Good morning! Here is your news briefing for Monday June 28, 2021
1.) THE DAILY SIGNAL
June 28 2021
Good morning from Washington, where the Biden administration is still largely ignoring the border crisis. Brigitta Borinstein writes about what her mother, an immigrant from Belgium, thinks of the current situation. Concerned your local school is teaching critical race theory? Mike Gonzalez has tips on what specifically to ask your school officials about. Plus: Fred Lucas on China’s lack of transparency, Rob Bluey on an alternative to Big Tech, and Rachel del Guidice on a pastor making the case against critical race theory.
Is your school principal denying that her school makes use of critical race theory when you call to complain? If so, it’s likely that she’s either misinformed or just spreading disinformation.
When I asked my mother about the border crisis, she said: “It’s like a violation has happened because we were doing the right thing and working so hard … now we’re just opening the door.”
As conservative struggle due to Big Tech censorship, Martin Avila is offering customers an alternative in the marketplace of internet services—from application development to web hosting.
The social cost of carbon is the most useless number you have never heard of. Do not be fooled by the Washington establishment’s use of sophisticated statistical models to make itself look credible.
“The idea that, you know, everything is … power dynamics and oppressor/oppressed,” says pastor and author Voddie Baucham Jr. “That’s Marxism. That’s not Scripture.”
The crusade to destroy Jack Phillips—and many others like him—will continue until the Supreme Court upholds the clear language and intent of the First Amendment.
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With social media censorship sidelining many important headlines, our Morning Brief email is how we make sure you get the latest developments that our reporters have curated from around the world. It’s our way of keeping you truly informed so that you can make the decisions that align with your values. We hope you enjoy our coverage. Manage your email preferences here.
3.) DAYBREAK
Your First Look at Today’s Top Stories – Daybreak Insider
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From the story: According to Pentagon Press Secretary John Kirby, the facilities are used by several Iran-backed militia groups engaged in unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) attacks against U.S. personnel and facilities in Iraq, including Kata’ib Hezbollah (KH) and Kata’ib Sayyid al-Shuhada (KSS).
Migrant Sentenced to 142 Years in Prison After Reportedly Saving 31 People at Sea
This took place in Greece, where they are cracking down on illegal immigration with long prison sentences. But in the case of Hanad Abdi Mohammad, the smuggler abandoned them and he was forced to take over. Apparently, that’s not uncommon.
US Bronze Medal Winner Turns Back on Flag During Anthem
Gwen Berry called it “disrespectful” to play the anthem while she took the medal at the U.S. Olympic trials, a stark contrast to the gold and silver winners (Daily Mail). From Jonah Goldberg: There go all those lucrative hammer endorsement deals (Twitter). From Christina Sommers: Why represent the US in the Olympics if you hate the US? (Twitter).
5.
Nike Pulls in Nearly 2 Billion Dollars from China in Fourth Quarter
Nike assures customers they don’t use forced labor, and the strongest terms they appear to use about it is “concern.” Also from the story: The footwear giant behind the iconic “Just Do It” marketing campaign says it is “of China and for China” for the foreseeable future.
Bari Weiss: Close of Hong Kong Newspaper a Sign of Trouble Ahead
From the story: “You may not have heard of Apple Daily. I knew of it, but only vaguely. It is — or rather, it was — Hong Kong’s version of the New York Post combined with William Lloyd Garrison’s The Liberator. A tabloid, yes. But also: a voice for freedom.” China jailed the publisher. Later: “Over the past week, the same forces that jailed him came for his newspaper. Hundreds of police officers raided the newsroom. They seized hard drives and laptops. They arrested five of the company’s top executives and editors, who stand accused of collusion with foreign forces and endangering national security. They froze the company’s assets. The swashbuckling, anti-Communist tabloid, the symbol of Hong King’s free press, printed its last edition on Thursday.”
Man Barred from Competing in Olympics against Women Because Testosterone Levels Too High
He won the women’s NCAA title in the 400-meter hurdles a few years ago, shortly after competing as a man (Washington Examiner). His times as a male were mediocre (World Athletics) and wouldn’t put him in the top 1000 (World Athletics)
8.
Unemployment Shrinks Where States Cut Federal Benefit
A rudimentary understanding of economics will get you here, but now there’s a study for those who refuse to believe.
Police in Portland ID Victim of Police Shooting as White to Prevent Antifa Riots
But they started attacking police before that news broke. Turns out, it was a black officer who shot and killed a white male. So the media is sorely disappointed.
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Good morning. In this world, nothing is certain but death, taxes, and monthly Morning Brew giveaways.
This time around, we are giving away a stunning ceramic cookware set from Caraway. Actually, 15 of them. When you share the Brew this week, you’ll be entered into a raffle to win this major upgrade for your kitchen. 1 referral = 1 ticket.
Markets: If you’ve found yourself checking Robinhood less frequently, it’s because the stock market hasn’t been this calm since 2017, according to the WSJ.
Economy: The bipartisan infrastructure deal is back on track after President Biden clarified his earlier comment that he’d only sign the bill along with a bigger Democratic spending package. The Senate appears to have the 60 votes needed to pass the infrastructure proposal.
Ten more states including Florida, Ohio, and Texas ended extra unemployment benefits on Saturday. They join 12 other states that have already opted out this month; all together, 26 states have said “thanks but no thanks” to assistance that’s available until September.
Their reasoning: Get rid of those Help Wanted signs. Businesses are desperate to hire workers, and many states think scrapping the extra $300/week in unemployment benefits, which the Biden administration incorporated into its pandemic relief bill, will spur more job-seeking.
Is it working?
Could be. In 22 states that canceled enhanced benefits this month, the number of people receiving unemployment benefits is falling faster than in states that have extended the program longer, according to an analysis by Jefferies.
In the states that cut off the extra payments the earliest, the number of workers who were paid benefits decreased 13.8% from mid-May to mid-June.
That number fell 10% in states cutting benefits in July and 5.7% in states that are waiting it out until September.
Other data paints a cloudier picture, though. Earlier this month, the job site Indeed found that job search activity fell below the national trend in states that cut off extra benefits in June.
Zoom out: Extra unemployment benefits are dividing people more than pineapple on pizza. Industry groups and Republican lawmakers say that the extra payments disincentivize work and are the leading cause of the worker shortage. 25 out of the 26 states that axed the benefits early are led by GOP governors.
Some economists and Democrats have said that other factors, such as greater childcare burdens or the fear of contracting Covid, are to blame. On Capitol Hill last week, Fed Chair Jerome Powell said that extra benefits could be playing a role in the worker shortage problem, but focused his attention on other challenges holding back the job market.
Looking ahead…four more states end enhanced benefits on July 10. Perhaps by then we’ll have more data to understand how the extra $300/week has played a role in the labor market’s sluggish recovery.
The desperate search for survivors continued over the weekend following the partial collapse of the Champlain Towers South condo building in Surfside, FL. Nine people have been confirmed dead and more than 150 remain missing.
The latest:
An engineering firm’s report from 2018 said that faulty waterproofing on the pool deck presented a “systemic issue for this building structure.” It is not clear whether the pool deck was related to the collapse; another 2018 report from the same company gave the building mostly a clean bill of health.
Officials are now considering whether or not to temporarily evacuate the sister building, Champlain Towers North, which is located right next door and was built around the same time.
+ Here are some ways you can help the victims and the recovery efforts.
For the first time, CRISPR technology has been used to successfully treat diseasein vivo, or inside the human body. That big medical news was announced Saturday by the biotech startup Intellia Therapeutics and its partner Regeneron, which said their gene-editing techniques reduced the amount of harmful liver protein associated with a genetic nerve disorder.
What is CRISPR? It stands for “clustered regularly interspaced short palindromic repeats,” and it’s one of those things humans found in nature and then copied.
Bacteria use CRISPR to repel viruses, but humans have harnessed it to ctrl+c, ctrl+v DNA sequences, potentially leading to a revolution in treating disease.
The two scientists who made that breakthrough in 2012, Jennifer Doudna and Emmanuelle Charpentier, won the Nobel Prize in Chemistry last year (Doudna is also a cofounder of Intellia).
Quote du jour: “There’s a feeling like we’re walking through a door here into all kinds of new possibilities. And there’s not many moments in medicine where you get to experience that,” Intellia CEO John Leonard said.
Looking ahead…expect Intellia shares, which have gained 233% since its 2016 IPO, to pop today.
If the last year has taught us anything, it’s that life can be unpredictable—including the stock market. And right now, we could all use a bit of stability.
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Stat: Not all recessions are created equal. As the stock market boomed last year, US households added $13.5 trillion in wealth, the biggest annual increase on record. In 2008, households lost $8 trillion.
Quote: “The bad news is that Covid-19 may never go away. The good news is that it is possible to live normally with it in our midst.”
Writing in the Straits Times, Singapore’s Covid-19 task force announced plans to treat the coronavirus like any other endemic disease, such as the flu. That means scrapping traveler quarantines, daily case number announcements, and intensive contact tracing efforts.
Jobs report: Can we fast-forward to Friday already? The biggest economic event of the week is the release of the June jobs report, which will tell us more about the improving labor market and whether inflation will show up in the form of higher wages. Analysts expect the economy to have added around 700,000 jobs last month, a slight bump from May.
SCOTUS’s final push: After a flurry of big rulings, the US Supreme Court will close out its term this week. Many Democrats would love to see Justice Stephen Breyer, 82, announce his retirement so that President Biden could nominate a replacement while the Dems have a majority in the Senate.
Halftime: Hit the “reset” button on the year when the second quarter closes Wednesday, June 30.
Everything else:
Wimbledon starts today, but without Nadal or Osaka.
Thursday is Canada Day.
Sunday is July 4th, and the federal holiday will be celebrated on Monday. Got any fun plans?
WHAT ELSE IS BREWING
The UK ordered Binance, a leading crypto exchange, to stop all regulated activities in Britain.
F9brought in $70 million at the North American box office this weekend, nabbing the biggest opening since 2019’s Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker.
Johnson & Johnson will pay $263 million to settle claims that it fueled the opioid epidemic in New York State and two NY counties.
LA Dodgers owners Mark Walter and Todd Boehly are buying a stake in the LA Lakers from billionaire Philip Anschultz, per Sportico. The deal values the Lakers at ~$5 billion.
It’s time for a BBQ Bonanza. This Fourth of July, let Instacart deliver everything you need to have the backyard bash of the century. Get your briskets, your chips and dip, heck even your SPF 50 without leaving the patio. Get free delivery* on your first order here.*
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Headphones in: If you need a new pod in your rotation, check out Business Unusual from Shark Tank judge and business mogul Barbara Corcoran. Each episode contains insightful advice for anyone looking to advance their career.
How well do you know last names around the world? We’ll give you the last names of players on teams competing in the Euro soccer tournament, and you have to figure out the country they play for.
Team 1: de Ligt, de Vrij, van Aanholt, de Jong, de Roon
Team 2: Dawidowicz, Krychowiak, Swierczok, Bereszynski, Zielinski
Team 3: Robertson, O’Donnell, McGregor, McGinn, McKenna
Team 4: Larsson, Olsson, Forsberg, Jansson, Augustinsson
Team 5: Brozovic, Orsic, Ivanusec, Kovacic, Perisic
ANSWER
Team 1: Netherlands Team 2: Poland Team 3: Scotland Team 4: Sweden Team 5: Croatia
✢ A Note From Fundrise
(Here’s all the legal jargon we know you love reading.)
Even the Biden-supporting Fourth Estate is perhaps beginning to feel a twinge of buyer’s remorse over its ever-positive reportage. In light of the president’s recent flip flop on the infrastructure package, CNN wrote, “His efforts to clean up those comments amounted to one of the most significant course corrections of Biden’s highly disciplined presidency, which had until now mostly defied his reputation as a gaffe machine.” Are the cracks starting to appear?
Let’s Get Ready to Rumble – Full Episode – Conservative Five TV
Something political to ponder as you enjoy your morning coffee.
For much of President Trump’s time in office, members of Congress sought to strip away his power to launch airstrikes. Supported by the media, politicians argued that the president should only be able to act after consultation with Congress. Will these same voices utter the same words now that President Biden has launched his own strikes?
Good morning and welcome to Fox News First. Here’s what you need to know as you start your day
US military launches airstrikes against three facilities on Iraq-Syria border
The U.S. military has conducted defensive precision airstrikes against three facilities near the Iraq–Syria border region Sunday evening.
According to Pentagon Press Secretary John Kirby, the facilities are used by several Iran-backed militia groups engaged in unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) attacks against U.S. personnel and facilities in Iraq, including Kata’ib Hezbollah (KH) and Kata’ib Sayyid al-Shuhada (KSS).
“As demonstrated by this evening’s strikes, President Biden has been clear that he will act to protect U.S. personnel. Given the ongoing series of attacks by Iran-backed groups targeting U.S. interests in Iraq, the President directed further military action to disrupt and deter such attacks,” Kirby added. “The United States took necessary, appropriate, and deliberate action designed to limit the risk of escalation – but also to send a clear and unambiguous deterrent message.”
A U.S. defense official with knowledge of the strikes told Fox News that US Air Force F-15s and F-16s were used in the operation. The strikes took place at approximately 6 p.m. Eastern Time, or 1 a.m. local time.
At least one facility used by Iran’s militia forces to launch and recover drones was destroyed, the official added. Recent strikes by the crude drones have targeted Americans in Baghdad and Erbil in northern Iraq.CLICK HERE FOR MORE ON OUR TOP STORY.
In other developments:
– Senate Democrat wants explanation for US strikes near Iraq-Syria border
– US airstrike in Syria under Biden and 2017 Tomahawk strikes ordered by Trump: The difference
– US firepower in Syria strike is revealed as officials brace for Iran’s next move
– US launches airstrike against Iranian-backed forces in Syria
Deadly shooting in Massachusetts eyed as possible hate crime
Massachusetts authorities investigating Saturday’s deadly shooting in Winthrop said they have found evidence that the incident may have been a hate crime, a report said.
Fox 25 Boston reported that two people were fatally shot by Nathan Allen, a 28-year-old with no criminal history. Allen stole a truck, crashed it into a building and then gunned down two Black bystanders. He was eventually killed by a “heroic” responding sergeant.
Rachael Rollins, the Suffolk district attorney, said the investigation is in its early stages, but anti-Black and anti-Semitic writings were located and tied to Allen. She referred to the killings as “executions” and said witnesses pointed out that Allen passed other bystanders not of color, MassLive.com reported.
“This individual wrote about the superiority of the white race,” she said in a statement. “About whites being ‘apex predators.’ He drew swastikas.”
The report identified the two victims as David Green, 58, a retired state trooper, and Ramona Cooper, a 60-year-olf Air Force veteran. They were both Black.
Authorities praised the quick-thinking sergeant who engaged the suspect. Terence Delehanty, the top cop in the town, called the officer “heroic.” CLICK HERE FOR MORE.
In other developments:
– Boston-area man plows stolen truck into house, guns down 2 people before being shot dead by police
– New Hampshire felon out on supervised release on weapons charge shoots Boston father in front of kids: police
Developers of doomed Fla. tower were once accused of paying off officials: report
Surfside’s developers had contributed to the campaigns of at least two town-council members, then demanded that the donations be returned when the allegations surfaced, according to the outlet.
Meanwhile, the 12-story tower had been on the verge of undergoing $15 million in renovations to pass a required 40-year certification when it collapsed, killing at least nine people and leaving more than 150 unaccounted for Thursday, the report added.
All of the principals believed to have been involved in the design and construction of the building are already dead, the outlet said.
The developers behind the project had included Nathan Reiber, a Polish-born Canadian who was also once charged with tax evasion and cited for legal misconduct in Canada, the report said.CLICK HERE FOR MORE.
