Good morning! Here is your news briefing for Wednesday March 17, 2021
1.) THE DAILY SIGNAL
March 17 2021
Happy St. Patrick’s Day from Washington, where the Biden administration is in denial over the border crisis. We’ve got a fact-check of the official line by three Heritage Foundation experts. You’re not imagining that most of the media is in the tank for President Biden, Tim Murtaugh writes. On the podcast, we look at the woke remaking of big corporations with the author of a book on it. Plus: hold on to your firearms; when faith makes you less equal; and “poison” on the Navy’s reading list. On this date in 1969, Ukrainian-born and Wisconsin-reared Golda Meir, 70, is elected as Israel’s fourth prime minister and to date is the only woman to win the post.
The left-wing claim that gun control legislation would save lives is demonstrably false. The cities with the highest murder rates and levels of other violent crime have the strictest gun regulations.
The Equality Act would give government free rein to restrict, compromise, or even eliminate the fundamental right to practice religion in pursuit of a political agenda.
Reps. Doug Lamborn, R-Colo., and Vicky Hartzler, R-Mo., ask the Navy to pull three books promoting identity politics and wokeness from its official reading list.
“Activist shareholders began pressuring companies 10, 15, even 20 years ago to do what the activists wanted … the squeaky wheel gets the grease,” says Stephen Soukup.
“If the Democrats break the rules to kill [the filibuster] … then we will use every other rule to make tens of millions of Americans’ voices heard,” says Senate Minority Leader McConnell.
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2.) THE EPOCH TIMES
3.) DAYBREAK
Your First Look at Today’s Top Stories – Daybreak Insider
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Dallas Convention Center to House 3000 Male Teen Illegal Immigrants
“For up to 90 days” according to the story (ABC News). From Congressman Mark Green: Let me get this straight. 3,000 illegal migrants can crowd into the Dallas Convention Center, but Americans still aren’t allowed to attend in-person games? The Democrat double standard is mind boggling (Twitter). From Erielle Davidson: I love how a pandemic that has irrevocably changed our way of life has suddenly become irrelevant when it hinders the woke agenda at the border (Twitter). CBS News reports there are more than 13,000 migrant children now in custody (Twitter).
2.
Disgusting Grammy Awards Hit All Time Ratings Low
And it wasn’t even close. Despite the star power, it was the lowest rated Grammy Awards in history. The show, which was particularly sleazy, had ratings that were less than half of what they turned in last year, and less than half the numbers of the previous low in 2006.
High-Profile Democrats Getting Behind Newsom’s Effort to Thwart Recall
Just as the California Governor opens a campaign committee to oppose the recall (RedState). From another story: Newsom is receiving help from near and far as Republican operatives behind the petition drive ready to meet the Wednesday deadline and submit the requisite signatures to trigger a recall election. Vouching for the governor as they acknowledge the recall for the first time are nationally popular liberals such as Sen. Bernie Sanders of Vermont and Georgia activist Stacey Abrams, plus senior California Democrats, including Rep. Adam Schiff and Sen. Alex Padilla (Washington Examiner). From Lanhee Chen: Newsom has overseen one of the biggest management failures in the state’s history—the state unemployment insurance fund paid up to $30 billion in fraudulent claims, including to people are sitting in state prison as we speak. And let’s not forget that Newsom ignored his own public health rules and dined with lobbyists at a fancy Napa Valley restaurant during the height of the COVID-19 pandemic. Newsom hasn’t been a failure because Republicans say so. No, his own actions are to blame for that (Townhall Review). In case all of his other efforts fail, Newsom is trying out the recall-is-racist angle (Fox News).
4.
Group of Virginia Teachers Engage in Smearing Parents Who Don’t Back Critical Race Theory
From the story: Members of a 624-member private Facebook group called “Anti-Racist Parents of Loudoun County” named parents and plotted fundraising and other offline work. Some used pseudonyms, but The Daily Wire has identified them as a who’s who of the affluent jurisdiction outside D.C., including schools staff and elected officials.
Wisconsin Sierra Club Distances Itself from Racist Founder
From the story: Known as “the father of our national parks,” Muir helped establish the conservation movement and shaped the way generations of people viewed the natural world. But he also disparaged Black and Native American people and kept company with white supremacists, including early Sierra Club board members who advocated forced sterilization of non-white and disabled people.
California Democrat Introduces Bill that Could Force Removal of Christian or Conservative Police
From the story: The bill defines hate speech as “as advocating or supporting the denial of constitutional rights of, the genocide of, or violence towards, any group of persons based upon race, ethnicity, nationality, religion, gender, gender identity, sexual orientation, or disability.” Pacific Justice Institute Senior Staff Attorney Matthew McReynolds said this broad and purposefully arbitrary definition could give way for Christians and conservatives to be classified as “hateful” based on the premise of rejecting abortion or supporting Proposition 8 in California, a same-sex amendment that passed in 2008.
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In honor of my family from the old country, as well as Kathy Mears, here are a few notes about this great Irish holiday.
— An oldie but goody on the history of St. Patty’s Day: Americans drink green beer and chug Irish Car Bombs, but in Ireland, St. Patrick’s Day, celebrated on the anniversary of his death in the fifth century, it’s a religious holiday. We’re not saying not to dive into that bottle of Jameson, but (maybe) read the history of the holiday here.
Before you crack that bottle of Jamesons, learn a little about the real St. Patrick first.
— Wear green, save green, eat green: Not only will many Americans see their stimulus checks Wednesday for a St. Patty’s Day treat, wearing green to show spirit for the famed Irish holiday can also save some cash. Krispy Kreme is offering free green doughnuts for patrons who show up wearing the token color. Read more about St. Patty’s deals and where to find green beer in this USA Today roundup.
🥧 — How to eat (and drink) like the Irish: From soda bread to Irish coffee, there are a lot of ways to celebrate the Emerald Isle at the dinner table. Check out recipes for the aforementioned treat as well as regional delicacies like Sheppard’s Pie and Beef and Stout Stew in this Washington Post roundup.
— Celebrating alone doesn’t have to be lonely: NorthJersey.com compiled its own list of ways to celebrate St. Patty’s at home, too, including with livestreamed concerts. Artists providing St. Patty’s virtual entertainment include Flogging Molly, The Dropkick Murphys and others. The list also includes recommended craft brews in which to imbibe. And remember, on March 17, everyone’s Irish!
— Green rivers are a St. Patrick’s Day tradition: The city of Chicago has been dying its river green since the 60s to celebrate St. Patrick’s Day, and in the years since, other cities have followed suit, including in Texas, Georgia, Indiana, North Carolina and even here in Florida (though Tampa won’t be dying its Hillsborough River green this year … thanks COVID-19). The festive celebrations have become honored traditions, but it’s no easy feat to turn a river green. Read more about the festivities and how they’re undertaken in this Rocket Miner feature.
Green rivers are springing up all around the country. It’s not as easy as it looks. Image via AP.
— Rock out for St. Patty’s: Still observing a self-quarantine and planning to stay-in this St. Patrick’s Day? Make it a more festive affair with these rockin’ tunes with Irish themes or by Irish bands and artists. The list, compiled by Courier-Times, includes popular hits like Thin Lizzy‘s (formed in Dublin) “The Boys are Back in Town” and lesser-known ditties like “Finnegan’s Wake” by The Irish Rovers. So grab a pint (or a whiskey) and shout Sláinte like no one’s listening (because they won’t be).
“Everyone’s Irish on St. Patrick’s Day” via Ray Flynn for the Boston Herald — Back in the day, even if you didn’t celebrate St. Patrick’s Day at home, you couldn’t help getting caught up in the special feeling of pride that washed over many people, you didn’t have to be Irish or have any Irish roots at all. Obviously, growing up and living in South Boston made it virtually impossible to avoid getting swept up in the traditional St. Patrick’s Day rituals, like morning Mass, the parade, family parties and the political breakfast at Dorgan’s Restaurant, which brought together local, national and even international celebrities to share humorous stories which attracted a large television audience. Some politicians would even use the event and day to launch their campaign for political office, whether it be Governor, Senator or President.
“Kamala Harris expected to meet Northern Ireland leaders on St. Patrick’s Day” via Suzanne Lynch of The Irish Times — Harris will meet virtually tomorrow with Northern Ireland First Minister Arlene Foster and Deputy First Minister Michelle O’Neill The Irish Times understands, as Northern Ireland is set to top the agenda for the annual St Patrick’s Day celebrations in Washington. It is understood that a meeting between the three female leaders is being finalized on the eve of the St Patrick’s Day meetings. U.S. President Joe Biden may also attend some of the discussion, which will take place on Wednesday afternoon following Taoiseach Michael Martin’s meeting with the President.
“CDC urges people to stay away for St. Patrick’s Day” via Nexstar Media Wire — Planning to get together to toast St. Patrick’s Day? The CDC says the best way to stay safe and protect others amid the coronavirus pandemic is to stay home. “Attending gatherings to celebrate St. Patrick’s Day increases your risk of getting and spreading COVID-19,” the CDC said. The holiday, which is on Wednesday, celebrates the patron saint of Ireland and is famous for its social gatherings and public parades and festivals. The CDC said the least risky way to gather is virtual, with people who live in your household or outside at least 6 feet apart from one another.
—@SenRickScott: The Democrats’ wasteful “COVID-19” spending bill shelled out $360B in unneeded bailouts to state & local gov’ts. Governors, mayors & state legislatures must protect taxpayer money & reject any federal funding in excess of their reimbursable COVID-19 expenses
—@MDixon55: .@GovRonDeSantis is proposing how he wants the Legislature to spend $4b of $10b Florida will get in federal COVID $ He won’t get everything, but it will guide lawmaker’s thinking. That leaves $6b to the Legislature. It’s a lobbyist’s dream, and y’all can’t get in the building
—@CHeathWFTV: “The amendment is well-intentioned, but …” A nice way of saying nope.
—@PaulCottiePhys: .@dennisbaxley just missed the point on the AP credits. AP Physics 1 is not equivalent to the physics course required by accreditation for an engineering major. AP Physics 1 is the best possible preparation for the engineering physics course, but it is not a replacement … and no amount of jawboning will change that. And high school students who pass AP Physics 1 will have their Bright Futures scholarship reduced by four credit hours.
—@Fineout: Sen. Baxley says Florida doesn’t guarantee 100 or 75 percent of tuition now as part of Bright Futures. ???? He voted for the bill that reinstated that guarantee in 2018.
—@KevinCraigFL: The #BrightFutures program is what kept me in FL when choosing where to go to school. It’s what led me to @UCF, a place that gave me incredible opportunities that led to a career that I love. I hope the program stays unchanged for the future of FL students.
Tweet, tweet:
Tweet, tweet:
Days until
Zack Snyder’s ‘Justice League’ premieres on HBO Max — 1; ‘The Falcon and the Winter Soldier’ premieres on Disney+ — 2; ‘Godzilla vs. Kong’ premieres — 9; 2021 Florida Virtual Hemp Conference — 10; 2021 Florida Derby — 10; Disneyland, other California theme parks begin to reopen — 15; MLB Opening Day — 15; RNC spring donor summit — 23; ‘Black Widow’ rescheduled premiere — 51; Florida Chamber Safety Council’s inaugural Southeastern Leadership Conference on Safety, Health and Sustainability — 54; ‘A Quiet Place Part II’ rescheduled premiere — 72; ‘Top Gun: Maverick’ rescheduled premiere — 107; Disney’s ‘Shang Chi and The Legend of The Ten Rings’ premieres — 116; MLB All-Star Game in Atlanta — 118; new start date for 2021 Olympics — 128; ‘Jungle Cruise’ premieres — 136; St. Petersburg Primary Election — 160; ‘The Many Saints of Newark’ premieres (rescheduled) — 191; ‘Dune’ premieres — 198; MLB regular season ends — 200; ‘No Time to Die’ premieres (rescheduled) — 206; World Series Game 1 — 223; St. Petersburg Municipal Elections — 230; Disney’s ‘Eternals’ premieres — 233; Steven Spielberg’s ‘West Side Story’ premieres — 268; ‘Spider-Man Far From Home’ sequel premieres — 275; ‘Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness’ premieres — 373; ‘Thor: Love and Thunder’ premieres — 415; ‘Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse’ sequel premieres — 569.
Awash
A full year after the nation began the “15 Days to Slow the Spread,” DeSantis outlined $4.1 billion in recommendations Tuesday for how the state should spend the incoming federal stimulus dollars.
However, the $4.1 billion isn’t all Florida will receive. That’s just some of the first half of the approximately $10 billion the state is supposed to receive directly from the federal government. The first tranche is expected sometime in the next two months while more money will come later.
Burning a hole: Ron DeSantis is ready to spend federal COVID-19 relief funds. Image via Colin Hackley.
Questions remain on exactly how much Florida will receive. It all depends on whether the federal government uses previous unemployment estimates for December or the latest revisions. Based on the latest update, Florida could receive closer to $9 billion rather than slightly more than $10 billion.
Among the top priorities the Governor outlined was to give the state’s first responders at least $1,000 each as a thank you for their dedicated work during the pandemic, costing an estimated $208.4 million. That includes EMTs, law enforcement officers and firefighters.
“We know the pandemic put a lot of strain on our first responders — EMTs, sworn law enforcement, firefighters — so we believe we should recognize their sacrifice,” the Governor said.
He also encouraged lawmakers to allocate roughly $260 million in relief to Florida seaports that were hit hard when cruise lines stopped business last year.
“That is an amount equal to the losses they’ve accrued during the pandemic through February of 2021,” DeSantis said.
Several areas hope to patch continued unemployment, including the $185 million for workforce training and research initiatives. Additionally, $73.2 million would update the state’s CONNECT unemployment system portal, which failed spectacularly at the start of the pandemic.
Other major funding initiatives DeSantis recommends include $1 billion to the Resilient Florida Grant Program, offering state and local grants for resilience projects, another $1 billion to the Emergency Management Response Fund, and nearly $1 billion to the Transportation Work Program.
“‘Doesn’t make any sense’: Ron DeSantis rejects Rick Scott’s call to return stimulus money” via Gary Fineout of POLITICO — DeSantis on Tuesday flatly rejected Florida GOP Sen. Scott’s call for Governors and Mayors to return money from the $1.9 trillion coronavirus relief package, creating another fault line with his potential 2024 rival. DeSantis instead outlined his plans for spending $4 billion of the up to $10 billion that could be coming to the state as part of the “American Rescue Plan.” DeSantis has called for using the money on everything from $1,000 payments to law enforcement officers, paramedics and firefighters to boosting spending on tourism marketing and transportation projects.
Dateline Tallahassee
Jeff Brandes hints at weak Senate support for anti-riot bill — Republican Sen. Brandes indicated that anti-riot legislation — one of DeSantis’ priorities — may not have enough support to move forward in the Senate, Giulia Heyward of POLITICO Florida reports. “I don’t think it has the votes to get out of committee,” Brandes said during a Tampa Bay Climate Alliance virtual town hall. The anti-riot proposal would increase penalties for crimes committed during protests. It has been speeding through the House but has yet to get a hearing in the upper chamber. Katie Betta, Senate President Wilton Simpson’s communication director, refuted the notion the Senate bill (SB 484) doesn’t have enough support to pass.
“Senate GOP advances Bright Futures redesign” via Ana Ceballos and Jeffrey S. Solochek of the Tampa Bay Times — Following a rewrite and uproar from dozens of students and parents, Senate Republicans on Tuesday advanced legislation that could reduce amounts covered under the state’s popular Bright Futures college scholarship program. The largely unpopular bill was pulled from the Senate Education Committee agenda a week ago to give its sponsor more time to adjust some of the more contentious items. Many of the key policy ideas in Senate Bill 86 were left untouched. But a new, longer version now requires state education officials to put together a list of degrees that don’t lead directly to jobs, and that list is tied to Bright Futures scholarship amounts.
Dennis Baxley’s contentious bill to make changes to Bright Futures scholarships is moving through the Senate. Image via Colin Haxley.
“Watered-down bill to regulate prescription middlemen draws pushback” via Renzo Downey of Florida Politics — A bill to add oversight to pharmacy benefit managers (PBM) cleared its first committee Tuesday, but changes made to the legislation left neither PBMs nor pharmacists completely satisfied. PBMs are middlemen between health care plans and pharmacies that are often blamed for rising prescription drug prices. They help determine which drugs insurance plans will cover and negotiate on behalf of insurers to secure discounts from drug manufacturers. When a claim is filed, PBMs collect money from those plans, then pass money to pharmacies through different methods. Sen. Tom Wright‘s bill (SB 390) would clarify that the Office of Insurance Regulation can examine PBMs, like other entities, to audit potential cost-cutting areas.
“Who’s behind a thorny Florida property rights bill? A real estate empire” via Zachary T. Sampson of the Tampa Bay Times — A bill in the Florida Legislature that would bolster a state property rights law was written by representatives of a major development business that has donated to its Senate sponsor. Sen. Ray Rodrigues said he worked with a lobbyist for the Barron Collier Companies and Collier Enterprises Management to draft the proposal. An email shows a lobbyist passed along draft language from an executive at Barron Collier Companies, one branch of a real estate and investment empire that traces back to Collier County’s namesake.
“Senate panel takes aim at local powers” via Jim Turner of News Service of Florida — Orders imposed by local officials after hurricanes, pandemic outbreaks or other emergencies could be overturned by the Governor or Legislature, under a measure (SB 1924) approved along party lines by Senate Community Affairs Committee. The bill, sponsored by Sen. Manny Diaz Jr., would limit to 10 days locally issued emergency orders, which could be invalidated by the Governor or the Legislature. The proposal would allow the orders to be extended but would require city or county elected officials’ support. Currently, local states of emergency can be ordered for seven days and extended indefinitely in seven-day increments as needed.
Gun control crackdown advances in Senate — The Senate Community Affairs Committee advanced a bill that would increase penalties for local governments that pass gun control ordinances. As reported by Matt Dixon of POLITICO Florida, SB 1484 states that if a local gun law is repealed due to a lawsuit, the person who brought the suit would be considered the prevailing party. Since 2011, Florida law has blocked local governments from passing gun control ordinances laws that are stricter than the state’s. However, bill sponsor Rodrigues says that local governments are still attempting to enact restrictions that challenge the preemption. The Estero Republican said the problem is some courts agree with the locals while others shoot down the local laws.
Tally 2
Bill would help incarcerated mothers get out early — A bill filed by Sen. Jason Pizzo would allow pregnant women or mothers with children aged 3 or younger to get out of prison after serving 65% of their sentence. As reported by Giulia Heyward of POLITICO Florida, SB 1908 would shorten sentences via gain time earned through good behavior, drug rehabilitation or educational attainment. Before passing the Senate Criminal Justice Committee, the bill was amended to exclude women who terminated their pregnancy or are no longer a child’s legal parent. It now heads to the Senate Appropriations Subcommittee on Criminal and Civil Justice.
Jason Pizzo seeks early release for pregnant inmates. Image via Colin Hackley.
“House gives boost to pharmacist vaccination power” via Christine Sexton of News Service of Florida — The House Professions & Public Health Subcommittee approved a proposal that would allow pharmacists to vaccinate children, but only after lawmakers narrowed the bill (HB 1063) to only allow pharmacists to administer influenza vaccines to children ages 7 and older. The initial version of the bill, filed by Rep. Juan Alfonso Fernandez-Barquin, a Miami Republican, would have authorized pharmacists to provide various vaccines to children ages 3 and older. That would have included vaccines needed for school, unless parents seek exemptions, including measles, mumps, rubella, diphtheria, tetanus, and meningococcal disease. Despite the change, the American Academy of Pediatrics continued to oppose the measure.
“Ana Maria Rodriguez’ ‘communist victims’ bill spurs sharp debate” via Scott Powers of Florida Politics — Definitions of communism, socialism, fascism, totalitarianism, economic theories and dictatorships were aired in debate Tuesday as Senators sorted what Sen. Rodriguez had in mind with her bill to create a holiday memorializing victims of communism. Is it a stand against places like Fidel Castro‘s Cuba or a red-meat bill for a Republican base that has reestablished communism as a front-line threat to American democracy? For Rodriguez, the definitions of various totalitarian ideologies bandied about in Tuesday’s meeting of the Senate Committee on Community Affairs clearly all referred to the same thing: the brutal results of communism that her parents fled when they escaped Cuba, and which have cost an estimated hundred million lives worldwide since the Bolsheviks first came to power in Russia in 1917.
“Narrowed local energy preemption bill powers through Senate panel” via Scott Powers of Florida Politics — Narrowing his bill to be mainly a prohibition on cities banning gas stations, Sen. Travis Hutson was able to drive his once-controversial local energy regulation bill through a Senate committee Tuesday. SB 856 had become a bit of a partisan flashpoint, as one of several proposals that could have rolled back cities’ and counties’ authority to adopt clean-energy plans and ordinances. Cities and counties were prepared to fight the legislation. On Tuesday, however, Hutson pushed through a strike-all amendment that narrowed the bill’s concern to making sure cities don’t try to outlaw gas stations “and their related infrastructure.” With that, the Senate Community Affairs Committee approved the measure, 6-3.
“Beach smoking restrictions clear first House committee” via Jacob Ogles of Florida Politics — Legislation allowing Florida cities and counties to outlaw smoking at public beaches and parks cleared its first House committee Tuesday. The House Professions and Public Health Subcommittee advanced a bill (HB 239) that would authorize local governments to regulate smoking at those locales. Right now, Florida law leaves the decision to regulate smoking only to the state government. Rep. Thad Altman, an Indiatlantic Republican, stressed the bill won’t ban all smoking but would give officials the ability to set local rules. That could include setting up areas where smoking is allowed while restricting it in most areas of a beach. “It doesn’t mean they will prohibit smoking, but it will give them the opportunity at least to address those conflicts,” Altman said.
“Car sharing tax and insurance bill clears House committee” via Scott Powers of Florida Politics — A bill that would require peer-to-peer car-sharing marketing platforms to collect and pay sales taxes and rental surcharges, as well as clarify insurance requirements, cleared a committee Tuesday. Republican Rep. Mike Caruso‘s HB 365 aims to bring the emerging peer-to-peer car sharing businesses such as Turo, GetAround, and Avail into tax, insurance, and regulatory parity with traditional rental car companies like Enterprise, Avis, and Hertz. The House Tourism, Infrastructure and Energy Subcommittee approved the measure by a 13-3 vote.
“Senate bundles all specialty license plate legislation into one package” via Haley Brown of Florida Politics — Senators are coming together over specialty license plates — quite literally. In a Tuesday committee meeting, lawmakers voted to package all specialty license plate legislation this Session into one bill. Sen. Dennis Baxley presented his bill (SB 676) to create a specialty plate to support Florida State Parks to Transportation Committee Chair Sen. Gayle Harrell, who rocks her own specialty plate supporting the Wildlife Foundation of Florida. Harrell proposed an amendment to Baxley’s bill to combine the license plate legislation, which all committee members supported. “We’re more than happy to be a vehicle for your other passengers,” Baxley quipped.
The Senate will bundle Gayle Harrell’s specialty license plate proposal into one big bill. Image via Colin Hackley.
“Larger wine bottles inch closer to reality” via Jason Delgado of Florida Politics — Floridians, your wineglass may soon runneth over. The House Commerce Committee on Tuesday unanimously OK’d a bill (HB 6073) that would repeal a state law prohibiting the sale of wine in containers larger than a gallon. Rep. Chip LaMarca, a Lighthouse Point Republican, is the bill sponsor. Currently, vendors who sell wine in a container larger than a gallon commit a second-degree misdemeanor, punishable by a $500 maximum fine and 60 days in prison. LaMarca’s proposal, however, would allow the sale of wine in a container of any size.
“House moves forward on Bryan Avila bill setting up Biscayne Bay Commission” via Ryan Nicol of Florida Politics — Legislation to create a Biscayne Bay Commission to manage conservation projects in the area has just one more committee stop remaining before hitting the House floor after a committee advanced the measure Tuesday morning. The House Agriculture and Natural Resources Appropriations Subcommittee gave Rep. Avila‘s bill (HB 1177) a thumbs-up Tuesday, making it the second successful committee stop for Avila so far. The Biscayne Bay Commission would have three parts: a policy committee, a working group, and a chief officer to advise Miami-Dade County.
Tally 3
“A freshman Black Republican joins Florida’s Legislative Black Caucus” via Isaac Morgan of the Florida Phoenix —Over the years, Black lawmakers in the Florida Legislature have tended toward the Democratic Party rather than the Republicans, but a small group of Black conservatives served under the GOP banner. The most recent is Rep. Webster Barnaby, a freshman lawmaker born in Birmingham, England, who was elected last year. He is a resident of Deltona and represents part of Volusia County. He is the House’s only Black Republican. Barnaby hasn’t responded to multiple requests for comment from the Florida Phoenix regarding his thoughts about his role and priorities. But he has joined the Legislative Black Caucus, an overwhelmingly Democratic institution.
Webster Barnaby is the sole Republican in the Florida Legislative Black Caucus. Image via Florida House.
Food fight alert — “Legislation transferring utility pole oversight to PSC moves in both chambers” via Renzo Downey of Florida Politics — Legislation shifting utility pole oversight from the Federal Communications Commission to the Florida Public Service Commission passed its first panel on Tuesday. Two bills (SB 1944/HB 1567), sponsored by Wauchula Sen. Ben Albritton and Indian Rocks Beach Rep. Nick DiCeglie, both Republicans, would require the PSC to enforce rates, charges, terms and conditions for pole attachments and to resolve pole attachment disputes. The bill outlines new rules for settling disputes, boosting grid reliability and hardening, and redundant poles. The FCC currently oversees many of the operations surrounding utility poles. But if PSC takes complete control under the bill, it would stop preempting private contracts. However, PSC would have the authority to settle disputes regarding those rates.
“Bill would speed up Everglades restoration north of Lake Okeechobee” via Amy Green of 90.7 WMFE — Florida lawmakers are considering legislation aimed at addressing toxic algae by speeding up Everglades restoration north of Lake Okeechobee, in the Kissimmee River basin. The project includes 80 wells designed to store water underground, using technology that has generated some concerns. The ASR wells are aimed at addressing one of the biggest problems of Everglades restoration: Where to store the vast amount of water needed to revive the river of grass. ASR wells allow water managers to store water underground and then pump it back to the surface as needed. But concerns about the technology have prompted a reduction in the number of wells. Beth Alvi of Audubon Florida says the number could change still as scientific studies continue.
“Kelli Stargel public-records exemption bill clears first committee along party lines” via Haley Brown of Florida Politics — A bill shielding legislator’s personal information from the public passed the Senate Ethics and Elections Committee Wednesday in a 5-4 vote along party lines. Despite the close vote tally, no one spoke for or against the legislation aside from the bill’s sponsor. The bill (SB 1488), filed by Lakeland Sen. Stargel, would create a public-records exemption for information about home addresses, telephone numbers and dates of birth of state lawmakers, Cabinet members and their spouses and children. The same exemption is currently extended to justices, judges, state attorneys, statewide prosecutors, and certain agency investigative personnel.
“Committee advances bill prohibiting municipalities from restricting consumer energy options” via Jason Delgado of Florida Politics — A Senate committee OK’d legislation Tuesday that would prohibit cities, counties and subdivisions from restricting consumer energy options. The Senate Community Affairs Committee unanimously advanced the bill (SB 1128) with a 9-0 vote. Republican Sen. Travis Hutson is the bill sponsor. Under the bill, municipalities would be prohibited from enacting or enforcing rules against a consumer’s utility service of choice, such as gas or electric. The bill would also void any municipal rules enacted before the bill takes effect.
“Occupational licensing bill cleared for House floor; Senate version passes first test” via Renzo Downey of Florida Politics — The House Commerce Committee gave Rep. Joe Harding‘s version (HB 735) its final necessary approval before it hits the House floor. Meanwhile, the Senate Regulated Industries Committee got the ball rolling for Sen. Keith Perry‘s proposal (SB 268). Local governments could continue “journeyman” requirements. The legislation would also add alarm system specialists to the list of journeymen, including plumbers, pipe fitters, mechanical workers and electrical workers. The proposal would end new regulations, but local governments could keep existing occupational requirements until July 2023. Fees and licenses sometimes cost up to $200, Perry, a Gainesville Republican, told the Senate Regulated Industries Committee.
Joe Harding’s occupational license proposal is ready to hit the House floor.
“Legislators want to let local government regulate smoking in parks but not mask-wearing” via Mary Ellen Klas of the Miami Herald/Tampa Bay Times — Local government can ban a person sitting outside a Little League Baseball dugout from smoking, but they cannot make them wear a mask. That is the effect of two bills moving through the Legislature this week, one preempting local restrictions of more than a week in the face of a public health crisis and the other loosening the existing preemption law to let locals limit smoking in public beaches and parks. The issue highlights the tension between DeSantis, who has issued his own emergency orders prohibiting the enforcement of local mask mandates and curfews during the pandemic, and local officials who have used those measures to attempt to prevent the spread of the contagious virus.
Uber cheers House panel for advancing cocktails-to-go — Ride-sharing company Uber praised the House Commerce Committee after it voted in favor of a bill (HB 329) that would allow restaurants to continue selling to-go drinks after the pandemic ends. “Uber is grateful to State Rep. Josie Tomkow for spearheading HB 329 through the committee process. She and her colleagues clearly understand the significant economic value of alcohol delivery and recognize that Florida restaurant owners are depending on it to safely continue reaching their customers.” HB 329 is now ready for the House floor. The companion bill, SB 148 by Sen. Jennifer Bradley, goes before its final committee on Thursday.
Lobby regs
New and renewed lobbying registrations:
Brett Bacot, Mike Grissom, Michael Harrell, Mark Kruse, Buchanan Ingersoll & Rooney: Habitat for Humanity of Florida, Waterline Renewal Technologies
Brian Bautista, David Browning, Chris Dudley, Mercer Fearington, Nicole Kelly, Paul Mitchell, Sydney Ridley, The Southern Group: Airbnb, American Integrity Insurance Company of Florida
Matt Bryan, David Daniel, Thomas Griffin, Jeff Hartley, Lisa Hurley, Teye Reeves, Smith Bryan & Myers: Epilepsy Foundation of America
Al Cardenas, Slater Bayliss, Christopher Chaney, The Advocacy Group at Cardenas Partners: Cano Health
Mike Corcoran, Jacqueline Corcoran, Matt Blair, Ralph Criss, Andrea Tovar, Corcoran Partners: Dutch Pet
Nick Iarossi, Christopher Schoonover, Capital City Consulting: PEAK Technical Staffing USA, Spokeo
Laura Lenhart, GrayRobinson: City of Clermont
Matthew McDonald, Peebles Smith & Matthews: Florida Stormwater Association, Orlando Utilities Commission
Bill Rubin, Heather Turnbull, Erica Chanti, Christopher Finkbeiner, Rubin Turnbull & Associates: Collection Quotient Consulting, Floridians for Safe Medical Cannabis Care
Nancy Stewart, Nancy Black Stewart PA: Florida Resident Owned Communities
Daniel Weber, Sachs Sax Caplan: Association of American Publishers
Leg. sked
The Senate Agriculture Committee meets to consider SB 1370, from Sen. Rodriguez, to allow veterinarians to use telemedicine to treat animals, 9 a.m., Room 110, Senate Office Building.
The Senate Governmental Oversight and Accountability Committee meets to consider SB 490, from Sen. Randolph Bracy, to make Juneteenth Day (June 19) a paid holiday for state workers, 9 a.m., Room 37, Senate Office Building.
The Senate Health Policy Committee meets to consider SB 614, from Sen. Rodriguez, to increase criminal penalties for committing assault or battery against hospital workers, 9 a.m., Room 412, Knott Building.
The Senate Health and Human Services Appropriations Subcommittee meets to confirm Simone Marstiller as secretary of the Agency for Health Care Administration, 12:30 p.m., Room 412, Knott Building.
The Senate Agriculture, Environment and General Government Appropriations Subcommittee meets to confirm Department of Business and Professional Regulation Secretary Julie Brown and Lottery Secretary John Davis, 3 p.m., Room 110, Senate Office Building.
The Senate Criminal and Civil Justice Appropriations Subcommittee meets to consider SB 1192, from Sen. Bobby Powell, to require the Florida Department of Law Enforcement to develop a mental illness component of training that law officers take as part of the recertification process, 3 p.m., Room 37, Senate Office Building.
The Senate Education Appropriations Subcommittee meets to consider SB 1450, from Sen. Rodriguez, to mandate a civic education curriculum for public schools, 3 p.m., Room 412, Knott Building.
Also:
The House Civil Justice & Property Rights Subcommittee, 9:30 a.m., Room 404, House Office Building.
The House Infrastructure & Tourism Appropriations Subcommittee, 9:30 a.m., Reed Hall, House Office Building.
The House Insurance & Banking Subcommittee, 9:30 a.m., Morris Hall, House Office Building.
The House Secondary Education & Career Development Subcommittee, 9:30 a.m., Room 212, Knott Building.
The House Finance & Facilities Subcommittee, 1 p.m., Room 404, House Office Building.
The House Government Operations Subcommittee, 1 p.m., Morris Hall, House Office Building.
The House PreK-12 Appropriations Subcommittee, 1 p.m., Reed Hall, House Office Building.
The House Regulatory Reform Subcommittee, 1 p.m., Room 212, Knott Building.
The House Education & Employment Committee, 3:45 p.m., Morris Hall, House Office Building.
The House Judiciary Committee, 3:45 p.m., Room 404, House Office Building.
The House State Affairs Committee, 3:45 p.m., Room 212, Knott Building.
TallyMadness
TallyMadness 2021 is ready to play … almost!
We have four “play-in” slots left to complete the field. For the final seed line, we will be taking last-minute nominations today for the big dance. Please email suggestions to Peter@FloridaPolitics.com.
Who will be the “best” lobbyist in #FlaPol? We’ll know soon!
Voting tips off Thursday morning.
TallyMadness is almost ready for tip off.
Here are 60 of the 64 slots; let the bracketology begin!
Leticia Adams, Adam Babington, Alex Barrera, Adam Basford, Brewster Bevis, Carol Bowen, Audrey Brown, Dale Calhoun, Chris Cantens, Gaston Cantens, Chris Clark, Tommy Culligan, Anthony DiMarco, BillieAnne Gay, Jake Farmer, Taylor Ferguson, Chris Flack, Andy Gonzalez, Jose Gonzalez, Marion Hammer, Craig Hansen, Jason Harrell, Joe Anne Hart, Sonya Deen Hartley, Mark Hendrickson, John Holley, Mary Ann Hooks, Clay Ingram, Carolyn Johnson, Albie Kaminsky, Mark Kaplan, Natalie Kelly, Allison Kinney, Edward Labrador, John Harris Maurer, John McReynolds, Cora Merritt, Dave Mica, Jr., Alix Miller, Holly Miller, Christian Minor, Brian Musselwhite, Tim Nungesser, Janet Owen, Fatima Perez, Toby Philpot, David Pizzi, Trey Price, Orlando Pryor, Casey Reed, Jonathan Rees, Jaimie Ross, Michael Rubin, Danielle Scroggins, Samantha Sexton, Stephanie Smith, Justin Thames, Frank Walker, Jason Welty, Michael Wickersheim, and Skylar Zander.
Statewide
“Florida could get a share of Perdue pharma money” via the News Service of Florida — Florida could get a share of a $7 billion bankruptcy plan to dissolve the company and steer its assets toward abating the nation’s opioid epidemic. Ashley Moody hailed the proposal, saying in a prepared statement Tuesday that it would secure additional funding “for Florida communities plagued by the national opioid crisis.” The company’s reorganization proposal, which has to be approved by a federal bankruptcy judge and a majority of the company’s creditors, requires members of the Sackler family to pay $4.275 billion to states, tribes and local governments. Members of the family founded and have owned the company. How the money will be allocated has not been finalized. If the plan is approved, Florida could get up to $280 million to $400 million over a 10-year period.
Ashley Moody is cheering Florida’s slice of the Perdue pharma money pie. Image via Colin Hackley.
“Ashley Moody signs on to Google lawsuit” via News Service of Florida — In Florida’s latest effort to punish technology companies, Attorney General Moody on Tuesday signed on to a Texas lawsuit accusing Google of violating federal antitrust laws to boost its online advertising business. The lawsuit is one of several legal challenges against tech behemoths Google and Facebook. It alleges Google “sought to kill competition” through “an array of exclusionary tactics, including an unlawful agreement with Facebook, its largest potential competitive threat” to manipulate digital advertising sales. The lawsuit focuses on “ad exchanges,” which are centralized electronic trading venues where display ads are bought and sold. Companies rely on Google “as their respective middleman” for purchasing display ads from exchanges to market products to consumers, the lawsuit said.
Happening today — The State Board of Education meets, 9 a.m., Tallahassee Community College, student union ballroom, 444 Appleyard Dr., Tallahassee.
Assignment editors — Agriculture Commissioner Nikki Fried, Sen. Tina Polsky, Rep. Kelly Skidmore and Florida Conservation Group Vice-Chair Jim Strickland, will hold a news conference to discuss energy and climate change legislation, 11:30 a.m. Office of the Agriculture Commissioner, Plaza Level, The Capitol. RSVP to Franco.Ripple@FDACS.gov; it will also be livestreamed at Facebook.com/FDACS.
Assignment editors — Florida Education Association President Andrew Spar, Secretary-Treasurer Nandi Rileythan, and more than 80 teachers, education support staff, higher education faculty and graduate assistants from around the state will speak in opposition to Senate Bill 1014, 11:45 a.m. Eastern time, outside the west side (facing the main parking lot) of the Tucker Civic Center, 505 W. Pensacola St., Tallahassee.
Happening today — The Revenue Estimating Conference meets to discuss issues related to the Florida Lottery., 9 a.m., Room 117, Knott Building.
Happening today — The Florida Development Finance Corporation Board of Directors meets, 2 p.m., 156 Tuskawilla Road, Suite 2340, Winter Springs. Call-in number: 1-646-741-5292, Meeting ID: 1115290332.
Happening today — The Space Florida Board of Directors meets, 4 p.m. Call-in number: 1-866-528-2256. Code: 4875556.
Meanwhile … “Lobbyist in $60 million Ohio bribery probe found dead in Florida” via The Associated Press — A longtime Ohio lobbyist who had pleaded not guilty in a sweeping federal bribery investigation has been found dead. In response to a request about information concerning Neil Clark’s death, the sheriff’s office in Collier County, where Clark had been living, provided a report describing a man’s body being found near a pond Monday morning by a bicyclist. The county medical examiner confirmed to AP it was Clark’s body and that a medical investigation and autopsy are underway. When officials reached out to the man’s wife, she said the couple was having financial issues and that she had not heard from her husband for a couple of hours, according to the report.
Neil Clark pleaded not guilty in August over an alleged role in a $60 million dark money scheme. Now he’s dead. Image via AP.
Moves
Personnel note: Caroline Adkins now media coordinator for City of Jacksonville — Caroline Adkins will take over as the City of Jacksonville’s media relations coordinator on Wednesday, the city’s Public Affairs Office announced. She replaces Marjorie Dennis, who has held this role the last three years and is leaving the office to take a position with the PGA Tour. Adkins is a graduate of the University of Georgia, where she earned an undergraduate degree in international relations and a master’s degree in public administration. She previously served as an outreach specialist in the City of Jacksonville’s Military and Veterans Affairs Department.
Caroline Adkins is taking the lead on Jacksonville’s media relations.
