Good morning! Here is your news briefing for Wednesday October 7, 2020
THE DAILY SIGNAL
October 7 2020
Good morning from Washington, less than an hour from a Virginia school system that plans to impose a radical view of race on teachers and students. Naturally, our Jarrett Stepman objects. At least two justices worry that the Supreme Court’s discovery of a right to same-sex marriage casts those who disagree as bigots. Nicole Russell has thoughts. On the podcast, Sen. Marsha Blackburn previews the confirmation hearings for Supreme Court nominee Amy Coney Barrett. Plus: strengthening our national identity, and protecting free speech. Sixty years ago today, in the second of four televised debates, Vice President Richard Nixon and Sen. John F. Kennedy address the Cold War and other foreign policy issues.
In Loudoun County, the school board is set to vote on a radical new code of conduct policy that is akin to something you may see in the defunct Soviet Union or in Communist China.
“Obergefell enables courts and governments to brand religious adherents who believe that marriage is between one man and one woman as bigots,” writes Justice Clarence Thomas of the landmark 2015 decision.
Amy Coney Barrett “said that she would put herself in the shoes of the party that she was ruling against and consider how would that person perceive her decision,” recalls a former law clerk.
The violence, looting, and mayhem that this nation has seen over the last several months has much of its roots in academia, where leftist faculty teach immature young people all manner of nonsense.
About 1,200 restaurants have permanently shuttered since March. The city has around 600,000 fewer jobs than a year ago. About one-third of the city’s small businesses may never reopen.
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THE RESURGENT
THE EPOCH TIMES
Morning Brief: The head of the U.S. intelligence community on Oct. 6 declassified a referral sent from the CIA to FBI Director James Comey in 2016
OCTOBER 7, 2020
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Tonight, Vice President Mike Pence and Sen. Kamala Harris will meet for their first and only vice presidential debate. The debate is set to be moderated by USA Today’s Susan Page at 9:00 p.m. ET.
Tune in to The Epoch Times’ live page to watch the debate.
“We naturally like what we have been accustomed to, and are attracted towards it.”
MAIMONIDES
Good morning,The director of national intelligence on Tuesday declassified a CIA memo sent to FBI Director James Comey in September 2016 containing a lead on the campaign of Hillary Clinton.According to the memo, foreign intelligence suggested that Clinton had approved a plan concerning the Trump campaign and Russia’s alleged hack of the Democratic National Convention.Comey last week denied having any memory of receiving the memo.
Communism breeds war, famine, slaughter, and tyranny. These in themselves are terrifying enough, but the damage dealt by communism goes far beyond this. It has become increasingly clear to many that, unlike any other system in history, communism declares war on humanity itself — including human values and human dignity.Get The Full Series Here
Amid the continuing personal and economic wreckage caused by COVID-19 and with President Donald Trump himself recently contracting the disease, experts say that it’s time to respond … Read more
President Donald Trump returned to the White House after a four-day hospital stay with a message of optimism and grit for a nation fatigued by months of … Read more
Less than a month before the election, Americans have witnessed a stream of cautionary tales regarding the unprecedented expansion of mail-in voting this year. Ballots have been … Read more
Tom Weigel, a third-generation dairy farmer in Platteville, likes how the Trump administration has helped farmers since the pandemic upended the market. After four years of … Read more
The Chinese regime’s espionage operations around the world have been accelerating over the past decade and are now “off the scale,” an analyst warns. His comment comes … Read more
Stocks have remained surprisingly resilient in the wake of President Donald Trump’s COVID-19 infection, which sent shock waves through global markets last week. Stock investors are tuning … Read more
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If The Federalist co-founder Sean Davis’s informants are even half-right, CIA Director Gina Haspel is making a big mistake—for herself, for the agency, and, above all, for the country. Read more
Everybody knows the story of King Canute, the 11th-century Viking king of England, who raised his hand to stop the roll of the tide—and yet the tide rolled in anyway. Read more
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There are ongoing allegations about the China and Russia business deals involving Hunter Biden, the son of Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden.
Three writers combined on a Washington Post hit piece on Amy Coney Barrett, again for her faith. The title of the piece: Amy Coney Barrett served as a ‘handmaid’ in Christian group People of Praise (Washington Post). From Mollie Hemingway: Democrats are laundering their (admittedly weak) anti-religious smear of Amy Coney Barrett through Emma Brown, the same reporter they used to launch their massive and media-coordinated anti-Kavanaugh operation that so many Americans found so despicable (Twitter). From Ryan Anderson: For the biblically illiterate, where the word “handmaid” comes from: “Mary said, ‘Behold, I am the handmaid of the Lord. May it be done to me according to your word.’ Then the angel departed from her.” Luke 1:38 (Twitter). The Guardian also added a similar hit piece with the scary title “Revealed: Amy Coney Barrett lived in home of secretive Christian group’s co-founder” (The Guardian). From Emily Znotti: Actual story: Barrett lived in student housing at Notre Dame operated by Catholics. Because Notre Dame is Catholic (Twitter). From Rich Lowry: It’d be great to know the theory of what Amy Coney Barrett would have been able to achieve if she hadn’t been hampered by being a woman in People of Praise —would she be Chief Justice of the Supreme Court already? Secretary General of the U.N.? What? (Twitter). From Tom Cotton: The liberal media are relentless in their slimy attacks on Judge Amy Barrett’s faith & family. Yet the absurd cartoon they are drawing just doesn’t square with the fact that she is a superstar law professor, turned circuit court of appeals judge. They should be ashamed (Twitter). From Alexandra DeSanctis: Never have I felt myself so personally invested in a particular political fight than I am the impending battle over the nomination of Seventh Circuit appeals court judge Amy Coney Barrett to the Supreme Court. I suspect that women across the country, and women of faith in particular, feel similarly. Judging from the reactions of many of my female friends and the outpouring of support that I’ve witnessed on social media, Trump’s decision to nominate Barrett to replace the late Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg has struck a chord (National Review).
2.
Netflix Indicted on Criminal Charges Over “Cuties” Movie
From the story: A Tyler County, Texas grand jury moved to return an indictment against Netflix on Sept. 23, Fox News confirmed on Tuesday via court documents. The complaint alleges Netflix “knowingly” promoted visual material which “depicts the lewd exhibition of the genitals or pubic area of a clothed or partially clothed child who was younger than 18 years of age at the time the visual material was created, which appeals to the prurient interest in sex, and has no serious, literary, artistic, political, or scientific value.” From a defiant Netflix: “This charge is without merit and we stand by the film.” (Fox News). From Lila Rose: Great news. This is the right response to Netflix promoting child pornography. We need to see more this (Twitter).
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3.
Trump Authorizes Declassification of All Russia Collusion Documents
From the story: President Trump on Tuesday said he has “fully authorized the total Declassification of any & all documents” related to the Russia investigation and the FBI’s investigation into former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton’s use of a private email server.
Which is almost entertaining, considering they’ve never for a moment acted as if they didn’t fully support him (NY Times). A new poll from CNN has Biden up 16 points (National Review). For context, in 2016, five polls were released between October 9-12. Three had Hillary up double digits. The average of those five had Hillary up nearly nine points (Twitter). In a five poll stretch from October 13-16, Hillary had a double-digit lead in three (Twitter). Two weeks before the election, on October 24th, five polls were released. Hillary had a double-digit lead in three. At that moment, Hillary’s average lead was 9.4. On the 25th, we got that outlier, the LA Times poll that had Trump up 1 on the 25th (Twitter). From there, Trump began to close the gap. All within the last two weeks (RCP). Right now, RCP has Biden up 9. Of the most recent four polls, three have him up double digits. Sound familiar? (RCP). Meanwhile, in an impressive list of why we should reelect Donald Trump, Hugh Hewitt includes this: Your freedoms and your fundamental right to be left alone are much stronger than they were before Trump’s inauguration, because the president, working with Senate Republicans, has bolstered the Supreme Court and federal courts with strong judges who honor the Constitution. These judges will long protect your religious practices and your right to bear arms, and will rein in the administrative state’s attempts to control your life (Washington Post).
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While the world mourns the passing of a rock god, lobbyist Screven Watson lost a friend.
News of Eddie Van Halen’s death at 65 stung for Watson, who spent his late teens running with the devil himself. Growing up in Shreveport, Louisiana, Watson came to know the guitar revolutionary through the family of Valerie Bertinelli, whose brothers went to his high school.
“We literally used Valerie and her stardom to get backstage when Van Halen came to town,” he said.
RIP to one of the greats: Guitar rock legend Eddie Van Halen dies of throat cancer at 65. Image via AP.
It became more than a one-time brush with fame. He and Bertonelli’s brothers befriended Eddie and Alex Van Halen and bassist Michael Anthony, all young guys with few friends their age but an appreciation for teenage hijinks. Watson, the same man who later served as Executive Director of the Florida Democratic Party through the 2000 recounts, followed the coolest rock band on earth each summer for the next four years.
Watson knew Van Halen from the rock festival Women and Children First era into the MTV heavy rotation “Jump” days. While lives diverged as Watson went to college at Southern Methodist University, he still connected with Eddie in that time, once watching the sunset from a hotel roof in Austin, Texas.
There were good times, like David Lee Roth slipping a 17-year-old Watson a Schlitz Malt Liquor by a hotel pool, or Watson and the Van Halen brothers tumbling a Volkswagen into a Taco Bell drive-thru at 2 a.m. just because rockstars could get away with it. There’s a Hilton Watson passes every time he visits Shreveport where he recalls a fire extinguisher fight that stripped wallpaper in the halls off the walls. ”We trashed some hotel rooms and their management wrote the checks,” Watson recalls with impish glee.
Watson hopes his old pal earns reverence among the plucking greats, along with Jimi Hendrix, Keith Richards, and maybe a select other few. “He was a scientist — maybe a mad scientist,” Watson recalls of the musician, who famously built his own guitars and tinkered with amps between shows.
But he’ll personally remember the shy bandleader, happy to let Roth steal the limelight while he crafted licks and revolutionized rock.
“People are going to talk about the sex, drugs and rock ’n’ roll,” Watson said. “I’m not going to say none of that was there, but this is a guy who took his craft seriously.”
“Eddie Van Halen, virtuoso of the rock guitar, dies at 65” via Jim Farber of The New York Times — Van Halen, whose razzle-dazzle guitar-playing made him the most influential guitarist of his generation and his band, Van Halen, one of the most popular rock acts of all time, died on Tuesday. He was 65. Van Halen’s son, Wolfgang, said in a statement that his father had “lost his long and arduous battle with cancer.” The statement did not say where he died. Van Halen structured his solos the way Macy’s choreographs its Independence Day fireworks shows: shooting off rockets of sound that seemed to explode in a shower of light and color. His outpouring of riffs, runs and solos were hyperactive and athletic, joyous and wry, making deeper or darker emotions feel irrelevant.
“In 1977, Ted Templeman went to check out an unknown band from Pasadena and changed rock history” via Ted Templeton as told to Greg Renoff of Los Angeles Magazine — In January 1977 I was working in my Burbank office at Warner Bros. Records when my secretary came in and said, “It’s Marshall Berle for you on line one. He says he has an unsigned band for you to see in Hollywood.” To be honest, I rarely bothered to take calls concerning unknown local bands. So I picked up his call. Then he said, “Ted, I’ve got a band for you. Their name is Van Halen.” So on February 2, I went down to the Starwood, on Santa Monica Boulevard in West Hollywood. When Van Halen came onstage, it was like they were shot out of a cannon. Right out of the gate I was just knocked out by Ed Van Halen.
Situational awareness
—@MattGaetz: President [Donald] Trump won’t have to recover from COVID. COVID will have to recover from President Trump. #MAGA
—@ScottLincicome: We need a total and complete shutdown of Trump administration officials entering the rest of the country until our country’s voters can figure out what the hell is going on.
—@EWErickson: Talked to a friend who lost two relatives to COVID and she is so angry with the President. Then had the same conversation with a different person. I get the sense outside the Twitter bubble that it isn’t going over well.
—@Redistrict: At the moment, [Joe] Biden is teaching a master class on letting your opponent’s candidacy self-destruct.
—@PhillipAKlein: Fundamental point I keep coming back to: All Biden needs to do to win is do 1 point better than Clinton in Michigan, Wisconsin, and Pennsylvania.
Tweet, tweet:
Tweet, tweet:
Days until
Amazon’s annual Prime Day begins — 6; Apple announces new iPhone — 6; NBA season ends (last possible date) — 7; stone crab season starts — 8; second presidential debate (tentatively) scheduled in Miami — 8; Wes Anderson’s “The French Dispatch” premieres — 9; NBA free agency (tentative) — 11; Florida Chamber’s Future of Florida Forum — 13; HBO debuts 2000 presidential election doc ‘537 Votes’ — 14; third presidential debate (tentative) at Belmont — 15; “The Empty Man” premieres — 16; 2020 General Election — 27; NBA 2020-21 training camp — 34; The Masters begins — 36; NBA draft — 42; Pixar’s “Soul” premieres — 44; College basketball season slated to begin — 49; NBA 2020-21 opening night — 56; Florida Automated Vehicles Summit — 56; “Death on the Nile” premieres — 71; “Wonder Woman 1984” rescheduled premiere — 79; Greyhound racing ends in Florida — 85; Super Bowl LV in Tampa — 123; “A Quiet Place Part II” rescheduled premiere — 136; “Black Widow” rescheduled premiere — 151; “No Time to Die” premieres (rescheduled) — 177; “Top Gun: Maverick” rescheduled premiere — 268; Disney’s “Shang Chi and The Legend of The Ten Rings” premieres — 275; new start date for 2021 Olympics — 289; “Jungle Cruise” premieres — 297; Disney’s “Eternals” premieres — 394; “Spider-Man Far From Home” sequel premieres — 397; Steven Spielberg’s “West Side Story” premieres — 429; “Thor: Love and Thunder” premieres — 493; “Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness” premieres — 546; “Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse” sequel premieres — 727.
Debate night in America
“Kamala Harris and Mike Pence will be separated by plexiglass at VP debate” via Alexi McCammond of Axios — After several days of negotiations over safety precautions and logistics, Sen. Harris and Vice President Mike Pence will be separated by plexiglass at the VP debate on Wednesday, two sources familiar with the move confirmed to Axios. Trump’s COVID-19 diagnosis has Democrats spooked about being anywhere near him or those in his orbit in the remaining days until the election, so they’re scrambling to make last-minute adjustments. The Commission on Presidential Debates approved the plexiglass on Monday, Politico first reported. There will also be plexiglass between the two candidates and moderator Susan Page of USA Today.
“‘Out of his mouth will come these wild Trumpisms’: Harris preps to take on Pence” via Christopher Cadelago of POLITICO — Vice presidential debates didn’t matter — until the President contracted a deadly virus and might be too sick to attend the next two of his own. After last week’s screamfest between Trump and Biden drowned out nearly all talk of policy, it’s now on Vice President Mike Pence and Sen. Harris to illuminate Wednesday night how the two tickets differ on substance. Pence has considerable ground to make up after Trump’s widely panned bulldozer act last week, and Harris has the delicate task of taking on the President as he recovers from the coronavirus. Harris’ tone toward the laid-up President is expected to mirror Biden’s of late, according to aides and allies.
Kamala Harris and Mike Pence square off in a socially distant debate. Image via AP.
“Harris should boost the ratings of this year’s vice presidential debate” via Adam Epstein of Quartz — U.S. vice presidential debates are often an afterthought, sandwiched between the first and second presidential debates at a time when voters would rather hear directly from the main candidates. But this year’s event between Pence and Harris could be more momentous than normal. Since 1984, when Nielsen started tracking TV ratings for the vice-presidential debates, they’ve garnered modest audiences, relative to their presidential counterparts. After the first 2016 debate between Trump and Hillary Clinton reached a record 84 million viewers, the vice presidential debate between Pence and Tim Kaine was watched by fewer than half that (37 million). Ratings for the last two VP debates have dropped significantly.
Biden campaign drops bilingual ads ahead of debate — Biden’s campaign rolled four new ads highlighting VP nominee Harris’ record fighting for Dreamers, immigrants and women. The ads also highlight Biden’s faith and family values. The late includes two Florida ads. The first, “La Aliada,” is a Spanish language TV ad focused on Kamala Harris’ commitment to fighting for the Latino community. The second, “American Citizens,” is a digital ad centered around Joe Biden’s belief that “in America, there is no room for second-class citizens.”
“Donald Trump’s doctor says the President ‘reports no symptoms’ after his first night back at the White House.” via Michael Crowley of The New York Times — Trump is reporting “no symptoms” of the coronavirus and doing “extremely well,” according to the White House physician, Dr. Sean Conley. In a brief, three-sentence memo released by the White House, Dr. Conley, whose credibility has been questioned by some medical experts after he admitted to giving a deliberately rosy description of the President’s condition during a news briefing over the weekend, said that Trump’s team of physicians visited him in the residence this morning and that, after a “restful first night at home,” Trump “reports no symptoms.” Separately, Pence’s physician also released an update on his condition, saying that Pence has “remained healthy, without any COVID-19 symptoms.” The physician, Dr. Jesse Schonau, said that Pence had been tested daily and had received negative results. “Vital signs and physical exam remain stable,” he said, “with an ambulatory oxygen saturation level of 95 to 97%.”
Donald Trump’s doctor says he’s doing well on his first night back at the White House. Image via AP.
“When did Trump test negative for COVID-19? Officials won’t say.” via Henry J. Gomez and Kadia Goba of BuzzFeed News — Since Trump entered Walter Reed National Military Medical Center on Friday, spokespeople and the President’s doctor have not answered questions about the date of the President’s last negative test for the coronavirus. “I don’t want to go backward,” Dr. Conley said Sunday when asked about the President’s last negative result. Trump appeared at last week’s presidential debate, which took place in Cleveland two days before he tested positive. Campaigns were required to present negative test results for everyone who entered the debate hall with the candidates, potentially the President’s last negative test.
