Good morning! Here is your news briefing for Friday February 4, 2022
1.) THE DAILY SIGNAL
February 4 2022
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Happy Friday from Washington, where shadowy interests are in play as President Biden prepares to pick a Supreme Court justice. Fred Lucas reports on the influence of Demand Justice. California keeps trying to put government in charge of health care, Bob Moffit writes. On the podcast, a congressman warns of growing antisemitism in the U.S. Plus: the madness of generous unemployment checks and men’s say in whether women get abortions. A hundred years ago today, Ford Motor Co., losing market share to General Motors, acquires failing luxury automaker Lincoln Motor Co. for $8 million. |
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2.) THE EPOCH TIMES
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3.) DAYBREAK
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4.) THE SUNBURN
Sunburn — The morning read of what’s hot in Florida politics — 2.4.22
Your morning review of the issues and players behind Florida politics.
Good Friday morning.
McNicholas & Associates will announce today that Fred Piccolo is joining the firm as vice president of Public Affairs.
Piccolo served as Gov. Ron DeSantis’ Communications Director in 2020 and previously held the same role for former House Speakers Richard Corcoran and José Oliva.
He built a lengthy resume in campaign work before entering the public sector, having served as a travel aide to U.S. Senate candidate and former Florida Secretary of State Katherine Harris and holding the Deputy Political Director job on Bill McCollum’s successful campaign for Attorney General.
After a two-year stint as former U.S. Rep. Dennis Ross’ chief of staff, he transitioned back to the campaign world with a job working alongside his brother, Tom Piccolo, and Anthony Pedicini at political consulting firm Strategic Image Management.
“Fred is a great leader, and we are excited to have him join our industrious team,” said firm founder and president Tom McNicholas. “Our clients will be the beneficiaries of Fred’s intensity, intelligence, experience, and of course, his world-class wit.”
As vice president of Public Affairs, Piccolo will work in the Tallahassee office of McNicholas & Associates, a multistate firm that provides a full slate of public relations and communications services, including crisis communications, media buys, grassroots outreach, and social media management.
“In 25 years in the public affairs business, I’ve experienced remarkable success for those I served. I am excited to be able to use that wealth of experience to help the clients we serve today and those we will serve in the future,” Piccolo said. “I have worked with many great teams and for many great leaders. That is what attracted me to this opportunity — the quality of the team around me and the quality of the leader of the organization.”
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“The Seminole Tribe as a political force remains unconquered” via Peter Schorsch of Florida Politics — Two gambling goliaths came into Florida intending to upend the state’s multibillion-dollar gaming industry. Only one obstacle stood in their way: the Seminole Tribe of Florida. And over eight months, the Tribe proved to be a force that no amount of money could conquer. This is the story of the two most expensive ballot initiative campaigns in U.S. history and how the Seminole Tribe, along with its cadre of political advisers, navigated unprecedented terrain to stop them in their tracks. By essentially stifling both efforts before they could get off the ground, the Tribe saved itself anywhere from $150 million to $250 million fighting the proposals on the ballot this fall. But an even more powerful message was delivered that will have a long-lasting effect for years to come: If you want to do business in Florida, you better check with the Seminole Tribe first.
— SITUATIONAL AWARENESS —
—@Redistrict: NEW: for the first time, Dems have taken the lead on @CookPolitical‘s 2022 redistricting scorecard. After favorable developments in NY, AL, PA et al., they’re on track to net 2-3 seats from new maps vs. old ones.*
—@ChrisSprowls: Being a father is the most important title I’ll ever hold, & I’m proud to highlight a House PCB sponsored by @RepThadAltman that addresses the crisis of fatherlessness affecting our children’s development and well-being.
—@Fineout: Chief U.S. Judge Mark Walker — as testimony continues on Florida’s voting law: “I assume we can’t say critical race theory anymore in Florida. But we can say racial resentment. But I assume we will ban that as well.”
—@LesleyAbravanel: Max is working overtime as these shady Florida Republicans attempt to dismantle democracy in between, distracting us with disgraceful disinformation, refusals to condemn #NazisInFlorida, and let’s not forget, the guvnuh’s Yelp tour of greasy spoons & Buc-ee’s from here to Mesa, AZ.
Tweet, tweet:
—@NateMonroeTU: There isn’t a lot of armchair psychology necessary here: We have a decadelong record demonstrating bad character judgment, lack of transparency and aloofness toward paying customers. That is, right now, Shad Khan‘s legacy in Jacksonville.
—@KyLamb8: Something really annoying from the Sunday afternoon NFL broadcast that Tony Romo and Jim Nantz whiffed on, and the rules expert didn’t even catch or correct them: there is no such thing as “too many men on the line of scrimmage.” It’s not an illegal formation.
— DAYS UNTIL —
Super Bowl LVI — 9; Will Smith‘s ‘Fresh Prince of Bel-Air’ reboot premieres — 9; Discover Boating Miami International Boat Show begins — 12; season four of “The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel’ begins — 12; Spring Training report dates begin — 13; Synapse Florida tech summit begins — 13; ‘The Walking Dead’ final season part two begins — 16; Daytona 500 — 16; Special Election for Jacksonville City Council At-Large Group 3 — 19; Suits For Session — 19; CPAC begins — 20; St. Pete Grand Prix — 21; Joe Biden to give the State of the Union address — 25; ‘The Batman’ premieres — 28; Miami Film Festival begins — 28; Sarasota County votes to renew the special 1-mill property tax for the school district — 32; the third season of ‘Atlanta’ begins — 47; season two of ‘Bridgerton’ begins — 49; The Oscars — 51; Macbeth with Daniel Craig and Ruth Negga begin performances on Broadway — 53; Grammys rescheduled in Las Vegas — 58; ‘The Godfather’ TV series ‘The Offer’ premieres — 83; federal student loan payments will resume — 86; ‘Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness’ premieres — 91; ‘Top Gun: Maverick’ premieres — 112; ‘Platinum Jubilee’ for Queen Elizabeth II — 118; ‘Thor: Love and Thunder’ premieres — 155; San Diego Comic-Con 2022 — 168; Michael Mann and Meg Gardiner novel ‘Heat 2’ publishes — 186; ‘The Lord of the Rings’ premieres on Amazon Prime — 210; ‘Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse’ sequel premieres — 245; ‘Black Panther 2’ premieres — 280; ‘The Flash’ premieres — 283; ‘Avatar 2′ premieres — 315; ‘Captain Marvel 2′ premieres — 378; ‘John Wick: Chapter 4’ premieres — 413; ‘Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania’ premieres — 539; ‘Dune: Part Two’ premieres — 623; Opening Ceremony of the 2024 Olympic Games — 903.
—TOP STORY —
“Florida Legislature approves redistricting maps for Senate and House” via Jacob Ogles of Florida Politics — The cartography has now shifted from a legislative matter to one of judicial scrutiny. The bill (SB 100) passed out of the Senate Thursday on a 37-0 vote. Notably, the Senate map last month earned three ‘no’ votes from Democratic Sens. Audrey Gibson, Gary Farmer and Victor Torres — citing concerns about the fact the Senate map holds the same number of minority access districts as are in place now, despite growth in Hispanic populations. Similar concerns dogged the House map, approved with far less bipartisanship on a near party-line 77-39 vote. Sen. Ray Rodrigues, Reapportionment Committee chair, encouraged Senators to stay above the fray. “I ask we give our colleagues in the House the same deference they have provided to us on our map,” he said. The legislative maps, unlike congressional maps in the works, passed as a joint resolution and can become law without the involvement of the Governor’s Office.
—”Florida Legislature moves ahead with redraw of districts, but waits on Ron DeSantis and court” via John Kennedy of USA Today Network
— DATELINE TALLY —
“‘Ghost’ candidates, dark money wouldn’t be focus of DeSantis’ election security office” via Skyler Swisher and Annie Martin of the Orlando Sentinel — DeSantis’ proposed election security office would have no authority to clamp down on “ghost” candidates or the dark money groups that support them. Investigators in the new office would focus on voter fraud, not illegal or unethical behavior by politicians and their campaigns, said state Sen. Travis Hutson, who is sponsoring the Senate’s bill. Ben Wilcox, the research director with Integrity Florida, a nonprofit, nonpartisan research institute, said Florida held a relatively seamless election process in 2020 for the first time in years. He questioned the need for a new office to address voter fraud.
—@ReporterAnnie: UPDATE: Senate President Wilton Simpson has a different interpretation of the DeSantis-proposed elections office than the Senator who sponsored the bill creating the office. Simpson said Thurs the bill wouldn’t prohibit the office from probing dark money and ghost candidates
“Bill following battle over DeSantis’ DEP Secretary pick prepped for Senate floor” via Renzo Downey of Florida Politics — Senators now are ready to consider legislation easing the Governor’s ability to appoint the heads of Florida’s environmental agency and other agencies. The bill emerged after a political showdown over DeSantis‘ environmental chief. Currently, the Governor’s pick for Secretary of the Department of Environmental Protection (DEP) requires three Cabinet members to approve the nominee. Legislation carried by Sen. Aaron Bean (SB 1658) would instead give the Governor the choice to seek the Cabinet’s unanimous support or the Senate’s majority support. That measure passed out of the Senate Rules Committee on Thursday, its final committee stop on its way to the Senate floor.
“Wilton Simpson says lawmakers will ‘fail’ citizens if they don’t tackle homeowner insurance ‘crisis’” via Christine Jordan Sexton of Florida Politics — Simpson on Thursday said his chamber continues to make the state’s property insurance market a priority and warned that things could worsen if the Legislature does not act this Session. The Senate will produce another property bill, and Simpson said that he is hopeful the House will take it up before lawmakers adjourn the 2022 Session in March. “There is something we have to do to get to this fraud,” he told reporters after the Senate adjourned. “And it’s the only way we are going to bring down these prices. If we fail, because of whatever special interests, then we’ve only failed our citizens.”
“Jeff Brandes says Governor, Jimmy Patronis, House Republicans are ‘sleeping’ through property insurance crisis” via Christine Jordan Sexton of Florida Politics — In his final Session in office, Sen. Brandes is lashing out at Republicans, including DeSantis, for ignoring the state’s growing property insurance crisis. During debate over property insurance in the Senate Wednesday, Brandes said the Governor was not paying attention as homeowners get hit with huge rate hikes, and insurers opt to stop writing policies in the Sunshine State. Brandes has emerged as a maverick in the last two sessions and has not been afraid to clash openly with Senate GOP leaders including Senate President Simpson. More recently, though, his criticism has extended to those outside his chamber.
—@JimRosicaFL: This suddenly made me think of @mahoneysthename‘s Tom Lee story from 2018: “I am just unchained … I’m done with these people and the way they’re running this institution like a third-world country.”
—”Chris Sprowls talks water conservation following release of FIU bonefish study” via Tristan Wood of Florida Politics
House plan could shut out some colleges from EASE funding — The House unveiled a three-tier plan for a college grant program that could see some private schools shut out from receiving funds. Andrew Atterbury of POLITICO Florida reported that the plan would provide top-tier schools EASE grants worth $4,000, up from the $2,841 currently awarded to students across all private colleges and universities. Schools in the middle tier would continue to receive $2,841. The lowest tier would be ineligible to receive EASE funding. Democrats expressed concern about the impacts the plan could have at historically Black colleges and universities.
House proposal could see universities ditch SACS — A higher education proposal in the House would require colleges and universities to seek out new accrediting bodies. As reported by Atterbury, the measure may be a response to the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools Commission on Colleges, the current accrediting body for state universities, weighing in on the FSU presidential search when Education Commissioner Corcoran was vying for the job. Republicans pitched the proposal to ensure state universities innovate and pursue higher standards. Democrats, meanwhile, said it could lead second-rate schools to seek out accrediting organizations with lax standards.
“Senate preps for vote on presidential search exemption bill without controversial House amendment” via Kelly Hayes of Florida Politics — The Florida Senate is preparing to vote on legislation that would provide a public records exemption for information about applicants seeking a state higher ed presidential position. The proposal made it through its second reading Thursday before the Senate. It now awaits a third reading, in which Senators will decide the fate of the infamous legislation. The measure (SB 520), filed by Brandes, would create a public records exemption applicable to the pool of public university and college presidential applicants. Information on selected finalists would be made available, however. The bill has made it practically unscathed through the Senate, dodging a controversial amendment tacked onto the House version.
“Immigration enforcement bill clears first House committee” via Jason Delgado of Florida Politics — A House panel gave a thumbs-up Thursday to a bill that would intensify Florida’s crackdown against illegal immigration. The bill (HB 1355) is a multi-prong proposal inspired by DeSantis. It would require law enforcement to cooperate with U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement. It would also prevent local governments from contracting with businesses that transport immigrants who’ve entered the country unlawfully. Rep. John Snyder is the bill sponsor. The Criminal Justice and Public Safety Committee OK’d the measure 12-5 vote. “This bill is about a federal government that has completely relinquished control of the southern border,” Snyder told committee members.
“Black legislators push key initiatives, but face hurdles in GOP-controlled Legislature” via Issac Morgan of Florida Phoenix — Black state lawmakers on Thursday unveiled key legislative initiatives aimed at improving health and safety and other conditions in communities of color, but most of the bills haven’t gained traction in the GOP-controlled Legislature. The Florida Legislative Black Caucus released a report Thursday outlining priority legislation in the Florida House and Senate in the 2022 session, focusing on health, safety, prosperity and pride. The Caucus wants to tackle community violence, increase access to affordable health care and housing, recognize Juneteenth Day as a paid state holiday and boost scholarship funds for students at Historically Black Colleges and Universities, where some schools recently faced bomb threats.
“Lawmakers want a ‘no negotiation’ policy with ransomware attackers” via Lawrence Mower of the Tampa Bay Times — Florida’s cities and counties have paid out millions of dollars to hackers who infiltrate their systems and hold critical data hostage. Now some state lawmakers want them to adopt a policy on hackers usually reserved for terrorist organizations: refuse to negotiate. A bill moving through the House of Representatives would ban local governments from paying attackers in ransomware cases, a growing form of hacking that uses malware intended to extort money or other ransom by encrypting files on a victim’s computer or network. The attacks have hit cities across the state. When a Riviera Beach police employee opened an email in 2019, it led to a shutdown of the city’s email, phones, police records, even the library. Although the FBI recommended against it, the city paid 65 bitcoins, worth about $600,000, to recover the records.
“Cyber terror bill clears first House committee” via Jason Delgado of Florida Politics — A House panel OK’d a bill Thursday that would modernize cybersex crime laws and criminalize the theft of sexually explicit pictures. The House Criminal Justice and Public Safety Committee advanced the measure (HB 1453) unanimously without questions or debate. Rep. Joe Harding is the bill sponsor. “This bill is going to create tougher penalties and ensure that in Florida, we’re not going to tolerate those activities,” Harding told committee members. The bill contains several provisions. It would prohibit someone from spreading “deepfake” sexually explicit images or altered sexual images and videos, without a person’s consent, making it a third-degree felony. The bill will also rename the crime of “child pornography” to “child sexual abuse material.” Proponents of the change say the word “pornography” implies some sort of consent, which children cannot give.
“House panel approves $500 million broadband bill” via Scott Powers of Florida Politics — A bill setting aside $500 million in federal money for broadband internet service expansion into rural and unserved areas got unanimous approval from a House panel Thursday after its sponsor used her own experience to allay skepticism. The House Tourism, Infrastructure and Energy Subcommittee voted 15-0 for Rep. Josie Tomkow‘s broadband internet access bill (HB 1543) and a companion bill (HB 1545). The bill appropriates $400 million, which originated in the federal infrastructure and COVID-19 relief bills for Florida’s Broadband Opportunity Program. That program was created last year to provide local grants to communities seeking help in developing broadband infrastructure.
“Net metering bill gets first House panel OK, despite fierce solar opposition” via Gray Rohrer of Florida Politics — Legislation favored by Florida Power & Light (FPL) and other utility monopolies to require future rooftop solar panel customers to pay higher rates was approved by the House Tourism, Infrastructure & Energy Subcommittee Thursday. Under current law, solar panel owners who have excess energy generated by the panels can sell it back to the utilities at the retail rate the utilities charge other customers. The bill (HB 741) would require a cheaper wholesale price charged to the utilities. Supporters of the bill claim other utility customers are subsidizing solar customers because they rely on the underlying electric grid when the panels don’t generate enough electricity.
—MORE TALLY —
“Senate votes to extend VISIT Florida until 2031” via Florida Politics — The Senate voted overwhelmingly to extend the life of the state’s tourism marketing agency for an additional eight years, an acknowledgment the agency has cleaned up its act. Sen. Ed Hooper’s bill (SB 434), which the Senate passed 36-1 Thursday, would postpone the sunset date for Florida’s tourism marketing agency from October 2023 to October 2031. That would end the agency’s constant need to annually ask the Legislature to keep the funding flowing. Senators passed the measure with no discussion. Only Sen. Manny Díaz Jr. voted against the measure.
“Senate signs off on memorial calling for more National Guard troops” via Jason Delgado of Florida Politics — The Senate passed a memorial Thursday calling on federal leaders to bolster the ranks of the Florida National Guard. The memorial (SM 826), though symbolic, marks Florida’s latest effort to beef up its understaffed militia. Despite serving the third most disaster-prone state in the nation, Florida ranks second to last in a “Guardsmen-to-citizen ratio,” with roughly 12,000 troops serving more than 22 million residents. Lawmakers, including Sen. Tom Wright, want federal decision-makers to reevaluate how many troops the Florida Guard can welcome into its ranks.
“Measure to overhaul Baker and Marchman acts dramatically scaled back” via Jim Ash of The Florida Bar — A proposed overhaul of the Baker and Marchman acts that govern the commitment of Floridians with mental illness and substance use disorders, respectively, appears to be dead this year. The Senate Children Families and Elders Affairs Committee voted 8-0 on Feb. 1 to approve a stripped-down version, SB 1844, by Sen. Aaron Bean. Moments before the panel took up his bill, Bean stepped to the lectern and offered a profuse apology. The amended version would make it easier for parents or guardians to seek voluntary mental-health treatment for a minor by removing a Baker Act requirement that the receiving facility must first conduct a “voluntariness” hearing.
