Good morning! Here is your news briefing for Monday November 1, 2021
1.) THE DAILY SIGNAL
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2.) THE EPOCH TIMES
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3.) DAYBREAK
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4.) THE SUNBURN
Sunburn — The morning read of what’s hot in Florida politics — 11.1.21
Good Monday morning.
First in Sunburn — Adrian Lukis, the former Chief of Staff to Gov. Ron DeSantis, is joining top lobbying firm Ballard Partners.
“Adrian’s recent experience at the highest levels of Florida state government significantly expands the depth of our firm’s formidable expertise in the state Capitol,” said firm founder and President Brian Ballard.
“His long-standing reputation, as well as his unique experience working closely with Gov. DeSantis, the Senate President and the Speaker of the House, will make him an invaluable partner and adviser for our firm’s clients.”
Lukis has been a top adviser to DeSantis since he was a candidate for Governor three years ago. During his tenure in the administration, Lukis managed the Executive Office of the Governor and all executive branch agencies under the Governor’s leadership.
He was elevated from Deputy to head Chief of Staff in March; however, he didn’t plan to stay long-term because of his young family. He left the position in September.
Before rising through the ranks in the Governor’s Office, Lukis was a high-level staffer to former House Speaker José Oliva. He formerly served as Deputy Staff Director in the Florida House of Representatives and as an attorney for the House Economic Affairs Committee.
Lukis is a graduate of Florida State University, where he earned his undergraduate and law degrees. He worked as a corporate and business law attorney before reentering state government.
“I am delighted to join Ballard Partners and to be working with the firm’s unparalleled team in Tallahassee,” Lukis said.
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You may not know her name, but you know her if you watch any sports on television.
Florida DraftKings’ customers received a targeted text/video message from Jessie “Make. It. Reign.” Coffield on behalf of Florida Education Champions this weekend, with a reminder to return their petition by mail to support their effort to bring competition in sports betting to Florida, with all tax revenues supplementing the Florida Educational Enhancement Trust Fund.
Registered Florida voters can request a personalized petition be mailed to them through many digital portals that connect to an FEC landing page, and as Jessie says, all they have to do is sign, date and return it, postage-paid, to “Make It Reign … in Florida.”
Clever play in leveraging the power of DraftKings’ national brand and millions upon millions of dollars in television advertising to add extra power to the petition-phase effort. We’re told to stay tuned for more to come this week.
To watch the video, click on the image below:
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According to polling released Friday by the Florida Chamber of Commerce, voters believe the state is headed in the right direction and think DeSantis deserves a second term.
The poll, conducted by Cherry Communications, found that 48% of Florida voters think the state is headed in the “right direction” compared to 42% who said it was on the “wrong track.”
Men were more likely to adopt the positive outlook, while the inverse was true for women. The Florida Chamber noted that Hispanic voters said the state was headed in the right direction by a 26-point margin, 57%-31%.
“Florida is moving in the right direction, and we need to keep the momentum going,” Florida Chamber President and CEO Mark Wilson said. “As we just recently addressed Florida’s future at our Florida Chamber Foundation Annual Meeting and Future of Florida Forum, there’s no better time to unite the business community for good to ensure the right things continue to happen.”
The six-point advantage for “right direction” carries over to the Governor’s race, the poll shows. Regardless of the opponent, DeSantis retains a strong position in his as-yet-unlaunched reelection campaign.
If his foil is Democratic former Governor and U.S. Rep. Charlie Crist, the incumbent would win a second term with a 7% margin. If Agriculture Commissioner Nikki Fried wins the Democratic nomination, the spread grows to 9%.
The Governor’s showing comes as Florida voters rate jobs and the economy as their top issue — it topped the list due to its strong support among men and Republicans. COVID-19 ranks No. 2, with women and Democrats listing it as their top issue.
The Florida Chamber poll was conducted on Oct. 17-25 by Cherry Communications during live telephone interviews of likely voters. The sample size included 246 Democrats, 254 Republicans and 108 independents. It has a margin of error of plus or minus 4%.
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First in Sunburn — Vic Torres endorses Annette Taddeo for Governor — The Taddeo for Governor campaign released its first wave of endorsements Monday. Democratic Sen. Torres joins former Reps. JC Planas and Cindy Lerner in endorsing Taddeo. “Our state has many challenges, and this Governor has put Floridians in harm’s way,” Torres said in a statement Monday. “We need a Democratic nominee who will offer the clearest contrast and I know the best candidate to do that is my good friend and colleague, Senator Annette Taddeo. Annette embodies the American dream and has fought against all odds her entire life. Annette has the experience, ethics and leadership to lead our state as Governor and I am proud to endorse her campaign for Governor.”
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Spotted at the Governor’s Mansion Saturday for Halloween festivities with the First Family — Secretary Laurel Lee and former Sen. Tom Lee, Secretary Todd Inman and Anne Duncan, Chris Emmanuel, Cody Farrell, Larry Keefe, Stephanie Kopelousos, Alex Kelly, Trey and Tara Price, Christina Pushaw, Chris and Gina Spencer, Meredith Stanfield, Ray Treadwell, Mike Yaworsky, Skyler and Lindsey Zander.
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Public affairs firm RedRock Strategies expanded its Florida footprint with the addition of Greg Ungru and Skylar Swanson.
“Both Greg and Skylar’s dynamic skillsets and dedication to winning are a welcomed addition to the RedRock Florida team,” said Kayla Lott, RedRock’s Senior Strategist. “As we continue to grow in Florida, having Greg’s extensive political experience and Skylar’s digital expertise on the team will help us continue to help our clients and friends be successful.
“RedRock Strategies has built a national presence in the public affairs, digital, and political consulting spaces for over two decades by defining what it takes to win. I look forward to working with Skylar and Greg to expand our Florida footprint and help our clients get from where they are, to where they want to be.”
Ungru has more than two decades of experience in The Process. The Ohio State University alum and current Florida State University MBA candidate served under four Governors, holding leadership positions in the Florida Department of Elder Affairs and Department of Economic Opportunity as well as Marsy’s Law for Florida, LeadingAge Florida, the Florida Sports Foundation and the Republican Party of Florida.
Swanson started her career in then-Rep. Keith Perry’s legislative office later moved over to the campaign side where she served as Fundraising Director for his 2016 and 2018 Senate campaigns. The FSU alum and current University of Florida graduate student then worked as Communications Director in the House Majority Office, and in 2020 she joined Attorney General Ashley Moody’s communications team.
— SITUATIONAL AWARENESS —
—@RonBrownstein: 1 big reminder from Fox Virginia Gov poll: there’s no escaping Prez’ shadow in modern US politics. If Biden’s approval really is just 43% w/Virginia voters Tues, it’ll be long night for (Terry) McAuliffe. If it’s 43% on 11/22, it will be brutal for Ds. That’s why bolstering (Joe) Biden is their job one.
—@WalshFreedom: It’s Trump’s Party. If you don’t support Donald Trump, you have no future in this Republican Party. None. No whining. It is what it is.
—@NumbersMuncher: The “Let’s Go Brandon” stuff is stupid, childish nonsense you see among teens trying to speak in code. The Southwest pilot was an idiot for saying it and knew full well what he was doing. Everyone on the right and left on here are losing their minds over the dumbest stuff.
—@Deggans: I’m wondering about existing school vaccine mandates for mumps, measles, polio. At some point, those were all new drugs, as well. If DeSantis had been Florida’s Governor when the polio vaccine was rolled out, would he have opposed children taking that, too?
—@ElectProject: Last-minute costume change this year: I’m going as an academic exercising their free speech. Very scary to some folks, apparently
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— DAYS UNTIL —
St. Petersburg Municipal Elections — 1; Florida’s 20th Congressional District Primary — 1; The Blue Angels 75th anniversary show — 4; Disney’s ’Eternals’ premieres — 4; ’Yellowstone’ Season 4 begins — 5; ’Disney Very Merriest After Hours’ will debut — 7; U.S. to lift restrictions for fully vaccinated international travelers — 7; Miami at FSU — 10; ‘Hawkeye’ premieres — 13; Special Session on vaccine mandates begins — 14; ExcelinEd National Summit on Education begins — 17; FSU vs. UF — 26; Florida Chamber 2021 Annual Insurance Summit begins — 30; Jacksonville special election to fill seat vacated by Tommy Hazouri’s death — 36; Steven Spielberg’s ’West Side Story’ premieres — 39; ’Spider-Man: No Way Home’ premieres — 46; ’The Matrix: Resurrections’ released — 51; ’The Book of Boba Fett’ premieres on Disney+ — 58; CES 2022 begins — 65; NFL season ends — 69; 2022 Legislative Session starts — 71; Florida’s 20th Congressional District Election — 71; Special Elections in Senate District 33, House District 88 & 94 — 71; Florida TaxWatch’s 2022 State of the Taxpayer Day — 72; Joel Coen’s ’The Tragedy of Macbeth’ on Apple TV+ — 74; NFL playoffs begin — 75; XXIV Olympic Winter Games begins — 95; Super Bowl LVI — 104; Daytona 500 — 111; St. Pete Grand Prix — 118; ‘The Batman’ premieres — 124; ’Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness’ premieres — 187; ’Top Gun: Maverick’ premieres — 207; ’Platinum Jubilee’ for Queen Elizabeth II — 213; ’Thor: Love and Thunder’ premieres — 249; San Diego Comic-Con 2022 — 261; ’Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse’ sequel premieres — 340; ‘The Flash’ premieres — 368; ‘Black Panther 2’ premieres — 375; ‘Avatar 2’ premieres — 410; ‘Captain Marvel 2’ premieres — 473; ‘Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania’ premieres — 627. ‘Dune: Part Two’ premieres — 718.
“Florida bars state professors from testifying in voting rights case” via Michael Wines of The New York Times — Three University of Florida professors have been barred from assisting plaintiffs in a lawsuit to overturn the state’s new law restricting voting rights, lawyers said in a federal court filing. The ban is an extraordinary limit on speech that raises questions of academic freedom and First Amendment rights. University officials told the three that because the school was a state institution, participating in a lawsuit against the state “is adverse to UF’s interests” and could not be permitted. In their filing, the lawyers sought to question DeSantis on whether he was involved in the decision. The university’s refusal to allow the professors to testify was a marked turnabout for the University of Florida. A spokeswoman for the university, Hessy Fernandez, defended the prohibitions, saying: “The university did not deny the First Amendment rights or academic freedom” of the professors. “Rather, the university denied requests of these full-time employees to undertake outside paid work that is adverse to the university’s interests as a state of Florida institution.”
“UF professors could testify in voting rights case if they are unpaid, spokeswoman says” via Danielle Ivanov of The Gainesville Sun — “To be clear,” Fernandez stated, “if the professors wish to do so pro bono on their own time without using university resources, they would be free to do so.” That allowance for unpaid work was not mentioned earlier when Gary Wimsett, UF’s assistant vice president for conflicts of interest, told two of the professors that “UF will deny its employees’ requests to engage in outside activities when it determines the activities are adverse to its interests.” Wimsett’s statement does reflect a view the UF President Kent Fuchs expressed at a September Faculty Senate meeting. Fuchs reminded the group that the state government has authority over almost all areas of the university’s operation.
Nikki Fried decries UF ‘repression of First Amendment rights’ — “DeSantis has again and again shown his willingness to politicize the school we love and use it to drive his own agenda — even if that means silencing faculty who are standing up for Floridians right to express themselves freely,” the Agriculture Commissioner and candidate for Governor said in a statement. “We deserve leaders who respect our Constitution, who understand the First Amendment, and who will uphold our institutions — not tear them down in a misguided and desperate attempt to hold on to power. Florida has seen these types of discriminatory laws to restrict voting rights before. They were wrong then, and they’re wrong today. Gator Nation knows what it takes to stand up and fight.”
Debbie Wasserman Schultz calls for UF reversal on professor testimony denial — “UF’s decision to prevent its professors from speaking out in court against a state law that suppresses minority voting rights is appalling,” Wasserman Schultz said in a statement. “We must speak out and renounce it. If allowed to stand, the restraint of these professors’ speech will undermine every UF claim to honor academic independence and free speech. It will damage UF’s ability to recruit and retain top faculty and stifle fundraising. UF will stand out in anti-academic exile, rather than an exemplar of higher learning. My hope is that President Kent Fuchs swiftly reverses this egregious action.”
— STATEWIDE —
“In addressing Florida business leaders, Ron DeSantis takes on ‘corporate wokeness’” via Mary Ellen Klas of the Miami Herald — After months of getting the cold shoulder from large corporations who refused to endorse his COVID-19 policies, DeSantis had harsh things to say at the annual meeting of the Florida Chamber of Commerce, blasting what he called “the rise of corporate wokeness.” “If you’re using your power as a corporation, and you’re leveraging that to try to advance any ideology, I think it’s very dangerous for this country and I’m not just gonna sit idly by,’’ DeSantis warned as he presented the keynote speech to the audience at the Hyatt Regency Grand Cypress resort in Orlando. In the rambling 30-minute speech, DeSantis warned the business audience that he has no tolerance for corporations that use their influence for political messaging.
“DeSantis: Uproar over Surgeon General nominee is ‘manufactured’” via Christine Jordan Sexton of Florida Politics — DeSantis told a national cable television audience that uproar over his appointed Surgeon General was “manufactured” and that he had no plans to withdraw the nomination of Dr. Joseph Ladapo. On Thursday, DeSantis recorded an interview with Fox News personality Laura Ingraham, but part of it did not air until late Friday. The Governor was asked about Sen. Tina Polsky and her decision to ask Ladapo to leave her office because he refused to wear a mask even after she told him she had a serious medical condition. Polsky was diagnosed with breast cancer and this week began radiation treatment. Ladapo, who was appointed to his post in late September, later released a statement saying he refused to wear a mask because he cannot communicate clearly or effectively with a mask.
“Florida’s legacy of slow-rolling parole keeps thousands of people behind bars — some, for decades past their eligibility date” via Justin Garcia of Scalawag magazine — According to the Florida Commission on Offender Review (FCOR), the agency that administers parole, from 2015 to 2020, only 152 parole-eligible people out of 6,851 considered cases were granted parole, or less than 2% of the cases reviewed. Of those, just 86 people paroled were serving time for murder or attempted murder. The commission’s 2020 Annual Report said there were 3,959 incarcerated people who were eligible for parole that year, and 424 “releasees” actively on parole supervision. Between October 2019 and September 2020, the commission made 1,419 parole determinations and granted parole to 41 incarcerated people — about 1% of parole-eligible prisoners in Florida. Florida’s numbers are staggeringly low compared with the parole boards of neighboring Southern states, too.
— DATELINE TALLY —
“Coming soon to Tallahassee: The DeSantis anti-vaccine show” via Steve Bousquet of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — DeSantis is obviously running for something, because he called a special session the week of Nov. 15 to give employees greater protection against vaccine mandates as ordered by Biden. Republican lawmakers, relegated to extras in DeSantis’ latest one-man show, will comply, of course. They don’t have a choice. The Governor also wants to tighten the so-called parents’ bill of rights, the new law used to attack school board mask mandates in Broward, Miami-Dade and elsewhere. You notice that major societal problems that directly affect people seldom warrant Special Sessions.
To watch DeSantis’ vow (via Twitter) on vaccine mandates, click on the image below:
Video Player
“DeSantis calls Special Session on COVID-19 vaccine mandates, backs off on business liability” via Gray Rohrer of the Orlando Sentinel — DeSantis formally called a Special Session to address COVID-19 vaccine mandates on employees by businesses and local governments, ordering the Legislature to convene from Nov. 15 to Nov. 19. But DeSantis backed off from stripping COVID-19 liability protections from businesses that impose vaccine mandates on their workers. A DeSantis spokeswoman said the ultimate goal is to prevent businesses from firing workers who opt against getting vaccinated, and there will be other “enforcement mechanisms” to dissuade companies from requiring vaccines in the first place.
“Lawmakers, officials resist testifying about election law” via John Haughey of The Center Square — On May 6, DeSantis signed a hotly-contested elections bill into law. DeSantis signed Senate Bill 90, adopted a week earlier by state lawmakers in a partisan vote, during a rally sponsored by Club 45 USA, a Trump fan club, and covered live as an exclusive on “Fox & Friends.” “Me signing this bill says: ‘Florida, your vote counts, your vote is going to be cast with integrity and transparency, and this is a great place for democracy,’” DeSantis said, acknowledging, again, that Florida’s 2020 election was the nation’s “gold standard” in electoral professionalism and security. Much has changed since, including, going on record to discuss how the legally-embattled SB 90 was crafted and adopted despite overwhelming citizen opposition.
Happening today — House Minority Co-leader Evan Jenne will hold a virtual news conference, 10 a.m., Zoom link here. The event will be livestreamed on The Florida Channel.
Happening today — House Democrats will host a virtual news conference to discuss the redistricting process: Jenne and Reps. Joe Geller, Kelly Skidmore and Dan Daley, 1 p.m. Zoom link here.
Happening today — The House Public Integrity and Elections Committee meets to discuss draft definitions regarding the 2018 constitutional amendment making changes to lobbying, 4 p.m., 404 House Office Building.
