Good morning! Here is your news briefing for Friday November 12, 2021
1.) THE DAILY SIGNAL
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2.) THE EPOCH TIMES
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3.) DAYBREAK
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4.) THE SUNBURN
Sunburn — The morning read of what’s hot in Florida politics — 11.12.21
Good Friday morning.
First in Sunburn — Associated Industries of Florida is announcing Adam Basford will serve as its new vice president of government relations, effective Dec. 1.
“I’m pleased to have Adam joining us to lead AIF’s government relations team,” said Brewster Bevis, president of AIF. “His strong relationships with Florida leaders, deep experience navigating complex policy issues, and understanding of Florida politics will serve AIF and its members well. I look forward to working with him closely as we continue to advocate on behalf of Florida’s business community for policies that will promote job growth and prosperity in our great state.”
Basford comes to AIF from the Florida Farm Bureau Federation, where he has worked for the past 17 years. Since 2012, he has held the title of legislative affairs director at FFBF.
In that role, Basford was tasked with lobbying the Legislature on all things agriculture. The diverse industry spans several policy silos, and Basford has found himself lobbying for everything from Hurricane Michael relief to the recently passed “Right to Farm” expansion aimed at curbing lawsuits against ag businesses.
Like the Florida Farm Bureau Federation, AIF advocates for a broad slate of interests. Known as “The Voice of Florida Business” in the Sunshine State, the organization includes members from every corner of the state and every segment of Florida’s private sector.
“I am excited for this opportunity to become a part of the well-respected AIF team, who I have worked closely with for many years,” Basford said. “It has been an honor to advocate on behalf of Florida’s agricultural community, and now I look forward to putting my knowledge and relationships to good use helping to fight for Florida’s job creators.”
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First in Sunburn — A recent polling memo from what is expected to be a hotly-contested Republican primary in Florida’s House District 12 has been obtained by Florida Politics, and former Rep. Lake Ray starts in a solid position facing his main primary opponent, Jessica Baker.
While both candidates are showing strong early fundraising and local support, Ray is up by 18 points in the overall primary for the seat in Duval County currently held by soon-to-be state Sen. Clay Yarborough.
Cygnal, the nationally-respected polling firm rated #1 in the country for two straight cycles by Nate Silver’s 538 service, noted in a memo, “As there will not be serious primary opponents for (Gov. Ron) DeSantis or (Sen. Marco) Rubio, it is safe to assume that turnout will be low. Therefore, it is important to look at those respondents that are most likely to vote. Ray leads those who have voted in the past four primary elections 44% to 6% and those that voted in the past three of four primary elections 34% to 9%. This can be understood as Ray benefiting from a more engaged and informed electorate that always or almost always votes.”
Baker is relatively unknown, and Lake Ray has room to grow as well. Yarborough endorsed Ray, while Mayor Lenny Curry endorsed Baker, whose husband Tim is a well-known Curry political operative. With both candidates armed to the teeth with cash and endorsements, this will be a very hot primary to watch.
DeSantis has a 91% favorable rating, and Donald Trump has a net favorable rating at plus 77% in the ultrasafe R district, which will be altered in lines but not likely to change in temperament or performance. The poll was conducted Nov. 1-2, 2021, measuring 350 likely voters in the Republican primary with a MOE of +/- 5.18.
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Just off embargo — Progress Pinellas launches new ad supporting Eric Lynn for CD 13 — Progress Pinellas is sponsored by Lynn’s family, friends and supporters to emphasize his long-standing record in Florida’s 13th Congressional District. The group’s first ad, “Hometown Kid” will begin airing Sunday during the Tampa Bay Buccaneers game. “Eric is running for Congress to fight Republicans’ attacks on us,” the ad says. “Eric is a force and his lifelong roots in St. Pete and Pinellas County are exactly what we need to fight for us in Washington, D.C.,” said Progress Pinellas Board Member Susan Schwartz. In the Democratic Primary, Lynn, a former senior adviser in the Barack Obama administration, faces Reps. Ben Diamond and Michele Rayner-Goolsby.
To view the ad, click on the image below:
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First in Sunburn — Shevrin Jones launches Senate reelection bid with ‘Shared Future’ ad — On Friday, Jones announced he will seek another term in Senate District 35. The declaration featured “Our Shared Future” a video highlighting the Miami Gardens Democrat’s commitment to fighting for the issues important to Floridians. “For me, this is deeply personal and about the friends I’ve grown up with, the neighbors I’ve talked to while knocking doors, the small businesses that are the backbone of our communities, and every family in our region,” Jones said in a statement. “That’s why I’ve focused on delivering direct, meaningful impact for our communities. While we have made incredible progress, there is still a lot of work ahead as we recover from the pandemic, safeguard civil rights and our democracy, and look to the future to build pathways to prosperity and opportunity for every Floridian.”
To watch “Our Shared Future,” click on the image below:
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Spotted — At the Veterans Day K9s for Warriors Charity Breakfast in Tallahassee DeSantis, Slater Bayliss, Al Cardenas, Cameron Cooper, Rory Diamond, Tom DiGiacomo, Brett Doster, Jamie Grant, Craig Hansen, Rob Johnson, Mike La Rosa, Frank Mayernick, Tony Mendola, Jason Nauman, Casey Reed, Jon Rees, Steve Schale, Stephen Shiver, Craig Smith, Sarah Suskey, and Brett Thompson.
— SITUATIONAL AWARENESS —
Tweet, tweet:
Tweet, tweet:
—@GeorgeTakei: If we permit vigilantes to come to tense conflict areas armed with assault-style rifles and to claim self-defense after KILLING people — even though they made themselves willing combatants in the danger zone — God help us all. We will have lost all reason.
—@GrayRohrer: Sign of the times for Democrats in Florida: Republican Wilton Simpson just raised more for his Agriculture Commissioner campaign ($1.6 million) last month than all three Dem candidates for Governor raised for their campaigns combined ($1.4 million)
—@UnrealZachWard: Yes, I live just north of Tallahassee, so it seems normal and appropriate that I am voting for Congressional candidates that are from downtown Jacksonville.
Tweet, tweet:
Tweet, tweet:
— DAYS UNTIL —
Miami at FSU — 1; Special Session on vaccine mandates begins — 3; ExcelinEd National Summit on Education begins — 6; ‘Hawkeye’ premieres — 12; FSU vs. UF — 15; Florida Chamber 2021 Annual Insurance Summit begins — 19; Jacksonville special election to fill seat vacated by Tommy Hazouri’s death — 25; Steven Spielberg’s ’West Side Story’ premieres — 28; ’Spider-Man: No Way Home’ premieres — 28; ’The Matrix: Resurrections’ released — 40; ’The Book of Boba Fett’ premieres on Disney+ — 47; Private sector employees must be fully vaccinated or tested weekly — 53; CES 2022 begins — 54; NFL season ends — 58; 2022 Legislative Session starts — 60; Florida’s 20th Congressional District Election — 60; Special Elections in Senate District 33, House District 88 & 94 — 60; Florida TaxWatch’s 2022 State of the Taxpayer Day — 61; Joel Coen’s ’The Tragedy of Macbeth’ on Apple TV+ — 63; NFL playoffs begin — 64; XXIV Olympic Winter Games begins — 84; Super Bowl LVI — 93; Daytona 500 — 100; CPAC begins — 104; St. Pete Grand Prix — 105; ‘The Batman’ premieres — 111; ’Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness’ premieres — 175; ’Top Gun: Maverick’ premieres — 196; ’Platinum Jubilee’ for Queen Elizabeth II — 203; ’Thor: Love and Thunder’ premieres — 239; San Diego Comic-Con 2022 — 250; ’Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse’ sequel premieres — 329; ‘Black Panther 2’ premieres — 364; ‘The Flash’ premieres — 367; ‘Avatar 2’ premieres — 399; ‘Captain Marvel 2’ premieres — 462; ‘Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania’ premieres — 623. ‘Dune: Part Two’ premieres — 707; Opening Ceremony of the 2024 Olympic Games — 987.
“Florida redistricting proposals mark ‘a good start,’ says expert” via Andrew Pantazi of The Tributary — The Senate released its first eight drafts, and the first signs are that the maps won’t be the gerrymandered nightmare that fair-districts advocates feared. “This is surprising,” said Michael McDonald, a UF political scientist who specializes in redistricting. “This looks like an attempt to comply with the Fair Districts Amendments while trying to eke out as much advantage as they can. … This isn’t the bloodbath we’re seeing in other states.” The four congressional proposals differ only slightly from each other, and the four state Senate proposals are mostly the same. Redistricting chair Sen. Ray Rodrigues said staff who drew the maps “faithfully adhered to the objective standards that were provided to them by the Senate Committee on Reapportionment.”
“Princeton gives Florida Senate’s initial redistricting efforts a solid ‘B’” via Jacob Ogles of Florida Politics — Most pundits agree the first redistricting drafts published in Florida appear less aggressively gerrymandered than some expected. But how fair were the products? The Princeton Gerrymandering Project found when it comes to treating both parties fairly, things appear relatively on track. The Senate Reapportionment Committee staff published its first drafts, with four proposed maps for Florida’s 28 congressional districts and four for the Florida Senate. All eight maps earned a grade of B in terms of partisan fairness, the most prominent grade on the university-issued report card. In all cases, the maps found there was a “slight Republican advantage,” but not one so severe it constituted a poor assessment.
Nonpartisan watchdog group gives good marks to initial redistricting maps — RepresentUs, in partnership with the Princeton Gerrymandering Project, scored the four-sets of initial staff-drawn Florida senate and congressional maps — grades range from “C” to “B.” “While these staff-drawn maps still preserve the political interests of the party in power, they are less extreme gerrymanders than we’ve seen in other states. We’ll be watching carefully as partisan politicians get their hands on them,” said senior campaign director Joe Kabourek. “Transparency is also a major concern. The Florida Legislature is not required to hold public hearings or take public comment despite the fact that nearly 80% of Floridians support a transparent process.” View the grades here.
“Senate maps put Lois Frankel, Ted Deutch in same congressional district” via Jacob Ogles of Florida Politics — Right now, CD 21 includes West Palm Beach and spans south on Florida’s coast to Delray Beach. It’s represented today by Frankel. Deutch represents CD 22, which stretches from Boca Raton down to coastal Fort Lauderdale. Both districts reach inland to around the Loxahatchee National Wildlife Refuge. But two plans in the Florida Senate would re-imagine CD 21 and CD 22 as slender, neighboring districts that span greater distances from north to south. CD 21 becomes a complexly inland district stretching from conservative Wellington to liberal Margate. Meanwhile, CD 22 under these drafts would run the coastline from West Palm Beach to the Miami-Dade line. That likely means a change from two solidly Democratic districts to one that’s deeper blue and another that’s more competitive.
“Janelle Perez campaign eyes post-redistricting SD 40, leaving Ileana Garcia unopposed in SD 37” via Jesse Scheckner of Florida Politics — A Nov. 2022 showdown over Senate District 37 between incumbent Republican Sen. Garcia and Democratic challenger Perez may no longer happen if the Florida Legislature approves preliminary state redistricting plans. Garcia would still be running to keep her seat in SD 37, which upon proposed redistricting would shrink to only cover a small portion of Miami-Dade County’s coast, including parts of Miami, Miami Beach, Coral Gables and Sweetwater. But Perez, who lives in Pinecrest, would instead run to succeed Sen. Annette Taddeo in SD 40, which would move from covering landlocked, unincorporated areas in southwest Miami-Dade to encompassing the coastal cities of Homestead, Cutler Bay, Palmetto Bay, Pinecrest, South Miami and Key Biscayne.
Michael Grieco could soon be a Senate candidate following release of Senate redistricting maps — Rep. Grieco tells Florida Politics he is “seriously considering” running for SD 37 after the release of Wednesday’s maps. In each of the four proposed Senate maps, current SD 37 candidate Janelle Perez would instead be placed in Senate District 40. Incumbent SD 37 Sen. Ileana Garcia, a Republican, remains inside her district. But the makeup appears much more friendly to Democrats, leaving open a clear lane for a serious challenge to Garcia. Of course, those proposed maps could still be changed going forward. Still, Grieco plans to make a final decision on the potential jump in “days, not weeks.”
— STATEWIDE —
“As Gov. Ron DeSantis plays hardball on DEP Secretary, 2019 comments signal support for open process” via Ryan Nicol of Florida Politics+ — DeSantis and Agriculture Commissioner Nikki Fried — two potential General Election opponents in the 2022 gubernatorial race — have gone back and forth over DeSantis’ choice for the new head of the Department of Environmental Protection (DEP). But a look back at comments made in 2019 gives Fried some support in her push for a more open process — and those comments came from DeSantis himself. DeSantis picked Shawn Hamilton to serve as DEP Secretary. Hamilton has yet to appear before the Cabinet for a public hearing, as stipulated under the 2015 Weidner Settlement Agreement. That settlement, which the state agreed to, required public hearings of certain appointments, regardless of whether the Cabinet had a vote.
