Good morning! Here is your news briefing for Monday August 9, 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 — 8.9.21
Without a doubt, the Seminole Tribe of Florida had one of their best weekends in history. On Friday, the federal government signed off on the new Gaming Compact between the Tribe and the state, officially giving them the OK to start offering roulette, craps, sports gambling, and even build new casinos.
The Compact is sure to be a boon to the Tribe’s bottom line, and the state stands to gain a lot, too, starting with a guaranteed $2.5 billion over the next five years. Odds are plenty more people will have a good weekend once sports gambling kicks off on Oct. 15 — that’s the weekend of the UF-LSU game, FYI.
Though the Tribe had reason to celebrate, the fan base that bears their name ended the weekend in mourning.
On Sunday morning, legendary FSU football coach Bobby Bowden died at the age of 91. The two-time national champion coach racked up more than 350 wins during his career and led the ‘Noles to a dozen ACC titles and 33 consecutive winning seasons. There may never be another coach like him.
Fans (and the many rivals who couldn’t help but love him) can take solace knowing that he passed on with many family members and loved ones by his side. “It was truly peaceful,” Terry Bowden told The Associated Press.
On a happier note, the NFL inducted a whopping 21 players into the Hall of Fame this weekend, plus a couple of coaches and front office staff for good measure — the League held a doubleheader thanks to the pandemic forced a delay to the 2020 class induction.
The 2021 list included Bucs safety John Lynch, and the 2020 class featured former Dolphins coach Jimmy Johnson. Of course, Peyton Manning earned a spot, as did Charles Woodson, who famously blocked the legendary QB from winning the Heisman a quarter-century ago.
And now for the bittersweet: The Tokyo Olympics are over.
Due to the pandemic, it was possibly the strangest edition of the Summer Games in modern history. Still, there were plenty of historic moments, from Simone Biles putting the spotlight on mental health to Tom Daley knitting in the stands. There were dozens of record-shattering athletic feats. Oh yeah, Team USA also rebounded from a shaky start to finish with 39 golds and 113 medals overall — the most of any country in both metrics.
If the Olympics aren’t your bag, maybe the SPJ Sunshine State Awards are more your speed.
They might not be as glamorous, nor as glittery, but they’re still pretty dang prestigious. There are loads of awards categories, but if you’re reading Sunburn, you know the Government & Politics award is the true prize. The winner: Jeffrey Schweers, for his elections coverage at the Tallahassee Democrat.
Also, Florida parents had another sweet weekend. Yes, they had to spend a wad of cash on school supplies, but thanks to the back-to-school sales tax holiday, they were able to save a bit on new threads, notebooks, and even big-ticket items such as computers. It’s not too late to get in on the action — the holiday ends on Aug. 10.
Want to avoid a bad weekend? Make sure your hurricane kit is ready to go, pronto.
The National Hurricane Center said Sunday that there are two areas of low pressure in the Atlantic — one has a 60% chance of becoming a cyclone by next weekend; the other has a 40% chance. We’re sure you know the drill, but here’s a refresher: make a plan and ensure you have enough food, water, meds and batteries. True, it’ll be a bad weekend either way if a storm hits, but it’ll be a lot worse if you’re unprepared.
If you’re all prepped, great. That just means you can relax and watch the Perseid meteor shower while the neighbors flock to Home Depot for supplies.
Finally, it seems like Christina Pushaw had a good weekend. The Governor’s Spokesperson spent the past couple of days on vacation — meaning she was able to swap back and forth between her various smurf accounts on Twitter with a nice view of Miami Beach rather than the humdrum vistas of her Tally office. Umm … cool?
— SITUATIONAL AWARENESS —
—@GovRonDeSantis: Coach Bobby Bowden lived a remarkable life and leaves an incomparable legacy. He created a dominating football program that produced championships and many great players. Coach Bowden also prepared his players to be leaders in their communities, and many have made a great impact across Florida and beyond. Most importantly, he lived his life guided by a strong faith in God, dedication to his family, and service to his community. RIP to a truly great man and legendary Floridian, Coach Bobby Bowden.
—@MarcoRubio: Coach Bowden was a great coach … but an even better man. The way he shaped young men & treated others was a powerful testimony of his faith in Jesus Christ, and as I saw first hand if he got into a recruits living room that recruit was going to @FSUFootball Rest in peace Coach
—@SenRickScott: Florida & @FloridaState have lost a legend. Ann & I are so sad to learn of Coach Bowden’s passing & are praying for Ann Bowden & their family. A man of deep faith & outstanding leader, his legacy will live on in the hearts & actions of countless students, coaches & young leaders.
—@CharlieCrist: Coach Bowden was a remarkable man and legend who embodied the true spirit of a Florida State Nole! My prayers are with the Bowden family today.
—@AshleyMoody: Bobby Bowden was a great coach and an even better human being. He touched so many lives and made Floridians proud — he was our own. My heart goes out to his family, former players, and fans across our state.
—@JimmyPatronis: As an FSU grad and lifelong Seminole fan, my family and I looked up to Coach Bowden as a giant among men, a visionary leader on and off the football field. RIP coach. While we mourn your passing, we’ll forever celebrate your life and honor your legacy.
—@ValDemings: I join my fellow FSU Seminoles in mourning the passing of the legendary Bobby Bowden. I was a student at FSU when coach Bowden joined FSU and took FSU football to national championships. We will be truly grateful for his life and legacy. GO NOLES.
—@WiltonSimpson: They say the measure of a man can be found in the lives he’s touched. Bobby Bowden was a force on and off the field and we were all better for having known him. Rest In Peace Coach.
—@MichelleforFL: I extend my heartfelt condolences to the Bowden family and my fellow Noles. Coach is synonymous with FSU. He was kind and warm spirit. I froze when I first met him. He asked me if I was going to say hello. We had a good laugh on our elevator ride.
—@CoachTaggert: My condolences to the entire Bowden Family and @FSUFootball family! Coach Bowden, your legacy will stand the test of time. Thank you for setting the standard for what a COACH/MAN should be. 🙏🏾🙏🏾 #Faith#Football#Family
Tweet, tweet:
—@DannyKannell: 411 wins. 2 national championships. 12 ACC championships. The numbers are insane, but they pale in comparison to the number of lives Bobby Bowden impacted for eternity. He was more preacher than coach. More father figure than mentor. More friend than teacher.
—@WarrickDunn: Coach Bowden made a huge impact on not only my life personally but so many others. He was blessed to have his family by his side when He passed away. My condolences to his wife Ann and their family.
Tweet, tweet:
Tweet, tweet:
Please read this thread from Tom Black. Click here.
—@KirkHerbstreit: Such fond memories of coach Bowden-Both as a fan watching him & his dominating Noles teams & as a young analyst working w/ him-He was a true testament to people will remember you based on how you make them feel-coach was as sweet & as good of a man as I’ve ever met. RIP Coach
—@MCuban: So people understand COVID math. If 100% of people are Vaxxed, then 100% of cases will be people who are vaxxed. We will have avoided ~95% of cases and 99.99% of deaths. As the % of vaxxed people grows, so will the reports of more vaxxed people getting COVID. Don’t be fooled.
—@GeorgeTakei: Dear anti-vaxxers: Your spokespeople keep getting COVID and dying. Radio shock jocks, GOP state representatives, preachers — they are learning the hard way that they were wrong. In their dying breaths, they are begging you to get the vaccine. Time to listen to them one last time.
— DAYS UNTIL —
‘Marvel’s What If …?’ premieres on Disney+ — 2; Florida Behavioral Health Association’s Annual Conference (BHCon) begins — 9; St. Petersburg Primary Election — 15; Boise vs. UCF — 24; Disney’s ‘Shang Chi and The Legend of The Ten Rings’ premieres — 25; Notre Dame at FSU — 27; NFL regular season begins — 31; Bucs home opener — 31; California Gov. Gavin Newsom’s recall election — 36; Broadway’s full-capacity reopening — 36; Alabama at UF — 40; Dolphins home opener — 41; Jaguars home opener — 41; 2022 Legislative Session interim committee meetings begin — 42; ‘The Many Saints of Newark’ premieres (rescheduled) — 46; ‘Dune’ premieres — 53; Walt Disney World’s 50th anniversary party starts — 53; MLB regular season ends — 55; ‘No Time to Die’ premieres (rescheduled) — 60; Florida Chamber Future of Florida Forum begins — 78; World Series Game 1 — 79; Florida TaxWatch’s Annual Meeting begins — 79; Georgia at UF — 82; St. Petersburg Municipal Elections — 85; Florida’s 20th Congressional District primary — 85; Disney’s ‘Eternals’ premieres — 89; ‘Disney Very Merriest After Hours’ will debut — 91; Miami at FSU — 96; ‘Top Gun: Maverick’ rescheduled premiere — 102; FSU vs. UF — 110; Florida Chamber 2021 Annual Insurance Summit begins — 114; Steven Spielberg’s ‘West Side Story’ premieres — 123; ‘Spider-Man Far From Home’ sequel premieres — 130; NFL season ends — 153; 2022 Legislative Session starts — 155; Florida’s 20th Congressional District election — 155; NFL playoffs begin — 156; Super Bowl LVI — 188; ‘Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness’ premieres — 228; ‘Thor: Love and Thunder’ premieres — 272; ‘Platinum Jubilee’ for Queen Elizabeth II — 297; “Black Panther 2” premieres — 333; San Diego Comic-Con 2022 — 345; ‘Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse’ sequel premieres — 424; “Captain Marvel 2” premieres — 459.
—”Iconic Florida State football coach Bobby Bowden dies at age 91” via Matt Baker and Joey Knight of the Tampa Bay Times
“Bowden, with faith and football, lived what he believed” via Joe Henderson of Florida Politics — You can’t tell the story of Bowden without devoting a generous amount of time to his deep, abiding faith. As Florida State’s football coach, he won two national championships and acclaim as one of the greatest to ever prowl the sideline. Off the field, though, he was even better. It’s impossible to measure the ripples from Bowden’s life completely, but suffice it to say they go on, and on, and on. He taught by example, and he lived what he believed. He’s not here now, no matter what will lie in the casket. We can only imagine the splendor he now enjoys. Bowden is home.
“His name shall endure: Bowden took FSU from ‘nowhereland to splendor’” via Gerald Ensley of the Tallahassee Democrat — There may be more to life than football. But Bowden made it king at Florida State, where he created football history as coach of one of the nation’s top programs. Now history has claimed Bowden, who died weeks after being diagnosed with pancreatic cancer. As it says in the Bible: His name shall endure forever. Bowden took over a team that three years before his arrival went 0-11 and created a dynasty. Bowden coached Florida State from 1976 through 2009 — and took FSU football from “nowhereland to splendor,” as longtime Tallahassee Democrat sports editor Bill McGrotha once termed it. Taking over a program just three years removed from an embarrassing, winless 0-11 season, Bowden fashioned a college football dynasty.
—”Rest in peace, Coach … Thank you for everything!” via Corey Clark of Warchant.com
—”Early to bed, early to rise. Morning calls with Coach Bowden and Ann Bowden were special” via Jim Henry of the Tallahassee Democrat
“With irresistible charm, Bowden transformed Florida State into an NFL factory” via Chase Goodbread of NFL.com — Bowden parlayed his fatherly, down-to-earth demeanor into close relationships with coaches, recruits, players, administrators and media alike. He was a disarming storyteller with all the charm of a salesman but none of the phoniness. He was also a hard-driving coach, but one who met heart-wrenching losses with immediate perspective and swapped in his favorite pejorative — “Dadgum!” — in place of any cursing. Bowden sought to build the Seminoles’ national profile by scheduling a heavy share of top-ranked opponents, knowing those games would give his program the recruiting advantage of network television exposure. Some of those opponents wouldn’t sign a traditional, two-year, home-and-home contract with FSU, however, so Bowden agreed to play certain road games without a return home game.
“Bowden’s ‘Puntrooskie’ play helped define his unmatched legacy” via Bill Vilona of the Pensacola News-Journal — A few seconds into his postgame news conference on Sept. 17, 1988, taking inquiries on how the Seminoles pulled off the now fabled, “Puntrooskie” to win the game, Bowden looked out at the media throng and said, “Hey, y’all want me to just show ya?” He got a football and played the role of fullback Dayne Williams, who had tucked the ball between his legs, following direct center-snap, while punter Tim Corlew perfectly sold the fake by acting like the ball sailed over his head. This bought the one- or two-seconds cornerback LeRoy Butler needed to grab the ball, fool defenders, and run 78 yards with 90 seconds left to the Clemson 1 and set up the game-winning field goal.
—“10 greatest triumphs of Bowden’s coaching career” via Joey Knight of the Tampa Bay Times
—”Here are the 10 most important games in the Bowden era at FSU” via Skip Foster for the Tallahassee Democrat
Bowden funeral arrangements — Friday, Aug. 13: 10 a.m.-1 p.m.: Bowden will lie in honor in the Capitol Rotunda; 2 p.m.-7 p.m., he will lie in repose in the Moore Athletic Center at Doak Campbell Stadium — open to the public. Saturday, Aug. 14: 11 a.m.: Funeral service for Bowden at the Tucker Civic Center at FSU — open to the public with doors opening at 9:30 a.m. Sunday, Aug. 15: 4-6 p.m., he will lie in repose at the Reid Chapel on the campus of Samford University — open to the public. A family-only burial service is to follow in Trussville, Alabama.
—”United in grief, paying respects, Florida politicos remember Bowden” via Florida Politics
“‘He’s like a family member.’ FSU fans pay tribute to coach Bowden outside stadium” via Kirby Wilson of the Tampa Bay Times — It was only a few hours after the news of Bowden’s death hit the Florida State University community. There was no plan for a public show of support for the beloved coach. But dozens of FSU fans like Kristin Tetsworth came to the statue on Sunday anyway. “He’s changed lives for people. He deserves respect. It’s just what you do,” said Tetsworth, who said she graduated from FSU in 1976 — the year Bowden took over the football program. “He’s like a family member.” At the statue, families gathered for silent communion with Bowden. Fathers brought sons. Wives brought husbands. Solemn individuals took photos of the makeshift memorial. Some wept. Everyone wore Seminole garnet.
—”On social media, fans look back with love, respect to Bobby Bowden” via Jonathan Tully of the Pensacola News Journal
Facebook status of the day:
— CORONA FLORIDA —
Breaking overnight — “Norwegian Cruise Line can require proof of vaccinations, federal judge rules” via Austen Erblat of the Sun-Sentinel — “U.S. District Judge Kathleen Williams said in her ruling that Norwegian Cruise Line, Oceania Cruises and Regent Seven Seas Cruises can require documentation of vaccines before they leave Florida ports. The cruise line’s next scheduled trip is the Norwegian Gem, set to depart the Port of Miami on Sunday, Aug. 15. The ruling overturned the state’s ban on so-called “vaccine passports.” The state argued that requiring proof of a COVID-19 vaccination is discriminatory and would force people to provide personal medical information. … “The health and safety of our guests, crew and the communities we visit is our number one priority, today, tomorrow and forever,” Frank Del Rio, president and CEO of the company said in a statement Sunday.
“Florida adds 134,506 coronavirus cases, 616 deaths in the past week” via Ian Hodgson of the Tampa Bay Times — Florida’s positivity rate rose to 18.5% in the past week, up from 18.1% the week before. Before reopening, states should maintain a positivity rate of 5% or less for at least two weeks, according to the World Health Organization. A 5% or less positivity rate indicates that testing is widespread enough to capture mild, asymptomatic and negative cases.
“COVID-19 patients continue to fill Florida hospitals” via Scott Powers of Florida Politics — Florida’s count of COVID-19 patients in hospitals rose to another record, filling 13,435 beds, the Florida Hospital Association says. That record day, reported Sunday by Florida officials to the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services and then publicly shared through a tweet by the Florida Hospital Association, now is well above any count seen before this summer of Florida hospital beds filled with COVID-19 patients. The Florida Hospital Association counts confirmed cases, contending the previous worst was on July 23, 2020, when 10,378 COVID-19 patients were reported in Florida hospitals. That number was exceeded last Monday. The Florida census of hospitalized COVID-19 patients has gone up every day since.
“As COVID-19 surges in Florida, Ron DeSantis refuses to change course” via Patricia Mazzei of The New York Times — DeSantis snapped this week at a reporter who asked if masks might help keep children safe in a state that now has more COVID-19 hospitalizations, including for pediatric patients, than anywhere else in the nation. He blamed President Joe Biden’s purported failure to control the spread of the virus across the border after the President suggested that Governors like DeSantis should either “help” fight the coronavirus or “get out of the way.” If the latest surge overwhelms hospitals, DeSantis’s perch as a Republican Party front-runner with higher aspirations could be in serious trouble.
—“Florida’s second summer of COVID-19 is different: Vaccines, ban on restrictions change landscape” via John Kennedy and Jeffrey Schweers of the USA Today Network
“Florida OKs school vouchers in districts requiring masks” via Brendan Farrington and Adriana Gomez Licon of The Associated Press — Florida’s Board of Education decided to provide private school vouchers to parents who say a public school district’s mask-wearing requirements amount to harassment of their children. The move to take private tuition costs from public school funding created yet another flashpoint in the fight between local school boards and DeSantis over coronavirus safety measures in schools. DeSantis has long supported efforts to expand school privatization and says parents should decide how to provide for their children’s health and education. The board then invoked an existing law to clarify eligibility for the Hope Scholarship, which protects children against bullying.
Assignment editors — Florida Agriculture Commissioner Nikki Fried will host a Zoom conversation with 12-year-old Lila Hartley, who wrote her local school board calling for a mask mandate, as recommended by the CDC and American Academy of Pediatrics, 10:30 a.m., livestreamed on Facebook.com/FDACS. RSVP for Zoom link no later than 9:30 a.m. to Erin.Moffet@FDACS.gov.
