Good morning! Here is your news briefing for Monday November 22, 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 — 11.22.21
Good Monday morning.
Before it gets too late into the holiday season, we thought it wise to check the temperature on Florida’s 2022 statewide races. So, we commissioned a survey from St. Pete Polls, and here’s what they found.
Both Gov. Ron DeSantis and Sen. Marco Rubio appear in good shape against their likely Democratic opponents.
The poll, taken Nov. 18 and 19, shows DeSantis leading the two most prominent Democrats challenging his re-election. If the election were held today between DeSantis and Rep. Charlie Crist, the Governor would take almost 51% to the St. Petersburg Democrat’s nearly 45%. In a head-to-head with Agriculture Commissioner Nikki Fried, DeSantis takes just over 51% to 42%.
Rubio also holds the lead against Rep. Val Demings, his most prominent Democratic challenger. In the federal race, pollsters found 51% would vote for Rubio, while just over 44% would pick the Orlando Democrat.
Perhaps more important is that both Republican incumbents clear the 50% mark with voters in the head-to-head matchups. Pollsters, who included responses from 2,896 active voters, report just a 1.8% margin of error. But that shows challengers most likely will have to peel votes away, not just win over undecideds, to win next fall.
You can read the full story about the poll here.
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The Southern Group continued its streak as Florida’s top-earning lobbying firm with $5.6 million in earnings last quarter.
The firm is now celebrating its third consecutive No. 1 quarter, and the three-peat comes shortly after TSG earned a Golden Rotunda for “Lobbying Firm of the Year.”
“I know at this point I’m supposed to say something high-minded and stilted about professionalism and teamwork that sounds like it was written by a PR professional, but really the reason we’re on top is because we’ve been busting our asses since the pandemic began and now you’re seeing the results,” TSG Chairman Paul Bradshaw said.
Ballard Partners took No. 2 with $5.1 million in receipts last quarter. Though it’s no longer the firm to beat, its revenues grew by an impressive $700,000 compared to Q2.
Capital City Consulting ranked third with a $4.1 million haul, $2.2 million of it earned in the Legislature.
“Capital City Consulting has shown strong continuous growth over the last 10 years, but more recently, our team members are in high demand as companies navigated COVID, an influx of federal dollars to the state, and other unique opportunities,” said CCC co-founder Nick Iarossi, who recently won the Golden Rotunda for “Lobbyist of the Year.”
Meanwhile, Ron Book and longtime lobbying partners Rana Brown and Kelly Mallette reported $2.5 million earned across 101 contracts, including four crossing six figures.
“In this process, being successful is about respecting the process, respecting the people, and finding a way — through hard work and long hours — to be successful on behalf of our clients,” Book said. “This often means very long nights and very early mornings, but in the end, we are not measured by how hard we work but by what we are able to achieve. That is why, Session after Session and year after year, we continue to grow and succeed.”
GrayRobinson was No. 5 with a $2.2 million haul. The new compensation reports make for two quarters in a row where GrayRobinson was indisputably among the Top-5 earning firms in the state.
Firm president Dean Cannon and the lobbying team represented 192 last quarter. The list included several Fortune 500 companies, such as JPMorgan Chase, PepsiCo, Aramark, Sodexo and Deloitte.
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After three years of helping Converge Public Strategies build a state and local government affairs program that’s received international attention within tech circles, Cesar Fernandez is joining another fast-growing tech startup.
Fernandez will join Pacaso’s public affairs team, in which he will oversee several markets in the United States.
Pacaso, founded by Zillow alumni Spencer Rascoff and Austin Allison, aims to create a new category of second-home co-ownership.
The company is valued at $1.5 billion and facilitates the co-ownership of second homes by setting up property-specific LLCs for up to 8 people who aspire to own a second home, marketing the homes in partnership with local real estate professionals, and providing property management services after each home’s sale.
“We’re thrilled to have Cesar on the Pacaso team,” said Colin Tooze, Pacaso’s vice president of Public Affairs and Communications. “Cesar’s insights and strategic counsel will be enormously valuable to Pacaso as the company continues to work with government officials across the country to help more people invest in local communities and achieve their dreams of second-home ownership.”
For the past seven years, Fernandez has been advocating for some of the country’s most innovative companies. After spending nearly four years at Uber, he represented tech companies at Converge, such as Zillow, Nuro, Cruise, Blockchain.com, Lilium, REEF, Revel, Spin, and Vivid Seats.
“We are excited for Cesar. He brings world-class talent to Pacaso as the company brings its innovative model into markets around the world. Converge seeks to be a center of talent in the innovation economy, and Cesar is a prime example of what we stand for,” said Jonathan Kilman, Chairman of Converge.
Fernandez, who was named partner at Converge earlier this year, will join the firm’s recently-formed advisory board, made up of high-profile government affairs professionals throughout the country.
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One final request to let us know what you’re grateful for this year.
We will publish the comments in tomorrow’s edition of Sunburn — the last one for the holiday week.
Please send your responses to Peter@FloridaPolitics.com.
— SITUATIONAL AWARENESS —
—@BarackObama: Happy birthday to my friend and my brother, @POTUS! Thanks for giving all of us the gift of better infrastructure. Grateful for all you’re doing to build this country back better.
Tweet, tweet:
Tweet, tweet:
—@ClayTravis: There is zero evidence Kyle Rittenhouse is a White supremacist. Zero. This trial opened many American eyes to how much the left-wing media chooses narrative over fact. The lies overwhelm the truth for many. But the red-pilled tide just keeps growing.
Tweet, tweet:
Tweet, tweet:
—@YvonneHinsonFL: It’s past time for this to end but appointing Ricky Dixson gives us more of the same.
—@DannyBurgessFL: It’s time strawberries get their just desserts! Florida recognizes Key Lime pie as the official state pie, but @RepMcClure and I filed legislation to designate the official state dessert: the strawberry shortcake.🍓
—@SteveSchale: For everyone freaking out about the Key Lime Pie, that is already enshrined in state law as the “State Pie” … So under @RepMcClure proposal, you can have your pie, and eat your cake too.
Tweet, tweet:
Tweet, tweet:
— DAYS UNTIL —
‘Hawkeye’ premieres — 2; FSU vs. UF — 5; Florida Chamber 2021 Annual Insurance Summit begins — 9; Jacksonville special election to fill seat vacated by Tommy Hazouri’s death — 15; ‘Sex and the City’ revival premieres — 17; Steven Spielberg’s ’West Side Story’ premieres — 18; ’Spider-Man: No Way Home’ premieres — 18; ’The Matrix: Resurrections’ released — 32; ’The Book of Boba Fett’ premieres on Disney+ — 37; Private sector employees must be fully vaccinated or tested weekly — 43; final season of ‘This Is Us’ begins — 43; CES 2022 begins — 44; NFL season ends — 48; 2022 Legislative Session starts — 50; Florida’s 20th Congressional District Election — 50; Special Elections in Senate District 33, House District 88 & 94 — 50; Florida Chamber’s 2022 Legislative Fly-In and Reception — 50; Florida TaxWatch’s 2022 State of the Taxpayer Day — 51; Joel Coen’s ’The Tragedy of Macbeth’ on Apple TV+ — 53; NFL playoffs begin — 54; XXIV Olympic Winter Games begins — 74; Super Bowl LVI — 83; Daytona 500 — 90; CPAC begins — 94; St. Pete Grand Prix — 95; ‘The Batman’ premieres — 101; ’Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness’ premieres — 170; ’Top Gun: Maverick’ premieres — 189; ’Platinum Jubilee’ for Queen Elizabeth II — 193; ’Thor: Love and Thunder’ premieres — 229; San Diego Comic-Con 2022 — 240; ’Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse’ sequel premieres — 319; ‘Black Panther 2’ premieres — 354; ‘The Flash’ premieres — 357; ‘Avatar 2’ premieres — 389; ‘Captain Marvel 2’ premieres — 452; ‘Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania’ premieres — 613. ‘Dune: Part Two’ premieres — 697; Opening Ceremony of the 2024 Olympic Games — 977.
“Donald Trump’s ire grows as Ron DeSantis’ popularity with Republicans takes off” via Gabby Orr and Steve Contorno of CNN — In a matter of months, DeSantis has gone from being a shining example in Trump‘s eyes of a MAGA leader molded in his image to an average politician who forgot his roots as he rose to Republican stardom. People close to both men first noticed the palpable shift in Trump’s posture toward DeSantis earlier this year as enthusiasm for the Florida Governor swelled among donors and GOP operatives who praised his laissez-faire response to the COVID-19 pandemic. The more DeSantis’ popularity soared, the more obsessed Trump became with receiving credit for his political celebrity. In April, Trump had told Fox News that DeSantis would “certainly” be under consideration for the VP slot if he were to launch a third presidential campaign in 2024. By October, the former President demanded that he publicly rule out a White House bid of his own.
— STATEWIDE —
“DeSantis opines again on Kyle Rittenhouse verdict, urges lawsuits against ‘defamatory’ media” via A.G. Gancarski of Florida Politics — DeSantis, in an emailed essay from his re-election campaign, urged Rittenhouse “to sue every corporate media outlet and every moronic commentator who smeared him into oblivion.” The email also calls for more restrictions on media — and advertisers — supporting “defamatory material,” specifically allowing civil lawsuits against both: “States need to make sure that those falsely smeared by corporate media have adequate recourse under state law to bring defamation actions.” He added that “entities who advertise on corporate media outlets that routinely lie and defame innocent people should be held accountable for facilitating defamatory material and false narratives.”
“DeSantis appoints four to key administration posts in major reshuffle” via Ana Ceballos and Lawrence Mower of the Tampa Bay Times — The Governor’s office announced that Ricky Dixon, a longtime official with the Department of Corrections, will soon replace Corrections Secretary Mark Inch, who is retiring. In addition to Dixon, DeSantis named Wesley Brooks as the state’s third chief resilience officer, the person tasked with helping Florida face the impacts of climate change; Eric Hall as the secretary of the state Department of Juvenile Justice, and Michelle L. Branham, as the secretary of the state Department of Elder Affairs.
