Good morning! Here is your news briefing for Tuesday November 9, 2021
1.) THE DAILY SIGNAL
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3.) DAYBREAK
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4.) THE SUNBURN
Sunburn — The morning read of what’s hot in Florida politics — 11.9.21
Coffee is for closers. So is Sunburn, your morning rundown of Florida politics.
Good Tuesday morning.
Let’s begin with a personnel note about a good friend.
Lawyer and lobbyist Donovan Brown launched his own lobbying firm on Tuesday, but he won’t be going it completely alone.
Capital Advocates will focus on clientele that play to Brown’s many strengths, which include a deep knowledge of the insurance, health care, transportation, the environment, energy, telecommunications and education industries.
Brown, a University of Florida law school graduate, has been working in government affairs since the early 2000s when he served as a special assistant to former Gov. Jeb Bush.
His resume includes experience in big law, a stint as Chair of the Financial Services Council at the Associated Industries of Florida as well as membership on the Florida Automated Vehicles Policy Work Group.
Until recently, Brown was vice president of Suskey Consulting. That firm recently merged into Shumaker Advisors Florida, with firm founder Alan Suskey serving as managing principal of state affairs and leading Shumaker’s Tallahassee practice.
While Brown didn’t make the jump, he will continue working with Suskey as of counsel to Shumaker Advisors Florida.
“This is an exciting new chapter for me in my career in politics and law and these new roles are an incredible opportunity to service clients’ needs in and around state government,” Brown told Florida Politics.
“I look forward to continuing to provide the insight, strategic counsel and advocacy it takes to achieve results in today’s complex political and legal environment though both my role as managing partner of Capital Advocates and as of counsel to the prestigious Shumaker law firm.”
Shumaker Advisors Florida President and CEO Ron Christaldi added, “Donovan is an extraordinary individual and a very talented advocate. We congratulate him on the launch of his public affairs practice, and are pleased to further strengthen his ties with Shumaker as we also continue to expand and grow in Tallahassee.”
Also on my radar this morning:
— Jason Mariner candidacy in CD 20 raises potential constitutional conundrum: When Mariner, who has a felony record won the Republican Primary last week to run for Florida’s 20th Congressional District, he put himself into position for a legal challenge that could open a door for felons to run for federal office. The Florida Constitution says no person convicted of a felony can vote or hold elected office until they have their civil rights restored. The U.S. Constitution, however, says something different about elected officeholders in the U.S. House of Representatives. If a ruling found he was able to run and serve in Congress, Florida’s law could be in legal jeopardy if it were used as the basis for a legal challenge of Morley’s qualification to serve in Congress.
— SITUATIONAL AWARENESS —
—@Rortybomb: The initial August jobs number of 235K started a wave of economic panic in the press. It was actually 483K, nearly half a million jobs (!). September’s 194K, which signaled malaise, is revised to 312K. Revisions are big in 2021, averaging 99K/month; press hasn’t managed it well.
—@GovRonDeSantis: Nick’s 50s Diner in West Palm Beach serves quality homemade food and has an excellent staff. Check it out: https://t.co/p2BEN0l3EM
—@LMower3: So apparently @GovRonDeSantis has stopped saying the word “vaccine.” During a news conference against vaccine mandates, he keeps referring to it as “the jab.” Other speakers are also referring to it as “the jab.”
—@CaseyDeSantis: Thank you for the prayers. Thank you for the kindness. Thank you for thinking of me. I am blessed, humbled and eternally grateful. … and yes, Governor, I will be back!
—@AGAshleyMoody: When law enforcement does the hard job of bringing a killer to justice, they deserve a prosecutor who will make sure that convicted killer never harms anyone else. Doesn’t look like L.A. prioritizes this common-sense public safety approach.
—@JaxPeel: Today’s a good day to mention that the @FLHouseDems are unified in their stance against 8:30 a.m. press conferences on non-committee week Mondays
—@KevinCate: Because some of you are asking, we saw no vaccine side effects for any of our three kids — aside from a huge dose of pride that they were helping end the pandemic. Arms were barely even sore. Easier than the flu shot.
— DAYS UNTIL —
Miami at FSU — 4; Special Session on vaccine mandates begins — 6; ExcelinEd National Summit on Education begins — 9; ‘Hawkeye’ premieres — 15; FSU vs. UF — 18; Florida Chamber 2021 Annual Insurance Summit begins — 22; Jacksonville special election to fill seat vacated by Tommy Hazouri’s death — 28; Steven Spielberg’s ’West Side Story’ premieres — 31; ’Spider-Man: No Way Home’ premieres — 31; ’The Matrix: Resurrections’ released — 43; ’The Book of Boba Fett’ premieres on Disney+ — 50; Private sector employees must be fully vaccinated or tested weekly — 56; CES 2022 begins — 57; NFL season ends — 61; 2022 Legislative Session starts — 63; Florida’s 20th Congressional District Election — 63; Special Elections in Senate District 33, House District 88 & 94 — 63; Florida TaxWatch’s 2022 State of the Taxpayer Day — 64; Joel Coen’s ’The Tragedy of Macbeth’ on Apple TV+ — 66; NFL playoffs begin — 67; XXIV Olympic Winter Games begins — 878; Super Bowl LVI — 96; Daytona 500 — 103; St. Pete Grand Prix — 108; ‘The Batman’ premieres — 115; ’Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness’ premieres — 178; ’Top Gun: Maverick’ premieres — 199; ’Platinum Jubilee’ for Queen Elizabeth II — 205; ’Thor: Love and Thunder’ premieres — 241; San Diego Comic-Con 2022 — 253; ’Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse’ sequel premieres — 332; ‘Black Panther 2’ premieres — 367; ‘The Flash’ premieres — 370; ‘Avatar 2’ premieres — 402; ‘Captain Marvel 2’ premieres — 465; ‘Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania’ premieres — 626. ‘Dune: Part Two’ premieres — 710; Opening Ceremony of the 2024 Olympic Games — 990.
“Ron DeSantis officially launches 2022 reelection bid” via Steve Contorno of CNN — DeSantis has officially launched his campaign for reelection, setting the stage for what is expected to be one of the country’s most closely watched and expensive gubernatorial races of 2022. DeSantis filed the paperwork to run for another four years on Friday. At a news conference Monday, DeSantis called his decision to seek a second term a “formality” and indicated a larger rollout would be forthcoming. The Florida politician has become one of the most recognizable Republican leaders in the country for his hands-off approach to managing the coronavirus pandemic and his promise to keep businesses and schools open. DeSantis’ style has been heralded by Republicans and many businesses and vilified by Democrats, who blame the Governor for the state’s deadly summer surge.
—“DeSantis files for reelection, allowing campaign spending during Special Session” via Mary Ellen Klas of the Miami Herald/Tampa Bay Times
— DATELINE TALLY —
“DeSantis, GOP lawmakers outline Special Session bills banning COVID-19 mandates” via Gray Rohrer and Steven Lemongello of the Orlando Sentinel — DeSantis unveiled details Monday about legislation he’s pursuing to block COVID-19 vaccine mandates during a special session that begins Nov. 15, including a ban on private employers requiring shots. But the bills don’t go as far as DeSantis initially proposed and, in some cases, even echo federal orders, despite him couching them as part of his fight against the Joe Biden administration. DeSantis also escalated his recent rhetoric questioning the COVID-19 vaccines by playing up potential side effects from what he repeatedly referred to as the “jabs” and slamming Washington’s approval of booster shots.
“Florida Senate to have draft redistricting maps this week but won’t hold public hearings” via Mary Ellen Klas of the Miami Herald/Tampa Bay Times — Senate Committee on Reapportionment Chair Ray Rodrigues announced Monday that the committee will have staff-drawn draft maps of its congressional and state Senate redistricting plans available on its website starting Wednesday as part of its first step in completing the must-pass bill during the Legislative Session that begins Jan. 11. Drawn behind the scenes by the committee’s staff just over two months after the U.S. Census released the data on which to draw them, the maps are supposed to follow the leadership-driven guidelines set by the committee with little discussion at its Oct. 18 meeting. The maps will be reviewed next week by the Senate redistricting committees during the Special Session on vaccine mandates.
“Veterans Day becomes Veterans Week under House Resolution” via Jason Delgado of Florida Politics — A recently adopted House Resolution expands this year’s Veterans Day into a weeklong affair. Proposed by Rep. Michelle Salzman, the Resolution designates Nov. 7—13, 2021 as Veterans Week in Florida. Salzman pitched the idea in the 2020 Legislative Session. “The idea that we are celebrating Veterans all week is a win for both our veterans and our community,” Salzman said in a news release. A veteran herself, Salzman said there are a variety of ways to celebrate veterans throughout the week. Floridians can shop at a veteran-owned business or simply promote veterans on social media, she suggested. The proclamation comes as Florida works to distinguish itself as the most military-friendly state in the nation.
“Tina Polsky, Christine Hunschofsky target ‘ghost guns’ ban in Florida” via Jesse Scheckner of Florida Politics — Legislation aimed at banning so-called “ghost guns” has landed in Tallahassee. Proponents say it’s a necessary update to the state’s firearm laws, but admit they face an “uphill battle” passing the proposed law. Sen. Polsky and Rep. Hunschofsky filed twin bills (SB 872 and HB 527) to prohibit the sale of undetectable or untraceable firearms known as “ghost guns.” Such guns are built, sometimes using 3D printers, with unfinished frames or receivers, the serialized piece of a pistol or rifle containing the operating parts of the firing mechanism regulated under federal law. The receiver or frame portion of a gun, if unfinished even by a small fraction, is unregulated. The ATF doesn’t consider unfinished frames for handguns and receivers for long guns, including rifles, technically firearms because they cannot fire a projectile on their own.
“Shevrin Jones bill would end driver’s license suspensions for Floridians facing certain court fines” via Ryan Nicol of Florida Politics — Sen. Jones has filed legislation that would add Florida to the list of several states ending the practice of suspending individuals’ driver’s licenses as a punishment for failure to pay certain court fines and fees. Jones filed the bill (SB 870) Monday. So far, no House companion bill has been filed, but Jones tells Florida Politics he expects that to happen by the end of this week, and that he’s seeking a Republican co-sponsor to make the effort bipartisan. That leads to a cycle where individuals seeking to pay off certain fines and fees accumulated through criminal cases, traffic violations or other court proceedings can face hurdles getting to work. That makes it difficult to make those payments and can lock people into debt.
“New law brings worries of home businesses opening right next door” via Lisa J. Huriash of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — A Florida law that encourages people to run businesses from home is drawing fear of what could open right next door in neighborhoods, maybe an ammo supply shop, a strip club or more. But one of the first instances to amplify concern came when the owner of Popping Smoke Ammunition filed paperwork to start up his ammunition-supply company from his two-bedroom home in Lauderdale Lakes. That sent frantic officials pleading for help from Tallahassee lawmakers. The bill’s intent was to make it easier so an “insurance salesman or consultant wouldn’t be penalized for working from your dining room table,” but elected officials don’t want to “change the character of neighborhoods.”
Happening today — The Highlands County legislative delegation holds a public meeting: Sen. Ben Albritton and Rep. Kaylee Tuck, 9:30 a.m., Highlands County Government Center, 600 South Commerce Ave., Sebring.
Happening today — The Okeechobee County legislative delegation holds a public meeting: Sen. Albritton and Rep. Tuck, 1:30 p.m., Historic Courthouse, 304 N.W. Second St., Okeechobee.
Happening today — The Broward County legislative delegation holds a public meeting: Sens. Lauren Book, Gary Farmer, Perry Thurston, Jones, Polsky; Reps. Robin Bartleman, David Borrero, Dan Daley, Bobby DuBose, Tom Fabricio, Joe Geller, Mike Gottlieb, Christine Hunschofsky, Evan Jenne, Chip LaMarca, Anika Omphroy, Felicia Robinson, Patricia Williams and Marie Woodson, 4 p.m., JAFCO, 5100 North Nob Hill Road, Sunrise.
Happening today — The Glades County legislative delegation holds a public meeting: Sen. Albritton and Rep. Tuck, 4:30 p.m., Glades County Courthouse, 500 Ave. J S.W., Moore Haven.
Happening today — The Madison County legislative delegation holds a public meeting: Sen. Loranne Ausley and Rep. Jason Shoaf, 6 p.m., Courthouse Annex, 229 S.W. Pinckney St., Madison.
New and renewed lobbying registrations:
Albert Balido, Natalie Fausel, Anfield Consulting: Rookwood Holdings 2, MAPS Public Benefit Corporation
Robert Beck, PinPoint Results: Mount Sinai Eldercare
Dean Cannon, Mary McDougal, GrayRobinson: Curriculum Associates
Robert Hawken, Meredith Snowden, Leath Consulting: First Step of Sarasota, Petland
Matthew Herndon, RSA Consulting Group: United Way Suncoast
Robert Sniffen, Sniffen & Spellman: Florida Justice Reform Institute
— STATEWIDE —
“DeSantis: First Family leans on faith amid Casey DeSantis cancer battle” via Jason Delgado of Florida Politics — DeSantis is leaning on faith and fellowship as his wife, First Lady Casey DeSantis, battles breast cancer. DeSantis fashioned Florida’s First Lady as a fighter. Better days, they believe, are on the horizon. “I have faith in God, I have faith in her and I do have faith in the power of prayer,” DeSantis told reporters. In addition to faith, DeSantis said fellowship is fueling the family of five’s resiliency. Both he and Casey, DeSantis said, are appreciative of the widespread support. “There’s a lot of people pulling for her, not just in Florida, but throughout the country,” DeSantis said. “And so, it’s really uplifting. It’s helped her spirits; it’s helped my spirits.”
Tweet, tweet:
—“‘Pork-barrel spending’: DeSantis disses federal infrastructure bill, but state will benefit” via A.G. Gancarski of Florida Politics
“DeSantis vows action against Joe Biden’s ‘midnight flights’” via A.G. Gancarski of Florida Politics — The Governor, appearing on “Tucker Carlson Tonight,” told Fox News viewers that a Jacksonville murder happened because Biden hadn’t been “doing his job” and that a murderer was on one of “Biden’s midnight flights” that brought people, including at least one murder suspect, to the Sunshine State. “So, these are flights that are coming in, 2 or 3 in the morning. The feds, of course, control the airspace. And they’re there on the ground,” DeSantis said. “They take these folks, and they send them to other parts of Florida by bus. Or to other parts of the Southeast.”
“DeSantis holds call with In-N-Out Burger President” via Robert Pandolfino of WFLA — DeSantis held a call with the president of In-N-Out Burger Lynsi Snyder-Ellingson on Monday with talks of the burger chain coming to the Sunshine State as a result of the state’s COVID-19policies. The news of the call was made public following the release of the governor’s schedule on Monday. Florida CFO Jimmy Patronis has pushed forward the idea of the restaurant to make a move to Florida after fighting back against San Francisco’s vaccine passport policy. On Oct. 14, the only In-N-Out in San Francisco was closed for several days after repeatedly refusing to follow that city’s public health mandate which required customers who wanted to dine indoors show their vaccination cards or proof they had tested negative for the virus in the past 72 hours.
“DeSantis suspends Medley councilwoman facing fraud charges” via Andrea Torres of Local 10 News — DeSantis announced the suspension of Ana Lilia Stefano, a councilwoman for the Town of Medley. A volunteer who worked with Stefano at the Santana Moss Foundation released records supporting the allegation that Stefano was selling about $24,000 of Feeding South Florida donations, prosecutors said. Officers arrested Stefano last week after a Miami-Dade Commission on Ethics and Public Trust and Miami-Dade State Attorney’s Office joint investigation into Stefano’s activities as the SMF executive director. Stefano is facing charges of organized scheme to defraud over $50,000 and grand theft of over $20,000.
Assignment editors — Agriculture Commissioner Nikki Fried will hold a news conference in Miami to discuss the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act, Douglas Road Metrorail Station, 3060 SW 37th Ct., Miami. RSVP to comms@fdacs.gov.
Assignment editors — Attorney General Ashley Moody hosts a news conference to discuss the recoveries from a recent case involving a charity scam, 10:45 a.m. Eastern time, Office of the Attorney General — Tampa Office, 3507 E. Frontage Rd., Tampa.
“Mysterious group that paid for attack ads in a key Senate race hires prominent Republican attorney” via Jason Garcia and Annie Martin of the Orlando Sentinel — A mysterious group that tried to influence the Democratic primary in a high-stakes Central Florida Senate race last year hired a prominent Republican attorney to defend it in a lawsuit aimed at forcing the group to reveal the source of its money. After more than a year of silence, Floridians for Equality and Justice said in court filings last week it hired attorneys from the Florida firm Shutts & Bowen, including Ben Gibson, a partner in the firm’s Tallahassee office who, according to his biography, served as the chief counsel to the Republican Party of Florida during the 2018 and 2020 election cycles and the general counsel of DeSantis’ transition team in 2018.
Assignment editors — Sen. Janet Cruz, Rep. Susan Valdés and Hillsborough County Commissioner Harry Cohen host a public town hall meeting, Pierce Middle School Cafeteria, 5511 N Hesperides St., Tampa.
— CORONA FLORIDA —
“COVID-19 update: 1,927 cases added, and 1,594 patients hospitalized” via Michelle Marchante of the Miami Herald — Florida reported 1,927 COVID-19 cases and 221 deaths. In all, Florida has recorded at least 3,661,182 confirmed COVID-19 cases and 60,418 deaths. Of the deaths added Monday, about 87% occurred over the past 28 days and about 38% in the last two weeks. In the past seven days, on average, the state has added 132 deaths and 1,506 cases per day. There were 1,594 people hospitalized for COVID-19 in Florida. COVID-19 patients take up 2.82% of all inpatient beds in the latest report’s hospitals, compared to 2.80% in the previous day’s reporting hospitals.