“Florida prisoners ‘inches away’ from emergency release” via Adam Walser of WFTS — A critical staffing shortage within Florida’s state prisons threatens the safety of officers, inmates, and the public. The ABC Action News I-Team uncovered the crisis in corrections is also costing taxpayers millions in overtime, reducing programs to educate, and train inmates. It also may trigger a mass release. A critical staffing shortage within Florida’s state prisons threatens the safety of officers, inmates, and the public. The staffing shortage is triggering the closure of prisons, work camps, and work release centers, forcing the state to pack inmates into hellishly hot facilities, where some have to sleep on floors. Florida lawmakers will return to Tallahassee for the 2022 legislative session with a mandate to fix Florida’s overcrowded, understaffed and dangerous prisons. And while many may think prison reform won’t impact them, they would be wrong.
— Two strikes and prison forever: Florida has one of the strictest anti-crime policies in the nation. Not to be outdone by other states passing “three strikes” rules allowing repeat offenders to serve life sentences even for nonviolent crimes, Florida passed a “two strikes” rule. It allows the state to seek the maximum sentence for crimes if the person committed a felony within three years of leaving prison. About 2,100 Florida prisoners serving life sentences without parole are there because of the law. A Marshall Project investigation found the rule has been disproportionately applied to Black felons, who account for 75% of those sentenced under it. Read more about the rule here.
“Mystery group behind attack ads in Central Florida Senate race strikes settlement with election officials” via Jason Garcia and Annie Martin of the Orlando Sentinel — The terms of the proposed “consent order” between Stephen Jones, the chair of Floridians for Equality and Justice, and the Florida Elections Commission are confidential for now. The Commission — which is run by a panel appointed by DeSantis — is scheduled to vote on the agreement at its meeting next week and the agreement will become public if it’s approved. Floridians for Equality and Justice surfaced last summer during the Democratic Primary in Senate District 9 in Seminole and Volusia counties. Records show it spent at least $160,000 on ads that included mailers attacking Patricia Sigman, who was widely considered the strongest Democratic contender in the race and promoting a lesser-known challenger as a more-progressive alternative.
“Telehealth treatments for injured workers declining in 2021, report shows” via Christine Jordan Sexton of Florida Politics — Between Jan. 1 and Sept. 30, 2021, workers’ compensation insurance carriers have paid 29,517 telehealth bills submitted by an array of health care providers authorized to treat injured patients, from medical doctors and advanced registered nurse practitioners to licensed mental health counselors. That’s a near 33% reduction from the 41,090 telehealth workers’ compensation claims that had been submitted during the first nine months of 2020 at the start of the COVID-19 pandemic. In all, by the end of 2020, 64,749 telehealth bills had been filed to workers’ compensation carriers by providers who treated workers injured on the job. And as the number of telehealth claims filed this year has dropped so has the total aggregate amount paid to health care providers.
— DATELINE TALLY —
“Rick Roth warns Palm Beach School Board about critical race theory” via Anne Geggis of Florida Politics — Roth came to the Palm Beach County School Board with a question and a warning about an issue that’s roiling school districts across the country. It’s called critical race theory and the West Palm Beach Republican told a joint meeting between the legislative delegation and the School Board Wednesday that he’s hearing concerns it’s happening in the same schools both he and his children call their alma mater. And it’s a concern that might cause an exodus from public schools, he said. Superintendent Mike Burke said the district does not teach critical race theory to Palm Beach County students.
“Anna Eskamani files bill to remove restrictions on how Orange County can spend tourism taxes” via Caroline Glenn of the Orlando Sentinel — When Orange County agreed to give up to $125 million to Universal Orlando to help pay for a new road, county leaders claimed they couldn’t use the millions of dollars they collect each year in hotel taxes for that purpose. Although a 3-year-old state law lets counties spend hotel taxes on road construction, Orange County said their hands were tied by a restriction. Commissioners ended up promising to pay Universal from property taxes and impact fees instead, money that could be spent on other crucial government services. House Bill 6075 filed by state Rep. Eskamani, the highest-ranking Democrat on the House’s tax committee, would repeal that part of the law that kept Orange County from using hotel taxes.
New and renewed lobbying registrations:
Mario Bailey, Carlos Cruz, Converge Public Strategies: Goodwill Industries of South Florida, Sunovion Pharmaceuticals
Brian Ballard, Adrian Lukis, Monica Rodriguez, Ballard Partners: LifeScience Logistics, Miami Learning Experience School
Matt Bryan, David Daniel, Jeff Hartley, Teye Reeves, Smith Bryan & Myers: Turo
Brooke Evans, The Mayernick Group: Hanley Foundation
Jon Johnson, Darrick McGhee, Johnson & Blanton: Clean Okeechobee Waters Foundation
Jonathan Johnson, Hopping Green & Sams: Lakewood Ranch Stewardship District
Mark Kruse, Buchanan Ingersoll & Rooney: Fidelity Information Services
Debbie Mortham, Mortham Governmental Consultants: Florida Association of Postsecondary Schools and Colleges
Dana Young: VISIT FLORIDA
— CORONA FLORIDA —
“Florida ordered 90,000 doses of the child vaccine. Texas ordered 1 million.” via Ian Hodgson and Kirby Wilson of the Tampa Bay Times — Florida health officials say they preordered approximately 90,000 child-size doses of the Pfizer vaccine. That’s enough to fully vaccinate 3% of Florida’s approximately 1.7 million children ages 5 to 11. Texas, another Republican-led state, preordered 1 million doses, enough to fully vaccinate over 17% of the state’s children in the same age group. California preordered 860,000 doses, enough to fully vaccinate 13% of kids there. Florida, the third-most populated state, ordered the least of the nine states where data was available.
“Was Florida’s decision to prioritize antibody treatments the right call?” via Christopher Heath of WFTV — In mid-August Florida, reached its peak in new COVID-19 cases. About a month later, the state hit its peak in hospitalizations and deaths. With Florida in the grip of one of the worst outbreaks of COVID-19 in the country, the state began setting up monoclonal antibody sites to treat those who were infected. At its 25 sites, Florida treated more than 135,000 people with the antibodies. About 55% of those people were unvaccinated. “What you see there is what I call reactive medicine,” said Dr. Isaiah Cochran, an Orlando physician. “The antibodies help, but you are able to infect others and may not know it by the time you start to show symptoms.”
“Nursing home staff vaccination rates up; COVID-19 deaths down” via Christine Jordan Sexton of Florida Politics — Nearly 59% of the state’s nursing home staff are fully vaccinated against the COVID-19 virus, a 5 percentage point jump in vaccination rates from the previous month. With 58.5% of staff vaccinated, Florida ranks No. 46 in the nation in the percentage of vaccinated nursing homes staff, with Louisiana, Michigan, Missouri and Oklahoma trailing in the four-week period ending Oct. 17. The AARP Florida report, dubbed the AARP Nursing Home COVID-19 Dashboard, also shows 150 Florida nursing facilities have met the industry stated standard to have 75% of staff vaccinated. That means that about 80% of Florida’s nursing homes have not met the industry standard.
“Thank you, Mayor Jerry Demings, for displaying real leadership during COVID-19” via the Orlando Sentinel editorial board — Demings held numerous briefings, flanked by Dr. Raul Pino, the unflappable director of Florida’s Department of Health in Orange County. The pair consistently offered straightforward information and advice about how residents could try to remain healthy as the virus swept across the state. And Demings always offered something else, nearly as important: Empathy for the victims and their families, conveying his experiences at funerals and at hospitals. What a contrast to the peevish, self-centered news conferences called by DeSantis who, instead of focusing on the scope of public suffering and what to do about it, picked fights with political enemies. We don’t thank politicians often enough, as Demings did. He was a tireless advocate for testing, masking, social distancing and vaccines.
— 2022 —
“Gambling amendment campaigns plow another $22 million into drives” via Scott Powers of Florida Politics — Gambling interests’ efforts to get Florida voters to consider expanding casino gambling and sports betting are raising the stakes, pouring another $22 million into their campaigns in October. The cash infusion fuels frenetic petition drives by Florida Education Champions, a committee backed by the fantasy sports giants DraftKings and FanDuel seeking to expand sports betting in Florida; and by Florida Voters In Charge, a committee backed by Las Vegas Sands Corp. seeking to create opportunities for casinos in North Florida. Between them, they’ve spent more than $32 million over four months.
Personnel note: Charlie Crist adds Carlos Carrillo as Senior Labor Adviser — Carrillo has joined Crist’s gubernatorial campaign as Senior Labor Adviser. Carrillo has more than 30 years of experience in organized labor. He has worked as a field representative for the National AFL-CIO and as a senior field representative for Florida. He also served as Labor & Veterans Vote Director for Joe Biden’s 2020 campaign. “I am thrilled to welcome Carlos to our team, a showcase of our campaign’s commitment to the labor movement, union workers, and a Florida that fights for all,” Crist said. “The hundreds of thousands of working families who call the Sunshine State home deserve to have their voices heard and a Governor who will fight alongside them for the rights, pay, and quality of life they deserve.”
Assignment editors — Crist will join a group of Miami-Dade leaders for a news conference announcing their endorsement of his bid for Governor, 11 a.m., RSVP to press@charliecrist.com for location.
“Election supervisor: Delayed mail might have delivered different result in CD 20 Primary Election” via Anne Geggis of Florida Politics — The latest count shows just five votes separate the two top vote-getters in last week’s Democratic Primary Election for CD 20, so it’s easy to believe that 287 ballots that were delayed in the mail might have delivered an entirely different outcome. Broward County Elections Supervisor Joe Scott told the Broward County legislative delegation this week the ballots his office received after the Primary Election on Nov. 2 were postmarked before that day. Some of them were stamped as early as Oct. 21. Scott urged lawmakers to push for changes in election law that would make votes postmarked by Election Day count, even if they arrive at their destination well after the election is over.
“Veteran of Iraq and Afghanistan wars to primary Matt Gaetz, promising to ‘restore dignity’” via Paul Bedard of the Washington Examiner — A veteran and special operations pilot during the Iraq and Afghan wars will on Thursday announce his campaign to challenge embattled Rep. Gaetz in the Republican primary, promising to “restore dignity” to the Panhandle district. Bryan Jones, a CV-22 Osprey pilot and small-business owner, told us, “I feel it is time to begin a new path of service, one that will help restore dignity and honor to Florida’s 1st District — because the people of this district are good, honest, hardworking people, and they deserve a congressman who reflects their values and who will fight for their beliefs and their freedoms.”
“Bill Young widow Beverly Young endorses Amanda Makki in CD 13” via Janelle Irwin Taylor of Florida Politics — Young endorsed Makki’s campaign Wednesday, choosing her over fellow Republican Anna Paulina Luna, a veteran herself. Her husband, Bill Young, served CD 13 from 1971 until he died in 2013. Beverly Young has been involved in races before, endorsing former U.S. Rep. David Jolly, who succeeded her husband. But she later soured on Jolly and announced plans to run against him in 2016, plans that never came to fruition. The timing of Young’s endorsement is significant. Bill Young was known throughout the district as a staunch supporter of the veteran community. His name graces myriad buildings throughout Pinellas County, including the Veterans Affairs Medical Center on Bay Pines.
—”Clay Yarborough at nearly $600K on hand for unopposed state Senate bid” via A.G. Gancarski of Florida Politics
—“Jennifer Bradley now at more than $450,000 for state Senate reelection” via A.G. Gancarski of Florida Politics
—“Reggie Gaffney outpaces Tracie Davis in October SD 6 fundraising chase” via A.G. Gancarski of Florida Politics
“Kamia Brown surpasses Geraldine Thompson in SD 11 fundraising” via Scott Powers of Florida Politics — The $4,525 that Democratic Rep. Brown raised for her Senate District 11 campaign might not be impressive by Senate campaign standards, but it was $4,525 more than her rival, Democratic Rep. Thompson, raised in the month. With that, Brown, whose Senate campaign essentially started rolling in September after slumbering most of the summer, is pulling away financially from Thompson, whose fundraising campaign has not yet started rolling. Brown heads into November with a total of $46,325 raised and about $30,000 still in the bank. Thompson’s only campaign money is reported in her old House reelection campaign fund, which showed a balance of about $8,000 heading into November, pretty much unchanged since June.