“DeSantis sits down for interview with Ben Shapiro” via Jason Delgado of Florida Politics — The Daily Wire released a one-on-one interview Sunday with DeSantis and Shapiro. Filmed inside the Governor’s Office, DeSantis and Shapiro explored various issues, COVID-19, corporate activism, media bias and immigration, among others. Florida State University hosted Shapiro late Monday for a sold-out speaking event. He was seen touring the Florida Capitol Building before the event. A former California resident, Shapiro relocated to Florida amid the pandemic. He is critical of California’s handling of the pandemic and the state’s left-leaning politics. Shapiro is among the leading conservative voices in the nation. In the interview, he bashed news media as “untethered” to the truth and “highly partisan.”
“DeSantis spokesperson acknowledges latest mistake, spurns critics after tweet deemed antisemitic” via Renzo Downey of Florida Politics — DeSantis‘ press secretary says she now understands why a tweet she sent this week could be perceived as antisemitic. After initially calling the “smears” against her since-deleted tweet “absurd and laughable,” Christina Pushaw tweeted a statement Friday saying the Anti-Defamation League of Florida explained to her what was wrong with her comment. While she said she regrets the initial post, she did not apologize for the tweet, which referenced the Rothschilds, who are sometimes the subject of antisemitic conspiracy theories. On Tuesday, Pushaw, who spent time working in politics in the Republic of Georgia, tweeted her reaction to the country this month announcing it would implement a COVID-19 passport.
Assignment editors — Attorney General Ashley Moody will host a news conference with Osceola County Sheriff Marcos Lopez and Vice-Mayor Felix Ortiz to release details on the 2021 Holiday Consumer Protection Guide, 10:45 a.m., Osceola Sheriff’s Office, 2601 E. Irlo Bronson Memorial Highway, Kissimmee.
Happening today — The University of Florida President’s Task Force on Outside Activities holds an online meeting to discuss the three political science professors dissuaded from testifying against the state in an elections law challenge, 1 p.m. Zoom link here.
Spotted — ExcelinEd’s 2021 National Summit on Education in Lake Buena Vista this week: WGU’s Southeast Regional Vice President Dr. Kim Estep and Florida Department of Education Chancellor of Career and Adult Education Henry Mack hosting a roundtable discussion on the value of higher education and ways to increase the return on investment for students.
— DATELINE TALLY —
“Conservative Super PAC bashes Anthony Sabatini for Special Session absence” via Renzo Downey of Florida Politics — Rep. Sabatini has drawn the attention of a conservative Super PAC, and they don’t like what they see. The American Heartland PAC has launched an ad targeting Sabatini, a two-term Howey-in-the-Hills self-styled firebrand running for Congress next year. Central to the PAC’s knock against Sabatini is his actions during the recent Special Session. Despite being one of the first people to suggest a Special Session against COVID-19 mandates, Sabatini was absent from the House during the first day of the Special Session on Monday. He instead attended a fundraiser in Washington.
To watch the video, click on the image below:
“Jeff Brandes, legislators back crypto bill” via Mark Parker of Catalyst — Fueled by efforts out of Miami and the Tampa Bay area, Florida is quickly becoming a destination for the blockchain and financial technology industries; however, state legislation relating to cryptocurrency is still in its infancy. While much of the recent attention on the state Legislature has focused on the anti-vaccination bills emerging out of the Special Session, Republican lawmakers have also filed legislation to establish a regulatory framework for cryptocurrency in Florida. Sen. Brandes filed a nearly identical bill earlier this year, which unanimously passed through the House before ultimately dying in the Senate. Brandes told said the legislation essentially starts with the basics and seeks to establish fundamental definitions to help create a clear path for further rules and regulations.
Happening today — The Duval County legislative delegation holds a public meeting: Sens. Aaron Bean and Audrey Gibson; Reps. Cord Byrd, Tracie Davis, Wyman Duggan, Jason Fischer, Angie Nixon and Clay Yarborough, 1 p.m., Jacksonville City Council Chamber, 117 West Duval St., Jacksonville.
— CORONA FLORIDA —
“Florida sees slight uptick in new COVID-19 cases; testing positivity rate remains low” via Cindy Krischer Goodman of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — New COVID-19 cases in Florida picked up slightly from last week, as did the number of additional deaths from the virus. The number of new cases in Florida for the week ending Nov. 18 rose to 10,828 from 10,746 a week ago. The case counts mark a big improvement from August when the count reached as high as 151,675 new cases in a week. The state test positivity stayed stable at 2.5%. There were 385 additional deaths, up from 363 additional COVID-19 deaths a week earlier. One of those deaths was a child younger than 16. That brings the state’s overall death toll to 61,081 people.
—”Improvement in COVID-19 case rates on the Space Coast stalls. Is a new wave coming?” via Amira Sweilem of Florida Today
“Florida COVID-19 vaccine first-dose count drops by 1 million; state offers no explanation” via Chris Persaud of The Palm Beach Post — Florida health officials reported on Friday an unexplained drop of more than 1 million residents awaiting their second shots of the coronavirus vaccine, a week after saying that tally had jumped by more than 1.1 million. The state Health Department said Friday that 1,836,172 residents had gotten their first jabs in the past week. On Nov. 12, that number was 2,890,568. On Nov. 5: 1,740,770. Florida has never experienced such large weekly swings in vaccination tallies.
“Disney pauses COVID-19 vaccine mandate for workers amid statewide crackdown” via Katie Rice of the Orlando Sentinel — Disney has paused its vaccine mandate for Florida employees in response to restrictions passed by the Legislature on Wednesday limiting employers’ power to require worker vaccination. A memo sent to Disney employees Friday said the company was taking that action immediately because of the state legislation and an appeal court’s temporary delay of federal vaccination guidelines from OSHA. The memo said Disney, Central Florida’s largest single-site employer, will require all employees who had not verified they were fully vaccinated to wear face coverings and observe social distancing, among other safety protocols.
— 2022 —
“Florida doesn’t just act Republican — it is a GOP state now” via Bill Cottrell of the Tallahassee Democrat — Well, we went and did it: Florida now has more Republicans than Democrats. It’s been a long time coming, since the Ronald Reagan era. Even as the Democratic majority dwindled, party leaders smiled nervously and said things would turn around any day now. But this month, the numbers actually flipped, though not by much. GOP executive director Helen Aguirre Ferre’ called it “a milestone moment in Florida history.” While the margin is small, it’s the trend that matters most. Since George W. Bush carried Florida in 2000 by a disputed 537 votes, the Democrats have lost about four statewide races for each one they’ve won. DeSantis attributed some of his party’s registration gain to people moving from high-tax, business-regulating states.
“Republicans overtook Democrats in voter registration mostly by subtraction” via Scott Powers of Florida Politics — Unofficial announcements made three weeks ago, at last, were confirmed by public, official counts: There now are more registered Republicans than registered Democrats in Florida, for the first time ever. But the voter registration numbers posted through October don’t show any big voter registration push by the Republican Party of Florida. Instead, they show the RPOF was not hit as hard by voter losses as the Florida Democratic Party. That is, Republicans won the latest count by having their registered voter rolls shrink less since last year. Voter registration rolls tend to stay flat or decline a bit in the year after a presidential election. In the past year, however, Florida’s electorate rolls declined a lot.
“Face mask mandates fueled Moms for Liberty’s growth. Now the group reviews books, looks ahead to school board elections” via Skyler Swisher and Leslie Postal of the Orlando Sentinel — The fight over face masks made Moms for Liberty a presence at Central Florida school board meetings, turning once staid policy discussions into sometimes tense and raucous affairs. Now, the group’s members are shifting their attention to other priorities. Among them: urging schools to remove “pornographic” library books and criticizing instructional materials they think teach critical race theory or praise communism. Launched on Jan. 1 by a trio of current and former conservative Florida school board members, Moms for Liberty quickly grew into a national network of parents aiming to become a lasting political force.
“Here’s how Sheila Cherfilus-McCormick won the primary — and her plans to be Florida’s newest congresswoman” via Anthony Man of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — During a wide-ranging phone interview Cherfilus-McCormick addressed the scrutiny she faced on the campaign trail, including over not filing a financial disclosure. She also analyzed the factors that led to her recent win — something that many political insiders assumed for months was unlikely. Money matters in any political race, but especially in one as close as this one. Cherfilus-McCormick’s campaign spending overwhelmed the other candidates, allowing her to introduce herself and her policies in TV ads far more than the others. It also allowed her to create a large field operation with offices and staffers knocking on doors throughout the district. For comparison, her competitor Barbara Sharief put in at least $926,000 of her own money.
“Cherfilus-McCormick and her mystery money” via the South Florida Sun-Sentinel editorial board — Cherfilus-McCormick, the Democratic nominee in the Jan. 11 special election in Congressional District 20, has not complied with a law requiring candidates to disclose to the clerk of the House of Representatives key aspects of their personal finances. Those financial disclosures are posted online for voters to review, and the law applies once candidates raise or spend $5,000. She passed that financial milestone long ago. Whatever Cherfilus-McCormick is hiding might explain how she was able to lend her campaign a staggering $3.7 million on her way to winning the recent Democratic primary by a scant five votes out of 49,082 votes cast over runner-up Dale Holness.
“Congressional candidate Maxwell Frost arrested at Washington protest” via Scott Powers of Florida Politics — Frost was arrested Thursday while taking part in a voters’ rights march in Washington. Frost, who is running for the seat opening in Florida’s 10th Congressional District in Orange County, was arrested, detained, and cited for incommoding during the rally in Lafayette Square, the Washington park behind the White House, according to his campaign. Frost called it an act of nonviolent resistance. In Washington, incommoding, obstructively crowding parks, streets, or buildings is a misdemeanor after police tell a crowd to disperse. The arrests were made by the U.S. Park Police, an agency of the National Park Service.
—“Frank Hibbard joins slew of Pinellas mayors endorsing Amanda Makki” via Kelly Hayes of Florida Politics
Happening tonight:
— CORONA NATION —
“U.S. COVID-19 deaths in 2021 surpass 2020s” via Jon Kamp, Robbie Whelan and Anthony DeBarros of The Wall Street Journal — The total number of reported deaths linked to the disease topped 770,800 on Saturday. According to the most recent death-certificate data, this puts the pandemic-long total at more than twice the 385,343 COVID-19 deaths recorded last year. The milestone comes as COVID-19 cases and hospitalizations move higher again in New England and the upper Midwest. Comparing the two pandemic years is imperfect because the first coronavirus-related deaths in the U.S. weren’t recorded until February 2020, while 2021 began in the grips of a wintertime surge.
