Good morning! Here is your news briefing for Monday April 5, 2021
1.) THE DAILY SIGNAL
April 5 2021
Good morning from Washington, where the left purposefully misrepresents a Georgia law as part of its campaign to keep power by nationalizing state and local elections. Tim Murtaugh explains. A young teacher wants out because of the liberal agenda imposed on all aspects of public education. Our Virginia Allen has her story. On the podcast, we explore the fight against human trafficking with one of its fiercest foes. Plus: today’s fertile soil for school choice, what happens when prosecutors go rogue, and your letters on American wokeness. On this date in 1792, President George Washington exercises the veto for the first time, rejecting a bill reapportioning seats in the House of Representatives.
As a black woman who currently teaches at a predominantly white high school, Morgan Foster says she never would tell colleagues she is conservative for fear she would lose her job.
President Biden, his fellow liberals, and his friends in the media are misrepresenting Georgia’s new election law, and it’s part of a far-reaching strategy that stretches well beyond the Peach State.
Sophia Fisher, of Stop the Demand Project, discusses her fight against human trafficking, how America is dealing with this horrible crime within its own borders and abroad, and what conservatives can do.
Baltimore law enforcement will no longer prosecute “low-level offenses,” which include possessing drugs or drug paraphernalia, trespassing, prostitution, and defecating or urinating in public.
“The progressives’ soft bigotry of low expectations steals opportunity and future parity from exactly the identity groups they claim to care for,” writes John Doner.
The Seattle Police Department saw a mass exodus of nearly 200 police officers in 2020 after a relentless public campaign by anti-police activists and like-minded City Council members.
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3.) DAYBREAK
Your First Look at Today’s Top Stories – Daybreak Insider
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Baseball Moves All Star Game Out of Atlanta to Punish Georgia for Voting Law
From the story: “Georgians – and all Americans – should fully understand what the MLB’s knee-jerk decision means: cancel culture and woke political activists are coming for every aspect of your life, sports included. If the left doesn’t agree with you, facts and the truth do not matter,” Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp (R) said in a statement. “This attack on our state is the direct result of repeated lies from Joe Biden and Stacey Abrams about a bill that expands access to the ballot box and ensures the integrity of our elections. I will not back down.” From later in the story: “.@MLB played games in Cuba, where the brutal Castro Regime murders its own citizens and denies them basic human rights like freedom of speech and free elections,” tweeted Florida Sen. Rick Scott (R). “Now these hypocrites are bowing to the woke liberal mob that upset over common-sense election reforms” (The Hill). From Hugh Hewitt: By moving the Major League Baseball All-Star Game from Atlanta, where it was scheduled to be played this summer, MLB Commissioner Rob Manfred has, in the opinion of many Republicans, declared the league an arm of the Democratic Party and baseball itself to be a blue sport, with values opposed to the Constitution and representative government (Washington Post). South Carolina Republican Jim Duncan wants to strip MLB of its antitrust exemption (Just the News).
2.
President Biden’s Call for Economic Sanctions on Georgia Exposes Hypocrisy
From the Wall Street Journal: Mr. Biden objects to Georgia’s new voting law as an “atrocity,” though it offers more avenues to vote than New York and Delaware, among other states. The President is so offended that he asked a sports league to boycott an American state, doing economic harm to the Atlanta area, and essentially smearing the state Legislature as bigots. We can’t wait to see what the U.S. President is going to say about China’s voting rules. There are no lines at polling places in the Middle Kingdom because there are no polling places, no absentee ballot controversies because there are no ballots. The country is run by a leadership cadre of the Chinese Communist Party, and its decisions are ratified by the rubber-stamp National People’s Congress that meets once a year (WSJ). A list of questions Biden should be asked (The Federalist).
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3.
Senator/Reverend Warnock on Easter: “We Are Able to Save Ourselves”
He deleted the tweet, but not before it was captured (Twitter). The Daily Wire notes “Warnock’s tweet was met with backlash from some Twitter users who accused the minister of heresy and preaching a false gospel” (Daily Wire). From Jenna Ellis: Let’s not forget that the “Reverend” Warnock is pro-choice, which is also against the Bible and moral truth. Warnock is a heretic and has no business calling himself a Christian when he does not agree with Christianity and Truth (Twitter).
4.
Portland Cops Leaving in Droves
From the story: Since July 1, 115 officers have left the Police Bureau, including 74 who retired and 41 who resigned (Oregonian). From Andy Ngo: Antifa’s plan in Portland is playing out. They would have never had success like this though without the support of the biased press, weak law enforcement leadership, city council & the district attorney (Twitter). Antifa again attacked the police union headquarters over the weekend (Fox News). Meanwhile, another story notes “Last year’s hefty spike in homicides is extending into 2021, with cities that slashed police budgets seeing some of the largest upticks.” In particular, “Portland, Oregon’s, homicide rate soared a staggering 1,900% in 2021” (Washington Times).
5.
60 Minutes Deceptively Edits Florida Governor to Make Him Look Bad
The story gives the transcript, which reveals Governor Ron DeSantis explaining his relationship with Publix and carefully laying out his decision process. The reporter, Sharyl Alfonsi, acts as if he never did so, then edited it out so the viewers got the same impression (Daily Wire). The edited 60 Minutes clip (Twitter). From Katie Pavlich: Never trust @60Minutes (Twitter). From Jennifer Van Laar: Those of us who live in California – where my aunt and uncle, both in their late ’70s and with multiple underlying conditions, have been unable to even schedule a 1st vaccine appointment – are wondering when Alfonsi will roll out a “bombshell report” about Gov. Gavin Newsom’s corrupt, no-bid contract for vaccine distribution awarded to contributor Blue Shield (which RedState has already reported on)? (RedState).
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6.
China/Hong Kong Opt Out of Showing Academy Awards Show Live
For fear that a Chinese born director up for an Oscar might disparage the communist regime.
The story doesn’t say where Michael Cohen gave his message, just that it was “to children.” He told them “It’s really important to celebrate International Trans Day of Visibility. Because the more the world understands, is aware of, and supports people of trans experience, the more empowered this community will be to have our rights and to have what we deserve and to be equal like everybody else.”
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Markets: On Mondays, we take the long-term view and show you different indicators’ performance from the beginning of the year, including the small cap index Russell 2000. If history is any indication, the momentum for stocks could continue—April has been the S&P’s strongest month on average over the last 20 years.
Covid: France lowered its economic growth projections as it entered its third national lockdown. India put more curbs on its biggest cities with cases rising. In the US, infectious disease experts warn we might be entering a fourth wave, although it’ll be less deadly than past ones.
Just a few weeks ago, we wrote about all the different “crazes” that have defined markets during the pandemic. Now, it seems like some of the more speculative corners of the investing world may be trending less Beeple, more Buffett.
Let’s start with NFTs, those non-fungible tokens that allow you to own an “original copy” of something on the internet, from an NBA highlight to a virtual house.
How it started…in February, 20,000+ buyers spent more than $45 million on basketball clips in a single day.
How it’s going…average prices for NFTs have tumbled 70% since their February high, per the NFT marketplace tracker nonfungible.com.
Let’s kick it to meme stocks, heavily shorted companies that are popular among many social media users.
How it started…GameStop began January around $17 a share, and at one point later that month closed at $347.51.
How it’s going…after gaining almost 150% in January, an index that tracks meme stocks hasn’t budged during the past two months, according to Bloomberg.
Finally, we turn to SPACs. Special purpose acquisition companies have become an extremely popular way for companies to go public while avoiding the formal IPO process.
How it started…last quarter, SPACs accounted for more than 25% of the total value of all deals in the US.
How it’s going…one index that measures SPAC performance has entered a bear market, and SPAC pioneer Chamath Palihapitiya recently admitted, “The SPAC market has taken a real beating.”
What’s popping the bubbles?
Seems like a collection of sharp objects: higher bond yields (and the threat of inflation), increased regulatory scrutiny (especially in the SPAC market), and simply that the novelty of these investments is wearing off.
Others think the waning of the pandemic has a lot to do with it. As more people get vaccinated, they’ll have other things to do besides sit at home and buy an NFT or trade on Robinhood. Google Trends shows that searches for “flights” are spiking while searches for “stock trading” are bottoming out.
Looking ahead…as we’ve seen with the resurgence of bitcoin following its 2018 collapse, just because interest in an investment class dies down now doesn’t mean its star won’t shine again.
In a blog post on Friday, Amazon admitted to scoring an “own-goal” on itself and apologized to US Rep. Mark Pocan after initially denying that the company’s delivery drivers had to pee in bottles due to being overworked.
The backstory: A little over a week ago, Pocan tweeted that Amazon wasn’t a “progressive workplace” because its workers had to urinate in bottles. Amazon News’s Twitter account denied the claim, responding, “You don’t really believe the peeing in bottles thing, do you?” Turns out, Pocan did. And he was right.
Not everyone can be Wendy’s. Amazon’s snarky Twitter replies are part of a broader effort from outgoing CEO Jeff Bezos, who encouraged company officials to push back against criticism of the company, reports Recode. In the last few weeks, Amazon execs have sparred with Senators Bernie Sanders and Elizabeth Warren, two of Amazon’s biggest bashers.
Zoom out: Things might be a little tense in the Amazon boardroom right now as it awaits the results of ~6,000 votes that’ll determine whether warehouse workers in Alabama will unionize.
Following last month’s collapse of Archegos Capital Management, we’re learning more about the epic rise and even epic-er collapse of Bill Hwang, the man behind the fund. According to Fox Business, the story of Archegos “may be one of the fastest creations and destructions of wealth in recent history.”
Who is he? Hwang moved to the US from South Korea as a teenager. Despite initially knowing little English, he got degrees at UCLA and Carnegie Mellon and landed a job on Wall Street under Julian Robertson, an investor who founded the pioneering hedge fund Tiger Management.
Hwang stayed under the radar, though in 2013 he was barred from managing public money for five years following an SEC investigation into insider trading and stock manipulation.
But he was still able to manage his own money, and manage it well he did. Hwang grew his own business 900% over seven years using complex financial tools called swaps. He amassed a portfolio worth over $10 billion, per estimates.
Then, when Hwang’s bets on companies like ViacomCBS started to sour, his lenders had to cover their obligations and he lost $8 billion in 10 days. It was the “biggest single-firm meltdown since the financial crisis,” per the WSJ, and it’s causing introspection in finance about the ability of private family offices to cause market havoc.
If you don’t know what 5G is yet, let us enlighten you: It has something to do with your cellphone.
And if you don’t know which 5G stocks to invest in, turn to The Motley Fool. They’re very jazzed about this new tech because of its possibilities that go beyond downloading a hip cool pop song.
5G can revolutionize medical technology, the Internet of Things, and even self-driving cars. And since things are still in the “What if?” phase, you can get a jumpstart with Motley Fool’s “5 Free 5G Stocks for 2021.”
These stock picks are only available to members of Motley Fool Stock Advisor—which is currently beating the stock market 5-to-1 [as of 3/18/2021]—so signing up is probably a smart move.
Stat: The cherry blossoms in Kyoto, Japan, had their earliest peak in more than 1,200 years of record-keeping this year. That’s notable for two reasons: 1) They’ve been keeping records for 1,200 years and 2) experts say earlier flowering is a sign of a warming climate.
Quote: “You now have permanent capital competing with a young couple trying to buy a house. That’s going to make US housing permanently more expensive.”
Real estate consultant John Burns explained to the WSJ that institutional investors like pension funds are swooping in to buy single-family homes in the US, driving up prices and potentially creating another housing bubble. About 20% of buyers of new houses never move in.
Read: The real reason humans are the dominant species. (BBC)
Georgia bill: After MLB said it’s moving the All-Star Game out of Atlanta due to the state’s new voting rights bill, everyone’s wondering…what comes next? Will other companies make similar moves? GA Gov. Brian Kemp said he “will not be backing down from this fight,” and a GOP representative is drafting a bill to remove the league’s antitrust exemption.
Sports: After that thrilling Final Four game Saturday, the men’s college basketball championship is tonight between heavyweights Baylor and Gonzaga. Stanford won the women’s title in another wild game last night. And in the world of golf, the Masters tees off on Thursday after just a five-month wait since the last one.
PBS documentaries: Okay, we know PBS doesn’t typically get a lot of play in the Brew, but there are some great docs you should know about. Ken Burns’s documentary on Ernest Hemingway begins tonight, and the iconic series on race in America, Eyes on the Prize, is returning on Saturday.
WHAT ELSE IS BREWING
A hacker posted the personal info of 533 million Facebook users for free online. Facebook said it was old data from a vulnerability it patched in 2019.
Pinterest has reportedly been in talks to acquire the photo app VSCO.
GMC unveiled its new electric Hummer SUV. When it goes on sale in 2023, it’ll cost more than $110,000.
Godzilla vs. Kongis the new pandemic box office king, earning $32.2 million this weekend in North America.
BREW’S BETS
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The painful truth: That frog in Planet Earth doesn’t actually croak that loud. Here’s how sounds are faked in nature documentaries.
In an interview with Fox News Sunday, Blunt – the fourth-ranking Republican in the Senate – argued that only 30% of the president’s proposal focuses on traditional infrastructure and said reducing the price would allow the White House to pass the bill through both chambers of Congress.
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“If we’d go back and look at roads and bridges and ports and airports, and maybe even underground water systems and broadband, you’d still be talking about less than 30% of this entire package,” [Blunt] added.
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Democrats would need to use the budget reconciliation process to pass the bill on their own unless the White House changes the proposal to satisfy Republicans or 10 Senate Republicans break with McConnell. Energy Secretary Jennifer Granholm said on Sunday that she hopes the proposal passes with bipartisan support, but added that Biden is prepared to use reconciliation without Republicans.
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YESTERDAY’S POLLIs it time to revoke statewide mask mandates?
Yes
48%
No
47%
Unsure
5%
642 votes, 254 comments
BEST COMMENTS“Yes – Since the CDC stated that those who have been vaccinated and/or have had the Covid-19 virus, cannot get or pass on the virus, there are enough people who meet that criteria to drop the mask mandate. Those who want, can still wear a mask.”
“No – Just as you aren’t supposed to stop taking an antibiotic the moment you feel better so you can avoid creat…”
“No – Why stop something that is proven to minimize cases if it costs nothing? Why not be vigilant and extra careful as…”
How is Florida responding to a wastewater flooding threat?
On Friday, the Manatee County Public Safety Department warned of an “imminent threat” of an uncontrolled release of wastewater from the former Piney Point phosphate proces…
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Who is expected to win in Bulgaria’s general election?
Parallel count of the vote by pollsters forecast [Bulgarian Prime Minister Boyko Borissov’s] centre-right GERB party to remain the largest grouping in parliament, but w…
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Why is Johnson & Johnson overseeing a vaccine production plant?
The [Emergent BioSolutions facility] had been working to produce ingredients for both the Johnson & Johnson and AstraZeneca vaccines and had mixed up ingredients f…
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Save time every day. Get the facts on trending news.
An estimated 533 million Facebook users have had their data leaked, including founder Mark Zuckerberg. The data was first circulated for sale on criminal marketplaces before being released for free on the regular internet. The company says the data came from an “old security breach.” Questions are being asked as to why the users were not informed when the leak first occurred.
Tech Tyranny: National Vaccine Passports On the Horizon?
The media has presented a united front defending the Biden administration’s decision not to reject immigration applications that have missing fields. During Trump’s presidency, these applications were returned with a request for further information. CNN states that the blank fields could include aliases and document numbers. Presumably, Joaquín Archivaldo Guzmán Loera, under the new ruling, would not be required to add his moniker El Chapo.
John Barrasso (R-WY), the chairman of the Senate Republican Conference, told Fox News that Border Patrol officials told him to delete photos he had taken at an immigration facility on the southern border.
Rather than provide a sound economic argument for raising the corporate tax rate, senior White House economic advisor, Cecilia Rouse, says the main reason for the proposed hike is that it’s “just the right thing to do.”
Republicans are being accused of hypocrisy for opposing Joe Biden’s infrastructure plan while supporting former President Trump’s proposal for infrastructure. In fact, GOP lawmakers are objecting only to the $2 trillion price tag and have signaled that they would definitely support a smaller package.
The Floyd Trial: Bracing for Impact – LN Radio Videocast
Something political to ponder as you enjoy your morning coffee.
Congratulations to Hunter Biden. The son of President Joe Biden announced that he was “100% certain” that he would be cleared of any “wrongdoing” in the ongoing tax investigation. Apparently, for much of the legacy media, this is as good as it gets. He seems to be all but absolved of any wrongdoing, and questions of the details discovered on his laptop (which he says was probably his) have all but disappeared.
Good morning and welcome to Fox News First. Here’s what you need to know as you start your day
Hunter Biden convinced ‘reluctant’ Joe to publicly support his relationship with Beau’s widow Hallie
Hunter Biden convinced his father Joe in early 2017 to put out a statement approving of the affair he was having with his deceased brother Beau’s widow, Hallie Biden, telling Joe that if he didn’t, the relationship would “seem wrong.”
“‘Dad,’ I told him, ‘if people find out, but they think you’re not approving of this, it makes it seem wrong,” Hunter Biden wrote in his book, “Beautiful Things,” to be released April 6. A copy of the book was obtained by Fox News.
He approached his father only after he was put “in a box” by a reporter calling to confirm or deny the relationship. Biden had left the vice presidency only a month before, according to Hunter Biden. He told his father he and Hallie were “incredibly lucky” to have found each other.
He suggested Biden’s grandchildren would pay the price emotionally if the former vice president didn’t make a positive statement about the affair. “‘The kids have to know there’s nothing wrong with this, and the one person who can tell them that is you,'” Hunter pleaded.
The senior Biden was reluctant but finally agreed to put out a statement:
“We are all lucky that Hunter and Hallie found each other as they were putting their lives together again after such sadness. They have mine and Jill’s full and complete support and we are happy for them.” CLICK HERE FOR MORE ON OUR TOP STORY.
In other developments:
– Hunter Biden ‘100% certain’ he’ll be cleared of wrongdoing in DOJ investigation
– Hunter says he began relationship with late brother’s widow when she was at her ‘neediest,’ he at his ‘lowest’
– Critics slam ‘utterly deceitful’ media after Hunter Biden admits laptop could have been his
– Hunter Biden says in memoir he wouldn’t take Burisma job again but insists it wasn’t ‘unethical’
California missing mother told family it was husband if ‘anything’ happens EXCLUSIVE: Nearly three months after a California mother of three went missing, her family and their lawyer are revealing chilling new details about her troubled marriage before she vanished.
Maya Millete, 39, disappeared on Jan. 7, the same day that she made an appointment with a divorce attorney for the following week.
Maya’s brother-in-law, Richard Drouaillet, said that marriage troubles between her and her husband, Larry Millete, began long before then though, claiming Larry constantly reached out to Maya’s family to try to enlist their help in fixing their relationship throughout 2020.
“He was more of an aggressor, trying to get us involved,” Drouaillet told Fox News. “He was trying to get us on his side, when we felt like it was a lot of lies that he was telling us.”
Drouaillet recalled one nearly hour-long phone call in late summer of 2020 in which Larry sought his advice.
“He just sounded desperate, you know, ‘You gotta listen to me. It’s her fault, it’s her fault,'” Drouaillet said.
The last time that Richard Drouaillet and his wife, Maricris, saw Larry and Maya Millete was on an early January camping trip, just days before she went missing. CLICK HERE FOR MORE.
In other developments:
– California missing woman’s sister frustrated by lack of progress in her case, ‘taking so long’
– Missing California woman scheduled appointment with divorce lawyer day she disappeared, family lawyer says
Portland police look for exit, say they’re ‘burned out’: report
Late last year, Portland’s police department said it received an “unprecedented” number of officers leaving their jobs midcareer to take lower-paying jobs elsewhere, and on Sunday, the city’s main newspaper published an article that offered a glimpse into some of the reasons why some left.
The Oregonian reported that since July 1, 2020, a total of 115 officers left the department — representing “one of the biggest waves of departures in recent memory.”
The paper said it reviewed 31 exit interview statements from these officers that showed a certain level of disillusion with the job. A retiring detective reportedly wrote in one that the community showed officers “zero support.”
“The city council are raging idiots, in addition to being stupid. Additionally, the mayor and council ignore actual facts on crime and policing in favor of radical leftist and anarchist fantasy. What’s worse is ppb command (lt. and above) is arrogantly incompetent and cowardly.”
Portland has been the center of some of the country’s most destructive protests in 2020, which coincided with the city’s largest jump in homicides in 26 years, according to the paper. KOIN reported that the homicide rate in the city continues to be high and detectives are having a challenging time keeping up with the workflow.
The city experienced 55 killings in 2020 and the paper pointed out that the victims ranged from 8 months to 71 years old. CLICK HERE FOR MORE.
In other developments:
– Antifa attacks Portland police union amid ongoing unrest
– Portland riot suspect, 22, accused of punching officer, vandalism; arrested twice in one night
TODAY’S MUST-READS:
– Warnock deletes Easter tweet amid backlash
– Laura Ingraham: Biden, Abrams on Ga boycotts – here’s what happens when reality bites social justice warriors
– Calgary church pastor’s video confronting police goes viral
– Asian woman stabbed to death in ‘random’ attack in California
– US Capitol attacker may have suffered head trauma from playing football, family says
– CBS’ ’60 Minutes’ accused of editing exchange between DeSantis, reporter pushing ‘pay for play’ narrative
THE LATEST FROM FOX BUSINESS:
– S&P 4K, Dakota Pipeline, Fed’s Powell and AMD-Xilinx top week ahead
– Georgia county that voted for Biden to lose $100M for moving All-Star Game
– Delta cancels over 100 flights as pandemic travel soars
– Unopened Super Mario Bros. game from 1986 sells for $660,000
– Facebook admits to pulling Noah Green’s accounts after fatal Capitol incident
– Rival group makes fully financed, roughly $680M bid for Tribune
#The Flashback: CLICK HEREto find out what happened on “This Day in History.”
SOME PARTING WORDS
Dave Rubin, host of “The Rubin Report,” joined Steve Hilton on “The Next Revolution” Sunday night and discussed the “wokeism” and “cancel culture” movements.
“This is the fight of a generation,” Rubin said. “But the fight of a generation is not, say, 1980s, you know capitalism vs. communism, United States vs. Russia, Rocky Balboa vs. Ivan Drago where the lines were clearly drawn.”
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America must face the threat of China. But the best way to strengthen the country domestically is to reject white supremacy and “wokeism” by striving toward a society that is race blind, not race obsessed.
The “class war” mentioned so often in conservative discourse is in fact the continuation of the half-century-long war over which values and social roles should be authoritative in American culture.
Naomi Schaefer Riley and James Piereson | City Journal
Despite the recent warnings by Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse (D-RI) about the nefarious effects of conservative “dark money,” the truth is that liberal foundations are much wealthier and are giving away their money much faster. Although conservative donors have reason to be wary of pooled funds, such collaborations might point the way toward more effective philanthropy.
We’re learning that risk aversion can go too far. A 5 mph speed limit could reduce vehicle deaths toward zero, and the closure of elementary schools would vastly reduce the spreading of colds. But too much risk aversion can be too risky.
Good Monday morning. Smart Brevity™ count: 989 words … 4 minutes.
1 big thing: COVID fuels dire teacher shortage
Illustration: Aïda Amer/Axios
The pandemic has pushed teachers out of the workforce in droves, and many schools don’t have a safety net to fill the gaps as children come back into classrooms, Axios’ Erica Pandey reports.
Why it matters: Teaching has been one of the toughest pandemic-era jobs, with the pivot to remote learning, then the stress of reopening.
Teacher retirements are up 44% in Michigan since August, Crain’s Detroit Business reports. School in Long Beach, Calif., saw teacher leaves of absence spike 35% this year, according to EdSurge.
73% of districts said their need for substitute teachers was more dire in 2020 than in 2019, Education Week found in a survey of principals and school administrators.
74% said the number of applicants for sub positions dropped.
What to watch: Schools are hiring. While many industries are still recovering from the initial pandemic crash, job openings for teachers are 2% higher than pre-pandemic levels, AnnElizabeth Konkel, an economist at the job-search site Indeed, tells Axios.
2. Exclusive: Yellen to call for global minimum corporate tax
Photo: Erin Scott/Bloomberg via Getty Images
Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen today will use her first major address to argue for a global minimum corporate tax rate, Axios’ Hans Nichols has learned.
Why it matters: Yellen is acknowledging the risks to the American economy if it acts alone in raising corporate rates.
Convincing other countries to impose a global minimum tax would reduce the likelihood of companies relocating offshore, as Biden seeks to increase the corporate rate from 21% to 28%.
The average corporate rate in the G7 is 24%, with some nine countries around the world recently lowering their corporate rate, according to the Tax Foundation, a conservative tax group.
