MORNING NEWS BRIEFING – DECEMBER 2, 2021

Good morning! Here is your news briefing for Thursday December 2, 2021

1.) THE DAILY SIGNAL

December 2 2021

Good morning from Washington, where conservatives are stoked that the Supreme Court may end abortion on demand. We’ve got commentary from Thomas Jipping and Sarah Parshall Perry on yesterday’s arguments and video reports from Mary Margaret Olohan on the scene outside. On the podcast, a lawyer tells Virginia Allen that the justices likely will overturn Roe v. Wade. Plus: The Heritage Foundation’s new president, Kevin Roberts, finds common ground with House conservatives, and Rachel Greszler describes what happens when Americans are fired under the vaccine mandate. Sixty years ago today, Cuban dictator Fidel Castro declares himself a Marxist-Leninist, an announcement that cements Cold War animosity between the U.S. and Cuba.

COMMENTARY
Key Takeaways From Supreme Court Hearing of Biggest Abortion Case Since Roe
By Thomas Jipping
Justice Kavanaugh explained that some of the court’s most significant decisions had overruled precedents, citing decisions that included Miranda v. Arizona, Lawrence v. Texas, and Obergefell v. Hodges.
COMMENTARY
An 'Abundance of Caution' Mentality Leads to Tyranny
By Ben Shapiro
The reaction from our institutional leaders to the omicron variant of COVID-19 has been completely unhinged.
NEWS
Heritage Foundation's New President Talks Conservative Agenda With House GOP Group
By Fred Lucas
“I want you to know that when you’re looking for the intellectual ammunition to fight Biden inflation, to fight our open borders … you can count on The Heritage Foundation,” says Kevin Roberts.
ANALYSIS
Why It's Likely That Supreme Court Will Overturn Roe v. Wade
By Virginia Allen
“If we overturn Roe, all it will do is say that the Constitution is neutral on abortion. … Then each state and the voters of each state can do what they want,” says Alliance Defending Freedom’s Denise…
COMMENTARY
Federal Employee Vaccine Mandate Could Result in Thousands of Firings. Here’s What That Means for Government Functions.
By Rachel Greszler
The Biden administration could be directly responsible for firing more federal employees over the coming months than would ordinarily be fired over nearly two decades.
NEWS
What I Saw at the Supreme Court as Justices Heard a Major Abortion Case
By Mary Margaret Olohan
Pro-life activists circled pro-abortion protestors, chanting repeatedly, “Trans lives start at conception!”
SPECIAL FEATURE
ICYMI: 21 of the Most Interesting Signs Outside Supreme Court During Abortion Case
By Virginia Allen
“Call me an extremist, but I think dismemberment is wrong,” states one sign.
LOGO-CHARCOAL_75percent.jpg

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2.) THE EPOCH TIMES

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3.) DAYBREAK

Your First Look at Today’s Top Stories – Daybreak Insider
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THURSDAY, DECEMBER 2, 2021
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1.
Pro-Life Sees Hope in First Day of Dobbs Before Supreme Court

From the National Review editorial board: Veterans of Supreme Court cases past know that it is risky to read the tea leaves from questions at argument, but it is hard to see how the argument could have gone much better for the pro-life cause (National Review).  Justice Clarence Thomas asked some very tough questions of the pro-abortion attorney (RedState). Justice Barrett addressed adoption (Daily Wire). From David French: As I listened to almost two hours of oral argument in Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health, a case challenging Mississippi’s ban on abortions after 15 weeks, I kept returning to a single thought: Ruth Bader Ginsburg was right. She accurately identified the inherent instability of Roe v. Wade. Because of that instability, it is now quite possible that Roe will be overturned and the ultimate legality of abortion rights will be decided by legislatures, not justices (Atlantic). From Ed Morrissey: …only seven countries allow for selective abortions past the 24-week mark — and we’re one of them. So are North Korea and China, as Roberts points out. The Washington Post fact-checked a claim four years ago by the Trump administration that US policy on abortion is so extreme that it’s only matched by six other countries, and found that claim to be true (Hot Air). From Dr. Albert Mohler: Pro-life Americans, and in particular, American Christians have to understand how long we have been waiting for this day, how long we have been waiting for the Supreme Court to be presented with this kind of question, for the court to take the case. There is no doubt that there is encouragement in the fact that a sufficient number of justices agreed to consider this case, because fundamentally, there is no reason to consider this case unless Roe itself is at stake. The pro-life movement has been working at this for nearly 50 years and the Roe v. Wade precedent is almost 50 years old. It was handed down January the 22nd, 1973 (Briefing). Transcript of the oral arguments (SCOTUS).

2.
Women’s Tennis Association Suspends Tournaments in China

From the story: “Unfortunately, the leadership in China has not addressed this very serious issue in any credible way,” WTA Chairman and CEO Steve Simon wrote in a statement distributed by the tour. “While we now know where Peng is, I have serious doubts that she is free, safe, and not subject to censorship, coercion, and intimidation” (NY Post). From their tweet: “With the full support of the WTA Board of Directors, I am announcing the immediate suspension of all WTA tournaments in China, including Hong Kong” (Twitter). From Jeff Blehar: In before the jerks say that the WTA has less on the line financially than the NBA (and you’d have to be an authentically proud flaming immoralist to gloat about this point), they are 100% on the right side here and it wouldn’t hurt for you to let them know if you think so too (Twitter). From Sarah McLaughlin: Wow, what a statement. While Disney+ cuts a Simpsons episode for referencing Tiananmen, the WTA suspends tournaments in China and forcefully rejects censorship. Pay attention to how companies and organizations respond to these issues; it says a lot about their leaders’ values (Twitter). From the Wall Street Journal editorial board: Too many Western leaders and celebrities apply a double standard when doing business with China, forgiving behavior from Beijing they’d deplore at home. Think the NBA’s LeBron James on Hong Kong, or BlackRock CEO Larry Fink on governance standards for business (WSJ).

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3.
Biden to Extend Transportation Mask Mandate

Expected to announce Thursday they are gleefully extending to mid-March (NBC News). From Bethany Mandel: I’m never going to be able to fly with young children again am I (Twitter).

4.
Stacey Abrams Announces She’s Running for Governor of Georgia

Although many have joked she’s running for re-elections since she claimed she won the first time (Daily Wire).  She lost to the current governor, Brian Kemp, in 2018 (NY Post).

5.
Christmas Parade Killer Speaks to Fox News

Fox News visited him but notes “Not even his mother has dropped by, he said. Earlier in the day, she released a statement on behalf of the family decrying Wisconsin’s criminal justice system for failing her son, a longtime felon with a 50-page rap sheet detailing domestic violence, firearms, drugs and other convictions in Wisconsin, according to documents obtained by Fox News Digital. Brooks is also a registered child sex offender in Nevada and served time in Georgia for beating his ex, records show” (Fox News). Meanwhile, from Jason Riley: The same press outlets that portrayed Mr. Rittenhouse as a white supremacist have had remarkably little to say about the racial identity of Darrell Brooks, the black suspect in Wisconsin who is accused of plowing his car through an annual Christmas parade last month and killing six people, including an 8-year-old boy, all of whom were white. Given the suspect’s history of posting messages on social media that called for violence against white people and praised Hitler for killing Jews, you’d think that his race and the race of his victims would be relevant to reporters. Race is all anyone would be talking about if a white man had slammed his vehicle into a parade full of black people. Yet suddenly the left has gone colorblind (WSJ).

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6.
Smollett Trial: Nigerian Brothers Testify Against Smollett

From the story: The man Jussie Smollett allegedly paid to help him stage a hate crime took the stand in the actor’s criminal trial Wednesday, describing how he took part in the hoax because he thought the ‘”Empire” star could help push his own acting career (NY Post).  From another story: Brothers Ola and Bola Osundairo told police that Smollett hired them to beat him because he felt producers of the show he starred on, Empire, didn’t do enough to protect him after he received a racist and homophobic letter on set. The brothers also told police that Smollett sent himself the letter for attention, according to police sources (Daily Mail). The jury got to see Jussie Smollett in a “dry run” video the day before the alleged attack (NY Post).

7.
Omicron Reaches United States Via California

Where so much reaches the United States. Symptoms, so far, are mild.  Just as they have been reported in South Africa.

Townhall

8.
Biden Repeats Debunked Claim That He Drove a Tractor-Trailer

He said it again Tuesday.  From the story: Biden’s claim was debunked earlier this year after the president said at a Mack Truck facility in Pennsylvania that he “used to drive an 18-wheeler.” When asked at the time if the president had ever driven such a truck, a White House spokesperson pointed to a December 1973 article from the Wilmington Evening Journal that showed Biden rode in an 18-wheeler on a 536-mile haul to Ohio. Fox News pressed the spokesperson at the time about the president’s claim – noting that riding in a truck is not the same as driving one – at which point the president’s spokesperson pointed to a United Federation of Teachers post that touched on Biden once driving a school bus for a summer job.

Fox News

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9.
Kraft Peanut Butter Promotes Trans Awareness Week

And offers a booklet to lecture you about pronouns.

Twitter

10.
UK Woman Wins Case Against Doctor Claiming She Should Not Have Been Born

From the story: The 20-year-old’s “wrongful conception” claim saw her take Dr. Philip Mitchell to court over his failure to advise her mother to take vital supplements before getting pregnant. She alleged that had the medic told her mom Caroline that she needed to take folic acid to minimize the risk of spina bifida affecting her baby, she would have put off conception. This in turn would have meant Evie would never have been born at all.

NY Post

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4.) THE SUNBURN

Sunburn — The morning read of what’s hot in Florida politics — 12.2.21

Here’s the day that was — and will be — in Florida politics.

Good Thursday morning.

The Florida Chamber of Commerce’s 14th Insurance Summit kicks off today, bringing together insurance policy experts from across the nation and a handful of other countries in Tampa to discuss ways to “insure Florida’s future” — pun intended.

The Summit begins with a table-setter talk from Florida Chamber President and CEO Mark Wilson titled “Planning for Florida’s Insurance Future,” followed by Chief Financial Officer Jimmy Patronis, who will detail the current state of Florida’s insurance industry.

Jimmy Patronis will again serve as lead speaker at the 2021 Florida Chamber Insurance Summit.

A slew of speakers will follow, delivering presentations and participating in panel discussions on all aspects of the broad insurance market.

One particularly timely segment will delve into how insurers and other stakeholders have responded to events such as the Surfside condo collapse.

It will feature Joy Ryan, a shareholder at top insurance lobbying firm Meenan PA, moderating a panel including Florida Building Commission Chair James Schock, Citizens Property Insurance COO Kelly Booten, Carlton Fields Of Counsel Bill Sklar, USI Insurance Services Senior Vice President Adam Lopatin.

Property insurance, in particular, has been a pressing issue in Florida. Rates are rising year after year, and lawmakers have attempted to steady them with bills to curb litigation. Citizens Communications Chief Christine Ashburn will expound on how the litigation landscape impacts the state in a conversation with the Personal Insurance Federation of Florida President Michael Carlson.

On Friday, attendees will get a historical perspective on how the Legislature has responded to challenges facing the market from a set of former lawmakers who chaired the major insurance policy committees — former Sen. Garrett Richter and former Reps. Dennis Ross and Bryan Nelson.

Former Insurance Commissioners Kevin McCarty and Tom Gallagher will join them on a panel moderated by lobbyist Tim Meenan.

A full agenda for the Insurance Summit is available online.

— SITUATIONAL AWARENESS —

@ShearM: Hours after he received the call from (MarkMeadows informing him of a positive test, (DonaldTrump came to the back of AF1 without a mask and talked with reporters for about 10 minutes. I was wearing a mask, but still got COVID, testing positive several days later.

@DonWinslow: Seeing some people tweeting today about how awful the Mississippi/Roe v. Wade situation is who in 2015/16 and 2018/2020 were tweeting “stop being an alarmist,” “Stop being a defeatist,” “he’s just too negative” You think this is bad. Real horror is Nov. 22.

@ProfMMurray: Y’all. Justice (SoniaSotomayor can count votes. She knows where this is headed … either viability is gone or Roe is gone. Her questions are for the public … to let us know that abortion isn’t the end. It’s just beginning of the unraveling of these other rights of intimate life.

@LoriBerman: While the Supreme Court is being asked to overturn a watershed decision and 50 years of court precedent, Representative @BenDiamondFL and I are fighting to protect women and codify reproductive health care in Florida.

@DrTomFrieden: Freedom includes the freedom not to be harmed avoidably by others’ choices. Vaccine mandates for health care workers and others, indoor mask mandates where COVID is spreading, and better protection of health care workers are ethically required.

@DaveWeigel: Inflation is real, gas prices are up, but there’s definitely been a lot of hyperventilating warnings about problems that don’t materialize. (I did Black Friday shopping as usual, in Delaware, and not an empty shelf in sight)

Tweettweet:

 

Tweet, tweet:

 

— DAYS UNTIL —

Jacksonville special election to fill seat vacated by Tommy Hazouri’s death — 5; ‘Sex and the City’ revival premieres — 7; Steven Spielberg’s ’West Side Story’ premieres — 8; ’Spider-Man: No Way Home’ premieres — 8; ’The Matrix: Resurrections’ released — 20; ’The Book of Boba Fett’ premieres on Disney+ — 27; Private sector employees must be fully vaccinated or tested weekly — 33; final season of ‘This Is Us’ begins — 33; CES 2022 begins — 34; Ken Welch’s inauguration as St. Petersburg Mayor — 35; NFL season ends — 38; 2022 Legislative Session starts — 40; Florida’s 20th Congressional District Election — 40; Special Elections in Senate District 33, House District 88 & 94 — 40; Florida Chamber’s 2022 Legislative Fly-In and Reception — 40; Florida TaxWatch’s 2022 State of the Taxpayer Day — 41; Joel Coen’s ’The Tragedy of Macbeth’ on Apple TV+ — 43; NFL playoffs begin — 44; ‘Ozark’ final season begins — 50; ‘Billions’ begins — 52; XXIV Olympic Winter Games begins — 64; Super Bowl LVI — 73; ‘The Walking Dead’ final season part two begins — 80; Daytona 500 — 80; CPAC begins — 84; St. Pete Grand Prix — 85; ‘The Batman’ premieres — 91; The Oscars — 117; ’Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness’ premieres — 160; ’Top Gun: Maverick’ premieres — 179; ’Platinum Jubilee’ for Queen Elizabeth II — 182; ’Thor: Love and Thunder’ premieres — 219; San Diego Comic-Con 2022 — 230; ‘The Lord of the Rings’ premieres on Amazon Prime — 274; ’Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse’ sequel premieres — 309; ‘Black Panther 2’ premieres — 344; ‘The Flash’ premieres — 347; ‘Avatar 2’ premieres — 379; ‘Captain Marvel 2’ premieres — 442; ‘Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania’ premieres — 603. ‘Dune: Part Two’ premieres — 687; Opening Ceremony of the 2024 Olympic Games — 967.

— TOP STORY —

Critical race theory becomes flashpoint for GOP, UF heading into Legislative Session” via Ana Ceballos of the Miami Herald/Tampa Bay Times — As Florida Republican lawmakers rush to introduce bills that target the teaching of critical race theory in state institutions, a University of Florida professor is claiming university officials have already asked faculty members not to use the words “critical” and “race” in the curriculum to avoid political backlash. The claims underscore widening allegations by faculty members that the politics of the day is influencing the state’s flagship university, even as university leaders have declared UF “free from undue influence.” UF College of Education associate professor Chris Busey claims that in meetings, university officials warned faculty and administrators in the College of Education to steer clear of curricula that touch on race, anti-racism or mention the words “critical’ and “race” together.

University of Florida professors have been instructed not to say any combination of ‘critical,’ ‘race’ or ‘theory.’ Image via Fresh Take Florida.


— STATEWIDE —

Gov. Ron DeSantis seeks election fraud crackdown but ignores dark money-backed sham candidates” via Gray Rohrer of the Orlando Sentinel — DeSantis wants a new law enforcement division to investigate and punish election crimes, but he’s said little about the ongoing criminal case involving “ghost” candidates that helped swing one South Florida state Senate race in the GOP’s favor and influenced two others. That’s led Democrats to suspect his motives in pushing the election crimes crackdown, a legislative proposal that includes increasing the penalty for ballot harvesting, requiring more frequent cleanup of voter rolls and eliminating the use of unsecure drop boxes. “It seems completely politically motivated,” said Rep. Anna Eskamani. “Gov. Ron DeSantis wants to set himself up to be President in 2024, and part of that means going along with some of this extreme rhetoric around election fraud that isn’t accurate.”

Ron DeSantis wants to investigate election fraud. Dark money? Not so much.

‘Bold goals’: Nikki Fried, Dems outline sustainable agricultural legislative priorities” via Kelly Hayes of Florida Politics — Agriculture Commissioner Fried, Sen. Gary Farmer and Rep. Kelly Skidmore presented legislative priorities Wednesday tackling sustainable agricultural and environmental policy ahead of the 2022 Session. The group introduced two bills, including one major package to set ambitious greenhouse gas reduction goals and statewide emissions standards. That legislation, sponsored by Sen. Tina Polsky and Skidmore, would establish a tax credit to incentivize farmers to set up solar panels on land not being used for agriculture. “The farmers are the stewards of the land. They have been for centuries, and they continue to be, and they are great partners in this initiative,” Skidmore said.

Is the future of Florida’s $1.8B Medicaid hospital financing plan at risk?” via Christine Jordan Sexton of Florida Politics — Senate Health and Human Services Appropriations Subcommittee Chair Aaron Bean told Florida Politics he is worried about the future of a $1.8 billion Medicaid hospital financing program after the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services recently shot down a similar funding proposal in Texas. The loss of all this money could complicate an upcoming Legislative Session where state lawmakers are expected to be awash in cash and pressed to set aside appropriations for long-standing needs. Created in 2021, the Hospital Direct Payment Program, or DPP, provides qualifying hospitals with supplemental payments designed to bridge the gap between the Medicaid rates hospitals are paid to deliver health care to the poor, elderly and disabled and the actual costs of the care.

