Good morning! Here is your news briefing for Thursday August 5, 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 — 8.5.21
Good Thursday morning.
Attorney General Ashley Moody will show another six-figure haul for her political committee when the finance report drops next week, according to data available on the committee website.
Friends of Ashley Moody’s running tally showed $134,055 raised across 30 contributions last month. The sheet includes a $25,000 check from Sarasota real estate developer and major GOP donor Hugh Culverhouse and another for the same amount from New York City hedge fund manager Daniel Loeb.
Other notables included Ft. Lauderdale contractor Moss & Associates at $20,000, Merit Capital and Amscot Financial, each chipping in $10,000 last month.
The July report extends the committee’s streak of six-figure reports to six months. May was Moody’s best month year-to-date with a $516,000 haul, followed by June, which saw Friends of Ashley Moody bank another $325,000.
Though contributions continue to pour in, the committee shows no signs of improvidence on the spending reports. According to the ledger available on the committee website, Friends of Ashley Moody spent just $17,840 last month. Issue Management received more than half the total — $10,000. Convert Digital followed with a $3,000 pickup for advertising services.
Moody’s committee started July with about $1.98 million in the bank. At month’s end, its coffers were stocked with $2.1 million.
Friends of Ashley Moody has now raised just shy of $7 million since it launched three years ago. Most of that flowed to the account in the lead-up to Moody’s 2018 win, but the account showed little activity after Election Day, raising $10,000 or so a month. Fundraising started gaining speed in November when the committee reeled in $90,000. Since then, the committee has raised about $1.5 million.
Excluding Gov. Ron DeSantis, who has been raising millions a month of late, Moody has outpaced all statewide candidates in fundraising so far this year.
Candidates and committees face an Aug. 10 deadline to file reports disclosing all campaign finance activity from July.
— SITUATIONAL AWARENESS —
—@PressSec: 23% of new COVID hospitalizations in the U.S. are in Florida, and their hospitals are being overwhelmed again. We are doing everything we can to help the people of FL, and they’re stepping up by getting vaccinated — we hope @GovRonDeSantis joins us in this fight.
—@CarlosGSmith: .@GovRonDeSantis blaming immigrants for Florida’s frightening COVID surge is appalling, xenophobic + dangerous. It’s also based on ZERO evidence. This is the NEW BIG LIE. I hate to repeat it, but we have to speak out against this scapegoating. The guv has totally failed us.
Tweet, tweet:
Tweet, tweet:
—@AaronParnas: Raise your hand if you’re also comfortable with getting a third vaccine booster if necessary.
—@realStanVG: For the people in (Anthony) Sabatini’s district — how do you vote for this man and still feel good about yourself? He calls Jeb Bush un-American trash for congratulating OUR medalists. How can you be so racist and xenophobic that you don’t even support our own citizens?
—@IsaacDovere: always impressive how easy it is for a politician to game speculation by buying a plane ticket to Des Moines or doing an interview with a New Hampshire media outlet. There’s probably no better return on investment for the free media that can be gotten for a few hundred bucks max
Tweet, tweet:
— DAYS UNTIL —
‘The Suicide Squad’ premieres — 1; Canada will open its border to fully vaccinated Americans — 4; ‘Marvel’s What If …?’ premieres on Disney+ — 6; Florida Behavioral Health Association’s Annual Conference (BHCon) begins — 13; St. Petersburg Primary Election — 19; Boise vs. UCF — 28; Disney’s ‘Shang Chi and The Legend of The Ten Rings’ premieres — 29; Notre Dame at FSU — 31; NFL regular season begins — 35; Bucs home opener — 35; California Gov. Gavin Newsom’s recall election — 40; Broadway’s full-capacity reopening — 40; Alabama at UF — 44; Dolphins home opener — 45; Jaguars home opener — 45; 2022 Legislative Session interim committee meetings begin — 46; ‘The Many Saints of Newark’ premieres (rescheduled) — 50; ‘Dune’ premieres — 57; Walt Disney World’s 50th anniversary party starts — 57; MLB regular season ends — 59; ‘No Time to Die’ premieres (rescheduled) — 64; Florida Chamber Future of Florida Forum begins — 82; World Series Game 1 — 83; Florida TaxWatch’s Annual Meeting begins — 83; Georgia at UF — 86; St. Petersburg Municipal Elections — 89; Florida’s 20th Congressional District primary — 89; Disney’s ‘Eternals’ premieres — 93; ‘Disney Very Merriest After Hours’ will debut — 95; Miami at FSU — 100; ‘Top Gun: Maverick’ rescheduled premiere — 106; FSU vs. UF — 114; Steven Spielberg’s ‘West Side Story’ premieres — 127; ‘Spider-Man Far From Home’ sequel premieres — 134; NFL season ends — 157; 2022 Legislative Session starts — 159; Florida’s 20th Congressional District election — 159; NFL playoffs begin — 160; Super Bowl LVI — 192; ‘Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness’ premieres — 232; ‘Thor: Love and Thunder’ premieres — 276; ‘Platinum Jubilee’ for Queen Elizabeth II — 301; “Black Panther 2” premieres — 337; San Diego Comic-Con 2022 — 349; ‘Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse’ sequel premieres — 428; “Captain Marvel 2” premieres — 463.
— TOP STORY —
“Ron DeSantis tries to thread needle with split COVID-19 messaging” via Matt Dixon of POLITICO — DeSantis, Wednesday was a tale of two very different responses to the pandemic. In the morning, DeSantis huddled with a group of hospital executives on a Zoom call to talk about the importance of the COVID-19 vaccine, emerging therapies and hospital resources. The executives in attendance said resources are not as strained as some say. The event, held on a day where Florida saw 16,935 new cases, lacked the overt partisan rhetoric DeSantis has become known for. Three hours later, DeSantis took a different approach. “Joe Biden has taken it to himself to try and single out Florida over COVID-19,” DeSantis said. “Why don’t you do your job,” DeSantis said of Biden during the event.
“DeSantis rails at Joe Biden, blames immigrants for record COVID-19 surge” via Steven Lemongello of the Orlando Sentinel — DeSantis launched an angry attack on President Biden, joining other Republicans in claiming without evidence that immigrants are behind the surge in COVID cases and hospitalizations. “Why don’t you do your job?” DeSantis said of the president. “Why don’t you get this border secure, and until you do that, I don’t want to hear a blip about COVID from you.” In response, White House press secretary Jen Psaki wrote on Twitter that “23% of new COVID hospitalizations in the U.S. are in Florida, and their hospitals are being overwhelmed again.”
— CORONA FLORIDA —
“Florida COVID-19 hospitalizations reach an all-time high as state reports 16,935 new cases” via Tampa Bay 10 — The ongoing COVID-19 surge in Florida continues to rival the peak last seen toward the beginning of the year, a period that had been considered the worst of the pandemic. Florida reported 16,935 new cases of COVID-19 for Aug 3. There were 140 additional deaths reported, as well. The data comes as COVID-19 hospitalizations in Florida rose to an all-time high of 12,408 patients. A little more than 85% of inpatient beds and about 87% of ICU beds in Florida were full. About 22% of the inpatient beds and 38% of the ICU beds were occupied by COVID-19 patients.
“Florida hospitals begin postponing elective surgeries as another record set for COVID-19 daily admissions” via Cindy Krischer Goodman of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — As the number of people hospitalized for COVID-19 in Florida rose to an all-time high on Wednesday, the state’s hospital systems started making plans to suspend elective procedures. Memorial Healthcare System announced Wednesday its five South Broward hospitals will suspend elective medical procedures starting Aug. 9 “to conserve critical resources for the care of COVID-19 patients.” “The current surge in COVID-19 cases in Florida has led to daily hospitalization rates not seen since the major spike last summer,” the hospital system announced in a written statement. Memorial had 526 COVID-19 patients admitted as of Aug. 3, up from about 400 only three days prior.
“COVID-19 surge continues at Jacksonville’s hospitals as Governor downplays numbers” via Beth Reese Cravey of The Florida Times-Union — The COVID-19 surge continued in Jacksonville on Wednesday when area hospitals reported increased numbers of ill patients, at least 90% of whom have not been fully vaccinated against the virus. Baptist Health reported 518 COVID-19 patients at its five area hospitals Wednesday morning, including 102 in intensive care. A day earlier, Baptist reported 504 patients, 92 of whom were in intensive care, she said. Fifteen of Baptist’s patients are children treated at its Wolfson Children’s Hospital, including four in intensive care.
“‘Literally losing our workforce’: Florida schools defy DeSantis’ anti-mask order” via Andrew Atterbury of POLITICO Florida — Florida school districts are moving to resist DeSantis’ order barring schools from implementing mask requirements for kids, setting up a fight with the Republican governor who has resisted any COVID-19-related mandates. The recent moves highlight how school districts across Florida are coping with the surge in coronavirus cases while grappling with DeSantis’ rejection of COVID-19 mandates. The governor, who has consistently downplayed the threat of the virus, has banned cities and schools from putting in place COVID-19 requirements like masks or vaccine passports. District leaders are left to choose: Eliminate mask mandates or face the loss of state funding.
“Duval School Board snubs DeSantis on masks, another setback for Florida Governor” via Nate Monroe of The Florida Times-Union — The Duval County School Board abruptly changed course and adopted a mask requirement for students with the caveat that parents will be allowed to fill out paperwork to exempt their kids, dealing a rebuke to DeSantis and crafting a workaround to his admonishment that local governments should not impose mandates to combat the spread of COVID-19. DeSantis has threatened to withhold state money from school districts that defy his wishes. A Duval schools official estimated Tuesday the total amount of money the state could conceivably withhold could top $640 million of the district’s $2 billion budget. The School Board’s action didn’t go as far as many parents and doctors had hoped and pressed the district Tuesday night to adopt during public comment.
“Statewide science scores in fifth and eighth grades dropped during the pandemic” via Danielle Brown of Florida Phoenix — Statewide science exams covering everything from earth and space science to physical science took a hit, with average passing rates lower than 50% for fifth and eighth graders. In fifth grade, 47% of students passed the state science exam in 2021, compared to 53% in 2019. In eighth grade, 45% of students passed, compared to 48% in 2019. The Florida Department of Education measures achievement on the science exams on a 1 to 5 scale, with passing scores of 3, 4 or 5. However, a 3 is not considered proficient. Only 4 and 5 scores in science are proficient or higher. A score of 3 means “satisfactory,” and a student “may need additional support for the next grade/course.”
“COVID-19 surge reignites debate over masks in Hillsborough Co.” via Megan Gannon of WFLA — Hillsborough County Commissioners received an update about the increase in COVID-19 cases. “It turns out this is much more contagious,” said Dr. Douglas Holt, Director of Health Department in Hillsborough County, talking about the Delta variant. County leaders asked what they can do to help mitigate the increase. Dr. Jason Salemi encourages people to continue wearing masks. However, protesters outside of the meeting argue that is not the answer. County Commissioners did not take any additional measures today; however, the county is opening two temporary COVID-19 testing locations this weekend to help meet the demand for testing.
“Face masks required for all St. Petersburg city government employees” via WFLA — Due to rising COVID-19 cases, the city of St. Petersburg is again mandating face masks for all city government employees. The announcement was made by St. Petersburg Mayor Rick Kriseman on his Twitter page. The mandate will be in effect inside city facility common areas and when employees are within six feet of others.
“‘Bill of Rights sanctuary’ resolution fails in Volusia after COVID-19 widow’s testimony” via Mary Ellen Moore of The Daytona Beach News-Journal — Volusia County Chair Jeff Brower was unable to gather any support for his proposal to declare Volusia County a “Bill of Rights sanctuary” on Tuesday. A vote to abandon the proposed resolution passed 4-1, with Brower recording the lone no vote. Two Council members were absent, Ben Johnson due to an illness and Fred Lowry due to a family emergency. Brower has been working with legal staff since early July to get the proposed resolution on the agenda. He said he’s been hearing from constituents concerned about door-to-door COVID-19 vaccines, gun rights, and other ways the federal and state government is chipping away at individual rights. “It’s not an anti-vaccine resolution. It’s not a gun resolution,” Brower told the Council Tuesday.
“Keiser University will require its 3,800 employees to be vaccinated” via Andrew Marra of the Palm Beach Post — Keiser University, a private university with 21 branches across Florida and a flagship campus in West Palm Beach, will require employees to receive COVID-19 vaccines by next month to keep working for the school. University Chancellor Arthur Keiser announced the new requirement, which takes effect Sept. 17, in an email Wednesday to approximately 3,800 employees. “We are now facing an increased threat and challenge due to the presence of the Delta variant of COVID-19 in Florida,” he wrote. “After careful consideration, we have made the decision to require all KU employees be fully vaccinated against COVID-19.”
—“Darren Soto, other Orlando Hispanic leaders urge vaccinations” via Scott Powers of Florida Politics
“Planning on visiting a South Florida casino? At least two are now requiring masks” via Carli Teproff of the Miami Herald — With COVID-19 cases on the rise, at least two South Florida casinos are again requiring all employees and customers to wear masks. On Tuesday, The Casino at Dania Beach announced the mask mandate would go into effect immediately. “Our main priority is keeping our guests and staff healthy and safe,” said Arnaldo Suarez, CEO and general manager for the Dania Beach casino. “Due to the highly contagious delta variant, we believe it’s in everyone’s best interest to reinstate our mandatory face mask policy until further notice.” As of Monday, guests and staff entering Calder Casino in Miami Gardens must also wear masks.
“Citing low COVID-19 vaccine rate, Marianna’s only Walmart to temporarily close for cleaning” via Christopher Cann of the Tallahassee Democrat — Marianna’s only Walmart location is closing until Friday morning for cleaning as part of a companywide program, citing low vaccination rates. Beginning Wednesday at 2 p.m., the store at 2255 Highway 71 will close while a third-party cleaning crew thoroughly sanitizes the building. Shoppers can return through freshly-cleaned doors Friday at 6 a.m. Only about 30% of the county’s population is fully vaccinated.
“Miami Heat and concert tickets up for grabs to entice COVID-19 vaccines” via David Selig of WPLG Local 10 News — Miami-Dade County and the Miami Heat are hoping that free tickets get more people out to receive COVID-19 vaccinations. The team and county are hosting a vaccination event Thursday at FTX Arena where anyone ages 12 and older can get a shot between the hours of 11 a.m. and 7 p.m. Those who do will be entered to win tickets to a Heat game or upcoming concerts featuring Bad Bunny, Kane Brown, Enrique Iglesias and Ricky Martin, The Weeknd, Fonseca and Andres Cepeda, or Maluma. The Florida Department of Health will be administering both Pfizer and Johnson & Johnson vaccines.
— CORONA NATION —
“FDA targets early September for approving Pfizer’s COVID-19 vaccine” via Sarah Owermohle and Adam Cancryn of POLITICO — The FDA is expected to approve Pfizer’s coronavirus vaccine by early September, amid a resurgence of cases that has heightened pressure on the administration to get more Americans vaccinated. While the agency had long eyed the fall for granting full licensure, officials have recently accelerated their work and now hope to finalize approval in weeks. Regulators authorized Pfizer’s two-dose vaccine for emergency use last December, followed quickly by Moderna. But full approval is a higher bar that health officials hope will nudge hesitant Americans toward getting vaccinated.
“CVS stops giving J&J COVID-19 vaccines in pharmacies, still offers shots at some MinuteClinics” via Berkeley Lovelace Jr. and Melissa Repko of CNBC — CVS Health has stopped offering Johnson & Johnson’s single-dose COVID-19 vaccine in its pharmacies, now only making the shots available in roughly 10% of its retail locations. The drugstore chain said it made the change over the past several weeks. It said customers can still get the shots at almost 1,000 MinuteClinic locations in 25 states and Washington D.C. MinuteClinics are inside some of the company’s drugstores and provide nonemergency medical care and other services, such as diagnostic tests and vaccines. CVS pharmacies will continue to offer the two-dose Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna COVID-19 vaccines nationwide.
“America’s pandemic pessimism returns” via Caitlin Owens of Axios — A majority of Americans now, once again, say the worst of the pandemic is yet to come. We took a brief hiatus from worrying about the pandemic, but the Delta variant and the response to it appear to have sent us back to a dark place. “It’s clear we are still far from ‘Mission Accomplished’ on COVID,” said Harris Poll CEO John Gerzema. On June 6, when vaccines were widely available, more than three-quarters of respondents said they thought that the worst is behind us. Today only 46% of respondents feel the same way — a drop of 10 points from last week alone.
“America isn’t taking care of caregivers” via Katherine Harmon Courage of Vox — An estimated 47.9 million adults in the U.S. — a staggering 19.3% — provide informal care to an adult with physical or mental health needs. This unpaid work, which includes everything from trips to the doctor to feeding, bathing, and toileting, has been valued at $470 billion per year, equivalent to three-quarters of the entire budget of Medicaid. The pandemic undermined mental health on a massive scale, with anxiety or depression symptoms hitting one in three people in the U.S. early in the outbreak. Emerging data shows that it’s been especially difficult for informal caregivers. Two CDC surveys last winter found that 40% of caregivers for adults reported anxiety or depression symptoms, and a worrying number — about 10% — reported serious suicidal ideation.
“College students buying fake vaccine cards to circumvent shot, testing requirements” via Lora Lavigne of WRAL Durham — College students are willing to pay a lot of money to get their hands on vaccination cards. The cards, of course, are free as proof that a person has had the COVID-19 vaccine. But students are using the fakes to provide that proof and circumvent campus requirements that they either get the shot or submit to regular testing. Simon Palmore, a junior at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, said he has heard of many of his fellow classmates deciding to buy vaccine cards to send to the university. Students describe it as easy as getting a fake ID. Online vendors have made blank cards more accessible to anyone.
“NASCAR to require masks in enclosed areas going forward” via The Associated Press — NASCAR is adjusting its health protocols as COVID-19 cases increase across the country. Beginning with this weekend’s events at Watkins Glen International, all personnel must wear a face mask in enclosed areas at all times, regardless of vaccination status. Enclosed areas include haulers and buildings, restrooms, the infield care center, race control and suites. NASCAR said the update to its protocols was being implemented on the advice of its consulting physicians and recently issued medical guidance. Masks will not be required outdoors at NASCAR events, provided individuals refrain from sustained close contact. Last year’s Cup race at Watkins Glen was switched to the road course at Daytona International Speedway because of COVID-19.
— STATEWIDE —
“NOAA updates its forecast as peak hurricane season approaches; La Niña watch issued” via Kimberly Miller of the Palm Beach Post — The omen of a late-blooming La Niña added to concerns for increased tropical activity this year with NOAA giving a minimal bump to its forecast numbers ahead of peak hurricane season. An annual August update released Wednesday predicts up to 21 named storms, with as many as 10 hurricanes and up to five major hurricanes of Category 3 or higher. Matthew Rosencrans, the lead seasonal hurricane forecaster for NOAA’s Climate Prediction Center, said there is a 65% chance the tropics will be more lively than normal, with just a 25% chance for a normal season and a 10% chance that it will be less active.
“Three storm systems emerge as peak hurricane season nears” via Chris Perkins and Angie DiMichelle of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — With the start of the peak period of hurricane season about a week away, a major spike in activity in the Atlantic basin has arrived. Three storm systems are being watched, two in the Atlantic Ocean and another on the African continent. The most recent system is a tropical wave located over the central tropical Atlantic. It’s producing a broad area of disorganized showers and thunderstorms, but conditions are expected to be marginally conducive for slow development by Sunday and into early next week as the system moves west-northwest at 10 to 15 miles per hour. The National Hurricane Center gives it a 20% chance of development during the next five days.
“Ron DeSantis announces $58M to revitalize panhandle after Hurricane Michael” via Renzo Downey of Florida Politics — The Department of Economic Opportunity will grant an additional $58 million to help revitalize communities hit by Hurricane Michael in 2018. DeSantis announced the distribution Wednesday in Panama City, which will receive $19 million. That program supports projects in Bay, Calhoun, Franklin, Gadsden, Jackson, Liberty and Washington counties, which suffered the brunt of Hurricane Michael in October 2018. Downtown areas and businesses are often the core of rural and small communities, DeSantis said. Under the DeSantis administration, DEO has awarded $200 million for Hurricane Michael recovery.
“Can Surfside condo collapse bring reforms? State, local group to consider new laws” via Douglas Hanks of the Miami Herald — A group of local, state and federal officeholders plan to explore improvements to building-safety regulations after the condominium collapsed in Surfside, County Mayor Daniella Levine Cava said this week. “After Hurricane Andrew, there was countywide agreement that we needed to strengthen the building code,” Levine Cava said in an interview released Wednesday with Monica Richardson, executive editor of the Miami Herald, El Nuevo Herald, and Bradenton Herald. “Going forward, I hope we can do the same.” The new “working group” will include elected officeholders in Miami-Dade representing four levels of government: city, county, state and federal. Levine Cava will serve as co-chair with Jose “Pepe” Diaz, the Miami-Dade County Commission chairman.
“Bipartisan proposal aims to give $1.85M to Florida man wrongly imprisoned for 37 years” via Jesse Scheckner of Florida Politics — A bipartisan effort is underway in the Florida Legislature to provide a former death row inmate who was wrongly imprisoned for 37 years just compensation for the time he lost behind bars. Republican Sen. Jeff Brandes and Democratic Rep. Andrew Learned this week filed twin bills for consideration in the 2022 Legislative Session that, if approved, would clear the way for a $1.85 million payment to Robert Earl DuBoise, who in September was exonerated for the 1983 rape and murder of a young woman in Tampa. DuBoise’s exoneration made national news last year. Brandes and Learned’s bills are classified as “claims” bills or “relief acts,” as they are intended to compensate a person or entity for injuries or losses caused by the negligence or error of a public officer or agency.
“Publix settles federal lawsuit over dreadlocks and religious freedom” via Gary White of The Lakeland Ledger — Publix Super Markets has agreed to pay $50,000 to settle a religious accommodation discrimination lawsuit, the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission announced Wednesday. The federal agency filed the lawsuit based on a complaint from a job applicant at a store in Nashville, Tennessee. The applicant, a member of the Rastafarian religious sect, received a job offer, but a Publix supervisor then asked if he planned to withdraw his application after he refused to cut his hair to meet Publix’s grooming policy. The applicant wears dreadlocks “as part of his sincerely held Rastafarian religious belief,” the EEOC said in the release. He asked for a religious accommodation that would allow him to work for Publix without cutting his hair. The EEOC said that Publix denied the request, and the man chose not to accept the job offer.
