Good morning! Here is your news briefing for Monday March 22, 2021
1.) THE DAILY SIGNAL
March 22 2021
Good morning from Washington, where a big bill to repair the nation’s infrastructure looks like it’s next on the majority’s agenda. David Ditch expects the worst. The minority party needs to get its act together to improve health care, Rep. Jim Banks writes. On the podcast, Rob Bluey asks climate change skeptic Marc Morano about his new warning to Americans about the Green New Deal. Plus: new COVID-19 guidance for schools; more election shenanigans in Wisconsin; an undemocratic school board in Maryland; and the growing attack on merit. On this date in 1947, in response to public fears and congressional probes of communism, President Harry Truman, a Democrat, orders a sweeping loyalty investigation of federal employees.
The language chosen by House Speaker Nancy Pelosi—coupled with comments from other prominent Democrats—suggests the call for bipartisanship should be taken with a grain of salt.
Worried that “thousands” of votes ran the risk of not being counted, a Wisconsin Democratic operative fired off an email to Green Bay officials a day before the presidential election.
Republicans must learn from our blunders over the past decade so that when we’re granted an opportunity to govern again, we don’t repeat those mistakes.
“The Green New Deal is about a takeover of our economy using a climate scare to achieve their ends, and the architects … are very open about that,” author Marc Morano says.
Bureaucrats who work for this school board control who can be nominated as student member and how that person can campaign—a clear and irreconcilable conflict of interest.
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2.) THE EPOCH TIMES
3.) DAYBREAK
Your First Look at Today’s Top Stories – Daybreak Insider
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Border Patrol Agents Releasing Illegal Immigrants Without Court Date
From the story: The use of prosecutorial discretion by border patrol to release migrants without a notice to appear in court is unprecedented, according to multiple sources, and is yet another sign of how overwhelmed parts of the border are becoming (Axios). Things are so chaotic, there’s talk of flying migrants to the northern border for processing (Washington Times). From Axios’ Jonathan Swan: The maximum amount of time a child is legally supposed to be held in border patrol custody is 72 hours. But as of Saturday, 3,314 unaccompanied children had been in custody longer, with 2,226 for more than five days and 823 for more than 10 days (Axios). From Senator Tom Cotton: The Biden administration keeps saying that Trump somehow dismantled the immigration system. That’s false. It was the Biden admin that dismantled three highly effective policies (PJ Media). From Congressman Michael McCaul: “I was chairman of Homeland Security, and as a federal prosecutor down here — it’s going to get worse. It’s going to get a lot worse. Springtime, summer, more and more come over” (ABC News).
2.
High School Student Sues School Over Teaching that He is “Privileged”
He’s bi-racial and objects to the radical agenda adopted by his school.
President Biden Posts “Mask Up,” Includes Picture of Him and Harris with Masks On
Even though both have been vaccinated (Twitter). From Byron York: They’ve both been vaccinated. From CDC policy, updated March 8: ‘Fully vaccinated people can visit with other fully vaccinated people indoors without wearing masks or physical distancing‘ (Twitter).
5.
Professor Defames Shrier in Sick Blog Post
Jules Gill-Peterson, a trans professor at the University of Pittsburgh, claims Abigail Shrier, seen above testifying before a U.S. Senate committee, is a white supremacist who fantasizes “about sexual harm to children.”
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6400 N. Belt Line Rd., Suite 200, Irving, TX 75063
With the state government firmly in Republican control since the last century, Florida policymakers have been extremely friendly to free-market principles.
At the same time, local governments decry the trend of state lawmakers passing so-called preemption bills, which the locals believe step on cherished home-rule principles of local democracy.
That’s why it’s particularly shocking that some local governments in the Panhandle are sticking it to local builders — and, ultimately, to the homeowners, these governments are supposed to serve.
Sometimes, preemption by Tallahassee is warranted and necessary.
In 2017, lawmakers recognized that the locals still weren‘t able to keep up with the demand, so they incentivized the use of private providers by requiring governments to reduce permit fees when builders and homeowners used private inspectors instead of public employees.
The reasoning was simple: The backlog was costing builders and homeowners time and money, and if government resources aren’t being spent to do the inspections, builders shouldn’t have to pay as much for the permitting process. It wasn’t just a suggestion — the Legislature made the fee reduction mandatory.
But that hasn’t seemed to matter to some local governments in the Panhandle, which have refused to lower the permit fees the way the law requires.
Government officials there are thumbing their nose at the Legislature and flipping off the clear language of the statute and the small mom-and-pop businesses working hard to rebuild these communities.
Is it any wonder elected officials seem to grow increasingly comfortable stepping on local authority?
If local government officials want the Legislature to stop intruding on their home rule powers — and they most certainly do — then they’d all better stop acting like outlaws who can pick and choose which legal mandates to abide by and which to ignore flagrantly.
___
Floridians 50-and-up now eligible for vaccine — On Monday, the state will begin allowing all Floridians who are 50 years old or older to get COVID-19 vaccines. The Governor announced the updated eligibility guidelines on Friday, just one week after the state lowered the minimum age from 65 to 60. In announcing the second age drop, Gov. Ron DeSantis said demand had started to taper off among seniors. “It’s really slowed down in terms of demand. There was a critical mass of seniors who wanted to get it,” he said. Heading into the weekend, nearly 7.2 million vaccine doses had been administered in Florida, and about 2.6 million residents had completed their vaccination regimen.
___
In other notes:
— State of political parties in Florida: Join an all-star panel Thursday at Suncoast Tiger Bay, where political parties will be on the agenda. Former Republican and never-Trumper DavidJolly, Democratic consultant SteveSchale and Director of House Campaigns for the Florida GOP FrankTerraferma are likely to provide a lively dialogue about what’s going right and what needs to be improved. The virtual forum is at noon on the Suncoast Tiger Bay website and its Facebook page.
🏛 — Florida Man strikes again: A Florida resident and member of the controversial Proud Boys group was among those who organized the Jan. 6 insurrection at the U.S. Capitol, according to federal prosecutors. Joseph Biggs, of Ormond Beach, is charged with obstruction of an official proceeding, entering a restricted building or grounds and violent and disorderly conduct.
🏖 — Tunnel to the beach: Elon Musk’s The Boring Company is talking with Fort Lauderdale to build a two-mile tunnel from downtown to the beach. Miami is considering a similar project, which could be completed in just six months for about $30 million. The Fort Lauderdale project would provide Tesla rides to the beach for $5-8. Surf’s up!
Elon Musk is talking with Fort Lauderdale and Miami about building tunnels to the beach. Image via AP.
🦎 — No iguanas for you: The Florida Fish and Wildlife Commission voted in late February to ban the sale of pet iguanas, Burmese Pythons and 14 other invasive species plaguing Florida. On Saturday, The Washington Post spotlighted the ban, which will be phased in over three years to allow businesses to rid their stock. Already have one as a pet, don’t worry. You can keep it. You just can’t replace it when it dies.
🐡 — Speaking of invasive species: Florida has a new one — a monster river fish called the arapaima. One washed up in Cape Coral’s Jaycee Park along the Caloosahatchee River this week. The arapaima is native to the Amazon Riverin South America and is one of the world’s largest predatory fish. Its scales are said to be as impenetrable as armor. Read more about it here.
Tweet, tweet:
—@ShannonRWoods: Florida Gov. DeSantis has proposed legislation to penalize Black Lives Matter protesters, saying “we will not allow our cities to burn and lawlessness to rule the streets.” Sounds like the Spring Breakers he invited to the state during a pandemic are doing just that.
—@NateMonroe: So DeSantis and his allies spout off some crazy bullshit about “lockdowns” and masks. Meanwhile, he leaves the state’s major cities the much harder work of doing actual mitigation (mask mandates, etc.). Florida *is* the state of lockdowns. In part because of Gov. Grievance.
—@Conarck: Looks like the Inky got the data on demographic breakdowns of FEMA site vaccinations that @HealthyFla @FLSERT refuse to provide to the public. But @MeredithMBeat assures us that Florida is the most transparent when it comes to releasing this stuff, so I guess nothing to see here.
—@TUMarkWoods: Winston Scott majored in music at @floridastate. He became an astronaut. He says music and science go hand-in-hand. Will the Florida legislature tell future Winston Scotts that if they want full #BrightFutures, they better pick a different major?
—@KirbyWTweets: if I were a legislator, my first initiative would be a resolution stating that ‘Better Call Saul’ is a perfect show. I would do my best to grind all other legislative business to a halt until this resolution was heard and passed
Tweet, tweet:
—@Carlos_Frias: You know when The Clevelander closes its bar, that’s like Waffle House closing when a hurricane approaches.
Days until
‘Godzilla vs. Kong’ premieres — 4; 2021 Florida Virtual Hemp Conference — 5; 2021 Florida Derby — 5; California theme parks begin to reopen — 10; MLB Opening Day — 10; Easter — 13; RNC spring donor summit — 18; 2021 WWE WrestleMania 37 begins — 19; Disneyland to open — 39; ‘Black Widow’ rescheduled premiere — 46; Mother’s Day — 48; Florida Chamber Safety Council’s inaugural Southeastern Leadership Conference on Safety, Health and Sustainability — 49; ‘A Quiet Place Part II’ rescheduled premiere — 67; Memorial Day — 70; Father’s Day — 90; ‘Top Gun: Maverick’ rescheduled premiere — 102; 4th of July — 104; Disney’s ‘Shang Chi and The Legend of The Ten Rings’ premieres — 111; MLB All-Star Game in Atlanta — 113; new start date for 2021 Olympics — 123; ‘Jungle Cruise’ premieres — 131; St. Petersburg Primary Election — 155; ‘The Many Saints of Newark’ premieres (rescheduled) — 186; ‘Dune’ premieres — 193; MLB regular season ends — 195; ‘No Time to Die’ premieres (rescheduled) — 201; World Series Game 1 — 218; St. Petersburg Municipal Elections — 225; Disney’s ‘Eternals’ premieres — 228; Steven Spielberg’s ‘West Side Story’ premieres — 263; ‘Spider-Man Far From Home’ sequel premieres — 270; ‘Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness’ premieres — 368; ‘Thor: Love and Thunder’ premieres — 410; ‘Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse’ sequel premieres — 564.
Dateline Tallahassee
Spotted: Gov. DeSantis at Mar-a-Lago on Saturday night.
Tweet, tweet:
“Florida took an aggressive approach to unemployment fraud. Was it worth it?” via Lawrence Mower of the Tampa Bay Times — During the height of the state’s unemployment crisis last year, Florida’s jobless agency enforced anti-fraud efforts that added months of delays and frustrations for those waiting for benefits. Pregnant women, Floridians sick with COVID-19 and those caring for children at home were denied benefits because they weren’t “able and available” for work under state law. Jobless Floridians with simple discrepancies on applications saw their claims locked, delaying payments by weeks or months. Former call center workers hired to help claimants say that stopping fraud was prioritized over providing benefits.
“Amid allegations of spoiler candidate scheme, Florida Democrats call for GOP Senator to resign” via Samantha J. Gross and Ana Ceballos of the Miami Herald — Florida Democrats on Friday called for Republican Sen. Ileana Garcia’s resignation and for a special election to be held in Miami-Dade Senate District 37, a day after state prosecutors accused a Miami GOP operative of planting a no-party candidate to sway the outcome of the race in November. Garcia’s 2020 victory strengthened Senate Republicans’ decadeslong control of the Florida Senate. But Democrats are calling into question the integrity of the election after a 25-page arrest affidavit laid bare an alleged scheme by former Republican state Sen. Frank Artiles that involved him paying an auto-parts dealer more than $40,000 to run and influence the race.
“State Attorney Executive Director Graham Fountain refutes POLITICO story alleging he fibbed” via Tom McLaughlin of the Northwest Florida Daily News — A reporter for POLITICO Florida claims to have caught Fountain, a local politician turned State Attorney’s Office bigwig, in a series of little white lies. Fountain, State Attorney Ginger Bowden Madden‘s executive director, says the reporter was skulking about the state Capitol cafeteria when he caught pieces of a conversation he wasn’t entitled to be tuning in to and that he didn’t hear all he says he heard. The resulting story, penned by reporter Matt Dixon, “isn’t news,” according to Fountain. “They turned it around to make it sound like something it wasn’t,” he said.
Tweet, tweet:
“Scott Plakon among nine seeking vacant Public Service Commission seat” via Kelly Hayes of Florida Politics — Rep. Plakon is among nine applicants vying for a seat on Florida’s Public Service Commission. Plakon, along with eight others, is applying for a seat left vacant in February when DeSantis appointed former Commissioner Julie Brown to lead the Department of Business and Professional Regulation. Plakon, who has served HD 29, must leave office in 2022 because of term limits. His wife, Rachel Plakon, has filed to run as a Republican candidate in 2022 in hopes of succeeding him. Plakon is joined by two applicants currently working with the PSC, Ana Cristina Ortega, a chief policy adviser at the PSC, and Gabriella A. Passidomo, a PSC attorney.
Sprowls speak
House Speaker Chris Sprowls wants to demand a high level of accountability from universities and research institutions to combat foreign interference.
Speaking with NBC Miami’s Jackie Nespral on Sunday, the House Speaker said the state’s plan to require groups to disclose funding from China and other adversarial countries is the most aggressive plan at the state level to curb foreign interference and theft.
“This is not something that’s in the newspaper every day or on the news, but it is a pervasive problem throughout the country and here in Florida,” Sprowls said.
Republicans’ plan has so far drawn unanimous support, including from Democrats. And Sprowls expects support to jump the state line and to extend to other states.
“I think it’s going to catch fire,” he said.
Chris Sprowls looks to end interference by China. Image via Colin Hackley.
Half the plan (SB 2010/HB 7017) would force state agencies, local governments, colleges, and universities to disclose donations and grants worth $50,000 or more from a list of seven countries or agents of those countries. Research and education institutions with budgets worth at least $10 million would have to screen applicants for research positions who aren’t permanent residents of the United States.
“We’re going to make them report their vetting process,” Sprowls said.
The second half of the plan (SB 1378/HB 1523) would increase corporate espionage penalties, including creating a second-degree felony for trafficking in trade secrets. Knowingly selling intellectual property to foreign adversaries would carry increased penalties.
Sprowls pointed to several foreign influence and intellectual property theft cases by China and Chinese agents, including at the Moffitt Cancer Center.
Under some contracts, Sprowls said some researchers travel to China to do work in undisclosed “shadow laboratories.”
“That was to the benefit, not of our people and of [the] American economy, but of the Chinese economy,” he added. “That ends under this bill.”
Lawmakers are scheduled to hear both the House and Senate versions of the foreign influence half of that package this week.
Tally 2
“John Dailey: HB 1 is bad for Tallahassee & Florida” for Florida Politics — We all agree that more needs to be done to combat extremism, White supremacy, and domestic terrorism in our country and in our communities, but the anti-protest legislation making its way through the Florida Legislature now does none of those things. It was proposed last summer in the wake of the global protests against racial injustice after the killing of George Floyd and directed at Black Lives Matter protests. We already have all the tools we need to address acts of violence in our city. This bill is attempting to solve a problem we don’t have, and it will have the effect — intended or not — of stifling constitutionally-protected speech.
Tallahassee and Florida will not be well served by anti-riot legislation, says John Dailey.
“House committee weighs new rules for voting by mail” via The Associated Press — A measure scheduled to be heard by the House Public Integrity and Elections Committee on Monday would require 24-hour monitoring of ballot drop boxes — either by guards, elections officials during work hours or by surveillance cameras during off-hours — and require voters to provide identification, such as their Social Security numbers, to update registration information. The Senate is considering its own changes to how vote-by-mail ballots are handled, including banning drop boxes. Both versions would also narrow the time period covered by a single application for an absentee ballot from two general elections cycles to just one — and wipe out the advantage Democrats now have over Republicans in the number of absentee voters.
“Off-roading: Amended toll roads repeal bill gets mostly favorable review” via Jeffrey Schweers of the Tallahassee Democrat — A massive, expensive and controversial toll roads project is heading for a dead-end, a prognosis hastened by economic reversals in the state caused by the COVID-19 pandemic. A proposal by state Sen. Gayle Harrell to repeal the 2019 statute that created M-CORES, or Multi-Use Corridors of Regional and Economic Significance, cleared its second and final committee by a 17-2 vote in the Senate Appropriations Committee Thursday. Now ready for the Senate floor, an amendment to the bill included recommendations made during the bill’s first hearing before the Transportation Committee.
“Senate votes to close sex offender loophole” via The Associated Press — A loophole in Florida’s sexual offender registration law would be closed under a Senate bill unanimously passed in response to a child molester who didn’t have to register because he didn’t pay a court-ordered fine. A judge ruled last year that Ray La Vel James of Tampa, who spent 12 years in prison after being convicted of molesting two girls at a public pool, didn’t have to register as a sex offender because the law states registration isn’t required until a sentence is completed and he hadn’t paid off a $10,000 fine that was part of his sentence. SB 234 was approved 39-0 on the Senate floor Thursday.
“PACE septic-to-sewer expansion gets name change as it clears second Senate committee” via Drew Wilson of Florida Politics — A bill aimed at speeding up septic-to-sewer conversions cleared another Senate committee and took on a new name. SB 1208 by Sen. Ana Maria Rodriguez would expand property assessed clean energy, or PACE, financing to cover wastewater treatment improvements and septic-to-sewer conversion, in addition to the suite of projects currently in the program. An amendment adopted in the Senate Finance and Tax Committee would also chuck the PACE acronym in favor of REEF, which is short for Resiliency Energy Environment Florida. The new name is intended to reflect the expanded scope of the program.
Ana Maria Rodriguez wants Florida to pick up the PACE in ditching septic tanks. Image via Colin Hackley.
“Lawmakers look to crack down on misuse of DAVID system” via Jake Stofan of Capitol News Service — Law Enforcement and others like state employees and 911 operators with access to the Driver Vehicle Information Database will face stiffer penalties for misusing the system to acquire personal information of members of the public under legislation passed by its final Senate committee Thursday morning. Current misuse of the system results in a $500 fine, but the legislation would raise financial penalties as high as $2,000. Sponsor Sen. Ed Hooper said it wasn’t one but many incidents that inspired the change.
Lobby regs
New and renewed lobbying registrations:
Matt Bryan, David Daniel, Thomas Griffin, Jeff Hartley, Lisa Hurley, Teye Reeves, Smith Bryan & Myers: National Animal Supplement Council
Alfreda Coward, Converge Government Affairs of Florida: City of West Miami, Florida Swimming Pool Association, Town of Cutler Bay
Taylor Ferguson: Parallel
Mathew Forrest, Ballard Partners: American Hotel and Lodging Association
Fred Karlinsky, Greenberg Traurig: Banzai Capital Partners
Larry Williams, Larry Williams Consulting: First Love Brewing
Leg. sked
The House Public Integrity & Elections Committee meets to consider PCB PIE 21-05, which seeks to make broad changes to state’s election laws, including drop boxes for mail-in ballots and requiring Floridians to request such ballots more often, 9:15 a.m., Room 404, House Office Building.
House Minority Co-leader Evan Jenne and Rep. Fentrice Driskell host a virtual media availability, 10 a.m. Zoom link here.
The House Appropriations Committee meets to consider HB 7017, from Rep. Erin Grall, to curb foreign influence in Florida colleges and universities and other agencies, 12:30 p.m., Room 212, Knott Building.
The House Ways & Means Committee meets to consider HB 219, from Rep. Jason Fischer, to give the state control of regulation of vacation rentals, preempting local restrictions, 12:30 p.m., Morris Hall, House Office Building.
The Senate Select Committee on Pandemic Preparedness and Response will hear an update from the National Federation of Independent Business, the Florida Restaurant & Lodging Association, the Florida Retail Federation, and the Department of Business and Professional Regulation, 1 p.m., Room 412, Knott Building.
The House Criminal Justice & Public Safety Subcommittee meets to consider HB 1049, from Rep. Mike Giallombardo, to allow law enforcement to use drones for traffic control and collecting crime-scene evidence, 3 p.m., Room 404, House Office Building.
The House Tourism, Infrastructure & Energy Subcommittee meets to consider HB 1239, from Rep. Josie Tomkow, to make broadband infrastructure changes. In part, it would require municipal utilities to make available utility poles to broadband providers, 3 p.m., Room 212, Knott Building.
The Senate Special Order Calendar Group meets to set the special-order calendar, 3 p.m., Room 401, Senate Office Building.
The Senate Commerce and Tourism Committee meets to consider confirming Dane Eagle as executive director of the Florida Department of Economic Opportunity, 3:30 p.m., Room 110, Senate Office Building.
The Senate Environment and Natural Resources Committee meets to consider SPB 7062, which address issues of the Central Florida Water Initiative, which involves the Department of Environmental Protection; the St. Johns River, South Florida and Southwest Florida Water Management Districts; the Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services and regional public water supply utilities, 3:30 p.m., Room 37, Senate Office Building.
The Senate Judiciary Committee meets to consider SB 1922, from Sen. Joe Gruters, to revamp the state’s alimony laws, 3:30 p.m., Room 412, Knott Building.
The House Post-Secondary Education and Lifelong Learning Subcommittee meets to consider HB 99, from Reps. Mike Gottlieb and Rep. Angie Nixon, to expand access to epinephrine auto-injectors, which are used to combat severe allergic reactions, 4 p.m., Reed Hall, House Office Building.
Also:
Happening today — Representatives of the League of Women Voters of Florida, the NAACP, Common Cause, All Voting is Local and the American Civil Liberties Union of Florida will hold a virtual news conference call to condemn elections bills in the Legislature, 2 p.m. Reporters can register online here.
The online competition started Thursday afternoon, pitting 64 in-house lobbyists against each other in a March Madness-style competition to decide who is the “best” lobbyist in Florida.
Among the Round 1 standouts: Florida Institute of Certified Public Accountants lobbyist Justin Thames, who made it all the way to the championship game last year before losing out to Corinne Mixon of Rutledge Ecenia. This year he started off by knocking out Comcast lobbyist Brian Musselwhite.
In the match between John Holley of Florida Power & Light Company and Anthony DiMarco of the Florida Bankers Association, it was Holley who prevailed. And Florida School Boards Association lobbyist BillieAnn Gay defeated Anheuser-Busch lobbyist Jonathan Rees as she seeks to match — and possibly improve upon — her Final Four run in 2020.
TallyMadness Round 1 brings some surprises, standouts and buzzer beaters.
To nobody’s surprise, Anthem Lobbyist Stephanie Smith dispatched Edward Labrador. Again, sorry, Edward, maybe next year you’ll get a better slot in the opening round.
Some other highlights from Round 1: AFP state director Skylar Zander prevailed against Danielle Scroggins in a close one; Stephanie Kopelousos of the Governor’s Office defeated David Pizzi of Florida Blue; the Florida Trucking Association’s Alix Miller sent the Florida Court Clerks and Comptrollers’ Jason Harrell packing, and Albie Kaminsky of Charter Communications dunked on Jamie Ross of the League of Southeastern Credit Unions.
Round 2 starts today and runs through 11:59 p.m. Thursday. Florida Politics readers will decide who makes it to the Sweet 16 by voting online — the winners will be announced in Friday’s Sunburn.
Suits for Session
Simply Healthcare is helping Volunteer Florida put on “Suits for Session” for the sixth year running. The service project engages legislators and staff, state agency employees, and others to collect new or gently-worn business attire to help job-seekers land their next gig.
“Simply Healthcare is honored to partner with Volunteer Florida to support this year’s Suits for Session initiative,” said Holly Prince, Simply Healthcare Medicaid Plan president.
“As COVID-19 vaccines become more readily available and Floridians have the opportunity to safely return to the workforce, the Suits for Session program will help to ensure that members of the community have access to the resources, including suits and clothing, needed to secure employment.”
’Suits for Session’ is now in its sixth year.
Since the project’s inception in 2016, Volunteer Florida and its partners have been able to donate over 21,000 items of professional wear to organizations across the Sunshine State.
This year’s edition will be held Wednesday on the corner of S Adams Street and W Pensacola Street, in front of Tallahassee City Hall. If you don’t have a spare suit, consider donating a blazer, jacket, blouse, shirt, pants, dress, skirt, tie, belt, shoes or a handbag — all are accepted.
“Miles of Florida roads face ‘major problem’ from sea rise. Is state moving fast enough?” via Mario Ariza and Alex Harris of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — After years of ignoring or denying climate change, Florida has begun assessing the threat that sea rise poses to a sprawling transportation network essential to the state’s economy. But the risks, like the water, are rising fast. One 2018 Department of Transportation study already has found that a 2-foot rise, expected by midcentury, would imperil a little more than 5%, 250-plus miles, of the state’s most high-traffic highways. That may not sound like a lot, but protecting those highways alone could easily cost several billion dollars.
“Florida Supreme Court holds North Florida ex-State Attorney Jeff Siegmeister in contempt” via USA Today Network — The Florida Supreme Court has held Lake City’s former top prosecutor in contempt and ordered his law license suspended indefinitely. The court also told Siegmeister to pay The Florida Bar $1,250 “for recovery of administrative costs,” according to its Friday order. Siegmeister never replied to the court’s Dec. 22 demand to explain why he shouldn’t be held in contempt for his earlier “failure to respond to an official bar inquiry,” records show. He was indicted on charges of conspiracy, extortion, bribery, fraud and tax crimes involving deals to settle court cases in Florida’s 3rd Judicial Circuit.
Jeff Siegmeister is in contempt of court and losing his law license. Image via News4Jax.
“Suit: Water belongs to residents of Florida” via Cindy Swirko of The Gainesville Sun — A showdown over a proposed permit that would enable Nestle Water to expand its Ginnie Springs bottling operation is coming Tuesday to the Suwannee River Water Management District. The district Governing Board in Live Oak will hear public comments and possibly vote on a pumping permit. “The District has received over 20,000 public comments on this item,” SRWMD spokeswoman Lindsey Covington said. “Of the comments, approximately 1% are in support of the item, and approximately 99% are opposed.” Under Florida law, water flowing in rivers, streams or channels above or below ground is considered owned by the people. Landowners have a “riparian” right to use the banks and water for activities such as boating, swimming and fishing.
Corona Florida
“Florida tops 2 million COVID-19 cases in just over 1 year” via Jim Saunders of the News Service of Florida — A little more than a year after the novel coronavirus showed up in the state, Florida has topped 2 million cases of COVID-19. According to the Florida Department of Health, with the addition of 5,105 reported cases Saturday, the total hit 2,004,362 confirmed cases since the pandemic started. The milestone was another reminder of the toll that COVID-19, the respiratory disease caused by the coronavirus, has taken on the state, killing at least 32,713 Floridians and sickening countless others. Another 624 nonresidents have died in the state.
“Florida adds 3,987 coronavirus cases, 32 deaths Sunday” via Romy Ellenbogen of the Tampa Bay Times — Florida recorded 3,987 coronavirus cases Sunday, bringing the statewide total to 2,008,349. The weekly case average increased to about 4,506 cases announced per day. The Florida Department of Health also announced 32 deaths from the virus. In Florida, 33,369 people have died from the coronavirus. The weekly average is about 73 deaths announced per day. About 76,000 coronavirus tests were processed Saturday, resulting in a single-day positivity rate of 6.23 percent. As of Sunday, 4,911,786 people in Florida are vaccinated against the coronavirus, an increase of 92,357 from the day prior.
“A rapid COVID-19 vaccine rollout backfired in some U.S. states, including Florida” via The Associated Press — Despite the clamor to speed up the U.S. vaccination drive against COVID-19 and get the country back to normal, the first three months of the rollout suggest faster is not necessarily better. A surprising new analysis found that states such as Florida, that raced ahead of others to offer the vaccine to ever-larger groups of people, have vaccinated smaller shares of their population than those that moved more slowly and methodically. The explanation is that the rapid expansion of eligibility caused a surge in demand too big for some states to handle and led to serious disarray. Vaccine supplies proved insufficient or unpredictable, websites crashed and phone lines became jammed, spreading confusion, frustration and resignation among many people.
Army health specialists fill syringes with the Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine in Miami. Image via AP.
Choose your news — “COVID vaccination sites brace for surge in demand for appointments as age drops to 50 on Monday” via Jane Musgrave of The Palm Beach Post — DeSantis said Friday that a tepid response from those between the ages of 60 and 64 prompted him to lower the age of eligibility to 50. Contrary to the Governor’s view, local officials said, they have been inundated with requests for appointments since those age 60 and up were allowed to get shots last week. They predicted demand would intensify on Monday when 195,000 county residents between the ages of 50 and 59 are allowed to get vaccinated. Retailers also said they expect demand will increase when an additional 2.83 million state residents between the ages of 50 and 59 are allowed to get shots.
Or there is this — “Vaccine demand cools as leaders expand eligibility” via Katie Santich and Ryan Gillespie of the Orlando Sentinel — When COVID-19 vaccinations began in earnest late last year, it was a little like Black Friday at Walmart. People camped out overnight. They slept in their cars. They stood in the sun for hours. They spent entire days on their computers and phones trying to find a single unclaimed opening at one of the region’s handful of vaccination sites. But as winter has turned to spring, demand has cooled. Even as vaccine eligibility expanded from residents 65 and older to younger teachers, school employees and public safety officials, the Orange County Convention Center vaccine site only reached its capacity of 3,000 shots a day once in the first two weeks of March. It averaged about 2,600 shots a day.
“COVID-19 vaccine supply will remain flat through March, followed by a surge” via Michael Wilner, Ben Conarck and Hannah Wiley of the Miami Herald — Flat supply over the course of March is due to widely anticipated shortfalls from Johnson & Johnson, one of three authorized vaccine manufacturers. The supply of the one-shot J&J vaccines will increase in roughly two weeks. Public health officials can see their projected vaccine supply up to three weeks in advance through a federal vaccine tracking system called Tiberius, and what they are seeing is a flat line through the end of March. The administration has increased the supply of vaccines from 900,000 vaccines administered per day to nearly 3 million since President Joe Biden took office. But demand remains so high that Governors, Mayors and public health officials say it is still not enough.
The pipeline for Johnson & Johnson vaccines is temporarily drying up in Florida.