Cost of CONNECT fixes could hit $130M — Modernizing the state’s unemployment system is expected to take two years and cost more than $130 million, Matt Dixon of POLITICO Florida reports. After the system, known as CONNECT, failed in the early days of the pandemic, lawmakers set aside $73 million to begin the modernization process. The federal government has provided another $57 million for the project. The Department of Economic Opportunity Division of Workforce Services Director Adrienne Johnston told the House Infrastructure and Tourism Subcommittee that the project started July 1, but the department has not yet calculated how much it has spent on it to date.

Police, state agencies await approved drone list as deadline looms” via Jason Delgado of Florida Politics — Under a recently passed bill (SB 44), DMS must create a list of approved drones and publish it online by Jan. 1, 2022. The agency, however, has yet to do so, and inquiries from Florida Politics into the selection process remain unanswered. The ongoing radio silence comes as state agencies and police await further guidance. Under the new law, drone operators must ground drones not featured on the list by 2023 — a requirement that may cost operators thousands. The list calls for DMS to select drone manufacturers with “safeguards to protect the confidentiality, integrity, and availability of data collected, transmitted or stored by a drone.” That job, however, is no small task with growing national security concerns around several drone distributors.

— DATELINE TALLY —

Chris Sprowls snags award from Healthy Start Coalition — Florida Association of Healthy Start Coalition CEO Cathy Timuta presented House Speaker Sprowls with an award this week to recognize his push to extend Medicaid benefits for pregnant women from two months to one year. The issue was one of Sprowls’ top priorities in the 2021 Legislative Session. “Every baby should have the opportunity to be born — healthy. And every mother should have the maternal health care she needs to set up herself, her family, and her child to thrive,” Sprowls said after receiving the award. “The Florida House is proud to stand together in support of moms and babies across our state, and we are thankful for the work that groups like Healthy Start have done and will do with our investment to bring vital health care services within the reach of more mothers.”

Chris Sprowls is recognized for his commitment to protecting Florida children.

‘We cannot sit idly by’: Democrats rebuke abortion restriction efforts” via Jason Delgado of Florida Politics — The High Court heard oral arguments on a Mississippi law banning abortion procedures beyond 15 weeks. An impending ruling by the conservative-leaning court threatens to weaken abortion rights, Democrats fear, paving the way for states to implement more restrictive laws. Democratic lawmakers in Tallahassee, meanwhile, are vowing to take a stand. “We need to unite and fight,” said Fried. Sen. Lori Berman and Rep. Ben Diamond propose measures (HB 709 and SB 1036) dubbed the Reproductive Health Care Protections Act; the proposals bar an individual or government from restricting a woman’s access to abortion. The identical measures also feature a mechanism allowing legal action against those who stand in the way.

Michael Grieco files ‘Greyson’s Law’ to add protections for children at risk of parental harm” via Jesse Scheckner of Florida Politics — Inspired by the tragic murder-suicide involving a young South Florida boy, Rep. Grieco of Miami Beach filed a bill Tuesday to make it harder for a parent to gain — or maintain — custody of a child if they have threatened, abused or stalked the other parent. The bill is called “Greyson’s Law,” named after 4-year-old Greyson Kessler, whose father, John Stacey, shot and killed him in May before turning the gun on himself. Greyson’s mother, Alison Kessler, had previously sought a restraining order for domestic violence against Stacey, but a judge denied her, citing a lack of evidence.

Charter school bill draws rare bipartisanship in House panel” via Renzo Downey of Florida Politics — The House Early Learning and Elementary Education Subcommittee unanimously approved a measure (HB 225) sponsored by Republican Rep. Fred Hawkins that would require school boards to renew charter schools at least 90 days before the school year ends, or the charter would renew automatically. The bill comes after the Hillsborough County School Board initially voted against renewing four charter schools’ charters this summer, just 56 days before the charters were set to expire. “Teachers were trying to find jobs. Parents are trying to find new schools for their children,” Hawkins said. “We want to prevent that.” Public schools start working toward the next school year well in advance, Hawkins noted. If there’s a problem with a charter school, districts should start addressing it with “plenty of time.”

Juvenile expungement bill passes second committee, awaits House consideration” via Renzo Downey of Florida Politics — The Senate Criminal and Civil Justice Appropriations Subcommittee voted unanimously, for the second time in two years, to advance a bill (SB 342) that would expand opportunities to expunge first-time arrests from juvenile records to felony charges. Lawmakers unanimously approved a similar bill last Session, but DeSantis vetoed the measure, citing concerns that forcible felonies were among the charges that could be expunged. Gainesville Republican Sen. Keith Perry and Winter Springs Republican Rep. David Smith, who is carrying the House version (HB 195), removed forcible felonies from the list in the updated bill. The proposal passed the entire legislative and committee process unanimously during the 2021 Session before receiving DeSantis’ veto after the Florida Police Chiefs Association raised concerns.

Transportation omnibus starts rolling — A bill (SB 398) that is expected to become this year’s transportation omnibus cleared its first committee on Wednesday, Dixon of POLITICO Florida reports. Among the bill’s provisions is a limit on how much the Florida Department of Transportation can spend on specific transportation projects. It would also repeal a public records exemption shielding documents identifying the names of people or companies that requested bid packages for DOT projects. Clearwater Sen. Ed Hooper, the bill sponsor, joked that the bill had already grown from two pages to eight pages since it was filed, adding “we are on our way to 80.” The House has not yet unveiled its transportation train.

Ed Hooper is on a (transportation) roll.

House panel doubles down on cryptocurrency regulation” via Renzo Downey of Florida Politics — House lawmakers remain bullish on cryptocurrency, taking a second stab at undoing how courts say Florida should regulate virtual currencies. The House unanimously approved a similar bill last Session, though the bill later died in the Senate. On Wednesday, the House Banking and Insurance Subcommittee approved the measure (HB 273), carried by Miami Republican Rep. Vance Aloupis, unanimously for the second time in two years. Florida has stayed quiet on cryptocurrency, Aloupis told the committee. He expressed the need for the state to set up a regulatory structure as the industry grows. “I think the question around virtual currency, whether you believe in it or not, it’s a reality,” Aloupis said.

Leg. cmte. mtg. schedule:

— The Senate Banking and Insurance Committee meets to consider SB 312, from Sen. Manny Diaz Jr., to allow telehealth providers to renew prescriptions for types of controlled substances, 8:30 a.m., Room 412 of the Knott Building.

— The Senate Community Affairs Committee meet for an update on affordable housing, 8:30 a.m., Room 37 of the Senate Office Building.

— The Senate Transportation Commission meets to consider SB 398, from Sen. Ed Hooper, to make changes to funding public transportation projects, 8:30 a.m., Room 110 of the Senate Office Building.

— The House Ways and Means Committee meets for an update on understanding estimating conferences, 9 a.m., Room 404 of the House Office Building.

— The House Civil Justice and Property Rights Subcommittee meets to consider HB 31, from Rep. Demi Busatta Cabrera, to shield firefighters from being threatened with suspensions, transfers, or termination during informal inquiries into misconduct, 11 a.m., Room 404 of the House Office Building.

— The House Infrastructure and Tourism Appropriations Subcommittee meets for an update on modernization of the state unemployment program’s computer system, 11 a.m., Reed Hall of the House Office Building.

— The House Insurance and Banking Subcommittee meets to consider HB 273, from Rep. Aloupis, to update rules on money-service businesses, including virtual currency, 11 a.m., Morris Hall of the House Office Building.

— The House Secondary Education and Career Development Subcommittee meets for an update on electrocardiograms for student-athletes, 11 a.m., Room 212 of the Knott Building.

— The House Agriculture and Natural Resources Appropriations Subcommittee meets for an update from the South Florida Water Management District on the Lake Okeechobee watershed restoration project, 1:30 p.m., Morris Hall of the House Office Building.

— The House Early Learning and Elementary Education Subcommittee meets to consider HB 225, from Rep. Hawkins, to change charters for charter schools, 1:30 p.m., Reed Hall of the House Office Building.

— The House Local Administration and Veterans Affairs Subcommittee meets to consider HB 403, from Rep. Mike Giallombardo, to enhance challenges to local-government ordinances, 1:30 p.m., Room 404 of the House Office Building.

— The Senate Health and Human Services Appropriations Subcommittee meets to discuss restarting visitation in long-term care facilities, 2:30 p.m., Room 412 of the Knott Building.

— The Senate Transportation, Tourism and Economic Development Appropriations Subcommittee meets for an update from the Florida Department of Transportation on a new federal infrastructure law, 2:30 p.m., Room 110 of the Senate Office Building.

— The House Children, Families and Seniors Subcommittee meets for an update on child-support guidelines, 3:30 p.m., Reed Hall of the House Office Building.

— The House Environment, Agriculture and Flooding Subcommittee meets to consider HB 323, from Rep. Tyler Sirois, to update rules related to the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission, including the use of drones, 3:30 p.m., Room 212 of the Knott Building.

— The House Justice Appropriations Subcommittee meets for an update from the Florida Department of Corrections about consolidation, 3:30 p.m., Morris Hall of the House Office Building.

— The Senate Criminal and Civil Justice Appropriations Subcommittee meets to consider SB 342, from Chair Keith Perry, to update rules by which juveniles could have arrest records expunged, 4:30 p.m., Room 37 of the Senate Office Building.

New and renewed lobbying registrations:

Sebastian Aleksander, The Aleksander Group: Jonathan Frantz

Brian BallardJordan ElsburyAdrian Lukis, Ballard Partners: The Florida Theatre, K9s for Warriors, Pulse Clinical Alliance

Matt BryanDavid DanielThomas GriffinJeff HartleyLisa HurleyTeye Reeves, Smith Bryan & Myers: Florida Association of Nurse Anesthesiology

Matthew HerndonNatalie King, RSA Consulting Group: United Way of Broward County

Von Johnson: Teach For America Florida Regions

Lauren Lange: Executive Office of the Governor

Michael Monroe: Florida Education Association

Desinda Wood-Carper, DC Strategies: DEPA Service Partners

— CORONA FLORIDA —

Florida COVID-19 cases fell Thanksgiving week, but so did vaccinations” via Ian Hodgson of the Tampa Bay Times — Florida’s COVID-19 cases continued to fall during Thanksgiving week. But vaccinations are also trending downward, and the effort to inoculate children ages 5-11 stalled as experts fear the spread of the newly-detected omicron variant. That’s according to the weekly report the state released on Tuesday, covering the seven days of Nov. 19-25. The report, usually released late Friday afternoon, was delayed last week because of the holiday. New infections fell to 9,663 over the week, bringing the state’s total infection count to 3,686,860. It’s the lowest weekly infection rate since mid-June 2020. Florida’s case positivity was also down, dropping to 2.4% from 2.5% the week before.

COVID-19 cases drop during Thanksgiving, but so did vaccinations. Image via AP.

Florida COVID-19 update: 2,096 new cases added to state tally” via Devoun Cetoute of the Miami Herald — Florida reported 2,096 COVID-19 cases and no new deaths on Tuesday, according to Wednesday’s report to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. In all, Florida has recorded at least 3,693,516 confirmed COVID-19 cases and 61,539 deaths. There were 1,247 people hospitalized for COVID-19 in Florida, according to a Wednesday report by the U.S. Department of Health & Human Services, which compiled data from 234 Florida hospitals. Hospitalized COVID-19 patients increased by 19 from Tuesday’s report, when 227 hospitals submitted data. Of the people hospitalized in Florida, 234 people were in intensive care unit beds, a decrease of 40. That represents about 4.20% of the state’s ICU hospital beds, compared to 4.47% the previous day.

Is Florida really the safest state in the U.S. for COVID-19? Don’t trust this CDC map that went viral online” via Cindy Krischer Goodman and David Schutz of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — A federal map shows Florida having COVID-19 transmission rates lower than all other 49 states. But even though many are touting it as good news and proof that Florida’s pandemic policies are working, the map is misleading. Data that shows community transmission levels by county have not been updated for the state of Florida on the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention portal since Thanksgiving. The resulting map shows a sunny picture of COVID-19 in Florida, the only state with a low transmission rate. But without new case numbers updated since Nov. 25, the seven-day average for Florida is skewed downward while much of the rest of the country is red, illustrating high COVID-19 transmission rates.

Decoding the data behind state Surgeon General’s policies” via Jeffrey Schweers of the USA TODAY Capital Bureau — When he was first introduced as DeSantis’ nominee for Surgeon General, Dr. Joseph Ladapo promised that the Department of Health would distinguish science and opinion. The next day he signed an emergency order that strengthened bans on school mask mandates and stripped schools of the authority to quarantine students who had come in contact with the COVID-19 virus for up to four days. So, where’s the science? Asked for the scientific basis for Ladapo’s statements, DeSantis’ press secretary offered three studies to back up his claims about vaccines and masks. While selected parts of the studies back up the claims that vaccines are losing their effectiveness or that masks don’t work, other data in those studies contradict their assertions.

Police: Stepdad lied, staged photos about school-masking ‘abuse.’ Now where’s the outrage?” via Scott Maxwell of the Orlando Sentinel — Back in October, a story out of Brevard County made national headlines. The stepfather of a 7-year-old girl with Down syndrome claimed he had photographic evidence that school officials had used a nylon cord to forcibly strap a face mask around his daughter’s head against her will. He said it impeded her ability to breathe and put her life at risk. Some media lapped it up, particularly the New York Post, London’s Daily Mail and Fox News. The stepfather even scored airtime with Fox host Tucker Carlson, who concluded school officials “tortured” the little girl. Everyone was outraged. Except it turns out the photos were staged. The stepdad lied about them — in a sworn statement to a police detective.

Apparently, it was all made up. Oops.

Catholic Archdiocese of Miami making face masks optional in its schools — for now” via Devoun Cetoute of the Miami Herald — Masks will now be optional indoors for students at the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Miami’s elementary and high school, if parents sign all the necessary papers. The Archdiocese announced Tuesday that it will allow parents and legal guardians to sign forms allowing unvaccinated and partially vaccinated students to opt out of having to wear a mask indoors in schools, effective immediately. The form can be found on the Archdiocese’s website, along with the new mask policy. Masks were already optional indoors for fully vaccinated students and teachers who provided the Department of Health vaccination cards to the school or confirmed through the FL SHOTS database.

— 2022 —

Draft House maps: Five Southwest Florida incumbents share districts with colleagues” via Jacob Ogles of Florida Politics — Sarasota-Manatee: HD 70; neither of the House maps shows the district reaching south of Hillsborough County. A newly envisioned HD 62 in both drafts covers portions of St. Petersburg, Tampa, and Gibsonton. The most consequence is to Rep. Fiona McFarland, representing the region’s one true swing district. Much of her HD 72 falls now within HD 73 in both maps. Lee-Collier: Both show a House district holding most of Cape Coral, though it can longer be contained in a single district as existing HD 77. Florida Heartland: Rep. Kaylee Tuck lives under both draft maps in a new HD 83; Rep. Melony Bell loses any Southwest Florida constituency. DeSoto County becomes part of HD 76 now also encompasses east Charlotte County.

Melony Bell and Kaylee Tuck are just two of the potential political casualties of redistricting.

Florida House proposes carving Tallahassee seat into three separate districts” via James Call of the USA TODAY Capital Bureau — For the first time, Tallahassee could be split into three state House districts, lumping Democratic-leaning precincts around FSU and northeast Tallahassee with coastal Republican counties of Gulf, Franklin and Wakulla. That’s according to the Florida House of Representatives first redistricting proposals released this week. HD 9, represented by Democrat Allison Tant, currently is contained within Tallahassee and Leon County. Tant would go from representing voters who supported Joe Biden by nearly two-thirds to competing in counties that backed Trump by a similar margin. HD 8, held by Democrat Ramon Alexander, would stay mostly the same. It’s a minority-access seat rooted in Gadsden County and Tallahassee’s west and south sides, including the Florida A&M University campus.

Joe Gruters endorses Griff Griffitts for HD 6 — Republican Party of Florida Chair and Sarasota Sen. Gruters endorsed Bay County Commissioner Griffitts to succeed Rep. Jay Trumbull in House District 6. “Griff Griffitts has proven himself to be a strong conservative and a powerful advocate for our constitutional rights and economic freedom,” Gruters said. “He strongly supports President Trump’s America First agenda and will be a trusted leader in Florida’s Legislature. It is my pleasure to endorse him for state Representative.” Griffitts faces Brian Clowdus in the Republican Primary for the Northwest Florida seat. He has previously picked up endorsements from CFO Patronis, U.S. Rep. Neal Dunn and state Sen. George Gainer, among others.

A.J. D’Amico launches campaign for HD 113 — Democrat D’Amico has opened a campaign account to run for House District 113, which currently covers a portion of coastal Miami-Dade County, including Miami Beach. “I seek this office as much to prove the place of civic-minded, hopeful young people in government as I do to represent the best people and places HD 113 and the State of Florida have to offer,” he said in a prepared statement. He said his campaign will “present a platform of dignified dissent to a political status quo that has left behind those with the most to lose and to advocate for policies such as accessible and affordable health care, the protection of our environment from the existential threat of climate change, and sustainable and abundant economic opportunities for all.”