“Contradictory and confusing White House statements offer an incomplete picture of Trump’s health” via Danielle Rindler, Leslie Shapiro and Kevin Uhrmacher of The Washington Post — Information about Trump’s condition has been incomplete, confusing and, at times, contradictory since early Friday morning when the commander in chief announced that he had tested positive for the novel coronavirus. Trump’s medical team, led by White House physician Conley, has been criticized for painting a rosy portrait of Trump’s condition Saturday, without disclosing that the President had been given supplemental oxygen or put on a steroid that is usually reserved for severely ill coronavirus patients. Conley and his team have also refused to discuss the President’s lung scans, saying only that “there’s some expected findings, but nothing of any major clinical concern.”
“The President’s doctor is doing harm” via James Hamblin of The Atlantic — For the past several days, Trump has had COVID-19. It’s unclear for how many days, because the President’s physician, Conley, refuses to share that information. When asked again yesterday, Conley told reporters, “I don’t want to move backward.” On Monday, Conley told reporters that the President was to be discharged to the White House. “He’s back,” Conley said with a smile. To hear Conley tell it, Trump was also never gone. The story of his illness jumped from “nothing to see here” to “mission accomplished.” The President is declaring victory. “Don’t be afraid of COVID,” he tweeted earlier in the day. “Don’t let it dominate your life.” This is a dangerous narrative, and Trump’s doctor has helped to shape it.
Dr. Sean Conley is helping shape a dangerous narrative of COVID-19. Image via AP.
“Il Donald” via Anne Applebaum of The Atlantic — For reasons that need no elucidation, I spent a few hours this morning watching Benito Mussolini. Il Duce was a short, balding, unattractive man. But he prepared himself carefully for public appearances. He also had a sense of what other kinds of imagery would attract attention. Most frequently, Mussolini had himself photographed on balconies. Many people who watched these performances at the time found them absurd, even laughable. The appeal of these things hasn’t disappeared or died out. An American President, suffering from an infectious disease, breathing hard, covered in orange pancake makeup, speaking from a balcony against the backdrop of our elegant White House and our beautiful Washington Monument — this is a scene that seems absurd, grotesque, and even frightening to many. But not to everyone.
“The President cares about his image. That’s pretty much it.” via Robin Givhan of The Washington Post — Trump walked out of the double brass doors at Walter Reed National Military Medical Center wearing a disposable mask and surrounded by security. He paused for the cameras. He gave a thumbs-up for the benefit of the pictures. And he climbed aboard Marine One. And when he arrived at the White House, he walked up the steps, stood in front of four American flags. And removed his mask. He removed his mask in a show of what? Ego. Recklessness. Selfishness. He is still convalescing from COVID-19, a highly unpredictable and deadly disease. He remains contagious. But no matter. Image is Trump’s everything. Health — his, others’, yours — be damned.
“Trump’s fearlessness of coronavirus is powered by the type of health care only he gets” via Eugene Scott of The Washington Post — Trump is sending some discordant messages as he projects that he has turned the corner on his own coronavirus infection. He’s said he “learned a lot” about the disease and also advised Americans to not “be afraid.” All the while, he’s expressed gratitude for the medical professionals attending to him. “This is an incredible hospital — Walter Reed,” he said in a video tweeted Monday. “The work they do is just absolutely amazing. And I want to thank them all — the nurses, the doctors, everybody here.” Reflecting on his stint in the hospital, he added: “It’s been a very interesting journey. I learned a lot about COVID. I learned it by really going to school. This is the real school. This isn’t the ‘Let’s read the books’ school. And I get it, and I understand it, and it’s a very interesting thing, and I’m going to be letting you know about it.”
“The health of his political opponents has always been fair game for Trump” via JM Rieger of The Washington Post — On Monday, Trump left Walter Reed National Military Medical Center, where he was being treated for a virus that he has downplayed more than 130 times and that has killed more than 200,000 Americans. The hospital stay follows years of Trump and his allies mocking his political opponents for their health issues — some of them exaggerated, others fabricated. Even before the 2016 presidential primaries, then-candidate Trump was speculating about Clinton’s health. Now, four years later, Trump and his allies have engaged in similar rhetoric about the health of Biden, even as they have been more sensitive about Trump’s health.
“‘Unjustifiable hysteria’: Republican recalcitrance about the virus persists even as GOP faces growing turmoil” via Robert Costa of The Washington Post — Widespread Republican recalcitrance about federal health guidelines showed few signs of waning on Monday, even as the party faces growing turmoil following Trump’s hospitalization and as more White House aides test positive for the novel coronavirus. White House press secretary Kayleigh McEnany and at least two of her deputies have now contracted the virus, further derailing the functioning of a West Wing plunged into crisis and adding to a long list of top Republicans who have been infected. But many Republicans continue to dismiss calls for alarm — and for changes to the party’s message on the virus and its operations.
White House press secretary Kayleigh McEnany and at least two of her deputies have contracted COVID-19.
“Supporters mirror Trump’s rosy projection of virus infection” via Michelle L. Price and Farnoush Amiri of The Associated Press — As an infected Trump urged Americans not to fear the virus that has killed more than 1 million people worldwide, many of his supporters were already in sync with that message. In interviews with Republican voters at Trump events and campaign offices, very few saw the President’s illness as a cautionary tale. None said they would change their personal approach to masks or distancing, and many expressed confidence that the disease was less dangerous than advertised. In Ohio, a “Women for Trump” group gathered indoors — many maskless and not distanced — to pray for the President’s recovery. In Nevada, a Reno business owner dismissed the threat of the pandemic as “overplayed.” Nearby, another Trump backer shrugged off any second thoughts about having cheered at a Trump campaign event last week as part of a maskless crowd.
“Trump is reinforcing all of his coronavirus problems, all at once” via Aaron Blake of The Washington Post — When Trump came down with the novel coronavirus last week, CNN’s pollsters rushed to insert new questions into a survey. Among the new questions: Will Trump’s diagnosis change the way he confronts the virus? Americans said overwhelmingly that it would not. They made a very safe bet. Trump, meanwhile, is apparently going to keep gambling. Over the past few days, Trump has offered what amounts to a remarkable and dumbfounding double-down on his coronavirus messaging: downplaying it, having his doctors hide information, taking a joy ride that could endanger the people riding in the car with him, demonstrably removing his mask upon returning to the White House, and sending tweets urging people not to be “afraid” of the virus.
“‘Invincible’ Trump tells us to live with COVID-19. These people died trying.” via Dana Milbank of The Washington Post — After Trump got out of Vietnam with student deferments and a spurious claim of bone spurs, he proposed that those who did serve in Vietnam were “stupid” and “losers,” according to various accounts. He mocked their sacrifice by saying he was a “brave soldier” in his “personal Vietnam” avoiding sexually transmitted diseases. We’re seeing the same thinking now with COVID-19. After getting treated for his infection by a team of top-notch doctors using antidotes that are rationed or entirely unavailable to other Americans, Trump shared a description of himself as “an invincible hero” in contrast to all those wusses who are taking precautions against the virus.
Donald Trump says he’s ‘invincible’ to COVID-19. Some people died trying to survive it.
“Stephen Miller tests positive for COVID-19” via Jacob Knutson of Axios — Miller has tested positive for the coronavirus, he confirmed in a statement on Tuesday. Miller’s diagnosis adds to the long and growing list of Trump administration officials who have contracted the virus as the White House scrambles to respond to the outbreak. Miller says he has been self-isolating and working remotely for the last five days, and tested negative for the virus every day through Monday. His wife, Pence’s press secretary Katie Miller, tested positive for COVID-19 in May.
“Top U.S. military leaders, including the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, are quarantining after being exposed to the virus.” via Helene Cooper of The New York Times — Gen. Mark A. Milley, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, along with several of the Pentagon’s most senior uniformed leaders, are quarantining after being exposed to the coronavirus, a Defense Department official said on Tuesday. The official said almost the entirety of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, including Gen. James C. McConville, the Army chief of staff, are quarantining after Adm. Charles Ray, the vice commandant of the Coast Guard, tested positive for coronavirus. “We are aware that Vice Commandant Ray has tested positive for COVID-19 and that he was at the Pentagon last week for meetings with other senior military leaders,” Jonathan Hoffman, the Pentagon spokesman, said in a statement released by his office.
“Trump’s return means more anxiety for White House reporters” via The Associated Press — Trump’s return to the White House to recover from the coronavirus seems certain to raise the already heightened anxiety level of the journalists assigned to follow him. Three reporters have tested positive for COVID-19 in recent days while covering a White House described as lax, at best, in following basic safety advice like wearing masks. Discomfort only increased Monday with news that press secretary McEnany had tested positive. The image of Trump standing on a balcony and removing his mask after a helicopter dropped him off Monday evening, then turning to enter the White House maskless, could hardly be reassuring to people who work there. After McEnany’s announcement Monday, Fox News chief White House correspondent John Roberts spent part of his afternoon waiting outside an urgent care center for his own test. He had attended McEnany’s briefing last Thursday. She didn’t wear a mask, and neither did one of her assistants who later tested positive, and Roberts sat near both of them. He tested negative.
“Facebook and Twitter take action against misleading Trump post” via Maria Arias of Axios — Facebook removed a post from Trump in which he falsely claimed that COVID-19 is less deadly “in most populations” than the flu. Twitter labeled the tweet for violating its rules about “spreading misleading and potentially harmful information,” but left it up because it may be “in the public’s interest.” Facebook has been criticized for not removing posts that violate community guidelines in a timely manner, yet the company sprung to action when Trump posted misinformation about the virus that “could contribute to imminent physical harm.” Twitter took action about 30 minutes later. A Facebook spokesperson told Axios: “We remove incorrect information about the severity of COVID-19 and have now removed this post.”
The models
To get a reasonable idea of how the presidential race is playing out, state polling is the way to go — particularly in battleground states like Florida. Some outlets offer a poll of polls, gauging how Trump or Biden are doing in select areas, then averaging the surveys to get a general idea of who leads nationwide. Sunburn will be updating these forecasts as they come in:
CNN Poll of Polls: As of Tuesday, the CNN average has Biden moving up a single point to 53% compared to a steady 42% for Trump. The CNN Poll of Polls tracks the national average in the presidential race. They include the most recent national telephone surveys meeting CNN’s standards for reporting and which measure the views of registered or likely voters. The poll of polls does not have a margin of sampling error.
FiveThirtyEight.com: As of Tuesday, Biden has moved up to an 82 in 100 chance of winning compared to Trump, who slipped to a 17 in 100 shot. One model still has no Electoral College victory, bringing the election to the House. FiveThirtyEight also ranked individual states by the likelihood of delivering a decisive vote for the winning candidate in the Electoral College: Pennsylvania leads with 27.4%, while Wisconsin moves to second with 14.7%. Florida dropped to third with 13.7% Other states include Michigan (8.7 %), Arizona (5.5%), Minnesota (4.5%), North Carolina (4.4%) and Nevada (3.2%).
Joe Biden is keeping his lead against Donald Trump.
PredictIt: As of Tuesday, the PredictIt trading market has Biden jumping to $0.67 a share, with Trump dropping to $0.36.
Real Clear Politics: As of Tuesday, the RCP average of polling top battleground states widens Biden’s lead over Trump 51.2% to 42.2%. The RCP average also has Biden averaging at +9 points ahead.
Sabato’s Crystal Ball: It’s easy to think of the Trump electorate as immovable, and much of his backing is rock solid, but not every single one of his 2016 supporters was 100% behind him. In the midst of 2020s bad environment — a pandemic and a rocked economy — it would make sense that any incumbent President would struggle to add new voters and retain everyone from his last election. Biden also may simply be a better fit for these voters than Clinton was, and the electorate is not static from cycle to cycle.
The Economist: As of Tuesday, their model predicts Biden is “very likely” to beat Trump in the Electoral College. The model is updated every day and combines state and national polls with economic indicators to predict a range of outcomes. The midpoint is the estimate of the electoral-college vote for each party on Election Day. According to The Economist, Biden’s chances of winning the electoral college has remained steady at 9 in 10 versus Trump with 1 in 10. They still give Biden a 99% chance (better than 19 in 20) of winning the most votes, with Trump at only 2% (less than 1 in 20).
Presidential
“Biden says no debate if Trump still has virus” via The Associated Press — Biden says he and Trump “shouldn’t have a debate” as long as the President remains positive for the coronavirus. Biden said Tuesday that he’s “looking forward to being able to debate him” but said, “we’re going to have to follow very strict guidelines.” He says he doesn’t know Trump’s status since the President returned to the White House after being hospitalized at Walter Reed National Military Medical Center for three days after a COVID-19 diagnosis. Biden told reporters while boarding his plane back to Delaware in Hagerstown, Maryland: “I think if he still has COVID, then we shouldn’t have a debate.” The next debate is scheduled for Oct. 15, with a third debate slated for Oct. 22.
Joe Biden says no debate if Donald Trump still has the virus.
“7 key facts about Biden’s big lead over Trump” via Aaron Blake of The Washing — The first two high-quality, big-name national polls since last week’s presidential debate show Democratic nominee Biden leading Trump by 14 points (NBC News/Wall Street Journal) and by 16 points (CNN). Each poll shows a double-digit shift in the margins from the 2016 election toward the Democrats. And yet, for very understandable reasons, Democrats are taking nothing for granted. The lessons of 2016 and the unpredictability of the first COVID-19 election have left them virtually incapable of believing the race is won until it’s actually won. At the same time, it’s worth putting things in perspective. Here are the facts.
“In big states, tiny counties, Trump attacking voting rules” via Nicholas Riccardi, Jonathan Drew and Scott Bauer of The Associated Press — When Trump’s campaign took issue with a new rule on processing some votes in North Carolina, it didn’t just complain to the Board of Elections and file a lawsuit. It wrote to some of the state’s 100 local election offices with extraordinary guidance: Ignore that rule. “The NC Republican Party advises you to not follow the procedures,” Trump campaign operative Heather Ford wrote in an email to county officials last week. The email urging defiance was a small glimpse at the unusually aggressive, hyperlocal legal strategy the Trump campaign is activating as voting begins. Through threatening letters, lawsuits, viral videos and presidential misinformation, the campaign and its GOP allies are going to new lengths to contest election procedures.
A Miami-Dade County Elections Department employee loads a cart of vote-by-mail ballots into a truck for transport to a local U.S. Postal Service office. Image via AP.
“Countering Trump, U.S. officials defend integrity of election” via Eric Tucker of The Associated Press — Four weeks ahead of Election Day, senior national security officials provided fresh assurances about the integrity of the elections in a video message Tuesday, putting them at odds with Trump’s efforts to discredit the vote. “I’m here to tell you that my confidence in the security of your vote has never been higher,” Chris Krebs, the director of the Department of Homeland Security’s Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Agency, said in the video message. “That’s because of an all-of-nation, unprecedented election security effort over the last several years.” The video appeared to be aimed at soothing the jangled nerves of voters ahead of an election made unique by an expected surge in mail-in ballots because of the coronavirus pandemic. Though Trump was not mentioned during the nine-minute video, the message from the speakers served as a tacit counter to his repeated efforts, including in last week’s presidential debate, to allege widespread fraud in the mail ballot process and to preemptively cast doubt in the legitimacy of the election.
“Jill Biden fires up Women for Biden event in Boca Raton” via Wendy Rhodes and Antonio Fins of The Palm Beach Post — Drawing an analogy between healing a “broken family” and unifying a nation, Jill Biden stumped through South Florida on Monday. The wife of former Vice President Biden started the day in Miami, then finished at a Women for Biden rally in Boca Raton. She accompanied her husband at stops in Little Haiti and Little Havana before the Democratic nominee appeared at a televised town hall at the Pérez Art Museum in Miami. Jill Biden talked about how she entered the Biden family after the tragic auto accident that killed the then-U.S. Senator’s wife and daughter. “How do heal a broken family?” she asked. “It’s the same way you heal a nation — with love, understanding and small acts of kindness.”
Assignment editors — Sen. Lauren Book will take part in an ‘Adopt Florida’ phone bank event supporting the Biden campaign and hosted by ‘Jewish Women for Joe’s Young Women’s Circle,’ 7 p.m. register atmobilize.us/2020victory/.
“Mike Bloomberg gives $500K to Orlando-based Hispanic voter outreach group” via Scott Powers of Florida Politics — An Orlando-based, Hispanic-voter outreach group is getting $500,000 from Michael Bloomberg, as part of his $100 million commitment to help Biden win Florida in the Nov. 3 election. Votar Es Poder PAC, a corporate affiliation to Poder Latinx, is getting the cash infusion to expand Poder Latinx’s efforts to reach Hispanic voters and to encourage them to vote. Poder Latinx claims to already have conducted 2.5 million phone and text conversations with voters and to have registered 33,200 Hispanic Florida voters. By Election Day the group says it hopes to have made 5 million voter contacts. The group also intends to canvass. “With Florida voters across the state already receiving their ballots — and with Florida potentially playing a decisive role in the election — direct voter outreach in support of Joe Biden and Kamala Harris is crucial right now,” Bloomberg stated in a news release. “The last debate made the stakes of this election abundantly clear — and presented Floridians with a choice between a leader who wants to bring the American people together and a President who wants to tear us apart. I’m supporting Votar Es Poder PAC’s efforts to help get this country back on track by turning out the vote for Joe Biden and Kamala Harris in Central Florida.”
Must Watch
New ads
Biden campaign launches ad campaign aimed at Black voters — Biden for President released three new ads focusing on Black voters and their support for VP nominee Harris ahead of the vice presidential debate Thursday. One of the ads, “Mirrors,” emphasizes the historic nature of Harris nomination to serve as VP — she is the first Black woman to be nominated for U.S. Vice President by a major party. In addition to airing nationally on digital, Mirrors will run on TV and radio in Florida, Georgia, Michigan, North Carolina, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin.
Project Yellowstone puts $2M into digital ad campaign — This week Project Yellowstone launched a new digital ad campaign in battleground states including Florida. The $2 million campaign is aimed at informing minority communities of their options in voting early or by mail. Included in the campaign is a Spanish-language ad directed at Florida’s Puerto Rican community. Project Yellowstone was founded to create voter awareness and information campaigns in states across the country to ensure that voters in states with “no-fault” absentee balloting are aware of the opportunity to vote by mail and how they go about requesting a ballot for the November election.