“COVID-19 breakthrough hospitalizations concentrated among most vulnerable” via Jon Kamp and Melanie Evans of The Wall Street Journal — Breakthrough cases of COVID-19 are hitting older people and those with underlying health conditions particularly hard. Unvaccinated people are primarily driving pandemic numbers. Breakthrough infections, however, are making up a growing portion because of rising numbers of vaccinated people and waning immunity among people who got their shots early on. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Director Rochelle Walensky said Wednesday that emergency room visits by vaccinated people aged 65 and older were increasing.
— CORONA ECONOMICS —
“Shopping online surged during COVID-19. Now the environmental costs are becoming clearer.” via Catherine Boudreau of POLITICO — The pandemic, in effect, hit overdrive on a decadeslong shift toward online shopping. E-commerce sales jumped nearly 32% in 2020 compared to the prior year. So far this year, online sales are on track to outpace that record. To meet the demand, delivery companies such as Amazon, FedEx, UPS and food delivery services wrapped millions of purchases in layers of cardboard and plastic and hired thousands of new drivers to bring them to our doorsteps. Consumers drove fewer miles to and from stores, while delivery companies drove more, so what was the net effect on greenhouse gas emissions? Offices and restaurants generated less waste, but all that food and packaging delivered to homes added to trash pickups from residential neighborhoods. Which is worse for landfills?
— MORE CORONA —
“Marine Corps compliance with vaccine mandate on course to be military’s worst” via Alex Horton of The Washington Post — Up to 10,000 active-duty Marines will not be fully vaccinated against the coronavirus when their deadline arrives in coming days. While 94% of Marine Corps personnel have met the vaccination requirement or are on a path to do so, for the remainder it is too late to begin a regimen and complete it by the service’s Nov. 28 deadline. Within an institution built upon the belief that orders are to be obeyed and one that brands itself the nation’s premier crisis-response force, it is a vexing outcome. The holdouts will join approximately 9,600 Air Force personnel who have outright refused the vaccine, did not report their status, or sought an exemption on medical or religious grounds, causing a dilemma for commanders tasked with maintaining combat-ready forces.
— PRESIDENTIAL —
“Joe Biden and aides tell allies he is running in 2024 amid growing Democratic fears” via Michael Scherer, Tyler Pager and Sean Sullivan of The Washington Post — Biden and members of his inner circle have reassured allies in recent days that he plans to run for re-election in 2024, as they take steps to deflect concern about the 79-year-old President’s commitment to another campaign and growing Democratic fears of a coming Republican return to power. The message is aimed in part at tamping down the assumption among many Democrats that Biden may not seek re-election given his age and waning popularity, while also effectively freezing the field for Vice President Kamala Harris and other potential presidential hopefuls.
“As Biden agenda advances in Congress, White House weighs new offensive on inflation” via Jeff Stein of MSN — Long stymied by seemingly intractable divisions, Biden in the same week signed into law a $1.2 trillion bipartisan infrastructure bill while also pushing through the House of Representatives a separate, $2 trillion-plus social and climate policy measure that has become the centerpiece of the president’s vision to change the American economy. The burst of progress on Biden’s economic agenda comes amid unresolved strains that the administration in recent months has struggled to confront, with high inflation emerging as a top concern for American voters amid the biggest price hikes in nearly three decades. Republicans have blamed the inflation problems on Biden’s economic agenda, but there are signs that the White House could soon push back more forcefully.
— D.C. MATTERS —
“Justices could rule on Texas abortion ban as soon as Monday” via Mark Sherman of The Associated Press — The justices are planning to issue at least one opinion Monday, the first of its new term, the court said on its website. There’s no guarantee the two cases over the Texas law, with its unique enforcement design that has so far evaded judicial review, will be resolved Monday. Those cases were argued on Nov. 1, and the court also is working on decisions in the nine cases the justices heard in October. But the court put the Texas cases on a rarely used fast track, raising expectations that decisions would come sooner than the months the justices usually spend writing and revising their opinions. The law has been in effect since Sept. 1. The justices hear arguments Dec. 1 over whether to reverse nearly 50 years of precedents and hold that the Constitution does not guarantee the right to an abortion. The case is about Mississippi’s ban on abortion after 15 weeks.
Assignment editors — U.S. Rep. Kathy Castor will join HART representatives for a news conference to celebrate the passage of the Infrastructure Investments and Jobs Act and discuss what it will mean for job creation and HART patrons in Tampa, 10 a.m., the pier just southwest of Armature Works, 1910 N Ola Ave., Tampa. RSVP with Rikki.Miller@mail.house.gov.
Assignment editors — U.S. Rep. Lois Frankel will host a news conference with Benjamin Ferencz, the last living prosecutor of the Nuremberg trials. Last week, Frankel introduced a bipartisan bill to award Ferencz the Congressional Gold Medal, 10:30 a.m., Kings Point, 356 Saville O, Delray Beach. RSVP to morgan.routman@mail.house.gov.
— CRISIS —
“Federal judge blames Trump while sentencing Capitol rioter” via Tommy Christopher of Mediaite — Federal Judge Amit Mehta pointed the finger of blame at Trump during the sentencing of Capitol rioter John Lolos. Mehta did not mince words when sentencing Lolo to 14 days in jail and $500.00 in restitution for his part in the attack. “People like Mr. Lolos were told lies, were told falsehoods, were told the election was stolen when it was not. Regrettably, people like Mr. Lolos, who were told those lies, took it to heart. And they are the ones paying the consequences,” Mehta said. Mehta will be presiding over many Capitol insurrection cases, including a conspiracy case involving the Oath Keepers.
— EPILOGUE TRUMP —
“The complicated truth about Trump 2024” via Peter Nicholas of The Atlantic — If Trump tries to run for President again, one of his former campaign advisers has a plan to dissuade him. Trump might not listen to his former campaign confidant. But the mere fact that someone who worked to elect Trump the first time is rehearsing arguments to stop a comeback suggests that the former President’s tight grip on the Republican Party may be slipping. A few other developments in recent weeks point to the early stirrings of a Republican Party in which Trump is sidelined. He’s behaving like a candidate-in-waiting. Trump’s most potent means of retaining his hold on his party is perpetuating the idea that he’ll be back on the ballot in three years. Whether he goes through with launching a re-election campaign may be beside the point.
“Trump’s first post-presidency book will, fittingly, require little reading and cost way too much” via Peter Wade of Rolling Stone — Nearly two hundred and thirty American dollars. That’s how much Trump is charging for a signed copy of his forthcoming picture book, which he is touting as “a must-have for all Patriots.” Leave it to Trump to try to swindle his supporters out of money, and just in time for the holidays. “Our Journey Together,” Trump’s first book since he was President, will be published on Dec. 7 by Winning Team Publishing, a company started by Donald Trump Jr. and Sergio Gor. The book is a coffee table-style publication that will contain more than 300 images, some of which will include captions in Trump’s distinctive all-caps handwriting. To buy the book, Trump is charging $74.99 or, for a signed copy, $229.99.
— LOCAL NOTES —
“A fire alarm could have saved lives at Surfside tower. Residents say it didn’t go off” via Sarah Blaskey and Nicholas Nehamas of the Miami Herald — In that seven-minute span between the pool deck collapsing and the tower failing, no klaxons, sirens or warnings seem to have gone off in the building’s condo units, hallways or lobby — raising questions about a possible failure or malfunction of the system. Had alarms gone off on every floor at 1:15 a.m. — alerting residents and perhaps giving them time to escape — at least some people may have survived, even if others lingered in their condos, thinking it was a false alarm. “Obviously, seven minutes is a long time. If [the alarms] went off and people followed the directions, that could have been crucial,” said William Bryson, former fire chief for the city of Miami and Miami-Dade County.
“Rush to appoint foster care agency in Pinellas, Pasco could backfire, child welfare experts warn” via Christopher O’Donnell of the Tampa Bay Times — Florida’s privatized child welfare system is supposed to put control of foster care in the hands of local agencies who know their community. But after terminating Clearwater nonprofit Eckerd Connects, the Florida Department of Children and Families seems set to choose a provider outside of Tampa Bay. The department has not released the names of the agencies that bid for the contract, but none of the three that made presentations Wednesday to Secretary Shevaun Harris and other department officials at a meeting in Largo are local. Roy Miller, President of Tallahassee nonprofit American Children’s Campaign, said it would make sense to take more time for such a critical decision.
“One year into office, Miami-Dade Mayor talks UDB, sheriff problems and her 2024 race” via Douglas Hanks of the Miami Herald — On her 365th full day in office, Miami-Dade Mayor Daniella Levine Cava’s voice caught when she addressed staff at the Lotus House Women’s Shelter in Miami for a volunteer session with county employees. ”It really helps me to get back to my roots, and really motivates me to do the work that I do,” Levine Cava, a former social worker, told the two-dozen people crowded into an office. “Which was always to make sure children and families were safe, and received love and support.” Afterward, the 66-year-old former child-welfare lawyer and foster-care administrator said she got emotional thinking about the connections between her current post and past career. She’s already raising money from lobbyists and county vendors for her 2024 re-election and confirmed this week she’s planning to seek a second term.
“Miami Beach ramps up lax sidewalk cafe policy. Business owners fear ‘death sentence.’” via Martin Vassolo of the Miami Herald — In what local leaders say is a step toward taming South Beach’s wild side, City Hall is cracking down on sidewalk cafe operators with a history of rule-breaking. The city administration rejected 13 applications from South Beach restaurant owners seeking to renew their sidewalk cafe permits, which allow them to set up outdoor tables on the public right of way for one year. The 13 businesses make up 9% of the 144 that applied for a renewal. Nine of the denied businesses are on Ocean Drive, where sidewalk cafe tables have been part of the postcard of the world-famous strip for decades. The new system assigns points to different code violations and discretion to consider factors like bad online reviews.
