Good morning! Here is your news briefing for Thursday April 29, 2021
1.) THE DAILY SIGNAL
April 29 2021
Good morning from Washington, where President Biden, in his first speech to a joint session of Congress, depicts America as “back” but with a lot of work to do. We check the facts on some main topics and Heritage Foundation policy experts analyze details. On the podcast, former U.N. Ambassador Nikki Haley talks about election security and what conservatives can do in this political environment. Plus: promoting alternatives to abortion and protecting children from the transgender agenda. He probably won’t forget: Ten years ago today, Great Britain’s Prince William weds Catherine “Kate” Middleton at Westminster Abbey in London.
President Biden discussed distribution of the COVID-19 vaccine, gun control, taxes, elections, and free preschool in his address to Congress. But his remarks didn’t tell the full story.
Recent experience leaves us less than confident that the public should trust published research from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, much less pronouncements based on it.
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3.) DAYBREAK
Your First Look at Today’s Top Stories – Daybreak Insider
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Biden Speech Filled with Inaccuracies, Threats, Spending
He called for free education beyond k-12 (Daily Wire). He pushed a massive tax increase on what he deems “wealthy” (Washington Times). From Guy Benson: Joe Biden is speaking the words, but this is an Elizabeth Warren economic speech (Twitter). Biden called the January 6th Capitol riot “the worst attack on our democracy since the Civil War” (The Federalist). From Mark Hemingway: The last two Democratic presidents commuted the sentences of left-wing radicals who bombed the capitol. 9/11 was an attack on our Democracy. The capitol riot was a damnable tragedy, but this is just a baseless and divisive characterization of how bad it was (Twitter). In a particularly disturbing moment, highlighted by many networks as heroic, Biden said “For all transgender Americans watching at home, especially young people, you’re so brave. I want you to know your president has your back” (Twitter). In the chamber, there were very few people allowed, and those who were wore masks. From Ben Domenech: There is zero scientific basis for Vice President Harris and Speaker Pelosi wearing masks. Zero. It is science denial for them to do so (Twitter). From Dan McLaughlin: Biden, who has been vaccinated, elbow-bumps Pelosi (who has been vaccinated and is wearing a mask) and Harris (who has been vaccinated and is wearing a mask) as if they were lepers he was terrified of touching (Twitter). From Tom Cotton: Joe Biden is like the rooster taking credit for the sun rising (Twitter). From Steve Scalise: Joe Biden talks about unity and bipartisanship. He promised it at his Inauguration too. But actions speak louder than words. And he governs like a radical and caves to his left-wing base at every turn. He’s not fooling anyone (Twitter). From Nikki Haley: President Biden says he wants bipartisanship but spent over an hour promoting radical policies that will harm our economy, grow government control, and cause more division. What a wasted opportunity (Twitter). Even Mediaite mocked Joe Biden for claiming to have “travelled over 17,000 miles” with Xi Jinping. But instead of a lie, they dubbed it merely “an odd claim” (Mediaite). The transcript (Washington Examiner).
2.
Biden Pushes Gun Control with Cluster of Lies
He said, among other things “We need a ban on assault weapons and high capacity again. Don’t tell me it can’t be done. We did it before and it worked” (The Hill). From Rich Lowry: It’d be nice if there some acknowledgement that gun violence has drastically increased in major cities with the anti-police agitation of the last year (Twitter). Amy Swearer took apart Biden’s gun lies in a tweet thread (Twitter). Turns out, polls indicate support for gun control is dropping (National Review). Back in March, Katie Pavlich took on the Biden lie that the Clinton era gun ban brought down mass killings (Townhall).
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3.
Biden Promises Massive Spending
A mere $6 trillion, if you assume he can keep the numbers that low (NY Times). Jim Geraghty goes through a litany of trillion-dollar spending plans coming from Camp Biden (National Review). From the Wall Street Journal: The goal is to expand the entitlement state to make Americans rely on government and the political class for everything they don’t already provide. The White House talking points pitch this in the smothering love of the welfare state: “making care affordable”; free medical and family leave; “free education”; two years of “universal pre-school”; “invest in the care workforce.” Subsidies and millions of new care givers, all licensed and unionized, will nurture you through the challenge of earning a living and raising a family (WSJ).
4.
Senator Tim Scott Blasts Biden Speech in Moving Response
Senator Scott was much more upbeat about America (National Review). From Marc Thiessen: This is the best (not the) SOTU response I’ve ever seen. It’s a thankless forum and @SenatorTimScott is nailing it. A rising star (Twitter). From Dan McLaughlin: Biden talked a fair amount about being pro-America: not betting against the USA, not underselling what we could do, arguing we should keep up with China. But Tim Scott actually *defended* America as good (Twitter). From Senator McConnell: I am so glad the nation heard @SenatorTimScott‘s outstanding Republican response to President Biden’s address. Republicans stand for the principles and policies that unite Americans and expand opportunity for working families. Not radical agendas designed to push us apart (Twitter). The progressives on Twitter responded with racism targeting Scott (Twitter/Twitter/Twitter).
5.
American Public See Situation at Border as Crisis
And disapprove of the way Biden is handling it by an overwhelming majority.
Report: Cuomo Admin Hid Report of Nursing Home Deaths for Months
It’s apparently worse than previously reported. From the story:… senior staffers buried a scientific paper that reported the number, blocked health officials from releasing the accurate tally and didn’t publicize an audit of the data until months after it was completed, the report alleges.
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Agriculture Commissioner NikkiFried released an attack ad last week calling out Gov. Ron DeSantis for signing a bill to force online retailers to collect online sales tax and use it to refill the unemployment trust fund and slash the commercial rents tax.
“Last night, Ron DeSantis raised your taxes by over a billion dollars, and he did it right before midnight with no cameras, no one watching,” Fried says in the video. “I’m pissed, and you should be pissed too. Now go tell the other 22 million Floridians across our state that Ron DeSantis just raised our taxes by over a billion dollars.”
Now, Fried is putting that ad in front of Floridians who use Facebook, Instagram, YouTube and Twitter.
The video runs as a pre-roll ad on YouTube and as static, graphic ads on Facebook and Instagram. On YouTube, the ad has already received over 105,200 views, with 96% of those viewers watching the ad all the way through.
Across all sites, the ad has notched 317,000 video views and generated about 1.75 million impressions, paid and organic.
The ad campaign was backed by a five-figure buy targeting a dozen of Florida’s blue and purple counties, including Broward, Palm Beach, Miami-Dade, Hillsborough, Pinellas, Orange, Seminole, Osceola, Leon, Duval, Sarasota and Collier.
Do you love Florida Politics? Do you wish there was more?
Wish granted.
Florida Politics publisher Peter Schorsch is teaming up with exiting Division of Emergency Management Director Jared Moskowitz to launch a new podcast.
Tentatively titled “State of Emergency,” the first episode will drop this summer.
Stay tuned for more details.
___
An inspiring must-read on courage, determination from Kerry Kriseman: “They told me I was dying: Why doctors’ words matter” — Kriseman, the wife of St. Pete Mayor Rick Kriseman, recounts to Alexandra Glorioso of Barred Owl Press the story of her 2019 cancer diagnosis after feeling discomfort during a family visit to California (Glorioso is also a cancer survivor): “A year and a half ago, I was lying on a California emergency room medical table when I first heard I was going to die. While one doctor probed me with a needle to extract thick, yellow turbid fluid from my abdomen, a gynecologist hovered over me and delivered the news: I probably had 7 to 8 months to live. ‘Oh my God. No,’ I said. I was a 51-year-old who had only been sick once in the last 10 years. If anything, I had skated by in life on my good health, and luck. The information didn’t match my self-identity. It all seemed so wrong. ‘Patient is appropriately shocked and in disbelief,’ read my medical notes from that day. ‘Fuck this shit,’ I told my husband hours later. I wasn’t ready to die. Thankfully, I didn’t believe her.”
Tweet, tweet:
—@DJGroup: Every year we prepare to play the Globetrotters, nearly every year the Washington Generals show up instead.
—@GrayRohrer: Tough couple of days for the Whips, who are theoretically supposed to count the votes and, you know, make sure they have enough before the actual votes are cast. Two public records exemptions going down two days in a row
—@JacobOgles: It’s upsetting more people aren’t upset about the stunt pulled with the sports ban in the Legislature. This issue was debated over an extraordinary time in the House, but never made it through a 3rd committee stop in the Senate. Now its an amm on a charter school bill.
Tweet, tweet:
—@CHeathWFTV: Nothing is dead until the handkerchief hits the ground.
—@BSFarrington: So, I’ve covered the Florida Legislature for more than two decades. Today is the first day I’ve heard floor arguments about inspecting children’s genitals.
Tweet, tweet:
Days until
Disneyland to open — 1; Kentucky Derby — 2; Orthodox Easter 2021 — 3; Mother’s Day — 10; Florida Chamber Safety Council’s inaugural Southeastern Leadership Conference on Safety, Health and Sustainability — 11; Gambling Compact Special Session begins — 18; ‘A Quiet Place Part II’ rescheduled premiere — 29; Memorial Day — 32; Florida TaxWatch Spring Meeting and PLA Awards — 35; ‘Loki’ premieres on Disney+ — 43; Father’s Day — 51; F9 premieres in the U.S. — 56; ‘Top Gun: Maverick’ rescheduled premiere — 63; 4th of July — 66; ‘Black Widow’ rescheduled premiere — 70; MLB All-Star Game — 75; new start date for 2021 Olympics — 85; second season of ‘Ted Lasso’ premieres on Apple+ — 85; The NBA Draft — 91; ‘Jungle Cruise’ premieres — 93; ‘The Suicide Squad’ premieres — 99; St. Petersburg Primary Election — 117; Disney’s ‘Shang Chi and The Legend of The Ten Rings’ premieres — 127; ‘The Many Saints of Newark’ premieres (rescheduled) — 148; ‘Dune’ premieres — 155; MLB regular season ends — 157; ‘No Time to Die’ premieres (rescheduled) — 163; World Series Game 1 — 180; St. Petersburg Municipal Elections — 187; Disney’s ‘Eternals’ premieres — 190; San Diego Comic-Con begins — 211; Steven Spielberg’s ‘West Side Story’ premieres — 222; ‘Spider-Man Far From Home’ sequel premieres — 229; Super Bowl LVI — 291; ‘Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness’ premieres — 331; ‘Thor: Love and Thunder’ premieres — 372; “Black Panther 2” premieres — 435; ‘Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse’ sequel premieres — 526; “Captain Marvel 2” premieres — 561.
Dateline Tallahassee
“Democratic turmoil: Long-simmering tension boils over as Florida Senators oust their leader” via Skylar Swisher and Gray Rohrer of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — Simmering tensions plunged Florida Senate Democrats into turmoil Wednesday with a vote of no confidence in their leader and infighting that pitted two Broward lawmakers against each other. When the dust settled, Sen. Gary Farmer was jettisoned as Democratic leader in exchange for Sen. Lauren Book, another Broward County lawmaker. Book will take over as leader immediately. With the leadership shake-up, Book will serve through 2024 because she had already been chosen to succeed Farmer as the leader when his term ended. Earlier in the day, tempers flared during a caucus meeting over a bill seeking to make college presidential searches secret. Sen. Tina Polsky called the meeting the “last straw” that led to the push to oust Farmer.
Democrats give Gary Farmer the boot. Image via Colin Hackley.
“Florida Legislature passes bill banning transgender girls from female sports teams” via Zac Anderson of the Sarasota Herald-Tribune — Republicans in the Florida Legislature passed a bill prohibiting transgender female athletes from playing on female sports teams at public schools, drawing discrimination complaints from Democrats. Transgender female athletes would be limited to playing coed sports or on teams with male athletes under the legislation, restricting female teams to individuals identified as female on their birth certificate. The bill applies to high school and college sports sponsored by public schools, including intramural and club teams. The controversial legislation appeared to have stalled after it failed to clear a final Senate committee, but it was added as an amendment to a charter school bill by House Republicans Wednesday.
Equality Florida decries trans athlete ban revival — House Republicans on Wednesday filed an amendment to a charter school bill (SB 1028) that would resurrect a proposal to block transgender girls from participating in women’s sports. The move drew a harsh rebuke from the LGBTQ rights organization Equality Florida, which has fought against the ban all Session. “In the eleventh hour of the 2021 legislative session, Florida lawmakers are still hellbent on passing this discriminatory bill,” said Gina Duncan, Equality Florida director of transgender equality. “Despite hearing the voices of trans kids and their families time and time again, extremists in the Legislature have made it their mission to make trans children pawns in their culture war.”
“After brief stumble, House clears social media ‘de-platforming’ bills” via Renzo Downey The House has approved a bill to crack down on “censorship” by social media companies. A related bill to implement it initially failed to muster adequate support. By a 78-41 vote on Wednesday, the House will send the main bill (SB 7072) back to the Senate. But a public records bill tied to it (SB 7074) initially didn’t garner the two-thirds support it needed to pass. After a motion to reconsider the 78-40 vote by which it failed, Rep. Rene Plasencia swapped back to his side of the aisle to give it the 79-39 vote it needed. The main bill, carried by Sen. Ray Rodrigues in the Senate and Rep. Blaise Ingoglia in the House, would require social media companies to post their terms of service and apply them equally.
Rene Plasencia flips to give Republicans passage of the social media de-platforming bill. Image via Colin Hackley.
“Legislators revive, then pass, preemption on Key West cruise referendum” via Mary Ellen Klas of the Miami Herald — A day after citizens of Key West thought the legislation aimed at overturning their vote to limit cruise ship traffic appeared dead, Republican legislative leaders quickly reversed course Wednesday and powered it past Democrats to send it to the governor. Sen. Jim Boyd, who sponsored the original bill that stalled earlier this week in the House, attached an amendment to an unrelated Senate transportation bill declaring that “any local ballot initiative or referendum may not restrict maritime commerce” at any one of Florida’s 15 deep-water ports. The provision is retroactive, applying the ban to three referendums approved by 60% of Key West voters in November. The bill was one of the most ambitious assaults on home rule this session and has commanded a remarkable amount of attention.
“Senate tees up amended data privacy bill” via Jason Delgado of Florida Politics — With less than 72 hours remaining in the Legislative Session, the Senate on Wednesday amended a high-profile bill that is intended to give Floridians more control over their data. Sponsored by Rep. Fiona McFarland, the bill (HB 969) would allow consumers to control how their personal data is shared and sold. The bill also sought to allow individuals to take legal action against businesses that violate a consumer’s date preferences. But under the Senate’s adopted amendment, legal action would now be reserved exclusively for the Attorney General. Sen. Jennifer Bradley is the Senate companion bill sponsor. The internet, she said, is a “surveillance economy.”
Term limits a sticking point in charter school bill — A bill that would allow state colleges and universities to operate charter schools that draw in students from multiple districts is being bogged down in the Legislature by the late addition of a provision to set school board term limits. As reported by Andrew Atterbury of POLITICO Florida, the House added the provision to SB 1028, which the Senate promptly removed. However, the upper chamber inserted its own set of changes and sent it back to the House. The additions include water safety education and provisions surrounding student retention amid the pandemic.
Budget notes
“House agrees on $50M funding plan for water storage construction north of Lake O” via Ryan Nicol of Florida Politics — Lead negotiators in the Senate and House have agreed to a budget provision slotting $50 million to help implement the Lake Okeechobee Watershed Restoration Project (LOWRP) north of Lake Okeechobee. The project is a priority for Senate President Wilton Simpson. In early April, the Senate approved a measure (SB 2516) as a conforming bill linked to the overall budget bill (SB 2500). Now, the House has agreed to that provision, allocating $50 million to help expedite construction of storage capacity north of Lake O. Simpson and other supporters say the storage will help trap water containing nutrients, which can cause algae blooms. Those blooms sometimes enter other waterways when water is released from Lake O to control the lake’s levels.
Wilton Simpson’s Lake O reservoir plan gets thumbs-up in the House. Image via Colin Hackley.
“Senate agrees to scuttle Lawton Chiles Endowment Fund” via Jason Delgado of Florida Politics — The Senate on Wednesday accepted the House’s proposal to terminate and liquidate the Lawton Chiles Endowment Fund. Named after former Gov. Chiles, the Legislature established The Lawton Chiles Endowment Fund (LCEF) in 1999 to fund health programs in the state. According to a staff analysis, the program today is valued at $958 million. It launched with $1.7 billion from the state’s settlement agreement with tobacco companies. But now, under the bill (HB 5011), the Legislature will eliminate the fund and redirect its balance to the Budget Stabilization Fund. The LCEF must be liquidated by the end of June 2022 under the bill. Rep. Jay Trumbull, the House budget chief, carried the measure for the House Appropriations Committee.
SLERS contract to be codified in law — L3Harris landed a big win in the budget, but now the House and Senate have agreed to codify into law language that hands them a 15-year contract to oversee and upgrade the Statewide Law Enforcement Radio System. As written, it would have the state pay the Melbourne-based company a yearly fee to run the system and build it out under the Project 25 radio standard while also expanding capacity. The language also covers radio tower leases, which were the main sticking point when the state attempted to grant the SLERS contract to Motorola.
“Here’s what’s in the proposed state budget for Tallahassee, Leon County” via James Call of the Tallahassee Democrat — Leon County’s four-member delegation to the Florida Legislature may bring home more than $3.5 million in local project spending in the proposed state budget lawmakers will vote on Friday. In addition to the hundreds of millions of dollars that will go to the operations of Florida A&M and Florida State universities and Tallahassee Community College, there’s money for a local mental health initiative and programs for at-risk youths in the next fiscal year’s $100 billion spending plan. Lawmakers also set aside $100,000 in planning and site acquisition for a new State Emergency Operations Center in Tallahassee’s Capital Circle Office Complex. And the county’s pretrial intervention program for military veterans is in line for $1.4 million, once the Legislature passes the budget later this week.
Tally 2
“Wilton Simpson suggests increased unemployment benefits dead for this Session” via Renzo Downey of Florida Politics — Simpson suggested Wednesday that his priority to increase weekly unemployment benefits by $100 likely won’t happen this Session. A week ago, Simpson declared that effort still alive. But the 2021 Regular Session ends on Friday, and the House hasn’t taken up the bill (SB 1906) to raise benefits from $275 to $375 per week and extending them from 12 weeks to 14 weeks. “It’s probably my fault that it may not be alive,” Simpson told reporters Wednesday evening. DeSantis dismissed the proposal during a news conference earlier this month. Some of Simpson’s other provisions did make it into the budget, including raising the minimum wage for state employees to $13 an hour and increased Florida Forever funding.
“Lawmakers eye changes to property insurance in wake of soaring rates” via Lawrence Mower of the Tampa Bay Times — In a scramble to stop Florida’s soaring homeowners insurance rates, state lawmakers are close to passing a bill that would reduce the amount of time to file a claim and allow Citizens Property Insurance to raise its rates above 10%. The Florida House voted 74-43 on Wednesday on a bill that would reduce the time to file a property insurance claim from three years to two years and stop contractors and public adjusters from soliciting homeowners to file a claim. While homeowners’ insurance rates have been rising, state lawmakers, including Republicans in the House and Senate, are split on how best to address it.
“Florida’s gun preemption law just got more powerful” via Kirby Wilson of Florida Politics — A new bill that’s poised to become law is the legislative equivalent of a Rorschach test. Fans of Florida’s sweeping gun preemption law, which bars municipalities from regulating firearms and ammunition in any way, say Senate Bill 1844, offers little more than a technical correction. It’s a “glitch bill,” they say. Those who detest Florida’s gun preemption law say the new bill dramatically expands an already Draconian state policy. “I didn’t think it was possible to make this statute worse. And lo and behold, they found a way to do it,” said Rep. Dan Daley. The bill passed the Florida House Wednesday by a vote of 78 to 39. Since it’s already passed the Senate, it will now head to the desk of DeSantis.
“Deal on tap for ‘alcohol-to-go’” via The News Service of Florida — Florida lawmakers appear ready to give final approval to a restaurant industry-backed measure that would make permanent a practice of allowing alcoholic drinks to be included with take-home meals. The House and Senate have reached a compromise on a bill (SB 148) that would include limits on restaurants that can sell alcoholic drinks with take-home and delivery orders, Senate sponsor Bradley said Wednesday. DeSantis, last spring, issued an executive order that included so-called “alcohol to go” to help restaurants forced to scale back operations in the early stages of the COVID-19 pandemic. He has endorsed making the rule permanent. The agreement, which drew unanimous support Wednesday from the Senate, would cut off the sale of to-go drinks when restaurants’ scheduled food service ends for the day or at midnight, whichever occurs first.
Uber cheers cocktails-to-go — Uber raised its glass to Rep. Josie Tomkow, Sen. Bradley and the rest of the Legislature after the drinks-to-go bill rolled to the Governor’s desk Wednesday night. “Uber thanks both Sen. Bradley and Rep. Tomkow, as well as House and Senate leadership, for prioritizing SB 148/HB 329 and ensuring that alcohol delivery remains a permanent option for Florida restaurants. The overwhelming, bipartisan support emphasizes the positive economic impact that alcohol delivery has had on restaurant owners and their ability to maintain successful businesses during COVID-19, while also helping to steady Florida’s local economies. We look forward for this measure to become law under Gov. DeSantis’ leadership on this issue.”
“Legislature passes rural broadband expansion bill” via Renzo Downey of Florida Politics — Lawmakers on Wednesday approved a measure to help expand broadband access in “unserved” parts of the state. That bill (HB 1239), which passed both chambers unanimously, would expand on last year’s bill transferring the Office of Broadband to the Department of Economic Opportunity and bolstering its mission. House sponsor Tomkow said the bill would “eliminate our digital divide throughout our state.” The proposal would encourage broadband companies to expand to rural areas by creating a path for the necessary infrastructure, including identifying federal grants available for local spending. The legislation no longer includes a sales tax exemption, which means the bill will not have a fiscal impact on local governments. Previously the bill provided a tax exemption for equipment used in the expansion.
“Lawmakers approve measure raising smoking age to 21” via Renzo Downey of Florida Politics — The House has approved a measure to raise the smoking age in Florida to 21, aligning it with federal law, preparing the bill for DeSantis to act on. The bill (SB 1080) passed the House by a 103-13 vote Wednesday, two days after it passed the Senate 29-9. Lawmakers last year had bundled that proposal with a measure to regulate vaping products. However, DeSantis vetoed the bill, arguing that limiting the available vaping flavors limited ways for smokers to ween themselves off cigarettes, which he argued are more dangerous. However, lawmakers this year limited the bill’s vaping regulations, which Senate sponsor Sen. Travis Hutson predicted would alleviate the Governor’s concerns.
House approves bill expanding medical cannabis potency testing — The House voted unanimously in favor of a bill (SB 1568) that would expand potency testing for medical marijuana, Arek Sarkissian of POLITICO Florida reports. The expansion would see DOH test all types of marijuana products. It currently focuses testing on edible cannabis products. The provision may set the stage for future THC caps on medical cannabis products. The 2021-22 budget also includes $4 million for DOH to expand testing under the rules outlined in the bill.
“Medical marijuana legislation stalls as public employees are fired for legal use” via Alyssa Feliciano April Rubin of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — Democratic representatives proposed House Bill 335 to prohibit employers from taking action against qualified medical marijuana patients, was referred to four subcommittees in February and hasn’t been heard since. Under current laws, agencies that receive federal funding, such as school systems, default to national laws that don’t allow medical marijuana use. Employees taking a drug test have 24-48 hours to provide a valid explanation for why opioids are in their system. This is not the case for marijuana because it is nationally considered a Schedule 1 drug. Rep. Nicholas Duran proposed the bill to protect patients he described as within their constitutional right to ingest medical cannabis.
Nick Duran is seeking to protect medical marijuana patients. Image via Colin Hackley.
“House OK’s amended public works bill” via Jason Delgado of Florida Politics — The House on Wednesday gave final passage to a bill that would overhaul the construction bidding process for local public works projects. After concurring on a Senate amendment, the House passed the bill with a 79-34 vote. Republican Rep. Nick DiCeglie is the bill sponsor. The bill (HB 53) requires local governments to utilize competitive bidding processes when contracting city, town or county projects. It also blocks cities from “train(ing) employees in designated programs with restricted curriculum or from a single source,” according to the bill language. Local ordinances that require things like apprenticeship programs, a trend among some more liberal cities aimed at providing work opportunities for residents, would be prohibited.
Tally 3
“Republicans carry expansion of renewable energy across the finish line” via Peter Schorsch of Florida Politics — Where are the Democrats on renewable energy? It’s hard to tell these days. On the House floor Wednesday, Democrats urged the chamber to vote down a bill that promotes renewable energy. Rep. Cord Byrd presented SB 896, sponsored by Sen. Jason Brodeur. The measure, which passed the Senate on Monday in a 25-14, expands production of renewable energy, specifically natural gas and solar. SB 896 adds to the statute a definition for renewable natural gas. It’s defined as anaerobically generated biogas, landfill gas, or wastewater treatment gas refined to 90% or greater methane content. The legislation also allows the Public Service Commission to approve cost recovery to purchase renewable natural gas.
Where are Democrats on renewable energy? They urged Senators to downvote Jason Brodeur’s expansion bill. Image via Colin Hackley.
“Car sharing bill headed to Governor’s desk” via Scott Powers of Florida Politics — DeSantis‘ signature is all that remains for a bill that clears Florida laws to make peer-to-peer car-sharing an accepted alternative to traditional rental cars. The House on Wednesday approved the measure (SB 566) by a 101-15 vote. It would set tax, insurance, and maintenance record rules into law so that individuals can rent out their private cars to total strangers, with Florida’s approval. The practice has been rising rapidly in popularity in the past few years, fueled by private vehicles on internet platforms such as Turo, GetAround, and Avail, which link individuals who have a vehicle to spare with visitors who’d like a vehicle for a day or a few days. The disruptive new business has met strong pushback from airports and from traditional rental car companies such as Enterprise and Avis.
“Legislature passes bill to centralize utility pole oversight” via Renzo Downey of Florida Politics — With the House’s vote Wednesday, a bill to give Florida control of utility pole oversight is on its way to DeSantis‘ desk. The House voted 114-3 to pass the bill (SB 1944) to shift utility pole oversight from the FCC to the Florida Public Service Commission. That proposal, sponsored by Sen. Ben Albritton and Rep. Nick DiCeglie, both Republicans, would require the PSC to enforce rates, charges, terms and conditions for pole attachments and to resolve pole attachment disputes. Democratic Reps. Anna Eskamani, Joy Goff-Marcil and Omari Hardy cast the lone no votes. No member debated the measure. The bill, which passed the Senate by a 38-2 vote, outlines new rules for settling disputes, boosting grid reliability and hardening, and on redundant poles.
“Anonymous code snitch ban clears House, heads to Ron DeSantis” via A.G. Gancarski of Florida Politics — Punitive and anonymous code complaints may become a thing of the past if a bill passed by the House Wednesday becomes law. The Florida House of Representatives passed by a resounding 81-35 vote, a Senate bill (SB 60) sponsored by Bradley. Bradley, in a manner reminiscent of her husband who preceded her in the Senate, took charge of a controversial issue, brokering a compromise that ameliorated concerns that this was another example of Tallahassee bigfooting the home rule dictum. The Bradley product replaced HB 883 from Rep. Toby Overdorf, an identical House bill laid on the table in favor of the already cleared Senate bill.
“House approves new round of specialty license plates, bill heads to Governor’s desk” via Haley Brown of Florida Politics — A bipartisan bill to create specialty license plates that rolled through the committee process faced pushback on the House floor. The bill passed 115-2 but not without debate. Legislation, sponsored by Sen. Dennis Baxley in the upper chamber and Rep. Allison Tant in the lower chamber, was intended to create a new specialty license plate that benefits Florida parks. But 12 other specialty license plates were rolled into the parks plate bill during a committee meeting. Legislators, it would seem, have realized the power of a specialty plate to bolster the bottom line of their favorite nonprofits. Portions of the annual use fees from each plate are given to a nonprofit. Rep. Tommy Gregory took issue with this part of the process though he supported the bill.
Allison Tant’s specialty license plate is heading to the Governor’s desk. Image via Colin Hackley.
The Senate Democratic Caucus meets, 9 a.m., Room 228, Senate Office Building. Zoom link here.
The Senate holds a floor Session at 10 a.m., Senate Chamber.
The House holds a floor Session at 10:30 a.m., House Chamber.
Also:
The Senate Special Order Calendar Group meets, 15 minutes after the Senate floor Session adjourns, Room 301, Senate Office Building.
2022
“Democrats fume over silence from DeSantis on Florida election” via Max Greenwood of The Hill — Democrats are voicing frustration with DeSantis over the special election for the late Rep. Alcee Hastings’s seat. Hastings, who represented a majority Black district in South Florida for nearly three decades, died early this month after being diagnosed with pancreatic cancer. Florida law gives DeSantis broad authority to set a date for the special election to replace him, but he has so far remained silent on when voters can expect to choose their next representative. Given Democrats’ narrow House majority, the vacancy in Florida’s 20th Congressional District stands to have a potentially significant impact on the party’s ability to move its agenda forward in Congress, and some fear that DeSantis could seek to complicate Democrats’ legislative efforts by leaving the seat vacant for months.
“Omari Hardy launches congressional bid seeking Alcee Hastings’ seat” via Ryan Nicol of Florida Politics — Hardy, a Democratic freshman in the Florida House, says he’ll join the Special Election to succeed the late U.S. Rep. Hastings in Congress. Hardy posted a video Wednesday morning announcing his run for the seat in Florida’s 20th Congressional District. “Why do we need a 31-year-old, fourth-generation teacher with two moms in Congress?” Hardy asks, briefly running through his bio. He then dubs himself an “unapologetic progressive” and highlights his struggles during the Great Recession. Hardy has already gained some national notoriety dating back to his time as a Lake Worth Beach Commissioner. That tenure featured a fiery exchange with then-Mayor Pam Triolo regarding the city’s handling of the COVID-19 virus outbreak.
Omar Hardy throws his hat in the ring for a congressional seat. Image via Colin Hackley.
“Candidate emerges for Perry Thurston seat” via The News Service of Florida — With Sen. Thurston planning to seek a congressional seat, the first candidate has emerged to try to replace him in the Legislature. According to the state Division of Elections website, Broward County School Board member Rosalind Osgood, a Democrat, opened a campaign account Tuesday to run in Senate District 33. Thurston plans to run in a special election to fill the seat of the late Congressman Hastings, who died early this month. It is not clear when the special election will be held.
“Randolph Bracy could run for Val Demings’ seat in Congress if she runs for Governor” via Gray Rohrer of the Orlando Sentinel — If U.S. Rep. Demings opts to run for governor in 2022, Democratic state Sen. Bracy will likely run to replace her, forgoing a race for governor himself that he has been considering, a source close to Bracy said. Politico reported last week that Demings is seriously considering challenging DeSantis or U.S. Sen. Marco Rubio next year. Bracy has released a video and has been eyeing a run for governor himself, but if Demings were to jump in the race, he’d give up hopes of a statewide run.
“When this Florida woman was an NPA candidate for state Senate, she was moving to Sweden” via Samantha J. Gross, Kevin G. Hall and Mattias Carlsson of the Miami Herald — A Central Florida woman who ran as an independent for the state Senate kept a low profile and hardly campaigned. But before she even filed to run, she applied for residency in Sweden, and the day before the November 2020 election, she pressed immigration officials to accelerate her request. The short-lived political career of Jestine Iannotti and her journey from the Sunshine State to Scandinavia is stranger than fiction, and involves advertisements entangled with dark money political groups and the resettling of a young family halfway across the world. Working together, the Miami Herald, McClatchy and the Swedish daily newspaper Dagens Nyheter tracked down the one-time no-party Senate candidate in Florida to a suburb of the Swedish capital of Stockholm.
Tweet, tweet:
Statewide
“DeSantis to appear on Fox News Governors’ town hall from Orlando on Thursday” via Steven Lemongello of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — Fox News Channel will air a live town hall from Orlando on Thursday night featuring DeSantis and four other Republican governors. The event, “Red State Trailblazers,” will be moderated by Laura Ingraham, host of The Ingraham Angle. The event will “focus on the successes and challenges each state has endured throughout the COVID-19 pandemic, including their state’s approach to unemployment and GDP growth.” DeSantis and the other governors, including Texas Gov. Greg Abbott, Iowa Gov. Kim Reynolds, Mississippi Gov. Tate Reeves and Nebraska Gov. Pete Ricketts, also will have an opportunity to respond to President Joe Biden’s first joint address to Congress on Wednesday.
Fox News will hail Ron DeSantis as a ‘Red State Trailblazer.’ Image via NBC News.
Does it? — “Ante up: Florida’s gambling deal opens the door for online poker and blackjack” via Skyler Swisher of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — Florida’s sweeping gambling deal wouldn’t just bring sports betting to the Sunshine State: It also opens the door for online poker, blackjack and other games. A 30-year deal inked by DeSantis and the Seminole Tribe of Florida would add Florida to more than two dozen states that have authorized sports betting. But Floridians could get to do even more gambling under another item near the end of the 75-page agreement. Under a “miscellaneous section,” Florida agreed to negotiate in “good faith” for the Seminole Tribe to offer online versions of all of its casino games. A lot needs to happen to get to that point, and several political and legal hurdles remain.
“Hospitals fight new state rules” via Christine Sexton of The News Service of Florida — Some of Florida’s largest health care systems and children’s hospitals are challenging two proposed state rules, alleging that facilities could get shut out of the market and quality of care could be harmed. Under current rules, new heart transplant programs are required to have annual caseloads of at least 500 cardiac catheterization patients and 150 open-heart surgery patients and, within two years, be performing at least 12 heart transplants annually. A higher minimum threshold of 24 heart transplants per year is set once a program is established. In the proposed rule, Agency for Health Care Administration would require that hospitals maintain minimum volume standards authorized under a federal Medicare rule. But the Medicare rule doesn’t contain minimum volume requirements for pediatric organ transplant programs.
“Toxic algae in Pahokee foreshadows Stuart’s fate if Lake Okeechobee discharges resume” via Matt Chesnes of TC Palm — As coastal residents along the Treasure Coast ramp up environmental education and activism in the face of the looming Lake O discharges, some are saying inland communities are facing environmental racism. “Although the cyanobacteria itself doesn’t discriminate, broken policy dictates that particular communities are hurt more than others,” Reinaldo Diaz wrote in an April 10 blog post. The troubles plaguing Lake O aren’t new, former Pahokee Mayor J.P. Sasser wrote. “We’re not going to take this in my community,” said U.S. Rep. Brian Mast. One of the bills pending in the legislature would prohibit the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers from discharging lake water into the St. Lucie River if it contains a toxicity level of over 8 parts per billion microcystins, helping to curb the effects of algae.
Corona Florida
“COVID-19 resident death toll tops 35,000” via The News Service of Florida — In another grim milestone, Florida on Wednesday exceeded 35,000 resident deaths from COVID-19 since the pandemic started last year. With an additional 72 resident deaths reported Wednesday, the total reached 35,030, according to numbers released by the Florida Department of Health. The state has also had 692 nonresident deaths. In all, Florida has had 2,222,546 cases of COVID-19. The largest number of resident deaths has been concentrated in Southeast Florida, with Miami-Dade County totaling 6,140 deaths. It is followed by Broward County, with 2,886 deaths, and Palm Beach County, with 2,760 deaths. Also hard-hit are long-term care facilities, where 11,266 residents and staff members have died.
“Stanford Dr. Jay Bhattacharya praises DeSantis for COVID-19 response: ‘He’s extraordinary’” via Alexandra Hutzler of Newsweek — Dr. Bhattacharya, a professor at Stanford University Medical School, has praised DeSantis for his response to the coronavirus pandemic. “I mean, I’ve never met a politician like him. He’s extraordinary,” Bhattacharya said during an interview on The Tom Woods Show. The podcast, hosted by libertarian Tom Woods, aired April 17. Bhattacharya said he didn’t know DeSantis well before they had a “remarkable” conversation about COVID-19 in the fall of last year. The governor, he said, had read lots of papers on the subject and “knew all of the details.” The Stanford doctor added that the Republican Governor knows more about coronavirus literature than “most epidemiologists.”
‘Extraordinary: Jay Bhattacharya gives Ron DeSantis props for his COVID-19 response.
“Vaccine ‘passport’ ban clears House” via Haley Brown of Florida Politics — A bill banning vaccine passports and limiting some local government powers during an emergency cleared the House Wednesday. But debate, at times, digressed into DeSantis‘ handling of the pandemic. The House passed the bill 76-40 Wednesday. The bill (SB 2006) already passed the Senate, but it will need to go back to the upper chamber after the House added an amendment to the bill on its second reading. Rep. Tom Leek and Sen. Danny Burgess carried the bill in their respective chambers. The legislation would make changes to the state’s Emergency Management Act to “better address the threat posed by pandemics or other public health emergencies,” according to a staff analysis.
Corona local
“Jerry Demings eases Orange County mask order” via Scott Powers of Florida Politics — Demings is easing county requirements on mask-wearing, allowing people to go without in some circumstances now, and setting touchstones for when mask requirements would be further lifted and ended altogether. Under an executive order Demings signed Wednesday, Orange County residents are now allowed to go maskless outdoors alone or in small gatherings and may reduce social distancing to just three feet, from six feet in his earlier order. Phase 2 of Demings’ order kicks in once 50% of the county’s population aged 16 or older has received a first dose of the vaccine. That would lift facial coverings outdoors for all people in all circumstances, but masks still would be required for indoors, except when someone is eating or dining.