“Florida files 33-page motion to stay federal vaccine mandate” via Christine Jordan Sexton of Florida Politics — Florida on Monday filed a 33-page motion with a federal court in Atlanta asking it to pump the brakes on a federally proposed workplace safety rule requiring employees at large companies to get vaccinated against the COVID-19 virus or to produce negative test results weekly. In the 33-page document attorneys for Moody’s office argued OSHA overstepped its legal authority when it issued the rule last week, and argued the rule violates the First Amendment and the Religious Freedom Restoration Act of 1993. The 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals issued a stay Saturday in a similar legal challenge. But Monday’s court document argues another stay needed to be issued because it’s unclear how long the Louisiana court ruling would be in effect.
“‘We are not anti-vaccine, we are anti-mandate’: Mandate critics defend vax stance, DeSantis” via Renzo Downey of Florida Politics — DeSantis and those speaking against vaccine mandates say their opposition isn’t anti-vaccine. DeSantis and legislative leaders on Monday unveiled their outline for next week’s Special Session. There are no details yet on the bills, but they are aimed at thwarting vaccine mandates imposed by public and private employers and related issues. “This is going to save the day for a lot of workers,” DeSantis said. The Governor has been criticized for hosting news conferences with people stating vaccine misinformation. He has also been called anti-vaccine and anti-mask, but the Governor says he is trying to protect the freedom of personal choice. Senate President Wilton Simpson and House Speaker Chris Sprowls joined the Governor and those opposing the federal mandate.
“Florida GOP lawmakers poised to take on big business over COVID-19 vaccine mandates” via Gray Rohrer of the Orlando Sentinel — Florida Republicans are accustomed to a cozy relationship with big businesses, passing tax cuts for large corporations, reducing regulations and pushing against movements for increased pay and benefits. But later this month, at DeSantis’ urging, they’re poised to pass a series of worker protections against employer COVID-19 vaccine mandates. DeSantis called for a Special Session Nov. 15-19. DeSantis has called on his fellow Republicans to ban vaccine mandates for local government employees. For private-sector workers, he wants those fired for not getting a COVID-19 vaccine to be eligible for unemployment benefits and anyone who does get a shot and suffers an adverse reaction to receive workers’ compensation benefits. Those measures run against the pro-business bills Florida Republicans typically pass.
“After school closures, disrupted lives, some leap at chance to get kids 5 and up vaccinated” via Daniel Chang of the Miami Herald — About 2.8 million children younger than 12 live in Florida, according to the health department, though that number includes those younger than 5, who are not yet eligible for a vaccine. Vaccines for children 6 months to 4 years old aren’t expected until 2022. By vaccinating younger children, physicians and public health officials hope to prevent a resurgence of the virus in the winter and reduce the chances that a new variant will emerge and trigger another wave. For parents eager to get their children vaccinated against COVID-19, the opportunity — and risks — of travel and family get-togethers and the chance to stanch the spread of a virus that has upended much of their lives are too important to pass up.
“Alachua County COVID-19 vaccinations continue to rise as residents await pediatric doses” via Danielle Ivanov of The Gainesville Sun — The number of people getting vaccinated in Alachua County rose for the second week in a row over the past seven days. At the same time, the federal government announced the approval of pediatric COVID-19 vaccines for children and released new vaccination rules for millions of working Americans. According to Friday’s COVID-19 Weekly Situation Report from the Florida Department of Health, Alachua County had 106 new COVID-19 cases over the past seven days, continuing to fall for a record low since the week of July 9.
“Leon County Schools appeals judge’s decision that OK’d ban on mask mandates” via Ana Goñi-Lessan of the Tallahassee Democrat — Leon County Schools has appealed a judge’s decision to uphold the state Department of Health’s emergency rule that school districts cannot impose mask mandates. On Friday, Leon joined Miami-Dade, Duval, Broward and Alachua counties and filed a notice with the 4th District Court of Appeal after Administrative Law Judge Brian Newman said decisions to opt out of student mask requirements are at the “sole discretion” of parents or guardians. The Orange County School Board, which was part of the original lawsuit, did not join the appeal. Attorneys for the school boards argued during a two-day hearing last month that the health department improperly skirted normal rule-making processes when it issued the Sept. 22 emergency rule.
“Miami, Broward districts to open vaccine sites at schools for children ages 5 to 11” via David Goodhue and Michelle Marchante of the Miami Herald — Miami-Dade and Broward public schools will begin offering the newly authorized Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19 pediatric vaccine to children ages 5 and up starting this week, school officials said Monday. The latest development comes as the FDA granted Emergency Use Authorization for the Pfizer vaccination for children between the ages of 5 and 11 on Oct. 29, followed by the CDC recommending it on Nov. 2. In August, the FDA approved the Pfizer vaccine for individuals 16 and over. In May, the agency granted emergency use authorization for the vaccine in children between 12 and 15.
“‘Watershed moment.’ Miami welcomes end of COVID-19 travel restrictions on 33 countries” via Anna Jean Keyser of the Miami Herald — Miami’s tourism economy has been slowly recovering since coronavirus lockdowns ended, but has been missing a key component: foreign tourists from most of Europe, Brazil, China, India and more. On Monday, Nov. 8, travelers from 33 countries will see U.S. coronavirus travel restrictions lifted for fully vaccinated people and the optimism and expectations in Miami’s tourism community are high. “We can’t see a complete recovery until the full international market is back in Miami,” said Rolando Aedo, the COO of the Greater Miami Convention and Visitors Bureau.
“International tourists return to Orlando, but COVID-19 jitters may remain” via Katie Rice of the Orlando Sentinel — As some flights touch down at Orlando International Airport today, many people will set foot in the United States for the first time in about 19 months. Monday marks the lifting of international travel restrictions for fully vaccinated visitors to the U.S. Travelers eager to return to their families, properties and vacations have watched for news of its return since September when the White House announced the new policies. They began booking flights on Oct. 15 when officials gave the specific date for the change. Local officials and tourism agencies hope international travel’s resumption signals the beginning of the revival of Orlando’s robust overseas tourism market. Demand for flights to Orlando has surged in recent weeks and experts are seeing encouraging travel bookings from the most enthusiastic visitors.
“Sarasota CEO expects vaccine mandate to ‘cost company millions’ as PGT prepares to comply” via Derek Gilliam of the Sarasota Herald-Tribune — Jeff Jackson runs one of Sarasota County’s largest companies, and while he plans to comply with a sweeping mandate that will require all companies with more than 100 employees to have them vaccinated or mandate weekly tests proving employees do not have COVID-19, he doesn’t appear happy about it. “We will not require our team members to be vaccinated to work at PGT Innovations,” Jackson said in a written statement to the Herald-Tribune. “We will encourage and make it as easy as possible for our team members to get vaccinated, but we will not require it.”
— 2022 —
“The Democratic Senate majority was already dicey. Then came Virginia.” via Natalia Allison of POLITICO — Democrats go into the midterm election with one advantage — a favorable map that gives some reason to think the party can hold its minuscule 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.
“Republican wave builds to take back the House” via Ally Mutnik of POLITICO — 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. Last week alone, the GOP saw the stirrings of a full-fledged suburban revival from Virginia to New Jersey to New York — and also possibly ended the careers of as many five Democratic incumbents with punishing new congressional maps in three other states.
Kelvin Soto endorses Charlie Crist for Governor — U.S. Rep. Crist’s gubernatorial bid added an endorsement from Osceola Clerk of Courts Soto during a small business tour in Kissimmee on Monday. “Charlie Crist understands what is at stake for everyone in Florida and is a proven leader in public education, public safety, and public health,” Soto said. “Osceola County is among the more diverse communities in the state. In Charlie, I see a Governor with a modern approach to leadership that recognizes the varied perspectives and issues of this community.” Soto joins more than 100 other elected officials and community leaders in endorsing Crist, who is running against Fried and Sen. Taddeo in the Democratic Primary. The winner of that contest will face Gov. DeSantis, who formally filed for reelection on Monday.
Michael Waltz snags endorsement from Nikki Haley — Former South Carolina Governor and U.S. Amb. Haley is backing Republican U.S. Rep. Waltz in his bid for a third term representing Florida’s 6th Congressional District. “Mike is a conservative fighter, servant leader, and firewall against the Biden administration’s big-government policies,” she said. “Whether it’s our national security or issues affecting Main Street, Mike always puts Americans first. I’m proud to endorse him for reelection because he defended our country as a Green Beret, and he’ll always stand strong against the Left’s socialist agenda.” Waltz described Haley, a potential GOP presidential candidate in 2024, as someone who “cares deeply about the security of our country and standing against the Biden administration’s attempts at weakening America and our allies abroad.”
Spotted — At the NRCC “Countdown to the Majority” event featuring special guest Trump: Gus Bilirakis, Christaldi, Coleman Covington, Leigh Ann Gillis, Alex Latcham, Amy Maguire, Sandy Murman, Suskey, Jackie Toledo, Robert and Nancy Watkins, Bob Warchola and JD White.
“Annette Taddeo campaign reports $650,000 raised just two weeks into Governor’s bid” via Jesse Scheckner of Florida Politics — Taddeo raised more than $650,000 just two weeks into her 2022 bid for Florida Governor, according to a press note from her campaign. Democratic consultant Christian Ulvert, who runs Taddeo’s political committee, credited “excitement and enthusiasm from grassroots supporters across the state.” In a written statement, Taddeo said it will take a “coalition of voters” for Democrats to regain the support of communities lost to their Republican opponents. Taddeo faces tough competition. On the Democratic side, Fried holds more than $3 million between her campaign and political committee. Crist, Florida’s former Republican Governor, holds $2.84 million between his campaign and committee.
Happening today:
Blaise Ingoglia starts November with $1.86M on hand — Spring Hill Republican Rep. Ingoglia raised $233,500 between his campaign and political committees last month and entered November with more than $1.86 million in the bank. “I have always been a conservative fighter, and I always will be. I will never back down from the woke mob that seeks to radically transform our nation and our state. I will work tirelessly to keep Florida’s economy strong and our people free,” he said. In July, the Spring Hill Republican filed to run in Senate District 10, though aware redistricting could substantially change jurisdictions. Lecanto Republican Rep. Ralph Massullo and Pasco County Sheriff Chris Nocco, a Republican of New Port Richey, are also considering a run in SD 10.
“Nick DiCeglie crosses $500K raised for Senate bid” via Kelly Hayes of Florida Politics — DiCeglie crossed the $500,000 mark in his run to succeed Sen. Jeff Brandes in Senate District 24. DiCeglie raised nearly $80,000 in October for his campaign and affiliated political committee, Economic Freedom Committee. DiCeglie’s campaign provided the latest update. More information on other candidates and finance details will be available when required campaign finance disclosures are filed with the Florida Division of Elections. Currently, DiCeglie faces Republican challenger Timothy J. Lewis, who has so far not raised any funds in the race. Democratic candidate Eunic Ortiz is also vying for the seat, but has so far trailed in the funding race.
“Jessica Baker out of the gate strong with $220K raised in first month as House candidate” via A.G. Gancarski of Florida Politics — Republican Baker raised more than $220,000 during her first month running for Jacksonville’s House District 12. Baker, an assistant state attorney running for the seat currently held by Senate candidate Rep. Clay Yarborough, raised $132,950 for her campaign and an additional $87,100 for her political committee. Baker’s list of donors is impressive and includes Susie Wiles, Kent Stermon, and the BestBet gambling entities. Wiles is an adviser to Donald Trump‘s political operation, while Stermon is a close friend of DeSantis, whose backing would be advantageous in a Republican Primary. None of the funding, Baker’s campaign noted in a news release, is “candidate or spouse” money. Baker faces former Rep. Lake Ray in the Primary.
—”Daniel Sotelo adds $11K for unopposed HD 118 run” via Jesse Scheckner of Florida Politics
Manatee GOP elects Vernon — The Republican Party of Manatee County on Monday elected Steve Vernon, president of the Lakewood Ranch Republican Club, as its new chair. He succeeds Kathleen King, who stepped down as county chair last month after 15 years in the job; King remains Florida’s national committeewoman on the Republican National Committee. Vernon notably challenged King earlier this year for the county role but fell short. More recently, he campaigned heavily against the ultimately renewed extension of a school property tax supporting the Manatee County School District.
— CORONA NATION —
“Biden administration says blocking vaccine mandate could cost hundreds of lives per day” via Rebecca Rainey of POLITICO — The Biden administration told a federal court Monday that a stay of its vaccinate-or-test requirement for private employers “would likely cost dozens or even hundreds of lives per day.” The administration argued that the OSHA was well within its authority to issue the requirements requiring employees at large businesses to be vaccinated against COVID-19 or tested weekly. The states, businesses and religious groups that requested the stay aren’t likely to succeed given earlier court rulings, federal law and “the considerable evidence that OSHA analyzed and discussed when issuing” the requirement, attorneys for OSHA and the Labor Department told the court.
“Jill Biden and the Surgeon General push for COVID-19 shots in schools.” via Sheryl Gay Stolberg of The New York Times — The First Lady and the Surgeon General traveled to Virginia on Monday to promote the vaccination of children in school against the coronavirus, visiting an elementary school whose students were the first to receive the polio vaccine as part of a nationwide clinical trial in 1954. It was the kickoff of what the Biden administration said would be a nationwide push to persuade parents and guardians to vaccinate children ages 5 to 11. The administration is seeking to enlist schools in the effort to vaccinate 28 million children. The first lady, Dr. Jill Biden, and the surgeon general, Dr. Vivek Murthy, met with students who had been vaccinated in the brightly colored school gymnasium and handed out stickers to them. “You guys are leaders, so thank you for being so brave,” Dr. Biden told them.
“Pfizer-BioNTech expected to seek authorization for coronavirus booster for people 18 and older” via Laurie McGinley, Lena H. Sun and Tyler Pager of The Washington Post — Pfizer and BioNTech are expected to seek authorization for their coronavirus vaccine booster shot for anyone 18 and older, a move that could increase booster rates at a critical moment in the pandemic. The request, which may be filed as soon as this week, is likely to win the backing of the FDA, said the individuals, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to discuss the issue. That would essentially fulfill the Biden administration’s booster-for-all-adults goal. Authorizing boosters for all adults would be an explicit recognition of what is already occurring: People are getting access to the shots by saying they are in one of the recommended categories; pharmacies are using the honor system.
“An emotional journey: Families reunite in U.S. with tears, balloons as COVID-19 travel ban ends” via David Shepardson and Julia Harte of Reuters — Paul Campbell had waited nearly two years to reunite with his German fiancée at Boston’s Logan airport on Monday, the day the United States eased travel restrictions imposed on much of the world since the COVID-19 pandemic began. “I’m just ecstatic that she’s here, I’m happy,” said Campbell, 63, a retired firefighter from Vermont who greeted her with a heart-shaped balloon. “Our relationship is still thriving even though we’ve been apart for two years.” The travel ban, imposed since early 2020, barred access to non-U.S. citizens traveling from 33 countries, including China, India and much of Europe — and had also restricted overland entry from Mexico and Canada. “Today America is open for business. That is our message to the world,” U.S. Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo said at Chicago’s O’Hare airport.
— CORONA ECONOMICS —
“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. And even now, 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.
“Retailers scramble to attract workers ahead of the holidays” via DNYUZ — Retailers, expecting the holiday shopping season to be bustling once again this year after being upended by the coronavirus in 2020, are scrambling to find enough workers to staff their stores and distribution centers in a tight labor market. It is not proving easy to entice applicants to an industry that has been battered, more than most, by the pandemic’s many challenges, from fights over mask wearing to high rates of infection among employees. Willing retail workers are likely to earn larger paychecks and work fewer hours, while consumers may be greeted by less inventory and understaffed stores. It’s especially critical for retailers to hire temporary help this year because existing employees are already strained from nearly two years of pandemic conditions.
— MORE CORONA —
“Could long COVID-19 unlock clues to chronic fatigue and other poorly understood conditions?” via Frances Stead Sellers of The Washington Post — Alison Sbrana watched the coronavirus skip from China across continents with a sense of impending doom. Sbrana, plagued by fatigue and brain fog since being diagnosed with mononucleosis six years earlier, was convinced that the pernicious new virus would wreak similar havoc in some of those who contracted it. Her intuition proved prescient. Some people who had suffered even mild cases of COVID-19 began complaining of problems that Sbrana knew too well, including muscle pain and drop-dead exhaustion. COVID-19 long-haulers inherited many of the challenges that have faced people like Sbrana for years, including a lack of understanding of the mechanisms that triggered their disabilities, leaving some doctors to view their symptoms as largely psychosomatic.
“Will children of color get vaccinated at the rates of other kids? Experts say equity is key” via Nada Hassanein of USA Today — Now that a COVID-19 vaccine is available for children as young as 5 years old, community leaders, clinicians and officials are ramping up grassroots efforts to ensure children of color have equal access to the shot. The rollout charges forward at drugstores, pediatrician offices, family health clinics and hospitals. But access may be challenging for some, as an estimated 53% of children throughout the nation lack a medical home. Doctors said the barriers adults in communities of color face in getting vaccinated are likely to be mirrored in children of color. “We obviously had disparities with their parents, so why shouldn’t we have disparities with their kids?” said Dr. Georges Benjamin, executive director of the American Public Health Association.
