Good morning! Here is your news briefing for Monday July 20, 2020
THE DAILY SIGNAL
Jul 20, 2020
Good morning from Washington, the federal city named for the father of our country. George Washington and other imperfect humans set something rare in motion, Jarrett Stepman writes. Vandals continue to target statues and other monuments. You’ll want to see Virginia Allen’s list. Plus: legislation to protect these historical markers; the violence doesn’t spare churches; what states bore the brunt of the coronavirus; June’s good guys with guns; and a movie about conservatives who happen to be black. On this date in 1976—seven years to the day since American astronauts arrived on the moon—the unmanned U.S. probe Viking 1 becomes the first spacecraft to land successfully on Mars.
In America, we lurch toward justice because we have a just system, or at least a system that allows for justice and the truth to succeed. That was not inevitable, as the history of the second country in the New World to declare independence shows.
The list of American statues and other monuments that have been toppled, decapitated, defaced, or removed since the May 25 killing of George Floyd grew longer almost daily through June and into July.
The California Republican’s legislation would withhold some federal funds from state and local governments whose officials fail to act to protect monuments from vandalism.
Congregants in Florida’s Queen of Peace Catholic Church were praying in the sanctuary when they heard a car crash through the foyer. Seconds later came the smell of smoke clouding the entry.
“There is nothing so useless as doing efficiently that which should not be done at all.”
PETER DRUCKER
Good morning,
More than 600 current and former lawmakers in 30 countries are calling on the Chinese regime to end its persecution of Falun Gong. July 20 marks the start of the persecution of the spiritual discipline by the Chinese Communist Party 21 years ago.
“The persecution of Falun Gong in China has been one of the harshest campaigns against a faith group in modern times,” a joint statement by the lawmakers reads.
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The Hypocrisy of the Black Lives Matter Movement
By Diane Dimond
Black lives matter. Of course they do. But it is now abundantly clear that the lives, safety and dignity of Black men, women and children are not really what drives organizers of the Black Lives Matter movement. Read more
Push Back Against ‘Operation Inclusion’ With ‘Operation Restoration’
By Roger Kimball
Did you know that the U.S. Army maintains an Equity and Inclusion Agency? Nor did I. But “Operation Inclusion,” its new course, is a vivid reminder of just how deep the cynical virus of anti-American racial redress… Read more
Glencore’s Near Collapse a Result of All-Too-Familiar Mistakes
By Rahul Vaidyanath
(September 30, 2015)
Enron. Lehman Brothers. And now possibly Glencore? That was the discussion among financial markets participants as commodity prices took another hit and the Anglo-Swiss natural resource giant saw its share price collapse by 29 percent on Monday. Read more
How has the Chinese Communist Party infiltrated American universities? How are Confucius Institutes involved?
Riots Break Out in Seattle During Yet Another “Protest”
An arsonist tried to burn a police precinct building and one policeman ended up in the hospital (Fox News). Antifa also looted an Amazon store in Seattle yesterday (Twitter). From Mollie Hemingway: Peaceful protesters peacefully protesting in peaceful Seattle (Twitter).
2.
Video Surfaces of Chinese Putting Blindfolded Uighur People on Trains
Also from the story: According to recent research by the Victims of Communism Memorial Foundation, the rate of population growth in the two largest Uighur prefectures in Xinjiang fell by more than 80% between 2013 and 2018 (BBC). This BBC video of the Chinese ambassador to the UK trying to explain away what is happening to these prisoners is startlingly poor (Twitter). Meanwhile, according to CBN News, “government officials are ordering Christians who receive welfare payments to replace crosses, religious symbols, and images inside their homes with portraits of China’s communist leaders” (CBN News). The purge in Hong Kong continues as China goes after educators (WSJ).
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3.
Democrats Upset at Federal Treatment of Rioters in Portland
Which they and the Washington Times story calls “protesters,” such as in this strange sentence: “Late Saturday, protesters broke into a building, set it on fire and started dumpster fires” (Washington Times). From just over a week ago, a black policeman from Portland talks about the abuse he gets from white so-called protesters (Twitter). From the New York Post: Questions do need asking about the feds’ tactics: Does the situation really require unmarked vehicles, and officers working without visible shield numbers or other clear ID or even uniforms? Yet the answers may be “yes and yes,” if there are real concerns about law enforcers’ personal safety. Recent days have already seen the public release of some officers’ personal info — “doxing” that invites harassment or worse at their homes (NY Post).
4.
Ginsberg Undergoing Chemotherapy
Cancer has returned. Ruth Bader Ginsburg is 87 and claims no plans to retire.
Black Woman Defaces Another Black Lives Matter Mural
She’s been dumping buckets of paint on them, wearing a shirt that reads “Jesus Matters” (NY Post). She addressed her efforts in a long Facebook post in which she praised the efforts of the police (Facebook).
7.
Biden Staffer Compares Cops Unfavorably to Pigs
Then deleted the posts after being confronted by Fox News (Washington Examiner). As far as I can tell, Biden’s team has not yet responded to the comments (Fox News). Meanwhile, the media is rushing to say Biden wouldn’t defund the police, despite his own words (Hot Air).
8.
Pro-Life Artist Paints “Baby Lives Matter” On Street in Front of Planned Parenthood
It was quickly removed, but not before the image was shared tens of thousands of times.
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After civil rights icon and longtime Congressman John Lewis died, Gov. Ron DeSantis and U.S. Sen. Marco Rubio donned their dunce caps, showing Floridians they are either out of touch or not paying attention … or both.
Asked about Lewis’ passing, DeSantis completely ducked the question, whining instead to a reporter that the question was off-topic.
“We’re trying to focus on the coronavirus,” he said.
Are you out of your mind? Lewis survived a brutal beating during a march in Selma, Alabama in 1965 and is one of the nation’s most beloved civil rights icons. But sure, Governor, let’s ignore that so you can continue pretending coronavirus is NBD.
Not to be one-upped. Rubio tweeted a tribute to Lewis but shared a photo of him with a different late Black congressman, Elijah Cummings. Does this mean Rubio thinks “they” all look the same? For Pete’s sake, Senator. Do you not have a staff to help you with this stuff?
No, it wasn’t a good week for Marco Rubio, either. (Bonus: It was his profile pic, too.)
In another case of the bad weekends, the Donald Trump campaign is reportedly investigating Brad Parscale’s campaign spending. This after he was demoted from campaign manager, the political equivalent to putting baby in the corner.
Whether or not Parscale saw this coming is unclear, but what is clear is that he most certainly should have.
Not everyone had a rough weekend though. Hat tip to Fox News’ Chris Wallace for his undeniably bold interview with Trump in which he spends exactly zero minutes questioning whether he should fact check the President in real-time on his claim that former Vice President Joe Biden literally wants to defund the police.
“Sir, he does not.”
It wasn’t all bad news for Trump and Republicans this weekend though. Priorities USA announced it was dropping its lawsuit seeking to change vote-by-mail rules, which could have massively expanded outreach by expanding deadlines and letting more people collect ballots. The GOP is celebrating a major victory on an issue they cautioned could have extreme consequences on election integrity.
Situational awareness
Tweet, tweet:
—@DavidJollyFL: The Biden camp should just pay to run this Chris Wallace @realDonaldTrump interview repeatedly on every network between now and Election Day. Great journalism, accurate reflection of all things Trump.
—@WalshFreedom: Yea, this Chris Wallace interview is insane, and yea, Trump is utterly unfit, but I’m watching it and thinking that I can’t wait to have a President who doesn’t tell us on national TV that he’s a genius because he can identify an elephant. Or a camel. Or count backward from 100.
—@HelenAguirreFer: @GovRonDeSantis provided COVID-19 testing and medical care to Ag workers while @nikkifried did nothing. Well not exactly. According to @FLSERT records, she sent them a few bags of rice and beans. Hope they were Goya!
—@FlSecofState: We commend the litigants for working with the State and Supervisors who are making the 2020 elections free, fair and safe. Today’s settlement is a victory for all involved and for all Floridians.
Tweet, tweet:
Tweet, tweet:
Days until
MLB starts — 3; WNBA starts — 5; PLL starts — 5; TED conference rescheduled — 6; Florida Bar exams begin in Tampa — 8; NBA season restart in Orlando — 11; Christopher Nolan’s “Tenet” premieres (rescheduled) — 11; NHL resumes — 12; Florida primaries for 2020 state legislative/congressional races — 29; Democratic National Convention in Milwaukee begins — 30; “Mulan” premieres (rescheduled) — 32; Indy 500 rescheduled — 34; Republican National Convention begins in Charlotte — 35; NBA draft lottery — 36; Rev. Al Sharpton’s D.C. March — 39; U.S. Open begins — 42; “A Quiet Place Part II” premieres — 46; Rescheduled running of the Kentucky Derby — 47; Rescheduled date for French Open — 62; First presidential debate in Indiana — 71; “Wonder Woman” premieres — 74; Preakness Stakes rescheduled — 75; First vice presidential debate at the University of Utah — 78; NBA season ends (last possible date) — 84; Second presidential debate scheduled at Miami — 87; NBA draft — 88; Wes Anderson’s “The French Dispatch” premieres — 88; NBA free agency — 91; Third presidential debate at Belmont — 94; 2020 General Election — 106; “Black Widow” premieres — 113; NBA 2020-21 training camp — 115; Florida Automated Vehicles Summit — 123; “No Time to Die” premieres — 123; NBA 2020-21 opening night — 134; “Top Gun: Maverick” premieres — 156; Super Bowl LV in Tampa — 202; New start date for 2021 Olympics — 368; “Jungle Cruise” premieres — 376; “Spider-Man Far From Home” sequel premieres — 473; “Thor: Love and Thunder” premieres — 571; “Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness” premieres — 613; “Black Panther 2” premieres — 655; “Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse” sequel premieres — 809.
Corona Florida
“What went wrong in Florida? Timing, testing, tourism and a COVID-19 crush” via Jeffrey Schweers of the Tallahassee Democrat — Two months after DeSantis boasted about proving the experts wrong by flattening the curve and getting COVID-19 under control, Florida has become the state that other states don’t want to become. Even with an emergency order reversing the reopening of bars and nightclubs, Florida has witnessed unprecedented, record-breaking growth in the daily number of cases and deaths reported for the last two weeks. With new cases averaging over 11,000 a day and a positivity rate hovering around 16%, Florida has become the new epicenter for the coronavirus pandemic not just in the US but globally. “We don’t want to become Florida,” Pennsylvania Gov. Tom Wolf said as he announced new bar and restaurant closures to slow down a surge of COVID-19.
A flower arrangement at an entrance of Jackson Memorial Hospital in Miami. Florida’s rapidly increasing number of coronavirus cases is turning Miami into the national hot spot for the virus. Image via AP.
“Florida surpasses 350,000 mark for COVID-19 infections; deaths near 5,000” via Michael Moline of Florida Phoenix — The latest report from the Florida Department of Health shows 12,478 new positive and 87 Florida resident deaths. The new numbers posted Sunday by the state health department reflect results received on Saturday. Some 11.85% of the 115,100 new results tested positive. That makes it 350,047 Florida infections in total and 4,982 deaths of Florida residents. Of the total deaths, 2,370 are from staffers and residents of long-term care facilities. Coronavirus tracking by The New York Times shows Florida 3rd among the 50 states for the number of COVID-19 infections. Florida now ranks 7th in the NYT analysis of infections per 100,000 people.
“Ron DeSantis says virus antibody tests show 16% positive” via Christopher Condon of Bloomberg — DeSantis said tests administered in his state Friday that aim to detect COVID-19 antibodies indicating whether a person had at some point been exposed to the virus showed a 16.1% positive rate. “That is a significant jump from where we were a month and a half ago,” DeSantis said Saturday during a news conference in St. Augustine. “So there’s a bigger pool of people who have the antibody.” Coronavirus cases in Florida have surged in recent weeks, part of a wave of U.S. infections centered on southern and Western states. The state hit a record number of deaths among residents on Thursday, but both deaths and cases have dropped in the last two days. Florida on Saturday reported a total of 337,569 virus cases and 4,895 deaths among residents. Among other things, the wave in cases has thrown into disarray the Republican National Convention, due to be held in Jacksonville over four days in late August.
Helluva deep-dive — “DeSantis’ COVID strategy: Talk about the good, avoid talking about how to prevent the bad” via Mary Ellen Klas and Kirby Wilson of the Miami Herald — As Florida recorded its worst week of coronavirus deaths, a bipartisan group of South Florida mayors met DeSantis on the 29th floor of Miami-Dade County’s government center Tuesday with a request: Please deliver a consistent and urgent message that people need to act responsibly. Tell people to “wear a mask,” they urged. Craft a “long-term strategy,” they said. “The public needs to be told they have to sacrifice,’’ they implored. Help us “speak with one voice,” they warned, because if nothing changed, they would be forced into another shutdown. “You speak to a segment of our population directly,’’ Miami Mayor Francis Suarez told the governor. “And I think the fact that you’re saying that is something that’s imperative and important for them to hear.”
“Why DeSantis yanked Florida’s Surgeon General from a coronavirus briefing” via Matt Dixon of POLITICO Florida — The coronavirus was sweeping Florida in April when state Surgeon General Scott Rivkees warned that people in the state might have to social distance for up to a year. Minutes later, an aide to DeSantis whisked him out of the briefing. The aide, DeSantis communications director Helen Aguirre Ferré, blamed Rivkees’ abrupt removal on a scheduling conflict. But state records challenge that assertion. Rivkees, at the April briefing with reporters, had gone off message. As spring breakers descended on Florida’s beaches in the spring, the DeSantis administration script was to downplay the dangers of the virus among young people. A DeSantis’ public records employee said the office had no record of the state surgeon general meeting with a deputy chief of staff.
“Ousted Florida scientist Rebekah Jones’ whistleblower complaint takes aim at DeSantis” via Chris Persaud of The Lakeland Ledger — Florida’s former top coronavirus data scientist filed a whistleblower complaint Thursday against the Health Department, accusing the agency of firing her in retaliation for refusing to manipulate data to support the push to reopen Florida after months of quarantine. The complaint by Jones targets DeSantis directly. “These efforts to falsify the numbers are a pattern and practice in Florida government that goes on to this day,” Jones’ Tallahassee attorney, Rick Johnson, said in a statement. ” DeSantis has routinely given false numbers to the press. His underlings at (the Health Department) follow his example and his direction.” Jones asked to be returned to her job with back pay and other compensation, Johnson said.
In a new whistleblower complaint, Rebekah Jones is directly targeting Ron DeSantis. Image via Rebekah Jones.
“Florida hospitals seek more virus medication as cases rise” via Kelli Kennedy and Brendan Farrington of The Associated Press — Florida hospitals said Saturday that they are in desperate need of a “lifesaving” antiviral to help treat the coronavirus patients rapidly filling their beds as cases across the state continue to rise at alarming rates. Federal health officials sent more than 17,000 vials of remdesivir to the state 48 hours after meeting with Florida hospitals last week. But the Florida Hospital Associations, which represents over 200 hospitals, said it’s not enough and asked Saturday for an expedited shipment of the drug and a new distribution process to avoid backlogs, which they say can mean life or death in some cases. “This initial shipment did not meet the incredible need we have for this live-saving drug,” Crystal Stickle, the group’s interim president, said in a statement.
“DeSantis enacts new emergency rules on senior COVID-19 patient transfers” via Christine sex and of the News Service of Florida — The Agency for Health Care Administration published an emergency rule that allows hospitals to use a symptom-based or test-based approach to confirm that long-term care residents are negative for COVID-19. The rule also gives hospitals the green light to discharge residents with an unknown COVID-19 status to nursing homes, if the facility has a dedicated wing or building with designated COVID-19 staff. The emergency rule replaces a prior emergency rule that required two negative tests 24 hours apart before a patient could be returned to a long-term care facility.
Happening today — LeadingAge Florida is hosting a virtual news conference to announce its report on the coronavirus, 12:30 p.m. media registration at us02web.zoom.us/webinar/register.
“Numbers have to ‘flatten’ before drinks can flow” via Tom Urban and Jim Turner of The News Service of Florida — Florida’s bar scene will remain on hold until there is a massive reversal in the growth of positive coronavirus cases, according to the state’s top business regulator. Department of Business and Professional Regulation Secretary Halsey Beshears on Friday said no timeline has been set to let people again drink in bars and nightclubs as the state adds thousands of coronavirus cases a day. “These numbers have to stop climbing, it has to flatten, and then there has to be a decrease in that positivity number,” Beshears said. The Florida Department of Health on Friday reported 11,466 new cases and 128 additional deaths, the fourth consecutive day of more than 100 deaths.
Meanwhile … “As DeSantis slips in Florida polls, Democratic challengers for Governor are starting to emerge” via Steve Contorno of the Tampa Bay Times — DeSantis entered this year as one of the country’s most popular governors. Florida Democrats could hardly lay a finger on him. But as DeSantis’ standing slides under the immense scrutiny of his coronavirus response, the Democrats most often discussed as potential challengers for his office, like Agriculture Commissioner Fried and former U.S. Rep. Gwen Graham, are stepping out to criticize the Republican leader more and more. Meanwhile, the mounting economic and public health crises have elevated several other Democrats, especially mayors, widening the field of 2022 contenders. “Eight months ago, DeSantis’ numbers were phenomenal and this would never have been a conversation,” said Reggie Cardozo, a Democratic strategist in Florida. “But it is now.”
Back to school?
“Older children spread the coronavirus just as much as adults, study finds” via Apoorva Mandavilli of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — In the heated debate over reopening schools, one burning question has been whether and how efficiently children can spread the virus to others. A large new study from South Korea offers an answer: Children younger than age 10 transmit to others much less often than adults do, but the risk is not zero. And those between the ages of 10-19 can spread the virus at least as well as adults do. The findings suggest that as schools reopen, communities will see clusters of infection take root that includes the home children of all ages, several experts cautioned.
“For parents who can afford it, a solution for fall: Bring the teachers to them” via Laura Meckler and Hannah Natanson of The Washington Post — Fed up with remote education, parents who can pay have a new plan for fall: import teachers to their homes. This goes beyond tutoring. In some cases, families are teaming up to form “pandemic pods,” where clusters of students receive professional instruction for several hours each day. It’s a 2020 version of the one-room schoolhouse, privately funded. Weeks before the new school year will start, the trend is a stark sign of how the pandemic will continue to drive inequity in the nation’s education system. But the parents planning or considering this say it’s an extreme answer to an extreme situation. With novel coronavirus infections rising in large swathes of the country, school districts in many big cities and suburbs are planning to start the fall with distance learning, either every day or for part of the week.
For parents with money, homeschooling incorporates an actual teacher.
“Florida must delay reopening of public schools, lawsuit says” via Lisa Maria Garza of the Orlando Sentinel — A lawsuit was filed in Orange County on Sunday against DeSantis and other officials to prevent the upcoming reopening of public schools over concerns that students and teachers would be put at risk of catching the coronavirus. The suit alleges that school districts have limited resources and won’t be able to safely transport kids to school, provide enough space for social distancing in classrooms and have other necessary protocols in place that are recommended by health officials to prevent the spread of the virus. Following state orders, the Orange County School Board on Friday approved an Aug. 21 reopening plan, offering both on-campus and online options.
Assignment editors — The Florida Education Association (FEA) President Fedrick Ingram, American Federation of Teachers President Randi Weingarten and National Education Association President Lily Eskelsen García will hold a virtual news conference to discuss litigation over the state emergency order to reopen physical public schools to students five days a week in August, 1 p.m. Registration link for media: floridaea.zoom.us/meeting/register/.
Corona local
“Broward County put under two-week curfew after seeing 10,000 coronavirus cases over a week” via Devoun Cetoute of the Miami Herald — After seeing more than 10,000 new novel coronavirus cases in the last week, Broward County has implemented new restrictions and a curfew that will last until August. On Friday, Broward County Administrator Bertha Henry issued a new emergency order that brings a host of new restrictions and closings to the county. Since July 10, Broward has seen 10,208 new cases, according to data from the Florida Department of Health. The county says over the last week, the positivity rates have been as high as 16.58% and hospitals are either at or exceeding ICU bed capacity. As of Wednesday, the county has issued 57 citations and 768 warnings for COVID-19 safety violations.
“‘It’s getting confusing.’ Miami-Dade and Florida can’t agree on metrics for COVID-19” via Daniel Chang, Ben Conarck and Douglas Hanks of the Miami Herald — A long-running difference in the way Miami-Dade County and Florida’s health department calculate the local rate of positive test results for COVID-19, a key measure that shows whether infections are rising or falling in the area, came to a head this week, confusing residents and policymakers on the county commission. On Friday, the rate of positive test results in Miami-Dade on the county’s New Normal dashboard reflected a 14-day average of 27.05%. The state health department’s two-week average was much lower, at 20.5%. “We need to get to the bottom of the issue of positivity reporting,” Jennifer Moon, the county’s budget director and deputy mayor overseeing the reports, wrote in an email Wednesday to Yesenia Villalta, administrator of the Florida health department’s Miami office.
“Miami-Dade plans to fine people not following COVID rules” via Freida Frisaro of The Associated Press — Miami-Dade County plans to start aggressively enforcing rules designed to combat the rapidly spreading coronavirus as Florida reported more than 11,000 new cases Friday adding to a caseload that is straining the state’s hospitals. The Miami-Dade County Commission unanimously approved an emergency order that gives all code and fire inspectors authority to issue tickets of up to $100 for individuals and $500 for businesses not complying with guidelines to wear masks and practice social distancing. Police officers have already had this enforcement power. “We’re going to put a heck of a lot of people out there,” Mayor Carlos Giménez told commissioners during a Zoom meeting. “Our people are going to go everywhere.”
People wait in line outside of a COVID-19 testing site in Opa-locka. Image via AP.
“This ZIP code had the highest poverty rate in Miami-Dade County. Then came COVID-19.” via Adriana Brasileiro, Yadira Lopez, Lautaro Grinspan and Rene Rodriguez of the Miami Herald — 23,000 people who live within the 33034 ZIP code, which stretches for nearly 280 miles across parts of Florida City, Homestead and unincorporated Miami-Dade. The ZIP is home to 4,894 households, with a median of 4.1 persons per household. But only 35% of the residents are married, an indication that more than one family often live under the same roof in order to pay the rent. The ZIP code has the highest poverty rate in the county, 40%, even though the median household income is $36,363, which is higher than many other ZIP codes in Miami-Dade. But the per capita income is $10,608, the lowest of any ZIP code in the county and less than half the $27,000 per capita median for the county. This has only gotten direr since the start of the pandemic.
“Miami Hurricanes test positive for COVID-19. And NCAA releases these strict guidelines” via Barry Jackson and Susan Miller Degnan of the Miami Herald — The coronavirus has made its way into the University of Miami football program. At least three players have tested positive for COVID-19, prompting the Hurricanes to cancel their mandatory workouts on Thursday. Per school policy, UM declined to confirm whether any players have tested positive. “Out of an abundance of caution and in coordination with our return to campus policy, we elected to postpone today’s workout,” UM said. UM athletic director Blake James previously said the school is not releasing the number of positive tests among student-athletes because it would cause more confusion. Multiple sources had said the football players had all tested negative in previous weeks.
First in Sunburn — “Tina Polsky calling for curfew in Palm Beach County” via Spencer Fordin of Florida Politics — Polsky, who is running for an open seat in Senate District 29, urged Mayor Dave Kerner and the Palm Beach County Commission to enact policies that mirror those undertaken in neighboring Miami-Dade and Broward Counties. Both Miami-Dade and Broward counties have instituted curfews in an effort to protect public health, but the epidemic continues to inflict a heavy toll on Florida. Polsky said: “In the absence of leadership from Gov. DeSantis, I am calling on Mayor Kerner and the Palm Beach County Commission to take swift action to keep us safe by instituting an 11:00 nightly curfew. I am also asking that citations be issued to those gathering in groups of 10 or more.”
Tina Polsky is calling on Palm Beach County Mayor Dave Kerner to institute a curfew, like those in Miami-Dade and Broward counties.
“Polk sets 1-day high for COVID-19 deaths” via The Lakeland Ledger — Polk County reached a troubling benchmark for COVID-19 deaths Saturday as the Florida Department of Health reported a record 12 in its daily advisory. That surpasses the previous mark of 10 set Tuesday and pushes the county’s overall death toll to 174. This has been the deadliest week since the pandemic began in Polk as 36 fatalities have been reported. Included in the latest deaths are the third youngest, a 32-year-old male, and the second youngest, a 29-year-old female. A male age 27 in June remains the county’s youngest fatality to COVID-19. Also continuing to climb is the county’s new cases of the novel coronavirus. With 253 more in the latest report, Polk’s rising total passed another milestone, now at 9,030.
“Pasco middle school teacher battling COVID-19 dies” via Kavitha Surana of the Tampa Bay Times — A Pasco middle school teacher who saw an outpouring of support from her community after she was hospitalized with COVID-19 has died. After suffering cold-like symptoms, Renee Dermott was hospitalized on July 13. The sixth-grade teacher at Seven Springs Middle School was diagnosed with pneumonia and tested positive for COVID-19. Tanya Murphy, a friend and co-worker, established a GoFundMe online fundraiser to support the family. It posted Friday. By Sunday afternoon it had raised more than $7,800.
Renee Dermott, the Pasco County middle school teacher who died from COVID-19, saw an outpouring of support from her friends, family and community. Image via Nikki Dermott/Facebook.
“Pro sports leagues are scoring rapid COVID test results in Florida — while others wait weeks” via Kevin Baxter of the Los Angeles Times — “We’re in a crisis situation where we’re setting records almost daily in terms of how many people are turning positive for COVID-19. And I can’t get the results back on a patient of mine. Meanwhile, these pro sports teams are being tested daily to semi-daily and getting the results back immediately. In some cases, they’re using the same lab,” said Dr. Adrian Burrowes. Florida reported 10,328 new COVID-19 cases Saturday, the fifth consecutive day the state has topped 10,000, and 90 deaths. Over the last five days, the state has averaged a coronavirus-related death every 14 minutes. The typical turnaround time in Florida and throughout the nation has grown, in many cases, from a day or two to more than a week.
Corona nation
“Donald Trump dismisses rising cases as deaths mount” via Derek Hawkins and Felicia Sonmez of The Washington Post — With coronavirus cases rising across the country and the U.S. death toll topping 137,000, Trump on Sunday dismissed concerns about the spike in infections, telling Fox News that “many of those cases shouldn’t even be cases.” “Many of those cases are young people that would heal in a day,” the President told Fox News host Wallace in an interview. “They have the sniffles and we put it down as a test.” While young people make up an increasing share of new cases, the virus has affected people in all age groups. A surge of infections is driving deaths back up again after months of decline, and hospitals in hard-hit states such as Florida, Texas and Arizona are facing an influx of patients that health officials say could soon overwhelm medical systems. Nationwide, hospitalizations were on track to exceed their previous peak of roughly 60,000 reached in the pandemic’s early months.
In a contentious interview with Chris Wallace of Fox News, Donald Trump dismissed the rising death counts from coronavirus. Image via CNN.
“Inside Trump’s failure: The rush to abandon leadership role in the virus” via Michael Shear, Noah Weiland, Eric Lipton, Maggie Haberman and David Sanger of The New York Times — Over a critical period beginning in mid-April, Trump and his team convinced themselves that the outbreak was fading, that they had given state governments all the resources they needed to contain its remaining “embers” and that it was time to ease up on the lockdown. In doing so, he was ignoring warnings that the numbers would continue to drop only if social distancing was kept in place, rushing instead to restart the economy and tend to his battered reelection hopes. For scientific affirmation, they turned to Dr. Deborah Birx, the highly regarded infectious diseases expert; she was a constant source of upbeat news for the president and his aides, walking the halls with charts emphasizing that outbreaks were gradually easing. A sharp pivot soon followed, with consequences that continue to plague the country today as the virus surges anew. Trump had missed or dismissed mounting signals of the impending crisis in the early months of the year.