Yellen will also challenge the world’s economic powers to focus on climate change, and on ways to improve vaccine access for the world’s poorest countries.
With more than 1 in 10 households reporting that they lack enough to eat, President Biden’s effort to push “food assistance to more people is notable both for the scale of its ambition and the variety of its legislative and administrative actions,” the N.Y. Times’ Jason DeParle writes.
University of Kentucky economist James P. Ziliak: “We haven’t seen an expansion of food assistance of this magnitude since the founding of the modern food stamp program in 1977.”
Between the lines: “The push reflects an extraordinary shift in the politics of poverty,” DeParle writes.
“With hunger especially pronounced among Black and Latino households, vital to the Democrats’ coalition, the administration is framing its efforts not just as a response to pandemic needs but as part of a campaign for racial justice.”
4. Top shots: Signs of freedom
In Myanmar on Easter, eggs with messages protesting the military coup are given out to customers of a shop in Yangon.
In Bangkok, Thailand, a pro-democracy activist joins an anti-government rally organized by the Red Shirts political movement.
5. Harder Line: Climate action’s price for blue-collar workers
Illustration: Aïda Amer/Axios
The split-screen economy, with some thriving and others still reeling, spells risk for President Biden and other pols as they rally around bold climate action, Amy Harder writes for Axios in her “Harder Line” column.
Why it matters: Society’s efforts to transition to clean energy and the impacts of a warming world both disproportionately impact poorer people in America and abroad.
How it works: Lower-income people spend a larger amount of their paychecks on heating, electricity and transportation.
Lower-income people are also less financially able to respond to, or move away, from places that are getting hotter or drier.
The catch: To tackle climate change, you must either make clean energy cheaper or fossil fuels more expensive — or both.
Therefore, any action we take to tackle climate change is, by default, going to raise energy costs.
Amy Harder, an Axios alumnus, is vice president of publishing atBreakthrough Energy.
6. Big Tech’s three-letter threat
While antitrust lawsuits and Capitol Hill hearings get headlines, Big Tech’s biggest threat in Washington may come from the quiet work of the Federal Trade Commission, Axios’ Kim Hart writes.
Why it matters: The FTC is gearing up to flex its muscle, both by enforcing current rules and trying to draft new ones. And it may be able to do so relatively quickly.
Acting FTC Chair Rebecca Slaughter has created a new “rulemaking group” within the agency’s general counsel’s office, positioning the FTC to draft new rules cracking down on anticompetitive corporate behavior.
The move signals that Slaughter will be more aggressive than recent predecessors, who focused on consumer protection issues like fraud.
Big Tech can also expect the FTC to take more aggressive enforcement action under President Biden, including lawsuits.
7. Exclusive: $20 million to rally progressives for Biden
The Open Society Foundations are pledging $20 million+ for grassroots organizing to rally progressives around President Biden’s infrastructure and social welfare proposals, Axios’ Hans Nichols scoops.
Why it matters: Backing from the George Soros-founded group is a call to action for Democratic donors and activists, who want Biden to go bigger with his $2 trillion+ infrastructure plan.
8. Billionaires intervene in hedge fund takeover of local newspapers
Illustration: Annelise Capossela/Axios
A pair of billionaires have reportedly agreed to put up more than $600 million of their own money to help finance a roughly $680 million bid for Tribune Publishing, the parent to many of America’s most iconic newspapers, Axios’ Sara Fischer writes.
The bid, according to The Wall Street Journal (subscription), can now be recommended for consideration by Tribune’s board to its shareholders over a cheaper bid from private equity giant Alden Global Capital.
Why it matters: It could derail a massive newspaper deal that would’ve likely resulted in the loss of hundreds of local journalism jobs across the country.
9. Winningest women’s coach leads Stanford to title
Photo: Morry Gash/AP
Above, Stanford coach Tara VanDerveer cuts down the net after the Cardinal beat Arizona, 54-53, in a women’s national championship that came down to the final shot.
VanDerveer this season passed Pat Summitt to become the all-time winningest coach in NCAA Division I women’s basketball history (now 1,125 career wins).
VanDerveer won two titles in her first three appearances in the Final Four, starting in 1990, The (San Jose) Mercury News reports.
“This isn’t why I coach,” she said last night. “I want to be a teacher.”
Kiana Williams, a senior who’s one of the top guards in the country, became Stanford’s career leader in three-pointers during the women’s tournament — held in her hometown, San Antonio.
For the first time, actors of color swept the individual film awards at the Screen Actors Guild Awards, potentially setting the stage for a historically diverse slate of Oscar winners, AP’s Jake Coyle writes.
The winners: The late Chadwick Boseman, best male actor for “Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom” … Viola Davis, best female actor for “Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom” … Yuh-Jung Youn, best female supporting actor for “Minari” … Daniel Kaluuya, best male supporting actor for “Judas and the Black Messiah.”
Simone Ledward Boseman, Boseman’s widow, quoted her husband when accepting his award: “If you see the world unbalanced, be a crusader that pushes heavily on the seesaw of the mind.” (USA Today)
Derek Chauvin is the rare officer facing murder charges. Police are rarely charged when they kill someone on duty, and even when they are, prosecutors face steep hurdles to winning a conviction.
Based on the acclaimed Washington Post series—a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize—an intimate account of the devastating effects of gun violence on our nation’s children, and a call to action.
President Joe Biden’s massive green infrastructure plan contains a proposal to address a long-standing environmental hazard while helping fossil fuel workers who lost their jobs during the coronavirus pandemic or who are threatened by the administration’s push for cleaner energy.
The Army’s case for more funding to field combat systems to fight China at first glance appears geared toward a budget battle with the Navy and Air Force, the services that long have dominated the Pacific region. But the ground service’s vision actually pits it against the Marine Corps in a possible David vs. Goliath funding fight.
When Joe Biden was elected, many liberals’ best hope was that he would be a transitional president, an old-school Democratic bridge to a further-left future. Now, the word they are increasingly using is “transformational.”
The White House’s decision to push twin sprawling infrastructure packages is complicating the pathway to passage and the Biden administration’s messaging strategy.
Democrats and the liberal media are policing the words we should use to describe the absolute catastrophe we’re witnessing each day at the southern border. They don’t like “crisis” or “surge.”
Dominion Voting Systems released a statement demanding former Michigan state Sen. Patrick Colbeck retract “false claims” he has made accusing the company of fraud in public presentations.
Former Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein said Robert Mueller’s special counsel investigation was no “witch hunt,” but he is reserving judgment on the origins of the Russia matter.
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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.
NEW YORK (AP) — It was the eve of the deadliest day of the coronavirus spike that brought New York City to a trembling standstill. They were a handful of people doing what they could in the city’s……Read More
MINNEAPOLIS (AP) — The trial of a former Minneapolis police officer in George Floyd’s death is expected to turn toward the officer’s training on Monday after a first week that was dominated by… …Read More
VATICAN CITY (AP) — Christianity’s most joyous feast day was celebrated worldwide with faithful sitting far apart in pews and singing choruses of “Hallelujah” through face coverings on a second… …Read More
PALMETTO, Fla. (AP) — Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis said Sunday that crews are working to prevent the collapse of a large wastewater pond in the Tampa Bay area while evacuating the area to avoid a “catas…Read More
SAN ANTONIO (AP) — Haley Jones scored 17 points and Stanford beat Arizona 54-53, giving the Cardinal and coach Tara VanDerveer their first national championship in 29 years on Sunday… …Read More
JAKARTA, Indonesia (AP) — Before each rainy season Lu Lu Aung and other farmers living in a camp for internally displaced people in Myanmar’s far northern Kachin state wou…Read More
WASHINGTON (AP) — Pete Buttigieg was a few weeks into his job as transportation secretary, buried in meetings and preparing for the launch of President Joe Biden’s $2.3 tr…Read More
The starry cast of Aaron Sorkin’s 1960s courtroom drama “The Trial of the Chicago 7” took the top prize Sunday at a virtual Screen Actors Guild Awards where actors of colo…Read More
JERUSALEM (AP) — Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s corruption trial is to resume Monday as the country’s political parties weigh in on whether he should form the…Read More
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Here’s more coronavirus news and other top stories you need to know to start your day.
Cook County’s public health leader on Saturday said the suburbs could soon return to previous COVID-19 restrictions as the region grapples with what appears to be the start of a third coronavirus wave.
Dr. Rachel Rubin, co-lead of the Cook County Department of Public Health that guides COVID-19 response in most of the suburbs, sounded the alarm in a call with reporters following a rising caseload that began in March. As a result, suburban Cook County might again see an indoor dining ban or the gathering limit curtailed from the current cap at 50% capacity or 50 people, whichever is fewer, Rubin said.
Facing immense pressure to keep classrooms open, dozens of schools across the Chicago region have relied on a crucial service: routine COVID-19 screenings conducted by SafeGuard Surveillance.
For months, the system worked smoothly. But in recent days, school officials have found themselves scrambling to defend the saliva test.
A $2.3 billion extension of Chicago’s Red Line south to 130th Street. More than 600,000 new water lines across Illinois. A $3 billion total remake of North Lake Shore Drive.
These are among the scores of projects Illinois state, local and federal officials are pursuing anew as President Joe Biden pushes his $2 trillion American Jobs Plan to shore up and transform the nation’s infrastructure.
Thirteen-year-old Eli Coustan found out about the difficulty people were having booking COVID-19 vaccination appointments after he helped his grandparents. Putting his programming skills to work, his website aims to make the process easier.
Launched in February, the site lists information about locations across Illinois that are offering COVID-19 vaccinations, including availability and eligibility information. As of Wednesday, Eli said the site had reached 14,600 unique visitors.
The snow has melted and temperatures are breaking 60 degrees, and Chicagoans are all too eager for the breath of fresh, springlike air. While more restaurants are offering dine-in options as COVID-19 restrictions loosen, dining al fresco couldn’t be more in vogue.
Grab your mask and head to one of these Chicago-area hot spots, featuring patios, tents, bubbles and other pandemic-prompted enclosures. Many are heated or enclosed, meaning it’s still worth checking out if temperatures dip.
Former state Treasurer Alexi Giannoulias is taking an early lead in fundraising in his bid to succeed Jesse White as Illinois secretary of state, adding $1.4 million to his campaign war chest less than a year before voters will decide which Democrat they want to move on to the general election.
Added to what he already had in his account, the new fundraising gives Giannoulias over $2.1 million cash on hand for the race, which has become crowded with announced and prospective candidates since Jesse White, who has held the office since 1999, said he won’t seek re-election. Rachel Hinton has the story…
Illinois now has 110 dispensaries licensed to sell recreational pot — more than ever before — after state regulators issued a slew of permits in recent weeks ahead of a critical deadline.
During Isaiah Jones’ initial court hearing Sunday, prosecutors described the 76-year-old victim as his “step-great-grandmother” and said he spent much of his life living with her.
While an ordinance that would have ended the contract failed last summer, community members are pushing forward with efforts to get McHenry County board members to reconsider it.
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: 555,001.
As of this morning, 32 percent of the U.S. population has received at least one dose of a COVID-19 vaccine and 18.5 percent is fully vaccinated, according to the Bloomberg News global vaccine tracker.
Official Washington found consensus over the weekend: Labels and definitions, talking points, and decades of policy assumptions are complicated by President Biden’s plan to rebuild America, whether it’s arguing over the meaning of “infrastructure,” a definition of bipartisanship or the economic perils of red ink.
A common vernacular, let alone legislative agreement, appears to be missing.
The Hill: Battle lines are drawn on Biden’s infrastructure plan.
Biden calls the $2.3 trillion plan he unveiled last week a “jobs plan.” White House economic adviser Brian Deese on Sunday repeated that the president’s goal is sustained employment growth (The Hill).
Bipartisan, which used to describe lawmakers’ support across party lines for legislation, now means public support across party lines for major initiatives, according to the president’s reading of recent polling (The Hill).
Sen. Roy Blunt (Mo.), the No. 4 Republican in the Senate, who will retire after next year, used an appearance on “Fox News Sunday” to urge the White House to drop parts of the president’s plan he argued are not about infrastructure. “I think there’s an easy win for the White House,” Blunt said without defining what that would be.
The Hill: Mississippi Gov. Tate Reeves (R) assailed Biden’s infrastructure proposal on Sunday as a left-leaning incarnation of progressives’ Green New Deal.
Across the aisle, Senate Budget Committee Chairman Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) disagreed with Blunt’s appraisal that Biden’s plan is too much, arguing the president’s ideas are too modest (The Hill).
It “depends on what you call infrastructure,” the senator said, noting a “crisis in human infrastructure.”
“Roads and bridges and tunnels are infrastructure. But I think many of us see a crisis in human infrastructure. When a working-class family can’t find good-quality, affordable childcare, that’s human infrastructure,” Sanders continued. “I think now is the time to begin addressing our physical infrastructure and our human infrastructure, I want to see that happen as soon as possible,” he added.
Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg, one of the president’s surrogates tasked with helping sell the plan this spring and summer, told NBC’s “Meet the Press” that the proposal, which Biden says would be offset by higher corporate taxes spread out over 15 years, would begin to trim federal deficits 16 years from now. That would be 2037.
Republican lawmakers oppose Biden’s plan to raise corporate taxes. The challenge for GOP lawmakers, however, is that they supported deficit spending when former Presidents George W. Bush and Trump were in the White House.
Fox News host Chris Wallace on Sunday questioned Blunt about the GOP’s “credibility” on the national debt after the party approved tax cuts in 2017 that lowered the corporate rate. “I don’t think anybody has a very good record,” Blunt replied (The Hill).
More than three and a half years ago, Blunt joined his GOP colleagues and Trump in supporting the GOP’s new tax “reform” law: “There’s a chance here to make a generational change that will last, I would hope, at least a generation as the structure. We can do that by lowering corporate rates,” he said, as a way to bolster “international competition.”
Corporate rates are now back on the table as one avenue to provide a revenue stream for Democratic policies over at least eight years, offset in the budget over nearly twice as long, or 15 years, according to Biden’s plan.
Energy Secretary Jennifer Granholm on Sunday said the administration is open to moving Democrats’ ideas through the 50-50 Senate with a simple-majority vote and a budget tool known as reconciliation. “As he has said, he was sent to the presidency to do a job for America, and if the vast majority of Americans, Democrats and Republicans, across the country support spending on our country and not allowing us to lose the race globally, then he’s going to do that,” Granholm told CNN (The Hill).
Reconciliation, to be successful among Democrats, requires the narrow majority to move in lockstep on a mammoth spending bill. That’s a tall order. Fallback ideas: Break the president’s plan into separate measures that might attract some GOP backers, or scrap the filibuster and live with the consequences.
Paul Kane, The Washington Post analysis: Even without the Senate filibuster, Democrats lack votes for ambitious parts of their agenda. The two most likely bills to get approved in a simple-majority Senate are the DREAM Act, which would grant permanent status to millions of undocumented immigrants who were brought to the United States as children, and the John Lewis Voting Rights Act.
CORONAVIRUS: The U.S.’s vaccination effort hit a new high-water mark over the weekend as the country hits a crucial stretch of the pandemic.
On Friday and Saturday, the U.S. reported that it administered 4 million and 4.1 million shots, marking two of the highest vaccine-output days of the year. Adding to the good news, the seven-day rolling average hit 3.1 million on Saturday — the highest average since the vaccine effort was launched (Bloomberg News).
Meanwhile, the Department of Health and Human Services removed British drugmaker AstraZeneca and put Johnson & Johnson (J&J) in charge of the Emergent BioSolutions plant in Baltimore after workers ruined 15 million doses of J&J’s shot by conflating ingredients. J&J said that it is “assuming full responsibility” of the Baltimore facility, reiterating that it will deliver 100 million doses to the government by the end of May.
The news is yet another blow to AstraZeneca in its vaccine rollout, having been hampered by concerns in Europe that it could cause blood clots and criticisms by U.S. health experts over incomplete data the company released about its jab’s efficacy (Reuters).
Axios: Vaccines may limit the damage from coronavirus variants.
> Messaging: The communications skills of Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Director Rochelle Walensky (pictured below) are being put to the test as she juggles criticism about her mix of negative and optimistic public comments regarding a potential fourth wave of COVID-19 outbreaks in the United States (The Hill).
The message problems were also raised on Sunday as Michael Osterholm, a member of Biden’s COVID-19 advisory board, acknowledged a messaging “problem” surrounding whether vaccinated individuals should travel and are safe from COVID-19.
“It’s not perfect. It’s not 100 percent [protection from COVID-19],” Osterholm said of the three COVID-19 vaccines currently available in the U.S.
“We do have a problem right now from a public health standpoint nuancing that message,” he continued, adding that Americans should “avoid [travel] if it’s nonessential” even after being vaccinated (The Hill).
CBS News: National Institutes of Health Director Francis Collins said in a commentary that he is a physician and a scientist and is helping message for the administration by discussing his Christian faith. He said the COVID-19 vaccine is “an answer to prayer.”
The Associated Press: The United Kingdom eyes testing out COVID-19 passports at mass gatherings.
CBS News: Scott Gottlieb, former Food and Drug Administration commissioner, says coronavirus infections among young people are fueling new COVID-19 hot spots, but he does not anticipate a true fourth wave of U.S. contagion.
The Washington Post: Are we entering a “fourth wave” of the pandemic? Experts disagree.
CONGRESS: Blunt opined on Sunday that it would be a “mistake” to leave as a permanent feature the fencing around the U.S. Capitol following Friday’s attack on the complex that killed a Capitol Police officer.
“I think it would be a mistake for fencing to be a permanent part of the Capitol,” Blunt told ABC’s “This Week.” “Fencing can create a false sense of security on a daily basis.”
The member of Senate GOP leadership argued that it would send the “wrong message” to leave it up. Following the Jan. 6 insurrection at the Capitol, fencing was erected around the entire complex, including the Senate and House office buildings. That fencing was eventually pared back and is up around only the Capitol itself (The Hill).
> Immigration: How much can Congress do to help the ongoing situation at the U.S.-Mexico border? According to lawmakers, the answer is not much.
Members of Congress indicated to The Hill’s Alexander Bolton that their role is likely to be very limited in corralling the immigration issue, saying that the problem is one for the Biden administration to fix.
“I don’t know you need legislation. I think what we need is to make sure we get the people and the technology down there to stop it,” said Sen. Jon Tester (D-Mont.) of what is needed to address the surge of migrants at the border, many of them unaccompanied children.
The Hill: Vice President Harris is in a difficult starring role on the border crisis.
The Hill: Gun control advocates applaud Biden funding plan but say more must be done.
A former staff member who worked for Rep. Matt Gaetz (R-Fla.) will be part of a press conference this morning in Florida, the congressman announced on Sunday. Gaetz is implicated in an ongoing Justice Department sex probe that launched under the Trump administration (NPR).
Politico: Rep. Liz Cheney (R-Wyo.) snags victories ahead of her next battle with Trumpworld.
IN FOCUS/SHARP TAKES
POLITICS & ADMINISTRATION: The backlash among corporations and entities to the Georgia voting law is putting other states on notice as they consider passing similar legislation.
As The Hill’s Alex Gangitano writes, Texas, Florida and Arizona are among the GOP-led states considering bills, setting the stage for potential clashes with major companies headquartered there. The backlash to the 2016 North Carolina “bathroom bill” is serving as a prime example of what may lie ahead.
In the Lone Star State, companies are already warning against an effort in the legislature that would limit early voting hours and broaden the authority of partisan poll watchers. American Airlines came out against the legislation, passed by the state Senate on Thursday. Dallas-based Southwest Airlines did not oppose the measure outright, but said in a statement that “the right to vote is foundational to our democracy.”
The highest-profile form of opposition to the Georgia law came on Friday as Major League Baseball announced that it will move its All-Star Game from Truist Park in suburban Atlanta to a new location. According to Cobb County, home of the Atlanta Braves, the decision will cost the county about $100 million in tourism (The Hill).
NBC News: Corporate America is wading into the voting rights brawl. Here’s why.
Golf Week: Civil rights advocates called on the Professional Golf Association and the Masters in Augusta, Ga., to pull the event that begins on Thursday to protest Georgia’s voting rights law.
> “Money bomb”: While facing a cash crunch last year, the Trump campaign and the for-profit company that processed its online donations, WinRed, in September began an intentional scheme to boost revenues using default automatic deductions from online donors, The New York Times reports. Many people of modest means whose accounts were depleted complained of fraud to banks and credit card companies. Returning what amounted to interest-free loans after the election, the Trump campaign, the Republican National Committee and their shared accounts issued more than 530,000 refunds worth $64.3 million to online donors. Consumer advocates say deploying the practice of recurring withdrawals on voters in the heat of a presidential campaign — at such volume and every week before Nov. 3 — had serious ramifications. “It’s unfair, it’s unethical and it’s inappropriate,” said Ira Rheingold, the executive director of the National Association of Consumer Advocates.
> Positioning for 2024: Republican senators who may seek the presidency in three years opposed many of Biden’s Cabinet nominations. Josh Hawley of Missouri was the GOP senator who voted against more of the president’s picks than any of his colleagues, according to data compiled by The Hill. Of the 21 nominees confirmed by the Senate since Jan. 20, Hawley opposed 19 and approved two: U.S. Trade Representative Katherine Tai and economist Cecilia Rouse, chairwoman of the White House Council of Economic Advisers. No senator voted against Tai, and just four voted not to confirm Rouse (The Hill).
Dan Balz: The next phase of Biden’s presidency will be harder and riskier.
OPINION
COVID-19 arsenal needs pills as well as shots, by Scott Gottlieb and Mark McClellan, opinion contributors, The Wall Street Journal. https://on.wsj.com/2PpWDq1
Vaccine passports and the tough questions we haven’t confronted, by Megan McArdle, columnist, The Washington Post. https://wapo.st/3uk9rNl
WHERE AND WHEN
The House meets at noon for a pro forma session. No votes are expected until April 13.
TheSenate will hold a pro forma session at 2 p.m. and return for legislative business on April 12.
The president will return to the White House after the Easter weekend at 11:30 a.m. He will receive the President’s Daily Brief at noon. Biden will deliver remarks at 1 p.m. from the Blue Room balcony about the tradition of Easter accompanied by first lady Jill Biden.
Vice President Harris will travel to Oakland, Calif., to tour a facility and promote the administration’s infrastructure plan. Harris will also hold a listening session with California leaders and a small business owner while in Oakland. She will return to Los Angeles and overnight there.
Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen at 11 a.m. will speak about the global economic recovery from the pandemic during an event hosted by the Chicago Council on Global Affairs.
Second gentleman Doug Emhoff will be in Eugene, Ore., today and in Yakima, Wash., on Tuesday for official events.
The White House press briefing will take place at 1:30 p.m. The administration’s COVID-19 response team will brief reporters at 11 a.m.
➔ COURTS: The trial of former Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin, charged in the death of George Floyd, continues at 10 a.m. Here’s what to know from the trial’s first week (The Hill). The trial is expected to turn to Chauvin’s police training, which his defense lawyers argue he followed when he held his knee to Floyd’s neck for 9 minutes and 29 seconds. The former officer, 45, is charged with murder and manslaughter (The Associated Press). … Rep. Ilhan Omar (D-Minn.) told CNN’s “State of the Union” that the Minneapolis community is on “edge” as it awaits the trial’s conclusion (The Hill).
➔ INTERNATIONAL: In Jordan, estranged Prince Hamza said in a voice recording released today that he would disobey orders by the army to not communicate with the outside world after he was put under house arrest over the weekend in a dramatic dispute with his half-brother, King Abdullah II (Reuters). Jordanian authorities said Sunday they foiled a “malicious plot” by Hamza to destabilize the kingdom with foreign support, contradicting Hamza’s claims that he was being punished for speaking out against corruption and incompetence. Faced with rival narratives, the United States and Arab governments quickly sided with the king, reflecting the country’s strategic importance in a turbulent region (The Associated Press). … As Russia steps up its saber rattling in Eastern Europe, the Pentagon is on alert, reports The Hill’s Ellen Mitchell. … The Biden administration is moving forward with steps to rejoin the Iran nuclear deal. U.S. officials are set to participate this month in discussions in Vienna with signatories to the 2015 Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action, reports The Hill’s Laura Kelly. … In his traditional Easter address, Pope Francis decried the continued massive spending on weapons and wars while the COVID-19 pandemic plows ahead and poor people continue to struggle. He labeled the continued spending “scandalous.” The address came before a second straight diminished crowd at St. Peter’s Basilica in Vatican City due to the pandemic (Reuters).
➔ WASHINGTON FOOTBALL TEAM: Today is the final day to submit ideas for renaming the team once known as the Washington Redskins. The burgundy and gold colors are staying. As part of the franchise’s rebranding project, Washington in August launched the website WashingtonJourney.com with the goal of giving fans a platform to contribute ideas for the team’s new moniker. The result? More than 15,000 submissions from 60 countries and six different continents as of mid-March (WTOP).
