Good morning! Here is your news briefing for Wednesday August 4, 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 — 8.4.21
Good Wednesday morning.
On Monday, bookies set Gov. Ron DeSantis’ reelection odds at 81%. On Tuesday, St. Pete Polls gave them a reason to hedge their bets.
The pollster surveyed nearly 4,000 Florida voters and found that, if the election were today, the Republican incumbent would lose to U.S. Rep. Charlie Crist by a point-and-a-half, 45.3%-43.8%. DeSantis would win in a head-to-head against Agriculture Commissioner Nikki Fried, but only by a hair.
This isn’t a pro-Dem prevarication: St. Pete Polls is one of the most highly respected polling outfits in the Sunshine State and is included in Real Clear Politics and FiveThirtyEight polling aggregations.
The survey delivered a couple of other body blows to DeSantis, who not long ago was described as the most popular Governor in the country. Maybe that’s still the case, but he’s seemingly more popular as an export than at home à la David Hasselhoff in Deutschland.
DeSantis was on the bad side of nearly half those polled (49%), while 44% said they were still in his corner two-and-a-half years into his first term, giving him a minus-5 rating overall. Meanwhile, President Joe Biden — who many believe DeSantis will challenge in 2024 — scored a plus-3 approval rating.
The Governor’s intractability on school mask mandates probably isn’t helping, as the same poll found more than three in five voters think masking up should be a requirement when kids head back to class later this month. Just 32% want a barefaced back-to-school season. Fence-sitters account for the other 6%.
GOP voters still largely support the Governor, both in job approval and the 2022 race, but they are not a monolith. About a fifth of Republicans said they would vote for Crist, and one in six said they’re backing Fried in 2022. In both cases, fewer Democrats say they’d cross the aisle to cast a ballot for DeSantis.
As far as job approval goes, DeSantis has Republicans locked down, 71%-22%, but Independents disapprove by a 12-point margin. Among Democrats, the incumbent remains about as popular as a Zune bricked in a vat of New Coke.
The St. Pete Polls survey was conducted Aug. 2-3. Of the poll’s 3,952 respondents, 39% are registered Republicans, and 37% are registered Democrats. It has a margin of error of plus or minus 1.6%.
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Meredith Brock Stanfield is the new legislative policy director at the Florida Professional Firefighters, the organization announced Tuesday.
In the new role, Stanfield will lead legislative policy development efforts for the group, which represents more than 27,000 Florida firefighters and emergency medical services personnel.
FPF President and CEO Wayne “Bernie” Bernoska said Stanfield brings the organization “a depth of knowledge” on key FPF issues, such as pensions and collective bargaining.
Stanfield comes to the Florida Professional Firefighters from the office of Chief Financial Officer Jimmy Patronis, where she has served as director of legislative and cabinet affairs for the past two years.
“Meredith onboarding with the FPF is a huge win for Florida firefighters. Few are as adept at navigating the legislative process as Meredith, but she does the most important thing in this process: win,” Patronis said.
The University of Georgia alumna previously worked as the legislative affairs director at the Departments of Management Services, Juvenile Justice, and the Office of Financial Regulation. Her resume also includes a stint with the Florida League of Cities, where she worked as a legal and legislative assistant.
“In recent years, I have been proud to support protecting the health and safety of Florida’s firefighters and emergency response personnel through the passage of key legislation, and I am thrilled to be joining the team at the FPF to make that my primary focus,” she said.
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Tallahassee attorney and lobbyist Sean Pittman has been named General Counsel of the National Bar Association.
Pittman was selected by the incoming president of the association last week during the NBA’s annual conference. His nomination was met with unanimous approval by the NBA Board of Governors. The selection was the first official act of new NBA President Carlos Moore, a Mississippi attorney.
“I am humbled by the great honor and responsibility to help lead this prestigious organization by providing reliable legal advice and guidance to President Carlos Moore, the NBA Board of Governors, and my peer attorneys across the country,” Pittman said in a news release.
“The National Bar Association has a proud history of supporting and engaging America’s Black attorneys and significant issues impacting Black people and communities. I am excited to play a larger role with the NBA as the existence and importance of the organization is exacerbated by COVID-19, health care and wealth disparities, police brutality, voter suppression, and the impact these issues have on Black people and our communities in America.”
Founded in 1925, The National Bar Association is the largest network of predominantly Black American attorneys and judges. The Washington-based has historically been a strong voice for the rights of Black people, marginalized communities, and underserved populations across the country.
“Sean Pittman will serve the NBA well, and I look forward to working with him,” Moore said.
Pittman’s selection comes as his firm, Pittman Law Group, celebrates its 20th anniversary and enjoys continued growth with the addition of a new office in Orlando. The firm also has offices in Tallahassee, Miami and Riviera Beach.
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It’s back-to-school season, and Simply Healthcare is doing its part to make it a good one for Florida students.
Last weekend, the company held an event in Tampa to deck out K-12 kids with new gear ahead of their first day back to class. Attendees had the opportunity to grab a haircut and a hot dog, courtesy of the health care company.
In all, 223 children stopped by to pick up a backpack.
The Back-to-School Backpack Giveaway was hosted on July 31 by Haven Destiny and had NFL Alumni in attendance encouraging kids to study hard this school year. The Sheffield Family Foundation was also a sponsor of the event.
Also, Simply Healthcare on Tuesday announced another effort aimed at getting Florida students ready for school — a partnership with the Florida Chapter of the American Academy of Pediatrics.
The two organizations will work together to create an online tool kit and to help families, teachers and caregivers guide children through the mental health struggles that have been exacerbated by the pandemic.
The company said it is just the first resource developed as part of the partnership, with more to come.
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The University of Florida chomped at the opportunity to bring on government affairs pro Sara Bremer as its new assistant director of government relations.
Bremer has spent more than a decade helping the Florida Court Clerks & Comptrollers navigate The Process, most recently as its deputy director of legislative services, which saw her take point on legislative policy initiatives benefiting clerks and comptrollers.
When she immigrates to the Gator Nation next week, she’ll handle similar duties — the university said Bremer will help plan and implement state-level legislative and public policy strategies.
“Sara has a stellar reputation for being a skilled professional with a strong work ethic and great relationships,” said Mark Kaplan, UF’s vice president of government and community relations. “With her passion for our university and our state, I know Sara will make a great addition to our team and will help further our success.”
An enthused Samantha Greer, UF’s government relations director, said the team “could not be more excited to begin working with Sara.”
As a Gainesville-born graduate of the state’s flagship university, Bremer has the lingo down pat — in a news release, she said the opportunity to “work toward the Gator Good for all of us is a dream come true.”
Bremer graduated summa cum laude and Phi Beta Kappa from the University of Florida with a bachelor’s in English and a minor in French. She also holds a master’s in international affairs from the school out west.
— SITUATIONAL AWARENESS —
—@MarcoRubio: If at this time last year someone had told us there was a medicine that made COVID no worse than the flu we would have been very happy. Well, now we do. Use it.
—@StevenTDennis: >1 out of every 1,900 people in Florida is in a hospital bed right now with COVID.
—@Dan_Sweeney: As usual, it’s not the higher hospital admissions that are the problem in Florida — it’s the media reporting on the higher hospital admissions.
Tweet, tweet:
—@MatthewDowd: Cuomo must be held accountable. Whether that be impeachment or resignation. As I have said for years, we must not tolerate this behavior. I said this for (Bill) Clinton, (Donald) Trump (Bill) Cosby, Justices (Clarence) Thomas/(Brett) Kavanaugh, etc. Those who only want accountability through partisan lens are hypocrites.
—@Jenn_Bradley: Rewatching #TedLasso and reminded of the perfection of the darts scene when Ted shuts down Rupert. “Be curious, not judgmental.”— Walt Whitman
— DAYS UNTIL —
‘The Suicide Squad’ premieres — 2; Canada will open its border to fully vaccinated Americans — 5; ‘Marvel’s What If …?’ premieres on Disney+ — 7; Florida Behavioral Health Association’s Annual Conference (BHCon) begins — 14; St. Petersburg Primary Election — 20; Boise vs. UCF — 29; Disney’s ‘Shang Chi and The Legend of The Ten Rings’ premieres — 30; Notre Dame at FSU — 32; NFL regular season begins — 36; Bucs home opener — 36; California Gov. Gavin Newsom’s recall election — 41; Broadway’s full-capacity reopening — 41; Alabama at UF — 45; Dolphins home opener — 46; Jaguars home opener — 46; 2022 Legislative Session interim committee meetings begin — 47; ‘The Many Saints of Newark’ premieres (rescheduled) — 51; ‘Dune’ premieres — 58; Walt Disney World’s 50th anniversary party starts — 58; MLB regular season ends — 60; ‘No Time to Die’ premieres (rescheduled) — 65; Florida Chamber Future of Florida Forum begins — 83; World Series Game 1 — 84; Florida TaxWatch’s Annual Meeting begins — 84; Georgia at UF — 87; St. Petersburg Municipal Elections — 90; Florida’s 20th Congressional District primary — 90; Disney’s ‘Eternals’ premieres — 94; ‘Disney Very Merriest After Hours’ will debut — 96; Miami at FSU — 101; ‘Top Gun: Maverick’ rescheduled premiere — 107; FSU vs. UF — 115; Steven Spielberg’s ‘West Side Story’ premieres — 128; ‘Spider-Man Far From Home’ sequel premieres — 135; NFL season ends — 158; 2022 Legislative Session starts — 160; Florida’s 20th Congressional District election — 160; NFL playoffs begin — 161; Super Bowl LVI — 193; ‘Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness’ premieres — 233; ‘Thor: Love and Thunder’ premieres — 277; ‘Platinum Jubilee’ for Queen Elizabeth II — 302; “Black Panther 2” premieres — 338; San Diego Comic-Con 2022 — 350; ‘Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse’ sequel premieres — 429; “Captain Marvel 2” premieres — 464.
— TOP STORY —
“In many ways, Florida’s current COVID-19 crisis is the worst in the nation” via Scott Powers of Florida Politics — At his news conference in Miami Tuesday morning, DeSantis sounded frustrated at how much attention the news media are paying to Florida’s COVID-19 case numbers and hospital admissions. Yet, in many ways, Florida’s summer COVID-19 surge appears to be the worst in the country by far and certainly the worst public health crisis Florida has suffered throughout the 18 months of the coronavirus pandemic. DeSantis’ latest frustration was expressed on a day that federal data cited by the Florida Hospital Association showed Florida with 11,515 COVID-19 patients hospitalized in one day. His administration has challenged whether that figure represents a record day for Florida in the COVID-19 pandemic era.
— CORONA FLORIDA —
“Florida again breaks record for COVID-19 hospitalizations” via The Associated Press — The number of people hospitalized for COVID-19 in Florida rose to an all-time high of 11,515 patients in one day. The data is used by the Florida Hospital Association to track admissions and staffing shortages. The figures also show 2,400 of those patients are in ICU beds. The previous day, the data showed there were 10,389 COVID-19-hospitalizations in the state. The new number breaks a previous record for current hospitalizations set more than a year ago before vaccines were available. Last year, Florida hit its previous peak on July 23, with 10,170 hospitalizations. Hospitals around the state report having to put emergency room visitors in beds in hallways, and others document a noticeable drop in the age of patients.
“Florida will remain without state-operated COVID-19 testing sites” via Jason Delgado of Florida Politics — DeSantis said Florida will not reopen state-operated COVID-19 test sites and will instead look to local governments to continue testing operations throughout the state. Under the CARES Act, DeSantis said local governments are well-funded and can maintain testing operations despite the summer surge of COVID-19 cases. What’s more, he highlighted the availability of at-home coronavirus tests that are available for purchase. “Our view is that this is so available throughout society right now,” DeSantis said, adding that municipalities are welcome to expand testing operations if they wish. The question of additional testing sites comes as COVID-19 cases and hospitalizations reach an all-time high in the Sunshine State.
“Younger, sicker, unvaccinated: Today’s COVID-19 patients in Florida are different” via Cindy Krischer Goodman of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — The newest wave of COVID-19 patients into Florida’s hospitals hit hard and fast, bringing mostly people between ages 25 and 55 who are unvaccinated and often have no underlying health conditions. As of Tuesday, more than 11,377 people were hospitalized for COVID-19 in Florida, a record. While little data on who fills hospital beds in Florida is published regularly, some information is collected and released by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Aharon Sareli, chief of critical care medicine for Memorial Healthcare System, said patients reflect the community’s demographics surrounding each hospital district in the state — particularly the unvaccinated residents.
“Central Florida doctors concerned over growing number of children hospitalized with COVID-19” via Lauren Seabrook and Sarah Wilson of WFTV — One week before school starts in Orange County, more than 30 children in the area are hospitalized, and many more are very sick with COVID-19. “Compared to the last prior two or three months, we’re seeing a tremendous increase in the number of kids coming in for medical care,” said Dr. Federico Laham, the medical director for pediatric infectious diseases at Arnold Palmer Hospital for Children. Overall in Orange County, 37 kids ages zero to 4 years old are positive for COVID-19; 113 kids ages 5 to 14 are infected, and 193 have the virus in the 15 to 24 age group. Of those, Orlando Health has five kids admitted to the hospital, including one in the ICU.
“COVID-19 surge in Pinellas is delaying emergency hospital care, officials warn” via Tracey McManus of the Tampa Bay Times — Residents choosing to remain unvaccinated for the coronavirus are having a disproportionate impact on local hospitals and government resources, Pinellas County Administrator Barry Burton warned on Tuesday. Daily counts of new cases are up to 660 on average, “the highest we’ve ever been,” Burton said, and hospitals are overwhelmed by patients, delaying help to those arriving for emergencies. The time from ambulance drop-off to when patients are seen for medical care has risen dramatically to about an hour on average, and to three hours in one instance, he said. That period typically averages about 15 minutes.
