The Morning Dispatch: Is Biden Easing Up on Nord Stream 2?

Plus: how Biden’s unaccompanied minors border policy differs from his predecessor’s.

(Photo by Sasha Mordovets/Getty Images.)

Happy Friday! Some free advice from your Morning Dispatchers: If you’re going to commit a crime, don’t text your ex-girlfriend about it—while you’re doing it—and then call her a moron. She might just turn you in.

Quick Hits: Today’s Top Stories

  • The United States conducted a series of airstrikes last night against facilities used by Iranian-backed militia groups in Syria. The strikes, ordered by President Joe Biden, came “in response to recent attacks against American and Coalition personnel in Iraq,” according to a Defense Department spokesman. Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin told reporters the administration was “confident” the target of the airstrikes “was being used by the same Shia militia that conducted the strikes [against Americans in Iraq].”
  • Senate parliamentarian Elizabeth MacDonough ruled last night that raising the federal minimum wage to $15 an hour through the budget reconciliation process does not comply with Senate rules, dealing a blow to Democrats who hoped to include the provision in their coronavirus relief package. Some progressive Democrats are advocating for overruling MacDonough, but White House officials have made clear they will not.
  • The Senate voted 64-35 on Thursday to confirm former Michigan Gov. Jennifer Granholm as secretary of the Department of Energy.
  • Former U.S. Olympic gymnastics coach John Geddert died by suicide on Thursday hours after he was charged with two dozen felonies by the state of Michigan, including 20 counts of human trafficking and two counts of sexual assault.
  • The House of Representatives passed the Equality Act on Thursday in a 224-206 vote, with all Democrats and three Republicans supporting it. The legislation, which is unlikely to garner the necessary 60 votes in the Senate, would amend the 1964 Civil Rights Act to provide additional legal protections for LGBTQ individuals.
  • Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell told Fox News yesterday he would “absolutely” support Donald Trump if the former president won the Republican nomination in 2024, though he added that “there’s a lot to happen between now and ‘24” and it “should be a wide-open race.” McConnell’s comments came weeks after he blamed Trump for the Jan. 6 assault on the U.S. Capitol and suggested the president might be prosecuted for his role.
  • The United States confirmed 80,763 new cases of COVID-19 yesterday per the Johns Hopkins University COVID-19 Dashboard, with 4.5 percent of the 1,811,380 tests reported coming back positive. An additional 2,318 deaths were attributed to the virus on Thursday, bringing the pandemic’s American death toll to 508,114. According to the COVID Tracking Project, 52,669 Americans are currently hospitalized with COVID-19. According to the Centers for Disease Control, 1,809,170 COVID-19 vaccine doses were administered yesterday, bringing the nationwide total to 68,274,117.

Nord Stream 2: 2 Fast 2 Furious

Longtime Morning Dispatch readers—we’re talking way back, when we were only publishing three days a week—might remember an item we wrote in December 2019 about Nord Stream 2, a pipeline being constructed by the Russian state-owned natural gas company Gazprom. Once completed, the pipeline would span the Baltic Sea, allowing Russia to export more gas directly to Germany.

Why does this matter? Here’s what we wrote last year:

Russia currently funnels much of the gas it sends to Europe through Ukraine, which is then able to extract both transit fees and geopolitical leverage from the aggressors to the east. Putin would love to end that, further weakening the Ukrainian economy and the country’s ties to the Western world. In an interview with state TV in April 2018, Gazprom’s CEO acknowledged as much, saying that while some gas would continue to flow through Ukraine upon the completion of the pipeline, “the volumes of such transit will be much lower.”

Former President Trump signed a law in December 2019 threatening sanctions against any company that aided in the completion of the pipeline. For a little more than a year, this strategy worked: The project was put on pause as businesses involved in its construction dropped out, deeming the financial and geopolitical penalty for continuing to be too great.

But construction resumed February 6—estimates now peg the pipeline at 90 percent complete—as it became clear the Biden administration would not be nearly as aggressive in blocking it as its predecessor was. The Biden team, in fact, has yet to enforce many of the sanctions that are required by law.

The Biden Administration’s First Migrant Detention Center

A few days ago, the Washington Post reported that the Biden administration had opened its first emergency migrant camp near the southern border, and that it would hold up to 700 teenagers and children. The move was lambasted by the right as hypocritical and the left as a broken promise. Is it one or the other? Both? Neither? We tasked our newest Morning Dispatcher, Ryan Brown, with finding out. His first standalone piece is up on the site, but some excerpts are below.

How does this compare to the Trump administration’s immigration policy?

The Biden administration insists that what is happening on the southern border is not at all like what happened during the Trump administration. At her daily press conference on Tuesday, White House press secretary Jen Psaki made this distinction: “We have a number of unaccompanied minors—children—who are coming into the country without their families. What we are not doing—what the last administration did was separate those kids, rip them from the arms of their parents at the border.”

