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3.) DAYBREAK
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4.) THE SUNBURN
Sunburn — The morning read of what’s hot in Florida politics — 9.16.21
Good Thursday morning.
They said ‘I do’ — A top-of-Sunburn congratulations to Kelsey Swithers and Patrick Deasy, the longtime couple who got married yesterday in Tallahassee. Swithers works as a senior member of Bascom Communications; Deasy owns Active Movement, a CrossFit gym in Tallahassee popular with many members of The Process. All the best to the happy couple!
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The pandemic has had some strange side effects on American politics. Among the strangest: “My body, my choice” is now a rallying cry for Republicans.
Gov. Ron DeSantis and supporters — especially the crowd fawning over his anti-mandate crusade — have co-opted the abortion rights slogan to describe the unenviable plight of those who can’t bear the thought of receiving one of three safe, effective, and potentially pandemic-ending shots.
How ironic that the GOP embrace of “my body, my choice” comes as abortion rights advocates shout it with renewed zeal. After the Supreme Court failed to act on a Texas law that effectively bans abortions, they fear Florida could be the next domino to fall.
It’s not all paranoia. Top state lawmakers, including the Senate President, have said the legislation is in the works.
On Thursday, the Florida Democratic Party launched the first salvo regarding abortion rights with a digital ad highlighting the “hypocrisy” of Republicans’ anti-abortion stance on vaccines as they plot to interfere with women’s reproductive rights.
The ad opens with a line from DeSantis: “We’re a free state. People are going to be free to choose, to make their own decisions about themselves, about their families.”
It continues, with sound bites from U.S. Sen. Ted Cruz, various news anchors and others. Later in the ad, Senate Democratic Leader Lauren Book promises that any attempt to import a Texas-style abortion law to the Sunshine State will be met with “fierce, fierce, fierce opposition.”
“We will do everything in our power to stop it from happening,” she says.
In an accompanying news release, FDP Executive Director Marcus Dixons said the party “has a clever message for Floridians — we will fight for women’s rights today, tomorrow, and always.”
He adds: “The Republican’s deeds and hypocrisy will be exposed, and voters will be reminded of their actions through 2022.”
To watch the ad, click on the image below:
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“Lincoln Project drags ‘worst Governor’ DeSantis in new ad” via A.G. Gancarski of Florida Politics — The video starts with some file news footage from the peak of the Florida COVID-19 resurgence, with descriptions of a state in “crisis,” the “hotbed of the pandemic.” “Where’s Ron DeSantis,” a crisp female voice asks, “Laughing it up in New Jersey, raising money for himself.” “He ran as a mini-me Trump. Now he’s trying to prove he’s more Trump than Trump and doesn’t care how many Floridians have to die,” the voice-over continues. “Ron DeSantis: the worst Governor in America.” Lincoln Project co-founder Rick Wilson said, “DeSantis is working hard to ensure he wins the America’s Next Top Trump reality show for the 2024 presidential contest, no matter how many Floridians suffer from his reckless COVID policies.”
To watch the ad, click on the image below:
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The Meenan Law Firm expanding its government affairs team, bringing on Daniel Olson as a government consultant.
“Dan brings a wealth of Executive Branch experience to our team,” managing shareholder Tim Meenan said. “We are excited by the breadth of his background and expertise, which will be a tremendous benefit to our clients.”
Before entering the private sector, Olson spent 14 years working in state government and public-private partnerships, most recently as Director of Government Affairs for Attorney General Ashley Moody.
In that role, he developed policy positions and championed legislative and budget priorities focused on opioid abatement and litigation issues, racketeering and elder fraud. He also oversaw the Cabinet Affairs office and advised the Attorney General on multiple high-profile issues.
Olson has been involved in the public policy arena for over a decade, specializing in Florida state Attorney General issues, professional regulation and licensing, alcohol, gaming, lottery, tobacco, tourism, procurement, and Cabinet Affairs. He has lobbying experience in the executive and legislative branches and has spent years advancing policy initiatives for two Governors and multiple agencies.
Olson earned his bachelor’s degree in political science and economics and master’s degree in public administration from Florida State University.
He has served in multiple leadership roles throughout his time in government, including as the Chief Operating Officer at VISIT FLORIDA, the Chief of Staff at the Florida Lottery, and the Director of Legislative Affairs at the Department of Business and Professional Regulation.
“We are proud to have Dan join our government relations team and employ his legislative and executive branch skills on behalf of our growing client roster,” said Joy Ryan, shareholder and head of Meenan’s Legislative Practice Area. “His experience at the highest levels of Florida’s state government will be an incredible asset to our firm.”
— SITUATIONAL AWARENESS —
—@POTUS: The vaccine requirements under my COVID plan will cover one hundred million workers. Today, I met with businesses that are leading the way. Because vaccine requirements keep businesses open and workers safe.
Tweet, tweet:
—@mstratford: News — Federal judge in Florida rules in favor of @RonDeSantisFL, declines to block the state’s ban on school mask mandates. It bucks the trend of two other federal courts that recently halted the same policies in Iowa & Tennessee.
—@jeffschweers: Florida news organizations file motion to intervene in @CarlosGSmith public records lawsuit against @HealthyFla — state objects! Leon Circuit Judge (John) Cooper will hear from both sides Monday at pretrial hearing.
—@ryanstruyk: U.S. vaccinated by religion via new Pew poll:
90% atheist
86% Hispanic Catholic
84% agnostic
79% White Catholic
73% White mainline protestant
70% Black protestant
57% White evangelical protestant
—@AGGancarski: You just know when someone pops out the “so many people are living in fear” that it’s going to be nothing but dulcet tones, Zen koans and good vibes for the whole three minutes of their public comment.
—@nicholaswu12: Rep. Stephanie Murphy (D-Fla.) says she can’t vote for the reconciliation package “at this early stage” but remains “optimistic that the comprehensive reconciliation package will be appropriately targeted and fiscally responsible …”
Tweet, tweet:
Tweet, tweet:
— DAYS UNTIL —
Alabama at UF — 2; Dolphins home opener — 3; Jaguars home opener — 3; 2022 Legislative Session interim committee meetings begin — 4; The Problem with Jon Stewart premieres on Apple TV+ — 14; ‘The Many Saints of Newark’ premieres (rescheduled) — 15; Walt Disney World’s 50th anniversary party starts — 15; MLB regular season ends — 17; ‘No Time to Die’ premieres (rescheduled) — 22; ‘Dune’ premieres — 36; World Series Game 1 — 40; Florida Chamber Future of Florida Forum begins — 41; Florida TaxWatch’s annual meeting begins — 41; Georgia at UF — 44; St. Petersburg Municipal Elections — 47; Florida’s 20th Congressional District Primary — 47; The Blue Angels 75th anniversary show — 50; Disney’s ‘Eternals’ premieres — 50; ‘Yellowstone’ Season 4 begins — 52; ‘Disney Very Merriest After Hours’ will debut — 53; Miami at FSU — 58; ExcelinEd National Summit on Education begins — 63; FSU vs. UF — 72; Florida Chamber 2021 Annual Insurance Summit begins — 76; Steven Spielberg’s ‘West Side Story’ premieres — 85; ‘Spider-Man: No Way Home’ premieres — 92; ‘The Matrix: Resurrections’ released — 97; ‘The Book of Boba Fett’ premieres on Disney+ — 100; NFL season ends — 115; 2022 Legislative Session starts — 117; Florida’s 20th Congressional District election — 117; NFL playoffs begin — 121; Super Bowl LVI — 150; Daytona 500 — 157; ‘Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness’ premieres — 190; ‘Thor: Love and Thunder’ premieres — 234; ‘Top Gun: Maverick’ rescheduled premiere — 253; ‘Platinum Jubilee’ for Queen Elizabeth II — 259; “Black Panther 2” premieres — 295; San Diego Comic-Con 2022 — 307; ‘Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse’ sequel premieres — 386; “Captain Marvel 2” premieres — 421.
“Slow business travel to deliver $5.3B hit to Florida tourism” via Jacob Ogles of Florida Politics — Florida’s hospitality industry expects to see a $5.3-billion loss in business travel this year. The group estimates business trips to Florida will be down 61% this year compared to 2019, before the pandemic crippled the state’s economy. But the projections are better than the 66% drop in business travel nationwide. That shows business travel, traditionally the largest revenue-generator for the industry, will produce less than $30.3 billion in 2021, down from more than $89.5 billion in 2019, the most recent year unaffected by the COVID-19 pandemic. The report includes state-by-state breakdowns and estimates Florida will bring in $3.46 from business travel this year.
— CORONA FLORIDA —
“Ron DeSantis flirts with the anti-vaccine crowd” via Marc Caputo and Gary Fineout of POLITICO — DeSantis isn’t anti-vaccine. But he has started standing shoulder-to-shoulder those who are. The Florida Governor’s clear and unadulterated public messaging about the need for vaccines has become more diluted in recent months, culminating with a news conference he held this week to bash President Joe Biden’s new vaccine mandate plan and threaten to fine cities and counties that impose their own mandates. The event in the small Florida town of Newberry featured two anti-vaccine workers, one of whom falsely claimed he wouldn’t get a shot because it “changes your RNA.” DeSantis at the time said nothing about the misinformation, a standard anti-vaccine talking point, and subsequently refused to say why he didn’t correct the falsehood.
“Federal judge says parents of students with disabilities must work through schools on masks” via David Goodhue of the Miami Herald — A federal judge in Miami declined to block DeSantis’ ban on public school mask mandates, saying the parents of students with disabilities who sued the Governor had not exhausted all remedies at their schools to accommodate their children’s needs before bringing the case to court. The 12 parents, whose children go to school in eight school districts across the state, including Miami-Dade, Broward and Palm Beach, had argued that their children, due to health conditions, were at particular risk of becoming ill or dying from COVID-19 if any of their peers attend school in-person without facial coverings.
“Fact-checking DeSantis on COVID-19 natural immunity” via Jon Greenberg of the Tampa Bay Times — DeSantis is pushing back against vaccine mandates, particularly for people who already have been infected. During a stop in Gainesville, DeSantis accused city officials of threatening to “destroy” city workers’ jobs. The Gainesville City Commission has given employees until Oct. 31 to get fully vaccinated. At an Aug. 5 meeting, the city attorney seemed to take a hard line, saying, “You have a choice. If you don’t want to get vaccinated, then your choice is to seek employment elsewhere.” DeSantis said mandates ignore the natural immunity many first responders gained from getting the disease earlier in the pandemic.
“The reversals have begun: Some school districts backtrack on opt-out mask policies” via Danielle J. Brown of Florida Phoenix — At least two school districts, Volusia and Lee, that previously adopted strict mask mandates have recently decided to allow parents to opt their students out of the policy for any reason. Another district, Indian River, has approved a change, a hybrid approach that would require masks only at certain times when COVID-19 surges in isolated schools. The policy turnarounds follow a recent court win for state education officials and the DeSantis administration and concerns about certain local boards potentially losing pay because of mask policies that do not include a parental opt-out. Earlier, those districts adopted a medical opt-out only if families wanted to forego mask-wearing for their children at school.
“Thousands of students are kept home every day for COVID-19 concerns. More on-campus testing could be the answer.” via Wells Dusenbury of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — As Florida continues to grapple with COVID-19, schools are keeping thousands of students home daily to avoid potential outbreaks even though most of those kids end up testing negative for the disease. One potential solution under consideration: more COVID-19 testing at schools. Dr. Alina Alonso, the state health department director for Palm Beach County, said health officials are in preliminary talks to increase school testing capacity. Aside from getting vaccinated, she said, that would be a key to maintaining a more regular schooling experience. “The biggest problem right now is how many children we’re having to quarantine (daily),” Alonso said.
“News giants join Carlos Guillermo Smith lawsuit vs. Florida Dept. of Health for COVID-19 data” via Jesse Scheckner of Florida Politics — An alliance of media companies has filed to join Rep. Guillermo Smith’s lawsuit against the state Department of Health and outgoing Surgeon General Scott Rivkees for the agency’s refusal to release previously public COVID-19 information. In a motion filed Wednesday afternoon, eight news organizations and the charitable First Amendment Foundation filed to intervene as plaintiffs. They jointly referred to themselves as the “News Media” in the motion. “The legal issues raised by this litigation mirror those confronted by the News Media in seeking similar public records information from the Defendants that Plaintiffs seek here,” the motion said.
“Inequities in Florida’s vaccine distribution persist for some” via Stephanie Colombini and Kerry Sheridan of WUSF — More than nine months after coronavirus vaccines were made available, inequities in Florida’s distribution process are still affecting some populations. Though most people who haven’t been vaccinated are white, vaccination rates among Black Floridians are still far behind their white and Hispanic counterparts. The state reports 49% of white people in Florida are vaccinated, compared with 31% of Black people. And data from the Florida Department of Health shows just 9% of all vaccines delivered in Florida have gone to Black people, though they make up about 17% of the population. But the data isn’t entirely complete. Both race and ethnicity information were missing for 13% of those who received a vaccination in Florida.
— CORONA LOCAL —
“‘Tell all of our family to get vaccinated’: COVID-19 kills 6 members of Glades family in three weeks” via Jane Musgrave of the Palm Beach Post — For months, Lisa Wilson went from door to door in Belle Glade, trying to convince people to get the coronavirus vaccine. Wilson, a longtime aide to Palm Beach County Commissioner Melissa McKinlay, persuaded pastors to preach about the need to get shots. Her husband, Belle Glade Mayor Steve Wilson, was one of the first in the western farming community to roll up his sleeve, hoping others would follow his example. But despite Wilson’s insistence that the shots would save lives, some members of her own family ignored her. In the last three weeks, six of them died from complications of COVID-19.
“COVID-19 vaccines needed for younger children, South Florida doctors say” via Hatzel Vela of WPLG Local 10 News — Pfizer says it expects to file safety and efficacy data for its COVID-19 vaccine for children ages 5 to 11 in early October and for those as young as 6 months old in the weeks after. Doctors say it is a critical next step in protecting against the virus. “We have seen very, very sick patients, pediatric patients, in our hospital,” said Dr. Hanadys Ale, a pediatric immunologist at Joe DiMaggio Children’s Hospital, where on Wednesday, they had 15 patients fighting COVID-19. “If we can save one child (from) not getting severe COVID and not succumbing to COVID, I think we have done something positive, something important.”
“Impatience with Miami-Dade COVID-19 relief for water bills almost sinks Daniella Levine Cava budget” via Douglas Hanks of the Miami Herald — Miami-Dade Commissioners almost upended Mayor Levine Cava’s 2022 budget proposal early Wednesday morning over a dispute involving the county’s freeze on water service cutoffs during the COVID-19 pandemic. In a lopsided vote that caught Levine Cava and her deputies off guard, Commissioners rejected her proposed 3.7% combined increase in water and wastewater fees as the first budget hearing of her administration was nearing an end. Only four of the 13 Commissioners — Keon Hardemon, Oliver Gilbert, Eileen Higgins and Jean Monestime — voted for the fee increases. Several board members objected to creating higher water bills for residents when Miami-Dade has tolerated $25 million in overdue water bills.
“Broward’s unvaccinated employees to lose $20 per paycheck. Vaccinated will get $500, Mayor says.” via Austen Erblat of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — Broward County employees who have not been vaccinated will pay a $20 surcharge every two-week pay period and will have to get tested for COVID-19 every week. Employees who can provide proof of vaccinations will get a $500 reward under the plan, the details of which are still being worked out. A spokesman said that Palm Beach County has an incentive program that offers employees a $25 gift card but no mandate. “No penalty. No testing requirements. Everyone is screened every day. Of course, always subject to change,” he added.
“Indian River School District will mandate masks only at schools with higher COVID-19 case counts” via Sommer Brugal and Colleen Wixon of Treasure Coast Newspapers — Students at schools with minimal COVID-19 cases soon will be exempted from wearing masks. Late Tuesday, the School Board approved a tiered approach to mask requirements based on the percentage of students and staff testing positive for the coronavirus. “We were able to come up with something that can work for our district,” said Board member Teri Barenborg. The 3-2 approval came after almost four hours of debate and public input. Board members Peggy Jones and Jacqueline Rosario voted no. The new system goes into effect Monday for elementary and middle schools, and Sept. 29 for high schools. Jones and board member Mara Schiff objected to the timetable, advocating for all schools to implement the changes in two weeks.
— STATEWIDE —
“DeSantis announces $3.4M to support military installations” via Jason Delgado of Florida Politics — The Florida Department of Economic Opportunity will award $3.4 million to support various military projects at defense installations across the state, DeSantis announced Wednesday. The bulk of the funding will go toward North Florida installations, including the Camp Blanding Joint Training Center in Starke, Naval Air Station Jacksonville and Naval Station Mayport. Clay County, where Camp Blanding is located, will receive roughly $865,000 for facility maintenance and future development, including expanding a buffer area around the base. The City of Jacksonville, meanwhile, will receive two separate grants: $450,000 for NAS Jax and $90,000 for NS Mayport.
“Florida Cabinet leaves DEP pick unaddressed” via Jason Delgado of Florida Politics — Despite repeated protests from Nikki Fried, the Florida Cabinet will not vote on the appointment of a new secretary to the state’s lead environmental agency. DeSantis, in August, appointed Interim Secretary Shawn Hamilton as Secretary of the Florida Department of Environmental Protection without the consideration of the Cabinet. The move, Fried charges, is unlawful. “As I reminded the Governor in June, he lacks the legal authority to unilaterally make this appointment,“ Fried said in a late August news release. “State law is very clear — it requires the unanimous approval of the Cabinet, in addition to confirmation by the Florida Senate.” DeSantis appointed Hamilton after the resignation of former DEP Secretary Noah Valenstein.
“DCF recommends using American Rescue Plan money for enhanced child abuse prevention” via Christine Jordan Sexton of Florida Politics — The Department of Children and Families released a legislative budget request for the fiscal year 2022-2023 that recommends using American Rescue Plan dollars to beef up the state’s child abuse prevention services. In its 2022-2023 legislative budget request, DCF asks for $1,585,687 to hire 18 people who will work on multidisciplinary teams meant to connect families in crisis to resources. It also asked for $3,056,194 to hire 40 people and establish a new hotline to help “pre-crisis” families. The funding is not recurring, and the Agency’s budget doesn’t address how the State would continue funding the enhancements to its child abuse prevention efforts beyond the state fiscal year 2022-2023.
— DATELINE TALLY —
“Legislators remain silent about repairing Florida’s tarnished redistricting process” via Mary Ellen Klas of the Miami Herald — When Florida legislators launch the once-a-decade redrawing of state legislative and congressional district boundaries next week, they will face new obstacles that include a compressed schedule because of a delay in the census process and restoring public trust after a court’s conclusion that the last process was secretly and illegally “hijacked” by Republican political operatives 10 years ago. But despite the hurdles, Florida GOP leaders have held no public hearings, will give no media interviews, and have not responded to requests from voters’ groups that they conduct a transparent process devoid of influence from secretive political operators.
“DeSantis orders flags at half-staff in honor of Jacksonville ‘champion’ Tommy Hazouri” via David Bauerlein of the Florida Times-Union — DeSantis issued the order in a memo that highlighted Hazouri‘s political career as a state House member from 1974 to 1986. He wrote Hazouri “will be remembered as a mentor, friend, and a champion for Jacksonville.” The flags will fly at half-staff from sunrise to sunset Thursday, the same day a funeral service is planned for Hazouri at 10 a.m. at Mandarin Presbyterian Church.
Jimmy Patronis names Steven Herrig to NICA Board — CFO Patronis on Thursday appointed Herrig to the Florida Birth-Related Neurological Injury Compensation Association (NICA) Board of Directors, representing casualty insurers, for a term ending Aug. 31, 2023. Herrig is the CEO and chairman of SUNZ Insurance Company and the founder and former CEO of Progressive Employer Services. The appointment comes after a new law passed in the 2021 Legislative Session expanded the board from five to seven members. “As CFO, I am committed to improving the lives of the kids and families in the NICA program and ensuring they receive the service and benefits they deserve,” Patronis said, adding that Herrig’s “background and expertise will be a tremendous asset” to the board.
“Joe Gruters, Randy Fine spark up beach smoking ban for 2022 Session” via Jacob Ogles of Florida Politics — Will 2022 be the year when Florida headline writers retire all butts on beaches puns? Sen. Gruters hopes so. The Sarasota Republican, for the fourth consecutive Session, filed legislation (SB 224) to allow a prohibition of smoking at parks, including beaches. Like legislation filed last year that died after clearing two Senate committees, his bill would empower local governments to pass local rules. Rep. Fine, a Palm Bay Republican, filed a companion bill (HB 105) in the House, where the bill only cleared one stop in the 2021 Session. Gruters, who has worked closely with Fine on other environmental legislation, feels happy working with the Representative again, he said.
