Good morning! Here is your news briefing for Monday July 19, 2021
1.) THE DAILY SIGNAL
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2.) THE EPOCH TIMES
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3.) DAYBREAK
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4.) THE SUNBURN
Sunburn — The morning read of what’s hot in Florida politics — 7.19.21
Ed. Note — As Peter continues to address the serious health issue with his wife, Michelle, the staff of Florida Politics also goes on to assemble Sunburn for you, our loyal readers and fans. Please, join us all in sending healing thoughts, prayers, and good wishes to Michelle and Peter as she begins the long road to recovery. Thank you for your support. God bless.
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Happy Monday.
Believe it or not, “The Happiest Place on Earth” is the tagline for Disneyland, not Disney World. But try telling that to Orlando, which is about to snag as many as 2,000 high-paying jobs away from Disney’s California HQ. That made for many good weekends in Central Florida.
But it wasn’t all sunshine and rainbows this weekend. Unfortunately, the pandemic is still alive and well.
The delta variant is spreading like wildfire among the unvaccinated population. In Florida, hospitalizations numbers shot up 73% since mid-June after six months of decline. The state now has the fourth-highest hospitalization rate in the country, so maybe hold off a couple of weeks before ordering some “Don’t Fauci my Florida” swag.
Florida isn’t alone. Three Texas lawmakers, two South African Olympians, and the U.K. Health Secretary Sajid Javid are all sidelined after testing positive.
But it’s worse in Missouri, where ICUs are filling up with young people. Some experts are even predicting the winter there — and other states lagging in vaccinations — could be worse than last, and some scientists say our chances of ending the pandemic are fast slipping away. The Show-Me State might need to become the Show Me Your Vaccine Passport State to get over the hump.
Speaking of vaccine passports, Florida’s ban may be on the way out.
A panel of the U.S. 11th Circuit Court of Appeals ruled 2-1 that the CDC’s cruise guidelines are rules — not suggestions — kneecapping Florida’s law banning cruise companies from requiring proof of vaccination to board.
The court decision probably put a damper on Gov. Ron DeSantis’ and Attorney General Ashley Moody’s weekend, but the folks at Norwegian Cruise Lines, which sued to overturn Florida’s ban in a separate case, are jumping for joy. Some of their future passengers are probably breathing a sigh of relief, too.
If their planning to board a ship on the Gulf Coast, however, they might not want to do much breathing. There’s a massive red tide outbreak in the Tampa Bay area and there’s no sign it’s slowing down.
It’s bad enough that more than 100 protesters spent their Saturday marching along the St. Petersburg waterfront calling on DeSantis to declare a state of emergency. Meanwhile, the City of St. Pete has moving workers from other departments to help remove hundreds of tons of dead fish from the bay — they even had to bring in a backhoe to get a 400 lb. grouper out of the water last week.
While notable, the Red Tide protest pales in comparison to what’s going on in Miami, where demonstrations in support of a free Cuba are entering their second week. Some have even decided to take their show on the road, boarding buses to Washington to call on President Joe Biden to intervene.
Let’s just hope they steer clear of Nationals Park, where America’s pastime collided with … well, America’s other pastime when three fans were shot during the sixth inning of Saturday evening’s game against the Padres.
The bad weekend streak continues for U.S. Rep. Matt Gaetz. An Anaheim “America First” rally he was scheduled to appear alongside U.S. Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene was canceled over “public safety concerns.” Still, he did post one of the best finance reports in Congress last quarter, so maybe another dose of so-called cancel culture will give his campaign account (or legal defense fund) another shot in the arm.
Even though the Anaheim Event Center is only a few miles down I-5 from Knott’s Berry Farm, we can confirm that Gaetz was not the man arrested for climbing the park’s 300-foot tower.
On a happier note, the Tallahassee Democrat pulled in the Florida Society of News Editors Gold Medal for its deep dive into the poor state of kids’ health care in the 32304 ZIP code. The subject matter may be a downer, but it’s nice to see good work recognized. If you missed it last year, stop what you’re doing and give it a read — it holds up.
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While industries recover after more than a year of pandemic, one of the state’s top communication firms is thriving — with a significant jump in national and international stature.
Moore, headquartered in Florida with locations in Colorado and Louisiana, moved up six spaces in the list of leading communications and PR firms nationwide, according to industry rating firm O’Dwyer’s.
In addition to climbing from No. 55 to No. 49 nationally, Moore, specializing in crisis counsel, public affairs, health care and other issues, also jumped 11 spots to No. 186 in the world.
As Moore gained prominence, they also grew in revenue. Globally, fee income in the industry declined by 4% in 2020 — a result of COVID-19. At the same time, Moore’s income increased by 7.3%.
“Even during a pandemic, our team’s dedication and diligence helped take this agency to even higher levels of success and historic growth,” said Karen Moore, Moore’s founder and CEO. “I attribute this to our team, culture and client success. And I believe our clients value and appreciate knowing they are partnering with one of the best in the nation.”
The numbers from O’Dwyer’s get even better: Moore is Florida’s No. 1 firm in the specialty areas of Public Affairs, Health Care, Education and Agriculture. Moore also ranks nationally in various key industries: No. 6 firm in the nation for Public Affairs; No. 6 firm in the nation for Education; No. 9 firm in the nation for Agriculture and No. 24 firm in the nation for Health Care & Medical Public Relations.
Representing both Fortune 500 companies and small organizations, Moore has been recognized for its business growth and culture by Inc. 5000 as a Fastest Growing Company and Best Place to Work.
— SITUATIONAL AWARENESS —
—@ryanstruyk: US coronavirus cases/day via @CNN: Right now: 30,887 cases/day, 7 days ago: 18,489 cases/day, 14 days ago: 13,562 cases/day, 21 days ago: 10,525 cases/day
—@MattLargey: By tomorrow, Texas will have doubled the number of people hospitalized for COVID in less than 3 weeks. We’re back at levels not seen since late April. Positivity rate now above 10%, which hasn’t happened since Feb. 24th.
—@TB_Times: Florida’s COVID-19 surge can be seen at Tampa General Hospital. It now has 40 infected patients, more than double two weeks ago. Every patient on a ventilator is unvaccinated and between the ages of 35 to 55.
—@SenPizzo: I’m taking the first 5 people in my district to lunch if they get vaccinated this week. If we reach 50 people, I’ll babysit (at the office) the first parent(s) who needs a day off. If we reach 100, I’m cooking, cleaning and doing laundry for someone.
—@ShevrinJones: I’ll cook the collard greens and mac&cheese —- count me in!
—@SenatorMenendez: Not a surprise, just a painful reminder that we need to stop relying on temporary immigration fixes. Congress must seize the moment and any and all opportunities to finally provide a pathway to legalization for millions of undocumented immigrants.
—@AGAshleyMoody: The border crisis created by @JoeBiden makes our communities less safe and puts us all at risk. I am proud to stand with @GovRonDeSantis today at the southern border. We must secure our nation and protect our communities.
—@MaryEllenKlas: A spokesman for the Texas Department of Public Safety told the @MiamiHerald that states are sending troops “at their own expense,” and there will be no reimbursement. Gov. @GregAbbott_TX would not commit to reimbursing Florida for travel expenses associated with the mission.
—@DuboseforFL: Today, we honor the man who showed us the path to peace and reconciliation. We celebrate his life and his achievements, his tireless fight for equality, justice, and freedom for all. Through a remarkable life that included two decades of imprisonment on Robben Island, former South African President Nelson Mandela taught us how to stand up for what is right and respect individual dignity. He was — and continues to be — an inspiration and role model.
Tweet, tweet:
— DAYS UNTIL —
Jeff Bezos travels into space on Blue Origin’s first passenger flight — 1; new start date for 2021 Olympics — 4; second season of ‘Ted Lasso’ premieres on Apple+ — 4; the NBA Draft — 9; ‘Jungle Cruise’ premieres — 11; ‘The Suicide Squad’ premieres — 18; ‘Marvel’s What If …?’ premieres on Disney+ — 23; Florida Behavioral Health Association’s Annual Conference (BHCon) begins — 30; St. Petersburg Primary Election — 36; Disney’s ‘Shang Chi and The Legend of The Ten Rings’ premieres — 46; NFL regular season begins — 52; California Gov. Gavin Newsom’s recall election — 57; Broadway’s full-capacity reopening — 57; 2022 Legislative Session interim committee meetings begin — 63; ‘The Many Saints of Newark’ premieres (rescheduled) — 67; ‘Dune’ premieres — 74; Walt Disney World’s 50th anniversary party starts — 74; MLB regular season ends — 76; ‘No Time to Die’ premieres (rescheduled) — 81; Florida Chamber Future of Florida Forum begins — 99; World Series Game 1 — 100; Florida TaxWatch’s Annual Meeting begins — 100; St. Petersburg Municipal Elections — 106; Florida’s 20th Congressional District primary — 106; Disney’s ‘Eternals’ premieres — 110; ‘Disney Very Merriest After Hours’ will debut — 112; ‘Top Gun: Maverick’ rescheduled premiere — 123; San Diego Comic-Con begins — 130; Steven Spielberg’s ‘West Side Story’ premieres — 144; ‘Spider-Man Far From Home’ sequel premieres — 151; NFL season ends — 174; 2022 Legislative Session starts — 176; Florida’s 20th Congressional District election — 176; NFL playoffs begin — 180; Super Bowl LVI — 209; ‘Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness’ premieres — 249; ‘Thor: Love and Thunder’ premieres — 291; ‘Platinum Jubilee’ for Queen Elizabeth II — 318; “Black Panther 2” premieres — 354; ‘Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse’ sequel premieres — 445; “Captain Marvel 2” premieres — 480.
“Federal judge finds DACA unlawful, blocks new applicants” via Sabrina Rodriguez and Josh Gerstein of POLITICO — A federal judge in Texas on Friday blocked the Biden administration from approving new applications for the Obama-era Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program, but current DACA recipients will remain unaffected for now. In a 77-page ruling, U.S. District Court Judge Andrew Hanen found that DACA is unlawful and that the Department of Homeland Security can no longer approve new applicants into the program, which has granted work permits and protection from deportation to more than 600,000 young immigrants brought to the U.S. as children. He also ruled that DHS could continue to process DACA renewals for now as the issue continues to move through the courts.
“‘A blaring siren’ for Democrats after ruling halts DACA” via Astrid Galvan of The Associated Press — Immigrants and advocates are urging Democrats and Biden to quickly act on legislation to protect young immigrants … Calling the ruling a “blaring siren” for Democrats, United We Dream Executive Director Greisa Martinez Rosas said they would be solely to blame if legislative reform doesn’t happen.
— #SOSCUBA —
“‘Si Cuba está en la calle, Miami también.’ Thousands rally for end to Cuban dictatorship” via Marie-Rose Sheinerman of the Miami Herald — Chants of “Patria y Vida” and “Libertad” rallying cries in solidarity with protesters against the authoritarian government in Cuba, filled the streets outside the Freedom Tower on Biscayne Boulevard on Saturday as around 3,000 people gathered for a rally at the Miami landmark after police blocked off the street. Draped in Cuban and American flags, the crowd joined in singing “Patria y Vida,” which manipulates a famous slogan of the Cuban government: “Patria o Muerte,” Homeland or Death. Grammy-winning Cuban singer Albita opened the rally with soulful renditions of both the “Star-Spangled Banner” and the Cuban national anthem. Organizers played videos of protests from the streets of San Isidro de Cuba and Havana on two screens set up on either side of the stage.
“Cuban government holds mass rally in Havana after protests” via Nelson Acosta of Yahoo! News — Raul Castro was among thousands who attended a government-organized rally in Havana on Saturday to denounce the U.S. trade embargo and reaffirm their support for Cuba’s revolution, a week after unprecedented protests rocked the communist-run country. Government supporters gathered on the city’s seafront boulevard before dawn to wave Cuban flags and photos of late revolutionary leader Fidel Castro and his brother Raul. The latter retired as Communist Party leader in April but promised to continue fighting for the revolution as a “foot soldier.” The rally was a reaction to demonstrations nationwide last Sunday amid widespread shortages of basic goods, demands for political rights and the island nation’s worst coronavirus outbreak since the start of the pandemic.
“Cuba’s President confronts a nation in crisis. Among his challenges: ‘He’s no Fidel Castro.’” via Samantha Schmidt of The Washington Post — Moments after police quelled the 1994 protests, Castro stepped out of a Jeep to find, almost magically, a group of supporters shouting “Viva Fidel!” When the current President, Miguel Díaz-Canel, walked through streets of protesters this week, he was cursed at. While Díaz-Canel has shown no aversion to strong-arming and detaining protesters, neither does he have Castro’s decadeslong record of consistent and brutal repression of political opponents. Protesters and Cuba analysts alike wonder whether this could be a tipping point toward long-awaited economic reforms in the country.
“Hundreds of Cubans are still detained after anti-government protests, human-rights groups say” via Nora Gámez Torres of the Miami Herald — Hundreds of dissidents, students, artists, journalists, priests and even children have been arrested in Cuba following islandwide anti-government protests that erupted Sunday and their violent aftermath. Many remain incommunicado. A Spanish-language list that has been shared on social media by the Cuban independent journalism outlet El Toque and other organizations includes details of 383 people arrested during the protests and the following days. Some have already been released. The number of arrests could be higher because there are obstacles to verification work.
“After the protests, Cuban government cracks down on social media leaders” via Abel Fernandez of the Miami Herald — The Cuban government has cracked down on social media activists and influencers after the protests that exploded across the island on Sunday and were harshly repressed, leaving at least one dead, dozens of injured and hundreds arrested. Several Twitter and other digital media activists who protested peacefully were detained in what observers described as a government attempt to teach them a lesson and discourage further protests. Cuban ruler Miguel Díaz-Canel and other government officials have alleged a social media campaign organized by the United States is provoking unrest and protests. Social media accounts with large numbers of followers have been suspended.
Explainer — “Could balloons power uncensored internet in Cuba?” via Tali Arbel of The Associated Press — DeSantis, called this week on the administration of Biden to greenlight a plan to transmit the internet to people in Cuba via high-altitude balloons when their government has blocked access. For years, Alphabet, the parent company of Google, worked to perfect an internet-balloon division service called Loon. It shut down that project in January, saying it wasn’t commercially viable. Before the shutdown, Loon balloons provided service in mountainous areas in Kenya through a partnership with a local telecom, Telkom Kenya. The Loon balloons were effectively cell towers the size of a tennis court. They floated 60,000 to 75,000 feet, or 11 to 14 miles, above the Earth, well above commercial jetliner routes.
“After 15 hours at sea, a Cuban refugee’s dream is deferred” via Maria Elena Vizcaino and Andrew Rosati of Bloomberg — More than 15 hours into Leonardo Herrera’s second attempt to reach the U.S., he was convinced he’d seen Florida. The 23-year-old mechanic from Boyeros, Cuba, had been focused on the rolling waves that rocked and lifted the wooden boat transporting him, 11 other Cubans, and all their hopes for a future free of repression and deprivation. Dolphins tracked alongside. And when Herrera raised his eyes, he believed he saw the dreamed-of coastline, though it was many miles away. Perhaps the celebration explained why they didn’t notice the U.S. Coast Guard plane until it was directly overhead. Minutes later, a cutter approached. Within four days, he was back on Cuban soil.
“Florida’s anti-riot law collides with Cuban American protests” via Bill Cotterell for the Tallahassee Democrat — Holding large rallies, getting permits for orderly marches in the streets, hearing their elected political leaders make impassioned speeches and publicizing conditions in Cuba are all important and effective ways of pressuring the Biden administration for serious action. Bringing the Palmetto Expressway to a standstill isn’t how. All the fired-up protesters accomplished with that was to irritate people already on their side. Under the new “anti-riot” laws the Legislature enacted this year, cops could have rounded up hundreds and jailed them pending first appearances. But the law is aimed at Black Lives Matter and other protesters like the people who staged demonstrations across the country last summer, not Cuban Americans who vote mostly for Republicans in Florida.
“Demonstrations may herald new political force as Sarasota Cuban community gains visibility” via Zac Anderson of the Sarasota Herald-Tribune — Unlike Miami and Tampa, the Sarasota region is not known for having a large Cuban community, and most Cubans who do live in the area have not been highly visible. That low-key presence changed last week when hundreds of people with Cuban roots descended on downtown Sarasota to demonstrate solidarity with anti-government protesters on the island. The size of the Sarasota demonstrations even surprised some local Cubans. “We didn’t know there was that many,” said Palmetto resident Ana Maria Milan. “We didn’t even know we had so many Cubans in Sarasota.” The Sarasota demonstrations stretched for days and drew upward of 200 people earlier in the week.
— 2022 —
“Money starts to pour into race to succeed Val Demings; Demings catching up to Marco Rubio herself” via Gray Rohrer of the Orlando Sentinel — In an already crowded Democratic primary to replace Demings, state Sen. Randolph Bracy reported raising $166,000 in the first month of the campaign, more than double the next-highest fundraiser, former Orange-Osceola state attorney Aramis Ayala. Meanwhile, Demings herself reported raising $4.6 million since launching her bid for Senate in early June, with $3 million cash on hand, while Republican U.S. Sen. Rubio has raised $5.6 million since the start of the year. The finance reports for the second quarter are the first glimpse of how Bracy, Ayala and civil rights attorney Natalie Jackson fared raising funds to replace Demings in her District 10 seat because they all entered the race in June.
“‘We didn’t have Surfside then.’ Charlie Crist reflects on 2010 repeal of inspection law” via Mark Harper of the Daytona Beach News-Journal — Crist is defending his 2010 decision to repeal a condominium inspection law that has come under renewed scrutiny in the wake of the tragic building collapse in Surfside. Operatives have attacked Crist, who from 2007 to 2011 served as Florida’s Republican Governor. At an appearance in Sarasota on Wednesday, Crist suggested no one had the value of hindsight 11 years ago when lawmakers did away with mandatory condo inspections for structural safety every five years. “We didn’t have Surfside then,” he said.
“Nuts shell out for Greg Steube as he raises nearly $134K in second quarter of 2021” via Jacob Ogles of Florida Politics — Steube pulled in more than $130,000 on his road to reelection to a third term in the U.S. House. And a look at his records show the Sarasota Republican to be a favorite among all kinds of nuts. The U.S. Peanut PAC shelled out $2,500 to the Congressman’s campaign. The National Peanut Buying Points Association and the National Pecan Federation’s PAC also donated $1,000 to Steube’s campaign. All told, the Sarasota Republican in the second quarter of 2021 reported $133,536 in contributions to his campaign. During his time in the House, Steube has been a vocal advocate for agriculture interests, which likely drew the interest of the nut industry and other growers.
—”Scott Franklin raises a modest $82K, but so far he doesn’t really need it” via Jacob Ogles of Florida Politics
—”Frederica Wilson raises $77K in Q2 to defend CD 24 seat” via Ryan Nicol of Florida Politics
—“Carlos Giménez reaps $436K in Q2 fundraising with gifts from big-name donors” via Jesse Scheckner of Florida Politics
—“Unopposed Maria Salazar raises $676,245 to defend FL CD 27” via Anne Geggis of Florida Politics
— DATELINE TALLY —
“Why isn’t another $1 billion a big thing?” via Christine Sexton of The News Service of Florida — DeSantis’ administration decided to seek more than $1 billion in extra Medicaid money made available through the American Rescue Plan Act, federal legislation that not a single Florida Republican voted for when it was passed. The Governor and his administration did not issue a single news release announcing Florida submitted an application to the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services seeking the additional funds. The Governor’s office kept the request for the additional funds on the down low, as did the state Agency for Health Care Administration. The agency applied on behalf of the state late Monday. Instead of announcing the news in a release, the agency posted a link to the application on its website.