“Nikki Fried blasts ‘Ron’ for fundraising outside the state amid record-high COVID-19 cases” via Jason Delgado of Florida Politics — Fried blasted DeSantis for leaving the state to fundraise elsewhere amid the summer surge of COVID-19 cases. She addressed the Republican Governor as “Ron.” “When we were in the middle of a crisis, the person who was charged with the responsibility to take care of our state is traveling across our country raising money for his PC,” Fried said. “That is unacceptable. With classes set to resume in the coming days and weeks, schools have reemerged as a political battleground amid the pandemic. This time, critics of DeSantis point to the rise of infections among Florida’s youth. According to the Florida Department of Health, 10,785 kids under age 12 tested positive for COVID-19 last week.
“DeSantis not surprised Joe Biden couldn’t remember him, jogs his memory” via A.G. Gancarski of Florida Politics — “I guess I’m not surprised that Biden doesn’t remember me. I guess the question is, what else has he forgotten?” DeSantis mused. Then DeSantis went for the stump speech, having dispensed with the “Governor who?” diss from Biden. “Biden’s forgotten about the crisis at our southern border; I can tell you that. Biden has forgotten about the inflation that’s biting the budgets of families all throughout our country. Biden has forgotten about the demonstrators fighting for freedom down in Cuba. Biden’s even forgotten about the Constitution itself.”
“Sen. Bill Cassidy splits with DeSantis on school mask mandates” via Shayne Greene of POLITICO — Sen. Cassidy said Sunday he disagrees with DeSantis‘ opposition to mask mandates in schools. “I do disagree with Gov. DeSantis. The local officials should have control here,” the Louisiana Republican said. Cassidy, a physician, added that “when it comes to local conditions, if my hospital is full, and my vaccination rate is low, and the infection rate is going crazy, we should allow local officials to make those decisions best for their community.”
“CNN’s Jim Acosta on delta variant: ‘Why not call it the DeSantis variant?’” via Rachel Scully of CNN — Acosta called out several GOP politicians who have pushed back on mandatory masking and COVID-19 vaccination, suggesting new coronavirus variants be named after them. During a segment Saturday afternoon, Acosta went after DeSantis and other Republicans, saying the politicians “know better” as the number of COVID-19 cases rises across the country due to the highly transmissible delta variant. “People should not have to die so some politicians can own the libs. They’re not owning anybody,” Acosta said. “We can sell beer koozies that say ‘Don’t Florida my Fauci’ and use the money to pay for all the funerals in the days to come,” he added.
“DeSantis’ effort to blame COVID-19 spread on migrants is short on evidence” via Louis Jacobson and Miriam Valverde of the Tampa Bay Times — DeSantis doubled down on his COVID-19 claims in a fundraising letter: “Joe Biden has the nerve to tell me to get out of the way on COVID-19 while he lets COVID-19-infected migrants pour over our southern border by the hundreds of thousands. Public health experts said it’s reasonable to be concerned about coronavirus spreading among migrants, especially if they’re living in close quarters. But they said there is no evidence it’s happening on the scale that DeSantis described.
“Norwegian cruises challenges Florida passenger vaccine law” via The Associated Press — Norwegian contends the “vaccine passport” ban, signed into law in May by DeSantis, jeopardizes the health and safety of passengers and crew and is an unconstitutional infringement on the First Amendment’s free speech guarantee, among other things. Norwegian attorney Derek Shaffer told U.S. District Judge Kathleen Williams during a remote hearing the vaccination requirement for its passengers is especially needed as Florida has recently experienced a sharp increase in COVID-19 cases and hospitalizations. “It’s scary what is happening in Florida. Florida is a hotspot,” Shaffer said. “All we’re doing is trying to protect our staff and passengers.”
— CORONA LOCAL —
“Duval County vaccinations rise as new COVID-19 cases decreased this week” via Clayton Freeman and Teresa Stepzinski of the Florida Times-Union — Northeast Florida residents have continued to accelerate their pace of vaccination against COVID-19, state and federal statistics indicate, as the region showed some signs of progress against the coronavirus pandemic. For several area counties, including Duval County, COVID-19 new cases decreased compared to the previous week for the first time since the late stages of spring. However, statewide numbers showed cause for concern. The Florida Hospital Association reported 13,348 patients with confirmed COVID-19 in hospitals statewide as of 3 p.m. Saturday afternoon. That represents a rise of 4,019 compared to the end of July and amounts to 131% of the state’s peak from prior coronavirus waves.
“16-year-old dies of COVID-19 at Jacksonville hospital; 3 more children in intensive care” via Beth Reese Cravey of the Florida Times-Union — As COVID-19 hospitalizations continue to rise in the Jacksonville area and across Florida, Wolfson Children’s Hospital reported its first death of the current surge. A 16-year-old who was unvaccinated and had no underlying health issues died of COVID-19 Thursday. “The death of a child is always tragic, and our hearts are with the family as they grieve this loss,” Wolfson spokeswoman Vikki Mioduszewski said. “We are unable to comment further due to patient privacy laws.
—”‘Gut-wrenching’: Children making up more of Jacksonville’s surge of COVID-19 hospitalizations” via Beth Reese Cravey and Katherine Lewin of the Florida Times-Union
“Duval Property Appraiser Jerry Holland hospitalized with COVID-19” via Kelly Hayes of Florida Politics — Jerry Holland and his wife, Beverly Holland, have been hospitalized with COVID-19 for almost a week. Since Monday, the pair have been at Mayo Clinic Jacksonville, although Jerry Holland expects to be released by Sunday. Beverly Holland, however, will likely remain hospitalized for possibly another week. Neither of the two had been vaccinated against the virus. “I’m improving, but she’s not doing so well,” Holland told the Times-Union. “I may go home today or tomorrow [Saturday or Sunday], but my wife’s probably got four or five more days here.” Neither he nor his wife has needed a ventilator so far.
“‘Many of them are not going to survive’: Tallahassee medical community paints dire picture of COVID-19 locally” via Casey Chapter of the Tallahassee Democrat — Dean Watson‘s message was clear on Friday: “I want you to hear me loud and clear: We have 20-year-olds dying from this.” In a morning COVID-19 webinar, local health officials urged people to get vaccinated and spoke about the delta variant and the state of the coronavirus in the community. It’s bad, they said, and it’s getting worse. Watson, chief integration officer at Tallahassee Memorial HealthCare, said most of the patients now in the hospital with COVID-19 are in their 20s, 30s, and 40s, and “many of them are not going to survive.”
—”COVID-19 outbreak closes Waterfront shelter, leaving dozens of homeless with few options” via Madison Arnold of the Pensacola News Journal
“Hillsborough schools reverse course: Masks required, with opt-out option” via Marlene Sokol of the Tampa Bay Times — In a last-minute change prompted by public pressure, Hillsborough County school superintendent Addison Davis announced Saturday that students will be required to wear face coverings in the public schools unless their parents notify the school that they are opting out. This new arrangement is similar to those adopted by some other Florida districts, and it is supported by guidelines that were issued Friday by the Florida Department of Health. It will be in effect in Hillsborough at least until Sept. 3.
“Pinellas long-term care facility where 100+ died from COVID-19 now faces 7 lawsuits” via Florida Politics — Families of seven residents within Freedom Square’s various facilities seek wrongful death compensation from the owners after documented failures to safeguard the facility led to a massive COVID-19 outbreak among staff and residents last spring. An extensive investigation found sweeping missteps that led to one of the state’s worst long-term care facility outbreaks. Employees described a lack of access to appropriate personal protective equipment (PPE). That included a shortage of safety gowns and N95 masks. Some employees reported having to reuse masks and make inferior homemade masks. The facility reportedly continued accepting hospital patients to its rehabilitation program without COVID-19 testing until April 9, 2020, weeks after red flags were raised about that practice.
“‘You will most likely get infected in the next few months,’ Polk health officials say” via Sara-Megan Walsh of The Lakeland Ledger — Amid an explosion of new COVID-19 cases that’s crowding hospital emergency rooms, exasperated health officials had a stark warning. “To those who are unvaccinated and are unconvinced to get vaccinated, I would be wishing you good luck in this journey,” said Dr. Timothy Regan. Regan, chief medical officer and president of Lakeland Regional Health Medical Center, said the number of COVID-19 patients pouring into the emergency room was “unlike anything he has seen in his entire career.” Health care officials gathered in LRH’s Mulaney auditorium to give insight into the latest COVID-19 surge in Polk.
—“Mandatory COVID-19 vaccinations for nursing home workers? One Polk County facility says yes” via Gary White of The Lakeland Ledger
“Some parents plan protest after Diocese of Venice mandates masks in schools” via Michael Braun of the Fort Myers News-Press — The Diocese of Venice’s last-minute change from a voluntary to required mask policy prompted some parents to say they would instruct their parochial-school children to refuse to wear a mask. School opens Monday for the diocese’s 15 schools, including three in Lee County and four in Collier. A spokesman for parents, John J. Heck, father of an incoming freshman student at Bishop Verot High School in Fort Myers, said several parents planned to be at the high school and other schools Monday morning to protest the new policy. “This got dumped on us Thursday night at 8:30,” Heck said.
—”Sarasota Memorial Hospital postponing elective procedures amid crush of COVID-19 patients” via Zac Anderson of the Sarasota Herald-Tribune
—”Southwest Florida COVID-19 hospitalizations continue to rise as state breaks new record” via Frank Gluck of the Fort Myers News-Press
“As more Florida kids are hospitalized for COVID-19, Nicklaus Children’s mandates vaccine” via Daniel Chang of the Miami Herald — Nicklaus Children’s Hospital in Miami announced a COVID-19 vaccine mandate for all employees and vendors on Friday as the number of pediatric inpatients hospitalized in Florida with a confirmed case of the disease continued to lead all other states. Hospital employees, including doctors, nurses, students, and others have until Oct. 15 to be fully vaccinated, with those who complete their inoculation by the deadline receiving a $150 reward. Employees who request an exemption for medical reasons or religious beliefs must submit a form by Sept. 3.
“PBC students now must wear masks unless parents provide a note, school district decides” via Andrew Marra of The Palm Beach Post — Three days before classes begin, Palm Beach County public schools changed its mask policy today to require all students to wear facial coverings on campus unless a parent provides a signed “opt-out” letter. In a reversal, the school district said it also will require its more than 11,000 teachers and thousands of additional school employees to wear masks, a move that the teachers union quickly denounced. The last-minute changes are the latest turn in what has been an erratic two weeks of debate and brinkmanship across Florida over school mask requirements.
“Prominent Florida pastor asks DeSantis to reconsider ‘masks optional’ stance” via Ana Goñi-Lessan of the Tallahassee Democrat — The Rev. R.B. Holmes Jr., the organizer of a statewide effort to encourage more residents of the state’s minority communities to get vaccinated, now is asking the Governor to “reconsider” his stance on keeping masks optional in schools. “As our cherished children will soon return to school in the midst of this pandemic, too many Floridians are unvaccinated,” said Holmes, pastor of Tallahassee’s Bethel Missionary Baptist Church, in a letter to DeSantis dated Friday. “I hope that you would strongly reconsider your decision around wearing face coverings,” Holmes added.
“Medical practices in Florida start requiring COVID-19 vaccines for employees” via Liz Freeman of the Naples Daily News — Large medical practices around Florida are beginning to require their employees to get vaccinated, which could become more widespread as the COVID-19 delta variant continues its grip with new infections and hospitalizations. Fort Myers-based Florida Cancer Specialists and Research Institute, with 100 locations in all 67 counties, announced this week it is requiring its workforce to have their first dose by the end of August and be fully vaccinated by Oct. 1. The cancer group has 250 physicians on its roster and 4,200 employees statewide.
“Florida to spend training camp in hotel to combat COVID-19” via Mark Long of The Associated Press — Florida will spend at least part of its training camp in a hotel as coach Dan Mullen searches for ways to avoid another COVID-19 outbreak within the program. The Gators begin three weeks of fall practice Friday, with Mullen understanding much more about the coronavirus than he did a year ago or even a month ago. “We’re going to have some protocols that we put in place,” Mullen said Thursday. Coronavirus hospitalizations are surging again as the more contagious delta variant rages across the country, forcing medical centers to return to crisis mode just weeks after many closed their COVID-19 wards and dropped other emergency measures.
— STATEWIDE —
“Answers begin to emerge about secret FBI probe of Saudi government complicity in 9/11” via Dan Christensen of Florida Bulldog — Piece by piece, the puzzle of the heavily censored FBI 2012 Summary Report about Operation Encore, the bureau’s once-hush-hush probe of Saudi government involvement in 9/11, appears to be giving up its secrets. The four-page report was the first confirmation of an active FBI investigation into questions of Saudi government involvement in the attacks since the 9/11 Commission closed down in 2004. The report was so thickly redacted that even the investigation’s code name, Operation Encore, was blanked out. In 2019 and again last year, Attorney General William Barr blocked the release of additional “classified national security information” in the report by personally asserting the state secrets privilege in the case.
Happening today — Lt. Gov. Jeanette Núñez leads an event on the recently passed “Every Child a Swimmer” legislation. Joining her is Sen. Lori Berman and Reps. Dan Daley, Christine Hunschofsky, Jim Mooney and Patricia Williams, 3 p.m., Keiser University, Student Life Center Gymnasium, 2600 North Military Trail, West Palm Beach.
Happening today — Rep. Kelly Skidmore holds a virtual event on workforce development and other employment issues, 6 p.m. Register here.
“Proposal calls for Miami-Dade health trust to pay $5M for rendering boy quadriplegic” via Jesse Scheckner of Florida Politics — Florida lawmakers next year are expected to consider a proposal that would clear a $5 million settlement payment to the family of a young boy who was severely disabled through negligence at a Miami-Dade County public health care facility. Republican Sen. Ana Maria Rodriguez filed a bill this week that, if approved next year, would authorize the group that oversees Jackson Health System, the county’s public health care provider, to pay the family of Harry Augustin Shumow.
Happening today — It’s the last day for Florida’s back-to-school tax “holiday” for clothes, school supplies, personal computers and more.
— 2022 —
“Virus surge sends ripples of alarm through Democrats” via Sean Sullivan and Marianna Sotomayor of The Washington Post — The resurgence of the coronavirus has reshaped the early contours of the midterm elections, with some Democrats beginning to distance themselves from the Biden administration and more directly blame Republicans, reflecting their growing alarm on an issue that long played to their political advantage. Democrats had hoped to pivot from Biden’s success on the pandemic to pitch the party’s economic agenda, including sweeping proposals on infrastructure and social programs. But the rise in COVID-19 cases is suddenly complicating that strategy.
“Why DeSantis could soon be in serious political trouble” via Steve Bousquet of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — All of a sudden, DeSantis doesn’t look so invincible. Two Florida polls came out this week. One survey, paid for by a leading ally of DeSantis, looks good for him. The other doesn’t. I realize voters are wary of polling numbers, but polls shape voters’ perceptions about candidates, and the numbers suggest he’s beatable. For dispirited Democrats, that’s progress. Despite his mismanagement of the COVID-19 crisis, DeSantis definitely has some things going for him. After winning by the skin of his teeth in 2018, DeSantis continues to pander relentlessly to the same limited core of angry supporters, whose fierce loyalty he seems petrified of losing.
“A little schadenfreude and Gov. DeSantis’ COVID-19 incompetence” via Mac Stipanovich for the Tampa Bay Times — DeSantis’ press secretary Christina Pushaw tweeted that Florida is not going to take the path of California’s mask mandates because “ … lockdowns have destroyed small businesses, decimated the middle class & kept kids out of school for going on 2 years.” This is an impermissible dialectical shift, equates masking with lockdowns, and then attacks lockdowns, which, even if her premises are true, produces a false conclusion, as no one is proposing lockdowns in Florida. DeSantis himself recently rolled out a big ol’ red herring combined with an appeal to emotion when he blamed undocumented immigrants crossing the southern border. In case your memory fails you, this is a return to the tried-and-true Trump trope of diseased, brown-skinned invaders.
“Mark Zuckerberg’s cash fuels GOP suspicion about Florida” via The Associated Press — When Zuckerberg donated $400 million to help fund election offices as they scrambled to deal with the coronavirus pandemic late last summer, he said he hoped he would never have to do it again. Republican legislatures are granting him that wish. At least eight GOP-controlled states have passed bans on donations to election offices this year as Republicans try to block outside funding of voting operations. The legislation often comes as part of Republican packages that also put new limits on voters casting ballots and imposing new requirements on county or city-based election officials. The response is spurred by anger and suspicion on the right that Zuckerberg’s money benefited Democrats in 2020.
— CORONA NATION —
“U.S. now averaging 100,000 new COVID-19 infections a day” via The Associated Press — The U.S. is now averaging 100,000 new COVID-19 infections a day, returning to a milestone last seen during the winter surge in yet another bleak reminder of how quickly the delta variant has spread through the country. The U.S. was averaging about 11,000 cases a day in late June. Now the number is 107,143. It took the U.S. about nine months to cross the 100,000 average case number in November before peaking at about 250,000 in early January. Cases bottomed out in June but took about six weeks to go back above 100,000, despite a vaccine that has been given to more than 70% of the adult population.
“The delta variant arrived at just the right time to break our spirits” via Anne Helen Petersen of The Washington Post — For a blissful few weeks, confusion and unease were in a notable decline in the United States. The emails I’d signed up to receive from officials here in Montana, informing me of coronavirus cases county by county, went from daily to weekly. Hot Vaxxed Summer didn’t just mean wearing all the clothes we hadn’t had an audience for over the last year. It was a feeling of possibility. The problem is that most of us are incapable of processing the reality of a new pandemic. Not because we don’t understand math or have thrown caution entirely to the wind, but because our capacity to comprehend information with nuance, particularly information about health, is gone.
“I treat pediatric COVID-19 patients. What I’m seeing in our hospital scares me.” via Heather Haq of The Washington Post — Throughout the pandemic, I have cared for kids admitted with COVID-19 to the children’s hospital in Houston, where I am a pediatrician. All the while, as both a doctor and mother, I’ve wrestled with a certain dissonance: There is this popular notion that COVID-19 doesn’t affect children, and my public health and epidemiologic training reminds me that on a population level, it’s true. But I contrast this with the reality of being a clinician at the bedside of children critically ill from COVID-19 and COVID-19-related illnesses. What I do know is that at this moment, as the highly contagious delta variant becomes the predominant strain circulating and we enter another COVID-19 surge, I am more worried for children than I have ever been.
