.
In addition, Heat was the first on-screen pairing of Robert DeNiro and Al Pacino, two of the biggest legends in Hollywood. Also rounding out a stellar cast was Val Kilmer, Jon Voight, Tom Sizemore and Ashley Judd.
Here is a sample of the celebrations and thoughts of Heat, a movie masterpiece that is still relevant a quarter-century after its release:
“Mann’s ‘Heat’ at 25: a newly relevant study in loneliness” via Marc Rivers of NPR — Heat deals with an existential kind of emptiness — one that becomes the film’s steady, plaintive bass line against the catchy melody of its cops-and-robbers plotting. And in its own strange and very specific way, it comforted me. Mann evokes that aching feeling visually: Figures framed against cold, hard glass and sharp angles, or overlooking an endless, glittering cityscape — LA as Edward Hopper might have painted it. Feelings of impotence are bound up in our current state of loneliness, in the understanding that you, yourself, are not enough, even as you also understand that you’re unable to do anything about that. The tragedy in Heat lies with characters who try, and fail, to do something about it.
“Heat at 25: Still the best crime thriller of the modern era” via Tom Jolliffe of Flickering Myth — Heat was an event. Heavily pushing toward a mature audience in a festive season looking to lure younger viewers. The film made solid returns, greeted with predominantly good reviews from critics and audiences alike. Some felt it was overtly masculine, overly long, and were left cold emotionally (which is kind of an overriding point of the film, about the emotional disconnection associated with the respective profession of cop and robber). Since that time, it continues to gain reverence in fans and hold up to critical analysis. It’s a film with more subtlety than has occasionally been credited to Mann as a filmmaker. Still, he constructs with cohesion between his style running above the surface and his substance below.
“Heat: when Pacino met De Niro in a coffee shop” via Anvita Singh of The Indian Express — Cinephiles went ballistic when they saw the two acting greats share screen space finally. Sure, it was not for long, but it happened. And it was perfect. Describing that coffee sequence is like attempting to describe magic. It’s only visible to those who really pay attention. The silence, the pauses, the weight their words carried. So simple yet so powerful. They discuss their women, their ‘careers,’ exchange pleasantries and final intentions. The framing is solid. Brilliant camerawork that never shows the two characters together at once. You see one face and then the other. After all, they are confronting each other. Placing them together in a frame like friends must not have made sense.
“Mann gives an update on the status of the Heat prequel” via Erik Swan of Cinemablend — The prequel to Heat has been a long-gestating project for Mann, who reportedly finished writing the novel back in 2016. Though it sounds like there’s still work to be done before it can hit bookstore shelves, Mann’s comments to Deadline are encouraging. But what’s even more exciting to hear is that Mann eventually wants to bring the story to the silver screen as well. It’s been nearly 30 years since Heat hit theaters, but fans are undoubtedly ready to reenter that universe. All in all, it appears Michael Mann still has more to say about his famous characters, but it could still be a while before the project actually comes to fruition.
“Collateral is the most Michael Mann film of all Michael Mann films” via Chris Nashawaty of Esquire — Heat is widely (and rightly) considered to be Mann’s masterpiece — the director’s grand meditation on all of his favorite pet themes: loyalty, honor, integrity, crime, compulsion, loneliness, and the point where good and evil bleed into one another until you’re no longer sure which side you’re meant to be rooting for. I’d argue the movie that actually nips most closely at the heels of Heat in the top tier of Mann’s underworld classics is 2004’s Collateral — another violent, nihilism-drenched thriller that seems to exist in the same spiritual universe as Heat. They’re two movements in an underworld symphony of L.A. after dark. Like every Mann movie, every single frame in Collateral is composed with a jeweler’s eye for detail.
Situational awareness
—@JoeBiden: Stay hopeful — brighter days lie ahead.
—@realDonaldTrump: First Vaccine Administered. Congratulations USA! Congratulations WORLD!
—@GovRonDeSantis: Great to be on the scene this morning at @TGHCares as they received one of the first shipments of the Pfizer vaccine in Florida. God Bless America!
Tweet, tweet:
—@ShevrinJones: For the 100th time, @JoeBide is the winner, and we love to see it.
—@JoeGruters: Here is one Electoral College vote for @realDonaldTrump! Florida was with him early, we are with him now, and we will be with him going forward. @FloridaGOP
—@CarlosGSmith: When will @SenRickScott finally acknowledge @JoeBiden as President-Elect?
—@TaiKopan: It’s remarkable that CNN — a news network renown for wall-to-wall coverage of things like hurricanes and election night — is currently wall-to-wall with people getting vaccines and the electoral college voting. Both typically routine things. A snapshot of this moment.
—@SteveLemongello: The part of the Florida electoral college vote where everybody writes down their vote should have Final Jeopardy music
—@KevinCate: It’s been a tough year for so many people in so many ways. @CATECOMM turns 10 this week. We work hard but also know how fortunate we are — & the responsibility that comes with that. So in honor of 10 years, today we’re donating $10,000 to our local food bank @SecondHarvestBB.
Tweet, tweet:
—@GrayRohrer: Has anyone made an Avignon presidency joke yet?
Tweet, tweet:
Tweet. tweet:
Days until
NBA 2020-21 opening night — 7; “The Midnight Sky” with George Clooney premieres on Netflix — 8; “Wonder Woman 1984” rescheduled premiere — 10; Pixar’s “Soul” premiere (rescheduled for Disney+) — 10; Greyhound racing ends in Florida — 16; Florida Restaurant & Lodging Association human trafficking compliance training deadline — 17; Georgia U.S. Senate runoff elections — 21; WandaVision premieres on Disney+ — 31; the 2021 Inauguration — 36; Super Bowl LV in Tampa — 54; Daytona 500 — 61; “Nomadland” with Frances McDormand — 66; Children’s Gasparilla — 116; “No Time to Die” premieres (rescheduled) — 118; Seminole Hard Rock Gasparilla Pirate Fest — 123; “A Quiet Place Part II” rescheduled premiere — 129; “Black Widow” rescheduled premiere — 143; “Top Gun: Maverick” rescheduled premiere — 198; Disney’s “Shang Chi and The Legend of The Ten Rings” premieres — 216; new start date for 2021 Olympics — 220; “Jungle Cruise” premieres — 228; St. Petersburg Primary Election — 252; St. Petersburg Municipal Elections — 322; Disney’s “Eternals” premieres — 326; “Spider-Man Far From Home” sequel premieres — 328; Steven Spielberg’s “West Side Story” premieres — 360; “Thor: Love and Thunder” premieres — 424; “Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness” premieres — 477; “Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse” sequel premieres — 658.
The Electoral College
“Electoral College vote officially affirms Joe Biden’s victory” via Nick Corasaniti and Jim Rutenberg of The New York Times — It began at 10 a.m. in New Hampshire, where electors met in a statehouse chamber festooned with holiday decorations and gave their four votes to Biden. By noon on Monday, the battleground states of Arizona, Georgia and Pennsylvania, ground zero for many of Trump’s fruitless lawsuits, had backed Biden too. In New York, Bill and Hillary Clinton voted for Biden along with 27 other electors. And when California cast its 55 votes for Mr. Biden around 5:30 p.m. Eastern time, it pushed him past the threshold of 270 Electoral College votes needed to win the presidency, putting the official seal on his victory after weeks of efforts by Trump to use legal challenges and political pressure to overturn the results.
Without question, the Electoral College affirms Joe Biden as the 46th President. Image via AP.
“Some Republicans acknowledge Biden is President-elect after electoral college vote” via Amy B. Wang and Seung Min Kim of The Washington Post — Republican lawmakers on Monday evening began acknowledging — somewhat — that Biden is the President-elect after the electoral college convened to affirm his victory over Trump. For weeks, most GOP Senators and Representatives had sidestepped the question, with most suggesting they wanted to “let the legal process play out” regarding Trump’s baseless claims of widespread voter fraud. Sen. Mike Braun and Rep. Roy Blunt were in the minority in that they explicitly referred to Biden by name. Sen. Lindsey Graham told reporters “yeah” when asked if Biden was President-elect and began commenting rapid-fire on Biden’s would-be Cabinet nominees.
“Biden offers spirited condemnation of Donald Trump’s efforts to undermine election” via Chelsea James of The Washington Post — After a month of downplaying the danger of Trump’s and Republicans’ efforts to delegitimize Biden’s win in the general election, the President-elect unleashed a forceful condemnation of Trump and his allies, hours after the electoral college made his win officially official. Biden called the lawsuit filed by 17 Republican attorneys general and 126 Republican members of Congress at the Supreme Court asking the court to toss out results in multiple states an “unprecedented assault on our democracy.” He called Republicans’ efforts to undermine lawful results a “position so extreme we’ve never seen it before.” And he pointed out the number of Republican judges, including some appointed by Trump himself, who dismissed as meritless multiple efforts to overturn results in key states.
The vaccine
“How science beat the virus” via Ed Yong of The Atlantic — In fall 2019, exactly zero scientists were studying COVID‑19 because no one knew the disease existed. The coronavirus that causes it, SARS‑CoV‑2, had only recently jumped into humans and had been neither identified nor named. But by the end of March 2020, it had spread to more than 170 countries, sickened more than 750,000 people, and triggered the biggest pivot in the history of modern science. Thousands of researchers dropped whatever intellectual puzzles had previously consumed their curiosity and began working on the pandemic instead. As of this writing, the biomedical library PubMed lists more than 74,000 COVID-related scientific papers — more than twice as many as there are about polio, measles, cholera, dengue, or other diseases that have plagued humanity for centuries.
“Coronavirus vaccines can have side effects. That typically means they’re working.” via Joel Achenbach of The Washington Post — The new coronavirus vaccine appears to be stunningly effective, blocking serious illness entirely in randomized trials, and it has passed strict safety reviews and won emergency authorization from regulators in the United States and several other countries so far. But news bulletins in the past week provided a reminder that this remains a revolutionary pharmaceutical agent that will be scrutinized in the months ahead as shots go into arms. Scientists will also be vigilant for severe allergic reactions. U.S. public health officials hope at least 70 percent of the population will agree to be inoculated with one of the vaccines rolled out in the coming months.
“Why this New York nurse got the country’s first coronavirus shot: ‘We were scared’” via Ben Guarino and William Wan of The Washington Post — It was fitting for so many reasons that Sandra Lindsay became the face of the country’s first coronavirus vaccinations Monday. With the coronavirus killing people of color at disproportionate rates, she was a Black woman eager to prove the shot’s safety to those still hesitant. She is a critical-care nurse, among the health care workers who have spent more time than any caring for the pandemic’s sickest victims — working at a New York hospital system that was on the front lines of the pandemic this spring. But what made Lindsay an especially poignant choice, her brother said, was that she had dreamed her whole life — since a 6-year-old in their home country of Jamaica — of finding a way to help others.
Nurse Sandra Lindsay is among the first Americans to be inoculated with the coronavirus vaccine. Image via Reuters.
“D.C. firefighters will get coronavirus vaccine in public as part of trust-building campaign” via Lola Fadulu of The Washington Post — Five first responders, the acting D.C. fire chief, the department’s medical director and three firefighters, will be among the first people in the District to get the coronavirus vaccine, as part of a targeted campaign to build confidence in the process. But while city officials expect the first shipments of the vaccine to arrive in the District on Monday, the fire department personnel will not get their shots until later in the week. Kaiser Permanente, which will administer the doses, expects to receive its initial shipment of the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine on Wednesday and must finish training its staff on how to handle the vaccine and give the shots, said LaToya Foster, a spokeswoman for D.C. Mayor Muriel E. Bowser.
“Ron DeSantis welcomes coronavirus vaccine to Tampa: ‘Today, we will have shots going in arms’” via Steve Contorno of the Tampa Bay Times — DeSantis welcomed 20,000 doses of the coronavirus vaccine to Tampa General Hospital on Monday morning, calling their arrival a “historic” achievement in the fight against the pandemic. “Today, we will have shots going in arms,” DeSantis said. “We will have health care workers getting vaccinated much faster than anyone could have anticipated six months ago. God bless America.” Moments later, DeSantis watched a 31-year-old nurse receive the first dosage of the vaccine in the Tampa Bay area through a shot administered in her left arm.
“Doctors outside hospitals unclear when they will get vaccine” via Wayne Washington of The Palm Beach Post — A nurse in Tampa became among the first people in Florida to receive a vaccine for the coronavirus Monday. Still, other health care providers say no protocol has been set up to let them know when they will be inoculated. “It’s a very disorganized and not very transparent process,” said Dr. Howard Green, a dermatologist who practices in Palm Beach County. “None of it’s standardized, I don’t think. Is there really any process. He said neither he nor his wife, a dentist, are aware of any plan for when providers like them are inoculated. Both are in their 60s, and both face and pose risks to patients because of prolonged, unmasked exposure.
“Florida health care workers get COVID-19 vaccine; Orlando’s AdventHealth doses will arrive Tuesday” via Steven Lemongello and Garfield Hylton of the Orlando Sentinel — A Tampa General Hospital nurse was among the first people in Florida to get a COVID-19 vaccine shot Monday, amid news that 20,000 initial doses for Orlando health care workers will be coming Tuesday. AdventHealth in Orlando and Jackson Memorial Hospital in Miami are slated to each receive their first 20,000 doses on Tuesday. In a news release, AdventHealth said it planned to start inoculating its “front-line staff” on Wednesday. The first vaccinations in Florida, as well as in New York a few hours earlier, came as the country was in the middle of a surge of coronavirus cases and with nationwide deaths topping 300,000.
“‘A new ray of hope.’ First South Florida hospital workers get vaccinated in Broward.” via Ben Conarck of the Miami Herald — The first health care worker in the COVID-19 epicenter of South Florida received an injection on Monday afternoon from a vial carrying a new “ray of hope” — a vaccine with the potential to bring a roaring epidemic of death and severe illness to an end. The shot went into the left arm of Memorial Healthcare System critical care physician Aharon Sareli who could be seen smiling from behind his mask. Later, outside the pharmacy and in front of more than a dozen cameras, Sareli said it was an identical experience to receiving a flu vaccine. He said it was “really an honor to go first.”
“COVID-19 vaccine arrives for Jacksonville health care staff” via Beth Reese Cravey and Matt Soergel of The Florida Times-Union — Registered nurse Danielle Parker broke into tears Monday morning after receiving one of the first coronavirus vaccines to be given in Jacksonville. The vaccination didn’t hurt, she said. It’s just that Parker, 28, a nurse in the COVID-19 intensive-care unit at UF Health Jacksonville since the beginning of the pandemic, has seen so much suffering. Now there’s a sign of hope — perhaps the beginning of an end to much of that suffering. The coronavirus vaccine’s first batches began arriving at UF Health Jacksonville Monday morning to be administered to front-line hospital staff. From there, it will go to other area hospitals in the days to come.
“Orange prepares to vaccinate 500 long-term care residents and employees each day” via Stephen Hudak, Ryan Gillespie and Naseem S. Miller of the Orlando Sentinel — Orange County’s top health official said Monday he is preparing for a “logistical nightmare” that involves vaccinating more than 9,000 residents and employees of long-term care facilities in the county as well as paramedics and emergency workers within four weeks after the first doses arrive. DeSantis laid out the four-week timeline last week, and Dr. Raul Pino, the state’s health officer in Orange, said that goal can be achieved but will require the health department to put some services on hold so more workers can give vaccinations. He said the plan is to vaccinate 500 nursing home residents, employees and EMS workers each day. That is similar to the pace at which his department tested individuals for the coronavirus.
“‘20,000 doses of hope’: Tampa Bay gets first coronavirus vaccine shipment” via Megan Reeves of the Tampa Bay Times — Tampa Bay’s first dose of coronavirus vaccine was administered to a nurse at Tampa General Hospital on Monday, a historic moment and a ray of hope as vials of the recently approved drug are shipped across the state and nation. Tampa General, the region’s largest hospital, received 3,900 vials of the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine. Each vial contains five doses, making for a total of 19,500 that will be used to vaccinate the area’s front-line health care workers. “This is 20,000 doses of hope,” Tampa General President and CEO John Couris said at a news conference. “This is the beginning to the end. This is monumental if you’re sitting in our shoes, caring for the patients that need us the most.”
Corona Florida
“Maskless crowd — including DeSantis family — at Edgewater-Niceville high school football game prompts online criticism, praise” via Katie Rice and Leslie Postal of the Orlando Sentinel — The Edgewater High School football team’s win over Niceville High School Friday evening propelled the Edgewater Eagles to the State Championship game — and prompted reaction to the largely maskless crowd. The schools have been getting attention online not only for the game itself but images of unmasked spectators — including Gov. DeSantis and his family — packed together in Niceville High School’s stands. The photo DeSantis posted on Twitter of his family, with neither him, his wife, nor his two young children in masks, showed a scene typical of playoff football before the coronavirus pandemic — prompting online praise from some and fierce criticism from others.
A maskless DeSantis family attends a Niceville High School championship game. Image via Twitter.
Corona local
“How will Orlando, the theme park capital of the world, recover from 2020?” via Gabrielle Russon of the Orlando Sentinel — The year 2020 brought images of Orlando never seen before. Interstate 4, the eternally traffic-clogged gateway to the theme parks, was quiet. The Magic Kingdom, the world’s busiest park, was empty for months, a happy place that previously had shut down for just a day or two for hurricanes or other emergencies. The coronavirus pandemic is expected to recede in 2021 as vaccines become available. But restarting Orlando’s tourism machine will be a monumental task, and experts disagree on how much longer the region and its hundreds of thousands of industry workers will suffer.
How will the theme park capital of the world get through the pandemic? Image via AP.
“‘What’s coming is much more dire’: COVID-caused evictions may be next crisis for Tallahassee” via Karl Etters of the Tallahassee Democrat — The specter of mass evictions once a federal moratorium sunsets on Dec. 31 prompted the Tallahassee City Commission last week to approve a $250,000 program aimed at landlords. In addition to creating the Landlord Risk Mitigation Fund, city commissioners asked staff to explore the option to create outdoor shelters similar to one in Hillsborough County. But that could be considered “camping.” Chronic homelessness has been considered for years by the Commission, and there has been a focus on attainable housing and including more partner agencies. But the immediate crisis of forced evictions has forced their hand, as people struggle to make ends meet through the pandemic. “What’s coming is much more dire as has been expressed,” Commissioner Jeremy Matlow said.
Corona nation
“Vaccine comes too late for the 300,000 US dead” via Adam Geller and Heather Hollingsworth of The Associated Press — The U.S. crossed the 300,000 threshold on the same day it launched the biggest vaccination campaign in history, with health care workers rolling up their sleeves for COVID-19 shots Monday. It took four months for the virus to claim its first 100,000 American lives. But with cold weather driving people inside, where the virus spreads more easily, months of reluctance in many states to require masks, and an increase in gatherings over the holidays, some public health experts project 100,000 more could die before Jan. 31. Already, the number of U.S. deaths rivals the population of St. Louis or Pittsburgh. The toll is equivalent to repeating a tragedy on Hurricane Katrina’s scale every day for 5 months.
Corona economics
“Tourism taxes for Visit Tampa Bay down 45% in October” via Sara DiNatale of the Tampa Bay Times — Hillsborough County hotels continue to be hit harder by the pandemic than their counterparts in Pinellas, as both counties deal with tourism slowdowns. Visit Tampa Bay, which handles marketing Hillsborough County as a destination, announced Monday that its tax collection on overnight stays was down 45% in October compared to the same month last year. Meanwhile, Pinellas’ collection was down just 13% in the same period. Both counties collect a 6% tax on overnight stays. October is the most recent month of bed tax data available. It’s also the start of both tourism bureaus’ fiscal year. Hillsborough County collected about $1.7 million and Pinellas about $3.5 million in October, both the highest amounts collected by each since the pandemic began in March.
Tourism in the Tampa Bay region takes a nose-dive.
“They took a mortgage deferment through the CARES Act. Then their credit score plunged.” via Trevor Fraser of the Orlando Sentinel — Tod Caviness was negotiating to buy a house in Sanford when his wife, Christin, got an alert on her phone. “Her credit score had gone down from 752 to 568,” he said, and Caviness discovered the same drop happened for him. The dramatic drop originated with a three-month deferment the couple received on their Bradenton home mortgage through the CARES Act. Though the CARES Act contains language to protect the credit of people who take advantage of it, problems similar to Caviness’ have been popping up around the country. The U.S. Public Interest Research Group noted 13,000 complaints about credit reporting from April through September, a 550% increase over the same period last year.
More corona
“Disney World was digitally adding masks onto maskless parkgoers in ride photos” via Shannon McMahon of The Washington Post — During the coronavirus pandemic and with a strict mask policy in place, Disney World created a new rule for riders who want to purchase an image of themselves mid-ride: no mask, no photo. That rule was briefly bent when parkgoers began requesting to purchase their photo if their mask moved or slipped free on the ride, which they complained was occurring on fast rides through no fault of their own. A Disney spokesperson said Disney World tested adding digital masks to riders’ PhotoPass images where masks had shifted mid-ride.
Disney is digitally masking up parkgoers. Image via Twitter.
Presidential
“Trump tells allies he will run in 2024, but hints he may back out” via Anita Kumar of POLITICO — Trump doesn’t need to run for President again. He just needs everyone to think he is. The President’s recent discussions with those around him reveal that he sees his White House comeback deliberations as a way to earn the commodity he needs most after leaving office: attention. The President has spent days calling a dozen or more allies to ask what they think he needs to do over the next two years to “stay part of the conversation,” according to two people, including one who spoke to the President. And while Trump has told allies he plans to run for President again, he has also indicated he could back out in two years if he determines he’ll have a tough time winning, said three people familiar with the discussions.
Donald Trump may (or may not) run in 2024. Image via AP.
“Florida-based elections vendor sues conservative media over fraud reports” via David Smiley of the Tampa Bay Times — A global elections vendor founded in South Florida is threatening to sue Fox News and other conservative media outlets for defamation unless they prominently retract unfounded reports alleging a conspiracy to rig the 2020 vote against Trump. Smartmatic, which keeps its U.S. headquarters in Boca Raton, announced Monday that it might file lawsuits against Fox News, One America News Network and Newsmax over a “concerted disinformation campaign” to claim or suggest the company was involved in stealing the Nov. 3 election from Trump. All three networks have amplified baseless claims by Trump and attorneys working with his campaign that Smartmatic software was used to manipulate vote totals.
“Speculation swirls over Ivanka Trump’s potential run for U.S. Senate in Florida” via The Guardian staff reports — Speculation about the post-White House career of Ivanka Trump is now centered on Florida, where the soon-to-be-ex-first daughter and senior aide to her President father has reportedly bought an expensive plot of land for a house and may be considering a run for Senate. Ivanka Trump is frequently mentioned as desiring a political career of her own and, during her time working for Donald Trump, has sought to position herself as a more media-friendly version of her father. Now US media reports are focusing on Florida — where Donald Trump owns the Mar-a-Lago resort — as a potential base for his daughter to launch a political career of her own.
Is Ivanka Trump eyeing a U.S. Senate seat from Florida? Image via AP.
“Barron Trump may enroll at Fort Lauderdale’s most elite high school after his father’s presidency ends” via Anthony Man of The South Florida Sun-Sentinel — Barron Trump, the 14-year-old son of Trump and First Lady Melania Trump, may enroll at Pine Crest School in Fort Lauderdale after his father’s presidency ends on Jan. 20. The possibility was raised by the New York Post’s gossip site Page Six, which reported that Melania Trump recently toured the school. It attributed the information to a single unidentified source. Trump hasn’t acknowledged he is leaving the presidency. But after President-elect Biden is inaugurated, the President and First Lady are widely expected to set up residence at Trump’s beloved Mar-a-Lago Club in Palm Beach.
“What’s next for Trump voters who believe the election was stolen?” via Sabrina Tavernise of The New York Times — Polls have presented a stark picture of alternate realities. A Fox News poll found that 77 percent of those who cast ballots for Trump said they thought the election had been stolen from him. Just 10 percent of Democrats agreed. Another survey, conducted by Bright Line Watch in late November, found that among those who said they approved of Trump’s performance in office, about half believed that he, not Biden, would be inaugurated in January. But interviews with dozens of people who voted for Trump reveal a more fluid picture. Some were die-hard supporters who were hungry for any information to support Trump’s claims that he won the election. For these voters, no data could convince them otherwise.
Transition
“Potential family conflicts arise for Biden and aides as his administration drafts new ethics rules” via Michael Scherer of The Washington Post — The last time Biden worked in the White House, his son-in-law Howard Krein mentioned that executives from his health care startup firm would be visiting Washington. The Vice President promptly arranged a meeting between the group, including Krein’s brother, Steven, and President Barack Obama in the Oval Office. “He knew about StartUp Health and was a big fan of it,” Howard Krein, the husband of Biden’s daughter Ashley, told the Philadelphia Business Journal in 2015. “He asked for Steve’s number and said, ‘I have to get them up here to talk with Barack.’” Now Biden is preparing to step back into the Oval Office with radically different expectations about handling the relationship between his official power and his family’s private interests.
D.C. matters
“William Barr to step down as Attorney General before Christmas” via Ryan Lucas of NPR — Trump said he and Barr had a “very nice meeting” at the White House and that their “relationship has been a very good one.” Deputy Attorney General Jeff Rosen will become acting Attorney General. In a letter to the President, Barr said he is proud to have played a role in Trump’s administration and said he would depart on Dec. 23. Earlier this month, Barr said the Department of Justice found no evidence of widespread election fraud, directly contradicting Trump’s baseless claims that Democrats stole the election. Ahead of the election, Barr had stood by the President, repeating his unsubstantiated claims that mail-in voting was ripe for fraud.
Attorney General William Barr is making a hasty exit before Christmas. Image via AP.
“U.S. agencies hacked in monthslong global cyberspying campaign” via Eric Tucker, Frank Bajak, and Matt O’Brien of The Associated Press — U.S. government agencies were ordered to scour their networks for malware and disconnect potentially compromised servers on Monday after authorities learned that the Treasury and Commerce departments were hacked in a global cyberespionage campaign tied to a foreign government. In a rare emergency directive issued late Sunday, the Department of Homeland Security’s cybersecurity arm warned of an “unacceptable risk” to the executive branch from a feared large-scale penetration of U.S. government agencies that could date back to midyear or earlier. The campaign was first discovered when a prominent cybersecurity firm, FireEye, learned it had been breached. FireEye would not say who it suspected and noted that foreign governments and major corporations were also compromised.
“Bob Levinson of Coral Springs died in Iranian custody, US government says” via Anthony Man of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — Iran was responsible for Levinson’s death, the retired FBI agent from Coral Springs who disappeared in Iran in 2007, Trump’s administration said. The administration concluded that Levinson was dead months ago, but Monday was the first time it said so publicly. “The government of Iran pledged to provide assistance in bringing Bob Levinson home, but it has never followed through. The truth is that Iranian intelligence officers — with the approval of senior Iranian officials — were involved in Bob’s abduction and detention,” FBI Director Christopher Wray said. “We will never waver from our commitment to find out more about Bob’s long captivity, to give the Levinson family the answers they deserve, and to finally bring Bob home.”
Dateline Tally
“Florida Senate President Wilton Simpson missing Electoral College vote after positive COVID-19 test” via John Kennedy of the Sarasota Herald-Tribune — Senate President Simpson has tested positive for COVID-19, forcing him to step away from serving as one of the state’s 29 electors set to cast ballots Monday for Trump at the state Capitol. The electors were tested before coming to the Capitol for the event, set for 2 p.m. in the Senate chambers. Simpson, a Trilby Republican, sent a letter to DeSantis, notifying him of his planned absence. “It was a great honor to be selected to serve our state in this historic capacity, and I was very much looking forward to casting my vote for President Trump and Vice President Pence,” Simpson said in his letter to DeSantis.
Senate President Wilton Simpson is MIA for the Electoral College vote, sidelined by COVID-19. Image via Colin Hackley.
“Rural broadband remains key issue for Loranne Ausley” via Jason Delgado of Florida Politics — Florida’s rural broadband limitations are neither new nor unique. But more than nine months into a pandemic that’s made the deficiencies all-the-more critical, many remote Florida communities are still without reliable internet access. Recognizing the deficiencies, Democratic Sen. Ausley plans to address the “digital divide” in the 2021 Legislative Session. “Today, not having access to the internet means you don’t go to school,” Ausley explained. “You can’t do your homework, your parents can’t help you with your homework, your parents can’t do their job from home, and they can’t access health care.” Ausley, who represents Senate District 3, said finding the gaps in service will be her “first order of business.”
“Lauren Book bill would require feminine hygiene products in public school bathrooms” via Drew Wilson of Florida Politics — Sen. Book filed a bill last week that would require school districts to make feminine hygiene products are available in public school bathrooms. SB 242, known as the “Learning with Dignity Act,” mandates schools have sanitary napkins, pads and tampons in female restrooms in all of Florida’s K-12 public schools. Under the bill, the products must be made available at no cost. “One in five girls have either left school early or missed school entirely because they did not have access to menstrual products,” Book said, citing a recent survey. “Girls pay a price when these products aren’t free — and providing them will go a long way toward equity in education.” The Plantation Democrat filed a similar bill last ahead of the 2020 Legislative Session, but it was never heard in committee.
Lauren Book seeks more dignity for girls in public schools. Image via Sen. Book’s office.
“Secret donor name in Florida Senate races wiped from records, replaced” via Samantha J. Gross and Ana Ceballos of the Times/Herald Tallahassee Bureau — The name of the mystery donor behind a $550,000 effort that helped promote no-party candidates in three key Florida Senate races, including one that is under investigation, was changed in campaign finance reports over the weekend. While making changes to fix errors in campaign finance reports is common, election attorneys say it is unusual to see political committees change their sole donor’s name two months after the fact. Even so, two political committees — Our Florida and The Truth — amended campaign filings and changed the name of the entity that funded the political mailers from Proclivity to Grow United Inc., a tax-exempt corporation that is also registered in Delaware and whose address is a post office box in Denver.
Statewide
“Florida gas prices down slightly after two-month high” via Malena Carollo of the Tampa Bay Times — Florida gas prices averaged $2.13 per gallon, down 2 cents from last Monday and 3 cents from their eight-week high, according to AAA, the Auto Club Group. Tampa Bay prices hovered just below the state average at $2.12 per gallon, down 3 cents from the previous week. Both were double-digit increases from this time last month — up 20 cents per gallon on average in Tampa Bay and 13 cents higher on average across the state. Mark Jenkins, the AAA spokesman, said that while the past week was “relatively uneventful” for the fuel market, news of vaccines being approved and distributed may affect future prices.
“Civil Rights heavy-hitters back Cynthia Moore Chestnut’s Democratic Party run” via Scott Powers of Florida Politics — A couple of generations of Black political and Civil Rights leaders in Florida ranging from Rep. Al Lawson to Aramis Ayala and from Ben Crump to LaVon Bracy are coming to bat for Chestnut‘s effort to be elected the next chair of the Florida Democratic Party. Chestnut’s campaign on Monday announced its first full slate of endorsements, including Lawson, the congressman from Tallahassee; Crump, the Civil Rights lawyer, who has been prominent in many of the key Black Lives Matters cases; Ayala, the first African American State Attorney in Florida; and Bracy, the church leader and Civil Rights icon from Orlando who is the mother of Sen. Randolph Bracy.
Lobbying regs
New and renewed lobbying registrations:
Travis Blanton, Darrick McGhee, Johnson & Blanton: Little Havana Activities & Nutrition Centers of Dade County
Matt Bryan, David Daniel, Thomas Griffin, Jeff Hartley, Lisa Hurley, Teye Reeves, Smith Bryan & Myers: STRAX Intelligence Group
Ryan Matthews, Peebles Smith & Matthews: JEA, Keys Energy Services, South Seminole & North Orange County Wastewater Transmission Authority
Local notes
“Aramis Ayala creates diversion programs for suspended license, prostitution, underage drinking offenses” via Monivette Cordeiro of the Orlando Sentinel — A few weeks before she leaves office, Orange-Osceola State Attorney Ayala announced Monday she plans to roll out three new diversion programs to help people avoid convictions on charges of prostitution, underage drinking or driving with a suspended license. Ayala said the programs aim to “reduce recidivism” among those arrested and direct prosecutorial resources toward more serious crimes. The diversion program for those accused of driving with a suspended license will be effective immediately in Orange County first, while the underage drinking program will start in about a week for both counties, Ayala said. State Attorney-Elect Monique Worrell, whose term starts next month, is on board to implement the prostitution diversion pilot program in spring 2021 in Orange, Ayala’s office said.
Orange-Osceola State Attorney Aramis Ayala wants her last act to be diversion programs for nonviolent crimes.
“Orlando warns of elevated bacteria levels at Lake Eola” via Ryan Gillespie of the Orlando Sentinel — Lake Eola has higher-than-normal levels of the bacteria E. coli in the water, a city official said Monday. It’s unclear what caused the water’s increased levels at the city’s signature park, but testing will continue over the next few days, said Samantha Holsten, a city spokeswoman. A warning was issued through the city’s Lake Alert system, and signs will be posted warning residents and visitors of the bacteria. For now, swan boats aren’t available for rent, and the veterinarian who looks after the swans is working with city parks officials to oversee their care.
“Disney reveals more tenants for Flamingo Crossings Town Center” via Austin Fuller of the Orlando Sentinel — Persimmon Hollow Brewing Co., a Five Below store, and several restaurants were revealed by Disney World on Monday as tenets in its new Flamingo Crossings Town Center. The development, anchored by a Target, is under construction at Western Way and State Road 429 near Animal Kingdom. Other tenets announced Monday include a UPS store, Wendy’s, Domino’s, Ellie Lou’s Brews & BBQ, Firehouse Subs, Pieology Pizzeria, and Gyu-Kaku Japanese BBQ. The 200,000-square-foot retail center will also include previously announced restaurants PDQ, Five Guys, Ben & Jerry’s and Dunkin’. A Walgreens is under construction on an out-parcel, Disney said.
“Jay Stowe arrives as new JEA CEO with ‘night and day’ contrast to fired CEO Aaron Zahn” via David Bauerlein of The Florida Times-Union — Stowe was among the public power industry advocates who watched the saga of last year’s attempted sale of JEA that landed multibillion dollar offers before it came skidding to an end on Christmas Eve 2019. A year later, Stowe is in Jacksonville as JEA’s newly hired CEO after an entirely new board did a national search and hired him. Stowe’s arrival in Jacksonville contrasts with former CEO Aaron Zahn on many levels — the different career paths each took to JEA’s top job, their biographical backgrounds, leadership styles, and above all, whether they view city ownership of JEA as in the city’s best long-term interest. If Zahn was about changing JEA, Stowe comes to JEA with a mission of restoration.
“Developers dug a lake near Boynton Beach without county permits. Now they’re adding a building.” via Mark Diamond of The Palm Beach Post — The ski-water enthusiasts who built a 15-acre lake west of Boynton Beach without permits have started to construct a building — also without permits. The move has so angered Palm Beach County officials that they have warned the property owners that further violations of the county’s “stop-work” orders could result in arrests. County officials may seek fines of as much as $20,000 a day against the alleged offenders at a hearing before a magistrate on Jan. 21. But the upcoming hearing does not appear to have deterred the partnership, led by a Canadian business executive, Douglas DeBruin and two county residents, Darin Montgomery of Lake Worth and Chet Raley of Boynton Beach.
“Texts raise questions of developer’s role in trying to oust Manatee County administrator” via Lee Williams of The Sarasota Herald-Tribune — On Sunday, Nov. 15 at around 1:05 p.m., Manatee County Commissioner Kevin Van Ostenbridge sent a text to local developer and Republican donor Carlos Beruff, the first of two texts which raise questions about Beruff’s involvement in the recent attempt to fire County Administrator Cheri Coryea. The text included a link to a Bradenton Times story titled: “Are special interests gunning for county administrator?” “We have a leaker,” Van Ostenbridge wrote. “Good thing no one reads this rag.” Coryea’s termination first came up publicly on Nov. 19, with Van Ostenbridge and three other commissioners voting in favor. Three of the Commissioners had been in office for less than 50 hours.