“$1B transferred from Lawton Chiles Endowment Fund as dismantling begins” via Renzo Downey of Florida Politics — The process of dismantling a vehicle for state health education and research funding is underway. Under a bill DeSantis signed last month, Florida is terminating and liquidating the Lawton Chiles Endowment Fund. Over the next 12 months, the state will fold those funds into the Budget Stabilization Fund, a reserve pot to buffer unexpected drops in revenue. The fund, named after former Gov. Chiles, was established by the Legislature in 1999 at the urging of Gov. Jeb Bush to pay for health programs and education in the state. On July 1, the bill closed off the endowment fund, which will be emptied and terminated by June 30, 2022, the end of the current fiscal year.
“Groups ramp up effort to block anti-protest law” via the News Service of Florida — Plaintiffs challenging a new Florida law aimed at cracking down on disruptive protests are asking a federal judge to block portions of the statute from being enforced, arguing that the statute includes a “guilt-by-association” provision allowing police to “round up” peaceful demonstrators who haven’t done anything wrong. In May, a coalition of groups, including the Dream Defenders and the Florida State Conference of the NAACP, filed a lawsuit challenging the new statute, which was one of DeSantis’ top priorities for the 2021 Legislative Session that ended April 30. The groups on Wednesday asked Chief U.S. District Judge Mark Walker for a preliminary injunction to block a central provision of the measure.
— STATEWIDE —
“Ron DeSantis visits Texas border, where Florida resources are spent on enforcement” via Ana Ceballos of the Miami Herald — Four years after escaping “terror” in Cuba, Gelacio Vera Gonzalez and his wife, Yenedi Monterrey Mena, touched American soil for the first time in the border city of Del Rio, Texas. Junior Sotomayor, a friend who crossed the Rio Grande with them with arms interlocked, said he wants to head to Miami, where he, too, has family. Within seconds of touching American ground, the three Cubans were apprehended by a group of Texas law enforcement officers who began the process of turning them over to U.S. Customs and Border Patrol. Just four hours earlier, DeSantis, Moody and Wilton Simpson had visited that very same spot. DeSantis’ team did not hesitate to use the mission in Texas as a fundraising pitch shortly after the news conference was over.
—“DeSantis sounds off on Democrats ‘double standard’ on immigration” via Kelsey Koberg of Fox News
“Failure at Piney Point: Florida let environmental risk fester despite warnings” via Bethany Barnes, Christopher O’Donnell and Zachary T. Sampson of the Tampa Bay Times — As early as 2008, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers was predicting possible disaster at the old Piney Point phosphate plant in Manatee County if a plan to use the site for dredging went forward. The “worst-case scenario,” the Army Corps cautioned, would be a tear in the plastic liner that engineers were counting on to hold back water perched atop dangerous waste material. Another worry the Army Corps raised: What if the private company in charge went bankrupt?
“Protesters seek help dealing with fish-killing red tide” via The Associated Press — Amid the stench of dead fish, protesters marched Saturday along Florida’s Tampa Bay to call for state assistance in dealing with a growing outbreak of harmful red tide. More than 100 people took part in the event along the St. Petersburg waterfront carrying signs and shouting, “Save our bay, make polluters pay.” Among other things, the protesters want DeSantis to declare a state of emergency that would free up more resources for the bay. The St. Petersburg City Council this week adopted a resolution calling for an emergency declaration. The Governor’s office has said such a declaration is not necessary and that sufficient money is available for the outbreak from the state Department of Environmental Protection.
“Florida man arrested after crashing through airport gate, getting into Coast Guard plane cockpit” via Brie Stimson of Fox News — A Florida man faces multiple charges after he allegedly drove through a security gate at a Tampa-area airport and got into the cockpit of a Coast Guard C-130 airplane on Saturday morning, officials said. Hamilton Moreno is accused of leading deputies on a chase across a runway at St. Pete-Clearwater International Airport before 5 a.m. ET in a vehicle that had been reported stolen the night before, the Pinellas County Sheriff’s Department said in a statement. Moreno was arrested after he allegedly crashed through a Coast Guard security gate, left the car in a hangar and climbed into the empty C-130, the sheriff’s department said.
— CORONA FLORIDA —
“Appeals court sides with CDC, Norwegian Cruise Lines over DeSantis on vaccination rules” via David J. Neal of the Miami Herald — The CDC COVID-19 guidelines for cruise lines returning to operation are rules, not suggestions, a federal appeals court ruled Saturday night, reversing a lower court decision in favor of the state of Florida. The 2-1 decision by the U.S. Eleventh Circuit Court of Appeals judges was a win for the CDC and, by extension, Norwegian Cruise Lines, which filed an amicus brief in this case. In a separate federal case, NCL has sued Florida Surgeon General Scott Rivkees for the right to require all passengers to be vaccinated against COVID-19 once it restarts its Florida cruises on Aug. 15.
“Florida’s Summer 2021 COVID-19 surge is looking awfully familiar” via Scott Powers of Florida Politics — The summer of 2021 is starting to look a lot like the summer of 2020 in Florida as the COVID-19 virus surges anew across the Sunshine State, though perhaps lagging about two weeks behind last year’s summer surge. Is it a signal to alarm public health officials, fueled by the new, more insidious delta variant, as many local officials have expressed? Vaccination rates, which began to fall off in May, began to pick up again last week statewide, perhaps as local public health officials expressed their alarm. And while only 58% of Floridians had at least one vaccination shot by last Thursday, the numbers are far higher among the groups most at risk, the elderly and people with high-risk health conditions.
“Three new vaccine sites open in Miami-Dade as COVID-19 cases surge” via Devoun Cetoute of the Miami Herald — As COVID-19 cases continue to surge in Florida, Miami-Dade County will be offering vaccines at three new locations. Appointments will be available for the Pfizer-BioNTech and the Johnson & Johnson COVID-19 vaccines in locations in Homestead, Little Haiti and Miami. For the Pfizer vaccine, recipients must be 12 years of age and older. For J&J, recipients must be 18 years old and older. All recipients under the age of 18 receiving a vaccine must be accompanied by a parent or guardian and must complete the COVID-19 vaccine screening and consent form.
—“Tampa Bay doubles COVID-19 cases over past week” via Kelly Hayes of Florida Politics
—“COVID-19 is back on the rise in the Jacksonville area” via Clayton Freeman of the Florida Times-Union
—”Broward, Palm Beach counties now seeing worst COVID-19 case positivity rates since January” via Ryan Nicol of Florida Politics
—”New COVID-19 case count rises sharply in Central Florida” via Scott Powers of Florida Politics
— “It’s crazy in the Florida Keys: Record crowds pack tourist spots post-COVID-19 restrictions” via Lois K. Solomon of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel
—”Polk’s new COVID-19 cases more than double, hospitalizations rising” via Sara-Megan Walsh of The Lakeland Ledger
“9 total staff members test positive for COVID-19 at Freedom Square in Seminole, executive director says” via Niko Clemmons of WFLA — Freedom Square of Seminole Executive Director Michael Mason said nine total staff members have recently tested positive for COVID-19. Mason says eight staff members at Seminole Pavilion Health Center tested positive for the virus. Four of them had been vaccinated. Mason says one additional staff member within Freedom Square’s rehabilitation facility also tested positive for the virus. All staff members are quarantining at home and have not been on campus since becoming symptomatic. Mason says no residents at Seminole Pavilion Health Center tested positive for coronavirus. They’re still waiting on results from residents at Freedom Square’s rehabilitation facility who were tested.
“July Fourth concert may have spread COVID-19 among vaccinated residents at John Knox Village” via Cindy Krischer Goodman and Angie Diichele of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — A group of mostly vaccinated residents at a South Florida retirement village tested positive for COVID-19 after attending a crowded Fourth of July concert. The Department of Health in Broward arrived at John Knox Village in Pompano Beach this week to test residents and staff at the community after some residents began showing symptoms and tested positive. Bill Pickhardt, chief operating officer of John Knox Village in Pompano Beach, would not say how many people at John Knox are COVID-19-positive, nor would he provide a breakdown of residents and staff. Residents, including one with COVID-19, said as many as 30 have the virus.
“More than 30,000 have failed to get second dose of COVID-19 vaccine in Sarasota County” via Elizabeth Djinis of the Sarasota Herald-Tribune — More than 31,000 people in Sarasota County have received one dose of the Pfizer or Moderna COVID-19 vaccine but not the second. Does that mean there’s a widespread problem of people getting partially vaccinated and not making it the rest of the way? Not quite, says Sarasota health department spokesperson Steve Huard. He says there are various reasons why these numbers look the way they do; snowbirds who received their first dose in Florida and their second dose somewhere else and duplicate entries in the vaccine database are among the possibilities.
“‘We had to work twice as hard’: How the pandemic magnified inequities for Florida’s migrant students” via Janine Zeitlin — A full picture is yet to emerge of the pandemic’s impact on Florida’s migrant students. What is clear: virtual learning, economic trials and high COVID-19 rates in farmworker communities magnified inequities for students already prone to learning loss, according to early data and interviews with experts, advocates, and migrant families throughout the state. Florida schools lost migrant students at a rate nearly five times higher than the non-migrant population. Migrant student enrollment fell more than 9%, or about 1,500 students, from spring 2020 to spring 2021, while non-migrant students dipped by 2%, about 60,000 students.
— CORONA NATION —
“Joe Biden grappling with ‘pandemic of the unvaccinated’” via Zeke Miller of The Associated Press — Two weeks after celebrating America’s near “independence” from the coronavirus, Biden is confronting the worrying reality of rising cases and deaths and the limitations of his ability to combat the persistent vaccine hesitance responsible for the summer backslide. Cases of COVID-19 have tripled over the past three weeks, and hospitalizations and deaths are rising among unvaccinated people. While the rates are still sharply down from their January highs, officials are concerned by the reversing trendlines and what they consider needless illness and death. And cases are expected to continue to rise in the coming weeks.
— “Delta variant takes hold in U.S. as coronavirus cases rise nearly 70%” via Yasmeen Abutaleb and Frances Stead Sellers of The Washington Post
—“Arizona reports over 1,000 virus cases for 4th straight day” via The Associated Press
—”In undervaccinated Arkansas, COVID-19 upends life all over again” via Sharon LaFraniere of The New York Times
—“Mask up indoors in Los Angeles and Las Vegas — even if you’re vaccinated, officials say” via Bailey Schultz of USA Today
“COVID-19 still killing Americans faster than guns, cars and flu combined” via Tom Randall of Bloomberg — Even with half the U.S. vaccinated, COVID-19 continues to kill people faster than guns, car crashes and influenza combined. The situation had improved dramatically since January when COVID-19 deaths outpaced heart disease and cancer as the country’s top killer. Still, for June, coronavirus was responsible for 337 deaths a day. For comparison, the historic average deaths from gunshots, car crashes and complications from the flu add up to 306 a day. “The sad reality is that despite our progress, we’re still losing people to this virus,” Jeff Zients, the White House pandemic response coordinator, said.
“Surgeon General reveals he’s lost 10 relatives to COVID-19 as he campaigns against vaccine misinformation” via Jemima McEvoy of Forbes — U.S. Surgeon General Dr. Vivek Murthy on Thursday made a personal appeal to the American public, revealing 10 of his family members have died of COVID-19, as he issued an urgent warning about the dangers of vaccine misinformation. The top doctor highlighted that these family members would likely still be alive if they had access to vaccines as data indicates nearly all COVID-19 deaths are now among the unvaccinated. He then outlined the “insidious” threat of wrong or misleading information about the vaccines spreading online, which he deemed “one of the biggest obstacles that is preventing us from ending this pandemic.”
— CORONA ECONOMICS —
“America’s workers are exhausted and burned out — and some employers are taking notice” via Soo Youn of The Washington Post — Employers across the country, from Fortune 500 companies such as PepsiCo and Verizon to boutique advertising firms and nonprofit organizations, are continuing pandemic benefits such as increased paid time off and child- or eldercare benefits as well as embracing flexible work schedules and remote work in recognition that a returning workforce is at high risk of burnout. Fidelity is granting U.S. full-time and part-time employees five additional paid “relief days” for unexpected events, as well as elder- and child care coordinators to help find and vet caregivers or tutors. The fund manager also expanded a program to help parents of children with behavioral or developmental disabilities.
“Florida’s June unemployment rate up slightly from earlier” via The Associated Press — Florida’s unemployment rate was 5% in June, up 0.1 percentage point from the month before, according to statistics released by the state on Friday. Florida’s June unemployment was still lower than the national rate of 5.9% and down 6.6 percentage points from a year ago. There were 523,000 unemployed Floridians out of a workforce of 10.4 million people. Monroe County had the state’s lowest unemployment rate at 3.5%, followed by St. Johns County at 4% and Okaloosa County, also at 4%. Hendry and Putnam counties had the highest unemployment rate at 7.6%, followed by Citrus, Osceola and Sumter counties at 7.2%.
— MORE CORONA —
“Senior Biden officials finding that COVID-19 lab leak theory as credible as natural origins explanation” via Natasha Bertrand, Pamela Brown, Katie Bo Williams and Zachary Cohen of CNN — Senior Biden administration officials overseeing an intelligence review into the origins of the coronavirus now believe the theory that the virus accidentally escaped from a lab in Wuhan is at least as credible as the possibility that it emerged naturally in the wild, a dramatic shift from a year ago when Democrats publicly downplayed the so-called lab leak theory. Still, more than halfway into Biden’s renewed 90-day push to find answers, the intelligence community remains firmly divided over whether the virus leaked from the Wuhan lab or jumped naturally from animals to humans in the wild. Little new evidence has emerged to move the needle in one direction or another, these people said.
“Vaccine inequity: Inside the cutthroat race to secure doses” via Lori Hinnant, Maria Cheng, and Aniruddha Ghosal — No one expected a vaccine gap between the global rich and poor that was this bad, this far into the pandemic. Inequity is everywhere: Inoculations go begging in the United States while Haiti, a short plane ride away, received its first delivery July 15 after months of promises, 500,000 doses for a population over 11 million. Canada has procured more than 10 doses for every resident; Sierra Leone’s vaccination rate just cracked 1% on June 20. In fact, European and American officials deeply involved in bankrolling and distributing the vaccines against coronavirus have said there was no thought of handling the situation globally. Instead, they jostled for their own domestic use.
“Canada could open to vaccinated U.S. tourists as soon as August, Justin Trudeau says” via Erin Cunningham of The Washington Post — Canada could reopen its borders to vaccinated travelers from all countries by early September, and possibly welcome immunized Americans as soon as mid-August, the office of Prime Minister Trudeau said late Thursday. Canada closed its land border with the United States in March 2020 as the pandemic first accelerated, and it has since restricted entry for other foreign visitors to help stem the spread of the virus. But now, as vaccination rates climb and transmission slows, those controls could be lifted in the coming weeks, Trudeau said in a call with Canadian provincial leaders Thursday.
“U.K.’s France curbs irk travelers; health chief tests positive” via Jill Lawless of The Associated Press — Tourists and the travel industry vented frustration and anger on Saturday after Britain reversed a plan to ease travel restrictions on France just two days after they were due to start, citing concerns about a variant of the coronavirus. The move comes even though France currently has lower rates of the virus than the U.K., where the highly contagious delta variant is driving a surge in infections. On Saturday, Health Secretary Sajid Javid, who is in charge of Britain’s coronavirus response, said he has tested positive for COVID-19 and is self-isolating while he awaits the results of a second test. Javid said in a video message that he had both shots of a vaccine, and “so far my symptoms are very mild.”
“A year after I contracted COVID-19, everything still smells like garbage and onions. One expert says it could last up to 3 years.” via Sophia Ankel of Insider — When I completely lost my sense of taste and smell in March 2020, it was the first thing I noticed. It was a completely surreal experience, even more so because, at the time, loss of sense of smell wasn’t officially recognized as a COVID-19 symptom yet. So when my nose started to pick up some aromas three months later, I was elated. Only this time, it wasn’t the same and hasn’t been the same since. For more than a year now, my nose has been plagued with what I like to call “COVID-19 smell.” The scientific term for this distortion of the ability to smell is parosmia, the “alteration of the sense of smell, that is usually unpleasant and caused by damage to olfactory neurons in the nerve center.” Living with this condition is incredibly frustrating and has had a massive impact on my everyday life.
— PRESIDENTIAL —
“The curious case of the quirky mortgage ads boosting Biden online” via Shane Goldmacher of The New York Times — The single biggest advertiser in Facebook’s political advertising database in recent months is not Biden, the Democratic or Republican parties or even any of the hundreds of candidates angling for advantage in the 2022 midterms. Instead, it is an obscure mortgage-related firm, Lower My Bills, which in an earlier internet era was best known for its omnipresent, if ostentatious, banner ads featuring dogs in goggles, dancing cowboys and strange green aliens that had little to do with interest rates. Now, the firm is spending millions of dollars on ads featuring headlines like “Biden is on a roll” as it pursues clicks it can convert into new customers.
— EPILOGUE TRUMP —
“Explosive interview directly implicates Donald Trump in tax scheme” via Jose Pagliery of The Daily Beast — A witness in the New York investigation against the Trump Organization has told prosecutors that Trump personally guaranteed he would cover school costs for the family members of two employees in place of a raise, directly implicating the former President in an ongoing criminal tax fraud case. The explosive claims come from Jennifer Weisselberg, the ex-wife of a longtime company employee, during a teleconference call with investigators on Friday, June 25. On that afternoon’s Zoom call, those sources said, investigators with the Manhattan district attorney and New York state Attorney General asked Weisselberg whether Trump himself was involved in the company’s alleged tax-dodging scheme of making corporate gifts instead of increasing salary that would be taxed. He was, she answered.
“Trump rages over post-presidential books he did interviews for” via Meridith McGraw of POLITICO — He knew it was coming. But Trump still was not pleased. He had read a new book excerpt, one of many about his presidency in the last few weeks, that described him telling his former chief of staff John Kelly that Hitler, for all his horrors, “did a lot of good things.” In particular, Trump officials are anxiously awaiting the books set to be published by actual colleagues, chief among them counselor to the President Kellyanne Conway and Jared Kushner, who plan to write their own accounts of the Trump presidency. Privately, former administration officials and top campaign aides have shared concerns about Conway’s upcoming tell-all in particular.
— “The media scramble at the heart of Trump Book Summer” via Paul Farhi of The Washington Post
“Few AZ voter fraud cases, discrediting Trump’s claims” via Bob Christie and Christina A. Cassidy of The Associated Press — Arizona county election officials have identified fewer than 200 cases of potential voter fraud out of more than 3 million ballots cast in last year’s presidential election, further discrediting Trump’s claims of a stolen election as his allies continue a disputed ballot review in the state’s most populous county. An investigation found 182 cases where problems were clear enough that officials referred them to investigators for further review. So far, only four cases have led to charges. No person’s vote was counted twice. The numbers illustrate the implausibility of Trump’s claims that fraud and irregularities in Arizona cost him the state’s electorate votes.