“NIH director: Vaccines should never be political” via David Cohen of POLITICO — NIH Director Francis Collins lamented that the notion of vaccination remains so politicized amid the nation’s ongoing surge of COVID-19 cases. Collins stopped short of endorsing mandatory vaccination but made it clear he thought public officials should be pushing for unvaccinated Americans to get their shots. “We ought to use every public health tool we can when people are dying,” he told George Stephanopoulos. Holding up a mask, Collins said Americans needed to think about saving lives first and foremost, particularly with schools set to reopen. Collins also spoke directly to vaccine skeptics: “If you’re on the fence, get off the fence. … Roll up your sleeve.”
“Anthony Fauci hopeful COVID-19 vaccines will get full approval by FDA within weeks” via Aamer Madhani of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — The U.S. government’s top infectious disease expert, Dr. Fauci, said Sunday that he was hopeful the FDA will give full approval to the coronavirus vaccine by month’s end and predicted the potential move will spur a wave of vaccine mandates in the private sector as well as schools and universities. The FDA has only granted emergency-use approval of the Pfizer, Moderna and Johnson & Johnson vaccines, but the agency is expected to give full approval to Pfizer soon.
“Public health collides with politics as latest wave of mask wars take off” via Megan Flynn of The Washington Post — Twenty months into the pandemic, the latest wave of the face-mask culture war is in full swing. Virginia and Maryland Governors Ralph Northam and Larry Hogan reiterated that they were not considering reimposing statewide mask mandates, instead emphasizing the importance of getting vaccinated. “Mask mandates or shutdowns will not be able to eradicate the threat of the virus or this delta variant,” Hogan said, noting the state is at “very low” levels of hospitalizations. Some Republicans have applauded Northam’s decision to avoid a state mandate while alleging the decision was political.
“These top U.S. chains are reinstating their mask requirements” via Nathaniel Meyersohn of CNN — Most large chains had removed face-covering requirements for vaccinated shoppers in May, following CDC guidance at the time easing mask-wearing for people vaccinated. Stores have continued to ask unvaccinated shoppers to wear masks. Target will require masks for workers and recommend masks for all customers in areas with a substantial or high risk of transmission. Walmart workers will be required to wear masks inside its facilities. Home Depot is requiring all workers to wear masks in all stores, regardless of vaccination status or the transmission risks of the area. Where mandated by local law or regulation, Starbucks will require customers to wear masks in our stores.
— CORONA ECONOMICS —
“As Democrats seethed, White House struggled to contain eviction fallout” via Michael D. Shear, Glenn Thrush, Charlie Savage and Alan Rappeport of The New York Times — Progressive Democrats are publicly assailing the administration for allowing an eviction ban to expire that past Saturday and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, unable to secure the votes to approve an extension, was demanding Biden find a different solution. The White House developed a strategy that allowed Biden to act, culminating in an announcement on Tuesday of a new, narrower eviction ban in counties where the virus is raging. Biden failed to anticipate how quickly Pelosi and other Democrats would escalate a pressure campaign aimed directly at the White House. It is also part of a broader narrative of a White House that has responded to the rise of the variant in halting and inconsistent ways as it tries to prevent the pandemic from raging out of control.
“Biden administration extends pause on federal student loan payments through January” via Danielle Douglas-Gabriel of The Washington Post — The Education Department said it will extend the suspension of federal student loan payments through Jan. 31, 2022, marking the fourth time the agency has given borrowers breathing room amid the pandemic. The department says it will be the final extension offered to borrowers. The moratorium was set to expire on Sept. 30, but Congressional Democrats had urged the Biden administration to push back the date as the public health crisis has left many Americans struggling to regain their financial footing.
— MORE CORONA —
“‘This is really scary’: Kids struggle with long COVID-19” via Pam Belluck of The New York Times — As young people across the country prepare to return to school, many are struggling to recover from lingering post-COVID-19 neurological, physical, or psychiatric symptoms. Often called “long Covid,” the symptoms and their duration vary, as does the severity. Studies estimate long COVID-19 may affect between 10 percent and 30 percent of adults infected with the coronavirus. Estimates from the handful of studies of children so far range widely. Doctors say even youths with mild or asymptomatic initial infections may experience long COVID-19: confounding, sometimes debilitating issues that disrupt their schooling, sleep, extracurricular activities, and other aspects of life.
“For seniors especially, COVID-19 can be stealthy” via Paula Span of The New York Times — The population over 65, most vulnerable to the virus’s effects, got an early start on COVID-19 vaccination and has the highest rate in the country, more than 80 percent are fully vaccinated. But with infections increasing once more, and hospitalization rising among older adults, a new study provides a timely warning: COVID-19 can look different in older patients. “People expect fever, cough, shortness of breath,” said Allison Marziliano, lead author of the study. But when the researchers combed through the electronic health records of nearly 5,000 people, all over the age of 65, who were hospitalized for COVID-19, they found that one-third had arrived with other symptoms, unexpected ones.
“New data suggest J&J vaccine works against delta and recipients don’t need a booster shot.” via Apoorva Mandavilli of The New York Times — A single dose of the COVID-19 vaccine made by Johnson & Johnson is highly effective in preventing severe illness and death from the Delta and Beta variants of the coronavirus. The study is the first real-world test of the vaccine’s efficacy against delta, a highly contagious variant of the virus surging across the United States and much of the world. South Africa’s Ministry of Health reported these preliminary results at a news conference on Friday. The data have not yet been peer-reviewed or published in a scientific journal.
—“The U.S. hasn’t OK’d boosters for those who got the J&J vaccine. But some are getting one anyway.” via Daniel Arkin of NBC News
“Masks, comfortable clothes likely to linger after pandemic, Post-Schar School polling finds” via Amy Goldstein and Emily Guskin of The Washington Post — Two-thirds of Americans say that once the coronavirus pandemic ends, they plan to put on masks when sick and wear comfortable clothes more often than before. When it comes to crowded places, the nationwide survey finds that more than 4 in 10 U.S. adults intend to wear masks in such circumstances after the pandemic. That includes more than half of women, compared with 1 in 3 men.
“Hawaii, masked and vaccinated, still falls prey to delta strain” via Nic Querolo and Jonathan Levin of MSN — Hawaii has one of the country’s most comprehensive mask mandates and a highly effective vaccine campaign. Despite that, COVID-19 cases on the islands are climbing with a ferocity that’s outstripping every other U.S. state. On Thursday, Hawaii recorded 655 new cases, a record since the beginning of the pandemic. Test-positivity rates surged to the highest in a year at 6.9%. The situation testifies to the delta variant’s strength and ability to penetrate walls of protection, restrictions and mandates. Those vaccinated have been mostly spared severe infection and illness. For those who haven’t, the risk is significant and growing.
— PRESIDENTIAL —
Tweet, tweet:
“‘Always working’: Biden eyes 1st summer getaway as President” via Darlene Superville and Aamer Madhani of The Associated Press — After more than six months of work combating the coronavirus, negotiating a bipartisan infrastructure bill, and repairing the U.S. image abroad, Biden should be heading out on vacation and a traditional August break from Washington. But with legislative work on the infrastructure bill keeping the Senate in session for a second straight weekend, and likely through next week, Biden hasn’t gone far, just home to Wilmington, Delaware, as he has done most weekends since taking office. “Every President is always working no matter where they are,” White House press secretary Jen Psaki said, explaining that Presidents can’t ever really tune out.
— EPILOGUE: TRUMP —
“Inside the extraordinary effort to save Donald Trump from COVID-19” via Damian Paletta and Yasmeen Abutaleb of The Washington Post — Trump’s brush with severe illness and the prospect of death caught the White House so unprepared that they had not even briefed Vice President Mike Pence’s team on a plan to swear him in if Trump became incapacitated. Trump’s medical advisers hoped his bout with the coronavirus, which was far more serious than acknowledged at the time, would inspire him to take the virus seriously. Perhaps now, they thought, he would encourage Americans to wear masks and put his health and medical officials front and center in the response. Instead, Trump emerged from the experience triumphant and ever more defiant.
“For GOP, infrastructure bill is a chance to inch away from Trump” via Luke Broadwater and Emily Cochrane of The New York Times — Trump tried mightily to kill the $1 trillion infrastructure bill, hurling the kind of insult-laden statements and threats of primary challenges that for years sent a chill down Republican spines. But the reaction inside the Senate, where many members of his party once cowered from Trump’s angry tweets and calculated their votes to avoid his wrath, was mostly yawns. Now, the legislation appears on a glide path to pass the Senate with a small but significant share of GOP support, possibly even including Sen. Mitch McConnell, the Kentucky Republican and minority leader who rarely crossed the former President when he ran the chamber.
“How Trump stiff-armed Congress — and gaslighted the courts — to build his wall” via David Rogers of POLITICO — Pentagon records paint the clearest picture yet of how far the Trump administration went to get around Congress and speed the diversion of military construction funds to build its border wall in 2019. The diversion, totaling $3.6 billion, disrupted scores of improvements for military operations and the quality of life for troops and their families. The newly released documents provide the first-ever look at the inner workings of how that money was moved around, and it’s not a pretty sight for congressional committees, which were left in the dark and denied basic answers about the accounting maneuvers.
“Trump’s repeating donation tactics led to millions in refunds into 2021” via Shane Goldmacher of The New York Times — The aggressive fundraising tactics that Trump deployed late in last year’s presidential campaign have continued to spur an avalanche of refunds into 2021, with Trump, the Republican Party and their shared accounts returning $12.8 million to donors in the first six months of the year. Trailing in the polls and facing a cash crunch last September, Trump’s political operation began opting online donors into automatic recurring contributions by pre-checking a box on its digital donation forms to make a withdrawal every week.
— CRISIS —
“The deplorable treatment of Michael Fanone and the heroes of Jan. 6” via Jonathan Capehart of The Washington Post — The anguished face of D.C. Metropolitan Police Officer Fanone is haunting as he is swarmed by a mob of terrorists hellbent on overturning a free and fair election at the behest of a president who refused to accept defeat. Fanone was tased so many times that he suffered a heart attack. He said that the few Republican members of Congress who would meet with him used their support of law enforcement during BLM protests last year as a shield against his criticism that they were refusing to stand by police after the savage attacks they suffered on Jan. 6.
“New Jersey gym owner, Seattle man are first to plead guilty to assaulting police in Capitol attack” via Spencer S. Hsu of The Washington Post — A New Jersey gym owner and a Washington state man became the first people to plead guilty to assaulting police in the Jan. 6 Capitol attack, facing what they acknowledged in plea deals could be roughly three to five years in prison under sentencing guidelines. The agreements by Scott K. Fairlamb and Devlyn D. Thompson set potential benchmarks for what at least 165 defendants charged with assaulting or impeding officers could expect if they cooperate. Prosecutors agreed to drop the other counts, which included rioting, trespassing and violent disorder.
— D.C. MATTERS —
“Rick Scott slams national debt, says he is ‘fed up’ by reckless government spending” via Cameron Cawthorne of Fox Business — Sen. Scott said he was “fed up” by the federal government not living within its means while discussing the price tag of the $1 trillion infrastructure bill. Scott said he definitely supports infrastructure and fixing roads, bridges, airports, etc., but he added that it should be done in a fiscally responsible manner. Scott continued by saying Congress has to be “honest” to the American people. Scott has been a staunch critic of the infrastructure package and said this past week in a joint statement with other Republican senators that they “still don’t have a score on this legislation from the Congressional Budget Office.” The Senate, with 18 Republican votes, advanced the bipartisan $1 trillion infrastructure bill on Saturday with a 67-27 vote.
First in #FlaPol — Kathy Castor urges immediate action on climate change after ‘alarming’ UN report — In response to a newly released report from the United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, Castor, chair of the Select Committee on the Climate Crisis, is calling for the immediate development of clean energy and the “rapid phaseout of carbon and methane pollution.” She cites worsening impacts of the climate crisis as proof for advancing Biden’s Build Back Better Agenda and Climate Crisis Action Plan. “Right now, over 100 major wildfires are burning across 15 states. Red tide is plaguing Florida’s coasts, hurricane season is getting longer, and deadly heatwaves are scorching communities,” Castor says. “Although the situation is dire, today’s report serves as a call to action.” Read the report here.
“Vern Buchanan believes vaccine helped him fight off COVID-19, but he’s not pushing shots” via Zac Anderson of the Sarasota Herald-Tribune — U.S. Rep. Buchanan credits the COVID-19 vaccine with making his recent infection less severe. “I think for me it made a huge difference,” said Buchanan, who tested positive for COVID-19 late last month and experienced mild flu-like symptoms, including fatigue and congestion in his head and chest. Yet when it comes to encouraging others to get vaccinated, the Longboat Key Republican is reluctant to urge the shots.
— LOCAL NOTES —
“Surfside tower was flawed from day one. Designs violated the code, likely worsened collapse” via Sarah Blaskey, Aaron Liebowitz, and Ben Conarck of the Miami Herald — Champlain Towers South was poorly designed, even for the 1970s when the plans were originally drawn and codes were less rigorous. Most of the column designs were too narrow to safely accommodate the amount of reinforcing steel called for in the plans, especially at the critical areas where the columns connected to the slab, engineers’ calculations based on the building code requirements at the time show. As a result, experts said the Champlain Towers contractor would have been forced to choose between squeezing in bars without the minimum clearance specified in the code or leaving out some of the planned reinforcement from the connection.
“J.T. Burnette public corruption trial restarts Monday after COVID-19 delay. What to know.” via Jeff Burlew of the Tallahassee Democrat — U.S. District Judge Robert Hinkle announced the restart date after a closed telephonic hearing with government and defense lawyers. The move allayed concerns about a possible mistrial caused by a jury that has seen its ranks depleted by the coronavirus. “The trial is on track to resume on Monday,” Hinkle said in a statement following the hearing. “Under current guidelines of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and based on the information reported to date by the 12 jurors, all jurors will be able to resume their jury service in full at that time.” Hinkle added that the schedule would shift “only if new information or circumstances require a change.”
“Glades Mayors argue new Lake O regulation plan is ‘completely unacceptable’” via Ryan Nicol of Florida Politics — Three Glades-area Mayors have signed a letter blasting the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers’ proposed plan to regulate Lake Okeechobee’s water levels and discharges. Pahokee Mayor Keith Babb, South Bay Mayor Joe Kyles and Belle Glade Mayor Steve Wilson signed the letter. The Army Corps under Col. Andrew Kelly recently announced a new regulation plan, dubbed “Plan CC,” in which the Mayors complain would see more water sent south and west and less water sent east, including to nearby Glades communities. The letter also directly calls out U.S. Rep. Brian Mast, with whom the Mayors have battled before.
“Chad Choate III appointed to Manatee County School Board by DeSantis” via Ryan McKinnon of the Sarasota Herald-Tribune — DeSantis announced that Sarasota financial planner Choate would take over the open District 4 seat. Manatee County Administrator Scott Hopes had been elected to the seat in 2018, but he vacated the board to take the top job with the county earlier this year. In a statement accompanying the Governor’s announcement, Choate said he looked “forward to standing with Gov. DeSantis by opposing a mask mandate in Manatee County Schools, keeping critical race theory out of our classrooms and prioritizing civics education.”
“Anonymous accusation roils Temple Terrace Council” via William March of the Tampa Bay Times — An anonymous accusation against City Manager Charles Stephenson of falsifying city documents roiled a Temple Terrace City Council meeting this week and sparked an investigation under Mayor Andy Ross. The accusation came in documents including city records presented unexpectedly during the meeting by Councilmember Meredith Abel, who said she received them from an anonymous source. The material claimed that earlier this year, Stephenson falsified records to conceal the award of a contract for work on a racquetball court at the city’s Family Recreation Complex to an unlicensed contractor. In a video of the meeting, Stephenson appeared angry and defiant at the accusation, but on the advice of Ross, didn’t respond publicly.
— TOP OPINION —
“DeSantis, once a rising star, is becoming a white dwarf” via Nate Monroe of The Florida Times-Union — Perhaps it was arrogance that drove Florida’s own degrading star, DeSantis, to believe tying his political fortunes to COVID-19 was a good idea. An educated man, DeSantis knew Florida’s pandemic arc, roughly middle of the pack in deaths nationally, was due mostly to decisions made by local officials of both parties that mimicked the measures taken by more liberal states: Mask mandates, closures, curfews. These were the very things DeSantis had begun railing against with increasing self-assurance in after-hours appearances on Fox News. The Delta variant has shattered the aura of competence DeSantis had hoped would last to the 2024 Republican presidential primary, and it has laid bare his incredibly dark Darwinian worldview about pandemic management.
— OPINIONS —
“What to do with our COVID-19 rage” via Sarah Smarsh of The New York Times — Abetted by that slow rollout, COVID-19 has resurged. Following a short, beautiful moment of relaxed precautions, while cases were down at the start of summer, we again don masks, change plans, and worry about how to keep ourselves and our loved ones safe. Vaccination rates are rising as the hesitant become less so, but the coronavirus will likely be with us indefinitely. How does one process this brutal reality? Many vaccinated Americans are tired, disgusted and eager to assign blame. Our national conversation has reached the point where many Americans are done with any and all excuses offered by the unvaccinated.
“On conservation and the environment, Florida Democrats and Republicans see common ground” via Stephen Neely of the Tampa Bay Times — DeSantis signed the bipartisan Florida Wildlife Corridor Act, committing $400 million to the preservation of lands that house some of the state’s wildest and most biodiverse ecosystems. The law marked a major step forward in protecting Florida’s endangered species and preserving their natural habitats. While voters overwhelmingly support the bill, many see it as just one of many steps needed to protect Florida’s environment and preserve the state’s natural treasures. A recent survey showed an overwhelming majority of respondents (87%) approved of the bill’s passage, while a plurality said that they approve of the job that DeSantis is doing when it comes to conservation and the environment.
