Good morning! Here is your news briefing for Monday November 15, 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 — 11.15.21
Good Monday morning.
Jordan Elsbury is joining Ballard Partners as the Managing Partner of the firm’s Jacksonville office.
In 2015, fresh out of Southeastern Louisiana University, Elsbury was coming up through the ranks of Louisiana politics when he took a chance on Lenny Curry’s first campaign for Jacksonville Mayor.
Like a few alums of the campaign, Elsbury stayed on to work for the administration, first as director of appointments, then in intergovernmental affairs, and finally as Chief of Staff.
During his tenure, Elsbury led the administration through the surge of the COVID-19 pandemic and secured the successful passage of one of the most extensive infrastructure programs in city history. Elsbury also spearheaded Curry’s other policy and legislative victories, including over a billion dollars of economic development projects.
The Mayor’s Office announced earlier this month that Elsbury would leave the position, effective Nov. 12. Ballard Partners, one of the top lobbying firms in the state and the country, snapped him up immediately.
“Jordan’s preeminent public service at the highest levels in the city of Jacksonville will make him an indispensable asset to our firm’s clients in Florida’s most populous city,” firm founder and President Brian Ballard said. “Jordan’s leadership of our firm’s Jacksonville office will make Ballard Partners the unparalleled government relations firm in the city.”
Elsbury added, “I am honored to join Ballard Partners, and am looking forward to expanding the firm’s capabilities in Jacksonville and working with its exceptionally talented and effective team in Tallahassee.”
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The Junior League of Tallahassee (JLT) is launching its 6th Annual Little Black Dress Initiative campaign on Monday at a local coffee shop.
The Initiative, which runs from Nov. 15-19, raises awareness about local food insecurity and money for programs and organizations fighting it in Leon County. JLT members raised more than $70,000 at last year’s initiative, according to the organization.
During the campaign’s five days, JLT members and initiative advocates wear the same black dress or outfit with a button that reads “Ask me About my Dress” or “Ask me About my Outfit.” When asked, participants share information about the food insecurity many Leon County children face and how to donate, said JLT President-elect Becca Piers in a video promoting the event.
“One in three kids in Leon County don’t know where their next meal will come from,” Piers said
Money raised during the event either supports JLT programs, like its Mighty Meals project that provides meals to local school children during spring break or goes to other local organizations fighting food insecurity, like Capital City Youth Services.
The initiative is launching Monday at 7:30 a.m. at RedEye Coffee Midtown on Thomasville Road. JLT is seeking donations for the Initiative on its website.
— SITUATIONAL AWARENESS —
—@KyleGriffinFL: The U.S. administered almost 10 million vaccine doses in the last week, the most since late May, according to the White House.
Thread:
—@EricTopol: Why should every adult get a 3rd shot (booster) when eligible (6 months after 1°💉)? 1. A randomized, placebo-controlled trial, the gold standard for assessing efficacy, showed restoration of efficacy to 95.6%, in >10,000 participants across all age groups
—@BuckSexton: People in my building in NYC are getting very fussy about everyone wearing masks in the elevator, presumably because they want to wait a few minutes until they sit in a packed bar or restaurant where nobody is masked (Anthony) Fauci has driven millions deep into mental illness territory
—@POTUS: Under my predecessor, infrastructure week was an empty promise. Now, we’re going to make an infrastructure decade a reality.
Thread:
—@IleanaGarciaUSA: Tomorrow-Nov15 in Cuba Socialism|Communism will once again show its true colors for the world to see, once again, many governments will look the other way. WE WILL NOT! The American Flag will once again wave in Cuba as a symbol of #hope and #freedom #soscuba #patriayvida #15nCuba
Tweet, tweet:
—@TeacherMerlin: Let me be clear, @ShevrinJones has been a Guest Speaker in my classroom. I asked the Senator if he would come talk to my class and his answer was, “yes.” No excuses, no I’m busy, just that he would love to. It was phenomenal. He actually makes time for people and shows up!
Tweet, tweet:
ExcelinEd National Summit on Education begins — 3; ‘Hawkeye’ premieres — 9; FSU vs. UF — 12; Florida Chamber 2021 Annual Insurance Summit begins — 16; Jacksonville special election to fill seat vacated by Tommy Hazouri’s death — 22; ‘Sex and the City’ revival premieres — 24; Steven Spielberg’s ’West Side Story’ premieres — 25; ’Spider-Man: No Way Home’ premieres — 25; ’The Matrix: Resurrections’ released — 37; ’The Book of Boba Fett’ premieres on Disney+ — 44; Private sector employees must be fully vaccinated or tested weekly — 50; final season of ‘This Is Us’ begins — 50; CES 2022 begins — 51; NFL season ends — 55; 2022 Legislative Session starts — 57; Florida’s 20th Congressional District Election — 57; Special Elections in Senate District 33, House District 88 & 94 — 57; Florida TaxWatch’s 2022 State of the Taxpayer Day — 58; Joel Coen’s ’The Tragedy of Macbeth’ on Apple TV+ — 60; NFL playoffs begin — 61; XXIV Olympic Winter Games begins — 81; Super Bowl LVI — 90; Daytona 500 — 97; CPAC begins — 101; St. Pete Grand Prix — 102; ‘The Batman’ premieres — 108; ’Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness’ premieres — 175; ’Top Gun: Maverick’ premieres — 196; ’Platinum Jubilee’ for Queen Elizabeth II — 200; ’Thor: Love and Thunder’ premieres — 236; San Diego Comic-Con 2022 — 247; ’Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse’ sequel premieres — 326; ‘Black Panther 2’ premieres — 361; ‘The Flash’ premieres — 364; ‘Avatar 2’ premieres — 396; ‘Captain Marvel 2’ premieres — 459; ‘Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania’ premieres — 620. ‘Dune: Part Two’ premieres — 704; Opening Ceremony of the 2024 Olympic Games — 984.
“Ron DeSantis wanted to get tough on employer vaccine mandates. Legislators reined him in” via Mary Ellen Klas of the Miami Herald — When DeSantis called for a Special Session to penalize companies that require employees to be vaccinated for COVID-19, Sen. Aaron Bean, who has spent much of his 17-year legislative career working on health care issues, knew the idea was going to have problems. “I want to stand for freedom,’’ said Bean. “But there’s also the argument that if I own a small company, and I have underlying health conditions, and I want to make sure all those that interact with me are safe, are vaccinated, who are we to tell that small-business owner what they can’t do?” Bean and other legislators were hearing from Florida businesses that they didn’t want to be told what they couldn’t do any more than they wanted the federal government to tell them what they had to do to keep their workplaces safe. Legislators first tried to persuade the Governor the issue could best be handled in the regular legislative session, but DeSantis, who was battling the federal government on mask mandates in schools and positioning to go to war over the federal government’s vaccine mandates, wanted to demonstrate the state was pushing back in a more high-profile way.
“Federal appeals court halts Joe Biden administration’s vaccine requirement, delivering policy a major blow” via Eli Rosenberg and Ann E. Marimow of The Washington Post — A federal appeals court in New Orleans has halted the Biden administration’s vaccine or testing requirement for private businesses, delivering another political setback to one of the White House’s signature public health policies. A three-judge panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 5th Circuit issued the ruling Friday after temporarily halting the mandate last weekend in response to lawsuits filed by Republican-aligned businesses and legal groups. They said they believed that the ruling imposed a financial burden on businesses and potentially violated the Constitution’s commerce clause. The New Orleans-based 5th Circuit is considered one of the country’s most conservative appeals courts.
— SPECIAL SESSION —
“Lawmakers consider COVID-19 rules for businesses despite legal hurdles” via Mary Ellen Klas, Ana Ceballos and Lawrence Mower of the Tampa Bay Times/Miami Herald — Florida legislators will convene a weeklong special session Monday to pass new regulations on businesses that require employees to get vaccinated for COVID-19. The proposals do not ban vaccination requirements but will impose five new exemptions for employees who don’t want a vaccination, all but one of which mirrors a federal rule. Under the proposed HB 1 and SB 2, businesses may require employees to be vaccinated as long as they offer certain opt-outs. The state has found more than 100 employers who have imposed vaccine requirements or laid off employees for not getting vaccinated. For those businesses, the law will not be retroactive, and those companies will face no sanctions.
“Lawmakers drop vaccine mandate from bill providing first responder disability, death payouts” via Fresh Take Florida — Florida lawmakers are considering legislation to provide disability or death payments for first responders infected during the pandemic; but not before rewriting the bill to avoid limiting payments to ones who were vaccinated if employers required it. The changes to the legislation, eliminating an entire section dealing with mandatory vaccinations, reflect the national debate over whether governments can require vaccinations for first responders. Since April last year, about 60 Florida law enforcement officers have died from COVID-19. The close-contact nature of policing leaves little room for social distancing, and DeSantis has worked to prevent local departments from instituting vaccine mandates.
“Florida business interests flag concerns with vaccine mandate bans” via Christine Jordan Sexton of Florida Politics — Florida business interests are starting to raise red flags over a bill that would discourage companies from requiring their employees to get vaccinated for COVID-19. Three days before lawmakers are slated to meet in a Special Session, a statewide nursing home association said the Legislature should consider altering the proposal (HB 1 and SB 2) to carve long-term care providers out of the vaccine mandate ban. In a statement Friday, Leading Age Florida CEO Steve Bahmer said nursing homes must comply with Centers for Medicare and Medicaid rules that require staff at health care facilities that accept Medicare and Medicaid to be vaccinated as a condition of receiving federal health care dollars.
—”Florida Chiropractic Society backs ban on vaccine mandates” via Florida Politics
— DATELINE TALLY —
“DeSantis says critical media coverage of COVID-19 surge has ‘been deadly’” via A.G. Gancarski of Florida Politics — The Governor made the claim in an interview on Fox News: “Well, I think in some respects it’s been deadly to people how the media has been,” saying that the media “attacked” him for opening state-run monoclonal therapy sites. “When we had our summer spike, I rolled out 25 monoclonal antibody clinics,” DeSantis said. “But yet when I did that, the media attacked me. They attacked the treatment because they were trying to score political points. So, it’s all about their partisan narratives.” DeSantis groused that the media would “absolve” Governors in other states with COVID-19 spikes, but said he was happy to be in the position he’s in. “So, it’s all politics. I’m glad I am a target.”
“‘Once in a generation’: Shevrin Jones to attend Biden’s infrastructure bill signing” via Kelly Hayes of Florida Politics — Sen. Jones is set to attend Biden’s signing of the $1.2 trillion bipartisan Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act on Monday at the White House. Jones called the bill a “once in a generation” piece of legislation. “The bipartisan infrastructure package is a historic, once-in-a-generation investment in our people and the future of Florida,” Jones said in a statement. In early November, Congress approved a $1 trillion package of road and other infrastructure projects after Democrats resolved a monthslong standoff between progressives and moderates. The federal legislation would provide Florida with nearly $16 billion in state formula funds for highways, bridges and transit over the next five years.
Assignment editors — House Minority Co-Leader Evan Jenne, Policy Chair Rep. Fentrice Driskell and Senate Democratic Leader Pro Tempore Bobby Powell will hold a media availability, 10 a.m., Zoom link here. This event will also be livestreamed on The Florida Channel.
Florida kicks off ‘recycling week’ — The Florida Department of Environmental Protection and The Florida Recycling Partnership Foundation celebrates “Florida Recycles Week” today through Friday to raise awareness about individuals’ actions to increase recycling habits and reduce waste. Day One starts at 11 a.m. Eastern time with a free webinar: “Take the Pledge” It’s America Recycles Day! Zoom link here. To take the pledge, visit FloridaRecycles.org. Presented by Keep Florida Beautiful and sponsored by Coca-Cola Beverage Florida. For more info, go to flrecycles.org or contact Keyna Cory, Keyna@FLrecycling.org, (850) 728-1054.
— STATEWIDE —
“Protest on the street and in writing show continued concern at UF over academic freedom” via John Henderson of The Gainesville Sun — University of Florida students and faculty held a protest on Friday, saying their battle with university administration over “academic freedom and free speech” is far from over. The university has come under intense criticism after its initial decision to block three professors from providing expert testimony against the state in a lawsuit over voting rights. On Nov. 5, UF President Kent Fuchs reversed his administration’s decision that had blocked the professors from providing expert testimony in a federal court challenge involving an elections law that was a top priority of DeSantis. The protesters argued that there are still serious unresolved issues.
“Insurance Commissioner orders 4.9% cut in workers’ comp rates effective Jan. 1” via Christine Jordan Sexton of Florida Politics — Florida Insurance Commissioner David Altmaier approved an average 4.9% rate reduction in workers’ compensation costs effective Jan. 1, the office said in a prepared release. Moreover, Altmaier announced the National Council on Compensation Insurance also withdrew its request to levy up to an additional $20 million on employers’ policies to monetize a catastrophic fund for workers’ compensation claims. The 4.9% reduction in rates is driven by strong underwriting profits, NCCI told Florida Office of Insurance Regulation staff at a public meeting on the rate filing. The National Council on Compensation Insurance reviews premium levels on behalf of most Florida insurance companies.
“Cops find respect, warm welcome, more money in Florida” via Kerry J. Byrne of The New York Post — Lakeland mounted a social media campaign targeting NYC cops earlier this year, and in April, dispatched a delegation to recruit in Times Square. Fourteen former Finest moved to Lakeland in the past year, 12 of them wooed over the past two months thanks to the recruiting trip. The respect accorded cops in Florida “was an eye-opener,” former NYPD cop Matthew Spoto said at a September news conference after heeding Lakeland’s call of duty. In New York, “it was almost like I was ashamed to be a law enforcement officer,” he said. NYPD officers start out earning $42,500 per year. The minimum PD salary in Lakeland is $53,000 following a pay raise earlier this year.
“Disney’s political paradigm shift” via Brian Burgess of The Capitolist — The conventional wisdom in Florida when it comes to gambling is that Disney opposes it because it threatens the company’s family-friendly image. As Disney’s CEO Bob Chapek pointed out to investors during an earnings call, that’s all about to change. Chapek says that Disney has conducted extensive research on the issue and found that changing attitudes view gambling differently than before. Potential sports betting licensing partnerships could prove to be a multibillion-dollar windfall for Disney, having no negative impact on Disney’s brand image overall, Chapek says. “It’s driven by the consumer, particularly the younger consumer that will replenish the sports fans over time and their desire to have gambling as part of their sports experience.”
Media registration open for 2021 National Summit on Education — ExcelinEd’s 2021 National Summit on Education will be Nov. 18-19 at Disney’s Coronado Springs in Lake Buena Vista. The education forum features a keynote address by Gov. Jeb Bush, with educators from across the country and internationally to develop strategies to improve education. Media can contact Joe Follick at Joe@ExcelinEd.org for free registration. For others who haven’t registered, visit the ExcelinEd website.