—“Tina Polsky pulls in nearly $32K in October to defend SD 29 seat” via Ryan Nicol of Florida Politics
—”Manny Diaz Jr. adds $36K to defend SD 36, half from tobacco, pharma, health care sectors” via Jesse Scheckner of Florida Politics
—“Ana María Rodríguez adds $45,000 for SD 39 defense” via Jesse Scheckner of Florida Politics
—“Speaker-designate Paul Renner rakes in $170K in October for reelection campaign” via A.G. Gancarski of Florida Politics
—“David Smith, Anna Eskamani turn on fundraising efforts” via Scott Powers of Florida Politics
Jackie Toledo raises $100K+ in October — Tampa Republican Rep. Toledo raised $103,125 for her HD 60 reelection campaign last month and now has $255,535 on hand between campaign and political committee. Toledo said she is “humbled by the support.” She added, “My work on bills like reducing the costs of prescription drugs and eradicating human trafficking are examples of why it is important for me to continue to represent the Tampa Bay region.” Toledo was elected to the House in 2016. She is currently running unopposed for a fourth term in the Hillsborough County-based seat. The current HD 60 has a GOP lean — Toledo was reelected by 10 points last year — though that could change when maps are redrawn ahead of the 2022 election.
—”Chip LaMarca raises $83K in October, marking highest monthly fundraising this cycle” via Ryan Nicol of Florida Politics
—”Hillary Cassel nets another $65K in October, grows HD 99 cash lead” via Ryan Nicol of Florida Politics
Save the date:
and
— CORONA NATION —
“COVID-19 hot spots offer sign of what could be ahead for U.S.” via Carla Johnson of The Associated Press — While trends are improving in Florida, Texas and other Southern states that bore the worst of the summer surge, it’s clear that delta isn’t done with the United States. COVID-19 is moving north and west for the winter as people head indoors, close their windows and breathe stagnant air. “We’re going to see a lot of outbreaks in unvaccinated people that will result in serious illness, and it will be tragic,” said Dr. Donald Milton of the University of Maryland. In recent days, a Vermont college suspended social gatherings after a spike in cases tied to Halloween parties. Boston officials shut down an elementary school to control an outbreak. Hospitals in New Mexico and Colorado are overwhelmed.
“Ten states sue the U.S. over the vaccine mandate for health care workers.” via Reed Abelson of The New York Times — The new suit claims that the rule issued last week by the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services “threatens with job loss millions of health care workers who risked their lives in the early days of the COVID-19 pandemic to care for strangers and friends in their communities.” The 10 states also argue that the rule “threatens to exacerbate an alarming shortage of health care workers, particularly in rural communities, that has already reached a boiling point.” Federal officials said they could not comment on pending litigation. In a statement, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services said that “there is no question that staff in any health care setting who remain unvaccinated pose both direct and indirect threats to patient safety and population health.”
“Booster shots are most popular in poorly vaccinated states where coronavirus rages” via Dan Keating, Fenit Nirappil and Katie Shepherd of The Washington Post — The rate at which fully vaccinated residents are getting the shots is highest in the states that also have high rates of new coronavirus cases, including Alaska, North Dakota and Montana, according to a review of state data by The Washington Post. In swathes of the country where health officials will not impose mask and vaccine mandates to curb the virus’s spread, or have had their powers stripped away by Republican state lawmakers or Governors, boosters are one of the few shields left for those worried about contracting and spreading the virus. Just over half of Montana’s population has been fully vaccinated, ranking 35th in the nation, but nearly 1 in 5 of vaccinated Montanans received boosters, ranking second in the nation.
“A judge says Texas’ ban on mask mandates violates the rights of students with disabilities.” via Eduardo Medina of The New York Times — A federal judge ruled on Wednesday that Texas Gov. Greg Abbott’s ban on mask mandates in schools violates the rights of students with disabilities, clearing the path for districts in the state to issue their own rules for face coverings, a decision that could affect more than 5 million students. The ruling comes after months of politicized disputes over measures at the state level opposing mask-wearing policies that had been intended to prevent the spread of COVID-19. Judge Lee Yeakel, who made the ruling in the suit filed in the United States District Court for the Western District of Texas, determined that the order from the Governor violated the 1990 Americans With Disabilities Act because it put children with disabilities at risk.
— CORONA ECONOMICS —
“With travel ban lifted, international buyers could make the South Florida real estate market even hotter” via Amber Randall of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — In Florida, foreign buyers make up about 5% of the dollar volume of sales. Experts believe that with travel restrictions lifted, they’ll be making their way to South Florida to buy a home or condo. “An enlarged buyer pool looking to purchase when the inventory is at all-time lows will likely ignite the competitive bidding processes,” said Bonnie Heatzig, executive director of luxury sales with Douglas Elliman in Boca Raton. Most foreign buyers looking to purchase properties in Florida come from five countries: Canada, Argentina, Brazil, Colombia, and Venezuela, according to a report from the Florida Realtors. South Florida is the most popular among foreign buyers, with the tri-county area getting about 52% of buyers, the report noted.
— MORE CORONA —
“‘Stretched too thin’: With staff ‘exhausted,’ schools cancel class or return to remote learning” via Trevor Hughes of USA Today — School districts across the nation are temporarily closing or switching back to remote learning as school administrators struggle with empty classrooms, driverless buses and understaffed cafeterias caused by widespread teacher exhaustion, coronavirus concerns and the Great Resignation. Michigan has in recent weeks seen at least eight schools shut down or return to online learning because of staff shortages. In Florida, Brevard Public Schools said it would extend its Thanksgiving break, while public schools in Seattle and Portland, Oregon, give teachers and students an extra day off for Veterans Day.
“SDF hospital: Stress over vaccination seen as main cause of side effects” via Seita Watanabe of Yomiuri Shimbun — Anxiety over the vaccination itself is believed to be the cause of the vast majority of side effects experienced among those vaccinated against the novel coronavirus at a mass vaccination site in Tokyo, an analysis by the Self-Defense Forces Central Hospital has found. About 90% of the acute-phase side effects experienced by 2,930 people after receiving the vaccine at the Defense Ministry-administered vaccination site were believed to stem from stress accompanying anxiety over the vaccination. Those in the younger age group made up the largest share of those affected, according to the analysis carried out before the site in Chiyoda Ward, Tokyo, is scheduled to close at the end of this month.
“Israel holds ‘war games’ to prepare for more lethal COVID-19 strain” via Gwen Ackerman of Bloomberg — Israel on Thursday began a nationwide drill to test its readiness in the event of an outbreak of a new, more lethal COVID-19 variant. The exercise, war-gamed over three sessions to simulate the passage of time after a potential flare-up, will test the resilience of systems that determine lockdown policies, monitor variants, offer economic support for citizens, enforce quarantines and watch border crossings. “While the situation of coronavirus in the world is deteriorating, Israel is safe and protected,” Prime Minister Naftali Bennett said in a statement. “In order to maintain this, and to safeguard the continuity of normal life, we must continue to closely monitor the situation and prepare for any scenario.”
— PRESIDENTIAL —
“Joe Biden pays tribute to veterans, ‘the soul of America,’ at Arlington National Cemetery” via Amy B Wang of The Washington Post — Biden paid tribute to the nation’s service members, calling the duty to care for its veterans America’s “one truly sacred obligation” and describing presiding over Veterans Day ceremonies at Arlington National Cemetery as the single greatest honor he had been afforded in office. “All our veterans past and present, we thank you. We honor you. And we remember always what you’ve done for us,” Biden said in a speech to about 650 people after a wreath-laying ceremony at the Tomb of the Unknowns. Biden remembered three prominent veterans who died in recent weeks: former Secretary of State Gen. Colin Powell, a Republican and a friend; Gen. Raymond Odierno, who helped devise Iraq War strategy; and former Sen. Max Cleland, a Vietnam War veteran.
“Dems to White House: The only prescription is more Biden” via Laura Barron-Lopez of POLITICO — After months of deference to Congress, Biden moved more assertively last week to shepherd half his domestic agenda into law. With the other half still in limbo, Democrats want some of that Biden punch again. Outside groups fear that congressional Democrats could come up short on Biden’s social spending package. They are concerned that moderates in the House may end up buckling if the budget scores on the bill come back worse than anticipated. And there is residual anxiety that one of the two wavering Senate Democrats — Joe Manchin of West Virginia and Kyrsten Sinema of Arizona — could vote “no” over concerns about inflation and long-term debt. The clearest solution to avoiding this, they argue, is more Biden.
“Biden appointing infrastructure chief” via Hans Nichols and Jonathan Swan of Axios — Biden plans to install a point-person in charge of infrastructure to ensure his administration properly implements its trillion-dollar legislation, two sources familiar with the plans tell Axios. Biden and his top aides know they need to flawlessly execute on their mammoth plan. It may be Biden’s best — and, perhaps, only remaining — opportunity to show voters Democrats can deliver major changes to improve people’s lives. A source with direct knowledge of the appointment said the new role would be called the “infrastructure implementation coordinator.” The goal is to streamline the grant-and-spending process and prevent fraud as the $1.2 trillion in funding is dispersed. It’s not yet known who Biden will pick to fill the job, but if history is a guide, it will be somebody he’s known for a long time and trusts implicitly.
— D.C. MATTERS —
“Democrats sell infrastructure bill, push for Biden backup” via Will Weissert, Thomas Beaumont, and Heather Hollingsworth of The Associated Press — Traffic whizzing behind her, Rep. Sharice Davids gathered reporters at a transportation facility along U.S. 69 in eastern Kansas this week to celebrate the surge of federal money headed in her state’s direction. The massive infrastructure package passed last week means $2.6 billion for Kansas roads, some of the largest investments in them since President Dwight Eisenhower, once a Kansan himself, supported the construction of the national highway system in the 1950s.
“Democrats’ lofty tax agenda imperiled by resistance from within” via Jeff Stein of The Washington Post — Democrats swept into power earlier this year promising to raise tax rates on corporations and the wealthy to pay for their ambitious social agenda. Both have been dramatically pared back, with a suite of their initial ideas on taxes in particular imperiled by resistance from within the party. To meet the demands of Sen. Kyrsten Sinema, the White House agreed to drop a proposed 3% tax on taxpayers earning over $5 million, instead agreeing to target the higher tax to those earning more than $10 million, two people familiar with the matter said on the condition of anonymity to discuss the internal negotiations. The move exempted roughly 35,000 of the wealthiest Americans, or approximately 0.02% of the richest 1%, from the new levy.
“‘I hope it’s a fever that will break’: GOP wrestles with infrastructure vote backlash” via David Sanders of POLITICO — It’s the party against critical race theory, “woke-ism” and vaccine mandates. And now, it would seem, the Republican Party is against bridges and roads. The ferocity of the reaction against the 13 House members who voted with Democrats on the House-passed infrastructure bill appeared to signal a new stage in the party’s evolution, marking the GOP as so reflexively anti-Biden that even spending on infrastructure — an issue that Trump once obsessed over as President — is too radioactive to support. “That’s the way the place works now,” said former Rep. Tom Davis, a Virginia Republican who served as National Republican Congressional Committee chair. “That’s what we have devolved to.”
Tweet, tweet:
“Marco Rubio wants to ban these contributions for ballot initiatives” via Alex Daugherty and Jimena Tavel of the Miami Herald — On Nov. 2, the FEC ruled that foreign donors can contribute to state-based ballot initiatives and referendum campaigns — potentially opening the door for foreigners to influence U.S. policy. Eight states have laws on the books banning such donations but federal law does not prohibit foreign contributions to referendums and ballot initiatives. Florida is not one of the eight states that explicitly ban the practice. Immediately after the FEC ruling, Rubio said he plans to introduce legislation that would ban any foreign donations for U.S. ballot initiatives. Rubio, the highest-profile Republican to announce opposition to the ruling that was backed by the FEC’s GOP Commissioners, said the prospect of Chinese or Russian involvement, in particular, is worrying.
— CRISIS —
“Pressure builds on Mark Meadows to cooperate with Jan. 6 Committee as White House rejects his executive privilege claims” via Jacqueline Alemany and Tom Hamburger of The Washington Post — The House Select committee investigating the Jan. 6 attack on The Capitol and the White House are ramping up the pressure on Meadows to cooperate with the probe into the insurrection as the committee zeros in on Trump’s inner circle. White House Deputy Counsel Jonathan Su sent a letter to Meadows’s lawyer, George Terwilliger III, Thursday morning notifying him that Biden will not assert executive privilege or immunity over the documents and deposition requested by the House Select committee related to his client.