— CORONA NATION —

First known U.S. case of omicron variant identified in California” via Yacob Reyes and Erin Doherty of Axios — The first known U.S. case of the Omicron variant was detected in California, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention confirmed Wednesday. The confirmed case was detected in a traveler returning from South Africa who was fully vaccinated and had mild symptoms. The person, who California Gov. Gavin Newsom said is a resident of San Francisco and tested positive on Nov. 28, is self-quarantining. All close contacts have been notified and tested negative. The individual had not yet received a booster shot, NIAID director Anthony Fauci said in a White House press briefing. Since the variant was first identified by scientists in South Africa earlier last month, Omicron cases have been confirmed across Europe, Canada, Israel, Hong Kong and Australia, among other countries.

Welcome to America, omicron. Image via AP.

‘It was just a matter of time.’ Anthony Fauci urges familiar COVID-19 protections with omicron arrival” via Michael Wilner of McClatchy — Fauci said the first omicron case discovered in California was an individual who was tested for COVID-19 on Nov. 29 after traveling to the U.S. from South Africa on Nov. 22. “We knew that it was just a matter of time before the first case,” Fauci said. “We know what we need to do to protect people.” He advised Americans to resume wearing masks in indoor group settings, including at restaurants when not eating or drinking, and get boosted as soon as possible for adults six months out from their last vaccine dose. White House officials declined to provide more details on the individual, only to say the person had mild symptoms that seemed to be improving.

A federal judge blocks Joe Biden’s vaccine mandate for U.S. health workers.” via Azi Paybarah and Reed Abelson of The New York Times — A federal judge issued a preliminary injunction to halt the start of Biden’s national vaccine mandate for health care workers, which had been set to begin next week. The injunction, written by Judge Terry Doughty, effectively expanded a separate order issued on Monday by a federal court in Missouri. “There is no question that mandating a vaccine to 10.3 million health care workers is something that should be done by Congress, not a government agency,” Doughty wrote. The judge, who was nominated to the court by Trump, also wrote that the plaintiffs had an “interest in protecting its citizens from being required to submit to vaccinations” and prevent the loss of jobs and tax revenue that may result from the mandate.

How Donald Trump’s ‘America First’ edict delayed the global COVID-19 fight” via Erin Banco of POLITICO — Decisions by top officials responding to President Trump’s edict to protect “America First” contributed to a global delay in COVID-19 vaccine donations and a lack of effort to assist low- and middle-income countries, according to five current and former U.S. officials who worked under Trump on the federal pandemic response. The officials said that the failure to view the COVID-19 threat in global terms left some nations — including those where the omicron variant emerged in recent weeks — lacking inoculation and much more vulnerable to mutations. They described a White House and its health agencies fixated on one goal: obtaining enough drugs and protective gear to shield the American people from COVID-19.

— CORONA ECONOMICS —

Biden promised relief for long COVID-19 patients, but many struggle to get benefits” via Breanne Deppisch and Samantha-Jo Roth of Spectrum News — The Biden administration announced in July that some people with long-term symptoms of COVID-19 could qualify as disabled under the Americans with Disabilities Act — extending the landmark federal civil rights law to sufferers of so-called “long COVID” and affording them protection against discrimination. But six months after Biden’s announcement, many COVID-19 “long haulers” have described the process of applying for such benefits as an uphill battle, made all the more challenging by a dearth of specialized doctors and a brand-new illness that often presents as a complex combination of symptoms, each as unique as the patients themselves. Even before the start of the pandemic, the ADA application process was notoriously difficult. But for “long haulers,” the process is even more rigorous.

Long COVID-19 patients find an uphill battle for disability benefits. Image via Mount Sinai Health.

— MORE CORONA —

Study: Severe COVID-19 infections impact survivors’ mortality rates” via Christine Jordan Sexton of Florida Politics — The mortality risk for patients who recovered from severe COVID-19 infections is twice as high the year following their illness as those who haven’t been infected, a new UF study shows. Researchers’ findings appear in the journal Frontiers in Medicine. “These findings reinforce that the internal trauma of being sick enough to be hospitalized with COVID-19 has a big consequence for people’s health. This is a huge complication of COVID-19 that has not been shown before,” said Arch G. Mainous III, the study’s lead investigator and a professor in the department of health services research, management and policy at the UF College of Public Health and Health Professions.

Great. Even surviving COVID-19 can shorten your life expectancy. Image via AP.

‘Needle Nazis,’ ‘medical brown shirts,’ Josef Mengele and Stars of David: How Nazi-coronavirus comparisons have proliferated on the right” via Aaron Blake of The Washington Post — House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy, a California Republican, has generally taken a hands-off approach to Republican Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene of Georgia. But for a fleeting moment in May, it seemed, Greene had gone too far. After she made two comparisons between coronavirus restrictions and Nazi Germany, McCarthy issued an uncharacteristically stern rebuke: “Marjorie is wrong, and her intentional decision to compare the horrors of the Holocaust with wearing masks is appalling.” A few weeks later, Greene visited the Holocaust Museum and apologized. But just a few weeks after that, she was back to comparing coronavirus vaccination efforts to the Nazis — citing “medical brown shirts” — this time with virtually no pushback from GOP leaders.

— PRESIDENTIAL —

Biden’s young voter problem” via Steven Shepard of POLITICO — Younger Americans are a key part of Democrats’ base, but they have soured on Biden. Polling shows — despite winning roughly three-in-five voters under age 30 — Biden’s approval rating slipping below 50% among the youngest segment of the electorate. That includes a new Harvard Youth Poll released Wednesday that pegs Biden at 46% approval among Americans aged 18 to 29, compared to 51% who disapprove. It’s a 13-point drop for Biden from March when 59% of young Americans approved of the job Biden was doing. The slippage is consistent with other polling, which portrays an across-the-board polling rut for the President.

Joe Biden is just not hip with the kids. Image via AP.

— D.C. MATTERS —

The Supreme Court seems poised to uphold Mississippi’s abortion law.” via Adam Liptak of The New York Times — The Supreme Court seemed poised on Wednesday to uphold a Mississippi law that bans abortions after 15 weeks of pregnancy, based on sometimes tense and heated questioning at a momentous argument in the most important abortion case in decades. Such a ruling would be flatly at odds with what the court has said was the central holding of Roe v. Wade, the 1973 decision that established a constitutional right to abortion and prohibited states from banning the procedure before fetal viability, or around 23 weeks. But the court’s six-member conservative majority seemed divided about whether to stop at 15 weeks, for now at least, or whether to overrule Roe entirely, allowing states to ban abortions at any time or entirely.

Looks like Roe v. Wade is going down. Image via AP.

— CRISIS —

Jan. 6 panel to vote on contempt against former DOJ official” via Mary Clare Jalonick of The Associated Press — The House panel investigating the Jan. 6 U.S. Capitol insurrection will vote on pursuing contempt charges against a former Justice Department official Wednesday as the committee aggressively seeks to gain answers about the violent attack by Trump supporters. The vote to pursue charges against Jeffrey Clark, a former Justice Department lawyer who aligned with Trump as he tried to overturn his election defeat, comes as Trump’s top aide at the time, chief of staff Meadows, has agreed to cooperate with the panel on a limited basis. Last month, Clark appeared for a deposition but refused to answer any questions based on Trump’s legal efforts to block the committee’s investigation.

Jeffrey Clark is in it deep. Image via AP.

— EPILOGUE: TRUMP —

Trump tested positive for virus days before debate, two ex-officials say” via Maggie Haberman of The New York Times — Trump tested positive for coronavirus three days before his first debate with Biden. in 2020, two former administration officials said Wednesday. The White House did not announce the positive test at the time, and the President received a negative result shortly afterward and carried on with a campaign rally and the debate, the officials said. The Guardian first reported the account, which cited a forthcoming book by Trump’s chief of staff Meadows. The two former officials, who spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to discuss the matter publicly, confirmed the timeline on Trump’s test results contained in “The Chief’s Chief” by Meadows.

Superspreader: Donald Trump had COVID-19 much sooner than first thought.

How Trump-backed secretary of state candidates would change elections in the United States” via Amber Phillips of The Washington Post — Former President Trump’s efforts to overturn the 2020 election are evolving into a movement that may be a more potent threat to democracy: one that places his supporters in elected roles with oversight of elections at the local and state levels. That would give him and his allies more say over who wins elections. The ultimate win for them would be to put in place Secretaries of State, who oversee how elections are conducted in most states and sign off on the results. More than any other category of elected official, secretaries of state could be instrumental in overturning the popular vote in their state — an unprecedented move in American history.

Trump in Southwest Florida for fundraiser inspired by Melania’s White House holiday décor” via Phil Fernandez of the Naples Daily News — Former First Lady Melania Trump famously questioned a top aide in a recorded conversation on whether she had to come up with a holiday look for the White House. “I have to do it, right?” Trump said, using an F word in describing her enthusiasm. “Who gives a (expletive) about Christmas stuff and decoration?” Her widely panned blood-red trees, compared to car wash drive-thrus, scenes from “The Shining,” and other terrifying experiences, are an inspiration for a private Friday fundraiser the former President is hosting in Naples. With a re-creation of her Yuletide handy work as a backdrop, attendees and three family members are paying up to $30,000 to pose for one photo only with the happy couple and access to a 7 p.m. party.


— LOCAL NOTES —

Keys politician arrested in Hialeah on domestic violence charge, says he has drug problem” via Gwen Filosa of the Miami Herald — A Florida Keys elected official was arrested Tuesday in Hialeah on a charge of domestic violence battery after his wife told police he struck her in the face with an empty pill bottle he threw during a rage. Monroe County Commissioner Eddie Martinez was jailed at the Miami-Dade Detention and Rehabilitation Center. His bond was set at $1,500. His arrest and picture remained on the detention center’s website Wednesday. It was unclear whether he had an attorney in this case or was released from jail. Martinez denied hitting his wife, Maria, and said he struggles with prescription pain medication, police said.

Eddie Martinez has a laundry list of problems.

Summer lawsuit trial seen in deadly Surfside condo collapse” via Curt Anderson of The Associated Press — The time frame for a trial to begin would be July or August, Miami-Dade Circuit Judge Michael Hanzman said at a Wednesday hearing. He added that he won’t look with favor on delays. “I’m not granting extensions or continuances. Not in this case,” Hanzman said. “Come next summer, we’re going to be picking a jury in this case. It’s not going to go beyond that.” The lawsuits filed in the aftermath of the 12-story Champlain Towers South collapse on June 24 in Surfside seek to affix blame and collect money for the victims, family members and property owners. One potential class-action case that could resolve the entire legal matter was filed last month, contending that excavation and construction of a luxury building next door worsened serious structural defects.

Amid ‘fraudulent’ use of disabled parking permits in South Beach, city considers action” via Martin Vassolo of the Miami Herald — It can be hard to find street parking in tourist-packed South Beach, even for those who pay for residential parking access. But resident activists and city officials say there is something more suspicious at play than a simple supply-and-demand issue: the fraudulent use of disabled parking permits. Videos taken in the city’s South of Fifth neighborhood and shared to social media purport to show restaurant workers parking in resident-only spots using disabled parking hang tags that bear the recognizable blue-and-white wheelchair symbol. Resident-activist David Suarez, who leads the neighborhood group Save SOFI, said workers abuse a city policy that allows those with disabled parking permits to park their cars for free in resident-only parking spots.

A small town plans to leave the Broward Sheriff’s Office. Will it conquer the obstacles to start its own police force?” via Lisa J. Huriash of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — Although a tiny town was supposed to have created its own police department by now, the project is stalled, cost estimates have gone up and it’s unclear exactly when officers will have a force of their own. The town of Pembroke Park — a 1.6-mile-long community nestled near Hollywood — blames much of the delay on red tape that comes from getting computer software and linking it to Broward County’s regional 911 system. Broward Sheriff Gregory Tony, whose agency will lose its contract when the new department starts running, has publicly listed some of the town’s troubles, saying “basic elements of good policing” aren’t close to being ready.

SFWMD head says construction north of Lake O is ‘critical’ for lake’s health” via Ryan Nicol of Florida Politics — The South Florida Water Management District Executive Director (SFWMD) lauded a new surge in funding for the Lake Okeechobee Watershed Restoration Project (LOWRP), calling the work “critical for the health of Lake Okeechobee.” Drew Bartlett spoke before the House Agriculture and Natural Resources Appropriations Subcommittee Wednesday as lawmakers prepare for the 2022 Legislative Session. Earlier this year, the Legislature approved $50 million in annual funding for LOWRP, which includes money to move forward with construction on water storage facilities north of Lake Okeechobee. “Northern storage is so critical,” Bartlett told lawmakers Wednesday. “It is important for the health of the lake. It is important for the health of the estuaries.”

Embattled Jacksonville inspector general sues City Hall” via Nate Monroe of The Florida Times-Union — Jacksonville’s embattled inspector general, Lisa Green, filed a lawsuit against City Hall this week accusing an oversight committee of engaging in “unfettered manipulation” of her office and “grossly” depriving her of due process by placing her on administrative leave after employees in her own office filed multiple whistleblower complaints against her. The city’s Office of Inspector General is in crisis. Some of the most serious issues revolve around an alleged romantic relationship Green had with a former director of investigations in the office, something mentioned in a complaint filed by her No. 2, Andrew MacFarlane, as well as at least one other whistleblower complaint that remains confidential. Green’s lawsuit argues that city and law-enforcement officials lack the power to place her on administrative leave.

Osceola Schools blast consultant’s ‘greed’ in health plan choice” via Gabrielle Russon of Florida Politics — The Osceola School District hired a consultant to help the district pick which health insurance company to hire. But instead of helping the school district spend its money wisely, the district is accusing the consultant of choosing an insurance company that rang up health care costs for the district while the consultant secretively collected nearly $4 million from insurance carriers, the school district said in a new federal lawsuit. In the lawsuit, the school district said it paid a capped annual fee of up to $195,650 to Gallagher Benefit Services for the consultant to analyze different insurance companies and help the district hire providers for employee benefits. Gallagher recommended hiring Cigna, which the district called “an unmitigated disaster.”

Replacing Eckerd Connects won’t fix systemic failures in foster care, watchdogs say” via Daniel Figueroa IV of Florida Politics — While mismanagement and some shady business practices led to the you’re-fired-you-can’t-fire-me-I-quit scenario that played out between Eckerd and DCF last month, watchdogs say an unbalanced and overburdened system fueled by excessive family separations will lead to the new agency experiencing similar issues. “No matter who takes over, if they don’t deal with wrongful removals, it will be Eckerd all over again,” said Richard Wexler, Executive Director of the National Coalition for Child Protection Reform. “It is infuriating when the Sheriff in Pinellas only points a finger at Eckerd and doesn’t stop to think he’s the one dropping all these children on Eckerd.” According to analysis from the NCCPR, Pinellas County removes children at a rate 2.5 times greater than the state average.

Joe Gruters, Fiona McFarland to host town hall on Siesta Key incorporation” via Jacob Ogles of Florida Politics — Lawmakers representing Siesta Key will hold a town hall meeting about the prospects of incorporating as a city. Sen. Gruters and Rep. McFarland, both Sarasota Republicans, will host the public forum Dec. 8 at 6 p.m. at the Siesta Key Chapel. The entire Sarasota County Legislative Delegation is advertised to attend. “Members of the community have made a request for the Legislature to allow the voters of Siesta Key to incorporate so that they can control their own destiny,” Gruters said. “This is a significant request being made and after meeting with numerous constituents, I feel it is worthy of a discussion and possible vote.”

New K-9 cop sniffs out SIM cards, other hidden electronics to fight computer crime” via the Tallahassee Democrat — A dog that can find hidden electronic storage devices (ESD) is now working for the Tallahassee office of the Florida Department of Law Enforcement — the first such K-9 cop locally. Rocket, handled by FDLE-Tallahassee Special Agent Aida Limongi, was introduced at a media availability Wednesday. The 1-year-old black Lab can “sniff out anything that can digitally store information, like USB drives, hidden cameras, computers, tablets, thumb drives, cellphones, micro-SD cards and SIM cards,” the department said in a release. Here’s how: The dogs can detect the compounds used in the circuit boards in storage devices. Criminals use such devices to hide evidence, such as child pornography images.

Trulieve to open new Tampa cannabis dispensary Thursday” via Kelly Hayes of Florida Politics — Trulieve Cannabis will open its 110th Florida store this Thursday at its newest location on North Dale Mabry Highway in Tampa. The cannabis dispensary company will host a ribbon-cutting and begin serving patients at this location at 9 a.m. on Thursday and will continue the celebration with all-day festivities and deals. The location will become the store’s sixth Tampa-based store, and its 157th location nationwide. “We are thrilled to open our newest dispensary in Tampa, a city and community that has been an integral part of the Trulieve growth story,” Trulieve CEO Kim Rivers said in a statement.

Noah Valenstein elected to BTT Board — Former DEP Secretary Valenstein was elected to the Bonefish & Tarpon Trust Board of Directors this week. BTT operates across the Southeastern U.S. and is dedicated to conserving the bonefish, tarpon and permit as well as their habitats and fisheries. “It is an honor to serve alongside such a dedicated board and focus on protecting Florida’s fishing legacy,” Valenstein said. “The restoration of Florida’s water resources requires a science-based and collaborative approach, and Bonefish & Tarpon Trust has shown its commitment to both.” BTT President and CEO Jim McDuffie added, “The leadership, knowledge, and commitment he brings to the BTT Board of Directors will ensure that we make the most of our opportunities to improve water quality, conserve coastal habitats, and strengthen fisheries management.”

Noah Valenstein will take up the banner for Florida’s fishing legacy. Image via FGCU.