Happening today — The Martin County legislative delegation meets: Sen. Gayle Harrell; Reps. John Snyder and Toby Overdorf, 9 a.m., Indian River State College, Chastain Campus, Wolf Technology Center, 2400 S.E. Salerno Road, Stuart.
“Gunshine State falls behind? Effort to make Florida next constitutional carry state returns” via Renzo Downey of Florida Politics — Pro-gun groups and Rep. Anthony Sabatini are bringing the “constitutional carry” debate back to the table for the upcoming Legislative Session. Sabatini filed legislation (HB 103) to remove requirements that people obtain concealed carry permits to carry a firearm legally. Constitutional carry laws allow law-abiding citizens to practice open and concealed carry. Florida has whimsically been given the nickname “The Gunshine State” for its residents’ affinity for concealed carry permits. Of the state’s 21.5 million residents as of 2020, nearly 2.4 million civilians have concealed carry permits as of the end of August.
New and renewed lobbying registrations:
Robert Beck, Marti Coley, PinPoint Results: Gartner Consulting, KinderVision/The Greatest Save
David Browning, Edgar Castro, Mary DeLoach, The Southern Group: Royal Caribbean Group
Diego Echeverri: Secure Democracy
Sha’Ron James, Gunster Yoakley & Stewart: Neighborhood Medical Center
Jeff Johnston, Amanda Stewart, Anita Berry, Johnston & Stewart Government Strategies: Neighborly Care Network
Adam Potts, Liberty Partners of Tallahassee: Advanced Energy Economy, City of Milton, Florida Chamber of Commerce, Florida Sheriffs Association, Lutheran Services Florida, Walton County Sheriff’s Office
Christopher Schoonover, Capital City Consulting: Media Choice
Jonathan Setzer, Florida Alliance Consulting: alternative claims management
— 2022 —
Take these numbers with a lot of salt — “Poll finds Charlie Crist still leading DeSantis, voters backing vax mandates” via Jacob Ogles of Florida Politics — A polling outfit in the Panhandle has consistently shown Crist leading DeSantis in the Governor’s race. The latest results may indicate the reason. The latest survey from The Political Matrix/The Listener Group finds voters want local controls regarding pandemic response. It also shows people aren’t happy with DeSantis as he supersedes local policymaking. Of note, this poll has consistently registered strong support for Crist, and the latest polling is no different. If an election were held today pitting Crist, a St. Petersburg Congressman and former Governor, against the incumbent, he would take 55% of the vote to DeSantis’ 45%. The 10-percentage-point margin falls well outside the poll’s 3.1% margin of error.
“Nikki Fried hits Ron DeSantis anew over not grabbing federal aid for hungry children” via Anne Geggis of Florida Politics — Fried said she’s willing to fill out the application for DeSantis so that $820 million in federal pandemic food aid could get to 2.1 million Florida children in low-income homes. All he has to do is submit, she said. Fried urged Floridians to call the Governor’s office to ask DeSantis to apply for Pandemic Electronic Benefit Transfer money during a roundtable discussion she led with Orlando Rep. Anna Eskamani and advocates for hunger relief. Florida is the only state that has not applied, Fried said.
Assignment editors — RepresentUS, a national movement of independents, progressives, and conservatives, will host a Zoom news conference to share its latest statewide polling results ahead of the state’s redistricting process, 10 a.m. Register here.
Save the date:
“Matt Willhite donates to 10 Palm Beach charities as he spends down House campaign account” via Ryan Nicol of Florida Politics — Willhite is sending $5,000 to charities in Palm Beach County as part of an effort to wind down his old House campaign account while he seeks a seat on the Palm Beach County Commission. Willhite is sending 10 separate donations of $500 each to charities across District 6, where he is running to succeed outgoing Commissioner Melissa McKinlay. McKinlay is blocked from running again due to term limits. District 6 includes the communities of Belle Glade, Pahokee and South Bay. Willhite presented those checks in a series of ceremonies across the county. “These charities are certainly in need of support, and I’m glad to be able to help them,” Willhite said in a statement to Florida Politics.
“Jupiter Mayor Todd Wodraska won’t seek reelection; Council member announces run to replace him” via Katherine Kokal of The Palm Beach Post — Wodraska announced to business leaders Wednesday morning that he won’t seek reelection in March. Council member Ilan Kaufer confirmed his plans to run for the town’s top elected office to The Palm Beach Post. “This is kind of the worst-kept secret in town,” Wodraska said at the Palm Beach North Chamber of Commerce’s annual Mayor’s Breakfast. “This is not a surprise to many people, but it is my formal announcement.” Jupiter’s mayoral election is scheduled for March 8. The candidate’s qualifying period begins at noon Nov. 2 and ends at noon Nov. 16. Wodraska has served two terms as Mayor.
— CORONA NATION —
“The pandemic marks another grim milestone: 1 in 500 Americans have died of COVID-19” via Dan Keating and Akilah Johnson of The Washington Post — The goal of testing, mask-wearing, keeping 6 feet apart, and limiting gatherings was to slow the spread of the highly infectious virus until a vaccine could stamp it out. The vaccines came, but not enough people had been immunized, and the triumph of science waned as mass death and disease remain. The result: As the nation’s COVID-19 death toll exceeded 663,000 this week, it meant roughly 1 in every 500 Americans had succumbed to the disease caused by the coronavirus.
“Joe Biden meets with business leaders of Disney, others on COVID-19 mandates” via The Associated Press — Biden was meeting Wednesday with the CEOs of Walt Disney and Columbia Sportswear, and other business executives and leaders to discuss his recently announced vaccine requirement for companies that employ at least 100 people. The White House meeting comes less than a week after Biden announced that the Labor Department is working to require businesses with 100 or more employees to order those workers to be fully vaccinated against COVID-19 or show a negative test result at least weekly. Some 100 million workers would be subject to the requirement, Biden said. The Labor Department is working to issue an emergency rule to implement the mandate.
“FDA sounds skeptical note on Pfizer booster shot ahead of key vote” via Lauren Gardner of POLITICO — The FDA refrained from endorsing a COVID-19 booster shot from Pfizer and BioNTech in an analysis posted Wednesday ahead of a crucial advisory committee meeting. The agency appeared skeptical about the companies’ assertion that an apparent drop in immune protection conferred by their COVID-19 vaccine is likely due to the passage of time rather than the emergence of the hyper-contagious Delta variant. FDA said observational studies don’t unanimously support the suggestion that the shot’s efficacy declines over time, while data overall show that all three vaccines authorized or licensed in the U.S. still protect against severe disease and death.
— CORONA ECONOMICS —
“COVID-19 workers comp claims mount, losses vague” via Christine Jordan Sexton of Florida Politics — Florida insurance officials want to know the impact COVID-19 has had on workers’ compensation insurance, but the National Council on Compensation Insurance can’t provide answers. Correspondence between the Florida Office of Insurance Regulation and the NCCI, which files proposed rates for workers’ compensation insurance carriers, shows that approximately $34.2 million in reported losses and legal costs have been reported to the NCCI as a result of COVID-19-related workers’ compensation claims. But in a letter to state actuary Greg Jaynes, NCCI State Relations Executive Dawn Ingham says the $34.2 million in claims should be “viewed as a starting point” for COVID-19 losses.
— MORE CORONA —
“White House considered requiring vaccines for international air travelers” via Annie Linskey and Yasmeen Abutaleb of The Washington Post — As White House officials rushed to shape last week’s sweeping new vaccine mandates, they debated the idea of requiring international air travelers to be vaccinated before boarding a plane, as part of a larger effort to persuade more Americans to get immunized, according to two people familiar with the plans. According to an administration official, some aides argued that other countries already require vaccinations to fly and that the United States should join their ranks. But others said mandates work best when they require people to prove they are immunized only once — like at work — rather than repeatedly, like every time they board a plane.
“Cuba starts vaccinating 2-year-olds, as COVID-19 cases spike among children on the island” via Nora Gámez Torres of the Miami Herald — Thousands of COVID-19 infections and at least 11 deaths among infants, small children and adolescents in Cuba prompted authorities to start vaccinating children as young as age 2 this week, relying on limited clinical data on the efficacy of a local product tested on 350 minors. “The number of coronavirus infections happening in Cuba in recent months in the pediatric population is alarming,” said Health Minister José Angel Portal Miranda in an op-ed published in the official government news site Cubadebate. No COVID-19-related child deaths were reported in 2020, but at least 12 children have died this year, including three two-month-old babies.
“Conservative radio host who spurned vaccines, mocked AIDS patients dies of COVID-19” via Timothy Bella of The Washington Post — For years, Bob Enyart used his conservative media platform in Denver to mock those who died of AIDS by name or call for women who receive abortions to face the death penalty. Enyart’s case pushed for boycotting vaccination because of the debunked claim that the vaccines were developed using aborted fetal cells. But weeks after he and his wife, Cheryl, tested positive for the virus after being unvaccinated, Enyart died of COVID-19, his radio co-host announced Monday. Enyart was 62.
“New Hampshire lawmaker switches parties, joining Democrats because of GOP views on vaccines and masks” via Caroline Anders of The Washington Post — A New Hampshire state representative “reluctantly” switched his party affiliation from Republican to Democratic on Tuesday, citing state Republicans’ opposition to masks and coronavirus vaccines. Rep. William Marsh said party extremists are edging out moderates like him; he had planned quietly to retire but felt his hand was forced by what he called Republicans’ refusal to take reasonable health precautions. “Politics, I’m afraid, is a team sport,” he said. “You’ve got to work with other people, and if nobody’s interested in what you have to say, you might as well go home.” Marsh’s announcement comes as the nation faces a new surge of coronavirus cases fueled by the highly transmissible delta variant.
— PRESIDENTIAL —
“Biden urges climate action: ‘We don’t have much more than 10 years’” via Zolan Kanno-Youngs and Jim Tankersley — Biden warned on Tuesday that the United States had only a decade left to confront a global climate crisis, using his second day touring a wildfire-ravaged West to try to rally the public, and congressional Democrats, to support measures that his administration hopes will reduce the burning of fossil fuels. Biden’s stops this week in Colorado; Boise, Idaho; and Long Beach and the Sacramento area in California amounted to more than an opportunity to call attention to the severe destruction of wildfires and other natural disasters that have been exacerbated by climate change. The visits were a last-ditch opportunity to sell the importance of measures aimed at mitigating climate change.
“Biden announces defense deal with Australia in a bid to counter China” via David E. Sanger and Zolan Kanno-Youngs of The New York Times — The Biden administration took a major step on Wednesday in challenging China’s broad territorial claims in the Pacific, announcing that the United States and Britain would help Australia to deploy nuclear-powered submarines, adding to the Western presence in the region. If the plan comes to fruition, Australia may begin conducting routine patrols that could move through areas of the South China Sea that Beijing claims as its exclusive zone and range as far north as Taiwan. The announcement, made by Biden, Prime Minister Boris Johnson of Britain and Prime Minister Scott Morrison of Australia, is a major step for Australia, which until recent years, has been hesitant to push back directly at core Chinese interests.
“Biden comes to Mark Milley’s defense after revelation top general, fearing Donald Trump, conferred with China to avert war” via Karoun Demirjian and John Wagner of The Washington Post — Biden on Wednesday threw his full support behind the Pentagon’s top uniformed officer, who has come under fire after a new book revealed he privately conferred with his Chinese counterpart to avert armed conflict late in the Trump administration. “I have great confidence in General Milley,” Biden told reporters at the White House, following calls to remove Milley as chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. Biden’s declaration, coinciding with efforts by the chief spokespersons for the White House and the Pentagon to stage a similar defense of the embattled general, effectively ends speculation that Milley’s assignment may be cut short. But the controversy surrounding his fitness for the job rages on — and thus far is falling mostly along party lines.
“Pope weighs in on calls to deny communion to Biden over abortion” via Elisabetta Povoledo, Richard Pérez-Peña and Ruth Graham — Pope Francis weighed in on Wednesday on a debate roiling the Roman Catholic Church in the United States, where conservative bishops are pushing for guidelines that would deny communion to politicians, like Biden, who support abortion rights. “I have never refused the Eucharist to anyone,” Francis said, though he added that he did not know of any instance when such a politician had come to him for communion. Bishops, the Pope said, should be pastors, not politicians.
— EPILOGUE TRUMP —
“All of this to keep Trump from getting upset” via Philip Bump of The Washington Post — We’ve spent so long coloring in the details of Trump’s response to the election that we can lose sight of just how utterly bereft of validity it is. Trump tried to undermine the results of the 2016 election before it happened, and then tried to undermine the results in states that voted against him that year because he lost the popular vote, and then tried to undermine the 2020 election all that year, and then quickly tried to claim he won in the hours after it concluded. Trump has consistently been dishonest and deflected about the election results not because they threaten his power but because they threaten his esteem.
“The Big Lie is (unfortunately) winning” via Chris Cillizza of CNN — It is 100% true that Biden won the 2020 election. And that Trump lost it. Unfortunately, in recent months, the Big Lie — that Trump somehow was defrauded out of the election — has gained increasing amounts of traction, according to a new CNN poll. In January, 59% said they have confidence that elections in this country reflect the people’s will, while 40% said they lacked that confidence. Today? A majority of Americans — 52% — say they do not have confidence that elections reflect the people’s will, while 48% say they do. That’s hardly the only data point in the poll that suggests Trump’s Big Lie is working.
“Trump was fixated on the Navy’s new supercarrier and ranted to military leaders that the ship ‘just doesn’t look right’” via Sonam Sheth, Ryan Pickrell of Yahoo News — According to a new book by Washington Post reporters Bob Woodward and Robert Costa, Trump was fixated on the first-in-class aircraft carrier USS Gerald R. Ford and regularly expressed dissatisfaction with the ship’s high cost of more than $13 billion, the weapons elevators, the catapults, and the placement of the flight command center, known as the ship’s “island,” on the flight deck. In one meeting with military leaders, Trump reminded them that he had been in the construction business. “I know about elevators,” he told them, according to the book. “If water gets on them,” elevators on the ship could malfunction, he said.
“Trump aides aim to build GOP opposition to Afghan refugees” via Jill Colvin of The Associated Press — As tens of thousands of Afghan refugees fleeing the Taliban arrive in the U.S., a handful of former Trump administration officials are working to turn Republicans against them. The former officials are writing position papers, appearing on conservative television outlets and meeting privately with GOP lawmakers — all to turn the collapse of Afghanistan into another opportunity to push a hard-line immigration agenda. “It is a collaboration based on mutual conviction,” said Stephen Miller, the architect of Trump’s most conservative immigration policies and among those engaged on the issue. “My emphasis has been in talking to members of Congress to build support for opposing the Biden administration’s overall refugee plans.”
— CRISIS —
“Nancy Pelosi told top General that Trump should have been ‘arrested on the spot’ for inciting Capitol insurrection, new book says” via Dan Mangan of CNBC — Pelosi told the top U.S. Army General that then-President Trump was a “dictator” who “should have been arrested on the spot” after what she called his coup attempt to remain in the White House by inciting the Jan. 6 Capitol insurrection, a new book reveals. Pelosi also said during a phone call in January with Joint Chiefs of Staff Chairman Gen. Milley that “the Republicans have blood on their hands” for enabling Trump’s delusions about his ability to retain the presidency, the book says. “But it is a sad state of affairs for our country that we’ve been taken over by a dictator who used force against another branch of government,” Pelosi, a California Democrat, told Milley.
“Claims that Milley made ‘secret’ calls to Chinese leaders exaggerated, sources say” via Lara Seligman and Daniel Lippman of POLITICO — Claims in an upcoming book that a frantic Joint Chiefs Chairman Gen. Milley made secret calls to his Chinese counterpart are greatly exaggerated. A forthcoming book claims that Milley grew concerned about Trump’s instability and the possibility that he might spark a war with China, prompting him to arrange a pair of secret phone calls with Gen. Li Zuocheng of the People’s Liberation Army. The first was on Oct. 30, just four days before the presidential election, and the second was on Jan. 8, two days after a mob of pro-Trump rioters stormed the Capitol.
“New details undermine Mike Pence’s supposed ‘hero’ turn on Jan. 6” via Aaron Blake of The Washington Post — The narrative wrote itself. Then-Vice President Pence, who had loyally and often obsequiously stuck by Trump through thick and thin, suddenly bucked him when his presidency was on the line. Trump wanted Pence to help overturn the results of the Electoral College vote on Jan. 6, but Pence refused — even as rioters who stormed the U.S. Capitol called for his hanging — all while professing to do so out of principle and loyalty to the Constitution. He was hailed even by some of the administration’s critics as an unlikely hero, the savior of the republic and more. The reality, we’re now finding out, is far from so neat and tidy.
— D.C. MATTERS —
“Marco Rubio accuses Milley of being leak on his own ‘treacherous’ action” via Scott Powers of Florida Politics — Rubio said Wednesday he believes Milley was the leak on reports about his own actions to reassure China about peace and said if the reports are true, Milley should be fired and face “military justice.” Speaking into his phone camera for one of his trademark bunker videos released on social media, Rubio said reports about Milley in the upcoming book “Peril” strike him as treacherous, dangerous, and unconstitutional. “Gen. Milley needs to answer questions about it, because if it’s true, he should be fired. He should be fired, and he should have to face military justice,” Rubio said.
Tweet, tweet:
New ad urges Stephanie Murphy to vote against spending bill — Club for Growth launched an ad campaign in Florida’s 7th Congressional District pushing for Murphy to vote against the spending plan put forward by congressional Democrats. Club for Growth describes the plan as “out-of-control spending.” The TV flight starts Thursday and runs for one week. Club for Growth President David McIntosh said, “Washington is out of touch with America. Democrats and even some Republicans need to realize that their constituents will roundly reject the out-of-control spending and $3 trillion increase in taxes.”
To watch the ad, click on the image below:
“Murphy declares opposition to Biden’s budget as drafted” via Scott Powers of Florida Politics — Murphy, one of the most influential moderate Democrats in the House, announced Wednesday she cannot support Biden‘s cornerstone $3.5 trillion Build Back Better Act as it is now written. Murphy, of Winter Park, said in a news release issued late Wednesday that she liked much of the bill, including the “historic provisions to combat the existential threat of climate change.” But, she added, “there are spending and tax provisions that give me pause.” She did not offer specifics in the news release.
Assignment editors — Congressman Crist will host an event to highlight a new $34-million transit center in downtown Clearwater to replace the current outdated facility at Park Street. Joining Crist is FDOT District 7 Secretary David Gwynn, Clearwater Mayor Frank Hibbard, Clearwater City Council member David Allbritton and Pinellas Suncoast Transit Authority CEO Brad Miller, 10 a.m., 710 Court Street, Clearwater.
— LOCAL NOTES —
“After Surfside collapse, condo dwellers who shirk fixes may reap a redevelopment windfall” via Andres Viglucci and Allie Pitchon of the Miami Herald — Faced with a deadline to make major repairs, and resistance from residents unwilling or unable to pay spiraling maintenance bills, the majority of condo board members at Miami Beach’s aging La Costa tower elected to take the easiest way out: They punted. Year after year, former residents and board members say, the La Costa board majority — with practically no financial reserves and little will to raise millions of dollars for seriously overdue repairs — authorized only minimal patchwork while long-standing and severe structural, concrete and electrical deficiencies visibly worsened. One former board member says the city of Miami Beach was content to look the other way.
“Pharmacist couple who was living the beach life dream in Surfside died in the collapse” via Adriana Brasileiro of the Miami Herald — For Raymond and Mercedes Urgelles, moving to Surfside from West Kendall was the beginning of a dream life on the beach: expansive ocean views from their living room, waking up to the sunrise every day, taking a dip in the sea before heading to work for the last few years before retirement. Cuban-born Urgelles and his Puerto Rican wife were both pharmacists. They had sent their two children, Daniel and Jennifer, off to college and by 2015 were young empty nesters with a whole new life ahead of them. They put their large house in the suburbs up for sale and set out to find an oceanfront two-bedroom condo that would be perfect for their next chapter.