“Florida releases COVID-19 variant data day after Orlando Sentinel sues for it” via Kate Santich of the Orlando Sentinel — Mutated strains of COVID-19 have reached 41 of Florida’s 67 counties, infecting hundreds of residents, including a 97-year-old woman and a 2-year-old boy, according to data released to the Orlando Sentinel late Friday by the state Department of Health. The disclosure came one day after the newspaper filed a lawsuit against the agency for allegedly violating Florida’s public records law and the state’s constitution. For 57 days, the state withheld information on the variant cases, despite numerous requests from Orlando Sentinel reporters and attorneys. The data shows infection rates appear to have spiked on February 7, when 124 cases were reported by laboratories examining selected samples’ genetic makeup
Corona local
“COVID-19 long-haulers pin hope on South Florida drug trial” via Cindy Krischer Goodman of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — The drug, called leronlimab, is used to ease the suffering of people who can’t shake COVID-19 symptoms. This group, also known as long-haulers, makes up about 10% of people who get the virus. They have become increasingly desperate as scientists are unable to explain the baffling syndrome. Dr. Norman Gaylis, with Arthritis & Rheumatic Disease Specialties in Aventura, is leading the FDA-approved trial. He anticipates the drug, given through injections into the belly, will help alleviate some or all of the long-term symptoms. The trial is double-blinded, which means half the participants will get a placebo, half will get the drug. None of the participants or Gaylis will know who got which until the trial is over.
A drug used to treat HIV and cancer patients, leronlimab, has shown success in treating the most severe coronavirus patients.
“At Disney World, Spring Break crowds are here, along with coronavirus fears, too” via Gabrielle Russon of the Orlando Sentinel — It’s noon, and you can tell by the ever-growing margarita line at the Epcot stand that it’s Spring Break time. Among the people at the park Friday was a local teacher off for the week, a Chicago family appreciative of Orlando’s warm weather and a businessman in town for a work conference at a Disney hotel. In Central Florida, there are signs the tourists are returning during the first Spring Break since the coronavirus pandemic canceled the annual celebration last year. Yet the crowds are coming during a complex juggle of balancing the region’s economic recovery with the threat of COVID-19 and as national news shows paint Florida as a superspreader state.
“Hundreds turned away after hearing they could get vaccine at Tampa church” via Anastasia Dawson of the Tampa Bay Times — The last thing health authorities wanted to see was more long waits like those that plagued the early days of the coronavirus vaccine rollout in the Tampa Bay area. But that’s just what happened Sunday as some 400 people from as far away as Orlando arrived as early as 4 a.m. for the promise of a shot when the doors opened at 9 outside Clair-Mel’s Keeney Chapel United Methodist Church. Word was that these vaccines were available to people younger than 60, the minimum age at the time for vaccine recipients who aren’t in front-line jobs or have medical notes. It turns out the word was wrong. Most of those in line were sent home unvaccinated and angry.
“Despite optimism for one-dose vaccine, Johnson & Johnson slow to reach Sarasota-Manatee” via Louis Llovio of the Sarasota Herald-Tribune — When Johnson & Johnson’s single-dose vaccine was approved this month, it was seen as a way to ease the burden of vaccinating hundreds of thousands twice and, for those getting vaccinated, a way to get one shot and be done with it. But despite promises from Washington and early optimism, the Florida Department of Health Sarasota County and Manatee County don’t have any doses of the vaccine and aren’t sure when they’ll get them. When asked if he’d heard when Sarasota may see the Johnson & Johnson vaccine, a county spokesman emailed a single-word answer: “Crickets.”
“What happens if you don’t wear a mask in Key West? There’s been a change” via Gwen Filosa of the Miami Herald — Despite packed streets and Spring Break crowds, Key West has stopped enforcing a strict law that requires people to wear masks in public. Miami-Dade made a similar decision several days ago but reversed itself on Thursday. The county’s police department now says it will resume enforcing a mask and curfew law despite an executive order from the Governor that cancels fines. Key West has been drawing thicker crowds of tourists for months despite the pandemic. The island is now in peak season with an extra layer of Spring Break visitors.
With Spring Break in full bloom, Key West wrestles with changing mask mandates.
“Married 66 years, Florida couple dies of virus minutes apart” via The Associated Press — Bill and EstherIlnisky spent nearly seven decades together as Christian ministers and missionaries, including stints in the Caribbean and Middle East before preaching for 40 years in Florida. They complemented each other, he the bookworm, she outgoing and charismatic. One without the other seemed unthinkable. So when they died minutes apart of COVID-19 this month at a Palm Beach County hospice, it may have been a hidden blessing, their only child, Sarah Milewski, said, even if it was a devastating double loss for her. Her father was 88, her mom 92. Their 67th wedding anniversary would have been this weekend. “It is so precious, so wonderful, such a heartwarming feeling to know they went together,” Milewski said, then adding, “I miss them.”
Corona nation
“The clearest sign the pandemic could get worse” by The COVID Tracking Project for The Atlantic — The number of people hospitalized with a confirmed case of COVID-19 in the United States has been plummeting since early January. Until about three weeks ago, hospitalizations in Michigan were following the same pattern. But in the past few weeks, data from the CDC and the HHS have shown that hospitalizations have risen by 45% from the state’s recent low on February 25. As a spring surge takes hold in Michigan, two new factors — variants of concern and rising vaccination levels — mean that we don’t yet know how this new rise in cases and hospitalizations will play out. In addition to the indisputable surge in Michigan, there are troubling signs in other parts of the country.
Michigan is showing some worrying signs that the pandemic could get worse before it gets better.
“Don’t be surprised when vaccinated people get infected” via Katherine J. Wu of The Atlantic — It’s hard to know when exactly the first cases appeared. But certainly, by January’s end, a slow trickle of post-vaccination infections had begun in the United States. They arose in the West, making headlines in Oregon; they sprouted in the Midwest and the South. Some of the latest reports have come out of Florida, Texas, and Hawaii. These breakthrough cases, discovered in people more than two weeks after receiving their final COVID-19 shot, will continue to grow in number, everywhere. And that’s absolutely no cause for concern.
“Yes, vaccine skepticism exists among health care workers — but far less so among top medical professionals” via Aaron Blake of The Washington Post — As the United States ramps up its vaccine process and hits 100 million doses, the biggest remaining hurdle is skepticism. How do you get enough people vaccinated to achieve herd immunity when polls show 3 in 10 Americans say they won’t get one and as some continue to question the vaccines that health officials in both the Donald Trump and Biden administrations have said is safe and effective? A new poll shows just how deep that skepticism runs. In fact, it’s very real even among health care workers. 35 percent of health care workers aren’t too confident or aren’t confident that the vaccines have been properly tested.
“Religious buildings reopen in Southwestern U.S. at a faster pace” via Alexandre Tanzi of Bloomberg — Places of worship are slowly reopening across the U.S., but generally more quickly in southwestern states. Large cities that were hit hard by the virus and stay-at-home orders show more tepid religious-property usage in early March, according to data from Brivo, which records the time and location of tens of millions of commercial-building access events from doors connected to its platform. Data for New York City show fewer than one-third, and in San Francisco, less than half religious buildings have reopened. Meanwhile, more than 83% in Salt Lake City are open.
Corona economics
“Millions headed to local campuses from COVID-19 stimulus package” via Byron Dobson of the Tallahassee Democrat — Florida State and Florida A&M universities and Tallahassee Community College collectively will receive nearly $143 million from the American Rescue Plan Act of 2021, also known as the COVID-19 Stimulus Package. As stipulated in the $1.9 trillion relief package, half the money earmarked for universities and colleges must be given to students as emergency grants to help pay for course materials, housing, food, health care, child care, and other personal expenses. Institutions can use the balance to offset costs associated with COVID-19-related expenses such as testing, technology and equipment purchases, ongoing building sanitation efforts and other costs associated with returning to campus.
What Adam Babington is reading — “Disney U.S. employees can begin phased return to offices this summer” via Anthony D’Alessandro of Deadline — We hear on good authority that Disney’s stateside employees can begin returning to their offices after July 4. It’s just another great sign that with COVID-19 vaccinations underway and cases falling in most states, the entertainment industry is beginning to readjust to some normalcy. We told you last week that WarnerMedia employees were provided notification that they could return in early September. Disney employees were notified this morning via an emailed internal company video.
Disney is looking to call employees back to offices after Independence Day. Image via AP.
What Michelle Schorsch is reading — “CEO says Disney cruises not likely to return until ‘maybe’ this fall” via Dave Berman of Florida Today — Disney Cruise Line continues to publicly hold out hope that its sailings out of Port Canaveral and elsewhere can resume as early as June. But Bob Chapek, CEO of The Walt Disney Co., last week indicated to stockholders that this timeline probably is unrealistic. He said that “with some luck,” Disney may be able to resume limited sailings in the fall. Disney and other major cruise lines have not sailed out of U.S. ports since March 2020 because of the coronavirus pandemic that triggered a Centers for Disease Control and Prevention no-sail order. Cruise lines are working on restart plans that will meet the CDC’s extensive “framework for conditional sailing” announced in October that replaced the no-sail order.
More corona
“How Europe injected more doubt Into a vaccine the world needs“ via Stephanie Baker, Ania Nussbaum, Arne Delfs and Suzi Ring of Bloomberg — Germany suspended use of the AstraZeneca PLC shot over concerns it was linked to blood clots. With no warning or consultation, the President of the European Council was blindsided. The decision quickly set off a chain reaction that not only laid bare the mess of the vaccine program but undermined the very institutions that preside over it. Other countries felt compelled to follow Germany’s lead and stop administering the vaccine, going against the advice of the European Medicines Agency. The week of drama ended with most countries reinstating Astra doses after the EMA, the EU’s regulator, reiterated on Thursday the benefits far outweighed any risks.
Germany’s sudden discontinuation of the AstraZeneca vaccine exposes chaos in the European vaccination effort.
“In poor districts, pandemic overwhelms school counselors” via Michael Melia of The Associated Press — School counselors everywhere have played important roles in guiding students through the stress and uncertainty of the pandemic, but the burden has been especially heavy in urban, high-needs districts like Bridgeport, Connecticut, where they have been consumed with issues related to attendance and engagement. In a nation where poor districts typically have fewer counselors per student, those demands highlight one way the pandemic is likely to worsen inequities in the American education system as those with the most on their plates have the least amount of time to help students plan for the future.
“Your unvaccinated kid is like a vaccinated grandma” via Emily Oster of The Atlantic — We still have a ways to go, but the speed of the vaccination process in recent days makes quasi-normalcy by July seem not completely out of reach. At least one group feels left adrift, however, and potentially behind: parents. Vaccines for children under 16 are not yet available. Trials have begun, but realistically, children won’t receive a shot in the arm until the fall or winter. But the best available research indicates that families with young children don’t, in fact, have to live like it’s 2020 until 2022. Parents can go ahead and plan on barbecues and even vacations. The explanation for why lies in the resilience of kids to COVID-19, and herd immunity.
“Vaccinated mothers pass COVID-19 antibodies to babies in utero and through breastmilk, early studies show” via Lindsey Bever of The Washington Post — Several preliminary studies suggest that women who received an mRNA vaccine (Pfizer or Moderna) during pregnancy had COVID-19 antibodies in their umbilical cord blood. Another study also detected antibodies in their breastmilk, indicating that at least some immunity could be transferred to babies before and after birth. Researchers have already seen that pregnant women who recover from COVID-19 can pass along their natural immunity to their babies. But the observation that vaccine-induced antibodies may reach a fetus through cord blood and a newborn through breast milk, is a discovery that may have broader implications in the fight against the virus.
“There’s a pandemic power crisis. But how big is it?” via Sarah Holder of Bloomberg — U.S. utility companies have shut off natural gas and electricity service to more than three-quarters of a million households across just 10 states during the pandemic, according to a report released Tuesday by the Center for Biological Diversity. That number may be big, but it’s also incomplete: It didn’t account for commercial customers who are also having trouble paying their bills, or the 14% of U.S. residents using public power, instead focusing on households served by private utility companies. And it omits the 30 states with utility commissions that don’t require companies to disclose how many households they disconnect, or that failed to provide easily searchable data.
“What we lose when we don’t see our work acquaintances” via Jeffrey A. Hall of The Wall Street Journal — As companies start reopening offices, and perhaps give employees a choice as to whether to return, both companies and employees should consider that without a shared physical space, we will lose a kind of relationship we’re rarely aware of, and that barely has a word to describe it. Somewhere between strangers and friends, these are people with whom we share moments of chats and check-ins. It’s easy to dismiss them as superficial. But the relationships we develop with such workplace acquaintances are much more important to our sense of connection and community than many of us realize. It perhaps goes without saying that spending time with people we love makes us less lonely and brings us greater life satisfaction.
Presidential
“‘No end in sight’: Inside the Joe Biden administration’s failure to contain the border surge” via Ashley Parker, Nick Miroff, Sean Sullivan and Tyler Pager of The Washington Post — The Biden administration is scrambling to control the biggest surge in 20 years, with the nation on pace for as many as 2 million migrants at the southern border this year, the outcome Biden said he wanted to avoid. Along with the existing struggle to combat the coronavirus, immigration has emerged as one of the administration’s most urgent challenges, seized on by Republicans as a political cudgel, posing risks to Democrats in the 2022 midterms and potentially undermining Biden’s governing agenda.
Amid a border surge, confusion reigns over Joe Biden’s policies. Image via AP.
“ICE securing hotel rooms to hold growing number of migrant families” via Stef W. Kight of Axios — The Biden administration has awarded an $86 million contract for hotel rooms near the border to hold around 1,200 migrant family members who cross the U.S.-Mexico border. It’s a sign of growing numbers of migrant families trying to come to the U.S., in addition to already overwhelming numbers of kids crossing the border without their parents or legal guardians. Both trends appear to be straining government resources. Through Endeavors, a Texas-based nonprofit, the contract is for six months but could be extended and expanded. The hotels will be near border areas, including in Arizona and Texas.
“Biden administration considers flying migrants to states near the Canadian border for processing” via Nick Miroff of The Washington Post — A new spike in the number of families and children crossing the Rio Grande into South Texas over the past several hours is forcing U.S. Customs and Border Protection to request airplanes that will allow the Biden administration to transport migrants to states near the Canadian border for processing. Border officials requested air support from U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement because 1,000 members of families and unaccompanied minors crossed the Rio Grande on Friday morning, and border agents have another 1,000 migrants they have been unable to process since last night, the communications show.
“Biden administration scrambles to avert COVID-19 outbreaks at the southern border” via Erin Banco and Sabrina Rodriguez of POLITICO — The federal government does not have a centralized system for tracking or responding to COVID-19 cases among the surge of migrants crossing the United States’ southern border, according to interviews with senior administration officials and those responding to the influx. The administration has outsourced most COVID-19 testing and quarantining for migrants to local health agencies and nongovernmental organizations. But it’s unclear how many have been tested for the virus, how many have tested positive and where infected people are being isolated along the border. The scramble to track COVID-19 cases at the border also shows that a year into the pandemic, the U.S. still doesn’t have the monitoring and communications systems needed to aggressively combat outbreaks of infectious disease.
“Biden’s top aides unlikely to qualify for relief payments” via Jonathan Lemire, Josh Boak, and Richard Lardner of The Associated Press — At least one group in America is unlikely to get any money from Biden’s $1.9 trillion economic rescue plan, his own top aides. Most of Biden’s senior West Wing advisers made far more than the threshold that would qualify them for direct payments from the President’s COVID-19 relief bill, according to White House financial disclosure forms released Saturday. The disclosure period runs through 2020. The documents paint a portrait of advisers whose wealth is dwarfed by those that surrounded Trump but do not quite line up with Biden’s image of “Middle-Class Joe.”
West Wing employees — who don’t need Senate confirmation — have had deep ties to the business world. Image via AP.
“Biden White House sandbags staffers, sidelines dozens for pot use” via Scott Bixby, Asawin Suebsaeng and Adam Rawnsley of The Daily Beast — Dozens of young White House staffers have been suspended, asked to resign, or placed in a remote work program due to past marijuana use, frustrating staffers who were pleased by initial indications from the Biden administration that recreational use of cannabis would not be immediately disqualifying for would-be personnel. The policy has even affected staffers whose marijuana use was exclusive to one of the 14 states and the District of Columbia, where cannabis is legal.
Epilogue: Trump
“Access, influence and pardons: How a set of allies shaped Donald Trump’s choices” via Kenneth P. Vogel and Nicholas Confessore of The New York Times — One hacked the computers of business rivals. One bribed doctors to win referrals for his nursing homes. Another fled the country while he was on trial for his role in a fraud that siphoned $450 million from an insurance company, leading to its collapse. Still another ran a Ponzi scheme that plunged a synagogue into foreclosure. Each won clemency from Trump. They also had something else in common. The efforts to seek clemency for these wealthy or well-connected people benefited from their social, political, or financial ties to a loose collection of lawyers, lobbyists, activists and Orthodox Jewish leaders who had worked with Trump administration officials on criminal justice legislation championed by Jared Kushner.
A wave of wealthy and well-connected people sought last-minute pardons from Donald Trump. Image via AP.
“Trump’s chief of staff could face scrutiny in Georgia criminal probe” via Linda So of Reuters — In late December, as then-U.S. President Trump falsely alleged that rampant voter fraud caused his Georgia election loss, White House chief of staff Mark Meadows made an unexpected visit to an Atlanta suburb, hoping to observe an audit of thousands of voter signatures. The Georgia secretary of state’s office said it had just 45 minutes notice of Meadows’ arrival in Cobb County, and it barred him from the room where state investigators were examining the absentee ballot signatures. A day earlier, Trump had publicly complained that the audit was moving too slowly after making baseless claims that Georgia’s signature verification system is rife with fraud.
“Professor who’s predicted presidential winners since ’80s says Trump won’t be a candidate in 2024. He’s probably right” via Andre Oppenheimer of the Miami Herald — Allan Lichtman, the American University political historian who has accurately predicted the outcome of almost all of our presidential elections in more than three decades, told me in an interview that it is “very unlikely” that Trump will be the Republican nominee in 2024 or that he will return to the White House as a candidate of a third party. He said that it’s way too early to forecast which party will win in 2024, but that Trump is unlikely to become the Republican candidate because “he has too many other challenges facing him.” Granted, Trump will go on the attack and will make it look as if he’s running, but his resources will be greatly diminished, Lichtman says.
“Trump’s Mar-a-Lago partly closed after positive COVID-19 tests” via Antonio Fins and Christine Stapleton of The Palm Beach Post — Mar-a-Lago on Friday said it closed the Beach Club and the a la carte dining room after an undisclosed number of employees tested positive for the COVID-19. Banquet and event services remain open, the club said. “We will update you when service resumes,” the statement said. The statement also said that following federal public health guidelines “a thorough sanitizing and cleaning of any affected areas and club facilities” has been conducted. The club also said it will “continue our heightened environmental cleaning regimen.”
Crisis
“When the Capitol riot came home” via Shawn McCreesh of New York Magazine — The trouble in Troy started hundreds of miles away that day, when David Ellis talked to a reporter. I quoted him in a short article published by this magazine on January 6 saying that the break-in “was not going to solve a thing, and then to see the police get treated the way they were treated, it’s ridiculous.” His few words to me would soon upend the little town that he has looked after for three decades, snowball into the statehouse, and roil New Hampshire politics. A clash over one unexpected question and raised others about the viciousness of our politics and how much the Trump years have warped us.
Effects of The Capitol riot are having a broad reach. Image via AP.
“Congressional fundraisers lobby corporations that suspended political donations following Capitol riot” via Brian Schwartz of CNBC — Fundraisers for congressional candidates and Party campaign groups are lobbying corporations to resume political donations after many suspended their contributions, according to people familiar with the matter. Dozens of corporations paused, at least temporarily, donations from their political action committees after the Jan. 6 Capitol riot that led to at least five deaths. Most companies have since said they are reviewing their PACs’ policies on whom they will give money to in the future. Some companies decided to pause contributions indefinitely to GOP lawmakers who challenged the election results. Other businesses opted to suspend donations to candidates across the political spectrum.
D.C. matters
“Supreme Court justices meet in person for first time in a year” via Greg Stohr of Bloomberg — Most U.S. Supreme Court justices met in person for the first time since the COVID-19 pandemic began, returning to their private conference room in Washington Friday after a year of holding their meetings remotely. The in-person conference represents a step toward normalcy at an institution that reveres its traditions. All nine justices have been fully vaccinated, Supreme Court spokeswoman Kathy Arberg said. The changes don’t yet extend to the courtroom. The court also said Friday it would hold its April argument session by phone, as it has throughout the 2020-21 term.
Frightening — “Federal judge pens dissent slamming decades-old press protections” via Josh Gerstein of POLITICO — A federal appeals court judge issued an extraordinary opinion Friday attacking partisan bias in the news media, lamenting the treatment of conservatives in American society and calling for the Supreme Court to overturn a landmark legal precedent that protects news outlets from lawsuits over reports about public figures. D.C. Circuit Senior Judge Laurence Silberman’s diatribe, contained in his dissent in a libel case, amounted to a withering, frontal assault on the 1964 Supreme Court decision that set the framework for modern defamation law: New York Times v. Sullivan. Silberman said the decision, requiring public figures to show “actual malice” to recover against a news organization for libel, was a “policy-driven” result that the justices simply invented out of whole cloth.
“‘Unacceptable and dangerous’: Rick Scott visits Southern border with Arizona Governor” via Kelly Hayes of Florida Politics — Scott joined Arizona Gov. Doug Ducey Friday at the Southern border, amid the current humanitarian crisis occurring as waves of migrants flow in. During his visit, Scott received a briefing from state and federal law enforcement officers in Arizona on the situation along the Southern border. Scott also toured the border with Ducey. “There’s a crisis at the border and it’s 100% President Joe Biden’s fault,” Scott said in a statement. Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas on Tuesday called the wave of migrants a difficult challenge but nothing new. Scott, however, joins critics of the Biden administration, saying the surge is “being fueled by President Biden’s disastrous policies of amnesty and open borders.”
Rick Scott says the border crisis is ‘100%’ Joe Biden’s fault. Image via Twitter.
“Florida physician group blasts Scott, Marco Rubio for voting against Xavier Becerra” via Kelly Hayes of Florida Politics — Sens. Rubio and Scott are facing scrutiny from a group of Florida physicians for voting no in the confirmation hearing of Biden’s nominee for Secretary of Health and Human Services, Xavier Becerra. Becerra, who was confirmed by the Senate in a near party-line vote Thursday, will be the first Latino to head HHS. Rubio and Scott joined most other Senate Republicans voting against him — leading to criticism from physician groups, including Dr. Bernard Ashby, Miami cardiologist and Florida State Lead for the Committee to Protect Medicare. According to The Associated Press, Senate Republicans dismissed Becerra as unfit for the position, but the American Medical Association and the American Hospital Association supported his nomination.
“Frontline workers, teachers gather to criticize Rubio’s vote against virus relief package” via Kelly Hayes of Florida Politics — A group of health care advocates, front-line workers and teachers met Friday at Rubio’s Miami office to oppose his vote against the $1.9 trillion American Rescue Plan. The coalition of Floridians delivered 33 black roses to Rubio’s office during the meeting, representing the more than 33,000 lives lost in Florida from COVID-19. Rubio joined 48 other Republican Senators in a party-line vote against the ultimately approved pandemic relief package, which Biden signed into law a little over a week ago. The group also shared disapproval over Rubio’s vote against confirming Biden’s nominee for HHS Secretary. He also faced scrutiny from Florida physicians for this move.
“Charlie Crist’s push to expand veteran vaccine access headed to Biden’s desk” via Kelly Hayes of Florida Politics — Legislation pushed by U.S. Rep. Crist to expand coronavirus vaccine eligibility to all veterans is now on its way to Biden’s desk to be signed into law after passing in a unanimous Senate vote. The proposal (H.R. 1276), called the Veteran Affairs Vaccine Act of 2021, will expand VA COVID-19 vaccine eligibility to all veterans who want one. Currently, only veterans who receive care at the VA can get a vaccine there, either because they have a service-connected disability or they make below a certain income threshold, leaving out millions of veterans, including seniors and those who are at higher risk.
2022
“In restricting early voting, the right sees a new ‘center of gravity’” via Jeremy W. Peters of The New York Times — For more than a decade, the Susan B. Anthony List and the American Principles Project have pursued cultural and policy priorities from the social conservative playbook, one backing laws to ban abortion once a fetal heartbeat could be detected and the other opposing civil rights protections for LGBTQ people. From their shared offices in suburban Virginia, they and their affiliated committees spent more than $20 million on elections last year. But after Trump lost his bid for a second term and convinced millions of Americans that nonexistent fraud was to blame, the two groups found that many of their donors were thinking of throwing in the towel. Why, donors argued, should they give any money if Democrats were going to game the system to their advantage, recalled Frank Cannon, the senior strategist for both groups.
“‘An all-hands moment’: GOP rallies behind voting limits” via Nicholas Riccardi and Michael Biesecker of The Associated Press — On an invitation-only call last week, Sen. Ted Cruz huddled with Republican state lawmakers to call them to battle on the issue of voting rights. Democrats are trying to expand voting rights to “illegal aliens” and “child molesters,” he claimed, and Republicans must do all they can to stop them. If they push through far-reaching election legislation now before the Senate, the GOP won’t win elections again for generations, he said. Asked if there was room to compromise, Cruz was blunt: “No.”
Asked if there was room for compromise on voting limits, Ted Cruz was blunt: ‘No.’ Image via AP.
Local notes
“South Beach curfew and causeway closures extended for the rest of Spring Break” via Martin Vassolo of the Miami Herald — Curfews and causeway closures to control unruly Spring Break crowds in South Beach will be extended through April 12, the Miami Beach City Commission unanimously decided Sunday during an emergency meeting. An 8 p.m. curfew in South Beach’s entertainment district and a 10 p.m. shutdown of the eastbound lanes of the MacArthur, Julia Tuttle and Venetian causeways will remain in effect Thursday through Sunday for the remainder of Spring Break. Residents, hotel guests and local business employees are exempt from causeway closures on the MacArthur and Tuttle. The Venetian is resident-only during the causeway shutdown hours, which were initially set at 9 p.m.
“Miami Beach residents and guests got caught on the causeways during Ocean Drive curfew chaos” via David J. Neal and Bianca Padró Ocasio of the Miami Herald — Pedestrians returned to Ocean Drive and traffic flowed on the causeways to Miami Beach again Sunday morning after Saturday night’s State of Emergency enforcement (eventually) emptied Ocean Drive and constipated the causeways. That second part brought more than a little fury from Beach residents and hotel guests, two groups were allowed to enter the city via the Julia Tuttle Causeway and the MacArthur Causeway. By Sunday noon, hundreds of brunch-starved tourists paraded through Ocean Drive, packing the beach-side restaurants. The iconic afternoon drag show was underway at Palace Bar. Though Miami Beach police were stationed throughout the beach on their ATVs, the presence of cops was minor. But there also was evidence of tourist damage of Saturday night’s causeway clogs.
Miami Beach’s state of emergency stranded residents on causeways. Image via Miami Beach Police.
“Black leaders react to South Beach Spring Break curfew, crackdown: ‘unnecessary force’” via Martin Vassolo of the Miami Herald — After weeks of uninhibited partying on South Beach by Spring Breakers, police turned away throngs of people — many of them Black — from Ocean Drive Saturday night using a SWAT truck, pepper balls and sound cannons. The tactics were intended to enforce an 8 p.m. curfew announced only hours earlier as a means to rid the city of unruly late-night crowds. But the use of force to clear out people of color from South Beach alarmed some Black leaders. And if Miami Beach has openly recoiled at the behavior of at-times chaotic crowds filling the city’s entertainment district, some in South Florida are having a similar reaction to the way police have handled the presence of thousands of people of color.
“Fort Lauderdale hoping to avoid Spring Break madness hitting Miami Beach” via Susannah Bryan of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — The chaos on the streets of Miami Beach that led to a Spring Break curfew and three causeway closures has leaders in Fort Lauderdale asking whether the same unruly crowds might head this way. Hundreds of college kids have already swarmed Fort Lauderdale’s beachfront bars over the past few weeks, but they’ve not created the kind of mob scene unfolding in South Beach that’s led to hundreds of arrests and a state of emergency, local officials say. Fort Lauderdale Mayor Dean Trantalis says he has been keeping an eye on how things are going in Miami Beach. So has Broward Mayor Steve Geller. But neither Geller nor Trantalis think the chaos will come here.
More local
“From leasing cars to renting politicians: How father-son developers wielded influence in Broward” via Rafael Olmeda of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — By their own admission, developers Bruce and Shawn Chait made public corruption a family business. They bragged about how they paid off politicians and expected favors in return: “In my business, if you get somebody elected, the person who gets you elected is the person who tells you what to do,” Bruce Chait once said. Described as gruff, profane and vindictive, Bruce and his son Shawn went from obscurity to notoriety more than a decade ago as a corruption scandal unfolded in Tamarac. Their cooperation with prosecutors kept them out of prison while sending one politician to prison and putting a half-dozen others under a cloud of suspicion for years to come.
“He watched an offensive video, then hit send: How Ibis’ longtime golf GM spurred controversy and conversation in this upscale community” via Tony Doris of The Palm Beach Post — Steve LoGiudice, longtime general manager at the Club at Ibis, thought the video funny and forwarded it to members of his board. It was a comedian’s parody of a golf news conference. It related to a controversy in January in which professional golfer Justin Thomas was caught on mic uttering a homophobic slur to himself over a missed putt. The bit by Bob Menery jabbed at exaggerated political correctness but came off as insensitive, homophobic and misogynistic to many. As word of the email spread beyond the Ibis board room and into the 1,800-home, fairway-lined community, The Friends of Ibis Facebook page filled with comment and criticism. Some called for LoGiudice’s firing, others voiced support.
A shared video of Justin Thomas has led to calls for a golf club executive to resign. Image via AP.