“‘A propaganda tool’ for Trump: A second federal judge castigates attorneys who filed a lawsuit challenging the 2020 results” via Rosalind S. Helderman of The Washington Post — Just before Christmas, two Colorado lawyers filed a federal lawsuit on behalf of 160 million American voters. The case was dismissed in April, but now a federal judge is considering disciplining the lawyers for filing a frivolous claim, sharply questioning the duo in a Friday hearing about whether they had allowed themselves to be used as “a propaganda tool” of Trump. “Did that ever occur to you? That, possibly, [you’re] just repeating stuff the President is lying about?” Federal Magistrate Judge N. Reid Neureiter asked the two lawyers, Gary D. Fielder and Ernest John Walker.
“At the kickoff event of the 2024 presidential race, Trump voters in Iowa say they are ready to move on” via James Pindell of The Boston Globe — To be sure, there was plenty of praise for Trump, and more than a few attendees said they have his back as he continues to make baseless claims about the 2020 election. But in interviews with 15 people at the conference, all of whom voted for Trump, none said they hoped the former President would run again. “I am interested in who comes next,” said 58-year-old Cheryl Prall. Trump himself has remained largely focused on bogus audits in states he lost to Biden. Denied access to major social media platforms, most days, he churns out news releases complaining about the election and those he feels have slighted him.
“Porsches, Gucci rings and billions of robocalls: Inside the PAC operation that raised millions by impersonating Trump” via Andrew Kaczynski and Em Steck of CNN — At first glance, “Matte Nox” looks like your typical 30-something wannabe internet influencer, flaunting a lavish lifestyle on his public Instagram and TikTok accounts. But like so many things on the internet, “Matte Nox” is not who he appears to be. “Matte Nox” is the assumed name and online persona of Matthew Tunstall, a 34-year-old from Texas who, over the past three years, raised millions of dollars operating two political action committees that impersonated the Trump campaign.
“To Trump’s hard-core supporters, his rallies weren’t politics. They were life.” via Michael C. Bender of The Washington Post — The deafening roars and vigorous choruses from the capacity crowd at the 20,000-seat Amway Arena showed that Trump’s supporters were excited to watch a rerun. They’d stood in line for hours or camped overnight. I had let the rallies, which formed the core of one of the most steadfast political movements in modern American history and reordered the Republican Party, turn stale and rote. But his rallies gave the Joes a reason to travel the country, staying at one another’s homes, sharing hotel rooms and carpooling. Two had married, and later divorced, by Trump’s second year in office. In Trump, they’d found someone whose endless thirst for a fight encouraged them to speak up for themselves, not just in politics but also in relationships and at work.
“Trump shower head rule on more water flow goes down the drain” via Matthew Daly of The Associated Press — The Biden administration is reversing a Trump-era rule approved after the former President complained he wasn’t getting wet enough because of limits on water flow from shower heads. Now, with a new President in office, the Energy Department is going back to a standard adopted in 2013, saying it provides plenty of water for a good soak and a thorough clean. The rule change will have little practical effect since nearly all commercially made shower heads comply with the 2013 rule, the pet peeve of the former President notwithstanding. The Energy Department said the action clarifies what’s been happening in the marketplace. Showers that provide the extra supply of water desired by Trump are not easily found.
— CRISIS —
“In Trump’s Jan. 6 recast, attackers become martyrs, heroes” via Calvin Woodward, Colleen Long and David Klepper of The Associated Press — A cocktail of propaganda, conspiracy theory and disinformation, of the kind intoxicating to the masses in the darkest turns of history, is fueling delusion over the agonies of Jan. 6. Hate is “love.” Violence is “peace.” The pro-Trump attackers are patriots. Months after the then-President’s supporters stormed the Capitol that winter day, Trump and his acolytes are taking this revisionism to a new and dangerous place, one of martyrs and warlike heroes, and of revenge. It’s a place where cries of “blue lives matter” have transformed into shouts of “f— the blue.” The fact inversion about the siege is the latest in Trump’s contorted oeuvre of the “big lie” compendium.
“Two Florida police officers charged in new Proud Boys indictment in Capitol riot” via Spencer Hsu of MSN — A father and son, who are current and former Florida police officers, and a North Carolina man have been charged with joining alleged Proud Boys members in the Jan. 6 Capitol riots, according to a new, five co-defendant indictment unsealed. Kevin “Tito” Tuck and Nathaniel A. Tuck were arrested and released on $25,000 unsecured bond Thursday by a U.S. magistrate judge in Tampa, court records show. Edward George Jr. was also arrested Thursday and was scheduled to appear in federal court Friday in Raleigh.
“Facebook frenzy erupts after PCSO asks public for help finding Jan. 6 Capitol riot suspect” via Gary White of The Lakeland Ledger — The Polk County Sheriff’s Office has more than a third of a million followers of its Facebook page, and the agency regularly posts seeking public help in finding suspects, either those sought for local crimes or as an assist to another law-enforcement agency. Such posts typically receive mostly positive responses along the lines of, “Go get ‘em, Grady,” in reference to Sheriff Grady Judd. The response was different Friday when the PCSO posted about Jonathan Pollock. Federal authorities say he assaulted three police officers during the riot. The Sheriff’s Office post said the FBI had requested that the agency spread information about Pollock. Pollock’s sister, Olivia Pollock, and three friends have already been arrested and charged with multiple crimes, including assaulting officers.
“Protesters rally at D.C. jail against Jan. 6 riot arrests” via Karina Elwood of The Washington Post — About 100 people from around the country gathered under the blazing sun outside the D.C. jail on Saturday to protest the arrest of those involved in the Jan. 6 Capitol riot. While MAGA hats and Trump apparel were mostly missing outside D.C. Central Detention Facility by request of the event organizers, many sported bright-red hats and carried signs with slogans such as “protests are not insurrections” and “patriots are not terrorists.” The rally was organized by Look Ahead America, a nonprofit organization that aims to give voice to “rural and blue-collar patriotic Americans who are disaffected and disenfranchised from the nation’s corridors of power.” The group Saturday was protesting about 50 people held in the D.C. jail, who they called “nonviolent American patriots.”
— D.C. MATTERS —
“After third venue cancels, Matt Gaetz, Marjorie Taylor Greene take ‘protest against communism’ to Riverside” via Hannah Fry of The Los Angeles Times — After three Southern California venues canceled Gaetz and Greene’s America First rally amid significant public outcry, the lawmakers hosted a protest in Riverside on Saturday evening instead. In a video posted to Twitter on Saturday afternoon, Gaetz called on all California “patriots” to join him and Greene outside Riverside City Hall for a “peaceful protest against communism.” A group of loyalists joined them there. The city of Riverside said officials are “aware of the announced event and taking steps to ensure the safety of everyone involved.” The abrupt change occurred hours after the Anaheim Event Center backed out of allowing the lawmakers to use the venue, a decision made after city officials shared concerns about other events limiting police resources for the rally.
—“Gaetz goes with Jeffrey Epstein lawyer” via Andy Marlette of the Pensacola News Journal
— LOCAL NOTES —
“Judge: All options on table for site of collapsed building” via The Associated Press — A South Florida courtroom observed a moment of silence Friday to remember the dozens of people who died in the collapse of the 12-story condominium complex near Miami. Then it returned to the business of considering what should become of the property. That decision may be weeks or months from being made as families grapple with difficult decisions over personal and financial losses, including whether to rebuild, place a memorial on the site or accommodate both. Miami-Dade Circuit Judge Michael Hanzman said he was open to all options, but no decision came at a hearing Friday. The judge appeared pleased that discussions were underway to raise the financing necessary, perhaps from the government, to buy the property for a memorial.
“Before role in Surfside condo that fell, engineer had hand in another building mess” via Sarah Blaskey, Aaron Leibowitz, Ben Conarck, and Samantha J. Gross of the Miami Herald — Just a few years before structural engineer Sergio Breiterman signed off on the construction work at Champlain Towers South Condominium, he vouched for a new municipal building in Coral Gables that, within months of completion, “leaked like a sieve,” “smelled like wet dog,” and developed cracks in the garage due to a dangerous construction flaw. His firm was hired by Coral Gables’ architect Klements and Associates to provide structural engineering expertise on a new, five-story Public Safety Building. He overlooked insufficient steel reinforcements in parts of the concrete structure. Compared building plans to photos of the debris and found some evidence to suggest a similar construction deficiency in the reinforcement.
—”Florida insurance regulator tells insurers to provide data on Champlain South policies” via Lawrence Mower of the Tampa Bay Times
“Searching for answers, Surfside families take solace in medical examiner reports” via Samantha J. Gross and David Ovalle of the Miami Herald — Thrust into mourning without the benefit of goodbyes, the bereaved are beginning to find some semblance of relief as authorities identify their loved ones and, for the first time, detail the circumstances of their deaths, telling families that the severity of the collapse likely meant that the end came quickly. “If they were asleep, they would not have been conscious long enough to suffer,” Miami-Dade Medical Examiner Dr. Emma Lew, who is retiring in August, said.
“In Miami’s gentrifying neighborhoods, Surfside condo collapse deepens fears of displacement” via Rebecca Tan, Meryl Kornfield, and Michael Brice-Saddler of The Washington Post — In the early 2000s, gentrification crept into Liberty City under the label of “urban renewal,” Linda Sippio, a lifelong area resident, said, displacing many of the people she grew up with. In gentrifying communities like Liberty City and nearby Little Haiti, traditionally Black and Latino neighborhoods located inland and on higher ground, the tragedy has also stirred anxiety over a burgeoning trend that academics and activists have called “climate gentrification.” Environmental activists say Surfside isn’t likely to prompt a rapid exodus of residents from the waterfront, but the disaster could drive insurers to hike prices for properties or encourage developers to look for prospects inland.
“The promise and peril of a casino in downtown Jacksonville” via Nate Monroe of The Florida Times-Union — The Las Vegas Sands Corp., formerly run by the late casino tycoon and Republican megadonor Sheldon Adelson, injected $17 million last month into a brand-new political committee, Florida Voters in Charge, intending to push two state constitutional amendments that could pave the way for casino gambling in North Florida. The possibility of a major casino operation in Jacksonville has been bandied about before, but a complex series of special interests in Tallahassee, including pushback from the Seminole Tribe and Disney, have relegated those talks to the theoretical. There is a labyrinth of obstacles on a state level, and an additional layer of regulatory and growth management issues on a local level, standing between any such casino and reality, years of work on even the fastest track.
“J.T. Burnette trial, Day 5: Court abruptly shuts down due to potential juror COVID-19 exposure” via Jeff Burlew of the Tallahassee Democrat — Today is day five of the Burnette trial at the U.S. Courthouse in Tallahassee. Burnette is accused of giving former Tallahassee City Commissioner Scott Maddox a $100,000 bribe in exchange for his abstention on a vote involving a downtown hotel project. He’s also accused of arranging $40,000 in bribes from an FBI front company, Southern Pines Development, to a Maddox consulting firm. The delay involves an unvaccinated juror whose mother is in the hospital with COVID-19 and pneumonia. U.S. District Judge Robert Hinkle issued a statement about the break in the trial. The juror visited her mother in the hospital last night. The two live in the same house but have not had close contact over recent days.
“Schools PR chief orchestrated secret attempt to save Superintendent Robert Runcie” via Scott Travis of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — The communications chief for Broward Schools orchestrated an aggressive but secret operation to try to save the job of Runcie within hours after he was arrested on a perjury charge. Amid calls for Runcie to step down or be fired after his arrest on April 21, Kathy Koch, a veteran public relations professional, hurriedly organized a pro-Runcie rally on school district property. She helped some of the county’s most prominent business leaders craft their remarks for the event on April 23, but she carefully tried to distance herself from the effort. His last day will be Aug. 10. Koch has worked for the district since 2018 and makes $168,000 a year. She said she organized the rally on her own personal time.
“Seminole’s effort to recoup losses from Joel Greenberg scandal could start with sports memorabilia” via Martin E. Comas and Jason Garcia of the Orlando Sentinel — As Seminole County seeks to claw back thousands of dollars in questionable or fraudulent spending by the Seminole County Tax Collector’s Office under Greenberg, one of its first victories could come in the form of sports memorabilia purchased with public money. “What I’m asking for — will be asking for — is not only the money that was used to pay for the memorabilia but also the memorabilia back so that we can sell it back out on the market,” Seminole County Attorney Bryant Applegate told commissioners this week. Greenberg used public funds to buy himself personal items, including memorabilia signed by NBA stars Kobe Bryant and Michael Jordan.
“The Manatee County Commission and the greatest fight of them all” via Chris Anderson of the Sarasota Herald-Tribune — Leave it to the Manatee County Commission. They can’t even fight right. They’re using Facebook posts to settle scores. Does anyone remember back in 2018? When Scott Hopes claimed fellow board member Dave Miner tried to run him over in the parking lot after a particularly contentious Manatee County School Board meeting? So now we have Manatee County Commissioner George Kruse calling out fellow Commissioner Carol Whitmore on Facebook, and while it’s a tickle fight compared to Miner vs. Hopes, Car Wars I, it’s still nasty in its own passive-aggressive way, basically because of the underlying sleaze factor. This whole thing has something to do with Kruse’s trip to a conference in Orlando and somehow Whitmore’s name appearing on his hotel bill as a guest, even though she wasn’t there.
“‘This is holding us back’: Confederate statue overshadows pressing issues in Putnam County” via Jim Abbott of The Daytona Beach News-Journal — When a Putnam County Commission workshop boiled over into angry shouting and name-calling this past week, the festering debate over the fate of a controversial Confederate monument again put rural Putnam County in an unpleasant public spotlight. For longtime residents and newcomers alike, the scene was a discouraging display in a county that lags behind other counties statewide in per capita income, education, health care and other important areas. For some, the monument debate is an unhelpful distraction that has outlived its relevance. For others, the division over the statue is tied into deeper issues that also have affected the ability of the county of 74,521 residents to lift itself out of stagnation.
“The Lake O plans: What it means for Palm Beach County if Lake Worth Lagoon is labeled an estuary” via Kimberly Miller of The Palm Beach Post — For the first time since the Lake Worth Lagoon was perverted by saltwater inlets gouged into its sides, it may officially be considered an estuary by water managers, a move that would offer protection from belching discharges of black muck. Lake Worth Lagoon’s designation in the current plan was simply an outlet for water going south, another drain for Lake Okeechobee without much consideration given to its environmental health and community importance. The result was decades of damaging releases through the C-51 canal of sediment-laden water from Lake Okeechobee and a watershed 42-times larger than the lagoon itself.
“Public relations firm’s bitter breakup leads to lawsuit” via Brian Bandell of the South Florida Business Journal — The ugly breakup of the partners behind Bitner Goodman, one of the largest public relations firms in South Florida, has spilled into the courtroom. Gary Bitner and Fort Lauderdale-based Bitner Goodman filed a lawsuit against former partner Michael Goodman, his new company and two former employees who jumped ship, alleging that they “looted” the company of its assets overnight. Bitner arrived at his office on June 12 to find it was nearly empty, including the loss of client files, computers, artwork and accounting records. Goodman, who now heads Fort Lauderdale-based Goodman Public Relations, said he and Bitner weren’t speaking for months and they spent a lot of money on lawyers to try and resolve their split amicably.
— TOP OPINION —
“Kids deserve the vaccine, too. It will keep them — and adults — safe.” via Saad B. Omer of The Washington Post — States are instead focusing on at least partially immunizing a minimum of 70% of adults. There’s a problem with this strategy, though: It leaves out children. But teens and young children, if the vaccine is approved for them, must be part of our approach if we are to end this pandemic. It is hard to imagine gaining sufficient ground against the virus without vaccinating a large share of teens and children. Vaccinating children would eliminate the need to choose between keeping them safe and restoring a sense of normalcy for them. If there is a substantial increase in cases and hospitalizations in the United States, domestic pressure on the government will likely decrease the willingness to prioritize global vaccine access.
— OPINIONS —
“Why we’re protesting now, in Cuba and Florida” via Patrick Denny of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — My grandfather and great grandfather both suffered as political prisoners, but thankfully didn’t die in prison, like many others. My grandmother remembers being taught to read and write with propaganda-ridden books. The night before my family was to leave Cuba by plane, the secret police busted into their home searching for their passports and visas. Someone had tipped them off. I feel the pain of the Cubans protesting for their rights to simply live, to eat, drink and be happy, to think independently without fear of persecution, protesting for their basic freedoms. Unlike my great-grandmother, whose memories of days long gone made the island too painful for her, we still dream of being able to go back to the free Cuba our ancestors grew up in.
“Voter fraud is becoming Republicans’ monster under the bed” via David Von Drehle of The Washington Post — Fear of the monster is its own validation. Sooner or later, you will be crawling on the floor, scolding all monsters to go away. The same logic, if we can call it that, props up the remaining election audit efforts around the country. Republican officials are no longer defending audits by claiming the election was stolen. Trump’s senior law enforcement official, then-Attorney General William P. Barr, said, “we have not seen fraud on a scale that could have effected a different outcome.” Many Republicans are not necessarily saying they’ll find a monster. But then again, invisible monsters are the very worst kind.
“Biden is right. Purveyors of vaccine disinformation are killing people.” via Jennifer Rubin of The Washington Post — President Biden hit the nail on the head Friday in response to a question about platforms such as Facebook that amplify scientifically false anti-vaccine claims, and deter people from getting lifesaving shots. “They’re killing people,” he said. One can quibble over whether Facebook or a mendacious Fox News host actually affects an individual’s decision to avoid vaccination, but it is hard to deny they can reinforce life-threatening behavior. Disinformation spreaders, including elected officials such as Sen. Ron Johnson, are putting people at risk. Not only do these voices discourage vaccination and thereby endanger those inclined to follow their advice, they also put children too young to receive the vaccination at risk.
“Don’t fascist my Florida, DeSantis” via Steve Bousquet of the Orlando Sentinel — Whose Florida is it, anyway? I pose this question after seeing DeSantis hawking online sales of beer koozies that say, “Don’t Fauci my Florida.” Even for the Florida Governor’s political base, that message hardly needs an explanation. Dr. Anthony Fauci, the nation’s leading infectious disease expert, is a public health menace who deprives us of our freedom. The koozies made their debut just as COVID-19 cases were skyrocketing in Florida, the state with one of the highest case rates in the U.S. That means more sickness, hospitalizations and deaths. Conditions are quickly and dramatically getting a lot worse. But don’t expect any help from your local leaders. DeSantis made sure to tie their hands.
“Gaming companies placed a $62 million bet against Florida voters. Don’t let them win” via the Miami Herald editorial board — Consider yourself warned, Florida. The door has been flung wide-open for more gambling, and everyone is scrambling to get a piece of the action. How else to explain this astonishing piece of news: Gambling interests pumped a whopping $62 million in political contributions last month into groups and efforts that could influence the future of sports betting and casino gambling via ballot initiatives in 2022. With that kind of money on the table, the potential market in Florida must be huge. No doubt much of this interest springs from the Legislature’s easy approval this year of a $500 million gambling deal negotiated between DeSantis and the Seminole Tribe.