“Demings won’t rescind face-mask order until COVID-19 vaccination rates higher” via Stephen Hudak of the Orlando Sentinel — Demings announced he won’t rescind his face-mask mandate completely until 70% of the county population 16 and older has been vaccinated against COVID-19. “As I have said many, many times, we in Orange County follow and continue to follow the science to guide our decision-making process,” Demings said. Demings said he consulted state health experts, UCF researchers and doctors from local hospitals in devising his new plan.
Jerry Demings relaxes — but not rescinds — the Orange County mask mandate.
“Disney World pays staff to get COVID-19 vaccine, as other Orlando companies successfully promote shots” via Austin Fuller of the Orlando Sentinel — Walt Disney World is offering up cash to its employees who get vaccinated against coronavirus, joining other Central Florida businesses pushing to protect their workforce against the pandemic. Staffers who are fully vaccinated by Sept. 30, either through the single-dose vaccine or both doses of a two-dose vaccine, become eligible for a one-time payment equal to four hours of pay. A number of Orlando companies have been offering money or extra time off as bonuses to workers who receive the vaccine. Incentives from businesses could help motivate more people to get a shot as vaccine demand has fallen in recent weeks.
“Johnson & Johnson vaccine pause spurs worries in Tampa Bay” via Allison Ross of the Tampa Bay Times — A poll conducted April 18-21, before the pause was lifted, found that less than a quarter of American adults who have not yet gotten a coronavirus vaccine said they were willing to take the Johnson & Johnson vaccine. Significantly fewer respondents said that the vaccine was safe compared to the Moderna and Pfizer vaccines. U.S. health officials on Friday lifted a 10-day pause on the Johnson & Johnson vaccines after the CDC said it found, out of 8 million people who had gotten the shot nationwide, 15 cases of women with an extremely rare blood clotting disorder. Advisers suggested the shots continue but with an additional warning about the rare risk.
“Jim DeFede locked out of Twitter — then reinstated — after posting about Miami school firing vaccinated teachers” via Ryan Nicol of Florida Politics — DeFede regained control of his Twitter account after he was restricted following a post about a Miami private school threatening to fire teachers vaccinated against COVID-19. And he got some help from Sen. Jason Pizzo along the way. Early Monday evening, DeFede highlighted a letter from The Centner Academy to teachers warning they could lose their jobs if they take the COVID-19 vaccine. The letter then pushes a small number of unverified complaints that the vaccine is causing changes in women’s menstrual cycles. After tweeting the letter, DeFede earned some time in “Twitter jail,” apparently for violating the company’s policy of sharing false information about the pandemic.
“COVID-19 outbreak at upscale West Palm country club causing anxiety for residents” via Mike Diamond of The Palm Beach Post — A rash of COVID-19 infections among restaurant staff at the Club at Ibis has forced the closure of some restaurants at the upscale country club in West Palm Beach. General Manager Stephen LoGiudice sent several emails in the past week informing members of the infections. In an email sent Saturday, LoGiudice reported that 133 workers were tested; 15 were found to have COVID-19. Another nine are in quarantine, leaving the country club without 24 restaurant workers. Any worker who tested positive has to quarantine for 10 days and must receive a negative COVID-19 test before returning to work, he noted.
“Moms for Liberty pushes school district to drop mask mandate for last month of classes” via Bailey Gallion of Florida Today — Members of conservative parent group Moms for Liberty urged the Brevard County School Board to drop the district’s mandatory masking policy for the remainder of the school year at a Tuesday board meeting. Twelve people spoke against mask mandates at the tense, emotionally charged meeting, insisting that masks harm children’s physical and mental health. At times speakers cried or raised their voices and became argumentative as they pressed their demands. Board members did not agree to revisit the policy for the remainder of the school year but said they will work with health officials to schedule a meeting at which policies for the 2021-2022 school year would be discussed.
Corona nation
“Joe Biden team advances COVID-19 workplace mask rules after Democrats demand explanation” via Michael Wilner and Alex Roarty of the Miami Herald — National COVID-19 workplace mask rules and other protections that had been stalled for over a month past a deadline set by Biden moved forward this week after congressional Democrats demanded an explanation for the delay. Inside the administration, officials acknowledged that a delay in releasing the new standards had caused surprising blowback from congressional allies, who this week issued statements and letters and scheduled open hearings on the delay. The standards would set enforceable, temporary rules across the country for employees on wearing masks at work, a policy that Democrats had called for since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic last year.
After Democratic pushback, Joe Biden advances workplace mask mandates in certain circumstances. Image via Getty.
“We can’t reach safety if only half the herd is vaccinated” via Jerome Adams of The Washington Post — We can’t reach the COVID-19 finish line with only half the herd. Our country has been moving rapidly toward community immunity to COVID-19, but the pace and enthusiasm are slowing from when Americans were willing to drive long distances and wait for hours to get vaccinated. We are swiftly approaching a tipping point on vaccine supply and demand. To finish this race and safely reopen, we urgently need to make it easier for holdouts to get vaccinated and implement new strategies to encourage them to do so. Tuesday’s announcement of new guidance for vaccinated Americans was overdue. Behavioral scientists know that the carrot often works better than the stick, especially when the stick isn’t applied equally across the population.
“Fully vaccinated seniors are 94% less likely to be hospitalized with COVID-19” via Lena H. Sun of The Washington Post — The Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna vaccines being deployed to fight the coronavirus pandemic are highly effective in preventing hospitalizations among older adults, the group most at risk for severe disease and death. While not surprising, the results are reassuring because they provide the first real-world evidence in the United States that both vaccines prevent severe COVID-19 illness, as they did in clinical trials, the CDC said. In the study, fully vaccinated adults 65 and older were 94% less likely to be hospitalized with COVID-19 than unvaccinated people of the same age, according to the CDC. People who were partially vaccinated were 64% less likely to be hospitalized with the disease than the unvaccinated.
“The CDC is still repeating its mistakes” via Zeynep Tufekci of The Atlantic — Yesterday, the CDC released more relaxed mask guidelines for outdoor activities, as well as new charts for indoor and outdoor recommendations. The more permissive guidelines were a welcome step forward, but they’re still frustrating. By issuing recommendations that are simultaneously too timid and too complicated, the CDC is repeating a mistake that’s hounded America’s pandemic response. The new guidelines are rigid and binary and aren’t accompanied by explanations or links to an accessible version of the underlying science. Confused? You’re not alone. The CDC should, at the very least, explain the scientific reasoning behind these rules. Not only would this empower people, but it would also inform the inevitable debate about the guidelines.
“Andrew Cuomo aides spent months hiding nursing home death toll” via J. David Goodman, Jesse McKinley and Danny Hakim of The New York Times — The effort by Gov. Cuomo’s office to obscure the pandemic death toll in New York nursing homes was far greater than previously known. Cuomo’s most senior aides engaged in a sustained effort to prevent the state’s own health officials, including the commissioner, Howard Zucker, from releasing the true death toll to the public or sharing it with state lawmakers, these interviews and documents showed. A scientific paper, which incorporated the data, was never published. An audit of the numbers by a top Cuomo aide was finished months before it became publicly known. Two letters, drafted by the Health Department and meant for state legislators, were never sent.
Andrew Cuomo has been doctoring nursing home COVID-19 numbers for months. Image via AP.
“Walmart expands delivery to your fridge, pandemic be damned” via Matthew Boyle of Bloomberg — In the fall of 2019, Walmart Inc. started testing a service to deliver groceries right into fridges while customers were out. Then the pandemic kept Americans at home, making Walmart’s InHome business largely unnecessary. But it’s not dead. With online grocery booming during COVID-19 and vaccinations rising, the world’s largest retailer is expanding the service. Walmart recently brought InHome to its home turf of Northwest Arkansas, expanded in Southeast Florida, and in July, will add Atlanta. A successful rollout could help solidify it as the biggest player in the $1.8 trillion U.S. grocery market, a position under attack from the likes of Aldi and Amazon.
Presidential
“White House proposes $1.8 trillion package that would dramatically expand education, safety net programs” via Jeff Stein, Danielle Douglas-Gabriel, Laura Meckler and Caroline Kitchener of The Washington Post — The White House on Wednesday unveiled a $1.8 trillion spending and tax plan aimed at dramatically expanding access to education and safety-net programs for families, the latest effort by Biden to try to turn some of his campaign promises into new policy. The package cannot be implemented without congressional approval, and many Republicans have offered a cool reception to the scope of tax increases and spending that Biden has tried to advance. But the White House’s new “American Families Plan” provides Congress with details of the President’s domestic agenda. Biden’s plan proposes a suite of changes that would collectively represent a marked change in how Americans interact with the federal government.
“Biden’s big bet: He can remake the economy without any negative side effects” via Heather Long of The Washington Post — Biden, fresh off a victory on a large stimulus package, is pitching another $4 trillion in spending to make bold investments in the nation’s physical infrastructure and human capital in what he says will spur growth, create a more equitable economy and make the United States more competitive with China, without any negative side effects. It’s a bold experiment that hasn’t been tested in the modern U.S. economy. This year and next, forecasters are predicting a burst in hiring and growth that will rapidly heal most financial wounds from the pandemic.
Go big or go home, Joe Biden says. Image via Twitter.
“Biden to invite lawmakers to the White House next week to discuss big spending packages” via Quint Forgey of POLITICO — White House press secretary Jen Psaki said Wednesday that Biden will likely invite members of Congress to the White House next week for bipartisan meetings on his sprawling infrastructure and social welfare proposals. Together, Biden’s American Jobs Plan and American Families Plan would constitute roughly $4 trillion in new federal spending over the next decade, financed by a combination of tax hikes for corporations and the wealthiest Americans. Congressional Republicans have balked at the proposed changes to the tax code, which would reverse certain provisions of former President Donald Trump’s 2017 tax law, while also taking issue with the White House’s definition of infrastructure, which they criticize as overly broad.
Assignment editors — Florida Democratic Party Chair Manny Diaz, Reps. Demings, Stephanie Murphy, Darren Soto, Frederica Wilson and Orange County Mayor Demings will host a virtual news conference to highlight Biden’s first 100 days and how Democrats have taken major steps to get Florida and America on track, 11:30 a.m.Zoom registration here.
“Inside Biden’s bubble: How an insular White House has kept drama and leaks at a minimum” via Natasha Korecki and Daniel Lippman of POLITICO — When Biden sat in one of his first Oval Office briefings to discuss the earliest acts of his presidency — impending executive actions — he brought only five people into the room. The five: Mike Donilon, Steve Ricchetti, Bruce Reed, Ron Klain and Stef Feldman. Each had been close to Biden for at minimum a decade. That lifers would be with Biden in the early moments of his presidency was not a surprise. That so few of them were there was a sign of things to come. One hundred days into the Biden administration, the White House is a tight ship defined by insularity, internal power centers, and top-down micromanagement.
“U.S. Catholic bishops may press Biden to stop taking Communion” via David Crary of The Associated Press — When U.S. Catholic bishops hold their next national meeting in June, they’ll be deciding whether to send a tougher-than-ever message to Biden and other Catholic politicians: Don’t receive Communion if you persist in public advocacy of abortion rights. Biden, only the second Catholic President, is the first to be such while espousing clear-cut support for abortion rights. Such a stance, by a public figure, is “a grave moral evil,” according to Archbishop Joseph Naumann of Kansas City, Kansas, who chairs the USCCB’s Committee on Pro-Life Activities and believes it’s necessary to rebuke Biden on the issue publicly. “Because President Biden is Catholic, it presents a unique problem for us,” Naumann said.
Epilogue: Trump
“FBI searches Rudy Giuliani’s home and office, seizing phones and computers” via William K. Rashbaum, Ben Protess, Maggie Haberman and Kenneth P. Vogel of The New York Times — Federal investigators seized cellphones and computers from Giuliani, the former mayor of New York City who became Trump’s personal lawyer, stepping up a criminal investigation into Giuliani’s dealings in Ukraine, three people with knowledge of the investigation said. FBI agents executed search warrants around 6 a.m. at Giuliani’s apartment on Madison Avenue and his Park Avenue office in Manhattan, carting away the electronic devices, Giuliani confirmed in a statement. The execution of search warrants is an extraordinary action for prosecutors to take against a lawyer, let alone a lawyer for a former President.
In deep: The FBI raids Rudy Giuliani’s home, office as part of the Ukraine probe. Image via Getty.
“Justice Department ends Donald Trump-era limits on grants to ‘sanctuary cities’” via Sarah Lynch of Reuters — The U.S. Justice Department has repealed a policy put in place during Trump’s presidency that cut off hundreds of millions of dollars in grants to sanctuary cities that limit cooperation with federal immigration authorities. In an internal memo, acting head of the Office of Justice Programs Maureen Henneberg said that prior grant recipients, including cities, counties and states that were recipients of the department’s popular $250 million annual grant program for local law enforcement, will no longer be required to cooperate with U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement as a condition of their funding. She also ordered staff to take down any pending Justice Department grant applications with similar strings attached and start the process over again.
“‘There is a tension there’: Publishers draw fire for signing Trump officials” via Elizabeth A. Harris and Alexandra Alter of The New York Times — After backing out of a deal with Sen. Josh Hawley, Simon & Schuster announced this month that it would publish two books by former Vice President Mike Pence. Dana Canedy, who joined Simon & Schuster as publisher last year, called Pence’s memoir “the definitive book on one of the most consequential presidencies in American history.” That’s when much of the staff erupted in protest. On Monday, editors and other employees at Simon & Schuster delivered a petition to management demanding an end to the deal, with signatures from more than 200 employees and 3,500 outside supporters. Most were probably not aware that the company has also signed the former Trump adviser Kellyanne Conway.
Crisis
“D.C. officer who suffered heart attack on Jan. 6 calls out Trump for downplaying ‘brutal, savage’ riot” via Tim Elfrink of The Washington Post — On Jan. 6, D.C. police officer Michael Fanone was swarmed by a pro-Trump mob and dragged down the Capitol steps, suffering a mild heart attack and a concussion as he was shocked with a stun gun and beaten. In the months since, Fanone said it had been “difficult” to listen to politicians like Trump, who last month falsely claimed rioters were actually “hugging and kissing” police, downplay the severity of the insurrection. “It’s been very difficult seeing elected officials and other individuals kind of whitewash the events of that day or downplay what happened,” Fanone told CNN’s Don Lemon on Tuesday night.
Capitol police officer Michael Fanone called the riot ‘medieval.’
“Trump supporter argues alleged death threats against leading Democrats were fueled by pandemic boredom” via Shayna Jacobs of The Washington Post — A fervent Trump supporter on trial on charges of making death threats to prominent elected Democrats before and shortly after the Jan. 6 riot at the U.S. Capitol insisted Tuesday that his statements on social media and in private messages were not to be taken seriously. Brendan Hunt blamed his comments on pandemic-induced boredom and depression when he took the witness stand to testify in his own defense in U.S. District Court in Brooklyn and was confronted by prosecutors with violent, racist, and anti-Semitic statements that he argued did not reflect his beliefs. Hunt’s case is seen as a test of how far violent speech can go before it is a crime.
“Doak Campbell Stadium name to remain the same” via Brandon Spencer of WCTV — At Wednesday’s Florida State University President’s Task Force on Anti-Racism, Equity and Inclusion meeting, the Task Force decided not to move forward on the recommendation to remove Campbell’s name from the university’s stadium. As of now, no action will be made on the name and it will remain the same. The Task Force did vote to allow the addition of a high-profile acknowledgment for the contributions on the park of Black and other underrepresented minority student-athletes at the stadium.
D.C. matters
“Lower-than-expected state population totals stoke concerns about the 2020 Census” via Tara Bahrampour, Kate Rabinowitz and Ted Mellnik of The Washington Post — A day after the government released the first results from the 2020 Census, some states and civic organizations were reeling from unexpected results, and wondered if the differences between projections and actual data might be an indicator of problems with the count. But this time, perhaps more than ever, the count faced unprecedented hurdles. They included underfunding, attempts by the Trump administration to add a citizenship question and exclude undocumented immigrants from apportionment, the coronavirus pandemic, and natural disasters that struck just before the count ended.
“Liberal group pushes Biden to take ‘urgent’ action on Puerto Rico in new report” via Alex Roarty and Syra Ortiz-Blanes of the Miami Herald — Biden must undertake a set of reforms to fundamentally change Puerto Rico’s relationship with the federal government, an influential liberal think tank argued in a report published Wednesday, including measures that would revoke a century-old law and ease the territory’s sizable debt. The report from the Center for American Progress says the steps are necessary to help Puerto Rico reverse a long-term economic decline that has persuaded many of its one-time residents to leave. The U.S. Census reported this week that the island lost more than 400,000 residents from 2010 to 2020, a greater than 10% decline over a decade in which Puerto Rico has been devastated by a fiscal crisis, hurricanes and earthquakes.
“What if Matt Gaetz shared nudes in a ‘regular office’? Two HR execs have thoughts.” via Monica Torres of HuffPost — Congress is an unusual workplace, but it does have a place for members to report harassment or discrimination: The Office of Congressional Workplace Rights. Those who report harassment are entitled to a free confidential adviser, and if a member of Congress is found to be at fault, they have to reimburse the government for any monetary award or settlement. Beyond laws that protect against harassment, many companies have policies in place that specifically address misconduct. Common sense dictates that yes, in almost any company, Gaetz would be subject to disciplinary action and likely terminated as it’s pretty egregious behavior; a middle schooler would know better.
What if Matt Gaetz pulled his shenanigans in a regular office? He’d be fired, for sure.
“Gaetz may be the only man who’s too gross for Newsmax” via Molly Jong-Fast of the Daily Beast — Just before his incredibly torrid sex trafficking scandal broke, Gaetz said he was thinking of “taking early retirement” and joining Newsmax. However, a Newsmax source quickly batted down the rumor, telling The Daily Beast, “Highly doubt it, highly.” If Gaetz is too creepy for Newsmax, he’s about the only guy who is. In 2017, at least a dozen women came forward with allegations of sexual harassment against Mark Halperin, who now hosts a weekend show on Newsmax.
Local notes
“Mayor Francis Suarez’s ‘cafecito’ city hall meetup attracts throngs seeking Miami tech momentum” via Rob Wile of the Miami Herald — More than 100 techies and investors heeded the call of Twitter, turning up Wednesday morning for chat and caffeination outside Miami City Hall in Coconut Grove for Mayor Suarez’s first public “cafecito tech talk.” The event came together almost overnight, as word of an impromptu Miami Tech Week began gathering steam on social media Sunday and continued over the next 48 hours. Entrepreneurs, many maskless, thanks to newly relaxed COVID-19 guidelines, queued for a cup of the promised cafecito from a larger-than-life cup-shaped kiosk and gathered under a tent to hear from Suarez. Suarez continues to be a primary conduit channeling the otherwise diffuse energy among tech and finance professionals from across the country flocking.
Frances Suarez gets caffeinated.
“Miami cop probed for repeatedly punching homeless man accused of stealing Publix chicken” via Charles Rabin and David Ovalle of the Miami Herald — A Miami police officer is under investigation after video surfaced on social media this week showing him shoving a homeless man to the ground inside a supermarket, then punching him repeatedly in the head before handcuffing him. Officer Alexander Garcia-Contreras has been relieved of duty with pay as investigators review whether he acted appropriately in arresting the suspected shoplifter, the department said on Wednesday. The arrest of Willie Barbor happened at Publix. According to court records, the charges of petty theft, resisting without violence, and disorderly conduct were quickly dismissed by prosecutors four days after his arrest.
“Robert Runcie pleads not guilty — and asks to have perjury charge dismissed” via Rafael Olmeda of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — Broward Schools Superintendent Runcie formally pleaded not guilty Wednesday, again asking a Broward judge to dismiss the perjury charge filed by a statewide grand jury. In one of three documents filed by the defense Wednesday, Runcie said he is not guilty, demanded a jury trial and waived arraignment, eliminating the need for a May 12 hearing that had been scheduled. A second document is a demand for discovery, a routine request for the state to turn over any documents or witness lists that will be used to prepare to prosecute Runcie. The third filing was a motion to dismiss the case, again a standard motion at the early stage of a criminal case.
“Court upholds conviction of officer in slaying of Black man” via Terry Spencer of The Associated Press — A Florida police officer who gunned down a Black motorist whose car had broken down six years ago could legally be convicted of both manslaughter and attempted first-degree murder, a state appeals court ruled Wednesday. The court said that unusual combination did not constitute double jeopardy. The Fourth District Court of Appeal rejected the contention by Nouman Raja’s attorneys that his 2019 convictions and 25-year prison sentence for the shooting of Corey Jones should be overturned. Raja’s attorneys had argued that since a defendant can’t be convicted of both murder and manslaughter for killing one person, a guilty verdict for manslaughter and attempted murder should also be rejected. But the judges sided with prosecutors by a 3-0 vote, saying Raja’s convictions were for distinct crimes.
“Demings: Proposed penny sales tax hike for transportation may appear on 2022 ballot” via Ryan Lynch of Orlando Business Journal — Demings on April 27 said he might revisit a proposed penny sales tax hike if the economy recovers “well enough.” During the county commissioners’ Tuesday meeting, he mentioned the potential for the proposed tax hike to go on the November 2022 ballot. Revenue from the initiative would be used to fund local transportation infrastructure and services. The proposal, previously slated to go on the 2020 ballot, was shelved in April 2020 due to the COVID-19 pandemic’s negative impact on the economy. When the penny sales tax hike first was first proposed, it was projected to generate roughly $596 million per year for a dedicated transportation fund, which would be used on infrastructure as well as services like Lynx and SunRail.
“Orlando Magic move offices out of Maitland and into downtown, setting up temporary home next to City Hall” via Alex Galbraith of Orlando Weekly — The Orlando Magic will move their operations into downtown Orlando, temporarily taking up residence in a 23,711-square-foot space next to City Hall on Orange Avenue. The Orlando Business Journal reports the team will move its operations staff out of their office in Maitland at the RDV Sportsplex Athletic Club, taking 200 employees with it. That future home is the long-planned sports & entertainment complex in the shadow of the Amway Center. The $200 million project is expected to include a hotel, seven stories of offices, 100,000 square feet of retail space and a residential community. The project has been in the planning stages for a decade, but the organization hopes to break ground before the end of this year.
“Michelle Salzman confident in repercussions for Skanska, but likely not until bridge is complete” via Emma Kennedy of the Pensacola News Journal — State Rep. Salzman said she’s confident there will be repercussions for Skanska following Hurricane Sally, but they might not come until the company has finished building the Pensacola Bay Bridge in its entirety. Salzman met with both the governor’s office and the attorney general’s office during the past week to push for both accountability for Skanska meeting its project deadline and remuneration for residents and business owners who have suffered as a result of the bridge’s ongoing outage. “The concern locally for my constituents and my community is to build back from this tragedy, but in the bigger picture, if we don’t send the message, then we set a precedent for this company being able to do this in another part of Florida,” said Salzman.
Michelle Salzman is certain Skanska will be held responsible for repairs to the Pensacola Bay Bridge. Image via Colin Hackley.
“Florida’s last harness racing track: Pompano Park might be in its stretch run” via Chris Perkins of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — The track at Pompano Park is the lone facility in Florida that features harness racing. The action on the racetrack conjures images of chariot races in ancient Rome as horses pull two-wheeled carts, each occupied by a “driver” (much like a jockey), who maneuvers the horse as it speeds around the facility’s 5/8-mile oval track. A measure likely to be considered in Florida’s legislative special session in May, when the body ponders sports betting, could approve decoupling, which would probably mean the end for harness racing at Pompano Park given that it’s the only place for harness racing in the Sunshine State. If decoupling is approved, Florida’s pari-mutuel facilities wouldn’t be required to “couple” slots and card games with races or matches.
Top opinion
“Our generation’s ‘Sputnik moment’ has finally arrived” via James Hohmann of The Washington Post — This may be Biden’s chance to seize a Sputnik moment in a way that Barack Obama never managed. With his first address to a joint session of Congress on Wednesday night, Biden has an opportunity to galvanize Americans to support his ambitious agenda, especially infrastructure investment, by highlighting the national imperative to come together to compete with a rising China. Just as President Dwight D. Eisenhower used Sputnik to build support for his agenda, which included the interstate highway system, beating Beijing requires Biden to rally support for expanding broadband, 5G, semiconductors, electric cars, artificial intelligence, and so much more. A decade after Obama tried to summon Americans, that Sputnik moment may have finally arrived.
Opinions
What Chris Sprowls is reading — “Florida’s school voucher expansion” via The Wall Street Journal editorial board — Florida already has among the most expansive school-choice offerings in the nation, and this week the Legislature expanded private-school vouchers to more families. Florida established the Family Empowerment Scholarship (FES) program in 2019 to help low-income students attend private schools. In the 2020-2021 school year, more than 36,000 students participated, with an average scholarship of nearly $7,000. The bill increases the eligible household income cap from 300% to 375% of the poverty level, about $100,000 for a family of four, though it prioritizes households under 185%. The enrollment cap will continue to escalate by 1% of public-school enrollment annually, allowing roughly 28,000 new students each year.
“A conservative professor’s plea to DeSantis — veto HB 233” via Professor X for Florida Politics — HB 233 was written to protect Florida public university professors like myself — conservative or moderates working in a climate where liberal, ‘woke’ politics dominate and the failure to espouse these beliefs threatens careers. I am a tenured professor at one of our flagship universities. While my politics are complex, I am probably best described as a ‘closet conservative’ working in an extremely liberal field. Unlike literally 99% of my colleagues, I will be voting for DeSantis in 2022. Surveying the faculty will accomplish little; there are already jokes circulating about how professors intend to give fake answers to confound the results. The recording provisions of HB 233 are particularly troublesome. Decontextualized recordings are red meat to clickbait-oriented journalists, and professors will self-censor and stifle debate to avoid being targeted.
“DeSantis does disease” via Gail Collins of The New York Times — Perhaps you didn’t notice, but cruise ships haven’t been sailing out of American ports lately. Something about, um, a virus. Many of us heard the first squeaks of a future pandemic when waves of infection broke out on a few alleged pleasure boats, leaving their multitudinous guests stranded on board, hostage to the new plague. The industry has recently been on hiatus. Florida, under the leadership of DeSantis, is suing the federal government to open up the harbors. At the same time, it’s prohibiting cruise lines from asking passengers for proof of vaccination. We pause here to note that at this moment in time, DeSantis is regarded as one of the leading candidates for the next Republican presidential nomination. DeSantis’s political committee has thus far received nearly $1 million from the owner of a pier that gets most of that Key West traffic.
“Bill makes unfair, unnecessary, unreasonable changes to labor unions” via Jordan W. Scott of the Tallahassee Democrat — More than 100 union members have shown up to the Civic Center to speak against SB 1014, and its House companion bill HB 835, at least three times as it sits in its final committee before it would head to the Senate floor. Each time it has been postponed, but make no mistake, the threat of this bill remains. SB 1014 would take bargaining power away from public sector employees. It impacts state workers, university and college employees, faculty, graduate assistants and many other public sector workers. If made law, it would eliminate automatic dues deduction for union members. It would also decertify any union locals that have less than 50% membership of their bargaining unit.
“Internship tax credits are an idea we can all support” via Shevrin Jones for the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — Because of the pandemic, countless Floridians have lost hours, their jobs or their businesses through no fault of their own. These challenges call for solutions that boost internship opportunities for students in Florida. That’s why I recently filed Senate Bill 258, a bill to create a new Internship Tax Credit Program to incentivize small businesses via a tax credit for each degree-seeking student intern that they hire for an internship. I am encouraged that colleagues on both sides of the aisle recognize the impact this can have for young people as our bill moves through Senate committees with unanimous support. By encouraging businesses to provide our students with opportunities to advance their knowledge and experience, we can prepare them for a career after they graduate.
“Nakesa Barnhill: Crime survivors deserve better protections in Florida” via Florida Politics — Five years ago, when my two-year-old son Amari was murdered, my employer gave me just five days off. A week later, I returned to work because I couldn’t afford to lose my job. This is why I and other Florida crime survivors are calling upon state leaders to give victims more support — including a reasonable period of time off — following a criminal or violent incident. Crime Survivors for Safety and Justice believes that state policy should provide up to 30 days of leave for those who need to access services, or take measures to ensure their safety, or grieve the loss of a loved one. No one should have to go through what I did.
“Runcie overstayed his welcome, and it’s time to go” via the South Florida Sun-Sentinel editorial board — Runcie arrived as Broward’s new superintendent more than nine years ago as the desperately needed savior of a school district reeling from scandal and controversy and under the harsh microscope of a grand jury. Runcie will soon depart, facing a felony charge of perjury brought by another grand jury. The Broward County School District needs new leadership and a fresh start. Again. Runcie offered to resign Tuesday at an emotional workshop of the school board in the face of certain disciplinary action by a board that clearly has lost faith in him. Ten months after Parkland, this editorial board called for Runcie’s resignation because of the systemic failures the shooting revealed.
On today’s Sunrise
The bill banning transgender athletes is alive again. But now, lawmakers removed the part about inspecting genitals.
Also, on today’s Sunrise:
— The House passes a bill banning vaccine passports, saying private businesses cannot ask customers to prove they’ve been vaccinated against COVID-19.
— The House has also approved a bill making it harder to vote by mail, and a bill that punishes local governments that try to do something about gun violence.
— The House also passed a bill making it illegal for social media platforms to ban users who spread lies and misinformation on their platforms.
— Yeah … it was that kind of day in the Florida Legislature.
— And finally, a Florida Man is accused of carjacking his own vehicle.
“NFL seeks return to normalcy with draft on Lake Erie shores” via Barry Wilner of The Associated Press — That’s not exactly the slogan for the NFL draft being staged Thursday through Saturday in Cleveland. It’s more at the top of the league’s wish list as it allows some prospects and fans to attend the festivities. Sure, the draft is the NFL’s most popular event other than the Super Bowl and opening day. The key here for the league is that, just as last season was completed on time, and the Super Bowl, albeit scaled down from a mega-event, was held on schedule, this draft will be as close as currently possible to the real thing. “We have to do this,” says Jon Barker, NFL head of live event productions. Another sign of business as usual is many, perhaps all the clubs, will be back at their facilities to conduct the selections. There are requirements and coronavirus protocols in place, of course.
After going all virtual in 2020, the three-day draft, one of America’s biggest, nongame sporting events, returns with thousands of fans. Image via AP.
“Let’s rock! Cleveland goes all-out for NFL Draft (but will Mother Nature cooperate?)” via Adam H. Beasley of the Miami Herald — The NFL Draft is the most made-for-TV event in an increasingly made-for-TV sport. The league has prepared for 50,000 people to fill this city’s streets and parks over each of the next three days, making the 86th Player Selection Meeting pro football’s biggest mass gathering since the pandemic began. Of course, basically, none of the actual action will take place here in Northeast Ohio. The teams these throngs of out-of-town visitors support, and the executives making those franchises’ most important decisions, won’t be anywhere near the league’s sprawling soundstage on the banks of Lake Erie. Chris Grier and Brian Flores will be back in Davie, phoning their picks into an on-site team rep, who will relay them on to the league.
“NFL draft could see record run of quarterbacks taken” via Josh Dubow of The Associated Press — As soon as the San Francisco 49ers traded three first-round picks to move up to No. 3 overall, it became clear that quarterbacks would come off the board at a record pace at the NFL draft. While QBs are widely expected to go 1-2-3 for just the third time in the common draft era that started in 1967, there are still questions about how many others will follow in the Top 10 and first round. Trevor Lawrence and Zach Wilson are expected to be the top two picks, Jacksonville and the New York Jets, with the Niners likely choosing among Mac Jones, Trey Lance and Justin Fields at No. 3. That would match 1971 and 1999 as the only drafts with quarterbacks taken with the top three picks. A record could be set with four QBs going in the top four if Atlanta drafts the successor to Matt Ryan or trades down to a quarterback-needy team.
“A receiver? A tackle? A trade-down? GM Chris Grier is on the clock for Dolphins” via Dave Hyde for the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — Cut through the noise and the nonsense and do the math. The Dolphins sit at No. 6. Three quarterbacks will be drafted with the first three picks. Three top-graded prospects remain by most rankings: Florida tight-end-but-so-much-more Kyle Pitts, LSU receiver Ja’Marr Chase and Oregon tackle Penei Sewell. Who falls? Who knows? But the last player standing is the Dolphins pick unless another surprise comes. Like trading down, which could happen. Like taking one of the smaller Alabama receivers, which they could trade down to do. The Dolphins delivered one surprise Tuesday by spending $6 million to send left guard Erik Flowers to play in Washington next season.
Aloe
What Jimmy Miller is reading — “Carmelo Anthony memoir coming out in September” via The Associated Press — Anthony’s life story includes a great deal besides basketball. The 10-time NBA All-Star has a memoir coming out on Sept. 14 that publisher Gallery Books calls “raw and inspirational,” tracing his rise from housing projects in New York City and Baltimore to becoming an Olympic gold medalist and one of professional basketball’s top scorers. The book is called “Where Tomorrows Aren’t Promised” and is co-written by D. Watkins. “I’m a Black kid from the bottom,” the 37-year-old Anthony writes in an excerpt of the book shared Wednesday by Gallery. “I had to fight through some of the roughest housing projects in America. How did I, a kid who’d had so many hopes, dreams and expectations beat out of him, make it here at all?”
Carmelo Anthony’s autobiography has much more to offer than basketball.
What Danny Burgess is reading — “RV industry continues to grow in Florida, spurred in part by the pandemic” via Ileana Najarro of the Tampa Bay Times — Lorrie Atkinson, 60, and her husband have been living out of their camper for four years at the Bay Bayou RV Resort in Tampa. She found it’s a cheaper alternative to renting and homeownership, allowing them to save for retirement. In the past year, plagued by the coronavirus pandemic, Atkinson has noticed a demographic shift among her RV neighbors. “There are a lot more families coming in,” she said. “I’m seeing people up here teaching their kids school. I’m seeing other people up here working.” The recreational vehicle industry, both nationally and locally, was already on the rise in sales and RV park development, with customers skewing younger and younger.
“Bear busts through Naples porch screen to have a dip in the pool” via Megan Myers of NBC 2 — A homeowner in Golden Gate Estates woke up to find a large hole in her porch screen. She quickly discovered the screen was ripped open by a bear. The homeowner said the bear has come into her pool and sat on the ledge multiple times. He normally splashes around in the water and minds his own business. The broken screen is the first and only thing the bear has damaged at the Naples property.
“Unusually pale dolphin spotted off Florida coast may be albino” via Garfield Hilton of the Orlando Sentinel — An unusually pale dolphin swimming in the Gulf of Mexico was captured on video camera. Caitlin Mackey posted the video Sunday of the lightly colored bottlenose dolphin in the Clearwater Basin Marina. The dolphin was swimming with a few others just along the side of an embankment. Officials at the Clearwater Marine Aquarium said they won’t label the dolphin as “albino” until they do more research. The dolphin, nicknamed “Cherub,” is less than 1-year-old and the third known calf of a dolphin nicknamed “Guardian.”
Happy birthday
Happy 67th birthday to ace photographer Mark Wallheiser. It’s also Gary Farmer‘s birthday.
___
Sunburn is authored and assembled by Peter Schorsch, Phil Ammann, A.G. Gancarski, Renzo Downey and Drew Wilson.
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Good morning. Old guys with stories to tell, rejoice! Starting next Monday, New York City will allow bar seating for the first time in more than a year.
Honestly? Very much looking forward to replace being alone at home with being alone at a bar.
Fed: Following its two-day meeting, the central bank didn’t announce any big policy moves, but said it was encouraged by the pace of vaccinations and the economic recovery. No word yet on when the Fed will wind down its pandemic-era stimulus measures, like keeping interest rates at near-zero.
Markets: Stocks weren’t fazed by anything the Fed said. Before closing lower, the S&P rose to an intra-day record, and the Dow was dragged down by Boeing, which posted its sixth consecutive quarterly loss.
In a primetime address to Congress last night, President Biden touted his American Families Plan, the third huge spending proposal Biden’s introduced in his 99 days in office.
The key parts of the plan:
Universal preschool for 3- and 4-year olds, and two years of tuition-free community college for every American.
A paid leave program for new parents, a permanent expanded child tax credit, and subsidized child care for low- and middle-income families.
The numbers: $1.8 trillion price tag = $1 trillion in new spending + $800 billion in tax credits.
How he’s going to fund it
If you ask where the oysters are from, you’ll probably pay more in taxes. Biden’s plan includes a) bumping up the top income tax rate from 37% to 39.6% b) nearly doubling the capital gains tax for wealthy investors, and c) giving more resources to the IRS to crack down on tax avoiders.
“It’s time for corporate America and the wealthiest 1% of Americans to pay their fair share,” Biden said.
Big picture: Taken with the president’s two other spending proposals, the American Families Plan represents his administration’s view that the federal government can and should play a significant role in shaping the US economy. Here’s a quick review of the other two bills:
The American Rescue Plan: This was the $1.9 trillion Covid-19 relief bill Congress passed in March. It sent $1,400 in direct payments to most Americans and extended additional unemployment benefits through the summer.
The American Jobs Plan: This infrastructure-focused plan pledges $2.3 trillion to shore up the nation’s roads and transit systems, and invests in next-gen building blocks like electric vehicle charging stations. It’s still being negotiated on Capitol Hill.
Looking ahead…Republicans think this $6+ trillion in spending is too fast, too furious, and they sure don’t like the tax hikes. But while GOP lawmakers will likely be able to wrangle concessions from the infrastructure bill, experts say the American Families Bill could pass with just Democratic support.