In other developments:
– Miami condo collapse: Death toll rises to 9, Surfside sister building to be probed by ‘army of engineers’
– Florida family gets 16 calls from grandparents who remain unaccounted for in condo collapse
– Building inspector was on roof of Florida condo hours before collapse
TODAY’S MUST-READS:
– AOC slams Kyrsten Sinema’s filibuster ‘defeatism’: ‘Our job is to help people’
– China’s cyber power ‘exaggerated,’ at least decade behind US, new study says
– Med students rescue passenger mid-flight during medical emergency
– NYC Times Square shooting leaves tourist hospitalized, suspects at large
THE LATEST FROM FOX BUSINESS:
– Why some vaccinated people may be back at the doctors soon
– During COVID-19, most Americans got richer – especially the rich
– Americans are leaving unemployment rolls more quickly in states cutting off benefits
– Walter Isaacson in preliminary talks with Elon Musk to write biography
#TheFlashback: CLICK HEREto find out what happened on “This Day in History.”
SOME PARTING WORDS
Mark Levin told viewers of Sunday’s “Life, Liberty and Levin” Marxism is here in the United States, the Democratic Party is home to these “ideological idea’s” and “this is no passing fad.”
“It’s not about learning about neo-Nazis and the Klan,” Levin said, continuing, “It’s about a Marxist movement – invented by Marxists – Herbert Marcuse, Derek Bell, and other Marxists – and it attracts the Marxists, like Black Lives Matter founders – 2 of 3 who have already said they are Marxists – and that’s not a coincidence.”
“This was hatched by professors to attack the society from a Marxist prospective,” he added.
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Fox News First was compiled by Fox News’ Jack Durschlag. Thank you for making us your first choice in the morning! We’ll see you in your inbox first thing Tuesday.
‘Mega comet’ 60 miles wide is about to fly through the solar system
A comet unlike any other in recorded history is on a trajectory to zip through the inner solar system in less than a decade, but astronomers say this one actually isn’t anything to lose sleep over.
U.S. News // 1 hour ago
Police identify 5 victims of deadly hot air balloon crash in New Mexico
U.S. News // 3 hours ago
Police investigating fatal shooting of 2 Black people in Mass. as hate crime
Top News // 4 hours ago
On This Day: IMF names Christine Lagarde its first female chief
World News // 6 hours ago
COVID-19 eases in Asia, including India: weekly deaths dip 6%, cases 3%
June 27 (UPI) — Coronavirus deaths and cases are trending down in Asia, where the outbreak began 1 1/2 years ago in Mainland China and spiked most recently in India, as the global toll nears 4 million people.
U.S. News // 8 hours ago
Biden directs Pentagon to hit sites in Iraq, Syria belonging to Iranian militias
June 27 (UPI) — The U.S. military carried out airstrikes late Sunday against several facilities belonging to two Iran-backed militias in Iraq and Syria at the direction of President Joe Biden, the Pentagon said.
U.S. News // 12 hours ago
Officials: Death toll rises to nine in Miami-Dade condo collapse
June 27 (UPI) — Nine people have been confirmed dead in the aftermath of the collapse of a condominium complex in Florida, Miami-Dade Mayor Danielle Levine Cava announced Sunday.
U.S. News // 13 hours ago
Celebrity Edge becomes first ship to depart from U.S. since pandemic
June 27 (UPI) — The Celebrity Edge set sail from Florida on Saturday with limited capacity and a majority of passengers fully vaccinated, becoming the first ship to depart from the United States with paying customers in 15 months.
World News // 15 hours ago
France far-right party projected to win no regions in second round of elections
June 27 (UPI) — Parties led by both former far-right presidential candidate Marine Le Pen and French President Emmanuel Macron were projected not to win any regions in the second round of elections Sunday.
U.S. News // 15 hours ago
Northeast set to sizzle under 2nd heat wave of 2021
June 27 (UPI) — The hum of air conditioners and fans will begin once more in the northeastern United States as the second official heat wave of 2021 gets underway and lasts through most of the week.
U.S. News // 17 hours ago
Former Alaska Sen. Mike Gravel dies at 91
June 27 (UPI) — Mike Gravel, the two-term Alaska senator most known for reading the Pentagon Papers into the Congressional Record, died Sunday. He was 91 years old.
U.S. News // 22 hours ago
Record highs shattered as unprecedented heat wave stifles the Northwest
To say it’s hot in the Northwest is an understatement. Temperatures have already soared to levels never been experienced in recorded history in this part of the United States.
U.S. News // 1 day ago
Texas Supreme Court: Store can’t be sued for selling gun in church shooting
June 25 (UPI) — In a unanimous ruling, the state’s highest civil court threw out multiple lawsuits against Academy Sports + Outdoors brought by survivors and families of victims of the 2017 mass shooting.
Top News // 1 day ago
On This Day: Atlantis blasts off for Mir rendezvous
On June 27, 1995, the space shuttle Atlantis was launched on a historic mission to dock with the Russian space station Mir. Docking occurred two days later.
World News // 1 day ago
Matt Hancock resigns as Britain’s health secretary after breaking protocols
June 26 (UPI) — British Health Minister Matt Hancock resigned Saturday after a video surfaced of him breaking social distancing protocols in May while the government was urging people to abide by them to stop the spread of COVID-19.
U.S. News // 1 day ago
Pregnant woman shot in Dallas road rage incident gives birth; suspect at large
June 26 (UPI) — A pregnant woman who was critically injured in a Dallas road rage incident has given birth while the hunt for her attacker continues, police said Saturday.
U.S. News // 1 day ago
Donald Trump bashes Gonzalez, other Republicans at Ohio rally
June 26 (UPI) — Former President Donald Trump returns to the campaign stump Saturday in suburban Cleveland where upwards to 20,000 are expected to attend a rally at the Lorain County Fairgrounds.
U.S. News // 1 day ago
3 killed, 3 critically injured in Chicago-area train-car crash
June 26 (UPI) — Three people were killed and three others were critically injured when a minivan they were in collided with a train at a crossing southeast of Chicago, police said Saturday.
U.S. News // 1 day ago
Johnson & Johnson agrees to $230M settlement in N.Y. opioid case
June 26 (UPI) — Healthcare giant Johnson & Johnson has agreed to a $230 million settlement with the state of New York in an opioid case, Attorney General Letitia James announced Saturday.
U.S. News // 1 day ago
New Mexico hot air balloon crash kills 4, leaves 1 hospitalized
June 26 (UPI) — A hot air balloon crashed in New Mexico after hitting a powerline Saturday, killing four people and leaving one hospitalized.
Too much emphasis on jobs can leave us blind to innovations that make life better for everyone but can’t easily be measured in an employment statistic.
“After 13 years of near silence in the conservatorship that controls her life and money, Britney Spears passionately told a judge Wednesday that she wants to end the ‘abusive’ case that has made her feel demoralized and enslaved. Speaking in open court for the first time in the case, Spears condemned her father and others who control the conservatorship, which she said has compelled her to use birth control and take other medications against her will, and prevented her from getting married or having another child.” AP News
Both sides are critical of the conservatorship process:
“Spears, who will be 40 this December, has been under her father’s conservatorship since 2008. Jamie Spears has controlled not only his daughter’s $60 million fortune but every aspect of her career and life — from terms of her Las Vegas residency to whether she could replace her kitchen cabinets… Conservatorships are typically granted only in extreme cases: A person is suffering from dementia or some other dire limitations. Spears, a mother of two, has successfully performed in Vegas for years without incident. How hapless can she be?…
“It will be fascinating to see how this plays out now, post-#MeToo. Here we have a ‘troublesome female’ — a child star sexualized as a young teenager, who shot to global superstardom, the media hounding her over whether she was still a virgin, a girl whose every relationship, parents included, was based on what she could do for them — claiming that her father has forcibly institutionalized her and forced her to perform against her will, once as she suffered from a 104-degree fever… Historically we’ve seen a lot of erratic, self-destructive behavior from male celebrities. Can you think of one who has been kept under conservatorship for years — or ever?” Maureen Callahan, New York Post
“Spears’ story is heartbreaking, especially for so many fans who saw her music and work as their own expressions of adolescent freedom. But beyond what has happened to her is a larger story of what may be happening to so many other people who are on the wrong end of the conservator or guardianship system—to disabled people facing down the pathologies of the world, to elderly people having their autonomy brutally taken away, to women whose feelings and experiences are dismissed as trivial, untrustworthy hysteria. She is a symbol for those people, and for anyone who ever expected the justice system to work for them but instead found that it was rigged against them.” Samantha Grasso, Discourse Blog
“Absent the determination of some kind of permanent cognitive incapacity—like an actual hole in your head—I’d argue that something as restrictive as a forced conservatorship should be self-terminating: It should automatically lapse after a year or two or something. Instead, the law goes the other way: Conservatorships can last indefinitely until a court deems them no longer necessary. The court is supposed to send an inspector every year to determine if the conservatorship is still needed, and apparently the person overseeing the Spears case has determined that for the past 13 years Spears could sing and dance for millions of people but couldn’t be trusted to get a haircut…
“Other than that nameless functionary doing the right thing, the only other way for Spears to get out of it is to petition the court to end the conservatorship. According to Spears herself, she didn’t know that was an option… Obviously, the person who is supposed to know is not Spears but her lawyer. But even here, Spears was not free to make her own choice. Spears’s lawyer, Samuel D. Ingham, was appointed by the court, over Spears’s objection, 13 years ago. It’s not clear to me what Ingham has done for his client these 13 years, other than collect a check, but it sure seems like the #FreeBritney people have done more.” Elie Mystal, The Nation
“One of the main difficulties in fighting conservatorship abuse is a lack of data. Conservatorships are overseen by local courts, and the majority of states—including California, where Spears lives—don’t keep track of how many conservatorships are ongoing… Sometimes, the exploitation can be subtle. ‘Commonly, conservators run up their fees in ways large and small, eating into seniors’ assets,’ the [Los Angeles] Times reported. ‘A conservator charged a Los Angeles woman $170 in fees to have an employee bring her $49.93 worth of groceries. Palm Springs widow Mary Edelman kept paying from beyond the grave: Her conservators charged her estate $1,700 for attending her burial.’…
“In order to solve this problem, experts suggest creating a comprehensive online information system to keep track of and oversee conservatorship cases. They also recommend taking more significant measures to guarantee the conservatee’s rights to due process. Conservatees and their families should know about and have access to the legal means to end conservatorships.” Ella Lubell, Reason
Both sides are particularly upset at claims that Spears is on birth control against her will:
“Step back and ask yourself: Should we be able, even temporarily, to sterilize a woman against her will on grounds of being mentally unwell? There are grave problems of both morality and individual liberty with that… I cannot see what argument there could be for a court in the United States of America to sanction a regime under which an adult woman who is well enough to ply her trade in society can be forced to carry a contraceptive implant she does not want. This is one area on which pro-lifers and conservative Christians should be in complete agreement with Planned Parenthood, which issued a statement supporting Spears…
“We should also be asking: If our legal system can do this to Britney Spears, how many other women is it happening to? The California supreme court, in the 1985 decision Conservatorship of Valerie N, concluded that there was a constitutional right to choose sterilization, and reasoned that a woman who was mentally disabled and incapable of making her own decisions should have a right to have her conservators decide that she be sterilized… the high-profile nature of [this] case should be an occasion for us to rethink the scope of what the law allows to be done to women’s capacity to bear children.” Dan McLaughlin, National Review
“In more than half of states, conservators are permitted to inflict not just long-term birth control, like Spears’ IUD, but permanent sterilizations on those deemed unfit to make the decisions for themselves. But who, exactly, gets deemed unfit? Sanity is a slippery thing and mental health a difficult status to assess: historically, many have been deemed insane for simply having unpopular opinions, or for behaving in ways that were offensive to common attitudes and contrary to convention. This is particularly true of women, who have a long history of being deemed insane for trivial reasons by those who are either committed to misogyny or interested in their money.” Moira Donegan, The Guardian
“Britney’s assertion that those in control of her life refuse to allow her to remove an IUD is particularly disturbing and calls to mind the dark days of the eugenics movement in the United States, which ran rampant throughout the 20th century. In California, where Britney resides, more than 20,000 people, judged to be ‘defective,’ were forcibly sterilized by the state between 1909 and 1963…
“Perhaps the infamous case of this era was Buck v. Bell. This case centered on a 17-year-old Virginia girl, Carrie Buck, who was raped and became pregnant. The state insisted that Carrie was sexually promiscuous, ‘feebleminded,’ and should be forcibly sterilized. The fact that she was young, poor, and uneducated made it hard for her to fight back. In court, Dr. Albert Priddy testified, ‘These people belong to the shiftless, ignorant, and worthless class of anti-social whites of the South.’… Later reports indicate Carrie was of normal intelligence and, after her marriage, regretted that she was unable to have more children…
“This remains one of the most shameful chapters in American history and in recent years some states, including North Carolina and Virginia, have moved to compensate victims of these barbaric programs. It should raise alarm bells to the public whenever the state (or a court-appointed authority) seeks to forcibly sterilize anyone (permanently or with a removable device like an IUD), whether they are a vulnerable popstar, an incarcerated person, or someone judged to be ‘defective.’” Nora Sullivan, Daily Signal
Happy Monday!Smart Brevity™ count: 1,463 words … 5½ minutes. Edited by Zachary Basu.
📈 Crypto event: Please join Axios’ Kia Kokalitcheva and Dan Primack tomorrow at 12:30 p.m. ET for a 30-minute virtual event on the future of cryptocurrency policy. Guests include Rep. Bill Foster (D-Ill.) and Grayscale Investments CEO Michael Sonnenshein.Sign up here.
1 big thing: Alzheimer’s drug may be catastrophe in the making
Illustration: Aïda Amer/Axios
The FDA’s approval of an Alzheimer’s treatment — the first in two decades — should have been a cause for celebration. Instead, it’s a scientific and financial mess, Axios’ Sam Baker and Bob Herman report.
Why it matters: Experts fear the FDA’s decision will undermine medical standards, explode the federal budget and fill millions of desperate people with false hope.
The backstory: FDA approval of Aduhelm, developed by Biogen, was controversial at the time, and criticism has only gotten louder.
The evidence that the drug works is extremely thin. The FDA’s own statisticians said it didn’t meet the agency’s usual standards.
An outside advisory panel — whose advice the agency usually follows — recommended against approving the drug. Three members quit in protest. One of them called this “probably the worst drug approval decision in recent U.S. history.”
The bottom line: Patients will likely take it for several years. If it doesn’t provide any clinical benefit, it will simply add billions more to the financial and emotional costs that Alzheimer’s already extracts.
President Trump and Gen. Mark Milley in 2019. Photo: Ron Sachs/CNP via Getty Images
Gen. Mark Milley, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, repeatedly blew up at President Trump over how to handle last summer’s racial-justice protests, The Wall Street Journal’s Michael Bender writes in his forthcoming book, “Frankly, We Did Win This Election.”
Trump wanted to invoke the Insurrection Act and put Milley in charge of a scorched-earth military campaign to suppress protests that had spiraled into riots in several cities.
Milley — now a GOP villain for his testimony last week on critical race theory — pushed back, Bender writes in a passage we’re reporting here for the first time:
Seated in the Situation Room with [Attorney General Bill] Barr, Milley, and [Secretary of Defense Mark] Esper, Trump exaggerated claims about the violence and alarmed officials … by announcing he’d just put Milley “in charge.”
Privately, Milley confronted Trump about his role. He was an adviser, and not in command. But Trump had had enough.
“I said you’re in f—ing charge!” Trump shouted at him.
“Well, I’m not in charge!” Milley yelled back.
“You can’t f—ing talk to me like that!” Trump said. …
“Goddamnit,” Milley said to others. “There’s a room full of lawyers here. Will someone inform him of my legal responsibilities?”
Asked for a response, Trump told Jonathan Swan through an aide: “This is totally fake news, it never ever happened. I’m not a fan of Gen. Milley, but I never had an argument with him and the whole thing is false. He never talked back to me. Michael Bender never asked me about it and it’s totally fake news.”
Trump later added: “If Gen. Milley had yelled at me, I would have fired him.”
Bender told Swan: “I asked the former president for his side of this particular argument in a written question — as he requested — along with other queries included in my thorough fact-checking process. He did not reply.”
3. Surfside tower needed $9 million in urgent repairs
Owners in the Surfside condo building were just days away from a deadline for steep payments toward more than $9 million in repairs that had been recommended three years earlier, AP reports.
Why it matters: Engineers and experts say documents make clear that several major repairs needed to be done as soon as possible. Other than some roof repairs, that work had not begun, officials said.
