Good morning! Here is your news briefing for Monday November 8, 2021
1.) THE DAILY SIGNAL
November 8 2021
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Good morning from Washington, where Democrats set their sights on massive social spending now that lawmakers have passed an infrastructure bill. Rachel Greszler writes that the latest twist would give the wealthy a big windfall. Some teachers enjoy a choice for their children that other parents don’t get, Virginia Allen reports. On the podcast, a Virginia scholar describes being attacked by her university community for questioning a bisexual Superman. Plus: Kelsey Bolar spotlights the plight of girls in Afghanistan; GOP lawmakers target the president’s vaccine mandates; the Pentagon eyes China’s nukes; and Michael Barone celebrates conservatives’ advances on cultural issues. On this date in 1994, 59% of California voters decide to bar illegal immigrants from public services, but politics will prevent the ban from taking effect. |
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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 — 11.8.21
Here’s your AM rundown of people, politics and policy in the Sunshine State.
Good Monday morning.
Let’s start the day with a major personnel note.
U.S. Sugar will announce today that Ken McDuffie has been promoted to executive vice president and Derek Pridgen has been promoted to vice president of Agricultural Operations.
In his new role, McDuffie will assist the U.S. Sugar President and CEO Robert H. Buker Jr. in all strategic and political matters and oversee U.S. Sugar’s agricultural operations. McDuffie will continue to directly oversee citrus agriculture and research, railroad operations, Rouge River Farms and industry and grower relations.
“Under Ken’s steady leadership at the helm of our Agricultural Operations division, we have had some of the most productive crops in our Company’s 90-year history,” Buker said. “As executive vice president, Ken will take on additional responsibilities to help move our Company forward as we continue charting a course for the future.”
McDuffie, a Clewiston native, most recently served as U.S. Sugar’s senior vice president of Agricultural Operations, a position he has held since 2005. McDuffie started working at U.S. Sugar in 1992 and has held several positions with the company. He earned a bachelor’s degree in economics from Florida State University.
“It is humbling to be able to help lead a company I have grown up admiring and have had the privilege to work for throughout my career,” McDuffie said. “U.S. Sugar is a special company, and I look forward to playing a larger role in ensuring we can continue to provide cane sugar, citrus, and fresh vegetables to customers across America.”
Pridgen, meanwhile, was promoted from U.S. Sugar’s general manager of Farm Operations. As vice president of Agricultural Operations, he will be responsible for all aspects of sugar-cane operations and will report directly to McDuffie.
— SITUATIONAL AWARENESS —
—@NaomiBiden: I’ll say it: this is a Big Fucking Deal
—@MattGaetz: I can’t believe Republicans just gave the Democrats their socialism bill.
—@JakeSherman: The bipartisan infrastructure bill was always the easier of the two parts of (Joe) Biden’s agenda. Next up: house passing BBB, (Joe) Manchin and (Kyrsten) Sinema in the Senate and then house passage again. Very interesting.
Tweet, tweet:
Tweet, tweet:
—@Jenn_Bradley: Thank you, President (Kent) Fuchs, for this guidance that protects free speech and academic freedom!
—@DanMartinez305: More important than ever, we need to recognize the horrible consequences of communism and remind our current and future generations of the importance of freedom we can take for granted. Thank you @SenMannyDiazJr @RepTomFabricio @AlexRizo110 @DavidBorreroFL @MiamiYRs
—@JacobOgles: The more I look at the incentives deal for Rumble to come to Longboat Key, the more questions I have.
—@Elmo: Elmo was so happy to talk to @DrSanjayGupta at the town hall today! Elmo learned that Elmo’s friends can get the COVID-19 vaccine now, and soon Elmo can too!
—@DonMoyn: Turns out that the woke mob coming to cancel Aaron Rodgers is *checks notes* Terry Bradshaw
— DAYS UNTIL —
Miami at FSU — 5; Special Session on vaccine mandates begins — 7; ‘Hawkeye’ premieres — 16; ExcelinEd National Summit on Education begins — 10; FSU vs. UF — 19; Florida Chamber 2021 Annual Insurance Summit begins — 23; Jacksonville special election to fill seat vacated by Tommy Hazouri’s death — 29; Steven Spielberg’s ’West Side Story’ premieres — 32; ’Spider-Man: No Way Home’ premieres — 32; ’The Matrix: Resurrections’ released — 44; ’The Book of Boba Fett’ premieres on Disney+ — 51; Private sector employees must be fully vaccinated or tested weekly — 57; CES 2022 begins — 58; NFL season ends — 62; 2022 Legislative Session starts — 64; Florida’s 20th Congressional District Election — 64; Special Elections in Senate District 33, House District 88 & 94 — 64; Florida TaxWatch’s 2022 State of the Taxpayer Day — 65; Joel Coen’s ’The Tragedy of Macbeth’ on Apple TV+ — 67; NFL playoffs begin — 68; XXIV Olympic Winter Games begins — 88; Super Bowl LVI — 97; Daytona 500 — 104; St. Pete Grand Prix — 109; ‘The Batman’ premieres — 116; ’Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness’ premieres — 179; ’Top Gun: Maverick’ premieres — 200; ’Platinum Jubilee’ for Queen Elizabeth II — 206; ’Thor: Love and Thunder’ premieres — 242; San Diego Comic-Con 2022 — 254; ’Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse’ sequel premieres — 333; ‘Black Panther 2’ premieres — 368; ‘The Flash’ premieres — 371; ‘Avatar 2’ premieres — 403; ‘Captain Marvel 2’ premieres — 466; ‘Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania’ premieres — 627. ‘Dune: Part Two’ premieres — 711; Opening Ceremony of the 2024 Olympic Games — 991.
“A court temporarily blocks Joe Biden’s vaccine mandate.” via Lauren Hirsch and Isabella Grullón Paz of The New York Times — A federal appeals panel on Saturday temporarily blocked a new coronavirus vaccine mandate for large businesses, in a sign that the Biden administration may face an uphill battle in its biggest effort yet to combat the virus among the American workforce. The stay, issued by a three-judge panel from the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit in Louisiana, doesn’t have an immediate impact. The first major deadline in the new rule is Dec. 5, when companies with at least 100 employees must require unvaccinated employees to wear masks indoors. Businesses have until Jan. 4 to mandate COVID-19 vaccinations or start weekly testing of their workers.
— STATEWIDE —
“University of Florida President Kent Fuchs reverses decision blocking professors’ testimony against state” via Douglas Hanks of The Gainesville Sun — The University of Florida’s president reversed his administration’s decision that had blocked three professors from providing expert testimony against the state in a lawsuit over voting rights. UF President Fuchs issued a statement to the university community midday Friday in which he said he had “asked UF’s Conflicts of Interest Office to reverse the decisions on recent requests by UF employees to serve as expert witnesses in litigation in which the state of Florida is a party and to approve the requests regardless of personal compensation, assuming the activity is on their own time without using university resources.”
“Professors sue over conflict of interest policy despite UF’s reversing its decision” via Divya Kumar of the Miami Herald — Three University of Florida professors who were barred from testifying in a lawsuit against the state’s new voting law filed a federal lawsuit Friday alleging their First Amendment rights were violated and asking the court to strike down the school policy that led to a “stifling of faculty speech against the state.” The lawsuit came despite the university’s reversing its decision earlier Friday and allowing the three faculty members, all political science professors, to participate in the voting rights lawsuit after all as long as they did so on their own time and did not use school resources. The suit notes that the state has not “prohibited testimony by professors at public universities that favor its viewpoint.”
“How a Florida university system ‘stacked’ with megadonors became ‘blatantly political’” via Jeffrey Schweers of USA Today Network — Eight years ago, then-Gov. Rick Scott convinced Bernie Machen to stay on as president of the University of Florida in the midst of the search for his replacement. In return Machen got the Legislature to approve a preeminence program and millions in state tax dollars to finance UF’s rise to Top 10 status. Now, almost a decade later, UF has achieved Machen’s goal of being among the top five public universities in the nation. But the prestige that came with climbing the mountain of U.S. News and World Report college rankings is in jeopardy over the decision to bar several professors from lending their expertise in court cases.
“UF controversy is latest chapter in long conflict between politics, academic freedom” via Lawrence Mower of Florida Politics — Four of the 13 board members responsible for governing the University of Florida are major donors to Ron DeSantis’ campaign, giving a collective $661,800 the last few years. While such political participation from the school’s board of trustees is hardly new, it poses a sudden perception problem for the governing body of a university that is trying to quell concerns that political pressures are jeopardizing the academic integrity of the state’s flagship university. Those concerns grew late last month when it was learned that the University of Florida fast-tracked the hiring of DeSantis’ divisive surgeon general, Dr. Joseph Ladapo, into a tenured position at the medical school.
“Proposal would weaken protections for tenured faculty at Florida universities” via Divya Kumar of the Tampa Bay Times — Faculty members at several public universities in Florida are expressing concern about a proposal that would weaken employment protections for tenured professors. The draft document, said to be written by a university provost, proposes rules that would make it easier for veteran faculty members to be dismissed. It has circulated among faculty at the University of Florida, the University of South Florida, Florida State University and the University of Central Florida. Some faculty leaders contend the proposal sends a chilling message at a time when Florida’s commitment to academic freedom is under question. It comes amid revelations that University of Florida faculty members recently have been barred from serving as paid expert witnesses in lawsuits that challenge DeSantis and the Republican-led Legislature on questions like voting rights and masks in schools.
“Florida, all about election integrity, can’t tell if a Republican broke an election law?” via the Miami Herald editorial board — Just days after DeSantis made a big, bold speech about “election integrity” and announced his plan to create a new state force to investigate voter fraud, his administration is still trying to figure out whether a member of his own party was eligible to run for office. Jason Mariner is a candidate running in a congressional district that leans so heavily Democratic he has virtually no chance of winning. Perhaps that’s why he might have slipped through the cracks. Under Florida’s clemency rules, he could’ve had his rights restored automatically as an ex-felon had he submitted a formal application. He didn’t.
“Ron DeSantis appoints aeronautics school head, beef jerky magnate to Enterprise Florida board” via Jesse Scheckner of Florida Politics — DeSantis appointed two new members Friday to the Board of Directors for Enterprise Florida, the state’s main economic development arm. They’ll join a passel of industry and government leaders who help steer Florida’s financial future. New to the Board are Rodney Cruise, senior vice president and chief operating officer of Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University, and Troy Link, president and CEO of Link Snacks Inc., best known as the producer and marketer of Jack Link’s Beef Jerky. The appointments came without comment from the Governor. They are subject to confirmation by the Florida Senate.
— DATELINE TALLY —
“Florida gaming compact, sports betting in doubt following federal court hearing, lawyers say” via Eric Glasser of WTSP — The Seminole Indian Tribe went live with its Hard Rock Sports Betting app earlier this week, but on Friday a federal judge heard arguments that could just as quickly pull the plug. “If they were hoping to change the judge’s views or persuade the judge during oral argument, that moment has been lost,” said Sports Betting Attorney Daniel Wallach. Wallach was monitoring Friday’s court hearing in Washington, tweeting play-by-play developments of a federal case that could determine the future of Florida’s gaming compact with the Seminole Indian tribe. This Seminole Tribe went live with its sports betting app days before Judge Dabney Friedrich could even hear the case.
“Legislative effort to repeal last year’s transgender athlete ban grows” via Anne Geggis of Florida Politics — A Central Florida lawmaker is bringing back one of the last Session’s most contentious issues in the hopes that her Republican colleagues will realize excluding transgender students from girls’ athletics could draw an economic penalty. Rep. Kristen Aston Arrington last month filed a companion bill (HB 6065) to Sen. Gary Farmer’s SB 212 that seeks to repeal last year’s legislation regarding transgender athletes. That law, passed largely along party lines last Session, means athletes are eligible for sports teams based on the gender listed on birth certificates at or near the time of birth. So transgender athletes are banned from girls’ or women’s teams.
Happening today — Sen. Tina Polsky and Rep. Christine Hunschofsky hold a virtual news conference on proposed “ghost gun” legislation, 10 a.m., Zoom link here.
“Florida considers ousting mockingbird from honorary perch” via Curt Anderson of The Associated Press — After nearly a century on its lofty perch, the northern mockingbird may be singing its last melodies as the state bird of Florida. An effort is taking flight to replace the far-ranging musical mockingbird with a bird that is more identifiable as distinctly Floridian. “Part of what we’re working to do is highlight that Florida has these incredible species and we should recognize the bird that most represents Florida,” said state Sen. Jeff Brandes, a St. Petersburg Republican whose legislation would strip the mockingbird of its title. ”To me, it’s a fun conversation to have.” Suggestions for a new state bird are all over the map, but four leading contenders have emerged: the Florida scrub-jay, flamingo, osprey and roseate spoonbill. Some joke it should be the construction crane.
Happening today — The Liberty County legislative delegation holds a public meeting: Sen. Loranne Ausley and Rep. Jason Shoaf, 4 p.m., Liberty County Courthouse, 10818 NW Florida 20, Bristol.
Happening today — The Calhoun County legislative delegation holds a public meeting: Sen. Ausley and Rep. Jason, 5:30 p.m. Central time, Calhoun County Extension Office, 20816 Central Ave., Blountstown.
“Jennifer Jenkins’ requests for temporary injunction against Randy Fine denied, case postponed to Nov. 16” via Eric Rogers of Florida Today — A Brevard County judge declined to hear evidence Friday for a temporary injunction filed by Brevard School Board member Jenkins against Florida State Rep. Fine for alleged cyberstalking. James Earp, senior judge for the 18th Circuit Court of Florida, also declined to consider a stay on the case requested by Fine’s attorneys but granted a motion for continuance, scheduling a follow-up hearing for Nov. 16. Fine’s counsel requested the postponement citing difficulties serving the required court documents to Fine, who was in Tallahassee preparing for the upcoming special legislative session. While Jenkins’ complaint against Fine has been granted a hearing, her multiple requests for a temporary injunction have so far been denied.
— CORONA FLORIDA —
“Florida COVID-19 update: State surpasses 60,000 deaths, as 698 are added to toll” via Devoun Cetoute of the Miami Herald — Florida on Friday surpassed 60,000 deaths since the beginning of the pandemic, as 698 more deaths and 1,635 additional COVID-19 cases were reported to the CDC. In all, Florida has recorded at least 3,657,645 confirmed COVID-19 cases and 60,197 deaths. In the past seven days, the state has added, on average, 100 deaths and 1,488 cases per day. About 12,882,180 eligible people in Florida, 60% of the state’s population, have completed their vaccine course.
—“Polk’s COVID-19 cases lowest in more than a year” via Gary White of The Lakeland Ledger
—”Doctors Hospital of Sarasota has no COVID-19 patients for the first time since pandemic began” via Zac Anderson of the Sarasota Herald-Tribune
Don’t tell Ron DeSantis this — “Halifax Health employees, volunteers who don’t get COVID-19 vaccine will be terminated” via Nikki Ross of The Daytona Beach News-Journal — Halifax Health employees must be fully vaccinated against COVID-19 by Jan. 4 or they will be terminated. This comes after the Biden administration released rules Thursday requiring COVID-19 vaccinations for health care workers. “It is my sincere hope that every team member will comply with this vaccination mandate,” said President and CEO Jeff Feasel in the email. “Each one of you is a valued member of the Halifax Health family and we do not want to lose you.”
“Masks no longer required in Miami-Dade County buildings, Mayor announces” via Devoun Cetoute of the Miami Herald — Masks will no longer be required in Miami-Dade County buildings, Miami-Dade Mayor Daniella Levine Cava said Friday. In a tweet about the reversal, Cava said it is due to “enormous progress we have made against the Delta variant, and in consultation with our Chief Medical Officer.” Cava had reinstated the mask mandate in July and urged businesses to do the same due to a spike in COVID-19 cases and deaths, which was later recognized as Florida’s third wave. Another factor in the change, Cava said, was that Miami-Dade’s seven-day COVID-19 positivity has stayed at or near 2%. She also said hospitalizations have “sharply declined.”
“Mask opt-out rules begin Monday for Palm Beach County public schools” via Brooke Baitinger and Arlene Borenstein-Zuluaga of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — Students in Palm Beach County can go to school with or without masks depending on their parents’ wishes starting this Monday. The move came after a ruling Friday by Division of Administrative Hearings Deputy Chief Judge Brian A. Newman where he decided a group of school districts failed to prove that the Florida Health Department’s emergency rule, which allows parents to opt their child out of quarantining or wearing a mask, illegally overstepped its legislative authority. In a letter, the school district still strongly encouraged children to wear a facial covering while indoors. However, it directed parents wanting an opt-out to send in a signed note to their student’s first-period teacher.