For your radar — With Florida facing a historic shortage of health care workers, leaders from a diverse set of affected organizations have come together under the banner of the Health Care Workforce Coalition, and today at 10:30 a.m. will hold a roundtable discussion at the Florida Health Care Association Education and Training Center that promises not just a description of the problem — but also some solutions. Everyone from nursing homes, assisted living facilities and hospitals to veterans’ services and home health care organizations are struggling to hire enough nurses, nursing assistants, and other professionals. The workforce shortage is affecting their ability to meet the needs of Floridians amid COVID-19 and the state’s growing elderly population, and they’re looking to the Legislature to help address the challenges they face. The roundtable discussion will take place at the Florida Health Care Association headquarters, the state’s largest association of long-term care facilities.
“Advocates question education requirements in proposed personal care attendant rule” via Christine Jordan Sexton of Florida Politics — State health officials were given a list of concerns relating to a new proposed rule that would allow unlicensed staff called “personal care attendants” to work in nursing homes as the industry struggles to find the workers it needs to care for residents. Florida Long-Term Care Ombudsman Program legal advocate Lynne Hearn told Agency for Health Care Administration officials the proposed rule they published didn’t meet the requirements of the 2021 law because it doesn’t require personal care attendants to complete 16 hours of classroom education. Instead, the proposed rule requires 10 hours of classroom teaching and six hours of supervised simulation, where the candidate must exhibit competency in all areas of training.
New and renewed lobbying registrations:
Oscar Anderson, Tasi Hogan, The Southern Group: Second Harvest Food Bank of Central Florida
Matt Bryan, David Daniel, Thomas Griffin, Jeff Hartley, Lisa Hurley, Jim Naff, Teye Reeves, Smith Bryan & Myers: GLP FLA
Emily Buckley, Dean Mead: Florida Ambulance Association
Chris Chaney, The Advocacy Group at Cardenas Partners: Gigly
Carlecia Collins, GrayRobinson: Conservation Florida
Candice Ericks, Ericks Consultants: FLITE Center, Intero Group HIM Services
Matthew Herndon, RSA Consulting Group: David A. Straz, Jr. Center for the Performing Arts, Miracles Outreach, Tampa Bay Partnership, Tampa Theatre
Scott Jenkins, Delegal Aubuchon Consulting: New York Life Insurance Company
Timothy Keck: Mission Health Communities
Jennifer Kelly, Foley & Lardner: ACT Environmental & Infrastructure
Travis Moore, Moore Relations: ONR App
— CORONA FLORIDA —
—“Florida COVID-19 update: 1,711 cases added to tally, hospital patients continue decreasing” via Devoun Cetoute of the Miami Herald
“DeSantis can’t figure out who made COVID-19 all political” via Philip Bump of The Washington Post — Nearly 1.2 million residents of the Sunshine State contracted the coronavirus over those three months, nearly a third of the total the state has seen since the pandemic began in February 2020. More than 13,000 Floridians died as the virus whipped across the state, more than 17% of the deaths the country saw during that period despite Florida having only 6.5% of the country’s population. And for DeSantis, that somehow means that it’s time to boast about what a good job the state has done. Throughout the pandemic, Florida’s case rates have been worse than the country’s 57% of the time.
“Florida posts lowest rate of COVID-19 cases per capita in nation” via Scott Powers of Florida Politics — Florida recorded just 12,151 new COVID-19 cases in the past week. By federal counts, which are slightly different from Florida’s tabulations but still in the same ballpark, the Sunshine State’s most recent tally of newly-confirmed cases now gives Florida the lowest per capita rate of new cases in the country. Florida’s 12,115 seven-day case tally in the federal report works out to a rate of 56 new COVID-19 cases per 100,000 residents, better than all the other 49 states. The CDC data covers a week that is one day behind the week that the Florida Department of Health reports in its Friday announcements. However, the federal data, which covers the week through Wednesday, can be used to compare states, as the CDC complies like data from all states.
“South Florida has now administered 1.25M vaccine doses as COVID-19 cases continue to fall” via Ryan Nicol of Florida Politics — South Florida’s tri-county area has hit another benchmark in vaccine distribution, surpassing 1.25 million doses administered. Miami-Dade County has put nearly 672,000 shots in arms since vaccines became available. That number is nearly 357,000 in Broward County and around 225,000 in Palm Beach County. The number of doses administered rose 12% week-to-week in Palm Beach County and 2% in Miami-Dade. Broward’s number fell 4% week-to-week. That vaccine push has seen 94% of Miami-Dade’s population get at least one shot. Broward County has administered at least one shot to 83% of its eligible population, and Palm Beach sits at a 75% vaccination rate.
“Miami-Dade’s COVID-19 vaccination rate is very high. Here’s why you might be skeptical” via Daniel Chang and Ana Claudia Chacin of the Miami Herald — No Florida county is as well-protected against COVID-19 as Miami-Dade, where 94% of residents 12 and older had received at least one dose of vaccine as of Oct. 28. At least that’s the percentage the state health department tells the public. As of Friday, 24 Miami-Dade ZIP codes logged a mathematically impossible vaccination rate of greater than 100% of eligible residents who have received at least one dose. Florida gathers and shares the data to help guide pandemic response planning, a purpose for which some local officials say the information is useless. There are 24 Miami-Dade ZIP codes where the share of eligible residents who have received at least one dose reportedly exceeds 100%.
“In Miami-Dade, predominantly Black and low-income ZIP codes are still behind on vaccination” via Ana Claudia Chacin and Daniel Chang of the Miami Herald — Despite flaws in the Florida Department of Health’s reporting of vaccination rates for each of the 80 ZIP codes in Miami-Dade, an analysis of the data reveals trends that suggest areas with predominantly Black and low-income residents are falling behind on vaccination against COVID-19. In the nine Miami-Dade ZIP codes where more than half of residents describe themselves as non-Hispanic Black, the average vaccination rate was just 48% of the population as of Friday. Only one of the nine ZIP codes had more than 50% of their population fully vaccinated.
“Jon Bon Jovi cancels Miami Beach concert after testing positive for COVID-19” via Samantha J. Gross of the Miami Herald — A positive test for COVID-19 forced Bon Jovi to cancel his Miami Beach show Saturday night as crowds were already beginning to fill the South Beach venue. Audience members were told that Bon Jovi would be unable to perform and that the whole band had been given rapid tests before the show. A WSVN reporter captured the musician leaving the Loews Miami Beach hotel on Collins Avenue in a yellow Maserati just before 7 p.m. One concertgoer, sports commentator Maria Garcia-Mella Cid, posted on Instagram that a new date was scheduled and that a DJ put on a show for attendees.
“‘It’s a personal choice’: DoD civilians, contractors protest COVID-19 vaccine mandate” via Jim Thompson of the Northwest Florida Daily News — A mix of local Department of Defense civilian workers and military contractor employees spent hours Thursday morning along Eglin Parkway protesting federal mandates that require them to be vaccinated against COVID-19 or have an approved exemption. At midmorning Thursday, about two dozen people stood between Gardner Drive and Cherokee Road in Shalimar waving signs with slogans opposing the mandates. Several participants revealed frustration with what they see as bureaucratic bungling surrounding the mandates, particularly with regard to basic communication from the DoD and employers on deadlines for vaccination and the processing of requests for exemptions on the allowable spiritual or health grounds.
“Duval Schools lifts its mask requirement as COVID-19 rates dip in Jacksonville” via Emily Bloch of The Florida Times-Union — Starting Monday, students attending Duval County Public Schools and employees will no longer be required to wear masks on campus. That’s because the city’s COVID-19 positivity rate has finally dipped low enough to categorize Duval County’s transmission status as “moderate” instead of “substantial” or “high.” Dr. Sunil Joshi, President of the Duval County Medical Society Foundation, said he would’ve preferred to see the district’s mask policy stay in place until community spread decreased even further. Duval County’s positivity percentage dipped weeks ago, but the average number of new cases took longer to achieve.
“With masks optional at most Florida schools, some students with disabilities feel cast aside” via Leslie Postal of the Orlando Sentinel — JJ Holmes, who has cerebral palsy, cannot both wear a face mask and use his communication device. Because COVID-19 poses heightened risks to his health, his doctor said everyone around him at school should wear a mask to keep him safe while he uses his iPad in class, according to his mother, Alison Holmes. But Seminole schools do not require masks, so the 11th grader has not been at Lake Mary High School this year. He and his mother argue the Seminole school district is violating federal law by refusing to require masks, as some districts did when COVID-19 cases surged in August. Falling COVID-19 caseloads give his mother hope JJ might be able to return to campus in January. But another surge in cases, which experts say is possible, could alter their plans.
— TUES’ ELECTIONS —
“11 Democrats on ballot to replace late US Rep. Hastings” via Brendan Farrington of The Associated Press — Some candidates running to replace Hastings are saying it’s a “once-in-a-lifetime opportunity” to represent the diverse South Florida district. In this case, that’s hardly an exaggeration. Eleven Democrats are on the ballot in Tuesday’s Primary Special Election, including state Rep. Omari Hardy, who was 3 years old when Hastings was elected in 1992. Hastings was the longest-serving member of Florida’s congressional delegation before he died in April after suffering from pancreatic cancer. Turnout is expected to be low on Tuesday, and it’s conceivable the next U.S. House member to represent the district can win the primary with 10% of the vote.
—”EMILY’s List endorses Barbara Sharief in CD 20 Special Election” via Ryan Nicol of Florida Politics
“Miami Mayor seeks second term as he raises national profile” via Adriana Gomez Licon of ABC News 10 — Miami Mayor Francis Suarez is hoping to easily secure a second term Tuesday, with his reelection campaign showing he can raise millions as he seeks to elevate his profile at a national level. Suarez gained name recognition for launching an effort to lure technology investors to the city at the beginning of the year. Analysts say Suarez was astute to seize a moment when some investors were looking to move to South Florida for tax reasons and looser COVID-19 restrictions during the pandemic. The Mayor has been more than willing to assist. In December, when someone tweeted about moving Silicon Valley to Miami, Suarez replied, “How can I help?” The effect his tech push has had on migration and job creation is still unclear as census numbers do not yet include data for 2021.
—”Eight candidates, some very familiar to voters, vie for two Miami Beach Commission seats” via Jesse Scheckner of Florida Politics
“Proposed 2 a.m. liquor ban will damage Miami Beach economy for years to come” via Hank Fishkind of the Miami Herald — The city of Fort Lauderdale, some 40 years ago, decided it wanted to do away with being a Spring Break destination, raising many of the same concerns that Miami Beach officials have when they talk about wanting to shut the Party down in their city. Fort Lauderdale successfully erased its name off the lists of top Spring Break destinations, but they also invited localized economic depression for 25 years. Eventually, the beach was redeveloped, but it took over decades for the economy to spring back. Miami Beach is inching toward the same fate. The 2 a.m. alcohol ban is a bad idea at an even worse time. We are in the midst of a very fragile economic recovery from the pandemic. An alcohol ban will undoubtedly have a devastating impact on the hospitality industry.
—”Miami Beach group opposing 2 a.m. alcohol rollback debuts ad highlighting leaked Mayor call” via Jesse Scheckner of Florida Politics
—”Orlando City Commissioner Robert Stuart faces tough challenge from Nicolette Springer” via Scott Powers of Florida Politics
—”Orlando City Commissioners trying to keep the band together” via Scott Powers of Florida Politics
—”Lisset Hanewicz, Tom Mullins race for District 4 amid hefty funding, partisan overtones” via Kelly Hayes of Florida Politics
“Have Manatee voters soured on public school funding? Tuesday tax vote will tell the tale” via Jacob Ogles of Florida Politics — School boards across the state and nation have faced hordes of angry critics, slamming policies on COVID-19 protocols and other issues. But are voters as a whole ready to defund the schools? A test may come Tuesday when voters in Manatee County, a place Trump won with more than 57% of the vote, decide whether to renew a property tax supporting public schools. Manatee County voters in 2018 first passed the 1-mill tax, but by a razor-thin margin with 51.39% in favor of the levy. That was a margin of 1,564 votes out of 56,370 cast. So, can it survive in the current political climate? School Board Chair Charlie Kennedy thinks so.
— 2022 —
“Progressives fear compromise could jeopardize midterm hopes” via Max Greenwood and Tal Axelrod of The Hill — Progressives are fretting over the pared-back framework of Democrats’ massive social policy and climate bill, warning that it won’t be enough to motivate the Party’s liberal base ahead of the 2022 midterms. Still smarting from seeing the package whittled down from $6 trillion to $3.5 trillion to $1.75 trillion, liberals say the final result is not enough to push the progressive grassroots to the polls next year after top priorities were left on the cutting room floor. Many progressives are still lining up behind the framework, in some cases begrudgingly, believing that failing to pass anything at all would be politically self-destructive.
Assignment editors — Congressman Crist will join the Tampa Bay Venezuelan advocacy group, Venezuela USA Foundation, to discuss the challenges facing Venezuelans fleeing the Nicolás Maduro regime, 3 p.m., Crist St. Pete District Office, 696 1st Ave. North, Suite 203, St. Petersburg. Later, Crist will meet with NBA legend Magic Johnson and community leaders to discuss Johnson’s Simply Healthcare initiative to expand access to quality health care to low-income residents, 4 p.m., Tropicana Field, Lot 1, 16th Street side, St. Petersburg.
“Dozens of Florida congressional candidates fail to turn in mandatory financial reports” via Corbin Bolies of Florida Politics — Mandatory reports that would reveal key details about the personal wealth of scores of political challengers running for Florida’s congressional seats are missing from government files on Capitol Hill. The missing paperwork means voters have few clues so far about where these candidates have earned their money, where they invested, or to whom they owe personal debts. It was supposed to be submitted to the Capitol in Washington. Seven of the candidates were running for the vacant seat in Florida’s 20th Congressional District in the southeast. The rest were candidates for next year’s elections.
Assignment editors — Rev. Don Tolliver, community leaders and members of the anti-corruption organization RepresentUS are hosting Gerry’s Partisan Pizza Truck, part of a two-week food truck tour of key states where lawmakers are in charge of the redistricting process, 1:15 p.m., Florida Capitol Complex Courtyard.
— CORONA NATION —
“Delta surge of COVID-19 recedes, leaving winter challenge ahead” via Jon Kamp and Brianna Abbott of The Wall Street Journal — The delta wave of the COVID-19 pandemic is past its peak, with new cases, hospitalizations and deaths declining in most states. The approaching holidays and winter months will test whether the U.S. can sustain that momentum. New COVID-19 case numbers in the U.S. are close to levels recorded near this time last year, with a seven-day average of about 72,000 a day. But the trajectory is the opposite. Last fall, cases were rising while hospitalizations and deaths, trailing indicators, were starting to follow. Now all those metrics are improving significantly at the national level. The seven-day new case average was down about 16% from the week prior.
“How does a pandemic start winding down? You’re looking at it.” via Joel Achenbach and Yasmeen Abutaleb of The Washington Post — The pandemic isn’t over. But new cases nationally have dropped below 75,000 a day, less than half the number in August. The pandemic appears to be winding down in the United States in a thousand subtle ways, but without any singular milestone or a cymbal-crashing announcement of freedom from the virus. Infectious-disease experts and Biden administration officials are not about to make any definitive predictions about when the pandemic might end. With most people vaccinated and infection rates dropping, the United States has entered a new phase of the pandemic in which people are adapting to the persistent presence of an endemic but usually nonlethal pathogen.
“CDC says unvaccinated foreign travelers under 18 don’t need to quarantine on arrival” via Rachel Pannett of The Washington Post — Foreign-national children who have not been vaccinated against the coronavirus will not need to self-quarantine for seven days upon arrival in the United States. The CDC issued an amended order clarifying its position Saturday after some international travelers raised concerns about their children needing to self-quarantine for that long under new rules that will apply once a travel ban on visitors from 33 countries is lifted on Nov. 8. The United States is lifting travel restrictions that have meant most foreign nationals who have been in the United Kingdom, several European Union countries, Brazil or China in the previous 14 days are not permitted to enter the United States.
“Vaccination offers more protection against COVID-19 than prior infection, a CDC study suggests.” via Benjamin Mueller of The New York Times — A new study by the CDC suggests that vaccination provides stronger and more reliable protection against the coronavirus than a past infection does. Unvaccinated people who had previously recovered from a coronavirus infection were five times as likely to get COVID-19 as people who had received vaccine shots. The study looked at how many hospitalized patients were indeed infected with the coronavirus. The odds of testing positive for the virus were considerably higher among unvaccinated, previously infected patients than among vaccinated people.
— CORONA ECONOMICS —
“Companies mull ending government contracts over vaccine mandate” via Hailey Fuchs and Natasha Korecki of POLITICO — Objections among certain vendors over Biden’s vaccine mandate for federal contractors are reaching an inflection point. As the deadline for workforce vaccination approaches, some trucking companies are mulling whether to end their work with the federal government altogether. In an interview, the American Trucking Associations’ Executive Vice President for Advocacy Bill Sullivan said some companies might simply decide that the mandate’s cost is not worth the government’s checks. He noted that if companies drop their contracts, it may be harder to get certain foods to troops, transport fuel for military vehicles, or even deploy the National Guard. Sullivan’s remarks are among the sharpest warnings yet from the business community about the residual impacts of the vaccine mandate.