“Four lawyers vie to replace Pat Keon in Coral Gables Group Three commission race” via Samantha J. Gross of the Miami Herald — More than 12,000 mail ballots have been sent to Coral Gables voters, and people are starting to make their choices on who they think should be the next Mayor and who should fill two Commission seats in the city’s April 13 election. In the Group Three race to replace Commissioner Patricia Keon, voters will choose from among four candidates: Javier Baños, Alex Bucelo, Kirk Menendez and Phillip “P.J.” Mitchell. All four candidates are lawyers who promise to stand up against overdevelopment and ensure a more transparent government for residents of Coral Gables. Already, the race has attracted a host of political attacks, barbs, and even a cameo by former Republican Florida Gov. Jeb Bush.
“Latest Jacksonville mayoral candidate a peculiar long-shot, but don’t discount him” via Nate Monroe of The Florida Times-Union — Jacksonville City Councilman Al Ferraro, who announced his long-shot 2023 candidacy for Mayor last week at a Northside shooting range, would arguably be the most conservative chief executive to serve in the half-century since the formation of the city’s modern government, and his revenge-of-the-suburbs political style would likely usher in a dramatic reshuffling of the priorities business and civic leaders have long fought to keep front-and-center at City Hall. Ferraro is akin to Mike Hogan 2.0. Hogan’s deeply conservative views and his opposition to focusing more on downtown redevelopment scared off many of the reliably Republican but more moderate and business-aligned donors. Still, it was the closest race in Jacksonville’s modern history. Hogan was 1,600 votes away from victory.
“Home surveillance camera shows officer lied on report when charging man with major crimes” via Adam Walser of ABC Action News — A Lake Wales man, who could have been sent to prison for years based on the claims in a police report, was saved by a home surveillance camera. It showed he didn’t attack an officer, as claimed in the report. Officer Colt Black’s report said: “[Chris] Cordero immediately exited the driver door and began to charge toward my patrol vehicle.” It also indicated Cordero approached the officer with closed fists. “That’s absolutely not true,” Cordero said. Cordero said he complied with all of Officer Black’s commands.
New College
U.S. News & World Report named New College — the only dedicated liberal arts school in Florida’s State University System — as one of the top 100 liberal arts colleges in the country and the No. 6 public college in the nation.
That puts the Sarasota-based school in rarefied company, behind the three U.S. military academies, the Virginia Military Institute and St. Mary’s College in Maryland.
New College has fewer than 1,000 undergraduate students (for now), providing an environment small enough that it brims with students’ opportunities to form organizations, whether it’s a crew team or a student publication.
Students also enjoy a greater opportunity to work with advisers and tailor an education curriculum that best suits them.
New College is in rarefied company.
“It’s why people who work here are really committed to being a public institution,” said New College President Dr. Donal O’Shea. “I can’t overstate how important I feel it is that this is not an elite thing.”
It’s an experience closer to what students find on private college campuses. New College’s average class size is 12, the student-to-faculty ratio at the school 7 to 1. Alumni and supporters of the school say it’s a treasure within the university system, proving the equivalent of an Ivy League education for a fraction of the price, especially to Florida students.
Rep. Fiona McFarland, a Sarasota Republican, said: “It’s a great school and we are tremendously proud to have it here. It’s one of the jewels in the crown of Sarasota’s diverse education offerings.”
O’Shea, an internationally regarded mathematician in charge on New College since the summer of 2012, will retire in June. Mary Ruiz, chair of the Board of Trustees, said the college is still in the throes of an expansive search for a new president.
“People will ask me all the time, aren’t you just an arts and sciences college? Yes, we are,” she said. “And we believe in results.”
Top opinion
“Nope, DeSantis’ record on COVID-19 isn’t a success, but a failure” via Michael Hiltzik of the Los Angeles Times — We’re not talking about his purported skill at fighting the COVID-19 pandemic. We’re talking about his ability to snow the press into taking at face value the claim that his refusal to impose stringent antivirus rules and regulations has been an unalloyed success The latest publication to fall into line is Politico, which on Thursday posted an article headlined, “How DeSantis won the pandemic.” A companion piece observed that he has “survived the pandemic,” and that “Florida has fared no worse, and in some ways better, than many other states — including its big-state peers.” Leaving aside that this sort of coverage treats the coronavirus battle as if it’s a sporting contest deserving of up-to-the-minute color commentary, the best that could be said about these judgments is that they’re premature.
Opinions
“Old pol, new tricks” via Maureen Dowd of The New York Times — Biden is being hailed as a transformational, once-in-a-generation progressive champion, with comparisons to L.B.J. and F.D.R. aplenty, while Barack Obama has become a cautionary tale about what happens when Democrats get the keys to the car but don’t put their foot on the gas. The collective smirk was wiped off the face of Obamaworld this past week, as former aides expressed their irritation at the retrospective dissing, and while Biden’s inner circle enjoyed an unfamiliar sensation: schadenfreude. Now the friendly fire once aimed at Biden is coming toward Obama.
“When local voters make their voices heard, Florida lawmakers seek to muzzle them” via the Miami Herald editorial board — When Key West put three referendums on the ballot last year to limit cruise ships at the city’s port, the cruise industry funded a dark-money disinformation campaign to convince voters to reject the proposals. Despite stoking fears that the referendums would “devastate” city services like police and fire rescue, the industry lost that battle. That made sense to Key West voters trying to preserve their way of life. But opponents of the measure weren’t having it, so they did what moneyed special interests usually do when they can’t get their way locally: They turned to the Legislature. The problem is when lawmakers are squeezed between economic interests and the environment — well, we don’t need to tell you who wins.
“The fight for our rights means defeating House Bill 1” via Andrew Learned for the Tampa Bay Times — We all want the same things: safe streets, peaceful expressions of our First Amendment liberties and the preservation of our constitutional rights. If passed, House Bill 1 in the Florida Legislature would take us in a different direction, one that criminalizes free speech and severely weakens our right to free assembly. I joined the U.S. military not long after 9/11. I took an oath to support and defend the Constitution of the United States. That includes the right to free speech and peaceful protest, which is why I cannot support House Bill 1. This bill simply goes too far in reining in our freedom of speech and expression.
“2021 is starting to remind one young Democrat of the voting challenges of 1971” via Dick Batchelor of the Orlando Sentinel — DeSantis and the Republican legislative leadership want to take us back in time with voting restrictions reminiscent of the Jim Crow era of racial segregation. Like so many efforts in Republican legislatures across the country, the Florida measures would make it very difficult for Black people to vote. Without shame, these obvious voter discrimination measures around the nation would outlaw drop boxes, radically restrict weekend voting and tighten the application process for absentee ballots. One such radical proposal eliminates the “Souls to the Polls” program in which Black churches encourage voting on the weekend before elections.
“We’d like to see Florida lawmakers survive on $275 a week in unemployment benefits” via the Miami Herald editorial board — We can’t say lawmakers are doing nothing to fix Florida’s inefficient-by-design, anti-worker unemployment system. The delays, system crashes and the desperation of laid-off workers who couldn’t get their applications through last year were too egregious to ignore. The proposals gaining traction in the Legislature are what Tallahassee likes to call a “step in the right direction.” It’s what allows lawmakers to say they fixed the issue, until the next crisis occurs. Luckily, they have time to pass more substantive before the legislative session concludes at the end of April.
“Former Florida state Sen. Frank Artiles is finally getting his due: criminal charges” via Fabiola Santiago of the Miami Herald — Confirmed: There was voter fraud in Florida in the 2020 election after all. And the alleged perpetrator, foul-mouthed Artiles, is getting his due. The disgraced former lawmaker and GOP operative is charged with making a mockery of democracy: rigging a 2020 state Senate race in Miami-Dade by planting and paying $44,708 to a bogus, no-party candidate. His masterful strategy to win for the GOP was to siphon off votes from the Democrat. Idiot that he has always been underneath the bravado, Artiles didn’t think the money and paper trail would lead to him — or that three reporters, the Miami Herald’s Samantha Gross and Ana Ceballos, and WPLG TV’s Glenna Milberg, would tirelessly pursue the truth.
On today’s Sunrise
Turns out Republicans who complained about voter fraud in last year’s election were right … but it was one of their own behind it. Democrats call for a do-over after a GOP operative and former state lawmaker was charged with financing a sham candidate in Senate District 37 to siphon votes away from the Democrat.
Also, on today’s Sunrise:
— The House Public Integrity and Elections Committee takes up a bill that’s being sold as a fraud-prevention measure but doesn’t do a thing about sham candidates. All it does is make it harder to vote by mail, the method often preferred by Democrats.
— Gov. DeSantis says more than 70% of Florida seniors have now been vaccinated for COVID-19, so he’s lowering the age to get a shot. As of today, anyone 50 and over can sign up.
— Florida reached another milestone in the COVID-19 crisis over the weekend as the number of cases passed the 2 million mark, one of every 10 Floridians.
— House and Senate leaders agreed on a bill to provide businesses and health care entities with protection from COVID-19 liability lawsuits, and the bill could be on its way to the Governor by the end of the week. But there’s another group asking for legal protection for an entirely different reason: Urban Search and Rescue Structures Specialists who volunteer to enter collapsed or partially collapsed buildings first to help clear a path to help first responders get to victims.
— The problem is liability lawsuits; Allen Douglas, head of the Florida Engineering Society, says these volunteer engineers deserve the same sort of protection enjoyed by good Samaritans.
— And finally, two Florida Couples who ran afoul of the law. One is accused of letting students smoke weed at their home; the other pair was caught with lamb and seafood stuffed in their pants at Costco.
“Canadian Snowbirds find refuge in their mythical Miami” via Dan Bilefsky of The New York Times — In a retirement community north of Quebec City, 30-foot plastic palm trees overlook Miami, Orlando and Cocoa Avenues, cookie-cutter streets where residents glide by some days on snowshoes. The pool area evokes countless oceanside condos in Florida. Except for the snow, and temperatures that dipped this month to minus 15 degrees Fahrenheit. This is Domaine de la Florida, a Canadian make-believe Miami, whose 520 residents are so in love with the Sunshine State that they have recreated it here. In the summer, golf carts whisk silver-haired retirees to games of beach volleyball, shuffleboard and bingo.
“The Oscars reveal 2021 show details. Social distance? Yes. Zoom? No” via Sonaiya Kelly of the Los Angeles Times — In the wake of a virtual Golden Globes ceremony that was marred with technical difficulties and spotty Zoom feeds, the Oscars will be held live at LA’s Union Station, where only nominees, their guests and presenters will be in attendance. There will not be an option to Zoom in. The producers promise an on-site COVID-19 safety team with PCR testing and different protocols for people already in L.A. and those traveling here. Additional show elements will be taped live from Hollywood’s Dolby Theatre.
No Zoom for the Oscars; it’s going live.
“Will ‘The Falcon and the Winter Soldier’ finally bring us a Black Captain America on-screen?” via David Betancourt of The Washington Post — During the final moments of the 2019 blockbuster “Avengers: Endgame,” the possibility of a Black Captain America became a likely Hollywood reality. An elderly, time-traveling Captain America (Chris Evans) hands over his shield to the loyal partner who was always on his left, the highflying Falcon (Anthony Mackie). It signified that a torch was being passed and that Marvel Studios’ next decade could be a more inclusive one. The time to see what will grow from that planted super-seed is now. “The Falcon and the Winter Soldier,” the next Marvel Studios event for Disney Plus, debuted the first of six episodes on Friday.
Happy birthday
Best wishes to top fundraiser Gretchen Picotte and great guys Sean Daly, Ash Mason, Paul Mitchell of The Southern Group, Jason Unger of GrayRobinson, and former Rep. Alan Williams.
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Covid: Cases are now rising in 21 states following a loooong decline. Officials are concerned about states loosening restrictions too early and the circulation of highly contagious strains, including one that was first found in Brazil called P1.
Nation: Vigils were held in cities across the country to remember the victims of the Atlanta shootings and to call out racism against Asian-Americans.
Today, the city council of Evanston, IL, will vote to begin distributing $400,000 in grants to Black residents. It would be the first instance of a US city issuing reparations for decades of racist government policies.
Who’s eligible? Black people who lived in Evanston between 1919 and 1969 (or those whose ancestors did), as well as Black residents who can show they were subject to housing discrimination by the city government. They’ll receive up to $25,000 to put toward housing, such as buying or upgrading a home.
The money will come from a sales tax on recreational marijuana, which was recently legalized in Illinois.
How we got here
Since the Civil War ended in 1865, reparations have been floated as a potential solution to the racial wealth gap that has resulted from centuries of discriminatory laws. For instance, in a process known as “redlining,” banks would deny mortgages to Black people in certain neighborhoods—preventing them from accumulating wealth by owning a home.
Fast forward to 2019. Evanston, a Chicago suburb and home to Northwestern University, voted to create the Reparations Fund to begin making amends for its past policies that denied wealth to its Black residents, who currently make up 16% of the total population. The city pledged to give out $10 million over 10 years.
For some, that’s not close to enough
A group of Black residents argue that Evanston’s reparations program is more like Reparations Lite for its narrow focus on housing assistance and cash payments: “If we’re doing reparations, let’s do reparations right,” said Alderwoman Cicely Fleming in a statement. “Let’s not short-change Black people on something they’ve been waiting centuries for.”
Proponents say it’s a good start for grappling with systemic racism, and could serve as a model for other cities, including neighboring Chicago, Providence, RI, and Asheville, NC, that are also considering reparations programs.
Yesterday, railroad operator Canadian Pacific announced plans to acquire Kansas City Southern for ~$25 billion.
This is a big deal, not just because it’s a deal that is big (the biggest M&A announced so far this year), but also because if regulators green-light it, the new company will have the first US-Mexico-Canada railroad.
Kansas City Southern’s routes run through Mexico and Texas to…Kansas City.
Canadian Pacific, which has a network that runs across Canada and some Northern US states, has been eyeing its railroad rival for years as a way to extend its own southern reach.
The deal may have some trouble with that regulatory green light; Canadian railroads have historically hit antitrust speed bumps in efforts to buy US companies.
Zoom out: The deal is a bet that North American trade will come roaring back as economies and factories flicker back to life. The USMCA trade agreement took effect last July and is expected to boost trade among the three countries.
A year into the global pandemic, the coronavirus continues to cause calendar chaos.
The Tokyo Olympics will bar international spectators from attending the event, which is set to start on July 23. Typically about 10%–20% of Olympics tickets go to international fans, and the Tokyo games had already sold 600,000 to overseas buyers, per the NYT.
March Madness had its first Covid-related forfeit: Saturday’s game between VCU and Oregon in the NCAA tournament was declared a “no-contest” after VCU reported multiple positive Covid-19 tests. Oregon will advance and play Iowa today.
Miami Beach declared a state of emergency and imposed a curfew in its entertainment district for 72 hours. The reason? Spring breakers have simply overwhelmed the area. “We’ve got too many people and too many looking to act out while there’s a pandemic going on,” Mayor Dan Gelber told USA Today.
Last week, you might have heard that the art market went—as they say in business school—absolutely bonkers, setting a new record of $69.3 million for a nifty digital artwork. The takeaway? Art investing has hit the mainstream. But perhaps putting your money in real, tangible art by the blue-chips makes more sense for you.
For one thing, contemporary art has outperformed the S&P by 172% from 2000–2020, according to data from Masterworks. They were the first platform to let you invest in paintings by the likes of Basquiat, Kaws, and Haring. But what about returns? They’ve got that too: They sold their first Banksy work for a cool 32% annualized return to investors.
With results like that, it’s no wonder there are over 25,000 people on the waitlist. Just use our special link, tell them the Brew sent you, and you’ll be good to go.*
Stat: There are more real estate agents in the US than homes for sale, per the WSJ. The National Association of Realtors had 1.45 million members in January (up 4.8% annually), while there were 1.04 million homes for sale (down 26%).
Quote: “There’s a very strong incentive for us to be very confidential with any information. If Tesla used cars to spy in China or anywhere, we will get shut down.”
During a virtual appearance at the China Development Forum, Elon Musk addressed reports that the Chinese government banned the use of Teslas at its facilities over fears their cameras could send sensitive information back to the US. Musk said the company would never do that.
Read: What working from home looks like in nine different countries. (Rest of World)
Earnings: GameStop drops its Q1 financials on Tuesday lol.
Inflation: Key inflation numbers will arrive on Friday in a report known as the Core PCE price index. Many investors have been worried about higher prices…but will it finally show up in the data?
DC appearances: The economic power duo of Fed Chair Jerome Powell and Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen will talk to Congress on Tuesday and Wednesday about Covid relief efforts.
Everything else:
Israel will hold its national elections on Tuesday
So much college basketball will be played
Start getting rid of your chametz, because Passover starts Saturday evening
Earth Hour, when people are encouraged to shut off lights for an hour, is Saturday night
WHAT ELSE IS BREWING
Saudi Aramco, Saudi Arabia’s state-owned oil giant, said its net income fell 44% last year but sees better times ahead and will maintain its $75 billion annual dividend.
The Turkish lira plunged as much as 15% after President Recep Tayyip Erdogan replaced the head of the country’s central bank.
Kent Taylor, the CEO and founder of restaurant chain Texas Roadhouse, died by suicide Thursday following a battle with “post-Covid-related symptoms,” the company said.
Facebook is working on an Instagram for kids under 13.
The NCAA apologized for discrepancies in the weight rooms between the men’s and women’s basketball tournaments, and upgraded the women’s facilities.
BREW’S BETS
You mean those aren’t lash extensions?! This mascara instantly makes lashes so long and lush, it’s hard to believe they’re not extensions. No wonder it has 11,800+ five-star reviews. Get in on the hype with 15% off.*
Take back the time Daylight Savings stole. With Policygenius, it takes minutes to compare home & auto insurance quotes from top companies, saving you hours of frustrating searching. On top of time, Policygenius customers have saved an average of $1000 per year by re-shopping—see what you can save here.*
GPOAT: The Final Four of our Greatest Product of All Time bracket is here. Microsoft Windows, the iPhone, Lego, and Google Search have all rested up over the weekend and are ready to make a run at the championship game. Make sure you vote for your favorite starting at 9am ET.
Miami Beach Mayor Dan Gelber issued the order on Saturday, after several days in which revelers got into fights in the popular spring break destination’s streets and eateries, and as thousands of people were crowding beaches and nightlife locations. According to USA Today, local police made 163 arrests over seven days.
…
The curfew will be in place for at least 72 hours, and requires all businesses to close at 8 pm. It also creates a “high impact zone” — an area most affected by the crowding and brawling — within which several roads will be closed overnight as well. Miami Beach interim city manager Raul Aguila told the Miami Herald that he recommends keeping the rules in place through at least April 12.
…
The Daily Beast reported that SWAT teams and pepper spray were deployed to break up street parties on Saturday night. While Miami Beach has taken its own local precautions against the coronavirus, Florida’s Republican governor, Ron DeSantis, lifted most restrictions statewide in September, and limited the extent to which local governments could enforce tighter restrictions, including mask mandates and lockdowns.
All votes are anonymous. This poll closes at: 9:00 PST
YESTERDAY’S POLLShould employers screen for prior marijuana use?
Yes
9%
No
86%
Unsure
5%
583 votes, 140 comments
BEST COMMENTS“Yes – Screen yes, but should it disqualify a candidate based on previous use? That should depend on frequency of use. Also, should not be an active user of drugs such as Marijuana or other drugs when holding a significant security clearance. If one chooses a path where having to hold a clearance is required and then one must abstain from certain behaviors whilst holding said clearance.”
“No – I’ve had a fantastic 40 year career in Civil Engineering only because the chronic arthritic condition I’ve lived with my entire adult life could be managed using cannabi…”
“Unsure – They can in states where it’s not legali…”
In an apparent volte-face, Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas took to the Sunday news shows to announce that the “border is closed.” This is perhaps not what those who voted for Joe Biden expected to hear just two months into his presidency. Former President Trump offered a more sober assessment, saying, “They are in way over their heads and taking on water fast.”
Texas Comes Out Swinging Against Biden’s Border Blunders
No more kids in cages? Or no more coverage of kids in cages? It seems even the Biden-friendly media is starting to question the lack of transparency and access to the estimated 15,000 minors currently being held on the southern border. Rep. Linda Sanchez (D-CA) said it was “not necessarily appropriate” for the Fourth Estate to see the holding facilities because they aren’t “permanent.”
According to former senior adviser Jason Miller, Donald Trump is getting set to launch his own social media platform within the next two or three months. This comes just weeks after MyPillow founder Mike Lindell also stated that he was in the process of creating a new platform.
Democrats and Republicans are in the process of reviving “earmarks” in the hope of making some bipartisan progress. However, some Republicans warn of the ever-increasing national debt.
The lead prosecutor for the January 6 riots at the Capitol hinted that some people could face sedition charges. Is this likely, or is it a tactic to garner media and public support ahead of trials?
Something political to ponder as you enjoy your morning coffee.
The AstraZeneca vaccine, once lauded as the jab to end the COVID crisis, is taking flak. The company is being accused of over-promising and under-delivering. However, this may be more political shenanigans than concrete facts. European Union leaders drew heavy fire for failing to sign contracts and agree to scheduling, meaning the former member state, the United Kingdom, was well ahead of the curve. Now the EU appears determined to discredit any success the newly independent nation may have.
Good morning and welcome to Fox News First. Here’s what you need to know as you start your day
Trump slams Biden over border ‘crisis’, accused him of causing ‘death and human tragedy’
President Biden said Sunday that he intends to travel to the southern border “at some point,” telling reporters that he is in no rush to visit because “I know what’s going in those facilities.”
Biden’s immigration agenda includes a pathway to citizenship for 11 million undocumented immigrants, but the president last week urged migrants planning on embarking to the United States to hold off for the time being.
Asked Sunday why his warning did little to quell the chaos at the border, Biden admitted that his administration could increase efforts to transmit his recent messaging to migrants making their way to the U.S.
The Customs and Border Protection (CBP) facilities have been operating far beyond capacity amid a troubling surge in border crossers. The agency announced that it had encountered more than 100,000 migrants at the border in February, while numbers of child migrants in custody have also increased dramatically.
The Biden administration has been moving to increase capacity of facilities to house migrants, and building a number of extra facilities — including looking at NASA sites and military bases.
Former President Donald Trump released a statement in response to Biden’s remarks on Sunday, blaming his successor for turning “a national triumph into a national disaster” with his handling of the crisis.
“We proudly handed the Biden Administration the most secure border in history,” the statement reads. “All they had to do was keep this smooth-running system on autopilot. Instead, in the span of a just few weeks, the Biden Administration has turned a national triumph into a national disaster. They are in way over their heads and taking on water fast.” CLICK HERE FOR MORE ON OUR TOP STORY.
In other developments:
– Border Patrol in Rio Grande Valley releasing illegal crossers into US without court date
– Border crisis: 823 unaccompanied migrant children held in border patrol custody for over 10 days: report
– WH ignores illegal crosser crediting Biden for allowing him in US, wouldn’t have come if Trump was president
– CNN joins other networks criticizing Biden for denying press access to border operations
Miami Beach spring breakers hit with extended curfew after SWAT team forced to break up rowdy crowd
Miami Beach officials on Sunday said the city would extend curfews and closures through April 12 after a SWAT team was called in Saturday night to break up a rowdy crowd of spring breakers that had defied an 8 p.m. curfew.
City commissioners unanimously voted on the move during an emergency meeting on Sunday. Interim City Manager Raul Aguila, who recommended extending the curfew, needed commission support to extend the curfew beyond Tuesday.
Aguila told The Miami Herald that the measure aims to “contain the overwhelming crowd of visitors and the potential for violence, disruption and damage to property.”
The vote comes after law enforcement officers in bulletproof vests dispersed pepper spray balls Saturday to break up groups that descended on sunny South Beach by the thousands, trashing restaurants and flooding the streets without masks or social distancing despite COVID restrictions.
After days of partying – including several confrontations between police and large crowds – Miami Beach officials ordered an emergency curfew from 8 p.m. until 6 a.m., forcing restaurants to stop outdoor seating entirely during the three-day emergency period, and encouraging local businesses to voluntarily shut down.
On Saturday, a military-style vehicle was seen rolling down the palm-tree-lined Ocean Drive on social media as outnumbered Miami Beach police officers struggled to disperse the raucous crowds. Tourists were urged to stay inside their hotels and pedestrians or vehicles were not allowed to enter the restricted area after 8 p.m. CLICK HERE FOR MORE.
In other developments:
– Miami Beach police arrest more than 50 people during spring breaker raucous
– Miami Beach declares ‘state of emergency’ over spring breakers, police deploying pepper balls at partiers
Trump returning to social media with ‘his own platform’ in 2-3 months: adviser
Former President Donald Trump will be back on social media in the near future with his own service, according to one of his senior advisers.
Trump was banned from Twitter following the Jan. 6 Capitol riots. He had been a prolific poster on that platform before and during his presidency.
“I do think that we’re going to see President Trump returning to social media in probably about two or three months here, with his own platform,” Trump senior adviser Jason Miller told Fox News’ “#MediaBuzz” on Sunday. “And this is something that I think will be the hottest ticket in social media, it’s going to completely redefine the game, and everybody is going to be waiting and watching to see what exactly President Trump does.”
Miller said he was unable to provide much more in terms of details at this point, but he did reveal that Trump has been having “high-powered meetings” at Mar-a-Lago with various teams regarding the venture, and that “numerous companies” have approached Trump.
“This new platform is going to be big,” Miller said, predicting that Trump will draw “tens of millions of people.” CLICK HERE FOR MORE.
In other developments:
– Operation Warp Speed Doc: 90% of Biden vaccine rollout plan was same as Trump’s
– Trump boosts Julia Letlow in Louisiana House race to succeed her late husband
TODAY’S MUST-READS:
– Capitol riot: Top prosecutor says evidence likely supports sedition charges in some cases
– Border Patrol in Rio Grande Valley releasing illegal crossers into US without court date
– Florida police say man dies after jumping off resort balcony with parachute: report
– Biden administration awards ICE $86M contract to secure hotel rooms for illegal families
THE LATEST FROM FOX BUSINESS:
– Pandemic unemployment benefits fraud could top $200B, firm says
– Spring break boom boosts business owners’ hopes: ‘Noticeably busy’
– Someone just bought a house for $500,000 – and they can never live in it
– Railroads strike $25B merger
#The Flashback: CLICK HEREto find out what happened on “This Day in History.”
SOME PARTING WORDS
General John M. “Jack” Keane joined Fox News host Mark Levin Sunday night to discuss President Biden’s foreign policy efforts on “Life, Liberty & Levin.”
“One of the things President Trump was able to do – and he’s never going to get any credit for it from the Biden administration – is make sure our allies know the United States has their back,” Keane said. Not signed up yet for Fox News First? Click here to find out what you’re missing.
Fox News’ Go Watch page is now available, providing visitors with Pay TV provider options in their area carrying Fox News Channel & Fox Business Network.
Fox News First was compiled by Fox News’ Jack Durschlag. Thank you for making us your first choice in the morning! We’ll see you in your inbox first thing Tuesday.
Steven B. Kamin and John Kearns | AEI Economic Policy Working Paper Series
This paper describes one of the first attempts to gauge the effect of the COVID-19 pandemic on the global trajectory of a key measure of economic activity — industrial production — throughout 2020.
“Top U.S. and Chinese officials offered sharply different views of each other and the world [last] Thursday as the two sides met face-to-face for the first time since President Joe Biden took office… In unusually pointed public remarks for a staid diplomatic meeting, Secretary of State Antony Blinken and Chinese Communist Party foreign affairs chief Yang Jiechi took aim at each other’s country’s policies at the start of two days of talks in Alaska.” AP News
From the Left
The left is generally supportive of Blinken and Sullivan taking a hard stance against China’s abusive and anti-democratic practices.
“Biden came into office vowing to restore, as he put it, ‘diplomacy rooted in America’s most cherished democratic values: defending freedom, championing opportunity, upholding universal rights, respecting the rule of law, and treating every person with dignity.’ Obviously, as even he would probably admit, his administration will often fall short of those values…
“At the very least, though, the Biden team promised, and so far has delivered, a rhetorical contrast with Donald Trump, who rarely even pretended to care about democracy abroad, praised other countries’ human rights abuses, and openly admitted that he preferred dealing with dictators, ‘the tougher and meaner they are,’ to democratic leaders.” Joshua Keating, Slate
“Last year, as it anticipated a win for Joe Biden in the U.S. election and then during the transition, China signaled that it wanted to effectively reset the relationship regarding cooperation on climate change and the pandemic. The Biden team saw these overtures for what they were: a trap to get the U.S. to pull back from competing with China in exchange for cooperation that would never really materialize…
“By skipping this step in favor of a strategy of competitive engagement—meeting with China but seeing it through the lens of competition—the Biden team not only saved time, but it flushed Beijing’s true intentions out into the open for the world to see. In his remarks, contrasting ‘Chinese-style democracy,’ as he called it, with ‘U.S.-style democracy,’ Yang implicitly acknowledged that the U.S.-China relationship is, and will continue to be, defined by a competition between different government systems: authoritarianism and liberal democracy.” Thomas Wright, The Atlantic
“Who would disagree, as George Floyd’s killer goes on trial in Minnesota and Asian women are gunned down in Georgia, that ‘the challenges facing the United States in human rights are deep-seated,’ as Yang put it. Yet, last fall, Americans were able to organize and rally and vote, and we turned out one leader and installed another. I can endorse Yang’s criticism of U.S. human rights without being sent to prison for ‘picking quarrels and provoking trouble.’ So I would say to Director Yang, you are right about America. If you are just as right about China, let Wang Bingzhang and Zhang Zhan and Joshua Wong out of prison. Let them speak their minds. Let your people organize and rally and vote.” Fred Hiatt, Washington Post
Critics of the Biden team’s performance note that “Soviet diplomats ran the same game plan in the 1950s, answering any American criticism of the Kremlin’s mass oppression and political prisons by citing lynchings in Alabama—and, though the two superpowers’ systems were far from morally equivalent, the reply stung and had an impact in many third-world countries with Black or brown majorities, where Washington and Moscow were competing for influence…
“Yet Blinken seemed startled and kept the reporters in the room while he issued a long rejoinder… In the weeks leading up to this trip, Blinken and other officials had publicly said that they would be meeting with the Chinese from ‘a position of strength’—always a mistake, as it seems designed to provoke and also conveys an impression of weakness, as those truly occupying a position of strength generally don’t feel compelled to say they do. It might have been better if Blinken had replied to Yang’s initial fusillade with a terse, witty sentence or two… and then moved on to the behind-doors session.” Fred Kaplan, Slate
“Now that each government has had its say, the United States should take the high ground and find ways to reduce tensions, even if those can partly be blamed on China’s recent actions. One way forward would be to reverse some of the Trump administration’s burn-the-bridges measures, like its ending academic exchanges, expelling Chinese journalists and closing consulates… Modest moves might seem less decisive than acting tough, but they are what, in the end, makes realpolitik real.” Ian Johnson, New York Times
From the Right
The right is generally critical of Blinken and Sullivan, arguing that they did not go far enough in defending American values.