“Broward voters overwhelmingly support school mask and vaccine mandates, poll shows” via Daniel Figueroa of Florida Politics — Broward County voters overwhelmingly support mask and vaccine mandates in schools along with other COVID-19 mitigation efforts. According to a new poll, about 75% of respondents support mask mandates at the high school and middle school levels. Elementary school mask mandates received 74% support. And nearly 88% of respondents said they support current vaccine requirements, while 70% said they support adding COVID-19 vaccines to the list of vaccines required to attend Broward public schools. Another 81% support the CDC recommendation to quarantine students exposed to COVID-19 for 14 days. The poll also shows 68% of respondents think DeSantis has done a poor job of handling COVID-19 in schools.
“Doctors meet in Ocala to discuss COVID-19 immunity, alternative treatments, ivermectin” via Cindy Swirko of The Gainesville Sun — An alternative message of COVID-19 vaccinations and treatments to that of government agencies came through loud and clear at a Saturday summit at which doctors who dispute the data, mandates and other actions were greeted with standing ovations. The Florida Summit on COVID-19 was held at the World Equestrian Center in Ocala and included doctors from throughout the U.S. who discussed the vaccines, natural immunity in those who previously had the virus, vaccine mandates and related topics. The theme of the summit could be summed up by part of the talk of Dr. Heather Gessling, “I don’t think at this point that we may be able to trust these agencies.” Several of the doctors who spoke have drawn criticism for pushing misinformation.
“Protesters gather in Viera to decry vaccine mandates for employers” via Tyler Vazquez of Florida Today — A small sea of red shirts and American flags could be seen marching along Judge Fran Jameson Parkway Friday as protesters turned out to show their opposition to new federal vaccine requirements. Around 200 people protested outside the Brevard County Government Center in Viera. The new rules for companies with more than 100 employees will take effect Jan. 4. Already the measure has drawn lawsuits from Republican state governments across the country, including Florida. The rally decried the mandate. Many in attendance engaged in chants of “Let’s go, Brandon” with some carrying signs to that effect. Others held signs that said, “No medical mandate,” “Say no to mandates” and “No vaccine mandates.”
“‘Overwhelmed’: Influenza rampant at FSU and FAMU as experts point to flu vaccine hesitancy” via Christopher Cann and Dejania Oliver of the Tallahassee Democrat — Tallahassee higher education campuses and hospitals are seeing large numbers of students and others suffering from influenza. Experts, many of whom have warned about a severe flu season for months, say this is the result of a return to normalcy and lessening of safety precautions taken while COVID-19 numbers were at its highest. At FSU, the school’s health center is full of sick students. Meanwhile, at FAMU there were 102 positive flu cases reported from the university’s community site on Wednesday alone.
— 2022 —
“Gloomy landscape for Democrats in midterms as Biden’s approval drops to 38% in poll” via Susan Page and Rick Rouan of USA Today — A poll found that Biden‘s support cratered among the independent voters who delivered his margin of victory over Donald Trump one year ago. Biden and his party are poised for a rebound, advocates argue, after the House passed a $1.2 trillion “hard” infrastructure bill late Friday, sending the signature measure to Biden’s desk for his signature. An encouraging economic report released Friday morning showed stronger-than-expected job growth. The survey illuminates the size of the hole Democrats need to dig out of as they look toward the elections in one year that will determine control of Congress and shape the second two years of Biden’s term.
“Roger Stone said he’ll run for Governor just to draw votes away from DeSantis unless the Governor pledges not to run for President in 2024” via Kelsey Vlamis of Yahoo News — Stone, a longtime ally of Trump, said he will run for Governor of Florida just to siphon votes away from DeSantis unless DeSantis commits to not running for President in 2024. “I believe that Gov. DeSantis, assuming he’s going to run for reelection, should pledge to the people of Florida that he will fill out all four years of a second term,” Stone said. In September, DeSantis said any “speculation” that he plans to run for President in 2024 is “purely manufactured.”
“Charlie Crist says DeSantis creating ‘culture of fear’ over voting rights, free speech” via Sam Sachs of WFLA — In a panel on voting rights and censorship, U.S. Rep. Crist pushed back on what he calls the ‘culture of fear’ that DeSantis is creating as Governor of Florida. The Congressman and Democratic gubernatorial candidate also leveled attacks at DeSantis’s six appointees on the university’s board of trustees over politicizing and censoring free speech at the university. Crist questioned DeSantis’s change of tune after the state reported it had its most secure election in history during the 2020 races. Crist was joined by a panel of speakers, all concerned about the way the state government and university had acted, and called for leaders to walk back the censorship on campus.
Assignment editors — Crist will participate in events as part of a Puerto Rican small business tour alongside Osceola Clerk of Courts Kelvin Soto. Crist will visit with local small-business owners to learn more about their needs and how Florida can create a strong post-COVID-19 economy, 10 a.m., Kissimmee. RSVP to press@charliecrist.com for location.
“Rick Scott to GOP hopefuls: Get Donald Trump’s support, but go beyond that” via Annie Bryan of POLITICO — Sen. Scott signaled Sunday morning that GOP candidates should vie for an endorsement from Trump ahead of the 2022 midterms; but that his endorsement is not enough to win. “You’d be foolish not to want and accept Donald Trump’s endorsement,” he said, ”but you’re going to win not because somebody endorses you.” GOP strategists and Senate Republicans are giddy at the idea of continuing red flips in 2022. In particular, Glenn Youngkin’s stunning win in Virginia‘s gubernatorial race was seen as inspiring GOP midterm hopefuls to follow suit. Scott advocated campaigning on the issues.
“Sheila Cherfilus-McCormick grows lead to 5 votes over Dale Holness after recount” via Alex Daugherty of the Miami Herald — Cherfilus-McCormick and Holness sat alone in the Broward elections office as a manual recount began, their two chairs spaced more feet apart than the number of votes separating them. They watched as their attorneys and Broward County elections officials completed a manual recount in the razor-thin Democratic primary to replace longtime U.S. Rep. Alcee Hastings, who died in April. Cherfilus-McCormick, a health care executive, ended the recount with a five-vote lead over Holness, a Broward County Commissioner. There were slightly more than 49,000 votes cast in the election for 11 candidates. Cherfilus-McCormick has 11,662 votes to Holness’ 11,657 votes. But the race isn’t over yet.
“Rosalind Osgood about to resign from Broward School Board to run for Florida Senate. DeSantis gets to pick replacement.” via Anthony Man of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — Osgood, chair of the Broward School Board, faces an imminent deadline to submit her resignation in order to move forward with her candidacy for Florida Senate. She said Thursday she plans to submit her resignation letter by the end of the day Friday. It would take effect in four months. The resignation, required under the Florida resign-to-run law, is irrevocable. DeSantis, whose policies are the antithesis of Osgood’s, would get to appoint her replacement to the District 5 School Board seat. Board members pick their chair.
—”Major changes coming to Pinellas County’s House delegation in 2022” via William March of the Tampa Bay Times
“DeSantis says Republicans outnumber Democrats in Florida for the first time in history” via Zac Anderson of the Sarasota Herald-Tribune — DeSantis said registered Republicans have surpassed Democrats in Florida for the first time in the state’s history, although official numbers aren’t available yet. “Today, and it’ll probably be fully publicized very soon, today for the first time in the history of Florida we’ve now overtaken Democrats,” DeSantis said. “There are more registered Republicans in Florida than Democrats.” DeSantis appears to be basing his claim on internal Republican Party of Florida numbers. Florida GOP Chair Joe Gruters said the party’s internal numbers indicate it is now ahead of Democrats in voter registration, but that likely won’t be reflected in public data released by the Florida Division of Elections until December.
“Democrats pushback as Republicans claim new voter majority in Florida” via Daniel Figueroa of Florida Politics — The Florida Democratic Party is pushing back against Republican claims that red voters now outnumber the blue in Florida. In a news release Friday, Democrats accused the Republican Party of Florida of “playing shell games.” “These are nothing more than attempts by Republicans to get a news release and a headline, when in fact the numbers show other patterns, including a disproportionate number of Democrats being reclassified as inactive,” Florida Democratic Party Chair Manny Diaz said. The release said any uptick in registered Republicans is due to Department of Motor Vehicles registrations rather than voter registration efforts. It also accused Republicans of purging voter rolls by moving eligible registered Democrats from active to inactive status.
— CORONA NATION —
“Biden vaccine mandates face first test with federal workers” via The Associated Press — Biden is pushing forward with a massive plan to require millions of private-sector employees to get vaccinated by early next year. But first, he has to make sure workers in his own federal government get the shot. About 4 million federal workers are to be vaccinated by Nov. 22 under the President’s executive order. Some employees, like those at the White House, are nearly all vaccinated. But the rates are lower at other federal agencies, particularly those related to law enforcement and intelligence. And some resistant workers are digging in, filing lawsuits and protesting what they say is unfair overreach by the White House. The upcoming deadline is the first test of Biden’s push to compel people to get vaccinated.
“Nearing Monday coronavirus vaccine deadline, thousands of federal workers seek religious exemptions to avoid shots” via Lisa Rein, Ian Duncan and Alex Horton of The Washington Post — With a Monday deadline looming, high percentages of federal workers are reporting they have been vaccinated against the coronavirus. But tens of thousands of holdouts have requested exemptions on religious grounds, complicating Biden’s sweeping mandate to get the country’s largest employer back to normal operations. Federal agencies have yet to act on the requests piling into managers’ inboxes from vaccine resisters seeking accommodations that would allow them to continue their jobs unvaccinated. The number of religious objectors ranges from a little more than 60 people at the Education Department to many thousands among the 38,000-strong workforce at the Bureau of Prisons.
“Vaccine refusals in intelligence agencies raise GOP concerns” via Nomaan Merchant of The Associated Press — Thousands of intelligence officers could soon face dismissal for failing to comply with the U.S. government’s vaccine mandate, leading Republican lawmakers to raise concerns about removing employees from agencies critical to national security. Overall, the percentage of intelligence personnel who have been vaccinated is higher than for the American public, 97% at the CIA, for instance. But there are lower percentages in some of the 18-agency intelligence community of approximately 100,000 people. Several intelligence agencies had at least 20% of their workforce unvaccinated as of late October. In some agencies, as many as 40% are unvaccinated.
—“California’s COVID-19 case rate now twice Florida’s” via the Tribune News Service
“The U.S. is finally reopening its land border to Canadians — but Canada’s rules are likely to deter many” via Amanda Coletta of The Washington Post — On Monday, for the first time in more than 19 months, fully vaccinated Canadians will be allowed to cross the U.S. land border for such nonessential purposes as tourism or family visits. Although the reopening is being cheered in the tight-knit communities that straddle the 5,500-mile border and by the Canadian snowbirds who prefer to drive South to warmer climates, few are expecting an immediate flood of tourists. That’s in part because those entering Canada must present a negative coronavirus molecular test result within 72 hours of arrival. Lawmakers, businesses and residents say the costly requirement, some tests are $200, will deter the day-trippers, shoppers and families for which their economies have yearned.
— CORONA ECONOMICS —
“The economy is actually pretty good. Here’s why Biden has had difficulty selling that.” via Catherine Rampell of The Washington Post — U.S. employers added 531,000 jobs on net in October, significantly higher than each of the previous two months. Those months’ figures have just been revised upward, too. Job gains in October were widespread, with growth across leisure and hospitality, professional and business services, manufacturing, and transportation and warehousing. The impact of the COVID-19 delta variant seems to be fading. We still have a jobs deficit relative to the level of employment when the pandemic recession began, but we’re digging out of it. The unemployment rate, which comes from a different survey, has ticked down again, to 4.6%. The unemployment rate, which comes from a different survey, has ticked down again, to 4.6%.
“Trapped in a pandemic funk: Millions of Americans can’t shake a gloomy outlook” via Jack Healy, Audra D.S. Burch and Patricia Mazzei of The New York Times — Despite many signals that things are improving, the stock market is hitting record highs, hiring is accelerating sharply with 531,000 jobs added in October, workers are earning more, and COVID-19 hospitalizations and deaths are dropping from their autumn peaks, many Americans seem stuck in a pandemic hangover of pessimism. Voters who supported Biden said they had grown dispirited about his ability to muscle through campaign pledges to address climate change, voting rights and economic fairness while also confronting rising prices and other disruptions to daily life exacerbated by the pandemic.
“Help really wanted: No degree, work experience or background checks” via Lauren Weber and Chip Cutter of The Wall Street Journal — U.S. companies are downsizing the hiring process. Beauty product retailer The Body Shop is dropping educational requirements and background checks for job applicants. United Parcel Service Inc. is making some job offers in as little as 10 minutes. CVS Health Inc. no longer requires college graduates to submit their grades. In a labor market where job openings outnumber applicants, companies are brainstorming how to get more candidates in the door and to the floor. The hiring overhaul signals a potentially broad rethink of job qualifications, a change that could help millions of people enter jobs previously out of reach.
“With cases piling up, an eviction crisis unfolds step by step” via Sophie Kasakove of The New York Times — It is not the sudden surge of evictions that tenants and advocates feared after the Supreme Court ruled in August that Biden’s extension of the eviction moratorium was unconstitutional. Instead, what’s emerging is a more gradual eviction crisis that is increasingly hitting communities across the country, especially those where the distribution of federal rental assistance has been slow, and where tenants have few protections. Experts say, the available numbers dramatically undercount the number of tenants being forced from their homes either through court-ordered evictions or informal ones, especially as rising rents make seeking new tenants increasingly profitable for landlords.
“‘The system is rigged’: Cruise lines have little to fear legally from COVID-19 deaths” via the Tribune News Service — The cruise line industry faces a wave of lawsuits from passengers and their families saying they or their loved ones contracted COVID-19 on a ship, resulting in either death or severe illness. Yet maritime and corporate law make it difficult to extract significant damages from cruise lines. Even after a series of coronavirus outbreaks at sea and a growing number of lawsuits, the industry’s biggest players face little serious threat, legal experts say. Multibillion-dollar cruise companies are not worried about the potential financial effect of such lawsuits, even if they end up losing many of the cases, said Ross Klein, a sociology professor and cruise industry expert at St. John’s College at Memorial University of Newfoundland.
—“Holland America brings new ship to mark first return to Florida since pandemic halt” via Richard Tribou of the Orlando Sentinel
“Peloton feels the burn as Americans head back to the gym” via Aaron Gregg and Hamza Shaban of The Washington Post — The pandemic created skyrocketing fortunes for a cadre of fitness-minded companies, and few benefited more from the stay-at-home era than Peloton. But the underlying question, will it last, was tested Friday in dramatic fashion as the company’s shares shed more than a third of their value amid diminishing sales and subscriptions forecasts. The stock slumped 35.4%, to $55.64, after Peloton slashed nearly $1 billion off its revenue projections. It now expects $4.4 billion to $4.8 billion in sales for the year ending June 30, 2022. The maker of connected exercise equipment also tempered its profit outlook. In August, the company cut 20% off the price of its signature bike, to $1,495, but it hasn’t been enough to maintain the highflying sales of 2020.
“Seller’s regret? Pandemic led to spike in home prices, including one sold by DeSantis” via Fresh Take Florida — Count DeSantis among homeowners with seller’s regret? The waterfront home near Jacksonville that DeSantis owned for nearly a decade until selling it after he moved into Florida’s Governor’s mansion has climbed in value by an estimated 50% since the deal. That means DeSantis effectively lost $232,000 by selling it just a year before the pandemic caused housing prices to surge across the United States. The home’s new owners in Ponte Vedra Beach said they were enjoying their good fortune and didn’t even know they were buying the Governor’s house until months after the deal closed. DeSantis lives with his wife and children in the Governor’s Mansion in Tallahassee and does not currently own any property.
— MORE CORONA —
“U.S. cancels multimillion-dollar deal with coronavirus vaccine maker whose plant ruined Johnson & Johnson doses” via Andrew Jeong of The Washington Post — The federal government has canceled a deal worth $628 million with Emergent BioSolutions, the Maryland-based vaccine manufacturer that was a vanguard of the Trump administration’s program to rapidly produce vaccines to counter the coronavirus pandemic. The cancellation comes after Emergent’s manufacturing facilities in Baltimore were found to have produced millions of contaminated vaccine doses this spring, prompting a monthslong shutdown. Emergent will forgo about $180 million due to the contract’s termination, the company said. As part of its coronavirus efforts, the federal government had invested in building additional capacity at two of the firm’s sites.