“How Sweden swerved COVID-19 disaster” via Johan Anderberg of UnHerd — Few now remember that for most of 2020, the word “experiment” had negative connotations. That was what Swedes were accused of conducting when we maintained some semblance of normality. The citizens of this country generally didn’t have to wear face masks; young children continued going to school; leisure activities were largely allowed to continue unhindered. If you measure excess mortality for the whole of 2020, Sweden (according to Eurostat) will end up in 21st place out of 31 European countries. If Sweden were a part of the U.S., its death rate would rank No. 43 of the 50 states.
— PRESIDENTIAL —
“Biden’s border woes expose White House divisions as centrists assert more control” via Nick Miroff and Sean Sullivan of The Washington Post — Illegal border crossings and coronavirus cases were both rising this summer when a group of Biden administration officials developed a plan to vaccinate migrants in U.S. custody, viewing the shots as a sensible public health measure. But just before the plan was rolled out, it was opposed by Susan Rice and other senior officials who worried that it would invite more illegal crossings. Some aides responded that migrants would not pay smugglers and take a dangerous journey just for a vaccine, but they were overruled. Several top aides want tougher enforcement measures and the president’s team is gripped with fear that any misstep could trigger a new crisis.
“Jim Jordan, a top Trump ally, is warning the GOP against a Biden ‘impeachment by reflex’ if it takes back the House.” via POLITICO — Jordan used a notable forum — a podcast with Matt Gaetz, another Trump pal on Judiciary — to reveal his thinking. The Floridian teed up his question on his podcast “Firebrand” by warning against “impeachment fever,” saying impeachment should only be based on “purposeful wrongdoing” by a POTUS. Otherwise, Gaetz said, “any time you have a President and a Congress that are in different parties, part of the ceremonial exchange of power will be an impeachment.” Gaetz then asked Jordan if he shares that concern. Gaetz previously co-sponsored Marjorie Taylor Greene‘s August resolution seeking Biden’s impeachment for his handling of the southern border. Gaetz alluded to that issue in the episode saying Biden was “worthy” of impeachment over that issue.
— D.C. MATTERS —
“The battle over Biden’s child tax credit and its impact on poverty and workers” via Glenn Kessler of The Washington Post — Right now, there’s a fierce battle within the economics world over Biden’s expanded child tax credit. At stake: whether the President’s proposal would reduce poverty as much as advocates say it would. As part of the coronavirus relief package, Biden took the existing child tax credit, expanded it, and in effect, made it a sort of monthly child allowance. The tax credit is believed to be an incentive for work. If wages go up, people tend to work longer; but if someone can get enough money without working, fewer people might work. There is also the “income effect,” in which more money makes things more affordable, including a decision to not work.
“How will Florida spend the billions Congress approved for infrastructure?” via Allison Ross of the Tampa Bay Times — The $1 trillion infrastructure plan now on President Joe Biden’s desk could bring billions of dollars to Florida for roads, bridges, public transportation, clean water and more. But the specifics on how that money will get distributed across the state has local governments, including those in Tampa Bay, still unclear. The Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act, which passed the U.S. House on Friday, could bring about $13 billion in federal funds to improve Florida’s aging highways and $2.6 billion over five years to improve the state’s public transportation options, according to a previously released by the White House.
— CRISIS —
“House Jan. 6 committee issues subpoenas to 6 top Trump advisers, including pair involved in Willard hotel ‘command center’” via Jacqueline Alemany, Tom Hamburger and Josh Dawsey of The Washington Post — Those subpoenaed to provide testimony and documents include scholar John Eastman, who outlined a legal strategy in early January to delay or deny Biden the presidency, and former New York City police commissioner Bernard Kerik, who led efforts to investigate voting fraud in key states. Both were present at the Willard during the first week in January. The list also includes three members of the Trump reelection campaign: campaign manager Bill Stepien; Jason Miller, a senior adviser to the campaign; and Angela McCallum, the national executive assistant to Trump’s campaign. The committee also issued a subpoena for Trump’s former national security adviser, Michael Flynn. All of them reportedly participated in discussions about challenging the election results.
— EPILOGUE TRUMP —
“‘Betrayal’ book: Trump threatened to leave GOP before RNC threat” via Oriana Gonzalez of Axios — Trump told the RNC chair that he was leaving the GOP to create his own new political party, according to a new book by ABC’s Jonathan Karl. Trump, who had said “he didn’t care” about destroying the GOP, ultimately backed down after Party leaders told him they would take actions that could have cost the former president millions of dollars, Karl said. On his last day in office, after boarding Air Force One, “Trump took a call from Republican Party chair Ronna McDaniel. … He told McDaniel he was done with the Republican Party.” Republican leaders told the former president that if he left, they would stop paying his legal fees and give out for free Trump’s email list. By the following week, Trump decided against leaving the GOP.
“Fox & Friends cautions Trump on possible 2024 run: He ‘needs to tone it down’” via Colby Hall of Mediaite — The set of Fox & Friends reacted to news of Trump’s plans to reveal his plans to run for a second term, and co-host Brian Kilmeade offered an interesting bit of insight from citizens he’s met over the past week. After meeting roughly 1,500 people recently while promoting his book, Kilmeade said that the No. 1 question he heard by far was “will Trump run again.” It appeared at the end of his spiel he was speaking for himself when he added, “I think the President’s gotta get better. He has to learn from the last four years.”
“Donald Trump will ‘probably’ announce 2024 plans after midterms: ‘A lot of people will be very happy’” via Brooke Singman of Fox News — Former President Trump, in an exclusive interview with Fox News, said he will “probably” wait until after the 2022 midterm elections to formally announce whether he will run for president in 2024. “I am certainly thinking about it, and we’ll see,” Trump said. “I think a lot of people will be very happy, frankly, with the decision, and probably will announce that after the midterms.” The former president said that timeline was “probably appropriate.” When asked whether he would consider DeSantis, Trump said: “He’s a good man, but we have a lot of great people. He’s been good.”
“The GOP under Trump is a hostage situation” via Aaron Blake of The Washington Post — The Washington Post reported earlier this year, as Trump was leaving office, that he had threatened to form a third party over his disgust with the GOP’s perceived lack of support for his baseless claims of a stolen election. Trump called it “fake news.” Now Karl reports in his new book that Trump explicitly told McDaniel on his final day in office that he was indeed going the third-party route, before backing down five days later. Republicans who talk to Trump have made it abundantly clear that they live in fear of this possibility. As they should. But it’s worth emphasizing just how much the modern GOP resembles a hostage situation. And this report fills out that picture.
“Rick Scott declines to say if Trump-backed Senate hopeful accused of strangling wife is right candidate for the job” via John Wagner of The Washington Post — Scott, who heads the group that works to elect Senate Republicans, declined to say whether Sean Parnell, a GOP hopeful in Pennsylvania who has been accused of strangling his wife and abusing his children, is the right candidate for the job. Scott maintained that in his role as NRSC chair he should remain neutral in primaries, except in the cases of GOP incumbents. “We’ll see who comes out of the primary,” Scott said. Scott added that he is certain his counterparts at the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee would take the “exact same” approach.
Assignment editors — Scott will be at Versailles in Miami to recognize the restaurant’s 50th anniversary, 11 a.m., 3555 Southwest 8th Street, Miami. RSVP to press@rickscott.senate.gov.
— LOCAL NOTES —
“City leaders eye fed funds to address climate impacts” via Florida Politics — The Florida League of Cities gathered last week in Orlando to discuss its upcoming state and federal legislative agenda. Even though the U.S. House would approve the Bipartisan Infrastructure Deal (BID) just after the conference concluded, the BID was discussed in a number of the panels along with a variety of other state and federal funding streams for local resilience and sustainability initiatives. This year, DeSantis and Republican leadership in the Legislature approved hundreds of millions of dollars in funding for local communities. The application process for much of that money is closing, and many of the cities represented at the FLC meeting are eager to fund priority projects through those programs.
“Oil drilling permit near Big Cypress denied by the state. Company will appeal, try again.” via Adriana Brasileiro of the Miami Herald — The Florida Department of Environmental Protection has rejected a permit application from a North Fort Myers company to drill an exploratory oil well north of Immokalee in Collier County, citing the potential for negative impacts on wildlife like the protected gopher tortoise and on water resources. South Florida water managers and the local water and sewer district had warned that the project threatened drinking water supplies in the region, and environmentalists said that oil exploration in the area — part of the Big Cypress watershed and the greater Everglades — could harm protected species like the Florida panther, the eastern indigo snake and the rare ghost orchid, which are found in the region’s unique cypress swamps, marl prairies, hardwood hammocks and mangrove forests.
“On first day back in service, Brightline train hits car in Pompano Beach” via Rob Wile and Michelle Marchante of the Miami Herald — On Brightline’s first day of service after a 19-month pandemic hiatus, one of its trains struck a car in South Florida on Monday morning driven by a grandmother who was with her young grandchild. It happened around 10 a.m. in Pompano Beach in the area of Northeast Third Street and North Flagler Avenue. The train struck the back of the car and spun it around. The woman sustained non-life-threatening injuries, including a broken collarbone. The express train’s service was halted in both directions for about an hour. “Today, we had a tragic reminder of what can happen in spite of grade crossings operating as they should, and our team operating as it should,” Brightline President Patrick Goddard said.
“‘A new era in our city’: Hialeah’s controversial police chief cut loose by new mayor” via Samantha J. Gross and Jay Weaver of the Miami Herald — Days after he was sworn in as Hialeah’s new mayor, Esteban “Steve” Bovo flexed his muscle on Monday and put controversial Police Chief Sergio Velázquez on leave, effective immediately. Velázquez, who was about to enter the city’s deferred retirement option plan, was made aware of the decision at lunchtime, Bovo said. Deputy Chief of Police George Fuente, husband of former Hialeah City Council member Katharine Cue-Fuente, will serve as interim chief. Fuente will oversee the department while a search committee creates parameters and begins the search for the next leader of the police department in the county’s second most populous city.
“Moms for Liberty sues Brevard School Board, saying speech rules discriminate by view” via Bailey Gallion of Florida Today — The Brevard chapter of conservative group Moms for Liberty has sued the Brevard County School Board over its public participation policy, saying the board has used it to limit speech and access for opposing viewpoints during meetings. School Board policy forbids speakers from making remarks that are “personally directed,” “abusive” or “obscene.” School Board Chair Misty Belford stops speakers from criticizing other school board members or district staff by name, requiring all speakers to direct their comments toward her or the board as a whole. In a complaint filed Friday, Moms for Liberty and four members, including Brevard chair Ashley Hall and former School Board member Amy Kneessy.
“Tampa Convention Center to get rooftop solar panels in push for net-zero emissions by 2050” via Daniel Figueroa of Florida Politics — The City of Tampa and Tampa Electric are taking a cue from their new sustainability partner, the University of South Florida, and going green. TECO President Archie Collins joined Tampa Mayor Jane Castor and interim USF President Rhea Law to announce the city’s main power utility aims to achieve net-zero carbon emissions by 2050. One of the latest projects to help achieve that goal is installing solar panels on the Convention Center’s roof. “We believe that this is what customers want,” Collins said. Collins said TECO has a long history of environmental stewardship. He said since the year 2000, the utility has reduced sulfur dioxide, a gas known to cause acid rain, by 99%. It’s reduced nitrous oxide, which leads to smog, by 95%.
“Another top USF leader will step down in 2022” via Lauren Coffey of the Tampa Bay Business Journal — University of South Florida’s provost and vice president has announced he will be stepping down in 2022. Ralph Wilcox has served in the position since 2008 and has been at the university for nearly 20 years. In a letter to the USF community, he referenced wanting to spend more time with family as a significant reason for leaving. Wilcox stated he will stay on as provost as long as it takes to ensure a smooth transition. After, he plans to remain on as faculty. He said the search for his replacement will begin in the spring, shortly after USF is expected to hire its new president.
“Calls grow for postponing vote on Confederate monument from Jacksonville park” via David Bauerlein of The Florida Times-Union — An up-or-down vote on moving the Confederate monument from Springfield Park should be put on hold until March so city and community leaders can explore options such as how to pay for the relocation, City Council member Matt Carlucci said Monday. Carlucci’s letter hit the City Council email inboxes as several high-profile Jacksonville business and civic leaders said it would be best to postpone the vote that is slated Tuesday night on legislation setting aside $1.3 million for moving the “Tribute to the Women of the Southern Confederacy” monument. The first round of votes in City Council committees last week showed most council members opposed the legislation and it was on track for defeat.
“Conservative commentator Ben Shapiro to speak at sold-out Florida State University event” via Christopher Cann of the Tallahassee Democrat — Shapiro, a conservative writer and commentator, will speak to a capacity audience at Florida State University next Monday, a lecture already evoking approbation and condemnation among students. The free event, put together by the College Republicans at FSU and FSU’s Institute of Politics, will take place in the Tucker Civic Center’s Exhibition Hall at 7 p.m. The event was funded largely by Young America’s Foundation, a conservative youth organization, as part of its Fred and Lynda Allen lecture series. It sponsors talks from other big-name conservatives like Matt Walsh, Liz Wheeler and former Vice President Mike Pence.
— TOP OPINION —
“Bill Clinton saved his presidency. Here’s how Biden can, too.” via Mark Penn and Andrew Stein of The New York Times — You can’t dismiss a clear electoral trend: last week’s flight from the Democrats was disproportionately in the suburbs, and the idea that home-owning, child-rearing, taxpaying voters just want more progressive candidates is not a sustainable one. After the 1994 congressional elections, Clinton reoriented his administration to the center and saved his presidency. Biden should follow his lead, listen to centrists, push back on the left and reorient his policies to address the mounting economic issues people are facing. As a Senator, he was a master at building coalitions; that is the leadership needed now. Moving to the center does not mean budging from core social issues that are at the heart of what the party believes in and are largely in sync with suburban voters. But it does mean connecting to voters’ immediate needs and anxieties.
— OPINIONS —
“The forgotten secret of Trump’s success” via Olga Khazan of The Atlantic — The argument in favor of the Democrats recruiting more-famous candidates is pretty clear cut: Celebrity offers a number of important advantages to aspiring politicians. Most Americans consume more television than political news, so they see more actors than they do legislators. Trump was the best-known GOP primary candidate in 2015. In crowded primary fields, or in nonpartisan elections, fame can be especially helpful. Yes, some examples of extremely successful celebrity candidates exist. But, no, professional Democrats don’t want to recruit more of them. Although celebrity candidates offer the political benefit of high name recognition, they sometimes prove disastrous if they appear reckless or ill-prepared. Name recognition is important, but rich people who aren’t celebrities can buy themselves name recognition by funding other candidates and buying ads.
“Condo safety must remain a priority” via the South Florida Sun-Sentinel editorial board — We understand that Republicans already have priorities for the session that begins in January. And everything has to be done quickly, so campaign season can start in earnest. But unlike the contrived issues that energize Republicans every year, this is a real one. The Champlain Towers South collapse revived questions about construction standards and condominium associations. Engineering trade associations and the Florida Bar agree on the need for reform. Throughout Florida, however, only Boca Raton has joined Broward and Miami-Dade counties in approving a safety inspection program. The city will require structural and electrical inspections of buildings that are at least 30 years old. Broward and Miami-Dade’s standards are 40 years.
— ON TODAY’S SUNRISE —
Gov. DeSantis files for a second term in office.
On today’s Sunrise:
— Alongside Republican legislative leaders, DeSantis also unveils a sweeping set of proposals against COVID-19 safety precautions in Florida.
To listen, click on the image below:
— ALOE —
“Metropolitan Ministries begins what it expects to be busy holiday season” via Fallon Silcox of Bay News 9 — Metropolitan Ministries opens its holiday donation tent on Monday and this year, officials there have set some big goals for our community. Metropolitan Ministries is hoping to serve 42,000 families through Christmas and officials say they need the communities to help. Maria Hernandez is a client of Metropolitan Ministries, and to say she’s had a tough year is an understatement. “Let’s just say I was a little desperate, hopeless, I didn’t know what to do,” said Hernandez. She caught COVID-19 last year and was hospitalized for two weeks. She had it so bad, she even lost her eyesight and while she was in the hospital, she received devastating news. Maria learned her fiancé, who also had COVID-19, died.
— HAPPY BIRTHDAY —
Best wishes to former Gov. Bob Graham, as well as Molly Curry, the First Lady of Jacksonville, and Dana Young, CEO of VISIT FLORIDA.
___
Sunburn is authored and assembled by Peter Schorsch, Phil Ammann, Renzo Downey and Drew Wilson.
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Good Tuesday morning. Smart Brevity™ count: 1,148 words … 4½ minutes. Edited by Zachary Basu.
🔋 At 12:30 p.m. ET today, Axios transportation correspondent Joann Muller hosts a 30-min. virtual event on cleaner cars and manufacturing. Register here.
Illustration: Aïda Amer/Axios
President Biden is trying to showcase sunny economic indicators, but Americans aren’t convinced, Axios Capital author Felix Salmon reports.
- Why it matters: Between now and midterms — a year from this week — Democrats need to get credit for America’s economic strength, or risk massive losses in Congress.
State of play: Economic health is undeniable, both for the country and for households. The economy is expected to grow 5.7% this year.
- Almost 6 million jobs were created between January and October. The unemployment rate is just 4.6%. The quit rate, a barometer of workers’ optimism, hit a record high 2.9% in August.
- Average earnings are up 3.5% this year to $31 per hour.
- Stocks hit a new record high every day last week — and yesterday, too — and are up more than 30% year-t0-date.