“Manatee hospitals have more COVID-19 patients now than when they hit capacity July 2020” via Jessica de Leon of the Bradenton Herald — Hospitals in Manatee County are treating more patients for COVID-19 now than they were just over a year ago when they were at capacity. Across the state and country, hospitalizations for COVID-19 have also spiked, a surge driven by the delta variant of the coronavirus. According to data collected by the Manatee County Department of Public Safety, the county’s three general hospitals had 131 patients hospitalized for COVID-19 on Monday. Among those patients, 28 patients were being treated in an ICU. Confirmed hospitalizations for COVID-19 totaled 11,863 in Florida on Tuesdays. Across the state, 2,406 patients are in an ICU being treated for COVID-19.
“Treasure Coast hospitals coping with influx of COVID-19 patients; modifying policies day-to-day” via Will Greenlee of Treasure Coast Newspapers — As the four Cleveland Clinic Treasure Coast hospitals experience the greatest totals of hospitalized COVID-19-positive patients since the pandemic began, all major area hospitals appear to have modified some day-to-day policies as COVID-19 cases across the state surge. Florida Tuesday reported an all-time daily high of 11,515 patients hospitalized for COVID-19, according to the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. For the third day in a row, the number was over 10,000 and the highest daily total since the pandemic. Last year, Florida hit its previous peak on July 23, with 10,170 hospitalizations.
“Record COVID-19 outbreak infects 21 Martin County Sheriff’s Office employees, 11 incarcerated people” via Mauricio La Plante of Treasure Coast Newspapers — At least 21 employees of the Sheriff’s Office are infected with COVID-19, the highest number of cases they’ve had since the beginning of the pandemic, said Chief Deputy John Budensiek. An additional 17 employees, who have not tested positive, are in quarantine, he said. “This is the worst it’s been since the pandemic began at the Sheriff’s Office,” Budensiek said. The most recent numbers available from the state Department of Health are from July 23 to July 29. That week there were 557 cases in Martin County and a new case positivity of 17.8%.
“Baptist Health to mandate COVID-19 vaccinations for staff at Jacksonville hospitals” via Beth Reese Cravey of The Florida Times-Union — Baptist Health announced Tuesday that it will require all 12,500 of its employees to be fully vaccinated for COVID-19 by Nov. 15. The hospital system cited the increasing number of cases and its “ethical responsibility” as an impetus for the mandate, as well as the expected full federal approval of the vaccines that are currently being distributed on an emergency basis. Baptist Health, which has five hospitals, will grant exemptions for “medical contraindications and sincerely held religious beliefs,” as it does in its flu shot policy.
“Gary Farmer implores Scott Rivkees to rebuke Governor’s ban on school mask mandates” via Ryan Nicol of Florida Politics — Farmer is seeking answers from Surgeon General Rivkees, as Farmer argues the Governor’s recent executive order banning school mask mandates is filled with a “proliferation of myths.” Farmer authored a letter to Rivkees, asking him to respond to and clarify DeSantis’ argument for blocking school boards from instituting such a mandate. “As you are also aware, in support of his order, DeSantis cited a Brown University Study, other unnamed ‘studies’ and a public health advisory issued by yourself,” Farmer writes in the letter to Rivkees. Farmer represents portions of Broward County, which is currently experiencing a COVID-19 surge like most of the state.
“Miami, Broward schools push to get students back on track after pandemic learning losses” via Madeleine Romance of the Miami Herald — After a year when many students had significant learning losses due to remote learning amid the pandemic, Miami-Dade and Broward public schools are ramping up, hiring teachers and tutors, academic and mental health counselors and getting families more engaged to get their students back on track for the school year. Miami-Dade and Broward educators are deeply concerned about how far students had fallen behind during the past school year, when they went to school one day and pivoted to online learning the next, contending with balky computers, quarantines, parents not always home to guide them and not being able to chat with a teacher, coach or a friend in the hallway.
Pandemic powered a spike in home schooling — Florida Department of Education data shows the number of Florida children in home-school jumped by more than a third during the pandemic. As reported by Andrew Atterbury of POLITICO Florida, the increase marks a record for Florida, with DOE saying it “is believed to be a direct result of families opting out of face-to-face instruction in a classroom due to the ongoing pandemic.” Arithmetically, home-school enrollment increased by 37,000 to 143,431 overall. Over the past five years, DOE data shows home-school enrollment is up by 55,969 students (or 64%).
— CORONA NATION —
“Joe Biden chides Republican Governors who resist vaccine rules” via Zeke Miller and Darlene Superville of The Associated Press — Speaking from the White House, Biden sharply criticized Florida Gov. DeSantis, Texas Gov. Greg Abbott and other officials who have moved to block the reimposition of mask mandates to slow the delta strain of the virus. The strain is surging in their states and other parts of the country with large numbers of unvaccinated people. “If you’re not going to help, at least get out of the way of people trying to do the right thing,” Biden said. Biden endorsed New York City’s move to require vaccinations to dine indoors or go to the gym, as well as corporate moves to require vaccines to return to work. Such policies have been barred to varying degrees in at least seven GOP-led states.
“FDA aims to give final approval to Pfizer vaccine by early next month” via Sharon LaFraniere and Noah Weiland of The New York Times — With a new surge of COVID-19 infections ripping through much of the United States, the FDA has accelerated its timetable to fully approve Pfizer-BioNTech’s coronavirus vaccine, aiming to complete the process by the start of next month. Biden said last week that he expected a fully approved vaccine in early fall. But the F.D.A.’s unofficial deadline is Labor Day or sooner. The agency said its leaders recognized that approval might inspire more public confidence and had “taken an all-hands-on-deck approach” to the work. Giving final approval to the Pfizer vaccine could help increase inoculation rates at a moment when the highly transmissible Delta variant of the virus is sharply driving up the number of new cases.
“CDC’s COVID-19 mask guidance clouded by flawed data” via Robbie Whelan and Jared S. Hopkins of The Wall Street Journal — The CDC is fighting COVID-19 without a full arsenal of data that some public-health experts said it would need to persuade more people to take steps to contain the pandemic. When CDC Director Rochelle Walensky said last week that people should wear masks again indoors in areas with “substantial” levels of COVID-19 transmission, for instance, she said evidence shows the Delta variant might be spread as easily by vaccinated people who become infected as by the unvaccinated. The CDC pointed to Provincetown, Massachusetts, where large gatherings in July at bars, nightclubs and house parties led to hundreds of COVID-19 infections. The CDC said that nearly three-quarters of infected people were fully vaccinated, and samples showed the amount of virus that infected people carried.
“CDC extends Donald Trump-era policy that allows migrants to be expelled over COVID-19 concerns” via Rebecca Moorin of USA Today — The Biden administration extended a Trump-era policy that allows migrants to be expelled to prevent the spread of COVID-19 in holding facilities. The CDC said in a statement that Title 42 “shall remain in effect until the CDC Director determines that the danger of further introduction of COVID-19 into the United States from covered noncitizens has ceased to be a serious danger to the public health, and the Order is no longer necessary to protect the public health.” Title 42 allows Customs and Border Protection officials to expel undocumented migrants to prevent the spread of COVID-19 in holding facilities. Children and some families are exempt from the policy.
“New congressional report says COVID-19 likely emerged in Wuhan months earlier than originally thought” via Josh Rogin of The Washington Post — The Chinese government continues to actively thwart a real investigation into the origins of COVID-19. Now, a new GOP congressional report alleges that Beijing was covering up the outbreak for months longer than previously assumed. The House Foreign Affairs Committee minority staff, led by ranking Republican Michael McCaul, released Monday an 84-page addendum to their previously issued report on the origins of COVID-19. Their new research focuses on whether the Wuhan Institute of Virology, the world’s leading bat coronavirus research center, as well as other labs in Wuhan, could have been the source of the outbreak. The report also presents extensive evidence that the international community may need to revise its outbreak timeline.
— STATEWIDE —
“With peak hurricane season fast approaching, National Hurricane Center tracks new disturbance in far east” via Alex Harris of the Miami Herald — Just ahead of peak hurricane season, the NHC is tracking a new disturbance in the far eastern Atlantic. As of the 8 a.m. Tuesday update, the surface trough of low pressure had a slight chance of future development — 10% in the next 48 hours and 10% in the next five days, a small drop from the 20% called for earlier Tuesday morning. The hurricane center said it could strengthen slightly over the next few days, but it’s on track to head over cooler waters on Thursday, which could weaken or destroy it.
“DeSantis starts food fight with Ben & Jerry’s over ice cream in Israel” via James Call of the Tallahassee Democrat — Ben & Jerry’s may not be available at Florida high school and college football games this season now that DeSantis has escalated his fight with the ice cream maker over an Israeli-Palestinian dispute. This week, the state placed Ben & Jerry’s parent company, Unilever, on Florida’s list of “Scrutinized Companies that Boycott Israel.” Unilever now has 90 days to “cease and desist” what DeSantis calls its “boycott” of Israel or face a Florida government snubbing of its more than 400 brands, including Lipton Tea, Hellmann’s and Dove soap.
Happening today — The Revenue Estimating Conference meets to examine transportation revenue, 2 p.m., 117 Knott Building.
“Suspects in murder of Haiti President sent to prison amid concerns of rights violations” via Jacqueline Charles of the Miami Herald — Haiti has started transferring more than three dozen suspects implicated in the murder of its President, Jovenel Moïse, into the country’s overcrowded prison system amid questions about whether authorities here are violating their own due process and concerns about detention conditions. “There hasn’t been any legal process yet; just disorder,” said Stanley Gaston, a defense attorney who represents four of the accused. “Everything is being done outside of the law.” The Miami Herald and McClatchy’s Washington Bureau confirmed Monday that at least three of the 44 individuals under arrest by Haiti National Police were moved Sunday from police holding cells to the crowded National Penitentiary near downtown Port-au-Prince.
“Spirit Airlines slammed for third straight day, canceling more than half its flights” via Austen Erblat of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — Spirit Airlines’ cancellations increased for the third straight day at Fort Lauderdale-Hollywood International Airport on Tuesday, frustrating hundreds of travelers. And, for the first time, those cancellations represented a majority of all of Spirit’s scheduled flights in Fort Lauderdale: 102 flights, or 52%. The Miramar-based airline has canceled more than 200 flights at the airport since Sunday and over 690 nationwide since Monday, according to flight-tracking service FlightAware. The airline has already canceled at least 16 flights for Wednesday, three of which are out of Fort Lauderdale. A Spirit spokesman on Sunday blamed weather and “other operational challenges.” The airline did not respond to multiple emails and phone requests for comment Monday and Tuesday.
New and renewed lobbying registrations:
Michael Corcoran, Jacqueline Corcoran, Matt Blair, Will Rodriguez, Andrea Tovar, Corcoran Partners: 211 Tampa Bay Cares
Steve Crisafulli, Crisafulli Consulting: The Washington Consulting Group
— 2022 —
“Charlie Crist to DeSantis: Require Florida state employees to get vaccinated” via Steve Contorno of the Tampa Bay Times — Speaking from South Florida, DeSantis downplayed the recent spike in cases as “media hysteria” and maintained that Florida will remain open and masks will not be required in schools when they open later this month. DeSantis isn’t considering a vaccine mandate of any kind, spokeswoman Christina Pushaw said, noting that some people have medical or religious reasons for choosing to forgo the shot. She also said that people who have natural immunity from prior infection are already protected. “If Disney, Walmart, and our military can do it, our state government can as well,” Crist said in a statement.
Assignment editors — Crist will join a group of Floridians — parents, a teacher, a pediatrician and a student — for a virtual roundtable about safety as the school year begins amid COVID-19 cases in Florida, 11:30 a.m. Livestream on Facebook.
“House Dem campaign chief warns the majority at risk without message reboot” via Sarah Ferris and Heather Caygle of POLITICO — During a closed-door lunch last week with some of his most vulnerable incumbents, House Democrats’ campaign chief delivered a blunt warning: If the midterms were held now, they would lose the majority. Rep. Sean Patrick Maloney followed that bleak forecast, which was confirmed by multiple people familiar with the conversation, with new polling that showed Democrats falling behind Republicans by a half-dozen points on a generic ballot in battleground districts. Maloney advised the party to course-correct ahead of 2022 by promoting Biden’s agenda, which remains popular with swing voters.
“Kanika Tomalin to join Eckerd College, dimming speculation of congressional run” via Kelly Hayes of Florida Politics — St. Petersburg Deputy Mayor Tomalin will join Eckerd College as the school’s vice president for strategy and chief operating officer at the start of next year, dimming speculation around a potential congressional run. Tomalin, who has served in Mayor Rick Kriseman’s administration since his initial election in 2014, will take on the role upon completion of this term, as Kriseman faces term limits. Tomalin, a Democrat, said she was considering entering the race for Florida’s 13th Congressional District back in June. The district is one of the most hotly contested seats in the state, and it will be an open election, with incumbent U.S. Rep. Crist vacating the seat to run for Governor.
— MORE CORONA —
“New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio will mandate COVID-19 vaccines for certain indoor activities” via Robert Towey of CNBC — de Blasio mandated inoculations for a range of indoor venues at a news conference Tuesday morning, requiring proof of COVID-19 vaccinations from employees and customers of indoor eateries, gyms and entertainment centers. The order goes into effect on Aug. 16, with full enforcement beginning Sept. 13. De Blasio said the mandate, known as the Key to NYC Pass, would encourage increased immunizations to combat the spread of the delta coronavirus variant. “When you hear those words, I want you to imagine the notion that, because someone’s vaccinated, they can do all the amazing things that are available in this city,” de Blasio said of the Key to NYC Pass.