“COVID-19 killed my brother and sister a week apart. It didn’t have to happen.” via Michele Genthon for The Washington Post — When the call came that my brother and sister were both in the hospital, I said, “COVID.” It was a statement, not a question. I knew. Despite our begging and cajoling, they had both refused the vaccines. We waited for the inevitable. We prayed, hoping for a miracle, knowing there would not be one. My siblings no longer need masks. They have gone home, but not to the home they sought from their hospital beds. My brother and sister lived full lives, but I know they could have been with us longer had they been vaccinated.
— PRESIDENTIAL —
“After months of setbacks, Biden finally gets long-sought win on infrastructure” via Sean Sullivan, Marianna Sotomayor and Tyler Pager of The Washington Post — Late Friday, Biden helped clinch passage of a $1.2 trillion bipartisan infrastructure bill, stepping up his pressure on House Democrats after months of standing back from the debate. Spurred in part by the humbling electoral losses, Biden made personal edits to a written statement aimed at forging compromise and publicly and privately urged members to vote for the measure all amid a flurry of phone calls with Nancy Pelosi. The long-sought legislative win came hours after a positive jobs report and encouraging news about an experimental drug to treat COVID-19, capping the most topsy-turvy week of Biden’s presidency.
—“What’s in the $1.2 trillion infrastructure package” via Heather Long of The Washington Post
“Biden gets his ‘infrastructure week,’ crossing another goal off Trump’s to-do list” via Matt Viser of The Washington Post — Biden entered office determined to rip to shreds most everything that his predecessor put in place. His advisers kept lists of Trump’s policies, and how they could immediately and methodically undo as many of them as possible and, on his first day in office, he did just that. But there were also subtle areas of overlap, and over the past three months, Biden has also demonstrated a willingness, and ability, to carry out some of the policies Trump could not. First, he withdrew from Afghanistan. He has pressed for the paid family leave benefits and prescription drug changes that Trump called for but never managed to implement. And on Saturday, Biden beamed at his biggest legislative accomplishment, one that Trump had chased but never achieved.
“Biden angrily defends DOJ plans for $450K migrant separation payouts” via Mary Kay Linge of the New York Post — Biden flared in anger Saturday as he spoke in favor of his administration’s plan to award $450,000 payments to migrants separated from their families after illegally crossing the U.S. border, three days after he called a report on the payouts “garbage.” The Biden administration has been negotiating legal settlements with the American Civil Liberties Union and other groups that could shower up to $1 million per family on asylum-seekers who were separated at the border under Trump’s “zero-tolerance” illegal immigration policy.
“Biden sent 70 secret night flights of migrants from border to Florida” via Anna Giaritelli of The Washington Examiner — More than 70 flights transporting migrants from the southern border to Jacksonville have landed in the dark of night in recent months as the Biden administration struggles to empty overflowing border facilities. It is the first time the state of Florida has disclosed the number of confirmed flights arriving in the state since the summer. DeSantis‘ office has scrambled in recent weeks to uncover who is facilitating the mystery flights landing in northern Florida daily, but the Biden administration has refused to disclose any information, one official said. The Department of Justice, Department of Homeland Security, and Department of Health and Human Services will not tell the state of Florida who is overseeing the flights, the names of those on the flights, or where the migrants are being taken.
“Biden may tap strategic reserve amid rising fuel prices, Jennifer Granholm says” via Connor O’Brien and Ben Lefebvre of POLITICO — Granholm said Biden is “looking at all of the tools that he has” to address high prices at the pump, including tapping into U.S. oil reserves. She also warned that home heating prices will be more expensive than the same period last year. “Yes, this is going to happen,” Granholm said. “It will be more expensive this year than last year.” Though Presidents have little to no control over gas prices, Republicans are increasingly hammering Biden for the rise at the pump, sensing that inflation is a political winner for them.
— D.C. MATTERS —
“How a $1 trillion infrastructure bill survived an intraparty brawl” via Jonathan Weisman and Carl Hulse of The New York Times — Ultimately it happened because faction-on-faction intransigence slowly turned to member-to-member cooperation — all in the service of what should have been an easy task, spending money on projects with obvious, bipartisan appeal. The contortions it took for the House to pass a bill that had cleared the Senate in August with bipartisan bonhomie underscored just how factionalized the party has become, how powerful each of those factions are in the Democrats’ razor-thin majority — and how difficult it will be over the next year to maintain that majority. “It is incredibly hard to run a place with such narrow majorities, but what compounds it is, there’s no overlap” within the factions, said Rep. Brad Sherman, a 24-year veteran Democrat from Southern California.
—”Who won what in the bipartisan infrastructure deal” via Michelle Cottle of The New York Times
Assignment editors — Sen. Scott will hold a roundtable meeting with port, business and retail leaders to discuss the supply chain challenges, 2:30 p.m., One East 11th St. #600, Riviera Beach. RSVP to press@rickscott.senate.gov.
“John Rutherford seeks stronger protections against oil drilling” via Sheldon Gardner of The St. Augustine Record — Proposed federal legislation would strengthen protections against oil drilling and seismic testing off Florida’s coast. On Oct. 25, Congressman Rutherford, who represents most of St. Johns County, introduced in the House H.R. 5707, the Preserving Recreation, Oceans, Tourism, Environment, and Coastal Towns in Florida Act. The act would prevent drilling and seismic testing off the coast of Florida, by creating “a drilling moratorium in the South Atlantic and the Straits of Florida and extends until 2032 the existing drilling moratorium in the Gulf of Mexico.” Rutherford said having the measure come up for review in 10 years allows for ongoing discussion.
“Pharmaceutical industry likely to shatter its lobbying record as it works to shape Democrats’ spending bill” via Yeganeh Torbati and Jonathan O’Connell of The Washington Post — A massive, monthslong advertising, lobbying and political donation blitz has been undertaken by the pharmaceutical industry and its allies to kill a Democratic proposal to lower the cost of prescription drugs by empowering the federal government to negotiate their prices. That provision to control drug prices became a focal point of the $1.75 trillion spending package Democrats are trying to move through Washington. The measure was in, then out, then watered down, going through a fierce ping-pong of backroom negotiations that is likely to continue once the Senate considers the bill in coming weeks. Pharmaceutical industry lobbyists defended their effort, alleging that the Democrats’ proposal would stifle research. They also said many other groups poured millions of dollars into the other side of the debate.
— CRISIS —
“Jan. 6 committee warns Trump DOJ official he must cooperate with investigation or it will move aggressively against him” via Jacqueline Alemany of The Washington Post — The House select committee investigating the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol warned former Justice Department official Jeffrey Clark that it will take more aggressive steps to compel his testimony after he refused to answer questions Friday during a closed-door interview with the panel. Chair Bennie G. Thompson said Clark has “a very short time to reconsider and cooperate fully” before the committee moves to “take strong measures to hold him accountable to meet his obligation.” Thompson did not specify what those measures would be, but the committee last month moved to hold Stephen Bannon in criminal contempt for failing to cooperate with its subpoena.
— EPILOGUE TRUMP —
“U.S. judge appears set to reject Trump bid to block records requested by Jan. 6 committee” via Spencer S. Hsu of The Washington Post — A federal judge appeared ready to side with Congress and the Biden White House against Trump’s effort to block the release of hundreds of pages of White House records sought by a House committee investigating the Jan. 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol. U.S. District Judge Tanya S. Chutkan said she might curb some “unbelievably broad” requests for records about Trump’s activities and communications leading up to the attempt by rioting Trump supporters as lawmakers met to confirm the 2020 presidential election, such as polling and campaign communication dating to April.
“Georgia grand jury looms in Trump inquiry” via Danny Hakim and Richard Fausset of The New York Times — An Atlanta district attorney is moving toward convening a special grand jury in her criminal investigation of election interference by the former President and his allies. The prosecutor, Fani Willis of Fulton County, opened her inquiry in February and her office has been consulting with the House committee, whose evidence could be of considerable value to her investigation. But her progress has been slowed in part by the delays in the panel’s fact-gathering. Her inquiry is seen by legal experts as potentially perilous for the former President, given the myriad interactions he and his allies had with Georgia officials.
“St. Pete Trump supporter still refuses to pay on election bet, could now face jail time” via Daniel Figueroa of Florida Politics — According to Pinellas County Court records, Sean Hynes, a St. Pete resident, and Jeffery Costa, who lives in Georgia, made an Election Day wager. Hynes said Trump would win, while Costa put his money on Biden. But after Biden was declared the winner, Hynes refused to pay, believing the results would be overturned. When Hynes continued to refuse payment, Costa took him to court. Costa asked for the initial $100, plus $250 in court costs and $300 in interest. In March, a court order settled the matter, reducing court costs and waving interest. It ordered Hynes to pay Costa $207.50 by Oct. 9.
— LOCAL NOTES —
“Destin Councilwoman Prebble Ramswell is suspended from office four weeks after felony arrest” via Tom McLaughlin of Northwest Florida Daily News — Nearly four weeks after she was arrested for official misconduct, battery on a law enforcement officer and a violation of Florida’s Sunshine Law, Destin City Councilwoman Ramswell has been suspended from office. DeSantis issued an executive order Thursday to make the suspension official. “It is in the best interests of the residents of the City of Destin and the citizens of the State of Florida, that Prebble Quinn Ramswell be immediately suspended from the public office which she now holds,” Executive Order No. 21-239 said.
“Following whistleblower complaint, Jacksonville inspector general put on leave” via Nate Monroe of The Florida Times-Union — Lisa Green, the inspector general who investigates allegations of waste, fraud and abuse at Jacksonville City Hall, has been placed on administrative leave. Green is the subject of a whistleblower complaint recently filed by the No. 2 in her own office, Andrew McFarlane, the office’s chief of investigations. That complaint, which I obtained, accuses Green of “haphazard management” and fostering a toxic atmosphere in the office marked by favoritism and dysfunction. The decision to place Green on leave is connected to that complaint, which, since it was filed days ago, has created a brewing controversy. Electronics were removed from Green’s office Friday afternoon, officials said. McFarlane has also been placed on leave.
“Criminal investigation launched into Eckerd Connects. How did we get here?” via Liz Crawford of WTSP — The Pinellas County Sheriff’s Office announced a criminal investigation into allegations of child abuse and neglect that they say kids under the care of Eckerd Connects Community Alternatives suffered. Eckerd has about 60 to 70 kids who are considered to be under a night-to-night status, meaning the kids don’t have a regular placement and are moved around on a nightly basis. Of those kids, the sheriff’s office says it learned about six a night have been sleeping on cots and under desks at Eckerd’s administrative office in Largo without clean clothes, toiletries, hot meals or clean shower facilities. Earlier this week, the Florida Department of Children and Families (DCF) announced Eckerd Connects will stop providing child welfare services in the Bay area within the next year.
“State launches emergency bid to find new foster care agency for Pinellas, Pasco” via Christopher O’Donnell of the Tampa Bay Times — With less than two months to find a new foster care agency for Pinellas and Pasco counties, the Florida Department of Children and Families late on Friday opened up bidding for the $80 million contract under emergency terms. The department will accept bids from agencies for a five-year contract to serve as the lead child welfare agency in the two counties. The deadline to apply is Nov. 12. The contracts are typically awarded to nonprofit groups that work in the social services arena. DCF has until the end of the year to find a new lead agency after Secretary Shevaun Harris told Eckerd Connects on Monday that its contract would not be renewed.
“Audubon Florida to Citrus County: Don’t weaken waterfront setback rules” via Mike Wright of Florida Politics — Florida Audubon is sounding the alarm at the prospect of the Citrus County Commission backing a plan to significantly reduce waterfront setbacks for homes. Citrus Commissioners have an 8 a.m. Tuesday workshop to discuss setbacks, which have been an on-and-off debate for several years. The county requires homes, porches, swimming pools, and the like to be built 50 feet from the water’s edge, or 35 feet with a berm or swale to prevent runoff directly into the lake, river or canal. “Now is not the time for Citrus County to loosen the requirements in its code to more easily allow development closer to the water in the county’s coastal areas,” Charles Lee, advocacy coordinator with Florida Audubon said. “Please reject proposals to weaken this code.”
“Erik Arroyo becomes the youngest-ever Mayor of Sarasota” via Anne Snabes of the Sarasota Herald-Tribune — Arroyo is the city of Sarasota’s new ceremonial Mayor. At 31, he’s the youngest person to serve as the city’s Mayor. “Me standing before you today as the youngest elected official in the history of Sarasota is a testament to how inclusive and forward-thinking our city is,” he told an audience that had crowded into the City Commission chambers on Friday. Arroyo’s predecessor, Hagen Brody, nominated him as Mayor, and the Commission voted unanimously for him to assume to post. As Mayor, Arroyo will fill a ceremonial role and is responsible for running the Commission meetings. The Mayor is also often treated as a sort of spokesperson for the city.
— TOP OPINION —
“DeSantis distorts the facts in media broadside” via Bill Cotterell of the Tallahassee Democrat — Online messages to voters are not usually fact-checked or held to the same standard of accuracy and fairness that a candidate’s policy positions and campaign promises should withstand. Thus, DeSantis’ team can be indulged a bit for mangling the truth in a little attack on the news media the campaign cranked out last week. Team DeSantis was just trying to fire up the Republican base by telling supporters that an incumbent Governor with more than $50 million in the bank and a nationwide following is somehow in dire peril, a year from his very-likely reelection. News coverage of DeSantis has ranged from skeptical to hostile. But it’s not much worse than how the media gang up on other Republicans close to Trump.
— OPINIONS —
“Dems’ incompetence unleashes DeSantis to continue to drive a wedge between us” via the Miami Herald editorial board — The day after Democrats’ humiliating loss in the Virginia gubernatorial election, DeSantis referred to Biden as “Brandon” at an official event, a nod to a vulgar insult of the President popular among conservatives. Perhaps there’s nothing more emblematic of the defeat of Biden’s agenda on Tuesday than one of his enemies embracing the “Let’s go, Brandon” chant. Democrats and the Biden administration could be getting the strategy to undermine Florida’s young Governor all wrong. Democrats only help DeSantis when they look incapable of governing when Biden’s approval ratings continue to sink and the party for months has haggled over a spending bill that contains reforms popular with Americans, such as child care.
“Florida needs a film incentive program” via Dana Trabulsy for the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — When I was elected to the Florida House in November 2020, one issue that immediately attracted me was the film and television production industry. For years, I’ve seen the Georgia Peach at the end of credits and wondered why I didn’t see a Florida Orange or Palm Tree. It seemed like common sense that Florida would have a booming film and television production industry. I quickly learned of the challenges. Florida is the only state in the southeast, and one of just 17 states in the country, without a program to compete for film and television projects. Florida is at a significant competitive disadvantage. In recent years Florida has lost close to 100 major film and television projects that would have spent more than $1.5 billion in Florida, used 250,000 hotel room nights and provided 125,000 cast and crew jobs for Floridians.
“Funds could heal the digital divide” via Rep. Travaris McCurdy for the Orlando Sentinel — When schools closed at the start of the pandemic, Orlando’s long-simmering digital divide exploded. Black and brown students already suffered a big gulf in home internet and computer availability. The pandemic made the impact of this divide much worse. The current surge in COVID-19 cases and student quarantines places the controversy back in the klieg lights. It’s part of the complex set of COVID-19 challenges facing the Biden administration and one they must tackle head-on. The U.S. Senate recently passed, as part of the bipartisan infrastructure package, $65 billion to build broadband networks in unconnected communities and get low-income neighborhoods connected to the networks already ubiquitously deployed in urban America.
— ON TODAY’S SUNRISE —
President Biden is hailing Congress’ passage of his $1 trillion infrastructure package.
Also, on today’s Sunrise:
— Meanwhile, Republican Sen. Scott remains skeptical about the true costs of the bipartisan plan.
— In her first public news conference since the announcement that she has breast cancer, First Lady Casey DeSantis announces the launch of a substance abuse education initiative for students.