— CORONA FLORIDA —
“Young Floridians and Hispanics saw the greatest increase in COVID-19 vaccinations as thousands died” via Cindy Krischer Goodman, Spencer Norris and David Schutz of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — With nearly 2,500 people a week in Florida dying during the peak of the delta wave, the groups most devastated saw the most significant increase in COVID-19 vaccinations. Two of the groups most hesitant to be vaccinated, 25-to-44-year-olds and the Hispanic population, led the state in new vaccinations while the delta wave took its toll on the state. The trend became especially apparent in South Florida, where younger people and minorities flocked to vaccination sites in August at even higher rates than the state as a whole. Overall, 49.7% of all Floridians are vaccinated for COVID-19, compared with 58.5% of the country’s total population. Children 5 to 11 began getting their first shots this week.
“South Florida COVID-19 cases decline, vaccination percentages drop as kids become eligible” via Jesse Scheckner of Florida Politics — South Florida COVID-19 case positivity rates fell to another record low over the last week. Just 1.7% of tests in Miami-Dade County came back positive Nov. 5-11, the report said. The rate was 2.2% and 2.5% in Broward and Palm Beach counties, respectively, continuing an encouraging downward trend that began in early August. In two of the three counties, Broward and Palm Beach, the number of weekly cases also shrank, albeit at a smaller rate than in weeks prior, indicating they are close to bottoming out and possibly reaching endemic status. Such may be the case in Miami-Dade, where there were 25 more cases than the week prior.
“‘We should have a choice’: Employees protest Ascension Sacred Heart vaccine mandate” via the Northwest Florida Daily News — Ascension Sacred Heart employees from across Northwest Florida took to the streets to Friday protest the health care network’s newly implemented COVID-19 vaccination requirement. About 100 employees, family members, and supporters lined the street outside Ascension Sacred Heart Emerald Coast in Miramar Beach, waving signs with messages such as “No jab. No job” and “Ascension fires heroes.” A similar demonstration played out at Ascension Sacred Heart Pensacola. Ascension announced its vaccination requirement for associates on July 27 and gave a Nov. 12 deadline for employees to comply.
“This elected leader worked remotely during COVID-19. Now he may get fired.” via Lisa J. Huriash and Brittany Wallman of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — A 73-year-old elected official who worried about contracting COVID-19 faces losing his job because he only showed up virtually for business during the pandemic. Miramar city leaders expect to vote Monday whether to fire Commissioner Winston F. Barnes, concluding that leaders “may punish its own members for misconduct.” Officials said he can be fired because he broke the city’s rules by not attending Commission meetings in person for three months. Barnes’ lawyer, Keith Poliakoff, says the city has no authority to oust him. It’s the voters who put Barnes in office, not his fellow elected officials. And only Florida’s Governor has the power to remove an elected official from office, the lawyer says.
— 2022 —
“Worries in top suburban battleground about Democrats’ spending show Biden’s midterm challenge” via John McCormick of The Wall Street Journal — Nevada’s 3rd Congressional District was the nation’s most competitive on average over the past three presidential elections. Former President Barack Obama won it by eight-tenths of a point in 2012; former President Donald Trump carried it by one point in 2016; Biden won it in 2020 by two-tenths of a point. Rep. Susie Lee, the congresswoman for the 3rd District since 2019, is one of 70 House Democrats being targeted by national Republicans. She won the district by three points in 2020, a narrower victory than in her first bid in 2018 amid lower turnout. William McCurdy II, a Clark County Commissioner who recently served as chair of the state’s Democratic Party, said he expects the Party’s prospects will improve if some of the President’s agenda is passed.
“Val Demings rips Marco Rubio for skipping 14 Senate hearings amid GOP boycotts” via Steven Lemongello of the Orlando Sentinel — U.S. Sen. Rubio has missed as many as 14 Senate hearings over the past two months, a practice the Republican was criticized for six years ago as he launched a bid for the presidency. But many of his absences since September have been part of either a GOP boycott of the Small Business Committee or a pledge to not vote for any of Biden’s State Department nominees. U.S. Rep. Demings, his likely opponent in next year’s U.S. Senate race, blasted Rubio’s absenteeism. Rubio did not appear at nine Foreign Relations hearings since Sept. 22, most of which focused on Biden nominations. Rubio has so far opposed all of Biden’s nominees to the State Department.
“Charlie Crist adds 11 Miami-Dade County endorsements” via Jesse Scheckner of Florida Politics — Crist collected support from 11 Miami-Dade community leaders Friday. They join seven others from the county who previously endorsed Crist, and hundreds of elected and community leaders from across the state who have thrown their weight behind his 2022 gubernatorial campaign. They include Miami-Dade Commissioner Sally Heyman, Miami Beach Mayor Dan Gelber, Bay Harbor Islands Mayor Josh Fuller, North Bay Village Mayor Brent Latham, Bay Harbor Islands Commissioners Stephanie Bruder and Bob Yaffe, former Surfside Vice Mayor Barry Cohen, former Surfside Commissioner Dan Gielchinsky and North Miami Beach Commissioners Daniela Jean, McKenzie Fleurimond and Paule Vellard.
“Florida law enforcement union endorses Wilton Simpson for Agriculture Commissioner” via Jacob Ogles of Florida Politics — The Florida Police Benevolent Association endorsed Senate President Simpson for Agriculture Commissioner, the group announced. “As our Senate President, you insist that the men and women of law enforcement and corrections be treated with the utmost respect,” reads a letter to Simpson from FPBA President John “Kaz“ Kazanjian. The FPBA boasts more than 30,000 members statewide and a greater level of influence among law-and-order voters. Simpson tweeted he’s proud to have the union’s support. In September, Simpson, a Trilby Republican, officially filed for Agriculture Commissioner, a post the professional farmer has long expressed interest in holding.
First in Sunburn — Ben Diamond taps longtime Democratic staffer Jena Kingery as CD 13 campaign manager — Kingery joins the Diamond campaign from Tallahassee-based political consulting firm ENH Industries, where she worked with Florida House Victory, People Over Profits, Julie Jenkins for State House, and Javier Fernandez for State Senate. “FL-13 is one of the most important Congressional races in the country, and I am confident Jena has the experience to lead our campaign to victory next November,” Diamond said. “She has been with our campaign since Day One, and I am thrilled to have her on our team in this new role.” Kingery previously served as the Chief Legislative Aide to Sen. Janet Cruz, Deputy campaign manager for Sean Shaw in his 2018 Attorney General Campaign, and the Deputy Compliance Director at the Florida Democratic Party.
“Alan Cohn ‘strongly considering’ run in re-imagined CD 15” via Jacob Ogles of Florida Politics — Cohn said he is “strongly considering” a bid for Florida’s 15th Congressional District. That’s based on draft redistricting maps showing the district with a Democratic tilt. Cohn won the Democratic nomination in CD 15 before losing to Republican Scott Franklin in November. But based on the draft maps, most expect Franklin, a first-term Congressman based in Lakeland, to run in the re-imagined Florida’s 28th Congressional District. An MCI Maps analysis shows the new CD 28, as imagined in four drafts published by the Florida Senate Reapportionment Committee, would lean right.
First in Sunburn — Florida firefighters’ union endorses Blaise Ingoglia for Senate — The International Association of Firefighters (IAFF) Florida Chapter is endorsing Rep. Ingoglia in his bid for Senate District 10, which covers Hernando, Citrus and portions of Pasco counties. In the announcement, union leaders said the Spring Hill Republican is a champion for wages, benefits, working conditions, health and safety, and pensions. Florida Professional Firefighters District 10 Vice President Derrick Ryan said Ingoglia will “continue to honorably serve the citizens of Florida, and the interests of the men and women employed in the Fire and Emergency Medical Services.”
“Tina Polsky to shift to SD 34, setting up possible Democratic primary” via Jacob Ogles of Florida Politics — Draft maps re-envisioning the Florida Senate landscape are already bringing political consequences. Sen. Polsky announced Friday she will likely run in the re-imagined Senate District 34 and leave Senate District 29 behind. She was one of three incumbent Senators seeking re-election whose home was drawn out of their own Senate districts. Incidentally, she lives in a community that would be in Senate District 31, represented by Sen. Lori Berman, a Democrat and ally. But she is running for Farmer’s seat. But this puts her running in the same district as Sen. Gary Farmer, a Democrat. For Polsky’s part, she hopes more changes to the maps are underway and that a primary could be avoided. She has concerns about how the draft maps divide Boca Raton into two Senate districts. She hopes to see matters rectified as the process continues.
—”Lauren Book fundraising dips in October, spending ramps up to defend Senate seat” via Anne Geggis of Florida Politics
—“Jennifer Wilson leads October fundraising in HD 66 race” via Kelly Hayes of Florida Politics
—”Alex Rizo posts banner fundraising with help from charter school builders, first responders” via Jesse Scheckner of Florida Politics
—”Robin Bartleman’s adds $10,500 for HD 104 re-election” via Anne Geggis of Florida Politics
— CORONA NATION —
“On podcasts and radio, misleading COVID-19 talk goes unchecked” via Tiffany Hsu and Marc Tracy of The New York Times — On a recent episode of his podcast, Rick Wiles, a pastor and self-described “citizen reporter,” endorsed a conspiracy theory: that COVID-19 vaccines were the product of a “global coup d’état by the most evil cabal of people in the history of mankind.” “It’s an egg that hatches into a synthetic parasite and grows inside your body,” Wiles said on his Oct. 13 episode. “This is like a sci-fi nightmare, and it’s happening in front of us.” Wiles belongs to a group of hosts who have made false or misleading statements about COVID-19 and effective treatments for it. Audio industry executives appear less likely than their counterparts in social media to try to check dangerous speech.
— CORONA ECONOMICS —
“Inflation emerges as defining economic challenge of Biden presidency, with no obvious solution at hand” via Jeff Stein and Heather Long of The Washington Post — America is emerging from the pandemic facing its most significant inflationary spike in decades, as startling and persistent price hikes threaten to undermine the recovery, while posing an entirely new kind of economic challenge to the Biden presidency. Policymakers are facing the devilish and unfamiliar quandary of booming consumer demand and dramatic supply disruptions combining to push higher the cost of necessities such as food, gas and housing. The more than 6% jump in prices recorded in October relative to last year has strained the budgets of millions of American families, complicated investment decisions for businesses across the country and created major political challenges for the White House.
“Are Americans starting to embrace one-earner households again?” via Henry Olsen of The Washington Post — Americans quitting their jobs at a pace never seen before despite record job openings have left many economists scratching their heads. Conventional analyses pin the discrepancy on a host of concerns, such as lack of child care and lingering fear of COVID-19. Many Americans may simply not want to run in the rat race anymore — and are opting for single-earner families instead. The overall labor force participation rate is down from a pre-pandemic 63.4% to 61.6% today. American businesses have benefited massively from the move toward two-earner couples. If the recent employment data signal that trend is reversing, the economic restructuring we will experience may be traumatic.
— MORE CORONA —
“Real-world data on the safety of COVID-19 shots for young children is just weeks away” via Rachel M. Pearson of The Washington Post — A recent poll shows a third of parents of 5-to-11-year-olds are waiting to see more data on the COVID-19 vaccine before choosing to vaccinate their children. Such parents won’t need to wait long: With the White House projecting that 900,000 kids in this age group will have their first vaccine this week, we will soon have enough information to detect even very rare vaccine side effects. Unvaccinated kids remain at risk of hospitalization and death from COVID, so I want all my pediatric patients to get vaccinated as soon as possible. But if you are a “wait and see” parent, you should have the information you need by February.
“The year America’s hair fell out” via Amanda Mull of The Atlantic — Only a few months into the pandemic, around the same time when I first thought I might be losing either my hair or my mind, people whose hair was indeed falling out by the handful started to come forward. They showed up in Facebook groups about hair loss, in subreddits dedicated to regrowth, and in the waiting rooms of dermatologists and hair restoration clinics. First, there were a few, but then there were thousands. Some of them had COVID-19, but others, like me, had not. Any kind of intense physical or emotional stress can push as much as 70% of your hair into the “telogen” phase of its growth cycle, which halts those strands’ growth and disconnects them from their blood supply to conserve resources for more essential bodily processes. That, in time, knocks them straight off your head.
— PRESIDENTIAL —
“Biden approval hits new low as economic discontent rises, Post-ABC poll finds” via Dan Balz, Scott Clement and Emily Guskin of The Washington Post — Majorities of Americans support Biden’s $1.2 trillion bipartisan infrastructure package and a pending bill that would spend nearly $2 trillion on social programs and climate initiatives. Yet despite the backing for these measures, Biden’s approval rating has ticked down to a new low, driven largely by more negative views among Democrats and independents. Overall, the survey offers a set of harsh judgments about the President’s performance and the state of the economy. Together, they send a stark warning to Democrats about their prospects in the 2022 midterm contests.
“‘Thank you, Brandon’ is just embarrassing” via Kaitlyn Tiffany of The Atlantic — People who don’t like Biden picked up “Let’s go, Brandon” and immediately ran the joke into the ground. People who do like Biden started fighting it on social media as if the phrase were the latest and greatest threat to democracy, and social media were the place where great threats to democracy should be fought. This is political discourse in the Twitter era. The clearest precedent for “Thank you, Brandon” began in 2009 with “Thanks, Obama,” the catchphrase uttered most often by Tea Party personalities and boys I went to high school with. Already, of course, #ThankYouBrandon is being co-opted by sarcastic Republicans as a sequel to “Thanks, Obama.”
— D.C. MATTERS —
“Cuban government, dissidents head toward Monday confrontation” via Karen DeYoung of The Washington Post — The Biden administration has described the dissident movement as the tip of a turning point in Cuba. It sparked unprecedented peaceful demonstrations by thousands on July 11 that were violently put down by Cuban security and led to hundreds of arrests. Biden has held off on unveiling his long-awaited policy toward Cuba as he considers “the best way forward.” He and other officials have indicated that the Cuban government’s response to the Monday march will play a role in how the administration proceeds. Measures already drafted include a reauthorization of remittances, and U.S. citizen travel to Cuba in both cases more than the paltry amount Trump allowed but less than authorized under Obama.
“Exiles march in solidarity in Miami as crackdown intensifies ahead of Monday protest in Cuba” via Nora Gámez Torres of the Miami Herald — Cubans in several cities worldwide have organized demonstrations in solidarity with the Cuban people and the young artists and activists of Archiepiélago, the group that called the march. In Miami, hundreds of cars carrying Cuban flags and signs with the slogans “Patria y Vida” and “SOS Cuba” set off in a caravan in the morning from Tamiami Park in a gesture of support for the Cubans of the island and the Nov. 15 march. “It is our duty to be here,” said Carolina López, a Cuban exile participating in the caravan. The Assembly of the Cuban Resistance estimates that more than a thousand cars participated in the caravan that was expected to end at the Freedom Tower.