“Jacksonville sets summer target of decision on Confederate monuments” via David Bauerlein of The Florida Times-Union — The future of Confederate monuments and markers in Jacksonville should be decided by City Council in the summer after reviewing options ranging from taking them down to leaving them as they are, council members decided Thursday. City Council members set that goal Thursday in a workshop for updating the council’s five-year strategic plan. “We take control of the monument issue, establish a plan, and put this all behind us,” City Council member Aaron Bowman said. City Council voted 12-6 on Nov. 9 to withdraw legislation introduced by Mayor Lenny Curry that would have set aside $1.3 million to remove a Confederate monument that has stood since 1915 in Springfield Park.
“Pinellas school district orders removal of ‘Gender Queer’ book” via Jeffrey S. Solochek of the Tampa Bay Times — The Pinellas County school district has instructed two high schools to take the LGBTQ coming-of-age graphic novel “Gender Queer: A Memoir” off their library shelves. The district did not follow its procedure for when a book is challenged for removal. However, the district said in a statement that it learned a Lakewood High School parent had raised concerns about the title, prompting a district-level review led by Associate Superintendent Kevin Hendrick. The district said Gender Queer remains available to teachers and other school staff. Other school systems around the state and nation also have removed the book from circulation amid calls from conservative leaders and some parents over what they say are inappropriate illustrations and sexual content.
“School Board member who stayed at vendor’s beach house supports him in contract” via Scott Travis of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — As a vendor criticized for high markups on students’ graduation caps and gowns was about to lose a lucrative contract, just one Broward School Board member came to his defense. School Board member Donna Korn adamantly opposed a proposal on Nov. 9 to reject an exclusive three-year deal for longtime vendor Chuck Puleri, saying it wasn’t fair to seek bids, score them and then decide the process was flawed. What Korn, the sole dissenting vote, didn’t say: that Puleri is a close friend, and that she and her children stayed at least twice with Puleri and his wife, Margot, at their $1.1 million beach home near Naples.
“Florida university says it won’t employ professor guilty of sexual misconduct with students” via Tristan Wood of Fresh Take Florida — A Florida university confirmed it will not employ next semester a former Florida State University professor who took a job there teaching after he was found guilty of sexual misconduct with students. It also said it was exploring how to overhaul its hiring practices to avoid similar issues in the future. The University of West Florida in Pensacola said it had been unaware of the investigation at Florida State into Ross May when it hired him part-time to teach two online classes after FSU had fired him. May, the former associate director of FSU’s Family Institute, was among three FSU professors identified earlier this week who FSU had determined committed sexual misconduct in separate incidents with students.
“Love in the big house: Former inmate plans unauthorized wedding in Florida federal prison to convicted fiance” via Fresh Take Florida — Chrissy Shorter wants to get married. On Monday, she believes she finally will. But she won’t be able to kiss her fiance as he becomes her husband, and she won’t see him in a suit and tie. Shorter, 43, has tried to wed Noel Arnold, 45, for seven months now. Arnold is incarcerated at Coleman Federal Correctional Institution, a low-security prison. She said her criminal record, reputation within the prison system, and identity as a transgender woman had led the prison warden, Kathy Lang, to deny her marriage request and revoke her visitation privileges. As a last-ditch effort to marry, Shorter and Arnold will hold their wedding ceremony over the phone.
— TOP OPINION —
“Kyle Rittenhouse’s $2 million legal funds won his case. Most defendants can’t afford that quality of aid.” via Paul Butler of The Washington Post — Don’t believe the hype that Rittenhouse was acquitted because self-defense cases are tough for prosecutors to win. More than 90% of people who are prosecuted for any crime, including homicide, plead guilty. The few who dare to go to trial usually lose — including in murder cases. Rittenhouse’s $2 million legal defense funds enabled his lawyers, before his trial, to stage separate “practice” jury trials — one in which Rittenhouse took the stand and one in which he did not. The more favorable reaction from the pretend jurors when Rittenhouse testified informed the decision to let the teenager tell his story to the real jurors. His apparently well-rehearsed testimony was probably the most important factor in the jury ultimately letting Rittenhouse walk.
— OPINIONS —
“It’s not ‘polarization.’ We suffer from Republican radicalization.” via Jennifer Rubin of The Washington Post — While it’s true that the country is more deeply divided along partisan lines than it has been in the past, it is wrong to suggest a symmetrical devolution into irrational hatred. The polarization argument too often treats both sides as equally worthy of blame, characterizing the problem as a sort of free-floating affliction. The GOP’s willingness to force a default on the debt is likewise indicative of a party that has fallen into nihilism. Only one party conducts fake election audits, habitually relies on conspiracy theories and wants to limit access to the ballot. Only one party overwhelmingly refused to participate in a bipartisan investigation of the Jan. 6 insurrection. Only one party tolerates and defends House members who resort to violent imagery and harass fellow lawmakers.
— ALOE —
“Tampa family faces fines for bringing on the Christmas spirit too early” via The Associated Press — A Florida family is in trouble with their homeowners’ association for putting up their Christmas lights too early. The Moffa family hired a company to decorate the yard of their Tampa home on Nov. 6. Days later, they received a letter notifying them that they now face a fine for violating their HOA agreement. If they don’t remove the lights, they could face fines of $100 a day, up to $1,000, the letter said. Michael Moffa said he has no plans to remove the lights. An attorney for the Westchase Community Association said a neighbor complained about the display. Moffa said, however, that the association hasn’t been receptive even after they offered to keep the lights off until Thanksgiving.
What Kevin Sweeny is reading — “‘Tis the season: Celebrate the holidays with St. Augustine’s annual Nights of Lights” via Sheldon Gardner of The St. Augustine Record — Nights of Lights season kicks off Saturday in St. Augustine, and this year will be a little different: Some West King Street businesses will participate in the festivities for the first time. From St. Augustine’s historic public square to the bayfront, City Hall and beyond, downtown will glow with millions of white lights every evening through Jan. 30. Saturday’s festivities kick off with performances in downtown St. Augustine. This year’s lighting honorees are Jennifer Wills, program coordinator for Flagler Health+ Care Connect, and Dr. Javier Aduen, critical care physician at Flagler Health+.
What David Johnson is reading — “Braves brace for big Spring Training push in North Port after winning 2021 World Series” via Earle Kimel of the Sarasota Herald-Tribune — When the Atlanta Braves clinched the 2021 World Series with a 7-0 Game 6 victory over the Houston Astros on Nov. 2, it was the fourth world title for the 145-year-old franchise and its first since 1995. When pitchers and catchers report to CoolToday Park on Feb. 14 to start 2022 preparing for the next Major League season, it will also mark the first time Sarasota County has hosted a World Series champion for Spring Training. Four times before, Sarasota County hosted a team the spring after its World Series appearance. “That’s quite an honor, considering the heritage and history of Spring Training baseball in Sarasota County,” said Mike Dunn, vice president of Florida Operations for the Atlanta Braves. Technically in their third season at CoolToday Park, the Braves have yet to actually host a full Spring Training schedule in North Port.
— HAPPY BIRTHDAY —
Happy birthday to Bettina Inclán-Agen and former Rep. Rich Glorioso. Belated happy birthday wishes to former U.S. Rep. Tom Rooney, Rep. Rick Roth, Cyrus Calhoun, Brooke Heffley, Chris Spencer‘s better half, Gina, and Rick Wilson.
___
Sunburn is authored and assembled by Peter Schorsch, Phil Ammann, Renzo Downey and Drew Wilson.
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Hello, Monday before Turkey Day. Smart Brevity™ count: 1,197 words … 4½ minutes. Edited by Zachary Basu.
📱 At 12:30 p.m. ET today, please join Axios executive editor Aja Whitaker-Moore and me for a half-hour virtual event on financial inclusion, including the role of credit scores. Guests include Sen. Tim Scott (R-S.C.) and Women’s World Banking president and CEO Mary Ellen Iskenderian. Register here.
Image: City of Waukesha/Facebook via Reuters
This frame shows a red SUV speeding past people watching a Christmas parade down Main Street in Waukesha, Wisconsin, yesterday.
- Seconds later, the driver plowed into the crowd, killing at least 5 people and injuring more than 40 others, including children.
The image is from a Facebook livestream by the city 20 miles west of Milwaukee — a reminder that this was a joyful community event, four days before Thanksgiving, after two years of COVID strain.
- The City of Waukesha Chamber of Commerce, with the URL “WaukeshaWorks,” put on the 58th annual parade.
- The theme: “Comfort and Joy.”
The joyous scene of marching bands and children dancing in Santa hats and waving pompoms turned tragic in an instant, AP reports.
- A “person of interest” is in custody, Waukesha Police Chief Dan Thompson said. He gave no details.
- Thompson said a Waukesha police officer fired his gun to try to stop the vehicle. No bystanders were injured by the gunfire.
Hot chocolate was spilled everywhere as the town began to treat casualties, probe the calamity — and mourn for countless families.
“Axios on HBO” visits the Ports of Long Beach and L.A. Photo: “Axios on HBO”
The world’s Everything Shortage will last past Christmas. But we’re starting to see how the kinks could loosen next year.
What’s happening: If goods aren’t off a boat by now, it’s highly unlikely that they’ll make it onto store shelves before Christmas, Axios Pro Rata author Dan Primack writes.
- When Primack visited the Ports of Long Beach and L.A. for “Axios on HBO” last week, at least half of the visible terminal cranes were upright. That means they weren’t removing containers from ships.
What’s next: Some consumer demand may wane after the holidays, helping the ports begin to catch up. But there are three more major trouble spots on the horizon:
- The labor contract representing around 15,000 West Coast port workers expires next summer. This could be a very difficult negotiation, given the reinvigorated U.S. labor movement.
- The International Maritime Organization, which oversees global ocean freight, has been implementing new rules whereby ships must reduce their carbon footprints. Ships most commonly meet these goals by slowing down.
- There could be a reverse logjam next year in Asia. Normally, a cargo ship would unload in Long Beach, then get filled back up with empty containers before returning to Asia. But some ships are leaving without enough empties because the port-truck-warehouse-rail ballet is such a mess. That could eventually disrupt the amount of cargo that can leave Asia.