➔ 🏀 NCAA: The Stanford Cardinal on Sunday held off the Arizona Wildcats, 54-53, handing them their first NCAA women’s basketball championship since 1992 (ESPN). The Gonzaga-Baylor men’s basketball final takes place later tonight. Tipoff is set for 9:20 p.m. (The Washington Post).
THE CLOSER
And finally … It was time to walk like an Egyptian this weekend.
The Egyptian government held an elaborate parade through Cairo on Saturday to move 22 mummies from a museum, which has been their home for more than a century, to a new structure for display. As part of the momentous event, the mummies were transported in customized gold and black vehicles to the National Museum of Egyptian Civilization.
Ahead of the planned move, chatter on social media erupted about the “curse of the pharaohs,” with some suggesting the recent blockage of the Suez Canal by a gargantuan container ship was somehow tied to unhappy mummies and their three-mile rehoming trek across Cairo. Archaeologists forcefully dismissed any curse of the undead (NBC News).
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Via The Hill’s John Kruzel, “The Supreme Court on Monday vacated a ruling which found that former PresidentTrump violated the First Amendment by blocking his critics on Twitter, with the justices dismissing the case as moot.” https://bit.ly/39Gt2Q4
Back story: “The lawsuit arose in 2017 after Trump’s social media account blocked seven people who had tweeted criticism of the president in comment threads linked to his @realDonaldTrump Twitter handle, which has since been banned on the platform … Lower federal courts found that Trump’s Twitter account, where he often weighed in on official matters, constitutes a public forum and that blocking his detractors violated their constitutional free speech protections.”
MLB announced that the Washington Nationals’ first game of the season will happen tomorrow amid COVID-19 infections. https://bit.ly/3mn6pF7
From the MLB: “The most recent round of test results of Nationals personnel included no new positives. All of (Washington’s) eligible personnel will be able to participate in baseball activities at Nationals Park on Monday.”
Back story: “The Nationals’ opening day game against the Mets last Thursday was postponed after a player tested positive for the virus. The Associated Press reported that four Nationals players are now isolating after testing positive for COVID-19 over the past week. Seven other players and two staff members are under quarantine due to possible exposure. None of the players or staff members have been identified, according to the AP.”
It’s Monday! I’m Cate Martel with a quick recap of the morning and what’s coming up. Send comments, story ideas and events for our radar to cmartel@thehill.com — and follow along on Twitter @CateMartel and Facebook.
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A MESSAGE FROM EXXONMOBIL
ExxonMobil – reducing emissions and capturing carbon
ExxonMobil Low Carbon Solutions is working to advance breakthrough technologies, including carbon capture and storage, hydrogen and other technologies, from our extensive, industry-leading R&D portfolio.
Via The Hill’s Marty Johnson, “The murder trial of former Minneapolis police officer DerekChauvin resumed Monday morning with a short hearing involving possible jury misconduct.” https://bit.ly/3dzKhDI
What we know about the jury misconduct hearing: The presiding judge explained, “I just conducted a ‘Schwartz hearing’ with the jurors. The court makes the finding that there was no jury misconduct, and that the jurors were credible in their responses, and accordingly, no action will be taken.”
Via The Hill’s Niall Stanage, “President Biden and the Democrats are making a big bet that the politics of taxation have changed.” https://bit.ly/3mlYGrd
What Democrats are hoping: “In their view, the American public — frustrated by the economic impact of COVID-19 and years of stagnation for the middle class — is willing to countenance higher taxes, at least on corporations and the wealthy.”
The biggggg risk: “The president and his party are also betting that any proposed shift in taxation will not enfeeble the post-pandemic recovery … If he’s wrong, the results could be politically disastrous.”
Via The Hill’s Max Greenwood, “Republicans are seizing on the intensifying debate over coronavirus vaccination passports as part of their strategy for recapturing control of Congress in 2022.” https://bit.ly/3wsCAro
Where the debate on passports stand: “The idea of vaccine passports has gained increasing attention in recent weeks as eligibility for COVID-19 vaccinations has rapidly expanded and Americans begin to see glints of a post-pandemic normal on the horizon. The White House has indicated that it will issue basic guidelines for such programs, though it has also said that it has no plans to create a centralized, federal requirement.”
The implications: “In interviews and conversations with The Hill, GOP strategists and operatives acknowledged the growing eagerness among Americans to be vaccinated against COVID-19. But many are also betting that emerging debates about so-called vaccine passports will help them play on voters’ fears of government overreach and privacy violations.”
ExxonMobil – reducing emissions and capturing carbon
ExxonMobil Low Carbon Solutions is working to advance breakthrough technologies, including carbon capture and storage, hydrogen and other technologies, from our extensive, industry-leading R&D portfolio.
The House and Senate are out. President Biden is in Washington, D.C. Vice President Harris is in California.
11:30 a.m. EDT: President Biden returned to the White House.
11:40 a.m. EDT: Vice President Harris left Los Angeles and is traveling to Oakland. In Oakland, she will tour a facility to advocate for the infrastructure plan and hold a listening session.
Noon: President Biden received the President’s Daily Brief.
5:25 p.m. EDT: Vice President Harris flies back to Los Angeles.
WHAT TO WATCH:
11 a.m. EDT: The White House’s COVID Response Team held a press briefing. Livestream: https://bit.ly/2R6UWhE
1 p.m. EDT: President Biden delivers Easter remarks at the White House. First lady Jill Biden attends. Livestream: https://bit.ly/3wshwl0
1:30 p.m. EDT: White House press secretary Jen Psaki holds a press briefing. Livestream: https://bit.ly/3fHjE2g
NOW FOR THE FUN STUFF…:
Today is National Caramel Day! It’s also National Deep Dish Pizza Day!
POLITICO Playbook: The new GOP attack on Biden’s jobs plan
Presented by
DRIVING THE DAY
Over the weekend,ANITA DUNN, a senior adviser to President Joe Biden, sent a memo to reporters with the subject line, “Momentum Builds for American Jobs Plan.”
While we reporters turn up our noses at press releases, we love memos. They seem so official!
Dunn pointed to the positive reception the Biden infrastructure plan has received in the media and among some business, labor and environmental leaders, and pointed to a trio of polls, including a recent one from POLITICO/Morning Consult, showing support for various aspects of the AJP.
Dunn then turned her attention to how Republicans who oppose the plan have tried to attack it, and the news there was encouraging to the White House as well. “In the face of massive support from the public, it’s no surprise that Republicans have struggled to articulate a reason to oppose the President’s plan,” she wrote.
She dinged the GOP for expressing support for infrastructure spending under DONALD TRUMP but withholding it — so far at least — under President JOE BIDEN. Dunn suggested their opposition to the corporate tax hikes Biden has proposed shows that “Republican lawmakers have been quick to come to the defense of multinational companies.”
There are a couple of notable things about the White House memo’s celebration of the plan’s rollout.
One is that the White House has already settled on a message similar to the one that accompanied the Covid relief-plus bill — that the public (including many Republicans) likes Biden’s policies, even if partisan GOP legislators in Washington don’t. And it’s true. There is a big gap between public support for Biden’s economic policies and how that support translates in Washington. Depending on the poll, as many as half of Republican voters supported the Covid relief bill but zero Republican legislators voted for it.
But Dunn’s memo is probably not the document you send out if your goal is to win over GOP legislators. Biden is going to invite Republicans to the White House, but so far we don’t see a coordinated messaging and outreach campaign to win GOP votes. All signs continue to point to a second reconciliation bill and a White House strategy aimed at keeping the Squad and Sen. JOE MANCHIN (D-W.Va.) in the tent rather than trying to attract 10 Republican senators to the effort.
One big question in American politics right now is how much room Democrats have to go big on spending and taxes. Has the year of Covid stimulus checks and government intervention permanently altered how many Americans view the role of government? Or will things snap back as Biden pushes for more government spending in areas well outside of the immediate health and economic crises?
We have been watching the GOP opposition to the Biden plan closely, and so far it has coalesced around two areas: 1) a traditional case against higher taxes and more government spending and 2) an effort to redefine the Biden plan around cultural hot-button issues. Last week a chyron on Fox during a segment about the American Jobs Plan said, “Green New Reparations Bill.”
A third area —one that was often the Achilles’ heel of ambitious legislation in the Obama era — has started bubbling up in conversations with Republicans on the Hill. A bill like this will inevitably require deals to secure Democratic votes, and those efforts could give the sausage-making such a putrid stench that the public will turn away in disgust at the allegedly corrupt process. (Remember the Cornhusker Kickback?)
If we had to guess,Nos. 2 and 3 are more likely to gain traction than No. 1. Culture and corruption are more visceral to voters right now than arguments about bloated government and tax hikes (especially tax hikes on the wealthy). But so far one of the biggest stories of this new president is that his policies have not created the kind of fierce organized backlash that his two Democratic predecessors felt by this point.
It could still happen. But for now, Dunn had reason to crow.
2022 WARNING SIGN FOR MURKOWSKI? — A new poll commissioned by Sen. LISA MURKOWSKI’S primary opponent, KELLY TSHIBAKA, shows the challenger leading in the all-party, open primary by 15 points over the three-term incumbent. Tshibaka — a former Alaska Department of Administration commissioner who recently hired Trump’s 2020 campaign manager BILL STEPIEN and deputy campaign manager JUSTIN CLARK to run her campaign — leads 34% to 19%, while AL GROSS, who ran as an independent last year, pulls 18%. Tshibaka has 61% favorability among both Trump voters and Republican voters.
By contrast, Murkowski is deep underwater at 33-63 favorable/unfavorable overall and 10/87 among Republicans, according to the survey conducted by the GOP polling firm Cygnal. Though Trump has not endorsed Tshibaka, he has vowed to campaign against Murkowski for voting to impeach him. Trump won 53% of the vote in Alaska last year, but we wouldn’t be so quick to bet against Murkowski, especially under Alaska’s new ranked-choice voting system. Candidates of all parties compete in an open primary in August 2022, with the top four candidates advancing to the general election. In 2010, Murkowski waged a successful write-in campaign after losing the Republican nomination to Tea Party-backed candidate JOE MILLER.The polling memo
BIDEN’S MONDAY — The president will arrive at the White House at 11:30 a.m. and receive the President’s Daily Brief at noon. He’ll deliver remarks about “the tradition of Easter at the White House” at 1 p.m.
— VP KAMALA HARRIS will travel to Oakland, Calif., at 8:40 a.m. Pacific time from Los Angeles. She’ll tour a facility to highlight the infrastructure bill’s investments in clean drinking water infrastructure. She’ll then hold a listening session with California leaders and a small business owner who got help from Community Development Financial Institutions. She’ll leave Oakland at 2:25 p.m. Pacific time for Los Angeles, where she’ll remain overnight.
— The White House Covid-19 response team and public health officials will brief at 11 a.m. Press secretary JEN PSAKI will brief at 1:30 p.m.
THE HOUSE will meet at noon and THE SENATE at 2 p.m. in pro forma sessions.
THE WEEK AHEAD — Biden will visit a vaccination site in Alexandria, Va., and deliver remarks about the vaccine effort Tuesday. He’ll deliver remarks about his infrastructure/jobs bill proposal Wednesday.
PLAYBOOK READS
MONDAY LISTEN — The latest episode of POLITICO’s “Dispatch” podcast features an exclusive interview with ANTHONY FAUCI. Among his comments: He says vaccine passports are “not going to be mandated from the federal government.” And he says if all goes well, he expects Americans could go to a packed movie theater with no mask by late fall/early winter.Listen and subscribe
INFRASTRUCTURE YEAR
THE TAX HIKES — “Some Democrats Cool to Biden’s Plan to Boost Corporate Tax Rate,”WSJ: “President Biden’s proposed tax increases on corporations as part of a $2.3 trillion infrastructure plan have drawn a skeptical reaction from some Democrats, who instead favor borrowing money to pay for the investments or raising other levies, like the gasoline tax, to do so. …
“Rep. Peter DeFazio (D., Ore.), the chairman of the House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee, said he didn’t think paying for the full cost of the plan through tax increases was necessary.”
BIDEN’S BIPARTISAN BOOGIE — “Biden’s next big bill could revive — or bury — his bipartisan brand,”by Burgess Everett and Marianne LeVine: “[Maine GOP Sen. Susan] Collins said she has spoken one-on-one recently with Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg and Housing and Urban Development Secretary Marcia Fudge, describing the administration’s overall outreach as ‘significant.’ But she said that for Republicans, ‘the question is: is the administration so wedded to the details of its plan, including its exorbitant top line, that these are just courtesy briefings as opposed to the beginning of a true dialogue?’
“What happens in the next few weeks to Biden’s $2 trillion-plus spending plan could determine the course of his first two years in office. If he takes a partisan approach again to enact tax increases and new spending, it would almost certainly chill the already difficult gun safety and immigration reform talks taking place in a closely divided Congress.”
BEHIND THE SCENES — “Inside the White House plan to sell its massive infrastructure proposal,”by Natasha Korecki and Megan Cassella: “The massive outreach campaign, detailed to POLITICO by several senior White House officials, comes as the Biden administration attempts to move a behemoth spending package across the goal line, just weeks after winning approval from Congress for its $1.9 trillion Covid-19 relief package. …
“As one person close to the White House put it, in their mind, Republicans will be viewed as ‘profoundly out of touch’ if they don’t get on board with backing the next round of spending. … Part of the sales pitch to Americans will be an appeal to suburban women, who have been particularly battered by the pandemic, leaving the workforce in droves and often carrying the burden of caretaking amid schools and childcare center closures.”
CONGRESS
STILL STANDING — “Cheney snags victories ahead of her next battle with Trumpworld,” by Melanie Zanona: “Rep. Liz Cheney took on the Trump wing of her party and survived its attempt to politically kneecap her. But it’s only the beginning of what looks like a years-long fight for her place in the GOP. … Cheney has racked up a string of wins that put her on more solid footing in the party — starting with her easy victory over a conservative-led effort to oust her as House GOP conference chair. …
“She still has to lock down her party’s endorsement in the deep red state of Wyoming next August, leaving plenty of time for pro-Trump forces to mobilize against her — though she’s likely to benefit from multiple pro-Trump candidates competing for the same lane. If Cheney can hang on to her House seat, however, her ability to climb the Republican leadership ranks may still be hamstrung by her vote against a former president who’s said to be obsessed with taking down the Republicans who helped impeach him.”
BIG PROFILE — “Introducing Todd Young, the most important senator you’ve never heard of,”Insider: “If President Biden is going to score legislative compromises in this age of disunity, especially on foreign policy, he’ll need the help of a below-the-radar, rock-ribbed Republican senator from Indiana to do it. Meet Todd Young, who’s scored a rare GOP invite to the Biden White House, retweets from the Democratic president’s national security advisor, and private meetings with the ‘shadow’ secretary of State, Delaware Sen. Chris Coons. In hours of exclusive interviews with Insider’s Adam Wren, including playing pickup soccer in the Indianapolis suburbs, Young dishes about his White House meeting with Biden, his unlikely partnership with Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, Trump, and the future of the GOP.”
GAETZ-GATE — MELANIE ZANONA (@MZanona): “Matt Gaetz’s office says a former staffer will hold a media availability [today at noon] regarding ‘recent encounter with the FBI.’” Details
“‘Heartbroken to learn another CP was killed while protecting the Capitol. My thoughts and prayers go out to the officer’s family and the entire Capitol Police force. The death toll would have been worse if the assailant had an AR-15 instead of a knife,’ the tweet reads. In a now-deleted tweet, Congressman Greg Murphy responded on Saturday, ‘Would have been worse @Ilhan if they had been flying planes into the buildings also.’”
POLITICS ROUNDUP
FROM 30,000 FEET — “Culture wars strain once unshakeable bond between Republicans, corporate America,”NBC: “The shift is the product of a Republican Party increasingly driven by ‘culture war’ issues that animate a base invigorated by Trump and corporate powerhouses that are under more pressure than ever to align themselves with the left on voting rights, LGBTQ rights and anti-racist efforts.
“The result is a fraying in relations between a GOP that has for years advocated for the kinds of libertarian economic policies that have widely benefited these businesses and companies that are using their might to help advance racial and social justice causes.”
RACIAL RECKONING — “Amid Awakening, Asian-Americans Are Still Taking Shape as a Political Force,”NYT: “As relatively new voters, many Asian-Americans find themselves uniquely interested in both major parties, drawn to Democrats for their stances on guns and health care, and to Republicans for their support for small business and emphasis on self-reliance. But they do not fit into neat categories. The Democratic position on immigration attracts some and repels others. The Republican anti-Communist language is compelling to some. Others are indifferent.”
HISTORY LESSON — “Bernice King maintains father’s assassination was government ‘conspiracy,’”TheGrio: “In a recent interview with theGrio, Dr. [Martin Luther] King’s daughter, Bernice King, spoke on the harrowing details of her father’s autopsy pictures. The graphic images, she recalled, showed that Dr. King’s whole jaw had been shot off. King also maintains a stance taken by the King family that his death was a multi-governmental conspiracy. …
“Former New York Congressman Ed Towns … told theGrio that ‘there was not enough time and energy’ given to the original probe of King’s assassination. Bernice King strongly contends there is still a search for answers as the assassination of her father was a culminated effort involving ‘federal, state and local governments,’ including the ‘Memphis Police Department.’ More than half a century after his assassination, Bernice King told theGrio that James Earl Ray, the man convicted in Dr. King’s murder, ‘was used as a diversion with the gun that he had.’”
PANDEMIC
SEARCH FOR SUPPLIER — “U.S. searches for new AstraZeneca vaccine producer after Emergent mix-up,”by Sarah Owermohle: “U.S. health officials are helping AstraZeneca find a new manufacturing partner for millions of its coronavirus shots after the contractor Emergent BioSolutions mixed up ingredients for two Covid-19 vaccines it’s simultaneously producing, a senior health official told POLITICO.
“The Biden administration already told Johnson & Johnson to directly take over vaccine manufacturing at Emergent’s Maryland plant after reports that the manufacturer had contaminated 15 million Johnson & Johnson doses with ingredients for AstraZeneca’s shot. But now, officials are telling AstraZeneca to cut ties with Emergent entirely, worried about the prospect for more mishaps that could erode public confidence in Covid vaccines, the official said. They added that the administration has identified two potential partners for AstraZeneca to work with on future production.”
BEYOND THE BELTWAY
‘60 MINUTES’ INVESTIGATION — “How the wealthy cut the line during Florida’s frenzied vaccine rollout,”CBS: “For three months, we’ve been reporting around Palm Beach County, the third-largest in the state. It’s home to old-monied millionaires but also some of the poorest day laborers and farm workers in America. During those months, we watched Florida’s vaccine rollout deteriorate into a virtual free for all and watched as some wealthy and well-connected residents cut the line, leaving other Floridians without a fair shot. …
“You have to catch two buses to get to the nearest Publix from the Glades. It’s 34 stops. More than two hours round trip. A daunting task in the middle of a pandemic, especially if you’re elderly. So why did the governor choose Publix? Campaign finance reports obtained by 60 Minutes show that weeks before the governor’s announcement, Publix donated $100,000 to his political action committee, Friends of Ron DeSantis.” Denials of impropriety from Publix and DeSantis
THOUGHTFUL INTERVIEW from TINA NGUYEN: “Andrew Yang’s Asian American Superpower”: “Yang finally opened up over lunch, the two of us chatting fluently to each other in the shorthand of Asian immigrant kids — me, the Vietnamese American smartass from Boston’s South Shore, and him, the sunny child of Taiwanese academics who settled in Westchester County. We talked about Asian American bloggers, John Cho, classic anime and Korean martial arts; we griped over people automatically assuming we were from California.
“[His] inclination is to downplay how this upbringing shaped him. … But if you get Yang by himself next to a pile of duck meat and hoisin sauce, with his white aides tactfully getting fried rice at a table further away, and give him an hour to talk about second-gen Asian kid angst, it quickly rises to the surface — as if it had never disappeared, but no one had ever asked him about it (in the media, at least).”
MEDIAWATCH
BIG FOR THE NEWSPAPER INDUSTRY — “Rival Group Makes Fully Financed, Roughly $680 Million Bid for Tribune,”WSJ: “A Maryland hotel magnate and a Swiss billionaire have made a bid for Tribune Publishing Co. that the newspaper chain is expected to favor over a takeover deal it already struck with hedge fund Alden Global Capital LLC. … The decision came after the two men indicated they plan to personally contribute more than $600 million combined, up from a previous total of $200 million …
“If Alden loses the deal, it would mark a stunning, 11th-hour turnaround for the New York hedge fund, and a major victory for critics who say its model of aggressive cost-cutting has hurt the local news industry.”
BEN SMITH COLUMN: “The Lawyer Behind the Throne at Fox,”NYT: “Last month, Lachlan Murdoch moved his family to Sydney, Australia, an unlikely base for a company whose main assets are American. The move has intensified the perception — heightened when he stood by as Fox News hosts misinformed their audience about Covid-19 last year — that Mr. Murdoch does not have a tight grip on the reins. The company takes pains to rebut that perception …
“But [Viet] Dinh, 53, was ready to step in, and indeed has been seen internally as the company’s power center since before Mr. Murdoch headed across the globe. … [He] is a surprising figure to play a central role overseeing the most powerful megaphone of the Trump movement. He’s part of the tight, elite group of conservative lawyers who largely disliked Donald J. Trump’s bombast and disdain for the law — he is said to regularly deride the former president in private — though they appreciated his judicial appointments and some other policies. And Mr. Dinh isn’t just a member of that group, but a true star of it.”
PLAYBOOKERS
MEDIAWATCH — Kelly Laco is now news/politics editor at Fox News. She previously was comms director for the Republican Attorneys General Association and a DOJ spokesperson.
TRANSITIONS — Joan Kirchner Carr is starting Joan K. Carr Consulting after 20 years in the Senate. She is former chief of staff to three senators from Georgia: Republicans Kelly Loeffler and Johnny Isakson, and Democrat Zell Miller. … Danny Kazin is joining American Bridge 21st Century as VP of campaigns to oversee the paid media program. He most recently ran the DCCC’s independent expenditure last cycle. … Joe Hack is joining the Daschle Group as a VP, making the firm bipartisan as its first Republican. He previously was chief of staff for Sen. Deb Fischer (R-Neb.). …
… Aaron Bennett is now deputy speechwriter for Speaker Nancy Pelosi. He previously was press and digital assistant for Sen. Brian Schatz (D-Hawaii). … Christina Lotspike is now senior manager of federal affairs at Instacart. She previously was VP of government affairs at the U.S. Chamber of Commerce. … Bernard Fulton is joining the Housing Policy Council as VP of government relations. He most recently was a senior policy advisor for financial services at the National Association of Realtors, and is a Zero to Three and HUD alum.
FIRST IN PLAYBOOK — Schmidt Futures, the philanthropic initiative founded by Eric and Wendy Schmidt, has named its new class of international strategy fellows, including Alex Loehr, Camille Stewart, Corey Jacobson, Daniel Lippman, Elizabeth Ralph, Kate Kizer, Katie Bruce, Ken Sofer, Sofia Gross and Tess deBlanc-Knowles.The full list
ENGAGED — Brandon Steinmann, district director for Rep. Kevin Brady (R-Texas) in Houston and a former deputy chief of staff and legislative director for several House members, and Jessica Hart, formerly the director of the Office for Victims of Crime for DOJ and of Sen. Ted Cruz’s (R-Texas) office, got engaged. They met in New York City while on a Texas Lyceum trip with other legislative staff and friends. Pic… Another pic
WELCOME TO THE WORLD — Alexandra Roberts, comms director at MSNBC, and Mike Roberts, an executive director at Columbia University, welcomed Micki Darling Roberts early Tuesday morning. Pic… Another pic … On-air welcome
BIRTHWEEK (was Sunday): Ali Rubin
HAPPY BIRTHDAY: Former Secretary of State Colin Powell (84) … Mary Katharine Ham, author and CNN commentator … WaPo’s Annie Gowen … David Hill … Dan Berman of CNN Politics … Josh Culling of Dezenhall Resources … Melissa Shuffield … Meghan Cox … Jacqueline Usyk … UAW’s Eric Heggie … PBS NewsHour’s Sam Lane and Yasmeen Alamiri … Kevin Roderick … Jesse Rifkin … Lizzy Guyton, comms director for Massachusetts Gov. Charlie Baker … Mikala Stubley … Michael Russo … Wilson Shirley …
… POLITICO’s David Van Veen … Matt Gertz of Media Matters … Lindsey Boylan … former FCC Chair Tom Wheeler (75) … former Reps. Peter King (R-N.Y.) (77), Katherine Harris (R-Fla.) (64) and Reid Ribble (R-Wis.) (65) … NYT’s Jill Rayfield … DLCC’s Leslie Martes … Benjamin Rosenbaum … Adham Sahloul … Shea Snider Miller … Luke and Brian Principato (34) … Adam Rubenstein … Sarah Horvitz of Planned Parenthood (32) … John Diamond … Garrett Marquis (38) … PayPal’s Howard Wachtel (41) … Terry Szuplat
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.