“Puerto Rico cautiously welcomes first cruise since COVID-19, Carnival’s biggest ship yet” via The Associated Press — The Carnival Mardi Gras docked Tuesday in Puerto Rico, the first time a cruise ship has visited the U.S. territory since the pandemic began. Some cautiously celebrated the arrival. It comes as Puerto Rico has reported an increase in COVID-19 cases blamed on the delta variant and seeks to restart its crucial tourism sector, which depended largely on record numbers of cruise ship passengers in recent years. Carlos Mercado, executive director of Puerto Rico’s Tourism Company, said the government took several precautions to prevent the spread of COVID-19, including allowing only those who are fully vaccinated to disembark.
“CDC says travelers should avoid Greece, Ireland and other destinations, regardless of vaccination status” via Bailey Schultz of USA Today — The CDC is advising travelers to stay away from Greece, Ireland, the U.S. Virgin Islands and other destinations, regardless of vaccination status. On Monday, the agency bumped more than a dozen destinations to its highest travel advisory category, “level 4: very high level of COVID-19,” on Monday. The agency asks travelers to avoid those destinations and says those who must travel should be fully vaccinated before arrival. The change comes as countries around the globe grapple with the highly contagious delta variant.
— CORONA ECONOMICS —
“Big economic challenges await Biden and the Fed this fall” via Jim Tankersley and Jeanna Smialek of The New York Times — The widespread availability of COVID-19 vaccines, the reopening of schools and the expiration of enhanced jobless benefits have been seen as a potent cocktail that should prod workers off the sidelines and into the millions of jobs that employers say they are having trouble filling. But that optimistic outlook might be imperiled by the resurgent virus and policymakers’ response to it. Big companies are already delaying return-to-office plans, an early and visible sign that life may not return to normal as rapidly as expected. At the same time, long-running federal supports for people hurt by the pandemic are going away, including a moratorium on evictions and an extra $300 per week for unemployed workers.
“Law school loses luster as debts mount and salaries stagnate” via Andrea Fuller, Josh Mitchell and Sara Randazzo of The Wall Street Journal — Law school was once considered a surefire ticket to a comfortable life. Years of tuition increases have made it a fast way to get buried in debt. Recent graduates of the University of Miami School of Law who used federal loans borrowed a median of $163,000. Two years later, half were earning $59,000 or less. That’s the biggest gap between debt and earnings among the top 100 law schools, ranked by U.S. News & World Report. Only a dozen of the nation’s law schools leave students earning annual salaries two years after graduation that exceed their debts, according to the Education Department data covering roughly 200 programs. Among them are Harvard University, Stanford University and the University of Pennsylvania.
“Wall Street is underestimating the economic recovery” via Conor Sen of Bloomberg — The U.S. remains in a deep employment hole, with 6.7 million fewer jobs in June than there were in February 2020. But that overstates the weakness in the economy. The elegant way to show this numerically is to look at the change in real GDP, employment, and wages and salaries received by workers between December 2019 and June 2021. Real GDP has increased by 0.8%. Employment is down by 4.1%. And wages and salaries received by workers are up by 6.7%. Employment and wages aren’t apples to apples, but it still shows that real output and real wages are at new highs while employment remains well below its high.
— PRESIDENTIAL —
“Landlords, tenants fill courts as eviction moratorium ends” via The Associated Press — The Biden administration allowed the federal moratorium on evictions to expire over the weekend, and Congress was unable to extend it. Historic amounts of rental assistance allocated by Congress had been expected to avert a crisis. But the distribution has been painfully slow: Only about $3 billion of the first tranche of $25 billion had been distributed through June by states and localities. The second amount of $21.5 billion will go to the states. More than 15 million people live in households that owe as much as $20 billion to their landlords. For some tenants, getting assistance has proved impossible. While the moratorium was enforced in much of the country, there were states like Idaho where judges ignored it.
“Biden administration issues new eviction moratorium” via Andrew Ackerman and Siobhan Hughes of The Wall Street Journal — The Biden administration Tuesday announced a new federal moratorium on evictions, bowing to pressure from progressive Democrats to revive lapsed tenant protections despite White House officials saying they lacked the legal authority to do so. The CDC ban targets areas that have experienced “substantial or high” levels of COVID-19 transmission and is expected to cover more than 80% of U.S. counties. The action aims to buy states and localities more time to distribute about $47 billion in rental assistance designed to help tenants harmed by the pandemic who have fallen behind on their rent. As of June 30, just $3 billion of that money had reached tenants and landlords.
“Biden approval ratings on COVID-19 and economy fall in new CNBC All-America survey” via Steve Liesman of CNBC — Biden held on to his overall approval rating in the latest CNBC All-America Economic Survey but showed weakness in two key areas as the public’s views on the economy and the outlook for the virus soured. In the poll of 802 American adults nationwide, 48% approved of Biden’s job as President, up a point from the first quarter. But his disapproval numbers grew to 45% from 41%. The biggest change came in views on his handling of the coronavirus, where approval dropped 9 points to 53%; Biden’s economic approval fell to 42%, a decline of 4 points, or just beyond the poll’s 3.5-point margin of error.
— EPILOGUE: TRUMP —
“Trump remains the key to 2022” via Stuart Rothenberg of Roll Call — With Trump not nearly as much in the limelight as he once was, Democrats are spending more time complaining about a handful of Republican elected officials who spend most of their time defending the former President and portraying Democrats as communists, socialists, Marxists and any other “ist” they can find. But while the Washington echo chamber sometimes seems obsessed with Marjorie Taylor Greene and Matt Gaetz, the 2022 midterm elections will almost certainly be a referendum on either Biden or Trump. Republicans want to make the midterms about Biden. Democrats need to give Trump enough rope so that he can hang himself. That means they still need him to get plenty of attention between now and next November.
“Trump raised millions but spent none of it on audits and GOP candidates” via Meridith McGraw of POLITICO — Six months since leaving office, Trump is sitting on a $102 million war chest. But having whipped his supporters into a frenzy with pledges to overturn the election and promises to support Republican candidates in the midterms, he is not spending his campaign money on either. A review of election filings from Make America Great Again PAC, Save America PAC, and the Save America Joint Fundraising Committee shows that not a penny was transferred or contributed from those Trump-affiliated entities to GOP candidates or committees involved in the midterm elections. The one expenditure Trump did make — a $1 million contribution to America First Policy Institute, the think tank a handful of his former aides launched when he lost the White House.
“Trump says he will not try to stop former Justice Dept. officials from testifying to Congress.” via Katie Benner of The New York Times — Trump said this week that he would not move to stop former Justice Department officials from testifying before two committees that are investigating the Trump administration’s efforts to subvert the results of the presidential election, according to letters from his lawyer, Douglas A. Collins. Collins said Trump might take some undisclosed legal action if congressional investigators sought “privileged information” from “any other Trump administration officials or advisers,” including “all necessary and appropriate steps, on President Trump’s behalf, to defend the office of the presidency.” The letters were not sent to the congressional committees, but rather to the potential witnesses, who cannot control whom Congress contacts for testimony or what information it seeks.
“Trump New Jersey golf club can’t use presidential seal now that he’s out of office, complaint says” via Jonathan D. Salant of NJ.com — A criminal complaint has been filed against Trump’s Bedminster golf club, charging the facility with misusing the presidential seal. Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington, a watchdog group and frequent critic of the former President, filed the complaint with the U.S. Justice Department after an Instagram photo showed the seal on a tee marker at the golf course. Federal law prohibits the use of the seal to give “a false impression of sponsorship or approval by the Government of the United States,” CREW said in its complaint. Justice Department spokesman Joshua Stueve declined to comment on the complaint.
— CRISIS —
“Two more police officers who responded to Jan. 6 Capitol attack died by suicide” via Alexa Corse of The Wall Street Journal — Washington’s Metropolitan Police Department said that two more officers who responded to the Jan. 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol have died by suicide. That raises to four the known number of suicides by police officers who defended the complex after Trump supporters stormed the U.S. Capitol. The toll comprises three officers from the Metropolitan Police Department and one officer from the Capitol Police. MPD Officer Gunther Hashida was found dead on July 29, and Officer Kyle DeFreytag was found dead on July 10. MPD Officer Jeffrey Smith and Capitol Police Officer Howard Liebengood also guarded the Capitol on Jan. 6 and subsequently died by suicide.
“Pentagon police officer is fatally stabbed” via Nancy A. Youssef and Sadie Gurman of The Wall Street Journal — At 10:37 a.m. “a Pentagon police officer was attacked on the Metro bus platform, gunfire was exchanged, and there were several casualties,” Pentagon Force Protection Agency Police Chief Woodrow Kusse said during a Tuesday press briefing, but declined to say how many were injured. Law-enforcement officials briefed on the investigation identified the suspect as 27-year-old Austin William Lanz. Authorities didn’t provide any additional information about the suspect. The FBI is leading the investigation, Chief Kusse said, but he didn’t specify why that agency was in charge. The bureau said that “it would be premature to speculate on motive” and that there is no longer a public threat.
“Church group reports suspected Capitol rioter to FBI” via Graig Graziosi of The Independent — Glen Allen Brook of California was arrested on Thursday by the FBI after his church group tipped off the agency. Brooks “boasted of his active participation” in the insurrection and “sent photos of his attendance” to a text chat group full of members from his church group, according to a criminal complaint. The text reportedly included a photo of himself inside the Capitol. Several weeks later, he was turned in by a member of the group. Allen’s arrest came just before it was announced that two more officers who fought Trump supporters during the insurrection had died by suicide. In the wake of a House select committee hearing, officers recounted the various injuries incurred during the attack.
— D.C. MATTERS —
“‘This attack happened’: Medals to honor Jan. 6 responders” via Mary Clare Jalonick of The Associated Press — The Senate has voted to award Medals of Honor to the Capitol Police and the Metropolitan Police Department for protecting Congress during the Jan. 6 insurrection, sending the legislation to Biden for his signature. Under the bill, which passed by voice vote with no objections, four medals will be displayed at the Capitol Police headquarters, the Metropolitan Police Department, the U.S. Capitol, and the Smithsonian Institution. The medals are “a recognition that will be on display for people to understand and remember what these officers did,” Senate Rules Committee Chairwoman Amy Klobuchar said. Senate passage comes after 21 House Republicans voted against the measure in June, some of them objecting to the language in the bill that referred to a “mob of insurrectionists.”
“Senators behind $1T infrastructure plan show off their work” via Kevin Freking and Lisa Mascaro of The Associated Press — The Senators who spent months stitching together a nearly $1 trillion infrastructure package are now trying to sell it to the American people before a key vote expected this week. Maine Republican Sen. Susan Collins said Tuesday that the $65 billion for broadband means that some people in her state would get access to the internet for the first time. Alaska Republican Sen. Lisa Murkowski spoke of how the bill would lead to more rural and Native Alaskans having access to a sink to wash their hands in. And Louisiana Republican Sen. Bill Cassidy noted there is about $16 billion for the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers that would help fund projects designed to curb coastal erosion. “
“Congress is slashing a $30 billion plan to fight the next pandemic” via Robinson Meyer of The Atlantic — Biden proposed $30 billion to address the issue, which advocates say could permanently mitigate the risks of future outbreaks. The investment would replenish medical stockpiles, proactively develop vaccines for major types of viruses, and ensure that the United States has a permanent production base of face masks and respirators. In effect, it would amount to an Apollo program — like push to guarantee that a pandemic could never shut down the country again. Yet, those funds have been slashed in the current negotiations over the $3.5 trillion reconciliation package as part of a push to slim it down.
“Why Marco Rubio’s criticisms of the Pentagon chief are so misplaced” via Steve Benen of NBC News — What the Republican Senator didn’t seem to realize is what the U.S. embassy quickly made clear: “The Philippine government has mandated that everyone must wear full-coverage face shields together with face masks while in public places. Local governments continue to implement additional requirements to slow the virus’ spread.” It was an unfortunate error for Rubio — a member of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee who probably should’ve thought this through before taking a public shot at the Pentagon chief. But instead of walking it back and/or deleting the tweet, the Florida Republican pressed on a day later, pointing to images of Austin with a mask but no face shield.
“Rubio presses DNI to investigate alleged unmasking of Tucker Carlson” via Dominick Mastrangelo of The Hill — The top Republican on the Senate Intelligence Committee is calling on the director of national intelligence to investigate allegations that the federal government “unmasked” Carlson. In a letter to Avril Haines, Rubio said that recent media reports that “Mr. Carlson was unmasked by a government agency” have “only fueled the perception that unmasking is being used as a political hammer or to satisfy curiosity.” “Unmasking” is a process by which senior intelligence officials can learn the identity of subjects under government surveillance who are otherwise listed anonymously if they believe there is a national security rationale for doing so.
“Vern Buchanan says existing water quality rules need to be enforced, not pass more regulations” via Earle Kimmel and Zac Anderson of the Sarasota Herald-Tribune — Buchanan said Monday following a roundtable discussion on red tide that more must be done to keep nutrients that feed harmful algae blooms out of waterways, but he favors stricter enforcement of existing rules over new regulations. “Let’s enforce the ones we’ve got first, and then we’ll go from there,” Buchanan said of Florida’s environmental regulations. Buchanan convened the roundtable at Sarasota’s Selby Gardens as red tide continues to foul waterways and kill sea life along coastal Sarasota and Manatee counties, as well as in the Tampa Bay area. Environmental advocates have long criticized Florida’s water quality rules as inadequate.
“Debbie Wasserman Schultz discloses personal investment in tech company months after deadline” via Anthony Man of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — Rep. Wasserman Schultz filed disclosures reporting she and her children bought stock in a technology company but waited months after the deadline to make the purchases public. Reports filed last week by the Broward/Miami-Dade County Democrat show four stock buys, on Oct. 13, in Westell Technologies Inc., which provides what the company calls “high-performance wireless infrastructure solutions.” The deadline for reporting the transactions was the end of November, making her disclosure eight months late. “This was an oversight and corrected once it was recognized,” a Wasserman Schultz spokesman said via email.