To listen, click on the image below:
— ALOE —
“Blue Angels bring together thousands at Pensacola Beach for ‘majestic’ Homecoming Air Show” via Colin Warren-Hicks of the Pensacola News Journal — A crowd of thousands enjoyed near-perfect flying weather Saturday afternoon as the Blue Angels soared across cloudless, blue skies over Pensacola Beach for the grand finale of the 75th anniversary Homecoming Air Show. The Saturday audience was noticeably larger than Friday’s turnout, with the 1,000-space lot at Casino Beach filling up completely before 9:30 a.m. Saturday, about 20 minutes earlier than Friday. The earliest arrivals Saturday came to the beach bundled in coats before sunrise to secure their spots for the U.S. Navy flight demonstration squadron’s last show of the season. But by the time the Blue Angels performed at 2 p.m., the temperature was closer to a mild 65 degrees and many in the crowd were sporting shorts and T-shirts.
“Here is how much Florida says it paid to bring Michelin to Miami, Tampa and Orlando” via Carlos Frías of Miami.com — Bringing the prestigious Michelin Guide to Florida is costing the state a fraction of what California paid just two years ago. Visit Florida, the state’s marketing organization has agreed in principle to pay the restaurant rating service Michelin Guide $150,000 of its total $75 million budget over the next year to create a new Florida guide. The new guide, expected to publish in April 2022 when the Michelin Guide announces which restaurants it deemed worthy of its stars, will cover the Miami, Orlando and Tampa metro areas.
— HAPPY BIRTHDAY —
Happy birthday to Leah Bickley and Emily Sitzberger. Belated happy birthday wishes to Amanda Bowen, Seminole Co. Commissioner Lee Constantine, the brilliant Eric Deggans, Pinellas Co. Commissioner Janet Long, our former colleague Danny McAuliffe, Jenny Meale Poggie, and top fundraiser Jon Stewart,
___
Sunburn is authored and assembled by Peter Schorsch, Phil Ammann, Renzo Downey and Drew Wilson.
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Axios AM
🗳️ Happy Monday. Midterms are one year from today. Smart Brevity™ count: 1,174 words … 4½ minutes. Edited by Zachary Basu.
Illustration: Aïda Amer/Axios
The Biden administration is igniting a nationwide brawl with its January deadline for employers with 100+ employees to require COVID shots or regular testing, Axios health care editor Tina Reed reports.
- Why it matters: The planned mandates affect more than 100 million Americans — over two-thirds of the workforce.
What’s happening: Lawsuits from 15 GOP-led states rolled in mere hours after the administration announced Jan. 4 as the deadline for employers.
- Even a Democratic governor, Kansas’ Laura Kelly, criticized the rule as not “the correct, or the most effective, solution for Kansas.”
- Green Bay Packers QB Aaron Rodgers, who is unvaccinated and missed last night’s game after testing positive for COVID, complained that some vaccine rules are “trying to out and shame people.”
State of play: A federal appeals court on Saturday temporarily blocked enforcement of the mandate. The administration says it’s confident the requirement will withstand legal challenges.
Satellite image shows a carrier target in Ruoqiang, Xinjiang, China. Photo: Maxar Technologies via Reuters
China’s military has built mockups in the shape of a U.S. Navy aircraft carrier and other U.S. warships, apparently as training targets, in the desert of Xinjiang, Reuters reports from satellite images by Maxar.
- Why it matters: These mockups reflect China’s efforts to increase anti-carrier capabilities, specifically against the U.S. Navy, as tensions rise with Washington over Taiwan and the South China Sea.
The images show a rail system with a ship-sized target mounted on it (ab0ve) — which could simulate a moving vessel.
In deciding whether to reappoint Fed Chair Jay Powell, with an announcement expected this month, President Biden is juggling three realities, Axios’ Hans Nichols writes:
- The pick could affect inflation … will face the cruel judgment of the markets … and needs to find 50 votes in the deeply divided Senate.
Why it matters: The head of the U.S. central bank is vested with vast powers that determine how quickly to heat — or cool — the economy. The results will be pivotal to Democrats’ midterm chances next year, and Biden’s potential campaign in 2024.
What’s happening: Biden met Thursday with Powell, a Republican appointed by President Trump, and with Lael Brainard.
- She’s a former Obama Treasury official who’s currently a Fed governor.
- Some Republicans are vowing to block Brainard, calling her too liberal, and hinting at an ugly confirmation fight.
The case for Powell: Markets know, like and trust the former private equity executive.
- If he’s reappointed, there won’t be a revolt from Wall Street as the White House looks to pass Biden’s social spending bill, fund the government and raise the debt ceiling.
- Markets also may allow Powell to let inflation run a little bit hotter.
The case for Brainard: She’s an economist and a Democrat, and is more aligned with Biden on a range of fiscal, monetary and regulatory issues.
- Sen. Elizabeth Warren has called Powell — to his face — a “dangerous man.” It’s unclear if the White House wants to go to war with her over the Fed.
- Brainard has advocated for the Fed to do more about climate change.
- Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen was the first woman to serve as Fed chair, so Brainard wouldn’t be a “first.” But the White House still puts a big premium on gender diversity.
Between the lines: Yellen has privately urged the White House to reappoint Powell, and publicly praised him as “experienced and credible.”
- But she also told Reuters “there are other candidates, too, who I think would be similarly perceived.”
The bottom line: Given Warren’s vocal opposition to Powell, the president will have to choose between his Treasury secretary and a powerful progressive senator.
- Ten months into his presidency, Biden has yet to buck Warren on a financial personnel decision.
The 50th New York City Marathon, back with 30,000 runners after a pandemic pause in 2020, races through Brooklyn yesterday.
Above: The Verrazzano-Narrows Bridge, connecting Brooklyn and Staten Island, during the 26.2-mile race.
Photo: “Axios on HBO”
The CEO of the world’s biggest vaccine maker told Jonathan Swan on “Axios on HBO” that low-income countries will start receiving the company’s COVID vaccines this week, now that India’s Prime Minister Narendra Modi is lifting restrictions.
- Why it matters: Billionaire Adar Poonawalla’s Serum Institute of India is the biggest supplier of vaccines to low-income countries.
The big picture: Advocates say the vaccination divide between rich and poor countries is unconscionable.
- More than half of people living in many developed countries are vaccinated. Less than 5% of people in low-income countries have received a shot.
Behind the scenes: “Axios on HBO” visited Poonawalla at the Serum Institute’s headquarters in Pune, India — a four-hour drive from Mumbai’s international airport in midnight traffic, on roads packed with fast-swerving trucks.
- Poonawalla is a billionaire with flashy tastes. He collects fast cars and converted one of them into a Batmobile. He works out of a grounded Airbus plane that has been converted into a lavish boardroom office.
- Adar’s father, Cyrus, started out breeding racehorses. He used to sell his aging horses to the Indian government to develop vaccines, but realized he could cut out the middleman and mass-produce cheap vaccines by extracting serum from his own horses.
The intrigue: When the pandemic began, Poonawalla did what only somebody in his situation could have gotten away with.
- He called his father and told him he wanted to invest several hundred million dollars, and enter a deal to begin producing a potential COVID vaccine that hadn’t even gone through clinical trials.
- Luckily, for Poonawalla and — finally, soon — recipients around the world, the bet paid off.
The world has gone mad. Imagine saying: “Hey, Twitter! Please decide whether or not I should sell $20 billion in stock.”
- Elon Musk did just that on Saturday, posting the poll above and promising his 63 million followers: “I will abide by the results of this poll, whichever way it goes.”
Asked on Twitter about the “final results” above, Musk replied: “I was prepared to accept either outcome.”
- Musk holds 17% of Tesla stock, worth just over $200 billion. One-tenth of that would be worth about $21 billion, The Wall Street Journal reports.
Screenshot: NRCC
House Republicans will run a one-day, nationwide ad campaign today — one year out from the midterms — targeting Democrats over rising prices, crime and the border, Axios’ Stef Kight reports.
- The National Republican Congressional Committee ad airs today on Fox News, Newsmax and One America News Network.
- It’s a small buy — just under $100,000 — but sets the tone for the cycle.
Flashback: House Rs have hammered those three issues since summer.
M.J. “Sunny” Eberhart (trail name: Nimblewill Nomad) — age 83 — is the oldest person to hike the entire 2,190-mile Appalachian Trail, AP reports.
- Above, we see the Alabaman descending Mount Hayes, near Gorham, N.H.
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Non-violence group works to stop violence with hoops and hope
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Morning Headlines
Defense industry executives are concerned that ambiguities in President Joe Biden’s vaccine mandate for federal contractors will create financial and legal risks for some 20 percent of U.S. businesses. Read more…
Buoyed, finally, by forward movement on a larger package of President Joe Biden’s domestic priorities, the House late Friday night cleared a Senate-passed bipartisan infrastructure bill that pours billions of dollars into roads, bridges, water systems, transit and broadband. Read more…
Metro’s carpet cars are back, and nobody on the Hill is happy about it
Delays have piled up for the “nation’s subway” after a mid-October derailment prompted the agency to ground its fleet of new 7000-series cars and fire up mothballed older trains, including some with smell-absorbing carpet that gets extra musty on rainy days. Read more…
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Watch: Private jets, nude beaches and SNL is back — Congressional Hits and Misses
Ted Cruz talked nude beaches in Austin and learned some Republicans have private jets. House Rules was stuck on “Saturday Night Live” references and Mike Lee wrote a love letter to Apple CEO Tim Cook. All that and more in the latest edition of Congressional Hits and Misses. Watch here…
House, Senate disagree over namesake for DOT headquarters
The House and Senate are engaged in a standoff over which former secretary of Transportation to name the DOT headquarters after — William T. Coleman Jr., the first Black secretary, or Norman Y. Mineta, the first Asian American to hold the post. Read more…
Photos of the week ending Nov. 5, 2021
As members of Congress continued to beat up on each other over the budget reconciliation package, the Capitol Police team beat up on the members’ team at the Congressional Football Game, 26-6. See a recap of last week in photos by CQ Roll Call’s photojournalists. Read more…
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25.) POLITICO PLAYBOOK
POLITICO Playbook: Big obstacles await Biden after big win
DRIVING THE DAY
SIREN — A new national poll from USA TODAY/Suffolk University pegs President JOE BIDEN’s approval rating at 38%. Things are worse for VP KAMALA HARRIS, who scores a 28% job approval.
Other bad numbers in the poll:
— 16% of those who voted for him say Biden has done a worse job as president than they expected.
— 44% of independents say he’s done worse than they expected.
— 64% say they don’t want Biden to run for reelection, including 28% of Democrats.
Silver lining: The survey was conducted Wednesday through Friday, after the Democrats’ Election Day drubbing but before passage of the bipartisan infrastructure bill, which receives high marks in the poll (61% support).
BIG OBSTACLES AHEAD FOR BIDEN: Congress is out this week and the Biden administration will spend much of the next few days promoting the benefits of BIF, making the case for the reconciliation bill and pushing parents and schools to get kids vaccinated.
So enjoy a brief window of calm in between last week’s Virginia and BIF news and the holiday insanity coming to Congress.
The must-read of the day to get prepared for what’s coming is this WSJ piece by Nick Timiraos, Natalie Andrews and Ian Talley on the obstacles looming for Biden:
— “Economic headwinds,” especially inflation.
— The CBO score that moderates want on the reconciliation bill might take several weeks.
— The Democrats’ latest immigration proposal for the bill may not survive the Byrd rule.
— The SALT changes, which many Democrats see as a giveaway to the rich, are uncertain: “The House’s plan to raise the $10,000 cap on the state and local tax deduction to $80,000 for nine years also faces possible revisions in the Senate because of opposition from some lawmakers.”
— Whatever passes the House will have to be ping-ponged back after the Senate makes its changes, “meaning Democrats could still be working on the legislation until the end of the year.”
— The government will shut down Dec. 3 absent a new spending deal and the debt ceiling needs to be raised, but Senate Minority Leader MITCH MCCONNELL “said last month that he wouldn’t again line up the votes to increase the debt ceiling through the regular process, making it unclear how Democrats will pass a bill to avoid the U.S. defaulting on its debt.”
SENATE AND HOUSE LANDSCAPE DEEP DIVES: The midterms are a year from today.
— Natalie Allison looks at the race for the Senate:
“Democrats go into the midterm election with one advantage — a favorable map that gives some reason to think the party can hold its miniscule Senate majority next year.
“But it’s not going to be enough on its own to save them in the current political environment.
“Not after what Tuesday’s election results revealed. Double-digit swings toward the GOP in races in Virginia and New Jersey last week suggest the seats Democrats narrowly won in recent special elections in Georgia and Arizona will prove difficult to defend, and the Senate playing field could be expanded by the addition of one or more top-tier GOP challengers.
“While the 2022 map overall tilts slightly in their favor — sparing the party from defending Senate seats in any states DONALD TRUMP won last year, and giving Democrats multiple pickup opportunities thanks to retiring Republicans — historic midterm trends are working against the party. So is President Joe Biden’s tanking approval rating.”
— Ally Mutnick reports on the battle to control the House:
“Republicans could hardly be better poised to recapture the House majority. Increasingly aggressive redistricting, a diverse slate of candidates raking in record-breaking amounts of cash and a political atmosphere that just keeps getting more favorable has Democrats watching with a growing sense of dread.”
Related: Republicans now lead Democrats in RealClearPolitics’ generic congressional ballot.
More: Another election post-mortem in the New York Times with a focus on Long Island’s Nassau County after Democrats suffered big losses in a county where they outnumbered Republicans.
Good Monday morning, and thanks for reading Playbook. Drop us a line: Rachael Bade, Eugene Daniels, Ryan Lizza, Tara Palmeri.
SUBURBAN MOMS ON GLENN YOUNGKIN: CNN’s Pamela Brown sat down with four suburban women who voted for Biden last year and for Youngkin on Tuesday. The interview tracks with other post-mortems that emphasize the Democrats’ missed opportunity in taking the education issue more seriously.
Some key quotes …
On how at-home learning during the pandemic was their big issue: “Our kids are in crisis. The learning loss is real. … Mandates and CRT did not influence my decision. At all.”
On Youngkin taking the issue more seriously than TERRY MCAULIFFE: “Glenn — he listened to us. … He spent a lot of one-on-one time with parents.”
“Terry seemed to be campaigning everywhere but Virginia.”
On BARACK OBAMA campaigning for McAuliffe and describing education issues as “phony, trumped-up culture wars”: “Offensive. … They were really dismissive.”
On McAuliffe focusing so much on Trump: “I felt like it was really tone-deaf to just discount parents and the whole educational struggle and make it about Trump all of the time.”
On Youngkin keeping Trump out of the state: “I told him if you bring Donald Trump into Virginia I’m not helping you.”
BIDEN’S MONDAY:
— 8:45 a.m.: The Bidens will leave Rehoboth Beach, Del., to return to D.C., arriving at the White House at 9:40 a.m.
— 10:15 a.m.: Biden and Harris will receive the President’s Daily Brief.
— 2:50 p.m.: Biden will honor the NBA champions Milwaukee Bucks on the South Lawn.
HARRIS’ MONDAY:
— 9:30 p.m.: Harris and second gentleman DOUG EMHOFF will depart D.C. en route to Paris.
Principal deputy press secretary KARINE JEAN-PIERRE will brief at 1 p.m. with Transportation Secretary PETE BUTTIGIEG.
THE SENATE and THE HOUSE are out.
BIDEN’S WEEK AHEAD: The president will head to the Port of Baltimore on Wednesday to tout the bipartisan infrastructure bill.
PLAYBOOK READS
ALL POLITICS
POKING THE BEAR — Coming off last week’s electoral romp, GOP officials at the Republican Jewish Coalition conference in Las Vegas over the weekend expressed differing views as to whether the party “could replicate their decisive gains with suburban voters, especially women, if Trump remained the face of the party,” NYT’s Jeremy Peters reports. “The most notable Trump skeptic was former Gov. CHRIS CHRISTIE of New Jersey, who … said that the party would be making a grave mistake if it did not recommit itself to truth-telling.”
THE VIEW FROM K STREET — Republican lawmakers appear more likely to take back congressional power in 2022. And corporate America is apparently noticing, Hailey Fuchs reports. “Interviews with about a half-dozen GOP-connected lobbyists reveal that the results of the off-year election bode well for the party’s fundraising from companies that had soured on giving after Jan. 6.”
HOW WE GOT HERE — In a new excerpt from his forthcoming book, “Misfire: Inside the Downfall of the NRA,” Tim Mak examines how the NRA doubled down on its culture war strategy in the aftermath of the Newtown, Conn., shooting in 2013 — tanking a gun-control bill it had helped negotiate and never looking back. More from POLITICO Magazine
CLYBURN TO ENDORSE IN WISCONSIN — The Daily Beast is reporting that House Majority Whip JIM CLYBURN (D-S.C.) is using his powerful endorsement in the Wisconsin Senate race to back MANDELA BARNES, the lieutenant governor of Wisconsin, in the primary challenge for the seat being held by Sen. RON JOHNSON (R-Wis.).