“Funding used to pay salary of Palm Beach Post reporter linked to environmental activists” via Brian Burgess of The Capitolist — A grant used to pay a year’s salary to Palm Beach Post reporter Lulu Ramadan in exchange for a hard-hitting story blasting sugar farming practices was provided by a nonprofit foundation with a history of funding politically active environmental groups in South Florida. The grant was used to compensate Ramadan for what amounted to “prepaid investigative journalism,” in which she pitched a specific story angle to ProPublica, a nonprofit news organization, before the findings of her investigation would have been known. The payments allowed the Post to save approximately $75,000 in salary payments. But the Post falsely implied in early July that they had spent “a great deal” of [their] resources” on the controversial reporting effort.
New and renewed lobbying registrations:
Kevin Cabrera, Mercury Public Affiars: The Soloviev Group
Eric Carr: Florida Commission on Offender Review
Will McKinley, Erik Kirk, PooleMcKinley: Divinity Software Group
Lesley Miller, Sandra Murman, Shumaker Advisors Florida: American Children’s Campaign Action Fund
— 2022 —
“DeSantis raises big bucks at suburban Milwaukee fundraiser” via Daniel Bice of the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel — Insiders say the fundraiser was held on July 26 at the Fox Point mansion of Kathryn Burke, a local philanthropist and the widow of John J. Burke Jr., the founder of Burke Properties who died in 2019. The Burkes were responsible for such Milwaukee landmarks as the Brise Soleil wings at the Milwaukee Art Museum. Donors at the DeSantis event had to pay a minimum of $1,000 to attend, and the maximum contribution was $25,000 to the Republican governor’s campaign fund. One source said about 50 to 60 people were in attendance. Burke hosted a high-profile, $2,800-per-head fundraiser for Donald Trump at her Fox Point residence in July 2019.
“Viva Las Vegas! DeSantis continues national tour ahead of 2024” via A.G. Gancarski of Florida Politics — DeSantis is thus far coy about potential presidential ambitions, but his travel schedule is that of someone in the 2024 mix. The latest evidence on that front is a fundraiser to be held later this month in Las Vegas. DeSantis, called “America’s Governor” by adherents and advocates, will grace the stage in Nevada on Friday the 13th. DeSantis, of course, won’t be fundraising for himself: he will be there in support of Sen. Tom Cotton. Also in attendance: former Nevada Attorney General Adam Laxalt, a long-standing friend of the Governor. Just last week, DeSantis was in Salt Lake City addressing the conservative American Legislative Exchange Council.
“‘The best way to keep them safe’: Doctor addresses masks in schools at Charlie Crist roundtable” via Kelly Hayes of Florida Politics — To mask or not to mask? That is the question a group of experts, school board members, and parents addressed in a roundtable Wednesday, with the panelists advocating for school mask mandates. Gubernatorial candidate and U.S. Rep. Crist hosted the roundtable, hearing from those who support mask mandate, a hot topic among Floridians as kids head back to the classroom in the coming weeks. DeSantis issued an order Friday barring school districts from requiring masks. Dr. Lisa Gwynn, a pediatrician and associate professor of clinical pediatrics, advocated for masking students, especially those unable to get vaccinated. “The only way to kind of arm them with a sense of safety is to make sure that they wear a mask and get vaccinated,” Gwynn said.
“Nikki Fried calls on parents to speak out against DeSantis’ ‘overreach’ in schools” via Jason Delgado of Florida Politics — Fried added her voice Wednesday to the chorus of Democrats demanding DeSantis stay out of local politics. In a statement, Fried chastised DeSantis for denying local school boards the authority to implement mask mandates on school grounds. The executive order, she warned, threatens children’s lives. “Now is the time for parents and teachers to stand up and make their concerns about this unacceptable government overreach known,” Fried said in a prepared statement. Indeed, COVID-19 cases are rising among Florida’s youth. According to the Florida Department of Health, 10,785 kids below 12 tested positive for COVID-19 last week.
“Joe Gruters confident GOP is unified, in strong position for 2022” via Jacob Ogles of Florida Politics — The Republican Party of Florida is “as strong as it has ever been,” Chairman Gruters said Wednesday. He’s confident the party will, for the first time, overtake Democrats in Florida voter registration very soon. “We’ll flip Florida by the end of the year, certainly by the election,” he said, referencing the 2022 midterm. That’s an abundance of confidence and enthusiasm from a party chair most recently in the news because of a sexual harassment complaint against him. A third-party investigation cleared Gruters, unable to find any firsthand account to back up the accusation. But when news broke, it fed days of rumors of tumult in Tallahassee.
“Millions of reasons to watch this candidate for Congress” via the South Florida Sun-Sentinel editorial board — A self-funded candidate to succeed the late U.S. Rep. Alcee Hastings is reviving one of the most discomfiting questions about American politics: Should someone wealthy be able to buy an advantage in a campaign and perhaps purchase the office itself? Florida’s new big spender is Sheila Cherfilus-McCormick, who has put more than $2.3 million into her candidacy in District 20 in Broward and Palm Beach counties, the most of any congressional candidate in the country. Nothing imaginable could set things right more than restoring limits on spending by outside forces and candidates that Congress legislated in 1971 and 1974.
“Democrat Janelle Perez eyes ‘grassroots movement’ to unseat Republican U.S. Rep. Maria Elvira Salazar” via Jesse Scheckner of Florida Politics — Perez sees herself as an in-touch, everywoman alternative to U.S. Rep. Salazar, the Republican incumbent she’s challenging for Florida’s 27th Congressional District in 2022. The first-time political candidate said that outlook will be reflected in her approach to fundraising, campaigning, and, provided she wins, legislating and representing the traditionally Democratic-leaning district Salazar flipped red last year. “I’d really like to start a grassroots movement,” Perez told Florida Politics. Both Perez and Salazar are the daughters of Cuban exiles. Until six years ago, both were registered Republicans. Perez is an active member of the LGBTQ community, serving on two local advisory boards, and has a young daughter with her wife, Monica. She’s also a cancer survivor.
“Jennifer Bradley, Travis Hutson latest state Senators to endorse Clay Yarborough” via A.G. Gancarski of Florida Politics — Sens. Bradley of Clay County and Hutson of St. Johns County both endorsed Rep. Yarborough, one of three sitting state legislators seeking to succeed Sen. Aaron Bean next year. The latest endorsements continue the momentum for Yarborough, who was endorsed by Senate President Wilton Simpson and incoming President Kathleen Passidomo last week over Reps. Cord Byrd and Jason Fischer. Fischer maintains a cash-on-hand lead in the SD 4 race with roughly $966,000 to deploy as of filings last month. Yarborough has nearly $88,000 in hard money. His political committee, Floridians for Conservative Values, has just over $335,000 on hand. Byrd has roughly $113,000 on hand between his campaign account and his political committee.
“Blaise Ingoglia enters August with $1.42M on hand” via Janelle Irwin Taylor of Florida Politics — Rep. Ingoglia raised more than $215K in July between his official campaign account and political committees, Government Gone Wild and Friends of Blaise Ingoglia, for his bid for Senate District 10. Ingoglia, running to succeed Senate President Simpson, has served in Florida House District 35 since 2014 and is facing term limits in 2022. He so far faces former Sen. John Legg in the GOP Primary. Lecanto Republican Rep. Ralph Massullo and Pasco County Sheriff Chris Nocco, a Republican of New Port Richey, are also considering a run in SD 10. Nocco has about $65,000 in his committee. Massullo, meanwhile, has a little over $124,000 in his committee and about $28,000 in his reelection campaign account.
— MORE CORONA —
“The known global virus caseload has surpassed 200 million infections.” via Marc Santora and Isabella Kwai of The New York Times — The known total of global coronavirus infections surpassed 200 million on Wednesday, according to the Center for Systems Science and Engineering at Johns Hopkins University. While always an imperfect measure of a virus that causes no symptoms in large parts of the populations it infects, case counts have provided a useful tool for much of the pandemic — like a flashing red light in the cockpit of a jetliner warning of imminent danger. A surge in case numbers has, in most cases, been followed by a crush of people crowding emergency rooms and, weeks later, a rise in fatalities. The global death toll as of Wednesday was 4.2 million, a rough estimate, given the discrepancies in the way nations record COVID-19 deaths.
“Unvaccinated, hospitalized: Patient now advocates for shots” via The Associated Press — Cedric Daniels went to visit his nephew in New Orleans for a long-awaited reunion. Daniels started feeling weak, had blurred vision, and was so short of breath he could barely make it from his couch in the living room to the bathroom. He tested positive for the virus. “It is frustrating because it’s preventable … but more than that, it’s really sad,” said James Ford, a critical care doctor in the ICU at Our Lady of the Lake Medical Center in Baton Rouge. Some of those patients, like Daniels, now wish they had taken the shot. “I am now a huge advocate for doctor’s orders,” Daniels added. “They think we ought to get vaccinated; I think we ought to get vaccinated.”
To watch a video of Daniel advocating vaccines, click on the image below:
“Exactly how many people have long COVID-19?” via Grace Browne of WIRED — To get a grasp on how big a problem long COVID-19 is, we need to know how many people out there have it. That number is surprisingly difficult to pin down. Some estimates have been on the conservative side. One study, collected as part of the COVID Symptom Study using the app ZOE COVID, surveyed 4 million people and found 4.5% of people with COVID-19 reported symptoms after 8 weeks, and only 2.3% of people after 12 weeks — a pretty low estimate. Other studies returned much higher numbers. One report from Imperial College London surveyed over 500,000 participants between September 2020 and February 2021 and found that almost 40% of people had at least one symptom lasting 12 weeks or more.
“Tampa Bay women file federal suit, hope to overturn public transit mask mandate” via Kelly Hayes of Florida Politics — Two Tampa Bay women have teamed up with a Wyoming nonprofit on a lawsuit seeking to overturn public transport masking requirements. Sarah Pope, a 57-year-old Lutz resident, and Ana Carolina Daza, a 49-year-old Safety Harbor resident, filed suit in Tampa federal court in response to mask requirements on flights, which the pair call dangerous. According to its website, the duo filed suit with the Health Freedom Defense Fund, a nonprofit that seeks to “implement a strategy to remove the unethical and unlawful mask, testing, and vaccine mandates,” according to its website. The suit lists defendants as Biden, the CDC and Xavier Becerra, Secretary of the Department of Health and Human Services. The pair are seeking to overturn the CDC’s mandate requiring masks in transportation hubs.
— CORONA ECONOMICS —
“U.S. economy may only grow 6.3% this year on supply woes” via Andrew Husby and Eliza Winger of Bloomberg — The median projection by U.S. Federal Reserve rate setters of 7% economic growth in 2021 is slipping out of reach, Bloomberg Economics’ updated forecasts suggest. The main factor behind the downward revision to 6.3% — which matches the bottom end of the range Fed officials penciled in at their June meeting — is an inability of the supply side of the economy to support faster inflation-adjusted growth, not the delta variant. Provided employment gains remain on track, any reduction in near-term growth projections at the September meeting should not significantly impact the policy debate.
“Interest-rate increases could come as soon as early 2023, Fed’s Richard Clarida says” via Nick Timiraos of The Wall Street Journal — Significant fiscal stimulus this year is speeding the economy’s recovery so that the Federal Reserve can consider lifting interest rates from near zero by early 2023, Fed Vice Chairman Clarida said Wednesday. He expects that, under his current projections for inflation and employment, “commencing policy normalization in 2023 would … be entirely consistent with our new flexible average inflation targeting framework.” Clarida prefaced his remarks by saying that interest rate increases are “certainly not something on the radar screen right now,” but he said that if his outlook for inflation and unemployment is realized, then the Fed’s thresholds for raising rates “will have been met by year-end 2022.”
“U.S. companies add far fewer jobs than forecast, ADP data show” via Reade Pickert of Bloomberg — Businesses’ payrolls increased by 330,000 last month, the smallest gain since February, after a revised 680,000 gain in June, according to ADP Research Institute data released Wednesday. The figure fell short of all economists’ estimates in a Bloomberg survey. The median estimate was for a 690,000 rise. The slowdown in hiring underscores the challenges of a full labor market recovery. Firms are trying to keep pace with an unleashing of pent-up demand, but filling a now-record number of open positions will take time. The ADP data showed a broad moderation in employment growth. While the report and government data don’t always move in lock-step, the smaller advance could temper expectations for an outsize gain in official payrolls figures on Friday.
“COVID-19 vaccine mandates split corporate America” via Chip Cutter, Sarah Nassauer and Bob Tita of The Wall Street Journal — In recent days, companies from Arkansas-based Walmart to Microsoft in Seattle have imposed vaccine mandates mostly on white-collar workers returning to offices. Meatpacker Tyson Foods took a harder line, saying all its workers must get the vaccine by Nov. 1. Each CEO cites myriad reasons for their vaccine strategy, though many also point to new CDC guidelines relating to how vaccinated people transmit the delta variant. Some companies want to reassure the public it is still safe to shop in their stores or visit their theme parks. Others want to prevent worker illnesses or absences from crippling their operations again. Still others want to end remote work and get staff back into offices. Union rules for several companies are complicating matters further.
“Businesses pushing to hire as Central Florida’s economy rebounds” via Rachael Krause of Bay News 9 — One year ago, many Floridians were dealing with job losses and layoffs from the pandemic as businesses were forced to make tough cuts to stay afloat. Now, as demand for products and services rebound, so too is Central Florida’s job market and local businesses are working to find ways to drive in fresh talent. “I think right now, there are great opportunities in the region and definitely looking at great paying jobs,” said Nilda Blanco, senior director of business intelligence for CareerSource Central Florida. Blanco said all industries in the region are in a hiring boom and wages are climbing, too. It’s allowing job seekers to be picky about where they want to work.
— PRESIDENTIAL —
“Biden administration preparing to offer vaccines to migrants along Mexico border” via Nick Miroff and Maria Sacchetti of The Washington Post — The Biden administration is preparing to begin offering coronavirus vaccine to migrants in U.S. custody along the Mexico border, where illegal crossings are at their highest levels in over two decades and health officials are struggling with soaring numbers of infections. Until now, only a limited number of migrants have received vaccines while held in longer-term U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement detention facilities. Under the broad outlines of the new plan, DHS would vaccinate migrants soon after they cross into the United States as they await processing by U.S. Customs and Border Protection.
“U.S. developing plan to require foreign visitors to be vaccinated” via Reuters — The Biden administration is developing a plan to require nearly all foreign visitors to the United States to be fully vaccinated against COVID-19 as part of eventually lifting travel restrictions that bar much of the world from entering the United States. The White House wants to reopen travel, which would boost business for the airlines and tourism industry but is not ready to immediately lift restrictions because of the rising COVID-19 caseload and highly transmissible COVID-19 Delta variant. The White House has held discussions with airlines and others about implementing a policy of requiring vaccines for foreign visitors.
“Carmakers, Biden to roll out emission cuts and EV sales goal” via Ari Natter, Keith Laing and Gabrielle Coppola of Bloomberg — The Biden administration plans to announce new limits on greenhouse gas auto emissions and new electric vehicle sales targets at an event with Detroit automakers at the White House on Thursday. The mandates, expected to cover the model years between 2023 and 2026, are a centerpiece of Biden’s climate plans and mark his administration’s first major effort to use regulation to stem planet-warming greenhouse gases. The limits are likely to fall short of what environmentalists have called for while pleasing auto manufacturers. Environmental activists had pressed Biden for emissions curbs as strong as those he helped broker as Obama’s vice president, which mandated a 5% reduction annually. That would have led to a fleetwide average of almost 50 mpg in 2025.
“Biden keeps the progressive angst at bay” via Laura Barrón-López and Christopher Cadelago of POLITICO — After days of progressives fuming over the failure to prevent the federal eviction moratorium from expiring, the White House abruptly shifted its calculus on Tuesday and enacted a new ban. It was a remarkable 180. It was a symbolic reversal, too. Biden’s retreat calmed a potentially combustible intraparty rift, the latest sign of the lengths he has been willing to go to keep restive Democrats unified. Through the occasional fireworks, the White House has remained bullish about its ability to keep the party together. Progressives have largely lauded Biden’s actions and legislative priorities during his presidency. Even before his Tuesday afternoon reversal, most progressives downplayed the idea that the moratorium spat was a harbinger of a larger war to come.
— EPILOGUE: TRUMP —
“Donald Trump asks court to end House pursuit of his tax returns from IRS” via Katelyn Polantz of CNN — Trump‘s legal team formally stepped into a long-running fight over a U.S. House request for his tax returns, claiming Trump’s financial history is being unfairly pursued for political reasons by Democrats and seeking to end House Ways and Means Committee investigations into the ex-President and his companies. Last week, the Justice Department determined that the IRS must hand over Trump’s tax returns to Congress, but a federal judge is still considering what could happen. While the pressure is heating up in the House Democrats’ pursuit of Trump’s tax information, the tax returns aren’t likely to be given to Congress anytime soon.
“A key witness emerges in probe of Trump’s DOJ election scheme” via Aaron Blake of The Washington Post — Congress could begin taking testimony as soon as this week from top Justice Department officials who bore witness to then-President Trump’s desperate attempt to overturn his 2020 reelection loss based upon lies and misinformation. And in the increasingly apparent real-time Justice Department efforts to combat that attempt, one man who has agreed to testify is emerging as something of a potential star witness in the effort: Richard Donoghue. Repeatedly, the former acting deputy attorney general’s name has surfaced in notes and emails repudiating the effort to call the election results into question in no uncertain terms. The building record of Donoghue’s resistance to the gambit makes him one of the most eagerly anticipated witnesses in the investigation.
“DOJ officials rejected colleague’s request to intervene in Georgia’s election certification: Emails” via Katherine Faulders and Alexander Maillin of ABC News — Top members of the Department of Justice 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 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 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 vote count in Georgia became a flashpoint for Trump and his allies, and Trump at one point falsely claimed that it was “not possible” for him to have lost the state.
“Disney World’s Hall of Presidents update is not kind to Trump” via Eric Ting of SFGATE — Disney World’s “Hall of Presidents” attraction reopened on Wednesday and now features an animatronic Biden. Biden’s animatronic — like all the animatronics that came before — is creepy, but it was at least amusing when someone put the audio of Biden’s “Corn Pop” campaign trail story over a video of the animatronic speaking. To make room for the new Biden figure, the Trump animatronic was put in the back row of the presentation next to Andrew Jackson, a highly controversial historical figure who was the architect of the Trail of Tears. Perhaps more glaring in Disney’s presentation is Trump’s conspicuous absence in a highlight reel of recent Presidents that plays before the animatronic figures are displayed for the audience.
— CRISIS —
“Former Olympic athlete close to plea deal in Jan. 6 attack case” via Caroline Vakil of The Hill — Klete Keller, a two-time Olympic gold medalist, was arrested in mid-January and indicted on seven charges in connection to the Jan. 6 riot, including civil disorder and obstruction of an official proceeding. Former teammates and coaches recognized Keller at the riot after seeing a video posted on social media by a reporter from the conservative news outlet Townhall. Keller’s Olympic team jacket with the word “USA” printed on his sleeves could be seen in the clip. Assistant U.S. Attorney Amanda Jawad told the judge overseeing Keller’s case on Wednesday that the prosecution and defense team were “just finalizing an agreement” over a plea bargain. Keller has been out on bond pending his case.
“Son of former Michigan lawmaker sentenced to time served for participating in Jan. 6 insurrection” via Steve Neavling of the Detroit Metro Times — A Michigan man who threatened “war everywhere if we let this election get stolen” was sentenced Wednesday to time served after spending six months in prison for his role in the Jan. 6 insurrection. Karl Dresch, 41, of Calumet, pleaded guilty to a misdemeanor count of willfully and knowingly demonstrating in a Capitol building. In exchange for his plea, prosecutors dismissed four other counts, including entering restricted grounds, disorderly conduct, and obstructing an official proceeding. Dresch, the son of a former state Representative, is among only a handful of insurrectionists to be sentenced so far.
“Police brass eyed in probe of Black man’s deadly arrest” via Jim Mustian and Jake Bleiberg of The Associated Press — Federal prosecutors are investigating whether Louisiana State Police brass obstructed justice to protect the troopers seen on long-withheld body camera video punching, dragging and stunning Black motorist Ronald Greene during his fatal 2019 arrest. Investigators are now moving up the chain of command, probing allegations that supervisors disregarded the video evidence, quashed a recommendation to arrest one of the troopers and recently pressed a state prosecutor not to bring any charges, according to documents obtained by AP and sources familiar with the case. The development comes as federal prosecutors prepare to present their findings to a grand jury by the end of the summer, which could bring the first charges of any kind in a case that’s long been shrouded in secrecy.
“Jan. 6 panel’s top staffer facing calls to resign” via Jordan Williams of The Hill — The committee announced late last month that it was hiring former CIA Inspector General David Buckley to serve as the panel’s staff director. Shortly after the announcement, Yahoo News reported that the Department of Homeland Security’s watchdog urged the CIA to take action against Buckley for retaliating against Andrew Bakaj, a whistleblower in the CIA inspector general’s office. Buckley is accused of retaliating against Bakaj for cooperating in an investigation into potential evidence manipulation within the inspector general’s office. Asked about the calls to resign, a spokesperson for the select committee said Buckley will continue to serve on the committee’s staff.
— D.C. MATTERS —
“Senate panel votes to repeal 1991 and 2002 laws authorizing wars with Iraq.” via Charlie Savage of The Washington Post — The Senate Foreign Relations Committee voted on Wednesday to repeal the 1991 law that authorized the Persian Gulf War and the 2002 law that authorized President George W. Bush to invade Iraq, sending the resolution to the Senate floor. The panel took that step by a 14-8 vote, with all Democrats and three Republicans supporting it. The vote was preceded by a debate over the scope and limits of Biden’s power to use military force against Iran. The committee vote came a day after Biden administration officials testified before a Senate panel, saying that both Iraq War laws were obsolete and not being used anymore.
“Will Mitch McConnell lift roadblock of Biden for infrastructure?” via Kevin Freking and Lisa Mascaro of The Associated Press — Senate Republican leader McConnell had vowed to be “100% focused” on stopping Biden’s agenda. But when it comes to the bipartisan infrastructure plan, McConnell is sounding like a go. His efforts are raising a big question on Capitol Hill: Just what is the self-described “grim reaper” thinking? Some colleagues say McConnell simply likes the bill and that his state would benefit from the federal investments. Others say McConnell thinks the bill could help some of the Republicans in contested elections. “He’s a very pragmatic person. I think he knows that everybody sort of wins if it’s true, hard infrastructure,” GOP Sen. Kevin Cramer said.