David Coburn’s tenure coming to an end? FSU reportedly contacting candidates about athletic director’s job” via Jim Henry of the Tallahassee Democrat — Florida State’s senior leadership has been in transition the past 16 months. And now it appears Director of Athletics Coburn, who originally was hired in an interim role before assuming the position full-time in May 2019, is nearing the end of his tenure with the Seminoles. On Wednesday, Pete Thamel of Yahoo Sports reported that FSU is “exploring options” and contacting “potential candidates” for the Seminoles’ A.D. position. In an interview with the Democrat in September, Coburn said he had not decided his future. Coburn was placed in the interim athletic director’s role by former FSU President John Thrasher in 2018 to lead the department through financial challenges. The COVID-19 pandemic and other university issues led Thrasher to extend Coburn’s tenure.

— TOP OPINION —

The court cannot fool itself: Eviscerating ‘Roe’ would upend lives” via The Washington Post editorial board — SCOTUS should strike Mississippi’s law, first, because a person should have a right to choose whether to carry a pregnancy to term. But the court must also consider the severe practical consequences of overruling its precedents. Mississippi’s lawyers hit peak absurdity when they argue that women no longer have a compelling practical interest in abortion access. They have cited advances in contraception, access to health care, laws that allow mothers to turn over their newborns to safe facilities, even female enrollment in law and medical schools to claim that abortion is no longer a necessary backstop to enable “women to participate equally in the economic and social life of the Nation.” If the court accepts these arguments, it will amount to an act of willful blindness.

— OPINIONS —

There’s another COVID-19-related ‘virus’ out there. This time, doctors are at risk” via the Miami Herald editorial board — There’s another worrisome, COVID-19-related health care scare infecting politically connected doctors who have a bullhorn and a bully pulpit. Unlike the coronavirus that emanated from China, or omicron, just discovered in South Africa, this virus comes from the land of MAGA. “Here comes the MEV — the Midterm Election Variant! They NEED a reason to push unsolicited nationwide mail-in ballots. Democrats will do anything to CHEAT during an election — but we’re not going to let them!” That’s Texas Republican U.S. Rep. Ronny Jackson on Twitter, claiming that omicron is just a Democratic hoax in that party’s quest to win elections at all costs — even subverting democracy. (Hmm, where would they get an idea like that?)

With tax break, Legislature again picks winners (Full Sail) and losers (Orange County)” via the Orlando Sentinel editorial board — The next time you hear a politician deny there’s a quid pro quo in campaign contributions, consider responding with these three words: Full Sail University. Top executives at the for-profit Winter Park college are generous donors to Republicans who run the state Legislature and occupy the Governor’s Mansion. And now, Full Sail stands to benefit from a tasty property tax break courtesy of the GOP-controlled Florida Legislature this past spring. We’ve said it before, but this is yet another instance of government picking winners and losers, which the GOP denounces publicly but practices regularly.

Another appeals court district is another Florida boondoggle” via South Florida Sun-Sentinel editorial board — With five district courts of appeal that appear to be efficient, Florida does not need another at considerable burden to the taxpayers. But that’s what the Florida Supreme Court is proposing to the Legislature on the questionable premise that it would increase public confidence in those appeals courts. It’s a boondoggle entailing another $50 million courthouse and ongoing salary and staff expenses of at least $1 million a year, plus endless complications for lawyers and an invitation to Gov. DeSantis to put six more conservative allies on the appellate bench. If public confidence is indeed flagging, as the court supposes, it’s because of blatantly political appointments by DeSantis and his predecessor, Rick Scott.

— ON TODAY’S SUNRISE —

The United States Supreme Court’s conservative majority is signaling that they will allow states to ban abortion much earlier than it has been before; Florida Democrats vow they won’t sit idly by.

Also, on today’s Sunrise:

— Lawmakers are tackling the affordable housing crisis, noting that it appears to be an ever-present crisis.

— And the state Surgeon General pledged his commitment to addressing the AIDS crisis while speaking at an event on World AIDS Day.

To listen, click on the image below:

— ALOE —

Email I didn’t open — “Florida named #4 state for tiny homes, according to new study” from Digital Third Coast

The Florida Retail Federation says shoppers are buying holiday gifts earlier this year” via Robbie Gaffney of WUSF — Florida Retail Federation spokesperson Amanda Bevis says shopping early for holiday gifts has been a growing trend for years. This year, she says retailers are seeing shoppers even earlier than before. “Part of that may be that people are just ready for the holiday season and want to start marking gifts off their list. Another reason for that may be the supply chain disruptions,” Bevis says. Bevis says extended Black Friday deals could also be spurring the rise in early holiday shopping. “61% of shoppers surveyed this month said they’ve already started browsing and buying holiday gifts, and that represents a 10% increase from a decade ago,” Bevis says.

Tampa Bay’s Festival of Lights kicks off with a million lights, Santa’s village” via Brianda Villegas of WFLA — For the first time, the Hillsborough County Fair has produced the two-mile driving tour — known as Tampa Bay’s Festival of Lights — on their own. According to festival organizers, the drive-thru attraction is filled with more than 150 displays and a million lights from entrance to exit. “We have dazzling, sparkling lights that you can experience together in the car with your family, all snuggled up nice and warm,” Hillsborough County Fair Manager Suzanne Holcomb said. Some of the displays that feature LED technology throughout the festival include a gingerbread house, elves wrestling alligators and even Santa and his reindeer riding on an airboat.

Be prepared to get lit in Hillsborough County. Image via Facebook.

Wakulla’s Surf Dog, a survivor and free spirit, named Grand Marshal of Panacea Christmas parade” via Ana Goni-Lessan of the Tallahassee Democrat — Years ago, when a thunderstorm rolled into Ochlockonee Bay at night, locals used to wake up, think of Surf Dog and hope he was OK. Surf Dog, now known as Buddy, captivated the hearts of Panacea residents who would watch him run throughout Wakulla County, especially around Surf Road. People tried to catch him. But Surf Dog’s free spirit couldn’t be tamed. Surf Dog got so popular, his name is even on the water tower. “Home of Surf Dog” is painted above Ochlockonee Bay in big blue letters. Local businesses sell Surf Dog merchandise, and there’s even a book about him. This week, Surf Dog will be representing his hometown as Grand Marshal of the 17th annual Christmas in the Panacea parade.

— HAPPY BIRTHDAY —

Best wishes to Sen. Debbie Mayfield, former Rep. Larry CrowSarah Criser Elwell, and Joey Redner.

___

Sunburn is authored and assembled by Peter SchorschPhil AmmannRenzo Downey and Drew Wilson.


5.) MORNING BREW

December 02, 2021
Morning Brew
SimpliSafe

Good morning. Companies are changing their names to better represent their future ambitions. First, Facebook became Meta as part of its push to build the metaverse, and Square, Jack Dorsey’s payments company, renamed itself Block yesterday to reflect its expansion into crypto/blockchain.

We’ll only celebrate when Netflix rebrands as The Selling Sunset Cinematic Universe.

Neal Freyman, Matty Merritt, Jamie Wilde

MARKETS

Nasdaq

15,254.05

S&P

4,513.04

Dow

34,022.04

10-Year

1.408%

Bitcoin

$57,157.10

Oil

$66.63

*Stock data as of market close, cryptocurrency data as of 6:00pm ET. Here’s what these numbers mean.
  • Markets: The major indexes continued their fall as the first Omicron case in the US was identified in California. The S&P just posted its worst 2-day drop since October 2020.
  • Politics: Don’t look now, but another government shutdown deadline is approaching. Lawmakers are negotiating a short-term spending patch to avoid a partial shutdown that would begin at 12:01am ET on Saturday.

TRAVEL

The Debate Over Travel Bans

A collage with a plane and a torn boarding passDianna “Mick” McDougall; Getty Images/fStop Images – Stephan Zirwes, imagestock, VanReeel, japatino, nanami_o

As more cases of the new, highly mutated Covid variant Omicron pop up around the globe—including the US—countries are introducing more travel restrictions in an attempt to slow the virus’s spread.

The CDC said on Tuesday it might require all air travelers coming into the US to show a negative Covid test within one day of departure (the current window for vaccinated international travelers to provide a negative test is three days). The Biden administration is also weighing whether to require people entering the country to self-quarantine for seven days, regardless of their test result.

  • The US, along with many other governments, has already blocked all foreign travel from eight countries in southern Africa, where Omicron was first detected.
  • Several nations, like Israel and Japan, have barred all foreign visitors.

There’s been loads of pushback

While some governments say travel bans are an important tool to buy more time and gather more data on Omicron, the WHO is calling BS. Health officials there argue that blanket travel bans are ineffective at controlling the spread of Omicron and unfairly punish the nations targeted. Plus, the new variant was already spreading in Europe before it was detected in southern Africa, so…the glitter’s already been spilled.

What does the science say? There’s not much data on the effectiveness of travel bans during Covid. One study showed that blanket travel bans early in the pandemic did slow down the spread of the virus. Another study didn’t find much evidence to support that.

Researchers are more certain that other types of travel policies that the US is considering, such as post-arrival testing and self-quarantining, can help curb transmission.

Big picture: Pity the airline executive. Covid is already projected to cost the tourism sector $1.6 trillion this year, and the latest Omicron developments could put another dent in the travel industry’s rebound.—NF

            

SPORTS

MLB’s Owners to Players

Clip from the SandlotThe Sandlot

Just when you thought baseball couldn’t get any slower, it went and stopped altogether.

MLB’s 5-year collective bargaining agreement with its players expired at 11:59pm ET last night, meaning the league has now entered a lockout that halts all operations—no free-agent signings, no trades, no use of facilities by players, and no contact between players and teams. It’s the first MLB work stoppage in 27 years and the ninth in league history.

Think of a lockout as an anti-strike. It’s when management (in this case, MLB owners) tells employees “you can’t come to work even if you want to” in a bid to speed up negotiations.

How did we get here? It’s a classic labor dispute over how to distribute the spoils of a $10 billion league. The players’ union wants some things (better pay for younger players in their prime, for one), and the owners want other things (an expanded postseason, a salary floor).

Looking ahead…the big worry is that the lockout will bleed into the season, which starts three months from now. But experts think the two sides will reach a new agreement by then.—NF

            

MEDIA

Spotify Confirms This Year Was Weird

While most of us spent yesterday wondering how Bo Burnham cracked our Spotify Wrapped top five and what a “wistful” audio aura means, the music streaming service also released its retrospective on the year.

Top artist: Puerto Rican hit-maker Bad Bunny was the most streamed artist globally for the second year in a row, but this year he did it without even releasing a new album. Taylor Swift, BTS, Drake, and Justin Bieber rounded out the top five.

Top album: As a planet we were all really going through it because Olivia Rodrigo’s Sour was the most-streamed album.

Top song: “drivers license” by Olivia Rodrigo. Obviously.

Top podcast: Last year, Spotify nabbed the exclusive rights to The Joe Rogan Experience in a $100 million deal, and this year it was the company’s most popular podcast.

  • Rogan was followed by Call Her Daddy, which Spotify brought to its platform for $60+ million in June.

Sign of the times: Streams of the playlist “Music for Plants” have grown 1,400% during the pandemic. And of course, there were over 42 million streams of vaccine-related playlists this year.—MM

            

TOGETHER WITH SIMPLISAFE

“Bah, Humbug”—Thieves Everywhere

SimpliSafe

Listen up all you package prowlers and stocking stealers, SimpliSafe has put you on notice this holiday season.

As for the rest of you… SimpliSafe’s robust, reliable, easy-to-install home security system is 40% off right now, meaning a whole bunch of people like you can enjoy a safe and secure holiday season.

In just 30 minutes, you can blanket every room, window, and door with sensors and cameras that detect break-ins, fires, flooding, and more. Oh, and did we mention that it’s backed by SimpliSafe’s 24/7 home monitoring service for rapid police and fire dispatch in an emergency?

Want some more impressive numbers other than that awesome 40% offSimpliSafe comes with a 100% satisfaction guarantee, meaning you can try it risk-free for 60 days.

Sorry burglars, you’re going to be left out in the cold this year.

Get 40% off your SimpliSafe system right here.

GRAB BAG

Key Performance Indicators

Beach scene in Tel AvivAmir Levy/Getty Images

Stat: Tel Aviv is the world’s most expensive city to live in, jumping from fifth place last year, per the Economist Intelligence Unit. It’s followed by Paris and Singapore (tied for second), Zurich, Hong Kong, New York, Geneva, Copenhagen, Los Angeles, and Osaka. Syria’s capital, Damascus, is the world’s cheapest city.

Quote: “While we now know where Peng is, I have serious doubts that she is free, safe, and not subject to censorship, coercion, and intimidation.”

Steve Simon, chairman and CEO of the Women’s Tennis Association, said the tour is suspending all tournaments in China in response to the treatment of tennis star Peng Shuai, who accused a high-ranking Communist Party official of sexual assault and subsequently disappeared from public view for more than two weeks. The WTA’s retaliatory move represents a major departure from other US-based sports leagues, which mostly try to play nice with China.

Read: When multilevel marketing met Gen Z. (The Atlantic)

            

CRYPTO

Shredding a Banksy Is So 2018

Banksy's Yuki Iwamura/Getty Images

Instead, the startup Particle is cutting one up into 10,000 NFTs. It announced yesterday that its first digitally sliced piece will be Banksy’s “Love is in the Air,” which it’s displaying at Art Basel this week.

Here’s how you divide a priceless work of art into blockchain-backed ownership shares:

1. Buy the art: In May, Particle cofounder and former Christie’s co-chair Loïc Gouzer purchased the Banksy work for $12.9 million (far above its $3–$5 million estimate) in a move likely meant to build hype.

2. Destroy the art: Particle plans to “legally destroy” the work by donating it to an eponymous nonprofit it’s established. That’s meant to strip the canvas of its value because “value can’t exist in two places,” Particle’s managing director told Axios. The alternative is burning it…which is exactly what was done to another Banksy in March.

3. Sell the NFTs: 10,000 “Particles” will go up for sale in early January. Buyers will receive a digital collector’s card, permission to view the painting IRL, and “the right to call the painting theirs.” Notably, Particle will earn royalties from any resale action.

Zoom out: In NFT land, social media hype = value. Particle’s success will depend on rallying an online community similar to Bored Ape Yacht Club’s or ConstitutionDAO’s. Some choice memes wouldn’t hurt.—JW

            

WHAT ELSE IS BREWING

  • Executives at eight top cryptocurrency firms will testify before the House Financial Services Committee next week in the first such hearing for the industry. Hey look ma, we made it?
  • Capital One became the biggest bank yet to scrap overdraft fees, following Ally Bank’s and PNC’s similar announcements earlier this year.
  • Match Group will pay $441 million to Tinder’s founders to settle a lawsuit that alleged Match intentionally lowballed Tinder’s valuation to avoid paying billions of dollars.
  • Toys “R” Us is aiming to open a store in New Jersey’s American Dream mall later this month. It would be the only Toys “R” Us location in the country.

FROM THE CREW

Our Holiday Sale Is Almost Over

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BREW’S BETS

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We look forward to this every December: The “52 things I learned in 2021” list by Tom Whitwell.

Another cherished winter tradition: The punny names of Scottish snow plows.

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GAMES

The Puzzle Section

Brew Mini: Today’s puzzle is definitely one you can PR on. Take a deep breath, then play it here.

Three Headlines and a Lie

Three of these news headlines are real and one is faker than a “Happy Holidays!” from your dentist’s office. Can you guess the odd one out?

  1. Gritty announces run for Pennsylvania senate seat
  2. Those cute cats online? They help spread misinformation
  3. Sperm is being used to create an eco-friendly alternative to plastic
  4. Terry’s and Heinz produce ‘world first’ chocolate orange mayonnaise

SHARE THE BREW

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ANSWER

We made up the Gritty one. But we’d vote for him.
✤ A Note From Divvy

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Written by Neal FreymanJamie Wilde, and Matty Merritt

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6.) THE FACTUAL

2 DEC 2021

The Factual

Facts, not fear.

TRENDING TOPICS
Mississippi abortion case • Capital One overdraft fees • WTA suspends China tournaments • Greece’s vaccine mandate • Global AIDS progress
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#1 in U.S. News • 229 articles

How have Supreme Court justices reacted to arguments challenging Roe v. Wade?

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  1. Highly-rated – last 48 hrs
    Supreme Court conservatives appear willing to gut abortion rights.
    Reuters (Center) • Factual Grade 78% • 4 min read

    The court heard about two hours of oral arguments in Mississippi’s bid to revive its ban on abortion starting at 15 weeks of pregnancy. Roe v. Wade recognized that the right to personal privacy under the U.S. Constitution protects a woman’s ability to terminate her pregnancy. Mississippi asked the justices to overturn the Roe ruling.

    The liberal justices warned against ditching longstanding legal precedents like Roe and abandoning a right American women have come to rely upon. Conservative justices downplayed the idea that the court must be careful in overturning its own precedents, noting that it has done so in many contexts.

    Conservative Chief Justice John Roberts suggested the court could uphold Mississippi’s law without overturning Roe. “The Constitution is neither pro-life nor pro-choice on the question of abortion but leaves the issue to the people of the states or perhaps Congress to resolve,” Justice Kavanaugh said.
  1. Different political viewpoint
    Can SCOTUS draw a new line on abortion?
    Reason (Moderate Right) • Factual Grade 78% • 3 min read
  1. Selected long-read
    Roe v. Wade isn’t the only way to protect a woman’s right to choose. (2020)
    Bookings Institute (Moderate Left) • Factual Grade 79% • 5 min read

View all articles

#1 in Business News • 10 articles

Why is Capital One getting rid of its overdraft fees?

It’s the largest U.S. bank yet to end the industry practice of charging customers a hefty fee, typically $25 to $35 in each instance, for allowing transactions that exceed a…
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#1 in World News • 44 articles

Why is the Women’s Tennis Association suspending its China tournaments?

The decision from the WTA comes after Chinese tennis star Peng Shuai alleged that she was sexually assaulted by China’s former Vice Premier Zhang Ga…
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#2 in World News • 26 articles

Are mandatory Covid-19 vaccinations going to become common in Europe?