“That unmasked man: DeSantis’ war on public health is disastrous” via The Daily News editorial board — Florida public schools didn’t ask for a culture war. All they’re trying to do is bring kids back while protecting them and their families from a contagious new strain of a deadly virus. As they try to navigate a tortuous terrain, DeSantis is fighting to take away one of the best and cheapest tools they have to reassure parents and minimize COVID-19 spread. Deepest shame on him. DeSantis, a likely 2024 GOP presidential contender, may think his ban on school-district mask mandates is a stroke of political genius. In truth, it’s the gravest form of public health malpractice.
“Playing politics with pandemic diminishes health agencies” via The Palm Beach Post editorial board — DeSantis’ hard-line COVID-19 stance leaves state health department analysts, nurses, physicians and scientists in a professional pickle. They were trained to follow accepted health and scientific practices and address public health challenges but are confronted by a state government that does everything it can to combat the virus. Unfortunately, it’s the governor and not the health official he appointed to lead the department, Florida Surgeon General Scott Rivkees, who calls the shots. That became all too obvious last year, after the surgeon general was escorted out of a coronavirus briefing when his remarks apparently strayed too far off-script from the governor’s message. Florida and its health department deserve better.
“COVID-19 is apolitical. Get the vaccine.” via Rep. Geraldine Thompson for the Orlando Sentinel — Society has benefited from vaccines that have treated diseases such as smallpox, polio, mumps, rubella and diphtheria. Today, infections from those diseases are almost unheard of. Presently, we may choose to take vaccines to prevent influenza, pneumonia and HPV. I have taken two doses of a vaccine to prevent COVID-19. COVID-19 is apolitical. It infects Republicans, Democrats and people who have no party affiliation. Unfortunately, getting the vaccine has been politicized and is seen by some as party loyalty. Yes, our hospitals are open for business. So too are our ICUs, morgues, crematories and cemeteries. Please get vaccinated to prevent a trip to either one.
“Surfside collapse may be rooted in the past. But accountability starts now” via the Miami Herald — In an investigation into the Champlain Towers South condominium collapse, engineers said original design and construction flaws alone were unlikely to have initiated the collapse. But the deficiencies, they agreed, “could have been the difference between a single floor caving in and the kind of progressive collapse that killed 98 people on June 24.” Standard building codes of the 1970s should have been sufficient to prevent the progressive collapse of the building. No matter where investigators finally pinpoint the causes of this horrific accident, we are not letting current officials, institutions and practices off the hook.
— ON TODAY’S SUNRISE —
Florida’s COVID-19 crisis shows no sign of slowing down. In fact, it’s getting worse.
Also on today’s Sunrise:
— More people are hospitalized than ever … but the Governor is trying to dismiss those numbers by saying it’s all part of the cycle.
— Florida’s kids are heading back to school, and DeSantis is sticking to his guns … saying local school districts cannot require students to wear a mask.
— The state Board of Education weighed in, but not in a good way. They adopted an emergency rule saying students shamed for refusing to wear a mask in school are eligible for a scholarship to a private school.
— The rule was approved unanimously by the Governor’s supporters who serve on the board.
— And finally, two Florida Men: One of them had to call a professional trapper to get rid of a toilet iguana; the other died of COVID-19 after downplaying the epidemic.
To listen, click on the image below:
— ALOE —
“Mixed bag: Erratic pandemic Olympics wind to a nuanced end” via The Associated Press — The Tokyo Olympics, christened with “2020” but held in mid-2021 after being interrupted for a year by the coronavirus, glided to their conclusion in a COVID-19-emptied stadium Sunday night as an often surreal mixed bag for Japan and the world. A rollicking closing ceremony with the theme “Worlds We Share,” an optimistic but ironic notion at this human moment, featured everything from stunt bikes to intricate light shows as it tried to convey a “celebratory and liberating atmosphere” for athletes after a tense two weeks. It was set to pivot to a live feed from Paris, host of the 2024 Summer Games. And with that, the strangest Olympic Games on record began closing their books for good.
“‘You restored the soul of America’: Biden virtually meets with Olympic athletes” via Chris Williams of Fox 13 — Biden and first lady Jill Biden spoke with U.S. Olympic athletes in a livestreamed virtual reception Saturday. “You restored the soul of America in so many ways; you really, really did,” he told Team USA. “That’s not hyperbole. That’s a fact.” The President also extended an invitation for the athletes to visit him at the White House in the fall. He also praised the members beyond their skills. “It wasn’t just, for a lot of you, it wasn’t just your athletic ability,” he said. ” It was your moral courage, the courage you showed.”
“‘I feel at peace’: Allyson Felix exits stage with record 11th medal” via Eddie Pells of The Associated Press — Felix knows the way to the Olympic medal stands better than any runner alive. She made her record-setting 11th trip there Saturday after starring as the headliner on a 4×400 relay win that featured a who’s who of American running. With the gold medal dangling from her neck and “The Star-Spangled Banner” playing in the near-empty stadium, “I took a moment just to close my eyes and take it in one last time,” Felix said. After the final race of the final Games of the 35-year-old sprinter’s career, Felix leaves the stage, having won the most medals of any track athlete in U.S. history.
“Sunisa Lee is about to try a new thing for an all-around champ: College gymnastics” via Emily Giambalvo of The Washington Post — Lee dreamed of becoming an Olympian, but competing alongside someone widely considered the best gymnast ever, she had not necessarily thought of winning the all-around gold medal. Usually, Lee’s competitions felt more like a race for second place, so she expected the Tokyo Games to present an opportunity to win the silver. The first item on her post-Olympics agenda remains the same: college gymnastics. She committed to Auburn long ago and hasn’t wavered from that plan. Lee will become the first Olympic all-around champion to compete in the NCAA, and she will arrive on campus Wednesday, eight days after her final performance in Tokyo.
— HAPPY BIRTHDAY —
Celebrating today are Rep. Keith Truenow and my fellow gentle giant, the FHCA’s Emmett Reed, who I’m sure today is still mourning the loss of Coach Bowden. I hope he finds a way to still celebrate. Also celebrating today are former House candidate Rebekah Bydlak, Jaime Figueras, and former lawmaker and Hillsborough Co. Commissioner Sandy Murman. Belated best wishes to a man who puts a sparkle in all of our eyes, our friend Slater Bayliss, as well as the incomparable Yolanda Cash Jackson.
___
Sunburn is authored and assembled by Peter Schorsch, Phil Ammann, Renzo Downey and Drew Wilson.
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13.) AXIOS
Axios AM
Happy Monday! Smart Brevity™ count: 1,194 words … 4½ minutes. Edited by Zachary Basu.
A fire truck drives through Greenville, Calif., which was destroyed last week by Northern California’s Dixie Fire. Photo: Noah Berger/AP
Released 4 a.m. ET: Global warming is happening so fast that scientists now say we’ll cross a crucial temperature threshold as early as 2030 — up to a decade sooner than they thought — Axios’ Andrew Freedman writes from a sweeping UN-sponsored review of climate science out today.
- Why it matters: The report arrives when it seems like the whole planet is on fire. The themes: faster, more urgent and more dangerous.
The findings: Atmospheric carbon-dioxide concentrations were higher in 2019 than at any time in at least 2 million years, according to the report by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC).
- The past 50 years saw the fastest temperature increases in at least 2,000 years.
- The report calls the connection between human emissions of greenhouse gases and global warming “unequivocal.”
Between the lines: The scientists make clear how starkly different the current climate already is from that in which modern human civilization first thrived.
- Compared with its first report in 1990, the IPCC’s new study reflects global warming’s transition from a far-off issue to a current crisis.
What’s happening: Warming is affecting every area of the globe, making the world a more volatile place. The report connects the dots between extreme events and long-term human causes.
By the numbers: The report projects that global warming at the end of the century will range between about 1.3 to 5.7°C (2.34 to 10.26°F), relative to 1850-1900 levels, depending on greenhouse gas emissions.
- Sea levels are projected to increase, under intermediate- to high-emissions scenarios, by between at least a foot and a half to more than three and a half feet by the end of the century.
- A rise of seven feet by the year 2100, or even 16 feet by 2150, “cannot be ruled out.”
Then-Vice President Biden with Amos Hochstein at the Caribbean Energy Security Summit in 2015. Photo: Brendan Smialowski/AFP via Getty Images
President Biden has appointed close former adviser Amos Hochstein as a State Department energy envoy charged with implementing a U.S.-Germany deal allowing the Nord Stream 2 pipeline to be completed, Jonathan Swan and Zachary Basu report.
- Why it matters: Hochstein has been a leading voice against Nord Stream 2, a Kremlin priority that will allow Russia to bypass Ukraine and deliver gas directly to the heart of Europe.
The appointment — which will not require Senate confirmation — lends the credibility of a prominent Russia hawk to a Biden decision that’s drawn intense criticism in Eastern Europe and on Capitol Hill, including from some Democrats.
- Implementing the pipeline deal will be an immediate priority for Hochstein, known by key players in Eastern Europe as “Biden’s guy.”
Behind the scenes: Sources who know Hochstein are surprised he’d agree to take a job that seems in such inherent conflict with his stance that the pipeline is “the existential crisis facing Ukraine.”
- “They’re trying to hide this terrible deal behind his credibility in the hopes it will make people forget just how bad this deal is,” said a source who’s worked with Hochstein on energy matters.
A source familiar with the process told Axios that “it’s frankly good to have someone who is deeply suspicious of the project and of Russian intentions because he will push hard … to manage the threat.”
Illustration: Aïda Amer/Axios
Top Biden officials are privately frustrated by their lack of visibility into COVID vaccine data collected by the CDC, Axios’ Caitlin Owens reports.
- Why it matters: America is increasingly reliant on data from other countries — or from drug companies — about vaccine effectiveness.
The CDC’s culture is to release data only when it’s ready for publication.
- That may make sense for the public. But it’s frustrating for policymakers trying to make real-time decisions, said one top source familiar with internal discussions.
- “That’s where the tension is, like: ‘Where the hell are the data?'” the source said.
The big picture: The data standoff reflects rising tensions between the CDC and the rest of the administration.
Gymnastics triple medalist Suni Lee, 18, the first Hmong American to win gold, waves to fans during a parade in her native St. Paul yesterday.
- She starts this week as a freshman at Auburn University in Alabama.
Above: Brittany Commisso, an executive assistant who accused Gov. Andrew Cuomo of groping her breast at the governor’s mansion, goes public on “CBS This Morning,” saying he “groped me, he touched me, not only once, but twice.”
- She’s the first woman to file a criminal complaint against Cuomo.
With impeachment increasingly likely, New York Lt. Gov. Kathy Hochul is already seeking advice on first steps in office, including which Cuomo officials to keep, The Wall Street Journal’s Jimmy Vielkind reports.
- In the most acute sign yet of Cuomo’s isolation, top aide Melissa DeRosa quit last night — with a statement that didn’t mention him.
Another way the country is on fire!
- The CDC bases “community transmission” on the number of cases per 100,000, and the number of positive tests, for the last week.
Photo: ICON/NASA via AP
To prepare to send astronauts to Mars, NASA is taking applications for four people to live for a year in a 1,700-square-foot Martian habitat (rendering above), created by a 3D-printer, in a building at Johnson Space Center in Houston.
- The paid volunteers will work a simulated Martian exploration mission — complete with spacewalks, limited communications back home, restricted food and equipment failures, AP reports.
NASA plans three of these experiments. The first starts fall 2022.
Above: The Mars Dune Alpha habitat is being made by a 3D-printer at Johnson Space Center.
Illustration: Annelise Capossela/Axios
Digital maps breakthroughs are enabling real-time navigation details for pedestrians, 3D geolocation for drones and augmented reality for gaming, Axios transportation correspondent Joann Muller writes.
- For autonomous vehicles, HD maps do more than just provide a high-def view of the world — they also enable a self-driving car to know precisely where it is, down to a few centimeters.
Most AV developers get to know a test city the same way any new resident does — by driving around.
- They spend a few weeks manually annotating everything about the streetscape, from lane markings to crosswalks and speed limits.
- AVs can be taught to drive below the speed limit on a certain stretch, or stop beyond the line for better visibility at a bad intersection.
About 200 people joined President Obama’s scaled-back 60th birthday bash on Martha’s Vineyard this weekend. A source gives this glimpse:
- President Biden, the Dalai Lama, Justin Trudeau and other world leaders sent video greetings that were played at the party.
- John Legend sang “Happy Birthday.”
- Lifelong friends from Hawaii and Marty Nesbitt gave toasts, with gentle ribbing.
- Valerie Jarrett, Eric Holder, Elizabeth Alexander, Arne Duncan and Pete Souza (who took the picture above) were in attendance.
Officials said the event followed CDC public-health protocols, including a testing regimen managed by a COVID coordinator.
- NIH Director Francis Collins said on CNN: “I think they’re doing everything they can to minimize the likelihood that this will be an occasion where infections happen.”
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Slain Chicago police officer ‘wanted to do good for the world,’ brother says
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22.) THE HILL MORNING REPORT
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23.) THE HILL 12:30 REPORT
24.) ROLL CALL
Morning Headlines
A sweeping bipartisan infrastructure agreement is now inching toward likely Senate passage. The latest procedural step came Sunday night when senators voted 69-28 to adopt the substitute amendment; the Senate then voted 68-29 on cloture on the bill. Read more…
After nearly a decade of bureaucratic slowdowns, advocacy efforts and stalled legislation, veterans may be getting increased access to one of the more effective treatments for combat-related mental health conditions: a service dog. Read more…
Watch: A race for the podium, whiskey and birthdays — Congressional Hits and Misses
In the latest Congressional Hits and Misses, the State Department is searching for a rare whiskey bottle, Rep. Crenshaw announces he’s pro-birthday and Senate leaders Schumer and McConnell are in a race that proves Bob Dole right: “The most dangerous place in Washington …” Watch here…
Click here to subscribe to Fintech Beat for the latest market and regulatory developmentsin finance and financial technology.
Senators call on State Department to speed up student visas
Sen. Alex Padilla, chairman of the Judiciary Committee’s immigration panel, and nearly two dozen other Democratic senators called on the State Department on Friday to speed up processing of student visas ahead of the start of the school year. Read more…
House Democrats restart effort to craft new voting rights bill
The House Administration Committee on Friday kick-started the process for creating a new Voting Rights Act bill, releasing a report alleging that states have used voter identification laws, voter roll purges and redistricting to minimize the impact of minority voters. Read more…
Clyburn: Pass voting bills or Democrats will lose majorities
As a young civil rights activist, James E. Clyburn was involved in protests that led to passage of the Voting Rights Act. Now, Rep. Clyburn says Congress needs to act to stop a new assault on voting. He joined CQ Roll Call’s Equal Time podcast to discuss what’s at stake and how he expects it to play out. Read more…
CQ Roll Call is a part of FiscalNote, the leading technology innovator at the intersection of global business and government. Copyright 2021 CQ Roll Call. All rights reserved Privacy | Safely unsubscribe now.
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25.) POLITICO PLAYBOOK
POLITICO Playbook: What Biden, Schumer, McConnell, Sinema and Portman learned from BIF
DRIVING THE DAY
BREAKING: Treasury Secretary JANET YELLEN weighs in on Congress’ handling of the debt ceiling.
“In recent years Congress has addressed the debt limit through regular order, with broad bipartisan support,” Yellen said in a statement. “In fact, during the last administration, Democrats and Republicans came together to do their duty three times. Congress should do so again now by increasing or suspending the debt limit on a bipartisan basis.”
Backstory: Senate Republicans have urged Democrats to raise the debt limit via the forthcoming reconciliation bill, which can pass without GOP votes. Caitlin Emma and Jennifer Scholtes scooped last week that Democrats have no plans to do so. Until now the Biden administration hasn’t taken a position. Yellen’s statement is a clear sign that the reconciliation bill, which will be released later today, will not address the debt ceiling and that the two parties are headed toward a showdown, likely in late September, when Democrats may add a debt ceiling increase to a short-term funding measure needed to avert a government shutdown.
Threat of a government shutdown? Possibility of America defaulting on its loans? Dust off that Blackberry, fire off a manual RT, and put on some LMFAO. It’s feeling very 2011.
Welcome to Infrastructure Week! (Never gets old.)
The legislation formerly known as BIF — officially it’s the Infrastructure Investment & Jobs Act, but IIJA doesn’t exactly roll off the tongue — could pass the Senate today.
The bill experienced a delay that inconvenienced the weekend plans of senators because Sen. BILL HAGERTY, a Trump loyalist from Tennessee, refused to agree to speed up the process. If the delay tactics continue today, the vote won’t happen until about 3 a.m. Tuesday. (Read up on the latest here, via our dynamic, if exhausted, Senate duo Burgess Everett and Marianne Levine.)
The Hagerty move was an exception that proved a rule: DONALD TRUMP, who just this weekend the head of the RNC said “still leads the party,” had little influence over the process.
Good Monday morning. Thanks for reading Playbook. Drop us a line: Rachael Bade, Eugene Daniels, Ryan Lizza, Tara Palmeri.
What else did we learn during BIF’s long and winding road to (seemingly imminent) passage? We pinged some of the people at the center of the deal in the Senate and White House for some lessons learned. Here are some of the key takeaways:
Trump: While it’s probably too much to say that the infrastructure bill is a repudiation of Trump, it might be seen as a kind of senatorial subtweet of him. The five Republicans who negotiated it are the five most anti-Trump GOP senators: ROB PORTMAN (Ohio), MITT ROMNEY (Utah), LISA MURKOWSKI (Alaska), SUSAN COLLINS (Maine) and BILL CASSIDY (La.). (All but Portman voted to convict Trump at his second Senate impeachment trial earlier this year.)
These are the GOP senators who have been the most vocal about Trump’s actions eroding democratic norms. The bill isn’t about Trump, but it was hard not to notice that those GOP senators most concerned about him were the ones who worked the hardest to show that a bipartisan democratic process was still possible.