The cryptocurrency ether hit a record high of $2,714 yesterday. The spike follows Tuesday’s announcement that the European Investment Bank will sell bonds on the Ethereum network, with the aid of Goldman Sachs, Banco Santander, and Society Generale. Plus, Visa announced it’ll settle transactions using Ethereum earlier this month.
Basically, Ethereum is getting Big Finance’s seal of approval.
Just like at Costco, there’s nothing to be ashamed of if you’re feeling lost here. Ethereum is the blockchain network that conducts transactions using ether, the name of its cryptocurrency. In other words, no central authority controls ether in the way the Fed controls the US dollar. That decentralization is what makes crypto, crypto.
So what can you do with Ethereum? Run exchanges, take out loans, send ether to family and friends, and more. Most non-fungible tokens (NFTs) run on its tech, too, like CryptoKitties’ digital cat platform.
Zoom out: Some, like Shark Tank’s Kevin O’Leary, think ether will always be the silver to bitcoin’s gold. Right now, one bitcoin = more than 20 ether.
Samsung Vice Chairman Jay Y. Lee. Chung Sung-Jun/Getty Images
The Samsung heirs said they’ll pay approximately one Cave of Wonders in inheritance tax following the death of Samsung chairman and family head Lee Kun-hee last year. Ringing in at $10.8 billion, it’s the biggest inheritance tax…ever.
The family will also donate 23,000 artworks and antiques that make most museums look like glorified Beanie Baby collections, featuring Dalí, Monet, Picasso, Park Soo-keun, Lee Jung-seob, and many other iconic artists.
They said the donations will “uphold [Lee Kun-hee’s] legacy and contribute to the creation of a better society.”
“Uphold his legacy” = “overhaul his reputation”
Lee Kun-hee was sentenced to three years in prison after evading taxes on a then-secret inheritance from his father. And the family scandals didn’t stop there: Lee Kun-hee’s son Lee Jae-yong (above) served one year behind bars for bribery.
Big picture: South Korea is looking forward to a windfall the family says is “three to four times the government’s total estate tax revenue last year.” It’ll collect the $10.8 billion across six payments over five years, giving the country’s richest family time to gather a) bank loans b) cash from dividends, and possibly c) divestments from Samsung holdings.
No, not the dinner plan—although a nice light chicken piccata does sound delish.
We’re talking about the plan you make to reach your financial goals. And making that plan and reaching those goals is easier than ever thanks to the .
It’s the FREE app that helps you create a goal based plan and then put that plan into motion.
But let’s be clear, how you put those plans into motion is up to you. If you’d rather trade on your own, their simplified trade ticket streamlines the whole process. And if you’d rather have your investments managed for you, you can use the app to set that up.
So no matter how you’re thinking about your financial future, the Fidelity Spire app can help.
Stat: LinkedIn did more than $3 billion in ad revenue during the year ending March 31, Microsoft said Tuesday. That’s more annual ad revenue than Snap or Pinterest.
Quote: “That’s incorrect.”
On the Today show, Dr. Anthony Fauci responded to podcaster Joe Rogan who said that healthy, young people should not get the Covid-19 vaccine. Dr. Fauci pushed back, saying that even though young people may not develop symptoms or serious illness, they could become vectors for the coronavirus and spread it to more vulnerable populations. He said young people should “absolutely” get vaccinated.
Read: How to have better arguments online. (The Guardian)
Tractor Supply, the rural US retailer famous for carrying everything except tractors, said that half of the 11 million chickens it sold in 2020 were to new customers. CEO Hal Lawton credited the surge to millennials moving from big cities and upgrading their sad window herb boxes to backyard coops in suburbs and less-populated areas.
Big picture: If it feels like all your friends are living their Little House on the Prairie fantasies, it’s because they are. Homeownership rates are growing fastest among people under 44, and in February, rural population growth among millennials increased 3%, according to Prevedere.
“I think all of us have been wondering if that generation will eventually conform to normal generational activities like householding,” Lawton said about millennials during the company’s earnings call, where the company also reported a 42.5% total sales increase YoY.
Looking ahead…as big cities that emptied out at the start of the pandemic open back up, Tractor Supply isn’t worried about young people ditching the simple life. The retailer plans to open 80 new stores in 2021.
WHAT ELSE IS BREWING
Facebook revenue increased 48% last quarter but warned that growth could “significantly” decline thanks to Apple’s new privacy policies.
Speaking of Apple, it reported double-digit sales growth in every product line. It also authorized $90 billion in share buybacks.
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Goodell bear hugs: The NFL Draft kicks off tonight in Cleveland. We know that Trevor Lawrence will go first to the Jacksonville Jaguars, but what happens after that? Here is your preview.
Four more years? For the wannabe Nate Silvers, this interactive map allows you to play around with different scenarios for the 2024 election.
For your second monitor: A live stream of the Great Moose Migration in northern Sweden.
If you’re not sure what to talk about on your first post-vaccine date, try bringing up some of these wild headlines—but just know that only three of them are real. Can you (or your date) guess which is the faker?
President Biden urged Congress to pass the George Floyd Justice in Policing Act, which aims to bolster police accountability and ban certain maneuvers that have led to the deaths of Black Americans. He asked Congress to reinstate a ban on assault weapons and high capacity magazines, recalling his efforts to do so in 1994 as a senator.
…
In his plea to lawmakers, Biden has said that raising the taxes on the wealthy would pay for his $1.8 trillion American Families Plan, a sweeping package that includes paid family leave, free community college, subsidized child care and other proposals to expand the nation’s social safety net.
…
The president didn’t focus on the border challenges his administration faced Wednesday night. Instead, he focused on urging Congress to pass his comprehensive immigration legislation, which would create a pathway to citizenship for the nearly 11 million people living in the United States without citizenship.
Why is the Supreme Court evaluating student discipline for off-campus behavior?
The case began in 2017 with a message posted to Snapchat [saying “f**k school f**k softball f**k cheer f**k everything”] by Brandi Levy, then a 14-year-old rising sophomore, after learning she did…
Full summaries, images, and headlines for subscribers only.
All votes are anonymous. This poll closes at: 9:00 PST
YESTERDAY’S POLLDoes Israel’s treatment of Palestinians warrant international sanctions?
No
46%
Yes
37%
Unsure
17%
294 votes, 83 comments
Context: Human Rights Watch calls for sanctions against Israel.
BEST COMMENTS
“No – Israeli Arab citizens share identical rights to Israeli Jewish citizens. How exactly does that meet the definition of Apartheid? Palestinians in the West Bank are subject to varying levels of Israeli control because of Israel’s successful defense of itself against Jordanian attack during the Six Day War. They are not Israeli citizens and not subject to Israeli law as that would constitute annexation and meet with international outcry.”
“Yes – Israel is an outlaw state. They agree to share land with Palestinians then the next day intrude int…”
“No – The Palestinian suffering is undeniable, but anyone looking two inches beneath the surface understands that it’s their own leadership’s fault. They have refused every op…”
Why is the death of a California man pinned down by police under investigation?
In their initial statement last week, the [Alameda county sheriff’s department] had said that Mario Gonzalez suffered a medical emergency during his arrest, but did n…
Full summaries, images, and headlines for subscribers only.
Why is France proposing new anti-terrorism legislation?
Some of the new proposals would allow authorities to more systematically monitor the Internet-browsing behavior of people who access extremist content. Macron’s allies hav…
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Don’t scroll past. Support credible news for everyone.
Why did the U.S. restore restrictions on methane emissions?
Senators on Wednesday reversed a Trump rollback by voting on a resolution under the Congressional Review Act, which gives them the ability to undo agency rules pa…
Full summaries, images, and headlines for subscribers only.
Save time every day. Get the facts on trending news.
Just two days before Joe Biden addressed the joint session of Congress, a prominent Washington newspaper ended its “Biden fact-check” database. The outlet cites the tremendous amount of work involved under President Trump as the key reason. So, either the editors expect a fresh bevy of falsehoods (and are deciding not to cover them), or they just believe Joe Biden will be completely honest during his time in the White House. Or maybe they suspected that the joint address would be too much work. Either way, what good is a paper that refuses to report the truth?
President Biden’s joint session address to Congress has left America more divided than ever. While touting more spending and the growth of the state, he failed to address the growing border crisis and the lack of bipartisanship in government.
Senator Tim Scott (R-SC) provided the GOP rebuttal to Biden’s speech. He countered that “America is not a racist country,” and that “It’s backwards to fight discrimination with different types of discrimination, and it’s wrong to use our painful past to honestly shut down debates in the present.”
Arkansas lawmaker on Wednesday approved a bill that would override federal gun control statutes. The bill will invalidate any federal gun control laws passed after Jan. 1, 2021. Gov. Asa Hutchinson has indicated that he will sign it into law.
Something political to ponder as you enjoy your morning coffee.
Estimates suggest that President Biden in his first 100 days in office has committed America to spending roughly $6 trillion. Despite how much those in the Capitol have proven their love of spending taxpayer dollars, it appears some signs of unity are finally on the horizon. Both Senator Mitt Romney (R-UT) and Sen. Joe Manchin (D-WV) are in agreement that the price tag is just far too high.
The Department of Defense’s approach to the full financial statement audit is changing its culture and improving performance, responsiveness, resilience, and agility — all crucial elements of future military competitiveness.
Frederick M. Hess and Hayley Sanon | RealClearPolicy
The university took what could have been a sensible, compassionate attempt to ensure faculty are treated fairly and turned it into a showcase of junk science and identity politics.
Jason D. Delisle and Arthur M. Hauptman | American Enterprise Institute
Ireland’s experience demonstrates that a country can still struggle with many higher education challenges, much like those in the US, even after implementing free college. This suggests that free college in the US may be far less effective than many of its advocates claim.
Why are some states such as Texas and Florida gaining businesses, residents, and House seats, and why are states such as California, New York, and Illinois losing businesses, population, and House seats?
Statement submitted for the record
Benjamin Zycher | Senate Committee on Environment and Public Works, Subcommittee on Clean Air, Climate, and Nuclear Safety
$200 billion to provide free preschool to all 3- and 4-year-olds
$109 billion to offer two years of free community college to all Americans
$225 billion to subsidize child care for families and support child care workers
$225 billion to create a national family and medical leave program
$200 billion to make temporary reductions in health insurance premiums for the Affordable Care Act plans permanent
Permanently increase tax credits for child care
Increasing IRS enforcement funding to audit wealthier taxpayers
Raising the top tax rate on the wealthiest Americans from 37% to 39.6%
Taxpayers earning $1 million or more a year, the top 0.3%, would no longer pay a 20% rate on income from capital gains such as the sale of a stock or other asset. They would pay 39.6% instead
AP News
From the Right
The right criticizes Biden’s proposals, arguing that they are too expensive and that the tax increases are too high.
“Joe Biden’s two big spending proposals (one on infrastructure and one on social programs), combined with the ‘COVID relief’ package he already passed, amount to $5.95 trillion in new spending…
“The 2020 Census found 331,449,281 people in the United States — including children. Biden’s spending, if passed, would amount to $17,951.46 for every man, woman, and child in the country. The most recent Census estimate puts the number of U.S. households around 128,451,000 (that’s 2.58 persons per household, if you’re keeping score). Biden’s new spending — remember, this is in addition to the existing federal, state, and local budgets — comes to $46,321.17 for each and every household in the United States. That is over 70 percent of median household income. Biden wants to blow through 70 percent of the typical family’s annual income just in spending proposed in his first 100 days in office.” Dan McLaughlin, National Review
“Beyond being strictly partisan, proposals that call for large government program expansions like the president’s also run counter to public sentiment. Our survey showed that 55 percent of working-age adults were somewhat or very concerned that the pandemic would lead to permanent expansions of the government, while 52 percent had little or no confidence that the federal government would do what was right for the American people over the next six months. More than ever, this suggests that the best path forward involves policies that gain support from both sides of the aisle…
Regarding the tax increases, many note that “A capital-gains tax is a second tax on corporate income. A neutral revenue code would tax all income only once. But the U.S. also taxes business profits when they are earned, and President Biden wants to raise that tax rate by a third (to 28% from 21%). When a business distributes after-tax income in dividends, or an investor sells the shares that have risen in value due to higher earnings, the income is taxed a second time…
“No less a progressive than Democratic Rep. Jerry Nadler recently deplored the unfairness of ‘double taxation’ [regarding the state] and local tax deduction, though he probably had no idea he was stating a principle that really applies to corporate income and capital gains…
“[But] The most important reason to tax capital investment at low rates is to encourage saving and investment. Consumption—buying a car or yacht—faces a sales tax but not a federal tax. But if someone saves income and invests in the family business or in stock, he is smacked with another round of tax. Tax something more and you get less of it. Tax capital income more, and you get less investment, which means less investment to improve worker productivity.” Editorial Board, Wall Street Journal
“Since capital gains are also subject to the 3.8% Medicare tax, the new capital-gains rate would be 43.4%. What makes this unusual is that 43.4% is well above the rate that would generate the most revenue for the government. Congress’s Joint Committee on Taxation, which does the official scoring and is no den of supply siders, puts the revenue-maximizing rate at 28%. My work several decades ago puts it about 10 points lower than that. That means President Biden is willing to accept lower revenue as the price of higher tax rates…
“It is shocking that this policy got past the economists in the administration, many of whom have had long and distinguished careers. The Biden administration is blowing up one of the key concepts that has united the economics profession: maximizing social welfare. It now believes in taxation purely as a form of punishment and is even willing to sacrifice revenue to carry it out.” Lawrence B. Lindsey, Wall Street Journal
From the Left
The left supports Biden’s proposals, arguing that they are popular among the public and would reduce inequality.
“Biden ran openly on all the policies he is trying to pass now, and all of them are extremely popular. Voters support the child tax credit by a margin of over 30 points, free pre-K by more than 40 points, and paid family and medical leave by more than 50 points. Sure, all those generous social benefits probably sound nice in theory, but what about the trade-offs? Well, the trade-off is that, to be made permanent through the Senate rules, they have to be paid for. But Biden is paying for them by raising taxes on extremely rich people. Not only are those measures popular, they are more popular than the spending itself.” Jonathan Chait, New York Magazine“This is, without question, an ambitious and far-reaching to-do list. But the goals are also humble, in the sense that the plan is really just designed to turn the United States into a normal country for mothers and fathers by providing benefits that much of the developed world already takes for granted…“We are, after all, the only wealthy country that doesn’t ensure paid leave for new moms. Child care? It’s already heavily subsidized in places like Japan, France, Korea, Germany, Australia, and the Nordics, but here the cost often rivals college tuition. We trail most of our peers in pre-K enrollment, likely because—according to the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development—they often spend a lot more public money on it…“Our antiquarian family policies don’t just make life more difficult and expensive for parents and their children. They are also, in all likelihood, acting as a drag on the economy by keeping women out of the workplace.” Jordan Weissmann, Slate“Biden’s plan would make a huge dent in inequality — in a country that currently provides very little government support for American families. The United States stands alone among developed countries in failing to mandate paid leave for new parents, or paid family medical leave. And many other high-income countries subsidize child care and preschool. Analysis shows the expanded child tax credit alone will cut US child poverty in half.” Anna North and Ella Nilsen, Vox“This country makes it too hard to function as working parents; they shouldn’t need to worry every second about their children’s welfare or whether their finances can survive the inevitable bumps in the road…“Biden’s plans for funding these programs also will come under scrutiny — as they should, especially his call for a whopping increase in the top capital-gains tax rate. But for the most part, he is not looking at new types of taxes, even on the wealthy, and not raising them at all on people earning $400,000 a year or less.” Editorial Board, Los Angeles Times
“The correlation between low capital-gains tax rates and high economic growth is weak… What’s more, the actual policy being debated here is not what the capital-gains tax rate should be, but rather, whether it is worthwhile to raise the capital-gains rate in order to invest in universal prekindergarten, public child care, a child allowance, free community college, and paid family and medical leave…
“A forthright version of the present debate over capital-gains taxes would center on one basic question: Do people who earn more than $1 million a year deserve a high rate of return more than poor children deserve day care and adequate nutrition? Unfortunately, we are going to have a disingenuous debate over the marginal impact of capital-gains rates on productivity instead.” Eric Levitz, New York Magazine
“A group of economists recently argued in the Chicago Booth Review that the prevailing wisdom among scorekeepers that the revenue-maximizing [capital gains tax] rate is about 30% may be misplaced — and could allow for an even higher rate. A pair of Princeton University economists published research in December showing that hikes may raise “substantially more tax revenue” than scorekeepers currently believe and that the revenue-maximizing rate may be about 40% — almost exactly where Biden’s proposal falls.” Timothy L. O’Brien, Bloomberg
A libertarian’s take
“Under the Biden proposal, the capital gains tax on wealthy individuals would rise to 43.4%, which would mean net rates well over 50% for individuals in high-tax states such as California and New York. Overall, that change would send the message that the U.S. is not such a great place to accumulate and cash in wealth. As a result, America would lose some of its cultural and economic vitality…“It may well be true that the U.S. has more efficient ways of encouraging ambition and wealth accumulation than the current approach to capital gains taxation. But to make that argument, advocates of the higher capital gains rate need to say what else they would do to boost the valorization of American wealth. Somehow, however, such explanations are never forthcoming — because this debate really is about a clash of values, not just efficiency, and one side wants to lower the status of accumulated wealth.” Tyler Cowen, Bloomberg
🎂 Happy Thursday! Today is the 100th day of President Biden.
Smart Brevity™ count: 1,197 words … 4½ minutes.
🗳️ Please join Axios’ Hans Nichols and Alayna Treene tomorrow at 12:30 p.m. ET for an Axios News Shapers event on Biden’s first 100 days.Sign up here.
1 big thing: Biden bets big
President Biden feels intensely that now is a time for proving that government can still do big things, and make tangible improvements to ordinary people’s lives.
Last night’s addressto a joint session of Congress, on his 99th day in office, was an argument for liberal, small “d” democratic government — investments, as he put it, that only government can make.
And he sees the stakes of failing as ceding the next century to the autocrats, Axios’ Jonathan Swan reports.
I’m told Biden deliberately echoed the empathetic, quietly impassioned tone of FDR’s Fireside Chats on the radio from 1933-44.
“In another era when our democracy was tested,” Biden said, “Franklin Roosevelt reminded us: In America, we do our part. We all do our part. That’s all I’m asking.”
As Biden’s plans come into fuller view, we see the momentous scale:
He’s trying to make people feel government in their lives — and feel like it’s a life raft, rather than an inconvenient and incompetent mess.
And he’s focusing on the most tangible stuff — shots in arms, $1,400 stimulus checks. Things that aren’t complicated.
Biden wants to spend a phenomenal amount of money — his accomplishments and proposals total $6 trillion — and mobilize the government to touch every corner of American life.
The great bet is that all this spending won’t lead to runaway inflation.
Warning that global strength can wane, Biden said the U.S. is “in competition with China and other countries to win the 21st century”:
We’re at a great inflection point in history. … We have to compete more strenuously …. I spent a lot of time with President Xi … He’s deadly earnest on becoming the most significant, consequential nation in the world. He and others … think that democracy can’t compete in the 21st century with autocracies, because it takes too long to get consensus.
“Autocrats will not win the future,” Biden said. “America will. And the future belongs to America.”
📊 Snap polls were overwhelming: A CBS News/YouGov poll found 89% of speech-watchers thought Biden was presidential, 85% approved and 78% said the speech made them feel optimistic about America.
Declining COVID cases, rising vaccination rates, trillions in government spending and an accommodative Federal Reserve are colliding to create a year of U.S. economic growth for the record books, Axios editor in chief Nicholas Johnston writes.
Why it matters: A sustained, surging economy is the best way to erase the pandemic’s brutal legacy of business losses and unemployment.
Goldman Sachs, in a research note literally titled “Anatomy of a Boom,” predicts more than 7% growth in 2021 — a sustained pace not seen in more than 30 years.
The bank writes that hopes of a post-vaccine economic rebound are changing from “from forecast to fact.”
The Fed upgraded its view of the economy yesterday. This week’s consumer-confidence measure is the highest since the pandemic began.
The bottom line: Get used to lots of economic charts going up and to the right.
3. $400,000+ zone for tax hike is per individual, not per family
Photo: Doug Mills/The New York Times via AP
President Biden’s promise not to raise taxes on Americans who make less than $400,000 applies to individuals — not married couples filing jointly, a White House official clarified for Axios’ Hans Nichols.
Why it matters: The declaration means a hypothetical couple, with each spouse making $399,999, wouldn’t escape the tax increase even though they individually earn less than $400,000.
Their combined income would be $799,998, which the White House believes is sufficient for them to help underwrite the expanded social safety net the president is proposing.
Biden wants to raise the top rate from 37% to 39.6% for families with taxable income above $509,300, and for individuals above $452,700.
That $509,300 limit means that two married individuals, who each have a taxable income exceeding $255,000, would see the portion of their earnings above that figure taxed at the highest rate.
5. GOP response: “America is not a racist country”
Sen. Tim Scott speaks last night. Photo: Senate TV via AP
Sen. Tim Scott of South Carolina, the Senate’s only Black Republican, delivered his party’s response:
Today, kids again are being taught that the color of their skin defines them — and if they look a certain way, they’re an oppressor. From colleges to corporations to our culture, people are making money and gaining power by pretending we haven’t made any progress. …
Hear me clearly: America is not a racist country. It’s backwards to fight discrimination with different discrimination. And it’s wrong to try to use our painful past to dishonestly shut down debates in the present.
6. Our weekly map: COVID cases are finally falling
New COVID infections fell by roughly 16% over the past week in the U.S. — a big improvement after weeks of stasis, Axios’ Sam Baker and Andrew Witherspoon write.
More than half of American adults have gotten at least one vaccine dose, and that seems to finally be putting a dent in the size of the country’s outbreak.
The U.S. averaged about 55,000 new cases per day over the past week, down from about 66,000 per day the week before.
The number of new infections declined in 26 states and rose in only four.
New York and Michigan saw the biggest improvements: New cases were down about 30% in each state.
U.S. factories are humming, but “the recovery’s speed has left many employers scrambling for workers or for parts.” —N.Y. Times
Amazon “is rolling out raises to more than 500,000 of its hourly workers a few months early, spending $1 billion on pay bumps designed to juice hiring.” —Bloomberg
“Apple, Facebook soar past earnings expectations.” —Reuters
8. Facebook touts tech innovation
Illustration: Sarah Grillo/Axios
Facebook’s earnings call yesterday was a huge departure from its pitch to investors over the past year. Instead of reiterating its progress in trust and safety, the tech giant touted investments in innovation and new technology, Axios Media Trends expert Sara Fischer writes:
CEO Mark Zuckerberg briefly addressed the ongoing COVID crisis in India and Brazil, before quickly pivoting to three main focus areas:
Immersive tech (AR/VR): Zuckerberg said Facebook’s Oculus Quest 2 headset “is doing better than we expected.” CFO Dave Wehner said Facebook Reality Labs has been one of the company’s biggest investments.
Commerce: More than 1 billion people visit Facebook’s Marketplace tab each month. There are more than 1 million monthly active shops on the platform, and over 250 million monthly active visitors to shops.
Creators: Earlier this week, Facebook unveiled new monetization tools for creators to make money off of e-commerce.
President Biden after his speech. Photo: Doug Mills/The New York Times via Getty Images
President Biden put his Cabinet in place faster than any other administration since President Reagan, the White House Office of Presidential Personnel says in a report provided first to Axios.
Biden has announced his intent to nominate 233 people for Senate-confirmed jobs — more nominees than any past administration at the 100-day mark, according to the White House.
Of Biden’s roughly 1,500 agency appointees, which the White House said was double the previous 100-day record:
58% are women.
18% identify as Black or African American.
15% identify as Latino or Hispanic.
15% identify as Asian American or Pacific Islander.
3% identify as Middle Eastern or North African.
2% identify as American Indian or Alaska Native.
14% identify as LGBTQ+.
4% are veterans.
3% identify as disabled or having a disability.
15% were the first in their families to go to college.
32% are naturalized citizens or the children of immigrants.
President Biden laid out plans to provide universal preschool, free community college and expanded health care and new tax breaks for families. He said the country has “stared into an abyss of insurrection and autocracy, of pandemic and pain,” and emerged strong.
In his maiden speech to a joint session of Congress since taking office in January, President Joe Biden said he spent his first 100 days in office extending a helping hand to the public and that he planned to continue to do so for the remainder of his term. Republicans, however, see a big spender who blundered into a migrant crisis at the southern border.
President Joe Biden will likely increasingly rely on the power of his pen to implement left-leaning priorities as bills begin to pile up in the evenly divided Senate, experts say.
A slew of challenges at the southern border will hang over Vice President Kamala Harris on Thursday as she visits Baltimore to close her first 100 days in office, returning to the city that was her presidential campaign hub to claim early successes on other issues.
Texas Sheriff Ed Gonzalez is in line to become the next leader of Immigration and Customs Enforcement, a federal law enforcement agency that he resisted working with and criticized during the Trump administration.
A former Justice Department official who reviewed the deeply flawed FISA applications against former Trump campaign associate Carter Page and who later assisted House Democrats in impeachment efforts against former President Donald Trump has been selected to serve in a key advisory role with the FISA court.
The prevalence of “vaccine hesitancy,” blamed by politicians and public health officials for the recent COVID-19 vaccination slowdown in the United States, has been exaggerated.
Rep. Lauren Boebert unfolded a space blanket associated with migrant detention centers as she sat and listened to President Joe Biden give a speech to a joint session of Congress.
White supremacist terrorism is the deadliest threat to the United States, President Joe Biden told lawmakers Wednesday night as he aimed to pivot from the country’s post-9/11 foreign fights to one at home.
President Joe Biden called on Congress to pass controversial legislation allowing Medicare to negotiate the prices of prescription drugs to offset the costs of improving Obamacare.
Just days before the 10th anniversary of U.S. special operations forces killing al Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden, President Joe Biden told a joint session of Congress it is time to leave Afghanistan.
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18.) ASSOCIATED PRESS
April 29, 2021
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AP Morning Wire
Good morning from Johannesburg. President Joe Biden declared that “America is rising anew” as he called for an expansion of federal programs to drive the economy past the pandemic and broadly extend the social safety net on a scale not seen in decades. Biden’s nationally televised address to Congress, his first, raised the stakes for his ability to sell his plans to voters of both parties, even if Republican lawmakers prove resistant. India set another global record in new virus cases with 375,000 people infected, for a total of more than 18.3 million cases, behind only the United States. An AP investigation finds that Ethiopia has swept thousands of ethnic Tigrayans into detention centers across the country on accusations that they are traitors, often holding them for months and without charges, as the government enters its sixth month of fighting in the Tigray region. China launches the main part of its first permanent space station.
Also this morning:
Catholic bishops may press Biden to stop taking communion
WASHINGTON (AP) — President Joe Biden declared that “America is rising anew” as he called for an expansion of federal programs to drive the economy past the pandemic and broadly extend the social safety net on a scale not seen in decades. Biden’s…Read More
NEW DELHI (AP) — India set another global record in new virus cases Thursday, with another 375,000 people infected, as the country gears up to open its vaccination rollout to all adults Saturday. It now has reported more than 18.3 million cases,…Read More
WASHINGTON (AP) — Sen. Tim Scott credited former President Donald Trump and Republicans on Wednesday with creating “a joyful springtime for our nation,” using his party’s official response to President Joe Biden’s first address to Congress to say…Read More
NAIROBI, Kenya (AP) — Ethiopia has swept up thousands of ethnic Tigrayans into detention centers across the country on accusations that they are traitors, often holding them for months and without charges, the AP has found. The detentions, mainly…Read More
BEIJING (AP) — China on Thursday launched the core module for its first permanent space station that will host astronauts long-term. The Tianhe, or “Heavenly Harmony,” module blasted into space atop a Long March 5B rocket from the Wenchang Launc…Read More
WASHINGTON (AP) — President Joe Biden is using his first address before a joint session of Congress to make the case that his administration has made progress during …Read More
NEW YORK (AP) — Federal investigators have executed a search warrant at the Manhattan home of former President Donald Trump’s attorney Rudy Giuliani, a law enforcement o…Read More
When U.S. Catholic bishops hold their next national meeting in June, they’ll be deciding whether to send a tougher-than-ever message to President Joe Biden and other Cat…Read More
Missing out on Thin Mints in the pandemic? A Google affiliate is using drones to deliver Girl Scout cookies to people’s doorsteps in a Virginia community. The town of C…Read More
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Mark Twain
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The Lee County school board will allow Superintendent Greg Adkins to finish out his contract, which is up June 30, and set plans for hiring a replacement.
Good morning, Chicago. Illinois public health officials on Wednesday reported 2,728 new confirmed and probable cases of COVID-19 and 33 additional deaths. There were 106,173 doses of the vaccine administered Tuesday.
Meanwhile, the weekly average of COVID-19 vaccinations administered in Illinois continues to decline even as the supply of vaccines remains steady. Gov. J. B. Pritzker on Wednesday said that anyone wanting a shot just has to “raise your hand.”
And in other news, a plan to rename Lake Shore Drive to honor the Black man credited with founding Chicago is set for a key City Council vote Thursday. Here’s what you need to know.
Here’s more coronavirus news and other top stories you need to know to start your day.
Graphic police video of Anthony Alvarez’s death was released Wednesday by the Civilian Office of Police Accountability, which is investigating whether Officer Evan Solano violated Police Department rules when he fatally shot Alvarez in the Portage Park area late last month. It was the second time in less than two weeks that officials released footage of an officer killing someone during a foot chase, adding further fuel to heated conversations over police policy.
President Joe Biden declared Wednesday night in his first address to a joint session of Congress that “America is rising anew,” and pointed optimistically to the nation’s emergence from the pandemic as a vital moment to rebuild the U.S. economy and fundamentally transform roles the government plays in American life.
Analysis: Biden makes the case that the era of big government is back and other key takeaways from his speech to Congress
Fact check: Claims from Biden’s speech to Congress and the GOP response
Ben Price’s descent into panic and despair, which ended in suicide Feb. 28, fits the pattern of post-COVID psychosis, a little-known but very serious reaction to the virus, according to Dr. Isaac Mezo. Post-COVID psychosis occurs within months of infection, and is marked by hallucinations or delusions, as well as strong negative feelings such as fear and anxiety.
The Chicago Bears have drafted 31 quarterbacks during the Super Bowl era, beginning with the 1966 season, and only one has gone on to make 100 regular-season starts in the NFL. That was Jim Harbaugh, selected in the first round with the 26th pick in 1987.
Even though the pandemic slowed down burger openings in 2020, it could never hope to stop the public’s insatiable demand for ground beef on a bun, the Tribune’s Nick Kindelsperger writes.
The Tribune has extensively researched the best burgers in Chicago, including when Kindelsperger once tried 130 to find the best in the city and in the suburbs. These nine new burgers from restaurants that opened in the past year — plus one that technically opened in 2019 but deserves love nonetheless — prove Chicago chefs will always find inventive new ways to make this classic dish.
Wing night specials scarce as restaurants face tight supply, higher prices for the takeout-friendly comfort food
Anthony Alvarez’s aunt said watching video of her nephew being fatally shot by a Chicago police officer in Portage Park was gut-wrenching. But what made it worse was seeing officers appear to struggle to help her nephew as he lay dying.
Now, Maria Alvarez, 40, is raising questions about the officers’ first-aid training, adding that it looked like they were unsure of what to do when Anthony Alvarez collapsed after being shot.
The drop in the backlog — which, at its highest point, stood at $16.7 billion in 2017 — means Illinois can pay its bills as they come in and moves closer to paying off its debts within a normal 30-day cycle.
Even as officials celebrated the reopening of all CPS high schools last week, the district saw low attendance for both in-person and remote learners a year into the pandemic.
Mayor Lori Lightfoot said the “Vax Pass” is still just a concept, but the idea is to use it as a carrot, instead of a stick, to bolster vaccination rates among young people.
Gov. J.B. Pritzker didn’t rule out the possibility of following some private universities, including three in Chicago, that are requiring students to get their COVID-19 shots before returning to campus in the fall.
Welcome to The Hill’s Morning Report. Today is Thursday! 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 each morning this week: Monday, 572,200; Tuesday, 572,674; Wednesday, 573,381; Thursday, 574,329.
President Biden told Congress and the American people on Wednesday that “millions of jobs” can result from his proposals to spend $4 trillion in less than a decade to expand the government’s reach into upgraded roads, broadband, health care, child care, community college and electric vehicles.
“Let’s get it done this year,” he said during his first, hour-long address to a joint session of Congress.
Speaking to a smaller group of lawmakers because of COVID-19 precautions, the president called his $2.3 trillion infrastructure plan “a blue-collar blueprint to build America,” and he described his latest $1.8 billion American Families Plan as a “once-in-a-generation” investment that could help the United States win a competition “for the future,” including with China.
The president took stock of his first 100 days in office by heralding his administration’s achievements against the coronavirus. He pointed to work done with Congress to pass relief legislation as evidence that the White House, Congress and government can move from a pandemic to rebuilding a nation he suggested has been on the wane.
Biden will be in Atlanta today to mark his first months in office with a drive-in rally, shifting his focus from crisis management to the arguably tougher task of legislating in a bitterly partisan Congress, with no Democrats to spare in either chamber.
During a speech that presented a decidedly progressive picture of American competitiveness, racial equity, government intervention and economic fairness, the president did not assail Republicans seated in front of him, who voted in lockstep against the $1.9 trillion COVID-19 relief bill.
The Hill: Biden makes his case for sweeping change.
The Hill: Biden: “Trickle-down economics has never worked.”
Dan Balz, The Washington Post analysis: At 100 days, Biden seeks to leverage narrow majorities to reverse the Reagan era.
John Harris, Politico magazine analysis: With the most ideologically ambitious speech of any Democratic president in decades, Biden aims to splinter the Trump coalition.
“I want to make sure the American people understand,” the president added, that the law he signed to help working-class and middle-income families who have been hardest hit by the contagion reached beyond delivering hundreds of millions of doses of vaccines.
The relief law, he said, put the United States on track to “cut child poverty in America in half this year. In the process, the economy created more than 1.3 million new jobs in 100 days.”
The president’s unspoken point: Trust Democrats; trust government.
Biden mostly stuck to the White House-prepared script, improvising a few folksy greetings (“thanks for having me,” he told Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.), and hailing Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) for his graciousness in renaming a 2016 law that funded cancer research for Biden’s late son, Beau, who died of brain cancer.
It was so quiet in the chamber at one point that a lawmaker’s ringing cellphone could clearly be heard as the president began his explanation about overhauling corporate taxes to pay for some of the proposed new spending he had just described.
Democrats leaped to their feet at least 57 times to applaud the president, joined by most Republicans when Biden hailed the achievements and the historical importance of the first female Speaker and first female vice president, both standing with him.
Biden said Vice President Harris, in addition to managing the U.S. response to the surge of migrants and other “root causes” of the border crisis, will work on a specific piece of their jobs plan, ensuring that “every American” is connected with high-speed internet, “including 35 percent of rural Americans who still don’t have it.”
“I am asking the vice president to help lead this effort because I know it will get done,” he added.
After pitching the major plans, Biden turned his attention to other policy issues, domestic and international. He waded into policing and racial justice just a week after the murder conviction of Derek Chauvin in the death of George Floyd.
Biden made news by calling on Congress to pass legislation to overhaul policing practices by May 25, the first anniversary of Floyd’s death, effectively putting a timer on lawmakers to come up with a bipartisan bill that can make it through the Senate. That will be a very steep climb for all parties involved.
The Hill: Biden calls for Congress to pass gun control bills. “Don’t tell me it can’t be done,” he said.
Sen. Tim Scott (S.C.), who delivered the GOP’s response to Biden’s speech, remained skeptical that Democrats want to pass any meaningful legislation on the topic, having authored the GOP’s policing bill last year. He is also in the thick of negotiations this go around.
“My friends across the aisle seemed to want the issue more than they wanted a solution,” said Scott, who will reportedly meet with lawyer Benjamin Crump and Philonise Floyd, George Floyd’s brother, later today. “But I’m still working. I’m still hopeful.”
Biden’s calls for bipartisan legislation also extended to guns and immigration, calling on Republicans specifically in both instances to come together to pass targeted bills on background checks and undocumented immigrants already living and working in the country, who are known as “Dreamers.”
The Hill: Tim Scott says Biden dividing country in GOP response to joint address.
Biden also touched on LGBTQ issues, specifically telling transgender individuals that he and the White House support them.
“I want you to know your president has your back,” Biden said.
On the international stage, Biden reiterated warnings to Russian President Vladimir Putin and touted his decision to pull all troops from Afghanistan by September.
The Hill: Biden: “The insurrection was an existential crisis.”
The speech was delivered before a chamber that was roughly one-eighth the capacity of normal joint sessions or State of the Union addresses, leading to awkward moments throughout the 65-minute speech. At multiple moments, the television audience could hear things happen that would never be heard in a normal address. As The Washington Post’s Paul Kane noted, one lawmaker’s ringtone went off for everyone to hear. One person in the chamber could also be heard sneezing.
“Low energy, felt longer than the clock said,” one House Republican present in the chamber said of the event. When told of what could be heard over the broadcast, the lawmaker added that it was no better in person.
“Worse in the room,” the lawmaker added.
On his way out of the chamber, Biden conversed with a crowd of lawmakers, mostly Democrats, as the new House sergeant at arms tried to usher him out of the chamber. While most Republicans did not hang around, at least three were spotted chatting up the president on the way out: Sen. Rob Portman (R-Ohio), Rep. Nicole Malliotakis (R-N.Y.), who represents a swing district in Staten Island, and Pennsylvania Rep. Brian Fitzpatrick (R).