“A lawyer who won her first county battle in middle school, Danielle Cohen Higgins joins Miami-Dade Commission” via Douglas Hanks of the Miami Herald — Though a Democratic rising star, Cohen Higgins secured her first political office in an appointment process largely steered by the Commission’s leading Republicans. Rebeca Sosa, the board’s acting chairwoman, led the votes that rejected holding a special election for the District 8 seat. Incoming Chairman Jose “Pepe” Diaz was one of two Commissioners who nominated Cohen Higgins. When Sosa asked for more nominations, the remaining Commissioners offered none. While the other first-termers won their commission seats after electoral success elsewhere, Cohen Higgins secured hers by outmaneuvering established politicians seeking the District 8 post. Among those who tried for the seat were former state Sens. Frank Artiles and Dwight Bullard.
Danielle Cohen Higgins is rewarded for her activism with a spot on the Miami-Dade Commission.
“Wellington sets in motion four-year, $9 million project to redirect waste” via Kristina Webb of The Palm Beach Post — A multimillion-dollar project to reroute a key main that feeds into Wellington’s wastewater treatment plant is moving forward. The project will be done in three phases, take about four years and cost an estimated $9 million, Utilities Director Shannon LaRocque told Wellington’s council at an agenda review workshop session on Dec. 7 before the following night’s council meeting. The first phase of the project, which is budgeted to cost nearly $1.9 million, won unanimous approval as part of the council’s consent agenda. The existing force main that runs through Palm Beach Polo is about 40 years old, and due to be replaced, LaRocque said. It also is especially deep, making it difficult to reach.
Top opinion
“We need a Marshall Plan for our schools. And we need it now.” via Richard Carranza, Austin Beutner, and Janice Jackson of The Washington Post — President-elect Biden has described the crisis in public schools caused by the pandemic as a “national emergency.” As the superintendents of the nation’s three largest public school districts, New York, Los Angeles and Chicago, every day, we grapple with the challenges that worry not just the President-elect but also the students and families we serve. Our schools, like thousands more across the nation, need help from the federal government, and we need it now. The challenges school communities face aren’t for lack of effort by principals, teachers, staff, parents and students. For many children, online and even hybrid education pales compared to what’s possible in a classroom led by a great teacher.
Opinions
“Far from Washington, Americans are finding local solutions” via Gerald F. Seib of The Wall Street Journal — As the debate about police behavior raged over the summer in the wake of George Floyd’s death in Minneapolis, the nation’s elected leaders in Washington seemed unable to agree on any response. At a time of deepening national divisions and political tribalism, many Americans have decided to rely less on Washington to deal with problems and have turned for answers to local institutions, state governments, business leaders, their own communities and one another. It’s no secret that Washington isn’t working particularly well these days. That may change under the Biden administration.
“The vaccines that could use a shot in the arm” via Clara Ferreira Marques of Bloomberg Opinion — Beijing and Moscow saw early the potential benefits of pulling ahead in the race to produce an effective inoculation against COVID-19. Apart from the public health benefits and the keen awareness in both governments of the need to be self-reliant, a clear win would validate top-down models of government and innovation. Moscow in August, to great fanfare, became the first to grant regulatory approval for a vaccine. By then, Beijing had already allowed doses of one of its own vaccines to be given to its military. Yet, with scarce data and plenty of government promotion, the dash for approvals and show over results has not translated into impressive diplomatic or domestic wins.
On today’s Sunrise
Senate President Simpson reveals he has COVID-19 on the same day vaccines were delivered to five Florida hospitals, with Tampa General administering the first shots. Gov. DeSantis supplied the play by play.
Also, on today’s Sunrise:
— Tampa General President Couris says it’s now the beginning of the end of the COVID-19 pandemic.
— Health care workers are first on the priority list … followed by residents of nursing homes and senior centers. Most Floridians won’t be vaccinated until February or March at the earliest, so the doctors say it’s up to all of us to stay safe until then.
— While everyone was celebrating vaccinations, the coronavirus remained on a tear in the Sunshine State. The health Department reported 138 new fatalities Monday … increasing the statewide death toll to 20,271. There were almost 85,000 newly confirmed cases of the disease … increasing the total to 1,134,383. Nationwide, the death toll just broke 300,000.
— Florida’s presidential electors cast their ballots … and there were no surprises.
— And finally, a Florida Man golfing in Cape Coral found his ball sitting on the top of an alligator’s tail.
“How tight is the Christmas tree supply? An 8-footer can sell for $2,000” via Lucy Craymer of The Wall Street Journal — This year, people are going all out for Christmas. There’s just one problem: finding a Christmas tree. The pandemic means millions are unable to travel over the holiday season and are celebrating at home instead. That’s produced a spike in demand for trees and a run on decorations. The Christmas tree shortage has its roots in the global recession of more than a decade ago. During those years, a glut of Christmas trees caused prices to tumble, and some farmers planted fewer or switched to other kinds of crops. Other farms just closed.
Christmas tree supplies are low, causing huge spikes in cost.
“Home Depot surprises 24 veterans with rental assistance for the holidays” via WSBTV — Home Depot surprised a group of 24 local veterans with a month of rental assistance just in time for the holidays. On Friday, the Home Depot Foundation and Quest Communities went door to door and surprised veterans living at the Quest Veterans Village in northwest Atlanta with home-care kits that included things like clothes, shoes, housewares, electronics, grocery gift cards and more. Along with the gifts came an even bigger holiday surprise: rental assistance for December.
“Secret Santa pays off layaways at Florida Walmart store” via FOX 35 Orlando — The holidays got a lot brighter for some shoppers at a Florida Walmart store. In Gainesville, employees at a Walmart Supercenter said a man wearing dark glasses, a hoodie, and a surgical mask presented the store with a $500 check to pay off layaways. “He walked straight to the Customer Service desk at the front of the store and requested to speak to the Team Lead. The man then asked for help locating layaways for toys before paying them off in full then calling the family to let them know. Employees at the store said the man told them he has been doing this for nearly a decade, traveling around the country and randomly selecting stores that offer layaways.
“Undercover cops dressed as Santa and elf filmed taking down suspected car thieves” via Patrick Knox of The U.S. Sun — The drama unfolded in Riverside as the undercover cops were conducting an operation targeting shoplifters. They then got reports of “three suspicious men” who were allegedly looking for vehicles to steal, police said. The video shows the elf pointing a gun at one of the suspected car thieves. He says: “What’s wrong is you tried to steal a car but your buddy stole the car.” The video also shows Santa running up to the other suspect, grabbing him from behind and wrestling him to the ground. Someone is then heard yelling, “get him, Santa,” as he ran toward the suspect.
Police officers dressed as Santa and an elf bust car thieves while in costume.
Aloe
“Good Samaritan helped Orlando police rescue family from flipped car in pond” via Grace Toohey of the Orlando Sentinel — A good Samaritan kept a child’s head above water after his family’s car flipped into a retention pond last week, helping keep the child alive until emergency personnel arrived, records show. Jose Díaz, 48, was driving behind the family’s car Thursday about 7:30 when he noticed the vehicle repeatedly trying to brake, but eventually losing control, driving across traffic then flipping into a retention pond, he told police. Díaz said he immediately stopped and called 911, then went to assist the family. It was dark and cold, but Díaz said he didn’t hesitate to assist the family. “I didn’t think about that at the moment, just take action,” said Díaz, who is a father himself.
“Heat, Arisons donate $3 million to World Central Kitchen” via Ira Winderman of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — The Miami Heat announced Monday that the team and the Micky & Madeleine Arison Family Foundation have made a $3 million donation to the World Central Kitchen, as well as partnered with the nonprofit organization that has provided over 33 million meals throughout the United States and Spain. The donation was made to assist in expanding the organization’s Restaurants for the People program in Miami. The donation was made to assist in expanding the organization’s Restaurants for the People program in Miami, which the Heat termed as “the next step in the team’s continuing effort to use their unique platform and standing in the community to deliver on their social justice pledge and effect positive change that uplifts the Black community.”
Philanthropists Micky & Madeleine Arison open their hearts — and wallets — to help the hungry in Central Florida,
Happy birthday
Celebrating today are Ken Lawson and Terrie Rizzo.
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Between the pandemic, a crash in oil prices, and growing calls to address its role in climate change, Exxon Mobil’s had plenty to reflect on this year. Yesterday, it got a headstart on New Year’s resolutions. By 2025, it’s aiming to…
Reduce overall emissions intensity by 15%–20%
Halve methane emission intensity
Emission “intensity”? Exxon’s commitments focus on emissions per unit of output, not absolute emissions. While these efforts should reduce total emissions, it’s not clear by how much, Axios writes. Additionally, Exxon is focusing on emissions linked to its own operations, not what’s known as “scope 3 emissions” released when its products are used (Exxon will begin reporting those next year).
Playing catchup
Once the most valuable company in the world, Exxon’s market cap has fallen around 60% in the last decade, and it was booted from the Dow this summer. For years, investors have pressured the company to take action on the environment; last week, an activist investor campaign called for new directors.
They might like the example set by Unilever, which this week became the first major company to voluntarily give shareholders advisory voting power on carbon reduction efforts.
Big picture: Oil companies, especially in the U.S., have been criticized for lagging behind the clean energy transition. While some are making efforts, including net-zero emissions targets and diversifying into renewables, “there doesn’t seem to be an oil major that’s got it all figured out between the pandemic, cloudy demand and price outlooks, and the unknown path through a world getting a bit more serious about climate,” Axios writes.
One more bump in their path
President-elect Joe Biden. He’s pledged to rejoin the Paris Accord on Day 1, invest $2 trillion in clean energy, and get the U.S. on a path to net-zero carbon emissions “no later than 2050.”
One way to get there: requiring businesses to report climate change risks and opportunities, which Mike Bloomberg pressed Biden to support in an op-ed yesterday.
Looking ahead…while fossil fuel companies struggle, a new guard of clean energy giants is beating them to investor dollars and ushering in energy’s “NextEra.”
Yesterday, NYC-area nurse Sandra Lindsay (above) became the first American vaccinated against Covid-19 outside of clinical trials. Three million more doses of Pfizer-BioNTech’s vaccine will be delivered across the country this week.
But just as that light at the end of the Lincoln Tunnel gets brighter, the short-term trajectory of the U.S.’ outbreak has never looked so grim.
More than 300,000 Americans have died from Covid-19.
The U.S. is averaging around 200,000 new cases/day and 3,000+ deaths.
Yesterday, NYC’s mayor told the city to prepare for a potential “full shutdown.” The city halted indoor dining as of yesterday, but will keep schools open.
Across the pond…
Things are also getting worse before they get better. London, the Netherlands, and Italy are following Germany and reimposing stricter lockdowns on nonessential businesses, travel, and social life through early January.
And while the UK began administering Pfizer-BioNTech’s vaccine last week, EU countries are still waiting on the bloc’s regulatory body for approval. The longer process has drawn criticism from some European leaders.
Fortune 500 companies and government agencies in the U.S. and UK are doing some holiday deep cleaning on their software networks following a major cybersecurity attack.
The backstory: Hackers infiltrated the IT systems of several federal agencies and top corporations via a product made by software company SolarWinds. The hack was first identified last week by FireEye, a cybersecurity company that itself was hacked.
It ain’t good
Over 300,000 customers use SolarWinds, 18,000 of which have been directly impacted, according to the company. It’s a small slice, but what the hackers sacrificed in quantity, they made up for in quality.
Known targets in the U.S. include the Treasury, Commerce, and Homeland Security Departments, according to the Washington Post.
As for the identity of the hackers, multiple outlets say all signs point to a specific group of Russian state-backed hackers called “APT29” or “Cozy Bear.”
Bottom line: This attack has cybersecurity professionals rattled. FireEye believes the operation dates back to March, potentially giving the hackers access to sensitive data from U.S. elections and a vaccine development process that shattered records.
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But the other thing you get when you is access to their Club. You’ll get benefits like:
Late Sunday night, Pornhub said it would remove all videos on its site not created by its content partners or its Model Program members, then set out on a massive content purge that eliminated most of its library.
As of Monday afternoon, the site had 2.9 million videos, compared to 13.5 million on Sunday.
The backstory: Earlier this month, Nicholas Kristof wrote in a column for the NYT that the platform was “infested with rape videos” and that it monetizes other types of sexual violence toward childen.
That piece set off a chain of events that have “left the porn industry shaken,” according to Motherboard.
Mastercard and Visa, which process payments on the site, launched an investigation.
Pornhub enacted policy changes, including banning unverified accounts from uploading new content.
But that wasn’t enough. Last Thursday, Mastercard and Visa cut ties with Pornhub.
Pornhub says that it’s being unfairly targeted because it’s an adult content site and that its efforts to remove illegal content have been largely effective. But it failed to convince the powerful payment processors, whose decisions could lead to major changes in the porn industry.
Yesterday, Amazon-owned Zoox unveiled its first electric robotaxi in its push to eliminate awkward small talk in Ubers forever. Here’s what’s under the hood.
It’s driverless: In fact, the vehicle doesn’t even have a steering wheel or pedals.
It’s safe: In the event of a crash, airbags envelop individual passengers to prevent any painful knee-knocking in the four-person cabin.
It’s fast(ish): Topping out at 75 mph, it’s the speediest robotaxi in the industry.
Zoox’s ties with Amazon mean it will likely be called into action to help optimize that last mile of delivery that keeps Bezos up at night. But for now, Zoox is 100% focused on people, not packages. “In a nutshell, we want to eventually move people around a city,” CEO Aicha Evans told journalist Kara Swisher in an interview. “It’s purpose built.”
Bottom line: Zoox is not yet ready for commercial use, but the ultimate goal is to launch a ride-sharing app in a few major cities.
WHAT ELSE IS BREWING
Google’s services, including YouTube and Docs, suffered a widespread outage yesterday morning for about an hour.
Google also pushed back its employees’ return to the office until September 2021 and said it would experiment with a “flexible workweek.”
Apple will now show nutrition-like “privacy labels” that provide more info on the user data that’s collected by apps.
The FTC is asking nine tech companies to share information on their methods for collecting user data.
Meghan Markle…venture capitalist? The Duchess of Sussex is investing in oat milk latte startup Clevr Blends.
BREW’S BETS
Sweatpants, more like sweet pants. Vuori’s Dreamknit™ fabric is buttery soft, meaning you’ll never want to take their Ponto Performance pants off. And since they look as good as they feel, you won’t need to. Get 20% off your first purchase from Vuori here.*
You told yourself you wouldn’t put off your gifting this year…but you did. And that’s okay. Because Sidekick, our lifestyle newsletter giving you trusted recs from all over the internet, is here to help you with your last-minute scramble.
In Sidekick’s Holiday Gift Guide, you’ll find the perfect holiday present for everyone in your life, including:
Your friend who subscribes to Hulu, Netflix, HBO Max, Peacock, and even CBS All Access
The yogi who has both a morning AND evening skincare routine
The recent NYT Cooking subscriber who won’t shut up about their focaccia bread art
Bottom line: In choosing these products, we abided by the Gift Guide Golden Rule: If we wouldn’t give it as a gift, we didn’t include it on the list.
Today’s game is the brainchild of Brew reader Mark Bissell. Which reminds us—if you have an idea for a trivia question or a puzzle, definitely drop a line.
Okay, onto Mark’s puzzle. Picture a world in which M&As are only approved for companies whose names can be merged by blending one into another via shared letters.
In this world, we’ll give you a clue about the combined company and you have to determine the two companies that merged.
Ex. Furniture for the Oracle of Omaha = Berkshire Hathawayfair
It has Normal People…and leggings
A $1.6 trillion colossus with a Vision Fund
An electric automaker, but make it bubbly
A defense contractor for singles
Vegan house rentals
ANSWER
It has Normal People…and leggings = Hululemon
A $1.6 trillion colossus with a Vision Fund = MicrosoftBank
An electric automaker, but make it bubbly = Tesla Croix
A defense contractor for singles = Lockheed Martinder
Vegan house rentals = Airbnbeyond Meat
** A Note From eToro
eToro USA LLC; Investments are subject to market risk, including the possible loss of principal.
California, the most-populous U.S. state, put Biden over the 270 votes needed to win the Electoral College when its 55 electors unanimously cast ballots for him and his running mate, Kamala Harris. [Joe Biden] also noted that his 306-232 margin in the Electoral College was the same as Trump’s 2016 victory, which the Republican described as a “landslide.”
…
Electors are typically party loyalists who are unlikely to break ranks, and few observers had expected Monday’s vote to alter the election’s outcome. With Trump’s legal challenges failing, the president’s dim hopes of clinging to power rest in persuading Congress not to certify the Electoral College vote in a special Jan. 6 session – an effort all but certain to fail.
…
Under federal law, any member of Congress may object to a particular state’s electoral count during the Jan. 6 session. Each chamber of Congress must then debate the challenge before voting by simple majority on whether to sustain it. The Democratic-controlled House of Representatives is sure to reject any such challenge.
Last week, it was revealed that President-elect Joe Biden’s son, Hunter, is under federal criminal investigation related to his foreign business dealings, including in China. The Wall Street Journal reported on Thursday that, according to a source, Barr “has known about a disparate set of investigations involving Hunter Biden’s business and financial dealings since at least this spring” and “worked to avoid their public disclosure” during the 2020 election to avoid interfering with the vote.
…
Barr also revealed earlier this month that the Justice Department has not found evidence of extensive voter fraud that could create a different outcome in the 2020 presidential race, contradicting claims made by Trump and his allies that the race was “rigged” or “stolen” and that Biden didn’t really win. Trump’s legal team responded by claiming that “there hasn’t been any semblance of a Department of Justice investigation.”
…
Biden’s attorney general pick will take over amid calls from some Democrats for Trump to be investigated after he leaves office, with the Trump administration, including the Justice Department, ramping up pressure on China and as Barr has scheduled federal executions during the transition period while Biden promises to end capital punishment.
The United States on Monday officially fingered Iran for the first time for the kidnapping, captivity and what it called the “probable death” of retired FBI Special Agent Bob Levinson 13 years ago, naming and shaming a pair of accused top Iranian intelligence officers. Senior U.S. government officials said the two Iranians — whose whereabouts are not known — were responsible for Levinson’s sad end.
…
But they did not disclose whether U.S. intelligence or the FBI have ascertained the reasons for his mysterious March 9, 2007 disappearance on remote Kish Island, where he was working on a murky CIA contract for intelligence analysts at the agency. Three Americans are believed currently held in Iran, and it was unclear how the administration’s confrontational approach to Tehran in the waning days of President Trump’s term will affect their cases.
…
ABC News has reported in 2019 that Levinson’s case had been set aside by the Obama administration during negotiations for the Iran nuclear deal, senior officials of both the Obama and Trump administrations confirmed. Levinson’s family has suffered years of frustration at the absence of information and what they have felt were betrayals by the U.S. government — and particularly the Obama White House.
Beginning in 1985, the U.K. had a lifetime ban on blood donations from men who have sex with men. From 2011 in most of the U.K., gay men were permitted to donate after 12 months of abstinence. In 2017, the U.K. changed that deferral period to 3 months. In 2015, the U.S. lifted its lifetime ban on men who have sex with men from donating blood — a policy that had been in place since 1983
…
Under the new policy, anyone who has the same sexual partner for more than three months — irrespective of gender or sexuality— will be eligible to donate, so long as there is no known exposure to a sexually-transmitted infection or use of the HIV prophylaxes [Pre-Exposure Prophylaxis (PrEP) and Post-Exposure Prophylaxis (PEP)]. The changes will go into effect in summer 2021.
…
The policy change should help an effort by the [National Health Service] to get more men to donate blood. In January, the public health body set a target to get 26% more male blood donors, noting a significant gender imbalance among donors. “This is a concern because men have higher iron levels, and only men’s blood can be used for some transfusions and products,” it explained.
The popular adult content site had prohibited unverified users from posting new content after a New York Times report revealed a number of inappropriate and illegal videos, including some involving minors, causing the credit companies Visa and Mastercard to cut ties with the company and all related websites.
…
Since Pornhub’s launch in 2007, any user could upload content to the site. Now, only verified users can do so. To become verified, users are required to submit a photo of themselves holding a piece of paper with their username, according to Pornhub’s site. This makes them eligible to monetize their videos.
…
“This means every piece of Pornhub content is from verified uploaders, a requirement that platforms like Facebook, Instagram, TikTok, YouTube, Snapchat and Twitter have yet to institute,” the company said in a blog posted announcing the changes. The purge by Monday morning brought the total number of videos on the site down from 13m to just 4m, a report from Motherboard found.
A stunning report into Dominion voting machines makes bold claims regarding the forensic audit. It claims that there was a 68.05% error rate, that the adjudication log was simply missing, and that on Nov. 21, an unauthorized user “unsuccessfully attempted to zero out election results.” President Trump tweeted in response to the audit: “This is BIG NEWS. Dominion Voting Machines are a disaster all over the Country. Changed the results of a landslide election. Can’t let this happen.”
Now that the Electoral College has voted, it appears the media floodgates have once again opened. For four years, the Fourth Estate kept quiet on any issue that painted the political left in a poor light. That has now changed. MSNBC is now running headlines on the dark side of the Obama administration and how the Electoral College is not actually a problem anymore. Other outlets have articles on Hunter Biden and Governor Cuomo’s recent sexual harassment complaints. It’s almost as if the media has permitted itself to once again do its job.
Forensic Report Details Serious Issues with Dominion
President Trump has announced Attorney General William Barr’s resignation. He will leave the post before Christmas and be replaced by Deputy AG Jeff Rosen. The resignation comes after a WSJ report said that Barr had asked prosecutors not to let slip details of the Hunter Biden investigation.
A forensic analysis report of Dominion voting machines in Michigan highlights several problems. The report points out that the devices had an error rate of over 60% and numerous other irregularities.
The Electoral College voted on Monday, Dec. 14, to name former Vice President Joe Biden the winner of the 2020 election. Pro-Trump Republicans in several swing states met to declare themselves electors in the hope that they will have standing for any legal challenges.
Venezuela Uses Hate Laws to Target Political Opponents
Something political to ponder as you enjoy your morning coffee.
Hate laws in Venezuela are now being used to attack and imprison political opponents of the Maduro regime. The law was passed in 2107 but was seldom used. In 2020, it appears it is the new favorite tool of political oppression. Critics are being censored and imprisoned and could face up to 20 years for their supposed crimes. This should be a stark warning to those who suggest a new law would never be used to an extreme degree.
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Antibody drugs were always the best bet for reducing the death and suffering from COVID-19 this fall. There is still an opportunity to invest in making more.
The question in every administration and Congress is, more often than not, what has to be cut or deferred to keep the Pentagon under the top line it’s been given by the White House and the Hill.
Congress must step in and modernize employer-sponsored insurance with stronger incentives for cost control. Firms should retain the power to pursue their own innovations and tailor their offering to their workers’ needs.
“Health care workers around the country rolled up their sleeves for the first COVID-19 shots Monday as hope that an all-out vaccination effort can defeat the coronavirus… Some 145 sites around the country, from Rhode Island to Alaska, received shipments, with more deliveries set for the coming days. High-risk health care workers were first in line.” AP News
Many healthcare professionals have written articles in recent days stressing the safety of the vaccines and recommending ways to get public buy-in:
“These vaccines’ development did not cut corners. Moderna’s and Pfizer’s compressed timeline reflects unique partnerships between industry, government, and academia, high levels of funding, and decades of previous research on mRNA vaccines, as well as countless individuals working day and night given the nature of the crisis. Authorization may be expedited, but both organizations followed the requisite orderly progression from Phase 1 to Phase 3 trials. The careful scientific design and rigor has given us a great deal of confidence in the final product…
“Two federal advisory boards (the FDA and the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention) as well as a separate advisory board in New York have evaluated Pfizer’s results, and approved the vaccine through the Emergency Use Authorization process. They will follow the same process for the Moderna vaccine. Pfizer’s Phase 3 results have additionally undergone external peer review and been published in the New England Journal of Medicine. Each of these independent reviews was incentivized to identify problems, not to gloss them over. It’s also tremendously unlikely that all of them missed a problem related to safety and efficacy… From our perspective, the likelihood of harm from Covid-19, in both the short and long term, far outweighs the small potential risks from the Pfizer and Moderna vaccines.” Megan L. Ranney and Esther K. Choo, CNN
“If government and health care leaders take the right approach to educating the public about the vaccines, we can create a pathway for the public to assess options and choose to get vaccinated. Given the accelerated development of the Pfizer vaccine and other vaccines not yet approved, convincing people that the vaccines are safe and effective is critical…
“Communications should stress that the Pfizer vaccine and the Moderna vaccine (not yet approved) are 90 to 95% percent effective. It’s also important to emphasize that while the development, testing, and approval processes for vaccines have been accelerated, no steps were skipped… Transparency also means being upfront about potential side effects of vaccines. These include possible arm soreness (as with most vaccines) and possible fatigue a day or two after vaccination. If people expect knowledge to evolve and believe public health leaders will be upfront, reports of new side effects are less likely to undermine confidence and trust.” Austin Baldwin and Jasmin Tiro, Fox News
Many on both sides are calling on policymakers to prioritize high-risk communities in their vaccine distribution plans:
“Recent research has shown that the excess mortality in the minority community is attributable to socioeconomic factors, including lower-income as well as below-average living and working conditions… People with lower income or crowded living conditions may not be able to follow public health measures such as social distancing, remote work, or even use of masks. It is alarming to note that CDC makes no clear mention of economic or working conditions when both so clearly put certain people at risk. Furthermore, many low-income jobs are as essential to a functioning society as healthcare provision…
“As the US explores vaccination distribution, recommendations from federal agencies such as the CDC should look to existing data regarding disproportionally impacted populations. This has already been done for those ages greater than 65. The same calculations should be applied to low-income people and racial and ethnic minorities.” Kirsten Axelsen and Benson Hsu, American Enterprise Institute
“People who live or work in high-risk, high-transmission communities must be given priority. Giving vaccines as soon as possible to these people will save a disproportionate number of lives because they are more likely to get the coronavirus. Many work in crowded conditions, including factories, meat packing plants, public safety jobs and agriculture. Others live in close quarters. Many are essential workers…
“These groups lack political power and they are usually the last to get society’s most important benefits. Some in these groups will not want the vaccine — at least not initially. This includes many in communities of color who have suffered and continue to suffer inequitable treatment and at times have been subjected to medical experimentation. And some members of the historically privileged will question why these at-risk communities should be given priority… [But] Making sure that those who are most at risk are prioritized for access to the vaccine will help protect the public, allow businesses to re-open, and save lives.” William B. Schultz and Dr. Regan H. Marsh, USA Today
Other opinions below.
From the Left
“Thank you to the scientists who started working on the vaccine in February, even before it was clear how widespread the pandemic would become. Thank you to the thousands of clinical trial volunteers who risked their health to take an experimental vaccine for the benefit of others. Thank you to the government officials who worked to limit the bureaucratic red tape that typically makes vaccine development a years-long process, and for doing it without compromising safety controls. And thanks, too, to President Trump… Operation Warp Speed delivered.” Editorial Board, Los Angeles Times“Getting a vaccine out to more than 300 million Americans within months will be like nothing the US has done before. It will require enough raw materials to manufacture the doses and enough factories to produce them. Those doses will then need to be purchased and shipped to all 50 states. The states will then need to distribute the vaccines to different localities, which will have to distribute them at the local level based on need — all while keeping the vaccines safely stored at the right temperature…“Local and state governments are cash-strapped from dealing with the ongoing economic downturn brought on by the pandemic. It’s not clear that the federal government is doing enough yet: Some officials say states need $8.4 billion to do this work; so far, they’ve gotten $340 million.” German Lopez, Vox“[The states’] plans are imperfect at best. Less than a third of the states included any estimates in those plans for how many providers would be in the vaccination chain, only a quarter had plans in place to make sure the vaccines reach under-served populations and only half of the states had a vaccination registration system ready to track doses… New Jersey’s plan is 182 pages. Wyoming’s is 33…
“[Supreme Court Justice Louis] Brandeis’ observation about states being laboratories for democracy sounds honorable when it comes to tax policy but may prove to be folly when it comes to serving a lifeline to a country hobbled by a pandemic. After all, America doesn’t fight its foreign wars with each state leading its own military unit. But it is about to wage a domestic campaign against a virus with dozens of distinct battleplans.” Philip Elliott, Time
“For Covid-19, prisons, jails and other detention centers are arguably the worst environment to be living in. These populations are uniquely vulnerable to the virus: Confinement is the antithesis of social distancing as cells are small and shared showers and common areas are natural Covid incubators. Meanwhile, supplies such as soap and masks are scarce…
“Incarcerated individuals are four times more likely to become infected than people in the general population… We need urgent action now, with vaccines prioritized for distribution among incarceration facilities along with nursing homes and health care settings.” Ashish Prashar and DeAnna Hoskins, NBC News
From the Right
“Six deaths did occur during the vaccine’s Phase III trial, but most of them occurred in the group that received the placebo. There were two deaths in the vaccinated group, one of which was caused by pre-existing arteriosclerosis while the other was caused by cardiac arrest, which occurred 60 days after receiving the vaccine…
“These six deaths represented 0.01 percent of the 43,448 trial participants, and the briefing notes that ‘All deaths represent events that occur in the general population of the age groups where they occurred, at a similar rate.’ The briefing report does not suggest that the deaths are connected to the vaccine in any way, and only 0.6 percent and 0.5 percent of the vaccine group and the placebo group reported serious adverse events, respectively.” Alec Dent, The Dispatch
“Donald Trump said during the second and final presidential debate on October 22 that he was optimistic a vaccine would be ready ‘within weeks’… The media could have accepted that the President probably has better insight into the timeline of vaccine development and approval than those not involved in the process. Instead, they roundly mocked his prediction…
“Just a couple of weeks after that final presidential debate, Pfizer announced that it had completed its third phase of vaccine trials successfully. The FDA issued its first emergency use authorization for a COVID-19 vaccine last week, nearly a month ahead of the end of the year…
“It’s no wonder that the media wanted to undermine Trump’s successful vaccination fast track program, Operation Warp Speed, ahead of the election. Many Americans cited the handling of the pandemic as a key voting issue. It would have hurt Biden immensely if Americans were made to be optimistic about Trump delivering a vaccine so quickly.” Amber Athey, Spectator USA
“[Biden’s] plan to put teachers at the front of the line for vaccination, second only to health-care workers and nursing-home residents, is driven not by science but by pure political pandering… while the initial fear that teachers expressed was understandable, recent data indicates that teachers and students are at no greater risk of contracting covid in schools than they are elsewhere…
“In our urban centers, should teachers get the jump on bus and taxi drivers and transit workers, who are confined in extremely close quarters with the general population but are nonetheless vital to keeping our cities functioning? What about immigrant farm laborers, who have been especially hard-hit by the virus, and restaurant and grocery workers who have braved covid-19 to keep the country fed?…
“It is wrong for Biden to pursue a one-size-fits-all approach across the more than 13,000 school districts in the United States simply because teachers unions wield more power in the Democratic Party than do interest groups representing other sectors.” Ray Domanico, Washington Post
☕ Good Tuesday morning.Today’s Smart Brevity™ count: 1,145 words … 4½ minutes.
🚨 Situational awareness: More federal agencies acknowledged being hit by “a hack engineered by one of Russia’s premier intelligence agencies” — Defense, State and Homeland Security, in addition to Treasury and Commerce. —N.Y. Times
💻 Join Felix Salmon tomorrow at 12:30 p.m. ET for an Axios Virtual Event on businesses making a difference during the pandemic. Register here.
1 big thing: Biden’s “very, very, very dark winter”
President-elect Biden speaks in Wilmington last night. Photo: Drew Angerer/Getty Images
America got quite a respite yesterday from this bleak year:
A woman of color became the first American to get the COVID vaccine.
Democracy worked, as the Electoral College voted in 50 state capitals.
And President-elect Biden called on the nation to “turn the page.”
But Biden is trying to prepare us for what incoming White House chief of staff Ron Klain told MSNBC’s Rachel Maddow will be “a very, very, very dark winter,” with “probably tens of thousands of deaths left before the end of the year.”
Biden said as he celebrated the certification of his victory: “My heart goes out to all of you in this dark winter of the pandemic, about to spend the holidays and the new year with a black hole in your hearts.”
Why it matters: Biden and his team want Americans to reckon with the pain — they use the word “dark” a lot — he’ll inherit. It also sets up the possibility of hope — and light — in 2021 as the virus fades and jobs rebound.
Not to be a bummer, but several people around Biden worry the light is further away than most think, which could hamper his presidency.
In addition to the COVID death toll that passed 300,000 yesterday, and likely will accelerate in the weeks ahead, there’s the mounting financial devastation. Axios Markets author Dion Rabouin points to all the cliffs that will beset Biden:
The U.S. Chamber of CommerceSmall Business Index, out today, finds that small businesses “anticipate the worst of the pandemic is still ahead”: 50% of the 1,000 entrepreneurs polled “see their operations continuing for a year or less in the current business climate before having to permanently close.”
Foreclosure and eviction moratoriums expire Dec. 31: “Between 2.4 million and 5 million American households are at risk in January alone,” The Wall Street Journal reports (subscription).
The big picture: Biden will take office with thousands of people dying daily, full vaccination months away, President Trump taunting him from the Twitter sidelines, the government rattled by an epic cyberattack, China asserting its power, and Americans divided like never before. To the victor go the spoils.
The share of Americans who say they’ll get the COVID-19 vaccine as soon as it’s available has doubled since September, with more than one in four now putting their hands up, Margaret Talev writes from the Axios/Ipsos Coronavirus Index.
Why it matters: This increased comfort is being driven by people 65 and older. But it’s happening across both parties, and all ages and racial groups.
Trustin pharmaceutical companies rose to 43%, up from 35% in September.
The survey offers some early evidence that as President Trump’s voice recedes, Republicans may be more willing to listen to institutions and science.
After the highest-profile arrestunder Hong Kong’s new security law, prosecutors say they need more time to go through more than 1,000 posts on the Twitter account of Jimmy Lai, a pro-democracy media tycoon.
That’s a bald-faced admission that what’s on trial is Lai’s free speech, Axios China author Bethany Allen-Ebrahimian writes.
Why it matters: The draconian law imposed by Beijing is playing out in line with the worst-case scenario its critics feared.
Beyond its general chilling effect, which resulted in a wave of self-censorship, the new law has already been invoked to charge over two dozen people, including numerous pro-democracy commentators and activists.
Wisconsin Gov. Tony Evers and other members of the state’s Electoral College cast their votes yesterday at the State Capitol in Madison.
In voting that went on throughout the day, California’s 55 electors put Joe Biden over the 270-to-win threshold at 5:29 p.m. ET.
The final tally: 306 electoral votes for Biden to 232 for President Trump — the same margin that Trump bragged was a landslide four years ago.
Elector Steve Henson signed his vote for Joe Biden for president of the United States, in the Georgia Senate chamber at the State Capitol in Atlanta.
Sophia Danenberg, a member of Washington’s Electoral College, signed her ballot for Vice President-elect Kamala Harris, at the State Capitol in Olympia.
The pandemic has supercharged the market for at-home testing for a slew of common conditions — everything from cholesterol checks to cancer screenings, Axios’ Marisa Fernandez reports.
Why it matters: At-home health tests can help Americans avoid a trip to the doctor’s office, though experts say they’re not a perfect replacement and run a higher risk of human error.
The Trump administration helped open up new commercial opportunities in orbit, building on years of work by the space industry, Axios Space author Miriam Kramer writes.
But some question whether those gains are sustainable in the long term.
What’s happening: Trump consistently prioritized NASA funding in his budget proposals and relaunched the National Space Council, which aims to hold agencies accountable for their work with space.
The Trump administration also extended the reach of commercial partnerships in space, outsourcing NASA’s human-rated lunar lander work to private companies in a trend that is likely to continue far into the future.
“I think the space program is in better shape now than it was when he took office,” John Logsdon, founder of the Space Policy Institute at George Washington University, told Axios.