(IR)RECONCILABLE DIFFERENCES
THE THRILL OF VICTORY — With the infrastructure bill finally heading to Biden’s desk, WaPo’s Matt Viser takes stock of his achievement. “Biden seemed to relish not only besting his predecessor, but also doing so in a bipartisan way that to him began to validate the kind of politics that Biden seeks to practice,” he writes.
“At a time of tribal warfare and balkanized politics, Biden could fairly tout legislation that was supported by top Senate Republicans such as Mitch McConnell — and in many ways saved when 13 Republican House members backed it late Friday night as six Democrats voted against.”
THE PANDEMIC
THE NEXT VACCINATION PUSH — The White House is kicking off a new effort to get children ages 5-11 vaccinated against Covid-19. HHS Secretary XAVIER BECERRA and Education Secretary MIGUEL CARDONA are sending a Dear Colleague letter to superintendents and elementary school principals, urging them to help get students vaccinated and disseminate information. First lady JILL BIDEN will also visit a series of children’s vaccination sites around the country in the coming weeks, beginning with a stop in McLean, Va., with Surgeon General VIVEK MURTHY today. The letter
CLIMATE FILES
FAKE DATA — A WaPo investigation published Sunday found that countries across the world are underreporting their greenhouse gas emissions to the U.N. “An examination of 196 country reports reveals a giant gap between what nations declare their emissions to be versus the greenhouse gases they are sending into the atmosphere. The gap ranges from at least 8.5 billion to as high as 13.3 billion tons a year of underreported emissions — big enough to move the needle on how much the Earth will warm.”
The upshot: “The plan to save the world from the worst of climate change is built on data. But the data the world is relying on is inaccurate.”
PLAYBOOKERS
Michael Cohen was mistaken for Michael Cohen, and a big correction ensued.
Joe Biden praised Big Bird after the feathered friend announced he got vaccinated. “Good on ya, @BigBird. Getting vaccinated is the best way to keep your whole neighborhood safe,” POTUS wrote on Twitter.
Dana Bash paid tribute to her mentor, the late Cokie Roberts, and discussed a new book about her by her husband, Steven Roberts, “Cokie: A Life Well Lived.”
Jim Clyburn, Liz Cheney and Chris Wallace received the Panetta Institute’s Jefferson-Lincoln Awards on Saturday night at a black tie gala in Pebble Beach, Calif.
SPOTTED: Rep. Peter DeFazio (D-Ore.) heading into the Capital Yacht Club at the Wharf.
LIVING HISTORY — NBC’s Matt Lavietes got a sneak peek of “Mayor Pete,” a documentary about Pete Buttigieg’s 2020 presidential run set to premiere on Amazon Prime Video on Friday. “While Washington buffs may devour some of its politically juicy moments — several scenes show Buttigieg’s communications director, Lis Smith, shouting at him during his debate prep — the film gives viewers an up-close look at how Buttigieg navigated and cemented his legacy in LGBTQ history,” Lavietes writes.
OUT AND ABOUT — The Republican National Lawyers Association honored Elliot Berke as the 2021 Republican Lawyer of the Year at an event Friday at the Pearl Street Warehouse. House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy spoke, and there were video tributes from Robert Duvall, Billy Gibbon, Billy Idol, Billy Duffy, Carl Palmer, Geoff Downes, Buck Dharma and Mike Peters. Berke’s band The Deplorables performed a set. Also SPOTTED: Reps. Rodney Davis (R-Ill.), Devin Nunes (R-Calif.) and Scott Brown.
MEDIA MOVE — Neil McCabe is starting as national political editor for the Star News Network, which includes The Tennessee Star. He just returned to Washington after a 10-month Army Reserve deployment to Camp Arifjan, Kuwait, and is a former Breitbart and One America News reporter.
TRANSITIONS — Molly Block is now comms director for Sen. Kevin Cramer (R-N.D.). She most recently was press secretary for Sen. Bill Cassidy (R-La.). … Justin Discigil is moving up to be chief of staff for Rep. Dan Crenshaw (R-Texas). He previously was comms director. Alyssa Anderson is moving up to be deputy chief of staff.
HAPPY BIRTHDAY: Rep. Mark Green (R-Tenn.) … ABC’s David Muir … Blackstone’s Wayne Berman … Karen Sherman of the Akilah Institute … Holland & Knight’s Leon Fresco … WaPo’s Tory Newmyer … POLITICO’s Roger Jeannotte … L.A. Times’ Jackeline Luna … Matt Sandgren of Innovative Policy … Amazon’s Erin Cohan … Council of State Governments Justice Center’s Jay Nelson … Ira Magaziner … Johanny Adames of the Latino Victory Project … Ben Williamson … AARP’s John Hishta … Weston Loyd … Kelsey Suter of Greenberg Quinlan Rosner … Courtney Stamm … Latham and Watkins’ Christopher Martin … Bob Jones … Charlotte Law … Kelly Jane Torrance … Ashley Higgins … Michael D. Brown … Richard Socarides … Laurie Moskowitz … former Rep. Dennis Moore (D-Kan.) … Andrew Turner
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26.) AMERICAN MINUTE
27.) CAFFEINATED THOUGHTS
28.) CONSERVATIVE DAILY NEWS
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29.) PJ MEDIA
The Morning Briefing: RINOs Bail Out Biden But He’s Still Cratering
Top O’ the Briefing
Happy Monday, dear Kruiser Morning Briefing friends. Big Soap needs to stop lying about the 2-in-1 shampoo/conditioner thing.
I hope everyone had a good weekend. Mine was definitely interesting.
On Saturday, I wore my new “Let’s Go Brandon” shirt to the University of Arizona football game. It got some compliments in the stadium and then sparked a couple of conversations afterward when we were walking around campus and at a local watering hole. My hometown is still very blue, so I was a little surprised. It’s fun accidentally meeting like-minded people and chugging a beer or two.
My football team also broke a 20-game losing streak, so it won’t be the last time I wear the shirt.
Welp…the House finally gave Biden his infrastructure bill and it isn’t pretty. Rick wrote about it over the weekend:
Late on Friday night, the presidency of Joe Biden hung in the balance as House Speaker Nancy Pelosi brought the $1.2 trillion Bipartisan Infrastructure Framework (BIF) to the floor for a vote.
The issue was in doubt. While the Progressive Caucus agreed to vote for the measure, their assent was based on a deal Pelosi reached with more moderate Democrats in the House. The moderates would vote no later than November 15 on Biden’s other massive spending measure—a $1.75 trillion social spending bill.
But the deal failed to convince the radical “Squad” members to vote for the BIF. Reps. Ilhan Omar, Cori Bush, Jamaal Bowman, Rashida Tlaib, Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and Ayanna Pressley were perfectly willing to torpedo Biden’s agenda then and there and make him a one-term president.
But Pelosi, the Democratic Party, and Joe Biden were rescued by 13 Republican House members who wanted some pork to show the folks back home that it wasn’t all fun and games in Washington and that Congress actually did some work every once in a while.
What is so frustrating about this is that things aren’t going well anywhere for the Democrats. They were roughed up pretty badly in Virginia last week and A.J. writes that this week is starting off even worse for Biden:
A USA Today poll released late Sunday presents more bad news for the Biden administration and Democrats.
The president’s job approval rating dropped to a dismal 38%, with nearly 60% disapproving. This is the lowest rating of any modern president at this point in his term — except for Donald Trump.
Though presidential approval polls are indeed a snapshot in time, the rating is also one of the most significant factors affecting midterm results.
The so-called generic ballot, which frequently underrates Republican chances, is also problematic for Democrats. If the election were today, respondents would vote for their Republican congressional candidate over the Democrat 46-38%, an advantage that undoubtedly would help the GOP reclaim the U.S. House in 2022.
When your opponent is flailing as badly as Team Biden is now, why offer a hand to help him out of the quicksand? The thoroughly execrable Adam Kinzinger was one of the 13 turncoats. He’s been slipping knives into the backs of his fellow Republicans since the beginning of the year, so that wasn’t a real shocker.
Republicans should be in full obstructionist mode right now and nothing else. The Democrats are doing a phenomenal job of beating themselves up. All the GOP needs to do is step aside and watch the in-fighting punches fly. It’s utterly unconscionable to saddle the American taxpayers with a $1.2 trillion boondoggle like this.
This is a perfect example of why the Republican Party needs to keep weeding out the squishes. When you’re facing your opponent you shouldn’t have to keep checking over your shoulder to see if any “friendlies” are sneaking up to sabotage you.
Let the Squad cancer keep eating away at the Democrats from the inside. There have been post-mortems since last Tuesday urging the Democrats to both go farther to the left or more to the center.
I’m just going to enjoy watching them chase their tails for a while.
Everything Isn’t Awful
PJ Media
CNN Films Child Trafficking Transaction and Does Nothing to Stop It
BUT NO MEAN TWEETS. FREE FALL: New Week Opens With Worst Polling Yet for Biden and Harris
Ousted Border Chief: U.S. Border Security ‘Worse Than Ever’ Under Biden
George Floyd Friend Claims Rittenhouse Jurors Are Being Tracked and Photographed
REPORT: Emilio Estevez Benched From ‘Mighty Ducks’ Series Over Disney’s Vaccine Mandate
Going Forward, Joe Biden Needs to Choose His Friends Carefully
NJ State Senate Candidate Who Spent $153 to Win is Already Apologizing to the Woke Mob
Civil War Among Nevada Democrats Could Pay Off Big for GOP
Tensions Escalate in Iraq Following Drone Strike on Prime Minister’s Residence
Which Way Will Joe Manchin Jump?
The World No Longer Believes in American Democracy, and Neither do We
West Coast, Messed Coast: Where’s Gavin Newsom?
Boy Scouts of America Embraces Critical Race Theory
Nuke ’em all. 13 House Republicans Rescue Biden’s Agenda By Voting For Infrastructure Bill
Chinese Officer Convicted for Spying Against U.S.
NYT Editorial Board to Democrats: Move to Center or Keep Losing
Townhall Mothership
Schlichter: Greetings from Feudal California
Oh, So That’s Why Huma Abedin Wrote That Book
Trump Has Strong Words for ‘RINOs’ Who Helped Pass $1.2 Trillion Infrastructure Bill
California School Investigating Teacher After Quiz Included a Question Criticizing Conservatives
Kanye ‘Ye’ West May Have Changed His Name, but Not His Allegiance to Trump
NYC Mayor-Elect Eric Adams Urges Fellow Dems to Abandon ‘Anarchists,’ ‘Defund the Police’
Are Deer Catching COVID From Hunters?
Rittenhouse Prosecutors Had A Very Bad Week
Mexico Asks For US Help In Stopping Guns Going South
So now most truck drivers will be exempt from the vaccine mandates
Kamala heads to conference on border security and migration… in Europe
New York Senator introduces UAP/UFO transparency amendment
‘He’s not real, Joe’: Official @POTUS Twitter account responds to Big Bird
‘How is this app free’: Elon Musk tweets about Sen. Ron Wyden’s ‘pp’
VIP
‘Unwoke’ With Kevin and Kruiser #19: Democrat Misogyny, Cowboy Boots, and We Love New Jersey
VodkaPundit: ‘Garbage!’ Red States Sue Biden Admin Over Vaccine Mandate for Government Contractors
Democrats’ Ongoing Demise Began With One Particular Fiasco
On COVID-19 Vaccines, the Chickens May Be Coming Home to Roost
Biden Admin Promises ‘Long Fight’ Over Vaccine Mandate, Which Is Exactly What It Wants
It Is Not COVID-19, But Emergency Rooms Are Overflowing Nationwide
Why Aren’t Women Returning to the Workforce?
Did The GOP Get A Backbone with Iran on Nuclear Deal?
Joe Biden Doesn’t Really Care About Illegals Separated at the Border. Here’s How We Know.
Around the Interwebz
Vin Diesel Asks Dwayne Johnson To Return For ‘Fast And Furious’ Conclusion
So what is “the metaverse,” exactly?
Why Are Some Liquors Called ‘Spirits’?
Bee Me
The Kruiser Kabana
Kabana Gallery
Kabana Comedy
30.) WHITE HOUSE DOSSIER
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Cut to the News
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USA
31.) THE DISPATCH
The Morning Dispatch: Biden’s Big Friday
Jobs numbers were better than expected, and the House passed the bipartisan infrastructure framework.
The Dispatch Staff | 1 |
Happy Monday! We were barely able to finish today’s newsletter in time because we devoted our entire weekend to getting really, really mad at an anthropomorphic bird.
Quick Hits: Today’s Top Stories
- The House of Representatives ended a months-long standoff Friday night and voted 228-206 to pass the bipartisan infrastructure package approved by the Senate in August. Thirteen Republicans crossed party lines to support the $1 trillion bill that includes about $550 billion in new spending, while six progressive Democrats voted against it.
- The Bureau of Labor Statistics reported Friday that U.S. employers added 531,000 jobs in October, beating the Dow Jones expectation of 450,000 and dropping the unemployment rate to 4.6 percent.
- Pfizer’s oral COVID-19 antiviral, PAXLOVID, was found to reduce the risk of hospitalization or death by 89 percent when taken shortly after a COVID diagnosis, according to data from a randomized Phase II/III trial of high-risk patients released on Friday. Just 0.8 percent of those receiving PAXLOVID within three days of COVID symptom onset were hospitalized, compared to 7 percent of those who received a placebo.
- An armed drone attacked Iraqi Prime Minister Mustafa al-Kadhimi’s residence early Sunday morning, with the leader surviving what what Iraqi officials described as an assassination attempt. No group has claimed responsibility for the ambush, but it came just days after skirmishes in Baghdad between government forces and Iranian-backed political parties disputing the outcome of October’s general election.
- A federal appeals court temporarily stayed the Biden administration’s vaccine mandate for large companies over the weekend after several Republican state governments and business/advocacy groups sued to block its implementation. The Department of Labor has until 5 p.m. today to respond to the mandate opponents’ request for an injunction, at which time the appeals court will make a decision that could then be appealed to the Supreme Court. The Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) mandate does not go fully into effect until January 4, 2022.
- Anti-coup demonstrations continued in Sudan over the weekend, with hundreds of protesters gathering in the capital of Khartoum on Sunday, where they were tear-gassed and arrested en masse by Sudanese security forces.
- Eight people died and several others were injured at Travis Scott’s Astroworld music festival in Houston on Friday after the raucous, 50,000-person crowd swelled toward the stage. At least 11 of the 17 people taken to the hospital were in cardiac arrest and required CPR, according to Houston Fire Chief Samuel Peña, and the dead ranged from ages 14 to 27.
Joe Biden’s Make-or-Break Friday
On October 28, President Biden traversed Pennsylvania Avenue to deliver an urgent message to congressional Democrats in person: “I don’t think it’s hyperbole to say that the House and Senate majorities and my presidency will be determined by what happens in the next week.”
One day later, the Commerce Department released data showing that, by one measure, year-over-year inflation had reached a three-decade high. The following Tuesday, voters swung dramatically rightward in several high-profile elections that were widely interpreted as a rebuke of the president and his party. As the week drew to a close, Biden’s approval rating—dragged down by a chaotic withdrawal from Afghanistan, ongoing supply chain disruptions leading to rising food and energy prices, and the pandemic’s Delta wave keeping some COVID-19 restrictions in place—fell to the lowest level of his term. Dating back to the 1940s, only Donald Trump and Gerald Ford were less popular at this point in their presidencies.
Needless to say, Biden began Friday in desperate need of a win. He got two.
Jobs Numbers Rebound
The first came early in the day, with the Bureau of Labor Statistics announcing at 8:30 a.m. ET that U.S. employers added 531,000 jobs in October, leading the unemployment rate to drop from 4.8 percent to 4.6. After two consecutive jobs day misses in a row—235,000 actual vs. 720,000 expected in August, 194,000 v. 500,000 in September—the economy beating Dow Jones’ 450,000 October consensus was welcome news.
Biden took a victory lap. “In total, the job creation in the first full nine months of my administration is about 5.6 million new jobs—a record for any new president,” he said in remarks at the White House. “Unemployment has decreased this year by more than any other year since 1950.”