As it happens, Biden will be in Philadelphia on Friday to celebrate the 50th anniversary of Amtrak, the transportation mode he used for decades as a senator from Delaware.
Republicans on Wednesday criticized the president’s proposed American Families Plan hours before the speech, arguing Biden’s announced proposals for health care, child care and community college, among other provisions, represent “socialist spending” that they maintain would cost jobs, hurt small businesses through proposed tax changes and curtail investment as the economy moves out of recession.
Democratic lawmakers said they are generally pleased with the proposals described by the president but acknowledged a heavy legislative lift ahead for Congress. But as The Hill’s Alexander Bolton reports, Sen. Joe Manchin (D-W.Va.), whose misgivings can sink any major Democratic measure, worries about the price tag of the president’s agenda.
The Biden infrastructure plan with its $2.3 trillion price tag faces an uncertain trajectory as a bipartisan group drafts a smaller alternative and Democrats debate whether to break up the sweeping proposal or forge ahead with a single measure, The Hill’s Jordain Carney reports.
The Hill: McConnell accused Biden on Wednesday of breaking his promise to unify the country and govern in a bipartisan way.
The Hill: “It’s about time,” Pelosi said when asked about two powerful women seated behind the president for the first time at an address to a joint session of Congress.
The Associated Press: Watching from afar, Congress will make or break the Biden agenda.
Bloomberg News: Biden for the first time will host House and Senate GOP and Democratic leaders at the White House on May 12.
CORONAVIRUS: Positive developments on the COVID-19 transmission front emerged on Wednesday as a new study showed that individuals who received one vaccine shot were far less likely to transmit the virus to someone else in their household.
According to a new study conducted by Public Health England, those infected with COVID-19 three weeks after receiving a dose of the Pfizer or AstraZeneca vaccine were between 38 and 49 percent less likely to pass the virus on to unvaccinated others in their homes.
The study provides a new round of evidence to show that COVID-19 vaccines reduce transmission of the virus, a question scientists have attempted to answer since shots first started being administered in early December. British Health Secretary Matt Hancock lauded the findings as “terrific news.”
“We already know vaccines save lives and this study is the most comprehensive real-world data showing they also cut transmission of this deadly virus,” Hancock said. “It further reinforces that vaccines are the best way out of this pandemic as they protect you and they may prevent you from unknowingly infecting someone in your household” (CNBC).
In the U.S., more evidence emerged on Wednesday that a minute segment of the fully vaccinated population can contract COVID-19. Of the 1.8 million Wisconsin residents who are fully vaccinated, there have been only 605 infections (0.03 percent) (Wisconsin State Journal).
The Hill: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Director Rochelle Walensky “cautiously optimistic” about coronavirus situation in U.S.
The Associated Press: North Carolina to lift outdoor mask rule, raise gathering limits.
The Baltimore Sun: Maryland lifts outdoor mask mandate after new CDC guidance for vaccinated people.
The Associated Press: BioNTech boss: Europe will reach herd immunity this summer
> International: South America is experiencing high caseloads from a Brazil variant of COVID-19, which is described as a warning to the world. Countries that recently had the spread of COVID-19 under control are now seeing hospitalizations and deaths surge (The Wall Street Journal). … Russia and China are spreading disinformation to undermine trust in Western vaccines, a report by the European Union says (Reuters via US News).
Bloomberg News: U.S. tells citizens to leave India as COVID-19 crisis deepens.
CONGRESS: The Senate Judiciary Committee on Wednesday questioned Ketanji Brown Jackson, nominated to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit. Jackson, 50, is considered by Democrats to be one of their brightest judicial stars and a top candidate for a Supreme Court nomination should a current justice retire (The Hill).
> The Senate on Wednesday used the Congressional Review Act as a tool to unwind a Trump administration rule that scuttled emission standards for methane and complicated calls to regulate releases of greenhouse gas from the oil and gas industry (The Hill).
>Anton Hajjar, Amber McReynolds and Ronald Stroman, the president’s nominees to key positions on the Postal Service Board of Governors, advanced on Wednesday through the Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee, setting up a final vote in the full Senate (The Hill). Biden is eager to get his own appointees confirmed to the board to gain sufficient votes to remove Postmaster General Louis DeJoy, a Trump appointee, whose time as head the Postal Service has led to decreases in mail delivery standards (The Washington Post).
> The Senate on Wednesday confirmed Samantha Power to lead the U.S. Agency for International Development, an independent global humanitarian agency. The vote was 68-26. Power is a former U.S. ambassador to the United Nations and the Pulitzer Prize-winning author of “A Problem from Hell: America in the Age of Genocide.”
IN FOCUS/SHARP TAKES
POLITICS: Federal agents for the Justice Department raided Rudy Giuliani’s Manhattan home and office on Wednesday, seizing computers and cellphones in a major escalation of a government investigation into the business dealings of former President Trump’s personal lawyer.
Giuliani, the 76-year-old former New York City mayor, has been under federal scrutiny for several years over his ties to Ukraine. The dual searches sent the strongest signal yet that he could eventually face federal charges (The Associated Press).
> 2022 watch: Rep. Ted Budd (R-N.C.) (pictured below) took the Senate plunge on Wednesday as he launched a bid for the open North Carolina seat, becoming the latest high-profile entrant in what has become a crowded primary.
Budd, a two-term lawmaker and member of the House Freedom Caucus, announced his campaign in a video released Wednesday morning, pitching himself as an ally of former President Trump while railing against the work of the Democratic-controlled Congress.
“I’m a political outsider who can’t be bought by the swamp, and I don’t give a rip about their Washington games,” said Budd, who is seeking to replace retiring Sen. Richard Burr (R-N.C.). “I’ve shoveled a lot of manure on my family’s farm, and it’s not the dirtiest job I’ve ever had, now that I’ve been to Congress.”
Budd is the third high profile candidate to toss his hat into the ring, after former Gov. Pat McCrory (R) and former Rep. Mark Walker (R-N.C.). Walker retired from Congress last year due to redistricting after he, ironically, decided against launching a primary bid against Budd for his seat in the state’s 13th Congressional District (The Hill).
Political watchers in the state argue that all three have their strong suits — but everything could be rendered moot if Lara Trump enters the race.
“Ted has lined up outside groups smartly, McCrory has decent name recognition, and Walker has been working the grassroots. This is shaping up to be a real race with no heir apparent,” one North Carolina GOP elected official told the Morning Report when asked what Budd’s entrance means.
“However, if Lara Trump gets in, it’s all over for these men,” the official added.
> Cheney vs. Trump, episode 108: Taunting from the 45th president on Tuesday that Rep. Liz Cheney (R-Wyo.), who supported Trump’s impeachment, won’t seek reelection next year is “wishful thinking,” Cheney said Wednesday (The Associated Press).
Politico: Budd launches Senate bid in North Carolina.
The Associated Press: In new Electoral College map, shifting battleground dynamics.
Vaccine hesitancy is as old as vaccines. I take comfort in that, by David Motadel, opinion contributor, The New York Times. https://nyti.ms/3t5qfXk
Cheerleader free speech case puts liberals in a bind, by Noah Feldman, columnist, Bloomberg Opinion. https://bloom.bg/2S715L3
WHERE AND WHEN
The House meets on Friday at 9 a.m. for a pro forma session. Pelosi will hold her weekly press conference at 10:45 a.m.
TheSenate will convene at 10 a.m. and resume consideration of the Drinking Water and Wastewater Infrastructure Act.
The president will receive his daily intelligence briefing at 9 a.m. He and Jill Biden will travel to Atlanta to mark his 100th day in office. They plan to visit at 1:35 p.m. with former President Carter and former first lady Rosalynn Carter in Plains, Ga. At 6 p.m., the Bidens will participate in a drive-in car rally in Duluth, Ga., before returning to the White House.
The vice president will travel to Baltimore at 1:15 p.m., and will tour a COVID-19 vaccination site at M&T Bank Stadium. She will make remarks at 2:55 p.m. about the administration’s first 100 days.
Secretary of State Antony Blinken meets virtually at 1 p.m. with the board of the Committee to Protect Journalists.
Economic indicator: The Bureau of Economic Analysis at 8:30 a.m. reports U.S. growth in the first quarter of the year. In the first official reading of gross domestic product for 2021, analysts expect to see big gains from consumer spending, rising business investment and a robust housing market as recovery continues during the pandemic.
👉 INVITATION: Join The Hill’s Virtually Live “Small Business Recovery Tour ~ Philadelphia” TODAY at 1 p.m. with Rep. Madeleine Dean (D-Pa.), House Financial Services Committee member; Rep. Dan Meuser (R-Pa.), House Small Business Committee member; VestedIn CEO Jim Burnett; Philadelphia City Council President Darrell Clarke; Urban League of Philadelphia President and CEO Andrea Custis; and Sunny Phanthavong, chef and owner of Vientiane Bistro. Registration is HERE.
➔ HATE CRIME: The Department of Justice in an indictment Wednesday said three Georgia men previously charged in the killing last year of Ahmaud Arbery will be charged with hate crimes and attempted kidnapping, alleging Arbery was shot while jogging in Brunswick, Ga., “because of his race.” Travis McMichael, 35, and his father, Gregory McMichael, 65, a retired police officer, were previously charged with murder after pursuing Arbery in their truck when he was shot by the younger McMichael. William “Roddie” Bryan, 51, who was driving behind them in a separate truck, filmed the shooting (NBC News).
➔ COURTS & TECH: The U.S. Court of Federal Claims on Wednesday decided not to dismiss a lawsuit filed by Amazon to protest Microsoft being awarded a $10 billion cloud-computing contract instead of Amazon Web Services (AWS). Microsoft in October 2019 was awarded the Pentagon’s Joint Enterprise Defense Infrastructure (JEDI) cloud computing contract, but Amazon quickly cried foul and filed suit alleging that the Trump administration interfered and that the former president used “improper influence” to steer the contract in Microsoft’s direction. The Pentagon’s new cloud system is now in limbo, as Judge Patricia Campbell-Smith has issued a sealed decision that effectively deflects the attempt by Microsoft and the Defense Department to get work underway on the contract, which has been halted since February 2020 (The Hill). … Amazon says it is raising compensation for hundreds of thousands of its workers between 50 cents and $3 per hour (The Wall Street Journal).
➔ RIP: Michael Collins (center below), one of the astronauts on the Apollo 11 mission to the moon, has died at the age of 90 following a battle with cancer. Collins’s family posted a statement to his Twitter page on Wednesday announcing the astronaut’s death and commemorating his life. Known as the “forgotten astronaut,” Collins was the command module pilot for the 1969 lunar mission but did not set foot on the moon like crew members Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin. In a tweet, Aldrin said that Collins will “always have the Fire to Carry us deftly to new heights and to the future” (The Hill). The New York Times obituary is HERE.
And finally … It’s Thursday, which means it’s time for this week’s Morning Report Quiz! Inspired by news headlines this week, we’re eager for some smart guesses about various meanings and implications of “free.”
Email your responses to asimendinger@thehill.com and/or aweaver@thehill.com, and please add “Quiz” to subject lines. Winners who submit correct answers will enjoy some richly deserved newsletter fame on Friday.
Secretary of State Antony Blinken during an interview this week called neighbors near which country “free riders”?
Spain
Afghanistan
Mexico
Eswatini
During his address to Congress on Wednesday night, Biden said which would be “free” to Americans under his proposals?
Prescription drugs under Medicare
Flood insurance from the Federal Emergency Management Agency
Two years of community college
None of the above
Masses of demonstrators this week continued to say they want which prisoner to be freed?
Derek Chauvin
Dzhokhar Tsarnaev
Joseph James DeAngelo Jr.
Alexei Navalny
The U.S. government recommended on Tuesday that people can be set free from wearing face masks outdoors if they are _______?
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Fresh off his address to a joint session of Congress on Wednesday night, President Joe Biden is hitting the road to sell sweeping plans for infrastructure investment, child care, health and education programs — and the tax hikes to pay for them. Read more…
Democrats control the redistricting process in several of the states losing House seats, and independent or bipartisan commissions will draw new boundaries in some of the others, but it’s hard to predict with certainty which party will come out ahead. Here’s how the process will work in each of the states slated to lose a seat. Read more…
OPINION — An “America First” caucus that was disavowed, sort of, by Marjorie Taylor Greene and several GOP colleagues should be treated as more than a sideshow. The notions that fueled a “draft” stating the group’s principles have lingered, becoming part of a conversation that’s becoming a little less shocking and a lot more routine. Read more…
Click here to subscribe to Fintech Beat for the latest market and regulatory developmentsin finance and financial technology.
House Chaplain Margaret G. Kibben begins many of her prayers in a familiar place — “Would you pray with me?” The new chaplain has invited people to pray with her often, on some of the most difficult days Congress has seen in many years. Read more…
House appropriators will begin sifting through thousands of earmark proposals next week, kicking off an arduous process that will mark the first time in a decade that subcommittee chairs have had the power to steer federal dollars to specific projects in lawmakers’ home states and districts. Read more…
President Joe Biden delivered a historic joint address Wednesday, telling the nation, “We have stared into an abyss of insurrection and autocracy — pandemic and pain — and ‘We the People’ did not flinch.” More important for the 200 members of Congress in attendance, though, was the opportunity to steal some of the national spotlight. Read more…
Presidents love to acknowledge their guests when speaking in front of Congress, calling on people to stand and wave as the crowd applauds, or surprise them like that one time Donald Trump gave Rush Limbaugh the Presidential Medal of Freedom. Joe Biden didn’t get the chance to do any of that Wednesday. Read more…
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25.) POLITICO PLAYBOOK
POLITICO Playbook: Biden gives Republicans what they’ve been waiting for
Presented by
DRIVING THE DAY
SPECIAL BIDEN ADDRESS SPOTTEDS:JOE MANCHINtaking notes in the gallery (speech transcripts are available, senator). … CHUCK SCHUMERslumping in his chair with his notably poor posture. … MITCH MCCONNELL striking his typical statuesque pose. … TED CRUZ, clapping when Biden talked about progress in vaccinating Americans (before nodding off). …
Freedom Caucus founder JIM JORDAN applauding at President JOE BIDEN’S recognition of JILL BIDEN’S work as a teacher and his statement that cops “serve their communities honorably.” … LAUREN BOEBERT wrapped in what looked like an emergency foil blanket and shaking her head at mentions of the Affordable Care Act and gun control. She also appeared to be live-tweeting the speech from the House floor. … PATRICK LEAHYsnapping pictures … with an actual camera.
BIDEN’S REVOLUTION IS TELEVISED — Biden’s first 100 days have been defined by a blitz of government expansion — some $6 trillion worthof actual and proposed spending.
It’s come in dribs and drabs: $1.9 trillion for Covid-19 relief first unveiled in January. Another $2 trillion-plus for infrastructure and climate in March. Nearly $2 trillion more proposed this week for education, child care and paid leave.
Wednesday night was the first time he detailed it all together in one place and before the largest potential audience that a president gets: an address to Congress.
Here’s why that could be a bad thing for him …
If you’ve been reading us closely, we’ve been tracking three notable political developments this year:
1) Biden has been proposing tax and spending policies on a scale that his recent Democratic predecessors never dreamed of.
2) Unlike 1993 and 2009, the GOP has so far been ineffective as an opposition party in the face of this spending onslaught.
3) Unlike his two recent predecessors who saturated the media in their first year in office, Biden tends to lay low and keep things as boring as possible.
There are a lot of theories about all of this: The pandemic and DONALD TRUMP’S own big spending have made it safe for big government; the GOP is divided and in turmoil since the events of Jan. 6 and obsessed with culture wars rather than government spending; an old white guy like Biden is a tough target for the right, anyway, and staying off the tube has made him even more difficult to demonize.
But on Wednesday night he was center stage — and so was the size and cost of his proposals. It was the kind of high-profile appearance and exposure that the White House has been trying to avoid as Biden attempts to stay under the radar and not call undue attention to the massive changes he’s trying to make.
What was notable was how much the GOP response snapped back to its more traditional small-government roots:
TIM SCOTT: “Tonight we also heard about a so-called ‘Family Plan.’ Even more taxing, even more spending, to put Washington even more in the middle of your life — from the cradle to college.”
MITT ROMNEY: “Six trillion and counting. I’m sure Bernie was happy.”
LISA MURKOWSKI: “Expansive spending on top of spending.”
JOHN THUNE: “A speech that’s got massive expansive new government programs, growth of government and lots of new taxes.”
Biden simultaneously has the tightest congressional margins and one of the most ambitious agendas. He’s trying to push a rhinoceros through a garden hose. If doing that requires political stealth, then Wednesday night’s speech may backfire.
COMING TO A PRIMARY ATTACK AD NEAR YOU: House GOP Conference Chair LIZ CHENEYfist-bumping Biden when he walked in the chamber. Cheney also engaged in a lengthy handshake with McConnell, who also accused Trump of inciting the Jan. 6 riot.
BY THE NUMBERS, per AP’s @ZekeJMiller: 6,045: Words in Biden’s prepared text 1,000: Words longer than Trump’s first address to a joint session 150: Words longer than Obama’s 1,700: Words longer than Bush’s 1,000: Words shorter than Clinton’s
RED, FRESH & BLUE— In the fourth installment of our video series, EUGENE sat down with Sen. CYNTHIA LUMMIS (R-Wyo.), the first woman to represent the state in the upper chamber. Lummis served in the House until 2015, retiring after her husband died. She said she decided to mount a comeback because both political parties, in her view, were ignoring the debt. In front of the Capitol Reflecting Pool, Lummis talked about her vote against the Electoral College certification and her obsession with Bitcoin.
“Don’t save money in dollars, save money in Bitcoin, spend money in dollars. That’s one of the reasons I’m a big advocate for Bitcoin, I think that it is the closest asset to gold in terms of its characteristics right now,” Lummis said.
MARJORIE TAYLOR’S MAKING GREEN — Rep. MARJORIE TAYLOR GREENE (R-Ga.) has made a name for herself — and recently, more than $3.2 million in mostly individual donations in three months — by oiling gears in the “outrage machine,” promoting extremist beliefs and false conspiracy theories,and bypassing both establishment media and establishment Washington. On Friday’s episode of the “Playbook Deep Dive” podcast, listen to Rep. ADAM KINZINGER (R-Ill.) and reporters MELANIE ZANONA, MICHAEL KRUSE, CHARLIE MAHTESIAN and RYAN on what Greene’s rise reveals about the erosion of traditional gatekeepers and the increasing nationalization of local races.
BIDEN’S THURSDAY — The president will receive the President’s Daily Brief at 9 a.m. the Bidens will depart the White House at 10:10 a.m. for Joint Base Andrews, where they’ll leave for Plains, Ga., at 10:30 a.m. They’ll arrive at Jimmy Carter Regional Airport at 12:55 p.m. The Bidens will meet with former President JIMMY CARTER and former first lady ROSALYNN CARTER at 1:25 p.m. They’ll depart at 2:55 p.m. for Gwinnett County Airport, where they’ll arrive at 3:55 p.m. At 6 p.m., they’ll participate in a drive-in car rally at Infinite Energy Center in Duluth, Ga. The president and first lady will depart at 6:40 p.m., arriving back at the White House at 9:20 p.m.
— VP KAMALA HARRIS will travel to Baltimore at 1:15 p.m. She’ll tour a Covid-19 vaccination site at M&T Bank Stadium at 2:20 p.m. At 2:55 p.m., Harris will deliver remarks on her first 100 days in office. Harris will leave to return to D.C. at 4:10 p.m.
— Principal deputy press secretary KARINE JEAN-PIERRE will gaggle on Air Force One on the way to Georgia.
THE SENATE is in session. DNI AVRIL HAINES will testify before the Armed Services Committee at 9:30 a.m. The Commerce Committee will hold a hearing at 10 a.m. on ERIC LANDER’S nomination as director of the Office of Science and Technology Policy. The Judiciary Committee will vote at 10 a.m. on the nominations of KRISTEN CLARKE and TODD SUNHWAE KIM as assistant attorneys general.
THE HOUSE is out. Speaker NANCY PELOSI will hold her weekly press conference at 10:45 a.m. EPA Administrator MICHAEL REGAN will testify before an Energy & Commerce subcommittee at 11 a.m.
FIRST IN PLAYBOOK — After Biden on Wednesday night called on Congress to pass police reform legislation by the anniversary of GEORGE FLOYD’S murder, May 25, a bipartisan group of senators and House members are meeting for the first time today to hold talks, according to a Democratic Senate aide. Key attendees:Sens. CORY BOOKER (D-N.J.), TIM SCOTT (R-S.C.), DICK DURBIN (D-Ill.)and LINDSEY GRAHAM (R-S.C.), and Rep. KAREN BASS (D-Calif.), who has been deputized by Pelosito handle negotiations on behalf of House Democrats.
PLAYBOOK READS
THE WHITE HOUSE
GOING DEEP ON KAMALA — “The misunderstood first 100 days of Kamala Harris,”by Eugene and Christopher Cadelago: “Rather than the cautious and overly ambitious pol she’s portrayed to be, interviews with more than a dozen current and former aides and others in Harris’ orbit paint a picture of a veep who remains intensely focused on earning the trust of Joe Biden, so much so that outside allies believe she’s partially motivated by a fear of losing it. Some worry she may be hurting her future political prospects in pursuit of it.”
“‘What I know is in Kamala’s mindset, it’s not just cozying up to Biden for her own personal gain, but because she wants to be actively engaged in government and that’s determined by how much authority Biden gives her,’ one Harris confidante said. ‘And how much authority he gives her is based on how much he trusts her.’”
POWER PLAY — “Samantha Power confirmed to lead US Agency for International Development,” CNN: “SAMANTHA POWER on Wednesday was confirmed by the Senate as the new head of the US Agency for International Development in a 68-26 vote. Power is scheduled to be ceremonially sworn-in to the role of administrator on Monday.”
POLITICS CORNER
PENCE SPEAKS — Former VP MIKE PENCE will give his first speech this evening since leaving the White House, a move aimed at laying the groundwork for a possible run for president in 2024. It’s no coincidence he’s giving the address in the early primary state of South Carolina — to an organization, the Palmetto Family Council, that champions “biblical values” in government and is a longtime ally.
The speech comes after Trump lashed out at Pence in January for refusing to overturn the election results — which Republicans almost universally agree he didn’t have the power to do and are privately grateful he didn’t try.
What he’ll say: Per a source familiar with his remarks, Pence will compare the accomplishments of the Trump-Pence administration with the first 100 days of Biden’s White House. He’ll blast Biden for moving to the left under pressure from progressives. And Pence will talk about how a return to a “positive” policy agenda rooted in conservative ideological principles can help the party flip the House and Senate.
He’ll also talk about his faith and the causes that he’s backed his entire career, such as opposing abortion and advocating for religious liberty. This would be Pence’s most promising lane in a potentially crowded Republican primary if Trump doesn’t run.
E-RING READING — “Biden Nominee for Pentagon Weapons Buyer Under Investigation,”Defense One: “The Department of Defense Inspector General is looking into allegations that a Biden nominee tapped to be the Pentagon’s chief acquisitions officer circumvented federal hiring regulations during his tenure at a DOD technology incubator.
“MICHAEL BROWN was nominated April 2 by the White House to be the under secretary of defense for acquisition and sustainment. Since 2018, Brown has led the Pentagon’s Defense Innovation Unit … A defense official familiar with the matter said Wednesday the IG is investigating the complaint but had not yet decided to launch a formal investigation.”
BEYOND THE BELTWAY
RECALL REALITY CHECK — “Newsom gets strong ratings on schools, economy despite recall attacks,” by Jeremy B. White and Mackenzie Mays: “Gov. GAVIN NEWSOM just got the most concrete evidence to date showing why he’s positioned to survive a recall vote. … [A] new statewide poll suggests those two pillars of anti-Newsom sentiment aren’t as sturdy as his foes think. The Public Policy Institute of California found 59 percent of likely voters approve of how Newsom has managed school reopening — and 59 percent approve how he has handled jobs and the economy. That figure is a few points higher than the share of likely voters who told PPIC in March they would vote to keep Newsom in office. …
“By comparison, in a June 2003 PPIC poll, only 21 percent of likely voters approved of then-Gov. GRAY DAVIS’ job performance.”
THE CUOMO SCANDALS — “Cuomo Aides Spent Months Hiding Nursing Home Death Toll,”NYT: “Cuomo’s most senior aides engaged in a sustained effort to prevent the state’s own health officials, including the commissioner, HOWARD ZUCKER, from releasing the true death toll to the public or sharing it with state lawmakers, these interviews and documents showed. A scientific paper, which incorporated the data, was never published. An audit of the numbers by a top Cuomo aide was finished months before it became publicly known. Two letters, drafted by the Health Department and meant for state legislators, were never sent.
“The actions coincided with the period in which Mr. Cuomowas pitching and then writing a book on the pandemic, with the assistance of his top aide, MELISSA DEROSA, and others.”
WHAT SAND HILL ROAD IS READING — “This Barack Obama adviser is quietly investing $250 million in startup founders of color,”Vox: “A new venture capital firm called Pendulum Holdings has in recent months been approaching and funding companies led by founders of color, according to people familiar with the matter. The firm is led by ROBBIE ROBINSON, who helped set up the financial affairs of the Obama family after they left the White House. He remains an adviser to the family.
“The fund, whose efforts haven’t previously been reported, is the latest attempt to better support Black founders, who receive only about 1 percent of venture capital funding, according to estimates. Corporate America has vowed to do better in the aftermath of the Black Lives Matter protests last summer, and one way to do that is to launch firms with an explicit focus on backing these entrepreneurs. Racial diversity in the world of startups matters because these companies create businesses, products, and wealth that can either perpetuate or help close inequality in the first place.”
TRUMP CARDS
THE VIEW FROM MAR-A-LAGO — “Trump’s Battle to Win the First 100 Days,”by POLITICO Magazine’s Michael Kruse: “Trump has hosted at his private club some of the most powerful Republicans plus a spate of aspiring elected officials vying for his approval. He’s deployed his emailed blasts to zero in on targets for vengeance while offering up to loyalists across the country his imprimatur. He’s welcomed well-heeled would-be donors.
“And it’s not just what he’s doing—it’s what he’s not. He’s not working on a memoir, and he’s not putting into motion a presidential library, after-the-Oval activities that are nothing if not conventional but also acknowledgements of a change in status—to more was than is. Trump, on the other hand, isn’t acting like a has-been—he’s acting like a still-here. Indeed, ramping up of late the volume and frenzy of his declarations, he is trying not only to not fade like any other former leader of the free world but to stoke his considerable remaining political sway—his first 100 days out of office a brazen continuation of his lack of a concession in the wake of his defeat.”
IN MEMORIAM — “Michael Collins, ‘Third Man’ of the Moon Landing, Dies at 90,”NYT: “It was an epic moment of exploration, an instant when the fantasy of science fiction writers became a reality. And when it transpired, Lt. Col. Michael Collins of the Air Force was the loneliest man in history. …
“Colonel Collins left NASA a year after the Apollo 11 mission, when he was named assistant secretary of state for public affairs. He became director of the Smithsonian’s National Air and Space Museum in 1971 … He was appointed under secretary of the Smithsonian Institution in 1978 and was named vice president of the LTV Aerospace and Defense Company in 1980. He later formed a Washington-based consulting firm.”
PLAYBOOK METRO SECTION — “Former Pro-Trump Artist Wants the National Portrait Gallery to Drape Trump Portrait in Black Cloth,”Washingtonian: “New York-based artist JULIAN RAVEN became something of a right-wing celeb for his sprawling painting of Donald Trump—complete with American flag-piercing bald eagle and border wall map—and his subsequent legal battle with the Smithsonian’s National Portrait Gallery to get it displayed.
“After the January 6 storming of the Capitol Building, however, the two-time Trump voter spoke out against his former hero, calling on him to resign. Now, the painter says the museum should not display a photo portrait of Trump destined for its presidential gallery when it reopens in the coming months.”
PROGRAMMING NOTE,per @brianstelter:“TUCKER CARLSON just said RUDY GIULIANI will join him live tomorrow night…” — that’s tonight!
SPOTTED: Cindy McCain eating lunch at Cafe Milano… George Will dining alone at Martin’s Tavern.
SPOTTED at Milos at Hudson Yards for a going-away party for Jake Siewert, who is departing Goldman Sachs: Josh King, David Leavy, Liz Bowyer, Joel Johnson, Gary Ginsberg, Brian Steel, Russell and Alex Horowitz, Christine Anderson, George Walker, Michael Feldman, Brian Steel, John Rogers, Dina Powell, Patrick Steel, Joe Lockhart, Jonathan Prince, Andrew Williams and Tom Nides.
FIRST IN PLAYBOOK — Lissandra Villa is returning to BuzzFeed as a national political reporter. She currently is a staff reporter at Time.
— Ebony Bowden is now director at Risa Heller Communications. She most recently was Washington correspondent for the New York Post.
STAFFING UP — The Biden administration announced 16 forthcoming nominations across several departments and boards, including Geraldine Richmond, Andrew Light and Sam Walsh at DOE, Jane Nishida and Jeffrey Prieto at EPA, and Roberto Rodriguez at the Education Department. The full list
TRANSITIONS — Shanna Fricklas is joining the Niskanen Center as a government affairs and legal fellow. She previously was executive director of the Problem Solvers Caucus. … Ian Miller will be chief science and innovation officer at the National Geographic Society. He most recently was director of earth and space sciences at the Denver Museum of Nature & Science.
WELCOME TO THE WORLD — Travis Cushman, senior counsel for public policy at the American Farm Bureau Federation, and Brittani Cushman, general counsel at Turning Point Brands, welcomed Emelia Jane Cushman on Tuesday. She came in at 3 lbs, 7 oz. Pic
HAPPY BIRTHDAY: Sen. Debbie Stabenow (D-Mich.) … Reps. Mo Brooks (R-Ala.), Steven Horsford and Joe Morelle … NBC’s Hallie Jackson … former Rep. Rodney Frelinghuysen (R-N.J.) … Lynne Weil of the Center for Security and Emerging Technology … Peter Kiley of C-SPAN … Anne Brachman … Eric Pierce of Lockheed Martin … Allison Zelman … Emily Saleme of Sen. John Thune’s (R-S.D.) office … Dawn Kopecki … Gentry Collins … Nadeam Elshami of Brownstein Hyatt Farber Schreck … UVa’s Melody Barnes … Gaby Baca … NYT’s Ari Isaacman Bevacqua … Jane Lee … Richard Goodstein … David Gaidamak … Alex Wright … Josh Sharp, co-founder of Advoc8 … Jennifer Nycz-Conner … Holly Morris … WaPo’s Melina Mara … Geng Ngarmboonanant … AIPAC’s Rob Bassin … Cara Morris Stern … Meghan Pennington of Hamilton Place Strategies … Karen Dynan … Matt Frendewey … former Rep. Jim Ryun (R-Kan.) … Jeff Poor … Geoff Earle of the Daily Mail
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.
Former Justice Department official Mary McCord will serve in an advisory role for the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court earlier this month. McCord was one of the officials who reviewed and approved warrants to surveil former Trump campaign aide Carter Page. The FISC, which approved the warrants in 2016 and 2017, …
Liberal Maureen Dowd, one of the New York Times’ most notable columnists, and major Trump denouncer, recently took to her own allies and friends with a devastating OpEd against the Liberal Hollywood elites, their annual awards celebration, the Oscars, and the rapid decline in worldwide popularity that is sinking America’s once prestigious …
I cannot speak for most people, but the time we have shared navigating through a modern-day pandemic has given me a tremendous opportunity to reflect on many aspects of life. Personally, professionally and as a society, we have experienced changes in our lives that were not planned but thrust upon …
It’s always funny when some of the most prominent, self-described socialists in America leverage their advocacy for socialism into becoming multi-millionaires. (I’m looking at you and your three houses, Bernie Sanders). The latest example of this comical yet revealing pattern comes courtesy of the Seattle City Council. The body is …
Arizona Audit Shines A Light On election Fraud You can’t hide the truth. Arizona is conducting the first serious and forensic audit of the stolen election. The audit officially began a few days ago panicking the Democrats. The Democrats sent a team of 100 lawyers to try and stop the …
On Wednesday, President Joe Biden will finally address Congress after much delay for the first time as President. The long-awaited speech will be met with much praise from the mainstream media and the radical Left as he will pander to both in the speech. No doubt his handlers will be …
President Joe Biden addresses a joint session of Congress Wednesday in which he will outline the state of the nation and promote his agenda. The State of the Union (SOTU) address has historically been given between late January and early February each year. The speech is scheduled to begin at …
Happy Thursday, dear Kruiser Morning Briefing friends. I occasionally play blues guitar under the name Onion Sweats Jones.
I love Thursdays because my friends VodkaPundit, Bryan Preston, and I do our weekly live video chat with our VIP Gold subscribers. We did one a year ago as just something to do for our VIPs during the plague. We had so much fun we wanted to do them every week. At least for a few months. Here we are a year later and our one hour a week is now three hours and it’s called “5 O’Clock Somewhere.” No matter how weird the week has been, this is a highlight. We have a great group there. We swap recipes. We laugh, we cry, it becomes a part of us.
And avoid getting around to having to pay attention to the topic at hand.
Not only do we have the best readers here, I have the best colleagues. Whenever one of these train-wreck political dog-and-pony shows is on television I can count on them watching and writing about it so thoroughly that I don’t have to.
I was actually going to try and watch this speech. Let’s be honest, Ol’ Gropes probably won’t be giving many of these joint session addresses so I thought I could make it through one.
Here’s how far I got:
Yeah, I know one of those hashtags is immature, but we all have our coping mechanisms.
After Biden said his hellos to everyone, that line was about ninety seconds into the speech.
As I tweeted, I don’t have the patience for this nonsense that January 6, 2021, was a day in American history parallel in importance to December 7, 1941, or September 11, 2001. It’s insane. There was no insurrection that day. Democracy wasn’t threatened. The drunk guy in the Viking helmet (yeah, yeah, I got the email about it not really being a Viking helmet) wasn’t at any time going to overthrow the United States government.
I would implore the Democrats to stop lying but it’s a pathological problem with them.
This January 6 lie is just about demonizing and marginalizing Trump supporters who won’t play along with Comrade Joe’s New World Order.
We’ve spent the two decades since 9/11 pretending that Jihadist extremists aren’t really the problem. It’s “Islamophobia” if you acknowledge the pattern and call the terrorists, you know, terrorists.
But because of a handful of rioters, the Democrats now want us to believe that there is a terrorist threat posed by everyone who ever attended a MAGA rally.
Just stop.
Also, the mask virtue-signaling in a room full of socially-distanced people who are all vaccinated was pathetic. It was also proof that the big -dea, big-government Dems know that they really have nothing going on and they have to keep the public distracted by the COVID panic porn.
The empty-vessel president and his flaccid commie agenda aren’t as popular as the media will tell you they are. People who have read history books are always going to be the flies in their ointment.
I will continue to resist and, no matter how many times they call me one, I will never be a terrorist.
PJ Media senior columnist and associate editor Stephen Kruiser is a professional stand-up comic, writer, and recovering political activist who edits and writes PJ’s Morning Briefing, aka The Greatest Political Newsletter in America. His latest book, Straight Outta Feelings, is a humorous exploration of how the 2016 election made him enjoy politics more than he ever had before. When not being a reclusive writer, Kruiser has had the honor of entertaining U.S. troops all over the world. Follow on: Gab, Parler, MeWe
Scott Outshines Biden, Enrages Libs With Inspiring Tale of Overcoming Adversity . . . Sen. Tim Scott (R., S.C.) delivered a powerful and inspiringly diverse response to President Joe Biden’s congressional address on Wednesday, causing professional journalists and other liberal ideologues to lose their minds. Scott argued that Biden—a “good man” whose speech was “full of good words”—had failed to deliver on his promise to unite the country after his victory in the 2020 election. “The Biden administration has pushed us apart,” he said, praising the bipartisan COVID-19 relief legislation passed under former president Donald Trump and the success of Operation Warp Speed. The radical policies Democrats have proposed, he argued, were not intended to find “common ground.”
Invoking his personal story of being raised in poverty by a single “prayin’ momma,” Scott spoke of his experience as a black man in America and his struggle to be taken seriously by Democrats and their supporters. “I get called ‘Uncle Tom’ and the N-word by progressives, by liberals,” said Scott, who also called out the Washington Post for publishing a widely condemned fact check suggesting “my family’s poverty was actually privilege.” Washington Free Beacon
Tim Scott did an amazing job with his rebuttal of Biden’s address. I love his and Ben Carson’s for ‘common sense’ approach.
Donald Trump: 2024 presidential bid could begin ‘right after’ midterms . . . Former President Donald Trump says if he runs for president in 2024 he could jump into the GOP nomination race and tap a running mate “right after” the midterm elections next year.
Mr. Trump is teasing the idea of making a political comeback in the 2024 presidential election. “I am giving it the most serious consideration, as you can imagine,” Mr. Trump said Wednesday on “The Dan Bongino Show” podcast. Washington Times
Trump just told Maria Bartiromo on Fox Business that he will definitely run for President in 2024.
Please join me for another White House Dossier Virtual Happy Hourtoday at 5 pm Eastern. I will send out the link at 3:00 pm. Look forward to chatting with you about top news and strategizing about how to make America normal again! Cheers, Rebekah.