“School board surprised by bill that could affect budget by millions” via Charlotte Twine of Keys Weekly — A bill currently steamrolling through the Legislative Session, if passed, could have serious consequences for the annual budget of the Monroe County School District. The school district levies a special half-mill tax that raises roughly $15 million a year for the school district. The half-mill tax must be reapproved by voters every four years. The proposed bill would require the school district to seek renewal of that half-mill only during November general elections, meaning the school district might have to forego that $15 million if it can’t get the item on a general election ballot in time. If the bill passes and the school board acts quickly, the half-mill tax approval could be “piggybacked” onto the November 2022 ballot.
“Port of Putnam? Lawmakers could add county to seaport panel” via Renzo Downey of Florida Politics — Putnam County might not be a coastal county, but some lawmakers want to add it to the state’s seaport infrastructure improvement panel. Representatives from Florida’s 15 public seaports plus the Florida Department of Transportation (FDOT) and the Department of Economic Opportunity currently comprise the Florida Seaport Transportation and Economic Development (FSTED) Council. A bill from Sen. Keith Perry (SB 1038), which passed out of the Senate Rules Committee Thursday on its way to the Senate floor, would add a representative from Putnam County to the Council. During Thursday’s meeting, Committee Chair Kathleen Passidomo raised a point that may resonate with many Floridians. “I didn’t realize Putnam County had a port,” the Naples Republican said. Along the St. Johns River, Palatka is home to the Putnam County Barge Port.
— SKED —
Assignment editors — Sen. Annette Taddeo continues a 67-county tour in her bid for Governor. Saturday, Feb. 5: 9 a.m., House of Hope 2484 SE Bonita Street, Stuart; 11:30 a.m., Big John’s Eatery, 100 Sansburys Way #108, West Palm Beach; 1:30 p.m., Smitty’s Sistrunk, 1134 NW Sixth St., Fort Lauderdale. Sunday, Feb. 6: 7 a.m., Antioch Baptist Church, 21311 NW 34th Ave. Miami Gardens; 10:30 a.m., Randy’s Restaurant, 13420 NW Seventh Ave., North Miami.
“DeSantis to address Federalist Society gathering as national focus on courts intensifies” via Gray Rohrer of Florida Politics — The prospect of a 49-year-old precedent recognizing abortion rights being overturned or seriously undercut later this year, combined with the imminent vacancy of U.S. Supreme Court Justice Stephen Breyer‘s seat, is putting an intense political focus on the nation’s high court as the 2022 campaign season kicks into gear. Amid that backdrop, DeSantis will address a gathering of the Federalist Society in Orlando Friday in a “fireside chat” format with Kayleigh McEnany, ex-spokeswoman for former President Donald Trump. The Federalist Society is the conservative legal organization that helped vet and recommend Trump’s three picks for the U.S. Supreme Court — Amy Coney Barrett, Brett Kavanaugh and Neil Gorsuch.
“Background check: UCLA supervisor wouldn’t recommend Joseph Ladapo for Florida Surgeon General job” Jeffrey Schweers of the USA Today Network — A former supervisor of Ladapo would not recommend him for the job, according to the Florida Department of Law Enforcement’s background investigation for his confirmation to the top medical post. “In my opinion, the people of Florida would be better served by a Surgeon General who grounds his policy decisions and recommendations on the best scientific evidence rather than opinions,” the unnamed supervisor at the University of California, Los Angeles, said in the Jan. 18 report prepared by a senior crime intelligence analyst for the Senate.
Assignment editors — Clear Health Alliance is hosting a panel discussion with Magic Johnson to talk about prevention of HIV/AIDS and care for individuals impacted by HIV/AIDS, 11:30 a.m., Jacksonville River City Downtown Hotel, 245 Water Street, Jacksonville. RSVP to amanda@redhillsstrategies.com.
“Cold emergency declared to help Florida farmers weather freeze fallout” via Anne Geggis of Florida Politics — Plummeting temperatures last weekend have farmers scrambling to save their crops, like the Valencia oranges almost ready for picking. DeSantis has issued an emergency order covering 30 counties to help with an emergency harvest. DeSantis’ declaration, reaching as far north as Volusia County and south to the Florida Keys, will suspend agricultural trucks’ weight limits, among other provisions, to help farmers cope. The declaration also covers Brevard, Broward, Charlotte, Citrus, Collier, DeSoto, Hardee, Hendry, Hernando, Highlands, Hillsborough, Indian River, Lake, Lee, Manatee, Martin, Miami-Dade, Okeechobee, Orange, Osceola, Palm Beach, Pasco, Pinellas, Polk, Sarasota, Seminole, St. Lucie and Sumter counties.
— CORONA FLORIDA —
“Florida COVID-19 update: State sees 720 new deaths, and the latest on hospitalizations” via Devoun Cetoute of the Miami Herald — Florida on Thursday reported 17,612 COVID-19 cases and 720 new deaths to the CDC. The CDC backlogs cases and deaths for Florida on Mondays and Thursdays, when multiple days in the past had their totals changed. In August, Florida began reporting cases and deaths by the “case date” and “death date” rather than the date they were logged into the system. Of the deaths added, about 99% occurred in the past 28 days and about 68% in the last two weeks.
“He spent 164 days battling COVID-19 at a Jacksonville hospital. Now, he wants others to get vaccinated” via Teresa Stepzinski of The Florida Times-Union — Fabian Granado will celebrate his 27th birthday on Feb. 8. It’s a day his close-knit family feared he wouldn’t live to see. Hospitalized 164 days, often near death, including two months in a coma, from COVID-19, Granado walked out of UF Health Jacksonville to tears of joy, cheers, handshakes and hugs from the masked medical staff who cared for him day and night. “I’m feeling wonderful,” said Granado in a soft, raspy voice. “It’s been a long 5½ months at the hospital getting my lungs healed and being able to talk, walk and you know, be alive and a human again.” Granado said he wouldn’t be alive but for God’s will. He praised as a blessing the hospital’s doctors, nurses, physical and occupational therapists, medical technicians and other medical personnel for saving his life.
— 2022 —
“Joe Biden authorizes $15 million transfer from DNC to House and Senate campaign committees” via Jeff Zeleny of CNN — Biden told party leaders at the White House that he has approved a transfer of $15 million from the Democratic National Committee to help boost the efforts of the party’s House and Senate campaign committees, officials said. The Democratic National Committee called it the largest-ever midterm cash transfer, with $7.5 million each to the two campaign committees. The $15 million is in addition to previous investments in targeted battleground states, on voter protection efforts, data building and state party building. It’s part of a coordinated campaign the DNC is building across eight states, where some of the top House and Senate races are playing out.
“Could proposed 15-week abortion ban hurt Florida GOP in 2022?” via Kirby Wilson and Romy Ellenbogen of the Tampa Bay Times — Voters don’t want to hear elected officials talk about abortion. So says Democratic pollster Molly Murphy. As the calendar inches closer to the 2022 elections, she said in an interview, the electorate has more pressing concerns, such as inflation, the coronavirus and local schools. “Even just the idea that a politician is focusing on abortion legislation not only puts them on the wrong side of the issue, but it puts them on the wrong side of getting what voters are going through right now,” Murphy said.
“‘Dr. Anthony Fauci can pound sand’: DeSantis’ campaign sells new flip-flops and more to keep skewering doctor” via Wells Dusenbury of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — DeSantis is taking more shots at Dr. Fauci with his latest campaign merchandise, this time adding flip-flops that read, “Fauci can pound sand.” The Florida governor has repeatedly criticized Fauci during the COVID-19 pandemic for what DeSantis perceived to be overly stringent safety guidelines. One of the latest items is the so-called “Freedom Over Fauci Flip Flops,” selling for $39. DeSantis’ website touts them as having high-quality soles, “which create a special message to Dr. Fauci as you walk through the sand.”
“Val Demings ‘delivers’ in new campaign video highlighting port spending” via A.G. Gancarski of Florida Politics — U.S. Rep. Demings released a video Thursday reminding voters that she “delivers” when it comes to Florida’s infrastructural priorities. The video focuses on spending at JAXPORT and the Port of Palm Beach, made possible via the Bipartisan Infrastructure Framework legislation, which U.S. Sen. Rubio opposed. Demings is seeking the Democratic nomination to challenge Rubio this year. “Chief Demings worked with Democrats and Republicans to deliver for Florida, passing legislation to create jobs, strengthen supply chains, and lower prices for working families,” said Demings’ campaign manager Zack Carroll. “Marco Rubio opposed it. Floridians deserve a Senator who will get the job done in Washington, not another career politician who takes his marching orders from special interests and party bosses, even when it hurts families back home.”
First on #FlaPol — “Erin Grall to run for Senate in proposed SD 29” via Scott Powers of Florida Politics — Republican Rep. Grall is filing to run for the new Senate District 29 seat. Under the Senate’s redistricting map approved last month, the newly formed and newly numbered district is clear of any incumbents and does not appear to have any other challengers. For now, that gives Grall a clear path into the Senate. The proposed new SD 29 would be centered in Vero Beach, stretching along the Atlantic coast from Sebastian to Port St. Lucie, then moving inland to take in parts of several counties rimming the northern and western shores of Lake Okeechobee. Grall’s popularity with her base may have been evidenced by the impressive host committee for her House re-election fundraiser in December.
Jessica Baker adds $55K in January for HD 17 campaign — First-time candidate Baker continued raising cash at a rapid clip last month in her campaign for a seat in the House. With $55,000 in new money added last month, the Republican Assistant State Attorney has now collected more than $400,000 four months into her campaign. About $21,000 of her January contributions were deposited into her official campaign account, with another $34,000 collected by her political committee, Friends of Jessica Baker. Baker had previously been running for House District 12, though under new maps produced by the Legislature, she will be running in the newly created House District 17.
“GOP operative Alina García campaign reports $135K raised toward Senate bid” via Jesse Scheckner of Florida Politics — Veteran Republican operative García amassed $135,000 in January toward her bid for Florida’s soon-to-be remapped Senate District 40. In just nine days last month, her campaign said, García raised more than $100,000 in direct financial contributions through her campaign account and almost $30,000 through her political committee, Florida Always First. She also received “an outpouring of local, community-based support and contributions from many of the state of Florida’s leading Republican voices.” Her campaign has yet to file its official January fundraising numbers with the Florida Division of Elections. The deadline for that is Feb. 10.
“Jordan Leonard campaign reports new monthly fundraising high for House bid” via Jesse Scheckner of Florida Politics — Leonard hit a fundraising high in January when he collected more than $50,000. Leonard is seeking to succeed fellow Democrat Joe Geller in the Florida House. Since launching his campaign one year ago, Leonard has amassed about $251,000 between his campaign and political committee, Americans for Florida. Last month marked his largest single-month gain. His campaign has not yet filed its official January fundraising numbers with the Florida Division of Elections. The deadline for that is Feb. 10. Provided the state Legislature and Supreme Court approve redistricting map H 8013, which has so far advanced through committee along a mostly party-line vote, Leonard would run in House District 106.
“Republican volunteers jam training in famously blue Broward County” via Anne Geggis of Florida Politics — Broward County is a famously Democratic stronghold, but more than 100 people who packed Wings Plus in Coral Springs came not for lunch but for training aimed at making the county redder. Organizers were ebullient at Republican accomplishments thus far and what Thursday’s turnout portended. “You are the backbone of what’s going to help us in Broward County. … The changes we’ve made and the changes we’ll continue to make are phenomenal,” said Tom Powers, Broward County Republican Party Chair and former Coral Springs City Commissioner. Since Powers was elected to his post leading the Broward County GOP in December 2020, he said party precinct men and women have doubled from 200 to 400, and there are 100 more applying for those positions. There are currently 547 precincts in Broward County.
“Prosecutors who want to curb mass incarceration hit a roadblock: Tough-on-crime lawmakers” via Keri Blakinger of NBC News — When Deborah Gonzalez campaigned in 2020 to become the first Latina District Attorney in Georgia, she wanted to upset the status quo. She promised to lock up fewer people and curb low-level drug prosecutions. And this year, Republican legislators are backing a bill that could dramatically affect reform-minded prosecutors like Gonzalez across the state. If it passes, the measure will create an appointed oversight committee with the ability to remove state attorneys from office if they won’t prosecute certain crimes, like the small-time drug charges Gonzalez vowed to avoid. The fight in Georgia highlights an emerging pattern across the country: Even when progressive prosecutors win voter support, establishment forces sometimes work to curb their power.
— CORONA NATION —
“So long, omicron: White House eyes next phase of the pandemic” via Adam Cancryn of POLITICO — Emboldened by falling case counts, the Biden administration is plotting a new phase of the pandemic response aimed at containing the coronavirus and conditioning Americans to live with it. The preparations are designed to capitalize on a break in the monthslong COVID-19 surge, with officials anticipating a spring lull that could boost the nation’s mood and lift Biden’s approval ratings at a critical moment for his party. But it’s a delicate operation. The White House is wary of declaring victory too early, only to get hit with another catastrophic variant. Officials are also anxious that voters will be disappointed by the idea of living with the virus under a President who once pledged to shut it down completely.
“The U.S. Surgeon General tells parents that Pfizer’s vaccine for young children will get a rigorous FDA review.” via Sheryl Gay Stolberg of The New York Times — The U.S. Surgeon General sought to reassure parents who are nervous about their toddlers and preschoolers being vaccinated against the coronavirus after federal regulators took a step toward authorizing vaccines for young children despite questions about their effectiveness. During a White House briefing, Dr. Vivek Murthy, the Surgeon General, said that Pfizer’s application for emergency authorization by the FDA would “undergo the same independent, rigorous and transparent review process” that was used to authorize COVID-19 vaccines for adults. Parents of young children are especially wary about the vaccines. Roughly 30% of parents of children younger than 5 now say they intend to vaccinate their children as soon as shots become available for that age group.
“Medicare will soon provide free at-home coronavirus tests” via Noah Weiland of The New York Times — Medicare, which covers roughly 60 million Americans, will provide free over-the-counter rapid coronavirus tests beginning in the spring. The policy would “allow Medicare beneficiaries to pick up tests at no cost at the point of sale and without needing to be reimbursed,” the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services said Thursday, adding that it would be the first time Medicare covered the whole cost of an over-the-counter test. Under the plan, which will also apply to Medicare Advantage beneficiaries, Medicare will pay eligible pharmacies and health providers to offer the tests.
“Americans have lost 13.5 million years of life during the pandemic” via Philip Bump of The Washington Post — The CDC calculates a metric called “excess deaths,” a comparison between the number of deaths recorded in the United States and the number of deaths that would be expected based on prior years’ trends. It allows them to spot things like exceptionally bad flu seasons, for example. Those data are also how we know that the number of deaths from COVID-19 is not exaggerated: Hundreds of thousands more people have died over the past two years than we otherwise would have expected. Those excess deaths have stripped away a cumulative 13.5 million years of life. It’s an immense number and one that necessarily keeps growing. A similar analysis from the team last summer put the total at about 9 million years of life, meaning that the total has grown by about 50% since then.
— CORONA ECONOMICS —
“Long COVID-19 is contributing to America’s labor shortage” via Tina Reed and Emily Peck of Axios — Long COVID-19 is likely keeping a lot of Americans out of the workforce, experts say, and that could continue for years as people struggle with persistent health problems. Long COVID-19 isn’t confined to older patients, and its symptoms can vary. The U.S. also doesn’t have particularly strong support systems for people who need long-term COVID-19 treatment. 1.6 million workers could be missing from the labor market right now because of long COVID-19, accounting for upward of 15% of unfilled jobs.
“Florida gained almost half a million jobs; health and education sector see growth” via Kelsie Cairns of ABC 7 — Florida jobs numbers are out for 2021. As compared to 2020, the state gained close to half a million jobs, according to the Department of Economic Opportunity. Of those jobs, over 50,000 were created in the health and education sector. The actual figures note 479,300 jobs were created; among those, 51,900 health and education jobs were added. In 2021, the total job growth increased to 5.6%. While over 50,000 doesn’t seem like much, compared to the near 500,000, the health and health science industry is booming! More and more professionals at all experience levels are applying to pharmaceutical and medical device companies.
— MORE CORONA —
“One day in the ‘parallel universe’ of a London ICU” via Megan Specia of The New York Times — So many people were infected by the coronavirus this winter — a record of around 186,000 new daily cases in the first week of January — that even if fewer of them ended up gravely ill, hospitals have remained under intense pressure. In intensive care units like Homerton’s, which treat the most seriously ill, nearly all those being tended are unvaccinated. Since the start of the pandemic, the hospital has treated more than 2,000 coronavirus patients. Nearly 500 died from COVID-19, according to hospital data. The pandemic has by now engendered a lasting change in the way its intensive care unit, and many others in the country, work. We visited Homerton on Jan. 21.
“No more pre-departure testing? Travel groups push for end of COVID-19 entry requirement for vaccinated flyers.” via Bailey Schultz of USA Today — Travel industry trade groups are pushing federal officials to drop the pre-departure coronavirus testing requirement for vaccinated travelers flying into the United States. Roger Dow, president and CEO of the U.S. Travel Association, said the organization is “very much in favor” of shaking up the entry requirements to make travel to the U.S. more seamless. Other destinations, including the United Kingdom and Puerto Rico, have dropped testing requirements for fully vaccinated travelers in recent weeks. Dozens of trade associations hope the U.S. will follow suit.
— PRESIDENTIAL —
“Biden in NYC: Nation must come together to end gun violence” via Josh Boak, Colleen Long and Michelle L. Price of The Associated Press — Running through a grim tally of recent gun deaths, Biden pledged to New Yorkers and the nation on Thursday that the federal government would step up its fight against gun violence by working more closely with police and communities to stop the surging bloodshed. “It’s enough. Enough is enough,” Biden told police, law enforcement officials and lawmakers gathered at the city’s police headquarters. “We can do something about this.” But Biden’s crime-fighting strategy relies heavily on buy-in from state and local officials as he suggests ways to spend federal dollars and expand on initiatives already underway. The modest initiatives demonstrate the limits to what he can do when Congress has no appetite to pass gun legislation.
— D.C. MATTERS —
“FDA nominee faces steep climb to Senate confirmation” via Christina Jewett and Emily Cochrane of The New York Times — The White House is facing pressure from prominent lawmakers over its pick to lead the FDA, with abortion foes urging Republican Senators to reject the nominee, Dr. Robert Califf, and with key Democrats withholding support over opioid policies and his industry ties. Nearly six years after Califf received overwhelming bipartisan support to lead the agency in the final year of the Barack Obama administration, lawmakers and aides are struggling to lock up the votes he needs to clear an evenly divided Senate, where Vice President Kamala Harris serves as the tiebreaking vote. Few, if any, nominees to the FDA have faced as much opposition on both sides of the aisle, and the agency has been without a permanent commissioner for more than a year.