“This did not happen by accident or just because,” he continued, referencing March’s American Rescue Plan and his administration’s vaccination efforts. “We still have to tackle the costs that American families are facing. But this recovery is faster, stronger, and fairer, and wider than almost anyone could have predicted. That’s what the numbers say.”
As we’ve noted repeatedly in recent months, those higher costs—inflation—are of increasing concern to economists across the political spectrum. But October’s jobs report—which also included a combined upward revision of 235,000 jobs for August and September—helped dampen fears of something even worse: stagflation.
“Stagnant economies don’t add 531,000 jobs in a month, and they don’t exhibit a low and rapidly falling unemployment rate,” New York Times senior economic correspondent Neil Irwin wrote Friday.
The economy is not completely back to pre-pandemic levels; the labor force participation rate has plateaued at about 61.5 percent (down from 63.3 pre-pandemic), and about 4.2 million fewer people are working today than in February 2020. But employers have added an average of 582,000 jobs every month since the beginning of this year, and the unemployment rate has fallen 1.7 percentage points over that span. By pretty much any metric, the economy’s recovery from the pandemic has greatly outpaced its recovery from the financial crisis.
It’s Finally Infrastructure Week
Biden’s second Friday win came much later, around 11 p.m. ET, as the House voted to advance the Senate-approved bipartisan infrastructure framework (BIF) to the president’s desk for his signature. It took a long and tortuous path, but the $1 trillion bill—which includes about $550 billion in new spending over the next five years to fund roads, bridges, railroads, electrical grid resilience, high-speed internet, water piping, and more—will become law this week.
Back in September, we described the Democrats’ predicament as a “very, very expensive M.C. Escher sketch.”
Congressional Democrats are trying to usher two massive spending bills to President Biden’s desk, and they need essentially every single Democratic senator and House member on board to do it. But the party’s moderate flank prefers the $550 billion bipartisan infrastructure package while its progressive wing favors the $3.5 trillion reconciliation bill. Several members on each side of this divide—enough to matter for final passage—have said they won’t vote for the others’ priority until their own is passed.
For about six weeks, Democrats’ progress was theoreticalprogress theoretical, and any attempt to translate it to the real world fell apart almost immediately. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi blew through self-imposed deadline after self-imposed deadline as dozens of her caucus’s more progressive members remained steadfast in their opposition to advancing the BIF, while Sens. Joe Manchin and Kyrsten Sinema took a blowtorch to the then-$3.5 trillion Build Back Better (BBB) reconciliation bill.
Then, last week’s elections happened. “Well, look, I do think the voters sent a message on Tuesday,” White House Chief of Staff Ron Klain told NBC News on Sunday. “They wanted to see more action in Washington. They wanted to see things move more quickly. And three days later, Congress responded, passing the president’s infrastructure bill.”
Whether or not you agree with Klain’s interpretation of the message being sent, Glenn Youngkin’s win in Virginia did seem to break Democrats out of the dead-end negotiations they’d been stuck in for months. So how did they square the circle?
Worth Your Time
- In a piece for Reason titled “Politics Is Rotting Brains and Making Everyone Mad,” Steven Greenhut argues against n national conservatism (and progressivism) in making the case for a neutral public square with a tightly restrained government that allows people to live out their lives largely as they choose. “I was always interested in politics, at least since my teenage years, but don’t remember every single thing that we did leading to knock-down, drag-out political debates,” he writes. “I don’t know what we do (beyond, on a personal level, refusing to segregate ourselves into political tribes), but I know what not to do. In a recent column, Sohrab Ahmari argued that to save America, we must reject libertarianism. He called on conservatives to reject the ‘illusion’ of neutrality and exercise political authority ‘on the side of truth.’ Whose truth? Whomever has the power, I suppose. As exciting as it may sound to grab power and vanquish our enemies, I’d suggest that the only way to save America is to recommit to its original principles.”
Presented Without Comment
Toeing the Company Line
- Haley spent last week poring over the legislative text of the Build Back Better Act, and will dedicate the next few issues of Uphill to breaking it all down. In Friday’s edition: the bill’s climate provisions.
- In the wake of last week’s electoral drubbing, much of the Democratic commentariat chalked Republican gains up to voters’ deep-seated racism. But as Jonah notes in Friday’s G-File, that’s terrible politics—especially because it was Biden 2020 voters who put Glenn Youngkin over the edge in Virginia.
- Is there a new politics of abortion? With Roe v. Wade in the crosshairs, voters responded in last week’s elections with a yawn, David writes in Sunday’s French Press. “If the exit polls are to be believed, the issue fizzled,” he writes. “Voters largely did not care. Only eight percent listed abortion as their top issue, and of those eight percent, 58 percent voted for Youngkin. The economy, education, taxes, and coronavirus were all far more consequential.”
- On the latest episode of Advisory Opinions—which was taped before a live audience at the University of Tennessee—David and Sarah discussed Supreme Court oral arguments in a gun control case, shared additional thoughts about Texas’ abortion law, and took audience questions.
- On Friday’s episode of The Dispatch Podcast, Steve interviewed Nebraska Sen. Ben Sasse at the Aspen Security Forum. Tune in for a conversation about America’s response to the digital revolution across the globe.
- Chris Stirewalt predicts that the midterms will be bad for the Biden administration and Democrats. But, looking back at how previous presidents responded to such drubbings, he points out there is plenty of time for Biden to turn things around for 2024.
- Gifted education is under attack by progressive educators—in the name of equity. But Frederick Hess argues that if schools eliminate such programs, affluent parents will be able to move their kids to private school or pay for other enrichment. And that leaves the low-income students suffering.
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
Frank Luntz Claims Embarrassing ‘Major Story’ About Donald Trump and Republicans
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44.) WORLD NET DAILY
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45.) MSNBC
November 8, 2021 THE LATEST Leaked data link cops to the Oath Keepers. It gets worse. by Frank Figliuzzi After reports surfaced linking active-duty police in major cities to the far-right organization the Oath Keepers, Frank Figliuzzi raises some questions: “How did we get here, and what do we do about it?”
Answers to both of those questions are complicated, Figliuzzi admits; the “how” entails a combination of Trump riling his base during his presidential campaign, the recent surge of protests against police brutality, and the misguided and oft misunderstood “defund the police” movement.
Fixing the problem “will take persistence, time and money,” Figliuzzi stresses — but there’s no time to waste. Now is the time to reimagine the police in America.
Read Frank Figliuzzi’s full analysis here and don’t forget to check out the rest of your Monday MSNBC Daily. TOP STORIES A majority of Republicans now believe that force may be necessary to save “the traditional American way of life.” Read More Like all rights, those described in the Second Amendment are not absolute. Read More Having experienced the loss of power, Ortega understands how valuable it is. And he has a plan to keep it. Read More Several companies are calling for voting rights legislation. They also donated to Republicans who are blocking it. Read More TOP VIDEOS MORE FROM MSNBC
Sunday, MSNBC Films presents “In the Dark of the Valley.” The new feature documentary explores the decades-long cover up of a nuclear accident in the Los Angeles area, the families that suffered, and one mother’s journey to activism after watching her own daughter fight cancer – twice.
Watch “In the Dark of the Valley,” Sunday at 10pm Eastern on MSNBC.
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, Al Roker joins Chris to talk about how he found his way into TV, what goes into producing forecasts and why climate change is an existential threat to our world. In addition to being on the Today Show, he’s also the author of more than ten books, including his latest one, “You Look So Much Better in Person,” and has a new limited series podcast out called Cooking Up a Storm. 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 MONDAY, NOVEMBER 8, 2021 Good morning, NBC News readers.
Today we look at the aftermath of the tragic Astroworld music festival, why Donald Trump looks set to run for the White House again, and why too much animal fat might be bad for you.
Here’s the latest on that and everything else we’re watching this Monday morning. Days after eight people died and dozens more were injured at Travis Scott’s sold-out Astroworld music festival in Houston on Friday, people who witnessed the tragedy are still coming to terms with it.
NBC News spoke with five people who attended the Astroworld show, all of whom said they feared for their safety as the crowd crushed together.
Those who heard the screams of others being crushed, who witnessed bodies being trampled, and who thought they, too, might die in the surge, are reeling from their experience.
“Once Travis Scott came on, I told myself this is the moment I’ve been preparing for, I just need to breathe,” said Diana Amira , 19.
“But … my rib cage was so squished that I couldn’t expand my lungs to catch a breath.”
Read the full story here. Monday’s Top Stories
Analysis: The former president is making all of the moves of a candidate. The question isn’t so much when he’ll start campaigning but whether he will stop. The Supreme Court could “right this historic wrong,” says a policy advocate, while the mother of a girl with a heart condition says “the injustice is causing me so much pain.” Fat from animal sources was linked to a higher risk of stroke, while vegetable fats were linked to a lower risk. OPINION When one pulls back and looks at Fox’s broader situation, letting Carlson engage in conspiracy-mongering makes a lot of sense, writes political analyst Brian Rosenwald. Also in the News
Editor’s Pick
Los Angeles and Chicago are rolling out guaranteed basic income programs that will provide direct cash assistance to thousands of struggling families. Select
Teens are hard to shop for — here are our picks for the best gifts for even the pickiest teens. One Fun Thing
As people get used to being able to see friends and family as Covid restrictions loosen, a new photography book shows a group of friends over the course of 30 years, from when they were high school students in 1985 to well into their adulthood in 2015.
“Between Girls” by Karen Marshall began with a chance meeting between Marshall and Molly Brover, then a 16-year-old high school student in New York City.
Brover became a collaborator and connector as she brought Marshall deeper into her world of parties, hangouts and after-school excursions.
“In the strangest of ways, this feels like the absolute right time for this project,” Marshall said.
Read more about it here.
Thanks for reading the Morning Rundown.
If you have any comments — likes, dislikes — send me an email at: patrick.smith@nbcuni.com.
Thanks, Patrick Smith Want to receive NBC Breaking News and Special Alerts in your inbox? Get the NBC News Mobile App 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: NBC poll shows deep partisan differences among social media users
Our most recent NBC News poll asked respondents about their social media consumption, and the results told a clear story that doesn’t require 280 characters.
Twitter isn’t real life – at least when it comes to party identification and political attitudes.
In the poll, 69 percent of adults say they have an account on Facebook, 28 percent say they use Twitter, 27 percent use TikTok and 27 percent don’t have an account on any of these social media platforms.
And those who use Twitter and TikTok are more likely to be Democrats than Republicans; are more likely to be Democrats who supported Bernie Sanders or Elizabeth Warren than Joe Biden during the 2020 Democratic primary season; and are – not surprisingly – are more likely to be younger than the general population.
Glenn Chapman/AFP via Getty Images
Check out these numbers by social media consumption:
Approve of Biden’s job as president
All adults: 42%
Facebook users: 42%
Twitter users: 57%
TikTok users: 50%
Non-users: 40%
Positive feelings towards Trump
All adults: 38%
Facebook users: 36%
Twitter users: 19%
TikTok users: 27%
Non-users: 46%
Prefer Democrats control Congress in 2022
All adults: 47%
Facebook users: 47%
Twitter users: 65%
TikTok users: 59%
Non-users: 45%
Prefer Republicans control Congress in 2022
All adults: 45%
Facebook users: 45%
Twitter users: 28%
TikTok users: 35%
Non-users: 45%
It’s all a reminder: If you’re getting your political news from Twitter, seeing what’s trending on the platform, or trying to influence the debate there – you’re missing out on a good chunk of the country.
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Biden’s Great Friday
Last Friday was President Biden’s best day as president since passage of his Covid relief package back in March.
The House passed the bipartisan infrastructure bill, sending it to his desk to become law. We learned the economy created 531,000 jobs in October, with the unemployment rate declining to 4.6 percent. And on top of it all, U.S. Covid cases and deaths are down from where they were a month ago.
The question we have, almost 72 hours later, is whether the PROCESS of getting that infrastructure bill passed was worth the political cost the Biden White House and the Democratic Party sustained over the last three months.
Much like the withdrawal from Afghanistan, the process overtook the actual policy.
Here was White House Chief of Staff Ron Klain on “Meet the Press” yesterday: “Well, look, I do think the voters sent a message on Tuesday. They wanted to see more action in Washington. They wanted to see things move more quickly. And three days later, Congress responded, passing the president’s infrastructure bill. But a lot of work went into getting us there over the past few months.”
More Klain: “In my opinion, it’s been a rough and tough year and we knew it would be. President Biden has said this all the time. We’re in a yearlong effort to dig out of the holes we were left… So I understand that voters are tired. Americans are tired of how long it’s taken to get the economy moving, to get Covid under control. I feel the frustration personally myself. I think everyone does. And I think that frustration wears on people. But I think what the American people are going to see is we have put in place the strategies, the actions to turn that around.”
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Tweet of the Day: This is who we are
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Data Download: The numbers you need to know today
38 percent: President Biden’s approval rating in a new USA Today/Suffolk University poll.
28 percent: Vice President Harris’ approval rating in the same poll.
13.3 billion tons: The high-end estimate of underreported greenhouse gas emissions by countries around the world, according to a Washington Post investigation.
46,501,233: The number of confirmed cases of the coronavirus in the United States, per the most recent data from NBC News and health officials. (That’s 151,223 more since Friday morning.)
757,854: The number of deaths in the United States from the virus so far, per the most recent data from NBC News. (That’s 3,089 more since Friday morning.)
430,927,624: The number of total vaccine doses administered in the U.S., per the CDC. (That’s 4,199,532 more since Friday morning.)
24,084,107: The number of booster vaccine doses administered in the U.S., per the CDC. (That’s 2,600,588 more since Friday morning.)
58.4 percent: The share of all Americans who are fully vaccinated, per the CDC.
70.1 percent: The share of all Americans 18-years and older who are fully vaccinated, per the CDC.
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Shameless Plug: Tickets on sale now for the Meet the Press Film Festival at AFI Fest
It’s almost time for the fifth annual Meet the Press Film Festival at AFI Fest!
This year’s festival features five programs of the best-in-class short documentaries — ticketholders can watch the films virtually or in-person on November 11th in Los Angeles.
You can get your tickets now at Fest.AFI.com
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ICYMI: What ELSE is happening in the world?
The U.S. has lifted international travel restrictions, allowing travelers from more than 30 countries to enter America again as long as they follow new requirements around vaccination and testing.
A federal appeals court temporarily blocked the Biden administration’s new vaccine rules for larger companies.
ABC News reports former President Trump told RNC Chairwoman Ronna McDaniel in January that he was leaving the GOP to start his own party out of frustration, only to relent days later.
Politico reports that GOP megadonor Miriam Adelson is reengaging in the political scene months after the death of her husband, Sheldon.
It wasn’t just Virginia: Republicans had a big Election Day across other smaller localities too, including on Long Island, where registered Democratic voters outnumber Republicans.
Big Bird’s weekend tweet that the fictional bird had been vaccinated against Covid-19 sparked backlash from Republicans like Texas Sen. Ted Cruz.
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50.) CBS
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51.) REASON
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52.) MANHATTAN INSTITUTE
53.) LOUDER WITH CROWDER
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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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TODAY’S MORNING JOLT WITH JIM GERAGHTY |
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73.) POPULIST PRESS
The woke left is in big trouble, people are revolting and standing up to this nonsense.
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🚨RED ALERT: Biden Has Major Public Meltdown
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TOP STORIES:
-
Jesse Watters… This is only the beginning…
-
Jim Jordan Says Clinton Campaign Was ‘Cozying Up To Russia’
-
Biden Has Major Public Meltdown
- Teachers Union Head BUSTED!
