Good morning! Here is your news briefing for Tuesday November 2, 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 — 11.2.21
Good Tuesday morning.
The Hard Rock Sportsbook app is live. Months after the Compact was signed by the Governor, OK’d by the Legislature, and approved by the feds, Floridians can now place bets.
While there was little fanfare leading up to the app launch — it was more of a soft opening — it is undoubtedly seeing plenty of action already. It works anywhere a smartphone does, meaning some bets, as Republican Rep. Randy Fine predicted, are likely placed from bathtubs.
But If politics were a sport (one you could bet on, that is), the app would be in for quite a stress test.
On the same day Hard Rock Sportsbook went live, the Seminole Tribe of Florida upped the ante in its campaign to convince Florida voters that the outside forces pushing for a wide-open sports betting market and a couple more casinos have a nefarious end goal — siphoning Floridians’ money and wiring it back to the Las Vegas Strip.
“Watch out, Florida. Out-of-state gambling companies want us to sign petitions to turn Florida into another Las Vegas while taking our money out of state. They know it could cost Florida billions and stop a popular law that puts us in control. They’ve got some nerve,” a string of everyday Floridians say in a new video ad produced by the Tribe.
“Don’t sign these gambling petitions. Because we already have a plan that’s working for us. … We’ll show these outsiders Florida’s not for sale.”
The spot directs viewers to a new website, WatchOutFlorida.com, that further explains the Tribe’s talking points and asks visitors to add their names “to the list of Floridians opposing the gambling amendments.”
But political committee Florida Education Champions, backed by sports betting juggernauts DraftKings and FanDuel, had a ready-to-go retort in defense of their initiative. An ad extols their proposal for redirecting sports betting taxes to education.
“Everyone loves a win-win, and if you’re a fan of sports betting, you can win-win, too. Billions of dollars for education, legal sports betting for you. We’re Florida Education Champions, and our petition brings legal sports betting to Florida and gives all the tax revenue to public education. That’s a win for you and our kids,” the ad’s star says.
It closes by urging voters to “be a champion for education” by texting 888-922-2240 to get and sign the petition.
They face a tight deadline to make the ballot, with about 223,000 valid petition signatures and another 669,000 left to deliver to county Supervisors of Elections, who likely need those in hand by the end of the year to meet deadlines for the 2022 election.
To watch the Seminole Tribe ad, click on the image below:
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Breaking overnight — “State web portal goes offline” via Renzo Downey of Florida Politics — The official web portal for Florida, including Gov. Ron DeSantis‘ homepage, has been down since Friday. A notice on state webpages like myflorida.com and flgov.com said the site is “currently under maintenance.” It is not the first time state websites have gone down. The voter registration portal crashed on the deadline to register to vote ahead of the November 2020 election.
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#FlaPol After Dark listeners knew it first — Steve Contorno heads to CNN — Contorno is leaving his post as the Tampa Bay Times’ political editor to join CNN as a reporter covering politics in the Sunshine State. Contorno started his political career covering Illinois politics for the Chicago Sun-Times and later held positions covering the political scenes in Wisconsin, Virginia and Washington, D.C. He came to Florida in 2015. “Looking forward to covering this crazy & consequential state for CNN,” he tweeted Monday. “I’ll be based in the Tampa area, but will be crisscrossing Florida to report on our politics, power & people.”
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Personnel note: Doug Wheeler launches solo public affairs shop — After leading the Florida Ports Council as president and CEO for more than 10 years, Wheeler has launched a full-service public affairs firm. D. Wheeler Strategies will provide its clientele with strategic consulting services in the areas of local, state and federal government affairs, brand and business development, communications, and organizational management. The new venture will see Wheeler leverage his broad business-based network and strong ties to transportation and infrastructure, international trade and development, and economic development to provide client success. At FPC, Wheeler helped generate unprecedented growth for Florida’s seaports, overseeing efforts that resulted in record funding and brought billions of state and federal investments to key port projects across the state. His resume also includes political and government affairs work for the Florida Chamber of Commerce and Associated Builders and Contractors.
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Save the date — Florida Internet & Television presents FITCon 2021, a two-day virtual event scheduled for Nov. 18-19. Now in its fifth year, FITCon brings together industry leaders for updates on state and federal legislative policy impacting internet providers and cable companies. On the second day, I get to pull out my crystal ball for what is on the horizon in the 2022 election cycle, followed by a Q&A on the upcoming Legislative Session and how it will affect political races statewide.
Registration is open now; please visit eventbrite.com/e/5th-annual-fitcon.
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Here are some other items that caught my attention:
— Most Americans will trust 2024 election results, but not most Republicans: An NPR/PBS NewsHour/Marxist National Poll found that 62% of Americans will accept the 2024 results, even if their candidate doesn’t win. But that majority is buoyed by Democrats, of whom 82% say they’ll trust results. Only 33% of Republicans said the same. Meanwhile, 81% of Americans believe there is a “serious threat” to democracy afoot, with 89% of Republicans smelling trouble, 79% of Democrats, and 80% of independents. But who’s the biggest threat? That depends on who you ask — 42% say Democrats are the biggest threat to democracy, 41% say Republicans, and 8% say both major parties are to blame.
— In CD 20, only one Special Election really matters: Tuesday’s Democratic Primary in Florida’s 20th Congressional District will almost certainly decide who will replace the late U.S. Rep. Alcee Hastings, whose death earlier this year prompted a Special Election. The late Democrat held the district since 1992 until he lost a cancer battle this summer. Now, 11 candidates are running in the Democratic Primary. An analysis from MCI Maps breaks down each candidate, the winner of whom will be the heavy favorite in the General Election. Candidates from central Broward County, MCI notes, might have an edge hailing from the district’s voting powerhouse. Those include Sen. Perry Thurston, Rep. Bobby Dubose and Broward County Commissioner Dale Holness. But don’t count out County Commissioner Barbara Sharief, from south Broward, or Rep. Omari Hardy and former Rep. Priscilla Taylor from Palm Beach, nor Sheila Cherifilus-McCormick, who doesn’t have a geographic base.
— New Census privacy method could leave people, homes uncounted: Differential privacy is the culprit. That’s the practice of intentionally adding errors to census data to avoid revealing participants’ identities. It prevents would-be data miners from matching census data to other publicly available information to identify people. The Census Bureau says it’s necessary to protect privacy, but, at least on paper, it’s causing people to vanish from counts. Critics of the measure, such as city officials and demographers, worry that the process is too far removed from reality. The result could cause flawed data, particularly among racial demographics, used to draw new political districts. Read the AP’s reporting on this conundrum here.
— You said the word!: After 20 months of COVID-19 craziness, we’ve all heard the word — “vax.” It became so pervasive this year, Oxford named it the 2021 Word of the Year. And it’s little wonder. Why say “vaccine” when you could sound much more hip by making it “vax.” As The New York Times notes, vax outperformed other fun vaccine euphemisms, such as “jab,” “shot,” and the hilarious “Fauci ouchie.” But the proof is in the data. According to Oxford, the term “vax” was used 72 times more often in September 2021 than a year earlier.
— Is Santa usurping Halloween?: “Christmas creep,” as retailers call it, has been happening for years, but this year it might have taken over even Halloween. As The New York Times reports, retailers nationwide have expedited the Christmas season “weeks, even months, earlier than last year.” So while stores had the requisite plastic pumpkins, they might not have been quite as noticeable as, say, a winter freaking wonderland. Britney Spears is on board. She put her tree up on Oct. 15, more than two weeks before Halloween. Maybe next year, we’ll add candy canes to our Halloween treat bags.
— Peppermint, YASS: Speaking of Christmas elbowing its way into fall holidays. Chick-fil-A’s Peppermint Chip Milkshake is returning to the famous chicken sandwich joint’s menu, according to Fox 13. The fast-food chain started serving the shakes Monday and will be available for a limited time. The shake combines Chick-fil-A’s “Icedream” product with pieces of peppermint bark, topped with whipped cream, and finished off with a cherry on top. Move over, pumpkin spice lattes.
— SITUATIONAL AWARENESS —
—@SteveLemongello: In basically every one of NJ and VA’s dumb odd-year elections for the last two decades, the Party that just won the White House lost the governorship. It didn’t really mean anything!
—@RepValDemings: It’s inexcusable to not include our plan to bring down prescription drug prices in #BuildBackBetter. Floridians pay far too much for their medicine. It’s outrageous, and we need to act.
Tweet, tweet:
—@RichardCorcoran: In light of the First DCA’s opinion declaring the Duval and Alachua County school districts’ forced masking policies in violation of state law, I’m officially putting the districts on notice: immediately come into compliance or face the consequences.
—@RepLoisFrankel: As we celebrate Florida passing 1 million #COVID19 vaccine boosters, we also mourn the tens of thousands of lives we have lost to this preventable disease.
Tweet, tweet:
— DAYS UNTIL —
The Blue Angels 75th anniversary show — 3; Disney’s ’Eternals’ premieres — 3; ’Yellowstone’ Season 4 begins — 4; ’Disney Very Merriest After Hours’ will debut — 6; U.S. to lift restrictions for fully vaccinated international travelers — 6; Miami at FSU — 9; ‘Hawkeye’ premieres — 12; Special Session on vaccine mandates begins — 13; ExcelinEd National Summit on Education begins — 16; FSU vs. UF — 25; Florida Chamber 2021 Annual Insurance Summit begins — 29; Jacksonville special election to fill seat vacated by Tommy Hazouri’s death — 35; Steven Spielberg’s ’West Side Story’ premieres — 38; ’Spider-Man: No Way Home’ premieres — 45; ’The Matrix: Resurrections’ released — 50; ’The Book of Boba Fett’ premieres on Disney+ — 57; CES 2022 begins — 64; NFL season ends — 68; 2022 Legislative Session starts — 70; Florida’s 20th Congressional District Election — 70; Special Elections in Senate District 33, House District 88 & 94 — 70; Florida TaxWatch’s 2022 State of the Taxpayer Day — 71; Joel Coen’s ’The Tragedy of Macbeth’ on Apple TV+ — 73; NFL playoffs begin — 74; XXIV Olympic Winter Games begins — 94; Super Bowl LVI — 103; Daytona 500 — 110; St. Pete Grand Prix — 117; ‘The Batman’ premieres — 123; ’Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness’ premieres — 186; ’Top Gun: Maverick’ premieres — 206; ’Platinum Jubilee’ for Queen Elizabeth II — 212; ’Thor: Love and Thunder’ premieres — 248; San Diego Comic-Con 2022 — 260; ’Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse’ sequel premieres — 339; ‘The Flash’ premieres — 367; ‘Black Panther 2’ premieres — 374; ‘Avatar 2’ premieres — 409; ‘Captain Marvel 2’ premieres — 472; ‘Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania’ premieres — 626. ‘Dune: Part Two’ premieres — 717; Opening Ceremony of the 2024 Olympic Games — 997.
“Alcee Hastings’ death left large shoes to fill. His likely successor will emerge Tuesday.” via Ryan Nicol of Florida Politics — The seat in Florida’s 20th Congressional District, formerly held by Hastings, won’t be officially filled until the Special General Election on Jan. 11. But Tuesday night’s Primary Election could be seen as the de facto end of the race, as the Democratic nominee will be heavily favored in the left-leaning district. It’s anything but clear who voters will select in the 11-person Democratic Primary. In a packed field during a likely low-turnout election, anything can happen. Five elected officials all resigned their respective positions to compete in the CD 20 Democratic Primary. The race stands out not just for the fact that it’s a rare Special Election for one of Florida’s 27 congressional seats. Hastings was Florida’s longest-serving member of Congress at the time of his death and was seen as a trailblazer in the Black community.
—”Who will pick up the mantle?” via Tiffani Knowles of The Miami Times
“Voters respond to fiercely fought South Florida congressional race with meager turnout” via Anthony Man of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — South Florida is about to send a new member of Congress to Washington, D.C, and voters are responding by … not voting. By the time in-person early voting ended Sunday, the total turnout for early voting and vote-by-mail in the Democratic primary was 11.3%. Primary day is Tuesday. The Broward-Palm Beach County 20th Congressional District is so Democratic that the primary winner is virtually guaranteed to become the ultimate winner, filling the vacancy created by the death of Hastings. Four out of five votes cast so far in the Congressional Primary have been mail ballots.
“Candidates in Miami-Dade’s low-turnout local elections hustle for every last vote” via Samantha J. Gross of the Miami Herald — With early voting concluded and no time left to postmark a mail-in ballot, all eyes in Miami-Dade County’s local races were trained Monday on voters who had yet to cast a ballot in what is turning out to be another low-turnout, off-year municipal election. Even after a weekend push at the polls, turnout heading into Tuesday’s Election Day was still paltry. With elections in Miami, Miami Beach, Hialeah, Homestead, Sunny Isles Beach and Biscayne Gardens, and 443,718 eligible voters across all races, combined turnout was at just 11.17% early Monday evening.
“Miami Mayor seeks reelection as he eyes national profile” via The Associated Press — 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. Suarez is not ruling out White House aspirations. He says the pandemic and social media elevated the roles and profile of “national mayors,” making them stronger contenders for the presidency. Next year, Suarez will become president of the U.S. Conference of Mayors, giving him a bigger platform.
—“Read before you vote: Candidates and races for the upcoming elections in Miami-Dade” via the Miami Herald
“Dan Gelber battled crime, COVID-19 and chaos on South Beach; now he’s seeking final term as Mayor” via Ryan Nicol of Florida Politics — Miami Beach Mayor Dan Gelber has seen a lot since securing his second mayoral term unopposed in 2019. On Tuesday, he’ll be looking for a third and final term leading the South Florida tourist mecca. This time, he faces several opponents. Four candidates are running to oust Gelber, who has run the city through the COVID-19 pandemic and overseen a contested debate surrounding the city’s nightlife. Also competing in the contest are Realtor Jean Marie Echemendia, businessman Ronnie Eith, innkeeper Carlos Enrique Gutierrez, and Gus Manessis, who works for a condo management company. Gelber indeed has the most seasoned political chops of the five candidates. Paired with a healthy fundraising lead, Gelber is the favorite to emerge from the crowded field Tuesday.
Assignment editors — Gelber will watch election results, joined by family and supporters, 7:15 p.m., location with RSVP to Christian Ulvert via christian.ulvert@gmail.com or (305) 336-3631.
“Party’s over? Miami Beach voters to decide on earlier alcohol cutoff time” via Ryan Nicol of Florida Politics — Miami Beach residents will vote on a referendum Tuesday that would require bars to stop serving alcohol at 2 a.m. Bars in South Beach currently serve drinks until 5 a.m. The debate over how late the liquor should flow has persisted throughout the year and could impact the city’s mayoral election as well. Tuesday’s referendum is a nonbinding straw ballot item meant to gauge resident support for moving the last call time up by three hours. But multiple members of the City Commission have said they would honor the voters’ decision and approve an ordinance should voters endorse the change.
—”Eight candidates, some very familiar to voters, vie for two Miami Beach Commission seats” via Jesse Scheckner of Florida Politics
Tweet, tweet:
“Central Florida voters head to the polls Tuesday” via Ryan Gillespie of the Orlando Sentinel — Voters across Central Florida will head to the polls Tuesday with seats on city councils up for grabs in Orlando, Oviedo, Mount Dora, and elsewhere across the region. Of three races in Orlando, only one is guaranteed to be decided Tuesday, and that’s in District 5, covering downtown Orlando, Parramore, and West Lakes, where Shaniqua Rose is taking on incumbent Regina Hill. Runoffs may be needed in Districts 1 and 3 if a candidate doesn’t receive 50% plus 1 of the vote totals. District 1 incumbent Jim Gray faces Sunshine Grund and Bill Moore to represent parts of Conway and all of Lake Nona. While District 3 incumbent Robert Stuart is challenged by Nicolette Springer and Samuel Chambers for the seat representing College Park, Audubon Park, Rosemont and Baldwin Park. Voters will also choose among candidates in St. Cloud, Groveland, Tavares, Montverde, Lady Lake, and Lake Mary.
—”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
“Voters in Lakeland, Winter Haven, Fort Meade will go to polls Tuesday” via Paul Nutcher of The Lakeland Ledger — The faceoff for Lakeland Mayor is between incumbent Mayor Bill Mutz and challenger Saga Stevin. In the City Commission District C Southwest race, challenger Allyson “Al” Lewis faces incumbent Sara Roberts McCarley. And for District D Southeast, voters will choose between Mike Musick and Shandale Terrell. Voters will be asked if they want to change the Lakeland City Charter regarding filling future vacancies. A second charter amendment on the ballot deals with appointments for City Attorney and City Manager. In Fort Meade, voters will decide between Ashlee Dishong, Herlinda Resendez and Jim “Possum” Schaill for City Commissioner Seat 1 and between Barbara Arnold and Samuel Berrien for the at-large City Commission Seat 5. In Winter Haven, there is a contest for City Commission Seat 5 between Matthew Logan Crowley and James H. “J.P.” Powell.