“White House officials open to tightening law authorizing war on terrorist groups” via Charlie Savage of The New York Times — Testifying before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, Deputy Secretary of State Wendy R. Sherman, favorably cited ideas to give Congress some role in any future decisions to expand counterterrorism operations to additional terrorist groups or new countries, as well as to require periodic reviews of such groups and countries. Sherman made her comments at a hearing officially devoted to pending legislation to repeal two other aging war-powers laws: the 1991 law that authorized the Persian Gulf War and the 2002 law that authorized George W. Bush to invade Iraq. The House voted in June to repeal them, and the Biden administration said it supported that effort, saying they were obsolete.
— LOCAL NOTES —
“First police videos released in Surfside condo collapse: Scenes of shock, confusion, chaos” via Charles Rabin and Martin Vassolo of the Miami Herald — Body camera video from three of the first Surfside officers on the scene of the Champlain Towers South condo collapse captured scenes of almost unthinkable chaos: Thick clouds of dust, a landscape strewn with wreckage and cries of help from unseen, seemingly unreachable victims. The town released the footage on Tuesday. The images are difficult to watch, reviving the shock and horror that faced the very first responders to the catastrophe early in the morning of June 24. Officer Ariol Lage, whose body camera started filming about 1:24 a.m. — minutes after the collapse — scurried past debris and down a walkway, dust floating overhead and bright lights in front of him.
“Why a residential building has spent 13 years on Miami-Dade’s unsafe structures radar” via Marie-Rose Sheinerman of the Miami Herald — Following the Surfside condo collapse that left 98 dead this summer, Miami-Dade County has faced mounting pressure to address the hundreds of unsafe structure cases in its jurisdiction, including aging residential complexes that have failed to meet a key safety benchmark for buildings aged 40 years and older. One stands out among the rest: Jade Winds, a sprawling North Miami Beach complex where one building is 13 years past due on its 40-year recertification — the longest-standing unresolved recertification case among buildings flagged by the county in a post-Surfside audit. More than a decade after the case was opened with the county, the building remains occupied.
“Man slammed by Miami Beach cop followed orders, arrest report and video show” via Terrell Forney of WPLG Local 10 News — Khalid Vaughn was a witness, recording an arrest on his cellphone when an officer tackled him to the ground and unleashed a series of punches. According to arrest reports for the five Miami Beach officers being charged in last week’s rough arrest, one cop exclaimed “my man,” to which Vaughn replied: “I’m minding my business, but I’m just recording. Y’all got him already. He handcuffed.” The officer shouted for Vaughn to back up. Video shows the witness complied. An arrest report says he was “five feet away from the nearest officer but upward of 15 feet away from the spot where Mr. (Dalonta) Crudup is being detained. Mr. Vaughn complies with the commands and backs up.”
“Francis Suarez’s veto means debate over how Miami should hire its top cop will have to wait” via Joey Flechas of the Miami Herald — Suarez has moved to block Miami voters from deciding whether the city should change the way it selects its top two public safety officers, a referendum on the way Police Chief Art Acevedo was quietly recruited by Suarez and hired this spring by City Manager Art Noriega in a pursuit kept quiet from the public and commissioners. On Friday, Suarez vetoed a city commission resolution to hold a referendum that could give commissioners a larger role in deciding who leads the city of Miami’s police and fire departments. The city manager has the sole discretion to hire and fire the police chief, but some commissioners want the power to name a search committee that would narrow and control the manager’s list of candidates.
“Will new Miami Beach law help officers arrested in rough arrests?” via Andrea Torres of WPLG Local 10 News — Before city commissioners passed a new law meant to help protect officers from civilian interference, Miami Beach Police Chief Richard Clements nodded his head in agreement when Rafael Paz, the acting City Attorney, assured commissioners it would not make the recording of officers an arrestable offense. Paz’s legal opinion during the public meeting in late June prompted Miami Beach Commissioner David Richardson to become the third Commissioner to co-sponsor the ordinance. Richardson had expressed concern about witnesses like those who recorded George Floyd’s murder. The witnesses’ videos and testimony were key in the murder conviction of former police officer Derek Chauvin.
“For the first time, Cuba approves Cuban-owned Miami company to do business on the island” via Sarah Moreno of the Miami Herald — The Cuban government has authorized a company owned by Miami businessman Hugo Cancio to operate on the island, an unusual ruling on a request that Cancio submitted more than a year ago that was initially rejected. A decree signed by Minister of Foreign Trade and Investment Rodrigo Malmierca allows Cancio’s Miami-based Fuego Enterprises to sell food as well as artisanal and other consumer goods in Cuba. It was published July 28 in the island’s Official Gazette. Fuego will have a branch office in Havana to handle the operations by the parent company in Miami, such as imports and exports.
Group releases names of police shooters after JSO scrubs records — The Tributary, a journalist group, added its voice to the chorus of organizations criticizing police departments for using Marsy’s Law to shield the names of police officers involved in shootings. The group said that the Jacksonville Sheriff’s Office started shielding names earlier this year and has scrubbed the officer names for incidents as far back as January 2019, and more redactions could be forthcoming. “In effect, due in large part to Marsy’s Law, Jacksonville police shootings are less transparent than ever,” the organization said. In response, The Tributary has made a public database naming the JSO officers who have shot someone from 2007 through 2020. The database can be found here.
“Should jurors walk through site of horror? Stoneman Douglas crime scene is next legal battleground” via Rafael Olmeda and Lisa J. Huriash of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — Knowing 17 people were murdered at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School on Feb. 14, 2018, won’t be enough. Seeing pictures of their bodies, hearing testimony from the doctors who performed their autopsies, even seeing surveillance video of the final moments of the terrified teenagers and faculty members won’t be enough. To truly understand why Nikolas Cruz needs to be convicted of murder and sentenced to death, prosecutors say that jurors need to follow his steps into the staircases, hallways, and classrooms where the crimes were committed. And that, defense lawyers argue, would overwhelm the jury with a flood of emotions that will make it impossible for them to return a fair and impartial verdict.
“Sunny Isles Mayor resigns to focus on job leading blood bank. Special Election to be held” via Martin Vassolo of the Miami Herald — Sunny Isles Beach Mayor George “Bud” Scholl is leaving office with more than a year left on his term, submitting a resignation letter Monday explaining how he will leave to focus on his full-time job as president and CEO of the OneBlood blood bank. Scholl, whose last day is Sept. 1, said he had been overwhelmed at times over the past year leading both the city and the blood-donation company during the COVID-19 pandemic. The recent surge in COVID-19 cases, and the emergence of the delta variant, convinced him he could not continue performing both roles.
— TOP OPINION —
“Tough-talking Ron DeSantis lacks courage to confront COVID-19” via the Orlando Sentinel editorial board — This is what Florida has in Ron DeSantis: A tough-talking Governor who is paralyzed by inaction in the face of the latest COVID-19 outbreak. He’s terrified that taking decisive action might anger the vaccine-hesitant base he’s increasingly reliant on to propel him to a presidential nomination in 2024. DeSantis appears to have learned a political lesson after making an innocuous comment on July 21 that the shots were “saving lives.” After a conservative backlash — they called him a “sellout” for promoting vaccines — DeSantis got right back to what he does best: ignoring the outbreak, the suffering, the deaths, and instead jetting around the state and roaring about how uncomfortable masks are.
— OPINIONS —
“DeSantis’ latest power grab goes too far and must be challenged” via the South Florida Sun-Sentinel editorial board — DeSantis has gone too far with an order that prevents school districts and their elected leaders from imposing any mask requirements on students, and threatens to punish them if they do by taking away state money. That’s our money that’s spent mostly to teach our kids. Who is DeSantis punishing? Any executive order should be narrowly tailored to achieve a result that’s clearly in the public interest, such as protecting public health. That should be achieved without violating individual rights or using the power of the state to trample on the home rule authority of local government. Small-government conservatives should be appalled by such a heavy-handed use of state power to punish another layer of government.
“The eviction ban has to end sometime” via The Wall Street Journal editorial board — As Democrats push to renew the nationwide ban on evictions that expired Saturday, they’re squabbling — er, screaming — over who’s failing the party’s progressive base. Speaker Nancy Pelosi puts the onus on Biden, urging him to act unilaterally. The White House says it lacks legal authority, as the Supreme Court recently made clear. Biden is correct: The CDC’s public-health powers do not extend to an interminable blanket prohibition of evictions across the entire nation. Any ban also may be an unconstitutional “taking” of property under the Fifth Amendment, though that’s an argument for another day. The point is that for 11 months, Trump and Biden stretched their authority, but now Biden must heed the Supreme Court’s warning.
“Florida is way too slow in getting federal aid to needy renters” via the Tampa Bay Times editorial board — Florida has received more than $870 million from the federal government to make landlords whole and keep renters in their homes during the pandemic. But the state’s only paid out about 2% of what it has received so far. Florida is not the only laggard; nationally, only about 6.5% of the $46.5 billion set aside for the program had been distributed by the end of June. But Florida is at one-third the pace of the national average. That’s a major red flag that must be corrected. It’s essential that Florida push out this money more quickly in the coming weeks. Doing so will help stabilize housing, public health, and the state’s recovery in an uncertain time.
— OLYMPICS —
“Simone Biles says Tokyo bronze means more than all her golds” via Elisha Fieldstadt of NBC News — Biles said Tuesday her bronze medal win on the balance beam in Tokyo means more than her gold medals because it represents her focus on mental health and her perseverance. “It means more than all of the golds because I pushed through so much the last five years and the last week while I’ve even been here,” she said. Biles, 24, said she was nervous while competing and “shocked” that she medaled, but “I didn’t really care about the outcome. I was just happy that I made the routine and that I got to compete one more time.”
“Meet Erriyon Knighton, the 17-year-old U.S. sprinter who broke a Usain Bolt record and is aiming for Olympic history” via Greg Auman of The Athletic — For Knighton, the record-breaking speed isn’t as incredible as his acceleration to the track world’s elite. On Sunday night in Oregon, he earned a spot in next month’s Olympics in Tokyo in the 200 meters, and at 17 years old, the rising senior at Hillsborough High School in Tampa became the youngest male U.S. Olympic track athlete in 57 years since Jim Ryun in the 1964 games, also in Tokyo. Six times in the past year and three times over the weekend, he reset the under-18 world record in the 200, along with the world under-20 record held by three-time Olympic 200-meter gold medalist Usain Bolt.
“U.S. men overcome slow start, beat Spain to advance to basketball semifinals” via NBC News — Consistency has been Team USA’s Achilles heel throughout these Olympics. That trend continued once more in their quarterfinal matchup against Spain. Luckily, they still managed to pull out the massive victory against one of the top men’s teams competing in Tokyo. Kevin Durant and company were lucky to enter halftime with the game knotted up at 43. After making just 38% of their shots through the game’s first 20 minutes. It seemed unlikely early on, but Team USA pulled out the 95-81 victory to move on to the men’s basketball semifinals, guaranteeing a chance to play for a medal. The U.S. will next take on the winner of Australia vs. Argentina.
“Tamyra Mensah-Stock brought her karaoke machine to the Olympics. She’s leaving with a gold medal.” via Les Carpenter of The Washington Post — American wrestler Mensah-Stock walked down a red carpet inside Makuhari Messe Hall as the first Black woman to win Olympic wrestling gold for the United States and the second woman ever. She touched her dangling American flag earrings and laughed and shouted and screamed all at once. She talked about the young Black girls who will watch her win Tuesday and want to be wrestlers themselves, maybe even Olympians. She said they were going to “see themselves,” just as she saw herself in Randi Miller, an Olympic bronze medalist in 2008, and Iris Smith, a former American team member. She said they are going to think, “I can do that.”
“Mao pins worn by Chinese athletes may test Olympic rules” via Graham Dunbar and Joe McDonald of The Associated Press — The image of Communist China’s founding leader, Mao Zedong, made an unscheduled appearance at the Tokyo Olympics, and the International Olympic Committee said Tuesday it is “looking into the matter.” The gesture risks being judged a breach of Olympic Charter Rule 50, which prohibits political statements on the podium at the Tokyo Games. After winning the women’s sprint in track cycling Monday, Bao Shanju and Zhong Tianshi wore pin badges of Mao. Badges showing Mao’s profile were worn by hundreds of millions of people in the 1960s to show their loyalty to the Communist Party chairman and the ultraradical Cultural Revolution he launched in 1966.
“Cut off from restaurants, Tokyo’s visitors find culinary delights at 24-hour convenience stores.” via Andrew Keh of The New York Times — Enter the saving grace of these Olympics, the glue holding the whole thing together: Tokyo’s 24-hour convenience stores, or “conbini,” as they are known in Japan. They have quickly become a primary source of sustenance and, more surprisingly, culinary enjoyment for many visitors navigating one of the strangest Games in history. All of us, athletes, team staff members, officials and journalists, are largely prohibited from venturing anywhere but our hotels and the Olympic venues. Trips outside this so-called bubble cannot exceed 15 minutes. We can’t traverse the galaxy of food outside the Olympic limits, but a conbini contains a culinary world unto itself, a bounty of bento boxes, fried meats, sushi, noodles galore, and all manner of elaborate plastic-wrapped meals and rare snacks.
— ALOE —
“Disney reopens Hall of Presidents, debuts Biden animatronic” via Dewayne Bevil of the Orlando Sentinel — The Hall of Presidents has reopened at Walt Disney World with Biden front and center of the Magic Kingdom attraction. Biden’s animatronic is seen reciting the presidential oath of office as his predecessors look on. “I, Joseph Robinette Biden Jr. …” the spiel begins. Biden recorded the words in the White House for the Disney attraction. The likeness of his immediate predecessor Trump now stands behind and over Biden’s right shoulder.
“The first Star Wars Tamagotchi makes you protect R2-D2 from Jawas” via Andrew Liszewski of Gizmodo — A long time ago, a digital pet called the Tamagotchi took the world by storm. Twenty-five years later, it’s still around, but now in competition with tablets and smartphones. So how do you make a near antique technology still worthy of attention and sales? You mash it up with Star Wars, of course. Instead of raising the droid from an egg (as far as we know, all robots come from factories no matter what galaxy they’re created), players will train their captive animated Artoo to master 19 different skills by keeping him charged, cleaned, and entertained through two initial games — firefighting and holo-chess — as well as seven other minigames that can be eventually unlocked as long as Artoo is kept happy.