“From parks to pumps to housing, Miami approves spending plan for $137M in federal aid” via Joey Flechas of the Miami Herald — Miami Commissioners will use millions in federal aid to fund senior meals, housing projects, and job training programs under a plan to spend $137.6 million provided by Washington through the American Rescue Plan. Commissioners unanimously voted Monday to spend $23.9 million directly on those programs. They chose to absorb the remaining $113.7 million into city coffers to offset the costs of dozens of city projects ranging from anti-flooding pumps, parks upgrades, parades, tech initiatives pushed by Mayor Francis Suarez and homeless assistance programs. The spending plan creates a budget for the city’s entire allocation from the American Rescue Plan, passed by Congress to help offset the financial consequences of the pandemic.
“Ex-UM professor charged with shipping genetic equipment to Iran in violation of U.S. sanctions” via Jay Weaver of the Miami Herald — Since early this year, federal investigators have been building a case against a former University of Miami assistant professor suspected of doing business with Iran and violating U.S. sanctions against the Persian Gulf country. Scientist Mohammad Faghihi almost slipped away at Miami International Airport, authorities say. “He was literally about to board a plane on Monday when he was arrested,” federal prosecutor Michael Thakur said Wednesday at a court hearing, seeking Faghihi’s detention based on being a flight risk to his home country, Iran. Faghihi, 52, was arrested on conspiracy and related charges stemming from allegations that he shipped genetic sequencing equipment to the Iranian military without a required license from the U.S. Department of Treasury.
“How did 9/11 change the classroom? Miami teachers reflect on how they’ve adapted” via Kalia Richardson of the Miami Herald — Dannielle Boyer began her first day of teaching on Sept. 11, 2001. The 24-year-old walked into her 8:30 a.m. Westview Middle school classroom with her “First Days of School” handbook, a gift from her aunt, and her Delta Sigma Theta bag swung over her shoulder. The night before, she deep-conditioned her hair and picked out a pair of black slacks and a high neckline blouse. She rehearsed how to greet her students, how to make them feel welcome. She did not anticipate the PA announcement interrupting her sixth grade class. A plane had crashed into the World Trade Center.
“Minority-owned businesses in Miami have a new business center with free resources” via Anna Jean Kaiser of the Miami Herald — The federal government’s Minority Business Development Agency is giving nearly $5 million for a Miami-based MBDA Business Center that will be operated by M. Gill & Associates, a Miami consultant firm that has focused on empowering businesses run by people of color and women in South Florida for over 30 years. The center will offer a short course in business management, which will be taught by instructors from Miami Dade College and will focus on operational efficiencies, financial management and emerging technology like cryptocurrency, cybersecurity, best practices and social media marketing. After completing the course, minority business owners have access to free consulting on business development, export market plans and mentorship.
“Jury selection in accused Stoneman Douglas shooter’s jailhouse battery trial may not begin in a courtroom” via Rafael Olmeda of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — No courtroom will be big enough to hold the number of jurors that will need to be considered for the jailhouse battery trial of the man also accused of carrying out the 2018 mass shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School, a Broward judge said Wednesday. Unveiling her vision for the start of the first trial of Nikolas Cruz, Broward Circuit Judge Elizabeth Scherer told prosecutors and defense lawyers that instead of calling jurors from the main assembly room to her courtroom when the time comes, she’s planning to do the opposite. “We can utilize the jury room for the initial screening of jurors,” she said. “We would plan to use all the jurors called in on those days.”
“Collier and Lee counties team up to oppose Army Corps plan for Lake Okeechobee releases” via Jake Allen of the Naples Daily News — Collier County is teaming up with Lee County to push back against an Army Corps of Engineers plan that would change how much and where water from Lake Okeechobee is released. The Lake Okeechobee System Operating Manual, otherwise known as LOSOM, is reviewed by the Army Corps every seven to 10 years. The new plan is set to be finalized in November. County officials in Southwest Florida have said that the new plan will send an inequitable amount of water from the lake toward the west coast via the Caloosahatchee River, which empties into an estuary in Lee County.
“Facing rising ambulance costs, Citrus County to take over EMS Oct. 1” via Mike Wright of Florida Politics — Citrus County ambulance service will return to County Commission oversight for the first time in over 30 years after Commissioners voted 3-2 Tuesday to take control Oct. 1 of Nature Coast EMS. The vote came on a day when Nature Coast, the nonprofit ambulance provider in Citrus County for 21 years, sought to increase its annual subsidy from the contracted amount of $858,519 to $1.6 million. Nature Coast officials said the increase was necessary to cover rising labor costs; the agency is losing paramedics and emergency medical technicians to neighboring counties that pay more.
“New airline to fly from Palm Beach International Airport to Connecticut” via Antonio Fins of the Palm Beach Post — A new airline will start service to Connecticut this December, Palm Beach International Airport officials said in a statement Wednesday. Avelo Airlines will offer nonstop service to New Haven’s Tweed-New Haven Airport, or HVN, beginning Dec. 16, 2021. One-way fares start as low as $59. “The announcement of new nonstop New Haven service is so exciting for travelers looking for an easy airport experience in both their departing and arriving cities,” said Laura Beebe, director of airports for Palm Beach County, in the statement. “We are thrilled to welcome Avelo to PBI, and we are confident this new partnership will be a great success.”
— TOP OPINION —
“Good for the Governor: Canceling FSAs is the right decision” via the South Florida Sun-Sentinel editorial board — We’ve spent much time criticizing the Governor at the Sun-Sentinel editorial board. We hardly knew how to treat the news when DeSantis announced Tuesday that he would seek to end the Florida Standards Assessment, the annual tests that have become the be-all, end-all for Florida schools, playing an outsized role in determining school quality and funding. We weren’t the only ones caught in this conundrum. Reaction was swift and positive from the Florida Education Association and some of the most liberal members of the Legislature.
— OPINIONS —
“Awful new revelations about Trump and Jan. 6 show Mike Pence is no hero” via Greg Sargent of The Washington Post — Ever since Pence announced on Jan. 6 that he lacked the power to help Trump overturn the 2020 election in Congress, it’s been widely suggested that the Vice President was one of the few heroes in this ugly tale. But new revelations in the forthcoming book by Post reporters Bob Woodward and Robert Costa cast doubt on this account. And the new details also hint at lines of inquiry about Jan. 6 that will shape aspects of the House select committee’s examination of those events. We know Pence told his security detail that he adamantly would not allow himself to be removed from the Capitol as the violence raged. Trump sent the mob to terrorize Pence.
“James Baiardi: To solve Florida correctional staff crisis, pay parity must happen now” via Florida Politics — On top of facing inmates every day, coupled with the threat of COVID-19, our brave men and women were forced to work an exhausting amount of overtime as the result of the staffing shortages. The staffing shortage, marked by some 5,000 vacant positions, has made our prisons extremely unsafe for everyone. These shortages directly result from a problem that began when prior legislatures failed to properly fund yearly pay raises for state correctional officers. During that time, other law enforcement agencies and county correction departments raised the pay and benefits, while state correctional officers fell behind. It’s time for Florida legislators and DeSantis to say yes to a significant pay raise for all correctional officers.
— ON TODAY’S SUNRISE —
Rep. Fine is filing a bill to ban the teachings of how racism has affected life throughout history and today.
Also, on today’s Sunrise:
— When it comes to making COVID-19 data public, open government groups are saying the Sunshine State has gone dark, when compared to the rest of the country.
— Lying in state, former Florida Chief Justice Stephen Grimes is remembered.
— Michael Barfield, Director of Public Access at the Florida Center for Government Accountability, talks about their ongoing lawsuit to get the state of Florida, particularly the Department of Health, to resume sharing critical COVID-19 data.
— Agriculture Commissioner Fried continues her weekly COVID-19 briefing.
— And the Lincoln Project is launching another attack ad against Gov. DeSantis.
To listen, click on the image below:
— ALOE —
“All-civilian Inspiration4 launches on three-day mission in orbit” via Miriam Kramer of Axios — SpaceX’s all-civilian Inspiration4 mission made history when it launched into orbit. It’s the first time a crew of amateurs has launched to orbit without a professional astronaut onboard. The mission also signals the start of a new era in space — one defined by an industry pushing to launch many more private people to orbit in the coming years. The SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket carrying the Inspiration4 crew members launched from Cape Canaveral, Florida, at 8:02 p.m. ET. Jared Isaacman, Sian Proctor, Hayley Arceneaux and Chris Sembroski will now live in their Dragon capsule in orbit for the next three days, before coming in for a splashdown somewhere off the Florida coast.
To watch the launch, click on the image below:
Video Player
“Universal lights up Horror Nights with new stage show” via Dewayne Bevil of the Orlando Sentinel — “Halloween Nightmare Fuel,” the new stage show at Universal’s Halloween Horror Nights, features playing with fire, daring aerial acts, and mysterious disappearances. For one thing, there are unusual fiery elements tossed about by performers. And then there are high-energy, intense dancers in costumes that are just north of Scantytown. Aerialists work with sometimes-on-fire equipment. The “Fuel” storyline revolves around a guy caught up in his own nightmare, and there’s room in the audience for individual interpretation. The lead character also has mind-boggling tricks up his sleeve, although creator Jason Horne calls them “illusions.” Then more dancing, flames and blaring music.
“Royal Caribbean to debut world’s largest cruise ship in Florida instead of China” via Richard Tribou of the Orlando Sentinel — Florida has been the first home for each of Royal Caribbean’s Oasis-class vessels since Oasis of the Seas debuted in 2008 but was set to lose out to China for the fifth ship in the class, Wonder of the Seas. But the cruise line announced some changes that will bring the ship to the Sunshine State early next year. What will inherit the title as the world’s largest cruise ship will sail out of Fort Lauderdale beginning March 4, 2022, for two months of Caribbean voyages before shifting to Europe for a summer sailing season, and then eventually making its way to China.
— HAPPY BIRTHDAY —
Celebrating today are U.S. Rep. Murphy, former congressional candidate Alan Cohn, WFTV’s Chris Heath, Ghada Skaff Lieser, Wayne Mineo, former Rep. David Rivera, our friend Paul Seago, and Pasco County Commissioner Kathryn Starkey.
___
Sunburn is authored and assembled by Peter Schorsch, Phil Ammann, Renzo Downey and Drew Wilson.
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Axios AM
Good Thursday morning. Wishing you an easy fast on Yom Kippur, the Day of Atonement — the most solemn day in the Jewish calendar.
- Smart Brevity™ count: 1,185 words … 4½ minutes. Edited by Zachary Basu.
California is projected to receive the largest number of Afghan refugees (5,255) who are coming to America, followed by Texas (4,481), according to State Department data obtained by Axios’ Stef Kight.
- Hawaii, South Dakota, West Virginia and Wyoming are the only states not slated to receive anyone from the first group of evacuees, plus Washington, D.C.
What’s happening: The Biden administration notified governors and mayors yesterday of the number of Afghan evacuees their state is expected to receive in the coming weeks.
- An initial group of 37,000 Afghans will soon be headed to states across the country, many after harrowing journeys from Afghanistan.
What’s next: More evacuees are waiting in third countries.
- The administration has requested funding from Congress to help resettle 65,000 Afghans in the U.S. by the end of this month and 95,000 by September 2022, AP reports.
Elon Musk’s SpaceX launched the first crew of amateurs into orbit without a professional astronaut onboard last night, signaling a new era in space, writes Axios’ Miriam Kramer, who spent months talking to the Inspiration4 crew for our “How It Happened” podcast series.
- Jared Isaacman, Sian Proctor, Hayley Arceneaux and Chris Sembroski will now live in their Dragon capsule in orbit for the next three days, before splashing down off the Florida coast.
Why it matters: SpaceX hopes to make space travel like air travel — with very little training necessary for folks flying to orbit and even beyond.
This image from a SpaceX video shows the crew during blastoff.
🚀 Watch the launch: Countdown starts at 4:17:15.
🎧 Hear it here … Axios’ “How It Happened: The Next Astronauts” podcast docu-series goes inside the Inspiration4 crew’s selection and training.
Illustration: Annelise Capossela/Axios
Facebook employs hundreds of researchers, many with Ph.D.s. They have found some shocking patterns, including how Facebook makes users angrier and girls deeply insecure, according to an ongoing Wall Street Journal series, “The Facebook Files” (subscription).
- The series is based on a trove of internal Facebook research reports and slide decks + online employee discussions. The Journal says at least some of the documents have been turned over to the SEC and Congress “by a person seeking federal whistleblower protection.”
The hardest-hitting installment so far, “Facebook Knows Instagram Is Toxic for Teen Girls, Company Documents Show,” reports:
- “Repeatedly, the company’s researchers found that [Facebook-owned] Instagram is harmful for a sizable percentage of [young users], most notably teenage girls.”
- “Facebook’s researchers identified the over-sexualization of girls as something that weighs on the mental health of the app’s users.”
In response, Karina Newton, Instagram’s head of public policy, wrote in a blog post: “We’re proud that our app can give voice to those who have been marginalized, that it can help friends and families stay connected from all corners of the world, that it can prompt societal change; but we also know it can be a place where people have negative experiences.”
- Adam Mosseri, head of Instagram, tweeted about the Journal account of research into young people’s experiences on his platform: “We stand by this work and believe more companies should be doing the same.”
The third and latest installment, “Facebook Tried to Make Its Platform a Healthier Place. It Got Angrier Instead,” reports on the effects of a major overhaul of the News Feed algorithm in 2018:
- Facebook researchers “concluded that the new algorithm’s heavy weighting of reshared material … made the angry voices louder. ‘Misinformation, toxicity, and violent content are inordinately prevalent among reshares,’ researchers noted in internal memos.”
Go deeper: Journal synopses of Parts 1-3.
The pace of new COVID infections in the U.S. is beginning to slow — a potential sign that the states hit hardest by the Delta wave are starting to turn things around, Axios’ Sam Baker writes.
- But deaths are still rising, and it’s still too early to know whether schools might drive cases back up again.
An average of about 150,000 Americans are contracting COVID each day. That number has fallen by 8% over the past two weeks.
- The virus is now killing 1,888 Americans per day, on average — a 33% jump over the past two weeks.
Simone Biles, testifying before the Senate Judiciary Committee about the FBI’s mishandling of reports of sexual abuse by Team USA gymnastics doctor Larry Nassar:
- “I blame Larry Nassar, and I also blame an entire system that enabled and perpetuated his abuse. … This is the largest case of sexual abuse in the history of American sport.”
FBI Director Chris Wray, appearing at the same hearing, began with a statement he titled, “Dereliction of Duty”:
- “On behalf of the entire FBI, … I want to offer my apologies, sympathy, and support to the survivors and their families.”
Read more from the gymnasts’ testimony, which was the lead of Axios PM.
Illustration: Annelise Capossela/Axios
Next-generation 911 will allow the nation’s 6,000 911 centers to accept texts, videos and photos, Axios’ Margaret Harding McGill reports.
- U.S. emergency communications have remained analog. But Congress is taking a new run at dragging 911 into the digital age.
Sen. Amy Klobuchar (D-Minn.), co-chair of the Senate Next Generation 9-1-1 Caucus, and Sen. Catherine Cortez Masto (D-Nev.) today will unveil a bill to create a $10 billion federal grant program for 911 upgrades.
President Biden meets with business leaders yesterday. Photo: Oliver Contreras/Getty Images
Molly Moon Neitzel, founder and CEO of Seattle-based Molly Moon’s Homemade Ice Cream, told Axios after meeting with President Biden yesterday that she likes his vaccine mandate for her 180 employees.
- 96% of Neitzel’s employees are vaccinated, Axios business editor Kate Marino writes. But the seasonality of ice cream means she will hire another 100 or so workers in the new year.
- “I’m thankful that this mandate will be in place, so I can just make it a requirement of the job,” Neitzel said.
After yesterday’s White House meeting, several CEOs said they’d been looking for stronger federal guidance to lean on.
In East Room remarks this afternoon on leveling the economic playing field, President Biden will argue that his Build Back Better plan will “deal everyone in.”
- A White House official tells me that Biden will argue that the nation has reached an inflection point — whether or not to perpetuate an economy where the wealthiest taxpayers and biggest corporations play by a set of rules they’ve written for themselves.
✉️ First look: 15 winners of the Nobel Prize in economics winners, including Joseph Stiglitz, write in an open letter that Biden’s agenda will reduce long-term inflationary pressure, provide inclusive economic growth and make the tax system more equitable:
Workers temporarily re-install security fencing around the Capitol ahead of a rally Saturday exalting the Jan. 6 rioters.
This graphic comes from Axios Denver — America’s 15th-largest Tesla magnet, with 14,000 Musk-mobiles in the metro area.
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Who is Pedro Martinez? Get to know the new head of CPS
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Morning Headlines
ANALYSIS — President Joe Biden and former President Donald Trump have the ability to freeze the 2024 presidential field of other official contenders because of their unique personal situations, personas and relationships with their parties, Nathan L. Gonzales writes. Read more…
Sens. Alex Padilla and Rand Paul proposed legislation Wednesday that would offer a path to permanent residency for “documented Dreamers,” or foreign citizens who grew up legally in the U.S. on a parent’s work visa but then couldn’t remain on it when they turned 21. Read more…
Gymnasts’ testimony leaves senators wondering why FBI agents aren’t being prosecuted
The congressional testimony Wednesday of four Team USA gymnasts — Simone Biles, McKayla Maroney, Maggie Nichols and Aly Raisman — left everyone watching questioning why FBI agents have not been charged with making false statements under oath. Read more…
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In response to Western drought, a flood of legislation
Tens of millions of Americans live in areas being punished by drought, from Oregon’s Klamath River basin to California’s Central Valley. The crisis is ramping up pressure on Capitol Hill to act even as lawmakers confront sharp partisan differences over the best ways to respond. Read more…
They have a vision for a happier Congress: More golf
Someone once said golf is best defined as an endless series of tragedies obscured by the occasional miracle. You could say the same about legislating. But for members of the Congressional Golf Association, the sport is an escape from the Hill’s daily histrionics. Read more…
9 takeaways from the California governor recall election
ANALYSIS — California Gov. Gavin Newsom’s convincing victory in a recall election has led to some overanalysis and overestimation of Democrats’ chances in next year’s midterms, ignoring the election’s unique circumstances, Nathan L. Gonzales writes. Read more…
Democrats tout California recall result ahead of 2022 midterms
Some Democrats touted California Gov. Gavin Newsom’s landslide victory in the recall election as a good sign for their chances in 2022, but some Republicans and strategists downplayed any connection between the result and what might happen more than a year away. Read more…
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25.) POLITICO PLAYBOOK
POLITICO Playbook: Moderates fear Pelosi hanging them out to dry
DRIVING THE DAY
STILL SLIPPING: President JOE BIDEN’s average approval rating (46%) is in FORD territory and could be headed into TRUMP territory if he doesn’t turn it around. Here’s where every modern president rated at this point, according to FiveThirtyEight …
W. Bush: 82.6%
Kennedy: 76.1%
Truman: 75%
Eisenhower: 74.4%
Johnson: 74%
H.W. Bush: 69.5%
Nixon: 62.3%
Reagan: 60.1%
Carter: 54.3%
Obama: 53.4%
Clinton: 48.3%
Biden: 46%
Ford: 46%
Trump: 38.8%
Speaker NANCY PELOSI made a deal with about a dozen skeptical House moderates In late August to win their support on the party’s $3.5 trillion budget. If they backed the fiscal blueprint, Pelosi promised two things. One was to hold a vote on the bipartisan, $1.2 trillion infrastructure bill by Sept. 27, a sweetener for those members eager to campaign on the policy win.
The other promise was less straightforward but no less important: Rather than the House and Senate drafting and voting on separate sweeping reconciliation bills, she agreed to figure out the contours of the social spending package with her Senate counterparts on the front end, ensuring any bill that passes the House would have 51 votes to clear the upper chamber.
In Congress lingo, it’s known as “pre-conferencing.”
The moderates’ logic for this second demand went like this: Let’s figure out what the JOE MANCHINS and KYRSTEN SINEMAS of the Senate are willing to live with, then pass a single agreed-upon bill through both chambers. Don’t make us take tough votes on controversial proposals on taxes, climate change and the like — only to have them stripped out by the Senate and leave us with nothing to show for them come campaign time.
Now, however, some moderates are increasingly concerned that Pelosi and her team are playing fast and loose with that commitment. They worry that Democratic leaders are charging ahead with their own expansive version of the reconciliation package without getting on the same page with the Senate first — and making them walk the plank in the process.
“When we vote on tough things that never become law, we have to go home and defend that vote without the support of the White House. It puts the House majority at risk,” said one moderate Democratic source. “We don’t want to vote on something that won’t pass the Senate — period. … Instead, our leadership would rather twist the screws [on] moderates.”