“Bill Mutz faces far-right political newcomer in Lakeland mayoral race” via Daniel Figueroa IV of Florida Politics — Lakeland’s mayoral race should be about pressing issues facing the city. But instead, the race has become a forced test of ideological divides as incumbent Mayor Mutz looks to continue his “still all in for ALL of Lakeland” promise against political newcomer Saga Stevin. Stevin has expressed extremist views, many aligned with fanatical Donald Trump supporters and the internet conspiracy QAnon. She’s criticized Mutz for moving a Confederate monument from one of the city’s keystone parks and claimed in debates that billionaire George Soros is somehow influencing politics in Lakeland. Despite those views, she’s been endorsed by police and firefighter unions in Lakeland. Stevin and Mutz will likely split the Republican vote. But Mutz has the better chance of earning votes from the city’s Democrats.
“Oviedo mayoral candidates often asked: ‘Where do you stand on Seminole’s rural boundary?’” via Martin E. Comas of the Orlando Sentinel — As Oviedo voters head to City Hall on Saturday to cast early ballots to elect a mayor, one of the increasingly contentious issues in the candidates’ campaigns is about a topic not even within the city. Do they support the strict development restrictions within Seminole County’s rural boundary? Her opponents Kevin Hipes and Abe Lopez also have had residents and debate moderators question their stance on the development-restricted area, which covers nearly one-third of Seminole. And all three candidates have repeatedly said they strongly support protecting the boundary. Conservationists say it’s probably one of the most important issues facing Oviedo in recent memory, as development pressure to build within that rural boundary is expected to increase in the coming years.
“Decision day is at hand for Ken Welch and Robert Blackmon” via Joe Henderson of Florida Politics —The latest survey by St. Pete Polls gave Welch a commanding 16-point lead, which could send a mistaken message to many voters that they don’t need to show up because the race is over. Would Blackmon supporters look at the polls and decide to take the dog on a walk instead of voting? Maybe. But could Welch backers figure it’s in the bag and get busy doing other things, forgetting to vote? It could happen. Probably won’t, though. As of Monday afternoon, turnout was at more than 19%. Of the mail ballots already returned, nearly 19,000 came from Democrats, compared to about 10,000 Republicans. The X-factor (maybe) is the more than 5,000 voters with no party affiliation who have already voted.
—”Everything you need to know about Tuesday’s St. Petersburg municipal election” via Colleen Wright of the Tampa Bay Times
—”Lisset Hanewicz, Tom Mullins race for District 4 amid hefty funding, partisan overtones” via Kelly Hayes of Florida Politics
”Red tide, building height heat up Venice races” via Jacob Ogles of Florida Politics — With two seats on the City Council up for a vote, the races this year will play a role in finalizing land development regulations, setting taxes and charting the coastal community’s long-term future. And with no other candidate-focused elections in Sarasota County this fall, it has attracted political attention from the major parties. Incumbent City Council member Helen Moore faces a challenge from fellow real estate agent Sandy Sibley. Meanwhile, James Boldt, Jennifer Lewis and Chris Simmons are facing off for the open Seat 4 spot.
Assignment editors — Former Republican Rep. JC Planas, Pastor Herman Yant and members of the anti-corruption organization RepresentUS are hosting an Election Day polling event with Gerry’s Partisan Pizza Truck, part of a two-week food truck tour of critical states where lawmakers are in charge of the redistricting process, 10:30 a.m., Central Christian Church, 250 SW Ivanhoe Blvd., Orlando.
— ALL EYES ON VIRGINIA —
“Virginia went big for Joe Biden, but on eve of another pivotal election, many voters say Democrats have not delivered for them” via Cleve R. Wootson Jr. of The Washington Post — A year ago, Biden won Virginia by 10 percentage points, riding a wave of antipathy toward Trump to place the commonwealth solidly into the Democratic column. But with the eyes of the political world back on Virginia for statewide elections on Tuesday, Biden’s sinking popularity has emerged as a key factor dragging down hopes of another party victory and making the state look, once again, more like a battleground than a Democratic stronghold. Interviews with nearly two dozen voters found a profound sense of frustration that people haven’t seen benefits of Democratic control trickle into their lives or their wallets.
“Virginia Governor’s race a tossup as Election Day nears, Post-Schar School poll finds” via Gregory S. Schneider, Laura Vozzella, Karina Elwood, Scott Clement and Emily Guskin of The Washington Post — Virginia’s race for Governor is a tossup as Tuesday’s election draws near, with 49% of likely voters favoring Democrat Terry McAuliffe and 48% favoring Republican Glenn Youngkin, according to a Washington Post-Schar School poll. The result is little changed from last month, when a Post-Schar School poll measured the race at 50% McAuliffe to 47% Youngkin — although the Democrat’s six percentage-point edge among all registered voters in September has narrowed to three points in the new poll, at 47% for McAuliffe to 44% for Youngkin. Youngkin is fueled by an 18-point advantage among independent likely voters, up from an eight-point advantage last month — a significant swing in a group that could determine the election’s outcome.
“The county that could decide Virginia’s Governor race” via Cuneyt Dil and Margaret Talev of Axios — Loudoun County, about 40 miles outside D.C., reflects national and state demographic trends. And it’s ground zero for cultural battles that have given Youngkin last-mile momentum against McAuliffe. 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.
“Last-ditch fight for Black votes could swing Virginia” via Elena Schneider and Maya King of POLITICO — Mailers attacking McAuliffe for being “on the side of abusive police officers” are popping up in Virginia voters’ mailboxes, urging support for third-party hopeful Princess Blanding. In interviews with POLITICO, more than a dozen top Democrats involved in the Virginia campaign expressed concern that Black support for McAuliffe is weaker and less enthusiastic than it could be in a razor-thin race in a blue-trending state. It appears Republicans are trying to take advantage. The anti-McAuliffe mailers are paid for by Our First Principles Fund, a nonprofit group whose only previous known spending came during the fight for the Virginia GOP’s gubernatorial nomination when the group spent six figures attacking one of Youngkin’s Primary opponents.
“Republican voters cut Glenn Youngkin some slack as he walks tightrope on Donald Trump” via Dan Merica and Eric Bradner of CNN — Trump, despite not traveling to Virginia to stump for Youngkin, has been an overriding presence in the race, with McAuliffe attempting to tie his opponent to a man who lost the commonwealth by 10% in 2020. Youngkin has responded by trying to walk a fine line with the former President: He has gladly accepted Trump’s endorsement numerous times, but he has also kept him at arm’s length in the close of the campaign. For Democrats, the dueling campaign strategies have turned the Virginia race into a referendum on the potency of Trump as a former President. But for many in Youngkin’s camp, the opportunity to defeat Democrats in Virginia far outweighs any questions they have about Trump’s lack of a presence in the race.
“As Glenn Youngkin tries to finesse Trump, Terry McAuliffe conjures his comeback” via Reid J. Epstein of The New York Times — In the final hours of campaigning on Monday to become Virginia’s next Governor, it was Youngkin offering an optimistic vision for the future while McAuliffe delivered harsh warnings about ghosts of the past. Youngkin was aiming to redefine how Republicans could win elections with Trump out of the White House. Youngkin, a former private equity executive, embraced Trump during the Primary contest this year but spent the months since winning the Republican nomination keeping a rhetorical distance. McAuliffe, crisscrossing the state in another plane, hammered away at the Trump-Youngkin connection, as he has for weeks. During his closing rally, in the parking lot of a Fairfax brewery, McAuliffe said Trump’s name 13 times in his 15-minute speech, repeatedly tying him to Youngkin.
—“On election eve, Trump touts ties with Youngkin” via Quint Forgey of POLITICO
“Before recent Democratic gains, Virginia went from blue to red and back again” via Daniela Santamariña and Zach Levitt of The Washington Post — The last time Virginia voters selected a governor, a year after Trump was elected President, Democrat Ralph Northam posted large margins in rapidly growing urban and suburban areas, netting a decisive victory over Republican Ed Gillespie. Republican Youngkin seeks to reverse the recent trend toward Democrats in one of America’s most contested states. Virginia Republicans have faced a growing challenge in the past decade as urban and suburban areas have grown and diversified, especially in Northern Virginia. Trump faced backlash from voters in those areas during his term. McAuliffe and his allies have tied Youngkin to the former President, who endorsed him in May.
“What the Virginia Governor’s race could tell us about the battle for control of Congress in 2022” via Melanie Mason and Jenny Jarvie of the Los Angeles Times — Virginia routinely gets outsize attention for its Governor races; the contests come in the otherwise quiet year after a presidential election, and the national political press corps is largely concentrated in neighboring Washington. For decades, the results have foreshadowed the political climate for the midterms; Republican Bob McDonnell’s win in 2009, for example, presaged major GOP gains during the tea party wave the following year, while current Democratic Gov. Ralph Northam’s win hinted at his Party’s strong performance in 2018. Precedent is not on McAuliffe’s side. Virginians tend to pick governors who come from the opposite political Party as the President; the only person to defy that trend was McAuliffe in 2013, who eked out a victory while Barack Obama occupied the White House.
— DATELINE TALLY —
“UF’s accreditor will investigate denial of professors’ voting-rights testimony” via Lindsay Ellis of The Chronicle of Higher Education — UF’s accreditor plans to investigate the flagship campus over the revelation that administrators denied three professors’ requests to serve as paid experts in a voting-rights lawsuit. Belle S. Wheelan, president of the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools’ Commission on Colleges, said the accreditor would follow its policy on investigating unsolicited information. Under those rules, accreditors can dig into campus happenings between review cycles if they learn of potential “significant issues of compliance.” Accreditation is needed for colleges to receive federal student aid.
UF launching task force to examine conflict of interest rules — University of Florida President Kent Fuchs and Provost Joe Glover sent a memo to UF students and staff Monday evening announcing they will appoint a task force to reexamine the institution’s conflict of interest rules. The announcement comes after three political science professors were blocked from serving as expert witnesses for the plaintiffs challenging the elections law passed earlier this year. Fuchs and Glover wrote that UF “stands firmly behind its commitment to uphold our most sacred right as Americans — the right to free speech — and to faculty members’ right to academic freedom.” They said the new task force would examine the existing policy for “consistency and fidelity.” However, the statement noted that faculty are only blocked from providing paid testimony. They added, “if the professors wish to testify pro bono on their own time without using university resources, they are free to do so.”
“Why did Florida ban state professors from challenging Ron DeSantis’s voting law?” via Greg Sargent of The Washington Post — The University of Florida has barred three professors from serving as expert witnesses in a lawsuit against the voter suppression measure. This story is about to get worse for the university: The Democratic members of Congress from Florida are set to come out sharply against the decision, I’m told, and depending on how things go, this could result in congressional hearings. This will ratchet up the stakes in this battle and draw more national scrutiny to a move that experts have denounced as a startling and inexplicable attack on academic freedom. The big unknown here is how this is supposed to be harming the university’s interests.
“Leading House Dem: Republicans will scale back DeSantis’ vaccine mandate ban” via Renzo Downey of Florida Politics — House Democratic Co-Leader Evan Jenne thinks the Legislature will scale back DeSantis‘ proposal to prevent businesses and government entities from mandating COVID-19 vaccines for employees. Senate President Wilton Simpson and House Speaker Chris Sprowls have equivocated, saying they intend to support businesses and Floridians against Biden’s “illegal and unconstitutional” vaccine mandate without saying they will pass state laws preventing vaccine mandates. The Republican-led Legislature has frequently backed business, but some influential corporations like Disney have implemented vaccine policies that run contrary to DeSantis’ anti-mandate proposal.
“Ahead of Senate vote, will Joseph Ladapo mask confrontation matter to Tampa Bay?” via Romy Ellenbogen of the Tampa Bay Times — Ladapo ruffled feathers again when meeting with Sen. Tina Polsky, ahead of his confirmation vote when the Legislature convenes in January for Session. In the time since, some Florida politicians have said they will not vote to confirm Ladapo, like Sen. Randolph Bracy. But in Tampa Bay, lawmakers, even Democrats, are sounding more reserved. It was a rookie mistake, said Sen. Jeff Brandes, but not an unforgivable one. “I think it’s predominantly been hashed out,” Brandes said. “It’s not an issue for me in my office.”
“Chip LaMarca pitches measure to broaden Florida KidCare access” via Jason Delgado of Florida Politics — A South Florida lawmaker is proposing legislation that would increase a child’s access to health care. The measure (HB 419) would expand access to Florida KidCare by doubling the current income cutoff limit to 400% of the federal poverty line. Florida KidCare is the state-provided health and dental insurance program. Republican Rep. Chip LaMarca is the bill sponsor. A former member of the Florida Healthy Kids Boards of Directors, LaMarca noted one in 13 children in Florida is uninsured. “Florida leads the nation in job creation and economic opportunity, and we must also lead on access to affordable health care for our kids,” LaMarca said.
“House Democrats demand public input mechanism for redistricting” via Jacob Ogles of Florida Politics — House Democrats say it’s imperative the once-a-decade process of redrawing Florida’s political boundaries becomes more open to the public. At a news conference Monday, the minority caucus stressed the urgency of access. “This is the public opportunity to draw back the curtain and see how the sausage is made,” said Rep. Dan Daley, ranking member of the House Legislative Redistricting Subcommittee. It’s a matter Democratic members have raised repeatedly ahead of the 2022 Legislative Session. But Republican leadership in both the House and Senate have said the COVID-19 pandemic makes a tour of cities and communities similar to what happened a decade ago unfeasible this year.
“Annette Taddeo, Carlos Guillermo Smith refile bills for tax-free Small Business Saturday” via Jesse Scheckner of Florida Politics — A proposal to give Florida shoppers a tax break and boost traffic at local businesses during the holiday season is back with minor tweaks that may help it succeed where it failed last year. Sen. Taddeo filed a bill (SB 712) to allow businesses that remit less than $100,000 a year in annual taxes to the Department of Revenue to participate in a “tax holiday” next November. Rep. Carlos Guillermo Smith filed its twin (HB 439) in the House. The holiday, known as “Small Business Saturday,” would occur Nov. 26, 2022. On that day, participating businesses that open by Jan. 8, 2022, would be able to forgo collecting the state’s 6% sales tax on any item “of tangible personal property” selling for $500 or less.
Leg. Cmte. Schedule:
—The Senate Commerce and Tourism Committee meets to consider SB 434 from Chair Ed Hooper to extend VISIT FLORIDA until Oct. 1, 2031, 9 a.m., 110 Senate Office Building.
—The House Education and Employment Committee meets for an update from the New Worlds Reading Initiative, 9 a.m., Morris Hall, House Office Building.
—The House Judiciary Committee meets for an update on civil lawsuit calculations, 9 a.m., Room 404 of the House Office Building.
—The Senate Children, Families and Elder Affairs Committee meets for an update on the state’s behavioral health system, 12:30 p.m., Room 37 of the Senate Office Building.
—The Senate Criminal Justice Committee meets to consider SB 260 from Chair Jason Pizzo to rename the Criminal Punishment Code as the Criminal Public Safety Code, 12:30 p.m., Room 110 of the Senate Office Building.
— The Senate Education Committee meets to consider SB 268 from Sen. Manny Diaz Jr. to proclaim each Nov. 7 as “Victims of Communism Day,” 12:30 p.m., Room 412 of the Knott Building.
— The House Health and Human Services Committee meets for an update from the Agency for Health Care Administration, 2 p.m., Morris Hall of the House Office Building.
— The Senate Military and Veterans Affairs, Space and Domestic Security Committee meets for updates from Pinellas County Sheriff Bob Gualtieri and Miami Beach Police Chief Richard Clements, 3:30 p.m., Room 37 of the Senate Office Building.
— The Senate Regulated Industries Committee meets to consider SB 170 from Polsky for a public-records exemption for lottery winners of $250,000 or more, 3:30 p.m., Room 412 of the Knott Building.
— The House Redistricting Committee meets for an update on redistricting law, 4 p.m., Room 404 of the House Office Building.
Assignment editors — NBA legend Magic Johnson joins Simply Healthcare and Department of Children and Families Secretary Shevaun Harris to discuss mental health in children and teens, 10:15 a.m. media setup; event begins 10:30 a.m., Old Senate Chamber, Florida’s Historic Capitol.
New and renewed lobbying registrations:
Jeff Sharkey, Capitol Alliance Group: Florida Agencies Serving the Blind
— CORONA FLORIDA —
“Florida COVID-19 update: 1,694 cases added and fewer people in the hospital” via Michelle Marchante of the Miami Herald — Florida reported 1,694 more COVID-19 cases and no new deaths as the global death toll topped 5 million. The Florida Department of Health usually backfills data on Mondays and Thursdays, but it’s unclear whether that occurred Monday since the death toll didn’t change. In all, Florida has recorded at least 3,650,637 confirmed COVID-19 cases and 59,497 deaths. On average, the state has added 81 deaths and 1,622 cases per day in the past seven days.