Personnel note: Miguel and Elinette Diaz de la Portilla join Gunster — Lobbying firm Gunster is expanding its Miami practice with former Sen. Miguel and Elinette Diaz de la Portilla, both of whom are joining as shareholders in the firm’s Environmental and Land Use Law practice. Miguel represents major developers and corporations in securing governmental approvals at the municipal and county levels. He has been named a “Top Lawyer” by the South Florida Legal Guide and “Attorney of the Year” by the Daily Business Review. Elinette offers more than 15 years of experience representing a wide range of clients, including builders, developers and landowners. Miguel earned his law and undergraduate degrees from the University of Miami. Elinette holds law and undergraduate degrees from St. Thomas University.
2022
“DeSantis committee continues raking in cash” via News Service of Florida — After DeSantis’ political committee raised more than $3.2 million in February, money continued to pour in during early March. According to a list of contributions on the committee’s website, the committee Friends of Ron DeSantis raised $1,517,000 during the first 10 days of March. Among the large contributions were $250,000 from the St. Augustine-based Island Doctors, $100,000 from the auto-industry company JM Family Enterprises, and $50,000 from an Associated Industries of Florida PAC, according to the website. The committee raised $3.22 million in February and had more than $12.6 million on hand as of Feb. 28. It will file a full March report with the state Division of Elections by an April 12 deadline.
Strongest indication yet — “Charlie Crist ‘strongly considering’ another run for Governor” via Selene San Felice of Axios — U.S. Rep. Crist‘s hat sits teetering at the edge of the 2022 ring. The St. Petersburg Democrat told Axios he is “seriously considering running for Governor” while on a tour of local businesses on Monday. That’s a bit firmer than his response to the question just a month ago: “My mind is open to it.” The race against Gov. DeSantis will be decided 15 years after Crist was elected as a Republican Governor — and a decade since he switched parties. He went from “Chain Gang Charlie” to saying “God bless Joe Biden.” Other possible Democratic contenders from across the state are former U.S. Rep. Gwen Graham, Agriculture Commissioner Fried and Reps. Val Demings and Stephanie Murphy.
Charlie Crist seems to be leaning closer to another gubernatorial run.
“Group targets Stephanie Murphy, Crist districts with immigration robocalls” via Jacob Ogles of Florida Politics — A conservative group will target two Florida congressional districts with robocalls blasting Biden’s immigration policies. The American Action Network (AAN) launched a new advocacy campaign targeting 49 districts across the nation. That includes Florida’s 7th and 13th Congressional Districts, held now by Democrats Murphy and Crist, respectively. In 16 of the districts across the country, AAN will target voters with digital ads. In the bulk of districts, including both Florida seats, the same messaging will be delivered to phones. Republicans in recent weeks have hammered the new Democratic administration on the increase in border crossings and unaccompanied minors arriving.
“Sarasota businessman Martin Hyde says he’s challenging Vern Buchanan for congressional seat” via Zac Anderson of the Sarasota Herald-Tribune — Hyde has announced that he is challenging U.S. Rep. Buchanan in Florida’s 16th Congressional District. “I’m holding the yes button to confirm I’m moving forward to file the paperwork to challenge Vern’ Buchanan for the Republican party nomination for Fl District 16,” Hyde wrote Monday in a Facebook post that showed him holding a green yes button. One Democratic challenger has already come forward as well. Benjamin Miranda-Padilla of Gibsonton has filed paperwork with the FEC to run in District 16.
ICYMI — New poll shows Cuban American voters align with GOP” via Gary Fineout of POLITICO — A poll of Cuban American voters in Florida shows that an overwhelming majority is solidly opposed to the Biden administration reengaging with the island dictatorship — and their brief drift toward Democrats has been totally reversed. During Barack Obama’s presidency, studies, exit polls, and voting patterns indicated that the exiled community’s hard-line positions about Cuba had begun to soften, prompting Obama to make a historic visit to the island in early 2016 — a move that brought a torrent of criticism from Florida Republicans including then-Gov. Scott and Sen. Marco Rubio.
Corona Florida
“Florida reports 4,791 new COVID-19 cases, as total for pandemic nears 2 million” via David Fleshler of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — Florida reported 4,791 new coronavirus cases on Tuesday and another 101 new resident deaths linked to COVID-19. The state has now reported 1,984,425 cases since the pandemic began. The seven-day average for new cases has been declining since January 8. Public health experts say the virus is considered under control when the COVID-19 test positivity rate is under 5%. But since Oct. 29, Florida has exceeded 5% in its widely publicized calculation for assessing the rate for testing of residents. The state reported a daily positivity rate of 5.95% on Tuesday, down from 6.13% the day before. The state’s pandemic data report shows a total of 32,449 Floridians have died from COVID-19.
Florida’s COVID-19 case count is nearing 2 million. Image via AP.
This is gonna bite — Baptist Health donors got early access to vaccine — Baptist Health of South Florida’s fundraising arm offered priority access to coronavirus vaccines to donors who could cut six-figure checks. As reported by Arek Sarkissian and Matt Dixon of POLITICO Florida, Baptist Health foundation CEO Alexandra Villoch emailed the proposition to about 3,000 wealth donors on New Year’s Day, when vaccines were in short supply. The DeSantis administration was not involved in the announcement. “As Baptist Health continues the immunization program for its front-line workers, we will also be expanding immunization efforts to include broader community members related to Baptist Health, such as our Giving Society members who meet the designated criteria,” the email said.
“Florida’s homebound residents have more shots on the way” via Bailey LeFever of the Tampa Bay Times — Florida will expand its program to vaccinate homebound residents over the coming weeks, rolling out doses to 2,000 more seniors and vulnerable individuals over the coming weeks, according to the state. The news follows Gov. DeSantis’ announcement via Twitter last week that the state had completed its pilot program to vaccinate 1,500 homebound Floridians, as he promised at a February news conference. As of Tuesday, the state had administered shots to 1,561 homebound people, wrote Samantha Bequer, spokeswoman for the Florida Division of Emergency Management, in an email. The state will expand the program as more vaccine becomes available, she wrote. The state had vaccinated more than 4 million people as of Sunday.
Help is on the way for Florida’s homebound seniors. Image via Spectrum News.
“Turnout low for special clinics vaccinating school workers” via Jane Musgrave of the Palm Beach Post — When DeSantis ordered all schools in the state to offer in-person instruction, powerful teachers unions sued, claiming it wasn’t safe to force their members to return to the classroom during the pandemic. However, over the weekend, when given a chance to get vaccinated, only 1,873 of the estimated 9,000 eligible school employees in Palm Beach County lined up to get the 5,000 shots that had been set aside for them, school officials said. Justin Katz, president of the county’s Classroom Teachers Association, suggested that many workers didn’t have time to prepare. The announcement that one-shot Johnson & Johnson vaccines would be available at four schools on Saturday and Sunday wasn’t made until Friday morning.
“Unmasked Spring Breakers are descending on Florida. Officials are begging them to behave.” via Hannah Sampson of The Washington Post — After the fledgling pandemic forced an early end to Florida’s annual Spring Break bacchanal in 2020, the state is wide-open this time around and irresistible. Walt Disney World’s four parks, operating at reduced capacity, have no more tickets available through March 25. Photos from popular beach destinations this month have shown large, occasionally raucous crowds of unmasked revelers. Over the weekend, Miami Beach police arrested 100 and pepper-sprayed “unruly” Spring Breakers. Flights are cheap. Travel restrictions are nonexistent, and the state reopened its economy months ago.
Corona local
“Jacksonville-area unemployment close to before pandemic” via Steve Patterson of The Florida Times-Union — The Jacksonville area’s unemployment rate slipped to 4.4% in January, state officials said, although a refiguring of the previous month’s level concluded that had actually been far lower. Florida’s Department of Economic Opportunity had previously estimated unemployment in Jacksonville’s metropolitan area to be at 4.8% for December — which would make January’s figures a healthy improvement. But the agency said Monday that the December rate had really only been 3.2%, a level Northeast Florida hadn’t seen since before the COVID-19 pandemic.
“In Broward, more people have now been fully vaccinated than have tested positive for COVID-19” via Ryan Nicol of Florida Politics — Vaccinations have now surpassed confirmed COVID-19 cases in Broward County, with nearly 209,000 people fully vaccinated in the region as of Tuesday. That’s greater than the nearly 205,000 people who have tested positive for the virus so far. That number is certainly an undercount of actual COVID-19 cases in the county, as testing was sparse early on in the pandemic, and a certain share of individuals who contracted the virus never sought a test. Still, the new milestone shows the progress of the COVID-19 vaccination effort in the region. Palm Beach County reached that same benchmark as of Feb. 19. Vaccinations have continued to outpace infections there, with more than 232,000 people fully vaccinated compared to 126,000 confirmed COVID-19 cases.
Broward County reaches a tipping point with the number of vaccinated residents. Image via Local 10.
“Miami-Dade police halt mask, curfew citations after DeSantis suspends fines” via Douglas Hanks of the Miami Herald — Miami-Dade County police have stopped issuing mask and curfew citations, calling the tickets pointless after Gov. DeSantis canceled fines for violating emergency COVID-19 orders. The county’s court system reported a sudden drop in emergency-order citations against businesses last weekend. During the weekend of March 5, courts reported 46 citations for violating emergency orders, all but one against businesses. During the weekend that ended Sunday, courts received zero emergency-order citations. “We’re no longer issuing emergency-order citations,” said Det. Alvaro Zabaleta, spokesperson for the Miami-Dade Police Department. “We’re no longer doing it because the Governor pardoned everything.” Last weekend was the first since DeSantis announced on March 10 that all fines for violating local COVID-19 orders were canceled.
“Looking for Johnson & Johnson vaccine? South Florida FEMA sites will no longer have them” via Carli Teproff and Devoun Cetoute of the Miami Herald — The Miami Dade College North Campus site and the two federal satellite centers — which are currently in North Miami Beach and Miami Springs — will only offer the two-dose series Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine, FEMA spokesperson Mike Jachles said. The Johnson & Johnson vaccine had been given at the federal sites before based on supply.
“Liberty City, Cutler Bay to be temporary home of FEMA vaccine sites. How to get a dose?” via Devoun Cetoute of the Miami Herald — The two Miami-Dade federal vaccination satellite sites will be leaving their posts in North Miami Beach and Miami Springs and moving to Cutler Bay and Miami’s Liberty City neighborhood, federal officials said Tuesday. On Thursday, the two sites, operated by FEMA, will be set up in Charles Hadley Park, 1350 NW 50th St., and at the South Miami-Dade Cultural Arts Center, 10950 SW 211th St., according to FEMA. The sites will run from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. every day until March 23. Each location can administer 500 doses a day. These are also walk-up sites that do not need an appointment.
“Hillsborough Co. reports highest positivity rate since early February” via Kelly Hayes of Florida Politics — Hillsborough County reported its highest single-day positivity rate since early February. On Monday, the county’s positivity rate was notably higher than it has been in the past two weeks, which hovered around 7%. Monday’s rate was 9.17%, the closest to 10% in more than a month. Monday’s positivity rate was the highest the county saw since Feb. 2, when it reported a rate of 10.25%. It is unclear whether Monday’s positivity rate is an outlier or if it’s an indication of a coming spike as people grow restless to return to normal. The county also confirmed 403 new cases on Monday, a small increase from the county’s previous two weeks, in which the county has been reporting daily numbers around 300.
“Can Tampa Bay restaurant owners require workers to get vaccinated?” via Helen Freund of the Tampa Bay Times — A few months ago, Tina Avila stopped going into work. Unlike people whose transition to working remotely required flipping open a laptop, Avila’s day-to-day hinged on being in and out of her restaurants. As the longtime owner of downtown Dunedin’s Casa Tina and Pan y Vino, attempting to do her job remotely was not ideal. But in January, Avila decided to stay home for a while. The reason? “My fear has always been to bring (coronavirus) home to my husband,” Avila, 53, said. Her husband, Javier, is 15 years her senior. Business has been busy the last couple of months, as returning snowbirds and tourists have flocked to Florida.
Can Tampa Bay restaurants mandate vaccines for employees? Image via Visit Tampa Bay/Facebook.
“Scores apply for rental, utilities help in Wellington in wake of COVID-19 financial hardships” via Wayne Washington of The Palm Beach Post — In a little more than a day, 162 households had applied for rental and utility assistance in Wellington, demonstrating the enduring financial hardships generated by a coronavirus pandemic now stretching into its second year. Palm Beach Gardens began accepting applications for a rental assistance program earlier this month. Using $71,000 in federal block grant money, Wellington opened an application portal at 8 a.m. Monday for individuals and families who need help paying for rent, water or sewer services. The Wellington Community Foundation has joined the village to help cover the water and sewer bills of successful applicants.
What Michelle Todd is reading — “UCF to host spring football game April 10 with 25% capacity, no tailgating” via Matt Murschel of the Orlando Sentinel — UCF will wrap up football camp by hosting its annual spring game April 10 at the Bounce House. The Knights kicked off Monday with the first of 15 practices that will take place over the next several weeks and culminate with the spring game between the offense and defense. Last year’s game was canceled due to concerns over the coronavirus pandemic. Kickoff is set for noon and attendance will be limited to 25% based on recommendations from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, along with state and local health officials. Social distancing and masks will be required except when fans are eating and drinking.
Corona nation
“Vaccines drive optimism about containing COVID-19 pandemic” via Kabir Khanna, Jennifer De Pinto, Fred Backus and Anthony Salvanto of CBS News — Overall, the percentage of people willing to get the vaccine, plus the number who report getting one, has been on the rise. But that optimism may meet the reality of vaccine hesitancy down the line, as many still say “no” or “maybe” to vaccines. This reluctance is connected to partisanship: Republicans, particularly younger ones, say they are less likely to get vaccinated when eligible. One important change we’ve seen behind the rise in willingness is that today Black and Hispanic Americans are as likely as White Americans to say they’ll get vaccinated if they haven’t been already. Some who previously said that they were waiting to see what happened to others are now getting off the fence.
Vaccinations are giving hope that the end is in sight. Image via AP.
“Moderna coronavirus vaccine trial begins in children as young as six months old” via Carolyn Y. Johnson of The Washington Post — Biotechnology company Moderna announced the first children received shots in a trial that will test its coronavirus vaccine on minors ranging in age from 6 months to 12 years old. The trial, which will include 6,750 children, will start with older children. Researchers will first determine the vaccine’s safety and correct dose in children from age 6 to 12 years old, then step down gradually to the youngest participants. Once the correct dose is determined in each age group, a second phase of the trial will test the vaccine against a placebo to assess whether it is safe and triggers an immune response.
“Extent of coronavirus vaccine waste remains largely unknown” via The Associated Press — As millions continue to wait their turn for the COVID-19 vaccine, small but steady amounts of the precious doses have gone to waste across the country. It’s a heartbreaking reality that experts acknowledged was always likely to occur. Thousands of shots have been wasted in Tennessee, Florida, Ohio and many other states. The reasons vary from shoddy record-keeping to accidentally trashing hundreds of shots. However, pinning down just how many of the lifesaving vials have been tossed remains largely unknown despite assurance from many local officials the number remains low. To be sure, waste is common in global inoculation campaigns, with millions of doses of flu shots trashed each year.
“Death in the prime of life: COVID-19 proves especially lethal to younger Latinos” via Akilah Johnson of The Washington Post — Throughout the pandemic, the coronavirus has disproportionately carved a path through the nation’s Latino neighborhoods, as it has in African American, Native American and Pacific Islander communities. The death rate in those communities from COVID-19, the illness caused by the virus, is at least double that for Whites and Asian Americans, federal data shows. Even more stunning: the deadly efficiency with which the virus has targeted Latinos in their 30s and 40s. The staggering loss of life at younger ages, plus higher overall mortality rates, is projected to have caused Latinos’ life expectancy nationally to plummet by about three years during 2020.
“After weeks of declining cases, echoes of hot spots emerge in Upper Midwest, New York City area” via Joel Achenbach, Ariana Eunjung Cha and Jacqueline Dupree of The Washington Post — After weeks of declining coronavirus deaths and hospitalizations, new hot spots of infection have emerged, and disease experts warn that the spread of a more dangerous variant and a too-rapid rush to return to normal life could prolong the historic health emergency. Caseloads are down nationally and tens of millions of people are fully loaded with antibodies to the virus, with more than 2 million people getting doses of vaccine every day. But the virus continues to pose a real and present threat, with about 55,000 new infections daily. Michigan has seen a rise in hospitalizations and positive test results.
Corona economics
“Norwegian Cruise Line cancels sailings through June amid coronavirus pandemic” via Tiffini Theisen of the Orlando Sentinel — The date any cruise line will return to service in the U.S. continues to push further into the calendar year, with Norwegian Cruise Line extending its voluntary suspension through June 2021. Those with reservations will automatically get refunds, the cruise line said, as well as a 10% off coupon added to their accounts, which is good for a year. The company’s three cruise lines amount to 28 ships, including Regent Seven Seas Splendor which debuted in 2020 and Norwegian Encore, which debuted in 2019. Norwegian Cruise Line is the third largest line globally and sails from Port Canaveral, PortMiami and the Port of Tampa.
Norwegian Cruise Lines are staying docked through at least June.
“The federal government helped thousands of Uber drivers weather the pandemic” via Faiz Siddiqui and Andrew Van Dam of The Washington Post — Tens of thousands of Uber and Lyft drivers received at least $80 million in government assistance during the coronavirus pandemic, making them among the largest groups of beneficiaries of a little-known government grant and loan program established to help small businesses weather severe economic disruptions. The drivers benefited from the Economic Injury Disaster Loans program of the SBA, money intended to help struggling businesses, entrepreneurs and other workers stay afloat during the pandemic. Policy experts said it was unusual for such a vast pool of workers under the umbrella of multibillion-dollar corporations to tap into that money.
More corona
“France finds COVID-19 variant that evades gold-standard tests” via Marthe Fourcade of Bloomberg — A new COVID-19 variant is spreading in the French region of Brittany, where several patients developed telltale symptoms but tested negative for the virus. Early analysis doesn’t suggest the mutated pathogen is more contagious or causes more severe disease than other versions, France’s health ministry said in a statement late Monday. Experiments are underway to determine the variant’s response to vaccination and antibodies from prior COVID-19 infection, the ministry said. A handful of patients whose infection was confirmed with samples from blood or deep in the respiratory system had tested negative at first with gold-standard tests, called PCR.
A French COVID-19 variant is particularly stealthy. Image via Bloomberg.
“Some long-haul COVID-19 patients say their symptoms are subsiding after getting vaccines” via Lenny Bernstein and Ben Guarino of The Washington Post — Some people who have spent months suffering from long-haul COVID-19 are taking to social media to report their delight at seeing their symptoms disappear after their vaccinations, leaving experts chasing yet another puzzling clinical development surrounding the disease caused by the coronavirus. U.S. clinicians and researchers have yet to reach a consensus on even a definition for long-haul COVID-19. They do not know how many people have it, what all the symptoms may be, or who tends to develop problems that persist or begin after the virus is cleared.
“Flyers refusing to wear masks face extended ‘zero-tolerance’ stance” via Alan Levin of Bloomberg — U.S. aviation regulators will continue what they call a “zero-tolerance” policy against passengers who refuse to wear face masks on airline flights. The Federal Aviation Administration in January announced it was being more aggressive about enforcing existing federal laws that require passengers to follow the crew’s safety instructions, but the policy expired at the end of March. “The policy directs our safety inspectors and attorneys to take strong enforcement action against any passenger who disrupts or threatens the safety of a flight, with penalties ranging from fines to jail time,” FAA Administrator Steve Dickson said in an emailed statement.
“‘Feels like I’m being punished’: College kids describe feelings of FOMO during Spring Break” via Jenna Ryu of USA Today — Many universities have taken measures to prevent social activities during the pandemic, with some shortening Spring Break to coincide with Easter and others canceling it altogether. Additionally, typical Spring Break hotspots, including Miami Beach, have enforced measures like a midnight curfew in anticipation of Spring Break. On Saturday, police in Miami Beach dispersed an “unruly” crowd of more than 200 people by shooting pepper balls. According to Johns Hopkins University data, the U.S. has had the highest number of COVID-19 cases over any country, with over 29 million cases and 500,000 deaths as of Monday.
Presidential
“Joe Biden and allies launch stimulus campaign focused on competitive battleground states” via Ashley Parker and Tyler Pager of The Washington Post — The Biden administration is launching a nationwide effort this week to sell the administration’s $1.9 trillion coronavirus relief package, a push that will take Biden, Harris and their spouses to seven states that Biden won in 2020, including two he flipped from Republicans and four that have competitive Senate races next year. The sales pitch will feature a host of top administration and Cabinet officials and is expected to encompass Republican-leaning states, too. Biden could visit Ohio, for instance, as early as next week, according to two people familiar with the plans, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to discuss them publicly.
Joe Biden takes his sales pitch on the road. Image via AP.
“Going after the ‘Achilles’ heel’: Biden charges into global anti-corruption fight” via Nahal Toosi of POLITICO — Earlier this month, amid a blizzard of news both domestic and foreign, Secretary of State Antony Blinken took the time to ban a powerful Ukrainian oligarch from setting foot in the United States. Ihor Kolomoyskyy, declared Blinken, was involved in “significant corruption,” having been accused of everything from looting billions from a bank to funding a private militia. Kolomoyskyy, a former Governor of a Ukrainian province, used his office for his personal benefit in ways that “undermined [the] rule of law and the Ukrainian public’s faith in their government’s democratic institutions,” Blinken alleged. Not only did Blinken bar Kolomoyskyy (who denies wrongdoing) from obtaining a U.S. visa, he barred the oligarch’s immediate family members, too.
“Biden faces growing political threat from border upheaval” via Sean Sullivan and Nick Miroff of The Washington Post — Rep. Henry Cuellar, a moderate Texas Democrat whose district hugs the border with Mexico, isn’t happy with how Biden’s team has responded to the surge of migrants trying to enter the United States. “His people need to do a better job of listening to those of us who have done this before,” he said Monday. Rep. Kevin McCarthy of California, the top House Republican, who took a trip to the border Monday to slam Biden’s approach, was even more critical. “There’s no other way to claim it than a Biden border crisis,” McCarthy said during a visit to a migrant processing center in El Paso.
“DeSantis slams Biden’s ‘disastrous’ border policy: ‘Donald Trump had it right’” via Brie Stimson of Fox News — DeSantis slammed Biden’s “disastrous” immigration policy on Saturday amid an influx of migrants coming to the border. “They’ve created this crisis,” the Governor said after maintaining that Trump had kept the border under control during his presidency. “But I think that this is intentional; I think it is ideological,” DeSantis continued. “I think they’re getting bit by this politically now,” but he said he thinks it’s something the administration anticipated. “It’s a disastrous way to start an administration,” DeSantis said of Biden. “I think most of the American people are going to be strongly opposed to this, and hopefully, they’ll reverse course.”
“Homeland Security chief defends U.S. handling of border surge” via Ben Fox and Elliot Spagat of The Associated Press — U.S. authorities encountered nearly double the number of children traveling alone across the Mexican border on Monday than on an average day last month, an official said Tuesday. Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas conceded the surge was a challenge. The Border Patrol came across 561 unaccompanied children at the border on Monday, including 280 in Texas’ Rio Grande Valley, the official said, offering a snapshot of how quickly events at the border have changed during the first two months of Biden’s presidency. By comparison, it encountered a daily average of 332 unaccompanied children in February, which itself was a 60% jump from January. The peak was 370 during a Trump-era surge in May 2019.
Surging numbers of unaccompanied minors at the Mexican border is posing a ‘challenge’ for the Joe Biden administration.
“Advocates seek Biden push on gun bills, but prospects iffy” via Alexandra Jaffe of The Associated Press — After Biden’s giant COVID-19 relief bill passed Congress, he made a prime-time address to the nation and presided over a Rose Garden ceremony. But there wasn’t so much as a statement from the White House after the House passed legislation that would require background checks for gun purchases, a signature Democratic issue for decades. Biden’s views on gun regulation have evolved along with his party to a near-unanimous call to do something about gun violence after a spate of mass shootings. In the early months of Biden’s presidency, even popular proposals like background checks are lower on his list of priorities, and their prospects in the Senate cloudy.
Epilogue: Trump
“Impeachment is over. But other efforts to reckon with Trump’s postelection chaos have just begun.” via Rosalind S. Helderman of The Washington Post — The state of Michigan and the city of Detroit have asked a federal judge to sanction attorneys who filed lawsuits that falsely alleged the presidential vote was fraudulent. An Atlanta-area prosecutor has launched a criminal investigation into whether the pressure that Trump and his allies put on state officials amounted to an illegal scheme to overturn the election. And defamation lawsuits have been filed against Trump’s allies. The goal, according to lawyers and others supportive of such efforts, is to mete out some form of punishment for those who helped undermine confidence in the election results and fueled the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol.
Post-Donald Trump chaos is just beginning.
“Trump’s costly, incomplete border wall is in pieces that could linger for decades” via Simon Romero and Zolan Kanno-Youngs of The New York Times — The incomplete border wall, already one of the costliest megaprojects in U.S. history, with an estimated eventual price tag of more than $15 billion, is igniting tensions again as critics urge Biden to tear down parts of the wall and Republican leaders call on him to finish it. The Biden administration suspended construction on the border wall on Jan. 20. Some stretches of the border, especially on federal lands that are relatively flat, now have long, continuous segments of 30-foot high steel barriers that could endure in the desert for decades to come. But in other areas, border-crossers can easily tiptoe around far-flung islands of wall, some of which look more like conceptual art pieces than imposing barriers to entry.
“Republicans flock to Mar-a-Lago for Trump fundraising, photo-ops” via ABC News — As Trump plots his post-White House political life, his flashy country club private properties have emerged as destination spots for Republicans looking to raise money through events that are also sure to line the former President’s pockets. Republicans have been making the trip to Trump’s Mar-a-Lago Resort in Palm Beach to meet with donors — despite running for office in other states. While it’s common for politicians to travel outside of their state to reach bigger donors, in the age of Trump, meet-and-greets with Trump at what was once deemed the “Winter White House” have become a particularly attractive option.
“MAGA voters discovered a new home online. But it isn’t what it seems.” via Mark Scott of POLITICO — As Trump supporters have flocked to alternative social media networks, many are turning to SafeChat, a fast-growing platform known for its tolerance of high-octane MAGA content. In the nine weeks since the Jan. 6 riot at the U.S. Capitol, SafeChat’s app has been downloaded more times than in all of 2020, quickly becoming a hotbed of conspiracy theories and disinformation that paints Biden’s new administration in the worst possible light. But the once-obscure social network, which touts its security protections and respect for free speech, is not just MAGA-friendly.
Crisis
“Russia, Iran acted to influence 2020 presidential election, report says” via Dustin Volz and Warren P. Strobel of The Wall Street Journal — Russian President Vladimir Putin authorized operations last year intended to hurt Biden’s presidential campaign and support Trump’s reelection while sowing discord to exacerbate tension in the U.S., a U.S. intelligence assessment released Tuesday said. In addition, Iran carried out a multipronged covert influence operation intended to undercut Trump’s reelection chances but didn’t directly promote his rivals. This effort was approved by Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and involved Iran’s military and intelligence agencies, which used both overt and covert messaging and conducted cyber operations, it said. China didn’t undertake efforts to interfere in the election, considering but ultimately choosing not to go ahead, the report said.
Vladimir Putin was an active participant in trying to get Donald Trump reelected. Image via AP.
“Army initially pushed to deny District’s request for National Guard before Jan. 6” via Paul Sonne, Peter Hermann, Ellen Nakashima and Matt Zapotosky of The Washington Post — The Army initially pushed to reject the D.C. government’s request for a modest National Guard presence ahead of the Jan. 6 rally that led to the Capitol riot, underscoring the deep reluctance of some higher-ups at the Pentagon to involve the military in security arrangements that day. In an internal draft memo obtained by The Washington Post, the Army said the U.S. military shouldn’t be needed to help police with traffic and crowd management, as city officials had requested, unless more than 100,000 demonstrators were expected. The draft memo also said the request should be denied because a federal agency hadn’t been identified to run the preparations and on-the-day operations.
“Yet another Capitol riot suspect arrested in Central Florida, feds say” via Cristobal Reyes of the Orlando Sentinel — Federal investigators made yet another Central Florida arrest in connection to the Jan. 6 riot at the U.S. Capitol building, prosecutors announced Tuesday. Dillon Paul Homol, 22, was arrested for obstructing official proceedings, entering a restricted area, entering restricted grounds, violent entry and disorderly conduct on Capitol grounds, prosecutors said in an afternoon hearing before a U.S. Magistrate Judge. Homol was released on a $25,000 unsecured bond and was ordered to live with his mother, where he won’t have access to his guns. He’s also only allowed to travel between Florida and Washington, D.C., for court proceedings. If convicted, Homol faces more than 20 years in prison and hundreds of thousands of dollars in fines.
“Capitol Police officer suspended after anti-Semitic document found at checkpoint” via Mike DeBonis and Tyler Pager of The Washington Post — U.S. Capitol Police suspended an officer Monday after a copy of an infamous anti-Semitic tract was found near a Capitol Hill security post Sunday, alarming a congressional aide who viewed the document in plain sight at the checkpoint. Photographs show a printed copy of the Protocols of the Meetings of the Learned Elders of Zion on a table inside an entrance to the Longworth House Office Building. The Post provided the photographs to the Capitol Police on Monday morning and requested comment. The department said Monday evening that acting chief Yogananda D. Pittman had suspended an officer pending an investigation “after anti-Semitic reading material was discovered near his work area on Sunday.”
“Federal courts look to expand security following Capitol riot, other threats to judges” via John Fritze of USA Today — Federal courts are beefing up security in response to the Jan. 6 attack at the U.S. Capitol and other recent violence, court officials said Tuesday. The U.S. Marshals Service will replace outdated home intrusion detection systems used by some judges and has started to hire staff to monitor internet and dark web traffic for threats to courthouses and staff, U.S. District Court Judge Claire Eagan of Oklahoma told reporters. Threats against judges, civil unrest last summer in cities across the nation, and the recent attack on the Capitol “highlighted the need to make significant and urgent improvements to several aspects of judicial and court security,” she said.
Security of The Capitol is expanding to include federal judges, courthouses and staff. Image via AP.
“HBO’s QAnon Docuseries ‘Q: Into the Storm’ believes it has discovered Q’s identity” via Nick Schager of Yahoo! News — A mishmash of abject nonsense about global elite cabals, deep state operatives, and pedophilic child-sex traffickers who consume babies’ fear for its rejuvenating power, QAnon’s belief system is so absurd that it would be laughable if it wasn’t so popular and thus so dangerous. Shot over the past three years, Cullen Hoback’s excellent Q: Into the Storm (March 21 on HBO) is a complex story about free speech, social media, anti-establishment fury, White nationalist intolerance, crackpot fantasy, and anarchist villainy, all of which contributed to the rise of the infamous conspiracy theory, which during Trump’s presidency took hold of factions of the GOP, and helped fuel the insurrectionist January 6 Capitol riots.
D.C. matters
“Senate centrists weigh brokering deals on immigration, minimum wage” via Burgess Everett of POLITICO — A bipartisan group of Senators who successfully pushed for a second coronavirus aid bill last year will meet on Wednesday as they weigh whether to wade into another thorny topic, such as immigration or the minimum wage. The group of 20, evenly split between Republicans and Democrats, was formed to push Congress to pass a $900 billion pandemic stimulus bill late last year. Its meeting this week comes as the House prepares to pass immigration bills that will further reinforce the Senate’s gridlock on that issue without some bipartisan framework to break the impasse.
Senate centrists, like Susan Collins, could be the key to immigration and other reforms. Image via AP.
“Dems pass on repealing Trump regulations — for now” via Burgess Everett and Marianne Levine of POLITICO — After taking full control of the government, Republicans and Trump wielded a little-used law to roll back more than a dozen Obama-era regulations. But Democrats are taking a different approach. Democrats have yet to use the Congressional Review Act to claw back any Trump-era regulations as of mid-March. The 25-year-old law allows the congressional majority party to essentially veto out regulations established during the waning days of an administration without facing a Senate filibuster. In the wake of their Senate takeover in early January, several Democrats spoke of plans to roll back Trump regulations they believed were hurting consumers and the environment.
“Crist urges IRS to extend tax filing deadline to July 15” via Kelly Hayes of Florida Politics — Crist is calling on the Internal Revenue Service to extend the filing deadline for 2020 taxes. In a letter to IRS Commissioner Charles Rettig, Crist urges the IRS to push back the original April 15 deadline for 2020 filing until July 15. The Pinellas County Congressman argues that taxpayers and preparers need more time to process the changes brought on by the recently signed American Rescue Plan. Crist provides Rettig several reasons why he is concerned about the upcoming deadline, including tax uncertainty for first and second-round Paycheck Protection Program loans, changes to the employee retention credit (ERC), IRS staffing shortfalls and resulting impacts and changes to tax law from Biden’s American Rescue Plan.
“Green groups launch $10 million ad campaign pressuring Biden, Congress to spend huge on climate” via Josh Lederman of NBC News — A coalition of environmental groups backed by Democratic Governors is launching a $10 million-plus ad campaign pressuring the Biden administration and Congress to spend trillions on climate change and clean energy as Washington gears up for its next fight over President Biden’s infrastructure and jobs plan. Dubbed “The Great American Build,” the campaign aims to set an aggressive starting point for negotiations over the size and scope of the infrastructure package, which is coming into focus as Biden’s next major push after last week’s passage of the $1.9 trillion COVID-19 relief package.
“Immigration overhaul bill may reform Florida farm working conditions” via Dalia Faheid of the Medill News Service — Working conditions for Florida’s undocumented farmworkers could drastically improve under recently proposed immigration reform legislation that would put them on a long-awaited path to citizenship while also providing labor protections. “It’s something that needs to happen. We’ve been relying on imported farm labor forever, and we need to do right by the people who pick our fruits and vegetables,” said Nezahualcoyotl Xiuhtecutli, general coordinator at the Farmworker Association of Florida. Nationwide, foreign-born workers make up 75% of the agricultural workforce, and about half of all farmworkers are undocumented immigrants. In Florida, the majority of farmworkers are immigrants who hail from South and Central America, according to the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development.
Florida immigrant farmworkers could soon see some dramatic improvements.
Meanwhile … “Alan Grayson’s Windermere house burns” via The Associated Press — The Windermere-area home owned by former Democratic Rep. Grayson was largely destroyed by fire early Tuesday morning. Grayson said by text that he and his family, including his wife, former congressional candidate Dena Grayson, escaped unharmed. The Orlando Sentinel reported Tuesday morning on its website that Orange County Fire Rescue responded to his home on Oak Park near Windermere at about 1 a.m., where crews battled the flames for more than an hour, according to the agency. “All occupants are reported out safely and no injuries have been noted. Unknown cause of the fire, at this time,” the fire department stated in a tweet Tuesday morning. Alan Grayson served three terms in Congress.
Local notes
“FBI focuses on Pasco commissioner’s role in dredging, golf cart community” via C.T. Bowen and Barbara Behrendt of the Tampa Bay Times — Thirteen months ago, the Pasco County Commission created a Hudson golf-cart community, designating 57 streets west of U.S. 19 and south of Hudson Beach as suitable for golf cart travel. That golf cart community designation is now part of an ongoing federal investigation that witnesses have said is focused on Mariano, the land purchase and a separate issue of disbursement of an anonymous $600,000 donation to complete a county-owned park. Pasco commissioners approved a $25,000 contract with the Carlton Fields law firm to represent the county’s interests in the investigation.
“Coral Gables candidates trade barbs as first attack ads circulate ahead of April election” via Samantha J. Gross of the Miami Herald — Mail ballots for Coral Gables’ April 13 elections won’t go out to voters for another week, but already attack advertisements are hitting mailboxes. Two of the ads attack Vice Mayor Vince Lago, who is running for Mayor against fellow Commissioner Patricia Keon. One ad shows Lago’s face in developers’ literal pocket and shows construction bulldozers plowing piles of money. The second shows Lago’s face alongside piles of cash, alleging he is “bankrolled” by developers. Two other pieces of attack mail sent this week targeted Group Three candidate Kirk Menendez and Alex Bucelo.
Opponents are targeting Vince Lago in the Coral Gables mayoral race. Image via Gables Insider.
“Tribe members owe taxes on casino income” via News Service of Florida — Siding with the Internal Revenue Service, a federal appeals court Tuesday ruled against members of the Miccosukee Tribe who did not pay taxes on income they received from a tribal casino in South Florida. A three-judge panel of the 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals said the tribe distributed profits from the casino to members and encouraged them to hide the payments from the IRS. Tribe members James Clay and Audrey Osceola, a married couple, did not report income and were audited along with other members in 2010. Tuesday’s ruling said Clay and Osceola were found subject to “hundreds of thousands of dollars in tax deficiencies.”
“Polarizing 87th Avenue bridge in South Dade heads to a crucial vote amid legal threats” via Samantha J. Gross of the Miami Herald — Three years after a Miami-Dade County transportation board shot down a proposal to build a bridge over Southwest 87th Avenue in Palmetto Bay, the polarizing pitch to unclog some of South Dade’s most congested roadways is heading for another vote. The Miami-Dade Transportation Planning Organization is expected to take up the $3.1 million plan on Thursday after county commissioners revived the project last month and put it on a fast track to approval. A yes vote would kick off the process of designing and constructing the bridge where a canal cuts 87th Avenue in two.
“Lawyers step in after Florida City tells trailer park residents they will be evicted” via David Goodhue of the Miami Herald — Damian Nunez lost consciousness Monday afternoon after a representative from a homeless organization told him he and his trailer would have to be gone from a Florida City-owned community by midweek. “I’m scared,” said Nunez, 56, who has a history of heart disease. “I’m scared they’re going to take away my trailer.” Miami-Dade County Fire Rescue medics treated Nunez at the scene, but he declined to be taken to a hospital after regaining consciousness. Representatives from the Miami-Dade Homeless Trust and Camillus House arrived Monday morning at the Florida City Camp Site and RV Park to assist residents.
“Judge faces discipline over campaign involvement” via News Service of Florida — Scott Cupp, a judge in the 20th Judicial Circuit, could face a public reprimand from the state Supreme Court after a probe into his support for a candidate in a Hendry County judicial election. Cupp reached an agreement with an investigative panel of the state Judicial Qualifications Commission in which he acknowledged that he acted improperly in supporting Richard Sullivan, who unsuccessfully tried to unseat Hendry County Judge Darrell Hill last year. The agreement, known as a stipulation, recommends that the Supreme Court issue a public reprimand to Cupp, who previously had served as a Hendry County judge and was succeeded by Hill.
“Bay Area beaches, roadways packed during Spring Break” via Dan Matics of Fox 13 — Spring Break is well underway up and down the 35 mile stretch of Pinellas County beaches. Traffic backed up more than a mile Tuesday to get to Clearwater Beach. Police there say that they are glad at the beach is open, unlike a year ago for Spring Break. They want everyone to follow all of the precautions — they’ve stepped up patrols and are reminding everyone of no alcohol, glass bottles, or dogs. Officials say there haven’t been any issues as of Tuesday afternoon. St. Pete-Clearwater International Airport has been slammed with vacationers. Spokeswoman Michele Routh said so many people are traveling, the airport is bringing back dozens of jobs.
What virus?
“U.S. Sugar helps dedicate new benches at Clewiston’s Harlem Community Tree Park” via Ryan Nicol of Florida Politics — U.S. Sugar joined several community leaders this week to dedicate new benches at Harlem Community Tree Park. The park is located near U.S. Sugar’s Clewiston factory. The organization helped donate funds to commission the new benches designed by Clewiston High School’s Building Trades and Construction Design Technology class. “This project has brought together our students, our pastors and our community leaders to help enhance a local park with a place for our neighbors to gather,” said Brannan Thomas, U.S. Sugar’s community relations manager. “Building strong communities and promoting unity is part of who we are, and we were proud to work with our community partners to help make this project a reality.”