Priorities USA, Color of Change release new ads targeted at Black voters — Color of Change PAC and Priorities USA Action are teaming up to launch a pair of digital ads bashing Trump for his “failed leadership” and praising Biden’s “steady leadership on the issues that matter most to Black Americans.” The ads will run on digital platforms in Florida, Michigan, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin as part of Priorities USA’s previously announced $3.4 million persuasion program targeting Black voters in key battleground states. “Whether he’s downplaying the pandemic, attacking our health care or doubling down on systemic racism, one thing is clear: Donald Trump has failed America — and Black voters are paying the highest price of all,” said Jenn Stowe, Deputy Executive Director of Priorities USA.
Happening today — The Florida Legislative Black Caucus is hosting a virtual town-hall to discuss proposed constitutional amendments on the November ballot, 7:30 p.m. register at us02web.zoom.us. Call-in number: 1-929-205-6099. Meeting ID: 83326747782. Passcode: 782239.
“Fearing delivery delays of mail ballots, Florida health care union sues Postal Service” via Mary Ellen Klas of the Miami Herald — The union representing Florida health care workers filed a lawsuit against Postmaster General Louis DeJoy asking a court to order him to reverse actions that it claims will delay the delivery of vote-by-mail ballots and disenfranchise Florida voters. The lawsuit, by 1199SEIU, the Florida chapter of the United Healthcare Workers, was filed in federal district court in Miami. It asks the court to order the U.S. Postal Service to disclose information about whether it is complying with its obligations under the law and following recent court orders issued in other states. For example, the union wants the agency to show that it is processing ballots whether or not the mail has the correct postage, as the courts have required.
Florida health care workers filed a lawsuit against Postmaster General Louis DeJoy.
“Links to Proud Boys emerges as issue in Florida congressional, legislative races” via John Haughey of The Center Square — Fringe groups, normally background noise in election campaigns, are front and center in several Florida congressional and legislative races, with candidates denying or defending links to the Proud Boys. Proud Boys, self-described “Western chauvinists” who deny being a White supremacy group, was founded in 2016 by Vice Media co-founder Gavin McInnes. The all-male group has confronted anti-fascists in Portland, Oregon.; Charlottesville, Virginia.; and New York City where, in 2018, members assaulted protesters. Two are now serving prison sentences as a result. Proud Boys gained ambient prominence after Trump, when asked to denounce White supremacy during his Sept. 29 debate with Biden, called on Proud Boys to “stand back and stand by.”
“Neal Dunn takes on ‘liberal extremists’ in his first ad of the 2020 cycle” via Renzo Downey of Florida Politics — With less than a month until Election Day, Rep. Dunn has released his first ad of the 2020 cycle, which puts “liberal extremists” in his crosshairs. The Panama City Republican, who served 11 years in the Army, highlights his military service in the ad before taking on the left-wing and leaning into his party’s law and order messaging. “We can’t let socialists erase our history, defund our police and destroy our economy,” Dunn says. “Now, more than ever, we must stand up for the bedrock principles and institutions that have made America the greatest country in the world.” As the Representative speaks, the ad rolls footage of a defaced statue of George Washington from Baltimore and rioters tearing down statues. Subsequent clips show demonstrations calling to “defund the police” and looters raiding a shop. The $140,000 ad campaign, which hit the airwaves Monday, will run for three weeks until Oct. 25. Of the total spend, Dunn has already spent $36,050 in the Panama City media market and $7,044 in the Tallahassee media market.
“Stephanie Murphy launches TV ad calling for national healing” via Scott Powers of Florida Politics — Rep. Murphy has launched the first TV ad of her 2020 General Election campaign declaring “we need less partisanship and more patriotism.” Murphy’s 30-second spot “Undivided” touches on several points within the theme of bipartisanship and unity that could be offered to defuse hits from her Republican opponent in Florida’s 7th Congressional District, Leo Valentin. Chip Harris, Murphy’s deputy campaign manager, said the ad is on cable in Orlando and is the first installment of a much larger six-figure persuasion campaign that will ultimately include multiple platforms throughout the Orlando area in both English and Spanish. The campaign said the ad would begin running Tuesday and would run through the Nov. 3 election.
“Florida Dems blast Scott Franklin for not wearing a mask, a trend with Trump COVID-19 positive” via Janelle Irwin Taylor of Florida Politics — The Florida Democratic Party is going after Franklin, a candidate for Florida’s 15th Congressional District, over campaign events this weekend in which he was indoors in proximity to voters without wearing a mask. With Trump recovering from COVID-19 at the White House after a positive diagnosis last week, the criticism is indicative of a renewed campaign strategy for Democrats that attempts to paint conservatives as dismissive of the virus’ effects and complacent in employing preventive measures. Photos posted to Franklin’s campaign Facebook page show Franklin shoulder to shoulder with Hillsborough County Sheriff Chad Chronister and Polk County Sheriff Grady Judd, in two separate photos, as well as in very proximity to others in a Plant City restaurant.
“‘You’re the boss’: Charlie Crist joins local Hispanic leaders to discuss voting, health care” via Kelly Hayes of Florida Politics — U.S. Rep. Crist joined Pinellas County leaders to discuss voting, health and wealth among the local Hispanic community. “Voting is the most powerful tool we have to create change in our country, our state, and our communities,” Crist said kicking-off the discussion. “It is the most important responsibility we have as citizens — a responsibility we have to our neighbors, our friends, our children and grandchildren.” The event is part of the Hispanic Outreach Center and Intercultural Advocacy Institute’s Hispanic Heritage Month Lunch and Learn Series to inform viewers of the challenges the Hispanic community faces in regard to voting and health care. Crist urged members of the community to make a voting plan and to consider voting by mail or voting early this election cycle. Voting guides are available in English and Spanish.
“Margaret Good pollsters say she’s in striking distance, though Vern Buchanan’s team disagrees” via Jacob Ogles of Florida Politics — Democrat Good’s campaign released a poll showing her within 6 percentage points of incumbent GOP Rep. Buchanan. A memo from Global Strategy Group shows Buchanan as the choice of 49% of voters with Good at 43%. With the incumbent under 50%, that leaves a real, albeit narrow, path to ousting the seven-term Congressman. But the Buchanan camp responded to the leaked poll with a release of its own internal polling. That shows the incumbent leading with 53% to Good’s 37%. That wide and insurmountable lead was measured by Data Targeting. The Buchanan poll was conducted from Sept. 29 to Oct. 1, and reports a 4.9% margin of error. The Good survey was taken between Sept. 24 and 27, with a margin of error of 4.4%. Neither camp released full crosstabs on the race.
“A political consultant once fired by Carlos Giménez has a new client: Carlos Giménez” via Alex Daugherty of the Miami Herald — Eight years ago, Al Lorenzo’s political consulting career was upended by Miami-Dade Mayor Giménez. Lorenzo, a veteran political consultant who earned millions from high-profile clients ranging from Barack Obama to Marco Rubio, was fired by Gimenez’s mayoral campaign in 2012 after he failed to disclose that one of his subcontractors had a lengthy criminal record, including a two-year stint in prison for forging postage stamps. “Since day one, our campaign has held itself to a higher standard,” Gimenez’s 2012 campaign said in a statement. “Consistent with these standards, we have decided to sever ties with Quantum Results effective immediately.” But Quantum Results has resurfaced in recent months in Miami’s two high-profile congressional races.
NRDC ad slams Giménez’s record on climate change — NRDC Action Votes launched a $250,000 digital ad campaign slamming Republican Giménez for his climate change record in the race for Florida’s 26th Congressional District. The campaign also includes an ad praising Democratic U.S. Rep. Debbie Mucarsel-Powell for working with Democrats and Republicans to secure funding for resilient infrastructure. “The people of South Florida are seeing firsthand the impact of climate change, but Carlos Gimenez is putting the interests of his corporate donors before that of residents in this district,” said Jossie Steinberg, director of NRDC Action Votes. “The choice in this race is clear, which is why we made it a top priority to support Rep. Debbie Mucarsel-Powell.”
“Facebook bans QAnon across all its platforms” via Axios — Facebook announced on Tuesday it would ban all accounts, pages, and groups representing the fringe conspiracy theory QAnon from its platforms. Facebook previously banned or restricted hundreds of groups, pages and Instagram accounts that “demonstrated significant risks to public safety” due to their ties to QAnon, but the latest update goes even further — removing all accounts “even if they contain no violent content.” The move comes as Facebook, long accused of bending over backward to accommodate the right, looks to take action against harmful rhetoric coming from conservative groups and figures. Just this morning, Facebook took swifter action than Twitter against a post from Trump falsely claiming COVID-19 is less deadly than the flu.
Leg. campaigns
“Poll: Democrat Patrick Henry holds slight edge over Republican Elizabeth Fetterhoff in HD 26 grudge match” via Jacob Ogles of Florida Politics — Former Rep. Henry may well be on his way back to Tallahassee. A new St. Pete Polls survey, commissioned by Florida Politics, shows the Daytona Beach Democrat beating Republican Rep. Fetterhoff. About 48% of voters in House District 26 plan to vote for Henry, while around 46% want to stick with the incumbent. But neither candidate has won over a majority of voters, and the 2-percentage-point margin between them falls well within a 4.8% margin of error. It all goes to show, this grudge match remains one of the hottest races of the election cycle and a contest still too close to call. That’s likely a shock to no one when the matchup between the same two candidates came down to a 61-vote margin after a recount in 2018. While the poll gives cautious hope to Henry, Democrats in the region overall will likely celebrate signs Biden leads in the district with 51% of the vote to Trump’s 45%. That’s in a jurisdiction where Trump beat Democrat Hillary Clinton by 2 percentage points in 2016, the pollster said.
“Scott Plakon launches 2 TV ads in HD 29 focusing on accomplishments” via Scott Powers of Florida Politics — Rep. Plakon has launched two TV commercials supporting his reelection campaign for House District 29, both offering testimonials from his family. In one commercial, his wife Rachel Plakon discusses his legislative efforts to provide more protection for stalking victims, help for single mothers, and to eliminate a criminal statute of limitations law to make it easier to prosecute pedophiles. In the other, his daughter Jeanne Plakon Zamith, a trauma nurse, discusses his efforts to provide more support for women fighting breast and ovarian cancer and to lead new efforts to support people suffering from Alzheimer’s disease, which took her mother, his first wife, Susie Plakon, in 2018. Plakon, a publisher from Lake Mary, is battling Democratic challenger Tracey Kagan, a criminal defense lawyer from Longwood, in the Nov. 3 election for HD 29. The election is a rematch of their 2018 contest, which Plakon won 51% to 49%.
“‘F*ck the Patriarchy’: PAC attacks Anna Eskamani over her statements, tweets” via Scott Powers of Florida Politics — A new political committee website is using Democratic Rep. Eskamani‘s record, statements, tweets, and photographs to suggest a portrait of someone who is wildly radical and unacceptable for House District 47, where she’s seeking reelection. Eskamani is responding by charging the site is an “offensive, transphobic, dog-whistle” effort “littered with lies.” Her Republican opponent Jeremy Sisson said the site “looks pretty straightforward to me.” The site AnnasGottaGo.com, run by the Central Florida Leadership Fund political action committee, often makes points that Eskamani has proudly embraced, but puts them in contexts to outrage strong conservatives, such as her support for abortion rights, which the site lays out with a headline, “If abortion is murder, then…;” or her strong advocacy for gun law reform, which the site notes has drawn an F-rating from the NRA.
Down ballot
“Seminole Republican mailer includes ad from anti-Islamic group” via Martin Comas of the Orlando Sentinel — Prominent members of Seminole County’s Republican Party raised concerns Tuesday after a 16-page mailer paid for by the party arrived at thousands of homes this week, featuring an ad for The United West, designated a far-right, anti-Islamic group. The ad on page 4 of the publication directly under an endorsement for Florida Senate candidate Jason Brodeur features The United West’s logo and reads, “My faith votes. United. We Stand,” and gives the nonprofit organization’s web address. The mailer, designed to appear as a newspaper called the “Seminole County Gazette,” features endorsements of 12 Republicans running for the Florida Legislature, Seminole Commission and sheriff. It was paid for by the Seminole County Republican Executive Committee and lists its “publisher” as Linda Trocine, chairwoman of the county party.
Corona Florida
“Ron DeSantis splits rapid-result tests among young and old” via Jane Musgrave of The Palm Beach Post — Thousands of rapid-result coronavirus testing kits will soon be en route to retirement communities, nursing homes and schools in Palm Beach County and throughout the state, DeSantis said at a news conference Tuesday. With boxes of the 15-minute tests stacked on a table in front of him, DeSantis said he plans to send 180,000 of the credit-card-sized tests to retirement communities, 100,000 to long-term care facilities and 60,000 to school districts. The remaining 60,000 of the 400,000 tests Florida will receive in its first weekly shipment from the federal government will be spread among the 60 state-run coronavirus testing centers.
Florida is getting thousands of rapid COVID-19 tests; Ron DeSantis is splitting them between the young and old. Image via Fox News Channel.
“Long-term care deaths top 6,000” via The News Service of Florida — A Florida Department of Health report showed 6,001 long-term care deaths attributed to COVID-19, after an increase of 12 from Monday. A separate Department of Health report shows that almost all of the deaths involved residents of nursing homes and assisted living facilities, with about 70 involving staff members. Long-term care deaths make up about 40% of the 14,767 deaths of Florida residents from the pandemic. Miami-Dade County leads the state with 809 long-term care deaths, but 19 counties have had at least 100 deaths. Palm Beach County has had 611, Pinellas County has had 537, and Broward County has had 413, according to the Department of Health.
Corona local
“Thousands of students and teachers return to Miami classrooms as COVID concerns linger” via Colleen Wright, Monique Madan, David Goodhue and Joey Flechas of the Miami Herald — More than 22,000 students across the nation’s fourth-largest school district returned to classrooms Monday morning for the first time since the COVID-19 pandemic upended life in the spring. Students in pre-K, kindergarten and first grade, as well as students with disabilities on a modified curriculum, were part of the first wave in the district’s staggered reopening plan. Another 40,000 students, including all elementary students plus sixth, ninth and 10th-graders, are expected to return Wednesday. The students donned colorful face masks. Typical first-day gifts for teachers were accompanied by hallmarks of the new COVID reality: disinfectant wipes. Parents kept social distance as they said goodbye to their little ones outside schools. Teachers and administrators outfitted in protective gear greeted families.
The first wave of students returns to Miami-Dade schools. Image via NBC 6.
“CBD business crashed, but Miami exec still got a PPP loan and bought $1M jet, lawsuit says” via Ben Wieder of the Miami Herald — A Miami businessman’s organic hemp company was approved for a federal Paycheck Protection Program loan valued between $150,000 and $350,000 months after the business had already shut it down, according to a lawsuit filed last Friday by investors in the company. What’s more, the investors allege that the business owner, Patrick Horsman, purchased a private plane for more than $1 million after the business had crashed and burned — and after he had applied for the loan from the program designed to help struggling small businesses keep employees on the payroll. The lawsuit alleges that Horsman laid off all of Integrated CBD’s employees no later than February 2020 but still applied for and received the PPP loan in late April.
“Broward wants to separate voters without masks. But that still won’t happen.” via Lisa J. Huriash of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — Pressure mounted for Broward County’s elections boss to do more to keep voters safe from COVID-19 at the polls. Broward Supervisor of Elections Peter Antonacci is among many election officials across Florida who won’t require people to wear masks on Election Day. Elections supervisors say they cannot turn away maskless voters because no one can be deprived of their right to vote. Federal law overrules local mask laws, they say. But that’s not good enough for Broward County commissioners. Commissioners encouraged the county’s elections office to separate maskless voters from the others, a request the office rejected. Creating a separate area for people without masks would send the wrong message, an elections spokesman responded.
“After a makeover last year, Edna Runner Tutorial Center near Jupiter adjusts for COVID-19” via Sam Howard of The Palm Beach Post — 2020 was always going to be an important year for the Edna W. Runner Tutorial Center in Limestone Creek. The after-school center planned to welcome children back to its expanded and revamped facility on Church Street this spring. But when the COVID-19 pandemic shuttered Palm Beach County public schools to in-person classes, the Runner Center put its plans on hold. When Palm Beach County public schools started online classes in August, the center opened its doors to about 50 students for reliable Internet and teacher supervision. And just last month, the facility finally reverted to its typical role as an after-school tutoring center for income-qualified children in the Jupiter area.
After a renovation last year, the Edna W. Runner Tutorial Center now must retool for COVID-19.
“FSU President John Thrasher and wife isolating at home after positive COVID-19 tests” via Byron Dobson of the Tallahassee Democrat — Thrasher and his wife Jean have tested positive for COVID-19, the university announced Tuesday. Thrasher learned of his result at 3:45 p.m. Tuesday after taking what’s called a PCR test, which tests for genetic material from the virus, earlier in the day. Jean Thrasher learned of her positive diagnosis late Monday night after a recent stay in the hospital and a local rehabilitation facility for an unrelated condition. The Thrashers are isolating at home and monitoring themselves for symptoms. Both are feeling well at this time, and the President is working from home, the university’s announcement said. Thrasher tweeted at 4:45 p.m.: “I wanted to share with the FSU family that First Lady Jean Thrasher and I have tested positive for COVID-19. I’m working from home as we both isolate. We are feeling well at this time and truly appreciate everyone’s support and well wishes!”
Corona nation
“U.S. medical supply chains failed, and COVID-19 deaths followed” via Juliet Linderman and Martha Mendoza of The Associated Press — Medical supply chains that span oceans and continents are the fragile lifelines between raw materials and manufacturers overseas, and health care workers on COVID-19 front lines in the U.S. As link after link broke, the system fell apart. This catastrophic collapse was one of the country’s most consequential failures to control the virus. And it wasn’t unexpected: For decades, politicians and corporate officials ignored warnings about the risks associated with America’s overdependence on foreign manufacturing, and a lack of adequate preparation at home. Now, with more than 210,000 Americans dead and the President himself infected with the virus, the U.S. grieves the consequences. And nurses are still being told to reuse masks designed to be thrown away after each patient.
After the supply-chain broke, the system fell apart. Image via AP.