“As infrastructure bill inches forth, a rocky, slow path awaits in the House” via Emily Cochrane of The New York Times — Liberals who have bristled at seeing their top priorities jettisoned from the infrastructure talks as Biden and Democrats sought an elusive deal with Republicans have warned that they may seek to change the bill substantially when they have the chance. At a minimum, House Democrats have made clear that they do not intend to take up the bill until a second, far more expansive package to provide trillions more in spending social programs is approved. House Democrats hold a slim enough majority that even a few defections could sink legislation, and progressives have been open in recent days about their reluctance to support the legislation without an ironclad guarantee that the budget package, expected to cost about $3.5 trillion, will become law.
“Senate appropriators warn of year-end train wreck” via Jennifer Shutt of Roll Call — Top Appropriations Committee members called for a bipartisan agreement between both chambers and the White House on spending toplines to avoid a series of stopgap bills or yet another partial government shutdown. This year, the committee broke from past precedent and opted not to approve a slate of subcommittee spending levels before it approved the fiscal 2022 Agriculture, Energy-Water and Military Construction-VA bills. Appropriations Chairman Patrick Leahy said he didn’t want the lack of a bipartisan agreement on spending levels to completely stall the panel’s work. But he reiterated calls for congressional leaders to begin serious negotiations with the White House. Leahy said that when the Senate returns in mid-September, he hopes the committee will “have a clearer path forward for considering the remaining nine bills.”
“Marco Rubio: ‘Stop with the mask fetish’” via Jason Delgado of Florida Politics — Rubio fired back Wednesday at the scores of people calling for mask mandates in Florida and beyond. In a video posted to Twitter, the Republican Senator described the fixation as a “fetish.” He blasted those, including the CDC, who are spinning their wheels on who to mask next. “You’re not going to mask your way out of this pandemic,” Rubio said. Vaccines, Rubio suggested, are the nation’s best path forward. But rather than “shame” or “coerce” the unvaccinated, Rubio said presenting facts and data is a better approach. Rubio’s video comes as Florida distinguishes itself as the epicenter of the nation’s COVID-19 pandemic. On Tuesday, Florida reported more than 11,515 hospitalized COVID-19 patients in one day.
“Charter advocates press Florida congressional delegation on equal funding” via Jacob Ogles of Florida Politics — Charter school advocates are calling on members of the Florida Congressional delegation to fund all public schools fully. That includes the many charter schools subsidized through school districts but independently managed. Foundation for Florida’s Future Executive Director Patricia Levesque said charter schools must receive financial equity. The pandemic makes it all the more important all schools receive federal funding, the letter argues. Notably, the letter praised the American Rescue Plan for providing $125 billion in funding for school districts, helping all institutions. But the budget already approved by the House Appropriations Committee “moves the country backward” by cutting $40 million from the federal Charter Schools Program.
“Mike Pompeo got $5,800 whiskey gift from Japan, but where is it?” via Matthew Lee of The Associated Press — The State Department said Wednesday it’s looking into the apparent disappearance of a nearly $6,000 bottle of whiskey given more than two years ago to then-Secretary of State Pompeo by the government of Japan. Pompeo knows nothing about the gift or an inquiry. The department’s Office of Protocol is required to record gifts given to U.S. officials and keep track of their disposition. Recipients have the option of turning gifts of a certain value over to the National Archives or another government entity or purchasing them for personal use by reimbursing the Treasury Department for their value.
— LOCAL NOTES —
“Judge: Preserving evidence key to Surfside collapse probe” via The Associated Press — Preservation of evidence is critical to understanding why a Florida oceanfront condominium collapsed and to protect the legal rights of victims and others. Miami-Dade County is expected later this month to hand over control of the Champlain Towers South site to a court-appointed receiver. That receiver, attorney Michael Goldberg, said discussions are ongoing regarding how experts such as engineers will gain access to the property and the building’s steel-and-concrete remains, some of which are stored in a local warehouse. “We are not going to be delaying this,” Miami-Dade Circuit Judge Michael Hanzman said at a hearing.
“Young Ukrainian teacher was moving to Japan. She died with friend in condo collapse” via Syra Ortiz-Blanes of the Miami Herald — Ukrainian-born Anastasia Gromova was going on the adventure of her life. The 24-year-old planned to hop on a plane in the fall, leaving her desk job of three years in Montreal to teach English in Japan. “She was very passionate about Asian cultures,” said her father, Sergiy Gromov. But before making the move across continents, Anastasia traveled to Miami with her best friend from college, 23-year-old Michelle Pazos. Pazos’ father, Miguel, had an apartment in the oceanfront Champlain Towers South. The friends wanted a perfect, sunny beach vacation before Anastasia traveled far from everyone and everything she loved and knew. Anastasia, along with Miguel and Michelle Pazos, perished in the night when the Surfside condo collapsed on June 24.
“Surfside security guard describes climbing through rubble to escape building collapse” via Rosh Lowe of WPLG Local 10 News — It’s something that will likely never be forgotten. The security guard working at the Champlain Towers South building the night the condo collapsed described the tense moments to Local 10 News’ Rosh Lowe. Shamoka Furman was on the job for five months as a security guard at the Champlain Towers South. She can be seen in bodycam footage moments after the condo collapse talking to Surfside Police officers. “All I remember was the building shaking; I thought it was an earthquake,” Furman said. “I don’t even know how I made it out. Through the grace of God. I had to get out, but guess what, I couldn’t get out. I had to figure out a way to escape.”
“Appeals court reverses itself, rules in Boynton case that people can videotape police” via Jane Musgrave of the Palm Beach Post — In a decision that was hailed as a victory for the public’s right to hold police accountable, the 4th District Court of Appeal on Wednesday reversed course, ruling that a Boynton Beach woman shouldn’t have been arrested for videotaping police. In a stunning turnaround, the West Palm Beach-based appeals court unanimously ruled that Sharron Tasha Ford had the right to turn her video camera on Boynton police in 2009 when they summoned her after stopping her son for sneaking into a movie theater. Judge Martha Warner, who chided her colleagues in May when they upheld Ford’s arrest, said the decision was obvious.
“Crime victim counting on ‘stand your ground’ defense faces felony charge in disarmed teen’s shooting death” via Annaliese Garcia and Andrea Torres of WPLG Local 10 News — Christopher Luis defended himself from three armed robbers in February in Miami-Dade County. Police said he suffered gunshot wounds to his left bicep and right hand, and doctors treated him at the Kendall Regional Medical Center. Surveillance videos show Luis shot a gun-wielding 16-year-old boy, disarmed him, and returned to fatally shoot him as he bled on the ground on Feb. 13 in Kendale Lakes, police said. According to the Miami-Dade State Attorney’s Office, prosecutors cleared Luis of murder and manslaughter charges and charged him with aggravated battery with a deadly weapon.
“Miami Beach police brutality case caught on video stirs memories of Arthur McDuffie killing” via Fabiola Santiago of the Miami Herald — They must not teach the despicable history of police brutality in Miami-Dade County at the academy. What else can explain why a swarm of Miami Beach police officers, acting like entitled criminals, descended on a surrendered, handcuffed man lying on the ground and repeatedly kicked and punched him, and slammed his head onto the hard terrazzo floor? The gang mentality of this latest episode of excessive use of force in our community stirs memories of a similar, if more unconscionably brutal and deadly, act by police: the McDuffie killing. In 1979 Miami, one had to imagine a police beating so savage that it took a man’s life.
“Judge rules ex-Fidel Castro prisoner Ana Rodriguez can be evicted from her Miami home” via Anna Jean Kaiser of the Miami Herald — Rodriguez, an 83-year-old who spent 19 years as a political prisoner in Castro’s Cuba and faces losing her Miami home, suffered a setback in court on Tuesday when a judge ruled that her eviction after a bank’s foreclosure is legal. Judge Peter Lopez said Rodriguez has until August 31 before the sheriff’s office would be able to serve her a writ of possession, forcing her out. Rodriguez’s home was foreclosed on by the Bank of New York Mellon in 2018. A buyer from California purchased the three-bedroom residence near Southwest Eighth Street and Le Jeune Road in August 2020 for $415,000 and is seeking to evict Rodriguez.
“Board rejects house designed for Jeffrey Epstein’s old property in Palm Beach” via Darrell Hofheinz of the Palm Beach Post — A contemporary-style home designed by a prominent Miami architect will not occupy the vacant Palm Beach lot where the infamous house of the late sex offender and disgraced financier Epstein once stood. In a nearly unanimous decision, architectural commissioners at their most recent meeting killed the design for 360 El Brillo Way after telling architect Kobi Karp the lakefront house was drastically out of step with the character of the Estate Section neighborhood. Commissioners cast a critical eye at the house’s curved walls with metal details and its soaring vertical elements with column-like fluting at the front door.
“FSU breaks ground on $90 million research facility” via Alexa Trischler of WTXL — Florida State University is breaking ground on a major research facility at Innovation Park. The new facility will create a significant number of jobs, from construction to education. Called the Interdisciplinary Research and Commercialization Building, students will access research labs in physics, chemistry, and engineering focusing on materials science. The facility will consist of three floors of mostly open bay labs, sized for up to 30 research groups, 24 postdoctoral researchers, and 155 graduates and undergraduates. FSU President, John Thrasher, says this will attract students and educators from all over the world.
— TOP OPINION —
“Rick Scott: Democrats must heed the failures of communism in Cuba” via the Miami Herald — The peaceful demonstrations we’ve seen across Cuba in recent days — the largest the island has seen in decades — are terrifying the brutal communist regime. The Cuban people are marching in the streets and crying out against the illegitimate, communist rule that has stripped them of their freedom, liberty, and basic human rights and dignity for more than 60 years. The message is clear: it is time for a new day of freedom and democracy in Cuba. At the onset of the protests in Cuba, I called for the Biden administration to enact further sanctions, so I welcome its announcement of sanctions against regime leadership and military units responsible for gross human rights abuses.
— OPINIONS —
“We have four words of advice for Biden, who says DeSantis should mandate masks in Florida” via the Miami Herald editorial board — Biden sure had a lot to say to the nation’s governors Tuesday. The president had absolutely no patience with two Republican Governors standing in the way of mask mandates that would protect their constituents from the delta variant of COVID-19, which has gone on a rampage. Biden’s demand: “Get out of the way!” He was admonishing Texas Gov. Greg Abbott and, of course, DeSantis. We have some advice for our well-intentioned president: Don’t waste your breath. Odds are, the allegedly licentious Gov. Cuomo will tender his resignation long before Florida sees a mask mandate from our anti-mandate leader.
“Biden’s honeymoon is over, and he knows it” via Thomas B. Edsall of The New York Times — The first seven months of the Biden presidency have been easy compared with what’s coming down the pike. Key provisions of COVID-19 relief legislation came to an end on Aug. 1, with more set to follow, including a cessation of moratoriums on evictions and mortgage foreclosures, termination of extended unemployment benefits, and a stop to enhanced food stamp subsidies and student loan forbearance. The prospect of millions of families forced from their homes as COVID-19 variants infect growing numbers of people provoked frenzied attempts by the White House and congressional Democrats to take emergency steps to halt or ameliorate the potential chaos and a possible tragedy of national proportions.
“Why should schools fight COVID-19 with one hand tied behind their backs?” via the Tampa Bay Times editorial board — This editorial board has agreed with many of DeSantis’ views on getting kids back to school during the pandemic. Like the Governor, we were early supporters of reopening brick-and-mortar schools, embraced giving parents a choice between in-person and remote classes, and we both warned how closing schools would have dire consequences for students, especially ones on the educational margins. We cannot, however, agree with his recent executive order forbidding schools from requiring that students wear masks. Kids under 12 years old accounted for almost 10% — 10,785 cases — of the state’s COVID-19 total last week. Just like last year, COVID-19 deaths among kids remain extremely rare. But we still have little understanding of the long-term impacts associated with COVID-19.
“As bad as COVID-19 has been, a future pandemic could be even worse — unless we act now” via Eric Lander for The Washington Post — As the President’s science adviser, I know what’s becoming possible. For the first time in our history, we have an opportunity not just to refill our stockpiles but also to transform our capabilities. COVID-19 has been a catastrophe. But a future pandemic could be even worse. It’s important to remember that the virus behind COVID-19 is far less deadly than the 1918 influenza. The virus also belongs to a well-understood family, coronaviruses. Preparing for threats is a core national responsibility. That’s why our government invests heavily in missile defense and counterterrorism. We need to similarly protect the nation against biological threats, which range from the ongoing risk of pandemics to the possibility of deliberate use of bioweapons.
“An air-conditioning shortage? That’s it. We have to close Florida” via Scott Maxwell of the Orlando Sentinel — This week, the Orlando Sentinel reported on a shortage of air-conditioning units and parts that are forcing some people to wait weeks and even months for repairs. Yes, weeks or months without air-conditioning. In Florida. During the summer. Obviously, there is only one reasonable course of action: We have to close Florida. Hopefully, this won’t be permanent. But if it is, hey, we had a solid 176-year run. My wife and I returned from a vacation in North Carolina and walked into a house with temperatures slightly higher than the surface of Venus. We were lucky enough to get a new unit within a week. But, as the Sentinel reported, other people are waiting much longer.
— OLYMPICS —
“Simone Biles reveals aunt passed away while she was competing in Tokyo Olympics” via Abbey White of The Hollywood Reporter — Biles revealed in an Instagram story that since withdrawing from the individual all-around and the team final, she had been practicing for all four apparatus medal competitions. But as she worked on getting her mental game on track to compete safely, Biles got the news that a close family member had died. “At the end of the day, people don’t understand what we are going through,” Biles said. “Two days ago, I woke up, and my aunt unexpectedly passed, and it wasn’t any easier being here at the Olympic Games.” Biles admitted that during the past week and a half, she had at one point become “numb,” but the speculation around her performance and her head game was also frustrating.
“Tamyra Mensah-Stock first Black woman to win Olympic wrestling gold” via Rebecca Falconer of Axios — Mensah-Stock told reporters after beating Nigeria’s Blessing Oborududu 4-1 to win the women’s freestyle 68 kg gold medal Tuesday it’s “awesome” that a Black woman has for the first time won the sport’s top prize. “Look at us representing,” said the 28-year-old Texan, who is the second U.S. woman to win Olympic gold in freestyle wrestling. Mensah-Stock also spoke to reporters of her pride in representing Team USA. “I love representing the U.S.,” she said. “I freaking love living there.”
“How did the USWNT fall short of Olympic gold? Rating the many theories” via Caitlin Murray of ESPN — Why has the No. 1-ranked U.S. women’s national team struggled so much at the Tokyo Olympics? Not even the players and staff seem to know. Without any clear-cut explanations for why a team that dominated its way through a World Cup two years ago suddenly looked so disjointed and ineffective at the Tokyo Olympics, plenty of outside theories have floated around. The best supported: Coach Vlatko Andonovski rotated the starting lineups too much. In any tournament where a bunch of games are packed into a short period of time, a coach has one of two ways to approach it: consistency for the sake of chemistry, or rotation to keep the players fresh for each game. Andonovski clearly leaned toward rotation. “It just didn’t click for us,” Megan Rapinoe said.
“Japanese at world’s busiest intersection slowly warming to Olympics” via Corky Siemaszko of NBC News — For 16 years, Kichitaro Kawada has taken Tokyo’s temperature from his perch at the Kishimoto newsstand in Shibuya Crossing, which is billed as the busiest intersection in the world. In recent weeks, he’s noticed the small talk with regular customers shifting from worries that the Tokyo Olympics would worsen the COVID-19 crisis to “the Japanese are winning medals.” Kawada said he’s also seen an uptick in newspaper purchases by customers eager to read about the latest exploits of Team Japan. The sentiment was echoed in interviews with others at Shibuya Crossing. And in other recent man-on-the-street reports of the Japanese showing a grudging and gradual acceptance of these Olympics Games as the home team has racked up an impressive 38 medals as of Wednesday.
“‘We will ROC you’: How Russians crushed the Tokyo Olympics under an alias” via Georgi Kantchev, Andrew Beaton and Joshua Robinson of The Wall Street Journal — Russia’s not really at the Olympics. But that hasn’t stopped the world’s largest country from hauling gold out of Tokyo like a Siberian mine. The Russian Olympic Committee, as the athletes competing here are known, has 53 total medals at the Tokyo Games, putting them behind only China and the U.S. They can’t celebrate under their flag. Nor can they blare the Russian national anthem on the podium. Yet they’re walking away with hardware in some of the Olympics’ biggest and most prestigious events, even after the country was technically banned for a yearslong, state-sponsored doping scheme.
“The IOC is investigating two Chinese medalists who wore Chairman Mao Zedong pins” via Annabelle Timsit of Quartz — Bao Shanju and Zhong Tianshi, two Chinese cyclists, won Olympic gold in the women’s team sprint. After their victory, Shanju and Tianshi stepped onto the podium to receive gold medals inside the Izu Velodrome in Shizuoka, Japan. They wore badges over their tracksuits that featured Chinese revolutionary Zedong, who founded the People’s Republic of China in 1949. It’s not clear why they did it, but Chinese state media cheered the athletes’ decision. The badges were common in China during the Cultural Revolution.
— ALOE —
“LEGO Master makes Spock mural out of LEGO bricks” via Chad Porto of Fansided — Samuel Hatmaker is a LEGO Master, and he’s using his talents as part of a way to celebrate what would’ve been the 100th birthday of Star Trek creator Gene Roddenberry. Hatmaker is making LEGO murals in conjunction with Roddenberry Entertainment. The latest is a Spock mural made up of mostly blue, black, white, yellow, and gray bricks, and features a colored silhouette of Spock and the Vulcan phrase, “Live Long and Prosper.” It’s beyond ironic that these insanely creative scenes and moments are being depicted in LEGO form when of all the major entertainment brands the brick-building toy company has deals with, Star Trek is actually not one of them.
“Disney reveals trailer for Star Wars hotel that costs $6,000 per family” via James Hibberd of The Hollywood Reporter — The Galactic Starcruiser is a two-night immersive experience at Walt Disney World that’s billed as “part live immersive theater, part themed environment, part culinary extravaganza, part real-life role-playing game.” The lowest announced pricing tier is $4,809 for two guests. That includes a standard cabin, food and drink (except alcohol, which is extra), and an experience that includes activities such as lightsaber training, bridge crew training, and a planet excursion to Batuu (aka the Galaxy’s Edge park). There are no listed prices for the hotel’s upgraded rooms, dubbed the Galaxy Chess Suite and the Grand Captain Suite. There are other add-ons, too, such as Captain’s Table seating rather than eating at communal tables in the “Crown of Corellia Dining Room.”
To watch the trailer, click on the image below:
“SeaWorld announces pirate plans for its first Howl-O-Scream” via Dewayne Bevil of the Orlando Sentinel — Pirates and shipwrecks will be part of SeaWorld Orlando’s inaugural Howl-O-Scream Halloween event, which kicks off Sept. 10. A haunted house called Captain’s Revenge will be part of the lineup. The theme park describes the maze using words like dank underbelly, musty air, ill-fated crew, and “a tempting and terrifying force has possessed those who once labored aboard this vessel.” Also in the works are a scare zone named Sea of Souls (marauding pirates, restlessness, ghostly fate, horrific shipwreck) and a themed bar experience known as Longshoremen Tavern. This will be the first year that SeaWorld Orlando offers an intense, after-hours Halloween event and the park’s first extra-ticket outing.
— HAPPY BIRTHDAY —
Best wishes to Sen. Ed Hooper, Rep. Tyler Sirios and Heather Barker.
___
Sunburn is authored and assembled by Peter Schorsch, Phil Ammann, Renzo Downey and Drew Wilson.
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13.) AXIOS
Axios AM
Happy Thursday! Smart Brevity™ count: 1,483 words … 5½ minutes. Edited by Zachary Basu.
Vice President Harris boards Air Force Two in Mexico City in June. Photo: Hector Vivas/Getty Images
A group of the Democratic Party’s most influential women met for dinner at a home in the nation’s capital last month to game out how to defend Vice President Kamala Harris and her chief of staff, Tina Flournoy, against a torrent of bad press, Jonathan Swan reports.
- Why it matters: It’s telling that so early in the Biden-Harris administration, such powerful operatives felt compelled to try to right the vice president’s ship.
The host was Kiki McLean, a Democratic public affairs expert and former adviser to both Clintons.
- Her guests included Harris confidant Minyon Moore; two former DNC officials, Donna Brazile and Leah Daughtry; Biden adviser and leader of his outside group, Stephanie Cutter; former Hillary Clinton spokeswomen and Democratic strategists Adrienne Elrod and Karen Finney; and former Obama White House communications director Jennifer Palmieri.
- Nobody from the vice president’s office was at the dinner, but Harris is attuned to her outside network of supporters. Harris’ office declined to comment on the dinner.
These were old friends getting together for the first time since the pandemic began, and celebrating a Democratic president after the Trump years. But the dinner had an urgent purpose.
A person familiar with the dinner said the point was “how can this group be supportive from the outside” and ensure her team was “making the most of this moment — as the first woman of color in the White House.”
- The women discussed how they could leverage Harris’ record as a prosecutor, California attorney general and U.S. senator to blunt criticisms of her performance as vice president.
Another source familiar with the dinner said attendees saw sexist overtones to the Harris coverage, and discussed how they could “make sure the press knows this.”
- “Many of us lived through the Clinton campaign, and want to help curb some of the gendered dynamics in press coverage that impacted HRC,” this source said. “It was like: ‘We’ve seen this before.'”
A lot of industries have permanently lost jobs during the pandemic, while very few have gained, Sam Ro writes in Axios Markets.
- Total employment will eventually recover to its pre-pandemic level — Wells Fargo senior economist Sarah House sees that happening in late 2022 or early 2023.
- But the headline unemployment rate might never get back down to the 3.5% we saw pre-pandemic.
The number of Americans who renounced their citizenship in favor of a foreign country hit an all-time high in 2020: 6,707, a 237% increase over 2019, Axios’ Jennifer A. Kingson reports.
- While the numbers are down this year, that could be because many U.S. embassies and consulates remain closed for COVID. Taking this grave step requires taking an oath in front of a State Department officer.
Why it matters: The people who flee tend to be the ultra-wealthy, seeking to reduce their taxes. New tax and estate measures proposed by President Biden could, if implemented, accelerate this trend.
Context: Only the U.S. and Eritrea tax people based on citizenship rather than residency. For most countries, if you are a citizen but don’t reside there, you aren’t taxed in that country.
What’s happening: The IRS publishes a quarterly list of the names of people who have renounced their citizenship or given up their green cards, but it only includes people with global assets over $2 million.
- The numbers started swelling in 2010, when Congress passed the Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act, or FATCA, which increased reporting requirements and penalties for expats.
- The Wall Street Journal discovered that the lists aren’t up to date: A lot of people who were reported to have renounced citizenship in 2020 actually did so years earlier.