At age 16, after the Civil War had ended, Booker T. Washington walked nearly 500 miles to attend the Hampton Institute in Virginia, founded by Union General Samuel Chapman Armstrong.
Washington stated:
“I have spoken of my admiration for General Armstrong, and yet he was but a type of that Christ-like body of men and women who went into the Negro schools at the close of the war by the hundreds to assist in lifting up my race.
The history of the world fails to show a higher, purer, and more unselfish class of men and women than those who found their way into those Negro schools.”
Graduating from the Hampton Institute in 1875, Booker T. Washington wrote in his book, Up From Slavery, 1901:
“Perhaps the most valuable thing that I got out of my second year at the Hampton Institute was an understanding of the use and value of the Bible.
Miss Nathalie Lord, one of the teachers, from Portland, Maine, taught me how to use and love the Bible …
… I learned to love to read the Bible, not only for the spiritual help which it gives, but on account of it as literature.
The lessons taught me in this respect took such a hold upon me that at the present time, when I am at home, no matter how busy I am, I always make it a rule to read a chapter or a portion of a chapter in the morning, before beginning the work of the day.
Whatever ability I may have as a public speaker I owe in a measure to Miss Lord.”
Booker T. Washington wrote in The Story of My Life and Work (1901):
“Aside from Gen. Armstrong … the persons who made the deepest impression upon me at Hampton were Miss Nathalie Lord and Miss Elizabeth Brewer, two teachers from New England.
I am especially indebted to these two for being helped in my spiritual life and led to love and understand the Bible.
Largely by reason of their teaching, I find that a day rarely, if ever, passes when I am at home, that I do not read the Bible.”
Miss Natalie Lord wrote in an article for the Hampton Institution publication, The Southern Workman (May 1902):
“Booker, as we always called him … I was much interested in him from the first. His quiet, unassuming manner, his earnestness of purpose and faithfulness greatly impressed me.
I saw in him one whom you could completely trust. He was diligent in his business … and yet unselfish in his thought for others.”
Later, Booker T. Washington attended Wayland Baptist Seminary in Washington, DC.
He moved to West Virginia and worked in a salt furnace and coal mine.
In 1876, he taught school in Malden, West Virginia, where he also taught a Sunday School class at the African Zion Baptist Church.
Washington returned to teach at the Hampton Institute.
In 1881, at the age of 25, Booker T. Washington founded the Tuskegee Institute in Alabama with 33 students.
Students not only had to learn academics, but also trade skills. They grew their own crops and raised livestock.
Washington observed that since slaves had been forced to work so hard on plantations, once freed, some held the expectation that they did not have to work as hard, even though they benefited from it.
He countered this by teaching:
“No race can prosper till it learns that there is as much dignity in tilling a field as in writing a poem.”
“I want to see you own land.”
“What is equally important, each one of the students works … each day at some industry, in order to get skill and the love of work, so that when he goes out from the institution he is prepared to set the people with whom he goes to labor a proper example in the matter of industry.”
“Few things can help an individual more than to place responsibility on him, and to let him know that you trust him.”
“To do a common thing in an uncommon way.”
“To do our work so well that it will be a difficult task for anyone to improve upon what we have done.”
“To live up to the high-water mark of daily duty. Whoever does this will meet with constant unexpected happiness and encouragement.”
Booker T. Washington hired Robert Robinson Taylor, the first African-American architect from MIT, who graduated near the top of his class.
Students made the bricks and helped build over 100 campus building, constructing classrooms, barns, outbuildings, and in 1899, Tuskegee’s impressive chapel.
In the Spring of 1896, Booker T. Washington invited George Washington Carver to teach at Tuskegee, as he had just received his Master’s Degree from Iowa State Agricultural Institute.
Booker T. Washington became friends with the leading men of his day, including:
President William McKinley;
President Theodore Roosevelt;
President William H. Taft;
Steel industrialist Andrew Carnegie;
Standard Oil’s John D. Rockefeller and Henry Huttleston Rogers;
George Eastman, inventor and founder of Kodak; and
Sears, Roebuck & Company President Julius Rosenwald.
Julius Rosenwald funded a pilot program of over 100 elementary schools, designed and operated by Tuskegee.
Rosenwald and Carnegie took a “matching fund” approach to expand to 4,977 schools, 217 teacher homes and 163 shop buildings in 15 States.
An Agricultural College on Wheels taught over 2,000 farmers in 28 States.
Booker T. Washington was thankful for rich people who supported his work at Tuskegee (Up From Slavery, 1901):
“The more I come into contact with wealthy people, the more I believe that they are growing in the direction of looking upon their money simply as an instrument which God has placed in their hand for doing good with.
… I never go to the office of Mr. John D. Rockefeller, who more than once has been generous to Tuskegee, without being reminded of this.
The close, careful, and minute investigation that he always makes in order to be sure that every dollar that he gives will do the most good — an investigation that is just as searching as if he were investing money in a business enterprise — convinces me that the growth in this direction is most encouraging.”
Washington added:
“In the city of Boston I have rarely called upon an individual for funds that I have not been thanked for calling, usually before I could get an opportunity to thank the donor for the money …
The donors seem to feel, in a large degree, that an honor is being conferred upon them in their being permitted to give …
Nowhere else have I met with, in so large a measure, this fine and Christ-like spirit as in the city of Boston, although there are many notable instances of it outside that city. I repeat my belief that the world is growing in the direction of giving.”
Booker T. Washington was grateful for the generosity of Christian churches, as he wrote in Up From Slavery, 1901:
“In my efforts to get money (for Tuskegee Institute) I have often been surprised at the patience and deep interest of the ministers, who are besieged on every hand and at all hours of the day for help.
If no other consideration had convinced me of the value of the Christian life, the Christ-like work which the Church of all denominations in America has done during the last thirty-five years for the elevation of the black man would have made me a Christian.
In a large degree it has been the pennies, the nickels, and the dimes which have come from the Sunday-schools, the Christian Endeavor societies, and the missionary societies, as well as from the church proper, that have helped to elevate the Negro at so rapid a rate.”
As recorded in The Booker T. Washington Papers, Volume 3: 1889-1895, compiled by Louis R. Harlan, editor, (University of Illinois, 1974, page 93), he wrote:
“As a rule a person should get into the habit of reading his Bible. You never read in history of any great man whose influence has been lasting, who has not been a reader of the Bible.”
Booker T. Washington continued his description of Tuskegee Institute:
“While the institution is in no sense denominational, we have a department known as the Phelps Hall Bible Training School, in which a number of students are prepared for the ministry and other forms of Christian work, especially work in the country districts.”
He added:
“In the school we made a special effort to teach our students the meaning of Christmas, and to give them lessons in its proper observance …
The Season now has a new meaning, not only through all that immediate region, but … wherever our graduates have gone.”
Washington wrote in Up From Slavery, 1901:
“When speaking directly in the interests of the Tuskegee Institute, I usually arrange, sometime in advance, a series of meetings in important centers.
This takes me before churches, Sunday-schools, Christian Endeavour Societies, and men’s and women’s clubs. When doing this I sometimes speak before as many as four organizations in a single day.”
In Up From Slavery (1901), Booker T. Washington wrote:
“While a great deal of stress is laid upon the industrial side of the work at Tuskegee, we do not neglect or overlook in any degree the religious and spiritual side.
The school is strictly undenominational, but it is thoroughly Christian, and the spiritual training of the students is not neglected.
Our preaching service, prayer-meetings, Sunday-school, Christian Endeavor Society, Young Men’s Christian Association, and various missionary organizations, testify to this …”
He added:
“You may fill your heads with knowledge or skillfully train your hands, but unless it is based upon high upright character, upon a true heart, it will amount to nothing.”
One of these Bible classes was taught by Dr. George Washington Carver, who wrote to Booker T. Washington, on May 28, 1907:
“For your information only. Mr. B.T. Washington,
About three months ago 6 or 7 persons met in my office one evening and organized a Bible class, and asked me to teach it.
I consented to start them off. Their idea was to put in the 20 or 25 minutes on Sunday evenings which intervene between supper and chapel service.
We began at the first of the Bible and attempted to explain the Creation story in the light of natural and revealed religion and geological truths. Maps, charts plants and geological specimens were used to illustrate the work.
We have had an average attendance of 80 and often as high as 114. Thought these facts would help you in speaking of the religious life of the school. Very truly. G.W. Carver.”
Though Tuskegee was non-sectarian, its daily life was permeated by active religion which included Sunday preaching services and Sunday school classes, daily evening chapel devotionals and a “Week of Prayer” held for two weeks every January.
A Bible Training school was established in 1893 to prepare students for Christian ministry.
Students helped out at community churches on Sundays; ran a Y.M.C.A. that looked after the sick, needy, and elderly in the area; and staffed a Humane Society for the proper care of animals.
On May 24, 1900, Booker T. Washington delivered an address, “The Place of the Bible in the Uplifting of the Negro Race,” at Memorial Hall in Columbus, Ohio:
“No man can read the Bible and be lazy.”
Booker T. Washington stated May 24, 1900:
“The men doing the vital things of life are those who read the Bible and are Christians and not ashamed to let the world know it.”
In Up From Slavery (1901), he wrote:
“Great men cultivate love … Only little men cherish a spirit of hatred.”
He added:
“The man is unwise who does not cultivate in every manly way the friendship and goodwill of his next-door neighbor, whether he be black or white.”
“In the sight of God there is no color line, and we want to cultivate a spirit that will make us forget that there is such a line anyway.”
Many places and items were named for him, including:
a bridge,
a mountain,
a ship,
an airplane,
a stamp,
a coin,
a college,
parks,
buildings
elementary schools,
middle schools,
high schools.
One high school named for him was Booker T. Washington High School in Atlanta, Georgia, where Martin Luther King, Jr., was a student 1942-44.
The pastor of Atlanta’s Ebenezer Baptist Church, Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr., rose to national prominence through the Southern Christian Leadership Conference.
Rev. King, Jr. was awarded the Nobel Prize in 1964.
Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr., as well as Archbishop Desmond Tutu, were influenced by the German Confessing Church leader Deitrich Bonhoeffer, who resisted Hitler’s anti-Christian totalitarian socialism.
Rev. King was also influenced by the non-violent methods of India’s Mahatma Gandhi who resisted Britain’s centralized big government.
Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., said August 28, 1963:
“Now is the time to open the doors of opportunity to all of God’s children …
In the process of gaining our rightful place we must not be guilty of wrongful deeds.
Let us not seek to satisfy our thirst for freedom by drinking from the cup of bitterness and hatred.
… We must forever conduct our struggle on the high plane of dignity and discipline. We must not allow our creative protest to degenerate into physical violence …
New militancy which has engulfed the Negro community must not lead us to a distrust of all white people,
for many of our white brothers, as evidenced by their presence here today, have come to realize that their destiny is tied up with our destiny and their freedom is inextricably bound to our freedom.
We cannot walk alone.”
In the same spirit, retired NBA player Charles Barkley stated on a CBS Sports panel, April 3, 2021:
“Man, I think most white people and black people are great people.
I really believe that in my heart, but I think our system is set up where our politicians, whether they’re Republicans or Democrats, are designed to make us not like each other so they can keep their grasp of money and power. They divide and conquer ….
We’re so stupid following our politicians … Their only job is, ‘Hey … let’s make the whites and blacks not like each other, let’s make rich people and poor people not like each other, let’s scramble the middle class.’ I truly believe that in my heart.”
Malcolm X gave a similar statement in 1963 before he was assassinated:
“The white liberal differs from the white conservative … Both want power, but the white liberal … has perfected the art of posing as the Negro’s friend and benefactor … to use the Negro as a pawn or a weapon in this political football game that is constantly raging between the white liberal and the white conservative … and the white liberals control this ball.”
In 1958, Manning Johnson wrote an exposé titled Color, Communism and Common Sense.
He stated shortly before being killed in an automobile accident:
“Like other Negroes, I experienced and saw many injustices and inequities around me based upon color, not ability …
After two years of practical training in organizing street demonstrations, inciting mob violence, how to fight the police and how to politically ‘throw a brick and hide’ … I was given an … intensive course in the theory and practice of red political warfare … that changed me from a novice into a dedicated red — a professional revolutionist …
I began to realize the full implications of how the Negro is used as a political dupe by the Kremlin hierarchy …
White leftists descended on Negro communities like locusts, posing as ‘friends’ come to help ‘liberate’ their black brothers …
Everything was inter-racial … cleverly devised as a camouflage of the red plot to use the Negro … beating the racial drums … even if the Negro masses are left prostrate and bleeding — expendables in the mad scramble for power.”
Community organizer Saul Alinsky wrote in Rules for Radicals:
“Disruption … is the first step …
The organizer must first rub raw the resentments of the people of the community; fan the latent hostilities of many of the people to the point of overt expression …
Search out controversy … Create the issues or problems … Stir up dissatisfaction and discontent …
The organizer … polarizes the issue … to lead his forces into conflict … The real arena is corrupt and bloody.”
Former Communist David Horowitz explained:
“The issue is ever
the issue. The issue is always the revolution …
In other words … civil rights or women’s rights … blacks … are only instruments in the larger cause, which is power.
Battles over rights and other issues, according to Alinsky, should never be seen as more than occasions to advance the real agenda, which is the accumulation of power.”
Franklin D. Roosevelt had warned Congress, January 3, 1940:
“Doctrines that set group against group, faith against faith, race against race, class against class, fanning the fires of hatred in men too despondent, too desperate to think for themselves, were used as rabble-rousing slogans on which dictators could ride to power.
And once in power they could saddle their tyrannies on whole nations.”
On April 16, 1963, Rev. King wrote:
“I stand in the middle of two opposing forces in the Negro community.
One is a force of complacency …
The other force is one of bitterness and hatred, and it comes perilously close to advocating violence.
… It is expressed in the various black nationalist groups that are springing up across the nation, the largest and best-known being Elijah Muhammad’s Muslim movement …
I have tried to stand between these two forces, saying that we need emulate neither the ‘do-nothingism’ of the complacent nor the hatred of the black nationalist.
For there is the more excellent way of love and non-violent protest.
I am grateful to God that, through the influence of the Negro church, the way of non-violence became an integral part of our struggle.”
Rev. King proclaimed August 28, 1963:
“I have a dream that one day this nation will rise up and live out the true meaning of its creed:
‘We hold these truths to be self-evident; that all men are created equal.’
I have a dream that one day on the red hills of Georgia the sons of former slaves and the sons of former slaveowners will be able to sit down together at the table of brotherhood …
I have a dream that my four little children will one day live in a nation where they will not be judged by the color of their skin, but by the content of their character.”
This closely resembled Booker T. Washington’s attitude, who wrote July 28, 1896:
“I am very glad to hear that The Salvation Army is going to undertake work among my people in the southern states.
I have always had the greatest respect for the work of The Salvation Army especially because I have noted that it draws no color line in religion …
God bless you in all your unselfish Christian work.”
Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr., was assassinated April 4, 1968.
On November 2, 1983, Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr.’s birthday was designated by Ronald Reagan as a National Holiday.
Reagan stated:
“Dr. King had awakened something strong and true, a sense that true justice must be colorblind, and that among white and black Americans, as he put it,
‘Their destiny is tied up with our destiny, and their freedom is inextricably bound to our freedom; we cannot walk alone.'”
By Shane Vander Hart on Apr 05, 2021 12:45 am
Sunday morning is described as the most segregated time in the week. Shane Vander Hart discusses why that is and shares five thoughts on how to address it. Read in browser »
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.
Summary: President Joe Biden will return to the White House late Monday morning after a long restful weekend with his family at Camp David. The press guidance says he will receive his daily briefing in the Oval Office before he even leaves Camp David so… be prepared for a correction …
There is very little good news here lately. After all, the majority of us fall into the key demographics of conservative or Christian. By public perception, those two very demographics make us racist, bigoted, xenophobic, homophobic, white supremacist, and about a dozen other things that we have heard from those …
Jefferson’s “Wall of Separation” was not intended to sever all ties between Church and State. Rather, our Founding Fathers encouraged this relationship. Our Founding Fathers did not intend for government to be rid of religion. On the contrary, they encouraged religion. Case in point, in his 1796 Farewell Address, George …
Hunter Biden cast doubt during an interview that aired Sunday on claims that he dropped off his laptop at a Delaware computer repair shop in 2019, saying that he does not remember doing so. In an interview on CBS “Sunday Morning,” Biden suggested that the laptop, contents of which were …
The writers of The Blue State Conservative reflected on what they considered the biggest story from the first two months of the Biden presidency. Here is what they said: PF Whalen: There are so many stories through Biden’s first two months to consider, and none of them are positive or …
The ignorant fool we are calling the president of the United States must answer for the criminal activity and human suffering we see all along the southern border of the United States. He was warned by the outgoing Trump administration that if he put out the message that all who …
This is such a sad day to have to announce the death of Major League Baseball. Every kid in my generation grew up with their baseball glove on their handlebars and a trading card flapping in the spokes Of their bike tires. Baseball was a part of our lives from …
One year after Americans were ordered to close down society for “two weeks to flatten the curve,” Bloomberg columnist Andreas Kluth warned, “We Must Start Planning for a Permanent Pandemic.” Because new variants of SARS-COV-2 are impervious to existing vaccines, says Kluth, and pharmaceutical companies will never be able to …
Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and the Politics of Nothing
Happy Monday, dear Kruiser Morning Briefing friends. I frequently dream about chocolate silk pie.
Spring has sprung here in the Sonoran Desert. Temperatures are in the 90s now. Pretty soon it will be a hundred jillion degrees every day until Halloween.
The heat can bring about some clarity. One tends to focus on the essentials when extra energy is sapped by the sun. I’m not saying that we desert folk are inherently wiser, it’s just that we have a knack for pushing unnecessary things to the side. A reality distillation, sort of.
We here at the Kruiser Morning Briefing like to disparage Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez a lot. Mostly because she’s an airhead idiot who the leftists have managed to elevate to goddess status and she makes the mocking so easy to do.
AOC is the epitome of all that is wrong with the digital, social media age. She has the IQ of a baboon’s armpit but has become the gold standard of Democratic politics because she’s made herself social media famous. If you’re of the opinion that a big Twitter presence carries some kind of street cred, that’s cool. If you’re hanging out in the real world, here is the deal about AOC: she’s a paste eater’s paste eater.
AOC wields power in the Democratic party because she is louder than everyone else. She takes her obnoxious, whiny girl act to all of the left-leaning social media platforms and terrifies the elders of the Democrat village with her power to get attention from the young ones.
In reality, America’s Dumbest Bartender isn’t getting a lot done.
She’s got millions of followers on Twitter. The media hangs on her every word. She is credited — fairly or unfairly — with jumpstarting the radical transformation of the Democratic Party. She makes extremism cool.
She’s Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, member of Congress representing the Bronx, and a proud Puerto Rican/Hispanic/Woman/ green/ socialist.
According to a study by the non-partisan Center for Effective Lawmaking, she’s also an incompetent radical. AOC was rated 230 out of 240 Democratic congresspeople based on some simple, but telling criteria.
Simply put: AOC doesn’t do her job very well.
Given her actual professional incompetence, it’s stunning how much influence she has. She’s so bad at what she does that one wonders whether she could even pour a shot without screwing it up back in her bartender days. The lefties love her though.
What’s scary is that this limited brain cell camera hog could end up being the most powerful person in America if the Democrats succeed in making our election process a mail-in ballot fraud fest. The nation is currently being spared because Bartender McDitz doesn’t meet the constitutional age requirement to be president.
Given the heated anti-American vibe of the Biden presidency, the Constitution may not last much longer.
We can take comfort in the fact that AOC hasn’t been able to advance much of her lunacy via legislation thus far. She is, however, very good at making other people do her work for her.
Therein lies the danger.
I Need to Share This
Our own Stacey Lennox wrote an absolutely brilliant post about the situation in Georgia. She lives there, and her perspective is invaluable.
Here is Stacey’s conclusion, which should be shared far and wide:
It is past time for Republicans to force Georgia politicians like Abrams and Warnock to get down to issues and the details of how their decisions affect Georgia families. Their “Jim Crow” narrative is tired, an insult to the state and from the middle of the last century. It degrades the suffering of those who lived through it, memories of those who changed it, and the people living in the state today. They only use it to avoid talking about the implications of the policies they support and vote for.
Everything Isn’t Awful
School Surprises Hero Custodian With $35,000 Collected As Special Gift of Thanks ❤️
“He’s kind of our rock, our foundation of what we do here,” says White Oak Elementary’s principal about head custodian Raymond Brown. https://t.co/CdqdhPsRyk
— Good News Network (@goodnewsnetwork) April 3, 2021
Pentagon on alert as Russia steps up saber rattling in Eastern Europe . . . Russia has upped its saber rattling in Eastern Europe and the Arctic, a move that has put the Biden administration on alert. In the past two weeks, Moscow has moved to test Washington and its allies on land, in the air and at sea with a buildup of military equipment in eastern Ukraine, military flights near Alaskan airspace and submarine activity in the Arctic. “I think we’ve been very clear about the threats that we see from Russia across domains. … We’re taking them very, very seriously,” Pentagon press secretary John Kirby said Wednesday. Russia’s aggressive actions have prompted U.S. European Command to raise its alert status to its highest level, and the activity in Ukraine, in particular, has prompted Biden’s top national security leaders to call their Ukrainian counterparts and other leaders in the region. The Hill
This is not saber rattling and it has been going on for much-much longer than two weeks. Russia’s escalatory actions in Ukraine must be viewed as Indications & Warnings (I&W, in intel speak) for an impending conflict in Eurasia, which – if broke out – would likely entangle the United States. To understand Putin’s motivations and how he plans to execute Russia’s anti-American strategy, consider pre-ordering my upcoming book Putin’s Playbook: Russia’s Secret Plan to Defeat America.
Kremlin says Russian military movements near Ukraine pose no threat . . . The Kremlin said on Monday that Russian military movements near its shared border with Ukraine posed no threat to Ukraine or anyone else and that Moscow moved troops around its country as it saw fit. NATO voiced concern last week over what it said was a big Russian military build-up near eastern Ukraine and as Russia warned that a serious escalation in the conflict in Ukraine’s Donbass region could “destroy” Ukraine. Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov on Monday told reporters on a conference call that Russia was always looking out for its own security. Reuters
Russia views Ukraine as part of its strategic buffer zone. Because of the perceived weakness of current US President, Putin will likely take provocative actions in the region – before the end of Biden’s term – to solidify Russia’s geopolitical dominance in Eurasia. We will discuss Russia’s threat to the United States at this Friday’s White House Dossier Happy Hour.
Coronavirus
US Grant to Wuhan Lab’s Coronavirus Research Was Never Scrutinized By HHS . . . An oversight board created to scrutinize research that would enhance highly dangerous pathogens did not review a National Institutes of Health grant that funded a lab in Wuhan, China, to genetically modify bat-based coronaviruses. Experts say the NIH grant describes scientists conducting gain-of-function research, a risky area of study that, in this case, made SARS-like viruses even more contagious. Federal funding for gain-of-function research was temporarily suspended in 2014 due to widespread scientific concerns it risked leaking supercharged viruses into the human population. Daily Caller
US puts J&J in charge of plant that botched COVID vaccine, removes AstraZeneca . . . The United States has put Johnson and Johnson in charge of a plant that ruined 15 million doses of its COVID-19 vaccine and has stopped British drugmaker AstraZeneca from using the facility, a senior health official said on Saturday. J&J said it was “assuming full responsibility” of the Emergent BioSolutions facility in Baltimore, reiterating that it will deliver 100 million doses to the government by the end of May. In a separate statement late Sunday, Emergent said it expects to align with the U.S. government and AstraZeneca to ramp down manufacturing for AstraZeneca’s COVID-19 vaccine at its Baltimore plant. Reuters
Why some Republicans think vaccine passports will backfire on Democrats . . . Republicans are seizing on the intensifying debate over coronavirus vaccination passports as part of their strategy for recapturing control of Congress in 2022. GOP strategists acknowledge the growing eagerness among Americans to be vaccinated against COVID-19. But many are also betting that emerging debates about so-called vaccine passports will help them play on voters’ fears of government overreach and privacy violations. The idea of vaccine passports has gained increasing attention in recent weeks as eligibility for COVID-19 vaccinations has rapidly expanded and Americans begin to see glints of a post-pandemic normal on the horizon. The White House has indicated that it will issue basic guidelines for such programs, though it has also said that it has no plans to create a centralized, federal requirement. The Hill
Politics
Biden administration ditches Trump’s ‘deficient’ asylum screening policy . . . Homeland Security has issued new rules requiring every affirmative-asylum decision to undergo a supervisor’s review, in a move the department described as “quality assurance” but which one former staffer said was an attempt to browbeat officers into approving more cases. The memo from U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services revokes a Trump-era policy that had chiefly limited reviews to decisions by new asylum officers, figuring that those on the job more than six months or who had done at least 150 cases no longer needed hand-holding. Washington Times
Biden faces backlash from US states to his clean energy agenda . . . Republican-led state capitols are considering bills that would punch holes in President Joe Biden’s green revamp of the US electricity system by promoting fossil fuels or piling costs on to renewable energy. The proposed legislation reverses a dynamic that played out over the past four years, when lawmakers in states controlled by Democrats moved to counteract Donald Trump’s climate rollbacks. One analyst described a “Biden backlash”.