🥊 Plus … Attorney General Bill Barr quit under pressure — which would be a transcendent story on almost any other day.
Go deeper… Jonathan Swan: President Trump has a history of dropping announcements at moments when cable news is running stories he hates — in this instance, the Electoral College affirming Biden’s victory. This looks like another example of the president tweeting his way out of chyrons.
9. 1 future thing
Photo: Zoox
Zoox, backed by Amazon, unveiled a 12-foot-long robotaxi that one day might be hailed with an app, Axios Navigate author Joann Muller writes:
The doors slide open, and you’ll take one of four seats. Each seat has a wireless charging pad, and there’s an open skylight roof with lighting that looks like stars.
The cars communicate with the outside world using lights and sounds.
These little robotaxis will be confined to a pre-mapped area at first. (Baby steps!)
Four-wheel steering lets the car go sideways into a tight drop-off location.
And Zoox can drive in both directions: There’s no front or rear.
No deployment date is set. Zoox co-founder and CTO Jesse Levinson tells Joann: “We would obviously not put these vehicles on the roads until we have the data to show we’re significantly safer than humans.”
“It’s not going to take as long as many people expect. But it’s not going to be next year, either.”
The proceedings harked back to more typical presidential elections and stood in contrast with the unprecedented — though fruitless — six weeks of legal and procedural chaos triggered by President Trump’s refusal to accept his loss.
By Elise Viebeck, Dan Simmons, Amy Worden and Omar Sofradzija ● Read more »
The potential public health impact of science-backed, smoke-free products is considerable. We will continue working to deliver smoke-free alternatives for adult smokers who don’t quit tobacco and nicotine altogether.
After weeks of downplaying President Trump’s challenges to the election, Joe Biden tore into the incumbent for contesting the results following the Electoral College’s formal vote for him as the president-elect.
China is using its economic leverage over Australia to punish the key U.S. ally for criticizing Beijing and warn other countries against partnering with Washington, according to diplomatic sources and analysts.
South Korea voted to ban its citizens from flying leaflets into North Korea, a practice used to send information into the nation about the outside world.
A Michigan attorney said he hopes President Trump will act on the findings from a forensic audit of Dominion Voting Systems equipment in Antrim County that was released on Monday thanks to a judge’s ruling.
The front-line worker widely believed to be the first person to get the COVID-19 vaccine in the United States says she felt reassured after getting her shot.
A top Georgia official announced investigators will conduct a signature audit of absentee ballot envelopes for votes cast during the state’s June primary and the 2020 presidential election in Cobb County.
Healthcare providers across the country were the first to receive the Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine Monday, kicking off the most urgent mass vaccination campaign in decades.
The Senate’s No. 2 Democrat joined lawmakers in both parties in calling on the leadership of the House and Senate to put a compromise coronavirus aid package on the floor for a vote before the end of the year.
Rep. Paul Mitchell announced he’s leaving the Republican Party just weeks before his January retirement, making it clear that President Trump’s efforts to challenge the results of the election drove him to the decision.
As Michigan’s electors gathered in the state Capitol to vote for President-elect Joe Biden unanimously, a group of Republicans falsely claimed they were supposed to be part of the vote and tried to enter the building.
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18.) ASSOCIATED PRESS
Dec 15, 2020
View in Browser
AP MORNING WIRE
Good morning. In today’s AP Morning Wire:
As US vaccine rolls out, nation’s deaths surpass a staggering 300,000.
Poor nations face wait for vaccines; London under tightest restrictions.
US Electoral College makes it official: Biden won presidency, Trump lost.
Year ends with bad blood between US and Iran, as well as Iran and Israel.
TAMER FAKAHANY DEPUTY DIRECTOR – GLOBAL NEWS COORDINATION, LONDON
The Rundown
AP PHOTO/LYNNE SLADKY
COVID-19 vaccine comes too late for America’s 300,000 dead; US health workers start getting vaccination shots
The vaccine that could help conquer the virus began rolling out on the same day the country reached this grimmest of milestones.
“The numbers are staggering — the most impactful respiratory pandemic that we have experienced in over 102 years, since the iconic 1918 Spanish flu,” said Dr. Anthony Fauci, the government’s top infectious-disease expert.
It took four months for the virus to claim its first 100,000 American lives. But with cold weather driving people inside, where the virus spreads more easily, months of reluctance in many states to require masks, and an increase in gatherings over the holidays, some public health experts project 100,000 more could die before the end of January, Adam Geller and Heather Hollingsworth report.
U.S. Vaccine Push:The largest vaccination campaign in U.S. history got underway with health workers getting the first shots. “Relieved” was the reaction of one nurse who got vaccinated. All will need another shot in 21 days. The injections begin an effort to try to beat back the coronavirus — a day of hope amid grief as the nation’s death roll hit another terrible milestone. How well initial vaccinations go will help reassure a wary public when it’s their turn next year, Lauran Neergaard reports.
The Food and Drug Administration is set to publish its analysis of a second potential COVID-19 vaccine, developed by Moderna. If cleared, U.S. officials predict they will have supplies to give 20,000 first injections by year’s end.
Public Health Leader Departures:An investigation has found that at least 181 U.S. public health leaders in 38 states have resigned, retired or been fired since the coronavirus pandemic began. The investigation by the AP and Kaiser Health News shows that at the same time, lawmakers in 24 states have crafted laws to weaken public health powers. Many public health officials say they can’t do their jobs when they are undermined by political leaders. The public health departures signify an enormous brain drain just as the U.S. rolls out its biggest vaccination operation ever and faces what are expected to be the worst months of the pandemic. This exclusive report is by Anna Maria Barry-Jester, Hannah Recht, Michelle R. Smith and Lauren Weber.
Poor countries face long wait for vaccines despite promises; London faces U.K.’s tightest lockdown restrictions, sees new virus variant
”The whole call for global solidarity has mostly been lost,” the World Health Organization’s vaccines chief said during an internal discussion, a recording of which was obtained by the AP.
With Americans, Britons and Canadians rolling up their sleeves to receive coronavirus vaccines, the route out of the pandemic now seems clear to many in the West, even if the rollout will take many months. But for poorer countries, the road will be far longer and rougher, report Aniruddha Ghosal and Maria Cheng.
The ambitious initiative known as COVAX created to ensure the entire world has access to COVID-19 vaccines has secured only a fraction of the 2 billion doses it hopes to buy over the next year, has yet to confirm any actual deals to ship out vaccines and is short on cash.
Britain’s Lockdown: London and its surrounding locales will be placed under the highest level of restrictions beginning Wednesday as infections rise rapidly in the capital. The government said it must take swift action after seeing “very sharp, exponential rises” in cases, with some areas doubling the number of infections every seven days. Under Tier 3 restrictions, the most stringent level, people can’t socialize indoors, and bars, pubs and restaurants must close except for takeout. Sylvia Hui reports from London.
The U.K. health secretary also said officials have identified “a new variant of coronavirus which may be associated with the faster spread in the south of England.” The World Health Organization is among those studying the new virus strain.
Taiwan has set a goal to vaccinate 60% of its population, 15 million people, with a COVID-19 vaccine. The country has signed an agreement with COVAX to purchase a COVID-19 vaccine, but is also actively in talks with vaccine companies as well.
AP PHOTO/PATRICK SEMANSKY
Electoral College makes it official: Biden won, Trump lost; Biden says ‘democracy prevailed’; Under relentless attack from Trump, US institutions bend but don’t break
The U.S. Electoral College has formally confirmed that Joe Biden will be the nation’s next president, giving him a solid electoral majority of 306 votes to affirm his victory in last month’s election.
Heightened security was in place in some states as electors met under various threats. The results will be sent to Washington and tallied in a Jan. 6 joint session of Congress.
For all the defeated Republican president’s objections, there was little suspense and no change among all the electoral votes allocated to Biden and Trump in last month’s popular vote.
President-elect Biden pointedly criticized Trump for threatening core principles of democracy even as he told Americans that their form of self-government ultimately “prevailed,” Aamer Madhani and Will Weissert report.
Biden said democracy has been “pushed, tested, threatened.” Biden and his team now hope the formal victory in the Electoral College will help the country unify and accept his presidency.
Democratic Institutions: America’s democratic institutions, facing unprecedented strain from Trump as he fights to hold power despite losing, have so far withstood the barrage and are holding firm. Electors in all 50 states backed the will of their voters to confirm Biden’s victory. But Trump has vowed not to stop, putting pressure on congressional Republicans who have to give final approval to the election on Jan. 6, Julie Pace, Thomas Beaumont and Brian Slodysko report.
Republicans: For the first time, a groundswell of leading Republicans finally say Biden is the winner of the presidential election. They announced their views after the Electoral College vote affirmed Biden won. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell was notably silent. But a number of senators said the time has come to move on. They’re essentially abandoning Trump’s assault on the outcome, Lisa Mascaro reports.
Barr Departure: Attorney General William Barr, one of Trump’s staunchest allies, is departing amid tensions over his boss’ baseless claims of election fraud and the investigation into Biden’s son. Barr will leave before Christmas and submitted his letter of resignation. Trump has publicly expressed his anger about Barr’s statement to the AP earlier this month that the Justice Department had found no widespread fraud that would change the outcome of the election, Michael Balsamo reports.
Putin’s Congrats: Russian President Vladimir Putin has congratulated Biden on winning the presidential election after weeks of holding out. He is one of the last world leaders to congratulate Biden. The Kremlin maintained Putin was holding off on doing so until the election results were officially confirmed.
The year started with the U.S. and Iran careening dangerously close to an all-out conflict that would have engulfed the Middle East. In the waning days of the Trump administration, there continues to be plenty of bad blood between Washington and Tehran, as well as Iran and Israel.
Levinson disappeared in Iran under mysterious circumstances more than a decade ago. U.S. officials in March said they had concluded that he was dead. U.S. diplomats and investigators have long said they thought he was taken by Iranian government agents, The announcement was the most definitive assignment of blame to date.
Iran has long denied having any information on Levinson.
The development is just the latest in a series of increasingly aggressive Trump administration actions against Iran since the president withdrew from the landmark 2015 Iran nuclear deal two years ago.
It reached a crescendo with the assassination of the revered Revolutionary Guard commander Qassem Soleimani by U.S. drone strike in Baghdad in January, which drew retaliatory strikes aimed at U.S troops in Iraq.
He says the scientist was killed in an effort to start a war in the last days of Trump’s presidency. Rouhani’s comments mark the first time he has directly accused Israel of carrying out the killing of Mohsen Fakhrizadeh late last month, Nasser Karimi reports from Tehran.
Israel, long suspected of killing Iranian nuclear scientists over the last decade, has repeatedly declined to comment on the attack.
Ten years ago, an uprising in Tunisia opened the way for a wave of popular revolts against authoritarian rulers across the Middle East known as the Arab Spring. For a brief window as leaders fell, it seemed the move toward greater democracy was irreversible. Instead, the region saw its most destructive decade of the modern era. Syria, Yemen, Libya and Iraq have been torn apart by wars, displacement and humanitarian crisis. Other countries, like Egypt, have rolled back into repression greater than before. But activists and observers say the yearning that fueled the uprisings, for greater rights and better governance, is still alive.
Governments and major corporations worldwide are scrambling to see if they, too, were victims of a global cyberespionage campaign. The hack penetrated multiple U.S. government agencies and involved a common software product used by thousands of organizations. Russia, the prime suspect, denies involvement. Cybersecurity investigators say the hack’s impact goes beyond U.S. agencies, which included the Treasury and Commerce department, though they haven’t yet disclosed which companies and other governments were targeted.
Thousands of people gathered in the Chilean region of La Araucanía to witness a solar eclipse, rejoicing in the rare experience even though visibility was limited because of cloudy skies. Skies were clear in northern Patagonia in Argentina, where people also watched the moon briefly block out the sun and plunge daytime into darkness. Many people wore masks to curb the spread of COVID-19, though they crowded together in some places in Pucón and in other areas of La Araucanía, 430 miles south of Santiago, the Chilean capital.
Major League Baseball’s Cleveland Indians are changing their name — but they don’t know to what or when. After months of discussions with a variety of groups, including Native Americans who have long protested the team’s use of a moniker and symbols that many deem racist, the team is dropping the name it has used since 1915. Owner Paul Dolan told the AP that the team will continue to be called the Indians in 2021 while new names are being considered. He said the team will not adopt an interim name.
‘They don’t want us to hold anything back for the second shot,’ state Emergency management director Jared Moskowitz said of the first delivery of Pfizer vaccine this week.
Meanwhile, the largest vaccination campaign in U.S. history is now underway. Illinois received its first shipments of the Pfizer coronavirus vaccine on Monday. Here’s everything you need to know.
The first COVID-19 vaccinations in Illinois are scheduled to be administered Tuesday, bringing a sense of hope along with the most significant action yet to blunt a pandemic that has killed more than 14,000 people statewide.
Amid a massive distribution effort that will take several days to reach medical centers in more than four dozen counties, Chicago selected a hospital in one of its hardest-hit neighborhoods to administer the city’s first shot. The vaccination will be given Tuesday morning at Loretto Hospital in the Austin community, where the death rate dwarfs the citywide average.
Since the beginning of the pandemic, 163 such school-based outbreaks have been reviewed in the state, including nine reported Friday by the Illinois Department of Public Health. But while the state is now posting such numbers online — and health departments are assisting schools with surveillance of cases, contact tracing and guidance — it still falls to school officials to make the biggest decision: Does the school need to shut down again?
Kim and Doug White, like many others, have sought ways to find happiness and some normalcy during an isolating time. Their solution: turn their Ford Transit van into a mobile dining room. Since October, the two have been pulling into restaurant parking lots and eating their takeout at the table covered in a red-and-white checkered table cloth in the back of their van.
When something inordinately rare or unexpected happens, it is said “the planets aligned.”
On Dec. 21, the winter solstice, two planets will appear nearly aligned, resulting in an event so uncommon it’s befitting of the saying. At one time, astronomers may have felt it so closely resembled a Christmas miracle — or, perhaps, the star of Bethlehem — that they named the spectacle the “Christmas Star.
Amid skyrocketing demand for legal weed in Illinois, statewide tax receipts from recreational pot sales are now rivaling those from booze.
November’s tax revenues from adult-use cannabis, which reflect the record $75.28 million in sales tallied in October, reached nearly $22.88 million, according to figures released by the Illinois Department of Revenue.
That’s less than $3 million shy of the roughly $25.74 million in taxes collected through alcohol sales last month. Tom Schuba has the story…
The Electoral College formally chose Joe Biden as the nation’s next president, giving him a solid electoral majority of 306 votes. The state-by-state voting took on added importance this year because of President Donald Trump’s refusal to concede he had lost.
Half of the jobs, which pay $15 an hour, include supervising students in classrooms where teachers are remote, monitoring social distancing and masking and conducting health screenings.
Ald. Leslie Hairston wants anyone arrested by Chicago police to be told of their right to free legal counsel and allowed a “reasonable number of phone calls” to attorneys and relatives within an hour.
“There’s so many women now doing what Jeannie did, and she was the first,” sportscaster Peggy Kusinski said of the longtime WMAQ-TV and WBBM-TV reporter.
In their first meeting since September, members argued over motions to subpoena the speaker and deadlocked on a vote to authorize a charge against Madigan for conduct unbecoming of a legislator.
The settlement in the case of Dnigma Howard brings a costly end to the January 2019 incident that became a flashpoint, dramatically altering the role of CPD officers assigned to Chicago Public Schools.
“These are widows and orphans,” the judge said. “Half a million dollars for any one of these families is a significant amount of money. Life changing, given the tragedy they went through.”
Welcome to The Hill’s Morning Report. It is Tuesday! We get you up to speed on the most important developments in politics and policy, plus trends to watch. Alexis Simendinger and Al Weaver are the co-creators, and readers can find us on Twitter @asimendinger and @alweaver22. Please recommend the Morning Report to friends and let us know what you think. CLICK HERE to subscribe!
Total U.S. coronavirus deaths reported each morning this week: Monday, 299,181; Tuesday, 300,482.
For nearly a third of a million people in the United States who have died from COVID-19 this year and the tens of thousands in this country destined to become fatalities before the coronavirus is in the past, Monday’s cheering for a vaccine cure came too late.
The price of the pandemic has been steep. The danger is rising, forcing New York’s governor and New York City’s mayor to weigh new lockdowns. Public health experts are wringing their hands that too many Americans have grown complacent, impatient and ready to refuse vaccines. In 36 days, COVID-19 will be President-elect Joe Biden’s No. 1 challenge, according to the Electoral College, which officially determined on Monday that President Trumplost his bid for a second term.
In the midst of encouraging news about the nation’s first Pfizer inoculations, Trump on Monday evening announced that Attorney General William Barr will leave the administration on Dec. 23.
Barr — assailed by detractors for advancing Trump’s agenda and also criticized by the president for saying his department found no voter fraud that would alter Biden’s victory — submitted an effusively laudatory resignation letter that in its first paragraph said that “it is incumbent on all levels of government … to promote public confidence” in the outcome of the election. The president, who named Jeffrey Rosen as acting attorney general, tweeted that Barr “has done an outstanding job!”
The New York Times: Barr to depart in eight days. In his resignation letter, he said the Justice Department is pursuing unspecified allegations of voter fraud.
The Hill’s Niall Stanage writes that no matter how determined Trump may be to focus public attention on the election, the vaccine rollout is the final test of his presidency.
Earlier on Monday, the Trump administration had envisioned a day of positive PR about vaccine doses distributed around the country. Sandra Lindsay, an intensive care nurse at Long Island Jewish Medical Center in Queens (pictured above), is believed to be the first U.S. recipient on Monday to receive Pfizer’s two-dose medication outside a clinical trial.
“I feel like healing is coming,” she said. “I hope this marks the beginning of the end of a very painful time in our history” (The New York Times).
In Washington, D.C., five health care workers at George Washington University Hospital were the first people to receive the vaccine in the nation’s capital on Monday. The group of workers included emergency medicine nurses, anesthesiologists, and labor and delivery nurses. Health and Human Services Secretary Alex Azar and U.S. Surgeon General Jerome Adams spoke about building public trust.
“We must now move from vaccines to vaccinations, and it would be a great tragedy if disparities actually worsened because the people who could most benefit from this vaccine won’t take it,” Adams said (The Washington Post).
NBC News: Hospitals opt for various methods to distribute scarce doses of the vaccine to their employees. Some chose the honor system.
The Associated Press: The first 3 million shots are being strictly rationed to front-line health workers and elder-care patients, with hundreds of millions more shots needed over the coming months to protect most Americans.
By the next spring or early summer, most Americans with no underlying health risks will “likely” be able to get the COVID-19 vaccine, Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, told MSNBC.
Goldman Sachs has predicted the United States could achieve vaccination of half the population by April (CNBC).
The Associated Press: Internationally, the chances that coronavirus shots will be shared fairly between rich and poorer nations are fading fast, some experts say. Of the approximately 12 billion doses of COVID-19 vaccines the pharmaceutical industry is expected to produce next year, about 9 billion shots have already been reserved by wealthy countries.
The Associated Press: Germany pushes for quick vaccine approval before Christmas by the European Union.
Restrictions: New York City (pictured below) should prepare for the possibility of a full shutdown, Mayor Bill de Blasio (D) and Gov. Andrew Cuomo (D) said on Monday. New York is headed toward a second full shutdown if COVID-19 cases and hospitalizations continue at their current pace. “If we do not change the trajectory, we could very well be headed to shut down” all nonessential businesses, Cuomo said (Bloomberg News and CNN). … Boston is among the cities in Massachusetts set to close gyms, museums and movie theaters as soon as Wednesday amid the latest COVID-19 surge. Cities and towns are expected to join the effort to return to phase two, step two — a three-week pause that will begin in some communities as soon as Wednesday — reflecting how municipal leaders do not think the state is doing enough to control the spread of COVID-19. “Unfortunately, we are at the point where we need to take stronger action to control COVID-19 in Boston, and urgently, to ensure our health care workers have the capacity to care for everyone in need,” Boston Mayor Martin Walsh (D) said in a statement (The Boston Globe).
POLITICS: The Electoral College on Monday officially handed Biden his election victory, cementing him as the 46th president as some Republicans finally come around to that reality after weeks of declining to recognize the election results.
The Electoral College voting process commenced Monday morning with meetings in Indiana, New Hampshire, Tennessee and Vermont, with electors in other states meeting throughout the day (New York elector Cuomo is pictured below). California’s 55 electoral votes put Biden over the top and confirmed his victory (The Hill).
The Electoral College results will be certified by members of Congress on Jan. 6. Two weeks later, Biden will be sworn in. Speaking on Monday night from Wilmington, Del., Biden blasted Trump’s efforts to overturn the results of the 2020 vote and called on the nation to move beyond the divisive election season following the certification.
“Respecting the will of the people is at the heart of our democracy even when we find those results hard to accept,” Biden said. “But that’s the obligation of those who have taken on a sworn duty to uphold the Constitution.”
“In this battle for the soul of America, democracy prevailed. … Faith in our institutions held, and the integrity of our elections remained intact,” the president-elect said. “And now it’s time to turn the page as we’ve done throughout our history, to unite and to heal.”
Gerald F. Seib: As electors gather, cold numbers show what really happened in 2020.
The New York Times: Four takeaways From Biden’s Electoral College victory.
Following the Electoral College developments, Republicans on Capitol Hill slowly started to concede that Biden is the president-elect, with many having declined to do so until Trump exhausts his legal avenues — which were largely shut off last week after two rulings by the Supreme Court — and Monday’s meeting. Among those include high-ranking GOP senators, including Sens. John Thune (S.D.), John Cornyn (Texas) and Roy Blunt (Mo.). Sen. Rob Portman (R-Ohio) said in a statement Monday night that it is time to “respect the will of the voters.”
“The orderly transfer of power is a hallmark of our democracy, and although I supported President Trump, the Electoral College vote today makes clear that Joe Biden is now President-Elect,” Portman said.
Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.), an ardent supporter of Trump, acknowledged Biden’s victory to reporters and proceeded to rattle off a number of nominees he can get behind in the new year, including Janet Yellen for Treasury secretary and Gen. Lloyd Austin to lead the Pentagon.
The Hill: Senate GOP leaders seek to put an end to election disputes.
However, the widespread support among Republicans for lawsuits attempting to overthrow the election results received some pushback on Monday as Rep. Paul Mitchell (I-Mich.), a retiring two-term lawmaker who once served in GOP leadership, announced that he was leaving the party and informed the House to change his party affiliation. In a letter addressed to Republican National Committee Chairwoman Ronna McDaniel and House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.), he explained his departure, saying that politicians, including the president, must be willing to accept the outcome of elections whether they win or lose.
“It is unacceptable for political candidates to treat our election system as though we are a third-world nation and incite distrust of something so basic as the sanctity of our vote. Further, it is unacceptable for the president to attack the Supreme Court of the United States because its judges, both liberal and conservative, did not rule with his side or that ‘the Court failed him,’” Mitchell wrote. “If Republican leaders collectively sit back and tolerate unfounded conspiracy theories and ‘stop the steal’ rallies without speaking out for our electoral process … our nation will be damaged.”
He noted that he has “spoken out clearly and forcefully in opposition to these messages,” adding that the House GOP has moved in the opposite direction, with many supporting lawsuits pushing to overturn the election results.
“As a result, I am writing to advise you both that I am withdrawing from my engagement and association with the Republican Party at both the national and state level,” he added (The Hill).
Mitchell’s announcement comes as McCarthy and House Minority Whip Steve Scalise (R-La.) face pressure to sign onto Rep. Mo Brooks’s (R-Ala.) incredibly long-shot effort to launch a floor fight next month to try to block Biden from becoming the next president at the Jan. 6 certification of the Electoral College.
The Hill: Requests for mail-in ballots top 1 million in Georgia as early voting begins in Senate runoffs.
The New York Times: Claims of a “bleak” environmental justice record appear to topple Mary Nichols’s chances to nab the Cabinet post at the Environmental Protection Agency in the Biden administration. Reuters reports on possible Biden picks for EPA by Wednesday, including Michael Regan of North Carolina, plus lists for Interior secretary and White House environmental adviser.
The Hill: Senate GOP warns Biden against picking Sally Yates as attorney general.
CNBC: Among those who congratulated Biden on Monday: Russian President Vladimir Putin.
CONGRESS: It’s crunch time on Capitol Hill as lawmakers work to secure agreements on a number of fronts, headlined by continued jostling toward securing an ever-so-elusive coronavirus relief deal by the end of the year.
With the clock ticking toward midnight, a bipartisan group of roughly a dozen lawmakers unveiled its $908 billion coronavirus relief package, splitting the proposal into two parts. The first is a $748 billion piece that includes another round of Paycheck Protection Program loan funds for small businesses, unemployment benefits, and more money for schools, vaccine distribution and other items.
The second part of the proposal includes $160 billion for state and local governments — a top priority for Democrats — and a liability shield for businesses from coronavirus-related lawsuits, which is a priority of Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.). Passage of that portion is expected to be a much steeper climb.
“I think we’ve had a Christmas miracle occur in Washington,” said Sen. Susan Collins (R-Maine). “These bills are not only bipartisan products; they are bicameral as well. My hope is that our hard work will spur our leadership on both sides.”
The text of the proposal came out two weeks after the lawmakers announced an agreed-to framework. It also comes as lawmakers reach the witching hour in talks, which have been headlined by negotiations that have stalled out on multiple occasions dating back to July.
Talks also continued at the highest levels on Monday as Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) spoke again with Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin and reiterated her opposition to the liability shield currently being discussed, which is the main obstacle to obtaining funds for states and cities.
The Washington Post: Bipartisan group of lawmakers readies two stimulus bills in effort to secure deal.
Elsewhere, lawmakers are on the verge of striking a deal on a $1.4 trillion omnibus spending bill as they look to fund the government before Friday’s deadline and avoid a shutdown.
Congressional leaders are expected to release legislative text as early as today, setting up a vote at some point in the coming days. The timing of the vote is up in the air due to a snowstorm set to hit parts of the country on Wednesday (Roll Call).
OPINION
The governor who stole Christmas — and the California businesses fighting back, by Daniel Ortner, opinion contributor, The Hill. https://bit.ly/2INxJgv
Build trust in vaccines by investing in community workers, by Rishi Manchanda and Claire Qureshi, opinion contributors, The Hill. https://bit.ly/3mjleqW
A MESSAGE FROM MASTERCARD
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WHERE AND WHEN
The House meets at 3 p.m. for a pro forma session.
The Senate meets at 10 a.m. and resumes consideration of the nomination of Thomas Kirsch to be a judge with the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 7th Circuit.
The president has no public events scheduled.
Vice President Pence travels to Bloomington, Ind., to tour Catalent Biologics and hold a roundtable discussion this afternoon about COVID-19 and Operation Warp Speed. He returns to Washington tonight.
Biden will travel to Atlanta today to campaign for two Democratic challengers competing in Jan. 5 Senate runoff contests, Jon Ossoff and Raphael Warnock. Vice President-elect Kamala Harris, a former attorney general in California, will host a virtual meeting with Democratic state attorneys general.
👉 INVITATION TODAY: The Hill Virtually Live event at 1 p.m. discusses “America’s Most Reliable Voter: New Year, New Leaders.” Joining the conversation are Rep.-elect Kai Kahele (D-Hawaii); Heather Booth, senior engagement director for the Biden-Harris campaign; Maggie’s List’s Jennifer Carroll; and more. America’s most reliable voters, the 50-plus community, made their voices heard, and newly elected officials all across the nation will soon take their seats. In part three of The Hill’s series, we look at how policymakers keep the promises made this year to older voters. Information is HERE.
👉 INVITATION: The Hill Virtually Live at 1 p.m. on Wednesday, “COVID-19, Tech and Economic Resilience,” with Sen. Tim Scott (R-S.C.); Rep. Suzan DelBene (D-Wash.); former Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano and Zoom board member; former U.S. Trade Representative Ron Kirk; Commissioner Jessica Rosenworcel of the Federal Communications Commission; and Fred Humphries, vice president of U.S. government affairs for Microsoft. As a new administration prepares to take charge, which technology shifts are here to stay? How can policymaking keep pace to ensure the American economy retains its competitive edge? In the first of three virtual events, The Hill discusses the role of technology in reenergizing the American economy. Information is HERE.
➔ CYBERSECURITY: U.S. officials and experts are reeling from a devastating cyber attack aimed at the federal government by “sophisticated” nation state backers, with the attack on an IT vendor potentially exposing sensitive government date for much of the past year (The Hill).
➔ NEWS MEDIA: Fox News is facing new competition for conservative viewers from rivals on the right amid a clash with Trump as he leaves the White House. Fox News is still the cable news ratings behemoth, and there are enormous barriers to entry for upstart cable outlets trying to break in. But fledgling conservative outlets such as Newsmax and One America News (OAN) see an opportunity to challenge Fox by buying fully into the president’s claims that the election was stolen from him. Trump has promoted both Newsmax and OAN as conservative alternatives while railing against Fox for not being sufficiently loyal (The Hill). … PBS’s “Frontline” remains a master of the concise, deeply reported, topically intense documentary dive on a subject of social concern after more than 750 episodes since 1983, writes Hank Stuever, The Washington Post’s TV critic.
➔❄ SNOW: A blockbuster winter storm is expected to unfold in the Northeast today through Thursday and unload more a foot of snow or more in some spots, according to AccuWeather. The storm will have a wide coverage area, with snow expected to fall from southern Illinois to Atlantic Canada and cover major thoroughfares including Interstate 95 along the mid-Atlantic. The accumulation of white stuff will depend on the storm’s evolving track.
And finally … This bit of vaccination history seems worth a reminder. On this day in 1827, three decades after scientist and British physician Edward Jenner discovered a method to immunize the population against smallpox, the Boston School Committee voted to require public school students to show they had been vaccinated against the disease.
The committee decided that certificates to the board of health were issued where necessary for students to receive free smallpox vaccinations. More than two decades later, Massachusetts passed the nation’s first school vaccination law, followed by New York in 1862 and Connecticut in 1872.
The last case of smallpox in the United States was recorded in 1949. For four decades, the World Health Organization has considered smallpox eradicated from the planet.
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24.) POLITICO PLAYBOOK
POLITICO Playbook: Reality, meet D.C.
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DRIVING THE DAY
MAYBE IT’S THE COLD, the impending wintry mix that’s bearing down on Washington. Maybe it’s because we’re about to leave 2020 — that wretched, disgusting year — in the rear view. As PETER BAKER put it on A22 of the NYT this morning, 2020 was “a grueling year of disease, death, racial strife, street violence, economic collapse and political discord the likes of which have not been seen in the United States in generations.”
WHO KNOWS WHAT EXACTLY PROMPTED THIS, but reality is beginning to intrude in Washington.
REALITY 1) JOE BIDEN is going to be the president of the United States. This was obvious to most breathing, thinking human beings with a pulse, but many Republican members of Congress were willfully blind to it. NYT on the Electoral College making it official
BUT A FEW OF THEM BEGAN JOINING THE REST OF US on Planet Earth on Monday. Sen. THOM TILLIS (R-N.C.) called BIDEN the “presumptive president.” Sen. LINDSEY GRAHAM (R-S.C.) — who was calling around to state election officials a few weeks ago — said “it’s a very, very narrow path for the president. I don’t see how it gets there from here, given what the Supreme Court did. But having said that, I think we’ll let those legal challenges play out.”
SEN. ROY BLUNT (R-Mo.), the chair of the inauguration, said: “We’ll deal with Vice President Biden as the president-elect. The president continues obviously to have all the options he has available to him, but the electoral vote today was significant.”
RUSSIAN PRESIDENT VLADIMIR PUTIN took it further than most Republicans, straight up congratulating BIDEN after a month of saying he was waiting for the process to play out. (AP/Moscow) … Putin’s congrats tweet
REALITY 2) It seems painfully obvious to nearly everyone on Capitol Hill that a Covid relief deal is at hand — should the leaders want it. This deal would include a mix of a renewal of the Paycheck Protection Program, vaccine money, rental assistance, unemployment benefits and school money. If President DONALD TRUMP wakes up from his fever dream in which he’s won the presidency, he could probably convince enough people to support direct payments, since Republicans and Democrats are on board with this.
SENATE MINORITY LEADER CHUCK SCHUMER andSpeaker NANCY PELOSI onMonday both said they were for state and local funding, but declined to draw a bright red line — as they had before. Senate Majority Leader MITCH MCCONNELL did not even mention liability overhaul in his floor remarks. State and local and liability are not attainable at the moment. Those two pieces are clearly falling away. Now the question becomes: Do the two sides have the courage, desire and political will to get this done? The scary thing is if they don’t get it done this month, it might never get done.
REALITY 3) THIS COVID-OMNIBUS COMBO can get real messy real quickly. If they release the omnibus bill today — that’s Tuesday — maybe it can make it to the House floor Thursday. Floor consideration in the Senate by Friday — the deadline — seems tough, since all senators would need to consent for a quick debate and vote. If Congress needs a short-term stopgap, then maybe the Senate would stay in for the weekend to get it done. In that scenario, would they give themselves longer to try to reach a Covid deal? Could the government shut down?
Good Tuesday morning. 36 DAYS until BIDEN takes office.
YES, BIDEN IS OFFICIALLY PRESIDENT … AND HE RAPS TRUMP FOR HIS ALTERNATE REALITY — NYT’S MICHAEL SHEAR: “Biden calls Trump’s attacks on voting ‘unconscionable’”: “President-elect Joseph R. Biden Jr. on Monday denounced the attacks on voting by President Trump and his allies, calling them ‘unconscionable’ and saying that no officials should ever face the kind of pressure they received to falsely proclaim an election to be fraudulent.
“‘They saw it with their own eyes,’ Mr. Biden said, speaking in Wilmington, Del. ‘And they wouldn’t be bullied into saying anything different.’ Mr. Biden’s forceful denunciation of the president’s tactics over the past several weeks came hours after the Electoral College formally cast its votes to replace Mr. Trump on Jan. 20. It was time, Mr. Biden said, ‘to turn the page’ on the election and move on with the business of the country.
“‘We the people voted,’ he said. ‘Faith in our institutions held. The integrity of our elections remains intact. And so now it is time to turn the page, as we’ve done throughout our history. To unite. To heal.’”
— AND THIS … MICHIGAN REP. PAUL MITCHELL announced on Twitter he was leaving the Republican Party. This is two weeks before the end of the session. MITCHELL did not run for reelection. So he’s out with a few weeks left in his political career, with very little on the line.
BARR IS OUT … WAPO’S MATT ZAPOTOSKY, JOSH DAWSEY and DEVLIN BARRETT: “William P. Barr to depart as attorney general, Trump announces”: “William P. Barr is stepping down as attorney general, ending a controversial tenure in which critics say he repeatedly used the Justice Department to aid President Trump’s allies, only to have Trump turn on him when he did not announce investigations of political foes and disputed White House claims of widespread election fraud.
“Trump revealed the move on Twitter, writing that he and Barr had a ‘nice meeting’ at the White House, and that Barr would ‘be leaving just before Christmas to spend the holidays with his family.’ Trump also posted a copy of Barr’s resignation letter, in which Barr indicated he had just provided the president an ‘update’ on the department’s review of voter fraud allegations.
“Barr’s letter said he was ‘greatly honored’ to have served in the administration, and heaped praise on Trump for his ‘many successes and unprecedented achievements.’ Trump on Twitter claimed of Barr, ‘Our relationship has been a very good one, he has done an outstanding job!’” WaPo
NEXT UP — WSJ: “Who Is Jeffrey Rosen, Who Will Succeed Attorney General William Barr?”by Aruna Viswanatha: “Deputy Attorney General Jeffrey Rosen, who President Trump said Monday would succeed outgoing Attorney General William Barr, is expected to lead the Justice Department in an acting capacity until President-elect Joe Biden’s inauguration. Since his confirmation to the No. 2 post in May 2019, Mr. Rosen has taken a leading role on some corporate cases, including the antitrust case against Google. He doesn’t have prior experience as a prosecutor.