“The F.D.A. releases stricter guidelines for vaccine developers after a holdup at the White House.” via Carl Zimmer and Noah Weiland of The New York Times — The Food and Drug Administration released updated, stricter guidelines on Tuesday for coronavirus vaccine developers, a step that was blocked for two weeks by top White House officials. The guidelines make it highly unlikely that a vaccine could be authorized by Election Day. The move, which was cleared by the Office of Management and Budget, appeared to be an abrupt reversal a day after The New York Times reported that White House officials, including Mark Meadows, the chief of staff, were blocking the guidelines. The new guidelines recommend gathering extra data about the safety of vaccines in the final stage of clinical trials, a step that would take more time.
“Trump says he is pulling the plug on stimulus talks.” via The New York Times — Trump abruptly ended talks with Democrats on an economic stimulus bill, sending the stock market sliding and dealing a final blow to an intensive set of on-again-off-again negotiations to deliver additional pandemic aid to struggling Americans before the November elections. Trump announced that he was pulling the plug on the effort in a series of afternoon tweets in which he accused Speaker Nancy Pelosi of California of “not negotiating in good faith” and urged Senate Republicans to focus solely on confirming his nominee to the Supreme Court in the coming weeks. Instead, Trump said that he had instructed Steven Mnuchin, the Treasury secretary, to stop negotiating, sending the S&P 500 down as much as 1% in the immediate aftermath of his tweet. It had been up more than half a percent in the moments before. The index closed down 1.40% for the day.
Corona economics
“Unemployment surges in Florida after September dip” via Drew Dixon of Florida Politics — Following several weeks trending downward, the number of unemployment claims in Florida in the past week saw a notable jump, according to Florida Department of Economic Opportunity data released this week. There have been a total of 4.155 million jobless claims filed with the state since the coronavirus outbreak gripped the state in March. That’s up by 87,000 from the previous week. It’s the biggest surge in new weekly jobless claims since the summer. The latest increase is up 21,000 over the 66,000 new claims filed in the last full week of September. The previous month’s weekly increases usually hovered around 60,000 new filings each week and showed signs of a slowdown in jobless claims caused by the pandemic. Before September, it was not unusual to see unemployment claims jump by more than 100,000 in one week during summer months. During the peak of the pandemic, those weekly figures surged to as many as 500,000 jobless claims on a weekly basis as Florida businesses instituted layoffs, furloughs and even outright closures due to the spread of the disease.
Unemployment surged in Florida after a dip in September. Image via AP.
“Regulators reject bid to halt electricity disconnections” via Jim Saunders of The News Service of Florida — The Florida Public Service Commission sided with utilities, which argued they have made widespread efforts, such as using payment plans, to help avoid shutting off customers’ power. The proposal, filed by the League of United Latin American Citizens of Florida and two utility customers, sought an emergency rule-making process that would have led to halting many disconnections for at least 90 days. Commissioner Donald Polmann said regulators are not suggesting that electricity should be cut off and pointed to programs that utilities have in place. Florida Power & Light, Gulf Power, Duke Energy Florida and Tampa Electric Co. — along with the Public Service Commission’s staff — opposed the proposal.
“PPP money abounded — but some got it faster than others” via Yuka Hayashi, Anthony DeBarros and Amara Omeokwe of The Wall Street Journal — Six months after launching the biggest small business aid initiative in history, Congress is working to extend the Paycheck Protection Program, but with new measures to ensure the most vulnerable of businesses have a better shot at funding. The PPP initiative delivered more than 5 million loans totaling $525 billion, but was dogged by complaints from many borrowers and small-business groups that it favored sophisticated companies with strong ties to lenders, which issued the loans, over those with weaker financial roots, including many in minority neighborhoods. That disparity played out in how fast companies were able to get loans in the first critical weeks following the program’s April 3 launch, according to a Wall Street Journal review of lending data in the nation’s capital.
More corona
“Election, pandemic is one-two punch in retail’s most crucial season” via Jordyn Holman of Bloomberg — American shoppers, distracted and fearful as 2020 enters the final quarter, could still throw analysts expecting a record holiday a curveball in the kind of rip-the-rug-out revelation that’s become this year’s signature play. Despite early projections of a knockout holiday, the busiest shopping time of the year may be marred by Americans too concerned to spend freely as an unprecedented election season and the continued pandemic land a one-two punch. “This year we have these two forces in our way, interfering with our holiday,” said John Gerzema, chief executive officer of Harris Poll. Throw in the virus-related recession, and “you have this once-in-a-lifetime confluence of three events: the pandemic, the economic effect and the instability of the election that’s now just casting a pall over people’s holiday planning.”
A pandemic on top of an election year poses a couple of body blows to the retail industry. Image via Bloomberg.
“Royal Caribbean cancels cruises until December, likely to start with ‘test cruises’” via Taylor Dolven of the Miami Herald — Royal Caribbean Group won’t resume U.S. cruises until at least December, the company announced Tuesday. Cruises on its four brands — Royal Caribbean International, Celebrity Cruises, Azamara, and Silversea — are canceled through Nov. 30 worldwide except for cruises from Hong Kong, which are on sale for November. The cruise industry first shut down passenger operations in mid-March amid outbreaks of COVID-19 on several cruise ships. Last week the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention extended its cruise ban until Oct. 31. The CDC had planned to ban U.S. cruises until February 2021, but the White House overruled the agency.
Statewide
“Wilton Simpson announces Tampa General contract for Session COVID-19 plan” via Renzo Downey of Florida Politics — In an update to Senators on the chambers’ COVID-19 precautions for the upcoming Legislative Session, Simpson said Tampa General Hospital is developing a safety plan in collaboration with Senate staff. That plan will encompass all Senate areas, including offices, the Senate Chamber, committee rooms and other public areas, according to the incoming Senate leader. In collaboration with TGH, he hopes to give Senators, staff and visitors confidence in their safety measures. “We are actively seeking expert advice, we will make informed decisions, and we will work together to implement the best approach on how to keep everyone safe,” Simpson said. His staff has been working with the Department of Health, universities and hospitals to explore their options. At the President-Designate’s request, outgoing Senate President Bill Galvano authorized a contract with TGH.
Incoming Senate President Wilton Simpson is working with Tampa General Hospital on a COVID-19 safety plan for the 2021 Session.
What Chris Sprowls is reading — “Legislator to trustees: You’re flunking consolidation” via Nancy McCann of Crows Nest St. Pete — Perturbed at the way the USF administration and trustees are handling consolidation, Pinellas County legislators intend to intervene again. State Sen. Jeff Brandes warned Monday that the Legislature may take action to replace some members of the 13-member Board of Trustees and amend the law to ensure that the St. Petersburg and Sarasota-Manatee campuses are protected. In an interview with The Crow’s Nest, Brandes criticized the university’s leadership for violating the spirit of laws already on the books and said changes must come at the top. “I would say we’re reviewing the entire structure of the current board (of trustees) to ensure it best reflects the community values and the leadership on that board (that is) needed to sustain the university,” he said. Similar criticism came from Ed Montanari, the chair of the St. Petersburg City Council, who said recent declines in freshman enrollment in St. Petersburg are “frightening” and a directive to change the campus’ name is “insulting.”
“Equality Florida, Step Up for Students team up to provide LGBTQ awareness training” via Drew Wilson of Florida Politics — LGBTQ rights organization Equality Florida has joined forces with Step Up For Students to provide LGBTQ awareness training at private schools. Equality Florida currently offers the training at public schools and would bring the same curricula to private schools that accept Florida Tax Credit Scholarship and Family Empowerment Scholarship students. Step Up For Students, the organization that administers most of those scholarships, has raised $1 million privately to seed the endeavor. That money is aimed at providing four years of ongoing training services for private school administrators and teachers, provided by Equality Florida’s Safe Schools team and coordinated by Step Up’s staff. “This is an exciting opportunity for us,” Equality Florida CEO Nadine Smith said. “Any time we can step inside any school to offer help to students, we want to be there. The bottom line is that every student should feel safe, no matter whether the school is public or private.”
“Mary Mayhew replacement a question mark” via The News Service of Florida — DeSantis’ administration has not said who is replacing Mayhew at the Florida Agency for Healthcare Administration, which oversees $30 billion in spending. The Governor’s Office and AHCA had not answered questions about leadership at the agency. Mayhew announced last month that she was leaving the agency post to become president and CEO of the Florida Hospital Association. Mayhew took the reins at the hospital association on Monday. Though her work most recently has been in the public sector, Mayhew for 11 years served as a president at the Maine Hospital Association.
Happening today — Four cases are in front of the Florida Supreme Court, including a dispute about the state’s role in implementing the 2016 constitutional amendment that broadly legalized medical marijuana. Florigrown, a Tampa-based firm denied a medical-marijuana license, is challenging the constitutionality of the 2017 law to carry out the constitutional amendment. Hearings are by videoconference because of the COVID-19 pandemic, 9 a.m. floridasupremecourt.org/Oral-Arguments.
Happening today — A Citizens Property Insurance committee will meet virtually to consider the recruitment process for replacing General Counsel Dan Sumner, who retires in January, 3 p.m. Register at citizensfla.zoom.us/webinar, Call-in number: 1-786-635-1003. Code: 98643729596.
D.C. matters
“Trump administration says it will further tighten rules for foreign workers using H-1B visas” via Nick Miroff of The Washington Post — Trump administration officials said Tuesday they will make further restrictions to the H-1B visa program that businesses use to hire foreign workers for specialized occupations, a move that U.S. technology companies have fiercely opposed. The changes will make U.S. companies pay higher salaries to the workers, tighten hiring rules that determine their eligibility and increase regulation by the Labor Department and the Department of Homeland Security. The agencies have not published a copy of the new regulations, leaving hundreds of thousands of engineers, doctors and other skilled professionals mostly guessing about the scope of their impact, even as Trump administration officials described the measures in superlative terms.
“Trump’s top federal prosecutors are overwhelmingly White men” via Jake Bleiberg, Aaron Morrison and Jim Mustian of The Associated Press — The nation’s top federal prosecutors have become less diverse under Trump than under his three predecessors, leaving White men overwhelmingly in charge at a time of national demonstrations over racial inequality and the fairness of the criminal justice system. The Associated Press analyzed government data from nearly three decades and found that a persistent lack of diversity in the ranks of U.S. attorneys has reached a nadir in the Trump administration. Eighty-five percent of his Senate-confirmed U.S. attorneys are White men, according to AP’s analysis, compared with 58% in Democratic President Obama’s eight years, 73% during Republican George W. Bush’s two terms, and at most 63% under Democrat Bill Clinton.
The Donald Trump administration’s federal prosecutors are overwhelmingly White males. Image via AP.
“Marco Rubio likens Senate to essential workers in push for SCOTUS confirmation” via A.G. Gancarski of Florida Politics — Rubio said his colleagues were essential workers and had work to do, including getting a ninth person on the U.S. Supreme Court with no delay. Rubio on Tuesday’s edition of Fox and Friends blasted Democratic calls to slow down the Amy Coney Barrett confirmation process due to COVID-19 positive Senators. “We have a job to do — an essential job for the country — because we can’t pass laws and we can’t confirm Supreme Court nominees if the Senate doesn’t meet,” Rubio said on the conservative talk network’s morning showcase. Rubio took specific issue with words from Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer castigating Republicans for “contemplating marching COVID-stricken members to the U.S. Senate” to “rush through” the vote.
“Awaiting appeal outcome, ex-U. S. Rep. Corrine Brown free from prison system supervision” via Steve Patterson of The Florida Times-Union — Former U.S. Rep. Brown left Jacksonville’s federal court Tuesday free to wait at home for a decision on an appeal of her 2017 fraud and tax-crime conviction. How that helps her is a puzzle, though, since she had been sent home from prison months ago to serve the balance of a five-year prison sentence away from some potential exposure to the coronavirus pandemic. “These motions aren’t filed all that often,” U.S. Magistrate James Klindt told prosecutors and Brown’s attorneys at the start of a hearing on Brown’s request for “release” pending the appeal’s outcome. The judge granted Brown’s request, but only after pointing out that doing so would keep the 12-term congresswoman from earning credit toward completing her prison sentence at home. By foregoing that credit, Klindt added, it’s possible Brown could end up later with a prison sentence she still has to serve, maybe back in custody if the pandemic is brought under control.
Local notes
“Pensacola declares state of emergency for Hurricane Delta” via Pensacola News Journal staff reports — Mayor Grover Robinson has issued a Declaration of State of Emergency 20-05, declaring a local state of emergency in the city of Pensacola due to Hurricane Delta. The declaration came just after 5 p.m. Tuesday and followed a similar declaration by Escambia County officials earlier that morning. Hurricane Delta’s winds continue to strengthen as it moves toward the northeastern coast of the Yucatán Peninsula. The Category 4 hurricane has maximum sustained winds near 145 mph. The 5 p.m. Tuesday forecast moved Pensacola out of the forecast cone, but the area is still expected to be impacted by high winds, potential storm surge and rain. Because the hurricane is coming on the heels of Hurricane Sally, some residents are particularly vulnerable due to damage their homes have already sustained.
Pensacola Mayor Grover Robinson declares a state of emergency ahead of Hurricane Delta.
“Bay County approves borrowing additional $50 million for Hurricane Michael repairs” via Tony Mixon of The Panama City News-Herald — Bay County commissioners on Tuesday approved a $50 million bond with Truist Bank for Hurricane Michael recovery. The money will help the county continue its repair work while Federal Emergency Management Agency funds make their way here. With the new bond, the county has borrowed $300 million for recovery expenses since Michael devastated the area two years ago. The $50 million will be used for several projects, including building new fire stations in Hiland Park, Southport and Panama City’s west end station on Michigan Avenue. Currently, there are temporary structures at those locations. The county’s debt committee recently chose the bond with Truist Bank as its best option. Truist offered more money and an interest rate that matched the lowest of the other two bids at 1.06% interest rate.
“Broward fine-tunes plan to create police review board” via Lisa J. Huriash of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — Broward’s new police oversight committee won’t investigate specific complaints against cops, but it will track problem-prone officers and weigh in on policies. County commissioners this month are expected to sign off on creating the Broward Police and Criminal Justice Review Board. The idea for the panel came as a response to the killing of George Floyd in Minneapolis. The board will have 23 voting members. On Tuesday, officials agreed to add two voting members from law enforcement, including the sheriff or his designee, and a member of the Broward County Chiefs of Police Association. That will offset two members from Black Lives Matter and the Dream Defenders. “It’s kind of balanced that way,” said Vice Mayor Steve Geller.
“Policy gives prosecutors leeway to drop resisting-arrest charges. Orange sheriff ‘extremely concerned’” via Monivette Cordeiro of the Orlando Sentinel — Orange-Osceola State Attorney Aramis Ayala’s office will seek to reduce the number of people prosecuted for resisting an officer without violence, citing data that shows Black people are disproportionately arrested on such charges. The charge was among those applied to some protesters who were arrested during recent demonstrations against police brutality and systemic racism, which Ayala said prompted her to reconsider her agency’s policies. A new policy Ayala unveiled Tuesday gives prosecutors more discretion to drop cases of resisting an officer without violence, in which there are no aggravating circumstances or other criminal charges filed. In a statement, Orange County Sheriff John Mina said he was “surprised to be informed of this policy change through the media,” adding that Ayala did not confer with him or, as far as he’s aware, other law enforcement leaders before making the policy change.
Orange County Sheriff John Mina is concerned about the leeway prosecutors have for resisting arrest charges.
“School Board demands psychiatric records from Parkland parents” via Megan O’Matz and Rafael Olmeda of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — Their sons and daughters died in the Stoneman Douglas massacre. They sued the Broward School Board, the sheriff and others for the loss of their children. Now parents and other victims are being asked to turn over their psychiatric records to prove they suffered mental anguish over the tragedy. The demand, contained in documents filed in lawsuits blaming the Broward school district for failing to identify and stop the threat posed by gunman Nikolas Cruz, has families of the victims enraged. In formal court responses, School Board member Lori Alhadeff, whose daughter is one of those killed, called the demand “harassing, burdensome” and an invasion of privacy. Alhadeff was elected to the School Board after her daughter’s death.
“City of Jacksonville wants to give Shad Khan interest-free $65 million loan for Lot J” via Christopher Hong of The Florida Times-Union — Jacksonville taxpayers will give Khan $65.5 million through an unusually structured loan that would charge no interest, take up to 50 years to repay and significantly lessen Khan’s tax burden, according to the proposed deal he’s reached with City Hall to build a mixed-use development on Lot J next to TIAA Bank Field that was announced Monday. Under the novel arrangement, the city will provide an upfront payment of $65.5 million to the billionaire’s development team. Instead of repaying the loan over a fixed schedule, the developers would make an upfront deposit of $13.1 million into a trust account, where the city expects it to grow in value over decades. The city would collect the money when the account’s value reaches $65.5 million or 50 years, whichever happens first. Counting the loan, Lenny Curry has proposed committing as much as $233.3 million in public subsidies to the project, including as much as $205 million in hard cash.
“Florida man arrested for threatening census taker with gun” via The Associated Press — A Florida man was arrested for using an assault-style weapon to threaten a census taker who had come to his house for the nationwide count of every U.S. resident. Michael Cooper was arrested after threatening census taker Johnny Swinney, according to a police report. Neighbors told deputies that Swinney’s U.S. Census Bureau badge was clearly identifiable when he approached Cooper sitting on the porch of his home and the census taker identified himself as a federal worker, according to an incident report. Cooper yelled at Swinney to leave, went into his home and returned with an assault-style weapon. He loaded the chamber and Swinney returned to his vehicle, where his wife was. His wife, Nicole, told deputies that she saw Cooper pointing his weapon at her husband’s back as he walked away from the house. Once in the vehicle, they heard a shot fired in an unknown direction, according to the incident report. Cooper told deputies that Swinney was trespassing and that he didn’t see an identification badge. He said he shot a round into the ground because he didn’t want to leave it in the chamber.
Top opinion
“The pandemic upended the present. But it’s given us a chance to remake the future.” via Fareed Zakaria of The Washington Post — The world that is being ushered in as a consequence of the COVID-19 pandemic is new and scary. The health crisis has accelerated a number of forces that were already gathering steam. It is a dangerous moment. But it is also in times like these that we can shape and alter such trends. To complete the story of our future, we must add in human agency. People can choose which direction they want to push themselves, their societies, and their world. In fact, we have more leeway now. In most eras, history proceeds along a set path, and change is difficult. But the novel coronavirus has upended society.