The issue came to a head Wednesday when three House Democrats tanked Pelosi’s prescription drug plan in the Energy and Commerce Committee — an embarrassing setback that signals problems ahead (more on this below). One of their chief concerns: that the Senate remains opposed to the overhaul, which would raise nearly $700 billion to fund health care provisions.
Behind the scenes, we’re told, Rep. STEPHANIE MURPHY (D-Fla.), a Blue Dog leader who hails from a battleground district, has also been prodding leaders to do more to get buy-in from the Senate before moving forward. Notably, Murphy voted against the Ways and Means multitrillion-dollar tax provisions in committee, which were not “pre-conferenced” with the Senate.
We caught up with Murphy on Wednesday, and she told Playbook pre-conferencing is the most efficient way to proceed. “Every minute that we spend debating provisions that will never become law is a moment wasted, and is going to delay much-needed assistance to the American people,” she said, adding that these early votes on the reconciliation bill should be based on political reality, not “aspirational.”
BACK TO THE FUTURE: This is a familiar predicament for centrist House Democrats representing competitive districts. Many lost their seats in the early 1990s after BILL CLINTON pressed them to back a BTU-fuel tax — only to abandon the provision when it bogged down in the Senate. Republicans ran ads against those members, who didn’t like the provision in the first place, and they lost the majority in 1994. Similarly, the Blue Dogs nearly went extinct after they backed cap-and-trade legislation in 2009. It too went nowhere, and they were pilloried during the campaign. It’s not uncommon to hear moderates today say, “We don’t want to get ‘cap-and-traded’ or ‘BTUed’ again.”
THE LEADERSHIP VIEW: One senior Democratic aide told us that Pelosi is on the same page as these members and that “leadership has always wanted the same bill to pass both chambers.” Another senior Democratic aide told us there is a clear “misunderstanding about what pre-conferencing meant” when Pelosi made the deal.
“I think, if you’re the [JOSH] GOTTHIEMERS and the Murphys of the world, you think it means cutting the full deal with Sinema and Manchin. … But leadership is treating this like normal end-of-the-year negotiation.” In other words: right now, it’s more Pelosi and Senate Majority Leader CHUCK SCHUMER ironing things out.
A third senior Democratic source told us leadership logistically can’t get 100% of the bill pre-conferenced; maybe around 80%. Plus, there’s an advantage to holding out, the person argued: “I think Pelosi wants to put out the $3.5 trillion [package] … use that as a baseline to try to give herself more leverage over Manchin and Sinema.”
Not all moderates are upset. One told us Pelosi’s promise was only to hash out a deal with the Senate before a floor vote in the House — not to do so ahead of votes at the committee level. This member is confident that will still happen.
As if to make the moderates’ point, the NRCC will be releasing a new round of paid ads today slamming vulnerable House Democrats over reconciliation, we’re told. Their targets are some of the same Democrats who struck the budget deal with the speaker: JIM COSTA (Calif.), CAROLYN BOURDEAUX (Ga.), JARED GOLDEN (Maine), JOSH GOTTHEIMER (N.J.), KURT SCHRADER (Ore.), VICENTE GONZALEZ (Texas) and HENRY CUELLAR (Texas).
“What’s the difference between Nancy Pelosi’s doormat and Congresswoman Carolyn Bourdeaux? Nothing,” the narrator intones.
Good Thursday morning, and an easy fast to those observing Yom Kippur. Thanks for reading Playbook. If you have an hour or two of idle time today, you could do worse than peruse Rolling Stone’s list of the 500 greatest songs of all time (updated for the first time in 17 years). Drop us a line with your favorites or worst snubs: Rachael Bade, Eugene Daniels, Ryan Lizza, Tara Palmeri.
BIDEN’S THURSDAY:
— 10 a.m.: The president and VP KAMALA HARRIS will receive the President’s Daily Brief.
— 1:45 p.m.: Biden will speak from the East Room, per his official schedule, about “leveling the playing field in our economy to bring down costs and ensure that the backbone of the country, the middle class, can finally get a break.”
Press secretary JEN PSAKI will brief at 2:30 p.m.
THE HOUSE and THE SENATE are out.
PLAYBOOK READS
THE WHITE HOUSE
— Amid a busy fall agenda, Burgess Everett and Laura Barrón-López take a look at how “Democratic lawmakers are urging Biden to get more directly involved” with reconciliation, the debt ceiling and government funding bills.
Senate Majority Whip DICK DURBIN: “There is no comparable political force to a president, and specifically Biden at this moment.”
— On cue, a White House official offered us this preview of Biden’s speech today on the reconciliation bill: “He’ll also argue that we don’t need to reduce the cost of being rich in America; we need to lower the cost of raising a child, of prescription drugs, of taking care of an aging parent, of health care, of high-speed internet, and of hearing aids.”
For those keeping score, almost every one of those Biden priorities is currently under threat by intra-Dem conflicts.
— Robert Garley of FactCheck.org has one for the ages: “No One Pushed ‘Button’ to Prevent Biden from Speaking”
CONGRESS
— Three moderate House Dems — Reps. SCOTT PETERS (D-Calif.), KATHLEEN RICE (D-N.Y.) and Schrader — defeated a prescription drug pricing reform plan at the committee level Wednesday. (Here’s Alice Miranda Ollstein and Sarah Ferris’s report on what happened.)
Dems are freaking out about this, but Pelosi cannot say that she wasn’t warned.
Ollstein and Susannah Luthi scooped back in May that those three members and seven of their colleagues wrote Pelosi a letter saying they did not favor the leading Dem plan. As we noted Sept. 1 when we outlined the fraught politics of drug pricing, “on this issue, Biden and Speaker Nancy Pelosi start the House debate without majority support.”
We don’t think this is the end of the plan. In fact, it was always more likely that RON WYDEN (D-Ore.) over in the Senate would write a compromise bill. But it does show a few things: 1) Pelosi, known for her prowess as a legislative tactician, can’t conjure votes out of thin air, 2) House moderates are serious when they say they don’t want to vote on policies that can’t pass the Senate (see above), and 3) PhRMA is powerful.
— Dems’ latest effort to move Senate Minority Leader MITCH MCCONNELL on the debt limit? “Shame,” says NYT’s Jonathan Weisman.
Good luck, say his allies. The kicker of the story, via former McConnell aide ANTONIA FERRIER: “The left trying to move Senator McConnell with shame or pressure is like trying to move Mount Everest with a light breeze.”
— Sinema to Manchin: Hold my beer. WaPo’s Mike DeBonis notes that while “Joe Manchin gets all the attention,” Kyrsten Sinema “could be an even bigger obstacle.” While she hasn’t been nearly as public as Manchin, “Sinema and her staff have been closely involved in the [reconciliation] talks, asking detailed questions to several key lawmakers and committee aides to understand the justification for proposed spending and tax increases.”
“Other Democrats familiar with Sinema’s work behind the scenes … said a major priority has been to ensure that matters that were negotiated out of the bipartisan infrastructure bill — additional transit funding, for instance — do not reappear in the Build Back Better bill, which would violate an agreement with Republicans to keep the two bills separate.
“Sinema, the Democrats said, has also been exploring ways to ‘means test’ some programs to target their effect on the nation’s neediest at a moment when many liberals argue that a much larger swath of Americans need help from the federal government.”
Sen. MITT ROMNEY (R-Utah): “Anyone who thinks she’s going to be a pushover is going to be severely surprised.”
— This was inevitable: “Conservative group files ethics complaint over Ocasio-Cortez appearance at Met Gala”
POLITICS ROUNDUP
NBC’s Alex Seitz-Wald: “Democrats warn of ‘canary in the coal mine’ for Latino voters in California recall”
Lara Seligman and Daniel Lippman, per two sources, say the WOODWARD/COSTA scoop about Joint Chiefs of Staff Chair Gen. MARK MILLEY secretly calling his Chinese counterpart amid Donald Trump’s erratic behavior is “greatly exaggerated.”
Marc Caputo and Gary Fineout report on how pro-vaccine Gov. RON DESANTIS is gradually making room for anti-vaxxers.
DENNIS HASTERT, former speaker of the House, reached a tentative settlement with the man who accused him of child sexual abuse, the Chicago Sun-Times reports. The civil case had been slated to head to jury selection Monday.
Rich Lowry: “The ‘Stolen-Election’ Myth Has Become an Albatross for the GOP”
JAN. 6 AND ITS AFTERMATH
— NYT reports that Republicans are distancing themselves from Saturday’s “Justice for J6” rally in support of defendants charged in the riot.
Sen. JOHN THUNE (R-S.D.): “There are a lot of clearly angry people who want to march on the Capitol. … I haven’t talked to a single Republican up here in the Senate that has encouraged or enabled anything like that.”
Sen. TOMMY TUBERVILLE (R-Ala.): “I don’t expect a lot of people there. … I haven’t heard anything about it. I will not be there.”
Sen. LINDSEY GRAHAM (R-S.C.) on the police response if violence erupts: “They need to take a firm line, buddy. … If anybody gets out of line, they need to whack ’em.”
Also not attending: Rep. MARJORIE TAYLOR GREENE (R-Ga.) and Sen. JOSH HAWLEY (R-Mo.).
THE PANDEMIC
— Not good: “Montana’s Largest Hospital Close to Rationing Life-Saving Care”
— AP’s Lauren Weber and Anna Maria Barry-Jester report that “Republican legislators in more than half of U.S. states, spurred on by voters angry about lockdowns and mask mandates, are taking away the powers that state and local officials use to protect the public against infectious diseases.”
“It’s kind of like having your hands tied in the middle of a boxing match,” said KELLEY VOLLMAR, executive director of the Jefferson County Health Department in Missouri.
PLAYBOOKERS
Peter Thiel recommended 150 people for positions in the Trump administration, including “numerous figures who were too extreme even for the most extreme members of Trump’s inner circle,” per a major excerpt from Max Chafkin’s new book in Bloomberg.
Nicki Minaj said she received an invite from the White House to talk about her cousin’s friend’s testicles. But a White House official told our Alex Thompson that they just offered to connect Minaj to talk to one of their doctors about the safety and effectiveness of the vaccine.
John Durham is getting ready to indict a bit player in the Russia investigation for allegedly lying to the FBI. Brandon Van Grack, who prosecuted Michael Flynn for lying to the FBI before Flynn was pardoned by Trump: “Apparently it’s once again a crime to lie to the FBI.”
Ahmad Massoud has hired a D.C. lobbyist.
SPOTTED: Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) ordering a crispy rice bowl at the Capitol Hill Sweetgreen on Wednesday night.
MEDIA MOVES — Laura McGann and Mark Bauman’s forthcoming D.C. news startup is rolling out a big batch of new hires: Justin Rood as investigations editor, Dave Levitan as science and climate reporter, Maggie Severns as policy reporter, Nikhil Kumar as deputy global editor, Joshua Keating as global security reporter, Serena Golden as special projects editor, Jason Paladino as investigative reporter, Matthew Zeitlin as domestic economics reporter, Kaila Philo as government and political institutions reporter, Anya Van Wagtendonk as misinformation reporter, Benjamin Powers as technology reporter, Morgan Richardson as assistant editor, Jackie Padilla and Jake Garcia as video producers, and Sarah McHaney as director of comms.
— Paul Volpe is rejoining the NYT to lead a new cross-functional team focused on standards, values and credibility. He most recently was executive editor and senior editor for emerging products at POLITICO. Announcement
STAFFING UP — HUD announced several recent hires: Crystal Bergemann as senior adviser for climate, Patrick Byrne as congressional relations specialist, Demetria McCain as principal deputy assistant secretary in the Office of Fair Housing and Equal Opportunity, Freedom Murphy as deputy press secretary, Daniela Perez as assistant press secretary, Mia Pittman as deputy assistant secretary for risk management and regulatory affairs at the FHA, Nathan Shultz as senior adviser at the FHA, and Brad Pollock and Michaela West as special assistants.
TRANSITIONS — Karen Hanley will be EVP at The Permitting Institute. She previously was acting executive director of Biden’s Federal Permitting Improvement Steering Council … Jon van Gelder is now an impact strategist at We Stand United. He previously was politics producer at MTV News. … Jennifer Sime is joining Physicians for Human Rights as its new COO. She most recently was SVP at the International Rescue Committee, where she worked for 22 years. … Allison Schneider is now director of media relations at the American Council of Engineering Companies. She previously was senior director of comms at the National Beer Wholesalers Association.
WEDDING — Colorado Gov. Jared Polis and Marlon Reis got married Wednesday at the University of Colorado. Colorado Public Radio’s Bente Birkeland has the details.
HAPPY BIRTHDAY: Reps. Joaquin Castro (D-Texas) and Stephanie Murphy (D-Fla.) … Louisiana Gov. John Bel Edwards … Julián Castro … Hogan Gidley … Jason Zengerle … RENEWPR’s Ben Finzel … Jill Lesser of National Geographic … Paul Orzulak of West Wing Writers … Cleta Mitchell … Lauren Dillon of Sen. Amy Klobuchar’s (D-Minn.) office … POLITICO’s Kevin Yamamura and Xinran Xu … Derek Mitchell of the National Democratic Institute … Sara Goo of Axios … Lori Brutten … NBC’s Richard Engel … NAM’s Jordan Stoick … Laurie Knight of the National Beer Wholesalers Association … Facebook’s Jackie Rooney and Josh Ginsberg … CNN’s Angelica Grimaldi and Hannah Sarisohn … Richard Perle … Oliver Schwab … Ian Walton … Chuck Westover … David Lavan … Elliot Vice … Nathan Hurst … former Reps. Ralph Abraham (R-La.) and David Rivera (R-Fla.) … Josh Benson of Old Town Media … E&E News’ Ester Wells … Christine Ciccone of the International Fund for Agricultural Development
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26.) AMERICAN MINUTE
27.) CAFFEINATED THOUGHTS
28.) CONSERVATIVE DAILY NEWS
|
29.) PJ MEDIA
The Morning Briefing: Olympic Gymnasts Reveal That Comey’s Trump-Hating FBI Was OK With Child Rape
Top O’ the Briefing
Happy Thursday, dear Kruiser Morning Briefing friends. You will always look ridiculous in a hoop skirt.
This is one of the rare times that I am leading off with something I wrote. It’s necessary though, and I’m sure you will all agree with me.
The Federal Bureau of Investigation has become an unhinged, unchecked state police service that needs to be reined in and overhauled. In recent times, this was an opinion one found only on the right.
It should be a bipartisan issue now.
All the while it was crafting a hoax about Russian collusion that was designed to destroy the president of the United States, the FBI was deliberately covering for a serial rapist of little girls.
Me:
McKayla Maroney’s testimony (video below) was particularly graphic and brutal. She not only detailed the horrors Nassar visited upon her, but she also went over the insanely tone-deaf questioning that she had to endure at the hands of the FBI. “They asked if he used gloves, I said no.” As if that would have made things better. “They asked if this treatment ever helped me.” A warning for those who watch the video: the questions above begin at the 2:32 mark, the two statements prior to that are even more graphic and awful. Her remarks are exceedingly damning.
Nassar was raping Maroney when she was 15 years old. Just when you think that the story can’t possibly get any worse, Maroney reveals that the FBI falsified her report.
The timeline of the accusations against the monster Nassar overlaps with the timeline of the FBI’s Russia collusion jihad against President Trump. The Bureau has become so politicized that it prioritized the destruction of the president over protecting little girls who were being raped.
The FBI victim-shamed the young women who came to the Bureau hoping that sharing the horror they’d endured would make it stop.
Tragically, the bureaucratic scum they sought out decided to continue enabling Nassar. It had other marching orders from the Democratic National Committee, after all.
Every FBI agent who came anywhere near this case and participated in the cover-up needs to spend the rest of his or her life in prison.
You know, a place where even the worst people know that harming children is wrong.
Everything Isn’t Awful
PJ Media
VodkaPundit: Afghanistan Hostage Crisis: Family of Navy Vet Wants Biden Official Fired
Guess What Dirty Democrat Tricksters Are Trying to Sneak Into Their $3.5 Trillion Package?
Serial Groper Al Franken Eyes Political Comeback
YES. It’s OK to Be Pro-Vaccine and Anti-Mandate—in Fact, It’s a Winning Message
Could Derek Chauvin Be Next? Court Vacates Ex-Minneapolis Cop’s Third-Degree Murder Conviction
BREAKING: Federal Judge Blocks Forced Vaccination for Medical Personnel in New York
New York Democrats Set to Gerrymander the GOP Out of Existence in the State
The Massive Political Risk for Biden and the Democrats With Vaccine Mandates
Woke Colleges Have No Tolerance for Freedom or White People
The Grand Alliance to Contain China: Will It Work?
King ‘Cherry Picker’ Juan Cole Accuses Jihadists of Cherry-Picking the Koran
The Man of the Hour? Why James Gilmore Matters More Than Ever
Reason to Fear a Vaccine Mandate
Judge Nixes Ballot Language for Referendum on Destroying Minneapolis Police Department
Townhall Mothership
Schlichter: Bush Completes His Scummy Betrayal
Oh, So That’s How 350,000 California Recall Votes Vanished from CNN’s Vote Tally
Biden’s Vaccine Mandate May Force Texas Hospital to Close
Trump Finally Has His Answer on ‘Where’s Durham?’
Fox News Decides to Play Comms Director for Mark Milley
Is Someone’s Size Enough To Justify Lethal Force?
Cam&Co. It Shouldn’t Take A Lawsuit To Exercise A Constitutional Right
LA Judge Reprimanded For Opinions On Gascón, Guns, BLM
Kasie Hunt speaks honestly about California Democrats – quickly gets ratioed on Twitter
When do high school creative-writing assignments become “grooming”?
VIP
VodkaPundit, Part Trois: This Is the Real Tragedy of Imaginary Genders
Here’s How We Know Joe Biden’s COVID Response Has Been a Failure
Why Did the California Recall Fail?
Around the Interwebz
NBA’s Milwaukee Bucks Hire Lisa Byington As Full-Time Play-By-Play Announcer, Breaking Barrier
WhatsApp begins testing a yellow pages-style business directory
More Than 1300 Retro Arcade Games From the Museum of Pinball Are Heading to Auction
Bee Me
The Kruiser Kabana
Kabana Gallery
Kabana Comedy
Burrito bowls aren’t a thing. It’s either a burrito or it’s not.
30.) WHITE HOUSE DOSSIER
31.) THE DISPATCH
The Morning Dispatch: What Will OSHA’s Vaccine/Testing Rule Look Like?
Plus: U.S. gymnasts who were molested by former team doctor Larry Nassar testify before Congress about the institutional failures that abetted their abuse.
The Dispatch Staff |
Happy Thursday! On this date 401 years ago, the Mayflower set sail from England bound for America. If those 130 brave passengers didn’t make their journey that day, the Chicago Bears likely would never have been in a position to draft Justin Fields this year. Thank you, pilgrims.
Quick Hits: Today’s Top Stories
- President Joe Biden announced a new trilateral security agreement with Australia and the United Kingdom on Wednesday with the aim of helping Australia develop nuclear submarine capabilities. Although China was not directly mentioned in Biden’s remarks, the partnership—which will also include coordination on cybersecurity, artificial intelligence, and quantum computing—is clearly intended to challenge its hegemony in the Indo-Pacific region.
- Both North and South Korea fired test ballistic missiles on Wednesday, with South Korea testing a submarine-launched ballistic missile and North Korea firing two ballistic missiles that flew several hundred miles and landed in the ocean. The State Department condemned North Korea’s launch as “in violation of multiple U.N. Security Council resolution.”
- Pope Francis on Wednesday waded into the debate over administering Communion to Catholic politicians who support abortion, saying that—while he is not up-to-date on the specifics of the situation with President Biden—bishops should minister with “compassion and tenderness” rather than condemnation. He maintained that accepting abortion is “accept[ing] homicide,” but reiterated his belief that the Eucharist “is not a prize for the perfect” but rather “a gift of the presence of Jesus in the church.”