“Prosecutors recommend ‘QAnon Shaman’ Jacob Chansley be sentenced to more than four years in prison“ via Joseph Pisani of The Wall Street Journal — U.S. prosecutors are recommending that Chansley, the self-described “QAnon Shaman” who stormed The Capitol on Jan. 6 wearing a Viking hat with fur and horns, serve 51 months in prison for his role in the attack. Chansley, 34 years old, was one of the most recognizable participants in the riot, roaming the halls of The Capitol shirtless with a painted face and holding a 6-foot spear. He pleaded guilty in September to obstruction of an official proceeding. The felony charge typically carries a statutory maximum of 20 years in prison. Under a plea agreement with the government, Chansley faces a potential sentence of 41 to 51 months. The judge isn’t bound by that sentencing range. In their court filing Tuesday to the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia, prosecutors recommended the maximum prison sentence under the agreement.
— EPILOGUE TRUMP —
“Donald Trump allies are pushing for ‘stay away’ strategy in some 2022 races” via Gabby Orr of CNN — Trump is expected to maintain a prolific schedule of campaign rallies to boost Republicans in next year’s midterms. But on the heels of Gov.-elect Glenn Youngkin‘s victory in Virginia, accomplished without a single Trump cameo, some of the former President’s aides and allies warn there could be parts of the country where he may now be encouraged to keep his distance. The “stay away strategy,” as one aide described it, would involve Trump steering clear of states or districts where a confluence of factors could mean his presence might sabotage Republican chances. The approach assumes an unusual level of deference from the prideful ex-President, who has long insisted his support is the most essential ingredient in any Republican candidate’s quest for victory.
“Federal appeals court temporarily delays release of Trump’s Jan. 6 records sought by US House committee investigating the Capitol insurrection” via Nomaan Merchant of The Associated Press — The U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit on Thursday granted an administrative stay sought by Trump. The stay is intended to give the court time to consider Trump’s arguments against the release of documents, which was otherwise scheduled for Friday without a court order. The House is seeking Trump’s call logs, draft speeches and other documents related to Jan. 6, when supporters of the former President stormed The Capitol to try to stop the certification of his loss to Biden. Biden waived executive privilege on the documents. Trump then went to court arguing that as a former President, he still had the right to exert privilege over the records and that releasing them would damage the presidency in the future.
“Chris Christie takes a jab at Trump for losing last year’s election” via John Wagner of The Washington Post — Christie took at a jab at Trump for losing last year’s election, signaling a willingness to spar with the former President as they both consider 2024 White House bids. “I’m not gonna get into a back-and-forth with Donald Trump,” Christie said. “But what I will say is this: When I ran for reelection in 2013, I got 60% of the vote. When he ran for reelection, he lost to Joe Biden.” “I’m happy to have that comparison stand up, because that’s the one that really matters,” Christie added. Christie, who at times has had a friendly relationship with Trump, including last year when he advised him ahead of debates with Biden, was responding to a taunt earlier this week from Trump.
“‘We killed Herman Cain’: Trump staffers say they blame themselves for Cain’s COVID-19 death after he attended Tulsa rally” via Oma Seddiq of Business Insider — When news hit that former Republican presidential candidate Cain died of COVID-19 a month after he attended Trump’s rally in Tulsa last summer, many of the President’s campaign staffers blamed themselves for his death, according to a new book. “We killed Herman Cain,” one senior Trump staffer reportedly told ABC News reporter Will Steakin, who also attended the Tulsa event on June 20, 2020. That’s according to an excerpt of ABC News’ chief Washington correspondent Jonathan Karl‘s forthcoming book, “Betrayal: The Final Act of the Trump Show,” published in Vanity Fair on Thursday. The book is slated to come out on Nov. 16.
“They raised millions for Trump, spent barely any of it on him. Now they’re indicted.” via Caitlin Oprysko of POLITICO — For the last five years or more, Matt Tunstall has used the name and likeness of Trump and other politicians to ostensibly raise money for a network of political action committees. But he’s been accused of pocketing most of the money himself and on Wednesday, his so-called scam PAC operation finally caught up to him. In an indictment unsealed on Wednesday, federal prosecutors charged Tunstall and Robert Reyes with conspiracy to commit wire fraud and to lie to the Federal Election Committee. They allege that of the roughly $3.5 million raised by the PACs they ran during the 2016 election, “only approximately $19 were distributed to any candidate’s authorized campaign committee or to any political cause, while a total of more than $1.5 million was used to benefit” the PAC operators themselves.
— LOCAL NOTES —
“Orange Elections Supervisor foils fake ballot in Orlando’s election” via Ryan Gillespie of the Orlando Sentinel — Of more than 12,000 ballots cast in Orlando’s city council elections last week, one vote caught the attention of the Supervisor of Elections office when it was rejected by a vote-counting machine. Upon further review, it mostly looked like any other ballot. What it did not have were exact matching bar codes that line the perimeter of an official ballot. The combination of lines and black boxes unique to each election tells a voting machine how to scan an official ballot. This particular ballot, deemed fake by Supervisor of Election Bill Cowles’ office, had incorrect markings, and only on the top and bottom instead of all four sides. It also was printed on lighter-weight paper, Cowles confirmed with the company that does the office’s printing.
“John Dingfelder officially denies key allegations in public records suit” via Daniel Figueroa IV of Florida Politics — Tampa City Council member John Dingfelder denied key allegations in a lawsuit accusing him of intimidation and improper communication of public information, according to documents filed in Hillsborough County Court. The suit was filed on Oct. 11 by Stephen Michelini, a Tampa-based development consultant. In the filing, Michelini accused Dingfilder of using his wife’s email account to conduct public business and of intimidating Michelini when he made a public request for those emails. Michelini filed an amended complaint against Dingfelder on Oct. 19. The council member responded on Nov. 3 denying most of the allegations. Dingfelder would not, however, elaborate. “I stand by whatever is in there,” Dingfelder said. “Whatever we filed in court.”
“Francis Suarez says Miami residents will be getting Bitcoin ‘yield’ in digital wallets” via Rob Wile and Joey Flechas of the Miami Herald — Miami residents may soon be getting a Bitcoin “yield” thanks to the MiamiCoin project. In an interview with cryptocurrency news site Coindesk.com, Suarez said he was planning to convert the millions of dollars in proceeds MiamiCoin has created into a Bitcoin “dividend.” “We’re going to be the first city in America to give a Bitcoin yield as a dividend directly to its residents,” Suarez said. “We’re going to create digital wallets for our residents, and we’re going to give them Bitcoin directly from the yield of MiamiCoin.” The wallets would be set up with a third-party vendor, he said.
“Opa-locka Mayor abruptly resigns during Commission meeting, citing ‘corruption’” via Aaron Liebowitz of the Miami Herald — Mayor Matthew Pigatt abruptly announced his resignation during a City Commission meeting Wednesday, marking the latest twist of fate for a city trying to overcome years of corruption and political chaos. Following a public comment period, Pigatt rose from his seat at the dais to deliver a prepared statement of his resignation. “I will not be a figurehead for corruption,” Pigatt said. Pigatt’s resignation was not on the agenda for Wednesday’s meeting. During his statement, Pigatt made repeated references to continued corruption within the city’s government despite his best efforts to root it out. He did not provide any details.
“Tallahassee police to release less information, fewer alerts about crime to public” via Christopher Cann of the Tallahassee Democrat — Amid a recent rash of gun violence, the Tallahassee Police Department is changing its public alert procedure to focus on crimes that lead to deaths and life-threatening or multiple injuries, effectively reducing the number of times it will immediately notify the public. The new guidelines are effective immediately. It emphasizes two things: A new incident alert procedure and its “social first” model, which asks reporters not to follow up on news releases or Tallahassee Online Police Statistics (TOPS), TPD’s real-time online crime map. The biggest change is the criteria for an incident alert, commonly posted on social media, notifying the public about an incident for both knowledge and safety.
“FSU might cut these five degree programs” via Tristan Wood of Florida Politics — The colleges overseeing the programs requested they be dropped following years of low enrollment or being inactive. If approved, the removal will go into effect in summer 2022: Bachelor’s in Early Childhood Education, currently has no students enrolled because it was suspended in 2017; Master’s in Nursing, phased out as the professional standards of the advanced nursing industry has left those type of programs behind nationwide; Master’s In History and Philosophy of Science, suspended since 2020 after a new major program was made to replace it; Master’s and Doctorate in Interdisciplinary Humanities, dropped following low enrollment and underperformance.
— TOP OPINION —
“The Democrats need to go back to school” via James Hohmann of The Washington Post — A week after Republicans won the Virginia Governor’s race, it is increasingly obvious that Fox News and red Twitter did not invent parental anger about what’s been happening in public schools. Efforts to lower academic standards and scale back educational opportunities in the name of racial equity are backfiring on liberals from coast to coast, including in the bluest big cities in America. Eliminating gifted and talented programs has become fashionable on the left, based on well-intentioned desires to close the achievement gap for African American and Latino students, but it’s alienating many parents. Complicating matters is the fact that, as of 2018, roughly a quarter of San Francisco’s children already attend private schools, compared to 9% in California.
— OPINIONS —
“Elon Musk once again proves the need for a billionaire tax” via Helaine Olen of The Washington Post — Musk, the world’s wealthiest man, would like us to think he takes personal finance and investment advice from Twitter. He recently polled his 63 million followers on the social media platform about whether he should sell part of his stake in Tesla. “Much is made lately of unrealized gains being a means of tax avoidance, so I propose selling 10% of my Tesla stock,” he wrote. More than 3.5 million votes later, the sells decisively won.
“Florida GOP aims to placate anti-vaxxers. DeSantis gets to chest-thump in the end” via the Miami Herald editorial board — Florida’s special legislative session, called by DeSantis to undermine new federal COVID-19 vaccination mandates, begins Monday. Conspicuously absent from the bills lawmakers will consider are the governor’s proposals to punish businesses by making them liable for medical harm arising from mandatory vaccination and to strip them from COVID-19 legal protections if they impose a mandate. In many ways, this special session is little more than a public performance designed to show that Republicans are protecting “freedom,” meaning, a small number of unvaccinated workers at the expense of everyone else. All of that comes courtesy of Florida taxpayers, who are footing the bill to send more than 100 lawmakers to Tallahassee outside their regular annual session that starts in just two months.
“DeSantis should know that a road might not just be a road” via Joe Henderson of Florida Politics — DeSantis is often dismissive when he believes an issue is unimportant or won’t benefit him politically. U.S. Department of Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg said the Bipartisan Infrastructure Framework would address systemic racism in highway design. DeSantis’ response was telling. “I heard some stuff, some weird stuff from the Secretary of Transportation trying to make this about social issues,” DeSantis said. “To me, a road’s a road.” Maybe he should ask former Sen. Arthenia Joyner about that because she has firsthand knowledge about what a road is or isn’t. After Tampa accepted federal dollars to build Interstate 275 and Interstate 4, the government took her family’s home by eminent domain to build roadways that went right through the heart of a thriving Black community.
“Congressional special election shows the need for ranked choice voting” via the South Florida Sun-Sentinel editorial board — In 1992, as ever since, the Democratic Primary was the decisive election in what is now CD 20. Alcee Hastings won it in a runoff with 22,046 votes and held the seat without serious challenge until his death on April 6 this year. Whoever wins the Democratic nomination to succeed him in the canvass scheduled Friday will claim the prize with fewer than 12,000 votes. Most of the voters this time will have favored someone other than the winner, whose credibility in Congress could be diminished by such a pitiful showing of support. It doesn’t have to be this way. As we reported recently, New York City had splendid success with ranked choice voting in its June primary for Mayor and other local offices.
— ON TODAY’S SUNRISE —
A Florida lawmaker and media organizations go head-to-head with the DeSantis administration in a lawsuit over COVID-19 data.
Also, on today’s Sunrise:
— The Mayor of a small South Florida city abruptly resigns, blaming ongoing corruption.
— Today’s Sunrise Interview is with Democratic Rep. Carlos Guillermo Smith, whose public records request to the Florida Department of Health for daily local COVID-19 data was denied; now he is part of an ongoing lawsuit against the state.
To listen, click on the image below:
— WEEKEND TV —
Facing South Florida with Jim DeFede on CBS 4 in Miami: The Sunday show provides viewers with an in-depth look at politics in South Florida, along with other issues affecting the region.
Florida This Week on Tampa Bay’s WEDU: Rob Lorei hosts a roundtable with Tampa Bay Times senior deputy editor Amy Hollyfield, businessman Stanley Gray, La Gaceta editor and publisher Patrick Manteiga and Adam Goodman, Edward R. Murrow Sr. Fellow at Tufts University.
In Focus with Allison Walker on Bay News 9/CF 13: A discussion about National Adoption Day and Month; the costs, process, and misconceptions regarding adopting a child in Florida. Joining Walker are Nicole Musgray, Associate Executive Director in Seminole County, Embrace Families; and Yolanda Demont, Adoption Program Manager, Children’s Home Society of Florida.