David Lesperance, an international tax lawyer based in Poland who specializes in helping people renounce U.S. citizenship, says: “There are probably 20,000 or 30,000 people who want to do this, but they can’t get the appointment.”
- “It’s a year and a half to get an appointment at a Canadian embassy … Bern [Switzerland] alone has a backlog of over 300 cases.”
What we’re watching: Biden’s proposal to raise the top capital gains rate to 43.4% prompted a lot of calls to Lesperance from people wanting to find out which foreign countries might grant them citizenship.
Photo: Thodoris Nikolaou/AP
Sheep flocked together yesterday during a wildfire on the island of Evia, about 100 miles north of Athens. People were evacuated in boats, and the birthplace of the ancient Olympics was threatened.
- Just asking: Why don’t humans have this response to existential threats?
Illustration: Sarah Grillo/Axios
Several practical and technological hurdles stand in the way of widespread vaccine passports, Axios health care editor Tina Reed writes.
- Why it matters: COVID vaccine mandates are quickly gaining steam, reviving interest in an easy, electronic way for people to verify that they’re vaccinated. But that technology is still far from perfect.
What’s happening: New York City, the first U.S. city to impose a vaccine requirement for many indoor businesses, will accept Excelsior Pass, an app developed for New York state, to verify people’s vaccine status.
- Plenty of glitches have been reported with the Excelsior app, preventing people from verifying their status.
Some experts fear that vaccine passports would provide a false sense of security to the vaccinated, particularly as new variants emerge.
The bottom line: We may have to stick with the CDC’s (poorly sized) paper cards to prove we’re vaccinated.
Obliterated grain silos in Lebanon’s capital, Beirut, yesterday on the first anniversary of the blast that ravaged the port and the city. Photo: AFP via Getty Images
Both the N.Y. Times and Wall Street Journal have front-pagers today saying Lebanon, a year after the ammonium nitrate blast in Beirut, is enduring one of the world’s 10 worst financial collapses since the mid-1800s.
- What does that look like? With hyperinflation topping 400%, brawls “have erupted in supermarkets as shoppers rush to buy bread, sugar, and cooking oil,” The Journal reports (subscription).
I went down the rabbit hole, and it turns out the World Bank has a list of the world’s worst systemic banking crises, going back to 1857.
Go deeper: Chart of the world’s 25 worst economic crises, 1857-2013.
President Biden nominated Mark Brzezinski — a former U.S. ambassador to Sweden, and son of Zbigniew Brzezinski, national security adviser for President Jimmy Carter — as ambassador to Poland.
- Biden called his sister, Mika Brzezinski of “Morning Joe,” to congratulate her. According to a person familiar with the call, Biden said: “I’m trying to give your brother Poland. What’s his number, Mika?”
Zbigniew Brzezinski was a Warsaw native who championed freedom for the Polish people. The historian Michael Beschloss tweeted this entry from the 1949 yearbook of McGill University in Canada:
Ben Shapiro, labor organizer?!
- The online conservative powerhouse, whose “The Authoritarian Moment” debuted yesterday on the N.Y. Times bestseller list, is unwittingly helping animate a drive in Politico’s newsroom to unionize with the NewsGuild.
- Politico bosses faced an internal revolt in January after Shapiro was allowed to guest-author Playbook for a day. Pro-union staffers are pointing to the company’s handling of the debacle.
Union organizers have been conducting informational sessions with editorial teams and gathering signatures for a statement to management, Axios’ Sara Fischer scooped.
- Politico spokesperson Brad Dayspring said publisher Robert Allbritton “understands that the decision to form a union is the choice of the newsroom employees who would be impacted by it, and POLITICO would respect the process and the majority decision of those employees.”
Axios’ Ina Fried reports from Tokyo: I’ve now been here 14 days, so I’m allowed to go to shops and restaurants and on public transit.
- Between table-tennis matches, I walked to Shinjuku rail station and checked out the Apple store and some local shops.
- At Bic Camera, an electronics chain and department store, I was able to get what my son most wanted — an authentic Japanese beyblade, the spinning attack tops popular with kids.
Feeling brave, I decided to take a train the two stops back from Shinjuku.
- A nice man helped me find my way, so I gave him one of the Olympic pins I collected. A woman on the train asked where I was from. When I said San Francisco, she started singing “I Left My Heart in San Francisco.” She got a pin, too.
Axios Olympics dashboard … Events to watch today … In photos: Tokyo Olympics day 13.
Angels’ Shohei Ohtani sprints around third on his way home against the Rangers in Arlington, Texas, on Tuesday. Photo: Tony Gutierrez/AP
Major League Baseball will open the 2022 season on March 31 — as long as there isn’t a work stoppage — and will try to have every team play its first game on the same day for the first time since 1968, AP reports.
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Some Illinois pot license winners looking to sell to highest bidder
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24.) ROLL CALL
Morning Headlines
Whether or not the bipartisan infrastructure bill passes, Ohio Republican Sen. Rob Portman’s work on the legislation is a fitting coda for a lawmaker who is said to prefer policymaking to politicking, as Portman, 65, prepares to retire at the end of this term. Read more…
Former President Donald Trump’s preferred candidates have lagged behind their opponents in overall fundraising, and a new filing from the top Republican donation platform shows his endorsements having mixed results in boosting online donations. Read more…
‘Punching down,’ the political weapon of so-called tough guys
OPINION — In today’s cruel world, it’s not just comedians punching down, reaching for the “easy” joke. Many see advantage in aggression and don’t feel embarrassed when reflecting on their words and actions. The “punching” is the point, and it’s always aimed at those perceived as less powerful. Read more…
Click here to subscribe to Fintech Beat for the latest market and regulatory developmentsin finance and financial technology.
Ahead of midterms, Democrats feel pressure to pass citizenship
If Democrats succeed in passing a pathway to citizenship for millions of undocumented immigrants through the budget reconciliation process, analysts say it could provide the party with a critical victory to motivate voters ahead of next year’s contentious midterm races. Read more…
Conservatives take aim at infrastructure bill in Senate
Although up to 17 GOP lawmakers have signaled tentative support for the nearly $1 trillion infrastructure measure being debated in the Senate, conservatives urged on by former President Donald Trump are making clear that to them, the “bipartisan deal” is no deal at all. Read more…
Wyden-led amendment would clarify cryptocurrency reporting rules
Senate Finance Chair Ron Wyden on Wednesday filed an amendment to the bipartisan infrastructure bill aimed at making clear that reporting rules for enforcing taxes on cryptocurrency transactions wouldn’t apply to intermediaries that develop secure “wallets” for storing digital assets. Read more…
Senate appropriators warn of year-end train wreck
Senior senators on both sides of the aisle raised warning flags Wednesday about the path ahead for spending bills in the absence of a bipartisan agreement on subcommittee allocations for defense, domestic and foreign aid programs. Read more…
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25.) POLITICO PLAYBOOK
POLITICO Playbook: Schumer double dares McConnell
DRIVING THE DAY
SCHUMER-MCCONNELL FACEOFF ON THE DEBT CEILING — CHUCK SCHUMER is about to double-dog dare MITCH MCCONNELL and his members to vote against a debt ceiling increase this fall. Just weeks after the minority leader implored his counterpart to tack a debt ceiling increase on to their party’s massive reconciliation bill — lifting the $28 trillion borrowing cap without any GOP votes — Schumer instead is maneuvering to make Republicans squirm.
The tentative plan: Tack the debt-ceiling hike on to a short-term funding bill designed to avert a government shutdown at the end of September, a move that would require GOP support. The Democratic leader is, in short, betting the GOP will cave rather than risk the blame for destabilizing an already shaky economy.
The strategy — scooped Wednesday by our in-house budget gurus Caitlin Emma and Jennifer Scholtes — sets up a hugely consequential game of chicken between the two leaders. They won’t have much time: Lawmakers will have only a few days to plot a path forward when they return from their summer recess in mid-September. Without an agreement, the government will shut down Oct. 1, and the Treasury could run out of money a few days after.
The entire situation gives us flashbacks to when Republicans demanded spending cuts in return for raising the borrowing cap while BARACK OBAMA was in the White House. The brinkmanship led Standard & Poor’s in 2011 to downgrade the nation’s credit for the first time ever.
Here’s what each side is saying this time around …
The view from the majority: Democrats note that McConnell in the past has been a broken record about never allowing the nation to default. They argue that Republicans dealt with the debt ceiling under DONALD TRUMP without a fuss. For the GOP to now say they want spending reforms in order to lift the cap after doing nothing of the sort the past four years, they argue, is disingenuous.
For that reason — and the obvious economic risks — Democrats think McConnell’s position is unsustainable and he’ll have to cave. “To create a fake crisis … at this moment with this much going on in the world and this much going on in this country, with Covid and dealing with the variant, would be the epitome of irresponsibility,” Sen. MARK WARNER (D-Va.) told reporters Wednesday.
The view from the minority: Republicans say that they’ve staked out a clear position on this early, so they cannot be blamed for balking at the last minute. With inflation soaring, they argue, Democrats shouldn’t be spending $3.5 trillion on a reconciliation package atop a $2 trillion pandemic package and another $1 trillion on infrastructure. They’re loath to be seen as enabling what they view as an irresponsible spending spree when the nation’s debt is already massive.
Republicans also argue that Democrats easily have the power to act on this alone, and if they choose not to, it’s their own fault. “They control the House and the Senate and the White House,” said Sen. ROY BLUNT (R-Mo.). “It’s easy for them to deal with if they want to.” Sen. MITT ROMNEY (R-Utah) agreed, telling reporters that Democrats are “the ones massively adding to the debt. … There’s no need for a compromise when they can do it by themselves.”
SO WHY WOULDN’T DEMOCRATS JUST USE RECONCILIATION? It’s all about the moderates. Centrist Democrats are already having a hard time swallowing the $3.5 trillion price tag. Adding a debt ceiling increase would only lead them to demand a slimmer package, Democrats involved in the matter tell us.
BOTTOM LINE: Each side is confident the other will blink. For the sake of the economy, hopefully one of them is right.
Good Thursday morning. Thanks for reading Playbook. Drop us a line: Rachael Bade, Eugene Daniels, Ryan Lizza, Tara Palmeri.
DURING THE 2020 PRESIDENTIAL PRIMARIES, we had countless conversations with Biden campaign officials who warned that it was crucial to separate the social media conversation about Democratic politics from the conversations happening offline in early states.
On Twitter, BERNIE SANDERS was marching to inevitable victory over JOE BIDEN, who allegedly wasn’t much better than another four years of Trump. But in places like South Carolina Biden led in polls from start to finish, and trounced Sanders by almost 30 points.
It became a cliche to say that Biden’s unofficial campaign slogan was “Twitter isn’t real life.”
In office, Biden and Bernie haven’t been very far apart on policy, but the old electoral divisions have repeatedly resurfaced in campaigns this year, and we’ve been having a familiar conversation with folks in Biden world recently.
Their take: The gap between the political Twitterverse and the real world is as wide as ever. SHONTEL BROWN, the winner of the special election primary in Ohio on Tuesday, had some 20,000 Twitter followers (it’s grown a bit since then), while her Bernie-backed opponent, NINA TURNER, had almost half a million.
And this wasn’t a one-off election. The Bernie-ALEXANDRIA OCASIO-CORTEZ wing of the Democratic Party has now lost a Louisiana special election for a House seat, the Virginia gubernatorial primary, the New York City mayoral primary and this week’s special election in Ohio. In the two special elections, the Bernie-AOC candidates actually outspent the Biden-aligned candidates.
This comes as little surprise to top party strategists. As Sarah Ferris and Heather Caygle reported earlier this week, the DCCC is urging vulnerable members to “run as ‘Biden Democrats.’”
Meanwhile, as this familiar debate plays out, there’s one political consulting firm that has been at the center of the moderate ascendancy: SKDK, which worked for the winning, come-from-behind candidates in both Louisiana and Ohio. Later this month, ANITA DUNN, one of Biden’s closest advisers, will be returning to SKDK, solidifying its role as the go-to shop for Biden Democrats.
— More: NYT’s Alex Burns’ post-Ohio analysis and Brown explains to the AP how she won the Ohio primary.
BIDEN’S THURSDAY:
— 9:30 a.m.: The president will receive the President’s Daily Brief.
— 11:30 a.m.: Biden and VP KAMALA HARRIS will meet with Asian American, Native Hawaiian and Pacific Islander civil rights leaders.
— 3 p.m.: Biden will speak on the South Lawn about his administration’s efforts on clean cars and trucks.
— 4:30 p.m.: Biden will sign the bill to award Congressional Gold Medals to the Capitol Police and others who defended the Capitol on Jan. 6, in a ceremony in the Rose Garden. He and Harris will also deliver remarks.
The White House Covid-19 response team and public health officials will brief at 11 a.m. Press secretary JEN PSAKI and Education Secretary MIGUEL CARDONA will brief at 1 p.m.
THE SENATE is in. The chamber will vote on cloture for EUNICE LEE’s judicial nomination an hour after it convenes.
THE HOUSE is out.
PLAYBOOK READS
INFRASTRUCTURE YEAR
DEMOCRATS EYE NEXT STEPS ON INFRASTRUCTURE — There’s a lot of chatter in the Senate that Schumer will file cloture today to end debate on amendments to BIF and start the clock for the final votes on the infrastructure bill. His office isn’t commenting, but a bunch of senators are flying to Wyoming on Friday for the funeral of the late Sen. MIKE ENZI. (The White House confirmed to us that after considering the trip, Biden will not be attending.) The thinking is that if the leader makes the move today, it will give members time to pay their respects, then be back in town Saturday when the post-cloture 30 hours of debate expires.
In preparing for the move — and to head off GOP complaints that Democrats are cutting off debate too quickly — Schumer’s office has been blasting out statistics showing that the chamber has voted on more amendments this year than in any of the past four years under GOP control.
It’s still TBD when we might see the vote on final passage. Technically, senators could keep debating well into next week due to arcane Senate processes. But if they all agree, they could wrap up as soon as Saturday.
After that, Schumer is expected to file a motion to proceed to the budget resolution, putting 50 hours on the clock for debate before the massive vote-a-rama, where senators debate and vote on tons of amendments well past all of our bedtimes. Meanwhile, August recess is calling us all …
ODD MAN OUT — “The Senate GOP’s one-man infrastructure test case,” by Burgess Everett and Marianne LeVine: “As the Senate’s bipartisan infrastructure gang sticks together on the floor this week, JERRY MORAN is conspicuously on the outs. Among the group of more than 20 senators who weeks ago pledged to support a $550 billion deal on new infrastructure spending, Moran is the only one who voted against moving forward — twice.
“And now, as the bill nears the finish line, colleagues in both parties are wondering where the affable two-term Kansas senator will come down. Moran’s support isn’t crucial to passing the bill, but the microscope on him reflects the ongoing push-and-pull between Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell’s methodical, straightforward Republican Party and the chaotic, confrontational style of former President Donald Trump.”
LAST-MINUTE OBSTACLE — “Cryptocurrency tax changes spark clash between White House, key Democratic senator,” by Kellie Mejdrich, Victoria Guida and Brian Faler: “Finance Committee Chairman RON WYDEN (D-Ore.), senior tax writer PAT TOOMEY (R-Pa.) and Sen. CYNTHIA LUMMIS (R-Wyo.) want to narrow who would be subject to new tax reporting requirements that are intended to improve tax compliance among those trading digital currencies. …
“But the administration, which had advised the larger bipartisan group of lawmakers who put together the infrastructure plan, calls that bunk. It believes the industry is using scare tactics to try to water down the requirements … The unusual dispute, pitting the Senate’s top tax writer against his colleagues in the administration, comes in what party leaders hope will be the final hours of debate over the plan.”
THE AMENDMENT PROCESS — “Sen. Joni Ernst targets Gov. Cuomo in amendment to infrastructure bill,” N.Y. Post: “Sen. JONI ERNST (R-Iowa) targeted embattled New York Gov. ANDREW CUOMO (D) in an amendment to the bipartisan infrastructure bill which would prevent its funding from being allocated to states that are led by an individual that has sexually harassed their subordinates.”
CONGRESS
FIRST IN PLAYBOOK — MICHAEL FANONE, one of the officers who defended the Capitol on Jan. 6 and gave an emotional testimony before Congress last week, covers the latest issue of Time, with a story written by Molly Ball: “The Aftermath: Why officer Mike Fanone won’t let America forget Jan. 6” … The cover … The story
SINEMA SPEAKS — “Unapologetically Moderate, Democrat Kyrsten Sinema Says She’s Focused On Results,” by NPR’s Dana Farrington and Mary Louise Kelly: “To Sinema, a moderate, bipartisanship is the way Washington should work. ‘We know that the American people are asking for us to take action,’ she told NPR’s All Things Considered. ‘What they don’t want to see is us sit on our hands, waiting until we get every single thing that we want. … That all-or-nothing approach usually leaves you with nothing.’ …
“To the larger consideration of whether Sinema’s approach would help or hurt Democrats maintain control of Congress, Sinema said her focus is on ‘getting stuff done.’ Noting her nearly 20 years serving in public office, she said that in her experience, ‘If you do the work and deliver results for the people that you represent, they’ll continue to send you back to do that job.’ … Although Sinema said she won’t support a budget package of that [$3.5 trillion] size, she did not provide any response on what she thought an acceptable size would be.”
WHOSE POWER IS IT? — “Debate Over Presidential War Powers Sets Up Test for a Divided G.O.P.,” by NYT’s Catie Edmondson: “After espousing hawkish, interventionist positions for decades and almost uniformly backing the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, the Republican Party is now grappling with political pressure to align itself more closely with the inward-looking ‘America First’ foreign policy articulated by Mr. Trump and backed by many conservative voters. It parallels similar foreign policy shifts Republicans have made in recent years to hew closer to Mr. Trump’s views, including a move away from their support of free trade and a growing appetite for aggressive federal intervention to bolster American competitiveness against China.”
THE WHITE HOUSE
POLL OF THE DAY — “Biden Loses Ground On His Handling Of COVID-19 Response, Quinnipiac University National Poll Finds; Infrastructure Bill Gets A Thumbs Up By A 2 To 1 Margin,” Quinnipiac: “Biden maintains a positive grade on his handling of the coronavirus response as Americans approve 53 – 40 percent … However, this is a double digit drop from a Quinnipiac University poll in May when Americans approved 65 – 30 percent.”
TODAY’S BIG ANNOUNCEMENT — “Carmakers, Biden to Roll Out Emission Cuts and EV Sales Goal,” by Bloomberg’s Ari Natter, Keith Laing, and Gabrielle Coppola: “The mandates, expected to cover the model years between 2023 and 2026, are a centerpiece of President Joe Biden’s climate plans and mark his administration’s first major effort to use regulation to stem planet-warming greenhouse gases. The limits are likely to fall short of what environmentalists have called for, while pleasing auto manufacturers.”
— More from Alex Guillén: “The ‘car guy’ president wants Americans to go electric”
CALLING THEM OUT — “Biden changes his tune by getting confrontational with GOP governors over Covid spike,” by CNN’s Kevin Liptak and Jeremy Diamond: “When Republican governors began prematurely lifting coronavirus restrictions in their states earlier this spring, Biden and his team largely kept their heads down, ramping up vaccine distribution while steering clear of rhetorical battles with political adversaries.
“But this week, as the Delta variant and low vaccination rates in several southern states sent cases soaring, Biden took a new approach: Castigating Republican governors who are standing in the way of mask and vaccine requirements — and calling out the governors of Texas and Florida in particular for enacting ‘bad health policy.’”
DEFENSE CHANGE INCOMING — “Biden plans shift in arms policy to add weight to human rights concerns,” Reuters’ Mike Stone and Patricia Zengerle: “Biden’s administration is preparing an overhaul of arms export policy to increase the emphasis on human rights, a departure from Trump’s prioritization of economic benefits to U.S. defense contractors, four people familiar with the initiative said.”
VEEP FILES — “Can Kamala Harris Solve the Vice-President Paradox?” by The Atlantic’s Peter Nicholas
KNOWING THE PRESS OFFICE — “These millennial and Gen Z staffers are part of Jen Psaki’s 11-person army that keeps the White House on message,” by Insider’s Robin Bravender, Nicole Gaudiano and Kayla Epstein: “Their pay ranges from $62,500 to $180,000 a year … Each morning, the team gathers for meetings in Psaki’s office — Wednesdays are bagel days — and they huddle for follow-up meetings later in the day as needed.” With a person-by-person breakdown of who’s messaging, flacking and spinning
POLICY CORNER
IMMIGRATION FILES — “Biden’s vision for the border has gone bust. But what’s Plan B?” by Sabrina Rodríguez and Anita Kumar: “The number of migrants apprehended at the border isn’t going down this summer, even as the heat makes the journey to the U.S. more dangerous. Instead, it has reached a 21-year high — and there’s a record number of unaccompanied children arriving, too.
“As the administration, local officials, border agents and nonprofit leaders grapple with the day-to-day logistical challenges of apprehending and processing or expelling thousands of migrants, U.S. officials and immigration experts say they have theories but no concrete explanations for why the increase is happening now. Many see it as a confluence of destabilizing conditions, some new, some long-standing: a still-raging pandemic, worsening economic crisis and devastation from past natural disasters.”
VAX POPULI I — “U.S. plans to require COVID-19 shots for foreign travelers,” by AP’s Zeke Miller: “The requirement would come as part of the administration’s phased approach to easing travel restrictions for foreign citizens to the country. No timeline has yet been determined, as interagency working groups study how and when to safely move toward resuming normal travel. Eventually all foreign citizens entering the country, with some limited exceptions, are expected to need to be vaccinated against Covid-19 to enter the U.S.”
VAX POPULI II — “Defense Secretary Weighs Recommending Vaccine Mandate for Troops,” by NYT’s Helene Cooper: “Defense Secretary LLOYD J. AUSTIN III will decide in the next few days whether to recommend that Biden make coronavirus vaccinations mandatory for the country’s 1.3 million active-duty troops, military officials said, signaling a major move by the administration to harden the country’s defenses against the highly contagious Delta variant.”
TRUMP CARDS
HOW CLOSE WE CAME, PART CMLXVIII — “Top DOJ official drafted resignation email amid Trump election pressure,” by Betsy Woodruff Swan and Nicholas Wu: “In early January 2021, one top Justice Department official was so concerned that then-President Donald Trump might fire his acting attorney general that he drafted an email announcing he and a second top official would resign in response. … Trump didn’t fire [JEFF] ROSEN, and [PATRICK] HOVAKIMIAN’s draft email — a copy of which was obtained by POLITICO — remained unsent.” The draft email
THE BEST PEOPLE — “Federal judge sanctions lawyers who challenged 2020 election results, calls claims ‘fantastical,’” The Hill
THIRSTY FOR ANSWERS — “A $5,800 Bottle of Japanese Whiskey Given to Mike Pompeo Is Missing,” by WSJ’s William Mauldin: “Japan’s gift to Mr. Pompeo, worth $5,800, was received in June 2019 … While other gifts to Mr. Pompeo, including a silver falcon statue from the Saudi Arabian foreign minister, are marked as being transferred to the State Department’s National Museum of American Diplomacy or elsewhere in the government, the whiskey is marked as ‘disposition unknown.’