“Patients lying in hallways, nurses working extra shifts: As coronavirus surges in some U.S. states, emergency rooms are being swamped” via Jay Reeves of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — A fast-rising tide of new coronavirus cases are flooding emergency rooms in parts of the United States, with some patients moved into hallways and nurses working extra shifts to keep up with the surge. Patients struggling to breathe are being placed on ventilators in emergency wards since intensive care units are full, officials say, and the near-constant care they require is overtaxing workers who also are treating more typical ER cases like chest pains, infections, and fractures. Dr. Alison Haddock of the Baylor College of Medicine said the current situation is worse than after Hurricane Harvey, which swamped Houston with floodwaters in 2017. Patients are waiting “hours and hours” to get admitted, she said, and the least sick people are lying in beds in halls to make room for most seriously ill.
“Trump administration pushing to block new money for testing, tracing and CDC in upcoming coronavirus relief bill” via Erica Werner and Jeff Stein of The Washington Post — The Trump administration is trying to block billions of dollars for states to conduct testing and contact tracing in the upcoming coronavirus relief bill, people involved in the talks said. The administration is also trying to block billions of dollars that GOP senators want to allocate for the CDC, and billions more for the Pentagon and State Department to address the pandemic at home and abroad, the people said. The administration’s posture has angered some GOP senators, the officials said, and some lawmakers are trying to push back and ensure that the money stays in the bill. The officials cautioned that the talks were fluid and the numbers were in flux. The negotiations center around a bill Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell is preparing to unveil this coming week as part of negotiations with Democrats on what will likely be the last major coronavirus relief bill before the November election.
Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell is preparing to announce a new coronavirus aid package, the last one before the November elections. Image via Getty.
“Hospitals are suddenly short of young doctors — because of Trump’s visa ban” via Dara Lind of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — As hospitals across the United States brace for a difficult six months, with the first wave of the coronavirus pandemic still raging and concerns about a second wave in the fall, some are acutely short-staffed because of an ill-timed change to immigration policy and its inconsistent implementation. A proclamation issued by Trump on June 22, barring the entry of most immigrants on work visas, came right as hospitals were expecting a new class of medical residents. Hundreds of young doctors were unable to start their residencies on time. Trump’s order included the H1-B visa for highly skilled workers, which is used by some practicing doctors abroad who get U.S. residency slots.
“‘Superspreading’ events, triggered by people who may not even know they are infected, propel coronavirus pandemic” via Ariana Eunjung Cha of The Washington Post — More than 1,000 suspected clusters, ranging from the single digits to thousands, have been logged in a database compiled by a coder in the Netherlands. A megachurch in South Korea. A political rally in Madrid. An engagement party in Rio de Janeiro. Nearly all took place indoors, or in indoor-outdoor spaces. Even as the Trump administration pressures schools to reopen this fall, the latest research suggests that understanding how and why these events occur, and how to prevent them, is key to reopening safely. In recent days, governors from at least 18 states, including Michigan, have backtracked on plans to loosen restrictions due to outbreaks.
Corona economics
“Trump demands payroll tax cut while GOP eyes benefit cuts for unemployed” via Jeff Stein and Erica Werner of The Washington Post — Trump sought to draw a hard line on the coronavirus relief bill Sunday, saying it must include a payroll tax cut and liability protections for businesses, as lawmakers prepare to plunge into negotiations over unemployment benefits and other key provisions in coming days. “I would consider not signing it if we don’t have a payroll tax cut,” Trump said. Democrats strongly oppose a payroll tax cut, and some Republicans have been cool to it, but Trump said “a lot of Republicans like it.” Trump also said “we do need some kind of immunity” in the bill. Senate Majority leader McConnell has repeatedly insisted the legislation must include liability protections for businesses, health care providers, schools and others. Democrats oppose this, too.
“The next disaster is just a few days away” via Paul Krugman of The New York Times — Some of us knew from the beginning that Trump wasn’t up to the job of being president, that he wouldn’t be able to deal with a crisis that wasn’t of his own making. Still, the magnitude of America’s coronavirus failure has shocked even the cynics. How did this happen? One key element in our deadly debacle has been extreme shortsightedness: At every stage of the crisis, Trump and his allies refused to acknowledge or get ahead of disasters everyone paying attention clearly saw coming. My sense is that Republicans have a delusional view of their own bargaining position. They don’t seem to realize that they, not the Democrats, will be blamed if millions are plunged into penury because relief is delayed; to the extent that they’re willing to act at all, they still imagine that they can extract concessions like a blanket exemption of businesses from pandemic liability.
Assignment editors — U.S. Rep. Debbie Mucarsel-Powell, Sen. Annette Taddeo and County Commissioner Daniella Levine Cava will host a virtual news conference with other local leaders and Florida workers to call on the Republican-controlled Senate to extend federal unemployment assistance before it runs out at the end of July, 1 p.m. For the Zoom link, RSVP katy.nystrom@mail.house.gov.
“Florida jobless rate drops in June as businesses reopen” via Mike Schneider of The Associated Press — Florida’s unemployment rate dropped to 10.4% in June from the previous month’s 13.7% rate as the state’s theme parks, restaurants, bars and other businesses started reopening after weeks of coronavirus-related lockdowns, the U.S. Labor Department reported Friday. But the state’s economic future remains clouded by recent spikes in Florida’s COVID-19 caseload, as evidenced by this week’s showing that jobless claims almost doubled last week from the previous week, economists said. Additionally, a host of large hotels have said that they are turning temporary furloughs from March into permanent layoffs at the end of July, and on-site consumption of alcohol at bars was banned at the end of June, causing many of them to shut their doors. “Florida was under 11%, which most people thought would be much higher than that. So, you have seen many people go back to work. Still, a long way to go,” DeSantis said.
The reopening of Florida’s economy in June helped restore jobs around the state, although the rise in COVID-19 cases prompted local governments to reimpose restrictions that caused extended payoffs and furloughs in July. Image via AP.
“Florida insurance businesses secured hundreds of millions in forgivable coronavirus relief funds” via Ron Hurtibise of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — Unlike restaurants, bars, salons and gyms, insurance companies didn’t shut down at the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic. They’re not facing uncertain futures like many businesses that depend on retail traffic. And no matter how they were financially affected, their customers can’t avoid buying their product. And yet, thousands of insurance businesses in Florida and the U.S. have taken advantage of Payment Protection Program funds, securing hundreds of millions of dollars in potentially forgivable loans. As with other lucrative businesses that have availed themselves of the money, consumers are justified in asking whether insurance companies really needed it or were merely taking advantage of an opportunity to pad their bottom lines.
More corona
“Doctor who survived COVID-19 bewildered by public disregard” via The Associated Press — Dr. Michael Saag spends much of his time treating patients fighting for their lives and working with colleagues who are overwhelmed and exhausted by the relentless battle against the COVID-19 pandemic. “It’s a mixture of emotions, from anger to being demoralized to bewilderment to frustration,” Saag said. In metro Birmingham, where Saag lives, it has been common to see fewer than half the people inside stores wearing masks. The doctor said he got particularly dispirited recently after stopping by a restaurant on the way home from work to pick up a takeout order of sushi. There were as many as 60 people inside, he said.
“Workers turn into amateur sleuths to track virus cases” via Joseph Pisani and Alexandra Olson of The Associated Press — Jana Jumpp spends eight hours a day updating a spreadsheet — not for work, but a recent hobby: figuring out how many of Amazon’s 400,000 warehouse workers have fallen sick with the coronavirus. Amazon won’t give a number, so Jumpp tracks it on her own and shares what she finds with others. She relies on Amazon employees at more than 250 facilities who call, text or send her Facebook messages with possible cases. She asks for proof, like messages or voicemails from Amazon, and tries to make sure she doesn’t count the same case twice. Jumpp says workers should know if there’s an outbreak and just how risky it is to head to work. “Amazon is not going to do it, so it’s up to us,” says Jumpp. Unions and advocacy groups have taken up the cause of working to see which companies are keeping their employees in the dark, too, creating lists or building online maps of stores where workers can self-report cases they know about.
Katie Doan, a former Whole Foods employee, started tracking COVID-19 cases at Amazon-owned Whole Foods in April. Image via AP.
“Disney guests now need to be ‘stationary’ while eating, drinking” via Andrew Kreitz of Tampa Bay 10 — All guests at Walt Disney World are required to mask up, except when eating or drinking, of course. But some new language on the resort’s website advises guests need to be “stationary” when doing so. Disney previously said in its reopening plan guests could take off a mask when eating and drinking “while dining.” It appears the change largely captures the food and drink items that can be purchased “to-go.” “You may remove your face covering while actively eating or drinking, but you should be stationary and maintain appropriate physical distancing,” the policy reads.
“Winn Dixie: No plans for mask mandates” via Dalvin Brown of The Florida Times-Union — In a retail landscape rife with stores requiring masks, Winn Dixie won’t. A spokesperson from the grocery chain’s parent company Southeastern Grocers said it isn’t mandating face coverings during the pandemic to avoid “undue friction” between customers and staffers. “We strongly encourage state officials to lead the way in regulating these types of safety mandates,” said Joe Caldwell, director of corporate communications at Southeastern Grocers, in a statement. Jacksonville-based Winn Dixie, which has hundreds of locations throughout the southern states, is “allowing associates to wear face masks” rather than requiring them, according to a statement on the parent company’s website. “We will continue to refine our processes and protocols in our stores, with health and safety as our guide, as long as this pandemic remains a threat,” the website says.
“The pandemic has hit restaurants hard, but experts say the ‘ghost food hall’ concept might save them” via Marisa Iati of The Washington Post — Aaron Gordon saw that takeout and delivery at Little Beast, his family-friendly pizzeria in the Chevy Chase neighborhood, was earning 110 percent of the restaurant’s pre-pandemic sales. Dine-in service at any of his restaurants was unlikely to provide adequate revenue for months, even years, Gordon mused, but a takeout and delivery-oriented establishment might thrive. Enter Ghostline, an establishment that will gather several chefs cooking in different styles to offer takeout, delivery and limited patio seating in the Glover Park neighborhood starting Sept. 1, without serving customers inside. Ghost food halls combine “ghost kitchens,” which serve meals exclusively by delivery and food halls, both of which have become popular in recent years.
Due to the pandemic, ghost food halls, focusing on takeout and delivery, are springing up everywhere — reducing the need for indoor dining and service staff.
“COVID-19 stole our change, and this is what stores are doing to get more” via David P. Willis of USA Today — In the midst of a nationwide coin shortage, some retailers are asking for customers to use exact change, if possible, or even better, use a credit or debit card for payment. Signs have gone up at quick-stops like Wawa and large retailers like Target and Lowe’s. Supermarkets are requesting exact change too, if shoppers have it. Some Wawa locations are even asking customers to turn in rolled coins for the equivalent bills and a free soda or sub. Stores are posting signs asking customers to pay with exact change, designating certain lanes as credit or debit only, and asking people to consider “rounding up” their cash purchase with the additional money going to charitable causes.
“Jack Nicklaus says he tested positive for coronavirus, antibodies” via Doug Ferguson of The Associated Press — Nicklaus revealed Sunday during the telecast of the Memorial that he and his wife tested positive for the coronavirus at the onset of the pandemic. Nicklaus and his wife, Barbara, turned 80 a month apart at the start of the year. He said his wife had no COVID-19 symptoms, while Nicklaus had a sore throat and a cough. Nicklaus said they were home in North Palm Beach, Florida, from March 13 “until we were done with it” on about April 20. “It didn’t last very long, and we were very, very fortunate, very lucky,” Nicklaus said.
Smoldering
“House leaders ‘alarmed’ federal officers policing protests” via The Associated Press — Top leaders in the U.S. House said Sunday they were “alarmed” by the Trump administration’s tactics against protesters in Portland, Oregon, and other cities, including Washington, D.C., and called on federal inspectors general investigate. “This is a matter of utmost urgency,” wrote House Judiciary Committee Chair Jerrold Nadler and others in a letter to the inspectors general of Department of Justice and Department of Homeland Security. The Democratic lawmakers are seeking an investigation “into the use of federal law enforcement agencies by the Attorney General and the Acting Secretary of Homeland Security to suppress First-Amendment-protected activities in Washington, D.C., Portland, and other communities across the United States.” The Mayor of Oregon’s largest city said Sunday the presence of federal agents is exacerbating tensions in Portland.
Of course, he did — “Roger Stone, who had sentence commuted by Trump, uses racial slur on air with Black radio host” via Bobby Caina Calvan of The Associated Press — Stone, a political operative whose 40-month prison sentence was commuted this month by Trump, his longtime friend, used the racial slur “Negro” on-air while verbally sparring with a Los Angeles-based Black radio host. The exchange occurred on Saturday’s Mo’Kelly Show, whose host, Morris O’Kelly, grilled Stone on his conviction for lying to Congress, tampering with witnesses and obstructing the House investigation into whether Trump’s campaign colluded with Russia to win the 2016 election. O’Kelly characterized “Negro” as the “low-calorie version of the N-word.”
During an interview, Roger Stone called radio host Morris O’Kelly, who is Black, a ‘Negro.’ O’Kelly called that the ‘low-calorie version of the N-word.’
“Nikki Fried likens Florida Republicans to the officers who watched George Floyd die” via A.G. Gancarski of Florida Politics — Agriculture Commissioner Fried, addressing the Florida Democratic Party’s Leadership Blue Gala, compared the Republican Party of Florida to the officers who watched one of their own kill Floyd in Minneapolis. The context was the fight against coronavirus, where Fried said that the officers’ “inaction and silence” reminds her of the Republican Party of Florida standing idly by as the virus ravages the state. “They stood by and watched … without intervening,” Fried said of the officers, “whose actions remind me of the Republican Party of Florida.” Fried wondered “where was the Republican Party as over 4,000 Floridians have died of coronavirus and the Governor refuses to issue a mask mandate.”
“Disney slashed ad spending on Facebook amid growing boycott” via Suzanne Vranica of The Wall Street Journal — Walt Disney Co. has dramatically slashed its advertising spending on Facebook Inc., according to people familiar with the situation, the latest setback for the tech giant as it faces a boycott from companies upset with its handling of hate speech and divisive content. Disney DIS was Facebook’s top U.S. advertiser for the first six months of 2020. It joins hundreds of other companies that have paused spending, including Unilever PLC, Starbucks Corp., Ford Motor Co., Verizon Communication Inc. and many small marketers. Civil-rights groups including the Anti-Defamation League and NAACP called on advertisers to pull ad spending for July, arguing Facebook hasn’t made enough progress enforcing its policies on hate speech and misinformation.
“Drive-in protesters repeat demands for accountability, civilian oversight of Jacksonville Sheriff’s Office” via Teresa Stepzinski of The Florida Times-Union — A couple hundred demonstrators with homemade signs demanding police reform, budget cuts and accountability gathered Saturday for a drive-in protest at Jacksonville Sheriff’s Office headquarters downtown. Protesters taped homemade signs on their cars, trucks, motorcycles and bicycles during the first-of-its-kind protest organized by the Jacksonville Community Action Committee, Northside Coalition of Jacksonville and their community activist partners. Many handwritten on cardboard or construction paper, the signs read: “We Demand Community Control of Police Now!,” “Say No to JSO Budget” and “Indict, Convict, Send Killer Cops to Jail.” Sitting inside or on top of their vehicles, the demonstrators honked their car horns to emphasize their demands. They were joined in the protest by the families of Jacksonville residents killed by Sheriff’s Office police in officer-involved shootings.
“Brevard protesters demand release of Gregory Edwards’ jail video at Melbourne event” via Tyler Vazquez of Florida Today — Although Brevard County has not seen the large-scale protests of other cities around the country, a small but dedicated group of activists has been taking to Space Coast streets. On Saturday, around a dozen activists showed up at a Cones for a Cause event supported by Ben & Jerry’s, handing out ice cream in Melbourne and raising awareness of Edwards‘ death at the Brevard County Jail. The death of Edwards, a combat veteran who died after a fight with as many as seven deputies at the Brevard County Jail in 2018, has sparked anger and drawn considerable attention in Brevard County. Activists, journalists, attorneys and others have repeatedly called for the release of a jail security video of the events at the jail that led to his death.
“Community leaders protest promotion of Panama City police officer who posed with ‘black labs matter’ sign” via Jacqueline Bostick of the NWF Daily News — Protesters gathered at the Panama City Police Department on Friday after the promotion of an officer who posed in a controversial photo in May. The officer, Melanie Law, had been exonerated and since promoted from lieutenant to captain following an investigation into a controversial incident in which she posed for a photo with a pair of dogs and their owners, next to a sign that stated, ‘black labs matter,’ during a social justice protest held May 31 on State Road 77 and 23rd Street. The department’s decision became the impetus of a protest Friday morning calling for “further review” of Law’s actions. Protesters also called for diversity training for the PCPD, regular and open dialogue with department administration and the establishment of a citizen review board.
“Black Lives Matter protest in Wakulla becomes shouting match with counterprotesters” via Alicia Devine of the Tallahassee Democrat — The first Black Lives Matter protest in Wakulla County had over 100 protesters who were met by almost as many counterprotesters. Counterprotesters began lining the back of the Winn-Dixie parking lot at 11 a.m. Some had Trump 2020 flags blowing in the wind from the bed of their pickup trucks. Black Lives Matter protesters started arriving a half-hour later. The crowds were separated by a line of deputies with the Wakulla County Sheriff’s Department as the two opposing sides shouted differing chants. When one side would shout “Black Lives Matter,” the other would retaliate with “all lives matter.”
“NASCAR fans boo Black racer Bubba Wallace, cheer after he crashes at Confederate flag-adorned racetrack” via Matthew Allen of The Grio — That backlash reached a new low during a qualifier run as fans booed Wallace, all while Confederate flags continued to wave at the event. Upon being introduced, fans booed Wallace, who has been in the press since late June after a noose was found in his stall at an Alabama raceway. Wallace has also championed Black Lives Matter. To make matters worse, Wallace crashed during his qualifying run and spectators cheered when his car hit a wall. Wallace insisted, although he stands by his decision to support Black Lives Matter and NASCAR’s June 10 ban of the Confederate flag, that not every NASCAR fan is bigoted.
NASCAR’s Bubba Wallace gets booed repeatedly at Tennessee’s Bristol Motor Speedway, as Confederate flags flew, and the crowd cheered as he crashed into a wall.
“Petition urges Trader Joe’s to get rid of ‘racist branding’” via Allyson Waller of the Orlando Sentinel — Trader Joe’s is being urged to follow the example of other national food companies and rebrand products that critics say perpetuate racial stereotypes. An online petition is asking the company to “remove racist branding and packaging from its stores,” including international food items carrying the names Trader Ming’s, Trader José and Trader Giotto’s. Those products and others reflect “a narrative of exoticism that perpetuates harmful stereotypes,” according to the petition, which on Sunday had been signed by more than 1,500 people. A Trader Joe’s spokeswoman said in a statement that the company had previously decided to get rid of the names and to rebrand its international foods with the Trader Joe’s name.
D.C. matters
“Matt Gaetz Facebook forum on school opening leaves some viewers wanting more” via Tom McLaughlin of the NWF Daily News — Gaetz’s promise to “drill down into some issues” voiced by parents and teachers regarding the planned opening of Florida schools on Aug. 11 left many who watched wanting more. Judging from comments typed in Friday as a Facebook video featuring Gaetz, Florida Education Commissioner Richard Corcoran, and Okaloosa County School Superintendent Marcus Chambers streamed live, not everyone is convinced schools can be opened safely. Gaetz and Corcoran, both Republicans, spoke in support of federal plans to open schools quickly even in the face of still mounting COVID-19 numbers.
“Donna Shalala calls for Florida to shut down again” via Maria Carrasco of POLITICO — Shalala slammed Trump and DeSantis on Sunday for reopening too soon. “The lack of leadership in the White House and in our governor’s office, they simply have not hit this with a hammer, which is what we needed to do, and starve the virus,” Shalala said on ABC’s “This Week.” “They opened too soon. And they misunderstand what you need to do or they understand it and they’re not willing to do it.” Approximately 65,000 new coronavirus cases were reported nationally Saturday. She said the “simplest thing” DeSantis could do is impose a statewide mask requirement and praised South Florida mayors for implementing such rules.
Donna Shalala is calling for a new lockdown of Florida. Image via AP.
Statewide
“He was the picture of redemption, now Florida lawmakers are pleading for his continued freedom” via Janelle Irwin Taylor of Florida Politics — An Ocala man who rebuilt his life after spending more than 20 years in prison is facing a return to prison because of what amounts to a legal technicality. Several Florida lawmakers hope to stop that from happening. Richard Midkiff is the picture of successful rehabilitation. He was arrested and sentenced for his role in a burglary gone wrong, which ended in murder. Midkiff was driving the getaway car and was sentenced to 38 years in prison. Midkiff’s legal team thought he was safe, but later learned an appeal by the office of Attorney General Ashley Moody was successful because the victims’ family request was in the killer’s plea deal, not Midkiff’s. He could be sent back to prison any day. Commutation is one of Midkiff’s few recourses, and might be the only one that keeps him from going back to prison, even if it’s only temporary.
After 20 years in prison, Richard Midkiff is the picture of rehabilitation. But he could be sent back to prison any day.
“New pelvic exam law causes uncertainty” via Christine Sexton of the News Service of Florida — Two state health care licensing boards have been asked to weigh in on whether the new law applies to male patients and examinations where body parts are viewed but not touched. Petitions for declaratory statements were filed this week with the Board of Medicine and the Board of Nursing seeking interpretations of the measure (SB 698), which was signed into law June 19 by DeSantis and went into effect July 1. The petitions were filed by some of the state’s largest medical groups, which say the law has left health care providers confused. The bill prohibits practitioners and medical students from performing pelvic examinations on patients without written consent from the patients or the patients’ guardians.
“As grievance talks loom, Disney sidesteps union actors by changing shows” via Matthew J. Palm of the Orlando Sentinel — As Walt Disney World and Actors’ Equity Association members prepare to discuss a grievance filed by the union, Disney is finding ways to work around the absent performers. Actors’ Equity represents about 750 performers at Walt Disney World, including those who sing in “Beauty and the Beast — Live on Stage,” “Finding Nemo — The Musical” and the “Hoop-Dee-Doo Musical Revue.” The union has been pressing Disney to provide regular COVID-19 testing of performers; Disney has said it is confident in the safety protocols already in place. Equity filed a grievance after Disney canceled a planned recall to work for Equity-represented performers when the theme parks reopened this month after the lengthy coronavirus shutdown. Multiple sources familiar with the negotiations confirmed the two sides would meet July 20.
Lobby regs
New and renewed lobbying registrations:
Brian Ballard, Bradley Burleson, Ballard Partners: The Faith Group
Rhett O’Doski, Ryder Rudd, Sean Stafford, McGuireWoods Consulting: Dascena
Eric Olsen, Hopping Green & Sams: East Central Florida Services, Mosaic Fertilizer
Evan Power, Ramba Consulting Group: Florida Supervisors of Elections
Marc Reichelderfer, Landmarc Strategies: Accountable Care Transactions
Matt Spritz, The Spritz Group: The Shul of Downtown
2020
“Joe Biden leads by double digits as coronavirus takes a toll on the President, Post-ABC poll finds” via Dan Balz and Scott Clement of The Washington Post — Trump faces a significant challenge in his bid to win reelection in November, with former Vice President Biden holding a double-digit lead nationally and the President’s approval ratings crumbling amid a spreading coronavirus pandemic and a weakened economy. The survey portrays an embattled President whose fortunes have declined markedly since the coronavirus arrived in the United States months ago. Biden leads Trump 55 percent to 40 percent among registered voters. That compares with a 10-point Biden lead in May and a two-point edge in March, at a time when the pandemic was just beginning to spread rapidly in parts of the country. Among those who say they are certain to vote, Biden’s lead stands at 11 points.
“Biden’s new plan to roll Trump” via Mike Allen of Axios — Biden’s campaign launched a new ad that ran in swing states during Wallace’s feisty “Fox News Sunday” interview with Trump. The minute-long ad, “Tough,” will air in the major markets in the six core swing states — Michigan, Wisconsin, Pennsylvania, Arizona, Florida and North Carolina. “I will not abandon you,” Biden says in the ad. “We’re all in this together. We’ll fight this together. And, together, we’ll emerge from this stronger than we were before we began.” The ad never mentions Trump’s name, but the intention is a stark, dramatic contrast in approach to the virus (“Wear a mask. Wash your hands”), laced with a positive, hopeful message.
“4 things that could swing the 2020 race toward Trump” via Aaron Blake of The Washington Post — There’s little good news for Trump’s campaign right now. That said, a lot can happen in three and a half months. We got a taste for that Friday when Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg announced a cancer recurrence while saying her treatment was going well. As the election approaches, pollsters will shift their models to emphasize likely voters, i.e. those who are not just registered but actually primed to vote. There’s some reason to believe that could benefit Trump. One thing that has followed Biden for just about as long as he’s been in politics is his tendency to commit gaffes. There’s another unpredictable way in which the virus could impact the election: by affecting turnout. Many states are moving toward mail-in balloting, for instance, but the GOP is fighting that.
“From ‘Sleepy Joe’ to a destroyer of the ‘American way of life,’ Trump’s attacks on Biden make a dystopian shift” via Michael Scherer and Josh Dawsey of The Washington Post — Trump has launched a slash-and-burn campaign against an exaggerated caricature of his Democratic opponent, casting Biden as a destroyer of basic freedoms and a threat to voters’ safety who would “let terrorists roam free” and “abolish the American way of life.” His new dystopian vision, with militant and extreme language not typical in American politics, marks a sharp departure from Trump’s previous effort to cast Biden as “Sleepy Joe,” an establishment politician with deteriorating mental abilities. It marks the latest effort, orchestrated by Trump’s advisers, to shift the conversation from rising coronavirus infections and deteriorating public support for the President’s pandemic response.
“Pandemic? What pandemic? Trump reelection ads ignore coronavirus” via Michael Finnegan and Seema Mehta of the Los Angeles Times — The death toll keeps rising as COVID-19 rages across Florida, Arizona and other campaign battlegrounds, but the television ads Trump is airing in those states say nothing about the coronavirus pandemic that has upended life for all Americans. It’s a conspicuous omission. Nearly every day, states that could decide the Nov. 3 election break records of sickness and death. Trump’s ads falsely accuse his Democratic rival Biden of trying to defund police. They claim the former Vice President would endanger children by letting violent crime explode in cities overrun by protesters who vandalize stores and set buildings on fire.
“Trump plans Florida fundraising trip in two weeks” via Anthony Man of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — Trump is heading to Florida for a July 31-Aug. 1 fundraising trip featuring events in Doral and Tampa. One will have a side benefit for Trump: putting money in his own pocket because it’s scheduled at the Trump National golf resort in Doral. The Trump campaign hasn’t publicly announced the fundraising trip, but his fundraising network was circulating invitations. Both events offer three donor tiers: $100,000 for a roundtable, photo and reception; $35,000 in donations or money raised from others for a photo and reception, and $5,000 for a reception.
“Trump declines to say whether he will accept November election results” via Felicia Sonmez of The Washington Post — Trump declined to say whether he will accept the results of the November election, claiming without evidence that mail-in voting due to the coronavirus pandemic could “rig” the outcome. In the wide-ranging interview with Wallace, the President also continued to play down the severity of the coronavirus crisis in the country, declined to say whether he is offended by the Confederate flag and dismissed polls showing him trailing former Vice President Biden by a significant margin. The interview comes as the 2020 campaign has been upended by the pandemic, which has claimed more than 137,000 lives in the United States. Most in-person events have been canceled, and both political parties are planning to hold smaller-scale conventions to limit the spread of the virus.
You knew this was coming — “Trump campaign is investigating campaign spending, Brad Parscale contracts” via Tom LoBianco of Business Insider — “There are two things you cannot do with Trump: take credit for his accomplishments and steal from him,” a friend of the President said. At the end of June, not long after Trump’s campaign held a poorly attended rally in Tulsa, donors including Home Depot founder Bernie Marcus complained to Trump that the campaign had no strategy. “They built a campaign for an easy reelection, which they would have had with the booming economy,” the Trump friend said. They’re doing the full autopsy because the President is pissed. It’s not abnormal for presidential campaigns to conduct internal audits of campaign spending, Republicans familiar with the current review and previous campaigns said.