— CRISIS —
“Memo circulated among Donald Trump allies advocated using NSA data in attempt to prove stolen election” via Josh Dawsey, Rosalind S. Helderman, Emma Brown, Jon Swaine and Jacqueline Alemany of The Washington Post — The memo used the banal language of government bureaucracy, but the proposal it advocated was extreme: Trump should invoke the extraordinary powers of the NSA and Defense Department to sift through raw electronic communications in an attempt to show that foreign powers had intervened in the 2020 election to help Biden win. Proof of foreign interference would “support next steps to defend the Constitution in a manner superior to current civilian-only judicial remedies,” argued the Dec. 18, 2020, memo, which was circulated among Trump allies.
— EPILOGUE TRUMP —
“Trump interference exacerbates GOP split on election reforms” via Burgess Everett of POLITICO — Trump’s attacks on the bipartisan Senate effort to prevent unsubstantiated and solo objections to presidential ballots are accentuating a GOP split over whether the work is even worth pursuing. The bipartisan group working on reform of the law Trump’s allies used to stoke challenges to his 2020 loss has attracted nine GOP Senators, whom Trump has labeled “RINO Republicans.” Despite that number of Republican negotiators, Trump’s comments are deepening the party divide over whether to revisit the Electoral Count Act at all, reflecting long-term fault lines in the GOP over the events of Jan. 6, 2021. The two Republican senators who led challenges to Biden’s win that day, Ted Cruz and Josh Hawley, are casting major doubt on the talks about making it tougher to thwart election certification.
“DeSantis strategizes for his future while Trump obsesses over his election loss” via Stephen Collinson of CNN — Trump is still waging his hopeless fight to win the last White House race. But his possible heir apparent, DeSantis, already seems to be trying to triumph in the next one. The former President’s increasingly fantastical obsession with an election that he lost shows his determination to pin the Republican Party’s future on a personal quest for vengeance that would restore his tarnished self-image as a winner. But DeSantis is directly engaging Biden, who plans to run for re-election, on multiple fronts that send an electric political charge through the GOP base.
—LOCAL NOTES —
“Florida man gets 16 years for spreading terrorist propaganda” via The Associated Press — A Florida man has been sentenced to 16 years in federal prison for distributing Islamic terrorist propaganda videos online. According to court records, Jonathan Guerra Blanco, a Cuban-born naturalized U.S. citizen, was sentenced last Friday in Miami federal court. He pleaded guilty in December 2020 to attempting to provide material support or resources to a designated foreign terrorist organization. According to court documents, federal investigators learned in 2019 that Guerra Blanco was following instructions the Islamic State terrorist group had widely distributed, directing adherents to publish propaganda, raise funds, recruit members and justify attacks on the United States. Prosecutors said that Guerra Blanco translated the group’s materials into Spanish for his target audience.
“Miami receives $5.25 million from MiamiCoin. Mayor has ideas about how to spend it.” via Joey Flechas and Rob Wile of the Miami Herald — The city of Miami on Wednesday received a wire transfer of $5.25 million from MiamiCoin, the first donation from a cryptocurrency project designed to raise money for municipalities. Mayor Francis Suarez confirmed the wire transfer to the Miami Herald during an interview Wednesday. Under an agreement approved by commissioners in July, the city can receive the cash as a gift deposited into an account that won’t be spent until commissioners decide how to use the money.
“Buyer’s remorse: Tampa City Council begins process to repeal controversial new noise ordinance” via Daniel Figueroa of Florida Politics — Tampa City Council member John Dingfelder called it “buyer’s remorse.” Three weeks ago, the Council passed a controversial new noise ordinance after receiving massive pushback from small-business owners, mostly those who provide nightlife and entertainment. The new ordinance would eliminate outdoor amplified sound in the city after midnight, reduce acceptable noise levels after 1 a.m. and give police more freedom in citing noise violations. During Thursday’s Council meeting, a split-decision sparked the process to repeal the ordinance that various administrations have been working on for nearly two decades.
“In discussion to expand PURE project, city staff says Tampa wastewater is cleaner than current source of drinking water” via Daniel Figueroa of Florida Politics — Tampa’s primary potable water resources are running dry. Projects examining the need to bolster potable water resources and the desire to reuse wastewater became even more urgent after DeSantis signed the Clean Waterways Act into law. Under that 2020 mandate, and 2021’s SB 64, Tampa has until 2032 to stop discharging water into the bay, or it could face fines of around $15,000 a day. The most talked-about options would treat the discharged wastewater, placing some of it in the aquifer, while the rest goes to the city’s reservoir and help meet minimum flow requirements in the river. The wastewater could make it into the city’s supply of drinking water. That aspect of the project received massive public backlash from people who didn’t want the city to spend billions on drinking potty water.
“USF talking to 50 people about president’s job, with more names to come” via Divya Kumar of the Tampa Bay Times — A consultant working to help the University of South Florida find its next President said he’s in conversation with 50 “targets” for the job. Alberto Pimentel, head of SP&A Executive Search, said he aims to keep the USF search on its timeline to begin interviewing candidates by March, when the University of Florida will start its search process. At USF, the pool of 50 people is made up of presidents, provosts and deans of top research schools and former academic leaders working with foundations, corporations or government entities, Pimentel said. He said he expects that group to narrow and other names to emerge closer to the end of the search. Because some of those have not formally applied, they are exempt from public record laws.
“Osceola County School Board asks DeSantis to decide fate of member accused of intimidation” via Shannon Butler and Adam Poulisse of WFTV — The future of a Central Florida school board member is in jeopardy. Jon Arguello is accused of intimidating a vendor that would not contribute to his sister’s campaign. A letter from the school district has been sent to DeSantis asking him if Arguello should be suspended from office or not. It comes after the board got a complaint and had an independent investigation into Arguello, and accusations that he intimidated a vendor who didn’t support his sister’s campaign. His sister, Jennifer Arguello, is running for Chair Terry Casillo’s seat. The investigation shows that Arguello was upset that lobbyist Mike Horner would not donate to that campaign.
“Naples property manager accused of misusing client money was sued. Then he bought a private jet” via Dan Glaun of the Naples Daily News — Some businessmen, when accused of embezzling their clients’ money, might try to lay low. Not Orlando Miserandino Ortiz. He bought a private jet. Thirty-three Collier and Lee county condo and homeowner associations have now accused Ortiz’s company American Property Management Services of financial misconduct, with the associations’ lawyer estimating losses totaling tens of millions of dollars. APMS was first sued in April for failing to turn over client bank accounts. Four days later, Ortiz created a company called Gama Jets LLC. It’s averaged four flights per week since the start of December, hitting destinations including Las Vegas.
— TOP OPINION —
“Don’t treat omicron lightly in Florida. It packs a punch” via the Tampa Bay Times editorial board — The COVID-19 delta variant hit Florida hard. More people here died from the virus between August and November than in any other state. Even accounting for population, our death rate topped the rankings for days at a time. Omicron is not delta. The new variant is unlikely to kill as many Floridians. But it’s time to stop referring to it as “mild.” Milder than delta? Sure, so far, at least, and it looks like it could stay that way. Nothing really competes when compared to the worst of the worst. But that doesn’t make omicron a lightweight variant. In fact, it appears to be punching well above its reputation. Deaths have picked up, even if our Governor doesn’t want to talk about them. The death rate has spiked, even if we all want to move on.
— OPINIONS —
“The smallest kids still lack a vaccine. The FDA must leave no uncertainty.” via The Washington Post editorial board — In considering whether to give emergency-use authorization to the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine for children under 5 years old, it is imperative that the FDA retains public trust and protects the integrity of the process. Many parents are eager for their children to get this vaccine, but many others might be hesitant. The FDA is taking an unusual route in considering the merits and must not leave any doubts in the air. Pfizer said on Dec. 17 that a two-dose vaccine worked well to stimulate antibodies in children from 6 months to 2 years old in a clinical trial, but did not work in children from 2 years old to under 5.
“Relax, the coup people weren’t very good at it and won’t try again until 2024” via Alexandra Petri of The Washington Post — All kinds of election-traducing plans, in short, were circulating within the Trump White House like flies in the Oval Office, but without Reince Priebus to swat them. But it’s fine because Trump is gone (now), and he is not being made to face any consequences, because he learned his lesson! And he will definitely pick Mike Pence as his running mate in the future, out of respect for his display of sterling character, so we don’t need to worry about the Electoral Count Act at all. As long as we don’t read about the attempted coup or ask anyone questions about it when we invite them on the television, it’s nothing to worry our little heads over.
“When it comes to crime, Democrats are in danger of being mugged by reality” via Max Boot of The Washington Post — Biden is due to visit New York on Thursday to discuss surging gun violence after the fatal shootings of two city police officers. It’s none too soon. When it comes to crime, Democrats are in danger of being mugged by reality. Trump was the incumbent in 2020. That made it hard for Republicans to blame crime on Democrats. The political carnage this year could be even worse if Democrats don’t do more to reestablish their crime-fighting bona fides. The party has mercifully abandoned talk of defunding the police after that concept was repeatedly rejected at the ballot box.
“Where’s the cancel-culture outrage over banning books?” via Molly Jong-Fast of The Atlantic — It shouldn’t have come as a shock to me when the anti-cancel-culture warriors at Fox “News” had a rabbi on to defend the banning of the book, but it did. Right-wing pundits who spent months complaining bitterly when Dr. Seuss Enterprises announced they had stopped publishing six relatively unpopular books because they included some very racist illustrations were oddly silent when it came to the removal of Maus. The people obsessed with cancel culture have been conspicuously silent when it comes to banning books and politicizing libraries. Dispensing anti-vaccine content from an enormous platform is literally a matter of life and death.
The Florida Senate approved combined redistricting maps with the House. That means they are on their way to the state Supreme Court for review.
Also, on today’s Sunrise:
— The Legislative Black Caucus says their legislative agenda can’t seem to find its way to committee hearings.
— You don’t see a lot of legislation about it, but Florida is in a real affordable housing crisis. Sunrise talks with UF’s Shimberg Center for Housing Studies.
— Another “audience of one” ad taunting Trump is playing in select Florida markets.
To listen, click on the image below:
—WEEKEND TV—
Facing South Florida with Jim DeFede on CBS 4 in Miami: The Sunday show provides viewers with an in-depth look at South Florida politics and other issues affecting the region.
Florida This Week on Tampa Bay’s WEDU with moderator Rob Lorei: Sarasota County Commissioner Christian Ziegler, who serves as Florida Republican Party vice-chair; NPR TV critic Eric Deggans and Tampa Bay Times sports columnist/reporter John Romano.
In Focus with Allison Walker on Bay News 9/CF 13: Senate President Simpson and House Speaker Sprowls will discuss leadership agendas for the current Legislative Session.
Political Connections Bay News 9 in Tampa/St. Pete: An in-depth look at the Florida lawmakers debate on new election security measures as current voting laws are challenged in court; and the push for criminal justice reform during the 2022 Legislative Session.
Political Connections on CF 13 in Orlando: Lake County Supervisor of Elections Alan Hays will discuss thousands of ballot initiative signatures that have been ruled invalid and how they may relate to voter fraud and voter security.
The Usual Suspects on WCTV-Tallahassee/Thomasville (CBS) and WJHG-Panama City (NBC): Host Gary Yordon talks with lobbyists Sean Pittman and Screven Watson.
This Week in Jacksonville with Kent Justice on Channel 4 WJXT: Jacksonville City Council candidates Tracye Polson and Nick Howland discuss the Feb. 22 Special Election for the open at large Group 3 seat.
— OLYMPICS —
“COVID-19 delays Seminole High Olympic bobsledder’s trip to Beijing” via J.C. Carnahan of the Orlando Sentinel — Josh Williamson spent the past four years vying for a Team USA spot as an Olympic bobsledder at the Winter Games in Beijing. This weekend, he now needs two consecutive negative COVID-19 tests to make that a reality. The Seminole County native was scheduled to leave Los Angeles for China with teammates last Thursday, but a positive COVID-19 test three days earlier has kept him in limbo. According to multiple reports, he is one of several bobsled athletes who have tested positive for COVID-19 over the past week. Williamson has been testing negative all week, and he expects to be cleared to leave for Beijing on Tuesday.
“Strong in qualifying, Jaelin Kauf gets head start at Beijing Games” via Pat Graham of The Associated Press — Before her qualifying round, moguls skier Kauf put on a pair of necklaces — one silver, the other gold — custom-made by her mom. Then, she went out and put herself in the mix for more hardware this weekend. The 25-year-old American got a great start on her Olympic journey, speeding through the bumps to finish third in a qualifying round Thursday, the night before the cauldron is lit in Beijing to mark the official start of these Olympics. She’ll be back at it Sunday with the medals on the line. “I’m stoked I put a solid top-to-bottom (run) down to start off the Olympics,” said Kauf, who also painted her nails red with gold sparkles for the occasion.
“Timothy LeDuc to become first openly nonbinary U.S. Winter Games athlete” via Dave Skretta of The Associated Press — Adam Rippon delivered one of those quintessential Olympic moments four years ago in Pyeongchang when his dazzling free skate helped to clinch the bronze medal for the U.S. in the team event to begin the figure skating program. Not only did Rippon leave fans breathless, but he also became the first openly gay American to medal at the Winter Games. LeDuc wants to do the same for U.S. athletes that identify as nonbinary. The 31-year-old LeDuc and pairs partner Ashley Cain-Gribble won their second national title last month in Nashville, giving them a spot in their first Olympics. While they are long shots to land on the pairs podium in Beijing, the final discipline of the figure skating program, they could help the U.S. win another team medal if they are selected to perform.
“Explainer: Water Cube where Michael Phelps ruled turns into Ice Cube” via Bernie Wilson of The Associated Press — Somewhere under the four sheets of curling ice being used for the Beijing Olympics is the swimming pool where Phelps splashed his way to history in the 2008 Summer Games. At first glance, the few spectators allowed into the National Aquatics Center might think the pool is gone forever, filled in to allow the curlers to slide their heavy granite stones down long, narrow sheets of ice to try to knock out their opponent’s rocks, accompanied by shouting and furious sweeping. Not so. In a cool bit of engineering and technology, the Water Cube has turned into the Ice Cube. The boxy building looks pretty much the same as it did 14 years ago. It’s just that for the time being, it’s a curling rink.
— ALOE —
“Does Florida have the most players in Super Bowl 56 or does another state rank higher?” via Jason Dill of the Miami Herald — Florida has bragging rights over every other state each year when it comes to producing the most NFL players. The league put out a news release breaking down the top producing states following the opening week of the NFL’s 2021 regular season. And it showed the Sunshine State on top with 192 players on NFL rosters.
“Does Florida’s most famous flower stand a ghost of a chance?” via Craig Pittman of Florida Phoenix — You’ve heard of the ghost orchid, right? It was featured in Susan Orlean’s 1998 bestseller “The Orchid Thief,” as well as the 2002 Nicolas Cage–Meryl Streep movie based on it, “Adaptation.” Most of the year, a ghost orchid resembles nothing more than a leafless green lump stuck to the side of a tree. But in the summer, when it blooms, it looks like an albino frog caught in mid-leap. In the case of the ghost orchid, you can sum up the wild backstory in a single word: Poaching. “Due to its beauty and rarity,” the petition states, “the ghost orchid has long been prized by collectors in Florida.”
“Disney Cruise Line delays debut of Disney Wish at Port Canaveral” via Richard Tribou of the Orlando Sentinel — Disney Cruise Line today announced it has pushed the debut of its new ship Disney Wish at Port Canaveral this summer. The new class of ship was slated to make its first sailing on June 9, but citing delays at the Meyer Werft shipyard in Papenberg, Germany, where the ship has been under construction since 2020, the line is now shifting to a July 14 debut. The six-week push means the first 12 sailings planned have been canceled, and the line is working with customers now to either rebook or refund deposits. The line said it was offering impacted guests a 50% discount on a future cruise departing by Dec. 31, 2023.
— HAPPY BIRTHDAY —
Celebrating today are Dan Barrow of Veterans Florida, Dan Berger and former Sen. Dwight Bullard.
___
Sunburn is authored and assembled by Peter Schorsch, Phil Ammann, Daniel Dean, Renzo Downey, Jacob Ogles, and Drew Wilson.
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13.) AXIOS
Axios AM
Happy Friday. It’s Jobs Day — figures out at 8:30 a.m. ET. Axios’ Neil Irwin says they’ll be a “hot mess express.” Preview.
- Smart Brevity™ count: 1,691 words … 6½ minutes. Edited by Zachary Basu.
Illustration: Sarah Grillo/Axios
Paths to power and winning elections inside the GOP are changing rapidly and radically, spawning a new generation of kingmakers while diminishing the clout of many who lorded over the party for years, Axios’ Jonathan Swan and Lachlan Markay write.
- Why it matters: Fourteen of the Republican Party’s top consultants and operatives across the country spoke in detail with Axios about how profoundly primary races have changed since 2014 — the last pre-Donald Trump midterm election, and the last midterms in which a Democrat occupied the White House.
What we found: Those sources — whose clients range from as Trumpy as they come to establishment Republicans — described a clear shift in the party’s power brokers. They spoke of changes to the ecosystem across four categories — institutions, endorsements, media and donors.
Who had the power:
- The U.S. Chamber of Commerce
- The NRA
- The Koch network
- Heritage Action
- The Drudge Report
- National Review
- Conservative movement groups, including Tea Party Express, FreedomWorks and the Senate Conservatives Fund.
Who has power now:
- Donald Trump
- Tucker Carlson
- Family and former aides to Trump
- Fox News
- Club for Growth
- Daily Wire
- Breitbart News
- Online influencers, including Candace Owens, Ben Shapiro, Dan Bongino, Joe Rogan, Jack Posobiec, Charlie Kirk and Marjorie Taylor-Greene.
- Steve Bannon
- Susan B. Anthony List.
Between the lines: Most of these changes weren’t gradual. They were triggered by the shockwave of 2016, when Trump was elected.