“Supermarkets play supply-chain ‘whack-a-mole’ to keep products on shelves” via Jaewon Kang of The Wall Street Journal — Supermarket chains are revamping their operations to navigate persistent product shortages, expanding storage space and curbing discounts to make sure they don’t run out. Companies are planning for shortages of popular brands of food and staples to continue for months and managers are trying to keep up as different products run short from week to week. Food retailers are buying extra inventory whenever they can, ordering items months earlier than usual. Some retailers are withdrawing discounts to reduce demand. Consumers typically find it easier to substitute products or switch brands when there isn’t a huge promotion going on.
— MORE CORONA —
“More than 4,996,000 people have died from the coronavirus worldwide” via Chris Alcantara, Youjin Shin, Leslie Shapiro, Adam Taylor and Armand Emamdjomeh of The Washington Post — The coronavirus is on the cusp of having killed at least 5 million people since it first emerged in Wuhan, China, in late 2019. Nearly a quarter-billion cases of the coronavirus have been reported. Despite the rollout of vaccines, global health experts warn that the pandemic is set to continue. Vaccines have blunted the worst impact of the pandemic in many countries, though their distribution has been marked by inequities that mean they have not stopped the virus’s spread.
“U.S. spies say COVID-19’s origins will remain unclear without China’s help” via Josh Wingrove of Bloomberg — COVID-19 was probably not a biological weapon, and most U.S. analysts believe it wasn’t genetically engineered at all, but a final conclusion on the virus’s origins is impossible without cooperation from China, a declassified U.S. report says. The Office of the Director of National Intelligence released its long-awaited public findings on the virus’s origins on Friday, a declassified version of the secret report submitted to Biden this summer. The intelligence community remains divided on where the outbreak began but believes two causes are plausible, that it spread through animals to humans or that it sprang from an incident at a lab in Wuhan.
“‘Bereft’: How Operation Warp Speed’s decisions left the world waiting for a vaccine” via Erin Banco, Adam Cancryn, Sarah Owermohle of POLITICO — In a series of meetings in the fall of 2020, Trump administration officials held a meeting on one of its vaccine suppliers. Maryland-based Novavax was reporting data that indicated the company was struggling to find a way to manufacture a high-quality shot consistently. And it did not yet have tests that could determine the levels of purity within each tranche. Novavax has pledged 1.35 billion doses to the world, along with the 100 million it promised the U.S. Yet in the year since then, it’s failed to successfully deliver a single dose, leaving the world’s neediest countries in limbo as it tries to convince regulators it can consistently produce a high-quality shot.
“America’s poor diet made COVID-19 much worse. Washington isn’t paying attention.” via Helena Bottemiller Evich of POLITICO — In Washington, there has been no wake-up call about the link between diet-related diseases and the pandemic. There is no national strategy. There is no systems-wide approach, even as researchers increasingly recognize that obesity is a disease driven not by lack of willpower, but a modern society and food system almost perfectly designed to encourage the overeating of empty calories. Researchers have estimated that nearly two-thirds of COVID-19 hospitalizations in the U.S. were related to obesity, diabetes, hypertension and heart failure. Food and beverage companies have been closely following whether marketing crackdowns, warning labels, or other more aggressive measures could spread. So far, there isn’t much on the agenda in the U.S.
— PRESIDENTIAL —
“Biden’s job rating sinks to 42% in NBC News poll a year from midterms” via Mark Murray of NBC News — A majority of Americans now disapprove of Biden‘s job performance, while half give him low marks for competence and uniting the country. What’s more, the survey finds that 7 in 10 adults, including almost half of Democrats, believe the nation is headed in the wrong direction, as well as nearly 60% who view Biden’s stewardship of the economy negatively just nine months into his presidency. “Democrats face a country whose opinion of President Biden has turned sharply to the negative since April,” said Democratic pollster Jeff Horwitt of Hart Research Associates. 42% of adults say they approve of Biden’s overall job as President, a decline of 7 points since August.
“How ‘Let’s Go Brandon’ became code for insulting Biden” via Colleen Long of The Associated Press — When Republican Rep. Bill Posey of Florida ended an Oct. 21 House floor speech with a fist pump and the phrase “Let’s go, Brandon!” it may have seemed cryptic and weird to many who were listening. The line has become conservative code for something far more vulgar: “F — Joe Biden.” It’s all the rage among Republicans wanting to prove their conservative credentials, a not-so-secret handshake that signals they’re in sync with the Party’s base. It started at an Oct. 2 NASCAR race at the Talladega Superspeedway in Alabama. The crowd was chanting something at first difficult to make out. The reporter suggested they were chanting “Let’s go, Brandon” to cheer the driver. But it became increasingly clear they were saying: “F — Joe Biden.”
“Southwest Airlines to investigate pilot’s purported anti-Biden chant” via Adelia Suliman of The Washington Post — Southwest Airlines is conducting an internal investigation after one of its pilots reportedly said a phrase used in right-wing circles as a stand-in for swearing at Biden over the plane’s public address system, apologizing to customers and insisting it does not condone employees sharing personal political opinions while on the job. The airline faced turbulence on social media over the weekend after an Associated Press journalist was on a flight from Houston to Albuquerque on Friday when she heard the pilot use the phrase “let’s go, Brandon,” writing that it brought on “audible gasps from some passengers.”
— D.C. MATTERS —
“Supreme Court embarks on most dramatic reckoning for abortion rights in decades” via Robert Barnes of The Washington Post — The Supreme Court will face a bramble of unsettled legal questions when it reviews Texas’s most-restrictive-in-the-nation abortion law Monday, but the inquiry itself is evidence of a changed court whose view of abortion as a constitutional right is in doubt. The court on Monday will hear two cases, one brought by abortion providers and the other by the Biden administration, to determine what role federal courts have in reviewing the law. Anti-abortion activists feel this is their chance to overturn the Roe vs. Wade decision.
“Florida could set record for Affordable Care Act insurance enrollment in 2022” via Christopher O’Donnell of the Tampa Bay Times — More Americans than ever will be eligible for marketplace insurance plans through subsidies established in the American Rescue Plan. That has the Biden administration predicting that four out of five consumers will be able to find health care coverage for $10 or less per month. Florida led the nation with a record-high 2.1 million residents enrolled in federal health care marketplace plans in 2021. The increase in funding will make it easier to reach and enroll people from the state’s rural areas and minority communities, said Anne Swerlick, senior policy analyst and attorney at the Florida Policy Institute, a nonpartisan nonprofit based in Tallahassee.
“Rick Scott says to solve port crisis, treat it like post-hurricane fuel shortages” via A.G. Gancarski of Florida Politics — “If the Secretary of Transportation wanted to solve the port issue, you’d fly out to the port. You’d sit down with everybody and find out what the problem is. And then you’d go solve it. Typically, the problem is solved by some government regulation or some government red tape,” Scott said, pivoting to problems replenishing gas stations after hurricane evacuations deplete fuel stock. “When I had hurricanes in Florida, I had to make sure we didn’t run out of fuel. I was constantly on the phone with everybody involved in delivering fuel. And even though we were selling some nine times the normal amount of fuel, we didn’t run out.”
“Ander Crenshaw reaches settlement over ‘zombie campaign,’ must pay fine to FEC” via Jacob Ogles of Florida Politics — Crenshaw has reached an agreement with the Federal Elections Commission to close a so-called “zombie campaign.” Crenshaw’s longtime PAC must pay a penalty of $3,950, and Crenshaw himself must pay more than $13,000 to the U.S. Treasury. The costs are related to the potential use of campaign dollars for personal use. Crenshaw announced in 2016 he would not seek another term in Congress. Rather than close down his longtime FEC account, it was converted to a multicandidate PAC, Ander PAC. But the complaint filed in 2019 suggested that PAC’s spending included many expenses that didn’t involve politics at all. The use of defunct PACs for personal use has been referred to by critics as spending by zombie campaigns.
— CRISIS —
Must-read — “Red flags” via Hannah Allam, Devlin Barrett, Aaron C. Davis, Josh Dawsey, Amy Gardner, Shane Harris, et al. of The Washington Post — While the public may have been surprised by what happened on Jan. 6, the makings of the insurrection had been spotted at every level, from one side of the country to the other. The red flags were everywhere. Trump supporters were discussing online how to sneak guns into Washington to “overrun” police and arrest members of Congress in January. Those planning violence believed they had “orders from the President,” used code words such as “pickax” to describe guns, and posted the times and locations of four spots around the country for caravans to meet the day before the joint session. The FBI passed the information to law enforcement agencies in D.C. but did not pursue the matter.
To watch just one of the many red flags, click on the image below (via The Washington Post):
Video Player
“During Jan. 6 riot, Trump attorney told Mike Pence team the Vice President’s inaction caused attack on Capitol” via Josh Dawsey, Jacqueline Alemany, Jon Swaine and Emma Brown of The Washington Post — As Vice President Pence hid from a marauding mob during the Jan. 6 invasion of the Capitol, an attorney for Trump emailed a top Pence aide to say that Pence had caused the violence by refusing to block certification of Trump’s election loss. The attorney, John Eastman, also continued to press for Pence to act even after Trump’s supporters had trampled through the Capitol. Greg Jacob, Pence’s chief counsel, wrote that by sending the email at that moment, Eastman “displayed a shocking lack of awareness of how those practical implications were playing out in real time.”
“Misinformation online is bad in English. But it’s far worse in Spanish.” via Stephanie Valencia of The Washington Post — Social media platforms are allowing far more misinformation to spread in other languages than they are in English. But some of the scariest misinformation online is spreading right here in the United States in Spanish. Latino communities maintain strong connections across Latin America; the result is an entire continent of Spanish-language misinformation largely unchecked by the platforms. Latinos are more susceptible to misinformation simply because of how much time we are spending online. Spanish-language misinformation narratives often start on Facebook or YouTube, but then conversations or viral content move to closed WhatsApp groups where there’s less of a chance for fact-checkers to intervene.
— EPILOGUE: TRUMP —
“Trump calls out Biden administration, predicts Virginia gubernatorial race” via Kelsey Koberg of Fox News — Trump called out the Biden administration and Democratic former Virginia Gov. McAuliffe Saturday on “Justice with Judge Jeanine,” saying the Biden administration is an “embarrassment.” “I think you have to say an F and not an F+. It would be an F,” Trump said when grading the Biden administration. Trump also said he had hoped that the Biden administration would succeed because he loves the country “more than anything.” Trump said McAuliffe’s comment that parents should not be involved in their students’ education was a “tremendous mistake,” and that Republican candidate Glenn Youngkin will “do very well” in Tuesday’s election.
“Trump is right: Former Presidents can assert executive privilege” via Saikrishna Prakash for The Washington Post — President Biden and former President Trump are locked in another fierce battle, this one not involving electoral votes but rather whether a President may invoke and insist upon “executive privilege” even after he has left office, in defiance of his successor. The former President has now sued the archivist to prevent the release of his Presidential papers. At the least, Trump has sufficiently good legal arguments to keep the issue in the courts for months, if not years, which would achieve the intended effect of bringing the investigation to a crawl. The idea that Presidents may keep some governmental information secret dates back to George Washington‘s administration.
— LOCAL NOTES —
“Did drilling next door damage Surfside tower? Newly surfaced vibration data offer clues” via Sarah Blaskey, Ben Conarck, and Aaron Liebowitz of the Miami Herald — In the spring of 2016, residents of Champlain Towers South flooded complaint hotlines to fume about construction activity at the neighboring Eighty-Seven Park project that had jostled their walls, closed their pool and coated their balconies in dust. A report obtained by the Miami Herald showed that the vibrations exceeded the developers’ own target limits along Champlain South’s southern wall, including the span where the pool deck would cave into the garage below five years later. Most of the readings along the wall came in over that limit but under levels known to do significant damage.
“Expanding development near Biscayne Bay blocks options for Everglades, agency says” via Douglas Hanks of the Miami Herald — Building an industrial park outside Miami-Dade’s Urban Development Boundary in South Dade could hinder Florida’s main Everglades restoration project since the proposed construction site is part of several potential plans for the restoration effort, the state’s environmental agency said Friday. Federal planners “recently identified several … alternative plans featuring project elements on this parcel designed to increase the quantity, quality and distribution of freshwater flows to Southern Biscayne Bay,” Lindsey Weaver, an administrator with Florida’s Department of Environmental Protection, wrote in the Oct. 29 letter to Miami-Dade’s planning office.
“Miami travelers frustrated amid American Airlines flight cancellations, delays” via Samantha J. Gross of the Miami Herald — More than 100 flights to and from Miami International Airport were canceled or delayed Sunday amid a wave of hundreds of Halloween weekend cancellations by American Airlines. On Sunday afternoon, 790, or 29%, of American’s operations were canceled, with 213 delays. Sixty-nine flights from Fort Lauderdale were either delayed or canceled as well. In a statement published Saturday, the company wrote that severe winds in Dallas, the airlines’ largest hub, reduced capacity by more than half, and staffing is short as employees end up out of their normal flight schedule. Proactively canceling flights creates “scheduling certainty for crews.”
“‘Symbol of resilience’: NAS Pensacola Building 633 reopens after 2019 terrorist attack” via Colin Warren-Hicks of the Pensacola News Journal — Building 633 at Naval Air Station Pensacola officially reopened Friday, almost two years after a terrorist attack inside its halls Dec. 6, 2019, forever changed the community. Admirals, high-ranking military officers and local dignitaries attended the reopening ceremony, which was intended to honor the three young sailors who lost their lives and the eight others injured in the attack. The Navy refurbished the building during its closure. The restored building now features a bronze plaque with the names and faces of the three sailors that can be seen as soon as one enters the first-floor quarterdeck.
“30A homeowner continues to fly ‘Trump Won’ banner, plans to hang ‘Let’s go, Brandon’ sign” via Jim Thompson of the Northwest Florida Daily News — The case of the “Trump Won” banner hanging down three stories of a Walton County Road 30A home in Seagrove Beach, in apparent ongoing support for Trump, will be back in front of Walton County’s code compliance magistrate on Nov. 17. And if a second politically-themed banner that Georgia businessman Marvin Peavy says he plans to hang from his house on Saturday attracts a complaint, that case will be making its separate way through the county’s code adjudication process. Code Compliance Magistrate Hayward Dykes Jr. found Peavy in violation of a section of the county’s land development code regarding signage along 30A under its local designation as a scenic corridor.
“Clara White controversy deepens, and draws attention of city inspector general” via Nate Monroe of The Florida Times-Union — When five of the Clara White Mission’s six executive board members abruptly resigned from the organization in August, accusing the nonprofit’s CEO of poor leadership, they left behind a key document that provides far more detail than has been previously reported about the numerous and growing concerns that ultimately prompted the board’s leaders to walk away from one of the city’s most iconic nonprofits. The document, attached to the letter of resignation submitted by the former board President, Michelle Paul, lists several concerns and allegations against Clara White’s longtime leader, Jacksonville City Council member Ju’Coby Pittman, ranging from outright obstruction to possibly misappropriating Clara White’s resources.
“Deltona faces lawsuits for racial discrimination, sexual harassment, incest innuendo” via Gabrielle Russon of Florida Politics — Deltona’s former interim City Manager Marc-Antonie Cooper, who is Black, is claiming discrimination and questioning the validity of his replacement John Peters III who won the permanent City Manager job with a 4-to-3 vote last year. “Here, an inadequate and unlawful charade of a vote was commenced to remove Dr. Cooper and terminate his position, and replace him with a White male, with no qualifications for the position.” Also suing Deltona is former human resources director Richard Adams who claimed he was fired in retaliation after he told Peters he was investigating him for sexual harassment and discrimination: “Specifically, Peters made comments toward the employee suggesting that he is a product of incest.”
“Mom banned as Orange elementary school volunteer after anonymous letter reveals OnlyFans page” via Cristóbal Reyes of the Orlando Sentinel — As a volunteer at Sand Lake Elementary where her two children attend school, Victoria Triece has spent hours helping organize class parties and assist in lab assignments in her older son’s classroom, something she said she wanted to do ever since she became a mom. But the 30-year-old is no longer part of Orange County Public Schools’ ADDition volunteer program as of Oct. 13, after she was kicked off campus when an anonymous parent told higher-ups they found her page on OnlyFans. Triece was told she would no longer be allowed to volunteer at the school on Oct. 13, though lawyers Mark NeJame and John Zielinski said she never received a formal letter of that decision.
“Gables Police Chief says gruesome Halloween display meant to be ‘educational’” via Samantha J. Gross of the Miami Herald — The Coral Gables Police Department made an effort to have a bit of Halloween fun this year, but the gory attempt was met with more gasps than giggles. The department set up a fake “crime scene” on Miracle Mile, which featured yellow tape and what looks like a body covered in a tarp. The scene also prominently displayed a Coral Gables police SUV, with a limbless mannequin in a T-shirt and face gaiter tucked under the front right tire. The scene was set up for the city’s annual “Halloween on the Mile” event Saturday. It was taken down when the event ended at 8 p.m., according to a city spokeswoman. In a statement, Coral Gables Police Chief Edward Hudak Jr. said the scene meant to educate, not disturb.