After the removal of Brad Parscale as Donald Trump’s campaign manager, the President is seeking a full audit of campaign spending.
“Progressives don’t love Biden, but they’re learning to love his agenda” via Matthew Iglesias of Vox — Progressive groups overwhelmingly favored confrontational leftists like Bernie Sanders or Elizabeth Warren during the 2020 primary campaign. And many pretty clearly favored younger, more diverse rising stars like Kamala Harris and Pete Buttigieg over Joe Biden. Biden, after all, is not only a paid-up member of the “establishment,” he’s a veteran of the long shadow cast over American politics by Richard Nixon and Ronald Reagan. Biden “envisions a massive public sector role for job creation,” points out Faiz Shakir, who managed Sanders’s 2016 campaign. He doesn’t think Biden has suddenly become a left-wing hero. But he credits Biden, Biden’s team, and mainstream Democrats more broadly with “understanding that in COVID-19 times there needs to be thinking about bold practical measures.”
“How Miami plans to host an October presidential debate amid a coronavirus pandemic” via Eric Doherty of the Miami Herald — When Trump and Biden take the stage at Miami’s Adrienne Arsht Center for the Performing Arts on Oct. 15, they’ll be debating before a small and socially distanced audience, according to plans crafted by the host facility. And everyone will be required to follow Miami-Dade County’s “New Normal” rules for stopping the spread of the coronavirus, which currently includes wearing face coverings. In addition to following social distancing guidelines inside the building, “all people on-site” must also wear a face-covering inside and outside. The plan is silent on whether Biden and Trump must wear face masks on stage, but the county’s rules currently require facial coverings in all public settings, and anyone who breaks the rules is now subject to a $100 fine.
“Democrats try to rally support in virtual convention” via Dara Kam of the News Service of Florida — For the first time, Florida Democrats skipped the soirees, schmoozing and selfies that are a staple of their annual convention. Instead, party leaders held a “virtual” three-day gala, highlighted Saturday night by an online appearance by former Vice President Biden, the presumptive Democratic presidential nominee. The web event came as COVID-19 cases have skyrocketed in recent weeks and the number of deaths related to the highly contagious respiratory disease continues to soar. The virtual convention, scheduled to last two hours but wrapped up within an hour, featured video clips of state and national party leaders, including Biden and Democratic National Committee Chairman Tom Perez.
“Priorities USA and others agree to drop voting lawsuit against Florida” via Gary Fineout of POLITICO Florida — There were signs that the lawsuit was in trouble. U.S. District Judge Robert Hinkle in late June refused to order changes right away, including a request that taxpayers cover postage costs for mail-in ballots. The decision to end most or all the legal battle is yet another win for Republicans in a key battleground state. The two sides in the lawsuit negotiated an agreement that calls for Florida’s chief election official to educate local election supervisors on prepaid postage and encourage them to use drop boxes and make vote-by-mail request forms available in Spanish. It also calls for Secretary of State Laurel Lee to undertake a public-relations campaign to inform voters of different ways to cast a ballot.
More from the trail
“CD 3 Republican Kat Cammack tells her story in new digital ad” via Drew Wilson of Florida Politics — Cammack recently launched her first TV ad touting her conservative credentials and dinging her opponents in the Republican primary for Florida’s 3rd Congressional District as “chickens.” Now, the Gainesville Republican is out with a more subdued video chronicling her upbringing and the experiences that led her to move to the district and work for current CD 3 U.S. Rep. Ted Yoho, first as his campaign manager and later as his deputy chief of staff. “Growing up in the country, and particularly on a cattle ranch, you learn hard work early,” she says in the minute-and-a-half long video. “It’s up in the morning feeding horses, chickens, dogs, cows, and the same thing at night, and I’m very grateful now looking back that we were instilled that work ethic at an early age.”
“Democratic candidate Oz Vazquez drops first TV ad in bid to unseat Brian Mast” via Ryan Nicol of Florida Politics — Vazquez is releasing his first television ad of the cycle as he competes for a chance to unseat Mast in November. Vazquez is battling former Navy JAG Officer Pam Keith in the Democratic primary for Florida’s 18th Congressional District. “Raised in Port Saint Lucie, Oz was the first in his family to graduate college,” the narrator begins. “When his dad got sick, Oz’ family relied on Social Security and Medicare to get by. In Congress, Oz will make protecting our Social Security and Medicare his top priority and work to finally bring down prescription drug costs for all Florida families. Vote Oz Vazquez for Congress.”
“Why are questions being raised about CD 19 candidate Casey Askar’s military record?” via Jacob Ogles of Florida Politics — As the GOP primary draws near in one the most competitive races in Florida, Askar’s background is coming under further scrutiny each day. Most recently, a letter from the Department of the Navy in response to a Freedom of Information Act request seeking evidence Askar served in the U.S. Marines. The Navy provided no such thing. The candidate’s legal name is Kousay Askar, but all military records have his last name spelled Asker. Florida Politics put in its own FOIA request to the Navy asking for proof of Askar’s service, but the campaign suggested the request be put in using the alternate spelling as well. Askar campaign consultant Kristin Davison acknowledges name confusion as a “fair question.”
“Cindy Banyai claims she’s outraising David Holden. Is that really accurate?” via Jacob Ogles of Florida Politics — Banyai announced she outraised primary opponent Holden in the race for Florida’s 19th Congressional District. But that’s only true if the money put in by Holden isn’t counted toward the total, and then only looking at the second quarter of 2020 exclusively. Holden continues to hold a significant cash-on-hand advantage in the race. “The second quarter Federal Election Commission fundraising reports were filed this week and the results show Dr. Cindy Banyai raised a little over $12,000 more than her primary challenger,” Banyai claimed in a campaign release. Holden’s second-quarter report shows $54,373 raised by his campaign in the second quarter. Banyai’s report shows she raised $45,909 in the same period covering April 1-June 30.
“Irv Slosberg floods SD 29 race with another $375K in self-loans as Polsky attracts outside cash” via Ryan Nicol of Florida Politics — Slosberg pumped another $375,000 of his own money into his campaign for the Democratic nomination in Senate District 29. Slosberg has now poured in $510,000 of his own money into his campaign since declaring for the contest at the end of May. That gives him plenty of money to play with as he battles Rep. Polsky of House District 81 in the Democratic primary. The race opened when Sen. Kevin Rader announced he would forego a second term. Polsky and Slosberg were the only two Democrats to file for the open seat. First-time Republican candidate Brian Andrew Norton filed for the seat in February. Slosberg raised just over $22,000 in outside money in the nearly two months he’s been in the race.
“Shevrin Jones adds another $90K, extends fundraising gulf in SD 35” via Ryan Nicol of Florida Politics — Jones has been the favorite of donors in the bid for Senate District 35. The latest fundraising reports confirmed that trend, as Jones added another $90,000. Those reports cover all financial activity from the two-week period spanning June 27-July 10. Jones’ campaign collected more than $18,000 during that period. His political committee, Florida Strong Finish, brought in another $72,000. The Florida Education Association Advocacy Fund dumped $30,000 into Jones’ PC in early July. Floridians United for Our Children’s Future, a PC connected to the Associated Industries of Florida, added another $10,000. The American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees, the nation’s largest public employee trade union, contributed $7,000 as well.
“Joe Harding picks up PBA endorsement, maintains cash lead in HD 22” via Drew Wilson of Florida Politics — Harding added an endorsement from the Florida Police Benevolent Association as he built his fundraising lead in the Republican primary for House District 22. The PBA lines up alongside Gilchrist Sheriff Bobby Schultz, Levy Sheriff Bobby McCallum, and others backing Harding over his primary opponent, Russ Randall. The PBA endorsement dropped at the same time candidates submitted finance reports for the June 27 — July 10 reporting period. To date, the Williston Republican has raised more than $140,000 from donors and lent his campaign about $21,000. After expenses, he has $118,000 in the bank. Randall, meanwhile, had raised $111,065 and spent $41,388, leaving him with $69,666 on hand on July 10.
“Donna Barcomb slams Fiona McFarland over ‘Black Lives Matter’ remarks” via Jacob Ogles of Florida Politics — Days after McFarland uttered the words “Black Lives Matter,” email and text blasts are scolding the first-time Republican candidate for even using the phrase. Barcomb attacked the choice of words in a text and message to voters. “I do not believe our police, our Sheriff, or our justice system is inherently racist,” the Barcomb blast reads. “Unlike Fiona, I will never, ever defund the police.” But McFarland never specifically said that she would defund the police and is even running a television ad stating that she “will stand with law enforcement to keep our streets safe.” McFarland stated: “Black lives matter. Police also matter. These two ideas are not mutually exclusive.” Barcomb said the use of the particular phrase unmistakably embraces the Black Lives Matter movement at the heart of sometimes violent demonstrations across the country.
What Steve Crisafulli is reading — “RSLC is raising cash faster than it did in 2016” via Florida Politics staff reports — The Republican State Leadership Committee said this week that it was in a much better position at the end of Q2 2020 than it was at the same checkpoint in the last two election cycles. The committee and its partner group, the State Government Leadership Foundation, raised a combined $10.8 million between April 1 and June 30. The haul is $5 million better than what the Democratic Legislative Campaign Committee managed over the same period. RSLC works to elect Republicans in down-ballot, state-level offices. DLCC does the same for Democrats. “The RSLC, its members, and donors know that the direction of our country for the next decade hangs in the balance of state elections this year, and have stepped-up accordingly,” said Bill McCollum, RSLC Chairman and former Florida congressman and Attorney General.
Down ballot
“April Griffin barely pays her own taxes, but she wants to collect yours” via Peter Schorsch of Florida Politics — In the past week, Griffin has launched a volley of attacks against Nancy Millan. The snipes have little bearing on the job they’re running for, Griffin doesn’t cast doubt on whether Millan, a longtime Tax Collector employee, is qualified for the job and she doesn’t attempt to paint Millan as untrustworthy or out of touch. There’s a good reason for that: Griffin is smart enough to know people who live in glass houses shouldn’t throw stones. For someone running to be Hillsborough’s Tax Collector, Griffin has a poor history of paying her taxes. She has been delinquent in paying the property taxes for a home she owns on Henry Ave. for a decade running, to the point the house was nearly seized and auctioned off to pay the tab.
April Griffin wants to collect Hillsborough County taxes, though she is often delinquent on her own.
Top opinion
“In the worst public health crisis in generations, DeSantis is a massive fail” via The Palm Beach Post editorial board — Once again, Florida is a national laughingstock. But this time, the joke is literally a sick one. Last Sunday, July 12, Florida recorded a chilling national record: more than 15,300 new COVID-19 cases in a single day. If Florida were a country, it would rank fourth in the world in this appalling category. Our new peers: the United States, Brazil and India. On Thursday, Florida chalked up its highest-ever daily death total: 156 COVID-19 fatalities. Which followed the previous high, set just two days before, of 132. On Wednesday, the state’s total of cases since the start of the pandemic crashed past 300,000. And DeSantis arrogantly called the frightening surge “a blip.” This denotes incompetence. And the whole country sees it.
Opinions
“‘No mask, no entry. Is that clear enough? That seems pretty clear, right?’” via Eli Saslow of The Washington Post — I’ll never understand what’s so hard about putting on a mask for a few minutes. It’s common sense. It’s a requirement now in North Carolina. But this is a conservative place, and there are only 900 people in this town. We try hard to get along. We found out how much they cared. It became clear real quick. I’d watch customers pull into the parking lot without their faces covered, and my whole body would start to tense up. Our store is on the Intracoastal Waterway, and people from all over the world dock in the harbor and come in here for supplies. It’s a big petri dish. I put a shield up over my register, and a few hours into my shift it was covered with spittle. Then the local sheriff went on Facebook and said he wasn’t going to enforce the state requirement because he didn’t want to be the “mask police.”
“Black Lives Matter isn’t complete without #SayHerName” via Karen Attiah of The Washington Post — Seven years ago, in July 2013, activist Opal Tometi took a cue from her friend Alicia Garza’s Facebook post and registered the website BlackLivesMatter.com. Since then, as we all know, #BlackLivesMatter has become much more than a hashtag, animating mass protest in the aftermath of the police killings of Black men. But there’s another facet to this story, and it’s something new. Historically, Black women have been pushed to the margins of our protest moments. This time Black women’s activism is front and center. Consider #SayHerName, which has emerged as a parallel rallying cry for Black women killed, assaulted and raped by police. The shooting death of Breonna Taylor by Kentucky police in March is the most recent and high-profile example.
“Bullying the Miami-Dade school district to reopen in August is just reckless” via the Miami Herald editorial board — The monumental decision on whether to reopen Miami-Dade schools in August is not on Wednesday’s School Board agenda, but it’s likely to pop up. After all, how to deal with this pandemic is the district’s most crucial decision in ages. The burden of deciding whether we continue with online schooling whether we physically return to class return to class physically falls largely on Superintendent Alberto Carvalho and the elected members of the School Board, who rely on his counsel. Carvalho has maintained that he will follow the advice of health experts and the coronavirus dashboard on what is best for the district’s 350,000 students, parents, teachers and staff, and the community. His is the most pragmatic, and empathetic, approach to this scary eventuality.
“A consequence of Marsy’s Law secrecy: Less accountability for police who use force” via the Orlando Sentinel editorial board — Given the protests and calls for police accountability that have engulfed America, the last thing the criminal and judicial system needs is less transparency. But that’s what’s been playing out in a Tallahassee courtroom, where the city’s police department is trying to shield the identity of two officers involved in recent shootings. For now, they are known as “John Doe 1” and “John Doe 2.” They might remain that way thanks to Marsy’s Law, which should be renamed “The Law of Unintended Consequences.” It was designed to protect the rights of crime victims. That sounded good to 62% of Florida voters, who passed it as a constitutional amendment in 2018. It hasn’t turned so good for open government, and the state Legislature needs to clarify the law the next chance it gets.
Today’s Sunrise
Florida’s number of COVID-19 cases (and fatalities) keep piling up, and Gov. DeSantis tries once again to downplay the danger.
Also, on today’s Sunrise:
— As for the pandemic, you won’t see any improvement just yet. Quite the opposite. In the past week, Florida set records for COVID-19 deaths and new cases. But DeSantis still insists there’s no need to panic.
— While the Governor tries to minimize fears, Democrats in the state’s Congressional delegation are sounding the alarm.
— Debbie Wasserman Schultz, Lois Frankel, Ted Deutch and Shalala are asking DeSantis to step up his game against COVID-19.
— Checking-in with two Florida Men who have taken an interest in animals: One ended up in the hospital after encountering an iguana, and the other is planning an X-rated movie about Carole Baskin and the Tiger King.
“Play ball? Experts send mixed signals on MLB 60-game season” via Jake Seiner of The Associated Press — Thirty baseball teams from 28 cities, trying to play 60 games each amid a coronavirus pandemic that seemingly hasn’t peaked in the United States. “Baseball games can work,” said Dr. David Hamer, professor of global health at the Boston University School of Public Health. “I think it’s feasible.” Public health experts have mixed feelings about baseball’s hopes to open its season on July 23. There is optimism because of the nature of the sport itself, which produces less on-field risk than basketball, football, or hockey. Then again, players and their families face a daunting task staying safe away from the ballpark, especially with teams traveling to and from hard-hit regions, including Florida and Texas.
Arizona Diamondbacks players watch from the stadium seats during an intrasquad game at Chase Field, in Phoenix. MLB has provided teams with a 113-page operations manual detailing protocols for its pandemic-shortened 60-game regular season. Players will be tested every 48 hours. Masks and social distancing are always required, except on the field. Backups will watch games from the stands instead of the dugout. No sunflower seeds. No spitting. No licking fingers. Image via AP.
“From Miami radio host to prime time on MSNBC, how Joy Reid is making journalism history” via Caroline Ghisolfi of the Miami Herald — Fifteen years ago, Reid made a dream board with her two greatest aspirations: Write a bestselling book and be invited as a guest on the MSNBC political talk show, “Hardball with Chris Matthews.” Three books and several promotions later, Reid is on her way to take over Matthews’ 7 p.m. weeknight slot and become the first Black woman to host a prime-time talk show on a major network when her show, “The ReidOut,” premieres Monday on MSNBC. “Surprise! There will be a Black lady in prime time,” Reid told theGrio.com, where she served as managing editor from 2011 to 2014 after the news broke. Reid replaces Matthews, who resigned in March amid on-air gaffes and allegations of sexual misconduct in the newsroom. “Hardball” had been on the air since 1997.
“Florida man captures video of a shark eating another shark” via Earl Killer of USA Today — Florida paddleboarder and professional photographer Jack Bates frequently sees all forms of sea life during his outings and usually brings a couple of GoPro cameras. He learned a long time ago, you just never know what you will see. On a Tuesday afternoon outing at his favorite beach in Florida, he saw something in about 4 feet of water that he’ll never forget. “It was pretty incredible,” Bates said. “I’m glad I had my camera.” Only a few yards from public beach access, Bates saw a large tiger shark feeding on the carcass of a large dead hammerhead shark.
Happy birthday
Happy belated birthday wishes to Jacksonville Mayor Lenny Curry. Celebrating today are state Sen. Darryl Rouson and William Large of the Florida Justice Reform Institute.
The left praises Biden’s plan, arguing that it is necessary to combat climate change and that it will benefit the economy.
“[Biden’s plan] promises to revive struggling auto towns in the midwest by building a new fleet of electric vehicles (a road the industry is already on). Since most renewable energy projects require land, rural areas are positioned to win with a wave of investment in wind and solar that brings hi-tech jobs to little towns along country blacktop roads…
“Other important solutions are at hand – planting cover crops for fall and winter to hold soil, suck up nitrogen and sequester carbon; planting grass along rivers to prevent pollution; new feedstocks such as sweet sorghum or hemp for carbon-neutral biofuels production: and on and on. The Farm Bureau on the right and the National Farmers Union on the left agree. We can reduce pollution of the Gulf of Mexico, and offset much of our carbon footprint, by planting a third more grass and a third less corn… Iowa climate and soil experts say we will have a difficult time growing corn, the world’s most-used crop, in 25 years… Biden’s $2tn green agriculture plan is ambitious but realistic.” Art Cullen, The Guardian
“Biden emphasized his commitment to making sure the same people who have been left behind by globalization are not hurt again. ‘I’m setting a goal of making sure that these front-line and fence-line communities, whether in rural places or in city centers, receive 40 percent of the benefits from the investments we’re making — in housing, in pollution reduction, in workforce development, in transportation — across the board,’ he said… Trump’s knee-jerk reaction to the proposal — socialism! — rings hollow after four years of mammoth deficits and crony capitalism. If you are going to have a big and active government (there is no large constituency for small government outside libertarian circles), you might as well put it to good use in reducing carbon emissions and creating jobs.” Jennifer Rubin, Washington Post
“The most encouraging aspect of Biden’s new climate plan is that it is also his plan for economic recovery… In ordinary economic times, mobilizing congressional support for massive federal intervention in the economy can be difficult, even if such intervention is ecologically necessary. The silver lining of the present calamity is that it has rendered private investors incapable of achieving a socially acceptable level of unemployment, and has thus broadened support for Uncle Sam stepping in to pick up the slack. And when the federal government is supplying the capital, it can allocate labor and real resources on the basis of social utility rather than market profitability.” Eric Levitz, New York Magazine
“Mr. Biden gets many things right. He aims to eliminate net greenhouse gas emissions from the United States by 2050, the year by which scientists recommend the planet stop adding heat-trapping gases to the atmosphere. To do so, he proposes transitioning the country to emissions-free electricity sources by 2035. The former vice president includes nuclear power as a potential contributor, rejecting the irrational antinuclear sentiment among some environmentalists…
“The logical centerpiece of any such plan would be a policy that puts a steadily rising price on carbon dioxide emissions, such as a carbon tax, which economists have recommended for decades… Biden nodded to carbon pricing during his primary campaign, but he proposed this past week instead a more complex web of federal spending, subsidies and mandates… As much as possible, the government should be agnostic about how emissions are cut, leaving these decisions to private actors incentivized to avoid polluting, because they will find the most efficient ways. Mr. Biden’s plan all but gives up on that logic. Mr. Biden’s plan would do much good, and over the right time horizon. It is not bad, just less good than it could be.” Editorial Board, Washington Post
“Perhaps the biggest missing piece in Biden’s plan is the international element. Climate change is an inherently international problem — the U.S. only emits about 13 percent of total greenhouse emissions, while China alone accounts for about 26 percent. The two major objectives of global climate policy must be somehow coaxing China into slashing its emissions and, at the same time, preventing the developing world (above all India) from following in its carbon-spewing footsteps… this will require a very large international investment fund to prevent poorer nations from building out the cheapest carbon-based power… unlike Sanders, Biden has no plan to offer international climate aid.” Ryan Cooper, The Week
“[Trump] bewails the amount of time it takes for projects to clear environmental reviews and related court challenges, adding what, in his mind, are unnecessary costs and delays. To be honest, he may have something there. NEPA came into being five decades ago — signed into law by President Nixon — and it’s not out of line to suspect that there are places where the law and the regulations that arose from it could use some reasonable revising. But Trump and his industry-connected advisors are not the ones to trust with such a task…
“American voters face a fork in their own road this November — stay on the Trump expressway to environmental degradation and catastrophic climate change, or shift to the road, bumpy as it may be, to a cleaner environment and more sustainable future… The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration reported last week that unusually high tides led to record flooding among one-quarter of Atlantic and Gulf Coast communities where the agency maintains tide gauges. Climate change is no dystopian vision of the future; it is here.” Editorial Board, Los Angeles Times
From the Right
The right criticizes Biden’s plan, arguing that it is too expensive and that it will harm the economy.
“Biden released his revised climate change plan this week after appointing Ocasio-Cortez to co-chair his climate panel. And sure enough, the revisions made to his original climate plan came straight out of the Green New Deal’s playbook. Biden increased the plan’s overall spending, moved up the date when the power sector must be free of carbon emissions, and shifted the plan’s focus to the creation of ‘green jobs,’ which would eventually replace mining, fracking, and other fossil-fuel-related industries…
“It’s no wonder Pennsylvania’s workers, many of whom depend on the fossil fuel industry, are nervous about Biden’s leftward lurch. ‘Biden needs to steer his car out of the far-left ditch back to the middle if he wants us to support him,’ said Shawn Steffe, a business agent for Boilermakers Local 154 in Pittsburgh and a ‘lifelong Democrat.’ ‘It’s not happening. I don’t see my members voting for someone who will take away their jobs and pensions over something that has a lot of half-truths to it.’” Kaylee McGhee, Washington Examiner
“Mr. Biden’s plan ‘connects tackling climate change with the economic recovery from the coronavirus crisis, while also addressing racism,’ writes the New York Times. Uh huh. Serious problems deserve to be treated seriously. If your surgeon told you he was going to address racism and the economy along with your coronary blockage, you would get off the table and run away…
“A year ago, when the primaries were in view, Mr. Biden at least offered a plan that contained an argument: The U.S. represents a minor and shrinking share of global emissions and therefore can’t fix an alleged climate problem with measures designed to grease domestic constituencies. Notice that there’s no mention of this reality in his latest plan, just a promise to throw green money at ‘union jobs.’…
“If Mr. Biden really cared [about climate change], he would propose a carbon tax. Washington could keep its corrupting mitts off investment decisions. The incentive to release less CO2 would permeate every choice made by consumers and businesses in the economy… [But] overnight, the Democratic focus went from climate policy to climate pork.” Holman W. Jenkins, Jr, Wall Street Journal
“Biden says that on his first day in office, he will develop ‘rigorous new fuel economy standards aimed at ensuring 100% of new sales for light- and medium-duty vehicles will be zero emissions.’… Keep in mind that as of today, plug-in electrics account for 0.5% of cars on the road, and made up less than 2% of new vehicles sold in 2019. And that’s despite massive public subsidies that have cost taxpayers $5 billion in credits to — mostly wealthy — EV buyers…
“The CO2 advantage of electric cars is vastly oversold. These are not ‘zero emissions’ vehicles. They simply change the source of the emissions from the car to power plants — most of them powered by coal and natural gas. A study by the University of Michigan’s Transportation Research Institute found that when you factor in CO2 emissions from electricity production, the average plug-in produces as much CO2 over its lifetime as a gas-powered car that gets 55 miles per gallon. The CO2 advantage of electric cars diminishes even more when you consider the entire lifecycle of the vehicle, including the environmental impact of mining required to manufacture the batteries.” Editorial Board, Issues & Insights
“Biden is exploiting the coronavirus crisis in an effort to promote his sweeping economic stimulus proposals. This is ridiculous for several reasons. First and foremost, this isn’t the typical economic crisis in which there is an argument for government intervention to create jobs and increase demand… The fact that the economy added a record 7.5 million jobs in May and June by partially reopening is a testament to the country’s underlying economic strength and the potential for a bounce back without fiscal stimulus from taxpayer dollars…
“There are also lines in the new climate plan, that fill us with foreboding, about investing in new faster rail projects. In 2011, Biden announced a six-year plan to build a ‘national high speed rail network.’ The administration’s efforts were such a disaster that the project stalled even in California, a liberal state dedicated to making it happen. Even left-wing Gov. Gavin Newsom was forced to scale the project back because it was unworkable, and there is no path forward for the promised Los Angeles to San Francisco line sold to state taxpayers a dozen years ago.” Editorial Board, Washington Examiner
“This is an obvious move to try to gin up some excitement among the climate activists in the liberal base. But much like Biden’s initial focus on amnesty for [illegal immigrants], is this really where the country’s priorities are today? Thanks to a combination of massive expenditures in pandemic relief and cratering revenues with the economy still largely shut down, we just finished logging a record-shattering expansion of our budget deficit. We’re looking at trillions more in losses before the end of the year. And now you want to dump another two trillion onto the pile…
“What will we be getting in exchange for all of this debt? Advances in renewable energy. And Biden is proposing this at a time when we just recorded the largest production capacity and domestic consumption of natural gas in recorded history. Oh, and natural gas prices for consumers hit a record low at the same time. We’re swimming in natural gas, a far cleaner and more environmentally friendly fuel than coal or oil. And we’ve got enough of it to take us well into the second half of the century.” Jazz Shaw, Hot Air
⚡Bulletin:In New Jersey, a gunman posing as a FedEx courier shot and killed the 20-year-old son of a federal judge at the family’s front door, and wounded the judge’s husband, AP reports.
The judge was in the basement and was unhurt, officials said.
1 big thing: We blew it
Illustration: Aïda Amer/Axios
America spent the spring building a bridge to August, spending trillions and shutting down major parts of society, Axios’ Dan Primack and Nicholas Johnston write.
The bridge was to be a bent coronavirus curve. On the other side was some semblance of normal, where kids go to school and their parents go to work.
Why it matters: We blew it. We built a pier, instead.
We blew it on testing. President Trump regularly brags and complains about the number of COVID-19 tests conducted in the U.S. But America hasn’t built the infrastructure necessary to process and trace the results.
Quest Diagnosticssays its average turnaround time for a COVID-19 rest has lengthened to “seven or more days” — decreasing the chance that asymptomatic or mildly symptomatic carriers will self-quarantine.
We blew it on schools. Congress allocated $150 billion for state and local governments as part of the CARES Act. But that was aimed at maintaining status quo services in the face of plummeting tax revenue.
There was no money earmarked for schools to buy new safety equipment, or to hire additional teachers for smaller classes.
The administration insists that schools should reopen this fall because kids are less likely to get very sick from the virus. But it hasn’t offered detailed plans to protect older teachers or pupils’ family members.
We blew it on economics. The CARES Act was bold and bipartisan, a massive stimulus to meet the moment.
But it’s running out, without an extension plan in place.
Coronavirus hospitalizations are skyrocketing, even beyond the hotspots of Arizona, Florida and Texas, Axios’ Bob Herman and Andrew Witherspoon report.
Why it matters: The virus is spreading rapidly through almost every region.