“To lend any credence to the notion that there is any human-rights equivalency between the United States and Russia or China is so hideously misinformed that it borders on mania. And Blinken’s half-hearted pushback against his table-pounding Chinese interlocutor is a discouraging, albeit preliminary, sign that this mania has found its way into the American diplomatic corps…
“Make no mistake: There is no equivalence. China has ruthlessly crushed democracy in Hong Kong. It has ethnically cleansed tens of thousands of minority Muslims in Xinjiang. It has herded them into reeducation camps, where they are forced to violate the tenets of their religion and are subsequently dispersed throughout the country to perform forced labor…
“If the United States is still the self-confident liberal democracy Blinken insists that it is, its representatives should have enough spine to defend this country’s virtues in a public forum.” Noah Rothman, Commentary Magazine
“What was Blinken’s response? It should have been to walk out, tell them [they] weren’t living in reality, and/or remind them they have actual concentration camps where they are putting Uighurs. Instead, the US’s top diplomat Blinken reportedly conceded that the U.S. ‘is not perfect.’ He basically let us be gored and said, ‘Thank you, may I have another?’” Nick Arama, RedState
Some argue, “Although Blinken and Sullivan needed to raise these issues with their Chinese counterparts, doing so publicly at a joint press conference deeply insulted them and needlessly damaged US-China relations…
“President Trump didn’t much care for diplomatic niceties, but he knew from his career as a dealmaker how to conduct diplomacy with America’s adversaries. When he appeared before the cameras with officials such as Xi Jinping and Kim Jong-un, Trump set a cooperative and optimistic tone. Trump also often bragged about his personal friendships with these leaders. The former president knew building trust through these personal relationships was part of what he called the ‘Art of the Deal’ to get these countries to the negotiating table and to strike deals with them.” Fred Fleitz, Spectator USA
“In its first two months the Biden Administration has been strong in its rhetoric… Mr. Blinken and national security adviser Jake Sullivan orchestrated a series of well-done meetings with Indo-Pacific allies in advance of the Anchorage meeting. They also struck a deal on financing U.S. troop deployments in South Korea…
“But the real challenge will be how well it responds to the aggressive designs of adversaries in Beijing, Moscow and Tehran. The hard men in these capitals recall how they were able to advance when Mr. Biden’s liberal internationalists were last in power under Mr. Obama. Russia grabbed Crimea, invaded eastern Ukraine and moved into Syria. China snatched islands for military bases in the South China Sea and stole U.S. secrets with impunity…
“This is a dangerous moment as the world’s rogue powers look to test the Biden Administration’s resolve. The Anchorage lecture is a warning to take seriously.” Editorial Board, Wall Street Journal
“These top CCP officials did not come to Anchorage with any intent of offering concessions… The purpose of the event for Beijing seems to have been to push arguments for its own authoritarian model and to trash the very concept of a U.S.-led liberal democratic order as a racist, belligerent system…
“But the outbursts likely also signaled Beijing’s frustration that the days of a more dovish U.S. approach to China are gone and not coming back anytime soon. ‘China had this illusion that the Biden administration would completely abandon the Trump administration’s China policy,’ said Miles Yu, a senior fellow at the Hudson Institute and a former adviser on China to Secretary of State Mike Pompeo. ‘They didn’t see that in a major way, and that’s why they blew up [in Alaska]. It’s an act of desperation.’” Jimmy Quinn, National Review
🕶️ Good Monday morning!Smart Brevity™ count: 975 words … < 4 minutes.
🏆 You’re invited: Tomorrow at 12:30 p.m. ET, Kendall Baker and Niala Boodhoo will moderate an Axios Virtual Event on systemic racism in sports, featuring ABC/ESPN analyst Jalen Rose and L.A. Chargers running back Justin Jackson. Sign up here.
1 big thing: Inside crowded border tent
Migrants in the Donna, Texas, overflow facility this weekend. Photo provided to Axios by Rep. Henry Cuellar (D-Texas)
Exclusive photos from inside a U.S. Customs and Border Protection temporary overflow facility in Donna, Texas, reveal the crowded, makeshift conditions at the border as children’s shelters and family detention centers fill up, Axios’ Stef Kight reports.
Why it matters: Because the Biden administration has restricted media coverage at housing facilities, images like these offer a rare window into conditions.
Each of eight “pods” in the tent-like (officially “soft-sided”) facility has a 260-person occupancy, said Rep. Henry Cuellar (D-Texas), who provided the photos to Axios to raise awareness about the conditions. As of yesterday, he said, one pod held more than 400 unaccompanied male minors.
Cuellar, who recently visited a border shelter for children, did not take the photos himself. He said the photos were taken over the weekend.
Cuellar decried the “terrible conditions for the children,” and said they need to be moved more rapidly into HHS care.
⚡ Jonathan Swan scoopedlast night that an internal Homeland Security document shows that 823 unaccompanied migrant children have been held in U.S. Border Patrol custody for over 10 days — more than a fourfold increase over the past week.
The U.S. accounts for 27% of the world’s COVID vaccine production, but 0% of the global supply beyond its own borders. Critics and allies alike say it’s time for that to change, Axios World editor Dave Lawler reports.
Why it matters: China has gotten a head start on vaccine diplomacy, sending millions of doses all over the globe, including to Latin America. Experts say it’s in America’s interest to compete in the race to vaccinate the world. The calls to start doing so are getting louder.
The Biden administrationtook a step last week, offering around 4 million total doses of the forthcoming (see next item) Oxford/AstraZeneca vaccine to Mexico and Canada.
“We’re going to have excess supply,” said Zeke Emanuel, Penn’s vice provost for global initiatives, who was a member of Biden’s coronavirus task force during the transition. “It would be unethical — and it would be a diplomatic and strategic mistake — to say we need to build up a buffer of 100 million doses while China and Russia are selling to people and saying, you know, ‘You guys count.'”
The coronavirus vaccine developed by AstraZeneca and the University of Oxford was 79% effective at preventing symptomatic COVID — and 100% effective against severe disease and hospitalization — in Phase III U.S. trial results announced by the company this morning.
Why it matters: The long-awaited U.S. data, which showed no serious side effects among the more than 20,000 participants who received at least one dose, will bolster global confidence in the vaccine.
4. New this morning: Economists want climate action
In a semiannual economic-policy survey by the National Association for Business Economics, more than two-thirds of the 205 respondents said U.S. policy should do more to mitigate climate change.
Tech companies bracing for harsher D.C. scrutiny are hiring some of their last friends in town — libertarians, Axios’ Margaret Harding McGill reports.
Why it matters: Progressive liberals and populist conservatives are ramping up attacks on tech. So the companies are scrambling to gain traction on Capitol Hill with the dwindling ranks of Republicans who still believe in laissez-faire — even for Big Tech.
Here’s the roadmap for Week 2 of the White House “Help Is Here” stimulus tour:
Today: “Help to Put Food on the Table” … Vice President Harris visits a vaccination center in Jacksonville. Second Gentleman Doug Emhoff tours a food bank in Des Moines with Ag Secretary Tom Vilsack.
Tomorrow (11th anniversary of ACA): “Help to Lower Health Costs”… President Biden flies to Columbus … Emhoff in Nebraska … HHS Secretary Becerra in Carson City.
Wednesday (Equal Pay Day): “Help for Women and Families” … POTUS event at White House … Emhoff in Missouri.
Thursday: “Help for American Communities” … POTUS’ first press conference.
Friday: “Help to Reduce Child Poverty.”
7. Lingo: “Stimmies” drive stock market
File photo: Matt Rourke/AP
Stimulus checks are driving a huge surge in investing by small traders, the N.Y. Times reports (subscription):
Deutsche Bank estimates “that as much as $170 billion from the latest round of stimulus payments could flow into the stock market.”
8. Senate’s historic handover
Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer’s new leadership team for the Senate Sergeant at Arms — the Senate’s chief law enforcement officer — starts today. This marks the first time, since the SAA office was created in 1789, that the leadership team has been all women:
Lt. Gen Karen Gibson (ret.), Sergeant at Arms: Her 33-year active-duty career culminated as Deputy Director of National Intelligence for National Security Partnerships.
Kelly Fado, Deputy Sergeant at Arms, has spent over 25 years in the Senate, including as operations director for former Democratic Leader Tom Daschle.
Jennifer Hemingway, chief of staff, became Acting Sergeant at Arms on Jan. 7.
With Israel voting tomorrow— and Palestinians voting May 22 in their first election since 2006 — Mkhaimar Abusada, a political-science professor at Al Azhar University in Gaza, tells the N.Y. Times (subscription):
The Israelis are sick and tired of going to elections four times in two years — but we haven’t had elections in 15 years.
10. 🏀 1 smile to go: Sister Jean works her magic
Sister Jean Dolores Schmidt — team chaplain for Loyola Chicago, who turned 101 in August — got both her vaccine shots so she could travel to Indianapolis for the team’s March Madness tipoff.
Well worth the trip: The Ramblers head to the Sweet 16 after a 71-58 upset of No. 1-seeded Illinois.
Before watching the game from a suite — decked out in her trademark maroon and gold — she delivered this pregame prayer, AP reports:
As we play the Fighting Illini, we ask for special help to overcome this team and get a great win. We hope to score early and make our opponents nervous.
The result is a boost for the troubled vaccine, which had its rollout paused across Europe last week after reports of a relative handful of rare but worrying blood clots.
Candidate recruitment is critical for Republicans in their campaigns to take back the Senate in 2022 after crushing losses in Georgia last cycle gave Democrats a slim majority, thanks to Vice President Kamala Harris’s tiebreaking vote.
Federal officers at the country’s busiest land port of entry, located on the California-Mexico border, prepared this week for potential major disturbances as the Biden administration grapples with an influx of people illegally crossing the border.
Acting Food and Drug Administration head Janet Woodcock is a leading contender for nomination as permanent commissioner of the agency but faces opposition from Democrats for her ties to the major drug companies responsible for developing highly addictive opioid painkillers.
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A conversation between Rep. Dan Crenshaw and MSNBC host Mehdi Hasan devolved into cross-talk as the two debated whether a crisis exists on the southern border.
Rising to prominence in 2018, Jean Dolores Schmidt, better known as Sister Jean, is five months away from her 102nd birthday and arguably the biggest fan of the Loyola Chicago Men’s Basketball Team.
Stephen Miller attacked President Biden’s immigration policies, warning they are “morally monstrous” and “indefensible” as the crisis on the U.S.– Mexico border continues to grow.
Kansas City Southern Lines is on board with Canadian Pacific Railway Limited’s planned merger, creating the first rail network to stretch from Canada down to Mexico.
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18.) ASSOCIATED PRESS
March 19, 2021
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AP Morning Wire
Good morning. Today we bring you a selection of top stories from The Associated Press at this hour to begin the U.S. day. Our Europe team will be back tomorrow to hand-select the best of AP’s news report.
LONDON (AP) — AstraZeneca says advanced trial data from a U.S. study on its COVID vaccine shows it is 79% effective. The U.S. study comprised 30,000 volunteers, 20,000 of whom were given the……Read More
Despite the clamor to speed up the U.S. vaccination drive against COVID-19 and get the country back to normal, the first three months of the rollout suggest faster is not necessarily… …Read More
Shortly after his mother was killed in the Atlanta-area shootings, Randy Park launched a GoFundMe page asking for $20,000 to pay for funeral expenses. By Sunday, the donations were approaching …Read More
WASHINGTON (AP) — The Biden administration is scrambling to manage a growing humanitarian and political challenge at the U.S.-Mexico border that threatens to overshadow its ambitious legislativ…Read More
INDIANAPOLIS (AP) — It’s not like anyone’s going to the office anyway. The change in the March Madness schedule brought about by the COVID-19 pandemic will give basketball fans a… …Read More
FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. (AP) — Pointing to over 1,000 arrests in one of the nation’s top party spots, Miami Beach officials warned Sunday that the unruly spring break crowd gath…Read More
JERUSALEM (AP) — Israelis vote Tuesday in their fourth parliamentary election in just two years. Once again, the race boils down to a referendum on Prime Minister Benjamin… …Read More
Through the lens of an instant camera, through the eyes of an outsider, oft-neglected corners of America take on a very different cast. There is beauty in the swing ride at th…Read More
BANGKOK (AP) — In the jungles of southeast Myanmar, the army was shooting and otherwise tyrannizing civilians long before last month’s military coup. This largely unseen oppre…Read More
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Southwest Florida’s mental health providers say they’ve seen a sharply growing rate of depressed, anxious and suicidal children. Their needs are overwhelming available services.
Meanwhile, with Chicago anticipating entering a new vaccination phase at the end of the month, the Tribune will talk to University of Chicago Medicine’s Dr. Emily Landon on Tuesday in a Facebook Live conversation. Here’s how to watch.
Here’s more coronavirus news and other top stories you need to know to start your day.
As the pandemic took hold in Illinois last spring, the rookie governor won praise from officials on both sides of the aisle as well as political observers and public health experts for his decisive early steps to slow the spread of the deadly disease. Most notably, he issued an unprecedented statewide stay-at-home order that went into effect one year ago Sunday.
With potentially lifesaving vaccine still in short supply, many Illinois residents have looked longingly at nearby states ― some with a reportedly easier process for making appointments, others that expanded eligibility or lowered age restrictions at a more rapid pace.
There have been hundreds of carjackings in Chicago already this year, brazen crimes that have frightened city residents and frustrated police, politicians and community leaders in a city whose national reputation has already taken a hit due to its gun violence. Through mid-March, there had been more than 370 carjackings in Chicago.
The Tribune spent a few days earlier this month trying to find victims of carjackings in the hours or days after they occurred. Here are some of their stories.
The sequel to Loyola’s magical Final Four run in 2018 has become a must-watch. The Ramblers ousted No. 1-seeded Illinois on Sunday to reach the Sweet 16 and must be considered a legitimate threat to win it all. As for the Illini, this year’s squad will be remembered for its legendary player — Ayo Dosunmu — and a ton of wasted potential.
Shannon Ryan column: No. 1 seed Illinois leaves the NCAA Tournament with unfulfilled promises and a wasted opportunity. Ayo Dosunmu will be a legend, but this team will be remembered for a second-round loss.
Photos: No. 8 Loyola knocks off No. 1 Illinois 71-58 in NCAA Tournament
Here’s a taste of something nice in 2021: Chicago Restaurant Week makes its return — and in an adaptable form!
Diners will still get the typical Restaurant Week setup: special prix fixe menus that are designed to be more affordable editions of restaurants’ offerings. Along with traditional operations, though, Restaurant Week menus will be available for dine-in and takeout versions. Check out Tribune dining’s list of highly anticipated menus before you make any decisions.
A man accused of going on a shooting spree Saturday in Austin that wounded two people, including a Chicago police officer, was trying to “lure” cops to the area “because he wanted them to kill him,” prosecutors said Sunday.
Tracey Thomas Jr. was charged with the attempted murder of five officers, including the cop who was shot, according to Chicago police and the Cook County state’s attorney’s office. He wasn’t charged in separate shooting incidents involving civilians. Tom Schuba has the story…
Two bills pending in the Illinois General Assembly call for the expansion of a tax credit that has been seen as an anti-poverty program because it provides relief for low-income households.
Tracey Thomas Jr. first opened fire on two people, wounding one. He then targeted multiple responding officers, striking one in the hand before holing up in an apartment, prosecutors said.
Donald Lassere is returning to his hometown of Chicago with a plan to make the museum more interactive and exciting and to build and diversify a clientele that is now “more than 80%” white in a majority-minority city.
The Atlanta-based Southern Christian Leadership Conference had targeted Nielsen in a series of protests planned as part of a year-long campaign against corporate racism.
A University of Chicago researcher wants to study thousands of people to test the relation between vitamin D and boosting the immune system to fight viruses.
Welcome to The Hill’s Morning Report. Today is Monday! 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 as of this morning: 542,359.
Today, 24.5 percent of the U.S. population has received at least one dose of a COVID-19 vaccine and 13.3 percent are fully vaccinated, according to the Bloomberg News global vaccine tracker.
It took two months, but the international world broke through President Biden’s laser-like focus on domestic affairs, COVID-19 relief and his arguments that in a post-Trump era, he has new solutions for age-old problems.
From immigration at the U.S. southern border, to relations with China, Russia and Iran, to next steps with the Taliban and U.S. troops in Afghanistan, the Biden White House finds itself back to the future.
On Sunday, Biden defended the administration’s response to conditions at the border, telling reporters the White House is “making sure that we reestablish what existed before, which was they can stay in place and make their case from their home country.”
The president said he would visit the area “at some point,” assuring reporters he understood the conditions migrants are experiencing in U.S. detention facilities.
Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas repeated on four network news shows on Sunday what he has told Congress for weeks. The U.S. message to Central American migrants and asylum-seekers who are putting themselves and their children in danger and attempting to reach the U.S. border is, “do not come.”
It is the same message Biden delivered in June 2014 at the southern border on behalf of former President Obama when a migrant surge led to tough responses that earned Obama the nickname “deporter in chief.”
“Those who are pondering risking their lives to reach the United States should be aware of what awaits them. It will not be open arms,”Biden said in Guatemala City nearly seven years ago while discussing the crisis then. “We’re going to send the vast majority of you back.”
Immigration law in 2021 remains a politicized puzzle, complicated by emotions tied to children, a pandemic and Biden’s campaign vows to undo former President Trump’s hard-line immigration policies, which also required immigrants to file appeals to enter the United States from their home countries.
The Associated Press: Biden aims to prevent border crossings from swamping agenda.
The Hill: DHS chief takes lead in Biden administration’s border response defense.
“The border is closed, the border is secure,” Mayorkas said on ABC’s “This Week.”
“We are encouraging children not to come. Now is not the time to come. Do not come, the journey is dangerous. We are building safe, orderly and humane ways to address the needs of vulnerable children. Do not come,” he continued.
The Associated Press: Mexico on Sunday moved to limit all nonessential travel at its shared border with Guatemala. It is under pressure in Washington, as it was in 2014 and 2020, to slow the migration north as the U.S. government wrestles with growing numbers of undocumented people fleeing their countries.
Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas) this week plans to visit the border with 14 colleagues and he urged Biden on Sunday to open migrant detention facilities to press coverage, despite White House arguments that COVID-19 risks are one reason officials are keeping journalists at bay. In a letter sent today to Biden and shared with the Morning Report, Cruz called it “unacceptable” that the news media could not join the GOP delegation to see “a crisis of your own making.” Trump also issued a four-paragraph statement on Sunday accusing Biden of “destroying” the country (The Hill).
As The Hill’s Jonathan Easley reports, Biden’s agenda for his first 100 days got off to a strong start but is being buffeted by border issues he understood from experience, instances of domestic extremism and violence that he assailed during his campaign and pressures from a host of foreign adversaries he has assured voters he knows well.
Also on Sunday, Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin (pictured below in Kabul) arrived in Afghanistan, making an unannounced visit as the administration wrestles with a war that is nearly 20 years old. Austin met with officials, including Afghan President Ashraf Ghani, U.S. diplomat Ross Wilson and Army Gen. Austin “Scott” Miller, the top U.S. commander in Afghanistan. Austin told reporters traveling with him in Kabul that senior U.S. officials want to see “a responsible end to this conflict” and “a transition to something else” (The Washington Post and The Hill).
The Taliban on Friday warned the United States that if it does not meet a May 1 deadline for U.S. troop withdrawals, there will be a response. Suhail Shaheen, a member of the Taliban negotiation team, told reporters “it will be a kind of violation of the agreement. That violation would not be from our side … Their violation will have a reaction” (AlJazeera).
Meanwhile, Turkey and Afghanistan today will commemorate 100 years of diplomatic relations and Turkey appears ready, with encouragement from the Biden administration, to play a mediator role in Istanbul in April in trying to finalize a peace deal with the Taliban. On Sunday, Biden also rebuked Turkey for abandoning an international agreement aimed at preventing violence against women (ABC News).
CNBC: Former Energy Secretary Ernest Moniz, who helped negotiate a 2015 nuclear deal with Iran from which Trump withdrew the United States, said on Thursday “there’s probably just about 10 weeks left for some serious diplomacy” with Tehran.
The Associated Press: Iran in January threatened attacks on Washington’s Fort McNair Army post as well as a top general.
Across the globe, the Biden administration hoped to counter Russia and China by strengthening U.S. alliances and to collaborate with partners to put pressure on both countries to change behavior. Antagonistic signals from Moscow and Beijing last week showed the Biden administration that the two powerful nations are willing to confront the United States, report The Hill’s Laura Kelly and Morgan Chalfant.
POLITICS: Sens. Ron Johnson (R-Wis.) and Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa) have effectively hit the pause button on two potentially competitive Senate races that could help determine party control of the upper chamber through the next presidential election. Both senators are up for reelection next year. But even as a handful of their GOP colleagues announce retirement plans ahead of the 2022 midterms, Johnson, 65, and Grassley, 87, are taking their time with their respective decisions, saying that it could be months before they reveal their intentions. Republicans familiar with their thinking say they are both quietly laying the groundwork for reelection campaigns, but could still decide not to run (The Hill).
The New York Times: How Johnson spreads misinformation and helps erode confidence in government.
> House – aspirations: From Alabama to Missouri to Pennsylvania to California to Ohio this cycle, ambitious House politicians are looking for promotions, The Hill’s Scott Wong reports. Conservative Rep. Mo Brooks (R-Ala.) will launch a bid for the Senate on Monday. In Missouri, a quartet of House Republicans are all exploring a bid for the seat held by retiring GOP Sen. Roy Blunt. And at least five House Democrats are eyeing a possible Senate bid to replace retiring GOP Sen. Pat Toomey in Pennsylvania. Allies of Rep. Adam Schiff (D-Calif.) are aggressively lobbying Gov. Gavin Newsom (D) to appoint the Intelligence Committee chairman as attorney general of the most populous state. Democratic Reps. Greg Stanton and Ruben Gallego are being encouraged to run for Arizona governor. Rep. Warren Davidson (R-Ohio) is mulling a GOP primary challenge against Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine (R).
> House – Louisiana: Republican candidate Julia Letlow won a special election to replace her late husband in Congress on Saturday, eliminating the vacancy left after Luke Letlow’s COVID-19-related death last year. Letlow will represent the 5th Congressional District as soon as the House returns from its work period next month. “What was born out of the terrible tragedy of losing my husband, Luke, has become my mission in his honor,” Letlow said in a statement declaring victory. Former President Trump endorsed Letlow in a written statement on Saturday (The Washington Post).
Also on Saturday, a pair of Democratic state senators from New Orleans claimed the most votes in a special election to replace former Rep. Cedric Richmond (D), who is now a senior adviser to Biden. State Sens. Troy Carter and Karen Carter Peterson (they are not related) will advance to an April 24 runoff that will determine who represents a heavily Democratic seat in a Black-majority district that stretches from New Orleans along the Mississippi River to Baton Rouge (The New York Times).
> California recall: Supporters of an effort to recall Newsom have turned in the last of the more than 2.1 million signatures they collected over the past year, almost certainly setting up what will be the most expensive and most competitive election of 2021, reports The Hill’s Reid Wilson.
> House – Iowa: Republicans are hammering Democrats for what they say is hypocrisy in their efforts to challenge Rep. Mariannette Miller-Meeks’s (R-Iowa) victory over Democrat Rita Hart in the state’s second congressional district (The Hill).
*****
ADMINISTRATION: This week, the Senate will consider for confirmation Boston Mayor Marty Walsh (D), Biden’s nominee to lead the Labor Department. The Hill’s Brett Samuels reports that the president still does not have a full complement of leaders in place to help steer critical agencies and departments.
> Veep: When it was announced last week that Biden adviser Gene Sperling — a veteran of the National Economic Council and the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) under former Presidents Clinton and Obama — is to oversee the implementation of Biden’s signature American Rescue Plan law, some Democrats wondered why the assignment didn’t go to Vice President Kamala Harris. What is her biggest role to date? It may be in the Senate and as an influential ambassador to key constituencies, The Hill’s Amie Parnes reports.
> Cyber security: Biden is coming under increasing pressure from lawmakers and other officials to nominate a White House cyber czar, particularly as the government continues to reel in the wake of two major foreign cyberattacks (The Hill). … The next cyberattack is already under way (The New Yorker).
> Internal Revenue Service: The administration this week extended the tax filing season to May 17, but that decision didn’t sweep away all the hurdles taxpayers and the IRS face when it comes to the $1.9 trillion American Rescue Plan Act (The Hill).
> OMB: Deep in the weeds of what matters to American cities when the federal government gets involved, an obscure technical board has proposed changing the definition of a Metropolitan Statistical Area for the first time in 70 years, a minor amendment to a definition about which only the hardest core demographers care. But to the 144 cities that might suddenly be dubbed “micropolitan,” the proposal is a threat to their pride and their economic futures, reports The Hill’s Reid Wilson.
IN FOCUS/SHARP TAKES
CONGRESS: Senate rules, in the minds of some, keep the upper chamber from functioning. Ten Republicans and 10 Democrats are offstage discussing what The Hill’s Jordain Carney reports would be “smaller changes” than dispensing with the filibuster. This ambitious band of senators also wants to try to forge consensus proposals to tackle immigration and infrastructure.
At the same time, House and Senate Democrats warn they have no patience for GOP stonewalling (The Hill).
Fractious congressional budget talks lead into what is expected to be a May submission to Congress of Biden’s first budget. The Hill’s Rebecca Kheel reports on expectations that the administration will request a static Pentagon blueprint. A group of progressive Democrats instead seeks to “significantly” slash defense spending and told Biden so in a letter last week that sparked backlash from Republicans, who ideally want an increase for defense. Bottom line: Expect much jockeying and lobbying.
OPINION
Biden is making America’s Afghanistan problems worse, by Eli Lake, columnist, Bloomberg Opinion. https://bloom.bg/2OXizIL
Why McConnell gets away with filibustering, by Jacob S. Hacker and Paul Pierson, opinion contributors, The Atlantic. https://bit.ly/3lAllQ9
WHERE AND WHEN
The House meets at 11 a.m. on Tuesday. The House Oversight and Reform Committee examines D.C. statehood legislation during an 11 a.m. hearing. The House Energy and Commerce Committee holds a hearing at 11 a.m. about infrastructure policy and will hear from former Secretary Moniz.
TheSenate convenes at 3 p.m. and resumes consideration of the nominations of Walsh to become Labor secretary.
The president and Harris will receive the President’s Daily Brief at 9:50 a.m. Biden will meet virtually at 7 p.m. with the Senate Democratic Conference during the group’s annual retreat. This week, the president will focus on the American Rescue Plan, the Affordable Care Act and pay equity, and travel to Columbus, Ohio. He plans to give his first official press conference on Thursday.
Harris at 9:30 a.m. will ceremonially swear in Isabella Guzman as administrator of the U.S. Small Business Administration. At 11:50 a.m., the vice president departs for Jacksonville, Fla., where she will visit a vaccination center at 2:25 p.m. and participate in an event at Feeding Northeast Florida Food Pantry and distribution center at 3:20 p.m. Harris will depart the Sunshine State at 6 p.m. and return to Washington.
Secretary of State Antony Blinken will be in Brussels through Thursday.
The White House press briefing is at 12:30 p.m. The coronavirus response briefing takes place at 11 a.m.
👉 INVITATIONS: The Hill’s Virtually Live packs this week’s calendar with smart conversations about key issues! Join “Climate Under Threat” Tuesday at 1:30 p.m. (registration HERE). Wednesday is “The Loss of Nature: A Global Threat,” at 1 p.m. (registration HERE). Thursday is “The COVID-19 Vaccine & the New Era of Manufacturing,” at 1 p.m. (registration HERE).
➔ CORONAVIRUS: U.S. data in a late-stage study shows the AstraZeneca vaccine is effective for all ages. AstraZeneca’s vaccine has been authorized in more than 50 countries but has not yet been given the green light in the United States. Scientists have been awaiting results of the U.S. study in hopes it will clear up some of the confusion about just how well the shots really work. AstraZeneca said its experts also identified no safety concerns related to the vaccine, including a rare blood clot issue that was identified in Europe. Scientists found no increased risk of clots among the more than 20,000 people who received at least one dose of the AstraZeneca inoculation (The Associated Press and Reuters).
Bloomberg News: The European Union announced on Sunday it will block exports to the United Kingdom of the AstraZeneca COVID-19 vaccine and related ingredients.
Vaccine hesitancy tied to COVID-19, observed among some Trump voters, is the result of “natural resistance to government,” Arkansas Gov. Asa Hutchinson (R) said on Sunday. The governor, whose state strongly supported Trump in November, said the former president’s public endorsement of vaccination last week was commendable. “I think we have to have our leaders, we have to have sports figures, we have to have different representatives of our community, including our political leaders, say [the] vaccine is important,” he said on CNN (The Hill).
Hutchinson nonetheless said he plans to lift the mask mandate in Arkansas at the end of March because “we’re a year into this and we know so much more today than we did a year ago. … I expect even though we take the mask mandate away that people will continue to use the mask when you cannot safely distance.”
The Hill’s Reid Wilson reports that U.S. progress in controlling COVID-19 infections is plateauing, a troubling sign even as vaccination rates rise in states and major urban areas. Brazil and Europe are once again in COVID-19 crisis, a possible preview of the backsliding the United States could face in the months ahead.