“Inside Netflix’s ‘Army of the Dead’ virtual reality experience: ‘It’s a massive undertaking’” via Chris Gardner of The Hollywood Reporter — The 30-minute experience offers participants a chance to select an avatar and firepower before boarding one of two tactical taco trucks on site. Each group (up to six at a time) is then presented with a brief virtual introduction to the mission. After that, it’s time to take a position in the motorized truck, put on a VR headset, grab a gun and try to survive the ride. After the game ends, participants can browse merch, pose in a photo booth and refuel at a concession stand. Viva Las Vengeance remains in Century City through Sept. 12, with New York, Las Vegas, Washington D.C. and London opening in the weeks to come. “Future cities to be rescued” include Miami.
— HAPPY BIRTHDAY —
Happy birthday to Reps. Andrew Learned and Tom Leek and our friends, Ryan Anderson, Patrick Baskette, Marty Fiorentino, and Herbie Thiele.
___
Sunburn is authored and assembled by Peter Schorsch, Phil Ammann, Renzo Downey and Drew Wilson.
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Morning Headlines
Texas Rep. Beth Van Duyne appears regularly on conservative media while trying to make jobs, not divisive partisan issues, the headline at home. Her strategy shows one way Republicans who won using Donald Trump’s populism playbook may campaign without him on the ballot. Read more…
The 2,702-page bipartisan infrastructure plan under debate in the Senate is a monster piece of legislation that takes hours to skim and days to read, but a few takeaways have emerged from the mammoth bill. Read more…
Shontel Brown tops progressive favorite Nina Turner in Ohio’s 11th District primary
Shontel Brown, the chair of the Cuyahoga County Democratic Party in Ohio, defeated progressive favorite Nina Turner for her party’s nomination Tuesday in the special election for the state’s 11th District. Brown led Turner 51 to 44 percent when The Associated Press called the race at 10:41 p.m. EDT. Read more…
Trump-backed lobbyist Mike Carey wins primary in Ohio’s 15th District
Mike Carey, a relatively unknown coal lobbyist endorsed by former President Donald Trump, won a crowded Republican primary Tuesday in the special election for Ohio’s 15th District, making him the heavy favorite to succeed former GOP Rep. Steve Stivers in November. Read more…
Biden’s summer of joy turns into frustration
OPINION — For a growing number of Americans, it sure doesn’t feel like anything is working in the country. So, like the process that rescued three astronauts from disaster in 1970, the president’s first step ought to be identifying and admitting what’s not working in order for him to adapt and survive politically. Read more…
Earmarks in House bills favor Democrats, but GOP not shy either
House appropriators set aside $3.7 billion for home-state projects in fiscal 2022 spending bills, with about 62 percent of the earmarked funds flowing to Democratic districts, a CQ Roll Call analysis found. But of the top 25 highest-grossing House members across all the earmarked bills, 18 are Republicans. Read more…
Take Five: Teresa Leger Fernandez
First-term Democratic Rep. Teresa Leger Fernandez recently sat down for an interview to talk about her deep roots in New Mexico, chile stew, her father’s political advice and ranked choice voting. Read more…
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25.) POLITICO PLAYBOOK
POLITICO Playbook: Reports of Trump’s demise are exaggerated
DRIVING THE DAY
BREAKING OVERNIGHT — “Obama Significantly Scales Back 60th Birthday Party as Virus Cases Rebound,” by NYT’s Annie Karni: “The party plans had been months in the making and many invitees had already arrived on Martha’s Vineyard when former President BARACK OBAMA belatedly announced he was canceling his huge 60th birthday bash scheduled for Saturday.
“‘Due to the new spread of the Delta variant over the past week, the President and Mrs. Obama have decided to significantly scale back the event to include only family and close friends,’ HANNAH HANKINS, a spokeswoman for the former president, said in a statement Wednesday morning. ‘He’s appreciative of others sending their birthday wishes from afar and looks forward to seeing people soon.’”
TRUMP REDEEMS HIMSELF IN OHIO — MIKE CAREY might have been on the ballot, but in the Buckeye State on Tuesday night DONALD TRUMP was just as much the winner. The former president’s candidate prevailed in a 10-way primary to replace former Rep. STEVE STIVERS, showing that the “Trump influence waning” narrative last week was premature.
As our colleague Marissa Martinez wrote Tuesday night: “Carey’s win affirms Trump’s ability to influence Republican primaries … after SUSAN WRIGHT, another Republican House candidate backed by the former president, lost her own special election for a district in Texas last week. Following the Texas defeat last week, Trump moved aggressively to prevent a second loss … [He] held a last-minute tele-rally for Carey Monday evening… Meanwhile, a pro-Trump PAC spent more than $350,000 on digital campaign ads in just the last week.”
In the Texas race last week, Democratic voters appeared to undercut Wright, making that election an imperfect test of the power of Trump’s endorsement. In Ohio, however, only Republicans could vote in the primary.
AS FOR TEAM BLUE …
THE ESTABLISHMENT REIGNS (AND SO DOES THE CBC) — For the second time in recent weeks, progressives came up short. Our Ally Mutnick, reporting on the ground in Bedford Heights, Ohio: “The Democratic establishment dealt a crushing blow to the progressive movement Tuesday, with SHONTEL BROWN, the preferred candidate of party stalwarts, triumphing over NINA TURNER, a face of the insurgent left, in a special congressional primary election.” It’s a major win for the Congressional Black Caucus, which went all in for Brown in a race that pitted House Majority Whip JIM CLYBURN (D-S.C.) against Sen. BERNIE SANDERS (I-Vt.) and the Squad. And it’s the second defeat for the left in recent weeks after ERIC ADAMS won the New York City mayoral primary.
Turner had the early momentum in the campaign, making this an especially tough loss for the left. Brown’s allies “bombarded the airwaves with ads dragging up unfavorable Turner comments about the Democratic Party. (Some spots included a now-notorious interview Turner gave comparing voting for JOE BIDEN to eating excrement.) The Democratic Majority for Israel super PAC was the main spender, dropping nearly $1 million on TV to boost Brown.”
In her concession speech Tuesday night, captured on Twitter by National Journal’s Kirk Bado, Turner showed her anger over the attacks: “I am going to work hard to ensure that something like this doesn’t happen to another progressive candidate again. We didn’t lose this race, evil money manipulated and maligned this election.” Brown, meanwhile, thanked “my Jewish brothers and sisters” in her victory speech and noted her support for the U.S.-Israel relationship, per Jewish Insider.
But it’s not all doom and gloom for the left. As Kara Voght at Mother Jones noted, Turner lost “on the same day @justicedems proves its point via Squad’s Capitol camp out.” Our Maya King called it “quite [the] split screen… progressives suffer a bruising loss in Ohio while one of their own in Washington clears the way for millions to avoid eviction.”
“We can draw conclusions about 2022 momentum from this race,” she wrote, “but can’t deny the grassroots activism that progressives like [CORI] BUSH are bringing, and said they would as challengers/candidates.” (More on this in a second …)
Good Wednesday morning. Thanks for reading Playbook. Drop us a line: Rachael Bade, Eugene Daniels, Ryan Lizza, Tara Palmeri.
CUOMO ON THE ROPES — New York Democrats are gearing up to impeach Democratic Gov. ANDREW CUOMO — and soon — after he refused to step down in the wake of state A.G. TISH JAMES’ Tuesday report that he sexually harassed 11 women. Here’s what it will look like, per our colleagues in the Empire State:
— New York’s impeachment process looks a lot like Congress’, but with a few differences. It starts in the lower chamber and takes a simple majority of the Assembly’s 150 members to impeach, just like on Capitol Hill. The chamber can create a special committee, though in this case the Judiciary panel has been investigating Cuomo.
But unlike with presidential proceedings, Cuomo would be tried in the so-called “High Court of Impeachment,” a jury composed of all the state’s senators (except the majority leader, who would become lieutenant governor and therefore is recused), and the seven members of the state’s highest court. Removal takes two-thirds of the 69-member body. Read our Bill Mahoney for the latest on the political front, and Nick Niedzwiadek and Terry Golway for more on the process.
Also of note: Only one of the state’s 56 governors has ever been impeached and removed from office: WILLIAM SULZER was ousted in 1912 after a select panel found that he didn’t report all his campaign money and used some of it to play in the stock market.
— Things could move fast, per the NYT’s Katie Glueck: “A person familiar with the process said it could take just a month to complete the inquiry and draw up the articles of impeachment. A trial in the State Senate could begin as soon as late September or early October.”
IMPEACHMENT ISN’T CUOMO’S ONLY PROBLEM …, He’s got a criminal probe hanging over his head, too.
MEET THE POSSIBLE NEXT NEW YORK GOVERNOR — “What to Know About Kathy Hochul, Cuomo’s Possible Successor,” by NYT’s Katie Glueck and Michael Gold
MORE HEADLINES — “What we know about the 11 women in the Cuomo harassment report,” POLITICO … “Key findings of the Andrew Cuomo sexual harassment report — and what’s next,” CNN … “‘Creepy’ and ‘flirtatious’: How Cuomo allegedly sexually harassed a state trooper,” NBC … “Biden calls for Cuomo to resign after investigation finds the New York governor sexually harassed 11 women,” WaPo
BIDEN’S WEDNESDAY:
— 10 a.m.: Biden and VP KAMALA HARRIS will receive the President’s Daily Brief.
— 11:15 a.m.: Biden will meet with ERIC LANDER, science adviser and director of the Office of Science and Technology Policy, to talk about getting ready for future pandemics.
Press secretary JEN PSAKI will brief at 12:30 p.m.
THE SENATE is in. The Foreign Relations Committee will mark up a bill to repeal the authorizations for use of military force against Iraq at 10:15 a.m. The Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee will hold a markup at 10:30 a.m. to vote on the nominations of ED GONZALEZ to lead ICE and ROBERT SANTOS to lead the Census Bureau.
THE HOUSE is out.
PLAYBOOK READS
THE EVICTION MORATORIUM
CORI BUSH GETS RESULTS — “Biden administration moves to block evictions in most of U.S. following liberal backlash,” by WaPo’s Jeff Stein, Tyler Pager, Seung Min Kim and Tony Romm: “The CDC issued a moratorium on evictions for 60 days for U.S. counties with ‘substantial and high levels of community transmission’ of the coronavirus, according to an agency news release. About 90 percent of the country will be covered by the ban as the virus’s delta variant spreads quickly throughout the country, Senate Majority Leader CHUCK SCHUMER (D-N.Y.) said in a statement.”
KNOWING THE SQUAD’S NEWEST STANDOUT — Speaker NANCY PELOSI used to remind former activists in Congress that when they were elected to serve their districts, they traded the picket line for a new set of decorum expectations. But this week Bush, the former Black Lives Matter activist and one of the newest members of the Squad, showed the nation that she can do things her way — and still get results. Nicholas Wu, Heather Caygle and Sarah Ferris take a closer look at the Missouri lawmaker, who experienced homelessness herself after an eviction.
— Forbes’ @AndrewSolender tweeted a video of Bush’s victory lap — but also a reminder for Democratic leaders: “Let’s be clear, activists are in Congress. So expect for things to be different than what people are used to.”
— As our Heather Caygle writes in to Playbook today, Pelosi was also flexing to get a win here. While Bush took to sleeping on the steps of the Capitol, the speaker publicly called on the White House to extend the moratorium, breaking with the president and working the phones all weekend to get the administration to do something.
THE BACKLASH … Sen. PAT TOOMEY (R-Pa.) on Twitter: “The eviction moratorium lacks both a legal basis and an economic justification. Even the president admitted today that the ‘bulk of constitutional scholars say … it’s not likely to pass constitutional muster.’”
ABC’s Justin Gomez, Mariam Khan and Cheyenne Haslet have more: “Biden said that he isn’t sure if the new moratorium would pass constitutional muster and expects legal challenges, but he said that some scholars he consulted think ‘it’s worth the effort.’ … Biden said ‘at a minimum’ that by the time this works its way through the courts, some of the funds will be able to reach renters who are struggling.”
— “President Biden Announces on Live TV That He Intends to Break His Oath of Office,” by National Review’s Charles Cooke
THE BACKDROP AROUND THE COUNTRY — “State, local aid bottlenecks leave renters exposed,” by Katy O’Donnell
CONGRESS
NOMINATION WOES — In a 50-50 Senate, every Democrat (or independent caucusing with the Democrats) can take their turn to throw a wrench in the works. When it comes to DAVID CHIPMAN, Biden’s pick to head the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, Sen. ANGUS KING (I-Maine) is putting up a roadblock. Burgess Everett, Anita Kumar and Marianne LeVine have more:
“[H]e has signaled to both the Biden administration and his Democratic colleagues that he is currently not supportive of the nominee, as he comes under pressure to buck a pick seen as resistant to gun rights in a state where hunting and gun rights are part of many voters’ DNA. … King could change his mind. …
“King’s current position signals that Chipman’s nomination — already facing long odds — is decidedly on the rocks. Several other Democratic senators, including JOE MANCHIN of West Virginia and JON TESTER of Montana, said this week they remained undecided. If Chipman can’t get lockstep Democratic support, he would be among the highest-profile Biden nominees to fail in the Senate.”
FOR YOUR RADAR — “Senate nears pivotal 60-vote threshold for scrapping Iraq war authorizations,” by Andrew Desiderio: “The historic, years-long push to rein in executive branch war-making authorities isn’t over yet. But it got this far thanks to tectonic shifts in public opinion as well as growing support among Republicans, who are poised to push the effort over the finish line when it hits the Senate floor later this year.