Where things stand: Arizona remains in the worst shape. 24.4% of hospital beds in the state were occupied by COVID patients as of July 18, according to an analysis combining data from the COVID Tracking Project and the Harvard Global Health Institute.
Texas is second at 19.1%.
It gets worse: Many other states are showing significant upticks in virus hospitalizations during the first half of July, including Alabama, California, Louisiana, Mississippi, South Carolina and Tennessee.
Between the lines: Intensive-care unit beds, reserved for the sickest patients, are completely full in parts of Arizona, Florida, Mississippi and Texas.
Mark Zuckerberg, under fire for allowing President Trump to post inflammatory statements on Facebook, tells me there’s no truth to whispers that the two have a secret understanding.
“I’ve heard this speculation, too, so let me be clear: There’s no deal of any kind,” the CEO said, calling the idea “pretty ridiculous.”
Why it matters: Zuckerberg, facing a growing ad boycott from brands that say Facebook hasn’t done enough to curtail hate speech, has become increasingly public in criticizing Trump.
The CEO pannedthe administration’s coronavirus response during a live interview with Dr. Anthony Fauci last week.
The context: Facebook has removed Trump ads and posts at least five times going back to 2018, for reasons that include “targeting personal attributes” and copyright violation.
Zuckerberg pointed out that “under this administration, we’ve faced record fines of $5 billion, are under antitrust investigation by multiple agencies, and have been targeted by an executive order to strip protections in Section 230,” which shields tech companies from liability for content on their platforms.
I asked Zuckerberg about Trump after the CEO told a companywide Q&A on Thursday, in remarks obtained by Axios:
“One specific critique that I’ve seen is that there are a lot of people who’ve said that maybe we’re too sympathetic or too close in some way to the Trump administration.”
“I just want to push back on that a bit,” Zuckerberg told employees. “[W]e need to separate out the fact of giving people some space for discourse, from the positions that we have individually.”
Zuckerberg went on to cite many disagreements with Trump, including immigration, climate change and “his divisive and inflammatory rhetoric.”
A White House official told me Trump “has always respected Zuckerberg’s strong pro-First Amendment position.”
“He’s entitled to his position, as are the tens of millions of Trump supporters on Facebook.”
The United Arab Emirates’ Hope spacecraft launched from Japan on a journey to Mars — the Arab world’s first interplanetary mission, Axios’ Miriam Kramer reports.
Why it matters: This is the first of three missions to the Red Planet this summer, with China and the U.S. following in coming weeks.
Hope will now fly through space until it reaches its orbit around Mars in about seven months.
The UAE sees this home-grown mission as a way of fostering scientific and technical expertise in the Middle East as a whole.
5. Economic activism of the civil rights movement
The world has lost three vanguard leaders who conceived and led a revolutionary movement that changed the U.S. forever, Dion Rabouin writes in his daily newsletter, Axios Markets.
Presidential Medal of Freedom honorees John Lewis and Cordy Tindell “CT” Vivian died Friday, following the death of honoree Joseph E. Lowery in March.
Why it matters: As fewer of these men remain to tell the story of how they engineered the civil rights movement, it’s important to remember the economic and strategic vision that fueled it.
What happened: The civil rights movement was a coordinated and multifaceted effort that took aim at the economic engine of businesses upholding the era’s racist policies.
The bus boycotts, Freedom Rides, sit-ins, buyers’ strikes and sidewalk demonstrations were all leveraged to pit a business’ interest in making money against its interest in upholding racial segregation.
“It was the strategy,” Vivian told Rabouin when he was a reporter at the Atlanta Daily World.
“That strategy of nonviolent direct action — that’s what won. That’s what made the difference.”
Sign up for Axios Markets, and get Dion’s full story shortly.
6. Hawley to squeeze corporate America on forced labor
Sen. Josh Hawley during a Senate Judiciary Committee meeting in June. Photo: Erin Schaff/The New York Times/Pool via Reuters
Sen. Josh Hawley (R-Mo.) tells me he’ll introduce legislation this week requiring companies with business overseas to certify that their supply chains are free of forced labor — and he’s especially concerned about China.
“If these reports from anti-trafficking advocates, anti-slavery advocates are wrong, then the companies will have a chance to set the record straight,” Hawley said in an interview. “But they will be held accountable.”
Hawley also plans to challenge celebrities who endorse the products: “I would hope that anybody who is profiting on that would want to push companies to certify that they’re not benefiting from slave labor.”
Hawley said multinational corporations “shift our jobs overseas, or they move their supply chains overseas, then they sell them to American consumers and they get celebrities to hawk them on TV.”
“Just because you are publicly donating money to this or that nonprofit doesn’t mean that it’s OK to profit off slave labor,” the senator added.
Illustration: Aïda Amer/Axios. Photo: Brendan Smialowski/AFP via Getty Images
Joe Biden’s latest climate plan mentions the word “union” more than it does the climate itself, Axios’ Amy Harder writes in her “Harder Line” column.
Why it matters: Wind and solar energy have grown immensely across America over the last decade, but associated union jobs have not.
Biden is trying to change that.
Biden’s expanded plan calls for sweeping changes to labor laws, alongside aggressive goals to transition off fossil fuels.
Workers building clean-energy infrastructure “must have the choice to join a union and collectively bargain,” the plan states.
The plan supports legislation that makes it easier for workers to collectively bargain. Biden’s plan would go further and hold executives “personally liable” if they interfere.
Friday night in Portland. Photo: Dave Killen/The Oregonian via AP
The Democratic chairs of the House Oversight, Judiciary and Homeland Security committees yesterday called on the inspectors general of the Justice Department and Department of Homeland Security to open an investigation into the Trump administration’s use of federal agents against protesters in Portland, Oregon, Axios’ Rashaan Ayesh reports.
Why it matters: They say the agencies “appear to have increasingly abused emergency authorities to justify the use of force against Americans exercising their right to peaceful assembly,” pointing to reports of unidentified federal agents arbitrarily detaining protesters in unmarked vans.
Last night marked the 52nd night of protests in the city — and featured more action against peaceful protesters, local TV station KOIN reports.
“Around 11:50 p.m., federal officers rushed out of the [federal courthouse] and used a heavy amount of tear gas, in addition to other crowd-control munitions, against protesters, many of whom had their hands up.”
9. Time capsule: What baseball was like
With cardboard cutouts of fans in the stands at Citi Field, the Yankees’ Clint Frazier hits a homer during an exhibition game against the Mets on Saturday.
10. Trump and the elephant
Screenshot via “Fox News Sunday”
When the topic of soundness of mind came up during the epic Chris Wallace interview on “Fox News Sunday,” President Trump told the anchor: “I’ll tell you what. Let’s take a [cognitive] test. Let’s take a test right now. … Joe [Biden] and I will take a test. Let him take the same test that I took.”
Wallace: “Incidentally, I took the test, too, when I heard that you passed it.”
Trump: “Yeah, how did you do?”
Wallace: “Well, it’s not the hardest test. They have a picture and it says, ‘What’s that?’ And it’s an elephant.”
Trump: “No, no, no. You see, that’s all misrepresentation.”
Wallace: “Well, that’s what it was on the web.”
Trump: “It’s all misrepresentation. Because, yes, the first few questions are easy. But I’ll bet you couldn’t even answer the last five questions. I’ll bet you couldn’t. They get very hard, the last five questions.”
How the world’s richest country got into this dismal situation is a complicated tale that exposes the flaws and fissures in a nation long proud of its ability to meet cataclysmic challenges.
By Joel Achenbach, William Wan, Karin Brulliard and Chelsea Janes ● Read more »
Majority Leader Mitch McConnell is facing competing demands from President Trump and Republican senators, including some up for reelection in states hit hard by the virus.
By Seung Min Kim, Rachael Bade and Erica Werner ● Read more »
Bee’s Famous Barbershop is part confessional, part comedy lounge. But these days, barber Brian McFadden finds himself proselytizing masks, gloves, hand sanitizer and safety as he cuts and shaves.
The president was visibly rattled and at times hostile during a Fox News interview as he struggled to answer for his administration’s failure to contain the coronavirus.
The Democratic presidential candidate faces pressure to put aside an old playbook that has placed a premium on experience in the nation’s highest elected jobs — positions that have largely eluded black women.
Election 2020 ● By Vanessa Williams and Sean Sullivan ● Read more »
A top Homeland Security official vowed the agency will maintain a heavy presence in Portland — and send reinforcements to other U.S. cities if violence surged.
By Marissa Lang, Maria Sacchetti and Emily Gillespie ● Read more »
President Trump’s longtime confidant was arguing with a black journalist over his commutation when a voice that sounded like his was heard uttering a pejorative.
By Rachel Weiner and Manuel Roig-Franzia ● Read more »
An oasis of prosperity and relative stability during the past decade of Middle East turmoil, Lebanon is facing an economic implosion as its government, its banks and its citizens run out of foreign currency simultaneously.
For those outside the Washington, D.C., Beltway and not consumed with political news, it’s easy to forget that there’s a presidential election this year. While society-changing, earth-shattering events such as the coronavirus pandemic, mass unemployment, and violent protests have taken center stage, the 2020 election itself is a bit of a snooze.
House Democrats in November may have a chance to expand their majority in an unexpected place, a sprawling area in eastern Kansas that usually favors Republicans.
Several top Democrats wrote a letter to the inspectors general of the Department of Justice and the Department of Homeland Security demanding an investigation into the use of federal agents in Portland.
President Trump’s chief of staff said that he expects criminal indictments to result from U.S. Attorney John Durham’s wide-ranging inquiry into the origins and conduct of the Trump-Russia investigation.
The former head of the Kentucky Democratic Party was sentenced to nearly two years in prison for his role in a scheme to funnel thousands of dollars into his daughter’s failed 2014 campaign for U.S. Senate.
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Good morning, Chicago. Here’s the coronavirus news and other stories you need to know to start your day.
Illinois reported 965 new confirmed cases of COVID-19 on Sunday, bringing the state’s total case number to 161,575. State health officials also said six more people have died after contracting the virus.
When the COVID-19 pandemic struck the United States, Illinois was one of the first hot spots in the country, fueling a death toll that remains among the nation’s highest. Now — after big drops in daily deaths in Illinois and other hard-hit states — the Sun Belt is seeing a massive surge.
The sharp increases in deaths in these Southern and Western states have added to growing unease in Illinois, where the downward trends on cases and positive test results have started to inch back up. Researchers say that while the latest data is not cause for outright alarm, it does suggest that the state, without changes, could be on the verge of another deadly surge.
For decades, the diminutive Michael J. Madigan has stood tall as a political constant in Illinois, displaying equal parts of power, arrogance, defiance and vindictiveness, while holding a singular ability to dictate much of the state’s policy agenda under governors both Democratic and Republican.
The extent of Madigan’s power over Democratic politics was evident from the muted responses of a number of members of his own House majority after federal prosecutors implicated the nation’s longest-serving statehouse leader as the beneficiary of a near-decadelong bribery and influence scheme conducted through Commonwealth Edison.
In Cook County, opioid overdose deaths this year are on pace to double last year’s figures, with the long-simmering public health crisis spiking while Chicago also faces increased gun violence and continues to battle the COVID-19 pandemic.
The deaths in the three overlapping crises are disproportionately impacting the Black community, highlighting racial inequities in health care, housing, education and other areas. The toll is particularly heavy on the city’s West Side, where since late March, nearly 80 people have died in just a few ZIP codes.
When public swimming pools and beaches closed, the key to surviving a sweltering Chicago summer during the pandemic was simple for those who could afford it: Buy a pool. For the rest of us, the options are scarce and mostly illegal, like sneaking a swim in sometimes-dangerous waters where there are no lifeguards. And that’s increasingly worrying safety experts, who say the risk of drownings has rarely been higher as Chicago suffers through one of its hottest summers.
Some Chicago offices are starting to reopen with a limited number of employees who are volunteering to return. As they do, companies are using new safety policies to protect workers from COVID-19. The early steps, from practical safeguards to quirky solutions, such as sticky notes on the bathroom door to prevent overcrowding, offer a glimpse at what office life might be like once more companies bring employees back.
Welcome to The Hill’s Morning Report. It is Monday. We get you up to speed on the most important developments in politics and policy, plus trends to watch. Alexis Simendinger and Al Weaver are the daily co-creators, so find us @asimendinger and @alweaver22 on Twitter and recommend the Morning Report to your friends. CLICK HERE to subscribe!
Total U.S. coronavirus deaths reported as of Monday morning, 140,534.
President Trump and Republicans on Capitol Hill are not on the same page as the Senate returns today with a commitment to write, pass and enact by August a pricey new piece of legislation to respond to the coronavirus and the recession.
There are big differences, even within the administration, about Trump’s favored payroll tax cut, which Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) says is a no-go with her colleagues in the House. Without a payroll tax cut, Trump said during a contentious back-and-forth with Chris Wallace on “Fox News Sunday,” he might not sign another stimulus measure, which is expected to carry a price tag between $1 trillion favored by Republicans and $3 trillion already passed by the House (The Hill).
Analysts in both parties have complained that cutting payroll taxes during this recession is not well-targeted and benefits people who still have paychecks rather than helping the tens of millions of people who are unemployed (CNBC).
GOP House and Senate leaders will meet at the White House this morning to discuss some of the knots in which they find themselves (CNBC).
Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) and Pelosi have said they believe they’ll be able to reach a deal, but each has dismissed pillars of the opposing party’s approach (The Hill).
The Washington Post: Swing-state incumbent senators chafing at what Trump, party leaders want in bill.
Trump has been saying for months that he wants to cut payroll taxes, which GOP senators don’t favor and Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin warns will never get past a blockade among Democrats in the House (The Washington Post). Inside the administration, Trump economic adviser Larry Kudlow scoffs at Mnuchin’s resistance and wants the president to stay the course on tax cutting (Yahoo Finance).
The White House and GOP senators are also not in sync on funding specific to fight the coronavirus. The Washington Post reports the president’s team doesn’t want to approve additional spending for COVID-19 testing and tracing by states and also opposes more resources for the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). Some GOP senators vehemently disagree and argue that states and the CDC need more funding, not less.
Will there be new federal checks sent to qualifying Americans, akin to the $1,200 direct payouts enacted in March? “We do support another round of economic impact payments,” Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin said on July 9 during an interview with CNBC. “As soon as the Senate gets back, we’re going to sit down on a bipartisan basis with the Republicans and the Democrats and it will be our priority that between the 20th and the end of the month, we’re going to pass the next legislation.”
House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.) said on Sunday on Fox News he wants to include in a stimulus measure COVID-19 liability protection for businesses, an approach to cutting off China from the U.S. supply chain, an end to the federal $600 per month increase for unemployment payments (which expires by law this month and which Pelosi says must be extended or the House will work into August to get it). McCarthy also said federal support for child care options in the pending measure would help reopen the economy.
Politico: Battle over COVID-19 aid consumes Congress’s final sprint to recess.
NBC News: Who got Paycheck Protection Program loans? Check out the interactive map that shows recipients by zip code and the amount of federal support they received.
> Criminal justice waiting game: House Democrats are increasingly indicating that they are prepared to wait another year to move on criminal justice legislation, allowing the party to message on the issue heading into the 2020 elections and hold out for bigger things next year.
The Hill’s Mike Lillis writes that while Democratic leaders would have liked to pass an overhaul of racial justice legislation this summer following George Floyd’s death, the Senate GOP forced the party to make a decision: Accept a more narrow bill, or wait it out, and many have decided the latter option is the only choice.
“Rather than coming up with a piece of the police reform act … we should really push this over until after the election and move something that is much more powerful,” said Rep. Bobby Rush (D-Ill.). “We don’t want to make a mockery of this moment. We don’t want to see something passed into law that is weak, watered down and whitewashed.”
One legislative issue that will be at the forefront in the coming weeks is the annual defense bill, but its future is in the air as the president once again raised the possibility of vetoing the bill on Sunday. Speaking to Wallace, Trump said that he “might” veto the National Defense Authorization Act over the provision to rename military installations that are named after Confederate figures.
“I might,” Trump said. After Wallace said that the military is for the change, Trump responded: “I don’t care what the military says. I do — I’m supposed to make the decision.”
The Hill: Democrats raise alarm about new U.S. human rights priorities.
NBC News: The leadership of the powerful House Foreign Relations Committee after November is shaping up into a tough battle among ambitious Democrats (if their party holds the majority), with at least three lawmakers eager to succeed New York’s Rep. Eliot Engel, who on Friday was officially defeated in his primary race. Rep. Brad Sherman of California has seniority, Rep. Gregory Meeks of New York was first to announce he’d challenge his colleagues for the chairmanship and Rep. Joaquin Castro of Texas is expected to jump in. Pelosi is expected to stay neutral as the jockeying continues.
Finally, Capitol Hill lost one of its larger-than-life figures. Rep. John Lewis (D-Ga.) died Friday night at age 80 from pancreatic cancer and the political world spent the weekend in mourning, trading proposals to honor the achievements of the lifelong civil rights activist.
House Majority Whip James Clyburn (D-S.C.) and others called for the Edmund Pettus Bridge in Selma, Ala., where Lewis and many others were beaten on “Bloody Sunday” in 1965, to be renamed for the longtime Georgia congressman. Pettus was a Confederate general and Ku Klux Klan leader.
“I think you ought to take a nice picture of that bridge with Pettus’s name on it, put it in a museum somewhere dedicated to the Confederacy and then rename that bridge and repaint it, redecorate it the John R. Lewis Bridge,” Clyburn told NBC’s “Meet The Press” (The Hill).
As of Sunday night, Lewis’s funeral arrangements were still being made. According to the Atlanta Journal-Constitution, services are expected to take place in Washington, Atlanta and Troy, Ala., his birthplace.
Paul Kane: John Lewis harnessed his history to become a moral compass for Republicans and Democrats.
The Hill: Clyburn says if Trump wants to honor Lewis, he should sign a bill to restore the Voting Rights Act.
CBS “This Morning”: Gayle King interviews Bill and Hillary Clinton today about the life and legacy of Lewis, 7 a.m. to 9 a.m.
Facebook launches Global State of Small Business Report
At Facebook, we are committed to helping small businesses succeed. We partnered with the World Bank and the OECD to survey businesses in 50+ countries and regions to understand the challenges they face and ways we can better support them.
CORONAVIRUS: The news of the coronavirus in the United States is back to the future: Infections, hospitalizations feel like a rewind to the dire crisis period in March; Trump on Sunday again downplayed the pandemic, while governors bicker over basic questions, including mask-wearing, testing and the wisdom of state-by-state rather than national decision making to battle the contagion.
The United States is seeing surges of COVID-19 in at least 38 states. On Friday, the number of confirmed new cases across the country was an eye-popping 77,000 in a single 24-hour period.
The president, during the “Fox News Sunday” interview with Wallace, described recent spikes in coronavirus cases as “burning embers” or “flames” and insisted record-setting cases of confirmed infections in Florida, Trump’s state of residence, would be “under control.” He also incorrectly repeated that a U.S. increase in COVID-19 testing is why surges in new infections were recorded this month, especially in the South and West.
“We’ll put out the flames. And we’ll put out in some cases just burning embers. We also have burning embers. We have embers and we do have flames. Florida became more flame-like, but it’s going to be under control,” Trump said (The Hill).
The president, who has been advised by Republican allies to modify his public approach to pandemic response because it is costing him in recent polls, called Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, “a little bit of an alarmist” (The Hill). Fauci, a respected virologist and clinician who calls a White House official’s effort to attack him in a recent op-ed “bizarre,” has warned that states and the federal government “need to get better control over things.”
Senate Republicans are also raising alarms about the rapidly growing caseloads of infected people, reports The Hill’s Jordain Carney.
The New York Times: Trump leans into false virus claims during combative Fox News interview.
Why is COVID-19 so efficient in spreading so rapidly? The Hill’s Reid Wilson reports that young people are increasingly behind the spread of the virus, calling into question the safety of schools and universities and the challenges for multi-generational families who live under the same roof.
Stand alone bars and watering holes located in restaurants are increasingly seen by public health experts as significant sources of indoor spread of COVID-19. Texas, Arizona and Florida have already taken action to close them. But governors in many other hard-hit states, especially in the South, are resisting action.
“I’m not at any point considering closing the economy back down,” Tennessee Gov. Bill Lee (R) said this week. That is not a recommendation being made by the public health community, although slowed reopenings are recommended in some regions. Mississippi Gov. Tate Reeves (R) said White House response coordinator Deborah Birx pointed to closing bars as a beneficial approach. In Georgia, though, Gov. Brian Kemp (R) is suing the city of Atlanta to stop business restrictions and a mask order (The Hill).
The Hill: GOP Govs. Greg Abbott in Texas and Ron DeSantis in Florida have split over their responses to a massive surge in coronavirus cases in their respective states. Both have been supportive of Trump, but they have headed in different directions, with different results. Florida is now the epicenter of the U.S. crisis.
Rep. Donna Shalala (D-Fla.), who served for eight years as secretary of Health and Human Services during the Clinton administration, is sharply critical of DeSantis and Trump and says the infection rate has reached an uncontrolled point where the Sunshine State should issue new stay-at-home orders, however painful that is economically. “The real thing we need to do is we need to close down again,” Shalala said on ABC’s “This Week” on Sunday. “I said four months ago, if we don’t do this right, we’re going to have to close down again. That’s our worst nightmare. And we’re going to have to do that in Florida” (The Hill).
Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine (R) warned on Sunday that his state is on a precipice. “We are at the point where we could become Florida, you know,” DeWine said. “Where you look at our numbers today versus where Florida was a month ago, we have very similar numbers,” he continued. “While we did a great job early on in Ohio, we’re now headed in the wrong direction, and frankly, I’m very, very concerned about that,” he added. “So, we’re going to move ahead with more orders from us this week” (The Hill). DeWine has not issued a mask mandate in Ohio.
NBC News: State-by-state guide to mask requirements.
National Institutes of Health Director Francis Collins says masks should not be optional for people who want to protect themselves. He describes the political divide over face coverings as difficult to fathom (NBC News).
Arkansas Gov. Asa Hutchinson (R) says masks should not be political (The Associated Press). Asked during an interview with ABC’s “This Week” about Trump’s public messaging about face coverings, he said, “I’m a Republican governor. Democrat governors have all — we’ve put in mask mandates based upon the circumstances of our state,” Hutchinson said. “It’s not popular. It’s not something we want to do. It’s not the first lever we pull. But it is one that, when the data says it’s necessary, we do it.”
The debate about national leadership during the pandemic will not go away, especially as the coronavirus worsens and the November elections draw closer. Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti (D) says he blames Trump (The Hill), while The New York Times reports that White House officials strategized from the beginning how to toss to the states public health and economic risks as a way to avert blame.
IN FOCUS/SHARP TAKES
POLITICS & CAMPAIGNS: The president declined to publicly commit to accept the election results in November if he loses to former Vice President Joe Biden, marking the second straight election in which he’s done so.
During his rollicking interview with Wallace, Trump said multiple times, “I have to see.” The comments come as national and state polls consistently show the president trailing Biden by significant margins, including in some swing states.
“I have to see. Look … I have to see,” Trump said. “No, I’m not going to just say yes. I’m not going to say no, and I didn’t last time, either.”
Hours before the interview aired, a new Washington Post-ABC News poll showed that Biden leads Trump by a 15-point margin with registered voters, an advantage that has grown significantly in recent months. The former VP led the same poll by 10 points in May, and by a slim 2-point margin in March.
On issues, Biden is 20 points ahead of Trump (54 percent to 34 percent) when it comes to the candidate voters “trust” to handle the coronavirus pandemic, 25 points (58 percent to 33 percent) on race relations, and Biden has a 9-point lead on crime and safety (details HERE). Trump is essentially tied with the former vice president when voters are asked about the economy.
Commenting on the president’s decision against accepting the 2020 results, the Biden campaign said, “The American people will decide this election. And the United States government is perfectly capable of escorting trespassers out of the White House” (The Associated Press).
The Hill: Trump says Fox News polls ‘among the worst’ after latest shows him trailing Biden.
The New York Times: As Trump ignores virus crisis, Republicans start to contradict him.
NBC News: States reject tens of thousands of mail ballots in this year’s primaries, setting off alarm bells for November.
> Rose Garden: With political rallies on the outs for most of 2020, Trump is turning to an iconic outdoor setting as his venue of choice to get his political message out less than four months before Election Day.
On Thursday, the president held a garden event to tout his moves to roll back regulations that heavily featured attacks against Biden. As Brett Samuels and Morgan Chalfant write, Trump’s decision to turn the Rose Garden into a political rallying ground breaks with decades of practice by past presidents.
Niall Stanage: The Memo: Muted conventions may scramble 2020 race.
The New York Times: Why Trump’s attacks on Chief Justice John Roberts aren’t working with some conservatives.
The Washington Post: Biden to speak to the nation’s largest Muslim American PAC.
> Morning Report exclusive: The National Republican Senatorial Committee posted $35.6 million in the second fundraising quarter and $14 million in June, outraising its counterparts at the Senate Democratic campaign arm and setting committee records for both periods of time in the process (The Hill).
Despite the committee’s success, Democratic candidates massively outraised Senate GOP incumbents and candidates in the second quarter. As Max Greenwood reported last week, in the 15 most competitive contests, the Democratic candidate outraised the Republican in 13 of them.
> Economy: As part of his Biden-centric attacks, the president is stepping up his rhetoric against the presumptive Democratic nominee on the economy as his advantage on the issue has eroded in recent months.
As The Hill’s Naomi Jagoda reports, the economy has been one issue Trump has consistently received highest marks for, but the coronavirus pandemic has all but halted that trend as his approval ratings have also fallen in recent months. In recent weeks, Biden has also made his economic pitch to voters, attempting to weaken the president on the topic.
The Hill: Jobless claims raise stakes in battle over COVID-19 aid.
CNBC: Jamie Dimon’s warning for the U.S. economy: Nobody knows what comes next.
OPINION
The world John Lewis helped create, by Adam Harris, staff writer, The Atlantic. https://bit.ly/3eQthYA
Behind the HHS-CDC disagreement, by Scott Gottlieb, opinion contributor, The Wall Street Journal. https://on.wsj.com/2BcxpEe
A MESSAGE FROM FACEBOOK
Facebook helps small businesses with the Summer of Support Program
As many storefronts remain closed, Boost with Facebook’s Summer of Support program is helping millions of people and small business owners gain skills and find resources they need to grow and transition online.
The House meets at 9 a.m. Pelosi will make morning appearances on “CBS This Morning” (8 a.m.) and MSNBC’s “Morning Joe” (8:30 a.m.).
The Senate reconvenes at 3 p.m. and proceeds to executive session to resume consideration of the nomination of Russell Vought to be director of the Office of Management and Budget.
The president participates in a political roundtable event at 6:15 p.m. with supporters at the Trump International Hotel in Washington.
Secretary of State Mike Pompeo is traveling to the United Kingdom and Denmark beginning today. In the U.K., where the secretary is scheduled to meet with Prime Minister Boris Johnson in London on Tuesday, he says a topic of discussion will be China. On Sunday, Foreign Secretary Raab told Sky News the U.K. government intends to be tough on China, especially over Hong Kong, but on its own terms. “I think the U.K. should have its own independent foreign policy rather than dance to the tune of the Americans, like what happened to Huawei,” he said.
👉 INVITATION: The Hill Virtually Live event Tuesday at 1 p.m., “Advancing America’s Economy: The Role of Private Capital,” with Reps. Stephanie Murphy (D-Fla.) and Bryan Steil (R-Wis.) and other experts, along with The Hill’s editor-at-large Steve Clemons. Registration HERE.
👉 INVITATION: The Hill Virtually Live event Thursday at 1 p.m. “Diabetes & the COVID Threat,” focuses on effective diabetes care during the COVID-19 crisis, with Reps. Diana DeGette (D-Colo.) and Tom Reed (R-N.Y.), the co-chairs of the Congressional Caucus on Diabetes, plus a panel of health experts. Moderator: The Hill’s Clemons. Registration HERE.
The Hill’s Coronavirus Report has updates and exclusive video interviews with policymakers emailed each day. Sign up HERE!