- Important Question Asked After Ashley Biden’s Diary Is Purportedly Published
- Republicans Make Move To Remove Top Congressman
- Santa Monica Goes Full Mask
- CORRUPT SDNY/FBI Investigates Diary Theft… Ignores Hunter Biden Crimes…
- Democrats Reeling From Major Defeat
- Concern Mounts After Pelosi Descends Into Incoherent Rambling
- Durham Finds First Evidence of Russian Collusion in Bombshell Revelation
- Another Clinton Operative Just Caught Lying To DOJ…
- Procter & Gamble Employees Issue Eerie Warning To American Consumers
- Newsmax Caves…Will Implement Mandatory Vaccines
- The Double-Vaccinated are the new Unvaxxed
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IN DEPTH:
|
- He Has Nothing But Contempt For You 1 hour ago
- Dozen House Dems won’t run for reelection, signaling midterm fears… 2 hours ago
- The Dossier Deceit… 3 hours ago
- Teachers union head removes mask at conference 3 hours ago
- Bongino provides roadmap for Republican candidates… 3 hours ago
- Republicans Pass Infrastructure with $0 for Border Wall 3 hours ago
- Democrat Senator: the BBB will not pass in Senate 3 hours ago
- Joe Biden Starts Wildly Screaming at a Reporter… 3 hours ago
- 13 RINOS Face Backlash for Enabling Biden’s Radical Agenda… 3 hours ago
- Ethical Questions Still Loom Amidst Hunter Biden Art Showing 3 hours ago
- CDC is Back to Demanding Americans Wear Masks… 3 hours ago
- ‘Squad’ Socialists Silent On Major Tax Loophole… 3 hours ago
- Russia Wants to Keep Status as Arctic Superpower… 4 hours ago
- Dem governor against Biden’s vaccine mandate… 4 hours ago
- China Consolidates Rare Earth Supply Chain 4 hours ago
- Another major retailor to raise prices amid labor shortage… 4 hours ago
- 2021 China Military Power Report… 4 hours ago
- C‑130 Successfully Snatches Drone In Midair 4 hours ago
- ‘PR Executive 1’ in Durham Indictment Is Former Democratic Party Campaigner 4 hours ago
- Food Prices Vault to Highest Level… 4 hours ago
- Vatican Newspaper Praises John Kerry’s Climate Change 4 hours ago
- Austria to Ban the Unvaccinated… 4 hours ago
- SCOTUS Has Chance to Stop Suppression of 2a Rights 4 hours ago
- Costa Rica issues COVID-19 vax mandate for kids 4 hours ago
- Three Injured in Knife Attack on German Train… 4 hours ago
- Biden sends CIA Director to Moscow… 4 hours ago
- Build Back Better Act to grant 5 year parole to some migrants…
- Migrants separated from their families ‘deserve’ to be compensated: Joe Biden 4 hours ago
- Dems snuck a tax cut for the rich into bill 4 hours ago
- Biden ‘Looking At’ Oil-Stockpile Release… 4 hours ago
- The Latest Shortage: Take-Out Containers and Coffee Cups 4 hours ago
- Warren Buffet’s Berkshire Is Sitting on $149 Billion Cash Pile 4 hours ago
- Watch The New Trailer For ‘Stranger Things’ Season 4 4 hours ago
- Michael Rapaport Mocks Biden at Climate Change Summit… 4 hours ago
- Chris Pratt seemingly responds to social media backlash over ‘healthy daughter’ comments, praises God
- We Should Not Allow China to ‘Bully’ the Philippines 4 hours ago
- Aaron Rodgers Dropped by Sponsor After Vax Comments 4 hours ago
- Nets’ Kyrie Irving could make one-game cameo at NBA All-Star game4 hours ago
- The biggest loser of the Durham indictments: James Comey’s FBI
- Cardinals QB Kyler Murray A Game-Time Decision… 4 hours ago
- Blackhawks Fire Head Coach Jeremy Colliton… 4 hours ago
- Cancun Beach Gun Battle Erupts… Tourist Flee, Two Dead… 16 hours ago
- Biden: Migrant families separated under Trump ‘deserve’ compensation 17 hours ago
- FEDERAL COURT FREEZES BIDEN VACCINE MANDATE 20 hours ago
- Texas Stampede Kills 8… Horrific Videos 1 day ago
- Biden Admin Weighing Shutting Down Oil Pipeline In Michigan 1 day ago
- Buckhead district one step closer to leaving Atlanta 1 day ago
- Project Veritas turned Ashley Biden’s diary over to law enforcement… Raided by SDNY 1 day ago
- Marine Corps Rejects Reports That It ‘Surrendered’… 1 day ago
- USS Connecticut CO, XO, COB Relieved ‘Due to Loss of Confidence’1 day ago
🚨RED ALERT: BREAKING: ‘Many’ More Durham Indictments Coming…
|
TOP STORIES:
-
BREAKING: ‘Many’ More Durham Indictments Coming…
-
Biden And Kamala’s Approval Hit New Low…
-
NBC’s Todd: Democrats in ‘Grave Danger’
- Biden Busted Sending Over 70 Secret Flights Into Florida…
- …Trying To Dilute Voter Base
- Mike Pence Makes Bold Prediction
- Marjorie Taylor Greene Goes Scorched Earth On Republican Traitors
- Jesse Watters… This is only the beginning…
- Jim Jordan Says Clinton Campaign Was ‘Cozying Up To Russia’
- Biden Has Major Public Meltdown
- Teachers Union Head BUSTED!
- Important Question Asked After Ashley Biden’s Diary Is Purportedly Published
- Republicans Make Move To Remove Top Congressman
- Santa Monica Goes Full Mask
- CORRUPT SDNY/FBI Investigates Diary Theft… Ignores Hunter Biden Crimes…
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IN DEPTH:
|
- The Dossier Deceit… 3 hours ago
- Teachers union head removes mask at conference 3 hours ago
- Bongino provides roadmap for Republican candidates… 3 hours ago
- Republicans Pass Infrastructure with $0 for Border Wall 3 hours ago
- He Has Nothing But Contempt For You 1 hour ago
- Dozen House Dems won’t run for reelection, signaling midterm fears… 2 hours ago
- Democrat Senator: the BBB will not pass in Senate 3 hours ago
- Joe Biden Starts Wildly Screaming at a Reporter… 3 hours ago
- 13 RINOS Face Backlash for Enabling Biden’s Radical Agenda… 3 hours ago
- Ethical Questions Still Loom Amidst Hunter Biden Art Showing 3 hours ago
- CDC is Back to Demanding Americans Wear Masks… 3 hours ago
- ‘Squad’ Socialists Silent On Major Tax Loophole… 3 hours ago
- Russia Wants to Keep Status as Arctic Superpower… 4 hours ago
- Dem governor against Biden’s vaccine mandate… 4 hours ago
- China Consolidates Rare Earth Supply Chain 4 hours ago
- Another major retailor to raise prices amid labor shortage… 4 hours ago
- 2021 China Military Power Report… 4 hours ago
- C‑130 Successfully Snatches Drone In Midair 4 hours ago
- ‘PR Executive 1’ in Durham Indictment Is Former Democratic Party Campaigner 4 hours ago
- Food Prices Vault to Highest Level… 4 hours ago
- Vatican Newspaper Praises John Kerry’s Climate Change 4 hours ago
- Austria to Ban the Unvaccinated… 4 hours ago
- SCOTUS Has Chance to Stop Suppression of 2a Rights 4 hours ago
- Costa Rica issues COVID-19 vax mandate for kids 4 hours ago
- Three Injured in Knife Attack on German Train… 4 hours ago
- Biden sends CIA Director to Moscow… 4 hours ago
- Build Back Better Act to grant 5 year parole to some migrants…
- Migrants separated from their families ‘deserve’ to be compensated: Joe Biden 4 hours ago
- Dems snuck a tax cut for the rich into bill 4 hours ago
- Biden ‘Looking At’ Oil-Stockpile Release… 4 hours ago
- The Latest Shortage: Take-Out Containers and Coffee Cups 4 hours ago
- Warren Buffet’s Berkshire Is Sitting on $149 Billion Cash Pile 4 hours ago
- Watch The New Trailer For ‘Stranger Things’ Season 4 4 hours ago
- Michael Rapaport Mocks Biden at Climate Change Summit… 4 hours ago
- Chris Pratt seemingly responds to social media backlash over ‘healthy daughter’ comments, praises God
- We Should Not Allow China to ‘Bully’ the Philippines 4 hours ago
- Aaron Rodgers Dropped by Sponsor After Vax Comments 4 hours ago
- Nets’ Kyrie Irving could make one-game cameo at NBA All-Star game4 hours ago
- The biggest loser of the Durham indictments: James Comey’s FBI
- Cardinals QB Kyler Murray A Game-Time Decision… 4 hours ago
- Blackhawks Fire Head Coach Jeremy Colliton… 4 hours ago
- Cancun Beach Gun Battle Erupts… Tourist Flee, Two Dead… 16 hours ago
- Biden: Migrant families separated under Trump ‘deserve’ compensation 17 hours ago
- FEDERAL COURT FREEZES BIDEN VACCINE MANDATE 20 hours ago
- Texas Stampede Kills 8… Horrific Videos 1 day ago
- Biden Admin Weighing Shutting Down Oil Pipeline In Michigan 1 day ago
- Buckhead district one step closer to leaving Atlanta 1 day ago
- Project Veritas turned Ashley Biden’s diary over to law enforcement… Raided by SDNY 1 day ago
- Marine Corps Rejects Reports That It ‘Surrendered’… 1 day ago
- USS Connecticut CO, XO, COB Relieved ‘Due to Loss of Confidence’1 day ago
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74.) THE POST MILLENNIAL
75.) BLACKLISTED NEWS
76.) THE DAILY DOT
Did a friend forward this? Subscribe here. Welcome to the Monday edition of Internet Insider, where we unspool threads of online misinformation—one dumb conspiracy at a time…
ONE DUMB CONSPIRACY Republicans received a major victory in Virginia last week after Glenn Youngkin defeated Terry McAuliffe in the race for governor.
While such a victory would normally be well-received by Republicans, prominent influencers on the far-right have somehow managed to frame the electoral win as a grand conspiracy by Democrats to lull Republicans into a false sense of election security.
With Youngkin’s win throwing a major wrench in the conspiracy theory that all U.S. elections are rigged against Republicans—now a major tenet of right-wing ideology—a new belief has been crafted that Democrats allowed the Republicans to win in order to provide cover for future election thefts.
In an article on the notoriously unreliable right-wing blog Gateway Pundit, author Jim Hoft questioned, without providing any evidence whatsoever, whether the election results were merely a “head-fake” by Democrats.
“Was this part of a larger psyop on the American public? Was this part of their game? Throw in McAuliffe as a sacrificial lamb knowing they can steal any future election at will?” he wrote. “So, was the 2021 Virginia race a head-fake by Democrats on the American public?”
Hoft wasn’t the only one to make the absurd suggestion. One user on Telegram known ironically as “The Truth” made similar arguments to his followers.
“People wake up: they didn’t steal Virginia so that patriots would continue to trust the plan and remain trusting the system which is totally rigged,” the user said.
The column continues below.
By Mikael Thalen Staff Writer SPONSORED Online courses have revolutionized the way people teach and learn, and Thinkific is paving the way. Thinkific’s all-in-one platform makes it easy to share your knowledge, grow your audience, and scale your business online.
With Thinkific, you can access deeper learning tools, a marketplace of apps, and experts to build a fully customized online course, membership site, or other digital products to help you take your business to the next level. Jarrin Jackson, another popular Telegram user with more than 108,000 subscribers, repeated the conspiratorial talking point as well.
“I pray I’m wrong on these elections. But then the cynical part of me thinks the godless commies are ‘giving us’ this one, so they can undermine the Fix2020 movement,” he wrote. “Doesn’t that make sense?”
Countless users across social media even called on Youngkin to carry out a forensic audit of the 2020 presidential election to prove that it was stolen from former President Donald Trump. Unsurprisingly, those same users did not call for an audit of the governor’s race. The claims were widely mocked on Twitter, where users pointed to the hyper-conspiratorial nature of the pro-Trump internet. “That’s how cults work. Everything feeds their narrative and anything that doesn’t seem to on the surface is a conspiracy to throw them off track,” @RustyCannon wrote. Journalist Bill Scher suggested that the electoral outcome in Virginia only proved just how legitimate the election system is.
“Counter-theory: Democrats, who control every statewide office in Virginia, ran an honest election,” he tweeted.
The pervasive claim regarding Youngkin’s win highlights how the far-right has seemingly become unable to view any world event, even those that are advantageous to their ultimate aims, as anything other than a vast conspiracy.
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77.) HEADLINE USA
78.) NATURAL NEWS
79.) POLITICHICKS
80.) BLACKPRESSUSA
81.) THE WESTERN JOURNAL
82.) CNN
Monday 11.08.21 A first-of-its-kind study used a new climate model to predict localized extreme weather events years in advance, and the results are not pleasant. Here’s what else you need to know to Get Up to Speed and On With Your Day. Ambulances arrive after a crowd surge at the Astroworld Festival in Houston. Concert tragedy
Houston authorities say the criminal investigation into a crowd surge that killed eight people and injured dozens more Friday evening at the Astroworld Festival at NRG Park could take weeks. The crowd of 50,000 was packed so tightly that as headliner Travis Scott took the stage, concertgoers were crushed and trampled as waves of people moved toward him. The youngest victim was just 14 years old. Scott has spoken out about the tragedy, saying he is devastated and is working to help the families of the victims. A concertgoer who was injured is suing Scott, who organized the festival, as well as entertainment company Live Nation, concert promoter Scoremore and others involved in the event.
Infrastructure
The House has passed the much-debated $1 trillion infrastructure bill after months of tense negotiation and despite pushback from progressives. The bill already passed the Senate in August. Once President Biden signs it, federal money will soon flow to repair the country’s potholed roads, aging airports, crumbling bridges and antiquated railroads, with more funds targeting rural broadband and earmarked to catalyze a fast evolution of electric vehicles. Experts consider the bill’s passage a big win for Biden after a week of disappointing returns for Democrats in several state elections. It is less of a win for the Congressional Progressive Caucus, which tried to delay the vote until the Senate passed the massive spending package.
Coronavirus
The US is opening its doors to vaccinated international travelers today after 20 months of restrictions. While this is an important step in the gradual recovery of airline business, industry leaders warn things could be a little sloppy at first, with long lines and wait times as international flights fill back up. Meanwhile, a federal appeals court temporarily blocked the Biden administration’s new vaccine mandate for private businesses with 100 or more employees, health care workers and federal contractors. The White House chief of staff says he’s confident the courts will uphold the rule before January 4, when it is due to take effect. In New York City, Mayor Bill de Blasio’s administration has signed agreements with 20 unions to reaffirm the city’s vaccine mandate — but not with the police or fire departments’ unions.
Cybersecurity
Suspected foreign hackers have breached nine organizations in the defense, energy, health care, technology and education sectors, including at least one organization in the US. This is the conclusion of findings that security firm Palo Alto Networks shared exclusively with CNN. A senior executive of the firm said the confirmed victims are the “tip of the spear” of the apparent spying campaign, and more victims are expected to emerge. While it’s unclear who is responsible for the activity, some of the attackers’ tactics and tools reportedly overlap with those used by a suspected Chinese hacking group. The National Security Agency and other federal units have been working with cybersecurity experts to track down hackers trying steal key data from US defense contractors and other sensitive targets. Federal officials told CNN this revelation of hacking activity is evidence of their work to stay on top of threats.
Nicaragua
Protests broke out across the world this weekend in reaction to Nicaragua’s fraught presidential election. President Daniel Ortega has received international condemnation for eliminating dissent and quashing competition in the run-up to his reelection bid. Dozens of opposition figures, including seven presidential candidates, have been arrested in Nicaragua in the past few months. At least 20 more people were arrested Saturday, a day before the election. While the Nicaraguan government spoke highly of voter turnout, some citizens called voting a “joke” and said others were afraid to even leave their houses to cast a ballot. Biden called the election a “sham” and a “pantomime” and said the international community would work to support the Nicaraguan people until a functioning democracy is restored.