➔ CITIES: The weekend focus in Atlanta turned to mourning eight victims in last week’s deadly shootings at three massage parlors in the area. Seven of the victims were women and six were of Asian descent, and reports sought to describe who they were (The Associated Press). … Miami residents blame out-of-town visitors for spring break havoc in South Beach. It was described as “multiple fights, brawls, melees, and other public displays and disturbances of the peace” (Reuters). … A Thursday-through-Sunday emergency curfew in Miami beginning at 8 p.m. in the entertainment district and other key areas will continue through April 11, the end of the spring break period (Miami Herald and The Washington Post). … Evanston, Ill., a suburb of Chicago, has a plan to pay Black residents reparations, which could be a national model (Reuters).
➔ U.S. POSTAL SERVICE: “In transit, arriving late.” The Postal Service has failed to restore its target delivery times months after the November elections and a holiday rush of packages and cards in 2020. It made a poor showing, delivering 62 percent of first-class mail on time, the lowest level in years. Americans, some of whom depend on mailed medications that never arrived, complained. Businesses complained. Lawmakers held hearings. The courts got involved. The rate of delivery rebounded to 84 percent by March 6, but that achievement remains far below the agency’s target of about 96 percent on-time mail delivery. A pending overhaul plan, welded to the USPS’s wobbly finances, may make persistent delays the norm (The New York Times).
THE CLOSER
And finally … “No way, man.”
Who would have guessed back in 1989, when TV viewers met Bart Simpson and his relatives, that audiences would still want to watch them in 2021?
“The Simpsons” on Sunday marked its 700th episode, and more are on the way. Fox recently renewed the animated institution created by cartoonist Matt Groening for another two seasons, bringing the show to Season 34 (and a grand total of 757 episodes) by 2023. But what happens after that?
“We’re going to definitely do 757,” said executive producer Al Jean. “I wouldn’t say that’s the end but I don’t know how much further we can go” (Variety).
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AstraZeneca is planning to request authorization for use in the U.S. after a study released Monday found its vaccine was 79 percent effective in preventing symptomatic COVID-19.
Where you’ve heard that name before: Multiple European nations this month suspended use of the AstraZeneca vaccine over concerns it led to blood clots. The top drug regulator for the European Union last week said the vaccine is safe to use but could not rule out possible rare side effects. The U.S. study identified no safety concerns related to the vaccine, according to AstraZeneca. http://bit.ly/3tDqGJ4
Next steps: The Food and Drug Administration has to authorize the vaccine for emergency use before it can be distributed in the U.S. For context, that process took 23 days from submission to authorization for the Johnson & Johnson vaccine.
The Associated Press’s Maria Cheng and Lauran Neergaard have more: http://bit.ly/3169oIp
It’s Monday. I’m Alicia Cohn, filling in for Cate, 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 New York Times’s Neil Vigdor, Michael Majchrowicz and Azi Paybarah: Miami Beach declared a state of emergency and enacted a curfew, but it wasn’t enough to discourage people from gathering to party for Spring Break. Police officers used pepper balls to disperse a large crowd that reportedly was not observing social distancing or mask rules on Ocean Drive on Saturday night. http://nyti.ms/3f2Vwqw
Spring Break parties are happening despite the fact that around 60 percent of colleges canceled “spring break” this year, according to the College Crisis Initiative at Davidson College. However, colleges can’t control where students sign on when most classes are still virtual. https://bit.ly/3lBGU2K
Former President Trump told the iHeart Radio podcast “The Truth with Lisa Boothe” on Monday that people will hear “soon” about the platform he’s creating as an alternative to Twitter or Facebook.
Reminder: Trump was permanently banned from Twitter and indefinitely banned from Facebook in January.
Trump’s senior advisor Jason Miller told Fox News’s #MediaBuzz on Sunday the platform will launch in “about two or three months,” and promised it would “completely redefine the game.” Watch video: https://bit.ly/318g4FO
WE’LL BE HEARING MORE ABOUT THIS:
The prosecutor who led the criminal investigation into the Jan. 6 Capitol breach told “60 Minutes” on Sunday night that former President Trump could be found criminally culpable for instigating the riot. Watch Michael Sherwin’s interview here:http://cbsn.ws/2NEoaTx
Status update: 400 criminal cases have already been filed, and Sherwin expects at least 100 more people will be charged in the insurrection.
The Senate has confirmed 20 out of 23 of President Biden’s Cabinet members so far. They’re expected to make it 21 on Monday night with a final vote on Marty Walsh’s nomination to lead the Department of Labor. The Senate has confirmed more of Biden’s nominees during the first 100 days of his presidency compared to former President Trump, who got 19 confirmed during his first 100 days.
But the debate is heating up. Airlines are considering requiring proof of vaccination to fly, especially internationally, which could be a relief to fellow travelers. But critics are worried about privacy and inequity.
I barely remember what the lower half of a face looks like:
Colorado and Utah are joining more than a dozen states — both Republican- and Democrat-led — that have lifted or are lifting mask mandates in the next two weeks. Health experts have warned it’s too soon, with only around 13 percent of the U.S. population fully vaccinated so far. But governors say local governments can still impose mask requirements on a case-by-case basis.
ANALYSIS — It’s all but inevitable now that a confrontation is coming over the filibuster. And Democrats laid out their case in sharp relief this past week, arguing that the current 60-vote threshold for passage of most Senate legislation enables racism. Read more…
In the wake of a Washington Post story in which a woman accused him of drunkenly groping her on a fundraising trip in 2017, New York Republican Rep. Tom Reed said Sunday that he has received treatment for alcoholism and will not seek reelection next year. Read more…
Louisiana Republican Julia Letlow is heading to Congress after winning a special House election Saturday for the seat her late husband won but never got to fill. She is the 48th widow appointed or elected to succeed her husband in Congress. Read more…
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Two longtime Louisiana state legislators are headed to an April 24 runoff in the special election to replace Democrat Cedric L. Richmond in the deep-blue 2nd District. Democratic state Sen. Troy Carter was leading an all-party, 15-candidate field Saturday when The Associated Press declared he had made the runoff. Read more…
OPINION — The Fairness for All Act would guarantee that while LGBTQ people will enjoy uniform and robust protections nationwide, so too will houses of worship, religious schools and religious charities, including those who partner with the federal government to deliver essential social services, writes Utah Rep. Chris Stewart. Read more…
OPINION — Former Kentucky Gov. Steve Beshear, the current chairman of the eHealth Public Policy Advisory Committee, offers HHS Secretary Xavier Beccera some advice to turn health policy into real-world assistance for sick and endangered Americans. Read more…
Sen. Tommy Tuberville dubbed Dr. Anthony Fauci “the Tom Brady of the COVID team,” Rep. Jim McGovern said he’d rather stick needles in his eyes than have an open rule and Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell got into the holiday spirit, extolling the virtues of Kentucky bourbon. Watch here…
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25.) POLITICO PLAYBOOK
Democrats are dead serious about taking back that Iowa seat
Just weeks after blastingDONALD TRUMP for trying to overturn the Electoral College, House Democrats are about to try to reverse the outcome of a House election in Iowa to pad their slim majority by an extra seat.
Democrats say their candidateRITA HART, who lost to GOP Rep. MARIANNETTE MILLER-MEEKS by six votes, has every right to ask the House to resolve one of the closest House races in American history. Congress, they point out, has dealt with 110 such contested election cases over the past 90 years. Only three, however, resulted in the declared winner being ousted andreplaced, according to the House Administration Committee.
The Iowa case couldbecome the fourth. Rep. ZOE LOFGREN (D-Calif.), who chairs the Administration panel that will adjudicate the first part of this case — and is a longtime ally of Speaker NANCY PELOSI — has said her panel members are keeping an open mind, that nothing is predetermined and that Hart has the burden of proof.
But a source close to the process confirmed to Playbook that the effort to oust Miller in favor of Hart has been blessed by the top echelons of House Democratic leadership. And the DCCC has brought in — and is paying the legal fees for — top Democratic election lawyer MARC ELIAS, this person said.
Elias, who helped fight dozens of Trump’s frivolous election law claims in court this winter,doesn’t wade into any old House race. His presence alone signals that Democratic leaders want to take this all the way and flip the seat into Democrats’ control.
“Federal law provides that this contest is the proper avenue to ensure that all legal ballots are counted and we have presented credible evidence to support their inclusion in the final tally,” Elias said in a statement provided by the DCCC.
Democrats maintain that the House Admin’s rulings and the motivations of the DCCC are two different things — but it would be politically naive to believe that. The judge in this case is essentially the prosecutor — and yes, this is totally allowed under the Constitution.
Still, the flip of the script here is really something to behold. Republicans who followed Trump’s demand that they object to the Electoral College votes, without any proof of fraud, are suddenly calling foul on Hart’s use of Congress to challenge her own election results.
But Democrats were just as adamant about the need to respect state-certified elections. If they side with Hart, the party will be effectively throwing out the decision of local election officials.
Here’s what you need to know about this dispute:
1) 22 ballots. Hart’s argument centers on 22 ballots her campaign says were not counted but should have been — and which would have led to her victory had they been included in the final vote tally. WSJ’s Kristina Peterson has an overview: “[S]ome … were cast through curbside voting but not accepted by the voting machine; absentee ballots that weren’t counted because they were in a box that was marked with a lower number of ballots than it actually contained, leading to confusion; and one absentee ballot that wasn’t counted because the signature was in the wrong location on the envelope.” In another situation, the voter taped her ballot shut so it was discarded.
GOP defense attorney ALAN OSTERGREN says that each of those was discarded by bipartisan panels of election officials based on rules about how ballots are counted in the state. The House Admin Committee will dig into this in the coming days.
2) Why not the courts? Republicans keep asking why Hart didn’t just appeal to the courts, which would have been much cleaner — and less fraught politically — than coming to Congress to get fellow Democrats to flip the election. Hart allies say there wasn’t enough time to prepare a lawsuit before the state-certification deadline in mid-December.
3) GOP outrage. The last time Democrats did something like this, in the 1980s, the blowback was intense. Expect the same again. Only this time, Republicans might not have much credibility on this issue — especially those who objected to the Electoral College results, at Trump’s request.
But there are plenty of Republicans who didn’t do that, like Senate Minority Leader MITCH MCCONNELL, who are also infuriated by this move. Last week the Kentucky Republican accused Pelosi on the Senate floor of trying to “steal” a House seat. (It will be a while if and when it reaches that point: The investigation is moving into what could be a lengthy discovery period, during which both candidates submit evidence and filings.)
4) Skittish moderates. There’s still a question of whether Democratic leaders can pull this off — in part because of their own skittish members. The House would have to vote on this, and in recent days, multiple Democrats have gone on record to express their reservations with overturning a state-certified election after blasting Trump for his shenanigans. On Fox News, Rep. DAVID PRICE (D-N.C.)said, “I don’t think there’s the slightest chance that that would happen.”
We’ve also spoken to Democrats in some of the most competitive House districts who donot want to vote on this. With a 219-211 majority, Pelosi couldn’t afford to lose more than a couple of votes if it reaches a floor vote.
5) Dangerous precedent? Republicans are already threatening that if Democrats do this, they’ll be blazing a path for future majorities to overrule state election results. What happens to election integrity if this becomes a regular thing?
BIDEN’S MONDAY — President JOE BIDEN and VP KAMALA HARRIS will receive the President’s Daily Brief at 9:50 a.m. Biden will meet virtually with Senate Democrats at 7 p.m. during the caucus’ annual retreat.
— Harris will swear in ISABELLA CASILLAS GUZMAN as SBA administrator at 9:30 a.m. She’ll leave D.C. at 11:50 a.m. for Jacksonville, Fla., where she’ll visit a vaccination center at 2:25 p.m. She’ll take part in a listening session with Florida leaders at Feeding Northeast Florida, Food Pantry, Distribution & Food at 3:20 p.m. She’ll leave Jacksonville at 6:05 p.m. to head back to D.C.
— The White House Covid-19 response team and public health officials will brief at 11 a.m. Press secretary JEN PSAKI will brief at 12:30 p.m.
THE HOUSE is not in session. The Oversight Committee will hold a hearing on D.C. statehood at 11 a.m.
THE SENATE will meet at 3 p.m. to swear in KAREN GIBSON as the new sergeant-at-arms. It will vote on MARTY WALSH’S nomination to be Labor secretary at 5:30 p.m.
THE WEEK AHEAD: Biden will head to Columbus, Ohio, on Tuesday to promote the Covid relief law and celebrate the anniversary of the Affordable Care Act. He’ll host an Equal Pay Day event Wednesday. And he’ll hold the first big press conference of his presidency Thursday.
PLAYBOOK READS
POLITICS ROUNDUP
SWEET REVENGE — “Trump looks to take down Raffensberger in Georgia,” by Alex Isenstadt and Zach Montellaro: “Former President Donald Trump is expected to endorse Rep. Jody Hice in a campaign to unseat Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensberger in next year’s Republican primary, according to three people familiar with Trump’s decision. Trump publicly seethed about Raffensperger after the November election, when the secretary of state refused to support Trump’s false claims that Georgia’s 16 electoral votes were stolen from him. Top Raffensberger aides had publicly rebuked the president’s conspiracy theories, warning in early December that it would lead to potential violence. …
“Hice, who first won election to his east-central Georgia seat in 2014, is a staunch Trump ally who supported Trump’s efforts to overturn the election. He derided the Democratic-led push to impeach Trump over his role in the Jan. 6 Capitol Hill riot as ‘bogus.’”
THAT WAS QUICK —“‘Sorry’: GOP U.S. Rep. Tom Reed retiring amid misconduct claim,” AP: “U.S. Rep. Tom Reed, a Republican from western New York who was accused last week of rubbing a female lobbyist’s back and unhooking her bra without her consent in 2017, apologized to the woman on Sunday and announced that he will not run for reelection next year.
“Reed, 49, said in a statement that the incident involving then-lobbyist Nicolette Davis occurred ‘at a time in my life in which I was struggling.’ He said he entered treatment that year and realized he was ‘powerless over alcohol.’ … In late February, Reed said he was seriously considering running for governor against Cuomo should the Democrat seek a fourth term next year. Reed said in his statement Sunday that he would not seek any elective office in 2022.”
HELP FROM FRIENDS — “Scoop: McCarthy hires top Trump official to run political operation,”Axios: “House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy has hired former President Trump’s White House political director, Brian Jack, to lead his own political operation. … The move to bring on Jack underscores McCarthy’s strategy of keeping Trump and his orbit close as Republicans seek to retake the House majority in 2022 — and McCarthy achieves his personal goal of becoming speaker.”
— “2024 ‘shadow campaign’ takes shape under Trump’s watchful eye,”by David Siders: “In Iowa this week, Pompeo will speak at a breakfast meeting of the Westside Conservative Club … He and Terry Branstad, the former governor and U.S. ambassador to China, will appear at a lunch that afternoon hosted by the Bull Moose Club of Des Moines, a group of conservatives under 40. Next week, Pompeo will appear by video conference in New Hampshire … On April 1, Rick Scott, the senator from Florida, will be in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, for an event hosted by the state Republican Party. South Carolina Sen. Tim Scott will be in Davenport on April 15. Later that month, Pence, the former vice president, will travel to South Carolina to give his first speech since leaving office. Sen. Tom Cotton of Arkansas, who has already visited New Hampshire multiple times, told Republican activists there in January to expect to see him back in the state soon.
“One Republican strategist in South Carolina said advisers to and associates of Pompeo, DeSantis and Sen. Marco Rubio of Florida have all placed calls into the state recently to discuss the landscape there.”
THE WHITE HOUSE
‘I DON’T LIKE PEOPLE TELLING ME HOW IMPORTANT I AM’ — “Jim Clyburn is ticking off some in the White House. He’s perfectly fine with that,” by Natasha Korecki: “Now that Biden is president though, Clyburn’s bold, in-your-face style, isn’t playing the same. While the president himself holds his longtime friend and confidant in the same regard, the congressman has privately drawn the ire of some White House officials, several sources tell POLITICO. But if Clyburn’s style is irking officials in the West Wing, he has no qualms about it. ‘I don’t like people telling me how important I am,’ the 80-year-old congressman said in a sit-down interview with POLITICO. ‘You gotta show me.’
“Clyburn is trying to put his stamp on the course of the Biden presidency and isn’t shy about it. He complained about a lack of diversity in Biden’s initial Cabinet rollout and pushed specifically for ally Marcia Fudge to get a position in the administration. He’s made his pick for Supreme Court Justice known even before there’s a vacancy. He joined other House Democrats in urging the administration to elevate Shalanda Young to the Office of Management and Budget to become the first Black woman to head the department.”
CRUZ TO TROLL W.H. ON MEDIA ACCESS AT THE BORDER — Since when is Sen. TED CRUZ (R-Texas) on the side of the media in any major dispute? Well, since today — when it’s politically advantageous. Cruz, who is leading a group of senators to the Rio Grande Valley on Friday to witness the situation at the border, is going to send the White House a letter asking for press access to detention facilities. The move comes after ABC’s Martha Raddatz grilled DHS Secretary ALEJANDRO MAYORKAS about why reporters still aren’t allowed in.
CONGRESS
‘AN ALL-ACCESS PURVEYOR OF MISINFORMATION’ —“Assaulting the Truth, Ron Johnson Helps Erode Confidence in Government,” NYT: “Mr. Johnson is an all-access purveyor of misinformation on serious issues such as the pandemic and the legitimacy of American democracy, as well as invoking the etymology of Greenland as a way to downplay the effects of climate change. …
“His continuing assault on the truth, often under the guise of simply ‘asking questions’ about established facts, is helping to diminish confidence in American institutions at a perilous moment, when the health and economic well-being of the nation relies heavily on mass vaccinations, and when faith in democracy is shaken by right-wing falsehoods about voting.”
GOING FOR BROKE — “Drug pricing, climate, immigration: House Dems eye ‘kitchen sink’ for next big bill,”by Sarah Ferris: “With most items on their agenda hobbled by the Senate filibuster, top House Democrats are eyeing ways to muscle through drug pricing and climate policy goals using the same arcane budget process that let the party bypass GOP votes for its pandemic aid bill. Sweeping immigration bills are also on the wishlist for many members, with Democrats eager to fit what they can in Biden’s next high-profile package — which could be the party’s last shot at using the budget tool before the midterm elections.
“House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Senate Majority Chuck Schumer haven’t formally decided to use the budgetary tool known as reconciliation for Biden’s next major priority, an infrastructure and jobs plan. Biden and top Democrats are still publicly courting Republicans for his proposal. But given the Senate GOP’s continued reluctance, many senior Democrats in both chambers believe it will be the ultimate path.”
JAN. 6 AND ITS AFTERMATH
RIOT PROSECUTOR SPEAKS — “Evidence in Capitol Attack Most Likely Supports Sedition Charges, Prosecutor Says,”NYT: “The department has rarely brought charges of sedition, the crime of conspiring to overthrow the government. But in an interview with ‘60 Minutes,’ Mr. Sherwin said prosecutors had evidence that most likely proved such a charge.
“‘I personally believe the evidence is trending toward that, and probably meets those elements,’ Mr. Sherwin said. ‘I believe the facts do support those charges. And I think that, as we go forward, more facts will support that.’” The interview
TRUMP CARDS
‘THE HOTTEST TICKET IN SOCIAL MEDIA’ — “Trump will use ‘his own platform’ to return to social media after Twitter ban,”The Guardian: “[Adviser Jason] Miller said he had been told by a reporter [Trump’s] statements were ‘much more elegant’ and ‘more presidential’ than Trump’s tweets, but added: ‘I do think that we’re going to see President Trump returning to social media in probably about two or three months here with his own platform.’
“‘And this is something that I think will be the hottest ticket in social media, it’s going to completely redefine the game, and everybody is going to be waiting and watching to see what exactly President Trump does. But it will be his own platform.’”
PLAYBOOKERS
SPOTTED in Palm Beach: Don Lemon at Le Bilboquet restaurant. He told guests he’s shopping for a home in the area. … Sen. Mitt Romney (R-Utah)and Ann Romney at the Colony Hotel — to be clear, not in town to see Trump. … Georgina Bloomberg dining at Sant Ambroeus.
KNOWING ADRIENNE ELROD — “HIGH PROFILE: Adrienne Kimbro Elrod’s swimming taught her tenacity,”Arkansas Democrat-Gazette: “It would be easy to distill Adrienne Elrod’s professional life — 25 years backing progressives on various fronts of the political fray — to her formidable strengths as a communicator and conjoiner of people. But ask the Siloam Springs native about the true north of her career longevity, to say nothing of the durability of her spirit, and she’ll lead you away from her education and internships, campaigns and connections.
“She’ll take you back home, instead, to a swimming pool. … ‘The first year on the swim team was god-awful. I got last place in every single event by 20 seconds.’ … After a year, however, Elrod started improving, then winning, until in high school she was ranked one of the top swimmers in the state. Time and again in her life, the relevance of that personal morality play has presented itself: Just don’t quit.”
POLITICO NEWS — Eli Reyes is joining POLITICO as health care editor. He most recently was deputy editorial page director at Newsday, and is a WaPo alum.… Nicholas Wu is joining POLITICO’s Congress team. He most recently has been a congressional reporter for USA Today.
TRUMP ALUMNI — Vanessa Ambrosini and Alexa Henning, both Trump White House alums, are joining Sen. Ron Johnson’s (R-Wis.) office as senior comms advisers. Ambrosini most recently was deputy director of public affairs at the Commerce Department. Henning most recently was director of media affairs for the Trump campaign.
TRANSITIONS — Geoff Burgan will be comms director for Sen. Ed Markey (D-Mass.). He most recently was Arizona comms director for the Biden campaign and is a Beto O’Rourke and Andrew Gillum alum. Giselle Barry will be moving to deputy chief of staff and Jeremy D’Aloisio to legislative director. … Jon Green is now defense policy adviser for Sen. Jeanne Shaheen (D-N.H.). He previously was national security adviser for Rep. Jason Crow (D-Colo.). …
… Jamal Ware is now senior director for congressional and public affairs at the Center for Security Policy. He previously was national security adviser at the Export-Import Bank, and is a Senate and House Intel Committee alum. … Gabriella Vesey is now legislative correspondent for Sen. Raphael Warnock (D-Ga.), covering health care and aging issues. She previously was legislative correspondent/aide for Rep. Sharice Davids (D-Kan.).
BIRTHWEEK (was Sunday): Former Rep. Paul Hodes (D-N.H.) turned 7-0
HAPPY BIRTHDAY: Sen. Alex Padilla (D-Calif.) (48) … Wolf Blitzer (73) … Rep. Pete Sessions (R-Texas) (66) … NBC’s Ali Vitali … Judge Neomi Rao … Rebecca Miller Spicer of Airlines for America … MSNBC’s Joshua Johnson … Sarah Feldman, comms director for Sen. Jon Tester (D-Mont.) … Josh Siegel … POLITICO’s Ruairí Arrieta-Kenna … E&E News’ Emma Dumain, Alex Wang and Scott Streater … Giovanni Hashimoto … Jeff Cohen … Tony Green … Lyzz Schwegler … Kathryn Jean Lopez … Ann Clancy … Matt Williams of the Democratic Policy and Communications Committee … Amy Kramer … Dan Backer … AARP’s Myrna Blyth … Sarah Mars Bowie … Patrick Manion … Kate Head … former Sen. Martha McSally (R-Ariz.) (55) … former Sen. Orrin Hatch (R-Utah) (87) … former Rep. Thomas Andrews (D-Maine), now U.N. special rapporteur on the situation of human rights in Myanmar
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.
By Shane Vander Hart on Mar 22, 2021 12:52 am
Last week, when the Iowa House of Representatives debated a bill that prohibited race and sex stereotyping in diversity training held in public schools, community colleges, and public universities, the concept of “white privilege” came to the forefront.
Several Democrats wondered aloud if concepts like “white privilege” would be allowed under the bill. One Republican lawmaker said he believed “white privilege” was a racist term.
I am personally not a fan of the phrase “white privilege” because I believe it is used too broadly and does not take into consideration a person’s personal history, socio-economic background, and geographical location.
For instance, would a white person in Appalachia be considered privileged? Compared to some, perhaps, others not so much.
Before I go further, it would be helpful to define privilege. Merriam-Webster defines it as “a right or immunity granted as a peculiar benefit, advantage, or favor.” In particular, a right or immunity “attached specifically to a position or an office.”
The University of San Francisco has a “white privilege resource guide,” they define privilege as “unearned access to social power based on membership in a dominant social group.”
They encourage white people – mainly white, Christian, heterosexual, able-bodied, middle-class, or upper-class males, to “check our privilege.”
They state, “becoming aware of privilege should not be viewed as a burden or source of guilt, but rather, an opportunity to learn and be responsible so that we may work toward a more just and inclusive world.”
Unfortunately, “check your privilege” has regrettably been a phrase to silence debate and shame people.
However, the concept that certain groups have had “unearned access to social power based on membership in a dominant social group” is historically accurate, I don’t know how anyone can deny that fact.
So I have to disagree with the Republican lawmaker who said the term is racist, at least not inherently. As a concept, I don’t always think it’s used constructively, but I can agree that I have benefitted from historical privilege as a white man who lives in the United States. That said, I don’t believe our country is inherently racist, but we need to be willing to recognize our historical warts and where historical privilege has led to systematic disadvantages for some as we seek to become a “more perfect” union.
I do believe systemic racism exists because I believe we are born with a sin nature and live in a broken and sinful world.
I also don’t believe I should feel guilty or ashamed because I was born white. I was “fearfully and wonderfully made” just like you were and everyone who has walked this earth are. We are all image-bearers of God and, as such, have dignity and worth. Our problem, historically, is not original skin, but original sin because ever since the fall of man, bigotry has existed.
A bit of my background, I grew up in a small town outside of Des Moines. My class, I believe, had just one person of color, someone I think was of Native American descent. I could be wrong about that, but that is my recollection, and I’m a few decades removed from that experience. It is accurate to say my class was practically all white.
In my freshman year, I moved into Des Moines and attended Hoover High School. I went from being in a practically all-white class to join a class that was still majority white but remarkedly more diverse than the school I had attended before.
I cherished that experience. It was enriching. But it was also frustrating at times and pushed me out of my comfort zone. I learned about and from perspectives, backgrounds, and experiences that were different than my own. I also was extended much grace because I’m sure I said stupid things at times and asked dumb questions.
My experience at Hoover also opened my eyes to the reality of bigotry within my hometown.
After attending Hoover for a few months, I went back to visit some people I knew in the town where I grew up, and it was eye-opening. I was asked questions that I’m not going to repeat here, but some people I knew revealed themselves to be racist.
I was shocked.
The fact I was shocked points to my “privilege” because while I knew racism existed historically and theoretically, but I never saw it firsthand. Because the town I grew up in was homogenous it did not bubble to the surface. Race was really never part of our conversations, not because we were color-blind, but because there was no diversity.
Suddenly, being exposed to (former) friends’ racist attitudes I also saw my “privilege” because it wasn’t directed at me. Though rebuking these former classmates and defending some new friends I made at Hoover was not well-received (putting it mildly).
I’ve had experiences throughout my life that exposed me to diverse backgrounds and points-of-view. When my wife and I were married, we lived in married student housing at the Christian college I attended in the Chicago suburbs. In our apartment building, we had Korean and Black neighbors, and we treasured the time we spent with them. While at that school, I tutored in a public housing complex in Chicago, and I learned more from the Black kids I tutored than I’m sure they learned from me. We lived in Miami-Dade County and experienced Cuban culture (when moved from there to a community that hosted the 2nd largest Amish population in the country, so talk about cultural whiplash).
When in Miami, as part of an urban sociology class my wife and I took together (the school I attended had a campus where I finished my degree), we did a ride-along with law enforcement. While on that ride-along, I witnessed law enforcement officers degrading Black people they had interacted with after calls. It was eye-opening, and the fact it is eye-opening, again, reveals my “privilege.” While I believe most law-enforcement officers are exceptional public servants, there are bad apples.
This is something that many of my Black friends have lived. In all the times I have been pulled over by police, which fortunately hasn’t been that much (I currently have a clean driving record, and it has been years since my last ticket), only twice did I not know the reason I was being pulled over.
That’s not the case with several Black friends of mine. That is not my experience, and it is something I don’t have to worry about.
That’s just one example. There are many others.
Now, in the classic definition of privilege, it shouldn’t be a “privilege” not to experience racism or not be pulled over or stopped because of the color of my skin. We all should enjoy that. It shouldn’t be a special “right or immunity.”
So, in that regard, I think the word “privilege” falls short.
Also, this concept doesn’t just apply to race. For instance, as a male, I generally don’t have to worry about being assaulted when walking outside by myself at night. My wife and my daughters have to be mindful of that, and the fact that I don’t shouldn’t be a “privilege” either.
I designed and led diversity training that was part of the volunteer training for a Christian non-profit I served for ten years because we worked with a diverse clientele. In that role, I also had the opportunity to speak before and visit various community organizations and churches. It was an enriching experience. It was a humbling experience (my first sermon at a historically Black church was nerve-wracking initially) because it pushed me out of my comfort zone (which is a good thing).
When it comes to diversity, I have learned two primary things: 1. Don’t make assumptions about someone’s experiences (or, in other words, “check my privilege”). 2. See it as an opportunity to learn and ask questions.
I think that is true regardless of who you are or what your background is. When it comes to discussing racial differences and diversity in general, it requires humility and patience from everyone involved.
Unfortunately, too many people who engage in “conversations” (if it’s even accurate to call them that) lack both things.
Launched in 2006, Caffeinated Thoughts reports news and shares commentary about culture, current events, faith and state and national politics from a Christian and conservative point of view.