- A spokesman for Joint Chiefs Chairman Gen. Mark Milley issued a statement on Wednesday that did not dispute the premise of Bob Woodward and Robert Costa’s reporting on his communication with Chinese military officials, but added that Milley “regularly communicates” with his counterparts across the world and that all such calls are “staffed, coordinated and communicated with the Department of Defense and the interagency.” A defense official familiar with the calls told Politico the reports are “grossly mischaracterized,” as Milley reportedly asked acting Defense Secretary Chris Miller for permission to make the call. Miller said yesterday that there was likely “a perfunctory exchange between us and our staffs about coordinating phone calls and messages for the day,” but added that, although he didn’t know if Woodward and Costa’s account is true, it would be “completely inappropriate” on Milley’s part if it is. The White House made clear Wednesday that President Biden has “complete confidence” in Milley’s “leadership, his patriotism, and his fidelity to our Constitution.”
- U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services announced this week that, beginning October 1, new immigrants to the United States must be fully vaccinated against COVID-19 to pass the mandatory immigration medical examination. Immigrants had already been required to be vaccinated against mumps, measles, polio, and countless other diseases.
What’s Actually Happening With Biden’s ‘Kind Of, Sort Of’ Vaccine Mandate?
When President Biden announced his administration’s plans last Thursday to tighten the screws on the unvaccinated, Republican elected officials were quick to denounce the moves, promising to fight them in court.
But it’s been a week, and no serious challenges to the employer vaccine/testing mandate have been filed. For good reason: It doesn’t exist yet.
“The Labor Department is working on an emergency rule that will require all employers with 100 or more workers to ensure their workers are fully vaccinated and regularly tested,” Biden reiterated yesterday at a meeting with business leaders and CEOs. “It’s going to take a little bit for them to put those requirements in place under the law.” White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki didn’t put a firm timeline on the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) rule, telling reporters Wednesday the administration will “hopefully” have more information “in the coming weeks.”
Several constitutional and regulatory scholars tell The Dispatch it’s almost pointless to speculate how the judiciary will handle inevitable challenges to the rule until we have a full grasp on what it entails. “The devil will be in the details,” said Ilya Shapiro, director of the Robert A. Levy Center for Constitutional Studies at the Cato Institute.
President Biden laid out his directive to OSHA pretty clearly last week: Issue a rule mandating that businesses with 100 or more employees require them either to get vaccinated or to submit to weekly COVID tests, with a penalty of $14,000 per violation. How much leeway does OSHA actually have in crafting the regulation? A lot, it turns out.
“We don’t know whether they’re going to go broad or narrow,” Cato’s Walter Olson told The Dispatch earlier this week. “Each time they go narrower, they potentially make it more effective to resist a group of challengers.”
Thinking of taking the plunge on a full Dispatch membership? Take advantage of our 30-day free trial, open until next week. Sign up now and get 13 months of full access for the price of 12—or, if you change your mind, cancel anytime in your first month and you won’t pay a cent.
Olympic Gymnasts Testify on Sexual Assault Allegations
In a Senate Judiciary Committee hearing Wednesday, four elite U.S. gymnasts took direct aim at organizations they said failed to protect athletes after allegations of sexual assault emerged against former national team doctor Larry Nassar.
In unflinching testimony, Olympians Simone Biles, McKayla Maroney, Maggie Nichols, and Aly Raisman called out USA Gymnastics (USAG), the United States Olympic and Paralympic Committee (USOPC), and the FBI for failing to act quickly to protect hundreds of girls from Nassar’s molestation.
The four were among the first elite gymnasts who in 2015 emerged as victims of Nassar, who committed repeated acts of sexual abuse against them and numerous other young girls under the guise of medical treatment.
Since the abuse scandal broke, victims have come forward from more than two decades of U.S. gymnastics, including the 2010 and 2011 world teams and the 2000, 2012, and 2016 Olympic teams.
“I blame Larry Nassar,” a tearful Biles told the committee, “and I also blame an entire system that enabled and perpetuated his abuse.” She added that “this is the largest case of sexual abuse in the history of American sport.”
Maroney, a member of the U.S. Olympic team in 2012, recounted that when she reported Nassar molesting her “hundreds of times in my bed” to the FBI, “they betrayed me, they betrayed my trust, and they sat idly by, as dozens of girls and women continued to be molested.” She described specific instances of abuse, including one where Nassar drugged her with a sleeping pill and she awoke to find herself “completely alone with him on top of me, molesting me for hours.”
Worth Your Time
- Writing in Politico, National Review’s Rich Lowry argues that Larry Elder’s recent embrace of former President Donald Trump’s election lies was a costly mistake—and a warning sign of something that could plague Republicans for years to come. “It’s not as though Elder, a talk-radio show host with no political experience who was running in a deep blue state, was going to cruise to victory regardless,” he writes. “But when he got pushed by Trump supporters into endorsing the stolen-election narrative, he ran directly into a Newsom political buzz saw linking him with Donald Trump and the Jan. 6 riot. In the Georgia special Senate elections earlier this year, Trump himself divided the party and suppressed GOP turnout at the margins by trying to make the election about November 2020 as much as possible and accusing Republicans who didn’t go along with his allegations of partisan treason. There may be other costs to come, perhaps up to and including the 2024 presidential election if Trump is the nominee again.”
- We don’t know about you, but we spent a significant amount of time yesterday reading Norm Macdonald obituaries and remembrances. This one, from Dan Brooks, is one of our favorites. “Norm Macdonald died less famous than he should have been,” Brooks writes. “He cared about jokes too much, when the business of comedy is not actually about jokes so much as audience shares and sponsors and streams and tickets. The comedy-consuming public claims to care nothing for these matters, of course; we only want funnier and funnier jokes. That is the theory, anyway, but in practice, the public is depressingly susceptible to hype. Fake funny sells. It often sells better than real funny, and it is significantly easier to produce. Norm despised fake funny, both in the industry and in daily life. It troubled him, the way you imagine that song coming out of the ice cream truck would trouble Mozart.”
Presented Without Comment
US President Joe Biden appeared to forget Prime Minister Scott Morrison’s name during this morning’s historic announcement of a new defence pact. Biden said “I wanna thank that fella down under” after thanking UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson. 9Soci.al/GgGh50GaMXq#9News
Also Presented Without Comment
Toeing the Company Line
- On Wednesday’s Dispatch Podcast, Sarah, Steve, Jonah, and David discuss the latest allegations regarding Gen. Mark Milley, the Biden administration’s vaccine/testing mandate, the California recall election, and more.
- Jonah’s Wednesday G-File(🔒) is about rules: where they came from, why they’re important, and how partisanship has rendered them meaningless. “My point isn’t about hypocrisy,” he writes. “The hypocrisy is bad, but it’s only smoke generated by a far more dangerous fire. People are putting torches to the rules, but all they know how to do is complain about the other teams’ smoke. … When you embrace the idea that rules are important for constraining your opponents but trivialities to be circumvented or rolled over otherwise—the way Biden wants to rollover governors in the way of his proposed vaccine mandate—you’re telling your opponents to adopt the very same tactic.”
- Scott Lincicome’s latest Capitolism did not delve into Met Gala fashion as we promised Tuesday, but rather his issues with President Biden’s vaccine mandate. “I wish everyone would get vaccinated—really I do—and you’d blush if you heard some of the things I’ve yelled at my TV over the last couple months,” he writes. “But there must be limits to even the best intentions in even the worst times, and President Biden has in my view exceeded those limits significantly.”
Reporting by Declan Garvey (@declanpgarvey), Andrew Egger (@EggerDC), Charlotte Lawson (@lawsonreports), Audrey Fahlberg (@AudreyFahlberg), Ryan Brown (@RyanP_Brown), Harvest Prude (@HarvestPrude), and Steve Hayes (@stephenfhayes).
32.) LEGAL INSURRECTION
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33.) THE DAILY WIRE
34.) DESERET NEWS
35.) BRIGHT
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36.) AMERICAN THINKER
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37.) LARRY J. SABATO’S CRYSTAL BALL
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KEY POINTS FROM THIS ARTICLE— Midterm electorates are typically whiter and more educated than presidential electorates. — At one time, this sort of change from the presidential to the midterm electorate might have made midterm electorates worse for Democrats. But given changes in the electorate, this midterm turnout pattern may actually aid Democrats, or at least not hurt them as much as it once did. — Minority turnout has fluctuated and is a wild card that plays a big role in determining baseline partisan leans and advantages — presidential-level turnout means Democrats enjoy the advantage, whereas dips favor Republicans. — The outcome in key swing states whiter than the national average, such as Pennsylvania, Wisconsin, and New Hampshire, may be influenced heavily by educational turnout differential. In states with large nonwhite cores, such as North Carolina, Georgia, Arizona, and Nevada, minority turnout will play a more critical role. Presidential vs. midterm turnoutsAlthough an election cycle occurs every two years in American politics, the electorate differs according to the type of cycle. In presidential years, where turnout is generally higher across the board, the electorate typically has more minority voters and more lower-propensity white voters who often do not have a four-year college degree. Meanwhile, in midterm years, the electorate generally has a higher share of voters with a four-year degree and is at least a touch whiter, with college-educated whites making up a greater share of the electorate. In this article, we take a closer look at the ways in which midterm electorates differ from presidential electorates and the implications this could have for 2022. As a starting point, let’s look at how Catalist, a major Democratic data firm that produces widely-respected estimates of the electorate, calculated the demographics of the past five national electorates (2012-2020). Table 1: Catalist estimates of electorate composition, 2012-2020Source: Catalist To better understand what each electorate’s partisan lean would be under current demographic support rates, we perform a simple reprojection, where we calculate what the electorate lean for each year would be under 2020 presidential support rates by demographic. This helps us better understand the range of plausible baseline partisan leans among coalitions given modern-day support rates. In the “actual electorate lean” column on the right in Table 2, we used the presidential results in presidential years (2012, 2016, and 2020). We used the national House popular vote for the two midterms (2014 and 2018). Table 2: Estimating recent elections using 2020 partisanshipWe find in Table 1 that midterm electorates are consistently more educated, with white, college-educated voters seeing the biggest spike in their electorate share in both 2014 and 2018 — per Catalist, they comprised 32% of the electorate in 2014, which was a 5% spike from their 2012 levels, and 31% in 2018, which was a 3% spike up from the 28% share they held in 2016. As white college voters now consistently vote significantly more Democratic than non-college whites, current partisanship levels indicate that this midterm turnout dynamic ends up now giving Democrats a boost of roughly 2 points in two-way margin among white voters when compared to the presidential electorates. Of course, Republicans can make up for this by performing better with college-educated whites, but they have been struggling with this group in recent years compared to their previous showings, and improvement on this front will likely be important for a good Republican midterm. Interestingly, note that the national electorate lean with 2020 partisanship applied to the 2014 electorate would have been D +1.8 as compared to the actual R+5.7; that is to say, Democrats suffered a penalty of about 7.5 additional points caused in large part by college-educated voters voting at an R+14 rate, per Catalist. This 22-point difference in the college-educated vote margin between 2014 (R+14) and 2020 (D+8) would, in itself, cause a roughly 7-point Republican swing in the electorate’s two-way partisan lean. However, the overall picture of who is favored in midterm electorates is greatly complicated by the picture of minority turnout, given the strongly Democratic lean among nonwhite voters. These voting blocs generally turn out at higher levels in presidential years, but in 2018, the nonwhite share of the electorate was close to 2016 levels. This meant that the primary difference in electorates between 2016 and 2018 came down to the surplus of educated white voters in 2018, which made the midterm electorate more Democratic on a turnout basis. In fact, applying 2020 support rates to the 2016 and 2018 electorates, we find that the national 2018 electorate was more Democratic-leaning than 2016 on presidential support rates by roughly 1 point on margin. The converse of 2018 occurred in 2014 with nonwhite voters — while the electorate became more educated, resulting in Democrats gaining a 2-point boost on margin among white voters, it was Republicans who gained among the overall electorate based on turnout alone — applying 2020 support rates to 2014 and 2012, we see that the midterm electorate was a point more Republican than the presidential one. This is caused almost entirely by a sharp drop in minority turnout, as the 2014 electorate was 4 percentage points whiter than the 2012 one, and this entirely wiped out any boost Democrats would have gained by educational turnout differential under current coalitions. This drop was most pronounced among Black voters, who are consistently the strongest demographic for Democrats by support rate — they went from 13% of the electorate in 2012 to 11% in 2014. It is worth noting, at this point, how strongly Black turnout correlates with Democratic performance. In 2014, the Black share of the electorate falling 2% wiped out just about any gain Democrats received from educational turnout differential, especially given how strongly Black voters vote Democratic. One way to think of this is in terms of expected value per vote — if Black voters are a D+80 bloc and white college voters are a D+8 bloc, then Democrats would need to turn out 10 white college voters to net the same amount of expected votes as they would get from a single Black voter. The electorate lean for 2022, therefore, may rely heavily on the percentage of the electorate that is comprised of Black voters. Swing state implicationsUp until this point, we have discussed electorate composition on a national level to glean demographic trends for turnout. However, given the 2022 Senate map and the difference in demographic composition among key swing states, it is worth examining a few of these states in more detail to better understand how the aforementioned turnout dynamics and trends may impact the results of the Senate races in key battleground states. Figure 1: Demographics of key 2022 Senate statesAbove, we show the demographic splits for several key swing states with contested Senate elections in 2022, sorted from left to right in order of the white population share per state, with the U.S. national average provided for comparison’s sake. These are the seven races that the Crystal Ball rates as either Toss-ups or just leaning one way or the other: Republicans are defending North Carolina, Pennsylvania, and Wisconsin, while Democrats are defending Arizona, Georgia, Nevada, and New Hampshire. In states with lower minority populations, it is likely that the previously-noted Democratic educational advantage among whites is magnified, and that the degree of influence minority turnout has upon the electorate is relatively blunted. This may be the case in New Hampshire, Pennsylvania, and Wisconsin, all of which are significantly whiter than the nation as a whole. Extrapolating from past electorates, Democrats may begin with an electorate that is anywhere between 1-3 points more favorable than 2020 in terms of presidential lean in these states. For instance, New Hampshire, which was Biden +7.2 in 2020, could see a Biden +9 electorate, given that state’s exceptionally large share of white voters. In contrast, Arizona, Nevada, North Carolina, and Georgia all have significant blocs of nonwhite voters, and it is here that the outcome of the Senate races may rely more heavily than usual on the turnout of minority groups. Arizona and Nevada, in particular, have heavy concentrations of Hispanic voters, while Georgia and North Carolina have high Black populations. If Democrats replicate their 2018 minority turnout operations in these states, they would go a long way towards avoiding another 2014-esque red wave; however, if those turnout efforts fall short, these states would become prime pickup material for Republicans. ConclusionFrom the analysis, we can see that midterm electorates, in general, have higher levels of four-year college attainment than the presidential electorates, which might actually help Democrats given their recent improvements with these voters. However, the volatility of minority turnout in non-presidential elections makes the overall midterm turnout advantage unclear. If nonwhite turnout stays at presidential levels, it is likely that Democrats begin with an electorate whose baseline presidential lean is more Biden-voting (in terms of 2020 presidential vote cast) than in the 2020 electorate itself, whereas if it dips in the way it did in 2014, Republicans would be advantaged on the whole. Determining which of the pictures is more likely between 2014 and 2018 is a tall order, especially given the amount of time to go until the 2022 environment. However, whatever happens, it is clear that the midterm and presidential electorates are likely to vary significantly in composition — it is just the areas in which the change is greatest that will play a large role in deciding the electorate’s baseline lean in 2022.
Read the fine printLearn more about the Crystal Ball and find out how to contact us here. Sign up to receive Crystal Ball e-mails like this one delivered straight to your inbox. Use caution with Sabato’s Crystal Ball, and remember: “He who lives by the Crystal Ball ends up eating ground glass!” |
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© Copyright by the Rector and Visitors of the University of Virginia |
38.) THE BLAZE
39.) THE FEDERALIST
40.) REUTERS
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41.) NOQ REPORT
42.) ARRA NEWS SERVICE
43.) REDSTATE
Left Loses Its Mind After Nicki Minaj Tweets Tucker’s Comments About Her Vaccine Questions
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44.) WORLD NET DAILY
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45.) MSNBC
September 16, 2021 THE LATEST Why Josh Hawley’s latest stunt is his most hypocritical
by Zeeshan Aleem Sen. Josh Hawley, R-Mo., is making some noise this week by threatening to block President Joe Biden’s State and Defense Department nominations after mishandling the Afghanistan withdrawal. There’s an irony in this move, Zeeshan Aleem writes, not least because Biden has in fact upheld a position that Hawley himself supported in the past.
“Hawley and everyone else in Washington knows this rebellion is mostly a symbolic one,” Aleem writes, “and one which is meant to generate attention more than results.”
Read Zeeshan Aleem’s full analysis here and don’t forget to check out the rest of your Thursday MSNBC Daily. TOP STORIES Gavin Newsom won the California recall. But Republicans are winning a scarier fight. Read More Woodward’s book shows how broken our nuclear command system really is. Read More These people deserve a spot at the table of shame, too. Read More TOP VIDEOS MORE FROM MSNBC Introducing The ReidOut Blog, the digital extension of “The ReidOut,” political juggernaut Joy Reid’s nightly show on MSNBC.
Follow for the latest commentary on daily news, including the ways politics and culture clash and coincide. You’ll also find exclusive web content that expands on conversations broached on “The ReidOut.” Race and racism, voting rights, reproductive rights, the Covid-19 fallout and recovery — expect it all.
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46.) BIZPAC REVIEW
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47.) ABC
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48.) NBC MORNING RUNDOWN
To ensure delivery to your inbox add email@mail.nbcnews.com to your contacts Today’s Top Stories from NBC News THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 2021 Good morning, NBC News readers.
Today we look at the surging number of coronavirus cases in Idaho and across the West, how the Texas abortion law compares to women’s rights across Europe, and the mystery of some 200,000-year-old handprints.
Here’s the latest on that and everything else we’re watching this Thursday morning. Doctors and nurses are so overwhelmed by the number and severity of coronavirus cases that they are contacting dozens of hospitals across the West in hopes of finding treatment for critical patients.
Kootenai Health, a hospital in Coeur d’Alene, Idaho, has already converted a conference room into an overflow Covid unit, started paying traveling nurses $250 an hour, brought in a military medical unit and received permission from the state to ration care.
That’s all in response to the Covid surge that in recent weeks has taken over much of Idaho — a state with one of the nation’s lowest vaccination rates.
“It’s just nonstop trying to find placement for these patients and the care that they need,” said Brian Whitlock, the president and CEO of the Idaho Hospital Association, who noted that hospitals across the state are struggling with the same issue.
“It really is a minute-by-minute assessment of where beds are open, and hospitals saying we don’t know where we’re going to put the next one.”
Read the full story here.
Also in Covid-19 news today:
Thursday’s Top Stories
When the U.S. Supreme Court this month declined to block a restrictive Texas law, abortion rights campaigners across Europe watched with dismay. Anti-abortion campaigners, however, were taking notes. Analysis: California Gov. Gavin Newsom’s victory over a recall attempt hardly screams harbinger of future results. Also on this, California Democrats are seeking changes to the recall process after Newsom’s victory. Users in extreme far-right Facebook groups and extremist forums are largely steering users away from an upcoming rally, claiming it could be a “false flag.” OPINION A new Polish law bars restitution to Holocaust survivors, part of a trend erasing any Polish responsibility for what happened to Jews during the war, writes Mark Wilf, chair of the board of trustees of the Jewish Federations of North America Also in the News
Editor’s Pick
OPINION On the heels of Fashion Week, Trymaine Lee speaks to two Black designers about their very different paths to success: Tracy Reese, who dresses stars including Beyoncé, and J Alexander Martin, the creative force behind the streetwear brand FUBU. Shopping
Though a machine-washable rug sounds too good to be true, my Ruggable remains soft and spot-free after going through a cycle in the washing machine. One Fun Thing
Impressions of hands and feet that appear to have been made by two children about 200,000 years ago may be the earliest work of human art, according to an international team of geologists and archaeologists.
Some other scientists are skeptical that the prints were made deliberately, or even that they are as old as the analysis suggests.
But if they are works of art — even art made in play — then they are more than 100,000 years older than the earliest-known cave paintings.
“The arrangement of the prints defies any practical explanation, such as walking, or any accidental explanation, such as falling,” said Cornell University archaeologist Thomas Urban.
“They appear to have been carefully arranged, implying a deliberate choice was made in placing them this way.”
Read the full story here.
Thanks for reading the Morning Rundown.
If you have any comments — likes, dislikes — send me an email at: patrick.smith@nbcuni.com.