—“Cubans in Orlando get ready to participate in worldwide #15NCuba protest” via Daniela Vivas Labrador of the Orlando Sentinel
— CRISIS —
“GOP leaders say little to condemn violent political rhetoric” via Jill Colvin of The Associated Press — In the past week, Republican Rep. Paul Gosar tweeted a video showing a character with his face killing a figure with Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez’s face. Several of the 13 House Republicans who backed a bipartisan infrastructure bill said they faced threats after their vote. In one profanity-laced voicemail, a caller labeled Rep. Fred Upton a “traitor” and wished death for the Michigan Republican, his family and staff. The response from Republican leaders? Silence. One of the nation’s two major political parties appears increasingly tolerant of at least some persistent level of violence in American discourse, or at least willing to turn a blind eye to it. Rep. Liz Cheney said Gosar should be censured “for his continued indefensible activities.” And she blasted House Republican leader Kevin McCarthy for his silence on the matter.
“73-year-old Sarasota County man convicted of threatening three members of Congress” via Earle Kimel of the Sarasota Herald-Tribune — Frank Anthony Pezzuto, who lives in unincorporated Sarasota County between South Venice and Englewood, was found guilty of “transmitting in interstate commerce a communication containing a threat to injure the person of another,” following a two-day trial in the U.S. District Court, Tampa Middle District. The verdict was released Monday. Pezzuto is a registered Democrat, as are the three U.S. representatives he is convicted of threatening. Court documents from the case show that on Jan. 25, 2020, Pezzuto called the office of U.S. Rep. Eric Swalwell and left the message: “Hello Mr. Swalwell, I’m coming to kill you.” Then, on Jan. 30, 2020, he threatened U.S. Rep. Adam Schiff. Finally, on Feb. 3, 2020, he called the office of U.S. Rep. Ilhan Omar and threatened her life.
“Rep. Adam Schiff: Steve Bannon’s indictment will ‘without a doubt’ lead others to comply with Jan. 6 panel” via Myah Ward of POLITICO — Rep. Schiff on Sunday said the Justice Department’s move to charge Bannon with contempt of Congress will “without a doubt” sway others to cooperate with the Jan. 6 select committee’s subpoenas. “And indeed, even before the Justice Department acted, it influenced other witnesses who were not going to be Steve Bannon,” Schiff said. The DOJ charged Bannon, a former top adviser to Trump, with two counts of contempt of Congress on Friday. The House referred Bannon to the department for prosecution last month after he refused to provide documents and testimony to investigators looking into the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol.
— EPILOGUE TRUMP —
“Emails reveal new details of Donald Trump White House interference in CDC COVID-19 planning” via Erin Banco of POLITICO — New emails and documents released by a congressional committee investigating the Trump administration’s handling of the pandemic show the extent to which top White House officials interfered in the CDC’s efforts to warn Americans about COVID-19. The House Select Subcommittee on the Coronavirus Crisis has conducted interviews over the last several months about how Trump and his closest confidants, including former White House adviser Scott Atlas and son-in-law Jared Kushner, tried to steer the course of the federal response, sidestepping the interagency process.
“Republicans aren’t ready for Trump-style ‘fraud’ claims in GOP primaries” via Douglas Heye of The Washington Post — Months after the Electoral College vote was certified and Biden inaugurated, Republicans are still being forced to look backward to 2020. Attempts by Trump’s acolytes to audit or overturn results in Arizona, Georgia, Michigan, Texas and Wisconsin continue, and the former President urges these on. What the GOP may not realize, though, is how this new trend could easily backfire on the Party, if candidates start falsely insisting that caucuses and primaries, as well as general elections, have been stolen from them.
“‘Chris Christie taunts Trump for losing ” via Mike Allen of Axios — Former New Jersey Gov. Christie, lacing up for a possible presidential run in 2024, said he won’t back down from a fight with Trump, taunting his longtime friend for losing the last election. “I’ve never walked away from an argument, no matter who stood on the other side,” Christie said. This is the first hand-to-hand combat of the 2024 Republican presidential race. Many Republican candidates fear crossing Trump. But Christie relishes political combat.
— LOCAL NOTES —
“Tallahassee Deputy City Manager: Amid backlash, new TPD policy not ‘written in stone’” via Karl Etters of the Tallahassee Democrat — New Tallahassee Police Department guidelines that govern the release of crime information are drawing criticism. But while TPD officials declared the policy as “effective immediately,” city officials say the change is not entirely set in stone. The changes to TPD’s public incident alert procedure restrict the release of information on crimes other than those that lead to deaths, life-threatening or multiple injuries, effectively reducing the number of times TPD will immediately notify the public. The department already maintains a tight leash on information, citing the victims’ rights amendment, Marsy’s Law, and that details can’t be released about cases that are “open and active” investigations.
“Flagler School Board member files criminal report over Black queer memoir” via Alex Cooper of the Advocate — A white school board member in Florida has filed a criminal complaint about the book “All Boys Aren’t Blue” by George M. Johnson, which explores the author’s experience growing up as a queer Black person. The board member claims the book’s presence in some schools in the district violates the state’s obscenity laws. Jill Woolbright, a Flagler County School Board member, filed the report with the Sheriff’s Office. The books were found in four schools in the district: two copies at Flagler Palm Coast High School, one at Matanzas High School, and one at Buddy Taylor Middle School. Administrators at Buddy Taylor Middle School had already pulled the book from its library shelves. Removing the books is required when a title is challenged, school board attorney Kristy Gavin said.
“New Kristen Rosen Gonzalez campaign ad claims Miami Beach Democrats endorsed her. They didn’t” via Martin Vassolo of the Miami Herald — Days before a runoff election in Miami Beach’s Group I City Commission race, Democratic Party leaders are criticizing Rosen Gonzalez for saying falsely in a political ad that the Miami Beach Democratic Club endorsed her. A Democratic former City Commissioner, Rosen Gonzalez sent voters a campaign mailer Friday saying she was “endorsed by” the local Democratic group. But that’s not true, according to Miami Beach Democratic Club President Matthew Land. Although the club has said it supports all Democrats running for office, it has also stated that it did not endorse anyone in the Group I runoff, including another Democratic candidate, Raquel Pacheco.
“The Little River’s polluted flow fuels Biscayne Bay troubles. Scientists taking a deeper look” via Adriana Brasileiro of the Miami Herald — In the month before a massive fish kill in Biscayne Bay last year, an astounding amount of water flowed out of Miami’s Little River, one of the county’s most polluted waterways. The volume of water was three times higher than in any month in more than three decades. Not long after, fish and other marine life began going belly-up. The evidence of Biscayne Bay’s decline has been accumulating for years beneath the surface, but the fish kill was a stinking mess impossible for the public and political leaders to ignore. Dissolved oxygen dropped to fatal levels just about where the Little River meets the bay. That’s right where countless fish, big and small, died. Miami-Dade County has pledged to clean up the bay, starting with figuring out the biggest problems.
“Money, money, money: South Florida lines up for cash from Biden’s infrastructure plan” via Susannah Bryan and Wells Dusenbury of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — Billions of dollars are up for grabs, a veritable pot of gold that’s coming down the pike as part of Biden’s $1.2 trillion infrastructure plan. It’s too soon to say exactly which projects will get approved, but the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act is meant to funnel billions into fixing the nation’s aging highways, bridges, water pipes and sewer lines, improving public transportation options, providing high-speed internet to all and expanding our electric vehicle charging network. Florida is in line to receive $19 billion. The bill still awaits the President’s signature, but South Florida leaders are already crafting their wish lists. In Florida, 408 bridges and more than 3,564 miles of highway are in poor condition.
“All aboard! Brightline Orlando-Tampa train project gets show of support from Polk County” via Dustin Wyatt of The Lakeland Ledger — Polk County residents could one day hop on a high-speed train and travel to Tampa or Orlando, avoiding I-4 traffic, if a long-envisioned plan to extend a South Florida rail line comes through. Polk leaders are hopeful it does. And as private company Florida Brightline LLC prepares to apply for a federal grant to help fund the extension, the Polk County Commission has agreed to offer a supportive hand. Calling it a “vital” program that could reduce congestion and accidents on I-4, the Commission voted Friday to send a letter to U.S. Department of Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg endorsing funding for Brightline through the Consolidated Rail Infrastructure and Safety Improvements grant program.
— TOP OPINION —
“Can Reaganism rise again?” via Ross Douthat of The New York Times — For a long time, my advice to Republican politicians and policymakers has been consistent: It isn’t the 1970s or 1980s anymore. The year 2021, though, is the first time a reasonable Republican could listen to my pitch and answer, but what if history is repeating itself, and we’re back in Reagan’s world? The U.S. seems locked in a Cold War with China, crime has emerged as a major political issue, and inflation is defining Americans’ economic fears. But history doesn’t really repeat itself so neatly. Both the inflation spike and the murder surge have been mediated by pandemic conditions in ways that make them more likely to recede rapidly than their antecedents in the 70s and 80s.
— OPINIONS —
“The ‘psychology of regret’ helps explain why vaccine mandates work” via Adam Galinsky of The Washington Post — Vaccines are no longer experimental, but the coronavirus vaccines do involve new technology. That probably intensifies the imagined potential regret in the minds of people thinking about side effects. The psychology of regret can also help explain why coronavirus vaccine mandates have generally been so effective. Despite the many assertions that mandates would lead to mass resignations, the employees of many organizations ultimately got on board. When people don’t feel the weight of making their own choice, they aren’t as tormented by the anticipated negative outcomes of their decision.
“Cops who don’t get vaccinated betray our oath to protect” via Patrick Skinner of The Washington Post — I am a fully vaccinated police officer who recently caught a breakthrough case of COVID-19. And I’ve never felt so lucky. COVID-19 was by far the leading cause of death for police officers nationwide in 2020 and it is on track to be the top killer again in 2021. Police officers are sworn to promote and protect the public good. Public health is a big part of the public good. Vaccinations are basic public health measures that have been accepted for 100 years. We can’t pick and choose what risks we will accept in this job, but we can seek to mitigate them. Police saying “We will not comply” isn’t just a threat to public health; it’s also a threat to the idea that policing must be done with the consent of those we police.
“Florida Men seek aid of DeSantis” via Andy Marlette for the Pensacola News Journal — We at the Florida Men’s Freedom, Firearms, Profanity, Alcohol, Tobacco, Tattoos, Hygiene and Fertility Preservation Association are writing to seek your assistance in a serious corporate assault against the God-given liberty of our members. Frankly, it’s about time we got us a Governor who’s willing to sit up yonder in Tallahassee and use the full power of government to crack down and control small private businesses all over the rest of the state. Please attack these perpetrators of “No Shirt” policies with the same vigor and viciousness that you are attacking private sector businesses for their own COVID-19 health, safety and employee policies. Shirtless and shoeless Florida Men are counting on you to fight for our fundamental rights to do whatever the heck we want on someone else’s private property.
“DeSantis’ COVID-19 record is terrible. Lawmakers should remember that at special session” via Dan Gelber for the Miami Herald — This week, DeSantis has called the Florida legislature into a special session in order to coerce his Republican majority to pass a series of measures intended to diminish the ability of private businesses and government to promote COVID-19 vaccinations. Of course, this has very little to do with the welfare of Floridians. DeSantis is making his case directly to a right-wing swath of 2024 national primary voters that he is the most anti-mask, anti-vaccine Governor in America. And to prove that point, like a modern-day pied piper, he will continue to lead our state off the cliff. I hope our legislators consider our Governor’s record on this pandemic before they blindly jump. Under DeSantis, Florida is among the nation’s and world’s leaders in COVID-19 sickness and death.
“Needless Session on ‘forced injection’ is all about re-election” via the South Florida Sun-Sentinel editorial board — The strident rhetoric of the Session proclamation lays bare DeSantis’ true motivation. This is not how it’s supposed to work. Special sessions are reserved for crises that demand quick, undivided attention. This is all about his re-election.
“A translator for City Council member Danny ‘Boston Liberty Bell’ Becton” via Nate Monroe of The Florida Times-Union — City Council member Danny Becton emerged this month as a staunch opponent of removing the Confederate monument in Springfield Park, an effort Becton and his council colleagues put on ice this past week when they withdrew legislation that would have paid for the removal. For now, the monument will stay right where it is. As for Becton, he expressed grave concern about the effect of removing the monument, which would be akin, he suggested, to removing history itself. In an effort to aid the goal of mutual understanding in our civic dialogue, and to help Becton better communicate with his constituents, we’ve created a handy Danny Becton Translator that will clarify what Becton actually means when he cites well-known landmarks, attractions, cities and historical events.
— ON TODAY’S SUNRISE —
Gov. DeSantis is set to convene a Special Session to block vaccine mandates.
Also, on today’s Sunrise:
— At first glance, it appears the Florida Senate’s own redistricting maps are not as gerrymandered as some feared it would be.
— Today’s Sunrise Interview is with data consultant Matt Isbell, who analyzed the first look of the staff prepared maps of the Senate Reapportionment Committee. He shares all of his hot takes — including which elected officials are in the hot seat … or without a seat.
To listen, click on the image below:
— ALOE —
“Holiday hell: 3 in 5 Americans BANNING unvaccinated relatives from family gatherings!” via Chris Melore of StudyFinds.org — The holidays are about to get heated and politics aren’t even the main issue this time. Nearly two-thirds of vaccinated Americans are banning unvaccinated family members from their holiday gatherings this year. A survey of 2,000 U.S. residents examined how the COVID-19 vaccine has impacted people’s relationships with their loved ones ahead of the holidays this year. Two in three respondents feel they cannot go home for the holidays without getting vaccinated first. Of the 65% fully vaccinated, nearly six in 10 have reportedly cut off family members who refuse to get the vaccine. Meanwhile, 63% don’t feel comfortable inviting unvaccinated relatives to their parties.
— HAPPY BIRTHDAY —
Celebrating today are state Reps. Michael Gottlieb and Will Robinson; Wayne Bertsch, Trimmel Gomes, Evan Power, Rodney Barreto and Max Steele. Belated happy birthday wishes to Karen Cyphers of Sachs Media Group and my favorite ex-Speaker of the Florida House, Will Weatherford.
___
Sunburn is authored and assembled by Peter Schorsch, Phil Ammann, Renzo Downey and Drew Wilson.
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Good Monday morning. Smart Brevity™ count: 1,183 words … 4½ minutes. Edited by Zachary Basu.
📱 Please join Axios’ Worth Sparkman and Alex Golden tomorrow at 1:30 p.m. ET/12:30 p.m. CT for a Smart Take event on the reopening of arts and culture in Northwest Arkansas. Sign up here.
Photo: “Axios on HBO”
Chris Christie told me on “Axios on HBO” that he and President Trump haven’t spoken since before Jan. 6, when Christie frantically tried to reach his friend of 20 years — and Trump never picked up the phone.