“Glades farmers committed to community and environment” via Judy Clayton Sanchez of The Palm Beach Post — Glades farmers may be a small percentage of the county population, but they help ensure our country and its families have food on the table. In the rural farming region, our farmers play an even more important role as a critical community partner. In a 7,000-plus word story in this paper last Sunday, an article on sugar-cane harvesting practices ran with little input from its main subject — farmers. All of us live in this community and among the fertile farmlands and sugar-cane fields, yet this story was only interested in what a handful of Glades residents had to say. While U.S. Sugar was contacted one week before the “deadline,” we’ve since learned that the story had already been written before we were asked for comment.
— ON TODAY’S SUNRISE —
DeSantis returned from his trip to Texas, where he met Florida officers sent to patrol the Mexican border.
Also, on today’s Sunrise:
— As the Governor was helping fuel the culture war out West, COVID-19 was doing a number back home. We set a new low last week in the number of vaccinations. So many Americans are refusing to get vaccinated, the U.S. Surgeon General says misinformation has become a threat to public health.
— Florida had more than 45,000 new cases over the past week, which was responsible for more than 20% of all the new cases in America.
— A setback for the Governor’s plan to ban vaccine passports on cruise ships sailing from Florida. A federal appeals court overturned a lower-court ruling that said the CDC overstepped its bounds regulating the cruise industry.
— Unemployment was up slightly in June … it was the third month in a row where the rate ticked up by one-tenth of one percent. But there was also a significant increase in the labor force.
— Florida added more than 80,000 new jobs last month. That’s good news, regardless of the higher unemployment rate.
— And finally, two Florida Men: One broke into an airport and tried to hide in a Coast Guard plane; the other doused a store full of people with anti-bear bear spray to make his escape with some stolen candles.
To listen, click on the image below:
— ALOE —
“‘Everybody is waiting for it:’ Disney Cruise Line sets sail on ‘test cruise’” via Amanda Castro of Click Orlando — Disney Cruise Line took a big step in its cruising comeback Saturday. The Disney Dream had a “test sailing” out of Port Canaveral, making it the first cruise ship to depart from the port with passengers on board since the pandemic started. Brevard County residents Joe Woelich and Jan Barker visit Jetty Park often. The pair said they plan to watch the first cruise ship leave Port Canaveral since the start of the pandemic. “Everybody is waiting for it, so yeah, it’s cool,” Woelich said. Officials said the Disney Dream was the last passenger sailing to depart from Port Canaveral on March 13, 2020, before the cruising industry shutdown.
“World of oyster farming: OysterMom, Oyster Boss navigate salty joys, perils of aquaculture” via Marina Brown of the Tallahassee Democrat — Out in what is known as Oyster Bay in Crawfordville where Deborah Keller tends to her large family, well, they’re almost like family, her “children,” the hundreds of baby oysters in whose service she has christened herself, OysterMom. What most oyster-eaters won’t be thinking of as they down the little squirts, is how much work it has taken to get the erratically shaped, water-filtering bivalves to their plates. Or how precarious are the lives of both the oysters that seem to have no other ambition but to grow, or the oyster farmers’ margins, who, like Keller, in the last six years have striven to develop a Northwest Florida industry that will sustain thousands? Currently, the jury is still out on whether oyster aquaculture will be a growing and sustainable addition to Florida’s “crops.”
“Future Jeeps will be able to drive underwater, CEO says” via Gary Gastelu of Fox News — The new Jeep Wrangler Xtreme Recon can drive through 33.6 inches of water, but future Jeeps may be able to go much deeper than that. During a recent electric vehicle presentation by Jeep’s parent company Stellantis, a Wrangler was depicted driving while fully submerged, and that vision could become a reality. “There is a little wink we have at the end, which is probably post-2030, but I know a lot of enthusiasts and a lot of our communities are requesting it,” Jeep CEO Christian Meunier said. Electric vehicles don’t have air intakes or exhausts, so as long as their equipment is sealed, they can operate underwater without any issues.
— HAPPY BIRTHDAY —
Belated best wishes to two great women in Florida politics, Reps. Allison Tant and Jackie Toledo. Celebrating today is our friend, Jacksonville Mayor Lenny Curry, as well as Tres Holton and Courtney Vandenberg.
___
Sunburn is authored and assembled by Peter Schorsch, Phil Ammann, Renzo Downey and Drew Wilson.
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13.) AXIOS
Axios AM
Good Monday morning from Norfolk — off to Chicago. Smart Brevity™ count: 1,169 words … 4½ minutes. Edited by Zachary Basu.
Illustration: Aïda Amer/Axios
A growing swath of House Democratic candidates says the party needs to radically improve its heartland appeal to have any hope of keeping power in Washington, Axios’ Alexi McCammond writes in the debut of “Swing Country,” her reported series on the 2022 midterms.
- Why it matters: With control of the House and Senate on the bubble, many ambitious Democrats — from the South to the Midwest to the Rockies — are running against their own national party’s image.
What’s happening: After four years of listening to President Trump, many rural voters are reflexively distrustful of progressive solutions to everything from the pandemic to infrastructure.
- In a 3-min. ad for his Senate campaign, Rep. Tim Ryan of Ohio never says he’s a Democrat.
What we’re hearing: Democratic strategists are advising candidates in states like these to refrain from “fancy” language, and to focus on populist economic policies.
- Several consultants insisted that Democratic policies — on labor rights, broadband, climate and infrastructure — are popular in rural areas. It’s the messaging that’s causing heartburn.
Coronavirus cases, hospitalizations and deaths are back on the rise in the U.S. as the highly transmissible Delta variant spreads across the country, Axios’ Sam Baker writes.
- This is happening almost exclusively to people who aren’t vaccinated, and it’s worse in places where overall vaccination rates are low.
The U.S. is now averaging about 26,000 new cases per day — up 70% from the previous week, the CDC says. Hospitalizations are up 36%, and deaths are up 26%, to an average of 211 per day.
- Two-thirds of eligible Americans have gotten at least one dose of a COVID-19 vaccine, and about 57% are fully vaccinated.
- Over 97% of the people currently hospitalized for severe COVID-19 infections were unvaccinated, according to the CDC.
A handful of states with low vaccination rates — Arkansas, Florida, Louisiana, Missouri and Nevada — are driving a plurality of new cases.
- One in five new infections comes from Florida alone, per the CDC.
The good news: The vaccines work, even against the Delta variant.
Illustration: Brendan Lynch/Axios
Retailers’ use of face-recognition tech, which can scan or store facial images of shoppers and workers, has accelerated during the pandemic, Axios’ Kim Hart writes in her “Tech Agenda” column.
- Why it matters: Retailers were looking for ways to track foot traffic with fewer employees, and offer contactless payments. Now, of course, they’re keeping this new power.
Where it stands: Stores including Walmart, Kroger, Home Depot and Target have said they won’t use facial recognition technologies, according to a list by an advocacy group, Fight for the Future.
- But Albertsons, Macy’s and Apple Stores do use the tech, per the list. Their privacy policies say they use it for security and to prevent fraud.
- Portland, Ore., last year became the first U.S. city to ban facial recognition by retail stores, hotels and restaurants.
How it works: Facial recognition tools are primarily used by retailers for security reasons — chiefly, to prevent shoplifting — and they usually don’t link images to personally identifiable information, says Brenda Leong of the Future of Privacy Foundation. She said there are plenty of other ways stores would like to use the technology, including:
- Identifying loyalty club members the minute they enter a store to send them push alerts and text messages about deals.
- Knowing exactly how long a customer is in the store to help tailor their experience in future visits.
- Using biometric systems for employees to clock in and out, and track workers’ whereabouts and monitor productivity.
Photos: Toru Hanai/Getty Images (3), Kim Kyung-Hoon/Reuters (Japan)
At the Olympic athletes’ village in Tokyo, teams decorate their balconies on the waterfront high-rise ahead of Friday’s opening ceremony.
Illustration: Sarah Grillo/Axios
The rapid succession of precedent-shattering extreme weather events in North America and Europe has some scientists saying climate extremes are worsening faster than expected, Axios’ Andrew Freedman reports.
- Why it matters: Extreme weather is the deadliest, most expensive and most immediate manifestation of climate change. Any miscalculations could make communities more vulnerable.
Axios spoke to nine leading scientists involved in extreme event research. The Pacific Northwest heat wave is being viewed with more suspicion than the European floods as a possible indicator of something new and more dangerous.
- Andrew Dessler, a climate scientist at Texas A&M, said he’s no longer sure if climate models are accurately capturing how global warming is playing out.
- “Perhaps we’ve just been very unlucky, but I think this is an open scientific question,” he said.
N.Y. Times columnist Nick Kristof, known for on-the-ground reporting about humanity around the world, tells two Oregon newspapers that he’s considering entering the Democratic primary for governor next year.
- Kristof, 62, whose Twitter bio calls himself “Oregon farmboy turned NY Times columnist,” told Willamette Week: “I have friends trying to convince me that here in Oregon, we need new leadership from outside the broken political system. … I’m honestly interested in what my fellow Oregonians have to say about that.”
The seat will be open: Gov. Kate Brown (D) is term-limited.
- “All I know for sure is that we need someone with leadership and vision so that folks from all over the state can come together to get us back on track,” the columnist added in his statement, later shared with The (Portland) Oregonian.
For at least two years, Kristof has been visiting his family farm in Yamhill, Ore., “removing the cherry orchard to make way for cider apples,” Willamette Week reports.
- In 2020, he and his wife, Sheryl WuDunn, wrote “Tightrope,” a book about strains in working-class America, including Yamhill.
- A February column (subscription), datelined Yamhill, told the moving story of a childhood pal — who became homeless and didn’t make it.
- An April column (subscription) was headlined: “Lessons for America From a Weird Portland.”
Video: Kristof returns to his rural hometown. … Read “The Kids on the Number 6 School Bus” (Click “Read an excerpt.”)
Normally the ultimate depreciating asset, cars are defying economic gravity: Some vehicles are now worth more than the original sticker price, The Wall Street Journal reports (subscription):
- “[C]ertain popular preowned models, such as the Kia Telluride and Toyota Tundra, are regularly selling for thousands of dollars more than the list prices of the brand-new versions as auto retailers run historically low on preowned vehicle inventory.”
Prices are even rising above 100,000 miles: “Car-shopping website Edmunds.com found that the average selling price for a used car with between 100,000 and 110,000 miles on it was $16,489 in June, the highest ever recorded and up from $12,626 a year ago,” per The Journal.
White House press secretary Jen Psaki, wearing a Max Scherzer jersey, threw out the first pitch at Nats Park yesterday — across home plate and into the mitt of Nationals relief pitcher Kyle Finnegan. (WTOP)
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Seven kids among at least 60 shot in violent Chicago weekend
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22.) THE HILL MORNING REPORT
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23.) THE HILL 12:30 REPORT
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24.) ROLL CALL
Morning Headlines
A joint fundraising committee controlled by Rep. Michelle Steel disclosed a donation of $7,900 earlier this year. The only problem: The reported donor had been dead for seven months. A disclosure form filed with the FEC now shows the money coming from the decedent’s husband, who was also a donor on the original disclosure. Read more…
The Senate Armed Services Committee will begin the process of assembling the massive annual defense policy bill for fiscal 2022 this week, amid roiling debates in a number of areas affecting the military. Subcommittee markups begin Monday and go through Tuesday, with the full committee convening Wednesday to consider the bill. Read more…
House Democrats build cash reserves ahead of 2022 midterms
House Democrats facing potentially competitive reelection races in 2022 hold a financial advantage compared with their possibly at-risk GOP colleagues, as candidates and party committees gear up for next year’s midterm battle for control of the chamber. Read more…
Click here to subscribe to Fintech Beat for the latest market and regulatory developmentsin finance and financial technology.
Pentagon offered to pay National Guard’s Capitol security costs
As lawmakers loudly sparred in recent weeks about how to reimburse the National Guard half a billion dollars for protecting the Capitol this year, the Pentagon quietly offered to simply foot the bill by deferring “non-urgent” facilities repairs by a few months, CQ Roll Call has learned. Read more…
Texas judge says DACA is illegal, halts new requests
A Texas federal judge on Friday struck down Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals, an Obama-era program protecting undocumented immigrants brought to the U.S. as children, blocking the government from approving new requests but shielding current program recipients for now. Read more…
Congress must pass Daniel’s Law to protect federal judges
OPINION — We can’t shield judges from all threats, but we can take sensible steps to secure their sensitive information from public view. One judge has already buried her son. Federal action is needed to spread these protections across the country, write Arizona Attorney General Mark Brnovich and New Jersey AG Gurbir S. Grewal. Read more…
Watch: Olivia Rodrigo, Miller Lite and cans of worms — Congressional Hits and Misses
In the latest Congressional Hits and Misses, Chuck Schumer and Ron Wyden fought over introducing Cory Booker, pop star Olivia Rodrigo made use of her driver’s license and hung out at the White House, Fox News exploded over Texas Dems drinking beer and Joni Ernst proved she loves “The Price is Right” more than anyone else. Watch here…
CQ Roll Call is a part of FiscalNote, the leading technology innovator at the intersection of global business and government. Copyright 2021 CQ Roll Call. All rights reserved Privacy | Safely unsubscribe now.
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25.) POLITICO PLAYBOOK
POLITICO Playbook: Schumer channels his inner McConnell
DRIVING THE DAY
A LONG WAY FROM APPALACHIA — Ohio GOP Senate hopeful J.D. VANCE was in the Hamptons on Saturday night mingling with GOP titans of industry. JIM TISCH, REBEKAH MERCER, STEVEN PRICE and HEATHER HIGGINS were among those who came out to support the “Hillbilly Elegy” author at a fundraiser in Southampton. Before the event, Vance visited the East Hampton home of EMIL HENRY, a former senior Treasury official for GEORGE W. BUSH and a perennial sounding board for Republican presidential aspirants. Henry, a longtime supporter and adviser to Sen. ROB PORTMAN (R-Ohio), was an early supporter of JEB BUSH and notably declined to support DONALD TRUMP.
DOUBLE-DARE YOU — CHUCK SCHUMER seems to be channeling MITCH MCCONNELL these days. The Senate majority leader is taking a gamble worthy of his predecessor by scheduling two major deadlines this week to force action on President JOE BIDEN’S agenda. The hardball move is meant to test whether Republicans who say they want bipartisanship mean it — but also to strong-arm his own ideologically diverse caucus into line on the massive, Democrats-only reconciliation bill.
FIRST UP: THE BIPARTISAN PACKAGE … Schumer will file cloture today on the bipartisan infrastructure framework, whether or not final text has been drafted. That will set up a procedural vote on the bill 30 hours later, putting Republicans on record for the first time Wednesday even as they continue negotiating on the final language.
Senators in the group spent the entire weekend trying to plug a nearly $100 billion hole in the $1 trillion plan after Republicans took issue with plans to beef up IRS enforcement. (More on this in a second.) Sources familiar with the ongoing talks told us Sunday night that there are other outstanding issues: The group was still haggling over something in almost every category of the bill, from highways and transit to water and power infrastructure.
Schumer thinks both sides have had plenty of time to reach an agreement. He’s been clear about his July time frame on this for weeks. And August recess is fast approaching, a time when senators — including Schumer — want to get home to campaign for reelection.
REPUBLICANS DON’T LIKE IT: Schumer’s put-up-or-shut-up move isn’t sitting well with the 11 Senate Republicans who’ve spent the past several months negotiating on BIF. Two of them — Portman and BILL CASSIDY (La.) — went on the Sunday shows to air their complaints.
“How can I vote for cloture when the bill isn’t written?” an exasperated Cassidy told Chris Wallace on “Fox News Sunday.” “Unless Sen. Schumer doesn’t want this to happen, you need a little bit more time to get it right. … It can absolutely happen, but you need the pay-fors. … We need Senate leadership, Schumer and the White House, to work with us. Right now, I can frankly tell you that they’ve not.”
Expect Schumer to argue this week that there is no reason not to proceed to the bill while continuing to negotiate. He made that argument for the massive China competition bill as well as the Asian American hate crimes bill a few months ago. But Republicans in the group have made it pretty clear that they’ll filibuster their own agreement if the language isn’t set by then.
SECOND: THE DEMOCRATS-ONLY BUDGET DEAL … Schumer also expects to have all 50 Senate Democrats (read: JOE MANCHIN of West Virginia and KYRSTEN SINEMA of Arizona) committed to the chamber’s unified budget plan this week. Passage of the $3.5 trillion budget, you’ll remember, is needed to unlock the fast-tracking tool to circumvent the filibuster. Without Manchin/Sinema on board, we could see some progressive Senate Democrats vote against moving to the bipartisan bill.
Manchin has said he needs to see more details on the budget before he makes a decision. More details are expected before the vote.
MITCH FLASHBACKS: Schumer’s double dare reminds some of McConnell’s move to force his conference’s hand on Obamacare repeal in the summer of 2017. In that case, the move ended up backfiring: JOHN MCCAIN opposed the bill, and a half-decade-long GOP campaign promise went up in flames.
Schumer is also taking risks here. A well-placed source said that he didn’t give a heads-up to Sinema, the lead Democratic negotiator for the Dems on BIF, before announcing his move. (Schumer’s office says staff was notified beforehand and it’s not like his timeline was a secret.)
ABOUT THOSE PAY-FORS — Portman said Sunday that he’s been on the phone with the Congressional Budget Office and the Joint Committee on Taxation all weekend trying to figure out the pay-for problem. He’s proposed delaying implementation of a Trump-era, prescription drug costs proposal that has yet to go into effect, called the Medicare Rebate Rule.
We made some calls on this and were told that repealing the rule would save about $180 billion. There’s also been some chatter about just delaying it for smaller savings. But a GOP source familiar with the talks said that Democrats are also eyeing the same potential pot of money for their own reconciliation bill, which they promised Manchin would be fully paid for.
QUICK RECAP — “Democrats, Republicans struggle to finish infrastructure proposal as key Senate deadline looms,” by WaPo’s Tony Romm
Good Monday morning, and thanks for reading Playbook. Drop us a line: Rachael Bade, Eugene Daniels, Ryan Lizza, Tara Palmeri.
POLITICO’s newest newsletter, National Security Daily, launches today. Anchored by Alex Ward, NatSec Daily will take you inside the Pentagon, the White House and beyond to tell you who’s up, who’s down and what’s keeping the administration up at night. Featuring scoops, exclusive interviews and top-notch analysis, NatSec Daily will serve as your one-stop location to catch up on the day in national security. Subscribe now here … Follow Alex @alexbward on Twitter
BIDEN’S MONDAY:
— 10 a.m.: The president will receive the President’s Daily Brief.
— 11:30 a.m.: Biden will deliver remarks on the economy and the BIF in the State Dining Room.
— 1:45 p.m.: Biden and first lady JILL BIDEN will welcome KING ABDULLAH II IBN AL HUSSEIN and QUEEN RANIA AL ABDULLAH of Jordan and His Royal Highness CROWN PRINCE AL HUSSEIN BIN ABDULLAH II.
— 2:15 p.m.: The president and King Abdullah II ibn Al Hussein will participate in a bilateral meeting in the Oval Office, followed by an expanded bilateral meeting at 2:30 p.m.