Top opinion
“Why the popular COVID-19 relief bill may not pay off electorally for Democrats” via Harry Enten of CNN — A new CNN/SSRS poll finds that 61% of Americans favor Biden’s coronavirus relief package. Just 37% oppose. This fits with the average polling, which almost universally shows more than 60% of Americans approved of the package. You don’t need to do a lot of hoop-jumping to see how passing popular legislation could help the Democrats electorally. It also can’t hurt Democrats that Republican members of Congress universally opposed the bill. So what the heck is the GOP seeing to make them come out against such a popular bill? Sometimes electoral math isn’t straightforward. Something can be popular without having major ramifications.
Opinions
“The blurry line between combating ‘fraud’ and just making voting harder” via Philip Bump of The Washington Post — In the weeks after the 2020 election, few members of the media were more ostentatiously willing to entertain Trump’s claims of election improprieties than Fox News’s Maria Bartiromo. Despite the lack of evidence then or now for any significant voter fraud, Bartiromo has continued to entertain the idea that something nebulously untoward occurred. On Sunday, she hosted Gov. Greg Abbott, a Texas Republican, to discuss the surge in migrants arriving at his state’s southern border. Toward the end of the interview, Bartiromo also asked Abbott to weigh in on federal legislation to protect voting access. Abbott claimed that Democrats were “trying to institutionalize voter fraud” with House Bill 1.
“Republicans can’t win if all of us vote. So they’re trying hard to ‘fix’ that” via Leonard Pitts Jr. of the Miami Herald — On the issue of guns, John Kavanagh has a record unblemished by sanity. The man loves guns. The man thinks everybody should have access to guns. Your modern Republican, you see, considers ballots more dangerous than bullets. “There’s a fundamental difference between Democrats and Republicans,” Kavanagh said last week. “Democrats value as many people as possible voting, and they’re willing to risk fraud. Republicans are more concerned about fraud, so we don’t mind putting security measures in that won’t let everybody vote — but everybody shouldn’t be voting …” You may read that over again if you wish, but it won’t become less ugly. And if you’re unclear on who the “everybody” is that shouldn’t be voting, well … welcome to America.
“By design or incompetence, Florida’s unemployment system failed ‘countless people’” via the South Florida Sun-Sentinel editorial board — Comedian John Oliver largely dedicated last week’s episode of his HBO show to Florida’s deeply flawed unemployment system. Oliver’s show, which quoted the Sun-Sentinel’s work, was devastatingly on point. It could only get through a few findings from Chief Inspector General Melinda Miguel’s damning report given its half-hour format. Until now, the chief villains of this story have been Scott, Deloitte, and the Florida Legislature. But Miguel’s report has brought new players to the forefront. Deloitte is one of what are known as the Big Four in the accounting industry, along with Ernst and Young, KPMG and PricewaterhouseCoopers. According to her March 4 report, only PWC was not involved in creating the system.
“Adrian Moore: Don’t buy the myths, Florida state retirement system is in deep trouble” via Florida Politics — Financial models and annual reports published by Florida Retirement System are clear — despite popular myth the pension plan in serious trouble. Unfortunately, some legislators and stakeholders mistakenly believe that FRS is in good shape. No one should believe these myths — they don’t stand up to the facts. The FRS pension plan has an “unfunded liability” of $36 billion as of last year. That means the state is short $36 billion of what it needs. The bulk of this pension debt — over $32 billion — is caused by a long history of underperforming investments and changes to actuarial assumptions. No professional actuarial organization considers less than 100% funding to be appropriate for a pension plan.
“License dental therapists to widen access to care” via Cathy Cabanzon for The Palm Beach Post — When Floridians don’t have access to dental care, minor problems often grow to complications that are incredibly painful and very costly. Given the alarming shortage of dentists in Florida, many Floridians are suffering. But there’s something we can do to help. Licensing dental therapists to practice in Florida can increase access to dental care across the state, bringing relief to people in pain and preventing others from suffering. I know because this happened to me. I suffered from an agonizing toothache, but I didn’t have access to dental care. A friend referred me to a dentist who educated me on the importance of preventive care, proper hygiene and early cavity treatment to prevent pain and tooth loss. This visit not only relieved my pain but also inspired me to become a dental hygienist so I could help ensure others would not have to go through the pain I experienced.
Jim Karels: Florida’s Right to Farm is important to the future of Florida’s prescribed burn program — Current law does not go far enough to protect farms from frivolous, unjust lawsuits. SB 88 by Sen. Jason Brodeur and HB 1601 by Rep. Jayer Williamson is necessary to keep farmers farming. More than 17 million acres in Florida, or nearly one-half of our state’s landmass, is forestland. Foresters who own some of this land contribute to our environment by protecting the land from development, filtering water and replenishing our aquifer, and providing wildlife habitat to many endangered species. Prescribed burning is important for forester landowners to manage and care for the land. SB 88 and HB 1601, which strengthen Florida’s Right to Farm laws, will enable forest landowners to continue prescribed burning to manage and care for their land.
On today’s Sunrise
The Senate Education Committee votes to reduce Bright Futures Scholarships for college students who insist on following their passions instead of going for the big bucks. Students are not amused.
Also, on today’s Sunrise:
— DeSantis still believes Florida is not getting its fair share from the new federal COVID-19 relief law … but he’s already figured out how he wants to spend it.
— Among other things, DeSantis wants to use “Biden Bucks” to fix the unemployment system, replenish the DOT road fund, give a thousand-dollar bonus to every first responder and bail out the seaports.
— Democrats launch a new campaign to thwart the Governor’s reelection next year — called “Ron Be Gone.”
— And finally, two Florida Women are charged with successfully hacking the election … of homecoming queen.
“Family of boy killed by alligator at Disney World urges organ donation” via The Associated Press — A Nebraska couple whose 2-year-old son died tragically at Walt Disney World nearly five years ago wants more families to consider donating their children’s organs if their child is ever facing death. Matt and Melissa Graves created the Lane Thomas Foundation after their son, Lane Thomas Graves, was killed by an alligator in 2016. The couple said they decided to focus on pediatric organ donation because they wanted to help other families fighting for their children’s lives, and they wanted to help kids because their son loved other children. “Because we know the pain of losing a child, we wanted to focus on an issue where we believe we can help prevent other parents from knowing our pain,” they said.
“Tokyo Olympic torch relay: Masks, quiet cheering and caution” via Stephen Wade of The Associated Press — Organizers plan to exercise extreme caution when the Olympic torch relay starts next week, knowing any stumble could imperil the opening of the Tokyo Games in just over four months. The organizers spoke in detail on Tuesday about their plans for the relay, scheduled to begin on March 25 from northeastern Fukushima prefecture. The relay will crisscross Japan for the next four months with 10,000 runners carrying the torch. It’s also a symbolic curtain-raiser for the postponed Olympics, and there is no room for error. If the relay stumbles — if there is an outbreak of COVID-19 — it could pull down the Olympics with it.
The delayed Tokyo Olympic torch relay will be a more subdued affair. Image via AP.
“Assistant principal accused in homecoming court vote fraud” via The Associated Press — An assistant principal at an elementary school is accused of accessing the school district’s internal system to cast fraudulent votes for her daughter who was elected homecoming queen at her high school, the Florida Department of Law Enforcement said. On Monday, agents arrested Laura Rose Carroll and her 17-year-old daughter on multiple charges stemming from the October homecoming vote at Tate High School in Pensacola. According to a news release from the agency, the investigation began in November when the Escambia County School District reported unauthorized access into hundreds of student accounts.
Happy birthday
Celebrating today is our dear friend Christian Minor, as well as Rep. David Smith, former Rep. Sean Shaw, Kelsey Frouge, former. Pete City Councilman Steve Kornell, and Rob Weissert.
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Good morning. We begin today’s newsletter with some tragic news: Eight people were killed, including six women of Asian descent, in shootings at three Atlanta-area massage parlors yesterday. A suspect is in custody, and police have not yet determined a motive. But the shootings come during a time when hate incidents targeting Asian-Americans are on the rise—nearly 3,800 have been reported since the pandemic began last March.
Economy: Turns out, people do less when it’s freezing out. Retail sales fell 3% last month, and factory production also dipped due to snow + brutally low temps. Analysts aren’t too worried, since the economy is projected to bounce back this spring in historic fashion.
Markets: All eyes are on the Fed today, which will update investors on its current view of the economy. Given concerns that a surging economic rebound might lead the Fed to ease up on its pandemic-era stimulus measures, Bank of America called the meeting “one of the most critical events for the Fed in some time.”
Volkswagen shares rose 10% yesterday after execs detailed their master plan to be No. 1 in the electric vehicle (EV) market by 2025, which includes:
More than double the number of EV deliveries this year
Build six new European battery factories
Employ 10,000 developers (making it the largest European software firm behind SAP)
Will that be enough?
Tesla’s slipping market value (shares are down over 23% since their January high, including a 4.4% dip yesterday) shows that investors see real competition as Volkswagen and other legacy automakers double down on EVs. While Tesla is years ahead in the software department, Volkswagen could gain an advantage in batteries, which currently account for over 30% of an EV’s cost. VW thinks it can halve battery costs with next-gen solid-state batteries starting in 2025.
And with 70 new electric models on the way this decade, Volkswagen could match Tesla EV sales as soon as 2022 and outstrip it by a margin of 300,000 come 2025, UBS predicts.
Big picture: Analysts see room for Tesla and Volkswagen in the growing EV market, per Bloomberg. If Tesla is the Apple (a dominant luxury brand with charging tech no one else can use), Volkswagen is well positioned to become the Samsung.
Still, this won’t be easy
Most Volkswagen revenues come from gas- and diesel-powered vehicles, and the pandemic sent overall sales down 15% last year. In its first disclosure of individual unit performance, the company said that operating profits fell almost 90% at its namesake brand and 40% at Audi.
Plus, the company is still lugging around some heavy baggage. Former CEO Martin Winterkorn goes on trial next month for charges related to Dieselgate, the massive 2015 scandal where the automaker was found to have cheated on emissions tests.
In a first for the company, Uber said it will reclassify its 70,000+ drivers in the UK as “workers.”
Seems like a minor edit, but in the world of the gig economy titles matter. The change means that Uber drivers in the UK will now earn the minimum wage (roughly $12.11 per hour), receive vacation pay, and be automatically enrolled in a pension plan.
The backstory: Uber’s business model of employing drivers to give strangers a lift has been challenged by governments around the world for not providing sufficient benefits.
The UK has proven to be the most successful foe. Last month, the British Supreme Court dismissed Uber’s argument that its drivers weren’t workers.
Zoom out: As part of the agreement, Uber will only pay the minimum wage for drivers when they’re with a passenger, so overall earnings may not change much. But the decision will certainly give labor activists a big confidence boost as they take on Uber in other courtrooms, including in the US.
If HBO’s Industry is any guide, working in finance involves a lot of flirting and cruel jokes. Both of those are trickier to do on Zoom, which might explain why banking execs are so antsy to get back to IRL office work.
Last week, anti-WFH Goldman Sachs CEO David Solomon told employees that he hopes to have them back in offices by this summer.
The announcement came at a time for Solomon. Goldman’s numbers are gold, man—revenue surged 22% in 2020 and the stock has doubled in the past year. But Solomon’s complaints about remote work have reportedly caused frustration among employees.
Then yesterday, we learned that JPMorgan is planning for summer interns in New York and London to work in-person.
Zoom out: JPMorgan’s NYC interns will get lunch from very empty Midtown Sweetgreens. Less than half of Manhattan’s 1 million office employees are expected to return to the office by September, per the Partnership for New York City.
Stat: Canada’s residential real estate sector accounts for a greater share of the economy than in any other high-income country, per the Bank of International Settlements. And it’s led to an affordability crisis: Vancouver is the second-least affordable city in the world, up from #15 in 2006. And Toronto has moved from #37 to #5 over the same time span.
Quote: “We are still firmly convinced that the benefits of the AstraZeneca vaccine in preventing COVID-19 with its associated risk of hospitalization and death outweigh the risk of the side effects.”
Emer Cooke, the head of the EU’s drug regulator, said there is no evidence that AstraZeneca’s vaccine has been causing the blood clots found in 37 people who’ve received the vaccine across the EU and Britain. 13 EU countries have suspended the shot due to concerns over blood clots.
Q from Andrew: Why have I seen so many new ETFs pop up recently? And…what exactly are ETFs?
The Brew’s A: ETFs, or exchange-traded funds, are investment products that give you a way to buy and sell a basket of assets without having to buy all the components individually. The cooler part is they trade on an ~exchange~ like any stock, making them easy to buy and sell.
The first ETF launched in the US in 1993 under the ticker “SPY.” It tracks the S&P 500.
Most ETFs are like SPY—they track indexes. But there are many other kinds of ETFs, including sector ETFs, bond ETFs, commodity ETFs, and even inverse ETFs, which seek to cash in on an industry’s decline.
ETFs are attractive because they’re easy to access and allow you to invest in many different assets at once, plus they’re often more tax-efficient than mutual funds. And in recent years, ETFs have been one of the most disruptive forces in investing. They topped $5 trillion in assets under management last November, and Bank of America projects the market will hit $50 trillion by 2030.
Thanks for the question, Andrew. If you have any other business-related questions, ask here.
WHAT ELSE IS BREWING
Moderna has begun testing its Covid-19 vaccine on children under 12.
eToro, the Israeli trading platform and Robinhood rival, is going public via SPAC in a $10.4 billion deal.
Google reduced the commission it takes from Android developers on their first $1 million in revenue, following a similar move by Apple.
The teenager who gained control of Twitter accounts of some of the world’s most powerful people last summer pleaded guilty and agreed to serve three years in prison.
LeBron James is joining Fenway Sports Group, the parent company of the Boston Red Sox and Liverpool Football Club, as a partner.
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Hear from Morning Brew’s CEO: On the podcast Founder’s Journal, Alex Lieberman shares intimate stories about what it’s like to lose employees, how the company made its first sale, and theories around promotion.
When YouTube starts talking smack to air fryer, you know the Greatest Product of All Time tournament is getting good. Only 16 products remain, and today you’ll have the opportunity to vote them down to eight.
The matchups
Legends region: #1 Coca-Cola vs. #12 Boeing 747 // #2 Lego vs. #3 Nintendo 64
Unsung Heroes region: #1 Microsoft Windows vs. #12 Tylenol // #2 Google Maps vs. #3 Duct tape
Innovators region: #1 iPhone vs. #12 AirPods // #2 YouTube vs. #14 Air fryer (no way they can pull this off, right?)
Simply Make Life Better region: #1 Google Search vs. #4 Spotify // #2 Netflix vs. #3 Uber app
It’s going to be a dramatic day. Make sure you head to our Twitter account to vote starting at 9am.
It’s our annual St. Patrick’s Day trivia tradition: We’ll write the first part of a popular Irish saying, and you have to complete it. Ready? Here we go.
The older the fiddle the sweeter the…
May your home always be too small to hold all your…
You’ll never plow a field by…
May misfortune follow you the rest of your life, and never…
If you’re enough lucky to be Irish…
ANSWER
1. The older the fiddle the sweeter the tune.
2. May your home always be too small to hold all your friends.
3. You’ll never plow a field by turning it over in your mind.
4. May misfortune follow you the rest of your life, and never catch up.
5. If you’re enough lucky to be Irish, you’re lucky enough!
The new criteria makes Virginians convicted of felonies eligible to vote immediately upon release from prison, even if they remain on community supervision. Virginia Gov. Ralph Northam (D) executive action reverses previous Virginia law, which stated that anyone convicted of a felony in the state would permanently lose their right to vote, serve on a jury, run for office, become a public notary or carry a firearm.
…
The move by Northam followed a constitutional amendment approved by the state’s 2021 General Assembly session that worked to restore voting and civil rights to formerly incarcerated felons. An update to Virginia Secretary of the Commonwealth Kelly Thomasson’s website noted that the changes went into effect immediately, and that former felons looking to restore their firearm rights should contact their local circuit court.
…
“Too many of our laws were written during a time of open racism and discrimination, and they still bear the traces of inequity,” Northam said. He added, “We are a Commonwealth that believes in moving forward, not being tied down by the mistakes of our past. If we want people to return to our communities and participate in society, we must welcome them back fully—and this policy does just that.”
All votes are anonymous. This poll closes at: 9:00 PST
YESTERDAY’S POLLDo you support making the expanded Child Tax Credit permanent?
Yes
53%
No
31%
Unsure
16%
367 votes, 139 comments
BEST COMMENTS“Yes – My co workers who do not have children are lapping me for promotions. I believe that is largely due to the extra time they have to put toward work during the pandemic. The gender pay gap improves when fathers take more of a role in raising children. But a new pay gap will arise, non-parents vs. parents if we don’t subsidize/incentivize raising up the next generation.”
“Somewhat – We have enough incentives for people to make a “business” of having …”
“No – I’m in favor of supporting families and children, but that money needs to …”
At least eight people have been killed in a shooting spree that occurred at three separate spa locations in Atlanta, Georgia. A suspect has already been arrested and charged. The 21-year-old suspect was arrested almost 200 miles away. It is, as of yet, unclear if the suspect was directly responsible for the shootings at all locations.
Facebook’s global planning head, Benny Thomas, was caught by Project Veritas confirming the worst fears of the conservative right. He said, “this is the myth that computer programmers told us, which is: ‘Oh, these are computers, computers don’t have bias.’ But guess what? Human beings wrote that code. And a human being has bias.” He also admitted that the company’s algorithms can be used to target individual users.
St. Patrick’s Day: Will It Outlive Cancel Culture?
President Biden will hold his first press conference on March 25. This is the longest period from inauguration to dealing with the press that the country has witnessed in the last 100 years. It is unknown if the president will take all questions or if a few select reporters will be granted access.
More than 100 Democrat representatives in the House are supporting measures to bring back Medicare-for-all. While the supporters acknowledge that the controversial idea has never once cleared a committee, let alone Congress, they insist that due to COVID, its time has come.
Something political to ponder as you enjoy your morning coffee.
For the first time, the president announced that he is willing to consider an overhaul of the filibuster rule. President Biden said during an ABC interview that in the old days, “You had to stand up and command the floor, you had to keep talking . . . so you’ve got to work for the filibuster.” It worked well enough for Jefferson Smith in the famous Frank Capra movie and may provide much-needed entertainment from a Congress that seems mired in partisanship and dullness.
Happy St. Patrick’s Day and welcome to Fox News First. Here’s what you need to know as you start your day …
Trump, on ‘Fox News Primetime,’ warns Biden’s border ‘crisis’ will ‘destroy our country’
Former President Donald Trump slammed President Biden as the border crisis further unravels, speaking with Maria Bartiromo in an exclusive interview on “Fox News Primetime.”
Trump said he and Mexican President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador had built a “great relationship” with a joint interest in controlling illegal immigration and constructing an efficient border wall. But he warned their progress was now in jeopardy with Biden in office.
“[Lopez Obrador] is a great gentleman. We had a very good relationship. They had 28,000 soldiers on our border while we were building the wall … and they were also stopping them at their northern border by Honduras, El Salvador, and Guatemala,” Trump said.
“Today, they are coming in. You take a look. They are coming in from foreign countries. I see they are coming in from Yemen. They are coming in from the Middle East. They are coming in from everywhere,” he said. “They are dropping them off and they are pouring into our country. It is a disgrace.”
“They are going to destroy our country if we don’t do something about it.”
Trump fumed that Biden has “eroded” the progress his administration made on the border in terms of national security and vetting asylum seekers.
“Frankly, our country can’t handle [the increase in migrants]. It is a crisis like we have rarely had and certainly we have never had on the border. But it is going to get much worse.” CLICK HERE FOR MORE ON OUR TOP STORY.
In other developments:
– Donald Trump hints he will consider running for president again
– Trump urges all Americans to get COVID vaccine: ‘It’s a safe vaccine’ and it ‘works’
– Trump credits Washington Post for correcting Georgia election report: I’m ‘very happy’ they ‘had the courage’
– Deroy Murdock: Welcome to Biden’s border crisis, sponsored in part by Trump Derangement Syndrome Georgia massage-parlor shootings leave at least eight dead; suspect in custody
At least eight people were found dead Tuesday following a bloody shooting spree that appeared to target Asian massage parlors in the Atlanta area.
Suspect Robert Aaron Long, 21, was arrested some four hours after the first shooting and authorities linked him to shootings that occurred at three different crime scenes.
Atlanta police Chief Rodney Bryant said it was too early to determine if the shootings were racially motivated hate crimes. But the shootings took place at spas where a majority of the employees are Asian. The horror scenes came amid a spike in attacks on people of Asian descent across the U.S..
The killing spree reportedly began shortly before 5 p.m. when four people were shot and killed and at least one other person was wounded at Young’s Asian Massage Parlor in Acworth, Georgia, reports said.
Police said video footage showed the suspect’s vehicle in the area of the Atlanta spas about the time of those attacks as well. That, as well as other video evidence, “suggests it is extremely likely our suspect is the same as Cherokee County’s, who is in custody,” Atlanta police said in a statement. CLICK HERE FOR MORE.
In other developments:
– NYPD to deploy officers in Asian communities in response to Atlanta massage parlor shootings
– Nearly 3,800 incidents of racism against Asian-Americans in past year, study says
– California cops bust anti-Asian crime suspect
– Elderly Asian man dies following California robbery, as hate crimes swell
Biden says Cuomo should resign if investigation confirms accusers’ claims
President Biden said New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo should resign if an investigation supports the sexual misconduct claims made by his accusers.
“If the investigation confirms the claims of the women, should he resign?” ABC News anchor George Stephanopoulos asked on Tuesday, for an interview scheduled to air in full on Wednesday.
“Yes,” Biden responded. “I think he’ll probably end up being prosecuted, too.”
“How about right now?” Stephanopolous pressed, citing growing calls for Cuomo’s resignation from prominent New York Democrats, including U.S. Sens. Chuck Schumer and Kirsten Gillibrand.
“That’s a judgment for them to make,” Biden responded.
“A woman should be presumed to be telling the truth and should not be scapegoated and become victimized by her coming forward,” Biden continued. “But there should be an investigation to determine whether what she says is true. That’s what’s going on now.”
“And you’ve been very clear, if the investigation confirms the claims, he’s gone,” Stephanopoulos followed.
“That’s what I think happens,” Biden responded. CLICK HERE FOR MORE. In other developments:
– Cuomo’s inner circle circulated letter to tarnish accuser: report
– Kamala Harris continues to avoid commenting on Cuomo sexual misconduct allegations
– Andrew Cuomo enabled, participated in ‘culture of corruption’: Marc Molinaro
– NY lawmakers want probe of how Cuomo also ordered homes for disabled to accept coronavirus patients
TODAY’S MUST-READS:
– Biden supports changing filibuster rules in Senate
– Piers Morgan fires back at former CNN colleague Ana Navarro: You’re still a ‘treacherous little back-stabber’
– Trump on rumors Meghan Markle will run for president: ‘I hope that happens’
– Denver dog-dragging suspect in custody after video sparks outrage: report
THE LATEST FROM FOX BUSINESS:
– Homebuyers canceling contracts as costs soar
– Connecticut’s zoning laws a focus in racial equity debate
– JetBlue weighs moving NYC jobs to Florida
– Dick’s Sporting Goods debuting own men’s athletic line, with prices comparable to Lululemon, Nike
#The Flashback: CLICK HERE to find out what happened on “This Day in History.”
SOME PARTING WORDS
Congressional Democrats’ bid to kill the filibuster represents “the ultimate power grab,”Fox News’ Sean Hannity told viewers Tuesday night.
“Now with razor-thin majorities in the U.S. House and the Senate, Democrats are attempting to implement what will be the single, largest power grab in modern American political history,” the “Hannity” host said.
“As we speak, there is now a full-court press to abolish the filibuster in the United States Senate. While Joe [Biden] wants to make it harder for the filibuster, most Democrats want to do away with it completely.”
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Benedic N. Ippolito, Matthew Fiedler, and Loren Adler | Brookings Institution
While the No Surprises Act will protect consumers from unexpected bills and establish an arbitration mechanism to resolve payment disputes between out-of-network health care providers and insurers, the legislation leaves many details to be worked out.
The United States does not need a sweeping and bold agenda that takes 85 percent of its foreign policy effort to preserve the existing international order against Chinese efforts to establish something that the United States and many other countries oppose.
Colleges should incubate ideas, promote debate, and create sacred spaces to aid and enhance social progress by studying the many facets of the human condition.
President Joe Biden’s rumored first defense budget fails to increase defense spending enough to even keep pace with inflation. The outcome is a military that cannot rebuild or effectively deter in the world’s key theaters.
Last week, “U.S. Senators Marco Rubio (R-FL), James Lankford (R-OK), Roy Blunt (R-MO), Sheldon Whitehouse (D-RI), Ron Wyden (D-OR), Cindy Hyde-Smith (R-MS), Rick Scott (R-FL), and Ed Markey (D-MA) reintroduced the Sunshine Protection Act, legislation that would make Daylight Saving Time (DST) permanent across the country.” Senate.gov
The right supports the bill, arguing that we should adopt permanent Daylight time.
Sens. James Lankford (R-OK) and Marco Rubio (R-FL) write, “Daylight Saving Time was a wartime effort to conserve fuel for candles and gas lamps during World War I, more than 100 years ago. It started in Germany but quickly spread across many parts of the world. In the 1970s, Congress lengthened Daylight Saving Time in order to save energy during the oil embargo from the Middle East…
“Even though we are now energy independent, are not in a world war, and do not have to read our smartphones by candlelight, we are still living under the relic of biannual clock changing… We’ve all felt that lingering tired and unease from switching the clock. Let’s eliminate this stressor for our families and #LocktheClock.” Sen. James Lankford and Sen. Marco Rubio, Fox News
“[DST] disrupts coordination, which is the whole point of keeping time. Most of the world does not observe DST. And countries that do adopt it do so on different days. This means for a few weeks each year there is total time chaos. People on the East Coast can’t remember if Europe is five or six hours ahead anymore. It wreaks havoc on the airline industry, costing them hundreds of millions of dollars a year in non-pandemic times. JP Morgan estimates consumer spending drops 3.5% every year we return to Standard Time. There are also more heart attacks, strokes, car accidents, and depression…
“[In the post-pandemic economy] we may go through an economic transformation just as profound as the industrial revolution that created the need for our current time conventions. Odds are more people will be working from home, at least part of the week. This makes coordination even more valuable as more people are in remote locations…
“The legend is that DST change began to accommodate farmers when we had a more agrarian economy. But that is a myth. In fact, farmers don’t like DST either. It messes with their livestock, who don’t understand why crazy humans change their schedules one day for no particular reason.” Allison Schrager, Business Insider
“How we became stuck with this system is still something of a mystery, though it’s reported that Ben Franklin suggested it in a letter to the editor all the way back in 1784… A more solidly established timeline suggests that Daylight Savings was intended to reduce electricity consumption. That excuse is also up for debate…
“Back in 2008, the Department of Energy released a study claiming that electricity demand went down by 5% because of this system because people weren’t turning on their lights until later in the evening. But a parallel study done the same year by the National Bureau of Economic Research claimed the opposite was true. While people were using less electricity on lighting, they were using more for heating and cooling, negating any potential benefits. In other words, nobody really seems to know for sure…
“Given all of the Sturm und Drang going on inside the Beltway these days, wouldn’t it be nice to come up with one concrete thing that Congress could work on in a bipartisan fashion and actually do something useful for the country? Getting rid of these biannual clock changes might not seem like a major legislative accomplishment, but at least it would be something.” Jazz Shaw, Hot Air
“If you don’t think this proposal is a big deal, you’ve probably never had to set up a mathematical equation to figure out whether it’s an appropriate time to call a pal who lives in another time zone in a state that doesn’t observe Daylight Savings. Or maybe you’ve never been a working-out woman who just wants to go for a nice after-work run without the dangers of the dark…
“Research has shown permanent Daylight Savings Time comes with quite a few potential benefits, such as fewer car accidents and robberies, and less obesity. It also helps people snap out of seasonal depression… In a year that’s snatched so much from Americans, enacting permanent Daylight Savings Time is a little thing that could add lots of joy.” Kylee Zempel, The Federalist
From the Left
The left generally argues against twice-yearly clock changes but is divided as to whether Daylight or Standard time should be adopted.
“There’s no good biological reason to change the time twice a year, but most health experts support ending daylight saving time, not making it permanent. Studies show that people get better sleep during standard time, because the bright morning light and the reduced evening light make falling asleep easier. In the winter, a shift to daylight saving time would mean the sun wouldn’t rise until after 8 a.m. in many places, which could make it difficult for people who need to get to early-morning jobs and classes. Some studies show that the sleep loss induced by daylight saving time is associated with an increase in heart attacks and strokes.” Olga Khazan, The Atlantic“We most effectively treat depression and seasonal affective disorder with exposure to morning sunlight. If you are depressed in the winter, that’s natural, because there’s less daylight available. It would be made worse by permanent daylight saving time, because you’d be depriving yourself of even more morning daylight… I personally support ideas that will give workers more control over their day. Whenever you feel the best coming in to work, you should. That’s the correct solution.” Jay Pea, SlateMeanwhile, proponents of Daylight time note that “though we have all heard the argument about kids having to walk to school in the dark if we don’t move the clocks back for winter, it’s not really an issue today. Most young schoolchildren don’t walk to school by themselves anymore, according to the National Center for Safe Routes to School, because it’s not perceived to be safe no matter how light it is outside. And older kids generally have later schedules, so not only would they not be affected by the later sunrise, they’d have more daylight for after-school programs and sports…“We think it makes more sense to have more daylight at the end of the day when more people are awake and active. Besides, it would be less disruptive, as we already spend two-thirds of the year on daylight saving time. But the most important thing is for us to stop messing with the clocks twice a year. Time’s up for this silly tradition.” Editorial Board, Los Angeles TimesDated but relevant: “The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention declared that most schools start too early, contributing to poor health in adolescents. Earlier school start times are linked to depression and anxiety in teenagers, as well as chronic sleep deprivation. Early start times also disadvantage young students, lowering their academic performance. It is absurd to blame DST on a problem created by the American school system. If more schools took the American Academy of Pediatrics’ advice and refused to start class before 8:30 a.m., DST would pose no impediment to schoolchildren… Don’t fault DST for giving us eight months of sunshine. Embrace it.” Mark Joseph Stern, SlateFinally, some argue that “our current split system, for all its frustrations, remains the best answer… The country tried permanent summer time before and did not like it. It was adopted as an energy-saving measure during World War I and World War II. Each time, it was quickly abandoned after the war. In 1974, Congress moved the United States onto summer time for two years to conserve oil. Clocks were moved forward on Jan. 7, 1974; people started their days in darkness and an angry backlash began. In the fall, standard time was restored…“[While] a growing body of research shows that messing with the natural rhythm of daily life takes a significant toll on human health… we make all sorts of choices that aren’t optimal for our health… A 2019 AP poll found that less than a third of Americans want to keep the current system, but there’s no consensus about what would be better. That’s the nub: We have a choice of three imperfect alternatives. And eight months of daylight saving time, for all its flaws, delivers the best available compromise: sunshine on summer evenings, and on winter mornings.” Binyamin Appelbaum, New York Times
A libertarian’s take
“We should scrap our current system of time zones and daylight savings in favor of worldwide adoption of Coordinated Universal Time (UTC), also known as Greenwich Mean Time. This would mean that everyone’s watches around the world would be set at exactly the same time. The only difference they would notice, depending on where they are located, would be where the sun is in the sky at a particular hour… What would be different under UTC is the time on your watch. In New York, midday would no longer be 12:00 p.m., but rather 5:00 p.m. (17:00 UTC)…“The adoption of UTC would not mean that people would be going to work in darkness in certain parts of the world. Business hours would be adjusted to UTC. For example, while businesses in London would still open at 9:00 a.m. and close at 5:00 p.m., in New York, under UTC, they would open in the morning at 2:00 p.m. and close eight hours later at 10:00 p.m… Virtually all modern technologies, including the Internet and GPS, have spontaneously adopted UTC. It’s time for the rest of us to do the same..” Steve H. Hanke and Christopher Arena, Cato Institute
☘️ Good Wednesday morning, and happy St. Patrick’s Day from Michael Patrick Allen.
Smart Brevity™ count: 991 words … < 4 minutes.
💻 Join Axios’Russell Contreras and me tomorrow at 12:30 p.m. ET for a virtual event on the sentencing gap between powder cocaine and crack, featuring Rep. Hakeem Jeffries (D-N.Y.),Rep. Kelly Armstrong (R-N.D.) and the real-life experience of Matthew Charles. Register here.
1 big thing: Tech’s new labor movement
Illustration: Aïda Amer/Axios
Big Tech rose to power and wealth largely union-free. But a wave of labor organizing is catching the giants at a vulnerable moment, when they’re being challenged by antitrust suits, hostile regulators and employee doubts, managing editor Scott Rosenberg writes.
A high-profile unionization campaign underway among Amazon warehouse workers in Bessemer, Ala., will culminate in a vote count on March 30 — “the digital age’s most important labor vote,” Dan Primack called it on the “Axios Re:Cap” podcast.
In Britain, Uber yesterday agreed to reclassify 70,000 drivers as “workers,” giving them access to government-mandated benefits.
A union effort among Google employees that began in January is taking an unconventional path — remaining a “minority union” for now, foregoing the possibility of collective bargaining but allowing the inclusion of contractors and even managers.
What we’re watching: There’s a split between conventional organizing pushes among blue-collar employees (wages, working conditions), and the animating concerns of white-collar employees (climate, diversity).
Our thought bubble: Unions are all about worker solidarity, and the two wings of tech labor would achieve a lot more if they worked together. But doing so would require breaking down a lot of barriers — social divides, and the industry’s ingrained ideology of individualism.
Office workers around the world are being told they can work from home forever, with many companies adopting hybrid models as they plan their returns. Erica Pandey, author of the Axios @Work newsletter, talked to researchers who see benefits to being in the office:
“Leadership is in the office, generally,” says Jessica Reeder, an expert on remote work who works on strategy at GitLab, the world’s largest all-remote company. “So if you’re going in, you have access to leadership. You see them in the halls, and you’re visible to them.”
Working parents — especially moms — who telework to be with their children could feel isolated.
New hires, especially younger ones, can miss out on connections with friends or mentors. Stanford economist Nicholas Bloom says he’s talked to companies that are considering having an extra day in the office for new hires: A company might tell veteran employees they need to come in three days a week, but have new hires come in four days for extra in-person bonding and training.
For the first time in 14 months, inflation displaced COVID as the No. 1 market risk in a monthly Bank of America survey of global asset managers, Dion Rabouin writes in Axios Markets.
COVID and the vaccine rollout dropped from “biggest risk” for nearly 30% of respondents in February to less than 15% in March. Inflation was cited by 37%.
93% of investors in the survey expect inflation to rise in the next 12 months, up 7 points from last month — and the highest reading in the history of the survey, which dates back to 1995.
The survey also found fund managers were incredibly bullish: 91% of respondents expect a stronger economy, the highest result on record.
4. Pictures of America
Above: A drone’s-eye view of Sonia, an asylum-seeking migrant from Honduras, walking down a dirt road in Penitas, Texas, yesterday with her three children — Jefferson, 9, Scarlet, 7, and David, 6 — after using a raft to cross the Rio Grande from Mexico.
ABC’s George Stephanopoulos asked President Biden yesterday: “Do you have to say quite clearly, ‘Don’t come’?”
Biden: “Yes. I can say quite clearly: Don’t come over … Don’t leave your town or city or community.”
Amid a waveof attacks on Asian Americans around the country, Asian women were six of the eight people killed last night in a shooting spree at three spas in metro Atlanta, the Atlanta Journal-Constitution reports.
A 21-year-old suspect was captured in southwest Georgia.
6. New thinking on distance lets more pupils return
Oak Terrace Elementary School in Highwood, Ill. Photo: Nam Y. Huh/AP
Dan Domenech, executive director of AASA, a national superintendents group, said he expects more states and schools to move to a 3-foot social-distance rule from the earlier 6-foot recommendation, AP reports.
Why it matters: With the 6-foot rule, most schools have space to bring back half of their students at a time. Moving to 3 feet could allow about 75% at a time, Domenech said.
The sudden change in thinking is based on a conclusion published last week in the journal Clinical Infectious Diseases: “Lower physical distancing policies can be adopted in school settings with masking mandates without negatively impacting student or staff safety.”
In some states that already allow 3-feet spacing, schools say they have seen no evidence of increased risk.
7. 🚨 Trump backs the jab
Fox News
With rising concern about Republicans resisting the COVID vaccine — and one day after Tucker Carlson raised questions about the shots — former President Trump told Fox News’ Maria Bartiromo last night:
I would recommend it, and I would recommend it to a lot of people that don’t want to get it — and a lot of those people voted for me, frankly. But … we have our freedoms and we have to live by that — and I agree with that, also. But it’s a great vaccine, it’s a safe vaccine, and it’s something that works.
Trump and First Lady Melania Trump secretly got the vaccine at the White House in January, with the news kept quiet until March 1.
8. Russia will keep meddling
Above is a key passage from a U.S. intelligence community report, declassified yesterday by DNI Avril Haines, on foreign threats to the 2020 election.
The conclusions: Russia worked for Donald Trump and against Joe Biden … Iran worked to undermine Trump … China “considered but did not deploy” influence operations. The report warns:
We assess that Moscow will continue election influence efforts to further its longstanding goal of weakening Washington.
The N.Y. Times devotes half of the news space on today’s front page to a fascinating airflow simulation, “Why Opening Windows Is a Key to Reopening Schools”:
What’s happening: “We worked with a leading engineering firm and experts specializing in buildings systems to better understand the simple steps schools can take to reduce exposure in the classroom.”
“This simulation was created using a three-dimensional model of a New York City public school classroom … Nearly 800,000 points of data were sampled from a simulation of airflow.”
Explore the graphic + an augmented reality experience that puts you inside an airflow simulation.
10. 🏀 You’re invited: Axios Madness
Illustration: Lazaro Gamio/Axios
Join us: The Axios Bracket Challenge is officially live. There will be prizes, promises Axios Sports editor Kendall Baker.
Authorities said they do not know yet whether the killings were racially motivated, but the shootings raised concerns among advocacy groups. Police arrested a suspect in the case but they are still working to confirm a connection between the three shootings and to determine a motive.
By Hannah Knowles, Reis Thebault, Jaclyn Peiser and Teo Armus ● Read more »
Attorney General Merrick Garland faces his first test on federal executions as the Supreme Court considers reinstating a death sentence for the Boston Marathon bomber.
Embattled New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo appears to have few friends right now, but he has stood by President Biden at key moments — meaning the new president could feel a sense of loyalty that will help his old friend survive.
California will have to deploy renewable power at record-breaking speed over the next few decades to meet its target for carbon-free electricity by 2045, a transformation that state agencies say in a new report this week is technically achievable but immensely challenging.
President Biden faces his first major test with the crisis at the southern border, a deteriorating situation that may expose the limits of focusing the administration on reversing former President Donald Trump’s policies.
Safeguard your hard-earned savings knowing your assets are safe from market volatility with the purest form of money, physical gold, and silver. Work with the experts at Reagan Gold Group who are dedicated to servicing and helping you diversify your portfolio.
President Biden is apparently a graduate of the Rahm Emanuel school of public policy. As former President Barack Obama’s chief of staff, Emanuel famously said, “You never want a serious crisis to go to waste. … It is an opportunity to do things you think you could not do before.” With his flurry of executive actions and the passage of the $1.9 trillion American Rescue Plan, Biden has shown he learned that lesson well as his immediate COVID-19 relief plans lay the groundwork for a longer-term liberal push.
A Republican-backed group is launching a six-figure ad campaign Wednesday to press Congress to pass a carbon tax, a policy to address climate change that has struggled to find bipartisan support.