“On Wednesday, the Senate Foreign Relations Committee will approve a bipartisan bill to repeal the 1991 authorization for the Gulf War and the 2002 authorization for the Iraq War; and, according to a POLITICO tally, the bill is likely to secure the requisite 60 votes when it hits the floor later this year — a significant shift for a Senate that has lagged behind a war-weary American public.”
ALL POLITICS
GOING LONG — “Rep. Billy Long launches Missouri Senate campaign after meeting with Trump,” by Alex Isenstadt: “Rep. BILLY LONG, a former auctioneer and radio show host who was first elected to the House of Representatives in 2010, made his announcement during an appearance on TUCKER CARLSON’s Fox News program. The congressman is tying himself closely to Trump. On Tuesday afternoon, prior to the airing of the interview with Carlson, Long met with the former president at Trump Tower in Midtown Manhattan, according to three people familiar with the sit-down.”
2022 WATCH — “Karen Bass signals openness to Los Angeles mayoral run,” by WaPo’s Sean Sullivan: “Rep. KAREN BASS (D-Calif.), one of the most prominent Black women in Congress and an ally of Biden, has signaled she is open to running for mayor of Los Angeles in 2022 under encouragement from some Democrats. The congresswoman has made no decisions about the race … but Bass’s openness is notable; her stock in Washington has been on the rise in recent years, with some mentioning her as a potential future House speaker or Cabinet official.
“Asked for comment on her intentions Tuesday, Bass spokesman ZACH SEIDL provided a written statement that said, ‘People are urging her to do it. She is not considering it at this time. Her plan right now is to run for re-election to her House seat in 2022.’”
ANOTHER 2020 SIREN — “DOJ officials rejected colleague’s request to intervene in Georgia’s election certification: Emails,” by ABC’s Katherine Faulders and Alexander Mallin: “Top members of the DOJ last year rebuffed another DOJ official who asked them to urge officials in Georgia to investigate and perhaps overturn Biden’s victory in the state — long a bitter point of contention for former Trump and his team — before the results were certified by Congress. The emails, dated Dec. 28, 2020, show the former acting head of DOJ’s civil division, JEFFREY CLARK, circulating a draft letter — which he wanted then-acting attorney general JEFFREY ROSEN and acting deputy attorney general RICHARD DONOGHUE to sign off on — urging Georgia’s governor and other top officials to convene the state legislature into a special session so lawmakers could investigate claims of voter fraud.
“The emails were provided by the DOJ to the House Oversight Committee, which is investigating efforts to overturn the election results. And they come as the DOJ investigator general looks at whether any officials in the department sought to overturn the outcome of the election.”
PANDEMIC
INCOMING — “F.D.A. Aims to Give Final Approval to Pfizer Vaccine by Early Next Month,” by NYT’s Sharon LaFraniere and Noah Weiland
SOPHOMORE SLUMP — “Chaos and confusion: Back to school turns ugly as Delta rages,” by Dan Goldberg, Juan Perez Jr. and Daniel Payne: “School boards are at war with governors over masks. Superintendents are developing contingency plans on the fly. And schools that only just opened have had to shut down.
“Welcome to sophomore year for Covid-19. The Delta variant, which few had heard of when classes ended in the spring, is upending reopening plans across the country, threatening President Joe Biden’s promise of a more normal school year and sustained economic recovery. Nearly 18 months into the pandemic, there’s no consensus on how to keep students and staff safe. Local school leaders, whipsawed by changing federal guidance, find themselves building a patchwork of protections based as much on local politics as public health.”
PLAYBOOKERS
TWEET OF THE DAY: House Oversight member Katie Porter (D-Calif.) sharpening her tools for a different context: “My oldest kid Luke is taking driver’s ed next semester. The parent orientation video suggests that we do ‘aggressive oversight’ of our teens’ driving. Some parents might be nervous, but I’m ready and eager to provide accountability when Luke gets behind the wheel of the van.”
SPOTTED: Sen. Tim Kaine (D-Va.) at the Nats game Tuesday night, appearing to have a good time in the nosebleeds. Pic … Sens. Mark Warner (D-Va.), Mitt Romney (R-Utah) and Susan Collins (R-Maine) in a suite at the Citi Open on Tuesday night. Pics via CBS’ Tim Perry … John Kerry and Madeleine Albright separately at dinner at Cafe Milano on Tuesday night.
SPOTTED at Foreign Policy for America’s NextGen leadership retreat for young policymakers Tuesday evening: Alia Awadallah, Itai Barsade, Jack Miller, Perry Blatstein, Caroline Chang, Sam Denney, Shannon Kellman, Natalia Cote-Muñoz, Mike Fox, Phoebe Benich, Ben Read, Tabatha Thompson, Leah Dreyfuss and Kristina Biyad.
MEDIA MOVES — Madeline Berg is joining Business Insider as a media editor. She currently is a staff writer at Forbes. … Kate Brannen will join the Foreign Affairs editorial team next month. She currently is editorial director at Just Security. …
… Evan Lambert is joining NewsNation as D.C. bureau correspondent, mainly reporting for “Morning In America.” He most recently was a reporter at Fox 5. … Bloomberg Economics has added Fed alums David Wilcox as director of U.S. economic research and Bill Dudley as senior adviser. Wilcox will remain affiliated with the Peterson Institute for International Economics, and Dudley will remain a Bloomberg Opinion columnist.
TRANSITIONS — Mairead Lynn is now comms director for Sen. Bob Casey (D-Pa.). She’s an EMILY’s List and Senate HELP alum. … Josh Glasstetter is now director of comms and public affairs at the U.S. Cannabis Council. He previously was a VP at West End Strategy Team, and is an SEIU and Southern Poverty Law Center alum. …
… Heather Purcell is joining the California Governor’s Office of Business and Economic Development (GO-Biz) in Los Angeles. She most recently was deputy chief of staff/comms director for Rep. Ro Khanna (D-Calif.). … Patrick Griffin has been named director of the Public Affairs and Advocacy Institute at American University, where he’s previously been the longtime academic director. He’s a Clinton White House and Capitol Hill alum.
WELCOME TO THE WORLD — Emily Loeb, associate deputy A.G. at DOJ, and Sarah Feldman, comms director for Sen. Jon Tester (D-Mont.), welcomed Hattie Frances Loeb on Saturday. She joins big brother Henry. She’s named for her late grandma Marilyn Frank, Sarah’s mom, as well as her great-great-grandmother and a long line of wise Texas women on Emily’s maternal side. Pic
HAPPY BIRTHDAY: Former President Barack Obama (6-0) … House Democratic Caucus Chair Hakeem Jeffries (D-N.Y.) … Reps. Tom Rice (R-S.C.) and Jim Hagedorn (R-Minn.) … Bret Baier … WaPo’s Seung Min Kim, Joby Warrick and Mike Madden … The Hill’s Bob Cusack … Iowa Gov. Kim Reynolds … Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot … John Edgell … CBS’ Katie Watson … Caren Auchman of Lewis … Alex Mallin of ABC … Joel Bailey of Rep. Jimmy Panetta’s (D-Calif.) office … Andrea Hechavarria of Butterfly Network … CNN’s Greg Krieg … Pete Brodnitz … USA Today’s Deirdre Shesgreen … Washingtonian’s Michael Schaffer … POLITICO’s Ashley Ryan, Donna Lindsay and Shanima Parker … Brett Loper … Nick Wing … Kate Michelman … Reagan Anderson … Kaci Sturgeon … Uber’s Hayley Prim … Valerie McCabe … Emil Hill … Chad Kolton … Anna Bennett … former A.G. Alberto Gonzales … Something Major’s Randi Braun … Richard Carlbom of United Strategies … Andrei Cherny … Minnesota A.G. Keith Ellison … former Rep. Rob Andrews (D-N.J.) … former U.S. Treasurer Rosario Marin … Robert Tuttle … former Ohio Gov. Ted Strickland
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.
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31.) THE DISPATCH
The Morning Dispatch: Cuomo Under Siege
Plus: The Biden administration reverses itself to insist it has the authority to extend an eviction moratorium unilaterally.
The Dispatch Staff | 1 min ago |
Happy Wednesday! Unless you made idolizing Gov. Andrew Cuomo a key part of your political identity last year—then you’re probably not feeling so great today.
Quick Hits: Today’s Top Stories
- New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo “sexually harassed a number of State employees through unwelcome and unwanted touching, as well as by making numerous offensive and sexually suggestive comments,” a 165-page report released by Attorney General Letitia James’ office on Tuesday found. Cuomo denied the allegations and insisted he will not resign, but a growing chorus of Democratic lawmakers—including President Joe Biden—are calling on him to step down. Democrats in the New York Assembly, meanwhile, are moving toward impeaching him.
- One day after the White House said the Centers for Disease Control was “unable to find legal authority” to implement even a “more targeted” eviction moratorium, the CDC announced the implementation of a more targeted eviction moratorium. The new order—which applies to areas experiencing “substantial” or “high” levels of community COVID transmission—is now set to expire on October 3.
- Mayor Bill de Blasio announced Tuesday that beginning September 13, New York City will become the first major U.S. city to require people to present proof of at least one COVID-19 vaccine dose to attend indoor restaurants, gyms, and other businesses and entertainment venues. De Blasio has thus far declined to reimplement a mask mandate in the city, saying he does not want to remove an incentive to get more people vaccinated.
- The CDC issued a new order supporting the continuation of Title 42, a Trump-era policy that allows U.S. officials at the southern border to expel migrants to their home countries without allowing them to apply for humanitarian refuge, in order to prevent overcrowding and COVID outbreaks in short-term Border Patrol facilities.
- There were a pair of special primary elections in Ohio Tuesday night. On the Democratic side, establishment favorite Shontel Brown beat out former state Sen. Nina Turner—a prominent Bernie Sanders surrogate—in Ohio’s deep-blue 11th congressional district. On the Republican side, former coal lobbyist Mike Carey rode Donald Trump’s endorsement to an easy victory in Ohio’s 15th congressional district.
Andrew Cuomo’s #MeToo Moment
In 2018, as Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh’s confirmation hearings were upended by charges of sexual misconduct, New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo made it known he was furious with Senate Republicans.
“After the #MeToo movement, they did absolutely nothing when it came to sexual harassment. They have always diminished the charges of women—always, consistently. And they’re doing it again right now,” he said at the time. “To cheapen or ridicule the pain a woman suffers from a sexual attack is disgusting—sexist and disgusting. To second-guess how a woman should have acted after a sexual attack is sexist and disgusting.”
Cuomo, apparently, held himself to a different standard. The New York attorney general’s office on Tuesday published its long-awaited report digging into the veracity of the numerous sexual harassment allegations leveled against him earlier this year. Investigators found that the governor committed unlawful sexual harassment through unwelcome and nonconsensual touching and offensive, sexually suggestive comments toward female employees.
In total, the report details the allegations of 11 women, each of whom investigators found to be credible.
“These 11 women were in a hostile and toxic work environment,” New York Attorney General Letitia James said yesterday. “What this investigation revealed was a disturbing pattern of conduct by the governor of the great state of New York and those who did not put in place any protocols or procedures to protect these young women who believed in public service. I believe women. And I believe these 11 women.”
One of the women, a former executive assistant to Cuomo who asked to remain anonymous, accused the governor of reaching under her blouse and grabbing her breast during a close hug. Another aide, Charlotte Bennett, detailed a history of inappropriate comments from the governor about her love life—exchanges that Cuomo’s Executive Chamber refused to investigate when she reported them last summer. A third, Lindsey Boylan, said the governor physically touched her on various parts of her body, including her waist, knees, and back, and kissed her on the cheeks and lips.
But Cuomo, who tweeted in 2018 that it “shouldn’t be a controversial proposition” to say a woman’s testimony is worth as much as a man’s, has cast doubt on the veracity of his accusers.
“I have heard Charlotte and her lawyer, and I understand what they are saying,” Cuomo said yesterday. “But they read into comments that I made and draw inferences that I never meant. They ascribe motives I never had. And simply put, they heard things that I just didn’t say.”
Biden Flip-Flops on Eviction Ban
Answering questions from reporters on Tuesday afternoon about his administration’s impending implementation of a new eviction moratorium, President Biden rather cavalierly announced he was planning to, most likely, violate his oath of office to “preserve, protect and defend” the Constitution of the United States.
“The bulk of the constitutional scholarship says that it’s not likely to pass constitutional muster,” he said. “I don’t know. There are a few scholars who say it will and others who say it’s not likely to.”
Senior Biden economic adviser Gene Sperling was even clearer in a Monday press conference. “To date, the CDC Director and her team have been unable to find legal authority, even for a more targeted eviction moratorium that would focus just on counties with higher rates of COVID spread,” he said.
But on Tuesday afternoon, CDC Director Dr. Rochelle Walensky signed an order implementing a “more targeted” version of the moratorium—applying “only” to the 80 percent of U.S. counties currently experiencing “substantial” or “high” levels of community COVID-19 transmission—until October 3. “This moratorium is the right thing to do to keep people in their homes and out of congregate settings where COVID-19 spreads,” Walensky said. “Mass evictions and the attendant public health consequences would be very difficult to reverse.”
“The CDC simply does not have this authority,” Ilya Shapiro, director of the Robert A. Levy Center for Constitutional Studies at the Cato Institute, told The Dispatch. “You could say that lots of things might lessen a pandemic. It doesn’t mean the CDC has the authority, therefore, to implement them.”
A late June ruling revealed that five of the nine Supreme Court justices agree. But one, Brett Kavanaugh, voted against striking down the ban “because the CDC plans to end the moratorium in only a few weeks.”
“Those few weeks will allow for additional and more orderly distribution of the congressionally appropriated rental assistance funds,” Kavanaugh wrote in his concurrence. “In my view, clear and specific congressional authorization (via new legislation) would be necessary for the CDC to extend the moratorium past July 31.”