“How does Florida rank on COVID-19? The best? The worst? Well, neither. But we aren’t great” via Scott Maxwell of the Orlando Sentinel — This past week, DeSantis claimed Florida had the lowest COVID-19 case count in America and credited himself with making that happen. Yet, just a few weeks ago, Florida was widely reported as one of the worst states in America regarding COVID-19 cases. Florida still ranks in the worst 10 states for both COVID-19 cases and deaths per capita for the entire pandemic. Records show Florida has the ninth highest per capita case count since the pandemic began, 22% higher than the national average. And the 10th highest per capita death rate, 20% higher than the national average.
Richard Corcoran warns defiant school boards after 1DCA opinion — Education Commissioner Corcoran used a recent opinion from Florida’s 1st District Court of Appeals to prod school districts with mask mandates to fall in line with state rules banning mask mandates or face the full wrath of the state education department. As reported by Andrew Atterbury of POLITICO Florida, Corcoran said Monday that he was “officially putting the districts on notice: immediately come into compliance or face the consequences.” Though 1DCA opinion was scathing toward the Alachua and Duval school boards, it was not a ruling in the case, which was brought forward by parents seeking to force school boards to comply with the state’s mask mandate ban. An administrative court ruling on the mandate ban is expected in the next two weeks.
“Miami-Dade school district relaxes masks for high school, middle school students” via David Goodhue of the Miami Herald — Parents of Miami-Dade County public high school and middle school students can opt their children out of the district’s mask mandate. Superintendent Alberto Carvalho announced at a news conference in downtown Miami Monday afternoon. It is effective immediately. Elementary school students and students in kindergarten through eighth grade schools are not subject to the protocol relaxation, but they could be within weeks if COVID-19 infections, hospitalizations and deaths continue to plummet in South Florida, Carvalho said. Working with its medical task force, the school district has relied on a critical set of metrics, including COVID-19 cases and percent positivity rates in Miami-Dade, in deciding COVID-19 protocols, including masks.
“Pensacola and Escambia County will stop reporting COVID-19 hospitalizations as cases drop” via Emma Kennedy of the Pensacola News Journal — The city of Pensacola and Escambia County will no longer report daily COVID-19 hospitalization data as the number of local cases has remained low enough that hospital officials no longer deem it necessary. However, officials have said that if hospitalizations increase again to more than 50 hospitalizations per day, the practice of updating those numbers is likely to return. “We are pleased to see a significant and consistent decline in the number of COVID-19 hospitalizations at Baptist and in other hospitals in the community,” said Baptist Hospital spokeswoman Kathy Bowers. As of Monday, the three hospitals were treating a total of 36 COVID-19 patients.
— 2022 —
“COVID-19’s campaign trail vanishing act” via David Siders of POLITICO — While the pandemic is nowhere near over, COVID-19 is fading as an issue that animates voters. It’s evident from recent polls in the off-year New Jersey and Virginia elections, where pre-pandemic concerns like taxes, the economy, and schools now rank as the top voter priorities. Strategists of both parties are advising candidates to shift their focus ahead of the midterm elections in 2022. Already, political advertising related to the pandemic has fallen off sharply from earlier this year. “Everybody’s just ready to move on,” said Julie Roginsky, a former top adviser to New Jersey Democratic Gov. Phil Murphy.
“Frustrated Democratic donors threaten to hold back midterm donations over infighting in Congress, tight Virginia race” via Brian Schwartz of CNBC — Several major Democratic donors have warned leaders in Congress that they may hold back on donations for next year’s midterm elections unless the Party can come together and get some big wins. Financiers have said behind the scenes that they are frustrated with lawmakers who have yet to pass Biden’s sprawling economic agenda. Donors have also described their frustration with the gubernatorial race in Virginia, where Democratic power player and former Gov. McAuliffe is running neck and neck with Youngkin, a wealthy former CEO of the Carlyle Group.
“Young people are over Democrats — and Republicans — new data show: What that means for 2022” via Noah Pransky of NBC LX — New data obtained by NBCLX reveals turnout among voters aged 18-29 fell by nearly half for California’s September recall election, compared to the 2020 presidential election 10 months earlier. Gen Z-ers, voters more likely than any other generation to support Democratic candidates, are also now the voters most likely to say they no longer support Biden and other established Democrat leaders. The research suggests the Democrats’ threats aren’t necessarily Republican gains; the GOP fails to connect with young voters. If there’s any constant in American politics, it’s that voters tend to have short memories. Democrats hope that fact — and the passage of the President’s Build Back Better plan — will together reengage young voters ahead of the 2022 midterms and turn unfavorable polling numbers into favorables.
“‘The best-case scenario here is no one cared’: Evan Jenne blasts decision on legislative Special Election dates” via Ryan Nicol of Florida Politics — Jenne, the House Democratic Co-Leader, is hammering DeSantis after DeSantis announced Special Election dates which could leave three seats in the Legislature unfilled next Session. Those elections will decide successors for Sen. Perry Thurston and Reps. Bobby DuBose and Omari Hardy. All three of those Democratic lawmakers were forced to resign their respective seats to pursue the open seat in Florida’s 20th Congressional District. All three represent strongly left-leaning districts. DeSantis set the Special Primary Elections for Senate District 33 and House Districts 88 and 94 for Jan. 11. If a Special General Election is necessary, that would be held on March 8.
“Orlando firefighters union backs Kamia Brown for Senate” via Scott Powers of Florida Politics — Brown has picked up the endorsement of the Orlando Professional Firefighters labor union in her quest to be elected to Senate District 11. Brown on Monday announced the backing of the firefighter’s union, Local 1365 of the International Association of Fire Fighters, adding to a list of Democratic lawmakers who joined her campaign last month. Brown faces Democratic Rep. Geraldine Thompson in a 2022 Democratic Primary battle for the seat. The position is opening because Democratic Sen. Randolph Bracy is running for Congress instead of reelection. Senate District 11 covers western Orange County. There are no Republican or independent candidates yet. Local 1365 represents 560 members of the Orlando Fire Department.
“Two groups behind Navarre incorporation effort continue push to get on 2022 ballot” via Alex Miller of the Pensacola News Journal — Two groups pushing to incorporate Navarre are moving forward with separate efforts after state Rep. Jayer Williamson refused to back down on his requirement that the incorporation effort earns at least 60% of the vote in a nonbinding referendum. Williamson called that threshold “nonnegotiable” last week at a legislative delegation meeting as Preserve Navarre founder Wes Siler argued there was no requirement in the state constitution that his group needed to reach that level. This latest push to turn the unincorporated Navarre community in Santa Rosa County into its own city comes after several failed attempts in recent years.
Happening tonight:
— CORONA NATION —
“Anthony Fauci encourages COVID-19 boosters, says pandemic is a ‘mixed bag’ entering the holidays” via Michael Wilner of the Miami Herald — Fauci, chief medical adviser to Biden, said the state of the coronavirus pandemic in the United States is a “mixed bag” entering the holiday season and that Americans should get their vaccine booster shots as soon as they are eligible. Over 64 million U.S. adults are not vaccinated, and the Biden administration is preparing for significant resistance from parents as vaccines become available to children ages 5 to 11 this week. Although he plans to stay in Washington and have family visit, Fauci said he would have “no problem” getting on an airplane to travel.
“C.D.C. plagued by confusing messaging, critics say” via Alexander Nazaryan of Yahoo News — On Oct. 22, Fauci, the top medical adviser to Biden, sat for a CNN interview that touched on coronavirus booster shots. The program host, John Berman, asked Fauci if people should seek out booster shots of the same brand of vaccine they’d initially received. “It’s generally recommended that you get the booster that is the original regimen that you got in the first place,” Fauci said. He conceded that mixing different types of vaccines was allowable but reiterated that brand loyalty was best. He had, in fact, added that there was no danger in mixing vaccine types, but a casual observer might have been led to believe that the federal government didn’t know its own plan.
— CORONA ECONOMICS —
What Alix Miller is reading — “More cargo at Florida ports? Truck driver shortage could bring challenges” via Paul Nutcher of The Ledger — Florida ports have the cargo capacity, but a shortage of truck drivers could create a logistics challenge throughout Florida. Last week, after Gov. DeSantis made statements publicly about port capacity in the Sunshine State, industry insiders said that a decadelong truck driver shortage could bottleneck freight at Florida’s ports just as cargo ships anchored off the Pacific coast are now waiting to be emptied. Tra Williams, owner and CEO of FleetForce Driving School in Winter Haven, welcomed the Governor’s comments but said more cargo would likely highlight the need to train more drivers.
— MORE CORONA —
“NYC puts 9,000 workers on unpaid leave as vaccine mandate kicks in” via Erin Durkin of POLITICO — New York City placed 9,000 city workers on leave without pay Monday as its coronavirus vaccine mandate for the public workforce kicked in. The requirement ordered by Mayor Bill de Blasio, one of the most aggressive in the nation, has pushed the vaccination rate among all city workers to 91%. But at least 21,000 city workers covered by the mandate remain unvaccinated: 9,000 who have now been barred from working, and another 12,000 who have applied for religious or medical exemptions. The latter group is being allowed to work until decisions on those exemptions are made in the coming days. The total city workforce is roughly 378,000.
“Maryland man pleads guilty to operating fake Moderna website, charging people to buy advance vaccines” via Andrea Salcedo of The Washington Post — The website was almost identical. When a user loaded the homepage, Moderna’s name and logo were displayed at the top of the site, along with a tab explaining how mRNA technology works. Some visiting the page would have been convinced that it was Moderna’s official website. On Friday, Odunayo “Baba” Oluwalade, one of three men accused of using the fake website to sell coronavirus vaccines at $30 per dose, pleaded guilty to federal wire fraud conspiracy in connection with the scheme.
— PRESIDENTIAL —
“Biden cites ‘overwhelming obligations’ of U.S. on climate” via Ellen Knickmeyer, Zeke Miller, and Josh Boak of The Associated Press — In a markedly more humble tone for a U.S. leader, Biden acknowledged at a U.N. summit Monday that the United States and other energy-gulping developed nations bear much of the responsibility for climate change, and said actions taken this decade to contain global warming will be decisive in preventing future generations from suffering. “None of us can escape the worst that is yet to come if we fail to seize this moment,” Biden declared. The President treated the already visible crisis for the planet as a unique opportunity to reinvent the global economy. He sought to portray the enormous costs of limiting emissions as a chance to create jobs by transitioning to renewable energy and electric automobiles.
— D.C. MATTERS —
“Joe Manchin says he won’t be pressured into reconciliation vote” via Andrew Solender of Axios — Sen. Manchin said he won’t be pressured into supporting a $1.75 trillion expansion of the nation’s social safety net and urged House progressives to pass a $1.2 trillion infrastructure bill in the interim. Manchin’s declarations show Democrats are no closer to passing the two bills that House leaders had hoped to move this week, and Biden has said will define his presidency. House progressives fear Manchin and Sen. Kyrsten Sinema will gut the reconciliation bill. Manchin said he has concerns about the bigger bill’s effect on inflation and increasing the federal debt, so he wants more time to study its specifics and determine their precise cost.
“Democrats scramble to get a drug-price compromise, but wait on Kyrsten Sinema” via Rachel Roubein, Dan Diamond, Tony Romm and Amy Goldstein of The Washington Post — Congressional Democrats are scrambling to work out a drug-price compromise that would cap seniors’ out-of-pocket costs for medicine and lower the price of insulin, with negotiators working through the weekend and Monday to convince key holdouts like Sen. Sinema. “The moment is now. We must deliver on our promise to lower the amount of money our constituents pay for prescription drugs,” Rep. Angie Craig and 14 colleagues representing competitive districts wrote to House leadership on Sunday. But the deal has yet to win support from Sinema, Rep. Scott Peters and a handful of other congressional moderates who objected to the more sweeping overhaul advanced by Democrats earlier this year.
“Nearly 4 in 10 who say election was stolen from Trump say violence might be needed to save America” via Aaron Blake of The Washington Post — During the 2016 campaign, Trump warned of the dangers of a small, radicalized portion of the country resorting to what it viewed as justified violence. In pushing his proposal to ban all Muslim immigrants, Trump cited polling from a like-minded immigration group. A poll is the latest to show that, even after the tumultuous events of Jan. 6, a large number of Republicans, 3 in 10, believe violence might be justified “to save our country.” What this poll adds to the dialogue is how much that overlaps with belief about a stolen election. Among those who believe the 2020 election was stolen from Trump, support for justified violence rises to 39%.
“The Supreme Court hints that it may allow a challenge to the Texas abortion law.” via Adam Liptak of The New York Times — After almost three hours of lively arguments, a majority of the justices seemed inclined to allow abortion providers; but perhaps not the Biden administration, to pursue a challenge to a Texas law that has sharply curtailed abortions in the state. That would represent an important shift from a 5-to-4 ruling in September that allowed the law to go into effect. Justices Brett Kavanaugh and Amy Coney Barrett, who were in the majority in that ruling, asked questions suggesting that they thought the novel structure of the Texas law justified allowing the providers to challenge it. Justice Kavanaugh said that might amount to closing a loophole. Justice Barrett noted the law was structured to prevent the providers from presenting a “full constitutional defense.”
— CRISIS —
Absolute must-read — “Bloodshed” via Jacqueline Alemany, Hannah Allam, Devlin Barrett, Emma Brown, Aaron C. Davis, et al. of The Washington Post — Trump had just returned to the White House from his rally at the Ellipse on Jan. 6 when he retired to his private dining room just off the Oval Office, flipped on the massive flat-screen television and took in the show. At the other end of Pennsylvania Avenue, thousands of his supporters were wearing his red caps, waving his blue flags, and chanting his name. The Capitol was under siege and the President, glued to the television, did nothing. For 187 minutes, Trump resisted entreaties to intervene from advisers, allies and his elder daughter, as well as lawmakers under attack.
— EPILOGUE: TRUMP —
“Trump is now the odds-on favorite to be President in 2025” via Tim Miller of The Bulwark — The twice-impeached, disgraced loser who was schlonged in the 2020 election, tried to stay in power against the will of the people, and then came 10 cowardly Republican Senators away from being disqualified from ever running for office again, is now more likely than any other person in the world to take the next oath of office on the Capitol steps on Jan. 20, 2025. How is that for some weird s — t? Now I’m sure some will roll their eyes when this headline comes across the Twitter feed. But this ain’t about my compulsions. It’s the actual, real-world reality being presented by those who have the most skin in the game.
— STATEWIDE —
“More time to choose, more money to educate, could mean more enrollment in Obamacare in 2022” via Christine Jordan Sexton of Florida Politics — Monday marked the start of open enrollment for 2022 health insurance coverage in the federal health insurance exchange under a law often referred to as Obamacare. The 2022 open enrollment runs for a 10-week period, from Nov. 1 through Jan. 15, giving residents more time to choose a plan than they had last year when open enrollment was limited to six weeks. More money is also being directed at so-called “navigators” to help people enroll in the federal health insurance exchange. Florida Covering Kids and Families at the University of South Florida received an $11.9 million grant from the Biden administration earlier this year to increase outreach programs and enrollment in the federal health insurance exchange.
“Nursing homes ponder staffing mandates as direct care costs increase” via Christine Jordan Sexton of Florida Politics — Nursing home staffing requirements could be on the table in the upcoming 2021 Legislative Session, according to the state’s leading nursing home association. Florida Health Care Association Chief Executive Officer Emmett Reed said a workforce shortage exacerbated by the COVID-19 pandemic had increased direct care costs at Florida nursing homes by $300 million over the last year. That’s not to say, though, that the Association will be asking for a $300 million increase in funding from the Legislature, Reed said. The FHCA will be meeting with its members next week to finalize its legislative budget proposal and upcoming Medicaid funding requests. Reed said the group may not ask for the full $300 million, which would result in a $19 increase in Medicaid reimbursement per day per patient.
“Seniors are using marijuana more than ever before” via Hannah Critchfield of the Tampa Bay Times — Marijuana use is on the rise among older adults. Last year, the proportion of adults 65 or older who reported recent cannabis use jumped by 18%, according to the 2020 National Survey of Drug Use and Health released last week, rising from 5.1% in 2019 to 6% in 2020. The spike comes on the heels of a steady trend of increased cannabis use among seniors over the last five years. What’s more, in 2020, more older adults also reported using marijuana sometime in their lifetime, a jump from roughly 32% to 36%, signaling a possible cultural shift in older adults’ willingness to open up about past tokes.
“U.S. Judge Robin Rosenberg should have pulled out of FPL case due to husband’s stock buy, court says” via Jane Musgrave of The Palm Beach Post — David “Jack” Wilkinson always suspected something was amiss when a federal judge threw out his 2017 lawsuit, seeking overtime pay from Juno Beach-based utility giant NextEra Energy. “It felt like there had to be something that influenced the outcome,” Wilkinson said. Last month, the engineer who lives in Knoxville, Tennessee, received a letter that confirmed his suspicions. Wilkinson learned that U.S. District Judge Rosenberg violated judicial rules by not stepping down from his case. In Wilkinson’s case, Rosenberg’s failure to step down and another involving NextEra Energy also violated the law.