Legislators have sharpened their focus since a winter storm caused blackouts in Texas and Midwestern states in February. Despite a varied set of causes, some have invoked the crisis to propose new constraints on solar and wind power. If enacted, the bills would cloud Biden’s objective of driving down carbon emissions from the electricity sector, one that he intends to bolster with a $2tn federal infrastructure plan announced last week. Financial Times
Gun control advocates applaud Biden funding plan but say more must be done . . . Gun control advocates are pushing President Biden to take more aggressive action on gun violence following three deadly mass shootings in as many weeks.
Democrats and outside groups are praising the $5 billion for community violence prevention programs tucked into the president’s massive infrastructure package, which was unveiled Wednesday and is likely to get the next big legislative push on Capitol Hill. But they say more must be done. The Hill
Trump calls for baseball boycott after MLB All-Star Game pulled from Atlanta . . . Major League Baseball pulled the All-Star Game from Atlanta over a voting law Georgia passed to try to reduce the chances for fraud. Donald Trump issued a statement Friday asking people to ditch baseball and other “woke” institutions.
“Baseball is already losing tremendous numbers of fans, and now they leave Atlanta with their All-Star Game because they are afraid of the Radical Left Democrats who do not want voter I.D., which is desperately needed, to have anything to do with our elections,” he said. “Boycott baseball and all of the woke companies that are interfering with Free and Fair Elections. Are you listening Coke, Delta, and all!” White House Dossier
National Security
US Allies Threatened By Russian Nukes Under Biden . . . Russia’s growing nuclear arsenal and President Biden’s inaction on nuclear weapons may put American allies in grave danger, Republicans and defense experts say. Vladimir Putin’s surging nuclear stockpile and military buildup leaves NATO allies all the more in need of protection from the U.S. military, according to Alan Mendoza, the executive director of the Henry Jackson Society, a British think tank. Mendoza said Europe needs more than Biden’s harsh words for Putin’s regime, particularly as Democrats weigh Pentagon cuts and advocate against America’s nuclear capabilities. “The world is going to get more rather than less dangerous ” Mendoza said. “What actually needs to be felt in Europe is that the U.S. will be there to support its NATO allies on the front lines.” Allies in Europe want American nukes to defend against Russia, Republicans and defense experts say. Washington Free Beacon
Having briefed, as a DIA senior intelligence officer, multiple heads of US Combatant Commands – who would be commanding US forces, in the event of a conflict involving Russia and the US, I concur with the British analyst’s conclusions. A Russia-NATO conflict, involving nuclear escalation is no longer a theoretical discussion.
International
Russia flexes its ‘sovereign internet’ with move to curb Twitter . . . The recent move by Russia’s internet censor to start slowing Twitter was a sign of Moscow’s resolve to take on Silicon Valley and marked a test of its new infrastructure for a “sovereign internet” less dependent on western tech companies. Exerting greater control over foreign social networks — the biggest outlet for dissent in Russia — has become more pressing for the Kremlin after supporters of jailed opposition activist Alexei Navalny used them to organize nationwide protests in January. Moscow has threatened to ban Twitter this month if it does not delete 3,168 posts that it says encourage illegal activities. The warning came after President Vladimir Putin said society would “collapse from the inside” if the internet did not “submit to formal legal rules and the moral laws of society”. Parallel web has been designed to give Moscow more control and reduce reliance on foreign tech. Financial Times
Money
Biden’s bet on taxes . . . President Biden and the Democrats are making a big bet that the politics of taxation have changed. In their view, the American public — frustrated by the economic impact of COVID-19 and years of stagnation for the middle class — is willing to countenance higher taxes, at least on corporations and the wealthy. The notion that there is a link between higher taxes and you not doing better is simply not the lived experience of the majority of people in the United States,” said Simon Rosenberg of the centrist New Democrat Network, contending that there is simply no data to support the idea that higher taxes per se slow economic growth. The Hill
NYC budget likely to tax business, top earners by billions . . . New York lawmakers are closing in on a state budget deal that will likely increase taxes on top earners and big businesses by billions of dollars — a move which would make wealthy New Yorkers fork over the highest taxes in the country. Legislators and Gov. Andrew Cuomo over the weekend ironed out the final terms of the Empire State’s mammoth $200 billion spending proposal — including a so-called “millionaire’s tax” — but broke on Sunday for the Easter holiday. They were expected to reconvene in Albany on Monday. Sources said the agreement is expected to include tax hikes and additional revenues totaling roughly $5 billion. New York Post
It is a mystery to me why anyone who has become successful – and not simply economically – because of the capitalism, would support radical liberals’ movement towards socialism. It has been demonstrated again and again that capitalism brings freedom and prosperity, while socialism results in poverty and suffering.
You should also know
It’s a Misperception That Firearms Aren’t Safe, Gun Shop Owner Says . . . Geneva Solomon is co-owner of Redstone Firearms in Burbank and Ontario, California, where she and her husband not only sell firearms but teach gun safety. Solomon joins the “Problematic Women” podcast to tell how she became passionate about gun ownership and safety. She also discusses her recent testimony before the Senate Judiciary Committee and why universal background checks will not lead to fewer crimes committed with guns. Daily Signal
You will not see Ms. Solomon sharing her views on CNN or MSNBC. As an African American, her views on Second Amendment are anathema to the leftist radicals.
Report: Suspect In Killing Of Capitol Police Officer Was A Nation Of Islam Supporter . . . The 25-year-old man who allegedly killed a Capitol police officer on Friday was a supporter of the Nation of Islam, the extremist group led by Louis Farrakhan. Noah Green was fatally shot after ramming his vehicle through a checkpoint at the Capitol. He hit two officers, killing one, 18-year Capitol police veteran William “Billy” Evans. Green was shot after exiting his vehicle with a knife and lunging at officers. Green, an Indiana native, was a supporter of the Nation of Islam, according to federal law enforcement officials familiar with the attack. Daily Caller
Oops.
YouTube Deleted 2.5 Million ‘Dislikes’ from Biden White House Videos . . . YouTube has deleted about 2.5 million ‘dislikes’ from videos on the official White House channel of President Joe Biden, according to data collected and posted online by a researcher who wished to remain anonymous. YouTube recently announced that it’s testing a new page design that hides the dislike count. “We have policies and systems in place to ensure that the engagement on YouTube is authentic, and remove any fraudulent metrics,” a YouTube spokesperson told The Epoch Times via email, but when asked, wouldn’t go into details on what criteria it uses to make these calls.The White House videos have seen these kinds of interventions on an ongoing basis, but it appears it’s only the dislikes that are disappearing. Epoch Times
Police Came To Disrupt A Canadian Church Service And The Pastor Was Not Having It . . . Pastor Artur Pawlowski of the Street Church in Alberta, Canada was not having it when police officers interrupted a Passover celebration Saturday night. A video went viral of Pawlowski yelling at the group of police officers who had disrupted the church gathering after the pastor shared the nearly five minute-long video on his Facebook page. “Please get out, get out of this property, immediately get out,” Pawlowski told the six police officers who were standing inside the entrance to the church. “Get out of this property immediately.” “I don’t want to hear a word,” he told the officers. “Out! Out! Out of this property immediately until you come back with a warrant, out.” Daily Caller
During a Passover service?! Seriously?
Disparate treatment in two fund-raising fraud cases renews debate over dual Justice system . . . Just a few short weeks apart, the U.S. Justice Department settled two major fund-raising cases involving foreign money injected into American elections. In February, a longtime Democratic bundler named Imaad Zuberi, who also donated to Donald Trump’s inauguration, was sentenced to 12 years in prison and millions in fines in a criminal information that alleged he routed foreign money into U.S elections, sometimes through straw donors. Last week, Nigerian-Lebanese billionaire Gilbert Chagoury, 75, a large donor to the Clinton Foundation, got a fine, no prison and deferred prosecution for allegedly routing his foreign money to straw donors to help Mitt Romney’s 2012 presidential campaign and some GOP congressional candidates. An associate also made a secret loan to Obama-era Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood, who failed to disclose the assistance.
The cases have remarkable similarities. Both involved foreign straw donations and tax issues. Both were prosecuted by the same office, the U.S. attorney’s office in Los Angeles. And both men are reported to have provided significant assistance to the U.S. government. The only thing that separates the two men’s cases is the severity of the punishment. Chagoury, two of his associates and LaHood got off easy with deferred or no prosecution deals while Zuberi received one of the stiffest penalties ever for campaign finance and lobbying violations. Just the News
Guilty Pleasures
Joe Biden Wouldn’t Harm a Flea . . . Political Cartoon. Washington Times
Something different today.
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A U.S. Capitol Police Officer was killed on Friday—and another one injured—after a man rammed into them trying to drive his car through a barricade outside the U.S. Capitol. The assailant was shot dead after lunging at the officers with a knife. Law enforcement officials said they do not believe the incident to be “terrorism-related”; the assailant was reportedly mentally unwell and a follower of Louis Farrakhan’s Nation of Islam.
Senior officials from the United States and Iran will indirectly meet in Vienna this week to jump start negotiations on how to restore the 2015 nuclear deal that former President Donald Trump abandoned in 2018.
According to the Washington Post, U.S. Customs and Border Patrol agents took more than 171,000 migrants into custody in March, the highest monthly level in at least 15 years.
A few days after Centers for Disease Control Director Rochelle Walensky told MSNBC that a new study showed vaccinated people “do not carry” the virus, the CDC walked back her claim. “Dr. Walensky spoke broadly during this interview,” an agency spokesperson said. “It’s possible that some people who are fully vaccinated could get COVID-19. The evidence isn’t clear whether they can spread the virus to others. We are continuing to evaluate the evidence.”
The CDC updated its travel guidance for fully vaccinated individuals over the weekend, saying they “can travel safely within the United States” without needing to get tested or self-quarantine.
Major League Baseball announced Friday it will move its All-Star Game and draft out of Atlanta due to Georgia’s new election law, two days after President Joe Biden expressed support for such a move. MLB “fundamentally supports voting rights for all Americans and opposes restrictions to the ballot box,” Commissioner Rob Manfred said in a statement, adding that moving the events out of Georgia was the “best way to demonstrate our values.”
The United States confirmed 35,554 new cases of COVID-19 yesterday per the Johns Hopkins University COVID-19 Dashboard, with 2.4 percent of the 1,502,241 tests reported coming back positive. An additional 220 deaths were attributed to the virus on Sunday, bringing the pandemic’s American death toll to 554,999. According to the CDC, 32,105 Americans are currently hospitalized with COVID-19. Meanwhile, 3,365,324 COVID-19 vaccine doses were administered yesterday, with 106,214,924 Americans having now received at least one dose.
A Very, Very Trumpy Senate Primary in Ohio
When Sen. Rob Portman announced in January that he wouldn’t seek reelection next year, it sent a political shockwave throughout Ohio. Few anticipated the move, but within weeks, there were already two viable Republican candidates running to take his place—and plenty more are coming.
For a piece up on the site, Declan spoke to several contenders—declared and potential—about how the race is shaping up, what sets them apart from other candidates, and what role they anticipate former President Trump will play in the contest. (Spoiler: A big one.)
Ohio is not the swing state it once was—elections analyst J. Miles Coleman told Declan it’s “stampeding rightward”—so whoever secures the Republican nomination is overwhelmingly likely to win the general. With about 60 percent of Republican voters still wedded to the former president, it makes sense that the candidates are scrambling to outdo one another to win Trump’s endorsement.
Who’s the favorite in the race?
It’s exceedingly early, but former Ohio treasurer Josh Mandel has run for Senate twice already—in 2012 and 2018—so he has an existing base of support and a pile of campaign cash. But Mandel 3.0 is … unlike its earlier iterations.
Mandel’s campaign rhetoric has only heated up since getting in the race. The presidential election? “Stolen.” Ohio GOP Chair Jane Timken? A “weathervane” and a “turncoat.” Rep. Anthony Gonzalez? “Traitor.” Ohio’s Republican Gov. Mike DeWine? “Total squish establishment failure.” Vice President Kamala Harris? “Hates what we stand for as Americans.” Joe Biden? “Not all there” and “an absolute sugar daddy to illegal immigrants.” A campaign pitch captioned “HUNTING RINOs IS FUN 🦏 🎯” featured a photo of a gun-wielding Mandel from his days in the Marine Corps. His Twitter account was temporarily suspended after he asked his followers which type of “illegals” commit more crimes: “Muslim Terrorists” or “Mexican Gangbangers.”
Mandel’s recent turn is alienating some longtime allies. “I was lined up to be a supporter of his campaign,” said one person who’s known Mandel for years and considers him a friend. “I don’t know what I’m going to do now, just based on some of the crap that he’s done over the past couple of weeks. It’s really disheartening to see.”
The person, who requested anonymity due to the nature of his relationship with Mandel, still believes the former treasurer will win—but he isn’t sure he wants him to. “I am at a point now where I can’t figure out if he actually believes this crap, or if this is just part of gaining the [Trump] endorsement,” he said. “I’ve got a public reputation—I can’t raise money for this guy. Like how the hell am I going to raise money for him when he’s, out of both sides of his mouth, he can’t shut up about the Muslim thing. It’s ridiculous, and it’s totally offensive.”
What about Jane Timken, the chair of Ohio’s Republican Party?
She jumped in the race about a week after Mandel did, and reportedly came close to getting the coveted Trump endorsement before Trump’s advisers convinced him to let the race play out a little longer. The former president is also apparently a little peeved Timken voiced support for Rep. Anthony Gonzalez after he voted to impeach back in January—so she reversed course and called for Gonzalez to resign instead.
Timken—who recently threw her weight behind an Ohio lawmaker’s proposal to rename Mosquito Lake State Park after Trump—mentioned the former president by name three times in the first 32 seconds of our interview, acknowledging the prominent role she expects him to play in the primary. “I’ve always been a proud supporter of President Trump,” she said. “He knows how hard I’ve worked to deliver Ohio for him in 2020 and all the work that I’ve put in for the last four years. And I would gladly have his endorsement and would be honored. President Trump is the leader of our party. He’s going to have an outside [sic] influence in Republican politics going forward, and I welcome his endorsement.”
“Before [Timken] became [Ohio GOP] Chairman, John Kasich had transformed the party organization into an anti-Trump mess,” her campaign website reads. “With the support of President Trump, Jane cleaned house, got rid of the Kasich decay, and completely transformed the Party into a well-oiled machine that won conservative victories and advanced an America First agenda at every level—and delivered a second victory for President Trump in our state.”
Who else is thinking about getting in?
Lots of top Republicans with an R next to their name are considering it, but Reps. Mike Turner and Bill Johnson, state Sen. Matt Dolan, and author/venture capitalist J.D. Vance are considered among the likeliest. Declan talked to all of them except Vance.
“I think we still remain a swing state, and so I think that we have to have a message that appeals to all voters,” Rep. Mike Turner said the morning after he announced he was considering a run. “And I certainly believe that being able to have solutions that respond to the needs of Ohio and the needs of our country necessitate that you have a message for all Ohioans. And not just a partisan message.”
Turner—the longtime mayor of Dayton, Ohio, who has served in the U.S House of Representatives since 2003—would bring something else to the race that Timken and Mandel can not: legislative experience. “Ohio has a history of electing people who, Day 1, can do the job,” he said. “And I think that’s what people are looking for. So we’re doing a tour through Ohio, talking to voters to find out what their issues are, what they think are important, and how that matches both my experience, my work that I’ve actually done, the accomplishments that I have in Congress.”
Rep. Bill Johnson, an Air Force veteran who has represented Ohio’s 6th Congressional District since 2011, may put forth a similar, albeit Trumpier, pitch. “I haven’t made a decision yet, but I am considering [a Senate run],” he said last week, before taking a thinly veiled shot at Timken. “There’s a big difference between being a party chairwoman where you don’t have to take a position on the issues, and having a voting record where you have to. … It’s one thing to say that you’ve been a supporter of the president, it’s something else to have the voting record that you can prove that.”
And Johnson—whose rural and industrial district includes much of Ohio’s eastern border—does have that voting record. “I don’t know if you saw the survey that came out by Axios last fall that has me ranked number one in Ohio in terms of supporting Donald Trump’s policies,” he boasted. “Let’s face it: Donald Trump’s policies were good for our state, they were good for my region.”
Among the most notable events of 2020—along with the pandemic and presidential election—was the death of George Floyd. The sight of a helpless black man dying while being restrained by police—captured on sickening viral video by a bystander—electrified the nation, sparking a wave of protests against police brutality that pulled thousands of Americans out of their homes and into the streets. At times, these protests descended into rioting and violence, with criminal elements smashing police cars and looting businesses.
Several officers were restraining Floyd when he died, but the face of the event was Derek Chauvin, who knelt on Floyd’s neck for minutes as Floyd lost consciousness and bystanders begged him to move. Shortly after Floyd’s death, Chauvin was arrested; last week, his trial got underway. The jury faces a herculean task: Taking an explosive event at the heart of a political movement and trying to render blind, impartial justice about it.
The prosecution’s strategy has been simple: Using the viral video as their cornerstone, they have called witnesses to attempt to prove that the footage depicts Chauvin knowingly using excessive force in a manner that led to Floyd’s death.
On Tuesday, the jury heard from Darnella Frazier, the teenager who recorded the video. “I heard George Floyd saying, ‘I can’t breathe. Please get off of me. I can’t breathe,’” she said, her voice shaking. “He cried for his mom. He was in pain.”
“It’s been nights I’ve stayed up apologizing to George Floyd for not doing more and not physically interacting and not saving his life,” she added. “But it’s not what I should have done, it’s what [Chauvin] should have done.”
A bombshell report from the New York Times’ Shane Goldmacher over the weekend showed that Donald Trump’s reelection campaign relied heavily on pre-checked recurring payment boxes that duped many of the former president’s supporters into donating much more money to the effort than they intended. Certain Democratic fundraising platforms have used similar tactics, but Trump’s campaign took it to an extreme: In the last two and a half months of 2020, the Republican National Committee and the Trump campaign were forced to issue $64.3 million worth of refunds to more than 530,000 donors, while the Biden campaign and DNC issued $5.6 million to 37,000 donors. “Stacy Blatt was in hospice care last September listening to Rush Limbaugh’s dire warnings about how badly Donald J. Trump’s campaign needed money when he went online and chipped in everything he could: $500,” Goldmacher writes. “It was a big sum for a 63-year-old battling cancer and living in Kansas City on less than $1,000 per month. But that single contribution — federal records show it was his first ever — quickly multiplied. Another $500 was withdrawn the next day, then $500 the next week and every week through mid-October, without his knowledge — until Mr. Blatt’s bank account had been depleted and frozen. When his utility and rent payments bounced, he called his brother, Russell, for help. What the Blatts soon discovered was $3,000 in withdrawals by the Trump campaign in less than 30 days. They called their bank and said they thought they were victims of fraud.”
Facebook employees have expressed concern in recent weeks that the Chinese Communist Party is using the social media platform “as a conduit for state propaganda,” Newley Purnell writes in a Wall Street Journal report. Facebook is banned in China, but the country’s government has purportedly been buying advertisements to be displayed around the world that show joyous Uyghur Muslims “thriving” in the Xinjiang region where the U.S. government has determined genocide is occurring. “A Facebook spokesman said that the ads taken out by Beijing pertaining to Xinjiang don’t violate current policies so long as the advertisers follow Facebook’s rules when purchasing them,” Purnell notes. But employees are hoping to pressure leadership until the policies change. “It’s time our platform takes action to fight misinformation on the Uighur genocide,” one wrote in an internal message board.
Florida Republican Rep. Matt Gaetz allegedly showed nude photos and videos of women he said he’d slept with to other lawmakers, including while on the House floor, sources tell CNN https://t.co/nL3BB1G8yz
Former congressman and White House Chief of Staff Mick Mulvaney joined Sarah and Steve on Friday’s Dispatch Podcastfor a wide-ranging and illuminating conversation about the trajectory of the House Freedom Caucus, his relationship with former Speaker John Boehner, what his day-to-day life in the Trump White House was like, and whether he’d have voted to impeach the former president after January 6.
In his Easter Sunday French Press, David discusses new Gallup polling showing church membership has fallen below 50 percent in the United States for the first time. “So many Christians fear a seemingly inevitable secular future. There’s a deep anxiety for our children and grandchildren, and real alarm that the church may face deepening isolation and perhaps even persecution,” he writes. But in the spirit of Easter, David makes the case that Christians should not give up hope. “The Christian faith is a resurrection faith. It is rooted in an eternal reality that not even death itself can prevail against the sovereignty and love of the Creator God. In rebirth, we change. We transform. Or, to put it another way, when it comes to the health and strength of the American church, Good Friday is in process. But fear not: We know that Sunday is on its way.”
GOP Rep. Matt Gaetz is in incredibly hot water after it leaked that the Justice Department is reportedly investigating him for allegedly having a sexual relationship with a 17-year-old girl. Gaetz’s time in Congress is likely coming to an end, but in his Friday G-File, Jonah argues that the Floridian was clearly unfit for public office long these reports were public. “We have politicians who think their job is to be pundits and social media trolls,” he writes. “That’s literally why they run for office—not to get things done, but to become famous for complaining about what is being done. They don’t know how to legislate or govern, and they think being concerned with such things is the hallmark of suckers and losers.”
Speaking of Gaetz, Chris Stirewalt also weighs in. He takes apart the suggestion by some that the real problem is Gaetz’s hypocrisy. “No matter what prosecutors find, we already know Gaetz’s conduct in office was unacceptable,” he writes.
Kemberlee Kaye: “Hoping everyone had a wonderful weekend.”
Mary Chastain: “I hope everyone had a great Easter! I also want to congratulate those who entered the Catholic Church during the Easter Vigil. Welcome home!”
Vijeta Uniyal: “The Biden administration has lifted sanctions and travel ban on the chief prosecutor of the International Criminal Court (ICC) who launched an investigation against the U.S. and Israeli military personnel for alleged war crimes. President Biden had ordered a review of the Trump-era sanctions shortly after entering the Oval Office. Secretary of State Antony Blinken on Friday announced the lifting of sanctions on ICC officials. He called former President Donald Trump’s countermeasures against the Hague-based tribunal “inappropriate.””
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Georgia on Everyone’s Mind
Democrats, their cohorts in the media, and woke companies like Delta, PayPal, Major League Baseball, Coca-Cola and others are clamoring to cancel an entire state based on lies about its recent voting law. President Biden said the new Georgia voting legislation is “Jim Crow in the 21st century.” Self-appointed, unelected leader Stacey Abrams echoed that sentiment, but former NJ Governor Chris Christie was on ABC’s “This Week” to call Abrams out. From The Daily Post USA:
“Christie went on to point out that Stacey Abrams, the major voting rights activist who narrowly lost the state’s 2018 gubernatorial race to current Gov. Brian Kemp, had just visited New Jersey to praise its expanded voting access efforts, which actually provides less access than in Georgia.“Stacey Abrams was in New Jersey, in my state, praising Phil Murphy this week for a voting law where New Jersey early voting is nine days,” he continued after facing considerable pushback from the liberal members of the panel, “Half of what Georgia’s is.”
“Yet she’s on TV in New Jersey — I saw it myself — saying that this is one of the greatest voting expansion bills we’ve ever seen, but this is Jim Crow? I’m sorry, George,” he said, referring to Biden’s comments.
Facing continued negative reaction from the panel, specifically on his lying claim, Christie doubled down, noting the importance of Biden’s falsehoods on the Georgia legislation.
“Listen, here’s what Joe Biden’s got to live with when he wakes up this morning on Easter morning: he is doing exactly what he sat around in the campaign and the transition and accused Donald Trump of doing,” Christie began.