🌞 How it could turn around: “Shipping and retail executives … expect the U.S. port backlogs to clear in early 2022, after the holiday shopping season and when Lunar New Year shuts many factories for a week in February, slowing output,” The Wall Street Journal reports (subscription).
- “Globally speaking, the worst is behind us,” said Louis Kuijs, head of Asia economics at Oxford Economics.
An Apple interior option is similar to this rendering by electric-vehicle startup Canoo. Photo: Canoo
Apple is fast-tracking an electric car that’s being refocused “around full self-driving capabilities, … aiming to solve a technical challenge that has bedeviled the auto industry,” Bloomberg’s Mark Gurman reports:
- “Apple’s ideal car would have no steering wheel and pedals.”
- In one option being considered (above), “passengers sit along the sides of the vehicle and face each other like they would in a limousine.”
Here’s an Apple touch: The car’s infotainment system — likely a big, iPad-like touch screen — could be “in the middle of the vehicle, letting users interact with it throughout a ride,” Bloomberg adds.
Illustration: Sarah Grillo/Axios
New data point to an “attention recession” as we ease off the shutdown era’s media binge, Axios Media Trends author Sara Fischer writes.
- Why it matters: The gradual return of normal life in many places — along with media overload and exhaustion — has cut consumption.
The retreat from at-home activities has negatively impacted the growth of several media industries on a year-over-year basis:
- Broadband: Kagan reports broadband subscriber growth “cooled significantly in the third quarter,” stalling for the first time in three years.
- Streaming: Subscriber growth slowed last quarter for most of the major streaming services.
- News: SimilarWeb found a 12.4% decrease in readership across the top 10 most visited news sites between October 2020 and October 2021.
Russian troops take part in an amphibious landing exercise in Crimea last month. Photo: Sergei Malgavko/TASS via Getty Images
The U.S. has shared intelligence with European allies indicating that Russia is planning for a potential large-scale invasion of Ukraine early next year, Bloomberg reports.
- Why it matters: The attack would be far larger and more devastating than the 2014 conflict in eastern Ukraine, where 14,000 people have been killed in a rebellion waged by Russian-backed separatists.
Putin, whose annexation of Crimea in 2014 led to sanctions and international condemnation, views Ukraine as unfinished business.
The 2022 class of U.S. Rhodes scholars includes the most women ever — 22 of 32, AP reports.
- The scholars start next fall at the University of Oxford in England.
One of the scholars is Louise Franke, a 21-year-old senior studying biochemistry at Clemson: “It feels amazing to be part of this historic moment, as a woman and as a woman from the South.”
The Gridiron Club on Dec. 4 will hold its first dinner in two years — the longest stretch without a dinner since the club was founded in 1885.
- COVID did what world wars didn’t, former Gridiron president Susan Page tells me: The dinners continued through World War I. The Gridiron only missed one year during World War II.
The speakers for the Gridiron Winter Dinner will be Chris Christie for the Republicans and Rep. Jamie Raskin of Maryland for the Democrats.
Illustration: Sarah Grillo/Axios
This year’s turkey supply is strong, Erica Pandey writes for Axios What’s Next.
- Inflation will make dinner pricier, and you might have to find alternatives for sides. But don’t fret about the main dish.
The only turkey compromise families might have to make is buying a bigger bird than they need, Butterball CEO Jay Jandrain tells Axios.
- Smaller turkeys — between 10 and 14 pounds — are in shorter supply than usual because many people are still limiting travel and having smaller gatherings.
Labor shortages at meatpacking plants prompted many turkey suppliers to extend the birds’ lifetimes before slaughtering and processing them.
- So there are just more big turkeys — 16 pounds and up — than smaller ones this year, according to the Butterball boss.
- Many people bought their birds early, he says. October turkey sales were up 200% year-over-year, market research firm IRI reports. But supply remains strong for last-minute shoppers.
🧇 Crazy leftover recipe: Jandrain said that Friday morning, he’ll try a waffle sandwich with turkey, gravy, and cranberry sauce in the middle. The waffle is made out of leftover stuffing. Recipe … Watch a video.
- Keep reading: Side shortage.
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POLITICO Playbook: The case for why Biden is screwed
DRIVING THE DAY
THE LATEST IN WISCONSIN — “A person plowed their SUV through the Waukesha Christmas Parade, leaving five dead and more than 40 injured authorities say,” by Milwaukee Journal Sentinel’s Bill Glauber, Mary Spicuzza and Molly Beck
JUST POSTED — Jonathan Chait’s latest — “Joe Biden vs. the Democrats” — poses this question on the new cover of New York magazine: “Why is a once-popular president with an even more popular agenda in so much trouble?”
There’s very little blame laid at the feet of Biden or VP KAMALA HARRIS or anyone in the White House.
Instead, Chait sees Biden’s collapse as collateral damage in the war between the two most vocal and least popular Democratic factions: “a well-funded left wing that has poisoned the party’s image with many of its former supporters and centrists unable to conceive of their job in any terms save as valets for the business elite.”
These two factions have eaten away at the Biden presidency from opposite directions, Chait continues. Biden tried to govern as a DAVID SHOR Democrat, but an out-of-touch left armed with unpopular slogans — and a big assist from Fox News — conspired to thwart him. Meanwhile, in Congress, Sens. JOE MANCHIN (D-W.Va.) and KYRSTEN SINEMA (D-Ariz.) worked to rewrite the most popular planks of the Biden agenda to satisfy the Chamber of Commerce and other corporate donors.
Chait argues that these two sides have crippled Biden’s image as a centrist. The left, which Biden successfully tamed and defeated in the 2020 primaries, has reemerged to saddle Biden with unpopular cultural baggage on issues like crime, immigration and race, pushing away working-class voters (mostly white ones, but increasingly non-white as well). On the other side, the plutocrats in Congress have defined centrism as opposition to major pieces of Biden’s reconciliation bill, no matter the details.
Chait sees the president’s political condition as close to terminal because he believes that Biden isn’t able to do much to contain the damage that the left and the self-styled centrists are inflicting: “Biden is like a patient wasting away from some undiagnosable disease.”
We look forward to the civil back and forth on Twitter that the Chait piece will surely spark!
FIRST IN PLAYBOOK — CONDOLEEZZA RICE will be on “Monday Night Football with PEYTON and ELI” (MANNING) tonight to watch and discuss the third quarter of the New York Giants-Tampa Bay Buccaneers game on ESPN2 and ESPN+, around 10 to 10:30 p.m. Rice is a longtime Cleveland Browns and Alabama Crimson Tide fan who has served on the College Football Playoff selection committee and said her dream job is NFL commissioner. The telecast begins at 8:15 p.m.
Good Monday morning. Thanks for reading Playbook. Drop us a line: Rachael Bade, Eugene Daniels, Ryan Lizza, Tara Palmeri.
INFLATION WATCH — The Biden White House has become much more attuned to the political damage that the highest inflation since 1992 is inflicting. On Tuesday, the president will make remarks about lowering prices, an issue that now claims the kind of attention previously reserved for fighting the pandemic and promoting his infrastructure and reconciliation bills.
Our latest POLITICO-Morning Consult poll offers fresh data about why that is. While the fiercest inflation hawks, such as LARRY SUMMERS, don’t see much of an inflationary impact from the reconciliation bill, which is loaded with long-term spending, a plurality of the public disagrees:
- 43% of voters think the climate and social spending package will make inflation worse.
- 15% of voters think it will have no impact on inflation.
- 26% of voters think it will make inflation better.
— Some decent polling news for Biden: 49% of voters support the reconciliation bill and 38% oppose it. Thirteen percent of voters don’t know or have no opinion (they clearly don’t subscribe to Playbook).
— Some good inflation news for Biden: “Supply-Chain Problems Show Signs of Easing,” by WSJ’s Stella Yifan Xie, Jon Emont and Alistair MacDonald
BIDEN’S MONDAY:
— 10 a.m.: The president and VP will receive the President’s Daily Brief.
— 4 p.m.: The Bidens will leave the White House for Fort Bragg, N.C., arriving at 5:25 p.m.
— 6 p.m.: The Bidens will have a friendsgiving with service members and military families as part of the Joining Forces initiative.
— 7:40 p.m.: The Bidens will depart Fort Bragg, arriving back at the White House at 9 p.m.
HARRIS’ MONDAY: The VP will also deliver remarks about equity and the health care workforce at an event at 3:30 p.m. with Surgeon General VIVEK MURTHY and LUIS PADILLA.
The White House Covid-19 response team and public health officials will brief (time TBA). Press secretary JEN PSAKI will gaggle aboard Air Force One on the way to Fort Bragg.
THE SENATE and THE HOUSE are out.
BIDEN’S WEEK AHEAD: The president will deliver remarks about the economy and lowering prices Tuesday. Then he, first lady JILL BIDEN, Harris and second gentleman DOUG EMHOFF will take part in a service project in D.C. And the Bidens will close out Tuesday by heading to Nantucket for the holiday.
PLAYBOOK READS
MEDIAWATCH
FOX IN THE HENHOUSE — STEPHEN HAYES and JONAH GOLDBERG announced Sunday they’re leaving Fox News over TUCKER CARLSON’s “Patriot Purge” series, an attempt to rewrite the history of the Jan. 6 insurrection. Their departures, and the series’ capitulation to the outlandish fringe of American politics, mark “the end of a lingering hope among some at Fox News … that the channel would at some point return to a pre-Trump reality that was also often hyperpartisan, but that kept some distance from Republican officials,” writes NYT’s Ben Smith. Carlson called their exits “great news”; a Fox spokesperson sent him data showing that independents watch the network. Hayes and Goldberg’s announcement
— NPR’s David Folkenflik’s story: “According to five people with direct knowledge, the resignations reflect larger tumult within Fox News over Carlson’s series ‘Patriot Purge’ and his increasingly strident stances, and over the network’s willingness to let its opinion stars make false, paranoid claims against President Biden, his administration and his supporters.
“Veteran figures on Fox’s news side, including political anchors BRET BAIER and CHRIS WALLACE, shared their objections with Fox News Media CEO SUZANNE SCOTT and its president of news, JAY WALLACE. Those objections rose to LACHLAN MURDOCH, the chairman and CEO of the network’s parent company, Fox Corporation. Through a senior spokeswoman, Scott and Wallace declined comment. Murdoch did not return a request for comment through a spokesman.”