- Much of the institutional GOP worked against Trump in 2016. Much of the heft they believed their endorsements carried evaporated as voters saw in real-time how Trump had little need for them.
- Said one top consultant: “You wouldn’t know that these groups were paper tigers — unless you ever ran against one of them.”
Part 2 below … Dive in to the full story.
Screenshot: Fox News
As the news media fragmented overall, traditional conservative media was usurped in GOP primaries by New Wave populist-nationalist media — while some once-influential institutions died off or faded, Axios’ Jonathan Swan and Lachlan Markay write.
- The Drudge Report used to be able to shape multiple conservative news cycles with one headline alone. These days, after a long fight with Trump, it’s viewed skeptically if not unfavorably by many Republicans.
- Republicans used to covet the cover of National Review. But after the publication opposed Trump in 2016, every operative we asked told Axios it’s become irrelevant in GOP primaries. One with several high-profile GOP primary candidates said: “I would argue there’s more people who’d be turned off by NR writing positive pieces.”
- “I don’t know who said that,” National Review editor Rich Lowry told us, “but I guarantee you if we ran a negative item of any sort on one of his or her clients … we would hear from that campaign pushing back almost immediately.”
Fox News still dominates. GOP operatives work as hard as ever to book their candidates on Fox. Getting on the evening primetime shows — “Tucker Carlson Tonight,’ “Hannity” and “The Ingraham Angle” — nets low-dollar donations and visibility with primary voters and Trump himself.
- Some disgruntled Trump fans have turned instead to the even more fervently pro-Trump networks, OAN and Newsmax. But those two networks face growing distribution problems as providers cut them off.
Tucker Carlson is the king of the GOP’s media wing — the person whose support GOP primary candidates most want and whose opposition is to be desperately avoided because it can “move numbers,” in the words of one operative who has seen the Tucker effect up close.
- One operative told Axios there are two other media entities candidates don’t want working against them in GOP primaries: “You don’t want Bannon on your f—ing ass” and “you don’t want Breitbart on your ass.”
An important shift is accelerating online: Many GOP primary voters now get their information directly from influencers including Candace Owens, Dan Bongino, Joe Rogan, Dave Portnoy, Charlie Kirk, Marjorie Taylor Greene — and websites including Ben Shapiro’s Daily Wire and Breitbart, which dominate Facebook.
- The hardest-core of Trump’s election-denying base listen to Bannon’s War Room — a podcast that has become an audition stage for GOP candidates, and a venue that consultants say is a goldmine for their candidates’ digital fundraising.
The bottom line: Several operatives said they could easily go a whole primary without needing to engage at all with the mainstream media.
- When they do, they’re often trying to provoke outlets the GOP base despises — such as CNN — to gain street cred with primary voters.
With the Beijing Games’ opening ceremony at 7 a.m. ET, American concerns about China and COVID are driving down enthusiasm about the Winter Olympics, we found in a new Axios-Momentive poll.
- Seven in 10 of the 2,590 respondents disapprove of allowing China to host these Olympics — but half plan to tune in anyhow, Axios managing editors David Nather and Margaret Talev write.
- Fewer than half of those polled said the Olympics should go ahead while the Omicron variant is spreading.
The intrigue: The survey found Democrats far more likely to watch at least some of the Games (61%) than Republicans (45%) or independents (36%).
- That’s a shift from the Tokyo Summer Olympics, when 69% of Democrats, 61% of Republicans and 54% of independents planned to watch.
Here’s the driver: 80% of Republicans disapprove of China hosting the Games, compared with 67% of Democrats.
Six in 10 couldn’t name a single athlete who’s competing.
- Snowboarder Shaun White, age 35, got the most mentions (6%) from people who did name athletes they were looking forward to watching.
- A few mentioned Simone Biles. The gymnast, of course, isn’t competing in the Winter Olympics.
Photo: Alexei Druzhinin/Sputnik/Kremlin Pool Photo via AP
Russian President Vladimir Putin and China’s Xi Jinping issued a thinly veiled joint statement condemning Western “interference in the internal affairs” of other countries, as they met for a highly choreographed summit ahead of the Olympics opening ceremony.
Illustration: Aïda Amer/Axios
The extent to which Omicron’s rapid spread leaves the world better off in the fight against COVID depends in part on how long infection-induced immunity actually lasts, Axios’ Caitlin Owens reports.
- Why it matters: Vaccinations and infections at high enough levels can form an immunity wall against the future spread of the virus. But if Omicron infections ultimately don’t contribute much, that leaves much of the world still vulnerable.
What’s happening: It’d be an Omicron silver living if the variant’s soaring global caseloads raised the level of global immunity to the point that the virus isn’t able to easily spread.
- But for that to happen, Omicron infections would have to translate into significant additional protection against future infection — which isn’t a given.
👀 What we’re watching: Omicron may have limited effectiveness against other variants, because Omicron is so different from those that originated before it.
Reality check: For people who have been vaccinated or infected with another variant — which is a very sizable population at this point — an Omicron infection could end up working as an effective booster.
A third of the nation’s 620,000 bridges — 36% — need major repair work or replacement, Axios’ Jennifer A. Kingson writes from a new report.
- Why it matters: Many bridges were built after World War II and meant to last 100 years. But they’re falling apart ahead of schedule, due to combinations of extreme weather, massive growth of vehicle traffic, deferred maintenance and a lack of coordinated oversight.
More than 43,500 U.S. bridges are in poor enough condition to be deemed “structurally deficient,” according to the report by the American Road & Transportation Builders Association.
- Chunks of concrete fall from bridges. Routine inspections reveal problems that prompt authorities to shut down lanes of traffic.
What’s happening: Historic sums are about to be spent on bridge repair — more than $26.5 billion over five years — under the infrastructure law.
The bottom line: A bridge collapse in Pittsburgh — on the same day President Biden visited the city to talk about infrastructure — highlighted the problem. But engineers say it’s a lot bigger than most realize.
- Go deeper: PDF of the report … Share this story.
Illustration: Aïda Amer/Axios
Meta’s record stock drop yesterday — the company formerly known as Facebook lost 1/4 of its market value — capped a crazy tech earnings season with two seemingly contradictory takeaways, Axios’ Ina Fried and Scott Rosenberg write:
- Tech firms now sit at the economy’s core.
- They can still be risky bets.
Why it matters: Investors long viewed tech as a sector with high growth potential and high risk. But as tech started grabbing bigger slices of the economy, the companies started looking more like blue chips.
The remaining four tech behemoths all had a better time of it.
- Amazon reported healthy results on top of a long pandemic-driven growth spurt.
- Apple reported its biggest quarter ever, with an 11% sales jump and revenue up in every part of the world.
- Google parent Alphabet posted better-than-expected earnings, with annual revenue topping $200 billion for the first time.
- Microsoft exceeded expectations and issued a rosy forecast as well, buoyed by strength in the PC market.
Opening Black History Month, Speaker Pelosi — the first woman Speaker — and House Majority Whip James Clyburn unveiled the Joseph H. Rainey Room, honoring the first Black member of the U.S. House.
- Rainey, who served from 1870-79, met in the room with fellow members of the Committee on Indian Affairs.
Like Clyburn, Rainey was a South Carolinian. Clyburn noted that his home state elected eight African Americans to the House during the 19th century, but added:
- “The problem is there’s 95 years between No. 8 and No. 9″ — Clyburn himself was elected in 1992.
- “Anything that’s happened before can happen again.”
Read a bio of Joseph Hayne Rainey … Read Pelosi’s remarks.
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14.) THE WASHINGTON FREE BEACON
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15.) THE WASHINGTON POST MORNING HEADLINES
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16.) THE WASHINGTON TIMES
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17.) THE WASHINGTON EXAMINER
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18.) ASSOCIATED PRESS
19.) FORT MYERS (FLORIDA) NEWS-PRESS
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20.) CHICAGO TRIBUNE
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21.) CHICAGO SUNTIMES
Protesters arrested calling for federal charges against Van Dyke
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22.) THE HILL MORNING REPORT
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23.) THE HILL 12:30 REPORT
24.) ROLL CALL
Morning Headlines
Congress is on course to pass a third government funding stopgap for the fiscal year that began Oct. 1, as negotiations on a 12-bill omnibus package continue at a snail’s pace barely two weeks before the Feb. 18 deadline appropriators set in the last continuing resolution. Read more…
Former employees of Washington’s NFL franchise brought new accusations against owner Daniel Snyder during a roundtable on Capitol Hill looking at the toxic culture within the organization. In speeches that at times turned graphic, several women described feeling they were used as sex objects or tools to increase sales, not human beings. Read more…
Republicans stress process for Supreme Court confirmation will be one of ‘respect’
Key Senate Republicans keep signaling their approach to the upcoming Supreme Court confirmation process will be one of “respect” rather than obstruction, to contrast with how they felt Democrats treated former President Donald Trump’s high court appointees. Read more…
Click here to subscribe to Fintech Beat for the latest market and regulatory developmentsin finance and financial technology.
82 lawmakers urge quicker evacuations of Afghan allies
More than 80 House members called on President Joe Biden to ramp up evacuations of Afghan allies still stranded in Afghanistan after the U.S. withdrawal last year. “We must do more to evacuate those remaining as quickly and safely as possible,” the lawmakers wrote in a letter sent to the White House on Wednesday. Read more…
Congress should pass defense budget to deter Putin, senators say
One of the most powerful messages Congress could send to deter Russian President Vladimir Putin from invading Ukraine would be to pass a defense appropriations bill, Senate Armed Services members Roger Wicker, R-Miss., and Jeanne Shaheen, D-N.H., said Thursday. Read more…
In killing ISIS leader, US delivers from over the horizon
The successful raid that prompted ISIS leader Abu Ibrahim al-Hashimi al-Qurayshi to kill himself and members of his family showed that the Biden administration can use “over the horizon” capabilities to attack terrorists in sites where the U.S. has no base of operations. Read more…
Americans united in worry over political divisions, but not much else, poll finds
American voters are worried. Worried about the economy, about inflation, about COVID-19 and about each other. Those are the major takeaways from the latest battleground poll on political civility out of Georgetown University’s Institute of Politics and Public Service. Read more…
CQ Roll Call is a part of FiscalNote, the leading technology innovator at the intersection of global business and government. Copyright 2022 CQ Roll Call. All rights reserved Privacy | Safely unsubscribe now.
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Washington, DC 20004
25.) POLITICO PLAYBOOK
POLITICO Playbook: What keeps a Supreme Court sherpa up at night
DRIVING THE DAY
THE PLAYBOOK INTERVIEW: STEPHANIE CUTTER — The latest Playbook Deep Dive podcast is now live. This week, we sat down with the longtime Democratic strategist at the Silver Brasserie diner in Cathedral Heights (her choice) and discussed what it’s like to be a Supreme Court nominee’s “sherpa” — a role she played in the Obama administration for now-Justice SONIA SOTOMAYOR.
Cutter, who might be the Forrest Gump of the modern Democratic Party, also shares her insider experiences working for MARIO CUOMO, BILL CLINTON, TED KENNEDY, JOHN KERRY, HARRY REID, BARACK and MICHELLE OBAMA, and JOE and JILL BIDEN. And we get into the weeds on why she believes Biden should ditch the Obama model of SCOTUS nominations and adopt the MITCH MCCONNELL model.
Some highlights:
— Several of the judges on Biden’s SCOTUS short list were also on Obama’s. “But President Obama had made the decision that he didn’t want to … put some of these women up because if it wasn’t successful, it would mean they’d never be elevated to the Supreme Court. They wouldn’t be chosen again — or [were] unlikely to be chosen again. And these are real stars. They’re the future. And, you know, he wanted to preserve that for them.”
— On the work that goes into vetting a SCOTUS nominee: “Find out … who their childhood classmates were, who was their first boss. … Be able to tell their life story, know what the vulnerabilities are. Build a plan that inoculates against those vulnerabilities quickly. Know where to organize on the outside.”
— Her advice for a nominee when meeting with senators: “You’re not supposed to say anything in the meeting on substance. It’s just cordial.”
— The potential political upside for Biden: “Some Republicans could overshoot this, and you already see some senators talking about how this is a ‘quota pick’ or an ‘affirmative action pick.’ … And that’s not going to sit well with people, particularly when they meet her. This person is not going to come off as an ‘affirmative action pick’; this person is going to come across as the most qualified person for the court, if you just look at the women on the proverbial short list. They can … continue their racist dog whistles on this. But I think most people are not going to have the stomach for it, and it will turn around and bite them.”
— On what keeps her awake at night about this process: “Something that we don’t know. You know, there’s an incredibly competent team running the vetting in the White House, and I’m confident if there is something, they’ll find it. But I honestly don’t think that these incredible women would be in the positions that they are if there was something. That’s what keeps me up at night. But I always think the worst about everything.”
— On which of the potential Biden nominees Cutter thinks she could sell without any problems: “I could sell any of them.”
Happy Friday. Thanks for reading Playbook. Drop us a line: Rachael Bade, Eugene Daniels, Ryan Lizza.
JAYAPAL MAKES MOVE TOWARD LEADERSHIP BID — Hill watchers have known for months that Rep. PRAMILA JAYAPAL (D-Wash.) wants to move up the ladder. This morning, our Sarah Ferris and Nicholas Wu have the dish.
— What Jayapal’s doing: According to more than a dozen lawmakers, Jayapal has been working the phones to lay the groundwork for a potential leadership run — and has left some with the impression that she could challenge a fellow progressive, Assistant Speaker KATHERINE CLARK (D-Mass.), for a job. She’s tapped two allies — Reps. VERONICA ESCOBAR (D-Texas) and DAVID SCOTT (D-Ga.) — to help make calls on her behalf.
— How that’s different from other Dems: As Sarah and Nicholas write, Jayapal’s move stands in stark contrast to the almost-frozen postures of others expected to make plays up the ladder after the midterms. Technically, Speaker NANCY PELOSI, Majority Leader STENY HOYER and Majority Whip JIM CLYBURN (D-S.C.) have yet to announce whether they plan to stay or vacate their posts next year. Because of that, most Democrats fear overt leadership campaigning would undermine their authority and be considered overstepping.
— Why that’s grating on other Dems: Indeed, Jayapal’s moves have peeved some of her colleagues, who say it’s premature to jockey for leadership while the majority is in jeopardy. But the news is another reminder of the leadership vacuum that likely awaits Democrats next winter if the top three retire, as many expect.
THE INSTAGRAM ACCOUNT THAT HAS CAPITOL HILL RIVETED — If you work on Capitol Hill, you’ve probably heard about it: “Dear White Staffers.” It’s an Instagram account that started as a place where aides of color on the Hill — which is dominated by white lawmakers and staff — could express their frustrations. But it’s expanded beyond that to become a go-to hub where anonymous staffers name and shame bad bosses and colleagues, and complain about absurdly long workdays, gender discrimination allegations, salaries so low they rely on food stamps to eat, generally toxic workplace behavior and an endemic lack of diversity.
“The account’s unfiltered, unvetted and seemingly endless content has become a must-read for aides in a town always hungry for rumor and gossip — for two very different reasons,” our colleagues Katherine Tully-McManus, Nancy Vu, Eleanor Mueller and Ximena Bustillo write. “Some devour the messages as a form of therapy that helps them feel understood while also providing relevant information on offices and bosses to avoid. Others monitor it defensively, worried their office or boss is being anonymously maligned and they’ll have a mess to clean up.”
It’s a reminder of the lack of a strong, centralized human resources department on Capitol Hill. Rather, each office operates as its own mini-fiefdom, setting pay and employment standards. That’s not always been to the benefit of staff, who have few places to turn when they have problems.
One note to Hill staffers with a story: You can always call us here at Playbook. We’ll protect your identity. Speaking of Hill employment issues …
PELOSI BACKS HILL UNIONIZATION EFFORTS — After Pelosi dodged a question about a potential unionization push by Hill staffers during her weekly press conference, her deputy chief of staff DREW HAMMILL said Pelosi would support such an effort. “We just unionized at the DCCC, and I supported that,” she said. (Anthony Adragna and Katherine Tully-McManus have more on Congress Minutes.)
A unionization push on Capitol Hill would be quite something. Staffers are routinely asked to work long hours with no overtime and menial salaries — and though it’s long been considered something of a rite of passage, attitudes are changing and expectations have evolved. That said, we have to wonder how this would play out in a Republican-controlled Congress — and how it would even work, given that each office operates as its own entity. Stay tuned, because this conversation is just starting.
BIDEN’S FRIDAY:
— 9:30 a.m.: The president will receive the President’s Daily Brief.
— 10:45 a.m.: Biden will deliver remarks on the January jobs report.
— 2 p.m.: Biden will deliver remarks and sign an executive order on project labor agreements at Ironworkers Local 5 in Upper Marlboro, Md., with VP KAMALA HARRIS and Labor Secretary MARTY WALSH also speaking.
— 5:30 p.m.: Biden will leave the White House for Wilmington, Del., arriving at 6:25 p.m.
Press secretary JEN PSAKI will brief at 11:45 a.m.
THE HOUSE will meet at 9 a.m., with last votes at 3 p.m.
THE SENATE is out.
PHOTO OF THE DAY
PLAYBOOK READS
ALL POLITICS
RNC DECLARES WAR ON CHENEY — On Thursday, an RNC resolution committee unanimously approved a formal censure of Reps. LIZ CHENEY (R-Wyo.) and ADAM KINZINGER (R-Ill.), who serve on the House committee investigating Jan. 6. The measure — which originally called for their expulsion from the House GOP Conference — is expected to get the full approval of the RNC today, report David Siders and Natalie Allison.
— But it’s more serious than censure: WaPo’s Josh Dawsey reports that a deal brokered by Chair RONNA MCDANIEL will allow the RNC to financially support HARRIET HAGEMAN in her bid to oust Cheney, potentially paving the way for the national party to “send money, volunteers, data and other things to the Wyoming GOP … which could then send the resources to use against Cheney. McDaniel also declined to say whether she would campaign personally against Cheney. ‘No decision has been made,’ she said.”
— Cheney responded by going straight at DONALD TRUMP: “The leaders of the Republican Party have made themselves willing hostages to a man who admits he tried to overturn a presidential election and suggests he would pardon Jan. 6 defendants, some of whom have been charged with seditious conspiracy,” she said in a statement Thursday night. “I’m a constitutional conservative and I do not recognize those in my party who have abandoned the Constitution to embrace Donald Trump. History will be their judge. I will never stop fighting for our constitutional republic. No matter what.”