— LOCAL NOTES —
“Broward school district announces national search for permanent superintendent” via David Goodhue of the Miami Herald — Broward County Public Schools announced Monday that it is launching a national search for a permanent superintendent to replace Robert Runcie, who resigned after his statewide grand jury indictment in April. In July, the School Board hired Vickie Cartwright to serve as an interim superintendent, but there was a stipulation she would not be a permanent hire. That changed when the School Board voted last week to let her apply for the job. Cartwright’s annual salary is $275,000. The choice over the summer was between Cartwright and Robert Schiller. Schiller made a career as an interim executive in the public and private sectors. He transitioned several large urban school districts in their search for a permanent superintendent.
“Eckerd Connects fired from child welfare services in Pinellas, Pasco” via Christopher O’Donnell of the Tampa Bay Times — Florida Department of Children and Families Secretary Shevaun Harris decided to terminate the state’s contract with Eckerd Connects to provide child services in Pinellas and Pasco counties when it expires at the end of the year, according to Florida Senate President Wilton Simpson. That contract was worth $80 million in 2021. In response, Eckerd Connects has told the state it will also walk away from an $87 million contract to provide child welfare services in Hillsborough County, a contract it has held since 2012. Simpson said the decision reflected frustration at the performance of Eckerd Connects, which has faced criticism for a handful of high-profile deaths of children in foster care under their watch. He said their performance did not measure up when compared to other lead foster agencies across the state.
“178 entities are seeking $74.9 million in county COVID-19 relief money. There’s a problem.” via Dustin Wyatt of The Lakeland Ledger — The Polk County Commission will decide Tuesday what to do with the county’s remaining federal COVID-19 relief money. But it’s clear going into the meeting that they won’t be able to help every business and nonprofit that’s requested a share of the funding. After the Commission agreed to put $82 million of its $140 million in American Rescue Plan funding toward infrastructure projects such as roads and facilities, the county has $10.5 million still available for social and health needs. Meanwhile, 178 local entities have submitted applications to the county with requests totaling $74.9 million. Where the money goes will likely be determined when the Commission gathers for a workshop scheduled to start immediately following the regularly scheduled 9 a.m. board meeting at the county administration complex in Bartow.
“Lakeland Chamber of Commerce President and CEO Cory Skeates resigns” via Maya Lora of The Lakeland Ledger — On Friday, the Lakeland Chamber of Commerce announced that its president and CEO, Skeates, has resigned from his post. In a news release, the Chamber’s executive committee said it had accepted Skeates’ resignation, effective Oct. 29. Skeates led the organization for six years and was previously president and CEO of the Oviedo-Winter Springs Regional Chamber of Commerce, according to the news release. Skeates said in a text message that he had “nothing to add beyond what was in the news release.” The news release states Skeates resigned following conversations between himself and the executive committee “related to fully realizing the Lakeland Chamber’s mission and vision” and that Skeates resigned “to allow a change in leadership in the best interest of the Chamber.”
— TOP OPINION —
“Learning is for commie-pinko wokesters, and we don’t need any of it around here” via Diane Roberts of Florida Phoenix — Unlike these school boards, Florida’s surgeon general nominee has his head on straight. Sure, there are all these so-called studies that show getting the vax and wearing a mask cut down on COVID-19 transmission, but our governor’s doc told us just what we wanted to hear: 1. Vaccines are “nothing special”; 2. Why not take hydroxychloroquine or horse de-wormer? What have you got to lose? 3. Masks are a communist plot. That brave Dr. Ladapo showed fuss-bunny Democrat Sen. Polsky who was boss, refusing to mask up in her office, even though she has cancer and is undergoing radiotherapy. Hey, lady: Our freedoms are more important than your compromised immune system.
— OPINIONS —
“Take the win, Democrats, and don’t look back” via E.J. Dionne Jr. of The Washington Post — Celebrate victory. Explain what you’ve achieved. Defend it from attack. Change the public conversation in your favor. Build on success to make more progress. And for God’s sake, don’t moan about what might have been. Biden and Democrats in Congress are on the cusp of ending their long journey through legislative hell by enacting a remarkable list of practical, progressive programs. This will confront them with a choice. They can follow the well-tested rules for champions of social change. Or they can repeat past mistakes by letting their opponents define what they have done and complain about the things left undone.
“Roe is as good as gone. It’s time for a new strategy.” via Kathryn Kolbert and Julie F. Kay of The New York Times — For the first time in a generation, the Supreme Court appears likely to overturn Roe v. Wade. The end of Roe need not herald the end of an era of reproductive freedom. It may instead launch a new strategy that protects the fundamental human right to decide whether to have children and raise them in safety and dignity. The Supreme Court will hear oral arguments in two separate cases challenging the new Texas law effectively banning abortion. The more direct nationwide threat to Roe, however, comes in December in a case challenging a Mississippi law that would ban most abortions after 15 weeks.
“Media ignore Florida COVID-19 recovery” via Dave Seminara of The Wall Street Journal — Florida went from having the country’s highest rate of COVID-19 infections to the lowest in about two months. Does the turnaround illustrate that infection rates are cyclical and often affected by weather? Is Florida’s infection rate lower than in states with significantly higher vaccination rates and mandates? I don’t know the answers to those questions, in part because journalists are less interested in asking them than in bashing DeSantis. An Oct. 25 New York Times article on declining COVID-19 cases nationwide failed to mention Florida, the state with the country’s most dramatic improvement. Instead, the paper’s David Leonhardt emphasized that Republicans have lower vaccination rates than Democrats. I support DeSantis’s approach because we can’t live in fear forever, and it’s wrong to force our children to do so.
“A choice for the University of Florida: Academic freedom or government stooge” via the Orlando Sentinel editorial board — Rest in peace, academic freedom, because the University of Florida has decided faculty members may speak their minds only when it’s in the best interests of the Gators and the governor. In effect, that means no university-sanctioned criticism of state government, its laws, or the GOP leaders who make them. The decision may be unprecedented, and it represents an about-face for a university that in 2018 cleared a professor to work on previous election lawsuits. Ironically, one of those was a lawsuit that challenged the state’s unconstitutional ban on early voting sites at state university campuses.
“UF’s big mistake on academic freedom” via the Tampa Bay Times editorial board — By any reasonable definition, “academic freedom” should mean that UF professors could testify in a voting rights court case in which they are, quite literally, experts. But UF is trying to bar political science Daniel Smith, Michael McDonald and Sharon Austin from testifying against SB 90, which puts new restrictions on in-person and mail-in voting. What is UF’s official reason? “Outside activities that may pose a conflict of interest to the executive branch of the State of Florida create a conflict for the University of Florida,’’ wrote the dean of UF’s college of arts and sciences. In other words, if it’s bad for the Governor, it’s bad for UF? That is a horrible line of thinking. And it’s a new one for UF.
— ON TODAY’S SUNRISE —
The Miami-Dade Public School District is relaxing mask mandates as the state heats up the threats.
Also, on today’s Sunrise:
— Amid Republican infighting, a Democrat comes to the defense of House Speaker Sprowls.
— And calls continue to mount against the University of Florida administration’s stance over a voting rights case, including a boycott over what’s being described as “benign racism.”
— Today’s Sunrise Interview is with Chuck Hobbs, the publisher of the Hobbservation Point Newsletter. He issued an open letter to his alma mater, the University of Florida, calling on the administration to reverse what he calls its tone-deaf stance barring its professors from testifying in a voting rights case — which challenges SB 90.
To listen, click on the image below:
— ALOE —
“Oh great, another cranky column about baseball games taking too long” via Jason Gay of The Wall Street Journal — Reading this lousy sports column will take three hours and 57 or so minutes less time than Sunday’s Game 5 of the World Series. That game lasted the routine nine innings. And took a whopping four hours. Now granted, this column is probably about 1/200th as interesting as watching the Astros and Braves play nine. Baseball’s gotta speed it up. While it’s easy to dismiss the moaning about long games as the same old anti-baseball cranks yelling at clouds, a wise business would see an opportunity. This Series is a huge moment for Braves fans and Astros fans, but a wider audience is always going to be good for the brand.
“The first trailer for ‘The Book of Boba Fett’ takes ‘Star Wars’ fans into the galactic underworld” via Ethan Alter of Yahoo Entertainment — Straight outta the Sarlacc, here comes the first trailer for The Book of Boba Fett; the latest Disney+ Star Wars series and the first live-action star vehicle for the titular bounty hunter in his four-decade existence. It’s an upgrade that’s been a long time coming for a divisive character who made his first appearance in 1978’s infamously awful Star Wars Holiday Special, followed by a notoriously lame death in 1983’s Return of the Jedi, not to mention a potential mid-2010s spinoff movie that was thrown in the garbage compactor. The Book of Boba Fett trailer indicates that Boba’s still got some ‘splainin’ to do to the rest of Tatooine’s criminal underworld about his sudden career transition.
“Universal: Mannheim Steamroller coming back; Grinchmas show on the move” via Dewayne Bevil of the Orlando Sentinel — Universal Orlando has revealed additional details about its festivities for the upcoming holiday season, including the return of Mannheim Steamroller concerts and a new location for its Grinchmas stage show. Mannheim Steamroller, a Christmas-music supergroup, will be in concert at Universal Studios’ Music Plaza on Dec. 4, 5, 11 and 12. It’s included in regular park admission. The concerts were absent from Universal’s holiday lineup as a pandemic precaution last year. The “Grinchmas Who-liday Spectacular Show” is moving into the space previously occupied by Blue Man Group. Universal’s holiday celebrations kick off on Nov. 13.
“Tampa, Orlando and Miami restaurants can now earn Michelin stars” via Helen Freund of the Tampa Bay Times — As part of a new partnership between The Michelin Guide and state tourism marketing agency VISIT FLORIDA, Michelin inspectors will start visiting restaurants in Tampa, Orlando and Miami and announce a guide sometime in 2022. The guide, arguably the world’s most well-known and respected restaurant ratings system, has never included Florida before. For Florida restaurants, this is big news. For Tampa restaurants, it’s really big news. But for other Tampa Bay area restaurants, the news is bittersweet. The guide doesn’t apply to the whole Tampa Bay region — just the city of Tampa. That means restaurants in other culinary hot spots, like St. Petersburg and Dunedin, won’t be awarded stars at this time.
“Why McDonald’s looks sleek and boring now” via Steven T. Wright of Vox — If you’ve ever had a hankering for a Big Mac in Orlando, Florida, there’s a good chance that you wandered into a very special McDonald’s. With its hideous red-and-yellow checkerboard exterior and its neon-lit french fry monolith, the so-called “World’s Largest Entertainment McDonald’s” bears down on innocent customers like a monument to bad taste. The muted colors, large glass windows, and overall boxy appearance of a modern McDonald’s are forgettable and a far cry from the garish red-and-yellow buildings that many recall from their childhood. At the same time, this standardization might make good business sense for a style of dining that is sometimes seen as out of fashion or simply outmoded; some in the industry wonder if the company has lost something in the process of turning its back on its McDonaldland origins.
— HAPPY BIRTHDAY —
Best wishes to Sheila Martin.
___
Sunburn is authored and assembled by Peter Schorsch, Phil Ammann, Renzo Downey and Drew Wilson.
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13.) AXIOS
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🗳️ Good Tuesday morning and happy Election Day. Smart Brevity™ count: 1,169 words … 4½ minutes. Edited by Zachary Basu.
Photo illustration: Sarah Grillo/Axios. Photo: Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images
Win or lose in today’s Virginia governor’s race, Glenn Youngkin has created a new template for Republican candidates running in competitive races in the Trump era.
- Why it matters: Republicans, with swing states set to dictate Senate control in 2022, are scrambling to strike a balance — when Full Trump is too hot in swing states like Virginia, but Never Trump is too cold for the former president’s rabid fans.
GOP strategists tell us Youngkin has shown five ways to navigate this squeeze:
- Embrace Trump tactics: Youngkin and his team were ruthless in torturing Democrat Terry McAuliffe with the words he most regrets: “I don’t think parents should be telling schools what they should teach.” That sentence, part of an answer about removing books from schools, is less controversial when you watch the whole clip, including McAuliffe’s declaration: “I love teachers!” But top Democrats tell us McAuliffe was too slow to clean it up. Even this Sunday, McAuliffe told Chuck Todd on “Meet the Press”: “[E]verybody clapped when I said it.”
- Softly embrace Trump himself: Steer clear of criticizing him, but also steer clear of standing next to him or running as a knock-off. As Peggy Noonan put it in a Wall Street Journal column: “Don’t insult Donald Trump but do everything to keep him away.” Youngkin nailed this. He shunned the T-word, pro or con.
- Turn your opponent into a liberal Trump: Find words, actions, votes that paint Democrats — not your own party — as the wild, anti-democracy, close-minded ones. Youngkin found fertile ground in culture wars — mask requirements, transgender bathrooms and teaching on race — unfolding in Loudoun County, the exurban bellwether beyond D.C.’s Beltway.
- Use their power against them: Youngkin turned Biden’s all-party control of Washington into a weapon. Youngkin fueled perceptions that Democrats have gone too far left for suburban parents and are captives of progressive elites.
- Don’t say crazy things: This is another prong of Peggy Noonan’s formula. Youngkin mostly avoided saying things independents — and suburban women — would find incendiary or insulting.
Pollster Bill McInturff of Public Opinion Strategies tells clients this polling for CNBC reflects a “surge of concern about the cost of living that has created very negative attitudes about the economy.”
- Why it matters: “It is a stark reminder that while Washington focuses every day on congressional negotiations … there’s the real world of the lives of everyday Americans,” McInturff writes.
Leaders of more than 90 countries today will sign a U.S. and E.U.-sponsored Global Methane Pledge, designed to cut emissions of the powerful but short-lived gas, Axios’ Andrew Freedman writes.
- Why it matters: Though methane is less abundant than longer-lived carbon dioxide, it’s dozens of times more powerful at trapping heat in the atmosphere.
How it works: While efforts to cut carbon dioxide emissions require systemic change, such as retooling the way society generates and uses energy, methane is easier to target.
- It only requires actions like plugging leaks in oil and gas infrastructure and other human-caused sources, including agriculture.
- The voluntary pledge commits countries to reducing methane emissions by 30% by 2030.
- Pledge signatories include 15 of the world’s top 30 methane emitters.
The intrigue: President Biden’s rollout of the methane pledge will be reinforced by action at home — unlike Biden’s summit speech yesterday, which had to share time on network news with Sen. Joe Manchin’s brushback against key pieces of his climate agenda in Congress.
- The EPA today will propose new regulations targeting methane emissions.
What’s next: Methane emissions will soon be tracked down to individual sources via satellites, aircraft and ground-based instruments. So a voluntary initiative like the Global Methane Pledge can eventually transform into a regulatory regime.
- Go deeper: White House fact sheet … Biden’s speech: “This is a critical decade” … Share this story.
Illustration: Annelise Capossela/Axios
The next space race will be defined by private companies teaming up to build space stations for NASA and industry, Axios Space author Miriam Kramer writes.
- Why it matters: The International Space Station is expected to end its run by 2030, if not before. The future of U.S. astronauts spending any time in orbit depends on these private stations.
Between the lines: These new space stations are expected to be far cheaper to build than the ISS, which cost about $100 billion.
What’s next: Instead of providing services in orbit, NASA plans to become a customer to space-focused private companies, allowing the agency to turn its attention on farther afield goals, like getting humans to the Moon and Mars.
Covers: Little, Brown … Dutton
- “The Age of AI,” by Henry Kissinger, Eric Schmidt and computer scientist Daniel Huttenlocher: “AI may produce insights that are true but beyond the frontiers of … human understanding. … [H]umans may find themselves in a similar position to that of Alexander Fleming, the discoverer of penicillin. … [H]umanity, lacking a concept of an antibiotic, did not understand how penicillin worked. The discovery launched an entire field of endeavor. AIs produce similarly startling insights — such as identifying drug candidates and new strategies for winning games — leaving it to humans to divine their significance.”
- Our friend Tim Mak of NPR has already driven news with “Misfire” — deep reporting on the NRA that “pulls back the curtains, from Wayne LaPierre’s wedding to the reaction at NRA HQ after Sandy Hook, from the infighting and corruption that led to Oliver North’s ejection … from the elite world of the NRA’s female million dollar donors, to an NRA delegation to Moscow, to confrontations between top officials in Oliver North’s hotel suite.” Read an excerpt.
Art director: Derry Noyes. Original art: Lynn Staley. Photo: USPS
Next year, the Postal Service will honor the late Katharine Graham, Washington Post owner and publisher during Watergate and the Pentagon Papers fight, in its Distinguished Americans series.
- The announcement notes Graham was “the first female head of a Fortune 500 company and a pivotal figure during turbulent moments in American history.”