Owners were facing payments of anywhere from $80,000 for a one-bedroom unit to $330,000 or so for a penthouse, to be paid all at once or in installments. Their first deadline was July 1 — this Thursday.
One resident whose apartment was spared, Adalberto Aguero, had just taken out a loan to cover his $80,000 bill.
4. Pics du jour
Secretary of State Tony Blinkentours the Sistine Chapel today, ahead of a meeting with Pope Francis.
Father Bruno Silvestrini, custodian of the Apostolic sacred sites, closes the door of the Sistine Chapel.
5. 🌡️ “Heat dome” signals warming’s march
Austun Wilde rests with her two dogs, Bird Is the Wurd and Fenrir, at a cooling center in the Oregon Convention Center in Portland yesterday. Photo: Nathan Howard/Getty Images
The dangerous heat wave enveloping the Pacific Northwest is shattering weather records by such large margins that it is making even climate scientists uneasy, Axios’ Andrew Freedman writes.
Why it matters: Infrastructure, including heating and cooling, is built according to expectations of a “normal” climate. Human-caused climate change is quickly redefining that normal, while dramatically raising the likelihood of events that simply have no precedent.
Portland, Ore., reached 112°F yesterday, breaking the all-time record of 108°F set just the day before.
Canada set a national all-time heat record on Monday, smashing the old record by nearly 3°F.
How it works: The heat dome over the Northwest, which is a sprawling, intense area of high pressure aloft, causes air to sink, or compress. As it does so, the air temperatures increase. Winds blowing from land to sea around this high are pushing temperatures higher.
One year after Beijing imposed a sweeping national security law on Hong Kong, the city’s political freedoms have been dramatically curtailed, leaving residents to cope with their home’s authoritarian transformation, Axios China author Bethany Allen-Ebrahimian writes.
Why it matters: The Chinese Communist Party has effectively shut the pro-democracy movement out of politics and cracked down on its leaders. The effects have rippled through business and even art.
Journalists face increased risk of prosecution and police searches. Authorities have denied visas for foreign journalists.
The New York Times has moved part of its Asia hub from Hong Kong to Seoul.
Businesses haven’t fled Hong Kong, as some predicted. But financial institutions are struggling to comply with conflicting sanctions regimes.
Key Republicans are warming to an idea that was once anathema to the party — new taxes on big American companies to pay for internet subsidy programs, Axios’ Margaret Harding McGill writes.
Why it matters: Republican interest in taxing Big Tech could help shore up a struggling subsidy fund that supports broadband in rural areas, schools, libraries and hospitals.
An idea from GOP FCC commissioner Brendan Carr to force tech companies to pay into a pool of money used to fund broadband programs is gaining steam with some key lawmakers.
House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy called the proposal “thought-provoking.” His office notes that video streaming accounts for more than 50% of web traffic, and online advertising is a $100-billion-a-year industry.
The Internet Association, a trade group that includes Big Tech companies, called the idea an attempt to punish its members.
Rep. Ro Khanna (D-Calif.), who represents Silicon Valley, will be out Feb. 1 with “Dignity in a Digital Age: Making Tech Work for All of Us.”
The publisher, Simon & Schuster, says the book “imagines how the digital economy can create opportunities for people all across the country,” and “offers a vision for democratizing digital innovation in order to build economically vibrant and inclusive communities.”
💭 Steve Case says Khanna “makes a compelling case for place-based policymaking, and how a more well-dispersed innovation economy can help rising cities thrive.”
9. 🚌 Startup tries smarter busing
Photo: Zum
Zum, a Bay Area startup that launched six years ago as an Uber-like ride service for families with children, is now working directly with school districts to modernize student transportation, Axios’ Joann Muller writes.
Zum uses a mix of cars, vans and school buses, with tracking software to let schools and parents monitor every student’s trip.
The big picture: Student transportation is the largest mass transit system in the United States — a $28 billion industry. For most districts, it’s the second-largest budget item after teacher salaries.
But it’s inefficient, with long travel times and frequent delays.
10. 🎞️ 1 film thing: “F9” set pandemic record
“F9: The Fast Saga,” the ninth installment in the “Fast and Furious” franchise, had the top weekend box-office haul in North America since before the pandemic, Axios Media Trends expert Sara Fischer reports.
Why it matters: The weekend blowout is a huge sign of optimism for the struggling movie theater industry, which has been ravaged by pandemic-driven theater closures and the rise of streaming.
“F9” blew past estimates and brought in $70 million this weekend — beating the previous pandemic champ, Paramount’s “A Quiet Place Part II,” which brought in $50 million on Memorial Day weekend.
That makes “F9” the biggest box-office opening winner domestically since “Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker” debuted in theaters in December 2019.
What’s next: Disney’s Marvel action film “Black Widow” debuts July 8, and Warner Bros.’ “Space Jam: A New Legacy” on July 16.
Tony Kinnett was working toward his master’s degree in education at Ball State University when a fellow graduate student told him he should feel guilty for being white during class. [READ MORE]
The acrimony and disorder of contemporary American politics, according to a host of conservative commentators, stem in significant measure from progressive elites’ incendiary words and antagonistic conduct. Progressive elites, the conservatives say, shower contempt on the United States as it is and on the ordinary middle-class and working-class Americans who are devoted to their local communities, love their country, embraced the Tea Party movement a decade ago, and voted for Donald Trump in 2016 and 2020. Many Americans who live outside of major cities and beyond the wealthy, bright-blue suburban enclaves that surround them—and a few who live there—resent the routine allegations of bigotry and backwardness to which they are subject by Democratic Party politicians and the mainstream media outlets. In the face of such longstanding provocations, say conservatives, their indignation and anger are understandable. [READ MORE]
China will use its space station to advance its military technology and strengthen its influence in foreign countries, experts and lawmakers warn the Washington Free Beacon.
Donald Trump is no longer president, but that doesn’t mean the libs have stopped complaining. They’d prefer to be able to govern like the Communist Party does in China, so they’re annoyed that some Democrats aren’t on board with their campaign to abolish the filibuster and other constraints on power.
The Parent Teacher Association of Virginia sent a letter of intent to abolish the parent group of the nation’s top high school after a slate of candidates opposed to critical race theory won an election earlier this month.
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17.) THE WASHINGTON EXAMINER
18.) ASSOCIATED PRESS
TOP STORIES
Rescuers stay hopeful about finding more survivors in rubble
By TERRY SPENCER and RUSS BYNUMtoday
SURFSIDE, Fla. (AP) — Rescue workers digging feverishly for a fifth day Monday stressed that they could still find survivors in the rubble of a collapsed Florida condo building, a hope family members clung to even though no one has been pulled out alive since the first day the structure fell.
US airstrikes target Iran-backed militias in Syria, Iraq
By LOU KESTEN
an hour ago
UN rights chief: Reparations needed for people facing racism
By JAMEY KEATEN
14 minutes ago
Australia battles several clusters in new pandemic phase
By ROD McGUIRK
today
AP PHOTOS: Hong Kong family leaves a changing city for UK
today
Offices after COVID: Wider hallways, fewer desks
By DEE-ANN DURBIN
today
Uprooted again: Venezuela migrants cross US border in droves
By JOSHUA GOODMAN
today
Senators to watch as Dems debate changing filibuster rules
By MARY CLARE JALONICK
today
EXPLAINER: Why are Palestinians protesting against Abbas?
By JOSEPH KRAUSS
today
Unprecedented: Northwest heat wave builds, records fall
Welcome to The Hill’s Morning Report. It is Monday! We get you up to speed on the most important developments in politics and policy, plus trends to watch. Alexis Simendinger and Al Weaver are the co-creators. Readers can find us on Twitter @asimendinger and @alweaver22. Please recommend the Morning Report to friends and let us know what you think. CLICK HERE to subscribe!
Total U.S. coronavirus deaths: 603,967.
As of this morning, 54 percent of the U.S. population has received at least one dose of a COVID-19 vaccine and 46.1 percent is fully vaccinated, according to the Bloomberg News global vaccine tracker.
President Biden needed some major PR rescuing after Thursday, when he tried to hail a bipartisan infrastructure deal while simultaneously threatening to veto it if Democrats’ priorities, largely plucked out of the $1.2 trillion accord because of GOP objections, don’t come to his desk “in tandem” months from now, when a separate, Democratic measure is ready.
By Sunday morning, the blast furnace from Republicans following Biden’s remarks had cooled. The president will travel to La Crosse, Wis., on Tuesday to begin touting the merits of the bipartisan framework in select locations that could benefit from infrastructure investments.
Biden’s comments on Thursday potentially prolonged a legislative slugfest that is likely to drag into the fall and the midterm contests, rattled trust on both sides of the aisle, and countered Biden’s own narrative that he’s a master deal-maker and salesman. The implied message to constituents: Don’t expect enactment in Washington anytime soon.
Late on Sunday, Washington’s focus on infrastructure was briefly interrupted by news that Biden ordered “defensive” airstrikes to hit weapons storage facilities used by Iran-backed militia in response to drone attacks against U.S. personnel and facilities in Iraq (ABC News). The president returned to the White House from Camp David on Sunday evening but did not respond to reporters’ questions about the action, which was announced by the Pentagon. The airstrikes took place Monday in Iraq and Syria, and the Iran-backed Iraqi factions vowed revenge (The Associated Press). Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin and Gen. Mark Milley, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, briefed Biden on attack options early last week, and the president approved striking three targets (The New York Times).
Over the weekend, the president appeared to be focused on rescuing his domestic agenda, issuing an unusually detailed written statement. “My comments … created the impression that I was issuing a veto threat on the very plan I had just agreed to, which was certainly not my intent,” he said (The Hill). The mop-up effort involved phone calls by Biden to lawmakers.
Republican senators who favor enactment of a compromise measure said Sunday they trust Biden’s word. The outline put together by 11 Republicans, nine Democrats and one Independent appeared to be back on track (The Washington Post).
But what about Democrats? Senate Budget Committee Chairman Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.), who backs spending $6 trillion for Democratic priorities, lost no time before saying last week that a bipartisan infrastructure bill goes nowhere without “firm, absolute agreement” on the reconciliation bill he and other colleagues have in mind, which includes tax hikes (The Hill). Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-N.Y.) urged Biden on Sunday not to be “limited by Republicans” (NBC News).
Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) remained silent over the weekend, but she faces questions this week. On Thursday, she vowed there would be no vote on infrastructure without Senate action on a reconciliation bill (The Hill). “Let me be really clear on this,” she said in the Capitol. “We will not take up a bill in the House until the Senate passes the bipartisan bill and a reconciliation bill. If there is no bipartisan bill, then we’ll just go when the Senate passes a reconciliation bill.”
As the week begins with the Senate out of Washington until after the Fourth of July, Democrats are so divided about their aims and strategies that the toughest negotiations ahead for Biden will be among members of his own party, reports The Hill’s Jordain Carney.
Senate Majority Leader Charles Schumer (D-N.Y.) bluntly laid out the risk: If Democrats can’t navigate the policy and political minefields and a two-track legislative strategy, they could end up with nothing.
“If we don’t have an agreement on both, we’re not going to have the votes for either. Plain and simple,” Schumer said.
More in Congress:Former Alaska Sen. Mike Gravel (D), died at age 91 on Saturday. He served in the Senate from 1969 to 1981 (The Associated Press). … Sen. Joe Manchin (D-W.Va.) continued on Sunday to defend his centrist perspectives (The Hill). … Democratic congressional aides and political analysts argue that Sen. Kyrsten Sinema (D-Ariz.) should recognize and be reassured that transformative legislation resulted in recent years from reconciliation measures that bypassed the 60-vote filibuster (The Hill).
POLITICS: If there was any doubt that former President Trump is a turbulent weather front that never clears, there were more clouds over the weekend with the start of a rally schedule, an anticipated criminal indictment this week and new details about the Trump presidency disclosed in yet more books.
Manhattan prosecutors gave the Trump Organization until this afternoon to state why criminal charges should not be brought regarding the company’s handling of employee perks and finances (The Washington Post).
Trump’s “Save America” travel schedule brought him to Ohio on Saturday (pictured below) and will put him in Sarasota, Fla., along with a fireworks display, on July 3. (Sarasota Magazine). The former president is eager to fortify his position as leader of the Republican Party while returning to his popular rally format, and he is intent on defeating Republican candidates he sees as his foes (The Hill). Sen. Rob Portman (R-Ohio), who is retiring next year, on Sunday joined a chorus of his colleagues to publicly declare Trump the party’s leader (The Hill).
And, in pending books and newly released interviews, we learn why former Attorney General William Barr publicly torpedoed Trump’s claims of widespread election fraud last year after widely being seen as Trump’s loyal defender. Barr says he was repeatedly urged by then-Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) to speak out ahead of the Georgia Senate special elections in January (which Democrats subsequently won), and Barr now says he had privately expected Trump to lose the election. “My attitude was: It was put-up or shut-up time,” Barr told ABC News journalist Jonathan Karl, author of the book “Betrayal.” “If there was evidence of fraud, I had no motive to suppress it. But my suspicion all the way along was that there was nothing there. It was all bullshit” (The Atlantic). (On Sunday, Trump released an eight-paragraph statement denouncing Barr without denying his account.)
Out this week from Harper Collins and Washington Post journalists Yasmeen Abutaleb and Damian Paletta is the book “Nightmare Scenario: Inside the Trump Administration’s Response to the Pandemic That Changed History.” In it, the former president in February 2020 mused about sending some Americans infected with COVID-19 to Guantanamo Bay for quarantine (The Hill).
Trump’s role in the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol is a centerpiece of Democrats’ determination to get an investigation of the events moving this year. As The Hill’s Mike Lillis and Scott Wong report, the House select committee probe announced by Pelosi last week will likely spill into 2022 — when midterm elections put the House majority up for grabs.
More in politics: Cybersecurity threats have forced political campaign organizations to ramp up their protections against ransomware and cyber breaches (The Hill). … Former Democratic presidential nominee Michael Dukakis, 87, has some advice for his party about the political potency of crime as a campaign issue, in an interview with The Hill’s Niall Stanage.… Deceptive campaign fundraising techniques often ensnare older people (The New York Times). … Republicans are watching their states back marijuana, and they’re not sold (Politico).
IN FOCUS/SHARP TAKES
ADMINISTRATION: The White House says it will evacuate from Afghanistan to third countries former interpreters, drivers and others along with their families, a way to remove them from danger, including risks from some Taliban fighters (pictured below). Those given an exit ramp from Afghanistan must complete what can be a years-long process of reviewing applications for so-called special immigrant visas (SIVs). Lawmakers and advocates reacted by saying the administration left many questions unanswered as it prepares to pull out as many as 70,000 people under an escalating withdrawal timeline (The Hill).
> U.S.-Israel: Secretary of State Antony Blinken and Israeli Foreign Minister Yair Lapid met Sunday in Rome for a diplomatic session aimed at resetting relations in the post-Netanyahu and post-Trump era (The Associated Press). “In the past few years, mistakes were made,” Lapid told Blinken. “Israel’s bipartisan standing was hurt. We will fix those mistakes together.”
> LGBT advocates say there is more work to be done by both the president and Congress to help the community, especially when it comes to transgender individuals (The Hill).
> Vaccine passports: The Biden administration has remained hands off about decisions by private employers to impose vaccine mandates or require proof of COVID-19 vaccinations from employees or even customers. Some public health authorities want the administration to support mandates and vaccine passports and get involved in a debate that blends science, commerce, worker and employer rights, psychology and politics (The Hill).
> Food and Drug Administration: Can the Food and Drug Administration move faster to fully approve the COVID-19 vaccines? Does it want to? Some public health experts believe hesitancy to get COVID-19 inoculations amid the delta variant could beneficially ease if Americans were able to get jabs that were no longer experimental (The Hill).
OPINION
Progressives can only win one kind of election, by Matthew Yglesias, Bloomberg Opinion. https://bloom.bg/3jiI8Rf
What I saw in my first 10 years on testosterone, by Thomas Page McBee, opinion contributor, The New York Times. https://nyti.ms/2UHItTo
WHERE AND WHEN
The House meets at noon.
