The Morning Dispatch: Russian Bounties and Lots of Questions

The White House will have trouble casting this story as a partisan concern.

Happy Monday! Let’s do this.

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Quick Hits: Today’s Top Stories

  • As of Sunday night, 2,548,992 cases of COVID-19 have been reported in the United States (an increase of 38,655 from yesterday) and 125,803 deaths have been attributed to the virus (an increase of 264 from yesterday), according to the Johns Hopkins University COVID-19 Dashboard, leading to a mortality rate among confirmed cases of 4.9 percent (the true mortality rate is likely much lower, between 0.4 percent and 1.4 percent, but it’s impossible to determine precisely due to incomplete testing regimens). Of 30,988,013 coronavirus tests conducted in the United States (586,369 conducted since yesterday), 8.2 percent have come back positive.

  • The New York Times reported that Russian military intelligence extended bounties incentivizing Taliban militants to kill American and coalition forces in Afghanistan.
  • President Trump retweeted a video on Sunday of a supporter from the Villages—a retirement community in Florida—shouting “white power.” White House deputy press secretary Judd Deere said Trump was unaware the white supremacist slogan had been used in the video and the tweet has since been deleted.
  • The House approved a bill on Friday to grant Washington, D.C., statehood by a vote of 232-180. The vote was primarily symbolic; the move is opposed by Senate Republicans and the White House.
  • In the wake of nationwide anti-racism protests, Mississippi lawmakers passed a bill yesterday requiring the removal of the Confederate battle emblem from the state’s flag.
  • Princeton University’s board of trustees announced on Saturday its plans to rename the Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs, stating, “racist thinking and policies make him an inappropriate namesake for a school or college whose scholars, students, and alumni must stand firmly against racism in all its forms.”

Russians Paid Off Taliban Insurgents to Kill Coalition Troops in Afghanistan

A Russian military spy unit bribed Taliban militants to kill American troops and other coalition forces in Afghanistan last year, according to a stunning news report Friday in the New York Times, sourced to American intelligence officials. The White House is facing tough questions from Democrats and top Republicans about the reporting, especially after it was confirmed by officials familiar with the matter that several U.S. troops are believed to have been killed by Taliban militants who had been paid off by Russians.

The Times reported that President Trump was briefed on the intelligence and the National Security Council took it up during a meeting in March. NSC spokesman John Ullyot said that “the veracity of the underlying allegations continue to be evaluated.” The administration has denied that Trump was briefed on the intelligence, although several news outlets—including the Wall Street Journal and the Washington Post—have matched and expanded on the initial reporting from the Times. 

Worth Your Time 

  • Dan McLaughlin’s latest National Review piece challenges New York Times columnist Jamelle Bouie’s claim that “neither Abraham Lincoln nor the Republican Party freed the slaves.” Bouie’s argument is part of a larger push by some on the left to reframe American history, particularly in the context of race, as a diegesis of unceasing white supremacist oppression. But while this narrative contains “elements of uncontroversial truth,” McLaughlin writes, many of “its most sweeping claims are false—and the true parts are merely tools for advancing the falsehood.”
  • FiveThirtyEight’s Clare Malone writes about the Republican Party’s long-standing race problem, tracing the party’s relationship with racial minorities back to the mid-20th century when moderates like Michigan Gov. George Romney were pushed out of the party in favor of anti-civil rights hardliners. In the decades following, the GOP wavered between earnest attempts to expand its coalition and cynical ploys to capitalize on racial divisions, with little success in broadening their appeal to black and brown voter bases. And, Malone argues, the party’s persistent inability to meaningfully expand its political coalition beyond white Americans is what led to the systematic voter suppression efforts that are still on display in some areas of the country today.
  • Frank Bruni’s Saturday New York Times op-ed picks up the case that Steve has made on The Dispatch Podcast: Joe Biden should pick Illinois Sen. Tammy Duckworth as his vice presidential running mate. “She’s the anti-Trump,” Bruni writes. “The antidote to the ugliness he revels in and the cynicism he stokes.” Comparing Duckworth—an Iraq war veteran who lost both her legs in combat—to Elizabeth Warren and Kamala Harris, two other frontrunners for the Democratic vice presidential nomination, Bruni writes that Duckworth “is a choice that makes exquisite emotional and moral sense. Largely, but not entirely, because of that, she makes strategic sense, too.”

Presented Without Comment

erica williams simon @missewill

First of all, they were in mud masks not blackface. And second of all, in what world does “Stop killing us.” sound like “Please remove episodes of Golden Girls”? I didn’t see that ask on anyone’s protest sign…

The Hollywood Reporter @THR

Hulu has removed an episode of ‘The Golden Girls’ that shows Betty White and Rue McClanahan in blackface. https://t.co/jLMGbhQBzJ

Toeing the Company Line

  • New York Times national politics reporter and Twitter celebrity Astead Herndon joined Sarah and Steve for the most recent special episode of The Dispatch Podcast to discuss Astead’s recent trip to cover Trump’s rally in Tulsa, the veepstakes, and all things rank and punditrous.
  • Grace and charity are two virtues that can no longer be found in contemporary politics, and yesterday’s French Press explains why. David analyzes the ways in which Americans across the political divide misconstrue one another’s intentions, resulting in a positive feedback loop of hostility and polarization.
  • Friday’s installment of the G-File delves into the moral panic caused when we retroactively apply the cultural and moral standards of today to nondescript behavior by public figures in the past, before outlining Trump’s biggest adversary in his reelection efforts: Trump.
  • And Jonah’s Saturday Ruminant this week was an old-school, back-to-basics “pox on both your houses”-type episode, with a history lesson on the origins of “social Darwinism” thrown in for good measure.
  • In the latest Dispatch Fact Check, Alec debunks viral claims that the Trump campaign used hired actors and Trump staffers to inflate the attendance of last Saturday’s Tulsa rally.
  • Jeryl Bier compares a New York Times story that described the riots that grew out of the George Floyd protests as “some isolated incidents of violence” with other coverage the paper did that described thousands of businesses being damaged and hundreds of people being arrested.
  • Avi Woolf highlights some of the more egregious examples of “cancel culture” from woke leftists, and suggests that conservatives must respond not by caving or with knee-jerk opposition, but by working to improve our cultural institutions.

Reporting by Declan Garvey (@declanpgarvey), Andrew Egger (@EggerDC), Sarah Isgur (@whignewtons), Charlotte Lawson (@charlotteUVA), Audrey Fahlberg (@FahlOutBerg), Nate Hochman (@njhochman), and Steve Hayes (@stephenfhayes).