Political Connections Bay News 9 in Tampa/St. Pete: A look ahead to the Special Session on COVID-19 mandates; a one-on-one interview with Rep. Fentrice Driskell on the Special Session; and a recap of Rubio’s visit to Tampa Bay to commemorate veterans.
Political Connections on CF 13 in Orlando: A discussion with Agustín Gutiérrez, Mexican Consulate — Orlando, on immigrants, immigration, work visas, and the work situation in Central Florida.
The Usual Suspects on WCTV-Tallahassee/Thomasville (CBS) and WJHG-Panama City (NBC): Host Gary Yordon talks with Dr. Ed Moore.
This Week in Jacksonville with Kent Justice on Channel 4 WJXT: Jacksonville City Council members Michael Boylan, LeAnna Cumber and Joyce Morgan; Michael Sampson II of the Jacksonville Community Action Committee.
— ALOE —
Prayers for Winter — “‘Dolphin Tale’ star illness prompts aquarium to close one day” via Curt Anderson of The Associated Press — The Clearwater Marine Aquarium said in a statement it will shut its doors Friday “to create the best possible environment” for medical staff to treat Winter, a 16-year-old female bottlenose dolphin suffering from a gastrointestinal infection. “The dedicated CMA animal care experts are consulting with top animal care and veterinary specialists in the country and exploring all possible options to save Winter’s life,” the statement said. The aquarium plans to reopen Saturday. James “Buddy” Powell, president of the aquarium, told reporters the one-day closure will allow staff “to do nothing but focus on Winter’s health.” Winter has previously experienced intestinal issues — not uncommon among dolphins — but such problems have never affected her like this, Powell said.
“Thanksgiving air travel on track to exceed pre-pandemic levels” via Karl Evers-Hillstrom of The Hill — Bookings for Thanksgiving flights are up 78% from last year and 3.2% from 2019, according to data from Adobe Digital Insights, which tracked online reservations at major airlines through Nov. 7. “After a year where many were unable to see their friends and families for Thanksgiving, we are expecting busy airports this month,” said Vivek Pandya, lead analyst at Adobe Digital Insights. “The holiday uptick is also driving up prices online, and consumers should start thinking about Christmas travel pretty soon.” The analysis found that September and October bookings were 13% and 10% lower than pre-pandemic levels, respectively. But air travel has rebounded in recent weeks as COVID-19 cases decline.
“Counting down in style: What’s new in Advent calendars” via Katie Workman of The Associated Press — For lovers of Advent calendars, there are lots of new, fun and unusual ways to count down to Christmas. Show up for Thanksgiving dinner with one of these and know that the recipient will be getting daily treats all month long. Maison Du Chocolat makes a Holiday Ornament Advent Calendar designed to hang on the tree. Vinebox has created 12 Nights of Wine: Women Winemakers Holiday Edition Boxes. For the coffee lover, check out the new Bean Box Twelve Mornings of Coffee calendar. The puppies and kittens can have their own little holiday countdown! There are many products out there, including Purina’s two versions for dogs: 12 or 24 days of treats that include chew bones and snacks.
— HAPPY BIRTHDAY —
Celebrating today are former Lt. Gov. Jeff Kottkamp, Taylor Biehl, state Rep. Nick DiCeglie, Megan Fay, Shawn Frost, Lindsay Harrington, Jackie Pons, and Gray Rohrer. Belated birthday wishes to Pierce Schuessler of Metz, Husband & Daughton. Celebrating this weekend are Speaker-to-be Sam Garrison and big-time lobbyist David Ramba.
___
Sunburn is authored and assembled by Peter Schorsch, Phil Ammann, Renzo Downey and Drew Wilson.
5.) MORNING BREW
6.) THE FACTUAL
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13.) AXIOS
Axios AM
Happy Friday! Smart Brevity™ count: 1,142 words … 4½ minutes. Edited by Zachary Basu.
Former President Trump — in a taped interview with Jonathan Karl of ABC News that was shared with Axios — defended, quite extensively, supporters who threatened to “hang” former Vice President Mike Pence.
Why it matters: Well, it is unprecedented for a former president to openly say it was OK to threaten the life of his vice president.
- Oh, the two men are on track to run against each other for the GOP nomination in 2024.
Zoom out: This is a slice of a 90-minute interview — conducted at Mar-a-Lago on March 18 — for Karl’s book, “Betrayal,” out on Tuesday.
- More news-breaking audio from the interview will air Sunday on ABC’s “This Week.”
Go deeper: We will let the Q&A tell the story.
Jonathan Karl: “Were you worried about him during that siege? Were you worried about his safety?”
- Trump: “No, I thought he was well-protected, and I had heard that he was in good shape. No. Because I had heard he was in very good shape. But, but, no, I think — “
Karl: “Because you heard those chants — that was terrible. I mean — ”
- Trump: “He could have — well, the people were very angry.”
Karl: “They were saying ‘hang Mike Pence.'”
- Trump: “Because it’s common sense, Jon. It’s common sense that you’re supposed to protect. How can you — if you know a vote is fraudulent, right? — how can you pass on a fraudulent vote to Congress? How can you do that? And I’m telling you: 50/50, it’s right down the middle for the top constitutional scholars when I speak to them. Anybody I spoke to — almost all of them at least pretty much agree, and some very much agree with me — because he’s passing on a vote that he knows is fraudulent. How can you pass a vote that you know is fraudulent? Now, when I spoke to him, I really talked about all of the fraudulent things that happened during the election. I didn’t talk about the main point, which is the legislatures did not approve — five states. The legislatures did not approve all of those changes that made the difference between a very easy win for me in the states, or a loss that was very close, because the losses were all very close.”
- 📚 Preorder … Read a “Betrayal” adaptation about “deputy president” Johnny McEntee … Read a “Betrayal” excerpt about Trump’s disastrous Tulsa rally.
“American home buyers are having to pounce faster than ever to clinch a deal, forcing many of them to make snap decisions about what house to purchase,” The Wall Street Journal reports (subscription).
- “Home sales between July 2020 and June 2021 sat on the market for a median period of only one week before going under contract, according to … the National Association of Realtors.”
- “That is down from three weeks a year earlier and marks a record low in data going back to 1989.”
Go deeper: Read the Realtors release.
Leaders of China’s Communist Party set the stage for Xi Jinping to extend his rule of the world’s most populous country, AP reports.
Why it matters: Xi, who has amassed more power than any Chinese leader since at least “paramount leader” Deng Xiaoping in the 1980s, is expected to pursue a third five-year term.
Between the lines: That would break with a two-decade-old party tradition that would have required the 68-year-old leader to step down next year.
- Xi’s bid to stay in power has the potential to alienate younger party figures who might see their chances for promotion diminished.
- “A party resolution on China’s past ignores mistakes and cements the president’s power,” as the L.A. Times puts it.
🔭 The long view: Countries in Asia, Africa and Latin America have shown that long periods of one-person rule can lead to poor official decisions and economic performance.
- Go deeper: Sponsors asked to defend support for Beijing Winter Olympics.
Army veteran Stephen Hedger is hugged by his son, Lincoln, as they visit the gravesite of U.S. Army Major Paul Douglas Carron at Arlington National Cemetery yesterday.
The average price of self-serve regular gas in California is $4.65 — just two cents under the record, set Oct. 9. 2012, AAA reports.
- The average national price is $3.42, unchanged from a week ago.
Californians: See a table of gas prices by metro area + the record price.
Former New York Mayor Mike Bloomberg, after speaking at the Glasgow summit, is personally asking centrist House Democrats to support President Biden’s Build Back Better package because of its climate provisions.
- “Democrats won’t get this chance again, and neither will the nation,” Bloomberg writes in an editorial for Bloomberg Opinion. “The overall bill is hardly perfect, but a major portion of it would produce health, environmental and economic benefits that we can’t afford to lose.”
American Airlines cancellations at LAX on Oct. 31. Photo: Carlos Barria/Reuters
Trying to head off mass flight cancellations, American Airlines offered flight attendants and pilots extra pay for working during the holidays. The pilots union voted to reject the offer, reports Michael Mooney of Axios Dallas.
- Why it matters: Flight demand is slowly approaching 2019 levels. Mass disruptions in December could be infuriating for passengers and incredibly costly for airlines.
Flight attendants could make as much as triple their usual pay for working holiday flights and having perfect attendance.
- American offered pilots a 50% pay increase for flying peak days around Thanksgiving, Christmas and New Year’s Day — and an additional 50% increase for picking up extra holiday trips.
- The pilots union says it wants more permanent changes to how the airline schedules flights.
Flashback: American Airlines had to cancel more than 2,000 flights in only a few days at the end October and early November, citing weather problems and understaffing.
- Southwest experienced similar problems, which cost the airline a reported $75 million.
Driverless trucks are a daily sight in Bentonville, Ark., as they shuttle Walmart merchandise from a warehouse to a Neighborhood Market, Axios’ Joann Muller and Worth Sparkman report.
- Walmart and its self-driving technology partner, Gatik, pulled the human safety driver from autonomous delivery trucks on a 7-mile route in the retailer’s hometown — an industry first.
- A passenger rides along as an observer, with the ability to stop the truck in an emergency. A chase vehicle follows behind.
How it works: The trucks move customer orders from a Walmart “dark store” (micro-fulfillment center) to a nearby Neighborhood Market.
- The route avoids schools and hospitals, and favors right turns — a practice pioneered by UPS.
Lingo: Gatik is targeting the “middle mile” of the supply chain — short, fixed, repeatable routes.
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14.) THE WASHINGTON FREE BEACON
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15.) THE WASHINGTON POST MORNING HEADLINES
16.) THE WASHINGTON TIMES
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17.) THE WASHINGTON EXAMINER
18.) ASSOCIATED PRESS
19.) FORT MYERS (FLORIDA) NEWS-PRESS
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20.) CHICAGO TRIBUNE
21.) CHICAGO SUNTIMES
22.) THE HILL MORNING REPORT
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23.) THE HILL 12:30 REPORT
24.) ROLL CALL
25.) POLITICO PLAYBOOK
POLITICO Playbook: Trump sours on DeSantis
DRIVING THE DAY
TODAY’S MUST-READ — “The toughest trial KEVIN MCCARTHY faces on his way to becoming House speaker isn’t reclaiming the majority. It’s what comes afterward.” That’s the blunt takeaway from Olivia Beavers’ big piece this morning drawing on interviews with more than 40 Republicans, which “point to two worrisome factions for McCarthy in a future vote for speaker: conservatives and wild cards.”
HERE’S THE THING …
- DONALD TRUMP has been complaining to members and guests at Mar-a-Lago that Florida Gov. RON DESANTIS still hasn’t joined the other 2024 hopefuls in pronouncing that he won’t run for president if Trump runs. One guest suspects that Trump’s gripes are so frequent because he is planting them in hopes that they’ll get back to DeSantis. Trump has told his advisers that DeSantis privately assured him that he won’t run if Trump does, but that’s not enough for the former president — he wants DeSantis to say it in public. Trump has even suggested that DeSantis shouldn’t underestimate his Democratic challenger CHARLIE CRIST, calling him a “killer.” Now, as DeSantis crisscrosses the country to raise money for his 2022 reelection, Trump aides are starting to feel pressure to pick sides. Trump has made it known that he didn’t appreciate that former White House chief of staff MARK MEADOWS traveled to Beverly Hills for a DeSantis fundraiser in June (also in attendance: Trump pal and casino magnate STEVE WYNN and former Treasury Secretary STEVE MNUCHIN) and then went on to Orange County, where he introduced DeSantis to other deep-pocketed donors. In a statement to Playbook, a spokesperson for Trump called this reporting “fake news.”
- At the Duke Ellington School of the Arts in Georgetown, the students don’t want DAVE CHAPPELLE’s money. The high school planned a fundraiser with its famed alum for Nov. 23 to raise money for a new theater named after the comedian, but quietly canceled the event due to an uproar over remarks he made about transgender people in his recent Netflix special, “The Closer.” Now here’s the backstory: Two students tell Playbook that their peers got into a heated debate with faculty after being told that they were expected to help assemble an exhibition to honor Chappelle on the same day as the fundraiser. With many of their classmates identifying as LGBTQ+, the students were uncomfortable supporting the comic, and some even talked about staging a walkout if the tribute went forward. Ellington ended up canceling the fundraiser, even though an invite had already been sent to multiple patrons. Chappelle, a graduate of Ellington, has credited the school with saving his life, donated $100,000 to his alma mater, gave it one of his Emmy awards in 2017, delivered a commencement address for the school, held a master class for students and regularly visited its campus with fellow celebs, like BRADLEY COOPER and CHRIS TUCKER.