TheSenate convenes for a pro forma session at 9 a.m.; senators are out of Washington through July 9.
The president receives the President’s Daily Brief at 9:50 a.m. Biden welcomes Israeli President Reuven Rivlin to the Oval Office at 4 p.m.
Vice President Harris postponed a planned trip today to Detroit. She will depart Los Angeles at 1:30 p.m. local time to return to Washington.
Blinken has a full schedule in Rome today. He tours the Sistine Chapel at the Vatican. He will have an audience with Pope Francis and hold a joint press conference with Italian Foreign Minister Luigi DiMaio. Blinken will participate in bilateral discussions about Syria and later meet with Italian Prime Minister Mario Draghi. Later this week, Blinken will join international counterparts at the Group of 20 foreign affairs ministers meeting in Matera, Italy.
The White House press briefing is scheduled at 12:30 p.m.
👉 INVITATION TUESDAY to The Hill’s Virtually Live event, “The Future of Missile Defense,” which begins at 12:30 p.m. Speakers include Rep. Jim Cooper (D-Tenn.), House Strategic Forces Subcommittee chairman, and Rep. Michael Turner (R-Ohio), the subcommittee ranking member; John Hill, director of the U.S. Defense Department Missile Defense Agency; and Gen. (ret.) Lori Anderson, former commander of U.S. Northern Command and North American Aerospace Defense Command. Information is HERE.
➔ MIAMI TRAGEDY: Search efforts are continuing at the site of the partial collapse of a 12-story, oceanfront condo tower built in 1981. At least nine people are confirmed dead and more than 150 are reported missing. A fire beneath the rubble has been contained, and rescue workers created an enormous trench in the rubble to assist the search efforts. The condo building was in need of at least $9 million in repairs, according to 2018 engineering firm emails released by Surfside, Fla. (The Associated Press), and there is growing evidence that the partial collapse began with structural failure at the bottom of the building, likely at the pool deck level (Miami Herald). It is unclear if any of the damage observed by residents and reported by engineering firms in recent years was responsible for the destruction of Champlain Towers South. The building’s rapid pancaking early Thursday and documented need for repairs have also raised questions about whether other similar buildings in Miami are in danger. Searchers over the weekend began informing relatives about finding body parts in the rubble, explaining the process of DNA identification and the work conducted by the medical examiner (CNN). Surfside Mayor Charles Burkett on Sunday told ABC News, “We don’t have a resource problem. We’ve had a luck problem. We just need to start to get a little more lucky right now.”
In a written statement Sunday night after being briefed by phone from Miami by Federal Emergency Management Agency Director Deanne Criswell, Biden said, “This is an unimaginably difficult time for the families enduring this tragedy. For those who are waiting in anguish for word of their loved ones as search and rescue efforts continue …, the pain of the uncertainty is an added, heartbreaking burden. My heart goes out to every single person suffering during this awful moment.”
➔ SUPREME COURT: Justice Stephen Breyer has given no sign that he plans to retire as the court wraps up its term (expected this week), but his silence has not stopped some court observers from searching for clues in the flurry of end-of-term decisions. The 82-year-old faces intense pressure to allow Biden to select a younger replacement while Democrats still have control of the Senate (The Hill). … One court watcher, Harvard law professor Randall Kennedy, predicts Breyer will submit his resignation to Biden and that a former clerk for Breyer will win confirmation to his seat (The American Prospect).
➔ STATE & CITY WATCH: At least three big-city mayors are quitting before their terms are up, and others have said they have seriously contemplated getting out early. Governing during a pandemic has been tough, reports The Hill’s Reid Wilson. … Baltimore experienced two earthquakes over three days (The Hill). … Record high temperatures are wilting Oregon and Washington state (Los Angeles Times and The New York Times). Biden will hold a White House meeting among Cabinet secretaries, governors and stakeholders to discuss the wildfire and other risks. … The next phase of the 17-year cicada invasion is about to begin: hatching of nymphs from trillions of eggs laid in trees happens over the next few weeks (WLWT).
THE CLOSER
And finally … A rejuvenation clock sounds like science fiction or a thriller movie about immortality. But in a new study, scientists describe evidence that may explain how eggs and sperm meet and form an embryo that resets aging. The biological clock embedded in mice and human cells appears to reset at zero soon after fertilization (Science News).
The study is a first step and “poses more questions than answers, which is great,” says Vittorio Sebastiano, a developmental biologist at Stanford University School of Medicine who was not involved in the study.
Some questions: What mechanism pushes cells to reset their age? Are there specific genes that drive the process? Do all living things rejuvenate in this way?
✅ Separately, our apologies for missing reader John Dziennik Jr., who aced Thursday’s Morning Report Quiz but whose response was missed in Friday’s list of winners. A big round of applause!
The Morning Report is created by journalists Alexis Simendinger and Al Weaver. We want to hear from you! Email: asimendinger@thehill.com and aweaver@thehill.com. We invite you to share The Hill’s reporting and newsletters, and encourage others to SUBSCRIBE!
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ANALYSIS — Democrats always intended the bill to overhaul elections, campaign finance and ethics law that stalled last week in the Senate as a statement of principle with which to draw a contrast with Republicans. But the measure’s demise is, thus far, demonstrating more fissures in their own party. Read more…
A U.S. intelligence assessment released to Congress on Friday confirmed that military pilots over the years had observed, and in some cases recorded, more than 100 instances of high-speed craft whose origin could not be traced or identified. Read more…
In her first trip to the U.S.-Mexico border as vice president, Kamala Harris on Friday attempted to broadcast a shift to a more humane immigration policy after the hard-line approach of former President Donald Trump. The location — El Paso, Texas — was chosen because of its role in some of the most stringent Trump-era policies. Read more…
Click here to subscribe to Fintech Beat for the latest market and regulatory developmentsin finance and financial technology.
Three House Republicans each must pay $500 fines imposed by the sergeant-at-arms for being warned and then failing to wear a mask on the House floor. Reps. Brian Mast of Florida, Mariannette Miller-Meeks of Iowa and Beth Van Duyne of Texas were all fined, according to a House Ethics Committee announcement released Friday. Read more…
Kyrsten Sinema celebrated the resurgence of bipartisanship, Thom Tillis let the dog out, Jen Psaki got a fly in her hair and Cathy McMorris Rodgers found a good reason to dip out of a live interview last week. All that and more in the latest Congressional Hits and Misses. Watch here…
As the Fourth of July holiday nears, Congress was in full swing this past week. It began with Juneteenth celebrations before moving on to a vote on Democrats’ elections overhaul and a visit from a music legend, among other Hill happenings, and CQ Roll Call’s photojournalists were there to cover it all. Read more…
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25.) POLITICO PLAYBOOK
POLITICO Playbook: Manchin vs. Sanders: Let the staring contest begin
Presented by Facebook
DRIVING THE DAY
BIDEN BACKS DOWN: The GOP rebellion over President JOE BIDEN’S Thursday veto threat of the bipartisaninfrastructure bill seems to have been quelled. ICYMI, on Saturday the White House released a long and windy statement to mollify Republicans who supported the deal. Biden said he supported the deal “without reservation.” On Sunday three of the five Republicans who negotiated it — MITT ROMNEY (Utah), BILL CASSIDY (La.) and ROB PORTMAN (Ohio) — made it clear that the president’s walkback was good enough for them. So does that mean it will pass? Too early to tell.
As the vague framework is turned into detailed legislative language, here are the next big land mines to watch in terms of GOP support:
— CBO score. If the Congressional Budget Office says the deal isn’t actually paid for, there are three options: deficit-finance the gap, go back to the drawing board and find additional pay-fors, or reduce the price tag of the package. All three options will create uncertainty about the bill’s passage.
— IRS enforcement. If conservatives want to launch a crusade against the bill, they have an easy target. It calls for spending $40 billion on increased enforcement, the type of proposal Republicans have long opposed.
— Reconciliation. Despite Biden’s statement, the enormous reconciliation bill that Democrats are drafting will hang over the process all summer and remain a handy excuse for any Republican who doesn’t want to back the bipartisan bill. Sen. JERRY MORAN (R-Kan.), an initial backer of the bipartisan bill, has already indicated that he wants a commitment from Sens. JOE MANCHIN (D-W.Va.) and KYRSTEN SINEMA (D-Ariz.) not to support the reconciliation bill. That is as much a moving of the goal posts as Biden’s veto threat.
SANDERS VS. MANCHIN: On Sunday Manchin laid down his first marker on what he would accept in terms of the size of the reconciliation bill.
“I’m willing to meet everybody halfway,” he told Jonathan Karl on ABC’s “This Week.”“If Republicans don’t want to make adjustments to a tax code which I think is weighted and unfair, then I’m willing to go reconciliation. That’s how you’re able to do it.
“But if they think in reconciliation I’m going to throw caution to the wind and go to $5 trillion or $6 trillion when we can only afford $1 trillion or $1.5 trillion or maybe $2 trillion and what we can pay for, then I can’t be there.”
A little later, Sen. BERNIE SANDERS (I-Vt.) tweeted, “Let me be clear: There will not be a bipartisan infrastructure deal without a reconciliation bill that substantially improves the lives of working families and combats the existential threat of climate change. No reconciliation bill, no deal. We need transformative change NOW.”
The good news for Democrats is that Manchin is now clearly committed to a reconciliation bill. The bad news is that his initial offer is well below what both Sanders and the White House have proposed.
Here are the rough reconciliation bill toplines for all three key players. (The numbers assume passage of the bipartisan infrastructure bill — otherwise they could all be a trillion dollars higher.)
— Sanders: $5 trillion
— Biden: $3 trillion
— Manchin: $2 trillion
The task for Biden (and Senate Majority Leader CHUCK SCHUMER) is to find the magic numberthat holds Sanders and Manchin together. Lots of bumps in the road (sorry!) coming, but it sure seems like a $1 trillion bipartisan bill and a $3 trillion Dems-only reconciliation bill is where things are headed.
As usual Manchin has the upper hand in these talks. It’s a lot more credible to withhold support for a package that a senator considers too costly than it is to withhold a vote from a package that a senator considers too small. Would Sanders actually refuse to support a $2-3 trillion reconciliation bill? We doubt it.
WILL BEZOS COME OUT AND PLAY? — Washington is socializing again, but what about JEFF BEZOS? After all, why buy a $23 million home in Kalorama ($40 million after renovations, according to Washingtonian) if you’re not going to throw parties … regularly? The last time the Amazon chief/WaPo owner had one was a few months before Covid-19 hit, an after-party to the 2020 Alfalfa Club dinner that drew the likes of IVANKA TRUMP, Romney, BEN STILLER and BILL GATES. But lately, his neighbors report that the iron-rod gate in front of his courtyard has been papered over to conceal arrivals — not too inviting. This may mean that there’s been some sort of activity at the seemingly desolate home. Either way, Washington may have to wait for Bezos to return from outer space for a true blowout bash. He takes off July 20, and alcohol doesn’t exactly help with training for liftoff.
BIDEN’S BETTER HALF TO THE OLYMPICS?— The Biden administration is drafting plans to send first lady JILL BIDEN to lead a presidential delegation to the Tokyo Olympics next month in place of the president. MICHAEL LAROSA, Jill Biden’s press secretary, said the administration is “assessing” what a FLOTUS-led delegation could look like but stressed that nothing has been finalized.
— 9:50 a.m.: The president will receive the President’s Daily Brief.
— 4 p.m.: The president will welcome Israeli President REUVEN RIVLIN to the White House.
Press secretary JEN PSAKI will brief at 12:30 p.m.
KAMALA HARRIS’ MONDAY: The VP will leave Los Angeles for D.C. at 4:30 p.m. Eastern time.
THE HOUSE will meet at noon, with votes postponed until 6:30 p.m.
THE SENATE will meet at 9 a.m. in a pro forma session.
PLAYBOOK READS
AMERICA AND THE WORLD
ABOUT LAST NIGHT — “U.S. Carries Out Airstrikes in Iraq and Syria,” NYT: “The United States carried out three airstrikes early Monday morning in Iraq and Syria against weapons storage facilities used by Iranian-backed militias that in recent weeks have conducted armed drone strikes against locations where the American military is, the Pentagon said on Sunday. … [Pentagon spokesperson JOHN] KIRBY said the facilities struck were used by Iranian-backed militias, including Kata’ib Hezbollah and Kata’ib Sayyid al-Shuhada, to carry out drone strikes against places where Americans were located.”
BUT DEMOCRATS AREN’T HAPPY … The airstrike isn’t great political timing for Biden: It comes just days after the House repealed the outdated AUMF approved for the Iraq War (the Senate is set to follow suit later this year). That move is meant to ensure Congress recoups its authority over matters of war, an effort that’s been years in the making.
In that regard, Biden’s airstrike could be seen as thumbing his nose at Congress — again. As congressional reporter Andrew Desiderio notes, the president has been citing his Article II self-defense authority as the legal rationale for this and a previous strike against similar entities, studiously avoiding the decades-old AUMFs.
“I’m just as worried about the expansion of Article II authority interpretation as I am about the expansion of existing AUMF interpretation,” Sen. CHRIS MURPHY (D-Conn.) told Andrew on Sunday night.
Democrats inherently trust this president on matters of national security, Andrew notes. But the yearslong fighting between American troops and Iranian proxies in the region is starting to look more like a “low-scale war,” Murphy told him. The senator said it would be in Biden’s interest to ask Congress for a new authorization if he believes the U.S. will need to keep hitting these Iran-backed groups.
In the meantime, Democrats are already demanding classified briefings on the airstrikes, which weren’t easy to come by the last time around. Sen. TIM KAINE (D-Va.), who has long pushed to rein in presidential war powers, told us that he’s demanding a briefing “without delay.” Kaine, it’s worth remembering, is the lead Democratic sponsor of the Senate’s effort to repeal the 1991 and 2002 AUMFs, which will get a vote in the Foreign Relations Committee next month.
Even Speaker NANCY PELOSI’s statement applauding Biden’s move as “targeted and proportional” seems to include a warning that he better start talking to Congress stat: “Congress looks forward to receiving and reviewing the formal notification of this operation under the War Powers Act and to receiving additional briefings from the Administration,” she said.
CONGRESS
THE WEEK AHEAD — It’s not often that this happens, but the Senate is out this week while the House is working. The main events in the lower chamber include:
— A vote on House Democrats’ five-year, $715 billion surface transportation bill, which has flown under the radar lately with all the focus on the bipartisan Senate infrastructure talks. More than 230 amendments have been filed to the legislation with the Rules Committee, which will work on the package before it heads to the floor later this week.
This should give us an early indication of how much bipartisan support an infrastructure proposal — highways, rails, roads, bridges — can actually muster in this polarized Washington.
— A vote authorizing a select committee to probe Jan. 6. (And none too soon, as we’re a bit sick of everyone speculating about it!)
THE WHITE HOUSE
TEFLON BIDEN — “‘Spray and Pray’: Republicans ramp up attacks on Biden on… everything,” by Christopher Cadelago and Eugene Daniels: “Over the last three months, Republicans and affiliated groups and committees have spent nearly $2.5 million trying to paint Biden and his priorities in a negative light. That’s more than three times what they’ve spent on Facebook ads targeting other leading Democrats — from Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.), House Speaker NANCY PELOSI (D-Calif.), Rep. ALEXANDRIA OCASIO-CORTEZ (D-N.Y.) and former President BARACK OBAMA — and issues like socialism, fake news, and ‘defund the police’ combined. …
“POLITICO opted to review the last three months of data, after Facebook lifted the ban on political ads on its U.S. platform. But there has not been a consistent theme to the anti-Biden spots. The attack lines getting pushed most on the right go after Biden’s massive infrastructure push, his call for raising taxes, dark money groups that support his agenda, his position on guns and the rise of gun violence in U.S. cities, according to Bully Pulpit’s analysis.”
POLICY CORNER
CHOOSE YOUR NEWS — The NYT and WSJ both published stories Sunday focused on Missouri that explored whether cutting federal unemployment benefits is helping employers fill vacancies. And … they reached opposite conclusions.