On the other hand: Sen. TODD YOUNG (R-Ind.), who voted to advance the bill, announced Sunday night that he would vote against final passage. Young is up for reelection next year, and the late-inning attacks from the Trump right vis-a-vis the timing of his opposition did not seem like a coincidence. (He cited the CBO score.)
McConnell: Most observers predicted the minority leader would play a familiar role: chief obstructionist. Not only did MITCH MCCONNELL support the bipartisan talks behind the scenes, he voted to advance the bill. McConnell has clearly sided with the political argument Portman and other Republicans made on the Senate floor Sunday: The legislation is good on the merits, it could benefit the party to be seen as productive rather than purely obstructionist, and a worse version — from the GOP perspective — would have passed under reconciliation anyway.
The bipartisan deal may also hurt a top Democratic priority, or at least McConnell and his colleagues hope it will. “This obviously severely undercuts the narrative that the Senate is broken and that the filibuster should be eliminated,“ said a senior Senate GOP aide.
Sinema, Sinema, Sinema: The GOP praise for the Democratic senator from Arizona remains off the charts. While we were all paying perhaps a little too much attention to JOE MANCHIN (D-W.Va.), who is happy to talk to reporters each day as he strolls through Senate corridors, KYRSTEN SINEMA, who generally avoids us, was quietly pushing this giant boulder up the hill. One GOP aide closely involved in the talks noted that Sinema’s insistence on a bipartisan bill against the wishes of most of her Democratic colleagues helped convince them a deal was possible and, this person noted, allowed Republicans to have far more influence in the process than they had any right to expect. Did we mention they really like Sinema?
Schumer: Early in the process the majority leader, at least publicly, seemed unenthusiastic about the deal. CHUCK SCHUMER, as is common during the fifth year of his Senate terms, is hugging the left these days, and the left hated the BIF process. It was the Sinema-Biden mindmeld that forced BIF to happen in the Senate, and Schumer eventually shepherded the bill through adroitly, using a (failed) cloture vote to push things along when talks dragged, and opening the spigot of amendments just enough to neuter GOP criticism that the process wasn’t fair.
Still, we don’t see the G-22/G-10 process as likely to be a model for other significant legislation this Congress. Democrats noted that the most GOP-friendly portions of the Biden agenda are all in the infrastructure bill, and they are bristling over the delay tactics this weekend despite the supermajority in favor of the legislation. One Republican told us the G-10 staff is burned out and the committee chairs, which lost control of policymaking to the ad hoc group of senators, all want to “kill” the Portman- and Sinema-led group.
The senior GOP aide added, “Getting this done in the current political climate has been extraordinarily difficult. It took four months to get to this point. This deal nearly died a hundred times along the way, and partisan forces sought to undermine it.”
The White House: Would the White House have pursued this course absent Sinema’s (and Manchin’s) insistence on a bipartisan deal as a buffer between the party-line votes on the American Rescue Plan and the upcoming budget? Doubtful. But the West Wing’s view is that it was a victory for Biden-style prioritization and discipline. “We set a strategy — two bills — in April and stuck with it,” said a senior White House official. “We ignored the noise and the doubts and stuck with our plan.”
Added another top Biden adviser: “People continue to underestimate the president and his ability to get things done. This is the most popular initiative Congress can move on, even according to the DCCC polling.”
On the other hand: The bill still has a long road through the House to get to President JOE BIDEN’s desk.
The press: One of the most important lessons for the press in covering such a long and complicated negotiation is to refrain from viewing daily comments from the key players as determinative of the outcome. Most public statements are negotiating ploys meant to influence the final outcome rather than torpedoes designed to destroy the deal (at least the ones from good-faith actors who want to pass something). This is a good reminder as we move on to covering the much more sweeping and more complicated reconciliation bill. Sinema and BERNIE SANDERS and JOSH GOTTHEIMER and ALEXANDRIA OCASIO-CORTEZ are all already using their considerable leverage to stake out what might look like irreconcilable differences.
But don’t confuse attempts to shape legislation, which the White House and Democratic leaders will have to resolve, for a bill’s demise — especially when the president and his party’s future depend on it passing.
Speaking of which …
HOUSE DEMS’ UPHILL CLIMB: We’ve seen several memos floating around this month from political operatives analyzing the prospects for Dems to keep control of the House after the 2022 midterms. A top progressive strategist circulated an analysis Sunday night that caught our attention.
His state-by-state study of where things will stand after redistricting, which overall will benefit Republicans, laid out the math for Democrats by highlighting a few simple numbers:
195: the projected floor for House Democrats after the midterms.
232: the projected ceiling for House Democrats after the midterms.
37: the number of swing seats in 2022.
2/3: the percentage of those swing seats that Dems will need to win in order to retain their House majority.
Bonus statistic that tells you just how difficult this will be for the Dems:
“Democrats who won 51 percent of the adjusted two-party vote in 2020, will likely have to win between one and two points more in 2022 to retain control.”
WHICH IS WHY SOME DEMS ARE OBSESSING ABOUT THIS: Historically the number of seats lost by a president’s party in his first midterm election is closely correlated with the president’s job approval.
For months, Biden’s approval has been extraordinarily steady. But a few pollsters have detected a recent dip that is making Dems nervous. Even such a small change — and this one seems tied to the reemergence of the coronavirus pandemic — could have big consequences in 2022 given the tight margins in Congress.
CNN’s Harry Enten: “Throughout the first six months of Biden’s term, his approval rating always stood at between 51% and 55%. When it hit 51%, it quickly rebounded into the mid-50s. In fact, his approval rating averaged 53% during his first six months in office.
“Over the last few weeks, though, we’ve seen a number of polls come out where Biden’s at or tied for the lowest level of his presidency. … None of these polls or the average show a massive decline in Biden’s approval rating. Together, though, they seem to be telling a story that Biden’s approval rating has leaked a little bit. This wouldn’t be a story if it weren’t for the fact that Biden’s approval rating has been so steady. The shift downward in the last few weeks is an illustration that events and time can move Biden’s numbers.”
BIDEN’S MONDAY — The president will remain in Wilmington, Del. Biden will receive the President’s Daily Brief at 10 a.m.
THE HOUSE and THE SENATE are out.
PLAYBOOK READS
Four stories that jumped out at us this morning …
1. Just released: a landmark U.N. study on the effects of global warming. And unsurprisingly, it’s not pretty: “Nowhere to run, nowhere to hide.’ U.N. climate report warns of ‘code red for humanity,’” AP: “Earth’s climate is getting so hot that temperatures in about a decade will probably blow past a level of warming that world leaders have sought to prevent, according to a report released Monday that the United Nations calls a ‘code red for humanity.’ ‘It’s just guaranteed that it’s going to get worse,’ said report co-author LINDA MEARNS, a senior climate scientist at the U.S. National Center for Atmospheric Research. ‘I don’t see any area that is safe … Nowhere to run, nowhere to hide.’
“But scientists also eased back a bit on the likelihood of the absolute worst climate catastrophes. The authoritative Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) report, which calls climate change clearly human-caused and ‘unequivocal,’ makes more precise and warmer forecasts for the 21st century than it did last time it was issued in 2013.”
2. The Taliban is steamrolling into new territory as the end-of-month American pullout deadline creeps closer. That means maximum political pain for Biden, whose critics are being handed new evidence daily to bolster their case that he’s hastily abandoning the country. The NYT trio of Helene Cooper, Katie Rogers and Thomas Gibbons-Neff captures the situation in a story with a bluntly worded headline — “U.S. Response Sends Clear Message to Afghanistan: You’re on Your Own” — and a just-as-blunt opening few graphs: “If the Taliban had seized three provincial capitals in northern Afghanistan a year ago, like they did on Sunday, the American response would most likely have been ferocious. Fighter jets and helicopter gunships would have responded in force, beating back the Islamist group or, at the very least, stalling its advance.
“But these are different times. What aircraft the U.S. military could muster from hundreds of miles away struck a cache of weapons far from Kunduz, Taliqan or Sari-i-pol, the cities that already had been all but lost to the Taliban. The muted American response on Sunday showed in no uncertain terms that America’s 20-year war in Afghanistan is over. The mismanaged and exhausted Afghan forces will have to retake the cities on their own, or leave them to the Taliban for good.”
3. Who would have guessed that what once seemed like a progressive pipe dream — a $15-an-hour minimum wage — has largely taken root on its own? Yet here we are: “Wages have been rising rapidly as the economy reopens and businesses struggle to hire enough workers. Some of the biggest gains have gone to workers in some of the lowest-paying industries. Overall, nearly 80 percent of U.S. workers now earn at least $15 an hour, up from 60 percent in 2014,” write WaPo’s Andrew Van Dam and Heather Long.
“This higher pay is likely to be permanent as wages rarely fall once they move up. Economists caution that a higher average wage is not the same as a $15 minimum wage. … Nonetheless, rising pay is still a game-changer for millions of workers.”
4. We’d put the odds of an Ocasio-Cortez vs. Schumer primary next year at about 10 to 1, possibly longer. The Senate leader is doing everything he can to appease the left flank of the party, and AOC says they’re working well together. But keeping the possibility alive can only improve her leverage in Congress, and that’s precisely what she did in an interview with CNN that popped Sunday.
“‘I know it drives everybody nuts. But the way that I really feel about this, and the way that I really approach my politics and my political career is that I do not look at things and I do not set my course positionally,’ Ocasio-Cortez told [Dana] Bash in ‘Being…AOC,’ the first episode of the new CNN series ‘Being…’ that airs Monday night at 9 p.m. ET. ‘And I know there’s a lot of people who do not believe that. But I really — I can’t operate the way that I operate and do the things that I do in politics while trying to be aspiring to other things or calculating to other things,’ she said in an interview in her district in late June.”
MORE READS …
POLITICS CORNER
AUTHENTICITY WATCH — This is becoming a pattern. “J.D. Vance Converted to Trumpism. Will Ohio Republicans Buy It?” by NYT’s Trip Gabriel: “Today, as [J.D.] VANCE pursues the Republican nomination for an open Senate seat in Ohio, he has performed a whiplash-inducing conversion to Trumpism, in which he no longer emphasizes that white working-class problems are self-inflicted.”
THE SOCIAL NETWORK — “Zuckerberg’s cash fuels GOP suspicion and new election rules,” by AP’s Nicholas Riccardi
AS HER TIME IN THE W.H. WINDS DOWN — “How Anita Dunn got ‘to the table’ and has helped other women follow,” by CNN’s Dana Bash and Abbie Sharpe
CUOMO LATEST
HARD TO OVERSTATE THIS LOSS — “Melissa DeRosa, Cuomo’s top staffer, resigns,” by Anna Gronewold and Bill Mahoney in Albany: “It’s undoubtedly the most significant loss for the Cuomo administration, even at the end of a week in which the governor has been condemned by everybody from the president to the state legislators who now have the votes to impeach him. DeRosa has been widely viewed as [New York Gov. ANDREW] CUOMO’s most trusted adviser and gained national fame when she occupied the seat next to him at last year’s pandemic briefings.”
SPEAKING OUT — “Executive assistant who accused Cuomo of groping speaks publicly for the first time: ‘The governor needs to be held accountable,’” CBS: “BRITTANY COMMISSO is one of 11 women referenced in a scathing report from New York State Attorney General LETITIA JAMES … Until now, Commisso had remained anonymous, referred to only as ‘Executive Assistant #1’ in the report. Her full interview will air on ‘CBS This Morning’ on Monday.”
STATE OF PLAY — “Cuomo digs in, shows no sign of heeding calls to resign,” by AP’s Marina Villeneuve
PANDEMIC REPORT
A DEEP DIVE ON DELTA — “‘Goldilocks virus’: Delta vanquishes all variant rivals as scientists race to understand its tricks,” by WaPo’s Joel Achenbach, Carolyn Johnson, Lena Sun and Brittany Shammas: “The coronavirus pandemic in America has become a delta pandemic. By the end of July, it accounted for 93.4 percent of new infections, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The speed with which it dominated the pandemic has left scientists nervous about what the virus will do next. The variant battles of 2021 are part of a longer war, one that is far from over. …
“Epidemiologists had hoped getting 70 or 80 percent of the population vaccinated, in combination with immunity from natural infections, would bring the virus under control. But a more contagious virus means the vaccination target has to be much higher, perhaps in the range of 90 percent. Globally, that could take years. … ‘To see delta just running laps around these other strains is very concerning,’ said BENJAMIN NEUMAN, a virologist with Texas A&M University. ‘It’s like “Jurassic Park” the moment you realize the dinosaurs have all got loose again.’” Lots more here.
AMERICA AND THE WORLD
STILL NO CLOSER TO ANSWERS — “Mystery Attacks on Diplomats Leave Scores of Victims but Still Little Evidence,” by NYT’s David Sanger: “President Biden’s top aides were told on Friday that experts studying the mysterious illnesses affecting scores of diplomats, spies and their family members were still struggling to find evidence to back up the leading theory, that microwave attacks are being launched by Russian agents.
“The report came in an unusual, classified meeting called by the director of national intelligence, AVRIL D. HAINES, according to several senior administration officials who spoke on the condition of anonymity.”
CARLSON CENSORED … IN HUNGARY — via Brussels Playbook author Lili Bayer: Fox News’ TUCKER CARLSON may have come to Hungary with the expectation he’d be spending time with kindred spirits, but Hungarian officials ended up censoring the television host.
This is awkward: In an interview with Hungarian PM VIKTOR ORBÁN, Carlson posed a question where he referred to Chinese leader XI JINPING as having “murdered many of his political opponents.” That’s somewhat uncomfortable for Orbán, given he has nurtured close ties to Beijing. And so, when Hungary’s international comms office sent out a transcript of the interview on Friday, it omitted the reference to the Chinese leadership. The NYT’s Ben Novak pointed out the discrepancy — prompting officials to send out a second, real version of what was said.
The real Orbán: The episode highlighted an awkward reality for the conservative right: Orbán may appeal to them rhetorically, but his policies are often in deep contradiction with their values and priorities.
TRUMP CARDS
EYES EMOJI — Iowa Republican Party Chair JEFF KAUFMANN (@kaufmannGOP), at 8:58 p.m. Sunday: “Had a great 15 minute call from President Trump this evening. He asked about Iowa’s farmers and other topics including Iowa’s first-in-the-nation status.”
PLAYBOOKERS
SPOTTED: Barack Obama having (hangover?) brunch at Beach Road in Vineyard Haven on Sunday, the morning after his birthday bash. (h/t Calla Walsh)
EVERY ROSE (GARDEN) HAS ITS THORNS — “Melania Trump Rips ‘Dishonorable’ Historian Over Criticism of Rose Garden Renovations,” Newsweek … “Evisceration of White House Rose Garden was completed a year ago this month, and here was the grim result—decades of American history made to disappear,” NBC’s Michael Beschloss tweeted.
@OfficeofMelania: “.@BeschlossDC has proven his ignorance by showing a picture of the Rose Garden in its infancy. The Rose Garden is graced with a healthy & colorful blossoming of roses. His misleading information is dishonorable & he should never be trusted as a professional historian.”
TRANSITIONS — David Concepcion is now director of media monitoring at America Rising. He previously was deputy war room director at the RNC. … Kendra Wood is now assistant chief clerk of debates in the House’s Office of the Clerk. She most recently was clerk for the House Science Committee. …
… John Hursh and Sevag Kechichian are joining Democracy for the Arab World Now. Hursh will be program director and previously was director of research at the Stockton Center for International Law. Kechichian will be Gulf researcher and previously was lead researcher on Saudi Arabia at Amnesty International. … Jourdan Lewis is now manager of government relations at Breakthrough Energy. She previously was senior policy adviser for Rep. Bobby Rush (D-Ill.).
ENGAGED — Connor Flocks, a management consultant with Accenture Federal Services, proposed to Melissa Schlosberg, a 2L at GW law school, on Friday at the island at Constitution Gardens off the Mall. They met at a Christmas party in Dupont in 2018, thanks to overlapping Arkansas and Vanderbilt alumni friend groups in the city. Pic by Jordan Moya
WEEKEND WEDDING — Adam Morfeld, a Nebraska state senator and the executive director and founder of Civic Nebraska, and Rachel Ayalon, an assistant director of admissions at the University of Nebraska, got married Saturday. The couple, who met online, wed in the senator’s lounge of the Nebraska State Capitol surrounded by close friends and family. Pic
HAPPY BIRTHDAY: Sen. Roger Marshall (R-Kan.) … CNN’s Chris Cuomo … NYT’s Julian Barnes and Ken Vogel … Lockheed Martin’s Marcel Lettre … Bill Burton … Ann Selzer of Selzer & Co. … Robin Pressman … Kathleen Matthews … Michael Fletcher … Hoda Kotb … Leila Sepehri Getto … SmartPower’s Brian F. Keane … Tim Tagaris … Isaac Lederman … Facebook’s Robert Traynham … Sharon Wagener … Christine Trippi … Brian Hart of LightHouse DC … Kerry Troup … POLITICO’s Jordan Hoshko … BBC’s John Simpson … David Sours … Fred Brown of Dezenhall Resources… New Deal Strategies’ Rebecca Kirszner Katz … Courtney Bradway of Cornerstone (28) … former Reps. John Sweeney (R-N.Y.) and Charles Djou (R-Hawaii) … Mike Mears … William Smith … Suzanne Elio … Gable Brady … Ryan Hampton … Karin Tanabe … Jamie Reno … Andrew Light … Mike Whatley … Catherine Tran … Eric Woolson … Rhonda Bentz Bozzella … Richard Weiblinger … Kate Leone … Lindsay Singleton of Rokk Solutions … Ann E.W. Stone … Chris Sautter … Virginia Pancoe … Connie Doebele
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: Dems Need Mask/Vax Panic to Screw Up at Least Two More Elections
Top O’ the Briefing
Masking Their Intentions
Happy Monday, dear Kruiser Morning Briefing friends. I like to do at least one thing a week that makes the neighbors think twice about approaching me.