Worth Your Time
- Eli Saslow’s Washington Post piece on the eviction moratorium is well worth your time. He focuses on one small landlord-tenant relationship in Schenectady, New York, capturing the difficulties the past year has thrust on both of them. “The house had been sold four times out of foreclosure, condemned by the city, and scheduled for demolition when Budhoo first saw it after immigrating to New York from Guyana in the early 2000s,” Saslow writes. “He’d worked at a nearby pick-and-pack warehouse for $8 an hour and saved up a small down payment toward a $79,000 purchase price. He’d rewired the electricity, gutted the plumbing, installed granite countertops, and begun renting it out for up to $950 per month. Gradually those profits had paid for more distressed properties, for his daughter’s college degree, and for a small home of his own where her diploma now hung above the entryway. He’d spent two decades growing his business on the first of each month until the pandemic hit Upstate New York.”
Toeing the Company Line
- Sarah and Co. concluded their 2024 GOP primary series in yesterday’s Sweep, previewing potential celebrity candidates who could shake up the field: Tucker Carlson, Dave Portnoy, and Donald Trump Jr. Sarah then wraps everything up with her top 10, taking into account both their likelihood of running and potential formidability, and a look at one of Tuesday’s special elections in Ohio.
- In yesterday’s Uphill, Ryan and Harvest walk readers through the status of debt ceiling negotiations before turning to—you guessed it—infrastructure. “Experts and lawmakers told The Dispatch that Congress will raise the debt ceiling this fall,” they write. “It’s a question of when exactly, how they’ll pass it, and who will vote in support of the move.”
- David’s latest French Press (🔒) makes the case for impeaching Gov. Andrew Cuomo after Tuesday’s report. “Impeachment isn’t just deserved on the merits; it would also represent an important step towards reclaiming America’s institutional integrity and partisan responsibility,” he writes. “This is not just a matter of justice for the women he allegedly harassed; it’s a matter of important national hygiene.”
- Chris Stirewalt is back on The Remnant, joining Jonah for a wide-ranging conversation about a desire for boring politics, our current “wilderness of grifts,” attempts to paint President Biden as a modern-day FDR, and much more.
- At the site today, Emma Rogers takes a deep dive into Lebanon, where—one year after a major explosion in Beirut killed hundreds—the nation continues to be gripped by economic and political malaise.
Let Us Know
Is there ever a justifiable reason for a president to take an action he or she knows is unconstitutional?
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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documents prove that Dominion has remote access to their equipment during the elections.
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74.) THE POST MILLENIAL
75.) BLACKLISTED NEWS
76.) THE DAILY DOT
77.) HEADLINE USA
78.) NATURAL NEWS
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79.) POLITICHICKS
80.) BLACKPRESSUSA
81.) THE WESTERN JOURNAL
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82.) CNN
Wednesday 08.04.21 It could be February before all eligible Americans get at least one Covid-19 vaccine dose, according to CNN analysis of CDC data. Here’s what else you need to know to Get Up to Speed and On With Your Day. A sign offers mask advice this week at Penn Station in New York City. Coronavirus
New York City will require proof of vaccination to enter all restaurants, fitness centers and indoor entertainment venues, Mayor Bill de Blasio announced. “If you’re unvaccinated, unfortunately, you will not be able to participate in many things,” he said. Countries in Europe have rolled out similar measures and incentives to try to get people vaccinated. New York’s move comes as a surge of Covid-19 — fueled by the Delta variant and low vaccination rates — is sending the US backward in the pandemic, with hospitalizations reaching wintertime levels. Covid-19 cases in children and teens just jumped 84% in a week, the American Academy of Pediatrics reported. The Delta variant is also wreaking havoc in China and across Africa. China is grappling with its worst outbreak in months and introducing mass travel restrictions, while deaths in Africa surged by 80% in a month.
Gov. Andrew Cuomo
New York Democratic Gov. Andrew Cuomo sexually harassed 11 women and created a “hostile” work environment for women, a report released by the state attorney general said. Investigators said they found a “pattern” of inappropriate behavior by Cuomo, which included both “unwanted” touching and comments of a “suggestive and sexual nature.” President Biden said Cuomo should resign. State legislators in both parties vehemently condemned Cuomo’s conduct, with the investigation prompting renewed calls for his impeachment. Cuomo denies the allegations and has shown no willingness to resign over them. “I want you to know directly from me that I never touched anyone inappropriately or made inappropriate sexual advances,” Cuomo said. CNN anchor Chris Cuomo’s role in his brother’s inner circle, which raises questions about journalistic ethics, is also detailed in the report.
Housing
The CDC has issued a fresh stop to certain evictions, saying that evicting people could be detrimental to public health and interfere with efforts to slow the pandemic. The new moratorium comes after Biden and his administration called on Congress to extend the prior one, setting off fury among members of his own party. The new ban applies to parts of the country with high or substantial transmission of Covid-19 and will last until October 3. Even if this new moratorium isn’t legal or sustainable, crushing humanitarian and political pressure left Biden no choice but to take a chance on it, CNN’s Stephen Collinson writes. The expiration of the original eviction moratorium left millions of Americans struggling to pay rent in the pandemic in the lurch.
Afghanistan
A car bomb exploded yesterday near the home of Afghanistan’s acting defense minister in Kabul. The blast went off close to Bismillah Mohammadi’s residence, where four assailants were also killed by Afghan security, a defense ministry spokesman said. The Taliban has claimed responsibility for the attack. Earlier Tuesday, an Afghan army commander had urged people in Lashkar Gah, the capital of Helmand province, to leave their homes if the Taliban was active in their area. “We won’t spare the Taliban alive at any cost,” he said. Concerns keep mounting over the civilian toll of the militant group’s advance on some of the country’s biggest cities. In recent days, the US has ramped up airstrikes on Taliban positions to try to halt militants’ advances. A US defense official detailed a deteriorating situation, telling CNN: “It’s not going well.”
India
Hundreds protested today in the Indian capital Delhi for the fourth day straight as outrage continues to build over the alleged rape and murder of a 9-year-old girl from one of India’s most oppressed castes. Protesters marched holding signs demanding accountability for the girl’s death. “We want justice,” they chanted, with placards that read: “Justice for India’s daughter.” The parents of the girl attended the protests as well. Her mother sobbed and screamed, at times calling out for her daughter to “come back.” Police are investigating the crime as an incident of caste violence and have arrested four men alleged to be involved in the girl’s death. Some protesters yesterday burned effigies of Prime Minister Narendra Modi as anger grew over his silence on the issue and the perceived failure of the government to protect young girls.
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People are talking about these. Read up. Join in. Archaeological ‘treasures’ include (really) old fruit
Vaccine developer gets a Barbie doll
The ‘Venom’ sequel trailer is here
Dramatic scenes from the Olympic velodrome
Machu Picchu is older than previously thought
Olympics update
If you thought the velodrome fallout wasn’t feisty enough, it turns out badminton can get heated, too. South Korea plans to pursue a formal complaint after a Chinese Olympian repeatedly swore during a match.
$15 trillion That’s just about what US household debt soared to in the last quarter. A surge in credit card spending and home purchases caused US household debt to increase by $313 billion, or 2.1%, in the second quarter, according to the Federal Reserve Bank of New York. In total, American consumers held $14.96 trillion in debt at the end of June. What I saw on 4 August killed my heart.
It’s been one year since the devastating blast that tore through Beirut, Lebanon. Samia Doughan, who lost her husband in the port explosion, recalls the horrors from one of the largest nonnuclear blasts in history. Brought to you by CNN Underscored We spent July testing dozens of products: Here are 27 we loved From Dutch ovens and water bottles to webcams and fast chargers, here are the products we fell in love with in July. Want more product recommendations? Sign up for the CNN Underscored newsletter. Meet Dominator, the domino robot with a new record 5 THINGS You are receiving this newsletter because you’re subscribed to 5 Things.
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83.) THE DAILY CALLER
84.) POWERLINE
Daily Digest |
- DOJ warnings to protect Capitol were ignored. Why?
- From the Saborit file: Immigration status
- Will Biden call on Cuomo to resign, as promised? [UPDATED: YES]
- Beginning of the End for Cuomo
- Podcast: Kevin Roche on Coronamania
DOJ warnings to protect Capitol were ignored. Why?
Posted: 03 Aug 2021 04:08 PM PDT (Paul Mirengoff)Did FBI leaders want Trump supporters to attack the Capitol? Did the leaders of the Capitol police want this? I can’t say they did. What I can say is that the FBI was long concerned about the possibility of post-election violence, and that throughout the Justice Department there was grave concern about that possibility on January 6. Yet, neither the FBI nor the Capitol police did anything to prevent the storming of the Capitol. Before the election, it was widely understood within the FBI and elsewhere at the Justice Department that Donald Trump, on the strength of in-person voting, would likely have early leads in swing states like Michigan and Pennsylvania, but that mail-in voting might well flip these states to Joe Biden. I’m told the FBI was worried that the erosion of Trump’s leads might lead to violence by Trump supporters. Violence at that juncture was never likely and did not occur. However, as January 6 approached and many thousands of Trump supporters were coming to D.C., it was clear that violence and/or the storming of government buildings was very possible. Accordingly, I’m told that Justice Department officials advised the FBI and the Capitol police to set up a perimeter to protect the Capitol and to deploy a force sufficient to prevent an attack. But this didn’t happen. Indeed, it’s my understanding that the doors to the Capitol building weren’t even locked on January 6. By contrast, the Department of Justice’s main building was on high alert that day. I understand that troops were deployed to protect main Justice. Ironically, those troops eventually were sent to the Capitol to help quell the rioting. I’m told that Richard Donoghue, then the Acting Deputy Attorney General and a veteran of the 82nd Airborne Division, led these forces down Constitution Avenue to the Capitol. Why, given all of the warning signs and actual warnings, wasn’t the Capitol protected? As I said, the FBI had been fretting for months about potential violence by Trump loyalists. FBI officials were part of the DOJ discussions about the possibility, if not probability, of violence on January 6, as well as about the need for the Capitol police to take serious protective measures. Why didn’t the Capitol police follow the Justice Department’s advice and protect the Capitol? Why didn’t the FBI make sure the Capitol was protected? I don’t know the answers to these questions. But I understand why some suspect that the FBI wanted a portion of the Trump supporters in D.C. on January 6 (a very small portion, as it turned out) to invade the Capitol. Just as the FBI apparently wanted extremist idiots to proceed along the path of a plot to kidnap Gov. Gretchen Whitmer.
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From the Saborit file: Immigration status
Posted: 03 Aug 2021 04:02 PM PDT (Scott Johnson)I have been digging on the confused question of Alexis Saborit’s immigration status over the past several days. He is an illegal alien originally from Cuba who cannot be deported from the United States. Just to give the issue a timely twist, he entered the United States from Mexico. Saborit knows the United States is unable to deport him. When he asked at the hearing this past Friday to be deported to his country rather than stand trial in Scott County, it was the sick joke of a twisted mind. Unfortunately, the joke is on us. ICE spokeman Shawn Neudauer has provided the following formal statement:
To understand Saborit’s immigration status readers should know that the 2001 Supreme Court decision in Zadvydas v. Davis limits the length of time under the Immigration and Nationality Act that ICE can detain noncitizens who are subject to a deportation order. The ruling generally precludes the agency from holding noncitizens with final orders of removal for more than six months if their actual removal cannot occur in the reasonably foreseeable future. This is often due to a foreign government’s refusal to accept the repatriation of its nationals. ICE previously attempted to remove Saborit-Viltres to Cuba, based on a final order of removal issued by an immigration judge in 2012. ICE was unable to obtain the necessary travel documents from Cuba. As a result, and following a review of his custody, he was released on an order of supervision in 2012.
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Will Biden call on Cuomo to resign, as promised? [UPDATED: YES]
Posted: 03 Aug 2021 01:08 PM PDT (Paul Mirengoff)Charles Cooke reminds us that in March, Joe Biden said that Andrew Cuomo should resign if the investigation into sexual harassment allegations found that Cuomo sexually harassed females. Asked by ABC News’ George Stephanopoulos if Cuomo should step down in that event, Biden replied, “Yes.” “I think he’ll probably end up being prosecuted, too,” he added. So what is Biden’s position now that a comprehensive investigation and report have established that Cuomo did harass female employees? So far, his response to questions about Cuomo is “be quiet.” Jen Psaki was also asked about the matter. She responded: “[Biden] will give his own reaction. . .later this afternoon.” Apparently, the White House hasn’t figured out what it should say about Cuomo in light of the state attorney general’s finding. I’m sympathetic to government officials who want to take a little time before responding to the latest news reports. In this case, though, Biden is on record as to how Cuomo should respond to an adverse finding on sexual harassment charges. And there’s no dispute that such a finding has been rendered. If the administration wants to review the adverse report before addressing it, I guess that’s okay. But given what Biden said in March and what the New York AG said in her report, there is only one answer Biden can give without completely losing face. Andrew Cuomo should resign. UPDATE: Biden has called on Cuomo to resign. In doing so, he told reporters:
Yeah, like embracing an executive assistant and reaching under her blouse to grab her breast. Biden has kept his promise and done the right thing. He really had no other choice.
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Beginning of the End for Cuomo
Posted: 03 Aug 2021 11:34 AM PDT (John Hinderaker)So far, Governor Andy Cuomo has seemed to ride out the dual storms of the nursing home scandal and multiple claims of sexual harassment. On the latter front, a lot depended on what New York’s Attorney General, a political rival of Cuomo, did. That shoe dropped this morning, as AG Letitia James held a press conference and announced the release of a report on her office’s investigation of Cuomo. The report is brutal, as described by James:
This thread provides a good summary:
Cuomo also appeared before the press, and asserted his defense that he paws more or less everyone. He apparently had his staff put together a montage of photos of Cuomo kissing a variety of people, or placing his hands on them:
People on Twitter aren’t buying it:
Comfortably Smug nicely unites the two Cuomo scandals:
Cuomo says he will not resign, and Attorney General James says she will not bring criminal charges, but will leave that to relevant local authorities. So we may be at an impasse for the time being. Still, it is hard to see Cuomo riding out this storm.