Reality check: 56% of voters think the country is on the wrong track, up from 39% in June, per the Harris Poll.
- The Gallup economic confidence index is now at -25, down from positive territory in June.
Between the lines: A White House official says some of the economic pessimism comes from supply-chain issues, which are contributing to the soaring price of cars and other goods.
- As the N.Y. Times’ Neal Irwin wrote Sunday: “[A]fter decades in which the availability of jobs (or lack thereof) drove economic sentiment, inflation now appears to have become the more powerful force.”
What we’re watching: The most salient price for most consumers — gas — is up 62% over the past year, to $3.42 per gallon.
- The inflation rate, released tomorrow, is expected to come in at an eye-popping 5.8% year-on-year.
Glenn Youngkin’s win in Virginia drove a statewide wave of Google searches about critical race theory, Axios’ Stef Kight and Jacque Schrag report.
- That’s a finding from a first-of-its kind project we’re unveiling today.
- Between now and next year’s midterms, Axios and Google Trends will track search activity in key states and districts.
The maps above explore issues conservatives want to push.
Most Americans — including two-thirds of Republicans — give their local schools high marks for juggling COVID risks, managing editor Margaret Talev writes from the Axios/Ipsos Coronavirus Index.
- Other findings from our national survey suggest Americans largely feel the Delta danger is behind us. That’s a potential path to redemption for President Biden after months of sinking approval.
Why it matters: Republicans are weaponizing dissatisfaction around schools to shape elections. But when it comes to COVID, our survey finds discontent is being driven by a vocal but small minority. Fewer than one in 10 parents said schools have done a “very poor job.”
By the numbers: Asked how schools in their community had done in terms of balancing health and safety with other priorities since the start of the pandemic, 71% of U.S. adults — and 75% of parents — said schools had done a good job as opposed to a poor job.
- Local businesses got the highest share of “good” ratings on balancing those interests — 80%.
Illustration: Sarah Grillo/Axios
A growing number of startups are trying to build a business around users who value privacy, often focusing on subscriptions rather than advertising, Axios’ Ina Fried and Sara Fischer report.
ProtonMail, the encrypted email service, expects to have 75 million users by year’s end, up from 50 million in June, CEO Andy Yen tells Axios.
- Yen attributes the increase to a rise in authoritarianism, threatening journalists and activists around the globe.
- He notes that users outside the U.S. are “picking up on privacy a lot faster. … Privacy is more real to people in a lot of these places. … The Western world was a little slow to get on top of it.”
Illustration: Sarah Grillo/Axios
A bipartisan group of House lawmakers has introduced a companion to a Senate bill that would let people use algorithm-free versions of tech platforms, Axios’ Ashley Gold reports.
- Why it matters: Anger over how platforms use their algorithms to target users is a bipartisan issue with momentum on Capitol Hill.
The Filter Bubble Transparency Act would require internet platforms to let people use a version of their services where content selections are not driven by algorithms. It’s sponsored by Reps. Ken Buck (R-Colo.), David Cicilline (D-R.I.), Lori Trahan (D-Mass.) and Burgess Owens (R-Utah).
- Buck and Cicilline are the bipartisan duo responsible for passing six antitrust bills out of the House Judiciary Committee in June.
- The Senate version has bipartisan sponsors, including Sen. John Thune (R-S.D.) and Sen. Mark Warner (D-Va.).
Astronauts celebrate inside the SpaceX Dragon spacecraft after a parachute ride last night into the Gulf of Mexico off Pensacola, Fla., following a 200-day mission to the International Space Station.
The astronauts’ view in the SpaceX Dragon capsule as they prepared yesterday to undock from the space station.
Covers: One World, Kokila
New York Times Magazine editor in chief Jake Silverstein is out today with an essay previewing a book version — coming next week — of “The 1619 Project,” the paper’s 2019 inquest into slavery’s stain on America:
“The 1619 Project: A New Origin Story’” represents a significant enlargement of the version of the project we produced two years ago. That version was not perfect, as few first efforts are, and the enormous amount of feedback we’ve received — both praise and criticism — has helped us deepen and improve it. …
I am aware that no matter how diligent the work has been, the book will kick up a new round of debates. After all, years of careful consensus-building around the national history standards did nothing to forestall that eruption. But in a sense, these arguments themselves may represent the apotheosis of our historiography.
Keep reading (subscription).
- 📚 Also out next week: A kids’ edition … Go deeper: More about the books.
NBA champions visited the White House yesterday for the first time since 2016, ending the Trump-era break in a tradition going back to 1963.
- The Milwaukee Bucks’ Giannis Antetokounmpo — 6 foot 11, born in Greece to Nigerian parents — said:
We have the best fans in the world. They supported us … when we were the worst team in the NBA. And, eight years later, we’re the best team in the NBA. … [I]f you dedicate yourself … and believe in your dreams, you can accomplish great things … I’ve done that my whole life, and I’m in the White House. This is — this is awesome. [Laughter.]
Bucks owner Marc Lasry presented this jersey to the 46th president.
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17.) THE WASHINGTON EXAMINER
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18.) ASSOCIATED PRESS
19.) FORT MYERS (FLORIDA) NEWS-PRESS
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20.) CHICAGO TRIBUNE
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21.) CHICAGO SUNTIMES
Federal jury convicts Four Corner Hustlers chief Labar ‘Bro Man’ Spann
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22.) THE HILL MORNING REPORT
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23.) THE HILL 12:30 REPORT
24.) ROLL CALL
Morning Headlines
A year before Election Day 2022, Democrats dominate the list of vulnerable senators, but party strategists remain optimistic. Republicans, meanwhile, believe they’re likely to win Senate control since midterms tend to be difficult for the president’s party. Operatives in both parties agree on one thing: It’s going to be a slog. Read more…
Campaign strategists predict the midterm environment will be friendlier to the GOP, but with 12 months to go, there could be plenty of surprises as President Joe Biden and his fellow Democrats work to prevent Republicans from capturing the seats needed to regain their majorities in 2022. Read more…
For Democrats, the future goes from bad to worse
ANALYSIS — Democrats had better hope things are darkest before the dawn, as they now face a series of challenges that combine to offer a bleak near-term future for their party. And if Republicans capture the House and/or the Senate in next year’s midterms, President Joe Biden can wave goodbye to the rest of his agenda. Read more…
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Gallego memoir offers blunt assessment of war, Harvard and Congress
It’s not luck that Ruben Gallego, a Democratic congressman from Arizona, wrote “They Called Us ‘Lucky.'” Politicians on the rise often write memoirs, after all. But Gallego says he wrote the book primarily for the men with whom he served in Iraq and secondarily for “people who want a real view of war.” Read more…
Winners and losers from House Democrats’ messy Friday fracas
ANALYSIS — Action on the budget reconciliation bill soon will shift to the Senate, which is expected to make changes and send the measure back to the House. See the winners, losers and those still fighting after several wild weeks on the south side of the Capitol. Read more…
Jan. 6 committee subpoenas Michael Flynn, John Eastman, four others
The House panel investigating the Jan. 6 Capitol attack sent subpoenas on Monday to six allies and advisers of former President Donald Trump who sought to overturn the election results and promote false election fraud claims, including John Eastman and Michael Flynn. Read more…
Small banks facing greater cyber risks urge Congress to act
Community banks, minority lenders and credit unions face greater risks of cyberattacks and damage from data breaches, a group of experts told lawmakers recently. The institutions want Congress to plug holes in laws that exempt from data security regulations the retailers and other entities handling the banks’ financial info. Read more…
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25.) POLITICO PLAYBOOK
POLITICO Playbook: A Trump-backed Senate hopeful takes the stand
DRIVING THE DAY
PARNELL DOUBTS GROW — All eyes are on SEAN PARNELL when he testifies today for the second and final time in an ugly child custody battle with his estranged wife, LAURIE SNELL. Though Parnell unequivocally denied abusing his wife and children on the stand Monday, the Republican Senate candidate in Pennsylvania is starting to bleed high-level support, two sources familiar with the matter told Playbook.
The swirl surrounding Parnell has been intense: On Friday, Parnell was slated to hold a call with donors to answer questions about the status of his campaign but canceled at the last minute, according to a supporter who was slated to participate in the call. That same afternoon, DONALD TRUMP’s team announced he would hold a fundraiser for Parnell at Mar-a-Lago in January, even though the event had been planned weeks before.
After POLITICO reported that DINA POWELL MCCORMICK’s husband, DAVID McCORMICK, is considering entering the race, Trump spokesperson TAYLOR BUDOWICH then issued a statement seeming to double down in support of Parnell, claiming that the former president took “careful consideration” before making the endorsement.
We reported last month, however, that some people close to Trump think Parnell was not vetted closely enough, and that Trump was pressured by DONALD TRUMP JR. to make the nod.
Parnell’s issues are bigger than any frustrations with Trump’s endorsement. Snell has claimed that he struck her and their children. Parnell said under oath that he was never physically abusive.
One supporter said that some Parnell donors are worried about his ability to raise money after the trial. Parnell, who raised $1.1 million in the third quarter — a modest sum especially after the Trump endorsement — has not been a prolific fundraiser.
One adviser to the campaign said they believe Parnell can remain a viable candidate as long as he keeps custody of his children, which the judge in the case will decide in a matter of weeks. A loss in the custody battle would be difficult to withstand politically, the adviser added. The person said Parnell will likely remain in the race until a ruling, even if his campaign is in limbo, and expects to see a bounce for Parnell if it appears that he is vindicated.
But a supporter said that donors are getting anxious and that some are considering advising him as soon as this week to pull out of the race before the judge rules.
“Even if his wife is carried out in a straitjacket, [in] some of these text messages, he’s calling his wife a whore,” said the supporter. “This is not someone we should be sending to Washington.”
The Pennsylvania race is key to GOP hopes to retake the Senate. The seat is currently held by retiring GOP Sen. PAT TOOMEY, but it’s a prime pickup opportunity for Democrats.
Here’s the Philly Inquirer story on Parnell’s court testimony Monday.
Good Tuesday morning. Thanks for reading Playbook. Drop us a line: Rachael Bade, Eugene Daniels, Ryan Lizza, Tara Palmeri.
JAN. 6 COMMITTEE TARGETS MORE TRUMP AIDES — The panel issued subpoenas Monday to a half-dozen Trump advisers, including campaign manager BILL STEPIEN, campaign senior adviser JASON MILLER, national executive assistant to the campaign ANGELA MCCALLUM and former national security adviser MICHAEL FLYNN. WaPo’s Jacqueline Alemany, Tom Hamburger and Josh Dawsey write that two other subpoenas were issued to “scholar JOHN EASTMAN, who outlined a legal strategy in early January to delay or deny [JOE] BIDEN the presidency, and former New York City police commissioner BERNARD KERIK, who led efforts to investigate voting fraud in key states.”
One key line from the piece: “All of them reportedly participated in discussions about challenging the election results, though Stepien, according to published reports, was initially skeptical of claims made by some of Trump’s legal advisers, including his former personal attorney RUDOLPH W. GIULIANI.”
POLITICO’s Kyle Cheney, who with Betsy Woodruff Swan has been all over Jan. 6 committee news, broke down Monday’s development for Playbook: “The latest batch of subpoena targets fall primarily into two groups, as committee members view them. The planners — Flynn and Eastman — helped Trump devise his strategy to stay in power despite losing the election. The implementers — Stepien, Miller and Kerik — were campaign operatives and surrogates who helped reconfigure Trump’s massive political apparatus into a disinformation megaphone, promoting ‘Stop the Steal’ messaging. The sixth target, McCallum, was a low-level campaign aide who received orders from someone — unclear who — to call state lawmakers in Michigan and urge them to reject Biden’s electors.”
The takeaway, per Kyle: “At a more fundamental level, the latest flurry of subpoenas featuring boldfaced Trump-world names shows that the committee has shifted into a higher gear, preparing to do battle on multiple fronts with prominent figures likely to resist their demands for testimony. There’s no indication the committee is done with its subpoena firehose either. Jan. 6 committee Chairman BENNIE THOMPSON has indicated that he signed 20 last week, but of those just the six reported today have become public.”
The coverage: “Jan. 6 committee subpoenas Trump allies linked to D.C. ‘war room,’” by Betsy and Kyle … “Jan. 6 Panel Subpoenas Flynn and Eastman, Scrutinizing Election Plot,” NYT … “Jan. 6 Committee Subpoenas Bill Stepien, Other Trump Allies,” WSJ
— MEANWHILE, via Kyle: “Former President Donald Trump filed an emergency request to a federal judge late Monday night to prevent the National Archives from sending sensitive records to Jan. 6 committee investigators by Friday. And just after midnight, Judge TANYA CHUTKAN rejected it, contending the request itself was legally defective and ‘premature.’ The unusual exchange, which happened in a span of two hours, comes as Chutkan is already considering an earlier request by Trump to prevent Congress from peering into his White House’s records about his attempt to overturn the 2020 election.”
BIDEN’S TUESDAY:
— 10:15 a.m.: The president will receive the President’s Daily Brief.
— 4:40 p.m.: Biden will speak at a DNC virtual grassroots event, followed by speaking at a DNC virtual fundraising reception at 5:45 p.m.
VP KAMALA HARRIS’ TUESDAY (Eastern time): The VP and second gentleman DOUG EMHOFF arrived in Paris early this morning. Still to come:
— 8:45 a.m.: Harris and Emhoff will tour the Institut Pasteur and meet with American and French scientists working on pandemic response and preparedness.
— Overnight: Harris and Emhoff will remain in Paris.
Principal deputy press secretary KARINE JEAN-PIERRE will brief at 1 p.m. with Commerce Secretary GINA RAIMONDO.
THE HOUSE and THE SENATE are out.
BIDEN’S WEEK AHEAD:
— Wednesday: Biden will meet with European Commission President URSULA VON DER LEYEN, and will head to the Port of Baltimore for an infrastructure event.
— Thursday: Biden will go to Arlington National Cemetery to honor Veterans Day and the 100th anniversary of the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier, and will speak at the Memorial Amphitheater.
— Friday: Biden will take part in the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation Leaders’ meeting, and will hold a Cabinet meeting focused on the infrastructure bill.
PLAYBOOK READS
WHITE HOUSE
FED UP — Biden interviewed LAEL BRAINARD to be Fed chair when she visited the White House last week, Bloomberg’s Craig Torres, Jennifer Jacobs, and Saleha Mohsin scooped. “[T]he White House has raised the possibility with some Senate Banking Committee members that [Chair JEROME] POWELL might not be reappointed,” they write. In addition, Fed Vice Chair for Supervision RANDAL QUARLES said Monday he’d step down shortly, giving Biden another opportunity to put his stamp on the central bank.
BIDEN DISAPPOINTS HBCUs — In recent weeks, dozens of Howard University students have taken over the social hub of the university to demand that the school fix their living conditions: Mold, rats and roaches are all over dorms and classrooms on their Washington, D.C., campus, the students say. The university says the complaints are exaggerated.
The students are also demanding that the Biden administration — including their most famous alum, Harris — and Congress follow through on a promise to provide adequate funding to HBCUs.
HBCUs have been underfunded for generations. The president’s Build Back Better agenda promised to improve their plight — to the tune of $45 billion proposed for minority-serving institutions (MSI), including HBCUs like Howard.
That total has been cut dramatically during negotiations. The latest BBB draft includes $10 billion in MSI funding, of which at least $2 billion would go to the more than 100 HBCUs. While that’s more than the federal government has ever dedicated to them, students are concerned it won’t cover badly needed upgrades.
All of this is potentially a real problem for a White House that’s already hemorrhaging political support.
The administration knows how it handles HBCUs will affect Biden’s standing with the Black community and especially young Black voters.
“[Biden] often says, ‘Dance with the one who brung you,’ and I think in many ways, African American institutions in particular and HBCUs in specific have been a big part of that, particularly during this election cycle,” said TONY ALLEN, the head of Biden’s HBCU advisory board, which provides advice and recommendations to the secretary of Education. Read Eugene’s story on this today
IMMIGRATION FILES — SUSAN RICE and other top officials quashed a plan this summer to vaccinate migrants in U.S. custody this summer, part of a trend in which centrists have taken the reins on Biden’s immigration policies to the dismay of progressives, report WaPo’s Nick Miroff and Sean Sullivan. Critics say the administration is elevating political concerns as “[m]ore recently, a group of Biden aides more attuned to national security and less sensitive to the activist community has begun asserting control,” in many cases breaking with Trump administration policies less than activists wanted.
ALL POLITICS
MAYOR PETE — Ruby Cramer spoke to JESSE MOSS, the director of “Mayor Pete,” a documentary about PETE BUTTIGIEG set to come out Friday, and Moss confessed that it was hard to get Buttigieg out of his shell.
“It’s not exactly that Buttigieg is ‘bullsh—ing’ us, as CHASTEN says in the first scene, or even that what you see is not, in fact, what you get. It’s the feeling of an inaccessible interior — of watching a person who is still becoming comfortable with himself and doing so on the biggest stage imaginable,” Cramer writes for POLITICO Magazine.
The documentary is really “a story about personal identity in politics — a man, then 37, a presidential candidate, a breakout star, now the most prominent member of Biden’s cabinet, who at every turn was unsure of how, or exactly how much, to share himself with the world.”
2022 WATCH — If STACEY ABRAMS opts not to challenge Georgia Gov. BRIAN KEMP to a rematch next year, DeKalb County CEO MICHAEL THURMOND sounds ready to jump into the race, per the Atlanta Journal-Constitution’s Patricia Murphy, Greg Bluestein and Tia Mitchell. “Thurmond said the GOP win in Virginia showed the need for Democrats to appeal to a broad coalition of progressives, moderates, and even disaffected Republicans to win statewide in Georgia.”