“He is lying to cause racial divisions in this country. That’s what he accused Donald Trump of doing and he’s a liar and a hypocrite this morning.”
You can read the full text of the law here, but Liz Wheeler has a good rundown of the major points:
So GA’s election law:
– Expands weekend voting
– Makes mail-in drop boxes permanent
– Allows food & water (bans “linewarming”)
– Requires voter ID (GA provides free ID)
– Makes absentee window longer than some lib states
Literally everything Dems say about this law is false.
Questions The Media Should Ask President Biden About His Call For Economic Sanctions On Georgia (The Federalist)
Hollywood Celebrities Cheer Major League Baseball Pulling All-Star Game from Georgia: ‘Home Run’ (Breitbart)
Georgia Democrats stare down a mob of their own making (Washington Examiner)
Trump Says To Boycott MLB And ‘All Of The Woke Companies’ Not Supporting Election Security (The Federalist)
Crenshaw, Rubio slam Biden, MLB over Georgia boycott, ask if China will be next (Fox News)
Another Murder Ignored by the Media for Going Against Preferred Narrative
On Friday, a man rammed his car into a barricade at the U.S. Capitol, killing one Capitol police officer and severely injuring another. The Daily Wire reported, “The deceased assailant who rammed two U.S. Capitol Police officers Friday and emerged from his car wielding a knife before police shot him has been identified as a 25-year-old African American man from Indiana who believed Louis Farrakhan is an incarnation of Jesus Christ.” More details from The Federalist:
“According to the acting chief of the U.S. Capitol Police Yogananda Pittman, the officers at the scene engaged the suspect” but reported that “he did not respond to verbal commands.”“The suspect did start lunging toward US Capitol Police officers, at which time US Capitol Police officers fired upon the suspect,” she explained. “At this time the suspect has been pronounced deceased.”
One Capitol Police officer is also dead [now identified as William Evans] following the incident. While authorities reported that “at least one of the officers was stabbed,” it is unclear why the officer “succumbed to his injuries.” The second Capitol Police officer remains in the hospital in critical condition.“
What I’m Reading This Week
In February, I posted about my weight loss over the last couple years. One thing became apparent after a few weeks — replacing bad habits with good habits is key for me. You see, I’m lazy 😂. If the path of least resistance is healthy, yummy food options in the fridge rather than waiting 30 minutes for UberEats, I’ll take it. This week I’m reading a book I’ve been seeing on the bestseller lists for months — Atomic Habits: An Easy & Proven Way to Build Good Habits & Break Bad Ones by James Clear. From the description:
“If you’re having trouble changing your habits, the problem isn’t you. The problem is your system. Bad habits repeat themselves again and again not because you don’t want to change, but because you have the wrong system for change. You do not rise to the level of your goals. You fall to the level of your systems. Here, you’ll get a proven system that can take you to new heights.
Clear is known for his ability to distill complex topics into simple behaviors that can be easily applied to daily life and work. Here, he draws on the most proven ideas from biology, psychology, and neuroscience to create an easy-to-understand guide for making good habits inevitable and bad habits impossible. Along the way, readers will be inspired and entertained with true stories from Olympic gold medalists, award-winning artists, business leaders, life-saving physicians, and star comedians who have used the science of small habits to master their craft and vault to the top of their field.”
Fingers crossed that there are success stories on business leaders who overcame late-night snacking and Olympians who learned to stop going to bed in makeup.
A Case of the Mondays
BEST April Fool’s joke from South Australia Police: Exciting New Dog Operations Initiative (YouTube — be sure to pay attention to the acronym)
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Apr 05, 2021 01:00 am
It’s wonderful to be able to travel to a beautiful spot like Hawaii, but the tradeoff is being treated like a prisoner, complete with GPS monitors and endless requests to “show me your papers”. Read More…
Migrants are Islam’s ‘eye’ on the West
Apr 05, 2021 01:00 am
Rather than giving something back to those Western nations taking them in, Muslims willingly residing in the West are exhorted to hate, disavow, cajole, and spy on their benefactors. Read more…
The Repressive party
Apr 05, 2021 01:00 am
The Democrats work hard to control law-abiding citizens, but part of the repression they visit on them is allowing criminals free rein. Read more…
A report on the State of New York
Apr 05, 2021 01:00 am
If you value liberty, freedom of speech, and effective government, the one place you don’t want to be is New York. Read more…
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The public debate over gender wage disparities in sports exploded when a star Golden State Warriors player said he was tired of hearing WNBA players complain about it. Draymond Gree … Read more
Secretary of Energy Jennifer Granholm didn’t deny claims over the weekend that tax hikes associated with the Biden administration’s more than $2 trillion infrastructure plan could have a ruinous economic effect on middle-class Americans.During an interview on Sunday, CNN host Jake Tapper confronted the energy secretary on the issue, citin … Read more
CBS News’ “60 minutes” was blasted on Sunday by a top Democratic official in Florida and the state’s largest grocery store chain after it aired a deceptively edited segment insinuating that Governor Ron DeSantis (R) engaged in a “pay to play” scheme with COVID-19 vaccine distribution. On Sunday evening, CBS News’ Sharyn Alfonsi … Read more
Since the insurrection at the U.S. Capitol, former President Donald Trump and his Republican allies have pushed false and misleading accounts to downplay the event that left five dead and scores of others wounded.
Across the United States, law enforcement agencies are scrambling to better protect Asian communities amid a wave of violence targeting them since lockdowns to cope with the coronavirus pandemic began about a year ago. We look at the fight back against anti-Asian hate crimes.
‘The Trial of the Chicago 7’ took the prize for best ensemble and Chadwick Boseman, who died last year, picked up another award for his final role as an ambitious 1930s trumpet player in ‘Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom’.
↑ Cast members accept the Screen Actors Guild award for Outstanding Performance by a Cast in a Motion Picture for ‘The Trial of the Chicago 7’, April 4, 2021
WORLD
↑ Damaged houses are seen at an area affected by flash floods after heavy rains in East Flores, East Nusa Tenggara province, Indonesia, April 4, 2021
Israeli prosecutors accused Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of treating favours as “currency” at the opening of a corruption trial which, along with an inconclusive election, has clouded his prospects of remaining in office.
British Prime Minister Boris Johnson says everyone in England will be able to take a COVID-19 test twice a week in a new drive to track the pandemic as society reopens and the vaccine rollout continues at a rapid rate. As much of Europe enters new lockdowns, Johnson has set out a staggered plan to ease restrictions.
Shares of Tesla surged nearly 8% in pre-market trading, after the world’s most valuable carmaker posted record deliveries as a solid demand for its electric cars offset the impact of a global shortage of chips.
GameStop shares fell 12% after the video game retailer said it may sell up to 3.5 million shares as it tries to take advantage of the stock price surge following the Reddit-driven trading frenzy earlier this year.
South Korea’s LG Electronics will wind down its loss-making mobile division after failing to find a buyer, a move that is set to make it the first major smartphone brand to completely withdraw from the market.
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Hunter Biden says the laptop computer possessed by a Delaware repair shop owner with images of him in compromising situations and with texts and emails regarding his controversial foreign business… Read more…
During renovations, Sara Ahmed learned her new home once was the Black Like Me Doll Museum. After donating a portion of the dolls to children in need, she is looking to donate the remaining dolls to a museum. Read more…
“He absolutely, definitely, died for our sins. He absolutely, definitely, rose from the dead. And He absolutely, definitely, is alive today.” Read more…
(ZEROHEDGE) – With Covid test results now becoming the key to people doing the once basic things they used to be able to do without turning over personal health records… Read more…
(FOX NEWS) – The United States Capitol was locked down on Friday due to an “exterior security threat,” as the United States Capitol Police (USCP) said two officers were injured… Read more…
(ISRAEL365NEWS) — The Regavim Movement filed a petition against the Jerusalem Municipality on Tuesday, demanding law enforcement against an illegal subterranean tunnel dug by the Church of the Dormition on…Read more…
(SCITECHDAILY) — Rokote Laboratories Finland Ltd., a newly-founded academic spin-out based in Finland is working to develop and introduce to the markets a nasal spray vaccine against COVID. The vaccine…Read more…
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47.) ABC
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Morning Rundown
Florida officials urge residents to evacuate amid threat of wastewater flooding: Florida officials are urging residents in the surrounding areas of a wastewater storage pond to heed evacuation orders ahead of a potential overflow of polluted water. On Friday, the Manatee County Public Safety Department warned of an “imminent threat” of an uncontrolled release of wastewater from the former Piney Point phosphate processing plant in Palmetto after a breach was detected in one of the walls of the southern reservoir. An estimated 390 million gallons of water remained in the pond as of Saturday morning, according to the Florida Department of Environmental Protection. Residents within a 1-mile radius of the plant were ordered to evacuate, and Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis declared a state of emergency Saturday in Manatee County as well as neighboring Hillsborough and Pinellas counties. Controlled discharges from the reservoir of about 30 million gallons per day began on Tuesday, DeSantis said. Florida’s National Guard is in the process of dropping off pumps to redirect the water into surrounding waterways. The water being discharged is slightly acidic but not to a concerning or toxic level, officials said. The concerns for the quality of the water being discharged are currently “less than the risk of everyone’s health and safety” due to the potential for flooding, DeSantis said Sunday. More than 300 homes have been evacuated, he added. It could take between 10 to 12 days for the situation to stabilize, Manatee County Administrator Scott Hopes said Saturday.
CDC says fully vaccinated Americans can safely travel, but recommends against nonessential trips: Fully vaccinated individuals can safely travel inside the U.S. and internationally, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said in new guidance released Friday, though they should still wear a mask when traveling on public transportation, including airplanes. The CDC says recent research on the effectiveness of the COVID-19 vaccines indicates there is low risk to vaccinated individuals and that they can travel without a COVID-19 test or quarantining after traveling. Still, the CDC is not “recommending” travel at this time due to the rising number of cases, such as those in Michigan, according to CDC Director Rochelle Walensky. The CDC is only recommending testing for travelers who are returning to the U.S. from international travel — keeping in place an order it announced in mid-January. For fully vaccinated Americans, this updated CDC guidance relieves much of the stress that comes with incorporating COVID-19 restrictions into travel plans. The CDC does note, however, that Americans still need to follow the guidelines set by other countries for international travel, including testing and quarantining. The CDC is still recommending unvaccinated people avoid all nonessential travel. “We haven’t changed our guidance for nonessential travel at all. We are not recommending travel at this time, especially for unvaccinated individuals,” Walensky said.
Deb Haaland creates federal unit to investigate missing and murdered Native Americans: In an effort to investigate thousands of unsolved cases of missing and murdered Native Americans, a new Bureau of Indian Affairs unit has been launched by Interior Secretary Deb Haaland. The Missing & Murdered Unit will work with tribal investigators and the FBI. It will also support marshal law enforcement resources throughout Indian country, and help uncover new information in witness testimony, material evidence and suspects. According to the Urban Indian Health Institute, homicide is the third-leading cause of death among American Indian and Alaska Native women aged 10 to 24. The Justice Department also found that Native women are victims of murder over 10 times the national average. “The new MMU unit will provide the resources and leadership to prioritize these cases, and coordinate resources to hold people accountable, keep our communities safe and provide closure for families,” Haaland said in a statement. Haaland, a New Mexico congresswoman and the first Indigenous Cabinet secretary, made this issue a priority of hers during her confirmation hearings. “Whether it’s a missing family member or a homicide investigation, these efforts will be all hands-on deck,” Haaland said. “We are fully committed to assisting tribal communities with these investigations, and the MMU will leverage every resource available to be a force-multiplier in preventing these cases from becoming cold case investigations.”
82-year-old goes viral with stunning virtual church outfits: One woman has become an online sensation for dressing to the nines to attend virtual church services. Dr. La Verne Ford Wimberly, a parishioner of the Metropolitan Baptist Church in Tulsa, Oklahoma, dressed up for a year’s worth of consecutive Sundays, keeping a calendar to make sure she didn’t repeat outfits. “I wanted to not only keep myself motivated, but I wanted to help keep others motivated as well,” she said. “To inspire them and encourage them, and kind of eradicate some types of forms of depression, isolation, fear and despair.” She added, “It just kind of gave all of us a boost, that we would eventually get out of this pandemic, things are going to be alright and then, eventually, we will return back to Metropolitan Baptist Church on a regular basis.” She credits the motivation behind her viral looks to her strong faith and she strives to inspire others. “With the hurricanes and floods and wildfires [and mass shootings], people are looking for hope,” she said. “They’re looking for something or someone to kind of elevate them, and something positive.”
GMA Must-Watch
This morning on “GMA,” Melissa Garcia shows off unique ways to work denim into your wardrobe — with the help from some “GMA” staffers! And Grammy winner Brandi Carlile joins us live to talk about her new memoir, “Broken Horses.” Plus, Ben Falcone joins us to talk about “Thunder Force,” a new superhero comedy film he wrote and directed. All this and more only on “GMA.”
For many, the next Covid-19 pandemic challenge is a return to “normalcy.” This morning we are looking at what going back to the office means, plus Trump ditching his iconic brand and how a Chicago teacher ignited a firestorm over one country’s Nazi legacy.
“We’re at this point where it’s like, ‘I’ve lost a lot this year, but what have I gained?'” said one clinical psychologist. “I think, in particular when it comes to work, there’s been a lot of gains.”
Experts say that both employers and employees need to be flexible and open-minded when it comes to going back to the office to help make the transition easier.
Employers need to “accept that there’s going to be some anxiety” and “normalize” the fact that it is going to be another challenging chapter, said one financial psychology expert.
Facebook groups have been crucial for information-sharing, especially during a pandemic and in a growing number of areas where local newspapers have been shuttered or gutted. But lawmakers and experts have been critical, claiming the mostly private spaces have become hubs for coronavirus and extremism.
Just like Prince changing his name to a symbol, the man who spent a lifetime putting his name on things is rebranding himself as a number. Marketing experts are intrigued — is he playing 3D chess or is there a more simple explanation?
The dominant narrative in Lithuania has long been one of resistance to both the Soviets and the Nazis. But a painstakingly detailed book recently published by a Chicago English teacher has turned that long-held belief on its head — and ignited a firestorm.
By Jake Whitman, Cynthia McFadden and Rich Schapiro | Read more
In 92 countries around the world, a vast but little-known network of roughly 60,000 Catholic nuns are fighting human trafficking. The work they do is often dangerous and daring, confronting pimps on darkened streets and patrolling dusty alleys that host brothels. “The pimps got to the point with the nuns where they just left them alone,” said a sex-trafficking survivor. “Because nothing you say or do is going to run them away.”
All coffee drinkers should keep a French press in their kitchen. Here’s why.
One SNL thing
“Saturday Night Live” roasted U.S. Rep. Matt Gaetz following last week’s reports that federal investigators were looking into allegations that he was involved in sex trafficking.
Gaetz, a Republican from Florida, has repeatedly denied the allegations and said they’re part of an extortion plot in which he’s the victim.
But on “SNL,” Gaetz played a starring role on the fictitious Britney Spears show, “Oops, You Did it Again.”
From NBC’s Chuck Todd, Mark Murray and Carrie Dann
FIRST READ: What to watch for in politics this week – and over the next month
A Democratic debate in Virginia. Two upcoming speeches by President Biden. Early voting in TX-6. The runoff in LA-2. And Biden’s 100th day in office.
Photo by Drew Angerer/Getty Images
Here are the political events we’re watching this week, as well as over the next month:
Tuesday, April 6: The five Democrats running for Virginia governor will participate in their first party-sanctioned debate, beginning at 7:00 pm ET.
Tuesday, April 6: President Biden will travel to Alexandria, Va., where he’ll speak on the state of the nation’s vaccination efforts.
Wednesday, April 7: Biden is set to deliver remarks selling his $2 trillion infrastructure bill.
April 19: Early voting is slated to begin in the TX-6 special congressional election to replace the late Rep. Ron Wright, R-Texas, who passed away in February after contracting the coronavirus.
April 24: The runoff in LA-2 between Democrats Troy Carter and Karen Carter Peterson takes place; the winner will fill the congressional seat vacated by Biden administration official Cedric Richmond.
April 29: Biden’s 100th day in office (if you count Inauguration Day as Day 1).
April 29: Former VP Mike Pence is set to address conservatives in South Carolina.
April 30: Biden will have completed his first *full* 100 days as president.
May 1: TX-6 special congressional election takes place.
Dems and Republicans spar over Biden’s infrastructure plan
“Meet the Press” yesterday featured key Dem arguments in favor of President Biden’s $2 trillion infrastructure plan, as well as the key GOP arguments against it.
Biden Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg: “We have fallen to 13th in the world, in terms of our transportation infrastructure, and continuing to head in the wrong direction because we’ve been failing to invest for a generation. The American Jobs Plan is our chance to fix that.”
More from Buttigieg: “We know that we as a country can afford to make big investments in infrastructure. We just need to make sure that corporations are paying their fair share. That’s what this plan is going to do,” he said, referring to the plan’s proposal to raise the corporate tax rate to pay for the increased spending.
Sen. Roger Wicker, R-Miss.: “What the president proposed this week is not an infrastructure bill. It’s a huge tax increase, for one thing. And it’s a tax increase on small businesses, on job creators in the United States of America.”
More Wicker: “The worst way to pay for it is to tax job creators.”
TWEET OF THE DAY: Scamming your supporters
Data Download: The numbers you need to know today
530,000: The number of refunds issued by the Trump campaign and the RNC to online donors in the final two and a half months of the 2020 election.
30,843,572: The number of confirmed cases of coronavirus in the United States, per the most recent data from NBC News and health officials. (That’s 37,663 more than yesterday morning.)
560,709: The number of deaths in the United States from the virus so far, per the most recent data from NBC News.
165,053,746: Number of vaccine doses administered in the U.S.
17.3 percent: The share of Americans who are fully vaccinated
24: The number of days left for Biden to reach his 100-day vaccination goal.
Campaign news you might have missed last week
Our First Read newsletter took last week off (we hope you and yours had a Happy Easter and Passover). But our blog had you covered on key campaign news that took place last week:
In the NM-1 special election to fill Deb Haaland’s seat, Democrats selected Melanie Stansbury as their nominee, and she’ll face Republican Mark Moores and Libertarian Chris Manning on June 1.
A PPIC poll found a majority of California voters – 56 percent – opposing the recall of Dem Gov. Gavin Newsom, while 40 percent said they support it.
And Kentucky’s legislatureoverrode the veto of Dem Gov. Andy Beshear regarding the legislation it passed that requires the governor to fill any Senate vacancy with an appointee from the party that currently holds the seat.
And the number of the week is…
Don’t miss the pod from over the weekend, which zeroed in on some new data about Americans’ support for same-sex marriage.
ICYMI: What ELSE is happening in the world?
The Capitol Police union is warning that there could be an exodus of staff after the most recent attack.
The U.S. has shuttered a once-secret part of the Guantanamo Bay detention facility.
Congressional Republicans feel confident that their attacks on Biden’s spending are taking hold with voters.
Former president Donald Trump is focusing his brand on a new number — 45.
Republicans and corporate America used to be closely aligned. Now, that bond is being strained.
Politico looks at Liz Cheney’s success so far in fighting back against Trumpworld.
Some Republicans are pulling their support after a Korean-American GOP candidate in the TX-6 special election made racist comments about Chinese immigrants.
The number of new COVID-19 cases is starting to creep up around the U.S., but doctors have not reached a consensus on whether the country is now in a fourth wave. Also, the Capitol police officer who was injured in Friday’s attack that killed his colleague is now out of the hospital. All that and all that matters in today’s Eye Opener. Your world in 90 seconds.
Hunter Biden defends Burisma role, says Trump used it in “illegitimate way”
Reflecting on his position at the Ukrainian company, Biden said he did not “fully comprehend the level to which this former administration and the people around it would go.”
Atlanta mayor on MLB relocating All-Star game over Georgia voting law
Atlanta Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms joined “CBS This Morning” to discuss the impact on her city, plus her response to Governor Brian Kemp doubling down on the law, and the calls to boycott from both sides.
As air travel starts to pick up, health officials are warning of another spike in COVID-19 cases. CBS News spoke to a health expert who says a decrease in testing, relaxing public health measures and new variants are contributing to a spread of COVID-19 in several states.
As fears of catastrophic flooding in Florida begin to decrease, there is growing concern that a controlled release of wastewater to prevent flooding could have dire environmental consequences.
Suicide was 11th leading cause of U.S. mortality in 2020. There was a lot of speculation last year that business shutdowns and stay-at-home orders associated with COVID-19 would cause suicide rates to spike. Now, new evidence published in TheJournal of the American Medical Association (JAMA) suggests this prediction may have been wrong. In fact, the number of U.S. deaths by suicide seems to have been slightly lower in 2020 than it was in the four preceding years.
Last year saw 44,834 Americans kill themselves, according to provisional data from the National Center for Health Statistics (NCHS) and the National Vital Statistics System (NVSS). That’s down from 47,511 in 2019, 48,344 in 2018, 47,173 in 2017, and 44,965 in 2016.
We do not know from the data in question whether the number of attempted suicides changed at all last year.
It’s also worth noting that another category of so-called deaths of despair—drug overdose deaths—did increase significantly in 2020.
In total, the U.S. saw 3,358,814 deaths last year—up 17.7 percent from 2019—according to the provisional data. The 2020 numbers include 345,323 deaths from COVID-19, making the novel coronavirus the new third-leading cause of death.
Suicide was the 11th leading cause of death last year, having been pushed out of the top 10 by COVID-19.
“Cause-of-death data are based on the underlying cause of death, which is the disease or condition responsible for initiating the chain of events leading to death,” notes JAMA. The provisional data it reported last week are “based on currently available death certificate data from the states to the NCHS as of March 21, 2021. Final mortality data will be available approximately 11 months after the end of the data year.”
The leading U.S. cause of death last year remained heart disease, with 690,882 heart disease deaths last year. This number has been slowly but steadily ticking up over the past five years, from 633,842 heart disease deaths in 2015.
The second leading cause of death remained cancer, with slightly fewer cancer deaths last year than in 2017–2019. The provisional data list 598,932 cancer deaths last year.
Unintentional injuries were the fourth leading cause of U.S. mortality in 2020—with 192,176 deaths last year, up from 173,040 in 2019. “Increases in unintentional injury deaths in 2020 were largely driven by drug overdose deaths,” according to the JAMA analysis.
These were followed by stroke (159,050 deaths), chronic lower respiratory diseases (151,637 deaths), Alzheimer’s disease (133,382 deaths), diabetes (101,106 deaths), influenza and pneumonia (53,495), and kidney disease (52,260 deaths).
“Most of the increase in deaths from 2019 to 2020 was directly attributed to COVID-19. However, increases were also noted for several other leading causes of death,” note the JAMA researchers.
These increases may indicate, to some extent, underreporting of COVID-19, ie, limited testing in the beginning of the pandemic may have resulted in underestimation of COVID-19 mortality.6 Increases in other leading causes, especially heart disease, Alzheimer disease, and diabetes, may also reflect disruptions in health care that hampered early detection and disease management.
In other news related to COVID-19 and mortality: New estimates from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) suggest the virus is deadlier than previous estimates let on.
“According to the ‘best estimate’ in the most recent version of the CDC’s COVID-19 Pandemic Planning Scenarios, 9 percent of people 65 or older who are infected by the COVID-19 virus die from the disease,” notesReason‘s Jacob Sullum.
The estimated infection fatality rates (IFRs) for other age groups are much lower but still generally higher than the numbers the CDC was using prior to March 19.
The estimated IFR is 0.002 percent for people 17 or younger, 0.05 percent for 18-to-49-year-olds, and 0.6 percent for 50-to-64-year-olds. The CDC’s prior estimates used somewhat different age groups, which makes direct comparisons tricky. But the estimated IFR for the oldest age group has risen dramatically, from 5.4 percent for 70+ to 9 percent for 65+.
The new estimates are also higher for the second-oldest group (0.6 percent for 50-to-64-year-olds now vs. 0.5 percent for 50-to-69-year-olds previously) and the second-youngest group (0.05 percent for 18-to-49-year-olds vs. 0.02 percent for 20-to-49-year-olds). The new estimate for the youngest age group is lower (0.002 percent for 17 or younger vs. 0.003 percent for 19 or younger), but that may reflect the lower cutoff.
FREE MINDS
FBI goes on fishing expedition at safe-deposit box store. Concerned about the possibly illegal contents in some safe deposit boxes at Beverly Hills-based U.S. Private Vaults, the FBI and Drug Enforcement Agency (DEA) raided the whole place and seized the contents of every safe deposit box there. The move has already set off a (much-deserved) legal battle. “Earlier this week, one customer went to court claiming that the government overreached by confiscating the belongings in every security box without showing why it suspected each person of committing crimes,” notes the Los Angeles Times.