— NYT’s Patricia Cohen in Maryland Heights, Mo.: “Where Jobless Benefits Were Cut, Jobs Are Still Hard to Fill”: “[I]n the St. Louis metropolitan area … [w]ork-force development officials said they had seen virtually no uptick in applicants since the governor’s announcement, which ended a $300 weekly supplement to other benefits. And the online job site Indeed found that in states that have abandoned the federal benefits, clicks on job postings were below the national average. …
“Of course, it’s early. But conversations with employers who are hunting for workers and people who are hunting for jobs in the St. Louis area revealed stark differences in expectations and assumptions about what a day’s work is worth. … [T]he squeeze has given many job seekers the confidence that they can push for higher wages or wait until employers come around.”
— WSJ’s Eric Morath and Joe Barrett: “Americans Are Leaving Unemployment Rolls More Quickly in States Cutting Off Benefits”: “The number of workers paid benefits through regular state programs fell 13.8% by the week ended June 12 from mid-May—when many governors announced changes—in states saying that benefits would end in June, according to an analysis by Jefferies LLC economists.
“That compares with a 10% decline in states ending benefits in July, and a 5.7% decrease in states ending benefits in September. … Some businesses in Missouri are already noticing a difference since the policy shift.”
POLITICS ROUNDUP
EYES ON 2024 — “The 2024 Iowa caucus campaign has already begun,”by Alex Isenstadt: “Only months after Trump’s election defeat, Republicans are laying the groundwork for the all-important, first-in-the-nation presidential caucuses. Potential candidates are hopscotching across the state to fundraise, campaign for midterm hopefuls and appear at traditional party dinners that mark the start of caucus season.
“And behind the scenes, Republicans are making overtures to influential activists, meeting with party leaders and hiring operatives with deep experience in Iowa, which is still expected to be the first 2024 contest for Republicans — even though Democrats are grappling with whether to change their nominating calendar. The burst of early activity — which is set to accelerate over the summer months — illustrates how Republicans are maneuvering with an eye toward succeeding Trump.”
MEANWHILE …
IT’S DESANTIS V. TRUMP — “DeSantis’ big goal: Don’t enrage Trump,”by Matt Dixon in Tallahassee: “Trump remains the leader of the Republican Party, commanding loyalty from members and remaining active in congressional and statewide races as he weighs a 2024 comeback. But at 42, [Florida Gov. RON] DESANTIS represents a young, fresh face who presses similar conservative policies but with arguably more discipline than the former president.
“DeSantis has even started getting help from well-known Trumpworld figures, including former White House chief of staff MARK MEADOWS, who joined the governor on a west coast fundraising swing that included stops in Las Vegas and Southern California. But the biggest question remains whether DeSantis will outshine the former president, and if that will in turn provoke Trump.”
TRUMP CARDS
THE TRUMP ORG SQUEEZE — “Trump Organization attorneys given Monday deadline to persuade prosecutors not to file charges against it,” by WaPo’s Shayna Jacobs, Josh Dawsey and David Fahrenthold: “That deadline is a strong signal that Manhattan District Attorney CYRUS R. VANCE JR. (D) and New York Attorney General LETITIA JAMES (D) — now working together, after each has spent more than two years investigating Trump’s business — are considering criminal charges against the company as an entity. Earlier this year, Vance convened a grand jury in Manhattan to consider indictments in the investigation. No entity or individual has been charged in the investigations thus far, and it remains possible that no charges will be filed.”
MAYOR TOASTS RETURN OF PARTY SCENE: Nightlife met culture Saturday night on the rooftop of the Kennedy Center, where D.C. Mayor Muriel Bowser attended the launch of the HEIST nightclub pop-up series. The temporary nightclub on the roof of the famed arts center was conceived by Vinoda Basnayake, a lobbyist behind many of the other nightlife venues in town like Castas Rum Bar and Morris American Bar. Also spotted: Adrian Fenty, former NFL player Dhani Jones and Jason Wright. The party will take place every Saturday night for the next eight weeks.
BRUNCH DIPLOMACY: A brunch at the home of socialite and philanthropist Adrienne Arsht on Sunday felt like a U.N. conclave, except in a garden with a soft serve ice cream machine. There were British Ambassador Karen Pierce, Iraqi Ambassador Fareed Yasseen, Spanish Ambassador Santiago Cabanas, Swiss Ambassador Jacques Pitteloud, German Ambassador Emily Haber, Norwegian Ambassador Anniken Krutnes, Jordanian Ambassador Dina Kawar, Colombian Ambassador Francisco Santos and chief Venezuelan envoy Carlos Vecchio. Among those without an excellency in front of their name: Sharon Rockefeller, Andrea Mitchell, Rita Braver and Bob Barnett, Jonathan Capehart, Capricia Marshall, Michael LaRosa, Anita McBride, Lt. Gen. Doug Lute, NIH Director Francis Collins, Luke Frazier, Robert Pullen, IMF head Kristalina Georgieva and Paige Ennis.
FIRST IN PLAYBOOK — Keri Ann Hayes will join Husch Blackwell Strategies to lead a new PAC and campaign resources services practice. She previously has been a longtime political aide to Sen. Roy Blunt (R-Mo.).
TRANSITIONS — Jordan Monaghan is now press secretary for North Carolina Gov. Roy Cooper. He previously was a principal at Precision Strategies and is a Sara Gideon alum. … Wade Giltz is now a campaign manager with Calvert Street Group. He previously was legislative correspondent for Rep. Raja Krishnamoorthi (D-Ill.).
WEEKEND WEDDING — TRUMP ALUMNI: Austin Cantrell, founder of Cantrell Communications and a former Trump White House assistant press secretary, and Sage Norberg, a public school elementary special education teacher, got married Saturday in Belfast, Maine. The couple, who now live in South Florida, met on a flight from BWI over three years ago. They were married by their former D.C. roommate before 30 of their closest family and friends.Pic … Another pic
SPOTTED: Trump at the wedding of Trump Org’s Ann Lauer and former pro Canadian football player Ross Scheuerman. The wedding was conveniently located at Trump’s Bedminster golf course, where he spends his summer in New Jersey.
HAPPY BIRTHDAY: Marc Kasowitz … Elon Musk (5-0) … former Defense Secretary Leon Panetta … former Sen. Carl Levin (D-Mich.) … former Reps. Jane Harman (D-Calif.), Donna Edwards (D-Md.) and Jim Kolbe (R-Ariz.) … Richard Walters … NYT’s David Kirkpatrick … Laura Tyson … Ziad Ojakli … Bill Greener III … Jesse Holland … Scott Waldman … Kurt Eichenwald (6-0) … Erin McPike … Carolyn Coda of Invariant … Shari Dexter … Brunswick Group’s Stephanie Benedict … Lara Kline … Comcast’s Brian Roberts … Deanna Williams … Kenneth DeGraff … Moses Marx … Jason Roe … Steve Johnson of American Airlines … Bloomberg’s Anna Edgerton … Mike Lurie … Paul Morrell … Pete Nonis … Rob Tappan … Paul Bonicelli … Elizabeth Hagedorn … Allison Aprahamian … CNN’s Yaffa Fredrick … Megan Bloomgren … Al Eisele … Mike Basch … Quinn McCord … AP’s Brendan Farrington … Dusky Terry … Meagan Mahaffey … David Olsen … Mark Helprin … Eli Reyes … Kristen Ellingboe of Alliance for Gun Responsibility … Al Briganti … Brian Jodice … Coddy Johnson … Scott Tilley … Bill Hulse of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce Center for Capital Markets Competitiveness … Tim Rodriguez of the Senate Judiciary Committee … Ashley Marquis of Jefferson Strategies
Send Playbookers tips to playbook@politico.com. Playbook couldn’t happen without our editor Mike Zapler, deputy editor Zack Stanton and producers Allie Bice, Eli Okun and Garrett Ross.
Medics have one of the toughest jobs in the military — saving wounded comrades despite the danger they may face on the battlefield. Army Spc. 5th Class Edgar McWethy Jr. understood that commitment; he gave his own life while trying to save several of his fellow platoon members in Vietnam. For …
Summary: President Joe Biden will receive his daily briefing Monday, then he will welcome the president of Israel. President Biden’s Itinerary for 6/28/21: All Times EDT 9:50 AM Recieve daily briefing – Oval Office4:00 PM Welcome the president of Israel to the White House – Oval Office White House Briefing …
A.F. Branco coffee table book “Keep America Laughing (at the left)” ORDER HERE Donations/Tips accepted and appreciated – $1.00 – $5.00 – $25.00 – $50.00 – $100 – it all helps to fund this website and keep the cartoons coming. Also Venmo @AFBranco – THANK YOU! 9-year-old Courageous Novalee pointed out to the school board …
loveyousave, CC BY-SA 2.0 <https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.0>, via Wikimedia Commons Britney Spears is 39 years old and is still under the thumb of her father. Her life has not been her own for the last 13 years since she has been under a conservatorship so strict that she is not allowed to …
“Why offer herds their liberation? Their heritage each generation, the yoke with jingles, and the whip.” ~ Alexander Pushkin Truth is always the first casualty in the war for freedom and liberty, and while many are still fighting to disseminate the hard truth surrounding current events in America, the Biden …
“Beware of false prophets, which come to you in sheep’s clothing, but inwardly they are ravening wolves.”—Matthew 7:15 In recent weeks, big-name Republican governors have signed bills and made statements assuring their conservative base they will not force COVID-19 vaccines on them. However, what appears to be good on the …
By now, you have all heard about the building collapse near Miami in the town of Surfside. The tragic event still has over 100 missing with the death toll continuing to rise. This event is a tragic one, but one that could have possibly been prevented. New details have emerged …
Let’s be honest about the biological men who compete against women in women’s own sporting events: these biological men are losers in every sense of the word. They could not compete successfully against other biological men and win events fairly, so they decided to pick on the weaker women and …
“While the earth remaineth, seedtime and harvest, and cold and heat, and summer and winter, and day and night shall not cease.”—Genesis 8:22 Leave it to politicians to think they know more than God. We are deluged constantly with fearmongering corporate media shills and power-mad politicians warning us that the …
Happy Monday, Kruiser Morning Briefing fans — it’s your Friendly Neighborhood VodkaPundit filling in for that other Stephen today. Kruiser decided well in advance of the Kruiser Kid’s visit with Pop to ask me to fill in today, knowing he’d be hungover from a weekend of family festivities. What he didn’t know was that I’d be hungover this morning, too.
I am such a sucker.
When I was cruising the headlines on Sunday night, figuring out the main topic for today’s briefing, I got hit with such a wave of fatalism that I considered headlining this column with, “Well, Dickens Was HALF Right.”
You know: It was the worst of times, full stop.
So let me tell you what got me into and what got me out of my news funk.
If you’re a Morning Briefing regular, or a reader of my daily column, Insanity Wrap, then you’re all too aware of just how distressing it is to be a conservative — or just a patriotic old-school Democrat — under Presidentish Joe Biden.
There is literally no lefty cause that is too outrageous, too expensive, or too destructive of our institutions and culture for Biden to fully embrace — we all know how gross Joey the Groper’s embraces are.
ASIDE: Maybe I should have said there’s nothing too far out there for the Biden administration to embrace. The distinction being that Biden seems too preoccupied with struggling to read past the pudding smears on his teleprompter to do much presidenting. The Cabal, or whatever you want to call it, is calling the shots.
My Sunday headline scan looked kind of like this:
Bribe people not to work while the economy is struggling to recover? Why not!
Try to slam a multitrillion-dollar boondoggle called “infrastructure” through on reconciliation after double-crossing the Republicans on an actual infrastructure bill? That is so last week!
Use tax money to hand out favors based on critical race theory? Marxism for fun and profit!
Rising inflation that might be getting totally out of control? So’s your Mom!
I could go on, but you more than get the gist already.
The big picture point is that the Biden administration is a juggernaut of bad ideas, a commitment to repeating mistakes we’d learned the hard way not to make again before my teeth were in braces (I’m 52 now).
On a wet and gloomy Sunday afternoon, it was almost enough to get me wondering just how much I could drink if I started buying the cheap scotch.
An overwhelming majority (80 percent) of voters said that illegal immigration is either a very serious (43 percent) or a somewhat serious (37 percent) issue, and most voters (63 percent) correctly said that the number of monthly illegal immigrant border crossings has increased since Biden took office.
Voters also said the economy is improving primarily because of the COVID-19 vaccine (54 percent) more than because of the Biden administration’s policies (46 percent).
A vast majority of voters (85 percent) said that they were either very concerned (45 percent) or somewhat concerned (40 percent) about inflation, which Biden’s profligate spending has arguably worsened.
Plus: “Sixty-one percent said that elementary schools should not teach kids ‘that America is structurally racist and is dominated by white supremacy,’ the conclusion of increasingly mainstream CRT, which has sparked a civil war in education.’”
Folks, these are the numbers President Porchlight has to work against even with the press fluffing his failures like… an analogy I can’t use in a family-friendly blog. And those poll numbers are only going to get worse for Team Biden, as the crime wave grows, inflation eats away at everything from retirement accounts to unemployment benefits, and more and more parents wake up to what’s happening to their schools.
Is the glass half-empty? You bet. But it’s also half-full.
The pushback is going to be a real thing of beauty. More than that, if the rumblings I’m already feeling — less than six months into Joey the Groper’ first term! — are anything to go by, we could be looking at a political earthquake much bigger than the Tea Party movement of Barack Obama’s first term.
I’m not saying everything is going to be all right, that stopping this juggernaut will be easy-peasy.
But the midterms are a mere 16 months away, and while the direction the federal government is moving scares the vodka right out of me, the direction the country is moving might prove to be a cause for real joy.
And when I say “real joy,” I mean, “the good scotch.”
Now For a Brief Musical Interlude
Sinatra and Basie always cheer me up, even when nothing else does.
That’s it for me today. I know I didn’t provide as many links as Kruiser usually does, but I have to save something for today’s Insanity Wrap, coming up in just a little while.
Big thanks to Kruiser for asking me to fill in. It’s always a privilege and a pleasure.
Steve launched VodkaPundit on a well-planned whim in 2002, and has been with PJ Media since its launch in 2005. He served as one of the hosts of PJTV, a pioneer in internet broadcasting. He also cohosts “Right Angle” with Bill Whittle and Scott Ott at BillWhittle.com. He lives with his wife and sons in the wooded hills of Monument, Colorado, where he enjoys the occasional adult beverage.
The official death toll in the Surfside, Florida condominium collapse has risen to nine by Sunday evening, and will likely grow much larger as hundreds of emergency workers and first responders continue searching for more than 150 residents who remain unaccounted for. The Washington Post reported Saturday that an engineer warned in 2018 of “major structural damage” to the building, but another engineer hired by Surfside to investigate the cause of the collapse said the reaction to that initial report was overblown, and that its findings were fairly typical.
The Pentagon announced last night that U.S. military forces had carried out “defensive precision airstrikes against facilities used by Iran-backed militia groups in the Iraq-Syria border region.” The administration said Iran-backed militias had used the facilities to launch UAV attacks on American personnel in Iraq, and President Joe Biden had ordered the strikes “pursuant to his Article II authority to protect U.S. personnel in Iraq.”
President Biden issued a statement on Saturday walking back his threat from earlier in the week to veto bipartisan infrastructure legislation if it was not paired with a larger reconciliation bill. Biden said his comments “created the impression that I was issuing a veto threat on the very plan I had just agreed to, which was certainly not my intent.”
The Department of Justice filed a lawsuit against the state of Georgia on Friday, alleging several provisions of its recently passed election law “were adopted with the purpose of denying or abridging the right to vote on account of race,” particularly black voters. Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger accused the DOJ of “spread[ing] more lies” about the law, and “operationaliz[ing] their lies with the full force of the federal government.”
A judge sentenced former Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin to 22.5 years in prison on Friday, justifying the prison term—which exceeded Minnesota state guidelines for unintentional second-degree murder while committing a felony, the most serious crime of which Chauvin was convicted—by citing his “abuse of a position of trust and authority,” as well as his “particular cruelty.”
The Office of the Director of National Intelligence released its highly anticipated UFO report on Friday, claiming there have been 144 U.S. government reports of unidentified aerial phenomena between 2004 and 2021. Only one of those objects—a large deflating weather balloon—was identified with high confidence.