THE WHITE HOUSE
GLASS HALF FULL — After a brutal few months, the White House is feeling a little better after last week: BIF signed into law, BBB through one chamber, booster shots available for all and a treatment pill on the way, jobs numbers improving. Laura Barrón-López reports that Democrats are a bit more upbeat heading into the holiday, sensing that a narrative turnaround might be in the offing, while acknowledging the tough road ahead. MIKE DONILON makes a cameo in the piece, and Laura also reports that LOUISA TERRELL and National Economic Council Director BRIAN DEESE played a crucial role in shepherding the reconciliation bill over the finish line in the House.
GLASS HALF EMPTY — New Hampshire Democrats were too worried about 2024 to celebrate much when Biden came to town Tuesday for an event touting the BIF, reports AP’s Steve Peoples. At a Harris event in Ohio on Friday, only one member of Congress showed up. And 2024 speculation is swirling — “the mere existence of such conversations so soon into a new presidency is unusual,” he writes.
Lede quote from the story: “‘Democrats are concerned,’ former state House Speaker STEVE SHURTLEFF, a longtime Biden supporter who attended the ceremony, told The Associated Press when asked about Biden’s political standing. ‘I’m concerned about where we may be in another couple of years when people really start to gear up and start making trips to New Hampshire.’”
JAN. 6 AND ITS AFTERMATH
IT’S ALWAYS THE GROUP TEXTS — The organizers of the Jan. 6 “Stop the Steal” rally dined on charcuterie and drank Champagne as the deadly Capitol insurrection raged for hours after the rally, Hunter Walker reports in a big new Rolling Stone story. He got his hands on the organizers’ group text messages, which reveal that the rally’s planning included an in-person meeting at the White House and “working with Trump’s team to announce the event, promote it, and grant access to VIP guests. “We are following POTUS’ lead,” one wrote Jan. 1 regarding tweeting about the rally. (A spokesperson for the organizers denied the story’s veracity.)
MOVING LIKE MOLASSES — The Senate Ethics Committee’s handling of a complaint against Sens. JOSH HAWLEY (R-Mo.) and TED CRUZ (R-Texas) over Jan. 6 and their objections to the 2020 election results “is plodding along at a snail’s pace, if it’s moving at all,” reports Burgess Everett. The senators say the committee hasn’t contacted them, and the very secretive panel isn’t saying anything about the status of an investigation.
AMERICA AND THE WORLD
FROM RUSSIA, WITH LOVE — U.S. intelligence shows that if Russian President VLADIMIR PUTIN chooses to invade Ukraine, Russia would be prepared for a massive and prolonged incursion of perhaps 100,000 troops from multiple directions, Bloomberg’s Alberto Nardelli and Jennifer Jacobs report. About half that number are already in place, with a potential wintertime invasion coming early in 2022. Still, the U.S. thinks Putin likely hasn’t made a decision yet.
LOOKING TOWARD VIENNA — As Iran has been putting things back together quickly after Israeli attacks on its nuclear facilities this year, NYT’s David Sanger, Steven Erlanger, Farnaz Fassihi and Lara Jakes write, “One senior American official wryly called it Tehran’s Build Back Better plan.” Iran’s in a strengthened position ahead of the next round of talks in Vienna this month. The U.S. is increasingly pessimistic about the chances of reviving the nuclear deal, and officials are indicating that more sanctions could be in the cards if Iran plays hardball. But, they report, the U.S. has lately been considering a small interim deal to buy more time.
DEPT. OF TOUGH LOVE — It sounded something like the Trump era at the Halifax International Security Forum this weekend, as America’s allies “expressed their fears and doubts about the health of American democracy and questioned Washington’s commitments to countering Beijing or Moscow,” Andrew Desiderio, Alexander Ward and Paul McLeary report from Nova Scotia. With a particular focus on the U.S. withdrawal from Afghanistan, a conference that could have been a big reemergence for America on the world stage instead turned into more of a Dr. Phil-style intervention. Six senators from both parties also took home a message of deep concern about congressional paralysis.
HAITI LATEST — Two of the 17 captured American and Canadian missionaries in Haiti have been freed, Christian Aid Ministries announced Sunday.
ASLEEP AT THE WHEEL — The Obama and Trump administrations allowed China to take over Congolese cobalt mines that will be pivotal to the development of electric vehicle batteries as the world transitions to clean energy, report NYT’s Eric Lipton and Dionne Searcey in a major investigation. Even as TOM PERRIELLO and others tried to stop the 2016 sale, it emerged as another instance in which the U.S. “essentially surrendered the resources to China, failing to safeguard decades of diplomatic and financial investments in Congo,” thanks to the “significant blind spots of U.S. leaders.”
(IR)RECONCILABLE DIFFERENCES
WHAT THE LEFT IS THINKING — Rep. RASHIDA TLAIB (D-Mich.) told Jonathan Swan for “Axios on HBO” that she’s worried about what’s going to happen to the reconciliation bill in the Senate once “corporate Democrats” (Manchin, Sinema, et al) start changing it.
ALL POLITICS
THE MAINSTREAMING OF POLITICAL VIOLENCE — Security risks are growing for public officials from Congress to local government, NBC’s Henry Gomez reports, fueled especially by violent grievances among Trumpist Republicans but also by the pandemic and in some corners of the left. The Capitol Police expect to log 9,000 threats this year. Gomez reveals several previously unreported incidents targeting Reps. JOE NEGUSE (D-Colo.), TOM RICE (R-S.C.), TED LIEU (D-Calif.), ANTHONY GONZALEZ (R-Ohio) and JOHN KATKO (R-N.Y.) and Sen. SUSAN COLLINS (R-Maine).
POLL OF THE DAY — Texas Gov. GREG ABBOTT holds a 6-point lead over BETO O’ROURKE, per a new Dallas Morning News/UT Tyler poll, and has a 10-point advantage in a three-way race over O’Rourke and MATTHEW MCCONAUGHEY. In a head-to-head matchup, McConaughey leads Abbott by 8 points. But it’s not clear how he’d get there: By a large margin, Democrats say they think O’Rourke is their best bet. One other interesting data point: Biden has a 42% approval rating, a couple of points higher than he did in September, contrary to the plummeting numbers he’s seen elsewhere. The poll
BEYOND THE BELTWAY
RITTENHOUSE SPEAKS — Fresh off his acquittal on all counts, KYLE RITTENHOUSE will have an interview with Carlson airing on Fox News tonight at 8 p.m. In a clip released in advance, Rittenhouse says that he supports the Black Lives Matter movement and peaceful demonstrations, and that he’s not racist. “This case has nothing to do with race. It never had anything to do with race,” he says. “It had to do with the right to self-defense.” His mother also says he has remorse. Watch the clip
— Conservative paramilitary groups have taken his acquittal as vindication and encouragement, reports NYT’s Charles Homans.
— The step back, from AP’s Morgan Lee: “Across much of the nation, it has become increasingly acceptable for Americans to walk the streets with firearms, either carried openly or legally concealed.”
ALMOST AS FUN AS COACHELLA — For POLITICO Magazine, Derek Robertson went to the “Let’s Go Brandon Fall Festival” in Brandon Township, Mich., where the Michigan Conservative Coalition made gleeful use of the anti-Biden euphemism. In speaking to attendees, he writes, “I was struck by how mild most of them were. Their politics, in person, sounded nothing like the conspiracy and vitriol that poured from the stage, and which ostensibly brought them to Brandon that day.” But he ends up drawing “an unexpectedly ominous lesson” from the event.
PLAYBOOKERS
Kyrsten Sinema, asked if she’s an enigma, said, “I don’t even know what enigma means, really. No one really does.”
MEDIA MOVE — Matthew Kendrick is joining Morning Consult as the new geopolitics reporter, authoring their newest daily morning news briefing, Morning Consult Global. He previously was a production assistant and editorial producer at CNN.
TRANSITIONS — Emily Davis is now comms director at the U.S. Global Leadership Coalition. She previously was VP of congressional and public affairs at the Millennium Challenge Corporation. … Ian McKendry is now VP and head of public affairs communication at U.S. Bank. He previously was VP of public relations at the American Bankers Association.
ENGAGED — Sofia Rose Gross, head of policy partnerships and social impact at Snap and a public affairs officer for the U.S. Navy Reserve, and Michael Haft, co-founder of Compass Coffee, got engaged on Sunday. The couple met on Bumble — she swiped right because his profile said he had served in the Marine Corps (and she thought he was very cute) and she was thinking about applying for the Navy Reserve and wanted some advice, but then the two ended up falling in love. He proposed Sunday morning on one of their regular Sunday jogs. Pics
WEDDINGS — Raphael Chavez-Fernandez, deputy assistant VA secretary for intergovernmental affairs, and Artin Haghshenas, a legislative assistant for Rep. Mikie Sherrill (D-N.J.), got married Saturday at the Mansion at Natirar in Peapack and Gladstone, N.J. Sen. Bob Menendez (D-N.J.) officiated; the couple met while working for him in 2015. Pic
— Todd Inman, the former Trump DOT chief of staff who is now secretary of Florida’s Department of Management Services, and Ann Duncan, chief strategy officer for Savills North America, got married on Saturday. The couple, who met at a meeting of Florida Tax Watch, wed at the Opryland hotel in Nashville and are honeymooning on Nicaragua’s Calala Island. Pic
— Sara Lynn Rafferty, associate at Jones Day and a Kay Granger alum, and Michael Anthony Filipelli, a former U.S. Marine and a senior electrical engineer at Vorbeck Materials, got married Oct. 23 on Marco Island, Fla. They met after a 5K Friday run in Arlington. Pic … Another pic … SPOTTED: Judge Jerome Holmes and Jeri Holmes, and Ed and Marie Royce.