“Florida activist says cop warned her not to wear condo costume to Halloween party” via Susannah Bryan of the Hastings Tribune — Imagine getting a spooky call from a cop warning you not to wear a boxy condo costume to a Halloween party. Hollywood mom Cat Uden says it happened to her. Uden has emerged in the past few months as an outspoken critic of a developer’s plan to build a 30-story condo on taxpayer-owned beachfront land south of Hollywood Boulevard. And she still plans to wear her homemade condo costume to the South Florida city’s Hollyweird Halloween downtown block party Saturday night. Police spokeswoman Deanna Bettineschi said by email that Uden needs a permit to hold a “planned protest march.”
— TOP OPINION —
What Peter Schorsch keeps reading — “Why never Trumpers should bet on DeSantis now” via Conor Friedersdorf of The Atlantic — In 2024, DeSantis may not be the President that Never Trumpers would choose. He’s too Trumpy for their taste. But their options are limited, and if beating Trump is their highest priority, as I think it should be, DeSantis may be their best bet. So far, DeSantis has threaded that dispiriting needle more deftly than most other Republican contenders. I strongly disagree with DeSantis on some issues and have all the policy objections you’d expect from a classical liberal. Yet I would be relieved to grant him four years in the White House if, in return, I could be assured that no Trump would ever again be President.
— OPINIONS —
“21,000 deaths later, do-nothing DeSantis takes a COVID-19 victory lap” via the Orlando Sentinel editorial board — Florida’s summer of suffering was also a summer of silence for DeSantis. The Governor had nearly nothing to say about his state’s lengthy run as No. 1 in the nation in COVID-19 cases, No. 1 in hospitalizations and No. 1 in deaths. Instead, the Governor held almost daily news conferences intended to burnish his Presidential bona fides among the MAGA crowd, and boost his Presidential ambitions. Through it all, the Governor pointedly ignored the elephant in the room: That Florida was the epicenter for a deadly new COVID-19 outbreak caused by the delta variant.
“Are parents who refuse to vaccinate kids for COVID-19 fueling another unhealthy trend in Florida?” via the Miami Herald editorial board — While the country is divided over COVID-19 vaccines, another ominous problem is going largely unnoticed: Routine immunizations for children, required under state law for school attendance, have fallen during the pandemic. That means fewer children immunized for diseases such as measles, polio and mumps, which have been controlled or eradicated because of vaccine mandates. Miami-Dade County has always struggled to get kids vaccinated because of its transient population and families from around the world who aren’t familiar with Florida’s vaccination schedule.
“Floridians are paying for Marco Rubio and DeSantis’ dangerous immigration policies” via Jude Derisme of the Miami Herald — Our state, in particular our state’s economy, relies on Haitian immigrants, who are overwhelmingly represented in critical industries including health care and tourism. Haitians form the bedrock of Florida’s immigrant community. That’s why it’s so disheartening to see so-called leaders like Rubio and DeSantis abandon us at such a pivotal moment. In September, DeSantis issued an executive order encouraging police officers to pull over any driver they suspect is transporting migrants into the state. It’s shameful that Haitians are subjected to policies DeSantis and his fellow Republicans would never dream of inflicting on other groups of immigrants. Rubio has followed the Governor’s lead, proving once again that he is too weak to stand up to his Party when its leaders attack immigrants.
— ON TODAY’S SUNRISE —
Gov. DeSantis says the Special Session beginning Nov. 15, will among other things, fortify the parent’s bill of rights.
Also, on today’s Sunrise:
— Union groups are concerned that calls to pull out of OSHA during Special Session risk the health and safety of millions.
— And one journalist digs and finds more than one-third of congressional candidates across Florida have failed to file mandatory financial disclosure reports.
— Today’s Sunrise Interview is with Theresa King, President of Florida Building and Construction Trade Council, and Rich Templin, director of politics and public policy with the Florida AFL-CIO — they are both concerned about calls from Republican legislative leaders for the state to drop out of the nation’s workplace safety agency.
— We will also hear from Fresh Take Florida reporter Corbin Bolies, whose reporting uncovered dozens of Florida’s congressional candidates failing to turn in mandatory financial reports.
To listen, click on the image below:
— ALOE —
“5 ideas for what to do with all that leftover Halloween candy” via Genevieve Shaw Brown of Good Morning America — Halloween candy buyback: The Halloween Candy Buy Back website is a great tool to find out where your kids can take their extra loot. Support the troops: There are a few options for donating your candy to troops overseas. One is called Soldier’s Angels. Plug in your ZIP code on their website and find a donation location near you. Switch Witch: Parents can buy the Switch Witch toy and book to gear up for the “switch” before Halloween, or they can simply swap out the candy for healthier grist or treat a la the tooth fairy. Trade it in for Reese’s peanut butter cups: If you’re Reese’s lover and will be in New York City on Wednesday, you’re in luck. There’s an actual Reese’s vending machine that will allow you to trade the candy you don’t want for Reese’s peanut butter cup.
“Billions of pounds of pumpkin will go to the landfill after Halloween” via Perry Miller of inhabitat.com — More than 1.3 billion pounds of pumpkins will be thrown out in the U.S., adding tons of waste to landfills. When we throw those pumpkins out, they decompose and release methane — a harmful greenhouse gas contributing to climate change. Is our pumpkin waste ruining the environment? It’s certainly an issue, but the U.S. Department of Energy is working on the problem by teaming up with industry experts to develop integrated biorefineries, which are facilities that can efficiently convert plant and waste material into affordable biofuels. As of right now, none of the refineries are in full operation. In the meantime, keep enjoying your pumpkins. Carve them, decorate them and — after October 31 — eat or compost them to reduce the food waste.
— HAPPY BIRTHDAY —
Happy birthday belatedly to ace PR pro Allison Aubuchon, Kate DeLoach of The Southern Group, Andrew Fay, former U.S. Rep. David Jolly, Michael Kruse of POLITICO, David Tuthill, Tyler Winik, and Ivey Rooney Yarger. Celebrating today are Danny Martell, Holly Moore, and Max Solomon.
___
Sunburn is authored and assembled by Peter Schorsch, Phil Ammann, Renzo Downey and Drew Wilson.
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13.) AXIOS
Axios AM
Good Monday morning. Smart Brevity™ count: 1,183 words … 4½ minutes. Edited by Zachary Basu.
📱Join Axios’ Alex Golden tomorrow at 1:30 p.m. ET/12:30 p.m. CT for a Smart Take virtual event on job growth in Northwest Arkansas. Register here.
With massive stakes for both parties in tomorrow’s Virginia governor’s race, the one place to watch — both to forecast the result and understand the outcome — is Loudoun County, Axios D.C’s Cuneyt Dil writes.
- Why it matters: Loudoun (the second “u” is silent), about 40 miles outside D.C., reflects national and state demographic trends. And it’s ground zero for cultural battles that have given Republican Glenn Youngkin last-mile momentum against Democrat Terry McAuliffe.
Zoom out: Democratic candidates in Virginia long relied on running up the vote in cities and fast-growing suburbs to win statewide.
- Loudoun County was once a sleepy Washington exurb. Then its population more than doubled in 20 years along a booming tech corridor, a diversifying area key to Democratic success in the Old Dominion.
What’s happening: Loudoun captured the national spotlight over controversies in its public school system, with Fox News showing heated-school board fights over masks and instruction on race.
- Republicans believe that has helped Youngkin — once the underdog and now neck and neck with McAuliffe, a former Virginia governor — chip away at the blue wall.
- Even if Youngkin wins the race, he’ll probably lose Loudoun. But insiders are watching how much he can reverse the big gains Dems have made in the county in the past three major elections.
As Axios managing editor Margaret Talev puts it: All roads in this race lead to Loudoun.
- It’s the wealthiest county in the U.S. (median income: $142,000).
- It has been Virginia’s fastest growing county for the past decade.
- Many of these people are parents with children in the public schools who are being drawn into culture wars not just on COVID precautions, but gender identity and how lessons involving race are taught.
- Loudoun’s population is two-thirds white, 20% Asian-American and 8% African-American.
Between the lines: Democrats say Youngkin is pouring kerosene on divisive culture war issues. The Republican has declared he’d ban teaching of critical race theory, and seized on a sexual assault case that allegedly occurred in a Loudoun high school bathroom.
- It’s unclear how much that tumult will matter. But education suddenly shot up to third, after the economy and COVID, as a top campaign issue in a Washington Post-Schar School poll.
Congressman Don Beyer, a Democrat from Alexandria, told Axios about the conservative uproar over how race is taught: “I think the people that it’s catching on with were never going to be our voters to begin with.”
The Facebook Papers, based on whistleblower documents, were a public relations nightmare for Facebook. But so far, advertisers, users and investors seem unfazed, Axios’ Sara Fischer and Neal Rothschild report.
- Based on online metrics, the controversy right now seems to be mainly of interest to the media and lawmakers. Facebook stories were notably sparse last week on the “most read” lists of major news sites.
Interest in Facebook — measured by social media interactions per published article about the company — has declined over the course of the year, according to exclusive data from NewsWhip.
- The Facebook Papers haven’t produced big spikes, even temporary ones, in interest about the company. The biggest jumps in engagement on stories about Facebook came from stories about Donald Trump.
Google Trends data show a similar decline in Google searches for Facebook over the past year.
- The Wall Street Journal’s most-engaged story from its “Facebook Files” investigation (“Facebook Knows Instagram Is Toxic for Teen Girls, Company Documents Show”) ranked 48th in social media interactions among all Journal stories since March, according to NewsWhip.
As President Biden lands in Scotland today for the global climate summit, the stakes are sky-high and expectations for real action are low.
- U.K. Prime Minister Boris Johnson says the world has run the clock down to “one minute to midnight.”
- “12 days to save the world,” blares the cover of The Scotsman.
- The cover of The Observer, the Sunday companion to The Guardian: “We have just two weeks to avert disaster.”
Against that apocalyptic backdrop, The Washington Post points out that scientists are seeing signs of hope in the changing politics of climate:
Green parties, once written off as fringe activists, are winning over larger shares of the electorate. Green ideas have also gone mainstream, with candidates from across the political spectrum portraying themselves as friends of the climate.
Go deeper — New overnight: White House fact sheet on U.S. climate commitments … Press call previewing the summit, with White House climate envoy John Kerry and national climate adviser Gina McCarthy.
A person in a vaccine costume battles an “alien” ahead of New York City’s 48th annual Halloween parade in Greenwich Village yesterday.
Mark Zuckerberg avatars were part of his metaverse film last week. Photo: Facebook via Reuters
The cavalcade of wonders in Mark Zuckerberg’s metaverse omits one crucial screenshot: what your body looks like while your mind has gone meta, Axios managing editor Scott Rosenberg writes.
- Why it matters: The real you is just sitting in a chair wearing goggles. If you fear screen time atrophies your flesh, or find Zoom drains your energy, wait till you experience metaverse overload.
The video mock-ups of the metaverse Zuckerberg unveiled last week showed what remote-presence wizardry might look like from within the 3D dimension. But they left out the prosaic reality of most current VR.
- Today’s headsets mostly block out the “real world” — and sometimes induce wooziness, headaches and even nausea.
The big picture: Facebook’s metaverse project aims to bring productivity to the remote workplace and fun to after-hours online frolics by moving more of our lives to a 3D game world.
- The vision is to liberate our digital existence from the confines of the screen, restore our freedom of movement on a more “embodied” internet, and enable deeper interpersonal connections in a social environment where we can see and interact with other people.
- “When you’re in a meeting in the metaverse,” Zuckerberg said, “it’ll feel like you’re right in the room together, making eye contact, having a shared sense of space and not just looking at a grid of faces on a screen.”
What’s next: Mixed reality and augmented reality tech and techniques promise to make 3D work and play a more mobile physical experience.
- There are fledgling efforts in this direction — like some fitness apps, the “Beat Saber” game Zuckerberg praised in his talk, and experimental pass-through video features, mixing real and digital fields of vision, that Oculus introduced last summer.
Go deeper: NBC’s 21-page poll.
Via Twitter
The publisher of the Oxford English Dictionary says 2021’s word of the year is “vax”:
- A relatively rare word until this year, it now claims numerous derivatives “from vax sites and vax cards to getting vaxxed and being fully vaxxed.”
The bottom line: “[N]o word better captures the atmosphere of the past year than vax.”
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14.) THE WASHINGTON FREE BEACON
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15.) THE WASHINGTON POST MORNING HEADLINES
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16.) THE WASHINGTON TIMES
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17.) THE WASHINGTON EXAMINER
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20.) CHICAGO TRIBUNE
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21.) CHICAGO SUNTIMES
CPS theater teacher suspended, play canceled after student complaints
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22.) THE HILL MORNING REPORT
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23.) THE HILL 12:30 REPORT
24.) ROLL CALL
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Morning Headlines
Super PACs and other outside organizations already have begun to invest heavily to influence the outcome of the 2022 elections, which will determine control of the House and Senate for the second half of President Joe Biden’s first term, putting next year’s midterms on pace to shatter previous records. Read more…
Afghan forces wilted in August in the face of a Taliban offensive that resulted in the fall of Afghanistan’s government. Since then, Americans have wondered how military units supported by so much U.S. training and equipment could have been toppled so easily. An Oct. 6 IG report may provide one clue. Read more…
Watch: The Astros, hot mics and Sasse getting sassy — Congressional Hits and Misses
In this week’s edition of Congressional Hits and Misses, Ted Cruz and Sheila Jackson Lee cheered on the Astros with no mention of the cheating scandal, Brian Mast called out a spicy hot mic, Ben Sasse gave Cory Booker the business and Kyrsten Sinema introduced the Senate to Casual Tuesday. Watch here…
Click here to subscribe to Fintech Beat for the latest market and regulatory developmentsin finance and financial technology.
FDA authorizes COVID-19 vaccines for younger kids
The Food and Drug Administration took action Friday to allow school-age children to qualify for COVID-19 vaccines as soon as next week. The FDA authorized a two-dose series of the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine, but with just one-third of the active ingredient, for children 5 to 11 years old. Read more…
Multiple members face primaries under new Illinois map
Democrats in the Illinois legislature have finalized a new House map that would pair up three sets of incumbents in a plan designed to give their party an additional seat in the chamber even as the state’s delegation shrinks. Read more…
Photos of the week ending Oct. 29, 2021
A House vote on the bipartisan infrastructure bill was postponed yet again this week, but there was still plenty to keep CQ Roll Call’s photojournalists busy. A dog parade, a softball game and a presidential visit were just some of the highlights. Read more…
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25.) POLITICO PLAYBOOK
POLITICO Playbook: It’s zero hour for Virginia and Build Back Better
DRIVING THE DAY
THE FINAL HURDLES — Could prescription drug pricing reform make it into the reconciliation bill after all? Senate and House Democrats and the White House came close to reaching a deal on the issue Sunday, report Burgess Everett, Alice Miranda Ollstein and Heather Caygle. The plan in the works would allow some Medicare negotiations with pharmaceutical companies — but if it comes together, it would still be much narrower than many Democrats initially intended.
— As a result, House votes on the two big bills will likely get pushed past Tuesday. But the party’s getting closer, per CNN’s Manu Raju: “Progressives meanwhile signaled on a private call this afternoon they are expected to be on board behind both bills.”
— The House Rules Committee is delaying a planned meeting today to give negotiations more time, per Bloomberg’s Jennifer Epstein and Justin Sink.
AND THE FINAL SPRINT — Greetings from Loudoun County, Va., where we spent Sunday evening jogging along with an Allbirds-clad TERRY MCAULIFFE as he campaigned in Leesburg’s annual Halloween parade.
A parade route is to the Macker what snow is to a polar bear: his natural environment.
McAuliffe spent so much time taking selfies and filling kids’ bags with candy that at least a football field of space opened up between his team and the floats in front of them.
Lots of corny jokes were told. “Let’s get my wife jealous!” he said before snapping a picture with his arm around someone’s grandmother.
“Ahhhhhh!” he fake recoiled every time he encountered someone in a scary costume.
He was adept at identifying anti-McAuliffe voters. “Who is this redhead’s mom?” he asked about a wee tike to whom he gave a fistful of candy. When the child’s mother was identified, it activated his GLENN YOUNGKIN-supporter radar. She looked away and McAuliffe jogged on by. Asked by a reporter if she was not a big McAuliffe fan, the woman buried her face in her hands and shook her head. She was a member of NoVa’s hottest swing vote: parents for Youngkin.
Around the time McAuliffe reached the end of the King Street parade route, Youngkin, whose supporters had a minimal presence in the parade, responded by tweeting, “Scary Terry has more tricks up his sleeve,” adding that if elected McAuliffe would mean repealing Virginia’s “right to work” law, “crippling the economy, shrinking workers’ paychecks, & killing jobs.” (McAuliffe has given a fuzzy answer on right to work, saying he’d sign a repeal but that it would never get through the state legislature.)
Things took a darker turn after the candy-dispensing festivities were over.