Politics
Biden’s Cradle-to-Grave Government . . . The progressive hits keep coming from the Biden Administration, and the latest is the $1.8 trillion American Families Plan introduced in broad strokes on Wednesday. It’s more accurate to call this the plan to make the middle class dependent on government from cradle to grave. The government will tell you sometime later, after you’re hooked to the state, how it will force you to pay for it. The regular federal budget is more than $4 trillion a year. But the cost, while staggering, isn’t the only or even the biggest problem. The destructive part is the way the plan seeks to insinuate government cash and the rules that go with it into all of the major decisions of family life. The goal is to expand the entitlement state to make Americans rely on government and the political class for everything they don’t already provide. Wall Street Journal
Biden ushers in the era of creeping socialism . . . President Biden in his speech to Congress, outlined his vision for the inexorable advance of socialism, detailing several major new “benefits” Democrats hope to lock in forever as ongoing government programs. The problem with a lot of programs liberals propose is that they may initially be temporary and small, but the programs are intended to become permanent and big. And then they grow forever and beget other programs. Eventually, you end up with socialism, because as the Left knows, once you give somebody something, it is very hard to take it away. White House Dossier
Biden’s Rambling Tirade . . . President Joe Biden on Wednesday said his political opponents “can’t stop” him from “moving forward” with his controversial agenda. During a rambling address to a mostly empty House Chamber on Capitol Hill, Biden shoplifted former president Donald Trump’s “Buy American” initiative and attempted to pass it off as his own. He repeated his inscrutable false claim about having traveled “more than 17,000 miles with” Chinese president Xi Jinping. Biden thanked politicians for the fact that so many Americans have received a COVID-19 vaccination but declined to credit health care workers, much less Trump and Operation Warp Speed, launched almost one year ago today to the widespread derision of so-called science experts and unaccredited media pundits. Washington Free Beacon
Biden Gave the Most Ideologically Ambitious Speech of Any Democratic President in Generations . . . Under a pose of guilelessness, Biden’s speech was in fact infused with political guile. The agenda he promoted to expand both free pre-school and community college, to subsidize the shift to a low-carbon economy, to fund a massive way of new public works construction by taxing the very wealthy, represented years of pent-up demand by progressives. But much of the money would be spent in ways designed to break up the Trump coalition, which was powered heavily by middle- and lower-middle class whites who do not have college degrees with contempt for many parts of the progressive agenda. Referring to his infrastructure proposal, Biden argued: “Nearly 90 percent of the infrastructure jobs created in the American Jobs Plan do not require a college degree. Seventy-five percent don’t require an associate’s degree. The American Jobs Plan is a blue-collar blueprint to build America. Politico
Tim Scott in GOP response to Biden: ‘America is not a racist country’ . . . Sen. Tim Scott on Wednesday knocked President Biden for “empty platitudes” about national unity while also accusing the US of “systemic racism” in a blistering Republican response to Biden’s first speech to a joint session of Congress. The South Carolina Republican said Democrats hypocritically talked about unity while filibustering his policing reform bill and rejecting GOP efforts to influence Biden’s recently passed $1.9 trillion COVID-19 relief bill. Scott, one of just three black senators, also said “America is not a racist country” — rejecting Biden’s recent assessment of America as systemically racist. New York Post
‘Uncle Tim’ slur against Tim Scott trends on Twitter after his Biden rebuttal . . . “Uncle Tim” trended on Twitter Wednesday night as left-wing users flooded the site with the racial slur on Sen. Tim Scott, R-S.C, following his rebuttal to President Biden’s address to Congress. Scott, who is Black, declared the United States is not a racist country while noting he had encountered racism in his life. Some of it, he said, came from the left in the form of being called an “Uncle Tom,” a derogatory phrase for Blacks who are viewed as too deferential to Whites. Fox News
Racist liberal ideologues can no longer pretend to be anti-racist. Their masks are off.
Biden fails to mention Israel in his address to Congress . . . This could well be the first time, in a very long time, that a president has failed in an address to Congress to mention one of our strongest and most endangered allies, Israel. Shows where his priorities are. This president, like the previous Democratic president, is not a reliable partner for Israel. My fellow Jewish voters overwhelmingly supported Joe Biden. They did Israel no favors. White House Dossier
Government Official Who Approved Improper Spying On Trump Staffer Tapped For Spy Court Role . . . Mary McCord, a former Justice Department official who approved efforts to snoop on former Trump campaign aide Carter Page, has been appointed to advise the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court. The same court excoriated government officials in late 2019 for providing misleading information in four applications to surveil Page, a former Naval officer, who served as a Trump campaign national security adviser. The surveillance court appointed McCord, who served as assistant attorney general for national security through May 2017, to be an amicus curiae on April 15. Daily Caller
Guiliani’s home raided by FBI: They left copy of Hunter’s laptop. Is Trump the target? . . . One must assume, at least partially. The Feds raided Rudy Giuliani’s apartment Wednesday morning, collecting all sorts of electronic devices. No doubt some of these have communications with Donald Trump. Apparently the only thing they didn’t care about was Hunter Biden’s laptop, leaving behind a hard drive that contains a copy of it. Go figure. “This is disgusting. This is absolutely absurd,” said Giuliani’s son Andrew. “And it’s the continued politicization of the Justice Department that we have seen. And it has to stop if this can happen to the former president’s lawyer. This can happen to any American. Enough is enough. The only piece of evidence that they did not take up there today was the only piece of incriminating evidence that is in there.”
More than 200 Seattle police officers quit over the last year . . . More than 200 Seattle police officers quit their jobs in the last year amid months of frequent anti-law enforcement, racial injustice protests and riots in the city. Many of the officers cited an anti-police climate in the city – including in the City Council — and disagreements with police management in their reasons for moving on, leaving the department with what Police Chief Adrian Diaz called a “staffing crisis” on Tuesday. He said 180 police officers quit last year and another 66 officers so far this year. Fox News
Our Cops Are Quitting in Droves . . . Under constant assault in the Left’s War on Cops, our nation’s Thin Blue Line is getting even thinner. The leftists’s War on Cops is being governed by a timeless economic principle — one made famous by Ronald Reagan: “If you want more of something, subsidize it; if you want less of something, tax it.” Back in the day, we used to subsidize careers in law enforcement with an abiding show of gratitude and admiration. Cops were our kids’ heroes, and we were overwhelmingly supportive of the vital work they did. These days, though, leftist mayors, city councils, and prosecutors are second-guessing the $50,000-a-year cops who make split-second life-and-death decisions; they’re reallocating funds and removing long-held legal protections such as qualified immunity; and they’re siding with Black Lives Matter and its Marxist ilk for one cop-hating protest after another. Patriot Post
Blinken warns Turkey, US allies against purchasing Russian weapons . . . Secretary of State Antony Blinken on Wednesday warned Turkey and other U.S. allies against buying weapons systems from Russia, saying such purchases could be subject to sanctions and strain ties with Washington. Blinken singled out Turkey as it undergoes talks with Russia for a second purchase of the S-400 anti-aircraft weapons system, saying it could be penalized under the Countering America’s Adversaries Through Sanctions Act (CAATSA). “It’s also very important going forward that Turkey, and for that matter all U.S. allies and partners, avoid future purchases of Russian weaponry, including additional S-400s,” Blinken said. The Hill
Coronavirus
COVID-19 Could Change Genes In Human Airway Cells ‘Long-Term’ . . . A new study found that a COVID-19 infection could cause changes to genes in the human airway, which could help explain those who suffer from long-term coronavirus symptoms. Spike proteins that cover the virus that causes COVID-19 bind to receptor cells in the body and release genetic material into the healthy cell. Researchers found that exposure to spike proteins changed the gene expression in human airway cells, and those changes persisted even after the cells had recovered. Cells related to inflammatory response were among those that were changed, which could explain why some people experienced long-term coronavirus symptoms like shortness of breath and dizziness even after recovering from the virus. Daily Caller
Moderna to Boost Covid-19 Vaccine Production to Meet Rising Global Demand . . . Moderna Inc. MRNA -2.58% plans to spend billions of dollars to boost production of Covid-19 vaccines and potentially triple its yearly output of doses in 2022, as the company seeks to meet rising global demand. The Cambridge, Mass., biotech company said Thursday it could produce up to three billion doses of Covid-19 vaccines in 2022, compared with a projected output of up to one billion this year. Moderna also said it would make no less than 800 million doses this year, up from a minimum 700 million it had forecast previously. Wall Street Journal
The COVID Crazies Demand We Do More Than What’s Actually Required . . . The members of society who are most enthusiastic about wearing masks, who tout the scientific literature and medical guidelines dictated to them by health authorities, are often asking their fellow Americans to do far more than the law requires them to.
Scientific evidence has shown that fully vaccinated individuals are incredibly unlikely to contract COVID-19 and then spread it to someone else. The CDC shifted its guidance Tuesday to reflect that and declared that vaccinated Americans can go without a mask under certain circumstances outside, but some ardent pro-maskers are still going further. Daily Caller
International
Russia Expels Diplomats From Slovakia, Lithuania, Latvia, and Estonia . . . Russia on Wednesday ordered the expulsion of seven diplomats from Slovakia, Lithuania, Latvia, and Estonia, in retaliation for the expulsion of Russian envoys in the wake of Czech accusations that Russian intelligence was behind a deadly 2014 blast. Moscow and Prague are locked in their biggest row since the end of the Communist era in 1989, which has spiraled into a series of diplomatic disputes with other European Union and NATO countries as Russia’s ties with the West linger at post-Cold War lows. Epoch Times
Russia’s Meduza feels force of Kremlin’s media crackdown . . . Readers of Meduza are now greeted by an unfamiliar sight at the top of every article: a block of text in 24-point Comic Sans font warning them Russia’s most popular independent news site is a “foreign agent”. The Kremlin’s new restrictions on Meduza, which editor Ivan Kolpakov says may force it to shut down, come amid what reporters say is unprecedented pressure on independent journalism in Russia. Police threatened to arrest several reporters this week for attending mass protest rallies in support of jailed opposition leader Alexei Navalny — even though they were clearly marked with IDs and press jackets. Financial Times
Tibetans see repeat of own repression in China’s treatment of Uyghurs . . . Tibetans are experiencing mass repression in China similar to that being enforced on ethnic minority Uyghurs in the western part of the country, the outgoing president of the Tibetan government in exile said. Lobsang Sangay, head of the exile government loyal to Tibetan Buddhist spiritual leader the Dalai Lama, said China is forcibly trying to turn Tibet into a Chinese province and Tibetans into Chinese, even as Tibet’s cause is getting less attention in the Western press. Tibet was an independent state in the Himalayas until Chinese troops annexed the region in 1950. The Dalai Lama fled into exile in India, where the exile government is based to this day. Washington Times
Money
US economic growth expected to have picked up in first quarter . . . US economic growth is expected to have received a boost in the first three months of 2021 from massive fiscal stimulus that fuelled consumer spending, as well as looser lockdown restrictions after new Covid-19 infections slowed. Economists estimate that figures due to be released on Thursday will show that gross domestic product advanced 6.1 per cent on an annualised basis in the first quarter — or about 1.5 per cent compared with the previous quarter, based on the measure used by other major economies. Financial Times
Biden’s woke economics will lead to disaster . . . Presidents may have disagreed about the boundaries, but free trade, controlling government deficits and trust in markets were the abiding ideology. With the Fed printing money to buy bonds, deficits were headed above $1 trillion even before COVID-19 struck. Mr. Biden’s expansive programs seems likely to put annual federal borrowing at twice that level after the pandemic is over. Moreover, Mr. Biden doesn’t just want guardrails on markets — limits on bank risk taking, regulations to police discrimination and subsidies to reshape health care. Rather, the president wants to reprogram American capitalism and culture to address alleged sexism, structural racism and climate change. Washington Times
Biden claims US billionaires made $1 trillion during pandemic — here’s the truth . . . During his first address to a joint session of Congress, Biden said that while 20 million working- and middle-class people lost jobs during the pandemic, the richest 650 people in the US saw their wealth explode. The president was referencing a report by Americans for Tax Fairness and the Institute for Policy Studies, two left-leaning groups. The claim is that as of February, the country’s 664 billionaires now have a collective net worth of $4.3 trillion, up from just under $3 trillion on March 18 of last year. While March 18 was early on in the pandemic in terms of time frame (states were not yet locking down), the Dow Jones Industrial Average was at its lowest point around late March, dropping to nearly 19,000 points by March 20. Net value is largely derived from the value of stocks, meaning that if measured from the lowest trough, the stock market’s subsequent multi-month increase would obviously cause a dramatic increase in the net worth of the country’s billionaires. Washington Examiner
You should also know
USPS official confirms covert social media tracking operation . . . A Republican representative who met with USPS Chief Postal Inspector Gary Barksdale on Wednesday said Barksdale confirmed the agency is combing through Americans’ social media posts for a covert intelligence mission. In a statement to FOX Business, a spokesperson for South Carolina Rep. Nancy Mace confirmed that Barksdale said during the briefing that USPS analysts search through social media posts, which is said to be part of a cover mission known as iCOP (Internet Covert Operations Program). Fox Business
Biden Admin Urges Supreme Court to Allow Schools to Censor Student Expression Online . . . The Biden administration and a Pennsylvania school district urged a skeptical Supreme Court to let school districts suppress free speech by students on social media if they deem it potentially disruptive to school operations. The case, Mahanoy Area School District v. B.L., court file 20-255, was heard April 28. Epoch Times
Minorities ‘Perfectly Capable of Getting Photo ID,’ Nikki Haley Says of Election Laws . . . Nikki Haley, previously US Ambassador to the United Nations and governor of South Carolina, discussed what conservatives realistically can try to accomplish during the next 18 months while faced with a liberal Democratic president and Congress. “Don’t assume that minorities can’t do for themselves,” Haley says of the latter. “We are perfectly capable of getting a photo ID. We’re perfectly capable of picking the school of our choice. We are perfectly capable of understanding how to make the most of our opportunities if they are put in front of us.” Daily Signal
Guilty Pleasures
CDC Recommends Wearing A Seat Belt Even When You’re Outside The Car . . . The CDC has issued brand new recommendations regarding the wearing of seat belts. Health experts there are now recommending people wear a seat belt, even when outside the car. “This guidance is especially important if you’re in a large group of people at the park or an outdoor event,” said Dr. Stiku Pumybum. “Risk of collisions leading to bone breaks or concussions dramatically increase in large groups of people. Billions could die!”
When pressed regarding what gives the CDC authority to comment on seat belt usage, they clarified that these were simply recommendations based on the latest scientific research, for the sake of public health. When further asked how exactly a seat belt that’s not anchored to anything can protect anyone, they replied with a statement saying “SHUT UP IT’S SCIENCE!” The Federal Government has responded with a nationwide seat belt order for all public parks, buildings, and sidewalks. “I don’t know what’s so hard about this,” said Biden as his aides handed him a juice box and tightened his 5-point harness. “Just wear the dang seatbelt folks!” Babylon Bee
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Happy Thursday! One last shameless plug under the wire: The Dispatch is currently in the middle of a 30-day free trial window. Well, not “in the middle” of one—the offer ends tomorrow. Before the opportunity vanishes like a politician’s concern for the national debt once they’re elected, we wanted to let you know about one of Dispatch membership’s greatest perks (besides getting the full version of this newsletter).
Every few weeks, Sarah, Steve, Jonah, and David meet up on Zoom for what we call Dispatch Live. It’s part podcast, part video chat, part Q&A, and 100 percent a great time. The original plan was to travel and do these in cities around the country—and we will in the future!—but the pandemic forced us to call an audible. We’ve had a ton of fun getting to “know” members as they chat with us below the video window, submit questions to Sarah to pose to the group, and build our Dispatch community.
Anyway, we held one last night before and after Biden and Scott’s speeches, and we wanted to provide you with a glimpse. (In theory, this will so inflame your FOMO that you’ll slap that “subscribe” button without further delay.)
“This was the most pro-government, most confident-in-the-ability-of-government-to- do-things, most in-favor-of-expanding-government presidential address [in recent memory],” Jonah argued. An old-school Democrat, Biden made clear his objective to reinvigorate the 1940s-era liberalism of Franklin Delano Roosevelt.
“But it’s totally unrealistic,” Steve responded. “We’re not going to pay for what Joe Biden is proposing by taxing only the wealthy and corporations. It’s not going to happen. You could confiscate the wealth of all of the richest Americans and it wouldn’t come close to paying for what he’s proposing right now.”
On the Republican side, our hosts liked a lot of what they heard from Sen. Tim Scott’s rebuttal. Sarah argued his speech hearkened back to the earlier days of compassionate conservatism, when the GOP viewed Democrats as adversaries, but not enemies.
“He didn’t set it up as saying, ‘Joe Biden is wrong on everything,’” David said. “He was setting it up as saying, ‘We want to meet Joe Biden on some things, and he doesn’t want to meet us. And there are things that we want to accomplish, and he doesn’t want to work with us.’”
“He did it in a way that that wasn’t the kind of outrage that we’re used to,” Steve added. “He actually made an argument, and it was a coherent, cohesive case.”
Rep. Ted Budd became the latest North Carolina Republican to enter the race to replace Richard Burr in the U.S. Senate next year, joining former Gov. Pat McCrory and former Rep. Mark Walker.
FBI agents executed a search warrant at Rudy Giuliani’s apartment yesterday, seizing cell phones and laptops from the former New York mayor and personal lawyer to Donald Trump as part of an investigation into Giuliani’s dealings in Ukraine. A similar raid was carried out at the home of Victoria Toensing, a Giuliani ally and former Justice Department official.
The Federal Reserve decided on Wednesday to keep interest rates close to zero, with Chairman Jerome Powell saying the country’s economic recovery is “uneven and far from complete.” Powell also downplayed concerns about inflation, saying “an episode of one-time price increases as the economy re-opens is not the same thing as, and is not likely to lead to, persistently higher year-over-year inflation.”
The Justice Department on Wednesday indicted three men on federal hate crime charges for their various roles in the death of Ahmaud Arbery, a 25-year-old black man shot and killed while running through a residential neighborhood in Georgia.
The Senate voted 68-26 Wednesday to confirm Samantha Power—former U.S. ambassador to the United Nations—as head of the U.S. Agency for International Development. The chamber also voted 52-42 to undo a Trump-era policy and reimpose regulations on methane gas that is emitted during the oil and gas production process.
Michael Collins, the third astronaut aboard Apollo 11, who piloted the craft while Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin walked on the moon, died Wednesday at the age of 90.
The United States confirmed 54,278 new cases of COVID-19 yesterday per the Johns Hopkins University COVID-19 Dashboard, with 5.5 percent of the 978,996 tests reported coming back positive. An additional 948 deaths were attributed to the virus on Wednesday, bringing the pandemic’s American death toll to 574,326. According to the Centers for Disease Control, 36,579 Americans are currently hospitalized with COVID-19. Meanwhile, 2,231,745 COVID-19 vaccine doses were administered yesterday, with 142,692,987 Americans having now received at least one dose.
Biden Goes Big in First Speech to Congress
President Biden’s speech to a joint session of Congress last night had a very different look and feel than a typical State of the Union address, which makes sense because it technically wasn’t one. Although most political leaders in Washington have been vaccinated by now, COVID-19 restrictions on the event limited its audience to about 200 people masked and spread throughout the House chamber, which can hold approximately 1,100.
Nevertheless, Biden seemed to enjoy returning to the place he called “almost home,” speaking for nearly 65 minutes about the first 100 days of his presidency and what he envisions coming next. Biden currently boasts a +12 net approval rating from voters, significantly better than Trump’s -10 at this point in his presidency, but worse than Barack Obama and George W. Bush’s +28. Biden did not mention Trump once by name, but he did throw his predecessor under the bus early on to pump up his own accomplishments.
I “inherited a nation—we all did—that was in crisis,” he said. “The worst pandemic in a century. The worst economic crisis since the Great Depression. The worst attack on our democracy since the Civil War. Now, after just 100 days, I can report to the nation, America is on the move again. … After 100 days of rescue and renewal, America is ready for a takeoff.” He touted the 220 million vaccine doses administered nationwide since he took office, but did not mention the work Operation Warp Speed did last year to help make that possible.
Underlying the entire speech was a precarious logical balancing act. On the one hand, his first few months in office were a smashing success and the country has a bright future ahead of it. On the other, things are in dire enough straits to justify pumping an additional $4 trillion of federal spending into the economy, on top of the more than $5 trillion spent on COVID-19 relief over the past year.
“More jobs in the first 100 days than any president on record. The International Monetary Fund is now estimating our economy will grow at a rate of more than 6 percent this year; that will be the fastest pace of economic growth in this country in nearly four decades,” Biden said at one point. Minutes later, he was making the case for his $2 trillion American Jobs Plan and unveiling his $1.8 trillion American Families Plan.
“We’re at a great inflection point in history. We have to do more than just build back … We have to build back better,” he said. “Throughout our history, if you think about it, public investment in infrastructure has literally transformed America, our attitudes as well as our opportunities. The transcontinental railroad, interstate highways, united two oceans and brought a totally new age of progress to the United States of America. … These are investments we made together as one country. And investments that only the government was in a position to make.”
As America Gets the Pandemic Under Control, the Virus Surges in India
Here in the U.S., it’s safe to say we’re in the home stretch of the fight against coronavirus. New cases remain significantly down from winter highs (although still higher than we’d like), and vaccines are in plentiful supply from sea to shining sea. Around the world, however, the virus continues to spread with unsettling speed—more than 800,000 new cases are being reported per day, the most in the pandemic to date.
The lion’s share of these cases are being reported in India, which is being hammered by the virus on a massive scale and with a severity outstripping anything seen in the U.S. More than 200,000 have died of the virus across the nation of 1.4 billion people, with another 350,000 or more cases—and climbing rapidly—reported every day. Experts, citing excess death numbers, say there’s reason to believe the actual number of deaths could be several times higher.
We’ve long known that COVID-19 is a deadly disease that grows far deadlier when it starts to overwhelm hospital capacity, and the stories coming out of India are a grim reminder. With no place to put patients, hospitals in Delhi have been forced to turn away sick people. And the nation now faces dire shortages of basic and crucial medical supplies, including anti-COVID drugs and even oxygen.
Dr. Arnold Monto, an epidemiologist and global health expert at the University of Michigan’s School of Public Health, told The Dispatch that India is currently suffering from a perfect storm of COVID risk factors. Much of the country’s population lives in close quarters in multigenerational homes. Both Delhi and Mumbai have enormous slums, where disease can easily spread. Because the country did a reasonably good job keeping viral levels low last year, there’s a very low level of populational immunity. And the arrival of vaccines on the horizon—even before they’d actually been widely distributed—may have helped lure Indians back into a false sense of normalcy, one encouraged by the government of Prime Minister Narenda Modi, who has been criticized for holding massive political rallies in recent weeks.
Think of how bad things were a year ago in New York, with cases suddenly exploding out of nowhere overnight. The situation in India is somewhat comparable to that—except that in New York, the country was able to dramatically scale up its medical capacity by diverting resources from less hard-hit regions. India can’t do that; its outbreak is spiraling out of control pretty much everywhere at once. And to top it off, the virus they’re struggling under appears to be of the significantly more transmissible variant variety, which has further compounded the problem.
“You had a trifecta,” Dr. Monto said, “a combination of opening, a fairly susceptible population, because of the fact that there hadn’t been that much transmission before, plus probably variants—all three working at the same time.”
Writing in Politico, National Review editor-in-chief Rich Lowry details how Republicans lost interest in fiscal conservatism and limiting spending. “In 2009, President Barack Obama created a spontaneous, hugely influential conservative grassroots movement on the basis of an $800 billion stimulus bill and a health care plan estimated to cost less than a trillion,” he notes. “In 2021, Biden is proposing to spend about $6 trillion in his first three big bills, and he can barely create more interest than the debate on wearing masks outdoors. … The party has changed and would much rather talk about the border than the budget, and cancellations than Congressional Budget Office scores. Of course, no Republicans will vote for Biden’s proposals and all will strenuously object, but that his plans won’t engender the fierce reaction they would have 10 years ago is yet another way in which the Overton window has shifted on deficit spending.”
The further we get from January 6, the easier it becomes to forget how terrifying a situation it truly was. “It’s been very difficult seeing elected officials and other individuals kind of whitewash, you know, the events of that day or downplay what happened,” U.S. Capitol Police officer Michael Fanone told Don Lemon in an emotional 10-minute interview well worth your time. “I experienced the most brutal, savage, you know, hand to hand combat of my entire life, let alone my entire policing career which spans almost two decades. … I felt like they were trying to kill me.”
If you’re a news junkie, don’t you just get tired of feeling like you’re supposed to be pissed off all the time? Jonah does. “Whether it’s Black Lives Matter and their apologists throughout elite left-wing media or the constellation of MAGA propagandists and their apologists throughout elite right-wing media, the order of the day has gone forth: You must be pissed off,” he writes in his Wednesday G-File. “You must think the other side hates you and you must hate them for it. If the facts help in that effort, great. But if the facts aren’t readily available, then don’t worry. We’ll work around that or just invent them.”
As we noted above, Scott’s Capitolism newsletter this week (🔒) concerns the Biden administration’s recent push to help vaccinate the developing world against COVID-19. Scott argues that, unfortunately, many of the measures the Biden administration is taking to help India will be slow to have much impact on the current crisis: “It’s a real shame that these efforts weren’t initiated weeks ago when folks were first starting to ring alarm bells.” But “the United States should be far more proactive about heading off ‘future Indias’ now, instead of waiting for them to explode and public outcry to reach a fever pitch.”
If you would like to listen to Sarah, Steve, Jonah, and David discuss the news of the day for about 45 minutes, you have two different options to choose from: The Dispatch Podcast, where they discuss President Biden’s first 100 days, a leak from Iran, the Census, and more; and Dispatch Live (🔒), where they react to both Biden’s address and Sen. Tim Scott’s rebuttal.
On the site today, Charlotte does a deep dive on the leaked interview with Iranian Foreign Minister Javad Zarif. She looks at Zarif’s revelation that former Secretary of State John Kerry told him of Israeli covert operations and his feelings about Iranian Gen. Qassem Suleimani, whom the U.S. killed in an airstrike in Iraq last year. She also tries to unpack the various motivations for whomever leaked the video.
Mary Chastain: “Hunter Biden is going to be a “guest host” for a class at Tulane University about….fake news. The other guest speakers are all liberals, too. At least I think they are. Definitely no notable conservatives. But Hunter Biden of all people. My goodness. Leftists would burn down a university if a class even contemplated having a Trump child speak to a class. I won’t say how I really feel about Biden, but let’s just say I have to go clean out something smelly from my cat’s litter box.”
Leslie Eastman: “We are wrapping up our vacation of the American Southwest. I should be back posting this weekend, which I am looking forward to as I have missed our team and our friends. The trip was wonderful, and I am very grateful for the chance to see such a beautiful part of this nation. One of the most interesting observations I had on this trip were the many school-age students visiting these historic sites and natural wonders, learning about them from their parents. I think the Teachers Unions are going to look at how they handled the pandemic as a big mistake in the very near future.”
Vijeta Uniyal: “As U.S. President Joe Biden negotiates with Iran to revive the Obama-era nuclear deal, German intelligence has exposed the regime’s efforts to advance its nuclear weapons program. The Iranian regime continues to seek technology and equipment needed to build a nuclear arsenal, the recently published annual domestic intelligence report by the German State of Bavaria disclosed.”
Stacey Matthews: “The Minneapolis Target store that got torched and looted last year during the rioting over the death of George Floyd now has a corporate-sponsored mural of a burning building on display as a show of support for Black Lives Matter. Yeah.”
Samantha Mandeles: “Here is an interesting perspective on the claim of “systemic racism” in American society. Expert legal fellow at the Hoover Institution, Richard A. Epstein examines the disproportionate impact of evictions in NYC on non-White folks (especially in the age of COVID) and the assertion that “structural racism” is to blame.”
David Gerstman: “So, President Biden and Vice President Harris skipped the governors’ weekly COVID briefings. Good to know. Who did they put in charge? The man whose policies killed some 11,000 seniors last year, New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo. If we had an independent media in this country Biden’s hands off approach would be on the front pages of every newspaper. And handing the briefings over to a guy who failed so spectularly is a reckless abdication of responsibility. Especially now that the New York Times has uncovered how utterly cynical Cuomo was.”
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Biden’s Joint Address
In a shameful display of anti-science, fully vaccinated members of Congress sat through President Joe Biden’s first Joint Address to Congress fully masked and social distanced. Vaccine confidence, eh?
Biden kicked off the speech by insulting 9/11 victims and war heroes alike by bizarrely claiming the January 6 Capitol attack was “the worst attack on our democracy since the Civil War.” He then went on to sell his $2 trillion “infrastructure” plan, of which for every $20 spent, only $1 would go to improving roads and bridges, and the “American Families Plan,” which I explain in more detail below. He begged Americans to pay higher taxes to pay for his historically large welfare expansions and also asked Congress to pass a laundry list of bills including the PRO Act, the (un)Equality Act, and HR1.
Aside from using George Floyd’s death to call for police reform, Biden devoted a noticeably small amount of his time to “racial justice,” which has been a prominent theme throughout his first 100 days. Avoiding this topic was a clear nod to the moderate voters who pushed him into office, but don’t be fooled: this president is pursuing radical “racial justice” policies in every corner of his agenda that will impact your life from cradle to grave.
Biden surprisingly made it through the 67-minute-long speech without a nap, but as for the rest of us, we looked more like this:
The [Cripple] American Families Plan
President Biden’s $1.8 trillion American Families Plan is exhaustive and expansive. Perhaps that’s the point—to make it so overly broad, he loses our attention span and banks on the public ultimately saying, “Sure, sounds nice,” as they did with the wasteful $1.9 trillion “Covid relief” bill.
The American Families Plan includes everything from “free” community college, “free” universal preschool and heavily subsidized childcare. Of course, none of these things are actually free. Biden plans to pay for the massive spending scheme by taxing businesses, corporations and all those evil rich people, which of course will have a trickle-down effect on the entire American workforce. And worse, this redistribution scheme will result in fewer choices for American families.
In sum, the plan is an alarming Leftward turn that’s far from the bipartisanship he promised during his campaign.
CDC Cancels A World-Renowned Vaccine Safety Expert
At this point, the CDC is doing more harm than good in its quest to encourage every American to get vaccinated. The Federalist’s Joy Pullman documents the story of the CDC pulling Dr. Martin Kulldorff of Harvard Medical School off the vaccine safety advisory committee after he publicly disagreed with the agency’s pause of the J&J COVID vaccine. Four days after Dr. Kulldorf voiced his objections on the J&J pause, the CDC reinstated the use of the vaccine, effectively adopting his recommendation after punishing him for publicly communicating it.
In an email to Dr. Kulldorff, the CDC’s Dr. Amanda Cohn wrote, “We understand and appreciate that VaST members have personal opinions and we do not object to the expression of those opinions.” However, she stated “we expect members to be objective and devoid of any appearance of bias… Therefore, CDC is respectfully ending your membership on VaST effective today.” (Uh, OK.)
Read the entire story here, along with Dr. Kulldorff’s April 17 op ed in The Hill:
“During this last year, vaccine confidence has been damaged by questionable public health messaging. For instance, former CDC director Robert Redfield said that masks may offer more protection than vaccines against the virus. Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, has asserted that those fully vaccinated must continue to wear masks and physically distance, even though the vaccines provide excellent protection. Some governors and universities have pushed to introduce coercive vaccine passports and mandates, leading many to ask, ‘If the vaccine is so good, why am I being forced to get it?’ The COVID-19 vaccines provide excellent protection, and we cannot afford more such unwarranted vaccine skepticism.”
Thursday Links
To Combat HIV, LGBT Americans Need To Wrestle With Some Hard Truths (The Federalist)
Another reason to love Texas: Parents Revolt After School District Tries to Institutionalize Critical Race Theory (The Federalist)
Prince William and Kate Middleton Celebrate 10 Years of Marriage (The Daily Mail)
Kelsey Bolar is a senior policy analyst at Independent Women’s Forum and a contributor to The Federalist. She is also the Thursday editor of BRIGHT, and the 2017 Tony Blankley Chair at The Steamboat Institute. She lives in Washington, DC, with her husband, daughter, and Australian Shepherd, Utah.
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Apr 29, 2021 01:00 am
Like those looters in Portland, Seattle, and other U.S. cities, progressives in Washington think the property of others is theirs for the taking. Read More…
Apr 29, 2021 01:00 am
The sports industries hard-left turn is driven solely out of survival instincts as well as the maxim, the squeaky wheel gets the grease. Read More…
Apr 29, 2021 01:00 am
The campaign for sanity and fair representation of views of different sides in opinion and news continues against cancel culture in the U.S. and UK. Read More…
Obama’s puppet spoke last night
Apr 29, 2021 01:00 am
We have, it is becoming increasingly clear, our first figurehead president, who will be trotted out from time to time to deceive the American people into believing that he is chief executive. Read more…
The raid on Rudy
Apr 29, 2021 01:00 am
This unexpected maneuver was undertaken despite the fact that it came in the midst of cooperative on-going conversations with Giuliani’s attorney Read more…
A very inconvenient truth
Apr 29, 2021 01:00 am
The leftists’ coming climate hysteria works only if you’re unaware of how the earth has handled CO2 over the life of the planet. Read more…
American Thinker is a daily internet publication devoted to the thoughtful exploration of issues of importance to Americans.
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Seattle police officers were refused service at a chocolate shop in town, the Post Millennial reported, citing sources in the department as well as an officer who reportedly contacted … Read more
Such viciousness reveals the lack of good arguments for the critical race perspective and that parents’ refusal to endorse racism has put agitators on the defensive.
We don’t need to cross any borders to witness a failed state — or at least a dysfunctional wannabe state. The 68 square miles of Washington D.C. have it all.
Remixing sci-fi tropes about robot domination, a new flick from the guys behind ‘The Lego Movie’ implores us to prize family relationships over technology.
The Biden administration is taking aim at menthol cigarettes. Under a new proposal, the minty tobacco product could be outright banned by the federal government.
Leftist online keyboard warriors were less than enthusiastic that a black Republican senator dissented from their narrative that all black people are oppressed.
The Civics Secures Democracy Act making its way through Congress threatens to create a national curriculum that would virtually compel teens to plunge into politics. It’s a horrible idea.
‘The State Department must investigate the massively alarming allegations that John Kerry, in his capacity as secretary of state, leaked information to Iran on covert Israeli military operations.’
Only 51 percent of the largely Democrat speech watchers approved of Joe Biden’s comments, but the corporate media outlet still labeled the ratings a ‘very positive reaction.’
‘It’s going to be a political blip immediately forgotten. It is not going to change the course of anything in Washington, which is now a mono-partisan affair under Joe Biden.’
The Transom is a daily email newsletter written by publisher of The Federalist Ben Domenech for political and media insiders, which arrives in your inbox each morning, collecting news, notes, and thoughts from around the web.
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40.) REUTERS
The Reuters Daily Briefing
Thursday, April 29, 2021
by Linda Noakes
Hello
Here’s what you need to know.
Biden’s plan – “blue-collar blueprint” or “socialist dreams”? China seeks to douse population speculation, oil majors leave their pandemic blues behind and in Russia a gaunt Navalny remains defiant
Today’s biggest stories
President Joe Biden addresses a joint session of Congress as Vice President Kamala Harris and Speaker of the House of Representatives Nancy Pelosi applaud at the U.S. Capitol in Washington, April 28, 2021
U.S.
President Joe Biden marks his 100th day in office with a trip to Georgia, visiting former President Jimmy Carter and pitching his plans to spend trillions of dollars to rebuild the U.S. economy.
During his speech to Congress yesterday, Biden appealed to Americans to support his “blue-collar blueprint” for change, saying his administration would invest a combined $4 trillion in families and infrastructure to rebuild the middle class
Republicans largely sat silently while Democrats applauded as Biden pushed a vision of more government investment funded by the wealthy. “Our best future will not come from Washington schemes or socialist dreams,” Republican Senator Tim Scott said in his rebuttal.
The address broke a historic glass ceiling, as two women – Vice President Kamala Harris and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi – sat behind the president for the first time in history.
A priest and a relative of a person who died from COVID-19 pray next to the body before the burial, at a graveyard in New Delhi, India, April 29, 2021
WORLD
India’s total COVID-19 cases passed 18 million after another world record of daily infections as gravediggers worked around the clock burying victims and rows of funeral pyres were built in parks and parking lots. We talk to a gravedigger working 24-hour shifts.
Jailed Kremlin critic Alexei Navalny, looking gaunt and drained after a hunger strike, denounced Russia’s justice system as his team said he faced new criminal charges and that it was disbanding a network of regional campaign offices.
China’s population grew last year, the statistics bureau said, in an apparent bid to quash reports that it had fallen – but it stopped short of saying from which year numbers had grown. An unexpected drop in population would pile pressure on Beijing to quickly come up with measures to encourage people to have more children and avoid an irreversible decline.
The Turkish government’s decision to ban alcohol sales during a 17-day COVID-19 lockdown that starts today has angered some secular Turks who see it as President Tayyip Erdogan’s latest imposition of a religious lifestyle on all of society.
BUSINESS
The Biden administration faces a major dilemma in its dispute with the European Union over Trump-era steel and aluminum tariffs: back down to avoid acute pain for Harley-Davidson and whiskey distillers or stick with the duties even though they are now exacerbating acute shortages for U.S. manufacturers.
Evidence submitted by a retail union that raised objections to Amazon.com’s conduct at this month’s union election in Alabama “could be grounds for overturning the vote”, the National Labor Relations Board says.