- “I tried to call him … to give him advice on what I thought he needed to be doing to stop the violence,” the former governor told me during our hour-long interview at his home in New Jersey.
- “I called Kellyanne Conway first. And I said to her: ‘Have you spoken to him?’ And she said she had not. And she said: ‘I think we both need to call him.’ And I said: ‘Absolutely.’ So I then called the president’s secretary … Couldn’t get through. I then called his body guy. Didn’t pick up. I then called the president’s cell phone, and he didn’t pick up.”
The two were once so close Christie called him “Donald,” even when he was in the White House. Right after Christie appeared on a Sunday show, the president would call him in the car and critique his appearance.
- “I was desperate to try to get in touch with him,” Christie told me, “because I felt like what was happening was awful and was going to be a stain on his presidency, and I wanted him to be the guy to stand up and stop it. But he didn’t take the call, and so I said what I would have said to him privately on the air on ABC.”
Christie, who’s gaming out a possible run for president in 2024, said he still considers Trump a friend, and still would have supported him over President Biden.
- But Christie was critical of Trump’s rejection of Mike Pence for not going along with lies about the election: “I think it was an awful act to a vice president who had been extraordinarily loyal, and a guy who deserved much better.”
Christie — out tomorrow with “Republican Rescue,” which includes his prescription for the GOP — is pushing his party to move on from 2020.
- “If we waste our time as Republicans talking about an election that we lost, we are going to lose future elections,” he said.
Making it clear he won’t let Trump bully him, Christie took a tough shot at potential 2024 candidates who plan to decide whether to run based on what the former president does.
- “Those people who say that they will defer to Donald Trump have disqualified themselves from being president,” Christie said. “[Y]ou shouldn’t defer to anyone if you believe you’re the best person.”
A swath of Republicans will join jubilant Democrats on the White House South Lawn this afternoon as President Biden signs the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act.
- Why it matters: The bipartisan guest list marks a pivot to implementation, after the hard-fought passage of America’s biggest public-works bill since President Dwight Eisenhower created the interstate highway system in 1956.
In addition to the Democrats who run both chambers of Congress, Republicans expected today include Sens. Bill Cassidy (La.), Susan Collins (Maine) and Rob Portman (Ohio), and Reps. Tom Reed (N.Y.) and Don Young (Alaska).
- Also expected are Govs. Kate Brown (D-Ore.), Larry Hogan (R-Md.) and John Bel Edwards (D-La.) … plus Mayors Lori Lightfoot of Chicago, David Holt of Oklahoma City, Steve Benjamin of Columbia, S..C., and Robert Garcia of Long Beach, Calif.
- Trade association heads include Suzanne Clark of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, Josh Bolten of the Business Roundtable and Jay Timmons of the National Association of Manufacturers.
- Union leaders include Teamsters President James Hoffa.
Under a deal nearing completion, the Trump name will be replaced by Waldorf Astoria on the historic hotel on Pennsylvania Avenue.
- CGI Merchant Group is set to acquire the hotel lease for $375 million — far less than the $500 million former President Trump was reportedly seeking in 2019, The Wall Street Journal scooped (subscription).
Why it matters: As we told you in September, the hotel was a central setting during Trump’s chaotic presidency, and became a prop and symbol for both sides in the political wars.
Illustration: Megan Robinson/Axios
“We are in a crisis of trust and truth,” warns a report this morning from the three co-chairs of the Aspen Institute’s Commission on Information Disorder — Katie Couric, Chris Krebs and Rashad Robinson:
We see how our information ecosystem is failing the public, and how the absence or loss of trust in government entities, community institutions, and journalism, combined with a growing number of bad actors and conflict entrepreneurs who exploit these weaknesses, have led to real harms, sometimes with fatal consequences.
Krebs, founding director of the U.S. Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency, says that “what’s broken in our society” includes “who we trust, who has power, where we get our news.”
- Increasing workforce diversity is a key recommendation: “More diverse representation expands the aperture of decision-makers, reduces groupthink and risks of bias and blind spots … These actions can curb the spread of misinformation in communities most vulnerable to or threatened by malicious actors.”
Photo: “Axios on HBO”
IBM has created a quantum computer capable of processing information so complex the work can’t be done or simulated on a traditional computer, CEO Arvind Krishna told Ina Fried on “Axios on HBO.”
- Why it matters: Quantum computing could help address problems that are too challenging for even today’s most powerful supercomputers, such as figuring out how to make better batteries or sequester carbon emissions.
IBM says its new Eagle processor can handle 127 qubits, a measure of quantum computing power.
- It would take a traditional computer “bigger than this planet” to be able to accomplish the same work, Krishna said.
Ji-Young will be the first Asian American Muppet on “Sesame Street.”
- The 7-year-old is Korean American, with passions that include rocking out on electric guitar and skateboarding, AP’s Terry Tang scoops.
- Ji-Young will debut in “See Us Coming Together: A Sesame Street Special,” which drops Thanksgiving Day on HBO Max and PBS.
The backstory: Ji-Young is the culmination of lots of internal “Sesame Street” discussion about meeting the moment after George Floyd’s death and the wave of anti-Asian hate incidents.
Ariel Sharon, then Israeli defense minister, joins Sam Donaldson, George Will and David Brinkley in 1982. Photo: ABC News
On Nov. 15, 1981, ABC’s David Brinkley launched “This Week,” with his signature roundtable and the news “since the Sunday morning papers.”
- George Will, a “contributing analyst” on that first roundtable, said in a taped tribute on yesterday’s show: “2061— I can hardly wait.”
Above: George Stephanopoulos as a “This Week” guest in July 1992, as communications director of Arkansas Gov. Bill Clinton’s presidential campaign — and today, as anchor of “This Week with George Stephanopoulos.”
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Drowning in debt: The toll of water bills on Chicago homeowners’ debt
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22.) THE HILL MORNING REPORT
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24.) ROLL CALL
Morning Headlines
ANALYSIS — Republicans didn’t have full control of redrawing the congressional lines in Iowa, but the new map gives them an opportunity to squeeze one more seat out of the Hawkeye State on their way to the House majority, according to CQ Roll Call elections analyst Nathan L. Gonzales. Read more…
The House is gearing up to consider a roughly $2 trillion budget reconciliation package this week sprawling across 2,135 pages and encompassing the work of 13 committees. Here are some of the chief areas that may need to be tweaked, or dropped altogether, before landing on President Joe Biden’s desk. Read more…
Stephen Bannon indicted for refusing to comply with congressional subpoena
Former White House adviser Stephen Bannon was indicted Friday on two counts of contempt of Congress for not complying with a subpoena from the House select committee investigating the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol, an action that will put others refusing to cooperate with the inquiry on notice. Read more…
Click here to subscribe to Fintech Beat for the latest market and regulatory developmentsin finance and financial technology.
Defense, veterans groups press for new appropriations
In three letters obtained by CQ Roll Call, representatives of America’s defense industry and its veterans warned congressional leaders of the dire effects of lawmakers’ continuing failure to enact fiscal 2022 appropriations — the latest sign of deep concern about Congress’ repeated reliance on continuing resolutions. Read more…
What a possible censure of Gosar means
House Democrats have introduced a resolution to censure Rep. Paul Gosar, a penalty that would amount to the chamber publicly shaming the Arizona Republican, for posting an animated video of him killing Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and attacking President Biden with swords. Read more…
It’s time to fix the broken Senate confirmation process
OPINION — The Senate confirmation process must be fixed to ensure that presidents can have a full team in place quickly while maintaining the chamber’s prerogative to advise and consent, writes Max Stier, president and CEO of the Partnership for Public Service. Read more…
Texas Rep. Pete Sessions spoke with Heard on the Hill about why he couldn’t stay away from Congress, what’s changed on the Hill since he first got there and why he went out of his way to defend Ohio Republican Anthony Gonzalez, who voted to impeach Donald Trump over Jan. 6. Read more…
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25.) POLITICO PLAYBOOK
POLITICO Playbook: Washington’s mystery mansion buyer unmasked
DRIVING THE DAY
A busy Monday: Congress is back … PATRICK LEAHY makes a big announcement at 10 a.m. … JOE BIDEN signs BIF at 3 p.m. … STEVE BANNON is expected to surrender.
THE TRUMP HOTEL IS BEING SOLD — WSJ’s Craig Karmin scooped Sunday afternoon that “DONALD TRUMP’s family hotel company has reached an agreement to sell the rights to its glittering Washington, D.C., hotel for $375 million.”
SCOOP: THIS COULD BE MAGA WORLD’S NEW D.C. MEETING SPOT — In August, former Trump Commerce Secretary WILBUR ROSS and his wife HILARY GEARY ROSS sold their 10,000-square-foot home in Woodland-Normanstone for $13 million, according to D.C. tax records. It is the most expensive D.C. home sale of the last 12 months.
The August deal was shrouded in mystery. The purchaser used an LLC called Salona Village Holdings that concealed their identity. The Rosses are barred by a confidentiality agreement from disclosing the real buyer’s name, Geary Ross told Daniel Lippman.
But the secret is out.
According to multiple sources, the anonymous buyer behind the LLC is PETER THIEL, the German-born billionaire co-founder of PayPal and friend of Trump. It is “common knowledge” among neighbors and real estate sources, one well-informed person told Playbook.
The mystery buyer’s identity became the talk of the neighborhood, which also includes PENNY PRITZKER (across the street), STEVEN MNUCHIN and LOUISE LINTON (down the hill), GEORGE and KELLYANNE CONWAY, EDEN RAFSHOON and ADRIENNE ARSHT, who sold the home to the Rosses in 2017 and moved around the corner.
The purchase of the splashy new Washington residence comes amid a burst of political activity for Thiel, who turned 54 in October. Previously he was best known in media and politics for secretly funding the HULK HOGAN lawsuit against Gawker.com that bankrupted the site and for his speech praising Trump at the 2016 GOP convention.
More recently, Thiel has become a major player in two top Senate races. He gave separate $10 million donations to a pair of super PACS to help elect J.D. VANCE in Ohio and BLAKE MASTERS in Arizona. As Alex Isenstadt reported in May, they are the largest donations Thiel has ever given and the largest donations that anyone has given to an outside entity supporting a Senate candidate, and they instantly transformed the two novice politicians into major contenders.
Thiel’s political views are murky. Once known as a libertarian, his biographer, MAX CHAFKIN, recently told Katie Fossett “there are aspects of Thiel’s politics that aren’t libertarian at all; they’re closer to authoritarianism. It’s super-nationalistic, it’s a longing for a sort of more powerful chief executive, or, you know, a dictator, in other words.”
If Vance and Masters make it to Washington, they should have a nice place to strategize with their longtime mentor and benefactor. Thiel’s new home has seven bedrooms, a 12-seat theater, a library, a caterer’s kitchen and staff quarters, according to a listing for the property that describes it as a “prestigious” “privately gated limestone beaux arts estate” with “manicured grounds & pool & marble terraces w/ views of Rock Creek Park.”
Thiel and his spokesman did not respond to requests for comment. Slideshow: 75 photos of the new Thiel estate (via Zillow)
ICYMI: “JD Vance Charts GOP Push Against Big Tech With Help From Thiel,” by Bloomberg’s Mark Niquette
Good Monday morning. Thanks for reading Playbook. Drop us a line: Rachael Bade, Eugene Daniels, Ryan Lizza, Tara Palmeri.
FIRST IN PLAYBOOK — Most measures suggest that Democrats are very likely to lose control of the House next year. So we were eager to get the first look at a memo that the DCCC is releasing this morning on the state of play a little less than one year out from Election Day.
The positive case for returning Democrats to power is their legislative agenda: passage of the American Rescue Plan to tackle the pandemic, the infrastructure bill and, they hope, the Build Back Better agenda.
But there is a ton of data and history that make it clear that new presidents often don’t get rewarded by voters for their legislative achievements in their first midterm. While running on the alphabet soup of ARP-BIF-BBB might be tempting, do the Dems have a backup plan?
They do: rip the bark off of House Republicans as “too dangerous for American families” by focusing on GOP support for Trump, the Jan. 6 riot and Covid-19 conspiracies.
Here’s the key portion of the memo that lays out the ferocious line of attack:
“The moment Washington Republicans felt their grip on power loosen, they unleashed a full assault on American democracy, culminating in a murderous assault on the Capitol and the introduction of anti-voter legislation across the country. Every day, Republicans demonstrate how unserious, cynical, and dangerous their return to power would be. …
“Since [Jan. 6], Republicans have attempted to block investigations of the assault, cover up their alleged involvement, and have even defended and celebrated the rioters.”
On Covid: “Since day-one of this pandemic — they’ve been hellbent on making it longer and more disastrous — denying the seriousness of COVID, lying about the effectiveness of masks, social distancing, and vaccines, comparing vaccines to Nazi Germany, and constantly pushing junk science that first told Americans to take a useless anti-malaria drug and then encouraged Americans to consume horse dewormer, even as hundreds of thousands died and children filled up ICU beds.”
The conclusion: House Minority Leader “KEVIN MCCARTHY has turned over control of the entire caucus to Donald Trump. McCarthy’s cowardly abdication leaves House Republicans with a toxic agenda and a field of conspiracy promoting, scandal prone, anti-democracy candidates that face an uphill battle convincing battleground voters to support them.” Read the whole thing here
ANOTHER BIG JON KARL SCOOP — Via Meridith McGraw, Jonathan Karl’s new book, “Betrayal: The Final Act of the Trump Show,” which will be released Tuesday, reports:
- Senate Minority Leader MITCH MCCONNELL planned to disinvite Trump from the inauguration. According to Karl, McConnell “felt he could not give Trump another opportunity to disrupt the peaceful transfer of power.”
- McCarthy was against the plan.
- McCarthy and a McConnell aide separately informed the White House of the plan.
- The information spurred Trump to preemptively announce that he wouldn’t attend via what would become his last tweet.
- Bonus tidbit of post-insurrection intra-GOP maneuvering: McConnell told Rep. LIZ CHENEY (R-Wyo.) to knock off her Trump criticisms because it was hurting the GOP and her own reelection chances.
— TOP TALKER: ABC’s Libby Cathey reports another revelation from Karl’s book: On New Year’s Eve, MARK MEADOWS emailed MIKE PENCE’s office a memo written by JENNA ELLIS on how the VP could overturn the election result.
JOIN US — White House press secretary JEN PSAKI will join POLITICO standards and ethics editor Anita Kumar for a live interview 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 MONDAY:
— 9:30 a.m.: The president will receive the President’s Daily Brief.
— 11:20 a.m.: Biden will participate in a Tribal Nations Summit coinciding with national Native American Heritage Month.
— 3 p.m.: Biden will sign into law the bipartisan infrastructure package, and he and VP KAMALA HARRIS will deliver remarks.
— 7:45 p.m.: Biden will virtually meet with Chinese President XI JINPING.