The Irish taoiseach may not be able to visit the White House for the traditional St. Patrick’s Day celebration on Wednesday, but he has sent a bowl of shamrocks so that President Biden has a sprig of green for his lapel.
Legendary golfer Tiger Woods was released from a Los Angeles medical facility and is recovering at his South Florida home following a car crash in late February.
A top Nevada official said the state Republican Party delivered only a small fraction of the more than 100,000 voter fraud complaints it claimed to have dropped off earlier this month.
President Biden’s top national security advisers are planning for a “very blunt” conversation with Chinese officials, U.S. officials said in the lead-up to a high-profile encounter between the two rival powers.
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18.) ASSOCIATED PRESS
March 16, 2021
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AP Morning Wire
Good morning from Rome. Authorities say shootings at two massage parlors in Atlanta left eight people dead, many of them women of Asian descent. A 21-year-old suspect was taken into custody after a manhunt in southwest Georgia. A new report shows white supremacist propaganda reached alarming levels in the U.S. last year. In the Netherlands, voters head to the polls for the final day of a virus-hit election. And the pandemic is taking its toll on St. Patrick’s Day: In New York City, the event celebrating Irish heritage is going to be largely virtual for the second year in a row.
Also this morning:
US report says Putin approved operations to help Trump in the election
Tiger Woods is back home in Florida, recovering from LA car crash
ATLANTA (AP) — Shootings at two massage parlors in Atlanta and one in the suburbs Tuesday evening left eight people dead, many of them women of Asian descent, authorities said. A 21-year-old man……Read More
NEW YORK (AP) — White supremacist propaganda reached alarming levels across the U.S. in 2020, according to a new report that the Anti-Defamation League provided to The Associated… …Read More
WASHINGTON (AP) — Russian President Vladimir Putin authorized influence operations to help Donald Trump in last November’s presidential election, according to a declassified intelligence… …Read More
THE HAGUE, Netherlands (AP) — Thousands of voting booths opened across the Netherlands early Wednesday on the final day of a general election overshadowed by the coronavirus pandemic, with… …Read More
NEW YORK (AP) — A largely virtual St. Patrick’s Day is planned for New York City on Wednesday, one year after the annual parade celebrating Irish heritage became one of the city’s first… …Read More
BEIRUT (AP) — Daraa was an impoverished, neglected provincial city in the farmlands of Syria’s south, an overwhelmingly Sunni Muslim backwater far from the more cosmopoli…Read More
SEOUL, South Korea (AP) — Fresh off a stop in Tokyo, President Joe Biden’s top diplomat and defense chief traveled to South Korea on Wednesday, a day after North Korea ma…Read More
NEW YORK (AP) — President Joe Biden said Tuesday New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo should resign if the state attorney general’s investigation confirms the sexual harassment all…Read More
Tiger Woods is back at home in Florida to resume his recovery from career-threatening leg injuries he suffered when his SUV ran off a road and down a hill in the Los Ange…Read More
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Meanwhile, you asked us more questions about COVID-19 vaccines, such as if you can get a mammogram the same week as the vaccine or if it’s safe to have surgery if you’ve been recently vaccinated. We asked experts to get you the answers. Here’s what they said.
Here’s more coronavirus news and other top stories you need to know to start your day.
In a memo to staff, Loretto Hospital president George Miller said he authorized his team earlier this month to “to vaccinate 72 predominantly Black and brown restaurant, housekeeping, and other hotel support personnel at Trump International Chicago.”
Chicago Public Schools has announced a target date to resume in-person classes for high school students, who marked one year of remote learning this week: April 19, the start of fourth quarter.
Tuesday evening’s announcement comes with caveats and three days before the deadline for high school families to choose in-person or remote learning for the remainder of the school year
Vaccinations are underway, but the magic number to become vaccinated is age 65. For people who are just shy of that number, it’s a bittersweet time. Some who spoke to the Tribune expressed hope at being vaccinated in the coming months but frustration at seeing friends and even spouses already vaccinated. One described the feeling as “vaccine purgatory.” Here are five of their stories.
Heidi Stevens column: An incomplete list of things I feel guilty about, a year into pandemic living
A year after trading for Nick Foles to bolster the quarterback position, the Chicago Bears are signing free agent Andy Dalton. The addition of Dalton gives coach Matt Nagy two veteran options at the position. The move probably reduces the chance for a huge swing at Russell Wilson or Deshaun Watson via trade but it doesn’t necessarily rule it out.
Dan Wiederer column: The Andy Dalton signing by the Bears is far from sexy. But what were you expecting?
The Cubs have rescheduled a slate of Wrigley Field concerts for this summer, including Lady Gaga, Guns N’ Roses and Chris Stapleton shows that were supposed to be held last year.
There were no concerts at Wrigley Field in 2020 amid the coronavirus pandemic, and live music has yet to return to the city in a big way. Even now, it’s unclear if the shows will happen this summer.
After relocating to Texas as the pandemic wore on, Rayneesha Dotson decided to return home to the South Side for a visit.
With her trip winding down this past weekend, Dotson’s aunt said she decided to spend her last days in Chicago “enjoying her friends.” But a night out quickly turned tragic early Sunday, when gunfire erupted at a makeshift nightclub, striking Dotson and 14 others. Dotson, 30, was pronounced dead at the scene. Lionel Darling, 39, was also killed.
“For her to go out like that, it just makes you sick to your stomach. She needs justice,” said Dotson’s aunt, Beverly Grinnage. Tom Schuba has the story…
“She wasn’t out here harming anyone. And for her to be out enjoying herself to get gunned down like that I think is just outrageous,” said Rayneesha Dotson’s aunt.
The “serial stowaway” has been arrested several times at O’Hare and Midway and at other airports around the country for sneaking past security and illegally boarding planes.
City liquor license holders have been reminded to enforce coronavirus guidelines for St. Paddy’s on Wednesday, including limiting the capacity to the lesser of 50% or 50 people per room.
Welcome to The Hill’s Morning Report. Today is Wednesday! Happy St. Patrick’s Day! ☘️🍀 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. 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, 534,889; Tuesday, 535,628. Wednesday, 536,914.
President Biden and Democratic lawmakers are facing a two-front assault as Republicans highlight troubles at the U.S.-Mexico border and try to thwart a progressive drive to nuke the Senate filibuster.
Biden, who is publicly promoting the $1.9 trillion coronavirus relief law, is repeatedly pilloried by Republicans, topped by criticism of the president’s handling of a surge of migrants along the U.S. southern border. During a stop in Pennsylvania on Tuesday, Biden indicated he will keep his eyes on the stimulus push and has no plans to visit the border, which House Republicans called for him to do during a trip to El Paso, Texas on Monday.
“Not at the moment,” Biden told reporters.
Biden’s focus on the stimulus plan is unsurprising given the popularity of the newly-enacted law. Equally unsurprising is the GOP’s latest immigration push, as it views the issue as one it can go on the offensive over. According to a National Republican Senatorial Committee official, internal polling shows that 62 percent of respondents disagree with Biden’s border security stance, including the suspension of deportations and cutting of funds for border security.
Buoying the GOP messaging: 62 percent of independents and 31 percent of Democrats disagree with the president’s immigration plan. Only 60 percent of Democrats and 31 percent of independents agree with Biden, according to the poll, which was conducted by OnMessage, a GOP consulting firm.
At the same time, Biden and Democrats were on the receiving end of a broadside from Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.), who delivered a scathing speech warning the majority party against nixing the legislative filibuster. McConnell warned on the Senate floor that the most minute, day-to-day items would need consent of the Senate, meaning all senators sign off on an action.
“Let me say this very clearly for all 99 of my colleagues: Nobody serving in this chamber can even begin, can even begin, to imagine what a completely scorched-earth Senate would look like,” McConnell said. “I want our colleagues to imagine a world where every single task, every one of them, requires a physical quorum” (The Hill).
The comments came a day after Sen. Dick Durbin (Ill.), the No. 2 Senate Democrat, panned the 60-vote threshold and compared it to a “weapon of mass destruction” that was holding the Senate “hostage.”
Chatter has increased in the Senate Democratic Conference about the possibility of nixing the legislative filibuster or reverting to a “talking filibuster” — which would force senators to physically be on the floor. However, any action would need the support of Sens. Joe Manchin (D-W.Va.) and Kyrsten Sinema (D-Ariz.), who have steadfastly supported the 60-vote rule and have committed to maintaining it.
The “talking filibuster” idea received a major boost on Tuesday as Biden threw his weight behind it, denoting a shift for the president after the White House insisted that his preference was to not make changes.
“I don’t think that you have to eliminate the filibuster. You have to do it what it used to be when I first got to the Senate back in the old days,” Biden told ABC News’s George Stephanopoulos in an interview set to air tonight. “You had to stand up and command the floor, you had to keep talking. … That’s what it was supposed to be.”
“It’s getting to the point where, you know, democracy is having a hard time functioning,” Biden said (ABC News).
The Hill: The migrant upheaval at the border has injected fresh uncertainty into Senate discussions about the ebbing potential for comprehensive immigration reform this year. The House may vote this week on targeted immigration bills that would help “Dreamers” and farm workers. Those measures face an uncertain future in the Senate.
CNBC: What to know about the House immigration bills being voted on this week.
The Hill: Texas Republican Sens. John Cornyn and Ted Cruz plan to lead a delegation of lawmakers to the border on March 26.
Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas (pictured below) on Tuesday defended the administration’s handling of the migrant surge at the border (The Associated Press). Two weeks ago in the White House briefing room, the newly sworn-in secretary urged migrants and asylum-seekers to wait and argued that the Biden team needed time to transition beyond the hard-line immigration policies put in place by former President Trump.
“We are working around the clock, seven days a week to make that timeframe as short as possible, but they need to wait,” Mayorkas said on March 1. “We are not saying don’t come. We’re saying don’t come now.”
Central American immigrants, who are trying to get into the United States in part because they say they thought Biden would be more welcoming, are finding rugged conditions on both sides of the southern border, and many are being flown by the Biden administration out of one location in Texas and deported into Mexico hundreds of miles away.
Republicans argue that Trump’s policies secured the border and made the United States safer.
The president faces tough questioning about his immigration goals as well as many other topics on March 24, when the White House says he will hold his first solo news conference.
ABC News: During the interview with Stephanopoulos, Biden told migrants not to travel to the U.S. border. “Don’t leave your town or city or community,” he said. The president also said New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo (D), who is being investigated for allegations of sexual harassment, should resign if charges are supported by the findings. “I think he’ll probably end up being prosecuted, too,” he said. Biden added that “a woman should be presumed telling the truth and should not be scapegoated and become victimized by her coming forward” (CNN).
The Hill’s Niall Stanage reports that public jabs from Biden’s White House advisers that former President Obama made mistakes a dozen years ago while trying to promote an $800 billion stimulus law rubs some in the party the wrong way. Democrats who seek to calm the waters contend that Team Biden is trying to say the administration learned lessons during the Obama era, not that Biden is criticizing the popular former president.
Reuters: Biden wants to make permanent the child tax credit, which was expanded for one year as part of the $1.9 trillion coronavirus relief program signed into law last week. Experts believe the move will significantly decrease child poverty in the U.S., and Democratic leaders say they will try to enshrine child tax benefits in the next major legislative package dealing with infrastructure.
Politico: Republicans on Biden’s COVID-19 relief bill: We bungled this one.
The Washington Post: Republican attorneys general are challenging the new stimulus law’s provisions providing $350 billion to states, counties and cities to cover the additional costs of the pandemic. Twenty-one attorneys general on Tuesday said they want to challenge the government in court for allegedly imposing “unprecedented and unconstitutional” limitations on their states’ ability to lower taxes. Congress in the new law restricts states from tapping the pandemic funds from Washington to finance local tax cuts.
CORONAVIRUS: European nations are being criticized for suspending the use of AstraZeneca’s COVID-19 vaccine as regulators and experts argue that concern that it causes blood clots is overblown and that they are missing a chance to vaccinate the population.
The European Union’s drug regulator, the European Medicines Agency (EMA), said on Tuesday that an investigation into the reports of clots by the EMA’s safety committee is expected to conclude on Thursday and report new recommendations. However, the EMA maintained that it believes the vaccine is safe to use despite a spattering of concerns surrounding clotting (The Associated Press).
“While its investigation is ongoing, EMA currently remains of the view that the benefits of the AstraZeneca vaccine in preventing COVID-19, with its associated risk of hospitalisation and death, outweigh the risks of side effects,” the EMA said in a statement.
While Germany, Italy, France and a host of other nations have temporarily halted use of the shot, Great Britain has plowed along and continues to vaccinate the masses with the AstraZeneca vaccine. Health Secretary Matt Hancock urged Britains to get the shot, noting that the EMA and Worth Health Organization have greenlighted the vaccine.
“We keep the effects of these vaccines under review all the time and we know that the Oxford-AstraZeneca vaccine is saving lives in the UK right now so if you get the call, get the jab,” Hancock said (BBC).
The New York Times: Europe’s vaccine suspension may be driven as much by politics as science.
New York Post: Will the U.S. approve the AstraZeneca vaccine amid Europe suspensions?
The Hill: Italian regulator says decision to suspend AstraZeneca “political.”
Reuters: Britain is considering the best way to proceed on vaccine passports.
The Hill: Moderna begins testing a vaccine on young children, infants.
> Capitol vaccinations: Congress received a new tranche of COVID-19 vaccines as 8,000 doses were delivered to the Capitol complex on Tuesday that will be split between the Senate and House.
“I do not expect the Doctor will be able to provide vaccination to all staff at this time but we will continue to provide to member offices as inventory becomes available,” the House Administration Committee said on Tuesday (Politico).
Meanwhile, rank-and-file Republicans on Capitol Hill are resisting taking the COVID-19 vaccine, undermining national efforts to defeat the virus and reinforcing the views of GOP base voters and Trump supporters who are already opposed to the vaccine.
According to The Hill’s Scott Wong and Mike Lillis, although the top GOP leaders were quickly vaccinated in December — and encouraged the public to follow suit — a number of high-profile rank-and-file members have indicated that they will ignore the advice for a number of reasons. Among those, some lawmakers say they don’t want to jump ahead of constituents in line for vaccines of their own or note that they have already had the virus and have antibodies.
Some also say they’re concerned the vaccine poses a greater health threat than COVID-19 itself — which infectious diseases specialists widely dispute. This has caused a headache for Republicans who want Congress to return to regular order and procedures, but do not want to mandate individuals receive a shot.
“This is our way out. … This is our ticket back to normalcy,” Cornyn said.
The downside: Lawmakers who received a shot in the weeks immediately following the Food and Drug Administration’s approval of the Pfizer and Moderna vaccines in December, especially younger members, were lampooned for “cutting the line.” This disincentivizes lawmakers to use their own inoculations to promote the shots.
The Hill: Trump urges supporters to get coronavirus vaccine.
The Associated Press: Schools weighing whether to seat students closer together.
Akron Beacon Journal: Ohio expands COVID-19 vaccine eligibility to 40+, cancer, obesity; all over age 16 eligible March 29.
CBS New York: Connecticut to open vax eligibility to all by April 5.
IN FOCUS/SHARP TAKES
POLITICS: Democrats believe selling the details buried inside the $1.9 trillion coronavirus relief law lays some groundwork for a successful midterm election cycle, especially if Biden’s transformative first-year legislative achievement ends up being one gargantuan spending bill. That law now speeds vaccine delivery, puts thousands of dollars in many families’ pockets and potentially boosts chances that small businesses and schools can soon reopen. Nevertheless, it’s eons until next year’s elections, and lots could go awry for the party in power.
History suggests Democrats will lose House seats and perhaps their majority as a result of the midterms. When a president’s job approval is above 50 percent, his party loses an average of 14 House seats, according to Gallup. If a president’s job approval is below 50 percent, the average loss of seats has been 37. Biden’s average job approval is at 53 percent (RealClearPolitics).
Across the Capitol in the 50-50 Senate, six Democrats who are 70 or older represent states where a Republican governor could fill vacancies with Republicans. Five other Democratic senators represent states in which a vacancy would go unfilled in advance of a special election. Such a situation could instantly tip the Senate majority to Republicans (The New York Times op-ed by law professor Paul F. Campos).
> Not so fast, governor: Eighty-seven-year-old Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.) says she plans to serve out her entire term, despite Democratic California Gov. Gavin Newsom’s comment on Monday that he could nominate a Black woman to succeed the senior senator if she retires (Los Angeles Times). Newsom faces a recall and is trying to tamp down pandemic misgivings among some voters.
Feinstein, who agreed last year at the urging of Democratic leaders to give up her position as top Democrat on the Senate Judiciary Committee, told reporters she and Newsom “are very good friends. I don’t think he meant it the way some people thought.”
The New York Times reports that Feinstein’s husband, investor Richard Blum, 85, is interested in an ambassadorship. Such a posting could potentially take the couple out of the United States and create a graceful opening for Feinstein to leave the Senate. Biden has not yet nominated friends and Democratic donors to such posts.
*****
ADMINISTRATION: Secretary of State Antony Blinken warned China on Tuesday against using “coercion and aggression” as he aimed during his first trip abroad to shore up Asian alliances in the face of growing assertiveness by Beijing. China’s extensive territorial claims in the East and South China Seas have become a priority issue in an increasingly testy Sino-U.S. relationship and are an important security concern for Japan.
“We will push back, if necessary, when China uses coercion and aggression to get its way,” Blinken said.
His visit to Tokyo with Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin began the first overseas visit by top members of Biden’s Cabinet. Today they are meeting officials in Seoul before meeting with Chinese counterparts in Alaska on Thursday.
The Associated Press: U.S. officials weigh North Korea options in talks in Seoul.
In advance of meeting with the Chinese, Blinken and Austin issued a statement on Tuesday with their Japanese counterparts, saying, “China’s behavior, where inconsistent with the existing international order, presents political, economic, military and technological challenges to the alliance and to the international community” (Reuters).
> Interior Department: Secretary Deb Haaland, confirmed by the Senate on Tuesday, provides the Biden administration with another Cabinet breakthrough as it pursues the most diverse administration leadership in history. Haaland is the first Native American Cabinet member (The Hill). … Advocates for Native Americans want the secretary to promote stronger tribal involvement in environmental decision making, broadband internet for tribal nations and modernization of the Bureau of Indian Affairs, created in 1824 (The Hill).
> Cyber: The Biden administration and organizations around the world are still struggling to address a massive cyber threat after Microsoft announced two weeks ago that it discovered major vulnerabilities in a popular email application. The email problem follows news of the SolarWinds breach, pressuring government and incident responders to come up with answers (The Hill).
Inside the National Security Council, deputy adviser Anne Neuberger is involved in coordination of responses to the Microsoft and SolarWinds breaches, White House spokeswoman Jen Psaki said Tuesday. The breaches, as well as instances of 2020 election interference and alleged Russian bounties offered to kill U.S. troops in Afghanistan, remain under U.S. review, she added.
Some bipartisan ideas for Congress, by William A. Galston, columnist, The Wall Street Journal. https://on.wsj.com/3bVeIV2
Electric vehicles won’t fix our carbon dilemma without some hard choices along the way, by Charles Lane, columnist, The Washington Post. https://wapo.st/3bVH3uK
A MESSAGE FROM FACEBOOK
Facebook supports updated internet regulations
It’s been 25 years since comprehensive internet regulations passed. But a lot has changed since 1996.
TheSenate convenes at 10:30 a.m. and resumes consideration of the nominations of Katherine Tai to be U.S. trade representative and Xavier Becerra to become Health and Human Services secretary.
The president will attend a St. Patrick’s Day mass in Wilmington, Del., at 8 a.m. before departing for Washington, D.C., at 9:40 a.m. Biden will receive the President’s Daily Brief at 9:50 a.m. and arrive at the White House at 10:35 a.m. The president will also host Irish Prime Minister H.E. Micheál Martin at 1 p.m. for a virtual bilateral meeting.
Vice President Harris will host Martin for a virtual bilateral meeting in the Vice President’s Ceremonial Office at 11 a.m. before the two attend a virtual event celebrating the Frederick Douglass Global Fellows. Harris will also host a virtual meeting with First Minister Arlene Foster and deputy First Minister Michelle O’Neill of the Northern Ireland Executive at 2:30 p.m. At 4 p.m., Harris will ceremonially swear in Michael Regan as EPA administrator.
First lady Jill Biden will travel to Concord, N.H., to visit the Christa McAuliffe School as part of the “Help is Here” tour to promote the $1.9 stimulus package.
Second gentleman Doug Emhoff will be in Albuquerque, N.M., to visit a vaccination site and to meet with a group of working women to discuss school reopenings during the pandemic.
The White House press briefing takes place at 3 p.m. The White House COVID-19 response team and public health officials will brief the press at 1:30 p.m.
Federal Reserve: The central bank releases a policy statement and revised economic projections at 2 p.m., and Chairman Jerome Powell holds a news conference this afternoon.
👉 INVITATION: Thursday at 1:30 p.m. The Hill’s Virtually Live hosts “The Future of Modern Expeditionary Warfare,” to discuss how the Navy and Marine Corps can maintain military readiness domestically and abroad. Featuring Gen. David Berger, commandant of the Marine Corps; Reps. Joe Courtney (D-Conn.), chairman of the House Armed Services Subcommittee on Seapower and Projection Forces, and Rep. Rob Wittman (R-Va.), ranking member of the subcommittee; and Sinclair Harris, former commander (ret.), U.S. Naval Forces Southern Command and U.S. 4th Fleet. Registration HERE.
➔ INTERNATIONAL: Prince Philip, 99, husband of Queen Elizabeth II, left a London hospital on Tuesday following a month of treatment for an unspecified cardiac condition (NBC News).
➔ TECH: Russia will block Twitter in a month unless it agrees to remove banned content from the platform, officials said on Tuesday. Vadim Subbotin, deputy chief of Roskomnadzor, the Russian state communications watchdog, said on Tuesday that the social media giant is not complying with demands to wipe out 3,000 posts that feature banned content, including posts that allegedly encourage suicide among minors. Twitter has served as a platform for dissent against Putin and the Kremlin, and the Russian government is displeased (The Associated Press).
➔ LABOR: Uber granted drivers in the United Kingdom worker status after losing a major labor battle. Under the new designation, more than 70,000 drivers will receive some benefits, including minimum wage, holiday time and pension contributions, but they will not get full employee benefits (CNBC). … The unionization battle between workers at a Bessemer, Ala., plant and Amazon is set to take center stage during a Senate hearing on wealth inequality today. One of the employees agitating for higher wages and less restrictive hours will testify, but Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos will be absent (The Hill).
And finally … Sister Jean is coming back to March Madness.
Loyola-Chicago’s 101-year-old team chaplain, who was a star of the 2018 NCAA Tournament (the last time the school made the Big Dance), was cleared to watch the school play against Georgia Tech at Hinkle Fieldhouse in Indianapolis on Friday.
Sister Jean Dolores Schmidt has not attended any of the school’s games this season due to COVID-19 restrictions, and there were questions surrounding whether she’d be able to watch on Friday given the limited travel parties for the teams. However, she received both doses of the vaccine and is ready to watch her Ramblers take the court in person.
“I’m not going to run down on the court and I’m not going to cause any disturbance,” she said about her presence (Chicago Tribune).
Tip-off for Loyola-Chicago and Georgia Tech is set for 4 p.m.
The Morning Report is created by journalists Alexis Simendinger and Al Weaver. We want to hear from you! Email: asimendinger@thehill.com and aweaver@thehill.com. We invite you to share The Hill’s reporting and newsletters, and encourage others to SUBSCRIBE!
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On immigration — please stay home: Biden urged migrants not to come to the U.S. In Biden’s words: “Don’t come over. Don’t leave your town or city or community.” Biden’s full response: https://abcn.ws/2P2N6Ew
On the filibuster — Biden wants to bring back the talking filibuster: Biden said he supports requiring senators to filibuster a bill by talking on the Senate floor. In Biden’s words: “I don’t think that you have to eliminate the filibuster, you have to do it what it used to be when I first got to the Senate back in the old days. You had to stand up and command the floor, you had to keep talking.” https://abcn.ws/3eLBSze
On the vaccine getting politicized: Stephanopoulos asked, “How do you get the politics out of this vaccine talk?” Biden’s response: “I honest to God thought that, once we guaranteed we had enough vaccine for everybody, things would start to calm down. Well, they have calmed down a great deal. But I don’t quite understand – you know – I just don’t understand this sort of macho thing about, ‘I’m not gonna get the vaccine. I have a right as an American, my freedom to not do it.’ Well, why don’t you be a patriot? Protect other people.” https://abcn.ws/2OLbOJP
On tax increases: Biden says he thinks he will get the votes from congressional Democrats to increase taxes. On the tax increases: “Anybody making more than $400,000 will see a small to a significant tax increase. If you make less than $400,000, you won’t see one single penny in additional federal tax.”
On New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo (D): Biden said Cuomo should resign if the investigation proves the allegations to be true. Stephanopoulos asked: “If the investigation confirms the claims of the women, should he resign?” Biden’s response: “Yes … I think he’ll probably end up being prosecuted, too.” https://abcn.ws/3eV4pm9
MEANWHILE IN NEW YORK — ‘HOW CUOMO’S TEAM TRIED TO TARNISH ONE OF HIS ACCUSERS:
Top of the morning to ya and a Happy St. Patrick’s Day!☘️ I trust you are all wearing some type of green today. I’m Cate O’Martel with a quick recap of the morning and what’s coming up. Send comments, story ideas and events for our radar to cmartel@thehill.com — and follow along on Twitter @CateMartel and Facebook.
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A MESSAGE FROM FACEBOOK
It’s time to update internet regulations
The internet has changed a lot in the 25 years since lawmakers last passed comprehensive internet regulations. It’s time for an update.
Via The Hill’s Cristina Marcos, “The surge of migrants at the southern border is putting Democrats on the defensive and building pressure on Congress to consider comprehensive immigration reform in the early months of President Biden’s new term in office.” https://bit.ly/3eOadhd
Biden’s campaign style complicated it a bit: “Biden and congressional Democrats campaigned on reversing the Trump administration’s hard-line immigration policies with more humane alternatives, but it’s proving to be a tricky balance of wanting to appear firm on border security while encouraging compassionate treatment of migrants seeking asylum.”
IN CONGRESS
The new f-word on Capitol Hill. ‘Filibuster,’ that is:
Via The Hill’s Jordain Carney, “Tensions are reaching a boiling point in the Senate over the fate of the legislative filibuster as Democratic support grows for eliminating the procedural roadblock.” https://bit.ly/3rVhdfK
How so: “Senators traded barbs on Tuesday, foreshadowing the likely political firestorm awaiting Democrats if they decide to move forward with reforming the filibuster — something they don’t yet have the votes to do. The exchanges came just hours before President Biden added fuel to the debate by saying for the first time that he supports changing the filibuster rules.”
Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell’s (R-Ky.) threat if Democrats nix the filibuster: “It would not open up an express lane for the Biden presidency to speed into the history books. The Senate would be more like a 100-car pileup, nothing moving,” McConnell said.
How Democrats are reacting — *shrug*: “Democrats largely shrugged off the GOP leader’s predictions, arguing he’s already gummed up the Senate.”
What Democrats have to gain: “Without filibuster reform, Democrats will need GOP support to pass any of their other big priorities: immigration reform, voting rights, anti-discrimination measures and background checks, just to name a few.”
Democrats can only use the budget reconciliation loophole one more time this year and that is expected to be used for an infrastructure package.
Eight people, six of whom are Asian, were killed in a shooting spree at three spas around Atlanta, Ga., yesterday evening. https://bit.ly/3tvLt1b
Are the shootings connected?: “Video evidence suggests ‘it is extremely likely’ that the same person was responsible for the three deadly shootings at massage parlors in the metro Atlanta area, police said Tuesday.” More from CNN: https://cnn.it/3vvps4B
A suspect: Police say that 21-year-old suspect Robert Aaron Long has confessed to the crime. “Long was arrested within hours of the attacks on the three spas, after police tracked his vehicle on the interstate in south Georgia.” The Cherokee County Sheriff says the suspect “may have frequented some of these places in the past.” More from NPR: https://n.pr/3loJ2KW
Is it a hate crime?: Atlanta Police said it is too early to determine. From Chief Rodney Bryant of the Atlanta Police Department: “We’ve received a number of calls about, is this a hate crime, we’re still early in this investigation. So we cannot make that determination at this moment. Again, we are very early in this investigation.”
What we know: Atlanta Police held a news conference on the shootings. Livestream: https://bit.ly/3eJG8PM
Reaction from Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp (R) last night: “Our entire family is praying for the victims of these horrific acts of violence. We deeply appreciate the quick apprehension of a suspect by @ga_dps in coordination with local and federal law enforcement.” https://bit.ly/38P5asZ
LATEST WITH THE CORONAVIRUS
Trump tells Americans to GET VACCINATED:
In an interview with Fox News yesterday, former President Trump urged Americans to get the COVID-19 vaccine. https://fxn.ws/3cKYLjJ
In Trump’s words: “I would recommend it and I would recommend it to a lot of people that don’t want to get it and a lot of those people voted for me, frankly … It is a great vaccine. It is a safe vaccine and it is something that works.”
Keep in mind: “Unlike President Joe Biden, Trump did not publicly receive the vaccine, but Fox News confirmed earlier this month that both he and former first lady MelaniaTrump received their vaccines privately in January at the White House.”
The House and Senate are in. President Biden and Vice President Harris are in Washington, D.C.
8 a.m. EST: President Biden attended a mass in honor of St. Patrick’s Day.
9:40 a.m. EST: President Biden left Wilmington, Del., en route to Washington, D.C.
9:50 a.m. EST: President Biden received the President’s Daily Brief.
11:30 a.m. EST: Two roll call votes in the Senate. The Senate’s full agenda today: https://bit.ly/2Q9zDLH
1 p.m. EST: President Biden hosts Irish Prime Minister H.E. Micheál Martin for a virtual meeting.
1:30 – 7:30 p.m. EST: First and last votes in the House. The House’s full agenda today: https://bit.ly/3cGmAcq
2:30 p.m. EST: Vice President Harris hosts a virtual meeting with First Minister ArleneFoster and deputy First Minister Michelle O’Neill of the Northern Ireland Executive.
4 p.m. EST: Vice President Harris ceremonially swears in Michael Regan as EPA Administrator.
Thursday: The Hill is hosting a virtual event, “The Future of Modern Expeditionary Warfare.” Details and how to RSVP: https://bit.ly/3bNXede
WHAT TO WATCH:
12:10 p.m. EST: Vice President Harris is attending a virtual even with Irish Prime Minister H.E. Micheál Martin celebrating the Frederick Douglass Global Fellows. Livestream: https://bit.ly/3vyhTdl
1:30 p.m. EST: The White House COVID Response Team held a press briefing. Livestream: https://bit.ly/3eLwVq9
3 p.m. EST: White House press secretary Jen Psaki and Education Secretary Miguel Cardona hold a press briefing. Livestream: https://bit.ly/3tuxEQx
NOW FOR THE FUN STUFF…:
Today is National Irish Food Day!
Grab a pint and corned beef and cabbage! Just promise me you’ll wear some green:
Via DCist, here’s a list of food and drink specials in Washington, D.C., today to celebrate St. Patrick’s Day. https://bit.ly/2QgaTla
And to brighten your afternoon, here’s a toucan just having a great day: https://bit.ly/3tvxpEV
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ANALYSIS — While most of the recent redistricting coverage has focused on delayed census data, partisan control of the mapmaking and the inevitable legal fights, that only captures part of the chaos and complexities ahead this cycle. Even after the lines are drawn, candidates and campaigns still matter. Read more…
The House will vote to reauthorize the Violence Against Women Act on Thursday, after standoffs over LGBTQ issues and gun rights prevented an update of the law for years. Authorization for the law, which provides funding for federal prosecution of domestic violence as well as state and local grant programs, lapsed in 2019. Read more…
OPINION — Joe Biden won not because of his policies but because just enough voters had had enough tweets for a lifetime. They were flat-out tired of constant rhetorical brawls and behavior they deemed unpresidential. So Biden benefited by promising unity and a bipartisan approach to governing. So far, we’ve gotten neither. Read more…
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Attention members of Congress: If you’re going to cast a vote that could anger your constituents, make sure they feel like you’ve been listening to them first. About three-quarters of people would be OK with it as long as they trusted that their views were taken into account, but a majority don’t feel heard, according to a new study. Read more…
The Capitol Police engaged in an unfair labor practice when it unilaterally suspended the union’s collective bargaining agreement as the coronavirus pandemic began last March, according to a decision by an Office of Congressional Workplace Rights hearing officer. Read more…
Russian President Vladimir Putin authorized and Russian entities carried out influence operations last year aimed at denigrating then-candidate Joe Biden and boosting former President Donald Trump’s candidacy during the 2020 election, U.S. intelligence agencies said in a report made public Tuesday. Read more…
In a farewell speech on the House floor, Rep. Deb Haaland thanked members for their bipartisanship and was emotional as she thanked her staff and New Mexico for the opportunity to serve. See the highlights of Haaland’s speech as she steps down from Congress to become the first Native American secretary of the Interior. Watch here…
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25.) POLITICO PLAYBOOK
POLITICO Playbook: GOP to accuse Biden of ‘unlawful’ border actions
Presented by
DRIVING THE DAY
Two numbers driving today: 62 and 40.
62 — That’s the percentage of people who strongly or somewhat approve of the job President JOE BIDEN is doing, according to a new POLITICO/Morning Consult poll that also pegs support for his pandemic bill at over 70%.
These are the numbers the White House wantsto talk about this week. But then there’s this …
40 — That’s the number of Senate Republicans who are set to accuse Biden of committing “unlawful” acts by freezing congressionally appropriated money for border wall construction on Inauguration Day. In a letter to the nonpartisan Government Accountability Office today, they will argue not only that Biden’s move was unsanctioned by Congress but that it exacerbated the border crisis. More below …
In an interview with ABC’s GEORGE STEPHANOPOULOS on Tuesday night, Biden made news on two of the most controversial aspects of his young presidency: the filibuster and immigration.
On the filibuster: “I don’t think that you have to eliminate the filibuster, you have to do it what it used to be when I first got to the Senate back in the old days. You had to stand up and command the floor, you had to keep talking.”
Playbook notes: A “talking filibuster” wouldn’t necessarily mean getting rid of the 60-vote threshold. We won’t know what Biden meant until he elaborates. (And we’ll get our first real chance when Biden holds his first real press conference March 25.)
On immigration: “Don’t come over. Don’t leave your town or city or community,” the president said, referring to migrants. Administration officials have said this before. But as the country is “on pace to encounter more individuals on the southwest border than we have in the last 20 years,” as his DHS secretary said Tuesday, Biden’s comments show just how serious the situation at the border has gotten.
BIPARTISANSHIP’S LAST GASP — It’s almost quaint: A group of 20 Senate Democrats and Republicans will break bread today in the hopes of sparking bipartisan progress on a range of hot-button issues.
But the chances of the group producing anything of substance are dim — and privately they all know it. The pull for both parties is in the opposite direction. Progressives are nudging Biden and the Democratic Party further left: They have no interest in diluting their goals in a (most likely fleeting) moment of power. The right is already eyeing a takeover of Congress in the midterms on a message of Democratic overreach.
The early days of the new administration have Republicans in the group feeling gloomy. They worked through the holidays over Zoom to help craft a pandemic relief bill they were all proud of. Moderate Republicans thought they’d continue riding high with Biden entering the White House. He was one of them — a reasonable pol with whom they could cut a deal.
But Biden dashed their hopes by cutting off bipartisan pandemic talks just when they were getting started. (Democrats dismiss the notion that Republicans were genuinely interested in getting to yes.) He and the party went their own way, and few expect the infrastructure debate will be any different.
Skepticism also abounds on the minimum wage, policing reform, immigration, even legislation to curb violence against women. In theory, there’s a middle ground on all these issues. But there’s no sign the will is there among the people who could make it happen.
Democrats riding high after their Covid relief success are hardly going to want to tell an emboldened left to lower their expectations. Senate Majority Leader CHUCK SCHUMER may also find it politically advantageous to put more liberal versions of bills on the floor, force Republicans to vote against them and then tee up the ads painting Republicans as anti-woman, anti-equality and anti-immigrant.
Going that route would also give the left a stronger justification (in its view) to nix the filibuster, which is what it ultimately wants.
For today, the group of 20 can at least enjoy their lunch.
MORE ON THAT SENATE GOP LETTER … Later this morning, Sen. RICHARD SHELBY (R-Ala.), the ranking member on the Senate Appropriations Committee, will lead at least 39 of his GOP colleagues calling on the GAO to look into Biden’s move suspending border wall construction and freezing funding for it appropriated by Congress.
Pointing to the surge of migrants and increase in border apprehensions, the group will argue that Biden’s actions “directly contributed to this unfortunate, yet entirely avoidable, scenario.” Following the decision, “operational control of our southern border was compromised and a humanitarian and national security crisis has ensued,” they’ll write, according to an early copy shared with Playbook.
The letter will argue that Biden’s moves “are also a blatant violation of federal law and infringe on Congress’s constitutional power of the purse.” Interestingly, the letter will cite GAO’s move to call foul on former President DONALD TRUMP’S decision to halt military aid to Ukraine without the Hill’s consent. That, you’ll remember, was a central charge in the first impeachment. Republicans will say Biden is doing the same thing now.
SURVEY SAYS — As Biden and co. hit the road to sell the Covid relief package, it’s not going to take much work. According to a new POLITICO/Morning Consult poll, 72% support the new law, versus 21% who oppose it.
As our Steve Shepard writes: “Support is nearly universal among Democrats — 95% — and strong among independents at 69%. Despite the law’s earning no support from Republicans in Congress, GOP voters are split: 44% support it, and 48% oppose it.”
We also asked about the fencing erected around the Capitol after the Jan. 6 riot. Seventy-three percent of Democrats and 51% of independent voters felt the security fence should remain up. Only 31% of Republicans agreed. Toplines … Crosstabs
BIDEN’S WEDNESDAY — The president will attend a mass in honor of St. Patrick’s Day at 8 a.m. in Wilmington, Del. At 9:40 a.m., Biden will depart Wilmington to return to Washington. He’ll receive the President’s Daily Brief at 9:50 a.m. en route to Washington, where he’ll arrive at 10:35 a.m. Biden will hold a virtual bilateral meeting with Irish PM MICHEÁL MARTIN at 1 p.m. in the Oval Office.
— The White House Covid-19 response team and public health officials will brief at 1:30 p.m. Press secretary JEN PSAKI and Education Secretary MIGUEL CARDONA will brief at 3 p.m.
— VP KAMALA HARRIS will host Martin for a virtual bilateral meeting at 11 a.m. in the VP’s Ceremonial Office. At 12:10 p.m., Harris will attend a virtual event with Martin celebrating the Frederick Douglass Global Fellows in the South Court Auditorium. The VP will hold a virtual meeting with Northern Ireland First Minister ARLENE FOSTER and deputy First Minister MICHELLE O’NEILL at 2:30 p.m. And at 4 p.m., Harris will swear in MICHAEL REGAN as EPA administrator in the Eisenhower Executive Office Building.
THE HOUSE will meet at 10 a.m. DHS Secretary ALEJANDRO MAYORKAS will testify before the Homeland Security Committee at 9:30 a.m. The Energy and Commerce oversight subcommittee will hold a hearing at 10 a.m. on increasing vaccinations, with ANTHONY FAUCI, the FDA’s PETER MARKS and CDC Director ROCHELLE WALENSKY.
THE SENATE will meet at 10:30 a.m. At 11:30 a.m., it will vote on KATHERINE TAI’S nomination to be U.S. trade representative and vote to invoke cloture on XAVIER BECERRA’S nomination to be HHS secretary. The Judiciary Committee will hold a hearing on the Equality Act at 10 a.m.