— Reporting from the RNC’s meeting in Utah, NBC’s Peter Nicholas and Allan Smith write that “a distinct chasm is emerging between Trump’s obsessions and the issues many GOP operatives consider crucial to winning the midterm elections in November. … [T]hey are loath to antagonize Trump and possibly drive off his hard-core followers. Yet in interviews, party officials showed little appetite for organizing the GOP around Trump’s grievances.”
NO MORE MORENO — Republican businessman BERNIE MORENO ended his Ohio Senate campaign Thursday, citing a recent conversation with Trump in which the two “agreed this race has too many Trump candidates” and that dividing up support among them — other candidates include JOSH MANDEL, J.D. VANCE and JANE TIMKEN — “could cost the MAGA movement a conservative seat.” Our Myah Ward notes that “Moreno gave $3.75 million of his own money to his campaign and launched a $4 million television ad spree in December.”
REDISTRICTING ROUNDUP — FiveThirtyEight’s Nathaniel Rakich delves into the implications of a federal court striking down Alabama’s congressional map for insufficient Black representation. As the case goes to the Supreme Court, a wide range of outcomes are possible: If the high court agrees, that could open up similar court challenges to force redrawn maps in Louisiana and South Carolina. On the other hand, the conservative majority could take the opportunity to further weaken the Voting Rights Act.
— New York Gov. KATHY HOCHUL signed new congressional maps into law Thursday, likely increasing the Dem majority in New York’s House delegation from 19-8 to 22-4.
— Democratic Kansas Gov. LAURA KELLY vetoed state Republicans’ congressional map Thursday over their attempt to break up Democratic Rep. SHARICE DAVIDS’ seat. Republicans vowed to override her veto, but it’s unclear whether they have enough votes, writes the KC Star’s Katie Bernard.
— Quite the role reversal: The Cook Political Report now forecasts that House Democrats are on track for a narrow net gain of seats from redistricting nationwide, amid a cycle that has proven far more favorable to Dems than many expected. (Of course, they’ll need to boost their popularity among voters significantly to hold onto the chamber in November.)
THE WHITE HOUSE
BIDEN’S THURSDAY WHIRLWIND — Laura Barrón-López and Christopher Cadelago have the readout on a “triumphant, if not frenetic, 24 hours for the White House — perhaps the most dizzying of his presidency,” which included a U.S. raid that resulted in the death of ISIS’ top leader, Biden’s appearance at the National Prayer Breakfast and a subsequent swing up to NYC to meet with Mayor ERIC ADAMS, speak with law enforcement and reassert his crime bona fides.
“That rapid succession of wildly different events seemed to jolt an administration that has spent most of its time in its first year grappling with a pandemic and its vast impacts,” the authors write. “It also seemed to provide a sense of relief, and a feeling inside and out of the White House — however fleeting it may turn out to be — that progress was being made.”
TOP-ED — When former Treasury Secretary LARRY SUMMERS warned of inflation early last year, his view was outside the mainstream consensus. In retrospect, his prediction proved prescient: High inflation has come to be one of the defining issues — economic or otherwise — of the Biden presidency. Now, Summers is out with a WaPo op-ed warning that today’s consensus view “that inflation will fall below 3 percent by the end of the year … is likely a repeat of last year’s wishful thinking.” Why? Labor costs and housing costs.
— Related reading: WaPo’s Catherine Rampell argues that the American Rescue Plan had too much “extra flab” that contributed to inflation and made Build Back Better harder to pass because “the bill ultimately crowded out political support for much more important and fiscally responsible items on Biden’s agenda, such as universal pre-K and efforts to fight climate change” — which is what Summers argued was the big danger early last year.
JUDICIARY SQUARE
TESTING THE CLYBURN-BIDEN RELATIONSHIP — When it comes to selecting a successor for Justice STEPHEN BREYER, Clyburn has made no secret that he wants Biden to select South Carolina native J. MICHELLE CHILDS. He’s said as much in countless media appearances in recent days, amounting to what NYT’s Annie Karni describes as “the kind of pressure campaign that longtime Biden aides say can sometimes backfire.”
“Mr. Biden recoils at being lobbied through the television. And there is sensitivity among some of his allies and former aides that his selection must look like the president’s own historic pick, not like a political chit he owes to Mr. Clyburn,” she writes. Still, “Clyburn remains optimistic that Mr. Biden will choose Judge Childs and that he will have had a hand in the selection of a groundbreaking Supreme Court nominee.”
POLICY CORNER
WHAT PROGRESSIVES ARE READING (AND FUMING OVER) — The Biden administration is set to “maintain a pandemic-era order put in place under Trump that authorizes the rapid deportation of migrants from the U.S.-Mexico border,” CBS’ Camilo Montoya-Galvez reports. “Since March 2020, the Trump and Biden administrations have expelled migrants over 1.5 million times without affording them the opportunity to request U.S. asylum, citing a series of CDC orders that argue the expulsions are needed to reduce the transmission of COVID-19 in border processing facilities.”
CONGRESS
SANCTIONS BILL UPDATE — Although a bipartisan group of senators are close to an agreement on a sanctions bill targeting Russia, lawmakers Thursday “emerged from a classified briefing … with fresh doubts about whether a legislative response could come together in time to deter an invasion,” our Andrew Desiderio reports. “Negotiators have settled on a plan that punishes Russia for the destabilizing actions it has already taken, including cyberattacks targeting Ukraine as well as false-flag operations to create a pretext for an invasion. A final agreement remains up in the air, however, amid some debate over the sanctions’ scope and the amount of flexibility to give Biden.”
SPECIAL PANDEMIC COMMISSION IN THE WORKS — “A broad and bipartisan group of senators is coalescing around legislation to create a high-level independent commission, modeled after the one that examined the Sept. 11 attacks, with broad powers to investigate the origins of the coronavirus pandemic and the response across the Trump and Biden administrations,” NYT’s Sheryl Gay Stolberg reports.
AMERICA AND THE WORLD
OVERNIGHT AT THE OLYMPICS —Via WSJ’s Chao Deng and Ann Simmons: “Chinese leader XI JINPING and Russian President VLADIMIR PUTIN met in Beijing in a summit just ahead of the Winter Games, showcasing a united front amid a tense standoff with the West over the buildup of Russian troops near Ukraine.”
MEDIAWATCH
CUOMO-ZUCKER CAGE MATCH — Slate’s Noreen Malone with quite the take on JEFF ZUCKER’s shock resignation from CNN and the belief it was connected to the CHRIS CUOMO firing: “[T]he whole scandal has the whiff of classic corporate ratfuckery, with a modern twist: All the feminist lessons of the past several years have been scooped up, melted down, and welded into a sharp, sharp shiv. The same worlds where abuse was likely to have been taken seriously and codified during the rise of Me Too — cloistered, rivalrous, impossibly competitive, liberal-leaning zones like television networks, academia, and Democratic politics — are now the worlds in which the accusations are most easily weaponized by power players seeking an advantage. Zucker may be the most recent example, but he’s certainly not alone.”
— Also: “Jeff Zucker’s legacy is defined by his promotion of Donald Trump,” by WaPo’s media columnist Margaret Sullivan: For Zucker, there was “nothing nobler than TV ratings, which always were Zucker’s guiding light, his be-all and end-all and, ultimately, his fatal flaw.”
TV TONIGHT — PBS’ “Washington Week”: Peter Baker, Seung Min Kim, Manu Raju and Nancy Youssef.
SUNDAY SO FAR …
FOX “Fox News Sunday,” guest-anchored by Martha MacCallum: Sen. Ben Cardin (D-Md.) … Sen. John Barrasso (R-Wyo.) … Neil Young (U.K. media correspondent, not the singer). Panel: Juan Williams, Gillian Turner and Josh Holmes.
CBS “Face the Nation”: Sen. Marco Rubio (R-Fla.) … retired Lt. Gen. H.R. McMaster … Scott Gottlieb.
Gray TV “Full Court Press”: Sen. Mark Warner (D-Va.) … Jon Decker.
MSNBC “The Sunday Show”: Steve Schmidt … Rep. Katherine Clark (D-Mass.) … Alphonso David … Jazz Lewis … Clarence Jones.
ABC “This Week”: Rep. Michael McCaul (R-Texas). Panel: Jonathan Karl, Mary Bruce, Susan Glasser and Jane Coaston.
CNN “Inside Politics”: Leana Wen. Panel: Laura Barrón-López, Tamara Keith, Jeremy Diamond and Meridith McGraw.
NBC “Meet the Press”: Panel: Al Cardenas, Helene Cooper, Jeh Johnson and Amy Walter.
PLAYBOOKERS
Joe Biden turned to Mitch McConnell at the National Prayer Breakfast and said, “Thank you for being my friend,” a (presumably) unintentional “Golden Girls” reference. (Which one’s Rose? Blanche?)
Chuck Schumer incorrectly claimed that “until 1981 … the Supreme Court was all white men,” apparently erasing Thurgood Marshall, who was sworn in as a justice in 1967. (Schumer later corrected the record and apologized.)
Monica Lewinsky wrote about the joy of Wordle for Vanity Fair.
Matt Lee, AP’s longtime State Department reporter, had what C-SPAN called “a heated exchange” with State spokesman Ned Price over the administration’s intelligence findings about Russia and Ukraine.
Todd Young called a reporter for Military.com and apologized after coldly dismissing her questions because her publication wasn’t widely read in his home state (or so he thought).
Mark Zuckerberg’s net worth dropped by $29 billion Thursday as Meta’s stock fell 26%. Jeff Bezos gained $20 billion in personal valuation the same day.
Speaking of Bezos: His new superyacht is so large that an iconic Dutch bridge must be dismantled to allow it to pass through. In a similarly relatable problem, Bloomberg reports that “the enormity of the yacht’s sails will make it unsafe to land a helicopter onboard, so Bezos has commissioned a support yacht equipped with a helipad to trail alongside.”
FIRST IN PLAYBOOK — Sen. Bill Hagerty’s (R-Tenn.) office is announcing several staff changes: Luke Pettit has joined as senior policy adviser from Senate Banking, Natalie McIntyre is moving up to legislative director, Clark Milner is adding the duties of senior adviser, Lucas Da Pieve is moving up to deputy legislative director, and Audrey Traynor is moving up to deputy press secretary and digital director.
WHITE HOUSE DEPARTURE LOUNGE — Kate Childs Graham at the end of the month will leave the VP’s office, where she’s director of speechwriting, per NYT’s Annie Karni.
TRANSITIONS — Nate Adams will be campaign manager for Sen. Lisa Murkowski’s (R-Alaska) reelect. He most recently was a director at National Victory Action Fund, and is a Dan Sullivan alum. … Sondra Goldschein is now the first executive director of the Campaign for a Family Friendly Economy. She previously spent 20 years at the ACLU, most recently as director of program and strategy and deputy director of the affiliate support and nationwide initiatives department. … Art Motta is now national director of policy and legislation at the League of United Latin American Citizens. He most recently was policy adviser for Rep. Eric Swalwell (D-Calif.). …
… Kaylie Hanson is now chief comms officer for Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer. She previously was senior adviser to Sen. Chris Murphy (D-Conn.). … Movement Voter Project is adding Causten Rodriguez-Wollerman as VP of programs, Elizabeth Gramling as VP of operations and COO, and Darrell Tucci as VP of development. … Kelsye Adams is now a program director at DC Vote. She most recently was executive director of Long Live Go Go.
HAPPY BIRTHDAY: Hunter Biden … Adrienne Arsht (8-0) … Fed Chair Jerome Powell … Reps. Claudia Tenney (R-N.Y.), Sanford Bishop (D-Ga.) and Michael Guest (R-Miss.) … former VP Dan Quayle … CNN’s Shimon Prokupecz … POLITICO’s Annie Rees … Nicolle Wallace (5-0) … L.A. Mayor/U.S. Ambassador to India nominee Eric Garcetti … John Czwartacki … Vox’s Sean Illing … Matt McDonald … DOD’s Ilan Goldenberg … Nissa Koerner … former VA Secretary Jim Nicholson … Robert Buckley … White House’s Susanna Billings … John LaBombard … Shantanu Tata … Eli Woerpel … E&E’s Mike Soraghan … Thad Inge of Van Scoyoc Associates … Blair Bender … CTV’s Will Dugan … Jessica Byrd … Zachary Mitchiner of Rep. Eddie Bernice Johnson’s (D-Texas) office (26) … Ashley (Huggins) Laryea … Seth Michaels of the Union of Concerned Scientists (43) … Dan Berger … Justin Meservie … Morgan Rako … Sara Himeles … Joe Thompson … Ann Liston … Taimoor Shah … retired Adm. Dennis Blair … Amelia Chassé Alcivar … Stan Settles of Sen. Bill Hagerty’s (R-Tenn.) office … Jovanni Ortiz (3-0)
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26.) AMERICAN MINUTE
“Battle Hymn of the Republic” & efforts to Abolish the Slave Trade – American Minute with Bill Federer
- generational indebtedness as in South Asia;
- forced labor in North Korean prison camps;
- socialist and communist countries strip dissidents of human rights and reduce them to servitude;
- exploited labor for mining and agriculture in South America and Africa;
- illicit drug production and trade;
- human-trafficking; and
- sex-slavery in cities across the world, including the United States, where the FBI has conducted stings during Super Bowl weekend.
- North Africa:
- Swahili Coast:
- Horn of Africa:
- Arabian Peninsula:
- Indian Ocean:
27.) CAFFEINATED THOUGHTS
28.) CONSERVATIVE DAILY NEWS
29.) PJ MEDIA
The Morning Briefing: AOC Stomps Her Foot and Reminds Everyone That She’s Still America’s Dumbest Bartender
Top O’ the Briefing
Happy Friday, Dear Kruiser Morning Briefing friends. Best of health wishes to everyone who is old enough to remember when the History Channel aired programs about history.
Thus far, February hasn’t given us much indication that 2022 might not be an idiot.
While we’re on the subject of idiots, we should note that America’s Dumbest Bartender is competing for gold in the “Biggest Mouth That Never Shuts” in this year’s ChiCom Olympics.
Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-Lubyanka) is furious with Sen. Kyrsten Sinema (D-Arizona) for daring to stand against the far-Left’s plans for socialism and election-rigging, and she is demanding that Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-Sinister) take action, and take action now. She wants him to “make their lives as difficult as possible.” This is the kind of rhetoric that destroys free republics, and AOC should be remembered for it.
I have no problem referring to Little Miss in terms that some might feel are patriarchal and sexist. She’s a commie, so I can be as awful as I want.
The problem with AOC is that the mainstream media hacks who the Democrats’ bidding have given her the impression that her Twitter popularity equals actual political clout. She’s not a bright girl, so she keeps lapping up the nonsense.
AOC’s badgering of Schumer is shining a light on two real problems with the Democrats’ slim majority in Congress. The first is the aforementioned social media clout that the empty-headed Ms. Ocasio-Cortez currently enjoys. She could barf up a Chiclet and all of social media would be abuzz about it for 48 hours. It feeds her ego and gives her the energy to yap on.
The second problem for the Dems — and America — that’s being exposed here is the fact that Chuck Schumer is an incompetent simpleton.
As my friend and colleague Kevin Downey Jr. frequently points out, Democrats fail up. The upper echelon of the Democratic party is populated with mediocrities who would likely fail at jobs that are mostly done by high school kids.
Chuck Schumer is a paste-eating fool who also happens to be the majority leader of what was once the most august legislative body in this great Republic.
Schumer is regularly out-maneuvered by Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, whose knowledge of Senate procedure dwarfs his counterpart’s. The fact that Schumer is so awful at his job gives AOC the feeling that she can push him around.
If a Republican congressperson were to try an influence the workings of the Senate the mainstream media hacks would be rending their garments over the egregious breach of protocol. They can’t say anything about AOC, however, because she’ll sprout fake tears and whine about sexism/racism/whateverism.
AOC is not a bright woman. She was elected to the House in a district that a Democrat with four cents and an IQ of 12 could win. The MSM may love her but her big mouth doesn’t win her a lot of friends in her own party.
Heaven help us if we ever start voting by Twitter though.
Everything Isn’t Awful
PJ Media
VodkaPundit. Kamala Harris on ‘What Has Gone Wrong’ at the Border: [BLANK STARE]
BREAKING: More Artists Leave Spotify! Also Breaking: No One Cares.
FLASHBACK: Biden Said Trump Deserved No Credit for Al-Baghdadi Raid
The Cancel Culture Double Standard
Georgia School System’s BLM Event Features Speaker With a Domestic Violence Charge
There Is Something You Should Know: On Duran Duran and the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Class of 2022
Desperately Unpopular Biden Makes Play to Control Cancer Cures With ‘Moonshot’
They seem nice. Islamic Fatwa Condemns Muslim Engagements for Being ‘Too Western’
Blanco Supremacy! Mexican Illegal Alien Painted Swastikas in D.C., Won’t Be Deported
This Epic ‘Let’s Go Brandon’ Photobomb During a Live MSNBC Broadcast Will Warm Your Heart
UN Accused of Colluding With China to Delay Uyghur Human Rights Report Until After the Olympics
ISIS Leader Killed During Raid in Syria by U.S. Special Forces
Townhall Mothership
Chuck Schumer Botches Major Fact About the Supreme Court
Newsweek Published This Op-Ed on Masks and Schools Kids. It Will Probably Trigger the Left.
It’s what Dodo Joe does best. Biden Repeats Debunked Lie in Assault on the Second Amendment
Poppin’ Fresh Has Gotta Go. CNN Insider: Brian Stelter Should Be the Next One Booted
Sparks Fly in Must-See Exchange After Reporter Presses White House on ‘False Flag’ Claims
Biden Starts Talking About Race Again, and It Goes off the Rails
College shooting suspect’s mom says issue is mental health, not guns
Cam&Co. Biden’s pivot on policing about politics, not public safety
Cincinnati prosecutor says road rage shooting was self-defense
NY Mag: Come on, why is Zucker *really* leaving?
Greg Sargent argues with Ruy Teixeira about wokeness and crime
Spotify CEO: I dislike some of Joe Rogan’s content — but will defend his publication. Mostly.
VIP
60 Years of Bond Theme Songs, Part 007 of 007
Was Biden’s Syria Raid Motivated by National Security or His Approval Ratings?