Greece’s Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis announced on Tuesday citizens over the age of 60 will be required to be vaccinated against Covid-19. Those older than 60 have unti…
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TODAY’S POLL

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YESTERDAY’S POLLShould more cities open safe injection sites?

407 votes, 45 comments

Context: New York City opens safe injection sites in bid to decrease overdoses.

HIGHLIGHTED COMMENTS

 No – The focus should be on stopping drug use – not via jail but via treatment – not making it “safer.” Drugs are not safe, even if they are made “safer.” Treat the disease, not the symptoms.

 Yes – As someone who worked with addicts at a methadone clinic, I believe we must decide as a society whether we will once and for all treat addi…

 Unsure – In the BMJ study referenced in the City Journal article it does potentially bring into question the impact of these sites (because despite the existence of these sites crime has risen, deaths …

#1 in Health News • 19 articles

How close are we to an HIV/AIDS vaccine?

About 40 years since the earliest reports of what became known as AIDS, scientists are still [trying] to develop a vaccine against the virus tha…
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Trump tested positive for Covid-19 three days before first debate with Biden, former chief of staff says.

9,466 Articles Analyzed Visit The Factual

7.) LIBERTY NATION

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FROM OUR NEWSROOM

Thursday’s Breaking News

Click Here

SCOTUS Considers MS Abortion Law – Will the Roe Precedent Stand?
By Scott D. Cosenza, Esq.

It was a hot bench as the Supreme Court heard arguments on a re-do of abortion law in the United States.

Click Here

“You don’t have to burn books to destroy a culture. Just get people to stop reading them.”

― Ray Bradbury

Omicron is Here. Now What?
By Kelli Ballard

Now that the newest variant of COVID is in the U.S., what are officials saying?

Click Here

Today’s Political Meme

Sometimes, you just need to laugh!

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Twitter’s New Privacy Rules – What Will They Mean for Journalism?
By Keelin Ferris

The new rules bring more questions than answers for the future of the platform.

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The Subtle Racial Bias of the Left-Wing Media
By Jeff Charles

Does the left-wing activist media actually care about black Americans?

Click Here

From the Liberty Nation Studios

No Escape for Democrats Locked in Biden’s Agenda – LN Radio Videocast – President v President? Or distracting smoke and mirrors? by Liberty Nation Staff – Watch Now

Biden v Trump in 2024 or Democrat Smoke and Mirrors? – LN Radio Videocast – Which candidate would come out on top? by Liberty Nation Staff – Watch Now

Liberty Nation On The Go: Listen to Today’s Top News 12.02.21
By Liberty Nation Staff

Conservative News – Hot Off The Press – Audio Playlist – AD FREE

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LibertyNation.com brings a new generation of writers to the vanguard of political discourse. Our content is entirely original, providing readers and viewers with bold, provocative analysis and commentary on current events.

For more news, LibertyNation.com recommends the news aggregator WHATFINGER.com — the #1 Alternative to Drudge.

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8.) FOX NEWS

 


9.) UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL

 


10.) THE FEDERALIST PAPERS

Web version
School District Unleashes Armed Agents on Parents in Their Own Homes
Posted by Mike Landry, The Western Journal
This should never happen in America. Read more…
Young Not Stupid: Sheriff Reveals Truth About COVID Testing Company, Then Takes a Major Stand
Posted by Cameron Arcand, The Western Journal
Sheriff Alex Villanueva is one of the few public officials willing to stand up to communist China. Read more…
Watch: Psaki Folds When Doocy Hits Her with 6 Brutal Questions
Posted by Randy DeSoto, The Western Journal
She doesn’t help Biden’s image. Read more…
Must See: Fed-Up Small Business Owner Dunks on Biden in 2 Words – Video
Posted by Samantha Chang, The Western Journal
The other folks on the Fox broadcast started laughing after Joyner made his incisive dig. Read more…
Smollett Prosecution Drops Bombshell: ‘Dry Run’ of Attack Caught on Video
Posted by Michael Austin, The Western Journal
Smollett and the Nigerian brothers were allegedly caught on video during a ‘dry run’ of the attack. Read more…
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11.) AMERICAN ENTERPRISE INSTITUTE

AEI’s daily publication of independent research, insightful analysis, and scholarly debate.
What is happening to my profession?
Sally Satel | Quillette
The implementation of the social justice agenda in the medical field has constrained collegial discourse, challenged the maintenance of standards, and suppressed honest analysis of certain problems.
Full Story
facebook
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The semantics of ‘surveillance capitalism’: Much ado about something
Jim Harper and Neil Chilson | American Enterprise Institute
The phrase “surveillance capitalism” has become an organizing idea for many critics of Big Tech. That phrase overstates the power dynamics at play in commercial collection and use of personal information, but valid concerns with the present-day information economy do exist.
Full Story
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The business of knowing: Private market data and contemporary intelligence
Klon Kitchen | Hoover Institution
The government should have access to consumer data on Americans — but it should also have greater oversight.
Full Story
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Economic mobility in America: A state-of-the-art primer
Scott Winship | Archbridge Institute
This report is the third in a series summarizing the state of intergenerational mobility in the United States.
Full Story
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Economics, Housing, and Poverty
Republicans battle over ‘socialism lite’
Michael R. Strain | Bloomberg Opinion
The future of the federal workforce
Andrew G. Biggs | House Committee on Oversight and Reform
5 questions for Mark Mills on the cloud revolution
James Pethokoukis and Mark Mills | AEIdeas
Housing finance: Insights on the new normal (week 47, 2021)
Edward J. Pinto and Tobias Peter | American Enterprise Institute
Will cloud computing create a new roaring twenties? My long-read Q&A with Mark Mills
James Pethokoukis and Mark Mills | AEIdeas
Foreign Policy and Defense
Joe Biden’s nuclear talks with Iran seem destined to fail
Michael Rubin | 19fortyfive.com
Narendra Modi surrenders to the farmers
Sadanand Dhume | The Wall Street Journal
Biden must block UN recognition of the Taliban
Michael Rubin | Washington Examiner
Politics, Society, and Culture
Noncitizen voting doesn’t pass this test
Howard Husock | The Hill
Build Back Better is a gift to rich, blue-state Democratic voters
Jonah Goldberg | The Dispatch
Save the cobalt!
Howard Husock | City Journal
A post-Roe abortion political ‘revolution’ is unlikely
Michael Barone | Washington Examiner
New York City safe injection sites send odious message to drug addicts
Howard Husock | New York Post
Health Care and Technology
Answering the Paris Call: An important step for US cybersecurity leadership
Shane Tews and Ivana Stradner | AEIdeas
Education
Social-emotional learning and the perils of teaching as therapy
Frederick M. Hess | Education Week
On attempts to ban books, draw a line between censorship and age appropriateness
Robert Pondiscio | InsideSources
Podcasts
What is critical race theory?
Danielle Pletka and Marc A. Thiessen | “What the Hell Is Going On?”

12.) THE FLIP SIDE

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Thursday, December 2, 2021

SCOTUS Abortion Case

“After nearly two hours of oral argument on Wednesday in Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization, [Justice Clarence] Thomas and the other members of the court’s six-justice conservative majority seemed poised to uphold a Mississippi law that bans almost all abortions after the 15th week of pregnancy.” SCOTUSblog

Here’s our prior coverage of the caseThe Flip Side

From the Right

The right is optimistic that the Court will overturn Roe.
“Defenders of Roe argued that reversing the case would be disruptive, that women have relied on the precedent to guarantee access to abortion for almost 50 years. Yet [the late Justice Ruth Bader] Ginsburg’s 1992 remarks demonstrate that Roe itself was also disruptive. It completely ruptured the prior legal regime, and our nation has been living with the fallout ever since…

“If the Court reverses Roe, it won’t do so because the majority hates women or views women as second-class citizens. Indeed, a woman would almost certainly be in the Court’s majority, and the Court would leave intact the ability of legislatures to protect abortion rights. Instead it will be because the majority embraces a constitutional order that limits the power of the judiciary to write laws and expands the power of the people to define the heart of liberty for themselves.”
David French, The Atlantic

“A few months after Roe was decided, the (pro-choice) legal scholar John Hart Ely noted that Roe had created a ‘super-protected right’ that ‘is not inferable from the language of the Constitution, the framers’ thinking respecting the specific problem in issue, any general value derivable from the provisions they included, or the nation’s governmental structure,’ and thus answered ‘a question the Constitution has not made the Court’s business.’ Roe ‘is bad,’ Ely concluded, ‘because it is bad constitutional law, or rather because it is not constitutional law and gives almost no sense of an obligation to try to be.’ And that should be enough to justify its dissolution

“[Justice Sonia] Sotomayor suggested more than once that if the Court were to overturn Roe, it might be seen as acting in a ‘political’ manner. But it was Roe that was ‘political.’ Overturning it, and returning it to the people, would be anti-politics. Unlike, say, jury trials or free speech or the right to bear arms, abortion was never a question for the courts, and for them to dispense with it for good would be a significant win for separation of powers.”
Charles C. W. Cooke, National Review

“Decades of advancements in science and technology have enhanced our understanding that human life begins at conception. We now know, for example, that an unborn child’s heart is actively beating around the fifth or sixth week. Pain receptors begin forming around the seventh week…

“Not only does Mississippi’s law limiting elective abortion after 15 weeks align with new scientific insights, it is in line with the laws in Europe where countries are often considered much more progressive than the U.S. The majority of these European nations restrict elective abortions to 12 weeks. An overwhelming 47 out of 50 European nations either prohibit elective abortions or limit them to 15 weeks or earlier…

“Public opinion also supports limits for abortion that Roe doesn’t allow. A large majority (76%) of Americans consistently say they want abortion limited to – at most – the first three months of pregnancy. Poll after poll confirms these findings.”
Jeanne Mancini, Fox News

From the Left

The left worries that the Court will overturn Roe.
“The justices should have no illusions: A partial or total reversal of Roe would devastate not only the Americans who rely on the abortion rights that have been theirs for nearly 50 years, but also the court itself, undermining its legitimacy… The court’s authority derives not from its ability to enforce its declarations — it lacks any such power — but from the fact that Americans respect its decisions. Those decisions must reflect something greater than mere whim or raw political power in the Senate. The court should overturn precedent only in exceptional circumstances

“Justice Brett M. Kavanaugh on Wednesday cited landmark cases such as Brown v. Board of Education, which overturned previous court holdings, to argue that the court sometimes makes its most important decisions when it breaks with past rulings. The justices should take no comfort in this strained comparison. If the court substantially reverses or strikes Roe, Americans will not remember it as a moment of overdue progress but as an undue contraction of Americans’ constitutional rights that does deep and immediate harm to millions. That would indeed be a bleak day for the court.”
Editorial Board, Washington Post

“In what other context is someone’s body, health and daily life commandeered to save another? No one would countenance a law that said a person who is a bone marrow or organ match is legally obligated to donate to another. There may be a moral imperative (if the person’s life and health would not be impacted), but we do not override an individual’s bodily integrity against his or her will even for noble purposes. We generally do not punish bystanders who refuse to come to the rescue of others in distress, especially when there is any risk to themselves…

“In no other context does ‘innocent life’ eviscerate all other liberties and interests… This is about denying women in particular the power to decide whether to undergo a substantial physical, hormonal, emotional and financial obligation for nine months.”
Jennifer Rubin, Washington Post

“The central premise of Roe, which Mississippi seeks to overturn, is about women’s right to make fundamental decisions about their lives, futures and families. If we lose the ability to control our bodies and our futures, so many of the gains women have made will be undone. At stake are not only indignities and inequities but the rights to self-determination and equal opportunity that would fall along with Roe.”
Billie Jean King, Washington Post

What passes for a compromise on abortion law has changed fundamentally. Roberts thought that the Court would go for superficially preserving Roe while allowing states to ban most (if not all) abortions, but that does not seem to be enough for this Court. Instead, we seem to be headed toward the idea of ‘compromise’ that Kavanaugh hinted at: a Supreme Court that immediately reverses Roe now that its membership has changed, without qualification or apology. That, Kavanaugh suggests, will be the ultimate compromise: a neutral, apolitical Court. Good luck convincing anyone of that.”
Mary Ziegler, The Atlantic

On the bright side…

‘Home Alone’ house will be on Airbnb for one night only this month.
NBC News

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13.) AXIOS

Axios AM

Hello, Thursday. Smart Brevity™ count: 1,068 words … 4½ minutes. Edited by Zachary Basu.

🩺 Today at 12:30 p.m., please join Axios’ Tina Reed and Alayna Treene for a half-hour virtual event on health equity, including a conversation with Brown University’s Dr. Ashish JhaRegister here.

1 big thing: Courage v. coddling with China
Peng Shuai of China serves during the China Open in Beijing in 2017. Photo: Andy Wong/AP

The women’s professional tennis tour suspended tournaments in China yesterday out of concern for Peng Shuai, on the same day that a top business voice made excuses for Beijing.

  • Why it matters: Ahead of February’s Winter Olympics in Beijing, some sports figures are taking on the regime — while Big Business shrinks from confrontation with the world’s second-largest economy.

What’s happening: The Women’s Tennis Association told AP that fears for the safety of Peng Shuai, the Chinese champion who accused a former Communist Party official of sexual assault, could result in cancellations beyond 2022.

  • WTA President and CEO Steve Simon said: “This is … about what’s right and wrong.”
  • In the NBA, the Boston Celtics’ Enes Kanter, who changed his last name to “Freedom” this week after becoming a U.S. citizen, has used social media to relentlessly protest human-rights violations in China.

Contrast that with billionaire Ray Dalio — legendary investor and founder of Bridgewater Associates, the world’s largest hedge fund — who told Andrew Ross Sorkin yesterday on CNBC’s “Squawk Box” when asked about Peng Shuai and China’s human rights issues:

  • “I can’t be an expert in those types of things. I look to whatever the rules are.”
  • “So the guidance of the government is the most important thing.”

Context: The Wall Street Journal, calling Dalio a “longtime China bull,” reported Nov. 24 that Bridgewater raised $1.25 billion for its third investment fund in China, making it one of the “biggest foreign managers of private funds in the world’s second-largest economy.”

Dalio added on CNBC: “I look at the United States and I say: ‘Well, what’s going on in the United States, and should I not invest in the United States because [of] our own human rights issues?'”

  • “I’m not trying to make political comparisons. I’m basically just trying to follow the rules.”

When Sorkin pointed out that the U.S. “isn’t disappearing people” like the Chinese government, Dalio replied: “As a top-down country … they behave like a strict parent.”

  • “If I … evaluated all approaches around the world in all countries, I’d be in a bind to try to find out … where do I invest.”

Zoom out: In Hong Kong, where Beijing has become increasingly heavy-handed, the Disney+ streaming service apparently censored the episode of “The Simpsons” with Homer visiting Tiananmen Square. (BBC)

Go deeper: Axios reported this week that Airbnb has more than a dozen homes available for rent in China’s Xinjiang region on land owned by an organization sanctioned by the U.S. government. Read the investigation.

2. U.S. faces urgent anti-hacker crisis
Featured image

Illustration: Allie Carl/Axios

Facing a deluge of ransomware attacks, the Biden administration is racing to fill nearly 600,000 vacant cybersecurity positions in government and business, Axios’ Sophia Cai reports.

  • Why it matters: Between increased demand and clogs in the talent pipeline, critical U.S. networks remain vulnerable to hacking.

The issue has emerged repeatedly at congressional hearings, but received little public attention until recently.

  • Private companies — including GuidePoint Security of Fairfax County, Va. — are offering cybersecurity training to veterans leaving the military.

Governments, nonprofits and companies are also partnering with community colleges and historically Black colleges and universities (HBCUs) to cast a wider talent net.

Mapped: Cybersecurity job openings by state.

3. 🦠 New this morning: 2 quick facts on Biden’s winter COVID plan
President Biden’s winter COVID plan, out this morning. Image: The White House

As part of a winter COVID battle plan President Biden will announce this afternoon, he’ll push for people with private health insurance to get reimbursed for at-home tests. Go deeper.

  • Also this afternoon, Biden will extend mask requirements through March 18 for those traveling by plane, rail and public transit. Go deeper.
4. Pic of the day
Photo: Dimitrios Kambouris/Getty Images

The Rockefeller Center Christmas tree is lit last night.

5. Unusual charge: Terrorism in school shooting

A memorial in Oxford, Mich., yesterday. Photo: Paul Sancya/AP

Terrorism is among the charges Michigan prosecutors brought yesterday against a 15-year-old sophomore in the shooting that killed four fellow students.

  • Why it matters: Gun-control advocates who track gunfire incidents on school grounds were not immediately aware of similar terrorism charges having been filed in other states, AP reports.

What’s happening: The novel approach is made possible by a Wolverine State law enacted after the 9/11 attacks nearly 20 years ago.

  • The state’s 2002 anti-terrorism law defines a terroristic act as one intended to intimidate or coerce a civilian population or to affect the conduct of a government through intimidation or coercion.

Oakland County Prosecutor Karen McDonald said: “What about all the children at home right now, who can’t eat and can’t sleep and can’t imagine a world where they could ever step foot back in that school? Those are victims, too. … The charge of terrorism reflects that.”

6. Key aide leaves V.P.’s office

Symone Sanders at the White House in May. Photo: Mandel Ngan/AFP via Getty Images

Symone Sanders, senior adviser and chief spokesperson to Vice President Harris, will leave by the end of the year, Axios’ Alexi McCammond reports.

  • Why it matters: Sanders is a central staffer who is trusted by Harris, and is the aide most frequently by her side in public.

Context: Concern about dysfunction in Harris’ operation starts in the West Wing and is widespread among top Democrats.

