The Morning Dispatch: Biden Waives Nord Stream 2 Sanctions

Plus: GOP states drop the hammer on community mask mandates in cities and schools.

One of the Russian pipe-laying vessels involved in the construction of the Nord Stream 2 pipeline. (Photo by Jens Büttner/picture alliance via Getty Images)

Happy Friday! Summer weather is here in earnest in the D.C. area, where we’re back to pushing 95 degrees for the foreseeable future. Jury’s still out on whether relaxed post-COVID work rules will permit wearing shorts and Aloha shirts to the Dispatch office.

Quick Hits: Today’s Top Stories

  • Israel and Hamas have agreed to a ceasefire after a violent 11 days. Both Israel and Hamas confirmed the agreement in statements. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu added in his statement that “the reality on the ground … will determine the future of the operation.”
  • The House passed a $1.9 billion emergency spending bill to beef up security around the Capitol building. The bill was passed by only one vote, with some members of “the squad” of progressive Democrats voting no because it would give more money to police. The funding is a response to the January 6 attacks on the Capitol.
  • President Joe Biden signed the COVID-19 Hate Crimes Act into law yesterday, which aims to curb violence and hate crimes against Asian-Americans.
  • The Biden Administration announced ICE will no longer use two Department of Homeland Security facilities in Georgia and Massachusetts after reports of abuse at the facilities. A whistleblower reported that doctors at the Irwin County Detention Center were performing unwanted hysterectomies and other unauthorized medical procedures.
  • Secretary of State Anthony Blinken sat down with Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov on Wednesday in anticipation of a meeting with the two country’s leaders later in the summer. This was the first meeting between high-level U.S. and Russian officials during the Biden administration. A State Department official said the meeting was “constructive.”
  • The United States confirmed 29,511 new cases of COVID-19 yesterday per the Johns Hopkins University COVID-19 Dashboard, with 3.4 percent of the 879,984 tests reported coming back positive. An additional 664 deaths were attributed to the virus on Thursday, bringing the pandemic’s American death toll to 588,531. According to the Centers for Disease Control, 25,948 Americans are currently hospitalized with COVID-19. Meanwhile, 2,107,077 COVID-19 vaccine doses were administered yesterday, with 160,177,820 Americans having now received at least one dose.

Biden Lifts Sanctions on Russian Gas Pipeline Company 

Back in February, we wrote to you about the resumption of construction on Russia’s Nord Stream 2 gas pipeline—and the Biden administration’s apparent indifference despite overwhelming bipartisan support for halting the project. On Thursday, the White House officially notified Congress of plans to waive sanctions on Nord Stream 2 AG, the German company overseeing the undertaking, and its CEO (and friend of President Vladimir Putin) Matthias Warnig.

As first reported by Axios on Tuesday, the removal of congressionally mandated sanctions by the U.S. government could allow for the pipeline’s completion by early summer, connecting Russian natural gas to Central and Western Europe by way of Germany. In addition to the waivers, the report also named eight new Russian companies and ships involved in the conduit’s construction to be sanctioned. But with 95 percent of the pipeline already completed, lawmakers fear that the addition of new entities—without the inclusion of the involved German parties—will lend the Kremlin a foreign policy win.

Putin has long eyed the project as an inroad into Europe, with aims to foster greater dependence on the Russian energy sector in the traditionally “tough on Russia” countries of the EU. In addition, the 750-mile pipeline bypasses Ukraine, through which Russian gas has traditionally flowed to the economic and strategic advantage of U.S. allies in Kyiv.

To curb Moscow’s influence, former President Donald Trump signed a law in 2019 threatening companies involved in the pipeline’s construction with sanctions. Several companies temporarily suspended their work in fear of retaliation from the White House. And in January 2021, a bipartisan group of lawmakers authorized sanctions on any entity that “provided services for the testing, inspection or certification” of the pipeline. Despite both measures, construction resumed February 6, and the conduit is nearly complete.

This Biden administration’s decision to lift sanctions on pipeline construction appears to be in deference to Germany, which has a vested economic interest in Nord Stream 2’s completion. But the move also directly contradicts a statement Secretary Blinken made during his confirmation hearing opposing construction of the pipeline. “The president-elect strongly agrees with you that Nord Stream 2 is a bad idea,” Blinken said, adding: “I am determined to do whatever we can to prevent [its] completion.”

No More Mask Mandates, Say States

Earlier this week, we filled you in on how, in the wake of the Centers for Disease Control’s latest guidance that vaccinated people need not wear masks, many states that had still been enforcing mask mandates moved to lift them. A few Republican-led states, however, are using the new guidance to go farther: not simply removing state-wide mask mandates, but forbidding cities and even schools from implementing their own mask requirements at all.

On Tuesday, Texas Gov. Greg Abbott, a Republican, issued an executive order prohibiting any government entities, including school districts, from requiring masks. And on Thursday, Iowa GOP Gov. Kim Reynolds signed an education bill with a similar provision into law. While the Texas order won’t be enforced until June 4—after the end of the school year for most state public schools—Iowa’s new law went into effect immediately, leaving districts scrambling to adjust.

“The state of Iowa is putting parents back in control of their child’s education and taking greater steps to protect the rights of all Iowans to make their own health care decisions,” Reynolds said in a statement. “I am proud to be a governor of a state that values personal responsibility and individual liberties.”

Last week, the interim director of the Iowa Department of Public Health encouraged schools to drop their mandates—although she also acknowledged that “some parents may want their child to continue to wear a cloth face covering for reasons that make sense for their family or that child’s individual health situation.”

Worth Your Time

  • We know, you’ve heard a lot about the Brood X cicada situation on the East Coast. So much that you might even be tired of hearing about it. But we promise, this interactive graphic from the Washington Post that walks you through the life of one of these cicadas is worth checking out. (Make sure the sound is on!)
  • You may not have seen this coming, but Miami is slowly becoming a sort of second Silicon Valley. This is no accident; Mayor of Miami Francis Suarez wants it to be seen as a place for the free market to explode. In this piece for Reason, Daniel Raisbeck talked to Mayor Suarez, but also to Latin American immigrants, who are, he writes, the true drivers of the economy in Miami: “Miami’s ascendance in the 21st Century hinges on whether it can continue to fulfill its role as the greatest city in Latin America that just happens to be located in the United States.”

Presented Without Comment

Toeing the Company Line

  • On Thursday’s Advisory Opinions, Sarah and David go deep on abortion case law, Justice Elena Kagan’s spicy dissent in Edwards v. Vannoy, and a UNC Chapel Hill tenure dispute.
  • Jonah’s Remnant episode this morning starts off with further ruminations on his midweek column on Israel and antisemitism, then reads from a Commentary piece on the anti-capitalist tendencies of medieval antisemites and the antisemitic tendencies of more modern communists.

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