- Now here’s an event everyone is angling to attend: the White House Christmas parties. Though the pandemic has sidelined most social events at 1600 Penn for nearly a year, “we are going to celebrate the holidays,” a White House spokesperson told Daniel Lippman. “It will look a bit differently than it has in the past. We are working through final details.” But just how different will it look? Two other White House officials told Daniel that the parties likely won’t be indoors, since the administration has to lead by example and follow the city’s guidelines on large gatherings. At the same time, an outdoor party in December sounds cold. Quite the conundrum. A final decision still hasn’t been made, but regardless it’ll likely be a skinnier guest list. Bonne chance!
- Rep. NICOLE MALLIOTAKIS (R-N.Y.) scored some enviable treatment from the N.Y. Post editorial board Thursday for voting in favor of President JOE BIDEN’s BIF: an adoring headline praising the Republican for “vot[ing] for her constituents on infrastructure bill.” But at the Metropolitan Republican Club in New York on Tuesday, Malliotakis was booed by the crowd when former Trump staffer BORIS EPSHTEYN singled her out among the 13 Republican “traitors” who voted for the bill. “It may be time for primaries on Staten Island,” he said, drawing applause and leading someone in the audience to shout out the name of her primary challenger in 2020, JOE CALDARERA. Rough.
- Ask Sen. JON TESTER (D-Mont.) if he’s running for reelection in 2024, and you’ll hear one of two answers. The one you’ll get most often is what he told Playbook (and other outlets): maybe — he’s still “feeling positively” about running for reelection, but won’t commit until 2023. But in late October, at a breakfast in Bozeman, Mont., he reassured about 30 donors and Democratic activists that he would run again. So … Tester is making sure the donor cash continues to flow while keeping the Democratic establishment on its toes over whether he’ll defend a red-state seat in a presidential year — which only gives him more leverage. Want the real answer? Tester’s office says to ask his wife.
Happy Friday. Thanks for reading Playbook. Drop us a line: Rachael Bade, Eugene Daniels, Ryan Lizza, Tara Palmeri.
CAT AND MOUSE ON CAPITOL HILL — It’s one of the most demanding jobs in Washington journalism: tracking down a lawmaker who’s in the news but doesn’t necessarily want to talk. For the Congress press corps, scoring that story-making quote might mean standing on a marble staircase for hours — if the senator or representative decides to talk at all. Rachael takes us inside the Capitol Hill media “scrum” — as reporters like CNN’s Manu Raju reveal their tricks of the trade … and former Sen. JEFF FLAKE discloses all the times he pretended to talk on his phone while walking past reporters. Listen and subscribe to Playbook Deep Dive
JOIN US — White House press secretary JEN PSAKI will join POLITICO standards and ethics editor Anita Kumar for a live interview on Wednesday as part of POLITICO’s inaugural Women Rule Exchange. The conversation will provide insight into how Psaki is reinventing her role for this era and the Biden presidency, what life is like inside the White House, especially for working mothers, and the latest developments with the Biden agenda. RSVP here to watch live
BIDEN’S FRIDAY:
— 8:30 a.m.: The president will take part in the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation Leaders’ meeting.
— 9:30 a.m.: Biden will receive the President’s Daily Brief.
— 2:30 p.m.: Biden will convene a Cabinet meeting focused on implementing the bipartisan infrastructure bill.
— 5:40 p.m.: Biden will leave for Camp David.
Psaki will brief at 1 p.m.
PLAYBOOK READS
CONGRESS
FIRST IN PLAYBOOK — Senate Minority Leader MITCH MCCONNELL is declaring that the fate of Democrats’ reconciliation bill is far from assured. In a new interview on the “Flyover Country with Scott Jennings” podcast out this morning, McConnell says, “Whatever the House does is irrelevant. The final bill is gonna be written in the Senate, and it’ll be written by two people.” He also says he believes America’s democracy remains healthy.
— BUT, BUT, BUT: In a WaPo op-ed Thursday, McConnell warned in stark terms that Democratic ideas to reform the Supreme Court would undermine judicial independence and weaken American democracy. “As this month’s elections confirmed, Americans did not hand Democrats any mandate to let radicals transform the country,” he concludes. “And they certainly have no mandate to permanently damage the rule of law.”
— SPEAKING OF: McConnell announced that he will not attend Monday’s signing ceremony for the BIF, which the Republican leader voted for.
PAGING BERNIE SANDERS — About two-thirds of America’s millionaires would get a tax cut under Democrats’ current reconciliation bill plan, reports Brian Faler, a far cry from the party’s initial dreams of socking it to the wealthy. That’s according to a new Tax Policy Center analysis that attributes the shift largely to repealing the state and local tax deduction cap.
THE WHITE HOUSE
BUILDING BACK BIDEN — As Democrats fear that unforeseen obstacles could yet torpedo the reconciliation bill, the party is clamoring for Biden to take a bolder leadership role in shepherding the package through Congress, Laura Barrón-López reports. Liberal outside groups want the president to make sure the House actually votes on the BBB bill next week as promised, and to manage the Senate centrists who could throw a wrench in the works.
MARK YOUR CALENDARS — The BIF sales pitch tour continues next week. Biden will head to Woodstock, N.H., for an event at an 82-year-old, red-listed bridge Tuesday, the day after he signs the bill into law. Then it’s on to Detroit on Wednesday to visit a GM electric vehicle plant.
ALL POLITICS
2022 WATCH — Sen. LISA MURKOWSKI (R-Alaska) announced this morning that she’ll run for reelection next year. Some Republicans had worried that Democrats might stand more of a chance if she bowed out, Burgess Everett reported in August, though the state’s new ranked-choice system offers room for plenty of surprises. Her launch video largely emphasizes her independent streak, noting the respect she gets from members of both parties and her support for infrastructure funding.
— Rep. MO BROOKS (R-Ala.) may have gotten the Trump endorsement to replace retiring GOP Sen. RICHARD SHELBY, but the 87-year-old isn’t leaving Congress without having his say. Shelby will spend $5 million of his own campaign money to boost KATIE BRITT, his former chief of staff, per WaPo’s Michael Scherer.
GETTING UGLY IN OHIO — The latest controversy in the crowded GOP Senate primary in Ohio is an ad from MARK PUKITA that negatively highlights JOSH MANDEL’s Judaism, reports Natalie Allison. The radio ad features an actor saying, “Are we seriously supposed to believe the most Christian-values Senate candidate is Jewish?” Pukita tried to defend himself Thursday, saying, “In terms of antisemitism, all I did in an ad was pointed out that Josh is going around saying he’s got the Bible in one hand and the Constitution in the other. But he’s Jewish.” (Reminder: Jews use the Bible, too.)
REDISTRICTING RAMIFICATIONS — After Rep. MADISON CAWTHORN (R-N.C.) decided to switch districts following the debut of new congressional lines in North Carolina, GOP state House Speaker TIM MOORE bucked expectations by announcing that he will not seek election to Congress, reports the News & Observer. Moore “was widely expected to run for the U.S. House in the newly created 13th Congressional District, which includes his home county of Cleveland,” but Cawthorn decided to jump from the 14th district to the 13th, citing his fear “that another establishment, go-along to get-along Republican would prevail there” unless he ran.
POLICY CORNER
INFLATION WATCH — Though a wide range of economists believe that in the long term, Biden’s BIF and Build Back Better packages “could make businesses and their workers more productive, which would help to ease inflation,” NYT’s Jeanna Smialek and Jim Tankersley report that “many researchers say the bill is structured in a way that could add to inflation next year.” And further, “some economists and lawmakers worry about the timing, arguing that the risk of fueling more inflation when it has reached record highs outweighs the potential benefits of passing a big spending bill.”
— Coming soon: an infrastructure czar. Sources tell Axios’ Hans Nichols and Jonathan Swan that Bident is planning to appoint a new role “in charge of infrastructure to ensure his administration properly implements its trillion-dollar legislation.”
AMERICA AND THE WORLD
WHEN I CALLED YOU LAST NIGHT FROM GLASGOW — Zack Colman reports that a “group of developing countries, which includes China and India, slammed the effort by U.S. climate envoy JOHN KERRY and European negotiators for countries to conduct the reviews of their climate initiatives more often, saying that the rich world had pumped most of the carbon dioxide into the atmosphere that was causing the changes in the climate.”
TOP-ED — The U.N.’s Amina Mohammed and the UAE’s Lana Zaki Nusseibeh write in the WSJ that denying girls an education is inconsistent with the religious teachings of the Quran, whose first command centers on reading and knowledge. “The world cannot stand by in the face of the Taliban’s escalating attacks on girls’ education, especially restrictions clothed in the false garb of religious compliance.”
JAN. 6 AND ITS AFTERMATH
OR ELSE — Leaders of the House select committee investigation Jan. 6 told Meadows that “they’re prepared to seek criminal contempt charges if he refuses to appear for a deposition on Friday,” Kyle Cheney reports. “Rep. BENNIE THOMPSON (D-Miss.), chair of the House select committee investigating the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol, said in a letter to Meadows’ lawyer, GEORGE TERWILLIGER III, that Meadows’ continued resistance to cooperating with the panel lacked any plausible defense.”
— Earlier Thursday, a federal appeals court “granted a short-term delay in the Jan. 6 select committee’s access to Trump’s White House records,” write Kyle and Josh Gerstein. “A three-judge panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit … will instead hear arguments in the matter on Nov. 30.”
— Also, CNN’s Dan Berman breaks down what Trump’s next attempt to block documents could look like.
TRUMP CARDS
SKIN DEEP — As CHRIS CHRISTIE mounts an early bid in the 2024 GOP presidential race, he’s carving out his lane and getting under Trump’s skin with subtle digs at the 2020 election and Trump’s presidency, Meridith McGraw and Marc Caputo report.
— The Daily Beast obtained a copy of Christie’s new book, “Republican Rescue,” in which he writes that he turned down Trump’s offer of chief of staff, because news of the offer leaked.
TV TONIGHT — PBS’ “Washington Week”: Rachel Scott, Kayla Tausche, Brian Bennett and Paula Reid.
SUNDAY SO FAR …
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MSNBC
“The Sunday Show”: Rep. Pramila Jayapal (D-Wash.) … Rep. Maxine Waters (D-Calif.) … Maya MacGuineas … Matthew Dowd … Dionne Warwick … Maya Wiley.
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CBS
“Face the Nation”: Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen … World Bank Group President David Malpass … Scott Gottlieb.
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FOX
“Fox News Sunday”: Surgeon General Vivek Murthy … Texas A.G. Ken Paxton. Panel: Doug Heye, Julie Pace and Mo Elleithee. Power Player: Virginia Lt. Gov.-elect Winsome Sears.
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ABC
“This Week”: Sen. John Barrasso (R-Wyo.). Panel: Chris Christie, Donna Brazile, Jane Coaston and Heidi Heitkamp.
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Gray TV
“Full Court Press”: Retired Army Gen. Stanley McChrystal.
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CNN
“Inside Politics”: Panel: Astead Herndon, Tarini Parti, Paul Kane, Gabby Orr and Austan Goolsbee.
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NBC
“Meet the Press”: Panel: Leigh Ann Caldwell, Matthew Continetti, Claire McCaskill and Eugene Scott.
PLAYBOOKERS
Doug Emhoff swung by a bakery in Paris’ Jewish Quarter.
Tish James is heading to California this weekend with hopes of building out a deep-pocketed national donor base as she mounts a campaign for governor of New York.
Joaquin Castro and his wife Anna are expecting a new baby next spring.
Washingtonian dug into the Josh Dawsey-going-to-space story — and David Fahrenthold’s history of pranking him.
SPOTTED: Neera Tanden and John Harwood at a two-top at Bindaas in Cleveland Park
OUT AND ABOUT — The Federalist Society’s Antonin Scalia memorial dinner at Union Station on Thursday night featured a speech by Sen. Tom Cotton (R-Ark.) and a toast from Leonard Leo to Justice Clarence Thomas’ 30 years of service. A protest truck was also seen outside saying that FedSoc leaders had supported the insurrection (pic). SPOTTED at the dinner: Justices Samuel Alito and Neil Gorsuch, David McIntosh, Gene Meyer, Jeff Sessions, Anna Cotton, Ted Olson, Judge Laurence Silberman, Greg Mueller, Mike Martin, Matt Whitlock, Maureen Scalia, Gene Scalia, Samantha Dravis, May Davis, Marc Short, Pat Cipollone, Pat Philbin, Don McGahn, Annie Donaldson, Joel Kaplan, Georgia A.G. Chris Carr, Will Levi, Michael Mukasey and Brent McIntosh.