Thanks, Patrick Smith Want to receive NBC Breaking News and Special Alerts in your inbox? Get the NBC News Mobile App |
49.) NBC FIRST READ
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From NBC’s Chuck Todd, Mark Murray, Ben Kamisar and Benjy Sarlin
FIRST READ:Recall voters said Covid was their top issue, but budget agenda takes center stage in Washington
Covid was a winning issue for Democrats in California’s recall election. In fact, it ranked as the top issue for voters in the NBC News exit poll, and those who selected it No. 1 broke overwhelmingly against the recall.
And Virginia Dems are seizing on the issue, too, ahead of this November’s gubernatorial contest.
But after months and months of a Covid-centered agenda, Democrats find themselves in a tough box: Is there still room to push their non-Covid agenda, particularly as cases and fatalities have been on the increase?
Today, Biden delivers remarks on the tax increases for the wealthy that he’s pursuing in the Dem’s reconciliation package. Yesterday, he met with moderate Sens. Joe Manchin, D-W.V., and Kyrsten Sinema, D-Ariz., to discuss that package. And earlier this week, he was talking reconciliation and infrastructure out west.
On Capitol Hill, meanwhile, Democrats are fighting over drug prices (more on that below) and gearing up for battle over raising the debt limit.
Bloomberg via Getty Images
We get that Biden and congressional Dems never foresaw – at least back in June and July – Covid still being THIS kind of problem (because, in large part, enough Americans would refuse to get vaccinated).
And the White House and Dems will tell you that they can do multiple things at the same time. (In fact, Biden yesterday discussed Covid with business leaders, and he talked about the issue while campaigning for California Gov. Gavin Newsom on Monday.)
But as we discovered in California, voters still care A LOT about the Covid situation around them.
As the Cook Political Report’s Amy Walter wrote earlier this month after listening to focus groups of independent and less-engaged Dem voters, “It’s clear that [these voters] are more interested in solving the challenges presented by COVID than anything else. Until they feel like it’s ok to stop worrying about COVID, it is going to be hard to get them to pay attention to the Democrats’ plans on anything else.”
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Vaxxed California counties vote against the recall, unvaxxed counties voted for it
Yesterday, we told you that the share of California voters opposing the recall (63.9 percent so far) was almost exactly the same as the portion of voters who told exit polling they viewed Covid vaccination as a public health responsibility over a personal choice (65 percent).
A similar relationship appears between Covid vaccination and recall vote — counties with high vaccination rates tended to back Newsom, while counties with lower vaccination rates tended to want to kick him out.
Here’s a look at the trends in each of the state’s Top 5 and Bottom 5 vaccinated counties (per the LA Times’ data on fully vaccinated residents) .
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TWEET OF THE DAY: It’s Debate Night in Virginia
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Data Download: The numbers you need to know today
Almost 49,000: The number of Afghans temporarily living in American military bases as they wait to be resettled.
4: The number of American soldiers killed by a top ISIS militant that France believes it killed in a recent airstrike.
Almost 500,000: The number of children diagnosed with Covid from Sept. 2 to Sept. 9, a number the American Academy of Pediatrics said has “increased exponentially.”
41,672,149: The number of confirmed cases of the coronavirus in the United States, per the most recent data from NBC News and health officials. (That’s 167,309 more since yesterday morning.)
670,615: The number of deaths in the United States from the virus so far, per the most recent data from NBC News. (That’s 2,476 more since yesterday morning.)
382,294,795: The number of vaccine doses administered in the U.S., per the CDC. (That’s 841,530 more since yesterday morning.)
54.1 percent: The share of all Americans who are fully vaccinated, per the CDC.
65.2 percent: The share of all U.S. adults at least 18 years of age who are fully vaccinated, per CDC.
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Talking policy with Benjy: Drugged out
We wrote previously that Democratic plans to empower Medicare to negotiate lower drug prices have taken on outsized importance in the reconciliation bill, both as a policy goal and as a means to fund the bill’s other health benefits.
House Democrats put out a plan this week that would allow Medicare to open talks over the most expensive brand-name drugs starting in 2025 and force companies to offer rates similar to other countries, which often pay less than half as much for the same drugs.
But their plans are in serious jeopardy as three members — Reps. Kathleen Rice, D-N.Y., Scott Peters, D-Calif., and Kurt Schrader, D-Ore. — voted against the provisions in the Energy and Commerce Committee on Wednesday, blocking it from advancing. E&C Chairman Frank Pallone said after the vote he was disappointed, but “confident it will be part of the final Build Back Better Act.”
The three “no” votes are part of a group backing a more industry-friendly bill, which they released this week, that would restrict Medicare negotiations to a much smaller group of drugs and place more limits on the potential price reductions. Other co-sponsors include Stephanie Murphy, D-Fla., and J. Luis Correa, D-Calif.
That puts leadership in the tough position of having to placate a bloc that’s trying to reduce one of the biggest sources of savings in the Build Back Better bill, even as some of the same members are vocally concerned about its overall cost. What’s more, the Senate has yet to release its own proposal, which could face similar resistance from members in states closely tied to the industry who might be emboldened by the House vote.
Drug pricing reform is extremely popular in polls, but the pharmaceutical industry is a tough well-funded opponent and is already up with a seven-figure ad campaign warning the changes will reduce access to new drugs as well as a joint campaign with some allied unions.
President Joe Biden has made drug pricing reform a top priority in recent weeks and it’s a favorite cause of Speaker Nancy Pelosi as well, so it will be interesting to see how much pressure both the White House and Democratic leaders are willing to exert in order to get a more far-reaching drug measure into the bill.
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ICYMI: What ELSE is happening in the world?
Hospitals in Idaho and other western states are struggling to find beds for critically ill patients as hospitals fill up with Covid patients.
Now that Newsom survived the recall, Democrats want to change the process moving forward.
The FDA may decide on Friday whether to approve booster shots for Pfizer’s Covid vaccine.
The fate of Democratic-backed immigration reform rests in the Senate parliamentarian.
Pennsylvania state Senate Republicans approved subpoenas for voter information as they continue to call for a review of the 2020 election results
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50.) CBS
51.) REASON
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52.) MANHATTAN INSTITUTE
53.) LOUDER WITH CROWDER
Cheers to Jim Breuer. As state governors and certain promoters are demanding proof of a personal medical decision to attend shows, the comedian says he won’t be playing venues that do. Breuer took to … MORE |
54.) TOWNHALL
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55.) REALCLEARPOLITICS MORNING NOTE
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56.) REALCLEARPOLITICS TODAY
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57.) CENTER FOR SECURITY POLICY
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58.) BERNARD GOLDBERG
59.) SARA A. CARTER
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60.) TWITCHY
61.) HOT AIR
62.) 1440 DAILY DIGEST
No images? Click here Good morning. It’s Thursday, Sept. 16, and we’re covering powerful testimony from US Olympic gymnasts, the latest twist in a South Carolina murder mystery, and much more. Have feedback? Let us know at hello@join1440.com. Win $10,000 from 1440. We’re approaching a big milestone—1 million readers. In appreciation, we’re giving away $10,000 in cold hard cash (want it in crypto? We can make that happen). To enter the giveaway, all you have to do is refer a friend. Each referral equals another chance to win. Just make sure you copy and paste using your unique referral code below: https://www.join1440.com/?rh_ref=97cc5da9 From the entire 1440 team, thanks for being a reader! NEED TO KNOW‘Enough Is Enough’Four current and former USA Gymnastics stars—Simone Biles, Aly Raisman, McKayla Maroney, and Maggie Nichols—testified before Congress yesterday, slamming federal law enforcement for turning a blind eye to numerous reports of sexual abuse by the former team doctor, Larry Nassar. The hearing followed the July release of a Justice Department report detailing the mishandling of the case by the FBI. In particular, Indianapolis agents were found to have effectively dismissed a number of claims about Nassar’s abuse as early as 2015, subsequently lying to internal investigators to minimize mistakes. One now-fired agent allegedly fabricated details of a 2015 conversation with Maroney to cover up inaction. At least 40 women were molested during the period in which agents failed to follow up on the case. FBI Director Christopher Wray apologized to the athletes in comments during the hearing. See parts of the emotional testimony here. Tensions in Korea North Korea launched two ballistic missiles off its east coast yesterday, just hours before South Korea launched submarine-based missile tests of its own. South Korean President Moon Jae-in defended the country’s test while calling the North’s test provocative. North Korean Kim Yo Jong, the powerful sister of leader Kim Jong Un (see background), responded by criticizing Moon’s remarks while defending the North’s growing weapons program. The military display is the latest sign of the intensifying arms race between the Koreas; both countries claim to be developing arsenals for self-defense purposes. The tests come just two days after the North fired new long-range missiles—capable of hitting Japan—over the weekend. The display comes amid stalled diplomatic negotiations between the countries and puts pressure on the Biden administration to reengage Pyongyang in nuclear talks. US officials stated the move does not pose an immediate threat to the US. Murdaugh Murder SagaThe mystery surrounding a high-profile double homicide took another twist yesterday after it was revealed a central figure in the case enlisted a hitman in a botched assisted suicide attempt. The winding saga revolves around 53-year-old Alex Murdaugh, the scion of a powerful family in South Carolina’s rural lowcountry region (see timeline). In February 2019, Murdaugh’s son, Paul, was accused of boating under the influence in a crash that left a 19-year-old woman dead. Ahead of Paul’s trial in June, Murdaugh found both his wife and Paul shot to death on the family’s hunting estate. The investigation is ongoing. In the latest turn, Murdaugh reported being shot at while changing a tire Sept. 4. The bullet grazed his head. Tuesday, a suspect was arrested, claiming Murdaugh paid to have himself killed in order to cash a $10M life insurance policy for his surviving son, Buster. Check out this deep dive into the family and its history. Refer a Friend for a Chance To Win $10,000! In partnership with RoutePROTECT YOURSELFYour company makes an excellent product. It’s been meticulously researched, designed, and improved. After months (or years!) of development, you start expanding a marketing budget, to spread the word far and wide. With pride, your company sends tens, hundreds, or even thousands of packages around the world to customers, paying attention to every last detail in the packaging. But then—just your luck—a couple shipments arrive to your customers damaged. Or worse, they don’t arrive at all. And there goes your best shot with a new customer. 94% of shoppers blame the retailer if a delivery goes poorly, so odds are they won’t be purchasing from you again. But that doesn’t have to be the end of your story. Give yourself a better chance with Route. Route is a tool enabled on merchant checkout pages to cover packages against loss, theft, and damage. 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IN THE KNOWSports, Entertainment, & Culture> Meghan Markle, Prince Harry, and Simone Biles among seven featured on covers for Time magazine’s 100 Most Influential People of 2021 list (More) | See full Time magazine list (More) > World Anti-Doping Agency to review its ban on cannabis in wake of US sprinter Sha’Carri Richardson’s suspension before the Tokyo Olympics (More) > “Smallville” Actress Allison Mack reports early to three-year prison sentence for role in NXIVM sex cult (More) Science & Technology> Internal Facebook documents show a 2018 change meant to promote meaningful interactions had the opposite effect, spreading hateful and false content (More) | Findings are part of a Wall Street Journal exposé based on leaked reports (More, paywall) > Researchers pinpoint neural circuit that causes the brain to lower production of dopamine, known as the “feel-good hormone,” in response to pain and stress (More) > Astrophysicists may have indirectly observed dark energy in unexpected results from a particle detector deep underground in Italy (More) | What is dark energy, the mysterious force that makes up two-thirds of the universe? (More) | See diagram of experiment (More) Business & MarketsBrought to you by The Ascent > US stock markets see highest gains (S&P 500 +0.9%, Dow +0.7%, Nasdaq +0.8%) in two weeks after string of daily declines (More) > Canadian Pacific Railway wins deal to take over Kansas City Southern after rival drops pursuit; $27B deal would create network of rail linking Mexico, Canada, and the US (More) > Shares of On Holding, Swiss shoemaker backed by tennis star Roger Federer, soar 46% in first day of trading on New York Stock Exchange to a valuation of over $11B (More) From our partners: A good time to transfer your credit card balance. This card offers 0% intro balance transfer APR for an unbelievable 18 months. Pair that with lucrative cash back rates and zero annual fee for a card you’ll want to check out. Apply now in just two minutes. Politics & World Affairs> Reported US COVID-19 deaths reach 664,000; figure implies about 1 in every 500 Americans has died from the disease during the pandemic (More) | See current US COVID-19 stats (More) > The US, the UK, and Australia to form security partnership, will share defense technologies in bid to counter China’s growing influence; Australia will develop a fleet of nuclear-powered submarines (More) > President Joe Biden backs Joint Chiefs of Staff Chairman Gen. Mark Milley after book excerpt claims Milley backchanneled with China in final days of the Trump administration (More) | See allegations (More) | Fox News reporter disputes report (More) IN-DEPTHThe Perfect JokeNYT Magazine | Dan Brooks. (From 2018) Norm Macdonald, who passed away from cancer Tuesday, built a cult following of comedy fans by combining acerbic wit with an unparalleled command over delivery. (Read, paywall) … and check out this compendium of Macdonald’s best late-night appearances. The Exponential AgeWired UK | Azeem Azhar. Economists historically operated under the assumption change took place over years or even decades, with societies adjusting as it unfolded. Now, technological advances have pushed the pace of change to months in some cases, with unknown consequences for the future. (Read) SHIPPING TRENDSIn partnership with Route The norms of shipping goods to customers are changing every day. The best you can do is stay up-to-date on the trends. Like that 81% of shoppers say proactive shipping updates are critical to repurchasing, 98% say shipping affects brand loyalty, and 94% blame the retailer if a delivery goes poorly. Route proactively covers packages against loss, theft, and damage, resulting in a 92% reduction in claim resolution times for you and your customers. Stay ahead of the times and sign up for a free Route demo today. Please support our sponsors! ETCETERAHumpback whale megapod spotted off the Australian coast. (w/video) Ancient spider watching her offspring found trapped in amber. Desperate employers are dropping drug test requirements. Ontario, Canada, opens a record-breaking pedestrian bridge. Do men sleep worse during a waxing moon? Explaining the Earth’s mysterious red glow. (via TED) This year’s potential inductees into the Toy Hall of Fame. Three bears caught playing in a backyard kiddie pool. Clickbait: Take a peek inside “The Flying Bum.” Historybook: Pilgrims depart from England on the Mayflower (1620); Actress Lauren Bacall born (1924); American musician BB King born (1925); HBD historian and author Henry Louis Gates Jr. (1950). “The beautiful thing about learning is nobody can take it away from you.” – BB King 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. 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63.) AMERICAN INSTITUTE FOR ECONOMIC RESEARCH
64.) NATIONAL REVIEW
65.) POLITICAL WIRE
66.) RASMUSSEN REPORTS
67.) ZEROHEDGE
68.) GATEWAY PUNDIT
69.) FRONTPAGE MAG
70.) HOOVER INSTITUTE
71.) DAILY INTELLIGENCE BRIEF
72.) FOUNDATION FOR ECONOMIC EDUCATION
73.) POPULIST PRESS
Enough is enough, we have to fight back against this!
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TOP STORIES:
-
Fox News Star Stormed Out – After Ridiculous Request
-
Biden Could Be Removed From Office After Letter Sent to Cabinet
-
White House Gets Hit With More Bad News — Top Official Has Resigned
- Pentagon Confirms Worst Fears About General Milley
- Clinton Judge Delivers Ruling That Has Conservatives Cheering
- Alexander Vindman Just Through Milley Under The Bus!
- ABC News Affiliate Accidentally Discovers the Truth About COVID Vaccines
-
THEY ARE FLIPPING! Gen Milley Is Done… Enjoy PRISON!