Climate Change Has Superpowers That Can Cause Inflation? Yes, Really.
Chris Cuomo Is ‘Burning Down’ CNN, and It’s Glorious
GOLD This Is Why Breitbart Called It ‘The Democrat/Media Complex’
Around the Interwebz
The Falcon 9 may now be the safest rocket ever launched
20 Facts You Might Not Know About Valentine’s Day
Bee Me
The Kruiser Kabana
Kabana Gallery
Kabana Tunes
30.) WHITE HOUSE DOSSIER
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Cut to the News
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USA
31.) THE DISPATCH
The Morning Dispatch: ISIS Leader Dead, U.S. Says
Plus: How Russia is laying the groundwork to insist the West provoked it into war.
The Dispatch Staff |
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Happy Friday! If you’ve had a rough week, take solace in the fact that you didn’t have to try explaining to your spouse why your net worth plunged $30 billion yesterday.
Quick Hits: Today’s Top Stories
- President Joe Biden announced yesterday the counterterrorism mission conducted in Syria Wednesday night was successful in killing Abu Ibrahim al-Hashimi al-Qurayshi, the top leader of ISIS. U.S. Special Operations opted for a special forces raid rather than an air strike to limit civilian casualties, but Biden claimed al-Qurayshi blew himself up, killing several members of his own family.
- The New York Times reported Thursday that U.S. intelligence officials claim to have uncovered a Russian plan to use faked video footage to create a pretext for invading Ukraine. The officials did not provide the Times any evidence of the plan, but said they hope to spoil it by publicizing it.
- Officials from the United Arab Emirates announced that its military intercepted three more drones entering its airspace on Wednesday, days after it intercepted a ballistic missile launched by Yemen’s Houthi rebels.
- The Bank of England announced Thursday its Monetary Policy Committee voted unanimously to begin reducing the stock of bond purchases, and voted 5-4 to raise interest rates another 0.25 percentage points to 0.5 percent. The four voters in the minority wanted to raise interest rates 0.5 percentage points to 0.75 percent.
- The Labor Department reported Thursday that initial jobless claims decreased by 23,000 week-over-week to 238,000 last week. The Bureau of Labor Statistics will release employment data for January later this morning, and economists generally expect the Omicron wave to have slowed hiring dramatically.
- Omicron continues to wane in the United States, with the average number of daily confirmed COVID-19 cases falling 49 percent over the past two weeks. But daily COVID-19 deaths—which have been a lagging statistical indicator throughout the pandemic—have increased about 13 percent over the same time period.
- Hundreds of thousands of U.S. homes were without power and thousands of flights were canceled on Thursday as winter storms swept through much of the South and Midwest.
U.S. Announces ISIS Leader Dead
Late Wednesday night, as we were putting the finishing touches on yesterday’s TMD, Pentagon press secretary John Kirby issued a cryptic statement: “U.S. Special Operations forces under the control of U.S. Central Command conducted a counterterrorism mission this evening in northwest Syria. The mission was successful. There were no U.S. casualties.”
Kirby did not elaborate any further, but wire services began reporting on a raid targeting a house in the town of Atmeh near Syria’s border with Turkey. Just before 8 a.m. ET, President Joe Biden disclosed the target. “Thanks to the skill and bravery of our Armed Forces, we have taken off the battlefield Abu Ibrahim al-Hashimi al-Qurayshi—the leader of ISIS,” he said. “All Americans have returned safely from the operation.”
Al-Qurayshi—born in Iraq as Amir Muhammad Said Abdel-Rahman al-Mawla and also known as Hajji Abdullah—joined Al-Qaeda nearly two decades ago, and pledged his loyalty to the Islamic State in 2014. In the intervening years, he spent time in detention at the United States’ Camp Bucca facility in Iraq, where agreed to inform on his fellow jihadists.
“He was a snitch. He ratted out some of his rivals within Al-Qaeda,” Bill Roggio, an Army veteran and senior fellow at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies, told The Dispatch.
Nevertheless, al-Qurayshi climbed the ranks of Islamic State leadership and was chosen to succeed Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi as caliph when al-Baghdadi died in an October 2019 raid similar to the one U.S. Special Operations carried out this week.
“Thanks to the bravery of our troops, this horrible terrorist leader is no more,” Biden said in late-morning remarks yesterday. The administration opted for a special forces raid rather than an airstrike to minimize civilian casualties, Biden noted. Just last week—after several fatal, high-profile screw-ups were exposed—Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin ordered the Pentagon to come up with an “action plan” to limit such collateral damage. A number of innocent noncombatants—the Pentagon says three, Syrian aid workers say 13—died anyways.
Russia’s Pre-War Propaganda Push
It’s become increasingly clear in recent weeks that, if Russian President Vladimir Putin ultimately decides to reinvade Ukraine, he’s going to claim—both for a domestic audience and on the international stage—that something forced his hand. In a piece for the site today, Charlotte explores the Russian propaganda that is laying the groundwork for such a move.
Putin has orchestrated a months-long propaganda blitz to re-cast NATO allies as aggressors and Ukraine as their hapless vehicle for war.
Late last month, a spokesman for a Russian-backed separatist enclave in eastern Ukraine—the self-proclaimed “Donetsk People’s Republic” (DPR)—warned Russian media that British-trained commandos were planning a “series of terrorist attacks” on critical infrastructure in the Donbass region. The operation’s goal: to “lure” Moscow into an unwanted armed conflict with the West, the spokesman alleged.
Look no further than the comments responding to the accusation’s coverage in RT, Russia’s state-controlled news agency, to grasp its intended effect.
“The U.S. conducted several false flag operations at home, for example, 9/11,” one commenter wrote. “I would not be surprised if they do something similar in Ukraine.”
“Kievnazis are asking for a bloody nose,” wrote another.
“Please Russia do not allow this fascist genocide against your people to take place!” exclaimed one commenter. “Kick out the EU/US zionist invaders AND their servants, the traitors of humanity!”
Worth Your Time
- For more on al-Qurayshi and ISIS, check out Colin Clarke’s latest piece for Politico. “Replacing Qurayshi is likely to be a challenge for ISIS, particularly if the next leader is not someone with a reputation on par with previous jihadi stalwarts, like Baghdadi and Abu Musab al-Zarqawi,” Clarke writes. “Whoever comes next may lack the religious or military credentials of his predecessors, leaving the group struggling to recruit. Succession presents terrorist groups with difficult decisions. High-profile, charismatic leaders can be effective recruiters, but they also present attractive counterterrorism targets. Leadership transitions also create the risk of rifts between top commanders, opening longstanding tensions between factions competing internally.”
- Ross Douthat’s latest column pushes back on Obama White House alum Ben Rhodes’ assertion that the Republican Party, as a whole, “no longer accepts” democracy. “Donald Trump’s stolen-election narratives should be understood as a way to reconcile the two competing tendencies within conservatism, the intellectual right’s skepticism of mass democracy and comfort with countermajoritarian institutions with the populist right’s small-d democratic self-image,” he writes. “Seen from within the right, the challenge of getting out from under Trump’s deceptions isn’t just a simple matter of reviving a conservative commitment to democracy. Trump has succeeded precisely because he has exploited the right’s more democratic impulses, speaking to them and co-opting them and claiming them for himself. Which means a conservative rival can’t defeat or replace him by simply accusing him of being anti-democratic. Instead the only plausible pitch would argue that his populism is self-limiting and that a post-Trump G.O.P. could win a more sweeping majority than the one his supporters want to believe he won already—one that would hold up, no matter what the liberal enemy gets up to.”
- In National Review, Kevin Williamson wonders if the era of big-tent political parties is over. “‘Are Democrats the Party of Joe Manchin, or AOC?’ asks [a recent headline]. And that, of course, is the real question,” Williamson writes. “In a more normal political time, the Democratic Party would be happy to represent such a wide swath of political opinion that both left-wing New Yorkers and Appalachian moderates felt at home there. But these are not normal times, and our political factions define themselves not by what they believe but by what—whom—they exclude. Implicit in the “Manchin or Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez” formulation is that the Democrats are going to be one or the other, even if, at the moment, they are both. There is a similar and more urgent question in front of Republicans, of course: Are they going to be the Trumpist party or something else?”
Presented Without Comment
Also Presented Without Comment
The top two executives at CNN were *coaching* then-Gov. Andrew Cuomo on what to say during his COVID briefings (which left out his data manipulation about nursing home deaths, of course) — the same briefings that CNN gushed about on air. Amazing.
Toeing the Company Line
- On the site today, Sarah has a piece exploring the odd legal limbo of the Equal Rights Amendment, which at one time or another has been ratified by 38 states but hasn’t been recognized as an amendment to the Constitution for various procedural reasons.
- On today’s episode of Advisory Opinions, David and Sarah dive into all aspects of Brian Flores’ discrimination complaint against the NFL and three teams, before turning to a dreaded Madison Cawthorn discussion and slightly less-dreaded Whoopi Goldberg discussion.
- Punxsutawney Phil forecast six more weeks of winter earlier this week, but that doesn’t bother Chris too much. “Things are pretty chilly out there and there’s no signs of daffodils popping up all over,” he writes in Thursday’s Stirewaltisms. “But that’s okay with me, because these are mostly normal problems of the kind America has been dealing with for decades.”
- Historian Hal Brands joined The Remnant on Thursday for a conversation with Jonah about the new era of great-power competition between China and Russia and the United States. What can America’s victory over the Soviet Union teach us about how it should prosecute today’s global conflicts? Should Joe Biden pursue a modern version of Harry Truman’s containment strategy? And was China’s authoritarian turn inevitable?
Reporting by Declan Garvey (@declanpgarvey), Andrew Egger (@EggerDC), Charlotte Lawson (@lawsonreports), Audrey Fahlberg (@AudreyFahlberg), Ryan Brown (@RyanP_Brown), Harvest Prude (@HarvestPrude), and Steve Hayes (@stephenfhayes).
Subscribe to The Morning Dispatch
An essential daily news roundup, TMD includes a brief look at important stories of the day and original reporting and analysis from The Dispatch team, along with recommendations for deeper reading and some much-needed humor in these often fraught times.
32.) LEGAL INSURRECTION
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33.) THE DAILY WIRE
02.04.2022
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34.) DESERET NEWS
35.) BRIGHT
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36.) AMERICAN THINKER
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37.) LARRY J. SABATO’S CRYSTAL BALL
38.) THE BLAZE
39.) THE FEDERALIST
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40.) REUTERS
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41.) NOQ REPORT
42.) ARRA NEWS SERVICE
43.) REDSTATE
Biden Starts Talking About Race Again, and It Goes off the Rails
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44.) WORLD NET DAILY
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46.) BIZPAC REVIEW
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48.) NBC MORNING RUNDOWN
To ensure delivery to your inbox add email@mail.nbcnews.com to your contacts Today’s Top Stories from NBC News FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 2022 Good morning, NBC News readers.
The 2022 Beijing Olympics officially kick off today with lots of pomp, pageantry and politics. More than 300,000 have been left without power by the deadly winter storm sweeping the U.S. Plus, more on the racial reckoning hitting the NFL as the failures of the “Rooney Rule” are exposed.
Here’s what we’re watching this Friday morning. The 2022 Winter Olympics kicks off Friday with a comparatively pared-back opening ceremony in Beijing’s “Bird’s Nest” National Stadium.
China aims to impress billions around the world with these Games, and perhaps momentarily transcend the politically charged atmosphere and strict Covid-19 restrictions that have characterized the runup to the competition.
“The world is turning its eyes to China, and China is ready,” President Xi Jinping said Thursday. “We will do our best to deliver to the world a streamlined, safe and splendid Games.”
However, politics loom large over these Games. A number of world leaders, including President Joe Biden, will not be in attendance, after announcing a diplomatic boycott of the Games on human rights grounds.
But Russian President Vladimir Putin will be there in a show of unity with China amid Moscow’s standoff with the West over Ukraine.
Putin and Xi met Friday in Beijing for a pre-Olympic summit and issued a joint statement pushing back against U.S. “interference” in other states’ “internal affairs” as Russia amasses troops on Ukraine’s borders and China hosts the Games.
Aside from all the politics, Olympic competition is already well underway. Team USA has already put its stamp on figure skating with American Nathan Chen recording the second-highest short program score ever on Friday. Friday’s Top Stories
Helicopters roared suddenly early Thursday over Atmeh, once a sleepy Syrian village, signaling the start of a chaotic and violent raid by U.S. special forces that left at least 13 dead, including a number of women and children. Though Covid cases and hospitalizations are falling fast in the U.S., two key metrics are still too high to ditch mask recommendations. Almost two decades after the so-called Rooney Rule was adopted by the NFL to correct the lack of diversity among coaching staff and top management in the league, there is still just one head coach who is Black — Mike Tomlin of the Steelers. U.S. and European warnings about a potential Russian military attack on Ukraine may have staved off an invasion for the moment, but the statements have also caused collateral damage for Ukraine’s economy, officials in Kyiv and experts say. Also in the News
Editor’s Pick
Experts say the recent bomb threats at a more than a dozen historically black colleges and universities build on years of racist attempts to stop Black people from getting an education. Select
As Black History Month begins, we put together a list of acclaimed and hotly-anticipated fiction works written by Black authors. One Grateful Thing
Three fishermen who clung to debris in the frigid waters off the coast of Massachusetts for nearly an hour after their boat sank survived thanks to a sharp-eyed woman on shore who was the only person to call 911.
The 55-foot boat went down so fast about a mile from shore Tuesday afternoon that the crew didn’t have time to don survival suits or even make a distress call.
Thankfully Pam Harght happened to be one of the few people to see the ship sink and called the police.
“If it wasn’t for this woman, I probably wouldn’t be here,” crew member Joe Roderick said.
Read the full story here. Want to receive NBC Breaking News and Special Alerts in your inbox? Get the NBC News Mobile App 30 Rockefeller Plaza New York, NY 10112 |
49.) NBC FIRST READ
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From NBC’s Chuck Todd, Mark Murray, Ben Kamisar, Bridget Bowman and Alexandra Marquez
FIRST READ: Competitive and chaotic GOP Senate primary in Ohio is just three months away
If it’s Friday… President Biden speaks on the January jobs report at 10:45 am ET… China’s Xi embraces Russia’s Putin as Olympic Games begin… RNC panel advances resolution censuring Liz Cheney and Adam Kinzinger… And NBC’s Benjy Sarlin deciphers Joe Manchin’s latest comments.
Also, we want to hear from you to improve your experience reading our newsletter, so go here to complete a brief survey.
But FIRST… What do you get when you mix Twitter trolling, about $30 million in self-funding, a billionaire financier and big-money outside groups?
You get this year’s GOP Senate primary in Ohio, one of the most competitive and chaotic Republican primaries on the calendar this year.
And it’s now just three months away.
It has it all: money, the Donald Trump x-factor, a shifting battleground and control of the Senate sitting on a knife’s edge.
Wealthy candidates have poured millions into the race, led by investment banker Mike Gibbons who loaned his campaign a whopping $11.4 million, and state Sen. Matt Dolan who put in $10.5 million. Businessman Bernie Moreno and former state GOP Chairwoman Jane Timken have dropped a few million of their own, too. (Moreno, however, dropped out of the race Thursday.)
Then there’s the outside spending. Protect Ohio Values, funded by billionaire Peter Thiel, is backing “Hillbilly Elegy” author JD Vance, while Club for Growth Action is backing former state Treasurer Josh Mandel. There’s also Ohio Leads, a pro-Timken super PAC, and a new super PAC that’s funded by Dolan’s relatives.
Cheriss May/Reuters/
All of that spending has caused some candidates to rise in recently released internal polls (though take those internals with a grain of salt). One takeaway from the polling, though? There are plenty of undecided voters.
That’s one reason why Trump looms large over this race, since his endorsement could be a game-changer. (The former president, in fact, was on Moreno’s mind when he dropped out, as he said he spoke with Trump and decided a divided field “could cost the MAGA movement a conservative seat.”)
Except for Dolan, every Republican in the primary is jockeying for position in the pro-Trump lane — Mandel and Vance by taking Trump’s no-holds-barred approach to their opponents and critics, Gibbons by playing up his outsider businessman persona, and Timken by evoking her work with Trump to win Ohio. (Be sure to read NBC’s Henry Gomez’s latest piece on Mandel.)
And a final question: Will any of this matter in the fall? The state has been trending Republican — Trump expanded his vote share in each of his two wins there, and GOP Gov. Mike DeWine was able to stem the tide and win re-election there in the Democratic wave year of 2018 (Democratic Sen. Sherrod Brown beat his GOP challenger that year, too).
Democratic Rep. Tim Ryan, who is running in Brown’s mold, appears to be avoiding a tough primary. And if Mandel’s the nominee, Democrats will likely be heartened by their past success running against him statewide. But Democrats will still need just about everything to go right if they want to buck the national trends and win one on the GOP’s home field.
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Tweet of the Day: Things that make you go ‘Huh?’
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Midterm roundup
Biden authorized the DNC to transfer $15 million to the House and Senate campaign committees, NBC’s Mike Memoli reports.
The RNC’s winter meeting this week underscored “a divide in the GOP between Trump’s obsessions and the issues many GOP operatives consider crucial to winning the midterm elections,” NBC’s Peter Nicholas and Allan Smith report from the meeting in Salt Lake City, Utah.
Today RNC members will consider a resolution instructing the party to censure two vocal Trump critics, Reps. Liz Cheney of Wyoming and Adam Kinzinger of Illinois, and “immediately cease any and all support” for the lawmakers.
The conservative Club for Growth PAC endorsed Blake Masters – who runs billionaire Peter Thiel’s investment firm and foundation – in the Arizona GOP Senate primary yesterday.
New York Democratic Gov. Kathy Hochul signed the state’s new congressional map into law, which benefits Democrats. Cook Political Report’s Dave Wassserman’s analysis shows that Democrats could net two to three House seats due to recent redistricting developments.
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Ad watch: Flood fires back at Fortenberry
The ad fight in NE-1 continues to heat up. In yesterday’s newsletter, we highlighted GOP Rep. Jeff Fortenberry‘s ad attacking primary challenger Mike Flood. A few hours later, ad tracking firm AdImpact captured Flood’s response airing on local stations in Nebraska, where he hit back against Fortenberry’s allegations that Flood isn’t tough on immigration.