It wasn’t the introduction to high finance that Adi Patel had once anticipated. The stage fright of walking into the imposing offices of a $607 billion asset manager in the heart of a historic financial district? Pandemic era: a five-day induction on Microsoft Teams. Here’s why banking recruits are fearing for their future.
Quote of the day
“From his vantage point, high above the Earth, he reminded us of the fragility of our own planet, and called on us to care for it like the treasure it is”
Rock on – no rise in infections after concert for 5,000 in Barcelona
A trial concert in Barcelona where 5,000 people took rapid COVID-19 tests and crammed into a venue without social distancing did not drive up infections, giving a ray of hope to the moribund live-music sector.
Archaeologists working on the Nile Delta have found dozens of tombs dating to the period before Egypt’s Pharaonic kingdoms first emerged more than 5,000 years ago.
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by Mario Murillo: Preachers stood in their pulpits and insulted, rebuked, and rejected Donald Trump while he was President. Now they insist that you are not a good Christian unless you accept Joe Biden.
Even if they do not know it, they are siding with Facebook and YouTube–who calling for censorship and criminal charges against Christians who question the validity of Biden’s election.
These preachers were wrong before, and they are wrong now.
Still other high profile evangelical leaders are much more gentle in their advice that we at least commend Joe if he does something right. The issue with that is that it denies the reality of what is really going on: a puppet and a rogue government.
No one should be quilting Christians into accepting Joe Biden. And yes, there are sound Biblical reasons for rejecting him.
But before I show you what the Bible instructs us to do in this situation, we need to address the biggest lie. The biggest lie says we need to accept the election and settle the issue of Biden’s presidency, once and for all, so that we can get back to normal and the nation can heal.
Let me ask you. How can we get back to normal while Biden is plunging the nation into chaos and glorifying things God hates? And how can we heal when, every day, Biden tears the nation apart with insulting rhetoric and inflammatory actions aimed at the Church?
God and His Word tell us what to do about Biden. Luke 13:31-32, “At that very hour some Pharisees came up and said to Him, ‘Go away from here, for Herod is determined to kill You.’ And He said to them, ‘Go and tell that fox [sly and crafty, skulking and cowardly], Behold, I drive out demons and perform healings today and tomorrow, and on the third day I finish My course.’”
Herod had crossed a line that made it appropriate to label him a fox—a label that we will expand on later. But Jesus is loving. Why is He disrespecting the office of King by calling him names? And more importantly, why is He refusing to obey the King?
Albert Barnes said in his commentary, “Tell that fox—A fox is an emblem of slyness, of cunning, and of artful mischief. The word is also used to denote a dissembler. Herod was a wicked man, but the “particular thing” to which Jesus here alludes, is not his “vices,” but his “cunning, his artifice,” in endeavoring to remove (Jesus) out of his territory. (Herod) had endeavored to do it by stratagem – by sending these (Pharisees) who pretended great friendship for his life“” Behold, I cast out devils”—(Jesus is saying), Announce to him the fact that I am working miracles in his territory, and that I shall continue to do it. I am not afraid of his art or his enmity. I am engaged in My appropriate work, and shall continue to be, as long as is proper, in spite of his arts and his threats.
The American church must confront all the Leftist leaders: Biden, Harris, Newsom, Whitmer, and Cuomo, et al., the same way that Jesus confronted Herod. The American church must say, “You will not close our doors or stop the miracles of God that flow from our ministries!”
Every American Christian must see that Biden is a puppet for a sinister cabal. He is the ailing mouthpiece of a dark and destructive agenda; an agenda that no Christian can support.
Biden is a weak Herod, but a Herod, nonetheless. I could cite many examples, but here are just a few:
– He wants to make it a criminal act to question his election. He wants to label anyone who still believes that Trump won as homegrown terrorists and he wants to close down their businesses. Glenn Kirschner, a DOJ operative launched a campaign to force “every business in America” to take a pledge that states, in part, that “The 2020 presidential election was free and fair, and produced accurate, reliable results.”
– He locks down Americans in the name of stopping infections, but he allows illegals who are sick with a new strain of Covid to freely enter and then roam our nation. Untold numbers of potentially sick people have been released into our communities.
– Here is a list of his goals: to use tax money to fund abortions, up to, and after birth; eliminate capital punishment; confiscate firearms and shut down gun manufacturers; defund the police; pay reparations to African-Americans; raise taxes up to 70%; push the green agenda, close down coal and oil projects, spend trillions on ‘clean energy’, and increase the national debt; stop building the wall at the border and give billions to illegals; allow them to vote; pack the courts; change voter laws; eliminate the Electoral College; undo all that Trump accomplished; divide Israel and Jerusalem into two nations; give billions to Palestinians; reinstate the Iran Nuclear deal; allow transgenders in the military and in women’s sports; allow transgender men into women’s restrooms and locker rooms; support gay marriage; legalize hard drugs; alter international trade agreements so they favor other nations and drive businesses out of America overseas; expand Obama-care; force religious organizations to hire LGBTQs; tax churches; brainwash students; persecute the church; demand vaccination passports; and many, many more failed and dangerous policies.
Biden’s actions reside outside the law of man and God. Therefore, we must relate to him as a rogue president, and we must therefore relate to God as our Leader at this moment.
And we must continue the work of God, without interruption―no matter what. Now you know why we must stop quilting Christians into accepting Joe Biden.
——————————- Mario Murillo is an evangelist Mario Murillo, minister, blogger.
Tags:Mario Murillo, minister, blogger, Please Stop, Guilting Christians, Into Accepting Joe BidenTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
by Tony Perkins: There’s more than one way to get good government: move to it! According to the latest Census data, that’s what a massive number of Americans who are sick of higher taxes, lockdowns, and regulations are doing. In other words, there’s more than one set of migrant caravans in North America — and the legal ones are pulling up to homes in places like California and New York, loading up the belongings of thousands of families and driving them to freer, cheaper states like Texas. You don’t just have to vote at the ballot box, Chuck DeVore points out. You can vote with a U-Haul too.
Apart from any election, the Census report is probably the most anticipated event on the parties’ calendars. Every 10 years, the government adjusts the number of congressional seats and electoral votes based on the decade’s population shifts. This year’s count, most people expected, would change the political landscape a lot. With people fleeing states like California faster than you can say “Gavin Newsom,” the bluest parts of the map were bound to take a hit. This week, the bureau confirmed, they did.
For the first time in history, the state of California is losing a congressional seat, along with liberal bastions like Illinois, Michigan, New York, and more moderate neighbors like Ohio, Pennsylvania and West Virginia. Alabama, Rhode Island, and Minnesota — where some change was expected — just barely avoided the same fate. In fact, less than 100 residents — 89 — made the difference between Minnesota losing a representative and keeping it!
The big winners, though, as Dave Wasserman explains on the Cook Political Report, are the states like Texas, where thousands of families are moving to escape the oppressive leadership and tax rates of the West Coast. The Lone Star State alone picked up two House seats, and Florida, Montana, North Carolina, Colorado, and Oregon all added one. For DeVore, who’s been following these trends for years, all of the signs were there. “This has been going on for quite some time and there’s various ways of measuring it,” he said on “Washington Watch.” You can look at the tax levels, for instance. Another way to measure it, DeVore points out, is through the Fraser Institute, who tracks the “economic freedom” of states.
“It looks at taxation, it looks at government spending, and it looks at labor law, union strength. And what’s fascinating about that is if you look at the bottom five states in the new Fraser ranking–New York, Vermont, Alaska, California, and West Virginia — every state that could lose a state did lose the seat.” (Vermont and Alaska can’t lose any more, since they only have one. “So it’s an interesting indication that people like freedom. They don’t like to live in these oppressive high tax states.” Florida, New Hampshire, Virginia, Tennessee, and Texas, on the other hand, are the “freest” five states in American, and they’re adding blue state refugees faster than most leaders can count.
“When people vote — with a moving van or a U-Haul truck — they vote for lower taxes and smaller government,” DeVore explains. Even Silicon Valley, where some of the most radical employers in the company are headquartered, is bleeding technology firms. Joe Lonsdale, who runs a $3.6 billion dollar venture-capital firm, finally admitted in the Wall Street Journal last November, “I love California, but I had to leave.”
Of course, in the big picture, what also matters is the Electoral College. Not only did these “freer” states win more congressional seats, they also won a bigger slice of the presidential pie. For the next 10 years, Texas has two more electoral votes, and Florida, North Carolina, Oregon, and Montana have one extra. The same goes for the states that lost a seat — California, Illinois, Michigan, New York, Ohio, Pennsylvania, and West Virginia. Come November 2024, their influence in picking the next president will also slightly wane. In 2020’s election, it wouldn’t have affected the outcome. Joe Biden would have won by 303 electoral votes instead of 306. But in future elections, who knows? It could end up being a significant reward for states who create the kind of friendly economic climate more families and businesses are looking for.
As for the more impending effects — like the 2022 midterms — DeVore believes it “increases the odds that [there will be] a shift in who holds the speaker’s gavel.” Republicans could gain as many as eight seats based on this new map, experts think. And thanks to the current make-up in most state legislatures, Wasserman explains, “Republicans have the final authority to draw congressional lines in 187 districts, down from 219 seats in 2011. Democrats will have final authority in states totaling 75 districts, up from 44 in 2011. New bipartisan commissions passed by voters in Colorado, Michigan and Virginia bring the number of commission-drawn districts to 121 up from 88 ten years ago. And there are 46 districts in states where control is split between the parties, down from 77.”
So as frustrating and appalling as the first 100 days of the Biden administration have been, take hope. State elections have consequences too — and those conservative leaders and representatives voters picked up last fall are the most underappreciated story of 2020. Those statewide elections are about to play a major role in backstopping the Biden agenda — and, based on his first three months, not a moment too soon.
—————————— Tony Perkins is President of the Family Research Council.
Tags:Tony Perkins, Family Research Council, Red States, Get Seat Revenge, in CensusTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
by Newt Gingrich: With the exception of the breakout of the Civil War at the onset of Lincoln’s presidency, the Biden administration’s first 100 days have been the most radical in American history.
The elite media would have Americans believe that President Biden is doing really well with a slight majority approval rating of 52 percent, according to a poll by ABC News and the Washington Post. But compare President Biden and his 52 percent with President Kennedy, who received 83 percent approval at this stage, or President Obama’s 69 percent approval.
The fact is Biden has the third lowest 100-day approval rating compared to every American president since World War II.
The only two presidents with lower approval ratings were President Donald Trump at 42 percent and President Gerald Ford at 48 percent.
For context, President Trump at this stage of his presidency had been assaulted by the international, academic, and media establishments. He had been dealing with a series of lies spread by the elite left — specifically, the Russia hoax.
Ford replaced President Nixon after the Watergate scandal, so he didn’t have to win an election. As a result, he was not well known by the country 100 days into his term.
Yet, Biden, who has been the object of the elite media’s adoration since announcing his run for president, received only a slightly higher approval rating than the establishment’s ultimate challenger and an unknown?
Since January, President Biden and Vice President Harris have put forward a purely radical explosion of ideas and policies that fundamentally break with our American tradition.
President Biden’s actions, statements, and policies have been characterized by a few common themes. The first is a reliance upon a series of big lie campaigns. For example, President Biden condemned Georgia’s new voting law, calling the legislation “Jim Crow in the 21st century” when, in reality, the law expands access to secure voting.
The left’s alternative to the Georgia voting law is H.R. 1, the so-called “For the People Act.” A more accurate name would be the “For the Corrupt Politicians Act” because it is designed to make elections less secure and keep the Democratic Machine in power.
Furthermore, the Biden administration continues to claim that America is a systemically racist country. Following the announcement of the Minneapolis verdict, rather than emphasizing that the U.S. judicial system works, President Biden said that “systemic racism … is a stain [on] our nation’s soul.” Similar statements about America’s systemic racism were made in March in Anchorage, Alaska — not by a U.S. politician, but by the Chinese Communist Party.
Such false statements made by President Biden — and echoed by Vice President Harris, Secretary of State Tony Blinken, and U.S. Ambassador to the UN Linda Thomas-Greenfield — undermine American values. They represent a remarkable departure from President Trump’s America first policy. By putting America down, the Biden administration is putting Americans last.
If it were true that America was systemically racist against minorities, then there likely wouldn’t be an enormous crisis at the U.S. southern border. The Biden administration’s disillusioned border policies that enable and encourage illegal immigration have resulted in the largest influx of migrants at the southwestern border in 20 years. President Biden’s policies (and Vice President Harris’s inaction) have created a humanitarian, health, and security crisis at the border that puts Americans — and migrants — at risk.
The left’s continuous condemnation of the police and the skyrocketing crime rates in U.S. cities also put American lives at risk. As major U.S. cities saw the homicide rate increase by 33 percent last year and police units struggle with rising retirement rates, the radical left called for defunding the police and Biden pushed stricter gun control laws. Clearly the safety of Americans appears to be less important than virtue signaling.
All these policies do harm to America and don’t put Americans first. The Biden administration has already proven to be insufferably, deliberately, and totally dishonest. The past 100 days have been a tale of two stories. One is propped up by the elite media and based on big lies and the arrogance that crazy radical policies are empathetic. The other is rooted in the reality of the concerns and interests of real Americans.
The American people will have to decide which to believe.
—————————– Newt Gingrich (@newtgingrich) is a former Georgia Congressman and Speaker of the U.S. House. He co-authored and was the chief architect of the “Contract with America” and a major leader in the Republican victory in the 1994 congressional elections. He is noted speaker and writer. This commentary was shared via Gingrich Productions.
Tags:Newt Gingrich, commentary, America Last, President Joe Biden, First 100 DaysTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
by Gary Bauer: Biden’s Big Giveaway
Tonight, Santa Claus will address a joint session of Congress. Well, not exactly. But Joe Biden is going to sound a lot like Santa Claus, promising free this and free that.
There’s polling that suggests widespread support for some of his big spending plans. And some of it (like real infrastructure projects) may be reasonable.
But this polling is largely meaningless. If you asked them, I’m sure polling would find that most Americans would like a free car, a free trip to Disney World and a free iPhone.
Such polling is also useless because it is often preceded by liberals like Clinton, Obama or Biden saying they’re going to tax the rich to give you free stuff. So, some other vague Americans named “Mr. and Mrs. Rich” are going to pay for all these things.
There’s only one problem here that pollsters always fail to mention. There are countries all over the world that have tried socialism. It doesn’t end well.
And in spite of all the left’s rhetoric about “income inequality,” the problem in America isn’t that some people are “too rich.” The problem is that there aren’t enough of them to pay for all the things the left wants!
Take a few minutes to watch this video. It’s a little dated, but it makes the point very well.
America Backs The Blue
The White House has announced that “police reform” will be a key topic in Biden’s address tonight. Sadly, I expect he will frame the issue with rhetoric about “systemic racism,” smearing many law enforcement officers as bigots.
Here’s what you need to know: America backs the Blue! A recent CBS News/YouGov poll finds that overwhelming majorities of various racial groups like their local police. For example:
82% of whites approved of the job their local police were doing. Just 18% disapproved.
77% of Hispanics approved of the job their local police were doing. Just 22% disapproved.
And 70% of black Americans approved of the job their local police were doing. Just 30% did not.
Numbers like that should make the left think twice about attacking the men and women on the Thin Blue Line. But the left is embracing a false narrative about America in order to fundamentally transform America.
America Is Worth Defending
The radical left’s rampage against everything American is outrageous. They’re attacking our historic monuments and protesting our national anthem. They claim the country was founded on genocide and that the American people are racists.
The left is lying. And this is a good time to remind ourselves of who we are.
The American Republic was founded on the values recorded in the second paragraph of the Declaration of Independence. It begins, “We hold these truths. . .” Well, just four words in and already the left’s got a problem because it rejects the very idea of truth.
“We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by our government with certain rights.” No, it doesn’t say government.
Our founders believed our rights come from God, not government. The God of Abraham, Isaac, Jacob and Jesus. If our rights come from government, then government can take them away.
“We are endowed by our Creator with certain unalienable rights.” Unalienable is an old-fashioned word that simply means our rights can’t be taken way. And among those are “the right to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness.” Yes, long before sonograms, our founders knew that without the right to life our rights mean nothing.
The founders, as imperfect as they were, wrote the most revolutionary words in the history of mankind. Their words sparked a revolution of freedom in America and throughout the whole world.
Generations of us have sacrificed blood and treasure to preserve that freedom. We broke the shackles of slavery. We defeated the evils of Nazism and Soviet communism. We put a man on the moon, and invented the Internet and the iPhone.
Do leftists really think the world would be better off if America never existed?
No nation of imperfect human beings will ever be perfect. But America is a good and decent land. It is well worth loving and defending.
Kerry In The Crosshairs
We told you yesterday about the New York Times report that former Secretary of State John Kerry may have leaked intelligence about Israel’s counterterrorism activities to Iran’s foreign minister. Of course, Big Media are completely ignoring the story.
I’m pleased to report that many conservatives in Congress are demanding that Kerry either resign or undergo a thorough investigation. Perhaps he should be subject to an FBI investigation and Logan Act prosecution like Gen. Michael Flynn was!
Senators Barrasso (R-WY), Blackburn (R-TN), Cornyn (R-TX), Ernst (R-IA), Inhofe (R-OK), Scott (R-FL) and others called on Kerry to resign. Sen. John Kennedy (R-LA) called Kerry’s alleged actions “despicable.”
Rep. Mike Gallagher (R-WI) said, “It’s unfathomable that any U.S. diplomat, past or present, would leak intelligence to the world’s leading sponsor of terrorism at the expense of one of our staunchest allies.”
Rep. Elise Stefanik (R-NY) tweeted: “This is a criminal act and John Kerry must be immediately investigated and PROSECUTED.”
Even Sen. Mitt Romney (R-UT) called the allegations “very troubling,” and demanded “full transparency to understand exactly what was done, by whom [and] for what purpose.”
Sen. Dan Sullivan (R-AK) said, “People are talking about treason, and I don’t throw that word around a lot.”
Sen. Ted Cruz (R-TX) blasted Kerry, saying the charge signals “catastrophic and disqualifying recklessness” by the former secretary of state and Massachusetts senator. Cruz added, “And it would be consistent with his long pattern of empowering Iran’s regime.”
John Kerry has been caught repeatedly talking to the Iranians (and the Palestinians) during the Trump years, telling them not to give in and to hold on until Democrats are back in power.
As men like former Vice President Pence and then-Secretary of State Pompeo were briefing President Trump on the threats from the mullahs of Iran, John Kerry was briefing the Iranians, coaching them and cheering them on!
Harris Hypocrisy
During a recent CNN interview, Border Czar Kamala Harris was asked if she was planning to go Central America to discuss the illegal immigration crisis that is overwhelming our southern border.
Harris answered, “We have to deal with COVID issues, but I can’t get there soon enough.” Considering that she is fully vaccinated, it’s not at all clear what “COVID issues” Harris was referring to.
Many of the illegal immigrants crossing our southern border are testing positive for COVID. In fact, the state of Texas is suing the Biden Administration for turning the border into a massive COVID superspreader event.
When pressed to explain Harris’s response, White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki came up empty, saying:
“Well, I would certainly have to ask her team about that specifically. But I would tell you also that her focus is not on the border; it’s on addressing the root causes in [Central America].”
So, Border Czar Harris’s focus is not the border. That’s liberal logic for you.
While addressing root causes is important, the most important, most immediate crisis is the border, which is also creating a lot of COVID issues.
Here’s some unsolicited advice for the Biden/Harris Administration: Help America first by securing the border first! Then deal with Central America.
Unfortunately, Biden and Harris don’t see open borders as a crisis. Instead, they see it as a pathway to more power.
——————————— Gary Bauer (@GaryLBauer) is a conservative family values advocate and serves as president of American Values and chairman of the Campaign for Working Families
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by Lawrence Kudlow: So let me get this right. President Biden has proposed the highest capital gains tax in, probably, history. I’m not quite sure. I know, though, that it’s the highest in the past 50 years.
At 43.4% — added with the corporate tax — that gets you to more than 50%. And then, of course, state capital gains will get you close to 60%. Nobody in Europe is even close to that.
Not even Bernie Sanders’ beloved Sweden, which is at 30%. By the way, China is at 20%. And, by the way, China’s 25% corporate tax would be lower than our 28%.
So it’s the combination of jacking up taxes on companies, and their profits, and their gains, or any time you sell a small business — or a farm or a ranch — you pay capital gains.
And, by the way, Team Biden might eliminate the step-up basis for capital gains around the death tax. Meaning: Heirs would have to sell assets immediately — a plan that the Penn-Wharton school claims would raise $113 billion.
So it’s pouring taxes on taxes and attacking investment, which is the key to blue-collar middle-class living standards. They’re being attacked.
And it’s an attack on our competitiveness in the global race for capital. These are policies that will surely throw a wet blanket on our booming economy.
Now, today comes word that this isn’t enough. Mr. Biden wants a cool $80 billion dollars to beef up IRS audits of high earners. I’ll quote from this morning’s New York Times, my friends Jim Tankersley and Alan Rappaport:
The administration will portray these efforts — coupled with new taxes it is proposing on corporations and the rich — as a way to level the tax playing field between typical American workers and high earners …..
The $80 billion in proposed funding would be an increase of two-thirds over the agency’s entire funding levels for the past decade. Good luck with that, Mr. President. From time immemorial, presidents searching high and low for revenues to fund their overspending love to get more IRS agents to run around the country and harass taxpayers.
This time $80 billion is a really big number. One former IRS commissioner said $25 billion would be sufficient. But here’s the last laugh.
Team Biden expects to raise $780 billion dollars in new tax revenues. Believe me, folks, they won’t get half of that. They might not even get a third.
It’s been tried before and failed utterly. Do you know what this is? Just another tax. Just another one. Do you know to what this leads us? Big-time politically motivated audits.
It weaponized the IRS. Remember a few years back, a lady called Lois Lerner, who was, during the Obama years, always going after conservatives. Individuals, groups, political parties, anything.
And, independent investigators proved hammer and tongs that she was politically motivated. And she wasn’t alone. And she wound up in disgrace, forced to flee the agency, one step ahead of the courts.
There is, though, more from Team Biden today. The administration will use an executive order to impose a $15 minimum wage for federal contractors.
This is a large group of both large and small companies, with knock-on effects running through the whole country — particularly affecting small businesses.
It is a backdoor minimum wage hike that Team Biden was forced to give up on in the infrastructure legislation. The biggest victim here is going to be military companies and the defense department.
So let me get this right — Team Biden is cutting the military budget in real terms. At the same time, it is jacking up the costs of its hundreds of thousands of contractors.
This is another anti-defense action, and it’s a prosperity-killing action. And it applies not only to giant outfits like Lockheed or Raytheon or Boeing. It also applies to a lot of smaller outfits.
They run our military bases, provide food services and sanitation services, etc. There’s no end to it, and $15 an hour is a lot more than $10.95 an hour.
Then the President has organized a pro-union task force headed by Vice President Kamala Harris. I sure hope she does better than she did running the immigration task force.
I bet she’ll go to a union site, even though she wouldn’t go to the southern border. The Bidens are pushing the ‘Pro Act’ — a pro-union political giveaway.
It would, among other things, end the secret ballot in union elections, end the right-to-work laws in about half the states, and force workers to pay high union does, for a far-left union political agenda.
Let’s hope workers will continue to revolt, as they did in the Amazon warehouse election at Bessemer, Alabama. Workers want the freedom to choose, and they deserve that freedom.
On Tuesday, I had a discussion with Stu Varney on his Fox Business show, Varney and Company. “The real president of the United States today is Bernie Sanders,” Stu told me, “and the vice president is AOC. I don’t think I’m too far out of line. I really don’t. I really know it.”
“It works for me,” I told him. For Stu Varney’s political characterization of Biden World looks just about right to me right now.
It’s one thing after another — taxes, spending, greening, laboring, regulating — you name it. It’s the far, far-left progressive agenda. I dare say voters thought they elected an unassuming, unity-seeking, moderate Democrat.
Oooops!
————————— Lawrence Kudlow is an American financial program host for Fox network who served as the Director of the National Economic Council during the Trump Administration from 2018 to 2021.
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Apparently, the Post doesn’t care that Biden is the most notorious liar in American presidential history.
by Catherine Mortensen: Tonight, Joe Biden will address a joint session of Congress in a faux State of the Union Address. I fully expect he will speak into a mostly empty room, as he did on his lame presidential campaign. Regardless, like the vast majority of Americans, I won’t be watching. But I fully expect the Washington Post to do its job and watch the speech and hold Biden accountable for speaking the truth. No. I have no expectation they will do that. Zero.That’s because this week, the paper’s chief fact-checker, Glenn Kessler, announced it is shuttering the presidential fact-checking database it launched under former President Donald Trump.“We’ve been comparing Biden (67 false or misleading claims) to Trump’s first 100 days (511 claims),” he said on social media. “But past is no prologue. In the last 100 days before the 2020 election, we counted 8,859 claims made by Trump. It was a wild ride.”
Kessler then shared a link to the Washington Post’s Biden database, adding “we do not plan to extend beyond 100 days.”
The newspaper that brought us “deep throat,” uncovered the Watergate break-in, and published the Pentagon Papers now has no interest in fact-checking the most notorious liar in American presidential history. Biden has spent the past half-century lying to the American public. That’s a fact. Google it. Or just read the Washington Examiner’s highly condensed version of Biden’s long history of lies.
From the Examiner:
Biden lied in April when he boasted his administration “turned around a slow-moving vaccination program” started under Trump. He pushed a misleading narrative in March when he said critics claimed his goal of 100 vaccines in 100 days was “way over the top.” He lied in February when he claimed there was “no real plan to vaccinate most of the country” when he took office.
Biden lied when he said he has enjoyed the backing of the NAACP every time he has run for office. Biden lied when he claimed the Obama administration did not “lock people up in cages.” He lied when he said that “immediately, the moment [the Iraq War] started, I came out against the war at that moment.”
These are all examples from just the past few months. There’s more.
Biden even made up an entire story about being arrested in South Africa for demanding to meet with an imprisoned Nelson Mandela.
Biden is the original fake news politician. Consider the whopper of a lie he told in the 1980s, when he first ran for president. Biden said during an exchange with a voter that he attended law school at Syracuse University on a full academic scholarship, that he finished in the top half of his class in law school, that he was named the outstanding student in the political science department as an undergraduate at the University of Delaware, and that he graduated from Delaware with three undergraduate degrees. Not a single one of those claims is true.
Kessler, the Post’s chief fact-checker, explained on social media that “Maintaining the Trump database over four years required about 400 additional 8-hour days over four years beyond our regular jobs for three people. We will keep doing fact checks, just not a database.”
Perhaps the Post, like many media outlets, is experiencing corporate belt-tightening. But given that it is owned by one of the world’s richest men, Jeff Bezos of Amazon, that doesn’t seem likely.
More likely what is going on is exactly what you think is happening: Bezos and the establishment media elites have no interest in holding Biden accountable for anything he says or does. The end of the Washington Post’s fact checking confirms why 58 percent of the people in a poll released on the first full day of the Biden presidency that, “most news organizations are more concerned with supporting an ideology or political position than with informing the public.”
The “see no evil, hear no evil, speak no evil” media that acts as a mouthpiece for the Biden agenda remains, and the Post’s decision to shut down any semblance of fact checking affirms that Americans are right to distrust the establishment media.
———————————– Catherine Mortensen is Vice President of Americans for Limited Government.
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It grew out of many folk and ecclesiastical practices, but one of the great innovations that allowed both Bach and The Beatles, Beethoven and Broadway, Bartok and “beats,” is the theory of music.
Which rests on that great innovation, musical notation.
Not my area of expertise, alas, but I tip my hat to the educators who know the physics and the art in precise and powerful ways.
Unfortunately, stupidly racist anti-racism has infected even music education. The latest example? The University of Oxford is considering a plan to get rid of teaching music through teaching notation.
“Sheet music is now considered ‘too colonial,’” explainsThe Telegraph, “while Beethoven and Mozart, and music curriculums in general, are believed to have ‘complicity in white supremacy.’”
While mainly an attack on classical music, our popular music rests upon a lot of basic western technique, too. The idea that musical notation is racist is itself bizarrely racist. Do these people think because whites invented musical notation, non-whites are oppressed by it? Yes, the opponents of western musical notation, who include “activist students” as well as “activist professors,” are apparently ashamed of a tradition focused on “white European music from the slave period.”
But until fairly recently, all civilization was “the slave period.” And Europe, which developed the tradition, wasn’t the world’s most slave-ridden society during the period of western music’s development: Africa and Asia were.
Slavery is bad. Very bad. Freedom is good. Very good. But you don’t reject good things because they once upon a time touched bad things. We can have both freedom and music.
And musical notation.
This is Common Sense. I’m Paul Jacob.
—————————– Paul Jacob (@Common_Sense_PJ) is author of Common Sense which provides daily commentary about the issues impacting America and about the citizens who are doing something about them. He is also President of the Liberty Initiative Fund (LIFe) as well as Citizens in Charge Foundation. Jacob is a contributing author on the ARRA News Service.
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by Americans for Prosperity: The Biden administration’s “infrastructure” spending plan may call for dusting off a bad idea that, when last proposed in 2019, the Senate rightly rejected: drug price controls.
Of course, price controls on prescription drugs have nothing to do with infrastructure. But this is also bad policy, resting on the faulty assumption that quality, affordable health care can be simply mandated into existence by government fiat.
Such policies rarely work the way they’re intended. Drug price controls result in drug shortages, lower research and development spending by pharmaceutical companies, fewer drugs reaching the market, and longer wait times for drugs that do.
How do price controls work — and what affect would they have on our ability to get the medications we need?
Price controls weakened Canada’s response to COVID-19
The United States has fully vaccinated over 81 million people, around a quarter of the population. Canada, meanwhile, has fully vaccinated just shy of 1 million people, a little over 2.5 percent of its population, meaning our northern neighbor is far behind much of Europe and South America.
Canada’s vaccination effort has been so disorganized that the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention now cautions Americans against travel to the country.
Canada didn’t get here overnight. Its lackluster vaccination effort is the result of longstanding policies that put the country at a stark disadvantage when it needed to procure shots.
Canada’s price controls are, in part, the culprit. They made it difficult for companies to ship the vaccines provided by Operation Warp Speed.
In effect, Canada priced itself out of the market for lifesaving shots.
That raises a question: Why was Canada so heavily reliant on the United States for vaccines? Again, price controls were part of the problem. Drug companies have been leaving Canada for decades because of its harsh regulatory environment.
To study how Canada’s price caps hollowed out the country’s pharmaceutical industry is to understand why the same policies would result in failure in the United States.
Why drug price caps wouldn’t work here
America’s large, resilient, and endlessly innovative pharmaceutical industry deserves credit for producing the drugs, therapeutics, and of course, vaccines we need to recover from the COVID-19 pandemic.
Unfortunately, the drug price caps called for in the president’s “infrastructure” package would make it more difficult for these companies to bring these medical marvels to market.
We’ve been here before. This same policy was proposed in 2019 by House lawmakers. The White House Council of Economic Advisers warned against implementing it, finding that:
Drug price caps would cut pharmaceutical industry revenues by $500 billion to $1 trillion over a decade.
In turn, drug companies would likely cut research and development spending by $75 billion to $200 billion during that period.
The industry would produce as many as 100 fewer products over that period. If companies usually produce 300 products, drug caps would bring that number down to 200.
The economic toll from such a policy would be disastrous. Americans would be less healthy and the country would be less economically productive. The Council of Economic Advisers estimates that price controls would reduce annual economic output by $375 billion to $1 trillion, around 10 to 30 times what the policy is projected to save.
In short, price caps on drugs would not only have a disastrous effect on America’s drug companies, but on every American in need of care, too.
Thankfully, there are better alternatives.
What Americans can get from a personal option
Creating additional barriers to medical care, we know, doesn’t work.
A smarter approach would be to give Americans a personal option for prescription drugs that creates a greater supply of available medicines. Lawmakers could do this in a few ways, including:
Streamlining the U.S. Food and Drug Administration’s drug approval process so that new drugs are approved at the same rate of speed as the COVID-19 vaccines.
Expanding health savings accounts for all so that every American can save and spend for prescription drugs, tax-free.
Removing barriers that block access to generic versions of drugs.
Allowing for more legal drug importation from other countries.
Tell lawmakers we don’t need a federal takeover of medicine. Americans need a personal option that puts patients first. Sign the petition.
—————————- Americans for Prosperity
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President Joe Biden walks Match 26 with son Hunter and
grandson Beau to Air Force One at Joint Base Andrews in
Maryland to fly to Wilmington, Delaware, for the weekend.
by Fred Lucas: Hunter Biden, the president’s son, seemingly faces no legal consequences for a possible deception during a background check while buying a gun.
It’s not clear whether the younger Biden broke the letter of federal gun law, although several legal experts and commentators say the question warrants an investigation.
Biden bought a .38-caliber revolver in Delaware on Oct. 12, 2018, according to an account by Politico published last month.
Politico reported: “Hunter responded ‘no’ to a question on the transaction record that asks, ‘Are you an unlawful user of, or addicted to, marijuana or any depressant, stimulant, narcotic drug, or any other controlled substance?’”
Thank you to my colleagues who joined me in calling on Biden’s Director ATF nominee to commit to investigating allegations that Hunter Biden falsified information during a background check in order to illegally obtain a firearm. https://t.co/rme34OD49V
On Monday, 22 House Republicans—led by Rep. Bob Good of Virginia — asked President Joe Biden’s nominee to run the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives to investigate Hunter Biden if he is confirmed by the Senate.
TheBlaze first reported the younger Biden’s handgun purchase in October.
Making a false statement on a federal criminal background check, known as ATF Form 4473, is a violation of federal law under Section 922(a)(6) of the U.S. criminal code. It also could violate Section 922(g)(3), which prohibits a drug user from possessing a firearm with ammunition.
Hunter Biden’s battle with substance abuse is widely known and key to his new memoir, in which he writes about using cocaine, crack, and alcohol through 2018. But Biden, 51, has not been the subject of a drug charge since being charged with cocaine possession when he was 18.
Federal law defines an unlawful user as “any person who is a current user of a controlled substance,” and adds that such use “is not limited to the use of drugs on a particular day, or within a matter of days or weeks before.” Instead, the law says, the unlawful use of drugs occurred “recently enough to indicate that the individual is actively engaged in such conduct.”
“There can be wide latitude to define a current user,” Jake Charles, executive director of the Center for Firearms Law at Duke University, told The Daily Signal. “For purposes of the law, you don’t have to have had a conviction or charges.”
Charles commented only on federal law, and stressed that he didn’t know the facts of the Hunter Biden situation and only had read vague news reports.
On multiple occasions, The Daily Signal contacted two lawyers identified in past news reports as representing Biden: Chris Clark of the firm Latham and Watkins and George R. Mesires of the firm Faegre Drinker. Neither lawyer responded to phone and email inquiries.
Earlier this month, Fox News host Tucker Carlson pointed to Hunter’s 2018 gun purchase in the context that the president’s ATF nominee has said he wants to prosecute more Americans for lying on background-check forms.
Cooke, noting that the president is calling for stricter gun regulations, said that “if he wants to show that he’s not trying to create a confusing thicket of rules that will end up being enforced capriciously—he should be in favor of investigating and, if necessary, prosecuting his son and his friends.”
Here are three key questions about what happened:
1. What Does the Law Say?
National Review columnist Andrew McCarthy, a former federal prosecutor, argued last month that “many false statements that result in indictments involve situations markedly less serious than lying to conceal a disqualification from firearms possession—especially under circumstances where, due to the lie, the disqualified person succeeded in obtaining a gun.”
The website of the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives notes that federal law (18 U.S.C. Section 922(g)) makes it unlawful for someone to receive or possess firearms or ammunition if he or she is an “unlawful user of or addicted to any controlled substance.”
The term “unlawful user of or addicted to any controlled substance” is defined in the Code of Federal Regulations, under 27 C.F.R. § 478.11, which states:
A person who uses a controlled substance and has lost the power of self-control with reference to the use of controlled substance; and any person who is a current user of a controlled substance in a manner other than as prescribed by a licensed physician. Such use is not limited to the use of drugs on a particular day, or within a matter of days or weeks before, but rather that the unlawful use has occurred recently enough to indicate that the individual is actively engaged in such conduct. A person may be an unlawful current user of a controlled substance even though the substance is not being used at the precise time the person seeks to acquire a firearm or receives or possesses a firearm.The National Rifle Association, in a March 29 post, said it “does not allege that Hunter engaged in any criminal conduct,” but cited several federal laws that might be applicable.
“Whether or not he and his family’s admissions, or other evidence, concerning drug use could give rise to an inference that Hunter was an ‘unlawful user of or addicted to any controlled substance’ during the time period he acquired and possessed the firearm would be a matter for federal prosecutors to investigate,” the NRA post said, adding sarcastically: “We’re sure [Attorney General] Merrick Garland will be right on it.”
The NRA post also said: “Theoretically, Hunter could have been in a period of sobriety during the timeframe he purchased and possessed the revolver.”
Again, Hunter Biden has not been arrested and charged with substance abuse, which is among situations listed as an “inference” in the federal code:
An inference of current use may be drawn from evidence of a recent use or possession of a controlled substance or a pattern of use or possession that reasonably covers the present time, e.g., a conviction for use or possession of a controlled substance within the past year; multiple arrests for such offenses within the past 5 years if the most recent arrest occurred within the past year; or persons found through a drug test to use a controlled substance unlawfully, provided that the test was administered within the past year.Importantly, Duke University’s Charles said, factors for drawing an “inference” of drug use under federal law include—but are not limited to—a conviction, arrests, or a recent failed drug test.