The first lady will also host a tea for Queen Rania Al Abdullah at the White House.
Press secretary JEN PSAKI will brief at 12:30 p.m.
THE SENATE will meet at 3 p.m. to take up the National Cybersecurity Preparedness Consortium Act of 2021. It will vote at 5:30 p.m. on TIFFANY CUNNINGHAM’S nomination as a judge on the Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit.
THE HOUSE returns after a two-week recess. It will meet at 2 p.m. to take up a variety of bills on everything from grid security to media diversity to desert locust control, with votes postponed until 6:30 p.m.
BIDEN’S WEEK AHEAD:
— Tuesday: The president will welcome the Super Bowl champion Tampa Bay Buccaneers to the White House, and hold a Cabinet meeting with VP KAMALA HARRIS also in attendance.
— Wednesday: Biden will travel to Cincinnati, where he will visit a local union training center and participate in a CNN town hall. Jill Biden will travel to Anchorage, Alaska.
— Friday: Biden will participate in a campaign event for Virginia gubernatorial candidate TERRY MCAULIFFE in Arlington, Va.
PLAYBOOK READS
THE WHITE HOUSE
INSIDE BIDEN’S FACEBOOK BLOWUP — “Biden’s Facebook Attack Followed Months of Frustration Inside White House,” by WSJ’s Andrew Restuccia and Sarah Needleman: “The administration’s confrontational approach marked a shift for Mr. Biden and his team, which began meeting with social-media companies during the presidential transition in a bid to strengthen protections against misinformation, U.S. officials said. They met with executives including those for Facebook, Twitter, YouTube, Snapchat and Pinterest.
“But in recent months, the behind-the-scenes discussions with Facebook grew increasingly unproductive, according to the officials, who said they were unsatisfied with the company’s responses to their requests for more information about how it was responding to the influx in misinformation.
“Convinced that private negotiations had little hope of success, senior Biden administration officials decided to ratchet up public pressure on Facebook this week amid growing concern in the White House with the slowing pace of vaccinations and the spread of the highly transmissible Delta variant.”
KLAIN GETS THE LEIBOVITCH TREATMENT — “The Ascension of Ron Klain,” by NYT’s Mark Leibovich: “Mr. Klain is an unquestioned man to see in the current White House, the most influential chief of staff of recent vintage and a marked departure from the four battered and marginalized short-timers who held the position under Trump. Mr. Klain, who was the chief of staff for Vice Presidents Biden and AL GORE, is viewed in and out of the West Wing as the essential conductor of administration business, a surrogate for the president and — in the mischievous portrayal of opponents — an all-powerful, unelected orchestrator of an ultraliberal agenda. Republicans have taken to calling him Prime Minister Klain.”
A PERCEPTIVE STORY ON THE NEW POLITICAL LANDSCAPE — “‘It’s ceding a lot of terrain to us’ — Biden goes populist with little pushback,” by Christopher Cadelago and Meridith McGraw: “Not long ago, a Democratic administration taking unilateral action to rein in corporations on everything from non-compete agreements to prescription drug affordability would have engendered fury from elected conservatives. Yet over the last week, few Republicans were warning that Biden’s actions would severely kneecap business or slow the economic recovery. And inside the White House, the relative silence was not just noticed but seen as vindication.”
GUANTÁNAMO WATCH — “Biden Administration Transfers Its First Detainee From Guantánamo Bay,” by NYT’s Carol Rosenberg and Charlie Savage: “The Biden team picked up where the Obama administration left off with the repatriation of a Moroccan man, reducing the prison population to 39.”
POLITICS ROUNDUP
PAGING DEAN BAQUET — “New York Times Columnist Nicholas Kristof Is Exploring a Run for Oregon Governor,” by Willamette Week’s Rachel Monahan: “In recent days, a poll including Kristof’s name asks voters how they would feel about a journalist who grew up on a farm running for office. The poll also includes other Democratic hopefuls. Kristof was raised on a sheep and cherry farm in Yamhill County, about an hour southwest of Portland.”
He sure sounds like a would-be candidate: “I have friends trying to convince me that here in Oregon, we need new leadership from outside the broken political system … I’m honestly interested in what my fellow Oregonians have to say about that.’” (We’ve heard that before, Kristof!)
2024 WATCH — “Pence flatlines as 2024 field takes shape,” by David Siders in Des Moines: “MIKE PENCE was met by a respectful, even warm, crowd in his first trip back to Iowa since the election. Republicans at a picnic in the northwestern corner of the state stood and clapped for him on Friday. In Des Moines later that afternoon, a ballroom full of Christian conservatives did the same.
“He was ‘honorable,’ a ‘man of faith,’ attendees at the annual Family Leadership Summit said. Evangelical leader BOB VANDER PLAATS called him ‘a very consistent conservative voice in Congress and then as governor, and then as vice president.’
“What few people said they saw in Pence, however, was the Republican nominee for president in 2024.”
DOESN’T BODE WELL — “Pollsters: ‘Impossible’ to say why 2020 polls were wrong,” by Steven Shepard: “National surveys of the 2020 presidential contest were the least accurate in 40 years, while the state polls were the worst in at least two decades, according to the new, comprehensive report from the American Association for Public Opinion Research.
“But unlike 2016, when pollsters could pinpoint factors like the education divide as reasons they underestimated Trump and offer specific recommendations to fix the problem, the authors of the new American Association for Public Opinion Research report couldn’t put their finger on the exact problem they face now. Instead, they stuck to rejecting the idea that they made the same mistakes as before, while pointing to possible new reasons for inaccuracy.”
FUNDRAISING FRIENDS — Stephen Sanchez (@SSanchezTV): “Million Dollar Birthday: Rep. MADISON CAWTHORN will hold a fundraiser at Trump’s Bedminster club on 7/31 — one day before his 26th birthday, per invitation shared with me. I’m told the event (roundtable, photo w/ Trump and cocktail party & dinner) is 20 donors paying $50k each.” With pic of invitation
CONGRESS
Today’s Congress fodder is a pair of NYT stories that — drumroll — don’t have to do with infrastructure …
1) SENATE RULES GOES TO ATLANTA — “Klobuchar Lays Out New Goals for Often Low-Key Rules Committee,” by Carl Hulse: “In just six months, [Sen. AMY KLOBUCHAR] has spearheaded a push for a sweeping voting rights bill sought by Democrats while her committee has investigated failings in the Jan. 6 assault on the Capitol. The panel was also in charge of staging Biden’s inauguration, only two weeks after the deadly riot. …
“The panel will convene its first field hearing in 20 years in Atlanta on Monday as it seeks to put a spotlight on the new voting restrictions being imposed by Republican state legislatures there and elsewhere, hoping to build a case for the seemingly fatally stalled voting rights measure. It is part of a rare move by the Rules Committee to try its hand at legislating — or at least agenda-setting — on a prominent policy issue.”
2) PELOSI TAKING ADVANTAGE OF REMOTE WORK — “Born of a Crisis, Remote Voting in Congress Has Become a Useful Perk,” by Nicholas Fandos: “Fourteen months after it was approved, with the public health threat in retreat and most members of Congress vaccinated, a growing number of lawmakers are using the practice to attend political events, double down on work back home or simply avoid a long commute to Washington.
“Perhaps no one has benefited more from the arrangement than Speaker NANCY PELOSI, who recently informed lawmakers that proxy voting would be in effect for the remainder of the summer. It has allowed Ms. Pelosi, whose majority is so slim that she can afford to lose no more than four Democrats if every member is present and voting, to all but ensure that absences alone do not cost her pivotal support.”
AMERICA AND THE WORLD
BIG INVESTIGATION — “Private Israeli spyware used to hack cellphones of journalists, activists worldwide,” by WaPo’s Dana Priest, Craig Timberg and Souad Mekhennet: “Military-grade spyware licensed by an Israeli firm to governments for tracking terrorists and criminals was used in attempted and successful hacks of 37 smartphones belonging to journalists, human rights activists, business executives and two women close to murdered Saudi journalist JAMAL KHASHOGGI, according to an investigation by The Washington Post and 16 media partners.
“The phones appeared on a list of more than 50,000 numbers that are concentrated in countries known to engage in surveillance of their citizens and also known to have been clients of the Israeli firm, NSO Group, a worldwide leader in the growing and largely unregulated private spyware industry, the investigation found.
“The list does not identify who put the numbers on it, or why, and it is unknown how many of the phones were targeted or surveilled. But forensic analysis of the 37 smartphones shows that many display a tight correlation between time stamps associated with a number on the list and the initiation of surveillance, in some cases as brief as a few seconds.”
— “FT editor among 180 journalists identified by clients of spyware firm,” The Guardian … “Responses from countries to the Pegasus Project,” Houston Chronicle … “Q&A: A guide to ‘spyware,’” WaPo
PULLOUT FALLOUT — “No Do-Overs in Afghanistan: The U.S. Cannot Re-Enter Once It Leaves,” by U.S. News & World Report’s Paul Shinkman: “As President Joe Biden nears the August deadline he set to withdraw troops from Afghanistan, one critical feature of the drawdown has become clear: he now owns the precarious situation there, and there’s no turning back.
“This defining moment for Biden’s legacy has been met with growing speculation that the U.S. may have to return to its longest war zone as the Taliban continues to take ground, execute America’s local allies and, many fear, position itself to overrun the U.S.-backed government in Kabul. But the situation on the ground, along with the domestic appetite for furthering U.S. conflicts abroad, make that impossible.”
PANDEMIC
FIVE TOTAL — “Two more Texas Democrats test positive for Covid-19,” by NBC’s Priscilla Thompson and Dennis Romero: “State Rep. TREY MARTINEZ FISCHER and in a statement Sunday he tested positive through a rapid antigen test.”
THE ‘DISINFORMATION DOZEN’ — “Majority of Covid misinformation came from 12 people, report finds,” by The Guardian’s Erum Salam: “[The Center for Countering Digital Hate] found in March that these 12 online personalities they dubbed the ‘disinformation dozen’ have a combined following of 59 million people across multiple social media platforms, with Facebook having the largest impact. CCDH analyzed 812,000 Facebook posts and tweets and found 65 percent came from the disinformation dozen.”
PLAYBOOKERS
VOLTAGE LOW AT THE CAPITOL — The Biden administration and many lawmakers have been preaching the convenience of electric vehicles, but we heard from one Democratic lawmaker who said he spent last week wandering around the Capitol trying to find a high-powered charging station for his new electric vehicle. It turns out, he said, the center of power has low voltage. On the House side, there are only 110V charging stations, where you have to bring your own power cord and charger and it can take up to 24 hours to charge.
“Getting those installed was a big deal, now they’re not good enough apparently,” said a House admin aide. “There are discussions underway about increasing the capacity and number of chargers to keep up with demand.” On the Senate side it’s a little less bleak, with level 2 charging stations that are only 220V, and still take hours to charge — not the type of speedy charge you get at a station.
PROGRAMMING NOTE — Carol Joynt’s long-running Q&A Cafe talk show is back this month after a Covid-19 hiatus. She’s relaunching the bar-side talk show at the George Town Club with an interview with Carol Leonnig and Phil Rucker, authors of “I Alone Can Fix It,” on Thursday.
SPOTTED at a baby shower for CNN’s Abby Phillip: Symone Sanders, Alencia Johnson, Maude Okrah and Lauren Wesley Wilson. Instapics
STAFFING UP — Yasmin Radjy is now senior adviser for recovery program outreach at the Treasury Department. She previously was national political director at Planned Parenthood Action Fund.
TRANSITIONS — Danielle Fulfs is now legislative director for Rep. Adam Schiff (D-Calif.). She most recently was senior legislative assistant to Assistant Speaker Katherine Clark (D-Mass.). … Chris Boness is now a policy adviser at the American Petroleum Institute. He previously was a professional staff member for the Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs GOP. … Samantha Martin is joining Finsbury Glover Hering as director of strategic comms. She previously was assistant VP for strategic outreach, comms and marketing at the Securities Industry and Financial Markets Association. …
… Zack DiGregorio is now national press secretary at Everytown. He most recently was senior comms associate at the Hub Project and is a Josh Gottheimer alum. … Zachary Lilly is now policy manager at NetChoice. He previously was telecommunication policy analyst at the Commerce Department. … Courtney Joline has been named a senior consultant at EY. She most recently was director for projects and policy at Business Executives for National Security.
ENGAGED — Courtney Rice, comms director for Nan Whaley’s Ohio gubernatorial campaign, and Ian Sundstrom, analyst at the Office of Naval Intelligence and Navy reservist, got engaged at the Washington Monument at sunset Thursday. The couple met at Beuchert’s Saloon on a blind date arranged by mutual friend Katie Drapcho. Pic
HAPPY BIRTHDAY: Playbook’s own Rachael Bade … Reps. Ron Estes (R-Kan.) and Raja Krishnamoorthi (D-Ill.) … WSJ’s Rebecca Ballhaus … Locust Street Group’s Ben Jenkins … Capitol Counsel Lyndon Boozer … Larry McCarthy … Rick Dearborn of Cypress Group … Eric Lichtblau … Andrea Porwoll … POLITICO’s Lauren Gardner and Mary Newman … Patrick Brennan … Dylan Riddle … Donna Shor … Carmel Ferrer … Jeff Marootian … Howard Schultz … Marlon Marshall … Bill Hyers … Jessica Tully … George Rakis … Jamie-Lukas Campbell … Joe Goetz … Kelly Magsamen … Lindsee Gentry … Google’s Maria Giannopoulos … Trevor Tejeda-Gervais … Daniel Kile of Vanity Fair … former Rep. John Campbell (R-Calif.) … NBC’s Alex Johnson … Lauren Selsky … Keegan Bales … Jennifer Skalka Tulumello … Stephen Ching … Wade Lairsen … Ron Faucheux … LaVenia J. LaVelle … Stephanie Valencia … The Nation’s Atossa Araxia Abrahamian … Rema Rahman of The Hill
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.
Follow us on Twitter
26.) AMERICAN MINUTE
Bartolome’ de Las Casas — Protector of the Indians – American Minute with Bill Federer
Bartolome’ de Las Casas — Protector of the Indian – American Minute with Bill Federer
- gave money, food, clothes & shelter to the poor;
- dug wells in native villages;
- opened orphanages;
- founded hospitals;
- staffed medical clinics;
- inoculated children;
- took in homeless;
- visited those in prison;
- provided disaster relief and emergency aid;
- taught farming techniques;
- provided literacy programs; and
- fought to abolish slavery.
- sold people into slavery;
- took land from Indians;
- grew opium in India to ship into China, as some British merchants did;
- turned a blind eye to sex-trafficking;
- incited racial tension for political gain, called “race-baiting”;
- voted for candidates who promise entitlement hand-outs even though those candidates disregard life of the unborn;
- promote sexually immoral indoctrination of school children “If anyone causes one of these little ones who believe in me to sin, it would be better for him if a large millstone were hung around his neck and he were thrown into the sea” (Mark 9:43)
27.) CAFFEINATED THOUGHTS
28.) CONSERVATIVE DAILY NEWS
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29.) PJ MEDIA
The Morning Briefing: Lying Democrats Are Anti-Vaxxers and COVID Superspreaders
Top O’ the Briefing
Democrats Are Struggling With the Truth Again
Happy Monday, dear Kruiser Morning Briefing friends. I’m thinking of eating nothing but taquitos for the rest of the summer.
Did we all survive the weekend? I hope the Delta variant didn’t get to everyone. Apparently, it’s EVERYWHERE.
The nonstop COVID drama is a bit much. Didn’t we all get enough of that last year? Social media is flooded with variant and vaccination news and harassment. It’s on the other side of tedious at this point. If you listen to Team Biden and their flying monkeys in the mainstream media it’s only Republicans who are bringing everybody’s least favorite plague to new people.
As always, they’re wrong.
At some point, it would be nice if the people in charge started getting things right, but that seems like a big ask when it comes to this pandemic. Bureaucratic incompetence is nothing new, but this clown car is spectacularly awful.
My RedState colleague Nick Arama wrote yesterday about the brave, bold Texas Democrats who ran away from work and are now staging their own COVID superspreader party:
I think we can officially call the runaway Texas Democrats flight to Washington, D.C., a “super spreader” now.
They announced on Saturday that three people had tested positive for the Wuhan coronavirus.
Then today, it was announced from the Texas House Democratic Caucus that two more have now tested positive, including Trey Martinez Fischer, who represents San Antonio’s 116th District. So that’s five total of the group, so far. The only other person of the five identified at this point has been Celia Israel of Austin, who said she was having mild symptoms of the virus. The rest of the five similarly were described as having no or only mild symptoms. Martinez Fischer said he would quarantine until he tests negative. All of them were allegedly fully-vaccinated.
That’s not going to help convince the 14 or so people who were still sitting on the fence about getting vaccinated to finally get the shot.
Rick wrote Sunday about the roots of COVID-vaccine skepticism. Joe Biden, Kamala Harris, Nancy Pelosi, and Andrew Cuomo were all vocal about their worries about the vaccine last year. The last time I checked, none of them were Republicans. They were haters because the vaccine was being developed when Trump was president. The MSM has a case of convenient amnesia when it comes to this fact. We’ve got the hack squad at CNN demanding to know Tucker Carlson’s vaccination status while accusing him of endangering lives because he won’t brow-beat his viewers about their personal health choices.
When Los Angeles County reinstated mask mandates last week. health officials there said the recent spike in cases was due to not having met vaccination targets. I pointed out in a column on Thursday that Los Angeles County is overwhelmingly liberal. Either virtually every Republican who lives there isn’t vaccinated or there are a lot of liberals who aren’t getting with the program.
Team Biden and Anthony Fauci keep accusing Republicans of making this a political issue. In reality, they’re the ones who are doing that. I know maybe six people who have opted not to get the vaccine, but most of the conservatives I know have been vaccinated. This is only a political issue because Democrats and the leftmedia can’t make a point without demonizing Republicans.
It never occurs to them that they would be trusted more if they’d stop lying.
Everything Isn’t Awful
PJ Media
VodkaPundit: White House Lets It Slip That ‘Temporary’ Inflation Could Last Years
Who Are the COVID-19 Misinformation ‘Dirty Dozen’ WH Wants to Silence? Not Anyone You’ve Heard Of
#WINNING. VICTORY: Biden Caves on Critical Theories Grant After Parents Push Back
After Meeting with COVID-Infected Texas Dems, Kamala Harris Goes to Walter Reed
Tokyo Olympics Already Marred by Positive COVID Tests
L.A. Police Stop Going Soft on Antifa Thugs
Virginia School Board Rejects State’s Radical Transgender Policies
Book Review: It’s Time for ‘American Marxism’ To Be Recognized and Defeated
Coming to Grips with Pro Sports’ ‘Woke’ Capitulation
Iran’s Attempt to Kidnap a Dissident in the U.S. Highlights Biden’s Extraordinary Weakness
WOW: Three Texas Dems Who Fled to D.C. Test Positive for COVID-19, One Says It’s Worth It
Vaccine Skepticism Is the Fault of Anti-Trump Democrats
GOP Calls on Biden to Withdraw Land Management Choice Over Eco-Terrorism Charge
Dr. Fauci Embarrasses Himself While Trying to Mock Fox News
Townhall Mothership
Schlichter: Are There Any Good Apples?