- “The stamp features an oil portrait of Graham, based on a photograph taken in the 1970s, during the peak of her influence.”
Go deeper: See other ’22 stamps.
Late innings mean late nights in the World Series, with many fans struggling to stay awake as the Atlanta Braves and Houston Astros play baseball’s most important games of the year, AP reports.
- The first five Series games averaged 3 hours, 41 minutes — up from 3:37 last year.
- The opener took 4:06. Sunday night’s Game 5 lasted exactly 4 hours, with both ending after midnight ET.
The Astros won 9-5 early yesterday. The Braves lead the series, 3-2.
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Feds charge 13, tie street gang to 19 murders over two decades
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24.) ROLL CALL
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Morning Headlines
The 2020 census may have missed more than 1.5 million people, enough to cost New York the congressional seat that went to Minnesota, according to a report released Tuesday. The Urban Institute estimated a close to 1 percent net double count in Minnesota, contributing to the state keeping all of its House seats in reapportionment. Read more…
Sen. Joe Manchin III, D-W.Va., pleaded Monday for more time to consider a $1.75 trillion budget reconciliation bill, saying he couldn’t support the sweeping measure until its impact was fully analyzed. Manchin said the full price tag could be double the advertised cost if the proposed programs were extended. Read more…
What the elections in Virginia and New Jersey won’t tell us
OPINION — Virginia and New Jersey election returns will likely tell us what we already know: Joe Biden has lost ground and Democratic voters are disillusioned. But results won’t necessarily be predictive of 2022 — times are too strange for a simple as-goes-Virginia cause and effect, and historical analogies break down with the pandemic. Read more…
Click here to subscribe to Fintech Beat for the latest market and regulatory developmentsin finance and financial technology.
California Republican Rep. David Valadao seems more comfortable chatting about bulls than bills, and he sounds indifferent discussing even his own electoral future after his vote to impeach Donald Trump. Valadao sat down with Heard on the Hill to discuss politics, farming and the future he wants for his children. Read more…
Key justices skeptical of Texas abortion law structure
The Supreme Court appeared ready Monday to give abortion providers a legal pathway to stop a Texas law that effectively bans the procedure after about six weeks, in part because a polarized Congress is unlikely to clarify how it and any copycat laws could be challenged in federal courts. Read more…
Biden’s telecom picks jump-start Democratic broadband push
President Joe Biden has designated Jessica Rosenworcel, the FCC’s acting chairwoman, to serve in the post on a permanent basis and tapped broadband policy advocate Gigi Sohn to fill an empty seat on the commission. The picks were welcomed by Democratic lawmakers and have won industry approval. Read more…
Democrats pinning climate hopes on revised methane fee
House Democrats are hoping their latest version of a methane fee in the budget reconciliation package reflects enough concessions to win over skeptical members within their own ranks and garner the critical support of West Virginia Democratic Sen. Joe Manchin III. Read more…
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25.) POLITICO PLAYBOOK
POLITICO Playbook: Youngkin’s crowds dwarf McAuliffe’s on election eve
DRIVING THE DAY
TERRY MCAULIFFE wanted GLENN YOUNGKIN and DONALD TRUMP to campaign together so badly that when it didn’t happen, McAuliffe simply invented a Youngkin-Trump event that didn’t exist.
“Guess how Glenn Youngkin is finishing his campaign?” McAuliffe told a modest crowd outside a Fairfax brewery Monday night at his final rally. “He is doing an event with Donald Trump here in Virginia.”
That was a lie. Trump wasn’t in Virginia and he never campaigned with Youngkin, though he did make the case for the GOP candidate — “fantastic guy!” — during a brief “tele-rally.”
Thirty miles away, at the Loudoun County Fairgrounds, a crowd several times the size of McAuliffe’s was waiting for Youngkin to take the stage. You got a hint of why McAuliffe was desperate to manufacture the fake Trump event. While McAuliffe has boundless energy — “Sleep when you’re dead!” he likes to say — his Monday audiences in Richmond and Fairfax, where we caught up with him, were modest and listless.
Youngkin’s were large and rollicking, with many of the trappings of a MAGA rally — a similar dad rock playlist, hats and flags and T-shirts paying homage to the former president — but, to the great disappointment of Democrats, not Trump himself.
In Richmond on Monday afternoon, McAuliffe hinted at how Trump’s uncharacteristic self-control in not inserting himself more forcefully into the Virginia race had been a bit of a letdown. “I guess from a political perspective, sure,” McAuliffe told reporters, “I think that would be great.” (Though he quickly added, “But for the sake of the country it’s time to move on.”)
McAuliffe’s final message was almost entirely negative, focused on tying his opponent to Trump. Youngkin’s pitch was more complicated. He spent far more time advocating for job training programs, fixing the Virginia DMV, eliminating the state’s grocery tax and admiringly name-checking GEORGE W. BUSH than he did talking about how he would ban critical race theory (a topic he’s leaned on plenty during the campaign to activate the MAGA base, despite the fact it’s not being taught in schools). Youngkin didn’t talk about Trump. (He didn’t have to.)
Still, Virginia is a blue state that JOE BIDEN won by 10 points, and the obvious intensity gap on display in the final days can be deceiving.
“The Virginia governor’s race is coming down to momentum against math,” note Steven Shepard and Charlie Mahtesian in the must-read of the day, in which the duo dig into the key geographic and demographic trends driving the race.
Heather Caygle, Marianne Levine and Sarah Ferris connect the dots between Democratic inaction in Congress and McAuliffe’s precarious situation across the Potomac: “Terry McAuliffe could go down in Virginia’s gubernatorial race Tuesday, and neither congressional liberals nor centrists want to take the blame.”
NYT’s Reid Epstein’s Virginia dispatch notes “it was Glenn Youngkin offering an optimistic vision for the future while Terry McAuliffe delivered harsh warnings about ghosts of the past,” a contrast that “demonstrated their shifting fortunes.”
CNN’s Dan Merica, who has covered the race for months, takes note of the apparent Youngkin-mentum: “Youngkin’s events in the final days of the campaign have been energetic, often sizable, affairs, with Republicans increasingly enthusiastic that they have a shot to win their first statewide race in Virginia in more than a decade.”
You can find everything you need to know about today’s election in Virginia, as well as the other 2021 contests, right here, including POLITICO’s beloved election night live chat, which will begin when polls close at 7 pm.
We’ll be hitting both Virginia candidates’ parties tonight and will have a deep dive on the results for you Wednesday morning. One of the only things that McAuliffe and Youngkin both mentioned Monday night — and we agree — is that the Virginia race will have an enormous impact on the direction of American politics in the coming months.
Good Tuesday morning. Thanks for reading Playbook. Drop us a line: Rachael Bade, Eugene Daniels, Ryan Lizza, Tara Palmeri.
POLL: POPULAR STUFF DROPPED FROM BBB — For months, the White House has been touting the programs in its original Build Back Better plan as popular with the American people. Our latest POLITICO/Morning Consult weekly poll bears out their optimism. But there’s also bad news for the administration: Some of their most popular ideas didn’t make it in the current framework, including adding dental and vision to Medicare, allowing Medicare to negotiate prescription drug prices and providing free community college.
The poll asked respondents to choose their top five most important components of the original Build Back Better package. These proposals made top five lists most frequently:
Paid family and medical leave, which was also excluded from the current framework, didn’t make as many top five lists, but it is still broadly popular. Seven in 10 respondents said they support it, including 82% of Democrats, 68% of independents and 58% of Republicans. Toplines … Crosstabs
BIDEN’S TUESDAY: The president just delivered remarks at the “Action on Forests and Land-Use” event at COP26.
— 7:15 a.m.: Biden will participate in a meeting on the Build Back Better World initiative.
— 9 a.m.: Biden will deliver brief remarks at an event highlighting the progress of the Global Methane Pledge.
— 10:30 a.m.: The president will deliver remarks at the “Accelerating Clean Technology Innovation and Deployment” event.
— 3:30 p.m.: Biden will hold a news conference.
— 5:55 p.m.: The president will depart Edinburgh, Scotland, to return to D.C., arriving at the White House at 1:25 a.m.
THE SENATE is in, with a recess from 12:30 p.m. to 2:15 p.m. for weekly conference meetings.
THE HOUSE will meet at 10 a.m. and at noon will take up several bills focused on small businesses and entrepreneurship. GSA Administrator ROBIN CARNAHAN will testify before the Transportation and Infrastructure Committee at 10 a.m.
PLAYBOOK READS
(IR)RECONCILABLE DIFFERENCES
MANCHIN’S EFF-YOU TO PROGRESSIVES — The West Virginia Democrat stole the limelight yet again Monday when he called a press conference — and promptly poked progressives in the eye. Sen. JOE MANCHIN chided the left for holding the bipartisan infrastructure bill (BIF) hostage — then did the exact opposite of what progressives wanted him to do to release it: He said he may or may not vote for the reconciliation bill after all.
The hedging came as progressives have been insisting both Manchin and Sen. KYRSTEN SINEMA (D-Ariz.) make public assurances that if they vote for the BIF, the two moderates will also pass the party’s larger social-spending bill. Manchin basically flipped them the bird.
And yet progressives appear to be shrugging it off, a bit of a head-scratcher given how adamant they’ve long been about securing commitments from the two senators. Congressional Progressive Caucus leader PRAMILA JAYAPAL (D-Wash.) told reporters Monday night that she trusts Biden when he says he can deliver 50 Democratic votes in the Senate to pass the Build Back Better plan.
“I am going to trust the president. Our members are going to trust the president. And we are going to do the job that we need to do, which is pass … both bills through the House,” she said. “Whatever Sen. Manchin says is … up to him.”
Why the sudden change? With a Democratic defeat in Virginia’s gubernatorial race today now looking like a real possibility, nobody wants to be blamed for a loss.
SO WHAT NOW? House Democrats — from Jayapal to Speaker NANCY PELOSI — are still saying they want to pass both bills this week. That is, if they can get the language finalized. Asked when that might be, Majority Leader STENY HOYER told reporters, “I wish I knew.”
Behind the scenes they’re still haggling over a few last provisions. In the meantime, the House Rules Committee will start work on parts of the bill already drafted as early as today, Pelosi announced Monday night. Burgess Everett, Sarah Ferris and Marianne LeVine have the latest here.
ALL POLITICS
INSIDE THE TRUMP-RICKETTS CORNHUSKER STATE BRAWL — Our Alex Isenstadt has a juicy read up today about the turf war between Trump and termed-out Nebraska GOP Gov. PETE RICKETTS. The headline: “Trump, the billionaire family and the bull semen baron who divides them.”
The full story is a great yarn — the deets are definitely worth your time — but here’s a taste: ““In a phone call earlier this year, according to a person with direct knowledge of the discussion, Ricketts tried to dissuade Trump from anointing a political adversary, cattle-breeding executive and Trump ally CHARLES HERBSTER, in the race to succeed Ricketts as governor in 2022. … Trump leapt into the Nebraska battle last week, defying Ricketts’ wishes and endorsing Herbster in a show of force for a longtime ally.”
“The months-long saga of Herbster’s rise — and Ricketts’ efforts to halt it … illustrates Trump’s primacy in the GOP and his willingness to spurn the party hierarchy, rebuffing a prominent governor in his own state to elevate one of Trump’s original political backers, a dyed-in-the-wool loyalist who was at both Trump’s 2015 presidential campaign launch and the January 6 rally that preceded the deadly riot at the Capitol.”
SEAN PARNELL ACCUSATIONS ROIL SENATE PRIMARY — We wrote a few weeks ago that Republicans were worried more would come out about SEAN PARNELL, the Republican Senate candidate in Pennsylvania recently endorsed by Trump. According to the Philly Inquirer, Parnell’s ex-wife testified under oath Monday that the former Army platoon leader — whom she said suffers from PTSD — abused not only her, but also their children. From the story: “In tears, LAURIE PARNELL said that her husband …
— “[C]alled her a ‘whore’ and a ‘piece of s—’ while pinning her down.”
— “‘Tried to choke me out on a couch and I literally had to bite him’ to get free. ‘He was strangling me.’”
— “[F]orced her out of their vehicle alongside a highway after raging at her, telling her to ‘go get an abortion.’”
— “[O]nce slapped one of their children hard enough to leave fingerprint-shaped welts through the back of the child’s T-shirt. Her attorney gave the judge a photo as evidence.”
— “[G]ot angry at one child and punched a closet door with such force it swung into the child’s face and left a bruise. She said her husband told the child, ‘That was your fault.’”
JUDICIARY SQUARE
SCOTUS WATCH, via NYT’s Adam Liptak: “After almost three hours of lively arguments on Monday at the Supreme Court, a majority of the justices seemed inclined to allow abortion providers — but perhaps not the Biden administration — to pursue a federal court challenge to a Texas law that has sharply curtailed abortions in the state. That would represent an important shift from a 5-to-4 ruling in September that allowed the law to go into effect.”
Also: Alice Miranda Ollstein and Josh Gerstein’s five takeaways from the arguments.
PLAYBOOKERS
Joe Biden looked … very sleepy during the opening speeches at COP26.
Roger Stone threatened to primary Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis if he “does not conduct an audit of the 2020 election in the state,” Insider’s Cheryl Teh reports.
Janet Yellen met Bono in Glasgow and tweeted: “It’s a Beautiful Day.”
Cori Bush said Joe Manchin’s opposition to BBB is “anti-Black, anti-child, anti-woman and anti-immigrant.”
Elon Musk’s net worth jumped $24 billion Tuesday (no that isn’t a typo), to $335 billion. He is by far the world’s richest person. Jeff Bezos is second with a measly $193 billion. (h/t Bloomberg)
Huma Abedin “thought for a long time” she cost Hillary Clinton the 2016 election, per CBS.
Kirsten Powers, CNN senior political analyst and USA Today columnist, has a new book out today that will appeal to many Playbookers: “Saving Grace: Speak Your Truth, Stay Centered and Learn to Coexist With People Who Drive You Nuts” (Convergent).
Tim Mak, an investigative reporter at NPR and a POLITICO alum, has a new book out today that spills the secrets of the nation’s powerful gun lobby. It’s called “Misfire: Inside the Downfall of the NRA.” Read NPR’s review here.
Tucker Carlson tried to suggest on air that WaPo’s massive Jan. 6 investigation was a flailing response to his new series on the Capitol siege. The Post has been working on its project for months.
TRANSITIONS — Julie Alderman Boudreau is joining American Bridge 21st Century as presidential research director. She most recently was research director at the League of Conservation Voters, and is a Planned Parenthood and Media Matters alum. … Bronwyn Flores will join IBM to lead comms for the IBM Policy Lab. She most recently led comms for regtech startup Metrc, and is a Consumer Technology Association alum. … Jason Ginenthal is now VP of health care media at FleishmanHillard. He most recently was a freelance PR consultant.
ENGAGED — Christopher Kirchhoff, senior adviser at Schmidt Futures and an Obama NSC and Pentagon alum, and John Tsou, VP of marketing at OpenTable, got engaged on Saturday. The two were a year apart at Harvard but first met on Hinge in San Francisco in early 2019. Pic
— Andrew Clark, the Republican comms strategist and 2020 Trump campaign rapid response director, got engaged to creative content marketer Ryan Donovan.
WELCOME TO THE WORLD — Kevin Perez-Allen, VP of issue advocacy at BerlinRosen, and Rachel Tucker, senior state strategies manager at the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, welcomed Lucía Alicia Perez-Allen on Sunday. She came in at 5 lbs, 13 oz and 19 inches. Pic
HAPPY BIRTHDAY: Playbook’s own Eli Okun … Pat Buchanan … former Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker … Jonathan Stahler of Sen. Chris Coons’ (D-Del.) office … Jen Dlouhy … Makan Delrahim … Roger Dow of the U.S. Travel Association … Fox News’ Cam Cawthorne … AARP’s Bill Walsh … John Sampson of Microsoft Azure … Melanie Tiano of CTIA … BBC’s Anthony Zurcher … Aaron Weinberg … Kevin Cirilli … WaPo’s Adam Kushner and Ava Wallace … DNC’s Alana Mounce … Sofia Vilar of J Strategies … APCO Worldwide’s Jay Solomon … Sheyla Asencios … Natalie Johnson of Firehouse Strategies … Catherine Lyons … Steven Capozzola … Matt Bisenius of the American Cleaning Institute … Daniela Pierre Bravo … Kayla Benker … Aaryn Kopp … Christopher Graves … Celeste Lavin of HuffPost
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26.) AMERICAN MINUTE
Conspiracy to Overthrow Government thwarted by George Washington – American Minute with Bill Federer
27.) CAFFEINATED THOUGHTS
28.) CONSERVATIVE DAILY NEWS
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29.) PJ MEDIA
The Morning Briefing: We Followed the Science and Got Punished by Twitter
Top O’ the Briefing
Happy Tuesday, dear Kruiser Morning Briefing friends. Be sure to drop by the treehouse for some complimentary sundries.