“‘The Department is looking into the matter and has an ongoing inquiry,’ the State Department said in an annual report on foreign gifts to be published Thursday in the Federal Register. WILLIAM BURCK, a lawyer for Mr. Pompeo, said the former secretary of state had ‘no recollection of receiving the bottle of whiskey and does not have any knowledge of what happened to it.’”
POLITICS ROUNDUP
CUOMO FALLOUT — “The Abandonment of Andrew Cuomo: Unions, Party Leaders and Deep Allies,” by NYT’s Dana Rubinstein and Katie Glueck: “The pillars of Mr. Cuomo’s political base now appear to be cracking beneath him, as he suffers consequential defections from core constituencies, including labor, white suburban lawmakers and Black political leaders.
“His only apparent hope is that, during the time it takes to draw up impeachment papers as the State Assembly advances its investigation, the reservoir of public good will he earned early in the pandemic will stifle the sentiment against him in the legislature and elsewhere. Certainly, in interviews on Wednesday across the state, not all voters saw the report as decisive.”
— “Majority of NY Assembly would oust Cuomo if he doesn’t quit,” AP … “CNN’s Cuomo Conundrum: A Star Anchor With a Brother in Trouble,” NYT
BRUTAL FOR GLENN YOUNGKIN — “Ex-Carlyle Boss Racked Up Bad Bets Before Move to Politics,” by Bloomberg’s Heather Perlberg and Tom Maloney: “[P]eople close to the private-equity firm have been chafing over the picture Youngkin paints of his investing acumen and the circumstances of his departure. In his final decade there, he shepherded several bets and strategies that chalked up losses, and some of them are still being unwound.”
BEYOND THE BELTWAY
WHOOPS — “Two House Democrats who broke quorum missing from Washington, D.C., reportedly vacationing in Portugal,” by the Texas Tribune’s Patrick Svitek and Cassandra Pollock
PLAYBOOKERS
PERHAPS NOT A PLAYBOOKER YET, BUT HE’S CLOSE: “Rafael Nadal Falling In Love With D.C. Is The Rom-Com We Need,” DCist
BOOK CLUB — NYT reporter Jennifer Medina is writing a book about modern Latino political identity, via Penguin Press.
STAFFING UP — Elizabeth Trudeau is the new principal deputy assistant to the secretary of Defense for public affairs. She’s on detail from the State Department (most recently in Belfast), the first-ever career Foreign Service officer to hold the position at the Pentagon.
— The White House announced multiple slates of new nominations, including: Mark Brzezinski as ambassador to Poland, Elizabeth Fitzsimmons as ambassador to Togo, Rebecca Gonzales as director of the State Department’s Office of Foreign Missions, Brian Shukan as ambassador to Benin, David Young as ambassador to Malawi, Adriana Kugler as U.S. executive director of the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development and Oren Whyche-Shaw as U.S. director of the African Development Bank.
— More nominations: Corey Hinderstein as deputy administrator for defense nuclear nonproliferation at DOE, David Honey as deputy undersecretary of Defense for research and engineering, Biniam Gebre as administrator for federal procurement policy at OMB, Andrew Fois as chair of the Administrative Conference of the U.S., Susan Tsui Grundmann as a member of the Federal Labor Relations Authority and Kurt Rumsfeld as general counsel of the Federal Labor Relations Authority.
TRANSITION — Kory Kozloski is now campaign manager for Mandela Barnes’ Senate bid in Wisconsin. He previously advised Barnes for the past several months, and is a DCCC and Democratic Party of Wisconsin alum.
WELCOME TO THE WORLD — Lauren Smith, head of federal regulatory engagement at the self-driving car company Cruise and an Obama OSTP alum, and Adam Conner, VP for tech policy at the Center for American Progress, welcomed Zia Evelyn Conner on July 22. After a nine-day stay at the Georgetown NICU, daughter and mother are both home safe and sound. Pic
— Varun Krovi, director at Invariant, and Reena Krovi, who works in finance, recently welcomed Ayaan Krovi.
— Laura Geller, investigative reporter at WUSA9, and her husband Adam welcomed daughter Simone on July 28. Pic
HAPPY BIRTHDAY: A.G. Sulzberger … Rep. Mike Doyle (D-Pa.) … Resident Commissioner Jenniffer González-Colón (R-Puerto Rico) … Rufus Gifford … Planned Parenthood’s Alexis McGill Johnson … Ryan Wrasse of Sen. John Thune’s (R-S.D.) office … Boston Globe’s Jim Puzzanghera … Jeremy Flantzer … Matt Mandel … Kristofer Eisenla … Cary Gibson of Ascendis Pharma A/S … Cicely Simpson … Molly Donlin of Regent Strategies … Laura Chace of ITS America … Lisa Geller … Caroline Ehlich … Sharon Weber … Alicia Amling of Temerity Capital Partners … Matt Anderson of Blackstone … ABC’s Luis Martinez … Michael Chandler … Katie Vlietstra Wonnenberg of Public Private Strategies … Colleen Fisher Simons … Facebook’s Monique Dorsainvil … Nicholas Rodman … Scott Vance … Julie Hughes … Ron Bouchard … Cambodian PM Hun Sen … Pete Snyder … former Nevada Gov. Brian Sandoval … VTDigger’s Jim Welch
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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26.) AMERICAN MINUTE
27.) CAFFEINATED THOUGHTS
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28.) CONSERVATIVE DAILY NEWS
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29.) PJ MEDIA
The Morning Briefing: The New York Times Is An Anti-Journalism Clown Car
Top O’ the Briefing
The New York Times—Where Journalism Goes to Die
Happy Thursday, dear Kruiser Morning Briefing friends. Asparagus doesn’t belong in the bedroom.
Remember the Sunday paper? It weighed a zillion pounds and back in the day, people would spend a lot of quality time with them. When my daughter was young, I subscribed to two of them: The Los Angeles Times and The New York Times. After church, I would make a doughnut run and spend a couple of hours getting ink all over my hands.
The story about the demise of physical newspapers revolves around the internet and the rise of craigslist, which pretty much destroyed classified ads. Both did play a role, but I would also blame the fact that newspapers abandoned doing real journalism a long time ago and that drove people away. Conservative people like me, anyway.
The New York Times was once considered the finest newspaper in the land. There was a time when real journalists wrote for the Times. One could read real news there. Now, the Times is just one big hyperventilating leftist Opinion section. The entire organization is a joke.
I wrote a post earlier in the week about the Times blaming Donald Trump for Joe Biden’s inability to hire radical climate leftists at a pace that pleases the progressives. Yeah, they’re still doing daily Trump tantrums over there.
Bryan wrote a post yesterday that highlighted the complete lack of journalistic integrity that permeates the entire Times organization:
For the Facebook fact-checkers and interns who’ll undoubtedly look this piece over, look up Walter Duranty. He’s dead now but is important to this story because of a massive tragedy that he deliberately covered up. Short version: As the New York Times correspondent in Moscow and the most respected Western reporter in the Soviet Union in the 1930s, Duranty actively covered up the massive campaign of starvation and murder that Joseph Stalin perpetrated against Ukraine. Duranty didn’t just look the other way. He actively participated under the respected aegis of the New York Times. He bullied other reporters from covering it. One reporter, Gareth Jones, tried to find the facts and get the truth out and battled Duranty, who declared that there was no famine.
That history may be relevant again because the New York Times reportedly decided not to use its considerable influence and resources to investigate the origins of COVID-19 at the same time China was lying and delaying, early weeks in the pandemic that cost lives. That story is perhaps the most important story of our time. COVID has killed millions and transformed the entire world. Where it came from and who, if anyone, is responsible is important.
We all remember what the mainstream media was busy doing when it should have been digging into the what, where, and when, of the origin of the coronavirus: demonizing anyone who suggested that China might be the bad guy. In fact, news organizations and Democrats often sounded like spokespeople for the Chinese Communist Party in early 2020.
More from Bryan:
To be clear, the Times denies that it refused to investigate the origins of COVID. It also told the Spectator that it stopped accepting money from China “in 2020.”
To be just as clear, the Times is political, that’s been obvious long before it foisted the 1619 Project on an unsuspecting country. The Times also hasn’t actually done much reporting on COVID’s origins. During the pandemic, it purged its newsroom of Bari Weiss and Donald McNeil for wrongthink and went on an internal witch hunt after it published Sen. Tom Cotton’s riot oped. It went extremely woke. Let’s just say its record lately isn’t stellar and denials from it may not be taken entirely as read. The 1619 Project isn’t valid history but the Times surely wants it to be. If it decided from on high that investigating COVID was too “dangerous” that’s well beyond politics or even Trump. That’s possibly back to Walter Duranty and covering up for a hostile regime with potential crimes in progress.
The Times has zero credibility. The organization worked 24/7 for years to pimp the Russia collusion hoax. The “reporters” there spent the entire Trump era writing flimsy, poorly-sourced attacks on him. It was as if a slew of toddlers were writing a feelings journal in crayon.
There are still journalists in America, they’re just not working for any of the major newspapers in the country.
And there haven’t been any working for The New York Times for a very, very long while now.
Everything Isn’t Awful
PJ Media
22 Pearl-Clutching State Attorneys General Want to Cede Power to the Feds
The Social Media Giants Call Me a Violent Extremist. You’re Next.
German Paper Apologizes for Scaring Kids With Panic-Driven Coverage of Covid
VDH: Biden Administration Should Look in Mirror Before Casting Stones Over Vaccinations
Pro-Palestinian Demonstrators in Brooklyn Call for Worldwide Violence Against Jews
REPORT: Biden Admin Has Dropped Thousands of COVID+ Illegal Migrants Into Just One Texas Town
VodkaPundit, Part Trois: DeSantis Blasts Biden: ‘I Don’t Wanna Hear a Blip About COVID From You’
What Joe Biden Caving on the Eviction Moratorium Really Means
Daily Dose of Downey: Democrats vs. the Constitution
True Believers, Blinded by Ideology
‘Shark Attacks’ and the Rewiring of Your Reality
Rep. Rashida Tlaib Accused of Using ‘Anti-Semitic Dog Whistles’ During Speech (Again)
Why Should Cuomo Resign? Democrats Almost Always Get Away With Their Misdeeds
LOL: Obama Scales Back Superspreader Birthday Bash After Criticism
Townhall Mothership
Schlichter: Liberals Hate That You Have Rights
Why Did Biden’s ATF Nominee Go on Chinese Communist TV…And Why Didn’t He Disclose That?
Biden’s Approval Down in Yet Another Poll
GOP Senator Introduces Legislation to Mandate Voter ID Laws in States That Require Vaccine Passports
Cam&Co. Richmond Mayor Blames Legal Gun Owners For Soaring Homicides
It’s Not The Wealthy Hurt By Gun Control
Judge Makes Important Comments During Extremist’s Sentencing
CA RECALL: Candidates for Governor Debate at the Richard Nixon Presidential Library
Hey Dems: Your Policies Led These 11 People to Pay $10K Each to Take a Death Trip Over the Border
Reuters on major oversight change: Border Patrol to be issued body cams
VIP
VodkaPundit, Part Quatre: Science vs ‘Teh Feelz’: A Genderfluid Seesaw
If Criticizing Dr. Anthony Fauci Is a Hate Crime, I Plead Guilty–And I’ll Do It Again
If You Think 2021 Has Been Rough So Far, Wait Until the Democrats Wage Their Next Horrible Battle
Revolution on Hold: Radical Democrat Loses Primary in Ohio
GOLD LIVE AT 3:30PM EASTERN THURSDAY: ‘Five O’Clock Somewhere’ with Kruiser, Preston, VodkaPundit
Around the Interwebz
‘The Dropout’: ABC News Podcast Returns As Elizabeth Holmes Goes On Trial
Facebook’s ban of third-party researchers ‘deeply concerning’
Bee Me
The Kruiser Kabana
Kabana Gallery
Kabana Random
Kabana Tunes
Kids don’t make porridge anymore, that’s how we got to this place.
30.) WHITE HOUSE DOSSIER
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31.) THE DISPATCH
The Morning Dispatch: China’s Nuclear Ambitions
Plus: Teachers unions soften their commitment to full in-person instruction in the fall.
The Dispatch Staff | 7 min ago | 5 | 1 |
Happy Thursday! We’ve got softball again tonight, but two of our star players—interns Tripp and Jonathan—have left D.C. for the summer. Guess we’ll see how well the old folks can hold their own.
Quick Hits: Today’s Top Stories
- The Alabama and Georgia Associations of Realtors filed an emergency motion last night with the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia, asking a federal judge to block the implementation of the Centers for Disease Control’s new eviction moratorium.
- The Taliban claimed responsibility for a suicide attack in Kabul on Tuesday night that targeted the Afghan defense minister’s home, killing eight and wounding 20. Defense Minister Gen. Bismillah Khan Mohammadi was not home during the attack. U.S. and Afghan officials said Wednesday they had conducted airstrikes on Taliban targets in Afghanistan’s southern Helmand province.
- The World Health Organization on Wednesday called for a global moratorium on COVID-19 booster shots until at least the end of September in order to afford poorer countries access to more vaccine doses.
- GOP Rep. Billy Long of Missouri—a former auctioneer and radio host—announced this week that he is running to fill the U.S. Senate seat being vacated by the retiring Sen. Roy Blunt.
- The Olympics continue, but the relative national standings atop the medal count remain the same as they have been for days: China leads the field with 33 golds and comes second in total medals with 73, while the U.S. holds the most total medals at 86 and the second-most golds with 27.
New Nuclear Silos Spotted in China
For years, analysts and academics have speculated that the United States and China may sit on the precipice of a “new Cold War,” pointing to emerging strategic competition in the realms of global investment, conventional arms, trade, and technology as harbingers. But there’s growing evidence to suggest that Beijing has renewed ambitions in a domain even more closely associated with 20th-century U.S.-Soviet geopolitical rivalry: nuclear weapon stockpiling.
Over the past two months, American researchers using commercial satellite imagery have discovered two construction sites on which hundreds of nuclear silos will one day sit—each occupying about 310 square miles of arid land in China’s northwest deserts. The first, located in Yumen, Gansu, is set to contain 120 launch points for intercontinental ballistic missiles (ICBMs). The second, discovered near a Chinese Communist Party (CCP) “re-education” camp in Hami, Xinjiang, will host 110 more.
“This is the second time in two months the public has discovered what we have been saying all along about the growing threat the world faces and the veil of secrecy that surrounds it,” U.S. Strategic Command tweeted last week. Washington Post national security columnist Josh Rogin dubbed the post STRATCOM “sounding the alarm on China’s nuclear weapons expansion as loudly as they can.”
Including “a dozen silos at Jilantai, and possibly more silos being added in existing DF-5 deployment areas,” China plans to expand its ICBM silos ten-fold, the Federation of American Scientists (FAS) wrote in its breaking report on the Hami site. According to Matt Korda, research associate for FAS’ Nuclear Information Project, this build-up—of about 250 new launch facilities in total—constitutes “the largest and the fastest silo build up in the nuclear age since the U.S. and Soviet Union built their silos during the Cold War.”
Korda, who discovered the Hami site, began his research guided by two theories. “I figured the geology of the site—the physical makeup of the site—would be similar between the Yumen site, and any subsequent sites,” Korda told The Dispatch. “If you’re making plans to build all of these missile silos in a desert, it requires a lot more logistics to then turn around and put them in a totally different type of terrain.”
Korda also correctly guessed that the site wouldn’t be far from the Yumen silo fields, which were first discovered by the James Martin Center for Nonproliferation Studies and reported by the Washington Post in June. Both research groups used Planet Labs, a private satellite imaging company, to make their discoveries. “It’s a really incredible, transformational product that they’ve created, because it allows folks like us to have daily insight into how different sites are changing and progressing,” he said. Government intelligence agencies no longer have a monopoly on such capabilities.
The Chinese People’s Liberation Army (PLA) has long adhered to a stated policy of “minimum deterrence,” stockpiling enough nuclear weapons to ward off a preemptive strike. But as China ascends to global power status, that policy is likely on its way out.
“U.S. defense strategists … long feared that China would eventually try to compete with the U.S. nuclear arsenal,” former senior policy adviser for nuclear and missile-defense policy in the Office of the Secretary of Defense Matthew Kroenig wrote in the Wall Street Journal last week. “They believed that as China became a geopolitical superpower, its leaders would eventually pursue a superpower nuclear arsenal. That is exactly what we are seeing today.”
The recent build-up could be a logical extension of China’s second-strike nuclear strategy in the event that Beijing sees its adversaries’ existing or future nuclear stockpiles as sufficient to overwhelm its own. Having plentiful silos allows the PLA to load some with ICBMs and leave others empty—which is resource-efficient and fuzzes the target for potential opponents.
But the expansion also serves to reinforce Beijing’s stature as an emerging economic and military superpower and insulate the CCP from the consequences of its bad behavior—domestically, regionally, and globally.
“The overarching aim is to checkmate America’s more extensive nuclear arsenal and missile defenses. China will severely complicate U.S. strategic targeting and defense planning by placing DF-41 ICBMs with multiple warheads in underground grids in Xinjiang and Gansu provinces,” Patrick Cronin, Asia-Pacific Security Chair at the Hudson Institute, told The Dispatch.
“Meanwhile, China enjoys a better military balance in theater missile capabilities—all part of Beijing’s decades of investing in missiles to deny the United States access to the South China Sea and other adjacent waters,” Cronin added. “The upshot is that China hopes to rival the U.S. Armed Forces.”
Teachers Unions Backtrack on In-Person School
One of the few silver linings to the dismal pandemic year of 2020 was that COVID-19 rarely afflicts children. While nearly all schools shut down and went virtual in the spring, the fall semester became a nationwide experiment in how much in-person activity schools could get away with, as some districts inched back into hybrid learning while others stayed fully remote. As the data rolled in, it soon became clear that careful in-person reopenings had been a success—there were remarkably few cases nationwide in which resuming in-person school had accelerated community transmission of the coronavirus.
As months went by and that data grew clearer, many schools continued to resist the prospect of reopening. For proponents of in-person schooling, one culprit was obvious: America’s teachers unions, which continued to lobby aggressively for remote education throughout nearly the entire school year.
Near the end of the term, that began to change. In May, Randi Weingarten, the president of the American Federation for Teachers, confidently declared that schools should open in the fall. “There is no doubt: Schools must be open,” Weingarten said in a speech. “In person, five days a week, with the space and facilities to do so. We know that’s how kids learn best and that prolonged isolation is harmful.”
But in recent weeks, Weingarten has begun softening that stance, using the Delta variant—and the CDC’s shifting mask guidance—as her rationale.
“We’re going to keep kids safe, we’re going to keep our members safe,” she said on MSNBC last Wednesday. “We’re going to try to open up schools.”
The most effective means of keeping people safe from COVID, of course, are the vaccines. The shots are not yet authorized for the youngest of schoolchildren, but all adults have had access to them for months—and teachers were understandably among the first groups to be made eligible. Back in January, Weingarten all but said vaccinations were the ticket back to in-person schooling. “Vaccine availability should align with school reopening,” she told The 74. ”So if you’re trying to reopen elementary schools, vaccine availability should be prioritized [for] elementary schools.”
But now that vaccines are plentiful, Weingarten is pushing back on the implementation of mandates. In a statement last week, she called COVID vaccines “the most important tool we have to protect ourselves,” but balked at requiring teachers to get vaccinated.
“We believe strongly that everyone should get vaccinated unless they have a medical or religious exception, and that this should be a mandatory subject of negotiation for employers to keep their employees safe and build trust,” she said. But “in order for everyone to feel safe and welcome in their workplaces, vaccinations must be negotiated between employers and workers, not coerced.”
The incongruity between these two stances has raised more than a few eyebrows. “So the Delta variant supposedly presents a medical threat so dire that it could potentially limit schooling for the third year in a row,” New York magazine’s Jonathan Chait wrote this week. “But it’s not serious enough to justify a vaccine requirement for teachers.”
Weingarten has argued that more than 90 percent of her union’s educators and school staff have been vaccinated, well above the national figure of about 70 percent. The Dispatch Fact Check looked into that claim this week:
“The Hart survey does not show that 90 percent of AFT members have been vaccinated, as Weingarten claimed, but that as of April 1, 2021, 76 percent of respondents had already been vaccinated, with a further 5 percent awaiting their scheduled appointment,” Alec writes. “Further, 8 percent of AFT members told Hart they would get vaccinated in the future, while 10 percent said they definitely will not get the vaccine. In all, 90 percent of AFT members surveyed by Hart said that they had been or would be vaccinated against coronavirus, a different claim from what Weingarten suggested.”
Nat Malkus, an education policy scholar at the American Enterprise Institute, told The Dispatch he is not surprised to see union leaders “hedging their bets” as the beginning of the school year approaches. “First and foremost, teachers unions’ duty is to protect the interests of their members,” Malkus said. “Oftentimes that’s going to align with what is best for students in schools, but frequently it doesn’t.”
In the vast majority of cases, Malkus said in-person reopenings are a foregone conclusion, and so unions are pursuing the restrictions they think will be in the best interests of their members. “The decisions to reopen schools in person give unions a lot of room to run hard against those plans in order to get what they want.”
Right now, the COVID-19 surge is concentrated in areas with relatively weak union power. But if the tide turns such that high case counts emerge in areas with stronger union power, Malkus said, teachers unions might once again be “at the forefront of calling for closures.”
Corey DeAngelis, the national director of research at the American Federation for Children, told The Dispatch that the actions of teacher’s unions and limits to in-person learning over the past year are leading a significant number of parents to consider options other than public schools.
“The latest data from the Census Bureau indicates that at least 11 percent of households are formally homeschooling their children,” DeAngelis told The Dispatch. “That’s relative to only 3 percent of households homeschooling their children pre-pandemic, so we’ve seen at least a tripling of the homeschool population.”
That trend has been accompanied by policy movement in the area of school choice as well. This year alone, 18 states have expanded or added programs that support school choice initiatives.
A nationwide RealClear Opinion poll conducted in June found that, between April 2020 and June 2021, support for school choice programs among the general public increased from 64 percent to 74 percent. The biggest jump in support was among families who had their kids enrolled in public schools.