“The truth: Mike is a law-and-order conservative. He opposed in-state tuition for illegal immigrants,” Madison County Sheriff Todd Volk says in Flood’s commercial.
The ad also attacked Fortenberry, detailing the federal indictment he’s facing for lying to the FBI about illegal foreign campaign contributions (which Fortenberry denies). The sheriff says Fortenberry is “lashing out at law enforcement and lying about Mike Flood.”
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Data Download: The number of the day is … 17,000.
That’s how much money both Rep. Henry Cuellar, D-Texas, and his primary challenger, Jessica Cisneros, each have booked on the TV airwaves from now through the March 1 primary, per ad-tracking firm AdImpact.
Cuellar and his allies had massively outspent Cisneros in the months before the race. But Cuellar has been on the defensive since news broke that the FBI had raided Cuellar’s home and campaign office were raided by the FBI — since the Monday after that news, the super PAC supporting Cuellar has spent just $53,000 on the air and doesn’t have any future buys booked yet.
So while the cavalry may still be coming for either candidate (or both), it’s worth noting that Cuellar has all-but lost his ad-spending edge with just weeks to go.
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Other numbers you need to know today
$237.6 billion: How much value Facebook parent company Meta lost yesterday when its stock plunged, the largest one-day dip in value in stock market history.
53: The number of days between America’s 800,000th Covid death and its 900,000th – a mark passed Thursday evening.
76,136,801: The number of confirmed Covid cases so far in America since the start of the pandemic, per an NBC News analysis.
4: That’s the factor by which mail-in ballots by Black voters in Washington state’s 2020 election were rejected when compared to white voters.
$200 million: How much the recall of California Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom cost taxpayers, per a final analysis released by the secretary of state Thursday.
300,000: The number of people in America without power due to winter storms across much of the country.
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Talking policy with Benjy: The latest on not-Build Back Better
Build Back Back better is dead, dead, deader. But Sen. Joe Manchin, D-W.V., is also dropping constant hints about what parts of it might go in a future hypothetical bill, perhaps with a different name.
In an interview with NBC News’ Sahil Kapul, Manchin offered some of his most detailed thoughts yet. He sees a reconciliation bill (the vehicle for any major legislation, since it can pass with Democratic votes alone) as primarily about tax reform, which in his case means reversing large chunks of the 2017 Republican tax cuts to help pay down the national debt.
“It’s the reason we have reconciliation,” Manchin said. “And everyone’s talking about everything but that.”
As we reported earlier in First Read, Democrats working on a Manchin-friendly bill are considering reserving some tax revenue for deficit reduction to try and woo him. Based on his latest interview, they’re barking up the right tree.
“That’s music to my ears,” Manchin said when asked about the approach. “Deficit reduction, inflation, being fiscally responsible — sounds like something we should be talking about!”
Manchin has also expressed interest in clean energy incentives, as well as boosting the Affordable Care Act’s subsidies to reduce premiums and cover more uninsured, including in states that have declined to expand Medicaid through the law. These are all items that Democrats have thrown out as potential components of a new not-Build Back Better act.
Pinning down Manchin on specifics can be hard and he’s made no guarantee he’ll sign onto a bill, even if Democrats address his every stated concern. But for someone who keeps saying Build Back Better is done and that there are no “formal talks” about passing some of its policies, he sure has a lot of thoughts about what might go in a sequel bill.
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ICYMI: What ELSE is happening in the world
An attempt by senators to overhaul the way Congress counts Electoral College votes is gaining steam.
The Washington Post has a deep dive into the ISIS leader who died in an American special operations raid Thursday, and a look into how President Biden decided to authorize it.
Former DNC chairman Tom Perez has tapped former Baltimore City Councilwoman Shannon Sneed as his gubernatorial running mate.
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Download the NBC News Mobile App
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50.) CBS
Eye Opener: Winter storm strands travelers
A 2,000-mile storm of snow, rain, ice and tornadoes strands travelers and knocks out power. Also, the White House claims Russia could use a propaganda video to justify an invasion of Ukraine. All that and all that matters in today’s Eye Opener.
Latest Videos
Figure Skater Alysa Liu is Living Her Olympic Dream
Team USA has high hopes for a 16- year- old phenom named Alysa Liu. The Californian brings a fearless attitude to the ice, which she hopes will propel her to a gold medal. She talks to Jamie Yuccas about how she handles pressure leading into her Olympic debut.
Women and heart health
Cardiovascular disease is the No. 1 killer of women in the U.S. We hear from a woman who suffered sudden cardiac arrest at 22 years old, and she credits CPR with saving her life. CBS News senior medical correspondent Dr. Tara Narula joins “CBS Mornings” to discuss cardiac risks and important life-saving techniques people should know.
Outrage over a new deadly no-knock search
Newly released police body camera video shows the deadly shooting of 22-year-old Amir Locke inside a downtown Minneapolis apartment. SWAT officers were executing a “no-knock” search warrant in a homicide investigation, but the city’s interim police chief says Locke was not the subject of the warrant. Jericka Duncan has the latest on the investigation.
Documents shed light on voting machine discussions
CBS News has exclusively reviewed documents that shed more light on internal discussions among former President Trump’s advisers about the possible seizure of voting machines after the 2020 election. CBS News senior investigative correspondent Catherine Herridge reports from Washington.
Winter Olympics opening cermony gets underway
The 2022 Beijing Winter Olympics kicks off with a massive opening ceremony. This comes amid widespread international protests concerning China’s human rights record. Jamie Yuccas has the latest from Beijing.
ISIS leader dies
The U.S. is praising the special operations forces who returned to base without suffering any casualties after ISIS’ leader killed himself on Wednesday. Nancy Cordes has the details.
U.S. alleges Russian fake video plot as pretext for invasion
The U.S. has revealed new intelligence of a Russian plot to use a fake video as a pretext for an invasion of Ukraine.
Multi-day storm brings tornado
A multi-day storm dumped more than a foot of snow in parts of the Midwest and created a tornado in Alabama, where at least one person was killed.
How to spot social media scams
Consumer Reports technology writer Thomas Germain joined “CBS Mornings” to share tips on how to stay safe online and protect yourself from social media scammers.
The post office’s place in America
As the U.S. Postal Service faces tough competition and a shrinking budget, Tony Dokoupil looks at what role the post office still has in the modern world.
More From CBS Mornings
Beijing Olympics officially kick off, under a cloud of controversy
Couple files lawsuit after DNA test reveals sperm mix-up
MacKenzie Scott donates $133.5 million to educational nonprofit
With post office closures, small towns feel loss of community
Winter storm blasts snow, freezing rain and sleet across U.S.
Tense calm at Ukraine border as Russia slams U.S. troop deployment
Broadway star reunites with stranger who gave him free tickets to a show 15 years ago
Brian Flores talks about lawsuit, alleged racist hiring practices in NFL
U.S. F-15s on Russia’s border a clear message to allies, and to Putin
COVID cases rising in Beijing ahead of Olympics: “It’s scary”
U.S.
Payrolls surged by 467,000 in January, confounding economists
The top-rated job in America? You might not have heard of it
Could a DNA sample from 30 years ago solve the yogurt shop murder case?
Biden details U.S. raid that took out “horrible terrorist” ISIS leader in Syria
Lawmaker wants Yellowstone’s “zone of death” loophole fixed
Politics
Biden details U.S. raid that took out “horrible terrorist” ISIS leader in Syria
Lawmaker wants Yellowstone’s “zone of death” loophole fixed
Under pressure from the U.S., Russia and China show a united front
Carl Bernstein on the political climate in Washington – “The Takeout”
RNC to consider resolution to censure Cheney and Kinzinger
Health
“There are a lot of dark times”: Care boxes help cancer patients cope with chemo
Couple files lawsuit after DNA test reveals sperm mix-up
People mistakenly assume products are safe, top regulator says
Listeria outbreak tied to Dole salads kills 2, sickens 17
House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer says he tested positive for COVID-19
MoneyWatch
World
Beijing Olympics officially kick off, under a cloud of controversy
Biden details U.S. raid that took out “horrible terrorist” ISIS leader in Syria
Under pressure from the U.S., Russia and China show a united front
Mount Everest’s highest glacier is losing decades’ worth of ice every year, scientists warn
U.S. maintains border policy of expelling migrants, citing Omicron
Entertainment
CNN president Jeff Zucker resigns
CBS meteorologist brings adorable baby on-air for winter storm forecast
From heartbreak to TikTok stardom: The amazing journey of the LSU Tiger Girls
4 arrested in connection with overdose death of actor Michael K. Williams
NY blows past $1B in online sports bets in just 3 weeks
Technology
Science
Mount Everest’s highest glacier is losing decades’ worth of ice every year, scientists warn
Climate change could be “catastrophic” for coral reefs
International Space Station to crash into the Pacific in 2031, NASA says
Scientists discover rare asteroid that follows Earth in orbit
NASA delays Artemis moon launch rehearsal till March
Crime
Could a DNA sample from 30 years ago solve the yogurt shop murder case?
Outrage over a new deadly no-knock search
Lawmaker wants Yellowstone’s “zone of death” loophole fixed
Audio of man charged in woman’s 1993 college murder played at trial
Black man shot to death by Minneapolis police wasn’t named in warrants
Space
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51.) REASON
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56.) REALCLEARPOLITICS TODAY
57.) CENTER FOR SECURITY POLICY
58.) BERNARD GOLDBERG
59.) SARA A. CARTER
60.) TWITCHY
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62.) 1440 DAILY DIGEST
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63.) AMERICAN INSTITUTE FOR ECONOMIC RESEARCH
64.) NATIONAL REVIEW
65.) POLITICAL WIRE
66.) RASMUSSEN REPORTS
67.) FIRST RIGHT
February 4th, 2022
02/04/2022 05:11 CDT
EL SALVADOR PRESIDENT WONDERS WHY WE ARE SELF-DESTRUCTING; FACEBOOK STOCK IMPLODES
TODAY’S TOP TEN
FOREIGN LEADER ASKS GREAT QUESTION ABOUT AMERICA
PRESIDENT OF EL SALVADOR ASKS: Is the destruction of American cities a “deliberate plan?” Post-Millennial.
U.S. GOVERNMENT LEFT AS MANY AS 9,000 AMERICANS in Afghanistan after withdrawal, Senate report reveals. Daily Caller.
FACEBOOK STOCK PLUNGES 26 PERCENT in biggest one-day drop ever. CNBC.
DEMOCRATIC SENATOR’S STROKE and prolonged absence further complicates Biden’s failing agenda. The Western Journal.
SUPPORT GROWING FOR SPECIAL COUNSEL on Biden family’s China ties. Breitbart.
NEW JERSEY GYM OWNER WHO DEFIED COVID lockdowns running for Congress. Daily Wire.
“A SPIT IN THE FACE:” BLACK CAUCUS in Virginia rejects black Republican delegate. Fox News.
SUPPOSED NEUTRAL MEDIA ARBITER rates Chinese state-run media more credible than OANN, Newsmax, and LifeNews. NewsBusters.
RIGHTS GROUP LISTS 10 WORST COLLEGES in America for upholding free speech. FIRE.
CALIFORNIA SCHOOL DISTRICT TELLS KIDS: “Attacking whiteness is not enough.” The Federalist.
If you’d like to share First Right with a friend, text FIRSTRIGHT (all caps, no spaces) to 30161
COMMENTARY WORTH READING
- Why the right should root for Biden to pick the most radical Supreme Court imaginable. Margot Cleveland.
- Democrats to blame for soaring crime, murdered police officers. Miranda Devine.
- Adam Kinzinger is a failed opportunist who focuses on pointless vengeance. Tristan Justice.
VIDEO WORTH WATCHING
- Man trolls MSNBC reporter with “Let’s Go Brandon” sign. The Daily Caller.
- AP reporter chides State Department spokesman over Russia statement. C-Span.
- Kamala Harris struggles to answer basic questions on border crisis. Grabien News.
LATEST FIRST RIGHT PODCAST
- An interview with conservative commentator Rachel Bovard. Rumble.
OFFBEAT BEAT
- The ultimate demise of Hitler’s Sixth Army. HistoryNet.
TWEETS OF NOTE
- (@thebradfordfile) Tuckers honk their horns. BLM burned down neighborhoods. Guess which one the media was outraged about. Tweet.
- (@catturd2) I don’t see how Joe Biden can last another year. His creepy whispering is getting stranger. He can’t read a Teleprompter. His anger is uncontrollable. He can barely walk. He doesn’t even know what he’s saying. This is so embarrassing. We’re the laughingstock of the world. Tweet.
MOST CLICKED ITEM YESTERDAY
- CONGRESS CLAIMS SOVEREIGN IMMUNITY prevents Capitol Police from sharing January 6th emails and videos. Just the News.
BONGINO REPORT TOP HEADLINE AT TIME OF EMAIL
- Biden Announces New Gun Control Push BONGINO REPORT.
68.) GATEWAY PUNDIT
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72.) FOUNDATION FOR ECONOMIC EDUCATION
73.) POPULIST PRESS
His plan is actually genius, no matter what you think about the guy…
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TOP STORIES:
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Lin Wood’s New Deal Could Deliver Huge Win For GOP
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Jesse Watters Explodes on Fox News, Liberal Media In Trouble
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Ted Cruz Destroys Biden Judicial Nominee ‘Did You Not Prepare for This Hearing?’
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Big US Biz Tells Fired Unvaxxed Workers To Sign 9‑Page Agreement to Stay Silent
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Doctor Hired By Fed Government Drops BOMBSHELL about COVID
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IN DEPTH…
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Jesse Watters Explodes on Fox News, Liberal Media In Trouble
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Ted Cruz Destroys Biden Judicial Nominee ‘Did You Not Prepare for This Hearing?’
- Surprising New Frontrunner For The Supreme Court
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Big US Biz Tells Fired Unvaxxed Workers To Sign 9‑Page Agreement to Stay Silent
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Doctor Hired By Fed Government Drops BOMBSHELL about COVID
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IN DEPTH…
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74.) THE POST MILLENNIAL
75.) BLACKLISTED NEWS
76.) THE DAILY DOT
Did a friend forward this? Subscribe here. Welcome to the Friday edition of Internet Insider, where we review the week online. TODAY:
BREAK THE INTERNET The quick rise of the ‘B*tch, you better be joking’ meme It’s a line that feels designed to become a reaction meme: “Bitch, you better be joking.” Delivered by Maddy (Alexa Demie) in episode 3, season 2 of HBO’s teen drama Euphoria as she responds to her friend Cassie (Sydney Sweeney) about whether her outfit resembled a country music star in “a good way or a bad way,” it’s become the latest breakout meme of the series.
As others have pointed out, “Bitch, you better be joking” is the new “environment that is so toxic” Glee meme. Both memes are screengrabs from popular TV shows that depict a main character saying a line that can apply to a variety of situations. In other words, perfect meme content. Both memes also followed a similar evolution: People sharing the unaltered screengrab, then people sharing the screengrab with the subtitle altered to reveal different words, and finally, heavily photoshopped versions of the meme that alter both the subject’s appearance and their line. Four years ago, we broke down the lifecycle of a meme. Although a lot has changed in meme culture since then—namely the emergence of TikTok—the evolution of a meme has stayed relatively the same. Except that it now happens at warp speed; the episode of Euphoria where this meme is pulled from aired less than two weeks ago. Twitter users are already declaring the meme overused and dead. While everyone will likely move on to a different meme in a week, for now, we can appreciate the many remixes of it that the internet has gifted us; this clip of the scene with a laugh track might be my favorite one. By Tiffany Kelly Culture Editor SPONSORED Let’s say goodbye to the predictable Valentine’s Day gift ideas this year. That includes generic chocolate boxes, cheap stuffed animals, and convenience store flowers. Instead, surprise your valentine with something they’ll actually use. Here are the best last-minute Valentine’s Day gift ideas to celebrate the day of love! TIKTOK What does ‘pushin’ P’ mean? In early January, rapper Gunna tweeted, “Jumpin n a person beef or situation when u dk wats goin on Not P.” He used the the blue P emoji in that tweet and others as he attempted to define what it is to push P— and what is and isn’t P.
According to Gunna, P can mean “paper” or “player,” but he also applies it to a more positive, drama-free approach to money and life. Soon P spread to TikTok, where videos from early January reference Gunna and his song with Future, “Pushin’ P,” which has been used in more than 500,000 TikToks. Once it started to spread, the definition expanded.
Read the full story here.
—Audra Schroeder, senior writer
DAILY DOT PICKS
GAMES Wordle fans are worried that the New York Times will put the game behind a paywall The puzzle game Wordle was a runaway hit this January, combining the logic of Sudoku with the vocab skills of Scrabble. But after a month of unprecedented popularity, Wordle has been acquired by the New York Times, inspiring suspicion among its fanbase.
There’s no app, which means no in-app purchases. No ads or data harvesting. No addictive gameplay because Wordle is just a website offering one new puzzle every 24 hours. It felt like a breath of fresh air in the current internet landscape, which is why so many people were pissed when someone tried to sell a Wordle copycat on the App Store. So when the news broke on Monday that Wordle had been sold to the New York Times, fans were immediately concerned.
Read the full story here.
—Gavia Baker-Whitelaw, staff writer
MEME OF THE WEEK
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79.) POLITICHICKS
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81.) THE WESTERN JOURNAL
82.) CNN
Friday 02.04.22 America’s economic recovery is about to go into reverse. White House officials are bracing for a weak January jobs report later this morning due to speed bumps in the road caused by the Omicron variant of Covid-19. Here’s what else you need to know to Get Up to Speed and On With Your Day. ISIS leader Abu Ibrahim al-Hashimi al-Qurayshi’s compound in northwest Syria after a US counterterrorism raid. ISIS
The leader of ISIS was killed yesterday during a US counterterrorism raid in northwest Syria. Abu Ibrahim al-Hashimi al-Qurayshi killed himself and his family after detonating a bomb as US forces approached his compound, Biden administration officials said. The explosion resulted in multiple civilian casualties, though there was a discrepancy between the White House and a Syrian civil defense group over how many. Qurayshi succeeded ISIS founder Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi after he was killed in similar US raid in 2019. President Joe Biden watched the raid unfold in real time from the White House Situation Room. It was the highest-profile counterterrorism operation of Biden’s tenure. Ukraine
US officials say Russia is planning to stage a fake attack by Ukraine in order to justify an invasion. Pentagon press secretary John Kirby said that the US believes the Russian government is creating “a very graphic propaganda video” that would depict an attack by Ukrainian military or intelligence forces that would include corpses, actors depicting mourners, and images of destroyed locations. Moscow has continued its buildup up of forces and military equipment along the countries’ shared border, despite diplomatic efforts by the US and allies to de-escalate the situation. Russian Ambassador to the European Union Vladimir Chizhov told CNN yesterday that Moscow is not planning any false flag operations to invade Ukraine.