➔ International: The Hill’s Rafael Bernal interviewsColombian President Ivan Duque (pictured below), who calls for multilateral COVID-19 solutions. Colombia has reported 190,700 cases of the coronavirus. … The European Union today entered an unscheduled fourth day of wrangling over a proposed $857 billion coronavirus recovery measure (BBC). … British Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab indicated that the United Kingdom could be on the verge of suspending its extradition treaty with Hong Kong on Monday and will give Parliament an update later today on the matter. Earlier this month, Australia suspended its own extradition treaty with the former British territory after China imposed a security law that significantly harms the “one country, two systems” principle (Sky News). … In Afghanistan, hopes for peace remain as dim as ever as a U.S.-Taliban agreement to end violence passed a 135-day mark last week, the point by which the U.S. military needed to draw down to 8,600 troops. The Hill’s Rebecca Kheel describes precarious conditions in a part of the world home to what was once called “the forgotten war.” … The United Arab Emirates sent its Amal (“Hope”) spacecraft to Mars today from a launch site in Japan. The seven-month journey is the Arab world’s first interplanetary mission (The Associated Press).
➔ Tech: Twitter revealed that high-profile hacks, which infiltrated the accounts of Biden, former President Obama, Elon Musk and others, targeted 130 people. The company, which said it is “embarrassed” and “disappointed,” expressed regret that passwords of 45 of those accounts were able to be reset by the scammers. “More than anything, we’re sorry. We know that we must work to regain your trust, and we will support all efforts to bring the perpetrators to justice,” Twitter said in a weekend blog post (The Associated Press). … The New York Times reports on Twitter’s mystery hackers, who made off with more than $100,000 in Bitcoin from gullible users. … The Twitter experience revealed a lot we should worry about when it comes to an election system teeming with political disinformation risks (The New York Times).
➔ Sports: 🏈 NFL training camps are set to open in the coming days, but players aired concerns Sunday on Twitter over the league’s lack of a health and safety plan. Star players, including Drew Brees and Richard Sherman, criticized the league for not listening to the medical professionals and experts about the return to play, with almost every player using the hashtag #WeWantToPlay. “What you are seeing today is our guys standing up for each other and for the work their union leadership has done to keep everyone as safe as possible. The NFL needs to listen to our union and adopt the experts’ recommendations,” tweeted JC Tretter, the president of the NFL Players Association (ESPN).
THE CLOSER
And finally … 🌎 It’s a cold case that scientist-sleuths want to close. They’ve been arguing for decades about whether dinosaurs were wiped out by an asteroid strike or volcanic eruptions 66 million years ago. New research says the climate and habitat calamity on Earth was definitely asteroid-created and that a volcanic eruption in what is now India may have been a blessing, warming the planet faster during the decades-long winter created by the asteroid, thus allowing more mammals to survive.
The new research was published in the most recent issue of Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
An estimated 75 percent of the planet’s plant and animal species disappeared in a relative blink of an eye during the extinction event at the end of the Cretaceous Period. Previous research had pointed to a giant asteroid impact, at Chicxulub in what’s now the Yucatán Peninsula in Mexico, that released enough ash, dust and gases to block out the sun and dramatically cool the planet for an extended period of time (Science News).
The Morning Report is created by journalists Alexis Simendinger and Al Weaver. We want to hear from you! Email: asimendinger@thehill.com and aweaver@thehill.com. We invite you to share The Hill’s reporting and newsletters, and encourage others to SUBSCRIBE!
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Both chambers return Monday for a frenetic week of legislating, highlighted by the annual defense authorization bills in both the Senate and the House and a bundle of spending bills in the House. And the schedule could change depending on the still developing funeral arrangements for the late Rep. John Lewis, D-Ga. Read More…
Outpourings of grief, gratitude and remembrance followed the news of Rep. John Lewis’ death Friday night, from lawmakers and leaders on both sides of the aisle and a new generation that is holding tight to his mentorship. Read More…
Even in a pandemic, advocates trying to influence federal policy are working in support of candidates who may someday vote on it, even though the candidates are keeping their distance from corporate PAC money. Read More…
Click here to subscribe to Fintech Beat for the latest market and regulatory developmentsin finance and financial technology.
Virginia state Del. Nick Freitas has won the Republican nomination to take on freshman Rep. Abigail Spanberger in the 7th District, a battleground seat that Democrats flipped in 2018. Freitas bested five competitors, the Richmond Times Dispatch reported. Read More…
The Trump administration must resume accepting new applications for the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program and comply with a recent Supreme Court ruling, a judge ordered Friday. Read More…
As Senate Republicans write their next pandemic relief bill, they’ve run into a dilemma of how to provide health care support to workers who have lost their jobs because of COVID-19. Read More…
We’ve all been there. We accidentally leave our phone in the bathroom and sheepishly walk to reception to pick it up after a co-worker turns it in. But unlike this unlucky lawmaker, we’ve never had to do the iPhone walk-of-shame in front of the entire House Appropriations Committee and TV cameras. Read More…
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POLITICO PLAYBOOK
POLITICO Playbook: Congress is back, but the leaders are still far apart
Presented by
DRIVING THE DAY
PRESIDENT DONALD TRUMP will get some company in Washington this week, as Congress — which has been on an elongated July Fourth break — returns to town.
THIS MEANS HUNDREDS of lawmakers running around the Capitol complex, reporters looking for reaction to each of the president’s utterances and, most importantly, the beginning of negotiations over the next large-scale coronavirus relief package.
THIS WILL BE THE HARDEST ONE YET. Republicans and Democrats are singing from different song sheets at the moment, and it will be up to Speaker NANCY PELOSI, Senate Majority Leader MITCH MCCONNELL, Senate Minority Leader CHUCK SCHUMER and House Minority Leader KEVIN MCCARTHY to chart a course that could produce a bill that the president will sign. Read Heather Caygle and Sarah Ferris on the negotiations
THE WHITE HOUSE will be represented by Treasury Secretary STEVEN MNUCHIN and chief of staff MARK MEADOWS in negotiations. Figuring out what the president wants is a difficult task, especially since it is liable to change from day to day.
IT’S NOT ENTIRELY CLEAR who has the upper hand in these talks. MCCONNELL has said he needs a liability overhaul to get a bill through the Senate. Democrats have been a bit more circumspect in what they want — no red lines, they have said — but have suggested they need state and local money and enhanced unemployment benefits.
THIS PACKAGE will be the last train leaving the station, so to speak — perhaps the last big bill before Election Day. As NYT’S ERIC LIPTON points out on today’s front page, lobbyists all want a piece.
HERE’S THE SCHEDULE, at this point, for this week:
— TODAY: MCCONNELL and MCCARTHY will meet with TRUMP at the White House. MEADOWS will be on the Hill this evening for meetings.
— TUESDAY: MNUCHIN and MEADOWS are scheduled to attend the Senate lunch. There’s buzz of a TRUMP appearance at the lunch in the Capitol, but TBD. HOUSE DEMOCRATS have a caucus call at 9 a.m.
WHAT TO WATCH FOR … AT SOME POINT, expect to see some outreach to the House and Senate Democratic leadership. We were told late Sunday night that nothing is firmed up, but the administration is eager for an in-person read into what PELOSI and SCHUMER want.
REPUBLICANS believe that SCHUMER and PELOSI have gotten the best of the TRUMP administration in previous negotiations.
THE WHITE HOUSE’S main play is to try to pit SCHUMER against PELOSI — and it rarely works, since they know it’s coming, and work hard to stay together.
THAT’S THE POINT of a new pep-talk letter we got our hands on that SCHUMER is sending to his Democratic colleagues.
— SCHUMER’S LETTER: “It has been over three months since the Republican-led Senate has considered major COVID-relief legislation while Americans face perhaps the greatest public health threat since 1918 and the greatest economic challenge since the Great Depression. While the Democratic-led House has acted, and Senate Democrats continue to press our colleagues to provide relief for families and workers, Senate Republicans have been missing in action. …
“During the debate over the CARES Act, it was our unity against a partisan, Republican first draft that allowed for significant improvements to be made—improvements that have benefited millions upon millions of Americans. I hope we will not have to repeat that process. But we will stand together again if we must. Our Democratic colleagues in the House are ready to work and we know that a bipartisan, bicameral process will result in a much better bill for the American people.” The full letter
Good Monday morning. GUESS WHAT: Major League Baseball is scheduled to start this week. Cross your fingers and pray.
INSIDE THE ROOM … PELOSI raised $14 MILLION for the DCCC, lawmakers and candidates this summer during four “Hold the House” virtual events. JOHN LEGEND executive-produced the events, and former President BARACK OBAMA headlined the finale Sunday night.
— OBAMA ON KEEPING THE HOUSE: “One good reason to keep the House is to keep Nancy Pelosi speaker, and that would be enough. But look, if you look at the last two years or year and a half … the House has been the bulwark against a lawlessness that we’ve seen and a disregard for basic democratic norms that has come not just from the White House, but has been enabled by the Republicans in the Senate and, if they had their druthers, the Republicans in the House.”
NEW … SENATE LEADERSHIP FUND, run by McConnell allies, raised $30.2 MILLION in June and has $97.3 MILLION on hand. The fight for the Senate is real, and is going to be pricey.
BIDEN NEWS — 11 STATE PARTIES have signed agreements with the Biden Victory Fund, the joint DNC/Joe Biden/state party fundraising operation. Supporters will now be able to give $730,600 to the account. The states are: New Mexico, Indiana, Maine, Tennessee, Kentucky, Alaska, Idaho, Montana, Missouri, North Dakota and South Carolina.
WSJ ED BOARD: “John Lewis’s America:The arc of his life shows the racial progress the country has made”: “We had differences with Lewis on policy, not least his opposition to the 1996 welfare reform when he predicted a catastrophe for the poor. The reform, passed by a GOP Congress and signed by President Bill Clinton, is the most successful bipartisan reform of the last 30 years.
“But these differences are trivial compared to the significance of Lewis’s life and contribution to America. He famously forgave George Wallace, Alabama’s segregationist Governor in the 1960s, in an example of reconciliation all of us should emulate. He never gave up his belief in nonviolence, despite the violence used against him. He never lost faith in the capacity of American democracy, despite its flaws, to strive for a more perfect union.”
FRONTS: N.Y. POST… NYT, with this headline in the lead slot: “ALLIES OF TRUMP START TO BREAK RANKS ON VIRUS” …WSJ, with these headlines: “Congress Pressed For Time On Next Virus Aid” and “Businesses Are Gearing Up For A Longer Road to a Rebound”
IT’S GOING TO BE REALLY HOT TODAY.Capital Weather Gang says highs will be between 98 and 101. ABC says it will feel like 114 degrees by 5 p.m.
BIG PICTURE, NYT A1: “As Trump Ignores Virus Crisis, Republicans Start to Break Ranks,”by Alex Burns, Jonathan Martin and Maggie Haberman: “President Trump’s failure to contain the coronavirus outbreak and his refusal to promote clear public-health guidelines have left many senior Republicans despairing that he will ever play a constructive role in addressing the crisis, with some concluding they must work around Mr. Trump and ignore or even contradict his pronouncements.
“In recent days, some of the most prominent figures in the G.O.P. outside the White House have broken with Mr. Trump over issues like the value of wearing a mask in public and heeding the advice of health experts like Dr. Anthony S. Fauci, whom the president and other hard-right figures within the administration have subjected to caustic personal criticism. …
“A handful of Republican lawmakers in the Senate have privately pressed the administration to bring back health briefings led by figures like Dr. Fauci and Dr. Deborah Birx, who regularly updated the public during the spring until Mr. Trump upstaged them with his own briefing-room monologues. And in his home state of Kentucky last week, Senator Mitch McConnell, the majority leader, broke with Mr. Trump on nearly every major issue related to the virus. …
“Senator Ben Sasse, Republican of Nebraska, said he wanted the administration to offer more extensive public-health updates to the American people, and condemned the open animosity toward Dr. Fauci by some administration officials, including Peter Navarro, the trade adviser, who wrote an opinion column attacking Dr. Fauci, the nation’s top infectious disease expert.
“‘I want more briefings but, more importantly, I want the whole White House to start acting like a team on a mission to tackle a real problem,’ Mr. Sasse said. ‘Navarro’s Larry, Moe and Curly junior-high slap fight this week is yet another way to undermine public confidence that these guys grasp that tens of thousands of Americans have died and tens of millions are out of work.’ Senator Roy Blunt, Republican of Missouri, was more succinct: ‘The more they turn the briefings over to the professionals, the better.’”
— “Endangered GOP senators under pressure as Senate considers new coronavirus measures,” by WaPo’s Seung Min Kim, Rachael Bade and Erica Werner: “The spiraling pandemic and the increasingly virulent politics around Washington’s handling of the novel coronavirus are raising the pressure on Senate Republicans as they try to craft a fresh coronavirus relief package. …
“The election-year politics over the pandemic will be entwined with the contours of the next coronavirus package — a complicated dynamic McConnell will have to manage along with disputes within his conference over aid to states and localities, as well as a persistent negative view by the public of the Trump administration’s handling of the pandemic.” WaPo
BAD NEWS FOR TRUMP … THE ECONOMY — “U.S. Companies Lose Hope for Quick Rebound From Covid-19,”by WSJ’s Chip Cutter and Doug Cameron: “Big U.S. companies are deciding March and April moves won’t cut it. The fierce resurgence of Covid-19 cases and related business shutdowns are dashing hopes of a quick recovery, prompting businesses from airlines to restaurant chains to again shift their strategies and staffing or ramp up previous plans to do so. They are turning furloughs into permanent layoffs, de-emphasizing their core businesses and downsizing production indefinitely.
“Delta Air Lines Inc. curtailed plans to add more summer flights and said it doesn’t expect business flying to recover to pre-pandemic levels. Chipotle Mexican Grill Inc. is adding staff and changing operations to accommodate more to-go business. Vox Media, the publisher of New York magazine and several news websites, said it would lay off 6% of its workforce as the company confronts a prolonged drought for its lucrative events business.”
— “Trump’s Hot-Button Fed Pick Faces Senate Committee Vote This Week” by NYT’s Jenna Smialek: “Judy Shelton, an unorthodox economist who was an adviser to President Trump’s 2016 campaign, could move one step closer to a seat on the Federal Reserve’s Board of Governors this week.
“While her fate is far from guaranteed, the Senate Banking Committee is expected to approve Ms. Shelton’s nomination on Tuesday, putting her one simple-majority vote in the full Senate away from confirmation at a moment when the central bank is employing vast powers that she has a track record of questioning.”
CORONAVIRUS RAGING …
— THE U.S. SURPASSED 140,000 deaths attributed to Covid-19 over the weekend, with confirmed cases rising to 3,773,260. The Johns Hopkins map
— “L.A. County continues dangerous coronavirus surge as Garcetti warns of new restrictions,”by LAT’s Howard Blume and Alex Wigglesworth: “Los Angeles County public health officials on Sunday reported 2,848 newly confirmed cases of the coronavirus, with the majority of those infected under the age of 41, as related hospitalizations reached a new high. There are currently 2,216 people hospitalized with the virus, the county health department reported. This is the fifth consecutive day with hospitalizations higher than 2,100 and the first time hospitalizations have surpassed 2,200. Among those hospitalized, 26% are in intensive care units and 19% are on ventilators.”
EXPANDING THE FIELD — “Biden eyes GOP supporters while Trump focuses on his base,” by AP’s Steve Peoples: “In the four months since Joe Biden effectively won the Democratic presidential nomination, he has focused on consolidating the party’s divergent and often warring factions. As the closing stretch of the campaign nears, that effort will expand to include Republicans disaffected with President Donald Trump.
“Former Ohio Gov. John Kasich, a Republican and frequent Trump critic, has been approached and is expected to speak at the Democratic National Convention on Biden’s behalf next month, according to a person with direct knowledge of the plans who requested anonymity to discuss strategy. Kasich is among a handful of high-profile Republicans likely to become more active in supporting Biden in the fall.
“Trump, meanwhile, is doing virtually nothing to expand his appeal beyond his most loyal supporters. Some GOP operatives believe the suburbs are lost while a contingent of high-profile Republicans are openly questioning the president’s reelection message. In an acknowledgment of the mounting challenges, Trump named a new campaign manager last week.” AP
— KASICH! A former Republican presidential candidate, governor and House Republican committee chair.
VEEPSTAKES … BOSTON GLOBE’S JESS BIDGOOD: “How Elizabeth Warren has kept eyes on her for the vice presidential nod”: “Warren has carefully maneuvered delicate questions of representation while campaigning for the role, calling herself an ally and engaging directly with the civil rights protests after the brutal killing of George Floyd fueled an urgent reckoning around racism in America. She attended demonstrators in Washington, offered up policy proposals intended to tackle structural racism, and reached out to Black activists with private phone calls and virtual events.”
TRUMP’S MONDAY — The president will depart the White House at 5:50 p.m. en route to the Trump International Hotel. He will participate in a roundtable with supporters of a joint fundraising committee at 6:15 p.m., returning to the White House at 7:25 p.m.
PLAYBOOK READS
E-RING READING … LARA SELIGMAN: “Mark Esper moves to shed his ‘yes man’ reputation”: “Almost exactly a year since his unlikely promotionto the top job in the Pentagon, the man known derisively in some national security circles as ‘Yes-per’ has started to show some backbone. [Esper] narrowly avoided losing his job in June after publicly opposing the use of active-duty troops to quash civil unrest, two days after the president threatened to do just that. On Friday, he issued a new policy that effectively bars the display of the Confederate flag on military installations, despite Trump’s support of such displays as ‘freedom of speech.’
“Esper’s efforts to stand up to his boss have seen limited success, but his willingness to stake out an independent position has gained him some respect among his underlings, and led some to believe that a man who seemed destined to be the ultimate transitional figure may yet leave a mark on the vast department that he oversees.”
BEYOND THE BELTWAY — “Son of federal judge slain, husband in critical condition,”by the New Jersey Globe’s David Wildstein: “The husband and son of U.S. District Court Judge Esther Salas were shot this evening after a gunman dressed as a Federal Express delivery driver entered their North Brunswick home, the New Jersey Globe has learned.
“Daniel Anderl, the judge’s 20-year-old son, is dead. He was a student at Catholic University in Washington, D.C. Her husband, Mark Anderl, 63, a criminal defense attorney and former Assistant Essex County prosecutor, is in critical but stable condition after undergoing surgery at Robert Wood Johnson Hospital in New Brunswick. Salas is unharmed, the Globe was told.”
PLAYBOOK METRO SECTION — “They got tested for coronavirus. Now, they wait. Growing delays have put lives in limbo,” by WaPo’s Erin Cox: “A Capitol Hill woman canceled her vacation because she couldn’t get timely proof she wasn’t infectious. A biologist from Charlottesville threw caution to the wind and visited his elderly parents anyway. A young D.C. man, exposed to a sick family member, has waited more than 10 days to find out if he is a coronavirus carrier.
“The nationwide surge in coronavirus cases has throttled testing turnaround times not only in hot spots, but in places that haven’t seen a dramatic spike in infections recently — including the greater Washington area. Private labs have been hamstrung by supply line shortages and overwhelming demand. Some labs have prioritized hospital patients or contracts with big employers, including the NBA, placing the general public at the back of a line that can grow longer by the day.” WaPo
MEDIAWATCH — HILLARY CLINTON will be on the premiere of MSNBC’s “The ReidOut,” JOY REID’S new 7 p.m. show.
— NYT’S BEN SMITH MEETS ALEX BERENSON: “An Ex-Times Reporter. An Ohio Wedding Provider. Covid Contrarians Go Viral,” with this nugget:“Playing devil’s advocate works on Twitter, though, and on Fox’s powerful shows, and has helped Mr. Berenson sell more than 100,000 copies of his self-published booklet, ‘Unreported Truths about Covid-19 and Lockdowns.’ Tesla’s founder, Elon Musk, helped shame Amazon into allowing the booklet onto its platform in June, and the two men have also discussed starting a new publication. Mr. Berenson even began preliminary conversations about hiring reporters, an associate of Mr. Berenson’s told me, but did not pursue the plan.”
WHITE HOUSE DEPARTURE LOUNGE — Dan Schneider has left the White House, where he was associate director of comms at the Council on Environmental Quality. Andrea Woods is now in that role. She previously was deputy press secretary at the EPA.
TRANSITIONS — Reginald Darby is joining the Millennial Action Project as VP of programs. He previously was deputy chief of staff and legislative director for Rep. Greg Steube (R-Fla.). … Nora Super will lead the Alliance to Improve Dementia Care, a new group the Milken Institute is launching with the AARP, Alzheimer’s Association, Biogen and the John A. Hartford Foundation. She is senior director of the Milken Institute Center for the Future of Aging.
BIRTHDAY OF THE DAY: Franklin Foer, staff writer at The Atlantic. What he’s been reading: “I read Camus’ ‘The Plague,’ which holds up magnificently. It really does anticipate how we have behaved in the face of pandemic. We made all the mistakes that he captured so many decades ago in French Algeria — and we have responded with the same denial, followed by grudging acceptance of mass death. Also, I just read Ottessa Moshfegh’s ‘My Year of Rest and Relaxation,’ also corona-relevant, since it’s about a woman who disengages from her fellow humans for a long stretch.” Playbook Q&A
BIRTHDAYS: Tom Friedman is 67 … Katrina Pierson, senior adviser for the Trump 2020 campaign … CNN political director David Chalian … Anita Decker Breckenridge … Katie Price, White House production assistant … Lucas Baiano is 32 … former Sen. Barbara Mikulski (D-Md.) is 84 … Stuart Elliott … Barry Lee Myers is 77 … Andrew Do … Jon Kuhl … Julia Pyper … Anne MacDonald … POLITICO’s David Giambusso, Aloise Phelps and Bridget Friendly … Patrick Kelly, director of speechwriting and publications at the AFL-CIO, is 27 (h/t Tarah Patz) … Hunter McKay, manager of research at Pinkston … WaPo’s David Lynch …
… Christopher Harvin … Carl Gershman … Robert Jones, VP at GS Strategy Group … Tom Engelhardt … Don Seymour,North America politics and government outreach manager at Facebook … Jamal Simmons … NBC News PR’s Joya Manasseh … Meg Rich … Stephen Brokaw … Steven Perlberg … Amy Elinski … Leah Grace Denny … Ashley Morgan … Paula Cino … Julie Sarne, director at Hamilton Place Strategies … Richard Kolko … Justin Dews, senior counsel for New Jersey Gov. Phil Murphy … Chris Hartmann … Jeff Liszt … Katie Paris … Julie Edwards … ABC News’ Kirit Radia … Tom Diaz … Carrie Simms … Carol Littell
“One small step for a man, one giant leap for mankind,” stated Astronaut Neil Armstrong, JULY 20, 1969, as he became the f irst man to walk on the moon, almost 238,900 miles away from the Earth.
The second man on the moon was Colonel Buzz Aldrin, who described it as “magnificent desolation.”
Aldrin earned a Ph.D. from M.I.T. and helped develop the technology necessary for the mission, especially the complicated lunar module rendezvous with the command module.
Buzz Aldrin’s popularity was the inspiration for the character “Buzz Lightyear” in Pixar’s animated movie Toy Story (1995).
Buzz Aldrin shared a story, “An Astronaut Tells of a little-known but Significant Event on the Moon,” printed in Guideposts Magazine, October 1970), and in his book, Return to Earth, published by Random House, 1973.
Before the two astronauts stepped out of the Lunar Module onto the moon’s surface, there was a planned time of rest.
Buzz Aldrin asked for radio silence because NASA was fighting a lawsuit brought by an intolerant atheist, Madalyn Murray O’Hair.
She objected to the previous Apollo 8 crew reading the first chapter of the Book of Genesis in their Christmas radio transmission in 1968.
During the radio silence, Aldrin then privately partook of communion, stating:
“For several weeks prior to the scheduled lift-off of Apollo 11 back in July, 1969, the pastor of our church, Dean Woodruff, and I had been struggling to find the right symbol for the first lunar landing.
We wanted to express our feeling that what man was doing in this mission transcended electronics and computers and rockets …
… Dean often speaks at our church, Webster Presbyterian, just outside of Houston, about the many meanings of the communion service.
‘One of the principal symbols,’ Dean says, ‘is that God reveals Himself in the common elements of everyday life.’ Traditionally, these elements are bread and wine-common foods in Bible days and typical products of man’s labor.
One day while I was at Cape Kennedy working with the sophisticated tools of the space effort, it occurred to me that these tools were the typical elements of life today.
I wondered if it might be possible to take communion on the moon, symbolizing the thought that God was revealing Himself there too, as man reached out into the universe.
For there are many of us in the NASA program who do trust that what we are doing is part of God’s eternal plan for man.”
Webster Presbyterian Church is located at 201 W. NASA Road 1, Webster, Texas, and is known nationally as the Church of the Astronauts as John Glenn, Buzz Aldrin, Jerry Carr, Charlie Bassett, and Roger Chaffee were active members during their time at NASA.
The flag Buzz Aldrin left on the Moon was designed and built by a member of Webster Presbyterian Church, Jack Kinzler.
Aldrin continued:
“I spoke with Dean about the idea as soon as I returned home, and he was enthusiastic.
‘I could carry the bread in a plastic packet, the way regular inflight food is wrapped.
And the wine also-there will be just enough gravity on the moon for liquid to pour. I’ll be able to drink normally from a cup. Dean, I wonder if you could look around for a little chalice that I could take with me as coming from the church?’
The next week Dean showed me a graceful silver cup. I hefted it and was pleased to find that it was light enough to take along. Each astronaut is allowed a few personal items on a flight; the wine chalice would be in my personal-preference kit.
… Dean made special plans for two special communion services at Webster Presbyterian Church. One would be held just prior to my leaving Houston for Cape Kennedy, when I would join the other members in a dedication service.
The second would take place two weeks later, Sunday, July 20, when Neil Armstrong and I were scheduled to be on the surface of the moon.
On that Sunday the church back home would gather for communion, while I joined them as close as possible to the same hour, taking communion inside the lunar module, all of us meaning to represent in this small way not only our local church but the Church as a whole.”
The Houston Chronicle and the Huffington Post have published articles about Buzz Aldrin’s communion on the moon.
Aldrin continued:
“Right away question came up. Was it theologically correct for a layman to serve himself communion under these circumstances? Dean thought so, but to make sure he decided to write the stated clerk of the Presbyterian church’s General Assembly and got back a quick reply that this was permissible.
And how much should we talk about our plans? I am naturally rather reticent, but on the other hand I was becoming increasingly convinced that having religious convictions carried with it the responsibility of witnessing to them. Finally we decided we would say nothing about the communion service until after the moonshot …
I had a question about which scriptural passage to use. Which reading would best capture what this enterprise meant to us? I thought long about this and came up at last with John 15:5.
It seemed to fit perfectly. I wrote the passage on a slip of paper to be carried aboard Eagle along with the communion elements. Dean would read the same passage at the full congregation service held back home that same day.”
Buzz Aldrin wrote further:
“So at last we were set. And then trouble appeared. It was Saturday, just prior to the first of the two communion services.
The next day, Neil Armstrong, Mike Collins and I were to depart Houston for Cape Kennedy. We were scheduled for a pre-mission press conference when the flight physician arrived and set up elaborate precautions against crew contamination …
We had to wear sterile masks and to talk to the reporters from within a special partition. The doctor was taking no chances. A cold germ, a flu virus, and the whole shot might have to be aborted.
I felt I had to tell him about the big church service scheduled for the next morning. When I did, he wasn’t at all happy.
I called Dean with the news late Saturday night. ‘It doesn’t look real good, Dean.’
‘What about a private service? Without the whole congregation?’
It was a possibility. I called the doctor about the smaller service and he agreed, provided there were only a handful of people present.”
“So the next day, Sunday, shortly after the end of the 11 o’clock service my wife, Joan and our oldest boy Mike (the only one of our three children who is as yet a communicant), went to the church. There we met Dean, his wife, Floy, and our close family friend Tom Manison, elder of the church and his wife.
The seven of us went in to the now-empty sanctuary. On the communion table were two loaves of bread, one for now, the other for two weeks from now. Beside the two loaves were two chalices, one of them the small cup the church was giving me for the service on the moon.