Worth Your Time
- GOP Rep. Julia Letlow of Louisiana was elected in a special election earlier this year to fill the seat of her husband Luke, who died of COVID-19 back in December. With Louisiana’s vaccination rate among the lowest in the country, Letlow sat down with CBS News to share her story. “[Luke] and I had prayed for weeks prior about the possibility of the vaccine, and we were so excited that it was coming out and that it was going to be widely available. And he missed it by two weeks,” she said. “I would have given anything, I would have given everything for that shot to have been available for us. Looking back now, and for someone to turn it away, it’s heartbreaking to me. … My prayer is that not one more person has to lose their life to this virus. It is a horrific way to leave this world. I don’t wish it on anyone else. We have the answer. Let’s use it.”
- Ari Schulman has a great piece in The New Atlantis about the absurdities of our late-stage pandemic response. “COVID security theater is when we claim our actions are aimed at fighting COVID, but actually part of our motivation is just to give the impression that we’re fighting COVID,” he writes. “For the last year, we have worn masks in restaurants—unless we are sitting down. We have stayed six feet apart—whether we are running by on the sidewalk or sitting a table away inside for hours. We have stood behind plastic barriers at the DMV and the checkout counter—even though we know COVID floats in the air.”
Presented Without Comment
Toeing the Company Line
- “China undoubtedly warrants criticism and attention from U.S. policymakers, and it represents a major challenge for U.S. economic and foreign policy over the next several decades,” Scott Lincicome writes in this week’s Capitolism (🔒). “[But] we now have plenty of evidence—more than three years of tariffs, sanctions, and chest-thumping—of how the “America First” alternative to engagement plays out. And the results are economic weakness, geopolitical mayhem, and a larger, less effective government.”
- Wednesday’s G-File (🔒) is about how the past year-plus has driven all of us insane—in varying ways and to varying degrees. “I think of the pandemic—both the disease itself and the pressures and stresses attendant to the response—as a kind of background radiation that affects people differently,” Jonah writes. “The background radiation is affecting our politics. How could it not? … So perhaps a bit more humility is in order? Perhaps a bit more understanding that there’s plenty of irrationality to go around? And maybe, just maybe, we should try a bit harder to not make people angrier than they already are?”
- On this week’s Dispatch Podcast, Sarah, Steve, Jonah, and David discuss the growing calls for Gov. Andrew Cuomo’s resignation, the Biden administration’s lawless implementation of a new eviction moratorium, the New Right’s dalliance with Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban, and the polarizing effects of small-dollar donations.
- Up on the site today, we’ve got a piece from Andrew about D.C.’s non-enforcement of prohibitions on permanent homeless encampments during the pandemic, an item from Jay Caruso on the Republican Party’s current dearth of policy vision, and a piece from Vlad Kobets and David J. Kramer commending President Biden for meeting with Belarus opposition leader Svetlana Tsikhanouskaya.
Let Us Know
After a searching for months to find a successor to the inimitable Alex Trebek, Sony Pictures Television is—according to a Variety report—closing in on Jeopardy’s executive producer, Mike Richards. Did you watch any of the celebrity guest hosts this past year? Who would you have selected?
Reporting by Declan Garvey (@declanpgarvey), Andrew Egger (@EggerDC), Charlotte Lawson (@charlotteUVA), Ryan Brown (@RyanP_Brown), Harvest Prude (@HarvestPrude), Tripp Grebe (@tripper_grebe), Emma Rogers (@emw_96), Price St. Clair (@PriceStClair1), Jonathan Chew (@JonathanChew19), and Steve Hayes (@stephenfhayes).
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32.) LEGAL INSURRECTION
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33.) THE DAILY WIRE
34.) DESERET NEWS
35.) BRIGHT
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36.) AMERICAN THINKER
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37.) LARRY J. SABATO’S CRYSTAL BALL
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KEY POINTS FROM THIS ARTICLE— Democrats tried but failed to get a seat at the redistricting table in four large Southern states in the 2018 and 2020 cycles: Florida, Georgia, North Carolina, and Texas. — The consequences for redistricting are vitally important. It’s easy to imagine Republicans squeezing a half-dozen extra seats out of just these four states in 2022, and that may be just a floor on their potential gains. — However, Republicans could also overreach, and court battles appear likely in all of these states. Redistricting in the big-state SouthThe late 2010s featured a number of near-misses for Democrats to get a seat at the table in redistricting in four, large states that lean Republican but are or are getting more competitive. In 2018, Democrats lost the Florida and Georgia gubernatorial races by 0.4 and 1.4 points, respectively. Had they won those races, Democratic governors could have used their veto power in those states to block Republican gerrymanders. Democrats also heavily prioritized flipping state legislative chambers in North Carolina and Texas last year, but came up well short of doing so. So Democrats are now fearful, and Republicans are hopeful, that the GOP can squeeze even more seats out of these four growing states. The Democrats’ worries were spelled out last week in the liberal publication Mother Jones, which reported data from the Democratic firm TargetSmart arguing that Republicans could net anywhere from 6-13 seats just from gerrymandering these states alone. The National Democratic Redistricting Committee pegs the potential Republican gains in these states as possibly even higher: 11-16 seats. Now, some of this might be just “sky is falling” rhetoric from Democrats who are trying to shock Democratic senators into doing away with the filibuster and pushing through the party’s “For the People Act,” which would mandate independent redistricting commissions in every state (the Democratic-controlled House has already approved the bill). But there’s also no question that Republicans are going to try to sharpen their already-impressive congressional margins in these four growing states, and it’s easy to imagine them reaching at least the floor of the Democrats’ pessimistic projections (netting six seats), and quite possibly gaining more than that. In other words, the sky might actually be falling for Democrats in these states. As of right now, these four states, combined, have 90 of the 435 House seats, and Republicans currently hold 55 of these seats, or 61.1% of the total. That’s a markedly better share of the seats than the region’s presidential vote from 2020 might indicate: Donald Trump won 51.6% of the two-party presidential vote in these four states, combined. Florida and North Carolina, two states that Barack Obama won at least once, have remained stubbornly right of center. Georgia and Texas are trending Democratic relative to the nation, but are also right of center (Texas more so than Georgia, which Joe Biden narrowly carried in 2020). Texas will be adding two seats, going from 36 to 38, while Florida and North Carolina will be adding a seat apiece, going from 27 to 28 and 13 to 14, respectively. Georgia, which added a 14th seat last decade, is the only one of these four that won’t add a seat this decade. That will push this quartet’s total to 94 seats, meaning that they will have one-fifth (22%) of all the nation’s House seats. Let’s take a closer look at redistricting in these four key states and assess how good it might get for Republicans, and how bad it might get for Democrats. FLORIDANumber of seats: 28 (up 1 from 2010s) Party breakdown in 2012: 17-10 R Current party breakdown: 16-11 R Most overpopulated district: FL-9 (Central Florida) Most underpopulated district: FL-2 (Panhandle) Who controls redistricting: Republicans 2012 control: Republicans In Florida, the coming redistricting process should bring no shortage of heartache for Democrats, but one of their most critical letdowns occurred almost three years ago: the winner of the 2018 gubernatorial race would get the opportunity to fill three seats on the state Supreme Court, as three Democratic-appointed justices were set to retire (judges on that court face a mandatory retirement age). In 2015, the state Supreme Court forced changes to the state’s Republican-drawn congressional map. The new map precipitated several Democrats pick-ups in the 2016 and 2018 cycles. Despite trailing in most polls, and running in an unfavorable national environment, then-Rep. Ron DeSantis (R, FL-6) upset then-Tallahassee Mayor Andrew Gillum (D) to keep the governor’s mansion in Republican hands. DeSantis filled the three positions, and the Florida Supreme Court is now one of the most conservative state courts in the country. With a new jurisprudence dominating the court, Democrats will find a less sympathetic audience for any redistricting challenges, though Republican legislators may not want to get too creative for their own good. Republican mappers may also be limited by the Fair Districts Amendment, a ballot measure that passed in 2010 and was meant to encourage compact and fair districts (but which Democrats are fearful that this court effectively will not enforce after the more liberal version of the court used it against GOP gerrymanders last decade). With all this out of the way, let’s consider where things stand now, and what’s likely to change. After the 2014 election, Republicans retained a 17-10 edge in the state’s delegation. But by the end of 2018, with a new map and a favorable midterm environment, Democrats had clawed within one seat of majority in the delegation, which became 14-13 Republican. Then, in 2020, as former President Donald Trump carried Florida by more than three percentage points — a comfortable margin, by state standards — he helped Republicans regain two seats in the Miami area, bringing their advantage back up to 16-11. The delegation will grow by one member at the start of the next Congress, although most observers expected it to gain two — Florida has added members since the 1940 census, when it was the least populous state in the South. It is now the nation’s third most populous state, trailing only California and Texas. The most underpopulated district in the state in the panhandle-based FL-2, held by Republican Rep. Neal Dunn. The 2nd District, which is now mostly rural, traditionally included the city of Tallahassee. But with the 2015 remap, most of the 2nd’s holdings in the city were given to the newly drawn FL-5, which was intended to be a majority-nonwhite seat. While Rep. Al Lawson (D, FL-5) hails from the state’s capital area and represented in the legislature for years before his 2016 election to congress, a greater portion of the district actually comes from Jacksonville (it includes most of the city’s Black precincts). While some Republicans have maintained that the current iteration of FL-5 is not protected by the Voting Rights Act — by composition, it is less than 50% Black — Nicholas Warren of the Florida ACLU, argues that major changes won’t be in store for the district. We will just have to wait and see how Republicans deal with this district, and what legal fallout may ensue. Moving south to the Orlando area, Democrats hold three seats, but seem likely to come out of redistricting with only two. FL-10, which is split roughly evenly among whites, Blacks, and Hispanics, was a seat created for 2015, and seems unlikely to change — as it usually gives Democrats over 60% of the vote, it acts as a vote sink in the area. Just to the south, the most populous district in the state is Rep. Darren Soto’s (D) FL-9, which needs to drop a whopping 165,000 residents. Whites and Hispanics each account for roughly 40% of the 9th’s population, though the latter group’s growth has been especially rapid. Given its minority population, Republicans may also steer clear of drastically reshaping FL-9 — it currently has a mild Democratic lean, but its redder holdings could be transferred out to shore up adjacent GOP seats. North of Orlando, Republicans will likely target Rep. Stephanie Murphy’s (D, FL-7) district — though it contains some of Orlando proper, suburban Seminole County makes up the majority of FL-7. Unlike districts 9 and 10, the 7th has a white majority. Though the trends for Republicans in Seminole County have not been good (it was a Trump-to-Biden county), legislators could make it redder by giving it parts of working-class Volusia County, or rural precincts of Lake County. If FL-7 is heavily altered, Murphy, who is a leader in the moderate Blue Dog Coalition, may be able to run in a new version of FL-10, as Rep. Val Demings (D, FL-10) is running for Senate (though other credible Democratic candidates have already announced bids for the open seat). Over in the Tampa Bay area, FL-13, which takes up three-quarters of Pinellas County, is another Blue Dog district that Republicans will have their eye on. Former Gov. Charlie Crist — who has, under three partisan labels, been a fixture in state politics for the last quarter-century — won this seat in 2016, but is now running for his old job. Before 2016, the legislature grouped most of the heavily Black precincts in St. Petersburg, Crist’s hometown, into Rep. Kathy Castor’s safely blue FL-14, which was focused on downtown Tampa (both parts of the district touched Tampa Bay, so the seat was contiguous). When the entirety of St. Petersburg was put back into FL-13, Crist ran and beat then-Rep. David Jolly (R) 52%-48% — those precincts were decisive. With a friendly court, Republicans may try to put parts of St. Petersburg back into FL-14, though Democrats would probably cite the Fair Districts Amendment and sue. If Republicans wanted to go a less risky route, FL-13 is one of the few districts in the state that needs to gain population — they could simply add some redder Pinellas County precincts that are currently in FL-12. This district is competitive enough already that a Republican might be able to win it as its currently drawn, and Republicans may very well attempt to make it redder. Finally, in south Florida, Republicans will probably be more interested in shoring up their current members than targeting Democrats. In 2020, three Cuban-American Republicans were elected to represent the Miami area: veteran Rep. Mario Diaz-Balart (R, FL-25) was unopposed for a 10th term, while now-Reps. Carlos Gimenez (R, FL-26) and Maria Elvira Salazar (R, FL-27) ousted Democratic incumbents who were first elected in 2018. Salazar is the only one of the trio who holds a Biden seat, though the president’s three-point margin in her district was down considerably from Hillary Clinton’s 20% margin from 2016. Republicans may remove parts of Miami Beach, which has a sizeable white liberal bloc, and give Salazar more ethnically Cuban precincts that are currently in Diaz-Balart’s seat. Gimenez may also want some help — though Trump carried his FL-26 by six points, it gave Clinton 57%. If Trump’s numbers with Cubans represent a new normal, the GOP’s Miami-area incumbents should have little to fear. But Republican legislators would be wise to draw the lines with the understanding that this may not be the case. Ultimately, Florida, like the other states mentioned here, is a state where Republicans likely will go as far as courts let them — or as far as they think courts will let them. GEORGIANumber of seats: 14 (no change from 2010s) Party breakdown in 2012: 9-5 R Current party breakdown: 8-6 R Most overpopulated district: GA-7 (Greater Atlanta) Most underpopulated district: GA-2 (Southwest Georgia) Who controls redistricting: Republicans 2012 control: Republicans Georgia has been at the forefront of national politics over the last year. After hosting a razor-thin presidential contest and two blockbuster Senate runoff elections, the Peach State will once again find itself in the national spotlight when maps are redrawn later this year. Though Democrats have found success in recent statewide elections, Republicans will be overseeing the mapmaking process because they still have majorities in both chambers of the state legislature and hold the governorship. With that trifecta, Republicans will face a tough balancing act: they will want to stymie Democratic gains in the Atlanta area but also protect their own incumbents — all while keeping the Voting Rights Act in mind. To understand the daunting task that Georgia Republicans face, we must take a trip back in time to the early 2000s. Back then, Democrats had dominated state government since Reconstruction, but they faced an increasingly competitive GOP. Republicans were beginning to post impressive numbers in the state’s rural areas and cut into the Democrats’ state legislative majorities. Democrats, seeing the writing on the wall, concocted egregious congressional and state legislative gerrymanders to preserve their dwindling grip on power. The congressional map was certainly not easy on the eyes. The 2002 Almanac of American Politics noted that the map must be “admired for its creativity.” The state was awarded two new seats in the 2000 census, and, not coincidentally, both were drawn to favor Democrats. Still, the Almanac authors warned that the map may not last the entire decade, citing not only Republicans’ rise to power but several federal lawsuits challenging the legality of the maps. “This work of art may not endure,” the Almanac noted. Sure enough, they were right. Courts threw out the Democrats’ state legislative maps, paving the way for Republicans to grab control of state government for the first time since Reconstruction. One of their first orders of business was redrawing the congressional map in a rare mid-decade redistricting session. The new map was much more compact and split fewer counties than its predecessor. Republicans also attempted to make more life more difficult for then-Reps. John Barrow (D, GA-12) and Jim Marshall (D, GA-8), two white Democrats with moderate voting records. Despite facing tougher constituencies, both Democrats were narrowly reelected in 2006’s broader Democratic wave. In 2010, Rep. Sanford Bishop (D, GA-2), in the southwest, faced a surprisingly close race — so close that some news networks called it for his Republican opponent on Election Night. Elsewhere, Marshall lost reelection to now-Rep. Austin Scott (R, GA-8), but Barrow was comfortably reelected. In the 2011 redistricting session, Republicans decided to make a tradeoff in order to protect Scott: Bibb County, which includes Macon, was the anchor of Scott’s district. GOP mapmakers decided to cede Bibb to Bishop in exchange for adding more rural counties to the 8th — importantly, as we’ll see later, this pushed the Black population share in GA-2 to over 50%. They also had their sights set on Barrow once again: they removed Savannah from his district and added more rural counties such as Coffee and Jeff Davis. When Barrow lost in 2014, he was the only remaining white Democrat in the Deep South — with his loss, the map produced its intended 10-4 Republican split. This brings us to the upcoming redistricting process. Recent Democratic gains in the metro Atlanta suburbs have shifted the delegation from 10-4 to 8-6 Republican. In the 6th District, Rep. Lucy McBath (D) pulled off one of the biggest upsets of the 2018 midterms when she ousted Rep. Karen Handel (R), who had just won a high-dollar special election for this suburban district the previous year. The 6th also saw one of the largest swings from Barack Obama in 2012 to Joe Biden in 2020 of any district in the nation, going from Obama -23 to Biden+11. Handel waged a rematch in 2020, which McBath won comfortably. In the 7th District, which includes most of rapidly diversifying Gwinnett County, now-Rep. Carolyn Bourdeaux (D) came within 500 votes of ousting Rep. Rob Woodall (R) in what was the single closest House race of the entire 2018 campaign. Woodall decided against running for reelection in 2020, and Bourdeaux narrowly defeated emergency room physician Rich McCormick (R) in the general election, making her the only Democrat to flip a competitive Republican-held district in 2020. Republicans are going to have to address their recent decline across the metro Atlanta suburbs, where they still have plenty of room to fall. No one knows what the map will end up looking like, but the general consensus seems to be that Republicans will attempt to combine the bluest parts of the 6th and 7th districts into one safely Democratic vote sink, in exchange for creating a new solidly Republican seat in rural and exurban northeast Georgia. On Map 1, GA-7, a checkmark-shaped district arching across the Atlanta metro, would have given Biden a 30-point margin, while the much redder 6th District is stretched up to the northern border. Map 1: Hypothetical 9-5 Republican Georgia gerrymanderSo if Republicans spread themselves out efficiently, most of their districts would end up being between 60% and 65% Trump — this is the case for seven of their nine seats on Map 1. Districts 1 and 12 are each closer to 55% Trump, but both are racially polarized and outside of their urban centers (Savannah and Augusta, respectively), Democratic support drops off steeply. GA-7’s unique demographic trajectory may be one reason why Republicans may preserve it as a Democratic-leaning seat: it was originally drawn to be about 50% white but is now firmly a majority-nonwhite seat, so big changes could be seen as a violation of the Voting Rights Act by Democratic redistricting lawyers. Still, a judge may also note that Section 2 of the VRA mandates that some districts be drawn so that certain minority groups can elect candidates of their choice. Though the 7th District is now majority-minority, Bourdeaux herself is white, and the district also includes a mix of different types of voters of color (the district is roughly two-fifths white, a fifth Black, a fifth Hispanic, and a sixth Asian). We asked Charles Bullock, a redistricting expert at the University of Georgia who recently released a second edition of his excellent book, Redistricting: The Most Political Activity in America, about the 7th District. He noted that plaintiffs in a lawsuit based on the VRA’s Section 2 would face the challenge of showing that members of the three non-Hispanic white ethnic groups vote alike. Some Republicans have also suggested that Bishop’s GA-2 might be at risk — the version on Map 1 gave Biden a not-overwhelming 57%, and it could easily be made more Republican. Carving out a redder district in southwest Georgia may seem enticing for the GOP, but a move like this could be seen as a violation of the Voting Rights Act. Unlike the 7th, the 2nd was intended to be a majority-minority district (remember, Republicans did this on purpose a decade ago in order to shore up the then-newly-elected Scott next door in GA-8). Black voters in the 2nd may feel disenfranchised if they are unable to have appropriate representation in Congress. Plus, it’s not guaranteed that a more competitive district in Southwest Georgia would be completely unwinnable for Bishop. His moderate stances on abortion and gun rights have played well with rural white voters over the years. And while we may live in era where down-ticket races are becoming increasingly tied to presidential races, Bishop maintains a respectable amount of crossover support. Bullock agreed that the district might be redrawn in such a way that Bishop could hold it, but perhaps not another Democrat if Bishop retired at some point this decade (Bishop is 74). To make a long story short, Republicans are now facing the same predicament that Democrats faced two decades ago. Their majorities in the state legislature are getting smaller, the minority party has been surprisingly successful in recent statewide elections, and they are facing a grim outlook in areas of the state where they once dominated. Republicans are aware that redistricting could be their last chance to forestall new Democratic gains in state government. NORTH CAROLINANumber of seats: 14 (+1 from 2010s) Party breakdown in 2012: 9-4 R Current party breakdown: 8-5 R Most overpopulated district: NC-12 (Charlotte) Most underpopulated district: NC-1 (Northeast North Carolina) Who controls redistricting: Republicans 2012 control: Republicans Tar Heel State Republicans drew two effective gerrymanders in the 2010s. The first one, which was in effect for the 2012 and 2014 elections, aimed to reverse a Democratic gerrymander from the 2000s, which helped Democrats maintain a narrow 7-6 advantage in the state even in the 2010 Republican wave. Republicans immediately won a 9-4 edge in 2012, and they got to their goal of 10-3 by 2014. But then a federal court threw out that map for packing too many minority voters into too few districts. So Republicans went back to the drawing board and drew another 10-3 map; as part of that, they unwound