“He will take over the top job at the Justice Department upon Mr. Barr’s departure on Dec. 23. Mr. Barr resigned on Monday. Other Justice Department officials said they didn’t expect Mr. Rosen to deviate from Mr. Barr’s policies. However, they noted he had been involved in sensitive litigation that the White House had an interest in, including a lawsuit against Mr. Trump’s former national security adviser, John Bolton, over the publication of his book in June.
“Mr. Rosen has spent most of his career in the private sector and at several other government agencies. They include the Transportation Department where he served in the No. 2 job before joining the Justice Department as deputy attorney general.”
CONFIRMATION HEARING PREP … NYT’S ZOLAN KANNO-YOUNGS: “Families at Border Present Familiar Test for Biden’s Homeland Security Pick:The Biden administration will be expected to balance demands for more lenient policies with moderates’ concerns that any show of tolerance could lead to more illegal migration.”
THE CORONAVIRUS CONTINUES TO RAGE … 16.5 MILLION Americans have tested positive for the coronavirus. … 300,482 Americans have died.
— “Washington navigates ethical minefield on getting first Covid shots,”by Alice Miranda Ollstein: “The first Covid shots will soon be available to top officials and essential staff in the White House, the Pentagon and Congress. But they’re already facing a political and ethical dilemma over who should be at the front of the line.
“While most of the scarce Pfizer vaccine is now on its way to hospitals and nursing homes across the country, some of the first tranche was reserved for federal leaders to ensure the government can continue to function as U.S. deaths and hospitalizations peak. President Donald Trump, President-elect Joe Biden and leaders in Congress could help themselves to it in the coming days. The question is: should they?
“On Monday, Biden’s transition team said no decision had been made, and that the president-elect is consulting with his chief medical adviser Dr. Anthony Fauci on timing. Trump will hold off for now, but Secret Service agents, the White House medical unit staff and those who run critical operations like the Situation Room will be vaccinated on a staggered basis in the coming weeks, to ensure they don’t all suffer unexpected side effects at once. Congress still is waiting to find out how many doses will be available and when, but some lawmakers are already vowing not [to] elbow their way ahead.
“‘I will not skip the line,’ Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) declared in a floor speech on Monday. But ‘as soon as it’s appropriate and recommended,’ he added, ‘We should all lead by example, take the vaccine and tell our constituents to take it as well.’”
THERE’S AN ARGUMENT THAT MANY MAKE IN THE CAPITOL that members of Congress are not like us — nor should they be. They’re forced to congregate when the rest of the world is staying at home, they travel during a pandemic, and some say they should be first in line to get the vaccine. This is the same argument they made months ago when they declined to test members in the Capitol. They wised up, now testing is readily available in the Capitol, and everyone is much safer and happier.
TRUMP’S TUESDAY — The president has nothing on his schedule. VP MIKE PENCE will travel to Bloomington, Ind., and tour the pharmaceutical company Catalent at 1:25 p.m. He will lead a roundtable discussion on Operation Warp Speed at 1:45 p.m. before returning to Washington.
BIDEN will receive the President’s Daily Brief. He will travel to Atlanta to campaign for Jon Ossoff and Raphael Warnock. VP-elect KAMALA HARRIS will receive the President’s Daily Brief. She will also host a virtual meeting with Democratic attorneys general.
HMM — ALEX ISENSTADT: “Trump antagonizes Republicans with Georgia fundraising ploy”: “President Donald Trump couldn’t make it any clearer: He needs his supporters to fork over cash for the all-important Georgia Senate runoff elections. ‘We MUST defend Georgia from the Dems!’ he wrote in one recent text message. ‘I need YOU to secure a WIN in Georgia,’ he said in another. ‘Help us WIN both Senate races in Georgia & STOP Socialist Dems,’ he pleaded a few days later.
“There’s just one hitch: Trump’s new political machine is pocketing most of the dough — and the campaigns of the Georgia senators competing in the Jan. 5 races aren’t getting a cent. Trump’s aggressive fundraising blitz appears to be devoted to helping the party defend Georgia’s two Senate seats and, with them, the Senate majority. But the fine print shows that most of the proceeds are going toward Trump’s newly launched PAC, which he plans to use to fund his future political activities. Only a fraction is going to the Republican National Committee, which is investing $20 million into the runoffs.”
“On the Sunday before Thanksgiving, Kemp flew up to Washington to introduce Trump to Kelly Loeffler, an Atlanta business executive he wanted to appoint to fill his state’s open U.S. Senate seat. But when Kemp and Loeffler finally got their audience with the president, Kemp presented Loeffler as a fait accompli — telling Trump that he wanted the president to meet the woman he was planning to name to the Senate.
“Well, if you’ve already made your decision, Trump grumbled, then I’m not sure why you’re here, according to people familiar with the conversation. Trump later complained to aides that Kemp was rude and impolite — never forgiving the Georgia governor for what he viewed as a major slight.
“The strain between the two Republicans has now boiled over into a full-blown feud in the aftermath of Trump’s 2020 electoral defeat, as the president has fixated on his loss in Georgia as a humiliation that he blames in large part on Kemp. Trump lost the solidly Republican state by approximately 12,000 votes and is furious with Kemp for not heeding his calls to question the integrity of the state’s election results.”
DAN DIAMOND: “Trump’s drug cards clear key hurdle following pressure from White House”: “President Donald Trump’s stalled campaign promise to send $200 drug-discount cards to seniors has new life after an obscure-but-important industry panel on Monday night gave its blessing, ending weeks of resistance to the plan.
“The Trump administration has been trying to revive the Medicare discount cards after the plan, abruptly announced in September, ran into resistance inside the administration over questions [about its] cost and legality. But as POLITICO reported last week, a new hurdle had recently emerged: an industry consortium that helps the Internal Revenue Service oversee benefit cards balked at the plan, raising concerns that Trump’s promised, one-time drug discounts didn’t meet typical standards for health-benefit cards.
“That group, the Special Interest Group for Inventory Information Approval System Standards, or SIGIS, helps govern electronic point-of-sale transactions, and its approval is essential for mass-producing millions of cards. The panel had come under pressure from the White House and Treasury Department to support the plan. After weeks of appeals from the administration, it did so Monday — stunning even some officials who were involved with the plan and believed the panel wouldn’t budge.”
VALLEY TALK — “FTC Demands Social-Media, Operations Data From Big Tech Companies,”by WSJ’s Ryan Tracy: “The Federal Trade Commission on Monday ordered nine prominent social-media and internet companies to provide a litany of data about their operations as part of a wide-ranging study into their business practices.
“The orders demand the companies turn over detailed, private business information about how they track Americans’ online activities and how they use that data. Companies receiving letters included Amazon.com Inc., Facebook Inc. and its subsidiary WhatsApp Inc., Reddit Inc., Snap Inc., Twitter Inc., Alphabet Inc.’s YouTube LLC, Discord Inc. and TikTok owner ByteDance Ltd., which is based in Beijing.
“The announcement isn’t a law-enforcement action and doesn’t carry any immediate penalties, though the information gathered could form the basis for future action by the FTC. The agency has broad legal authority to seek information from U.S. companies and is also empowered to police unfair and deceptive business practices.”
SPOTTED at Bluelight Strategies’ 26th annual Latkes & Vodkas over Zoom on Monday night, hosted by Steve Rabinowitz and Aaron Keyak: Reps. Ted Deutch (D-Fla.), Steve Cohen (D-Tenn.) and Brad Schneider (D-Ill.), Tom Vilsack, Mel Levine, Sam Coppersmith, Joan Nathan, Paula Shoyer, Jacob Blumenthal, Julie Schonfeld, Avis Miller, Burt Visotzky, Jan Caryl Kaufman, Jack Moline, Rob Satloff …
… David Makovsky,Mark Levin, Jonathan Jacoby, Ann Lewis, Toby Dershowitz, Heather Booth, Matt Nosanchuk, Marc Stanley, Cherrie Daniels, Chanan Weissman, Ira Forman, Tevi Troy, Noam Neusner, Ken Marcus, Teresa Vilmain, William Daroff, Aviva Kempner, Tom Kahn, Laurie Moskowitz, Judy Bartnoff, Gil Preuss, Doug Finch, Ari Roth, Linda Lourie, Greg Rosenbaum, Keith Allred and Laura Quinn.
TEAM SCALISE MOVES — Marty Reiser will be policy director for House Minority Whip Steve Scalise (R-La.), taking over from Bill Hughes, who is retiring after 31 years in Congress. Reiser previously was deputy policy director for Scalise. …
… David Planning — special assistant to the president for legislative affairs — will be GOP staff director on the House Small Business Committee. He is also a Scalise and Patrick McHenry alum.
TRANSITIONS — John Walsh will be COS for Sen. Ed Markey (D-Mass.). He previously was Markey’s campaign manager. … Arie Dana will be COS for Rep.-elect Michelle Steel (R-Calif.). Dana previously was COS for Steel on the Orange County Board of Supervisors. … Kristin Walker and Josh Arnold will be COS and deputy COS for Sen.-elect Cynthia Lummis (R-Wyo.). Walker previously was owner of Three Elephant Public Relations. Arnold previously was director of strategic partnerships at Heritage Action. …
…Patrick Mocete and Callie Strock are joining Rep.-elect Young Kim’s (R-Calif.) office as COS and comms director. Mocete previously was Kim’s campaign manager and is an Ed Royce and John Katko alum. Strock previously was press secretary for the House Energy and Commerce GOP and is a Will Hurd alum. … Dillon Iwu is now director of government affairs at the American Investment Council. He most recently was a senior field representative for Rep. Karen Bass (D-Calif.). … Kendall Ridley will be senior director of comms at the Council for Responsible Nutrition. She previously was senior manager of external communication at CoStar Group.
ENGAGED — Eli Woerpel, legislative director for Rep. Dan Meuser (R-Pa.), and Annie Humphrey, legislative assistant for Rep. Frank Lucas (R-Okla.), got engaged Saturday. Both are from Kansas, but they didn’t meet until they both moved to D.C. The two met at Molly Malone’s watching their Kansas City Royals win the World Series.Pic… Another pic
BIRTHDAY OF THE DAY: Jeff Le, U.S. state and local public policy lead for VMware. How he got his start: “My career has taken a winding path in the areas of external and foreign relations, national and homeland security, and managing cabinet affairs for former California Gov. Jerry Brown. My big break in public policy? Lending my laptop plug to a Hill staffer at a crowded Starbucks a month after moving to town and chatting about the Backstreet Boys. This led to a Hill internship. Two lessons here: you never know when or who will see potential in you. And appreciation for boy bands may play an important role in your professional life.” Playbook Q&A
BIRTHDAYS: Sen. Mark Warner (D-Va.) is 66 … Rep.-elect Lauren Boebert (R-Colo.) is 34 … retired Gen. John R. Allen,president of Brookings, is 67 … Ruy Teixeira … Donna Brazile … Bill Knapp (h/ts Hilary Rosen) … Erin Dwyer … Heather Booth is 75 (h/ts Jon Haber) … Tim Dickson … Marc Mezvinsky … Matt Paul … Tanya Bjork … Karen Hicks … Maggie Brickerman … Maggie Gau … Carson Pfingston (h/ts Teresa Vilmain) … Corey Sherman … Andrew Cote, acting deputy assistant secretary of Defense for special operations and combating terrorism … John Phillips is 78 … Jim Dornan, VP for business and policy development at 720 Strategies … Lauren French, senior comms director for Climate Power 2020 … POLITICO’s Isabel Dobrin … Anna Jager … Facebook’s Devon Kearns … Tara Corrigan, COO of the Messina Group …
… Lenny Young, COS for Rep. Julia Brownley (D-Calif.) … Fox News’ Griff Jenkins is 5-0 … Katie Hunt … Meridith Webster… Kristen Scholer, senior anchor at Cheddar … David Adler, chair of BizBash (h/t Tammy Haddad) … Winter Casey (h/t Tim Burger) … Gavin Ross … Patrick Oakford … Bobby Moran … Danyell Tremmel … Mark Siedlecki … Gabriel Groisman … Andy Polesovsky … Israel “Izzy” Ortega … Oliver Koppell is 8-0 … Alison Omens … Deborah Koenigsberger Gutierrez … McCauley Mateja … Tony Kreindler is 51 … Holly Lane … Jordan Richardson … Frannie LaSala … Diane Kepley … Emily Pierce … Sarah Sullivan … Abby Matousek … Jimmy LaSalvia is 5-0 … Mark Patterson … Jan Eberly … Laura Nevitt … Theana Kastens … Schuyler Softy … Brian Haley … Arkady Rotenberg is 69
“In the same way, let your light shine before others, so that they may see your good works and give glory to your Father who is in heaven,” (Matthew 5:16, ESV).
By Shane Vander Hart on Dec 14, 2020 08:37 pm
The Electoral College has voted, and Joe Biden is now officially, if not before, the President-Elect, but some Republicans still believe the election is not over.
White House Senior Advisor Stephen Miller said on Fox & Friends this morning, “The only date in the Constitution is January 20. So we have more than enough time to right the wrong of this fraudulent election result and certify Donald Trump as the winner of the election.”
“As we speak, today, an alternate slate of electors in the contested states is going to vote and we’re going to send those results up to Congress. This will ensure that all of our legal remedies remain open. That means that if we win these cases in the courts, that we can direct that the alternate state of electors be certified,” he added.
Except this is a pipe dream. No court will overturn the Electoral College vote that has now been certified.
The 1887 Electoral Count Act (which is poorly written) theoretically allows for dueling slates of electors from contested states. An explainer by Tom Hals in Reuters states, “States with close contests between Republican President Donald Trump and his Democratic rival Joe Biden could produce competing slates of electors, one certified by the governor and the other by the legislature.”
“The risk of this happening is heightened in the battleground states of Michigan, North Carolina, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin, which have Democratic governors and Republican-controlled legislatures,” he added.
When Congress meets on January 6, 2021, if there were dueling slates of electors, theoretically, the House could approve one slate of electors and the Senate for the other.
While the Trump campaign organized alternate electors to vote, no state legislature has certified alternate electors.
Not that it would be constitutional for a state legislature to violate their state law and state constitution to certify an alternate slate of electors contrary to the state’s popular vote anyway, and it would certainly violate federal law.
U.S. Rep. Mo Brooks, R-Mo., tweeted, “In presidential election contests, Congress has a superior role under the 12th Amendment to the Constitution than the Supreme Court, any federal court, or any state court. Congress is empowered to certify electoral college vote submissions, or not.”
Is he right?
The section of the 12th Amendment he is referring to reads, “The President of the Senate shall, in the presence of the Senate and House of Representatives, open all the certificates and the votes shall then be counted; — The person having the greatest number of votes for President, shall be the President, if such a number be a majority of the whole number of Electors appointed; and if no such person have such majority, then from the persons having the highest numbers not exceeding three on the list of those voted for as President, the House of Representatives shall choose immediately, by ballot, the President. But in choosing the President, the votes shall be taken by states, the representation from each state having one vote…”
According to the 12th Amendment, the House could supplant the candidate for President who has a plurality if a majority is not reached.
It reads, “Upon such reading of any such certificate or paper, the President of the Senate shall call for objections, if any. Every objection shall be made in writing, and shall state clearly and concisely, and without argument, the ground thereof, and shall be signed by at least one Senator and one Member of the House of Representatives before the same shall be received. When all objections so made to any vote or paper from a State shall have been received and read, the Senate shall thereupon withdraw, and such objections shall be submitted to the Senate for its decision; and the Speaker of the House of Representatives shall, in like manner, submit such objections to the House of Representatives for its decision; and no electoral vote or votes from any State which shall have been regularly given by electors whose appointment has been lawfully certified to according to section 6 of this title from which but one return has been received shall be rejected, but the two Houses concurrently may reject the vote or votes when they agree that such vote or votes have not been so regularly given by electors whose appointment has been so certified.”
Here’s the confusing part, the law says that “no electoral vote or votes from any State which shall been regularly given by electors whose appointment has been lawfully certified to according to section 6 of this title from which but one return has been received shall be rejected.”
Then it says Congress can reject the vote or votes if they concurrently vote that those electoral votes were not “regularly given” and “lawfully certified.”
They shall not, but they may??? It’s convoluted.
I’m not sure their legal rationale for that 3 U.S.C. § 6 (1948) spells out the criteria “regularly given” and “lawfully certified” electoral votes clearly. Also, per 3 U.S.C. § 5 (1948), the final determination for controversies over electors shall be determined at least six days before the Electoral College votes. This is called Safe Harbor day, and it was on December 8, 2020.
So, technically, the House and Senate could vote to reject electoral college votes, I guess, but there’s no chance that it would pass. It’s questionable that rejecting a vote that meets criteria standards under 3 U.S. Code § 6 would be legal. It’s most definitely unconstitutional because nowhere in the Constitution’s text does it give Congress this kind of authority.
All the 12th Amendment allows is for the votes to be counted in the presence of Congress. It makes no mention of the vote requiring Congressional approval.
So, while some on Team Trump want to state the fight to win the presidency is not over, in reality it is.
Launched in 2006, Caffeinated Thoughts reports news and shares commentary about culture, current events, faith and state and national politics from a Christian and conservative point of view.
President Donald Trump has no public events on his schedule for Tuesday. Keep up with the president on Our President’s Schedule Page. President Trump’s Itinerary for 12/15/20 – note: this page will be updated during the day if events warrant All Times EST No public events White House Briefing Schedule None Content created by Conservative Daily …
One of the biggest cliches in politics is that the Democratic and Republican parties are polarized ideologically. If there is one thing Democrats and Republicans can agree on these days, it’s that there aren’t many things on which they agree. Polarization’s consequences are especially evident on Capitol Hill, where lawmakers regularly call for action in …
Nation of Islam leader Louis Farrakhan advised his followers against coronavirus vaccination in a speech Saturday, calling the breakthrough vaccine “toxic waste” that would harm the black community. Farrakhan, 87, also sprinkled several anti-white pejoratives throughout his 70-minute speech, referring to white people as “crackers” and “devils.” “We are so frightened over this Covid, now …
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China Biden, also known as “Beijing Biden,” likes the communist Chinese. He does their bidding—for profit, of course. We all know Hunter cut some terrific deals with communist-run businesses in China and raked in millions of dollars, thanks to his dad’s position as Vice President during the Obama administration. Of course, his father, whom he …
U.S. Attorney John Durham has added prosecutors to his team investigating the origins of the Trump-Russia probe, a top law enforcement official told Fox News. According to Fox News, the official said that Durham is making “excellent progress” in his investigation. The move comes as President Donald Trump and some congressional Republicans have ramped up …
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From completely unnecessary and counter-productive covid lockdowns to the forced wearing of worthless masks, to Biden’s promise of a “dark winter” if he is elected to the White House, Democrats are directly to blame for the horrendous economic circumstances of America and the societal damage being done to this nation, and then being redone by …
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Google’s apps experienced outages across the world, including Calendar, Gmail, Hangouts, Maps, Meet, Stadia and YouTube, The New York Times reported Monday. Google outages over multiple applications occurred Monday morning but cleared up shortly after, according to its Google Workspace Status Dashboard. “We’re aware of an ongoing issue with multiple products and our team is …
A former Dublin, Ohio, man pleaded guilty in U.S. District Court today to conspiring to steal exosome-related trade secrets concerning the research, identification and treatment of a range of pediatric medical conditions. Yu Zhou, 50, also pleaded guilty to conspiring to commit wire fraud. Zhou admitted to conspiring to steal scientific trade secrets related to …
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When Barak Obama was president he said, “It wasn’t right that we were No.1 in the world” and that we should be no different than anyone else. Since then and in previous years before that democrats have been trying to turn this country into a socialist/ communist country and that includes attacking our holidays in …
Media Keeps Mistaking Joe Biden for a Roman Catholic
Happy Tuesday, travelers on the Kruiser Morning Briefing way. There’s a fire pit and tacos out in the compound’s courtyard.
After having made it through the Obama years as an observer and critic of the mainstream media I really didn’t think that there could be anything more mouthbarf-inducing than the cloying fan club treatment the MSM gave him.
Wow, did I miss the mark on that one.
The Biden days, weeks, or months (no one seriously thinks this guy is going to last years in office) are going to see the media redefining “wearisome.”
I didn’t spend much time pondering just how insufferable the media might become during a Biden presidency for two reasons: I was holding out hope that the Democrats wouldn’t be able to steal the election and I didn’t think that the faux journoscum could shred their First Amendment responsibilities any further.
There is a clear reason why they are going to be worse now.
All of the people in the leftmedia were identifying as swooning teenage schoolgirls when The Lightbringer was in office. The weren’t really reporting, they were keeping feelings journals, dotting every “i” with a heart and fighting to keep tears of joy from ruining the pages. They were on “Isn’t he dreamy?” autopilot.
The huge difference now is that none of them really like Biden that much, if at all. To fulfill their lust for getting rid of ORANGE MAN BAD, the MSM was forced to install in the Oval Office an empty-head moron who can’t navigate three sentences without losing his ability to speak his native language. The poor dears who have to keep this charade afloat have to go way over the top to do so. They need to over-correct by making things up just so they can pretend that there is some “there” there with Drooling Joe.
That brings me to this bit of tedium in The Washington Post from last week that claimed Biden could “redefine what it means to be ‘a Catholic in good standing.’”
Despite these divisions, Biden is poised to make his mark on American Catholicism. For the next four years, the country will see its president go to Mass every Sunday, take out a rosary at times of contemplation, and quote his favorite childhood nuns and Catholic poets. And it will watch him try to navigate polarizing issues of special interest to his church that John F. Kennedy never had to take a position on — abortion, LGBTQ rights and climate change among them.
“It’s potentially a game-changer in American politics,” said Kathleen Sprows Cummings, head of the Cushwa Center for the Study of American Catholicism at the University of Notre Dame. When Biden has spoken in detail about his faith, he has emphasized the values of welcome and decency, and that the worst sin is the abuse of power. With those images in the White House, Cummings said, “there is a potential to expand our national conversation about faith in public life beyond the abortion question. When you look at the whole picture you see someone who is a person of faith in a way [President] Trump is clearly not. Trump focuses on this world and on himself.”
The reason that most practicing Roman Catholics — myself included — like being Catholic is that the Church doesn’t get blown about by the political and social whims of the day.
It’s a pure leftist media fever dream that a president who received endorsements from every abortion group in America is in a position to define or redefine anything about Catholicism. It’s not a minor issue that can be glossed over for political convenience. Even the current pope — who isn’t exactly a fan favorite among many Catholics — doesn’t offer any wiggle room here. Francis has repeatedly spoken out against abortion and euthanasia, reaffirming the sanctity of life from the moment of conception through old age.
The American media exhibits this kind of arrogance whenever it’s time for the Church to elect a new pope. Most who write about or report on Catholicism don’t have the slightest clue what they’re talking about. The central component of the aforementioned fever dream is the idea that somehow the Roman Church will toss aside more than two millennia of tradition and become something more palatable to American leftists.
I wish I knew how to say “Oh HELL no!” in Latin.
Joe Biden isn’t Henry VIII. He doesn’t get to make up a new church that he likes better.
And he’s not quoting any poets. The guy can’t tell you what he’s having for breakfast while he’s eating it. Stop already.
Biden claims victory, slams Trump . . . President-elect Joe Biden delivered a forceful rebuke on Monday to President Donald Trump’s attacks on the legitimacy of his victory, hours after winning the state-by-state Electoral College vote that officially determines the U.S. presidency. “In this battle for the soul of America, democracy prevailed,” Biden said in a prime-time speech from his hometown of Wilmington, Delaware. “Now it’s time to turn the page, as we’ve done throughout our history – to unite, to heal.” Monday’s vote, typically a formality, assumed outsized significance. Reuters
Biden claims he has a “bit of a cold” . . . President-elect Joe Biden confirmed that he is battling a slight cold following a speech on Monday night in which he stopped several times to clear his throat while addressing the nation on the Electoral College’s vote to formally confirm his victory. Biden’s voice was slightly hoarse during the address, which took place shortly after he surpassed the 270-vote threshold required to win the White House. “Thank you, I have a little bit of a cold, I’m sorry, but look, you know, you did it, you did it, not a joke,” Biden said during the live stream. The Biden-Harris team has undergone frequent tests for COVID-19 in recent weeks. Biden was most recently tested for the virus last Friday, according to White House pool reports. That test came back negative. Fox News
Uh, last test Friday? Pray for Joe Biden’s health. And you know why.
Coronavirus
Nurse is first in US to get the vaccine . . . The front-line worker widely believed to be the first pe rson to get the COVID-19 vaccine in the United States says she felt reassured after getting her shot. “I felt a huge sense of relief, hope for everyone around the world that healing is coming, that we took a step in the right direction to finally put an end to this COVID-19 pandemic,” Sandra Lindsay, an ICU nurse at Long Island Jewish Medical Center in Queens, New York, said Monday. Washington Examiner
See, now that the election is over, we can say these things.
New mutation in UK may cause more spreading . . . British scientists are trying to establish whether the rapid spread in southern England of a new variant of the virus that causes COVID-19 is linked to key mutations they have detected in the strain, they said on Tuesday. The mutations include changes to the important “spike” protein that the SARS-CoV-2 coronavirus uses to infect human cells, a group of scientists tracking the genetics of the virus said, but it is not yet clear whether these are making it more infectious. Reuters
Moderna vaccine on the way . . . Moderna Inc.’s vaccine is safe and effective for preventing Covid-19, U.S. regulators said, clearing the way for a second shot to quickly gain emergency authorization and add to the country’s sprawling immunization effort. The Food and Drug Administration’s staff said in a report on Tuesday that the experimental vaccine is 94.1% effective at preventing symptomatic Covid-19, confirming earlier results released by the company. Bloomberg
Veterans Affairs to prioritize minority veterans for vaccine . . .
The Department of Veterans Affairs will prioritize black, Hispanic, and Native American veterans for receiving COVID-19 vaccines.
“We’re … considering the disproportionate impact of COVID-19 on racial and ethnicity minority groups as we plan for how to offer COVID-19 vaccines to veterans,” the VA said in a document released last week. Black veterans have been disproportionately affected by COVID-19, accounting for 16% of cases and 22% of deaths in the VA system while only accounting for 12% of the veteran population in the country, according to Stars and Stripes. Washington Examiner
Fauci: US to achieve herd immunity be second quarter 2021 . . . Dr. Anthony Fauci said the US could achieve “herd immunity” by late spring or early summer, now that a COVID-19 vaccine is finally rolling out. “The real bottom line is when do you get the overwhelming majority of the population vaccinated so that you can get that umbrella of herd immunity?” Faucisaid Monday. “I believe if we’re efficient about it and we convince people to get vaccinated, we can accomplish that by the end of the second quarter of early 2021, namely by the end of the late spring [or] early summer.” New York Post
Politics
Hunter Biden failed to report $400K in income from Burisma . . . This is going to be the laptop that keeps on giving. Assuming that’s where the email is coming from. According to Fox News: Hunter Biden did not report “approximately $400,000” in income he collected from his position on the board of Ukrainian natural gas firm Burisma Holdings when he joined in 2014, according to an attorney for his firm who noted that his tax returns needed to be amended, a new email obtained by Fox News shows. White House Dossier
I mean, come one, we’ve all done it. You’ve got $400,000 laying around and you’re like, “Where did that come from?” And so you don’t report it.
Barr departs — but apparently on good terms . . . Attorney General Bill Barr is out, but confounding the predictions of many, he is apparently leaving on good terms with President Trump. “I am greatly honored that you called on me to serve your Administration and the American people once again as Attorney General,” Barr wrote in his letter of resignation. “I am proud to have played a role in the many successes and unprecedented achievements you have delivered for the American people. Your record is all the more historic because you accomplished it in the face of relentless, implacable resistance.” White House Dossier
Georgia secretary of state orders audit of mail-in ballot signatures . . . Georgia’s secretary of state announced on Monday that an audit of signatures on mail-in ballots in one country will be carried out ‘to restore confidence’ – although it will not change the results of the November 3 election. Brad Raffensperger, a Republican, has been under pressure for weeks to investigate what Donald Trump claims was massive voter fraud in the state. Both Raffenspeger and the Republican governor, Brian Kemp, have insisted that there has not been widespread election malpractice, but that has not reassured Trump or his supporters. Daily Mail
Now?
Biden transition teeming with Big Tech insiders . . . Agency review teams for the Biden-Harris presidential transition have added Silicon Valley insiders in droves, an analysis shows. The teams are charged with planning for the incoming presidency, holding sway over thousands of political and staff appointments, including positions atop the Federal Trade Commission, Federal Communications Commission, and leading the Justice Department’s antitrust division.
Facebook is fending off regulatory action by the FTC, with Google fighting off the Department of Justice. Washington Examiner
Surge of illegal immigrants at border as Biden prepares to take power . . . These people understand what’s going on. They know quite well that they are going to get amnesty from Joe Biden. Expect even more people to show up at the border next month.
According to the Washington Examiner: “United States border officials encountered more than 70,000 migrants who tried to enter the U.S. from Mexico illegally in November, four times the number of people seen in April. White House Dossier
Major networks silent on Cuomo sexual harassment claim . . . Several major cable networks failed to report on sexual harassment allegations against Gov. Andrew Cuomo in the wake of the Sunday accusations, according to a media watchdog group. CBS, NBC and ABC were all silent on Sunday night — the same day Cuomo’s former aide Lindsey Boylan tweeted out the claims against her ex-boss, according to the Media Research Center. The group said the same networks’ Monday morning news shows also failed to report on the allegations, which Cuomo has denied. Fox News, meanwhile, ran a report on the news at about 6:10 p.m. Sunday. New York Post
Me too for you, but not for An-drew?
Hillary calls for abolishing the Electoral College . . . Hillary Clinton is once again calling for the scrapping of the Electoral College to pick presidents. The 2016 Democratic presidential nominee and former secretary of state, senator and first lady, made her latest plea after casting an electoral vote for President-elect Joe Biden and Vice President-elect Kamala Harris on Monday. “I believe we should abolish the Electoral College and select our president by the winner of the popular vote, same as every other office,” Clinton tweeted. Fox News
Well, she’s got a little axe to grind against the Electoral College, doesn’t she?
Biden headed to Georgia to campaign for a Democratic Senate majority . . . President-elect Joe Biden is traveling to Atlanta on Tuesday, aiming to boost Senate candidates Jon Ossoff and Raphael Warnock and propel Democrats to a majority in the upper chamber.
The Senate runoffs taking place on Jan. 5 will decide the control of the Senate majority for the next two years. The Hill
National Security
Thousands of CCP members employed by US and European companies . . . A leaked Chinese Communist Party membership roll shows thousands of party members employed by American and European companies. Employees of companies key to American national security are among the two million CCP members listed in the data leak. Two such companies—Qualcomm and Boeing—regularly receive contracts from the Department of Defense and host a combined 516 CCP members. Other companies, such as HSBC, Volkswagen, and Hewlett-Packard, also employ thousands of CCP members. Washington Free Beacon
International
Covid economic slowdown to cause massive hunger among kids . . . The global economic downturn ushered in by the COVID-19 pandemic could end up killing thousands of children around the world while leaving millions more malnourished, a new study has found. Approximately 168,000 children are “likely” to be killed by starvation before the global economy recovers, according to the new study from the Standing Together for Nutrition Consortium. The Consortium is made up of 30 different international organizations, including the World Bank, UNICEF and USAID. Daily Caller
Poor countries face long wait for vaccine . . . With Americans, Britons and Canadians rolling up their sleeves to receive coronavirus vaccines, the route out of the pandemic now seems clear to many in the West, even if the rollout will take many months. But for poorer countries, the road will be far longer and rougher. The ambitious initiative known as COVAX created to ensure the entire world has access to COVID-19 vaccines has secured only a fraction of the 2 billion doses it hopes to buy over the next year, has yet to confirm any actual deals to ship out vaccines and is short on cash. Associated Press
Putin congratulates Biden . . . Russian President Vladimir Putin on Tuesday congratulated Joe Biden on his victory in the U.S. presidential election, after Biden won the state-by-state Electoral College vote that officially determines the U.S. presidency, the Kremlin said. The Kremlin had said it would wait for the official results of the election before commenting on its outcome, even as other nations congratulated Biden on the win in the days after the Nov. 3 vote. “For my part, I am ready for interaction and contact with you,” the Kremlin cited Putin as saying in a statement. Reuters
Money
Pelosi, Schumer under pressure to strike coronavirus deal . . . Democratic leaders Nancy Pelosi and Chuck Schumer face pressure to allow a vote on a Covid-19 assistance plan without the aid for states they’ve said is vital, after a bipartisan group split that and liability protections from other relief spending. With the congressional session winding down and a government funding package needed by Friday, time is running out for an agreement on the two most contentious and partisan pandemic-relief issues — Covid-19 liability protections for employers and aid for state and local governments. Bloomberg
You should also know
Blizzard to hit the Northeast . . . All eyes are on the Northeast as a significant winter storm is going to develop and bring epic snowfall totals, possible blizzard conditions and ice from the Mid-Atlantic to New England. A system moving across the Plains will bring measurable snow to parts of Oklahoma and Texas. That same area of low pressure will move off the southeast coast and become our nor’easter Wednesday into Thursday. Fox News
Teen charged with murdering family . . . A juvenile has been charged with four counts of murder in connection with the deaths of two adults and two children at a home near Elkview in Kanawha County. A fifth member of the family, a teenage boy, had been located away from the crime scene and was being interviewed by deputies. A sheriff earlier said a man, his wife and sons, ages 12 and 3, were found deceased by a relative at about 10:40 a.m. Sunday. West Virginia MetroNews
Guilty Pleasures
Woman finds raccoon in Christmas tree . . . A Florida woman captured video of the chaos that ensued inside her home when her dog alerted her to a raccoon climbing her Christmas tree. Aubrey Iacobelli said she awoke to the sound of her dog growling about 4:15 a.m., and a brief investigation uncovered the reason for the canine’s disquiet — a raccoon had apparently entered the home through the dog door and was climbing the Christmas tree. A video filmed inside Iacobelli’s home shows the dog knocking the tree over in an attempt to reach the raccoon, sparking a chase through the house. UPI
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30.) THE DISPATCH
The Morning Dispatch: A Mammoth Intelligence Hack
Plus: Bill Barr’s eleventh-hour resignation from the Justice Department.
Happy Tuesday! The amendments of the Bill of Rights were ratified by the states on this date 229 years ago—and boy are we glad they were!
Quick Hits: Today’s Top Stories
President-elect Joe Biden officially received 306 electoral votes yesterday as members of the Electoral College in states across the country met to cast their ballots. In brief remarks last night, Biden said the American electoral process “proved to be resilient, true, and strong,” but went on to lambast President Trump for his “unprecedented assault on our democracy” in recent weeks.
The first doses of the Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine were administered to healthcare workers and long-term care facility residents on Monday.
President Trump announced on Twitter Monday that Attorney General Bill Barr will leave his post on December 23. Deputy Attorney General Jeff Rosen will serve as acting attorney general for the remaining few weeks of the Trump administration, and Richard Donoghue will assume the role of deputy attorney general.
A bipartisan coalition of lawmakers unveiled an updated two-part, $908 billion coronavirus relief plan on Monday. One bill would appropriate $748 billion to extend the Paycheck Protection Program for small businesses, add enhanced federal unemployment insurance, and boost funding for vaccine distribution, education, and coronavirus testing. The second bill—$160 billion—includes the thornier topics: Funding for state and local governments, and limited liability protections for employers.
An investigation from Bellingcat and CNN identified a team of Russian specialists that trailed Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny in the days leading up to his poisoning via nerve agent in August. CNN’s Clarissa Ward confronted one of those allegedly involved, walking up to his apartment on the outskirts of Moscow.
Election technology company Smartmatic on Monday issued legal notices and retraction demand letters to Fox News, One America News Network, and Newsmax for what the company views as a “disinformation campaign” intended to injure Smartmatic and discredit the 2020 U.S. election.