In 1943, as collectivist policies were ascendant, an extraordinary thing happened. Three women published three books that year that would jolt Americans from their socialist stupor and remind them of the fundamental American values of individual liberty, limited government, free-market capitalism, and entrepreneurship. This Women’s History Month is an ideal time to reflect on how …
Army Chaplain Emil Kapaun inspired his men during the Korean War with calm, courageous leadership, instilling in his fellow prisoners of war a desire to stay strong — even after he no longer could. His actions eventually earned him the nation’s highest military honor, as well as a potential path to sainthood. Kapaun was born April …
In this installment of our weekly conversation, PF Whalen and Parker Beauregard of The Blue State Conservative consider the current crisis at our southern border, President Joe Biden’s utter mishandling of that crisis, and how it relates to the larger debate on immigration. PF: The current situation at the border is dreadful. According to CNN, …
On March 2, online publication MusicRadar covered a report released by the University of East Anglia detailing independent musicians’ dwindling incomes. The report stated two major factors are at play. First, artists who belong to major labels have a distinct advantage over independent musicians when it comes to earning potential from streaming. Platforms like Spotify …
Jason Miller made a comment Sunday that will excite Trump supporters across the country. The former Trump adviser said that Donald Trump will return to social media in two or three months on a platform of his own making. Many suspected that Trump would become involved in a social media platform after Facebook and Twitter …
Summary: President Joe Biden will receive his daily briefing Monday morning. In the evening, the president will participate in a video conference call with the Senate Democratic Caucus as they attend their annual retreat. President Biden’s Itinerary for 3/22/21: All Times EST 9:50 AM Receive daily briefing – Oval Office7:00 PM Virtual meeting with Senate …
Photo by Jon Tyson on Unsplash If individuals, business owners and others would act according to their consciences, the growing number of self-appointed dictators around the country would be stripped of their de facto power. When people stand up for their own Liberty, they are standing up for the Liberty of their fellow citizens as …
This is a cute bunch. They are all robotic when it comes to daily talking points. It is even clear that every talking head at CNN and MSNBC is on the mailing list for the key phrases of the day. Nancy Pelosi loves her Thursday chats with the press and Chuck can usually be seen …
HIDALGO, Texas—U.S. Customs and Border Protection, Office of Field Operations (OFO) at the Hidalgo International Bridge intercepted $944,500 worth of alleged methamphetamine that was being smuggled into the United States by two persons arriving from Mexico in a Dodge Ram pickup. “On a daily basis our frontline officers continue their focus on securing our border …
Happy Monday — is that a thing? — Kruiser Morning Briefing friends.
It’s me, Your Friendly Neighborhood VodkaPundit, filling in for Kruiser this morning. My friend has made his way back to his ancestral home to see his family and especially the lovely Kruiser Kid for the first time since the lockdowns began.
That’s an awfully long time, so I hope you won’t mind me filling in for Kruiser today.
Ever feel like you’re missing the forest for the scrub oak?
We have quite a bit of scrub oak on our little wooded homestead, and it can be nasty stuff. It forms these thickets nothing but our smallest dog can get through, and Chewie still ends up with scrapes all over himself. It isn’t all that nice to look at, but it grows quickly enough that it requires more maintenance than it’s worth.
In American politics and culture, the Woke Uber Progressive Authoritarian Left (WUPAL) is like that scrub. They get far more attention than they’re worth, and if you’ve spent any time looking at their Twitter profiles, you know they usually aren’t anything you want to look at, either.
I mean, don’t make me remind you about Trigglypuff.
Oops. Sorry.
Also, like the real scrub oak, despite their small numbers, WUPAL is deeply rooted enough that we’re stuck with them at present.
But don’t forget the lovely forest.
My home state of Colorado has been loosening up, finally, and this weekend I decided to grab the kids and make full use of it.
We were out and about all weekend, and do you know what we didn’t hear or see out in the real world?
A single WUPAL. Not a one.
I took my boys out for much-needed haircuts on Saturday morning. Taped on the counter near the cash register was a hand-printed note that said something like, “Masks required by state order, but we won’t invade your privacy asking you about any health condition you might have.”
One or two wore masks, most didn’t. The mood was cheerful, even boisterous.
We stopped to grab burgers on our way up to the gun range, and if you’re thinking I’m raising red-blooded American males who get their hair cut by dirty-joke-telling male barbers before taking them to eat meat and shoot guns…
…well, yeah.
But back to my point about those AWOL WUPALs.
I won’t say which restaurant we went to because they seemed to be operating above the state-ordered capacity restriction. The parking lot was nearly full, and so were the tables and the bar.
Coloradans were supposed to be enduring a vegetarian “MeatOut” day suggested by our idiot governor, but if anybody ordered a veggie burger instead of the real thing, I couldn’t hear or see it.
After lunch, we made our way further north to a gun range where one of my dearest friends works. The Glock G44 I’d ordered a couple of weeks ago had arrived for pickup, weeks sooner than hoped.
The only bad news was actually good news, in a way. I filled out my background check papers, only to be told I’d have to come back in a few days to pick up the G44.
“Colorado has 3,000 people a day applying for background checks,” I was told. “The backlog is pretty bad.”
Having to wait certainly seems like an infringement on my 2nd Amendment rights, but the fact that Coloradans continue to buy guns in record numbers despite all the nanny-state Democrats in Denver seems like a blessing.
Sunday was more of the same: Errands to run, lunch with a friend, none of it visibly impacted by a single WUPAL.
Just happy, cheerful people enjoying a sunny Sunday morning.
That’s the forest we’ve given too little attention to. It really won’t be long now until we can party like it’s 2019.
If you spend all your time staring at the nasty scrub oak — social media, the infotainment “news” shows, etc. — you’ll miss the lovely forest.
America still feels like America, once you step away from the computer screen and put your smartphone down.
I think that’s why the Democrats in Washington are acting in such a reckless rush — they know resistance is growing.
Thanks for not sticking a tack on the substitute’s chair. Kruiser will be back on Thursday, with Bryan Preston and Paula Bolyard filling in the next two days.
California wants to teach ‘counter-genocide’ to over 6 million students in public schools . . . Racism under the banner of anti-racism. Hate under the banner of love. Intolerance under the banner of tolerance. Exclusion in the name of inclusion. Canceling the goodness of Dr. Seuss while extolling the grunge and grind of Cardi B. If you often find yourself scratching your head wondering how in the world we got here, look no further than your local schools. Consider this week’s winner of the “Orwell is Laughing Award” as reported by Chris Rufo of the Discovery Institute.
“California’s proposed ‘ethnic studies’ curriculum calls for the ‘decolonization’ of American society and a suggested solution is a ‘counter-genocide’ against white Christians.” The smarter-than-thou folks who are crafting the curriculum for our nation’s most populous state now want to teach “counter-genocide” to over 6 million children and teens in California’s public schools. According to the proposed curriculum: “California’s Ethnic Studies Model instructs students to ‘challenge racist, bigoted, discriminatory, imperialist/ colonial beliefs ‘and critique’ white supremacy, racism and other forms of power and oppression,’” and to teach young people that the mindset of every single immigrant coming to the shores of early colonial America was “Eurocentric, white supremacist, capitalist, patriarchal, heteropatriarchal, and anthropocentric …” Washington Times
Can’t make this stuff up. H/T to TL.
Coronavirus
AstraZeneca’s Covid Vaccine Safe, 79% Effective in US Trials . . . AstraZeneca Covid-19 vaccine was shown to be safe and 79% effective in preventing symptomatic disease in U.S. clinical trials involving more than 32,000 people. The company prepares to request emergency authorization in the U.S. in coming weeks, a move that—if approved—will add another vaccine available for Americans. The shot is already widely used outside the U.S. The American trials. Although serious blood clotting issues affected a very small number of people in Europe who received the shot, the U.S. trials identified no increased risk of serious blood clotting. AstraZeneca said participants aged 65 years and over were shown to have vaccine efficacy of 80%. Wall Street Journal
Social Distancing Mandate ‘Wasn’t Based on Clear Science: Former FDA Chief . . . Former Food and Drug Administration Commissioner Scott Gottlieb said that the six-foot social distancing mandate that was employed across much of the United States and the world to deal with the CCP virus pandemic “wasn’t based on clear science.” “This six-foot distancing requirement has probably been the single costliest mitigation tactic that we’ve employed in response to COVID … and it really wasn’t based on clear science.
There were no scientific studies on the optimal conditions for COVID-19 social distancing at the early stages of the pandemic. Epoch Times
Americans vastly overestimate the risk of hospitalization from COVID: Study . . . Americans overestimate the likelihood a person with COVID-19 would have to be hospitalized by 10 times the actual number, a study shows. People were asked during a Franklin Templeton/Gallup study what “percentage of people who have been infected by the coronavirus needed to be hospitalized.” Thirty-five percent of those asked said that over half of infected people would require hospitalization from the disease. Meanwhile, only 18% of Americans correctly stated that the risk of hospitalization was somewhere between 1%-5%. “The U.S. public is also deeply misinformed about the severity of the virus for the average infected person,” the study’s authors said. Washington Examiner
More tech at home creates longer, more stressful workdays during COVID . . . The workday working from home during the coronavirus pandemic doesn’t just feel longer – it actually is longer. For many of us, spending 12-hour-plus workdays staring at laptops has become far too familiar. Since the World Health Organization declared a global pandemic a year ago, many companies allow employees to work remotely, and in some cases, permanently. Screens, keyboards, and computer mice on dining room tables are now commonplace, and videoconferencing is the new normal. But the convenience of having that technology at home is creating a never-ending workday for some employees who struggle to decide when it’s time to turn off the switch. A Harvard Business School study of more than 3 million people in 16 cities worldwide found that the average workday increased by 48.5 minutes during the pandemic’s early stages. USA Today
Politics
Trump will return to social media with ‘his own platform’: adviser . . . Former President Donald Trump will be back on social media in the near future with his own service, according to his senior adviser Jason Miller. “I do think that we’re going to see President Trump returning to social media in probably about two or three months here, with his own platform,” Miller told Fox News’ “#MediaBuzz” on Sunday. “And this is something that I think will be the hottest ticket in social media, it’s going to completely redefine the game, and everybody is going to be waiting and watching to see what exactly President Trump does.” Fox News
GOP hopefuls crank up the ‘if-Trump-doesn’t-run’ primary . . . Mike Pompeo and Rick Scott are headed to Iowa this week and next, followed by Tim Scott in mid-April. Mike Pence plans to visit the early primary state of South Carolina, while Ron DeSantis appears to be conducting a soft launch in his home state of Florida.
Jeff Kaufmann, chair of the Iowa Republican Party, said he’s never seen so much interest so early in a presidential election cycle. But what’s truly unique about the Republicans’ pre-presidential primary is that It’s a a wholly conditional one. Prospective 2024 candidates, donors and conservative media outlets — the entire Republican ecosystem — are building strategies and structuring the race around the single question of whether former President Donald Trump runs again. Politico
Trump Rips Biden, DHS Over Border Crisis . . . Former President Donald Trump said in a statement Sunday that the Biden Administration must “immediately complete the wall” to stop the influx of illegal immigrants crossing the U.S.-Mexico border. “They must immediately complete the wall, which can be done in a matter of weeks – they should never have stopped it,” the statement said. “They are causing death and human tragedy. In addition to the obvious, drugs are pouring into our country at record levels from the Southern Border, not to mention human and sex trafficking. This Administration’s reckless policies are enabling and encouraging crimes against humanity. Our Country is being destroyed!” Daily Caller
Biden Will Visit Southern Border ‘At Some Point’ . . . President Joe Biden said on Sunday that he will visit the U.S. southern border “at some point” as his administration continues to struggle with addressing the influx of illegal immigration. Biden made the comments to reporters after stepping off the Marine One at the White House. The United States is currently facing a significant surge in illegal border crossings, in particular from unaccompanied minors. While families and single adults are being expelled at the border, the administration is still accepting unaccompanied minors who arrive illegally, Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas said. Epoch Times
Illegal Immigrant Says He Wouldn’t Have Crossed The Border If Trump Was President . . . A father who crossed the U.S.-Mexico border illegally told ABC’s Martha Raddatz that he would not have done so if former President Donald Trump were still in office. During a segment of “This Week” that aired Sunday morning, Raddatz interviewed a man from Brazil who had crossed the border with his wife and children — and he told her that he made the choice not to come until President Joe Biden took office. “Would you have tried to do this when Donald Trump was president?” Raddatz asked. “Definitely not,” responded the Brazilian. “Did you come here because Joe Biden was elected president?” “Basically.” Daily Caller
Biden hampered by lack of confirmations . . . President Biden is facing a convergence of challenges without a full complement of agency leaders who would typically oversee efforts on the ground to address them. The administration is searching for solutions to the growing border crisis, but the president has yet to nominate officials to lead Customs and Border Protection, Immigration and Customs Enforcement or U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services — three key components of the immigration system. The Hill
GOP Criticizes Biden for Prioritizing Social Justice Over Working Americans . . . Three top Senate Republicans have voiced concern to the Biden administration’s Labor Department that it is prioritizing social justice above the interests of American workers. Sens. Richard Burr of North Carolina, Mike Crapo of Idaho, and Pat Toomey of Pennsylvania wrote a letter Thursday responding to the Labor Department’s recent announcement that it would prioritize so-called social, environmental, and governance objectives. The Labor Department said earlier this month that it wouldn’t enforce two rules issued by the Trump administration in 2020, which required private-sector retirement plans to make investment decisions based on the financial interests of workers and retirees regardless how well the companies met environmental or social standards. The Labor Department “should immediately reverse its ill-considered decision to not enforce these rules,” the Republican senators wrote. Daily Signal
Dems vow to go ‘bold’ — with or without GOP . . . Democrats are warning they won’t tolerate GOP stonewalling as they try to make good on their pledge to enact a “bold” agenda and avoid Obama-era missteps. Democrats face intense pressure not to water down their legislative priorities after years of a backed-up wish list during the Trump-era and a decade since the party has had a unified government it could use to muscle through sweeping reforms considered anathema to the GOP. The plow-ahead strategy is significant with a host of big agenda items looming in the coming months, including sweeping proposals addressing infrastructure needs, climate change and fixes to the Affordable Care Act. The Hill
National Security
US Government Must Limit Investments in China: Panel . . . The Trump administration took swift action in its final months to ban investments in communist Chinese military companies, in an effort to curb Beijing’s access to the lucrative U.S. stock market. But more work needs to be done to protect U.S. capital markets and critical technologies, according to a panel of China experts. There’s a need to modernize U.S. laws and export controls, Nazak Nikakhtar, former assistant secretary at the U.S. Department of Commerce, said at a hearing by the U.S.–China Economic and Security Review Commission. The United States should come to terms with the reality that business dealings with Chinese firms have aided the growth of China’s military-industrial complex for the past four decades, Nikakhtar said during her testimony. Epoch Times
China’s clandestine military buildup to be exposed by US intel agency . . . U.S. public and private researchers are about to get an unprecedented look at the scope of China’s military buildup. The National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency, which oversees U.S. spy satellite imagery, is preparing to produce public reports on China’s military and national security programs as part of an intelligence authorization law approved for fiscal year 2021. Disclosure mandate was folded into the $1.4 trillion omnibus spending bill signed into law by Trump. The law calls on Vice Adm. Robert G. Sharp, NGA director, to launch the open-source project on the Chinese military by June 25. Washington Times
International
China Regularly Abuses NYU Students. NYU Keeps Taking Chinese Money . . . Chinese authorities viciously beat and detained a group of New York University students in Shanghai last week, leading some students to question the university’s lucrative dealings with the Chinese regime. Nine students, including six Americans, allege plainclothes Chinese police officers beat and detained them in two separate incidents. Chinese officers kicked one young man in the head and bruised a young woman as they took her into custody after approaching both at a bar. In a separate event, seven other students were taken to Chinese authorities and tested for drug use after sitting in detention for up to 16 hours. Such abuses are not uncommon in the financial relationship between NYU and China either, as the elite university reaps millions from financial agreements with Beijing. Washington Free Beacon
Sidney, Australia faces worst floods in 60 years, evacuating thousands . . . Australia was set on Monday to evacuate thousands more people from suburbs in Sydney’s west, battered by the worst flooding in 60 years, with torrential rains expected to continue for another day or two. Reuters images showed submerged intersections, marooned livestock and cars up to their windshields in water, out of which poked the tops of street signs, as three days of rain swelled rivers in the most populous state of New South Wales. Reuters
Money
Dark Money Fuels Push to Ditch Filibuster . . . The left-wing group leading a campaign to have Senate Democrats eliminate the filibuster is housed at one of the left’s most powerful dark money networks, business records show. Fix Our Senate is steering a coalition of 60 progressive groups to pressure moderate Democrats to eliminate the filibuster, which requires a 60-vote supermajority to advance legislation. The group is a project of the Sixteen Thirty Fund, a nonprofit incubator managed by the D.C.-based consulting firm Arabella Advisors. Arabella’s network of funds is used by the nation’s wealthiest liberal donors to secretly bankroll a host of progressive initiatives. The coalition has added dozens of groups in recent days as Democrats increase their calls to eliminate the filibuster. Washington Free Beacon
IRS warns start of child tax credit program could be delayed . . . The head of the IRS warned this week of potential delays to the launch of the new monthly child tax credit payment program authorized under President Biden’s $1.9 trillion stimulus plan. Commissioner Chuck Rettig raised concerns about whether the IRS will be able to get the relief program up and running by July as Congress had planned. Under the law, known as the American Rescue Plan, most American parents can expect to receive $3,000 for every child ages 6 to 17 and $3,600 for every child under age 6. The expanded amounts are tapered off once income hits $75,000 for individuals and $150,000 for married couples. (Families are normally entitled to up to $2,000 annually in refundable tax credits per child). Fox Business
Hospitals Hide Pricing Data From Search Results . . . Hospitals that have published their previously confidential prices to comply with a new federal rule have also blocked that information from web searches with special coding embedded on their websites, according to a Wall Street Journal examination.
The information must be disclosed under a federal rule aimed at making the $1 trillion sector more consumer friendly. But hundreds of hospitals embedded code in their websites that prevented Google and other search engines from displaying pages with the price lists. The code keeps pages from appearing in searches, such as those related to a hospital’s name and prices, computer-science experts said. Wall Street Journal
You should also know
Sedition charges likely in Capitol Riots: prosecutor . . . Michael Sherwin, the federal prosecutor tasked with investigating the Jan. 6 riot at the Capitol, told “60 Minutes” in an interview that evidence collected thus far likely meets the threshold to charge some suspects with sedition. Any person charged with sedition is effectively accused of attempting to overthrow the U.S. government and faces up to 20 years in prison if convicted. Fox News
Newsom Earned Praise from Anti-Vaccine Extremists . . . An anti-vaccine extremist who compared vaccination programs to the Holocaust praised Democratic California governor Gavin Newsom for working to water down legislation that would have curbed vaccine exemptions. Both Newsom and his wife met with prominent anti-vaccine activists to discuss Senate Bill 276, which aimed to crack down on medical vaccine exemptions sold by a small group of California doctors. Vaccine truther Robert F. Kennedy, Jr.—who has likened U.S. vaccine programs to the Holocaust—lobbied against the legislation in the January 2019 meeting by reportedly telling Newsom that vaccines are “both dangerous and ineffective.” Washington Free Beacon
Guilty Pleasures
Taiwan urges residents not to change names to ‘salmon’ for free sushi . . . The Taiwanese government is urging residents not to change their legal names to “salmon” to take advantage of a restaurant’s free sushi promotion.
The Taiwan Ministry of the Interior said nearly 100 people have registered to change their names to “salmon” under the country’s Name Act to take advantage of restaurant chain Sushiro’s promotion, which promises free sushi for customers whose names include the Chinese characters used to spell the name of the fish.
The restaurant requires customers taking advantage of the promotion to provide official ID, inspiring some to change their names legally. The ministry urged residents not to change their names for the promotion, pointing out that the Name Act only allows a person to change their name three times — meaning some of those who change their names for the promotion could be stuck with the name for the rest of their lives. UPI
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Happy Monday! It’s early, but “JonnyD” has one of the best March Madness brackets left in not only the TMD pool, but also the entire country. Nice job calling the Loyola Chicago upset of Illinois … we guess.
And quick clarification from our piece Friday on Iowa’s 2nd congressional district: Democrat Rita Hart did not “strike out in court” before appealing to the House to overturn the election results—she bypassed the court system entirely. Apologies for the confusion.
Quick Hits: Today’s Top Stories
The Centers for Disease Control updated its coronavirus guidelines for K-12 schools on Friday, reducing the recommended distance between elementary school students (and middle and high school students where community transmission is low) from six feet to three feet. The guidelines continue to recommend six feet of separation for adults at all times, as well as for students when masks cannot be worn.
With the United States continuing to face a surge of undocumented immigrants at the southern border, the Biden administration has moved to secure an $86 million contract with hotels in Arizona and Texas to house families and children. More than 5,000 unaccompanied children were in U.S. Customs and Border Protection custody at the end of this week.
Republican Julia Letlow will take the congressional seat of her late husband Luke, who died in December after testing positive for the coronavirus, following a special election in Louisiana on Saturday.
GOP Rep. Tom Reed of New York announced Sunday he will retire at the end of his current term, two days after a former lobbyist accused him of groping her in 2017. Reed, co-chair of the bipartisan Problem Solvers Caucus, had previously signaled his intent to run for governor of New York in 2022.
The International Olympic Committee and Japanese government announced Saturday that no overseas spectators will be allowed into Japan this summer to attend the Tokyo Olympic and Paralympic Games due to continued COVID-19 concerns.
The United States confirmed 35,852 new cases of COVID-19 yesterday per the Johns Hopkins University COVID-19 Dashboard. An additional 447 deaths were attributed to the virus on Sunday, bringing the pandemic’s American death toll to 542,356. According to the Centers for Disease Control, 30,792 Americans are currently hospitalized with COVID-19, and 3,039,915 COVID-19 vaccine doses were administered yesterday. 81,415,769 Americans have now received at least one dose.
Blinken and Sullivan Butt Heads with Beijing
The Biden administration held its first set of in-person meetings with high-level Chinese diplomats in Anchorage, Alaska last Thursday and Friday. Both sides walked away without having secured any tangible progress.
The two days of talks were contentious from the beginning, as Secretary of State Antony Blinken and national security adviser Jake Sullivan used their opening remarks to condemn China’s mass incarceration and oppression of Uyghurs in Xinjiang, cyberattacks against the U.S., and geopolitical encroachment on Hong Kong as destructive to the international order.
“Each of these actions threaten the rules-based order that maintains global stability,” Blinken said. “The United States’ relationship with China will be competitive where it should be, collaborative where it can be, adversarial where it must be.”
Their Chinese counterparts—State Councilor Wang Yi and Chinese Communist Party foreign affairs chief Yang Jiechi—didn’t take kindly to those remarks. They hit back with what Blinken later characterized as a “defensive response,” which critiqued U.S. involvement in China’s “internal affairs” and sought to draw a moral equivalence between the two countries.
“We hope that the United States will do better on human rights,” Yang said through an interpreter. “China has made steady progress in human rights, and the fact is that there are many problems within the United States regarding human rights. … The challenges facing the United States in human rights are deep-seated. They did not just emerge over the past four years, such as Black Lives Matter.”
“When talking about universal values or international public opinion on the part of the United States, we hope the U.S. side will think about whether it feels reassured in saying those things, because the U.S. does not represent the world,” Yang continued. “It only represents the government of the United States. I don’t think the overwhelming majority of countries in the world would recognize that the universal values advocated by the United States or that the opinion of the United States could represent international public opinion.”
The debate surrounding Democrats’ H.R. 1 election reform package has been predictably partisan. Jessica Huseman cuts through the noise surrounding the bill in her latest for The Daily Beast. A reporter focused on the electoral process, Huseman lauds many of H.R. 1’s ostensible goals—such as securing voting rights and reforming the redistricting process—but argues it is unworkable as currently constituted. H.R. 1 “was written with apparently no consultation with election administrators, and it shows,” she writes. “The sections of the bill related to voting systems—wholly separate from its provisions on voting rights—show remarkably little understanding of the problems the authors apply alarmingly prescriptive solutions to. Many of the changes the bill demands of election administrators are literally impossible to implement. Others would significantly raise the cost of elections but provide no assured long-term funding.”
In 2016, Xiyue Wang traveled from the U.S. to Tehran to complete his doctoral dissertation. Weeks later, he landed in an Iranian prison, where he stayed for 40 months. In a detailed account of his detention for The Atlantic, Graeme Wood lets Wang’s experiences—and subsequent treatment by American academic circles—speak for themselves. “He said he once thought that the dreadful state of Iran was ‘all because of something we did wrong to them,’ and that a thawing of ties would empower Iranian moderates. But that view relied on what he called a ‘mirage’ of moderation within the Iranian government. ‘I slowly saw: They don’t want to be our friends. They don’t want to reconcile,’” Wood writes. “During that period, he said he met no regime supporters. ‘But to my surprise, when I came back to the United States, there were many sympathizers with the regime,’ … ‘Can you imagine how furious this makes me, every single day?’” For more on Wang’s imprisonment, be sure to check out Danielle Pletka’s interview with him for The Dispatch.
@cleantechnica I am accumulating resources to help make life multiplanetary & extend the light of consciousness to the stars
Toeing the Company Line
In his Sunday French Press, David focuses on one of the less-discussed aspects of last week’s horrific shootings in Georgia: Christian “purity culture” and the damage it can do when taken to its extreme. “A culture that defines a person by their sexual sin cultivates misery,” David writes. “When it places women in a position of guarding a man’s heart, it cultivates abuse. And sometimes, when a man’s heart is particularly dark, it can even cultivate murder. The problem with purity culture is not Christianity. The problem with purity culture is that its extremes are not Christian at all.”
Jonah the road warrior paused his family vacation several times last week to feed Dispatch content machine. In Friday’s Remnant, he discusses everything from the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in Cleveland, to his take on the reintroduction of earmarks in Congress, to the perks and pitfalls of sleeping in a Walmart parking lot. In the G-File (published on Saturday this week!), he shares his thoughts on GOP deficit hypocrisy, and the rush to immediately characterize last week’s Georgia shooting as part of the broader uptick in anti-Asian violence. “These killings don’t appear to neatly fit that narrative,” he writes. “That doesn’t mean the issue of anti-Asian bigotry isn’t real or that the Atlanta killings aren’t a big story, they just don’t appear to be the same story. And it’s been interesting to see people try to stitch them together.”
Danielle Pletka joined Sarah and Steve on Friday’s Dispatch Podcast to discuss all things foreign policy: The aforementioned bilateral U.S./China meeting, the Biden administration’s approach to Iran, Israel and Palestine, and more!
In her latest Uphill (🔒), Haley takes a close look at how House GOP Leader Kevin McCarthy is handling the Republican conference’s most extreme members. (Spoiler: not very forcefully.) “While many Republicans agree that a big tent is a positive, some think the party would benefit if the tent were … a little smaller,” she writes. “McCarthy has displayed a profound sense of tolerance this year for members who spout malicious falsehoods and align themselves with extreme groups—raising questions about how he will keep members in line if he becomes House speaker in 2023.”
The theme of the Dispatch website this weekend was movie reviews. If you want to know more about the eight films nominated for Best Picture in this very strange year, check out our Oscars 2021 Watch Guide. And if you’re a nerd like David, you can read his long-awaited review of Zack Snyder’s Justice League. After years of waiting for the film, David deems it a worthy conclusion to the “second-greatest superhero trilogy,” trailing only Christopher Nolan’s Batman movies.
Kemberlee Kaye: “A huge thanks to everyone who joined us for last night’s virtual panel on The 1619 Project!”
Mary Chastain: “I hate being sick. HATE IT. One plus of the pandemic? Doctors setting up e-visits because I really do not feel like driving to a doctor’s office. I’ll get my Z-pack tomorrow and the sinus infection will go bye-bye.”
Leslie Eastman: “Operation Warp Speed is light-years ahead of other COVID vaccination programs. It’s hard to overstate exactly how vital Trump’s approach to vaccine development, approval, and purchase was to the current rate of vaccinations across this country. Operation Warp Speed: Light-years ahead of other COVID vaccine programs.”
David Gerstman: “In 25 to 50 years, will Donald Trump be viewed as a hero for saving the United States from an even worse toll from the COVID virus because of the ramped-up vaccine production he promoted through Operation Warp Speed? Leslie Eastman implicitly makes the case that, indeed, Trump’s vision has paid off handsomely for the United States. She looks at other vaccine efforts and concludes, “Reviewing the data on the speed of development, efficacy of the product, manufacture of the supply, and distribution to a large population, Operation Warp Speed is light years ahead of other national programs. Trump’s public-private partnership proved to be a strategic success.” FWIW, I’m part of a trial for a vaccine produced by Novavax and administered by the University of Maryland Medical School. I don’t know yet if I’ve received the vaccine, though there’s a 67% that I have.”
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Live By Cancel Culture, Die By Cancel Culture
Last week, the incoming editor-in-chief of Teen Vogue, Alexi McCammond, announced that she wouldn’t be taking the role after several SJWs online and at the magazine demanded she be ousted because of past social media posts that were deemed racist and offensive. When the announcement came, Teen Vogue‘s senior social media manager, Christine Davitt, who supported McCammond’s resignation, tweeted ‘”[Exhales the deepest sigh I’ve ever sighed].”
“A senior Teen Vogue staffer who posted a letter expressing concern about Alexi McCammond for past tweets racist against Asian Americans used the N-word in tweets from over 10 years ago herself. Christine Davitt, senior social media manager at Teen Vogue in 2009 wrote two tweets to a friend identifying him as a “ni–a,” and in 2010 used the word “ni–a” in a joke tweet. The friend appears to be White.
…
Davitt on March 8 posted a letter on Instagram from Teen Vogue staff expressing concern to Conde Nast management about the hiring of McCammond, “in light of her past racist and homophobic tweets.” “So proud of my @teenvogue colleagues. The work continues…” Davitt wrote in a caption.“
A collection of Davitt’s tweets:
Well, that’s a shame. Will Davitt hold herself to her own standards and resign? Now the left is grappling with where the purge ends. CNN’s Brian Stelter said, “No one wins in the purity wars.” Pretty rich coming from a network that supports silencing most conservative media, a former President of the United States, and women, minorities, entertainers and anyone else who deviate from their leftist groupthink. I tend to agree with Chris Barron, Fox News commentator and friend, who said, “If you are a conservative you shouldn’t care one iota about cancel culture warriors getting a taste of their own medicine. Live by the sword, die by it.”