We are leading off today with an in-house “news” story that’s part of a larger issue that we here in Briefing Land are dealing with: the coordinated assault on truth, conservative media, and free speech by mainstream and social media.
We here at PJ Media are in a bit of an ideological tug-of-war with Twitter right now. That may seem silly to outsiders but we work in media and — for better or for worse — our fortunes are tied in varying degrees to social media. Digital new media grew up at the same time as Facebook and Twitter. In the early days, we began integrating social media into our overall branding and marketing plans. It worked quite well for a long time.
Then they began turning on us.
I’ll let Paula get you up to speed:
We knew this would eventually happen. Twitter has locked PJ Media’s account and is demanding that we delete a tweet that told the truth about Rachel Levine’s gender. You remember Levine. He’s Joe Biden’s transgender assistant secretary for Health for the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services and, if you believe the Washington Post, the “first-ever female four-star admiral” in the U.S. Public Health Service Commissioned Corps.
PJM’s Matt Margolis took issue with that claim in an article titled: “Rachel Levine Is Not the ‘First Female Four-Star Admiral’… Because He’s a Male.”
The whole affair began when Matt tweeted out the article with that headline, then our official PJM account did the same. The zealous Twitter book-burning censors wasted little time in locking the accounts. That’s not the same as getting suspended. Our account is still visible, we just can’t do anything with it. If you visit it, it looks like we haven’t posted anything in a week and a half.
To get it unlocked, we are supposed to delete the tweet, which Twitter says means acknowledging a violation of its rules.
I was relaying this to a friend when it first happened and she asked what we were going to do about it. I told her I got the feeling that Paula wanted to dig in and not acquiesce.
And here we are.
Paula offers some of her reasoning:
In 21st-century America, truth is considered a revolutionary idea. Maybe it’s always been that way. But now, more than ever, we need to stand up to the bullies who would force us, maybe at gunpoint in the near future, to lie and to parrot their preferred narrative. We owe it to our kids and grandkids, and to future generations, to tell the truth. We don’t want to look back and say that we lost our freedom because we feared confrontation or retribution or a reduction in clicks.
Our friend and colleague Brandon Morse also wrote about this at our sister site RedState, and offered this conclusion:
This is a fight society should be willing to have. We should be able to speak factually without fear of being punished for it. We should be able to debate in the open without the platform we debate on shifting things in the favor to give one side more advantage over the other and silencing one side of a respectful debate.
Twitter is wrong here, and PJ Media should be supported openly as they stand firm against this ridiculous attempt by Twitter to parrot the “correct” narrative. Tell Twitter that you stand with PJ Media and that they’re wrong for censoring others they disagree with.
The main reason I find all of this so galling is that American leftists are forever running around screaming like a bunch of pants-wetting banshees about conservatives being “SCIENCE DENIERS!” This is coming from a bunch of people who have completely rejected biology in pursuit of the politics of abortion and transgender issues. During the past year and a half, one of their pet phrases has been “Follow the science.” We here at PJM are being penalized for literally doing that in this case.
As I write this, our addled alleged president is attending the U.N. Climate Conference, where he and other world leaders are letting computer models, which are more often than not wrong, be the determinative factors for dictating the policy of a New World Order. These people don’t believe in science any more than I believe I’m going to spend the rest of my days as a billionaire on an island with a bunch of NFL cheerleaders.
This incident highlights one of the reasons I write so much about our VIP subscription program. That wasn’t the purpose of relaying this (I’ll have a longer column about the VIP fun next week), but if your interest is piqued, you can sign up here.
Meanwhile, we will keep following actual science and not being afraid to write about it.
Everything Isn’t Awful
PJ Media
Me: [WATCH] Sen. Marsha Blackburn Is Fighting for Essential Workers Threatened By Vax Mandates
VodkaPundit: Parents, Juan Williams Thinks You’re Racist
Oh. Nation of Islam Professor: Jewish Weed Is Making Black Men Gay
Biden and the Democrats Have Failed America
We Refused to Lie About Rachel Levine’s Gender—So Twitter Locked Our Account
The Cost of Communism: ‘Comrade de Blasio’ Has Gutted the Big Apple
Mike Rowe: Today’s Skilled Labor Shortage Is No Surprise
#MemoryHole alert. The Investigation of Those ‘Horrible’ Border Patrol Agents on Horses Has Vanished
VodkaPundit, Part Deux: Pushing Grandpa Off the Cliff: Democrats Ready to Ditch Joe Biden
Monday Miscellany: The Realities of Anti-Trans Crime and Racism, and a Halloween Myth
Sleepy Joe Biden Falls Asleep During Climate Conference. Wouldn’t You?
The Southwest Airlines ‘Let’s Go Brandon’ Narrative Appears to Be Crashing and Burning
Rittenhouse Defense Team Implodes Hours Before Jury Selection
Oops! Mandate Mayor Frees Up Thousands of Workers Just in Time to Vote
L.A. Times and LAPD Ignore the Realities of Crime in the City
Townhall Mothership
We Know What Halyna Hutchins Said Before She Was Shot by Alec Baldwin
Laugh or Cry? Here’s How NBC News Reached Out to the Secret Service Over ‘Let’s Go Brandon’
White House Sides With The Squad After Manchin Blasted Them
An Under the Radar SCOTUS Ruling Could Be a Bellwether on Roe and School Choice
Lock ’em up. Loudoun County Officials Likely Lied About Knowledge of Sexual Assault in Restroom
Will Ilhan Omar’s “Blame The Police” Argument Win In Minneapolis?
Cam&Co. Sales Soaring After Gun, Ammo Tax Struck Down
Kavanaugh: Could Theory Behind Texas Abortion Law Be Used For Gun Control?
Decision time: Austin defunded police, Proposition A goes up for a vote tomorrow by Austinites
Strib: Top three MN Dems oppose abolish-the-police charter change … silently
The Florida Halloween costume debacle
Terry McAuliffe wraps up his campaign by inviting AFT President Randi Weingarten to speak
VIP
[VIDEO] Kruiser’s ‘Beyond the Briefing’—Undoing Public Education Indoctrination
The Left Thinks ‘Let’s Go Brandon’ Is the Most Offensive Thing Ever and It’s Hilarious
Trump Unloads on All the ‘Perverts’ in the Media
6 Warning Signs Your Town Is Going Woke
Why More Pre-K Leads to More Brainwashed Children
If Terry McAuliffe Wins, Democrats Will Misinterpret the Results and Overplay Their Hand
Elections I’ll Be Watching on Tuesday
Around the Interwebz
Zillow reportedly needs to sell 7,000 houses after it bought too many
In win for Anglican nuns, Supreme Court orders new scrutiny for New York mandatory abortion coverage
Is an Asteroid to Blame for the Biblical Story of Sodom?
Bee Me
The Kruiser Kabana
Kabana Gallery
Kabana Comedy
I’ve never lived in a house that had a basement and I think that helped keep me away from some darker life choices.
30.) WHITE HOUSE DOSSIER
31.) THE DISPATCH
The Morning Dispatch: SCOTUS Hears Arguments on the Texas Abortion Law
Plus: It’s Election Day!
The Dispatch Staff | 3 |
Happy Tuesday! Today’s the day we find out who wins the Virginia gubernatorial race, which in turn will determine the size of Democrats’ spending bills, the outcome of the 2022 midterms, the 2024 presidential nominees, whether we go to war with China, and the survival of the human race as we know it. No pressure!
Quick Hits: Today’s Top Stories
- In a report published over the weekend, the Centers for Diseases Control concluded that available evidence shows both fully vaccinated individuals and those previously infected with COVID-19 have a “low risk” of additional infection for at least six months, but that “substantial immunologic evidence” indicates that vaccination following infection “significantly enhances protection and further reduces risk of reinfection.”
- Ethiopian Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed has encouraged Ethiopian citizens to “join the fight” against the rebel Tigray People’s Liberation Front (TPLF) in recent days amid reports that TPLF forces killed more than 100 youths while capturing the city of Kombolcha. A TPLF leader denied the allegation.
- The Supreme Court on Monday sent back a case brought by the Roman Catholic Diocese of Albany challenging a New York mandate that health insurance policies cover abortions, asking the lower court to reconsider their earlier ruling in light of June’s Fulton v. Philadelphia decision, which allowed a Catholic foster care organization to continue operating. The court also declined to hear Dignity Health v. Minton, a case brought by a Catholic hospital that was sued after refusing to perform a hysterectomy on a transgender man.
- New York City’s COVID-19 vaccine mandate for public workers went into effect on Monday, with 91 percent of the city’s workforce of approximately 378,000 having received at least one vaccine dose. The city has placed about 9,000 unvaccinated workers—a disproportionate number of whom are first responders—on unpaid leave, and another 12,000 or so are continuing to work while decisions regarding their religious or medical exemptions are made.
Texas’ Abortion Law Faces Supreme Court Scrutiny
Two months ago yesterday, the Supreme Court ignited a firestorm across the country by—quite literally—doing nothing. A Texas law prohibiting abortions in the state after six weeks went into effect on September 1, and—despite the legislation almost assuredly running afoul of Roe v. Wade’s “undue burden” test—the Supreme Court opted not to step in to block its enforcement.
About 24 hours, later, Justice Samuel Alito explained why: Senate Bill 8’s (SB8) enforcement is not in the hands of state officials like prosecutors or county clerks, but private citizens who can collect $10,000 and attorney’s fees for successfully suing anyone who performs—or “knowingly engages in conduct that aids or abets the performance” of—an abortion after a fetal heartbeat is detected. Noting that there were “serious questions” about law’s constitutionality, a majority of the court nonetheless voted to deny an application for injunctive relief. Texas legislators had, through what Cato Institute Vice President Ilya Shapiro labeled “a clever gimmick,” essentially hacked the system of federal court review.
“Federal courts enjoy the power to enjoin individuals tasked with enforcing laws, not the laws themselves,” Alito wrote. “And it is unclear whether the named defendants in this lawsuit can or will seek to enforce the Texas law against the applicants in a manner that might permit our intervention.”
Two months later—after a September in which the number of abortions performed in Texas was reportedly down 50 percent year-over-year—the issue reached the Supreme Court again, with justices hearing oral arguments Monday in two cases that have sprung up in response to the law: Whole Woman’s Health v. Jackson and United States v. Texas. Abortion came up plenty in the combined three hours of deliberation, but it isn’t at the heart of either case.
“Both the U.S. v. Texas and Whole Woman’s Health v. Jackson, they’re purely about the procedural question of whether these entities can sue before any enforcement action has been taken,” Ilya Somin, a constitutional law professor at George Mason University, told The Dispatch. “It’s not about the substantive question about whether Roe v. Wade should be overruled. And that’s why you see people—some of whom would probably be perfectly happy if Roe v. Wade were limited or overruled—still worried that allowing SB8 to evade judicial review would set a dangerous precedent.”
Solicitor General Elizabeth Prelogar—confirmed to her post last Thursday—laid out how she viewed the stakes while arguing the Biden administration’s case. “The United States does not lightly invoke an authority like this to sue a state,” she said in response to a question from Justice Brett Kavanaugh. “The reason we’ve done it here is because SB8 is so unprecedented, extraordinary, and extraordinarily dangerous for our constitutional structure.”
“If Texas is correct that it can nullify this court’s precedents and it can successfully evade the mechanisms that this Court recognized in Ex parte Young,” she continued, referring to a 1908 Supreme Court ruling establishing that individuals can sue state officials to prevent them from enforcing unconstitutional laws, “then no constitutional right is safe.”
Kavanaugh expressed similar concerns in his questioning of Texas Solicitor General Judd Stone, who was tasked Monday with defending his state’s creative legal maneuvering. “Are you saying, absent [Congressional action], that Second Amendment rights, free exercise of religion rights, free speech rights, could be targeted by other states?” Kavanaugh asked, referencing a hypothetical laid out by Chief Justice John Roberts in which a state passed a law making anyone who sells an AR-15 liable for $1 million to any citizen that sued them. “Would that kind of law be exempt from pre-enforcement review in federal court?”
A Look at Today’s Less Exciting Elections
Well, that’s not a headline designed to keep you reading, is it?
As millions of Americans go to the polls in off-year elections today, all eyes are understandably on Virginia’s gubernatorial race: It features a well-known figure in Terry McAuliffe, it’s taking place in the national media’s backyard, and by all accounts it’s more or less in a dead heat. Whoever wins, we’re going to break the campaign down every which way: In TMD and The Sweep, on The Dispatch Podcast, and Advisory Opinions. You can probably count on a G-File, French Press, and/or Chris Stirewalt column touching on the outcome as well.
We say all that to let you know we’re going to ignore Virginia entirely this morning and focus on a couple of other elections taking place today: New Jersey’s gubernatorial race and two special elections in Ohio. None of them are as close as McAuliffe vs. Youngkin—and they don’t carry with them the same narrative oomph—but we’ll catch you up quickly.
Ousting Murphy in New Jersey? Fuhgeddaboudit.
Incumbent New Jersey Gov. Phil Murphy is widely expected to become the first Democratic gubernatorial candidate to win a second term in his state since Brendan Byrne in 1977.
Murphy has managed to maintain a steady polling lead over GOP challenger and former state legislator Jack Ciattarelli even as President Joe Biden’s popularity has fallen in the state and COVID-19—the issue around which Murphy has centered his campaign—has faded in importance to New Jersey voters. A Monmouth poll of likely voters last week showed Murphy with a 51-40 percent lead over Ciattarelli. Only 43 percent of those likely New Jersey voters surveyed said they approve of Biden.
Like McAuliffe in Virginia, Murphy has invested quite a bit of energy tying his Republican opponent to former President Donald Trump, who lost New Jersey by nearly 16 points in 2020. “Stop the Trump Team. Vote Murphy.” signs are plastered everywhere in New Jersey, and Murphy has been running ads reminding voters of Ciattarelli’s attendance at a November 2020 “Stop the Steal” rally. (Since winning the Republican nomination, Ciattarelli has denied knowing it was a “Stop the Steal” rally and declared Biden the legitimately elected president.) The Trump-centric strategy may backfire for Democrats in Virginia, but it’s unlikely to fail in New Jersey.
“It kind of works in a different way [in New Jersey] because there is such a big Democratic registration advantage there,” a GOP strategist told The Dispatch, noting there are approximately 1 million more registered Democrats than Republicans in the Garden State.
Worth Your Time
- Diet-related diseases like obesity, hypertension, and diabetes are among the biggest risk factors for severe COVID-19, and the linkage has led countries around the world to reprioritize public health messaging on healthy eating and, in some cases, outright ban junk food sales to children. There has been no such reckoning in the United States, Helena Bottemiller Evich notes in a piece for Politico. “As the link between poor diets and the toll of Covid-19 became clear, some food industry leaders began bracing for a backlash, assuming that top government officials would be looking to take action in the aftermath of the pandemic,” she writes. “[But] there is no national strategy. There is no systemswide approach, even as researchers increasingly recognize that obesity is a disease that is driven not by lack of willpower, but a modern society and food system that’s almost perfectly designed to encourage the overeating of empty calories, along with more stress, less sleep and less daily exercise, setting millions on a path to poor health outcomes that is extremely difficult to break from.”
- In her latest New York Times newsletter, Jane Coaston compares sports fandom to political polarization. “My hatred for Michigan State is not sensible,” she writes. “I did not come to it through logical decision making and a firm comprehension of the facts. My hate for Michigan State developed just as my love for Michigan did, naturally, easily, through a change of cities and the formation of lifelong friendships. And my politics are likely very much the same. I am proud of my willingness to be wrong, but I’ve noticed that I have a troubling propensity to excuse my own wrongness in the face of evidence by saying that hey, well, those guys are probably even more wrong than I am. That’s not reason. That’s fandom.”
Presented Without Comment
NBC White House Correspondent Reports on Biden ‘Dozing’ at Climate Summit: ‘These Can Be Embarrassing Situations’ mediaite.com/a/lhpty
Also Presented Without Comment
Toeing the Company Line
- For more on the Supreme Court’s reactions to SB 8, check out Monday’s episode of Advisory Opinions! Sarah runs through what she sees as the potential outcomes of the various cases, while David explains why the litigation “alarms” him. Plus, qualified immunity, Catholics and abortion, vaccine mandates, and some Halloween costume updates.
- On the site today, Anthony Ruggiero and Andrea Stricker of the Foundation for the Defense of Democracies look back on the legacy of A.Q. Khan, the Pakistani nuclear engineer who operated the world’s most prolific black market nuclear proliferation network.
- Also, Emma Rogers explains the evolution of the U.S.’s use of drone warfare since the Bush administration first deployed drones to conduct targeted killings after 9/11.
Reporting by Declan Garvey (@declanpgarvey), Andrew Egger (@EggerDC), Charlotte Lawson (@lawsonreports), Audrey Fahlberg (@AudreyFahlberg), Ryan Brown (@RyanP_Brown), Harvest Prude (@HarvestPrude), and Steve Hayes (@stephenfhayes).