  • Sanders rose to prominence in 2016 as national press secretary for Sen. Bernie Sanders’ presidential campaign. Read her bio.
7. 📚 FT’s Business Book of the Year
Featured image

Cover: Bloomsbury Publishing

The Financial Times and McKinsey Business Book of the Year is New York Times cybersecurity reporter Nicole Perlroth’s “This Is How They Tell Me the World Ends: The Cyberweapons Arms Race.”

  • Roula Khalaf, FT editor and chair of judges, said: “Cyber security isn’t featuring highly enough on CEOs’ agenda. I hope this award will prompt them to read this book and pay attention.”
8. ⚾ MLB lockout begins
baseball home plate with pause sign

Illustration: Shoshana Gordon/Axios

MLB owners locked out players after the league’s collective bargaining agreement expired at midnight, leading to baseball’s first work stoppage since 1995, Jeff Tracy writes in Axios Sports.

  • How it works: Everything aside from negotiations is now halted. Contracts can’t be signed, injured players can’t work with team staff to rehab, and zero communication is allowed between players and teams.

Between the lines: In the 26 years since the last work stoppage, immense distrust has been sown between the league and players.

  • First came steroids — now it’s sign-stealing, sticky stuff and juiced balls.

What each side wants.

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14.) THE WASHINGTON FREE BEACON

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15.) THE WASHINGTON POST MORNING HEADLINES


16.) THE WASHINGTON TIMES

President Biden will announce a sweeping plan Thursday to combat the coronavirus this winter, requiring …
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December 2, 2021

   

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Anti-abortion and Abortion rights advocates demonstrate in front of the U.S. Supreme Court Wednesday, Dec. 1, 2021, in Washington, as the court hears arguments in a case from Mississippi, where a 2018 law would ban abortions after 15 weeks of pregnancy, well before viability. (AP Photo/Jose Luis Magana)

Conservative-leaning justices show unanimity in skepticism of ‘viability’ standard

The Supreme Court flirted Wednesday with unraveling the landmark 1973 Roe v. Wade decision that created a national right to … Read More

By Stephen Dinan

Top Headlines

 

Pro-life advocates urge liberal justices to ‘follow the science’ on abortion

By Valerie Richardson – Read More

Biden to roll out new travel rules after first case of omicron found in U.S.

By Tom Howell Jr. – Read More

Republican rebels force Schumer to choose between shutdown and Biden’s vaccine mandate

By Haris Alic – Read More

U.S. military loses public trust as it pushes into politics

By Mike Glenn – Read More

Smash-and-grab crime wave baffles congressional Democrats

By Kerry Picket – Read More

Advocacy group accuses Salvation Army of ‘covering up’ embrace of critical race theory

By Mark A. Kellner – Read More

Opinion

 

Biden shows exactly how not to handle a crisis

By Joseph Curl – Read More

Democrats’ smash-and-grab politics

By Tammy Bruce – Read More

Will Trump run?

By Michael McKenna – Read More

Politics

 

Abrams dives into Georgia’s gubernatorial race, setting up possible rematch against Kemp

By Seth McLaughlin – Read More

‘Last-ditch attempt’: Jan. 6 committee gives ex-Trump official final shot before House contempt vote

By Joseph Clark – Read More

Former Facebook workers’ testimony spotlights lawmakers’ disagreement over censorship

By Ryan Lovelace – Read More

Security

 

Pentagon chief slams China’s drive for hypersonic weapons

By Hyung-jin Kim and Kim Tong-hyung – Read More

Nearly 10,000 service members requested religious waiver for COVID vaccine

By Ben Wolfgang – Read More

Critics pan Pentagon’s strategic posture review, lack of action on China threat

By David R. Sands – Read More

Sports

 

Maryland honors Bias, but can’t hold on in loss to Virginia Tech

By George Gerbo – Read More

LOVERRO: RG3’s tell-all may be silver lining to twisted saga

By Thom Loverro – Read More

Up-and-down Heinicke hitting stride for surging Washington

By Jacob Calvin Meyer – Read More

 

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17.) THE WASHINGTON EXAMINER

 

Subscribe to the Magazine View this as website
BY HUGO GURDON AND DAVID FREDDOSO
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HIGHLIGHTS

ASU students protest over Kyle Rittenhouse even after he drops enrollment

ASU students protest over Kyle Rittenhouse even after he drops enrollment

Students at Arizona State University took part in a campus protest Wednesday against Kyle Rittenhouse’s status as a student even after it was revealed that he was no longer enrolled as an online student.

Partisan haggling and vaccine mandate fight threaten government funding deadline

Partisan haggling and vaccine mandate fight threaten government funding deadline

The threat of a partial government shutdown loomed Wednesday thanks to party differences over extending federal funding and a GOP threat to slow down the legislation in protest of President Joe Biden’s vaccine mandate.

Youngkin says he wants Virginia to be ‘most military-friendly state in America’

Youngkin says he wants Virginia to be 'most military-friendly state in America'

Virginia Gov.-elect Glenn Youngkin said during a Wednesday interview that he wants to make the Old Dominion “the most military-friendly state in America.”

SEE IT: Pro-choice protesters pop ‘abortion pills’ during SCOTUS demonstration

SEE IT: Pro-choice protesters pop 'abortion pills' during SCOTUS demonstration

Protesters in support of abortion rights loudly and proudly celebrated abortion during a protest at the Supreme Court on Wednesday morning.

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Hackers access personal information of 400,000 Planned Parenthood patients

Hackers access personal information of 400,000 Planned Parenthood patients

Thousands of people had their personal information accessed by hackers in a data breach of Planned Parenthood Los Angeles last month.

Goldman Sachs CEO warns high taxes threaten New York City’s future

Goldman Sachs CEO David Solomon said New York City’s status as a premiere global business destination could diminish if it keeps increasing taxes on businesses.

Jack Dorsey’s Square rebrands to Block

Jack Dorsey's Square rebrands to Block

Jack Dorsey’s Square is becoming Block.

Stacey Abrams announces run for Georgia governor in 2022

Stacey Abrams announces run for Georgia governor in 2022

Stacey Abrams announced Wednesday that she is launching her second bid for governor of Georgia. Abrams, a Democrat, narrowly lost to Gov. Brian Kemp in 2018 and refused to concede, though she acknowledged her GOP rival would be certified the victor, because she said minority votes that would have favored her were suppressed.

MLB headed to first work stoppage since ’95 as deal expires

MLB headed to first work stoppage since '95 as deal expires

IRVING, Texas — Major League Baseball’s collective bargaining agreement expired Wednesday night, plunging the sport toward a management lockout that will end labor peace after 9,740 days over 26 1/2 years.

Pence embraces ‘our’ Trump supporters angry with him over Jan. 6

Pence embraces 'our' Trump supporters angry with him over Jan. 6

Former Vice President Mike Pence shrugged off the anger of Trump supporters who are upset he did not attempt to challenge the results of the 2020 election while presiding over Congress in January as lawmakers tallied the electoral votes in President Joe Biden’s victory despite pressure by his boss at the time.

THE ROUNDUP

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18.) ASSOCIATED PRESS

 


19.) FORT MYERS (FLORIDA) NEWS-PRESS

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20.) CHICAGO TRIBUNE

Chicago Tribune
VIEW IN BROWSER DECEMBER 2, 2021 CHICAGOTRIBUNE.COM

DAYWATCH

Good morning, Chicago.
State health officials on Wednesday reported 6,119 new confirmed and probable cases of COVID-19, the most in a single day since January.
More than 1 in 7 Illinois residents have gotten a COVID-19 booster shot, in a vaccination push that continues as a new variant arrives in the U.S. and an old one fuels a hospitalization spike among the unvaccinated that rivals the worst of the pandemic.
And on Thursday, President Joe Biden is expected to announce a booster and testing campaign that includes a requirement for private insurers to cover the cost of at-home COVID-19 tests and a tightening of testing requirements for people entering the U.S.
— Paul Day, audience editor
Here are the top stories you need to know to start your day.

1

The Supreme Court signaled a willingness to make sweeping changes to limit abortion rights. Here are four things to know.

The U.S. Supreme Court has before it one of its most significant abortion cases in decades, and its decision could challenge Roe v. Wade, the landmark 1973 case that established the right to terminate a pregnancy nationwide and also limits state restrictions on the procedure prior to fetal viability.

Here are four things to know about the case and its potential impact on abortion access in Illinois and around the country.

2

‘That’s when I proceeded to punch him in the face’: Key witness in Jussie Smollett trial testifies about actor’s alleged plot to stage hate crime

It was “colder than penguins’ feet” the night Abimbola Osundairo and his brother gathered their bleach and ski masks and headed to downtown Chicago, waiting to give a fake beating to actor Jussie Smollett.

The plan for the hoax attack had been carefully laid out days earlier, when Smollett revealed he was upset that folks at the “Empire” series’ studio weren’t taking a threatening letter he’d received more seriously, Osunairo testified Wednesday at Smollett’s criminal trial.

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3

Chicago’s Art Institute fired its volunteer docents and caused a furor heard nationwide. The fight is really about the future of museums.

Art Institute President James Rondeau called changes at the museum and the dismissal of longtime volunteers “evolutionary.” In some circles there was outrage. But the wider question, the Tribune’s Christopher Borrelli reports, is about what it means to be a museum, and the uncertainty has just begun.

4

MLB owners impose a lockout of players — baseball’s 9th work stoppage and the 1st since 1995 — as the collective bargaining agreement expires

The collective bargaining agreement between Major League Baseball and the players union expired at 10:59 p.m. CST Wednesday. Revenue sharing and free agency are reportedly among the areas being discussed.

Tribune reporters LaMond Pope and Meghan Montemurro break down the details and explain what it means in the short term for the White Sox and Cubs.

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5

Stay in Winnetka’s ‘Home Alone’ house this season through Airbnb and encounter booby traps, mac and cheese, and a tarantula

An overnight stay at Winnetka’s “Home Alone” house will give up to four guests the chance to relive their favorite scenes from the 1990 holiday classic on Dec. 12 for $25, plus fees and taxes, through Airbnb. The home has been designed to look similar to the movie that made Macaulay Culkin’s Kevin McCallister character a household name.


21.) CHICAGO SUNTIMES

Abimbola Osundairo testifies Jussie Smollett asked him to ‘fake beat him up’

#598・ 

Chicago Sun-Times Morning Edition

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Chicago Sun-Times Morning Edition
Good morning, Chicago —
Here’s the latest news from around the area this morning.
On the third day of Jussie Smollett’s trial, Abimbola “Abel” Osundairo took the stand for nearly four hours. At one point, Osundairo said Smollett asked him to “fake beat him up” and even requested that he use an anti-gay slur and say “MAGA” during the staged homophobic and racist attack. Matthew Hendrickson has more from Wednesday in the courtroom.
While the Illinois cannabis industry continues growing nearly two years after legalization, workers pushing to unionize amid complaints of low wages and rough working conditions claim they’ve faced stiff resistance from the corporate pot firms that employ them.
And after a showdown vote in City Council on a proposed Chicago ward map was called off yesterday, the chairman of the Council’s Rules Committee passed out copies of a new proposal and set two public hearings on it for next week. Fran Spielman has the latest on the city ward map situation.
Get even more news below, and thanks for reading.
Satchel Price, assistant audience engagement editor
Abimbola Osundairo testifies Jussie Smollett asked him to ‘fake beat him up’

Only a few cannabis workers in Illinois are unionized 2 years after full legalization. Organizers say corporate owners have put up fierce resistance.

Showdown vote on Chicago ward map called off; public hearings next

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22.) THE HILL MORNING REPORT

The Hill's Morning Report
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President Joe Biden speaks to commemorate World AIDS Day

© Associated Press/Evan Vucci

 

 

Welcome to The Hill’s Morning Report. It is Thursday! We get you up to speed on the most important developments in politics and policy, plus trends to watch. Alexis Simendinger and Al Weaver are the co-creators. Readers can find us on Twitter @asimendinger and @alweaver22. Please recommend the Morning Report to friends and let us know what you think. CLICK HERE to subscribe!

Total U.S. coronavirus deaths reported each morning this week: Monday, 776,639; Tuesday, 778,601; Wednesday, 780,233; Thursday, 782,100.
President Biden today will describe new federal travel restrictions and stricter COVID-19 testing requirements for all international travelers to the U.S. beginning next week in response to the omicron variant, which was confirmed on Monday in a traveler from South Africa who arrived in San Francisco 11 days ago (The Hill).

 

The president and his public health advisers have encouraged Americans to be cautious without panicking as scientists spend a few weeks researching omicron’s capabilities. Their primary message: Get vaccinated and get booster doses if you’re eligible.

 

On Wednesday, the president sought to be reassuring. ​​“We’re looking ahead to a brighter and happier December,” he said.

 

The Hill: About 18 percent of U.S. adults are still unvaccinated, contributing to almost 1,000 COVID-19 deaths every day. Biden’s tough admonitions to the unvaccinated and to Republicans, including in Congress, who say they back vaccines but oppose federal mandates, are piling up in courts.

 

Reuters: Mask requirements on modes of transit will extend until mid-March.

 

The New York Times: Biden will announce that private insurers will cover the reimbursement costs of at-home COVID-19 test kits available over the counter. The administration is becoming more focused on the need for testing and will supply such rapid COVID-19 kits to community health centers and rural clinics and add vaccination centers nationwide.

 

“So much of the next phase of covid depends on easy, rapid access to testing, whether it’s omicron or quick access to oral treatments” or compliance with employer vaccine mandates, Nirav Shah, president of the Association of State and Territorial Health Officials and director of Maine’s Center for Disease Control and Prevention, told The Washington Post.

 

In the week since the discovery of the newest variant and its spike protein mutations, scientists worldwide have adopted a cautiously optimistic outlook that while omicron appears adept at moving from human to human, the infections it causes have been treatable and available vaccines have lessened the severity of illness and could be tweaked by manufacturers within months to provide stronger immune responses (The Wall Street Journal).

 

Omicron has been identified in more than 30 countries across continents in the span of a week, pointing out yet again that the pandemic is far from over as long as COVID-19 can ignore borders and find susceptible human hosts (CNBC). Omicron now accounts for the majority of new COVID-19 infections identified in South Africa. The country has administered enough vaccine doses to fully vaccinate just 22 percent of the population, according to the Reuters tracker.

 

The Associated PressSouth Korea on Wednesday confirmed its first five cases of omicron.

 

The first known U.S. case of the new strain arrived in San Francisco with a traveler who was healthy, had received two doses of Moderna vaccine but no booster, developed mild symptoms within three days of arriving from South Africa on Nov. 22 and is now self-quarantining while contact tracing continues. The variant was confirmed through genomic sequencing (The Hill, San Francisco Chronicle and The New York Times).

 

The New York TimesCalifornia assures residents it is prepared for omicron’s presence. The state will increase COVID-19 testing at its major airports, focusing on arrivals from countries identified by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention as potential sources of the variant, but Gov. Gavin Newsom (D) said California was not contemplating tougher public health restrictions or school closures.

 

The New York TimesNew York has weathered three coronavirus variants this year. Will omicron be different?

 

It is inevitable that omicron will be detected in other states, posing new challenges for Biden and his advisers, for governors and mayors, not to mention physicians and hospitals at a time when Americans are losing patience with pandemic uncertainty and economic challenges.

 

The public bemoans rising prices for food and gasoline, shortages of some consumer goods, gyrations in financial markets and predictions of higher interest rates next year, ever-evolving coronavirus restrictions and precautions that lack consistency and sometimes logic, and a recent burst of optimism about safe travel options now dashed ahead of the holidays.

 

On Capitol Hill, Democrats in the Senate have a $2 trillion legislative agenda that has become more challenging to sell and may limp into 2022. Partisan warfare, in part involving GOP antipathy toward Biden’s COVID-19 mandates, cast a shadow over the need to fund basic government functions ahead of a Friday deadline. Drama is expected at the close of the week, although Senate Republicans offered assurances on Wednesday that a shutdown was unlikely. Separately, to avoid U.S. default on Treasury obligations, both parties in Congress are being asked to bless tens of billions of dollars in U.S. borrowing authority ahead of a mid-December deadline (and ahead of next year’s potentially seismic midterm elections).

 

Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) continues to present an aura of confidence that a default crisis is not imminent. How it’s averted, however, involves a strategy he’s been discussing since last month with Senate Majority Leader Charles Schumer (D-N.Y.) — privately.

 

The New York Times: One anecdotal case of omicron infection affecting a busy Israeli doctor hints that three doses of Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine was a valuable shield for some vaccinated individuals with whom he came in contact. In other words, omicron may be giving boosters a boost.

 

More executive branch news: The administration will try to persuade a federal appeals court that an internal Justice Department memo that cleared former President Trump of any wrongdoing in connection with the Mueller investigation should be kept under wraps (The Hill). … Symone Sanders, a top communications aide to Vice President Harris, will leave the White House at the end of the month, adding to West Wing personnel change as the administration’s first year nears an end (Politico).

 

Passengers walk inside a terminal of the Barcelona Airport

© Associated Press/Joan Mateu Parra

 

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LEADING THE DAY
SUPREME COURT: Justices during oral arguments on Wednesday appeared poised to consider setting new abortion limits as they weighed a Mississippi law that takes direct aim at Roe v. Wade.

 

A majority of the court posed sharp questions about how firmly rooted Roe’s viability standard is in the Constitution. The Mississippi law, which bans virtually all abortions after 15 weeks of pregnancy, conflicts with the nearly five-decade-old rule that says states cannot prohibit abortion prior to when a fetus can live outside the womb, known as fetal viability, which occurs around 24 weeks.

 

“If you think that the issue is one of choice, that women should have the choice to terminate their pregnancy, that supposes that there is a point at which they’ve had the fair choice, the opportunity to choice. And why would 15 weeks be an inappropriate line? Viability, it seems to me, doesn’t have anything to do with choice. But if it really is an issue about choice, why is 15 weeks not enough time?” Chief Justice John Roberts asked.