HARRIS’ MONDAY: The VP will also deliver remarks on voting rights at 5 p.m. at the Declaration for American Democracy Coalition Principals Meeting.
Psaki will brief at 1:30 p.m.
THE SENATE will meet at 3 p.m. to take up GRAHAM STEELE’s nomination as an assistant Treasury secretary, with a cloture vote at 5:30 p.m.
THE HOUSE will meet at 2 p.m. to take up several bills, with votes postponed until 6:30 p.m.
BIDEN’S WEEK AHEAD:
— Tuesday: The president will travel to Woodstock, N.H., to visit a bridge and deliver remarks.
— Wednesday: Biden will travel to Detroit to visit a General Motors factory and deliver remarks.
— Thursday: Biden will participate in bilateral meetings with Canadian PM JUSTIN TRUDEAU and Mexican President ANDRÉS MANUEL LÓPEZ OBRADOR, before hosting the two leaders for a North American Leaders’ Summit.
— Friday: Biden will pardon a Thanksgiving turkey in a ceremony in the Rose Garden.
PLAYBOOK READS
THE WHITE HOUSE
THE INFRASTRUCTURE FUND OVERSEER — WSJ’s Ken Thomas scooped that the White House tapped former New Orleans Mayor MITCH LANDRIEU “to supervise the roughly $1 trillion infrastructure bill, turning to a veteran of Hurricane Katrina’s recovery to coordinate the rebuilding of roads, bridges and ports.” He “will be a senior adviser responsible for the coordination of the new law, working through the National Economic Council.”
— Landrieu’s appointment immediately triggered 2024 speculation, per JMart.
SUCCESSION — Eugene Daniels and Alex Thompson put it plainly: “Biden says he intends to run for reelection in 2024. But not all Democrats believe him. Nor are they convinced his No. 2 would be the clear heir if he did choose to opt out. As Harris grapples with a portfolio of seemingly intractable issues and responsibilities that have drawn her away from the national spotlight — she Zoomed into the infrastructure Cabinet meeting from Paris on Friday — other Democrats have raised their own national profiles.
“A person familiar with Biden’s conversation about his 2024 plans says ‘he has told people he is running and that ‘we will be prepared.’ But there has been persistent chatter in Democratic circles that he could decide not to. And talk of successorship has spilled into open view in recent days, with even a close Biden ally, former Connecticut Sen. CHRIS DODD, speculating about Harris’ positioning in a potential 2024 primary.”
— CNN’s Edward-Isaac Dovere and Jasmine Wright portray the start of Harris’ vice presidency as pretty much a big mess. Citing conversations with “nearly three dozen former and current Harris aides, administration officials, Democratic operatives, donors and outside advisers,” the pair writes that “many in the vice president’s circle fume that she’s not being adequately prepared or positioned, and instead is being sidelined.
“The vice president herself has told several confidants she feels constrained in what she’s able to do politically. And those around her remain wary of even hinting at future political ambitions, with Biden’s team highly attuned to signs of disloyalty, particularly from the vice president.”
AND THEN THERE’S PETE — Harris-world has chafed at all the positive press PETE BUTTIGIEG has gotten compared to their own. And just as a trio of tough stories on Harris dropped over the weekend, the AP posted this glowing piece about the charmed Transportation secretary: “As Biden prepares to sign the infrastructure bill on Monday, eyes are turning to the man still best known as ‘Mayor Pete,’ a newcomer whose promise of ‘generational change’ and real-world sensibility of fixing potholes launched him to the top of the early Democratic primary contests during the 2020 campaign,” Hope Yen, Tom Beaumont and Josh Boak write. Buttigieg “now stands to become one of the more powerful brokers in Washington, handling the largest infusion of cash into the transportation sector since the 1950s creation of the interstate highway system.”
CONGRESS
THE NEXT BIG SHOWDOWN — Democrats want to get going on a bipartisan deal to lock in government funding levels. But Republicans are considering taking a hard-line stance to force the majority to freeze funding at Trump-era levels, report Jen Scholtes, Caitlin Emma and Burgess Everett — even if that means giving up higher defense spending. “Democratic leaders believe retiring GOP senators will provide the bipartisan support needed for a longer-term spending deal and that appropriations leaders will squash a freeze … Their bet may be misplaced, however.”
BANNON CHRONICLES
DEPT. OF WAGON CIRCLING — Republicans are “warning that Democrats’ efforts to force Bannon to comply with what they say is an unfair subpoena paves the way for them to do the same if they take back the House in 2022,” WaPo’s Amy Wang reports.
Much of the party’s leadership is “seizing on Bannon’s indictment to contend that Democrats are ‘weaponizing’ the Justice Department, warning Democrats that they will go after Biden’s aides for unspecified reasons if they take back the House majority in next year’s midterm elections, as most political analysts expect.”
DEPT. OF COLD WATER POURING — “Steve Bannon’s Contempt Indictment Isn’t All that Trump Foes Think It Is,” by former federal prosecutor Renato Mariotti for POLITICO Magazine
PLAYBOOKERS
Pam Brown is pursuing a master’s of law at GW but will continue working at CNN.
Elon Musk trolled Bernie Sanders after the Vermont senator said the extremely wealthy need to pay “their fair share” in taxes. “I keep forgetting you’re still alive,” Musk tweeted.
Joe Biden Facetimed with the Irish rugby team to congratulate them on a big win.
Mark Cuban shared his thoughts on inflation — and America’s overreliance on overseas manufacturing — with WaPo’s Jeff Stein.
Joe Neguse had a pithy answer to the question: “What’s the worst thing humans have ever invented?” “Social media.”
Caitlin Flanagan of The Atlantic wrote beautifully about “The Day I Got Old.”
SPOTTED: Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) at the Hilton in Charleston, S.C., taking pictures in the lobby. Graham — one of the 19 Senate Republicans who voted for the infrastructure bill — said he’s in “The Holy City” for an event on a local parkway that will benefit from BIF. Pic
SPOTTED: New Jersey Gov. Phil Murphy on Sunday watching the Jets/Bills game with New York Gov. Kathy Hochul at MetLife Stadium in East Rutherford, N.J.
FIRST IN PLAYBOOK — Run for Something is launching a C3, Run for Something Civics. Its focus is “helping recruit young people to run for office” to ensure that elected leaders are representative of their constituents.
— Richard Parker is now VP of external affairs at Food for the Hungry. He most recently was assistant USAID administrator for legislative and public affairs, and is a U.S. Global Leadership Coalition and George W. Bush HHS and Peace Corps alum.
TRANSITIONS — Andy Flick is now executive director for the New Democrat Coalition. He most recently was chief of staff for Rep. David Trone (D-Md.), and is a Seth Moulton, Jim Costa and Ike Skelton alum. … Erin Perrine is launching TAG Strategies’ public relations arm as VP. She previously was comms director for Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas). … Thom Parisi is now a public policy manager on Meta’s connectivity and access policy team in D.C. He previously was an associate at Covington & Burling. …
… Eddy Conroy is joining New America’s education policy team as senior adviser. He previously was associate director of institutional transformation at the Hope Center. … Brian Hawkins is now director of external relations at Philanthropy Roundtable. He previously was director of free speech initiatives at Stand Together. … Brian Martinez is now Midwestern regional coordinator at the American Conservation Coalition. He previously was a legislative aide for Wisconsin state Sen. Rob Cowles.
ENGAGED — Andy Eichar, press secretary for Rep. Hakeem Jeffries (D-N.Y.) and a House Oversight and Rosa DeLauro alum, and Gloria Nlewedim, a health partnership and policy specialist for YMCA of the USA and a Cori Bush and House Appropriations alum, got engaged Friday. Eichar popped the question in the Rayburn elevator where the two first met. Pic … Another pic
— Joshua Woodward, legislative director for Rep. Kat Cammack (R-Fla.), and Katie Abrames, a legislative analyst for the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, got engaged Saturday at the Constitution Gardens on the National Mall. They met in former Rep. Mark Walker’s (R-N.C.) office and have been together for four-and-a-half years. Pic
WEDDING — Eli Schooley, legislative counsel for Rep. Josh Gottheimer (D-N.J.), and Ollie Engebretson, an associate at Sullivan & Cromwell, got married Oct. 30 at Natirar in Peapack, N.J. They originally met as classmates at the University of Virginia School of Law. Pic … Another pic
WELCOME TO THE WORLD — Clare Krupin, senior editor at Pivotal Ventures and speechwriter to Melinda French Gates, and Stephen Krupin, head of executive comms at SKDK and a former Obama speechwriter, welcomed William Michael Krupin on Tuesday. Pic
— Bobby Panzenbeck, director at DCI Group, and Cassie Panzenbeck, CEO at Fiscally Fit, welcomed Doris Marie Panzenbeck on Thursday. Pic … Another pic
HAPPY BIRTHDAY: Rep. Drew Ferguson (R-Ga.) … Fox News’ John Roberts … AP’s Zeke Miller … Jen Palmieri … USDA’s Xochitl Torres Small … Joe Sandler … Amanda Renteria … Bill Richardson … Asha Rangappa … Robert Draper … Gail Gitcho … WaPo’s Greg Miller … Molly O’Toole … Madge Bush … John Easton … Augie McGinnity … Jennifer Jones … Adam Snider … Bill Signer of the Carmen Group … CNN’s Laura Bernardini … Elliott Phaup … Davan Maharaj … Lee Cochran of the Blackstone Group … Chris Graham … Matthew Fried … Jim Boyle … AARP’s Joe Valenti … Ben Goodman of Mission: Readiness … Lumen Technologies’ Cyril Dadd … Mike Mills … Robert McCreary … FT’s Silvia Sciorilli Borrelli … Alexandra Lippman … Mark Naymik … Erin (Shaw) Stinner … Ryan Miner … Zach Bauer
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Send Playbookers tips to playbook@politico.com. Playbook couldn’t happen without our editor Mike Zapler, deputy editor Zack Stanton and producers Allie Bice, Eli Okun and Garrett Ross.
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26.) AMERICAN MINUTE
27.) CAFFEINATED THOUGHTS
28.) CONSERVATIVE DAILY NEWS
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29.) PJ MEDIA
The Morning Briefing: Evil Democrats Want to Pretend That Inflation Doesn’t Hurt
Top O’ the Briefing
Happy Monday, dear Kruiser Morning Briefing friends. I don’t know why, but I feel that a barn dance is fitting right now.
I would like to begin by thanking everyone who responded to the VIP pitch last week. It was awesome and we have a lot more people jumping onto the other side. For those who chose not to, I’m still here with the Briefing, my friends.
As you may have noticed, America is experiencing a bit of financial distress.
Each month economists attempt to gauge how average Americans are weathering the ups and downs of the U.S. economy. By using the simple yet clever technique of adding the U.S. unemployment rate (4.8%) to the current rate of inflation (6.22%) economists quantify the economic well-being of the country into a Misery Index. The current U.S. Misery Index stands at 10.82%.
If you have spent any time at all perusing the mainstream media you have been told that the money hemorrhaging from your wallet ain’t no thang.
But it is.
Democrats want us to believe that this economical train wreck that Gropey Joe is subjecting us to is somehow normal. Only in the fever-dream of an avowed leftist could this economy be a good thing. It’s gotten so bad for them that they are trying to convince you that the $90 you just spent to fill up your Altima is actually a good thing.
Sorry, lefty macroeconomics lecture, it still costs a lot.
Beltway elitist Democrats truly believe that Americans who have to pay for things don’t understand what’s going on with their wallets.
Spoiler alert: we do.
This will ultimately be the Democrats’ undoing. As their own James Carvillle once said, it’s “the economy, stupid.” They can’t wish away the real-world consequences of their actions.
Democrats want you to be miserable.
Conservatives don’t.
Choose wisely.
Everything Isn’t Awful
PJ Media
GLORIOUS. Elon Musk Spanks Bernie Sanders, Leftists Melt Down
#CommieAlert. Surgeon General Responds to Biden Being Overruled on Mandates
Spire Energy Warns Missouri Customers of Possible Outages
The World is Going Full Commietard — It’s Time To Stand Up
Misery Index: Average Americans Feel the Pinch of the Biden Economy
Republicans on the Comeback Trail in Pennsylvania
The Media Refuses to Acknowledge Its Failures in Promoting the Steele Dossier
13-Year-Old Watches Father Die As Seattle Vaccine Mandate Staffing Crisis Delayed Emergency Response
Atlas Accuses Fauci and Birx of Ignoring COVID Data on Schools
#PettyTyrant update. Newsom Quietly Extends California’s ‘State of Emergency’ for Third Time
How (Not) to Cure Vaccine Hesitancy
ICYMI: Three Things the Left Hopes You Missed This Week
Road Report: A Trucker Talks About the Industry and Life on the Road
Townhall Mothership
Schlichter: Time to Declare Victory Over COVID
How Bad Are the Problems With Harris? Jen Psaki’s Sunday Night Tweet Is Telling
Did You Miss Ted Cruz Smacking Down Liz Cheney’s Insufferable Self-Righteousness? Grab a Seat.
Now That Glenn Youngkin Has Won, Vulnerable Virginia Democrats in Congress Are in Even More Trouble
The Long Knives Come out for Kamala Harris as Her Vice Presidency Continues to Collapse
Professor Prescribes ‘Reregulation’ to Help White People Stop Their Racist Violence
Citigroup Prepared To Back Off On Anti-Second Amendment Stance
Shooting Survivor Says God, Not Gun Control, The Key To Stopping Violence
What changed? Manhattan art gallery abruptly cancels public viewing of Hunter Biden’s art
VIP
[WATCH] Kruiser’s ‘Beyond the Briefing’—Democrats Need a Useless/Diversity Axis
The Fringe with Megan Fox, Episode 75: The Case Against Kyle Rittenhouse, Part 1
The Only Reason Why You Know What Really Happened to Kyle Rittenhouse
Biden Chief of Staff Ron Klain May Have Doomed The Vaccine Mandate
Early COVID Treatment Summit In Florida Draws 1,000 Doctors
Left-Wing NBC Anchor Utters November’s Most Elitist Line
Reduct This
The Kruiser Kabana
Kabana Gallery
Kabana Comedy
“That’ll get you regular.”
30.) WHITE HOUSE DOSSIER
31.) THE DISPATCH
The Morning Dispatch: Grand Jury Indicts Steve Bannon
The former Trump adviser faces charges on two counts of contempt of Congress.
The Dispatch Staff | 2 |
Happy Monday! We are saddened to announce that our bid to buy the rights to the Trump International Hotel in Washington, D.C. and convert it into Dispatch HQ was not accepted.
Quick Hits: Today’s Top Stories
- The Bureau of Labor Statistics announced Friday that a record 4.4 million Americans quit their jobs in September as workers seek to capitalize on the incredibly tight labor market. There were approximately 10.4 million unfilled job openings in the country at the end of September.