32.) LEGAL INSURRECTION
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33.) THE DAILY WIRE
34.) DESERET NEWS
35.) BRIGHT
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36.) AMERICAN THINKER
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37.) LARRY J. SABATO’S CRYSTAL BALL
38.) THE BLAZE
39.) THE FEDERALIST
40.) REUTERS
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41.) NOQ REPORT
42.) ARRA NEWS SERVICE
43.) REDSTATE
Media Salivate Over Another Likely Racial Hoax at Glenn Youngkin’s Massive Final Rally
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44.) WORLD NET DAILY
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45.) MSNBC
November 2, 2021 THE LATEST Virginia voters haven’t elected a Republican to a statewide office since 2009, but voters in the state go to the polls today with Republican candidate Glenn Youngkin slightly ahead in the polls and looking to end the GOP’s 12-year losing streak. But what happens in Virginia today could have implications for electoral politics across the country, Zeeshan Aleem writes. A Youngkin victory would serve as a “new playbook,” Aleem writes, because it “would signal the uncomfortable truth that Republican candidates can find ways to make Trumpism appear more moderate and respectable even in states that turned their back on Trump.”
Read Zeeshan Aleem’s full analysis here and don’t forget to check out the rest of your Monday MSNBC Daily. TOP STORIES Would the court allow any other right to be trampled on the way it’s allowed the right to abortion to be all but eviscerated? Read More The WFP’s $6 billion ask is nothing to the richest person on Earth — but he’s still going to be a jerk about it. Read More TOP VIDEOS MORE FROM MSNBC
Election Night is hours away. 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 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 mayoral candidate 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
Check out the MSNBC channel on Apple News
Download the NBC News Mobile App and watch 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 TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 2021 Good morning, NBC News readers.
All eyes are on Virginia, where today’s governor’s race is the most important election of the year. The White House announced new methane regulations as President Joe Biden tries to secure global climate commitments at the U.N. summit in Glasgow. Plus, Princess Diana is all over pop culture this fall. Why does her story still resonate?
Here’s what we’re watching this Tuesday morning. All eyes are on Virginia today, where voters will have their say in the first major election of President Joe Biden’s term — one both parties are watching closely for lessons ahead of next year’s midterm elections.
Polls show a neck-and-neck race between Democrat Terry McAuliffe, a former governor looking to reclaim the office, and political newcomer Glenn Youngkin, who is trying to crack the code on how to win as a Republican in a state former President Donald Trump lost by a wide margin.
Virginia, which elects its governors a year after the presidential election, has often served as an indicator of which way the political winds are blowing and which party is more engaged.
Here are five things to watch in today’s race.
Polls will close in the Virginia election at 7 p.m. ET. Follow the results here. Tuesday’s Top Stories
The new rules, proposed by the Environmental Protection Agency, aim to curb emissions of the potent greenhouse gas. The move comes as President Joe Biden tries to show the U.S. is serious about taking action on climate change as it tries to get other countries to make commitments, too. SPECIAL REPORT Younger, Southern, rural and white. Those are increasingly the kinds of people who are dying of Covid-19, as the demographics of those hit hardest by the coronavirus have shifted since the pandemic first hit the United States. A jury of 20 people has been selected in the trial of Kyle Rittenhouse, who was 17 when he fatally shot two men during protests and unrest in Kenosha, Wisconsin, last year. The jury includes just one person of color out of 11 women and nine men. Jaroslaw Kaczynski and his party have used tactics to stay in power that even the communists who took over Poland after World War II didn’t dare use, experts say. Also in the News
Editor’s Pick
The Princess of Wales is all over popular culture this fall. Here’s why her story still resonates, according to experts. Select
From desk organizers to gift boxes, these thoughtful presents are our picks for your favorite teacher. One Fun Thing
“We certainly ruffled some feathers,” said Laura Keown, communications adviser at Forest & Bird, a conservation group that organizes New Zealand’s annual Bird of the Year contest
They sure did.
That’s because the winner announced on Monday wasn’t a bird at all but the long-tailed bat, or pekapeka-tou-roa.
Read the full story here. 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 |
49.) NBC FIRST READ
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From NBC’s Chuck Todd, Mark Murray and Ben Kamisar
FIRST READ: Just how blue is Virginia? We’ll find out tonight
Over the last two decades, Virginia has transformed – politically and demographically – from a state that broke for Republican George W. Bush by 8 points in 2004, to one that Democrat Joe Biden won by 10 points in 2020.
And in today’s race for Virginia governor between Democrat Terry McAuliffe and Republican Glenn Youngkin, just how blue the state has become will be put to the test in a political environment that has deteriorated for Democrats in Biden’s first year as president.
As we’ve told you before, two trends have hovered over this contest.
Trend No. 1: Of the 14 major statewide contests since 2005 – for president, the Senate and governor – Democrats have won 13. The exception was Republican Bob McDonnell’s gubernatorial victory in 2009.
Trend No. 2: Since the 1970s, the party that just won White House has always lost this gubernatorial contest the following year, with just one exception.
That exception? McAuliffe’s narrow 2.5-point victory in 2013, which was colored by a corruption scandal involving the aforementioned McDonnell, a government shutdown and the crash of the Obamacare website.
Elizabeth Frantz/Reuters
It was just seven years ago, back in 2014, when Sen. Mark Warner, D-Va., BARELY won re-election the last time Democrats faced these kinds of political headwinds.
How much has Virginia changed since then? We’ll find out tonight.
One more point about Virginia and its political hue: It’s been a pragmatic blue – with Warner, Tim Kaine, Ralph Northam, Abigail Spanberger and a McAuliffe who won his primary last June by more than 40 percentage points.
Has the Democratic Party’s progressive transformation, at least on Capitol Hill, also played a role in this race?
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Math, momentum and uncertainty
For all of the discussion of poll movement, crowd sizes and yard-sign counts, there are only three things we’re sure about going into tonight:
One, that this race for Virginia governor is close.
Two, as Politico writes, Democrats have math on their side, while Republicans have momentum.
And three, there’s PLENTY of uncertainty in this contest, especially when we start seeing election returns come in.
If you’ve followed Virginia elections over the past decade like we have, it’s traditionally been a state that’s counted quickly, that’s had most voters casting ballots on Election Day, and that’s had rural counties reporting first and Dem-heavy Northern Virginia voting last.
But we know that more than 1 million Virginians have already voted early. We also expect different counties to report on their early votes vs. day-of votes at different times. And unlike in 2020, Dems believe many of their voters have returned to their pre-pandemic patterns of voting on Election Day, while the GOP has run an aggressive early-vote campaign.
So a bit caution: When the returns START coming in, they might not tell the whole story.
Let’s be patient to see ALL of the votes come in after polling places close at 7:00 pm ET.
By the way, since we’re expecting a close contest, there is no automatic recount in Virginia. But per the State Board of Elections, the losing candidate has 10 days after the certification of the election (Nov. 15, in this case) to request a recount if they fall within 1 percent of the winner.
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Tweet of the Day: VA-GOV isn’t the only race we’re watching tonight
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More from our poll: 50 percent of Republicans doubt their votes will be counted accurately:
One of us writes on the latest numbers from our new NBC News poll:
“Two-thirds of all registered voters, 66 percent, say they are confident their vote will be counted accurately, down from 85 percent in October 2020. And 29 percent say they are not confident that their vote will be counted accurately in the future, compared to 11 percent who said the same a year ago.”
The decline has come mainly from Republicans:
“Last year, 84 percent of Republicans said they were confident in the vote count, about on par with Democrats. But now, 41 percent of Republicans share that view, while 50 percent say they are not confident their vote will be counted accurately.”
And: “Just 22 percent of Republican adults believe that Biden was elected legitimately, while 71 percent of independents and 93 percent of Democrats said they believe that Biden’s election was legitimate.”
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Data Download: The numbers you need to know today
75 percent: The portion of the country’s methane emissions that will be covered by new Biden administration regulations on those emissions from oil and gas infrastructure.
2070: When Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi pledged that the nation will aim to reach net zero carbon emissions.
46,109,378: 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 123,716 more since Monday morning.)
750,541: The number of deaths in the United States from the virus so far, per the most recent data from NBC News. (That’s 1,267 more since Monday morning.)
423,005,384: The number of total vaccine doses administered in the U.S., per the CDC. (That’s 935,285 more since Monday morning.)
19,178,738: The number of booster vaccine doses administered in the U.S., per the CDC. (That’s 571,233 more since Monday 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.
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ICYMI: What ELSE is happening in the world?
Here’s what to watch for in the Virginia’s race for governor.
The jury in the case against Kyle Rittenhouse has been selected, with opening statements starting Tuesday.
Here’s what’s still up in the air as the Democrats look to land the plane on their $1.75 trillion social spending package.
The wife of Pennsylvania Republican Senate hopeful Sean Parnell testified Monday that he abused her, allegations Parnell has denied.
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Download the NBC News Mobile App
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50.) CBS
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51.) REASON
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52.) MANHATTAN INSTITUTE
53.) LOUDER WITH CROWDER
Let’s just quote the “fact” checkers upfront that Joe Biden was only resting his eyes. They haven’t circled the wagons in Joe’s defense yet, … MORE |
54.) TOWNHALL
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55.) REALCLEARPOLITICS MORNING NOTE
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56.) REALCLEARPOLITICS TODAY
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57.) CENTER FOR SECURITY POLICY
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58.) BERNARD GOLDBERG
59.) SARA A. CARTER
60.) TWITCHY
61.) HOT AIR
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
66.) RASMUSSEN REPORTS
67.) ZEROHEDGE
68.) GATEWAY PUNDIT
69.) FRONTPAGE MAG
70.) HOOVER INSTITUTE
71.) DAILY INTELLIGENCE BRIEF
72.) FOUNDATION FOR ECONOMIC EDUCATION
73.) POPULIST PRESS
74.) THE POST MILLENNIAL
75.) BLACKLISTED NEWS
76.) THE DAILY DOT
Welcome to the Tuesday edition of Internet Insider, where we dissect tech and politics unfolding online. Today:
BREAK THE INTERNET Biden finally filled the FCC. When can you expect net neutrality to be restored? Analysis
It finally happened. If you’ve been reading this newsletter for a while, you know that we’ve been reporting on the growing frustrations about President Joe Biden’s inaction at the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) for months.
Last week, he finally announced his nominees to fill out the agency.
A quick recap if you haven’t been keeping up: Biden inherited a deadlocked 2-2 FCC when he took office, and fairly quickly announced that Jessica Rosenworcel, a Democrat already on the commission, would serve as the acting chair.
Then, for months, Biden dragged his feet on doing anything else at the FCC—which as many noted, pushed back the timeline for a number of high-profile things the agency could do, like restoring net neutrality rules.
After months of waiting, Biden announced that he has nominated Rosenworcel for another term at the FCC and named her the full time chair. He also announced the nomination of Gigi Sohn, a prominent net neutrality and public interest advocate, to be the fifth commissioner at the FCC. (Side note: you can read the Daily Dot’s interview with Sohn from earlier this year if you want to read more about her thoughts about the FCC).
So naturally, the question becomes: Now that the waiting is over, what comes next?
As we reported late last week, restoring net neutrality rules and the FCC’s authority over the broadband industry is expected to be one of, if not *the* top priority for the new Democratic majority at the FCC once Rosenworcel and Sohn go through the confirmation process in the Senate.
That confirmation process could be pretty quick, mostly because the Senate is up against a ticking clock. Rosenworcel’s term technically ended last year, but rules have allowed her to stay at her post until the end of the current session of Congress, which ends in January.
If the Senate doesn’t confirm Rosenworcel and Sohn before then, Republicans could take a majority at the FCC. While that majority wouldn’t give them all that much power at the agency, it would bookmark what has been a slow-moving process from Biden that has recently seen frustration boil over the surface.
Assuming the Senate confirms Rosenworcel and Sohn by the end of December—something Sen. Maria Cantwell, the chair of the committee that would hold the hearings, has indicated will happen—experts told the Daily Dot they expect 2022 to be full of talk about net neutrality and the agency’s authority over broadband.
“The combination of the three Democratic commissioners there makes it very clear that broadband is going to be classified as a common carrier service next year. I think no one should waste time doubting that or horse racing the question because every commissioner that is appointed and sitting have all firmly confirmed that is what they believe is the proper way of regulating access,” Ernesto Falcon, a senior legislative counsel at the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF), told the Daily Dot. “Everything else that is relevant to broadband access stems from there.”
So while it’s been a long wait for Biden to finally fill out the FCC, it appears the next year could be busy at the agency. Stay tuned. Deputy Tech Editor
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BIG TECH Leaked docs show how Facebook tries to keep costs down when it polices hate speech Documents leaked by former Facebook employee-turned-whistleblower Francis Haugen reveal the social media company’s efforts to reduce its spending on moderating hate speech.
In an internal report from Aug. 6, 2019 titled “Cost control: a hate speech exploration,” an unknown Facebook employee details a strategy for implementing cost control measures related to hate speech moderation.
“Over the past several years, Facebook has dramatically increased the amount of money we spend on content moderation overall,” the post states. “Within our total budget, hate speech is clearly the most expensive problem: while we don’t review the most content for hate speech, its marketized nature requires us to staff queues with local language speakers all over the world, and all of this adds up to real money.”
Numerous charts featured in the report show how the majority of spending comes from Facebook reacting to hate speech issues as opposed to proactive work on the issue. Reactive costs accounted for 74.9% of the money spent while proactive measures represented just 25.1%.
Facebook found that the majority of its reactive efforts—or roughly 80.56%—were tied up in enforcing its hate speech policies.
The leaked report goes on to note that costs could be reduced by reviewing fewer user reports, reviewing fewer proactively detected pieces of content, and reviewing fewer appeals.
The paper suggests numerous options content moderators could potentially use to bring down costs, which include ignoring hate speech complaints deemed “benign” and “adding friction to the appeals process.”
In a statement to the Daily Dot, however, a Facebook spokesperson denied that the document called for “budget cuts” and claimed that no such cuts were made regarding its content moderation.
—Mikael Thalen, staff writer
INTERNET RIGHTS 45 groups call on FTC to end discriminatory and abusive data practices A collection of more than 40 civil rights, public interest, and internet rights groups are urging the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) to craft rules that address ‘the entire life cycle” of data and crack down on discriminatory and abusive data practices.
The groups wrote a letter to FTC Chairwoman Lina Khan where they urge the commission to respond to a “range of data harms” and establish “clear rules against discriminatory and abusive data practices.”
In the letter, the groups note that data collection and data sharing has an impact on civil rights, like when companies use personal data to “enable or even perpetuate discriminatory practices” against people of color, the LGBTQ community, low-income people, and other marginalized groups.
In September, a group of eight senators called on the FTC to “set clear safeguards” on the collection and use of personal data, saying that consumer privacy in the U.S. has become a “consumer crisis.”
The senators—including Sen. Richard Blumenthal (D-Conn.), Sen. Ed Markey (D-Mass.), Sen. Ron Wyden (D-Ore.), Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.), and others—said that there needed to be a national standard for data privacy to “protect consumers, reinforce civil rights, and safeguard our nation’s cybersecurity.”
—A.W.
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79.) POLITICHICKS
80.) BLACKPRESSUSA
81.) THE WESTERN JOURNAL
82.) CNN
Tuesday 11.02.21 We’ve reached the end of our named list for the 2021 storms, even though there’s a whole month left to go in the Atlantic hurricane season. If more storms develop after the current Subtropical Storm Wanda, the naming will move to a new list — starting all over again at “A.” Here’s what else you need to know to Get Up to Speed and On With Your Day. Republican Glenn Youngkin, left, and Democrat Terry McAuliffe are vying for Virginia governorship in a much-anticipated race. Election
US voters will head to the polls today to decide a series of races and policies that will test the national political landscape a year into President Joe Biden’s administration, and a year before the all-important midterm elections. Perhaps the most critical race today is in Virginia, where Democrat Terry McAuliffe and Republican Glenn Youngkin are vying to be the state’s next governor. Biden handily won the state in the 2020 election, and Democrats are hoping to keep the state blue. Youngkin, meanwhile, has tried to walk a fine line on handling support from former President Donald Trump, and if he wins, it would provide Republicans with a road map on how to leverage Trump’s influence. Other key decisions to be made today: Police reform is on the ballot in Minnesota, New Jersey’s Democratic governor is looking for a historic reelection, and Atlanta and New York City are choosing new mayors.