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Podcast: Kevin Roche on Coronamania
Posted: 03 Aug 2021 09:53 AM PDT (Steven Hayward)As regular readers know, when it comes to COVID, our go-to source for making sense of the subject is Kevin Roche, who brings his years of experience in the health care field to his very useful website, healthy-skeptic.com. Scott Johnson follows Kevin’s work closely (here, here, and here, for example), but we decided it was time to hear from Kevin directly in podcast form. Among his other pithy phrases are, “Coronamania thrives in darkness,” a nice twist on the pretension of the Washington Post, and also, “you can’t spell ‘pandemic’ without panic.” In this wide-ranging conversation, we cover the latest on the “Delta variant,” the misperceptions of the so-called “breakthrough” infections among the vaccinated, what vaccines actually do, how the CDC has squandered its credibility with its constantly shifting messages that seem in large part to be politically driven, and several other aspects of the COVID scene (including the lab leak hypothesis). One important takeaway: COVID is here to stay, and we haven’t yet come to grips with a serious long-term adaptation strategy. It’s almost as though our public health bureaucracy and some political leaders like the crisis atmosphere—and license to spend huge amounts of money—COVID has provided. Never let a crisis go to waste, as someone once said. You know what to do now: listen here, or put on your mask and wander over to our hosts at Ricochet. This posting includes an audio/video/photo media file: Download Now |
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85.) THE POLITICAL INSIDER – WAKE UP EDITION
86.) THE PATRIOT POST
87.) DECISION DESK HQ
88.) DIGG
89.) THE POLITICAL INSIDER – LUNCH BREAK
90.) CONSERVATIVE TRIBUNE
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91.) USA TODAY
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92.) THE DAILY BEAST
93.) JUST THE NEWS
Just The News: Daily Newsletter
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94.) SHARYL ATTKISSON
95.) RIGHTWING.ORG
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96.) NOT THE BEE
97.) US NEWS & WORLD REPORT
98.) NEWSMAX
Breaking News from Newsmax.com |
2022 Litmus Test? Carey, Backed by Trump, Wins House Primary in Ohio
Special: ‘The 12 Million Mile Battery’ Judge Temporarily Halts Texas Restrictions on Migrant Transports Scientific Paper Suggests Criticizing Fauci Be Deemed a ‘Federal Hate Crime’ |
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99.) MARK LEVIN
August 3, 2021
On Tuesday’s Mark Levin Show, The New York State Attorney General’s independent investigation found that Gov. Andrew Cuomo sexually harassed women who are both current and former state employees. NY AG Letitia James reported that Cuomo violated both federal and state laws yet she did not announce any charges against him for groping or any other charge. Why not? What kind of Attorney General’s office is this? Where is the US Attorney if there were violations of federal law? Then, Rep. Lee Zeldin, a candidate for governor in New York, calls in to comment on Cuomo’s fiasco and the punting of responsibility by AG James. Zeldin questioned whether or not Cuomo would be held accountable for anything else he’s done, including his deadly mishandling of nursing homes during the height of the pandemic. Later, all citizens that get COVID because the federal government brought the disease to you through a COVID positive migrant or to your neighborhood or school district you must determine causation and sue them. It’s a violation of one’s civil rights when the government doesn’t do its job and it’s time we flood the system with their own mess. Meanwhile, Tamyra Mensa-Stock won the gold medal for Team USA in wrestling at the Tokyo games. She is the first African-American woman to achieve this honor and she couldn’t be prouder to compete on behalf of her country. Afterward, Ben Shapiro, calls in to discuss his new book, “The Authoritarian Moment: How the left Weaponized America’s Institutions Against Dissent.”
THIS IS FROM:
NY Post
Gwen Berry, hammer thrower who turned away from US flag, fails to medal at Olympics
MRC TV
TV News Thrills Over Cuomo, Our ‘Acting President’
Washington Times
Progressives call for new probe, impeachment of Justice Kavanaugh
ATR
“C’Mon, Man”: 10 Perplexing Items in the Bipartisan Infrastructure Bill
The Hill
Coming soon: America’s own social credit system
Breitbart
Cuba: Human Rights Activists Confirm 1000+ Arrests/Disappearances Since July 11
Yahoo
‘They can’t sit calmly in Tehran’: Israel vows to retaliate against Iran if US won’t
Rumble
Cruz: Universities Don’t Teach Anymore, They Are Paid Sinecures For The Govt
The podcast for this show can be streamed or downloaded from the Audio Rewind page.
Image used with permission of Getty Images / Spencer Platt
100.) WOLF DAILY
101.) THE GELLER REPORT
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102.) CNS
103.) DAN BONGINO
104.) INDEPENDENT SENTINEL
The clip of the CCP first Olympic champion restores faith in America!
Watch this true Olympic ChampionThis terrific young woman is what we expect from our champions. She truly is that and she loves her country. Tamyra Mensah-Stock (USA) celebrates winning the Gold after defeating Blessing… | |
CDC, now running the country, ORDERED no evictions for 60 daysThe CDC appears to be running the country. Do you remember voting for these people? They’re unelected pencil pushers with college degrees and years behind desks. The latest guidance from… | |
210,000 cross the border in July, told to find a border agent in 60 daysJust so you know, more than 210,000 illegal aliens — not migrants or many asylum seekers — crossed our borders in July. Those are the ones we knew about. There… | |
The Left Failed California Minorities, Now They Seek Solutions From The Right The Left Failed California Minorities, Now They Seek Solutions From The Right By Marc Ang A surprising thing happened last November. The racist and divisive Proposition 16 failed miserably at… | |
Judge Napolitano fired for sexually harassing young men at FoxA lawsuit was filed on Monday claiming that Judge Napolitano was sexually harassing young men at Fox News. The network fired the judge so they must think there’s strong evidence. Judge… | |
Masking is child abuse and adult abuse–RESIST!Journalist Karol Markowicz writes at the NY Post “kids unlucky enough to live in blue cities and states were subjected to the anti-science mania of gentry liberals and the cravenness… | |
The Invincible Family – Book Review, Part 2The Invincible Family – Book Review, Part 2 A New Take on the Genesis of Love: By Gene Van Shaar In her new book, The Invincible Family, Kimberly Ells… | |
John Wayne: The Forgotten History of “The Duke”John Wayne: The Forgotten History of “The Duke” His story is as American as his values. Born Marion Robert Morrison in Iowa at a whopping 13 pounds, his family relocated… | |
What is going on with suicides among DC Police?Yesterday, we reported that a third D.C. Metropolitan Police Department (MPD) officer who had responded to the January 6 riots had killed himself. Now we have a fourth officer. A fourth… | |
Warren says it’s ‘undemocratic’ to not kill the unborn any time for any reasonAbortion is about “the functioning of our democracy,” former Democratic presidential contender Elizabeth Warren told Teen Vogue in an interview this week. The baby killer said “voting and access to… | |
CDC wants 23 NY counties to unmasked illegals with COV pour inA total of 23 counties in New York now meet the guidelines from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention for indoor masking. Illegals don’t apparently, just citizens and legal… | |
Why are federal taxpayers expected to pay other peoples’ rent?There are 9.21 million jobs available yet people aren’t paying their rent. They want the government to pay it. A few leftist groups protested, along with House Democrats, so Biden… | |
US-hater Gwen Berry won’t be getting any medalsAmerica hating hammer thrower Gwen Berry finished 11th out of 12 competitors. No medals for her. Hop on a plane and hide your head in shame, Gwen. You’ve been punished.… | |
Vaccine mandates have begun without your permissionIf the government can use their corporate allies to make you shoot a drug into your veins, they can make you do anything with the excuse of health and safety.… | |
How can you believe all this garbage?Where are the civil libertarians, where are the libertarians and liberals in general? Why aren’t all the Republicans out ranting? New York City is the first city to demand vaccine… | |
Biden commies’ infrastructure plan to make it too expensive to drive a carThe Tenth Amendment to the United States Constitution, a part of the Bill of Rights, was ratified on December 15, 1791. It expresses the principle of federalism, also known as… | |
“It’s a sad day!” Cuomo’s near-teary response to NY AG report!Today, NY AG Letitia James found Governor Andrew Cuomo guilty of sexually harassing and bullying multiple women. She accused him of retaliating as well as creating a “toxic work environment.”… | |
Biden Administration is “out of gas,” “do not comply!”The Tenth Amendment to the United States Constitution, a part of the Bill of Rights, was ratified on December 15, 1791. It expresses the principle of federalism, also known as… | |
No more bacon and eggs for Cali thanks to their pig lawsAt the beginning of next year, California will begin enforcing an animal welfare proposition approved overwhelmingly by voters in 2018 (62%). It requires more space for breeding pigs, egg-laying chickens,… | |
NY AG finds Cuomo sexually harassed women, fostered a toxic workplace, bullied, retaliatedNew York Attorney General Letitia James found that Andrew Cuomo did indeed sexually harass women. There are 11 complainants but Cuomo apparently established a pattern of it beyond the 11.… | |
NM Gov will strip school board of their positions if they disobey COV mandatesDemocratic New Mexico Governor and all-around tyrant Michelle Lujan Grisham is threatening to remove the board of a small, rural school for going against state health mandates. They have courageously… | |
Commie de Blasio mandates 1st vaccine passport for bars, restaurants, theaters, gyms and moreNew York City residents and visitors will be required to show proof of vaccination for indoor dining, gyms, and shows, Mayor Bill de Blasio, aka Nazi Warren Wilhelm, announced Tuesday.… | |
NBC’s Olympic ratings are crashing as WOKES push them off the cliffNBC’s boring and confusing primetime coverage of the Tokyo Olympics continues to shed viewers. They have lost roughly half of the audience that tuned in for the 2016 summer games.… | |
Biden’s ‘buy American’ plan doesn’t mean Feds have to buy AmericanPresident Biden’s $1.2 trillion infrastructure package is being pitched as a win for the domestic economy, but an obscure line within the 2,702-page bill could INCREASE THE OFFSHORING of American… | |
CDC “guidance documents focused” on CDC COVID camps”“…considerations from the perspective of the U.S. Centers for Disease Control & Prevention (CDC) for implementing the shielding approach in humanitarian settings as outlined in guidance documents focused on camps…”… | |
10 interesting tweets from Rasputin’s platformGood Morning everyone, especially Simone Biles but definitely not Adam Kinzinger and Liz Cheney! We thought we’d start the morning off with interesting tweets from Rasputin’s place. Want to avoid… | |
Simone Biles comes home with a Bronze and a memory of thunderous applauseSimone Biles will leave the Tokyo Olympics with a piece of U.S. Olympic history. Biles won a bronze medal in the balance beam event. She scored a 14.000 and was… | |
Biden admin is dropping Haitians off at gas stationsAs usual, Joe Biden did nothing today. He has nothing on his schedule. If he cared at all about his position, he would address the many disasters facing the American… | |
‘Oppressed’ Olympic athlete twerked for the cameras after losing the GoldWe had a twerker at the Olympics. A vulgar US athlete decided that shaking her booty before the world while in Tokyo would be a good idea. Twerker, US Shot… | |
Media irresponsibly ties latest officer suicide to J6 riot with NO evidenceA third police officer who responded to the January 6th Capitol Riot has died from an apparent suicide, the Metro Police reported. The officer, Gunther Hashida, was found deceased at… | |
Biden’s destroying the US: non-stop busloads of illegals get tickets to anywhere USAFoxLA reporter Bill Melugin has another shocking report about the “mass release of migrants.” Migrants with COV are still overwhelming small towns. The government via Catholic Charities is giving these… | |
Cuomo wants to go to bars knowing you’re vaccinatedNew York Governor Cuomo wants restaurants and bars to mandate vaccination and to provide proof of vaccination. This is the man who is responsible for the deaths of thousands of… | |
Dr. Paul Kengor on American MarxismDr. Paul Kengor is a professor of political science at Grove City College, executive director of The Center for Vision & Values, and author of several books. He is a… | |
Everyone’s masking up over skewed dataLess than 0.1% of vaccinated Americans tested positive for COVID-19 Of the 164 million vaccinated Americans, around 125,000 people have tested positive for breakthrough infections and 0.001% have died, according… | |
In their role as hacks, AMA says abandon sex on public birth certificatesThe American Medical Association, a highly politicized body of left-wing individuals, declared that sex should be removed as a legal designation on the public part of birth certificates. Trust the… | |
Transgender Laurel Hubbard couldn’t make one snatch lift in TokyoLaurel Hubbard, the 43-year-old who transitioned from male to transgender female in 2012, was competing in the 87kg+ category but failed to record a single valid Snatch lift in Tokyo.… | |
US women’s soccer loses, Canada wins, Yay Canada!Canada beat the USWNT in the Olympic semifinal match on Monday morning 1-0 after a decisive penalty kick goal by Jessie Fleming in the 75th minute. Jesse Fleming scored the… | |
Simone Biles returns to compete in the balance beamGymnastics Gold medalist Simone Biles plans to compete in the balance beam final Tuesday, USA Gymnastics confirmed Monday. “We are so excited to confirm that you will see two U.S. athletes… | |
‘Oppressed’ Olympian dishonors the US on the stageU.S. shot-putter Raven Saunders told AP Sunday she placed her hands above her head in an “X” formation while on the Olympic podium after winning a silver medal to stand… | |
Obama’s holding a super spreader event in MassachusettsBarack Obama is holding a 60th birthday party for himself with just under 500 people. Pearl Jam will play and Steven Spielberg will be in attendance. There will also be… |
105.) DC CLOTHESLINE
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106.) ARTICLE V LEGISLATORS’ CAUCUS
107.) THE INTERCEPT
108.) SONS OF LIBERTY
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109.) STARS & STRIPES
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