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- Thugs Try to Intimidate Judge in Police Officer’s Case
- Deep meaning of the Danchenko case
- The “racial reckoning’s” reckoning
- Rittenhouse On Trial
- Vax You
Thugs Try to Intimidate Judge in Police Officer’s Case
Posted: 07 Nov 2021 09:03 AM PST (John Hinderaker)Last April, police officers stopped a young career criminal named Daunte Wright in Brooklyn Center, Minnesota. They ran a check and realized that Wright was wanted. Wright resisted arrest and tried to flee in his vehicle. Veteran Brooklyn Center police officer Kim Potter intended to tase Wright, but accidentally drew her gun instead of her taser and shot him. She is now being prosecuted for manslaughter (the prosecution has stipulated that the shooting was accidental) and, as with Derek Chauvin, Attorney General Keith Ellison has taken over the case. Hennepin County District Judge Regina Chu has been assigned the case. Leftist thugs evidently have figured out where Judge Chu lives, and last night they demonstrated outside her apartment building. At least one thug, and perhaps more, gained access to the building despite apartment security and stood outside her door. Crime Watch Minneapolis has the story:
Only one person is shown in these photos; he posted on social media from outside Judge Chu’s door. But he says he is “waiting for the gang to get up here,” so more may have joined him. Also, the second graphic says that a resident of the building “asked him if there was a reason [he was in the building] and yelling out the window [to protesters outside].” This reply to the Minneapolis Crime Watch tweet refers to “thugs” gaining entry to the building, so again, there may have been more than one:
This attempt to intimidate a judge is totally unacceptable, and yet the reality is that it likely will be accepted. Thugs like the one who photographed himself outside the judge’s apartment door have been indulged all their lives. Law enforcement in Minneapolis has become almost non-existent, and civic authorities are more interested in preserving what is left of their city’s (and state’s) tattered reputation than in facing up to the depths to which Minneapolis has fallen. Activists want to turn the Kim Potter trial into a lynch mob-dominated circus like the Derek Chauvin trial. At the moment, I am not aware of anything that might stand in their way. The last question is whether any news outlet other than Minneapolis Crime Watch will defend not just Judge Chu, but our criminal justice system, by publicizing these thugs’ intimidation tactics. Of course, Power Line just did, and I am confident that Alpha News will. But the Minneapolis Star Tribune and other conventional news outlets? Don’t hold your breath. UPDATE: I see that Alpha News has just written about this outrage. Alpha’s post, by Kyle Hooten, includes video of the “protest.” That post also suggests that the main thug may be George Floyd’s nephew. It also raises the possibility that the thugs might have had the wrong building.
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Deep meaning of the Danchenko case
Posted: 07 Nov 2021 06:51 AM PST (Scott Johnson)In the scheme of things the indictment handed up by an Eastern District of Virginia grand jury against Igor Danchenko this past Thursday may be small potatoes, but the case is significant. I have embedded a copy of the 39-page indictment at the bottom. Check my summary of the allegations below against the indictment itself. I leave out a lot and the indictment conceals the names of key players in a welter of nameless descriptors such as U.S. Investigative Firm-1 (i.e., Fusion GPS). National Review’s editorial on the indictment — I infer that it was written by Andrew McCarthy, author of the best book so far on the Russia hoax — has been posted online as “The Dossier Deceit.” Both the indictment and the editorial explication are well worth reading. We met Danchenko last year in the RCP column “Meet the Steele Dossier’s ‘Primary Subsource’: Fabulist Russian From Democrat Think Tank Whose Boozy Past the FBI Ignored.” I pulled a few quotes from Sperry’s column here at the time. Danchenko is a Russian national who held down a perch at the Brookings Institution in years past, from 2005-2010. He was Christopher Steele’s most important source of the fabrications in the so-called Steele Dossier. Danchenko allegedly relied in part on one Charles Dolan for his fabrications. Dolan was a long-time Democratic Party operative in the Clinton circle of Bill and Hillary Clinton. He is the indictment’s PR Executive-1. Dolan himself seems to have thought that Danchenko worked for the the Russian intelligence agency FSB. At Brookings Fiona Hill — the Trump administration NSC official who promoted Trump’s impeachment — connected Danchenko with Steele. She also connected Danchenko with Dolan. You can make this stuff up, but it lacks verisimilitude. The Russia hoax is Clintons all the way down. Rep. Devin Nunes essentially cracked the case in 2017 when he subpoenaed the bank documents demonstrating that Marc Elias and the Perkins Coie law firm were cutouts for the players including Steele and Fusion GPS. Charged with lying to the FBI, Danchenko is something of a footnote. I would only add that it’s not difficult to fool a mark who wants to believe. (Why is FBI AGENT-1 laughing in the recorded interview with Danchenko quoted in paragraph 54 of the indictment?) I seriously doubt that the FBI really needed Danchenko’s assistance to ascertain that the Steele Dossier was a fraud. That was my take on it from the first moment I read it after its publication by Buzzfeed. The FBI was instrumental to the con. The object of the Russia hoax was for the Democratic Party’s media adjunct to report the FBI investigation in advance of the 2016 election in order to promote the election of Hillary Clinton. When Clinton lost, the object of the hoax was to tie the Trump administration in knots. Failing in its first object, the hoax succeeded beyond the wildest dreams of malice in its second. The FBI and Department of Justice of course took out four FISA warrants on Carter Page based on the fabrications of the Steele Dossier. On each of those four occasions the signing officials vouched that the relevant information had been “verified,” whatever that means. Apparently it doesn’t mean much, or those officials would be answering for their derelictions. Six New York Times reporters and a researcher flagged Page as a key to the alleged Trump/Russia collusion case in their August 2017 story “Trump Adviser’s Visit to Moscow Got the F.B.I.’s Attention.” The Times cited a story in the Washington Post reporting that the FBI had taken out a FISA warrant on Page. In her take on the indictment for the Wall Street Journal, Kim Strassel makes a point that I have beaten into the ground over the past few years. Quoting Strassel allows me to repeat it here: “The Clinton dossier should go down as one of the biggest scandals in U.S. political history.” The New York Post republished Strassel’s column in accessible form here. The NR editorial provides helpful background:
The editorial has more:
The New York Times and Washington Post stories on the Danchenko indictment point a finger back at themselves in ways that I want to pause over. The Post hilariously reflects on its own role in the story by Devlin Barrett and Tom Jackman: “The [indictment’s] allegations cast new uncertainty on some past reporting on the dossier by news organizations, including The Washington Post.” You think? We can only hope it’s not just beginning to dawn on them, Barrett and Jackman offer this study in understatement: “Some of the material came from a Democratic Party operative with long-standing ties to Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton, according to the charges, rather than well-connected Russians with insight into the Kremlin.” Barrett and Jackman take note of the Post’s reporting on Millian:
Gee, thanks. We should probably look elsewhere for illumination. The Post treats the New York Times with supreme tact as one of the other “news organizations” left unnamed by Devlin and Barrett. In the Times, observe how eager Adam Goldman and Charlie Savage are to downplay the significance of the Steele Dossier:
Andrew McCarthy’s book on the Russia hoax is Ball of Collusion: The Plot to Rig an Election and Destroy a Presidency. In chapter 2 he turns to the origin of the FBI investigation of the Trump campaign. Steele and his dossier were key. He concludes chapter 2 with the Times’s silent revision of the history in stories such as the one on the Danchenko indictment. He writes:
I asked Andy about this point yesterday by email. He responded:
He elaborated on the role of the press in a subsequent message:
In itself the Danchenko case may be small potatoes. There is much room for argument about its deep meaning, but it signifies. Although we have become inured to it, the degradation and corruption of the FBI, the CIA, and the Department of Justice should retain the ability to shock. The transformation of the press into the eager tool of these agencies for the rankest of purposes must be included in reckoning the deep meaning of the Danchenko case, or so it seems to me.
Danchenko Indictment 0 by Herridge
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The “racial reckoning’s” reckoning
Posted: 06 Nov 2021 09:11 PM PDT (Paul Mirengoff)The Washington Post has a lengthy article about how Tuesday’s election has dashed the hopes of black activists. The article begins this way:
Are black activists surprised by these election results? If their critique of America as systemically and unrelentingly racist has any truth to it, the surprising thing isn’t that the activists’ agenda was rejected in Virginia and Minneapolis, it’s that “defund the police” and the teaching of dumbed-down Critical Race Theory took hold in the first place. Actually, these two developments — defund the police and teaching CRT — are surprising under any view of America other than that it went insane. No sane society would entertain the possibility of abolishing or cutting way back on its police force and switching to “a comprehensive public health approach to public safety.” No sane nation would teach children that race is a central fact about them and their classmates or that an evil like racism is the central fact about its history. Tuesday’s election suggests that the insanity was only temporary. Barack Obama understood the perils of advancing a CRT-style critique of America. The Post quotes one of his key advisers, Ben Rhodes, who says that as president, Obama often tried to frame “progressive change as a validation of American history” rather than a repudiation of it. I doubt that Obama genuinely believed that American history validated or was consistent with his agenda, racial or otherwise. His wife didn’t seem to believe this. But Barack was smart enough to pretend. Drawing on Obama’s example, Rhodes says:
(Emphasis added) Al Sharpton, race hustler extraordinaire, also wants the left to dial it down, according to the Post. He calls, vaguely, for pragmatism:
But what does dialing it down or being practical mean in this context? And is a return to Obama’s kinder, gentler rhetoric truly a way out of the box Democrats have put themselves in? I doubt it. This isn’t 2009 or even 2016. The woke can of worms has been opened. Sweet-sounding rhetoric won’t put the worms back. Democrats will have to speak specifically about each one of them. Take CRT. The Obama/Rhodes line that America is great and that our history is consistent with the kind of change the left wants can’t be squared with the critique being peddled, not just to school children but to many employees of corporate America. The Obama/Rhodes line entails a refusal to advocate this anti-American indoctrination. But Dems haven’t openly advocated it. Instead, they have denied that the indoctrination is occurring. Are they going to keep denying this even after what happened in Virginia or will they face up to reality and agree to an about-face? The latter course is the “practical” one, but I don’t expect Democrats to embrace it. The teaching of American history is only one part of the woke education agenda, which is only one part of the overall woke agenda. Each part of the agenda raises difficulties for the Obama/Rhodes approach. Consider law enforcement. It’s not enough for Democrats to stop talking about defunding the police. Are they going to support hiring police officers on a scale necessary to bring police forces back to the manpower levels needed to deal with rising crime rates? Are they willing to give officers the latitude they need to be able, or even willing, to police high crime areas? Probably not. But that means risking that violent crime will continue increasingly to plague our cities, while property crime spreads to our suburbs. In the 1990s, Bill Clinton, Joe Biden, and the rest of the Democratic party were willing to get tough on crime — not just through more active policing, but also through tougher sentences. Will the contemporary Democratic party move meaningfully in this direction? I don’t think so, not any time soon. And the same goes for a host of other areas where wokeness has made inroads with the left. Resorting to high-minded rhetoric about America being great enough to change isn’t a solution to the problems woke Democrats confront. They will have to make tough policy choices on the issues associated with wokeness. I don’t believe they’re capable of making ones that most of the electorate will like.
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Rittenhouse On Trial
Posted: 06 Nov 2021 06:58 PM PDT (John Hinderaker)Kyle Rittenhouse is the then-17 year old boy who showed up in Kenosha, Wisconsin, during the violent riots, looting and arson that occurred last year. Rittenhouse, armed with a rifle, wanted to help maintain order and protect private property, but it was a misguided mission to say the least. He ran afoul of extreme leftists, most likely Antifa members, and, coming under attack, shot three of them, two fatally. Viewing the videos that were circulating at the time, it seemed pretty clear to me that the kid acted in self-defense. Now Rittenhouse is being prosecuted for murder. To sum up his life-destroying experience, I can’t improve on Jim Treacher, via Instapundit:
Rittenhouse is now on trial for murder in Wisconsin. Multiple cell phone videos show that the second and third leftists whom Rittenhouse shot, as he attempted to flee to safety, were attacking him. He pretty obviously was acting in self-defense. So the prosecution, trying to put away the now-18 year old for murder, concentrates on his original encounter with a violent leftist named Rosenbaum who allegedly didn’t pose an imminent threat of death to Rittenhouse. So far, things haven’t gone well for the prosecution. Its own witnesses are not entirely on board with the anti-Rittenhouse program. Yesterday the prosecution put on a witness who observed Rittenhouse’s interactions with Rosenbaum. On cross, the defense elicited testimony that was helpful to Rittenhouse. In this clip, versions of which have gone viral, the prosecutor attempts to negate the witness’s testimony on cross that Rosenbaum tried to attack Rittenhouse:
Please indulge me for a moment as a lawyer and litigator for 41 years, and a veteran of more than 100 jury trials This prosecutor, probably an able lawyer, violated a cardinal rule: he asked one question too many of a witness over whom he had no control, who was not really on his side, and with whom he had not coordinated this particular testimony. And his one question too many was vital to his case. But as usual, the real problem isn’t the lawyer, the problem is the facts of the case. Every indication is that Rittenhouse, confused and misguided as he may have been, acted in self-defense in response to violent threats, and then actions, from left-wing activists. Several readers have asked us why we are not covering the Rittenhouse trial as we (Scott, in particular) did the Derek Chauvin prosecution.The short answer is that George Floyd’s death and the subsequent prosecution of Chauvin and others happened in our back yard, while the Kenosha riots and the Rittenhouse prosecution are one state away. But the Rittenhouse case is obviously of interest. If you want to follow it, Legal Insurrection is a good place to go. And we will have updates and commentary from time to time.
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Vax You
Posted: 06 Nov 2021 05:33 PM PDT (John Hinderaker)Green Bay quarterback Aaron Rodgers is in the news. He tested positive for covid and will miss tomorrow’s game. The purported scandal is that Rodgers implied in a press conference some time ago that he had been vaccinated. (He said “immunized.”) Now Rodgers is caught up in the general hysteria over vaccination, leading him to describe himself as a victim of the “woke mob” that is trying to “put a final nail…in my cancel culture casket.” More on the broader point in a moment, but in the specific context of professional football, I think the covid rules are silly and damaging to both players and fans. I have seen no reporting to the effect that Rodgers is sick or unable to play football. In my view, covid is like any other disease. If he is too sick to play, he’ll have to sit out. If he is not too sick, he should play. Might he spread the disease to other players? Sure. As with many other diseases from time immemorial. But the vast majority of NFL players have been vaccinated, so that risk mostly reflects the fact that the vaccines aren’t very effective at stopping the virus from spreading. Pressure on those who have not been vaccinated to get the shot, coming mostly from the Left, has become crazed even as evidence mounts that the vaccines, unfortunately, don’t work as well as expected. You can see that from the CDC’s chart showing daily trends in new covid infections. When the vaccines first became widely available around the beginning of 2021, covid cases were about to peak. New cases declined rapidly after that, presumably due in part to the vaccines, but also to the natural ups and downs of the disease. Beginning in late summer, cases rose sharply again, reaching another peak in September. This would not have happened if the vaccines had been as effective as advertised:
Currently the CDC says that 78.6% of Americans have received at least one shot of an anti-covid vaccine, but at the moment cases appear to be rising again. At Healthy Skeptic, Kevin Roche comments:
Experience indicates that the vaccines are useful primarily for limiting the severity of breakthrough infections, not for limiting the spread of the disease. But that puts vaccines squarely in the category of self-interest. If people think getting vaccinated is the best bet for their own health, as I do, great. But there is little or no argument for forcing them to get vaccinated for the sake of someone else’s well-being. Which brings us to Joe Biden’s new OSHA rule (an “Emergency Temporary Standard”) requiring all employers of 100 or more people to, in turn, require their employees to be vaccinated or undergo constant covid testing. This Several states have sued to stop enforcement of the new OSHA rule, and earlier today the 5th Circuit Court of Appeals issued an order staying enforcement of the rule. The order says:
As a lawyer, I have no prediction as to how this litigation will turn out. If we still have a Constitution, if our national government is one of limited, enumerated powers, the Emergency Standard is unconstitutional. Dealing with epidemics is a matter for state and local governments, which, unlike the U.S. government, have police powers. Try to find a clause of the Constitution that authorizes the new Emergency Standard. I’ll wait. But we left the Constitution behind a long time ago. These days, who knows? I will say this: the current hysterical insistence that everyone be vaccinated, whether they want to or not, is a harbinger of the totalitarian state that the Left wants us to become, not a reflection of the free country that we historically have been.
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November 5, 2021
On Friday’s Mark Levin Show, WPHT Radio Host, Rich Zeoli, fills in for Mark. Democrats are in disarray and the progressives are waging an intra-party civil war, so the only thing left to do is issue themselves a blue-state tax break by reinstituting the State And Local Tax deduction (S.A.L.T.). Then, despite the massive losses from Tuesday’s election, the Democrats have upped the ante and are calling even more Americans racists. The democrat’s trade here is the SALT deduction in exchange for the vote of Democrat members of Congress, from moderate districts, to vote for President Biden’s Build back Better bill. Later, when federal law enforcement becomes weaponized by corrupt individuals in the government to advance their own political agenda, we have a police state. It’s again been revealed with the arrest of Igor Danchenko that all of the Russian collusion materials were fabricated and had no basis in truth. The phony dossier was created by Hillary Clinton’s 2016 campaign, the Democrat National Committee, their lawyers, and freelance spies Igor Danchenko, Christopher Steele, and Charles Dolan, whom they hired to pull it all together. Afterward, Democrats are sour over the “Let’s Go, Brandon” chants, memes, and songs that they fixate on calling parents racists. Anyone that disagrees with their positions on critical race theory is labeled a racist even if they’re black.
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