Opinions
“4 funny feelings about 2020” via Tim Alberta of POLITICO — There’s no question that Trump is losing; that former Vice President Biden holds the high ground. Still, if the 2016 election taught us anything, it’s that election forecasts aren’t worth the paper (or web space) they’re printed on — especially forecasts relating to Trump. The man has defied gravity too many times, escaped too many near-death political experiences for anyone to feel confident in prophesying his demise. We are at a stage of the race, however, when reporters should feel confident unloading their notebook and sharing their hunches and strongly held suspicions. What follows are not ironclad assertions of realities to come; with Trump fighting COVID-19, the economy slowly unraveling and the political climate growing more volatile by the minute, there is no telling what might yet happen to upend the race.
“Couldn’t register to vote Monday? DeSantis did the right thing on Tuesday” via the Miami Herald editorial board — DeSantis went a long way to quell conspiracy theories that Monday’s untimely sputtering of the state’s online voter registration website was a vote-suppression ploy. After cries of foul play from Democratic officials, the Governor announced midday on Tuesday that he would extend the voter registration deadline to 7 p.m. There is still some suspicion as to what happened Monday. The Florida Department of State is working with federal law enforcement officials to look at whether there were any “deliberate acts against the voting process.” Let’s see what they uncover, but DeSantis did the best he could to even the playing field, in the event that there was fraud, or just the work of another faulty state website.
“Should Florida’s minimum wage be raised to $15?” via the Tampa Bay Times editorial board — Raising the state minimum wage to $15 an hour sounds appealing. The hefty bump would increase the income of hundreds of thousands of Floridians. More people would earn a living wage, enough to pay for food, shelter, and other necessities, easing the fear of having to decide between keeping the electricity on or buying prescription medicines. What’s not to like? Well, quite a bit, when you peel back the layers. The minimum wage debate is often cast as moral champions against unfeeling capitalists. But it’s far more complicated. There’s no glossing over that a $15 minimum wage creates winners, but it always creates losers. Raising the base wage by so much so quickly will increase costs for businesses. In turn, prices will rise, shifting some burden onto regular Floridians. The ones struggling to make ends meet will feel more of the pinch. So will unskilled workers who lose their jobs when businesses cut expenses to make up for the higher cost of wages.
“Amendment 2 would hit Florida businesses just as they’re struggling to come back” via the Naples Daily News editorial board — There are ideas whose time has come. And then there’s Amendment 2. The proposed change to Florida’s constitution on the Nov. 3 ballot would gradually raise the minimum wage in the state from the current $8.56 to $15 an hour by 2026. The first jump, to $10 an hour, would take effect in September of 2021. With Florida businesses reeling from the effects of COVID-19 related shutdowns and a public still wary about venturing out, we simply can’t endorse imposing higher costs on them now. It may take years for businesses, especially those in the tourism and hospitality sectors, to return to normalcy, if they ever do. Raising the cost of anything they require to operate, including labor, means they are likely to purchase less of it. That translates to fewer jobs, especially for those on the bottom of the employment ladder hoping to gain that first rung on the way up.
“Restaurant worker: Why I’m voting ‘no’ on Amendment 2 to raise Florida’s minimum wage” via Heather Parsons for Florida Today — Being part of the hospitality industry is a family tradition. My mother was a server in the restaurant industry and raised five kids on her own. I’ve been a server and bartender for more than 20 years. But if Florida passes Ballot Amendment 2, the $15-an hour mandatory minimum wage, the family tradition could come to an end. As a bartender, I am able to work hard so that I can make good money. When I was a single mom, this job afforded me the flexibility to raise my kids, but also pay my bills. Amendment 2 would change all of that. This ballot amendment would gradually hike Florida’s minimum wage up to $15 per hour by 2026. Businesses would be required to pay everyone the mandatory minimum wage, including part-time and full-time workers, students and 20-year restaurant veterans like me. There’s no way small businesses like the seafood restaurant where I work can afford to pay all employees with varying levels of experience a minimum of $15 an hour.
“House Democrats want to force you to pay for abortion” via Rick Scott for The National Review — Last week, Congress passed a spending bill to keep the government open. One previously bipartisan hallmark has come under scrutiny: a frightening reflection of the leftward shift of today’s Democratic Party on the issue of abortion. Liberal Democrats in the House, with the support of Speaker Nancy Pelosi, have signaled that they no longer will include the Hyde Amendment in funding packages starting next year. Support for taxpayer-funded abortion has become a litmus test among Democrats of one’s adherence to the party’s new radical orthodoxy on the issue. It is no longer enough for Democrats such as Pelosi to support a woman’s “right to choose.”
“Florida’s ‘toll roads to nowhere’ could have devastating environment impact. Now’s the time to stop it.” via Frank Cerabino for The Palm Beach Post — You may have heard of Florida’s sudden plan to build what are widely called “toll roads to nowhere.” If not, you ought to know about it, because if they happen, you’ll be paying for it as a Florida taxpayer, to the tune of about $1 billion over the next 10 years. The project would slice through some of Florida’s most environmentally pristine lands. M-CORES was packaged into a bill that was slipped last year through the state Legislature without the customary multiple committee hearings. The road project isn’t just to put new toll roads through these rural areas, but also to make them ripe for development by installing sewer and broadband service along the routes.
“Tax breaks for ‘high-crime’ theme parks and deli counters at Publix? Oh, Florida” via Scott Maxwell for the Orlando Sentinel — About two decades ago, Florida lawmakers said they wanted to offer incentives to businesses that would invest in urban, high-crime neighborhoods. What a nice, noble idea. Except that’s not quite how it played out. While the plan was pitched as a way to encourage companies to invest in neglected communities, Universal Orlando and its hotel partners have gotten half of all the $35 million in statewide incentives … for investing in multimillion-dollar rides and four-star resorts on its own property. And you’d have a hard time arguing that Islands of Adventure is a “high crime” neighborhood … unless maybe you consider it criminal to charge $14.99 for a souvenir soda cup.
Today’s Sunrise
Florida’s emergency operations center is tracking Hurricane Delta as it heads for the Gulf of Mexico.
Also, on today’s Sunrise:
— DeSantis visits The Villages to announce the state will be distributing more than 400,000 new rapid COVID-19 test kits per week for the near future. First in line are nursing homes and adult living centers.
— The Florida Department of Health confirmed 2,251 additional cases of COVID-19 Tuesday and 59 more fatalities.
— With just seven hours before the deadline, the state’s voter registration website crashed. So, the Governor extended the deadline for another seven hours Tuesday to make up for the lost time. The extension expires at midnight.
— The head of the Drug Enforcement Administration visits Tallahassee to announce they’ve busted a drug ring that was flooding North Florida with meth made in Mexico. The Franklin County Sheriff says it’s nothing like “Breaking Bad.”
— A deep dive into the Public Service Commission’s decision to deny a request for a 90-day moratorium on utility disconnections during the pandemic.
— And finally, a Florida Man lost his job as a school principal after telling a parent he gave equal time to Holocaust deniers because didn’t “know for sure” it actually happened. So, you can only guess who might be getting his job back.
“Airbnb is canceling one-night Halloween bookings to prevent house parties” via Shannon McMahon of The Washington Post — Airbnb took a stance against large gatherings this summer by banning parties at its rental properties globally. Now the company is moving one step further in North America by implementing a ban on one-night bookings on Halloween that could foster large gatherings. The vacation rentals platform announced on Friday that it will not allow reservations on Oct. 30 or 31 for any of its “entire home” listings in the United States and Canada. Airbnb will cancel any existing one-night reservations that fall into that category, reimbursing both guests and property hosts. Entire-home listings differ from private-room and shared-room Airbnb listings, which only offer a portion of a house or building that is usually occupied by the host. The move is part of an effort to curb parties during the global coronavirus pandemic, the company said.
To prevent large groups of partyers, Airbnb is prohibiting single night bookings around Halloween.
“St. Petersburg makes ‘Condé Nast Traveler’ list of America’s best cities” via Jay Cridlin of the Tampa Bay Times — For the first time, St. Petersburg was named one of the Top 10 large cities to visit in the Condé Nast Traveler 2020 Reader’s Choice Awards, unveiled Tuesday. A record 715,000 Condé Nast Traveler readers voted in the 33rd annual awards, among the longest-running and best-known in the travel world. The poll, conducted online, takes into consideration categories including hotels, restaurants, attractions and value. The magazine called the city “perfect for a weekend getaway,” highlighting the white-sand beaches and dolphin-spotting possibilities near the Don CeSar hotel and Fort De Soto Park, as well as downtown attractions including the Salvador Dalí Museum, “dozens of street murals” and the new St. Pete Pier. Visit St. Pete/Clearwater President and Chief Executive Steve Hayes called the Condé Nast Traveler awards “the best of the best of travel,” saying the honor “gives us, as a destination, something to hang our hat on.”
“Why the ‘Free Britney’ saga feels so familiar” via Spencer Kornhaber of The Atlantic — Someday, with luck, Britney Spears will write a “good, mysterious book.” At least, that’s what she said in the closing moments of Britney: For the Record, a 2008 MTV special that capped off a few years of highly publicized turmoils for Spears. In January 2008, the then-26-year-old Spears was committed to a hospital psychiatric ward against her will, and her father, Jamie, obtained temporary legal control of her affairs. By the time of For the Record’s November broadcast, the conservatorship had become permanent. It was a shockingly quiet end to what had been a raucous story. Yet signs of trouble have become visible in the past two years, beginning with Spears abruptly canceling a second Las Vegas residency.
Happy birthday
Belated wishes to Joe Follick. Celebrating today are Mark Logan, Randy Osborne, the always kind, always thoughtful Jon Peck of Sachs Media Group, and Tom Philpot.
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Good morning. We hope this email finds you well. It’s often difficult to come up with original ways to start this newsletter, so today we’re circling back with as generic an email greeting as possible (ccing Ted for visibility).
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2020: The VP debate between Mike Pence and Kamala Harris is tonight. President Trump, back at the White House after being hospitalized with Covid-19, said he planned to attend next week’s presidential debate in Miami.
Economy: The U.S. trade deficit ($67.1 billion) grew to its highest level in 14 years. The deficit measures the difference in value between a country’s exports and its imports. If the deficit gets too big, it could hamper economic growth.
Yesterday, President Trump told his representatives to pause negotiations on a new pandemic relief bill until after the election, tweeting, “after I win, we will pass a major Stimulus Bill that focuses on hardworking Americans and Small Business.”
Markets did their best Grand Canyon impression. The Dow swung as much as 600 points lower and the S&P took a skinny dip too:
Google Finance
It was unexpected
Last week, Trump threw his support behind a $1.6 trillion package and tweeted “GET IT DONE” from the hospital on Saturday. So what happened?
Trump said yesterday that House Speaker Nancy Pelosi wasn’t negotiating “in good faith” and was trying to bail out Democrat-controlled states with “money that is in no way related to Covid-19.”
State and local governments are cash-strapped due to falling tax revenues and mounting expenses from the pandemic. Democrats wanted $436 billion to send to those governments, while the Trump administration offered $250 billion.
The stakes
Trump’s tweets came hours after a Powellful warning from the Federal Reserve. In a virtual speech before the National Association for Business Economics, Chair Jerome Powell said businesses and households are facing a “weak recovery” that will cause “unnecessary hardship” unless the government offers more support.
Powell praised lawmakers for their “innovative” bills earlier this year. But not afraid to wield the carrot and the stick, he warned that initial gains could stall as businesses reopen to weak demand. And if the recovery slows, a “tragic” escalation of existing racial and wealth inequalities could come.
His main point: Lawmakers need to do something. “Even if policy actions ultimately prove to be greater than needed, they will not go to waste.”
Big picture: “After the election” is a bit of an ambiguous timestamp. Experts believe election results could take weeks, if not months, to determine due to mail-in voting. If a new relief bill hinges on full election results, then school funding, small business and airline aid, and direct payments to households could be held up for months.
The pandemic may have delayed weddings and the Masters, but it did not throw off track House Democrats’ plans to deliver a spanking to Big Tech firms over alleged anticompetitive behavior.
After a 16-month investigation, they released their findings in a 449-page report yesterday. The high-level takeaway? Facebook, Apple, Google, and Amazon all enjoy monopoly power in certain sectors and should be forced to split their online businesses from other units.
“Companies that once were scrappy, underdog startups that challenged the status quo have become the kinds of monopolies we last saw in the era of oil barons and railroad tycoons.”
“These firms have too much power, and that power must be reined in and subject to appropriate oversight and enforcement.”
Bottom line: If adopted, this proposal would amount to the “most significant changes to federal antitrust rules in decades,” writes Politico. That’s a big if—GOP lawmakers could push back on the more drastic recommendations.
Today, the Supreme Court will hear oral arguments in Oracle’s consequential legal case against Google.
At issue: Oracle is demanding $9 billion in damages over what it calls illegal use of its software. Some have called it the “copyright case of the century,” and it’s been marinating awhile; the case was filed in 2010.
The backstory: To make the operating system for its Android smartphone, Google developers used a component—the application programming interface, or API—of the programming language and development platform Java. Oracle now owns Java.
So Oracle says it’s owed $$$. A jury sided with Google initially, but then two appeals court decisions favored Oracle. Google says its use of the API is protected by what lawyers call “fair use.”
A lot is at stake here. APIs are a central, if legally hazy, pillar of modern software development—developers have assumed they’re fair game for ~20 years. Experts worry an Oracle win would mean the consolidation of legal power among Big Tech’s software giants and a rockier path for startups.
When we mention Slack in our e-newsletters, we aren’t just name dropping the most productive platform ever known to office-kind. At the Brew, we actually rely on Slack to Get. Stuff. Done.
So what exactly do we do on ?
In short:everything.
In long: Slack lets us , stay organized, and avoid the dreaded workplace email-overload. As the new way to communicate, Slack replaces email with something faster, better organized, and more secure.
From meaningful conversations about business goals to meme-ingful conversations with our teammates, Slack keeps us on task and makes us feel connected. It’s almost like we never really left the office.
. Slack lets you attach info from thousands of apps, share files, and make phone calls (whatever those are). It connects to everything you need to get your work done.
Anyone who doubts shoppers’ willingness to visit stores in-person should drop by their local Ikea on a Saturday. Yesterday, the Swedish furniture retailer announced that massive demand for home furnishings has kept it on track to open a record 50+ locations this year.
Still, after decades of serving customers a store experience as consistent as its meatballs, it’s ready to mix things up:
Under Ikea’s “total market approach,” the company is supplementing its suburban warehouse mazes with city showrooms and expanded online fulfillment.
It’s also adding kitchen planning studios, services such as furniture assembly and rental, and tech-savvy tools for customers.
Even as online sales surged 45% for the fiscal year ended in August, store closures this spring did hurt Ikea’s total revenue. But the company still managed to welcome 825 million visitors, and consumers have flocked back for Fjällbo since lockdowns lifted.
Bottom line: The outlook hasn’t been this good for Ikea since Netflix dropped Tidying Up with Marie Kondo.
Yesterday, Boeing said that over the next decade global airlines will need 11% fewer planes than previously forecast, reflecting a staggering and persistent drop in air passenger traffic.
Meanwhile, private jet takeoffs and landings are projected to rebound to pre-pandemic levels by next summer.
Yesterday, the U.S. DOJ arrested early tech entrepreneur John McAfee in Spain.
McAfee made his fortune with the computer virus-fighting software you remember from fifth grade computer class, but he hasn’t been associated with it since the ’90s.
The charges: tax evasion, per an indictment from June that was unsealed yesterday. It alleges that from 2014 to 2018, McAfee dodged the tax man by funneling payments through bank accounts set up by other people, dealing in crypto, and buying assets (including a yacht) under other people’s names.
He may have a hard time pleading poor—during those years McAfee made over $23 million from selling the rights to his life story, consulting, and other work, according to the indictment.
Zoom out: This guy is what your mom calls “quite the character.” In 2012, he was linked to the death of his neighbor in Belize, then showed up in Guatemala, where he was arrested on immigration charges. He then laid low until 2016, when he launched a bid for the U.S. presidency on the Libertarian ticket.
WHAT ELSE IS BREWING
Facebook is banning all accounts representing the conspiracy theory QAnon from its platforms.
More Facebook: The company removed a post by President Trump that said the seasonal flu was more deadly than Covid-19, a claim rejected by health experts. Twitter flagged the post as spreading misinformation about the coronavirus.
Apple is expected to debut its new iPhones at an event on Oct. 13.
The Trump administration upped requirements for employers who hire workers through the H-1B visa program.
TikTok scooted by Instagram as teens’ second-favorite social app, according to a Piper Sandler report. The first? Snapchat.
SNL actually paid audience members last Saturday night to comply with pandemic guidelines.
Flippin’ 300%. That’s how much Flippy, the world’s first autonomous robotic kitchen assistant, can increase profit margins for quick serve restaurants. And you can flippin’ invest in this QSR game changer right now. Just flippin’ do it.*
K-pop data viz: Why do groups like BTS and SuperM have 7+ members? The Pudding put together a data-driven breakdown of how they’ve gotten so big.
Read a book: The New York Public Library created election reading lists for kids, teens, and adults. To not read about politics, head to their Instagram story highlights and swipe through classic books like Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland or The Raven.
Losing a guitar legend: Eddie Van Halen, the cofounder of the rock band Van Halen, died of cancer yesterday at 65. Here’s his 20 greatest solos, an iconic music video, and tributes from John Mayer, Keith Urban, and more.
*This is sponsored advertising content
LAW SCHOOL TRIVIA
Big law firms have brushed off the pandemic like it was a junior associate requesting a weekend off. Can you name the top 10 law schools in the country, according to the latest U.S. News and World Report rankings?
LAW SCHOOL TRIVIA ANSWER
Yale
Stanford
Harvard
Columbia
University of Chicago
NYU
Penn
UVA
Northwestern, UC Berkeley, University of Michigan (tie)
Good morning and welcome to Fox News First. Here’s what you need to know as you start your day …
Trump authorizes Russian collusion declassification along with Clinton email probe documents
President Trump on Tuesday announced he has “fully authorized the total Declassification of any & all documents” related to the Russia investigation and the FBI’s investigation into former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton’s use of a private email server.