HOT ON THE LEFT — Buffalo Mayor BYRON BROWN’s write-in triumph over democratic socialist darling INDIA WALTON has progressives seeing red — and calling for his removal from a DNC position, report David Siders and Holly Otterbein. That’s not likely to happen. But the Democratic incumbent’s independent victory against the party nominee who dethroned him in the primary has left the left flank reeling, and frustrated over their inability to land big wins.
CONGRESS
TIME IS NOT ON THEIR SIDE — The Senate has only three work weeks left the rest of 2021, with a recess set for Dec. 10. But there’s “almost no chance that schedule holds at this point, with the Democratic majority facing a to-do list more daunting than a Black Friday sales rush. Congress has to fund the government past Dec. 3, pass a massive defense policy bill, finish out a $1.75 trillion party-line social spending bill and potentially maneuver around a U.S. credit default,” write Burgess Everett and Marianne LeVine in a must-read for anyone in Washington politics making holiday plans.
SUCCESS BY TRUMP’S MEASURE — Stocks were on the upswing Monday, “buoyed by fresh optimism about the government spending that would be unlocked by the passage of Biden’s infrastructure plan,” NBC’s Martha White reports. “The S&P 500 closed above 4,700 for the first time, and the Dow Jones Industrial Average added over 100 points, to close at 36,432.”
PLAYBOOKERS
The River View Estate — part of George Washington’s Mount Vernon — sold last week for $48 million. The 16,000-square-foot mansion is among the most expensive homes ever sold in the D.C. region, according to news reports. Per Chesapeake Bay Magazine, it sits on 16.5 acres on the Potomac, and almost every room overlooks the waterfront. It “boasts luxuries like a 15-seat movie theater, spa with sauna, and a large home gym. A carriage house provides parking and a guest house.” Here’s the Zillow page
Paul Gosar tweeted a photoshopped anime of him killing Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and attacking Joe Biden. Outrage ensued, to which Gosar’s spokeswoman said “everyone needs to relax.” AOC responded that Gosar — “a creepy member” — “will face no consequences” because Kevin McCarthy will give him a pass.
Donald Trump, naturally, said at an NRCC fundraiser that Glenn Youngkin would have lost without him. He’s also been complaining about Kevin McCarthy since 13 Republicans voted for BIF last week.
Barack Obama mistook Scotland for Ireland.
Beto O’Rourke really was born to be in it — at least based on his try-and-try-again approach to seeking public office. On Monday night he teased an announcement, presumably that he’s running for Texas governor.
Amy Klobuchar celebrated the reopening of the U.S.-Canada border in style.
SPOTTED: Rep. Karen Bass (D-Calif.) having breakfast in Manhattan at Michael’s with Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot.
MEDIA MOVES — Kasie Hunt has hired “Meet the Press” senior producer Allie Sandza to be her supervising producer at CNN+. Her first full day was Monday. … Julian Pecquet has been named Washington correspondent for the Paris-based Jeune Afrique Group, publisher of The Africa Report. He previously founded Foreign Lobby Report and covered foreign policy for Al-Monitor and The Hill.
FIRST IN PLAYBOOK — Kevin Walsh is joining Invariant. He previously was a government and regulatory affairs executive at IBM Corporation, and is a Claire McCaskill alum.
— Brian Papp is now a managing director at FTI Government Affairs, working on the trade and labor client portfolios. He most recently was Democratic staff director on the Senate Finance Subcommittee on International Trade, Customs and Global Competitiveness.
— Sarah Boison is now digital director at the Department of Transportation. She most recently was director of digital comms at the Climate Reality Project.
STAFFING UP — Katie Hendrickson is now director of congressional affairs for the USTR. She most recently was senior associate director for presidential boards and commissions at the White House. … Alexandra Robinson is now deputy speechwriter for the Department of Labor. She most recently was press assistant for Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer.
TRANSITIONS — David Mann has been appointed VP of regulatory and government affairs at Oberon Fuels. He most recently has been a senior director in the plastics division of the American Chemistry Council. … Cole Lyle has been named executive director of Mission Roll Call. He most recently was president of the Working Warrior Foundation, and is a VA and Richard Burr alum. …
… Beverly Hart is now legislative director for Rep. Dean Phillips (D-Minn.). She most recently was senior legislative assistant for Rep. Sean Patrick Maloney (D-N.Y.). … Sam Kuebler is now legislative assistant for Rep. Drew Ferguson (R-Ga.). He previously was legislative assistant for Rep. Adam Kinzinger (R-Ill.). … Meghan Pazik is now legislative assistant for Rep. Julia Brownley (D-Calif.). She previously was legislative assistant for Rep. Sean Casten (D-Ill.).
WEEKEND WEDDING — Jim Newell, senior politics writer at Slate, and Tierney Sneed, digital writer at CNN, got married Sunday in Key West. Pic … SPOTTED: Dave Weigel and Margarita Noriega, Dylan Scott, David Catanese, Paul McLeod and Sarah Mimms, Garrett Quinn, Ben Jacobs, Cameron Joseph, Liz Glover, Hamilton Nolan, Caitlin Owens and Lauren Fox.
HAPPY BIRTHDAY: POLITICO co-founder John Harris … Sen. Sherrod Brown (D-Ohio) … Rep. John Katko (R-N.Y.) … Sarah Isgur … Endpoints’ Zachary Brennan … USA Today’s David Mastio and Matt Brown … Hugh Ferguson … Sunshine Sachs’ Claire Tonneson … Peter Roff … Hunter Hall of the Picard Group … Matthew Ellison … Nancy Jacobson of No Labels … Wisconsin state Treasurer Sarah Godlewski … Marcus Switzer … Chelsea Rodriguez (3-0) … Geoff Verhoff of Akin Gump … László Baksay … HuffPost’s Arthur Delaney … Capital One’s Jill Shatzen Kerr … Peter Lichtenbaum of Covington & Burling … Glenn Gerstell … Matthias Reynolds of Targeted Victory … The Economist’s Idrees Kahloon … Kendra Kostek … Catherine “Simmy” Jain … API’s Bethany Aronhalt … Kevin Sullivan … former Sen. Bob Graham (D-Fla.) … Joel Seidman … Marie Baldassarre of Rep. Ro Khanna’s (D-Calif.) office … Catherine Chen … Karen Scott … Tara Patel … Kevin Bailey … Alex Curd … Marc Kimball … former Rep. Scott Tipton (R-Colo.) … Charles Kupperman … David Levine of BerlinRosen
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26.) AMERICAN MINUTE
27.) CAFFEINATED THOUGHTS
28.) CONSERVATIVE DAILY NEWS
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29.) PJ MEDIA
The Morning Briefing: The Americans Who Matter Are Opposed to Vaccine Mandates
Top O’ the Briefing
Happy Tuesday, dear Kruiser Morning Briefing friends. More bonfires, fewer arrests. That’s my personal plan going forward.
A little bit of business before we get to the regular stuff: it looks like Twitter isn’t letting us post full tweets right now. Based on what I can see at our sister site Twitchy, all that’s showing up now is the text of the tweet and a link. The pictures aren’t there, which is a lot of what I do here, as regular readers know. A couple of the daily features are going to be put on the shelf until I figure out a new way to do it. It’s probably a good time to shake things up anyway.
We’ve been discussing the mandate fetishists all year here now, most recently about the toll they’re taking on first responders in New York City. The mandates have been taking a toll on health care workers too. In fact, it seems like all of the people we really need to keep things running properly in this great land have some misgivings about the raging mandates that the Democrats are so fond of.
Athena has got the latest chapter in this saga for us:
In an industry already squeezed between labor shortages and interruptions to established best practices, America’s trucking organizations are warning the Biden Administration not to make things worse with a capricious, illogical vaccine mandate.
“With one of the most mobile workforces in the nation, the logistical challenge of vaccinating 3.6 million truck drivers as they move cross country is nearly impossible as drivers may not return to their base of operations for several days or even weeks at a time,” wrote John Lyboldt, president of the Truckload Carriers Association, in a letter to the U.S. Department of Transportation. “This natural lack of consistency regarding the individual schedules of drivers presents an even larger challenge when considering the weekly testing provision of the forthcoming mandate. Adding to this is the exorbitant cost of implementing a weekly testing regime for our mobile workforce and the added burden on our nation’s laboratories, which the industry is already heavily relying upon to detect drug and alcohol users in compliance with the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration’s [FMCSA] Drug and Alcohol Clearinghouse.”
Lyboldt also expressed concern that the mandate could prompt qualified drivers to flee the industry, as it has done to other labor forces where similar mandates have been applied, such as municipal workers in cities nationwide. “TCA believes the ramifications of the vaccine mandate on the trucking industry would decimate the current driver pool, creating unacceptably long wait times for freight deliveries across the nation … Finding qualified drivers to haul the nation’s freight safely and efficiently is already a challenge within the industry, a challenge which will only be exacerbated under a massive driver exodus.”
Joe Biden’s America, ladies and gentlemen!
Despite the ongoing disaster, Biden and his puppet masters are encouraging business owners to continue participating in it even though a court has called a temporary halt to all of it.
The soy boy betas who pollute politics, academia, and the mainstream media are the strongest proponents of vaccine mandates, and we really don’t need any of them to continue functioning. They’re all busy jackboot-stomping all over our freedoms and not contributing anything else to society.
I’d much rather be paying attention to the nurses, cops, firefighters, and truckers.
VIP Week Update
We’re celebrating the second anniversary of the launch of our VIP program all week. Many of us will be writing nostalgia pieces that I’ll share snippets of here for the rest of the week. Paula kicked it off with “It’s Been a 16-Year Wild Ride at PJ Media,” which features a nice pic of a younger, thinner, Stephen Kruiser from back in the PJTV days. Here’s a bit from the post:
The word “blog” was only a few years old then. Five years earlier, there were only about two dozen blogs on the internet, but by 2005 that number had exploded to nearly 50 million. I don’t think that anyone could have imagined the changes we’d see over the next 16 years, not only in the news and political landscape but also in the evolution of online media. Pajamas Media was an upstart at the time, challenging the Goliaths in the mainstream media who thought they were too big to fail. They had money, power, prestige, arrogance, and a sense of entitlement. And they weren’t watching their backs.
Simon and Johnson launched Pajamas Media in the wake of the “Rathergate” scandal — where Real Journalist and CBS anchor Dan Rather used forged military documents to try and smear George W. Bush. In the wake of the embarrassing episode, CBS apologist Jonathan Klein made a snarky comment about bloggers in their pajamas writing without editorial oversight. Thus the name Pajamas Media was born.
There are a lot more fond memories in the post, including some vintage VodkaPundit from 2005.
All week long we’re offering a 40% discount — our largest ever — when you sign up using the promo code 2022.
It’s a party you don’t want to miss.
PJ Media
VodkaPundit: Have You Seen Kamala Harris? Neither Has Anyone Else
AWKWARD. BOOM: The Star Witness for Prosecution in Rittenhouse Trial Just Blew Up the State’s Case
Truckers Warn Against Biden Vaccine Mandate
Biden Demagogues Americans in Bizarre Presser
While World Focuses on ‘Islamophobia,’ Christians Live Precarious Existence in Muslim Lands
Camilla Parker Bowles Reportedly Can’t Stop Talking About Biden’s Fart Heard ‘Round the World
Trump, House Republicans, Spending, and Credibility
Florida Leads the Way, Plans Special Legislative Session to Prohibit Biden’s Vaccine Mandate
Nationwide Vaccine Mandate Walk-outs Planned for the Next Four Days
Academic Wants a U.S. ‘War’ Against ‘Climate Change’
At Gathering of Presidential Hopefuls, Pence Slams Biden on Israel
Is Our Military Being Used as Vaccine Guinea Pigs? A Flight Surgeon’s Testimony Will Make You Wonder
Biden’s Plan to Compensate Illegals Is Ridiculously Unpopular
Townhall Mothership
America Is Hanging on by a Thread
Like one does. Pete Buttigieg is Focused on…’Racist’ Bridges
China Prepares to Challenge the US Navy
Is MO’s Second Amendment Preservation Act Good For Criminals?
Cam&Co. Gun Control Is Dooming Dems To Defeat In Rural America
ABC News Says It Talked To Gun Owners. They Talked To Gun Control Activists
Turley: Why is the FBI investigating the theft of a diary?
Film review and retrospective: The Emperors Club
MSNBC shares an inflation hot take that’s BEGGING for a coveted Ron Klain retweet; Updated
VIP
VodkaPundit, Part Trois: Don’t Look Now, But There’s a Nuclear Nightmare A-Brewing
Trump Reveals When He’ll ‘Probably’ Announce His 2024 Intentions
Democrats Constantly Prove That We Need Election Integrity
GOLD Schlichter: Glenn Youngkin Was the Right Guy at the Right Time
Around the interwebz
SpaceX successfully brings crew of four home from the International Space Station
Senior Sprint: 105-Year-Old Julia ‘Hurricane’ Hawkins Just Set a New Track-and-Field Record
Bee Me
Democrats Make Environmental Commitment To Use Only 100% Recycled Talking Points https://t.co/naACTFDic6
— The Babylon Bee (@TheBabylonBee) November 9, 2021
The Kruiser Kabana
Kabana Tunes
30.) WHITE HOUSE DOSSIER
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Editor
Cut to the News
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USA
31.) THE DISPATCH
The Morning Dispatch: The Debate Over Paying Families Separated at the Border
Plus: The Justice Department has considered payments in response to an ACLU lawsuit.
The Dispatch Staff | 2 |
Happy Tuesday! It’s Justin Fields’ league, and the rest of the NFL is just living in it. (Yes, we know the Bears still lost.)
Quick Hits: Today’s Top Stories
- The Justice Department announced Monday it has indicted a 22-year-old Ukrainian national and a 28-year-old Russian national for their involvement in a series of ransomware attacks on businesses and government entities—including this summer’s Kaseya attack—and is seeking to extradite the 22-year-old from Poland where he was arrested. The Justice Department also said it seized more than $6 million in ransom payments, and the Treasury Department on Monday sanctioned Russian cryptocurrency exchange Chatex for allegedly facilitating those payments.
- Reuters reported Monday that—according to satellite imagery from late October—China’s military has constructed mock-ups of several different U.S. warships in the Taklamakan Desert near Xinjiang, potentially as training targets. At least one aircraft carrier and two Arleigh Burke-class guided missile destroyers are seen in the desert, where China has previously tested ballistic missiles. Asked about the report Monday, Chinese Foreign Ministry Spokesman Wang Wenbin said he’s “not aware of the situation you mentioned.”
- Federal Reserve Gov. Randal Quarles announced Monday he will resign from the central bank’s seven-member board of governors at the end of December, opening up another vacancy for President Joe Biden to fill. Quarles—nominated by former President Donald Trump in 2017—had just completed a four-year term as the Fed’s vice chairman for bank supervision.
- The January 6 select committee announced Monday it had issued subpoenas to six additional advisers to former President Trump, including John Eastman, Jason Miller, Michael Flynn, and Bill Stepien.
Biden Administration Weighs Paying Families Who Were Separated at the Border
It’s been about a week and a half since the Wall Street Journal first reported the Biden administration was in the process of negotiating settlements of up to $450,000 per person with families separated at the southern border under the Trump administration’s zero-tolerance policy, and the White House seems to finally be cohering around a single message.
When first asked about the story by Fox News’ Peter Doocy on November 3, President Biden dismissed the report as “garbage,” declaring that payments of $450,000 per person are “not going to happen.” But less than 24 hours later, the White House clarified this dismissal.
“What [the president] was reacting to was the dollar figure that you mentioned to him yesterday,” White House deputy press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre told Doocy in a press briefing the following day. “If it saves taxpayer dollars and puts the disastrous history of the previous administration’s use of zero tolerance and family separation behind us, the president is perfectly comfortable with the Department of Justice settling with the individuals and families who are currently in litigation with the U.S. government.”
Jean-Pierre’s comments refer to a class action lawsuit filed by the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) against the Trump administration in October 2019 seeking compensation from the federal government on behalf of the immigrant children and their parents “cruelly and inhumanely separated from each other” along the United States’ southern border in 2017 and 2018.
The lawsuit—which has grown to include about 940 claimants—alleges that separated children and parents were not told when or if they would see each other again, and that the policy inflicted “irreparable psychological and physical damage” on migrants for “no legitimate reason.” The complaint also declared government officials “were unable to identify which children belonged to which parents” once reunification efforts began.
The Trump administration began separating children from their families in El Paso, Texas, as part of a pilot program in 2017 aimed at deterring illegal immigration at the southern border, and that pilot program was extended along the entire U.S.-Mexico border in April 2018 as part of the administration’s “zero tolerance” policy. The policy, according to its advocates within the administration, would allow enforcement officials to detain illegal immigrants who arrived at the border with a child, and thus disincentivize illegal immigrants and coyotes from bringing children knowing that families would be released into the country. As we wrote to you a year ago:
The legal rationale [for child separation] dates back to the 1997 Flores v. Reno court settlement, which stipulates that children in immigration custody cannot be detained for longer than 20 days. In order for the Trump administration to detain adults for longer than 20 days, therefore, the children had to be separated from the parents.
Former President Trump repealed the policy via executive order in June 2018, but his administration confirmed the following year that roughly 5,500 children were separated from their families before that happened—and the parents of about 545 hadn’t been located as of October 2020. (A Department of Homeland Security spokesperson told The Dispatch at the time that many of the parents of those remaining 545 children did not want “such reunification to occur.”)