When the younger Biden purchased the handgun, it had been more than five years since he failed his last known drug test in the Navy, which led to his administrative discharge.
Speaking of the federal firearms law in general, Charles said that someone who failed a drug test years earlier would not likely fall under the category of those prohibited from purchasing a gun.
Generally, a potential 2018 offense for lying on a gun form or possessing both a gun and drugs would not be too far back to investigate, Charles said.
“It depends on the prosecutor, what witnesses saw, and the evidence,” he said.
Another part of the law (18 U.S.C. § 922(a)(6)) says it is illegal “knowingly to make any false or fictitious oral or written statement or to furnish or exhibit any false, fictitious, or misrepresented identification” intended to deceive a gun seller.
In other words, someone has to be aware that he or she isn’t telling the truth, and a substance abuser often is the last to acknowledge a problem.
Also, 18 U.S.C. § 924(a)(1)(A) applies to anyone who “knowingly makes any false statement or representation” on a background-check form.
The Supreme Court gave some definition to “knowingly” in a 2019 ruling when by a 7-2 ruling it overturned a conviction in Rehaif v. United States. In that case, an illegal immigrant misrepresented his legal status on a background-check form in buying a firearm.
The majority of the high court determined that when a person is charged with having a gun despite a legally prohibited status, prosecutors must prove the accused knew he or she was prohibited from buying the gun.
2. How Does Hunter Biden’s Drug Use Line Up With His Gun Purchase?
Hunter Biden’s handgun purchase in October 2018 involved other unusual elements.
For example, his brother Beau Biden’s widow, Hallie, took Hunter’s gun and put it in a trash can near a Janssen’s Market grocery store and the Secret Service then got involved, Politico reported.
The two were having an affair at the time, when Joe Biden’s surviving son wasn’t eligible for Secret Service protection.
Politico quoted a White House spokesperson as saying, “President Biden did not have any knowledge of, or involvement in, the Secret Service’s alleged role in this incident, and neither he nor any family member was a protectee at that time.”
However, the New York Post reported that Hunter sent text messages about three months later, one that was sent Jan. 29, 2019, said of Hallie:
She stole the gun out of my trunk lock box and threw it in a garbage can full to the top at Jansens [sic]. Then told me it was my problem to deal with.Then when the police[,] the FBI [and] the secret service came on the scene she said she took it from me because she was scared I would harm myself due to my drug and alcohol problem and our volatile relationship and that she was afraid for the kids.
Really not joking the cop kept me convinced that Hallie was implying she was scared of me.The newspaper also referred to a Dec. 6, 2018, message that said: “Took from lock box of truck and put it IN PAPER BAG AND Threw it in trash can at local high end grocer. For no reason.”
Sens. Charles Grassley, R-Iowa, and Ron Johnson, R-Wis., referred to the text messages when requesting information from the Secret Service.
Biden’s purchase of the handgun in October 2018 came five years after the Navy discharged him in 2013 for testing positive for cocaine. The president’s son writes about his drug addiction in his new memoir, saying it extended through 2018.
McCarthy, the former prosecutor, also referred to Section 922(g)(6) of the Federal Code, which forbids someone who has “been discharged from the armed forces under dishonorable conditions” from possessing a firearm. Although the issue has been raised about the younger Biden, it wouldn’t likely apply, McCarthy wrote in the March 27 piece in National Review.
“Consistent with the special treatment to which he is accustomed, the son of the then-vice president of the United States was permitted to be separated from the Navy administratively, rather than be dishonorably discharged,” McCarthy wrote. Different branches of the armed forces assign different meanings to the phrase “administratively discharged.”
In 2017, police in Arizona found a crack pipe in Biden’s rental car after it was damaged in an accident, ABC News reported. Someone also reportedly aimed a gun at him while he was trying to purchase cocaine in Los Angeles in 2016, when his father was still vice president.
The younger Biden’s drug use was cited in his 2017 divorce file by ex-wife Kathleen Biden, who claimed that he “created financial concerns for the family by spending extravagantly on his own interests (including drugs, alcohol, prostitutes, strip clubs, and gifts for women with whom he has sexual relations), while leaving the family with no funds to pay legitimate bills.”
USA Today reported that his memoir “Beautiful Things” refers to his struggles with drugs in spring 2018 and fall 2018, when his family tried to intervene.
Hunter Biden writes about using his “superpower—finding crack anytime, anywhere” while in Los Angeles in 2018; he recounts learning how to cook drugs, writing: “I never slept. There was no clock. Day bled into night and night into day.”
In 2019, the New York Postreported that in late 2018, Biden “was suspected of smoking crack inside a strip club” in Washington. Biden’s lawyer, Mesires, didn’t reply to the Post’s requests for comment.
3. Is This Law Enforced in Other Cases?
The Justice Department pursued at least two prosecutions for lying on a federal background-check form prior to Hunter Biden’s gun purchase, according to Justice Department press releases.
When buying a Cobra .380-caliber semiautomatic handgun at Flash Pawn in Memphis, for example, Everette Alexander said on the form that he wasn’t a convicted felon, although he was convicted 12 years earlier of possessing marijuana with intent to sell. In June 2019, a judge sentenced Alexander to 10 months in federal prison followed by two years supervised release for lying on the form in December 2017.
In August 2018, two months before Biden purchased his handgun, then-U.S. Attorney D. Michael Dunavant of the Western District of Tennessee heralded the importance of prosecutions for lying during a background check.
“A valuable tool in this prevention effort is the ATF Background Check Form 4473, which must be completed before a federally licensed firearms dealer sells or transfers a firearm,” Dunavant said upon Alexander’s indictment.
“Criminals and other prohibited persons who attempt to thwart the background check process by lying on the required forms threaten to undermine this important crime prevention tool, and such conduct cannot be tolerated,” he said.
Juan Sauceda went to a Walmart in Brownsville, Texas, in September 2018 to buy a 12-gauge pump shotgun and attested that he never was convicted of a felony—despite convictions on two counts of assault and battery with a deadly weapon in 2013, according to the Justice Department.
Sauceda’s offense, which brought him a sentence of 18 months in prison, occurred a month before the younger Biden bought his gun in Delaware.
That said, prosecutions for lying on a background-check form in a gun purchase have been rare, according to a Government Accountability Office report. In 2017, the report said, only 12 of more than 12,000 Americans found to have lied on the form were charged and 99% of them got only a warning.
McCarthy, the former prosecutor, wrote in another column published March 29 that cases of lying on background checks should be prosecuted more frequently:
Often, what is concealed is a prior conviction. The authorities discover it in reviewing the background check, and the purchase never goes through. Those cases ought to be prosecuted more often, but it’s not true that charges are never filed. Even if it were true, this is not that situation. Biden got the gun and, predictably, lost it. That’s a case that ought to be charged 10 times out of 10.In November 2019, almost two years into Donald Trump’s presidency, the Justice Department announced “Project Guardian” to crack down on anyone who would “lie and try”—meaning attempt to buy a gun after making one or more false statements on a background-check form—or “lie and buy”—successfully purchase a firearm after giving false answers.
President Biden recently nominated David Chipman to run the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives. Chipman is a veteran ATF agent who in 2020 called for increasing arrests of those who lie on a background-check form in a gun purchase.
“While at ATF, I conducted studies involving people who failed background checks to determine how many later committed crimes with a gun—many did,” Chipman said last year in a Reddit question-and-answer session. “This is a perfect opportunity to arrest people before committing crimes rather than responding after the fact.”
The conviction rate might not be particularly high for lying during a background check, but a perusal of the Justice Department’s website shows federal prosecutors heralding each such case in recent years as highly important.
Other prosecuted cases include:
Last October, a Wisconsin man was convicted of lying on a form by saying he was not subject to a restraining order, when in fact he was subject to a domestic protection order in Minnesota, according to a Justice Department announcement.
In September, a Washington state woman pleaded guilty to several felonies related to purchasing firearms for others, including making false statements. This prosecution was part of Project Guardian, and the Justice Department called the case an example of “‘lie and buy’ firearms trafficking schemes.”
In August, a Virginia man with seven previous felony convictions pleaded guilty to falsely claiming that he never had a single one. The man also had outstanding warrants on charges of abduction, larceny, assault and battery, and withholding a credit card belonging to another individual. The gun dealer recognized the man and notified police, who arrested him before he could proceed with the purchase.
In February 2020, a federal jury convicted a Nevada man of making false statements during a background check. The jury found that he lied about his address over the course of buying 35 guns in 2017 and 2018. He got two years in prison.
In December 2019, a judge sentenced a Texas man to 46 months in prison after he bought four firearms, claiming that he had no felony convictions. The man actually had been convicted in Puerto Rico on charges of theft by means of violence, robbery, carrying a firearm without a license, and possession of a controlled substance.
A Louisiana man pleaded guilty in July 2019 to making a false statement when trying to buy a Smith & Wesson semiautomatic pistol by answering no on a question about any pending felony charges. The man actually was facing charges of home invasion, simple battery, domestic abuse battery, simple assault, intimidating witnesses, and simple burglary.
In March 2019, a federal jury convicted a Tennessee man for making a false statement on ATF Form 4473 by saying he was not a convicted felon, when he actually was convicted of felony burglary in 2008 in Mississippi.
As a separate matter, about 600 federal prosecutions occur each year for possession of both drugs and guns, Duke University’s Charles said.
—————————— Fred Lucas is chief national affairs correspondent for The Daily Signal.
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by Clayton Cramer and Frank Miniter, Editor in Chief: In his first week in office, President Joe Biden (D) signed a stack of 22 executive orders. By mid-March, he had signed more than 50. Just before this went to print, four Democrat senators, led by Sen. Robert Menendez (D-N.J.), sent a letter to Biden asking him to take executive action on guns.
Gun-control groups, and the politicians who side with them, see their chance and they are impatient. The drumbeat from the mainstream media has been particularly incessant. They want to know when Biden will move against American citizens’ Second Amendment rights.
Meanwhile, as this was being written, Democrats in the U.S. House of Representatives had been busily pushing various pieces of gun-control legislation forward, laws that would massively infringe upon Second Amendment-protected rights. The most-egregious has been H.R. 127, the “Sabika Sheikh Firearm Licensing and Registration Act,” a jaw-dropping list of unconstitutional provisions that includes a national gun registry, requirements for psychological evaluations for anyone who wants to keep their guns and much more.
Though Democrats have 50 votes in the U.S. Senate, plus Vice President Kamala Harris (D) ready to break Senate ties, Democrats are likely blocked from getting H.R. 127 and other infringements on our rights passed into law (as this was being written, anyway), as they would need 60 votes to overcome a filibuster in the Senate.
Democrats could use the “nuclear option” to kill or weaken the filibuster in the U.S. Senate, but to accomplish this, they need Sen. Joe Manchin (D-W.V.) and Kyrsten Sinema (D-Ariz.) to give in. Both Manchin and Sinema have publicly rejected the idea of eliminating the filibuster entirely, but there is still a concerted effort in the Democrat caucus to at least limit the use of the filibuster, which could obviously have dire consequences for gun owners.
Still, whether or not they can end the filibuster, the executive-action route is still there. So, okay, without Congress, how much can a president do to our constitutional rights?
Article II, Section 3, of the U.S. Constitution says the president “shall take Care that the Laws be faithfully executed… .”
Just before this, in Section I, the U.S. Constitution says that before the president may take office they must “take the following Oath or Affirmation: ‘I do solemnly swear (or affirm) that I will faithfully execute the Office of President of the United States, and will to the best of my Ability, preserve, protect and defend the Constitution of the United States.’”
This should restrain a president to the law, but there is a lot of room for interpretation in many of our laws—hence the power to “take Care that the Laws be faithfully executed.”
Such is why much of the brilliance of the U.S. Constitution is in its brevity. It’s an ancient maxim that “more law equals less justice”—this saying is so old, the Ancient Roman statesman Cicero cited it as an old saying over 2,000 years ago. Clearly, it was known to the Founders that a longer document with more-nuanced explanations would not reign in a federal government, but would likely just present more openings between the words for those who simply see the U.S. Constitution as an impediment to their power.
In the more than two centuries since the U.S. Constitution was written, court rulings have attempted to answer just how constrained a president is when it comes to their executive orders. Basically, the U.S. Supreme Court has held that executive orders must be supported by the U.S. Constitution or by Congress delegating authority to the executive branch through legislation.
“The president may issue lawful executive orders to the federal bureaucracy, but not to the citizens of the United States,” says Stephen P. Halbrook, an attorney who specializes in the Second Amendment and who is a contributor to this magazine. “During the primary, Kamala Harris thought she could dictate new federal gun laws if Congress failed to act in the first 100 days of her administration. She may think she’s now the president-in-waiting, but she’s in for a rude awakening if she still holds that fantasy,”
Halbrook is looking to the clear constraints that the Second Amendment of the U.S. Bill of Rights places on the federal government, which, since the U.S. Supreme Court ruled in McDonald v. Chicago (2010), also restricts state and local governments.
There is a rich history behind Halbrook’s legal opinion.
In 1798, then-President George Washington issued the first executive order. He did so to instruct the heads of U.S. agencies “to impress me with a full, precise and distinct general idea of the affairs of the United States” within their departments.
Since then, with the exception of one president, every president has issued executive orders; for example, President Abraham Lincoln (R) used this power to issue the “Emancipation Proclamation” in 1862.
Still, until the early 1900s, executive orders were mostly just used to direct the federal bureaucracy. This changed in the twentieth century. President Franklin D. Roosevelt (D), in fact, used this power to write a record 3,522 executive orders, many of which challenged or exceeded the limits of his authority.
Incredibly, in 1944, the U.S. Supreme Court upheld President Roosevelt’s Executive Order 9066, which authorized the rounding up of people of Japanese ancestry (two thirds of whom were U.S. citizens) living in the United States. There were no trials for these people. By the power of a president’s pen, these people were imprisoned and their property was often stolen in the process. This was a clear a violation of the right to due process and the right to equal protection under the Fourteenth Amendment. Nevertheless, the Court decided the threat these people represented was a good enough reason to uphold Roosevelt’s executive order.
So, obviously, executive orders can be dangerous to American liberty, especially if the high court goes along with them. Theoretically, all that is needed is a “crisis,” judges who’ll go along with the notion that a president needs some latitude and some connection to an actual law for a president to effectively pass a law without congressional approval.
Given the current makeup of the U.S. Supreme Court—thanks in no small part to former President Trump’s nominees—it is difficult to imagine today’s Court allowing a president to simply take away constitutionally protected freedoms.
Still, Biden might think there is room at the margins.
Indeed, in 1989, President George H. W. Bush (R) used an executive order to ban the importation of “43 types of semi-automatic assault rifles, including the Chinese-made AK47 and Israeli-made Uzi carbine.” The Gun Control Act of 1968 allowed importation of firearms for sporting purposes, and Bush decided these 43 guns had no sporting purpose.
So could Biden do something similar to restrict popular semi-automatics that are currently lawful to own? Perhaps, but there would be a clear constitutional challenge. The U.S. Supreme Court’s Heller v. D.C. (2008) decision ruled that the Second Amendment protects firearms that are in “common use,” and, as there are now about 20 million AR-type rifles—and perhaps hundreds of millions more of other semi-automatics—in American citizens’ hands, any honest court would invalidate such an executive order today.
And it would need to be a court challenge (or the pen of a new president), as Congress can’t overturn an executive order. Congress, however, can remove funding to implement an executive order, but, given the makeup of the current Congress, it seems doubtful they’d use the power of the purse to dissuade this president from infringing on this constitutional right.
In the past, this power has sometimes been checked by the U.S. Supreme Court; for example, during the Korean War, steel workers threatened to go on strike. In response, President Harry S. Truman (D) issued Executive Order 10340 to seize most steel mills. He claimed that a strike would endanger national security. In this case, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that this power to seize private property was beyond the president’s authority.
In other cases, the U.S. Supreme Court has upheld executive orders that have some connection to a president’s lawful authority. In Trump v. Hawaii (2018), the Court upheld Proclamation 9645 (proclamations being a type of executive order) that limited entry from eight countries that were regarded as doing a poor job of identifying potential terrorists. Most of these were Islamic-majority nations, but one was North Korea. The Court concluded that the President’s authority to exclude persons who were a danger to national security included this power.
So then, could Biden ban handguns by executive order? Certainly not, as the Heller decision determined that handguns were protected by the Second Amendment. What about “assault weapons” and magazines exceeding 10 rounds? Biden could claim there is a crisis caused by allowing these guns to be in private hands, but he has no statutory or constitutional authority to point to, and these types of firearms are clearly protected by the Second Amendment, so it is difficult to see a majority of the current justices on the U.S. Supreme Court allowing such an infringement of the peoples’ constitutional rights to stand.
Such a loss would embarrass President Biden, and this move would stir up a lot of freedom-loving voters—if indeed, they still need stirring up—as we move toward the 2022 midterm elections. It would therefore be a political gamble for Biden. Perhaps he would hope that, as the U.S. Supreme Court has declined to rule on a gun case for more than a decade despite having important chances to do so, the high court would pass again.
The mainstream media would be on Biden’s side. But a majority of the justices on the U.S. Supreme Court have pro-Second Amendment rulings on their records and, in the recent past, several justices have loudly protested the Court’s reluctance to take a new case to enforce its Heller decision or to resolve Second Amendment disagreements between lower courts.
So it seems more likely that Biden will use his pen to order the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF) to make certain rule changes that interfere with our rights. He might also order regulatory agencies, as former President Barack Obama (D) did, to bully the financial-services sector into terminating business relationships with gun stores and manufacturers. He might also try to expand rules to deprive Second Amendment rights from veterans who need help with their financial affairs by automatically adding their names to the FBI’s National Instant Criminal Background Check System (NICS).
It isn’t a leap to say the creative legal minds in the gun-control organizations the Biden administration listens to are now dreaming up new avenues to attack our freedom, or that Biden’s many officials are doing the same thing.
Clearly, if there ever was a time when America’s millions and millions of gun owners need to stay together behind this association, this is it. To stay involved, sign up for NRA Grassroots Alerts at nraila.org/grassroots-alerts and log on to the NRA’s A1F.com and NRA-ILA.org to stay up to date on what’s happening. Then, when your voice is needed, please contact your legislators.
——————————- Clayton Cramer and Frank Miniter, Editor in Chief, NRA America’s 1st Freedom.
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by E. P. Unum: History helps us keep things in perspective.
For example, imagine you were born in 1900, the beginning of a new century.
On your 14th birthday, World War I starts and ends on your 18th birthday. Twenty-two million people perish in that war. Let that number sink in!
Later in that year, the Spanish Flu Pandemic hits the planet and runs until your 20th birthday. Fifty million people die from it in those two years. Yes, you read that correctly…50 million.
Then, things really start to get exciting. On your 29th birthday, the Great Depression begins. Unemployment hits 25%, the World GDP drops 27%. Banks collapse. Savings and investments vanish. Homelessness, famine, poverty, business failures are the order of the day. All of this until you are 33. Our country nearly collapses along with the world economy. But things are about to really get sticky.
Just as you celebrate your 39th birthday, World War II starts. You are in the prime of your life, but don’t try to catch your breath just yet! You and your family are struggling with rationing of things like gasoline, tires, meat as the nation focuses its attention on the war effort. Between your 39th and 45th birthday, seventy-five million people perish in this war. America and its Allies prevail in this conflict and we begin the monumental task of rebuilding the world!
Yes, America did that.
America began the process of rebuilding nineteen nations in Europe, including Germany and the entire nation of Japan, our enemies in WWII. It extends massive aid to China but the Communists under Mao Tse Tung use it to help drive our ally, Chiang Kai Shek, out of China to Formosa (now Taiwan).
Then, five years go by and by the time you celebrate your 50th birthday, the Korean War starts. Five million perish in this “police action”. China led by Mao enters this conflict on the side of North Korea and the war ends in a stalemate.
By now, you have reached age 55, and guess what? The Vietnam War begins and doesn’t end for 20 years. Four million people perish in that conflict.
On your 62nd birthday, you sit glued to your black and white TV set listening to President John F. Kennedy talking about the Cuban Missile Crisis, a tipping point in the Cold War. ICBM Missiles capable of hitting cities across the United States are being constructed and fueled on the island of Cuba, 90 miles from our shores. Life on our planet, as we know it, could very well have ended, but, thankfully, great leaders on both sides came to their senses and prevented that from happening. But, we were on the brink. Then, mercifully, when you turn 75, the Vietnam War finally ends.
Now, think of everyone on the planet born in 1900. How do you survive all of that? When you were a kid in 1975, remember how you thought your 75-year-old grandparent couldn’t possibly understand how hard school was? Or how depressing it was that you didn’t make the CYO traveling basketball team. And how sad you felt when you didn’t get accepted to the college of your choice or how devastated you were when you didn’t get to go to your junior prom! It kind of pales in comparison to what our grandparents went through doesn’t it?
Yet, your grandparents and mine survived everything listed above. Not only did they survive in the face of significant adversity, but they worked hard and helped build a nation that includes the greatest economy known to man, replete with incredible advances in science, medicine, technology, and the arts, and the highest standard of living for its citizens in the world. And we saved Europe…twice…in the twentieth century from Nazism, Fascism, and Totalitarianism. It’s all about keeping things in perspective.
Yes, we’ve lost too many people to this new Chinese virus. But, keeping things in perspective, it is by no means the existential threat the media has made it out to be.
Thanks to President Trump we have three approved vaccines and many drug therapies, all created in less than a year…a remarkable accomplishment. Our survival rate is 99.96% but our so-called leaders still promote a dialogue of fear.
Promoting fear itself creates an unhealthy environment. Fear causes people to think and act irrationally. It clouds your judgment. So does pointing accusatory fingers, the blame game. We are Americans. We are better than that.
Let’s try to remember that. Let’s try to remember that we have survived, overcome, and prospered because of that one singular fact. Yes, we have our problems, but here is a news flash for all the radical liberals and social justice warriors rioting in our streets: violence is never the answer. Violence is the tool of the ignorant.
Let’s try and keep things in perspective, open our schools and businesses, stop dwelling on negative things, renew the entrepreneurial spirit and American creativity and innovation… and start focusing on our future once again.
And, perhaps most importantly, let’s get back to the principles upon which our nation was founded and by which our country has prospered: Love of God, Love of Family, and Love for our fellow men and women.
God bless America!
—————————– E.P. Unum is US! H/T McIntosh Enterprises – Apr 28, 2020.
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by Victor Davis Hanson: Eeyore could continue, but what we are witnessing is unapologetic nihilism. We are engaged in a suicidal impulse to delight in primeval tribalism, to destroy the entire concept of merit—and to erect in its place a Sovietized system largely overseen by middle-aged, privileged white people and minority elites, who as bureaucrats, lawyers, politicians, media functionaries, and academics dream up these apartheid systems, apply them to less well-off others, and then traverse around the very consequences of their own ideologies.
I am not cynical, but I do expect that homeless camps will not pop up next to Silicon Valley prep schools (as they do near Seattle public schools), that the walls of Montecito and Malibu were better erected than the pre-Trump rickety border fence, and that the pilots of John Kerry’s or Mark Zuckerberg’s private jets were and will be selected only on the basis of meritorious records of flying, period.
Where does it lead? A vast Lord of the Flies nation, worshiping a Boar’s Head, with victory going to the strongest tribe?
Fortified hamlets and pockets similar to the world of Augustine in the 4th Century AD, outside Hippo Regius?
Our major downtowns now the weedy streets and rubble-filled agoras of the abandoned heartland city-states of Roman-era Greece, as described by Pausanias and Plutarch?
The medieval keep and the peasantry hugging its outside walls?
A return to 1970s and early 1980s, popularized by Dirty Harry, Death Wish, and Escape From New York?
Or the Time Machine’s Morlocks and Eloi?
Or just our same old, same old juxtaposition of the pre- and post-modern slow decline, in which the rule of law has been replaced by the rule of the tribe. But then again, as the great economist, Adam Smith warned us, there is a lot of ‘ruin’ in a successful state to bank on, as we consume the inherited gifts from the hard work, investment, and sacrifice of our betters now long dead—and maligned for their generous inheritance to us.
—————————— Victor Davis Hanson (@VDHanson) is a senior fellow, classicist and historian and Illie Anderson Senior Fellow. Shared via Victor Davis Hanson // Private Papers. He has been a visiting professor at Hillsdale College since 2004. Hanson was awarded the National Humanities Medal in 2007 by President George W. Bush. Private Papers
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President Biden lays out plans for COVID-19, gun violence, immigration: In his first presidential address to a joint session of Congress Wednesday night, President Joe Biden delivered a speech that looked back on his accomplishments during his first 100 days in office while also pitching ahead for his future agenda. The first topic that Biden addressed was the COVID-19 pandemic. He said he had “inherited a nation” that was “in crisis” — facing a historic pandemic and economic crisis, and reeling from the Jan. 6 insurrection at the Capitol, but in the past 100 days, Biden noted the efforts taken to fight the disease. “America is rising anew,” he said. The rest of the president’s speech focused on what he hopes to do over the next year, which include making gun control and immigration a priority, as well as his infrastructure bill, education and child care plans. But some say it’s unlikely that some of his goals will be met. When it comes to gun control, the House-passed gun control measures have little support among Senate Republicans. And bipartisan support for his $2.3 trillion infrastructure plan has yet to be secured. In the Republicans’ response to Biden’s speech, Sen. Tim Scott, R-S.C., the only Black Republican senator, criticized Biden for failing to keep his promise of bipartisan collaboration, citing how Democrats passed COVID-19 along partisan lines. Click here to read more. Also noteworthy was that for the first time, two women were seated behind a president making an address to a joint session of Congress. Vice President Kamala Harris and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s roles as the first and second in the line of presidential succession were highlighted in the visual that Pelosi told ABC News was “historic.”
Federal grand jury charges 3 men with hate crime, attempted kidnapping in Ahmaud Arbery shooting: A federal grand jury has charged three men with hate crimes and attempted kidnapping in the fatal shooting of Ahmaud Arbery in February 2020. Arbery, a 25-year-old Black man, was killed while jogging in the neighborhood of Satilla Shores in Brunswick, Georgia, on Feb. 23, 2020, when he was allegedly chased down in a truck by Travis McMichael, 35, and Travis’ father, Gregory McMichael, 65. Authorities said Gregory McMichael, a retired investigator with the Brunswick District Attorney’s Office who previously served as a Glynn County police officer, assumed Arbery was responsible for “several break-ins” in their neighborhood, according to police. He and his son grabbed their guns and chased Arbery in a white pick-up truck, authorities said. A third man, William Bryan, 51, recorded the chase on his cellphone, which captured Arbery getting ambushed by the McMichaels. All three men have each been charged with one count of interference of rights and attempted kidnapping, and the McMichaels were also charged with using, carrying and brandishing a firearm in relation to a crime of violence. Ben Crump, one of the attorneys representing Arbery’s family, said the indictment was “another step in the right direction.” “We applaud the Justice Department for treating this heinous act for what it is — a purely evil, racially motivated hate crime,” Crump said in a statement. The McMichaels and Bryan each have pleaded not guilty and have been ordered to stand trial later this year.
Prince William and Kate celebrate 10th wedding anniversary: Prince William and Kate have reached a new milestone in their relationship — 10 years of marriage. Today marks the couple’s 10th wedding anniversary and to celebrate, they released two new portraits, which were taken at Kensington Palace by London-based photographer Chris Floyd. Over the past decade, the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge, who are now the parents of three children, have established themselves as the next generation of the monarchy. William, 39, will become king after the reigns of his grandmother, Queen Elizabeth, and his father, Prince Charles, end. William and Kate’s oldest child, 7-year-old Prince George, will become king following his father. Now, the weight of the monarchy is on William and Kate more than ever after Prince Harry and Meghan left their roles as working members of the royal family. As William and Kate’s influence in the monarchy continues to grow, they have taken on special causes including the issue of early childhood development, the arts and mental health. See some of the couple’s sweetest moments from over the years here.
This woman was fired from modeling for being a size 6, now she’s a powerlifter: A side-by-side photo comparison of a former teen model when she was modeling and her current look as a powerlifter is receiving lots of love on social media. Catherine Harrison, 23, used to model part-time while she was in high school. Harrison said it was a fun hobby that continued for a couple of years until she was allegedly fired for being a size six. “They told me, ‘Hey, actually, we’re going to go with size four and under models now. So if you want to lose some of that extra weight, we can talk about it,’” Harrison recounted. “It really, really hurt.” Harrison, who said she was diagnosed with rheumatoid arthritis at 17 which prevented her from taking on high-impact exercise, turned to powerlifting to focus on strength training instead of losing weight. She said the sport helped her unlearn unhealthy behaviors and gain more self-confidence. While a student at the University of Houston, Harrison joined the powerlifting team and qualified to compete in the collegiate nationals. Harrison has created a conversation online after sharing her story on social media. “All the comments like ‘Hey, I’m kind of going through something like that as well’ were humbling,” she told “GMA.”
GMA Must-Watch
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President Joe Biden painted a nation on the mend, recovering from the pandemic but still in need of a big boost from the federal government, in his first address to Congress on Wednesday as he seeks to shift his focus beyond Covid nearly 100 days into his administration.
Biden said he was there to speak to Congress not just about “crisis” but also about “opportunity,” pitching $4 trillion of ambitious investments in the economy and social safety net programs that he argued were necessary to compete on the global stage and said would reduce deficits in the long run.
“Now, after just 100 days, I can report to the nation: America is on the move again. Turning peril into possibility. Crisis into opportunity. Setbacks into strength,” he said.
While the U.S. seems to be finally turning a corner on the pandemic, India is buckling under the weight of a terrifying surge in Covid-19 deaths. Photos and video of mass cremations have come to symbolize the country’s struggle. “People die in front of our eyes every day. These are people who should have been saved,” said a volunteer with a group that offers cremations to the poor.
Mario Gonzalez, 26, died in police custody after Alameda County officers pinned him facedown on the ground for five minutes. His family and their attorney say his death is eerily similar to that of George Floyd. “These Alameda police officers killed Mario literally while the jury was debating Derek Chauvin’s murder charges,” his family’s lawyer said.
Three Georgia men previously charged in the killing of Ahmaud Arbery will he was jogging in Georgia last year were indicted Wednesday by a federal grand jury and charged with hate crimes and attempted kidnapping. The Department of Justice alleged Wednesday that the men confronted Arbery “because of his race.”
Postal workers and advocates for rural communities fear delivery delays, but the Postal Service said the consolidations will provide for “more efficient and reliable performance.”
Wayfair’s Way Day sale is here for two days only. Save up to 80 percent on outdoor furniture, coffee tables, home decor and more.
One life well lived
Michael Collins, a member of the Apollo 11 mission that landed on the moon, died Wednesday. He was 90.
As Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin planted humanity’s first bootprints on the moon, Collins stayed behind to pilot the command module, circling roughly 60 miles above the lunar surface.
Collins himself never stepped foot on the moon, but his accomplishments contributed to what remains one of the most famous space missions in history.
From NBC’s Chuck Todd, Mark Murray and Carrie Dann
FIRST READ: Big government is back. Can the Trump-influenced GOP stop it?
NBC’s Peter Alexander perfectly summed up President Joe Biden’s first address to Congress, which laid out his $1.9 trillion Covid relief law, his $2 trillion-plus infrastructure/jobs plan and his new $1.8 trillion proposal for preschool and free community college.
The Era of Big Government is back.
Photo by Melina Mara – Pool/Getty Images
And the question we have is whether today’s Republican Party – after the Trump presidency and after the voters that Trump brought in with his populism — can legitimately stop it.
According to our most recent NBC News poll, 55 percent of Americans say the government should do more to solve the country’s problems, while 41 percent say the government is doing too many things that should instead be left to businesses and individuals.
What’s especially noteworthy here is that these numbers are essentially unchanged from the Trump Era (when majorities supported a more active government) and they’re a departure from the Obama Era (when there was less support).
Just look at this breakdown of those who support a more active government in our current poll:
% saying government should do more
57% of those under 35
56% of seniors
55% of lowest earners
55% of middle class
54% of higher earners
49% of whites
78% of Black Americans
61% of Hispanics
82% of Democrats
60% of independents
23% of Republicans
And while this 23 percent support from Republicans stands out, there is an education divide here: Only 13 percent of college-educated Republicans want the government to do more, versus 26 percent of non-college Republicans.
Bottom line: Biden is betting big that the country will maintain this support for a more active government.
And Trump, importantly, helped encourage this mindset.
What Tim Scott’s GOP response didn’t mention
That brings us to the GOP response from Sen. Tim Scott, R-S.C., who criticized Biden for not uniting America, for spending and taxing too much, and over the situation at the border.
But what his speech DIDN’T do was present an alternative, forward-looking political future – other than praise what happened during Trump’s presidency.
“In 2009, President Barack Obama created a spontaneous, hugely influential conservative grassroots movement on the basis of an $800 billion stimulus bill and a health care plan estimated to cost less than a trillion. In 2021, Biden is proposing to spend about $6 trillion in his first three big bills, and he can barely create more interest than the debate on wearing masks outdoors.”
“The conventional wisdom was that after the free-spending Trump years, Republicans would snap back to being deficit hawks when out of power. There’s been some of that, but the relatively muted reaction to Biden’s almost incomprehensible spending ambitions is testament to the fact that, no, Republicans simply aren’t as interested in fiscal issues anymore.”
And to our earlier point, if the GOP isn’t as interested in fiscal issues anymore, how do they fight back against what Biden is proposing?
By the numbers: How Biden’s first 100 days stack up versus his predecessors
Here’s a numerical comparison of Biden’s first 100 days as president with his most recent predecessors as they reached this milestone:
First 100 Days: Executive orders signed
Biden – 42
Trump – 30
Obama – 19
Bush – 11
First 100 Days: Pieces of legislation signed
Biden – 11
Trump – 29
Obama – 14
Bush – 7
First 100 Days: Solo formal news conferences
Biden – 1
Trump – 1
Obama – 6
Bush – 2
Clinton – 4
First 100 Days: Joint news conferences
Biden – 1
Trump – 8
Obama – 6
Bush – 3
Clinton – 9
First 100 Days: States visited
Biden – 9 (Camp David, MD and Wilmington, DE each count as 1)
Trump – 11
Obama – 11
Bush – 26
First 100 Days: Foreign countries visited
Biden – 0
Trump – 0
Obama – 9
Bush – 2
First 100 Days – Appointees confirmed
Biden – 40
Trump – 25
Obama – 69
Bush – 35
Clinton – 49
First 100 Days: Supreme Court nominees confirmed
Biden – 0
Trump – 1
Obama – 0
Bush – 0
Clinton – 0
Some context: This is a new president who’s taken office during a pandemic – hence the zero foreign trips, the one in-person visit by a foreign leader (for a joint news conference) and the small number of states visited.
Also, not all legislation signed into law is created equally. While Trump signed 29 pieces of legislation into law in his first 100 days, his big tax-cut law didn’t take place until the end of his first year in office. Biden’s $1.9 trillion Covid relief law, however, got passed during his second month in office.
32,380,222: The number of confirmed cases of coronavirus in the United States, per the most recent data from NBC News and health officials. (That’s 51,283 more than yesterday morning.)
578,306: The number of deaths in the United States from the virus so far, per the most recent data from NBC News. (That’s 1,543 more than yesterday morning.)
234,639,414: The number of vaccine doses administered in the U.S.
27.1 percent: The share of Americans who are fully vaccinated
0: The number of days left for Biden to reach his 100-day vaccination goal.
ICYMI: What ELSE is happening in the world?
Miss the address? Check out last night’s live blog from NBCNews.com.
NBC’s Sahil Kapur has five key takeaways from yesterday’s speech.
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55.) REALCLEARPOLITICS MORNING NOTE
04/29/2021
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Carl Cannon’s Morning Note
Joe Goes Big; Scott’s Rising Star; Competitive Districts
By Carl M. Cannon on Apr 29, 2021 08:52 am
Good morning, it’s Thursday, April 29, 2021. Joseph R. Biden delivered his first State of the Union address (although it’s not officially called that) last night and it was an ambitious speech for sure. We have plenty of coverage on it, as you’ll see.
The atmospherics were strange, though, weren’t they? A hall in the U.S. Capitol “filled” to a fraction of its capacity. Masks on lawmakers and other guests, even though members of Congress are fully vaccinated. I couldn’t help but think that the all-female elbow bump between the vice president and the House speaker aligned behind the president would have made for a better historic image if Kamala Harris and Nancy Pelosi were more easily recognizable. But maybe not. It was certainly a sign of the times. And to critics of the mask-wearing, I’d point out some sobering facts: Nearly 5,000 people died from COVID-19 last week in the United States alone. About the same number of Americans are being hospitalized with serious coronavirus infectionseach day.
Afterward, South Carolina Sen. Tim Scott delivered the Republican response to President Biden’s speech. It’s a tricky task, as I pointed out yesterday, but Scott pulled it off so well he rekindled talk of a presidential run 2024. That’s a long way off, but if such a campaign were to take place and succeed, Scott would be the fifth politician to deliver both a State of the Union address and the opposition party’s response. The other four are George H.W. Bush, Jerry Ford, Bill Clinton, and now Joe Biden. I mentioned that bit of political trivial in yesterday’s newsletter, as well, although I was off by one letter when it came to George Bush. In my telling, it was Dubya, not his father, who gave the GOP response before later becoming president. Eagle-eyed Howard Mortman of C-SPAN spotted the error.