MEDIA MOVES — Vox is adding Marin Cogan as senior correspondent and Rachel Wilkerson Miller as editor of a new section about helping people live better lives. Announcement
TRANSITIONS — John Pomeranz is joining Community Change as general counsel. He previously was partner at Harmon, Curran, Spielberg, & Eisenberg. … Art Hackney has moved back to D.C. as VP of Axiom Strategies. He’s a longtime Alaska GOP consultant and chair emeritus of the American Association of Political Consultants. …
… Elise Argall will be senior associate director of public policy comms at the Alzheimer’s Association. She previously was comms director for Rep. Guy Reschenthaler (R-Pa.). … Priya Bery will be SVP for partnerships at the Pew Charitable Trusts. She most recently has been CEO of the Tarsadia Foundation. … Dan Green is now digital director for the American Values Coalition. He most recently was national comms director for Democrats for Life of America.
WELCOME TO THE WORLD — CNN’s Kristen Holmes and Noah Gray welcomed their first child, Eliot Bradley Gray, on Thursday morning. He’s named after both of Kristen’s grandmothers, Elenor Romano and Ruth Bradley Holmes, and he joins family dog Col. Peanut. Pic … Another pic
HAPPY BIRTHDAY: Sen. Jack Reed (D-R.I.) … Jeff Zients … Dr. Elena Allbritton … PBS NewsHour’s Stephanie Kotuby … Protocol’s Bennett Richardson … Rhana Natour … Harlan Hill … Steve Guest of Sen. Ted Cruz’s (R-Texas) office … Brittany Packnett Cunningham … Anchor Change’s Katie Harbath … Ian Bremmer of the Eurasia Group … Katie Stuntz … Ryan Coyne of Olympic Media … Jenn Ridder … Kevin Gundersen (4-0) … Michelle Perry … Lauren Peikoff of MSNBC … British Robinson of the Barbara Bush Foundation for Family Literacy … Crozer Connor … Maria Cardona of the Dewey Square Group … Roger Ream of The Fund for American Studies … Erica Sackin of Planned Parenthood … Nasdaq’s Jeremy Skule … Dave Weinberg … former Transportation Secretary Norm Mineta (9-0) … Ross Baird … former Rep. Diane Watson (D-Calif.) … Alex Brown … Jessica Kahanek … Scott Beauchamp … Pete DeAnna … Tyler Boozer … POLITICO’s Debra Kahn … Amber Cottle … Kara Gelber of Morning Consult … Josh Britton … Alex Griswold
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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 FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 2021 Good morning, NBC News readers.
Today we look at how anti-vaccine influencers are advising pseudoscience treatments for people to remove the vaccine from their bodies, Britney Spears’ crucial conservator hearing, and a blinking “Demon Star.”
Here’s the latest on that and everything else we’re watching this Friday morning. In a TikTok video that has been viewed hundreds of thousands of times, Dr. Carrie Madej recommends adding in one cup of borax, a cleaning agent that’s been banned as a food additive by the Food and Drug Administration, to “take nanotechnologies out of you.”
The video is one of several methods anti-vaccine influencers and communities on social media have in recent weeks suggested to their many followers who have capitulated and received the Covid shot.
Anti-vaccine message boards are now littered with users caving to societal pressure or work mandates and receiving a coronavirus vaccination.
Long before Covid, anti-vaccine influencers and alternative health entrepreneurs promoted unproven and sometimes dangerous treatments they claimed would rid children of the alleged toxins that lingered after routine childhood immunizations. With Covid came a new group of believers.
Read more here.
Also in Covid news today, anti-viral drugs are on the way and we explain what they are and what they do. Friday’s Top Stories
A federal appeals court Thursday granted former President Donald Trump’s request to temporarily block the National Archives from turning over his White House records to the House committee investigating the Jan. 6 riot at the U.S. Capitol. If the termination petition is approved, the singer will gain full autonomy to make her own financial and medical decisions for the first time since 2008. “It’s a song about censorship,” said Jeroen de Kloet, who studies the cultural implications of globalization. “But then it’s being censored, so that only amplifies the impact of the song.” OPINION If we’ve learned anything, it’s that we have to stop hoping that men will save us, writes Lyz Lenz. Also in the News
Editor’s Pick
Decades after an abusive Christian boarding home closed, women are searching for the children they were forced to give up for adoption. Select
Google released its Google Shopping Holiday 100 for 2021, its list of 100 of the top-trending gift ideas based on Google searches this season. One Fun Thing
Lauri Jetsu, an astrophysicist at the University of Helsinki, is following a tradition that may stretch back thousands of years.
For more than a decade, he’s studied the bright star Algol, one of the most unusual stars in the sky, with its brightness visibly changing every few days.
His research suggests those fluctuations have been noted since at least ancient Egyptian times, and he believes observations made more than 3,000 years ago can contribute to the modern scientific understanding of how Algol behaves.
Read the full story here.
Thanks for reading the Morning Rundown.
If you have any comments — likes, dislikes — send me an email at: patrick.smith@nbcuni.com.
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The CEO, who believes the 2020 presidential election was wrought with issues, is set to air the special…
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RED ALERT: ‘It’s Stupid’: Fight Breaks Out On Fox News
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TOP STORIES:
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Jim Jordan Reveals Durham’s Next Target
-
Trump Preparing Thanksgiving Surprise…
- Racist Biden Talks About ‘The Great Negro’ During Veteran’s Day Speech
- Trump Responds Perfectly To Liz Cheney…
- Truth Out About Why Those Republicans Voted For Biden’s Big Bill
-
‘It’s Stupid’: Fight Breaks Out On Fox News
-
Newsome Goes Down Hard After Getting Booster…
-
Election Group Makes Shock Discovery —Officials Demanding Audit
- Alec Baldwin Get More Bad News…
- Kamala Harris mocked for French accent during Paris visit…
- 2nd Grader Suspended 38 Times Tells School Board She Hopes They Go to Jail
- RITTENHOUSE JUDGE PHONE RINGS WITH MOST PATRIOTIC SONG EVER!
- DHS Issues New Bulletin Boldly Threatening Americans
- Former White House Doc Ronnie Jackson Reveals What Obama Said About Biden
- Biden Nominee Makes Chilling Admission About What’s Coming for Americans
- Stunning Turn Of Events In Contentious NJ Senate Election
- CONFIRMED: Biden NSA Advisor Caught In Durham Indictment
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IN DEPTH:
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- PETA Calls on Fauci to Resign Following Reports of Abusive Dog Experimentation 8 mins ago
- Outrage as Biden calls Satchel Paige the ‘great negro at the time’ 53 mins ago
- BLM threatens riots if Mayor-elect Adams reinstitutes NYPD anti-crime units 2 hours ago
- Defending Freedom, Generation After Generation 2 hours ago
- Man Shot to Death Counted as COVID-19 Fatality 2 hours ago
- Biden Admin Wants Whistleblowers to Report on Companies… 2 hours ago
- Dem bill shrug’s off crimes by illegal immigrants 2 hours ago
- Biden Treasury nominee attacks Manchin… 2 hours ago
- USMC $144,000 salary for ‘diversity’ adviser 3 hours ago
- Where is the mandate for saving Americans in Afghanistan? 3 hours ago
- Iran-Backed Militants Storm U.S. Embassy Seize Hostages and Equipment 3 hours ago
- Hunter Biden Questioned Outside NYC Gallery… 3 hours ago
- Federal Judge Rules Ban on Mask Mandates Violates Rights… 3 hours ago
- Elon Musk Sells About $5 Billion in Tesla Stock 3 hours ago
- Pennsylvania Court Overturns State’s School Mask Mandate 4 hours ago
- People Who Don’t Get Vaccinated Will be “Miserable” and “Lonely” For Life 4 hours ago
- Payouts to Illegal Migrants: Another Sad Example of a Politicized DOJ 12 mins ago
- NIH knew Wuhan lab enhanced bat coronavirus 52 mins ago
- Recon bill ‘Gimmicks’ HIDE $1T+ in spending 1 hour ago
- Kamala Harris mocked for French accent during Paris visit… 1 hour ago
- Taliban Holds a Parade with US Military Gear, Vehicles, and Choppers Provided by Biden 1 hour ago
- Vaxxed Vikings Player Hospitalized 1 hour ago
- Veteran’s Day: A Holiday of Gratitude and Reflection 1 hour ago
- Beckham Jr. narrows options to 3 teams 1 hour ago
- DeSantis: ‘I Will Send Biden’s Illegal Aliens To Delaware’ 1 hour ago
- Bolsonaro RIPS WHO Chief: ‘People Dying After 2nd Dose’ 1 hour ago
- MSNBC Host: Rittenhouse’s Trial Is “White Privilege on Steroids” 1 hour ago
- Howard Stern Says Would Beat Trump 2 hours ago
- So-Called Meritocracy Isn’t The Problem 2 hours ago
- Let Parents Choose 2 hours ago
- Brian Stelter Can’t Handle the Truth 2 hours ago
- Parents Go After Union Stranglehold On School Boards 2 hours ago
- Winning Opium Wars on American Will 2 hours ago
- GOP Apostates Save Brandon Again 2 hours ago
- Russia & NATO weigh in: Poland border crisis 2 hours ago
- Biden Considers Normalizing Relations with Taliban 2 hours ago
- Xi Says No Return to Cold War Tensions 2 hours ago
- Blinken: U.S. would ‘take action’ if Taiwan attacked 2 hours ago
- Fifth Wave of Epidemic Begins in France 2 hours ago
- Lockheed’s SR-72 May Revolutionize Everything 2 hours ago
- China’s 3rd aircraft carrier expected February 2 hours ago
- Military Wants Lasers To Kill Enemy Drones 2 hours ago
- China Building Its Own U.S. Marine Corps? 2 hours ago
- Russia, Iran: Restore nuclear deal 2 hours ago
- Easy fix to Space Force’s top vulnerability 2 hours ago
- Geraldo: “You Have NO Rights When It Comes To Vax” 2 hours ago
- Girl vs School Board: Go To Jail For Forcing Masks 2 hours ago
- Prosecutors: ‘QAnon Shaman’ needs 4 years in prison 2 hours ago
- Trump Bashes Repub Who Voted For Biden Bill 2 hours ago
- CA sheriff ends cooperation with ICE 2 hours ago
- PA school mask mandate nixed by court 2 hours ago
- School Exam: What are KKK, Fox News, Florida, & TX? 3 hours ago
- Pelosi Director Lobbyist For China Chamber Of Commerce 3 hours ago
- Biden Admin Spending $4 Billion+ on Aging Ports 3 hours ago
- BIDINFLATION: Kraft to raise prices up to 20% 3 hours ago
- EU court upholds Google antitrust ruling 3 hours ago
- Infrastructure bill targets crypto industry 3 hours ago
- Org Says Dems’ Budget Would Costs $2.4 Trillion 3 hours ago
- Natural Gas Prices Volatile This Winter 3 hours ago
- EV Carmaker Rivian Set to Go Public 3 hours ago
- CA City Passes Highest Min Wage in US 3 hours ago
- DeSantis Doubles Down On ‘Brandon Administration’ 3 hours ago
- CBP orders supervisors to push vax mandate 3 hours ago
- 10 times media said Steele dossier ‘not disproven’ 3 hours ago
- Biden ‘Informants’ to Report Co-Workers 3 hours ago
- CA schools ditch A‑F grades citing racial gaps 3 hours ago
🚨RED ALERT: ‘It’s Stupid’: Fight Breaks Out On Fox News
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TOP STORIES:
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LeBron Attacks Rittenhouse for Crying, It Immediately Blows Up in His Face
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DeSantis Drops Big Announcement – He’s Making It Official
-
Top Dem FLIPS On Party — Exposes Joe Biden
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Trump Preparing Thanksgiving Surprise….
- Trump Responds Perfectly To Liz Cheney…
- Truth Out About Why Those Republicans Voted For Biden’s Big Bill
- Newsom Goes Down Hard After Getting Booster…
- Election Group Makes Discovery —Officials Demanding Audit
- ‘It’s Stupid’: Fight Breaks Out On Fox News
- Alec Baldwin Get More Bad News…
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Jim Jordan Reveals Durham’s Next Target…
- Kamala Harris Gets a French Accent During Paris visit…
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IN DEPTH:
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- SpaceX delivers new crew of 4 to station, ‘glorious sight’ 14 mins ago
- The Never Trump Journalists Russian Collusion Betrayal 2 hours ago
- Dissident Parents Targeted by School Board in Arizona 2 hours ago
- To Tell the Truth: MSM Spin on Inflation Makes it Sound Not So Bad 2 hours ago
- PETA Calls on Fauci to Resign Following Reports of Abusive Dog Experimentation 8 mins ago
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82.) CNN
Friday 11.12.21 Do you have a boss who calls you outside your work hours? Maybe someone should tell them such behavior is now illegal in Portugal. Just some food for thought! Here’s what else you need to know to Get Up to Speed and On With Your Day. Youth activists protest yesterday in Glasgow, where the COP26 climate summit is coming to a close. Climate
It’s the last day of the COP26 climate summit in Scotland. After two weeks of talks, the big question is: What will the 197 participating parties have to show for it all? Negotiators are working hard on the final details of the Glasgow Agreement, a set of climate pledges and priorities that COP26 President Alok Sharma says will be the main artifact by which history judges this key global meeting. The first draft, revealed Wednesday, did not go down particularly well, with climate experts and advocacy groups criticizing it as vague and not ambitious enough. The latest version retains an unprecedented reference to fossil fuels, boosting pressure on major coal, oil and gas producers. Sharma has urged delegates to find common ground on climate financing: getting wealthy countries to help developing ones cut emissions and adapt.