We took communion. At the end of the service Dean tore off a corner of the second loaf of bread and handed it to me along with the tiny chalice. Within a few hours I was on my way to Cape Kennedy.
… What happened there, of course, the whole world knows.
The Saturn 5 rocket gave us a rough ride at first, but the rest of the trip was smooth. On the day of the moon landing, we awoke at 5:30 a.m., Houston time.
… Neil and I separated from Mike Collins in the command module. Our powered descent was right on schedule, and perfect except for one unforeseeable difficulty.
The automatic guidance system would have taken Eagle to an area with huge boulders.
Neil had to steer Eagle to a more suitable terrain. With only seconds worth of fuel left, we touched down at 3:30 p.m.”
Mission Control was nervous, as the Eagle was descending faster than anticipated.
The on-board guidance system computer sounded an alarm.
It was later discovered that a switch was on causing the radar to also look up to locate the Columbia in case the landing had to be quickly aborted, and the computer was dithering between the upward and downward signals.
Neil Armstrong switched to manually land the craft, with Buzz Aldrin relaying instrument readings, while the rockets were kicking up a cloud of blinding moon dust, obscuring vision of the boulders below.
After the successful landing, Neil Armstrong radioed:
“Houston, Tranquility Base here. The Eagle has landed.”
Mission Control’s CAPCOM (Capsule Communiator), Charles Duke, who was later on Apollo 16, replied:
“Roger, Twank … Tranquility, we copy you on the ground. You got a bunch of guys about to turn blue. We’re breathing again. Thanks a lot!”
Aldrin continued:
“Now Neil and I were sitting inside Eagle, while Mike circled in lunar orbit unseen in the black sky above us.”
Mike Collins had taken the photo of the Eagle separating from the command module Columbia, and drifting down toward the Moon.
Collins was alone in the Columbia, circling the dark side of the Moon.
He wrote that “not since Adam has any human known such solitude,” and that he was “sweating like a nervous as a bride” till the Eagle returned (The Guardian, July 18, 2009):
“Collins’ deepest fear: that he would be the only survivor of an Apollo 11 disaster … Despite their apparent calm … no one was more stressed than Collins …
… (He) was obsessed with the reliability of the ascent engine of Armstrong and Aldrin’s lander, Eagle. It had never been fired on the Moon’s surface before …
Should the engine fail to ignite, Armstrong and Aldrin would be stranded on the Moon – where they would die when their oxygen ran out.
… Or if it failed to burn for at least seven minutes, then the two astronauts would either crash back on to the Moon or be stranded in low orbit around it, beyond the reach of Collins in his mothership, Columbia. “
On the Moon’s surface, Buzz Aldrin recounted:
“In a little while after our scheduled meal period,
Neil would give the signal to step down the ladder onto the powdery surface of the moon. Now was the moment for communion.
So I unstowed the elements in their flight packets. I put them and the scripture reading on the little table in front of the abort guidance system computer …
… Then I called back to Houston.
‘Houston, this is Eagle. This is the LM Pilot speaking. I would like to request a few moments of silence.
I would like to invite each person listening in, wherever and whomever he may be, to contemplate for a moment the events of the past few hours and to invite each person listening, wherever and whomever he may be, to contemplate for a moment the events of the past few hours and to give thanks in his own individual way’ …
… On World Communion Sunday, October 4, 1970, many Christians through the world will unite in spirit as they-each in his own church, according to his own tradition-participate in celebrating the Lord’s Supper …
… For me this meant taking communion. In the radio blackout I opened the little plastic packages which contained bread and wine.
I poured the wine into the chalice our church had given me. In the one-sixth gravity of the moon the wine curled slowly and gracefully up the side of the cup.
It was interesting to think that the very first liquid ever poured on the moon, and the first food eaten there, were communion elements.
And so, just before I partook of the elements, I read the words, which I had chosen to indicate our trust that as man probes into space we are in fact acting in Christ …
… I sensed especially strongly my unity with our church back home, and with the Church everywhere.
I read: ‘I am the vine, you are the branches. Whoever remains in me, and I in him, will bear much fruit; for you can do nothing without me.'”
Webster Presbyterian Church on NASA Parkway near Houston, Texas, keeps the chalice used on the Moon and commemorates the event each year on the Sunday closest to July 20.
While Buzz Aldrin and Neil Armstrong were on the Moon, Mike Collins orbited behind the Moon, becoming the most distant solo human traveler, completely out of radio contact from Earth, nearly a quarter of a million miles away.
Alone in space in the command module Columbia , Mike Collins wrote:
“This venture has been structured for three men, and I consider my third to be as necessary as either of the other two.
I don’t mean to deny a feeling of solitude. It is there, reinforced by the fact that radio contact with the Earth abruptly cuts off at the instant I disappear behind the moon, I am alone now, truly alone, and absolutely isolated from any known life. I am it.
… If a count were taken, the score would be three billion plus two over on the other side of the moon, and one plus God knows what on this side.”
Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin spent a total of 21 hours and 37 minutes on the moon’s surface before redocking their lunar module Eagle with the command ship Columbia, which was orbiting 57 miles above the Moon’s surface.
Armstrong took the historic photo of Aldrin saluting the American Flag.
A little known event in the USA-USSR Space Race was that the Soviet’s launched an unmanned lunar landing module at the same time, and attempted to land it as close as possible to the Eagle landing site.
Just two hours before Armstrong and Aldrin blasted off from the moon, Russia’s Luna 15 crashed landed in the nearby Mare Crisium.
After their moon walk, Armstrong and Aldrin climbed back into the Eagle.
Their large spacesuits, which included life support backpacks, made maneuvering difficult and the circuit breaker was broken which controlled ignition for the life-off rockets.
This potentially serious accident was fixed with the tip of a felt pen.
To reduce weight, they threw out unnecessary moon walk equipment, then re-compressed the Eagle.
The Eagle lifted off and successfully re-docked with the Columbia.
As they were returning to Earth, July 23, 1969, Buzz Aldrin stated via television:
“This has been far more than three men on a mission to the Moon …
Personally, in reflecting on the events of the past several days, a verse from Psalms comes to mind.
‘When I consider the heavens, the work of Thy fingers, the Moon and the stars, which Thou hast ordained; What is man that Thou art mindful of him?'”
Armstrong added:
“To all the other people that are listening and watching tonight, God bless you. Good night from Apollo 11.”
Charles Duke later flew to the moon on the Apollo 16 mission.
On April 21, 1972, Astronauts Charles Duke and John Young explored the moon’s rugged Descartes region.
Years later, Charles Duke spoke at a Prayer Rally during the Texas State’s Republican Convention in San Antonio’s Lila Cockrell Theatre, June 22, 1996.
His remarks were printed in the book, Charles Duke: Moonwalker (Rose Petal Press, 2nd edition, 2011, p. 256-261):
“I have been before kings and prime ministers, junta leaders and dictators, businessmen and beggars, rich and poor, black and white …
One of the most touching times was in the office of one of the cabinet ministers in Israel … After the introduction I was asked to share my walk on the moon with the Israeli minister.
‘Mr. Minister,’ I began, ‘I was able to look back at the earth from the moon and hold up my hand and underneath this hand was the earth. The thought occurred to me that underneath my hand were four billion people. I couldn’t see Europe, America, the Middle East.
… I couldn’t see blacks or whites, Jews or Orientals, just spaceship earth.
I realized we needed to learn to love one another, and I believed that with that love and our technical expertise, we could solve all of mankind’s problems …’
The promises of the Bible are true and, I believe, speak the truth in every area — whether it be in spiritual matters, nutrition, history, or even science …”
Charles Duke added:
“In 1972 aboard Apollo 16, I saw with my own eyes what is written in the Scriptures.
In Isaiah 40:22 it says ‘It is He that sitteth upon the circle of the earth.”
And in Job 26:7, it is written ‘He hangeth the earth upon nothing.’
Who told Isaiah that the earth was a circle? … And how did the writer of Job know that the earth hung upon nothing? …
This is the Lord I love and serve. This is the Lord who transformed by life. This is the Lord who transformed my marriage.
… I used to say I could live ten thousand years and never have an experience as thrilling as walking on the moon. But the excitement and satisfaction of that walk doesn’t begin to compare with my walk with Jesus, a walk that lasts forever.
I thought Apollo 16 would be my crowning glory, but the crown that Jesus gives will not tarnish or fade away. His crown will last throughout all eternity …”
Charles Duke concluded:
“Not everyone has the opportunity to walk on the moon, but everybody has the opportunity to walk with the Son. It costs billions of dollars to send someone to the moon, but walking with Jesus is free, the Gift of God.
‘For by Grace are ye saved through faith, and that not of yourselves, it is the gift of God, not of works, lest any man should boast.’
You don’t need to go to the moon to find God. I didn’t find God in space – I found him in the front seat of my car on Highway 46 in New Braunfels, Texas, when I opened my heart to Jesus. And my life hasn’t been the same since.
Now I can truly look up at the moon and the stars and with the prophets of old exclaim, ‘The heavens declare the glory of God, and the firmament showeth His handiwork.'”
President Donald Trump will attend fundraising events on Monday. Keep up with Trump on Our President’s Schedule Page. President Trump’s Itinerary for 7/19/20 – note: this page will be updated during the day if events warrant Keep up with Trump on Our President’s Schedule Page. All Times EDT 5:50 PM …
White House Chief of Staff Mark Meadows said Sunday he expects indictments to be handed down in U.S. Attorney John Durham’s investigation into the origins of the Trump-Russia probe, and that documents will be released in the coming days that suggest the FBI spied on the Trump campaign. “You’re going …
A viral report of a sudden surge of coronavirus cases in infants in a single county in Texas is inaccurate, a local official said on Saturday. On Friday, the top health official for the Corpus Christi area said at a press conference that the county currently has 85 cases of …
When local and state government officials outwardly reject the notion to protect the Constitutional rights of the people in their cities and states, then the federal government not only the right, but a duty to step in and do what these left-wing cowards are afraid to do. Another day goes …
Happy Monday, dear Morning Briefing readers. No, really.
I decided to get my COVID-19 randomness rant out of the way early this week. These are always fun because a select group of the same people choose to be deliberately obtuse about whatever point or points I am making. Nuance is lost on the righteous COVID crowd. Were it not for the extreme pleasure I take in annoying people I would probably be frustrated by this.
But you’ve all met me. In that weird internet way.
Throughout the various phases of COVID and riot times, the one thing that I’ve been complaining about the most is that almost none of the people in charge are being completely forthcoming about, well, anything. There’s an overwhelming sense of straight-up winging it that’s been there since the beginning. The early winging it by Andrew Cuomo and Gretchen Whitmer sent thousands and thousands of elderly people to their COVID deaths so it’s a valid thing to be upset about.
The second round of shutdowns is a perfect example. Here in Arizona, if 51% of a bar/restaurant’s receipts are from alcohol sales then the place is shut down now. If they’re from food sales then COVID is magically not killing grandma anymore and the place can stay open.
It’s a bit nonsensical.
There’s been speculation for a while that there has been some fudging of the numbers when reporting COVID-19 cases and deaths. Matt wrote a post on Friday about a motorcycle death in Florida being attributed to COVID:
A young Florida resident who died in a motorcycle accident is included in the state’s official COVID-19 death count, a state official reveals.
FOX 35 News in Orlando discovered this after asking Orange County Health Officer Dr. Raul Pino about two young COVID-19 patients in their twenties who died, and whether they had any preexisting conditions that contributed to their deaths.
“The first one didn’t have any. He died in a motorcycle accident,” Pino said.
Matt links to a couple other posts that detail further sketchiness in the reporting of deaths in Florida and New York.
I’m so old I remember when it was a good thing to have a healthy and inherent lack of trust for government officials. Now we are supposed to be worshiping at the Altar of Fauci and not asking any questions lest we be accused of wanting to create a wholesale COVID slaughter.
Clarifying once again: I am aware that this a highly contagious virus and that COVID-19 cases have been spiking this past month. I’m not minimizing or dismissing anything.
However, even that discussion has been a dishonest one. We’re supposed to believe that fifty people in a bar or a hundred people in a church are the cause for the uptick but that tens of thousands of people protesting and rioting is perfectly safe. The idiots pushing this line are actually going with a “but everyone was wearing masks” defense. Yeah, a lot of them were but not all of them were. And the ones who were wearing them often pulled them down to yell at cops.
I’d be a lot less cranky about COVID compliance if this kind of disingenuous crap weren’t rampant.
The reality is that the most self-righteous COVID scolds I know are the ones who are going out in public and being around other people a lot, and not for work reasons. They all believe that their cloth masks are some kind of COVID Captain America shields that are making them invincible.
No, I’m not anti-mask, I play along on the rare occasions that I go anywhere. But that’s just it, I don’t go anywhere. I may complain about the actions of elected officials but I am also one of the most isolated people I know. Unless I can get COVID from my cat I’m being a rather good plague-time soldier.
As long as my favorite craft beer place continues making deliveries I will remain so.
This is fun. Bob Newhart and Craig Ferguson for a couple of different interviews. Newhart is always great and I loved Ferguson’s hosting style. He was the last late-night host who just wanted to be funny and not political all the time.
Let’s begin the day with some light stretching, shall we?
Happy Monday! After a two-week recess, Congress is officially back in session today with much to accomplish. From the next COVID relief package to police reform, we look forward to our leaders putting their differences aside, focusing on the important issues at hand, and delivering results for the American people. (Editor’s note: Sarcasm, we think?)
Quick Hits: Today’s Top Stories
A total of 56,759 new cases of COVID-19 were confirmed in the United States yesterday, with 7.4 percent of the 768,823 tests reported coming back positive. With 381 new deaths attributed to the virus Sunday, the pandemic’s American death toll reached 140,500.
John Lewis—civil rights leader and longtime congressman from Georgia—died on Friday from pancreatic cancer at the age of 80.
Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, 87, announced on Friday that she is undergoing chemotherapy treatment for a recurrence of pancreatic cancer in her liver. “I have often said I would remain a member of the Court as long as I can do the job full steam,” she said in a statement. “I remain fully able to do that.”
A federal judge in Maryland on Friday ordered the Trump administration to begin accepting new applications for the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) program after last month’s Supreme Court decision on the issue.
The Trump administration is considering reducing American military presence in South Korea after the president demanded that South Korea increase its financial contributions to keep U.S. forces stationed there. No formal decision has been made.
Joe Biden released a five-step school reopening plan over the weekend, calling on Congress to allocate $34 billion to ensure schools have enough funding to comply with CDC guidelines and upgrade their technology and broadband systems.
The Pentagon on Friday effectively banned all displays of the Confederate flag in all Defense Department workplaces and public areas. “The flags we fly must accord with the military imperatives of good order and discipline, treating all our people with dignity and respect, and rejecting divisive symbols,” wrote Defense Secretary Mark Esper.
Progressive newcomer Jamaal Bowman was officially declared the winner of New York’s 16th District Democratic primary over Eliot Engel, a 32-year veteran of Congress and current chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee.
The Department of Homeland Security confirmed over the weekend it had used unmarked vehicles in Portland, Oregon, to detain protesters without explanation. The unmarked vehicles, acting DHS Deputy Secretary Ken Cuccinelli said, were used to keep officers safe and “move people to a safe location for questioning.” Oregon officials—from Portland Mayor Ted Wheeler, to Sen. Jeff Merkley, to Gov. Kate Brown—have expressed dissatisfaction with DHS’s presence in the state and encouraged them to leave. Violent protests have raged in Portland for more than six weeks.
Can Kids Transmit COVID-19 After All?
Summer is flying by, and the question of whether and how schools will be able to reopen their doors is becoming more urgent. As school districts and states mull how to answer that question, perhaps the most important factor for consideration—whether children are less likely to transmit the virus than adults—has been largely an unknown.
This week, however, we’ve gotten a substantial new data point: a contact-tracing study of nearly 60,000 people in South Korea who had contracted or came into contact with the virus between January and March this year.
“We are tired of being beaten by policemen. We are tired of seeing our people locked up in jail over and over again.” His voice shook. “How long can we be patient? We want our freedom, and we want it now. We do not want to go to jail. But we will go to jail if this is the price we must pay for love, brotherhood, and true peace.”
Those were not empty words. Lewis was arrested 40 times from 1960 to 1966 protesting for racial justice, first as one of the 13 original Freedom Riders, then as the chairman of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC). He and fellow demonstrators throughout the years were tear gassed and beaten senseless by police and attacked by white vigilantes; Lewis had his skull fractured marching across the Edmund Pettus Bridge in Selma, Alabama. “We were determined not to let any act of violence keep us from our goal,” Lewis later said, reflecting on his ‘60s activism. “We knew our lives could be threatened, but we had made up our minds not to turn back.” President Lyndon Johnson signed the Civil Rights Act in 1964, and Voting Rights Act a year later.
More than five years since Donald Trump came down the escalator and declared himself a candidate for the Republican nomination, the American news media, for the most part, is still figuring out how to cover him. The journalistic conventions of the past several decades simply were not built for a politician like Trump. But Chris Wallace’s recent interview of the president—recorded last week, aired yesterday—was a master class in how to do it. Wallace was respectful and fair in asking Trump about the coronavirus, race relations, Joe Biden, and more, but he did not hesitate to challenge the president on his more dubious statements. Take the time to watch the whole thing here.
Few outlets knew John Lewis better than the Atlanta Journal-Constitution. So be sure to read this tribute to Lewis from Tamar Hallerman, on Lewis’s role as “confessor to those repenting of racism.” Lewis and his staff often found letters of apology in the mail, Hallerman writes. “They came from the children and grandchildren of people who fought in the 1960s against him and other civil rights activists —and even from those who remained on the sidelines.”
In 2002, John Judis and Ruy Teixeira published The Emerging Democratic Majority, which argued that the Democratic Party should take advantage of economic, social, and demographic trends that were already working in its favor. Democratic operatives, Teixeira argues in a piece for Persuasion, have misinterpreted the book’s thesis, that it’s only a matter of time before demographic trends doom the Republican Party. “We also emphasized that building this majority would require a very broad coalition, including many voters drawn from the white working class. This crucial nuance was quickly lost,” Teixeira writes. “With the exception of Obama’s victory in 2012, Democrats lost just about every important election for the next eight years. … If Democrats don’t correct their misunderstanding of what it takes for them to win elections, the next decade could turn out to be just as bitter as the last.”
We’re living in heyday of conspiracy theories? Of all groups that should reject them, evangelical Christians should be among the first, David writes in Sunday’s French Press. Christian theology permeates evangelicals’ marriages, work lives, and schooling, but is noticeably absent in their political engagement. “We connect our faith with our political objectives but do far less work connecting our faith to our political conduct or our theological priorities,” he writes. “This is not the way we engage with other significant areas of life.”
If you missed David’s special Friday French Press, be sure to check that out too! He forecasts three possible outcomes of a Trump vs. Biden faceoff and gives us a glimpse into what the Republican Party—and the conservative movement writ large—might look like after the election.
On this week’s foreign policy episode of The Dispatch Podcast, Sarah, Steve, and Tom Joscelyn dive into Trump’s business-minded foreign affairs strategy in the Middle East, China and Russia’s deep-seated anti-Americanism, and the implications of a Biden presidency for American interests abroad.
The economic lockdowns and social distancing have made urban living more challenging and less popular. In normal times, city dwellers will trade the discomfort of living in a small apartment for vibrant cultural experiences. But when the economy is locked down and everyone is shut in? That’s a different story. Samuel J. Abrams runs the numbers on how many Americans are considering a move to smaller areas.
William Jacobson: “From Times of London (paywall): ‘Bill Jacobson, a law professor at Cornell University, recently wrote two blogs critical of the Black Lives Matter movement. In response, alumni put up a petition calling for him to be fired. Twenty-one of his colleagues then wrote a letter decrying his “racist speech”. His view is that while Weiss or Sullivan can easily find other platforms to write for, and professors like him have job protection, many younger people are being intimidated into silence. “Everybody is afraid to say anything,” he said. “I’ve received many, many emails from students who have told me they are disgusted by what’s going on. “But they don’t speak publicly and I understand that. If you’re a young law student, you can’t afford to have accusations made about you on the internet. One whiff of controversy and you’re stuffed.’“
Mary Chastain: “Baseball starts this week. I cannot express how excited I am to have the Cubs and the game back in my life.”
Leslie Eastman: “A study product by a Connecticut pathologist shows the CDC coronavirus test kits generate 30% false positive results and 20% that are false negatives. So, as the press uses the authority of “science” to promote pandemic panic, much of the data must be considered unreliable. Sensible policy makers and public health officials should act accordingly.”
Vijeta Uniyal: “Iran-sponsored terror group Hezbollah is hoping for a Chinese bailout as Lebanon suffers its worst economic crisis in decades. Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah in a televised speech told his Lebanese followers to “look east” to Communist China for their economic rescue, media reports said.”
David Gerstman: “Just finished watching The Spy on Netflix. It’s the story of Eli Cohen, the legendary Mossad agent who was in line to become deputy defense minister of Syria at the time he was caught and hanged. It’s well-acted and the cast is headed by Sacha Baron Cohen – the comedian – who brings authority to the title character. While many of the event really did happen – when you visit the Golan Heights today, you’ll see the eucalyptus that he convinced the Syrians to plant there. (This told the Israeli Air Force where the Syrian underground fortifications were, making them easy targets in the Six Day War.) I do wonder how accurate the backstory is. We can’t know many of the personal interactions As incredible as Cohen’s exploits and successes were, the series covers the cost to his family, his ability to become and remain the ambitious Syrian patriot, and whether Israel overplayed their hand with him. It’s a very entertaining series.”
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“Today, the nostrum goes, it is not enough for Americans to be not racist. They must be “anti-racist.” … What, pray tell, is the difference between being against racism and being anti-racist?….”
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Jobs Not Mobs
As COVID-19 testing and positive cases go up in some states and people reckon with another round of lockdowns and closed businesses, author and Dilbert creator Scott Adams has a suggestion for President Trump. He tweeted, “#jobsnotmobs is a nearly unbeatable campaign slogan in 2020. Contrast is persuasive, and this one rings true.”
He also said, “I’m no political expert, but the Democrat strategy of effectively legalizing violent crime before a national election seems suboptimal. #JobsnotMobs.”
In an interview on “Fox News Sunday,” President Trump said the surging violence in large cities is the fault of Democrats. From Fox News:
“During the exclusive interview at the White House on Friday, Wallace asked Trump to explain why murder rates were up in cities like Chicago and New York.‘I explain it very simply by saying they’re Democrat-run cities, they are liberally run. They are stupidly run,’ the president said.
Trump added that Democrats who run the cities seeing a spike in violence “want to defund the police, and Biden wants to defund the police.”
There was a lot of hullabaloo about host Chris Wallace pushing back on the claim that Biden doesn’t want to defund the police. In the same article, Fox News points out:
“In a July 8 interview with activist Ady Barkan, Biden said that some funding should “absolutely” be redirected from police, but his campaign denied this was support of defunding police.
In the interview, the presumptive Democratic nominee said that police forces don’t need surplus military equipment, saying this is what leads them to “become the enemy” in a community.
“But do we agree that we can redirect some of the [police] funding?” Barkan asked Biden.
“Yes, absolutely,” said the former vice president.”
Related Reading:
Federal Officers Deployed To Curb Portland’s Violence While Some Local Leaders Refuse To Accept Help (The Federalist)
To win in 2020, Trump needs to quell America’s disruption (New York Post)
Never Give The Mob An Inch: Nothing You Do Will Ever Be Enough, So Stop Trying To Appease Them (The Political Insider)
Trump to consider not signing coronavirus relief bill without payroll tax cut (Fox News)
COVID-19 Deaths Drop For 12th Week in a Row
On Friday, the CDC reported that COVID-19 deaths dropped for the 12th straight week. This is great news given the increase in testing and reported positive cases. The CDC said, “Based on death certificate data, the percentage of deaths attributed to pneumonia, influenza or COVID-19 (PIC) decreased from 8.1% during week 27 to 6.4% during week 28, representing the twelfth week of a declining percentage of deaths due to PIC.”
By the way, did you know you can volunteer for COVID-19 vaccine trials? More information here. Unfortunately, it looks like I’m not eligible :
“…the point of the study is to see if the vaccine protects people from getting sick with Covid-19. If people who mostly stay home get vaccinated, and they don’t get sick with Covid-19, it’s hard to know if the vaccine protected them or if their lifestyle kept them away from the virus in the first place.”
Arrivederci, Trader Giotto!
After a measly 1,400 people signed a petition that called Trader Joe’s light-hearted names like Trader Jose, Trader Ming, and Trader Giotto “racist,” the grocery chain said it will change its product branding. From ABC News:
“The company acknowledged that the product naming may have had the “opposite effect” of its intent.
“While this approach to product naming may have been rooted in a lighthearted attempt at inclusiveness, we recognize that it may now have the opposite effect — one that is contrary to the welcoming, rewarding customer experience we strive to create every day,” Kenya Friend-Daniel, a spokesperson for Trader Joe’s, said in a statement.”
What I’m Reading This Week
Speaking of not leaving the house, I noticed recently that my “take with me when I leave the house and have to wait for people” book has been neglected over the last couple months. So, this week I’m finishing The Way I Heard It by Mike Rowe. Rowe is a wonderful storyteller and this book follows the format of his podcast of the same name, as well as his bumpy path from the the graveyard shift on QVC to Dirty Jobs heartthrob.
A Case of the Mondays
The Cancel Culture Cop — “We have an indecent photo of you in front of a woman” (Trey Kennedy on YouTube)
Rafter saves coyote pup from drowning, takes it on 10-day adventure (New York Post)
Last week, the First Lady visited Engine Company 9 Fire Station in Washington D.C. During the visit she talked to the firefighters, EMS staff, and police officers about their struggles, particularly in one of D.C.’s toughest districts. She said, “I appreciated today’s opportunity to give my thanks to some of D.C.’s bravest and finest. The President and I will continue to support our dedicated firefighters, police members, EMS personnel and other critical first responders who put their lives at risk each day in order to keep our neighborhoods safe. We are grateful for their teamwork, professionalism and courage, and the vital role they play in communities throughout the country.”
Regarding the fashion, if this was the previous administration you probably would have heard the media gushing about the high-low pairing. The First Lady wore a $139 Rachel Roy shirtdress. While I couldn’t find it in stock since it’s from 2019, I did find it on Rent the Runway. A one-time rental is only $30. The shoes, Roger Vivier’s Gommetine leather ballet flats, retail for $700.Some similar dresses:
Note: By using some of the links above, Bright may be compensated through the Amazon Affiliate program and Magic Links. However, none of this content is sponsored and all opinions are our own.
Jul 20, 2020 01:00 am
If we are going to engage in the rename game to cleanse society of any reference to anything the thought police find objectionable, military bases will be joined by almost anything else that has a name. Read More…
Jul 20, 2020 01:00 am
Republicans cannot represent who we are to the American people if we forget who we are and accept attempts to distort and change our history. Read More…
Justice Thomas once again excels
Jul 20, 2020 01:00 am
Thomas understands that the American rule of constitutional law is more than some inside-Washington power play between the branches. Read more…
#RenameTheStates
Jul 20, 2020 01:00 am
If we are going to cancel everything so it doesn’t offend anyone, let’s do it right! Read more…
Erasing America
Jul 20, 2020 01:00 am
The mob is ruthless, insatiable. But it is anything but invincible. All it takes to stop it is the will to do so. Sadly, that will is nowhere to be found. At least as of yet. So, it marches on Read more…
Saturday marked the 52nd consecutive night of protests in Portland following George Floyd’s death. Demonstrations elevated to violent levels as the night progressed, and by 11 p.m., the Portland Police Department declared a riot.Rioters broke into the Portland Police Association building on Saturday night and set it on fire. Agitators als … Read more
Conditions at Syracuse University are rapidly deteriorating as an increasing number of conservative students question whether it is safe to return in the fall.
The Federalist reached out to Atlantic Editor in Chief Jeffrey Goldberg, bringing the investigation, the author’s claim, and his editor’s silence to his attention. Goldberg has yet to respond.