“All Russia Hoax Scandal information was Declassified by me long ago,” Trump tweeted. “Unfortunately for our Country, people have acted very slowly, especially since it is perhaps the biggest political crime in the history of our Country,” before he additionally tweeted “Act!!!”
Last year, the president gave Attorney General Bill Barr authority to declassify any documents related to surveillance of the Trump campaign in 2016. Trump, at the time, also ordered members of the intelligence community to cooperate with Barr’s probe.
Allies of the president, including Republicans on Capitol Hill leading their own investigations into the origins of the Trump-Russia probe, have criticized officials like FBI Director Christopher Wray and CIA Director Gina Haspel, claiming that the directors have been blocking the release of documents.
“Today, at the direction of President Trump, I declassified additional documents relevant to ongoing Congressional oversight and investigative activities,” Ratcliffe said in a statement to Fox News Tuesday. CLICK HERE FOR MORE ON OUR TOP STORY.
In other developments:
– Gregg Jarrett: Declassification of Russia probe documents could prove Hillary Clinton committed felony
– DNI declassifies Brennan notes, CIA memo on Hillary Clinton ‘stirring up’ scandal between Trump, Russia
– Fred Fleitz: Report claims Hillary OK’d effort to defeat Trump in 2016 with false Russia collusion charge
– ‘Spygate’ author Bongino cheers Trump declassification move while awaiting surgery
– Trump allies, Republicans say American people ‘deserve the truth,’ praise declassification of Russia probe docs
– Trump’s declassifying order won’t erase his wrongdoing, Swalwell says
Pelosi questions COVID-19 treatments’ effect on Trump’s mental fitness after economic stimulus talks fall apart
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi wondered out loud whether President Trump’s use of a steroid during his COVID-19 treatment regimen may have been “impacting his thinking” after the president called for an abrupt halt of negotiations over the next coronavirus stimulus bill, according to reports.
Pelosi questioned whether dexamethasone had affected the president’s thought process as he recovers from his illness, during a Democratic call Tuesday, according to CNN’s Manu Raju, who cited two people on the line.
The drug’s potential side effects can include vertigo, psychic disorders and mood swings, according to the U.S. Food and Drug Administration.
But Dr. Brian Garibaldi, a specialist in pulmonary critical care, said the president received his first dose of the drug Saturday did not subsequently appear to show any side effects.
On Twitter, Trump countered that the Democrats were after more money than is justified for the next round of COVID-19 relief, tweeting “Nancy Pelosi is asking for $2.4 trillion … to bail out poorly run, high crime, Democrat states, money that is in no way related to COVID-19. We made a very generous offer of $1.6 trillion … and, as usual, she is not negotiating in good faith.” CLICK HERE FOR MORE.
In other developments:
– Trump rejects Dems’ coronavirus relief proposal, calls off negotiations ‘until after the election’
– Pelosi cites Fed’s Powell in latest push for coronavirus relief deal
– House Democrats’ stimulus bill includes stimulus checks for illegal immigrants, protections from deportations
Eddie Van Halen, legendary rock guitarist, dead at 65 from throat cancer
Eddie Van Halen, one of rock ‘n’ roll’s singular and most gifted guitarists, died Tuesday morning, his son Wolfgang, announced on Twitter.
“I can’t believe I’m having to write this, but my father, Edward Lodewijk Van Halen, has lost his long and arduous battle with cancer this morning,” he tweeted.
Van Halen was a guitar virtuoso, whose blinding speed, control and innovation propelled his band, Van Halen, into one of hard rock’s biggest groups, fueled the unmistakable fiery solo in Michael Jackson’s hit “Beat It” and elevated him to the status of rock god. CLICK HERE FOR MORE.
In other developments:
– Eddie Van Halen’s death, celebs react: ‘My heart is broken’
– Eddie Van Halen’s life in pictures
– Michael Levin: Eddie Van Halen played soundtrack for my generation — his death shows even rock gods are mortal
– Eddie Van Halen’s ex-wife Valerie Bertinelli pays tribute to late star: ‘See you in our next life my love’
TODAY’S MUST-READS: – Biden raises eyebrows after telling ‘these beautiful young ladies’ he wants to ‘see them dancing when they’re four years older’
– McCloskeys indicted on gun charges stemming from standoff at St Louis mansion
– Experimental Chinese coronavirus vaccine reportedly safe in early-stage trials: researchers
– Mark Cuban, Sen. Ted Cruz engage in Twitter spat over drop in NBA ratings
– Netflix indicted by Texas grand jury for ‘Cuties’ film
– Ben Shapiro: If Biden, a ‘comatose 78-year-old career politician’ wins election by double digits, ‘that’s on Trump’
– LeBron James, Lakers move within one game of NBA title
THE LATEST FROM FOX BUSINESS: – NY loses more residents than any state during coronavirus pandemic
– Bill Murray tells FBN he can moderate next presidential debate after ‘a couple cups of coffee’
– Elon Musk is now Tesla’s sole voice after key department gets cut
#TheFlashback: CLICK HERE to find out what happened on “This Day in History.”
SOME PARTING WORDS
Tucker Carlson continued his attacks on the mainstream media during Tuesday’s “Tucker Carlson Tonight” concerning media attacks on President Trump’s COVID-19 message.
“It’s hard to think of a more positive message than Trump’s message. Yes, the coronavirus is deadly – it’s killed hundreds of thousands of people in this country. Trump survived, so can we,” Carlson said. “Don’t let it dominate your own life, Trump said. That’s advice we’d give our own children.”
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Trump’s COVID spotlights Pence role as pandemic point man, raises stakes of VP debate
Following his 2016 debate against Hillary Clinton’s running mate, Tim Kaine, Pence received high marks — even among liberal media outlets — for a level, dignified performance.
On Tuesday, President Donald Trump tweeted, “Nancy Pelosi is asking for $2.4 Trillion Dollars to bailout poorly run, high crime, Democrat States, money that is in no way related to COVID-19. We made a very generous offer of $1.6 Trillion Dollars and, as usual, she is not negotiating in good faith. I am rejecting their… request, and looking to the future of our Country. I have instructed my representatives to stop negotiating until after the election when, immediately after I win, we will pass a major Stimulus Bill that focuses on hardworking Americans and Small Business.” Twitter
Later on Tuesday, he added, “The House & Senate should IMMEDIATELY Approve 25 Billion Dollars for Airline Payroll Support, & 135 Billion Dollars for Paycheck Protection Program for Small Business. Both of these will be fully paid for with unused funds from the Cares Act. Have this money. I will sign now!” and “If I am sent a Stand Alone Bill for Stimulus Checks ($1,200), they will go out to our great people IMMEDIATELY. I am ready to sign right now.” Twitter
From the Right
The right criticizes Pelosi for refusing to compromise and is divided about preferred stimulus measures.
“Though Pelosi never mentions it, her bill would rewrite election law for 2020, barring voter-ID requirements, forcing states to count absentee ballots that arrive as late as 10 days after Election Day and imposing same-day voter registration everywhere, though currently only 21 states allow it. These changes don’t belong in a stimulus bill…
“Pelosi’s bill promises school districts $225 billion, but only $5 billion, or 2 percent, would go to making schools safer by improving air quality or installing sinks and other hygiene upgrades… The bill allocates $417 billion to state and local governments, with no strings…
“A sizable portion of stimulus money should go to environmental improvements such as air-cleaning systems, antimicrobial coatings on desks, keyboards and subway poles and other antiviral technologies that improve workplace and transit safety… Instead, in Pelosi’s bill, the $600 billion-plus allocated to cities, states and school districts — a staggering amount equivalent to the nation’s entire defense budget — would be consumed plugging budget holes.” Betsy McCaughey, New York Post
“Trump is right that Democratic leadership has been demanding far more than it should be in these negotiations. One need only look at the past pork they tried to stuff into Congress’s first two rounds of coronavirus aid to understand Trump’s frustration. But that is no reason to call off negotiations altogether. The two parties managed to compromise on this twice before, and they can do so again…
“Pelosi is as much to blame for this fiasco as Trump. Republicans are probably right when they argue that she is intentionally refusing to compromise on this deal in order to hurt Trump’s reelection chances. If she cared more about the American public than her political fortune, she would have passed this package weeks ago. But now, she can lay the blame for this package’s failure squarely at Trump’s feet. And she will be right to do so — because there was no reason for this. Additional aid is a universally popular and necessary policy, and by abandoning it, Trump is jeopardizing his campaign’s chances and, more importantly, the well-being of millions who need help.” Kaylee McGhee, Washington Examiner
Others argue, “Good for Trump for standing firm on Pelosi’s blowout spending package. Right now the conventional wisdom, which is sometimes not completely wrong, is that this is a major political blunder by Trump. But it does show he can hang tough in the face of political pressure. Maybe he can turn this to his advantage in the next debate and the rest of the campaign. Instead of following Truman and attacking a ‘do-nothing Congress,’ he should attack a fiscally reckless Congress. Maybe Mitch McConnell can reach a deal with Pelosi, though I doubt she wants a deal at this point.” Steven Hayward, Power Line Blog
“The economy is still rebounding in robust fashion, enough so that at their September meeting the Fed Governors had to update their too pessimistic predictions from June. St. Louis Fed President James Bullard told the Journal this week that the economy is healthy enough that no more monetary stimulus may be needed. Data such as industrial production and, this week, service-industry activity have been strong. A rebounding labor market and a 14% savings rate pave the way for more consumer spending without $1,000 checks. The Atlanta Fed’s GDPNow forecast for third quarter growth is 35.3% as of Tuesday…
“The main current economic problem isn’t a lack of demand-side stimulus. It is the continuing restrictions on business and commerce in many states. The state economies suffering the most are those that have continued the strictest lockdowns. The August jobless rates in New York (12.5%), California (11.4%) and Pennsylvania (10.3%) were the highest in the country. Contrast that with Utah (4.1%), Texas (6.8%) and Georgia (5.6%). The solution is to reopen the economy while protecting the most vulnerable from Covid.” Editorial Board, Wall Street Journal
Some suggest, “Instead of spending the money, why not cut out the government middleman and not collect the taxes? In 2020 the personal income tax was expected to raise $1.81 trillion and the corporate income tax $260 billion, for a total of $2.07 trillion. For a little more than $2 trillion, Congress could suspend the personal and corporate income tax for a year…
“Roughly 150 million workers would no longer have income tax withheld from their paychecks, providing an enormous boost to their incomes and their incentive to work… America’s 30 million or so small businesses would no longer have to pay, collect or calculate the income tax for a year. This would mean more money for hiring workers and Investing…
“The current 2,100-page House stimulus bill would dole out dollars to hundreds of special interests—solar companies, airlines, transit operators, universities, state and local pension funds, hospitals, art programs and teachers unions. The income tax suspension would benefit everyone.” Stephen Moore, Wall Street Journal
From the Left
The left criticizes Trump for refusing to compromise and supports a large stimulus bill.
“The stock market immediately sold off on the news, with the Dow Jones industrial average ending the day 376 points down. Companies from airlines to energy firms to restaurants have warned in recent days that they will have to undertake massive layoffs without more government aid. At least 75,000 layoffs were announced by major corporations at the end of last week alone…
“This new wave of layoffs will add more to the ranks of the 26 million Americans who were already receiving unemployment compensation. Many unemployed say they no longer have enough money to pay rent, car payments or utility bills, or even buy food. The average unemployment payment fell from $900 a week to just over $300 at the end of July, a sharp reduction that makes it hard for many families to financially survive. As these people stop paying renting and car payments, it hurts landlords, firms and banks waiting for the money…
“Trump risks the nation backsliding economically, putting more jobs and business in danger of going away.” Heather Long, Washington Post
“Voters surveyed in the New York Times/Siena College national poll in late September favored a $2 trillion stimulus package by a 72-23 margin. The possibility that the race would tighten in the stretch run because of economic improvement was one of the things helping Trump most in our [election] model… Now, though, with voters possibly encountering news of layoffs instead of renewed growth, Trump may have undermined his best comeback strategy…
“And the way Trump went about it makes matters worse for him, politically. Up until this point, House Majority Leader Nancy Pelosi had faced at least a little bit of a risk: Though the stimulus might have helped Trump, she could have been partly blamed if talks collapsed. But now, Trump’s tweets make it clear that he was the one who pulled out of the talks.” Nate Silver, FiveThirtyEight
“The Republican rationale for opposing the House bill has always been that it is a ‘blue-state bailout,’ a reward for irresponsible Democratic jurisdictions. This claim is simply false; the economic crisis has dried up tax revenue and driven up spending needs in states and cities run by Democrats and Republicans alike…
“Suppose it were somehow true, though, that Democratic states and towns were exclusively in need of federal help to avoid tax hikes and service cuts. You can see why ideological conservatives might salivate at the opportunity to use a crisis to cut them down to size. But why would Trump want that? Does he think laying off cops and teachers in Michigan, Wisconsin, and Pennsylvania helps him?” Jonathan Chait, New York Magazine
“Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) seems completely indifferent to whether there’s a stimulus bill or not; he may have decided that Trump is going to lose anyway, so he wants to make life as difficult as possible for President Biden, and too much economic recovery would hamper that effort… And Trump? Officially, he supported more stimulus, until out of nowhere he put the kibosh on the negotiations. But the truth is that it’s safe to say he had few strong opinions about it one way or another.” Paul Waldman, Washington Post
“Viewed broadly, Trump’s first term has been defined by the deals he didn’t do. Trump promised to force Mexico to pay for the construction of the southern border wall. He said he would renegotiate the Iran nuclear deal. That he would make a peace deal between Israel and Palestine. That he would pass a new health care bill. That he would pass a new gun control measure… The lack of a [stimulus] deal represents a remarkable failing of one of the central promises of his presidency: That he could make deals that other longtime Washington politicians could only dream about.” Chris Cillizza, CNN
“It’s true that the long-term fiscal outlook gives cause for concern… But for the moment, as [Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome] Powell pointed out, the risks are skewed. Fiscal stimulus that’s too meager or too long delayed could tip the economy into slower growth or even outright contraction (which would itself have serious long-term fiscal consequences). Right now, on the other hand, with the government able to borrow for nothing and inflation running lower than target, delivering too much fiscal stimulus poses little if any danger.” Editorial Board, Bloomberg
“The initial goal in augmenting unemployment benefits was to provide full replacement rate income to workers forced to shelter in place. Instead, lawmakers agreed to a $600 flat weekly supplement for all recipients as it soon became clear that many states’ computer systems were incapable of issuing actual replacement-level wages…
“What’s called for now is to address the problem at the source by modernizing our government’s fintech infrastructure. Not only would strengthened systems better facilitate essential programs like those in the CARES Act, but the more proficient policies they enable could even contribute to a restored public confidence in government.” Jason Tepperman, The Hill
☕ Good Wednesday morning, and enjoy tonight’s V.P. debate (9 p.m. ET in Salt Lake City). Today’s Smart Brevity™ count: 1,274 words … 5 minutes.
🎧 Axios Today, our 5-minute podcast hosted by Niala Boodhoo, is right here.
💻 Join Caitlin Owenstoday at 12:30 p.m. ET for an Axios virtual event about ways the pandemic has worsened social and racial inequities. Register here.
1 big thing: Trump’s seniors moment
Illustration: Sarah Grillo/Axios
Something wild and unexpected unfolded in the second half of President Trump’s term, and now is accelerating: Elderly Americans, who helped elect him, have swung sharply against him.
Why it matters: National and state polls show a total Trump collapse among Americans 65 and older. If this chasm remains, it could help bring the whole Republican power structure down with Trump.
In what has been a 50-50ish nation, it’s stunning to see polling gaps this wide:
In a NBC/Wall Street Journal poll out Sunday, Joe Biden led Trump by 27 points among seniors (62% to 35%).
In a CNN/SSRS poll out yesterday, similar story — 21 points(60% to 39%).
This is a group Trump won by seven points in 2016.
The same gap shows up in state polling, including the critical battlegrounds of Florida and Pennsylvania.
The movement predates the virus. CNN polling guru Harry Enten notes that a year ago, Biden was up 11 points over Trump with seniors in a CNN poll.
💡 The main pre-pandemic reasons were health care and his strength with women, Axios’ Alexi McCammond and Margaret Talev wrote in May.
Republicans believe the big reason for the current chasm is the coronavirus, which has hit seniors far harder than any age group. A former senior White House official who remains close to the team told Axios’ Jonathan Swan:
“[A] few of us screamed from the rooftops to them about in March. Who [cares] what anyone else thinks? If you can’t win seniors, you can’t win.”
“And, if you don’t take something that is killing old people seriously, you will lose seniors.”
Between the lines: More women vote than men. More women go to college than men. More women than ever are running for election and winning. And more women than ever are turning on Trump and the GOP.
The bottom line: Younger, white men alone do not a victory make. So the 65+ trend represents a clear and present danger to the vitality and viability of the GOP.
Trump has undermined himself with old people, women and minorities.
National Journal’s Josh Kraushaartweeted yesterday: “That’s going to be the story of this election: Pivotal Trump voting bloc in 2016 becoming part of the Biden base.”
2. Cost of Washington’s stimulus failures
Illustration: Aïda Amer/Axios
Heading into the winter months without a new round of stimulus will leave vulnerable workers without a financial safety net if they get sick. That will likely make the pandemic worse, experts tell Axios health care editor Sam Baker.
Trump tweeted yesterday afternoon: “I have instructed my representatives to stop negotiating until after the election when, immediately after I win, we will pass a major Stimulus Bill that focuses on hardworking Americans and Small Business.” Stocks fell, and even his allies were baffled by this obviously politically dumb move.
But then he tweeted last night: “If I am sent a Stand Alone Bill for Stimulus Checks ($1,200), they will go out to our great people IMMEDIATELY. I am ready to sign right now. Are you listening Nancy?”
At the Capitol, which has no formal testing regimen, 123 front-line workers have tested positive since the beginning of the pandemic, Roll Call reports.
White House senior adviser Stephen Miller confirmed late yesterday that he has joined the list of top Trump officials who have tested positive: “Over the last five days I have been working remotely and self-isolating, testing negative every day through yesterday. Today, I tested positive for COVID-19 and am in quarantine.”
The bottom line: Official Washington is making this worse.