the serpentine and heavily litigated NC-12, a majority-minority district that took in Black pockets in Greensboro, Winston-Salem, and Charlotte. That district is now entirely contained within Charlotte’s Mecklenburg County. State courts, led by a Democratic-controlled state Supreme Court, unwound the congressional map once again during the 2020 cycle, which forced North Carolina Republicans to make some actual concessions. So they drew two new safe Democratic seats, one in Winston-Salem/Greensboro/High Point and the other in the Raleigh area, and the state elected an 8-5 Republican delegation. Republicans kept control of the state House and Senate last year, and while North Carolina has a Democratic governor, Roy Cooper, he has no role in redistricting and cannot veto maps. Democrats do still have control of the state Supreme Court, although a rough 2020 cycle cut their 6-1 edge to 4-3. Democrats hope that the precedent from the recent state court decisions that reconfigured the past map could constrain Republican gerrymandering. Republicans hope to grab the majority on the court in the 2022 election, and their narrow victory in the race for the court’s chief justice position last year might also provide them some logistical advantages in a Democratic lawsuit over gerrymandering. In any event, North Carolina is adding a 14th seat. If North Carolina Republicans essentially try to recreate something along the lines of a 10-4 version of their previous gerrymanders from the last decade, it’s not hard to imagine what they could do. Map 2 is a potential 10-4 Republican gerrymander. Map 2: Hypothetical 10-4 Republican North Carolina gerrymanderDemocrats made a serious attempt at unseating Rep. Richard Hudson (R, NC-8) in 2020, but he held on by nearly seven percentage points. Though he retains much of Fayetteville, the 8th moves further into the GOP-leaning Piedmont. On Map 2, the new 14th District is added in the western Charlotte metro area. It is rumored that Republican state House Speaker Tim Moore, who hails from Cleveland County, is considering a congressional run, so this may be a configuration he’d favor. When North Carolina added a 13th district after the 2000 census, then-state Sen. Brad Miller, a Democrat who had a hand in drawing the new maps, made sure the new NC-13 included his home turf — he was elected when the map was enacted, for 2002, and served until he was drawn out by Republicans a decade later. Democratic Reps. Deborah Ross (D, NC-2) and Kathy Manning (D, NC-6) each retain their bases, in Raleigh and Greensboro, respectively, but veteran Rep. David Price’s NC-4 is essentially dismantled. Price, who lives in Chapel Hill, would be drawn into a district that would geographically favor Manning. A map like this could prompt Price, who turns 81 later this month, to retire. NC-1 as currently drawn is an interesting case: It became markedly less Democratic as the most recent map essentially unpacked it by removing Durham (though Map 2 puts Durham back into NC-1, that may ultimately not be the case). Rep. G. K. Butterfield (D, NC-1) and Biden both carried the current district by roughly 8.5 points. It’s not impossible to imagine the district being competitive in a bad Democratic year. Just like a few other southern districts with substantial minority populations (the district includes a number of rural counties that are majority Black) NC-1 is not growing. Going into the 2010 round of redistricting, NC-1 needed to pick up almost 100,000 residents — this time, it is the only North Carolina seat that needs to add population. Republicans may just end up being safest leaving it alone for legal reasons, and perhaps they will be able to compete for the district at some point in the decade anyway. Short of moving Durham back into the district, Butterfield’s best scenario would be picking up Pasquotank County (Elizabeth City) while dropping some red rural turf around Greenville or Goldsboro — this would nudge the district slightly leftward. While Rep. Madison Cawthorn (R, NC-11) has become a major lightning rod in Washington, he should be fine almost regardless. In the initial Republican gerrymander in advance of the 2012 election, the GOP helped push then-Rep. Heath Shuler (D, NC-11) toward retirement by removing Democratic precincts from the liberal city of Asheville from his western Carolina district. Shuler was replaced by Mark Meadows (R), later one of President Donald Trump’s chiefs of staff. The most recent North Carolina map now has all of Asheville in it, but Republican performance in other parts of the Appalachian district has improved. When Shuler was last reelected, in a competitive 2010 contest, he did better in some rural counties than he did in Asheville’s Buncombe County. Today, aside from running up the score in Buncombe County, Democrats would probably prioritize limiting their losses in Henderson County — this ancestrally GOP county was Shuler’s worst in 2010, but Biden was the best-performing Democratic nominee in this growing county since Jimmy Carter, in 1976. Still, Cawthorn and Trump each carried the district by about a dozen points, so Republicans should feel fairly secure with a similar seat. Overall, though Republicans could draw some creative plans, North Carolina is probably his is another state where they need to be careful about spreading themselves too thin — especially in growing metropolitan areas where Democratic performance has been improving, most notably the growing Greater Charlotte and Triangle areas. TEXASNumber of seats: 38 (+2 from 2010s) Party breakdown in 2012: 24-12 R Current party breakdown: 23-13 R Most overpopulated district: TX-22 (Houston Suburbs/Exurbs: Ft. Bend/Brazoria counties) Most underpopulated district: TX-34 (South Texas: Brownsville/Harlingen) Who controls redistricting: Republicans 2012 control: Republicans A mid-1960s scholarly article on gerrymandering has as part of its title “Dragons, Bacon Strips, and Dumbbells,” which are terms sometimes used to describe what heavily gerrymandered districts look like. There’s no shortage of these kinds of shapes in Texas, one of or perhaps the most consistently gerrymandered state in the country for many decades: previously by Democrats, now by Republicans. Back in 1994, a year when Republicans won a majority of seats in the South for the first time in modern history (and the House majority for the first time in four decades), the Democratic gerrymander of Texas endured: Republicans won the aggregate statewide House vote by 14 points, but won only 11 of the state’s 30 seats (that aggregate vote is inflated, as Democrats left five seats uncontested while Republicans had a candidate in every seat, but this was still a clear gerrymander). In the Democrats’ 2018 national wave year, Republicans won 64% of the seats with less than 52% of the two-party vote (though the Republicans left four seats unopposed). There’s no question that Texas has become a more competitive state at the presidential level in recent years. Mitt Romney won the state by 16 points in 2012, and then Donald Trump won it by only nine in 2016 (that was as the national popular vote contracted from Barack Obama by four to Hillary Clinton by two, so Texas became markedly less Republican compared to the nation as a whole). In 2020, Trump won the state by 5.5 points, meaning that Trump did about 3.5 points worse last year than he did in 2016. This is evident across the state’s gerrymandered districts, many of which got much more competitive over the course of the decade as Republican strength waned in growing suburban areas across the state. Trump’s 2020 margin was at least 10 points worse than Romney’s 2012 margin in 15 of the state’s 36 districts. Moreover, the Republican slippage was apparent in the state’s close 2018 Senate race, when 20 of the 36 districts voted more Democratic than the state as a whole. Democrats, at both the presidential and congressional level, flipped two formerly Safe Republican seats by the end of the decade: those now held by Reps. Colin Allred (D, TX-32) and Lizzie Pannill Fletcher (D, TX-7). Biden flipped a third, TX-24, but first-term Rep. Beth Van Duyne (R) narrowly held it as an open seat last fall, and he came within three points or less of flipping seven more. In other words, the Republican gerrymander generally endured, but it was showing major signs of strain by last fall. Though Texas is getting closer at the presidential level, it still pretty clearly leans Republican, and that’s a little more pronounced at the congressional level. In all 23 seats they won, the Republican House candidate got a larger share of the vote than Trump. Republican challengers also did better than Trump against the two new Democratic incumbents, Fletcher and Allred, which indicates a lingering Republicanism below the surface even in some districts that are clearly leaning Democratic now at the presidential level. The Democrats did not gain everywhere in the state at the presidential level, though. Joe Biden’s 2020 margin was between 14-19 points worse than Barack Obama’s 2012 margin in three districts — TX-15, TX-28, and TX-34 — that cover South Texas, although the districts’ three Democratic incumbents all did at least a little bit better than Biden. With 38 districts for Republicans to draw, and Democratic lawsuits a certainty, we’re not going to pretend to be able to handicap what might happen, other than to say that our expectation is that Republicans will come out of Texas with a bigger advantage in the delegation than they hold now. How much bigger? It’s hard to say. Still, there are some observations we can make: — Many of the Republican-held districts where GOP performance eroded in the 2010s are, to borrow the term from above, “bacon strips” that extend out from major urban areas into rural areas and or link two urban areas with wide swathes of dark red Republican areas in between. Perhaps the most striking example of this is TX-21, held by Rep. Chip Roy (R). His district stretches from downtown Austin to northern San Antonio, while also taking in rural areas whose most famous inhabitant was President Lyndon B. Johnson. Republicans will want to strengthen many of these districts, or they risk losing them later in the decade. — One way to do that would be to make some Democratic districts stronger, or even create a new Democratic vote sink or two to make the other districts more reliably Republican. For instance, Republicans may consider drawing a safely Democratic district in Austin as a way to protect several Republican incumbents whose districts currently cover parts of Austin’s Travis County. This is something the Republicans arguably could or should have done last decade, although it didn’t end up hurting them, as they held all their Travis County seats the whole decade despite some close calls. Tadeusz Mrozek, an Election Twitter mapmaker, drew a hypothetical Republican gerrymander that creates a new, heavily Democratic district in Austin but otherwise is designed to elect 27 Republicans and 11 Democrats statewide. Republicans may also decide that, instead of targeting Allred and/or Fletcher, they could just change their currently Democratic-leaning swing seats into very safe Democratic districts. — In the Houston area, Rep. Kevin Brady’s (R, TX-8) retirement may be convenient for Republicans. While TX-8 takes in some rural counties, the heart of the district is Montgomery County, a veritable wellspring of Republican votes — in fact, it was the only county, nationally, that gave Trump a margin greater than 100,000 raw votes in both 2016 and 2020. Without an incumbent to consider, GOP mappers could unpack Brady’s 8th District to buffer up adjacent Republican districts. — Depending on how enduring the Trump 2020 surge was among Latinos in South Texas — and this is an open question, although some signs of Democratic weakness in the region also appeared in Beto O’Rourke’s (D) otherwise impressive but unsuccessful challenge of Sen. Ted Cruz (R-TX) in 2018 — Republicans very well may try to grab one of those three South Texas seats. Rep. Filemon Vela (D, TX-34) has already announced his retirement from one of them. One of the themes in public reporting about GOP gerrymandering efforts across the country is a push and pull between being maximally aggressive and grabbing as many Democratic seats as possible in order to ensure a 2022 House majority versus being a bit less aggressive and designing districts that can elect Republicans throughout the decade. Rep. Patrick McHenry (R, NC-10) summed it up in a quote to Politico: “There’s an old saying: Pigs get fat. Hogs get slaughtered. And when it comes to redistricting, that is, in fact, the case.” We’ll spare you any more reference to pig products and pig product production, as there’s been plenty of that in this section, although Democrats reading this are plenty queasy already. ConclusionEven if we assume only modest gerrymandering by Republicans — and that is not a safe assumption, but let’s make it here just for the sake of argument — it’s easy to see how Republicans could squeeze a half-dozen more net seats out of these four big states. Republicans in Texas could, for instance, go from 23-13 to 25-13 just through making sure the state’s two new seats go to them, or some other combination of changes that gives Democrats a new seat but compensates for that by making an existing Democratic seat more Republican. Georgia Republicans could add a seat by altering one of the Democratic-held GA-6 or GA-7, making one markedly bluer and the other markedly redder. North Carolina Republicans could ensure that the state’s new seat is a Republican seat, and Florida Republicans could do the same while altering one other current Democratic seat, either FL-13 in the Tampa Bay area or FL-7 in the Orlando area, in such a way that a Republican wins it next year. So that would be six seats right there. And Republicans in these states probably will go further than this, with some of the possibilities outlined above, although doing so may carry more risk, particularly if Republicans stretch themselves too thin in big metro areas where their strength has eroded in recent years, most notably Atlanta, Dallas-Ft. Worth, Houston, Austin, Raleigh, and Charlotte. That we did not mention any Florida cities in that list — Republicans generally have held up better in that state’s big urban areas — is an indication that perhaps Florida represents the GOP’s best gerrymandering opportunity of this group, despite the state’s seeming restrictions on such activity. We’re now through almost the entire South in our ongoing redistricting series — the only Southern state we haven’t touched on yet is Virginia, and the state doesn’t really vote like the rest of the South anymore anyway (we’ll tackle the Old Dominion in a future part of this series) — and the GOP’s redistricting dominance in the region is obvious. In the coming weeks, we’ll explore other regions where Democrats are better-positioned, or at least perhaps not-as-badly positioned, and see where Democrats might be able to make up some of the ground they appear poised to lose in the South. Read the fine printLearn more about the Crystal Ball and find out how to contact us here. Sign up to receive Crystal Ball e-mails like this one delivered straight to your inbox. Use caution with Sabato’s Crystal Ball, and remember: “He who lives by the Crystal Ball ends up eating ground glass!” |
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© Copyright by the Rector and Visitors of the University of Virginia |
38.) THE BLAZE
39.) THE FEDERALIST
40.) REUTERS
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41.) NOQ REPORT
42.) ARRA NEWS SERVICE
43.) REDSTATE
After Joe Biden Negates Property Rights, Liz Cheney Focuses on What Truly Matters
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44.) WORLD NET DAILY
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45.) MSNBC
August 5, 2021 THE LATEST The frustrating truth at the heart of Andrew Cuomo’s ‘defense’ by Jessica Levinson New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo is in trouble. An independent investigation found credible evidence that Cuomo sexually harassed at least a dozen women during his time in office. Cuomo tried to defend himself on Tuesday, blaming his alleged behavior on everyone but himself. “If I closed my eyes and just listened, I could practically hear him saying women who have survived assault are damaged goods and should not be trusted — but of course, that part went unsaid,” Jessica Levinson writes.
And while Cuomo’s specific behavior is terrible, Levinson writes, “this alleged culture of sexual harassment didn’t flourish overnight; it was cultivated over time. And it is highly unlikely that Cuomo’s office is the only politician’s office that operates this way.”
Read Jessica Levinson’s full analysis here and don’t forget to check out the rest of your Thursday MSNBC Daily. TOP STORIES Matt Damon — and many other famous men — need to stop this cycle. Read More Florida’s infections and hospitalizations are not a media creation; they’re painfully real. Read More TOP VIDEOS NEXT 25 Help us celebrate MSNBC’s first 25 years by joining us every day for 25 days as our anchors, hosts and correspondents share their thoughts on where we’ve been — and where we’re going.
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46.) BIZPAC REVIEW
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47.) ABC
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48.) NBC MORNING RUNDOWN
To ensure delivery to your inbox add email@mail.nbcnews.com to your contacts Today’s Top Stories from NBC News THURSDAY, AUGUST 5, 2021 Good morning, NBC News readers.
We have the latest public health advice on why people should continue to wear masks and get tested after receiving their Covid shots, how President Biden plans to make half of all new cars electric, and the latest from the Tokyo Olympics.
Here’s the latest on that and everything else we’re watching this Thursday morning. As the highly transmissible delta variant sweeps across the country, the message from public health experts is clear: don’t ditch the mask yet — even if you’ve had a Covid vaccine.
“I think it’s critical to be masking indoors no matter where you live,” said Susan Hassig, an epidemiologist at the Tulane University School of Public Health and Tropical Medicine, as her home state of Louisiana was poised to exceed the peak of hospitalized Covid-19 patients since the pandemic began.
Every parish in the state is at the highest risk level, as the delta variant leaves the country grappling with a surging virus once again.
“I can’t tell you how different it feels than ever before,” Hassig said. “This virus is moving so fast. More and more counties on the local levels are turning orange and red every day. It’s critical to mask and test on suspicion of exposure.”
Other parts of the South, including Florida and Tennessee, are also struggling with Covid-19 surges as their vaccination rates remain below 50 percent of their populations.
Read the full story here.
Also in Covid news today:
Thursday’s Top Stories
Also in the News
Editor’s Pick
Shopping
Ophthalmologists and eye surgeons explain why your glasses fog up when you wear a mask and recommend face masks and accessories to help you avoid the irritating phenomenon. One Fun Thing
Christopher Meloni is hot.
And not just because he’s got a hot new(ish) show, “Law & Order: Organized Crime,” a spinoff of “Special Victims Unit,” which itself was a spinoff of “Law & Order.”
Meloni, 60, is seriously smoking in pictures to accompany a new interview in Men’s Health, where we see him doing the splits, popping some serious biceps and pretending to drag a truck.
Read more here.
Thanks for reading the Morning Rundown.
If you have any comments — likes, dislikes — send me an email at: patrick.smith@nbcuni.com.
Thanks, Patrick Smith Want to receive NBC Breaking News and Special Alerts in your inbox? Get the NBC News Mobile App |
49.) NBC FIRST READ
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From NBC’s Chuck Todd, Mark Murray and Ben Kamisar
FIRST READ: Rising Covid cases take a toll on Biden’s standing
Just a little more than a month ago, Covid cases in the U.S. had flatlined to an average of about 10,000 a day, as President Biden was declaring the country’s independence from the virus.
Now cases have shot up to an average of nearly 100,000, especially in less-vaccinated parts of the country, and it’s all taken a toll on Biden’s handing of the issue.
According to a new CNBC poll – conducted by the same Dem and GOP firms who do the NBC poll – Biden’s approval rating for his handling of the coronavirus has dropped 9 points from 62 percent among all adults in April to 53 percent now.
Biden’s overall approval rating in the poll is at a middling 48 percent.
And per a Quinnipiac poll released yesterday, 53 percent of Americans approve of his Covid handling – down from 65 percent in May.
His overall approval rating in the Q-poll is at 46 percent.
AFP – Getty Images
As we’ve said before, how Covid goes in the United States, so goes the Biden presidency.
“If he gets [vaccinations] right, he will oversee a less pessimistic American public; he’ll get a stronger economy; and he’ll do something that his predecessor was unable to execute in his final days,” we wrote the day before Biden’s inauguration.
Make no mistake: The sky isn’t falling for Biden; his overall numbers are as strong or stronger than Trump’s ever were during his four years as president.
But all the numbers are a reminder that Biden’s political situation doesn’t improve until the Covid situation does.
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Biden vs. DeSantis
By the way, the overall Covid situation in the United States had led to exchanges like this.
Here was Biden on Tuesday: “[I]f you aren’t going to help, at least get out of the way of the people who are trying to do the right thing,” the president said of governors who he said are not using their office and resources to defeat the virus. “Use your power to save lives.”
And here was Florida Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis yesterday firing back at Biden: “If you’re trying to deny kids a proper in-person education, I’m going to stand in your way and I’m going to stand up for the kids in Florida. If you’re trying to restrict people, impose mandates, if you’re trying to ruin their jobs and their livelihoods and their small business, if you are trying to lock people down, I am standing in your way and I’m standing for the people of Florida.”
(For the record, Biden has called for schools to be open, and he isn’t imposing lockdowns.)
DeSantis added, “Why don’t you do your job, why don’t you get this border secure and until you do that, I don’t want to hear a blip about COVID from you.”
(Also for the record, Florida doesn’t share a border with Mexico or any another country.)
It’s become a tried and true practice for Republicans: When in doubt, talk about the border – even if your state is thousands of miles of away for the U.S.-Mexico border.
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Data Download: The numbers you need to know today
35,470,411: The number of confirmed cases of coronavirus in the United States, per the most recent data from NBC News and health officials. (That’s 122,557 more than yesterday morning.)
618,60: The number of deaths in the United States from the virus so far, per the most recent data from NBC News. (That’s 668 more than yesterday morning.)
348,102,478: The number of vaccine doses administered in the U.S., per the CDC. (That’s 725,329 since yesterday morning.)
49.8 percent: The share of all Americans who are fully vaccinated, per the CDC.
60.7 percent: The share of all American adults at least 18 years of age who are fully vaccinated, per CDC.
50 percent: The share of new cars and trucks sold by 2030 that the White House wants to be electric. Top automakers announced Thursday they were aiming for a similar goal.
Net-zero: The carbon emissions goal by 2050 that Exxon is considering pledging, according to the Wall Street Journal.
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TWEET OF THE DAY: For relaxing times, make it Suntory time
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ICYMI: What ELSE is happening in the world?
Prosecutors are investigating New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo, as lawmakers warn impeaching him could take months.
Mississippi and Arkansas are among the states running out of intensive care unit beds amid the latest Covid surge.
The Washington Post breaks down what we know about the new delta-plus variant.
And here’s what vaccinated parents of kids under 12 should know about the delta variant.
Officer Michael Fanone speaks with Time Magazine about the Jan. 6 attack and its aftermath.
In Texas, progressive Jessica Cisneros is once again challenging Rep. Henry Cuellar, D-Texas.
A federal judge ordered lawyers who filed a case in Colorado questioning the results of the 2020 election to pay the legal fees of their opponents as punishment for the “frivolous” filing.
Kansas GOP Sen. Jerry Moran joined the bipartisan group backing the infrastructure deal, but has voted against it moving forward twice.