Pharmaceutical company Johnson & Johnson (J&J) reached a $230 million settlement with New York Attorney General Letitia James on Friday, resolving James’ opioid-related lawsuit against the company. As part of the settlement, J&J confirmed its exit from the opioid business nationwide.
The United States confirmed 3,428 new cases of COVID-19 yesterday per the Johns Hopkins University COVID-19 Dashboard, with 0.7 percent of the 482,104 tests reported coming back positive. An additional 80 deaths were attributed to the virus on Sunday, bringing the pandemic’s American death toll to 603,966. According to the Centers for Disease Control, 11,839 Americans are currently hospitalized with COVID-19. Meanwhile, 1,204,225 COVID-19 vaccine doses were administered yesterday, with 179,261,269 Americans having now received at least one dose.
Infrastructure, on the Rocks
As we discussed on Friday, President Biden announced last week that he and a bipartisan group of senators had finally reached a deal on an infrastructure package after weeks of negotiation. The bill would shore up the nation’s roads, bridges, railways, electrical grids, public transit systems, and more. But within hours of its unveiling, the deal was on life support. Why? The president’s own comments.
In a press conference Thursday afternoon, Biden made clear that he would not sign the plan he had just agreed to into law unless Congress also used the budget reconciliation process to pass his multi-trillion-dollar American Families Plan, a bill chock-full of progressive entitlement priorities from funding universal pre-school and community college to extending the temporary increase to the Child Tax Credit created by Biden’s stimulus bill earlier this year.
“If this [bipartisan agreement] is the only thing that comes to me, I’m not signing it,” Biden said. “It’s in tandem.”
The president’s remarks were likely intended to ease concerns from progressive Democrats, who were wary of Biden sacrificing too many of their wish-list items in negotiations with Republicans. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi had already said both bills must move in tandem, and Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer labeled them a package deal.
But several Republican lawmakers had gone out on a limb to engage in good-faith talks with the White House, and they felt betrayed by Biden’s comments. The GOP group met virtually on Friday to regroup. Shortly thereafter, Politico reported that Sen. Bill Cassidy felt “blindsided,” Sen. Rob Portman was “pissed and disappointed,” and Sens. Mitt Romney and Susan Collins were “particularly incensed.” They had not come away from their meetings with the president thinking he would explicitly tie the two pieces of legislation together.
On Friday, the White House scrambled to control the fallout, deputizing top administration officials to patch things up with Republicans on the Hill. When that proved insufficient, Biden himself began working the phones.
Finally, the White House issued a rare Saturday afternoon statement in which the president admitted that he messed up. “At a press conference after announcing the bipartisan agreement, I indicated that I would refuse to sign the infrastructure bill if it was sent to me without my Families Plan and other priorities, including clean energy,” it read. “That statement understandably upset some Republicans, who do not see the two plans as linked; they are hoping to defeat my Families Plan—and do not want their support for the infrastructure plan to be seen as aiding passage of the Families Plan. My comments also created the impression that I was issuing a veto threat on the very plan I had just agreed to, which was certainly not my intent.”
“So to be clear,” the statement continued, “Our bipartisan agreement does not preclude Republicans from attempting to defeat my Families Plan; likewise, they should have no objections to my devoted efforts to pass that Families Plan and other proposals in tandem. We will let the American people—and the Congress—decide.”
The statement seems to have done its job, with Republicans taking to the Sunday shows yesterday to make clear Biden’s comments were water under the bridge.
“I was very glad to see the president clarify his remarks, because it was inconsistent with everything that we had been told all along the way,” Sen. Portman told ABC News. “I’m glad [the bills have] now been de-linked and it’s very clear that we can move forward with a bipartisan bill that’s broadly popular, not just among members of Congress, but the American people.”
Sen. Cassidy told Meet the Press that he’ll “continue to work for the bill,” adding that he thinks Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell will also “be for it if it continues to come together as it is.”
“I certainly can understand why, not only myself, but a lot of my colleagues were very concerned about what the president was saying on Friday,” Sen. Mitt Romney told CNN. “But I think the waters have been calmed by what he said on Saturday. … I do take the president at his word.”
With Republican negotiators appearing once again to be firmly in favor of the bipartisan deal, Democratic leaders will now embark on a balancing act of their own, convincing progressives to vote for an infrastructure bill that’s much smaller than they’d like and moderates to vote for a reconciliation bill that’s much bigger than they’d like.
Sen. Joe Manchin charted out his characteristic middle ground on ABC News yesterday. “If Republicans don’t want to make adjustments to a tax code which I think is weighted and unfair, then I’m willing to go reconciliation,” he said. “But if they think in reconciliation I’m going to throw caution to the wind and go to $5 trillion or $6 trillion when we can only afford $1 trillion or $1.5 trillion or maybe $2 trillion and what we can pay for, then I can’t be there.”
Adams’ Apple?
The last ballots have yet to trickle in in the Democratic primary for New York City’s mayoral race. But all early indications are that Eric Adams—the former police captain, New York state senator, and Brooklyn borough president—will likely become the next mayor of New York City.
Adams, a black man and former cop, built his campaign around a promise to balance the concerns of racial justice and public safety, casting himself as someone who would work to improve New York policing, but not to hobble it. On the trail, he explicitly distanced himself from the “defund the police” movement which sprung up among progressives last year following the death of George Floyd—a compelling message given the spike in crime rates that has occurred across the U.S. during the pandemic.
Adams’ direct blue-collar appeal and support from several key labor unions have led some commentators to speculate that his win would herald the return of some version of the “machine politics” that defined politics in the city for decades. Writing for the Slow Boring newsletter last week, Yale law professor David Schleicher described Adams as “a throwback to an earlier era when mayors represented a political party and coalition of interests rather than an ideological vision or an individualistic style of leadership.”
Daniel DiSalvo, a political science professor at the City College of New York and senior fellow at the Manhattan Institute, is skeptical that Adams will bring back machine politics—true political machines don’t hold primary elections, after all—but told The Dispatch the results so far show that Adams was able to put together an electorate with “a curious resemblance to an older … more moderate coalition.” In contrast, Adams’ rivals Kathryn Garcia and Maya Wiley did well among a wealthier and relatively less diverse crowd in Manhattan and the adjacent inner part of Brooklyn.
“Look at me, and you’re seeing the future of the Democratic Party,” a confident Adams said at a press conference Thursday. “If the Democratic Party fails to recognize what we did here in New York, they’re going to have a problem in the midterm elections and they’re going to have a problem in the presidential election. … America is saying, we want to have justice and safety and end inequalities, and we don’t want fancy candidates.”
The remark was an obvious allusion to the ongoing conflict among Democrats over how to best talk about—and make policy to address—crime and policing. Democrats are beginning to recognize their vulnerabilities on those issues, and Republicans are making clear their plans to exploit them. As we wrote in last Thursday’s TMD, President Biden is talking more about the fact that his policy initiatives would increase funding for police departments and put more officers on the streets.
Still, it’s important to keep in mind that last week’s primaries were, as expected, low-turnout affairs. If Adams wins, “he won on the basis of 250,000 people who ranked him first on their ballot, in a city of 8.5 million residents,” DiSalvo said. Any attempt to extrapolate these primaries to national politics should be undertaken with caution.
First in The Dispatch: Rep. Anthony Gonzalez Responds to Trump
While you were (we hope) enjoying a relaxing Saturday night with friends and family, Declan was … watching former President Donald Trump’s first political rally since January 6, held at the Lorain County Fairgrounds in Ohio. Why Lorain County? Because it’s just outside GOP Rep. Anthony Gonzalez’ district, and Trump wants him gone.
Declan spoke to Gonzalez over the weekend for a piece that’s up on the site this morning. Gonzalez was one of ten House Republicans to vote in favor of impeaching Trump for his election lies and his role in the January 6 assault on the Capitol. He was blunt about Trump’s continuing attempts to flip the 2020 presidential election and the willingness of Republicans to support him in those efforts. Here’s an excerpt:
“A guy named Anthony Gonzalez, who is bad news,” Trump said, referring to the two-term congressman whom he labeled a “tough cookie” and a “friend” in 2019. Gonzalez is a hometown hero—an all-state high school football player who excelled at Ohio State and was drafted in the first round by the Indianapolis Colts in 2007—but the crowd instinctively knew to boo. “He’s a grandstanding RINO, not respected in D.C., who voted for the unhinged, unconstitutional, illegal impeachment witch hunt. … He’s a sellout, and a fake Republican, and a disgrace to your state.”
I called Gonzalez to get his reaction. The most powerful Republican in the country had flown to the congressman’s backyard, branded him a traitor, and endorsed his primary challenger, a former Trump administration staffer named Max Miller.
That was news to Gonzalez. “Took my wife on a date,” he told me a couple minutes after 9 p.m., just as Trump was finishing up. “Didn’t pay any attention.”
When I filled him in on all the insults that he’d missed, there was a pause—and then a chuckle: “That’s actually not so bad!”
But upon being informed Trump spent what seemed like 45 minutes relitigating the 2020 election—and that MyPillow CEO and prominent election fraud truther Mike Lindell received an enormous standing ovation during the rally—Gonzalez grew more somber. “I couldn’t care less about what the former President says about me. I really couldn’t,” he said. “What I do care about is the fact that he continues to double and triple down on the election lies that led to insurrection on January 6 and very likely could lead to more violence in the future.”
“The most important thing that all elected Republicans can do right now is tell the truth to the country and our voters about the fact that we had a legitimate election and President Trump lost,” he continued. “Anything short of that is an abdication of duty.”
Worth Your Time
In an excerpt of his forthcoming book published in The Atlantic yesterday, Jonathan Karl details the falling out between Donald Trump and his then-attorney general, William Barr, in the final months of his administration. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell pleaded with Barr for weeks to shoot down Trump’s claims of widespread election fraud, arguing he couldn’t do it himself because Senate Republicans needed Trump’s help to win the runoff elections in Georgia. When Barr did so publicly, the president was infuriated. “‘Did you say that?’ ‘Yes,’ Barr responded. ‘How the f— could you do this to me? Why did you say it?’ ‘Because it’s true.’ The president, livid, responded by referring to himself in the third person: ‘You must hate Trump. You must hate Trump.’” Barr and McConnell both confirmed the accounts in the story.
As of this writing, nine people have been confirmed dead following a condominium collapse in Surfside, Florida, and more than 150 remain unaccounted for. Over the weekend, NPR’s Lulu Garcia-Navarro spoke with Susana Alvarez, a woman who lived on the 10th floor of the building. “I was in bed, and I heard a tremor,” she remembered. “I went around the corner, and that’s when I saw that the building was missing. There was nothing there, and people were screaming. I could hear them screaming. At that point, I turned around. And there was maybe two apartments left in my floor, and I banged on their doors. They came out, and then I said, ‘We got to get out of here.’ And the fire escape door wouldn’t open, but I saw people on the other side, and I banged. And they opened it, and I just ran.”
#Dune and #TheFrenchDispatch are scheduled to release on the same day. Timothée Chalamet stars in both films. https://t.co/hjAQuOzzzR https://t.co/70vAVVcdvy
Toeing the Company Line
Friday’s Vital Interests (🔒) provides readers with an in-depth look at the situation in Afghanistan, which Thomas Joscelyn argues is “much worse than you realize.” Virtually everyone anticipated that the Taliban would use violence to consolidate power when U.S. troops withdraw from Afghanistan this fall. They’re not waiting for withdrawal.
Jonah’s Friday G-Filecovered “everything going on right now.” He didn’t mean to oppress you with his words, but he does work to hold “the people responsible for this linguistic oppression” accountable, contending that the “war on ‘oppressive language’ is itself oppressive.”
Sarah and Chris Stirewalt were joined by RealClearPolitics’ A.B. Stoddard on Friday’s Dispatch Podcastto discuss all things infrastructure, the politics of the border, and 2024 rumblings.
The Office of the Director of National Intelligence finally released their UFO report over the weekend, and in his French Press yesterday, David explored what the theological ramifications of extraterrestrial life would be. “While there are atheists who proclaim that the discovery of aliens would pose insurmountable challenges to faith in Jesus and confidence in scripture,” he writes, “many Christians proclaim exactly the opposite.”
Let Us Know
We’re not 100 percent sure she’s even reading this, but if you’ve got any congratulations or advice for Haley, we’ll be sure to send them her way!
Trump Vows to Flip House and Senate at Ohio Rally
On Saturday, thousands of Trump supporters gathered in Wellington, Ohio to hear former President Trump speak at his first rally since he left the White House. It was a greatest hits of jabs at Biden failures for the America-First crowd, including comments on “woke generals,” spiking gas prices, the border crisis, inflation and China, Russia and Iran “humiliating our country.” Even though he teased the possibility of winning again in 2024, one important election is closer. From The Post Millennial:
“Trump has vowed to help Republican lawmakers regain control of Congress in next year’s midterm elections. The GOP is close to flipping both chambers of Congress given the Democrat Party’s razor-thin majorities.
‘We will take back the House. We will take back the Senate. And we will take back America soon,’ Trump declared to the cheering crowd.
…
The conservative assembly marks the first campaign-style rally since Trump left the White House and one of many expected appearances in support of causes that further the Make America Great Again agenda as well as the numerous accomplishments of the Trump administration. Trump is expected to replicate the same buzz at Sarasota, Florida, on July 3.”
More Weekend Reads
Washington Post reporter falsely claims DeSantis was slow to respond to Surfside condo collapse (The Post Millennial)
Chef Andrew Gruel Survived COVID-19 and Gavin Newsom (Reason)
Biden reiterates support for bipartisan infrastructure plan, clarifies he did not issue veto threat (CNBC)
Biden’s capital gains tax plan would push US rate to one of highest in developed world (Fox News)
White Progressives Shocked To Learn Black And Latino Voters Don’t Share Their Radical ‘Defund The Police’ Views (The Daily Wire)
Meghan McCain Torches Cancel Culture – ‘I’ve Gotten In A Lot Of Trouble’ (The Political Insider)
Will ‘Cottagecore’ Usher in a Return to Femininity?
At The Federalist, Elle Reynolds writes about a term I’ve never heard, but totally understand — “cottagecore.” Architectural Digest calls it “a movement hearkening back to agricultural life, skills, and crafts.” That crafts, baking, sewing, gardening, and other useful skills are being embraced by younger generations makes this Gen Xer’s heart sing. More from Elle Reynolds:
“In a remarkably unfeminine age, why are Gen Z girls suddenly so eager to dress like 1950s housewives and Jane Austen protagonists?
The aesthetic, marked by flowy cuts, feminine patterns, and soothing color palettes, evokes a lifestyle of gardening, picking flowers, baking cookies, or chasing chickens around a pretty red barn. Unsurprisingly, it caught on while many people were locked down in their homes hiding from COVID-19, often turning to activities like gardening or baking in lieu of social activity. “People … are flocking to ‘cottagecore,’ an online aesthetic that idealizes agricultural life, to calm their hyper-stimulated nerves,” noted an Insider headline in April 2020.
…
Gen Z’s pop icons like Billie Eilish build their brands on baggy, androgynous looks that understandably reject the hypersexualized Hollywood mold. Athleisure, which prioritizes comfort and practicality, has expanded outside the gym and the jogging track, exponentially so when people started working from home.
…
Yet, despite this prolonged attack on femininity, many Gen Z girls are running to buy girly dresses. They don’t see floral sundresses as a ruse by patriarchal designers to make women look more appealing to men. They just see that they’re pretty — and they want to participate.”
“Yvonne Orji has never shied away from being unapologetically herself, and that includes being outspoken about her faith. Known for interpreting Biblical stories and metaphors to fit current times, her humorous and accessible approach to faith leaves even non-believers inspired and wanting more.
The way Yvonne sees it, God is a sovereign prankster, punking folks long before Ashton Kutcher made it cool. When she meditates on her own life – complete with unforeseen blessings and unanticipated roadblocks – she realizes it’s one big testimony to how God tricked her into living out her wildest dreams. And she wants us to join in on getting bamboozled. This is not a self-help book – it’s a get-yours book!
In Bamboozled by Jesus, a frank and fresh advice book, Orji takes listeners on a journey through 25 life lessons, gleaned from her own experiences and her favorite source of inspiration: the Bible.”