The United States confirmed 270,103 new cases of COVID-19 yesterday per the Johns Hopkins University COVID-19 Dashboard, with 12.4 percent of the 2,172,942 tests reported coming back positive. An additional 1,314 deaths were attributed to the virus on Monday, bringing the pandemic’s American death toll to 300,477. According to the COVID Tracking Project, 110,549 Americans are currently hospitalized with COVID-19.
Russia’s Latest Hack: U.S. Agencies and Companies
In one of the most expansive cyber breaches in the country’s recent memory, several federal government agencies—including the U.S. Departments of Treasury, State, Homeland Security, and Commerce, as well as the National Institutes of Health—were infiltrated by foreign actors in a months-long campaign. The attack has yet to be formally attributed to any one organization or state, but the Washington Post reported Sunday that officials suspect APT29, a Moscow-backed group notorious for its sophisticated espionage operations and direct links to Russian intelligence agency resources. The same group allegedly hacked the State Department and White House during the Obama administration.
Hackers gained entrance to the networks of government agencies and other organizations using a malicious software update for SolarWinds Inc., an IT provider with numerous government contracts. The Austin-based company boasts more than 300,000 customers across the globe, including all five branches of the U.S. military, NASA, the Pentagon, more than 425 Fortune 500 companies, the Department of Justice, and the Office of the President of the United States.
Klon Kitchen, Director of the Heritage Foundation’s Center for Technology Policy, told The Dispatch that the hackers “focused their efforts on SolarWinds, and then used it as a base camp from which to funnel into all of these clients.” We do not yet know the full extent of the operation, but we can pretty safely assume the number of entities affected will continue to grow. In a filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission on Monday, SolarWinds said it believes fewer than 18,000 of its customers installed the specific version of its Orion software that “contained this vulnerability.”
Department of Justice Dis-Barred
With the Electoral College officially confirming Joe Biden as president-elect yesterday and the Trump administration down to its final 36 days, you might think the president would be content to ride out his term without any more significant personnel shakeups. In the weeks since the election, he’s already dismissed Defense Secretary Mark Esper and CISA Director Christopher Krebs. But Attorney General Bill Barr became the latest Trump administration casualty on Monday, with the President taking to Twitter to announce Barr would be resigning his post, effective December 23.
For the last two years, Barr has been one of President Trump’s most reliable allies: Shepherding him through the release of the Mueller report, intervening in the prosecutions of his former aides, launching an investigation into the roots of the Trump-Russia probe, claiming that a Biden win would “irrevocably” commit America to “the socialist path.” In the months leading up to the election, critics dinged him for parroting the president’s rhetoric attacking mail-in voting.
But he occasionally showed an independent streak that frustrated the president, refusing to prosecute Trump’s adversaries, calling the prosecution of Roger Stone “righteous,” delaying the findings of the investigation into the origins of the Russia inquiry until after the 2020 election, keeping secret the federal investigation of Hunter Biden and even declaring that Trump’s tweets make his job more difficult. In recent days, Barr has distanced himself from Trump’s crusade to convince the American people that Joe Biden was elected only thanks to mass Democratic voter fraud. On December 1, Barr told the Associated Press that, although the Justice Department was investigating complaints of election fraud as it received them, “to date, we have not seen fraud on a scale that could have effected a different outcome in the election.”
Worth Your Time
Azam Ahmed writes for The New York Times about a Mexican woman’s herculean effort to track down the people responsible for kidnapping and murdering her daughter. In three years, Miriam Rodríguez captured nearly every living member of the crew that had abducted her daughter in their city of San Fernando, Mexico, leading to their arrests. “She cut her hair, dyed it and disguised herself as a pollster, a health worker and an election official to get their names and addresses,” Ahmed reports. “She invented excuses to meet their families, unsuspecting grandmothers and cousins who gave her details, however small.” Her efforts made her a target—and in 2017, she was shot in front of her home and killed. “In all, she was instrumental in taking down 10 people, a mad campaign for justice that made her famous, but vulnerable,” Ahmed writes. “No one challenged organized crime, never mind put its members in prison.”
In a deeply reported piece for The Atlantic, Ed Yong chronicles how the COVID-19 pandemic shifted scientific priorities, resources, and manpower in ways never seen before. “No other disease has been scrutinized so intensely, by so much combined intellect, in so brief a time,” he writes. This cuts both ways—not only did scientists develop vaccines, testing methods, and models for how the virus is contracted, but they also in some cases produced flawed research, pursued sloppy clinical trials, and published misleading information. “At its best, science is a self-correcting march toward greater knowledge for the betterment of humanity. At its worst, it is a self-interested pursuit of greater prestige at the cost of truth and rigor. The pandemic brought both aspects to the fore,” he concludes. “Humanity will benefit from the products of the COVID‑19 pivot. Science itself will too, if it learns from the experience.”
The BBC has put together a compelling, beautiful series of photographs documenting how the Balkans have changed since the signing of the Dayton Agreement—the international peace treaty that brought an end to the devastating war in former Yugoslavia. “Between 1992 and 1995, the war in Bosnia-Herzegovina claimed more than 100,000 lives and made around two million people homeless,” the BBC notes. The 25th anniversary of the signing of the Dayton agreement was yesterday. Scottish photographer Chris Leslie visited the Balkans over the years to photograph the people affected and the areas ravaged by the war.
The Supreme Court on Friday declined to hear Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton’s lawsuit contesting the election results in four battleground states. What does the court’s order mean in plain English? Should the justices have said more? David and Sarah break it down on the latest episode of Advisory Opinions.
Dispatch contributor and AEI scholar Yuval Levin has a must-read essay on the homepage, looking at the origins of partisan conspiracy and, importantly, a path to move beyond this ugly moment. “One institution in particular has kept its head and helped the country do the same: the federal judiciary … Notably, resistance to the pull of polarized conspiracy has extended to judges nominated by President Trump himself. Faced with claims of election fraud, every judge has demanded evidence, argument, and an adherence to proper procedure, and refused to tolerate groundless fantasy. These judges have done this not as agents or opponents of the president but as professionals—representatives of a set of institutions whose claim to authority is rooted in their commitment to a standard of integrity. It would have been good for us to see all the conspiracies of recent years scrutinized that way.”
Kemberlee Kaye: “So very ready for Christmas this year and spending more time reflecting on the gift of Christ than I am on the state of the country or headlines, because ultimately, that’s what matters far more.”
Mary Chastain: “We all know the government is dumb. Let’s go ahead and be stingy when it comes to encryption and cybersecurity. One of these days Russia or another enemy will make officials really regret their laziness. Russian hackers penetrated our Treasury, Commerce, and other federal agencies and spied on emails among staffers. Thing is, this hacking group has done this before.”
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Stacey Matthews: “CNN’s resident media hall monitor Brian Stelter has spent more time covering Fox News’s coverage of the Hunter Biden story than the story itself. What an absolute clown.”
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“This week, as Los Angeles County announced it would lock down all outdoor dining, a video went viral. That video featured restaurant owner Angela Marsden…”
Silicon Valley Moves Out of California
Tech companies are leaving California in droves and bringing their workforces with them. The trend has picked up significantly over the last year, as work-from-home arrangements have become normalized. Oracle now joins Hewlett-Packard in leaving the state for Texas. According to Oracle, the decision will give their employees more flexibility on where to live. The San Francisco area is notorious for being prohibitively expensive; high tax rates and building restrictions created a situation in the city where someone could earn over $100,000 a year and live in his car.
Other tech executives, including Tesla CEO Elon Musk, say they are ditching California due to the state’s personal income tax rate–it has the highest in the nation. Musk is also moving his company to Texas, which has a zero percent income tax rate.
This trend is likely to only continue, especially since left-wingers in San Francisco appear to be doubling down on the types of oppressive policies that created the corporate exodus in the first place. For example, voters in the city recently passed a wealth tax beyond efforts for the state or federal level. It is described as an “overpaid executive tax” which would apply to those firms in the city which pay their officers more than 100 times the median worker salary. The ripple effects of San Francisco’s corporate exodus will inevitably hurt blue collar workers and service industry workers in the future. Local revenues for basic services, social programs, and infrastructure will be hollowed out as rich earners continue to leave and take their capital elsewhere. They will move to places with more jobs or to where they can create them. This will simply create advantages for workers in Austin or Denver to the detriment of low income and middle income workers in San Francisco
TIME Magazine Picks Joe Biden, Kamala Harris as “Person of the Year” TIME Magazine has a two-decade tradition of highlighting victors of presidential elections as “Person of the Year.” This time around, however, not only did the publication select president-elect Joe Biden, but also his vice president-elect Kamala Harris. Despite a short-lived and lackluster performance during the Democratic primaries, during which she was overwhelmingly rejected by left-leaning voters, Harris continues to claim Biden’s spotlight.
TIME’s decision to include Harris in its award for person of the year highlights how influential she is likely to be in the Biden administration. While Biden has portrayed himself as a middle-of-the-road moderate, Harris was one of the most liberal individuals in the US senate–even more than self-proclaimed Democratic socialist Bernie Sanders, according to some outlets. Biden, who has called himself a “transitional figure,” does not represent the heart and soul of the new Democratic Party. The energy on today’s left is with the progressives, such as Harris anad “Squad” members Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez.
Progressives Already Questioning Joe Biden
Speaking of the squad, there are already signs of friction between the Democrats’ most radical figures and more moderate forces in the party. During a CNN interview this weekend, squad member Ilhan Omar complained that progressives aren’t being given enough power in the coming Biden Administration.
When asked if she agrees with Bernie Sanders’ recent statement that progressives don’t have enough of a “seat at the table” in the Biden Administration, Omar responded, “I do. And this is, you know, what we have been saying and asking for. We worked diligently in trying to make sure that the people understood that it was important for us to get rid of Trump, but to have someone who was going to be partner with us in governing for progress in our country, and we continue to be hopeful in having that partnership as we have governed on behalf of our country.”
Many have noticed a civil war of sorts brewing within the Democratic Party. Hatred of Donald Trump unified Democrats during the election, but once Biden is in office the differences between left-wing factions could start to become pronounced.
Do You Own Any Bitcoin?
The possibility of inflation in the next few years under the Biden Administration has increased interest in cryptocurrencies during the last few months. I have been buying Bitcoin and other cryptos on PayPal, where users can currently purchase these currencies without any fees. It’s easy to do, and you can watch your investments grow (or shrink) in real time on PayPal’s user-friendly platform. But be warned: Beginning in 2021, PayPal will start instituting fees with all crypto purchases.
Admittedly, dumping a large portion of your savings into cryptocurrencies probably isn’t a wise decision; but why not buy a small amount to diversify?
Kristin Tate is an author and columnist focused on taxation and government spending. Her latest book, The Liberal Invasion of Red State America, was published by Regnery Publishing in 2020. She is a Robert Novak Journalism Fellow at the Fund for American Studies, examining the size, scope, and cost of the federal workforce. Kristin also serves as analyst for the nonprofit group Young Americans for Liberty, aiding the organization in its mission to promote limited government and fiscal responsibility. You can follow her on Twitter at @KristinBTate.
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Dec 15, 2020 01:00 am
Today we see social tyranny played out by a small but growing group of citizens that has a chilling effect on the lives of the majority of Americans. Read More…
Dec 15, 2020 01:00 am
If the ruling class doesn’t have climactic climate change wars and moral systemic racism wars to fight, what would the robin do then, poor thing? Read More…
Dec 15, 2020 01:00 am
We must remain vigilant and be prepared to fight for the unalienable rights that our forefathers fought so hard to grant us. Read More…
Dec 15, 2020 01:00 am
Critical national infrastructure must be protected against physical and cyberthreats, including impairment and malicious exploitation, by all actors, not excluding the companies that own and operate elements of that infrastructure. Read More…
Dec 15, 2020 01:00 am
If we 73 million adult conservatives and our families are conscious of where we click and shop, we certainly will be a formidable group. Read More…
Recent Blog Posts
Barr resigns: Everyone (except Biden) wins
Dec 15, 2020 01:00 am
William Barr resigned as Attorney General yesterday, clearing the way for appointment of a special counsel to investigate the crimes of Hunter Biden and any other matters [cough: Joe!] that may arise from that investigation. Read more…
The ‘kraken’ is the sleeping giant now awakened within the GOP
Dec 15, 2020 01:00 am
When Republican electors across crucial swing states cast their electoral votes for Donald Trump in the face of the left’s insistence that Joe Biden won the election, I thought to myself: when did the GOP grow a spine? Read more…
Dan Crenshaw is back with an awesome ad
Dec 15, 2020 01:00 am
In September, Dan Crenshaw spearheaded an amazing ad for Texas’s Republican candidates. He’s now back with Part II, to help out in Georgia. Read more…
Will Vermont have child COVID informants for Christmas?
Dec 15, 2020 01:00 am
Few contrasts could more openly demonstrate how arbitrary Vermont’s COVID rules have become than prohibiting family meal gatherings while advising strangers they can have sex freely. Read more…
Do not give in to pessimism and despair
Dec 15, 2020 01:00 am
For those who follow historical trends, there’s a feeling America’s best days are now gone. The Trump spirit and American exceptionalism suggest otherwise. Read more…
Essential steps to retrieve Georgia
Dec 15, 2020 01:00 am
By shining a light on every step of the process, Georgia Republicans can force the election into the light, eliminating a lot of the fraud along the way. Read more…
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In a wide-ranging conversation, Hillsdale College President Larry Arnn discusses the importance of 1620, the despotic ideology of The New York Times, and the importance of families.
As our nation wrestles with challenging issues, anti-religious rioters and officeholders are forgetting that successful social movements don’t attack religion. Rather, they are usually rooted in it.
After Texas v. Pennsylvania, conservatives must rediscover their opposition to judicial overreach. A Warren Court of the right is not the solution we need.
Those disappointed in the outcome of this election and of the Texas suit should not lose sight of the constitutional values that will last far beyond any one lawsuit and any one election.
Federalist Co-Founder Sean charged big tech and big media of rigging the November election through their conspired suppression of the Hunter Biden story.
If you think you’ll like ‘Fatman’—in which Mel Gibson stars as Santa Claus facing down a hitman—you’ll like ‘Fatman.’ And if you aren’t so sure, you still might like it.
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Christmas crowds in Italy raise alarm
Italy is considering more stringent nationwide restrictions during the Christmas holidays after scenes of big gatherings in many cities over the weekend raised worries.Italy has passed Britain as the European nation with the worst official death toll, with more than 65,000 dying since the start of the outbreak in February.With pressure on hospitals easing and daily cases falling, the government relaxed some restrictions put in place last month. But scenes of crowded shopping districts in cities such as Milan and Rome have caused concern.First Americans vaccinated
A New York City intensive care unit nurse became the first person in the United States to receive a coronavirus vaccine, saying she felt “healing is coming” as the nation’s COVID-19 death toll crossed 300,000.Sandra Lindsay, who has treated some of the sickest COVID-19 patients for months, was inoculated at Long Island Jewish Medical Center in the New York City borough of Queens, an early epicenter of the country’s coronavirus outbreak.“It didn’t feel any different from taking any other vaccine,” Lindsay said. “I feel hopeful today, relieved.”
“The Netherlands is closing down,” he said to the sound of protesters banging pots and pans outside his office in The Hague. “We realize the gravity of our decisions, right before Christmas.”
The measures include limiting gatherings to no more than two people, also at home. An exception will be made for three days around Christmas, when three adult visitors will be permitted.
Singapore to open travel bubble
Singapore is to allow a limited number of business, official and other “high economic value” travelers from abroad under a “bubble” arrangement that offers a glimpse into what visitors for this year’s relocated Davos conference might expect.
Singapore’s borders have been effectively shut for months, and it faces challenges hosting an event that usually attracts thousands just five months from now.
Track the global spread with our live interactive graphic here.
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A hack. A raid. A series of curious events that all seem to tie back to one company: Dominion Voting Systems. The company at the heart of voter fraud allegations across the country and particularly in contested states may have been exposed despite all of their best efforts. How? Through SolarWinds Orion. Why? Because the Russians, God, or both are helping us out.
That’s the premise. Here are the facts. SolarWinds Orion is the company whose security software was hacked this weekend, allegedly by Russians. Major but conspicuously mundane companies and government agencies were among those affected. They were raided today by the FBI, US Marshals, and Texas Rangers. This event likely yielded a seizing of servers.
Dominion Voting Systems is likely somewhere on those servers. We can’t know for sure until we hear from the authorities, but it’s conspicuous that they lied about connections to SolarWinds Orion, claiming they had no connections. We know it’s a lie because if you visit their FTP website, it’s operated by Serv-U, a division of SolarWinds.
Dominion Voting Systems uses SolarWinds products and it is still not powered down.
So, we have Russia apparently hacking for no other reason than to point attention to SolarWinds Orion. On the servers that were confiscated as a result of the hack is information potentially sent to and from Dominion Voting Systems, information that was almost certainly wiped from their own servers before investigators could get their hands on them. It all seems conspicuously like deus ex machina.
In the latest episode of NOQ Report, I noted how it reminds me of the Timothy McVeigh situation. The Oklahoma City Bombing may still be unsolved today if it weren’t for a random highway patrolman pulling over McVeigh for a busted tail light. If Russia (or God) is alerting us about where to find the smoking gun, this may all work out nicely.
As conspiracy theories go, this one is pretty mild on the “theory” and heavy on facts. Put them all together and we may have the miracle smoking gun emerging before our eyes that reelects President Trump.
COVID-19 may take down an independent news outlet
Nobody said running a media site would be easy. We could use some help keeping this site afloat.
Colleagues have called me the worst fundraiser ever. My skills are squarely rooted on the journalistic side of running a news outlet. Paying the bills has never been my forte, but we’ve survived. We have ads on the site that help, but since the site’s inception this has been a labor of love that otherwise doesn’t bring in the level of revenue necessary to justify it.
When I left a nice, corporate career in 2017, I did so knowing I wouldn’t make nearly as much money. But what we do at NOQ Report to deliver the truth and fight the progressive mainstream media narrative that has plagued this nation is too important for me to sacrifice it for the sake of wealth. We know we’ll never make a ton of money this way, and we’re okay with that.
Things have become harder with the coronavirus lockdowns. Both ad money and donations that have kept us afloat for a while have dropped dramatically. We thought we could weather the storm, but the so-called “surge” or “2nd-wave” that mainstream media and Democrats are pushing has put our prospects in jeopardy. In short, we are now in desperate need of financial assistance.
The best way NOQ Report readers can help is to donate. Our Giving Fuel page makes it easy to donate one-time or monthly. Alternatively, you can donate through PayPal as well. We need approximately $11,500 to stay afloat for the rest of 2020, but more would be wonderful and any amount that brings us closer to our goal is greatly appreciated.
The second way to help is to become a partner. We’ve strongly considered seeking angel investors in the past but because we were paying the bills, it didn’t seem necessary. Now, we’re struggling to pay the bills. This shouldn’t be the case as our traffic the last year has been going up dramatically. June, 2018, we had 11,678 visitors. A year later in June, 2019, we were up to 116,194. In June, 2020, we had 614,192. We’re heading in the right direction and we believe we’re ready talk to patriotic investors who want to not only “get in on the action” but more importantly who want to help America hear the truth. Interested investors should contact me directly with the contact button above.
Election year or not, coronavirus lockdowns or not, anarchic riots or not, the need for truthful journalism endures. But in these times, we need as many conservative media voices as possible. Please help keep NOQ Report going.
Join fellow patriots as we form a grassroots movement to advance the cause of conservatism. The coronavirus crisis has prompted many, even some conservatives, to promote authoritarianism. It’s understandable to some extent now, but it must not be allowed to embed itself in American life. We currently have 8000+ patriots with us in a very short time. If you are interested, please join us to receive updates.
Today, the Two Mikes again had the honor of hosting Lt. General Thomas McInerny for a discussion about where President Trump stands in his effort to be certified the winner of the election he obviously won. The General noted that the President has done his best—throughout his term—to do everything in accordance with the U.S. Constitution, and that he deserves credit for that.
He added, and was supported by the Mikes on this, that time was running short and that the evidence of widespread treason committed by Democrats since 2015 fully justifies the president to declare a state of insurrection and to ferociously apply his 2018 Executive Order against the large number of Democrats who rigged the 2020 election with the support of a foreign power named China.
Each of us speculated that the President probably would still have to declare martial law in order to deal with the violence that the Democrats’ terrorist groups—Antifa, BLM, and BAMN ( by all means necessary)—will be ordered by the party leaders to unleash against Americans and their property.
Few people have been more on top of what’s going on with voter fraud the Lt. General Tom McInerney. His advice to the President and calls for drastic action should be strongly considered.
COVID-19 may take down an independent news outlet
Nobody said running a media site would be easy. We could use some help keeping this site afloat.
Colleagues have called me the worst fundraiser ever. My skills are squarely rooted on the journalistic side of running a news outlet. Paying the bills has never been my forte, but we’ve survived. We have ads on the site that help, but since the site’s inception this has been a labor of love that otherwise doesn’t bring in the level of revenue necessary to justify it.
When I left a nice, corporate career in 2017, I did so knowing I wouldn’t make nearly as much money. But what we do at NOQ Report to deliver the truth and fight the progressive mainstream media narrative that has plagued this nation is too important for me to sacrifice it for the sake of wealth. We know we’ll never make a ton of money this way, and we’re okay with that.
Things have become harder with the coronavirus lockdowns. Both ad money and donations that have kept us afloat for a while have dropped dramatically. We thought we could weather the storm, but the so-called “surge” or “2nd-wave” that mainstream media and Democrats are pushing has put our prospects in jeopardy. In short, we are now in desperate need of financial assistance.
The best way NOQ Report readers can help is to donate. Our Giving Fuel page makes it easy to donate one-time or monthly. Alternatively, you can donate through PayPal as well. We need approximately $11,500 to stay afloat for the rest of 2020, but more would be wonderful and any amount that brings us closer to our goal is greatly appreciated.
The second way to help is to become a partner. We’ve strongly considered seeking angel investors in the past but because we were paying the bills, it didn’t seem necessary. Now, we’re struggling to pay the bills. This shouldn’t be the case as our traffic the last year has been going up dramatically. June, 2018, we had 11,678 visitors. A year later in June, 2019, we were up to 116,194. In June, 2020, we had 614,192. We’re heading in the right direction and we believe we’re ready talk to patriotic investors who want to not only “get in on the action” but more importantly who want to help America hear the truth. Interested investors should contact me directly with the contact button above.
Election year or not, coronavirus lockdowns or not, anarchic riots or not, the need for truthful journalism endures. But in these times, we need as many conservative media voices as possible. Please help keep NOQ Report going.
Join fellow patriots as we form a grassroots movement to advance the cause of conservatism. The coronavirus crisis has prompted many, even some conservatives, to promote authoritarianism. It’s understandable to some extent now, but it must not be allowed to embed itself in American life. We currently have 8000+ patriots with us in a very short time. If you are interested, please join us to receive updates.
Following a report from CISA that SolarWinds Orion security systems had been compromised, they issued a rare emergency directive calling on everyone, including government agencies, to stop using their software. Now, it appears that the company’s offices in Austin have been raided by multiple law enforcement agencies.
Everything is moving quickly and more updates are flooding in, but according to The Gateway Pundit:
Last night the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) issued a rare Emergency Directive 21-01, in response to a KNOWN COMPROMISE involving SolarWinds Orion products. This was only the fifth Emergency Directive issued by CISA under the authorities granted by Congress in the Cybersecurity Act of 2015.
CISA reported a breach of the SolarWinds Orion products. This Emergency Directive called on all federal civilian agencies to review their networks for indicators of compromise and disconnect or power down SolarWinds Orion products immediately.
The degree of this breach and the ubiquitous use of SolarWinds in government agencies and private companies makes this huge. The raid, reportedly in a joint operation through the FBI, US Marshals, and the Texas Rangers, seems to be focused on figuring out if these breaches were intentionally allowed or if it was known ahead of time by executives. It’s noteworthy that the CEO and Executive Vice President sold tons of shares of their own company last month.
BREAKING per guest on @seanhannity’s radio show: “The FBI, Texas Rangers & US Marshals are all at the SolarWinds HQ in Austin, TX” looking at their systems. Notes the Executive VP sold 57k shares [$1.2M] on 11/9. The CEO, Kevin Thompson, had sold 700k shares [$15M] 10 days later https://t.co/DPN8u1z9I1
The Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency ordered all government departments by noon Monday to identify and shut off instances of SolarWinds Orion software running or connected to any government system, as agencies scrambled to mitigate potential damage from a critical vulnerability in software used by a huge swath of the federal government and military.
News broke over the weekend that officials at CISA and the FBI were investigating breaches at two of the largest federal agencies—the Commerce and Treasury departments—related to a flaw in the SolarWinds Orion software. Early reports suggest hackers working for the Russian government were involved in the breaches.
But what’s not being discussed enough is the potential for this raid to yield a bigger fish, Dominion Voting Systems, who uses SolarWinds for security. If anyone has the data that’s needed to prove massive voter fraud through machine hacking and/or vote count manipulation, it’s SolarWinds. It doesn’t matter how much covering up as done by Dominion if their security company’s servers have the data as well.
And now that data is likely in the hands of law enforcement. Call me a conspiracy theorist, but I’m quite happy the Texas Rangers were involved. I’m not the most trusting person when it comes to federal law enforcement.
It would be ironic if the backdoor to Dominion Voting Systems through SolarWinds Orion happened to be the way massive voter fraud was unambiguously revealed to the world. Cross your fingers.
COVID-19 may take down an independent news outlet
Nobody said running a media site would be easy. We could use some help keeping this site afloat.
Colleagues have called me the worst fundraiser ever. My skills are squarely rooted on the journalistic side of running a news outlet. Paying the bills has never been my forte, but we’ve survived. We have ads on the site that help, but since the site’s inception this has been a labor of love that otherwise doesn’t bring in the level of revenue necessary to justify it.
When I left a nice, corporate career in 2017, I did so knowing I wouldn’t make nearly as much money. But what we do at NOQ Report to deliver the truth and fight the progressive mainstream media narrative that has plagued this nation is too important for me to sacrifice it for the sake of wealth. We know we’ll never make a ton of money this way, and we’re okay with that.
Things have become harder with the coronavirus lockdowns. Both ad money and donations that have kept us afloat for a while have dropped dramatically. We thought we could weather the storm, but the so-called “surge” or “2nd-wave” that mainstream media and Democrats are pushing has put our prospects in jeopardy. In short, we are now in desperate need of financial assistance.
The best way NOQ Report readers can help is to donate. Our Giving Fuel page makes it easy to donate one-time or monthly. Alternatively, you can donate through PayPal as well. We need approximately $11,500 to stay afloat for the rest of 2020, but more would be wonderful and any amount that brings us closer to our goal is greatly appreciated.
The second way to help is to become a partner. We’ve strongly considered seeking angel investors in the past but because we were paying the bills, it didn’t seem necessary. Now, we’re struggling to pay the bills. This shouldn’t be the case as our traffic the last year has been going up dramatically. June, 2018, we had 11,678 visitors. A year later in June, 2019, we were up to 116,194. In June, 2020, we had 614,192. We’re heading in the right direction and we believe we’re ready talk to patriotic investors who want to not only “get in on the action” but more importantly who want to help America hear the truth. Interested investors should contact me directly with the contact button above.
Election year or not, coronavirus lockdowns or not, anarchic riots or not, the need for truthful journalism endures. But in these times, we need as many conservative media voices as possible. Please help keep NOQ Report going.
Join fellow patriots as we form a grassroots movement to advance the cause of conservatism. The coronavirus crisis has prompted many, even some conservatives, to promote authoritarianism. It’s understandable to some extent now, but it must not be allowed to embed itself in American life. We currently have 8000+ patriots with us in a very short time. If you are interested, please join us to receive updates.
The first duty of the highest ranking law enforcement official in the land, the Attorney General, is to defend the Constitution by enforcing the laws. Jeff Sessions failed to do that. Matthew Whitaker fulfilled his duties competently in his short stretch as acting-AG. William Barr was supposed to be a difference maker but turned out to be another Deep State pawn.
Now that he has officially resigned, it’s time for President Trump to make a bold move. He needs to find someone committed to the nation, the Constitution, and the people he or she is sworn to protect. I don’t know who that person is, but I know what traits they need to possess.
First and foremost, loyalty is paramount. No, I’m not referring to loyalty to President Trump, though that would be nice. We need an Attorney General who is loyal to America. That means when there’s an investigation into the Biden Crime Family, it needs to be addressed properly and not buried until after the election. Even former FBI Director Jim Comey knew this.
Second, the next Attorney General must be a person of action. We’ve had enough of people like Barr who talk a big game but do nothing. One can make a credible argument that Barr actually hampered the Justice Department from doing what little it tried to do under his reign. Assigning special counsels and prodding investigations along are meaningless if they do not result in justice being served.
Lastly, the next Attorney General needs to be someone who isn’t afraid to take on the swamp. If there’s one major regret from President Trump’s first term, it’s that he did not surround himself with people who were capable of fulfilling his biggest campaign promise, draining the swamp. Many were deeply embedded in the swamp and had no intentions of ever draining it.
The next Attorney General cannot be a Deep State lackey like Barr or a coward like Sessions. We need a strong man or woman to step into the position and bring law and order back to the United States of America.
COVID-19 may take down an independent news outlet
Nobody said running a media site would be easy. We could use some help keeping this site afloat.
Colleagues have called me the worst fundraiser ever. My skills are squarely rooted on the journalistic side of running a news outlet. Paying the bills has never been my forte, but we’ve survived. We have ads on the site that help, but since the site’s inception this has been a labor of love that otherwise doesn’t bring in the level of revenue necessary to justify it.
When I left a nice, corporate career in 2017, I did so knowing I wouldn’t make nearly as much money. But what we do at NOQ Report to deliver the truth and fight the progressive mainstream media narrative that has plagued this nation is too important for me to sacrifice it for the sake of wealth. We know we’ll never make a ton of money this way, and we’re okay with that.
Things have become harder with the coronavirus lockdowns. Both ad money and donations that have kept us afloat for a while have dropped dramatically. We thought we could weather the storm, but the so-called “surge” or “2nd-wave” that mainstream media and Democrats are pushing has put our prospects in jeopardy. In short, we are now in desperate need of financial assistance.
The best way NOQ Report readers can help is to donate. Our Giving Fuel page makes it easy to donate one-time or monthly. Alternatively, you can donate through PayPal as well. We need approximately $11,500 to stay afloat for the rest of 2020, but more would be wonderful and any amount that brings us closer to our goal is greatly appreciated.
The second way to help is to become a partner. We’ve strongly considered seeking angel investors in the past but because we were paying the bills, it didn’t seem necessary. Now, we’re struggling to pay the bills. This shouldn’t be the case as our traffic the last year has been going up dramatically. June, 2018, we had 11,678 visitors. A year later in June, 2019, we were up to 116,194. In June, 2020, we had 614,192. We’re heading in the right direction and we believe we’re ready talk to patriotic investors who want to not only “get in on the action” but more importantly who want to help America hear the truth. Interested investors should contact me directly with the contact button above.
Election year or not, coronavirus lockdowns or not, anarchic riots or not, the need for truthful journalism endures. But in these times, we need as many conservative media voices as possible. Please help keep NOQ Report going.
Join fellow patriots as we form a grassroots movement to advance the cause of conservatism. The coronavirus crisis has prompted many, even some conservatives, to promote authoritarianism. It’s understandable to some extent now, but it must not be allowed to embed itself in American life. We currently have 8000+ patriots with us in a very short time. If you are interested, please join us to receive updates.
In recent days, YouTube made an alarming announcement that the video platform behemoth would begin censoring any content questioning the deep state narrative: “Joe Biden won and is now your leader — accept it.”
Even while the Trump campaign and others were legally contesting the results for Biden in just enough swing states to ‘win’ — challenges that were accompanied by literally hundreds of witness statements in the form of sworn affidavits, the platform issued its blanket dictate: ‘There shall be no content allowed questioning Biden’s legitimacy.’
Now we know why.
As reported by the National Pulse, YouTube employs several software engineers who have ties to the Chinese Communist Party, and since we all know that Biden and his spawn do as well, that explains a lot.
Here’s what the outlet discovered:
— Tai Jinjiang is a software engineer who’s been with YouTube since 2019 and who previously worked for Guanghzou Shian Technology as a project manager. Tia provided details about his work for the firm, which is based in China, noting that he played a “major role in successful PLA certification of ShiAn terminal by [the] Minister of Public Security, State Secrecy Bureau, and IT Evaluation Center.”
Notes the National Pulse:
In other words, Jinjiang led software efforts on behalf of the PLA – appearing to reference China’s People’s Liberation Army – and a host of Chinese government-led intelligence bodies. What’s more, he notes he “garnered numerous staff awards for excellent performance.”
— Xiao Chen is listed as having become a software engineer at YouTube last month. He previously worked as a research assistant at Sun Yat-Sen University, which recently sent a researcher to the United States who pleaded guilty to lying to the FBI over his China ties. The university’s Supercomputing Center has been on the U.S. government’s entity list since 2015. The list contains “people and companies the U.S. government deems a national security risk.”
— Xifei Huang is another software engineer and has been with the platform since February 2014 though he previously worked as a developer for Peking University in Beijing.
Researchers from Peking University have been sentenced in the U.S. for stealing American intellectual property and for failing to disclose to immigration officials their Chinese Communist Party affiliations.
“The university also counts former and current party apparatchiks among its leadership, including its leader: a former head of the country’s spy agency’s Beijing branch,” The National Pulse noted.
— Fan Yang has been employed as a software engineer by YouTube since April 2017 after doing an internship at China Telecom, which has been deemed by the Defense Department as having collaborated with the Chinese military for at least 20 years.
Fan was a research assistant at Fudan University, which recently took out “freedom of thought” from its charter after acceding to demands from the Chinese Communist Party. During Fan’s stint as an assistant, five Chinese military-tied hackers based at Fudan University were indicted for pilfering U.S. secrets.
The National Pulse adds:
The unearthed ties cast YouTube’s decision to ban all content disputing a victory for Joe Biden – the Chinese Communist Party’s preferred candidate – in an interesting light. It similarly calls into question reports of YouTube automatically deleting Chinese-language phrases critical of the Chinese Communist Party, which the platform attributed to “an error in our enforcement systems.”
The revelations also add to a growing list of American tech corporates hiring Chinese Communist Party-linked individuals including Facebookand Twitter.
As previously reported, ‘China Joe’ Biden and son Hunter have extensive business and financial ties to the ChiComs. What’s more, nearly his entire transition team and several people he has chosen to be in his Cabinet, if he is, in fact, actually inaugurated, also have close ties to the Communist regime in Beijing.
So essentially, after four years of Donald Trump trying to break down the ties China developed with U.S. officials and corporations, Biden is getting ready to reinstate them and give Beijing’s authoritarians a seat at the table of American government.
Where is the ‘mainstream media’ now? Or are they still focused on the ‘Trump-Russia’ lie?
Nobody said running a media site would be easy. We could use some help keeping this site afloat.
Colleagues have called me the worst fundraiser ever. My skills are squarely rooted on the journalistic side of running a news outlet. Paying the bills has never been my forte, but we’ve survived. We have ads on the site that help, but since the site’s inception this has been a labor of love that otherwise doesn’t bring in the level of revenue necessary to justify it.
When I left a nice, corporate career in 2017, I did so knowing I wouldn’t make nearly as much money. But what we do at NOQ Report to deliver the truth and fight the progressive mainstream media narrative that has plagued this nation is too important for me to sacrifice it for the sake of wealth. We know we’ll never make a ton of money this way, and we’re okay with that.
Things have become harder with the coronavirus lockdowns. Both ad money and donations that have kept us afloat for a while have dropped dramatically. We thought we could weather the storm, but the so-called “surge” or “2nd-wave” that mainstream media and Democrats are pushing has put our prospects in jeopardy. In short, we are now in desperate need of financial assistance.
The best way NOQ Report readers can help is to donate. Our Giving Fuel page makes it easy to donate one-time or monthly. Alternatively, you can donate through PayPal as well. We need approximately $11,500 to stay afloat for the rest of 2020, but more would be wonderful and any amount that brings us closer to our goal is greatly appreciated.