Our Endangered Civilian-Military Relationship
Prior to the inauguration, it was reported that National Guard members stationed in DC would have their social media accounts investigated to ascertain their political beliefs. Then last week, two official military accounts criticized Fox News host Tucker Carlson. It’s a very uncomfortable issue to discuss because the military has been one of the most well-respected American institutions (possibly the last), especially among conservatives. Journalist Salena Zito writes about the struggling perception of military leadership in her latest column:
“In short, while we understood that politics always affected the military, we respected and expected that our military leaders never got in the mud with their partisan points of view.
Last week, that all changed, and not for the country’s good, and indeed not good for the civilian-military relationship. It is a relationship that should be cherished and guarded against senior military officers getting into childish Twitter spats with civilians no matter how tempting it may be.
And yet, that is just what Master Gunnery Sgt. Scott Stalker, the commander of the U.S. Space Force, did when he went after a conservative civilian talk show host on Twitter with a video attacking his commentary.
It matters little who was involved. It was wrong. Military Twitter accounts, whether the account is an official one held by a uniformed leader or a soldier, reflect on the military in the public mind, mainly because it is often the only contact civilians have with a military member.
When only one-half of 1% of people serve in the military, a whole lot of the public doesn’t have daily interaction with anyone serving. So, if Twitter is your only interaction and you are on there and watch the leader of the U.S. Space Force go after a civilian, you might be inclined to wonder what the hell is going on in our military ranks.”
More Weekend Reads
Biden Overstepped Constitutional Authority in Revoking Keystone Pipeline Permit, States Allege in Lawsuit (The Daily Signal)
Biden Administration Awards $86 Million Contract for Hotel Rooms for Migrants to Manage the Crisis at the Border (Red State)
Mexican Officials Admit Trump’s Border Policies Helped Them Manage Migrant Influx (The Federalist)
Gottlieb: The CDC’s Six-Foot Distancing Rule Is The Costliest Mitigation Measure Taken During The Pandemic (Hot Air)
Joe Biden Is Our Geriatric President And He Should Embrace It (The Federalist)
What I’m Reading This Week
On the docket this week is This Time Next Year by Sophie Cousens. From the description:
“Minnie Cooper knows two things with certainty: that her New Year’s birthday is unlucky, and that it’s all because of Quinn Hamilton, a man she’s never met. Their mothers gave birth to them at the same hospital just after midnight on New Year’s Day, but Quinn was given the cash prize for being the first baby born in London in 1990–and the name Minnie was meant to have, as well. With luck like that, it’s no wonder each of her birthdays has been more of a disaster than the one before.
When Minnie unexpectedly runs into Quinn at a New Year’s party on their mutual thirtieth birthday, she sees only more evidence that fortune has continued to favor him. The gorgeous, charming business owner truly seems to have it all–while Minnie’s on the brink of losing her pie-making company and her home. But if Quinn and Minnie are from different worlds, why do they keep bumping into each other? And why is it that each fraught encounter leaves them both wanting more?”
A Case of the Mondays
This police officer and his K9 partner are TikTok famous (LADBible via Facebook)
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Mar 22, 2021 01:00 am
Former green Dr. Patrick Moore undercuts gloom and doom prophecies in his book Fake Invisible Catastrophes and Threats of Doom. Read More…
Mar 22, 2021 01:00 am
Looks like another international incident from the man who’s been called wrong on every foreign policy issue he’s ever touched. Read More…
Recent Blog Posts
Jealous Dubya Bush emerges a pathetic, bitter little man
Mar 22, 2021 01:00 am
Bush’s latest string of attacks on President Trump are mendacious, specious, and loaded with jealousy. He’s a mouse compared to Cat Trump, but has ambitions of becoming a rat. Read more…
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A northern Michigan county that encountered controversy regarding the 2020 general election has decided to hand-count every ballot in an upcoming primary instead of using machines from Dominion Voting Systems.Antrim County commissioners voted unanimously to hand-count the votes of the upcoming May 4 primary. The commissioners rejected a p … Read more
Former President Donald Trump unloaded on his successor Sunday, directly responding to President Joe Biden’s administration continually blaming Trump for the growing border crisis. What is the background? Biden officials have made a habit of blaming incompetence of the Trump administration for the intensifying migrant crisis. … Read more
Given the reality of the NCAA’s policy, South Dakota Gov. Kristi Noem’s proffered explanation for excluding women collegiate athletes from the protections of H.B. 1217 is beyond misleading.
While Islam has receded from the public mind, Islamic ambitions remain intact. President Biden is poised to facilitate those objectives by reviving the Iran nuclear deal.
Even when he was a presidential candidate, Joe Biden promised the United States would accept all asylum seekers, although U.S. asylum has been studded with fraud and abuse for a long time.
Naperville School District 203 paid a diversity consultant, Dena Nicole Simmons, $10,500 for a 60-minute Zoom ‘keynote’ address last month – at a rate of $175 per minute.
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AstraZeneca’s coronavirus vaccine has received a major boost after data from a large trial showed it was safe and effective, potentially paving the way for its emergency authorization in the United States.
Miami Beach officials voted to extend an 8 p.m. curfew and emergency powers for up to three weeks to help control unruly and mostly maskless crowds that have converged on the party destination during spring break.
Investigators in a criminal probe of former U.S. President Donald Trump’s real-estate business are combing through millions of pages of newly acquired records with an eye toward identifying witnesses who can bring the documents to life for a jury.
Decades ago, in the Chicago suburb of Evanston, Cordelia Clark ran a restaurant out of her kitchen and parked cabs for her taxi company in her backyard because Black residents were effectively barred from owning or renting storefronts in town.
↑ Men pose outside the Bonus Tompson Hardware store in Evanston, Illinois, U.S., circa 1912
WORLD
↑ Dogs in carriers are transported on inflatable boats by State Emergency Service personnel during a rescue amid rising floodwaters in Sydney, Australia, March 22, 2021
Australian authorities are planning to evacuate thousands more people from flood-affected suburbs in Sydney’s west, which is set for its worst flooding in 60 years with drenching rain expected to continue for the next few days.
A dispute between Britain and the European Union over the implementation of the so-called Northern Ireland protocol – designed to prevent a ‘hard’ Irish border – has raised fears that the outrage it has caused among some caught in the middle could spill over into violent protest in the coming months.
Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov began a visit to China with a call for Moscow and Beijing to reduce their dependence on the U.S. dollar and Western payment systems to push back against what he called the West’s ideological agenda.
BUSINESS
Stocks slid and the Turkish lira tumbled towards a record low against the dollar after President Tayyip Erdogan shocked investors by replacing Turkey’s hawkish central bank governor with a critic of high interest rates.
U.S. stocks mark the one-year anniversary of the market low as the spread of COVID-19 and government lockdowns began to crush economic activity, before massive government and central bank stimulus plus the development of vaccines fueled a stunning, if uneven, rebound. We look back at a year of bust and boom.
Food delivery company Deliveroo could make Britain’s biggest stock market debut since commodities giant Glencore went public nearly a decade ago, after setting a price range on Monday that values it at up to $12 billion.
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[Editor’s note: This story originally was published by Real Clear Health.] By Mike Guerra Real Clear Health The U.S. response to the COVID-19…Read more…
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Morning Rundown
Miami Beach declares state of emergency due to spring break crowds: Miami Beach officials have declared a state of emergency due to “overwhelming” spring break crowds. Over the weekend, the Miami Beach City Commission extended the 8 p.m. curfew in the entertainment district to April 12 after seeing an increase in visitors compared to previous years. Miami Beach Mayor Dan Gelber announced the curfew and temporarily closed several roads leading to the city. In addition, causeway closures at 10 p.m. in the area will continue until at least April 12 as well. “This was not an easy decision to make,” interim City Manager Raul Aguila told reporters at the briefing. “We are doing that to protect the public health and safety.” In the last week, Miami had the highest test positivity rate of any large metro area with a rate of 226 positive COVID-19 cases per 100,000 people. To disperse crowds in Miami, police officers resorted to using pepper balls, but many, including the Miami Beach Police chief, are worried that “the behavior is getting to be a little bit more for us to be able to handle.” For more on this story, watch “Good Morning America” at 7 a.m. for an interview with Miami Beach Mayor Dan Gelber.
Texas Rep. McCaul says border crisis will only get worse in coming months: As record numbers of unaccompanied children continue to be detained along the southwest border, Rep. Michael McCaul, R-Texas, predicts that 1 million people could try to cross the border by the summer. “It’s going to get worse. It’s going to get a lot worse,” he said Sunday on ABC’s “This Week.” “This is a humanitarian crisis. We see the children and the babies … and we’re going back to kids in cages all over again.” McCaul, who was chairman of Homeland Security, placed blame on the Biden administration for creating the current crisis at the border. Recently, there has been a surge in apprehensions at the border. And in recent weeks, the rate of search-and-rescue missions conducted by Border Patrol agents in Texas, Arizona, New Mexico and California have nearly doubled. While McCaul said the Biden administration was responsible for the crisis, Secretary of Homeland Security Alejandro Mayorkas said the prior administration is to blame for the current influx of migrants. “We are rebuilding the system as we address the needs of vulnerable children who arrive at our borders,” he said on “This Week.” Earlier this month, Mayorkas echoed President Joe Biden’s message urging would-be immigrants to avoid traveling to the border, for now. “Now is not the time,” he said. “This journey is dangerous. We are building safe, orderly and humane ways to address the needs of vulnerable children, do not come.”
NCAA upgrades weight room for women’s basketball players: Following criticism over the disparity between men’s and women’s training facilities during March Madness, the NCAA revealed an upgraded weight room Saturday for female basketball players competing in the Division I tournament. On Friday, NCAA officials apologized after images and video surfaced on social media showing the differences between the women’s and men’s weight room facilities in Texas and Indiana, respectively. The women’s tournament weight room appeared to consist of a single set of dumbbells and some yoga mats, while the men’s more lavish tournament weight room was stocked with rows of weights and training equipment. In response, Lynn Holzman, the NCAA’s vice president of women’s basketball, promised to have improvements in place by Saturday morning. The weight room controversy has touched on larger issues of inequality in women’s college basketball — from the difference in the number of Division I teams that compete in the women’s (64) versus the men’s (68) tournaments, to social media branding that focuses on the men’s games. “[It is time] for the NCAA leadership to reevaluate the value they place on women,” said South Carolina women’s basketball coach Dawn Staley in a statement.
Boy comforts younger brother with deep breathing techniques: If you’re ever feeling stressed during your workday, apply some breathing techniques from 6-year-old Noah West. Last week, Noah’s mom, Ashley, saw Noah teach his 4-year-old brother, Cory, a few seconds of breathing exercises when he began to cry over his Nintendo Switch controllers being not fully charged. It instantly calmed Cory down. “I’m like, ‘Oh my god this is so cute,’” said West, who told “GMA” that she tries to teach her children emotionally healthy coping mechanisms. West said this was the first time that she saw her sons use her methods in action and decided to record the moment. West, who is currently working toward her degree in social work, said it’s important that her children become aware of when their emotions are heightened so that they can gain control of them and make sound decisions. She also practices yoga and meditation. “They see me breathing and they see me trying to be calm and they do it to themselves,” she said. “The energy that I give out, they give back to me and they give to each other.”
GMA Must-Watch
This morning on “GMA,” Justin Bieber will perform one of his new hit songs! And for today’s “Open for Business,” we’re speaking to the owner of Cookie’s Paper Petals, which has managed to blossom amid the pandemic. Plus, Martin Freeman and Daisy Haggard of the new FX show, “Breeders,” will talk about their roles and the show’s popularity since its debut. And Tory Johnson is back with “GMA” Deals and Steals on skin care and hair care. All this and more only on “GMA.”
This morning we’re taking a look at perhaps the last bipartisan issue left in Washington, Miami Beach’s clamp down on spring break crowds and AstraZeneca’s promising U.S. trial results.
There appear to be very few issues Democrats and Republicans can agree on these days, except for maybe one: China.
“We’re not going to win the 21st century if we fall behind China on critical technologies,” said Rep. Ro Khanna, D-Calif.
Many other lawmakers from both sides of the political aisle agree.
Washington is being pushed to find consensus on China, observers in both parties say because the foreign policy issue brings together every wing of American politics, from progressive populists to “America First” nationalists to traditional security hawks, write NBC News’ Benjy Sarlin and Sahil Kapur.
Miami Beach, Florida, city leaders voted Sunday to extend emergency curfew restrictions because of out-of-control spring break crowds that local officials say are made up of more than just typical college students. City Manager Raul Aguila said he believed that Florida’s lax Covid-19 rules have encouraged people from outside the state to visit. “This is a spring break like no other,” he said. (Video)
The drug company said it will now prepare to apply to the Food and Drug Administration for emergency use approval. If it is approved by U.S. regulators, it will likely bolster global confidence in the vaccine after several European countries briefly halted distribution due to fears over serious side-effects such as blood clots.
Activists say painting millions of Asian Americans with the broad brush of universal success damages all members of the community. “The model minority myth is a really powerful drug, but like drugs, it’s toxic,” said Oscar nominated producer and director Renee Tajima-Peña.
Recent years have revealed a scary, dangerous new era in which children have been taught to hate, are recruiting others, and are plotting terrorist attacks.
For three elections in a row, Israeli politics had an outsize guest star: Donald Trump. But now as weary Israeli voters head to the polls for a fourth time in two years Tuesday, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu can no longer rely on a helping hand from the White House.
From NBC’s Chuck Todd, Mark Murray, Carrie Dann and Ben Kamisar
FIRST READ: Here are the 10 U.S. counties that have had the biggest increase in Asian residents
With calls growing to shine a light on harassment and violence against Asian Americans, particularly in the wake of the Georgia spa killings last week, it’s worth looking at the communities where the Asian population has grown the most in the last decade.
An NBC News analysis of data from the American Community Survey finds that the counties with the greatest growth in Asians as a share of the population include largely suburban areas outside of Atlanta, San Francisco, Washington/Baltimore, New York City, Dallas and Houston.
Photo by RINGO CHIU/AFP via Getty Images
Forsyth, which neighbors Cherokee County — the site of the first Atlanta-area spa shooting — has seen its Asian population grow from about 5.5 percent to nearly 13 percent since 2010, the largest jump in the country.
Forsyth, like many of the other counties with growing Asian communities, has a fast rate of overall growth, high rates of college education, and high median incomes.
With one exception (Middlesex), these are also counties where Democrats have improved their presidential vote share since 2008. That Democratic boost is particularly notable in Forsyth, Collin and Howard counties, where Democrats did between 10-12 percentage points better in 2020 than in 2008.
But while these counties may have key political and demographic traits in common overall, the Asian population in each is uniquely diverse.
In the Bay Area, the largest segment of the Asian population is Chinese, with all three counties also home to some of the country’s largest Filipino populations. In most of the other top counties, including Forsyth, the largest subgroup is Indian. Howard County, Maryland has a large Korean population; both Texas counties have robust Vietnamese and Pakistani populations, in addition to Indian and Chinese ones.
‘The border is closed’ — with one big exception
On “Meet the Press” on Sunday, Department of Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas defended the Biden administration’s border policies, saying that the border is closed.
But he also made a significant exception to that statement.
MAYORKAS: Chuck, our, our message has been straightforward and simple. And it’s true. The border is closed. We are expelling families. We are expelling single adults. And we’ve made a decision that we will not expel young, vulnerable children…
TODD: How can you say the border is closed if there is this — what some would look at as a loophole? And I understand on humanitarian grounds…
MAYORKAS: So, Chuck, we have a short-term plan, a medium-term plan and a long-term plan, and the president and I have spoken to this repeatedly. Please remember something, that President Trump dismantled the orderly, humane and efficient way of allowing children to make their claims under United States law in their home countries. He dismantled the Central American Minors program. So we are rebuilding those orderly and safe processes as quickly as possible. But in the meantime — in the meantime we will not expel into the Mexican desert, for example, three orphan children whom I saw over the last two weeks. We just won’t do that. That’s not who we are.
TWEET OF THE DAY: Tom Reed apologizes, won’t run in 2022
29,943,585: The number of confirmed cases of coronavirus in the United States, per the most recent data from NBC News and health officials. (That’s 150,260 more than Friday morning.)
544,848: The number of deaths in the United States from the virus so far, per the most recent data from NBC News. (That’s 3,145 more than Friday morning.)
124,481,412: Number of vaccine doses administered in the U.S.
12.6 percent: The share of Americans who are fully vaccinated
38: The number of days left for Biden to reach his 100-day vaccination goal.
The first congressional specials of 2021
Julia Letlow, the widow of Rep.-elect Luke Letlow, R-La., who died from Covid complications in November, won the special election Saturday to fill her late husband’s congressional seat.
“Endorsed by former President Donald Trump, Letlow had been favored to win Louisiana’s heavily Republican 5th Congressional District, and she managed to avoid a runoff by surpassing the 50 percent threshold,” NBC’s Alex Seitz-Wald writes.
Meanwhile, the special election in LA-2 to replace former Rep. Cedric Richmond, D-La. (who joined the Biden administration) heads to an April 24 runoff between Democratic state Sens. Troy Carter and Karen Carter Peterson.
In a field of 15 candidates, Troy Carter got 36 percent of the vote and Carter Peterson got 23 percent; the two candidates aren’t related.
ICYMI: What ELSE is happening in the world?
There’s not much hope for bipartisanship on any issue in Washington these days. But China might be an exception.
A top Trump adviser says the former president is planning a return to social media with his own platform. (Trump is also expected to weigh in on a race to take down Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger.)
A key prosecutor says the evidence in the Jan. 6 riot may meet the bar for sedition charges against some suspects.
Miami Beach Mayor Dan Gelbert declared a state of emergency for the city to crack down on rowdy spring breakers flouting coronavirus safety guidelines. Also, the Biden administration has closed the U.S.-Mexico border as a surge of migrants look to enter the country. All that and all that matters in today’s Eye Opener. Your world in 90 seconds.
As thousands of people gather across the country to honor the eight victims of the Georgia spa shootings and protest Asian hate, family and friends of the victims are remembering the lives lost. Mark Strassmann reports.
More than 15,000 unaccompanied children are being held at U.S. border; Sen. Murphy visited and says “I wouldn’t want my children to be in those detention facilities.”
AstraZeneca says advanced trial data from a U.S. study on the COVID-19 vaccine it developed along with Oxford University shows it is 79% effective in preventing symptomatic illness and 100% effective against severe illness and hospitalization. Dr. David Agus joined “CBS This Morning” to explain more.
Country music singer-songwriter Rissi Palmer joins “CBS This Morning” to discuss her return to the Grand Ole Opry stage for the first time in 13 years. Palmer, who is also featured in a new exhibit at the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum, explains why returning to the famous stage was healing for her and how country music can become more inclusive.
Plus: Wisconsin may approve microschools, what will Biden Title IX guidance look like, and more…
Abortion ban “is not constitutional,” governor tells CNN. Arkansas Gov. Asa Hutchinson said Sunday that he hopes the state’s new, near-total ban on abortion will trigger a Supreme Court challenge to Roe v. Wade.
The law bans abortion “in all cases except to save the life of the mother in a medical emergency.” Hutchinson signed it into law earlier this month, instituting fines of up to $100,000 and up to 10 years in prison for anyone who performs an abortion on someone whose life is not at risk.
Hutchinson told CNN’s State of the Union on Sunday that he knows the new Arkansas abortion law “is not constitutional under Supreme Court cases right now.”
However, the Republican governor “signed it because it is a direct challenge to Roe v. Wade. That is the intent of it,” he said. “I think there’s a very narrow chance the Supreme Court will accept that case, but we’ll see.”
Meanwhile, in South Carolina, a federal court has put a temporary halt to a measure, signed into law in February, that would ban most abortions there.
The South Carolina law bans abortion after fetal cardiac activity can be detected, which can occur as early as three-and-a-half weeks after conception. “But before the governor’s pen hit the paper, Planned Parenthood and other groups filed a motion against the state and Attorney General Alan Wilson to stop the law from taking effect,” notes WLTX.
On Friday, U.S. District Judge Mary Geiger Lewis issued a temporary restraining order against enforcing the South Carolina ban. Judges have responded similarly to so-called heartbeat bills in a number of other states.
“Similar bills have been passed by other states and are tied up in the courts,” WLTX points out. “In passing the law, some South Carolina Republican lawmakers had hoped that the new conservative majority at the U.S. Supreme Court might take a look at their law and others like it.”
FREE MINDS
Biden and Title IX. During his tenure as Barack Obama’s vice president, now-President Joe Biden was behind many of the administration’s worst interpretations of Title IX (the law governing sex discrimination—and these days, a whole lot more—in schools). Some of the problems with Obama-era interpretations were remedied in more recent years. But with Biden’s executive pledge to revise Title IX interpretations once again, can we expect a return to the worst Title IX guidance? Greg Lukianoff of the Foundation for Individual Rights in Education (FIRE) suggests on Twitter that we will not.
“Given Biden was the public face of the Obama Title IX guidance, we were concerned about a major rollback of the reforms. Two weeks ago, he issued an executive order for ED to consider rescinding the regs,” tweeted Lukianoff. “However, I will be surprised if he tries to reinstate the Obama-era Title IX policies.”
Lukianoff gives two reasons: Public opinion has changed, and the legal landscape has changed.
FREE MARKETS
Wisconsin may approve “microschools.” A new bill in the Wisconsin state legislature would add microschools to the options parents can choose “to satisfy the compulsory school attendance requirement.” The bill defines a microschool as “an instruction program provided to a child by the child’s parent, or a person designated by the parent, that is provided to 1) two to five family units; 2) no more than 20 children; and 3) participating children at a physical location.”
“Under current law, an instruction program provided to a child by the child’s parent, or a person designated by the child’s parent, that is provided to more than one family unit does not qualify as a home-based private educational program,” the legislation notes.
“While 2020 brought this lack of options to light, they’ve always existed and we should be looking to give more parents more options even if we don’t think that our families would use that option currently,” said state Rep. Shae Sortwell (R–Two Rivers), who sponsored the bill. “Even if you don’t think it’s necessary for your family now, you never know how life’s circumstances are going to change.”
QUICK HITS
• The Biden administration continues to botch the handling of unaccompanied minors at the border. “The U.S. government on Saturday was housing approximately 15,500 unaccompanied migrant minors, including 5,000 teenagers and children stranded in Border Patrol facilities not designed for long-term custody,” a CBS News review of federal data found.
• “Texas lawmakers’ plan for stopping social media firms from blocking or banning certain ideas or speakers has just one itty, bitty problem—it’s flagrantly unconstitutional,” writes Jared Schroeder, a Southern Methodist University journalism professor and author of The Press Clause and Digital Technology’s Fourth Wave.
• The city of Evanston, Illinois, is instituting a “narrow and targeted” reparations program for black residents whose families were affected by historically racist and discriminatory housing policies, reports Reuters.
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.
Bernie Sanders has always been a parasite suckling at the taxpayer’s teet. Uncle Ted Nugent breaks people into either the “asset column”, or the “liability column.” Bernie has always been a liabili … MORE
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55.) REALCLEARPOLITICS MORNING NOTE
03/22/2021
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Carl Cannon’s Morning Note
Schumer Factor; RCP Takeaway; Local Relief
By Carl M. Cannon on Mar 22, 2021 07:54 am
Good morning, it’s Monday, March 22, 2021. “March Madness,” at least on the men’s side, has been wild so far, hasn’t it? Upsets are actually the norm. In the women’s bracket, which got rolling yesterday in San Antonio, the powerhouses played to form, however, as all four top seeds (North Carolina State, U-Conn, South Carolina, and Stanford) cruised to easy victories.
How are we going to find time to watch all these games, which continue today in both the men’s and women’s tournaments? Well, I’m not, because RealClear Opinion Research has a new poll coming out tomorrow, and I’m busy with that. But if you’re inclined to slack off at work, tell your bosses that March 22 is “National Goof Off Day.”
Yes, that’s really a thing, with various experts and local journalists dispensing ways to nurture your mental health by following the goofy holiday’s precepts. Yes, observing it this year may seem incongruous amid the 13th month of a pandemic that has stressed the worldwide economy. But it is an excuse to watch college basketball. Or, if you’re not a sports fan, to stream the all-time goof-off movie, the 1986 cult classic, “Ferris Bueller’s Day Off.”
With that (less than sage) advice, 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’s Got Problems. Is Chuck Schumer One of Them? A.B. Stoddard writes that the Senate majority leader’s increasingly progressive tilt might help him ward off a left-wing primary challenge in 2022, but he isn’t helping the president or his party.
RCP Takeaway Podcast. John Della Volpe, polling director for RealClear Opinion Research, discusses a new poll on voters’ views of Biden’s record so far.
Relief Bill Boosts State/Local Funding to Pre-Pandemic Levels. Lou Cannon has the details.
Baghdad Bob at the Southern Border. Charles Lipson cites the new administration’s lack of transparency in addressing the migrant surge.
Congress Is Flying Blind on Immigration. At RealClearPolicy, Rep. Madison Cawthorn argues that including a citizenship question in the census would give lawmakers information needed to shape policy.
Will Biden Nominee Run a Research-Based CFPB? Also at RCPolicy, Thomas W. Miller Jr. lists his concerns about Rohit Chopra.
The Faith Journey of Luther Strange. The former Alabama senator reflects on influences that drew him to the political arena.
Bolstering the Abraham Accords Through Education Initiatives. Peter Berkowitz suggests ways to further serve the shared interests of the peace agreement signatories.
Voting Rights –Then and Now. Leslie C. Francis spotlights milestone achievements and the struggles needed to secure them.
Why Arkansas’ GIRLS Act Levels the Playing Field. Arkansas Attorney General Leslie Rutledge explains the thinking behind a bill that bases participation in school athletics on the sex assignment found on the student’s birth certificate.
Boris Johnson Has Become the Anti-Trump. At RealClearEnergy, Rupert Darwall highlights how the British PM has embraced policies diametrically opposed to those of the man he was often compared with.
America’s Most Underrated Energy Reality. Also at RCE, Jude Clemente lays out the low-cost numbers for natural gas.
The Center for Security Policy today announced Jamal Ware has joined the organization as Senior Director for Congressional and Public Affairs and as a policy analyst.
Alejandro Mayorkas is the new Secretary of the Department of Homeland Security. Until yesterday, he was best known for his scandalous misconduct facilitating visas for politically-connected Chinese migrants when he was Barack Obama’s director of Customs and Border Protection.
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62.) 1440 DAILY DIGEST
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Good morning. It’s Monday, March 22, and we’re covering more allegations against New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo (D), new guidelines for schools, and upsets galore in March Madness. Have feedback? Let us know at hello@join1440.com.
New allegations of sexual harassment were lodged against New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo (D) over the weekend, the latest in a wave of claims against the three-term lawmaker. Thirty-three-year-old Alyssa McGrath, who serves as an assistant in Cuomo’s office—though not directly for the governor—becomes the ninth woman over the past month to make such accusations (see overview). McGrath accuses Cuomo of making inappropriate comments and staring down her blouse, among other behaviors.
McGrath is the first to come public with such allegations while still working in the Cuomo administration. One of the most serious claims to date—accusations of physical groping—were made anonymously by a current staff member. The original accuser, former aide Lindsey Boylan, claimed in an interview ($$, New Yorker) that Cuomo staff sought to retaliate against her.
Separately, California Gov. Gavin Newsom (D) appears likely to face a recall election, with organizers submitting 2.1 million signatures by the March 17 deadline, surpassing the 1.5 million signature threshold. Officials have until April 29 to confirm the validity of those who signed the recall petition.
Social Undistancing
Health officials revised regulations over the weekend, reducing the recommended distancing between students during in-person learning from 6 to 3 feet. While the guidelines from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention are not mandatory—most school decisions are made at the local level—the revisions are expected to give cover to school districts struggling to accommodate students indoors while observing 6-foot distancing.
The decision was bolstered by a Massachusetts study involving about 577,000 students and 100,000 staff showing no difference in case rates in schools with policies of 3- versus 6-foot distancing.
New York recorded its first case involving virus variant P.1, first seen in Brazil. The mutation is believed to spread more quickly than other strains, but does not have a higher mortality rate. Current vaccines have been shown to be effective against known variants. See a breakdown of the different strains here.
Separately, cofounder and CEO of the Texas Roadhouse restaurant chain, Kent Taylor, died by suicide over the weekend after a battle with persistent COVID-19 symptoms. Read more about COVID-19 “long-haulers” here.
More than 81 million people in the US have received at least one vaccination dose. As of this morning, the country’s death toll stands at 542,359. Average daily deaths in the US continue their downward trend, with the seven-day average just over 1,200 per day (see data).
Upset City
After a pandemic-induced one-year hiatus, the NCAA men’s basketball tournament got underway this weekend, with a number of marquee programs making an early exit. Two teams—No. 2 Ohio State and No. 7 Florida—fell to No. 15 Oral Roberts, which became just the second 15-seeded team in history to reach the Sweet Sixteen.
Also in the first round, No. 13 North Texas beat No. 4 Purdue, No. 12 Oregon State beat No. 5 Tennessee, No. 14 Abilene Christian beat No. 3 Texas, and No. 13 Ohio bounced reigning national champions and No. 4 seed Virginia.
On the first day of the second round, No. 1 Illinois fell to No. 8 Loyola Chicago. It’s the second time in four years Loyola—cheered on by 101-year-old Sister Jean—has advanced to the Sweet 16. Later in the day, No. 11 Syracuse beat No. 3 West Virginia while No. 12 Oregon State followed their Friday win by upsetting No. 4 Oklahoma. The second round concludes today (see schedule).
The women’s tournament kicked off yesterday, with all 16 higher-seeded teams notching a victory. It was the first time since 2010 no lower-seeded teams pulled an upset during a single day of the first round.
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We get it: You like a light, refreshing “adult” drink, but hate how bloated and groggy it can make you feel the next day. Don’t worry, we were in the same boat.
Until we found JuneShine, that is. JuneShine is the “champagne of kombucha“—a description we wholeheartedly agree with. Their hard kombucha (6% ABV) uses green tea and honey instead of black tea and sugar for a smoother, less acidic taste. And if you’re looking for recommendations, you should check out their Midnight Painkiller with pineapple, coconut, orange, activated charcoal, and nutmeg. It has an intense look, bold flavor, and will most certainly live up to the hype.