As we walked with a McAuliffe staffer to the candidate’s bus, parked in a nearby parking lot, a panicked young aide approached. “We need a police officer!” she said.
When we arrived, McAuliffe was inside the bus doing an interview. His brother JOE was milling about outside with campaign staffers and a couple of reporters. The cops were eyeing a middle-aged white guy in camo pants who had been screaming, apparently unintelligibly, about Loudoun County schools. (He may have been intoxicated.) Maybe it was nothing. But to get a sense of how on edge everyone is in American politics a few days before the most important election of 2021, there was concerned talk about whether he might be armed.
Staffers generously offered a pair of reporters the chance to flee into a campaign vehicle if something unusual happened.
In the end it was nothing. The heckler got in his F-150 pickup truck, and two police officers worked to calm him down. McAuliffe’s bus departed without incident. But we have rarely been out on the trail when there was such a heightened sense of alarm about the possibility of an interaction between a campaign and an opponent’s supporter escalating to something more sinister.
McAuliffe and Youngkin have similar schedules today: Both will be in Roanoke in the morning and Richmond in the afternoon (Youngkin will also make a stop in Virginia Beach). Tonight, McAuliffe will be in Fairfax County, while Youngkin will finish up here in Loudoun County, a place that’s become shorthand for the unusual mix of issues and buzzwords — parental control of education, the rights of trans Virginians, critical race theory — that have defined this race.
“No one knows,” said one of McAuliffe’s advisers when asked for a prediction about Tuesday. “It’s a toss-up.”
We’ll be with both candidates today and will report back.
The final polls: FiveThirtyEight’s poll tracker has Youngkin surging into a slight lead, now up by an average of 0.6 points.
Two more reads:
- Zach Montellaro and Brittany Gibson’s dispatch from the trail Sunday.
- Elena Schneider and Maya King report that “more than a dozen top Democrats involved in the Virginia campaign — from strategists on the ground to House Majority Whip JAMES CLYBURN (D-S.C.) — expressed concern that Black support for McAuliffe is weaker and less enthusiastic” than it should be.
Good Monday morning. Thanks for reading Playbook. Drop us a line: Rachael Bade, Eugene Daniels, Ryan Lizza, Tara Palmeri.
PULITZER BAIT — A massive three-part WaPo investigation into the Jan. 6 insurrection is worth a chunk of your time today. The report documents previously undisclosed warnings of political violence that law enforcement failed to heed; DONALD TRUMP’s inaction during the putsch; and the lingering effects of conspiratorial distrust of voting around the country that have put democracy at risk. More than 25 reporters and 75 journalists in total worked on the project.
BIDEN’S MONDAY: The president departed Rome for Edinburgh at 3:45 a.m. Eastern time.
— 6:30 a.m.: Biden will arrive in Edinburgh, Scotland.
— 7:30 a.m.: Biden will greet British PM BORIS JOHNSON and U.N. Secretary-General ANTÓNIO GUTERRES in Glasgow, Scotland.
— 8 a.m.: Biden will attend the COP26 Opening Session.
— 9 a.m.: Biden will deliver the COP26 Leader Statement.
— 10:30 a.m.: Biden will attend an event on action and solidarity.
— Noon: Biden will have a bilateral meeting with Indonesian President JOKO WIDODO.
— 2:45 p.m.: Biden will attend a reception hosted by Johnson.
Deputy press secretary KARINE JEAN-PIERRE and national security adviser JAKE SULLIVAN are gaggling aboard Air Force One on the way to Edinburgh.
The White House Covid-19 response team and public health officials will brief at 11 a.m.
VP KAMALA HARRIS’ MONDAY:
— 11:40 a.m.: The VP will depart D.C. en route to New York City.
— 1:05 p.m.: Harris and Energy Secretary JENNIFER GRANHOLM will tour John F. Kennedy International Airport and deliver remarks on climate action at 1:30 p.m.
— 7:30 p.m.: Harris will deliver remarks at National Action Network’s 30th Anniversary Triumph Awards at Carnegie Hall.
— 9:05 p.m.: Harris will depart New York to return to D.C.
THE SENATE will meet at 3 p.m. to take up ALAN DAVIDSON’s nomination as assistant Commerce secretary for comms and information. It will vote at 5:30 p.m. on BETH ROBINSON’s and TOBY HEYTENS’ judicial nominations.
THE HOUSE will meet at noon, with votes postponed until 6:30 p.m.
BIDEN’S WEEK AHEAD:
— Tuesday: Biden will participate in the climate summit in Glasgow, Scotland, hold a press conference and leave Edinburgh to return to D.C.
— Wednesday: Biden will arrive back in D.C.
— Friday: Biden will deliver remarks on the October jobs report, and he and first lady JILL BIDEN will attend COLIN POWELL’s funeral at Washington National Cathedral.
PLAYBOOK READS
(IR)RECONCILABLE DIFFERENCES
THE LONG VIEW — Paid family leave looks likely to be jettisoned from the Build Back Better bill. But the surge of attention and activism on the issue could open the door for bipartisan negotiations on the issue in the future, as some business groups and Republicans tell NYT’s Jonathan Weisman that there might be a path forward for stand-alone legislation. Still, any compromise bill would be less generous and take longer to implement than the plan Sen. KIRSTEN GILLIBRAND (D-N.Y.) has championed.
— In West Virginia, activists and some voters are smarting over Sen. JOE MANCHIN’s move to torpedo the paid leave proposal, reports AP’s Jay Reeves from Charleston.
THE WHITE HOUSE
AIR FORCE ONE HUNDRED — Veteran White House reporter and Washington record-keeper MARK KNOLLER tells us that Biden’s flight from Rome to Glasgow today marks his hundredth Air Force One trip in office. (He’s also made 152 Marine One voyages.) That compares to 101 for DONALD TRUMP and 124 for BARACK OBAMA at this point in their presidencies.
ALL POLITICS
SITTING BACK AND RELAXING — The House GOP is watching from the minority as Democrats toil to muscle through their agenda, and they’re relishing the chaos, reports Olivia Beavers. The conference is confident about regaining the majority next year, and they’re avoiding tough questions about their own party. “While Democratic infighting blots out the sun in Washington, Republicans don’t mind the shade,” she writes. Even the small group of moderates trying to build support for the bipartisan infrastructure bill aren’t finding many takers.
DEMS’ TURNOUT PROBLEM — New data from the California recall election shows that 18- to 29-year-olds made up 12% of the electorate, down from 17% in November 2020, NBCLX’s Noah Pransky reports. The numbers “suggest Democrats may be suffering due to young progressives’ frustrations over the glacial pace of progress in fulfilling Biden campaign promises on social programs, climate change and civil rights.”
THE NEW GOP — Sen. MARCO RUBIO (R-Fla.) will strike a populist note at the National Conservatism Conference tonight, telling his party to take the side of working people against big business, Axios’ Alayna Treene and Sarah Mucha report. The title of his speech: “We Need Corporate Patriotism to Defeat American Marxism.”
JUDICIARY SQUARE
TODAY’S BIG CASE — Two challenges to Texas’ near-total abortion ban go before the Supreme Court today as the justices hear arguments starting at 10 a.m. NYT’s Adam Liptak writes that all eyes are on Justice BRETT KAVANAUGH, who legal experts say is likeliest to be the swing justice open to reversing course from the court’s decision on the matter two months ago. Hearing the challenges in such a quick manner may indicate that one of the five justices who upheld the ban is amenable to changing, and Kavanaugh shares Chief Justice JOHN ROBERTS’ cautious instincts about the court’s image and institutional reputation.
POLICY CORNER
FED UP — Some economists worry that Fed Chair JEROME POWELL is pushing too hard on the jobs market, which could worsen inflation in a late-’60s redux, reports Bloomberg’s Rich Miller. But as the central bank looks likely to pull back this week on its huge bond-purchase scheme, Powell “faces a conundrum when it comes to the labor market.”
FASCINATING READ — A new Census Bureau method, “differential privacy,” intentionally introduces errors into its data to help protect people’s confidentiality, AP’s Mike Schneider reports. The idea is to prevent anyone from matching census information to other public data to identify participants. “But some city officials and demographers think it veers too far from reality,” and some outside analysts worry it could lead to undercounts of racially mixed areas, with potential implications for redistricting and federal funding. (The Census Bureau disagrees.)
THE PANDEMIC
WHAT PANDEMIC? — Covid-19 is fading as a political issue on the campaign trail, as voters rate it as less of a priority, strategists shift their focus and pandemic-related advertising drops off, reports David Siders. Even as more than 1,000 Americans continue to die each day, the fatigue could be good news for the GOP: “Democrats may lose one of their most compelling campaign planks,” he writes. In a recent Virginia poll, only 23% of voters listed the pandemic as one of their top two issues.
VACCINATION SETBACK — Moderna said Sunday that the FDA’s review of its application to vaccinate adolescents against Covid-19 will be delayed, possibly until January, as the government looks into reports of the rare heart side effect myocarditis. More from NPR … The announcement
AMERICA AND THE WORLD
HINDSIGHT IS G-20/20 — Ryan Heath has a withering dispatch from the conclusion of the G-20 summit in Rome, where he writes that world leaders’ accomplishments on a corporate minimum tax and other issues paled in comparison to their failure to land major action on climate change and the pandemic. The lack of any big new climate commitment from China overshadowed the summit, he writes, and royal figures ended up upstaging the elected leaders with more vigorous calls to action: “[I]t was unelected figures who set the agenda, leaving the United States and other democratic leaders in the political dust.”
— ON THE OTHER HAND: Biden took a victory lap at the summit’s conclusion, trumpeting that “the weekend had shown the power of American engagement on the world stage, and that it had renewed relationships that frayed under his predecessor, Donald J. Trump,” write NYT’s Jim Tankersley and Katie Rogers in Rome. At his news conference, the president broadcast optimism about his political fortunes at home and got choked up talking about his relationship with Pope FRANCIS.
NEXT UP — Biden’s credibility on climate hangs in the balance in Glasgow, writes NBC’s Josh Lederman.
PLAYBOOKERS
SPOTTED ON HALLOWEEN: A pack of kids ringing the doorbell of Jeff Bezos’ massive Kalorama house — only to be told by a man on an intercom that they were “not participating in Halloween.” Some of the kids walked away muttering that they were going to TP his home with Amazon toilet paper, a source who was with the group, which included children and adults, told Daniel Lippman. Bezos spent this weekend in Glasgow for the climate conference, where he met with the Prince of Wales. Pic of the house later that night
SPOTTED: Special guest judge Rep. Jamie Raskin (D-Md.) at the Politics & Puns Halloween party Saturday night hosted by Adam Green in Columbia Heights.
Jen Psaki tested positive for the coronavirus, along with several of her family members. It’s a breakthrough case, and she said her symptoms are mild.
Kal Penn, in a new book publishing Tuesday, comes out and reveals he’s engaged to a man named Josh whom he met in D.C.
Four Seasons Total Landscaping dressed up as Four Seasons Hotel for Halloween.
Kirsten Gillibrand dressed up as Cruella de Vil from “101 Dalmatians.” Her dog Maple was a dragon.
Two women at Mar-a-Lago dressed up as Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez with a twist on her “Tax the Rich” dress — one white dress said “Be the Rich” and the other said “Marry the Rich.”
Larry Summers wrote something that the White House actually liked.
Barclays CEO Jes Staley stepped down over Jeffrey Epstein ties.
TRANSITIONS — Jack Beyrer is now deputy press secretary for Sen. Roger Wicker (R-Miss.). He most recently was a news writer at the Washington Free Beacon. … Skiffington Holderness is now a director of government relations at Delta Air Lines. He’s previously been a longtime aide to Sen. Jim Risch (R-Idaho), most recently on the staff of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. … Jake Wilkins is now an account director at Rokk Solutions. He most recently was comms director for Sen. Kevin Cramer (R-N.D.) and is a USDA and RNC alum. …
… Dawn-Marie Sullivan is now a legislative assistant for Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas). She most recently was a legislative assistant for Rep. Matt Rosendale (R-Mont.), and is an Andy Biggs alum. … Kathleen Gayle is now a legislative assistant for Sen. Mike Rounds (R-S.D.). She most recently was legislative director/comms director for Rep. John Rose (R-Tenn.). … Gayle Fishel is rejoining Ogilvy Public Relations as EVP of corporate and brand reputation. She most recently was VP of marketing and comms at the United Service Organizations.
ENGAGED — Alex Wirth, co-founder and CEO of public affairs software firm Quorum, proposed to Tracy Nelson, an incoming associate at Sullivan & Cromwell, at sunset Tuesday in the Sahara Desert. The couple initially met in D.C. the summer of 2015 and then reconnected on Hinge the summer of 2019. Pic
BIRTHWEEK (was Saturday): Londyn Marshall of Carbon180 and Cat Duffy of The Hub Project
HAPPY BIRTHDAY: Reps. Darrell Issa (R-Calif.) and Maria Elvira Salazar (R-Fla.) (6-0) … Senate Chaplain Barry Black … Apple CEO Tim Cook … Charles Koch … David Bossie of Citizens United … former Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke … Katie Walsh Shields … Vanessa Morrone Ambrosini … WaPo’s Carlos Lozada … POLITICO’s Anthony Hatch, Jason Shervinski and Megan Wilson … John Oxtoby of Ariel Investments … Michael Byerly … Jess Andrews of Sen. John Kennedy’s (R-La.) office … Business Roundtable’s Liz Dougherty … Suzanne Zurn of the National Security Innovation Network (5-0) … Alpine Group’s Grace Bellone … Clare Steinberg … Tyler Hernandez … Chloe Taylor of Hawk Partners … Bill Deere of the UNRWA … Leslie Pollner … John Stipicevic … CNN’s Marshall Cohen … Alex Byers … former Reps. Bruce Poliquin (R-Maine) and John Spratt (D-S.C.) … John Seeley … Liz Bowman … Francesco Guerrera … Anthony Fragale … Cami Bissen … American Conservation Coalition’s Lucero Cantu … Erin Hearn of J Strategies
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26.) AMERICAN MINUTE
27.) CAFFEINATED THOUGHTS
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28.) CONSERVATIVE DAILY NEWS
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29.) PJ MEDIA
The Morning Briefing: Dems Prove Vaccine Mandates Have Nothing to Do With Public Health or Safety
Top O’ the Briefing
Happy Monday, dear Kruiser Morning Briefing friends. Whipped cream or sauerkraut, but never both.
My mother and sister are in from Michigan for a quick visit, and we spent a lovely Halloween having dinner at my favorite Mexican restaurant. We lingered with our carbohydrate comas and had a great talk. At one point, my mom said, “You know I’ve followed politics my whole life. I just don’t know what to think anymore.”
Welcome to a club that’s getting bigger every day, mother dear.
We are living in a topsy-turvy, nonsensical world where we’re watching one of the two major political parties in the United States of America actively trampling all over freedom and trying to ruin the country.
Spoiler alert: It’s not the Republicans.
I — and many others — have been writing since last year that the tyrants who have been the most over the top with COVID rules and restrictions aren’t at all motivated by concern for the public good. While I can’t stare into the barren souls of every elected leftist in America, I’m pretty convinced they don’t care at all whether most of us live or die.
The safety of the public can be compromised in more ways than one. In an effort to create the illusion that this virus can be gotten rid of, the petty tyrants are throwing some of the most important people — those tasked with keeping the public safe — under the mandate bus.
There have been a number of stories in recent weeks about healthcare-worker shortages that are due to vaccine mandates. Various states of emergency are being declared. The officials declaring them are taking no responsibility for having created the problem. You will, however, read a lot about the fact that Republicans are big bad meanies for pointing out that a problem exists.
At the height of the pandemic last year, liberal politicians all over America turned into cheerleaders for the defund the police madness. The real-world consequences of that political folly are being dealt with now in many blue cities. Chris wrote about New York City’s woes:
If you’ve ever watched an episode of any of the various Law and Order series, you see how difficult a time NYPD detectives have under normal circumstances. In a large city like New York, crime is constant and bureaucracy makes solving them even more complicated.
And that’s when they’re not hampered by the Defund the Police movement and Biden-era staffing issues.
These days, New York City has made life harder for their hard-working detectives. Last year, Mayor Bill de Blasio and the city council slashed the NYPD budget by a whopping billion dollars.
It’s tough to fathom that sort of budget cut, so let’s look at what such a shortfall meant for the NYPD. The police department disbanded a plainclothes anti-crime unit, dropping 600 jobs. Another 900 new recruits found their hiring delayed, and officers and detectives alike faced less overtime.
Violence is up, cops’ morale is down, and Chris notes that the vaccine mandate in effect for municipal employees in New York could deplete their ranks even further.
Kevin has a disturbing story about what the mandate is doing to the New York Fire Department:
As of 7:30 a.m. Saturday, New York City has locked up 26 firehouses due to manpower shortages blamed on the COVID vaccine mandate.
GOP Rep. Nicole Malliotakis represents Staten Island and Brooklyn, where five of the now-closed stations are located. If someone dies, she points the blame at Komrade de Blasio.
I sure hope that the fine citizens of New York City can take comfort in the fact that they won’t be getting COVID as they watch their homes go up in flames because the vax Nazis have shut down the fire stations.