HAPPY BIRTHDAY: U.S. Ambassador to the U.N. Linda Thomas-Greenfield … Rep. Andrew Clyde (R-Ga.) … Bettina Inclán-Agen … The Hill’s Scott Wong … CNN’s Cassie Spodak … Rob Atkinson of the Information Technology and Innovation Foundation … Josh Alcorn … ABC’s Matthew Mosk … Shefali Razdan Duggal … Matt Strawn … Jacob Wood … Ned Price … Brunswick Group’s Robert Christie … Annie Shoup … Sarah O’Neill … Abbie Fickes … Tim Cameron of FlexPoint Media … Meghan Dugan … Welles Orr … Milwaukee Journal Sentinel’s Craig Gilbert … James Williams of Arnold Ventures … Lauren Reamy of Sen. Marco Rubio’s (R-Fla.) office … The Daily Beast’s Harry Siegel … Meena Ganesan … Andy Stern … POLITICO’s Elizabeth Powell and Kalyn Tuttle … TheSkimm’s Jessica Turtletaub … Donny Deutsch … BBC’s George Alagiah … Tim R. Cohen … Josh Goldstein … former Rep. Anthony Brindisi (D-N.Y.)
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82.) CNN
Monday 11.22.21 If it seems like it’s taking longer to get your order at the drive-thru of your favorite fast food restaurant, it is — and you can blame Covid-19. Here’s what else you need to know to Get Up to Speed and On With Your Day. Police investigate at the scene after a vehicle drove into a crowd during a holiday parade in Waukesha, Wisconsin. Wisconsin
Five people were killed and more than 40 were injured when a vehicle drove into a Christmas parade yesterday in Waukesha, Wisconsin, city officials said. “These numbers may change as we collect additional information. Many people have self-transported to area hospitals,” the city of Waukesha said in a Twitter post early this morning. Witnesses described the horror of seeing individuals struck and lying on the ground after a red SUV drove through a series of barricades and barreled into the crowded parade route on Main Street around 4:39 p.m. local time. Police Chief Daniel P. Thompson said officers are working with the Waukesha County Medical Examiner’s Office to identify victims. Thompson says there is “a person of interest in custody,” but would not say whether it was the driver of the SUV nor if any arrests have been made. It is unknown at this time whether yesterday’s incident was an act of terrorism, Thompson said.
Congress
Senate Democrats will try to negotiate with moderate Sens. Joe Manchin and Kyrsten Sinema to address their disagreements on the size and scope of President Joe Biden’s economic package as it heads to the chamber, Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer said yesterday. “The House did a very strong bill. Everyone knows that Manchin and Sinema have their concerns, but we’re going to try to negotiate with them and get a very strong, bold bill out of the Senate which will then go back to the House and pass,” Schumer said during a news briefing, stressing the importance of party unity. The comments come days after House Democrats passed the Build Back Better bill, a key piece of Biden’s sweeping domestic agenda. The $1.9 trillion plan faces hurdles in the Senate, where Manchin and Sinema have voiced concerns over its reach and price tag. Schumer said he would like the bill done by Christmas.
Coronavirus
If you and your family members are fully vaccinated against Covid-19, it’s OK for you to ditch the masks this holiday season when you’re around each other, Dr. Anthony Fauci told CNN Sunday. “That’s what I’m going to do with my family,” Fauci, the director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, told CNN’s Dana Bash on “State of the Union.” However, the nation’s top infectious disease expert also noted that if you’re traveling or are unaware of the vaccination status of the people around you, then you should wear a mask in those situations. Fauci’s comments come as the US faces the second holiday season of the pandemic, but the first with safe and effective vaccines now available to people ages 5 and older. Still, a significant part of the eligible population remains unvaccinated. Meanwhile in Europe, protests against new Covid-19 restrictions turned violent over the weekend as cases continue to rise on the continent. Rioting broke out at The Hague on Saturday over the Dutch government’s new coronavirus measures. Elsewhere, an estimated 40,000 people on Saturday crowded the streets of Vienna in the country’s biggest coronavirus-related protest to date.
Sudan
Sudan’s military chief reinstated Abdalla Hamdok as prime minister yesterday, almost a month after he was ousted in a military takeover. Gen. Abdel Fattah Al-Burhan appeared with Hamdok at a signing ceremony in the Presidential Palace, according to a live video broadcast on state television. The deal agreed upon by Hamdok and Al-Burhan also includes the release of political detainees who were jailed following the October 25 coup, according to Mudawi Ibrahim, a prominent official in the National Forces Initiative, which helped mediate the talks. Hamdok becomes leader again of the transitional government, which was first established following the ousting of former strongman and President Omar al-Bashir in 2019. Hamdok and Al-Burhan also agreed on a power-sharing deal between civilian and military leadership, but it will include as-of-yet unspecified restructuring, according to Ibrahim.
Haiti
Two missionaries kidnapped in Haiti over a month ago have been released, according to a statement by the US-based Christian Aid Ministries. “We have learned that two of the hostages in Haiti were released. We praise God for this! Only limited information can be provided, but we are able to report that the two hostages who were released are safe, in good spirits, and being cared for,” the organization said yesterday. “While we rejoice at this release, our hearts are with the fifteen people who are still being held,” the statement also said. The group of 16 Americans and one Canadian were kidnapped by the Haitian gang 400 Mawozo while traveling by car northeast of capital city Port-au-Prince on October 16. They include an infant, a 3-year-old and a 6-year-old, as well as two young teenagers. All hail from Amish, Mennonite and other conservative Anabaptist communities across six US states and Ontario. Sponsor Content by Revtown Get Early Access to this Brands Black Friday Deals After years in athletic apparel, Revtown’s founders decided to take the best parts of workout clothes—think comfort, flexibility and durability—and apply them to denim. Enjoy up to 25% off this cyber week!
People are talking about these. Read up. Join in. BTS cleaned up at the American Music Awards The the K-pop supergroup won three awards, including artist of the year. Checkout the full list of AMA winners here.
“Ghostbusters: Afterlife” scares up a solid opening at the box office
Simu Liu makes his hosting debut on “Saturday Night Live”
Pillow fighting enters combat sports arena
How Friendsgiving found its place in the holiday season 500,000 That’s how many pounds of illegal marijuana were seized by state police in Oregon last week. Under Oregon state law, adults 21 and over may use cannabis within specified limits, but it is illegal to manufacture marijuana without a license. Police said the estimated street value of the marijuana was $500 million. This entire tragedy makes the case that we should not allow our fellow Americans to own and use weapons that were originally designed for battlefield use.
Texas Democratic gubernatorial candidate Beto O’Rourke, reacting to the Kyle Rittenhouse verdict on CNN Sunday. Rittenhouse, 18, was acquitted of all charges last Friday after facing trial for shooting and killing two people, and wounding another, during unrest in Kenosha, Wisconsin, last year. Brought to you by CNN Underscored Amazon’s early Black Friday sale is live: Here are 13 items to snag ASAP Black Friday has arrived early and Amazon has launched some gift-worthy deals, including discounts on everything from vacuums to headphones. Hungry for more deals? Check out Underscored’s Guide to Cyber Week. Oh, so that’s what would happen … Sponsor Content by CompareCards Pay No Interest Until 2023 with a Better Credit Card Our credit card experts hand selected the cards below because of their long 0% intro APR interest offers.
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83.) THE DAILY CALLER
84.) POWERLINE
Daily Digest |
- Report: Wisconsin mass killer had just been released on cash bail
- Facing rise in violent crime, D.C.’s mayor rejects BLM mantras
- Majority non-white city swings more than 40 points in favor of GOP
- Heap Big Medicine Man
- Looting Comes to the Suburbs
Report: Wisconsin mass killer had just been released on cash bail
Posted: 21 Nov 2021 09:57 PM PST (Paul Mirengoff)On Sunday in Waukesha, Wisconsin, a driver sped his vehicle into a holiday parade. He injured at least 23 people and left multiple people dead, according to city officials. Karol Markiewicz of the New York Post reports that the police are holding a suspect. She says he is Darrell E. Brooks, a black male in his late 30s. Nick Arama at Red State provides the following information about the suspect:
Another source, the website Heavy, adds this information about the suspect:
One should never rush to judgment in the hours immediately after a horrific incident like this one. But if the preliminary information cited above is accurate, this is yet another example — an especially tragic one — of America’s under-incarceration problem. |
Facing rise in violent crime, D.C.’s mayor rejects BLM mantras
Posted: 21 Nov 2021 08:35 PM PST (Paul Mirengoff)Last week, Muriel Bowser, mayor of Washington, D.C., issued a letter advising residents of the steps her administration is taking to address the rise in violent crime in the city. The letter begins this way:
Bowser then lists six steps she will take to deal with violent crime. The first two are:
The second measure is the antithesis of “defund the police,” the slogan that was all the rage last year at this time. Defunding the police, or at least reducing police funding, remains a goal of BLM and the left generally, but D.C’s mayor wants to move in the opposite direction. The first measure constitutes “inequity,” as the left sees it because in practice, it entails a “disproportionate” amount of policing in areas where minorities live. This, in turn, entails an increase in the disparity between Black arrests and White arrests because the diversion of police resources from White to Black areas can be expected to increase the proportion of Black arrests (albeit probably only slightly.) For this reason, as I understand it, the Obama Department of Justice looked askance at the “disproportionate” policing of Black neighborhoods in Baltimore, for example. Why is D.C.’s mayor departing so sharply and so publicly from the left-liberal/BLM playbook? Because D.C. residents are fed up with violent crime and because Bowser is running for reelection. She faces a challenge from the left in the form of Trayon White. He’s the genius who claimed the Rothschilds control the weather. The third candidate in the race, Robert White, is also a committed leftist. Normally, a candidate in Bowser’s position might want to tack leftward in the face of challenges from the left. But Bowser saw what happened in New York’s Democratic mayoral primary earlier this year. Thus, she’s not looking for a middle ground on crime. She wants to be the tough on crime candidate. It’s true that some of the last four measures Bowser sets forth in her letter are mush — funding “violence interrupters,” for example. But Bowser led with two measures that any law and order conservative would embrace. That’s not an accident. It’s a sign of the times. |
Majority non-white city swings more than 40 points in favor of GOP
Posted: 21 Nov 2021 07:00 PM PST (Paul Mirengoff)South Carolina is about as Red as any state in America. However, Columbia — the state’s capital and second largest city — has had a Democratic mayor for the past three decades. In recent years, this probably has much to do with the fact that more than half of Columbia’s population is non-White. In 2020, Joe Biden carried the city by a margin of nearly 40 points. Thus, the Dems’ stranglehold on Columbia seemed complete. However, Columbia has just elected a Republican mayor. The Republican, Daniel Rickenmann, defeated Democrat Tameika Isaac Devine in a runoff election last week. The margin was 4 points, 52-48. Rickenmann, a member of city council, prioritized three issues: public safety, support for small businesses, and repairing infrastructure. Devine focused on “issues of income instability, affordable housing, creating equitable neighborhoods, and embracing the diversity of this city.” Rickenmann’s platform proved more attractive to voters. Even in Democratic strongholds, voters seem more worried about crime, lack of job opportunities, and deteriorating roads and bridges than about abstractions — especially abstractions like equity and diversity that have come to stand for an erosion of standards and lack of concern for public safety. |
Heap Big Medicine Man
Posted: 21 Nov 2021 04:23 PM PST (John Hinderaker)From Canada comes this ridiculous story about an academic grant to study pre-scientific methods of preventing cancer. One could say that the only important thing in this story is the dollar figure: $1.2 million. Academic institutions exist in large part as slush funds to funnel cash into the hands of liberal constituencies. I am pretty sure that any humor in what follows is unintentional:
What utter nonsense! Only in a university can one actually get paid for writing such drivel.