Biden has taken a different approach to the families separated under the policy, signing an executive order his second week in office that established a task force to aid in the reunification process. And over the past two weeks, it’s become clear the administration plans to offer affected families some form of payment, even if the exact figure isn’t settled yet.
Worth Your Time
- NPR’s Tim Mak has a new book out about the downfall of the National Rifle Association (NRA), and Politico published an excerpt on Monday detailing how the decades-old organization decided to eschew the legislative process in the wake of the Sandy Hook shooting and double down on gun rights as identity politics. “At 5:30 a.m. one morning in early 2013, soon after a gunman in Sandy Hook killed 26 people, National Rifle Association lobbyist Abra Belke was woken up by a phone call,” Mak writes. “She was shocked to hear a U.S. senator on the line angrily shouting, ‘Why would you do this?’ The lawmaker was Sen. Mary Landrieu, a Democrat from a red state, saying she had just been put in an impossible situation by the NRA. The subject of the call was an ad produced by the NRA’s public relations firm, Ackerman McQueen, which had targeted President Obama’s daughters: ‘Are the president’s kids more important than yours?’ the narrator asked. ‘Then why is he skeptical about putting armed security in our schools when his kids are protected by armed guards at their school? … He’s just another elitist hypocrite.’ NRA HQ had released the spot without telling their lobbyists about it first. … The ad was another example of the tension between the NRA’s messaging strategists at Ackerman McQueen, and the Institute for Legislative Action (ILA), the NRA’s lobbying arm. While the lobbyists were on the Hill trying to make deals, Ack-Mac and NRA CEO Wayne LaPierre were cooking up this divisive advertisement. Good for the base, bad for legislation.”
- While Glenn Youngkin’s victory in Virginia last week led many progressives to circle the wagons around critical race theory and impugn any Republican concerns as bad-faith (or worse), others engaged in introspection following the electoral backlash. “Electoral necessity shouldn’t be a prerequisite for progressives to engage in internal criticism,” Eric Levitz writes in New York Magazine. “And it seems to me that some of the practices that Rufo & Co. have dubbed ‘CRT’ do warrant the left’s disavowal, less on grounds of political pragmatism than on those of ideological principle. … A decent number of progressive groups and well-intentioned school districts do seem to be hiring quack consultants to dispense laughable race malarkey and recipes for organizational self-sabotage. Which is bad. And progressives shouldn’t hesitate to say so. Our institutions should not be patronizing the dissemination of bizarre racial stereotypes, or modes of ostensibly anti-racist discourse that credit ‘white culture’ for ‘the scientific method.’ This would be true even if this stuff came with no political downside. But it is even more true now that the right is exploiting slideshows on ‘color group collectivism’ to discredit the progressive movement’s broader agenda for racial justice.”
- The use of “workarounds” may be pivotal in engineering, but former Indiana Gov. Mitch Daniels believes they’re corrosive when it comes to governance. “Ideas for redesigning the machinery of self-governance are always in order, and sometimes badly needed. But discarding or violating rules while they are still in effect is corrosive of the trust on which all depends,” he writes for the Washington Post, referencing the OSHA’s vaccine/testing mandate for large businesses, the Federal Trade Commission’s jettisoning of a formal rule on vertical acquisitions, and Democrats’ efforts to cram immigration reform into the reconciliation process. Daniels concludes by quoting Russian chess champion and human rights advocate Garry Kasparov on Russia’s post-Soviet relapse into autocracy: “What we didn’t understand is that democracy is a process, not a result. The moment you go against the process, the moment you accept that your guy, who has the best intentions in this world, can violate the rules, can rig the result with a little bit of a tweak—it starts with little tweaks here and there—then that’s it.”
Presented Without Comment
The definition of a close contact is getting broader in China, where authorities are hunting down every potential COVID-19 infection.
Also Presented Without Comment
Worlds colliding: A Jan. 6 rioter tells Belarusian state media that he traveled to Ukraine when he realized he was wanted by the FBI, then hiked on foot through its Pripyat marshes to seek asylum in Belarus
Toeing the Company Line
- On Monday’s episode of Advisory Opinions, Sarah and David engage in some more Supreme Court talk before turning to the legal fate of the OSHA’s large employer vaccine mandate. Plus, jury selection in the Ahmaud Arbery case and John Durham’s indictment of Igor Danchenko in the special counsel’s investigation into the origins of the Trump/Russia collusion probe.
- Oliver Wiseman attended last week’s National Conservatism Conference in Orlando. He came away with a few questions, including a big one: Has the group’s moment passed?
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.) DC CLOTHESLINE
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42.) ARRA NEWS SERVICE
43.) REDSTATE
Directed Verdict and Big Problems for the Prosecution in the Rittenhouse Case
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44.) WORLD NET DAILY
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45.) MSNBC
November 9, 2021 THE LATEST As we wait for news from the DOJ on whether Steve Bannon will face legal consequences for failing to comply with the special committee investigating the events of Jan. 6, many are growing impatient, writes Joyce Vance. However, “what appears to be delay here isn’t necessarily a negative.”
“Now, for many, the well of confidence in the Justice Department has run dry,” Vance writes. “But DOJ, even if it wanted to be more transparent, faces significant restrictions on revealing the details or even the existence of a grand jury investigation prior to indictment. In fact, people other than witnesses who make disclosures can face prosecution. Silence doesn’t mean inaction. Frustratingly, it means we don’t know.”
Read Joyce Vance’s full analysis here and don’t forget to check out the rest of your Tuesday MSNBC Daily. TOP STORIES Ted Cruz thinks Big Bird is a government shill who must be stopped. Read More Many white parents weren’t taught America’s whole truth as kids. And it shows. Read More Trump failed twice — first when he tried to pass his own plan, and then again when he tried to sabotage Biden’s plan. Read More To Hawley, Crash Bandicoot and depictions of coitus are more harmful than the conspiracy theories he still defends. 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 10 p.m. ET.
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, New York Times opinion writer Jay Caspian Kang joins Chris to talk about assimilation amid a wave anti-Asian violence, increasing wealth gaps, limited representation and the need for more solidarity in pursuit of upward mobility. His new book, ‘The Loneliest Americans,’ probes what it means to be Asian American at this moment. Listen to the new episode now. Follow MSNBC
Check out the MSNBC channel on Apple News
Download the NBC News Mobile App and watch MSNBC
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46.) BIZPAC REVIEW
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47.) ABC
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48.) NBC MORNING RUNDOWN
To ensure delivery to your inbox add email@mail.nbcnews.com to your contacts Today’s Top Stories from NBC News TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 2021 Good morning, NBC News readers.
Centrist Democrats are in the driver’s seat now that the infrastructure deal is heading to President Joe Biden’s desk. The latest fallout from the tragic Astroworld festival crush, plus when is the healthiest time to go to sleep?
Here’s what we’re watching this Tuesday morning. Centrist Democrats now control the fate of President Joe Biden’s social spending and climate package after Congress passed his bipartisan infrastructure bill late last week.
But progressive activists are organizing to keep the pressure on House moderates to follow through and vote for the social safety net package, with some feeling anxious that the left gave up its main leverage by passing the infrastructure measure before a vote on the larger spending package.
Nevertheless, the White House is planning on deploying top Cabinet officials as part of a major push to promote passage of the infrastructure bill, hoping the much-needed win will translate to a political boost.
The road show begins Wednesday with Biden himself traveling to the Port of Baltimore even before he’s signed the bill into law.
Stocks surged to record highs Monday, with Wall Street buoyed by fresh optimism about the billions in government spending that will be unlocked once Biden signs the bill into law. Experts expect an infusion of spending in a variety of sectors from construction, engineering and transportation to broadband, the electrical grid and green energy. Tuesday’s Top Stories
The boy suffered brain trauma after he was trampled, said the high-profile civil rights lawyer Benjamin Crump, who has been retained by his parents. As the number of lawsuits mounts, surprise festival performer Drake also made his first public statement since Friday’s tragedy. Falling asleep from 10 to 11 p.m. is associated with lower risk of developing heart disease, according to a report published Monday in the European Heart Journal—Digital Health. The plans would ban current and future investigations into allegedly unlawful killings by state forces — military and police — as well as by paramilitary groups. The proposals have been met with almost wholesale rejection across the political spectrum in Northern Ireland. Parents have a range of concerns about the Covid-19 vaccine for kids — from safety to effectiveness. Pediatricians share some of the questions they’re getting and how they respond. Also in the News
Editor’s Pick
The football star has appeared in cheeky commercials for the insurance company for about a decade. But on Sunday ads featuring Rodgers all but disappeared from the airwaves after his controversial remarks about the Covid-19 vaccine. Select
Amazon is now hosting early Black Friday deals — here are our picks for the best ones across multiple categories. One Fun Thing
Santa may have fewer eyes in homes this Christmas season after a Georgia judge — jokingly — banned the Elf on the Shelf.
Cobb County Superior Court Chief Judge Robert Leonard posted a mock order on Twitter last week banishing these elves.
“Tired of living in Elf on the Shelf tyranny? Not looking forward to the Elf forgetting to move and causing your kids emotional distress? I am a public servant and will take the heat for you. My gift to tired parents,” Leonard tweeted.
Read the full story here. Want to receive NBC Breaking News and Special Alerts in your inbox? Get the NBC News Mobile App 30 Rockefeller Plaza New York, NY 10112 |
49.) NBC FIRST READ
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From NBC’s Chuck Todd, Mark Murray, Ben Kamisar and Alec Rich
FIRST READ: Here are 10 dates to highlight on the 2022 primary calendar
With Election Day 2022 is now less than a year away, it’s time to get to know the important primary dates on the midterm calendar.
So here are some of the key days we’re going to be watching:
March 8: NC
This is the first big primary date for next year, with competitive Democratic and GOP contests vying to fill the Senate seat being vacated by retiring Sen. Richard Burr, R-N.C. The Democratic field includes former state Supreme Court Chief Justice Cheri Beasley, Jeff Jackson and Erica Smith, while the GOP field includes Reps. Ted Budd and Mark Walker, R-N.C., as well as former Gov. Pat McCrory.
May 3: IN, OH
After North Carolina comes Ohio, where Republicans like Josh Mandel, Jane Timken and J.D. Vance are running for the nomination to replace retiring Sen. Rob Portman, R-Ohio. On the Democratic side, Rep. Tim Ryan, D-Ohio, and progressive Morgan Harper are running for this Senate seat.
AP Photo/Jeff Dean
May 17: KY, OR, PA
All eyes will be on Pennsylvania, where a large and diverse Democratic field – John Fetterman, Malcolm Kenyatta, Rep. Conor Lamb, D-Pa., and Val Arkoosh – is running for the open Senate seat being vacated by outgoing Sen. Pat Toomey, R-Pa. And expect potentially competitive GOP contests for Senate (which will include Sean Parnell) and governor.
Also in Oregon, we’ll see the primary races to replace term-limited Gov. Kate Brown.
May 24: AL, AR, GA
Georgia’s on our mind on this day, with GOP Gov. Brian Kemp getting a primary challenge from pro-Trump (and former Democrat) Vernon Jones, while Herschel Walker is in the driver’s seat in the GOP Senate primary for the right to take on Sen. Raphael Warnock, D-Ga.
Also on this day, we’ll get the results from the GOP field vying to replace retiring Sen. Richard Shelby, R-Ala, which includes Rep. Mo Brooks, R-Ala.
June 28: CO, IL, MD, NY, OK, UT
We’ll be watching the Democratic and GOP gubernatorial primaries in New York after Gov. Kathy Hochul succeeded Andrew Cuomo, as well as Democratic and GOP gubernatorial primaries in Maryland to replace term-limited Gov. Larry Hogan.
Aug. 2: AZ, KS, MI, MO, WA
Lots of action on this day: In Arizona, Republicans are running for the right to take on Sen. Mark Kelly, D-Ariz.; in Kansas, the GOP will get its nominee against Democratic Gov. Laura Kelly; in Michigan, the GOP will get its pick to run against Democratic Gov. Gretchen Whitmer; and in Missouri, there’s a crowded Republican field – including former Gov. Eric Greitens, state AG Eric Schmitt and Rep. Vicky Hartzler, R-Mo. – to replace retiring Sen. Roy Blunt, R-Mo.
Aug. 9: CT, MN, VT, WI
The next week we’ll see a crowded field of Democrats running for the right to take on Sen. Ron Johnson, R-Wis. (who still hasn’t announced if he’s running for re-election), as well as the GOP pick for the right to take on Democratic Gov. Tony Evers in this all-important battleground state.
Aug. 16: AK, WY
It’s a big day for former President Donald Trump and his influence within the GOP, when we’ll get the Sen. Lisa Murkowski, R-Alaska, vs. Kelly Tshibaka Senate primary – in addition to that Rep. Liz Cheney, R-Wyo., vs. Harriet Hageman contest in Wyoming,
Aug. 23: FL
We’ll find out which Democrat – Rep. Charlie Crist or Agriculture Commissioner Nikki Fried – will take on GOP Gov. Ron DeSantis.
Sept. 13: DE, RI, NH
And this is the final big day we have circled. Who becomes the nominee to run against Sen. Maggie Hassan, D-N.H.? Is it Gov. John Sununu? Or does he even run?
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Tweet of the Day: It’s Sununu Decision Day
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Data Download: The numbers you need to know today
$13.4 million: The amount that’s already been spent on TV/radio/digital advertising in New Hampshire’s Senate race, per AdImpact, before Republican Gov. Chris Sununu announced his decision on whether to run.
6: The number of countries in the top 10 for largest Covid-19 case increases that are in Europe.
46,627,764: 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 126,531 more since yesterday morning.)
759,163: The number of deaths in the United States from the virus so far, per the most recent data from NBC News. (That’s 1,309 more since yesterday morning.)
432,111,860: The number of total vaccine doses administered in the U.S., per the CDC. (That’s 4,199,532 more since yesterday morning.)
24,795,097: The number of booster vaccine doses administered in the U.S., per the CDC. (That’s 1,184,236 more since yesterday morning.)
361,848: The number of children under the age of 12 who have been vaccinated, per the CDC.
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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More subpoenas issued in Jan. 6 probe
“The House committee investigating the Jan. 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol issued a new batch of subpoenas Monday to former administration and re-election campaign aides who supported President Donald Trump’s effort to overturn the 2020 election,” per NBC News.
“Six people were subpoenaed: Bill Stepien, Trump’s 2020 re-election campaign manager; Jason Miller, a senior campaign adviser; Angela McCallum, a campaign aide; John Eastman, a conservative lawyer who was reported to have advised Trump and others in the administration; Michael Flynn, Trump’s former national security adviser; and Bernard Kerik, an adviser who the committee said used Washington, D.C., hotels as “command centers” for the campaign’s election strategy.”
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ICYMI: What ELSE is happening in the world?
A child handed over to U.S. soldiers at Kabul’s airport in desperation is still missing.
The fate of the House Democratic social spending bill is in the hands of five moderate lawmakers who are waiting on a score from the CBO.
NJ.com reports that former President Donald Trump called the New Jersey truck driver who toppled the Democratic state Senate president in last week’s election.
Arizona Republican Rep. Paul Gosar tweeted an anime-style video where a cartoon of the congressman attacks New York Democratic Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and President Biden.
General Electric is splitting into three companies.
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Download the NBC News Mobile App
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50.) CBS
51.) REASON
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52.) MANHATTAN INSTITUTE
53.) LOUDER WITH CROWDER
Senator-Elect Edward Durr is the feel-good story of the 2021 election, or Senator-Elect “for now”, I should say. I’ll get to that in a minute. Durr, … MORE
54.) TOWNHALL
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55.) REALCLEARPOLITICS MORNING NOTE
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56.) REALCLEARPOLITICS TODAY
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57.) CENTER FOR SECURITY POLICY
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58.) BERNARD GOLDBERG
59.) SARA A. CARTER
60.) TWITCHY
61.) HOT AIR
62.) 1440 DAILY DIGEST
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63.) AMERICAN INSTITUTE FOR ECONOMIC RESEARCH
64.) NATIONAL REVIEW
65.) POLITICAL WIRE
66.) RASMUSSEN REPORTS
67.) ZEROHEDGE
68.) GATEWAY PUNDIT
69.) FRONTPAGE MAG
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72.) FOUNDATION FOR ECONOMIC EDUCATION
73.) POPULIST PRESS
A ‘star’ witness for the prosecution in the Kyle Rittenhouse trial just blew the entire case for the prosecution, after he admitted to pointing his own gun at Rittenhouse before the teen shot his bicep off.
|
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TOP STORIES:
-
🚨🚨Rittenhouse Witness Blows Case For Prosecution… ‘Should Be Over Immediately’
-
Trump Just Made Big Vow To The American People
-
‘She Was Actually On My Plane’: Greene Drops a Bomb On Pelosi
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DOJ Exposes Big Kamala Harris Problem
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John Durham’s Next Target Revealed….
- GOP Senator Announces He May Run Against Trump…
- Biden’s Spending Bill Could Cripple $6 Billion Industry
- Biden Shutting Down Another Major Pipeline… Gas Will Be INSANE!