BIDEN ALSO WEIGHS IN ON CUOMO — ABC: “‘There should be an investigation to determine whether what she says is true,’ Biden told Stephanopoulos during a wide-ranging interview in Darby, Pennsylvania. ‘That’s what’s going on now.’ He added: ‘There could be a criminal prosecution that is attached to it. I just don’t know.’ …
“Biden said ‘a woman should be presumed telling the truth and should not be scapegoated and become victimized by her coming forward.’ ‘Takes a lot of courage to come forward,’ the president said.”
‘UNPRECEDENTED AND UNCONSTITUTIONAL’ — “Republican attorneys general threaten key element of the $1.9 trillion stimulus,” WaPo: “Twenty-one Republican state attorneys general on Tuesday threatened to take action against the Biden administration over its new $1.9 trillion coronavirus stimulus law, decrying it for imposing ‘unprecedented and unconstitutional’ limits on their states’ ability to lower taxes.
“The attorneys general take issue with a $350 billion pot of money set aside under the stimulus, known as the American Rescue Plan, to help cash-strapped cities, counties and states pay for the costs of the pandemic. Congressional lawmakers opted to restrict states from tapping these federal dollars to finance local tax cuts.”
CONGRESS
THE NEXT BIG HEALTH CARE FIGHT —“Democrats treading lightly on Biden’s next big health care promise,” by Alice Miranda Ollstein and Joanne Kenen: “Democratic lawmakers and allies favoring a public option to compete with private insurers want the party to seize on its narrow congressional majorities to muscle through an idea that’s long been popular with the base. They’re betting that after years of rising health costs and the GOP’s failed attempts to throw out Obamacare, voters in the tightly contested 2022 midterms would reward Democrats for tackling health care costs.
“Democratic politics have moved left since centrist lawmakers jettisoned a public option from the original Affordable Care Act legislation back in 2009. At the time, a government-run health plan was seen as too radical. But as progressive calls for a fully government-run ‘Medicare For All’-type system have gotten louder in the intervening years, the public option has become classic Biden middle ground — popular with independents and even some Republican voters.”
THE BIDEN ADMINISTRATION
BY THE NUMBERS — “The State Department has a systemic diversity problem,”by Ryan Heath: “Though 40 percent of the American population is from a racial or ethnic minority, ‘only 13 percent of the Department’s Senior Executive Service are people of color,’ said Ambassador Gina Abercrombie-Winstanley, a career diplomat. ‘It was more diverse in 1986 — literally — than it is now,’ said Eric Rubin, president of the American Foreign Service Association, which represents the department’s diplomats.
“The State Department’s official historianssay that minority staff made up 12.5 percent of employees at the end of the 1980s. According to Government Accountability Office figures from 2020, the ratio of African American employees has fallen since 2002. Black women make up 9 percent of staff, down from 13 percent, and just three percent of the Senior Foreign Service is Black. ‘We’ve disproportionately lost senior foreign service officials that are non-white and non-male,’ Rubin said.”
POLITICS ROUNDUP
‘YOU DON’T SEE THE FIGHT’ —“GOPers on Biden’s Covid bill: We bungled this one,”by Gabby Orr, Christopher Cadelago, Meridith McGraw and Natasha Korecki: “The overwhelming sentiment within the Republican Party is that voters will turn on the $1.9 trillion bill over time. But that wait-and-see approach has baffled some GOP luminaries and Trump World figures who … fear the party did little to dent Biden’s major victory …
“‘The lack of response to this bill in an organized messaging and aggressive media push back is shown by the fact that Democrats have now gone from $2 trillion to a $4 trillion infrastructure package. If Covid relief was that easy, why not just run the table?’ said former Trump White House chief strategist Steve Bannon.
“‘It’s a fairly popular bill that polled well because it’s been sold as a Covid relief bill with direct cash payments to Americans — what’s not to like?’ he added. ‘However, that’s not what the bill is. That’s a huge problem because 2022 has already started and you don’t see the fight here.’”
CALIFORNIA’S CALLING— “Newsom plans to ‘fight like hell’ to save political legacy,”by Carla Marinucci and David Siders: “California Gov. Gavin Newsom broke his silence on the California recall with a string of national television appearances this week, pinning the effort on President Donald Trump supporters, anti-immigrant forces and conspiracy-driven opportunists.
“Heading into Wednesday’s signature deadline, Newsom is trying to frame California’s recall as an extension of the divisive 2020 presidential fight. ‘We’re gonna take this extremely seriously … we’re gonna get ready — and fight like hell,’ Newsom senior strategist Sean Clegg said. ‘This is a Republican recall — with a capital “R” — and we’re going to make it that.’”
“Pompeo will remotely ‘visit’ leadoff presidential primary state New Hampshire just a few days after he embarks on a two-day in-person visit to first-caucus state Iowa on March 24 and 25.”
SHOW ME THE MONEY — “House GOP super PAC launches hard-money arm,”by Zach Montellaro:“The Congressional Leadership Fund, the super PAC with close ties to House Republican leadership, is launching a hard-money arm that will allow it to endorse and contribute directly to candidates and members of Congress.
“The effort, dubbed the ‘CLF Trailblazers Fund’ and shared first with POLITICO, marks a new step for the high-spending super PAC that will allow it to have a more direct role in congressional races, potentially including GOP primaries. The super PAC will continue its independent expenditures as well, in a setup known as a hybrid PAC or a ‘Carey committee.’ Hybrid PACs are fairly popular and started cropping up in earnest in 2012, shortly after a 2011 federal court decision that allowed for them.”
DONALD VS. MEGHAN, 2024 — “Trump on rumors Meghan Markle will run for president: ‘I hope that happens,’”Fox News: “Former President Donald Trump told Fox News on Tuesday that if the rumors surrounding Meghan Markle’s potential 2024 presidential bid prove to be true, he’d have an ‘even stronger feeling toward running’ in the next election.
“‘I hope that happens. If that happened, I think I’d have an even stronger feeling toward running,’ Trump told [Maria] Bartiromo. The former president would not confirm whether he planned to run again in 2024 at an earlier point in the interview.”
RE: NOVEMBER 2020 — “Putin targeted people close to Trump in bid to influence 2020 election, U.S. intelligence says,”WaPo: “Russian President Vladimir Putin and other senior officials in Moscow sought to influence the 2020 election by spreading misleading information about Joe Biden through prominent individuals, some of whom were close to former president Donald Trump, the U.S. intelligence community said in a report Tuesday.
“The new report does not identify those individuals by name, but it appears to reference Trump’s onetime personal lawyer Rudolph W. Giuliani … Both Russia and Iran sought to influence the election … But a third major adversary, China, did not even try, it says, contradicting the Trump administration’s assertions about Beijing’s activity last year.”
ABOUT THE BORDER WALL — “Trump’s Incomplete Border Wall Is in Pieces That Could Linger for Decades,”NYT: “The incomplete border wall, already one of the costliest megaprojects in United States history, with an estimated eventual price tag of more than $15 billion, is igniting tensions again as critics urge Mr. Biden to tear down parts of the wall and Republican leaders call on him to finish it.
“The Biden administration suspended construction on the border wall on Jan. 20, the president’s first day in office, announcing a 60-day period during which officials are determining how to proceed.”
PLAYBOOKERS
FIRST IN PLAYBOOK — Pete Kavanaugh is launching Highbury Strategies, a consulting firm. He previously was deputy campaign manager for the Biden campaign and is a Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama alum.
— Michael Clemente has started doing consulting work for the Washington Examiner. He is the former EVP of Fox News, and is a CNN and ABC alum.
MEDIAWATCH — Aída Chávez is now D.C. correspondent for The Nation. She previously was a congressional reporter for The Intercept.
TRANSITIONS — Ben Driscoll is now senior counsel for the Senate Rules Committee. He previously was judiciary program director at the League of Conservation Voters. … Rodericka Applewhaite is now senior comms adviser for the Michigan Democratic Party. She previously was on the rapid response team for Pete Buttigieg’s campaign and is an EMILY’s List alum. …
… Angel Hernandez is joining the Housing Policy Council as VP of capital markets. He previously was director of MBS programs at Ginnie Mae. … Corey Schrodt is now government relations manager for climate policy at the Niskanen Center. He previously was chief of staff for Rep. Francis Rooney (R-Fla.).
ENGAGED — Emily Haas, senior director at FTI Consulting and a Conor Lamb alum, and Mark Paustenbach, SVP at Rokk Solutions and a Treasury Department and Biden alum, got engaged Sunday in Cape Elizabeth, Maine.Pic
WELCOME TO THE WORLD — Heather Caygle, co-congressional bureau chief at POLITICO, and Aaron Lorenzo, tax reporter at POLITICO, welcomed Hadley Catherine Lorenzo on Monday. She came in at 8 lbs, 7 oz and 21 inches. Pic
— Shira Siegel, legislative director for Rep. Elaine Luria (D-Va.) and a Nita Lowey and Mike Quigley alum, and Jordan Blumenthal, a counsel and policy adviser for the House Oversight Committee and an Elijah Cummings and Patrick Murphy alum, welcomed Zeke Parker Blumenthal on March 7. Pic
HAPPY BIRTHDAY: Rep. Dave Joyce (R-Ohio) … Tim Burger … Judy Stecker … Laurel Strategies Chair and CEO Alan Fleischmann … Rokk Solutions’ Mark Paustenbach and Stefano Dotti … former CIA Director Michael Hayden (76),whose birthday wish is that Ted Cruz drop his hold on Bill Burns to be CIA director … Eileen O’Connor, SVP of comms at the Rockefeller Foundation … Carl Leubsdorf … Harrell Kirstein … POLITICO’s Sarah Owermohle and Connor Foxwell … Patrick Murphy of 3 Click Solutions … Mary Schaper … Myrlie Evers-Williams … Joe Hines, digital director at Stand Up America … CNN’s Kate Sullivan … 270toWin’s Allan Keiter … Ethan Porter, assistant professor of media and public affairs at GW … former Reps. Cynthia McKinney (D-Ga.) and Denver Riggleman (R-Va.) … NBC’s Sally Bronston … CBS’ Trey Sherman … NRDC’s Mark Drajem … Facebook’s Erin Murray Manning … James Flexner … Ben Miller, VP of production at Convergence Media … MSNBC’s Tiffany Mullon … Yahoo’s Dylan Stableford … Larry Farnsworth, president of Gavel Public Affairs … WSJ’s Anna Rafdal … Uber’s Annaliese Rosenthal … Andrew Kovalcin, principal at Advanced Advocacy … Keira Bair … RNC’s Katelyn Seago (25) … Peter Barrett (5-0) … Jake Leahy
Send Playbookers tips to playbook@politico.com. Playbook couldn’t happen without our editor Mike Zapler and producers Allie Bice, Eli Okun and Garrett Ross.
Now that the implications of the Harris/Biden administration are setting in, my Democrat friends (yes, I do have a few) are becoming very embarrassed. They bought into the propaganda that all the turmoil in Washington was created by the erratic and immoral behavior of Donald Trump. Their vote for Harris/Biden was a vote to return to …
Four people on the FBI’s Terrorist Screening Database have been arrested at the southern border since the beginning of October, the Customs and Border Protection agency told Congress on Tuesday, according to Axios. The report comes one day after congressional Democrats accused House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy of lying when he said during a press …
President Joe Biden stopped himself as he started to make a comment about #METOO accusers during an interview where he discussed sexual misconduct allegations against Democratic New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo. During the interview, Biden told ABC’s George Stephanopoulos that Cuomo should resign if sexual misconduct allegations against him are confirmed to be true, adding …
Summary: President Joe Biden will attend mass, receive his daily briefing while returning to Washington, D.C., and hold a virtual meeting with the Prime Minister of Ireland. President Biden’s Itinerary for 3/17/21: All Times EST 8:00 AM Attend St. Patrick’s Day mass – Wilmington, DE9:40 AM Depart Delaware en route to Washington, DC – Air …
The Hill’s Joe Concha called The Washington Post a “political operative” for misquoting former President Donald Trump’s phone call with a Georgia elections investigator on ‘Fox & Friends’ Tuesday. The Post reported that Trump told Georgia election investigator Frances Watson in December to ‘find the voter fraud’ and that she would be a ‘national hero’ …
Four people arrested at the southern border since Oct. 1 were on the FBI’s Terrorist Screening Database, Axios reported Tuesday. Three of the arrestees were from Serbia and one was from Yemen, Customs and Border Protection (CBP) officials reportedly confirmed to Congress, according to Axios. The four arrested migrants crossing the border provided names corresponding …
National Guardsmen stationed at the Capitol building should instead be sent to address the “humanitarian crisis” at the southern border, a Republican congressman said Tuesday. The Guard Our Border Act would reassign 95% of the National Guardsmen stationed at the Capitol building to the southern border since the U.S. Capitol Police said Monday that there …
The Liberty Loft has written extensively the past week about the allegations of New York Governor Andrew Cuomo. Now that a multitude of Democratic and Republican politicians have stated Cuomo needs to resign, a Leftist news site now says the reason people are believing these women is due to white privilege. Yup! You read that …
Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas said Tuesday that the number of migrants apprehended at the United States’ southern border is on track to hit a two-decade high. “We are on pace to encounter more individuals on the southwest border than we have in the last 20 years,” Mayorkas said in a statement. “We are expelling …
In July, Adam Weinstein of The New Republic wrote that Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis was leading Americans “on a Death March” by not embracing the same COVID-19 restrictions as many other US states. “Keeping churches open—as well as beaches, restaurants, and dividend-yielding commerce—has been a big priority for Ron DeSantis,” wrote Weinstein. “DeSantis has resisted …
Moderna announced Tuesday that children had begun to receive its coronavirus vaccine as part of a trial testing whether the shot is safe and effective on minors. The trial, consisting of 6,750 children, will first vaccinate older kids in order to determine the correct dose of the vaccine in children ages six to 12, the …
Joe Biden and his entire Cabinet and staff are embarking on a “Help is Here” tour to promote the COVID-19 Relief Bill that he signed into law last week. Why do you need to hit the road to promote a $1.9 Trillion pork fest that is already a done deal? Without a single vote from …
Education mastermind John Dewey transformed the way we approach teaching and learning. He had the right idea, that is to engage the mind in learning, over a century ago: “Give the pupils something to do, not something to learn; and the doing is of such a nature as to demand thinking: learning naturally results.” Learn …
Billions of people across the globe continue to live under COVID-19 lockdowns or heavily-restricted life. And for almost all of us, life amid the pandemic in 2020 was an isolating and difficult year. Yet doctors are warning that children in particular are experiencing grave mental health consequences as a result of the lockdowns—leading to an …
Over the past few days, the mainstream media has been reporting on Joe Biden’s tax increase that he is planning. Nothing in the tax increase should come as a surprise, since Joe Biden claimed he was going to raise taxes during his campaign. He clearly said that he intended to raise taxes on anyone that …
Compare January 6th to What’s Currently Happening in Myanmar In January, former President Donald J. Trump became the first American president to be impeached twice, and the article of impeachment with which he was charged accused him of “incitement of insurrection.” The accusation was based on the Capitol riots of January 6th, and the level …
President Biden Promises To Use His Words…Eventually
Happy Wednesday, dear Kruiser Morning Briefing friends. My piccolo concerto is coming along just fine, than you.
Full disclosure: I was one of the those people who thought that the Democrats would have hit President Biden with a 25th Amendment coup by now. After a while I realized that they prefer having him in place and pulling his puppet strings. They type up the executive orders, tell Ol’ Gropes to sign them, and the dismantling of the Republic proceeds apace.
I also wasn’t factoring in Kamala Harris’s roariang ambition. She’d like Biden to last at least two years so that she can have a ten year run in office. If the Democrats succeed in their efforts to make the “anomalies” from last year a permanent part of our elections we may never see another Republican president again. Madam Vice President has probably been redecorating the Oval Office in her head since Inauguration Day but she knows that patience is the best strategy now.
Back in December, though, I was telling everyone that Biden wouldn’t make it to March 1st in office.
Once it became apparent that the old boy would be hanging around for a while I began wondering how they would be able to employ the basement strategy that worked so well for them during the campaign. They can’t let Biden get too much time before the cameras. The potential for embarrassment is always just one short video away with this drooling fool.
I was asked in January how they could hide the President of the United States. Keeping the COVID panic ratcheted up gives them an ongoing excuse for the president’s lack of public availability.
One thing I didn’t consider at the time was that Team Biden would simply refuse to do press conferences. They’ve been blowing off their beloved advocacy press corps for a couple of months already.
That’s all finally changing now. A date has been put on the calendar for Biden’s first presser and I, for one, can’t wait to see the train wreck happen.
President Joe Biden will hold his first press conference on March 25, White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki confirmed on Tuesday.
The press conference will take place on his 64th day in office, making this the longest period in the 100 years that a new president has not held a solo meeting with the mess. According to Fox News, President Donald Trump held his first press conference 27 days into his presidency. President Barack Obama’s first presser was 20 days into his administration and President George Bush’s was in office for 33 days before his first press conference.
The news comes after the press repeatedly asked Psaki when Biden was planning to hold a press conference. The White House has used the pandemic to curb the number of reporters in the briefing room and requiring some reporters to submit questions prior to one of Psaki’s briefings, the New York Post reported.
There is something deliciously Biden-esque about the announcement coming so many days before the event. It’s like they are basically admitting that he needs a lot of prep time to take a few softball questions. We’re not really going to believe that the press corps is going to grill Biden with serious questions, are we? Maybe they’ll go the Obama route and ask him what he’s found most enchanting about the presidency so far.
No, America’s shame is that this president can’t string three sentences together without a month of practice. The press corps will be complicit in making sure that the event is something they can heap praise on Biden for later. Sadly, the bar is so low for him that if he simply manages to avoid chewing on his toes while he’s up there they’ll call it a success.
Don’t bet on this happening. There’s still plenty of time for them to manufacture a reason to postpone the press conference. That’s probably why they gave more than a week’s notice.
President-in-waiting? Harris serves as POTUS’s stand-in and understudy with Biden’s future uncertain . . . VP Kamala Harris is racing across the nation promoting the coronavirus relief package and stressing the importance of vaccination, giving many voters their first good look at the possible president-in-waiting. The focus on Ms. Harris is growing with each passing day given that she is a heartbeat away from the presidency — and that heart belongs to a 78-year-old who might not seek a second term. Ms. Harris’ role in the White House remains a work in progress and without a designated portfolio of duties. For now, the 56-year-old former U.S. senator and California attorney general mostly serves as President Biden’s stand-in and understudy. She is a regular presence at the president’s daily intelligence briefing and has made several calls to foreign leaders in Mr. Biden’s stead. Washington Times
Biden to hold first news conference, but not for another nine days . . .“President Biden will hold his first formal news briefing on Thursday afternoon, March 25,” press secretary Jen Psaki announced Tuesday. At 55 days into the new presidency, many had begun to wonder why Biden had not yet held a solo news conference — separating him from over a dozen of his most recent predecessors. The stretch of over seven weeks is the longest period a new president has gone without meeting with the media in the last 100 years. White House Dossier
Coronavirus
FL Schools Reopened Without Becoming COVID Super-spreaders . . . As school districts around the U.S. continue to grapple with whether to reopen classrooms amid the coronavirus pandemic, data shows Florida started in-person learning without turning schools into superspreaders. The state was one of the earliest to resume in-person instruction in August, following an executive order by Education Commissioner Richard Corcoran that directed districts to provide families the option of classroom learning five days a week or risk losing funding. The mandate triggered outcry among some teachers and parents who considered it risky. In the seven months since, Florida schools have avoided major outbreaks of Covid-19 and maintained case rates lower than those in the wider community. Wall Street Journal
Woman gives birth to first known baby with COVID-19 antibodies . . . A health worker who received a coronavirus vaccine gave birth to the first baby known to be born with COVID-19 antibodies. The unnamed health worker passed her COVID-19 antibodies to her newborn daughter in utero, a local NBC affiliate reported. The mother was 36-weeks pregnant when she was administered the first dose of the Moderna vaccine. “To our knowledge, this was the first in the world that was reported of a baby being born with antibodies after a vaccination,” pediatrician Paul Gilbert said. Washington Examiner
Trump urges supporters to get coronavirus vaccine . . . Former President Trump on Tuesday urged his supporters to get vaccinated against the coronavirus as concern grows over polls showing GOP vaccine hesitancy. Making a rare media appearance on Fox News, Trump said he would “recommend” the shots that are currently being distributed but added a caveat about respecting individual freedoms. “I would recommend it, and I would recommend it to a lot of people who don’t want to get it and a lot of people who voted for me, frankly, and we have our freedoms, and we have to live by that, and I agree with that also,” he told Fox News’s Maria Bartiromo, adding that “it’s a great vaccine, and it’s a safe vaccine.” The Hill
Politics
Border crossings to be highest in 20 years. But it’s not a crisis! . . . It’s a humanitarian catastrophe. But not a crisis. You understand. “We are on pace to encounter more individuals on the southwest border than we have in the last 20 years,” Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas said in a statement Tuesday morning. “There is understandably a great deal of attention currently focused on the southwest border,” Mayorkas said. “The situation at the southwest border is difficult. We are working around the clock to manage it, and we will continue to do so. That is our job. We are making progress, and we are executing on our plan.” White House Dossier
Trump blames Biden for border crisis . . . Former President Trump on Tuesday blamed his successor for the burgeoning crisis at the southern border, saying previous progress has been “eroded” under President Biden. In an interview with Fox News Channel’s Maria Bartiromo, Trump argued that his working relationship with Mexico and the partially constructed border wall had acted as deterrents for migrants while he was in office. “We did a lot of things, and all of that is now eroded,” Trump said. “Today, they’re coming in from all foreign countries. … They’re dropping them off, and they’re coming into our country, and it’s a disgrace. They’re going to destroy our country if they don’t do something about it.” The Hill
Republicans Blast Biden for Ignoring Border Crisis . . . House Republicans criticized President Joe Biden for failing to acknowledge the crisis on the southern border after they visited immigration facilities on Monday. The Republican delegation, led by House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy (R., Calif.), surveyed multiple immigration facilities on the border in New Mexico and Texas. Rep. August Pfluger (R., Texas), a member of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, blasted the administration’s response after speaking to immigration officials. He said the conditions on the ground are deteriorating and potentially undermining national security. “It’s such a shame that the Biden administration won’t call it a crisis … but they’re signaling it [is a crisis] with all the resources that they’re putting into it,” Pfluger said. “Anybody who cares about the security of this country should be doing something, regardless of partisan lines.” Washington Free Beacon
Four people on terror watchlist arrested at southern US border since October . . . Four people on the FBI’s terror watchlist have been arrested at the southern border since October, a report said. Three of the people are from Yemen, and the other is from Serbia, the Customs and Border Protection agency confirmed to Congress on Tuesday, according to Axios. The terror watchlist includes people who are “known to be or reasonably suspected of being involved in terrorist activities,” the report said, citing the FBI. The revelation comes as Republican lawmakers touring the border on Monday said some suspected terrorists had been heading to the crossing — along with the tens of thousands migrants typically from Mexico or Central America. New York Post
Biden, Democrats want to gut filibuster by forcing senators to talk for days . . . The Democrats don’t want to be accused of eliminating the filibuster. They just want, now that they run the Senate, to eliminate it while pretending to do something positive.
So they’re talking about the old days, when a senator had to stand and talk for hours, days, whatever. It sounds quaint, this move is an exercise in raw power. They just want to get their bills passed with 50 votes instead of the 60 that have long been needed to invoke “cloture” and proceed to a majority vote. Biden offered this “idea” during an interview with ABC’s George Stephanopoulos. “I don’t think that you have to eliminate the filibuster, you have to do it what it used to be when I first got to the Senate back in the old days,” Biden said. “You had to stand up and command the floor, you had to keep talking.” White House Dossier
Republicans on Biden’s Covid bill: We bungled this one . . . As President Biden embarks on an ambitious plan to sell his massive coronavirus relief package to the public, conservatives are starting to ask: Did we botch this? The overwhelming sentiment within the Republican Party is that voters will turn on the $1.9 trillion bill over time. But that wait-and-see approach has baffled some GOP luminaries and Trump World figures who expected Republicans to seize their first opportunity to cast newly-in-charge Democrats as out of control. Instead, they fear the party did little to dent Biden’s major victory — a victory that could embolden the administration in forthcoming legislative fights and even the lead up to the midterm elections. “The lack of response to this bill in an organized messaging and aggressive media push back is shown by the fact that Democrats have now gone from $2 trillion to a $4 trillion infrastructure package. If Covid relief was that easy, why not just run the table?” said former Trump White House chief strategist Steve Bannon. Politico
National Security
Putin likely directed 2020 US election meddling, US intelligence finds . . . Russian President Vladimir Putin likely directed efforts to try to swing the 2020 U.S. presidential election to Donald Trump, according to an American intelligence report released on Tuesday that sources said would likely trigger U.S. sanctions on Moscow. The 15-page report, released by the Office of the Director of National Intelligence, added heft to longstanding allegations that some of Trump’s top lieutenants were playing into Moscow’s hands by amplifying claims made against then-candidate Joe Biden by Russian-linked Ukrainian figures in the run-up to the November 3 election. It also added new findings that Putin either oversaw or at least approved of the election meddling to benefit Trump. Reuters
This “Intelligence Community Assessment” (ICA) was prepared by 6 and coordinated with an additional one out of the 18 IC agencies. A critical US Intelligence Community component, the Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA) did not sign off on this declassified ICA. Russia’s covert influence operations, involving election sabotage are run primarily by its military intelligence, the GRU (Glavnoye Razvedyvatel’noye Upravleniye). My former agency, the DIA – which is the leading agency of the entire US military intelligence apparatus – has the primary responsibility for and expertise within the IC for the GRU. The fact that DIA did not participate in the drafting or even coordination of this ICA calls into doubt credibility of the assessments contained in this document. The IC’s competence to assess foreign leaders’ intent is very limited, due to the analysts’ propensity for mirror-imaging and cognitive biases. Sounds like potentially another “Trump-Russia collusion” hoax.
‘Three Warfares’: U.S. pummeled by covert disinformation war waged by Russia, China . . . China and Russia are engaged in sophisticated information warfare against the United States, spreading false narratives to undermine social cohesion and sow division, senior Pentagon intelligence officials disclosed Tuesday.
James Sullivan, a Defense Intelligence Agency cybersecurity expert, told a hearing of the House Armed Services subcommittee on intelligence and special operations that both adversaries are engaged in covert warfare using disinformation — deliberately deceptive information — targeting the US public and government. Mr. Sullivan, the DIA specialist, said Russia is “without question” the world’s leader in the strategic use of covert disinformation “because they are a lot more prolific and they are a lot more destructive.” Moscow’s information operations are much more aggressive than China’s in seeking to undermine U.S. democracy and degrade social cohesion, he said. Washington Times
Putin’s goal is to foment political disfunction and destabilize the American society by pitting Americans against one another, rather than to “help” place a specific candidate in the White House. You can read the details about Russia’s strategic intentions towards the United States in my upcoming book Putin’s Playbook: Russia’s Secret Plan to Defeat America
China-Backed Confucius Institute Rebrands to Avoid Feds’ Scrutiny . . . The China-backed Confucius Institute is rebranding to avoid public scrutiny into its work disseminating propaganda to thousands of American students. US government oversight and faculty pushback have curtailed the influence of the Confucius Institute, which has dwindled from 103 college branches in 2017 to just 51 today. But the propaganda program is not going away without a fight. Experts say that after host institutions shutter Confucius Institutes, some of the programs continue to operate by adopting new names. The rebranding has allowed the Beijing-backed influence program to continue to shape the education of students from kindergartners to college students. Washington Free Beacon
International
Britain to Boost Nuclear Weapons Stockpile in Defense-Policy Shift . . . The British government laid out plans to increase its stockpile of nuclear weapons as part of a shift in defense policy that recognizes that the world order it helped forge in the wake of World War II is crumbling. Following its exit from the European Union last year, Britain is looking to carve its place in a more volatile and fragmented international system while bolstering its economy through greater global trade. Prime Minister Boris Johnson said that requires the U.K. to become a nimble power broker with a greater sway in the Indo-Pacific region backed by an increase in domestic investment in science and technology. Wall Street Journal
Money
Pfizer sees ‘opportunity’ to hike price for COVID-19 vaccine, CFO says . . . Pfizer is looking to turn its lucrative coronavirus vaccine into an even bigger cash cow. The drugmaker sees a “significant opportunity” to charge more for the groundbreaking shot once it gets to the other side of the COVID-19 pandemic, one top executive says. Pfizer set the current prices for the vaccine it developed with its German partner, BioNTech, based on the need for governments to secure doses and get the virus under control, according to chief financial officer Frank D’Amelio.
For instance, Pfizer is charging the US government $19.50 per dose — well below the $150 or $175 per dose it typically pulls in for a vaccine, D’Amelio said on the company’s February earnings call. New York Post
US airports have over $115B in infrastructure needs, report finds . . . U.S. airports need $115.4 billion in infrastructure investments over the next five years to address critical needs, an industry trade group found in a report released on Wednesday.
The Airports Council International – North America found that these investments are needed to improve the air passenger experience, increase convenience, enhance security, expand competition and ultimately lower prices for travelers. The report was released as President Biden and congressional leaders are crafting a sweeping infrastructure package and debating how to pay for the spending, which includes conversations about a tax hike. The Hill
You should also know
Three Books of ‘Poison’ on Navy’s Reading List for Sailors . . . Two members of Congress are asking the Navy to pull three books promoting identity politics and wokeness from its official reading list. The books teach young sailors that they’re being asked to fight and possibly die for “a systemically racist country,” the lawmakers say. The books—“How to Be an Antiracist” by Ibram X. Kendi; “The New Jim Crow” by Michelle Alexander; and “Sexual Minorities and Politics” by Jason Pierceson—are listed as part of the Chief of Naval Operations Professional Reading Program. All Navy personnel pledge to defend the Constitution, yet these books portray America as fundamentally bigoted. Daily Signal
Amazon Won’t Let You Read My Book. Op-Ed by Ryan T. Anderson, Author of ‘When Harry Became Sally’‘ . . . “Transgender equality is the civil rights issue of our time,” President Biden tweeted in January 2020. We might want to talk about that. What’s causing the surge in the number of girls seeking sex-reassignment procedures in the past decade? Might we want to find that out before we rush to conclude that puberty-blocking drugs and cross-sex hormone therapies—and even double mastectomies for 13-year-olds—are a human right? The sad reality is that very little is known about the causes of gender dysphoria, yet powerful institutions are promoting radical experimental therapies for children. We need to respect the dignity of people who identify as transgender while also doing everything possible to protect young people and foster their healthy development. This will require a better conversation about gender-identity issues, and that’s why I wrote my book. No good comes from shutting down a debate about important matters on which reasonable people disagree. “When Harry Became Sally” addresses the scientific, medical, political and philosophical issues at the heart of our national debate on transgender issues. We should have that debate, and Amazon shouldn’t get in the way. Wall Street Journal
I was able to find the book on the publisher’s website Encounter Books, for $16.99. I am ordering mine today. As free and independent thinkers, we are all are Ryan T. Andersons now. Authors cancelled by the totalitarian leftist mob have my support.
Guilty Pleasures
Look out, Labs: French bulldogs now 2nd most popular US dog . . . Could the French bulldog become America’s favorite purebred pooch? After riding a rocket ship to popularity over the last quarter-century, Frenchies came in second only to Labrador retrievers — the leaders for 30 straight years — in the American Kennel Club’s latest rankings, set to be released Wednesday. They reflect the relative numbers of purebreds, mainly puppies, that were added last year to the oldest U.S. dog registry.Stocky and smush-faced, French bulldogs have their charms — at least in fans’ eyes — but also their limitations “They’re not the type of dog to go hiking with you,” AKC spokesperson Brandi Hunter says, “but if you want a dog that’s going to snuggle up with you, be cute, be adaptable, minimal grooming… that’s the kind of breed for you.” A dig into the details: THE TOP 10: After Labrador retrievers and French bulldogs, the top 10 breeds include German shepherds, golden retrievers, bulldogs, poodles, beagles, Rottweilers and German shorthaired pointers. Dachshunds made the top 10 for the first time since 2013.
More than 98,300 Labs joined the AKC’s registry last year, compared to about 66,500 French bulldogs. Associated Press
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Quick Hits: Today’s Top Stories
A gunman in Georgia shot and killed eight people at three different massage parlors around Atlanta on Tuesday night, He was captured by police about 150 miles south of the city. Six of the eight victims were Asian, according to law enforcement.
Month-over-month retail sales fell 3 percent in February, according to a Commerce Department report, large part because of winter storms and supply chain disruptions across the United States. Economists project additional vaccinations, loosening coronavirus restrictions, and American Rescue Plan checks will lead to a rebound in the coming months.
In an ABC News interview, President Joe Biden said he believes New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo should resign if the investigation into his alleged sexual harassment reveals wrongdoing. “I think [Cuomo] will probably end up being prosecuted, too,” Biden added.
Emer Cooke, the head of Europe’s medicines regulator, said Tuesday there is currently “no indication” that the AstraZeneca COVID-19 vaccine causes blood clots, despite countries such as Germany, Italy, and France suspending its use. Cooke added that she remains “firmly convinced” that the benefits of receiving the shot outweigh the risks.
Donald Trump encouraged his supporters to get COVID-19 vaccines in an interview with Fox News last night. “It is a great vaccine. It is a safe vaccine and it is something that works,” he said. “I would recommend it and I would recommend it to a lot of people that don’t want to get it and a lot of those people voted for me, frankly.”
Axios reported Tuesday that the Customs and Border Protection agency told Congress that four people detained at the U.S.’ southern border since October 1 “match names” on the FBI’s Terrorist Screening Database. As the border crisis continues, President Biden told would-be migrants not to come to the United States. “Don’t leave your town or city or community,” he said.
The Senate voted 81-17 on Tuesday to confirm Isabel Guzman to head the Small Business Administration, where she will oversee the Paycheck Protection Program.
The Chicago Bears recommitted themselves to mediocrity on Tuesday, signing former Cincinnati Bengals quarterback Andy Dalton to a one-year, $10 million contract.
The United States confirmed 54,023 new cases of COVID-19 yesterday per the Johns Hopkins University COVID-19 Dashboard. An additional 1,275 deaths were attributed to the virus on Tuesday, bringing the pandemic’s American death toll to 536,871. According to the Centers for Disease Control, 32,515 Americans are currently hospitalized with COVID-19, and 1,655,996 COVID-19 vaccine doses were administered yesterday. 72,135,616 Americans have now received at least one dose.
The State of the Filibuster
Ever since Georgia voters delivered Democrats the slimmest possible Senate majority back in January, lawmakers and pundits on both sides of the aisle have been bracing for an inevitable showdown over the legislative filibuster—the procedural rule that affords a minority of senators the ability to delay or block votes on pieces of legislation. We delved into the historical origins of the filibuster back in September in anticipation of this fight, and it’s finally here.
Democrats were able to kick the intra-party squabble down the road for a few weeks by passing their $1.9 trillion American Rescue Plan through the budget reconciliation process, which requires a bill receive just 50 votes (plus Vice President Kamala Harris) as opposed to 60. It cost Democrats a $15 perhour federal minimum wage, but it allowed them to send President Biden a bill roughly $1.3 trillion bigger than it would have been had they needed to secure 10 Republican votes.
But budget reconciliation can be used only to pass bills directly related to spending or revenue, and most of President Biden’s agenda—from H.R. 1, to immigration and police reform, to environmental regulation, to gun control—extends well beyond that. Republicans have yet to actually filibuster any of these proposals, but that’s because Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer has yet to bring them to the floor. How Senate Democrats choose to move forward on the filibuster will define the remainder of Biden’s term.
Although a majority of Senate Democrats now support abolishing or weakening the filibuster—a complete flip-flop from what many of them said when they were in the minority—the procedural rule remains safe for now. All 50 would need to be on board to change the Senate rules, and Sens. Joe Manchin and Kyrsten Sinema maintain they aren’t budging. Before relenting on a power-sharing agreement with Schumer back in January, Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell was able to extract verbal commitments from the two moderate Democrats that they “will not vote to end the legislative filibuster.”
Still, reporters ask Manchin if he’ll back out of this pledge just about every single day. “JESUS CHRIST! What don’t you understand about NEVER?!” he shouted earlier this month. Yesterday, he more calmly reiterated that he’s “in the same place [he’s] always been on the filibuster.”
But progressives are not going to let up—and many are drawing a flicker of hope from comments Manchin made on Fox News last week. “The filibuster should be painful,” he said when Chris Wallace asked him about potential reforms to the rule. “We’ve made it more comfortable over the years. … Maybe you have to stand there. There’s things we can talk about.”
Intelligence Community Finds Foreign Election Interference
In a now declassified report on foreign threats to U.S. federal elections in 2020, the National Intelligence Council disclosed evidence of attempted Iranian and Russian interference in November’s presidential election. Neither country attempted to materially alter voter registration or vote totals, but influence campaigns carried out by Tehran, Moscow, and other foreign entities sought to aggravate sociopolitical tensions within the U.S. and sway the way American voters cast their ballots.
The report, which was originally sent to former President Trump on January 7, notably excluded China as among the foreign meddlers. It determined that while Beijing may have been weighing interference, neither election outcome ultimately benefited China enough for it to “risk getting caught.” China opted instead for traditional means of influence—like lobbying and economic leveraging.
Predictably, Iran led the charge to delegitimize the Trump team and the Republican Party through various cyber tools. In the government-led influence campaign likely approved by Supreme Leader Khamenei, cyber actors made spoof social media accounts and sent fake emails to Democratic voters purporting to be from the Proud Boys in an effort to boost voter turnout for Biden. With an economy crippling under the pressure of Trump’s “maximum pressure” sanctions program, Tehran had a vested interest in bettering the odds of the then-president’s political opponent.
The report also determined that Russian President Vladimir Putin had purview over election interference attempts made by senior Kremlin officials, online influence actors, and proxies to boost Donald Trump’s reelection prospects and spread unsubstantiated narratives about President Biden and his family. An interconnected web of Ukrainian linked actors—including Ukrainian legislator Andriy Derkach and Russian agent Konstantin Kilmnik—reportedly “sought to use prominent US persons and media conduits to launder their narratives to US officials and audiences,” including individuals who were close to Trump and his officials.
Is the Culture War Leading Republicans to Rethink Labor Unions?
President Biden made waves earlier this month when he voiced his support for a union drive at an Amazon fulfillment center in Bessemer, Alabama. “It’s not up to me to decide whether anyone should join a union,” he said. “But let me be even more clear: It’s not up to an employer to decide that either.”
Late last week, another prominent official spoke up in favor of Amazon’s workers: Republican Sen. Marco Rubio. “When the conflict is between working Americans and a company whose leadership has decided to wage culture war against working-class values, the choice is easy,” Rubio wrote in a USA Today op-ed. “I support the workers.”
In a piece for the site, Ryan takes a look at the stakes in the unionization fight, and the rapidly shifting politics surrounding it.
What exactly is happening in Alabama?
The Bessemer fulfillment center employs more than 5,800 people, making this the biggest push for a union Amazon has seen from a group of employees. Voting opened in early February and will close on March 29.
If employees vote in favor of unionizing, they would join the pre-existing Retail, Wholesale and Department Store Union (RWDSU). That organization has over 100,000 members nationally, including sanitation workers, grocery store workers, and those who work in the poultry industry. Alabama is a “right to work” state, meaning employees of a union shop can’t be compelled to join a union or pay dues.
The full-time employees of the Bessemer center are offered an hourly wage of $15.30 (well above Alabama’s minimum wage) and full benefits. However, employees have complained of a lack of communication from leadership and other issues. One employee told AL.com that there was insufficient advance warning of mandatory overtime—if a person shows up late to said overtime, that hour or so is docked from paid time off.