FREE MARKETS
FDA finally legalizes at-home COVID-19 testing. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration could have helped save a lot of lives last year. Instead…
FDA finally legalizes home testing, seven months after admitting Abbott’s test is accurate, and 15 months after the SARS-Cov-2 genome was published. https://t.co/IqLx8jtKrUhttps://t.co/LcSHIkAFmJ
• Pediatricians are speaking out against an Arkansas law that will ban hormone therapy and gender confirmation procedures for anyone under age 18. The Libertarian Party of Arkansas has also condemned the measure, saying it “steps all over the doctor-patient-parent relationship.”
• California teachers unions say members need free child care in order to go back to work in person. “The demand is salt in the wound for parents who struggled with distance learning at home amid intense reopening negotiations that have dragged on for a year,” writes Mackenzie Mays at Politico.
• Never underestimate New York City’s nanny state capabilities:
It’s absolutely incredible that you still technically have to be an officially certified artist to live in SoHo, with a certificate from the NYC Department of Cultural Affairs !!! https://t.co/7EzMv7HCW3pic.twitter.com/HGkSh2cChG
• “Wartime rationing changed how America ate for a century,” notesReason‘s Liz Wolfe. Will the pandemic do the same?
• “New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo and state lawmakers are nearing a budget agreement that would increase corporate and income taxes by $4.3 billion a year and would make top earners in New York City pay the highest combined local tax rate in the country,” TheWall Street Journalreports. “Legislators were briefed on a plan under which income-tax rates would rise to 9.65% from 8.82% for single filers reporting more than $1 million of income and joint filers reporting more than $2 million, the people said.“
• Reason‘s Ron Bailey explores “the therapeutic possibilities of mRNA technology,” which “extend beyond infectious diseases and cancers.“
• Conor Friedersdorf interviews Ndona Muboyayi, one of the parents leading the charge against anti-racism curriculum in Evanston, Illinois.
• All culture war, all the time (sighhhhhh):
“A new GOP political memo argues the party should embrace a working-class agenda, but nearly all of the issues highlighted (except trade policy) are cultural in nature: 1) immigration; 2) anti-wokeness; 3) Big Tech; 4) trade; 5) coronavirus lockdowns.”https://t.co/LwyvXHSXWp
Elizabeth Nolan Brown is a senior editor at Reason, where she writes regularly on the intersections of sex, speech, tech, crime, politics, panic, and civil liberties. She is also co-founder of the libertarian feminist group Feminists for Liberty.
Since starting at Reason in 2014, Brown has won multiple awards for her writing on the U.S. government’s war on sex. Brown’s writing has also appeared in The New York Times, Los Angeles Times, The Daily Beast, Buzzfeed, Playboy, Fox News, Politico, The Week, and numerous other publications. You can follow her on Twitter @ENBrown.
Reason is the magazine of “free minds and free markets,” offering a refreshing alternative to the left-wing and right-wing echo chambers for independent-minded readers who love liberty.
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55.) REALCLEARPOLITICS MORNING NOTE
04/05/2021
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Carl Cannon’s Morning Note
Police Reform; RCP Takeaway; Light of the World
By Carl M. Cannon on Apr 05, 2021 08:32 am
Good morning, it’s Monday, April 5, 2021. The word “gospel” is derived from the Old English godspel, which translates to “good story” or, in a more modern vernacular, “good news.” That was fitting in 2021. The holiest day on the Christian calendar is not a federal holiday, but over the Easter weekend, the government delivered great news: In the 24-hour period starting on Good Friday, more than 4 million coronavirus immunizations were administered in this country, culminating in a rolling seven-day average that exceeded 3 million vaccines per day.
We’re getting there, people. People are still dying and worrisome reports still trickle in — a cluster on Cape Cod of the Brazil variant of the virus, rising caseloads in Michigan, reluctance in some communities to get the vaccine — but we are finally getting there.
It’s happening “day by day,” to borrow a popular song title from a musical that opened 50 years ago this spring. When it was released as a single the following year, “Day by Day” filled radio airwaves with a simple but catchy faith ditty that made it onto the Billboard Hot 100 charts for 1972. And yes, that musical was “Godspell.”
With that, I’d direct you to our front page, which aggregates, as it does each day, an array of columns and stories spanning the political spectrum. We also offer a complement of original material from RCP’s reporters and contributors, including the following:
* * *
States Are Tackling Police Reform Amid National Impasse. Susan Crabtree explores the issue that, after simmering for nearly a year, is again spotlighted by the Derek Chauvin trial.
We Need More Joy. Legalize Marijuana. Eric Spitz makes the case for comprehensive cannabis reform legislation, which is now supported by Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, among other prominent lawmakers.
Securing Freedom for the Middle Class, and All Americans. Peter Berkowitz examines the Biden administration’s commitment to conduct a foreign policy that concentrates on advancing the interests of the nation’s working families and middle class.
RCP Takeaway. A.B. Stoddard joins Tom Bevan, Andy Walworth and me to discuss Georgia’s new voting law and “Biden as FDR” in this episode.
America’s Recycling System Is Broken — and Repairable. At RealClearEnergy, John Hayes offers solutions.
Reforms That Could Restore the Postal System’s Fiscal Health. At RealClearPolicy, Steve Pociask outlines changes the USPS badly needs to make.
Stocks Are Already Pricing In Biden’s Tax Increases. At RealClearMarkets, Ken Fisher counters the prevailing notion that a bear market is in store given the president’s proposals.
Price Rule on Drug Cost Comes at a Bad Time. At RealClearHealth, Peter Pitts and Jason Zemcik spotlight an unintended consequence of a drug pricing rule finalized recently by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services.
Debunking COVID Vaccine Naysayers. At RealClearScience, Marilyn Quigley takes aim at anti-vaccine videos circulating on social media.
The Last Disciples. At RealClearReligion, John Hirschauer considers the mysterious young man who, according to Mark’s gospel, flees from Christ in the final moments before His captivity.
This week the U.S. Department of Justice announced the indictment of 22-year old Wyatt A. Travnichek of Ellsworth County, Kansas for allegedly accessing the Ellsworth County Rural Water District’s computer system on or about March 27, 2019.
Hunter Biden, the President’s surviving son, has launched a promotional tour for a memoir designed to evoke sympathy for his addictions and other demons.
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62.) 1440 DAILY DIGEST
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Good morning. It’s Monday, April 5, and we’re covering an attack at the US Capitol, the NCAA championships, and much more. Have feedback? Let us know at hello@join1440.com.
One US Capitol Police officer was killed and another injured Friday after a car intentionally rammed a barricade on the north side of the Capitol complex. Officers say they do not believe the incident was an act of terrorism; while Congress is currently in recess, only a few members remain in Washington, DC.
The suspect, 25-year-old Noah Green of Indiana, reportedly brandished a knife upon exiting the crashed vehicle; he died at the hospital after being shot by police. Green’s family say he had been suffering from delusions and paranoia in the run-up to the attack.
The deceased officer was identified as 41-year-old William Evans, an 18-year veteran of the force who served on the agency’s first responders unit. Flags were ordered to be flown at half-staff to honor Evans. The attack was the first violent incident at the Capitol since the building was stormed Jan. 6.
The No. 1 seed Stanford Cardinal took home the women’s NCAA championship last night, outlasting No. 3 Arizona in a thrilling 54-53 victory. It’s the program’s first title since 1992 and the third for coach Tara VanDerveer. The Cardinal were led by sophomore Haley Jones—the top recruit in 2019—who had 17 points and eight rebounds. Watch the final minutes of the game here.
On the men’s side, despite one of the most upset-laden tournaments in recent memory, two top teams will meet in the championship tonight—No. 1 seeds Gonzaga and Baylor (9:20 pm ET, CBS). While Baylor cruised by No. 2 seed Houston Saturday, 78-59, Gonzaga needed a last-second three-pointer from star Jalen Suggs (watch clip) in overtime to put away No. 11 seed UCLA. Undefeated Gonzaga is 4.5 point favorites to win the title.
The US economy added an estimated 916,000 non-farm jobs in March, the highest figure since August, according to figures released Friday. The report blew past analysts’ projections of around 675,000, with experts pointing to an increasing number of states reopening their economies coupled with rising vaccination numbers. The estimated unemployment rate fell from 6.2% to 6.0%.
With the vast majority of states having dropped most pandemic restrictions (see overview), a number of hard-hit industries rebounded. The leisure and hospitality industry saw the biggest gains, netting an estimated 280,000 jobs, followed by government services (136,000) and construction (110,000). See a breakdown by industry here.
The picture is not all rosy—Black unemployment sits at 9.6%, while youth unemployment rose slightly month-to-month to 11.1%. Dig into the data here.
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We strongly believe 1440 is best paired with coffee. Start the morning right with your daily dose of caffeine and news. But if you’re buying coffee bottles, have you checked the nutrition label on those things? Yikes.
>MLB to move 2021 All-Star Game and Draft from Atlanta over Georgia’s new voting law (More) | Overview on Georgia’s election law (More) | Chicago White Sox rookie Yermin Mercedes becomes the first player since 1900 to start season with eight consecutive hits(More)
>Rapper DMX on life support after suffering heart attack brought on by drug overdose (More)
> The late Chadwick Boseman, Viola Davis among big winners at Screen Actors Guild Awards (More) | See complete list of SAG Awards winners (More)
Science & Technology
>Facebook hack reveals personal data of more than 533 million users, including names, email addresses, and phone numbers; company says info came from a vulnerability fixed in 2019 (More)
>Key immune cell process identified for fighting cancer and infectious disease; research could lead to increased production of T cells (More) | “Killer” T cells explained (More)
>Proof-of-concept study shows DNA can be collected from air; living organisms shed biological matter as they interact with the environment, study shows feasibility of identifying specific species based on ambient-collected DNA (More)
Business & Markets
> Auto industry executive John Krafcik to step down as CEO of Waymo, Alphabet’s (Google’s) autonomous driving business unit (More) | Tesla delivers 184,800 cars in Q1, higher than expectations and up more than 109% from last year (More)
>Global mergers and acquisitions activity totals $1.3T in Q1, up 94% over last year and highest year-to-date figure since 1980 (More)
>Carl Icahn to appoint former General Electric chief investment officer as new CEO of his $13B publicly traded investment firm Icahn Enterprises (More)
Politics & World Affairs
>US health officials loosen guidance, recommend fully vaccinated people can travel (More) | US incidence rate plateaus after rising to about 65,000 new cases per day; average daily deaths drop below 900 (More) | More than 40% of US adults have received at least one shot; see how your state is doing here (More)
> Border officials record 170,000 migrant encounters in March, the highest monthly total in 15 years (More) | Facilities holding unaccompanied minors report widespread overcapacity, including one facility at more than 1,600% over its COVID-19 limit (More) | See data from recent years (More)
>Jordan arrests more than a dozen people allegedly involved in a coup attempt led by former crown prince Hamzah bin Hussein (More)
But if your answer is “no,” you may be surprised to find out that the calories and carbs in your average Starbucks bottle or energy drink is pretty similar to what you’d find in a cheeseburger. Needless to say, it’s time to clean up what you’re drinking for energy. Power your day right with 25% off your entire first purchase from Super Coffee. Use code 1440MEDIA at checkout to claim.
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Historybook: Booker T. Washington born (1856); American Civil War Battle of Yorktown begins (1862); Actress Bette Davis born (1908); HBD Colin Powell (1937); RIP Kurt Cobain (1994).
“There are no secrets to success. It is the result of preparation, hard work, and learning from failure.”
– Colin Powell
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Why 1440? The printing press was invented in the year 1440, spreading knowledge to the masses and changing the course of history. Guess what else? There are 1,440 minutes in a day and every one is precious. That’s why we scour hundreds of sources every day to provide a concise, comprehensive, and objective view of what’s happening in the world. Reader feedback is a gift—shoot us a note at hello@join1440.com.
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63.) AMERICAN INSTITUTE FOR ECONOMIC RESEARCH
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April 5, 2021
California’s Failed Response To COVID
By Dr. Jayanta Bhattacharya & Dr. Martin Kulldorff | “The lockdowns of varying stringency in place since March 2020 have evidently failed to protect Californians-especially poor Californians-from COVID and have inflicted enormous harm. It is far…
Why Have the Courts Been Deferential to Lockdowns?
By Ethan Yang | “Anti-lockdown proponents and advocates of traditional public health policy as it was practiced a little bit over a year ago must compete in the realm of popular opinion. In order to reclaim and preserve our freedom, there must be…
By Donald J. Boudreaux | “When one weighs whatever is the quantum of tyranny that might realistically be ascribed to Trump against the quanta of tyranny that infest and fuel Covid lockdowns, mask mandates, school closures, and the Covid hysteria…
By Jeffrey A. Tucker | “The answer is not fear, not segregation, not lockdowns, not the imposition of medieval rules and castes. The answer is freedom and human rights. Somehow those institutions served us well over many hundreds of years, during…
The Lockdowners Have Their Own Conspiracy Theories
By Phillip W. Magness | “With Gurdasani stressing that she was keen to avoid future lockdowns – a ‘strawman’ in her own words – as late as October 26th, one begins to wonder how she could have supported the very same ‘strawman’ over a month…
By Christopher Barnard | “Protecting our environment deserves more attention than a prefix in a campaign slogan for a complete political and economic revolution. Especially one that has caused so much untold misery for both humans and the planet.”
Thomas Paine’s writings and political advocacy are a stark reminder to us all of a period in history when it was a noble cause to defend your fellow countrymen’s dignity and human rights.
Thomas Paine (1737-1809) was an English-born American political activist and philosopher who advocated American independence and for the French Revolution. Often regarded as one of the most instrumental figures in the revolutionary wars, Paine went to battle against European monarchs with his pen and ink. His writings greatly influenced the Founding of the United States and French republics keeping him a household name to this very day.
I’m back, and thank you to Alexandra DeSanctis and Isaac Schorr for filling in during my vacation. On the menu today: the complicated backstory on the worries about that potential toxic leak in Tampa Bay and what Florida governor Ron DeSantis is doing about it; the Miami Marlins’ new general manager Kim Ng and the importance of offering genuine opportunities to minorities, and not just public-relations window-dressing; and comparing a 2020 vision of post-pandemic life to the reality that is gradually taking shape around us — with particular focus on the dire state of daily life in Iran.
Ron DeSantis and the Coming Blame Game for the Tampa Bay Toxic Spill
Right across from Saint Petersburg on Florida’s Tampa Bay is Manatee County, where a phosphate-processing plant that closed two decades ago has gradually built up a reservoir of 480 million gallons of acidic water. That chemical-laden byproduct is now in danger of spilling … READ MORE
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Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY) issued a statement accusing U.S. corporations that oppose the GOP-sponsored law curbing voting access in Georgia of using “economic blackmail” to spread “disinformation,” Axios reports.
Said McConnell: “We are witnessing a coordinated campaign by powerful and wealthy people to mislead and bully the American people.”
Judd Legum: “On January 11, Facebook announced that ‘following last week’s awful violence’ it was suspending donations from its political committee ‘for at least the current quarter, while we review our policies.’”
“But campaign finance records… reveal that, 44 days later, Facebook donated $50,000 to the Republican State Leadership Committee. Facebook routed the donation through a fundraising vehicle that the RSLC set up in Virginia, a state with lax campaign finance laws that allows unlimited direct corporate contributions. The primary goal of the RSLC is to elect Republicans to state legislatures and other state-level offices across the country.”
“Lawmakers on Capitol Hill say Congress has little role to play in fixing the border crisis, arguing the responsibility falls largely on President Biden and federal agencies,” The Hill reports.
“While most members say they’ll provide more resources if the president asks, they also point out that there’s not much they can do on the legislative front.”
Said Sen. Jon Tester (D-MT): “I don’t know if you need legislation. I think what we need is to make sure we get the people and the technology down there to stop it.”
“The Supreme Court on Monday dismissed a case over former President Donald Trump’s efforts to block critics from his personal Twitter account,” the AP reports.
“The court said there was nothing left to the case after Trump was permanently suspended from Twitter and ended his presidential term in January.”
“Russian President Vladimir Putin signed a law allowing him to run for two more terms in the Kremlin once his current term ends in 2024,” Reuters reports.
“The legislation, which could pave the way for Putin to stay in power until 2036 should he choose to do so and win re-election, reflects sweeping changes to the constitution that were brought in last year.”
An internal poll commissioned by Sen. Lisa Murkowski’s (R) primary opponent, Kelly Tshibaka (R), shows the challenger leading in the all-party, open primary by 15 points over the three-term incumbent.
Tshibaka, who recently hired Trump’s 2020 campaign manager Bill Stepien and deputy campaign manager Justin Clark to run her campaign, leads 34% to 19%, while Al Gross, who ran as an independent last year, pulls 18%.
Harry Enten: “Indeed, once you control for who controls the White House, there is a surprisingly strong correlation between the generic congressional ballot 19 months before the midterm elections and the eventual House result.”
“If trends hold, the most likely national House result in 2022 given the current generic ballot is Republicans winning by between 4 and 5 points.”
“While we don’t know how redistricting will change things in terms of what type of advantage Democrats will need in the national vote to hold onto the House, any Republican advantage in the popular vote would probably be enough to take the House.”
Adam Liptak: “The Supreme Court has become far more likely to rule in favor of religious rights in recent years, according to a new study that considered 70 years of data.”
“The study, to be published in The Supreme Court Review, documented a 35-percentage-point increase in the rate of rulings in favor of religion in orally argued cases, culminating in an 81 percent success rate in the court led by Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr.”
FiveThirtyEight: “In the past two decades, trust in traditional media has plummeted — especially among Republicans. According to polling from Gallup, since at least the late 1990s, Republicans have been less likely than Democrats (and independents) to say they trust the media. But starting in 2015, trust among Republicans took a nosedive, falling from 32 percent to 10 percent in 2020. (Meanwhile, among Democrats, trust in the media has actually climbed back up, and by quite a bit.)”
“Part of this is because Republicans are often more vocal in their criticism of the media and have long perceived it as having a liberal bias. But now they are also more likely to say that being ‘anti-media’ is part of their political identity, and this is likely driving the staggering gap in media trust that we are seeing.”
“Justice Democrats, the left-wing group that recruited Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez to run for Congress, has its eyes set on ousting another Democratic incumbent,” Politico reports.
“The organization will announce that it is backing Odessa Kelly (D) in her campaign against Rep. Jim Cooper (D-TN) — a Blue Dog Coalition member who has long frustrated liberals.”
“Donald Trump spent a lifetime putting his name on steaks to skyscrapers to stimulus checks, but now, the former president appears to be replacing the gold-plated surname with a number: 45,” NBC News reports,
“Last week, the 45th president launched his new official website, 45Office.com, a URL unlike those of his predecessors, who used their names for their web addresses.”
“Trump’s shift from his name to his digits has been across his political properties.”
NBC News: “The shift is the product of a Republican Party increasingly driven by ‘culture war’ issues that animate a base invigorated by Trump and corporate powerhouses that are under more pressure than ever to align themselves with the left on voting rights, LGBTQ rights and anti-racist efforts.”
“The result is a fraying in relations between a GOP that has for years advocated for the kinds of libertarian economic policies that have widely benefited these businesses and companies that are using their might to help advance racial and social justice causes.”
“Rep. Liz Cheney took on the Trump wing of her party and survived its attempt to politically kneecap her. But it’s only the beginning of what looks like a years-long fight for her place in the GOP,” Politico reports.
“Cheney has racked up a string of wins that put her on more solid footing in the party — starting with her easy victory over a conservative-led effort to oust her as House GOP conference chair.”
“She still has to lock down her party’s endorsement in the deep red state of Wyoming next August, leaving plenty of time for pro-Trump forces to mobilize against her — though she’s likely to benefit from multiple pro-Trump candidates competing for the same lane. If Cheney can hang on to her House seat, however, her ability to climb the Republican leadership ranks may still be hamstrung by her vote against a former president who’s said to be obsessed with taking down the Republicans who helped impeach him.”
Politico: “The massive outreach campaign comes as the Biden administration attempts to move a behemoth spending package across the goal line, just weeks after winning approval from Congress for its $1.9 trillion Covid-19 relief package.”
“As one person close to the White House put it, in their mind, Republicans will be viewed as ‘profoundly out of touch’ if they don’t get on board with backing the next round of spending. … Part of the sales pitch to Americans will be an appeal to suburban women, who have been particularly battered by the pandemic, leaving the workforce in droves and often carrying the burden of caretaking amid schools and childcare center closures.”
Axios: Soros group pledges $20 million to pass Biden plan.
Wall Street Journal: “President Biden’s proposed tax increases on corporations as part of a $2.3 trillion infrastructure plan have drawn a skeptical reaction from some Democrats, who instead favor borrowing money to pay for the investments or raising other levies, like the gasoline tax, to do so.”
“Rep. Peter DeFazio (D-OR), the chairman of the House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee, said he didn’t think paying for the full cost of the plan through tax increases was necessary.”
A new Reuters/Ipsos poll finds about half of Republicans believe the January 6 Capitol siege was largely a non-violent protest or was the handiwork of left-wing activists “trying to make Donald Trump look bad.”
Also, 60% of Republicans also believe the false claim put out by Trump that November’s presidential election “was stolen” from him due to widespread voter fraud, and the same proportion of Republicans think he should run again in 2024.
As the murder trial of Derek Chauvin enters its second week, a near-majority of voters believe the former Minneapolis police officer should be found guilty in the death of George Floyd
Thirty-eight percent (38%) 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 April 1, 2021.
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If imitation is the sincerest form of flattery, then President Biden’s professed commitment to conduct a foreign policy that concentrates on advancing the interests of the nation’s working families and middle class pays a striking compliment to his predecessor.
by Larry Diamond, Kevin Johnson, Miles Rapoport via The Hill
Two secretaries of state were honored recently by the Bipartisan Policy Center in Washington. Maggie Toulouse Oliver, New Mexico’s Democratic secretary of state, and Kyle Ardoin, Louisiana’s Republican secretary of state, received the organization’s prestigious Patriot Award on behalf of all U.S election officials, in recognition of their public service during the 2020 elections.
The myth of Biden the healer, and Trump the cruel divider, got Biden elected. But the fantasy that Biden had the answers to problems that Trump created is a far greater—and more dangerous—delusion.
The era of good feelings in the Biden administration began with his inaugural address on Jan. 20. President Joe Biden spoke of “unity” and of “bringing America together”in order to deal with, “anger, resentment, hatred, extremism, lawlessness, violence, disease, joblessness and hopelessness.”
Blogger, author, podcaster, economist Tyler Cowen of George Mason University discusses the lessons learned from the pandemic with EconTalk host Russ Roberts. Appearing roughly one year after his first conversation on the pandemic, Cowen revisits the predictions he made then and what he has learned for the next time.
A professor at the University of Buckingham, James Tooley, joins Paul E. Peterson to discuss Tooley’s new book, Really Good Schools: Global Lessons for High-Caliber, Low-Cost Education, and the success of some low-cost, effective private schools in the developing world.
President Biden will soon present his proposal for increasing income tax rates and tax rates on capital gains on high-income people. He also proposes to raise the corporate income tax rate to 28 percent from its current level of 21 percent. I would not be directly affected by the first two proposals: my income, though high, is much lower than the income to which the higher tax rates would apply and although I have substantial capital gains, they are almost all on stocks owned in IRA-type retirement accounts.
Hoover Institution fellow Victor Davis Hanson discusses the media coverage of the Capitol police officer killed after a car rammed into a barricade outside the Senate.
Hoover Institution fellow Lanhee Chen discusses President Biden’s $2 trillion infrastructure package that includes funding for more traditional infrastructure, like transportation, water, and utilities and more. But there’s also something Biden’s calling “infrastructure at home”: affordable housing, school upgrades, broadband and more. Chen discusses whether this is a Democrat’s wishlist, or are there aspects of this bill that can gain Republican support?
An old adage warns us that people who stand for nothing fall for anything. March 27, 2021, marked the passing of a great Cold War diplomat and professor who stood for something: Charles Hill.
Before COVID-19, few scientists would have pegged the Chinese city of Wuhan, in temperate central China, as a likely starting point for a global coronavirus pandemic. Its climate and fauna don’t fit the bill.
In her opening remarks this week to the Financial Stability Oversight Council (FSOC), Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen identified climate change as the “big” “emerging risk” facing the nation’s financial system.
The latest federal stimulus/farm bill, for example, “is targeted for all those in need – as long as they are not white.” This stereotypes, demonizes and excludes an entire group, the classic definition of racism but now branded as “critical race theory.”
The Thompson Center, UW-Green Bay Weidner Center, and UW-Milwaukee College of General Studies are pleased to welcome Dr. Shelby Steele for a conversation on freedom in America today.