Biden Can Use His Meeting With Jordanian King To Bring A Terrorist To Justice
The Saga of NAACP Leader Who Yelled ‘Let Them Die’ About Opponents of CRT Continues
DeSantis Calls Out Biden for Politically Motivated ‘Double Standard’ on Cuban Immigrants
It’s Officially a ‘Super Spreader’: More Runaway Texas Dems Test Positive
WATCH: Terrifying Video Shows Little Girl Dragged by School Bus as Civil Trial Begins
Continuing the Pro-Vaxx Campaign, State University Offers Chances to Win $1,000 Scholarships
Activists Still Pretending Gun Sales Led To Crime Spike
Armed Citizens Protecting Neighborhoods, Businesses Amid South Africa Violence
No, Philly’s Gun “Buybacks” Aren’t Working
Pepper the robot discontinued after being repeatedly fired from jobs
The Atlanta police exodus continues apace
L.A. County sheriff: The new indoor mask mandate isn’t backed by science and we won’t enforce it
And not serving booze. We bailed out the airlines. Why are they so understaffed?
VIP
The Kruiser Kabana Episode 138: The SFK Fun Truck Needs to Be a Thing
‘Unwoke’ With Kevin and Kruiser #3: What’s the Best Gun When You’re Sleepy?
VodkaPundit, Part Deux: Conservatism in the Age of Biden and the ‘Target-Rich Environment’
If Democrats Trust the 2020 Results, They Should Support the Forensic Audits
Wisconsin Could Have the Next Forensic Audit of the 2020 Election
Facebook Misinformation Isn’t Killing People, Joe Biden Is
Biden’s Cuban Refugee Policy Is Brutal and Inhumane
‘Don’t Fauci My Florida’ Merch Riles Democrats
GOLD Why Are Democrats Still Obsessed With The Post Office?
Around the Interwebz
8 Foods You Can Buy in Bulk and Freeze for Later
Fearmongering is no way to win over vaccine refuseniks
Meet the Italian Brothers Who Grew the World’s Biggest Cherry
Bee Me
The Kruiser Kabana
Kabana Gallery
Kabana Tunes
I don’t think Beer Pilates is a thing but I’m willing to listen to the pitch.
30.) WHITE HOUSE DOSSIER
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Cut to the News
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31.) THE DISPATCH
The Morning Dispatch: Biden Blames Big Tech for Vaccination Shortfalls
Plus: A federal judge puts a freeze on new applicants to the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program.
The Dispatch Staff | 18 min ago | 2 |
Happy Monday! Watch Space Jam (1996) and Space Jam: A New Legacy (2021) back-to-back and try making the case to us that LeBron James is the GOAT instead of Michael Jordan. We’d like to see you try.
Quick Hits: Today’s Top Stories
- The Commerce Department reported Friday that U.S. retail sales rose 0.6 percent from May to June, outpacing economists’ projections.
- A federal judge ruled on Friday that the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) program is illegal, halting the approval of new Dreamer applications but leaving the more than 600,000 current DACA recipients’ status untouched. President Joe Biden called the decision “deeply disappointing” and said the Department of Justice intends to appeal it.
- Bloomberg reports that more than 1 million Cubans are using a U.S.-backed censorship evasion software called Psiphon every day to get around the regime’s social media crackdown in light of recent protests.
- Government data released Friday shows that U.S. Border Patrol has made more than 1 million arrests along the U.S.-Mexico border dating back to last October. Agents last made more than 1 million such arrests in one fiscal year in 2006, and there are almost three months left in FY 2021.
- Pope Francis on Friday moved to place new restrictions on the use of the Tridentine (Latin) Mass, limiting where—and by whom—the more traditional Mass can be celebrated.
- Massive flooding continued to ravage Germany and Belgium over the weekend, with the resulting death toll rising to at least 188.
- American Collin Morikawa, 24, edged out Jordan Speith to win the British Open on Sunday. It was Morikawa’s second major championship.
White House v. Facebook: Vaccine Edition
After a barn-burning first few months, the United States’ COVID-19 vaccination effort has slowed to a limp. Fewer than 700,000 shots have been administered per day on average over the past two weeks, compared to more than 3 million back in April. That deceleration would be more palatable if we were approaching herd immunity, but per the Centers for Disease Control (CDC), just over half the eligible population (56.8 percent) is fully vaccinated, and only 65.8 percent of those ages 12 and up have received at least one shot. Nearly three weeks later, the country still hasn’t reached the Biden administration’s Fourth of July goal of 70 percent of adults with at least one dose.
Perhaps unsurprisingly, there’s some frustration about this at the White House. “This is becoming a pandemic of the unvaccinated,” CDC Director Rochelle Walensky said Friday. “Our biggest concern is that we are going to continue to see preventable cases, hospitalizations and, sadly, deaths among the unvaccinated.”
In response, the administration debuted a new strategy for getting vaccination numbers moving again: Laying into tech companies, which the White House clearly believes to be doing an insufficient job combating vaccine misinformation.
Surgeon General Vivek Murthy issued an advisory on Thursday labeling health misinformation “a serious threat to public health” and arguing that “misinformation has caused confusion and led people to decline COVID-19 vaccines.” The document breaks down the unique roles individuals, educators, health professionals, journalists, tech platforms, researchers, funders, and governments have in knocking down health misinformation, but one of those groups has received much more scrutiny than the rest.
“Modern technology companies have enabled misinformation to poison our information environment with little accountability to their users,” Murthy told reporters on Thursday. “They’ve allowed people who intentionally spread misinformation—what we call ‘disinformation’—to have extraordinary reach. They’ve designed product features, such as ‘Like’ buttons, that reward us for sharing emotionally-charged content, not accurate content. And their algorithms tend to give us more of what we click on, pulling us deeper and deeper into a well of misinformation.”
Biden himself was a little more blunt when asked by reporters on Friday for his opinion of Facebook. “They’re killing people,” he said.
DACA Dreaming
Federal judge Andrew Hanen ruled on Friday that the DACA program is illegal, enjoining the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) from approving new applications. Current DACA recipients—of which there are more than 600,000 nationwide—will not be affected.
DACA allows people who were brought to the United States illegally as children—often referred to as “Dreamers”—to apply for “deferred action” status for two years at a time, shielding them from deportation and making them eligible for work permits and other benefits, including Social Security cards.
In 2018, Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton filed a lawsuit arguing that the executive branch “lacks the power to unilaterally grant unlawfully present aliens lawful presence and work authorization.” Hanen, a George W. Bush appointee in the Southern District of Texas, ruled that the 2012 DHS memorandum creating the program violated the Administrative Procedure Act, which requires most federal rules to go through a notice-and-comment process. Janet Napolitano—the Obama administration’s Department of Homeland Security secretary at the time—failed to do so in the case of DACA.
Immigration activists criticized Hanen’s ruling, but their ability to pressure the political system is limited. “Since all Hanen did was prohibit the issuance of new DACA work permits and did not invalidate the ones people already have, there’s a lot less political imperative to do something about it as there would have been otherwise,” Mark Krikorian, executive director of the restrictionist Center for Immigration Studies, told The Dispatch. “It’s hard to say the sky is falling when nobody’s losing [deferred action status].”
Worth Your Time
- For those already vaccinated and concerned about the Delta variant, it can be easy—and cathartic—to vent frustrations with those still refusing to get the shot. (And don’t get us started on media and political elites knowingly stoking disinformation for their own gain.) But as Michael Brendan Dougherty writes in National Review, scorn and condescension are likely only hardening vaccine skepticism. “Getting skeptics on board will require abandoning efforts that seem like open manipulation in defiance of the evidence. It will also mean leveling with people,” he writes. “An ad might acknowledge that indeed there aren’t long-term studies and cannot be any when we are responding to a sudden pandemic, but it could offer medical reasoning to trust that long-term health complications due to these vaccines are unlikely, given how few short-term complications there have been. A public-health campaign would give context to the information about vaccine reactions reported on the government’s own websites—such as the VAERs system—and explain how the government assesses them. In the absence of this, skeptics will take the word of whoever is willing to give this information context. … If vaccine advocates really do want vaccination uptake to increase more than they want to feel superior, they have to change course.”
- In her latest essay, New York Times columnist Roxane Gay attempts to answer a central question: Why are people so awful online? “I don’t enjoy most social media anymore,” she confesses. “After a while, the lines blur, and it’s not at all clear what friend or foe look like, or how we as humans should interact in this place. After being on the receiving end of enough aggression, everything starts to feel like an attack. Your skin thins until you have no defenses left. It becomes harder and harder to distinguish good-faith criticism from pettiness or cruelty. It becomes harder to disinvest from pointless arguments that have nothing at all to do with you. An experience that was once charming and fun becomes stressful and largely unpleasant. I don’t think I’m alone in feeling this way. We have all become hammers in search of nails.”
Presented Without Comment
Also Presented Without Comment
Toeing the Company Line
- Former New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie sat down with Sarah and Chris on Friday’s Dispatch Podcast for a fascinating discussion on the state of the GOP. Why did Donald Trump lose? What should Republicans be focusing on ahead of 2022? Does Christie have one more presidential run in him?
- In his Friday G-File, Jonah riffs on the Biden administration’s incessant “America is back” declarations. “For Biden, it seems to have two meanings. One is his narrow argument that we are rejoining all of the multilateral partnerships and alliances that Trump pulled out of or denigrated,” he writes. “But there’s another meaning to ‘America is back.’ It’s an unsubtle dig at Trump and a subtle bit of liberal nostalgia all at once. It’s kind of a progressive version of ‘Make America Great Again.’ It rests on the assumption that one group of liberal politicians speaks for the real America, and now that those politicians are back in power, the real America is back, too. But the problem is, there is no one real America. There are some 330 million Americans and they, collectively and individually, cannot be shoe-horned into a single vision regardless of what labels you yoke to the effort.”
- David’s Sunday French Press was written in response to yet another example of a Christian leader failing to respond adequately to sexual abuse. “It’s time for the disparate elements of a disorganized church to rally to a common cause,” he argues. “It’s time for that same disorganized church to apply the common lessons of all too many similar scandals to create systems of accountability that leave abusers nowhere to hide. It’s time to recognize that human frailty leads to human failure, and to enact policies and processes that put a fence around our own weakness.”
- Thomas Joscelyn’s latest Vital Interests (🔒) looks at the Iranian regime’s recent attempts to kidnap Masih Alinejad—a dissident and human rights activist—on American soil. “One can imagine the spectacle that would have occurred had Alinejad gone missing from her Brooklyn home in the middle of the night,” he writes. “It says much about how the Iranian regime views the U.S. that it did not really fear any reprisals, or even a modest disruption in the nuclear negotiations.”
- On the site today, Chris Stirewalt examines how House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy’s quest for the speaker’s gavel might imperil Republicans’ chance to retake the House, and James C. Capretta takes a deep dive into how to address Medicare’s coming insolvency.
Reporting by Declan Garvey (@declanpgarvey), Andrew Egger (@EggerDC), Charlotte Lawson (@charlotteUVA), Ryan Brown (@RyanP_Brown), Harvest Prude (@HarvestPrude), Tripp Grebe (@tripper_grebe), Emma Rogers (@emw_96), Price St. Clair (@PriceStClair1), Jonathan Chew (@JonathanChew19), and Steve Hayes (@stephenfhayes).
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32.) LEGAL INSURRECTION
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33.) THE DAILY WIRE
34.) DESERET NEWS
35.) BRIGHT
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36.) AMERICAN THINKER
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37.) LARRY J. SABATO’S CRYSTAL BALL
38.) THE BLAZE
39.) THE FEDERALIST
40.) REUTERS
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41.) NOQ REPORT
42.) ARRA NEWS SERVICE
43.) REDSTATE
A.U.D.I.T. of Elections: Why Do Democrats Fear a Forensic Audit in Pennsylvania?
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44.) WORLD NET DAILY
45.) CONSERVATIVE BRIEF
46.) BIZPAC REVIEW
47.) ABC
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48.) NBC MORNING RUNDOWN
Monday, July 19, 2021
Good morning, NBC News readers.
Who’s at risk for breakthrough Covid infections, Texas Democrats’ escape comes with a hefty price tag, and Jeff Bezos prepares to head to space.
Here’s what we’re watching this Monday morning.
Fully vaccinated people who become seriously ill with Covid-19 tend to be older than 65, have weakened immune systems or other severe medical conditions, an NBC News survey of health officials nationwide found.
As of July 12, the CDC has reported nearly 5,500 cases in which a fully vaccinated person with Covid-19 was hospitalized or died. Seventy-five percent of those patients were over age 65. However, many breakthrough infections are asymptomatic and are found by chance or routine testing among patients who arrive at the hospital for other reasons, such as heart conditions or other medical problems.
Covid cases around the country are on the rise, though the total is nowhere close to what it was months ago. It comes as slowing vaccination rates — particularly in more conservative areas — indicate an uphill battle to vaccinate remaining holdouts.
Monday’s top stories By Jane C. Timm | Read more Private jets, housing, food and other transport costs will make up the bulk of the costs facing the more than 50 Democratic members of the state House who fled Austin for Washington, D.C., last Monday. By Jon Schuppe | Read more While some people have been quickly cleared, others are still waiting. On Tuesday they will file a petition seeking to dismiss their convictions. By Eiko Yahashi and Corky Siemaszko | Read more Five days before the cauldron is lit, a new poll showed more evidence that the Japanese public opposes holding the Games in the country amid the Covid-19 pandemic. OPINION By Sally Augustin | Read more The science is clear: People feel most comfortable and safe when they’ve got a single space that they ‘own’ at work and is theirs to return to, writes Augustin, an environmental psychologist. The future of cannabis is female: Gen Z women are fastest-growing consumers of legal weed By Ben Popken | Read more Modern branding that takes its design cues from traditional consumer brands, along with clear labels and lab-tested ingredients are appreciated by female cannabis users who like the evolved approach. BETTER How to buy the best salad greens at the farmers market and grocery store By Erica Chayes Wida | Read more Believe it or not, sometimes buying wilted greens is OK.
Want to receive the Morning Rundown in your inbox? Sign up here.
Also in the news …
Here’s how to apply spray sunscreen — and the best ones to buy
One fun thing Wren Zimmerman had always wanted to ride horses. After being diagnosed in high school with a condition that causes vision loss, she decided to change her plans for the future and pursue her passion – competitive horse jumping. She moved to Kentucky horse country and now rides and competes full-time.
“He’s my seeing eye horse, if you will, and he gives me freedom from my disability,” she said of her horse. “My own personal goals might blaze a trail for other people to pursue their own passions, and to feel comfortable doing that.”
Watch the video here.
Thanks for reading the Morning Rundown.
If you have any comments — likes, dislikes — send me an email at: rachel.elbaum@nbcuni.com.
Thanks, Rachel Elbaum
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49.) NBC FIRST READ
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From NBC’s Chuck Todd, Mark Murray, and Ben Kamisar
FIRST READ: Eight weeks out, California recall lacks the buzz of 2003 contest
With 57 days to go until the election and with the official list of replacement candidates now complete, it’s safe to say that the 2021 California gubernatorial recall bears no resemblance whatsoever to its 2003 predecessor.
In 2003, incumbent Dem Gov. Gray Davis’ approval ratings were in the 20s and 30s. In 2021, incumbent Gov. Gavin Newsom’s approval is in the 50s.
AP Photo/Ringo H.W. Chiu
In 2003, the biggest celebrity running to replace Davis was Arnold Schwarzenegger. In 2021, the biggest celebrity is Caitlyn Jenner, who has been shooting a “Celebrity Big Brother” reality show overseas in Australia instead of campaigning for governor.
In 2003, Lt. Gov. Cruz Bustamante was a prominent Dem running to replace Davis. In 2021, of the eight Democrats on the official list of candidates, none is a current or former elected official.
In 2003, the other candidates running included child actor Gary Coleman, Arianna Huffington, the late Larry Flynt and former Major League Baseball Commissioner Peter Ueberroth. In 2021, the other candidates include former San Diego Mayor Kevin Faulconer, 2018 GOP gubernatorial nominee John Cox, former Rep. Doug Ose – as well as real-estate YouTuber Kevin Paffrath and L.A. billboard queen Angelyne, who also ran in 2003.
And maybe most strikingly of all, the 2003 California gubernatorial recall was the marquee contest that year in the country, with it dominating the nation’s political news. By contrast, the 2021 race has been a relative snoozer, with it being overshadowed by rising Covid cases, heat waves, the upcoming Olympics – and even New York’s mayoral race and Virginia’s gubernatorial contest.
Now that lack of attention could help depress Dem turnout, which is how Republicans could defeat Newsom in this Dem-dominated state.
But more than anything else, the lack of interest just shows how strong Newsom looks right now.
Which is a significant difference from 18 years ago.
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What we learned from last week’s FEC reports
One of us broke down the big headlines from last week’s second-quarter FEC reports, and here’s what we found:
- Sen. Tim Scott, R-S.C., led the pack among incumbents raising money for their re-election, raking in $9.6 million and ending June with a $14.4 million warchest. Ohio Republican Mike Gibbons raised more than any other challenger with $6.2 million (but almost $5.7 million of that was in loans).
- Not including personal loans, Rep. Val Demings, D-Fla., raised the most of any Senate challenger with $4.7 million raised and $3.1 million in cash on hand. Her would-be GOP opponent (assuming she wins the primary, in which she’s heavily favored), Sen. Marco Rubio, also had a strong quarter and raised $4 million to leave his cash on hand at $6.3 million.
- Other Senate incumbents who raised $2 million or more for the quarter: Raphael Warnock, D-Ga., ($7.2 million); Mark Kelly, D-Ariz., ($6 million); Maggie Hassan, D-N.H., ($3.3 million); John Kennedy, R-La., ($3 million); Catherine Cortez Masto, D-N.M., ($2.8 million); Rand Paul, R-Ky., ($2.7 million); Tammy Duckworth, D-Ill., ($2.4 million); Alex Padilla, D-Calif., ($2.2 million); Patty Murray, D-Wash., ($2 million); and Todd Young, R-Ind., ($2 million).
- Other notable hauls: Vulnerable Sen. Ron Johnson, R-Wis. ($1.2 million); Sen. Lisa Murkowski, R-Alaska, ($1.1 million); Dem Rep. Tim Ryan ($3.1 million); and Dem John Fetterman ($2.5 million).
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Data Download: The numbers you need to know today
$1.5 million: How much one Texas Democrat estimates it will cost members of the state House to stay in D.C. through the end of the state’s special session in protest of a GOP-led bill adding new voting restrictions.
5: The number of Texas Democratic state House members who tested positive for Covid-19 after traveling to D.C.
39: The number of prisoners at Guantanamo Bay after the Biden administration transferred its first detainee from the detention center.
34,207,484: The number of confirmed cases of coronavirus in the United States, per the most recent data from NBC News and health officials. (That’s 74,792 more since Friday morning.)
612,289: The number of deaths in the United States from the virus so far, per the most recent data from NBC News. (That’s 706 more since Friday morning.)
337,740,358: The number of vaccine doses administered in the U.S., per the CDC.
48.6 percent: The share of all Americans who are fully vaccinated, per the CDC.