- The 5th Circuit Court of Appeals on Friday extended its previous stay on the Biden administration’s COVID-19 vaccine/testing mandate, with the court’s three-judge panel arguing the rule “grossly exceeds” the Occupational Safety and Health Administration’s (OSHA) statutory authority. The constitutionality of the mandate—which was scheduled to go into effect January 4, 2022—is likely to eventually be appealed up to the Supreme Court.
- A federal grand jury on Friday indicted Steve Bannon on two counts of contempt of Congress after the longtime Trump associate flouted a subpoena issued by the House’s January 6 Select Committee. Mark Meadows—Trump’s chief of staff the day of the attack—did not show up for a scheduled deposition before the committee on Friday.
- President Biden on Friday announced his intent to nominate Dr. Robert Califf to serve as commissioner of the Food and Drug Administration. Califf, a cardiologist, first held the role in the Obama administration from 2016 to 2017. Biden also announced Sunday he is tapping Mitch Landrieu, former mayor of New Orleans, to oversee the implementation of the bipartisan infrastructure package.
- Republican Sen. Lisa Murkowski officially announced Friday that she will run for re-election in Alaska next year, setting up a primary clash with former Alaska Department of Administration Commissioner Kelly Tshibaka, whom former President Trump has endorsed. The National Republican Senatorial Committee announced it would back Murkowski’s re-election bid despite her support for Trump’s impeachment earlier this year.
- The Central Committee of Sudan Doctors said Sunday that six people were killed in protests on Saturday against the coup carried out by the Sudanese in late October.
Steve Bannon Indicted
For weeks, allies of Donald Trump—often at the behest of the former president—have undertaken a campaign of willful non-compliance when summoned before a House select committee tasked with investigating the January 6 attack on the Capitol. Unanswered subpoenas and legal efforts to withhold documentation have come to characterize what many Republicans have attempted to dismiss as a partisan witch hunt, despite the presence of two Republicans on the panel. As recently as Friday, former White House Chief of Staff Mark Meadows failed to appear for a deposition.
But hours later, a federal grand jury indicted former Trump adviser Steve Bannon on two counts of criminal contempt of Congress following a referral by the House. Each count carries with it the possibility of a minimum of 30 days and a maximum of a year in jail, along with financial penalties.
While lawmakers on the select committee hope the Justice Department’s move toward accountability will act as a warning to other Trump associates flouting congressional subpoenas, legal experts say that Bannon’s many missteps throughout the investigation have lent themselves to prosecution in ways that others have thus far avoided. And because Bannon was acting as a private citizen on January 6—he left the Trump White House in 2017—his claims to executive privilege are more dubious than those of Meadows and other sitting administration officials.
Bannon was summoned to testify before the committee (and produce relevant documents) in October as part of its ongoing probe into the January 6 riots and the events leading up to them. On January 5, the day before Congress was set to certify Joe Biden’s electoral victory, Bannon had predicted on his podcast that “all hell is going to break loose” at the Capitol, and he was reportedly one of the loudest voices in Trump’s ear urging him to obstruct the vote certification.
Bannon now faces jail time—not for his alleged role in the effort to overturn the 2020 election results, but for his ongoing refusal to cooperate with the congressional investigation into it. On October 7—Bannon’s first scheduled hearing before the committee—his lawyer submitted a letter claiming executive privilege seven hours after his client was set to appear. On October 14, his second planned appearance, Bannon never showed—or even submitted an excuse for skipping.
Worth Your Time
- In a piece for The Atlantic, McKay Coppins looks at the career trajectory of Utah’s Sen. Mike Lee—who went from fighting Donald Trump’s nomination at the 2016 Republican National Convention to favorably comparing him to a figure from the Book of Mormon four years later—and whether he has anything to worry about as he looks to run for a third term next year. “First elected in the Tea Party wave of 2010, Lee has long rankled the local establishment in Utah, where he is viewed by many as a showboating obstructionist whose penchant for provocation routinely embarrasses his home state and its predominant religion,” Coppins writes. “Lee’s MAGA makeover during the Trump presidency served only to exacerbate that perception. Now, as he prepares to run for reelection next year, Lee is bracing for a concerted, multifront campaign to unseat him.”
- In an essay for National Review, an active duty combat-arms officer derides what he sees as a “stunning” lack of accountability for the botched U.S. drone strike that killed 10 civilians in Afghanistan, including several children. Last week, an independent Pentagon review concluded the fatal error was not caused by misconduct or negligence, and no disciplinary action was recommended. “Having personally conducted countless dynamic-targeting situations while running current operations in both Afghanistan and Iraq, I can attest that you do not just strike a car you have been actively tracking for eight hours that is loaded with civilians without people making serious mistakes,” the officer writes under the pen name Robert Berg. “Likely these mistakes came at much higher levels than Air Force lieutenant general Sami Said’s review cared to look.”
- Ross Douthat has spent most of his career in punditry advising the Republican Party to move beyond Ronald Reagan’s vision of conservatism. But even he has to admit that—from inflationary concerns, to rising crime rates, to a bubbling “Cold War” with China—there are a growing number of parallels between the world of the 1970s and ‘80s and today. “For the electoral landscape of this specific moment, and the politics of 2022, the G.O.P. has advantages unlike any in my pundit’s lifetime,” he writes in his latest column. “A chance to win, and maybe win big, by eschewing the unpleasant work of adaptation and simply playing those 1980s hits again.”
Presented Without Comment
Philippine politics is so unpredictable that Duterte looks set to run against his own daughter for VP
Also Presented Without Comment
Members of the NFL’s officiating department privately acknowledged that officials erred on at least three critical calls and non-calls that went against the #Bears on Monday night. From me and @RapSheet:
Toeing the Company Line
- In Friday’s G-File, Jonah uses the latest developments regarding the Steele dossier to make a point about both-sides-ism. “Going by what we know, the Steele dossier was a travesty. It was an outrageous, indefensible, dirty trick,” he writes. But on “the other side of the ledger,” Donald Trump openly called on the Russian government to meddle in the 2016 election, his campaign held a meeting with a Russian woman promising to deliver dirt on Hillary Clinton, and his campaign manager, Paul Manafort, gave internal polling data to Russian intelligence officer Konstantin Kilimnik. “Now you can make as much or as little about all of this as you want—and many people have, in both pro- and anti-Trump tribes,” Jonah concludes. “My only point is that just because Team A misbehaved, that doesn’t mean Team B’s misbehavior didn’t exist.”
- David’s Sunday French Press takes a look at Ramirez v. Collier, a Supreme Court case that will determine whether a pastor can pray for and touch John Henry Ramirez in the execution chamber as he is put to death by the state of Texas. “When [Pastor] Dana Moore gets into a car and drives hundreds of miles to meet a condemned man, he is an instrument of that grace,” David writes. “This is the church at its best, when a pastor lives out the parable of the lost sheep. He’s a shepherd who quite literally leaves his flock behind each day that he drives out to Livingston Texas, to meet the one behind bars, waiting to die. But if Texas does not relent, and if the court does not intervene, we will see the state fail its foundational obligations.”
- A new report details the Chinese Communist Party’s goal of “seizing Taiwan without a fight”—and Friday’s Vital Interests (🔒) details how that could happen. The People’s Liberation Army’s “Three Warfares” doctrine encapsulates psychological, public opinion, and legal combat, Thomas Joscelyn notes. “It is not clear if these tactics are all equally effective, or even what their overall effect really is. Regardless, the CCP’s assault on Taiwan has already begun—once you understand that warfare is more than just bullets.”
- Scott Lincicome, America’s favorite economic policy wonk, is back on The Dispatch Podcast to discuss supply chains, inflation, wages, and labor force participation!
- Haley, Harvest, and Ryan are still working through hundreds of pages of legislative text to discern where exactly Democrats’ Build Back Better Act would allocate money. In Friday’s Uphill (🔒): Climate and health care policy.
- On the site today, Chris Stirewalt uses the example of the #freebritany movement to explore the emergence of online mobs. “Communities built around obsessive interests online spill out into real life. Helping create a mob makes people feel powerful, and membership in a mob makes people even more fanatical,” he writes.
- Klon Kitchen explains why the newly introduced Filter Bubble Transparency Act won’t fix social media.
Reporting by Declan Garvey (@declanpgarvey), Andrew Egger (@EggerDC), Charlotte Lawson (@lawsonreports), Audrey Fahlberg (@AudreyFahlberg), Ryan Brown (@RyanP_Brown), Harvest Prude (@HarvestPrude), and Steve Hayes (@stephenfhayes).
32.) LEGAL INSURRECTION
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33.) THE DAILY WIRE
34.) DESERET NEWS
35.) BRIGHT
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36.) AMERICAN THINKER
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37.) LARRY J. SABATO’S CRYSTAL BALL
38.) THE BLAZE
39.) THE FEDERALIST
40.) REUTERS
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41.) NOQ REPORT
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42.) ARRA NEWS SERVICE
43.) REDSTATE
Winsome Sears Proves Again Why She Terrifies the Democrat Party
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44.) WORLD NET DAILY
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45.) MSNBC
November 15, 2021 THE LATEST Trumpworld is making substantial inroads into Brazil’s political life — and helping pave the way for Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro to carry out his own version of “Stop the Steal” in the run-up to his re-election bid next year, writes Zeeshan Aleem.
The increasing evidence of links between former president Donald Trump’s and Bolsonaro’s circles should be a source of concern for anyone trying to spot trends in right-wing populism — and the threat it poses to the stability of democracy — across the world.
Read Zeeshan Aleem’s full analysis and more on your Monday MSNBC Daily. TOP STORIES In exchange for paying to indulge in racism and transphobia, the students get … nothing. Read More Swift isn’t the same woman she was in 2012 — and it works in everyone’s favor. Read More Generally, someone who provokes an attack is unable to use self-defense, but Wisconsin law is a little more generous. Read More It would’ve been easy for Trump to say the right thing, but he just couldn’t help himself. Read More TOP VIDEOS MORE FROM MSNBC
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46.) BIZPAC REVIEW
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47.) ABC
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48.) NBC MORNING RUNDOWN
To ensure delivery to your inbox add email@mail.nbcnews.com to your contacts Today’s Top Stories from NBC News MONDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 2021 Good morning, NBC News readers.
Kenosha, Wisconsin, is on edge ahead of closing arguments in the Kyle Rittenhouse trial. American journalist Danny Fenster has been freed from a Myanmar prison and is heading home. Plus, what to expect from President Joe Biden and Chinese President Xi Jinping’s virtual summit later today.
Here’s what we’re watching this Monday morning. Ahead of closing arguments in the homicide trial of Kyle Rittenhouse, the city of Kenosha is on edge and bracing for a verdict in the controversial case.
Rittenhouse, 18, is charged with reckless homicide, intentional homicide and attempted intentional homicide after he gunned down two men and wounded a third during protests after the police shooting of Jacob Blake last year.
Wisconsin has dispatched 500 National Guard troops to be on standby as a precaution to ensure public safety during the conclusion of the trial.
Some experts believe the case’s closing arguments and verdict will be a pivotal moment for America.
“All signs are this is going to be the case that vindicates white people,” said John Eason, an assistant sociology professor at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. He added, “If the peak of the country’s social justice reckoning was George Floyd, then this is the pendulum swinging back.”
Rittenhouse’s mother spoke out ahead of the trial’s conclusion, arguing that it was his life or the shooting victims’ lives.
“If he didn’t have that gun, my son would’ve been dead,” Wendy Rittenhouse said in an interview with NBC’s “Nightly News.” Monday’s Top Stories
American journalist Danny Fenster, sentenced only days ago to 11 years hard labor in Myanmar, has been freed and is on his way home, according to former U.S. diplomat Bill Richardson. Biden and Xi meet virtually on Monday for perhaps their most consequential summit to date — one that comes as both leaders face complicated political situations at home and an escalating rivalry between superpowers that’s drawing comparisons to a new Cold War. As Europe finds itself “back at the epicenter” of the Covid-19 pandemic once again, experts say it should serve as a warning to the U.S. and other countries about the coronavirus’s unremitting nature. Pop star Britney Spears may finally be freed from her conservatorship, but observers and fans worry that society will fall back into the same behavior that helped put her there more than 13 years ago. Also in the News
Editor’s Pick
Some see a plastics complex near Pittsburgh as a boon for a struggling region. Others fear a return to a toxic past for a product they say the world needs less of just as the U.N. Climate Change Conference wraps up with a warning that our “fragile planet is hanging by a thread.” One Fun Thing
In this week’s Sunday Sitdown with Willie Geist, comedian Michael Che talked about his long road to becoming a writer and “Weekend Update” co-anchor on “Saturday Night Live,” including selling T-shirts out of the trunk of his car to make ends meet.
This week’s show included mocking Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, for picking a fight with the “Sesame Street” character Big Bird.
See highlights from “SNL” here and watch Che’s full interview here. Want to receive NBC Breaking News and Special Alerts in your inbox? Get the NBC News Mobile App 30 Rockefeller Plaza New York, NY 10112 |
49.) NBC FIRST READ
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From NBC’s Chuck Todd, Mark Murray and Ben Kamisar
FIRST READ: Biden’s new challenge is to connect infrastructure law to economic concerns
Today, President Biden gets to celebrate the big bipartisan/unity/coming-together achievement that he campaigned on – when he signs the $1.2 trillion infrastructure legislation into law at 3:00 pm ET.
“We can join forces, stop the shouting, and lower the temperature,” Biden said at his inaugural address. “For without unity, there is no peace, only bitterness and fury.”
The problem for Biden: The public isn’t rewarding him for this bill.
At least not yet.
A Washington Post/ABC poll, conducted after the House passed the infrastructure bill, has Biden’s job rating at 41 percent, even though the same survey shows 63 percent of Americans supporting the bipartisan infrastructure legislation (and 58 percent favoring his spending on climate change, preschool and health care).
What’s more, the poll finds that just 35 percent of Americans believe Biden has accomplished a great deal or a good amount during his first 10 months in office.
Nicholas Kamm/AFP – Getty Images
One reason why Biden hasn’t gotten credit for the infrastructure bill – outside of the fact that it took the House three months to pass it after the Senate did – is that Americans don’t see it connected to their concerns about the economy.
Just 29 percent of Americans have a positive view of the economy, while a whopping 70 percent see it in a negative light, per the same Post/ABC poll.
And 59 percent say they are more concerned that Biden will do too much to increase the size and role of government, despite the majorities supporting the big infrastructure and social safety net bills.
Bottom line: Even though the unemployment rate is down and wages are up, the economy feels out of sorts to too many Americans, as prices on goods and services keep on increasing.
And Biden, right now, seems focused on his legacy and his long-term agenda – rather than the problems that the public is feeling.
One other thing: Three months after 19 GOP senators helped pass the bipartisan infrastructure bill – and three months after the Biden White House focused more on their partisan social safety net legislation – just how bipartisan is today’s bill signing going to be?