Over the next few months, the failure to provide some financial lifeline will likely force some working people into an impossible choice between their health and their livelihoods.
Above, workers clean the plexiglass panels that’ll separate Vice President Pence and Sen. Kamala Harris at tonight’s V.P. debate at the University of Utah.
Pence and Harris will be exactly 12.25 feet apart.
Harris plans to zero in on Pence’s role as the head of the coronavirus task force, sources tell Axios’ Alexi McCammond.
Harris plans to confront him with personal questions like: What message does it send to American families who’ve lost a loved one to this virus, when President Trump says not to be afraid of it?
And she plans to revive Pence’s own inaccurate virus assessments, including saying in April that “[i]f you look at the trends today, … I think by Memorial Day weekend we will have this coronavirus epidemic behind us.”
Sen. Kamala Harris, in a forthcoming Elle cover story by Ashley C. Ford, explains a greeting in various African cultures:
When you [are introduced] for the first time, the greeting is not “pleased to meet you.” The greeting is “I see you.” I see you as a complete human being. At this moment in time, it is so critically important in our country for all people to be seen in their full selves, in a way that gives them the dignity they deserve.
4. Worth 1,000 words
5. Economics behind Trump’s stimulus flips
Graphic: Steven Rattner for MSNBC’s “Morning Joe”
Markets hated President Trump’s rebuff of stimulus discussions, but the president’s skepticism makes sense if you follow the logic of his economic advisers, Axios Markets editor Dion Rabouin writes.
Trump has surrounded himself with die-hard acolytes of supply-side economics, like one-time Fed pick Stephen Moore, who argue that fiscal stimulus measures and increased benefits for unemployed Americans don’t help, but instead hurt the economy.
“We’re very worried about Trump doing a deal with Pelosi that would have very negative effects on the economy,” Moore told Axios’ Alayna Treene in July.
They’ve been lobbying Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin, who led negotiations for the White House, to focus exclusively on tax cuts and more deregulation to counter the downturn.
Trump economic adviser Larry Kudlow is also a dyed-in-the-wool supply sider and has been calling for payroll tax cuts while playing down the value of relief spending for months.
6. Mrs. Obama: Vote “like your lives depend on it”
Photo via the Biden campaign
Former First Lady Michelle Obama made her closing argument yesterday for Joe Biden, arguing that President Trump has mismanaged the pandemic while “stoking fears about Black and brown Americans,” reports Axios’ Hans Nichols.
“We can no longer pretend that we don’t know exactly who and what this president stands for. Search your hearts, and your conscience, and then vote for Joe Biden like your lives depend on it.”
Any hope that blockbuster hits would return to the big screen this year have been shattered in the past week, writes Axios’ Sara Fischer.
Cineworld, the parent company of Regal Cinemas, on Monday said it would be temporarily closing all of its 663 theaters in the U.S. and the U.K.
Warner Bros. on Monday said that its highly-anticipated film “Dune” would now be delayed in its theatrical debut until 2021.
In doing so, it also pushed the release date for “The Batman” from 2021 to 2022.
The bottom line: All of this signals that the movie industry likely won’t even begin to begin to bounce back until 2021, when big blockbusters are back on the release schedule.
Eddie Van Halen, then 49, plays the final chord of “Jump” during a Van Halen concert at the Continental Airlines Arena in East Rutherford, N.J., in 2004. Photo: John Munson/NJ Advance Media via AP
Guitar virtuoso Eddie Van Halen, whose prodigious skill helped him a rock god, died yesterday at 65 from cancer. (AP)
I am the best at doing me. Nobody else can do me better than me.
You know, Eric Clapton is Eric Clapton. Nobody does Clapton better than him. Nobody does Hendrix better than Hendrix. We’re not trying to be anything other than who we are.
10. 🍽️ “Enjoy Your Meal. The Clock Is Ticking”
“To survive the pandemic, some restaurants are taking an unusual approach to hospitality: showing diners the door,” writes The Wall Street Journal’s Alina Dizik for an A-hed.
“Reseating parties more quickly throughout the evening allows restaurants to benefit from higher food sales rather than letting the same guests linger at the table.”
“Turnover is especially important when COVID regulations call for serving fewer guests in the dining room at one time and keeping diners farther apart.”
“Every minute counts,” David Schneider, director of operations at Portale in New York, told the Journal.
Mike Allen
📱 Thanks for starting your day with us. Invite your friends tosign upfor Axios AM/PM.
Defense Secretary Mark Esper blew Naval growth projections out of the water Tuesday when he announced a goal of more than 500 manned and unmanned ships by 2045.
Jon Hoadley, a 37-year-old liberal, is pushing an agenda to confront climate change aggressively as a wedge issue to defeat longtime Republican incumbent Rep. Fred Upton in a purple district of southwest Michigan.
Vice President Mike Pence and Sen. Kamala Harris’s Wednesday debate sets up a clash between two figures with vocally opposite views on abortion and religious freedom.
The Republicans have cut the Democratic Party’s voter registration edge in key states, a development President Trump’s campaign views as a hidden advantage as polls show rival Joe Biden growing his lead.
Vice President Mike Pence and California Sen. Kamala Harris will face off on Wednesday for the first and only vice presidential debate during the 2020 campaign. But if history is any guide and people continue to vote the top of the ticket, the debate won’t change much.
Calm, disciplined, and tight. Four years ago at Virginia’s Longwood University, Indiana Gov. Mike Pence demonstrated his debate chops and helped rebalance President Trump’s awkwardly flailing campaign.
Renewing the $600 enhanced unemployment payment that expired in July would slam the brakes on the economic recovery, according to a report to be released Wednesday.
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Good morning, Chicago. On Tuesday, Illinois health officials announced 1,617 new known cases of COVID-19 and 32 additional fatalities. The seven-day statewide positivity rate is currently 3.4%.
Also, the city warned that Chicago residents are “strongly advised” to avoid traveling to Indiana. The state may be the next addition to the quarantine list next week.
Have you prepared your voting plan for this upcoming election? Early voting is now underway in Chicago and across the state, and we’ve put together a list of nearly 200 locations in the city and the suburbs where you can vote early.
Here’s more coronavirus news and other top stories you need to know to start your day.
Mayor Lori Lightfoot on Tuesday cast a dark vision of the city budget plan she will present to aldermen later this month, saying it might be the toughest vote City Council members will ever have to take because of its potential to disrupt workers’ lives if she resorts to wide-scale layoffs or other labor cuts.
Though Lightfoot again declined to specify exactly how she will close a projected $1.2 billion deficit, the mayor said every meeting with her financial team about the issue “has been painful.”
President Donald Trump, said to be making progress in his recovery from COVID-19, tweeted his eagerness to return to the campaign trail Tuesday even as the outbreak that has killed more than 210,000 Americans reached ever more widely into the upper echelons of the U.S. government.
As Trump convalesced out of sight in the White House, the administration defended the protections it has put in place to protect the staff working there to treat and support him. Trump again publicly played down the virus on Twitter after his return from a three-day hospitalization, though even more aides tested positive, including one of his closest advisers, Stephen Miller.
With one month left of the fall quarter, the outcome of a labor dispute with the Chicago Teachers Union could have implications for whether Chicago Public Schools reopens for the winter.
While students and teachers continue remote learning at least through Nov. 5, an independent arbitrator on Friday ruled that CPS violated its contract with the Chicago Teachers Union by making some employees work in person under what may not have been “safe and healthful” conditions.
In June, in an attempt to take the fall for internal turmoil, Andrew Alexander, the longtime co-owner of Second City, announced plans to remove himself from the famed comedy theater and put his share up for sale. On Tuesday, a Los Angeles-based investment bank put the whole institution up for sale. Second City is a mainstay of Chicago’s famed theater scene but also is a for-profit, live-entertainment operation devastated by a forced closure.
Here’s a look at the issues that have plagued the HGTV series “Windy City Rehab,” which follows Alison Victoria Gramenos and her team as they renovate and flip Chicago homes, from permit trouble to a burglary, civil and city lawsuits, work stoppage and behind-the-scenes drama.
Christina Jordan was in the process of purchasing a new condo in Chicago’s Woodlawn neighborhood when the coronavirus pandemic upended daily life, making her question if it was the right time to move.
The 37-year-old abandoned her plans, but decided to refinance her Oakland condo after hearing it was a good time to get a lower interest rate. When she got her home appraised, she was surprised to see it valued at $278,000 — $1,000 less than she paid six years earlier.
So Jordan decided to get a second appraisal; this time, she didn’t disclose her race on forms. It was $62,000 higher than the first. Elvia Malagón has the story…
The Democratic governor’s “seven guiding principles” also include licensing police, increasing access to sentence credit and time-limited supervised release and only detaining defendants who are a threat to public safety, a “key element” in creating a state that “works for everyone.”
The owner thinks her lower home appraisal was skewed by her race and her neighborhood — and a recent study says those factors play more of a role in appraisals now than in 1980.
Lightfoot declared Republicans and Democrats in Congress had “shirked their responsibility” to address the “catastrophic effect” the pandemic has had on the economy of Chicago and other cities.
The mayor campaigned on a promise to re-open six mental health clinics her predecessor shut down, but her 2020 budget kept them closed. Instead, she earmarked $9.3 million to boost capacity at the five remaining city clinics.
Welcome to The Hill’s Morning Report. It is Wednesday! We get you up to speed on the most important developments in politics and policy, plus trends to watch. Alexis Simendinger and Al Weaver are the co-creators, and readers can find us on Twitter @asimendinger and @alweaver22. Please recommend the Morning Report to friends and let us know what you think. CLICK HERE to subscribe!
Total U.S. coronavirus deaths reported each morning this week: Monday, 209,725; Tuesday, 210,195; Wednesday, 210,909.
Coronavirus relief talks came to an abrupt halt on Tuesday when President Trump announced that he was pulling out of stimulus bill discussions until after the election and accused Democrats of engaging in bad-faith negotiations. The president’s surprise move sent financial markets into a tailspin hours after the head of the nation’s central bank predicted the U.S. economy would weaken further without new stimulus from policymakers.
The president’s decision came in a series of tweets, saying that the White House made a “very generous” $1.6 trillion offer, which Democrats rejected in favor of a $2.2 trillion proposal that narrowly passed the House on Thursday. Hours later, Trump reversed his messaging, calling on Congress to immediately approve bills to provide loans to small businesses, support struggling airlines and provide another round of stimulus checks.
NBC News: Trump reverses course, dangles new $1,200 stimulus checks.
“As usual, [Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.)] is not negotiating in good faith. I am rejecting their request, and looking to the future of our Country,” Trump wrote in an initial tweet on Tuesday that scrambled ongoing negotiations. “I have instructed my representatives to stop negotiating until after the election when, immediately after I win, we will pass a major Stimulus Bill that focuses on hardworking Americans and Small Business.”
Trump pumped his executive brakes after more than a week of intensified negotiations between Pelosi and Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin, which had been revived after breaking down in early August. Trump’s decision was especially striking as the White House had been far more gung-ho for a deal than Senate Republicans, going so far as to increase an offer last week to $1.3 trillion in an effort to find an accord.
In a statement, Pelosi labeled Trump’s decision “an act of desperation.” She also told House Democrats on a conference call on Tuesday that she wondered if doses of a steroid drug Trump received as part of his treatment for COVID-19 affected his decision-making (Politico).
“His irresponsible statement and policies have damaged lives, livelihoods and the life of our democracy, instead of crushing the virus, honoring our heroes — in health care, first responders, sanitation, transportation, food workers, teachers, teachers, teachers and others — and putting money in workers’ pockets,” Pelosi said in the statement. “Today, once again, President Trump showed his true colors: putting himself first at the expense of the country, with the full complicity of the GOP Members of Congress.”
The Hill: Trump orders aides to halt talks on COVID-19 relief.
The president’s decision on Tuesday also came hours after Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell repeated his calls for another round of stimulus during a speech to a conference of economists. He predicted that the U.S. recovery from COVID-19 would weaken without another round of relief for individuals and various industries, especially if confirmed cases continue to rise in the coming months, saying that “weakness feeds on weakness” (The Washington Post).
Reacting to the news of Trump’s about-face, the Dow Jones Industrial Average erased all gains Tuesday and dropped 375 points (1.34 percent) before trading ended. Trump’s tweet also included the claim that the stock market “is at record levels.” On Monday while hospitalized at Walter Reed National Military Medical Center, he told his supporters in a tweetstorm, “401(K). VOTE!”
However, Tuesday was filled with inconsistent messaging from Trump. Hours after halting negotiations, he fired off a trio of tweets indicating that he still wanted to pass immediate relief in some form. In one, he indicated support for Powell’s remarks earlier on Tuesday and called for Congress to pass standalone bills to fund the airlines, refill the Paycheck Protection Program and for another round of $1,200 direct checks to some Americans. The renewed interest in passing some form of relief was reflected on Wall Street as stock futures rose overnight (CNBC).
His decision to wait until after Nov. 3 also caught Republicans by surprise. While garnering the necessary support for another multi trillion dollar stimulus package among Senate Republicans has always been a tall order, despite the help for individuals and businesses hurt by the pandemic, many said they were surprised to see Trump scuttle the effort. Sen. Susan Collins (R-Maine) called the decision to wait until after the election a “huge mistake.” Other Republicans were less charitable.
“He must see a tactical advantage for reelection. Not sure what, though. … Bewildering,” One GOP aide told the Morning Report. “Republicans should keep negotiating anyway. Trump always changes his mind or threatens things. How many times has he threatened to veto something we passed, only not to?”
“Classic Trump. It’s like him announcing he’s not inviting a championship team to the [White House] after they’ve already indicated they won’t go,” the GOP aide added. “Parties weren’t even close here.”
CNBC: Trump’s “illogical” move to end stimulus talks baffles Wall Street and Washington.
The Philadelphia Inquirer: Hundreds of American Airlines flight attendants are losing jobs at Philadelphia International Airport.
Elsewhere, the White House continued to deal with its in-house outbreak as more staffers and those with connections to recent events tested positive for the novel coronavirus.
White House senior adviser Stephen Miller (pictured below on Sept. 30 with two other colleagues diagnosed with the virus) announced that he tested positive for COVID-19 on Tuesday, saying that he began self-isolating five days ago and had tested negative for the virus during that time.
The Hill: Fourth White House press aide tests positive for COVID-19.
CNBC: Trump reports no symptoms after first night back at the White House, doctor says in memo.
The Associated Press: Inside the White House, staff, Secret Service eye virus with fear, anger. Trump, still contagious, made clear he has little intention of abiding by best containment practices.
Almost the entire Joint Chiefs of Staff is also in quarantine following Coast Guard vice commandant Adm. Charles Ray’s positive coronavirus test after he experienced symptoms over the weekend. According to the Coast Guard, Ray was at the Pentagon on Friday. A senior defense official confirmed to The Hill that Ray met the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Gen. Mark Milley, and all but one of the other Joint Chiefs (The Hill).
Los Angeles Times: Trump struggles with coronavirus message in campaign’s final month.
Business Insider: Trump’s experimental treatment from Regeneron puts the company in a “very tough situation” as others request early access, CEO says.
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2020 POLITICS: During the 90-minute debate at 9 p.m. ET at the University of Utah between Vice President Pence and Sen. Kamala Harris, the spotlight tonight will be on the Democrat from California, who is juggling high expectations, The Hill’s Amie Parnes reports.
Among Harris’s challenges will be balancing a respectful demeanor on television with assertiveness as she shadow boxes with the VP who is the proxy for a presidential candidate ill with COVID-19 and chafing while in quarantine, says The Hill’s Max Greenwood among his list of things to watch.
The stakes of tonight’s debate are unusually high for a discussion between running mates, writes Niall Stanage in his Memo. Pence is next in line to a 74-year-old president who has downplayed a virus that has killed more than 210,000 Americans and infected the commander in chief. Harris was selected as a history-making running mate by a Democratic nominee who would be the oldest president ever inaugurated if he wins.
On Tuesday, Pence’s doctor released a letter arguing the vice president is not a COVID-19 transmission hazard while in Salt Lake City and “does not need to quarantine.” The vice president’s physician said Pence has tested negative for the coronavirus in two types of tests and has not been in recent contact with administration colleagues who tested positive for the virus.
The two campaigns disagreed on Tuesday about whether each should be surrounded by plexiglass as well as seated 12 feet apart as a precaution on the debate stage (The New York Times). Katie Miller, a spokeswoman for Pence, mocked Harris on Monday for asking for plexiglass. Miller, who previously contracted COVID-19 and recovered, is married to Trump adviser Stephen Miller, who tested positive for the contagion this week.
The Commission on Presidential Debates is weighing the idea of holding the Oct. 15 presidential debate scheduled in Miami and the Oct. 22 event in Nashville outdoors (The New York Times). On Tuesday, Biden said next week’s debate should be scratched if the president has the coronavirus (The Hill).
Trump tweeted on Tuesday while quarantined at the White House as potentially infectious that he plans to travel to debate former Vice President Joe Biden next week (The Hill). The president has repeatedly downplayed the threat of the virus for others and for himself (The Hill). Although his handling of the coronavirus pandemic is unpopular with most Americans, his supporters have clearly echoed his assertion that COVID-19 is not a big deal (The Associated Press).
The Hill’s Reid Wilson reports that for months, Republican strategists have insisted the polling gap will close between the two nominees. But four weeks from Election Day, Republicans are starting to wonder if they were wrong — and that a Democratic tsunami is building. “If the bottom falls out on the president, it’s going to be a long night for everybody,” said House Deputy Minority Whip Tom Cole (R-Okla.).
The Cook Political Report’s David Wasserman writes for The New York Times that
10 bellwether counties — five in Sun Belt battlegrounds, five in the Frost Belt (loosely defined to include Iowa) — may point toward each state’s winner, and these counties suggest Trump may be in trouble.
“They run the gamut from meatpacking hubs to white-collar office parks, and from peach orchards to yacht-dense retiree havens. But there is something they all have in common: Their votes will matter a lot. To win the White House, Mr. Biden will need to flip some combination of the 10 states Mr. Trump carried by less than 10 points in 2016 (in ascending order of margin): Michigan, Pennsylvania, Wisconsin, Florida, Arizona, North Carolina, Georgia, Ohio, Texas and Iowa. Mr. Biden has several paths to victory, and the first three states alone, in addition to every state won by Hillary Clinton, would be enough to put him into the Oval Office,” he wrote.