People who are decent and truly care about the health and safety of the public would actually follow the science and do a better risk analysis rather than simply flexing the privilege of office to feel powerful.
Biden, de Blasio, and the rest of the mandate fetishists are drunk on the idea of having the power to bend citizens to their will, all the while falsely presuming that they’re doing it from the moral high ground.
In reality, they keep plumbing new depths of disregard for real public safety.
Everything Isn’t Awful
PJ Media
Jen Psaki Tests Positive for COVID
NYFD Shutters 26 Firehouses Over Vaccine Mandate
McAuliffe’s Gargantuan Gaffe May Help Tip Virginia Red
Stupid Things Stupid Liberals Did This Week
Dear Colin Kaepernick: We’re Not Buying the ‘Black & White’ Hate You’re Selling
Stasi in Kansas City: Student Denounces Christian Teacher to Authorities, Gets Him Suspended
Yes, Leftism Is A Religion: Presbyterian Church Graces Us With Hymn to Climate Change
MAGA Rapper Loza Alexander Debuts at No. 1 on Emerging Artists Chart
Loudoun County Schools’ Controversies Continue
McAuliffe: Parents Shouldn’t Pick Textbooks, ‘We Have Experts Who Actually Do That’
In Bizarre Interview, Buttigieg Equates Supply Chain Debacle With Pandemic and Vaccines
I need a Silkwood shower. IRONY: ‘Inter-Gender’ MMA Fight Horrifies Fans in Poland
Trump Does ‘Tomahawk Chop’ at World Series and the Left Flips Out
On the Brink of Triumph, Green Faces Its Nemesis
Blue State Blues: Record Number of Students Flee Nation’s Largest Public School Districts
Good riddance, crybaby. Anti-Trump Rep. Adam Kinzinger Won’t Seek Re-Election
Townhall Mothership
Schlichter: You Libs Made Your Cesspool, Now Float In It
Terry McAuliffe Hit with Campaign Finance Complaint Over Foreign Money
Ben Carson Rips Covid Vaccines For Kids: ‘This Is Really A Giant Experiment’
Gretchen Whitmer Vetoes Voter ID Laws, But Election Integrity May Still Prevail in Michigan
Upholding NY’s Carry Laws Wouldn’t Be Nonpartisan. It Would Be Nonsensical
Will Ohio Be The Next Constitutional Carry State?
Arizona Man Held In Mexico After Forgetting Gun Was In Car
Vice: We forced the Lincoln Project to admit they were behind the hate hoax
We’re apparently now making Alec Baldwin the victim in the “Rust” shooting
Declassified report shows split among intelligence agencies over COVID-19’s origin
PHOTO: Steve Buscemi greets trick-or-treaters dressed as a meme of himself
NBC News’ Chuck Todd shares polling ‘filled with some scary news’ for Biden and the Dems
WATCH: Ohio Dem Tim Ryan gets dragged for awful campaign video
VIP
‘Unwoke’ With Kevin and Kruiser #18: Cheering On the ‘New’ Republican Party
CNN Accuses the Braves of Alienating Atlanta’s Black Community With Half-Truths
Bill Maher: Reasonable Leftist?
America Is Ready to End Racial Preferences in College Admissions
Weekly Good News Round-Up: Diverse Pancakes, Dad Power, and Power Naps
Ready Player One? Apple Working On Fully-Immersive Augmented Reality
Is It All Over for Terry McAuliffe?
The Democrats’ Miscalculation of the Importance of Parental Rights
Republicans ‘Pounce’ on the Terrible Biden Economy? You Don’t Say!
Around the Interwebz
TV’s Worst of the Week: Secret Abortion, ‘Modern-Day Slavery’ & Polyamory
Gordon Ramsay’s New Cooking Competition, ‘Next Level Chef’, Is Almost Ready To Serve
At long last, ‘copypasta’ and ‘air fryer’ have been added to the dictionary
How the TV Dinner Revolutionized American Life
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30.) WHITE HOUSE DOSSIER
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31.) THE DISPATCH
The Morning Dispatch: Inflation Pains
Wages are up but so are prices, hampering overall economic confidence.
The Dispatch Staff | 3 |
Happy Monday! Congratulations to President Joe Biden, who over the weekend lived out Declan’s dream of having the pope tell him that he is a “good Catholic.”
Quick Hits: Today’s Top Stories
- The Food and Drug Administration on Friday authorized Pfizer/BioNTech’s COVID-19 vaccine for children ages 5 through 11, and the Centers for Disease Control’s Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices will meet this week and vote on a formal recommendation. Moderna, meanwhile, said Sunday that the FDA will “require additional time” to review its vaccine for 12- to 17-year-olds and determine whether it is tied to an increased risk of myocarditis.
- Secretary of Homeland Security Alejandro Mayorkas issued another memo on Friday attempting to terminate the Trump administration’s “Remain in Mexico” immigration policy—or Migrant Protection Protocols (MPP)—after a federal judge ruled in August that Mayorkas’ previous efforts violated the Administrative Procedure Act. “I recognize that MPP likely contributed to reduced migratory flows,” Mayorkas said. “But it did so by imposing substantial and unjustifiable human costs on the individuals who were exposed to harm while waiting in Mexico.”
- The Supreme Court issued an order on Friday denying a preliminary injunction to a group of health care workers in Maine seeking religious exemptions to the state’s COVID-19 vaccination mandate. Justices Amy Coney Barrett and Brett Kavanaugh joined John Roberts and the court’s three liberal justices mostly on procedural grounds, while Justices Neil Gorsuch, Clarence Thomas, and Samuel Alito dissented.
- The number of abortions performed in Texas in September—the first month in which the state’s effectively six-week abortion ban was in effect—decreased by approximately 50 percent year-over-year, according to research from the Texas Policy Evaluation Project.
- G-20 leaders issued a loosely worded joint communiqué on Sunday pledging to “accelerate” their actions to achieve global net zero greenhouse gas emissions “by or around mid-century” and “recogniz[ing] that the impacts of climate change at 1.5°C are much lower than at 2°C.” The leaders also formally endorsed a new 15 percent global minimum corporate tax, though it’s far from guaranteed that each country will succeed in implementing the provision domestically.
- The Commerce Department announced Saturday that the Biden administration had reached an agreement with the European Union to scale back—but not eliminate—the Section 232 steel and aluminum tariffs first imposed by the Trump administration in an effort to “reduce inflationary pressures” and “alleviate a major supply chain crunch.” Such tariffs remain in place on British and Japanese steel and aluminum, but the Commerce Department said it is “consulting closely” with the countries.
- The Treasury Department on Friday announced sanctions on a handful of companies and individuals that the United States says “have provided critical support” to Iran’s drone program. American officials said last week they believe Iran was behind a recent drone strike on U.S. forces in Syria.
- John Sopko—the United States’ special inspector general for Afghanistan reconstruction—issued his quarterly report to Congress over the weekend, lambasting the State and Defense Departments for withholding information for years about the reality in Afghanistan. “The full picture of what happened in August—and all the warning signs that could have predicted the outcome—will only be revealed if the information that the Departments of Defense and State have already restricted from public release is made available,” he said in remarks Friday.
- Japan’s Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) held onto its parliamentary majority in yesterday’s election, bolstering Prime Minister Fumio Kishida, who took office about a month ago.
- Republican Rep. Adam Kinzinger—a vocal critic of former President Trump—announced Friday he will not seek reelection in 2022. Illinois’ Democratic state legislature had advanced a new, gerrymandered congressional map earlier in the week that all but doomed Kinzinger’s already slim chances of holding onto his seat.
- New York Attorney General Letitia James, a Democrat, announced Friday that she is running for governor. James’ office led the sexual harassment investigation into Andrew Cuomo that ultimately led the former governor to resign.
Inflation Hits a 30-Year High
“McDonald’s Raises Menu Prices as U.S. Worker Wages Climb.”
“Pepsico Warns of Another Price Increase as Supply Disruptions Linger.”
“Chipotle’s Profit More Than Doubles as Chain’s Burritos Get Pricier.”
“Procter & Gamble to Raise Prices of More Household Goods as Supply Chain Costs Bite.”
“U.S. Companies Bet Shoppers Will Keep Paying Higher Prices.”
If you’ve been reading business headlines—or just shopping—you likely won’t be surprised to hear that, by one measure, annual inflation is at its highest level since the beginning of the Persian Gulf War in January 1991. According to the Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA), the personal consumption expenditures (PCE) price index increased 4.4 percent year-over-year in September, and 0.3 percent from a month earlier. Even stripping out more volatile food and energy prices—which increased 4.1 percent and 24.9 percent from last year, respectively—the core PCE price index was up 3.6 percent year-over-year.
U.S. consumers amassed record savings over the course of the pandemic, and are raring to start spending again in an increasingly post-pandemic world. But manufacturers and businesses—dealing with a challenging combination of worker shortages and supply-chain hiccups—are struggling to keep pace, resulting in both shortages and higher prices.
“We simply have too much demand chasing too little supply,” Brian Riedl, senior fellow at the Manhattan Institute, told The Dispatch. “Washington has pumped in so much stimulus—through both fiscal policy and the Federal Reserve—that it’s outstripping what our economy can produce, particularly because of the supply chain issues we have.”
But it’s not just consumer prices that are going up: The Bureau of Labor Statistics reported Friday that overall compensation costs for civilian workers—including wages, salaries, and benefits—increased 3.7 percent year-over-year in September, the fastest rate since the end of 2004. The growth was particularly pronounced in the private sector, where compensation increased 4.1 percent annually compared to the public sector’s 2.3 percent.
In a vacuum, wages rising is excellent news—both for workers and the economy overall. But the development could feed into a vicious cycle when paired with sky-high inflation, whereby employers pass increased payroll costs onto consumers in the form of higher prices, which in turn prompt employees to ask for additional raises. This phenomenon appears to be playing out in the restaurant industry—particularly with fast food—while price increases in manufacturing have more to do with rising materials and energy costs.
The strange economic recovery has Americans holding some interesting—and conflicting—opinions. Although nearly 3 in 4 respondents in a recent Gallup survey report now being a good time to find a quality job—the highest percentage since the turn of the century—overall economic confidence fell for a fourth straight month to the lowest level since May 2020. The findings track with a mid-October Fox News poll, which found 73 percent of voters rating the economy negatively and 39 percent feeling like they are “falling behind” financially, up from 27 percent in June. Further, 71 percent report noticing products being out of stock, and a whopping 87 percent said they were “extremely” or “very” concerned about rising prices.
Top Biden administration officials have maintained since last spring that inflation will be “transitory,” projecting it to return to a more palatable 2 percent annual level within months as the economy kicks off its COVID-19 rust. But even Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen appeared to be adjusting expectations in an appearance on CNN’s State of the Union last week.
Worth Your Time
- Republican Sen. Josh Hawley unveiled a proposal last week that he believes will “solve” the current supply chain crisis by requiring companies manufacture “over 50 percent of the value” of certain goods in the United States, but Eric Boehm of Reason argues it would make today’s shortfalls permanent. “One must assume that if the lights in his home went out due to a storm, Hawley would respond by declaring electricity to be a mistake and demanding that the government require homes to be lit with candles and gas lamps,” Boehm jests in response to Hawley’s plan. “After all, what is the electrical grid but a complicated supply chain that leaves Americans woefully dependent on production and distribution systems (power plants, substations, and lines) that they do not fully control? Better to produce your own lighting, right? If that means you have to live without television or the internet, well, those are just the trade-offs required to achieve self-sufficiency.”
Presented Without Comment
The Lincoln Project and Dem operative @lawindsor hired operatives to pose as tiki torch-wielding white supremacists at @GlennYoungkin‘s Charlottesville rally today. They only took credit/blame after I told them I IDed someone in the photo.
Toeing the Company Line
- In Friday’s Uphill, Haley caught up with Rep. Maria Elvira Salazar—a freshman Republican from Florida—about her background as a journalist, the January 6 commission, her Christian faith, and much more. Plus, Harvest has the latest on congressional Democrats’ slow-moving negotiations.
- Late last week, former President Trump submitted a letter to the Wall Street Journal riddled with falsehoods about the 2020 election. In her latest Dispatch Fact Check, Khaya corrects them.
- Jonah’s Friday G-File—like Margaret Thatcher—argues that “the facts of life” are generally pretty conservative. “Societies that try to impose some grand unified field theory of social justice or the common good eventually run into the fundamentally conservative facts of life,” he writes. “The conservative tends to be the person in the room that says some new idea won’t work or is otherwise wrong. From this fact alone, in the great intellectual Olympics of history, conservatives deserve the gold medal, because most truly new ideas are wrong. It’s just a numbers thing. If you say, ‘It won’t work’ to every spit-balled or brainstormed idea, you’ll be right at least 80 or 90 percent of the time.”
- David’s Sunday French Press uses “horseshoe theory”—the idea that the political spectrum bends like a horseshoe so extremists on both sides end up mirror images of one another—to explore critiques of American classical liberalism. “Post-liberal right and post-liberal left fundamentally prioritize the power of the state over the liberty of the individual,” he writes. “Under their preferred forms of government, free speech, economic freedom, private property, and religious liberty would all be fundamentally transformed and dramatically diminished.”
- On Friday’s Dispatch Podcast, Sarah and David spoke with Fight for Schools director Ian Prior about critical race theory and a sexual assault controversy in Loudon County, Virginia, schools. Will these issues decide Tuesday’s gubernatorial race?
- The Dispatch’s Dune podcast finally happened. Tune in to this week’s Ruminant, featuring Jonah, David, Haley, and Jack Butler, and you’ll find the geekiest 76 minutes of content available anywhere on the internet. Why did it take so long for a competent Dune movie to be produced? What did the film get right? Were any elements of the book unjustly left out? And is sci-fi inherently conservative?
- On the site today, Chris Stirewalt gets philosophical on the evolution of social media and how we were naive about its potential harms. “Social media to many of us seemed initially like at worst a free, fun time waster and just maybe could hold promise for reconnecting a culture that had become increasingly divided and isolating,” he writes.
- Dalibor Rohac argues that big international summits, like this week’s COP 26, are not an effective way to fight the very real problem of climate change.
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
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Morning Edition
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Monday, Nov. 1, 2021
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Good morning. On our mind today: How Utahns want the state’s budget surplus to be spent, what Bronco Mendenhall had to say about BYU after losing to the Cougars, and should Utah lawmakers adopt the independent commission’s political maps? Read this morning’s six most important stories below. |
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35.) BRIGHT
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36.) AMERICAN THINKER
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37.) LARRY J. SABATO’S CRYSTAL BALL
38.) THE BLAZE
39.) THE FEDERALIST
40.) REUTERS
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41.) NOQ REPORT
42.) ARRA NEWS SERVICE
43.) REDSTATE
Bill Maher Continues His Anti-Democrat Streak, Wipes the Floor With the Woke Over Words
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44.) WORLD NET DAILY
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45.) MSNBC
November 1, 2021 THE LATEST As America heads to the polls on Tuesday, Noah Rothman breaks down painful (for some) truths about the Democratic Party: For all its efforts to demonize the Republican Party leading up to the crucial 2022 midterm elections, Democrats have ultimately positioned the GOP for success — whether candidates put up a fight or not.
“The present political environment is looking increasingly like the one that preceded the 2010 midterm cycle,” Rothman writes, “which swept Democrats from federal office at a near-record pace, and for essentially the same reasons.”
Read Noah Rothman’s full analysis here and don’t forget to check out the rest of your Monday MSNBC Daily. TOP STORIES Attempting to turn a gun into something less than a lethal weapon will get more people hurt and killed. Read More They’re acting as though they were the ones on the presidential ballot last November. Read More Virginia’s Glenn Youngkin is twisting the facts of a sexual assault case to bolster his anti-trans platform. Read More How can tweeting an article that is not defamatory give rise to a claim for defamation? Read More TOP VIDEOS MORE FROM MSNBC
Election Night is around the corner. Steve Kornacki will break down live results of key races happening across the country, including the close Virginia governor’s race.
Watch MSNBC’s special coverage on Tuesday, beginning at 5 p.m. ET. And stream the Kornacki Cam nonstop at MSNBC.com.
How do we make sense of this unprecedented moment in world history? Why is this all happening? Chris Hayes asks the big questions that keep him up at night every week on his podcast, aptly titled, “Why Is This Happening?”
In the newest episode, Buffalo mayor India Walton joins Chris to talk about how she went from being a registered nurse and local activist to a politician. She was thrust into the national spotlight when she defeated four-term incumbent Byron Brown in the June primary. It was an unusual win: Walton had never held elected office, and Brown isn’t letting go of his seat without a fight. Listen to the new episode now. Follow MSNBC
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46.) BIZPAC REVIEW
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47.) ABC
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48.) NBC MORNING RUNDOWN
To ensure delivery to your inbox add email@mail.nbcnews.com to your contacts Today’s Top Stories from NBC News MONDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 2021 Good morning, NBC News readers.
President Joe Biden, who has made action on climate change a central pillar of his presidency, attends a make-or-break global climate summit. The Supreme Court will hear arguments against Texas restrictive abortion law. Plus, just in time, the Astros found their bats just in time and pulled out a Game 5 win, sending the World Series back to Houston.