Well, Mandatepalooza is back and more irritating than ever.
As I returned to perusing the news after my weekend hiatus, I noticed a lot more mask and vaccine mandate stories than usual. Yeah, the nonsense has been ramping up the past few weeks but these last few days have been absolutely ridiculous.
Let’s take a quick tour of some of them and then ponder what’s really going on.
Stacey had a great post yesterday about the nation’s scolding grandpa Dr. Faustus still being a raving hypocrite. Here’s her conclusion:
Gatherings are a risk, or they aren’t. Vaccinated individuals are broadly protected from severe illness with COVID-19, or they aren’t. The threat from new variants is serious, or it isn’t. If Fauci would like people to take him seriously, consistency would be great. Instead, he chooses to politicize public health with his selective outrage and protect his political allies by remaining mum.
It’s pretty safe to say that as long as this clown is left with so much power that we are going to be flailing in our response to all things COVID-19.
Vaccine passports have been in the news a lot lately. New York City finally rolled its passport out and it’s kinda turned the city into a whiteout, which Stacey also wrote about:
New York City became the first major metro to require proof of vaccination to access restaurants, gyms, and other venues last week. Mayor Bill de Blasio proudly announced the “Key to New York City” pass, a vaccine passport, effective August 16. As Karol Markowicz pointed out, the vaccine passport erased children under 12 from public life because they cannot be vaccinated. The mayor’s office updated the policy to exempt them from the vaccine requirement and mandate masks for children instead.
Public policy is often full of unintended consequences. And while de Blasio and others like him are just sure they are sticking it to white Trump supporters with vaccine passports like these, nothing could be further from the truth. According to New York City’s tracking, only 32% of black residents are fully vaccinated, and 43% of Hispanic residents have taken the complete doses. White New Yorkers are not too much farther ahead with 46% participation, but the unvaccinated are probably not some reservoir of Trump support since the city went for Biden — he got 76% of the NYC vote.
Rabbi Michael Barclay had a harsher assessment of the passport situation:
History always has a sad way of repeating itself, and it is frightening that the “yellow badge” of persecution is once again finding its way into our society. This time, it’s in the form of vaccine passports.
My colleague Jazz Shaw over at HotAir wrote a piece about the burgeoning fake vax passport market.
Of course, none of this has anything to do with public health. If it did, alleged President Joe might pay some attention to our southern border. As Bryan put it:
You don’t do what Biden is doing with regard to the border if you really have Americans’ health and interests at heart. If Biden had any interest in upholding his oath of office to defend the country, he would not be doing what he is doing on the border.
And you certainly don’t mull a crackdown on travel from Europe even for the vaccinated in the name of science while leaving the border as porous as he has.
The Democrats need to keep hitting the COVID panic button for a couple of reasons. The first is that they’ve gone kinda fascist now and want to keep the masses in check with the “public health” tyranny. The other reason is that they want to use all of this to keep flushing election laws down the toilet. That makes me wonder if maybe they aren’t peaking a little too soon here. They might want to pace themselves with the variant panic if they want to be able to jerk around the election laws 15 months from now.
Then again, the way Fauci and Co. have been just making stuff up, they may not be worried about their ability to wing it for a few more years.
Everything Isn’t Awful
PJ Media
[WATCH] Here’s What Defunding the Police Looks Like in One City
This Justice Dept. hates justice. NUNES: Attorney General Garland Might Try to Bury Durham Report
An American Story: Tennessee Girl Discards Christianity, Becomes Climate Change Activist, Joins ISIS
Excellent. Biden Pick for ATF Chief in Serious Trouble in the Senate
Fauci Fatigue: This Summer’s Superspreader Hypocrisy Looks Just Like Last Summer’s
Basheer Jones Hates America. He Wants to Be Mayor of Cleveland.
Are Michael Wolff’s Troubling Revelations About Fox News and the RNC True?
Corporate Rent-Seeking Reaches New Level With Postal Service Reform Bill
You’re Not Going to Believe Why a Wisconsin School Spent $50K To Move a Rock
Memes Make It Clear: New York City’s Vaccine Passport Is the Real Jim Crow 2.0
Oh. New York Times Calls Osama bin Laden a ‘Devoted Family Man’
Suspects Finally Arrested for Murder of 8-Year-Old Secoriea Turner at Atlanta BLM Rally Last Year
In Progressive Washington State, Criminal Justice Reform Only a Criminal Could Love
1,500 Rabbis Slam the ADL as Unable Even to Identify, Much Less Fight, Anti-Semitism
Townhall Mothership
No Going Back Now: Senate Votes to End Debate on $1.2 Trillion Infrastructure Bill
Lori Lightfoot Criticized for Tweet Following Cop’s Death: Some ‘Say We Do Too Much’ for the Police
Tunnel to Towers is Commemorating 20th Anniversary of 9/11 in a Truly Special Way
Brian Stelter Applauds Chris Cuomo for Tuning Out ‘Family Drama’ Surrounding Brother’s Sex Scandal
New Lawsuit In Hawaii To Restore Rights Unlawfully Taken
National Review Takes Aim At Challenge To Heller
Give Oregon to Canada. Push To Outlaw Hunting In Oregon Underway
Fed Up: Gun Owners Sue Over Lengthy Licensing, Permitting Delays
Reminder: she’s evil. Weingarten open to vaccine mandates for teachers after opposing them
LOL because of course. Fake vaccination card market flourishing
Denver will “discipline” unvaccinated first responders
Hundreds at Obama Party, but One Important Person Got the Brush-Off
Like Locusts, Hollywood Stars and the Tech Elite Are Swarming on Austin
#RIP. “Night Court,” “The Fall Guy” Actress Markie Post, Dead at 70
Accuser Drops the Hammer on Gov. Cuomo With Criminal Complaint, New TV Interview
Twitter Has Kicked Erick Erickson off… for Being ‘Pro-Science’
This tweet from John Legend could be the fastest badly aged take in the history of Twitter
EPIC. WATCH: Ball girl TAKES OUT a fan running on the field at Dodger Stadium
VIP
[WATCH] Kruiser’s ‘Beyond the Briefing’—Now Accepting Applications for My Taco Cult
‘Unwoke’ With Kevin and Kruiser #6: Cuomo Bashing and Kevin Tries a New Whiskey
The Fringe with Megan Fox, Episode 67: Media Malfeasance and the Great Illusion
Kruiser’s (Almost) Daily Distraction: Take a Hike… Really
Weekly Good News Round-Up: Duct-Tape Adventures, Social Shenanigans, and Weird Olympic Sports
Daily Dose of Downey: More Scare Tactics From the CDC About the Virus That 99% of People Survive
How Did This Get Produced? New FX/Hulu Series Undermines Radical Leftist Gender Theory
Is COVID-19 Really Impacting Kids Or Is This the Latest Panic to Push Restrictions and Mandates?
COVID: Yes, There Are Tests for the Delta Variant
Joe Rogan Reads a Peer-Reviewed Study and the Vax-at-All-Costs Crowd Wants Him Cancelled
Trump Has Questions After Thousands of Ineligible Wisconsin Voters FINALLY Removed From Rolls
GOLD What Can the Liberal Media Do with a Dementia-Ridden Biden and a B****y VP?
Around the Interwebz
Another #RIP. Bobby Bowden Dies: College Football Coach With Two National Champions Was 91
How to Bring Mindfulness to Your Digital Life
ISS astronauts show off zero-gravity moves in the space Olympics which should be a real thing
Make Your Home Smell Like Swedish Meatballs With IKEA’s New HUVUDROLL Candle
Smells Like Onion
The Kruiser Kabana
Kabana Gallery
Kabana Tunes
I think I’ve learned all I can from Forensic Files.
30.) WHITE HOUSE DOSSIER
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31.) THE DISPATCH
The Morning Dispatch: Good News on the Jobs Front
Plus: Breaking down Missouri’s 2022 GOP field.
The Dispatch Staff | 17 min ago | 3 | 1 |
Happy Monday! Congratulations to the United States’ Olympic delegation, which rallied over the weekend to finish first in gold medals for the third straight Summer games, and overall medals for the seventh straight. USA!
Quick Hits: Today’s Top Stories
- The Bureau of Labor Statistics reported Friday that the U.S. economy added 943,000 jobs in July—the largest single-month gain in nearly a year. The unemployment rate dropped from 5.9 percent to 5.4 percent, though the economy remains 5.7 million jobs underwater compared with February 2020.
- Taliban fighters captured five provincial capitals in northern Afghanistan over the weekend, continuing their aggressive push to fill the vacuum left by retreating U.S. forces. On Sunday, the State Department urged U.S. citizens in the country to leave immediately, warning that “given the security conditions and reduced staffing, the Embassy’s ability to assist U.S. citizens in Afghanistan is extremely limited even within Kabul.”
- The White House announced Friday it would extend the moratorium on federal student loan payments through January of next year, prolonging a policy first put into place by the Trump administration in March 2020.
- United Airlines announced Friday it would require all of its 67,000 employees to receive COVID-19 vaccines, becoming the first U.S. airline to do so. Google, Facebook, Walmart, and Disney have implemented similar mandates for some or most of their employees in recent days.
- The Centers for Disease Control on Friday released data showing that people who had COVID-19 and subsequently got vaccinated were less than half as likely to be reinfected as people with natural immunity alone.
- Iran’s newly inaugurated president, Ebrahim Raisi, met with leaders from several Palestinian terror groups Friday, telling them that “Palestine has been and always will be the number one issue of the Muslim world.”
- California’s Dixie Fire, which has been raging for nearly a month, has become the second-biggest blaze in state history, surpassing 2018’s Mendocino Complex Fire. The California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection tweeted Sunday that more than 8,500 firefighters are currently battling wildfires across the state.
Strong Economic Numbers in July
In the days leading up to Friday’s jobs report, there were plenty of reasons to be pessimistic about the impending July numbers from the Department of Labor (DOL). The Delta variant had been spreading like wildfire, many virus-related restrictions had been reimplemented, the incentive-warping enhanced unemployment insurance and eviction moratorium both remained in effect, and payroll processing firm ADP’s private jobs tally—which typically tracks fairly closely with the DOL’s figures—sharply missed expectations earlier in the week.
But when 8:30 a.m. rolled around and the Bureau of Labor Statistics blasted out its monthly Employment Situation Summary, recipients were met with some welcome news: The U.S. economy added 943,000 jobs in July—the highest monthly total since last August—leading the unemployment rate to drop from 5.9 percent to 5.4 percent. The May and June reports were revised up by a combined 119,000 jobs as well.
We’ve still got a long way to go—approximately 5.7 million fewer people are employed today than February 2020—but economists struggled to interpret Friday’s data as anything other than a massive step in the right direction.
“I have yet to find a blemish in this jobs report,” said Jason Furman, erstwhile chair of the Obama administration’s Council of Economic Advisers, who hasn’t been shy about critiquing the Biden administration. “I’ve never before seen such a wonderful set of economic data.”
That might be a bit hyperbolic—the U.S. economy, for example, added 4.8 million jobs in June 2020 when the pandemic-induced hole was much deeper—but July’s numbers presented policymakers and lawmakers with a whole lot to love.
As has become customary in just about each one of these post-vaccine reports, the leisure and hospitality sector led the rebound, adding about 380,000 jobs last month—including 253,000 restaurant and bar workers alone. Education came next, accounting for approximately 261,000 of the new jobs—though much of this school-teacher surge can be chalked up to COVID-inspired fluctuations in hiring seasonality. Business service employment rose by 60,000, transportation and warehousing by 50,000, healthcare by 37,000, and manufacturing by 27,000.
The labor force participation rate ticked up ever-so-slightly from 61.6 percent to 61.7—still well below February 2020’s 63.3 percent—and the number of long-term unemployed (27 or more weeks) fell 560,000 to 3.4 million. Employees’ average hourly wages inched up $0.11 to $30.54, while their weekly hours more or less held steady at around 35.
President Joe Biden delivered remarks Friday morning to revel in—and take credit for—the progress. “The Biden plan is working, the Biden plan produces results, and the Biden plan is moving the country forward,” he said, referring to his administration’s vaccination rollout and the American Rescue Plan. “We’re now the first administration in history to add jobs every single month in our first six months in office, and the only one in history to add more than 4 million jobs during the first six months.”
The Republican response to the jobs numbers was more muted than it had been in recent months when the data looked less promising, but GOP lawmakers who did speak up credited their own policies for the improvement. “Thanks in part to Republican governors removing the Biden work barrier that pays the jobless more to stay home than to work, the July jobs report finally met expectations,” Rep. Kevin Brady—Ranking Member on the House Ways & Means committee—said.
Show Me the Candidates!
With longtime GOP Sen. Roy Blunt of Missouri set to retire next year, the race to replace him is shaping up to be a fascinating test of where the current political energy is in a longtime Blue Dog Democrat state that has been trending redder and redder in recent years. Up at the site today, Chris Stirewalt has a breakdown of the rogues gallery that has turned up in the Republican primary, vying for the attention of the general public on Fox News (two candidates have announced on Tucker Carlson’s show, a third on Fox’s Special Report) and wooing a certain private citizen on trips down to Mar-a-Lago.
[Mark] McCloskey knows from his work how important promotion is, so he is working a Ron DeSantis primary strategy to try to become the Fox News candidate in the field. That makes [former Gov. Eric] Greitens the Newsmax nationalist in the race, a posture that helps him drum up small-dollar donations from the MAGA community to try to offset his weak support from traditional donors. Greitens has already sewn up the support of Trump insiders and kooky cable stalwarts including Rudy Giuliani, Victoria Toensing, Joe DiGenova, Sebastian Gorka, and Bernie Kerik. And don’t forget Rep. Billy Long, who declared for Senate after traveling to call on former President Trump and who went on Tucker Carlson Tonight last week to announce his candidacy.
Unless Hungarian strongman Viktor Orbán decides to stage a Budapest cage match to determine who deserves to be the true tribune of the people, that leaves McCloskey, Long, and Greitens substantially fighting over the same pool of votes. And that’s very good news for Republican chances in Missouri. With those three fighting each other, that should leave space for a semi-normal candidate to get through the primary. The situation here is like the Ohio Senate primary, where Republican elders also hope that a safer general-election candidate might slip past noisy nationalists J.D. Vance and Josh Mandel. It worked in this year’s Virginia and New Jersey GOP gubernatorial primaries, so that may be the party’s best model for the 2022 Senate races as well.
But who is the semi-normal candidate in Missouri? The bar is pretty low given how Republican the Show Me State has become and the presumed GOP lean of the midterm electorate. Plus, Missouri Democrats may be even worse basket cases than the Republicans. Seeming determined to become the Ilhan Omar of the Middle Mississippi Valley, Rep. Cori Bush is regularly dashing to the cameras to provide new fodder for Republicans to use in discrediting her party in the eyes of the state’s persuadable voters. And it’s also been up to Democratic mayors in St. Louis and Kansas City to reimpose limited mask mandates in the face of skyrocketing coronavirus infections. Indeed, Democrats’ narrow hopes of flipping the Senate seat rely on getting a little-known generic Democrat through their primary and then drawing a real kook on the GOP side. If Republicans can keep it together, the seat should be a safe one for them. But the semi-normal lane is a little crowded, too.
Worth Your Time
- In the latest entry for The Ruffian newsletter, Ian Leslie provides an additional perspective on last year’s Central Park dog walker/birdwatcher sagar, using it as a lens through which to discuss how reporters should do their work. “Journalists, like good novelists, should be curious about everything and empathetic about everyone. They should seek to tell a different story, not the story everybody else is telling,” Leslie writes. “They should instinctively want to report on what it felt like to be Amy Cooper that morning in Central Park, as well as Christian Cooper. The corollary of this attitude is a deep suspicion of stories with angels and demons which perfectly fit our own story about how the world is. Moral clarity means nothing to report.”
- Is the CDC’s eviction moratorium a win for the “politics of love” or a total abdication of congressional responsibility? In a detailed and compelling piece for the Washington Post, David Von Drehle makes a case for the latter. Instead of distributing funds expressly set aside for struggling tenants, the Biden administration has expanded the executive branch’s extralegal powers, punting the difficult decision-making over controversial policies to unelected judges. “The long-term solution was to restore the economy, which has been done in significant measure. The midterm solution was to provide financial aid to pandemic victims so they could keep up with their rent through the crisis. That money—tens of billions—was appropriated. But through failures of government, the bulk of the relief is sitting unused. … Remember: The moratorium is no longer protecting needy renters,” Von Drehle writes. “It is protecting the government agencies that are failing to connect those needy renters with available resources to assist them.”
Presented Without Comment
Also Presented Without Comment
Toeing the Company Line
- The State Department’s social media blitz calling for a diplomatic settlement in Afghanistan—#CeasefireNow—is effectively an announcement of America’s lack of will. The Taliban, which has taken city after city across the country in recent days, is not going to cede any political capital to the Afghan government in a war it is clearly winning. In his latest Vital Interests, Thomas Joscelyn reflects on the Biden administration’s fundamental misunderstanding of the jihadists’ goal to control Afghanistan in its entirety. “American diplomats and military leaders alike are fond of saying there is no ‘military solution’ for the war in Afghanistan. That’s because the U.S. gave up on any possibility of victory years ago,” he writes. “The same cannot be said for the Taliban.”
- Richard Goldberg—Foundation for Defense of Democracies senior adviser and frequent Dispatch contributor—joined Sarah and Steve on Friday’s Dispatch Podcast to talk all things Iran. In President Biden’s breakneck shift away from Trump’s diplomatic and rhetorical approach to the Iranian regime, Goldberg explains, Tehran has expanded its illicit nuclear proliferation more than ever before.