Climate
World leaders exchanged promises and deadlines at the first full day of COP26 talks in Glasgow. Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi finally announced a net-zero emissions target, pledging India will become carbon neutral by 2070. The country has been under pressure to join other major UN nations with such a pledge, but Modi’s deadline is a full two decades after the 2050 deadline experts say is critical to reducing warming due to greenhouse gases. President Joe Biden, meanwhile, apologized for the United States’ withdrawal from the Paris Agreement under the Trump administration. Delegates from smaller nations like Barbados called on world powers to do more to curb rising global temperatures, pointing out that their nations were especially susceptible to things like natural disasters and rising sea levels. Today, more than 100 world leaders representing over 85% of the planet’s forests are expected to commit to ending and reversing deforestation and land degradation by 2030. Congress
West Virginia Democratic Sen. Joe Manchin, whose vote is hugely important in an evenly divided Senate, has said he is not ready to vote on the Democrats’ $1.75 trillion spending bill, even after being one of the sole forces behind its significant pare-down. Yesterday, Manchin said that liberal Democrats’ efforts to secure his vote in exchange for their backing of a $1.2 trillion infrastructure bill weren’t working, and insisted the House vote on the infrastructure bill alone. This is a huge blow to progressive Democrats and to President Biden, who wants to get climate funding from the spending bill assured as soon as possible. Manchin’s announcement has also sowed unease because, if Democrats heed his suggestion, they’d be moving forward on infrastructure without any concrete assurances that he’d support the spending bill. To Biden and those closely aligned with him, the bills are equally important. Coronavirus
The United States’ Covid-19 vaccination program for children ages 5 to 11 will be “running at full strength” next week, according to White House coronavirus response coordinator Jeff Zients. That, of course, is contingent on what the CDC decides this week: Its vaccine advisers will meet today to consider whether to recommend the use of a child-sized dose of the Pfizer vaccine in that age group. If they make the recommendation, and if CDC Director Rochelle Walensky signs off on it, inoculations can begin. In other vaccine news, the Federal Register is expected to soon publish the Labor Department’s rule requiring private businesses with 100 or more employees to ensure they’re vaccinated or test them weekly, fulfilling an announcement President Joe Biden made in September. Abortion
The Supreme Court listened to hours of arguments yesterday regarding the controversial Texas abortion law, which prohibits abortions after about six weeks of pregnancy and attempts to avoid legal challenges by empowering private citizens to enforce it. The nine justices will continue to deliberate the case in private, but during yesterday’s hearings at least two conservative justices, Brett Kavanaugh and Amy Coney Barrett, expressed doubts regarding Texas’ effort to prevent federal lawsuits against the law. This could set up a court majority ruling against Texas for the first time and allow at least one of the lawsuits against the ban to proceed. Critics of the law hope this may lead to a suspension of the ban. The Texas law conflicts with high court precedent dating to 1973’s Roe v. Wade and has forced women throughout Texas to travel to Oklahoma and other states for abortions. Paid Partner Content Eye makeup with over 15,000 five-star reviews Liquid Lash Extensions Mascara™ gives you lusciously long eyelashes and its nourishing formula makes them stronger overtime. CNN readers get 15% off Thrive Causemetics.
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‘Squid Game’ crypto plunges to $0 after scammers steal millions of dollars from investors
Mariah Carey reminds us she’s the queen of Christmas
Bravo announces ‘The Real Housewives of Dubai’
Leaky SpaceX toilet problem will force astronauts to use backup ‘undergarments’ The American Psychological Association failed in its role leading the discipline of psychology, was complicit in contributing to systemic inequities, and hurt many through racism, racial discrimination, and denigration of people of color, thereby falling short on its mission to benefit society and improve lives.
The American Psychological Association, which admitted in an apology that it has been complicit in systemic racism and eugenics for decades. Brought to you by CNN Underscored Oprah’s Favorite Things 2021 just dropped: Here’s what to buy Oprah’s famous Favorite Things list is here, which means the holidays are in full swing. From plush robes and spice racks to rowing machines and backpacks, here are 28 things to buy before they sell out. Some days you just wanna … 5 THINGS You are receiving this newsletter because you’re subscribed to 5 Things.
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83.) THE DAILY CALLER
84.) POWERLINE
Daily Digest |
- Chop On!
- Literally Sleepy Joe
- Mayoral candidates can’t run away fast enough from BLM rhetoric
- Musk for the Win
- In the Virginia race, NYT edition
Chop On!
Posted: 01 Nov 2021 04:16 PM PDT (John Hinderaker)I checked out on this year’s baseball season due to wokeness on the part of Major League Baseball (moving the All-Star game out of Atlanta) and the Minnesota Twins. I paid virtually no attention to baseball all year, but haven’t been able to resist tuning in on the World Series. I had no clear favorite. I like the Astros, in part because one of their biggest stars, Jose Altuve, is shorter than I am and is, nevertheless, a power hitter. But I decided to root for the Braves on account of their mistreatment by MLB and the fact that former Twin Eddie Rosario now plays for them. Also, I like the Tomahawk Chop. I think it is fun to see an entire stadium of baseball fans chanting and chopping in unison. Of course, not everyone agrees. Sportswriters across the country are denouncing the Chop as “racist.” And when President Trump attended Saturday night’s game, and he and Melania chopped along with the crowd, liberal heads exploded. But why, exactly, is the Tomahawk Chop racist? The Chop and the chant obviously embody an Indian reference, consistent with the fact that the team is called the Braves and a tomahawk features prominently in their logo. But so what? Some might say it constitutes cultural appropriation, but cultural appropriation is usually a good thing.
The Minnesota Vikings–my home team, unfortunately–have a “Skol” cheer. I think it is pretty dumb, but fans dutifully yell “Skol!” when prompted. Also, a guy dressed up as a Viking blows a big horn. Is the “Skol” cheer racist? If not, why not? The cheer, along with the big horn blown by a guy wearing a stereotypical but historically inaccurate Viking helmet, are another instance of cultural appropriation, consistent with the team’s name and logo. This is a small horn, not the big one But so what? While I don’t think much of the “Skol” cheer, I also don’t think it is “racist.” And neither is the Tomahawk Chop. The fact that sportswriters get their undies in a bunch over the latter, but not the former, tells us more about them than about the two teams, their team names, and their fans. And if Jane Fonda can do the Tomahawk Chop, so can Donald Trump. Feel free to agree or disagree in the comments.
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Literally Sleepy Joe
Posted: 01 Nov 2021 12:40 PM PDT (Steven Hayward)Oh, my. (P)resident Joe Biden was caught falling asleep at the climate summit in Glasgow this morning, but I can’t really blame him. As you watch this two-minute clip, listen to the drivel being offered by the speaker. Falling asleep seems like the best remedy, as well as the most suitable alternative to suicide.
An aide helpfully awakens him—somewhat. I wonder if he said, “Wake up, Brandon.” P.S. I think Australia’s Sky News grasps the situation:
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Mayoral candidates can’t run away fast enough from BLM rhetoric
Posted: 01 Nov 2021 09:18 AM PDT (Paul Mirengoff)There’s at least a week’s worth of good news in this one Washington Post article about the backlash against the “defund the police” campaign. However, I think the Post overstates the extent to which Democrats are truly moving away from anti-police views and policies. Let’s start, though, with the good news. It begins in the first three paragraphs:
The shift, of course, is driven by voter revulsion at the results of anti-police and other soft-on-crime policies:
(Emphasis added) We keep hearing about a “racial reckoning.” Maybe the media should start talking about a law and order reckoning. Here’s some good news from Buffalo, New York:
The socialist has transitioned from insane to merely clueless. I love this passage:
A poll released Tuesday by WIVB-TV and Emerson College showed Mayor Brown holds a 17-point lead over forgetful Walton. We’ve discussed how “defund the police” has lost its panache, and then some, in Seattle’s mayoral race. The Post brings us up-to-date:
(Emphasis added) Justin Hansford, executive director of the Thurgood Marshall Civil Rights Center at Howard University, finds it “surprising how quickly Democrats are back to a law-and-order narrative.” Maybe. But it’s more surprising that the death of George Floyd induced temporary insanity in the form of a strong “defund” campaign. Hanford blames the waning of that campaign on its diffuse leadership structure, most notably the fact that the movement never established a clear leader or political arm. There’s no limit to the cluelessness of many on the left. At the same time, conservatives shouldn’t be so clueless as to take the rhetoric of suddenly law-and-order conscious Democrats at full face value. There’s some truth — more than a little, I fear — in this observation by one of the Post’s sources:
The problem for Democratic mayors is that the more their response to the reality of mounting violent crime is “informed by what happened to George Floyd,” the more the hands of police officers will be tied and the more difficult it will be even to staff a police force with enough manpower to combat the wave of violent crime. Going forward, voters are likely to want sincere law-and-order mayors, not just law-and-order poseurs.
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Musk for the Win
Posted: 01 Nov 2021 08:59 AM PDT (Steven Hayward)I’ve long thought that the categorical criticism many conservatives have of Elon Musk and Tesla was overdone. The Tesla is a great product, and unlike the rest of Silicon Valley, Musk is actually trying to manufacture something tangible, and not just another app, or a fraudulent medical device. My criticism of Musk was limited to the lavish government subsidies—especially the $7,500 tax credit that goes overwhelmingly to the rich and which Democrats now wish to expand in their budget busting bill—and also the belief that electric cars are “green” and have “no emissions,” when a true life-cycle analysis shows that electric car manufacturing has a huge environmental footprint, plus what are you gaining if the electrons you stuff into the battery come from coal-fired power plant, as they would in Ohio or Indiana? Meanwhile, Musk keeps stepping out more publicly against the left. His latest Twitter exchange with a UN twerp is pure gold:
He can “open the books” right now, but I doubt he will. Chaser: Musk is just the person who might actually do this:
Cue the scolds. But I definitely want a t-shirt.
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In the Virginia race, NYT edition
Posted: 01 Nov 2021 05:12 AM PDT (Scott Johnson)The New York Times previews the Virginia gubernatorial election in a good story by Jeremy Peters and Matthew Cullen. On the one hand, they report:
On the other hand, they pick up on differences that can be observed on the campaign trail:
Although it has banked a lot of votes with a little help from its friends and may well march forward to victory, the McAuliffe campaign is a study in the political equivalent in mortuary science:
Peters and Cullen omit any mention of Friday’s disgusting Democratic hoax allegedly perpetrated under the auspices of the Lincoln Project and a Democratic operative, who have taken the fall. I don’t think the Times has gotten around to it. If you get your news from the Times, the whole thing is a deep secret. By contrast, the Wall Street Journal runs the editorial “A dirty campaign trick in Virginia.” It is the kind of story the Times would dig into and hammer if Republicans (real Republicans) were involved and a Democrat was the target. The Democrats seek to portray Youngkin as some kind of a racist, but the story includes the Times photo of black Youngkin supporters at Saturday’s rally in Springfield. At least they aren’t buying it.
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85.) THE POLITICAL INSIDER – WAKE UP EDITION
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86.) THE PATRIOT POST
87.) DECISION DESK HQ
88.) DIGG
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89.) THE POLITICAL INSIDER – LUNCH BREAK
90.) CONSERVATIVE TRIBUNE
91.) USA TODAY
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92.) THE DAILY BEAST
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93.) JUST THE NEWS
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94.) SHARYL ATTKISSON
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95.) RIGHTWING.ORG
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96.) NOT THE BEE
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Nov 2, 2021 |
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Sponsored By: Alliance Defending Freedom Help challenge the vaccine mandateAmericans may have different opinions about COVID-19 vaccines, but every American should agree that the Biden administration’s threatened mandate is a vast and unlawful executive power grab. Help ensure that Alliance Defending Freedom has the resources necessary to take the Biden administration to court—all the way to the U.S. Supreme Court, if necessary!
Don’t mess with Aaron Rodgers’ dog, especially on HalloweenPeople have been wondering why Packers QB Aaron Rodgers was growing out his hair over the past few months.
A California couple celebrated their wedding at a local Taco Bell and holy cow it actually looks like a really nice place to have a reception“California couple celebrates their wedding reception at a Taco Bell” sounds, if we’re being truthful, pretty on-point for California, a wacky state full of a great many just-plain-wacky people.
This mother of a bride pleaded with mostly-peaceful leftists to not ruin her daughter’s wedding because Kirsten Sinema was a guestHere’s your daily reminder that Wokeism is a vile religion that turns people into the worst humanity has to offer:
Please beam this directly into the minds of your Virginia friends who are still thinking about voting for Terry McAuliffeI had to watch this so now you do too:
This weirdo handed out masks for Halloween and got “Let’s Go Brandon” written on his garage with ketchup as a result 🤣This dude forgot the “trick” that’s customary if treats are not provided on Halloween.
Energy Sec. Granholm says rising fuel costs are proof of why we need wind and solar power 🤡As a Michigander, I had the severe displeasure of having Jennifer Granholm as my governor. She left office without fixing our pothole-marked roads and oversaw the worst GDP growth in the nation, despite her massive tax hikes.
The Hill: “‘Parents’ rights’ is code for white race politics,” because if you’re going to make things up, you might as well go big.Are you a parent who thinks it’s a good idea to, you know, parent?
Video: Jurassic Park but with a huge cat instead of a T-Rex
Disney just locked 33,000 people inside their Shanghai park to do mass COVID testingIn a move that should surprise absolutely no one, Disneyland Shanghai took the drastic measure of locking all of its 33,000 guests in the park late Sunday evening in order to test them for Covid. Why? Because of a single case of the virus that was identified in a guest that had attended the park the previous day.
Watch: Biden fell asleep during the opening speeches of a climate summit in ScotlandThe whole “Let’s Go, Brandon” and “Sleepy Joe” memes are hilarious and all, but I really don’t want the President of the United States to be this senile…
Biden met maskless with Pope Francis even though he’d met with Covid-positive Jen Psaki the week before
The U.N. says $6 billion from Elon Musk could solve world hunger and the Dogefather is calling their bluffThe U.N. has a budget of $8.4 billion to address world hunger.
Loudoun County mom: “My 6-year-old somberly came to me and asked if she was born evil because she was a white person”Hiding rape, forcing students to use transgender pronouns, firing teachers for saying they believe Christian things, and this:
Colin Kaepernick really just compared playing in the NFL to being a slaveBad news, guys. Colin Kaepernick is talking again. Which means he’s saying something incredibly ignorant and stupid and the media is praising him for it.
So lies aren’t “misinformation” if they’re about Ted Cruz, apparently?In no way do I compare myself to popular conservative Senator Ted Cruz of Texas, nor do I think that in my lifetime I have faced the amount of public scrutiny and nastiness that Cruz endures on any given day.
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97.) US NEWS & WORLD REPORT
98.) NEWSMAX
99.) MARK LEVIN
November 1, 2021
On Monday’s Mark Levin Show, under President Biden and the Democrats, the nation is unraveling. Things have gotten so bad that even Chuck Todd points out that Biden is incompetent and ineffective as his approval ratings continue to sink. Even Joe Manchin is backing away from Biden’s inflation debacle. Then, Matthew Foldi from the Washington Free Beacon calls in to explain how Terry McAuliffe’s campaign used Democrat staffers to masquerade as ‘White supremacists” posing in front of Glenn Youngkin’s campaign bus. The Democrat front-group The Lincoln project claimed responsibility for the hoax despite the level of apparent coordination from the McAuliffe campaign. Afterward, we must take heed to the admonition of Reagan; freedom isn’t passed on through the bloodstream, it must be fought for. Later, Brian Kilmeade, calls in to discuss his new book ” The President and the Freedom Fighter: Abraham Lincoln, Frederick Douglass, and Their Battle to Save America’s Soul.” Kilmeade points out that Lincoln remained committed in adversity just like we need to today.
THIS IS FROM:
Right Scoop
Chuck Todd somberly delivers ‘SCARY’ news of ‘SHOCKING’ Biden poll numbers
PJ Media
Democrats Hit New Low With Heinous Anti-Youngkin Ad in Virginia
Right Scoop
Watch Pharrell Williams AT Terry McAuliffe rally tell crowd they DON’T have to VOTE for McAuliffe!
Right Scoop
‘These People’: Terry McAuliffe just cannot hide is CONTEMPT for parents who OBJECT to grotesque curriculum
Rumble
Biden Takes A Nap During Climate Conference
Washington Free Beacon
Pelosi Pushes Electric Vehicle Subsidies As Husband’s Tesla Stock Soars
The podcast for this show can be streamed or downloaded from the Audio Rewind page.
Image used with permission of Getty Images / Brendan Smialowski
100.) WOLF DAILY
101.) THE GELLER REPORT
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104.) INDEPENDENT SENTINEL
Independent Sentinel
A 6-year old in a Loudoun school asked her mother if she was born evil since she’s white. McAuliffe wants to bring back busing and end the suburbs. 2300 firefighters, mostly unvaxxed, called in sick today. Biden apologizes for the US. He hates us.
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105.) DC CLOTHESLINE
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106.) ARTICLE V LEGISLATORS’ CAUCUS
107.) BECKER NEWS
108.) SONS OF LIBERTY
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109.) STARS & STRIPES
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110.) RIGHT & FREE
111.) UNITED VOICE
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112.) THE DAILY SHAPIRO
113.) INSURGENT CONSERVATIVES
Ten months into Biden’s presidency and many Democrats have seen enough.
Confessions of error are rare enough in woke America that they should be strictly construed against the speaker. Two such confessions (the legal term is…
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114.) WAKING TIMES
115.) UNCOVER DC