Legions of ‘trainers’ holding up ‘White Fragility’ are indoctrinating government agencies, corporate workforces, and schools. People subjected to it have good grounds for a lawsuit.
The war over free expression isn’t over, but the cancel consensus is starting to flop as the facade of viewpoint diversity in elite institutions begins to fade.
The Transom is a daily email newsletter written by publisher of The Federalist Ben Domenech for political and media insiders, which arrives in your inbox each morning, collecting news, notes, and thoughts from around the web.
“You must read The Transom. With brilliant political analysis and insight into the news that matters most, it is essential to understanding this incredible moment in history. I read it every day!” – Newt Gingrich
Joe Biden is running ads in Texas right now. Texas. Joe Biden. It’s happening. That’s what the Democratic Party thinks about the Republican Party in the Longhorn State, a place recently considered to be safely red. But reinforcements are coming in the form of Lt. Col. Allen West who won the race for Texas GOP Chair early Monday morning.
I just want to say how truly humbled I am by this honor, and that I will work hard for Texas and Texans.
I would like to thank my amazing and dedicated team, as well as an incredible number of supporters.
The marathon final day of the Texas Republican Convention culminated with former Chair James Dickey conceding to West around 4:00 am Central Time. West will serve two years. We endorsed West back in September of last year. It’s wonderful to see him emerge victorious. We have reached out to Team West to secure an interview with him on the NOQ Report Podcast, but in the meantime I discussed his victory on Conservative News Briefs.
The fate of the nation may rest on the results coming out of Texas in November. The Republican Party is in good hands as Lt. Col. Allen West will lead the GOP on the quest to Keep Texas Red. Congratulations, Chairman!
Join fellow patriots as we form a grassroots movement to advance the cause of conservatism. The coronavirus crisis has prompted many, even some conservatives, to promote authoritarianism. It’s understandable to some extent now, but it must not be allowed to embed itself in American life. We currently have 8000+ patriots with us in a very short time. If you are interested, please join us to receive updates.
Upon contraction, those who will die from COVID-19 will expire in two weeks on average. But one full month after the June 20th unofficial start of the “surge” and “2nd wave” of coronavirus cases, the death rates continue to remain steady. There has been a slight uptick to the tune of dozens more a day, but nowhere near the massive increase we were told to expect based on the tens of thousands of daily new cases “surging” across the nation.
The reason, as we’ve talked about many times in the past, is because the increased testing is the real culprit in the coronavirus cases spike. More testing means more cases. More cases doesn’t necessarily mean many more infections. It simply means those who normally wouldn’t have been tested before who may or may not be experiencing symptoms are now being found. If there was a real surge to the tune that mainstream media and the left have been singing for the last month, we would have seen more deaths than we saw in late April and early May at the peak of the pandemic. Instead, we’re seeing less than half of them.
But it’s more nefarious than the misleading narrative. There is clear evidence that the numbers we’re being fed are manipulated or even manufactured. Hospitals, administrators, and doctors have incentives to claim the coronavirus on as many cases as possible. The difference in Medicare payouts for basic coronavirus cases is an extra 20%. If someone is placed on a ventilator, the difference is as much as triple the standard rate.
On top of that, there are the political considerations. The more reported cases, the higher the level of fear. The more fear, the less likely it will be that President Trump is reelected. As I noted in the latest episode of the Rucker Report, I have no idea what the political breakdown is in the medical professions, but we know for sure that numbers are being jacked up for both financial and political reasons. It’s all part of the leftist agenda.
It’s been 30 days since the so-called “surge” started getting reported by mainstream media and leftists. Within two weeks, we should have seen a dramatic spike in deaths. We haven’t. Folks, you’re being lied to. We all are.
Join fellow patriots as we form a grassroots movement to advance the cause of conservatism. The coronavirus crisis has prompted many, even some conservatives, to promote authoritarianism. It’s understandable to some extent now, but it must not be allowed to embed itself in American life. We currently have 8000+ patriots with us in a very short time. If you are interested, please join us to receive updates.
It’s not unnecessary for the church in America to want to address the rising racial tensions. In fact, the church should be a reliable witness on social issues. However, it is a betrayal for the Church to push a Marxist book like White Fragility by Robin DiAngelo. And this is what I have witnessed, without a disclaimer beyond stating that the book is not a Christian book nor is the author.
In an effort to combat this local capitulation, I took it upon myself to read the book in its entirety. And I can attest to you the book is worse than what the title suggest. I can provide assurance to you that there is nothing edifying for the Christian in White Fragility. The background of Robin DiAngelo is that she is a diversity trainer. During her evangelism ministry, she realized white people do not take kindly to being accused of racism. And so she dubbed it “white fragility.”
This book starts with postmodernism and is drenched in Karl Marx. It is the most racist thing I have ever read, not only in how it views white people but also how it views black people. Robin DiAngelo believes she has this special knowledge that makes her better than you, yet at multiple times is a total fraud.
I could go on about how bad this book is. But I would much rather show you. that is why I am doing a video series on White Fragility where we will walk-through the book. In this walk-through, I will show you her underlying arguments, abundant fallacies, insane anecdotes, and other craziness found. I do not exaggerate with how fallacious Robin DiAngelo is.
The video above is the first installment in this series I am doing. I hope you will watch. If you are interested in continuing the series with me, I urge you to subscribe so you do not miss it.
Join fellow patriots as we form a grassroots movement to advance the cause of conservatism. The coronavirus crisis has prompted many, even some conservatives, to promote authoritarianism. It’s understandable to some extent now, but it must not be allowed to embed itself in American life. We currently have 8000+ patriots with us in a very short time. If you are interested, please join us to receive updates.
Anyone who wonders how Democrats continue to get elected or why Joe Biden is still being taken seriously by tens of millions of Americans need only look to where they get their news. If it’s CNN, chances are they’re completely unaware of the anarchy and destruction happening in Portland, Seattle, and other cities across the nation where lawlessness reigns and the streets are controlled by Antifa and Black Lives Matter “protesters.”
Among the other enthralling works of journalism adorning CNN’s homepage is a story titled, “Demi Moore explains carpeted bathroom,” and a breaking news report titled “Florida bicyclist injured in collision with an iguana.” There is a plethora of stories lambasting President Trump for, well, everything, and a story about Joe Biden’s roadmap for opening schools safely, a roadmap he certainly hasn’t read.
Conservatives who get their news through independent sources are exponentially more aware of the real problems facing Americans than those who sit in the CNN bubble. Even Fox News viewers are moderately more aware of the actual issues than those who get their news from most other mainstream media outlets. It’s no wonder that over half the country is clueless when it comes to the reality of Black Lives Matter and Antifa, two organizations that are promoting the anarcho-communist worldview taking over Democrat-led cities.
Despite the presence of the internet and thousands of media outlets at our fingertips, tens of millions of Americans have no idea what’s going on. We must promote the truth or fall victim to voters who hear nothing but lies. Our EIC, JD Rucker, discussed this more in-depth in the latest episode of Conservative Playbook.
Join fellow patriots as we form a grassroots movement to advance the cause of conservatism. The coronavirus crisis has prompted many, even some conservatives, to promote authoritarianism. It’s understandable to some extent now, but it must not be allowed to embed itself in American life. We currently have 8000+ patriots with us in a very short time. If you are interested, please join us to receive updates.
The son of a federal judge has been murdered and her husband, a criminal defense attorney, is in critical condition after a gunman dressed like a FedEx driver opened fire at their home. The judge is believed to have been in the basement at the time of the shooting.
Federal Judge Esther Salas was unharmed in the attack, but her 20-year-old son, Daniel Anderl, was killed in the attack at their home in North Brunswick, New Jersey. Some of her high-profile case are drawing attention as possible motives for the attack, including a financial fraud case against former Real Housewife Teresa Giudice and multiple cases involving members of the Grape Street Crips. But it’s a case she was assigned on July 15 that had links to late sex abuser Jeffrey Epstein that has many most curious about motive.
In the case, Deutsche Bank is being accused of misleading investors ‘about anti-money-laundering deficiencies,’ including failing to properly monitor high-risk customers, that included billionaire Jeffrey Epstein, according to Bloomberg.
It is unknown it Salas was even the target. According to reports, her husband, Mark Anderl, answered the door and was shot. When their son went to investigate, he was shot as well before the gunman fled the scene.
https://t.co/WqozRxQOBT
Federal judge’s son, 20, is shot dead and her criminal defense attorney husband is critically injured after a gunman dressed as a FedEx driver ambushed their home – four days after she was assigned a case linked to Jeffrey Epstein
— John F. Kennedy Jr. (@John_F_Kennnedy) July 20, 2020
For the record I agree that you don’t have to have any interest in researching criminal conspiracies to believe that one of the Epstein judges facing an attempted assassination 96 hours after she gets the case is suspicious as hell
Judge Salas was assigned 4 days ago to unravel all of the money laundering in the Epstein case. Hundred of millions worth with banks, suspects, whole black book. Yesterday a gunman shows up at her house, shoots her husband, kills her son, and escapes without going into house.
According to Daily Mail, Salas has sat a judge on the U.S. District Court for New Jersey in Newark, for nine years and was the first Hispanic woman to serve on the federal bench in the state. She served as a public defender and federal magistrate before President Barack Obama nominated her to serve as a District Court Judge in 2010. Her husband, Mark Anderl also works in legal circles and served as an assistant prosecutor in Essex County for ten years before becoming a criminal defense attorney.
New Jersey Governor Phil Murphy said in a statement, “Judge Salas and her family are in our thoughts at this time as they cope with this senseless act. This tragedy is our latest reminder that gun violence remains a crisis in our country and that our work to make every community safer isn’t done.”
The FBI, U.S. Marshals, New Jersey State Police along with the New Jersey Office of the Attorney General have been on the scene of the shooting throughout Sunday evening.
This will give plenty of fodder for conspiracy theorists on both sides of the political aisle. Was Salas the target? If so, was the Jeffrey Epstein case part of the motivation? We may never know.
Join fellow patriots as we form a grassroots movement to advance the cause of conservatism. The coronavirus crisis has prompted many, even some conservatives, to promote authoritarianism. It’s understandable to some extent now, but it must not be allowed to embed itself in American life. We currently have 8000+ patriots with us in a very short time. If you are interested, please join us to receive updates.
Over the weekend, the Trump Administration made a strong move to re-establish law and order in the face of violent, far leftist “protests.” The flash point is Portland, aka Antifa central.
Over the past 50 days, Antifa has established ground superiority over Portland. The Trump Administration, no longer willing to tolerate the constant violence and destruction, against the wishes of local authorities, sent the specially trained law enforcement BORTAC- Border Patrol Tactical Unit- to defend areas within Federal jurisdiction.
Not surprisingly, the Democratic Party chose the side of Antifa, claiming what was occurring in Portland were peaceful protests that were winding down, only now to be stoked back up by the President’s actions.
Though laughably brazen, the Democrats’ bizarre claims could not have come as a shock to Americans who had been following as events unfolded. With media allies, the Democrats were asking Americans to trust their voices and those of the media, and not believe their own “lying” eyes.
Did we really not see with our own eyes this hammer attack on a Federal officer?
#Antifa covers #Portland with #BlackLivesMatter & “Kill Cops” graffiti, destroys property, tries to set fire to federal courthouse & other Gov. buildings, even attacks Federal cop with a hammer—& allies say city being “softly Pinochet’ed” by #Trump
But that’s not the reason the Democrats’ choice to support the violent and radical far left is not shocking. It’s not a surprise because the Democrats had already formally partnered with the radical left. In March, in the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic and with little fanfare, the formal partnership between the DNC and the radical leftist organizing platform, the Action Network was announced.
“We had hoped to announce our partnership with the DNC under much different circumstances, but now, facing an unprecedented crisis that has forced us all to move our organizing from in-person to digital, our partnership to build robust, safe, and trusted technology for the movement is more important than ever.”
The Action Network, operating under the Action Squared umbrella, is a progressive platform used to launch and maintain far left radical activities. The Action Network first gained my attention from the assault of conservative journalist Jack Posobiec and the corresponding arrest of Antifa member Jason Charter. Ironically, it was Charter himself that pointed me at the Action Network by linking to an article from the Atlantic on his Twitter profile.
That article identified Charter as a member of Americans Take Action, “a self-proclaimed ‘resistance organization’” whose purposes include impeaching President Trump, restoring fair elections and creating a purpose-driven economy. Their website warns that “Life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness are under attack with Trump in the White House. We must impeach Trump and save democracy in America.”
When you click on the “donate” icon, you’re taken not to ActBlue as expected, but to the Action Network.
What exactly is this Action Network?
Their history began 9 years ago when the far left radicals shifted tactics. In the July 13th, 2011 Canadian based publication Adbusters, the call went out to mobilize the masses:
“The beauty of this new formula, and what makes this novel tactic exciting, is its pragmatic simplicity: we talk to each other in various physical gatherings and virtual people’s assemblies … we zero in on what our one demand will be, a demand that awakens the imagination and, if achieved, would propel us toward the radical democracy of the future … and then we go out and seize a square of singular symbolic significance and put our asses on the line to make it happen.
“The time has come to deploy this emerging stratagem against the greatest corrupter of our democracy: Wall Street, the financial Gomorrah of America.
“On September 17, we want to see 20,000 people flood into lower Manhattan, set up tents, kitchens, peaceful barricades and occupy Wall Street for a few months. Once there, we shall incessantly repeat one simple demand in a plurality of voices.
“This could be the beginning of a whole new social dynamic in America, a step beyond the Tea Party movement, where, instead of being caught helpless by the current power structure, we the people start getting what we want whether it be the dismantling of half the 1,000 military bases America has around the world to the reinstatement of the Glass-Steagall Act or a three strikes and you’re out law for corporate criminals. Beginning from one simple demand – a presidential commission to separate money from politics – we start setting the agenda for a new America.”
It’s widely believed that Occupy Wall Street died out after a couple of months. It did not. Occupy Wall Street transformed.
It was from the Occupy Wall Street seedling that a former John Kerry digital advisor Brian Young launched the platform responsible for much of today’s organized protests. From the Sunrise kids to John Wayne, from Antifa to the DNC, the Action Network is the behind the scenes driving force.
By their own tax returns, the Action Network describes itself as “…a digital hub.” Their tax documents continue, “Our innovative open platform is the home for flexible, nimble campaigns where networks of groups and individuals can take individual action that leads to concentrated results.”
The nonprofit Action Network platform was set up specifically to support progressive and only movements. Back in 2017, Young explained his reasoning:
“They (Occupy Wall Street) had a lot of events, they got a lot of attention for around two months, but then it just kind of faded,” Young says. “A platform like ours could have really kept it alive.”
Although the platform found its footing in 2017, publicly available tax data shows it was actually built in 2011, the year of Occupy Wall Street. Progressive funding via Contribution and Grant dollars began flowing in 2012 with a $100,000 donation by the NEA. In 2014, the United Food and Commercial Workers added $70,000 to the cause. And in 2016 and 2017, the real money started coming in. The AFL-CIO contributed a total of $585,000.
The Action Network total reported revenue, including grants and user fees, jumped dramatically from 2015 to 2018. The Action Network reported total revenue of $944,000 in 2015, $1,245,000 in 2016, $2,277,000 in 2017 and $2,668,000 in 2018. That’s an almost 200% total revenue increase. But the revenue transitioned from mostly grants to fees. During that same time period, Program Service Fees grew from $0 in 2015 and 2016 to over $1.8 million in 2018.
Who uses the Action Network? The better question would be, “Who doesn’t use the Action Network?”
One user is the International Anti-Fascist Defence (sic) Fund based out of Canada. Here’s the link to their contribution page.
Learn why spreading the truth about this is so important for November…
As per their Action Network profile, “The International Anti-Fascist Defence Fund provides direct, immediate support to anti-fascists and anti-racists anywhere in the world, whenever they find themselves in a difficult situation as a result of their stand against hate. Whether it’s replacing damaged/stolen property, paying medical bills, helping them find a safe place to stay, funding legal defence, helping their families, or doing antifa prisoner support, this Fund seeks to alleviate the harm that results from doing the right thing sometimes.”
One key member of the Antifa Defence Fund is Montreal ARA cofounder Walter Tull. Tull is actually quoted in the Antifa Handbook: “…the job of the anti-fascist is to make [fascists] too afraid to act publicly and to act as volunteer targets for their hate and attacks which might keep them from thinking about burning down the mosque in their neighborhood.”
(To be clear, there are no mosques being burned down in Portland by fascists. The only buildings on fire are being caused by Antifa.)
Remember those Trump town hall events that got violent? According to the Washington Free Beacon:
The Action Network has partnered with major progressive groups, including the AFL-CIO and National Education Association. The group touts its partnership with Indivisible, a group that provides a “practical guide for resisting the Trump agenda.” The group manages lists of volunteers and supporters for the Town Hall Project, a protest group founded by a former Hillary Clinton campaign staffer that encourages people to show up at town halls and protest for progressive policies.
Among the organizations on the extreme and radical left to which Action Network has opened its platform are the Communist Party USA and the associated Young Communist League USA. People’s Forum used Action Network to promote the book launch for Marxist Literary Criticism Today.”
Those are just a few examples.
Ever wonder where this cancel John Wayne strategy started? Action Network.
“We do not have to allow Tucker a platform on which to earn millions for airing his disgusting views. We can hit him in the place he values above all other things: his wallet. Tell Tucker’s female advertisers to lead the charge in making the right decision to pull their ads from Tucker Carlson Tonight and #DropTucker
This comes as Fox News prepares for its first presentation to advertisers Wednesday as part of networks’ “upfronts,” which promote programming.”
You can find most any recent Progressive activity via this search page. Try it. You can search on a word, like “Trump,” or search on your own zip code to see what’s been launched in your area.
There is almost no end to the Action Network’s reach. This is how people know when and where to show up. This is how the petitions are formed. This is the hub.
Here’s Antifa in Portland getting arrested by BORTAC. If you’ve seen it before, did you notice what was being said? What’s the woman say? “NLG will get you out.” What’s NLG? The National Lawyers Guild. (Antifa has not one but at least 2 legal structures working on their behalf.) As per the NLG website: “The NLG is dedicated to the need for basic change in the structure of our political and economic system.”
Go search on NLG or Lawyers Guild on the Action Network. Yep. They’re also part of the Action Network family.
And a family it is. The best description I’ve seen about the Action Network is from Fast Company, who referred to the Action Network as:
“…as a digital family tree for progressive movements. On the platform, organizers can set up a site for a national event. (Large organizations like the People’s Climate March, which likely sends out millions of emails a month, donate a few thousand dollars per month to the Action Network for use of the platform, and individuals and smaller organizations can use it for free.) Once the organization sets up a site, local offshoots can register related events, and people interested in participating in the movement can sign up with their email addresses to receive information about events, planning meetings, and follow-up actions. If this structure sounds familiar after the events around Donald Trump’s inauguration, it should: The Women’s March made use of the Action Network, and as such was able to translate a global event of unprecedented magnitude into a sustained, action-driven movement.”
The Action Network is more than a partner to the DNC. They, as well as Antifa, Antifa Defence, NLG, and others are now part of the same “digital family tree.” It’s no wonder the Democrats stood up for Antifa in Portland. It wasn’t just their typical political position of Orange Man Bad. The DNC and Antifa are officially cousins.
Join fellow patriots as we form a grassroots movement to advance the cause of conservatism. The coronavirus crisis has prompted many, even some conservatives, to promote authoritarianism. It’s understandable to some extent now, but it must not be allowed to embed itself in American life. We currently have 8000+ patriots with us in a very short time. If you are interested, please join us to receive updates.
We have to get the message out that Joe Biden, whoever his Vice President is, and Democrats in general are promoting the lawlessness rampant across the nation. Sadly, that’s the easier part. The harder part is getting news of the riots out in the first place. Mainstream media is willfully ignoring it because they know the narrative is ugly. They know if people start seeing what Antifa and Black Lives Matter are out there doing to businesses, law enforcement, and their own neighbors, that support for them would fade.
If support for BLM and Antifa fades, support for Democrats will fade along with it because they’re the party that is actively supporting these violent movements. We can get the word out through social media, as many have done today.
A man is setting fire to a Starbucks attached to an apartment building.
— (((Jason Rantz))) on KTTH Radio (@jasonrantz) July 20, 2020
BREAKING: Antifa Militants and Black Lives Matter rioters broke out windows to @SeattlePD East Precinct and ignited a small fire. Weeks ago, protesters overtook the East Precinct and created the Capitol Hill Autonomous Zone. #seattleriotshttps://t.co/6L7yk86x6Q
In the latest episode of Conservative Playbook, JD breaks down the suppression of information regarding these riots. The left and the media (but we repeat ourselves) want their narrative to stay intact. They want it all called “mass demonstrations” and “peaceful protests” despite the clear fact that these violent riots and looting activities are neither peaceful nor part of some sort of demonstration. They’re anarchy for the sake of anarchy.
Patriots must not sit back and expect the truth to get out through mainstream media. It has a better chance of getting out through smoke signals. It’s our responsibility to keep ourselves and other voters informed about reality.
Join fellow patriots as we form a grassroots movement to advance the cause of conservatism. The coronavirus crisis has prompted many, even some conservatives, to promote authoritarianism. It’s understandable to some extent now, but it must not be allowed to embed itself in American life. We currently have 8000+ patriots with us in a very short time. If you are interested, please join us to receive updates.
There isn’t much we can say about Paul Krugman that hasn’t already been said. The man who spent most of his career defending economic theories that failed and poking holes in economic theories that worked has attempted to revive his relevance by embracing social justice projects like Black Lives Matter and Defund Police. And to do this, he’s willing to become a full-blown conspiracy theorist in his efforts to virtue signal to a younger generation who has no idea who he is.
The latest round of “Conspiracy Krugman” came in the form of an attack on the integrity of Portland Police Association’s report that rioters set their building on fire. As our EIC noted on Twitter:
Conspiracy Krugman is so woke.
Lest we forget, this is the guy who claimed he was hacked by Q when he “discovered” incriminating “stuff” on his computer. https://t.co/f9VefNDz9P
Krugman went on to highlight the Shake Shack incident in which NYPD investigated reports that their officers were poisoned. But conflating an investigation that turned out well for all involved to a report by the police department of a fire started by rioters in their building is disingenuous. The first requires medical tests and is not demonstrable without them. The second can be plainly seen which is why the Portland Police Association reported it as fact.
One of the most common propaganda tools used by the left is to cast doubt on truth in an effort to promote their narrative. Krugman isn’t just attacking the integrity of the Portland Police Association. He’s attempting to perpetuate the left’s narrative that law enforcement is generally bad and willing to lie in order to defend themselves. It’s projection; the radical left has the market cornered on such devious activities. That’s not to say cops don’t lie, but this is clearly not such a case. Here is how their Tweets escalated:
People gathering around North Precinct are interfering with the operations of a police facility. Vacate the precinct’s parking lot and move back to NE MLK Blvd. Failure to follow this direction may subject you to arrest, citation, or use of force including crowd control munitions
Paul Krugman doesn’t really believe the Portland Police Association is lying. He’s gaslighting for the sake of casting doubt on law enforcement in general while virtue signaling to a progressive movement that’s leaving him behind. This is Cultural Marxism at its most devious.
Join fellow patriots as we form a grassroots movement to advance the cause of conservatism. The coronavirus crisis has prompted many, even some conservatives, to promote authoritarianism. It’s understandable to some extent now, but it must not be allowed to embed itself in American life. We currently have 8000+ patriots with us in a very short time. If you are interested, please join us to receive updates.
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19 states set single-day records as leaders see ‘out of control’ coronavirus surges: As coronavirus cases continue to surge across the U.S., 19 states, including Florida, Tennessee and Oklahoma, set single-day records last week for the most cases yet, according to the COVID Tracking Project. To combat the spread, Arkansas Gov. Asa Hutchinson and Colorado Gov. Jared Polis each announced statewide mask mandates. So far, 28 states including Washington, D.C., have made masks mandatory. But despite there being 64,000 new cases and 523 deaths nationwide on Sunday alone, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis said his state, one of the nation’s worst-hit, is “not going back” on its reopening plans. When it comes to handling the coronavirus pandemic, the latest ABC News/Washington Post poll shows a public preference for former Vice President Joe Biden over President Donald Trump. Read more about it here and get the latest mobile updates about the coronavirus here.
Rep. John Lewis remembered for ‘good trouble’ in the fight for civil rights: Following the death of Rep. John Lewis on Friday, political leaders and celebrities from former First Lady Michelle Obama to director Ava Duvernay took to social media to honor him. “A giant among us,” Duvernay wrote on Twitter. “My goodness, we will miss him so.” Lewis, 80, represented Georgia’s 5th Congressional District since 1987 and was known as the “conscience of the U.S. Congress.” For more than 60 years, Lewis devoted his life to social activism and legislative action on issues including civil rights, voting rights and health care reform — work he liked to call “good trouble,” which is highlighted in a recent documentary released under the same moniker. He is perhaps best known for taking part in the Freedom Rides in the ‘60s and for being the youngest person to speak at the 1963 March on Washington. Then, in 1965, in what would become known as “Bloody Sunday,” Lewis, who was leading protesters in a march for voting rights, suffered a fractured skull when Alabama state troopers beat and tear-gassed demonstrators after ordering them to disperse. “The civil rights movement has lost an icon,” the Congressional Black Caucus said in a statement. Now, fellow Congress members are calling for the Senate to pass the Voting Rights Act, which was struck down in 2013 by the Supreme Court and would restore key protections against racial discrimination. “What we have to do is live up to his legacy,” Rep. Karen Bass, D-Calif., said on ABC’s “This Week.” “We need to continue that fight for social justice.”
Princess Beatrice wears Queen Elizabeth’s vintage dress for her wedding:Princess Beatrice wore something old and borrowed on her wedding day: a vintage dress by Norman Hartnell on loan from her grandmother, Queen Elizabeth II, along with the same diamond fringe tiara that Queen Mary wore on her wedding day in 1947, according to Buckingham Palace. Beatrice, the eldest daughter of Prince Andrew and Sarah Ferguson, had plans for a large royal wedding, but the event was canceled due to the coronavirus pandemic. Instead, she and her new husband, Edoardo Mapelli Mozzi, opted to have a small ceremony at the Royal Chapel of All Saints at Royal Lodge, Windsor, which was attended by the bride’s grandparents, Queen Elizabeth and Prince Philip, and “close family,” including the couple’s parents and siblings. A private reception hosted by Queen Elizabeth followed the ceremony at Buckingham Palace’s gardens.
5 siblings adopted together after being separated in foster care: Andi and Thomas Bonura’s family doubled in size on May 6 when they adopted siblings Thomas and Carter, both 8, David, 6, Gabrielle, 4, and Bryson, 2, over a Zoom call. The couple from Texas, who initially struggled with conceiving and then endured challenging pregnancies, got licensed to become foster parents in 2017. Soon after, Bryson, then a newborn, came into their care. David and Gabrielle followed, and then twin brothers Thomas and Carter. “They were sweet and would say, ‘Can we come live with you?’” Andi Bonura said of her twin sons. When Thomas and Carter’s parents terminated their rights, the Bonuras took them in. After the adoption, which was facilitated by DePelchin Children’s Center, neighbors organized a car parade with the Bonuras’ family and friends. “God’s hand was in it,” said Andi Bonura. “Our family is complete.”
GMA Must-Watch
This morning on “GMA,” an all-new exclusive and emotional interview with the one and only Alex Trebek! And Patricia Heaton joins us to talk about her new book and how she’s been spending her time in quarantine. Plus, an alarming headline about sunscreens: What’s really the best way to stay protected this summer? We’ve got what you need to know about potentially harmful chemicals. All this and more only on “GMA.”
Federally-funded coronavirus life lines are set to run out soon — even though the crisis is far from over. The son of a federal judge was shot and killed in New Jersey. And why are elephants dropping dead in Botswana?
Here’s what we’re watching this Monday morning.
‘We can’t afford to wait’: Many coronavirus relief measures are set to expire soon. But the crisis is still raging.