- American conservatives tend to recoil when politicians muse about transplanting Europe’s governmental systems and traditions to the United States, which makes the nationalist right’s infatuation with Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán all the more perplexing. In Friday’s G-File, Jonah argues that drawing on Orbán’s strongman leadership to push for particular policies is both politically misguided and futile in a large, diverse society. “I no more want to live in an America crammed into a Sweden-shaped hole by Bernie Sanders types than I want to live in an America shoved into a Hungary-shaped one,” he writes. “But I’m more dismayed by this crap on the right precisely because it concedes a crucial argument to the left. Shopping abroad for a duty-free model that lends credibility to social planners who wish to impose their will here at home is becoming a bipartisan affair.”
- In Sunday’s French Press, David delves into the Christianized toxic masculinity pushed by Pastor Mark Driscoll and his congregants at Mars Hill in Seattle before its dissolution. While some of Driscoll’s tenets—purpose, drive, and personal responsibility—resonated with young men in a positive way, its emphasis on dominance as inherently and valuably masculine glamorized the worst, and least Christian, male impulses. “His ministry did change lives. Others like him—before and since—have changed lives. And when you change a man’s life, you can inspire fierce devotion,” David writes. “But pastors and leaders must handle that devotion with great care. When countering a culture that often attacks traditional masculine inclinations as inherent vice, the answer isn’t to indulge traditional masculine inclinations as inherent virtue.”
Let Us Know
How much of this year’s Olympics did you end up watching? What was your favorite moment from the Games?
Reporting by Declan Garvey (@declanpgarvey), Andrew Egger (@EggerDC), Charlotte Lawson (@charlotteUVA), Ryan Brown (@RyanP_Brown), Harvest Prude (@HarvestPrude), Tripp Grebe (@tripper_grebe), Emma Rogers (@emw_96), Price St. Clair (@PriceStClair1), Jonathan Chew (@JonathanChew19), and Steve Hayes (@stephenfhayes).
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32.) LEGAL INSURRECTION
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33.) THE DAILY WIRE
34.) DESERET NEWS
35.) BRIGHT
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36.) AMERICAN THINKER
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37.) LARRY J. SABATO’S CRYSTAL BALL
38.) THE BLAZE
39.) THE FEDERALIST
40.) REUTERS
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41.) NOQ REPORT
42.) ARRA NEWS SERVICE
43.) REDSTATE
Hundreds at Obama Party, but One Important Person Got the Brush-Off
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44.) WORLD NET DAILY
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45.) MSNBC
August 9, 2021 THE LATEST Why Tokyo won’t recover from the Olympics anytime soon
by Dave Zirin Hosting the Olympics is never easy. But when Japan took the reins from Brazil in 2016, nobody would be able to predict what waited four years down the line. Now, after a year’s delay thanks to the pandemic, the Games came to a close on Sunday. As the Olympic Village empties of athletes and trainers, it’s worth taking stock of what they’re leaving behind, Dave Zirin writes.
“Now that the dust is clearing from the Games, it must be acknowledged that somehow — without spectators, with the specter of Covid-19, with volunteers quitting by the thousands, with tremendous resistance from locals — they pulled it off,” Zirin writes. “Yet pulling it off has come with a price.”
Read Dave Zirin’s full analysis here and don’t forget to check out the rest of your Monday MSNBC Daily. TOP STORIES Florida’s kids are less safe because Gov. DeSantis wants to be president some day. Read More Trying “to stop the will of the people and replace it with the will of the mob” isn’t patriotism. Read More TOP VIDEOS NEXT 25
To mark MSNBC’s 25th anniversary, MSNBC Daily featured 25 days of forward-looking essays on important issues from MSNBC anchors, hosts and correspondents. You can read the full collection of essays now at MSNBC.com/TheNext25. Follow MSNBC
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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 MONDAY, AUGUST 9, 2021 Good morning, NBC News readers.
The U.N. has released a blistering assessment of the human impact on climate change. More unvaccinated parents are bringing Covid home to their kids and Tokyo has passed the Olympic baton to Paris.
Here’s what we’re watching this Monday morning. Warming oceans, rising sea levels and other impacts of climate change may be “irreversible for centuries to millennia,” according to a blistering report released by the United Nations on Monday.
The report is the most comprehensive assessment from the U.N.’s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) since 2013 and provides the strongest case yet for human-caused global warming, saying it’s “unequivocal that human influence has warmed the atmosphere, ocean and land.”
“It has been clear for decades that the Earth’s climate is changing, and the role of human influence on the climate system is undisputed,” Valérie Masson-Delmotte, co-chair of the IPCC’s Working Group I, said in a statement.
The IPCC, established in the late 1980s, consists of thousands of scientists across 195 member governments who pore over the most recent published and peer-reviewed research on global warming and compile the findings into a report on the current state of the climate.
The sobering assessment comes less than three months before world leaders are set to convene from Oct. 31 to Nov. 12 in Glasgow, Scotland, for the 2021 U.N. Climate Change Conference.
Read more about the major scientific report here. Monday’s Top Stories
As the delta variant surges, unvaccinated adults are bringing Covid home to their kids — leaving children’s hospitals overwhelmed with young patients and struggling to keep up. Melissa DeRosa resigned as secretary to the governor Sunday as Cuomo faces calls to step down after New York’s attorney general alleged he sexually harassed nearly a dozen women. The rapid fall of provincial capitals deals a heavy blow to the crumbling Afghan government forces, which have struggled to contain the group’s offensive. Tokyo staged an Olympiad that was delayed by Covid and dismayed a skeptical public but still delivered its share of drama.
Fox News talking head Tucker Carlson’s paeans to the Hungarian government under authoritarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán are laughable, Casey Michel, author of “American Kleptocracy,” writes in an opinion piece. Also in the News
Editor’s Pick
Basing car insurance premiums on drivers’ credit histories disproportionately harms people of color, experts say. Lawmakers are starting to address the issue. Shopping
With back-to-school and end-of-season sales dominating August, major retailers like Target, Walmart and Best Buy are expected to host big deals this month. One Out-Of-This-World Thing
A few days after the government released its report on UFOs, Avi Loeb got a call from the Harvard astronomy department.
An administrative assistant informed Loeb, a professor of science at Harvard, that he was getting some new research money. And shortly after, a billionaire paid Loeb a visit on the front porch of his home to ask him about aliens.
“I’ve been in academia for about 40 years and been a department chair,” Loeb said. “Never have I ever seen a situation where a faculty member gets funding without looking for it and even meeting the donor.”
Read more about how this Harvard professor ended up on the hunt for UFOs here.
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49.) NBC FIRST READ
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From NBC’s Chuck Todd, Mark Murray and Ben Kamisar
FIRST READ: New Hampshire sits at the center of the battle for Senate control in 2022
It’s not a presidential election cycle, but the state of New Hampshire is poised to play a critical role in the fight for power in Washington, D.C. once again in 2022.
All eyes are on New Hampshire GOP Gov. Chris Sununu, who many Republicans view as one of the key ingredients to taking back control of the upper chamber – if he mounts a Senate bid.
But while the political world waits for that decision, the rough-and-tumble world of political advertising certainly is not waiting for anything. The New Hampshire race already ranks as the third-most expensive Senate race in the country when it comes to ad spending, according to AdImpact, with $2.9 million already spent.
And before the field is even set, both sides are making clear this will be a nationalized race.
Photo by Scott Eisen/Getty Images
Progressive groups are taking swipes at Sununu over things like signing new abortion restrictions, ahead of a major Supreme Court decision on abortion next year. And they’re calling him Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell’s “handpicked” candidate, trying to counter his strong approval rating in the state by tying him to Washington. (Expect them to also try to tie Sununu to former President Donald Trump, who weighed in last month to say he’d “like to see [Sununu] run.)
Republicans are working a similar angle, tying Hassan to House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer while attacking H.R.1/S. 1 as Hassan’s “Washington power grab.”
So far, six groups have already spent at least six figures on ads, all for a race that doesn’t have a GOP candidate — yet.
Sununu has been open about his decision-making process, explaining it to NBC’s Henry Gomez in this great story last month. And he has a lot of factors to weigh, not the least of which being how nationalized this race might become.
The governor has held onto strong approval numbers despite the difficult job of weathering the storm of the pandemic, and he’s positioned himself well for a northeastern Republican — he’s strong with independents and has been able to walk a careful line with Trump.
That’s the kind of profile that has Republicans salivating over a potential bid. But that balancing act gets tougher if he runs for Senate, when it would be harder to keep national forces and Trump at an arm’s length, and away from his political legacy.
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A dire warning from U.N. scientists on climate
A new report from the United Nations’ Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change makes a blunt pronouncement: Global warming has been unprecedented and the effects are irreversible for the long-term. But the world knows what it needs to do to curb those effects and it needs to act now.
It’s a reminder that while the politics over the issue may not be settled, science doesn’t wait for a political consensus to shake out.
Here are a few of the top findings from the sobering report that one top climate scientist called a “reality check“:
“Human influence has warmed the climate at a rate that is unprecedented in at least the last 2000 years.”
“Human-induced climate change is already affecting many weather and climate extremes in every region across the globe.”
“Many changes due to past and future greenhouse gas emissions are irreversible for centuries to millennia, especially changes in the ocean, ice sheets and global sea level.”
“Global warming of 1.5°C and 2°C will be exceeded during the 21st century unless deep reductions in CO2 and other greenhouse gas emissions occur in the coming decades.”
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Data Download: The numbers you need to know today
1 million: The number of students who did not show up for school last year, either in person or online.
463,477 acres: The size of the Dixie Fire, now the second-largest in California history, which has blazing for weeks.
35,841,717: The number of confirmed cases of coronavirus in the United States, per the most recent data from NBC News and health officials. (That’s 252,407 more than Friday morning.)
620,690: The number of deaths in the United States from the virus so far, per the most recent data from NBC News. (That’s 1,532 more than Friday morning.)
351,400,930: The number of vaccine doses administered in the U.S., per the CDC. (That’s 2,434,511 since Friday morning.)
50.1 percent: The share of all Americans who are fully vaccinated, per the CDC.
61.1 percent: The share of all American adults at least 18 years of age who are fully vaccinated, per CDC.
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TWEET OF THE DAY: The deal with breakthrough cases
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ICYMI: What ELSE is happening in the world?
Some hospitals are seeing an uptick in children seriously sick with Covid.
The Washington Post has a deep dive into how the delta variant upended the battle against Covid.
A federal judge will allow Norwegian Cruise Line to move forward with plans to require passengers show proof of Covid vaccination, even though its against Florida law.
The Taliban continues to amass territory as American forces withdraw from Afghanistan.
A top Cuomo aide has resigned amidst the fallout from the attorney general investigation into the governor.
The Senate Judiciary Committee is interviewing former DOJ officials about Trump’s efforts to overturn the election.
The Jan. 6 Committee has hired former GOP Rep. Denver Riggleman to a senior staff position.
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55.) REALCLEARPOLITICS MORNING NOTE
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56.) REALCLEARPOLITICS TODAY
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 Monday, Aug. 9, and we’re covering the end of the Olympics, a historic fire in California, and much more. Have feedback? Let us know at hello@join1440.com. First time reading? Sign up here. NEED TO KNOWOlympics WrapAfter more than two weeks of competition, the Games of the XXXII Olympiad came to an end yesterday, with athletes filling Tokyo’s National Stadium. Similar to the opening ceremony, the elaborate performance proceeded largely absent of fans due to COVID-19 protocols. See highlights of the closing ceremony here. It was a banner year for banner performances, with at least 20 records across multiple sports. Some partially attributed the success, particularly in track and field, to technological advances in shoes, spikes, and track materials. Ratings also fell (paywall, NYT) to the chagrin of networks and sponsors. An estimated 16.8 million US viewers tuned in per night, down by more than 12 million from the 2016 games. Television officials have blamed the time delay with Tokyo and a lack of energy from crowdless stadiums for the slump. Team USA ended on a high note. Speedster Allyson Felix became the most decorated US track athlete in Olympic history. Felix picked up her 10th and 11th medals—a bronze in the 400-meter sprint and a gold in the 4×400-meter relays. On the court, the women’s basketball team claimed their seventh straight gold, beating Japan 90-75, while the men’s team won gold after beating France 87-82. Overall, the US topped the final medal count in both gold (39) and overall (113) medals. See a breakdown of the US medals here. Don’t blink—the Paralympics begin Aug. 24, while the 2022 Winter Olympics in Beijing are just six months away. Dixie Fire Rages Northern California’s Dixie Fire has grown to the largest single-source wildfire in state history and the second biggest overall, having consumed roughly 490,000 acres as of this morning (21% containment). Most of the damage surrounds the Lake Almanor reservoir, having spread across Lassen Volcanic National Park and Plumas National Forest (see map). At least five people are missing, with thousands under evacuation from small towns in the area. The blaze began 27 days ago, potentially sparked by faulty power equipment. Driven by high temperatures and unpredictable winds, the fire leveled the town of Greenville (w/video) last week, destroying almost 100 homes. Many have drawn parallels to the area’s 2018 Camp Fire—the deadliest in state history—which killed 85 people and destroyed the town of Paradise. Fire officials said the Dixie Fire may be fully contained by Aug. 20, pending weather conditions. Taliban AdvanceTaliban fighters have captured the northern provincial capital of Kunduz, according to reports from Afghanistan over the weekend. It marks the largest city to fall to the militant group since it launched an offensive in May, and comes just weeks before the Biden administration’s deadline for US withdrawal from the country. Afghanistan’s sixth-largest city (pop. 375,000), Kunduz is viewed as a strategic priority and a commercial hub, positioned near the border with Tajikistan. The city also became the fifth provincial capital to fall since Friday. Cities captured by Taliban militants took control of Zaranj in the southwest Friday and Sheberghan in the north Saturday. Officials fear the country’s capital of Kabul and its second-largest city, Kandahar, are at risk of becoming boxed in by Taliban-controlled or -contested land. See a time-lapse map of Taliban territorial gains since April. In partnership with LobA CHANGE IN TACTICSYou’re a good marketer: You’ve tested every digital channel you can think of, and you’re always looking to expand where possible. But in a time when it’s harder than ever to get consumers to respond to digital marketing, this may be your cue to take things offline. Give direct mail a try: It’s an oldie, but a goodie. And with Lob, you can get the same level of transparent, reliable infrastructure for your direct mailings as email, miraculously bringing direct mail in line with your digital channels. It can help you open a whole new world of possibilities, bringing the convenience of the inbox to the mailbox but with responsiveness that digital channels lack. Embrace a truly omnichannel marketing strategy today. And instead of going at it alone, revising your workflows, eliminating data silos, and revamping your approach to marketing, let Lob lend a hand. Read their Direct Mail Tactics Playbook for free today. Please support our sponsors! IN THE KNOWSports, Entertainment, & CultureBrought to you by The Ascent > Bobby Bowden, College Football Hall of Famer and one of the all-time winningest coaches in history, dies at 91 of pancreatic cancer (More) | Football world reacts to Bowden’s death (More) > Dennis “Dee Tee” Thomas, cofounder of soul-funk band Kool & the Gang, dies at 70 (More) | New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival canceled for second straight year due to COVID-19 (More) > Olympics: Canadian soccer player Quinn becomes first openly transgender athlete to win an Olympic medal (More) | Neeraj Chopra wins javelin to bring India its first-ever Olympic gold in track and field (More) | Team USA tops Brazil to win its first gold medal in women’s volleyball (More) From our partners: This new credit card is a reward-seeker’s dream, offering 2% cash rewards on all purchases (no more tracking categories) and a generous sign-up bonus. The Ascent’s independent team of experts has awarded it the coveted five-star rating. Learn more today. Science & Technology> Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change releases the first in a series of updates on its global warming assessment; summary finds the world is warming faster than expected, with temperatures likely to exceed key benchmarks before 2040 (More) > SpaceX demonstrates the stacking of its Starship spacecraft on top of its Super Heavy rocket, creating the world’s tallest rocket (More) | NASA’s Perseverance Martian rover fails to collect rock sample on first attempt (More) > Researchers identify trio of immunotherapy drugs that eliminate pancreatic cancer tumors in mice when used in combination; one of the deadliest cancers, the disease affects roughly 60,000 Americans per year (More) Business & Markets> US economy adds 943,000 jobs in July, higher than 850,000 expected; unemployment rate drops from 5.9% to 5.4% (More) > Saudi Aramco, the Saudi Arabian majority state-owned oil business, sees quarterly net income jump 288% over last year to $25.5B as demand for oil recovers (More) > Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway sees quarterly operating income increase 21% over last year; business has $144B in cash on hand (More) Politics & World Affairs> Rolling average of new COVID-19 cases in the US nears 110,000 per day, up almost 650% since the beginning of July; daily deaths up about 200% over the same time, now averaging more than 500 per day (More) > Former aide to New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo (D) files criminal complaint; the former staffer is one of 11 women to publicly accuse Cuomo of sexual misconduct (More) | Cuomo faces Friday deadline to respond to possible impeachment probe by state lawmakers (More) > Senate clears filibuster on the $1T bipartisan infrastructure package in 67-27 vote over the weekend; final vote expected this week as amendment negotiations continue (More) MAILBOX IS THE NEW INBOXIn partnership with Lob Digital burnout is real. With most people living and working entirely online, it’s no wonder digital marketing response rates are dropping. But do you know where there isn’t burnout? Your mailbox. Bring the convenience of email to the mailbox, but with a level of responsiveness digital channels lack. Start connecting more effectively with customers by revamping your direct mail tactics, and read Lob’s free Direct Mail Tactics Playbook today. Please support our sponsors! ETCETERAThe Olympics’ best photos. … and the Games’ best robot helpers. SpaceX wants to launch digital billboards into orbit. Interactive journey reveals the top songs of each week since 1958. Spend time creating and saving your own Jackson Pollock painting. Eight-year-old boy’s lemonade stand gets the Sturgis boost. Perfectly preserved 28,000-year-old cave lion cub found in Siberia. Jersey man’s lawn-mowing charity expands to 16 states. Clickbait: Mad spider scientists genetically engineer a daddy short legs. Historybook: US drops atomic bomb on Nagasaki, killing 40,000+ (1945); Whitney Houston born (1963); Actress Sharon Tate, four others are murdered by Manson Family (1969); Gerald Ford becomes US president as Richard Nixon resigns (1974); RIP musician Jerry Garcia (1995). “Success doesn’t change you. Fame does.” – Whitney Houston Enjoy reading? Forward this email to a friend.Why 1440? The printing press was invented in the year 1440, spreading knowledge to the masses and changing the course of history. Guess what else? There are 1,440 minutes in a day and every one is precious. That’s why we scour hundreds of sources every day to provide a concise, comprehensive, and objective view of what’s happening in the world. Reader feedback is a gift—shoot us a note at hello@join1440.com. Interested in advertising to smart readers like you? Apply here! |
63.) AMERICAN INSTITUTE FOR ECONOMIC RESEARCH
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76.) THE DAILY DOT
August 09, 2021
Welcome to the Monday edition of Internet Insider, where we unspool threads of online misinformation—one dumb conspiracy at a time…
ONE DUMB CONSPIRACY Conspiracy theorists accuse D.C. cop attacked on Jan. 6 of actually being a rioter Conspiracy theorists are accusing a D.C. police officer of carrying a Confederate flag during the Jan. 6 riot at the Capitol.