The second way to help is to become a partner. We’ve strongly considered seeking angel investors in the past but because we were paying the bills, it didn’t seem necessary. Now, we’re struggling to pay the bills. This shouldn’t be the case as our traffic the last year has been going up dramatically. June, 2018, we had 11,678 visitors. A year later in June, 2019, we were up to 116,194. In June, 2020, we had 614,192. We’re heading in the right direction and we believe we’re ready talk to patriotic investors who want to not only “get in on the action” but more importantly who want to help America hear the truth. Interested investors should contact me directly with the contact button above.
Election year or not, coronavirus lockdowns or not, anarchic riots or not, the need for truthful journalism endures. But in these times, we need as many conservative media voices as possible. Please help keep NOQ Report going.
Join fellow patriots as we form a grassroots movement to advance the cause of conservatism. The coronavirus crisis has prompted many, even some conservatives, to promote authoritarianism. It’s understandable to some extent now, but it must not be allowed to embed itself in American life. We currently have 8000+ patriots with us in a very short time. If you are interested, please join us to receive updates.
We’re in uncharted territory, folks. With electors from multiple contested states going to their capitals to cast votes for President Trump, we have the makings for constitutional ambiguities to come into play. It’s not that alternate electors have never tried to cast votes, but the scale in which this year’s GOP electors are flocking to capitals has never happened before.
Mainstream media will report that it’s “official,” that former Vice President Joe Biden is in. But as I noted this morning, don’t listen to them. Nothing is official until January 6th when the votes are tallied, and nothing is truly, constitutionally official until January 20th. Until then, there is still an opportunity for multiple bombshell reports of voter fraud to sway judges, Justices, or Congress. Bombshells such as this one…
With multiple states sending alternate electors to vote for the person they believe actually won the election, which can be demonstrated once enough fraud is exposed, these moves are going to be viewed as last-ditch efforts by the GOP to cast doubt on election results. But their presence can be significant if enough doubt can come into the light, which is why the remaining lawsuits and legislative moves at the state and national level are important.
Looks like there’s a move under way for President Donald Trump among the Electors. The GOP in some states are having their electors cast their votes for President Donald Trump to preserve his ability to win.
While the Democratic electors in the states of Pennsylvania and Georgia are casting their votes for Joe Biden, slates of Republican electors in those states cast votes for President Trump just in case legal challenges succeed.
Many Trump supporters are losing hope, but in states where alternate electors have gathered with varying degrees of success, the excitement is still real. Even in those states, such as Michigan where electors were blocked, their presence and the attempt itself will be enough to offer a solution if and when the massive voter fraud in their states is exposed. Here are reactions from three of the states:
I just landed back home in Vegas from the rally in DC to learn that the GOP electors for my state of Nevada have voted Trump.
“So, house leadership did not allow our 16 electors to even come in the building,” said former Republican candidate for Congress David Dudenhoefer. “But we sent them just in case by January 6 something was uncovered that would be a smoking gun we would have an alternative slate as remedy.”
Therein lies the key: Remedy. The electors in these states have either cast their alternate votes to officially contest the election or they were turned away, in which case the act of blocking them itself can be used to demonstrate a remedy was attempted. Now, all we need is the bombshell. Or two. Or ten. Whatever it takes to reveal voter fraud to the point that not even mainstream media or Big Tech cannot suppress it, that’s what we need.
It still comes down to the judiciary. If the Supreme Court rules in favor of the Trump campaign or any of the various lawsuits working their way up the judicial ladder, then the presence of these alternate electors will be significant.
Keep fighting, folks. Keep spreading the truth. What we’re seeing today is the first step in remedying this fraudulent election. Now, all we need are some bombshells to emerge. And they will. They already are.
COVID-19 may take down an independent news outlet
Nobody said running a media site would be easy. We could use some help keeping this site afloat.
Colleagues have called me the worst fundraiser ever. My skills are squarely rooted on the journalistic side of running a news outlet. Paying the bills has never been my forte, but we’ve survived. We have ads on the site that help, but since the site’s inception this has been a labor of love that otherwise doesn’t bring in the level of revenue necessary to justify it.
When I left a nice, corporate career in 2017, I did so knowing I wouldn’t make nearly as much money. But what we do at NOQ Report to deliver the truth and fight the progressive mainstream media narrative that has plagued this nation is too important for me to sacrifice it for the sake of wealth. We know we’ll never make a ton of money this way, and we’re okay with that.
Things have become harder with the coronavirus lockdowns. Both ad money and donations that have kept us afloat for a while have dropped dramatically. We thought we could weather the storm, but the so-called “surge” or “2nd-wave” that mainstream media and Democrats are pushing has put our prospects in jeopardy. In short, we are now in desperate need of financial assistance.
The best way NOQ Report readers can help is to donate. Our Giving Fuel page makes it easy to donate one-time or monthly. Alternatively, you can donate through PayPal as well. We need approximately $11,500 to stay afloat for the rest of 2020, but more would be wonderful and any amount that brings us closer to our goal is greatly appreciated.
The second way to help is to become a partner. We’ve strongly considered seeking angel investors in the past but because we were paying the bills, it didn’t seem necessary. Now, we’re struggling to pay the bills. This shouldn’t be the case as our traffic the last year has been going up dramatically. June, 2018, we had 11,678 visitors. A year later in June, 2019, we were up to 116,194. In June, 2020, we had 614,192. We’re heading in the right direction and we believe we’re ready talk to patriotic investors who want to not only “get in on the action” but more importantly who want to help America hear the truth. Interested investors should contact me directly with the contact button above.
Election year or not, coronavirus lockdowns or not, anarchic riots or not, the need for truthful journalism endures. But in these times, we need as many conservative media voices as possible. Please help keep NOQ Report going.
Join fellow patriots as we form a grassroots movement to advance the cause of conservatism. The coronavirus crisis has prompted many, even some conservatives, to promote authoritarianism. It’s understandable to some extent now, but it must not be allowed to embed itself in American life. We currently have 8000+ patriots with us in a very short time. If you are interested, please join us to receive updates.
Face placebos are the last thing anyone wants to talk about with everything else going on. What with the country coming apart at the seams with the national socialist left flaunting the social construct of a free and fair electoral process. However, they persist in their mask insanity, so we thought it appropriate that we quote and highlight a recent interview on Glenn Beck.
Part of the discussion centred on a Doctor’s assessment on face placebo mandates pointing out that they could be doing far more harm than supposed good. These are from the transcript of the video from the 11-minute mark:
“According to all of our scientific evidence, there is no data to shows that. In fact, their big argument is respiratory droplets. Now, if you think about people wearing a mask fidgeting with the mask all day long they are spitting into the mask all day and then rubbing it in their face, fidgeting.
The Oregon medical board says that the primary source of contamination is touching the face, well everybody that wears the mask is touching their face all day long. By the end of the day what they are wearing is a facial diaper completely contaminated not just with virus potentially but with all kinds of bacteria that get rubbed on the skin.”
While the video was on the general nature of politicians dictating medical policy, this part brought up a good point. We’ve been doing the same thing for the better part of a year, and the left would like to keep it up for a few more, despite the prospects of a vaccine.
Herd immunity is the only real defence against a virus and yet the left wants to avoid the subject keep on with the same tactics that have failed time and time again. Even worse, they insist on forcing these measures on everyone without any debate while these might be the reason the situation has become worse over time. It would of course go against their cherished tendencies towards tyranny, but we should examine whether or not masks have exacerbated the crisis instead of controlling it.
COVID-19 may take down an independent news outlet
Nobody said running a media site would be easy. We could use some help keeping this site afloat.
Colleagues have called me the worst fundraiser ever. My skills are squarely rooted on the journalistic side of running a news outlet. Paying the bills has never been my forte, but we’ve survived. We have ads on the site that help, but since the site’s inception this has been a labor of love that otherwise doesn’t bring in the level of revenue necessary to justify it.
When I left a nice, corporate career in 2017, I did so knowing I wouldn’t make nearly as much money. But what we do at NOQ Report to deliver the truth and fight the progressive mainstream media narrative that has plagued this nation is too important for me to sacrifice it for the sake of wealth. We know we’ll never make a ton of money this way, and we’re okay with that.
Things have become harder with the coronavirus lockdowns. Both ad money and donations that have kept us afloat for a while have dropped dramatically. We thought we could weather the storm, but the so-called “surge” or “2nd-wave” that mainstream media and Democrats are pushing has put our prospects in jeopardy. In short, we are now in desperate need of financial assistance.
The best way NOQ Report readers can help is to donate. Our Giving Fuel page makes it easy to donate one-time or monthly. Alternatively, you can donate through PayPal as well. We need approximately $11,500 to stay afloat for the rest of 2020, but more would be wonderful and any amount that brings us closer to our goal is greatly appreciated.
The second way to help is to become a partner. We’ve strongly considered seeking angel investors in the past but because we were paying the bills, it didn’t seem necessary. Now, we’re struggling to pay the bills. This shouldn’t be the case as our traffic the last year has been going up dramatically. June, 2018, we had 11,678 visitors. A year later in June, 2019, we were up to 116,194. In June, 2020, we had 614,192. We’re heading in the right direction and we believe we’re ready talk to patriotic investors who want to not only “get in on the action” but more importantly who want to help America hear the truth. Interested investors should contact me directly with the contact button above.
Election year or not, coronavirus lockdowns or not, anarchic riots or not, the need for truthful journalism endures. But in these times, we need as many conservative media voices as possible. Please help keep NOQ Report going.
Join fellow patriots as we form a grassroots movement to advance the cause of conservatism. The coronavirus crisis has prompted many, even some conservatives, to promote authoritarianism. It’s understandable to some extent now, but it must not be allowed to embed itself in American life. We currently have 8000+ patriots with us in a very short time. If you are interested, please join us to receive updates.
The company that conducted an independent audit of 22 Dominion Voting Systems in a small Michigan county released a report Monday concluding the machines are “intentionally and purposefully designed with inherent errors.”
Consequently, Allied Security Operations Group advised in its report, President Trump should invoke his 2018 executive order to ensure national security in the event of foreign interference in an election.
“We conclude that the Dominion Voting System is intentionally and purposefully designed with inherent errors to create systemic fraud and influence election results,” says the report, written by Russell Ramsland, a former Republican candidate in Texas. “The system intentionally generates an enormously high number of ballot errors.”
The report was published on the website of attorney Matthew DePerno, a lawyer in Anterim County who represented a voter in the case.
The county was in the news after the election when it was discovered that 3,000 votes had been flipped from President Trump to Joe Biden. The Michigan secretary of state and the Antrim County clerk both blamed “human error.”
But Allied Security insists it’s a “machine” or “software” error, calling it a “national security issue.”
Dominion machines are used in 28 states, serving some 40% of the population.
The report recommends “that an independent group should be empaneled to determine the extent of the adjudication errors throughout the State of Michigan.”
Dominion has dismissed charges that its machines are vulnerable to fraud as “election disinformation.”
“All Dominion systems are capable of producing paper records and are 100 percent auditable, with testing, reviews, audits, and recounts subject to oversight and verification by all political parties,” the company states on its website.
Michigan’s assistant attorney general, Erik Grill, charged the report’s claims are “inaccurate, incomplete, and misleading.”
The report states the forensic examination of the tabulation log for Dec. 6 found 68.05% — 10,667 of 15,676 individual events — were “recorded errors.”
“These errors resulted in overall tabulation errors or ballots being sent to adjudication,” the report says.
The high error rate “proves the Dominion Voting System is flawed and does not meet state or federal election laws.”
The audit also noted vulnerabilities related to the ability of Dominion machines to be connected to the internet.
Powell: ‘We’ve never witnessed anything like this’
On Friday, attorney Sidney Powell filed emergency requests to the Supreme Court to order officials in Georgia, Michigan, Wisconsin and Arizona to de-certify their 2020 election results.
“In fact, one of our experts says Dominion fraud was 5% higher votes for Biden across the board everywhere there was a Dominion machine running. The same was true for other Democrats that were running on the tickets in those states,” she said.
Powell, who is not part of the Trump campaign legal team, also suggested Trump could invoke his 2018 executive order calling on the director of national intelligence to assess evidence of foreign interference in an election.
If John Ratcliffe, the DNI, were to conduct such an assessment, she said, it would “blow the mind of every citizen in the country who’s willing to look at the truth and the facts.”
“Because there’s never – we’ve never witnessed anything like this in the history of this country,” said Powell. “And it’s got to be stopped right now or there will never be a free and fair election.”
COVID-19 may take down an independent news outlet
Nobody said running a media site would be easy. We could use some help keeping this site afloat.
Colleagues have called me the worst fundraiser ever. My skills are squarely rooted on the journalistic side of running a news outlet. Paying the bills has never been my forte, but we’ve survived. We have ads on the site that help, but since the site’s inception this has been a labor of love that otherwise doesn’t bring in the level of revenue necessary to justify it.
When I left a nice, corporate career in 2017, I did so knowing I wouldn’t make nearly as much money. But what we do at NOQ Report to deliver the truth and fight the progressive mainstream media narrative that has plagued this nation is too important for me to sacrifice it for the sake of wealth. We know we’ll never make a ton of money this way, and we’re okay with that.
Things have become harder with the coronavirus lockdowns. Both ad money and donations that have kept us afloat for a while have dropped dramatically. We thought we could weather the storm, but the so-called “surge” or “2nd-wave” that mainstream media and Democrats are pushing has put our prospects in jeopardy. In short, we are now in desperate need of financial assistance.
The best way NOQ Report readers can help is to donate. Our Giving Fuel page makes it easy to donate one-time or monthly. Alternatively, you can donate through PayPal as well. We need approximately $11,500 to stay afloat for the rest of 2020, but more would be wonderful and any amount that brings us closer to our goal is greatly appreciated.
The second way to help is to become a partner. We’ve strongly considered seeking angel investors in the past but because we were paying the bills, it didn’t seem necessary. Now, we’re struggling to pay the bills. This shouldn’t be the case as our traffic the last year has been going up dramatically. June, 2018, we had 11,678 visitors. A year later in June, 2019, we were up to 116,194. In June, 2020, we had 614,192. We’re heading in the right direction and we believe we’re ready talk to patriotic investors who want to not only “get in on the action” but more importantly who want to help America hear the truth. Interested investors should contact me directly with the contact button above.
Election year or not, coronavirus lockdowns or not, anarchic riots or not, the need for truthful journalism endures. But in these times, we need as many conservative media voices as possible. Please help keep NOQ Report going.
Join fellow patriots as we form a grassroots movement to advance the cause of conservatism. The coronavirus crisis has prompted many, even some conservatives, to promote authoritarianism. It’s understandable to some extent now, but it must not be allowed to embed itself in American life. We currently have 8000+ patriots with us in a very short time. If you are interested, please join us to receive updates.
“The left-wing news media didn’t just poison the information environment with their incessantly negative coverage of President Trump going into the 2020 election.
“They also refused to give airtime to important arguments of the Republican campaign — both pro-Trump and anti-Biden — which meant millions of voters cast their ballots knowing only what the media permitted them to know about the candidates….
“(T)he Media Research Center…tested…(swing state) voters’ knowledge of eight news stories — all important topics that our ongoing analysis had shown the liberal news media had failed to cover properly.
“We found that a huge majority (82%) of Biden voters were unaware of at least one of these key items, with five percent saying they were unaware of all eight of the issues we tested.
“This lack of information proved crucial: One of every six Biden voters we surveyed (17%) said they would have abandoned the Democratic candidate had they known the facts about one or more of these news stories.
“A shift of this magnitude would have changed the outcome in all six of the swing states won by Joe Biden, and Donald Trump would have comfortably won a second term as president.”
And despite ALL of that – Trump still won. Until the post-Election Day heist by Biden, Inc.
When a Republican miraculously manages to get elected President? Good news he generates is credited by the Zeitgeist to his most recent Democrat predecessor. And his accomplishments are lyingly subserviated to his most recent Democrat predecessor’s.
“‘The stock market Dow Jones Industrial Average just hit 30,000, which is the highest in history. We’ve never broken 30,000, and that’s despite everything that’s taken place with the pandemic,’ (Trump) said.”
Except Trump did it. So the Zeitgeist blows past its past wrong reporting – and lyingly gives credit to the incoming Democrat successor they lyingly helped steal the election…oops, I mean elect.
“President of UPS Global Healthcare, Wes Wheeler, says UPS ‘spent months strategizing with Operation Warp Speed officials’ on how to best distribute the vaccine.
“Wheeler also said the two companies will be working closely to divvy up states for the most efficient vaccine delivery.”
Trump wisely started the global movement away from thieving, totalitarian Communist China.
And the Zeitgeist pretends all of it never happened. Trump does the heavy lifting – and the Zeitgeist pretends the door Trump opened is just…open for Biden to waltz through.
Trump also got the government to auction lots more wireless spectrum to the private sector. More private sector spectrum – means more connectivity. For everyone.
“Robust broadband investment matters because it keeps the internet affordable….
“Today, the average American adult spends over 40 hours per week online. If we paid 1995 rates for present-day usage, the average bill would total $320 per month. And, of course, it would be dial-up, not 4G LTE.
“Unfortunately, net neutrality led to decreased broadband investment. Since 2006, broadband investment has only decreased twice: in the depths of the Great Recession and after net neutrality was passed, per statistics from the industry’s trade association.”
And Biden can’t “create municipal broadband.” Because government broadband has already existed for more than twenty years. Guess how that’s gone?
“For decades, local governments have made promises of faster and cheaper broadband networks. Unfortunately, these municipal networks often don’t deliver or fail, leaving taxpayers to foot the bill. Explore the map to learn about the massive debt, waste and broken promises left behind by these failed government networks.”
To continue closing the Digital Divide – as Trump did? We need more Trump Policy.
Unfortunately, we’re about to get the antithesis of what we need. A whole lot of Biden Policy.
We do know with metaphysical certitude that when Trump’s ten million new Internet users come online – the Zeitgeist will lyingly credit Biden.
But the Zeitgeist’s lies can only obfuscate Reality.
They can’t change it.
—————————- Seton Motley is the President of Less Government and he to ARRA News Service.
Tags:Seton Motley, The Zeitgeist Is Already Lying, Crediting Biden, with Trump’s Successful EverythingTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
by FRC Action: For the tens of thousands of people who made the trip to the National Mall this weekend, there was some solace in the crowds. They came, Ohio’s Melissa Regan said, to fight for their freedom. “I’m a mom and a proud American,” New York’s Lisa Morin told a photographer on an unusually warm December day. “And I’m really scared about what’s happening in this country.” It’s not just about exposing the truth of the election, she insisted. It’s about exposing the truth, period.
Like so many of the president’s supporters, they could only shake their head in frustration at the latest setback to that truth. Hours earlier, seven justices of the U.S. Supreme Court announced they would not hear the 18-state lawsuit against Georgia, Wisconsin, Pennsylvania, and Michigan for its gross violation of election law. In a brief, three-sentence explanation, the justices claimed that the attorneys general lacked the standing to sue. “Texas has not demonstrated a judicially cognizable interest in the manner in which another state conducts its elections.” Although Justices Samuel Alito and Clarence Thomas didn’t necessarily disagree, they did make a point of releasing a separate statement saying they would have at least heard the case.
The justices blamed standing, Margot Cleveland wrote, “‘a judicially cognizable interest.’ But how can the state of Texas not have a judicially cognizable interest in her sister states living up to the compact they entered when they entered the Union?” Part of the lawsuit might have been a stretch, she agreed, but “by failing to mention Texas’s constitutional claims, and by not providing any reasoning for its decision — omissions likely needed for the court to maintain its near-unanimous agreement — the Supreme Court created the appearance that it does not care about constitutional violations.” Let’s hope, she went on, that their decision was rooted in the Constitution and not their concern about meddling in the election.
For now, the media is having a field day with the 126 House Republicans who urged the Supreme Court to take the case. Fellow Rep. Maxine Waters (D-Calif.) said she was “disgusted” that the members weighed in, even though they had a very real stake in ensuring their states’ votes counted. If Georgia, Wisconsin, Pennsylvania, and Michigan violated their election laws, then guess what? They’re breaching the entire contract on which our country is based. All the states, a brief from Citizens United had argued, “are interdependent. Our nation’s operational principle is E Pluribus Unum. Each state has a duty to other states to abide by this…” This isn’t an infringement on other states’ sovereignty, the group insisted. “Each state depends on other states to adhere to minimum constitutional standards in areas where their sovereignty is ceded to the union. And if those standards are not met, then the responsibility to enforce those standards falls to this Court.”
Not only did these attorneys general have a right to file this lawsuit, under the contract of the Constitution, they had an obligation to file this lawsuit. Liberals, of course, who’ve never wanted to be governed by anything but their own radical agenda, don’t care what our guiding document says. In fact, they’re so incensed that any Republican would exhaust these legal options that they’ve floated the idea of punishing them in the new Congress! Rep. Rep. Bill Pascrell (D-N.J.), in a letter to Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) argues that these patriots are “traitors” “who would seek to destroy the Union.” These are, in his words, “unbecoming acts that reflect poorly on our chamber.” House leaders, he insists, cannot agree to seat them.
What House Republicans did may be a fireable offense in the eyes of lawless Democrats, but that’s what makes it so commendable. Standing up for the rule of law takes courage in a ruthless environment like this one. And when the media and liberal activists and even some Republicans are telling you to just “let it go,” (and by “it” they mean our constitutional process), it was all the more heroic that these conservatives stepped in and stood up for integrity.
At the end of the day, Rep. Mike Johnson (R-La.) reminded everyone, “Duty is ours, results are God’s.” Doug Masriano (R), a Pennsylvania state senator who hosted the first public hearing on election integrity he’s heard from “thousands of people” across the state about fraud at every level. These are real problems in our system, he insisted. That’s why he’s not quitting — and neither, Masriano said, should Republicans. “We’re on the side of righteousness — and we need to fight forward politically [to clean up the process], not just roll over.” Courage is rising, he said. “And it’s not too late. It’s never too late.”
——————— Shared by FRC Action.
Tags:FRC Action, Duty Is Ours, Results Are God’sTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
by Gary Bauer: Got Vaccine? Thanks, President Trump! There was a moving scene yesterday in a place you have probably never heard of before: Portage, Michigan. People spontaneously gathered waving American and Trump flags as the first trucks pulled out of a Pfizer factory carrying the first batches of COVID-19 vaccines. This marks the beginning of the end of the coronavirus.
Some conservative commentators have compared it to D-Day. Well, if it’s D-Day, then Donald Trump is the commander in chief. He brought together our military, shipping companies, medical researchers and more as he waged war against this virus.
It is possible that by December 31st, 99% of nursing home residents will have received the vaccine. That will break the back of COVID.
Nursing home residents are one percent of the population. But, sadly, they represent about 40% to 45% of all the deaths. Stopping half of the COVID deaths by the end of the year or early next year would be a huge achievement.
By the end of today, vaccine doses will arrive in all 50 states. By the end of February, 100 million doses will likely be delivered. This is a monumental logistical effort that has been orchestrated by President Trump and Vice President Pence.
The Biden Crime Family
Remember how Joe Biden repeatedly insisted that he never discussed Hunter’s business dealings with him?
Well, late Friday news broke that Hunter Biden had ordered extra keys to be made for his “office mates” at a suite he identified as “The Biden Foundation” and “Hudson West (CEFC US)”. CEFC was the Chinese energy company that was going to pay Hunter and the whole Biden gang big bucks.
So, who needed keys to the CEFC office? One key was for Gongwen Dong, an “emissary” of CEFC Chairman Ye Jianming. Another key was for Hunter’s uncle James Biden. Another key was for Jill Biden. And the last key was reportedly for . . . Joe Biden.
Why would Joe Biden, who never discussed his son’s business dealings, need a key to the Washington, D.C., office of a Chinese energy company? Are we supposed to believe that Joe would walk in one day and ask what a Chinese guy was doing in his suite? Of course not. He knew all along! And note the close connection between the Biden Foundation and a Chinese company that was bankrolling the Biden family.
In one of the presidential debates, President Trump raised the issue of Hunter’s questionable business dealings. Joe Biden responded by saying that dozens of former national security experts dismissed the charges as Russian disinformation, and then he accused Donald Trump of making money off the Chinese.
The entire Biden family spent the entire campaign lying to the American press and the American people. And not one of those journalists is angry about it. They knew they were being lied to, but they were all in for their anointed candidate. They media were lying too!
The Founding Fathers believed that a free press was essential to the preservation of freedom. But we don’t really have a free press today. We have a hyper-partisan press just as committed to one party rule as the talking heads of Pravda were.
—————————- Gary Bauer (@GaryLBauer) is a conservative family values advocate and serves as president of American Values and chairman of the Campaign for Working Families
Tags:Gary Bauer, Campaign for Working Families, Got Vaccine, The Biden Crime FamilyTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
Morocco becomes the latest to agree to normalize relations with Israel. by Thomas Gallatin: President Donald Trump has announced the latest Middle East peace deal, this one between Israel and Morocco. “Another HISTORIC breakthrough today!” read Trump’s social media post. “Our two GREAT friends Israel and the Kingdom of Morocco have agreed to full diplomatic relations — a massive breakthrough for peace in the Middle East!” Morocco is now the fourth Arab nation in recent months to end hostilities with Israel and agree to normalize relations with the Jewish state, the others being United Arab Emirates, Bahrain, and Sudan. Paging Saudi Arabia…Part of the deal was the U.S. agreeing to officially recognize Morocco’s sovereignty over Western Sahara. As Trump noted, “Morocco recognized the United States in 1777. It is thus fitting we recognize their sovereignty over the Western Sahara.” This will include the U.S. working to increase economic and social development with Morocco.Trump’s foreign policy legacy is the antithesis of his predecessor’s. Whereas Barack Obama, who blamed the U.S. for much of the world’s problems, essentially initiated an “America last” foreign policy that allowed our enemies to gain both strength and influence, Trump has, with his America First agenda, reestablished the U.S. international position of world leader. In so doing, he has brokered peace agreements in a region of the world that many foreign policy experts have written off as essentially impossible.However, Joe Biden, should he take office, plans to reverse Trump’s undeniably impressive progress in the Middle East by promising to re-enter the U.S. into the disastrous Iran nuclear deal. Such a decision would throw a lifeline to the world’s biggest state sponsor of terrorism. The pathetic political justification? The only reason Biden plans to get back into the Iran deal is to shore up the false narrative that Barack Obama’s seminal foreign policy “achievement” was saving the world from a nuclear-armed Iran. If anything, the deal — and Biden’s planned efforts — will only ensure that Iran ends up with nukes.
————————- Thomas Gallatin writes for The Patriot Post.
Tags:Thomas Gallitin, The Patriot Post, Trump’s Fourth Mideast Peace DealTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
by Bill Donohue: CNN ran a piece December 13 noting that Joe Biden goes to church, prays, and carries a rosary. Right after the election, America, the Jesuit media outlet, commented that Biden prays and carries a rosary. Back in September, NPR observed that Biden uses “biblical language,” prays, is a “deeply devout person of faith,” and, of course, carries a rosary.
The Washington Post is fascinated by Biden’s faith. On November 30th, it noted his “devout Catholicism.” On December 9th, two articles were published on this subject. One mentioned that he goes to church on Sunday and carries a rosary. The other was more pointed: “Joe Biden goes to church. Quietly. Calmly.”
So it is settled. Joe Biden goes to church and carries a rosary. This is empirically verifiable. Clearly the media are enamored of his faith. But why are they so kind?
Recall how the media recently treated another Roman Catholic, Amy Coney Barrett. They were anything but kind. Indeed, her “devoutness” was a source of discontent, even rage in some quarters.
What accounts for the disparate treatment? Biden rejects the teachings of the Catholic Church on abortion—he has become an extremist—marriage (he even officiated at a gay wedding), foster care, gender ideology, healthcare, contraception, sterilization, religious liberty, and school choice. Barrett is in unison with the Church on all of these issues. He has been denied Holy Communion by some priests. She never has.
This is typical of the way the media treat Catholics in public office. Clarence Thomas, Samuel Alito, John Roberts, Brett Kavanaugh and Sonia Sotomayor are all Catholic, and their Catholicity has been subjected to intense scrutiny, save for Sotomayor. That’s because she is not known for her fidelity to Church teachings on these matters.
The moral of the story is plain: It is perfectly fine to be a Catholic public official just so long as he or she rejects the teachings of the Church on matters of public policy, even when those policies are life and death issues. In other words, it is okay for Catholics to bludgeon the Little Sisters of the Poor provided they carry a rosary.
—————————- Bill Donohue (@CatholicLeague) is a sociologist and president of the Catholic League.
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The Texas cases also demonstrate that fraud can happen at different points during the election process, and that it effectively dilutes legitimate ballots cast by legal voters.
During the 2014 general election, for example, Avery Ayers sought to run as an independent challenging Sen. John Cornyn, R-Texas. However, he forged the signatures of voters to qualify to be a candidate on the ballot. Ayers pleaded guilty to a third-degree felony fraud charge in state court and was sentenced to five years in prison.
Though he was paroled five months into his sentence on that charge, he’s now in federal prison for a separate wiretapping felony.
Threats to fair and free elections can occur at the registration process, as some fraudsters use invalid or commercial addresses to register to vote in areas where they don’t actually live.
In 2013, a group of at least four people attempted to take over a local utility board by falsely registering a Residence Inn as their home address.
James Jenkins, recently added to the database, pleaded no contest and was sentenced to 12 months of probation and a $2,000 fine for his involvement in this scheme. One co-conspirator was convicted by a jury and sentenced to three years in prison, and two other conspirators entered pretrial diversion programs to avoid prosecution.
Others, like Israel Garza, attempt to vote even though they are ineligible. When successful, such actions can negate the ballot of a legitimate voter, effectively disenfranchising that voter.
Garza, a convicted felon whose rights had not been restored, attempted to vote in a 2010 Texas municipal election even though he was ineligible. He pleaded guilty to attempted illegal voting and was sentenced to a year in prison, two years of probation, and fined $2,500.
Another convicted felon, Benito Aranda Jr., voted in the 2012 Texas primary election. He was convicted and sentenced to 10 years in prison for voting illegally as a convicted felon, but is serving the remainder of his sentence under “community supervision.” That’s the Texas term for probation.
The Heritage database is not an exhaustive, nor comprehensive list. It doesn’t capture all cases, and certainly doesn’t capture all reported instances or allegations of election fraud, some of which may be deserving of being investigated or prosecuted, but aren’t.
But the database does highlight vulnerabilities in the election system.
We do our best to track cases that are brought to our attention, but we don’t add them to our database until a conviction has been obtained or a civil judgment entered.
Take, for example, a prosecution we are currently tracking in Texas, involving a social worker who has been charged with 134 felony counts of election fraud.
Kelly Reagan Brunner worked in a state-supported institution for Texans with intellectual and developmental disabilities. She is alleged to have registered 67 of the residents to vote without their knowledge or consent, many of whom had been declared mentally incompetent under Texas law.
As Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton said, it “is particularly offensive when individuals purport to be champions for disability rights, when in reality they are abusing our most vulnerable citizens in order to gain access to their ballots and amplify their own political voice.”
Another prosecution we are tracking, this one out of Los Angeles, involves Carlos Antonio De Bourbon Montenegro, aka Mark Anthony Gonsalves, a prospective mayoral candidate. He was recently charged with numerous felony and misdemeanor offenses of election fraud for his alleged involvement in a scheme that is said to have involved submitting fraudulent voter registrations on behalf of homeless individuals.
It’s alleged that Montenegro filed more than 8,000 false registration applications over five months, forging names, addresses, and other information on nomination documents.
Thankfully, this attempted fraud was caught before a ballot was cast due to the actions of a county registrar who flagged the suspicious behavior.
Other prosecutions we have recently started tracking involve other convicted felons illegally voting.
In Wisconsin, it’s alleged that at least four felons voted despite being on a special parole status that prohibited them from voting. These men had been convicted of violent felonies, including rape, burglary, and strangulation of a woman.
Can you imagine the anger of their victims, or the victims’ families, knowing that these criminals were casting ballots, taking part in the process that determines the laws that they intentionally violated?
As these cases demonstrate, election fraud often harms the most marginalized in communities, damaging the power the people have to freely choose their representatives.
Awareness of the current threats is the first step in securing fair and secure elections and should be a bipartisan priority in every state.
In the meantime, we will continue to bring attention to, and document, election fraud cases and convictions occurring throughout the country.
——————————— Kaitlynn Samalis-Aldrich is a research assistant in the Meese Center for Judicial and Legal Studies at The Heritage Foundation. Hans von Spakovsky (@) is an authority on a wide range of issues—including civil rights, civil justice, the First Amendment, immigration, the rule of law and government reform—as a senior legal fellow in The Heritage Foundation’s Edwin Meese III Center for Legal and Judicial Studies and manager of the think tank’s Election Law Reform Initiative.
Tags:Kaitlynn Samalis-Aldrich, Hans von Spakovsky, The Heritage Foundation, Election Fraud Database, Tops 1,300 CasesTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
A KOMO News reporter elaborates: “If someone . . . steals power tools with the intent of reselling them online in order to pay for a basic need like food or rent, the city of Seattle may be OK with that.”
This “principle” discards the principle that individuals have rights, including property rights, which it is wrong to violate by, for example, stealing. With the principle discarded, no line can be drawn to limit the amount of stealing one may do or the means of doing so. The needs of the person being robbed are somehow deemed irrelevant.
The Seattle plan might have spared Hugo’s Jean Valjean decades of being pursued by Javert. But the injustice there wasn’t that Valjean was punished for stealing a loaf of bread but that his punishment — 19 years as a galley slave — was so disproportionate.
Food is a continuing cost. Rent is. The immediacy keeps recurring. What if you have a $2,500 monthly rent?
Well, just gotta steal lots of power tools, and do so regularly. According to the babblers on the Seattle city council, “need” trumps the rights and lives of the innocent. So it’s okay to terrify somebody in a dark alley and grab their stuff even if the victim has an immediate basic need to be left alone.
Seattle has an immediate basic need for a new government that respects lives and property. Until then, let’s hope the “city limit” signs are well marked.
This is Common Sense. I’m Paul Jacob.
————————— Paul Jacob (@Common_Sense_PJ) is author of Common Sense which provides daily commentary about the issues impacting America and about the citizens who are doing something about them. He is also President of the Liberty Initiative Fund (LIFe) as well as Citizens in Charge Foundation. Jacob is a contributing author on the ARRA News Service.
Tags:Paul Jacob, Common Sense, Needed TheftTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
As we reflect on a fabulous year (sarcasm intended), I’m grateful we at least had President Donald Trump fighting to keep America great. Despite constant media attacks and senseless haters, President Trump remained strong and successful.
In the 12 months of 2020, President Trump gave America:
1. The death of terrorist Qasem SoleimaniPresident Trump started 2020 with a bang, literally. In January, he directed the United States military to kill Soleimani, and they succeeded.
2. The fastest economic recovery in historyWhile the Chinese Coronavirus hurt our economy, President Trump was able to recover 16.4 million jobs from April to November. His great work prior to the pandemic and his actions during, such as the CARES Act and Paycheck Protection Program, led to the fastest recovery in history.
3. Record-breaking 1 percent GDP growth in third quarterThis was the sweetest treat we could have asked for in October.
4. Civil Service ReformIn June, President Trump issued an Executive Order reforming the hiring process for federal employees, prioritizing merit and competency over degrees. President Trump also recently issued an executive order regarding senior bureaucrats, which allows them to be hired and fired more easily. This is great news because like our politicians, federal bureaucrats and employees, need to be held accountable.
5. Nomination and confirmation of Supreme Court Justice Amy Coney Barrett.As a young, conservative woman, I was inspired to see President Trump nominate now-justice Amy Coney Barrett to the Supreme Court. She is a wonderful role model to young women because she is living proof that you can have a successful career and raise a wonderful family.
6. 415 total miles ofborder wall constructedDespite the Coronavirus, Black Lives Matter riots, drastic voter fraud this past election, and all the other many crises of 2020, President Trump was able to deliver on his promises of securing our borders.