Here’s what we’re watching this Monday morning. President Joe Biden said Sunday that G-20 leaders had made “tangible progress” toward shared challenges when it comes to climate change, as pressure ramps up for the United States and other high carbon-emitting countries to commit to more aggressive action ahead of this week’s United Nations climate summit in Glasgow, Scotland.
But Biden also blamed disappointment from some experts that the G-20’s climate commitments did not gone far enough, on “the fact that Russia and China basically didn’t show up.”
The president’s credibility on climate will be on the line in Glasgow.
Despite Biden’s best efforts to get ambitious climate measures signed into law ahead of the international summit known as COP26, the ongoing wrangling among his own party on the measures is not lost on world leaders who have watched U.S. seriousness about climate change flip-flop depending on who is in power in Washington.
Britain’s Prince Charles is set to tell leaders the world must put itself on “war-like footing” to combat the climate crisis as he kicks off the summit today.
Meantime, Vice President Kamala Harris will be pitching U.S. climate action back in New York as COP26 gets underway. Monday’s Top Stories
Months after the Supreme Court let Texas effectively ban most abortions in the state, it will hear two arguments Monday challenging the most restrictive abortion law in the country. The upcoming election, which has attracted cash from deep-pocketed donors, turned once sleepy school board meetings into heated debates. Once a hamlet for cowboys and homesteaders, the Morongo Basin is undergoing rapid change as an influx of urbanites escaping city life drives up prices. As New Zealand gets set to ease lockdown restrictions, experts say the number of cases is expected to soar, especially among minority communities, including the Indigenous Maori population. Also in the News
Editor’s Pick
A recent recreation has drawn global attention and praise, but also landed the two students behind the AI project in potential legal trouble. Select
With Black Friday approaching, major retailers are beginning to offer early holiday deals right now. One Fun Thing
Thousands packed the main boulevard of Mexico City on Sunday to watch the Day of the Dead parade featuring dancing skeletons, marching bands and floats, after last year’s event was curtailed because of the coronavirus pandemic. Want to receive NBC Breaking News and Special Alerts in your inbox? Get the NBC News Mobile App 30 Rockefeller Plaza New York, NY 10112 View in browser | Unsubscribe | Manage Subscription | Contact | Privacy |
49.) NBC FIRST READ
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From NBC’s Chuck Todd, Mark Murray and Ben Kamisar
FIRST READ: The political environment looks like 2014, and that’s scary news for Democrats
Nine months into Joe Biden’s presidency, the political environment for Democrats – right now – looks more like 2014 than 2010.
And one year out before the 2022 midterms, that 2014 comparison should frighten every Democratic strategist this day after Halloween 2021.
Here’s the NBC News/WSJ poll from Oct. 2010:
- Obama approval: 47% approve, 49% disapprove (registered voters)
- Nation’s direction: 32% right track, 59% wrong track (RVs)
- Obama economic handling: 43% approve, 53% disapprove (RVs)
- Congressional preference: D+2 (RVs)
Here’s the NBC/WSJ poll from Oct. 2014:
- Obama approval: 42% approve, 52% disapprove (RVs)
- Nation’s direction: 25% right track, 65% wrong track (RVs)
- Obama economic handling: 43% approve, 53% disapprove (RVs)
- Congressional preference: R+2 (RVs)
And here’s the NBC News poll from Oct. 2021:
- Biden approval: 42% approve, 54% disapprove (adults)
- Nation’s direction: 22% right track, 71% wrong track (adults)
- Biden economic handling: 40% approve, 57% disapprove (adults)
- Congressional preference: D+2 (RVs)
Chris Kleponis/CNP/Bloomberg via Getty Image
If you want to see how this Tuesday’s race for Virginia governor has become so close in a state Biden won by 10 points last year, here’s what the Mark Warner (D) vs. Ed Gillespie (R) Senate race looked like for Democrats back in 2014:
Warner 49.2%, Gillespie 48.4%.
Folks, it’s the political environment.
The good news for Democrats from our poll is that the 2022 midterms are still a year away, and it’s possible to see how Biden’s numbers recover.
The bad news for Democratss from our poll, however, is almost every set of numbers.
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GOP makes gains on key issues
That includes the issue handling between Democrats and Republicans. Especially when you compare where some of those numbers from 2020.
Here is each party’s advantage when the NBC News poll asked respondents which party does a better job handling a particular issue:
- Border security: R+27 (48% said GOP does a better job handling it, versus 21% for Dems)
- Inflation: R+24
- Crime: R+22 (was R+12 in Oct. 2020)
- National security: R+22
- Economy: R+18 (was R+13 in Oct. 2020)
- Being effective and getting things done: R+13
- Immigration: R+9 (was D+6 in Oct. 2020)
- Election security: D+1
- Voting rights: D+5
- Abortion: D+10
- Education: D+10
- Covid: D+12 (was D+17 in Oct. 2020)
- Climate change: D+24 (was D+27 in Oct. 2020)
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Tweet of the Day: Yodel-ay-ee-oooo
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Data Download: The numbers you need to know today
More than 5 million: The number of people who have died from Covid-19 worldwide.
749,274: The number of deaths in the United States from the virus so far, per the most recent data from NBC News. (That’s 2,530 more since Friday morning.)
45,985,662: 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 151,675 more since Friday morning.)
422,070,099: The number of total vaccine doses administered in the U.S., per the CDC. (That’s 4,274,562 more since yesterday morning.)
18,607,505: The number of booster vaccine doses administered in the U.S., per the CDC. (That’s 3,190,165 more since yesterday morning.)
58 percent: The share of all Americans who are fully vaccinated, per the CDC.
69.6 percent: The share of all Americans 18-years and older who are fully vaccinated, per the CDC.
2,000: The number of New York City firefighters who have taken medical leave over the last week amid the department’s new rules on vaccinations.
12 percent: The portion of the California recall election votes that were cast by voters between the ages of 18-29, down from 17 percent in November of 2020.
730: The number of municipalities the New York Times reports relies on fines or fees for at least 10 percent of its revenue, a finding part of its deep dive on traffic stops and why they sometimes turn violent.
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Final day of campaigning in Virginia
In the last day of campaigning before Tuesday’s gubernatorial race in Virginia, Democrat Terry McAuliffe holds get-out-the-vote events in Roanoke, Virginia Beach, Richmond and Northern Virginia at 6:45 pm ET – where he will deliver remarks denouncing Donald Trump’s tele-rally for GOP nominee Glenn Youngkin.
Youngkin, meanwhile, hits Roanoke, Richmond, Virginia Beach and Loudoun County at 9:00 pm ET.
And at publication time, Donald Trump just released this statement: “Remember this, Glenn Youngkin is a good man, a hardworking man, a successful man. He loves Virginia and wants to cut your taxes, save your children’s education, and many other very good things. Terry McAuliffe is a low-life politician who lies, cheats, and steals. He was a terrible high-tax governor and would be, if elected, an even worse governor again. I say to all of our millions of followers, don’t listen to the Fake News and misleading advertisements written largely by already-acknowledged perverts. Get out and vote for a man who will be a great governor, Glenn Youngkin!”
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ICYMI: What ELSE is happening in the world?
The Washington Post’s massive, new investigation into the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol details that law enforcement brushed aside clear warnings about the potential for violence, that Trump repeatedly rebuffed requests from allies to try to call off the attack, and how deeply engrained support for Trump’s unfounded elections claims in the GOP.
The Supreme Court hears arguments on Texas’ restrictive abortion law at 10 a.m. ET Monday.
Politico reports that top Democrats are concerned about McAuliffe’s black voter turnout.
Vice President Kamala Harris is set to pitch new action on climate change in a Monday event in New York.
More than a dozen states are rethinking how they count the incarcerated population in the redistricting process.
White House press secretary Jen Psaki has tested positive for Covid.
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55.) REALCLEARPOLITICS MORNING NOTE
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56.) REALCLEARPOLITICS TODAY
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57.) CENTER FOR SECURITY POLICY
58.) BERNARD GOLDBERG
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62.) 1440 DAILY DIGEST
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63.) AMERICAN INSTITUTE FOR ECONOMIC RESEARCH
64.) NATIONAL REVIEW
TODAY’S MORNING JOLT WITH JIM GERAGHTY |
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65.) POLITICAL WIRE
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73.) POPULIST PRESS
74.) THE POST MILLENNIAL
75.) BLACKLISTED NEWS
76.) THE DAILY DOT
Nov. 1, 2021 Welcome to the Monday edition of Internet Insider, where we unspool threads of online misinformation—one dumb conspiracy at a time…
ONE DUMB CONSPIRACY Solar flare spurs doomsday predictions from conspiracy theorists If you’re reading this, society didn’t come to a crashing halt last week after a major solar flare made its way toward planet earth, despite what conspiracy theorists were claiming.
On Thursday, a X1-class solar flare—the most powerful kind of flare—erupted from the sun, according to the U.S. Space Weather Prediction Group.
As noted by Space.com, such eruptions have been known at times to cause temporary radio and satellite communications blackouts.
“The most powerful X-class flares can interfere with radio and satellite communications and supercharge the planet’s aurora displays when they are aimed directly at Earth and accompanied by a massive eruption of solar particles, called a coronal mass ejection,” Space.com said. But for conspiracy theorists online, the solar flare was a clear sign that a doomsday event was set to take place.
One Twitter user outlandishly suggested that there was no solar flare to begin with and argued that such claims were actually part of a genocidal plot.
“Made up solar flare will be used as an excuse for internet and power outage worldwide,” the user wrote. “They want to kill us faster since they have become impatient and want to reduce the population to 500 million and it’s taking longer.”
Another user claimed that the flare would lead to “10 days of darkness,” a mythical event in QAnon lore that claims a global blackout will be followed by mass arrests and executions of former President Donald Trump’s political enemies.
“10 days of darkness,” the user said. “This is the excuse. It ain’t what’s really going on.”
Others made vague references to “false flags,” suggesting that the government would use the solar flare as cover for some sort of staged event.
The column continues below.
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Over on Facebook, the conspiracy theories were even wilder and more prevalent.
One QAnon follower claimed that society would come to a screeching halt but still argued that “patriots” would be in control.
“It’s looking very likely, with everything I’m seeing, that we may be approaching the blackout,” the user wrote. “If you tie the solar flare information with what I’ve decoded this am there’s a built in excuse for the net shut down along with communication interruptions. As always, be prepared should this event happen and remain calm. Patriots in control!” But not everyone predicted the end of the world. Mike Cernovich, who used to promote the Pizzagate conspiracy theory, claimed that he had “energetically” sensed the solar flare all along. “Ah this explains a lot. Energetically I felt something was off. Had seen a few other high consciousness people say that also,” he tweeted. “Our minds / spirits / call it what you will / are antennas. Listen to those feelings.”
What many seemed unaware of is the fact that a major X-class solar flare already slammed into the earth earlier this year in July.
Unsurprisingly, society did not end. A temporary shortwave radio blackout occurred over the Atlantic ocean and coastal regions. While scientists have warned that a severe solar storm could one day damage electrical grids and even the underseas cables that make up the global internet, QAnon won’t be there to save you. Staff Writer
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77.) HEADLINE USA
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78.) NATURAL NEWS
79.) POLITICHICKS
80.) BLACKPRESSUSA
81.) THE WESTERN JOURNAL
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82.) CNN
Monday 11.01.21 Consumers have already been given the warning that holiday shopping is going to be much costlier this year. So far, their habits indicate they’ll keep on spending anyway. Here’s what else you need to know to Get Up to Speed and On With Your Day. An employee prepares for leaders to arrive for the COP26 UN Climate Summit in Glasgow. Climate
World leaders are meeting at the COP26 summit in Glasgow for some of the most important climate talks in years. More than 120 leaders will speak today, setting the tone for two weeks of negotiations that will hopefully end with a firm global plan to take on, as UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson said, “coal, cars, cash and trees.” The latest UN climate report, released in August, painted a dire picture and predicted the world must halve emissions over the next decade to begin reversing disastrous climate effects. President Biden has already pledged to reach that goal by 2030, and part of his mission in Glasgow will be convincing other nations that the US is serious about its climate commitment. Passing that huge US spending bill, with the biggest-ever investment in combatting climate change, would have helped, but it’s still being formulated in Congress.
Congress
House Democratic leaders are pushing for votes on both the $1.2 trillion infrastructure bill and the $1.75 trillion economic plan as soon as tomorrow. Many House Progressives signaled yesterday they’d likely back both bills — a hopeful sign that weekslong gridlock between progressive and moderate Democratic factions may soon end. The economic spending bill has been drastically pared down, and many key Democratic priorities, like paid family leave, have been left on the cutting room floor. However, Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg says the Biden administration will continue to push for those priorities in other ways. As far as deadlines, the next important date to watch for is December 3. That’s when newly extended transportation funding — put in place to buy time on the infrastructure bill — runs out. That’s also when the US is expected to hit the debt ceiling.
Coronavirus
More than 5 million people around the world have died of Covid-19. This staggering threshold was surpassed early this morning, according to Johns Hopkins University data. Last week, the World Health Organization warned that global Covid-19 cases and deaths are increasing for the first time in two months, spurred by big increases in Europe. As cases continue to multiply in some areas, the South Pacific island nation of Tonga has recorded its very first case of Covid-19. The discovery has prompted thousands of Tongans to get vaccinated and could result in a national lockdown.
Elections
Members of the House panel investigating the January 6 Capitol riot are reexamining a 134-year-old law that they say former President Trump and his allies exploited to try to prevent the verification of the 2020 election. The Electoral Count Act was meant to give Congress a process by which to certify Electoral College votes submitted by the states. But election experts say it needs updating to ensure that a losing party can never subvert the Electoral College results. The committee’s new interest in this law undercuts a legal argument made by Trump that the panel has no true legislative purpose for seeking his White House documents. Elections will also be top of mind across the country tomorrow, as states and communities head to the polls. Virginia’s gubernatorial race will be of particular interest, as many see it as an early referendum on Democratic and Republican influence leading into next year’s midterms.
Sudan
Sudan’s Prime Minister Abdalla Hamdok said he will never “willingly” stand down and called for an overhaul of Sudan’s fragile political process following a military coup last week. Hamdok has been under house arrest since Sudan’s top general, Abdel Fattah al-Burhan, dissolved the country’s ruling council instead of turning over control of the body to a civilian leader as planned. Hundreds of thousands of people demonstrated across Sudan over the weekend in protest of the military takeover. The activist group that organized the protests is demanding the restoration of the country’s transitional civilian government. Military and civilian groups have maintained a shaky power-sharing alliance in the country since the 2019 Sudan uprising that led to the toppling of President Omar al-Bashir’s three decade rule.
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Hebrew speakers mock Facebook’s corporate rebrand to Meta because it sounds similar to the Hebrew word for ‘dead’ A sharply divided Supreme Court will gather today to once again consider a Texas law that bars abortion at around six weeks of pregnancy, reigniting a debate concerning the most restrictive law in the country. 340 That’s about how many Americans have been evacuated from Afghanistan since the US withdrawal at the end of August, according to Secretary of State Antony Blinken. This is a man who has a great empathy. He is a man who understands that part of his Christianity is to reach out and to forgive.
President Biden, after meeting Friday with Pope Francis. The two had met in 2015, shortly after the death of Biden’s son, Beau. Biden, who is the United States’ second Catholic president, said the Pope has provided his family “great solace.” Brought to you by CNN Underscored Celebrate Diwali with these 18 brilliant gift ideas On Nov. 4, Diwali — a major Indian holiday featuring lights, fireworks, gifts and feasts — begins. To help mark the occasion, we rounded up 18 gifts to help usher in a prosperous and successful new year. Celebrating death … and life Sponsor Content by Wise Bread Insanely High Paying Cash Back Card With No Annual Fee $200 bonus offer. High ongoing cash back rates. No annual fee. 0% interest for 15 months on purchases. Start racking up huge cash back rewards.