Capitol riot
A federal appeals court has temporarily granted former President Trump’s request to pause the release of key White House documents ahead of today’s deadline to deliver them to the House committee investigating the January 6 attack. Trump appealed after a lower court decided he can’t claim executive privilege to keep them secret. Now, the three-judge appeals panel has asked lawyers for Trump, Congress and the Biden administration to submit briefs before oral arguments are heard on November 30. Ex-White House chief of staff Mark Meadows, one of many Trump-era officials served with subpoenas in the investigation, has said he will refuse to appear before the committee until courts rule on Trump’s claim of executive privilege. The panel, in response, has given him an ultimatum: Appear by today, or risk being found in criminal contempt.
Astroworld
A ninth person has died as a result of the crowd surge a week ago at a Houston music festival. The woman was just 22; every victim was younger than 30. Houston police now say the investigation into the crush could take months, and questions remain over who should be held accountable. A slew of lawsuits have been filed by families of victims and survivors against rapper and organizer Travis Scott and others. A security guard quit the day of the event after he says he didn’t get enough training and heard about plans online for fans to storm the gate. The Houston firefighters union has complained about the lack of reliable communication between it and medics at the scene hired by the Astroworld event.
Coronavirus
More than 2 million at-home Covid-19 tests produced by Ellume have been recalled by the company due to “higher-than-acceptable” false positives. The FDA says there have been 35 reports of false positives, enough for the body to identify it as a Class I recall — the most serious kind. However, there have been no deaths related to the test failures, and the reliability of negative test results is not affected. Meanwhile, a report this week found the pandemic has caused a 16% rise in expected deaths among the 38 member nations of the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development. Life expectancy fell the most in Spain and the United States, with the US losing 1.6 years of life per capita on average over the course of the pandemic.
Myanmar
A military court in Myanmar has sentenced American journalist Danny Fenster to 11 years in prison. Fenster, 37, had been detained in the country for more than five months. He is the former managing editor of Frontier Myanmar, an independent news outlet that covered current affairs, business and politics in Myanmar. The publication says the charges Fenster faced, including unlawful association with an illegal group and circulating comments that “cause fear” or are “false news,” were based on the allegation that Fenster was working for a different, banned media outlet in the aftermath of the military coup. However, at the time of his arrest, Fenster had not worked for that outlet for several months. Fenster is one of about 100 journalists detained since the February coup, with about 30 still behind bars.
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Kevin Gough, a defense attorney for one of the three White men charged in Black jogger Ahmaud Arbery’s killing, objecting to nationally recognized civil rights leaders attending the trial to support the victim’s family. Prince Charles’ longest-serving and closest aide, Michael Fawcett, has quit as head of The Prince’s Foundation amid an alleged cash-for-honors scandal. Quiz time! A. Chris Evans
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83.) THE DAILY CALLER
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- Liberal Governor Tried to Pump Covid Numbers to Justify Shutdown
- The (No) Keystone COP
- Biden shocked that inflation isn’t “transitory”; Manchin not so much.
- Today’s Live Podcast Taping
- Poland’s Border Crisis
Liberal Governor Tried to Pump Covid Numbers to Justify Shutdown
Posted: 11 Nov 2021 02:52 PM PST (John Hinderaker)A whistleblower has leaked an email exchange dating to October 2020, in which the Chief of Staff to Minnesota Governor Tim Walz tells the state’s Department of Health that the Department’s numbers on how covid was spreading were “less useful than what I expected” because “these numbers are small.” The Commissioner of Health said, in turn, that “people look at the primary case numbers and think those are small impacts that don’t justify the dial backs we propose.” She urges her staff to engage in “creative thinking.”
As I understand it, what is happening here is that the governor wanted to order restrictions on “social gatherings, weddings, funerals,” but the Department of Health’s data on origin of covid infections showed such a small number coming from those events that people wouldn’t buy the governor’s proposed shutdown. So the Department of Health was encouraged to calculate second and third generation infections on into the future–“generations of transmission”–to make the numbers look bigger. On November 10, 2020, Governor Walz issued Emergency Executive Order 20-96, titled “Restricting Social Gatherings, Celebrations, and the Hours and Operations of Bars, Restaurants, and Venues to Prevent Further Spread of COVID-19.” This is the order for which the governor wanted the Department of Health to dummy up more compelling data. The order recites:
This was never true, and there were never any strong data to support the claim.
These leaked emails provide a small window into a phenomenon that we have seen over the last year and a half at the federal level and in many states: politicians who want to exert ever-greater control over our lives have consistently misrepresented and exaggerated data relating to covid in order to instill fear and to justify harsh measures that have damaged the quality of life of many millions of Americans. There is little or no evidence that extreme covid shutdowns did any material good, but we know they did a great deal of harm. Someday, perhaps there will be an accounting for the endemic dishonesty that lay behind them. |
The (No) Keystone COP
Posted: 11 Nov 2021 02:23 PM PST (Steven Hayward)Apparently the UN climate summit in Glasgow is still going on, long past the scene where Ferris Bueller comes out of the shower after the credits have finished asking “You’re still here? Go home!” Most of the heads of state, and even some old codger named Obama, have long ago left and gone home, but fortunately Nancy Pelosi is on the spot to fill the void, though I did have to check to make sure this wasn’t the Babylon Bee:
Apparently Tuesday was “gender day” at COP 26, so it makes sense. Though this paragraph is fun:
Wait—I’m still thinking this whole conference is one giant writers’ room meeting for the Babylon Bee. It’s the only explanation that makes sense. How else to account for headlines like this:
How come climate justice is not being achieved? Looks like it is Saudi sabotage:
But as predicted here last week, once all the brave talk about how “the time for words is over,” there would be a tussle over the non-binding words COP 26 would actually put forth. Hence, no surprise here:
Expect the whole thing to take the same cycle as the previous 25, as explained here by our friends at the Global W arming Policy Foundation over in the UK:
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Biden shocked that inflation isn’t “transitory”; Manchin not so much.
Posted: 11 Nov 2021 12:55 PM PST (Paul Mirengoff)The Washington Post reports that “the White House was thrown on the defensive Wednesday by an inflation report that showed the largest annual increase in prices in three decades.” The inflation report, says the Post, “trigger[ed] fresh criticisms of President Biden’s legislative plans on Capitol Hill and rais[ed] questions about what the administration can do to stem the politically perilous tide of rising prices.” Here’s one way Team Biden can try to stem the inflationary tide. Don’t pour another $2 trillion into the economy via the “build back better” boondoggle. According to the Post’s sources, “senior White House officials were greatly disappointed by Wednesday’s report and surprised at how serious the inflationary problems are throughout the economy.” Really? I was taught that inflation occurs due to “demand pull” and/or “wage push.” The injection of enormous amounts of federal money into the economy, coupled with labor shortages caused in part by some of these cash payments, fueled both phenomena. Biden’s economic team should not have been surprised by the resulting inflation. Larry Summers, a leading liberal economist and Secretary of Treasury under Bill Clinton, isn’t surprised. As the Post, acknowledges, he has been warning of the coming inflation for months. Now, another leading Dem economist has weighed in. Biden’s line is that the pandemic caused inflation. But former Obama administration economic adviser Jason Furman tells AP that policymakers poured kerosene on the fire with federal spending. They were so intent on staving off an economic collapse that they “systematically underestimated inflation,” Furman says. Furman cites as an example Joe Biden’s $1.9 trillion coronavirus relief package, with its $1,400 checks to most households in March. This money overstimulated the economy, he states. Furman adds:.
Another Democrat has been ahead of his party when it comes to anticipating inflation and its discontents. I’m referring to Joe Manchin. He too has been warning about inflation for months, and has cited this concern as a reason to pause before pumping “reconciliation” money into the economy. Yesterday, he complained that inflation is not “transitory” (as the White House has been insisting) but rather “real” and “getting worse.” During the summer, Manchin said “Congress should hit a strategic pause on the budget-reconciliation legislation. . .because [a pause] will provide more clarity on the trajectory of the pandemic, and it will allow us to determine whether inflation is transitory or not.” (Emphasis added) Now, Manchin has determined that inflation is not transitory, so it’s reasonable to expect him to “pause” reconciliation spending legislation indefinitely. Manchin has the power to do so. And with the infrastructure-plus bill done, dusted, and no longer “hostage” to reconciliation, he has no special incentive to get on board the reconciliation train. That doesn’t mean Manchin will follow through with an indefinite pause, but it provides reason to hope that he might. |
Today’s Live Podcast Taping
Posted: 11 Nov 2021 11:59 AM PST (Steven Hayward)We’re still putting together the topical agenda for our live taping of the Three Whisky Happy Hour podcast this afternoon at 5:30 pm Pacific time, but if you want to join us (whisky not mandatory, and yes, Irish whisky is definitely allowed, as is American bourbon whiskey), click on THIS LINK around 5:25 pm or so. We will be having a poll of listeners about whisky preferences, so your vote can help end the civil war between me and Lucretia. Cheers! |
Poland’s Border Crisis
Posted: 11 Nov 2021 09:37 AM PST (John Hinderaker)In a crisis that is, in some ways, reminiscent of our own disaster at the southern border, Poland is facing what amounts to an invasion across its border with Belarus. The London Times reports:
The migrants allegedly have been flown into place on Russia’s airline, Aeroflot, and are accompanied to the border by Belarussian troops. “Gangster” seems like a fair characterization:
Left unexplained is how Belarussian sovereignty and independence depend on forcing foreign migrants across the Polish border.
Belarus seems to be looking for a provocation:
Well, she is certainly correct that the Biden administration will not fight for Poland. Belarus would not be engaging in this provocative behavior without Russian sanction or, more likely, instigation. What are the Russians up to? Why do they think it is in their interest to force Middle Eastern and African immigrants into Poland? Are they observing the disaster at our own border, and using similar tactics to weaken Poland? Or are they simply trying to provoke an armed clash that could be the pretext for war in Eastern Europe? I don’t know. But it seems likely that Vladimir Putin sees an opportunity to take advantage of a pitiful U.S. administration to advance Russian interests and undermine the free countries of Eastern Europe. |
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November 11, 2021
On Thursday’s Mark Levin Show, the American Marxist doesn’t celebrate Veterans Day or even America for that matter. Defunding the military budget, and supporting the damage caused by the Democrat Party does not support the sacrifice that these men and women invested in our country. This program thanks all veterans and stands with them every single day. Then, in typical reprobate fashion, Joe Scarborough attacked the judge in the Kyle Rittenhouse case for chastising the rogue prosecutor after he impinged on Rittenhouse’s Constitutional rights. Mob rule pushed the media and the prosecution to rush these charges instead of gathering the facts and witnesses. Now the prosecution is angling for a mistrial since their star-witness blew it. This is the problem with mob rule. Later, the media is so thoroughly corrupt when they push an agenda instead of the truth. Professor Richard Weaver saw it coming, and highlighted the media’s use of targeted personal attacks and mischaracterizations because there is no context. This is how the Marxist egalitarian society advances its pseudo-events and propaganda. Also, there is a long history of violent attacks at the U.S. Capitol. On January 6th, no members of Congress were shot, no bombs were tossed, and the media still call this an insurrection just so they can blame Trump. Now their committee is trying to subpoena more former Trump staffers in the name of an “insurrection.” Finally, author Bill O’Reilly calls in to highlight the importance of his upcoming tour with former President Trump, reflecting on historical importance matters.
THIS IS FROM:
Axios
“Axios on HBO” exclusive: Christie taunts Trump for losing
Breitbart
‘What Tears?’: LeBron James Mocks Kyle Rittenhouse for Crying During Trial Testimony
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NBC Won’t Say If It Will Acknowledge China’s Human Rights Atrocities During Beijing Winter Olympics
The podcast for this show can be streamed or downloaded from the Audio Rewind page.
Image used with permission of Getty Images / Lynne Gilbert
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