- Trump Responds With Fire To Milley Stabbing Him In The Back
- Kamala Harris Under Heavy Fire for Mind-Blowing Tweet
VAX CRISIS:
|
IN DEPTH…
-
BREAKING: White House defends General Milley after revelations he undermined Trump by speaking to Chinese counterpart
- General Milley Should Face ‘Court Martial’… 26 mins ago
- Joe Biden billboard’s for the Taliban Popping Up 1 hour ago
- ‘You’re Really F***ing Me’: Biden Reportedly Furious Over Manchin Spending Block 2 hours ago
-
Rand Paul: Gen. Milley should be removed, court-martialed if secret calls to China are confirmed
- BREAKING: Biden to announce 3‑way pact on intelligence sharing with UK, Australia 2 hours ago
- ABC News Producer Says Network Retaliated After Sexual Assault Accusation 2 hours ago
- Absolutely disgusting, American Airlines…TAKE ACTION! 2 hours ago
- Poland: While we Wish to Remain in the EU, we Must Remain Sovereign 2 hours ago
- Analysis: Afghan Population in U.S. Explodes, Majority Live on Welfare 2 hours ago
- New US Immigrants Will Need COVID-19 Vaccination Proof 2 hours ago
- The Deep Politics of Vaccine Mandates | RealClearPolitics 2 hours ago
- Climate Protesters Blocking Road Cause Pile-Up, Woman Airlifted to Hospital 2 hours ago
- Intel officials: Al Qaeda could rebuild in Afghanistan in a year 2 hours ago
- DHS chief of staff tells Sec Mayorkas adios, steps aside for a professional to do the job 2 hours ago
- Pennsylvania Republicans look to subpoena personal information about voters in 2020 election inquiry 2 hours ago
- Time Is Running Out: Iran Could Have Ability to Build a Nuclear Weapon in One Month 2 hours ago
- After South China Sea Incidents, US Needs ‘Sustained’ Pacific Presence, Lawmaker Says — Breaking Defense 3 hours ago
- Vice Chairman of Joint Chiefs of Staff Says Pentagon Moving “Unbelievably Slow’ With Modernization 3 hours ago
- Soldiers Have 3 Months to Get COVID Vaccine or Face Discharge, with Few Waiver Options 3 hours ago
- Yes, Milley has to go 3 hours ago
- Biden to reportedly meet Wednesday with execs on COVID vaccine mandate 3 hours ago
- Bad News: China’s Navy Is Patrolling Near Alaska 3 hours ago
- Virginia teacher: Asking students to sit quietly and listen to the teacher is white supremacy 3 hours ago
- Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker Won’t Say When Mask Mandate Will End 3 hours ago
- Report: Milley Told Military Officials Not to Take Orders After Capitol Riot 3 hours ago
- Blinken floats ‘new’ war-making powers to counter terrorist threats in Afghanistan 3 hours ago
- Boris Defends Vax Passports, Calling Them ‘Game Changer’, ‘Life Saver’ 3 hours ago
- NBA Won’t Force Vaccine on Elite Athletes, But Staff Will be Mandated to Get the Jab 3 hours ago
- Israel Facing New Record Corona Spike Despite Vaccine Passport Rollout 3 hours ago
- Despite Mandates, Biden Commerce Secretary Claims “Nobody Is Being Forced” To Take COVID Vaccine 3 hours ago
- Arizona Becomes First State To Sue Biden Over Vaccine Mandates 3 hours ago
- Selective Memory: The Carefully Excised “WHY” of the 9/11 Attacks 1 hour ago
- Federal Tax Collections Set Record… 4 hours ago
- Inflation jumps 5.3%… 4 hours ago
- Household Income Falls… 4 hours ago
- Poverty Rate Rises… 4 hours ago
- Teachers in CO Face Criminal Charges If Don’t Enforce Masks; Punishable By Prison… 5 hours ago
- White House eyes mandate for international fliers… 5 hours ago
- NBA players WILL NOT be required to get vax… 5 hours ago
- Man pulled from BMW in Manhattan carjacking… 5 hours ago
- Gangs Have Infiltrated L.A. Sheriff’s Dept… 5 hours ago
- Reputed Colombo crime family boss among 14 mobsters snared in bust… 5 hours ago
- NORM MACDONALD DEAD… 5 hours ago
- ‘SNL’ star, stand-up comedian with cult following… 5 hours ago
- MUSK: THERE ARE UFOS… 5 hours ago
- Mysterious Unmanned Vessel Spotted In San Diego Bay… 5 hours ago
- AMAZON Palm Reader Launches at Concert Venue in Sneak Peek of Biometric Future… 5 hours ago
- Will Soon Be Everywhere? 5 hours ago
- CEO Jassy: ‘Still early days for us in media’… 5 hours ago
- SHOWDOWN: Iranian Guards Physically Harassed Female Nuke Inspectors… 5 hours ago
- Enough uranium for bomb in month? 5 hours ago
- Chinese Warships Sailing Near Alaska; Shadowed By Coast Guard… 5 hours ago
- Beijing purging celebrities, tech billionaires. Problem bigger than ‘sissy men’… 5 hours ago
- Horrifying tale of prostitute orangutan chained to bed… 5 hours ago
- ‘Real Science Radio’ Host Dies of covid… 5 hours ago
- Hand Sanitizer Poisoning In Children On Rise; Kids Getting Drunk… 5 hours ago
- ‘Absolutely No Way That’s Her Real Bottom’: Megyn Kelly Says Madonna Appeared At VMAs With ‘Fake’ A** 3 hours ago
- Actor Michael Rapaport calls out AOC over Met Gala dress 3 hours ago
- Christopher Nolan Chooses Universal Pictures For His Film About J. Robert Oppenheimer & The A‑Bomb 3 hours ago
- Alec Baldwin Calls Gov. Ron DeSantis ‘The New Jim Jones’ 3 hours ago
- Idaho company speaks out after Biden claims he received his ‘first job offer’ from there: ‘We have no record’ 3 hours ago
- NBA Won’t Force Vaccine On Players, Will Left-Leaning Cities Let Them Play? 3 hours ago
- Dodger Legend Mike Piazza Goes to Bat for Larry Elder in Recall 3 hours ago
- Sources: Seattle to host 2023 MLB All-Star Game 3 hours ago
- Buffalo Bills owner threatens to move team if he doesn’t get public funds for new stadium — but does he mean it? 3 hours
- Navy football coach fired for COVID-19 vaccine refusal: ‘I continue to stand firm in my conviction of faith’ 3 hours ago
- Big E rocks WWE Universe with WWE Title win 3 hours ago
- NY Governor Calls on Facebook to Crack Down on Pro-Lifers 3 hours ago
- Aaron Gordon, Nuggets agree to 4‑year, $92 million contract extension, per report 3 hours ago
- AOC slapped with ethics complaint for accepting free Met Gala tickets 3 hours ago
- China’s most famous defector to America warned US intelligence agencies of coronavirus in 2019 3 hours ago
- Breyer: The Texas abortion ban decision was “very bad,” but not political 4 hours ago
- Biden’s ancestors were slave owners, genealogist finds 4 hours ago
- DHS not testing migrants for COVID-19, must strengthen ‘preventative measures’: OIG report 4 hours ago
- Norquist: Democrats’ planned business taxes higher than communist China’s 4 hours ago
- Georgia’s largest county considers Stacey Abrams lobbyist for top election job, angering state 4 hours ago
- North Korea Fires Two Ballistic Missiles Off East Coast 4 hours ago
- MSNBC guest journalist Katty Kay tells Dr. Anthony Fauci that it’s ‘crazy’ she can travel around the country without showing proof of vaccination 4 hours ago
- Media Tries to Downplay Latest Inflation Report 4 hours ago
- Dems Losing Ground In Texas As South Texas Hispanics Vote GOP: Report 4 hours ago
- Why weren’t the elite wearing masks at the Met Gala? 4 hours ago
|
TOP STORIES:
-
General Milley Comes Forward Makes Stunning Statement
-
Former Kamala Harris Staffer Goes Rogue With Major Leak
- Fox News Star Stormed Out – After Ridiculous Request
- Biden Could Be Removed From Office After Letter Sent to Cabinet
-
White House Gets Hit With More Bad News — Top Official Has Resigned
- ‘You’re Really F***ing Me’: Biden Flips Out On Democrat Senator
-
WAR ROOM: Milley Will Turn On Joe Biden
- Psaki Makes Announcement About Gen. Milley Resigning
- BREAKING — FDA refuses to back Pfizer Vax
- Pentagon Confirms Worst Fears About General Milley
- WATCH LIVE! FIRST CIVILIAN’S HEADING TO SPACE NOW FOR 3 DAYS
- DAILY Covid Pill Could Come Next
VAX CRISIS:
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IN DEPTH…
- Authorities encountered 208,887 people illegally crossing border in August, four times more than previous year 25 mins ago
- Biden announces nuclear military technology pact with Britain and Australia 1 hour ago
-
Trump-era merger guidelines revoked by Democrat-controlled FTC 2 hours ago
-
BREAKING: White House defends General Milley after revelations he undermined Trump by speaking to Chinese counterpart
- General Milley Should Face ‘Court Martial’… 26 mins ago
- Joe Biden billboard’s for the Taliban Popping Up 1 hour ago
- ‘You’re Really F***ing Me’: Biden Reportedly Furious Over Manchin Spending Block 2 hours ago
-
Rand Paul: Gen. Milley should be removed, court-martialed if secret calls to China are confirmed
- BREAKING: Biden to announce 3‑way pact on intelligence sharing with UK, Australia 2 hours ago
- ABC News Producer Says Network Retaliated After Sexual Assault Accusation 2 hours ago
- Absolutely disgusting, American Airlines…TAKE ACTION! 2 hours ago
- Poland: While we Wish to Remain in the EU, we Must Remain Sovereign 2 hours ago
- Analysis: Afghan Population in U.S. Explodes, Majority Live on Welfare 2 hours ago
- New US Immigrants Will Need COVID-19 Vaccination Proof 2 hours ago
- The Deep Politics of Vaccine Mandates | RealClearPolitics 2 hours ago
- Climate Protesters Blocking Road Cause Pile-Up, Woman Airlifted to Hospital 2 hours ago
- Intel officials: Al Qaeda could rebuild in Afghanistan in a year 2 hours ago
- DHS chief of staff tells Sec Mayorkas adios, steps aside for a professional to do the job 2 hours ago
- Pennsylvania Republicans look to subpoena personal information about voters in 2020 election inquiry 2 hours ago
- Time Is Running Out: Iran Could Have Ability to Build a Nuclear Weapon in One Month 2 hours ago
- After South China Sea Incidents, US Needs ‘Sustained’ Pacific Presence, Lawmaker Says — Breaking Defense 3 hours ago
- Vice Chairman of Joint Chiefs of Staff Says Pentagon Moving “Unbelievably Slow’ With Modernization 3 hours ago
- Soldiers Have 3 Months to Get COVID Vaccine or Face Discharge, with Few Waiver Options 3 hours ago
- Yes, Milley has to go 3 hours ago
- Biden to reportedly meet Wednesday with execs on COVID vaccine mandate 3 hours ago
- Bad News: China’s Navy Is Patrolling Near Alaska 3 hours ago
- Virginia teacher: Asking students to sit quietly and listen to the teacher is white supremacy 3 hours ago
- Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker Won’t Say When Mask Mandate Will End 3 hours ago
- Report: Milley Told Military Officials Not to Take Orders After Capitol Riot 3 hours ago
- Blinken floats ‘new’ war-making powers to counter terrorist threats in Afghanistan 3 hours ago
- Boris Defends Vax Passports, Calling Them ‘Game Changer’, ‘Life Saver’ 3 hours ago
- NBA Won’t Force Vaccine on Elite Athletes, But Staff Will be Mandated to Get the Jab 3 hours ago
- Israel Facing New Record Corona Spike Despite Vaccine Passport Rollout 3 hours ago
- Despite Mandates, Biden Commerce Secretary Claims “Nobody Is Being Forced” To Take COVID Vaccine 3 hours ago
- Arizona Becomes First State To Sue Biden Over Vaccine Mandates 3 hours ago
- Selective Memory: The Carefully Excised “WHY” of the 9/11 Attacks 1 hour ago
- Federal Tax Collections Set Record… 4 hours ago
- Inflation jumps 5.3%… 4 hours ago
- Household Income Falls… 4 hours ago
- Poverty Rate Rises… 4 hours ago
- Teachers in CO Face Criminal Charges If Don’t Enforce Masks; Punishable By Prison… 5 hours ago
- White House eyes mandate for international fliers… 5 hours ago
- NBA players WILL NOT be required to get vax… 5 hours ago
- Man pulled from BMW in Manhattan carjacking… 5 hours ago
- Gangs Have Infiltrated L.A. Sheriff’s Dept… 5 hours ago
- Reputed Colombo crime family boss among 14 mobsters snared in bust… 5 hours ago
- NORM MACDONALD DEAD… 5 hours ago
- ‘SNL’ star, stand-up comedian with cult following… 5 hours ago
- MUSK: THERE ARE UFOS… 5 hours ago
- Mysterious Unmanned Vessel Spotted In San Diego Bay… 5 hours ago
- AMAZON Palm Reader Launches at Concert Venue in Sneak Peek of Biometric Future… 5 hours ago
- Will Soon Be Everywhere? 5 hours ago
- CEO Jassy: ‘Still early days for us in media’… 5 hours ago
- SHOWDOWN: Iranian Guards Physically Harassed Female Nuke Inspectors… 5 hours ago
- Enough uranium for bomb in month? 5 hours ago
- Chinese Warships Sailing Near Alaska; Shadowed By Coast Guard… 5 hours ago
- Beijing purging celebrities, tech billionaires. Problem bigger than ‘sissy men’… 5 hours ago
- Horrifying tale of prostitute orangutan chained to bed… 5 hours ago
- ‘Real Science Radio’ Host Dies of covid… 5 hours ago
- Hand Sanitizer Poisoning In Children On Rise; Kids Getting Drunk… 5 hours ago
- ‘Absolutely No Way That’s Her Real Bottom’: Megyn Kelly Says Madonna Appeared At VMAs With ‘Fake’ A** 3 hours ago
- Actor Michael Rapaport calls out AOC over Met Gala dress 3 hours ago
- Christopher Nolan Chooses Universal Pictures For His Film About J. Robert Oppenheimer & The A‑Bomb 3 hours ago
- Alec Baldwin Calls Gov. Ron DeSantis ‘The New Jim Jones’ 3 hours ago
- Idaho company speaks out after Biden claims he received his ‘first job offer’ from there: ‘We have no record’ 3 hours ago
- NBA Won’t Force Vaccine On Players, Will Left-Leaning Cities Let Them Play? 3 hours ago
- Dodger Legend Mike Piazza Goes to Bat for Larry Elder in Recall 3 hours ago
- Sources: Seattle to host 2023 MLB All-Star Game 3 hours ago
- Buffalo Bills owner threatens to move team if he doesn’t get public funds for new stadium — but does he mean it? 3 hours
- Navy football coach fired for COVID-19 vaccine refusal: ‘I continue to stand firm in my conviction of faith’ 3 hours ago
- Big E rocks WWE Universe with WWE Title win 3 hours ago
- NY Governor Calls on Facebook to Crack Down on Pro-Lifers 3 hours ago
- Aaron Gordon, Nuggets agree to 4‑year, $92 million contract extension, per report 3 hours ago
- AOC slapped with ethics complaint for accepting free Met Gala tickets 3 hours ago
- China’s most famous defector to America warned US intelligence agencies of coronavirus in 2019 3 hours ago
- Breyer: The Texas abortion ban decision was “very bad,” but not political 4 hours ago
- Biden’s ancestors were slave owners, genealogist finds 4 hours ago
- DHS not testing migrants for COVID-19, must strengthen ‘preventative measures’: OIG report 4 hours ago
- Norquist: Democrats’ planned business taxes higher than communist China’s 4 hours ago
- Georgia’s largest county considers Stacey Abrams lobbyist for top election job, angering state 4 hours ago
- North Korea Fires Two Ballistic Missiles Off East Coast 4 hours ago
- MSNBC guest journalist Katty Kay tells Dr. Anthony Fauci that it’s ‘crazy’ she can travel around the country without showing proof of vaccination 4 hours ago
- Media Tries to Downplay Latest Inflation Report 4 hours ago
- Dems Losing Ground In Texas As South Texas Hispanics Vote GOP: Report 4 hours ago
- Why weren’t the elite wearing masks at the Met Gala? 4 hours ago
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74.) THE POST MILLENIAL
75.) BLACKLISTED NEWS
76.) THE DAILY DOT
Sept. 10, 2021 Welcome to the Thursday edition of Internet Insider, where we explore identities online and off. Today:
BREAK THE INTERNET Anti-vaxxers are now identifying themselves as ‘pure bloods’ A week ago, if you searched “pure blood” on TikTok, you would probably only see videos from Harry Potter enthusiasts. Now, however, you’ll get a “distressing content” warning and videos of anti-vaxxers claiming the phrase as their new nickname.
It is not entirely clear who started the trend, but the popularity of a video posted by TikTok user @kats.outta.the.bag suggests that it originated with her. The now-deleted video shows the TikToker with a static, black and white filter and on-screen text that reads, “We will No longer be referred To as Unvaxxed… We simply go by…” She then covers the camera with her arm as the beat drops and pulls it back to reveal a colorful, smoky filter and the phrase “pure blood” highlighted in red.
The TikToker states in a video and comment that she used the phrase as a Harry Potter joke. User @vitaltreasures, another self-identified “pure blood,” also told the Daily Dot that the name was a joke. She said that the name was a reference to the vampire show True Blood, however, and did not respond to a question asking how the show inspired the trend.
The “pure blood” trend is not the first time anti-vaxxers have used pop-culture references to identify each other on TikTok. They previously used the audio of The Hunger Games whistle to “call out” to their unvaccinated “brothers and sisters” and find out what state they were from. They have also used audio from Transformers (2007) in which Optimus Prime says, “I send this message to any surviving Autobots taking refuge among the stars: We are here. We are waiting.”
Comments on the TikToker’s subsequent videos criticize her use of the term for its reference to the Harry Potter villains, and others connected the term to Nazis. In a video posted Saturday that has gotten over 300,000 likes, TikTok user @goodtrouble_ shows @kats.outta.the.bag’s video then says, “So first you were comparing yourselves to the Jews and the Holocaust, and now you’re the Nazis? Pick a f*cking lane.”
@Kats.outta.the.bag disagrees with the connection to Nazism, however. In a video posted Friday, she responds to user @crazymotherrunner’s comment that her use of the term has “racism undertones” by saying that people are just looking for something to be mad at.
“Y’all are the one that’s going around rattin’ everybody out to the government,” the TikToker says. “You’re also mass-reporting pages to get people to shut up so that’s lookin’ a little [raises eyebrows] as well.” Contributing Writer
CHECK OUT THE LATEST FROM THE BAZAAR Here’s a primer for anyone interested in CBD
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SELF-CARE Recipe: Chiles en nogada Today is Mexican Independence Day. It’s a celebration of a declaration of the country’s independence from Spain, and for many Mexican-Americans, it’s a time to reconnect to family and cultural roots. In Texas, my best friend’s family always celebrates with chiles en nogada, which is a red, white, and green dish that represents the colors of the Mexican flag. As the day approached, I found myself missing the tradition. So in a bout of culinary bravery, I made the dish myself. I knew it would be a laborious process. The dish consists of poblano peppers filled with a tomato-based stew of meat and fruits, topped with a sweet nut-based sauce and pomegranate seeds. It’s a lot!
I used this recipe recommended by friend, which recommends easy-to-find substitutes for traditional ingredients. I found that the cooking itself wasn’t particularly difficult but required some patience and—to my pleasant surprise—relatively few dishes.
Per usual, I made some tweaks to personal taste, including using ground beef for the filling and canned tomato sauce to speed up the process. I even made a vegan-friendly batch to share with friends, using Impossible meat for the filling and dairy-free milk and cream for the sauce. I was delighted by the accomplishment—and the taste of home.
Now Playing: 🎶 “Liz” – Remi Wolf 🎶
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77.) HEADLINE USA
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78.) NATURAL NEWS
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79.) POLITICHICKS
80.) BLACKPRESSUSA
81.) THE WESTERN JOURNAL
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82.) CNN
Thursday 09.16.21 It is Yom Kippur, the Day of Atonement. The Jewish holy day began last night at sundown and is considered the most important and sacred of Jewish religious holidays. Here’s what else you need to know to Get Up to Speed and On With Your Day. A dose of Covid-19 vaccine is prepared in New Jersey. Coronavirus
Three reports published yesterday support the argument that booster doses of Pfizer’s Covid-19 vaccine would be safe and effective and may be needed. These and other reports will be on the docket tomorrow when FDA vaccine advisers meet to discuss booster doses, though the agency has signaled it has a lot of factors to consider before making an official move on the subject. What’s not up for debate, experts say, is that the vaccines work to reduce infection, spread and serious illness. Meanwhile, the rise of child cases of Covid-19 is sounding alarm bells. About 60% of all cases in Georgia over the last 60 days occurred in K-12 schools, representing about a sevenfold increase. In the past week, Ohio has seen a 44% increase in cases among school-age children, compared to a 17% jump in the rest of the population.
Law enforcement
The Justice Department has announced that federal law enforcement officers will be banned from using neck restraints (commonly known as chokeholds) during arrests and using no-knock entries while executing warrants except in rare cases. As the federal government looks to increase policing accountability, some states are facing issues within their own justice systems. In Colorado, a 14-month investigation into the Aurora police department found a pattern of practicing racially biased policing and excessive force. In Georgia, the US Justice Department announced a statewide investigation into the state’s prisons, focusing on prisoner-on-prisoner violence and sexual abuse of gay, lesbian and transgender prisoners by prisoners and staff.
Larry Nassar
Acclaimed gymnasts who were abused by former physician Larry Nassar testified yesterday in a powerful Senate hearing. Simone Biles, McKayla Maroney, Maggie Nichols and Aly Raisman all accused the FBI of botching its investigation into allegations against Nassar and called out intimidation by the sport’s governing bodies. The gymnasts gave new insight into how the FBI had mishandled their allegations. For instance, Maroney said when she related graphic details of her abuse to the FBI in 2015, the formal summary from the agent contained false information that she said minimized the abuse. They also expressed anger over the decision by the Justice Department not to charge two former FBI employees involved in the investigation who were referred by the department’s inspector general for potential prosecution.
Debt ceiling
The clock is ticking on raising the debt ceiling. In short, if Congress doesn’t raise the limit on federal borrowing soon, the government will default on its debt by the end of next month and risk serious damage to both the US economy and its international reputation. However, the issue has created divisions in Congress. Many Republicans don’t want to be involved in the vote to raise the debt ceiling because they say Democrats have driven up spending with Covid-19 relief plans and their domestic agenda. Democrats are considering tacking the borrowing increase onto a must-pass spending bill to keep the government open to force the GOP’s hand. But if Republicans block that plan, things would get even uglier.
China
Major powers are pushing back on China’s increasingly aggressive military posturing. President Biden and the UK government will work together on an effort to help Australia acquire nuclear-powered submarines to try to counter Beijing’s influence in the region. While the trilateral partnership isn’t specifically about responding to issues with China, the US says it’s important to have an allied front against possible Chinese aggression. Meanwhile, Japan has asserted that the Senkaku Islands, known as the Diaoyu Islands in China, are unquestionably Japanese territory. These islands are also claimed by China, so Japan’s pushback could set up a new conflict between the region’s two biggest powers.
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Refinance Rates Took a Sharp Decline. Do You Qualify? If you bought your home or last refinanced during a higher interest-rate environment, now could be a good time for you to refinance. Compare your best offers now.
8 Clever Moves When You Have $1,000 In The Bank Secret: If you have $1,000, there are exactly 8 money moves you should make today that could set you up for a lifetime of financial success. Here’s what to do. People are talking about these. Read up. Join in. Apple’s iPhone 13 secret weapon is, surprisingly, its price
Rivian beats Tesla, GM and Ford to build the first electric pickup truck
Meghan and Harry are named ‘icons’ in Time’s list of 100 most influential people
The Crystal Cabin Awards recognize the airplane interior designs of the future
RuPaul has a new namesake: A rainbow-colored fly 40% That’s about how much of the US electricity sector is powered by methane, the main component of natural gas. Methane is a more potent greenhouse gas than the longer-lasting carbon dioxide. The US and EU are expected to announce a plan tomorrow to cut methane emissions by nearly a third by 2030. The problem is not theological, it’s pastoral. How we bishops deal with this principle. We must be pastors, also with those who are excommunicated. Like God with passion and tenderness. The Bible says so.
Pope Francis, addressing the ongoing debate within the US Catholic Church over granting communion to Catholic politicians, including Biden, who support abortion rights. The Pope said bishops should be pastors, not politicians, in such situations. Brought to you by CNN Underscored The best Dutch ovens of 2021 We simmered, we braised and we baked for weeks to find the absolute best Dutch ovens on the market. After putting 13 highly rated and top-selling models to the test, two stood out above the rest. How high can you go? 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 |
- Do Mask Mandates Work?
- Morningafterwise in CA
- Our botched Afghan evacuation, by the numbers
- Leo Baeck, Berlin, 1935
- Why Biden has “great confidence” in Milley
Do Mask Mandates Work?