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50.) CBS
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51.) REASON
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52.) MANHATTAN INSTITUTE
53.) LOUDER WITH CROWDER
UFC President Dana White is the most based president in America. At least, until we get to say the words, “President Ron DeSantis.” While the sports media was demanding sports pander to panic porn, … MORE
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55.) REALCLEARPOLITICS MORNING NOTE
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56.) REALCLEARPOLITICS TODAY
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57.) CENTER FOR SECURITY POLICY
58.) BERNARD GOLDBERG
59.) SARA A. CARTER
60.) TWITCHY
61.) HOT AIR
62.) 1440 DAILY DIGEST
No images? Click here Good morning. It’s Thursday, Aug. 5, and we’re covering the fallout from the Cuomo report, an Olympian who fled Belarus, and much more. Have feedback? Let us know at hello@join1440.com. First time reading? Sign up here. NEED TO KNOWPressure Grows on Cuomo Calls for New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo (D) to resign continued to mount yesterday, following the Tuesday release of a report concluding he sexually harassed at least 11 women in recent years. A number of high-profile lawmakers have said Cuomo should step down (see list), including Sens. Chuck Schumer (D) and Kirsten Gillibrand (D), House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D), and President Joe Biden. The civil probe concluded Cuomo likely broke federal and state laws in a number of instances. Westchester County and Manhattan officials reportedly requested documents yesterday, though experts say the burden of proof in a criminal trial would be higher than what is presented in the report. Cuomo, who faces reelection next year, said he would not resign in comments following the report’s release. The Democratic-led state legislature has said it is considering moving forward with impeachment proceedings; see how that works in the state here. See our previous write-up on the report here. Olympic DefectionBelarusian Olympic athlete Krystsina Tsimanouskaya safely landed in Poland yesterday, days after refusing to return home over fears for her safety. The sprinter had criticized her team’s management on social media and said she feared reprisal from the country’s authoritarian government led by Alexander Lukashenko. Tsimanouskaya, who says handlers attempted to force her to board a Belarus-bound plane Sunday, was granted an emergency visa by Polish officials. Lukashenko, the only person to serve as the country’s president since the office was established in 1994, has attempted to wipe out political dissent since declaring victory in an August election that outside officials say was marred by fraud (Lukashenko claimed to have received 80% of the vote). Tsimanouskaya’s defection comes as two main opposition figures began a closed-door trial in the country. Florida’s COVID-19 SurgeThe number of patients in Florida hospitalized with COVID-19 has surpassed 11,500, or 13% higher than the previous peak in July 2020, the state’s hospital association said yesterday. Officials also said that more than 86% of intensive care beds were occupied by patients across all ailments. The news comes as the US continues to grapple with a surge in new COVID-19 cases, primarily driven by the more transmissible delta variant (what we know). The country’s rolling seven-day average of new cases sits at more than 90,000 per day, while daily deaths are averaging roughly 400, a 60% increase over the past two weeks. Just under 50% of Florida’s population is fully vaccinated, according to state data. The state accounts for almost one-in-five new cases across the country; see US hot spots by county here. Globally, the number of reported COVID-19 infections passed 200 million yesterday, with the World Health Organization calling for a ban on vaccine boosters until every country is at least 10% vaccinated. In partnership with CARIUMASNEAKERS IN HIGH DEMANDHow exactly does a sneaker end up with a 26,000+ person waitlist? We’ll count the ways, because the 1440 team loves CARIUMA: The brand making better sneakers for you and planet Earth. Their bestselling, crazy-comfy styles are made with sustainably sourced natural materials and designed for a classic look. For example, OCA is the low-impact sneaker with the big waitlist: This CARIUMA signature is now back in stock, handcrafted with organic canvas and responsibly sourced rubber. Another crowd-pleaser is the low-carbon footprint IBI, a knit sneaker made with bamboo, recycled PET and sugarcane. Or when you’re on the go, take it easy in the new IBI Slip-On, made with 3x less carbon than the industry average. Find your perfect pair: 1440 readers receive an exclusive 15% off CARIUMA sneakers for a limited time! Please support our sponsors! IN THE KNOWSports, Entertainment, & Culture> Olympics: Canada’s Andre de Grasse wins gold in men’s 200 meters as Americans Kenneth Bednarek and Noah Lyles take silver and bronze (More) | American Ryan Crouser breaks Olympic record to take gold in shot put (More) > MLB releases full 2022 regular season schedule with opening day set for March 31 (More) | Hall of Fame Game tonight (8 pm ET, Fox) between Pittsburgh Steelers and Dallas Cowboys kicks off NFL’s preseason (More) > Singer and fashion mogul Rihanna now a billionaire ($1.7B) and second wealthiest female entertainer behind Oprah, according to Forbes report (More) Science & Technology> Study of synthetic nanobodies derived from llamas provides a near-atomic look at three ways immune system cells can attack the coronavirus (More) > Menopause onset timing can be predicted by analyzing genetic markers, new study finds (More) > Machu Picchu was built decades earlier than previously believed, new radiocarbon dating reveals; study pushes back the timeline of the Inca Empire’s rise to prominence to at least the year 1420 (More) Business & MarketsBrought to you by Sailthru > Shares of free stock trading app Robinhood increase 50% yesterday, have popped over 100% this week following last week’s initial public offering (More) > General Motors misses earnings expectations; earnings dragged down by warranty recall costs (More) | Uber beats revenue and earnings expectations, as Uber Eats segment continues strong growth amid pandemic-induced transportation slowdown (More) > Spirit Airlines apologizes to customers after fourth straight day of flight cancellations stemming from staff shortages and system outages (More) From our partners: Trusted by NASCAR, Thrive Market, and Conde Nast, Sailthru’s cross-channel marketing platform helps marketers deliver personalized experiences to each and every consumer across email, web, and mobile. With the industry’s most robust customer profile, you can deliver meaningful marketing experiences to drive conversions and grow your business. Share in the success and learn more about Sailthru today. Politics & World Affairs> Israel carries out airstrikes in Lebanon in response to ongoing rocket attacks carried out by militants across Israel’s northern border (More) > Officials identify officer slain in Tuesday knife attack near the Pentagon metro station near Washington, DC, as Iraq War veteran George Gonzalez (More) | Attacker identified as Cobb County, Georgia, resident 27-year-old Austin William Lanz (More) > At least 10 people killed after an overloaded van carrying migrants crashes in southern Texas (More) IN-DEPTHAmerica’s Homicide SurgeProPublica | Alec MacGillis. How the city of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, provides a lens on the complex reasons behind the yearslong decline—and subsequent upswing—in the homicide rate in major US cities. (Read) Alien DreamsMIT Press Reader | Wade Roush. The surprisingly long history of mankind’s speculation about the existence and nature of extraterrestrial life. (Read) STYLISH AND COMFORTABLEIn partnership with CARIUMA Take a cue from Mother Nature: Everything looks better in color. And CARIUMA agrees. Sun Yellow! Rose! Mineral Blue! Green! Whether you’re sporting the featherweight bamboo knit IBI or durable cotton canvas OCA, you’ll get everything you want in a bold summer sneaker—classic, good-looking and ultra-comfy, right out of the box. A 1440 exclusive: enjoy 15% off your pair, for a limited time! Please support our sponsors! ETCETERAVisualizing where happiness comes from. The battle over remote work. Lake Tahoe chipmunks reckon with the bubonic plague. Olympic horses spooked by sumo statue. The internet is arguing over this parallel parking job. (paywall, Curbed) Boy saves sister from dog attack, proudly carries the scar. Ice wall collapses at Tennessee’s Titanic museum. Clickbait: “Jetpack guy is back.” Historybook: Space pioneer Neil Armstrong born (1930); RIP Marilyn Monroe (1962); The US, the UK, and the Soviet Union sign Nuclear Test Ban Treaty (1963); RIP Nobel Prize-winning author Toni Morrison (2019). “Mystery creates wonder and wonder is the basis of man’s desire to understand.” – Neil Armstrong Enjoy reading? Forward this email to a friend.Why 1440? The printing press was invented in the year 1440, spreading knowledge to the masses and changing the course of history. Guess what else? There are 1,440 minutes in a day and every one is precious. That’s why we scour hundreds of sources every day to provide a concise, comprehensive, and objective view of what’s happening in the world. Reader feedback is a gift—shoot us a note at hello@join1440.com. Interested in advertising to smart readers like you? Apply here! |
63.) AMERICAN INSTITUTE FOR ECONOMIC RESEARCH
64.) NATIONAL REVIEW
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65.) POLITICAL WIRE
66.) RASMUSSEN REPORTS
67.) ZEROHEDGE
68.) GATEWAY PUNDIT
69.) FRONTPAGE MAG
70.) HOOVER INSTITUTE
71.) DAILY INTELLIGENCE BRIEF
72.) FOUNDATION FOR ECONOMIC EDUCATION
73.) POPULIST PRESS
74.) THE POST MILLENIAL
75.) BLACKLISTED NEWS
76.) THE DAILY DOT
Welcome to the Thursday edition of Internet Insider, where we explore identities online and off. Today:
BREAK THE INTERNET Indigenous TikTokers say they’ve been banned after speaking against oil pipeline After live streaming police violently crashing a religious ceremony and Pipeline 3 protest at Red Lake Treaty Camp—where cops threw down a protester and ripped their shirt—TikTok banned the account of the person who filmed it, @Quiiroi, a Two Spirit Indigenous educator. The ban lasted for over a week.
“About halfway during the ceremony, I went to sit down and take a break, I hear screams [and] I come rushing with my camera, I immediately [turned] my live stream on. Police were there holding a line,” they told the Daily Dot.
Pipeline 3 is a pipeline expansion by oil company Enbridge that cuts across native land in the Midwest. Protesters want the expansion to stop and for the oil company to clean up the abandoned pipeline and the spills it has caused. The original Pipeline 3 spilled 1.7 million gallons of crude oil onto the frozen Prairie River in Grand Rapids, Minnesota.
The livestream by Quiiroi showed police officers from local counties attacking and arresting protesters. That including five to six officers slamming Alex Golden Wolf, a Two Spirit Indigenous leader of the White Earth Nation, to the ground and tearing their shirt before arresting them. “They showed up with tear gas and rubber bullets and guns. We’re in camping gear. I was wearing this camisole and flip flops. And a bandana to keep the sun off the top of my head,” Quirroi said. “Why are [the police] in riot gear?” Over 20 protesters were arrested in the police raid and taken to Pennington County, Minnesota jail. But when Quiiroi tried to use their TikTok account later that day, they couldn’t post anything, learning they were banned until July 30. Then on July 30, Quiiroi was informed that their account was again banned for community guideline violations. “My account was supposedly banned for multiple community guidelines violations,” Quiiroi told the Daily Dot. But Quiiroi does not know where the multiple violations came from. Despite appeals to various official TikTok email accounts as well as calls with other TikTok creators, Quiiroi received silence from the popular platform. Without notice, Quiiroi’s main account was reinstated on Sunday. But given the platform’s track record, Quiiroi could be banned again without warning, all while they’re trying to raise awareness of a pipeline cutting through their land. “Right now the things that we are fighting for, are not just for the benefit of ourselves,” Quiiroi said, “they are for the benefit of not just this generation, the next generation, everyone.” Contributing Writer
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FROM OUR FRIENDS AT NAUTILUS What the CDC’s new guidance on indoor masks means for you “Long COVID” symptoms can include fatigue, difficulty concentrating, shortness of breath, muscle aches, depression, and anxiety. The condition was first found in adults, but several students have indicated a similar condition in children, despite them rarely experiencing severe symptoms of COVID. Researchers are still working to determine how frequently and how severely children can get long COVID, and estimates vary widely. Finding an accurate estimate is essential, however, because upcoming decisions about school closures and vaccine rollouts may depend on the risk the virus poses to children. According to the National Library of Medicine, 12.9% of U.K. children aged 2 to 11 who have COVID symptoms maintain some symptoms five weeks after their initial infection. Of U.K. children aged 12 to 16, 14.5% still have symptoms five weeks after initial infection. A challenge that arises when trying to diagnose long COVID comes about because many people who contracted the virus never got tested for it. In some cases, they may have only been tested after the virus cleared their system. It is also difficult to diagnose because long COVID causes general symptoms that are common in many other illnesses and infections.
Remedies for long COVID are still being researched, but some COVID patients have used physical therapy and their own home remedies to counter the infection. Rebuilding strength and improving organ health can minimize the risk of complications, according to Dr. Hassan Sajjad, an Iowa Mercy Medical Center pulmonologist specializing in post-COVID care. Getting lots of rest and taking over-the-counter pain relievers can also be effective for some long COVID patients who need temporary relief from chronic pain or fever.
SELF-CARE Virtual sex survey—last chance Did you have Zoom, FaceTime, or Skype sex while in lockdown? The Daily Dot wants to include your experience in an upcoming report on how our readers had sex during the pandemic.
This is your last chance to take our Virtual Sex Survey, which can be completed anonymously. You can also share your contact information to help us gather information through a brief interview.
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77.) HEADLINE USA
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78.) NATURAL NEWS
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79.) POLITICHICKS
80.) BLACKPRESSUSA
81.) THE WESTERN JOURNAL
82.) CNN
Thursday 08.05.21 A firefighter in Dallas has been charged after allegedly faking his family’s Covid-19 diagnoses and taking paid leave to go to a resort. Here’s what else you need to know to Get Up to Speed and On With Your Day. Covid-19 vaccine doses sit at a pop-up vaccination site in Springfield, Missouri. Coronavirus
Efforts to get more Americans vaccinated against Covid-19 are growing more urgent as an expert warns that if vaccination rates don’t increase, the dangerous Delta variant could continue to evolve. “The next variant is just around the corner, if we do not all get vaccinated,” Adm. Brett Giroir, the coronavirus testing czar under President Trump, told CNN. A surge in the Delta variant combined with low vaccination rates has sent the US backward in the pandemic, and messages from President Biden’s health officials have sometimes been muddled or contradictory. Florida Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis’ battle with Biden is complicating matters in a state that has seen coronavirus-related hospitalizations rise 13% from their previous peak in July 2020. Globally, the picture is bleak too. The Delta variant is ravaging the world and pushing Southeast Asian nations to the breaking point.
Texas van crash
At least 10 people were killed and 20 others taken to hospitals after a van crashed yesterday on a highway near Encino, Texas, a state Department of Public Safety spokesperson said. There were 30 people inside a white Ford passenger van when the driver tried to make a right turn and “veered off the roadway and struck a metal utility pole and stop sign,” Sgt. Nathan Brandley told CNN. The driver and nine passengers were pronounced deceased at the scene, the department said. At least some of those in the van were believed to be undocumented immigrants, officials told CNN affiliate KRGV.
Iran
Ebrahim Raisi is set to be inaugurated today as Iran’s next president, signaling the start of a new harder-line era that could herald major shifts in the Islamic Republic’s policies at home and abroad. After eight years of Hassan Rouhani’s moderate administration, Iran now turns to Raisi, an ultra-conservative judiciary chief whose views are fully in line with the thinking of the country’s powerful clergy and Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, the final say on all major matters of state. Raisi’s inauguration comes at a pivotal time, with Iran in indirect negotiations with the United States over how to revive the 2015 nuclear agreement.
Mexico
Mexico has filed a lawsuit against 11 gun manufacturers over firearms that flow from the United States across the border and into criminal hands in Mexico, court documents obtained by CNN show. The suit was filed in federal court in Boston and aims “to put an end to the massive damage that the Defendants cause by actively facilitating the unlawful trafficking of their guns to drug cartels and other criminals in Mexico.” Mexico alleges the defendants design, market, distribute and sell guns in ways that routinely arm drug cartels in Mexico. “Defendants design these guns to be easily modified to fire automatically and to be readily transferable on the criminal market in Mexico,” the suit read. Smith & Wesson, Colt and Glock are among named defendants. The companies did not respond immediately to CNN’s request for comment.
Bill Gates
Microsoft founder Bill Gates says he regrets the time he spent with Jeffrey Epstein. “It was a huge mistake to spend time with him, to give him the credibility of being there,” Gates said. Epstein, the wealthy financial manager who was accused of child sex trafficking, was found dead in a New York jail cell in 2019. Speaking yesterday with CNN’s Anderson Cooper, Gates said he only met with Epstein in the hopes of raising more money to deal with global health issues. “I had several dinners with him, you know, hoping that what he said about getting billions of philanthropy for global health through contacts that he had might emerge,” Gates said. “When it looked like that wasn’t a real thing, that relationship ended.”
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Australian Olympians criticized for ‘excessive alcohol consumption’
Giraffes are as socially complex as elephants
Lizzo is pregnant with Captain America’s baby … right?
Hubble captures a stunning image of squabbling galaxies
Olympics update
Simone Biles has thanked a Japanese gym for allowing her to privately train and overcome her struggle with “the twisties,” a mental block in gymnastics where competitors lose track of their positioning midair. Biles said she would “forever be thankful” to Juntendo University “for allowing me to come train separately to try to get my skills back.”
$1.7 billion That’s Rihanna’s estimated net worth, according to Forbes. It makes her the wealthiest female musician and the second-richest woman in entertainment behind Oprah Winfrey. I believe mentorship is one way to help women regain confidence and rebuild their economic strength.
To mark her 40th birthday, Meghan, Duchess of Sussex, has launched a mentorship program to support women getting back into the workforce after the pandemic. The duchess has asked 40 activists, athletes, artists and world leaders to participate. Brought to you by CNN Underscored 13 kitchen tools that take the stress out of meal prepping Having the right gadgets, containers and appliances can seriously streamline your meal prep, saving you time and money. We talked to experts to round up the top tools to help elevate your experience. ‘Death’ by Chocolate Eclair 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 |
- Cuomosexuality
- Our Disgraceful Judges
- California’s Latest Insanity
- Prospective “squad” member loses in Ohio
- The Times’s China syndrome
Cuomosexuality
Posted: 04 Aug 2021 04:38 PM PDT (Steven Hayward)The real mystery of Andrew Cuomo is why he couldn’t seem to get any tail when the entire press corp constantly kissed his ass. Think I exaggerate? The indispensable Jim Geraghty of National Review‘s “Morning Jolt” offers us this sampler:
So I think at this point we can declare that Andrew Cuomo was the Michael Avenatti of the Grand COVID News Cycle. Or maybe the media is just full of Cuomosexuals.
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Our Disgraceful Judges
Posted: 04 Aug 2021 04:20 PM PDT (John Hinderaker)The Black Lives Matter movement and attendant anti-police hysteria are the main reason for skyrocketing crime across America. But there is a second factor that needs to be exposed and condemned: soft-headed judges who don’t take seriously their obligation to protect the public. Scott has been covering the infuriating case of Alexis Saborit, an illegal alien who beheaded his girlfriend in a Minneapolis suburb while she was driving him to court to make an appearance in an arson case. Another homicide has been making the news here, too: Man let out of prison early is charged killing wife, captured in NW. Minnesota after weeks on the run. Note that what follows is from the Minneapolis Star Tribune, a notoriously left-wing newspaper. But maybe even liberals are getting fed up with out-of-control crime:
So it’s another domestic homicide. What is infuriating is the role played by our criminal justice system:
So Reinbold was a would-be pipe bomber whose violent proclivities led to a federal prosecution. Why was he let out of prison early?
This is insane. I suppose there are 50 million Americans (including me) who have borderline high blood pressure and high cholesterol. And if Reinbold had contracted covid–a risk to which people are exposed outside of prisons, too–his chance of survival would have been more than 99 percent. So for this, he was given a “compassionate release.” How about some compassion for members of the public, including his wife and children, who, it turns out, he had tried to murder previously? For liberal judges, compassion is a one-way street. It applies to criminals only. What follows is, frankly, too dumb to deserve comment:
Yeah, so the pipe bomber was going to take great care of his children. Oops, he murdered their mother. And it turns out that he previously had tried to kill them all:
On top of all of this insanity, it turns out that Reinbold had already had covid when he got his “compassionate release” from prison!
So, for absolutely no reason, federal judge John Tunheim freed would-be pipe bomber and car rammer Eric Reinbold to prey on the public, and, as it turned out, his own family, whom he had previously attacked. Thus Lissette Reinbold’s body was found by one of her own children with “multiple stab wounds to her neck, torso and upper extremities.” Nice going, Judge Tunheim. The Star Tribune story doesn’t mention it, but Tunheim is a liberal Democrat, appointed to the federal judiciary by Bill Clinton. Soft-headed judges like Tunheim who put ideology and pro-criminal sentiment over public safety deserve to be named and shamed. This is an issue around which the public needs to be mobilized, and my organization is launching a campaign to inform the public about feckless judges like John Tunheim and to mobilize opposition to pro-criminal judging. Watch for it. Meanwhile, if you want to know more about how a once-great American city has descended into chaos as a result of incompetent leadership, here is the cover story in the Summer issue of Thinking Minnesota that is just now hitting mailboxes: Freefall: State and Twin Cities leaders dither while vulnerable residents live in fear and increasing danger.
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California’s Latest Insanity
Posted: 04 Aug 2021 09:50 AM PDT (Steven Hayward)Never mind rising crime, runaway homelessness, and other afflictions of California; have you heard the latest madness? California may be on the verge of making bacon a contraband substance, or at least a scarce luxury good. From the AP:
This sentence may be my favorite:
“California-compliant hogs.” That phrase used to apply to Harley-Davidson motorcycles, but now. . . Calling Ammo Grrrl: this looks like material for an entire new stand up set—please consider coming out of retirement! How to fight back? Believe it or not, there is help to be found in . . . academia! I have discovered an article in the latest issue of the Journal of the American Philosophical Association—the premier academic journal in the field (which means it’s normally the usual dreck) that warms my heart, as well as my bacon frying pan:
I’m not familiar with this Nick Zangwill fellow, but he is my new hero. (I note separately that he has written sympathetically of Roger Scruton, so I suspect he may very well be One Of Us, or at least a fellow-traveler.) Meanwhile, I’m going to step out to buy a new freezer to stock up on a two-year supply of bacon. (Also sausage, ribs, and pork chops—the other products from Homer Simpson’s “magical animal.”) And I’ll be wearing one of these ribbons on my lapel:
Or I’ll just get this t-shirt:
Chaser:
Grrrrrrr.
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Prospective “squad” member loses in Ohio
Posted: 04 Aug 2021 07:58 AM PDT (Paul Mirengoff)Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez’s “squad” won’t be adding a member from Ohio this year. Last night, in a special election in Ohio’s 11th congressional district, the “establishment” Democrat, Shontel Brown, defeated far-leftist Nina Turner. The margin was around seven points (51-44) when AP called the race for Brown. Turner is a nationally-known figure. Bernie Sanders is a fan, as is Ocasio-Cortez. In fact, Turner served as Sanders’ “chief surrogate” during his presidential runs, according to Politico. As the darling of “progressives,” Turner was able to raise $4.5 million. Brown, whom Hillary Clinton endorsed, raised around $2 million. Yet, Brown prevailed fairly handily. Politico calls Turner’s defeat “a crushing blow to the progressive movement.” Maybe. But even without reinforcements, that movement seems able to wag the dog in Washington. Joe Biden’s patently unconstitutional decision to extend the moratorium on evictions is a case in point. How much difference is there really between an “establishment” Democrat — backed not just by Hillary Clinton but also by James Clyburn, Bennie Thompson, and Marcia Fudge — and a “progressive” backed by Bernie Sanders? It’s a matter of perspective, I suppose. From where I sit, there isn’t much functional difference. But to progressives, the difference apparently is like night and day. Thus, something called “The People’s Party” declared:
Right on, brothers and sisters! To hell with the Democrats, those running dogs of capitalism. Go form that new party.
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The Times’s China syndrome
Posted: 04 Aug 2021 07:18 AM PDT (Scott Johnson)Last year the Washington Free Beacon reported that the New York Times had quietly deleted hundreds of “advertorials” that the Chinese Communist Party paid to publish. This week the Spectator published Dominic Green’s column reporting that the Times suppressed any inquiry into the origins of the Covid epidemic. Dominic’s column links to and builds on the Free Beacon story. Dominic also links to Times reporter Alexandra Stevenson’s tweet below, which is linked in turn to her Times story.
Last night Tucker Carlson put these two stories together in his opening monologue (video below).
The Times submitted this statement to the Spectator:
Dominic includes the Times statement without further comment. It reads to me like an old-fashioned nondenial denial.
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99.) MARK LEVIN
August 4, 2021
On Wednesday’s Mark Levin Show, In light of Gov Andrew Cuomo’s sexual harassment allegations, Jen Psaki was asked for her reaction to the Tara Reade/Joe Biden sexual allegations. Psaki dodged the question and reiterated that Biden believed that all women should be respected after brushing it off as “heavily litigated during the campaign.” Biden and Psaki seem to be done talking about this issue, however, it is impossible to believe Reade and Biden at the same time. Are they sticking to the notion that all women should be believed? Did Reade ever have her day in court? Then, McAllen, Texas is feeling the brunt of the border crisis and has declared a state of emergency after Biden’s policies just dumped 1500 illegal aliens in their small city. Later, Rep Rashida Tlaib is a Hamas-supporting anti-semite and says that Palestinians have been cut off from clean water for a profit. Tlaib was alluding to a global Jewish structure that defends itself against Hamas’ terror attacks. Meanwhile, Iran has blown an Israeli tanker out of the water, and in an act of appeasement, Sec. Blinken says he will leave it to Britain to figure out. Afterward, Biden and the CDC don’t have the authority to extend any eviction moratorium. Moreover, not all renters are facing eviction, this is about power and expanding their massive and spending. When will the freebies end?
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Psaki Avoids Question About Biden Sexually Harassing Tara Reade
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McAllen, TX declares state of DISASTER after Biden dumped 1,500 illegals with COVID last week
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Rep. Rashida Tlaib Accused of Using ‘Anti-Semitic Dog Whistles’ During Speech (Again)
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Whistleblower Exposes Cuomo Nursing Home Scandal (March 26, 2020)
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3 min ago
Levar Burton is the obvious choice.