A Case of the Mondays
Dog Is Literally The Cutest Home Depot Employee Ever (The Dodo)
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Jun 28, 2021 01:00 am
Waiting for the government medical establishment to suddenly allow frontline doctors an early treatment protocol like those used in India is unlikely. Read More…
Radical left crazies openly cheer cop killer on social media
Jun 28, 2021 01:00 am
A would-be cop-killer caught in Georgia after shooting a cop in the head in Daytona Beach is a “hero” to the crazies on social media that the social media barons can’t bring themselves to ban. Read more…
Conservatives and the Chauvin sentence
Jun 28, 2021 01:00 am
Chauvin is going away for a long time and we needn’t waste any more thought on him. But we do need to curb any further influence he might have. Read more…
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37.) LARRY J. SABATO’S CRYSTAL BALL
38.) THE BLAZE
39.) THE FEDERALIST
40.) REUTERS
41.) NOQ REPORT
42.) ARRA NEWS SERVICE
43.) REDSTATE
44.) WORLD NET DAILY
45.) CONSERVATIVE BRIEF
46.) BIZPAC REVIEW
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June 25, 2021 – Having trouble viewing this email? Open it in your browser.
Morning Rundown
Death toll climbs to 9 as 4 more victims identified in Surfside building collapse: Nine people have died in the partial collapse of the 12-story Champlain Tower South condominium complex in Surfside, Florida, as a massive search and rescue mission enters its fifth day. Four more bodies were recovered overnight from the rubble Sunday night and more than 150 people remain unaccounted for. Rescuers are still hoping to find survivors waiting to be saved in the pile of concrete, twisted metal and personal belongings, officials said. No survivors have been discovered from the wreckage since early Thursday morning. On Sunday, relatives of those still unaccounted for were escorted by police to hold vigils for their missing loved ones. Some confronted Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis and officials at a meeting Sunday night that not enough was being done in the search. But officials said that an out-of-control blaze that had been burning deep in the rubble hampered rescue efforts. Miami-Dade Mayor Daniella Levine Cava said that the fire was contained around noon on Saturday and that rescue squads have been sifting through debris in shifts around the clock. While the cause of the collapse is still under investigation, documents released by Surfside on Friday point to a number of factors that could have been the issue. Watch “Good Morning America” at 7 a.m. for more updates from Miami-Dade Fire Rescue Chief Andy Alvarez.
Minnesota judge says Derek Chauvin’s sentencing ‘not based on emotion or sympathy’: When Minnesota Judge Peter Cahill handed down former Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin’s sentence on Friday, he said Chauvin acted in a matter that was “particularly cruel and an abuse of his authority” in the killing of George Floyd. “[Chauvin] treated Mr. Floyd without respect and denied him the dignity owed to all human beings and which he certainly would have extended to a friend or neighbor,” said Cahill on Friday, who further explained Chauvin’s sentencing in a 22-page memorandum opinion. Cahill’s decision is an extreme rarity in the U.S. legal system. In the past 16 years, just nine law enforcement officers before Chauvin have been sentenced to prison terms after being convicted of murdering people on the job, according to data released by the Police Integrity Research Group at Bowling Green State University. Chauvin, who was sentenced to serve 22 ½ years in prison, is now the 10th officer to be convicted of murder while on the job. While many have weighed in about Cahill’s sentencing decision and have said it was fair, experts still believe more work needs to be done in the field of policing.
5 people dead after hot air balloon crash in New Mexico: Many in New Mexico are mourning the deaths of five people after a hot air balloon crash in Albuquerque on Saturday. According to authorities, a Cameron 0-120 hot air balloon hit a power line just after 7 a.m. about 6 miles west of the Albuquerque International Sunport Airport. The basket that the passengers were riding in detached from the envelope, fell about 100 feet, crashed and caught fire. The envelope kept going and authorities said they located it a little over a mile south of the crash site. Police believe the victims’ age ranges are 40s to 60s. Albuquerque is a destination many travel to for its International Balloon Fiesta every year. Albuquerque Mayor Tim Keller said the tragedy “hits hard at home” and “in the ballooning community.”
Sisters get tattoos of father’s final note after losing him to COVID-19: Anna Harp, 27, remembers her father, Rudolph Clausing, as “a friend to everyone.” “He always saw the best in everyone,” Harp told “GMA.” “He so effortlessly could make someone smile.” When her dad contracted COVID-19 weeks before Thanksgiving, Harp said he was in and out of the hospital as he battled the virus. “It just seemed like his lungs were just tired and they couldn’t work anymore,” said Harp, who shared that he wouldn’t recover from his illness. Harp said she and her mom were able to go to the hospital to say goodbye to Clausing and found a note he had written from his hospital bed that read, “It has been such a good life.” To honor their father, Harp and her sister, Abrielle Clausing, 21, decided to get tattoos of his words. Harp documented the experience in a TikTok video. “We just have so much love for him,” said Harp. “This was the only way we could think to show it and just have this reminder everyday that he did live such a good life.”
GMA Must-Watch
This morning on “GMA,” Scarlett Johansson is joining us live to talk about her new Marvel film, “Black Widow.” We’re also looking at all the best moments of the BET Awards. And for new graduates breaking into the job market, ABC News correspondent Rebecca Jarvis has tips on how to stand out. Plus, don’t miss Chris Connelly’s interview with Academy award-winning actress Dame Helen Mirren about her new documentary series, “When Nature Calls.” All this and more only on “GMA.”
The death toll in the Florida condo collapse rose to nine over the weekend and more than 150 people are still unaccounted for. In the Middle East, the U.S. launched airstrikes against militias in Iraq and Syria. And one high school senior got more than he ever expected from his co-workers on graduation day.
Days after the collapse of a high-rise condo building in the Miami beach area, survivors are grappling with the aftermath. Some, like Moshe Candiotti, are feeling grateful for their escape, while also thinking of the valuables they left behind, like an oil painting of his mother.
Over the weekend, the death toll rose to nine, with 10 people injured and more than 150 residents still unaccounted for. First responders are searching the debris with canines and sonar technology to locate all the remaining residents.
As authorities investigate what caused the deadly collapse, officials released a trove of documents related to the building, including a consultant’s report that warned there was evidence of “major structural damage” below the pool deck.
The action in Iraq and Syria was a response to drone attacks on American personnel, an official said. But the effect of the operation remained unclear. The airstrikes come as the Biden administration considers lifting sanctions on Iran in an effort to revive the 2015 nuclear deal.
Vaccination efforts have hit a wall just as a more contagious variant is spreading rapidly in the country. That could be worrisome for many states, particularly in rural parts of the Southeast, and could mean the U.S. is on the cusp of a new wave of infections.
The president’s legislative ambitions are on shaky ground. But there remains a path to success for his top priority, a physical infrastructure package.
Hamas may be an international pariah, branded as a terrorist organization by the U.S. and Israel, but the militant group has succeeded in winning the admiration and respect of Palestinians in the wake of the recent 11-day war with Israel.
On his graduation day, high school senior Tim Harrison showed up for his shift at the Waffle House in Center Point, Alabama like any other day. But he ended up getting a special surprise.
With no cap and gown or a ride to the ceremony, Harrison’s co-workers and even some customers stepped in. He got his cap, gown, a brand-new suit for the special day and later on, a scholarship to a local community college.
From NBC’s Chuck Todd, Mark Murray, and Carrie Dann
FIRST READ: “Nothing there”: More Republicans are calling Trump’s election lies out for what they are
The more we learn about Donald Trump’s baseless, false and discredited claims about the 2020 election, the more baseless, false and discredited those claims have become.
Photo by Drew Angerer/Getty Images
Just consider the revelations over the past week – from REPUBLICANS:
In Michigan, a GOP-led investigation by its state Senate concluded that it “found no evidence of widespread or systematic fraud in Michigan’s prosecution of the 2020 election.” (Remember, Biden won Michigan by more than 150,000 votes.)
Regarding Arizona, a report co-authored by former Kentucky Secretary of State Trey Grayson criticized the so-called “audit” of the election results in that state, saying it “does not meet the standards of a proper election recount or audit,” and that it’s being conducted by an “inexperienced, unqualified contractor.”
And over the weekend, ABC’s Jon Karl writing for the Atlantic had former Trump Attorney General Bill Barrdebunking Trump’s claims about the 2020 election results. “If there was evidence of fraud, I had no motive to suppress it. But my suspicion all the way along was that there was nothing there,” Barr said. “It was all bullsh!#.”
Predictably, Trump lashed out at those GOP findings.
“Michigan State Senators Mike Shirkey and Ed McBroom are doing everything possible to stop Voter Audits in order to hide the truth about November 3rd,” the former president said in a statement, which even included those state senators’ phone numbers.
And on Barr, Trump added: “RINO former Attorney General Bill Barr failed to investigate election fraud, and really let down the American people.”
But as surprising as it is that one-third of Americans believe President Biden’s 2020 win was due to voter fraud, it’s maybe even more surprising just how flimsy – and discredited – those fraud allegations are.
Even Bill Barr doesn’t buy them.
Infrastructure dealis back on track – for now
On Friday, we said that conservatives revoltingwas one way President Biden’s infrastructure/jobs/tax/safety net hopes could get derailed.
And that’s exactly what happened when they criticized Biden’s direct demand linking the bipartisan infrastructure deal with the reconciliation package – since the reconciliation vehicle contains tax and climate provisions they don’t want.
But after Biden released a lengthy statement on Saturday walking back that direct linkage – “My comments … created the impression that I was issuing a veto threat on the very plan I had just agreed to, which was certainly not my intent” – key GOP senators got back on board their support for a bipartisan infrastructure bill.
Sen. Bill Cassidy, R-La., on “Meet the Press”: “So I hope it’s enough. We’ll see going forward. But I’ll continue to work for the bill.”
Sen. Rob Portman, R-Ohio, on ABC: “I was very glad to see the president clarify his remarks because it was inconsistent with everything that we had been told all along the way.”
Sen. Mitt Romney, R-Utah, on CNN: “I do take the president at his word.”
What also stood out was the cover that progressive Rep. Alexandra Ocasio-Cortez, D-N.Y., appeared to give Biden after one us asked her if she wanted the president to issue a veto threat on the bipartisan deal if there was no reconciliation package.
“I think it’s very important for the president to know that House progressives and, I believe, you know, the Democratic Caucus is here to ensure that he doesn’t fail. And we’re here to make sure that he is successful in making sure that we do have a larger infrastructure plan,” she said.
To be sure, there will many more twists and turns later this summer/fall over the infrastructure deal, but Crisis #1 was averted.
For now.
TWEET OF THE DAY: U.S. airstrikes in Iraq and Syria
VA GOV: Youngkin’s big spending advantage
In the three weeks since Virginia’s Democratic gubernatorial primary, Republican nominee Glenn Youngkin has spent more than $2.2 million on ads – almost all it on TV and more than half of it over the pricey DC area’s airwaves, per ad-spending data from Ad Impact.
By comparison, Dem nominee Terry McAuliffe has spent just $55,000 – all of it on digital and none on TV.
As we get closer to the fall, we know McAuliffe and the Dems will up their spending.
But money is going to be one advantage the wealthy Youngkin has throughout the course of this campaign.
Data Download: The numbers you need to know today
35: The number of Texas and national progressive groups who have joined a new coalition to fight a pending restrictive voting law in the Lone Star state, per exclusive reporting from NBC’s Jane Timm.
116: The temperature recorded in a part of Canada this weekend, the highest ever recorded in the country.
112: The record-breaking temperature in Portland on Sunday.
33,762,375: The number of confirmed cases of coronavirus in the United States, per the most recent data from NBC News and health officials. (That’s 27,760 more than Friday morning.)
607,316: The number of deaths in the United States from the virus so far, per the most recent data from NBC News.(That’s 648 more than Friday morning.)
323,327,328: The number of vaccine doses administered in the U.S.
42.4 percent: The share of all Americans who are fully vaccinated, per NBC News.
56.8 percent: The share of all American adults over 18 who are fully vaccinated, per CDC.
ICYMI: What ELSE is happening in the world?
Prosecutors in New York have given Trump’s lawyers until today to make their case as to why criminal charges should not be filed against the Trump Organization.
The painstaking search for victims in the Florida condo collapse intensified even as hopes diminished that anyone would be found alive, while a 2018 report on the building found significant structural issues. Also, President Biden is trying to reassure Republicans that he still supports a bipartisan infrastructure agreement. All that and all that matters in today’s Eye Opener. Your world in 90 seconds.
A bipartisan infrastructure deal is back on track after President Biden suggested he would not sign the agreement unless it accompanied a separate proposal including Democratic priorities like childcare and green energy. Weijia Jiang has the latest.
With records broken in Portland, Eugene and Seattle, the Pacific Northwest is sweltering under triple-digit temperatures the likes of which has never seen before in the normally temperate month of June. Lilia Luciano reports. Jeff Berardelli also joins “CBS This Morning” to discuss more.
DHS Secretary Mayorkas on immigration issues at southern border
Department of Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas joins “CBS This Morning” to talk about his visit to the border crossing in El Paso with Vice President Kamala Harris and how the administration is working to improve the conditions for migrant children.
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55.) REALCLEARPOLITICS MORNING NOTE
06/28/2021
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Carl Cannon’s Morning Note
SCOTUS Bingo; Hawley’s Stance; How Roberts Ruled
By Carl M. Cannon on Jun 28, 2021 09:32 am
Good morning, it’s Monday, June 28, 2021. Nine years ago today, in a 5-4 decision that surprised many observers, Chief Justice John Roberts joined the four members of the Supreme Court’s liberal voting bloc to uphold the Affordable Care Act.
In a moment, I’ll reprise some of the contemporaneous reaction to this controversial ruling, and offer my own thoughts about that decision. First, though, I’d point you to our front page, which aggregates, as it does each day, an array of columns and stories spanning the political spectrum. We also offer a complement of original material from RCP reporters and contributors, including the following:
* * *
Supreme Court Bingo, 2021 Edition. Sean Trende offers educated guesses as to which justices have written opinions for the term’s remaining cases, possibly indicating how those rulings will play out.
Josh Hawley Takes On CRT in a Fight for the Nation’s “Soul.” Phil Wegmann explores the Missouri senator’s efforts to counter critical race theory and other progressive efforts to define “what we think about America.”
RCP Takeaway. In this week’s podcast, we discuss infrastructure funding and the teaching of critical race theory in schools.
Gallup Abortion Poll Fails to Reflect Americans’ Nuanced Views. Jeanne Mancini calls the new survey’s results on late-term abortion out of step with longstanding sentiments among the U.S. public.
Democrats Are Using FEC as Partisan Weapon. Former commissioner Bradley Smith assails departures from past precedent in handling complaints before the elections panel.
Dershowitz’s Lesson in Cultivating Respect for Free Speech. Peter Berkowitz considers the legal eagle’s latest book, “The Case Against the New Censorship.”
GOP and Dems Want to Break Up Big Tech. Both Are Wrong. Bob Zeidman explains his rationale at RealClearMarkets.
High Court Protects Religious Foster Care. At RealClearReligion, Mark Rienzi writes that the unanimous ruling in Fulton v. City of Philadelphia proves protecting religious liberty in a same-sex rights case does not have to be controversial.
Challenges of India’s Vaccination Drive. At RealClearWorld, Shubha Nagash and Neha Raykar propose a four-part plan to overcome obstacles posed by COVID in the populous nation.
Looking for Balance on Campus? Head South. At RealClearEducation, Samuel Abrams points to where students can find an environment of politically open-minded peers.
How to Fix Student Aid. Also at RCEd, Michael Brickman touts the benefits of income share agreements.
* * *
On June 28, 2012, when the U.S. Supreme Court narrowly upheld the Democrat’ sweeping 2010 health care reform widely known as “Obamacare,” Republican Party leaders immediately vowed to repeal it. Mitt Romney said that while the court may have found the act constitutional, “it didn’t say that Obamacare is good law and good policy.”
“Obamacare was bad policy yesterday, it’s bad policy today,” Romney added. “Obamacare was bad law yesterday, it’s bad law today.”