And with that, I’d point you to RCP’s front page, which presents our poll averages, videos, breaking news stories, and aggregated opinion pieces spanning the political spectrum. We also offer original material from our own reporters, columnists, and contributors:
* * *
Biden Restates His Bid to Go Big. Phil Wegmann has this wrap-up of the president’s speech.
Tim Scott’s 2024 Star Rises After Biden Rebuttal. Susan Crabtree has the story.
Joe Biden Comes Into His Own. Howard Fineman writes that last night’s speech shows he’s neither an echo nor a reaction to transformational presidents before him.
Create More Competitive Districts to Limit Extremism. Richard H. Pildes explains why the drawing of “safe” seats only adds to political polarization.
Five Facts to Convince Trump Voters to Get Vaccinated. RealClearScience editor Ross Pomeroy spotlights ways to disentangle politics from the vaccine.
Jump-Start a Revolution in Precision Medicine. At RealClearHealth, Jennifer Levin Carter touts the potential of tailoring treatment to an individual’s specific genetic landscape.
Cash for Clunkers 2: The Electric Vehicle Boogaloo. At RealClearPolicy, Mike Palicz argues that the chief beneficiary of proposed EV subsidies is the wealthy donor class.
We Need a New Approach to North Korea. At RealClearWorld, Daniel DePetris advocates an emphasis on deterrence instead of denuclearization.
Countering Russian Nuclear Doctrine. At RealClearDefense, Mark Schneider warns that unilateral cuts in the U.S. deterrent capability is the wrong response to a Kremlin buildup.
Author Interview: Matt Gallagher. At RealClearBooks, John Waters has this Q&A with the Iraq War veteran whose latest work is “Empire City.”
While maintaining good relations with its Iranian neighbor and top energy provider is strategic, Baghdad also sees the potential a stronger U.S.-Iraq and Iraq-Gulf relationship could deliver.
When an Iranian minister is astonished at a disclosure by a former secretary of state about a close U.S. ally, you know something is seriously wrong – and, if the allegations are confirmed, this U.S. official should never hold a government position again.
During Joe Biden’s “free stuff” speech to some of the Congress last night, the President characterized our relationship with the world’s exemplar of that model, Communist China, as a “competition.”
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60.) TWITCHY
61.) HOT AIR
62.) 1440 DAILY DIGEST
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Good morning. It’s Thursday, April 29, and we’re covering a range of decisions on police body cameras, the NFL Draft, and much more. Have feedback? Let us know at hello@join1440.com.
A North Carolina judge yesterday delayed the release of police body camera footage that recorded events during the April 21 police shooting of Andrew Brown Jr. in Elizabeth City. Brown’s family, who has seen a 20-second clip of the shooting, petitioned to have five body camera videos and dashcam footage released publicly. Judge Jeffrey Foster expressed concern that the release would impede ongoing investigations into the shooting. Brown’s family will be given access to all footage within 10 days, and Foster will reconsider public release in 30 to 45 days.
An independent autopsy concluded Brown was shot five times, once in the back of the head. Reports suggest he was driving away from the scene as police attempted to conduct a search warrant. Other details in the case have been sparse to date.
In related news, Chicago police released body camera footage of the March shooting of Anthony Alvarez. According to reports, Alvarez was armed with a semi-automatic pistol and was fleeing from police when he was shot in the back. See the body camera footage here (warning: sensitive content).
Separately, police in Alameda, California, released footage of the death of Mario Gonzales. Police initially responded to calls of someone under the influence in a public park. Gonzales died after being detained on the ground for five minutes; the cause of death is under review, with an autopsy pending. See the body camera footage here (warning: sensitive content).
Finally, three men were indicted on federal hate crime charges yesterday for their role in the February 2020 killing of Ahmaud Arbery in Georgia. Each faces additional murder charges in state court.
Editor’s note: Some readers have questioned the need to show video of violent incidents. Video often captures and conveys the nuances of an incident better than words ever can—so we try and be judicious with the use of such footage.
NFL Draft Kicks Off
The first round of the NFL Draft will be held tonight (8 pm ET, ABC/ESPN), live from Cleveland, Ohio. Fans and draft prospects will be present once more after the then-emerging pandemic forced last year’s event entirely online.
This year’s early rounds are expected to be quarterback heavy, with former Clemson phenom Trevor Lawrence widely expected to be picked first by the Jacksonville Jaguars. Some projections have up to four more signal callers going in the top 15 picks: Justin Fields (Ohio State), Zach Wilson (BYU), Mac Jones (Alabama), and Trey Lance (NDSU). Alabama’s DeVonta Smith, the first wide receiver to win the Heisman Trophy in three decades, is expected to go in the top five, along with tight end Kyle Pitts (Florida) and receivers Ja’Marr Chase (LSU) and Jaylen Waddle (Alabama). See the top 300 prospects here.
Rounds two and three will be held tomorrow, followed by rounds four through seven Saturday.
Snapchat and SCOTUS
The Supreme Court heard arguments yesterday over whether public schools may discipline students over off-campus speech. At the center of the case is Brandy Levy, who was suspended from the varsity cheerleading squad over a 2017 profanity-laced Snapchat post from the then-14-year-old. Levy argued the suspension violated her First Amendment rights.
Levy’s lawyer argued that the Supreme Court precedent Tinker v. Des Moines—a ruling from 1969 that states public schools have broader authority to regulate speech that could significantly disrupt the school’s work—does not apply to the case as the post was made on a weekend, outside of school. The school board argued the time and place of the student’s speech are irrelevant as the internet is universal.
Justices appeared split on balancing censorship of out-of-school speech with the schools’ rights to address disruptive behavior, which could in principle include online bullying. A decision is expected in early summer.
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>HBO Max to launch a $9.99 per month ad-supported streaming tier in June (More) | Australian singer-songwriter Anita Lane dies at 62(More) | Rapper Kodak Black sentenced to probation after pleading guilty to 2016 assault of a teenage girl (More)
>Kendrick Carmouche to be the first Black jockey since 2013 to compete at the Kentucky Derby (Saturday, 2:30 pm ET, NBC) as he rides long shot Bourbonic (More)
>Burning Man, an annual counter-culture festival in the Nevada desert, canceled for second straight year due to COVID-19 (More)
Science & Technology
>Astronaut Michael Collins dies at age 90 from an unspecified type of cancer; Collins piloted the historic Apollo 11 mission that landed the first humans on the moon (More)
>Study shows the most ancient stable pieces of the Earth’s crust, known as cratons, have broken apart and glued themselves back together over billions of years; it was previously thought the formations underwent little significant change over time (More)
>Nanobodies, tiny synthetic molecules that mimic the immune system’s antibodies, may prevent human monocytic ehrlichiosis, one of the most prevalent and life-threatening tick-borne diseases (More)
>Federal Reserve holds key interest rate near zero; plans to continue supporting economic recovery (More)
>Earnings season: Apple smashes earnings expectations—quarterly revenues grow 54% to $89B, net income tops $23B; adds $90B to share buyback program (More)
>Ford posts highest quarterly net income in years, but warns global chip shortage may hinder future earnings (More) | Facebook quarterly revenues up 48%, posts $9.5B profit as advertisers accelerate investment in digital ads (More)
>President Joe Biden gives first address to Congress, announces $1.8T American Families Plan; see details of the proposal (More) | Watch highlights of speech (More) | Sen. Tim Scott (R-SC) gives the Republican rebuttal (More)
>Federal investigators raid home and office of former Trump personal lawyer Rudy Giuliani; search was reportedly part of a probe into Giuliani’s foreign lobbying practices in Ukraine (More)
>Germany to put growing anti-lockdown groups under surveillance (More) | Almost 55% of US adults have received at least one vaccination dose; see how your state is doing (More)
IN-DEPTH
‘Look After My Babies’
The Associated Press | Cara Anna. A moving look at the devastating impact of Ethiopia’s civil war in the country’s northern Tigray region, as told through the travails of one family. (Read)
Following the Science
The Pudding | Jeff MacInnes. Undergirding the successful development of vaccines and treatments for COVID-19 was an unprecedented collaboration by the international research community. This fascinating visualization captures the massive scientific undertaking of the past year. (Read)
Now, 5G is here. And The Motley Fool wants to help you live a smarter, happier, and richer life. They’re providing new Stock Advisor members with a free additional stock pick to capitalize on the rollout of 5G technology. Check out the report today.
Historybook: Jazz legend Duke Ellington born (1899); HBD singer-songwriter Willie Nelson (1933); RIP film director Alfred Hitchcock (1980); Los Angeles riots begin following acquittal of police officers in the beating of Rodney King (1992); Prince William and Kate Middleton get married (2011).
“A problem is a chance for you to do your best.”
– Duke Ellington
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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
64.) NATIONAL REVIEW
65.) POLITICAL WIRE
66.) RASMUSSEN REPORTS
67.) ZEROHEDGE
68.) GATEWAY PUNDIT
69.) FRONTPAGE MAG
70.) HOOVER INSTITUTE
71.) DAILY INTELLIGENCE BRIEF
Daily Intelligence Brief.
Good morning, it’s April 29, 2021. On this day in history, French national heroine Joan of Arc and her troops entered the besieged city of Orléans during the Hundred Years’ War (1429); the U.S. Army liberated 31,601 people from Dachau Nazi concentration camp in Germany (1945); riots erupted in Los Angeles in response to the verdict in the trial of four white police officers acquitted of charges related to the 1991 beating of Rodney King (1992).
TOP STORIES
But I Don’t Want to Go Back to the Office: Thanks to the Pandemic, 1 in 4 Office Workers Have Decided to Stay Home
In large urban areas, many office buildings remain largely empty. According to a report in theLos Angeles Times, as of April 7, an average of 24 percent of employees in 10 major U.S. cities were back to the office. That’s one in four people who have opted to head back to work.
This is bad news for real estate, which has seen a dip in office space demand since the pandemic transitioned from a temporary situation to a way of life, during the past year. While some businesses have been slowly bringing their workers back into the office, others have decided to make working from home a more permanent solution.
From a business perspective, if it seems to be working, why spend the money on office space? This year has been an experiment for many companies that were able to stay afloat by continuing to successfully conduct business remotely.
As a result of the loss of rent income, landlords have been reluctant to lower their rates. Instead, they have been offering businesses perks like months of free rent and generous allowances to build out their offices.
Despite the current trend, a survey cited in the LA Times article stated that 85 percent of office workers are looking forward to returning to the office. But many aren’t ready to do so.
The reality is many businesses are willing to allow their employees to work from home a few days a week or even permanently. It’s become a way of life for a lot of white-collar workers.
In light of the pandemic, the majority of CEOs want to see a 50 percent vaccine rate nationwide before resuming normal operations.
Nevertheless, it seems that many companies will reduce their office capacity as they allow for this new normal to continue. But as vaccine rates continue to grow and infections drop, extroverts and people who feel they work better in a communal environment are likely to return to the office and try to pick up where they left off over a year ago.
Will Vitamin D Save Us From COVID-19?
Last year, when the threat of COVID-19 reached our shores, we realized we had no obvious weapons to fight this new and threatening virus. So consumers, as well as scientists, had to go back into the arsenal of already existing supplements, vitamins, herbs and conventional medications to see if we may have some efficacy against the insidious virus.
Vitamin D was one of the most promising supplements on the market that appeared to have some defense power worth studying. One appealing thing about something as benign as Vitamin D is it’s simply a supplement. So most people have no reservations about upping their daily intake. Even Dr. Fauci was on board.
So is there any validity to the claims? After a year of studies, although many are still ongoing, we do have a little more information to help us decide if popping a Vitamin D is worthwhile.
According to a report byNPR, it is unreasonable to think there is any one miracle supplement that could be a cure-all, but the report goes on to say there are, indeed, “compelling reasons” to study Vitamin D in the context of COVID-19.
We already know Vitamin D is essential to bone health. Our bodies make the vitamin by simply spending a little time in the sun. We find it added to cow’s milk to ensure we get enough. But scientific studies have concluded a mix of results regarding the benefit of Vitamin D in respiratory infections.
In 2017, a review of 25 randomized controlled trials concluded “Vitamin D helped prevent acute respiratory tract infections.”
This was great news!
Dr. Adit Ginde, a professor of emergency medicine at the University of Colorado School of Medicine, stated Vitamin D may “increase antimicrobial peptides, which function as natural antibiotic and antiviral guards against pathogens.”
Research indicates about 40 percent of Americans are not getting enough Vitamin D. Researchers have also found a correlation between certain populations at higher risk of severe COVID-19 and a lack of Vitamin D.
In fact, JAMA Network Open published a study among 489 participants. They found the “relative risk of testing positive for COVID-19 was 1.77 times greater” in Vitamin D-deficient patients. A Spanish study found 80 percent of the study’s patients hospitalized with COVID-19 were also Vitamin D deficient.
Ultimately, there are no solid conclusions, but researchers are hopeful. And as one researcher stated, “If I had money on it, I would bet that it’s more likely that Vitamin D is helpful than not in COVID, but I don’t know for sure.”
That’s probably a strong enough argument to consider adding it to our shopping list.
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.
From All Things Possible and the Victor Marx 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.
Thank you for joining us today. Be safe, be healthy and
As millions of renters across America continue to benefit from sweeping protections against eviction during the COVID-19 pandemic, their landlords haven’t been so fortunate.
Nestlé has been ordered to stop taking spring water from the San Bernardino National Forest for its bottled water products. The decision, made by California’s Water Resources Control Board, comes after a probe into Nestlé’s use of spring water found multiple violations and excessive resource depletion. The company has spent years taking the spring water to package and sell it.
The terms “nationalism” and “patriotism” are often used interchangeably. This is understandable, as they have somewhat overlapping meanings, both of which suffer from a certain amount of vagueness. However, there are a number of key differences between the two that are worth shedding light on. In the final analysis, we believe that the term “nationalism,” while not denoting anything totalitarian by its nature, is not an accurate term for the sentiment that exists in the United States. Nationalism, it would seem, is more suited to Europe or Asia, places with historic nations, united by common language and ethnicity that are necessarily tied with a certain area of land.
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Welcome to the Thursday edition of Internet Insider, where we explore identities online and off. Today:
Autistic TikTok stars campaign to stop star-studded fundraiser
Private school bans teachers from getting the COVID vaccine
For the love of knitting
BREAK THE INTERNET
Autistic TikTok stars campaign to halt ‘hate groups’ fundraiser endorsed by Stephen Colbert, Jimmy Kimmel
Autistic TikTok stars are organizing a live stream to counter a celebrity-endorsed fundraiser for an autism awareness organization. The TikTokers say the organization, Next for Autism, does not have autistic people’s best interests in mind.
Paige Layle, who has more than 2 million followers on TikTok, posted a video on Thursday about Next for Autism’s event, “Color the Spectrum,” that will include celebrities including Jimmy Kimmel and Stephen Colbert.
Layle says the campaign, which has raised nearly $1 million, is harmful to autistic people.
In her video, Layle said that Next for Autism supports “autism hate groups,” including Autism Speaks and Cure Autism. She said Autism Speaks has a history of anti-autistic mission and commentary, much of which has been documented by autistic people and parents of autistic people. Layle said the organization aims to “cure” autism or prevent the birth of autistic children.
Layle also announced that around the same time that Next for Autism’s event will take place, social media users with autism will be hosting a Twitch live stream.
According to a poster shared on social media, speakers for the April 30 live stream will include Layle, Evelyn Jeans, TikToker Tim Boykin (@blackautisticking), and TikToker Rebecca Faith Quinn (@reberrabon_bon).
Meanwhile, a Change.org petition by Chloé Hayden demanded that the so-called “eugenics fundraiser” be halted.
“Awareness and understanding towards autism is brilliant,” part of the petition states. “Organizations that support the ending of us is not.”
The Daily Dot has reached out to Next for Autism and publicists for Kimmel, Stewart, Sandler, Colbert, and Oliver, and will update the report if they respond.
Put your mask supply on autopilot with a subscription
We live in a world where you can subscribe to anything from cat food 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. That’s one less thing you’ll have to worry about. Not to mention, keeping a box of them in the car when you forget your mask can come in clutch, big time.
Private school bans teachers from getting the COVID vaccine
A Florida private school is threatening to punish any teachers who receive a vaccination against COVID-19. The ban on COVID vaccines was announced in a letter written by Leila Centner, one of Centner Academy’s co-founders.
Centner is a known anti-vaxxer. She posts frequently to social media, lamenting vaccines and other public safety measures like face masks. In an email to educators at the private school, Centner claimed that “reports have surfaced recently of non-vaccinated people being negatively impacted by interacting with people who have been vaccinated.”
The school’s vaccine policy requires teachers to take strict measures. Teachers who wish to be vaccinated must wait until the school year is over. They are not assured continued employment at the private school.
“This is completely irresponsible,” Florida International University infectious disease expert Dr. Aileen Marty reportedly said. “It is spreading rumors about something that is completely unfounded.”
After a year of writing my own thoughts about self-care in this newsletter, I’m branching out—but not too far. I’m asking my Daily Dot co-workers about how they integrate self-care rituals and a treat-yourself mentality into their days.
This week, I talked to Michelle Jaworski, a wordsmith and culture wizard whose razor-sharp movie and TV reviews often dictate whether I want to watch—or not. Michelle shared that she’s knitted over two dozen items in quarantine and some of her to-watch list, which includes classics like Alien and Roman Holiday. The interview below has been condensed and edited.
How do you define self-care? Is it important to you?
If I have a few uninterrupted hours ahead of me, I’ll turn on the TV to watch a few episodes of a show or a movie, or pick up my knitting needles, or play through Hades a few times. If I have less time, I might read a bit of whatever book I’m in the middle of or put on a podcast episode while making dinner.
I know you love knitting. How do you decide what project to start next?
I also know you like watching movies/TV shows. What are some films you return to again and again?
It’s such a cliché, but it’s a pretty succinct one: The movies I return to are the ones I adored when I was younger like Robin Hood (animated version with anthropomorphized animals), The Muppet Movie (a perfect movie), the Lord of the Rings trilogy (a seminal series for a lot of millennials who were in middle school when they came out).
Any other thoughts on self-care?
Some of the things I’ve enjoyed doing as forms of self-care the most are the kinds of things we generally tend to stigmatize because they’re things that women, nonbinary people, and the LGBTQ+ community tend to love, write, or consume. If it’s a thing that makes people happy, why should we shame it?
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82.) SEAN HANNITY
April 29, 2021
Latest News
BIDEN’S BIG BUCKS: Here’s What’s in Joe’s New $1.8 TRILLION ‘American Families Plan’
What you’ve missed: A DC pastor used COVID relief funds to buy 39 cars and a house, and controversial right-wing provocateur Nick Fuentes reportedly has been placed on a “no-fly list.”
Blue Forum is hosting its first event, ‘On State Capacity‘, with notable speakers. Join the interactive session on Monday, May 3rd at 7:45 PM EST to discuss questions on the government’s ability to effectively implement decisions. Use promo code ‘TPM’ to get 50% off your ticket!
Thank you to our sponsor, Blue Forum
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Just hours after downing shots and filming herself on Facebook Live saying “f*ck the police,” Jessica Beauvais struck and killed an NYPD officer, the Daily Mail reports.
A nearly 2-hour live stream was posted to Beauvais’ Facebook page as part of the Face the Reality radio show she appears on. During the stream, Beauvais slammed the justice system and police officers, and played the NWA song “F*ck Tha Police.”
“This week we are going to talk about the ignorance that was the Derek Chauvin trial – or the ignorance that is essentially justice is this f***ing justice system,” said Beauvais. “Police say an oath and in that oath they say an oath that they are not supposed to be afraid of that position that is literally in the rules.”
She also claimed that if ever faced with a fatal police encounter, she would not be the only victim.
According to the Daily Mail, “Throughout the video, Beauvais is seen vaping and drinking an unknown dark liquid from a plastic cup and, at one point, washes down the contents of a red shot glass with a bottle of Snapple. Police sources claim she later confessed to guzzling vodka before the deadly accident.”
After signing off of her stream by saying “F*ck the police,” Beauvais got into her Volkswagen and drove down the Long Island Expressway where Anastasios Tsakos was redirecting traffic from a fatal car crash.
Beauvais struck Tsakos, reportedly sending him 100 feet into the air before he landed on a grassy area near the road. He was later pronounced dead at the hospital. He leaves behind a wife, a three-year-old son, and a six-year-old daughter.
“I did hear a thump, so I knew I hit something but I didn’t see what it was,” said Beauvais, questioning why police had originally pulled her over.
“I think that when you see the images of [Beauvais’] car and the windshield that is completely shattered, as well as damage to the front of the car, there is no way to not know that you struck an individual,” said NYPD Commissioner Dermot Shea.
Footage of Beauvais being brought out of the 107th Precinct of the NYPD shows her tearfully saying “I’m sorry. I’m sorry that I hit him and that he’s dead.”
Beauvais faces up to 15 years of prison time along with 13 charges brought against including second-degree manslaughter, second-degree vehicular manslaughter and leaving the scene of an incident without reporting a death.
Ontario Labour Minister Monte McNaughton announced on Wednesday that the Ford government would set up what is called the “Worker Income Protection Benefit,” following months of refusing to implement a paid sick-leave program.
The legislation will require employers to pay employees for up to three days;
Employees will be eligible to be paid up to $200 per day, if legislation passes.
“This is more than one day available to workers in PEI, and the two days to workers in Quebec. This is a game-changer, and this will save lives,” said McNaughton.
Officials say the program will be retroactive from April 19.
Employees will not have to file paperwork to receive their funds, and employers will instead be paid back by the province.
Think about the last transit expansion plan or government website launch you read about. It probably included details about timeline delays, cost overruns, and maybe even high management turnover, right? This is a recurring theme with government-led projects.
State capacity can be loosely defined as the government’s ability to effectively implement its decisions. And on that front, all levels of government seem to be doing a pretty terrible job.
We’d like to explore why that is, and what we might do about it.
Join us online on Monday, May 3rd, at 7:45 PM EST in conversation with Tyler Cowen, Alon Levy, and Ginny Roth to discuss these important questions.
Tickets for the event are available at blueforum.ca and are 50% off for all TPM newsletter subscribers with the promo code ‘TPM’. We hope to see you there!
Vice President Kamala Harris called LGBTQ violence a “root cause” of why people flee Guatemala in a virtual meeting between Kamala Harris and the President of Guatemala, Alejandro Giammattei.
The meeting was broadcasted on PBS.
Harris has been tasked with diplomacy and strategy in the Northern Triangle countries of El Salvador, Honduras, and Guatemala as regards the massive influx of migrants from those nations to the US.
“There are also longstanding issues that are often called the ‘root causes’ of immigration,” she told President Giammattei.
“We are looking at the issue of poverty and the lack, therefore, of economic opportunities; the issue of extreme weather conditions and the lack of climate adaptation; as well as corruption and the lack of good governance; and violence against women, Indigenous people, LGBTQ people, and Afro-descendants.”
On Monday, Kamala Harris announced an additional $310 million in aid to Central America. “$255 million will go to humanitarian relief and $55 million will go toward addressing food insecurity,” per KMOV4.
In the first week of April, the White House unveiled a $112 million aid package. The money there was designated for humanitarian reasons and programs designed to help people earn an income.
This approach to the migration crisis is how Vice President Kamala Harris is choosing to handle the situation after being deputized to do so by President Biden. The impact of the crisis is acutely felt at the US-Mexico border, where migrant detention facilities doubled in size within the span of a few weeks.
Part of the Biden administration’s funding efforts are directed toward “resettlement” programs for migrants who made it into the United States, so far. Something more permanent than the roughly $90 million the White House doled out for migrants to stay in hotels.
Young migrants boys have been abandoned in the middle of nowhere, and young migrant girls have drowned (and nearly drowned) in the Rio Grande river.
Governor Cuomo spent months silencing health officials and working with aides to hide the real number of deaths in New York nursing homes.
The public and state lawmakers asked repeatedly for the Governor’s office to provide an accurate count of how many New Yorkers died of COVID in nursing homes. However, Cuomo and his top aides worked over several months to prevent that information from being shared, according to The New York Times.
Cuomo’s team silenced New York’s own public health officials, including the commissioner Howard Zucker, from releasing an accurate depiction of how many people were dying in New York nursing homes. This occurred as Cuomo instituted policies to prevent nursing homes from turning away patients infected with COVID-19 who had just been released from the hospital.
Cuomo also stopped an academic paper with this data from being published, going on to withhold the results of an audit for months after it was finished. Two letters that detailed the gravity of the situation were also thrown away at the direction of the Governor’s office.
In March of 2020, Cuomo stated that nursing homes could not turn away patients just released from the hospital for COVID-19. Over the 2 months that the policy remained in place, thousands of people died in nursing homes from COVID which came directly from the hospital. The original death count was thought to be around 6,000 people.
Problems arose when it became clear that those who were transferred from hospitals to nursing homes were not being counted as nursing home deaths. An accurate count of nursing home deaths was only released by the state attorney general in January of 2021. This report revealed that Cuomo under-reported nursing home deaths by as much as 50 percent. The real number of nursing home deaths in New York as of April 2021 is 15,5000.
It has now been discovered that Cuomo and his aides knew the accurate number of nursing home deaths last spring, yet withheld the numbers and covered up the number of deaths. This happened while Cuomo began writing, pitching and marketing a book on his response to the pandemic.
On May 8, the founder of Tesla Elon Musk and pop star Miley Cyrus will take over SNL as host and musical guest. Many Hollywood celebrities, ‘blue checkmarks,’ and even SNL cast members, were not happy with the choice and took to Twitter to express their displeasure.
SNL cast members quoted Socialist Sen. Bernie Sander (I-VT) on social media and expressed their view that rich and successful people are not welcome in the United States anymore.
Musk, who attended Queens University at a time, has built a science and innovation business empire from SpaceX, to The Boring Company and his most famous venture Tesla. Musk is also famous for his antics including selling the “Not a flame throw” through The Boring Company.
Canadian businessman Kevin O’Leary views Musk and others differently and said, “If you work hard, you could be stinking rich one day.”
Musk has also created a name for himself in pop culture, making headlines for smoking weed on The Joe Rogan Experience, sending Tesla stock soaring or plummeting with one tweet and for naming his child X Æ A-XII. Elon Musk eluded to what he might have planned for the show in a tweet.
SNL cast members were also outraged at this with Bowen Yang commenting, “What the f**k does this even mean.”
President Biden will visit Georgia after giving his first address to Congress, the NFL draft begins and more news to start your Thursday.
Happy Thursday, Daily Briefing readers! Fresh off his historic address to both houses of Congress, President Joe Biden will visit Georgia today. One of his stops: meeting 39th president Jimmy Carter. Also in the news: 32 former college football stars will see their dreams come true tonight as the NFL draft kicks off its first round.
Steve and Jane are here with what you need to know Thursday.
⚖ The Justice Department charged three white men with hate crimes for the death of Ahmaud Arbery, a Black man who was shot and killed while jogging in Georgia. The men – Travis McMichael; his father, Gregory McMichael; and William “Roddie” Bryan – were indicted for targeting and threatening Arbery due to his race.
🛳 Passenger voyages from the U.S. could start mid-summer, depending on cruise lines’ pace and compliance with the CDC’s guidelines and framework for conditional sailing, the agency said in a letter to the cruise industry.
🌎 Despite anger and emotional debate from Democrats, Florida Republican leadersrevived and approved a controversial ban on transgender athletes participating in women’s sports at the high school and college levels Wednesday night. The measure now goes to Gov. Ron DeSantis, who is likely to sign it into law.
👋 The Academy Award winners were announced on Sunday, so let’s talk about it. Join us at 4 p.m. ET today on Clubhouse! We’ll be chatting about the Oscars, diversity in the entertainment industry and what’s changed.
Join us at 4 p.m. ET Thursday, April 29 on Clubhouse.
USA TODAY
🎧On today’s 5 Things podcast, housing and economy reporter Swapna Venugopal Ramaswamy talks about the ways companies are trying to make the office appealing again. You can listen to the podcast every day on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or on your smart speaker.
Here’s what we’re looking at today:
Biden heads to Georgia, one day after delivering historic speech to Congress
President Joe Biden and first lady Jill Biden will spend most of Thursday in the state of Georgia. First, the Bidens will visit the 39th president, Jimmy Carter, and his wife, Rosalynn. Later, to mark the president’s 100th day in office Friday, they will attend a drive-in rally in Duluth, according to Biden’s official schedule. The trip comes a day after his first address to a joint session of Congress Wednesday evening. During the speech, Biden called out goals he has achieved such as his administration passing its goal of delivering 200 million COVID-19 vaccines in his first 100 days in office. He also called for police reform after the conviction of Derek Chauvin for killing George Floyd, urged reinstatement of the assault weapons ban, pressed Congress to pass his comprehensive immigration legislation and implored lawmakers to raise taxes on the rich and corporations, saying they need to pay their fair share.
‘Representation matters’: With Harris, Pelosi, 2 women share dais for the first time
Vice President Kamala Harris and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi stand near President Joe Biden
Getty Images photo; USA TODAY graphic
American presidents are flanked by the speaker of the House and the vice president during high-profile speeches such as an address to a joint session of Congress, each sitting behind and on either side of the commander in chief.
Frustrated by Gov. Gavin Newsom’s liberal policies and approach to the pandemic, his opponents submitted signatures last month to force an election to recall the Democratic leader of the nation’s most populous state. On Thursday, county officials in California will complete the validation process for more than 1.6 million signatures collected by organizers. It’s not the first time Californians have tried to unseat the governor: In 2003, voters recalled Democratic Gov. Gray Davis and replaced him with Republican Arnold Schwarzenegger.
Federal law enforcement and analysts within the Department of Homeland Security warn that the threat from white supremacist organizations will remain persistent in the coming years.
NFL draft set to kick off with the first round
The 2021 NFL Draft will begin Thursday night with its first of seven rounds. Running until Saturday, the draft will be spread out across multiple venues in Cleveland and fans will be allowed to attend. Commissioner Roger Goodell and a select number of prospects will take the stage and the famous, albeit somewhat awkward, bro hugs will be back, despite questions about their safety. Clemson quarterback Trevor Lawrence is expected to be chosen No. 1 overall by the Jacksonville Jaguars and BYU’s Zach Wilson is expected to go No. 2 to the New York Jets. The intrigue really begins when the San Francisco 49ers reveal who they will take with the third pick after making a big trade to move up. The draft will air live on ABC, ESPN and NFL Network (8 p.m. ET/5 p.m. PT).
🟣 In her review of Hulu’s “The Handmaid’s Tale,” TV critic Kelly Lawler writes that “the plodding, frustrating fourth season is not unlike the plodding, frustrating third or the plodding, frustrating second.”
Biden administration could push for ban on menthol cigarettes
A response could come Thursday from the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) to a citizen petition filed in 2013 by national public health advocates who are calling for the FDA to include menthol in its ban on cigarettes with “characterizing flavors,” which have long appealed to children. The Biden administration is planning to push for a ban on menthol cigarettes , which have been the target of anti-smoking advocates and civil rights activists who say the industry has aggressively marketed to Black Americans, according to a report published by The Washington Post. The cigarette ban would not require congressional approval, but the FDA would have to submit proposed rules and seek public comment. A final ban could take years and would likely be challenged in court by the tobacco industry, which has repeatedly sued the FDA to block anti-tobacco regulation.
Scott also defended the country’s record on race as one of opportunity and optimism and said Democrats ignore the country’s strides over the past century for political and financial gain.
Prince William and Duchess Kate celebrate 10th wedding anniversary
Thursday marks 10 years since Prince William, second in line to the British throne, now 38, wed his longtime girlfriend, the former Kate Middleton, now 39, in an extravagant ceremony on April 29, 2011, at the historic Westminster Abbey in London. New pictures of William and Duchess Kate were released to mark the occasion, which was watched by millions around the globe. The Cambridges, now the parents of three – Prince George, 7, Princess Charlotte, 5, and Prince Louis, 3 – are now full-time working royals, taking up more responsibilities to help William’s father Prince Charles as grandmother Queen Elizabeth II, 95, cuts back on public engagements.
Prince William and Duchess Kate of Cambridge at Kensington Palace photographed this week in London, and released on April 28, 2021, to mark their 10th wedding anniversary on April 29.
Chris Floyd/Camera Press/via AP
ICYMI: Some of our top stories published Wednesday
New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo announced on Wednesday that the curfew for both indoor and outdoor dining and bar seating will be lifted in New York City starting in May.
The Australian government said Wednesday that it will spend hundreds of millions to upgrade four strategic bases, in addition to conducting more war game exercises with the United States.
White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki said Tuesday that the Biden administration “respectfully” disagrees with the Catholic church’s stance against using aborted children for medical research.
USA Today is facing criticism after it allowed former Democratic candidate Stacey Abrams to water down her support for boycotts in Georgia after Major League Baseball pulled its All Star Game from the state – a move that cost Atlanta businesses millions.
West Virginia Gov. Jim Justice announced the state will be giving a $100 savings bond to any resident between the ages of 16 and 35 who gets a COVID-19 vaccine.
Actors and filmmakers who attended Sunday’s Oscars took aim at law enforcement on stage and on the red carpet, even though the event was being safeguarded by the Los Angeles Police Department (LAPD) and other agencies.
President Joe Biden answered a few questions from gathered reporters at the White House before saying he would be “in trouble” if he continued to take questions.
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I’m Cade Courtley, former Navy SEAL Platoon Commander, sniper, and author of the SEAL Survival Guide.
If 2020 has taught us anything… it’s not IF you need a backup plan… it’s WHEN.
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99.) MARK LEVIN
April 28, 2021
Posted on
On Wednesday’s Mark Levin Show, Oprah Winfrey and Lebron James are frauds because they support movements that destroy our country while they reap the rewards of the free-market system that they have profited from. Yet the left’s mantra is “tax the rich.” Tonight President Biden will give a Castro-like speech at his first joint session of Congress. Pontificating about racism and climate change and proposing that the federal government steal money, by way of confiscatory taxes, from a workforce that earned it to redistribute it to a workforce that hasn’t. All in the name of ideas that Biden feels are noble. It’s so much easier to propose these things than it is to correct and remove them once implemented. Marxism has always failed and always will fail. Then, Biden is a liar and is trying to make it look like he saved America from the coronavirus and that infrastructure means whatever he says. Rep. James Clyburn supports the left’s reimagining of whatever they feel like as if the people working in government are the only ones that have a say, and not the people paying for all of this spending. Later, it has been leaked that in Biden’s speech he will say that the January 6th, 2021 riot at the US Capitol was the biggest attack on US democracy since the Civil War. The media will paint whatever picture they want to get their desired propaganda result. Afterward, the FBI raided the home of former Trump attorney Rudy Giuliani. Despite him and his lawyers agreeing to make themselves available to the FBI. However, the feds wanted to disregard any attorney-client privilege that Giuliani might have concerning the 45th President of the United States. Notice the disparate treatment between former Mayor Giuliani and Hunter Biden who has never been raided despite troves of allegations.
You didn’t think he was going away, did you? The country needs President Trump and his pro-America rallies. If the GOP takes back the House and the Senate in 2022, then we can expect to see President Trump run for POTUS again in 2024. May the wind …
First do no harm is …… racist. Jim Crow medicine. The Democrats have perverted and destroyed every important and respected institution in this country, The idiots are “experts,” while the experts are smeared, defamed and ostracized by the …
Facebook Twitter Google+ The Washington Post said they won’t fact check Joe Biden. He routinely says things that aren’t true, and someone has to do it. Therefore, The Geller Report will fact check false statements President Biden makes …
Facebook Twitter Google+ For 30 days, I will report daily the terrorist attacks, the crimes, the butcheries of Ramadan Bombathon 2021. I have followed and report Ramadan Bombathon for 8 years. It has always amazed me to see that no mainstream …
A week ago, the Geller Report brought you the story of Shokhobiddin Bakhritdinov, the Muslim in New York City who stopped his car at an intersection, got out and looked around before getting back in, putting his car in reverse and hitting several …
The Democrats are no longer hiding their hatred for this country and every decent, law abiding American. They stole the election and then declared war on us.
Shortly after President Joe Biden urged Americans to seize the opportunity “to root out systemic racism that plagues America,” Sen. Tim Scott — a black man who has experienced discrimination firsthand — rejected the claim that this is a racist country…
The mission of the Media Research Center is to create a media culture in America where truth and liberty flourish. The MRC is a research and education organization operating under Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code, and contributions to the MRC are tax-deductible.
The communists at YouTube banned our interview with President Trump yesterday, and that Biden speech last night was an abomination. In this episode, I address these topics and the disgusting raid on Rudy Giuliani’s home yesterday.
Tennessee to Pass Legislation Requiring Watermarks on Absentee Ballots
The legislature in Tennessee has unanimously approved a bill that will add watermarks to absentee ballots. The Senate approved the measure 27-0 while the Tennessee House approved it 92-1. The bill is being sent to Governor Bill Lee’s desk and he is expected to sign the bill into law.
Biden Breaks Pledge Not to Increase Taxes on Anyone Earning Under 400k with Marriage Penalty Tax
During the 2020 campaign, Joe famously gave his solemn pledge that no one making less than $400,000 would see a tax increase. Unsurprisingly, Joe Biden was lying.
Americans Are Buying Less Coca-Cola Following Stance Against Georgia Election Law
A new poll shows that many consumers have stopped buying Coca-cola products in response to the company coming out against Georgia’s new election integrity law.