7. Peace Deal between Israel and United Arab-EmiratesPresident Trump secured a historic peace deal between Israel and the United Arab-Emirates, the first of its kind since 1994. Another fun fact: President Trump is the first President since Reagan not to start a war!
8. Peace Deal between Israel and BahrainLess than a month later, President Trump secured a peace deal between Israel and Bahrain. The President’s work and negotiation skills are helping Arab nations come together for peace and prosperity.
9. Peace Agreement between Israel and SudanIn less than three months, President Trump struck a third peace deal between Israel and Sudan. Piece by piece, President Trump is helping bring peace to the Middle East! Try saying that ten times fast, it’s fun.
10. Peace agreement between Israel and MoroccoAmericans for Limited Government President Rick Manning applauded President Trump for his historic efforts and peace deals throughout this year, stating “Donald Trump continues to prove to be the greatest peace President in modern American history, as he has just announced a fourth peace deal between Israel and Morocco. The prior peace and normalization agreements with the United Arab Emirates, Sudan and Bahrain and Israel set the stage for the opportunity of a generation to finally put the Middle East at peace.”
11. Accessible COVID testingPresident Trump’s leadership during the ongoing coronavirus, led America to lead the world in Coronavirus testing. Thanks to him, we’re leading the world by about 55 million in testing.
12. COVID vaccine due to phenomenal Operation Warp SpeedPresident Trump recently signed an executive order, which ensures Americans will be prioritized when a COVID vaccine is developed or procured using US government and taxpayer resources. Despite what the mainstream media will tell you, President Trump is handling the pandemic tremendously well. The vaccine was approved over the weekend, and is being sent to every corner of the nation.
2020 has not been an easy year, but I’m grateful for these 12 gifts (and others) from President Donald Trump over the last 12 months.
Tags:Americans for Limited Government, Megan Marzzacco, In the 12 Months of 2020, Donald gave to meTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
by Caroline Glick: Last week Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu gave an interview to Michael Doran from the Hudson Institute. As a scholar, rather than a reporter, Doran asked questions that related to the ideas that have animated Netanyahu’s actions over the years.
The first part of their discussion revolved around Netanyahu’s speech before the joint houses of Congress in March 2015 where he laid out the case against the centerpiece of then-president Barack Obama’s foreign policy – the nuclear deal with Iran. Standing before the US lawmakers, Netanyahu explained that Obama’s gambit would guarantee that Iran would develop a nuclear arsenal inside of a decade.That address is widely considered to have been a turning point in Israel’s history. It cemented Israel’s position as a regional leader and set the conditions for strategic cooperation between Israel and the Sunni Arab states of the Persian Gulf which, like Israel, are threatened by Iran and its nuclear weapons program.
Doran, who is Catholic, chose to begin his discussion of the speech not with the impact it had on the Arab world, but its impact on American Jews. Members of the US Jewish community, Doran recalled, were frightened by the speech which pitted the leader of the Jewish state against the President of the United States. He quoted a friend who told him, “2,000 years of history have taught us that you shouldn’t clash with kings.”
The American Jewish anxiety over Netanyahu’s speech is notable because it revealed a harsh truth that has only grown harsher in the five years that have passed since then. The self-confidence that characterized American Jewry in the second half of the 20 century has all but disappeared.
Until the 1950s, the most common expression of anti-Semitism in America was elitist snark and ostracism. The country club anti-Semitism of high society kept Jews out of fancy country clubs, law firms, and investment banks. Jews were subjected to admission quotas at top universities and the Jews that got in were expected to behave like good Presbyterians.
In the early to mid-1950s, as the dimensions of the Holocaust were absorbed by the American ruling classes, the gates to high society began opening to American Jews, and what is widely considered the Golden Age of American Judaism began.
Fifty years later, at the start of this century, things began slipping back. The Golden Age began to rust. It wasn’t the WASP elite of yesteryear that rejected the civil rights of Jews. It was the new progressive elite that began undermining the Jews’ position as they moved from the margins of American society to center stage. Like the Soviets, who exchanged the old anti-Jewish bigotry that rejected Jews as individuals, for the new anti-Jewish bigotry that rejected Jews as a nation, the progressives rejected Israel’s right to exist and ostracized Jews who embraced their attachment to the Jewish people and homeland.
The progressive elite are now the new American elite. Now in charge, they have dusted off the old anti-Semitism of the WASP elites and updated it. Whereas the old elite anti-Semitism involved the social and financial ostracism of Jews due to their religion, today’s elite anti-Semitism involves the social and financial ostracism of Jews due to politics and racism.
As Netanyahu spoke with Doran, the online Jewish magazine Tablet published a story of such contemporary elite anti-Semitic ostracism suffered by a group of Jewish women in Los Angeles. The women had been members of an exclusive, members-only Facebook page for women in LA called “Girls Night Out.”
GNO, with its 30,000 members is considered a valuable networking tool. As the article explained, the page, “offers valuable work opportunities for LA’s large freelance population. By commenting on threads, fitness trainers, chefs, makeup artists, and the like can prove their bona fides and, if they are lucky, get new clients. Artists can sell their wares and PR pros can announce hot new openings and popup stores.”
With the economic shutdowns caused by the coronavirus, membership in the networking rich Facebook page is considered a precious resource.
In late August, as the Black Lives Matter riots spread to Los Angeles, the page’s administrators made supporting BLM official policy. BLM’s LA riots were rife with specifically anti-Semitic attacks against synagogues and Jewish businesses. Anti-Semitic banners were posted on highway overpasses and the atmosphere in Jewish neighborhoods, in particular, was fearful.
One such banner on highway 405 caught the attention of a Jewish GNO member. She posted a comment about the banner, which read, “The Jews Want a Race War,” on GNO and expressed her concern. Other Jewish women joined her and they recommended that the page appoint a Jewish woman as one of its administrators to aid in the fight against anti-Semitism.
In response, another GNO member suggested that only Jews who agree to “acknowledge the occupation of Palestine,” should be permitted to administer the page. That is, only Jews who accept the progressive elite’s anti-Semitic constraints on their rights to participate in polite society can have the job.
All the Jewish women who posted objections to this self-evidently bigoted post were thrown off the page. And, a Jewish woman who accepted the condition, and wrote a post condemning Israel was given the job of an administrator.
The Jews who were thrown off took their case to the group founder. She proceeded to do nothing for three months. Finally, last month, the founder pushed out the anti-Semitic administrators and moderators, including the Jewish anti-Zionist, brought back the Jewish women who were expelled, and appointed two pro-Israel Jewish women as moderators on the page.
Given its happy end, the GNO story is a nice story. But the fact that for three months, the Jewish women who stood up for themselves were denied the opportunity to participate in the valuable networking opportunities provided by the Facebook page simply because they stood up against bigotry testifies to the prevalence and power of progressive anti-Semites.
This elite progressive anti-Semitism isn’t expressed only as hatred for Israel and Jews who support Israel. It is also characterized by a sneering contempt for Judaism and Jewish practices – for instance, the practice of celebrating Hanukkah.
Last week, the New York Times published an opinion piece under the headline, “Saying Good-bye to Hanukkah.” The article was written by a non-Jewish woman, with an assimilated Catholic mother and an assimilated Jewish father. In her column, she declared that she and her non-Jewish spouse will not be lighting the menorah with their non-Jewish children because it just isn’t meaningful to them.
It ought to go without saying that a non-Jewish woman’s decision not to celebrate a Jewish holiday is a non-event. So why did the NYT publish it?
Today, the New York Times is the newspaper of record for the progressive elite. As such, the NYT published the article to tell the faithful that contempt for Judaism and Jewish ritual is the way to go. The article can be seen as of a piece with the paper’s hostile treatment of ultra-Orthodox Jews.
To date, the Jewish community’s institutional leadership has been utterly incompetent in contending with the resurgence of the country club anti-Semitism of America’s progressive ruling class. This owes, in large part to the fact that many powerful members of the community are progressives and as such, they side with the anti-Semites against their fellow Jews.
Last month, William Daroff, the CEO of the Conference of Presidents of Major Jewish Organizations asked the group’s members to adopt the International Holocaust Remembrance Association’s definition of ant-Semitism. The IHRA definition, along with the examples of anti-Semitism it includes has been adopted by the US government and dozens of other governments worldwide.
The progressives at Americans for Peace Now refused. In an open letter to Daroff, the pro-Palestinian group aped Jeremy Corbyn insisting that the examples of anti-Semitism attached to the IHRA definition – rejecting Israel’s right to exist, campaigning for its boycott and the ostracism of its supporters and using a double standard to judge Israel – are not anti-Semitism.
Rather than boot APN out of the Conference of Presidents for endorsing discrimination against Jews, Daroff shrugged his shoulders. Everyone has a right to his opinion, he responded. It was just a suggestion.
Netanyahu’s response to Doran’s recollection of his friend’s fear over the premier’s bold defiance of Obama was instructive, both in terms of what it says about the nature of Jewish history and the nature of Jewish leadership.
Netanyahu said he rejected Doran’s friend’s “general rule,” that Jews “shouldn’t clash with kings.”
“I think Jewish history is a little more complex than that. It goes back actually almost 4,000 years,” he noted.
And then Netanyahu turned to Hanukkah.
“Next week we’re marking down one episode alone, just one example of resistance to kings without which we wouldn’t be here today. It’s called Hanukkah, it’s the Maccabean Revolt against the Seleucid Empire and Antiochus. Without that revolt, there wouldn’t be a Judaism, there wouldn’t be Christianity either.”
Netanyahu then rejected Doran’s friend’s characterization of Obama as a king.
“I wasn’t there dealing with a king. I was dealing with the elected president of our great valued ally, the United States.”
While many American Jews were scared that Netanyahu’s courageous challenge of Obama’s central foreign policy would provoke anti-Semitism, in fact, it empowered many Americans to oppose the deal. Republicans rallied against it. Every Republican presidential candidate in 2016 pledged to abandon the deal, and President Donald Trump kept his promise.
By being a leader, Netanyahu also empowered the American Jewish community to defy Obama, even as he and his advisors channeled anti-Semitism by demonizing the deal’s opponents as being in the pockets of nefarious donors and foreign interests.
AIPAC launched a major campaign to oppose the nuclear deal in Congress and tens of thousands of otherwise uninvolved American Jews attended demonstrations across the US to voice their opposition to the deal that paved the way for Iran to become a nuclear power.
Netanyahu explained that in dealing with leaders like Obama, with whom he had profound disagreements, “You seek compromise where you can, but you have to avoid compromise where you can’t and you have to distinguish between the two and that’s what I tried to do.”
This lesson in leadership is perhaps the key message of our time. Like the Greeks of yesteryear, the progressive elites today insist that, to be accepted in polite society, Jews have to give up an essential part of their identity – and their civil rights. The Greeks demanded that the Jews give up the Torah. The progressives demand they give up their Jewish peoplehood. These are things that cannot be compromised, only fought, even when those demanding their forfeiture are Jews themselves.
———————– Caroline Glick is the Senior Contributing Editor of Israel Hayom and the Director of the David Horowitz Freedom Center’s Israel Security Project. For more information on Ms. Glick’s work, visit carolineglick.com.
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by Mario Murillo: If you are looking for me to give you an easy answer, forget it. But, if you want a rock to build on—if you want a truth that will stiffen your resolve and give you a backbone—if you want to hear some reasons for fighting, then read on.
Here are the two things you must do first:
-You must never let go of your faith in an American miracle. No matter how this looks. No matter how impossible it may seem. You must never let go of your faith in that miracle.
-You must face the facts of your current situation, no matter how brutal they seem.
Here’s why those two things are so urgent. This election is a test. It is a bitter test. It is a trial that goes to the very core of your soul. To pass this test, you must never give up. God and Satan have dramatically opposite purposes for this test.
In this horrendous time—in this crime that stole an election—in this fearsome discovery of what Communist China is trying to do to us, I have a great hope. But my hope is not in prophets, prophecies, or even in Trump. My greatest hope is in the character of God. I know Him, and I know what He does in situations like this.
I know God. I know His character. Those who know God and trust His character, are the ones that Daniel said would thrive in the evil of the last days. “…but the people who know their God shall be strong, and carry out great exploits” (Daniel 11:32). Those who will soon exploit this present darkness, know God Himself. They know Him even better than they know His prophecies. They know He always keeps His promises. They know He never fails!
For the last several weeks, many have been quoting this portion of 2 Chronicles 20:20, “Believe His prophets, and you shall prosper.” This is found in the story of the great miracle victory that God gave to Judah and King Jehoshaphat.
God wants to use it to forever settle it in your life that it was God, and only God, Who got us out of this mess. God wants to use it to place you in the middle of the victory, and the celebration of that victory.
On the other hand, Satan wants to use it to permanently destroy your faith in miracles. He wants to humiliate your intercession, as well as your stand against abortion and immorality.
But, the most important thing the devil wants to do is to make sure you miss the victory celebration. Only those who stand against the storm—the vicious lies—and remain at their post, even after we have passed all the human deadlines, will feel the joy of our final victory. Proverbs 14:10 says, “The heart knows its own bitterness, and a stranger does not share its joy.” Only those who suffer now, can celebrate then.
Now read this…
Once during a lady’s luncheon at a large church, some women were gossiping about the pastor. They had no idea that his wife was seated at the table behind them. One of the women claimed that the pastor had said something he should not have said. The wife spun around and said, “He never said that.” The lady who made the accusation retorted, “How do you know he didn’t say it? You weren’t even there.” The response of the pastor’s wife is the soul of this blog. She said, “I know him. He is incapable of making a statement like that.”
In this horrendous time—in this crime that stole an election—in this fearsome discovery of what Communist China is trying to do to us, I have a great hope. But my hope is not in prophets, prophecies, or even in Trump. My greatest hope is in the character of God. I know Him, and I know what He does in situations like this.
I know God. I know His character. Those who know God and trust His character, are the ones that Daniel said would thrive in the evil of the last days. “…but the people who know their God shall be strong, and carry out great exploits” (Daniel 11:32). Those who will soon exploit this present darkness, know God Himself. They know Him even better than they know His prophecies. They know He always keeps His promises. They know He never fails!
For the last several weeks, many have been quoting this portion of 2 Chronicles 20:20, “Believe His prophets, and you shall prosper.” This is found in the story of the great miracle victory that God gave to Judah and King Jehoshaphat.
I can’t tell you the number of times I have read 2 Chronicles 20. That is why it shocked me that I had never seen this before. Then I saw that the king’s hope for victory was in something deeper than the prophecy.
Read this portion of the chapter. See if you see it in Jehoshaphat’s prayer:
“10 And now, here are the people of Ammon, Moab, and Mount Seir—whom You would not let Israel invade when they came out of the land of Egypt, but they turned from them and did not destroy them— 11 here they are, rewarding us by coming to throw us out of Your possession which You have given us to inherit. 12 O our God, will You not judge them? For we have no power against this great multitude that is coming against us; nor do we know what to do, but our eyes are upon You.”
Just as the pastor’s wife knew what her husband was capable of, so the king knew what God would do in a situation where Judah was helpless before a wicked enemy bent on destroying an innocent people. Jehoshaphat prayed, ‘Will you not judge them? Because we are helpless and they are utterly wrong.’
Do you understand that the prophecy Judah received was merely instructions about how to see victory? The king already assumed victory was coming—because of the character of God.
Joe Biden is a puppet, bought and paid for by Communist China. We have a flurry of despicable villains. From Democrats, to social media, to Hollywood, to name just a few. Now let’s look at what they have done. They have deceived. They have censored. They have committed great crimes.
Like Jehoshaphat, we have arrived at the same conclusion—a conclusion infinitely greater than any prophecy. Here’s the situation: We are being stripped of our freedom. We are hated because we have opposed the unspeakable horror of abortion. We are being forced to shut down, be vaccinated, and toe the line of socialism.
Say it with Jehoshaphat: “Will you not judge them? We have no might against this great host…but our eyes are on You.” Do not give up. Man does not decide the deadline, only God does.
David wrote, “O love the Lord, all you His saints! The Lord preserves the faithful, and plentifully pays back those who deal arrogantly. Be strong and let your heart take courage, all you who wait for, trust in, and expect the Lord! (Psalm 31:23-24 AMP)
————————– Mario Murillo is an evangelist, minister, blogger.
Tags:Mario Murillo, Ministries, Where My Hope Rests. In This Election CrisisTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
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by Bob Maistros: Republicans have lost more than 50 court cases” relating to election fraud and illegalities, parrots the traditional media ad infinitum and gleefully. CNN crows of “desperate appeals and baseless conspiracy theories.”
But the burgeoning legal body count is no indicator of legal incompetence, flight of fancy nor quixotic stubbornness. Rather, it’s a measure of the American judiciary’s historic failure at all levels to protect the integrity of the electoral process, defend the Constitution, and ultimately, perhaps, preserve the union.
“Do you think we’re stupid?” Trump legal team leader Rudy Giuliani queried plaintively as the vote heist unfolded.
No, Mr. Mayor. Your well-organized opposition doesn’t think you’re not stupid. But does think – nay, knows – you’rehelpless.
Helpless on short notice to expose and counter the near-perfect crime Democrats orchestrated over months of war-gaming and legal positioning.
Helpless against traditional media ranks closing around Joe Biden and outright taunting the president. (One national anchorman recently tossed off that The Donald “refuses to admit he has lost.” “Refuses” connoting pigheadedness, “admit” a deprecatory form of the more traditional “concede,” and “has lost” a conclusion the blow-dried Ron Burgundy-type was not yet in position to draw.)
Helpless against rules rigged outside legal and constitutional frameworks amid pandemic panic, some with acquiescence of spineless, brain-dead Republican officials.
But most of all, helpless in the face of the high legal mountain to climb.
That mountain consists, first of all, of the need for “clear evidence” of irregularities sufficient to overturn the result. In fact, the Trump team is hamstrung by mindless repetition of the talking point alleging “no evidence” at all of election fraud.
Oh. You mean “no evidence” like thousands of pages of election worker affidavits? Like refusing bipartisan access to vote counting? Like tossed absentee envelopes? Like constitutionally impermissible variances in intrastate review standards?
Like the statistical impossibility and suspicious timing of near-simultaneous vote dumps across four states almost unanimously in favor of one candidate? Like video evidence appearing to show officials pulling out hidden ballots after dismissing observers?
Or even like the executive branch amendments of election laws, constitutionally required to be established only by state legislatures, and passed expressly to prevent the exact frauds that may have eventuated?
You mean that kind of non-existent “evidence?”
Meanwhile, in the words of one prominent legal blog, there’s judicial “reluctance to wade into post-election litigation” on the part of the Supreme Court in particular – still institutionally burned by fierce leftist reaction to appropriate intervention in Bush v. Gore.
Yeah? Where, pray tell, was the Supremes’ “reluctance,” for example, to disenfranchise majorities affirming traditional marriage in 31 sovereign states?
“Reluctance” to baldly rewrite federal law creating a cause of action for transgender funeral home employees cross-dressing in the presence of grieving families?
Or “reluctance” to step in and recast a penalty as a “tax” to preserve an otherwise unconstitutional enactment?
Suddenly “reluctant” courts hide behind procedural dodges to avert their duty to ensure a credible and lawful electoral process. As if “laches” – mere delay in bringing a suit – overrides basic questions of constitutionality. And a state has no standing – “judicially cognizable interest” – in challenging unconstitutional actions, including potential violations of federal law, that negate the actual national presidential results to which their citizens’ votes contributed.
Not to mention another outrageous Catch 22: wrongdoings – no matter how egregious – that cannot be shown without further investigation to be large enough to change outcomes must be ignored. But if they are massive in extent, then relief shouldn’t be granted that “disenfranchises” so many voters – even if their “votes” are illegal or non-existent.
BTW, since when is a theft’s size a reason to excuse it? “Bernie Madoff stole $65 billion? That’s so much money it would be unfair to take it away from him.” C’mon, man. Here, we’re only talking about purloining the entire presidency.
It would have been little skin off various courts’ backs to allow suits to advance, facilitating discovery and deposition of officials involved in suspicious activity and potentially, even disproving charges of fraud, thereby instilling greater confidence in the result one way or another.
Instead, the Supreme Court’s two punts this week unleash Dred Scott 2020 (without the racial overtones). Like the original, they will inflame tensions and potentially, create further momentum toward America’s sundering.
And make no mistake, that momentum is growing. More commentators, even legends like Rush Limbaugh and Pat Buchanan, bring it up daily. One anonymous pundit actually proffers an intriguing scenario, a red county-led separation, that would leave this correspondent on the wrong side of the divide – in a Republican state but one of America’s bluest local jurisdictions.
More important, Texas’ now-spurned lawsuit provides a potential stepping stone: 18 states are now on record alleging a stolen presidency. From there, it’s only a hop, skip and a jump to the Declaration of Dissolution previously suggested in this space.
The judiciary, most notably the high court, could have helped avert that outcome. Instead, in the words of a previous president, the justices could join scorned Roger Taney not just on the wrong side of the coming split, but on the wrong side of history.
———————— Bob Maistros writes for Issues & Insights@Issues&Insights.
Tags:Bob Maistros, Issues & Insights, See-Nothing, Do-Nothing, Judiciary Unleashes, Dred Scott 2020To share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
by Fred Lucas: Postal employees in Wisconsin backdated mail-in ballots in the presidential election and nursing home staffers pressured elderly residents on how to vote, witnesses told state lawmakers.
A state election official, meanwhile, assured the Wisconsin lawmakers that there is no evidence of widespread fraud.
These and other witnesses testified Friday before two committees of the Wisconsin Legislature that held a joint hearing on allegations of fraud and irregularities during the Nov. 3 election.
The hearing came as Wisconsin was one of four states — along with Georgia, Michigan, and Pennsylvania — sued by Texas and 18 other states that accuse them of violating their own state election laws. The U.S. Supreme Court, however, rejected the complaint Friday night, saying Texas had no legal standing.
The Wisconsin hearing also fell just three days before the Electoral College convenes Monday in state capitols across the country to vote for president based on the election results in their state.
Major news outlets projected Nov. 7 former Vice President Joe Biden, who appears to have collected 306 of the necessary 270 electoral votes, as the winner over President Donald Trump.
However, Trump, who appears to have garnered 232 electoral votes, has not conceded the election.
Biden won a recount in the state. Late Friday, a Wisconsin judge rejected the Trump campaign’s challenge to the recount and certification of the vote. The campaign appealed to the Wisconsin Supreme Court, which CBS News reported was expected to hear arguments Saturday.
Postal employees in Wisconsin backdated mail-in ballots in the presidential election and nursing home staffers pressured elderly residents on how to vote, witnesses told state lawmakers.
A state election official, meanwhile, assured the Wisconsin lawmakers that there is no evidence of widespread fraud.
These and other witnesses testified Friday before two committees of the Wisconsin Legislature that held a joint hearing on allegations of fraud and irregularities during the Nov. 3 election.
The hearing came as Wisconsin was one of four states—along with Georgia, Michigan, and Pennsylvania—sued by Texas and 18 other states that accuse them of violating their own state election laws. The U.S. Supreme Court, however, rejected the complaint Friday night, saying Texas had no legal standing.
The left is actively working to undermine the integrity of our elections. Read the plan to stop them now. Learn more now
The Wisconsin hearing also fell just three days before the Electoral College convenes Monday in state capitols across the country to vote for president based on the election results in their state.
Major news outlets projected Nov. 7 former Vice President Joe Biden, who appears to have collected 306 of the necessary 270 electoral votes, as the winner over President Donald Trump.
However, Trump, who appears to have garnered 232 electoral votes, has not conceded the election.
Biden won a recount in the state. Late Friday, a Wisconsin judge rejected the Trump campaign’s challenge to the recount and certification of the vote. The campaign appealed to the Wisconsin Supreme Court, which CBS News reported was expected to hear arguments Saturday.
Trump won Wisconsin’s 10 electoral votes in 2016 after defeating Hillary Clinton by 47.2% to 46.5%, but the Badger State certified Biden as the winner of the 2020 race with 49.6% to Trump’s 48.9%.
Democrats on the Wisconsin Legislature’s committees demanded early on that each witness should give sworn testimony. State Rep. Ron Tusler, a Republican and chairman of the Assembly committee, said that requiring witnesses to testify under oath is not something the panel normally does and he wouldn’t make this hearing an exception.
Here are four big highlights from the day of testimony at the Wisconsin Capitol before the state Assembly’s Committee on Campaigns and Elections and the state Senate’s Committee on Elections, Ethics, and Rural Issues.
1. Postal Service Whistleblower
Postal contract worker Ethan Pease said he wasn’t either a Trump or a Biden supporter, but voted for the Libertarian presidential candidate in November in what was only the second time he has voted.
Pease, who graduated high school in 2018, said he initially wanted to avoid getting in trouble after a U.S. Postal Service worker told him that ballots were being backdated. But he felt compelled to report it, he said.
Pease said he was surprised by what he saw and heard while working for United Mailing Services, a subcontractor to the Postal Service, in the months leading up to the election.
He started delivering mail-in ballots in September, he testified:
On one occasion, I forgot to retrieve the ballots for my nightly box truck run. Luckily, I had to take two trucks that night, so I got them on the second truck run. After that, I always made sure to get them because you don’t want to have to take a box truck to go all the way back for one cart and take it all the way back to the post office. It’s about a mile drive.On Nov. 2, the day before Election Day, he saw just one ballot in the bin to pick up. On Election Day itself, he said, there were no ballots in the bin for delivery.
“The next day, Nov. 4, a senior USPS employee, whose name I do know, had asked me if I had forgotten any ballots the night before election night,” Pease told lawmakers, adding:
He explained to me that an order came down from the Wisconsin-Illinois chapter of USPS that 100,000 ballots were missing. He then told me that his post office, the one at Milwaukee Street in Madison, Wisconsin, had dispatched employees to look for the missing ballots around 4 a.m. Nov. 4. He said, and I quote, ‘around 4 a.m.,’ and that only seven or eight ballots were found at United Mailing Services, my work.Based on my previous experience and habit of double-checking the ballots, I believed that to be a lie immediately.On Nov. 5, Pease said, he talked to another Postal Service employee, who was not a supervisor:
She admitted that USPS employees were ordered to backdate ballots that were received too late to be lawfully counted. I asked this employee if I would be getting in trouble for those ballots the night before with my own boss, just kind of making sure that I was covered, because at first I did think perhaps I did miss ballots. But I couldn’t have if they were on the cart where they are supposed to be.He said the postal employee responded: “No, I wouldn’t worry as long as they were postmarked for the third.”
“Then she hesitated for a moment and said, ‘That’s why they had us do that,’ referring to USPS employees.”
He said he didn’t tell USPS supervisors because they seemed to dislike Trump:
I’ve heard those same employees make jokes about asking customers who came into the post office lobby, ‘Who did you vote for? Oh, President Trump. OK.’ Then they would reference throwing the ballots directly into the trash.I know that something wrong happened here and I just want to see that something gets done about it for our state and for the people of our state, so that people can have faith in our elections. … The bottom line to all of this is, why was the USPS even looking for ballots on Nov. 4 hours after the polls closed at 8 p.m. [Nov. 3].2. No Evidence of ‘Large-Scale Voter Fraud’
No major election fraud occurred, but Wisconsin state officials mishandled matters enough to hurt confidence in the system, testified Dean Knudson, a Republican member of the Wisconsin Elections Commission.
“I have not seen credible evidence of large-scale voter fraud in Wisconsin during the November election,” Knudson told the legislators:
In Wisconsin, there were no dumps of ballots during the night. None. There is no evidence of any fraud related to Dominion Voting [Systems] or any other machines in Wisconsin. None. The counting in Wisconsin did not stop and restart. Election observers were allowed to be present throughout the Election Day and election night proceedings. …There has been no credible evidence presented to the Elections Commission that any of these problems occurred in Wisconsin. During this pandemic, Wisconsin successfully conducted elections in April, May, August, and November. We were the first to show how in-person voting could be safely conducted during this pandemic.However, Knudson said that the way a large number of votes were counted so late at night understandably raised suspicion when it seemed the state flipped from Trump to Biden. He said:
This system was fatally flawed. On election night 2020, Biden surged ahead of Trump when the Milwaukee absentee votes were reported in the early morning hours. This time, that delay caused more than confusion. It destroyed confidence in our election, creating suspicion, wiping out trust in our elections. Election night reporting should never be allowed to happen this way again.Knudson said no one made a complaint to the Elections Commission, but urged anyone with evidence and a complaint to do so.
“The method for this is an individual who sees wrongful conduct by an election official must start with a sworn complaint to the Elections Commission,” Knudson said. “No court can find wrongdoing in Wisconsin until that [complaint] has been filed with the Elections Commission.”
It’s more effective than bringing the complaint to a district attorney to prosecute, he added.
“You can file it with the DA. The truth is they will seldom prosecute someone over this. It happens from time to time,” Knudson said. “They don’t see it rising to be worthy of their time. If you would gather a series of those and turn them into the Elections Commission, the commission could gather a group of those and it would carry more weight going to court.”
3. ‘No, No, He’s a Bad Man’
Dan O’Donnell, a Wisconsin talk radio host, told the lawmakers that he had been investigating absentee ballots from nursing homes for several months. O’Donnell related several anecdotes, which he said he got from family members of older residents.
One woman he identified as Susan said her mother told her: “I really wanted to vote for Trump.”
However, he said, a staff member at the nursing home told Susan: “No, no, he’s a bad man. We are voting for Biden.”
“The staff member instructed her to vote for Biden, so she did, but she wasn’t happy about it. None of us should be happy about this,” O’Donnell told the lawmakers. “These are severely cognitively and developmentally impaired people who rely on their caregivers for everything. But those caregivers have betrayed their trust.”
O’Donnell gave several other examples, asserting, “This has happened over and over and over here in Wisconsin at assisted living facilities and nursing homes across the state.”
He said “Ethel,” a pseudonym because her family fears retribution for coming forward, was 95 and died in a nursing home in October after struggling with dementia.
“She’s been voting absentee for years even though she has not been mentally competent enough to since at least 2012,” O’Donnell said, attributing this to Ethel’s daughter, whom he identified as Janet. “In fact, as her mental state deteriorated, her voting became more regular. How could this be? Janet has filed a police report with her local law enforcement agency and under penalty of obstruction of justice.”
He read a sworn statement from the daughter, in which she says: “Mom could sometimes not recognize me, remember what her last meal was, or even what day it was, and she voted.”
Even though Ethel died in October, her vote for president was counted, O’Donnell said.
He again quoted Janet’s statement to police:
I inquired who had requested a ballot for her and had access to her to assist in filling out the ballot for her, as I have not been able to visit her personally for months. They never gave me an answer on how she received a ballot.4. Calling Out Social Media
Another witness focused on large donations from the Center for Tech and Civic Life, a nonprofit primarily funded by Facebook co-founder and CEO Mark Zuckerberg and his wife Priscilla Chan, who gave $350 million to the project.
The center spent more than $6 million in Wisconsin for improved election administration, according to litigation by the Amistad Project, an initiative of the Thomas More Society, a conservative legal group.
The funding, which included money for ballot drop boxes, was focused heavily on Democratic areas, testified former Kansas Attorney General Phillip Kline, now director of the Amistad Project.
“You had a billionaire in the counting room and America was kicked out. Those funds funded the election workers,” Kline told the state legislators. “They funded the people who boarded up the windows in Michigan. They funded the election judges in Pennsylvania and they funded your election designed by these cities contrary to your law.”
Kline cited an “unprecedented public-private partnership” to administer elections in areas with expected high Democratic turnout.
“You can’t privatize elections,” he added, and the government should not put its thumb on the scale.
In Pennsylvania, Kline noted, officials set up one drop box for every 4 square miles in areas where Biden had the most support, or one drop box for every 4,000 voters. However, he said, in the 59 counties that Trump won, the average was one drop box for every 1,159 square miles.
The problem was similar in Wisconsin, Kline said, adding:
You can look at any polling and see that one party prefers to vote in person. One party prefers to vote absentee in advance. I will say this: Government putting its thumb on the scale to increase the turnout of one demographic is the opposite side of the same coin as government putting its thumb on the scale to suppress one demographic from voting.You can’t treat persons or groups differently, despite identity politics and cancel culture. Our rights are intrinsic, not offered by you. They are being protected by you. When government gets in the game through Mr. Zuckerberg’s funds, of treating different groups of people differently, it violates a basic tenet of American law that we all should hold fast to as a protection of individual liberty.In a public statement in October, Zuckerberg defended the spending on election administration, saying he isn’t opposed to government funding elections but that such funding isn’t adequate.
“Since our initial donation, there have been multiple lawsuits filed in an attempt to block these funds from being used, based on claims that the organizations receiving donations have a partisan agenda. That’s false,” Zuckerberg’s post says. “These funds will serve communities throughout the country—urban, rural and suburban–and are being allocated by non-partisan organizations.”
————————— Fred Lucas writes for The Daily Signal.
Tags:Fred Lucas, The daily Signal, 4 Big Highlights, From Wisconsin’s Investigative Hearing, Election Fraud AllegationsTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
by Penna Dexter: Millions of America’s students may have fallen behind during months of remote schooling. But parents have learned a lot. Some have discovered the benefits of homeschooling. Others found out how hard it can be and are jubilant when their schools reopen.
The Wall Street Journalrecently reported on the findings of a non-profit organization called Northwest Evaluation Association. NWEA looked at online test results for 4.4 million public-school children in 3rd through 8th grades and found that students did nearly as well in reading this fall as they did last fall. But in math, students’ progress was slower. Another group, Renaissance Learning, Inc. found that students “started school this fall significantly behind expectations in math and modestly behind in some grades in reading.”
A California education blogger, Joanne Jacobs, wasn’t surprised by these results. Students may be reading at home, she writes, but “Kids pretty much learn math at school or don’t learn it.” Math skills build upon each other. So a lesson missed or not mastered last spring makes it harder for students to advance.
It’s no wonder New York City parents pushed back hard when their schools closed a couple of weeks ago and sent students back home for remote learning. Their pressure overcame the powerful teachers’ union and resulted in schools reopening this week for a large share of elementary school students.
Teachers’ unions often decry the learning gap between students living in more and less prosperous neighborhoods. Remote learning has exacerbated that gap.
Children with behavioral, emotional, and physical challenges have missed out on services they normally get through school. Some are falling behind, while parents have been on their own to seek out services such as speech therapy.
There’s no substitute for in-person learning. But this period of remote learning has taught some parents they no longer trust the public schools to provide their children with a good education.
This pandemic presents the perfect opportunity to get serious about school choice.
———————— Penna Dexter writes for Point of View.
Tags:Penna Dexter, Remote SchoolingTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
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45.) ABC
December 15, 2020 – Having trouble viewing this email? Open it in your browser.
Morning Rundown
US administers 1st doses of Pfizer coronavirus vaccine: The first doses of Pfizer’s coronavirus vaccine were administered in the U.S. to health care workers and nursing home staffers Monday morning, marking a major milestone in the nation’s battle against the virus. The first to receive the vaccine was Sandra Lindsay, a critical nurse in New York, who told Gov. Andrew Cuomo she wanted to instill trust in the vaccine. “I believe in science. As a nurse, my practice is guided by science and so I trust that,” said Lindsay. Among the others who received the vaccine Monday were the head of emergency at a major New York City hospital, an environmental services worker from Texas who cleans the emergency room and Mississippi’s state health officer. Health and Human Services Secretary Alex Azar said Monday that 20 million Americans should be able to get the first dose of the COVID-19 vaccine by the end of December and another 30 million will get their first shot by the end of January. However, it is unknown how long virus protection will last after the recommended two doses. The rollout of Pfizer’s vaccine comes as the number of Americans killed by COVID-19 rose to 300,267 on Monday, according to data from Johns Hopkins University. The grim milestone comes after the U.S. logged 3,124 deaths in a single day last week, the highest one-day death toll reported since the outbreak began.