In 2018, the Trump administration instituted a “zero-tolerance policy” that purposefully separated children from parents when they were caught crossing the border illegally, citing a wish to deter families from doing so. In a January 2019 study, HHS found that at least 2,737 children were separated from their parents. However, because of a lack of data and other complexities, that number may have been much higher. Instead of deterrence, though, what resulted was a massive public outcry and, ultimately, a withdrawal of the policy from the Trump administration in June 2018.

That was the policy Psaki was referencing in her comments, and the Biden administration has not reinstituted it. Currently, the new administration is dealing with an influx of new undocumented immigrants while also trying to keep the detained population low amid the coronavirus pandemic. Since taking office, Biden has reversed some of Trump’s restrictive immigration orders, including lifting a freeze on issuing green cards, revoking the travel ban on several Muslim-majority countries, throwing his full support behind the DACA program, and more. Perhaps most important: While Biden has largely kept in place a Trump-era expulsion order for anyone crossing the border, he has made an exemption for unaccompanied minors.

Worth Your Time

  • To help start your Friday on an optimistic note, here’s some fantastic news: COVID-19 deaths have fallen dramatically in nursing homes in recent months, far outpacing the national decline. “In some nursing homes, four out of five residents or more have now been vaccinated,” Matthew Conlen, Sarah Mervosh and Danielle Ivory write in the New York Times. “The turnaround is an encouraging sign for vaccine effectiveness and offers an early glimpse at what may be in store for the rest of the country, as more and more people get vaccinated.”
  • CNN’s Andrew Kaczynski and the Wall Street Journal’s Rachel Louise Ensign lost their nine-month-old daughter Francesca last December to a deadly brain tumor. In a heart-wrenching piece for the Washington Post, Kaczynski details the grief their family experienced—but also makes the case for a series of steps pharmaceutical companies and governments can take that, over time, could prevent other families from suffering the same fate. “Children with cancer touch a special place in people’s hearts,” he writes. “We’ve received so many incredible messages of support from total strangers that we will always cherish. And yet, as a society, we have failed to put our best resources together. Let’s start now. We don’t have time to waste.”

Presented Without Comment

Jonathan Swan @jonathanvswan

It’s beyond galling for Ukrainians to hear this empty talk from Germany – the country actively screwing them by helping Russia gain leverage – and cutting off Ukraine’s energy leverage and income stream – through NS2 https://t.co/uF6BDlLyEe

German Mission to UN @GermanyUN

The Russian invasion and annexation of parts of #Ukraine is one of the most blatant violations of int’l law since WW2, Amb. Heusgen says in #UNGA today. Ukraine’s sovereignty and territorial integrity are being violated to this day. https://t.co/bgQJdcykwB

Also Presented Without Comment

John McCormack @McCormackJohn

Chip Roy in January: Trump “deserves universal condemnation for what was clearly impeachable conduct—pressuring the vice president to violate his oath to the Constitution to count the electors.”

John McCormack @McCormackJohn

Texas GOP congressman Chip Roy: “Yesterday, Liz [Cheney] forfeited her right to be chair of the Republican conference. You cannot stand up and make a statement that is so completely out of step with the Republican conference.” https://t.co/fyvUABbEaa

Toeing the Company Line

  • In his latest French Press (🔒), David explains how the Equality Act goes well beyond the legitimate scope of nondiscrimination law in seeking to protect LGBT Americans from invidious discrimination. For David, the Equality Act has two main flaws. “First, it renders virtually all biological sex distinctions unlawful, regardless of context,” he writes. “And second, it explicitly attempts to diminish religious liberty protections for religious individuals and institutions by stating that the Religious Freedom Restoration ACT (RFRA) ‘cannot provide a basis’ for challenging the ‘application or enforcement’ of the act.”
  • On yesterday’s episode of Advisory Opinions, Sarah and David engage in some mild-mannered media criticism over coverage of the Supreme Court, before being joined by University of Chicago law professor William Baude for a discussion of the Court’s shadow docket.
  • TMD grand poobah Declan Garvey joins Jonah on this week’s second edition of The RemnantThe pair discuss Declan’s recent piece on whether the GOP could fracture, while nerding out over Whig history. They also address whether a third party could emerge in the United States, and if there’s any credibility to the idea of “Red Dog Democrats.” Along the way, Jonah makes sure to abuse Declan relentlessly for his Harvard education.

Reporting by Declan Garvey (@declanpgarvey), Andrew Egger (@EggerDC), Haley Byrd Wilt (@byrdinator), Audrey Fahlberg (@FahlOutBerg), Charlotte Lawson (@charlotteUVA), Ryan Brown (@RyanP_Brown), and Steve Hayes (@stephenfhayes).