Perhaps most crucial are the expanded unemployment benefits, which are expected to terminate at the end of the month.
Democrats have one proposal and Republicans promise another, but with no sign of negotiations, chances are slim that Congress will pass a bill before the $600-a-week unemployment payments expire.
Also on the chopping block are a patchwork of eviction moratoriums across the country, suspension of some federal student loan payments and several other measures meant to alleviate some of the economic pain caused by the ongoing pandemic.
Many of these measures were put in place earlier this year in the CARES Act with the idea that the U.S. would emerge from the worst of the health crisis within a couple of months. But with much of the U.S. experiencing a worsening of the pandemic in recent weeks, experts say the need for help has not yet passed.
Two former chairs of the Federal Reserve urged lawmakers to renew the emergency benefits.
‘I will be right eventually’: Trump defends erroneous coronavirus predictions in wide-ranging interview
President Donald Trump defended his past misstatements about the coronavirus Sunday,saying he “will be right eventually”in a contentious and freewheeling interview with Fox News’ Chris Wallace.
Coronavirus cases have spiked throughout the country in recent weeks,presenting record numbersof new cases as well as jumps in hospitalizations. Trump downplayed the increases as “embers,” although he acknowledged that Florida has become “more flame-like” and that there has been “somewhat of a surge in certain areas.”
Trump’s exchanges with Wallace on the coronavirus were only the tip of the iceberg in the lengthy interview. They also had heated discussion about the Confederate flag, the renaming of military bases named for Confederate leaders, whether or not the president would accept the election results and his own mental acuity.
Husband and son of a federal judge shot at home in New Jersey
The son of U.S. District Judge Esther Salas was killed Sunday and her husband was in critical condition after they were shot at their home in New Jersey, senior law enforcement officials told NBC New York.
The judge was home at the time of the shooting at her home in North Brunswick Township early Sunday evening and was not injured, according to the Associated Press.
The FBI office in Newark said it was searching for “one suspect” in connection to the shooting.
Federal Judge Esther Salas is a judge in U.S. District Court in Newark, New Jersey. (Photo: Rutgers Law School)
It’s not poachers killing elephants in Botswana. That has conservationists worried.
Botswana’s elephants are dropping dead.
Hundreds of elephant carcasses have been found scattered across a remote, narrow region of the north — and poaching is not to blame.
The mystery surrounding the causehas dragged on for months, and experts say the slow response to the deaths has shed light on deeper issues in the country’s relationship with the prized creatures.
“It’s worrying,” said Keith Lindsay, a conservation biologist based in Oxford, England, who specializes in elephants. “If it is a disease, then it could be catastrophic.”
The carcass of one of the many elephants which have died mysteriously in the Okavango Delta in Botswana. (Photo: National Park Rescue / AFP – Getty Images)
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“‘Wake up America! Wake up!’ For we cannot stop, and we will not and cannot be patient.”
— Rep. John Lewis at the 1963 March on Washington. The sharecroppers’ son who became a giant of the civil rights movement and served as a U.S. Congressman for over 30 years,died Friday. He was 80.
One fun thing
Tired of lockdown?
Barbados wants to tempt you to live and work remotely from one of its beautiful beaches.
The initiative is intended to give a much-needed boost to the island’s tourist-dependent economy, while capitalizing on the shift in work patterns driven by the coronavirus pandemic.
“There’s nothing like waking up and seeing the sunshine,” Barbados prime minister said to NBC News.
I hope you got some slice of the Barbados with a safe summer weekend wherever you are.
If you have any comments — likes, dislikes — drop me an email at: petra@nbcuni.com
If you’re a fan, please forward it to your family and friends. They can sign-up here.
Thanks, Petra Cahill
NBC FIRST READ
From NBC’s Chuck Todd, Mark Murray, Carrie Dann and Melissa Holzberg
FIRST READ: Despite polling lead, Biden still has work to do with Black and younger voters
If you’re Joe Biden and the Democrats, it seems like the polling couldn’t get any better right now – over the weekend, a national Washington Post/ABC poll found Biden up 15 points among registered voters, while a Fox News survey showed him ahead by 8 points.
But if the race is going to tighten, as Democratic data scientist David Schor warned in a recent interview, Biden still has some work to do with Black and younger voters.
Especially when it comes to motivating them to vote in November.
JIM WATSON/AFP via Getty Images
According to the NBC News/Wall Street Journal poll we released last week – which had Biden ahead of Trump by 11 points – 74 percent of African-Americans said they had a high level of interest in the upcoming election.
That’s higher than what it was in Oct. 2016 (65 percent), but lower than on the eve of the 2008, 2012 and even 2004 elections.
What’s more, Biden’s favorable/unfavorable rating among Black voters stands at 48 percent positive, 19 percent negative (+29) – good, but hardly great with this steadfast Democratic voting bloc. Still, Black voters favor Biden over Trump by an 80 percent-to-6 percent margin in the poll.
And that brings us to voters 18 to 34: 56 percent of them have high interest in the election, which is about equal to where it was it was in Oct. 2016 (54 percent).
Biden’s fav/unfav rating with these youngest voters also is abysmal – 26 percent positive, 44 percent negative (-18). Still, Biden is leading Trump among these voters, 62 percent to 23 percent.
Bottom line: Biden still has room to grow with these voters when it comes to election interest and likeability.
And maybe that’s how he ultimately uses his looming VP pick, which is coming within the next month.
A failure to lead
Earlier this month, we attributed President Trump’s polling deficit to a failure to lead on the biggest issues that have rocked this country, particularly the coronavirus.
“Over a critical period beginning in mid-April, President Trump and his team convinced themselves that the outbreak was fading, that they had given state governments all the resources they needed to contain its remaining ‘embers’ and that it was time to ease up on the lockdown.”
“In doing so, he was ignoring warnings that the numbers would continue to drop only if social distancing was kept in place, rushing instead to restart the economy and tend to his battered re-election hopes.”
By the way, here’s how the president talked about the coronavirus in a Fox News interview released over the weekend:
On coronavirus fatalities…
TRUMP: But when you talk about mortality rates, I think it’s the opposite. I think we have one of the lowest mortality rates in the world.
WALLACE: That’s not true, sir. We, we, we have a — we had 900 deaths on a single day…
On spiking coronavirus cases…
TRUMP: Many of those cases are young people that would heal in a day. They have the sniffles and we put it down as a test. Many of them — don’t forget, I guess it’s like 99.7 percent, people are going to get better and in many cases they’re going to get better very quickly.
DATA DOWNLOAD: The numbers that you need to know today
141,450: The number of deaths in the United States from the virus so far. (That’s 2,117 more than Friday morning.)
45.73 million: The number of coronavirus TESTS that have been administered in the United States so far, according to researchers at The COVID Tracking Project.
Near 600,000: The global death toll from the coronavirus after a weekend that saw a record number of new cases worldwide.
15 percentage points: Joe Biden’s lead over Donald Trump in an ABC/Washington Post poll over the weekend.
8 percentage points: Biden’s lead in a FOX News poll also out over the weekend.
TWEET OF THE DAY: RIP to the man who promoted ‘good trouble’
2020 VISION: The ‘Trojan Horse’ strategy
NBC’s Sahil Kapur looks at the Trump campaign’s latest attempt to go after Joe Biden – this time by painting him as a vessel for Bernie Sanders and socialists to exploit.
“Joe Biden would be nothing more than an auto pen, a Trojan horse for a radical agenda so radical, so all-encompassing that it would transform this country into something utterly unrecognizable,” Vice President Mike Pence said on Friday.
“The Trump campaign’s efforts to paint Joe Biden as something he is not is nothing new,” the Biden camp said in a statement. “The only new development here is the increasingly deranged level of desperation they are showing in trying to sell another ridiculous theory.”
AD WATCH from Ben Kamisar
Today’s Ad Watch is about how, for the Democrats, it always comes back to health care.
A new spot in North Carolina by Majority Forward, a non-profit aligned with the Senate Majority PAC that’s backing Democrat Cal Cunningham over Republican Sen. Thom Tillis, is a good example of how Democrats are pointing to the current coronavirus crisis to prosecute the issue in North Carolina.
The new ad invokes the coronavirus pandemic before pivoting to hit Tillis for his vote not to expand Medicaid in 2013, when he was the state speaker of the House, with the Democrat-aligned group arguing the state would have been in a better place to weather the storm if not for that vote.
As Cunningham and his allies have made similar attacks so far this cycle, Tillis has defended his vote. But the ad is a good reminder of how, during a crisis where health care is top of mind for many Americans, the Democrats have been hammering the issue home to voters for years and aren’t stopping now.
Trump vs. Senate Republicans?
After reports over the weekend that the White House would be trying to block money for coronavirus testing and contact tracing, Senate Republicans are pushing back against the administration, NBC’s Hill team reports. “It’s a disagreement that underscores the worsening fracture between a president who wants to downplay the seriousness of the crisis and a Republican Party that sees its grip on power slipping away in the face of a failure to contain the virus, with testing and tracing key to any successful push to get the spread under control,” our team reports.
Republicans haven’t outlined how much money they want for testing and contact tracing –Democrats included $75 billion for it in the HEROES Act. But two sources confirmed to NBC News that it’s a clear priority for fighting the virus.
The disagreement comes after President Trump has continued to blame increased testing in the surge of coronavirus cases across the country – during an interview on Fox News Sunday, Trump said the testing “really skews the numbers.”
Don’t miss the pod from this weekend, when we looked at how Democrats have the slight intensity advantage about voting in 2020, per the most recent NBC/WSJ poll.
ICYMI: What ELSE is happening in the world?
Read the Atlanta Journal-Constitution’s full coverage on the death of Rep. John Lewis here.
Georgia Democrats will decide today who will replace John Lewis on the November ballot.
The son of a U.S. district judge is dead and her husband is in critical condition after an assailant shot them at their home. Judge Esther Salas was recently was appointed to preside over a lawsuit brought by Deutsche Bank investors.
Democrats say the White House is blocking CDC testimony on issues of safety in school reopenings.
Trump still wants a payroll tax cut in a coronavirus relief package, even though Democrats say it’s a nonstarter and some Republicans have warned against it as well.
Republican senators are coming under even more political strain as the president continues to see sinking approval amid the pandemic.
Tributes are pouring in for Congressman John Lewis, who died at the age of 80 on Friday. Also, the coronavirus continues to ravage the states where it’s run rampant for weeks. All that and all that matters in today’s Eye Opener. Your world in 90 seconds.
Watch Video +
Tributes pour in for Congressman John Lewis
Watch Video +
The Clintons remember the “joy” of knowing John Lewis
Read Story +
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi on John Lewis’ legacy
Watch Video +
Dems push to fully restore Voting Rights Act to honor John Lewis
Read Story +
Ambassador Andrew Young remembers Congressman Lewis
Join us later today for a discussion between Senator Tom Cotton and Manhattan Institute president Reihan Salam on the future of policing in America and the challenges of public debate in an age of polarization.
“The mass exodus of wealthier people from dense cities such as New York and San Francisco will be a catastrophe for the cities if it keeps up. It will also be a disaster for the suburbs to which these affluent refugees are moving.”
By Nicole Gelinas New York Post
July 20, 2020
The economic fallout from the pandemic has only just begun, but there is a sharp divide in Congress over what should be done. A better plan lies somewhere in the less-news-cycle-worthy middle ground.
By Beth Akers Economics21
July 17, 2020
Joseph Cesario claims that I mischaracterize the reason why he retracted his 2019 study on fatal police shootings.
By Heather Mac Donald The Wall Street Journal
July 18, 2020
“Every day in the city is marked by shootings, many deadly. Murders are up 23 percent this year, and the pace of shootings appears to be accelerating: Almost 400 people have been shot since Memorial Day.”
By Seth Barron New York Post
July 18, 2020
Join the Manhattan Institute on Thursday for a discussion on how states and localities are coping with fiscal distress with Yale Law’s David Schleicher, David Skeel of the University of Pennsylvania, and the Manhattan Institute’s Chris Pope and moderator Allison Schrager.
Steven Malanga and Chris Pope join Brian Anderson to discuss how long-term-care facilities have borne the brunt of the Covid-19 pandemic, innovative approaches to nursing-home staffing and training, and what we can learn from the experience to be better prepared next time. Audio for this episode is excerpted and edited from a recent event.
With America and its cities still reeling from the Covid-19 pandemic and the recent civil unrest, Manhattan Institute scholars are charting a path forward at the federal, state, and local levels. Read more in the Summer 2020 update from president Reihan Salam.
Manhattan Institute is a think tank whose mission is to develop and disseminate new ideas that foster greater economic choice and individual responsibility.
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REALCLEARPOLITICS MORNING NOTE
07/20/2020
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Carl Cannon’s Morning Note
COVID and Public Trust; Subsource Follies; Crime Crackdown
By Carl M. Cannon on Jul 20, 2020 09:06 am
Good morning. It’s Monday, July 20, 2020. This summer, criminal justice issues have risen to the forefront of America’s national political conversation. It’s not the first time, and it seems to happen often in a presidential election year. Although they must know that slogans such as “law and order” or “defund the police” are unhelpful in addressing the complex challenge of balancing freedom with personal safety, politicians apparently can’t help themselves.
Four years ago, at the Republican convention in Cleveland, New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, a former federal prosecutor, led the hall in a harrowing call-and-response as delegates chanted “Lock her up!” while Christie made the case against Hillary Clinton’s near-miss with an FBI investigation into her email practices.
Ben Carson was another member of the vanquished-by-Donald Trump club who addressed the convention. Dr. Carson told the delegates that Mrs. Clinton had followed the lead of leftists inspired by Lucifer. It was not the only reference to Satan that year. Sen. Lindsey Graham, another Republican whose presidential hopes were dashed in the primary season, mentioned “Lucifer” a few times on the campaign trail, although on each occasion the basis of comparison was Trump, not Clinton. The Grand Old Party was as divided in 2016 as it had been any time since 1964 — another convention in which the GOP altered its course.
The nominating convention that year was held in California, at the old Cow Palace in Daly City, outside San Francisco. There, the nominee told Republican delegates, and the nation, that “extremism in the defense of liberty is no vice” and that “moderation in the pursuit of justice is no virtue.” This kind of rhetoric sounds contemporary, doesn’t it? In any event, that very week, a 15-year-old black youth in New York — armed with a knife — put that theory to the test. The result was rioting and violence, and a crucible not unlike the one we are going through in this country now.
I’ll have more on this idea in a moment. First, I’d point you to RealClearPolitics’ front page, which presents our poll averages, videos, breaking news stories, and aggregated opinion pieces spanning the political spectrum. We also offer original material from our own reporters and contributors, including the following:
* * *
How a Public Health Crisis Becomes a Public Trust Crisis. Matthew Baum, John Della Volpe and six other polling specialists offer their findings on the coronavirus pandemic’s impact on our institutions.
The “Primary Subsource’s” Laughable Guide to Russiagate. In RealClearInvestigations, Eric Felten reports on newly released FBI notes about interviews with the person responsible for the Steele dossier’s assertions.
The Real Scandal of Stone’s Commutation Isn’t What You Think. I consider the issue of unjustly harsh prison sentences and the countless convicts deserving of presidential mercy.
“How We Got Here”: The Transformation of America. Frank Miele examines the roots of the radical ideology now being endorsed by Democrats.
Biden’s Trump Imitation: The Highest Form of Flattery. Andy Puzder spotlights the candidate’s “Made in America” slogan, which echoes Trump’s “America First” policies (though the similarities end there).
Conor Lamb Outraised by PA Challenger. Salena Zito has the story on the closely watched House race.
School Choice Grants Would Help Struggling Families. David McIntosh applauds the president’s efforts to designate 10% of COVID-19 educational relief funding for grants to private schools or charter schools.
Reopening Schools and the Limits of Expertise. Charles Lipson argues that voters and elected officials are the rightful final arbiters of how best to navigate the pandemic.
It’s Time for an Oval Office Speech on COVID-19. Peter Wallison prescribes the plain but urgent message Americans need to hear from the president.
Labor Rule Could Cost China Billions in U.S. Investment. The Trump administration may bar private U.S. retirement plans from buying stock in Chinese companies, Susan Crabtree reports.
Re-grounding U.S. Diplomacy in America’s Founding Principles. Only by reinforcing our original commitment to human rights and political institutions can the U.S. promote those values worldwide, Peter Berkowitz writes.
* * *
Although he was not a racist, conservative 1964 Republican presidential nominee Barry Goldwater was so committed to the idea of limited government that called himself a “states’ rights man,” not quite knowing, or caring, how that sounded to African Americans.
Sen. Goldwater was so fixed on his ideas of federalism that he opposed federal civil rights legislation and aligned himself and his party with Southern defenders of Jim Crow. For that reason, reporters covering the 1964 convention asked Goldwater about two passing references to crime in his July 16 acceptance address. Republicans supported “law and order,” he said at one point, while proclaiming later in his speech that he was determined “to keep the streets safe from bullies and marauders.”
Was the Arizona senator saying that curbing street crime is a federal responsibility?
“I think the responsibility for this has to start someplace,” he said at a press conference the day after his speech, “and it should start at the federal level.”
If that sounds close to what Sen. Tom Cotton wrote in the New York Times, causing such an uproar — and close to what President Trump regularly tweets — well, it sounds that way to me, too.
In Goldwater’s case there was an obvious inconsistency, but also a context Americans understood at the time. The day he delivered his acceptance address, a group of black youths sitting on a stoop on East 76th Street in New York City got into an altercation with a white apartment house superintendent who was hosing down the sidewalk. Words were exchanged. The man, either feeling entitled or by accident — the accounts differed — turned the hose on the kids.
They began throwing bottles at him, but one youth, 15-year-old James Powell, ran at the man, brandishing a knife. An off-duty New York City police officer happened by. No smartphone recorded what happened next. The cop said the teen refused orders to drop the knife and lunged at him. Whether that is what happened or not, the officer fired his revolver at the boy, killing him.
To whites, including Barry Goldwater, it seemed an example of bullies being stopped from marauding the streets of this country. To blacks, the symbolism of a white man hosing down blacks evoked Bull Connor’s firehoses and police dogs. And African Americans didn’t necessarily accept the police version about the knife.
Like many of the police killings that have recently torn this country apart (though not George Floyd’s killing in Minneapolis), the case of James Powell was complicated. The youth had a history of petty offenses, including violence in school. He was clearly an instigator in the melee with the apartment building super. Yet, he’d also traveled to Washington, D.C., the year before for the great freedom march on the National Mall. He was on East 76th Street that day because he was enrolled in a special educational program for at-risk youths.
He was, noted Theodore White in “The Making of the President 1964,” on a search.
Powell “was, by all reports, reaching for something,” White wrote. “And he was shot while he was reaching for an education to make himself better — and a knife to slash with.”
The resulting riots in New York set the tone for the times, as well as the polarizing political rhetoric that lay ahead. The incident also serves as a contemporary reminder to white America that the upheaval we are enduring today isn’t only about George Floyd or Michael Brown or Philando Castile or Walter Scott or Breonna Taylor. It’s about all of them, and a thousand others, including 15-year-old James Powell. It concerns, as an early American patriot famously wrote, “a long train of abuses and usurpations.”
Why did the coronavirus crisis become a pandemic that ruined Americans’ livelihoods and lives? Why have public officials been so divided about what to do. Who is responsible for the pandemic and why? What must be done to prevent future natural and man-made biothreats?
Tomorrow, the Center will host a webinar featuring Gordon Chang and Claudia Rosett on how the Chinese and WHO mislead the world on the coronavirus. Moderating the webinar will be Center President and CEO, Fred Fleitz.
The violence plaguing many of America’s major cities may be seen by some as a reaction to the death of George Floyd in Minneapolis, but a closer examination indicates that there is much more involved. The violence has largely been perpetrated by Antifa and the Black Lives Matter (BLM) movement. Antifa is Maoist in its philosophy and BLM was founded by self-described Marxists. What we are seeing is in fact a communist insurrection aimed squarely at the United States Constitution.
Last Thursday, Attorney General William Barr warned American business leaders to stop appeasing and enabling the Chinese Communist Party’s malevolent ambitions and illegal behavior.
Yesterday, in response to pointed questions from Fox News’ Maria Bartiromo, one of the most egregious of those capitalists, Bridgewater founder Ray Dalio, tried to portray Communist China as merely a “worthy opponent” and downplayed its “stealing” of proprietary information
In the end, however, Dalio acknowledged that we face a four-front “war” with the CCP – involving technology, trade, geopolitics and possibly capital. He actually implied that he was concerned with our winning that war and that he was on America’s side in doing so.
If true, that would, of course, represent a very welcome sea-change on the part of one of Wall Street’s so-called “masters of the universe.” If it’s not, Ray Dalio will be held accountable.
This is Frank Gaffney.
LAWRENCE PECK, Advisor at the North Korean Freedom Coalition:
What is North Korea doing to subvert the US?
Various pro-North Korean groups operating in the United States
American companies supporting the Black Lives Matter movement
Will the Republican National Convention take place this year?
JOHN SOLOMON, Co-author of new book, Fallout: Nuclear Bribes, Russian Spies, and the Washington Lies that Enriched the Clinton and Biden Dynasties, Chief Executive Officer and Editor in Chief of Just the News:
A history of foreign influence on the Clintons and Bidens
Were the Clintons trying to prevent a Republican presidency?
Below is a sneak peek of this content! When Donald Trump was elected president, you couldn’t open up a newspaper without reading an op-ed by some progressive intellectual about how America was looking a lot like Germany in the 1930s. They warned us about a darkness that was falling on… CONTINUE Read More »
Bernard Goldberg, the television news reporter and author of Bias, a New York Times number one bestseller about how the media distort the news, is widely seen as one of the most original writers and thinkers in broadcast journalism. He has covered stories all over the world for CBS News and has won 13 Emmy awards for excellence in journalism. He won six Emmys at CBS, and seven at HBO, where he now reports for the widely acclaimed broadcast Real Sports. [Read More…]
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Individualism and Public Health: Tensions and Challenges
By Stephen Davies | “The aim should be to strictly fence off and limit the scope of coercive public health as both an ideal and a practice. We should think of it as something like a nuclear reactor core – useful, even essential but something that…
By Ethan Yang | “In the pursuit of a more perfect union and better decision-making, we should begin to contemplate the epistemic limits of government. To inquire into the limits of knowledge acquisition and understanding. To what extent can those…
By Stephen Davies | “Capitalism in this account is not truly modern, inasmuch as something we can describe with that word has existed repeatedly in history. It has usually come to a bad end, because of the way private wealth and fear of losing it…
By Fiona Harrigan | “Proponents of alternative education would be wise to reflect on their praise of America’s forced experiment in ‘homeschooling.’ Because while this experience may compel some parents to keep their kids at home, there will be…
By Roger W. Koops | “If there is no extraordinary evidence, why are there such extraordinary claims and responses? Why has the world medical, social, and economic order been torn apart for a pandemic that looks much like a normal influenza…
By Jeffrey A. Tucker | “We’ve learned throughout this ordeal that despite our technology, our knowledge, our history of building prosperity and peace, we are no smarter than our ancestors and, by some measures, not as smart as our parents and…
It’s the small things that we use daily in life that reveal our loyalties. This is precisely why we made an AIER coffee mug. It suggests stability, dignity, and determination. It has personalized a matte-finish exterior with a shiny lip and interior. It has a 17-oz capacity and a flat handle for comfort. It says everything it needs to say!
Frederic Bastiat wrote with urgency and passion for the free society, even until his last breath. He knew that political systems were not enough to preserve freedom.
We need public consensus that comes from practical and moral conviction. He left us with the perfect model for how to obtain this.
This is why AIER has put together this collection consisting of five of Bastiat’s most lucid and compelling pieces. There are many others, so please just consider this the essence of his work, a beginning and not an end.
Alexandra DeSanctis here, filling in for Jim Geraghty this week. On the menu today: Congress is back in session, ready to negotiate another round of COVID-19 relief funding; New York City enters Phase Four of reopening as Andrew Cuomo cracks down on outdoor drinkers; and Andrew Sullivan departs New York magazine with a telling farewell.
Congress Preps to Mull Another Stimulus Bill
Back in session this week, the House and Senate face the difficult task of wrangling another stimulus bill, adding to $2.2 trillion that Congress already doled out in March in the CARES Act, through the Paycheck Protection Program, individual stimulus checks, and other forms of spending. Two months ago, Democrats in the House passed a $3 trillion spending bill, hoping that it would become the new stimulus package, giving additional aid to state and local governments and another $1,200 to each taxpayer.
But Senate Republicans have indicated they’re only willing to craft a new bill for about $1 trillion, focusing on a few key industries rather than the panoply of special interests that have been lobbying hard for a piece of the pie during the economic … READ MORE
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Facebook launches Global State of Small Business Report
At Facebook, we are committed to helping small businesses succeed. We partnered with the World Bank and the OECD to survey businesses in 50+ countries and regions to understand the challenges they face and ways we can better support them.
“Makes an original and compelling case for nationalism . . . A fascinating, erudite—and much-needed—defense of a hallowed idea unfairly under current attack.” — Victor Davis Hanson
Democrat Senator Kamala Harris (CA) on Saturday night appeared on MSNBC to discuss late Congressman John Lewis. But everyone was talking about her *new* face…. Read more…
Leading conservative activist and entrepreneur Michelle Malkin was attacked by Antifa and Black Lives Matter thugs Sunday at a “Back the Blue” rally in support… Read more…
Judge Esther Salas The 20-year-old son of US District Judge of New Jersey, Esther Salas, an Obama appointee, was shot dead Sunday night and her… Read more…
In November 2019, the star witness for the Democrat Representative Adam Schiff’s impeachment show trial was announced. Her name was Fiona Hill. Today we’ve uncovered… Read more…
Another day, another lie. The fake news media exploded this weekend after a health official on the Texas Gulf Coast claimed 85 infants have tested… Read more…
A Kentucky woman who tested positive for coronavirus and her husband were put under house arrest with ankle bracelets after they refused to sign the… Read more…
By Wayne Allyn Root I’m Wayne Allyn Root. I’m both a nationally-syndicated conservative talk show host and a Las Vegas oddsmaker. Long before politics, I… Read more…
As reported exclusively earlier this morning by TGP, Roger Stone was attacked by Mo’Kelly, a leftwing radio host based out of Los Angeles. Kelly claimed… Read more…
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The yearlong controversy over the State Department’s Commission on Unalienable Rights illustrates the potency of the intolerant and uncivil passions afflicting the nation. It also underscores the urgency of the commission’s report, which Secretary of State Mike Pompeo presented to the public last Thursday in a speech in Philadelphia at the National Constitution Center and in a Washington Post op-ed.
California’s 2020-21 $202 billion state budget spends about three times as much per state resident, adjusted for inflation, as 30 years ago. But look around and you won’t see your tax dollars at work. You will see public schools in disrepair, potholes large enough to take out your rear axle and century-old water pipes bursting. Basic government functions are grossly inadequate.
via Socialism and Free Market Capitalism: The Human Prosperity Project
The Hoover Institution presents an online virtual speaker series based on the scholarly research and commentary written by Hoover fellows participating in the Human Prosperity Project on Socialism and Free-Market Capitalism. Tune in to the launch event on Monday, July 20, 2020 at 11:00 am PT.
The 66th Secretary of State and The Denning Professor in Global Business and the Economy at Stanford University, Condoleeza Rice, joins Paul E. Peterson to discuss how school choice can help lower-income families get more of out the public education system, and how systemic change will be necessary to improve racial equality in America.
It wasn’t that long ago when much of the global elite had conclusively decided that climate change was our world’s top priority. Then came a massive sideswiping by a global pandemic, of which we have only seen the first wave, along with an equally massive global recession. It serves as a timely reminder that an alarmism that cultivates one fear over others serves society poorly.
The routine on the plant tour could be physically and mentally taxing. As occasional traveling aide Ed Langley reported, however, “There is [a] way that Ron stays fresh on these trips. He makes them an adventure. There has to be a set pattern to the talks, but he always seems to find a way to vary the routine. Consider what happened today.” At a reception for middle-management employees, one of the wives asked Reagan what she could do about her young son.