Biden clinches victory in Electoral college voting: Just minutes after the Electoral College declared him the victor of the 2020 election, President-elect Joe Biden addressed the nation and reflected on the long road it took to get to this stage. “The flame of democracy was lit in this nation a long time ago, and we now know nothing, not even a pandemic or an abuse of power, can extinguish that flame,” he said during the nearly 15-minute speech. Biden, who was awarded 306 electoral votes, commended election workers and officials for doing their jobs during the pandemic. He also slammed President Donald Trump and members of the GOP who tried for weeks to overturn the results of the election. “It’s a position so extreme we’ve never seen it before, a position that refused to respect the rule of the people, refused to respect the rule of law and refused to honor the Constitution,” Biden said. “Thankfully, a unanimous Supreme Court immediately and completely rejected this effort.” Moments after Biden secured his Electoral College victory, Trump tweeted that Attorney General Bill Barr resigned and that Deputy Attorney General Jeff Rosen will fill the role. Trump and his allies had scrutinized Barr since he said the Department of Justice did not uncover evidence of widespread voter fraud.
Women rally around Jill Biden after controversial op-ed calls for future first lady to drop ‘Dr.’: The backlash was swift after a controversial op-ed published in The Wall Street Journal over the weekend called on future United States First Lady Dr. Jill Biden to drop her “Dr.” title because she is not a medical professional. “A wise man once said that no one should call himself ‘Dr.’ unless he has delivered a child,” wrote Joseph Epstein. “Think about it, Dr. Jill, and forthwith drop the doc.” In response, some women on social media slammed the article as misogynistic and a group of women who are PhDs encouraged others with degrees to add their titles to their name. The future first lady, who has been an educator for more than three decades and has two master’s degrees, tweeted, “Together, we will build a world where the accomplishments of our daughters will be celebrated, rather than diminished.”
Lyft driver’s viral video helps customer get his own car: A Louisiana man will likely never have to walk or take a rideshare vehicle to work again, thanks to his Lyft driver’s plea on TikTok. On a rainy November day, Ed Hays Jr. requested a Lyft to take him from his home in Shreveport, Louisiana, to the gas station where he works as a cashier in Bossier City, an 11-mile roundtrip. David Daniels answered Hays’ request and during their trip, Hays said he typically walks to work and back. Inspired by Hays’ positive attitude and strong work ethic, Daniels posted the story to his TikTok page and within hours, the footage had been viewed more than 100,000 times. He also launched a fundraising campaign for Hays and has raised more than $6,800 in donations. “I was never expecting all of this,” said Hays, who will be getting a 2001 Mercury Grand Marquis. “He’s like a saint.”
GMA Must-Watch
This morning on “GMA,” George Clooney will talk about his new movie, “Midnight Sky,” which he not only stars in, but directed and produced, too. Plus, Wonder Woman herself, Gal Gadot, joins us live this morning to chat about her highly anticipated upcoming movie. And Amber Riley, known from her role on “Glee,” joins us to chat and perform her new song, “BGE.” All this and more only on “GMA.”
The U.S. turned a corner in the fight against Covid-19 as health care workers received the first vaccines, the Electoral College vote officially confirmed President-elect Joe Biden’s victory and Attorney General William Barr is out.
Here is what we’re watching this Tuesday morning.
Health care workers get first vaccines as Covid death toll tops 300,000
“I feel hopeful today, relieved,” said Sandra Lindsay, an intensive care unit nurse at the Long Island Jewish Medical Center in the Queens borough of New York City, moments after she received the first dose.
By the end of the week, the drug company Pfizer expects to deliver 2.9 million doses to 636 locations across all 50 states withhealth care workerson the front lines of the pandemic being prioritized for the first doses of the vaccine.
Dr. Anthony Fauci, the nation’s top disease expert, predicted that after vaccines are more widely deployed the country could achieve herd immunity against Covid-19 by “the end of the second quarter 2021.”
But with the death toll from the coronavirus in the U.S. surpassing 300,000 Mondayand more than 16.5 million confirmed cases, we are not out of the woods yet.
Biden called the election, which Trump and his supporters have tried to overturn with scores of failed legal challenges, “honest, free and fair.” He called attacks on the election and election officials “simply unconscionable” and Trump’s attempts to overturn the election an “abuse of power.”
“In America, politicians don’t take power — the people grant it to them,” Biden said.
Starting to get the winter blues? Here are nine energy-boosting foods to keep you going all winter long.
Shopping
A gorgeous hammock from Nicaragua, coffee from the mountains of Puerto Rico and Mexican-made embroidered face masks: We’ve got the best gift ideas from Latino-owned businesses.
Quote of the day
“The emotional power of this moment is something that we have been anticipating, striving to reach for about 10 months.”
— Dr. Gregory Schmidt, an intensive care physician with the University of Iowa Hospitals and Clinics, who was one of the first Americans to get the Covid-19 vaccine on Monday.
One fun thing
For students at the Prairie Hill school in Pewaukee, Wisconsin, learning has no boundaries.
Fourth-grade teacher Lindsey Earle wanted her students to stay safe during the pandemic, so she built a makeshift classroom for them and inspired the rest of the school to do the same.
“It’s more fun because we get to be outside,” says fourth grader Adella Spiropoulos.
From NBC’s Chuck Todd, Mark Murray, Carrie Dann and Melissa Holzberg
FIRST READ: Electoral College Monday was the Trump presidency in a nutshell
Not only was Monday a historic day in this country – with the start of Americans getting coronavirus vaccinations, as well as with the Electoral College making the results of the 2020 presidential election official.
It also epitomized a day in the Trump presidency as it begins to come to an end.
AP Photo/Carlos Osorio
It included President Trump celebrating good news about the first coronavirus vaccinations. “First Vaccine Administered. Congratulations USA! Congratulations WORLD!” he tweeted.
The day also had him ignoring a grim coronavirus milestone – with the number of Covid fatalities crossing 300,000 on Monday.
It featured him continuing to deny defeat in the 2020 election, continuing to move the goalposts (after losses at the ballot box, in the recounts, in the courts and in the Electoral College counts) and continuing to be unable to pull off what he wanted to do (overturn the election results).
It had him firing/dismissing/replacing another Cabinet secretary – this time Attorney General Bill Barr.
And it had news of a Russian cyberattack on the United States, with Trump not saying a word about it.
So yesterday had it all – celebration, tragedy, denying electoral reality, more Cabinet musical chairs, and Russia.
As NBC’s Benjy Sarlin observed, it was a big day in American history.
It also felt like a season finale to a TV show – where so many different storylines come together, but also where so many challenges remain, especially when it comes to the coronavirus and our democracy’s fragility.
Biden pushes back
In Joe Biden’s address to the public last night after the Electoral College made his 2020 victory official, we expected him to talk about democracy’s importance and bringing the country together after the election – which he did.
But we didn’t expect the forceful pushback he made to Trump and other Republicans.
“One of the extraordinary things we saw this year was that every day Americans, our friends and our neighbors, often volunteers, Democrats and Republican, independents demonstrating absolute courage,” Biden said of state elections administrators and workers, per NBC’s Gary Grumbach.
“It is my sincere hope we never again see anyone subjected to the kind of threats and abuse we saw in this election. It’s simply unconscionable.”
Biden added this on the Texas lawsuit intended to overturn the election results: “Even more stunning, 17 Republican attorneys general and 126 Republican members of the Congress, actually — they actually signed onto a lawsuit filed by the state of Texas. That lawsuit asking the United States Supreme Court to reject the certified vote counts in Georgia, Michigan, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin.”
“It’s a position so extreme we have never seen it before. A position that refused to respect the rule of the people.”
Data Download: The numbers you need to know today
16,597,729: The number of confirmed cases of coronavirus in the United States, per the most recent data from NBC News and health officials. (That’s 268,472 more than yesterday morning.)
301,438: The number of deaths in the United States from the virus so far. (That’s 1,841 more than yesterday morning.)
221.10 million: The number of coronavirus tests that have been administered in the United States so far, according to researchers at The COVID Tracking Project.
110,549: The number of people currently hospitalized with coronavirus
21: The number of days until the January 5 Senate runoffs.
36: The number of days until Inauguration Day.
TWEET OF THE DAY: Putin recognizes Biden’s win
More GOP senators acknowledge Biden’s victory, too
Before Monday’s Electoral College vote, just six Senate Republicans referred to Joe Biden as the president-elect, according to NBC’s Hill team — Mitt Romney, Susan Collins, Lisa Murkowski, Ben Sasse, Pat Toomey and Bill Cassidy.
But another seven said it for the first time on Monday — Rob Portman said the vote “makes clear that Joe Biden is now the president-elect”, Roy Blunt said “the electors have voted so there’s a president-elect.” Mike Braun, Shelley Moore-Capito, John Thune, Mike Rounds and Lamar Alexander echoed those thoughts.
But others added caveats. Lindsey Graham said he’d “let those legal challenges play out,” and John Cornyn said Biden’s “the president-elect subject to whatever additional litigation is ongoing.
Biden Cabinet/Transition Watch List
State: Tony Blinken (announced)
Treasury: Janet Yellen (announced)
Defense: Ret. Gen. Lloyd Austin (announced)
Homeland Security: Alejandro Mayorkas (announced)
HHS: Xavier Becerra (announced)
UN Ambassador: Linda Thomas-Greenfield (announced)
Director of National Intelligence: Avril Haines (announced)
Agriculture: Tom Vilsack (announced)
HUD: Marcia Fudge (announced)
Veterans Affairs: Denis McDonough (announced)
OMB Director: Neera Tanden (announced)
US Trade Representative: Katherine Tai (announced)
Today’s Runoff Watch focuses on President-elect Joe Biden’s visit to Georgia today.
Thanks to NBC’s Mike Memoli, we know that today’s drive-in rally in Atlanta with Democrats Jon Ossoff and Rev. Raphael Warnock will also include former 2018 Democratic gubernatorial nominee Stacey Abrams, as well as Atlanta Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms, per a campaign official.
Just like Team Trump has been lending a hand in Georgia, Team Biden is too — the president-elect’s team has invested $5 million into the runoff effort, Memoli reports, with 50 campaign staffers deployed for efforts like organizing, outreach and voter-contact. That’s because Biden’s life would be a lot easier if Democrats can sweep the races, and his running mate, California Sen. Kamala Harris, is the one breaking the ties in a 50-50 Senate.
THE LID: The number of the week is… 54
Don’t miss a special deep dive pod from yesterday, when we looked back at the women who have served in presidential Cabinets.
Obamacare should be a key pandemic safety net, but some fear it’s not reaching the right people.
Anthony Fauci says that “herd immunity” could be possible in the U.S. by late spring or early summer, depending on the efficacy of the vaccine rollout.
A generation of kids are going to need a lot of support to recover from the educational and emotional toll of Covid.
Black and Latino families are at disproportionate risk for yet another Covid-linked trauma: Eviction.
Plus: Oregon rolls back parking minimums, regulators approve a new type of pig, Shrek finally gets the recognition it deserves, and more…
The first batch of the freshly approved Pfizer/BioNTech vaccine is now being distributed across the country,sparking hopes that we are finally turning a corner on the coronavirus pandemic. Meanwhile, the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) continues to drag its feet in approving additional vaccines.
On Friday, the FDA issued an emergency use authorization for this vaccine, allowing Pfizer to start shipping out the first of some 3 million doses from its warehouse in Kalamazoo, Michigan. By noon on Monday, some 55 locations had received their shipments of the vaccine, reports the Wall Street Journal. By Sunday, millions of doses are supposed to ship to over 1,000 locations. By the end of the year, Pfizer says 25 million doses of its vaccine will be available countrywide.
This is all great. The endless stories about healthcare workers getting the first round of vaccine shots are some of the first bits of good news to make it onto the front pages of newspapers and websites in the last nine months.
It’s nevertheless important to remember that the FDA’s approval is coming nearly two weeks after British regulators greenlighted the same vaccine, and almost a month since Pfizer/BioNTech submitted its final data for the agency to review.
Had the FDA acted more swiftly—say by bumping up the December 10 meeting it held to recommend approval of the Pfizer vaccine—Monday’s good news could have arrived a few weeks earlier. Meanwhile, the advisory committee tasked with evaluating another vaccine developed by Moderna is not set to meet until Thursday.
Given the slow rollout of these vaccines (slow, at least, when considered against the number of people needing to be vaccinated), it’s easy to think that the delay of a few days or weeks isn’t all that consequential.
Not so, says George Mason University economist Alex Tabarrok, who deploys some back-of-the-envelope math to argue that a few thousand people will die for every day the FDA dawdles in approving new vaccines.
“The slow ramp up doesn’t change the number of deaths caused by delay. It just spreads them out over different days. You can adjust the ramp [up] so that it occurs over 10 days or 30 days. Doesn’t change much,” he writes in a post at Marginal Revolution.
“FDA delays [in approving early coronavirus tests] cost tens of thousands of Americans their lives back in January, and it’s happening again now,” wrote John Hopkins scientist Marty Makary in The Dispatch about the agency’s slow-walking of vaccine approvals.
FREE MARKETS
An Oregon regulatory board issued a new rule that trims the number of off-street parking spaces developers can be required to build. Michael Andersen, in an article for the Sightline Institute, describes what the changes will mean in much of the state:
Middle-housing projects on residential lots of 3,000 square feet or less can’t be required to have more than one off-street parking space, total, for the first four homes. For lots of up to 5,000 square feet, no more than two parking spaces can be required, total; for lots of up to 7,000 square feet, no more than three spaces. On lots larger than 7,000 square feet, a limit of one mandatory parking space per home applies.
Parking minimums are yet another regulation that drives up the costs of housing by requiring developers to build more spaces on more land than they otherwise might. By limiting what people can build on land they own, these minimums obviously infringe on property rights.
Oregon’s decision to pare back how many parking spaces local governments can require for new developments is a win for both affordability and freedom.
FREE MINDS
In addition to vaccines for humans, the FDA also approved a new type of genetically engineered pig on Monday, reports The Verge. A snippet:
The Food and Drug Administration has approved genetically engineered pigs for use in food and medical products. The pigs, developed by medical company Revivicor, could be used in the production of drugs, to provide organs and tissues for transplants, and to produce meat that’s safe to eat for people with meat allergies.
Who knows what other types of super animals we might be getting if regulators weren’t so busy dragging their feet (or hooves).
QUICK HITS
• Republican senators are coming around to the idea that Joe Biden might have won the 2020 presidential election following his victory in Monday’s Electoral College vote.
• Had the FDA approved a vaccine a little more quickly, the momentous news about Shrek being added to the National Film Registry might not have been so criminally overshadowed.
• Attorney General William Barr announced Monday that he will resign sometime before Christmas.
• A report from the Center of Global Policy suggests that up to half a million ethnic minorities are being forced to pick cotton in China’s Xinjiang region.
• U.S. tech giants face huge new fines from European regulators, Reuters reports.
• A San Francisco cop hit two bicyclists after allegedly running a red light.
Christian Britschgi is an associate editor at Reason. After graduating from Portland State University with a degree in political science, Christian worked in public relations before moving into journalism by way of an internship at Reason’s D.C. office.
He has since written for a number of news outlets, including The College Fix, The Lens,Watchdog.org, The Orange County Register, The New York Daily News, and Jacobite. You can follow him on Twitter @christianbrits.
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.
“[Biden’s] plan to put teachers at the front of the line for vaccination, second only to health-care workers and nursing-home residents, is driven not by science but by pure political pandering.”
By Ray Domanico The Washington Post December 14, 2020
“The selection of Brian Deese to direct the National Economic Council (NEC) places a spotlight on some of the conflicting commitments within the Biden administration.”
By Jonathan Lesser The Hill December 14, 2020
What is the future for large, superstar cities after the pandemic ends? Today starting at 1:00 p.m. ET, Michael Hendrix moderates an all-star panel with Richard Florida, Edward Glaeser, and Janette Sadik-Khan.
Is critical race theory reality? Tomorrow starting at 1 p.m. ET, Jason Riley hosts an important discussion on critical race theory’s language, origins, and growing mainstream influence with with John McWhorter, Ralph Richard Banks, Randall Kennedy, and Chris Rufo.
“Not one Trump-appointed judge has supported the president’s claims of a stolen election.”
By John O. McGinnis New York Post December 13, 2020
Adapted from City Journal
New York City should use advancements in data technology to get its foster and adoption programs up to date.
By Naomi Schaefer Riley City Journal Online December 14, 2020
We’re pleased to announce that Glenn Loury has joined the Institute as a senior fellow. He will work on the economic, political, and social analysis of issues relating to persistent racial inequality.
Law professor Richard Epstein joined James R. Copland to discuss drug and vaccine development, the limits of bureaucratic regulation, and the capacity of markets to share knowledge, control risk, and spur life-saving innovation. Hosted by the Adam Smith Society.
Senator Mike Lee joined 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 to explore the actions policymakers, donors, community activists, and others can take to strengthen civil society and social capital.
Reihan Salam interviews veteran journalist Megyn Kelly to discuss 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.
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.
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.
Manhattan Institute is a think tank whose mission is to develop and disseminate new ideas that foster greater economic choice and individual responsibility.
52 Vanderbilt Ave. New York, NY 10017
(212) 599-7000
You get the feeling Dan Crenshaw wanted to be a movie star when he grew up. Congress was his backup plan. Or it went Navy SEALs, then acting, then Congress. He could have remade the 1990 Charlie Sheen … MORE
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53.) REALCLEARPOLITICS MORNING NOTE
12/15/2020
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Carl Cannon’s Morning Note
Dr. No; Campus Assault Headwinds; Graceful in Defeat
By Carl M. Cannon on Dec 15, 2020 09:15 am
Good morning. It’s Tuesday, Dec. 15, 2020. A new vaccine is being disseminated across the United States, spreading faster than the deadly virus did in February and March as it turned 2020 into a rolling nightmare.
We also, officially, have a new president-elect. The Electoral College has spoken, and its tally gave Joseph R. Biden Jr. 306 electoral votes — the same number Donald J. Trump earned in 2016. In both years, the results in several key battleground states were exceedingly close. In both years Trump trailed significantly in the national popular vote: Hillary Clinton outpolled him by 2.87 million votes four years ago; Trump is trailing Biden by 7 million votes (and counting) this year. It’s emotionally difficult to lose a presidential election, whether narrowly or in a landslide. But only one candidate can emerge as the winner. This year it’s Joe Biden.
Twenty years ago this week, in another contentious election that was ultimately decided at the Supreme Court, the winner was George W. Bush. It fell to Albert Gore Jr. to conclude the process by delivering a concession speech. He did so in a brief address noteworthy for its grace. I mentioned this recently and wrote about it at length in this space four years ago (and five years before that). What follows is a reprise of my earlier essay, but its lessons are again relevant.
First, I’d point you to our 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:
* * *
Dr. No: Northwestern’s Unwise Rebuke of Epstein’s Op-Ed. Charles Lipson weighs in on an NU lecturer’s comments about Jill Biden’s preferred courtesy title.
Headwinds for Biden’s Push to the Past on Campus Assaults. At RealClearInvestigations, Richard Bernstein reports on developments that don’t bode well for Joe Biden’s “believe all women” approach that critics say resulted in kangaroo courts for male students.
The Technology Solution to Hysterical Mythmaking. Bret Swanson hails the hundreds of new tech channels and media outlets challenging Silicon Valley’s control of news and other messaging.
Facebook Critics’ Clueless Ideas About Warding Off Competitors. RealClearMarkets editor John Tamny addresses a popular view about how the social media giant stays on top.
How Biden Can Make Drug Prices More Affordable. Also at RCM, Howard Dean encourages the incoming president to dramatically reduce or eliminate the roles of the pharmacy benefit managers, who have been singled out in jacking up the price of medicines.
Beware of Google’s Foray Into Health Care. At RealClearHealth, Ashley Herzog points out the possible ramifications of the Google v. Oracle case before the Supreme Court.
Lame Duck Session Will Reveal Both Parties’ Priorities. At RealClearPolicy, Jerry Rogers writes that the debate over the economic stimulus package is indicative of where Republicans and Democrats find themselves moving into 2021.
From COVID to Climate, the U.K. Is Handing Policy to the Unelected. At RealClearEnergy, Rupert Darwall urges an end to putting policy choices beyond the reach of the democratic process.
Our Alarming Silence on China’s Violation of Rights. At RealClearWorld, Robert S. Spalding argues that business with China should never be business as usual until oppression is ended in Hong Kong.
Harvard-Yale Matchup on the Free Speech Front. At RealClearEducation, John Hirschauer spotlights where the two elite schools stand in the 2020 college rankings.
Biggest Junk Science of 2020. Ross Pomeroy compiled this list.
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The presidential election held on Nov. 7, 2000, produced an anomaly that had happened only three previous times in U.S. history: The winner lost. The first, and most notorious, instance came in 1824. In a four-man race, Andrew Jackson won the popular vote and bested John Quincy Adams in the Electoral College. He lacked the required majority of electors, however, so the issue was thrown to the House of Representatives, which chose Adams. This result infuriated Jackson supporters, who dubbed it “the corrupt bargain,” and it galvanized Old Hickory — he won the presidency handily four years later. I imagine Donald Trump’s acolytes are already whispering “corrupt bargain” in his ear.
For Al Gore, the 2000 election returns were triply painful. First, he lost in the Electoral College by so narrow a margin that a switch of even the smallest state from Bush to Gore would have made the difference. Second, it seems apparent that third-party candidate Ralph Nader cost him a win in New Hampshire — and almost certainly in Florida, where a razor-thin recount result (and a divided Supreme Court) rendered the eventual outcome. Third, Gore won the popular vote by some half-million ballots — a foreshadowing of the 2016 election.
The 2000 election revealed something to Americans that neither Gore nor George W. Bush had given much thought to at the outset of the contest: The concession speech is not merely good manners. It is an essential part of the democratic process. It signifies to partisans that the election is over. Al Gore did not shy from his civic duty.
Speaking from the vice president’s office, Gore began with a lighthearted quip: “I promised him that I wouldn’t call him back this time,” a reference to the election-night concession to Bush Gore had made — and then retracted an hour later. “I offered to meet with him as soon as possible so that we can start to heal the divisions of the campaign and the contest through which we just passed.”
Gore made it clear he disagreed with the Supreme Court’s decision, but he turned rhetorically to Abraham Lincoln to make sense of it. “Almost a century and a half ago, Senator Stephen Douglas told Abraham Lincoln, who had just defeated him for the presidency, ‘Partisan feeling must yield to patriotism. I’m with you, Mr. President, and God bless you.'”
American politicians often quote Lincoln, but Gore didn’t do it casually. He was reminding his own supporters of the “better angels” of their nature. In cadences and prose that deliberately evoked the 16th U.S. president, Gore added: “Neither he nor I anticipated this long and difficult road; certainly neither of us wanted it to happen. Yet it came, and now it has ended — resolved, as it must be resolved, through the honored institutions of our democracy.”
Bush, too, alluded to Lincoln that day, saying in his victory speech that the nation “must rise above a house divided.”
“Americans share hopes and goals and values far more important than any political disagreements,” Bush added. “Republicans want the best for our nation, and so do Democrats. Our votes may differ, but not our hopes.”
Two decades later, we wonder if that is still true. But one way to rekindle those feelings is to reach across the divide in a personal way. Bush did that, too. “Vice President Gore and I put our hearts and hopes into our campaigns,” said the new president-elect. “We both gave it our all. We shared similar emotions, so I understand how difficult this moment must be for Vice President Gore and his family. He has a distinguished record of service to our country as a congressman, a senator and a vice president.”
Bush added a verbal “salute” to Al Gore, and wished him every success.
That wished-for success came, too, for both men. George W. Bush served two terms in office, has teamed up as an ex-president with Bill Clinton in fighting AIDS in Africa and raising money for victims of tsunamis in Asia, and taught himself to paint. He’s a surprisingly good artist. Al Gore went on to become a spokesman for our planet’s ecology, an Academy Award winner, and a Nobel laureate. In other words, F. Scott Fitzgerald wasn’t just wrong about there being no second acts in American life, he was conspicuously wrong: There are second, third, fourth acts.
Take Newt Gingrich as a case in point. The once-ousted House speaker ran for president in 2012, endorsed Donald Trump in 2016, and continues to pursue a second career as a commentator and novelist. Twenty years ago, when Gingrich was asked by NBC’s Tom Brokaw to distill the meaning of the 2000 election and its aftermath.
Gingrich noted that in 1994, Republicans believed they had earned a mandate because of their huge gains in the midterms. Brokaw then asked the former speaker what message voters had sent with the nearly evenly divided 2000 election returns. “It’s a mandate to slow down,” Gingrich replied, “and listen to each other.”
For journalists in America’s capital, the times of presidential elections and the peaceful transfer of power are the most interesting to write about, report on, and analyze. In such times, the role of the press is to examine the legacy of the outgoing president and learn about the new leader, his vision, Cabinet, and policies.
The media should offer a closer look at the political history of the president-elect, his previous stances and votes on issues that matter to the average citizen, and to question the decisions of the person who will lead the country for the coming four years. This scenario has been repeated over and over with every president who has been voted in to serve the American people and be the new “leader of the free world.”
Major Antifa activity took place over the weekend in Portland, Olympia, WA, and Washington D.C.
At the site of the barricade stand-off in Portland which broke out December 8th, it appears that the Antifa occupation and “eviction defense” of The Red House in Portland has proven largely successful. The investor/owner of the occupied home has reportedly agreed to sell it back to the original owners at cost. While media reports suggest that some details remain to be hashed out, a successful deal is a clear victory for those who used violence against police to defeat the attempted enforcement of a legal eviction order, and then seized territory around the neighborhood and built barricades to prevent law enforcement’s return.
The evidence continues to accumulate that the Chinese Communist Party is our time’s existential threat to freedom. For example, Australia has just revealed a leaked list of nearly two million CCP spies now operating worldwide.
So why on earth are American investors continuing to have their money invested in this enemy by Wall Street?
The short answer is that “Beijing’s Bankers” are paid handsomely by the CCP to secure funds for its military companies and others that threaten our national security and human rights values.
To his great credit, President Trump has taken extraordinary measures to end this practice of U.S. underwriting of our enemy. For example, he issued an Executive Order blocking indexes and Exchange Traded Funds from investing in “Communist Chinese Military Companies.”
JEFF NYQUIST, Writer, Newsmax, WorldNetDaily, SierraTimes, Financial Sense and Epoch Times, Author, “Origins of the Fourth World War and The New Tactics of Global War”:
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60.) AMERICAN INSTITUTE FOR ECONOMIC RESEARCH
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December 15, 2020
The Rescue From Madness
By Joakim Book | “With governments around the Covid world suspending everything that people value, we suddenly warped society. Truth-speakers are only listened to if they are politically expedient. We impaired the workings of a free society,…
By Allen Mendenhall | President-elect Joe Biden has pledged to “unify.” In a divided America, how is that possible? Where is room for agreement in our increasingly polarized politics? What can bring together Biden and Trump voters?
Opponents of Liberty Remain Misguided Sore Winners
By Richard M. Ebeling | “Be assured that when the interventionist-welfare state policies are intensified and made more intrusive into the social and economic fabric of American society, and when, over time, it brings about more corruption,…
By Edward Peter Stringham | “We are called upon again to exercise creativity and moral courage in defense of the ideals of freedom. The power of that courage is often underestimated. The road back to sanity and liberty is treacherous and twisted,…
By Ethan Yang | “Restaurant closures represent an attack on some of the most sacred cultural institutions in society that will not only further degrade our social fabric, but also generate tremendous economic damage to already devastated…
Covid, Lockdowns, & Long-Term Care: State Comparisons
By Amelia Janaskie & Micha Gartz | “While nursing homes await the arrival of the vaccine within the next few weeks, the data still speaks to the importance of protecting the elderly in the meantime. The focused protection of nursing homes and…
This work should be in the hands (or the ereaders) of an entire generation, so that we can relearn what we once knew and get back to making the world a better place, rather than tearing down what it took centuries to build. There is no such thing as shutting down an economy or ignoring economic principles. Galles has proven that. ~Jeffrey Tucker
On the menu today: Something of a stream-of-consciousness Jolt this morning, starting with contemplating how we can consume bad news in a troubled world and still keep our sanity and good cheer; what cults offer their members and how that relates to our current political environment; and Attorney General William Barr heads for the exit.
If It Bleeds, It Leads
One cliché about journalism is, “they don’t write articles about all the planes that land safely.” Another is that news is defined by what is unusual and surprising — when a man bites a dog, not when a dog bites a man.
But if every time you tune into the news you hear about men biting dogs, and you never hear about dogs biting men, you start to think you live in a society with a scourge of men running around trying to chomp on canines, and that dogs rarely if ever bite men. If your news sources aren’t being careful to maintain perspective, the process of trying to be more informed about the world around you can lead to you … READ MORE
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President Trump retweeted a post from conservative lawyer Lin Wood who suggested the president put Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp (R) and Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger (R) in prison, after they certified Joe Biden’s victory in the state.
“President-elect Joe Biden and Vice President-elect Kamala Harris will be sworn in to office on the steps of the Capitol next month, but those who are planning his inauguration are urging Americans to stay at home and limit gatherings during the event,” the Washington Post reports.
“Biden’s planning committee for the first time stated definitely Tuesday that he will be sworn into office on the west side of the Capitol, the location which has been used in recent years, and he will give an inauguration address from the platform.”
“But just about everything else is being reimagined.”
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Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell on the Senate floor, per the New York Times: “Our system of government has processes to determine who will be sworn in on Jan. 20. The Electoral College has spoken.”
He added: “So today I want to congratulate President-Elect Joe Biden. The president-elect is no stranger to the Senate. He’s devoted himself to public service for many years.”
“I also want to congratulate the vice president-elect, our colleague from California — Sen. Harris. Beyond our differences, all Americans can take pride that our nation has a female vice president-elect for the very first time.”
New Yorker: “There are twenty-three thousand teen-agers in the state who weren’t old enough to vote in November, but who will be old enough to vote in the Senate runoffs, in January. These volunteers tried to find them.”
Donald Trump’s victory in 2016 and Joe Biden’s in 2020 were by the same electoral vote margin, 306 to 232, according to the preliminary tally.
But in the Electoral College, which is the official count, Trump won just 304 electoral votes in 2016 because two Texas electors cast their votes for John Kasich and Ron Paul.
There were no “faithless electors” in 2020, so Biden won 306 electoral votes.
A Washington state elector became emotional Monday while describing his terminal diagnosis and his desire to make his remaining time “count” by voting for Joe Biden.
The conservative website Right Wisconsin retracted it’s endorsement for Rep. Tom Tiffany (R-WI) after he supported a federal lawsuit to overturn the presidential election in Wisconsin and three other states.
“As a growing number of coronavirus vaccines advance through clinical trials, wealthy countries are fueling an extraordinary gap in access around the world, laying claim to more than half the doses that could come on the market by the end of next year,” the New York Times reports.
“While many poor nations may be able to vaccinate at most 20 percent of their populations in 2021, some of the world’s richest countries have reserved enough doses to immunize their own multiple times over.”
Washington Post: “Shoplifting is up markedly since the pandemic began in the spring and at higher levels than in past economic downturns, according to interviews with more than a dozen retailers, security experts and police departments across the country.”
“But what’s distinctive about this trend, experts say, is what’s being taken — more staples like bread, pasta and baby formula.”
“President-elect Joe Biden’s pick for secretary of state is expected to visit the State Department and meet with Secretary of State Mike Pompeo on Thursday for the first time since Biden’s victory,” CNN reports.
“The meeting between Antony Blinken and Pompeo — planned to occur days after the Electoral College cemented Biden’s victory on Monday — will mark the first formal recognition by President Trump’s top diplomat that he is preparing to hand over the reins of American foreign policy to his successor. The meeting is scheduled to last for only 15 minutes, but State Department officials view it as a positive step.”
Politico: “The success of the president-elect’s agenda hinges on the two Senate runoff races that will decide the balance of power in the chamber. If Ossoff and Warnock fail to defeat Republican Sens. David Perdue and Kelly Loeffler on Jan. 5, it will mean a GOP-controlled Senate that’s guaranteed to stand in the way of implementing Biden’s policy goals.”
“Then there’s the matter of appearance. While Biden risks expending precious political capital even before taking the oath of office, if he plays it safe and declines to go to a state he narrowly won — especially after President Donald Trump and a bevy of Republicans have campaigned there — it will send an early message of caution and timidity. And it would signal to Georgia Democrats that the uphill contests were too far out of reach.”
The FDA said the coronavirus vaccine made by Moderna is highly protective for adults and prevents severe cases of Covid-19, the New York Times reports.
Based on the encouraging findings, the agency intends to grant emergency authorization for use of the vaccine on Friday.
Dr. Anthony Fauci, the nation’s top infectious-disease official, publicly recommended Tuesday that Biden be be vaccinated against the coronavirus “as soon as we possibly can,” the Washington Post reports.
“Nearly one year after the House of Representatives impeached President Donald Trump, the federal government has released the criminal referral alleging Trump committed crimes related to his phone call with Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelensky, a conversation that sparked the historic proceedings,” BuzzFeed News reports.
Politico: “Trump’s last gasp to overturn the Nov. 3 election results will come on Jan. 6, when the House and Senate are scheduled to gather in a joint session to certify Biden’s win in the Electoral College. A handful of GOP House members have said that they will challenge Biden’s victory, though they are unlikely to succeed.”
“House Democrats unsuccessfully challenged election results in the recent past — including in 2001 and 2017, after candidates won the popular vote but lost the Electoral College.”
“President Trump’s media criticism is usually binary — there are ‘good stories,’ favorable to him, and then the other category,” the New York Times reports.
“Most news coverage on Monday fell into that other category. One by one, presidential electors in all 50 states and the District of Columbia formally recognized Joseph R. Biden Jr. as the president-elect, the latest and most significant rejection so far of Mr. Trump’s desperate attempts to undo the will of the voters.”
“But inside the sprawling and self-reinforcing network of websites, podcasts and video news that has fed some of the most reckless and unrealistic claims about the election, the myth of Mr. Trump’s political survival endures.”
Washington Post: Newsmax and One America grapple uneasily with Biden’s electoral college victory.
“How is this America? Democrat electors are allowed in to vote but Republicans are not allowed? We are seeing totalitarianism take shape in front of our eyes.”
— Rep.-elect Lauren Boebert (R-CO), quoted by Colorado Pols, apparently not understanding that Joe Biden’s electors voted because he won Colorado.
Most voters suspect the news media buried the Hunter Biden story until after the election and think there’s a good chance that new President Biden was involved in his son’s overseas dealings.
The Rasmussen Reports Immigration Index for the week of December 6-10, 2020 fell slightly to 99.2 from 100.6 the week before. The Index has closed below its baseline most weeks since Election Day and remains well below its high of 108.0 in June.
The Electoral College is meeting today to formalize the 2020 election results. The Trump campaign is contesting election results in several states due to massive… Read more…
Don’t miss the last chance to get this rare extreme-altitude Malbec for Christmas. Order today and get a bottle with grapes from 8,950 ft (the third highest vineyard in the world) at a 53% off discount. Read more…
Arizona’s eleven Republican Presidential Electors have convened to cast their votes for President Donald to be reelected. In doing so, Arizona became the fourth swing… Read more…
Responsible Wisconsin Republicans met on Monday to put forth their slate of electors for the 2020 election. Wisconsin Republicans followed the rule of law and… Read more…
Brad Raffensperger Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger on Monday announced a signature audit in Cobb County. “We stand ready to answer each and every… Read more…
Joe Biden coughed his way through a press conference where he prematurely declared victory on Monday evening. Biden seemed to struggle to get through the… Read more…
President Trump announced Monday evening that US Attorney General Bill Barr will be stepping down “just before Christmas.” “Deputy Attorney General Jeff Rosen, an outstanding… Read more…
The MyPillow CEO spoke at the Women For America First Rally where he slammed Fox News for prematurely calling Joe Biden the winner of Arizona’s… Read more…
Dominion is trying to hide their relationship with SolarWinds. We reported yesterday that late Sunday night the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) issued a… Read more…
This is getting predictable. It should have been a great day for the “most popular Democrat in world history” after the 50 states put forth… Read more…
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