> “The Fallout” and “Lily Topples The World” among top winners at 2021 South by Southwest film festival awards (More) | See SXSW winners in gaming, community service, and startup pitch competitions (More)
>Queen Elizabeth to appoint diversity czar as part of larger effort to modernize the monarchy in wake of Meghan Markle and Prince Harry interview(More)
>Nawal El Saadawi, pioneering Egyptian feminist writer and activist, dies at 89 (More) | Famed Tiffany and Co. jewelry designer Elsa Peretti dies at 80 (More)
Science & Technology
>Study finds the coronavirus was likely circulating undetected in China for up to two months before the first reported case in December 2019 (More)
>Mount Fagradalsfjall fissure erupts in southwestern Iceland, the system’s first volcanic activity in 900 years; lava flow follows more than 50,000 small-scale earthquakes over the past month (More) | See video (More)
>Scientists make first observation of ultracold groups of atoms colliding in microgravity; study may have an application in space navigation (More)
Business & Markets
>Saudi Arabian majority state-owned oil business Saudi Aramco sees 44% reduction in yearly earnings amid pandemic; will pay $75B dividend (More)
>Shares of Visa drop 6% after the Department of Justice announces probe into potentially anticompetitive debit card practices (More)
>Canadian Pacific Railway agrees to acquire Kansas City Southern in $25B deal; will create first rail network connecting Canada, Mexico, and the US (More)
>Julia Letlow (R) wins special election to the US House in Lousiana’s 5th District; Letlow’s husband, Luke Letlow, died from COVID-19 after winning election in November but before being seated (More)
>Samia Suluhu Hassan sworn in as Tanzania’s president following the death of former president John Magufuli; Hassan becomes the country’s first female leader and the third female leader in the history of East Africa (More)
>Biden administration awards $86M contract to hold migrant family members arriving at the US-Mexico border in hotels (More) | Critics say border policy causing confusion (More) | Border encounters have risen steadily since April 2020; see data (More)
They just committed to becoming 100% carbon neutral, with 100% renewable solar power in their brewery and trees planted for every six-pack box delivered. Check JuneShine out guilt-free today and take 20% off their incredible variety pack with code 1440MEDIA.
Historybook: HBD William Shatner (1931); HBD legendary musical theater composer Andrew Lloyd Webber (1948); HBD sports broadcaster Bob Costas (1952); HBD Reese Witherspoon (1976); Terrorist drives car into crowd in London, killing five and injuring 50 (2017).
“There is a very fine line between success and failure. Just one ingredient can make the difference.”
– Andrew Lloyd Webber
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63.) AMERICAN INSTITUTE FOR ECONOMIC RESEARCH
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March 22, 2021
The Final Push to Restore Freedom
By Robert E. Wright | Have you noticed that the good guys are on the verge of winning the great struggle, certainly intellectually but also politically and culturally? It’s become nearly impossible for the lockdowners even to muster salience.
Thomas Paine, Debt Realist and Political Economist…
By Robert E. Wright | In 1776, an age when social media entailed spending a few hours in the evening in the local tavern listening to printed materials read aloud by those fortunate enough to be able to read, Thomas Paine was a blue checkmark…
To End Budget Deficits, Restrict Political Pickpockets
By Richard M. Ebeling | “Unless some way is found to escape from our current political situation, to use Frederic Bastiat’s words, in which the State has become the ‘great fiction’ through which everyone tries to live at everyone else’s expense,…
By Paul E. Alexander | “Vaccinating our children with a possibly harmful (untested) vaccine to them and with no basis given their risk profile, must be pushed back upon hard by parents. Parents are the voices of their children now on vaccinating…
The Disease Models Were Tested and Failed, Massively
By Phillip W. Magness | “The repeated failures of the Ferguson/ICL model point to a scientific error at the heart of the theory behind lockdowns and similar NPIs. They assume, without evidence, that their prescriptive approach is correct, and that…
By Veronique de Rugy | “Very few seem to care that we’re closing in on $30 trillion in debt, the symptom of our insane spending. In fact, it has become fashionable to claim that we can borrow without fear of a debt crisis or of any consequences.
The Harwood Reader: Essential Readings in the History of Economic Ideas consists of his own list of readings and put together what amounts to a Harwood-style education in economic theory, history, and policy.
With this reader, we all have the opportunity to gain an understanding into his intellectual achievements, as well as to why and how he was able to exercise such moral courage in the management of AIER, resisting multiple attempts by government to shut down our work.
On the menu today: why the national media may not want to look too closely at which states rank at or near the bottom of the vaccination effort — by every measure; AstraZeneca unveils the results of its trial testing among Americans; and U.S. photographers have to go to Mexico to see how the U.S. Customs and Border Protection is treating migrants.
Which States’ Vaccination Programs Are Sputtering?
As I see it, there are three ways a state can say it’s doing a good job in vaccinating its residents in comparison to other states. The first is having a high percentage of the state population that is fully vaccinated — either two shots of either the Moderna or Pfizer vaccines, or one shot of Johnson & Johnson. The second is what percentage of the population is partially vaccinated. There’s a school of thought that because the first shots of Moderna and Pfizer give more than half the benefits, it makes more sense to give more people the first shot and deprioritize the second shot until later. (Remember, the first and second shots are the same stuff. … READ MORE
Former President Trump said that Republicans need “stronger” and “better” leadership than Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, The Hill reports.
Said Trump: “I mean, he can’t rein in his own people. We have the Mitt Romneys of the world and, you know, the Ben Sasses of the world. These are not good for the Republican Party.”
“A lawyer for one of the women who have accused New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo of sexual harassment charged Monday that he is trying to interfere with a state attorney general’s office investigation of the womens’ claims,” CNBC reports.
Sen. Mitch McConnell (R-KY) slams Rep. John Yarmuth (D-KY), who has argued for eliminating the Senate filibuster, in the Louisville Courier Journal:
“Congressman John Yarmuth likes to pretend he knows me. He talks to reporters and writes in these pages as if he’s some sort of ‘McConnell-whisperer.’ That’s a full day’s drive from reality…”
“Yarmuth also thinks he knows the Senate, even if he never had the gumption to challenge me. The Senate stands as a firewall against heated passions and short-term electoral changes. Rules like the filibuster, which requires 60 votes to advance most legislation, exist to block bad ideas from becoming law and to encourage bipartisan solutions. This design also stabilizes national policy from swinging with every shift of the political winds.
“The legislative filibuster is the essence of the Senate.”
Gerald Seib: Filibuster debate tears at Biden and Senate, with long term consequences.
“President Joe Biden is rewarding Atlanta Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms, one of his staunchest allies, with the first campaign fundraiser he’s headlined since he was sworn into office two months ago,” the Atlanta Journal Constitution reports.
Politico: “Now that Biden is president though, Clyburn’s bold, in-your-face style, isn’t playing the same. While the president himself holds his longtime friend and confidant in the same regard, the congressmember has privately drawn the ire of some White House officials.”
“But if Clyburn’s style is irking officials in the West Wing, he has no qualms about it.”
Washington Post: “Conducted in partnership with two Democratic analytics firms – Kinetic21 and BlueLabs – Run for Something analyzed 3,953 precincts within 61 counties in Arizona, Florida, Georgia, Kansas, North Carolina, New York, Ohio and Texas. The study compared precincts where a Republican was running on the ballot for state House or Senate uncontested with places where both Republicans and Democrats were running.
“The study found that even if the Democrat didn’t win, having a contested state legislative race provided anywhere from a .3 percent to 1.5 percent boost for Biden.”
“She’s looking at defining what a Western Democrat looks like. A Western populist Democrat that’s not owned by the unions or traditional Democratic constituencies (like) minorities and women. She’s not going to be so pigeonholed.”
— Ex-GOP strategist Chuck Coughlin, quoted by the Los Angeles Times, on Sen. Kyrsten Sinema (D-AZ).
Rep. Filemon Vela, who represents a southern Texas border district and is vice chair at the Democratic National Committee, will not run for reelection to the House next year, Axios reports.
Vela won his seat with 55% in 2020 and is the first Texas Democrat to decide to leave the House ahead of restricting next year.
Meredith Conroy: ““The largest bloc of young Republicans (ages 18 to 29) are white men, according to a 2018 survey from Tuft University’s Center for Information and Research on Civic Learning and Engagement, which found that among young voters, white men were the only racial or gender group to align with the GOP in the midterms.”
“This is important because polling by the Public Religion Research Institute, also from 2018, found that 55 percent of young white men (ages 15 to 24) think that discrimination against white people has become as big a problem as discrimination against Black people and other minority groups. In fact, almost half said in that poll that diversity efforts will harm white people.”
“In other words, a core part of the younger GOP base is really concerned that they’ll lose their status in society.”
NBC News: “Paid congressional internships are a prestigious and powerful stepping stone for college students, but a recent report found they are far from representative of the nation’s diversity.”
“White students made up 76 percent of paid congressional interns, though they make up about half (52 percent) of the national undergraduate student population, according to a new report from the non-profit Pay Our Interns.”
“Democrats are warning they won’t tolerate GOP stonewalling as they try to make good on their pledge to enact a ‘bold’ agenda and avoid Obama-era missteps,” The Hill reports.
“Fresh off a big win on coronavirus relief, Democrats are facing intense pressure not to water down their legislative priorities after years of a backed-up wish list during the Trump-era and a decade since the party has had a unified government it could use to muscle through sweeping reforms considered anathema to the GOP.”
Washington Post: “Ann O’Leary, a prominent Democratic policy expert, has withdrawn from contention to be President Biden’s budget director, refocusing attention on whether the White House will pick Shalanda Young, who has widespread support on Capitol Hill.”
“Republican Georgia legislators are pursuing an overhaul of primary and runoff election rules — changes that might have prevented Democrats from winning U.S. Senate races if they had been in effect last year,” the Atlanta Journal Constitution reports.
“Runoffs would be held four weeks after an initial election, cutting short the state’s current nine-week wait.”
Politico: “But what’s truly unique about the Republicans’ pre-presidential primary is the contingent framework that is unfolding around it. It’s a primary — but a wholly conditional one. Prospective 2024 candidates, donors and conservative media outlets — the entire Republican ecosystem — are building strategies and structuring the race around the single question of whether former President Donald Trump runs again.”
“It’s been nearly a half-century since either party had to navigate a primary in which a losing president loomed as a potential contestant.”
Washington Post: “An unlikely coalition of Democrats across the ideological spectrum mounted an 11th-hour push in the final weekend before the American Rescue Plan for President Biden to go big on tackling child poverty. They prevailed over what one person involved in the process called the “cost police” in Biden’s inner circle, those anxiously warning about the ballooning cost of the stimulus package.”
“This under-the-radar success created what could be the most consequential piece of the $1.9 trillion package — one that, if made permanent, could approach the impact of the programs established under President Lyndon B. Johnson’s War on Poverty.”
“The sudden, unexpected creation of an approximately $120 billion social program has thrown a twist into the political landscape. Some Democrats now fear being labeled big-government spenders in the upcoming midterms. Some conservatives, on the other hand, are embracing the idea as a family-friendly measure.”
CNN: “In his first two months in office, Biden has taken several steps to bolster the landmark health reform law, which marks its 11th anniversary on Tuesday, and to embed it even more firmly in the nation’s health care system. Former President Barack Obama is scheduled to speak Monday about how the Affordable Care Act has benefited Americans and how the Democrats’ $1.9 trillion relief package, which Biden signed into law earlier this month, has strengthened the law.”
“Aided by the stimulus package, the Biden administration is making these moves even before its top health officials are in place. Health and Human Services Secretary Xavier Becerra was only confirmed on Thursday, while the President’s pick to run the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, Chiquita Brooks-LaSure, has yet to go before the Senate.”
“The U.S. accounts for 27% of the world’s coronavirus vaccine production, but 0% of the global supply beyond its own borders. Critics and allies alike say it’s time for that to change,” Axios reports.
“China has gotten a head start on vaccine diplomacy, sending millions of doses all over the globe, including to Latin America. Experts say it’s in America’s interests to compete in the race to vaccinate the world, and the calls to start doing so are getting louder.”
Playbook: “Just weeks after blasting Donald Trump for trying to overturn the Electoral College, House Democrats are about to try to reverse the outcome of a House election in Iowa to pad their slim majority by an extra seat.”
“Democrats say their candidate Rita Hart, who lost to GOP Rep. Marianette Miller-Meeks by six votes, has every right to ask the House to resolve one of the closest House races in American history. Congress, they point out, has dealt with 110 such contested election cases over the past 90 years. Only three, however, resulted in the declared winner being ousted and replaced, according to the House Administration Committee.”
Key takeaway: “The effort to oust Miller-Meeks in favor of Hart has been blessed by the top echelons of House Democratic leadership.”
Washington Post: Pro-impeachment Republicans object to Democratic probe of narrow Iowa race.
The White House has spent weeks denying that the surge of migrants at the U.S.-Mexico border should be called a “crisis,” but two-thirds of voters say it is a crisis.
Forty-one percent (41%) of Likely U.S. Voters think the country is heading in the right direction, according to a new Rasmussen Reports national telephone and online survey for the week ending March 18, 2021.
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Last September, energetic Trump administration diplomacy brought Bahrain’s foreign minister, the United Arab Emirates’ foreign minister, and Israel’s prime minister to the White House to sign and to celebrate the Abraham Accords. The agreements offer unprecedented opportunities for the parties to the accords, for the broader region, and for the international order. Over the last seven months, the focus has been on cooperation in national security and commerce. That’s understandable.
with Jack Goldsmith via U.S. House Committee on Foreign Affairs
Hoover Institution senior fellow Jack Goldsmith will testifies before the United States House Committee on Foreign Affairs on “Reclaiming Congressional War Powers.”
In this interview, recorded on February 10, 2021, Edward Nelson, an economist for the US Federal Reserve Board, discusses his new two-volume work, Milton Friedman and Economic Debate in the United States, 1932–1972.
The Hoover Institution’s Herbert and Jane Dwight Working Group on the Middle East and the Islamic World acknowledged the tenth anniversary of the Syrian civil war this week with a conversation about the origins of the conflict and the future of what has become a failed state.
As a general rule, the next time an official, a politician, or an expert lectures us on the “science,” make sure that he is not projecting his own unscientific biases onto others.
Key climate goals of the administration, such as reducing greenhouse gas emissions for the energy and transportation sectors, may be held hostage by China. This is because a shift away from fossil fuels depends on lithium ion batteries. Since China dominates that industry, the administration will need its strategy to mitigate the leverage.
The harsh sentence handed down to former French President Nicolas Sarkozy, who was found guilty of influence peddling, confirms anew an ancient truth of politics. Even in the world’s most firmly entrenched democracies, corruption remains a curse.
Whether it’s a pandemic or a Texas-sized ice storm that leaves millions of people without power, we’d like to avoid a repetition. Megan McArdle of the Washington Post talks with EconTalk host Russ Roberts about the challenge of learning the right lessons from the current crisis in order to prevent the next one. McArdle argues that we frequently learn the wrong lessons from the past in trying to prevent the harm from the catastrophes that might be waiting in our future.
Former President Donald Trump formally announced Operation Warp Speed (OWS) on May 15, 2020. OWS was constituted as a projected $18 billion business-government-military partnership, charged to “produce and deliver 300 million doses of safe and effective vaccines with the initial doses available by January 2021, as part of a broader strategy to accelerate the development, manufacturing, and distribution of COVID-19 vaccines, therapeutics, and diagnostics.”
The director of the Sinquefield Center for Applied Economic Research at Saint Louis University, Michael Podgursky, joins Paul E. Peterson to discuss the resignation of the members of the Oakley Union Elementary School District Board, who were caught on a live Zoom meeting discussing parents, including a comment that, “it’s very unfortunate that they want to pick on us because they want their babysitters back.”
In Jeff Hummel’s Monetary Theory and Policy class recently, he assigned an interesting computational problem that shed light on the main factors driving the drop in the U.S. money supply between 1929 and 1933. He used a problem from Greg Mankiw’s Intermediate Macro text. The problem didn’t give magnitudes but I assume everything was in billions of dollars.
interview with Ayaan Hirsi Ali via The Philanthropy Roundtable
Hoover Institution fellow Ayaan Hirsi Ali breaks down the lessons learned about politics and culture from the death of Theo van Gogh and the importance of listening to different views.
interview with John Yoo via The Federalist Society
Hoover Institution fellow John Yoo joins a panel to consider to what extent such presidential unilateral action is consistent with the original meaning of the constitution and whether the costs of such action outweigh its benefits. The panel also considers whether there are ways to reform the War Powers Act to make it a more effective instrument for requiring legislative deliberation before the United States commits to major military action abroad.
Hoover Institution fellow Bjorn Lomborg discusses the exaggeration of climate risk, the coming backlash against eco-austerity, and why technology is the best solution.
Hoover Institution fellow John Yoo discusses former President Trump, executive power, the US Constitution, the differences between the Republicans and Democrats, and much more.
Condoleezza Rice was born in Birmingham, Alabama. She was secretary of state during George W. Bush’s presidency and the first and only black woman to have served in that position.
US and Chinese diplomats clashed Thursday in their first face-to-face talks since President Joe Biden took office, with the world’s top two powers each digging in on a laundry list of issues on which they diverge broadly as the meeting opened in Alaska.
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.
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71.) DAILY INTELLIGENCE BRIEF
Daily Intelligence Brief. The Equality Act — What is it?
Good morning, it’s March 22, 2021. On this day in history, the Stamp Act — the first direct British tax on American colonists — was passed (1765); the Equal Rights Amendment passed the U.S. Senate (1972); and the Pentagon awarded a contract to AM General Corporation to develop High Mobility Multipurpose Wheeled Vehicles or “Humvees” (1983). The civilian version — the Hummer —arrived in 1992.
On February 25, 2021, the U.S. House of Representatives passed H.R. 5 — The Equality Act. The Equality Act, sponsored by Rep. David Cicilline (D-RI), is not a new piece of legislation.
Cicilline, the first openly gay mayor of Providence, Rhode Island, tried to get the Equality Act to pass in 2015 and 2017, but didn’t succeed. In 2019, Cicilline attempted to get the legislation through a third time, with the bill passing in the House of Representatives.
According to the bill, the Equality Act provides additional protections for Americans who identify as part of the LGBTQ community. The bill reads, in part, “This Act makes explicit that existing Federal statutes prohibiting sex discrimination in employment (including in access to benefits), healthcare, housing, education, credit, and jury service also prohibit sexual orientation and gender identity discrimination.”
The summary section of the bill states, “This bill prohibits discrimination based on sex, sexual orientation, and gender identity in a wide variety of areas including public accommodations and facilities, education, federal funding, employment, housing, credit, and the jury system. Specifically, the bill defines and includes sex, sexual orientation, and gender identity among the prohibited categories of discrimination or segregation. The bill expands the definition of public accommodations to include places or establishments that provide (1) exhibitions, recreation, exercise, amusement, gatherings, or displays; (2) goods, services, or programs; and (3) transportation services.” Under this expanded definition, the Equality Act would include schools.
Further, places of public accommodation would be subject to the legislation. According to every available legal source reviewed by DIB analysts, public accommodations only include churches if space is rented out for non-religious activities. Findlaw reads, “Churches, synagogues, mosques, and other religious organizations are generally not considered public accommodations. However; when these facilities are rented out to the public for non-religious purposes, they become public accommodations during that period of use.”
Both Protestant and Catholic leaders have come out against the legislation. In a radio broadcast, Rev. Albert Mohler, president of the Southern Baptist Theological Seminary, said, “It will be very difficult for Christian schools, Christian colleges, even in some cases for the ministries of Christian churches to proceed. This will change not just a few things, it will fundamentally change almost everything on the nation’s landscape.”
In writing about the impact that the Equality Act would have on faith-based organizations, the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops wrote that the bill “forces religiously operated spaces and establishments, such as church halls, to either host functions that violate their beliefs or close their doors to their communities, and “requires women to compete against men and boys in sports, and to share locker rooms and shower facilities with men and boys.”
In addition, the USCCB said the bill will force “faith-based charities that serve all people to violate their religious beliefs and threatens the welfare of thousands of beneficiaries of charitable services such as shelters and foster care agencies, by forcing a multitude of them to be shut down.”
The opponents of the Equality Act have many concerns. Senator Lindsey Graham (R-SC) stated, “I would talk until I fell over to make sure that the Equality Act doesn’t become law, destroying the difference between a man and woman in our law.”
DIB analysts reviewed last Wednesday’s Senate hearing about the Equality Act, which raises further concerns.
During an exchange with Mary Rice Hasson, the Director of the Catholic Women’s Forum, Senator Tom Cotton (R-AK) asked, “Would the Equality Act shutter or (punish) thousands of these charities, institutions, schools, and other well-meaning Americans who are trying to help their fellow citizens?”
Hasson told Cotton, “Absolutely. And one core of this is the refusal to recognize the difference between biological sex. So any religious house of worship, a faith-based charity that abides by restrictions based on biological sex. So, for example, if you have a Jewish charitable outreach that separates men and women, it’s going to be subject to a discrimination lawsuit because they’re going to be risking violation of that provision protecting gender identity. So it is not true to say that people of faith don’t lose anything. We lose everything. This just prevents the Religious Freedom Restoration Act from being available to us. It’s a complete, just radical, radical change in the rights of religious Americans.”
During the hearing, Senator Cory Booker (D-NJ) also participated, blasting the argument for religious freedom, saying, “We have seen this phenomenon of religion being used to justify slavery, segregation, bans on interracial marriage. In fact, as recently as 1983, Bob Jones University argued before the Supreme court that its racially discriminatory marriage and dating policies were protected by the Free Exercise clause of the First Amendment. We know this history.”
Currently, no Republican senators are supporting the Equality Act. For the bill to pass in the Senate, it needs 10 Republican senators’ votes. In addition, at the Senate hearing last Wednesday, no Republicans voiced their support for the legislation.
While President Joe Biden said he supports the bill, with its heavy opposition in the Senate, the chances of the current version becoming law are unlikely.
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European Countries Backsliding Into Stricter Lockdowns
One would think that with vaccine distribution rapidly proceeding and the widespread failure of past destructive lockdown measures to mitigate COVID deaths, countries would be reopening rather than further restricting their economies. When it comes to Europe, one would be wrong.
“A handful of countries re-introduce[d] lockdowns to curb a third wave of infections, with France, Poland and Ukraine all implementing stricter measures at the weekend that are set to last several weeks at least,” CNBC reports. “A month-long partial lockdown was reintroduced in Paris Saturday, as well as in 15 other regions in France. Meanwhile, Europe’s largest economy Germany could be set to extend a national lockdown into April as the country also battles a third wave of Covid-19 cases.”
COVID-19 is a serious, deadly disease for some subsets of the population, particularly elderly people and those with pre-existing medical conditions. However, a new Gallup survey reveals that Americans vastly overestimate the severity of the threat that COVID poses to average adults compared to actual data.
“The public overestimates the likelihood a person with COVID-19 would have to be hospitalized by 10 times the actual number, a study shows,” the Washington Examinerreports.
“The U.S. public is also deeply misinformed about the severity of the virus for the average infected person,” Gallup concluded.
Who’s to blame for this woeful misunderstanding? Well, to some extent, Americans have an obligation to inform themselves better than they have. Yet I can’t help but look at the fearmongering from public health “experts” and catastrophic click-bait media coverage and assign much of the blame to those factors.
Report: Trump’s Comeback Will Involve New Social Media Competitor
Whether you love him or hate him, get ready to hear more from Donald Trump. The ex-president, who has been banned from most social media platforms, is reportedly planning a comeback—and his own social media competitor to Big Tech.
Trump 2020 campaign advisor Jason Miller told Fox News Sunday that Trump would be launching the platform in 2 to 3 months and that he would “completely redefine the game.”
This is an interesting twist. For those of us who have been critical of Big Tech’s increasingly censorious and illiberal behavior but eschewed heavy-handed government “solutions,” more competition can only be a good development.
Data of the Day: Many hospitals are reporting a 30% to 50% increase in admissions for alcohol-related liver disease as the isolation from COVID restrictions worsens alcoholism for many people.
P.S. I have a new podcast out interviewing a landlord, policy analyst Jen Sidorova, on how the CDC’s “eviction moratorium” has destroyed the rental market and screwed over working class landlords like her. Listen/watch on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or 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.
The world was a much different place in 1943. World War II was well underway, the internet didn’t exist, and the libertarian movement was a lot smaller. But as Kerry McDonald writes in her latest article on FEE.org, it was in this year that three influential women published three books that would have a lasting impact for decades to come.
The first of these women is Rose Wilder Lane. Born in 1886 in Dakota Territory, Rose became a fierce opponent of socialism after visiting the Soviet Union and witnessing the corruption and tyranny it had created.
In 1943, she wrote The Discovery of Freedom, wherein she discussed how individual liberty unleashes the creative potential of people and thereby facilitates progress.
Isabel Paterson was a contemporary of Lane and also a prolific writer. She wrote a column for the New York Herald Tribune for 25 years, a platform she often used to advocate for libertarian ideals.
Paterson’s 1943 book was titled The God of the Machine. The book discusses the importance of individualism and voluntary association, and it got high praise from both Lane and Ayn Rand.
Rand, of course, is the third author in this trio, having published The Fountainhead in 1943. After growing up in Russia during the Russian revolution, Rand developed her own philosophy known as Objectivism. In her own words, Objectivism is about “man as a heroic being with his own happiness as the moral purpose of his life, with productive achievement as his noblest activity, and reason as his only absolute.”
The libertarian movement has grown a lot since 1943, largely because of the work of these three women. And, hopefully, by recalling the works of those who went before us, we can develop a renewed passion for the principles they upheld.
Over the past hundred years, there have been more than two dozen attempts to build a socialist society. All of these attempts have ended in varying degrees of failure. So why have socialist ideas become so attractive again?
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TikTok mom goes viral for how she discusses anti-Asian violence with her kids in video
BREAK THE INTERNET
‘Do you mind if I sit with you guys?’ Woman seeks help from skaters at park after man follows her for 40 minutes
A maskless woman at Dunkin’ refused to get out of line until a worker complied with her demand to “give (her) an iced coffee,” despite her refusal to comply with the store’s mask policy. The entitled woman eventually left the coffee shop defeated and empty-handed. And when a customer over at Wingstop failed to get his way, he chunked the location’s cash register through a window. While the customer wanted a refund after the chicken wing joint messed up his order, the tantrum may have set him back thousands.
Two other viral instances are further highlighting the dangers women can face while doing the most mundane of tasks. A woman who was just trying to take a walk recorded a man as he followed her for 40 minutes, only stopping after she sought refuge among a group of skateboarders at a park.
Another woman who was just trying to order food via DoorDash revealed on Facebook the disgusting text messages she received from the driver who was assigned to her delivery. In the messages, the driver told her he’d only deliver her food if she “helps him out a little sexually.” “If not, I’m going to have to cancel,” the driver threatened.
“I feel incredibly unsafe because now this sick individual has both my phone number and my address,” the woman said on Facebook.
Find out how DoorDash responded here, and catch up on more you may have missed this weekend below.
How having a PPE strategy is good for your business
Having a good PPE strategy for your business is the only prudent move you can make going forward. Just because your local government is dropping the ball doesn’t mean you should. Luckily, good PPE strategy not only makes for good employees and happy customers, it makes for good business.
Pfizer, one of the drug companies that has successfully brought a COVID-19 vaccine to market, is now considering charging more for that vaccine in the future. As CBS News reported, a top executive for the company suggested to investors that COVID-19 vaccine pricing could increase post-pandemic. As the report about the Pfizer vaccine noted, “The suggestion raises questions about whether a drug, developed at the behest of the federal government to respond to a global crisis, could turn a profit for one company.”
Carter Lewis Gould, a senior analyst for Biopharma Equity Research at Barclays, asked about the possibility during a Barclays-hosted virtual global healthcare conference held this month. Gould, in referencing comments made by Pfizer executives during the summer of 2020, asked whether Pfizer might pursue “higher pricing” as “we move from a pandemic to an endemic phase,” according to an edited transcript of the conversation.
Frank A. D’Amelio, Pfizer’s chief financial office and executive vice president of global supply, responded by saying the company sees a “significant opportunity” for its vaccine “from a pricing perspective” as the world moves “from a pandemic situation to an endemic situation.”
“So if you look at how current demand and current pricing is being driven, it’s clearly not being driven by what I’ll call normal market conditions, normal market forces,” D’Amelio observed. “It’s really been driven by kind of the pandemic state that we’ve been in and the needs of governments to really secure doses from the various vaccine suppliers.”
“So what we believe, what I believe is, as we move from a pandemic state, from a pandemic situation to an endemic situation, normal market forces, normal market conditions will start to kick in,” he continued.
TikTok mom goes viral for how she discusses anti-Asian violence with her kids in video
Jane Park, a Korean-American mom from Seattle, is known on TikTok for her videos about her 5-year-old daughter and 7-year-old son. In a recent video that went viral, Park discusses the Stop Asian Hate movement with her kids.
In the video, Park asks her children why they think hate and viruses are similar. Park explains to her children that like a virus, hate can infect people. Park then asks her kids how they felt after hearing about the recent acts of violence against Asian Americans. Park’s children say they feel “sad because they killed people. … They killed Asian people.”
Park tells her children it’s important to talk about these issues—even when they are difficult to talk about and can be upsetting—in order to stop racism and violence. “We can speak out against it. We can talk about it. We can build awareness, right? Because not everybody might know what’s going on,” Park says.
After her video went viral, with over 1 million views, Park told KING5 Seattle that she hopes her video will encourage other parents to talk to their own children about the racism Asians are currently facing in America.
“I know that there are other parents other Asian American parents kind of struggling as I am,” Park told KING5 Seattle. “Ask [your kids], how are you feeling about all of this, and then in taking that step back and allowing kids to tell you, if they’re feeling scared.”
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82.) SEAN HANNITY
March 22, 2021
Latest News
SCHUMER BEGS: Senator Pleads with JetBlue Not to Slash Jobs in NYC, Move Workers to Florida
Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer pleaded with JetBlue airlines to keep jobs […]
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