How are Biden’s words reverberating?
“Biden was saying ‘it’s the worker’s decision and the employers should stay out of it.’ That’s a powerful idea, and I think it’s a sort of shot across the bow for all these employers.” said Nelson Liechtenstein, U.S. labor research professor at University of California, Santa Barbara. Liechtenstein also emphasized just how influential that video was to the movement as a whole:“I do think every union organizing campaign for the next three years will pull out that Biden two-minute video.”
While the president never actually said “Amazon” in his video statement, RWDSU President Stuart Appelbaum was ecstatic with it. “This is the most pro-union statement from a president in United States history,” he told Politico.
What’s Rubio’s angle?
In a video posted to Twitter, Rubio complained about political decisions Amazon has made. “Here’s the bottom line, it’s very simple for me,” he said. “The largest, richest company in the world and a champion of wokeness that all it does is beat up on conservatives, versus hard working Americans who just want to get paid a little more, and have better work conditions. It’s an easy choice.”
An “overwhelming” majority of Republican lawmakers oppose unionization generally, American Enterprise Institute economist Stan Veuger told The Dispatch.
Rubio “wants to punish Amazon because they do not support the political causes that he wants them to support,” Veuger continued. “Whenever a company does something that is not in line with whatever religious grievances the GOP officials hold they get mad and so they try to punish them.”
In a Tablet preview of her new book, Kasztner’s Train, Anna Porter briefly chronicles the tragic and controversial life of Rezsco Kasztner. Considered a collaborator by some and a hero by others, Kasztner worked tirelessly during World War II to negotiate the release of thousands of Jews from Nazi-occupied territory. But rather than being welcomed to Israel with open arms, Kasztner found himself at the center of a political tug of war, facing trial for this work before being assassinated by a right-wing radical. “Had Kasztner been a gentile, there would no doubt be statues of him, parks named after him, and movies made about his daring, nerve-wracking dance with the devil,” Porter writes. “The enduring question about his life would be how, and why, he had saved so many Jews while repeatedly risking his own life. Instead, with Kasztner, the question that lingers is, ‘Why didn’t he do more?’”
Support for third parties is at an all-time high of 62 percent, and only 33 percent of Americans believe that the two major parties “do an adequate job of representing the American people.” Bret Stephens proposes a solution to our representation problem in his most recent column for the New York Times: Create a new party encompassing the vast majority of voters, who favor liberal tenants like freedom of speech, deference to the free market, equality of opportunity, and the presumption of innocence. “The new illiberalism is frightening. It could also be productive,” Stephens writes. “Everyone who has been bitten by it, left or right, is rediscovering how capacious the old liberal faith was, how trivial its internal differences really were, how much they might yet have in common—including common enemies—with people they once regarded as ideological opposites.”
In an investigation for BuzzFeed News, Joseph Lee compiled interviews and records documenting the Seminole Nation’s discrimination against Freedmen—tribal members of black descent—who have been systematically denied COVID-19 financial relief, health services, and vaccines. “They hate us that bad,” one black citizen of the Seminole Nation told Lee. “We’re stuck in a system that doesn’t care about us.”
In her latest Sweep newsletter, Sarah touches on some soon-to-be-up-for-grabs House seats, Ohio’s Senate race, Matthew McConaughey’s potential gubernatorial campaign in Texas, Marco Rubio’s newfound support for unions, and data science expert David Shor’s take on the “foundational cracks in the Democratic Party’s coalition.” Chris Stirewalt also weighs in on the gubernatorial contests in New Jersey and Virginia.
We’re now more than two months out from the January 6 Capitol insurrection, and the seat of our democracy is still surrounded by National Guardsmen and secure fencing. In her latest Uphill newsletter, Haley writes about the members of Congress who are now calling for the complex to be opened back up.
If you’re been thinking about joining The Dispatch, now is the time. Our next members-only Dispatch Live is this Thursday, March 18! Tune in at 8:30 p.m. ET tomorrow for an hour of lively discussion on the news of the day and more.
Fuzzy Slippers: “As a military brat, I have been around, loved, and respected the military my entire life. As a conservative, I have supported our troops and our military with every ounce of my being. As a conservative military brat, I am absolutely horrified at what the military has become: unprofessional, abjectly partisan, woke tools of the Democratic Party. Their approval ratings–i.e. Americans “trust and confidence” in the U.S. military–significantly slipped prior to the cumulative effects of these recent banana republic-style incidents. Prediction: they ain’t seen nothing yet.”
Leslie Eastman: “Hoping everyone has a festive St. Patrick’s Day! I started mine a day early, as I found an Irish pub in Santa Monica open on Tuesday, so I chugged down an Irish Ale before Newsom decided to shut down the state again. It was glorious.”
David Gerstman: “Yesterday, Mike LaChance had a great tweet, “Today is the one year anniversary of 15 days to slow the spread. Have we all learned a valuable lesson about government and power?””
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Corporate Media Doesn’t Deserve Our Trust
Back in January, the Washington Post published an impeachment-bolstering bombshell about a phone call between Georgia election officials and then-President Donald Trump.
“The conclusion a sitting president may have committed a crime is still in the corrected story, even though that conclusion was initially at least partly based on fabricated quotes. While they didn’t directly cite this Post story, Trump’s alleged pressuring of Georgia officials was eventually cited by House Democrats in the impeachment articles against Trump. A few weeks later, House Democrats would cite the article and its fabricated quotes on page 10 of their impeachment brief, as well as highlight the article and its fake quotes in oral arguments during the televised impeachment trial…
A correction two months after the fact, when the story has already played a significant role in shaping perceptions of political events, seems wholly inadequate. The headline on the Post’s follow-up story is given an anodyne headline: ‘Recording reveals details of Trump call to Georgia’s chief elections investigator.’…
In sum: The Washington Post anonymously printed fabricated quotes they knew were from a second-hand source in the office of a political enemy, couldn’t confirm the quotes with additional sourcing, still attributed them to the sitting president of the United States, used those quotes as a basis to speculate the president committed a crime, and the Democratic party would later repeatedly cite the bogus article when attempting to impeach Trump for ‘high crimes and misdemeanors.’…
Think for a second about all of the anonymously sourced stories you’ve read in recent years. Now realize it’s the dishonesty and manipulation that doesn’t get exposed that should scare you.”
The Last Institutional Domino?
Speaking of trust, long term polls show the military as virtually the only American institution with its head consistently and substantially above water in terms of institutional trust. If you think the chronic untrustworthiness of our institutions – Congress, the media, the police, big business, and banks, just to name a few – has gone great in recent years, you should be thrilled that military brass have decided to wade into the culture wars.
“This week it was middle-aged generals acting like middle-school girls, after Carlson suggested on air that perhaps pregnant women are not the ideal candidate for combat roles in the military. To respond, military leaders, in uniform, published selfies on Twitter citing Carlson’s lack of military experience, the supposed unseriousness of his profession in comparison, his age, and many more peripheral, arbitrary, and mostly untrue aspects of his character and tone: anything but the actual merits of his point…
Tucker’s broader point about the institutional feminization and relative unseriousness of the military was proven embarrassingly accurate by their own hysterical, social media-based response. How weak are the wokerati’s sacred cows, which can be slaughtered simply by pointing out their absurdity. And how venomous is the NPC vipers’ spittle-lipped ‘clapback.’ It’s almost as if their career is built around toeing the line.
This brings us to another point: how thoroughly and successfully the lackeys of woke ideology have infiltrated the military: a historic institutional touchstone for conservatives. Any long-harbored illusions about the ideological imperviousness of the military, much like the judiciary, should be dashed by this moment.”
“My younger son is 17, and wants to join the military. I have been writing here about how normally I would have supported that, but my conscience really bothers me about it, most of all because I do not trust the US Government not to waste the lives of our soldiers in stupid, pointless wars, but also, as of late, because I do not want my son to put his life on the line serving an organization that values ideology more than it does the lives of its soldiers. In other words, if my son were to become a Marine, I would be appalled that the USMC would send him out into combat in a half-female platoon, knowing that these platoons, based on the USMC’s own research, do not perform as well as all-male ones. They would be putting the life of my son on the line for woke political ideology, and I cannot stand that thought. Nor do I want my son to have to affirm garbage trans ideology and Kendi Thought as a condition of defending his country. He should not be taught to think by the US military that he is a lesser man because he is white. His mother and I have raised him to deplore racism, and not to judge people on the basis of their skin color, but rather by the content of their character. And I should want him to go into the US military to unlearn that?”
Yikes.
A Cultural Barrage from Congress
The culture war is about to go into overdrive. Just in this upcoming week, the House and Senate are poised to consider the Equality Act, the Equal Rights Amendment deadline, the Violence Against Women Act (which has “women” stripped from key titles), and big immigration reforms.
My college Jennifer Braceras and I have launched a bi-monthly series called At the Bar, in which we virtually gather at happy hour to break down the consequences of legal changes or cases to culture and everyday life. Our first episode is on the multi-pronged attack on the concept of biological sex in the law – a real “war on women.” Check it out here (we’ll get that intro down smoother by next time – it’s a learning curve).
Fashion Moment of the Week
From layering under your minidress to graphic tees to oversize blazers, a great primer from Evie Magazine on incorporating the greatest trends of every decade from the 1950s through the 1990s into your spring wardrobe in a modern way.
Wednesday Links
ICYMI, don’t. Taibbi: “The Sovietization of the American Press.” (Substack)
Vaccines are a triumph of the Trump administration, and we shouldn’t allow the media to forget it. (NY Post)
Cancel culture for cops? California moves to expel conservative cops as members of “hate groups” for opposing SCOTUS gay marriage decisions and other mainstream beliefs. (The Federalist)
David Shor talks shifting election coalitions on Ben Domenech’s new Fox podcast. (Fox News Radio)
Cuba and 63 other countries defend the CCP’s genocide. (The Federalist)
Inez Feltscher Stepman is a senior policy analyst at the Independent Women’s Forum and a senior contributor to The Federalist. She is a San Francisco Bay Area native with a BA in Philosophy from UCSD and a JD from the University of Virginia. She lives in Washington, D.C. with her husband, Jarrett Stepman, her puggle Thor, and her cat Thaddeus Kosciuszko. You can follow her on Twitter at @inezfeltscher and on Instagram (for #ootd, obvi) under the same handle. Opinions expressed on this website are her own and not those of her employers. Or her husband.
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Mar 17, 2021 01:00 am
Republicans in every state deserve elected officials who represent our conservativism and patriotic values. RINOs betray this trust. Read More…
Mar 17, 2021 01:00 am
A firm understanding of what immigration most definitely is not will help us to get a grasp of what immigration actually is — or at least should be. Read More…
Mar 17, 2021 01:00 am
The Saudis have made it clear they will vigorously oppose any revival of the Iran nuclear deal and have openly hinted they could launch their own nuclear weapons program to counter Iran’s. Read More…
Where are the Republicans?
Mar 17, 2021 01:00 am
Every day, I think it will change. Surely some Republican will mention that the storming of the Capitol came in reaction to a stolen election. Read more…
Reparations incognito
Mar 17, 2021 01:00 am
Whether paid in blood or gold, for almost 200 years America has, in one form or another, paid reparations for slavery. Read more…
American Thinker is a daily internet publication devoted to the thoughtful exploration of issues of importance to Americans.
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An argument over a stimulus check prompted a quadruple murder, authorities say, according to media reports.What are the details? An Indianapolis woman lost four family members after one of her children’s fathers demanded she give him a portion of her stimulus money. The New York Post reported that the suspect, 25-year-old Malik Halfacre, is a … Read more
We’ve watched as Americans across the country have surrendered their freedoms and informed on their neighbors in exchange for delusions of security. But here in this house, we won’t surrender.
Democrats and leftist Christians who were outraged over ‘family separation’ are now silent about the record number of migrant children trafficked across the border.
Michigan Democrat Attorney General Dana Nessel refused requests from state lawmakers to launch an investigation into Gov. Gretchen Whitmer’s orders putting COVID-positive patients into nursing homes.
Protecting children from confusion or from harmful experimental ‘treatments’ is neither abuse nor neglect, but under the Equality Act, it would be treated as such.
The Transom is a daily email newsletter written by publisher of The Federalist Ben Domenech for political and media insiders, which arrives in your inbox each morning, collecting news, notes, and thoughts from around the web.
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Eight people, six of them women of Asian descent, were shot dead in a string of attacks on Atlanta-area day spas on Tuesday, and a man suspected of carrying out all of the shootings was arrested hours later in southern Georgia.
The violence unfolded days after U.S. President Joe Biden used a nationally televised speech to condemn a recent surge in hate crimes and discrimination against Asian-Americans.
The United States is facing the biggest surge of migrants at its southwestern border in 20 years, as the Biden administration races to handle an influx of children trying to cross alone.
Republican voters are increasingly hostile toward illegal immigrants, Reuters/Ipsos polling shows, an unease that the Republican Party is moving to capitalize on in its bid to retake Congress.
↑ Asylum-seeking migrants from Central America, who were airlifted from Brownsville to El Paso, Texas, and deported from the U.S., walk near the Paso del Norte international border bridge in Ciudad Juarez, Mexico, March 16, 2021
WORLD
↑ Plaintiffs’ lawyers and supporters outside Sapporo district court in Hokkaido, northern Japan, March 17, 2021
A Japanese court has ruled that not allowing same-sex couples to get married is “unconstitutional,” setting a precedent in the only G7 nation not to fully recognise same-sex partnership.
Pope Francis has appealed for an end to bloodshed in Myanmar, saying: “Even I kneel on the streets of Myanmar and say ‘stop the violence’”. Myanmar’s most powerful Buddhist monks’ association has signaled a break with the authorities, accusing an “armed minority” of torture and killing innocent civilians.
Russian President Vladimir Putin likely directed efforts to try to swing the 2020 U.S. presidential election to Donald Trump, according to an American intelligence report. Washington is expected to impose sanctions on Moscow as soon as next week because of the allegations.
About 10.3 million people were displaced by climate change-induced events such as flooding and droughts in the last six months, the majority of them in Asia, a humanitarian organisation says.
Uber drivers in Britain should receive the minimum wage for the whole time they are logged on to the app, two former drivers say after winning a court battle which could reshape the gig economy. Following a UK Supreme Court defeat, the company reclassified its more than 70,000 drivers in Britain as workers.
Airlines with planes idled by the pandemic are cutting costs by delaying some maintenance tasks like changing life vests, testing oxygen bottles and checking emergency exits under COVID-19 waivers from airplane manufacturers and regulators.
A lawsuit against General Motors alleging it concealed problems with a sensor renews a spotlight on the company’s safety practices, seven years after the automaker vowed never to repeat a notorious failure to recall millions of vehicles with defective ignition switches later linked to 124 deaths.
Retired Lt. Col. Alexander Vindman, the career government employee who testified against President Trump during the Democrats’ first impeachment of the president, says “right-wing” media outlets should be sued to curb their influence.
Vindman, who was removed from his position on the National Security Council and escorted off White House grounds after Trump’s acquittal a year ago, wrote in a commentary for the Lawfare blog that right-wing media have become radicalized.
He charged they “fueled” the “Big Lie of ‘stolen elections’ and ‘evil Democrats’” to rouse people to “insurrection.”
“The mob that attacked the Capitol was born of hatred fomented by the right-wing media. These insurrectionists were raised for years on a steady diet of disinformation and half-truths, which produced the fertile fields for radicalization,” Vindman wrote.
He wants “accountability.”
The Western Journal noted at the time of Trump’s first impeachment that Vindman bypassed his chain of command to complain about the president’s phone call with Ukraine’s president, which is a breach of military ethics and conduct.
In his Lawfare commentary, Vindman wrote that after the impeachment trial, Trump criticized him and “proxies amplified these themes on television news, internet news, and social media.”
“I’m afraid I did not respond forcefully to the threats and defamation,” he said. “While the former president was likely immune from civil suit, I should have sued those who amplified his campaign of defamation. Holding those who defamed me accountable could have deterred further attacks against me and subsequent targets,” he wrote.
The original source of the complaint about Trump’s telephone call was an anonymous “whistleblower.” But investigative reporter Byron York contends in a new book that the instigator was Vindman.
York’s book is “Obsession: Inside the Washington Establishment’s Never-Ending War on Trump.”
“It didn’t take a real rocket scientist that the source of this, the original source of this, was Lt. Col. Vindman,” York said.
Vindman acknowledged that the First Amendment “gravely limits” the restriction of media, but he argued that news outlets can be sued for defamation.
“Why not hold the media accountable for the heinous insurrection where it hurts them most? By design, defamation law makes intentional, malicious lying an expensive habit, but this works only if people are willing to bring civil cases against the peddlers of disinformation.”
He cited reports that he contends were part of “a comprehensive defamation campaign” carried out by Fox News, Laura Ingraham, John Yoo, Gateway Pundit, Steve Bannon, Rudy Giuliani, American Greatness, Sen. Marsha Blackburn, the Federalist, One America News Network and others.
“I rationalized inaction, thinking that litigation against these media outlets and individuals would paint me as litigious and seeking personal gain. This was a mistake. Now, I propose a different solution: Legal action must be taken to rein in the right-wing media apparatus,” he said.
When they “make baseless and outrageous claims about ‘stolen elections,’ ‘communist Democrats,’ and ‘fascist main-stream media,’ they are building on lies about individuals,” Vindman claimed.
“They are galvanizing extremism on the back of defamation,” he said.
“Civil consequences, rather than governmental restrictions on First Amendment rights, could be a meaningful way to take what are fundamentally money-making ventures and demand truth from them, instill rigor in their reporting, and uphold accountability,” he wrote. “Putting companies in fear of the real costs in civil damages for slander, libel, and false claims that can cumulatively incite violence and that can individually harm actual human beings should have a restraining effect on their behavior.”
The Western Journal noted Vindman remained Rep. Adam Schiff’s “star witness” against Trump even though others, including Robert O’Neill, the former Navy SEAL who killed Osama bin Laden, slammed Vindman for his behavior.
‘The Purge’ by Big Tech targets conservatives, including us
Just when we thought the Covid-19 lockdowns were ending and our ability to stay afloat was improving, censorship reared its ugly head.
For the last few months, NOQ Report has appealed to our readers for assistance in staying afloat through Covid-19 lockdowns. The downturn in the economy has limited our ability to generate proper ad revenue just as our traffic was skyrocketing. We had our first sustained stretch of three months with over a million visitors in November, December, and January, but February saw a dip.
It wasn’t just the shortened month. We expected that. We also expected the continuation of dropping traffic from “woke” Big Tech companies like Google, Facebook, and Twitter, but it has actually been much worse than anticipated. Our Twitter account was banned. One of our YouTube accounts was banned and another has been suspended. Facebook “fact-checks” everything we post. Spotify canceled us. Why? Because we believe in the truth prevailing, and that means we will continue to discuss “taboo” topics.
The 2020 presidential election was stolen. You can’t say that on Big Tech platforms without risking cancelation, but we’d rather get cancelled for telling the truth rather than staying around to repeat mainstream media’s lies. They have been covering it up since before the election and they’ve convinced the vast majority of conservative news outlets that they will be harmed if they continue to discuss voter fraud. We refuse to back down. The truth is the truth.
The lies associated with Covid-19 are only slightly more prevalent than the suppression of valid scientific information that runs counter to the prescribed narrative. We should be allowed to ask questions about the vaccines, for example, as there is ample evidence for concern. One does not have to be an “anti-vaxxer” in order to want answers about vaccines that are still considered experimental and that have a track record in a short period of time of having side-effects. These questions are not allowed on Big Tech which is just another reason we are getting cancelled.
There are more topics that they refuse to allow. In turn, we refuse to stop discussing them. This is why we desperately need your help. 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 are on track to be short by about $5300 per month in order to maintain operations.
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. We had 5,657,724 sessions on our website from November, 2020, through February, 2021. Our intention is to elevate that to higher levels this year by focusing on a strategy that relies on free speech rather than being beholden to progressive Big Tech companies.
During that four-month stretch, Twitter and Facebook accounted for about 20% of our traffic. We are actively working on operating as if that traffic is zero, replacing it with platforms that operate more freely such as Gab, Parler, and others. While we were never as dependent on Big Tech as most conservative sites, we’d like to be completely free from them. That doesn’t mean we will block them, but we refuse to be beholden to companies that absolutely despise us simply because of our political ideology.
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.
As the world spirals towards radical progressivism, the need for truthful journalism has never been greater. 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 11,000+ patriots with us in a very short time. If you are interested, please join us to receive updates.
Conservative commentator Candace Owens announced on Twitter that she is suing singer Cardi B. The two have gone at it before, but this particular spat turned very ugly when the singer posted a screenshot of a Tweet allegedly from Owens that says her husband cheated on her with her brother.
Yes. Just spoke with my family. I am 100% suing Cardi for that nonsense. You can’t just start throwing out wild lies against private members of my family because you’re upset someone called your out on your degenerate performance.
I‘ll keep you all posted. https://t.co/v2aisvQiOG
Cardi B’s performance at the Grammy’s has drawn criticism, particularly from conservative circles, as it stretched the boundaries of decency on network television. She performed a pole dance and engaged in mock sexual acts with Megan Thee Stallion. The display overshadowed what was otherwise a standard “woke” broadcast that saw viewership crash.
A run-of-the-mill Twitter squabble between Cardi B and Candace Owens Tuesday evening ended with Owens claiming she plans to sue Cardi for posting a Photoshopped tweet suggesting that Owens’ husband had cheated on her with her brother. Got all that?
Cardi had posted a clip of Owens speaking on Fox News, in which she said Cardi and Megan Thee Stallion’s “WAP” performance at the Grammys “feels like we are looking at corrosion, like we are about to see the end of an empire.”
Owens responded to Cardi’s tweet by calling her “a cancer cell to culture,” and, well, things only went downhill from there. After quite a bit more back-and-forth we’ll just skip over, Cardi posted a tweet, supposedly from Owens, that reads, “Yes, my husband did cheat on me with my brother. Yes, he said no when I asked to join them.”
The alleged Tweet from Owens that became a screenshot shared by many was resurfaced by Cardi B today after back-and-forth between the two. Owens has maintained from the beginning that it is clearly photoshopped, but the story was picked up by questionable media sources and went viral last year.
Not you talking about two women thrusting their vaginas together while your husband and brother slap cocks and balls together .WELL WOULD YOU LOOK AT THAT !wow https://t.co/SvbnEXOOQFpic.twitter.com/kzzS6nVww9
Conservative commentators came to Owens’ defense and pointed out the rank hypocrisy of challenging her criticism about Cardi B’s actions with fake screenshots. What makes it worse is that Owens is being attacked by some for engaging in so-called cancel culture.
I really wish people would stop using “cancel culture” when they’re not smart/honest enough to figure out what it means. This dude says it’s cancel culture for @RealCandaceO to sue someone for defamation… an indication that this dude is a dum dum. https://t.co/cR36Wqk4Kl
— (((Jason Rantz))) on KTTH Radio (@jasonrantz) March 16, 2021
Twitter’s reaction to it all was odd.
This is certainly an interesting way to characterize Cardi B saying defamatory things about Candace’s brother based on photoshopped tweets, Twitter pic.twitter.com/akxtTDNSOc
Twitter user LadyKayaga noted that the screenshot shared shows “View Tweet Activity” which is a function only seen on Tweets posted by the user. In other words, this screenshot would have had to originate from Candace Owens herself if it were real.
Cardi B really used a badly photoshopped tweet to dunk on Candace Owens without doing any confirmation checks to deflect from the valid points Candace made about her.
The screenshot says “tweet activity”, how can you see the tweet activity on another persons tweet? pic.twitter.com/W88KQOEMK1
Twitter as a platform may be protected, but its users are not. When celebrities like Cardi B spread bald faced lies to destroy someone’s life, there must be repercussions. Candace Owens should move forward with her lawsuit.
‘The Purge’ by Big Tech targets conservatives, including us
Just when we thought the Covid-19 lockdowns were ending and our ability to stay afloat was improving, censorship reared its ugly head.
For the last few months, NOQ Report has appealed to our readers for assistance in staying afloat through Covid-19 lockdowns. The downturn in the economy has limited our ability to generate proper ad revenue just as our traffic was skyrocketing. We had our first sustained stretch of three months with over a million visitors in November, December, and January, but February saw a dip.
It wasn’t just the shortened month. We expected that. We also expected the continuation of dropping traffic from “woke” Big Tech companies like Google, Facebook, and Twitter, but it has actually been much worse than anticipated. Our Twitter account was banned. One of our YouTube accounts was banned and another has been suspended. Facebook “fact-checks” everything we post. Spotify canceled us. Why? Because we believe in the truth prevailing, and that means we will continue to discuss “taboo” topics.
The 2020 presidential election was stolen. You can’t say that on Big Tech platforms without risking cancelation, but we’d rather get cancelled for telling the truth rather than staying around to repeat mainstream media’s lies. They have been covering it up since before the election and they’ve convinced the vast majority of conservative news outlets that they will be harmed if they continue to discuss voter fraud. We refuse to back down. The truth is the truth.
The lies associated with Covid-19 are only slightly more prevalent than the suppression of valid scientific information that runs counter to the prescribed narrative. We should be allowed to ask questions about the vaccines, for example, as there is ample evidence for concern. One does not have to be an “anti-vaxxer” in order to want answers about vaccines that are still considered experimental and that have a track record in a short period of time of having side-effects. These questions are not allowed on Big Tech which is just another reason we are getting cancelled.
There are more topics that they refuse to allow. In turn, we refuse to stop discussing them. This is why we desperately need your help. 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 are on track to be short by about $5300 per month in order to maintain operations.
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. We had 5,657,724 sessions on our website from November, 2020, through February, 2021. Our intention is to elevate that to higher levels this year by focusing on a strategy that relies on free speech rather than being beholden to progressive Big Tech companies.
During that four-month stretch, Twitter and Facebook accounted for about 20% of our traffic. We are actively working on operating as if that traffic is zero, replacing it with platforms that operate more freely such as Gab, Parler, and others. While we were never as dependent on Big Tech as most conservative sites, we’d like to be completely free from them. That doesn’t mean we will block them, but we refuse to be beholden to companies that absolutely despise us simply because of our political ideology.
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.
As the world spirals towards radical progressivism, the need for truthful journalism has never been greater. 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 11,000+ patriots with us in a very short time. If you are interested, please join us to receive updates.
March 16, 2020 is the day in which President Donald Trump largely caved to the demonic forces surrounding him. Anthony Fauci had just lied to Congress about his views on COVID-19. And the administrative state was listening to pandemic models created by modelers who believed that we only have 9 years left to live because of global warming.
Overnight, the Branch Covidians became the largest religious group in the United States. They consisted of atheists, environmentalists, communists, Democrats, Republicans, and even church goers. They had their own pope, Anthony Fauci. They had their own canon of acceptable models, scientific studies, and cherry-picked data. They had their own salvation/soteriology with masks, social distancing, lockdowns, and the vaccine. Above all, it was an eschatology. They genuinely believed that this was an apocalyptic level event.
The Branch Covidian religion would kill people, destroy businesses and livelihoods, and be the greatest threat to liberty globally. In return it would give Big Pharma billions and untold control over our lives. It would give its followers a newfound purpose. They truly believe that they are saving lives by masking, social distancing, staying home, and taking an experimental vaccine. They believe themselves holier for their adherence to CDC guidelines. In the name of protecting the elderly, they treated them like prisoners, only worse because they released prisoners during all of this.
The Bible is clear on how the world will end, with room for debate on the exact order of operations. The Bible is exceedingly clear that Christ, not the Pope, nor Caesar is head of the church. However, we saw that churches disagreed in their actions. They not only closed their doors, they also barred their small groups from gathering. In direct opposition to Acts 5:29, churches cited Romans 13 in participating in unconstitutional edicts. They conceded and affirmed that the government had the authority to ban churches from gathering. Not only was Romans 13 misused in an American context, it was also used to promote heretical ecclesiology. Christ is head of the church. There is no equal.
Instead of following the Bible, the American church groveled to the government, in many cases pleaded to let them reopen. But Jesus declared in Matthew 28
18 And Jesus came up and spoke to them, saying, “All authority has been given to Me in heaven and on earth. 19 Go therefore and make disciples of all the nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and the Son and the Holy Spirit, 20 teaching them to observe all that I commanded you; and lo, I am with you always, even to the end of the age.”
He begins by declaring all authority has been given to Him, not some. And this authority is on earth, not just in heaven. The church disagreed. Jesus didn’t really have that authority when there is a virus with a 99% chance of survival. We have a mission. Many churches treat Sunday morning as the mission field and therefore abandoned their own mission field without hesitation.
Churches justified assuaging the Branch Covidians by stating that this was only temporary. One year later, the church grovels to the state with ungirded loins. In Daniel 6 we see the proper response to “temporary” edicts that render onto Caesar what is to be rendered onto God.
10 Now when Daniel knew that the document was signed, he entered his house (now in his roof chamber he had windows open toward Jerusalem); and he continued kneeling on his knees three times a day, praying and giving thanks before his God, as he had been doing previously. 11 Then these men came by agreement and found Daniel making petition and supplication before his God.
We learned two major lessons moving forward with the Great Commission. The first is that the church, the universal body of believers is a lot smaller than we thought it was. The number of people who claim Christ but preached the Branch Covidian religion was astonishing. The number of professed Christians who lived in fear instead of hope for God’s wonderful providence is really telling. The second lesson is just like the first. We learned that the mission field is a lot larger than we previously assumed.
As a religious minority in the age of the Branch Covidians, the church in the United States needs to gird its loins and recommit its ecclesiology to Christ and not Caesar. The church is the physical assembly of believers. We have a mission to disciple and spread the gospel. We should not be putting barriers like masks, social distancing, capacity limits, vaccines, nor lockdowns in the way of proclaiming the gospel and fulfilling the Great Commission.
‘The Purge’ by Big Tech targets conservatives, including us
Just when we thought the Covid-19 lockdowns were ending and our ability to stay afloat was improving, censorship reared its ugly head.
For the last few months, NOQ Report has appealed to our readers for assistance in staying afloat through Covid-19 lockdowns. The downturn in the economy has limited our ability to generate proper ad revenue just as our traffic was skyrocketing. We had our first sustained stretch of three months with over a million visitors in November, December, and January, but February saw a dip.
It wasn’t just the shortened month. We expected that. We also expected the continuation of dropping traffic from “woke” Big Tech companies like Google, Facebook, and Twitter, but it has actually been much worse than anticipated. Our Twitter account was banned. One of our YouTube accounts was banned and another has been suspended. Facebook “fact-checks” everything we post. Spotify canceled us. Why? Because we believe in the truth prevailing, and that means we will continue to discuss “taboo” topics.
The 2020 presidential election was stolen. You can’t say that on Big Tech platforms without risking cancelation, but we’d rather get cancelled for telling the truth rather than staying around to repeat mainstream media’s lies. They have been covering it up since before the election and they’ve convinced the vast majority of conservative news outlets that they will be harmed if they continue to discuss voter fraud. We refuse to back down. The truth is the truth.
The lies associated with Covid-19 are only slightly more prevalent than the suppression of valid scientific information that runs counter to the prescribed narrative. We should be allowed to ask questions about the vaccines, for example, as there is ample evidence for concern. One does not have to be an “anti-vaxxer” in order to want answers about vaccines that are still considered experimental and that have a track record in a short period of time of having side-effects. These questions are not allowed on Big Tech which is just another reason we are getting cancelled.
There are more topics that they refuse to allow. In turn, we refuse to stop discussing them. This is why we desperately need your help. 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 are on track to be short by about $5300 per month in order to maintain operations.
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. We had 5,657,724 sessions on our website from November, 2020, through February, 2021. Our intention is to elevate that to higher levels this year by focusing on a strategy that relies on free speech rather than being beholden to progressive Big Tech companies.
During that four-month stretch, Twitter and Facebook accounted for about 20% of our traffic. We are actively working on operating as if that traffic is zero, replacing it with platforms that operate more freely such as Gab, Parler, and others. While we were never as dependent on Big Tech as most conservative sites, we’d like to be completely free from them. That doesn’t mean we will block them, but we refuse to be beholden to companies that absolutely despise us simply because of our political ideology.
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.
As the world spirals towards radical progressivism, the need for truthful journalism has never been greater. 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 11,000+ patriots with us in a very short time. If you are interested, please join us to receive updates.
Just over three weeks before Election Day 2016, Chris Cillizza, now with CNN, infamously tweeted, “Let me say for the billionth time: Reporters don’t root for a side. Period.”
No doubt he really believed it, as do many journalists who truly feel they are treating their stories’ subjects fairly. But as a group, their overall body of work shows quite clearly that they have “put on the jersey,” meaning that members of mainstream media are squarely on President Joe Biden’s team and have been since before Election Day 2020.
In the latest iteration of the media’s anti-Trump bias, The Washington Post was forced to issue a massive and embarrassing correction on its reporting of a phone call between former President Donald Trump and a Georgia official regarding disputed election results.
The quotes attributed to Trump by a single, anonymous source were things he actually did not say, as proven by a recording of the call released two months after the original, erroneous reporting.
Unexplained in this fiasco is how multiple news outlets were able to independently and wrongly confirm the initial, factually inaccurate story in the first place.
Worse, the fake quotes included in the first version of the Georgia phone call story were seized upon by Democrats and deployed during Trump’s second impeachment trial. Here was bad reporting being weaponized for political purposes.
This should be a jarring wake-up call for journalists. In all likelihood, it probably will not be.
As communications director for the Trump 2020 campaign for two years, I saw the media’s bias in action daily. Perhaps there was no better example than our elongated struggle to get Beltway reporters to cover the story surrounding Hunter Biden’s business dealings, which we viewed as a scandal that involved Joe Biden every bit as much as his son.
Most outlets only reported on the laptop in the context of trying to discredit it as an implication of Joe Biden. And almost every publication trumpeted a letter from “former senior intelligence officials,” who wrote that the information contained on the laptop seemed like “Russian disinformation,” even though they admitted they had no actual knowledge of that being the case.
The emergence of Tony Bobulinski, Hunter Biden’s former business partner, did little to sway reporters, who were alarmingly unconcerned about his adamant assertion that Joe Biden knew all about the overseas transactions and was actually cut in on some of the action.
And when James Rosen of Sinclair Broadcasting broke the story that in 2019 the FBI opened a money laundering investigation into Hunter Biden and his associates, which was still considered “open and ongoing,” no one else in the Beltway media showed the slightest interest.
Over the course of the last two weeks of the 2020 campaign, we held repeated conference calls with the media, often featuring U.S. senators and members of the House of Representatives, calling on reporters to lift the blackout and cover the story in the manner it deserved.
As Election Day neared, we implored journalists to tap their sources at the Department of Justice to confirm the FBI investigation into the activities of Hunter Biden and his associates, as Rosen had done for Sinclair Broadcasting.
There were no takers, except for a few who went through the front door of the Department of Justice press office to receive a standard refusal to comment, rather than enlisting the legion of anonymous sources they frequently used to write stories about Trump.
It was not until Dec. 9, 2020—more than a month after the election—that the media felt safe to report on the FBI investigation into Hunter Biden. And that was only because he issued a statement himself confirming its existence.
The media blackout worked. Trump pollster John McLaughlin found that 36% of Joe Biden voters were unaware of the entire saga, and that 4.6% of total Biden voters would have changed their minds if they had known about it—clearly enough to swing the election in key states.
With Election Day behind them, major news outlets have continued their practice of slanted reporting, both to continue heaping scorn on Trump and to promote Biden.
Another way to gauge which way the media leans is to examine accounts of similar episodes occurring under both Trump’s and Biden’s administrations. The disparate treatment of comparable events is striking.
In March 2020, The Washington Post gloomily reported on Trump’s approval of a coronavirus relief package under the headline, “Trump signs $2 trillion coronavirus bill into law as companies and households brace for more economic pain.”
Nearly a year later, the Post openly celebrated Biden’s approval of a $1.9 trillion package by tweeting the headline, “Biden stimulus showers money on Americans, sharply cutting poverty in defining move of presidency.”
In an apoplectic headline about the Trump administration’s response to the murder of journalist Jamal Khashoggi, The New York Times fumed, “In Extraordinary Statement, Trump Stands With Saudis Despite Khashoggi Killing.”
But when Biden failed to take any strong action against the Saudis after he became president, The New York Times gave it a soft landing with the friendly and empathetic headline, “Biden Won’t Penalize Saudi Crown Prince Over Khashoggi’s Killing, Fearing Relations Breach.”
The media is forever creative, however, as sometimes a clear Democratic scandal can also be turned against Republicans. Take, for example, the handling of two scandals battering New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo—the forcing of COVID-19 patients into nursing homes while covering up the number of deaths, and the growing list of women accusing him of sexual assault and harassment.
On the story involving Cuomo’s alleged conduct with women, the venerable Associated Press was still able to work in criticism of Republicans and praise for Biden at the same time, offering this opinion in what masqueraded as a straight news piece:
Republicans have seized on the scandal to try to distract from Biden’s success tackling the coronavirus pandemic and challenge his party’s well-established advantage with female voters.
To the credit of some in the White House press corps, a substantial amount has been written about Biden’s refusal to hold a press conference, likely because reporters have personal interest in such an event. So Biden, who was excessively protected from the media by staff during the campaign and has been known to wander wildly off-script, has yet to face wide-ranging and rapid-fire questioning.
But that did not stop Politico from gushing that Biden “has surprised some of his former colleagues and allies with a largely gaffe-free White House debut,” despite purposefully limited opportunities to make such mistakes.
The mainstream press wants very much for the public to believe that they have not chosen sides. But their 2020 campaign coverage and their reporting on the first weeks of the new president reveal that too many of them are indeed wearing the Biden jersey.
‘The Purge’ by Big Tech targets conservatives, including us
Just when we thought the Covid-19 lockdowns were ending and our ability to stay afloat was improving, censorship reared its ugly head.
For the last few months, NOQ Report has appealed to our readers for assistance in staying afloat through Covid-19 lockdowns. The downturn in the economy has limited our ability to generate proper ad revenue just as our traffic was skyrocketing. We had our first sustained stretch of three months with over a million visitors in November, December, and January, but February saw a dip.
It wasn’t just the shortened month. We expected that. We also expected the continuation of dropping traffic from “woke” Big Tech companies like Google, Facebook, and Twitter, but it has actually been much worse than anticipated. Our Twitter account was banned. One of our YouTube accounts was banned and another has been suspended. Facebook “fact-checks” everything we post. Spotify canceled us. Why? Because we believe in the truth prevailing, and that means we will continue to discuss “taboo” topics.
The 2020 presidential election was stolen. You can’t say that on Big Tech platforms without risking cancelation, but we’d rather get cancelled for telling the truth rather than staying around to repeat mainstream media’s lies. They have been covering it up since before the election and they’ve convinced the vast majority of conservative news outlets that they will be harmed if they continue to discuss voter fraud. We refuse to back down. The truth is the truth.
The lies associated with Covid-19 are only slightly more prevalent than the suppression of valid scientific information that runs counter to the prescribed narrative. We should be allowed to ask questions about the vaccines, for example, as there is ample evidence for concern. One does not have to be an “anti-vaxxer” in order to want answers about vaccines that are still considered experimental and that have a track record in a short period of time of having side-effects. These questions are not allowed on Big Tech which is just another reason we are getting cancelled.
There are more topics that they refuse to allow. In turn, we refuse to stop discussing them. This is why we desperately need your help. 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 are on track to be short by about $5300 per month in order to maintain operations.
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. We had 5,657,724 sessions on our website from November, 2020, through February, 2021. Our intention is to elevate that to higher levels this year by focusing on a strategy that relies on free speech rather than being beholden to progressive Big Tech companies.