To be fair, there is a limited sense in which this seeming absurdity could be true. Before the Europeans came along, Native Americans’ life expectancies were brutally short. Few lived long enough to die from cancer. So it is not entirely false to say that cancer, like high cholesterol, is a symptom of colonialism.
I will hazard a wild guess that nothing resulting from this project will prevent a single Indian from getting cancer or anything else. It will, however, result in the distribution of $1.2 million among the “researchers,” who appropriately are “so grateful.” The grotesque corruption of academic life grinds on, paid for mostly by taxpayers. |
Looting Comes to the Suburbs
Posted: 21 Nov 2021 12:03 PM PST (John Hinderaker)Beginning with the George Floyd riots, liberals have generally taken the position that rioting, looting and arson are just fine, as long as they are done in a righteous cause. This was what the anti-Rittenhouse hysteria was all about: how dare he try to interfere with rioting and arson, carried out by Antifa and BLM? Liberals are generally of the view that looting and arson only damage property, and property doesn’t matter. Besides, all that property is insured, right? A New York Times reporter has written that her paper shelved her article on the devastating effect of the Kenosha riots on small business people who were, for the most part uninsured, until after the election. Cities like Portland, Minneapolis and San Francisco have been devastated by rioting and looting. But smug suburban liberals haven’t seemed to mind much, as long as crime was confined to urban centers like Minneapolis and San Francisco, where, on Friday night, Union Square was looted. But what will they think when disorder strikes closer to home? Last night, an organized gang of looters struck the Nordstrom store in Walnut Creek, California. Walnut Creek is a prosperous community of around 64,000, 85% white and Asian. The raid was well-coordinated, as 25 cars blocked the street in front of the store while dozens of looters ran inside, stole merchandise, and left in the waiting vehicles. Apparently only three of the looters were arrested.
This is the description from a San Francisco television station:
More:
In all probability, the goods were stolen for resale, not for personal use. Most of the shoplifting that has devastated San Francisco has been carried out by organized gangs that make millions of dollars reselling stolen goods on the internet. This is most likely similar. Liberals have no vocabulary to condemn rioting, looting, arson and vandalism when these crimes are committed by blacks, or by whites pretending to act on behalf of blacks, as with Antifa riots in Portland and Kenosha. Liberals have sown the wind, and America’s cities are reaping the whirlwind. So far, that doesn’t seem to have given many liberals second thoughts. But as looting and other crimes invade the suburbs, a lot of liberals are going to change their tune. |
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85.) THE POLITICAL INSIDER – WAKE UP EDITION
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99.) MARK LEVIN
November 19, 2021
On Friday’s Mark Levin Show, self-defense predates the U.S Constitution and Kyle Rittenhouse was rightfully found not guilty today. A non-violent protester was killed in the riot on January 6th and the left within the media called that an insurrection. Yet, Democrats will defend the violent rioters instead of the law-abiding citizen. The radicals on the left don’t believe in a jury system as was proved by the prosecutors in this case who were willing to undermine the Constitution to get a scalp for their cause. Then, President Biden alluded to the notion that Rittenhouse was a White supremacist. These are grounds for an effective lawsuit against the President for defaming Rittenhouse. The media is still trying to inject racial narratives and the 2nd Amendment into this case’s verdicts because that’s all that propagandists know how to do. Later, Congressman Jim Jordan calls in with his reaction to the House’s passage of Biden’s Build Back Better bill and his new book “Do What You Said You Would Do: Fighting for Freedom in the Swamp.” Jordan added that the Democrat Party continues to hurt America and must be stopped. Afterward, Democrats are fixated on funding programs that are destructive to growth including coal mines. Sen. Joe Manchin needs to make a clear decision to vote against the Build Back Better plan or West Virginians will lose jobs in one of their most important industries.
THIS IS FROM:
Breitbart
Joe Biden ‘Angry and Concerned’ by Rittenhouse Jury Verdict, Calls for Peaceful Protests
Breitbart
House Passes Behemoth Build Back Better Act
Breitbart
Vulnerable House Democrats Vote for ‘Largest Amnesty in American History’
Rumble
Psaki Claims CBO Score Isn’t Correct, BBB Will Reduce Deficit
Washington Examiner
Manchin signals he is open to vote on social spending bill before the end of the year
The podcast for this show can be streamed or downloaded from the Audio Rewind page.
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Terror in Waukesha today. Prayers for Waukesha.
Waukesha Scanner with Potential InformationInformation from the Waukesha scanner You can listen to the Waukesha police scanner on this link. #Waukesha scanner call pic.twitter.com/rlCC4F6Yb1 — PatrioticBabe (@PatrioticBabe_) November 22, 2021 Ian Miles Cheong claimed… | |
Real Hispanic Texan Tells Beto ‘Don’t Come Back’ & ‘You Ain’t Taking My Guns’Gubernatorial candidate Robert Francis O’Rourke, aka fake Hispanic Beto, still wants to take our guns. He told Dana Bash on State of the Union that an AR-15 is a battlefield… | |
First Subpoenaed FDA Reports on Pfizer Vaccine Released, 158K+ Adverse Events in First Few MonthsAttorney Aaron Siri recently released the first batch of subpoenaed documents from the FDA on Pfizer’s COVID vaccine. The documents reveal that in the first few months of this year,… | |
Car Plows Through Christmas Parade in Waukesha, Multiple Casualties Reported (videos)A car traveling at high speed plowed into a Christmas parade in Waukesha, Wisconsin, leaving at least 30 people injured, among them several elderly women, according to reports. There are… | |
56% of NYPD Regret Becoming Officers [Thanks to the Marxists]According to the New York Post, over half of New York Police Department (NYPD) officers right now wish they had never joined the force. This is according to an internal… | |
Colorado Officials Want Sex Offenders to Sound Less Like, Well, Sex OffendersOn Friday, the Colorado Sex Offender Management Board (SOMB) voted to make sex offenders sound less offensive by changing the terminology. They are no longer sex offenders, but rather “adults who commit… | |
About 10,000 Unvaccinated Marines About to Be CutUp to 10,000 active-duty Marines will not be fully vaccinated against the coronavirus when their deadline arrives in coming days, a trajectory expected to yield the U.S. military’s worst immunization rate, WaPo… | |
More Potential Evidence Pointing to the Lab Leak TheoryThe Telegraph reports that scientists were collecting bat samples from Laos. In September, scientists came across a coronavirus strain named Banal-52 in Laos. Banal-52 shared 96.8 percent of its genome… | |
Daring Robbery by 80 Not White Supremacists of Nordstrom in San FranSan Francisco has an incompetent Marxist mayor and an inept communist DA who do not let the police do their job. Therefore, what you see is anarchy. Take this incident… | |
Far-Left Laurence Tribe Wants Kyle Rittenhouse Retried by the DoJCommitted leftist Laurence Tribe, a lawyer who knows better, wants Kyle Rittenhouse tried a second time by the Justice Department even though it compromises the legal tenet of double jeopardy.… | |
Hunter Sold the US Out to the CCP for a Key Ingredient in Electric CarsPerverted drug addict and art scammer, Hunter Biden, who serves as the “bag man” for “the big guy,” sharing accounts with big guy Joe as he reaps the rewards of… | |
Rittenhouse in Good Spirits and Alan Dershowitz Offers to Help Him Sue CNNAfter the Kyle Rittenhouse “not guilty” verdict Friday, former Covington Catholic High School student Nick Sandmann announced Sunday afternoon that he “just got off the phone” with the acquitted teen who is… | |
Media’s Raging Anti-White Racism: “Little Murderous White Supremacist”The media’s talking points today are blatantly racist. “Defending while white” is one of them. The Left is determined to destroy American’s right to self-defense, at least as it concerns… | |
“This Is Creepy as Hell”Are any of these leftists capable of thinking for themselves? If you read the tweets below, you won’t think so. The identical tweets are as creepy as hell. The Leftists… | |
Fauci Wants to Shoot Up Your Babies with mRNAThis is one of the most repulsive things I’ve seen this idiot Fauci say yet. Anyone willing to inject their babies with mRNA therapy over a virus with a 99.999995%… | |
Racist Ideology Expands to Young ChildrenThis is truly terrible news. The racist, hate America ideology of the 1619 Project will spread to small children. It is also in volume form now. It is fake history,… | |
A Most Egregious Wrong, Lt. Bill Kelly’s Guilty of Free SpeechIn April, Lt. William Kelly, a 17-year veteran of the Norfolk Police Department was fired for making an anonymous donation of $25 to Kyle Rittenhouse who acted in self-defense during… | |
Attorney for Kyle Rittenhouse Calls Lin Wood an “idiot” Who Used the KidKyle Rittenhouse attorney Mark Richards says “getting rid of the first two lawyers” – John Pierce and Lin Wood – was a critical moment for the defense. Lin Wood wants… |
105.) DC CLOTHESLINE
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