 

Roberts, along with Associate Justices Brett Kavanaugh and Amy Coney Barrett, are who many court watchers consider key votes in a case that anti-abortion activists view as their best chance in decades to undermine the 1973 decision.

 

As The Hill’s John Kruzel notes, Kavanaugh asked multiple times why the court is better suited than Congress or the states to play referee in this situation.

 

“One interest has to prevail over the other at any given point in time,” Kavanaugh said to the U.S. solicitor general, who argued against the Mississippi law.

 

The Hill: Five revealing quotes from Supreme Court abortion case.

 

Amy Howe, SCOTUSblog: Majority of court appears poised to roll back abortion rights.

 

The Hill: Associate Justice Sonia Sotomayor suggests the Supreme Court wouldn’t “survive the stench” of political calculation if abortion rights are undercut.

 

Abortion rights advocates holding cardboard cutouts of the Supreme Court Justices demonstrate

© Associated Press/Jose Luis Magana

 

 

*****

 

CONGRESS: Senate Republicans are grappling with a push by some in their conference to force a government shutdown in an effort to stop Biden’s vaccine mandate for private businesses ahead of the Friday deadline to extend funding.

 

Sens. Mike Lee (R-Utah) (pictured below) and Roger Marshall (R-Kan.) are leading the charge to block funding for the administration to enforce its employer vaccine (or testing) mandate for large employers. The plan to delay a spending bill could push any shutdown into the weekend and potentially into next week (The Hill).

 

As The Hill’s Alexander Bolton reports, the two senators refused to back down from their plan to drag out consideration of a stopgap spending bill during a GOP steering committee meeting on Wednesday. However, most Senate Republicans opposed their plan, saying they will almost certainly be blamed for any shutdown and, in any case, the Senate will be voting next week on a resolution to nullify the employer vaccine mandate under the Congressional Review Act.

 

“There was not full agreement, that’s for sure,” Senate Republican Policy Committee Chairman Roy Blunt (Mo.) told reporters.

 

Sen. Mike Mike Lee, R-Utah,

© Pool via Associated Press/Tom Williams

 

 

McConnell insisted on Wednesday that all will be alright once all is said and done.

 

“I think we’re going to be OK,” McConnell told reporters heading into the meeting (CNN).

 

Also at issue is how long any stopgap spending bill would last. As The New York Times notes, the spending levels in an expected continuing resolution were set while Trump was in office, with Republicans hoping to extend it as long as possible.

 

“I’d like February, March would suit me — April, May,” said Sen. Richard Shelby (Ala.), the top Senate GOP appropriator. “I think it gives us more time to seriously sit down.”

 

The Wall Street Journal: Government shutdown deadline approaches as deal eludes lawmakers.

 

Politico: McConnell’s latest challenge: stopping a shutdown over vaccine mandates.

 

The Hill: McConnell leaves GOP in dark on debt ceiling.

 

The Hill: Sen. Marco Rubio (R-Fla.) blocks quick votes on stalemated defense bill.

 

> GOP v. BBB: Republicans are ramping up attacks on the state and local tax (SALT) provision in the Build Back Better agenda, arguing that the move would lower taxes for high-income households with the hope that it will help them in the 2022 midterms.

 

The SALT plan under discussion, which was pushed for heavily by members from high-tax states such as New York and New Jersey, would undo the $10,000 cap on the deduction. However, some progressives and moderates are concerned that a rollback of the cap would benefit wealthy Americans, with their GOP counterparts lying in wait to attack them.

 

As The Hill’s Naomi Jagoda writes, Republicans are highlighting the potential benefits to high-income households in the massive social spending package in an effort to kill the changes.

 

Cristina Marcos, The Hill: House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.) faces headaches from far-right House GOP.

 

The Hill: McCarthy pleads with Republicans to stop infighting: “Congress is not junior high.”

 

Politico: House Transportation Committee Chairman Peter DeFazio (D-Ore.) to retire from Congress in latest blow to Democrats.

 

The Hill: GOP resistance to Biden FCC nominee could endanger board’s Democratic majority.

 

> Jan. 6: The House select committee investigating the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol voted unanimously Wednesday night to refer Jeffrey Clark, a Trump Justice Department lawyer, for prosecution, the second such censure by the panel.

 

The committee is now planning to convene a second hearing for Clark on Saturday, after his lawyer asked for a change to plead his Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination, with the vote continuing the contempt process (The Hill).

 

The Hill: Media giants side with Stephen Bannon on request to release Jan. 6 documents.

IN FOCUS/SHARP TAKES
POLITICS: Democrat Stacey Abrams, whose voter turnout expertise and following within her party are notable, on Wednesday launched her second campaign to be Georgia governor, boosting the party’s chances to turn the state blue.

 

As The Hill’s Max Greenwood notes, Abrams was expected to launch the bid for months. No other Democrat had entered the Georgia gubernatorial race, and with Abrams in the contest, it’s unlikely she’ll see a primary challenge.

 

Abrams announced her campaign in a video touting her work in the state since her 2018 loss to Gov. Brian Kemp (R) by 1.4-percentage points. Her candidacy also tees up one of the most anticipated gubernatorial contests of next year, with a potential rematch against Kemp in the offing.

 

However, Kemp has his own problems on the right, as evidenced by Trump’s statement in reaction to Abrams’s announcement.

 

“I beat her single-handedly, without much of a candidate, in 2018,” Trump said, referring to Abrams. “I’ll beat her again, but it will be hard to do with Brian Kemp, because the MAGA base will just not vote for him after what he did with respect to Election Integrity and two horribly run elections, for President and then two Senate seats. But some good Republican will run, and some good Republican will get my endorsement, and some good Republican will WIN!”

 

Former Sen. David Perdue (R-Ga.) has floated a possible primary challenge against Kemp, whom he supported in 2018.

 

Abrams would become the nation’s first Black female governor if she wins.

 

The Hill: Massachusetts Gov. Charlie Baker (R) will not seek reelection in 2022, leaving his party scrambling for a prominent candidate.

 

NBC News: Former Rep. Keith Rothfus (R-Pa.) is considering entering the Pennsylvania Senate race.

 

Politico: Trump intervenes in Ohio Senate primary — for himself.

 

The Hill: Senate race in Ohio poses crucial test for Democrats.

 

Stacey Abrams speaks to Biden supporters

© Associated Press/Brynn Anderson

 

OPINION
My abortion story shows why the Supreme Court must save Roe v. Wade, by Billie Jean King, opinion contributor, The Washington Post. ​​https://wapo.st/32Sr3rh

 

Justice Sotomayor gets political on abortion, by The Wall Street Journal editorial board. https://on.wsj.com/3Ef0iLb

A MESSAGE FROM FACEBOOK
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Marcella, founder of Oh Comadre Candles, says “Facebook helped [her] find [her] community” and turn her passion into a full-time business.

Learn how Facebook is supporting small businesses like Oh Comadre Candles across the US this holiday season.

WHERE AND WHEN
The House meets at 8 a.m.

 

The Senate convenes at 10 a.m. and resumes consideration of the National Defense Authorization Act.

 

The president will receive the President’s Daily Brief at 10 a.m. Biden will visit the National Institutes of Health in Maryland and deliver remarks at 1:40 p.m. about the government’s revised COVID-19 battle plan for the winter, including new federal travel restrictions following the global spread of the omicron variant. The president, first lady Jill Biden, Harris and second gentleman Doug Emhoff will participate in the traditional National Christmas Tree lighting on the Ellipse at 5:30 p.m. Biden and Interior Secretary Deb Haaland will speak.

 

The vice president will travel to Charlotte, N.C., and tour a public transit facility at 11:20 a.m. with Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg to tout the merits of the new infrastructure law in a speech at 11:55 a.m. (WBTV). She will return to Washington in the afternoon.

 

Economic indicator: The Labor Department today reports on claims for unemployment benefits filed in the week ending Nov. 27, data that is expected to show continued U.S. employment recovery.

 

The White House daily press briefing is scheduled at 11 a.m.

 

👉 INVITATION to The Hill’s Virtually Live event: TODAY at 1 p.m., “Investing in Maternal & Infant Health,” with Reps. Alma Adams (D-N.C.) and Jaime Herrera Beutler (R-Wash.), plus federal and advocacy organization experts (information HERE).

 

📺 Hill.TV’s “Rising” program features news and interviews at http://thehill.com/hilltv or on YouTube at 10:30 a.m. ET at Rising on YouTube.

ELSEWHERE
 DEFENSE: Pentagon chief Lloyd Austin said Thursday while speaking in Seoul, South Korea, that China’s pursuit of hypersonic weapons “increases tensions in the region.” The United States is concerned about China’s military capability, Austin said, calling Beijing “our pacing challenge” (The Associated Press). ​​China’s drive to end American predominance in Asia stirs unease in Washington, particularly a July test of a hypersonic weapon capable of partially orbiting Earth before reentering the atmosphere and gliding on a maneuverable path to its target.

 

 SPACE: Harris on Wednesday said Russia‘s “irresponsible act” last month of blowing up one of its satellites, creating a field of space junk, demands a more robust global effort to adopt new rules of behavior in orbit to protect national security and to defend commerce. “By blasting debris across space, this irresponsible act endangered the satellites of other nations, as well as astronauts in the International Space Station,” she said while convening the inaugural meeting of the National Space Council under her leadership (Politico).

 

 SPORTS:  Major League Baseball plunged into its first work stoppage in a quarter-century when the sport’s collective bargaining agreement expired Wednesday night and owners immediately locked out players in a move that threatens spring training and opening day (The Associated Press). … 🎾 The Women’s Tennis Association (WTA) announced Wednesday a suspension of all tournaments in China and Hong Kong until a probe is launched into tennis star Peng Shuai’s recent allegation of sexual assault against a retired senior government official. Steve Simon, the WTA’s president and CEO, said in a statemen that Peng has “seemingly been pressured to contradict her allegation of sexual assault” and “is not allowed to communicate freely,” which Simon said was unacceptable for the tennis organization (The Wall Street Journal).

 

China's Peng Shuai makes a forehand return

© Associated Press/Andy Brownbill

 

THE CLOSER
And finally … It’s Thursday, which means it’s time for the Morning Report Quiz! Startled by some inflated numbers, we’re eager for some smart guesses about dollar signs in the news.

 

Email your responses to asimendinger@thehill.com and/or aweaver@thehill.com, and please add “Quiz” to subject lines. Winners who submit correct answers will enjoy some richly deserved newsletter fame on Friday.

 

According to the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Turkey Market News Report, released ahead of Thanksgiving this year, the cost per pound for wholesale frozen turkeys weighing 16 pounds or less jumped by how much compared with 2020?

 

  1. 1 percent
  2. 23 percent
  3. 52 percent
  4. 100 percent

 

Newly named Twitter CEO Parag Agrawal will receive an annual salary of $1 million. But there’s an inducement: If he drives rapid decisions and implements them, the company says he will land a bonus. How much?

 

  1. $3 million
  2. $8 million
  3. $12 million
  4. $25 million

 

Paige Bueckers, who plays basketball for the University of Connecticut, became Gatorade’s first NCAA athlete partner in a multi-year name, image and likeness deal that, together with sneaker marketplace StockX, is described as how lucrative?

 

  1. $25,000
  2. $100,000
  3. $500,000
  4. $1 million

 

A Massachusetts man bought a sketch at auction for $30 four years ago that experts recently said could be a work from the 1500s by German Renaissance master Albrecht Dürer. How much do authorities think the artwork, now on museum display, might be worth?

 

  1. $1 million
  2. $6 million
  3. $20 million
  4. $50 million

 

Shown are frozen turkeys in New Hope, Pa.,

© Associated Press/Matt Rourke

 

The Morning Report is created by journalists Alexis Simendinger and Al Weaver. We want to hear from you! Email: asimendinger@thehill.com and aweaver@thehill.com. We invite you to share The Hill’s reporting and newsletters, and encourage others to SUBSCRIBE! 
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23.) THE HILL 12:30 REPORT

 


24.) ROLL CALL

Image

Morning Headlines

ImageAs states sprint through their redistricting processes this fall, many activists are learning that mapmaking commissions don’t quite address gerrymandering or minority voting protections as intended. Read more…

ImageOPINION — It’s time for another end-of-the-year column by Stuart Rothenberg recognizing the best and worst in U.S. politics, and it wasn’t easy for him to find a lot of good things about 2021. The economy is still a big question mark, the coronavirus keeps mutating and the Yankees couldn’t get past a one-game playoff against the Red Sox. Read more…

Wanted this holiday season: More wise men and women on the Hill

 

ImageOPINION — Where are the wise men and women bearing gifts? All we’ve got are Lauren Boebert, Paul Gosar and Marjorie Taylor Greene, pumped up with power in a Republican Party they rule, backed by the Ghost of an Administration Past, holed up in Mar-a-Lago. Read more…

Click here to subscribe to Fintech Beat for the latest market and regulatory developmentsin finance and financial technology.

Learn more about RevenueStripe...

What ‘Your’ vs. ‘You’re’ says about Congress right now

 

ImageWhen Marjorie Taylor Greene trashed a fellow Republican on Twitter this week, the exchange raised serious questions about abortion, Islamophobia and eroding civility in Congress. But it also left many in Washington fired up about something else: basic grammar. Read more…

There’s a problem with politics, and it isn’t just partisanship

 

ImageOPINION — Everyone doesn’t have to agree on everything, but it’s how we disagree that’s increasingly the problem. When we see our political opponents as an “other,” we devalue their lives and are willing to say and do things we normally wouldn’t to someone we see as an equal, elections analyst Nathan L. Gonzales writes. Read more…

More companies disclose political spending after Jan. 6 attack

 

ImageCorporations are ramping up disclosure of political spending amid intense scrutiny of their advocacy by the public and by shareholders focused on social justice and governance issues in the wake of the Jan. 6 insurrection at the Capitol. Read more…

Advocates energized by Supreme Court abortion case

 

ImageAdvocates on both sides of the abortion debate, brandishing signs ranging from “Abortion is Essential” to “I am the Pro-Life Generation,” braved cold weather Wednesday to rally near the Supreme Court ahead of what experts say could be the biggest abortion case in a generation. Read more…

CQ Roll Call is a part of FiscalNote, the leading technology innovator at the intersection of global business and government. Copyright 2021 CQ Roll Call. All rights reserved Privacy | Safely unsubscribe now.

 

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25.) POLITICO PLAYBOOK

POLITICO Playbook: Symone says goodbye

Presented by

DRIVING THE DAY

SANDERS OUT — SYMONE SANDERS, a senior adviser and chief spokesperson for VP KAMALA HARRIS, “is expected to leave the White House at the end of the year,” Eugene, Chris Cadelago and Daniel Lippman reported Wednesday night. “It was not immediately clear where Sanders is heading next or when she will be leaving the vice president’s office. Sanders is the highest profile exit and the second high-profile one from the Harris team in the last month. ASHLEY ETIENNE, Harris’ communications director, is also set to depart in the coming weeks.”

Sanders, a 31-year-old African-American strategist and one of the admin’s most recognizable advisers, leaves amid a flurry of stories about internal frictions and disorder in the VP’s office. Sanders was often the aide who pushed back on those storylines, defending the VP and advocating for her both publicly and in one-on-one dealings with reporters.

In a note to staff Wednesday night, Sanders wrote: “I’m so grateful to the VP for her vote of confidence from the very beginning and the opportunity to see what can be unburdened by what has been. I’m grateful for [Harris chief of staff] TINA [FLOURNOY] and her leadership and her confidence as well. Every day, I arrived to the White House complex knowing our work made a tangible difference for Americans. I am immensely grateful and will miss working for her and with all of you.”

An official in the VP’s office confirmed the departure and said the president and VP have “known for a while.” Sanders transitioned to Harris’ VP team after serving as a key Biden campaign senior adviser during the 2020 election. The official added that the White House will throw a party for Sanders in the coming weeks to celebrate her service.

— WaPo’s Cleve Wootson Jr. and Tyler Pager note two more pending departures: “PETER VELZ, director of press operations, and VINCE EVANS, deputy director of the Office of Public Engagement and Intergovernmental Affairs in the vice president’s office, have also told others in the vice president’s office that they are leaving, according to two administration officials. Both are expected to take new jobs in or close to the administration.”

TIME MISMANAGEMENT — When we pushed send this morning, the Senate remained at a standstill on its two big priorities this week:

1) Government funding: GOP hard-liners threatening to force a shutdown over funding for federal vaccine mandates were trying to secure a separate vote on the issue (which would likely fail) in return for backing down. Senate Majority Leader CHUCK SCHUMER sounded uninterested in entertaining the idea: “Any few handful of members who believe strongly in something can say, ‘I’m going to shut down the government unless I get what I want.’ If people do that, it’s chaos.”

Meanwhile, Minority Leader MITCH MCCONNELL and the majority of Senate Republicans who believe it’s absurd to threaten a shutdown over the mandate issue were trying to convince Sen. MIKE LEE (R-Utah) and the shutdown caucus to drop the issue and clear the way for a new continuing resolution.

The current CR runs out at midnight Friday.

2) National Defense Authorization Act: The latest holdup is courtesy of Sen. MARCO RUBIO (R-Fla.). He blocked a deal Wednesday night to move forward on the defense bill this morning after his amendment to ban Chinese imports connected to forced labor in Xinjiang province was excluded from a package of two dozen other amendments to be considered.

Schumer excoriated Rubio’s tactic as “sad, tragic and almost absurd.” The Democratic leader argued that the Rubio amendment, which has already passed the Senate separately, has a so-called blue slip problem, which means it would kill the NDAA in the House by violating the constitutional requirement that “All Bills for raising Revenue shall originate in the House.”