During that four-month stretch, Twitter and Facebook accounted for about 20% of our traffic. We are actively working on operating as if that traffic is zero, replacing it with platforms that operate more freely such as Gab, Parler, and others. While we were never as dependent on Big Tech as most conservative sites, we’d like to be completely free from them. That doesn’t mean we will block them, but we refuse to be beholden to companies that absolutely despise us simply because of our political ideology.
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.
As the world spirals towards radical progressivism, the need for truthful journalism has never been greater. 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 11,000+ patriots with us in a very short time. If you are interested, please join us to receive updates.
SACRAMENTO – A Bay Area assemblyman wants to ban from service police officers and police officer candidates who are members of hate groups or have used hate speech in the past, even in “a private discussion forum” online.
Yet the definition of a “hate group” and “hate speech” used by Assemblyman Ash Kalra’s (D – San Jose) new bill, AB 655, is incredibly broad. Not only does it include armed militia groups and white supremacists promoting “domestic terrorism,” it also includes police officers expressing conservative religious or political views on abortion, marriage, and gender or with membership in a political party or church that does.
One legal expert said the bill would “usher in a new era of McCarthyism” where Muslim, Catholic, Evangelicals, and even registered Republicans would be blacklisted from law enforcement jobs.
‘Inexplicable, unwarranted and unprecedented attack’
“Under the guise of addressing police gangs, the bill at the same time launches an inexplicable, unwarranted, and unprecedented attack on peaceable, conscientious officers who happen to hold conservative political and religious views,” wrote Pacific Justice Institute Senior Staff Attorney Matthew McReynolds.
“Indeed, this is one of the most undisguised and appalling attempts we have ever seen, in more than 20 years of monitoring such legislation, on the freedom of association and freedom to choose minority viewpoints.”
According to a bill fact sheet provided by Kalra’s office, AB 655 is needed to root out “extremist infiltration” into our police departments as evidenced by “the apparent cooperation, participation, and support of some law enforcement,” gave to insurrectionists during the January 6, 2021 attack on the U.S. Capitol Building.
The document goes on to say that California sheriff departments all over the state have been “plagued by texting, email, and social media scandals where officers exchanged racist and homophobic messages.”
Definition of hate speech is alarmingly broad
AB 655 would require police candidates to receive a background check for “official membership in a hate group, participation in hate group activities, or other public expressions of hate.”
Public complaints of employed police officers would result in the same investigation, “and if sustained, could lead to termination.”
So how does broad is the bill’s definition of a hate group and hate speech? Here is the definition from the text of AB 655:
“‘Hate group’ means an organization that, based upon its official statements or principles, the statements of its leaders, or its activities, supports, advocates for, or practices the denial of constitution constitutional rights of, the genocide of, or violence towards, any group of persons based upon race, ethnicity, nationality, religion, gender, gender identity, sexual orientation, or disability.”
AB 655 defines hate speech with similar language. It states: “‘Public expression of hate’ means any explicit expression, either on duty or off duty and while identifying oneself as, or reasonably identifiable by others as, a peace officer, in a public forum, on social media including in a private discussion forum, in writing, or in speech, as advocating or supporting the denial of constitution constitutional rights of, the genocide of, or violence towards, any group of persons based upon race, ethnicity, nationality, religion, gender, gender identity, sexual orientation, or disability.”
According to McReynolds, the breath of these definitions raise serious questions. Is the Catholic Church a hate group because it advocates rejecting the “constitutional rights of women to obtain an abortion?” Are all the churches that voiced support for Proposition 8, defining marriage as a union of one man and one woman, “hate groups” because they “opposed LGBTQ constitutional rights to marry?” Are Muslims banned from being officers because they attend a mosque that has “spoken out against homosexuality or gender equality?”
Support for traditional family could bar service
What about the California Republican Party that still has a family blank in its platform that says it “support[s] the two-parent family as the best environment for raising children, and therefore believe that it is important to define marriage as a union between one man and one woman.”
The platform also says that, “The Supreme Court’s ruling [on same-sex marriage] cannot and must not be used to coerce a church or religious institution into performing marriages that their faith does not recognize.” It would seem the Republican Party itself is a hate group according to AB 655.
“The rights guaranteed by the U.S. Constitution have been the topic of intense political debate for 200 years, and especially over the last several decades since the Supreme Court found a right to abortion in the Constitution in 1973,” said Greg Burt, Director of Capitol Engagement with the California Family Council.
“Should the state now ban from public service qualified, fair-minded people who happen to hold religious or political views that conflict with controversial Supreme Court decisions on marriage and abortion? This is a blatantly unconstitutional violation of religious liberty and freedom of speech. It is also a tyrannical abuse of power from a politician seeking to ruin the lives of those he disagrees with.”
AB 655 is scheduled to be heard before the Assembly Public Safety Committee on April 6, 2021.
‘The Purge’ by Big Tech targets conservatives, including us
Just when we thought the Covid-19 lockdowns were ending and our ability to stay afloat was improving, censorship reared its ugly head.
For the last few months, NOQ Report has appealed to our readers for assistance in staying afloat through Covid-19 lockdowns. The downturn in the economy has limited our ability to generate proper ad revenue just as our traffic was skyrocketing. We had our first sustained stretch of three months with over a million visitors in November, December, and January, but February saw a dip.
It wasn’t just the shortened month. We expected that. We also expected the continuation of dropping traffic from “woke” Big Tech companies like Google, Facebook, and Twitter, but it has actually been much worse than anticipated. Our Twitter account was banned. One of our YouTube accounts was banned and another has been suspended. Facebook “fact-checks” everything we post. Spotify canceled us. Why? Because we believe in the truth prevailing, and that means we will continue to discuss “taboo” topics.
The 2020 presidential election was stolen. You can’t say that on Big Tech platforms without risking cancelation, but we’d rather get cancelled for telling the truth rather than staying around to repeat mainstream media’s lies. They have been covering it up since before the election and they’ve convinced the vast majority of conservative news outlets that they will be harmed if they continue to discuss voter fraud. We refuse to back down. The truth is the truth.
The lies associated with Covid-19 are only slightly more prevalent than the suppression of valid scientific information that runs counter to the prescribed narrative. We should be allowed to ask questions about the vaccines, for example, as there is ample evidence for concern. One does not have to be an “anti-vaxxer” in order to want answers about vaccines that are still considered experimental and that have a track record in a short period of time of having side-effects. These questions are not allowed on Big Tech which is just another reason we are getting cancelled.
There are more topics that they refuse to allow. In turn, we refuse to stop discussing them. This is why we desperately need your help. 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 are on track to be short by about $5300 per month in order to maintain operations.
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. We had 5,657,724 sessions on our website from November, 2020, through February, 2021. Our intention is to elevate that to higher levels this year by focusing on a strategy that relies on free speech rather than being beholden to progressive Big Tech companies.
During that four-month stretch, Twitter and Facebook accounted for about 20% of our traffic. We are actively working on operating as if that traffic is zero, replacing it with platforms that operate more freely such as Gab, Parler, and others. While we were never as dependent on Big Tech as most conservative sites, we’d like to be completely free from them. That doesn’t mean we will block them, but we refuse to be beholden to companies that absolutely despise us simply because of our political ideology.
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.
As the world spirals towards radical progressivism, the need for truthful journalism has never been greater. 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 11,000+ patriots with us in a very short time. If you are interested, please join us to receive updates.
“But as for the cowardly, the faithless, the detestable, as for murderers, the sexually immoral, sorcerers, idolaters, and all liars, their portion will be in the lake that burns with fire and sulfur, which is the second death.” -Revelation 21:8
One of the words that best describes many within the church today would be “cowardly.” We’ve seen this exemplified especially over this past year, as we’ve seen pastors capitulate to the tyrannical edicts from Leftist governors banning worship services. Instead of obeying God over men, they are choosing to submit to man over God. This is an indictment on the current state of the church.
It is fascinating that the Book of Revelation lists the cowardly and faithless right alongside “murderers, the sexually immoral, sorcerers, idolaters, and all liars.” No surprise, it sure seems as if these prophetic words are coming to fruition right before our eyes. You would think that these modern-day pastors would remember these words from the Bible and be inspired to take a stand for truth in a dark and fallen world. Unfortunately, they’ve refused to heed these warnings and, instead, are becoming the fulfillment of these prophecies.
Each of the news stories that Pastor Ken Peters and his wife, Valencia, discuss during this first episode of Patriot Squad plays right along with this theme of taking a stand and not being cowardly. In light of all that is going on in the world today, there is literally no room for the fearful or cowardly. It is time for the church to rise up and take a stand… to be strong and courageous.
While many cringe at the thought of confronting our fallen culture head on, that’s exactly what Jesus did during His earthly ministry. He publicly called the Pharisees hypocrites. He overturned tables in the marketplace at the Temple. He confronted actual injustice head-on.
No one could honestly say that Jesus was not strong and courageous. Christians always say that we are to be more Christ-like. However, when push comes to shove, no one actually wants to be the disruptive force that Jesus exemplified for us to emulate. It’s time for that to change, which is exactly what Patriot Church and The Church at Planned Parenthood are accomplishing. It’s time to take a stand, folks. Right here, and right now.
‘The Purge’ by Big Tech targets conservatives, including us
Just when we thought the Covid-19 lockdowns were ending and our ability to stay afloat was improving, censorship reared its ugly head.
For the last few months, NOQ Report has appealed to our readers for assistance in staying afloat through Covid-19 lockdowns. The downturn in the economy has limited our ability to generate proper ad revenue just as our traffic was skyrocketing. We had our first sustained stretch of three months with over a million visitors in November, December, and January, but February saw a dip.
It wasn’t just the shortened month. We expected that. We also expected the continuation of dropping traffic from “woke” Big Tech companies like Google, Facebook, and Twitter, but it has actually been much worse than anticipated. Our Twitter account was banned. One of our YouTube accounts was banned and another has been suspended. Facebook “fact-checks” everything we post. Spotify canceled us. Why? Because we believe in the truth prevailing, and that means we will continue to discuss “taboo” topics.
The 2020 presidential election was stolen. You can’t say that on Big Tech platforms without risking cancelation, but we’d rather get cancelled for telling the truth rather than staying around to repeat mainstream media’s lies. They have been covering it up since before the election and they’ve convinced the vast majority of conservative news outlets that they will be harmed if they continue to discuss voter fraud. We refuse to back down. The truth is the truth.
The lies associated with Covid-19 are only slightly more prevalent than the suppression of valid scientific information that runs counter to the prescribed narrative. We should be allowed to ask questions about the vaccines, for example, as there is ample evidence for concern. One does not have to be an “anti-vaxxer” in order to want answers about vaccines that are still considered experimental and that have a track record in a short period of time of having side-effects. These questions are not allowed on Big Tech which is just another reason we are getting cancelled.
There are more topics that they refuse to allow. In turn, we refuse to stop discussing them. This is why we desperately need your help. 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 are on track to be short by about $5300 per month in order to maintain operations.
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. We had 5,657,724 sessions on our website from November, 2020, through February, 2021. Our intention is to elevate that to higher levels this year by focusing on a strategy that relies on free speech rather than being beholden to progressive Big Tech companies.
During that four-month stretch, Twitter and Facebook accounted for about 20% of our traffic. We are actively working on operating as if that traffic is zero, replacing it with platforms that operate more freely such as Gab, Parler, and others. While we were never as dependent on Big Tech as most conservative sites, we’d like to be completely free from them. That doesn’t mean we will block them, but we refuse to be beholden to companies that absolutely despise us simply because of our political ideology.
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.
As the world spirals towards radical progressivism, the need for truthful journalism has never been greater. 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 11,000+ patriots with us in a very short time. If you are interested, please join us to receive updates.
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47.) ABC
March 17, 2021 – Having trouble viewing this email? Open it in your browser.
Morning Rundown
Biden discusses surge in migrants and Gov. Cuomo’s sexual harassment allegations: President Joe Biden addressed the southern border crisis in an exclusive interview with ABC News’ George Stephanopoulos, where he stated, “I can say quite clearly: ‘Don’t come over. Don’t leave your town or city or community.’” The number of unaccompanied teens and children who have been taken into U.S. custody along the U.S.-Mexico border has shot up in recent weeks, as the number of migrants attempting to cross the country increases. Republicans have criticized Biden’s moves to rescind former President Donald Trump’s harsh immigration policies and said it has encouraged migrants to come to the U.S., but Biden told ABC News that “we’re sending back people” who cross the border. “The idea that Joe Biden said, ‘Come’ — because I heard the other day that they’re coming because they know I’m a nice guy,” said Biden. “Here’s the deal, they’re not.” Biden, who is currently in Philadelphia promoting the $1.9 trillion COVID-19 relief bill he signed into law last week, also called on New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo to resign if an investigation confirms claims he committed sexual harassment. However, he stopped short of backing an immediate end to Cuomo’s governorship. “The investigation is underway and we should see what it brings us,” he said. Watch more of the interview with President Joe Biden on ABC’s “Good Morning America” at 7 a.m. ET.
8 dead in 3 shootings at Georgia spas, suspect in custody: At least eight people were killed in three separate shootings at spas in the Atlanta area on Tuesday, according to law enforcement officials. Robert Aaron Long was identified as the suspect and taken into custody in Crisp County, Georgia, following a police pursuit, authorities said, saying it was “extremely likely” he carried out all three attacks. All four deaths in an Atlanta shooting were identified as women and “it appears that they may be Asian,” police said at a press conference. Two victims in the Acworth shooting were Asian women, while a white woman and white man were also victims, the Cherokee County Sheriff’s Office said. A Hispanic man remains in the hospital from that shooting as well. While no motivation has been established, anti-Asian hate crimes and harassment have been on the rise over the last couple of months, according to crime data. Stop AAPI Hate released a statement about the shootings, saying, “The reported shootings of multiple Asian American women today in Atlanta is an unspeakable tragedy — for the families of the victims first and foremost, but also for the Asian American community.” The FBI said in a statement to ABC News that it is now assisting with the investigation.
Elliot Page speaks out in 1st interview since announcing he is transgender: In his first interview since announcing he is trangender, actor Elliot Page opened up to Time about his transition, his struggles with identity from an early age and his life now. Page, who is known for his roles in “Juno” and “The Umbrella Academy,” said he felt that he “wanted to be a boy” since he was 9 years old. “I would ask my mom if I could be someday,” he shared. Page said that as he was breaking into the industry, he found roles where he “had to look a certain way,” and explained that he had to wear a wig sometimes for parts. But while promoting “Juno” in 2007, Page revealed that he was battling with mental health issues, including anxiety and depression, and struggled with “how to explain to people that even though [I was] an actor, just putting on a T-shirt cut for a woman would make me so unwell.” After announcing his transition in December, Page said he had “this feeling of true excitement and deep gratitude to have made it to this point in my life …” Now, he’s devoted to spreading awareness for trans visibility, equality and rights. He’s also using his platform to call out trans discrimination and violence across the U.S.
‘Superhero’ pharmacist on a mission to vaccinate his community: Dr. Mayank Amin, 36, may just be a pharmacist in his Lansdale, Pennsylvania, community, but his efforts to keep his community safe during the COVID-19 pandemic have been nothing short of superhuman. Last month, Amin, who owns Skippack Pharmacy, made it his mission to vaccinate his community. On Super Bowl Sunday, amid a snowstorm, Amin said he received 1,200 vaccines. Despite the 8 inches of snow on the ground, he — along with two volunteers — decided to vaccinate his community. And he did so in a Superman suit. “It was a celebration outside and people didn’t care how cold it was or about the snow,” Amin told “GMA.” Amin, who started Skippack last year amid the pandemic when he saw elderly neighbors concerned over receiving their medications, started dressing up as Superman on New Year’s Eve, when he realized the last prescription he had to fill and deliver was for a child. Since then, he’s been surprising people in his Superman suit. Amin’s goal is to get everyone in his community vaccinated by May. “I want everyone around here vaccinated,” he said.
GMA Must-Watch
This morning on “GMA,” George Stephanopoulos sits down for an exclusive with President Joe Biden, and asks about his stance on immigration, the allegations against New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo and more. Plus, “Southern Charm” star Shep Rose joins us live this morning to talk about his book of essays called “Average Expectations.” And we’re celebrating St. Patrick’s Day with Irish dance group Cairde, who are taking TikTok by storm with their modern twists on traditional Irish dancing. All this and more only on “GMA.”
A shooting spree in the Atlanta area has left eight people dead, including six Asian women. Plus President Joe Biden is facing a growing challenge on immigration as the number of migrants at the border swells.
Here’s what we’re watching this Wednesday morning.
6 Asian women among 8 killed in Atlanta-area shootings
Eight people were killed, including six Asian women, after shootings at three Atlanta-area massage parlors that unfolded within an hour on Tuesday. A 21-year-old suspect was captured 150 miles south of Atlanta after a manhunt, authorities said.
Police said they are still investigating a motive, but the shootings raised fears that people of Asian descent were targeted in the attack.
New research released by Stop AAPI Hate, an advocacy group formed to prevent anti-Asian discrimination during the coronavirus pandemic, on Tuesday revealed that nearly 3,800 incidents were reported over the past year and that a disproportionate number of attacks were directed at women.
While it’s still unclear if the attacks were racially motivated, out of an abundance of caution officials in New York City and Seattle said they were deploying additional police patrols to protect their Asian American communities.
President Joe Biden is facing mounting challenges on the politically volatile issue of immigration as he navigates a growing humanitarian crisis on the border and pressure from within his own party to deliver on his promise to remake the system. As his administration responds, it is restricting the information Border Patrol agents can share with the media as a surge of migrants tests the agency’s capacity at the southern border.
While the facts in the trial of the former Minneapolis police officer charged with murder in the death of George Floyd may be black and white, when it comes to jury selection the issues seem to have more to do with Black versus blue. Here’s our report on what we can learn from the jury selection process.
By Ahiza García-Hodges and Diana Dasrath | Read more
NFTs, or non-fungible tokens, are suddenly everywhere in digital media. Once an obscure part of the broader blockchain technology world, they have boomed in recent months thanks to the sudden embrace of almost all corners of the art, entertainment and media worlds.
By Susan Del Percio, Republican strategist | Read more
In order to get the country vaccinated, Biden needs the help of the states — especially governors. But the leaders of Texas, California, New York and Florida seem mostly focused on their political self-interests.
By Melissa Bailey, The Hechinger Report | Read more
Exam schools loom large as symbols of opportunity and inequality in American public schools. Now, the nation’s twin crises are shaking them to their core.
We consulted cleaning and health experts on how washable rugs work and how to find the best one for you.
One fascinating thing
Sing, mate, eat: Spring break, cicada-style.
In a few weeks, a natural spectacle will take place across much of the United States — one that is not found anywhere else in the world.
Billions of cicadas that have spent years patiently growing in complete darkness will finally emerge, perfectly in sync, for a raucous party in the sun.
It’s been 17 years, and the periodical insects, also known as Brood X, are back. Read the full story here.
Thanks for reading the Morning Rundown. And Happy St. Patrick’s Day to those celebrating today.
If you have any comments — likes, dislikes — send me an email at: petra@nbcuni.com
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And now an influx of migrants at the U.S.-Mexico border has once again turned into a political football, with no obvious legislative solution in sight.
For all of the talk about the filibuster and the “scorched earth” that will occur if it’s eliminated, there’s been a problem bigger than mere Senate process.
Washington can’t solve – or now even work on – pressing problems related to our borders.
Data Download: The numbers you need to know today
14: The number of Republican senators who voted for the 2013 compromise comprehensive immigration bill
5: The number of those Republican senators who remain in the Senate today (Susan Collins, Lindsey Graham, John Hoeven, Lisa Murkowski and Marco Rubio.)
69,000: The number of Virginians on probation for felonies who have now been restored voting rights under a new policy by Virginia Gov. Ralph Northam.
29,674,025: The number of confirmed cases of coronavirus in the United States, per the most recent data from NBC News and health officials. (That’s 60,710 more than yesterday morning.)
539,330: The number of deaths in the United States from the virus so far, per the most recent data from NBC News. (That’s 954 more than yesterday morning.)
110,737,856: Number of vaccine doses administered in the U.S.
11.3 percent: The share of Americans who are fully vaccinated
43: The number of days left for Biden to reach his 100-day vaccination goal.
TWEET OF THE DAY: Tragedy in Atlanta
U.S. intel community confirms Russia interfered in 2020 election to help Trump
On Tuesday, the U.S. intelligence community released an unclassified report confirming:
No foreign actor attempted to alter any “technical aspect” of the election, like ballots or results;
The Russian government conducted a campaign to discredit Joe Biden and support Donald Trump (“A key element of Moscow’s strategy this election cycle was its use of proxies linked to Russian intelligence to push influence narratives … to US media organizations, US officials, and prominent US individuals, including some close to former President Trump and his administration,” the report said);
Iran carried out a campaign to hurt Trump, though not promote his rivals;
And China refrained from interfering in the election, but NBC’s Ken Dilanian reports that one member of the U.S. intel community dissented from the finding “and argued that China did do some things online to hurt Trump.”
The White House goes green on St. Patrick’s Day
NBC’s Mike Memoli reports that the Biden White House today is going green – literally, folks, as the president likes to say.
Per Memoli, the presidential mansion’s north facade “will be illuminated in green Wednesday evening in one of many tributes to Ireland planned on Biden’s first St. Patrick’s Day as president.”
More: “Covid-19 protocols are putting a damper on what would otherwise be a more robust celebration of St. Patrick’s Day in the Biden White House. But officials say they’re making the most of the holiday, nonetheless. In addition to lighting the White House green, they will dye both the North and South Lawn water fountains green, reprising Obama’s tradition, which was an homage to Chicago.”
ICYMI: What ELSE is happening in the world?
Biden made his most definitive comments to date on Andrew Cuomo, saying that he should resign if the harassment allegations against him are confirmed.
An AP analysis found that the rate of rejected mail-in ballots was actually down in 2020.
Democrats in both chambers are pushing Biden to take on student debt via executive order.
Some Republicans now say they dropped the ball on building opposition to the Covid relief bill.
Rick Scott says red state governors should return stimulus money. The governor of his own state says that “doesn’t make any sense.”
After Gavin Newsom spoke publicly about Sen. Dianne Feinstein’s potential replacement, she reiterated that she’s not planning on stepping down. (But here’s an interesting wrinkle: Her husband is interested in an ambassadorship, according to the New York Times.)
Plus: Columbus, Ohio, wants six months in jail for first-time sex customers, Texas’ new social media bill is a mess, and more…
Motive for fatal Atlanta shootings unclear. There’s no indication that last night’s fatal shooting spree at several Atlanta-area massage parlors was connected to conspiracy theories about sex trafficking at Asian massage businesses. Atlanta police say they showed up at one of the businesses in response to a call about a robbery in progress.
The motive for the shooting, which left eight people dead, is still unclear, despite many in the media attributing it to anti-Asian racism.
Seven women and one man were killed in the shootings; six of them were Asian and two were white, police report. One other man was injured as well.
A suspect in police custody, 21-year-old Robert Aaron Long, is thought to be behind the shootings at the two massage parlors in northeast Atlanta (Gold Massage Spa and Aromatherapy Spa) and one (Young’s Asian Massage) about 30 miles northwest of the city.
Red Canary Song, a group devoted to Asian sex worker and migrant rights, notes that workers at Asian massage parlors and spas are frequent targets of violence from both customers and police. People speculating about possible motives for this horrific crime probably shouldn’t overlook that fact in the rush to portray the shootings as stemming from anti-Asian racism tied to COVID-19.
But as of this morning, we simply don’t know what drove the Atlanta massage parlor shooter to commit these atrocities.
The identities of the victims have also not yet been released.
FREE MINDS
Ohio city seeks six months in jail for people who pay for sex. Authorities in Columbus, Ohio, are trying to put a social justice spin on ratcheting up penalties for prostitution. City Council members say it’s concern for people selling sex that is leading them to consider a new policy—but this policy would keep penalties for selling sex intact and continue to direct police resources to targeting sex work between consenting adults, increasing penalties for people who pay for sex.
“The Council’s proposed amendment institutes a penalty of up to $1,500 and 180 days in jail for a first offense,” notes WOSU. “The second and third offenses include mandatory minimum fines of $550 and $800 respectively, as well as 10 and 15 days in jail.”
Ohio State University professor of women, gender, and sexuality studies Jennifer Suchland has been speaking out against the proposed changes. “When you add more criminalization to the sex trade, it both makes it harder to reach potential victims and worsens the conditions for those who rely on the sex trade for survival,” Suchland said in a WOSU interview.
FREE MARKETS
Some good news on the economic front. “Federal Reserve officials, who are scheduled to release their latest economic projections at 2 p.m. ET, are likely to say they expect the labor market and inflation to rebound faster than they anticipated in December,” reports the Wall Street Journal. “The central bank is broadly expected to reaffirm its commitment to ultralow interest rates and bond purchases for now.”
QUICK HITS
NEW w @jessemckinley: Cuomo aides circulated a letter trashing Lindsey Boylan within days of her tweets in December accusing him of harassment. The idea was for ex staffers, particularly women, to put their names on it. No one would. https://t.co/MGqGdlxGFf
Elizabeth Nolan Brown is a senior editor at Reason, where she writes regularly on the intersections of sex, speech, tech, crime, politics, panic, and civil liberties. She is also co-founder of the libertarian feminist group Feminists for Liberty.
Since starting at Reason in 2014, Brown has won multiple awards for her writing on the U.S. government’s war on sex. Brown’s writing has also appeared in The New York Times, Los Angeles Times, The Daily Beast, Buzzfeed, Playboy, Fox News, Politico, The Week, and numerous other publications. You can follow her on Twitter @ENBrown.
Reason is the magazine of “free minds and free markets,” offering a refreshing alternative to the left-wing and right-wing echo chambers for independent-minded readers who love liberty.
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55.) REALCLEARPOLITICS MORNING NOTE
03/17/2021
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Carl Cannon’s Morning Note
Vacant Posts; Assessing HR 1; Green Party
By Carl M. Cannon on Mar 17, 2021 09:05 am
Hello, it’s Wednesday March 17, 2021, and top o’ the morning to you all. A year ago today is when the reality of this global pandemic really hit home for millions of people. It came in the form of essentially canceling a cherished Irish-themed holiday, one with sectarian and nationalist origins but which is now celebrated the world over, mostly in a secular and internationalist spirit. Irish bars here in Washington, D.C., and around the world reluctantly shut their doors — on their most anticipated (and profitable) day of the year — as St. Patrick’s Day parades were being called off in city after city.
We’re still not out of the woods, however, and tonight most of our “Erin Go Bragh!” toasts will still take place on Zoom, in small outdoor gatherings or in the confines our own domiciles. If you’re looking for company as you lift a glass of Irish whiskey, the Boston Globe has a superb lineup of hosts for its weekly “Cocktail Club.” If I’m doing this right, you can sign up for it here.
We’ve proven resourceful in that way — and by “we” I mean the human race, not only those of us who are Irish or part Irish (or who merely love the Irish). Meanwhile, Ireland’s U.S. Embassy in Washington has been killing it on Twitter the past 24 hours, inclusiveness being the main message this year. No, the embassy probably didn’t need to respond in a literal fashion to conservative commentator Matt Walsh’s clever sendup of “cultural appropriation.” But on a cold gray morning day, the stream of tweets from Ambassador Daniel Mulhall and his staff have been uplifting. My favorite was a mash-up of St. Patrick’s Day greetings from world leaders, punctuated by one of William Butler Yeats best lines:
Think where a man’s glory most begins and ends
And say my glory was I had such friends.
With that, I’d direct you to RCP’s front page, which presents our poll averages, videos, breaking news stories, and aggregated opinion columns spanning the political spectrum. We also offer original material from our own reporters, columnists, and contributors, including the following:
* * *
Biden Leaves Key Immigration Posts Vacant Amid Border Surge. Phil Wegmann has the story.
Why HR1 Threatens Election Integrity. Justin Riemer argues that Democrats’ For the People Act would cancel out confidence-building measures imposed by the states.
Why Was ERCOT’s CEO Terminated? At RealClearEnergy, Richard Axelbaum & Phillip Irace explore Bill Magness’ role in the Texas power grid fiasco last month.
Where the Child Allowance Debate and Education Intersect. At RealClearPolicy, Brandon McCoy writes that income boosts to disadvantaged families could become a valuable asset in efforts to reduce the school achievement gap.
The 5G Revolution in Health Care Is Here. Also at RCPolicy, Luke Ashton urges the FCC to foster further development by expanding the auctioning of mid-band frequencies and allowing more companies to build 5G infrastructure.
Insanity Need Not Be Destiny. At RealClearWorld, Jane Harman warns that national security strategies formed during the Cold War are no longer effective in an increasingly multipolar world.
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62.) 1440 DAILY DIGEST
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Good morning. It’s Wednesday, March 17, and we’re covering a deadly string of attacks in Atlanta, a surprising discovery in Israel, and much more. Have feedback? Let us know at hello@join1440.com.
Eight people are dead and one other person injured after a series of shootings at three Atlanta-area massage parlors yesterday. The first attack took place near the town of Acworth, about 30 miles to the northwest of the city. The subsequent two attacks targeted spas inside the city.
Six of the eight victims were reported to be Asian women, with four victims of Korean descent. The attacks follow a rise in hate crimes against Asian Americans over the past year, up a reported 150% in major US cities. Police have not yet released a motive for yesterday’s attacks.
The suspect, 21-year-old Robert Aaron Long, was captured three hours after the shootings about 150 miles south of the city, while driving along Interstate 75. He was taken into custody without incident.
Dead Sea Scroll Discovery
Archaeologists in Israel revealed yesterday dozens of Dead Sea Scroll fragments bearing Hebrew religious writings found in a desert cave, believed to have been hidden during a Jewish revolt against Rome between 132 and 136 CE. The first new fragments found in the region in 60 years, the scrolls include lines from the books of Zechariah and Nahum.
Initially discovered in 1946-47, the broader collection of writings is among the most important discoveries in Judeo-Christian history, containing some of the oldest-known examples of writings later included in the Hebrew Bible. While some are well-preserved, thousands exist as fragments, many purchased separately through antiquity dealers. Explore their history here.
The operation also included a collection of rare coins from almost 2,000 years ago, a 6,000-year-old skeleton of a child—likely female, mummified in a piece of cloth—and a 10,000-year-old basket, which may be the oldest in the world.
Election Influence
Russia and Iran both attempted to influence the 2020 US presidential election by amplifying traditional and social media narratives, according to a declassified US intelligence report released yesterday.
The report found Russia carried out extensive efforts undercutting the Biden campaign and supporting the Trump campaign, including coordinating the leak of purportedly damaging audio between Biden and a Ukrainian lawmaker. Conversely, the assessment found Iran actively worked to influence public perception against then-President Trump, whose administration adopted a hard-line stance against the country.
Both shared the primary goal of exacerbating US social and political divisions while undermining confidence in the electoral process.
Analysts concluded China considered but did not deploy similar operations. No evidence was found that any foreign actors technically interfered in the vote tabulation or processes (i.e., hacking electronic voting machines).
The report explicitly avoided making a conclusion on what, if any, impact the operations had on the outcome. Find the full assessment here.
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IN THE KNOW
Sports, Entertainment, & Culture
>LeBron James to become part owner of Boston Red Sox; James already owns a small share of English Premier League champs Liverpool(More) | Tiger Woods returns home after three-week stay in hospital following Feb. 23 car crash(More)
>Yaphet Kotto, actor best known for role as the villain in James Bond film “Live and Let Die,” dies at 81 (More)
>Actor Elliot Page becomes first transgender man to appear on cover of Time magazine (More) | Read full interview with Page here(More, $$)
Science & Technology
>Study suggests coronavirus variant B.1.1.7, first seen in the United Kingdom, has up to a 60% higher 28-day mortality rate than conventional strains (More) | Moderna begins testing its vaccine on children between six months and 11 years old (More)
>Google unveils its new Nest Hub smart display, with the option to track your sleep patterns from your bedside using radar motion detection and breathing pattern analysis (More)
>Lightning strikes played an essential role in the origins of life on Earth, according to new theory; strikes on mineral deposits led to the production of phosphorus in water, a key element in biological organisms (More)
>OxyContin maker Purdue Pharma files a $10B bankruptcy proposal that would have the Sackler family give up control of company; more than 36 states have accused the company of helping fuel the opioid epidemic (More)
>Uber drivers in the United Kingdom to be paid the minimum wage; company granted the rights after losing Supreme Court decision last month (More)
>The volatility index(VIX), commonly known as Wall Street’s “fear gauge,” slips to lowest level since before pandemic (More) | US retails sales drop by 3% in February as cold temperatures reduced spending (More)
>Homeland security chief Alejandro Mayorkas warns migrant levels at the US-Mexico border are on pace to be the highest in two decades; says policy is to turn back adults and families, process unaccompanied minors (More)
>Japan’s Supreme Court rules prohibition on same-sex marriages is unconstitutional; Taiwan is the only major Asian country to grant legal rights to same-sex couples (More)
>Secretary of State Antony Blinken, Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin meet with South Korean officials in Seoul in Biden administration’s highest-level foreign trip to date; officials meet with Chinese diplomats in Alaska tomorrow (More)
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Historybook:First St. Patrick’s Day parade held (1601); Golf legend Bobby Jones born (1902); Singer Nat King Cole born (1919); National Gallery of Art opens in Washington, DC (1941); HBD soccer great Mia Hamm (1972).
“Celebrate what you’ve accomplished, but raise the bar a little higher each time you succeed.”
– Mia Hamm
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63.) AMERICAN INSTITUTE FOR ECONOMIC RESEARCH
64.) NATIONAL REVIEW
TODAY’S MORNING JOLT WITH JIM GERAGHTY
IS PRESENTED BY
We’ll take a break from the pandemic and vaccination rollout today to turn our attention to the first major crisis of the Biden administration, now worsening by the day on our southern border. President Biden deploys what I call “the Malarkey Maneuver”; the Biden administration issues an unwritten gag order to U.S. Customs and Border Protection; and a House Democratic subcommittee chairman calls Kevin McCarthy a liar . . . when McCarthy turned out to be right. If only someone had foreseen that electing a Democratic administration would create the perception of amnesty and open borders across Central America!
Joe Biden and the Malarkey Maneuver
In his recent interview with George Stephanopoulos — you know, that guy who worked as a top communications aide in the Clinton White House when President Biden was a senator — Biden rejected the notion that his rhetoric or policy shifts prompted the current surge of migrants heading toward the U.S.-Mexico border.
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“Former president Donald Trump’s son Eric, who runs the family’s private company, touted the potential of transforming their Doral golf resort into a gambling destination amid a quiet push among Florida Republicans to legalize casinos in areas of the state that have long opposed them,” the Washington Post reports.
“Although Republican legislative leaders have not yet submitted a bill, word of a proposal has spread widely enough that both supporters and opponents already are gearing up for a fight that they say could be more intense than in previous years due to Trump’s potential interest and his close relationship with Gov. Ron DeSantis (R).”
“The way many Republicans describe it, President Biden has thrown open the border between Mexico and the United States so that anyone who wants to come into the country can do so, illegally or legally,” the Washington Post reports.
“But many of those who live along the border in Texas say that while there has been a dramatic increase in the number of migrants caught crossing illegally, the border itself has been heavily restricted for nearly a year because of the coronavirus pandemic.”
California Gov. Gavin Newsom (D) “broke his silence on the California recall with a string of national television appearances this week, pinning the effort on President Donald Trump supporters, anti-immigrant forces and conspiracy-driven opportunists,” Politico reports.
“Heading into Wednesday’s signature deadline, Newsom is trying to frame California’s recall as an extension of the divisive 2020 presidential fight.”
Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis (R) flatly rejected Sen. Rick Scott’s (R-FL) “call for governors and mayors to return money from the $1.9 trillion coronavirus relief package, creating another fault line with his potential 2024 rival,” Politico reports.
Said DeSantis: “It doesn’t make any sense. If Florida were to send the money back, Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen is going to send it to Illinois, California, New York or New Jersey. I don’t think that would make sense for Floridians — for us to be giving even more money to the blue states that are already getting such a big windfall in this bill.”
CNN: A year into the pandemic, Florida is booming and DeSantis is taking credit.
“Democratic lawmakers and allies favoring a public option to compete with private insurers want the party to seize on its narrow congressional majorities to muscle through an idea that’s long been popular with the base,” Politico reports.
“They’re betting that after years of rising health costs and the GOP’s failed attempts to throw out Obamacare, voters in the tightly contested 2022 midterms would reward Democrats for tackling health care costs.”
“President Joe Biden promised on Wednesday morning that any individual earning more than $400,000 a year would see some type of tax increase under his forthcoming economic plan,” Bloomberg reports.
Said Biden: “Anybody making more than $400,000 will see a small to a significant tax increase. You make less than $400,000, you won’t see one single penny in additional federal tax.”
Sen. Raphael Warnock (D-GA) “will focus on voting rights in his maiden floor speech, making the case for a new federal law that could offset election restrictions proposed in Georgia and other states,” the Atlanta Journal Constitution reports.
“The broad outlines of America’s partisan divides are visible on any national map. Republicans typically dominate in most Southern and Plains states, and Democrats in Northeastern and West Coast ones. Democrats cluster in urban America, Republicans in more rural places,” the New York Times reports.
“But keep zooming in — say, to the level of individual addresses for 180 million registered voters — and this pattern keeps repeating itself: within metro areas, within counties and cities, even within parts of the same city.”
“Democrats and Republicans live apart from each other, down to the neighborhood, to a degree that raises provocative questions about how closely lifestyle preferences have become aligned with politics and how even neighbors may influence one another.”
“While many Texans last week were worried about sky-high electric bills from February’s winter storms, the state’s sole utility commissioner was privately reassuring out-of-state investors who profited from the crisis that he was working to keep their windfall safe,” the Texas Monthly reports.
The news came in a recording of a 48-minute call in which Texas Public Utility Commission chairman Arthur D’Andrea discussed the fallout from the February power crisis with investors.
The Houston Chronicle reports D’Andrea resigned last night after the audio was released.
Politico: “The overwhelming sentiment within the Republican Party is that voters will turn on the $1.9 trillion bill over time. But that wait-and-see approach has baffled some GOP luminaries and Trump World figures who fear the party did little to dent Biden’s major victory.”
Said former Trump strategist Steve Bannon: “The lack of response to this bill in an organized messaging and aggressive media push back is shown by the fact that Democrats have now gone from $2 trillion to a $4 trillion infrastructure package. If Covid relief was that easy, why not just run the table?”
Former Rep. Doug Ose (R-CA) plans to run against Gov. Gavin Newsom (D) in the event of a recall election, the Sacramento Bee reports.
Said Ose: “I’ve lived in this state all my life, and I’ve never seen it in such a state of disarray. We don’t know if our schools are open, we don’t know where to get a shot, we don’t know if our businesses are open, we don’t even know if we can go back to work.”
Bloomberg: “Trump’s net worth is down to $2.3 billion from $3 billion when he became president, according to the Bloomberg Billionaires Index. The pandemic he promised would disappear is walloping his company, and the riot that got him impeached for a second time is wounding his brand.”
“The Biden administration is restricting the information Border Patrol agents and sector chiefs can share with the media as a surge of migrants tests the agency’s capacity at the southern border,” NBC News reports.
“Border Patrol officials have been told to deny all media requests for ‘ride-alongs’ with agents along the southern border; local press officers are instructed to send all information queries, even from local media, to the press office in Washington for approval; and those responsible for cultivating data about the number of migrants in custody have been reminded not to share the information with anyone to prevent leaks.”