- Press Secretary Jen Psaki ‘Not Seen For 11 Days’
- George Floyd’s Family Threatens Jurors In Kyle Rittenhouse Case…
- NBC: Trump looks like he’ll run to reclaim the presidency in 2024
- Creepy Chuck Schumer Busted In The Act…
- BREAKING: ‘Many’ More Durham Indictments Coming…
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IN DEPTH:
|
- Mike Pence Strikes the Iranian Regime 34 mins ago
- 27 States Sue Biden Admin Over Vax Mandate… 34 mins ago
- Learn from California’s Smart-City Screwups 34 mins ago
- HISTORIC: Registered Reps Outnumber Dems in Florida 1 hour ago
- Slamming Vape Products With Taxes Is Regressive 2 hours ago
- Media Outlets Report Fake News On COVID Hospitalizations 2 hours ago
- NBA Declares… The Vaccinated are now the Unvaccinated… 2 hours ago
- Hispanic voter gives brutally honest reason for supporting Glenn Youngkin 3 hours ago
- Nothing Wrong With Chris Pratt Celebrating His Newborn’s Health 3 hours ago
- NFL Player Posts Video with Guns Threatening To Kill Someone… 3 hours ago
- Trucking industry short over 72k drivers 3 hours ago
- Durham Building Bigger Conspiracy Case 3 hours ago
- Biden’s Afghan war crime whitewashed 3 hours ago
- Is cyber-terrorism a threat to national security? 3 hours ago
- NASCAR Condemns ‘Let’s Go, Brandon’ Chant… 3 hours ago
- Will Taiwan Situation Escalate? 3 hours ago
- Saudi Arabia & Israel Move Toward Security Cooperation 3 hours ago
- Lockheed wins F‑22 $10.9B contract 3 hours ago
- Did Marines REALLY Get ‘Crushed’ By Royal Marines? 3 hours ago
- Sen. Rick Scott: Anti-BDS Laws When GOP takes Congress 3 hours ago
- Biden considering shutting down ANOTHER pipeline 3 hours ago
- Leftist Urge Accelerating COP26 Schedule 3 hours ago
- Health Sec: Get Booster Or Get Christmas Restrictions 3 hours ago
- Global COVID cases hit 250 million 3 hours ago
- Police: Syrian Train Attacker Stabbed Passengers ‘Randomly’ 3 hours ago
- Taliban Appointed as 44 Governors, Police Chiefs 4 hours ago
- Biden Yells At Reporter Who Calls Him out For Lying 4 hours ago
- Which Way Will Manchin Jump? 4 hours ago
- Instead of “Retaking” K‑12 Education, Let’s Remake It 4 hours ago
- NBA: Get Boosters or Face Game Day Testing 4 hours ago
- Camilla Parker Bowles SHOCKED By Biden’s ‘long fart’ 4 hours ago
- Propaganda for kids: Big Bird gets vaxxed 4 hours ago
- Vin Diesel Asks Dwayne Johnson Back For ‘Fast And Furious’ finale 4 hours ago
- Faith Hill & Tim McGraw Yellowstone Prequel Trailer 4 hours ago
- Terry Bradshaw slams Aaron Rodgers over vax 4 hours ago
- NBC’s Todd: Dems in ‘Grave Danger’ of Losing Congress 4 hours ago
- SHOCK: Broncos end Cowboys’ 6‑game streak 4 hours ago
- NFL teams PISSED at Aaron Rodgers double standard 4 hours ago
- Boston Antifa protest turns violent 4 hours ago
- NBA, NBPA Now Requiring Booster Shot 4 hours ago
- NBPC Head: ‘biggest’ border security crisis ‘ever’ 4 hours ago
- Inflation hits NYC’s Iconic $1 Pizza Slices 4 hours ago
- WH Chief Believes Vax Mandate Will be Upheld 4 hours ago
- Hackers breach nine global organizations 4 hours ago
- Biden Advisor Wants to Push FURTHER Left 4 hours ago
- Where’s Gavin? Newsom Has Disappeared 4 hours ago
- COLD WINTER: Natural-Gas Exports Hike Prices for Utilities 4 hours ago
- OPEC+ and Saudis Stay Cautious on Oil Output 4 hours ago
- Truck Companies SCRAMBLE to Find Spare Parts 4 hours ago
TOP STORIES:
-
Ohio ‘Republicans’ Move Forward With Removing Rep. Jim Jordan’s Seat
-
Mandatory Vaccination for air travel is coming…
- Biden To Announce Big Agreement With China’s Xi Jinping
- White House: Move forward with mandate despite court freeze
-
Rittenhouse Witness Blows Case For Prosecution… ‘Should Be Over Immediately’
-
Trump Just Made Big Vow To The American People
- GOP Senator Announces He May Run Against Trump…
- Biden’s Spending Bill Could Cripple $6 Billion Industry
- Biden Shutting Down Another Major Pipeline… Gas Will Be INSANE!
- ‘She Was Actually On My Plane’: Greene Drops a Bomb On Pelosi
- Press Secretary Jen Psaki ‘Not Seen For 11 Days’
- DOJ Exposes Big Kamala Harris Problem
- John Durham’s Next Target Revealed….
- George Floyd’s Family Threatens Jurors In Kyle Rittenhouse Case…
- NBC: Trump looks like he’ll run to reclaim the presidency in 2024
|
IN DEPTH:
|
- Biden Tells Businesses to Proceed With Vax Mandates Despite Court-Ordered Pause 54 mins ago
- Tennessee Bill Prohibiting Hospitals from Restricting Visitors2 hours ago
- Antibody Cocktail Reduced Infection Risk by 82% for 8 Months 2 hours ago
- Biden Exposed On Camera Insulting Every American 3 hours ago
- Biden/Harris Have Just Put Their Entire Party at Risk 3 hours ago
- America Is Hanging on by a Thread 3 hours ago
- Massive Turnout To Protest Vaccine Mandates in LA 3 hours ago
- Al Gore unveils Mass Surveillance System for Climate…4 hours ago
- US inflation expectations surge to another record high, New York Fed survey shows 5 hours ago
- Newsmax Opposes Vaccine Mandate, Here’s Why 6 hours ago
- Biden: If ‘You Leave Those Billions of Dollars of Weapons Behind’ in Iraq, They’ll ‘Be Used Against Your Grandchild’
- Soros-Backed Crackpot Activist Nandini Jammi Lies to Her Donors6 hours ago
- Turley: Why is the FBI investigating the theft of a diary? 6 hours ago
- TIP: CLICKING THIS BOX ALLOWS YOU TO GO DIRECT TO SOURCE——> 6 hours ago
- Bill Gates Praising Chinese Communist Party ‘Friendship.’ 7 hours ago
- Nightclubs Bypass Vax Passport by Placing Chairs on Dance Floor7 hours ago
- Mike Pence Strikes the Iranian Regime 34 mins ago
- 27 States Sue Biden Admin Over Vax Mandate… 34 mins ago
- Learn from California’s Smart-City Screwups 34 mins ago
- HISTORIC: Registered Reps Outnumber Dems in Florida 1 hour ago
- Slamming Vape Products With Taxes Is Regressive 2 hours ago
- Media Outlets Report Fake News On COVID Hospitalizations 2 hours ago
- NBA Declares… The Vaccinated are now the Unvaccinated… 2 hours ago
- Hispanic voter gives brutally honest reason for supporting Glenn Youngkin 3 hours ago
- Nothing Wrong With Chris Pratt Celebrating His Newborn’s Health 3 hours ago
- NFL Player Posts Video with Guns Threatening To Kill Someone… 3 hours ago
- Trucking industry short over 72k drivers 3 hours ago
- Durham Building Bigger Conspiracy Case 3 hours ago
- Biden’s Afghan war crime whitewashed 3 hours ago
- Is cyber-terrorism a threat to national security? 3 hours ago
- NASCAR Condemns ‘Let’s Go, Brandon’ Chant… 3 hours ago
- Will Taiwan Situation Escalate? 3 hours ago
- Saudi Arabia & Israel Move Toward Security Cooperation 3 hours ago
- Lockheed wins F‑22 $10.9B contract 3 hours ago
- Did Marines REALLY Get ‘Crushed’ By Royal Marines? 3 hours ago
- Sen. Rick Scott: Anti-BDS Laws When GOP takes Congress 3 hours ago
- Biden considering shutting down ANOTHER pipeline 3 hours ago
- Leftist Urge Accelerating COP26 Schedule 3 hours ago
- Health Sec: Get Booster Or Get Christmas Restrictions 3 hours ago
- Global COVID cases hit 250 million 3 hours ago
- Police: Syrian Train Attacker Stabbed Passengers ‘Randomly’ 3 hours ago
- Taliban Appointed as 44 Governors, Police Chiefs 4 hours ago
- Biden Yells At Reporter Who Calls Him out For Lying 4 hours ago
- Which Way Will Manchin Jump? 4 hours ago
- Instead of “Retaking” K‑12 Education, Let’s Remake It 4 hours ago
- NBA: Get Boosters or Face Game Day Testing 4 hours ago
- Camilla Parker Bowles SHOCKED By Biden’s ‘long fart’ 4 hours ago
- Propaganda for kids: Big Bird gets vaxxed 4 hours ago
- Vin Diesel Asks Dwayne Johnson Back For ‘Fast And Furious’ finale 4 hours ago
- Faith Hill & Tim McGraw Yellowstone Prequel Trailer 4 hours ago
- Terry Bradshaw slams Aaron Rodgers over vax 4 hours ago
- NBC’s Todd: Dems in ‘Grave Danger’ of Losing Congress 4 hours ago
- SHOCK: Broncos end Cowboys’ 6‑game streak 4 hours ago
- NFL teams PISSED at Aaron Rodgers double standard 4 hours ago
- Boston Antifa protest turns violent 4 hours ago
- NBA, NBPA Now Requiring Booster Shot 4 hours ago
- NBPC Head: ‘biggest’ border security crisis ‘ever’ 4 hours 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 Tuesday edition of Internet Insider, where we dissect tech and politics unfolding online. TODAY:
BREAK THE INTERNET Conspiracy theorists are falsely claiming that three giraffes at the Dallas Zoo died after receiving the COVID-19 vaccine.
The allegations first began spreading on Nov. 2 after CNN reported on the deaths, which came just two months after the zoo announced its plans to vaccinate certain at-risk animals against COVID.
The two headlines were cited as proof by anti-vaccine advocates across social media that the inoculations had caused the deaths. Jordan Sather, a prominent supporter of the QAnon conspiracy theory, shared the claim to his more than 70,000 followers just last week.
“Sounds like vaccinating the animals made them sick and weak,” Sather wrote.
Yet the first death, which occurred on Oct. 3, came after the zoo was forced to euthanize a 3-month-old giraffe named Marekani due to a “catastrophic” injury to one of its legs.
The second death, which involved a 19-year-old giraffe named Auggie, took place on Oct. 22 after the animal suffered an “age-related health issues that led to liver failure,” according to the zoo.
Just days later on Oct. 29, a 14-year-old giraffe named Jesse passed away as well after blood tests showed “abnormal liver enzymes.”
In a statement, the zoo said that it was looking into whether the last two deaths were related. The zoo is not only testing for the presence of any zoonotic diseases but is attempting to determine whether the two giraffes were exposed to any toxins.
The Daily Dot was also able to confirm that none of the giraffes had received a vaccine for COVID. In fact, the zoo revealed that it had yet to receive any of the vaccines at all, which it intends to use on animals known to catch COVID from humans such as great apes and big cats.
“We have not yet received the vaccine,” the zoo told the Daily Dot. “With that in mind, we can say with certainty that the recent giraffe deaths are not related to the vaccine.”
The Dallas Zoo also told the Daily Dot that giraffes are not among the animals it intends to vaccinate.
“Giraffes are not one of the animals that would be considered at higher risk for COVID-19,” the zoo said. “Mustelids (like otters and ferrets), all primates, and canids are considered at higher risk. No clinical cases have been documented in hoofstock.”
Read the whole story here. By Mikael Thalen Staff Writer SPONSORED There’s nothing like the warm hug from a cup of hot chocolate, but Beam’s new White Chocolate Peppermint Dream Power isn’t like other cocoas. Made with nano CBD, melatonin, and other sleep-promoting ingredients, Beam’s new limited edition Dream Powder will ensure you get a restful and revitalizing night’s sleep (without the morning grogginess). Swirls of peppermint and creamy white chocolate make this bedtime blend perfect for the holidays. Get it while it lasts and save 40% on your first three months of a subscription — no code needed! THE STATE A coalition of tech and civil rights organizations are urging the Senate to confirm the nominations of Jessica Rosenworcel and Gigi Sohn to the Federal Communications Commission (FCC).
In a press release on Monday, the activist group Demand Progress revealed that the more than 20 organizations, known collectively as “Battle for the Net,” are flooding senators with messages pushing for the confirmations.
President Joe Biden last month picked Rosenworcel for FCC Chair and Sohn for FCC Commissioner. The pair are known for their strong support of net neutrality.
Rosenworcel has already been serving as acting chair since January but would have to step down in 2022 if not confirmed by the Senate. Sohn is a former FCC staffer who made a name for herself by strongly advocating for open and affordable internet access.
Mark Stanley, the director of operations at Demand Progress, praised both nominees while urging the Senate to take action.
“These nominees have immense experience, deep expertise, and track records as coalition builders who work with people from all points on the ideological spectrum. They’re pragmatists who have built unassailable records putting the public interest first,” Stanley said. “The public has waited long enough. The essential nature of affordable broadband access and an open internet is more clear than ever. The Senate, both Democrats and Republicans, must get to work to quickly confirm these highly qualified nominees together, so the FCC can in turn get to work for the public.”
Battle for the Net claims that it has already sent over 110,000 messages to members of the Biden administration and the Senate as part of its push.
Caitlin Seeley George, the campaigns director at the digital rights advocacy group Fight for the Future, likewise lauded Rosenworcel and Sohn.
“Both of these candidates are fully qualified and should be confirmed immediately so that the FCC can get to work and can finally undue Ajit Pai’s disastrous repeal of net neutrality,” George added. “It’s taken nearly a year to get this far, it would be absurd for the Senate to waste any time.”
Given that Democrats currently control the Senate, the confirmations are expected to go through if a vote is held, although potential hurdles exist.
— M.T.
DAILY DOT PICKS
HACKTIVISTS Romanian authorities have arrested two hackers suspected of using REvil ransomware to extort 5,000 victims.
Before their arrest last week, the two suspects allegedly made more than half-a-million dollars by collecting ransom payments, according to Europol, the European Union’s law enforcement agency.
At least five other hackers allegedly using REvil and other similar software have been arrested this year, Europol said in a press release. None of the seven total suspects have been identified publicly. The arrests were part of a 17-country effort called Operation GoldDust. According to Europol, those arrested and their affiliates are responsible for over $200 million in demanded ransom.
REvil’s website went offline last month after United States law enforcement worked with other countries to hack the group, Reuters reported.
REvil ransomware has been responsible for several infamous attacks, including one in June that forced meatpacker JBS to shut down plants for at least a day and pay an $11 million ransom.
“Another blow against those who target the vulnerable on the internet,” tweeted Brian Honan, an Irish cybersecurity consultant and former special advisor on cybersecurity for Europol.
—Grace Ferguson, reporting fellow
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77.) HEADLINE USA
78.) NATURAL NEWS
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79.) POLITICHICKS
80.) BLACKPRESSUSA
81.) THE WESTERN JOURNAL
82.) CNN
Tuesday 11.09.21 Everything is coming up roses for big cryptocurrencies. Bitcoin and Ethereum both hit record highs yesterday, and some investors predict even bigger gains to come. Here’s what else you need to know to Get Up to Speed and On With Your Day. Attorney General Merrick Garland looks on during a Senate committee hearing last month. Capitol riot
The House select committee investigating the January 6 insurrection has issued six more subpoenas to top campaign associates of former President Trump, including ex-national security adviser Michael Flynn. The panel believes Flynn, along with a few other Trump campaign employees, attorneys and confidantes, were involved in promoting the lie that the presidential election was stolen. However, if the committee wants to get valuable testimony out of this new round of subpoenas, it may need to put pressure on former Trump adviser Steve Bannon, who was recently handed a contempt of Congress citation for defying his subpoena. The citation is a rare rebuke but carries few inherent consequences. Attorney General Merrick Garland is in control of a lot of this process, and there are no obvious signs he intends to act quickly.
Astroworld
Investigators are working to determine the causes of death of the eight people killed Friday in a crowd surge at a Houston music festival. They are reportedly looking at all possibilities, including whether a batch of counterfeit pills possibly laced with fentanyl played a role. The deadly conditions at the event have prompted a growing number of lawsuits on behalf of concertgoers. Travis Scott, the rapper behind the Astroworld Festival who was also performing at the time of the crush, announced he will pay for the funeral costs of the victims and fund mental health support for survivors. Scott, along with concert promoter Live Nation and others involved in the event, are under intense scrutiny over how the tragedy played out.
Climate
The COP26 climate summit in Scotland has entered its second week. By the summit’s end, participants are hoping to have a “Glasgow Agreement” to solidify international priorities like limiting global warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius, sticking to net-zero emissions commitments and providing help to countries most vulnerable to the climate crisis. However, major fossil fuel providers like Saudi Arabia, China and Russia may resist adoption of a global warming cap. Meanwhile, former US President Obama spoke at the summit and criticized his successor, Trump, for pulling the US out of the Paris Agreement and setting off “four years of active hostility towards climate science.” He also took aim at the Chinese and Russian Presidents for skipping the COP26 entirely.
Coronavirus
Global Covid-19 cases have now surpassed 250 million, just a year and eight months after the World Health Organization put a name to the coronavirus pandemic. Together, the US, India and Brazil account for 40% of reported cases. Globally, about 4 billion people have gotten at least one dose of a Covid-19 vaccine, and about 3.1 billion people are fully vaccinated. In the US, Pfizer is expected to seek FDA authorization as soon as this week for a booster shot for people 18 and older. Boosters at a certain point after initial inoculation are already FDA-authorized for several groups, including those 65 and older, immunocompromised people and those with certain living or working conditions.