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Build it and they will come
But national Democrats seem confident that campaigning on the popular infrastructure bill and climate/preschool/health care legislation (once it also passes Congress) is the way to improve Biden’s numbers and the party’s political fortunes, NBC’s Sahil Kapur reports.
“Voters are deeply cynical about what politicians say they will do, so Democrats need to actually get it done,” Democratic strategist Jesse Ferguson tells Kapur. “This gap won’t close by telling people what we will do. It will close by showing people what we are doing.”
Adds Rep. Sean Patrick Maloney, D-N.Y., chair of the DCCC: “We’re about to deliver universal pre-k and extend a game-changing middle-class tax cut. The job now is to go out and sell it. So I’m encouraged to see that Joe Biden’s begun to tour the country connecting with Americans like only he can.”
And this week, Biden heads to New Hampshire (on Tuesday) and Michigan (on Wednesday) to sell the infrastructure bill.
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Tweet of the Day: Watching Pat Leahy today
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Data Download: The numbers you need to know today
10: The number of Astroworld victims now that a nine-year-old boy has passed away.
10 points: The GOP advantage on the generic ballot in the Washington Post-ABC News poll, with Republicans at 51 percent to the Democrats’ 41 percent.
47,079,752: The number of confirmed cases of the coronavirus in the United States, per the most recent data from NBC News and health officials. (That’s 212,534 more since Friday morning.)
765,992: The number of deaths in the United States from the virus so far, per the most recent data from NBC News. (That’s 2,778 more since Friday morning.)
440,559,613: The number of total vaccine doses administered in the U.S., per the CDC.
29,338,966: The number of booster vaccine doses administered in the U.S., per the CDC.
58.8 percent: The share of all Americans who are fully vaccinated, per the CDC.
70.5 percent: The share of all Americans 18-years and older who are fully vaccinated, per the CDC.
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ICYMI: What ELSE is happening in the world?
President Biden and Chinese President Xi Jinping will meet Monday for a virtual summit.
Former Trump adviser Steve Bannon will be arraigned Monday morning for contempt of Congress.
The New York Times reported that the military had tried to downplay a 2019 airstrike against the Islamic State that may have killed dozens of civilians.
American Journalist Danny Fenster has been released from Myanmar, where he had been sentenced to 11 years of hard labor by the military junta.
CNN reports that Vice President Harris has had a rocky start to her time in the administration.
The New York Times looks at how the congressional battleground is coming together amid the redistricting battles.
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Dave Chappelle is an alumnus of Duke Ellington School of the Arts in Washington, DC. It’s was featured when Chappelle was a guest on Jerry Seinfeld’s “Comedians in Cars Getting Coffee.” Chappelle is a … MORE |
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UNREAL! This is the worst case scenario! Please tell me this is not true…
|
🚨RED ALERT: Huge News About Dem Rep. Jerrold Nadler
|
TOP STORIES:
-
Biden Ally Leaks Dem’s 2024 Candidate….
-
DOJ & FBI Complicit In Durham Indictment…
- Donald Trump Defeats Joe Biden
- Biden’s Chief Of Staff Makes Stunning Admission
-
Rittenhouse Lawsuit Against Biden…
- Kamala Harris Rightfully Called Out By Reporter
- Huge News About Dem Rep. Jerrold Nadler
- Gov. Kristi Noem Makes It Official!
- Rittenhouse Judge Just Opened The Path
- Witness Tampering in Rittenhouse Trial…
|
IN DEPTH:
|
- Bidenomics: Far more available jobs than workers… millions resign 2 hours ago
- Jan. 6 Defendants Taken Out of Cells on Stretchers… 2 hours ago
- FBI tactics against Project Veritas cause concerns about freedom of the press 2 hours ago
- Border agents ordered to cease deporting Nicaraguans… 2 hours ago
- Biden vaccine mandates likely heading to U.S. Supreme Court 2 hours ago
- Biden’s Justice Department pledges to ‘vigorously defend’ vaccine mandate 2 hours ago
- Behar: Kyle Rittenhouse Crying Was ‘Worst Acting’ I Have Ever Seen 2 hours ago
- Alarm Sounds on Kerry’s Ties to Chinese Slave Labor 2 hours ago
- Joe Biden Should Cancel His Virtual Summit with China 3 hours ago
- Why an SR-71 Spy Plane Went Mach 3.2 Against an F‑15 Fighter 3 hours ago
- DEA Stopped Saying ‘Mexican Cartel’ To ‘Appease’… 3 hours ago
- US Actions in Ukraine Backfiring… 3 hours ago
- Belarus Airline Bans Syrian, Iraqi, Yemenis… 3 hours ago
- Iceland Parodies Facebook’s Metaverse in Tourism Ad… 3 hours ago
- German state health ministers call to extend state of emergency… 3 hours ago
- Belarus Damaging Poland’s Border Fence, Attacking Guards with Lasers 3 hours ago
- 50 years of predictions on climate apocalypse… 3 hours ago
- Guess which party ranks as more extreme… 3 hours ago
- Biden fast track of federal judge confirmations 3 hours ago
- High schoolers’ interest in four-year colleges dropped … 3 hours ago
- FBI Email Server Hacked… 4 hours ago
- Russian cyber warfare puts America in danger… 4 hours ago
- COP26 produces a climate deal 4 hours ago
- Should We ‘Live More Like Europeans’? 4 hours ago
- Ridley Scott Calls Superhero Movies No F–king Good & Boring as Sh‑t 4 hours ago
- Dwayne Johnson Wants To Be the Next James Bond 4 hours ago
- Twitter’s Treatment of Project Veritas Reveals Double Standard… 4 hours ago
- ‘Yellowstone’ Premiere Draws A Staggering 14.7 Million Viewers 4 hours ago
- Guitarist Robert Cray Drops from Eric Clapton Tour over Anti-Lockdown Song 4 hours ago
- Steelers’ Ben Roethlisberger to be placed on COVID-19 list 4 hours ago
- Garland scores 21 points, Cavaliers rout Pistons 98–78 4 hours ago
- Yellen admits labor participation ‘quite depressed’ compared to pre-pandemic levels 4 hours ago
- Bitcoin Upgrade Taproot Activates 4 hours ago
- MoviePass Co-Founder Looks to Reboot Failed Service 4 hours ago
- Elon Musk Sold $6.9 Billion in Tesla Stock Last Week 4 hours ago
- Latinos Are New Swing Voters: What Are Dems Going to Do? 17 hours ago
- National Guard Activated Over Rittenhouse Verdict… 24 hours ago
- What Did Obama Know and When Did He Know It? 24 hours ago
- The Kyle Rittenhouse Trial Is Embarrassing 1 day ago
- US Inflation more horrible than Washington admits 1 day ago
- Disney And Marvel Bank On Identity Politics In First Teaser… 1 day ago
- Defiant Mark Meadows rips Capitol riot committee… 1 day ago
- 8 big problems with Biden’s ‘Build Back Better’ bill 1 day ago
- Most millionaires would receive a tax cut under Dems 1 day ago
- Kanye West Goes Nuclear on Chappelle’s Critics… 1 day ago
- No Border Wall Funding In Bill? 1 day ago
- Judge ends Britney Spears’ conservatorship 1 day ago
- Leftists Threaten Judge in Rittenhouse Trial 1 day ago
- New Beatles doc reveals the truth behind band’s darkest days 1 day ago
- Luke Bryan Mocks Aaron Rodgers At CMA Awards… 1 day ago
🚨RED ALERT: Biden Ally Leaks Dem’s 2024 Candidate….
|
TOP STORIES:
-
FAUCI JUST ISSUED THIS URGENT WARNING…
-
Pelosi’s Days Are Numbered…
-
WaPo Retracts Russia Collusion Reporting, Points Finger At Hillary Clinton
-
Trump Responds To Bannon Indictment
- Ted Cruz Laces Into Two Republican Traitors
- Biden Ally Leaks Dem’s 2024 Candidate….
- Donald Trump Defeats Joe Biden
- Biden’s Chief Of Staff Makes Stunning Admission
- Rittenhouse Lawsuit Against Biden…
- DOJ & FBI Complicit In Durham Indictment…
- Kamala Harris Rightfully Called Out By Reporter
- Huge News About Dem Rep. Jerrold Nadler
- Gov. Kristi Noem Makes It Official!
- Rittenhouse Judge Just Opened The Path
- Witness Tampering in Rittenhouse Trial…
|
IN DEPTH:
|
- Bidenomics: Far more available jobs than workers… millions resign 2 hours ago
- Jan. 6 Defendants Taken Out of Cells on Stretchers… 2 hours ago
- FBI tactics against Project Veritas cause concerns about freedom of the press 2 hours ago
- Border agents ordered to cease deporting Nicaraguans… 2 hours ago
- Biden vaccine mandates likely heading to U.S. Supreme Court 2 hours ago
- Biden’s Justice Department pledges to ‘vigorously defend’ vaccine mandate 2 hours ago
- Behar: Kyle Rittenhouse Crying Was ‘Worst Acting’ I Have Ever Seen 2 hours ago
- Alarm Sounds on Kerry’s Ties to Chinese Slave Labor 2 hours ago
- Joe Biden Should Cancel His Virtual Summit with China 3 hours ago
- Why an SR-71 Spy Plane Went Mach 3.2 Against an F‑15 Fighter 3 hours ago
- DEA Stopped Saying ‘Mexican Cartel’ To ‘Appease’… 3 hours ago
- US Actions in Ukraine Backfiring… 3 hours ago
- Belarus Airline Bans Syrian, Iraqi, Yemenis… 3 hours ago
- Iceland Parodies Facebook’s Metaverse in Tourism Ad… 3 hours ago
- German state health ministers call to extend state of emergency… 3 hours ago
- Belarus Damaging Poland’s Border Fence, Attacking Guards with Lasers 3 hours ago
- 50 years of predictions on climate apocalypse… 3 hours ago
- Guess which party ranks as more extreme… 3 hours ago
- Biden fast track of federal judge confirmations 3 hours ago
- High schoolers’ interest in four-year colleges dropped … 3 hours ago
- FBI Email Server Hacked… 4 hours ago
- Russian cyber warfare puts America in danger… 4 hours ago
- COP26 produces a climate deal 4 hours ago
- Should We ‘Live More Like Europeans’? 4 hours ago
- Ridley Scott Calls Superhero Movies No F–king Good & Boring as Sh‑t 4 hours ago
- Dwayne Johnson Wants To Be the Next James Bond 4 hours ago
- Twitter’s Treatment of Project Veritas Reveals Double Standard… 4 hours ago
- ‘Yellowstone’ Premiere Draws A Staggering 14.7 Million Viewers 4 hours ago
- Guitarist Robert Cray Drops from Eric Clapton Tour over Anti-Lockdown Song 4 hours ago
- Steelers’ Ben Roethlisberger to be placed on COVID-19 list 4 hours ago
- Garland scores 21 points, Cavaliers rout Pistons 98–78 4 hours ago
- Yellen admits labor participation ‘quite depressed’ compared to pre-pandemic levels 4 hours ago
- Bitcoin Upgrade Taproot Activates 4 hours ago
- MoviePass Co-Founder Looks to Reboot Failed Service 4 hours ago
- Elon Musk Sold $6.9 Billion in Tesla Stock Last Week 4 hours ago
- Latinos Are New Swing Voters: What Are Dems Going to Do? 17 hours ago
- National Guard Activated Over Rittenhouse Verdict… 24 hours ago
- What Did Obama Know and When Did He Know It? 24 hours ago
- The Kyle Rittenhouse Trial Is Embarrassing 1 day ago
- US Inflation more horrible than Washington admits 1 day ago
- Disney And Marvel Bank On Identity Politics In First Teaser… 1 day ago
- Defiant Mark Meadows rips Capitol riot committee… 1 day ago
- 8 big problems with Biden’s ‘Build Back Better’ bill 1 day ago
- Most millionaires would receive a tax cut under Dems 1 day ago
- Kanye West Goes Nuclear on Chappelle’s Critics… 1 day ago
- No Border Wall Funding In Bill? 1 day ago
- Judge ends Britney Spears’ conservatorship 1 day ago
- Leftists Threaten Judge in Rittenhouse Trial 1 day ago
- New Beatles doc reveals the truth behind band’s darkest days 1 day ago
- Luke Bryan Mocks Aaron Rodgers At CMA Awards… 1 day ago
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74.) THE POST MILLENNIAL
75.) BLACKLISTED NEWS
76.) THE DAILY DOT
Did a friend forward this? Subscribe here. Welcome to the Monday edition of Internet Insider, unfurling online threads of misinformation—one dumb conspiracy theory at a time.
ONE DUMB CONSPIRACY Conspiracy theorists were met with yet another defeat last week after California Gov. Gavin Newsom (D) returned from a nearly two-week absence from the public eye. Newsom’s hiatus came due to unspecified “family obligations,” which ultimately led to the cancelation of his trip to Scotland for the COP21 climate change conference.
The decision to forgo the overseas trip came shortly after Newsom received a Moderna booster shot on Oct. 27, leading conspiracy theorists to suggest that the governor had undoubtedly experienced an adverse reaction.
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After a week or so of silence, Newsom appeared in a video on Twitter wishing his constituents a happy Diwali and Bandi Chhorwas. Newsom then reportedly attended the wedding of artist and model Ivy Love Getty in San Francisco the following weekend.
Despite it becoming abundantly clear that Newsom was in perfect health, conspiracy theories continued to spread online thanks largely to right-wing figures such as Jack Posobiec. The conspiracy theory exploded last Monday when Children’s Health Defense, the organization run by prominent anti-vaxxer Robert F. Kennedy, sensationally claimed that a “source” had revealed that Newsom was exhibiting symptoms of Guillain–Barré syndrome (GBS). GBS is a rare disorder in which the immune system damages nerves. Once again, the claims appeared to be entirely false. Newsom gave a lengthy speech the very next day at the 2021 California Economic Summit. With all the conspiracy theories proven false, it appeared the ridiculous claims would finally end.
But undeterred by the falseness of the claim, an unknown individual would inject new life into the conspiracy theory by releasing a video that appeared to show one half of Newsom’s face paralyzed.
The insinuation was clear: Newsom had in fact experienced a debilitating side effect from his third COVID-19 shot. “Um… What’s wrong with his face,” a Twitter user who shared the video last Tuesday said. Conspiracy theorists quickly spread the video online, arguing that Newsom was actually dealing with Bell’s palsy, a reaction to a viral infection that causes muscle weakness in one side of the face. Others said Newsom had suffered from a stroke.
“He had a stroke. Partial paralysis,” another Twitter user said. “Watch his left eye also. A bit droopy and delayed.”