But it isn’t just any officer being accused. Instead, conspiracy theorists are pointing the finger at Metropolitan Police Officer Michael Fanone, who recently drew the ire of Trump supporters after testifying to Congress last week about the failed insurrection.
While speaking to lawmakers, the 40-year-old officer recounted being dragged into the crowd as rioters called for him to be killed “with his own gun.”
Fanone eventually fell unconscious, suffered a heart attack, and was later told by medical professionals that he had experienced a concussion and a brain injury. Posts comparing images of the officer to one of the rioters began spreading online this week across social media platforms such as Facebook, TikTok, and Twitter, where users alleged that Fanone was nothing more than a “crisis actor.”
The claim was even amplified by Ian Smith, the conspiratorial gym owner from New Jersey who has become a folk hero to conservatives for defying COVID restrictions.
The narrative is part of an ongoing effort by Trump supporters to either downplay the violence at the Capitol or to pin the blame entirely on a range of characters including the FBI, antifa, and the so-called Deep State.
The claim about Fanone, however, is completely false.
The column continues below.
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The man pictured with the Confederate flag is not Fanone but Delaware resident Kevin Seefried.
Seefried has already been identified, arrested, and charged for his involvement in the riot all the way back in January.
Seefried even admitted in an interview with the FBI that he had brought a Confederate flag with him to D.C. that he normally kept displayed on the outside of his home.
The two men’s appearances also differ in numerous ways.
For example, while Fanone has clearly visible neck tattoos, Seefried does not. Fanone also testified to being in his uniform, not in street clothes like the rioter, throughout the entire attack on the Capitol.
Pictures from that day also show Fanone in riot gear while being attacked by the crowd.
Sean Hickman, a spokesperson for the Metropolitan Police Department, also confirmed to PolitiFact that the rioter pictured with the Confederate flag was “not Officer Fanone.” While many conspiracy theorists have now deleted their remarks in the face of such overwhelming evidence, others still refuse to believe that Fanone and Seefried are two different people. Staff Writer
ARE YOU THE MOST EXTREMELY ONLINE READER? In a recent email to supporters, former President Donald Trump asked his fans to help pick a design for a new card, such that they could become card-carrying members. The design is being compared to what Nazi symbol?
Can’t stop doomscrolling? Are you extremely online? Prove it by answering our question of the day. Get it right and you could receive a shout-out here in the newsletter—and a downright remarkable mug.
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77.) HEADLINE USA
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80.) BLACKPRESSUSA
81.) THE WESTERN JOURNAL
82.) CNN
Monday 08.09.21 The Tokyo Olympics just ended, but can you believe the Beijing 2022 Winter Games are less than six months away? Here’s what else you need to know to Get Up to Speed and On With Your Day. A medical worker rests last week at a Covid-19 ICU ward in Jonesboro, Arkansas. Coronavirus
The average number of new coronavirus cases in the US has increased ninefold since the beginning of July, and hospitalizations are at their highest rate since February. In some parts of the country, hospitals are at capacity, and loved ones of those battling the virus are pleading for access to life-saving equipment. As if the situation isn’t bad enough, new concerns are starting to arise: Dr. Anthony Fauci says the continued spread of the virus could allow new variants — possibly ones more resistant to vaccines — to emerge and spread if more people don’t get vaccinated. Experts are already seeing more cases of the Lambda variant, which is designated by WHO as a coronavirus “variant of interest.”
Afghanistan
The Taliban has seized five provincial capitals in Afghanistan and let loose a string of violence as foreign forces, led by the US, complete their withdrawal from the country. Among the areas now under Taliban control is Kunduz, a strategically important provincial capital that marks the first major city to fall to the Taliban since it began its offensive in May. Afghanistan’s swift descent into violence has been alarming and follows international warnings that a foreign troop withdrawal could lead to a Taliban resurgence. Now, there is concern that even the country’s capital of Kabul could fall. In the past week, the US has increased airstrikes against Taliban positions in a bid to halt its advances.
Infrastructure
The Senate has voted to cut off debate on the massive $1.2 trillion infrastructure package, clearing the way for a vote on the final passage of the bipartisan bill. Sixty-eight senators, including 18 Republicans, voted to invoke cloture (quickly halting the debate) to break the filibuster and push the process forward. The Senate is now expected to hold a final vote tomorrow morning. Senators are confident the bill will pass, but there’s been some recent shuffling of necessary Republican support of the bill. If it passes, it wouldn’t just be a win for President Biden’s agenda; it would also be a win for both parties, which have worked for months to come to an agreement on the bill. An affirmative Senate vote wouldn’t make it a done deal, though. The bill would still face significant challenges in the House.
Climate
The United Nations’ Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change just released a new report, and the message is clear: Deadly and irreversible effects of climate change are already here. Unlike previous assessments, the report also concludes it is “unequivocal” that humans have caused the climate crisis. It states the world has rapidly warmed 1.1 degrees Celsius higher than pre-industrial levels and is now careening toward 1.5 degrees — a critical threshold that world leaders have agreed should represent the upper limit of global warming. Scientists say the only way to keep from reaching this point of no return and to prevent even more catastrophic damage is to reduce greenhouse gas emissions to zero.
Andrew Cuomo
New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo is facing increasing pressure — often from within his own Democratic Party — to answer for multiple claims of sexual harassment. Brittany Commisso, an assistant to Cuomo and one of 11 women whose claims of sexual abuse were substantiated by a report last week by the state attorney general, went public with her accusations this weekend. The New York legislature is now poised to move ahead with impeachment proceedings, and the state Assembly’s Judiciary Committee will meet to discuss a potential timeline. However, Cuomo has indicated he will not go down without a fight and has denied having “touched anyone inappropriately or made inappropriate sexual advances.” Cuomo’s top aide resigned late yesterday amid the growing controversy.
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Pocket $200 after spending $500 1.5% unlimited cash back on all purchases or up to 3% cash back. No annual fee. 0% interest for 15 months. Learn more. People are talking about these. Read up. Join in. Reminisce about the best moments of the Tokyo Olympics
Meet Japan’s Olympic pin obsessives
New Orleans Jazz Fest cancels fall event due to Covid-19
Actress Julie Bowen of ‘Modern Family’ helped rescue a hiker who fainted
Loyal Ikea customers can win a candle that smells like its famous meatballs 260 million That’s how many people in the US are forecast to experience high temperatures of at least 90 degrees by the end of the week as a new heat wave settles over parts of the country. And if you see a crime, report a crime. But if you see people — Black people, any minority — don’t report people doing normal things.
Roy Thorne, a Black man in Michigan who along with his son and a Black real estate agent, was handcuffed by police as the agent showed them a house. Thorne says it felt like the incident was an example of the risks Black people assume just by doing normal things. one more thing Yesterday’s newsletter misstated what prosecutors have said about the timing of the killing of Susan Berman. Robert Durst is charged with first-degree murder in the death of Berman, hours before she was set to talk to investigators about the disappearance of Durst’s first wife. Brought to you by CNN Underscored Got a credit score of 740 or higher? These are our favorite cards for you With a credit score that’s considered “excellent,” you can have your pick of the top rewards and travel credit card options. Here’s what to know before adding a new card to your financial arsenal. Fire feast 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 |
- Red-State Bikers and Sophisticated Celebrities
- Kevin Durant shines
- Slow Learners on the Left
- Biden’s open border & the open question
- Inside Obama’s bash
Red-State Bikers and Sophisticated Celebrities
Posted: 08 Aug 2021 04:11 PM PDT (John Hinderaker)On Meet the Press this morning, Chuck Todd asked Anthony Fauci about the Sturgis, South Dakota bike rally that got under way this weekend. Both Todd and Fauci tut-tutted about how the event will spread covid:
Of course, all kinds of events are going on. Like Chicago’s Lollapalooza, attended by several hundred thousand over four days, where attendees were “literally pressed against each other, maskless.” But Chicago is a blue city, run entirely by Democrats, so Lollapalooza didn’t merit a mention. And, of course, there was no mention of Barack Obama’s 60th birthday party, where celebrities mingled cheek by jowl without wearing masks. Neither Todd nor Fauci could possibly be unaware of Obama’s super-spreader event–celebrities attended from around the world–but somehow it didn’t come up. Of course, CNN assures us that Obama’s birthday party was a totally different kind of event from the Sturgis bike rally. It was attended by “sophisticated, vaccinated” people. Never mind that Fauci insists that the vaccinated, like the unvaccinated, should wear masks.
What a joke. It has been obvious from the beginning that the rules that CDC and Democratic governors inflict on the rest of us do not apply to liberal elites. Chuck Todd is not a journalist, and “Doctor” Fauci is not a scientist. No wonder so many people don’t bother to listen to either one.
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Kevin Durant shines
Posted: 08 Aug 2021 01:40 PM PDT (Paul Mirengoff)NBA star Kevin Durant is the pride of Prince George’s County, Maryland. More than that, he’ll likely end up surpassing the legendary Elgin Baylor as the greatest basketball player the Washington, D.C. metropolitan area has ever produced. Normally, I root wholeheartedly for athletes from the D.C. area, and I did so for Durant until three things happened: (1) Durant refused even to consider coming home to play for the Washington Wizards when he became a free agent, (2) he chose to play for a team that had just won the NBA championship without him, and (3) he seemed increasingly surly when interviewed about these and other matters. But now that Durant has led the U.S. to gold at the Olympics, I’m back on board the bandwagon. Durant was the only one of his generation of American superstars who agreed to play for Team USA. Lebron James, Stephen Curry, Kawhi Leonard, James Harden, and Anthony Davis all elected to skip the Olympics. For this, they should not be blamed. Each had recently finished a grueling NBA season following the late completion of the previous one in a bubble (due to the pandemic). There were valid health concerns about going to Japan. Moreover, the veteran stars had reason to feel confident that the generation of talented players just behind them — stars like Devin Booker, Damian Lillard, Bradley Beal, and Jayson Tatum — could bring home another gold medal. But Durant elected to go to Japan and seek his third gold medal. He did so even though his NBA season was more grueling than those of James, Curry, Davis, and emerging star Zion Williamson, who also opted out. Durant and his Brooklyn Nets were still playing when the above-mentioned four were at home, their teams having been eliminated from championship contention. Durant was last seen on an NBA court scoring 48 points in an overtime game-seven loss to eventual champions Milwaukee — one of the most amazing game-seven performances I’ve ever seen in the NBA. As it turned out, the U.S. couldn’t have won the gold medal without Durant. In the championship game against a very strong team from France, Durant carried the U.S. Lillard and Booker both had off nights. Tatum scored well, but could not have led the team to victory. (Unfortunately, Beal never made it to Japan due to the coronavirus.) Other than Tatum, Durant was the only real U.S. scoring threat for most of the game. And since the Americans couldn’t contain France’s center, Rudy Gobert (another NBA star), Team USA could not have defeated France without Durant’s contribution. In the end, that contribution amounted to 29 points on 9-18 shooting from the field and 8-9 shooting from the foul line (including the two free throws that iced the game). Only Tatum, with 19 points, produced even half of Durant’s scoring output. Durant also chipped in with six rebounds, second only to Tatum’s seven on the U.S. side. And he made several key defensive plays, while managing avoid foul trouble (five fouls means disqualification in international play). In addition to Durant, I want to credit Booker, Khris Middleton, and Jrue Holiday for their participation. All three played in the NBA finals, which ended on July 20. They arrived in Tokyo just as the U.S. was about to play its first game (a loss to France). Booker was wretched in the final, but excelled when the U.S. routed Australia in the semi-final. Middleton scored four points with a rebound, an assist, and some good defense in only 11 minutes against France. Holliday was a key contributor in the victory over France. He didn’t shoot well, but managed 11 points and five rebounds, while excelling on defense. Outside of Durant and Tatum, he was Team USA’s best performer in the final game. But the final really belonged to Durant, and not for the first time. In his two previous gold medal games, he scored 30 points. This time, he scored 29. After the game, Durant said:
Count Kevin Durant among the heroes of this non-woke Olympics.
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Slow Learners on the Left
Posted: 08 Aug 2021 08:38 AM PDT (Steven Hayward)It appears even Venezuelan socialists can figure it out sooner or later:
Funny how price signals and markets work that way.
Also this:
Funny how socialism always seems to work that way. Now if only we could get our home-grown socialists to learn this. Start with a certain member of Congress from Queens. Chaser:
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Biden’s open border & the open question
Posted: 08 Aug 2021 06:33 AM PDT (Scott Johnson)If a frank enemy of the United States had taker over the executive branch this past January, I wonder if he would conduct himself one whit differently than have Joe Biden, his administration, and his Democratic enablers in Congress and the media. This isn’t the point that Andrew McCarthy expressly makes in his August 7 NR column “Why the Border Crisis Is Here to Stay,” but the column supports the point and it is the one I would like to make. NR has unfortunately placed this critically important column behind its paywall. Here is a representative excerpt:
Here is one more:
How would an enemy of the United States do any differently? That is the question that seems to me to emerge inescapably from McCarthy’s column. It is certainly the one that I keep asking myself. UPDATE: I would like to note that Andy expresses no disagreement with me. (I meant to write that this is a critically important column, not “a critically important.”)
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Inside Obama’s bash
Posted: 08 Aug 2021 05:05 AM PDT (Scott Johnson)The New York Post seems skeptical that Barack Obama’s 60th birthday bash at his $12 million Martha’s Vineyard mansion was actually “scaled back” — the Post employs scare quotes in its headline over the story on the big event — as advertised in light of the panic over the Delta variant. The Post hold that they partied like its 2019.” “This while President Biden, Obama’s ex-veep, warned the nation about a possible coronavirus resurgence.” I don’t see any masks visible in the stealth pics the Post has published in a second story on the bash. Obama himself is pictured dancing without a mask. The Daily Mail has much more here. Obama isn’t too shaken up or chastened by the panic. Perhaps he secured a waiver from the fallacious Anthony Fauci. Taking a close look at the pictures, the Post observes that “bathroom amenities included antiperspirant wipes, a lint roller and Advil, according to the pictures.” In the cover story linked at the top the Post names a few of the guests: “Steven Spielberg, Tom Hanks, George Clooney, Jennifer Hudson, Jay-Z, Beyoncé, Bradley Cooper, Don Cheadle, Gabrielle Union, Dwyane Wade, Bruce Springsteen, Erykah Badu, Steven Colbert and John Kerry were just some of the celebrity guests at the seaside affair.” Obama’s bash brings to mind Michael Harrington influential 1962 book about poverty in the United States. He called it The Other America. Someone could write a good book about the other America on display at Obama’s birthday bash. Culminating in the birthday bash, an exposition of Obama’s path to success, wealth, and fame would be a tale for our time with more true lessons than Harrington’s exposure of poverty in the United States ever had. Here is one courtesy of Rep. Elise Stefanik: “The liberal elites are laughing at us, attempting to sell this as a ‘scaled-back party.’” Stefanik drove the point home: “The two phony people most certainly crossed off the invite list: Andrew and Chris Cuomo.” Stefanik is also quoted telling the Post in another story: “Democrats are imposing forced vaccine mandates, unscientific masks mandates, and are openly discussing lockdowns, while President Obama gathers with hundreds of maskless liberal elites who flew in on private jets with no vaccine requirement to attend.” I could listen to her all day.
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99.) MARK LEVIN
August 6, 2021
On Friday’s Mark Levin Show, KARN radio host Doc Washburn fills in. After referring to his notes, President Biden says that there are 17 million more people vaccinated than there actually are in the country. This, from the same president who wrongly said that 150 million Americans had been killed by “gun violence” last year. Then, in Pittsburgh, government-funded scientists sought out aborted minority babies for research. Some of these babies are born alive and begs the question of whether this is even legal. A FOIA (Freedom of Information Act) request has revealed that Anthony Fauci funded millions of dollars for research on beagles that infected the dogs and then euthanized them. According to the White Coat Waste Project, the dogs suffered painfully when injected with an experimental agent. Later, Rhode Island teachers unions are suing a parent for trying to stop gender theory and critical race theory from being taught in her child’s school. The parent responded, “Game on!” Afterward, some American generals like Mark Milley are focused on spreading wokiesm more than they are in ending insurgencies.
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Fauci-Led Agency Funded Abusive Animal Experiments Promising To Kill Dozens Of Beagles
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America’s Generals Lied, Lost Wars, And Looted The People They Claimed To Serve
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109.) STARS & STRIPES
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just now
Didn’t see a lot of the Olympics mostly because of the time difference. Favorite moment? I know this will sound corny, but I loved seeing the American and Botswanan 800 meter semifinalists finish the race together, nearly a minute behind the winner, after they had tripped and fallen over each other. Real sportsmanship and all that.
1 min ago
I don’t watch the Olympics. Most of the events I wouldn’t watch for free at my local college or high school, so why would I watch them on TV? And the dramatic delivery of he announcers feels like emotional manipulation. But I am glad we beat China!