Posted: 15 Sep 2021 04:51 PM PDT (John Hinderaker)Much has been written, pro and con, on the effectiveness of mask mandates in stopping or slowing the spread of covid. Various experiments have purported to show that masks can work; I criticized one such product by the Mayo Clinic here. In my opinion, the most persuasive approach is to chart covid cases, or hospitalizations, before and after dates when mask mandates went into effect, or were rescinded. I have seen many such charts and have never been able to discern a pattern where masks have a material effect. Our friend Kevin Roche has charted the impact of Minnesota’s mask mandate at Healthy Skeptic. Minnesota is a good test case because Minnesotans tend to be compliant, if not downright ovine. If you tell us to wear masks, we will mask up to the last man. As Kevin writes:
So did the mask mandate work? This chart says it all. Click to enlarge:
Kevin explains:
Of course, mask nazis can assert that if it hadn’t been for the mask mandate, the numbers would have been even worse. But there is zero empirical basis for such a claim, which is pretty much the lowest form of argument. Some states and municipalities are now re-instituting mask mandates. That is the weird thing about public policy in general: failure rarely discredits a policy. Far more likely, failure will lead to calls to double down or reinstate the policy that didn’t work the first time. I don’t know what to do about this, except try to get voters to be smarter.
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Morningafterwise in CA
Posted: 15 Sep 2021 03:45 PM PDT (Steven Hayward)Paul and Scott have already noted the prominent reasons why the Newsom recall failed, and failed badly. This is worse than a rout: it is going to embolden California progressives to push their agenda even harder. Let us recall that even Nate Silver, a month ago, thought Newsom was in genuine peril:
Then came Larry Elder, who was unknown outside the conservatives who listen to talk radio. He was the perfect foil for Democrats to turn the recall in to a genuine general election with Newsom running against Elder rather than defending his own sorry record, and light up a heretofore apathetic Democratic base. Elder’s campaign could have been better: it didn’t emphasize runaway homelessless that is extremely unpopular, nor did he attack Newsom for our $5 gasoline prices that are largely the result of obsolete state regulations that a sensible governor could get the Biden Administration to waive if it wanted to. But there are a couple silver linings: progressive overreach might provoke a backlash in next year’s election. Newsom might get upset, perhaps by a bland GOP candidate like former San Diego mayor Kevin Faulconer, who was planning to run next year already. Also, the recall did win in a couple of swing congressional districts suggesting that the GOP might pick up a House seat or two next year. Finally, the exit polls show Newsom performed more poorly than expected with . . . Latino voters. Hmmmm.
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Our botched Afghan evacuation, by the numbers
Posted: 15 Sep 2021 01:45 PM PDT (Paul Mirengoff)Scott has provided video of the exchanges between Sec. Antony Blinken and several Republican Senators yesterday during a hearing on the Afghanistan fiasco. He has done a great service to those of us unwilling to watch Blinken in full. All of the clips Scott presented are worth watching. In this post, I want to focus on Sen. Rob Portman’s comments (the video is below). Portman presented the best data made available to him by the government regarding the evacuation. Blinken did not dispute Portman’s numbers. The numbers are rough estimates in some cases because our government hasn’t been able to provide better information. Even so, it’s fair at this juncture to base our assessment of the evacuation on the data Portman presented. According to Portman, the U.S. evacuated only 705 of the 18,000 applicants for special immigrant visas (SIV). It’s estimated that we evacuated only 30,000 of the 60,000 Afghans deemed to be “at risk” as a result of our withdrawal. Furthermore, an estimated three-quarters of the people we evacuated fit within none of the following categories: U.S. citizen, green card holder, SIV applicant, P1 or P2 visa holder. Thus, we failed miserably at getting out the people who deserved to be evacuated, while evacuating huge numbers of people with no recognizable claim to the privilege of being rescued at the risk of American service members’ lives, or even with a plausible claim to being “at risk.” I assume the vast majority of these non-deserving evacuees wish to contribute positively to America. Many of them probably will. But those who can’t, and their children, will become disillusioned and some, in their disillusionment, may become threats to our security. In addition, it’s possible that some evacuees already pose a threat. The Biden administration promises to vet the evacuees. However, that promise is all but meaningless because, as Mark Krikorian has pointed out, there’s no way reliably to vet these people. The only reliable vetting was through the SIV program, under which Afghans who proved their loyalty to the U.S. by risking their lives to help counter the Taliban became eligible to enter America. But the Biden administration showed little interest in moving that process along until its friends at the Washington Post complained in late June. By then it was too late to move the process anywhere close to where it should have been. Thanks to Biden’s ass-backwards way of leaving Afghanistan, the evacuation was too chaotic to enable us to avoid the shockingly poor results Portman cited in his comments to Blinken. The consequences will be dire for many we left behind in Afghanistan. We can only hope they won’t be dire here in America.
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Leo Baeck, Berlin, 1935
Posted: 15 Sep 2021 01:33 PM PDT (Scott Johnson)Jews begin the observance of Yom Kippur at sundown tonight with the Kol Nidre prayer service. Ten years ago our friend Rachel Paulose asked to join us at our service. Since then she has regularly attended the service with us and joined my family when we break our fast, as she will do again this year. The first time around she pointed in our prayer book to an adaptation of the prayer composed by the reformist German Rabbi Leo Baeck for delivery in German synagogues during the Kol Nidre service on October 10, 1935. The prayer remains timely today. I have previously posted the prayer and am taking the liberty of posting it again today, both for its intrinsic interest and its continuing relevance:
At the time he wrote and disseminated the prayer, Baeck was president of the Reichsvertretung der Juden in Deutschland, the official representative body of the Jews in Germany. The Gestapo discovered the text of the prayer and arrested Baeck. In Days of Sorrow and Pain, his Pulitzer Prize-winning biography of Baeck, Leonard Baker writes that Gestapo officials showed up at some Yom Kippur services, especially in Berlin: “No count was ever made of how many rabbis read the prayer at the service; many did, so many that it was almost an act of collective defiance on the part of the German rabbinate.”
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Why Biden has “great confidence” in Milley
Posted: 15 Sep 2021 01:00 PM PDT (Paul Mirengoff)A headline in the Washington Times declares: “Biden has ‘great confidence’ in Gen. Milley despite the general’s anti-Trump maneuvers.” A more accurate headline would replace “despite” with “because of.” Other than Milley’s anti-Trump sentiments and maneuvers, it’s difficult to imagine a reason why Biden would have any confidence in the general. Oh, wait. I forgot about Milley’s determination to expose military members to the anti-American ravings of critical race theorists. Milley’s alleged collaboration with the Red Chinese — something that, far from denying, Milley and his White House backers appear to defend — doesn’t faze Biden. Why not? Because Trump. Let’s hope that the next Republican president won’t excuse treasonous, or borderline treasonous, behavior “because Biden” or “because Kamala Harris.” The “because Biden” rationale may seem particularly alluring. By the time he departs, there will be good reason to doubt that he’s in possession of a majority of what, in the best of times, were limited faculties. Jen Psaki said this about her boss’ faith in Milley:
It’s astonishing that the White House would have to vouch for the patriotism and fidelity to the constitution of the Joint Chiefs Chairman. I’m old enough to remember when these attributes were self-evident. Welcome to the new U.S. military. But how can Milley’s performance in the past eight months possibly justify complete confidence in his leadership? He presided over the worst military disaster the U.S. has suffered in decades. Even absent reason to believe that Milley promised to collaborate with China to thwart what he idiotically thought the commander-in-chief might do, the decision to pull troops out of Afghanistan before evacuating our citizens warrants his removal. Milley could then teach a course on Mao, Lenin, and Marx at Evergreen State.
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89.) THE POLITICAL INSIDER – LUNCH BREAK
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92.) THE DAILY BEAST
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95.) RIGHTWING.ORG
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96.) NOT THE BEE
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Not the Bee Daily Newsletter |
Sep 16, 2021 |
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Sponsored By: The Patriot Post Liberty Isn’t CancelledFor 25 years The Patriot Post has provided solid conservative perspective on the most important issues. Now, we’ve made our Patriot’s Primer on American Liberty available as a free download for your use. Expand your knowledge and fortify your loved ones with this essential guide to understanding Liberty in the context of American history. Get our highly-acclaimed Patriot Primer when you confirm a free subscription to 𝘛𝘩𝘦 𝘗𝘢𝘵𝘳𝘪𝘰𝘵 𝘗𝘰𝘴𝘵.
Here’s Fauci Pre-Pandemic Laughing At The “Paranoid” Idea That Masking Is Effective Against Infectious DiseaseRemember how we were all told that masks don’t work, then we were told that actually, they do work.
Researchers have decisively proven that an alleged 15th century Viking map of the U.S. is totally bogusResearchers this month declared that much-debated map of the U.S. that some had claimed was drawn by Vikings prior to Columbus’s journey here, is unquestionably a forgery:
Educators in Colorado could face prison time if they don’t enforce a local mask mandatePeople these days take face masks very seriously, to the point that some of them are literally willing to throw you in prison if you don’t comply with the new mask world order:
One pastor is literally selling religious exemptions for vax mandates in exchange for donations and that’s not how this worksThe powers that be—the federal government, state authorities, teachers’ unions, Karens of all backgrounds—have refused to let the COVID crisis go to waste and have spent the past year and a half amassing power, influence, authority, and money.
Watch: Insane footage shows China blowing up 15 skyscrapers that had sat vacant for nearly a decadeAuthorities in China recently demolished over a dozen massive buildings in one fell swoop, bringing down 15 skyscrapers in the city of Kunming in the country’s Yunnan province.
So Trump had some colorful thoughts about Benedict Milley secretly calling the Chinese military … and yeah it’s pretty much that the “dumba**” should be “tried for TREASON”Remember that unhinged Orange Guy who was apparently so unhinged (according to CNN) that his top general called our sworn communist enemies in China to tip them off about our military tactics?
GoFundMe cancels fundraiser by father whose son reportedly died from an enlarged heart five days after getting the 💉Ernest Ramirez was banned from GoFundMe after using the platform to fundraise in the wake of his son’s death after receiving the Pfizer vaccine. Ivory Hecker (who you may remember from her Fox News whistleblowing) reported on the story, posting an interview with Ramirez on Twitter.
Facebook has reportedly allowed millions of VIP users to violate its content rules without being punishedFacebook has become known in recent years for the ruthless enforcement of its internal content rules, to the point that posting anything on the site can sometimes feel like opening your mouth in Stalinist Russia—you never know if you’re going to become an Unperson by saying the wrong thing.
“They aren’t hiding their bias anymore”: Major pro-life group Live Action responds to Google banning their ads across the internetPro-life group Live Action said this week that tech giant Google had banned the organization’s advertisements at the behest of pro-choice advocates.
Massachusetts activates National Guard to help get kids to school during bus driver shortageDid you know there was a nationwide school bus driver shortage?
“Total surprise”: Scientists accidentally stumble across a momentous black hole formulaBlack holes are among the most mind-blowing and singularly terrifying phenomena in the universe, which makes you think we’d be doing everything we could to avoid them lest we disturb them and they devour us in a fit of rage.
America saw 3.2 million new gun owners in the first half of 2021 as record sales continueGood news: The Second Amendment is still going strong.
I can’t stop laughing at this postgame interview response from Jameis WinstonLook how happy this man is! It’s beautiful. Dude just dropped five touchdowns on the Packers and proved all his haters wrong.
Widow of Marine killed in Kabul gives birth to the most loved baby in the whole wide worldThe widow of Lance Cpl. Rylee McCollum has given birth to a beautiful baby girl, Levi Rylee Rose.
Grammy-nominated singer writes song about Biden called “Blood On My Hands,” gets blocked from promoting it on Facebook like 5 seconds laterRemember, Big Zuck is watching for any signs of wrongthink!
Watch: High school teacher says that telling students to sit still and follow directions is “white supremacy” 🤡In the following video, you’ll hear a woke cultist describe why “Positive Behavior Interventions and Supports,” a disciplinary framework that is supposed to be a nicer alternative to detentions, suspensions, and expulsions, is actually just white supremacy.
Israel is deploying a robot that can open fire on combatants and evacuate wounded soldiers from battle zonesIsrael this week revealed a highly advanced robot patrol system that looks like it could end up being a game changer in the country’s legendary defense system:
Watch this hilarious Norm MacDonald joke about cancer and let me explain why this man was a winnerComedic legend Norm MacDonald died Tuesday after a private 9-year battle with cancer.
Canadian first responders stage silent protest against vaccine mandate
Uh oh: Genealogist discovers Joe Biden’s slave-owning ancestors
Lt. Colonel unleashes 🔥🔥🔥 on Biden and the woke Pentagon in scorching resignation letter: “I cannot and will not contribute to the fall of this great nation”This 19-year career Army officer just resigned and forfeited his pension because he is unwilling to serve under the dystopian nightmare America is slowly turning into:
Taco Bell is launching a subscription-based taco service, so the one guy that wanted that is probably really happy right nowMaybe you’re a Taco Bell fan or maybe you’re a Taco Bell foe, but in either case you have to hand it to the 60-year-old company: they know how to stay relevant in the 21st century.
Why isn’t this in textbooks?If it was confined to the intellectual sewer of Twitter, I’d leave it alone, but the ever-increasing prevalence of woke revisionists and anti-Western activists attempting to influence the content and character of American history curriculum around the country forces my hand.
Shocker: Facebook’s own research showed that Instagram is harmful for young people but the company still downplayed it in publicSocial media giant Facebook has reportedly known for some time that its Instagram platform can have markedly deleterious effects on the mental health of young girls, yet the company nevertheless downplayed that information in public:
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97.) US NEWS & WORLD REPORT
98.) NEWSMAX
Breaking News from Newsmax.com |
24 Dem AGs Back Biden DOJ’s Bid to Block Texas Law Against Abortions
Special: Biden’s Plans for Retirement Accounts Trump Acting Defense Secretary Miller ‘Did Not’ Authorize Milley China Calls Durham Probe Seeks Indictment of DNC Lawyer for Lying to FBI Special: Put This Spice in Your Shoes to Fix Toenail Fungus WH Praises Fox for 90% Staff Vaccination, Daily Testing Rep. Comer Demands Intel From Biden’s Inconclusive COVID-19 Origin Report
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99.) MARK LEVIN
September 15, 2021
On Wednesday’s Mark Levin Show, WPHT Radio Host Rich Zeoli fills in for Mark. It’s difficult to believe Bob Woodward, but Gen Mark Milley is a woke General so this report rings true. Milley has cited “America’s original sin” in support of the 1619 project, “white rage” and his previous detrimental comments regarding former President Trump. Why would Milley make such comments to think there’s even a hint of a reason to believe that Trump would launch an attack on China? An immediate investigation is needed to get to the bottom of these secret phone calls with China. Later, the public is slowly learning that Anthony Fauci and the federal government lied about the origin of the coronavirus. Now evidence is emerging that reveals that Fauci lied about the US’s role in gain of function research. Afterward, masking kids and indoctrinating them in public school continues and the politicians think parents shouldn’t even have a say in the matter. The pro-Marxist movement wants to label anyone that opposes them as a white supremacist and woke teachers are teaching children that whiteness is an extension of white supremacy.
The podcast for this show can be streamed or downloaded from the Audio Rewind page.
Image used with permission of Getty Images / Saul Loeb
100.) WOLF DAILY
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104.) INDEPENDENT SENTINEL
Dr. Mengele’s FDA: humanized mice experiments with human fetal headsJudicial Watch announced that it received 198 pages of records and communications from the FDA involving “humanized mice” research with human fetal heads, organs, and tissue, including communications and contracts… | |
Corporations, 3 former presidents, Biden to resettle massive numbers of AfghansDonald Trump’s former top aide, Stephen Miller recently reported that the Biden administration plans to allow any and all Afghans to immigrate into the United States. There is a bill… | |
Lindsey Graham is out defending Mark MilleyLindsey Graham is completely useless. He’s approving judges and other appointments of very far-left people without question and he’s forever pushing illegal immigration and amnesty. Now, he’s making excuses for… | |
Benedict Arnold Milley defiantly admits to the calls and talk of nukesChairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Mark Milley admitted Wednesday that he did speak with the Chinese communists. He made no effort to defend it or the accusation that… | |
Biden White House asks Congress to make US taxpayers fund welfare for Afghan refugeesAs tens of thousands of Afghan migrants, many of whom are anonymous, are being processed and transferred to the United States, the White House is asking Congress to give welfare… | |
Dems’ desperate distractions from Afghanistan and Mark MilleyLook at how the hardcore leftists controlling Joe Biden desperately change the subject with Capitol Police and the fake J6 insurrection. JUST IN – Pentagon received a request from the… | |
Posobiec discusses the infiltration of conservative groupsSteve Bannon has been concerned about infiltration into conservative groups. He singled out a BBC article, ‘Going undercover to infiltrate Chinese-American far-right networks‘ to discuss the issue with conservative reporter… | |
Blinken lied to Congress about stranded Americans in AfghanistanThe media doesn’t even talk about the stranded Americans, green card holders, and SIVs any longer. They were abandoned by the Biden administration, and they remain abandoned with very few… | |
Lt Col resigns over “Marxist takeover of the military”I cannot and will not contribute to the fall of this great nation. ~ Lt. Col. Paul Douglas Hague US Lieutenant Colonel Paul Douglas Hague resigned — forfeiting his pension… | |
Remarkable! Biden STANDS BY ‘patriotic’ MilleyIn a stunning announcement, Jen Psaki said Joe Biden will stand by General Milley, a potential traitor. “The president believes he’s patriotic, his fidelity to our Constitution is unquestionable, and… | |
US Leadership is under bureaucratic ruleTHE LEADERSHIP OF OUR COUNTRY The now infamous Woodward-Costa book Peril mentions Donald Trump’s dear and close friend and ally Lindsey Graham who allegedly said the former president has “personality problems” that will… | |
CDC warns Afghans with measles could ‘seed COUNTLESS U.S. community outbreaks’The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Director Rochelle Walensky has sent a private warning to the chief of Afghan evacuation operations that measles is spreading among refugees and poses… | |
CIA Director Haspel was fearful of ‘out-of-control Trump’When The Washington Post reported the potentially treasonous behavior of Mark Milley based on a book by Bob Woodward and Robert Costa, they carefully framed it as Milley gallantly saving… | |
Deep State report: Esper ORDERED the backchannel to the Chinese communistsIt was allegedly Esper who directed his policy office, a couple of levels down, to backchannel the CCP to assure them there was no intention to seek war. Milley followed… | |
Nicki Minaj blasts Joy Reid as a ‘dumb ass’ ‘Uncle Tomiana’My God SISTER do better’ imagine getting ur dumb ass on TV a min after a tweet to spread a false narrative about a black woman. ~ Nicki Minaj to… | |
Biden’s family were slave owners & related to Jefferson Davis’s wifeIt was not until after Biden won the presidency that Bannerman and Roberts created their genealogy, allowing Bannerman …to confirm…what some people online had already been claiming about Thomas Randle… | |
Mark Milley ordered military command TAKE A LOYALTY OATH TO HIMThe new book Peril by Bob Woodward and Robert Costa is meant to damage Donald Trump and it attempts to justify a potential act of treason by a windblown general. It… | |
Shocking betrayal, authors who hid it & media who back treasonCaveat: This report might not be true. General Milley has not yet responded to accusations of betrayal. As explained earlier on Tuesday, Joint Chief of Staff Chair Mark Milley colluded… |
105.) DC CLOTHESLINE
106.) ARTICLE V LEGISLATORS’ CAUCUS
107.) BECKER NEWS
108.) SONS OF LIBERTY
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109.) STARS & STRIPES
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110.) RIGHT & FREE
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California Gov. Gavin Newsom has defeated the recall challenge by a comfortable margin.
Recent data from the Cooperative Election Study shows 20% of atheists have participated in a march or protest, compared with 6% of white evangelicals. Forty…
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‘We have the wrong people analyzing this,’ Rubio said.
The complaint alleges that Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez broke the rules of the House of Representatives with her actions at the Met Gala.
111.) UNITED VOICE
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112.) THE DAILY SHAPIRO
113.) INSURGENT CONSERVATIVES
‘If there ever was a honeymoon for President Biden, it is clearly over.’
Recent data from the Cooperative Election Study shows 20% of atheists have participated in a march or protest, compared with 6% of white evangelicals. Forty…
‘The chain of command runs from the President to the Secretary of Defense, not through the Chairman,’ Miller said.
‘He’s not going to get away with it. He’s not going to be empowered to do more,’ Pelosi reportedly said.
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114.) WAKING TIMES
115.) UNCOVER DC