59.4 percent: The share of all American adults at least 18 years of age who are fully vaccinated, per CDC.
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TWEET OF THE DAY: Bad news out of Tokyo
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Falling apart?
With Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer scheduling a procedural vote this week on the bipartisan infrastructure package, one key pay-for appears to be unravelling.
“The Republicans’ lead negotiator for a bipartisan infrastructure bill said Sunday that lawmakers had dropped a proposal to boost IRS enforcement as a way to pay for the package,” per NBC News.
“Increasing IRS enforcement of tax collections to pay for the $579 billion bill had emerged as a point of contention among Senate negotiators, with many conservative anti-spending groups and lawmakers expressing concerns.”
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ICYMI: What ELSE is happening in the world?
The Biden administration is blaming China for the recent Microsoft Exchange hack.
Los Angeles has enacted new mask orders amid another surge in Covid-19 cases.
Older people with serious medical conditions are at highest risk for severe breakthrough Covid-19 infections.
A new investigation by The Washington Post and 16 other media partners uncovered how private spyware has been used to hack the cellphones of journalists, activists, businesspeople and others
The Dallas Morning News is endorsing GOP state Rep. Jake Ellzey in the House runoff election over Republican Susan Wright, whose husband represented the area until he died this year.
Pollsters are struggling to explain how 2020 election polling went wrong.
The Wall Street Journal does a deep dive into the rift between President Biden and Facebook on Covid-10 misinformation.
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51.) REASON
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52.) MANHATTAN INSTITUTE
53.) LOUDER WITH CROWDER
JP Sears is a mensch. He noticed there are a lot of morons who hate America. There are also morons who think what’s happening in Cuba isn’t because of communism and who think women have weiners. But t … MORE
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55.) REALCLEARPOLITICS MORNING NOTE
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62.) 1440 DAILY DIGEST
No images? Click here Good morning. It’s Monday, July 19, and we’re covering the aftermath of deadly floods in Europe, the ongoing immigration surge along the US-Mexico border, and more. Have feedback? Let us know at hello@join1440.com. First time reading? Sign up here. NEED TO KNOWDeath Toll Rises in EuropeMore than 180 people have been confirmed dead, with hundreds still missing, as rescue crews worked through the aftermath of deadly flooding in Western Europe. The waters were preceded by historic rainfall in eastern Belgium, the Netherlands, and western Germany (see map), with the city of Cologne measuring more than 6 inches of precipitation in a 24-hour period. Meteorologists said the amount of rain equaled a full month’s worth in a single day in many locations. In a region that rarely sees such heavy rains, the situation was exacerbated by general unpreparedness. The European Flood Awareness System issued a warning early last week, but officials were reportedly slow to respond. Early models showed a low pressure system bringing precipitation from the Mediterranean Sea, trapped by two high pressure fronts (see breakdown, paywall, WashPo). See photos of the devastation here. Border Encounters More than 188,000 migrants were stopped along the US-Mexico border last month, according to government data, the highest June total in at least two decades. Border officials have reported more than 1 million encounters in the current fiscal year (which begins in October), the first time that mark has been passed since 2005. Of the June total, roughly 34% were migrants who had been encountered within the previous 12 months. Similarly, of the 1 million encounters since October, less than half (about 456,000) were newly encountered migrants. Officials said the large number of migrants who were expelled under pandemic-related public health orders and subsequently attempted reentry contributed to the high overall numbers. See the data here. In related news, a federal judge ruled the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program, referred to as DACA, to be illegal. The Obama-era program defers deportation of certain undocumented immigrants known as Dreamers—an estimated 700,000 children and young adults who were under 16 years old when they entered the US. Under the ruling, current recipients will not be affected and may continue to renew their status, but no new applicants will be allowed. Bootleg Fire GrowsOregon’s Bootleg Fire grew to roughly 300,000 acres over the weekend, fueled by dry air and windy conditions. Expanding by 4 miles a day in the state’s Fremont-Winema National Forest, the blaze has drawn more than 2,100 firefighters to help contain the flames, while forcing the evacuation of tens of thousands. The fire is roughly half the size of the state’s worst fire in history, the Long Draw Fire, which burned through nearly 560,000 acres in 2012. As of this morning, the fire was 25% contained. The blaze is one of nearly 80 wildfires currently burning across 13 states in the western US, including the Snake River Complex fire along the Oregon-Idaho border, which has consumed more than 100,000 acres and was 44% contained as of this writing. It is unknown what started the fire, which was sparked July 6. See photos here. In partnership with YieldstreetEXPLORE NEW INVESTMENTSEvolving markets open the door for alternative approaches to investing. Cut through the volatility with Yieldstreet investments that target short durations and income generation. Explore investments in art, real estate, legal finance, and more with minimums starting at $1k and target annual yields of 10-15%. Yieldstreet’s asset-backed deals can help protect your capital, allowing you to unlock income generation with downside protection from hard assets. This style of investing isn’t new for hedge funds and the ultra-wealthy, but attaining this level of access is long overdue for retail investors. Join over 275k members on Yieldstreet today. Please support our sponsors! IN THE KNOWSports, Entertainment, & Culture> Slovenian cyclist Tadej Pogačar wins second straight Tour de France (More) | Milwaukee takes NBA Finals game five over Phoenix 123-119 for their third straight victory, can clinch championship tomorrow night (More) | American Collin Morikawa wins British Open, his second major championship (More) > Pioneering rapper Biz Markie, best known for “Just a Friend,” dies at 57 of complications from diabetes (More) | Pulitzer Prize-winning photojournalist Danish Siddiqui killed while covering clash between Afghan forces and Taliban militants (More) | See Siddiqui’s photos here (More) > French filmmaker Julia Ducournau becomes second female director to win the Palme d’Or, the top prize at Cannes Film Festival, with “Titane” (More) Science & Technology> Amazon founder Jeff Bezos set to enter space tomorrow morning aboard his company Blue Origin’s inaugural crewed mission (More) > Study shows cannabis was first domesticated roughly 12,000 years ago in East Asia (More) > Archaeologists provide findings on dig into Roman fort found near the UK’s North Yorkshire; discoveries shed light on Dere Street, one of Britain’s oldest roads (More) Business & MarketsBrought to you by BlockFi > US stock markets fall Friday (S&P 500 -0.8%, Dow -0.9%, Nasdaq -0.8%); all three indices end the week lower for the first time in four weeks (More) > US retail sales increased 0.6% in June versus expectations of a decline (More) > Oil prices reach three-year high; OPEC and allies agree to increase oil production in August until pre-pandemic output levels are reached (More) From our partners: The easiest way to earn bitcoin. Our friends at BlockFi bring us the world’s first bitcoin rewards credit card, offering 3.5% in bitcoin back on all purchases in your first three months (up to $100 in bitcoin) and 1.5% back in bitcoin on every purchase after that. On top of that, earn crypto interest on all rewards—all of these perks for no annual fee. Politics & World Affairs> New US COVID-19 cases surpass 30,000 per day, with daily deaths hovering around 250; see data here (More) > At least five Texas Democratic lawmakers test positive for COVID-19 after leaving the state in an attempt to block an election and voting reform bill (More) > First person facing charges related to the Jan. 6 storming of the US Capitol set to be sentenced; prosecutors asked for Paul Allard Hodgkins, charged with obstructing an official proceeding, to serve 18 months in prison (More) A TRULY DIVERSIFIED PORTFOLIOIn partnership with Yieldstreet Looking to build wealth beyond the stock market? Gain access to alternative investment opportunities once reserved for the ultra-wealthy, with Yieldstreet. Build a diversified portfolio with investments such as real estate, art, commercial finance, and other alternatives typically with low stock market correlation and target annual yields of 10-15%. Join over 275k members who have invested over $1.6B with Yieldstreet. Please support our sponsors! ETCETERAA retrospective on former sports anchor Stuart Scott. The website that helps kids run a real business. The 25 best bars in America. Heading to space? Make sure you have insurance. The Eiffel Tower reopens for business. MIT’s newest robot wants help dress the elderly. The pandemic’s easiest photo trend. When $10M in cocaine lands on your roof. Clickbait: How not to scare away bears. Historybook: Inventor and businessman Samuel Colt born (1814); First US Women’s Rights convention held (1848); Sports journalist Stuart Scott born (1965); First GPS signal transmitted (1977). “Our life’s journey is really about the people who touch us.” – Stuart Scott Enjoy reading? Forward this email to a friend.Why 1440? The printing press was invented in the year 1440, spreading knowledge to the masses and changing the course of history. Guess what else? There are 1,440 minutes in a day and every one is precious. That’s why we scour hundreds of sources every day to provide a concise, comprehensive, and objective view of what’s happening in the world. Reader feedback is a gift—shoot us a note at hello@join1440.com. Interested in advertising to smart readers like you? Apply here! |
63.) AMERICAN INSTITUTE FOR ECONOMIC RESEARCH
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72.) FOUNDATION FOR ECONOMIC EDUCATION
Plus, the retail sector is coming back to life.
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73.) POPULIST PRESS
SHARE THIS WITH YOUR LOVED ONES! Something is not right…
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TOP STORIES:
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MRNA Vaccine Inventor Sounds The Alarm… Something Is Serious Wrong
-
Incredible: Rare Footage Of Donald Trump Speaking At Cuban Foundation
- Chemical Attack At Public Park — Hazmat On Scene
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DOJ Caught Assisting Biden To Win Election
- Attorney General Merrick Garland Just Violated His Pledge
- Dems Who Fled Texas Just Got Devastating News
- Ronna McDaniel Finally Gets What She Deserves…
- Kamala Harris Just Humiliated On National Television
- Kamala Harris Is Getting Very Nervous
- Trump Absolutely Wrecks Fox News And Bret Baier
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IN DEPTH:
- INCREDIBLE: RARE Footage of Donald Trump Speaking at Cuban Foundation 3 mins
- Rental car companies across U.S. struggle to replace diminished fleets 4 hours
- Canceled Keystone Pipeline company suing U.S. for $15 billion 4 hours
- OPEC+ meets to agree oil supply boost as prices rise 4 hours
- Rick Scott: If Cubans Get Internet Access Back, the Communist Regime Is ‘Over’ 4 hours
- UPDATE: The NAACP Leader Who Declared ‘Let Them Die’ About Opponents of CRT Has Resigned 4 hours
- Senior Biden officials now say COVID lab leak theory just as plausible as natural origins explanation: report
- Concha: Democrats’ stunt with Texas election bill will ‘blow up in their faces’ in 2022 4 hours
- Federal Judge Throws a Monkey Wrench Into Capitol Riot Prosecutions 4 hours
- If The White House Is Looking For Disinformation – The Call Is Coming From Inside The House 4 hours
- Wall Street’s China Dreams Get Jolt From U.S. Hong Kong Warning 4 hours
- Some San Francisco-area restaurants reinstate mask requirements, cut unvaccinated workers over new guidance 4
- Janet Yellen to Discuss “Stablecoin” Cryptocurrencies With Regulators 4 hours
- Miami housing market tightens further 4 hours
- These States Are Throwing a Monkey Wrench in the Left’s Effort to Build ‘Structural Bias’ Into the Election System 5
- Three Texas Democrats Test Positive for COVID-19 After Fleeing State for Washington, D.C. 5 hours
- Biden to host Super Bowl champ Tampa Bay Buccaneers Tuesday 5 hours
- Trump takes a hack at British Open for bypassing his Scottish golf course 5 hours
- Tom Brady playing entire 2020 season with torn MCL could spell trouble for Bucs under NFL policy 5 hours
- Tour De Crazy continues, cyclists save fan who fell into ravine 5 hours
- Cuban Government Responds to Protests By Holding Mass in Havana 5 hours
- Biden team fumbled early response to Cuban unrest 10 hours
- Biden vows to fight DACA ruling, calls for congressional action 16 hours
- Facebook says White House ‘looking for scapegoats’ after missing vaccine goal 18 hours
- ‘My fist meal as a fugitive’: Quotes of the week 1 day
- UFC star Conor McGregor pictured for first time since undergoing surgery following gruesome leg injury 1 day
- All-Women Umpiring Crew Calls MLB Game for First Time 1 day
- Red Sox game still on with Yankees’ COVID count at six 1 day
- Tom Brady Played Through Season And Super Bowl On Torn MCL – OutKick 1 day
- Richard Sherman breaks silence, cites ‘personal challenges’ after arrest 1 day
- Kevin Love withdraws from Olympic team, citing ‘performance’ level: reports 1 day
- Mark Wahlberg on eating 11,000 calories a day for his upcoming movie ‘Stu’: ‘It was not fun’ 1 day
- Director Oliver Stone Slams the Cancel Culture ‘Witch Hunt’ and Twitter for Banning Trump: ‘It’s Shocking!’ 1 day
- ‘Airplane!’ pilot Robert Hays hosts A&E air-mayhem series 1 day
- Disney to Move Thousands of Jobs from California to ‘Business Friendly’ Florida 1 day
- Wisconsin next? GOP lawmaker asks for forensic audit of 2020 election 1 day
- Self-driving truck beats human drivers on multistate trip by 10 hours 1 day
- Chair of Congressional Black Caucus arrested for storming Senate building in protest of filibuster 1 day
- Prosecutor Delayed Hunter Biden Probe To Shield 2020 Election 1 day
- Exclusive: Suburb Wanting ‘Divorce’ from Atlanta Will Get Senate Hearing 1 day
- BREAKING: Federal Judge Rules DACA Illegal 1 day
- Los Angeles County sheriff will not enforce new mask mandate: ‘Not backed by science’ 1 day
- BREAKING: Protesters flock to Biden White House to demand freedom for the Cuban people 1 day
- BREAKING: Trump DESTROYS woke ‘General’ Mark Milley over ‘coup’ allegations in blistering new statement 1 day
- Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen says lockdowns can return in low vaccination areas 1 day
- B‑21 Progress Means Current Bombers Need Fast Retirement — Air Force Magazine 1 day
- ‘Afghanistan is unraveling.’ McConnell skewers Biden again on withdrawal 1 day
- China-Backed Confucius Institute Turns Its Attention to K‑12 Classrooms — Washington Free Beacon 1 day
- Mike Lee: White House colluding with Facebook ‘looks like First Amendment violation’ 1 day
- McConnell Joins Calls for Biden Administration to Withdraw Eco-Terrorist Nominee for Public Lands Post 1 day
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🔥HUGE!!: Trump Is ‘Mad As Hell’ — Goes All In
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TOP STORIES:
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Trump Is ‘Mad As Hell’ — Goes All In
- GA Secretary of State Demands Election Officials Fired After Audit Discovery
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MILITARY INTELLIGENCE PROVES STOLEN ELECTION IN MULTIPLE STATES
- NOW THEY ARE SAYING THAT THE REPUBLICAN PARTY IS THE #1 “NATIONAL SECURITY THREAT TO THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA”
- INCREDIBLE: RARE Footage of Donald Trump Speaking at Cuban Foundation
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MRNA VACCINE INVENTOR SOUNDS THE ALARM… SOMETHING IS SERIOUS WRONG
- CHEMICAL ATTACK AT PUBLIC PARK — HAZMAT ON SCENE
-
DOJ Caught Assisting Biden To Win Election
- Attorney General Merrick Garland Just Violated His Pledge
-
DEMS WHO FLED TEXAS JUST GOT DEVASTATING NEWS
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IN DEPTH:
- Harris visits Walter Reed for ‘routine’ doctor appointment days after meeting with infected Texas Democrats 2 hours
- This decision is a crushing blow to freedom of speech 4 hours
- Obama is using Biden as his puppet… 4 hours
- The World’s Tech Giants, Compared To The Size Of Nations’ Economies 5 hours
- INCREDIBLE: RARE Footage of Donald Trump Speaking at Cuban Foundation 6 hours
- Rental car companies across U.S. struggle to replace diminished fleets 10 hours
- Canceled Keystone Pipeline company suing U.S. for $15 billion 11 hours
- OPEC+ meets to agree oil supply boost as prices rise 11 hours
- Rick Scott: If Cubans Get Internet Access Back, the Communist Regime Is ‘Over’ 11 hours
- UPDATE: The NAACP Leader Who Declared ‘Let Them Die’ About Opponents of CRT Has Resigned 11 hours
- Senior Biden officials now say COVID lab leak theory just as plausible as natural origins explanation: report 11 hours
- Concha: Democrats’ stunt with Texas election bill will ‘blow up in their faces’ in 2022 11 hours
- Federal Judge Throws a Monkey Wrench Into Capitol Riot Prosecutions 11 hours
- If The White House Is Looking For Disinformation – The Call Is Coming From Inside The House 11 hours
- Wall Street’s China Dreams Get Jolt From U.S. Hong Kong Warning 11 hours
- Some San Francisco-area restaurants reinstate mask requirements, cut unvaccinated workers over new guidance 11 hours
- Janet Yellen to Discuss “Stablecoin” Cryptocurrencies With Regulators 11 hours
- Miami housing market tightens further 11 hours
- These States Are Throwing a Monkey Wrench in the Left’s Effort to Build ‘Structural Bias’ Into the Election System 11 hours
- Three Texas Democrats Test Positive for COVID-19 After Fleeing State for Washington, D.C. 11 hours
- Biden to host Super Bowl champ Tampa Bay Buccaneers Tuesday 11 hours
- Trump takes a hack at British Open for bypassing his Scottish golf course 11 hours
- Tom Brady playing entire 2020 season with torn MCL could spell trouble for Bucs under NFL policy 11 hours
- Tour De Crazy continues, cyclists save fan who fell into ravine 11 hours
- Cuban Government Responds to Protests By Holding Mass in Havana 11 hours
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TOP STORIES:
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House Speaker Wants Audit After Court Informed of ‘Massive Errors’
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AZ Senate President Makes Announcement on Recalling State’s Electors
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Sufficient Numbers To Change The Election
- Dems Change Tune On Voting Machine Hack…
- Decertification Could Soon Be Coming To GA After Today’s Lawsuit
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Maricopa County Elections Official BUSTED In The Act
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Trump Issues Dire Warning
- Trump Is ‘Mad As Hell’ — Goes All In
- GA Secretary of State Demands Election Officials Fired After Audit Discovery
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Military Intelligence Proves Stolen Election In Multiple States
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IN DEPTH:
- Biden tackling inflation concerns head-on with latest infrastructure push 18 seconds
- Biden transfers 19-year Guantanamo Bay detainee to Morocco 10 mins
- US accuses China of massive Microsoft hack on 250,000 servers worldwide 15 mins
- Florida man first to face felony sentencing for ‘entering the Capitol to obstruct Congress’ on Jan 6 20 mins
- Arizona Senate President: State’s 11 Electors Cannot Be Recalled After Maricopa Audit 20 mins
- Staff Abuse Allegations Against VP Harris Predate Her Vice Presidency 3 hours
- It’s infrastructure week — and this time it’s for real 3 hours
- ‘Peppa Pig’ effect has kids speaking in British accents during pandemic 3 hours
- Sen. Graham says he’ll follow the lead of Texas House Dems who fled state and leave for vote on spending bill 4 hours
- Fox Nation’s new series covers what it’s like to be ‘canceled’ in America 4 hours
- DeSantis slams Biden administration’s ‘double standard’ on Cuban immigrants 4 hours
- Georgia Official Makes Excuses For Residents Who Illegally Voted in 2020 4 hours
- ‘Consistent thread’: Harris staff complaints predate her vice presidency 4 hours
- Is Joe Biden Reimagining The Jimmy Carter Presidency? 4 hours
- Dr. Fauci Embarrasses Himself While Trying to Mock Fox News 4 hours
- Rep. Nicole Malliotakis rips AOC as a ‘communist sympathizer’ after Cuba remarks 4 hours
- Exclusive — Pence: Biden’s ‘Bad Policy’ Could Derail Pandemic Recovery 4 hours
- Following COVID, 4 In 10 Baltimore Public High School Students Earned Below A 1.0 GPA 4 hours
- San Francisco judge dismissed case against serial child sexual predator ‘in the interest of justice’ 4 hours
- Speaker of Georgia House demands investigation into Fulton County election irregularities 5 hours
- Families of 9/11 victims slam Democrats for saying Jan 6 riot was worse 5 hours
- California and Oregon wildfires worsen, prompting more evacuations 5 hours
- Texas House Democrats’ walkout costing taxpayers $43,000 a day 5 hours
- New legislation allows Illinois kids to run lemonade stands without permits 5 hours
- Trump Showerhead Rule Gets Plugged 5 hours
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74.) THE POST MILLENIAL
75.) BLACKLISTED NEWS
76.) THE DAILY DOT
July 19, 2021 Welcome to the Monday edition of Internet Insider, unspooling the threads of internet misinformation—one dumb conspiracy at a time…
ONE DUMB CONSPIRACY Conspiracy theorists think Biden is planning to fact-check their private texts Conspiracy theorists are sounding the alarm over the belief that President Joe Biden is preparing to monitor and fact-check their private texts.