Olympics
The Winter Olympics in Beijing begin today and excitement is building around the opening ceremonies scheduled to kick off later today. About 3,000 athletes will be competing in 15 disciplines across 109 events through February 20. Politics have dominated the build-up to the Games though, with several countries — including the US — imposing diplomatic boycotts to protest China’s alleged human rights abuses. Tensions in Eastern Europe are also impacting the atmosphere at the Olympics as Russia threatens to invade Ukraine. And Coronavirus concerns are at the forefront after a total of 308 Olympic-related cases were reported yesterday, 111 of which involve athletes or team officials, the Beijing Olympic Committee said. Participants are currently confined to a “closed loop system” and will compete, eat and sleep within that bubble without making any contact with the wider Chinese population until the Games end. Coronavirus
Medicare will start paying for home Covid-19 tests beginning this spring. Last month, the Biden administration began requiring health insurers to cover the cost of home tests. Medicare was not initially included in the directive, sparking an outcry from seniors. This move will allow the 36 million senior citizens and Americans with disabilities in the traditional Medicare program to get reimbursed for tests purchased at participating pharmacies and retailers, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services told CNN. Separately, a new spinoff of the Omicron variant, called BA.2, has been found in at least 49 countries, including the United States — but medical professionals say there’s no need to worry because there is no evidence that it causes more severe sy than the original Omicron variant. Afghanistan
Afghanistan’s public universities have reopened to female students for the first time since the Taliban took over the country last year. Female students were allowed back on university campuses this week, but on the condition they were separated from male students. Under the Taliban’s previous rule from 1996 to 2001, women and girls were barred from education. But the group has been vague on its plans for the education of girls and women since the hardline government resumed power on August 15. In many provinces, young girls are still being excluded from secondary schools, prompting aid groups to sound the international alarm for swift action. Sponsor Content by Bankrate More than 15 million homeowners could save big with a Refi If your rate is 3.65% or higher, you could lower your mortgage payment by at least $104.65/month by refinancing through Bankrate. Browse rates that on average are 0.28% lower than the national average on Bankrate today.
People are talking about these. Read up. Join in. “Moonfall” premieres in US theaters today The movie is quite stellar. You’ll really enjoy this if you gravitate toward space disaster epics.
MacKenzie Scott donates $133.5 million to educational nonprofit Move aside Santa! Ms. Scott is coming to town… with millions of dollars in unsolicited donations.
Demand for candy and snacks is increasing Anyone else guilty of stress eating Hershey Kisses during the pandemic?
A drawing bought for $30 at a yard sale has been valued at $10 million Maybe a treasure hunt at your neighbor’s next yard sale will make you a millionaire! Have hope!
The colorful Caribbean Vamos! These vibrant images of Puerto Rico will make you add the Caribbean to your travel list. The Lunar New Year, also known as Spring Festival in China, was celebrated this week. What year have we entered, according to the Chinese zodiac?
A. the Year of the Snake
Take the 5 Things weekly news quiz to see if you’re correct! $240 billion That’s how much Meta, the company formerly known as Facebook, dropped in market value yesterday. The company’s shares closed down more than 26% following a rough earnings report, making it the worst trading day in Meta’s history as a public company. How do we unite us again? Unity is elusive, but it’s really actually necessary.
— President Joe Biden, delivering remarks yesterday at the National Prayer Breakfast at the US Capitol. His address to members of Congress and religious leaders at the multi-faith event stressed the importance of unity “during a moment of great division.” Brought to you by CNN Underscored We tested 12 food processors: Here are the 3 worth investing in A food processor can be the next best thing to a personal sous chef. To help you find the best one for your kitchen, we tested nine full-size food processors, along with three space-saving mini versions, and we found three that are actually worth your money. Kittens and puppies meet for the first time Calling all cat and dog lovers! Start your day with this adorable first encounter. (Click here to view)
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83.) THE DAILY CALLER
84.) POWERLINE
Daily Digest |
- Truckers of the World Unite!
- Brian Flores sues the NFL
- Cosmic Stupidity
- Podcast: Is There a ‘Generation Gap’ on the Right? The ‘Based’ Think So
- Price of the ticket
Truckers of the World Unite!
Posted: 03 Feb 2022 05:30 PM PST (John Hinderaker)In recent years, we have seen a fundamental realignment in American, and Western, politics. After something like 200 years of purporting to represent the laboring classes, liberalism has been exposed. Most voters now understand that it is Republicans, and by inference conservatives, who speak for the working class. Democrats (liberals) are seen as the party of the would-be elites, who unfortunately aren’t elite at anything useful. This is the context of Glenn Reynolds’ excellent New York Post column: “Truckers are starting a working-class revolution — and the left hates it.”
Which is a problem when your intellectual vanguard is–to be blunt–stupid.
That is the self-interest angle. Why should working people vote for politicians whose policies are antithetical to their interests? But the cultural divide may be equally important:
Or, as Salena Zito rather brilliantly puts it, the middle of somewhere. The Left’s response to the Canadian truckers’ protest has been laughable:
That is painfully dumb, and no one believes it. So why do leftists fall back on these pitiful tropes?
More at the link. Let’s finish with Glenn’s conclusion:
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Brian Flores sues the NFL
Posted: 03 Feb 2022 05:15 PM PST (Paul Mirengoff)Last month, I wrote about Brian Flores, the moderately successful black coach of the Miami Dolphins, who was fired after three seasons. I said that the firing of Flores raised suspicions of racism, but that it’s extremely unlikely the dismissal really was race based. The Dolphins defended the decision to sack Flores, at least in part, on the basis that the coach clashed with the Dolphins’ general manager, who is black. Having hired both a black GM and a black head coach, the notion that the Dolphins discriminate on the basis of race in top-level jobs seemed far fetched. Undeterred, Flores has now sued the Dolphins, two other NFL teams, and the league itself for alleged discrimination. His Complaint is here. I want to offer some preliminary and tentative thoughts about the case. First, though, I should provide some disclosure. Years ago, I provided legal services defending perhaps a dozen cases brought against various NFL teams. None involved the hiring or firing of a coach, and none of the information in this post was gained in the course of my representations. All the assertions of fact in this post are based on publicly available information. As to Flores’ claim against the Dolphins, it strikes me that the ex-coach’s own statements establish that he was not fired because of his race. Appearing on CBS after filing his suit, Flores reportedly said the Dolphins’ owner offered him money to lose games so as to improve the team’s draft position. According to Flores, he refused and this “hurt my standing within the organization and ultimately was the reason I was let go.” (Emphasis added) It would be deplorable to fire a coach for not losing intentionally. But doing so would not be race discrimination. If Flores is right that non-tanking was “the reason I was let go,” then race was not the reason — not unless he can show that the Dolphins have retained white head coaches who also refused to tank. Not content with undermining his claim of race discrimination through this attack on the Dolphins’ owner’s integrity, Flores also alleges that the owner pressured him to recruit a “prominent quarterback” for the franchise, in violation of rules against tampering. Flores says he did not participate in that recruiting effort (of Tom Brady, probably) and thereafter, “was treated with disdain and held out as someone who was noncompliant and difficult to work with.” This, then, is another reason for Flores’ serious problems with the Dolphins that has nothing to do with his race. Given Flores’ concessions plus the fact that the Dolphins have a black GM, his race discrimination claim against the team seems quite weak. Flores also claims that the New York Giants discriminated against him when, recently, they hired a white head coach to fill a job he interviewed for. He says that before the Giants interviewed him, he received a text from Bill Belichick congratulating him for getting the job. Apparently, Belichick intended to congratulate a different Brian — Buffalo Bills assistant Brian Daboll — who did, in fact, get the job. From this, Flores infers that his interview was sham (or pro forma) compliance with the “Rooney Rule,” which mandates interviews for minority candidates, and that the Giants never seriously considered him. What Belichick knew, as opposed to what he assumed, is unclear. However, if Flores’ interview with the Giants was a sham, this would show only that (1) the Giants thought Daboll was clearly their guy whatever Flores, or anyone else, might say during an interview and (2) they didn’t take the Rooney Rule very seriously. It would not tend to show that the Giants preferred Daboll to Flores because of race. Flores has also sued the Denver Broncos. This claim, too, is based on allegations that his interview. with that team was a sham. He says:
Again, even if true, this would show only that the Broncos didn’t think as much of Flores’ candidacy as they did of Fangio’s. It would not mean that race played any part in their thinking. However, Flores will be hard pressed to prove the truth of his allegations against Elway, Ellis, and the others. The Broncos say:
If Flores gets to trial, it will probably be his word against five Broncos executives and pages of detailed notes. Flores seeks to represent a class — other Blacks allegedly denied jobs as head coaches, offensive and defensive coordinators, quarterback coaches, and general managers because of their race. I have no opinion on the merits of the underlying class allegation. As I tried to show last month, the fact roughly 70 percent of current NFL players are Black, compared to 10 percent of NFL head coaches last year (for example), has little if any bearing on the issue of race discrimination. However, it’s possible that the disparity between the percentage of black head coaches and their representation in a properly constructed candidate pool would be statistically significant. It’s also possible that a careful case-by-case and/or statistical analysis of head coach firings during a relevant time period would show that Blacks need to perform better than Whites to keep these jobs. But to maintain class claims, Flores will have to obtain class certification. This is not the place for a detailed discussion of class certification in the context of Flores’ case. However, it seems to me that the weakness and quirkiness of Flores’ individual claims — again, he basically says he was fired for not complying with wishes of the team owner that have nothing to do with race — could be an obstacle to certification. Running through Rule 23(a) and (b) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, which govern class certification, is the notion that the name plaintiff’s claims must be non-idiosyncratic enough to justify proceeding on a class basis. Given what I’ve written above about Flores’ individual claims, this may be one barrier to class certification. A related problem is the highly individualized nature of even plausible race discrimination hiring claims for head coaching positions. As far as I know, there’s no job description for head football coach. You can’t hold up a candidate’s paper credentials against set, objective criteria and figure out whom to hire that way. Flores interview with the Broncos took three-and-a-half hours. I don’t know what happens during these interviews but I assume there is a detailed discussion of coaching philosophy, coaching strategy (offense, defense, and special teams), potential assistant coaching hires, and player personnel. Assessment of how a coach does during such interviews, along with a general evaluation of whether the coach seems to “have what it takes” to lead five dozen or more professional athletes, is incredibly subjective. Given this reality, how does a trier of fact, with no more than (at best) a fan’s knowledge of pro football, decide whom a team would have hired in a fair, non-racially biased process? Think about what passes for knowledge and insight on sports talk radio. In the case of a jury in the Southern District of New York, where Flores has brought his case, the verdict would be rendered by “Joe from White Plains” and “Tito from the Bronx” — or maybe by their non-football-watching wives. There may be no getting around this difficulty when it comes to litigating Flores’ individual claim. But perhaps the problem militates against trying dozens of these highly individualized claims together in a class action. Flores says he’s bringing the case to shine a light on what he thinks (and what may be) race discrimination against black coaches, GMs, and candidates for these jobs. The over-the-top wording of his complaint (e.g., “In certain critical ways, the NFL is racially segregated and is managed much like a plantation. . .The owners watch the games from atop NFL stadiums in their luxury boxes, while their majority-Black workforce put their bodies on the line every Sunday, taking vicious hits and suffering debilitating injuries to their bodies and their brains while the NFL and its owners reap billions of dollars.”) offers more heat than light. But maybe there is racial discrimination here and maybe this lawsuit is a serviceable vehicle for exposing it. One possibility — and it’s always a possibility — is that the case will settle. Flores and, in the event of certification, class members would get paid and the NFL would make some hiring commitments. On the other hand, Flores’ individual case may be so weak, and his allegations so inflammatory and larded with irrelevant shots against the league (e.g. the Colin Kaepernick saga), that the NFL will opt to fight, hammer and tong. If so, it could be quite a spectacle. |
Cosmic Stupidity
Posted: 03 Feb 2022 04:32 PM PST (John Hinderaker)We are surrounded by so much craziness on a daily basis that one could devote his life to deconstructing the follies of the Left and still not make a dent. I don’t choose to do that, but here are a few items in the news that represent peak stupidity, at least for today. First, Pramila Jayapal is a member of Congress, a Democrat from Washington. Here is her take on rising prices:
This is dumb on a number of levels. First, her lack of self-awareness in failing to understand that Starbucks is a luxury product. Most Americans are worried about how they will heat their homes, put food on the table and fill their gas tanks. They aren’t losing sleep over the cost of a decaf latte. Second, the costs of doing business are indeed rising, not because of “corporate greed” but because of inflation due to the massive spending and borrowing in which the federal government has engaged, and which Ms. Jayapal voted for. Third, the idea that “every single worker in America” should join a union is laughably retrograde. With only a few exceptions, unions flourish in monopoly environments, which mostly means government. Only around 6 percent of private sector workers are unionized, largely because unions lose most elections. And while unions aren’t great at doing much for their members, which is why membership has dwindled to 6 percent, one thing they do relatively successfully is increase employers’ costs. So if Starbucks becomes unionized, watch for the price of that decaf latte to rise. The horror! Another manifestation of peak stupidity is this story out of Georgetown Law School. It arises from Ilya Shapiro’s criticizing Joe Biden for his affirmative action Supreme Court appointment. Shapiro, a brand new Georgetown Law faculty member, was suspended as a result of his wrongthink. But that was only the beginning:
This is not law school as I experienced it. When I was a law student, the story was often told–it might have been apocryphal, but it accurately represented the attitude of faculty, administrators and students–of the law student who was not able to respond adequately to a professor’s grilling him about a case. The professor flipped the student a quarter and told him to call his mother and tell her to come pick him up. Because he was never going to be a lawyer. At Georgetown, the idea of a “crying room” for students who are distraught because they learned of criticism of affirmative action (for the first time, apparently) found favor:
God help us. I have seen some online discussion as to whether these pitiful snowflakes are doomed to failure in the law business. I hope they are, but I am not sure that is the case. Pathetic weakness has apparently become a mark of virtue, and today’s students are carrying their distorted values into the workplace. I won’t be shocked if, in a few years time, judges bred in the same ideological hothouse are giving lawyers a recess to cry over a cross-examination that did not go well. One more: the Mayor of Los Angeles, Eric Garcetti, was photographed maskless with Los Angeles Laker star Earvin Johnson and Governor Gavin Newsom. This is a faux pas since California children are being terrorized with mask mandates. The invaluable Libs of TikTok was on the case:
Garcetti’s response? He didn’t exhale:
So Gavin Newsom and Eric Garcetti are caught acting normally, and have to fabricate excuses. This is the world we live in. Meanwhile, those poor kids are still being forced, irrationally, into masks. That’s three; here is a bonus instance of peak stupidity: Michelle Malkin has been banned by Airbnb, along with her husband Jesse–who sometimes books travel arrangements!–because she spoke at a conservative conference. Here’s hoping tomorrow is a little less dumb. |
Podcast: Is There a ‘Generation Gap’ on the Right? The ‘Based’ Think So
Posted: 03 Feb 2022 08:02 AM PST (Steven Hayward)Almost completely ignored by conservative media (never mind the mainstream media), there is a growing generation gap emerging within young conservatives that in some ways resembles the “generation gap” of the 1960s which saw the new left “hippie” generation emerge from liberal homes, as Midge Decter explained in her early book Liberal Parents, Radical Children. Now it is happening on the right. The postwar conservative movement that we baby boomers grew up with is not attractive or relevant to the generation coming of age now. I started picking up on this story with Michael Anton’s long essay almost three years ago on the phenomenon of the underground but highly popular book Bronze Age Mindset, which, it must be said, is a very different book from The Conservative Mind or The Road to Serfdom. Then I started following a group of mostly younger conservatives who participate actively on Twitter, and sometimes in live chats on the “Spaces” platform that Twitter has launched. Most of this younger cohort participate online under a pseudonym, because in the age of cancel culture their politically incorrect views, and moreover their transgressive humor (they actually make George Floyd jokes, which is worse than Helen Keller or Anne Frank jokes), would get them instantly censored if not worse. I reached out to one of the ring leaders of this circle, “Athenian Stranger,” on Twitter (@athens_stranger) and rounded five of these mostly younger figures to come on this podcast to explain their disgust with our “woke republic,” and their disappointment with the ineffective resistance of the established conservative movement. Since I’m a stodgy baby boomer, I recruited Glenn Ellmers, author of The Soul of Politics, to join me as the special guest-host for the episode. He and Joshua Lippincott have just this week published an important article about this topic, “Boomers, Meet the Based.” The other four participants are “Astral” (who goes by @Astrikos10 on twitter), Aionian, “Lucky” (Resurrected Luck), and Doug Kuular. Settle in for a long conversation. We had some technical difficulties with recording this large a group, and thus there are some abrupt edits throughout on account of sudden crashes and disconnections. But it couldn’t be helped. Glenn and I do a short “postgame show” at the end to try to tie some loose ends together. The episode is quite long as there is a lot to cover. Do give it a try though. Think of it as what a classroom seminar with a group of bright conservative students would be like today. As always, listen here, or hobble over in your walker to our hosts at Ricochet. https://mp3.ricochet.com/2022/02/Ep-309-2322-8.34-AM.mp3 This posting includes an audio/video/photo media file: Download Now |
Price of the ticket
Posted: 03 Feb 2022 07:17 AM PST (Scott Johnson)One might think the fact and cost and multifarious impact of the Biden administration’s redistribution of illegal immigrants around the United States would be big news, but we know it isn’t. It is somehow a preserve of the right. The left favors it and would prefer that those in the middle be kept in the dark. They like it this way just fine. We thus turn to Breitbart News for John Binder’s story “Biden’s Flights of Illegal Aliens into U.S. Cost Taxpayers $340M in 9 Months.” Binder reports:
The cost is of course the least of it, but it is not insubstantial, it should be known, and it is of interest. Whole thing here. |
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