Hundreds of academics and intellectuals around the world are signing onto a joint statement in support of European colleagues who have been banned by Beijing from visiting China and hit with other sanctions because of their work.
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.
Good morning, it’s April 5, 2021. On this day in history, President Franklin D. Roosevelt established the Civilian Conservation Corps, a federally funded organization that put tens of thousands of Americans to work during the Great Depression on projects with environmental benefits (1933); Kareem Abdul-Jabbar broke Wilt Chamberlain’s all-time career scoring record of 31,419 points, with 31,421 (1984); and grunge rock icon Kurt Cobain died of suicide (1995).
TOP STORY
On Friday, April 2, 2021, the Biden administration agreed to begin indirect talks with the Islamic Republic of Iran on returning to the 2015 Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA). The talks will be held in Vienna, Austria.
The Wall Street Journal reports, “Negotiations to restore the 2015 Iran nuclear deal will take place among all parties in Vienna next week, senior Western diplomats said Friday, the first serious effort to rescue the agreement since President Biden took office in January.”
“Senior officials from all participants in the accord, Iran, France, Germany, the U.K., Russia, China and the European Union, as well as top U.S. officials, will gather in the Austrian capital from Tuesday. However, there will be no direct discussions for now between U.S. and Iranian officials, the diplomats said.”
In response to the news, Iranian Foreign Minister Javad Zarif tweeted, “At virtual JCPOA JC meeting, Iran & EU/E3+2 agreed to resume in-person talks in Vienna next Tues. Aim: Rapidly finalize sanction-lifting & nuclear measures for choreographed removal of all sanctions, followed by Iran ceasing remedial measures. No Iran-US meeting. Unnecessary.”
Zarif, however, will not be present at the talks in Vienna.
The news comes at a time of increased tension between the U.S. and the Iranian state.
Last week, the United States told Iran it would lift some sanctions against the country if they quit installing advanced centrifuges and stopped uranium enrichment at 20 percent. Iran didn’t agree to the terms. Press TV, an Iranian state media outlet, provided a statement from an unnamed Senior Iranian official, reporting that, “A senior Iranian official tells Press TV that Tehran will stop its 20 percent uranium enrichment only if the U.S. lifts all its sanctions on Iran first.”
Signaling a further lack of cooperation, late last week, the International Atomic Energy Agency reported Iran installing more advanced centrifuges at his nuclear facility in Natanz.
Additionally, Ansarallah (The Houthis) a delisted state sponsor of terrorism in Yemen, removed by the Biden administration and backed by Iran, continue to target Saudi Arabia. In late March, the Houthis attacked Saudi oil facilities with drones and ballistic missiles. Then last week, when the Saudis proposed a ceasefire, the Houthis turned down the offer, demanding KSA (the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia) lift its blockade in Yemen.
Also, Iran continues to support groups like Kata’ib Hezbollah in Iraq, the terrorist group responsible for launching a rocket attack in Iraq on Al Asad Air Base in March 2021. As DIB analysts previously reported, during the attack, a U.S. contractor died as the result of a “cardiac episode.”
Further, as DIB analysts previously reported, Iran and China just signed a 25-year accord with China helping develop Iran’s economy, and both nations agreeing to share military technology and intelligence. Last month, Chinese President Xi Jinping called the U.S. the “biggest threat” to China’s security and development.” And the Biden administration’s meeting in Alaska with senior Chinese Communist officials ended with even icier tensions than prior to the summit.
According to reports, earlier this year, the NSA also picked up the Iranian Revolutionary Guard’s chatter discussing methods to target Fort McNair in Washington D.C.
WHAT THIS MEANS FOR US AS AMERICANS
The U.S. potentially returning to the JCPOA would likely embolden Iran as a hostile actor, not deter it from further aggression. Currently, Iran is continuing its support for terrorism, attacking U.S. allies in the Middle East and repeatedly violating the 2015 nuclear deal. With the U.S. agreeing to lift some sanctions against Iran before a return to the JCPOA, the Biden administration is allowing Iran to control the negotiation, showing the U.S. is willing to negotiate with the world’s top sponsor of terrorism. Some Americans could see the Biden administration is rewarding bad behavior by agreeing to indirect talks in Geneva.
Also, Iran hasn’t shown any signs of good faith before the meeting in Vienna. Signaling more concern is Iran’s partnership with the Peoples’ Republic of China, which indicates it is positioning itself to cooperate more with the U.S.’ biggest geopolitical threat in the East. Also, the deal shows China playing both sides, as one of the major partners involved in returning to the JCPOA.
Iran also signed a cybersecurity cooperation agreement with Russia in late January 2021. Americans anticipate further agreements between China/Iran and China/Russia that could undermine U.S. national security and interests around the world.
Leaders in the UAE and Bahrain, both members of the Abraham Accords, have not commented since the news about talks in Vienna. On the other hand, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said he would not allow Iran to obtain a nuclear weapon and that he does not support a return to the JCPOA.
The Daily Intelligence Brief, The DIB as we call it, is curated by a hard working team with a diverse background of experience including government intelligence, investigative journalism, high-risk missionary work and marketing.
This team has more than 68 years of combined experience in the intelligence community, 35 years of combined experience in combat and high-risk areas, and have visited more than 65 countries. We have more than 22 years of investigative reporting and marketing experience. Daily, we scour and verify more than 600 social media sites using more than 200 analytic tools in the process. Leveraging the tools and methods available to us, we uncover facts and provide analysis that would take an average person years of networking and research to uncover. We are doing it for you every 24 hours.
From All Things Possible, the Victor Marx Group and Echo Analytics Group, we aim to provide you with a daily intelligence brief collected from trusted sources and analysts.
Sources for the DIB include local and national media outlets, state and government websites, proprietary sources, in addition to social media networks. State reporting of COVID-19 deaths includes probable cases and probable deaths from COVID-19, in accordance with each state’s guidelines.
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Report: Janet Yellen Will Push ‘Global Minimum Corporate Tax’
Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen will reportedly throw the Biden administration’s support behind the idea of a “global minimum corporate tax” in remarks given today.
“Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen on Monday will present an argument for a global minimum tax rate, tax hikes that will help pay for President Biden’s massive infrastructure and jobs plan,” Forbesreports. “A global minimum tax is a corporate tax rate that the major world economies would need to agree on in principle and pledge not to undercut—the idea is that this coordination across the globe will prevent multinational companies from relocating in search of lower rates, because rates would be essentially the same everywhere.”
This is an interesting twist, because it suggests that the Biden administration is aware of one of the big problems with its plan to hike the corporate tax: decreased US competitiveness and business offshoring. Suffice it to say, though, that such a global scheme is highly unlikely to come to fruition any time soon. And now, if the Biden administration goes ahead with the harmful tax hike anyway and prompts a business exodus, it can’t say it didn’t know.
WSJ Editorial Board: Proposed NY Tax Hikes Are ‘Madness’
I wrote to you recently about the tax hike proposals making their way through New York’s political system. In summary, even though the Empire State received a huge federal bailout, Governor Cuomo and progressive state legislators are pushing forward with increases in the state income tax, capital gains tax, estate tax, and more.
The conservative-leaning Wall Street Journal editorial board is speaking out against the tax hikes, warning they will accelerate the ongoing exodus of successful individuals and businesses from the state.
“As New York’s Covid expatriates consider returning to the office, lawmakers in Albany should be shouting welcome home,” the Journalwrites. “Instead they’re eyeing big new tax increases that would give the state’s temporary refugees to Florida—or wherever—one more reason to stay away for good.”
They cite E.J. McMahon of the Empire Center for Public Policy, who warns that “The financial incentive for high earners to move themselves and their businesses from New York to states with low or no income taxes has never—ever—been higher than it already is.”
Time to move, indeed. If successful, this wave of tax hikes will be very bad news for New Yorkers and the Empire State economy. But it may well be a boon to Florida and other states with more hospitable economic climates that welcome, rather than punish, success.
Data of the Day: A new Axios-Ipsos poll shows that the majority of Americans do not trust the Federal Reserve to act in their best interest.
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 economy is struggling, but there are actually many job openings in America right now. Across the country, small businesses are desperate for staff. Paradoxically, many Americans remain unemployed right now. People are out of work, and don’t seem eager to get back to work.
So what’s the deal? Well, think about it this way. If you could make $1000 per week staying home compared to $800 per week working, which would you choose? Staying home, obviously.
Therein lies the problem. People are getting paid to not work, which is creating a massive disincentive to joining the labor force. And as Kenneth Schrupp explains in his latest article on FEE.org, it’s happening because of ultra-generous unemployment benefits.
California is a particularly egregious example of this phenomenon. In February, unemployment in the state was 8.5 percent. The state’s unemployment benefits dole out up to $750 per week. In other words, you can get paid the equivalent of $18.75 per hour (assuming a 40 hour work week), even though the state’s minimum wage is $13 per hour.
It’s no wonder small businesses are struggling to find employees. It’s hard enough to compete with the Amazons and Walmarts of the world, but when you have to compete against taxpayer-subsidized free cash, you’re almost guaranteed to lose. Add to that selective bailouts and lockdown orders and it starts to feel downright unfair.
So here’s a radical idea. Maybe we shouldn’t live in a world where the government can pick winners and losers. Maybe we should think twice about handing out massive unemployment benefits and stimulus checks that inevitably keep people out of the labor force, even when there are jobs to be filled.
It reminds me of something Frederic Bastiat said. “Government is the great fiction, through which everybody endeavors to live at the expense of everybody else.”
In the real world, of course, it just doesn’t work that way.
Biden Is Covering Up True Price Tag of Infrastructure Plan, Experts Warn
by Brad Polumbo
President Biden’s just-released ‘infrastructure’ proposal has come under fire for its enormous cost and hundreds of billions in waste and unrelated partisan spending. But experts warn that the true cost of Biden’s bill is likely much higher than its $2 trillion price tag.
How One Federal ‘Stimulus’ Program is Crippling Small Businesses and Boosting Monopolies
by Kenneth Schrupp
While 40% of small businesses are struggling to find employees, 18.2 million Americans are receiving unemployment benefits, which means that millions of unemployed Americans are deciding to stay home. Here’s why.
Why the Push Is on to Make Pandemic Life ‘Permanent’
by Tom Mullen
A year after Americans were ordered to close down society for “two weeks to flatten the curve,” Bloomberg columnist Andreas Kluth warns, “We Must Start Planning for a Permanent Pandemic.”
The coronavirus is just the latest in a long series of crises that always seem to lead politicians to the same conclusion: we just cannot afford freedom anymore.
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73.) POPULIST PRESS
BOOM! Never Mess With Texas!!
ALERT: Big Tech censored our emails. That’s why you haven’t received our emails in a week…but we are back. Please note you can always visit our website directly at www.Populist.Press
Welcome to the Monday edition of Internet Insider, where we dissect the weekend online. Today:
TikToker scares away catcallers by barking at them
‘How hard is this to understand?’ Karen verbally abuses Tim Hortons worker over donut order
‘It’s disgusting, bro’: TikToker catches delivery drivers bad-mouthing her hairless cat on doorbell camera
BREAK THE INTERNET
TikToker scares away catcallers by barking at them
In recent weeks, we’ve seen numerous women use TikTok to document the harassment they are subjected to throughout their day-to-day lives. A TikToker went viral over the weekend for demonstrating how she shuts down such harassment in a video, drawing praise from people online. In the video, the TikToker barks at a group of men who hit on her while she was walking down the street. “Normalize barking at men,” viewers are now urging.
Meanwhile, a father-daughter TikTok duo was in the middle of creating a video when a man walking by stopped to tell them to “go back to China,” adding to the string of anti-Asian racist incidents the U.S. has seen in recent months. The dad said the racism was something he hoped his young daughter would never have to “see or witness in life.”
We live in a world where you can subscribe to anything from cat foods to underwear (which is pretty dang great, honestly). Now that masks have become a part of our everyday lives, why not put them on subscription, too? Armbrust’s Subscribe and Save program not only keeps your mask supply coming but also offers 30% off the total cost. May as well have one less thing to worry about. Not to mention, keeping a box of them in the car when you forget your mask is invaluable.
‘How hard is this to understand?’ Karen verbally abuses Tim Hortons worker over donut order
Footage of a customer berating a Tim Hortons employee for an apparent miscommunication regarding an order has people online yet again bemoaning the treatment of service workers.
The clip was shared with a brief explanation that the customer’s issue was that “the worker did not speak fluent English.” From the very start, the customer is speaking rudely and clearly frustrated that something in her order was not done correctly. She points to a variety of different donuts in the case next to the cash register and demands they all be added to her bag.
“How hard is this to understand?” the woman screams at the worker behind the counter. “One of every type of your donuts!”
The employee politely acquiesces until the person filming tries to step in. “Ma’am, please don’t show disrespect to these people,” he says. “Can you please just calm down?”
At that point, she redirects her anger at him, walking over to wag her finger in his face and insist that she’s already explained her order six times. “Drop dead,” she says.
‘It’s disgusting, bro’: TikToker catches delivery drivers bad-mouthing her hairless cat on doorbell camera
TikToker Melissa McCormick shared a clip from her doorbell camera of two delivery men dropping off her new television. But, apparently, they weren’t amused by her grey Sphynx cat, Dublin.
One man points out hairless Dublin and pointedly says, “Yuck.”
After knocking on the door, one voice says: “How do people hold those things, man?”
“It’s disgusting, bro,” he continues. “They all look like my balls when I shave.”
Luckily, McCormick found the interaction “comical.” In the video caption, she jokes: “Now I know how people feel about our Sphynx cat,” with the hashtags #mycatisawesome and #yourballsarenotascute. Several viewers also jumped to Dublin’s defense; one even lamented that the “poor cat got absolutely body shamed.”
Of course, this isn’t the first time a doorbell camera has captured people doing cringe-worthy, or even downright horrible, things. Another TikToker previously caught her boyfriend cheating on her through Ring doorbell. And in late 2020, a Domino’s Pizza delivery driver in the U.K. was caught on camera rubbing food on his crotch before handing an order to a customer.
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77.) HEADLINE USA
78.) NATURAL NEWS
Huge effort under way to target blacks for the VAX… go to the front of the line
Why are the vaccine pushers so excited about making sure Blacks in America get vaccinated first?
And why would any African-American person trust the same government that once ran the Tuskegee experiments and told those human guinea pigs they were being “treated” with medicine when they were actually being sacrificed in the name of “science?”
Vermont is just the latest state to target Blacks for vaccine priority… ever wonder why?
Also this weekend, I posted a special podcast report, “You would never hire a person with the background of Big Pharma.” Because pharma companies are criminals, crooks and fraudsters… and that’s according to the United States Dept. of Justice.
Boost your immune system with delicious and nutritious Organic Cocoa EnergizeSpecially formulated to provide a wealth of nutrients, Groovy Bee Organic Cocoa Energize combines the health benefits of organic cocoa powder, organic maca root powder and seven organic functional mushroom powders. It is naturally sweetened with low glycemic organic coconut sugar. Groovy Bee Organic Cocoa Energize is vegan, non-GMO and certified Kosher and organic. It is also extensively lab tested for glyphosate, heavy metals and microbiology.
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82.) SEAN HANNITY
April 5, 2021
Latest News
WHERE’S KAMALA? Harris Stays Silent After Footage Shows Children Thrown Over Border Wall
Vice President Kamala Harris was appointed by Joe Biden to oversee the administr […]
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“I love the man that can smile in trouble, that can gather strength from distress, and grow brave by reflection. ’Tis the business of little minds to shrink; but he whose heart is firm, and whose conscience approves his conduct, will pursue his principles unto death.” —Thomas Paine (1776)
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Gonzaga, Baylor meet in the most anticipated men’s national championship, and more testimony is coming Monday in the trial of Derek Chauvin.
Good morning, Daily Briefing readers! I hope you all are having a refreshing start to a new week. One thing for sure: there’s a lot to look forward to with tonight’s NCAA tournament national championship game between Gonzaga and Baylor, the most anticipated one whose pathway started back in March 2020.
Monday also continues the murder trial of former police officer Derek Chauvin for the death of George Floyd, during which jurors will hear from more witnesses.
Let’s get started with what people are reading this morning.
💰 A huge question many have had since President Joe Biden took office: Will he cancel student loan debt? As college costs spiral, here is what Biden is considering and has directed his education secretary to explore his authority to cancel student debt by executive order.
🏆 A historic night at the Screen Actors Guild Awards was highlighted by the late Chadwick Boseman’s win for best lead actor in a film for his role in “Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom.” Boseman was one of the four actors of color who earned individual acting honors Sunday — the first time that has happened at the SAG Awards.
🏭 The full breach of a Florida wastewater reservoir could unleash hundreds of millions of gallons of polluted industrial water into the nearby area, a threat that prompted officials to issue an evacuation order for residents near Tampa Bay and the governor to declare a state of emergency.
🎧 On today’s 5 Things podcast, we take a look at vaccine rates around the world. You can listen to the podcast every day on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or on your smart speaker.
Perfect season on the line as Gonzaga, Baylor meet in men’s national championship
The stage is set. Monday night’s national championship game between Gonzaga and Baylor is the most anticipated men’s basketball title game in years , matching teams that have been No. 1 and No. 2 most of the season with the Zags trying to finish the first perfect season in the sport since 1976. For both Gonzaga and Baylor, this NCAA Tournament has been about unfinished business. The pathway to the 2021 national championship – not 2020’s – began when March Madness was canceled on March 12 of last year, as both teams returned a chunk of their rosters for 2020-21. What Gonzaga didn’t have last year, though, is freshman standout Jalen Suggs, who is fresh off of etching himself into college basketball history with his incredible overtime buzzer-beater to down upset-minded UCLA in the Final Four on Saturday. Tip-off for the national championship will be at 9 p.m. ET at Lucas Oil Stadium in Indianapolis. The game will air on CBS.
Murder trial of former police officer Derek Chauvin continues
Jurors will return to the courtroom Monday to hear more testimony from witnesses in the trial of former Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin , charged with George Floyd’s murder. Jurors heard from 19 people last week, including several who witnessed Floyd’s death and broke down in tears on the stand as they described their attempts to intervene on his behalf. Several Minneapolis police officers, including Chauvin’s supervisor at the time of Floyd’s death, testified about what they saw at the scene after Floyd was arrested, police training and the officers’ use of force on Floyd. Chauvin is charged with second-degree murder, third-degree murder and second-degree manslaughter. Floyd, a Black man, died in police custody on May 25, 2020, after Chauvin, who is white, pinned his knee against Floyd’s neck for more than nine minutes.
George Floyd’s girlfriend Courteney Ross gives jurors first glimpse of his personal life, good times and bad
More top stories for your morning:
•
The culture warriors keep knocking on the White House doors, but President Joe Biden seldom answers. From Dr. Seuss to Mr. Potato Head, Biden steers clear of polarizing culture wars.
A Georgia church, kicked out of the SBC for allowing gay members, wants to make sure ‘everybody’s welcome.’ Two weeks after being kicked out of the Southern Baptist Convention, Towne View Baptist Church celebrated its 32nd anniversary by formally accepting members the SBC believes they should have turned away.
•
Live COVID-19 updates: The U.S. vaccine rollout may be bumpy, but it’s the envy of our neighbors to the north.
•
“American Idol” returned Sunday, for the first episode of the season filmed at its studio headquarters in Los Angeles. Throughout the night, 12 of the top 24 contestants performed solo songs, as well as duets with celebrity singers.
•
Hall of Famer Charles Barkley is known for his outspoken opinions, whether it’s about basketball or politics. Recently, Barkley called out politicians for stoking racial tensions: ‘They divide and conquer.’
•
Verzuz, the webcast series born out of quarantine earlier this year, has grown into must-see appointment viewing for music fans thanks to its nostalgia factor and behind-the-scenes appeal. Here is everything you need to know about Verzuz, including its latest battle between The Isley Brothers and Earth, Wind and Fire.
NFL quarterback Aaron Rodgers to guest host on ‘Jeopardy!’
Aaron Rodgers can check “Jeopardy!” host off his personal bucket list. The Green Bay Packers quarterback begins his two-week stint on “Jeopardy!” on Monday , temporarily filling the wide gap left by the death of Alex Trebek as producers seek a permanent host for the popular quiz show. Rodgers is a longtime fan and has been on the “Jeopardy!” stage before: He bested Kevin O’Leary (“Shark Tank”) and astronaut Mark Kelly as a contestant in 2015 to win $50,000 for charity. “I thought the best way to honor Alex’s legacy was to really understand the game inside out…” the NFL star told USA TODAY.
Rapper DMX remains hospitalized, as prayer vigil is set for Monday
A prayer vigil is planned for Monday outside of the hospital in White Plains, New York, where DMX, whose legal name is Earl Simmons, was rushed late Friday night after suffering a heart attack, his family announced. The 50-year-old rapper’s family released a statement through publicist Angelo Ellerbee on Sunday afternoon saying: “our brother, son, father” was admitted to White Plains Hospital “facing serious health issues.” DMX’s longtime lawyer Murray Richman also told The Associated Press on Saturday evening that the hip-hop star was on life support, but could not confirm reports the heart attack was caused by a drug overdose.
After Major League Baseball (MLB) announced the decision to move their annual All-Star Game from the state of Georgia in protest of its new voter integrity law, Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-NY) invited the league to host the event in New York.
Canadian pastor Artur Pawlowski lashed out last week at a team of Canadian police officers who descended upon his church during Holy Week. The entire scene was captured on video that has since gone viral with several praising the minister for taking a stand against the cornavirus”Gestapo.”
Atrisco Heritage Academy in Albuquerque, New Mexico, will now refer to its prom and homecoming court as “royalty” instead of “king and queen,” the school announced on March 3.
Former President Donald Trump said on Saturday to “[b]oycott Major League Baseball, Coca-Cola, Delta Airlines, JPMorgan Chase, ViacomCBS, Citigroup, Cisco, UPS, and Merck.”
The Center for Effective Lawmaking (CEL) recently published a study of legislative effectiveness in the 116th U.S. Congress, which ran from Jan. 3, 2019, to Jan. 3, 2021.
British police shut down a “Good Friday” service at Christ the King Polish church in south London, calling the gathering “unlawful under the coronavirus regulations.”
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Homeless Shelter Cleared to House Illegal Aliens, Dozens Infected with COVID-19As if the illegal immigrant crisis along the U.S.-Mexico border were not bad enough, homeless Americans have been booted from a temporary shelter in southern California to make room for scores of migrants, dozens of them infected with COVID-19. Since the Biden administration rolled out the welcome mat, thousands of illegal aliens have entered the country, most of them minors classified as Unaccompanied Alien Children (UAC) by the feds. Now the government is scrambling to meet its legal obligation of caring for them at facilities nationwide operated by the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS).
Illegal Aliens Released by BP Commit Home Invasion Robberies, Store Burglaries in U.S. TownViolence sparked by the illegal immigrant crisis along the U.S.-Mexico border has spilled over into a sleepy little town unaccustomed to the devastating impact large influxes have on bigger cities near major crossings. A series of crimes committed by illegal aliens and human smugglers (coyotes) has left the usually tranquil Arizona town of Sonoita, population of about 800, in shock. Veteran ranchers and business owners in the area interviewed by Judicial Watch say that in the last few days there have been two home invasion robberies and two local stores were burglarized by a group of illegal immigrants who had just been released into their community by the U.S. Border Patrol in the predawn hours.
Judicial Watch Statement on Supreme Court Refusal to Uphold Court Ruling Requiring Hillary Clinton Email TestimonyHillary Clinton ignored the law but received special protection from both the courts and law enforcement. For countless Americans, this double standard of justice has destroyed confidence in the fair administration of justice. Americans would never have known about Hillary Clinton’s email and related pay for play scandals but for Judicial Watch’s diligence. We expect that the Biden State and Justice Departments will continue to protect her and cover up their own misconduct as we press for additional accountability through the courts.
Grassroots Rebellion Grows with New Calls to Ban Critical Race Theory from Military, Public Schools
The Epoch Times
Kevin O’Leary said he was “devastated” when he learned his former football coach, David Flynn, had been fired after questioning a seventh-grade history curriculum that labeled white people and America as inherently racist.
Judicial Watch at the Supreme Court: Fighting for Clean Elections
Judicial Watch
Battles for clean elections are heating up around the country and Judicial Watch has long been a national leader in the fight. Recently we weighed in on a critical case now being considered by the Supreme Court. Its outcome could reshape elections in America for decades to come.
Judicial Watch is fighting to protect the First Amendment rights of non-profit donors across America from a new California law which “compels the disclosure of certain organization’s donors [to its state government].” “This challenge to California law has now made its way to the Supreme Court,” Fitton explained last month. Filing an amici curiae (friends of the court) brief, Judicial Watch is asking the Supreme Court to consider or take up the case. “We’re obviously asking for this California law to be overturned,” Fitton continued.
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