But the allegations—based entirely on the misrepresentation of a single media report—are not true. The debacle began last week after Politico published an article detailing the Biden administration’s efforts to crack down on misinformation regarding Covid-19 vaccines.
The report states that groups allied with Biden, such as the Democratic National Committee (DNC), plan to work with fact-checkers and SMS carriers in order to dispel false claims being “sent over social media and text messages.”
The passage was immediately seen by many right wing users on Twitter as proof that the government would begin monitoring their texts.
One of the bigger promoters of the false claim was Matt Walsh, a commentator with Ben Shapiro’s Daily Wire.
In a widely viewed video shared to Facebook, Walsh asserted that the DNC is “colluding with fact checkers to monitor our text messages.” Walsh also expressed shock at the fact that no other media outlet had covered the bombshell revelation. “How is this not a big deal at least? That’s the report, that they’re going to be monitoring our private text messages,” Walsh said.
The column continues below.
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The false claim was also repeated by prominent right-wing figures including conspiracy theorist Jack Posobiec and Fox News host Tucker Carlson.
“Today we learned the Biden administration considers censorship applicable to private speech as well, what you say in private when you’re alone with your phone,” Carlson said on his late-night show. “You won’t be able to say or read what you want because the DNC plans to control, and apparently has the ability to control, the flow of information that you receive on your phone.”
But the actual author of the Politico report, Natasha Korecki, has repeatedly pointed out that she never once claimed that texts would be monitored.
In a series of tweets, Korecki attempted to push back on the overwhelming amount of misinformation that had twisted her reporting.
“As the story points out, it’s allied, private groups that are working with SMS carriers—not the White House,” she tweeted. “Even then, there is no ability for groups to read individual texts aside from the ones they receive themselves.”
Korecki further clarified that the private groups would alert SMS carriers to false claims that had gone viral online, allowing them to send out alerts.
While it hasn’t been clarified, users would likely have to sign up or opt-in to receive such alerts to begin with.
Either way, the claim that the Biden administration will be scanning hundreds of millions of private text messages in order to chastise Americans for sharing information it doesn’t like is patently false. Staff Writer
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77.) HEADLINE USA
78.) NATURAL NEWS
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79.) POLITICHICKS
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80.) BLACKPRESSUSA
81.) THE WESTERN JOURNAL
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82.) CNN
Monday 07.19.21 There are some real winners as car prices hit record highs. (But, hint: It’s not automakers.) Here’s what else you need to know to Get Up to Speed and On With Your Day. A person wearing a mask walks past Athletes Village days before the Tokyo Olympics. Coronavirus
Millions of Americans are jeopardizing their health, freedom and finances by not getting vaccinated against Covid-19, current and former federal health officials say. Dr. Scott Gottlieb, FDA commissioner in the Trump era, gave a clear warning on the Delta variant, calling it, “the most serious virus that they get in their lifetime in terms of the risk of putting them in the hospital.” Across the Atlantic, English citizens, many of whom are now fully vaccinated, will experience a new reality today — dubbed by some as “Freedom Day” — after the government lifted almost all restrictions. Nightclubs can reopen, mandatory mask wearing is gone and capacity limits indoors or outdoors have ended. Meanwhile, as the Tokyo Olympics are set to start later this week, there are more and more Covid-19 cases in the Olympic Village.
Extreme weather
While floods have done serious damage in Europe over the past few days, landslides have destroyed neighborhoods in India, and fire is now decimating parts of the US. At least 189 people are dead and hundreds more missing after catastrophic flooding hit large swaths of Western Europe. The flooding, caused by unprecedented rainfall, hit parts of western Germany before shifting to Belgium and the Netherlands. In the US, 80 large fires have been raging in 13 states, burning more than 1 million acres. Officials are warning more Oregon residents to prepare to evacuate as the Bootleg Fire scorches about 300,000 acres. And at least 31 people have been killed in Mumbai after torrential rain triggered landslides that crushed cars and houses.
US gun violence
Shootings over the weekend in Chicago, Philadelphia, Washington, DC, and other US cities underscored the continuing rise in gun violence in the nation this year. The sound of gunshots outside Nationals Park in DC sent fans and players scrambling for safety during a baseball game; three people were wounded. In Chicago, at least 53 people were shot in 41 separate shootings from Friday evening to last evening, police said. In Portland, Oregon, a woman died and six other people were wounded after a shooting on Saturday, police said. Other shootings injured children, including a 1-year-old wounded Saturday night in Philadelphia.
DACA
A federal judge in Texas ruled Friday that the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program is unlawful. The decision, by US District Judge Andrew Hanen, injected uncertainty into the lives of hundreds of thousands of young immigrants and their families. For now, however, those currently in the DACA program will be allowed to stay in it, even as the judge has blocked the government from approving the applications of new enrollees. Yazmin Bruno-Valdez, who was ushered into the Obama-era program less than a month ago, said the ruling had left her awash in fear, guilt and uncertainty.
Austria
Austrian authorities say they are investigating reports that US diplomats in Vienna have experienced symptoms of a mystery illness known as Havana Syndrome. A US State Department spokesperson said: “We are vigorously investigating reports of possible unexplained health incidents among the US Embassy Vienna community or wherever they are reported.” Victims of Havana Syndrome have reported a varying set of symptoms and physical sensations, including sudden vertigo, nausea, headaches and head pressure, sometimes accompanied by a “piercing directional noise.” Some have been diagnosed with traumatic brain injuries. Incidents like this began in late 2016 in Cuba and have been reported in Russia, China and elsewhere.
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People are talking about these. Read up. Join in. Astronauts spice up their diets
A woman stole this man’s dog. He paid for her drug rehab
Golfing history for Collin Morikawa
‘Space Jam’ scores a hit at the box office
Why it seems everyone hates the English abroad
14 That’s how many living people can claim to be descendants of Leonardo Da Vinci, according to decadeslong research into the Renaissance genius’ purported remains. It has always been a dream of mine to represent the USA at the Olympics, and I hope there will be many more chances for me to make this come true in the future.
Cori “Coco” Gauff, the US tennis hopeful, will miss the Tokyo Olympics after announcing on Twitter she has tested positive for Covid-19. Brought to you by CNN Underscored After years of buying things at REI, here are our favorites Since more and more people are getting outdoors, we put all our years of shopping at REI to use and rounded up some of the top gear we’ve tried. Here are 19 products we’ve personally used for hiking, camping and more. Watch lava get crushed in a hydraulic press 5 THINGS You are receiving this newsletter because you’re subscribed to 5 Things.
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83.) MSNBC
July 19, 2021 THE LATEST The GOP plan to ‘win’ elections in three easy steps
by Hayes Brown The Republican Party isn’t being particularly sneaky about its strategy for coming back to power after losing the White House and Congress. Using former Donald Trump’s Big Lie as justification, the GOP is working to make it harder for people to vote in states around the country. But there are two other steps to their plan that take place before and after voters actually go to the polls, Hayes Brown writes.
“In three areas, the Republican Party is working to win elections not by persuading new voters to subscribe to their ideas, but by making their opponents incapable of victory,” Hayes Brown writes. “Taken separately, any one of them can be an infringement on the people’s right to choose their elected officials. Together, they’re a nightmare for democracy.”
Read Hayes Brown’s full analysis here and don’t forget to check out the rest of your Monday MSNBC Daily. TOP STORIES Will Trump launch his political comeback as a future speaker of the House of Representatives? Read More Trump hasn’t been punished for trying to “stop the steal.” As a lawyer this literally makes no sense to me. Read More Reports that Milley drew comparisons between Trump’s and Hitler’s rhetoric are chilling. Trump’s response made matters worse. Read More TOP VIDEOS LISTEN NOW Into America
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84.) POWERLINE
Daily Digest |
- Magic Bus
- Dems plan to do amnesty through reconciliation
- DFL Party Calls on Thompson to Resign
- Comic news story of the day [Updated with Meme]
- Podcast: The 3WHH, Almost Live from Budapest
Magic Bus
Posted: 17 Jul 2021 04:16 PM PDT (John Hinderaker)Speaking of electric vehicles… Possibly the dumbest thing any country could do from an energy standpoint is to promote widespread use of electric vehicles, while simultaneously subsidizing reliance on wind and solar energy, which work less than half the time. Moreover, governments’ politically-motivated reliance on electric vehicles like buses has been a disaster. This is a typical “green” fiasco:
There is no sane reason for any government to buy, let alone subsidize, these vehicles. It is crony corruption, pure and simple.
Exactly.
It would help, I suppose, if they actually worked. But practicality is optional if you are “green.” Enormous amounts of money are being made at the expense of taxpayers and ratepayers.
Battery capacity is a huge issue with electric vehicles:
Thirty to fifty miles! Pathetic. Other cities that have fallen for the electric bus scam have seen similar results:
By rights, companies like Proterra should be subject to massive consumer and securities fraud lawsuits, and maybe they will be. But political muscle goes a long way, and Proterra and its ilk are darlings of the Biden administration and the Democratic Party in general. |
Dems plan to do amnesty through reconciliation
Posted: 17 Jul 2021 01:23 PM PDT (Paul Mirengoff)Reconciliation is the process through which budget bills can pass the Senate with a simple majority of the votes. The idea, I take it, is that it’s so important to have a budget that the quest to pass one shouldn’t be subject to a veto by 41 Senators. The Democrats intend to pass a massive spending bill via reconciliation. The bill, once it’s actually drafted and proposed, will be full of devices designed not just to increase spending, but to enhance the power of the federal government. Most alarmingly, the Democrats plan to use reconciliation to grant amnesty to millions and millions of illegal immigrants. Joe Manchin, arbiter of all things, is apparently on board. He says he’s always supported this type of immigration reform, dating back to the bipartisan attempt at it years ago. I doubt he has ever supported enacting such reform with only a simple majority of Senate votes as an end-run around the filibuster. However, his comments to date suggest this isn’t a problem for him. Kyrsten Sinema’s support will also be required. Because she’s from a state at ground zero of the illegal immigration crisis, she may have more reservations than Manchin. However, it seems likely that, under intense pressure, she will go along with her party on this one. Thus, the ability of Democrats to change our immigration laws with the backing of only 50 Senators will turn not on any elected official, but on the Senate parliamentarian, Elizabeth MacDonough. She will be called on to decide whether the radical change the Dems seek can be accomplished through reconciliation. The correct answer, of course, is that it can’t be. As the editors of National Review point out:
The need for this limitation is obvious. Because virtually every piece of legislation has an incidental budgetary impact, without the limitation the filibuster is effectively abolished. Equally obvious is the fact that the budgetary impact of granting amnesty to illegal immigrants is merely incidental to the grant. The editors of National Review note:
Rich Lowry makes additional points on the subject here. Does this mean that the Senate parliamentarian will block the Democrats’ maneuver? Not necessarily. But if she doesn’t, then, as NR’s editors say, “the position of parliamentarian might as well be abolished since it will no longer serve any purpose.” |
DFL Party Calls on Thompson to Resign
Posted: 17 Jul 2021 01:20 PM PDT (John Hinderaker)Scott has chronicled the appalling saga of Minnesota Representative John Thompson. Most recently, it came to light that Thompson has been involved in four separate instances of domestic violence, the circumstances of which are aggravated and in some cases bizarre. This shouldn’t be surprising, since Thompson is best known for assaulting an effigy of the wife of the head of the Minneapolis police union with a stick. In any event, the DFL Party has had enough. Today it called on Thompson to resign from the legislature: I assume this will mark the end of Thompson’s political career, although he may still have a bright future as a race hustler, his real vocation. If the Democrats could force Al Franken out of the U.S. Senate, I am pretty sure they can force Thompson out of the Minnesota House. |
Comic news story of the day [Updated with Meme]
Posted: 17 Jul 2021 11:33 AM PDT (Scott Johnson)The Austin American-Statesman has just reported from DC that those Texas Dems are destined for a rendezvous with the psickening Jen Psaki. This is not the Babylon Bee:
A shout out to Alex Berenson with this detail: “The three members are vaccinated. The caucus did not release their names.” Posting the vaccination angle might get you banned on all social media platforms per the ukase of the psickening Ms. Psaki. Incidentally, I would guess they’re lying about that. Is it wrong to laugh?
UPDATE by JOHN: This can’t wait until next Saturday:
The whole fleeing-Texas story is hilarious, in my opinion one of the worst political calculations of recent times. |
Podcast: The 3WHH, Almost Live from Budapest
Posted: 17 Jul 2021 11:15 AM PDT (Steven Hayward)I figured a nine time zone distance might provide a margin of safety from Lucretia’s rear-end kicking over my article “What the Hell Happened to Bill Kristol?“, which Lucretia finds sorely wanting. And my attempts to mollify Lucretia with tales of how great Hungary’s conservatives are was mostly unavailing, even if true. Anyway, in this slightly abbreviated episode (because I had to rush off to begin a typical Central European Saturday night of drinks and dinner over a four hour period), we quickly strafe the Biden Administration for its shredding of Trump’s foreign policy achievements, with the partial exception of the Afghan pullout, which we support because of the comprehensive failure of our politico-military establishment ever to come up with a serious plan to win. We also look over Abigail Shirer’s essay “Want to Save America? Stop Acting Like a Conservative,” and from there proceed to the main event, which is the fantastically well-reasoned legal opinion about Critical Race Theory from Austin Knudson, the attorney general of the state of Montana. Settle in with a cup of coffee and read the whole thing; We only hit a few highlights before I had to run off to my boozy night on the town. More about that later perhaps. This posting includes an audio/video/photo media file: Download Now |
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85.) THE POLITICAL INSIDER – WAKE UP EDITION
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86.) THE PATRIOT POST
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87.) DECISION DESK HQ
88.) DIGG
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89.) THE POLITICAL INSIDER – LUNCH BREAK
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90.) CONSERVATIVE TRIBUNE
91.) USA TODAY
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92.) THE DAILY BEAST
93.) ABSOLUTE NEWS
94.) SHARYL ATTKISSON
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95.) RIGHTWING.ORG
96.) NOT THE BEE
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Not the Bee Daily Newsletter |
Jul 19, 2021 |
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Sponsored By: Alliance Defending Freedom Third grader prohibited from wearing “Jesus Loves Me”.School Administrators forced joyful and spunky third-grader, Lydia Booth, to remove and replace her mask. Why? Because it had “Jesus Loves Me” written on it. Lydia isn’t looking to cause trouble. She only wants to share the love of Jesus with her friends and classmates. Lydia’s constitutional rights don’t disappear when she steps into school. Thank you for helping us defend her. Click here to sign your name to stand with Lydia—and for your religious freedom. Add your name to the growing list of Americans standing with Lydia!
Brooklyn man passes out outside his apartment late at night and is robbed not just once, but twiceOh man, how would you like to be this guy?
Comedian Bill Burr says “treasonous, un-American” CNN wants “Darth Vader” Trump to return because Biden is a “bore”Well… that’s one flavorful way to put it:
Anaheim officials run America First rally out of town, say they “respect” free speech but have “a duty to call out speech” they don’t like 🤡Anaheim, California says it “respects” free speech, but if you disagree with city leaders on political policy, they say it’s their right, NAY THEIR “DUTY,” to call you out and force you out of town:
MASS protests in France against new vaccine passport mandateI mean that is a ton of people.
It’s a cult! John Leguizamo says “Critical Race Theory is my whole reason for being”
This dude took a selfie every single day for 21 years and made a video of himself agingFascinating look at the aging process:
Videos: Gunshots erupted right outside Nationals Park during the game yesterday, chaos ensued, and the game was canceledThe shots were clear and loud, even over the hum of the game:
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97.) JUST THE NEWS
Just The News: Daily Newsletter
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98.) NEWSMAX
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99.) MARK LEVIN
July 16, 2021
On Friday’s Mark Levin Show, President Biden chose to run for president but would never release his medications list. Despite his many cognitive failures the media continues covering for his obvious decline. Using the guise of a COVID health emergency Biden’s senior staff has no problem telling Facebook what social media posts they want to be censored. The fact is there isn’t a single case of death related to anyone’s Facebook post about the coronavirus. Now, Jen Psaki says if an individual is banned from one social media platform they should be banned from all. What’s next, banning talk radio hosts or conservative commentary on cable news? Will dissent or disagreement be labeled as misinformation that kills people too? Then, Karl Marx was viewed as a prolific writer and fancied himself a journalist for the New York Tribune, this is why the Marxists in the media are a disaster and are indeed the enemy of the people. The American media have become special pleaders for the Americanized Marxist movement in various areas of our once open and free society. The silencing of opposition (repression) is their main tactic as they claim ideological purity. Later, Michelle Lette, a member of the Fairfax, VA Parent Teacher Association, called for the critics of critical race theory to be allowed to die. Even some parent groups have been compromised by the teacher unions. Afterward, Candidate for Governor of California, Larry elder, joins the show to discuss his run for Governor of California.
THIS IS FROM:
Rumble
Biden: ‘The Only Pandemic We Have Is Among Unvaccinated’
NY Post
Hunter Biden prosecutor paused investigation before election: report
Politico
Hunter Biden’s prosecutor rejected moves that would have revealed probe earlier
Townhall
Disney Cancels Christmas
The podcast for this show can be streamed or downloaded from the Audio Rewind page.
Image used with permission of Getty Images / Chip Somodevilla
100.) WOLF DAILY
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103.) DAN BONGINO
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105.) DC CLOTHESLINE
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106.) ARTICLE V LEGISLATORS’ CAUCUS
107.) THE INTERCEPT
108.) DENNIS PRAGER
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109.) STARS & STRIPES
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