Jonathan Bernstein: “Forcing senators to give marathon orations to carry out a filibuster is a bad idea, but it looks like it may be a bad idea whose time has come, with President Joe Biden endorsing the ‘talking filibuster’ in an ABC News interview. Why? Because most Democrats want to eliminate the filibuster, and Senator Joe Manchin of West Virginia — the most moderate Democrat in the Senate — has said that while he absolutely won’t vote to eliminate the filibuster, he’s open to going the ‘talking’ route.”
“And so that’s what’s we’re going to talk about. Because what happens with Senate procedures over the next few months is going to determine whether Democrats pass a lot of their remaining agenda or very little of it.”
“White supremacist propaganda reached alarming levels across the U.S. in 2020,” the AP reports.
A new report found “5,125 cases of racist, anti-Semitic, anti-LGBTQ and other hateful messages spread through physical flyers, stickers, banners and posters… That’s nearly double the 2,724 instances reported in 2019.”
“Online propaganda is much harder to quantify, and it’s likely those cases reached into the millions.”
New York Times: “The incomplete border wall, already one of the costliest megaprojects in United States history, with an estimated eventual price tag of more than $15 billion, is igniting tensions again as critics urge Mr. Biden to tear down parts of the wall and Republican leaders call on him to finish it.”
“The Biden administration suspended construction on the border wall on Jan. 20, the president’s first day in office, announcing a 60-day period during which officials are determining how to proceed.”
Washington Post: “Twenty-one Republican state attorneys general on Tuesday threatened to take action against the Biden administration over its new $1.9 trillion coronavirus stimulus law, decrying it for imposing ‘unprecedented and unconstitutional’ limits on their states’ ability to lower taxes.”
“The attorneys general take issue with a $350 billion pot of money set aside under the stimulus, known as the American Rescue Plan, to help cash-strapped cities, counties and states pay for the costs of the pandemic. Congressional lawmakers opted to restrict states from tapping these federal dollars to finance local tax cuts.”
As the U.S. Senate considers legislation that would revamp America’s election laws, voters still overwhelmingly support laws requiring that voters show identification before casting a ballot.
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with Elizabeth Economy via Committee on Foreign Relations, United States Senate
Hoover Institution senior fellow Elizabeth Economy testifies before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee on “Advancing Effective U.S. Policy for Strategic Competition with China in the Twenty-First Century.” Economy’s testimony is here.
Prolific author and Pulitzer Prize–winning columnist George Will joins Hoover senior fellows Niall Ferguson, H. R. McMaster, and John Cochrane to discuss America’s drift away from the Founding Fathers’ intentions, the failure of its two-party system, the future of taxation and the US economy, challenges presented by a rising China—and his thoughts as he closes in on a landmark birthday (an early May celebration that will coincide with the release of Ferguson’s new book, Doom: The Politics of Catastrophe).
The Hoover Institution’s Working Group on the Middle East and the Islamic World held a discussion on Tuesday, March 16, 2021 from 8:30-9:30am PST with Ambassador Itamar Rabinovich, Professor Emeritus at Tel Aviv University and Dr Carmit Valensi, Research Fellow at the Institute for National Security Studies (INSS).
via Battlegrounds: International Perspectives On Crucial Challenges To Security
H.R. McMaster in conversation with Juan Manuel Santos, former President and Minister of National Defense (of Colombia), on Wednesday, March 17 at 9:00am PT.
On this day, the deadline for handing in signed petitions that could trigger a California gubernatorial recall election later this year, let’s not dwell on the implications of a potential referendum on Gavin Newsom’s future.
[Subscription required] Gov. Gavin Newsom is in trouble, and he knows it. The deadline to submit signatures on petitions for his recall is Wednesday and its proponents are poised to put his fate on the ballot later this year.
President Biden is apparently a graduate of the Rahm Emanuel school of public policy. As former President Barack Obama’s chief of staff, Emanuel famously said, “You never want a serious crisis to go to waste. … It is an opportunity to do things you think you could not do before.” With his flurry of executive actions and the passage of the $1.9 trillion American Rescue Plan, Biden has shown he learned that lesson well as his immediate COVID-19 relief plans lay the groundwork for a longer-term liberal push.
In his State of the State address this week, California Governor Gavin Newsom argued that the effort to recall him from office is a “partisan power grab.” But the reasons why Newsom is under fire have very little to do with partisanship at all.
Hoover Institution fellow Victor Davis Hanson talks about America’s open southern border, media legendizing, the left’s “Imaginarium,” Biden first national address, the international consequences of domestic unrest, and the gauging the likelihood of a Newsom recall in California.
Hoover Institution fellow Bjorn Lomborg argues that the left is using fear to push costly, radical climate policies.
The opinions expressed in this publication are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the opinions of the Hoover Institution or Stanford University.
Thank you for subscribing to the Hoover Daily Report.
This email was sent to: rickbulow1974@gmail.com
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71.) DAILY INTELLIGENCE BRIEF
Daily Intelligence Brief.
Good morning, it’s March 17, 2021. On this day in history, St. Patrick, patron saint of Ireland, died, according to legend (461 A.D.); Albert Einstein finished his scientific paper on the Quantum Theory of Light, one of the foundations of modern physics (1905); and the Bee Gees made their U.S. TV debut on “The Ed Sullivan Show” (1968).
TOP STORIES:
Secretary of State Pushes Back Against China’s Aggression
On Tuesday, March 16, 2021, Secretary of State Antony Blinken commented about the Biden’s administration’s primary concerns with China.
Blinken said, “We will push back, if necessary, when China uses coercion and aggression to get its way. China uses coercion and aggression to systematically erode autonomy in Hong Kong, undercut democracy in Taiwan, abusing human rights in Xinjiang and Tibet.”
In response, China’s Foreign Ministry Spokesperson Zhao Lijian shouldn’t “undermine a third party” or “peace and stability in the Pacific.”
Additionally, earlier this week, Lijian said, “I would like to reiterate that Hong Kong is China’s special administrative region, thus its electoral system is China’s local electoral system. How such a system is designed, developed and improved is totally China’s internal affair. During the 150-plus years of colonial rule by the UK, Hong Kong residents have always been suppressed by the British government, with no democracy or human rights to speak of. Why is it that the G7 members paid no attention to Hong Kong’s human rights and democracy back then?”
Another Rocket Attack on Base Housing U.S. Contractors in Iraq
On Monday, March 15, 2021, multiple rockets hit a base in Iraq, housing U.S. contractors.
According to Arab News, “Seven rockets targeted an Iraqi air base housing U.S. troops north of Baghdad on Monday, a security source said, the latest in a string of attacks Washington routinely blames on Iran-linked factions. The evening attack on Al-Balad did not cause any casualties or damage inside the base, the security official said.”
“The other five rockets crashed into a nearby village, he added, noting that all seven were fired from a separate village in the neighboring province of Diyala, east of the base.”
Russia and China Announce Partnership to Build Lunar Space Station.
In a signal of concern to the United States, Russia and China have agreed to a partnership to build a lunar space station on the moon.
CNBC reports, “This week Roscosmos, the Russian space agency, signed an agreement with the Chinese National Space Administration, to create an International Scientific Lunar Station “with open access to all interested nations and international partners. It was the most dramatic sign yet that Moscow sees its space future with China and not the United States, further underscoring its growing strategic alignment with Beijing.”
DAILY RUMOR:
Have New Dead Sea Scrolls Been Discovered for the First Time in 60 Years?
TRUE or FALSE: TRUE
Archaeologists in Israel have discovered new Dead Sea Scrolls for the first time in 60 years.
According to reports, the Dead Sea Scrolls have fragments of text from the books of Nahum and Zechariah. The text is in Greek with one passage reading, “These are the things you are to do: Speak the truth to one another, render true and perfect justice in your gates.”
The Dead Sea Scrolls are ancient manuscripts, which were discovered between 1947 and 1956. The Dead Sea Scrolls have provided more insights into Ancient Biblical and Hebrew history.
DAILY PERSPECTIVE ON COVID-19
Since the Outbreak Started
As of Tuesday, March 16, 2021, 22,340,389 people in the U.S. have recovered from coronavirus. Also, the U.S. reports 30,192,224 COVID-19 cases, with 549,367 deaths.
Daily Numbers
For Tuesday, March 16, 2021, the U.S. reports 52,650 cases, with 1,248 deaths.
WHAT THIS MEANS FOR US AS AMERICANS
The comments from Secretary of State Blinken indicate the Biden administration is concerned about China’s authoritarianism in Hong Kong, its desire to undermine Taiwan and its human rights abuses against Uyghur Muslims. Additionally, the Biden administration is now calling the CCP campaign against the Uyghur Muslims a “genocide.” The comments indicate a shift on the issue from the Biden administration. Blinken and Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin will address Uyghur Muslims’ brutal treatment with Chinese officials during their meetings this week in Alaska.
According to Admiral Phil Davidson, Commander of Indo-Pacific Command, China has a million people pushing propaganda for the state. As a result, Americans can anticipate the first meeting between Chinese and American officials resulting in massive propaganda on social media. The disinformation from the CCP could come in information campaigns designed to paint the United States in a hostile and combative light. Also, the disinformation could come from fake social media accounts that don’t have any identifying information, linking them back to the CCP. Creating bots makes it easier for the Chinese Communist Party to spread false narratives online.
The rocket attack on Al-Balad in Iraq shows how Iranian-backed militias are continuing their aggression in the region. Also, Al-Balad houses U.S. contractors from Sallyport Global, a worldwide security and stability operations company. The last time rocket attacks killed a U.S. contractor was on March 3, 2021. As a result, the Biden administration launched airstrikes against an Iranian-backed target in Syria. Any further casualties on the U.S. side in Iraq would likely return a similar response.
The news of China and Russia building a space station together shows Moscow is backing away with cooperation in space with the United States. Americans should anticipate China and Russia continuing to create new partnerships that undermine U.S. strategic interests and U.S. national security.
The Daily Intelligence Brief, The DIB as we call it, is curated by a hard working team with a diverse background of experience including government intelligence, investigative journalism, high-risk missionary work and marketing.
This team has more than 68 years of combined experience in the intelligence community, 35 years of combined experience in combat and high-risk areas, and have visited more than 65 countries. We have more than 22 years of investigative reporting and marketing experience. Daily, we scour and verify more than 600 social media sites using more than 200 analytic tools in the process. Leveraging the tools and methods available to us, we uncover facts and provide analysis that would take an average person years of networking and research to uncover. We are doing it for you every 24 hours.
From All Things Possible, the Victor Marx Group and Echo Analytics Group, we aim to provide you with a daily intelligence brief collected from trusted sources and analysts.
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Welcome to the FEE Daily, your go-to newsletter for free-market news and analysis, authored by FEE.org Opinion Editor Brad Polumbo. If you’re reading this online, click here to make sure you’re subscribed to the email list.
Spending Blowout and Money-Printing Binge Prompting Inflation Worries
The federal government has now spent an astounding $6 trillion, nearly $42,000 per federal taxpayer, on ‘COVID’ relief. So, it’s hardly shocking that top financial investors are increasingly worried about inflation.
A new Bank of America survey shows that investors’ top concern is no longer COVID-19, but they now see the prospect of coming inflation as the biggest risk to the economy.
“Both inflation (37% of respondents) and the risk of a market taper tantrum [a panic driven by a tapering of the amount of money being injected into the economy] (35%) beat out the pandemic as the top risk for investors,” Axiosreports. “COVID-19 and the vaccine rollout dropped from being seen as the biggest risk by nearly 30% of respondents in February to less than 15% in March.”
Democrats Renew Push for Socialized Healthcare
While it’s unlikely that Congress will actually pass “Medicare-for-All” any time soon, Democrats in Washington are doubling down on the socialized healthcare proposal as an integral part of their agenda.
“House Democrats on Wednesday will renew their effort to enact Medicare-for-all, arguing the year-long pandemic was a ‘wake-up call’ to replace the nation’s fragmented health insurance system — and betting they can pressure President Biden to embrace a government-run program that he famously rejected,” the Washington Postreports.
The latest “Medicare for All” bill is being introduced by Rep. Pramila Jayapal, and she has 109 co-sponsors among fellow House Democrats.
Big News: FEE Testifying Before Senate Small Business Committee on Lockdown Consequences
Today, I will testify before the Senate’s Small Business Committee to discuss the work FEE has done documenting the unintended social and economic consequences of pandemic lockdowns.
Here’s an excerpt from my opening statement: “From mental health to drug overdoses to domestic violence, the immeasurable economic and social damage lockdowns have wrought cannot be made whole by any amount of welfare, stimulus payments, or business grants.”
You can read the whole thing here and stream the hearing live at 2:30pm EDT by clicking here.
Data of the Day: Retail sales fell 3% in February, the Wall Street Journal reports.
P.S. I have a new podcast out today interviewing Manhattan Institute economist Brian Riedl on how the COVID spending blowout is spiralling us toward a fiscal crisis. Listen on Apple Podcasts or Spotify or watch us on YouTube.
You don’t always have time to read a full in-depth article. Thankfully, FEE Fellow Patrick Carroll is here to give you the key takeaways from one highlighted article each day.
Florida Governor Ron DeSantis got a lot of criticism back in July about his decision to loosen lockdown restrictions in his state. Scientists and journalists were adamant that his policies would lead to soaring fatalities and that he should reverse his decision before it was too late.
But now, over 6 months later, the data are in, and Florida’s COVID fatalities are actually on par with or better than those of many lockdown states.
Indeed, as Jon Miltimore reports in his latest article on FEE.org, Florida’s current case rate is comparable to California’s, even though California pursued drastically higher restriction levels. Of course, the mainstream reporting on this comparison shies away from concluding that the lockdowns were ineffective, but it’s hard to interpret these data any other way.
But why not be extra cautious, some may say. If the lockdowns help at all, shouldn’t they be imposed in order to save lives?
The problem with this line of thinking is that it ignores the drastic unintended consequences of these measures, such as deteriorating mental health, rising drug overdose deaths, and higher rates of domestic abuse. These are very real costs borne by very real people, and they need to be weighed against the supposed benefits of placing everyone under what is essentially a form of house arrest.
Governor DeSantis understood these costs, which is why he refused to impose the kind of harsh lockdowns that other states have pursued. And fortunately, many other states are beginning to ease their restrictions as well.
It’s a welcome sign of federalism in a time when decentralized decision making is needed more than ever.
FEE Testifies Before the Senate: The Life-Threatening Unintended Consequences of Pandemic Lockdowns
by Brad Polumbo
On Wednesday, March 17, 2021, Foundation for Economic Education Opinion Editor Brad Polumbo will testify before the Senate Small Business and Entrepreneurship Committee. Before Chairman Ben Cardin, Ranking Member Rand Paul, and their fellow senators on the committee, Polumbo will discuss the work FEE has done to catalog the dire economic and social consequences pandemic lockdowns have imposed on the public.
A Government Guide to Keeping Insulin Unaffordable: 3 Easy Steps to Hogtie a Market
by Laura Williams
Through a nebulous network of bully tactics and insider dealings, government agencies and corporate campaign donors conspire to deny patients the benefits of market competition.
NEW OUT OF FRAME: Even Marvel Needs to be [CENSORED]
YouTube has been rather restrictive on our latest videos, so in acquiescence of our gracious protectors, we’re coming to you with a clean, shiny, family-friendly video on an underrated movie, “Avengers: Age of Ultron.”
Marvel Universe films that came before “Avengers: Age of Ultron” were fun and action-packed, but they lacked deep and serious themes that started with this film—and that’s what makes it so special.
In this episode of Out of Frame, we’ll discuss 5 integral themes brought up in “Avengers: Age of Ultron” and explore their timeless significance that any individual, institution, or government would do well to learn from.
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Almost one year ago, former President Trump declared a national emergency and the White House announced a 15-day plan to slow the spread of the coronavirus. Governments around the world either preceded the U.S. or soon followed with similar pronouncements. The upsurge in totalitarianism since these edicts were installed is mind-boggling.
After a coup in the South American country of Bolivia in November 2019, democratically elected president Evo Morales was forced to flee. Foreign Office documents obtained by Declassified show Britain saw the new military-backed regime, which killed 18 protesters, as an opportunity to open up Bolivia’s lithium deposits to UK firms.
After law-enforcement authorities in Sicily and Piedmont seized batches of the AstraZeneca COVID jab, prosecutors in the EU’s third-largest economy have launched a manslaughter investigation after a music teacher died just hours after receiving the jab.
With his entire archive retracted by the Southern Poverty Law Center and a growing record of disgrace, Alexander Reid Ross now collaborates with ex-CIA agents, cops, DHS officials, and a GOP congressman turned “Bigfoot scholar,” with funding from a Koch brother.
In a desperate attempt to avoid questioning about the worsening humanitarian crisis at the Southern border, White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki claimed that it is President Trump’s fault that thousands of children are sleeping on concrete floored cages without seeing the Sun for days.
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I’ve never seen the theatrical cut of Justice League, the 2017 film that united all of DC’s heroes against a greater foe. I was aware of some of what happened behind-the-scenes in that Snyder (Man of Steel, Batman V Superman) shot much of the film but left it after his daughter died by suicide; Joss Whedon took over directing duties. While I’ve watched nearly every DCEU movie to that point and liked some of Snyder’s non-DC offerings, I wasn’t going to spend money on a movie that looked bad even from the marketing trying to convince me to watch it. (And that was before low-quality snaps of Henry Cavill’s poorly CGI’d-off mustache leaked.)
There’s a level of exhaustion attached to it even amid Snyder fans who, after all this time, will finally get what they wanted. It’s a four-hour movie (and anyone who willingly watches the LOTR extended trilogy has sat through one of those), but it’s also a movie that heavily leans into the Dark Knight-esque grittiness that recent DC offerings like Shazam!, Aquaman, and Birds of Prey have distanced themselves from. But, even amid the toxicity from some Snyder fans—a narrative which Snyder has pushed back against in recent weeks—it’s a rare second chance for a director to finally get his vision off the ground.
My colleague Gavia Baker-Whitelaw explained in her review of Zack Snyder’s Justice League, “in some respects, the Snyder Cut is a clear improvement. But it’s also laden down with padding and exposition.” But what the Snyder Cut also does, she says, is give Ray Fisher’s Victor Stone an actual character arc, which was largely cut from the theatrical version that Whedon completed. (Fisher has since accused Whedon of abusive behaviorand said that several Warner Bros. execs had “racially discriminatory conversations”; WarnerMedia has denied Fisher’s accusations.)
As I write this newsletter, I have yet to watch Zack Snyder’s Justice League; Monday’s virtual premiere that I was set to attend was delayed for several hours after a Microsoft Teams outage. Still, I am curious about what awaits me, especially given that I only have vague ideas and pop culture osmosis of what went wrong the first time around.
Celebrate The Ridge’s Kickstarter Birthday with 15% off all Wallets
It’s hard to believe that RFID (radio frequency identification) blocking wallets were a hard thing to find eight years ago. But The Ridge changed that when it launched its Kickstarter at that time, successfully crowdfunding an innovative product to protect its users from digital theft. To celebrate its Kickstarter milestone, The Ridge is paying it forward… literally.
The Oscars’ diversity campaign bears fruit with 2021 nominations
After years of internal struggle and external pressure, the Academy Awards is truly beginning to recognize a more diverse field of creators. The 2021 nominees include groundbreaking recognition for Nomadland‘s Chloé Zhao (the first woman of color to receive a best director nod), along with more actors of color than ever before. This is also the first time two women directors have been nominated at once: Zhao and Promising Young Woman‘s Emerald Fennell.
Earning critical acclaim throughout 2020, Minari is a low-budget drama about a Korean-American family who start a farm in rural Arkansas. Steven Yeun stars in the lead role, earning a best actor nomination alongside his co-star Youn Yuh-jung (best supporting actress). The film also earned nominations for best picture, director, and original screenplay (Lee Isaac Chung). During the Golden Globes, Minari was the subject of controversy due to its nomination in the foreign-language category, despite being an American film—an implicitly racist choice by the Globes organizers.
Why the Academy—and studios—still have work to do
Due to the pandemic, a significant number of nominees were streaming releases. But Netflix, with its deep pockets and high-profile titles, definitely won out. Its main Oscar bids were Mank, The Trial of the Chicago 7, Hillbilly Elegy (which earned bad reviews), and Da 5 Bloods. Mank and Chicago 7 are now the clear front-runners, raising questions about which films Netflix chose to prioritize for Oscar campaigns. Early in the awards season, Delroy Lindo (Da 5 Bloods) was seen as a shoo-in for an acting nomination. But as the public campaigns heated up, Mank and The Trial of the Chicago 7 seemingly took priority.Da 5 Bloods only received one nomination (best original score), with no recognition for Lindo or Spike Lee—the most prominent Black director in this year’s Oscar race. Regina King (One Night in Miami…) and Shaka King (Judas and the Black Messiah) also missed out in the director category.
‘WandaVision’ behind-the-scenes special unveils the magic of making Marvel’s magical hit
The 57-minute special, which can be found under the first episode of Marvel Studios ASSEMBLED on Disney+, is a fascinating and in-depth exploration of how a show as weird and ambitious as WandaVision came into being. We learn:
Blue Vision: The visual effects and makeup teams had to get creative when filming Paul Bettany as the synthezoid iteration of Vision for the first two black-and-white episodes, so they leaned on an old trick to suggest the color red in B&W by filming Bettany in blue.
Episode 1 went as authentically ’50s as possible: The sets included colors that viewers wouldn’t see but would pop when filmed in black-and-white. The camera lenses and lighting were ’50s-accurate. The show even relied on old-school effects to create Wanda Maximoff’s magic.
The WandaVision theme songs include hidden motifs: We can all agree that “Agatha All Along” is a banger, but there’s a certain magic to the other theme songs created by songwriters Bobby Lopez and Kristen Anderson-Lopez, each of which tie musically together.
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78.) NATURAL NEWS
79.) POLITICHICKS
80.) ONE NEWS NOW
81.) THE WESTERN JOURNAL
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Breaking News Alert
This is a breaking news alert which we send infrequently to update you on emerging breaking stories.
Lawmakers should remember that unintended consequences are a byproduct of nearly every action, and the bigger the action, the bigger the consequences. Read more…
Kotto was known for his roles in both film and television and played villain Dr. Kananga, also known as Mr. Big, in the James Bond film ‘Live and Let Die.’ Read more…
‘If 74,000,000 people do nothing, the Democrats will keep printing money until they run out of ink and the ability to raise taxes to pay it all back.’ Read more…
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82.) AMERICAN CONSEQUENCES
Governor Cuomo Has Got to Go… But Will He?
By Buck Sexton
It’s hard to think of a faster fall from grace for such a widely celebrated politician.
Last summer, Governor Andrew Cuomo was polling just behind Barack Obama as the second most trustworthy Democrat in America. For the Left, that’s like being a Catholic who’s compared with the Pope. Cuomo crossed over into being a celebrity. He got an Emmy for his daily COVID-19 briefings and a publisher paid him more than a million dollars for his pandemic “leadership” book.
It even got weird… The governor’s superfans coined the term “Cuomosexual” and corporate media referred to him as the “Love Gov.” Chatter was tossed around green rooms that Cuomo might even throw his hat in the ring of the 2020 Democrat presidential primary at the very last minute. He became the anti-Trump… a guy who was showing the country how to beat the pandemic while also preparing to beat the sitting president.
Now, the Governor of New York will be lucky if he makes it through the month with his job.
Cuomo is under siege, surrounded on all sides, and the forces demanding his ouster are closing in… The many political enemies he made over the years are sensing weakness, and they’re pouncing.
It’s been an astonishing turnabout for a man who not long ago was doing victory laps on his brother’s CNN show, making jokes about oversized Q-tips and who their mom liked more growing up.
The list of Democrats who have publicly called for Cuomo to resign keeps growing. Senator Chuck Schumer – the most powerful national level politician in New York State – wants him out. So does a majority of New York State’s congressional delegation, including Congresswoman Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez. Ditto for Senator Kirsten Gillibrand, whom we all remember was the one who pushed then Senator Al Franken off the proverbial cliff for sexual misconduct allegations.
If you don’t have an exit plan for stocks, think about what a 50% hit to your portfolio would mean… Would you have to delay retirement by 10 years? Downsize your home? Tell your grandkids you can’t pay for their college? Dr. Sjuggerud says that could be the case for most people who don’t take this ONE simple step today…
Meanwhile, the number of named sexual harassment accusers against Cuomo keeps growing. Currently six women have come forward, all telling similar-sounding stories of a governor who liked to harass women and leverage his power for sexual access. There have even been some shared lurid details (Cuomo’s obsession with his hand size) that add to the creepiness factor. And there could also be more allegations still coming…
In response to all this, Cuomo remains defiant. He says he won’t bow to “cancel culture,” which is an absurd defense. This is not about a beloved children’s book that fails to meet the standards of wokeness or the handsy antics of a French cartoon skunk. These are credible allegations from numerous women who are alleging behavior that, while not necessarily criminal in conduct, definitely crosses the line into inappropriate.
And this isn’t even the worst part… The corporate media and the Democrat Party are fixated on the “Me Too” allegations against Cuomo. But the gravest offense that Cuomo committed while governor has nothing to do sexual harassment… It’s the New York nursing-home catastrophe. His directive may well have resulted in hundreds of deaths.
An executive order he signed on March 25, 2020 forced senior housing facilities to take back COVID-19 positive patients. Cuomo put thousands of geriatric New Yorkers in mortal peril. His order was autocratic, reckless, and unthinkably stupid. How hard could it be to know that sending seniors with COVID into nursing homes full of other seniors would pose an unthinkably high risk of lethal transmission?
To make matters worse, as I wrote about last month in American Consequences, there’s ample evidence that Cuomo and his goon squad of gubernatorial aides intentionally under-reported the actual death toll in the nursing homes by 50%. (More than 15,000 people have died in New York state’s nursing homes and long-term care facilities from COVID-19, but the state reported only 8,500 deaths.) That’s not an honest math error… It’s fraud. His senior aide is on tape confessing they hid the number for political reasons. And now there’s a federal investigation underway.
Cuomo simply shouldn’t be in charge of the fourth largest state in America. But he absolutely refuses to go. He is one of those politicians who lives for the office he holds. Cuomo defines himself by power, and cannot imagine his future without it.
The great bully of Albany is going to use every trick in the book – all the coercion, manipulation, favor trading, threats, and scheming – that he has learned during a lifetime of state politics. He knows stepping down would be the end of his career as well as his legacy, so that’s not going to happen. They will have to impeach and remove him, and it’s going to be like pulling a honey badger out of its den.
So will that happen? It’s all going to come down to whether Democrats on the New York legislature decide that the wrath of the Empire State’s tyrant is less threatening than the implosion of whatever credibility Democrats have when it comes to the “believe women” narrative.
The odds are moving against Cuomo… But never count out a New York guy who fights dirty and has nothing left to lose.
A major shock is coming to the U.S. financial system. Months of stock gains could go up in smoke. But there’s an easy way to make sure your money and prospective gains are LEGALLY PROTECTED. The last time something similar happened you could have seen 772% gains. A real reader explains how he does it, in plain English, right here.
Thank you for standing up for no fake news and simply reporting what’s going on. In this day and age, it’s so important to report the facts instead of being silent or reporting with rose-colored glasses on! Thank you and keep up the good work! – Chris K.
Jason Rantz Response: Thanks, Chris. It’s baffling that some outlets or personalities continue to pretend Antifa doesn’t exist. Just this week on The View, Joy Behar said Antifa is imaginary. Antifa make it very easy to label them… They wave a flag, they wear black-bloc uniforms, they literally chant “ANTIFA,” and when you look up activists on Twitter, they self-identify as Antifa or anti-fascist. This doesn’t take deep-dive detective work to figure out.
Your article was as usual, fact free on proof that Antifa was involved in any of the demonstrations mentioned. And you ignore that on the other hand Quanon followers are happy to regale all with the source of their delusions. And further, the demonstrators you mention are concerned with real life events, not Jewish lasers from outer space, and pedos in the basements of pizza parlors that don’t have basements. – Jan S.
Jason Rantz Response: This is classic gaslighting… If Jan doesn’t think Antifa exists, then Jan shouldn’t think QAnon exists. But Jan picks and chooses what to acknowledge by filtering it through an ideological lens. So let’s be clear, Antifa exists, just like believers in QAnon conspiracies exist. And political violence of all kinds – coming from the Left, Right, or Center – is wrong and should be punished.
Buck Sexton
Executive Editor, American Consequences
With Editorial Staff
March 17, 2021
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83.) SEAN HANNITY
March 17, 2021
Latest News
ABUSE EXPOSED: Whistleblowers Shine a Light on Abuse, CoVID Chaos at Group Homes for the Disabled in NY
A pair of courageous women are leading the charge in highlighting the often unre […]
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J.D. Vance has flirted with the idea of running for office before but with an open Senate in his state of Ohio things are looking a bit more serious for the author of Hillbilly Elegy. A Super PAC set up to support him received a $10 million donation for tech billionaire Peter Theil and additional support from Republican donors in the Mercer family.
Will NY Governor Andrew Cuomo be able to survive multiple allegations of harassment and one of assault? If he does, he’ll be far from the first. President Joe Biden says if the results of the state Attorney General’s investigation shows Cuomo did do what’s alleged he should resign and possibly face prosecution.
We’ve previously covered the problems state’s are facing in congressional and state legislative reapportionment due to delays in the Census Bureau’s release of data. Alabama is now the second state, along with Ohio, suing to force the release of the numbers sooner than the federal government says they will.
There’s a new study out examining the impact of increased no-excuse absentee voting on turnout in the 2020 general election. Shortest of short answers….not much. Somewhat longer answer…”the results suggest that no-excuse absentee voting mobilized relatively few voters and had at most a muted partisan effect despite the historic pandemic. Voter interest appears to be far more important in driving turnout.”
One concern many voting rights advocates had about the increase in absentee voting last year was an expected increase in the number of rejected ballots. Mail-in ballots are generally rejected at higher rates than other types because they often have multiple procedural steps to ensure security, which leads to mistakes by voters. That didn’t materialize last year, even with increased numbers of absentee ballots because of voter educational efforts.
Virginia is one of two states along with New Jersey to hold state legislative elections this year. Of the one hundred members in Virginia’s lower House of Delegates, 16 are facing primary challengers in June. 13 are Democrats and that’s a record.
With it looking increasingly likely that California Governor Gavin Newsom will face a recall election this year, polls are showing most voters oppose ousting him from office. The most concerning numbers for the Democratic incumbent however are support for retaining him is below 50% and 58% of respondents say that if he does survive the recall this year, it’s time for someone new in 2022 when he’s up for reelection.
Democratic Congresswoman Ann Kirkpatrick (AZ-2) announced she’ll retire after this term. Preliminary census data indicates that the state is likely to pick up another seat in the House of Representatives so without knowing what the districts will look like, it’s impossible to predict how the race to replace her rates.
An Introduction to the 2021 Israeli Election (Part 2): Polar Factionalism
By Ben Lefkowitz
Political, ideological, and social polarization emerges most often in electoral systems with elements of electoral majoritarianism, but in the right conditions polarization can emerge just as easily in proportional systems. The consolidation of voters into a few political parties (e.g. First-Past-the-Post systems like the United States or the United Kingdom), or a few electoral alliances (e.g. Two-Round runoff systems as in France, Poland, or much of Latin America) draws clear and exploitable lines between political camps. The societal animosity which foments polarization rarely emerges in proportional systems because parliamentary cooperation is needed for the system to function. Otherwise stable, proportional systems require unresolved, multi-generational conflicts concerning the personal identity of the voters, their democracy, and even the national identity to polarize into a multitude of inflexible camps.
This is the reality of Israeli politics. The preceding article in our three-part series on the Israeli Election examined the fragmentation of individual voter identities, how this fragments the political system into a multitude of camps, and how Likud’s camp remains the largest. Today’s article examines those groupings and why they prefer confrontation rather than compromise.
The Political Poles
The irony of Israel’s political polarization is that the multiparty system perpetuates division rather than unity, a reversal of the normal structural dynamic. Israel briefly held direct elections for the office of Prime Minister during the 1990s, the result of a failed attempt to stabilize the parliamentary system. Despite sharp voter divisions only one of the three direct elections was a narrow contest. Factionalism keeps the Israeli electorate divided because there are factionalized parties. Unified tickets force factions to compromise and side with the ticket closest to their values before the election, and the factions did not always divide perfectly 50-50.
New Israeli political parties emerge and older ones vanish each election. The poles they and their supporters orbit rarely change. Multiple parties align themselves with the same pole, and voters aligned with that pole move between aligned parties easily. Larger tickets, including Likud, are coalitions of factions which may gravitate around different poles despite the perception of electoral unity. These groupings are not absolute – an individual voter whose demographics align with a faction around one pole might be committed to another faction for other ideological reasons.
The Secularizers
Jewish Israeli secularism is not agnosticism or atheism. A secular Israeli Jew often will celebrate Jewish holidays and participate in cultural norms – the affixation of mezuzah for example. Judaism is only a single facet of a secular Jewish Israelis identity. Secularizers oppose policies originating from the Israeli Rabbinate, the Haredi community, or religious-minded politicians. The Secularizers perceive these policies as limits on personal freedom and as favoring the Jewish identity over any other. The state should not favor any particular definition of Judaism (e.g. Orthodoxy) and treat all equally. These views open the Secularizers’ tent to minority religious groups.
Blue & White 2020 Election Vote Map. Blue & White did not entirely control the Secularist vote, nor did solely draw from that pole. As the largest it does show the concentration of Secularist voters in the Tel-Aviv Metro, Haifa, and other North coast cities.
Tel-Aviv, Haifa, and their suburbs along the north coast contain the majority of secularized voters. The cooperative agricultural communities known as kibbutzim are additional strongholds, but these small settlements contain few voters. Secularizers are more likely to be Israeli natives and their multigenerational Israeli families unintentionally facilitates access to education and employment. This election, the Secularizers align with either Yesh Atid, Blue & White, Labor, Meretz (Greens), or Likud depending on factionalized identities.
The Haredim
Those subscribing to this traditionalist (Ultra-Orthodox in the United States) version of Judaism live separately from mainstream society. Identity comes from the Haredi community and devotion to its ideals. The Haredim have a lower employment rate and a higher birth rate when compared to other Israeli Jews. Most Haredi youth study in yeshiva (Jewish religious schools) which historically exempts the community from Israel’s military draft laws. Haredi communities’ prioritize the freedom to live according to Rabbinic customs. Laws designed to “integrate” the Haredim, such as ending their military exemptions, are viewed as attacks upon the community’s liberty. Haredi politicians work to change laws to better accept their traditional religious views into Israeli society.
Haredi Parties 2020 Election Vote Map. The Haredim live in their own communities, leading to a few areas of extreme concentration and none elsewhere. The two largest communities are the Religiously important Jerusalem and the Haredi’s Tel-Aviv suburb of Bnei Brak.
Some of the Haredi neighborhoods hold traditional religious significance, like those in Jerusalem, but others were built to accommodate their different lifestyles. Markets and services in Haredi communities are tailored to their needs, attracting more Haredi families and pushing away others. This leads to self-segregation in Haredi settlement patterns. A small number of Haredim vote Likud, but nearly all Ashkenazi Haredi communities vote for the parties under the United Torah Judaism alliance, and nearly all Mizrahi and Sephardic Haredim vote for Shas.
The Pragmatic
Pragmatic or traditional Jews are politically between the Haredim and the Secularizers and reject both groups. Traditionalist factions observe more Jewish customs and value their Jewish identity more so than the Secularizers. Yet they are too integrated within the modern state to consider leaving it for Haredi society. Sephardic and post-Soviet Jewish groups are the pole’s main constituencies. Individuals support secularist reforms but prefer that reforms are made within the existing Rabbinate-State relationship. The group’s key feature is its commitment to the continuity of the current system, as disruption could end the comparative prosperity this group now enjoys when compared to its ancestors.
Likud dominates the traditional pragmatic pole, even though it isn’t the sole party in orbit. Likud still wins a large number of votes from the Secularist cities, but it is mainly their suburbs, the more recently developed southern cities, and periphery towns which give the party their votes.
This is Likud’s base but it is not theirs exclusively. Larger opposition parties like Blue & White, between 2019 and 2020, campaign for this same voter pool and Yisrael Beiteinu competes solely for the Russian-Jewish vote. This election cycle former Likudite Gideon Sa’ar is challenging Prime Minister Netanyahu for primacy via his New Hope party. Urban areas like Ashdod—areas developed recently when compared to the north coast and ancient cities—are strongholds of pragmatic traditionalists, along with surrounding suburban developments and periphery villages.
The National Religious
National Religious Jews are not all doctrinaires, even though their political parties align themselves with conservatism. The belief that Israel should be a Jewish State for the Jewish people unites many factions for political cooperation. The National Religious believe in the equality of opportunity for all Israeli citizens. This means ending Haredi privileges and ending restrictions on settlement into land perceived to be Israeli in the West Bank. Socially conservative beliefs (like homophobia) are brought into the movement by the factions that follow religious traditionalism. On the fringes of the National Religious movement is the radical Jewish supremacist Kahanist group.
National Religious 2020 Election Vote Map. The national religious parties win the majority of the votes from the West Bank settlements. The explicitly Religious Nationalist Parties are small, so the settlements votes carry more weight when compared to the suburbs to their east.
National Religious parties perform extremely well among voters residing within the West Bank settlements. This is because of the movement’s views on protecting and expanding West Bank developments and because National Religious factions claim a birthright and desire to reside in these settlements. Outside of the settlements, the National Religious parties find support among suburban and the more financially well-off migrant communities. Likud historically receives a large portion of the National Religious vote, with fewer votes going to explicitly National Religious parties. This election there are two such lists which contain smaller factionalized parties: Yamina and the Religious Zionists.
The Arabs
Not all Arab citizens of Israel vote for explicitly Arab political parties. Many believe their vote is better used by abstaining from the electoral process. Other factions and subgroups find their interests better served by one of the secularist parties or Likud. Typically, the economically struggling and usually Muslim part of the Arab community votes as a block. Arab factions and different geographic communities vary in their experiences and in their understanding of their position within the Israeli State. Each Arab community perceives and experiences a varying degree of inequality, and the explicitly Arab parties are the only ones committed to correcting these social and economic hardships. Divisions allow multiple parties to run candidates and each offer a different answer to the identity question.
Arab Joint List 2020 Election Vote Map. The explicitly Arab parties win the votes in explicitly Arab communities. These are mainly in the north or along the West bank border, but there are Bedouin towns in the south.
Most Arab votes are in the Israeli North. These are the financially struggling cities and towns that have historically been and remain uniformly Arab. Other strongholds include larger cities with Arab neighborhoods, like Haifa and the Jaffa section of Tel-Aviv, and the Bedouin towns in the Negev. In recent years, the four main Arab Parties have run under a Joint Arab List to maximize representation. This year, the Islamist Ra’am party split from the Joint List and now campaigns separately from the Joint List’s Hadash, Ta’al, and Balad parties.
Polarization
Every electoral pole is best understood by its view of the Israeli State. No pole is satisfied with the status quo and each believes that they can improve it to enhance individual liberty, equality, or opportunity. Every pole’s ideal future is incompatible with the other factions’ ideal futures. The lack of common ground on this question of identity polarizes constituent members. The polar alignment and the unequal distribution of Israeli parliamentary power make it easy for Likud and hard for the opposition to construct a government.
This cycle, Netanyahu’s ideal government is Likud plus the Haredim plus the National Religious, the same coalition as in years past. The opposition’s ideal government is a combination of the Secularizers, the non-Likud pragmatists, and the non-extremist factions of the National Religious, an alignment with few similarities besides the general idea of reform. An adept political leader knows how to balance polar factions to satisfy allies yet leave them desiring more. Even a like minded coalition though cannot be guaranteed to last long though because it is always easier to argue than agree.
Ben Lefkowitz (@OryxMaps) is a Contributor to Decision Desk HQ.