“I would ask Marco Rubio to sleep on this overnight,” an exasperated Schumer pleaded on the Senate floor.

MEANWHILE, IN THE HOUSE: Olivia Beavers and Heather Caygle report on how Minority Leader KEVIN MCCARTHY is trying to contain the damage caused from his own chamber’s GOP member-on-member combat:

“In the last 24 hours, the fallout from Rep. LAUREN BOEBERT’s (R-Colo.) Islamophobic comments about progressive Rep. ILHAN OMAR (D-Minn.) has tangled Reps. MARJORIE TAYLOR GREENE (R-Ga.) and NANCY MACE (R-S.C.) in their own separate, ugly Twitter spat.

“As more controversies crop up in McCarthy’s conference, the ultra-conservatives in his party are increasingly emboldened. Their calls to squeeze out Republicans who have rebuked former President DONALD TRUMP, despite McCarthy arguing that the GOP is a ‘big tent party’ that has never been more united, are only growing louder.

“During a conference meeting Wednesday morning, GOP members in the room said McCarthy sought to handle the recent flare-ups diplomatically. Rather, sources in the room said he did not directly name Greene or Mace, whose battling he tried and failed to defuse Tuesday night.”

House Republicans may be on a glide path to taking back the House next year, but at least some of them worry that the party’s radicals could cause them to blow it.

“We’re undermining ourselves,” Rep. DON BACON (R-Neb.) said while leaving the GOP meeting Wednesday. “We have everything in our favor.”

Good Thursday morning, and thanks for reading Playbook. Bob Dylan returns to The Anthem tonight. Drop us a line and tell us what you want him to play: Rachael BadeEugene DanielsRyan LizzaTara Palmeri.

DONALD TRUMP, SUPERSPREADER? — The explosive news, first reported by the Guardian’s Martin Pengelly, that Trump tested positive for the coronavirus three days before the first presidential debate, according to MARK MEADOWS’ forthcoming book, “The Chief’s Chief,” raises the possibility that the president could have transmitted the virus to numerous people. Here’s what Trump was up to while infected:

Sept. 26:

— Trump tests positive for the coronavirus, according to Meadows’ book.

— Trump hosts a Rose Garden event and indoor reception at the White House for the announcement of AMY CONEY BARRETT as his Supreme Court nominee. At least 11 people at the event soon tested positive for the coronavirus, including first lady MELANIA TRUMP, Lee, Sen. THOM TILLIS (R-N.C.), CHRIS CHRISTIE, KELLYANNE CONWAY and KAYLEIGH MCENANY.

— Trump leaves the White House for a rally in Pennsylvania shortly after his positive test, which Meadows says was followed by a negative test that Trump decided was the more conclusive result.

— Aboard Air Force One, Trump walks to the back of the plane and chats with reporters, including NYT’s MICHAEL SHEAR, who tested positive several days later.

Sept. 27: Trump holds a press conference in the White House briefing room and meets with Gold Star families at the White House. (He later says that one of the attendees may have infected him.)

Sept. 28: Trump has debate prep and two public events at the White House, including one on a new coronavirus testing plan.

Sept. 29: Trump attends the first presidential debate with JOE BIDEN in Cleveland, where he mocks Biden for often wearing a mask. (Asked Wednesday if he believed Trump “put you at risk,” Biden replied, “I don’t think about the former president.”)

Sept. 30: Trump attends a rally in Duluth, Minn. Aboard Air Force One, HOPE HICKS shows signs of being sick with Covid-19. (Trump later suggests she infected him.)

Oct. 1: Trump attends a fundraiser in Bedminster, N.J. McEnany later says, “The first positive test he received was after his return from Bedminster.”

Oct. 2: Trump tweets before 1 a.m. that he has Covid, and later in the day he is airlifted to Walter Reed hospital. He is much sicker than the White House reveals, and from his hospital bed he tells a friend, “I could be one of the diers.”

BIDEN’S THURSDAY:

— 10 a.m.: The president will receive the President’s Daily Brief.

— 12:45 p.m.: Biden will depart the White House en route to Walter Reed National Military Medical Center.

— 1:15 p.m.: Biden will visit the NIH in Bethesda, Md., where he’ll deliver remarks on the pandemic and the Omicron variant at 1:40 p.m.

— 2:25 p.m.: Biden will return to the White House.

— 5:30 p.m.: Biden and first lady JILL BIDEN will be joined by Harris and second gentleman DOUG EMHOFF for the National Christmas Tree Lighting on the Ellipse. Biden and Interior Secretary DEB HAALAND will deliver remarks.

HARRIS’ THURSDAY:

— 9:20 a.m.: The VP will also depart D.C. en route to Charlotte, N.C.

— 11:20 a.m.: Harris and Transportation Secretary PETE BUTTIGIEG will tour the Charlotte Area Transit System Bus and Light Rail Garage.

— 11:55 a.m.: Harris and Buttigieg will deliver remarks.

— 2:50 p.m.: Harris will depart North Carolina to return to D.C.

Press secretary JEN PSAKI will brief at 11 a.m.

THE HOUSE will meet at 8 a.m. and will take up several bills. The Rules Committee will meet at 9:30 a.m. to formulate a rule on a resolution recommending that the chamber find JEFFREY CLARK in contempt of Congress in the Jan. 6 investigation. Speaker NANCY PELOSI will hold her weekly press conference at 10:45 a.m.

THE SENATE is in.

PLAYBOOK READS

TRUMP CARDS

TRUMP 2022 — Alex Isenstadt reports that the former president is throwing himself into midterm races where he hasn’t even endorsed a candidate because he views the contests “as a tool to bolster and measure his own political standing ahead of a potential 2024 bid.” For instance, Trump took exception to Club for Growth ads in Ohio highlighting J.D. VANCE’s comments in 2016 calling him an “idiot,” “noxious” and “offensive.” The reason: Trump told Club President DAVID MCINTOSH the ads “could have the effect of driving down his popularity in Ohio.”

TRUMP 2024 — Former chief of staff JOHN KELLY told The Atlantic’s Peter Nicholas that “Trump won’t run” in 2024. “He’ll continue talking about it; he may even declare, but he will not run,” Kelly said. “And the reason is he simply cannot be seen as a loser.”

ALL POLITICS

BIG SHAKEUP AT AFP — Americans for Prosperity President TIM PHILLIPS resigned from the political advocacy group “after the Koch-backed conservative organization made clear he was no longer welcome following an internal investigation into unspecified personal impropriety,” Washington Examiner’s David Drucker reports. The group is a “well-funded grassroots and voter turnout arm of the Koch network of political and policy groups, and Phillips was its public face for nearly 17 years before resigning Wednesday. Phillips had been on paid leave since just before Thanksgiving, when the group became aware of a personal indiscretion. After investigating the matter, Americans for Prosperity concluded Phillips’s ‘behavior’ was ‘incompatible with our organization’s values,’ and he was allowed to resign.”

SHE’S RUNNING (AGAIN) — Democrat STACEY ABRAMS announced her campaign to be Georgia’s governor Wednesday, setting up another challenge against Gov. BRIAN KEMP. Abrams ran against Kemp in 2018 and lost by 1.4 percentage points, writes The Atlanta Journal-Constitution’s Greg Bluestein. “Her decision, long expected by local Democrats, clears the way for what could be a titanic showdown between two longtime political rivals. That is, if Kemp survives a fight for the GOP nomination first,” Bluestein notes.

AND HE’S THINKING ABOUT IT — Sources told Alex Thompson, Eleanor Mueller, Lisa Kashinsky and Stephanie Murray that Labor Secretary MARTY WALSH “is weighing whether to return home to Massachusetts and run for governor next year. … A number of Democrats have called Walsh about the race after Massachusetts’ Republican Gov. CHARLIE BAKER announced on Wednesday that he was declining to run for a third term. Allies of the former Boston mayor are also telling fellow Massachusetts Democrats that he is considering running.”

JUDICIARY SQUARE

SCOTUS TAKEAWAYS — Josh Gerstein and Alice Miranda Ollstein break down Wednesday’s high court hearing on the Mississippi law prohibiting abortion after 15 weeks, a case that could significantly pare back abortion access if not overturn Roe v. Wade.

’22 POLITICS — As the Supreme Court weighs a monumental ruling on abortion rights, Democrats and Republicans are also measuring how much the issue will play into next year’s elections. “The differing responses framed a central question: Would Wednesday’s bombshell Supreme Court argument, where the conservative majority suggested it was prepared to sharply cut abortion rights, energize liberals after decades when the issue has been a more powerful motivator for the right?” write WaPo’s Sean Sullivan and Seung Min Kim. “The court’s ruling could come as late as next June, meaning it would land while campaigning is in full swing for the November 2022 congressional elections.”

COLLINS ON ABORTION — The office of Sen. SUSAN COLLINS (R-Maine) released a statement Wednesday saying that she “favors passing legislation to enshrine the protections of Roe v. Wade into law,” NBC’s Sahil Kapur reports. Any such measure would lack the 60 votes needed to pass the Senate. Collins has defended her vote to confirm BRETT KAVANAUGH in part because he said Roe is settled law. But the justice sounded a different note on abortion at Wednesday’s oral arguments than he did at his confirmation hearings.

THE PANDEMIC

NEW VARIANT, NEW PLAN — Biden will unveil a new “winter strategy” to fight Covid-19 as the Omicron variant begins to pop up around the globe, including a case in California. NYT’s Sheryl Gay Stolberg writes the president “will announce Thursday that the more than 150 million Americans with private health coverage will be able to get at-home coronavirus tests reimbursed by their insurers, and that international travelers must show proof of a negative coronavirus test taken the day before departing for the United States.”

MASK MANDATE NOT GOING ANYWHERE  Sources tell Reuters’ David Shepardson that the president “will extend requirements for travelers to wear masks on airplanes, trains and buses and at airports and train stations through mid-March, amid concerns about the new Covid-19 variant. … A formal announcement extending the requirements through March 18 is expected on Thursday. The TSA in August extended the transportation mask order through Jan. 18.”

CONGRESS

RETIREMENT ROUNDUP — House Democrats are already staring down a brutally long list of retirements among their caucus, and the list is only expected to grow, report Sarah Ferris, Heather Caygle and Ally Mutnick. That potentially includes a “significant number of older committee chairs who have served for decades or seen their marquee legislation enacted this Congress — or both.”

MEDIAWATCH

INSIDE THE CNN-CUOMO SAGA — CHRIS CUOMO “said on Wednesday that he was embarrassed by CNN’s decision to suspend him indefinitely for his efforts earlier this year to help his brother, former Gov. ANDREW M. CUOMO of New York, stave off a mounting sexual harassment scandal,” NYT’s Michael Grynbaum and John Koblin report. “For CNN and its president, JEFF ZUCKER, however, the questions over Mr. Cuomo’s breach of basic journalistic rules and the timing of the network’s decision to suspend him are unlikely to disappear. …

“CNN has no immediate plans to retain an outside law firm or forensic investigators for the review, according to a person briefed on the company’s plans, who was granted anonymity to share details of private discussions. The review is expected to focus on any ethical journalistic lines that Mr. Cuomo may have crossed, the person said. … CNN has not publicly referred to the inquiry as an investigation, instead calling it ‘a thorough review’ that would seek ‘additional clarity’ into the situation.”

PLAYBOOKERS

Kamala Harris convened the inaugural meeting of the National Space Council under her leadership.

Mike Pence, in an interview with Christian Broadcasting Network, defended his actions on Jan. 6: “I don’t know if President Trump and I will ever see eye to eye on that day. Or that many of our most ardent supporters will agree with my decision that day. But I know I did the right thing.”

D.C.’s Duke Ellington School of the Arts reaffirmed its decision to name its theater after Dave Chappelle despite an Instagram campaign by the comedian to have the issue settled by a fundraising battle between Chappelle haters and fans.

Mike Bloomberg announced a $750 million charter school initiative in a WSJ op-ed.

Anthony LaBruna, a college student the Trump administration hired for a significant post, is running for the Iowa state Senate.

TUBERVILLE MAKES AN APPEARANCE: As the Alabama Senate primary race heats up with some polls showing candidate Katie Britt leading the Trump-endorsed Rep. Mo Brooks, guests at a fundraiser for Britt on Wednesday were surprised to see Sen. Tommy Tuberville (R-Ala.) in attendance. The reason: Tuberville hasn’t endorsed in the race. His appearance was naturally interpreted by some as a nod of support. The fundraiser was co-hosted by former GOP Senate chiefs Joe Hack, Olivia Kurtz, Mike House and Kate Dickens at S-3 Group’s townhouse on C Street. Also SPOTTED: Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.), Marc Short, Jeff Miller, Rachel Pearson, Katie Walsh, Mike Williams, Gina Rigby and Cindy Hayden. Pic

ADAMS IN GHANA: Omicron be damned, New York City Mayor-elect Eric Adams was going to Africa. Standing before a crowd of Jewish leaders in a gold caftan, Adams saluted Rabbi Menachem M. Scheerson or “The Rebbe” from Crown Heights for his work before a crowd of Jewish leaders in Ghana on Wednesday night as part of their Hanukkah celebration. “I came here to close the open wound of slavery and connect with my ancestors,” Adams said. “You have wounds around what happened in Nazi Germany.” He said “no matter what pain we experience, we must turn that pain into purpose.”

SPOTTED at a 50th anniversary party for the United Arab Emirates hosted by UAE Ambassador Yousef Al Otaiba at the Kennedy Center on Wednesday night: national security adviser Jake Sullivan, climate envoy John Kerry, Deputy Secretary of State Wendy Sherman, CIA Deputy Director David Cohen, Reps. Ted Deutch (D-Fla.) and Ro Khanna (D-Calif.), Jon Finer, Anne Neuberger, Daniel Benaim, Marcelle Wahba, Shirin Herzog, Malcolm Hoenlein, William Daroff, Rob Satloff, David Makovsky, Jason Isaacson, Dan Mariaschin, Brian Hook, Patrick Steel, Yehuda Neuberger, Richard Mintz, Seth Horwitz, Dana Al Marashi, Shannon Connolly, Adriana Sahliyeh, Matthew Jennings and Mark Vlasic.

SPOTTED: Andrew Yang in line ordering Cava at Union Station on Wednesday afternoon. Pic … Mick Mulvaney having lunch at Bombay Club on Wednesday. … Paul Ryan at Charlie Palmer on Wednesday.

FIRST IN PLAYBOOK — Ben Petersen is now Arizona comms director for the RNC. He most recently was deputy comms director for Arizona Gov. Doug Ducey.

TRANSITIONS — Bryan Humphreys will be CEO of the National Pork Producers Council. He previously was SVP at the National Pork Board. … Annie Weinberg is joining Summer Lee’s Pennsylvania congressional campaign as campaign manager. She most recently was principal at AMW Strategies. … Elizabeth Powell is joining the ONE Campaign as special assistant to the CEO, where she will do external engagement. She currently is a VIP engagement specialist at POLITICO. …

 Anthony Birch and Matt Johnson are joining Platform Communications. Birch will be VP of marketing and digital strategy and most recently was a social media supervisor at Generac Power Systems. Johnson will be a field operations strategist and account executive and most recently was field operations director at the Land and Liberty Coalition.

ENGAGED — Daniel White, special assistant at the Office of the Secretary of Defense, and Denise Pyfrom, global partnerships manager for the NBA and an MBA candidate at Columbia Business School, got engaged at Franklin D. Roosevelt Four Freedoms Park in New York City in late November. They met in New York City and will soon share Columbia University as an alma mater — Daniel graduated from the School of International and Public Affairs. Pic

— Jay Bhargava, press secretary for the Senate Homeland Security Democrats, and Harshitha Teppala, legislative correspondent for Sen. Bob Menendez (D-N.J.), got engaged Wednesday morning in front of the Capitol. The two were in the same middle school class in Montgomery, N.J., and then in 2017 they reconnected when both were on the Hill — Harshitha messaged Jay on Facebook to get coffee because they were from the same hometown. Pic

WELCOME TO THE WORLD — Eric Delaney, professional staff and director of member services for the House Rules Committee, and Johanna Montiel, legislative director for Rep. Salud Carbajal (D-Calif.), welcomed Benjamín Louis Delaney on Thursday. Pic

HAPPY BIRTHDAY: Interior Secretary Deb Haaland … VA Secretary Denis McDonough … Cal Thomas … incoming U.S. Permanent Representative to NATO Julianne Smith … Bob Carey … Finsbury Glover Hering’s Mina Moore … Carrie Wofford … Dan Puskar of the Public Lands Alliance … Alex Short … NBC’s Chris Berend … Erin Bailey … ABC’s Brad Mielke … Mairéad Lynn of Sen. Bob Casey’s (D-Pa.) office … Rayshon Payton … Andrew Howell of Monument Advocacy … Evan Walker … John Bodnovich of the American Beverage Licensees … Shannon Kiely Heider … Kelly Klass of Locust Street Group … Hogan Lovells’ Mark Irion … Lauren Cross … former Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid … former A.G. Edwin Meese (9-0) … former Sen. Wayne Allard (R-Colo.) … former Reps. Carol Shea-Porter (D-N.H.) and Pete Gallego (D-Texas) … POLITICO’s Kristi Swartz and Troy Kieser … Stone Phillips

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26.) AMERICAN MINUTE

“Amazing Grace, How Sweet the Sound …” – John Newton, William Wilberforce, & the fight to end slavery in the British Empire – American Minute with Bill Federer

  “Amazing Grace  & the fight to end slavery in the British Empire – American Minute with Bill Federer  How Sweet the Sound …” – John Newton  William Wilberforce

“Amazing grace!
How sweet the sound,
That saved a wretch like me!
I once was lost, but now am found,
Was blind, but now I see.”