Poland-Belarus
Tensions are escalating between Poland and Belarus as a weekslong migrant crisis there comes to a head. Polish officials have repeatedly accused the country’s eastern neighbor of moving migrants toward the Polish border. More and more people have been illegally crossing Poland’s border from Belarus in recent weeks — more than 30,000 since August, according to the Polish Border Guard. Additional military personnel have been deployed to deal with the situation, and another neighbor — Lithuania — has also sent troops to the border. European officials have accused Belarusian leader Alexander Lukashenko of encouraging people to cross illegally into Poland and other European neighbors in retaliation for recent sanctions by the EU, the US and Britain over Lukashenko’s crackdown on political opposition.
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Recalculate Your Refinance Quicken Loans urges homeowners to take advantage of low rates. Calculate Payment. People are talking about these. Read up. Join in. A 9-foot video game joystick now holds a Guinness World Record
Adele debuts new song ‘Hold On’ in Amazon holiday ad
‘Yellowstone’ season premiere teases prequel series starring Tim McGraw
Heinz produces ketchup in ‘Mars-like’ conditions
New Zealand cricket match suspended as pitch invaded by bees
24 That’s how many states just this year have been sites of legislative attempts to restrict how topics like racism, sexism and American history are taught in schools, according to an analysis by the free expression group PEN America. Is my life more important than doing something really good in my career?
Josh Cavallo, the only current openly gay player in men’s top-flight soccer. Cavallo says he would be “scared” to play at the 2022 FIFA World Cup in Qatar because of the country’s homosexuality laws. Brought to you by CNN Underscored Nordstrom’s Black Friday sale has arrived — and styles are already selling out Shop for an early gift for someone on your list, or for yourself, during Nordstrom’s early Black Friday sale. Hundreds of items are discounted up to 40% off, but these are our top picks that are just too good to ignore. Cool it down 5 THINGS You are receiving this newsletter because you’re subscribed to 5 Things.
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83.) THE DAILY CALLER
84.) POWERLINE
Daily Digest |
- Learning to Love Inflation
- Dumbest Energy Policy Ever? [Updated]
- Infinite Absurdity > Peak Absurdity?
- At the Rittenhouse trial
- The New York Times does rural America
Learning to Love Inflation
Posted: 08 Nov 2021 04:57 PM PST (John Hinderaker)The Biden administration’s official position on the inflation that is now robbing Americans of purchasing power, to a greater degree than seen in the last 30 years: it’s good for you! Recalling how well inflation went over with voters in 1980, I seriously doubt that this spin can sell. But it’s apparently the best the Democrats can muster. Via InstaPundit:
“Vote for us, we’re the party of inflation!” said no political party, ever. But evidently the Democrats will give it a go. Coincidentally, one week from today my organization will unveil 33 billboards around the Twin Cities, highlighting skyrocketing prices of basic commodities like gasoline, bacon and home heating. I am pretty sure that no one driving past our billboards will consider their message to be good news.
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Dumbest Energy Policy Ever? [Updated]
Posted: 08 Nov 2021 04:04 PM PST (John Hinderaker)In less than a year in office, the Biden administration has produced a clownish energy policy. It is simultaneously suppressing petroleum production in the U.S. and begging Saudi Arabia and Russia to produce more. This is idiotic, but Jennifer Granholm apparently thinks it’s funny. You might think the administration’s energy policies couldn’t possibly get worse. But now the New York Times reports: “Biden Administration Plans Wind Farms Along Nearly the Entire U.S. Coastline.”
So at the same time the administration is trying to block oil and gas leases on federal lands, it contemplates leasing federal waters for wind turbines. Wind turbines are environmentally awful and produce electricity less than half the time, so along with wind farms watch for many billions of dollars to be spent on natural gas plants that will operate the majority of the time when the wind turbines produce no electricity. I didn’t think it would be possible to produce an energy policy this mind-numbingly foolish, but the Biden administration has exceeded my expectations. UPDATE: Having killed the Keystone pipeline, the Biden administration now admits that it is contemplating shutting down Enbridge Pipeline #5, which serves Michigan. Governor Whitmer tried to close the pipeline at least temporarily, and several Indian tribes have demanded that the pipeline be dismantled. The Biden administration acknowledges the obvious fact that closing Pipeline #5 would raise energy costs in Michigan. At this point, I say: go ahead, do it. For years you have been telling us that you are opposed to fossil fuels and intend to phase out their use. Fossil fuels provide Americans with the large majority of our energy, and are by far the most efficient source of energy for most uses. But the Democrats don’t like them. Fine: force voters either to go without electricity and gasoline, or pay skyrocketing prices for those commodities. Then run for re-election. After years of meaningless chatter from the Left, it is time to put up or shut up.
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Infinite Absurdity > Peak Absurdity?
Posted: 08 Nov 2021 03:31 PM PST (Steven Hayward)Every day I think optimistically that we have reached peak absurdity from the left, but every day there is a fresh new high in leftist (un)creative destruction. First up, this:
Of course, many more people die every winter from cold weather, but I won’t hold my breath waiting for those deaths to be attributed to climate change. Meanwhile, I note that the feature film about the making of the Williams sisters tennis duo (“King Richard“) is finally out, starring Will Smith as their hard-driving father as the principal focus of the film. When Smith was cast in the role, there were complaints that Smith wasn’t “black enough” to play the role, which made me wonder whether we were really going to start using melanin swatches to judge film roles and other such things. Behold, the Pew Survey:
I really should know by now that the left’s capacity for absurdity is an infinite resource.
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At the Rittenhouse trial
Posted: 08 Nov 2021 02:09 PM PST (Paul Mirengoff)Over the weekend, John wrote about the prosecution of Kyle Rittenhouse. The prosecution’s case didn’t seem to be going well, in part because one of its witnesses gave important testimony that favored the defendant. That trend continued today with the testimony of Gaige Grosskreutz, one of the people Rittenhouse shot. On cross-examination, Grosskreutz admitted that Rittenhouse shot him only after he (Grosskreutz) pointed a gun at the defendant in close proximity to his head. (See video below starting around the 8 minute mark.) Grosskreutz, who admitted he ran at Rittenhouse who was on the ground, agreed that when he had his hands in the air, Rittenhouse took no action to defend himself. Only when Grosskreutz lowered his hands and pointed the gun at Rittenhouse did the defendant shoot. I’m no criminal lawyer, but that sounds to me like self defense, with regard to the shooting of Grosskreutz. Grosskreutz testified that he did not draw the gun “with the express intent of using it” but rather to be “ready” if he felt that was necessary. Maybe, maybe not. But Rittenhouse had no way of knowing Grosskreutz’s intentions. When someone points a gun at you in this kind of situation, where Grosskreutz ran at Rittenhouse in the midst of the chaos, I think you’re entitled to assume he’s going to use it, and to defend yourself accordingly.
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The New York Times does rural America
Posted: 08 Nov 2021 01:21 PM PST (Paul Mirengoff)My friend who reads the New York Times alerted me to this article about rural America’s continued movement away from the Democratic party. I’m glad he did. The article is well worth reading. The most noteworthy thing about the Times’ piece is the numbers it presents from Virginia:
Virginia has 95 counties. The Times doesn’t say how many of them are rural, but judging from the breakdown in this map it looks Youngkin was above 70 percent in just about all of them. The Times notes that Youngkin “was outpacing former President Donald Trump’s 2020 showing in even the reddest counties.” So I guess the GOP doesn’t need Trump to win big in rural America. It just needs Trump’s team not to discourage people in rural areas from voting with frivolous claims that their vote won’t be counted due to rigged voting machines (or some such nonsense). The Times also notes that Youngkin did well among suburban voters in Virginia. Thus:
Here’s another “foreboding possibility.” GOP support among rural voters may be approaching Democrat support among African-Americans, or at least African-American males. The Times puts it this way:
If the Virginia election is a reliable guide, the GOP share of the rural vote may be approaching 80 percent. In 2020, around 20 percent of African-American men (but only around 9 percent of African-American women) voted for Donald Trump. Blacks make up around 11 percent of the electorate according to this report. According to the Times’ story, rural Americans make up between 20 and 30 percent of the electorate, depending on how one calculates it:
Can Democrats reverse their slippage in rural America? The Times isn’t optimistic:
Dan Balz at the Washington Post doesn’t see much hope for a Democratic recovery in rural America, either. His latest article is called (in the paper edition), “Democrats lack solutions to bring back rural voters.” Balz writes:
It’s not really a blind spot, though. Democrats want to transform America significantly, and many of them radically. Rural America doesn’t want a major transformation and, I suspect, takes demands for such a transformation personally (especially attacks on “whiteness,” demands that religion take a backseat to various woke causes, and calls for ever more gun control). If Democrats want to make major inroads in rural America, they may have to transform themselves radically. I don’t see that happening.
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85.) THE POLITICAL INSIDER – WAKE UP EDITION
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89.) THE POLITICAL INSIDER – LUNCH BREAK
90.) CONSERVATIVE TRIBUNE
91.) USA TODAY
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92.) THE DAILY BEAST
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93.) JUST THE NEWS
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95.) RIGHTWING.ORG
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96.) NOT THE BEE
97.) US NEWS & WORLD REPORT
98.) NEWSMAX
99.) MARK LEVIN
November 8, 2021
On Monday’s Mark Levin Show, Media Matters has libeled this program by maliciously taking fragments of statements made and twisting them to intentionally change the clear meaning that Democrats within the media label everyone that they disagree with as “racists.” Then, the ongoing investigation into the January 6th riot is the biggest investigation in U.S history, according to the Attorney General. The Democrats and never-Trump Republicans on the Congressional select-committee have now issued new subpoenas into Trump’s senior team. This is nothing more than another political hit job by the Democrats with the patina of a fair oversight investigation. Later, Lt. Governor-elect, Winsome Sears, a Jamaican immigrant is attacked By Michael Eric Dyson as being a Black mouth with a White supremacist tongue. The analysts on MSNBC are all towing the same racist line too. This has nothing to do with race and everything to do with dehumanizing society and promoting their hateful American Marxist agenda in classrooms and elsewhere. Afterward, Former White House Trade Advisor, Peter Navarro, calls in to discuss his new book “In Trump Time: My Journal of America’s Plague Year.” Navarro shared personal anecdotes of his years in the Trump Administration and how he witnessed the media lie by omission on various occasions including regarding the coronavirus.
THIS IS FROM:
Hill Reporter
Fox’s Mark Levin: It’s the Racists That Make The Country Work
Washington Post
The worrisome pro-Capitol-riot activism isn’t a rally. It’s in right-wing media (September 16, 2021)
Right Scoop
Judge orders RELEASE of Jan 6th detainee after surprise inspection found deplorable conditions
NY Times
Jan. 6 Inquiry Subpoenas Eastman, Flynn and Other Trump Allies
Fox News
Liberal MSNBC guest calls Winsome Sears a ‘Black mouth’ for ‘White supremacist practices’
The Blaze
MSNBC host and panel go off on ‘white men whining and complaining about wokeness’: ‘Shut the F up’
Breitbart
Mitch McConnell ‘Delighted’ Congress Passed $1.2 Trillion So-Called Bipartisan Infrastructure Bill
Rumble
Buttigieg & Reporter Spend 3 Minutes Talking About Racist Roads & Bridges
Politico
Federal court blocks Biden administration’s vaccination mandate
Just The News
‘Propaganda’: Experts rip CDC study claiming vax offers stronger protection than natural immunity
The podcast for this show can be streamed or downloaded from the Audio Rewind page.
Image used with permission of Getty Images / Brendan Hoffman
100.) WOLF DAILY
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104.) INDEPENDENT SENTINEL
Invasions on our border, invasions on Poland’s border, but it’s not Soros, of course. Nothing to see here.
In our new crazy USA, highways are racist but don’t worry, Pothole Pete is on it.
The Rittenhouse trial is going swimmingly. The prosecution proved Kyle Rittenhouse acted in self-defense.
A not white supremacist slugged an Asian woman for no reason. Stop Asian hate! Seriously, stop it.
Sesame Street is propagandizing pre-schoolers.
Drone attack on Pennsylvania electric grid and Biden lets China make our secret infrastructure parts.
More coup news!
And so much more in Crazyland.
Migrants Form on the Borders of Poland & Belarus, Not Just the USIs there a planned invasion of free Western nations? One must wonder when you look at the invasion on our border and on the borders of Poland and Belarus. It… | |
Planeloads of Illegals Come in the Dead of NightMark Levin began his radio show this evening by quoting Ben Shapiro saying we can’t survive as a nation with one-third of the nation supporting the other two-thirds as socialists.… | |
Biden’s Green New Deal $$$ All Go to the CCPChina emits almost twice the emissions as we do but they are not going to change course. They are our most dangerous competitors and they plan to lead. They see… | |
Boosters Forever! NBA Players Might Get Boosters Every 2-6 MonthsThe NBA has reportedly urged players to get Covid-19 booster shots. They can only be considered fully vaccinated if they get the booster shots. The NBA told the players the… | |
Biden Tells Businesses to Defy the Court Order & Move Ahead with Vax MandateThe White House on Monday said businesses should move forward with the vaccine requirements. This is despite the court-ordered pause. The U.S. Court of Appeals for the 5th Circuit halted… | |
Prosecution’s Key Witness Admits Rittenhouse Shot in Self-DefenseIt’s Day 5 of the Rittenhouse political trial that never should have been brought to trial. To add to our earlier report, the key witness in the prosecution’s case just… | |
Prominent Crazies Discuss Deconstructing Racist HighwaysIn the clip below, activist reporter April Ryan questions Pothole Pete Buttigieg about the racist roadways in New York. Acting as if this is a thing, Pothole Pete can’t wait… | |
Not White Supremacist Slugs Asian Woman in NY for No ReasonA racist attacker told a woman to “go back to China” and slugged her in the back of the head in an unprovoked Lower Manhattan attack this week, police said.… | |
‘Let’s Go, Brandon’ Is Still a ThingAs long as Joe Biden is turning the country into Venezuela, we will hear the chants of “Let’s go, Brandon,” and “F- Joe Biden.” The phrase is on blimps, in… | |
World’s Largest Investment Firm Needs Permission to Hire White MenOne of the largest investment firms in the world, State Street Global Advisors, will need to ask permission to hire white men as it rolls out a diversity hiring initiative. “This is… | |
Biden COS: If OSHA Can Mandate Hard Hats, It Can Mandate Drug InjectionsOn Sunday, White House Chief of Staff Ronald Klain, who many think is the Acting President, told Chuck Todd that he expects Joe Biden’s vaccine mandate to be upheld. It… | |
WOKE Sesame Street Indoctrinates Little Kids on Vaccination for COVSesame Street has gone WOKE and is collaborating with CNN, the government mouthpiece, on indoctrinating children into vaccinations. It’s basically the government doing marketing on behalf of the vaccine manufacturers.… | |
John Kerry Says Plan to Spend Billions on Climate Change Won’t Cut ItA Climate Depot report indicates that John Kerry said billions of dollars won’t cut it for climate change. John Kerry told UN COP 26 that the United Nations can count… | |
New Poll Shows 2/3rds of Americans Are Opposed to Making Millionaires Out of IllegalsA Trafalgar poll released Monday found that two-thirds of American voters surveyed, including a near-majority of Democrats, either “disapprove” or “strongly disapprove” of reported plans by the Justice Department to pay compensation… | |
Key Witness Rushed Kyle Rittenhouse with a Gun after Kyle Was AttackedUpdate: After this was posted, Gaige Grosskreutz admitted that Kyle Rittenhouse didn’t shoot until after he had a gun pointed at him. The prosecution in the Rittenhouse case withheld a… | |
Deeply Disturbing News of a [Failed] Drone Attack on our Electrical GridThe U.S. electrical grid is ever more vulnerable to a devastating drone attack, according to a chilling joint report released by the FBI, the National Counterterrorism Center, and the Department of Homeland… | |
Major WOKE Paper Asks If the Answer for Theft Is Barricading OurselvesSan Francisco, under the leadership of communist Chesa Boudin, is quickly deteriorating. Thefts, for one thing, are out of control because people can steal up to nearly $1000 without any… | |
WSJ: Researchers Look to Spike Proteins as Cause of Vax Heart ProblemsMyocarditis describes inflammation of the heart muscle, while pericarditis refers to inflammation of the sac surrounding the muscle. It is appearing in some people, usually within 7 days of getting… | |
Amazon Special on MIA Buttigieg That No One Asked For Is HereWow, this man has failed just enough to get his Amazon special..Nice ~ YouTube commenter Still another phony promotional video about our Transportation Secretary who took the job and immediately… | |
Ratcliffe’s Stunning Account of People Who Could Be Charged in the CoupJohn Ratcliffe reviewed some of the details of the coup with Maria Bartiromo on her show today based on the intelligence that he saw and declassified that tie into the… |
105.) NOQ REPORT
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106.) ARTICLE V LEGISLATORS’ CAUCUS
107.) BECKER NEWS
108.) SONS OF LIBERTY
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109.) STARS & STRIPES
110.) RIGHT & FREE
The terrible election results for Democrats are going to lead to some terrible conclusions. One may be the assumption that these bad results reflect a media…
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111.) UNITED VOICE
112.) THE DAILY SHAPIRO
113.) INSURGENT CONSERVATIVES
114.) WAKING TIMES
115.) UNCOVER DC
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