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- The migration crisis: “Americanists” vs. “Transformationalists”
- “Let’s Go Brandon!” In the Skies [with comment by Paul]
- Stephen Hunter: The Shooting
- In the Virginia race
- Sunday morning coming down
The migration crisis: “Americanists” vs. “Transformationalists”
Posted: 31 Oct 2021 11:20 AM PDT (Paul Mirengoff)Last weekend, American Greatness featured an article by John Fonte on the migration crisis as its “Weekend long read.” This weekend, I commend Fonte’s lengthy article to Power Line readers. Fonte’s piece is called “Migration Crisis Overview: Americanists vs. Transformationists.” His thesis is that Joe Biden’s immigration policy represents an existential conflict for America. Before getting to that argument, Fonte provides an excellent discussion of the harrowing state of our border with Mexico, a summary of Biden’s immigration policy, and a persuasive argument tying former to the latter. He then analyzes the border crisis through the lens of a power struggle of clashing interests, values, and cultures among five competing forces: 1) the cartels, 2) the Mexican and Central American governments, 3) the migrants themselves, 4) the Americanists, and 5) the Transformationists. Who are the “Americanists”? Fonte describes them as follows:
By contrast, the “transformationalists” are “those political, cultural, and ideological forces in America who favor the ‘fundamental transformation’ of the United States.” They believe that America has been plagued for centuries by “systemic racism” that remains embedded in our core institutions, such that the “fundamental transformation” of the nation is required. Fonte proceeds to demonstrate that the Biden-Harris Administration has explicitly rejected the three core principles of the Americanist immigration tradition: 1) that immigration should first and foremost serve the interests of American citizens; 2) that immigration policy should be implemented with the consent of the American people; and that 3) patriotic assimilation is the end goal of immigration. As to the third prong, he notes that in April, Biden went so far as to ban use of the word “assimilation” by federal agencies. Thus, in Fonte’s words, the president “repudiated a core Americanist symbol from George Washington to Barbara Jordan that many regard as a quintessential manifestation of the traditional success of America’s immigration story.” Accordingly, Fonte concludes that Biden is on board with “the Transformationist goal (and expectation). . .that the vast majority of the 1.5 million or so migrants illegally entering the United States this year (with, perhaps, the exception of some Asians and anti-communist Cubans) will be ‘integrated’ into the new group rights regime (equity rather than equality) established by American progressive elites.” The newcomers will be “integrated” into the “oppressed” group category in today’s prevailing cultural Marxist framework of American life as a conflict between “oppressor” groups and “oppressed groups.” That, at least, is the idea. If this analysis of the situation is correct, and I think it probably is, then it’s difficult to dispute Fonte’s view that Biden’s immigration policy represents an existential conflict for America.
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“Let’s Go Brandon!” In the Skies [with comment by Paul]
Posted: 31 Oct 2021 09:53 AM PDT (John Hinderaker)On Friday, a Southwest Airlines pilot signed off with the usual chatter directed at his passengers, and added, “and remember, let’s go Brandon.” It was a low-key invocation of the ubiquitous phrase:
Reportedly, “Let’s go Brandon” is being heard on Southwest Airlines pilots’ radios even when not audible to passengers, and I have it on good authority that the same thing is happening on other airlines. This is hardly a surprise; a few days ago, four of the top ten songs on iTunes were variations on “Let’s go Brandon.” What is interesting about this seemingly minor episode is the Left’s extreme reaction to it. It is all over Twitter, with liberals denouncing the Southwest pilot and demanding that he be investigated or fired. Twitchy features this tweet by a liberal activist who is a former Obama employee and now is a lecturer at the Kennedy School:
Of course it isn’t just this pilot: liberals are hysterical about “Let’s go Brandon,” not to mention the actual “F**k Joe Biden” chants that have broken out at college football games and elsewhere. You see this everywhere on Twitter, among other places. Apparently these people have forgotten the last five years. If they thought it was unacceptably crude to say “F**k the president,” they should have thought of it in 2016. A simple Google search–“fuck Donald Trump”–turns up 17,900,000 results. One could cite endless examples of such vulgarity. Here is one, from the Facebook feed of a Lutheran minister who is engaged in campus ministry:
There is no one in the Democratic Party–literally not a single person, as far as I am aware–who has objected to the unceasing stream of obscenity that Democrats have directed at Donald Trump for the last five years. “Let’s go Brandon” is remarkably subtle and unobjectionable compared with what we see from the Democrats every day. (Then of course we have far more serious misconduct, like multiple physical assaults on Senator Rand Paul and his family. But that is material for another post.) And the incivility continues. To cite just one of countless instances, we have Democratic Party activists crashing and ruining a wedding because Kyrsten Sinema was one of the guests:
These are simply evil people. When I observe the appalling behavior of liberals in America today, the mildest response I can conjure up is “Let’s go Brandon.” STEVE adds: Wouldn’t it be a wonderful flying experience if liberals decided to boycott Southwest en masse? Southwest could help along this blissful prospect if they start serving Black Rifle Coffee. PAUL adds: “Let’s go Brandon” is political commentary. In my opinion, pilots should not subject a captive audience of passengers to it. JOHN responds: In principle, I agree with Paul. In a parallel universe that isn’t crazy, my belief that captive audiences shouldn’t be exposed to political commentary, even in humorous, three-second doses, would govern. However–speaking of captive audiences–I am mindful of the fact that I have spent many hours at airport gates being subjected to left-wing harangues on CNN. When I have spent an equal number of hours listening to conservative commentary from pilots, I will call it even.
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Stephen Hunter: The Shooting
Posted: 31 Oct 2021 06:16 AM PDT (Scott Johnson)Our friend Stephen Hunter describes the column below as “one more Alec Baldwin piece, this from a film critic and acknowledged firearms expert.” Steve was the Pulitzer-Prize winning film critic of the Washington Post and is the author of the Bob Lee Swagger novels. His new novel is TARGETED, which will be published in January by Atria/Emily Bestler Books and is available for pre-order now. Steve writes: What did Alec Baldwin know of the firearm with which he killed Halyna Hutchins? The answer, based on his filmography, is not much. Whether intentionally or by chance, he has had a remarkably gun-free career as a film actor. He has never made a Western. His most recent exposure dates back to 1994’s “The Getaway,” in which he used a .45 automatic, as did Steve McQueen in Sam Peckinpah’s original. However the automatic is a pistol from another era (1911 on) and its protocols are entirely different than the Italian clone of the Colt Peacemaker he reportedly used on the set of “Rust.” The perdurable Peacemaker is a genre icon. It has been used safely in literally tens of thousands of Westerns, from “The Great Train Robbery” of 1903 to this year’s “Old Henry.” In today’s professional film culture, even with diminished production of Westerns, there still must be hundreds of men and women highly proficient in its use. New Mexico, where the film shoot had gone, has to be jammed with savvy Colt users. There’s even an under-the-radar sport called Western Action Shooting by which thousands of ordinary folks dress up cowboy and use period-accurate firearms in matches. In other words, there’s no shortage of expertise. Clearly, Baldwin was not a western action shooter. One must further wonder if his reputed anger issues or his CEO status as producer precluded some old-salt type from giving him a basic rundown on what he could or could not do or what he should never do with the pistol. If so, that would be one more catastrophe in the chain of catastrophes that killed Ms. Hutchins. The gun that Baldwin used was a functional Italian replica of the Colt revolver which came into being in the early years of industrialized firearm development, far before such elementary issues as safety became of consideration. It was one of the first cartridge-firing handguns from Connecticut’s gun valley, originally released in 1873. Besides or perhaps in spite of being beautiful and ergonomic, its power, reliability, ease of operation and sturdiness made it a perfect marketplace fit. It was designed to be a short-range, quick-to-deploy mankiller, mandatory protection in the frequent episodes of violence that marked the frontier. Its engineers never cared about safety because they assumed the men who used it to be of practical nature, good with their hands, skilled in survival skills, shooters of experience, of great need to do the necessary fast. They never envisioned it in the hands of actors. All these years later, it retains some features that make it dangerous to the tenderfoot. As a single-action revolver, its trigger does one thing; it drops the cocked hammer. That hammer must be cocked by hand, usually with the thumb, wrapping around and securing the upswept spur, drawing it back until it locks in place. Thus–usually–shooting requires two discrete behaviors–the hammer must be cocked, then the trigger pressed. The art of drawing and shooting the single-action Colt is therefore highly refined, an integration of contradictory motions–the draw is up and out, the cocking down and back — that demand coordination, dexterity, hand strength and practice. It is not something to be picked up quickly, which is why many producers use shooting doubles, like armorer Hannah Guiterrez-Reed’s legendary father Thell Reed, in closeups. One exception confuses the issue and Clint Eastwood will be eternally grateful for it. He burst into big-screen consciousness in 1967 when he–or an Italian shooter-double in close-up–blew five galoots out of their boots as if he had a submachine gun. “A Fistful of Dollars” helped make him a star. Eastwood or the double had fanned the pistol. It is a feature of the Colt–of any revolver– that when the trigger is held back, that is, pinned against the rear of the trigger guard, the cocking function is bypassed. There are mechanical reasons for this, but I won’t explain them because I am not without mercy. Still, it is this feature which makes fanning possible: if the shooter holds back the trigger, he can slap the hammer back and it flies forward and fires at each slap, over and over. With practice and talent he can get really fast and even accurate. So it was this big iron that ended up on the hip and then in the hands of Alec Baldwin. I believe the most likely scenario for the incident at Bonanza movie ranch had to involve “inadvertent fanning.” There’s even an incident of inadvertent fanning on the record. In John Ford’s magnificent “The Searchers” Ethan (John Wayne) tosses The Reverend (Ward Bond) his loaded Colt. “Watch it, it’s loaded,’” says Ethan. But the Reverend doesn’t watch it. As he raises the pistol to fire at the charging Comanches, his thumb slips off the hammer and he accidentally discharges a shot at 45 degrees into the river. Something like this must have happened to Baldwin. The actor, as reported, was sitting in the pew of the church, practicing. He was trying mightily to get the draw-cock rhythm down and that was his focus, though dangerously adding the element of speed. It never occurred to him that the gun was loaded. (Rule No. 1: All guns are always loaded.) He was unaware that his muzzle had drifted onto the camera crew where Ms. Hutchins and director Joel Souza were crouched. (Rule No. 2: Never let your muzzle cover anything you aren’t willing to destroy.) In practicing the draw-while-cocking integration, his index finger had wandered onto the trigger, depressing it just far enough to bypass the cocking function. (Rule No. 3: Don’t touch the trigger until you’re ready to shoot.) Struggling awkwardly, he released the hammer under the impression he had cocked the pistol. He hadn’t. The hammer flew forward. The gun fired. (Rule No. 4: Always know what your target is.) It is quite possible that absent knowledge of these mechanics, he still believes the gun fired on its own, out of some defect. The defect was his. Most gun accidents are confluences of unlikelihoods, defying logic and all odds. Just consider the train of “if onlys” that produced this one. But distraction, more than anything, is a root cause. Whatever the legal, professional, or moral outcome, it should remind all shooters, Hollywood or Baltimore or any place in between, to pay attention. Let me add Rule No. 5: When you have a gun in your hand, it is the only thing in the world.
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In the Virginia race
Posted: 31 Oct 2021 05:49 AM PDT (Scott Johnson)Glenn Youngkin campaigned early yesterday morning in Arlington, deeply Democratic territory just across the river from Washington. He tweeted out the photos below to convey the size of the crowd he drew. It’s probably a mistake to make much of crowds in this context — I’ll never forget my night among the throng packed into the old Minneapolis Auditorium for George McGovern in the summer of 1972 — but Youngkin must be doing well to be spending time in northern Virginia on the closing weekend of the race.
Terry McAuliffe called on Kamala Harris to whip up the enthusiasm of the crowd in Norfolk. I draw the inference that McAuliffe thinks he needs help. If Harris is the help you need, you might be in deep trouble, but he also had Pharrell Williams on hand to deliver a weirdly impersonal message.
That isn’t to say the event didn’t draw a crowd. It did. Rich Edson tweeted out the photo below.
Nick Arama collects a few more clips in the RedState post “Cringeworthy Kamala’s Effort for McAuliffe Just Might Make People Vote for Youngkin.” Arama’s roundup includes a clip of Pharrell Williams’s pitch to the crowd “to vote and be a part of the process of being a Virginian.” Woo hoo! If McAuliffe pulls this race out on Tuesday the only conclusion to draw is that Virginia has become a deep blue state.
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Sunday morning coming down
Posted: 31 Oct 2021 05:08 AM PDT (Scott Johnson)If you listen to the right radio stations at this time of the year, you will hear a few songs associated with Halloween. On WUMB’s Highway 61 Revisited show yesterday, host Albert O devoted the entire four hours to songs fitting the day. He played oldies ranging from the traditional “Long Black Veil” (Johnny Cash’s cover) to Donovan’s “Season of the Witch” (covers by Vanilla Fudge as well as Al Kooper/Stephen Stills on Super Session) and the traditional “Tam Lin” (covered by Fairport Convention). He never fails to include “I Scare Myself” by Dan Hicks. The show has become an annual event and is a complete blast. By my lights, “I Put a Spell on You” by the artist known as Screamin’ Jay Hawkins is foremost among the songs that have made their way into Albert’s lineup. I’d like to take the liberty of revisiting the song this year just for the pleasure of it. Here is the improbable backstory offered by Bill Diehl at AllMusic: “Hawkins originally envisioned the tune as a refined ballad. After he and his New York session aces (notably guitarist Mickey Baker and saxist Sam ‘The Man’ Taylor) had imbibed to the point of no return, Hawkins screamed, grunted, and gurgled his way through the tune with utter drunken abandon.” Screamin’ Jay recalled: “[T]he producer brought in ribs and chicken and got everybody drunk, and we came out with this weird version … I don’t even remember making the record. Before, I was just a normal blues singer. I was just Jay Hawkins. It all sort of just fell in place. I found out I could do more destroying a song and screaming it to death.” The song was first recorded during a session in late 1955. However, that version was relegated to the vault. In 1956 Hawkins took another stab at the song and produced the hit version. You can hear Screamin’ Jay screaming on what I assume is that version in the video below. It’s a novelty song.
Who first heard the possibilities in the song? It must have been Nina Simone. Simone turned it into a tortured love song (the sax solo is by Jerome Richardson, I think) in 1965. She titled her album of that year after the song. Now we were getting somewhere. Her version is a keeper.
In 1968, the British rocker Arthur Brown harked back to the theatricality of Screamin’ Jay on The Crazy World of Arthur Brown. “I Put a Spell on You” fit right in.
That same year Creedence Clearwater Revival recorded the song for their debut album. Playing lead guitar and shredding his voice on the vocal, John Fogerty took possession of the song. It’s no joke. This is epic. I love this version.
The video above places CCR’s album track over the band’s live performance of the song at Woodstock in 1969. Fogerty could pull it off live as well. Below is the Woodstock track. CCR kept the live Woodstock recording in the can so that it would not compete with their own studio work at the time. Now it can be heard.
It doesn’t get much better than Simone’s or CCR’s version, but we can’t stop time in 1969. The song has been covered by many artists over the years. Joe Cocker recorded a good version in 2004 with a little help from Eric Clapton on guitar.
Jeff Beck turned in a surprisingly restrained cover featuring Joss Stone on the vocal for Emotion and Commotion in 2010. This gets down to the basics.
Lest there be any doubt that the song lives, listen up to Samantha Fish and her band give it a workout, blues style, in the 2014 performance below. Ladies and gentlemen, give it up for Samantha Fish.
I don’t want to beat it into the ground. I’m going to wind it up here this morning and encourage you to pursue it further on your own if you are so inclined (and I hope you are).
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Here’s your annual list of problemetic Halloween costumes to avoid … and the list seems to be getting longer and stranger.This year’s list comes courtesy of the LSPIRG (more on them in a moment) via the University of Washington and the always watchful Jason Rantz.
Trump got caught doing the chop at the Braves game last night and now there’s no question in my mind that he’s a white supremacistOh my gosh, you guys. I knew this guy was, like, the worst ever, but I didn’t realize he was a straight-up white supremacist Indian-hating Nazi!
Ibram X. Kendi deleted this tweet about college admission when people noted it undermines his entire life’s work of claiming America is rife with white supremacyIt’s hard to keep your religious doctrine straight when you’re woke.
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97.) US NEWS & WORLD REPORT
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99.) MARK LEVIN
October 29, 2021
On Friday’s Mark Levin Show, the crackpot website Mediaite is falsely reporting that this program is promoting conspiracy theories. However, it was Terry McAuliffe that claimed the 2000 and 2016 election were stolen. It was Terry McAuliffe’s campaign that just hired attorney Mark Elias who has known ties to a web of dark money donor groups aimed at changing elections through litigation instead of by legislation (which the Constitution calls for). If Elias specializes in election challenges and McAuliffe expects to win, why would he even hire Elias if he wasn’t actually planning on using litigation to win the election? It was Democrats led by Hillary Clinton that called the election of Donald Trump in 2016 illegitimate and stolen. Yet, Mediaite re-prints the propaganda produced by Media Matters and other outlets that exist solely to propagandize and slander conservative opposition. Later, why is President Biden even considering a nuclear treaty review? Such a surrender would be a gift to all global enemies of the United States. Afterward, the Biden administration is attempting to compel the Israelis to accept a Palestinian Embassy in Jerusalem. This goes against their sovereignty and the very spirit of the Abraham Accords. Finally, Arizona AG Mark Brnovich calls in to discuss the news that the Supreme Court accepted Arizona’s petition to defend the Public Charge Rule, which is a Trump administration rule that restricted green cards for immigrants deemed likely to be reliant on welfare.
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Here We Go Again: Mark Levin Insists Terry McAuliffe is Plotting to ‘Steal the Election’
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The crusade of a Democratic superlawyer with multimillion-dollar backing (August 7, 2016)
New Republic
The Right’s Embrace of Political Violence Is Escalating
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Allies lobby Biden to prevent shift to ‘no first use’ of nuclear arms
Twitter
Byron Donalds is a BADASS and this video proves it!
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Europe, UK, Join the U.S. in Condemning Israel over Settlement Construction
Post Millennial
AT&T employees are ‘assessed annually’ on racial politics issues and being workplace activists
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