Others went as far as to claim that the individual in the footage wasn’t the governor at all, believing that Newsom had been arrested and sent to Guantanamo Bay, a hallmark of QAnon. But the footage is clearly a doctored version of a video shared by the official Twitter account for the Office of the Governor of California on Nov. 4.
In statements to numerous media outlets, Newsom’s press secretary Daniel Lopez stated that the governor had not experienced any side effects. With Newsom back in the public eye, it’s quite clear that none of the claims regarding his wellbeing were ever rooted in reality.
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77.) HEADLINE USA
78.) NATURAL NEWS
79.) POLITICHICKS
80.) BLACKPRESSUSA
81.) THE WESTERN JOURNAL
82.) CNN
Monday 11.15.21 Holiday events are looking a little more normal this year after last year’s pandemic-hobbled season — and that includes the return of mall Santas! Here’s what else you need to know to Get Up to Speed and On With Your Day. The infrastructure bill could help pay to build a new bridge next to the Brent Spence Bridge in Cincinnati. Infrastructure
President Biden is expected to sign the roughly $1 trillion infrastructure bill today, setting in motion historic levels of funding for projects across the country. Biden has tapped former New Orleans Mayor Mitch Landrieu to oversee the bill’s implementation. Landrieu has promised to work closely with state and local governments to organize projects and create new jobs to support them. About $550 billion in new federal investment is expected to go to such projects over the next five years. American infrastructure is in desperate need of updating and repair, and some undertakings that could get a big boost from the bill include a new bridge along a major transit artery in the Midwest, expanded public transit in the Atlanta metro area and rail improvements in Chicago, the nation’s busiest rail hub.
Capitol riot
The White House chief of staff under former President Trump has defied a subpoena to appear before the House committee investigating the January 6 Capitol riot. Now, a key member of that panel says the House will “move quickly” to refer Mark Meadows for criminal contempt, just like it did with Trump’s one-time adviser Steve Bannon. A federal grand jury on Friday returned an indictment against Bannon for his refusal to appear before the committee. Bannon is expected to self-surrender and appear in court today. As the committee expands its list of subpoenas, it wants to make clear that those who defy its requests could face real consequences.
Coronavirus
As the winter months roll in — and Covid-19 spikes threaten as people move indoors — the struggle over vaccine mandates in the US continues. A federal appeals court has reaffirmed its earlier decision to freeze the Biden administration’s vaccine mandate, calling it “staggeringly overbroad.” The OSHA rule requires all employers with more than 100 employees to ensure their workers are fully vaccinated against Covid-19 or undergo regular testing and wear face masks at work. In Oklahoma, the state’s National Guard has pledged to thwart a Defense Department mandate that troops be vaccinated against Covid-19. GOP Gov. Kevin Stitt has also asked the Pentagon to suspend the mandate for National Guard members. The Pentagon has said it will respond.
Economy
Consumer prices have climbed about 6.2% in the last 12 months — a rate of increase that hasn’t been seen since 1990 and is well above the Federal Reserve’s long-term inflation goal of around 2%. However, staggering inflation isn’t flagging consumer spending. US retail sales rose more than expected in September, and October numbers, due out tomorrow, are expected to be just as healthy. Still, the situation is very alarming for investors and financial experts. The director of the National Economic Council and Biden’s top economic adviser is urging Congress to pass the $1.75 trillion economic spending package to help curb rising prices.
Poland-Belarus
Thousands of people are now stranded at the border between Poland and Belarus as the humanitarian crisis there grows. The migrants — most of whom are from the Middle East and Asia — are seeking to cross illegally into Poland, and many are now living in a Belarusian forest, weathering freezing nighttime temperatures. Some have died of exposure. The Red Cross is delivering aid, but the situation may only get worse. Belarusian state border officials estimate the number of people in the border region could increase to 5,000 within a week. The US and EU are preparing to levy fresh sanctions on Belarus, whose leader Alexander Lukashenko has been accused of manufacturing the crisis by encouraging migrants to cross into Belarus’ EU neighbors.
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People are talking about these. Read up. Join in. Adele concert features surprise fan proposal
America’s 10 most expensive ZIP codes have median home prices over $4 million
You could win $1,000 to binge-watch Betty White’s work
No turkey? No problem! Try a plant-based Thanksgiving menu this year
A very large hog named Papa Pig backed up traffic in South Carolina Biden’s highly anticipated virtual summit with Chinese President Xi Jinping is set for today. It comes amid heightened tensions over Taiwan, trade and human rights but also just as the nations unveiled a surprise climate pact. American journalist is freed Danny Fenster has been released from jail in Myanmar.
Astroworld death toll rises A 9-year-old boy who was injured in the crowd crush in Houston has died, becoming the 10th person to perish in the concert tragedy. $4.682 That was the average price of gas early this morning in California, beating the state’s previous record average price of $4.671 for regular unleaded set in October 2012. Californians are facing the highest gas prices in the nation due in part to production issues caused by extreme weather. Best day ever … praise the Lord … can I get an Amen????
Britney Spears, in an Instagram message to fans after a judge terminated her 13-year conservatorship. The move ends months of legal struggles for the singer, who spoke out forcefully against the terms of the agreement over the past year. Brought to you by CNN Underscored The best SAD light therapy lamps of 2021 If winter makes you want to sleep all day, a light therapy lamp can help put a little pep in your step. We tested seven top-rated models to find the best options to help brighten your day. Well, we’ll just wing it 5 THINGS You are receiving this newsletter because you’re subscribed to 5 Things.
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89.) THE POLITICAL INSIDER – LUNCH BREAK
90.) CONSERVATIVE TRIBUNE
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Nov 15, 2021 |
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Sponsored By: Alliance Defending Freedom TAKE OUR SURVEY: Defend Religious LibertyWe have critical cases, including some pending at the Supreme Court, and need YOUR feedback. Do you think that people of faith should be forced to create artistic messages that celebrate events, like same-sex weddings, that violate their religious beliefs? Take our flashpoll and help us defend religious liberty today!
Elon Musk is out here on a Sunday night flaming Bernie Sanders on Twitter
Watch this streaker get ab-so-lutely clobbered by a security guy
Heading Into Midterms, Republicans Hold Their Largest Poll Lead In 40 Years!Hooollllyyyy moly folks. The Democrats are getting absolutely POUNDED at the polls. Why are they getting pounded at the polls? Because they are screwing everything up, would be my first guess.
Depressing: Nearly two-thirds of all vaccinated Americans claim to have banned unvaccinated family members from holiday gatheringsThis is the first holiday season in which the COVID-19 vaccine has been in widespread usage, and we’re seeing the uncompromising politics of it play out in real time:
Here’s Biden’s Commie Banking Nominee Calling for “No More Private Bank Accounts”
Durham University in the UK is offering training to students on how to be a prostituteYou guys, I think we’ve hit the point of no return:
This guy spent 4 years and tens of thousands turning an old Cadillac El Dorado into a 5-ton functional replica of the Ghostbusters Ecto-1 and give him credit it’s pretty sweetSome folks build bookshelf models of their favorite cars. Others…well, others do this:
Scottish government will put tampons in men’s bathrooms just in case a transgender person needs themThis stuff gets less surprising by the day:
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97.) US NEWS & WORLD REPORT
98.) NEWSMAX
99.) MARK LEVIN
November 12, 2021
On Friday’s Mark Levin Show, the National School Board Association did, in fact, collude with the White House before that memo calling parents domestic terrorists was issued. This program made the prescient state that there was coordination with the NSBA and the White House calling the letter an “inside job” at that time. Now on November 12th, 2021 its been confirmed that the NSBA has been actively engaged with several executive branch agencies. It is also believed that the DOJ had a hand in writing the memo. Then, Hawk Newsome, the head of Black Lives Matter of Greater New York City has declared that there will be arson and bloodshed in the streets if the NYPD’s anti-crime task force is reinstated by the incoming Mayor Eric Adams. While there’s no repercussion for the BLM leader, Steve Bannon was indicted for rejecting an overreaching subpoena from a partisan congressional committee obsessed with Donald Trump. How many presidents and their staff has this happened to? The Democrat party of Jim Crow remains a grave threat to this country as their war is promoted by Marxism and attacks the culture of Americanism, our economy, and our energy production. Later, when then-AG Eric Holder got caught running the “Fast and Furious” gun-running scandal he declined to respond to Congressional subpoenas and he was only held in contempt. There is no evidence that Steve Bannon led an insurrection on January 6th but he’s been indicted. Afterward, what the FBI is doing to James O’Keefe and Project Veritas is egregious. Leaking information from his cellphone to the New York Times has now become a routine pattern of political punishment. Finally, Grove City College Professor Paul Kengor joins the show to discuss his latest article in the American Spectator on natural immunity. Kengor argues that natural immunity is five times superior to the artificial immunity offered through vaccination, which only lasts about six months before a booster is needed to maintain efficacy.
THIS IS FROM:
Fox News
NSBA coordinated with White House, DOJ before sending notorious ‘domestic terrorists’ letter: emails
AP
Bannon indicted on contempt charges for defying 1/6 subpoena
Newsbusters
TERRORISM: Nets Ignore BLM Threatening to Bring ‘Bloodshed’ to NYC
Rumble
Joy Reid: CRT Exists Because of The Rittenhouse Trial
World Israel News
Rabbis slam Biden abstention on antisemitic UN resolution
NY Post
Mega-rich Pelosi objected to ‘billionaire tax’ in $1.75T spending bill
American Spectator
The Federally Funded Takedown of Natural Immunity
The podcast for this show can be streamed or downloaded from the Audio Rewind page.
Image used with permission of Getty Images / Anadolu Agency
100.) WOLF DAILY
101.) THE GELLER REPORT
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102.) CNS
103.) RELIABLE NEWS
104.) INDEPENDENT SENTINEL
RFK Jr is banned for pointing to who gets rich by shutting people like him up.
Gates casually explains the vaccinations didn’t work well.
Fauci is sounding the alarm about the vaccine. If I was in the hospital and they told me Fauci was my doctor, I’d run the other way.
A general will reinvent the Marines into a WOKE fighting force.
Cheney, a candidate for President?
Pass the CRT test to continue your education at UW.
Gates Admits the Vaccines Didn’t Work WellDuring a recent interview, Bill Gates, the self-declared world ruler, discussed changing our systems to meet the so-called climate crisis. It was the usual Great Reset blather. Towards the end,… | |
RFK Jr Points to an Indisputable TruthFor those who question Robert F. Kennedy Jr., it would be hard to find fault with anything he is saying in this short clip. Nothing he puts up on his… | |
Rush’s Wingman: Left’s Goal — Ultimate Destruction of ConservativesJames Golden interviewed with Steve Bannon recently. James Golden is Bo Snerdley, Rush’s wingman, who has a new book out, Rush on the Radio. Golden also hosts a radio show…. | |
Spielberg: ‘So Much at Home’ in Cuba-‘8 Most Important Hours of My Life’ Were With CastroIf you want to know what’s wrong with America, in part, it’s that the people with money are communists, and they are influencing our politics. That is what you see… | |
General Will Reinvent Marines Based on Identity Politics, Equity, InclusionGen. David Berger, commandant of the Marine Corps, said during an interview on Friday that the Marines will reinvent itself and focus on diversity, equity, and inclusion “to reflect America.”… | |
CCP Is Lobbying US Companies to Oppose Bills Making the US CompetitiveThe Chinese Communist Party is exploiting the freedoms in our country, and the corruption in our greedy corporations. The CCP allegedly asked US companies to lobby against the bills on their… | |
Dr. Fauci Sounds the Alarm About the Failing VaxDr. Anthony Fauci, the Director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Disease, Dr. Wrong, is sounding the alarm about the vaccines waning within months. His solution is to… | |
Henry Ruggs III faces 50 years in prison for 156 MPH fatal crashFormer Las Vegas Raiders football player Henry Ruggs III faces 50 years in prison for the death of Tina Tintor. Ruggs was driving his Chevrolet Corvette at 156 miles per… | |
CRT’s Systemic Racism Means Whites Won’t Get Treated in HospitalsWe just posted a short clip of a white man who was denied monoclonal antibodies therapy in a hospital in Texas, which preceded the posts from Jewish Deplorable below attesting… | |
Texas Hospital Won’t Treat the White Man, Seriously?This is getting evil. A white man can’t get monoclonal antibodies at a Texas hospital because he’s white. He was also too young. However, if he was Black or Latino,… | |
CNN Picks a Possible GOP Presidential Candidate — 19% Liz CheneyCNN discussed Rep. Liz Cheney as a possible presidential candidate. CNN is the network that thought the creepy porn lawyer Michael Avenatti could be president. Their analytic ability is the… | |
Meet Your Next President of the United StatesThe New York Times published a propaganda piece praising Kamala Harris’s performance on her trip to Paris. The purpose is clear. They were able to help destroy the Trump presidency… | |
Gossip About ‘White Racist’ Truckers on MSNBCThe trucking industry is in dire straits largely thanks to Democrats. California has passed draconian laws that make it too difficult to financially survive as an independent trucker. It is… | |
Austria Won’t Let Unvaccinated 12 Years and Over Leave Their Homes, Police to PatrolAustria has already banned the unvaccinated from restaurants, cinemas, ski lifts, and hairdressers, but now they won’t be able to leave their homes, allegedly for ten days. The Austrian government… | |
Poland Faces War to Protect Its Borders, Something the US Will Not DoPoland is currently under invasion. Belarusian dictator Lukashenko unleashed hordes of Islamists at the border with Poland. Poland and Belarus are now close to war. “Last night Belarusian soldiers tried to… | |
Instagram Bans All Mention of James O’Keefe and Project VeritasYou may not even mention Project Veritas or James O’Keefe on the Instagram platform.James O’Keefe, banned everywhere, is an investigative journalist who exposes the Left. He relies heavily on whistleblowers… | |
No Enrolling in UW Unless You Pass the CRT QuizThe University of Wisconsin-Madison won’t let students enroll in their next semester classes unless they take the Critical Race Theory quiz and pass it. Pause it when she puts up… | |
Disgraced FBI Agent Peter Strzok Is Baaaack!What is more dangerous than an internal mole working feverishly to befoul the integrity of a presidential election? ~ James Woods The Left’s favorite disgraced FBI agent is back to… | |
Hell, No! Biden’s Soviet Nominee Will End All Private BankingThe Biden administration’s Soviet-trained nominee for the very important position of comptroller of currency, Saule Omarova, plans to end private banking. We wrote about Saule Omarova’s proposal to end private… |
105.) DC CLOTHESLINE
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106.) ARTICLE V LEGISLATORS’ CAUCUS
107.) BECKER NEWS
108.) SONS OF LIBERTY
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109.) STARS & STRIPES
110.) RIGHT & FREE
111.) UNITED VOICE
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112.) THE DAILY SHAPIRO
113.) INSURGENT CONSERVATIVES
114.) WAKING TIMES
115.) UNCOVER DC
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