These days, liberals tend to admire Mitt Romney; certainly, the media fawns all over him. This wasn’t the case nine years ago. At that time, his official residence wasn’t in Utah, he didn’t serve in the U.S. Senate, and he had friendly relations with Donald Trump — who had endorsed him for president five months earlier in Las Vegas. (“Mitt is tough, he’s sharp, he’s smart,” Trump said at the time. “Donald Trump has shown an extraordinary ability to understand how the economy works,” Romney reciprocated. “It means a great deal to me to have the endorsement of Mr. Trump.”)
Today is another story entirely. Romney’s estimation in the eyes of Democrats and the press corps has increased in direct proportion to his antagonism toward Trump. Back in 2012, Romney’s opponent wasn’t Trump, it was Barack Obama, the incumbent U.S. president Romney was trying to unseat. When it came to the Affordable Care Act, however, Romney was in a delicate spot. “Obamacare” was modeled after “Romneycare,” the Massachusetts state law signed by Romney when he was governor of the Bay State.
Chief Justice Roberts had a dilemma, too. When it came to the question of whether it was constitutional, the Affordable Care Act had an Achilles’ heel that was glaring to “strict constructionists” — conservative jurists who tend to take the Founders at their word: Obamacare’s individual mandate seemed to run squarely afoul of the U.S. Constitution’s “commerce clause.”
Using creative legal reasoning, Roberts sidestepped this problem by declaring ACA’s individual mandate a “tax,” instead of an unconstitutional encroachment upon individual liberty. Roberts conceded in the body of his ruling that this wasn’t the most obvious way to look at the mandate, but that court precedent suggested an out: “The question is not whether that is the most natural interpretation of the mandate,” Roberts wrote, “but only whether it is a ‘fairly possible’ one.”
Conservative legal scholars were furious and felt, as they had previously with high court appointments ranging from Earl Warren to David Souter, as though they’d been duped yet again during the nominating process.
But others were impressed:
“He’s a guy trying to find the right constitutional arguments,” Notre Dame University law school professor Richard Garnett told NPR’s Liz Halloran. “He’s able to confirm his commitment to federalism, and to look really closely at a piece of federal legislation, regardless of the party that produced it, and see if it is constitutional. That’s to be admired, no matter what you think of the decision.”
Yet while defending Roberts, there was a context to this litigation that liberal scholars did their best to ignore. In the run-up to the decision, Democrats had overtly politicized the legal challenge to the ACA. President Obama had shamelessly assailed the Supreme Court and served notice that an adverse ruling would engender further attacks.
So Roberts, at least in my view, was put in the position of trying to save an institution he cares about — his own institution — from being delegitimized. Writing on SCOTUSblog, UCLA constitutional law professor Adam Winkler gave the chief a tip of his cap for his efforts.
“With this deft ruling, Roberts avoided what was certain to be a cascade of criticism of the high court. No Supreme Court has struck down a president’s signature piece of legislation in over 75 years. Had Obamacare been voided, it would have inevitably led to charges of aggressive judicial activism. Roberts peered over the abyss and decided he didn’t want to go there.”
On a final point, if conservative scholars care about the doctrine of separation of powers — and most of them do — there was always an easier way to get rid of Obamacare: Elect Republican majorities in both houses of Congress and repeal it.
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62.) 1440 DAILY DIGEST
63.) AMERICAN INSTITUTE FOR ECONOMIC RESEARCH
64.) NATIONAL REVIEW
TODAY’S MORNING JOLT WITH JIM GERAGHTY
IS PRESENTED BY
An Australian virologist who worked in the Wuhan Institute of Virology until November 2019 says everything she saw looked safe while she was there; President Biden bombs Iran; the Democrats realize just how slim their House majority is; and the U.S. National Archives denounces its own rotunda.
Australian Who Worked at the Wuhan Institute: ‘Scientists Are Gossipy and Excited’
It is good that Australian virologist Danielle Anderson is telling the world about her time at the Wuhan Institute of Virology, right before the start of the COVID-19 pandemic, and that while working there, she saw nothing unusual or that concerned her:
An expert in bat-borne viruses, the Victorian is the only foreign scientist to have undertaken research at the Wuhan Institute of Virology’s BSL-4 lab, the first in mainland China equipped to handle the planet’s deadliest pathogens. Her most recent stint ended in November 2019, giving Anderson an insider’s perspective … READ MORE
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‘We could be moving forward any time now unless they try to stall again. Fulton may make a new desperation move to postpone it,’ Garland Favorito said.Read more…
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People visit the makeshift memorial for victims of the building collapse.
Condo collapse
Rescue crews are still searching through the debris — and families are still waiting in agony — after a Miami-area condo building partially collapsed last week. At least nine people are confirmed dead and 152 are unaccounted for this morning. Crews have carved out trenches, contained a deeply rooted fire, and burrowed into the site to pull out remains as those above ground use K9s, sonar and heavy equipment to locate the missing. Some families have expressed frustration at how long rescue and recovery efforts are taking. Three years ago, a structural report on the building showed major issues in need of repair but didn’t indicate whether it was at risk of collapse. Officials are now inspecting nearby buildings for signs of structural damage.
Coronavirus
We know the Delta variant of the coronavirus could become a major problem in the US, but experts say it won’t be as pervasive as the stages of the pandemic we’ve seen so far. Rather, it will be hyper-regionalized, devastating dense at-risk communities across the country. Those pockets will have low vaccination rates and low rates of prior infection. Meanwhile, Australians are feeling the frustration of repeated lockdowns. The country was praised for its early handling of the pandemic, but outbreaks of the Delta variant — and low vaccination rates — have led to prolonged restrictions in some regions.
Airstrikes
President Biden directed military forces yesterday to conduct defensive precision airstrikes against facilities used by Iran-backed militia groups in the Iraq-Syria border region. The President directed the actions after recent attacks by Iran-backed groups on US targets in Iraq, the Pentagon’s press secretary said. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi supported the strikes in a statement, calling them a “targeted and proportional response to a serious and specific threat” but said Congress would review the formal notification of the operation. This isn’t the first time Biden has ordered such an airstrike. The military’s first known action under Biden came in February, when it struck a site in Syria, prompting concern among lawmakers who said Biden had not asked for the necessary congressional authorization.
Infrastructure
Biden also this weekend tried to walk back a rogue comment he made last week when he said he wouldn’t sign the big bipartisan infrastructure bill unless it came paired with a multi-trillion dollar Democratic spending plan for “human infrastructure.” He was referring to huge economic recovery bill backed by Democrats. Biden assured potential defectors that he wasn’t issuing a veto threat, and for now, it looks like the bill is back on track with bipartisan support. Republican senators like Mitt Romney accepted that Biden’s comments were a flub — but the mistake gave opposing GOP members the opportunity to paint Biden’s comments as deceptive.
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With the exception of the one instance where we determined with high confidence that the reported UAP was airborne clutter, specifically a deflating balloon, we currently lack sufficient information in our dataset to attribute incidents to specific explanations.
An excerpt from the US intelligence community’s unclassified report on unidentified aerial phenomena (aka UFOs). In the report, intelligence personnel admitted they don’t have an explanation for all of the reported UAPs and may need further scientific knowledge to understand them.
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20 products under $25 to help you organize your garage
We understand how easy it is for garages to get cluttered. Whether you’re trying to find storage solutions for holiday decorations, tools or whatever else you may keep in your garage, we spoke with experts to find 20 products to help you organize your space.
Flying high
America’s best, most brilliant athletes are punching their tickets to Tokyo … and among them is, of course, gymnast Simone Biles, who polished off this great floor routine. (Click here to view.)
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Our mailing address is: Conservative Tribune P.O. Box 74273 Phoenix, AZ 85087
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Our mailing address is: Conservative Tribune P.O. Box 74273 Phoenix, AZ 85087
Simone Biles and co. are set for Tokyo, the search for survivors in the Florida condo collapse continues and more news to start your Monday.
Good morning, Daily Briefing readers! At least nine people have now been confirmed dead while more than 150 remain missing in the devastating condo collapse near Miami Beach. And in better news, it’s ready, set go for the U.S. women’s gymnastics team – Simone Biles,Sunisa Lee, Jordan Chiles and Grace McCallum will represent the nation at next month’s Olympics in Tokyo.
🔴 Former Attorney General William Barr described the final weeks of the Trump administration and Donald Trump’s frenzied attempts to retain power. “My attitude was: It was put-up or shut-up time,” Barr said.
🌏 The U.S. military launched airstrikes against Iranian-backed militias in Syria in retaliation for drone attacks on U.S. personnel and facilities in Iraq, the Pentagon announced Sunday.
🏀 “I feel unheard.” A number of people have reacted to the controversial hirings of NBA coaches Jason Kidd and Chauncey Billups.
🎤 Cardi B is pregnant! The rapper showed off her baby bump while performing at the BET Awards Sunday with husband Offset and his group Migos.
Cardi B performs at the BET Awards.
BET Awards
🎧 On today’s 5 Things podcast, hear how rescue workers are building tunnels to try and find survivors of the Miami building collapse. You can listen to the podcast every day on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or on your smart speaker.
Here’s what’s happening today:
Rescue teams continue to search for survivors of Florida condo collapse
The dangerous search for survivors after a condominium building collapse in Surfside, Florida , continues Monday. Authorities say nine people have been confirmed dead and 152 people remain unaccounted for. Accompanied by dogs trained to find both people and bodies, searchers have carved a 40-foot-deep trench through the site to assist with rescue efforts, providing access to new areas of the rubble. The collapse has become an international tragedy as news reverberates globally of missing residents with roots around the world. Among the missing are dozens of Jews, South American immigrants and the sister of Paraguay’s first lady.
US women’s gymnastics team set for Tokyo Olympics
Simone Biles, Sunisa Lee, Jordan Chiles and Grace McCallum are set on Monday as the official 2021 U.S. women’s Olympic gymnastics team . The Tokyo Olympics are less than a month away, and the USA locked in its team for one of the most popular sports on Sunday night. Jade Carey and MyKayla Skinner will join as individual competitors. Four alternates will also travel to Japan. The men’s team was announced Saturday: Brody Malone, Yul Moldauer, Shane Wiskus, Sam Mikulak and Alec Yoder will represent the U.S. in Tokyo.
🔵 Noah Lyles wins 200-meter dash at U.S. Olympic track and field trials in a world-leading time.
COVID-19: North Carolina to name first winners of vaccination lottery
One lucky person in North Carolina is getting a $1 million prize and another a $125,000 grant for post-secondary education tuition. The state on Monday will announce the winners of its COVID-19 vaccination lottery , part of its push to increase vaccination rates. Winners will be announced weekly. A total of four vaccinated residents 18 and older will win $1 million each, and four residents ages 12 to 17 will win tuition prizes. Also Monday: Pennsylvania’s statewide mask mandate ends, although businesses, schools and municipalities may still require them.
Pacific Northwest scorched in dangerous, record-breaking heatwave
Heat records in many cities are expected to be broken on Monday as dangerous temperatures continue to scorch the Pacific Northwest . Monday is forecast to be the “hottest day for the big cities of Seattle and Portland with all-time record highs likely in both cities,” according to the weather service. The entirety of the Northwest baked under triple-digit heat over the weekend, with Portland, Oregon having its hottest day ever recorded on Sunday, recording 110 degrees. The extended “heat dome” over the Pacific Northwest was a taste of the future as climate change reshapes weather patterns worldwide, experts say.
Grand Slam tennis returns to England with Wimbledon
The tennis world was shaken when Wimbledon was canceled in 2020 because of the COVID-19 pandemic — the first time since World War II. But the oldest Grand Slam tennis tournament ends a two-year absence on Monday . What’s at stake? Defending champion Novak Djokovic will try to win his 20th major championship, a record already shared by Rafael Nadal and Roger Federer. Serena Williams is seeking her 24th major singles trophy to equal the all-time mark after losing in the 2018 and 2019 Wimbledon finals. And Coco Gauff, now 17, will return to the site of her big breakthrough at 15. Could there be yet another new Slam champion?
📸 Megan Thee Stallion, Lil Nas X and more: Stars take the stage at the BET Awards 📸
Taraji P. Henson performs onstage.
Bennett Raglin, Getty Images for BET
The BET Awards were back in full force after going virtual last year. There was a pregnancy announcement, show-stopping performances from the world’s biggest artists, and moving tributes of music legends recently lost. Tap here for our gallery of the best photos of the night.
On Friday’s Mark Levin Show, The Biden regime has turned the Department of Justice into an appendage of the Democrat party. They are going to sue the Georgia legislature for their existing voter laws. AG Merrick Garland is doing the dirty work of President Biden and he is the furthest thing from a moderate. It’s time for Republican Attorney Generals to stand up to Garland and the Biden Administration. It’s clear that these agencies have been politicized and cannot be trusted. Also, Jalen Rose is an EPSN commentator and might be a bigot, saying that having white player Kevin Love on the Olympic team is tokenism and that the USA should have sent an all-black team to the Olympics. If the races were reversed, this wouldn’t be tolerated for one minute, but racism only cuts one way apparently in this country. Later, Kamala Harris finally went to the border, but she went to the wrong border town. She went to El Paso, not McAllen, where the actual border crisis is happening. Kamala didn’t go to the border to see what’s going on or do anything; she just went to be able to say she went. Then, the climate change movement is just another of the Marxist Democrat’s ways of controlling us and taking away our rights. This is an ideology that is dressed up in polar bears and melting ice caps in order to hide the iron fist. It is a grave threat to our existence, and the Biden administration has embraced a vast part of it.
You won’t hear a word of condemnation from America’s woke feminists, for this brutal act of violence against a female journalist. Instead, they condemn Israel. A country were women thrive and prosper in every possible field.Palestinian …
There was a time when Canada was perhaps the safest country for Jews outside of Israel. Those days are long gone.Related – Haters’ Online Attack on Israeli Gelato Shop Solato Backfires Spectacularly
At a time when antisemitic attacks against Canada’s Jewish population has reached record levels, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau appoints a supporter of the BDS (Boycott the Jews) Movement to Canada’s Senate. Elections have consequences.Prime …
Break up Facebook – they have seditiously and wickedly undermined our free and fair election system. The leftwing coup must be repelled.As one commenter noted, “If the left could compete in the realm of ideas, they wouldn’t want to censor …
Excellent. The IDF’s search and rescue units are perhaps the best in the world. Thank you, Israel.A joint @IDF & @IsraelMFA aid delegation will depart tonight to assist at the destruction site in #Miami, USA, after the collapse of a …
On Thursday, Nancy Pelosi named the groups that she blames for the January 6 “insurrection,” and that she means to destroy now. Speaking about what she claims to be the “root causes” of what she claims to be the January 6 attempt to …
Former CIA director John Brennan’s recent remarks about Israel and of Jews have been criticized by Ira Stoll here.John Brennan has for a long time taken Israel – and Israeli Jews – to task. He was furious, for example, with Israel for its …
An Air Force lieutenant colonel in charge of a heavy-construction unit in Qatar died Saturday in a noncombat incident while deployed in support of the coalition battling the Islamic State, the military said.
Now in its 13th year, the PA Hero Walk is an annual event put on by the Kiski Valley Veterans and Patriots Association that has raised nearly $3 million since its inception in 2009.
A Pentagon team evaluated Barnes Air National Guard Base, the Westfield-Barnes Regional Airport and the city itself last week as a possible base for the next-generation of F-35A Lightning II fighter jets.
Four living Chinese American veterans and several more who have died were honored Saturday in Fresno, earning what their families said was long overdue praise for serving in World War II.
The sights, sounds, and stories of World War II aviation will come to life in Niagara Falls when the B-29 Superfortress “FiFi” and the B-24 Liberator “Diamond Lil” land at Niagara Falls International Airport, accompanied by a T-6 Texan and a PT-13 Stearman.
A bipartisan deal to invest nearly $1 trillion in the nation’s infrastructure appeared to be back on track Sunday after a stark walk-back by President Joe Biden to his earlier insistence that the bill be coupled with an even larger Democrat-backed measure in order to earn his signature.
Veterans of Foreign Wars Post 168 is organizing an End of the Afghanistan War Parade to honor soldiers who served in America’s longest military conflict.
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