The Hill: Biden during a Gettysburg, Pa., speech on Tuesday calls for unity, invokes Lincoln. “I do not believe we have to choose between law and order and racial justice in America,” he said. “We can have both.”
The Hill: A potential Biden administration would take aim at the Trump team’s rollbacks of many major environmental protections put in place by the Obama-Biden administration. Here’s a look at that approach.
> Early voting: Ballots are available in 35 states and voting begins in the swing states of Arizona, Iowa, New Hampshire and Ohio within the next week. (Biden and Harris plan to campaign in Arizona on Thursday, where Trump is trailing in the most recent polls, according to the RealClearPolitics average). … Milwaukee scrapped plans to use the Bucks’ and Brewers’ stadiums as early voting sites, citing fears the ballots could be legally challenged (The Associated Press).
> Maine Senate race: Collins is down 1 point against challenger Sara Gideon, according to a new Bangor Daily News-Digital Research poll released on Tuesday. The survey shows a narrower result than many previous polls as early absentee voting kicks off.
> North Carolina Senate race: Cal Cunningham (D), who is challenging Sen. Thom Tillis (R) in a contest critical to control of the Senate, is mired in a scandal involving a woman to whom he sent suggestive texts and with whom he had an intimate encounter in July. A married Army Reserve lieutenant colonel with a wholesome appeal, Cunningham was widely viewed as the kind of recruit Democrats needed to make inroads in conservative-leaning Southern states such as North Carolina (The Associated Press).
Republican political strategist and North Carolina native Doug Heye told the Morning Report that much depends on how Cunningham handles the mess. “Back to the bunker with barely a statement shows that he is not the great candidate we’ve all been told. He has to get in front of this and be seen by voters,” he said.
Tillis is in self-isolation after testing positive for COVID-19 after attending White House events Sept. 26 that may have spread the coronavirus to lawmakers, guests and Trump administration staff.
> Voter registration: Florida extended its deadline on Tuesday for voter registration when its computer system crashed (Politico).
IN FOCUS/SHARP TAKES
MORE CONGRESS: Senate Democrats are carefully mapping their strategy for Monday when Judge Amy Coney Barrett’s confirmation hearings kick off as they seek to avoid landmines that backfired in the 2018 battle over Justice Brett Kavanaugh’s nomination.
As The Hill’s Alexander Bolton writes, Senate Minority Leader Charles Schumer (D-N.Y.) has urged the Senate Democratic Conference to avoid talking about the Supreme Court nominee’s religion, character or qualifications for the bench. Instead, he has asked them to focus on “health care, health care, health care” in the coming weeks, believing the continued chatter on the issue could pay dividends in key Senate contests ahead of Election Day.
“This is going to be a very different judicial nomination process than the last one. The last one was very heated,” one Democratic senator told The Hill on the strategy for next week’s confirmation hearing, referring to the dragged-out fight over Kavanaugh two years ago.
As part of the strategic planning, Schumer has met with Democratic members of the Senate Judiciary Committee, with those lawmakers discussing among themselves how to coordinate a different strategy to oppose Barrett.
The Hill: Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas) on confirming Trump’s Supreme Court nominee: “We have the votes.”
The New York Times: Big Tech was their enemy, until partisanship fractured the battle plans.
The Hill: Democrats sense momentum for expanding child tax credit.
OPINION
The rest of the world is taking advantage of a distracted America, by David Ignatius, columnist, The Washington Post. https://wapo.st/2Sy7PPc
Are hospitals ready for Covid’s second wave? By Lionel Laurent, columnist, Bloomberg Opinion. https://bloom.bg/3iBcRVx
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The Senate holds a pro forma session on Friday at 10 a.m. The full chamber has recessed for legislative business until Oct. 19.
The president is recuperating at the White House with COVID-19. He has no public events scheduled.
The vice president participates in a televised debate with Harris in Salt Lake City at 9 p.m. ET.
Supreme Court: Today, Google, Oracle and Ford will press their cases before the justices in a pair of disputes that are expected to have broad impacts on American businesses and consumers. The justices will hear oral arguments by phone as the new term gets underway. Decisions are expected by the end of June (CNBC).
Biden-Harris campaign events: Biden will headline virtual fundraising events. Harris will debate Pence tonight in Utah at 9 p.m. ET.
➔ ECONOMY: The number of people who have joined the ranks of the long-term unemployed has spiked. The data points to a slow slog of a recovery, which could take years to reach pre-COVID levels (The Hill). … When the CARES Act relief bill was enacted last spring, the Paycheck Protection Program attracted applicants from companies of all sizes, eager to gain access to $525 billion in federal resources to stay afloat as the pandemic forced businesses to close. A Wall Street Journal analysis looking at Washington, D.C., found that 80 percent of PPP recipients in the city’s central business district received loans before the program ended Aug. 8, following quick approval. By comparison, just 38 percent of borrowers received loans approved in that first month in the areas east of the Anacostia River, where neighborhoods are known for small and Black-owned businesses, nonprofits and churches. The PPP disparity measured by zip codes was similar across the country, underscoring the speed with which larger companies tapped ongoing relationships with banks and lenders to be the first in line to get the federal cash.
➔ IMMIGRATION: According to a two-year inquiry by the Justice Department’s inspector general into Trump’s “zero tolerance” family migrant separation policy, driving the government’s actions were former Attorney General Jeff Sessions and former Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein. “We need to take away children,” Sessions told federal prosecutors in 2018. Rosenstein told prosecutors that children’s ages were not a legal considerations in prosecutions of adults and that infants could be separated in family units (The New York Times).
➔ TECH: Facebook on Tuesday banned QAnon accounts across its platforms, a decision of significant impact tied to its evolving enforcement policies to remove some accounts — not individual posts — tied to conspiracy theories and incitements of violence. The company believed it needed to limit the “ability of QAnon and Militarized Social Movements to operate and organize on our platform,” a spokesman said. QAnon is a conspiracy theory that the FBI views as a domestic terrorism threat (Yahoo News). It grew out of the fringes of the internet and posits that high-profile Democrats and Hollywood celebrities are members of a child-eating cabal that is being secretly taken down by Trump and that members of this fictitious cabal will soon be marched to their execution (NBC News).
➔ NOBEL PRIZE WEEK: The Nobel Prize for chemistry was handed out in Stockholm this morning to French scientist Emmanuelle Charpentier and American Jennifer A. Doudna for the development of a method for genome editing known as CRISPR, calling it “one of gene technology’s sharpest tools” (The Associated Press).
➔ CORONAVIRUS: The nation’s capital reported 105 new coronavirus cases on Tuesday, the highest daily total for the city since early June. The district has averaged 40 new infections per day, according to the COVID Tracking Project. While White House tests are not counted among the district’s totals, the outbreak of infections among recent visitors to 1600 Pennsylvania Ave. seems to have driven residents to get tested. At the city’s Judiciary Square testing locale, 600 coronavirus tests were conducted on Monday, an increase from the usual number of about 350 (The Hill). … Europe’s second wave of COVID-19 outbreaks is spilling over from the young to the old, the latest data shows (The Wall Street Journal). … In Pennsylvania, Gov. Tom Wolf (D) announced on Tuesday that outdoor sporting events can now have 15 percent capacity, opening the door for NFL and college football games in the state to host fans. However, the decision is up to local municipalities. Philadelphia Mayor Jim Kenney (D) said on Tuesday that a possible decision will be reviewed next week (NBC Sports Philadelphia).
THE CLOSER
And finally … It should surprise no one that in a year in which Americans are shopping, but not in brick-and-mortar stores because of COVID-19, merchants want to do everything possible to maximize what is expected to be an anemic season of holiday sales during an economic annus horribilis. They want to help buyers beat the online rush, avert potential delivery service delays and dodge any supply chain problems. It means, in a word, HallowHanukMas.
Stores such as Best Buy, Macy’s and Target are starting their biggest Black Friday deals in October instead of November so people don’t crowd retail locations later, creating a potentially dangerous situation during a pandemic.
“We’re preparing for a holiday season unlike any we’ve seen before,” Target CEO Brian Cornell told The Associated Press.
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POLITICO PLAYBOOK
POLITICO Playbook: Trump’s ‘Big Lebowski’ moment
Presented by Facebook
DRIVING THE DAY
HAVE YOU SEEN “THE BIG LEBOWSKI”? WALTER — played by John Goodman— is not a big fan of DONNY, played by Steve Buscemi. During one of their famous bowling scenes, WALTER says to DONNY: “You have no frame of reference, Donny. You’re like a child who wanders in in the middle of a movie.”
DONNY, in this case, bears more than a passing resemblance to President DONALD TRUMP.HIS TWEETS TUESDAY about the Covid stimulus talks seem like he’s awaking from a monthslong slumber, unbriefed by his advisers and unaware of his surroundings as he enters the fray.
TRUMP PULLED OUT OF THE TALKS at 2:48 p.m., citing the nearly $1 trillion difference between the GOP and Democratic negotiating stances — which many had been privately suggesting he do for some time. Then at 9:54 p.m., he suggested Congress pass “25 Billion Dollars for Airline Payroll Support, & 135 Billion Dollars for Paycheck Protection Program for Small Business,” and a $1,200 stimulus check for every American.
MAN, WHAT A STRATEGY! If you think you’ve heard this before, it’s because you have! Republicans have been suggesting stand-alone bills for months. Speaker NANCY PELOSI has even said that she would pass a stand-alone airline relief bill — one of her chairs tried last week, and the GOP blocked it. If TRUMP had pushed for this a month ago, when Congress was in session, it might have had a chance of being successful.
THIS COMES TOWARD THE MIDDLE OF A BEFUDDLING week for TRUMP.
HE TESTED POSITIVE for the coronavirus, and landed in Walter Reed Medical Center. …
… HIS DOCTOR has given a series of murky news conferences, which have, at times, been undermined by the president himself or his aides.
… HE TOOK A RIDE AROUND WALTER REED to visit fans, which was widely portrayed as irresponsible.
… HE LEFT THE HOSPITAL MONDAY, and made a point of taking his mask off as he got to the White House. Then he said people shouldn’t feel like Covid dominates their lives — tell that to the 207,000 people who died.
… AT LEAST 17 OF HIS AIDES have the coronavirus. Top aide STEPHEN MILLERis the most recent to test positive.
… THE JOINT CHIEFS are quarantined.
OK, THIS IS THE LAST TIME WE’LL DO THIS. The substance of why Covid relief talks fell apart: 1) The two sides were roughly $1 trillion apart. 2) The GOP on Capitol Hill didn’t want a $2 trillion bill. They wanted an $800 billion to $1.5 trillion bill. That never changed, no matter how many times Treasury Secretary STEVEN MNUCHIN huddled with PELOSI. Senate Majority Leader MITCH MCCONNELL was never going to ignore the majority of his conference, which didn’t want a big bill. 3) No one can really speak for TRUMP, other than TRUMP.
— WAPO’S ERICA WERNER and JEFF STEIN: “During Tuesday’s call, McConnell suggested to Trump that Pelosi was stringing him along and no deal she cut with Mnuchin would command broad GOP support to pass in the Senate, according to two people with knowledge of the call who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss it.”
IS THIS THE END OF COVID RELIEF TALKS? Honestly, who knows.
NEW … ONE MASSIVEAND ONE BIG FUNDRAISING HAUL …
— MASSIVE: CONGRESSIONAL LEADERSHIP FUND, a super PAC that backs House Republicans,raised $77.4 million last quarter — more than double what it did in the same quarter in 2018 ($33 million), when all CLF did was talk about how much money it raised and how great it was. It’s their biggest quarter ever — the closest they’ve come is $51 million in the second quarter of 2018. CLF is going to be a big boost for Republicans down the stretch — and they’ll need it.
— BIG: IVANKA TRUMP headlined two fundraisers Tuesday, which raised a combined $10 MILLION for the TRUMP reelection campaign. She’s raised $25 MILLION in six events in 2020.
PRESIDENT’S NUMBERS DROP … WAPO’S ASHLEY PARKER and JOSH DAWSEY: “A GOP group working to elect Senate Republicans conducted polling over the weekend in four states — Colorado, Georgia, Montana and North Carolina — as Trump was hospitalized. The president’s numbers dropped ‘significantly’ in every state, falling by about five points in all four. ‘The president is in real trouble,’ said one of the group’s operatives, who is also close to the White House.”
“Aides said the president’s voice was stronger after his return from the hospital Monday night, but at times he still sounded as if he was trying to catch air. The West Wing was mostly empty, cleared of advisers who were out sick with the coronavirus themselves or told to work from home rather than in the capital’s most famous virus hot spot. Staff members in the White House residence were in full personal protective equipment, including yellow gowns, surgical masks and disposable protective eye covers. …
“Mr. Trump, diagnosed with Covid-19 last week, was still livid at his chief of staff, Mark Meadows, whose effort on Saturday to tamp down the rosy portrait of Mr. Trump’s condition given to reporters by his chief doctor was caught on camera. Other officials were angry with Mr. Meadows for not even trying to control the president. …
“Some White House staff members wondered whether Mr. Trump’s behavior was spurred by a cocktail of drugs he has been taking to treat the coronavirus, including dexamethasone, a steroid that can cause mood swings and can give a false level of energy and a sense of euphoria. … On Monday night, some of the staff members still at the White House had gathered to watch Mr. Trump’s return. When he defiantly took off his mask on the Truman Balcony for a made-for-television moment, aides said it was of course a statement. But they also wondered if the face covering was making it harder for the president to breathe.”
NEW — MCCONNELL plans to take a shot at criticism of AMY CONEY BARRETT’S religious views this morning: “The ongoing attacks by Senate Democrats and the media on Judge Barrett’s faith are a disgrace. … Only our self-parodying liberal media would call it a scandal that a young person in graduate school found community in shared religious beliefs and met their future spouse. Most Americans would call that a beautiful story. … Every Supreme Court Justice in history has possessed personal views. Judges have a job to do and they swear to do it impartially. It is the definition of discrimination to assert that Justice Barrett’s particular faith makes her uniquely unqualified for this promotion.”
AHEAD OF TONIGHT’S VP DEBATE … CHRIS CADELAGO:“How Kamala Harris has stacked up as Joe Biden’s No. 2”: “Joe Biden’s selection of Harris has excited Democrats. She’s helped him raise money at a record clip. She is Biden’s highest-profile surrogate to swing-state cities like Milwaukee, Detroit and Philadelphia, with a particular focus on courting voters of color, including African Americans and Latinos.
“Harris appears solo and alongside Biden in TV ads, a rarity for a VP contender, and stars in digital videos pumped out by the campaign. She’s become the 77-year-old nominee’s emissary to pop culture, making appearances with musical icons, sitting for podcasts geared toward non-political audiences and drawing millions of views for brief videos of her stepping off the plane in Converse Chuck Taylor sneakers. The verdict: Harris, with a few exceptions, has hit her marks.”
NEW … POLITICO/MORNING CONSULT POLL: 43% of voters expect HARRIS to best VP MIKE PENCE tonight. 37% say PENCE will come out on top.
— TRUMP still leads BIDEN when it comes to who is viewed as a better steward of the economy. 46% say TRUMP is more trusted, and 42% say BIDEN.
FIRST IN PLAYBOOK — The DNC WAR ROOM is sending out a memo this morning laying the groundwork for where they want to hammer PENCE at tonight’s debate: all pandemic, all the time. The memo
HAPPENING TODAY — ANNA will moderate a WOMEN RULE virtual conversation at 1 P.M. on the VP debate with MAYA HARRIS, JEN PALMIERI and CHRISTINE PELOSI. Register to watch
NEW: POLITICO is joining ProPublica’s Electionland, a project that tracks how Americans vote and examines voting problems across the country. Electionland also runs a tip line for voters to identify voting issues. Electionland HQ … The tip line
BATTLE FOR THE SENATE — “Susan Collins goes for the jugular with her career on the line,” by Burgess Everett: “Susan Collins generally keeps an even keel. But she’s had it with Sara Gideon. ‘She will say or do anything to try to win,’ Collins said of her opponent in a 30-minute interview in her Capitol quarters last week. ‘This race is built on a foundation of falsehoods. And trying to convince the people of Maine that somehow I am no longer the same person.’
“Collins wasn’t done as she accused Gideon of ‘defaming my reputation and attacking my integrity’ in their increasingly nasty race. For good measure, the Maine Republican added that Gideon’s campaign was being run as an arm of Chuck Schumer’s Washington operation, scolded Gideon, the statehouse speaker, for not reconvening the legislature amid the pandemic and challenged Gideon’s handling of a sexual misconduct scandal.
“Perhaps most pointedly, she suggested that Gideon is from away — a serious charge in a state that can turn its nose up at outsiders. ‘I grew up in Caribou, I’ve lived in Bangor for 26 years. My family’s been in Maine for generations. She’s been in Maine for about 15 years and lives in Freeport,’ Collins said acidly of Gideon, who was born and raised in Rhode Island. ‘That’s a big difference in our knowledge of the state.’” POLITICO
TRUMP’S WEDNESDAY — The president has no public events scheduled.
ON THE TRAIL … BIDEN will attend virtual fundraising events.
— HARRIS will participate in the VP debate in Salt Lake City. DOUG EMHOFF will join Paid Leave for the United States Action Fund for a pre-debate “Conversations on Care.” Afterward, he’ll attend the debate.
BEYOND THE BELTWAY — “St. Louis couple indicted for waving guns at protesters,”by AP’s Jim Salter in St. Louis: “A grand jury on Tuesday indicted the St. Louis couple who displayed guns while hundreds of racial injustice protesters marched on their private street. Al Watkins, an attorney for the couple, confirmed to The Associated Press the indictments against Mark McCloskey, 63, and Patricia McCloskey, 61. A spokeswoman for Circuit Attorney Kim Gardner declined comment.
“The McCloskeys, who are both attorneys, have become folk heroes among some conservatives. They argue that they were simply exercising their Second Amendment right to bear arms, and were protected by Missouri’s castle doctrine law that allows the use of deadly force against intruders. The case has caught the attention of President Donald Trump, and Republican Missouri Gov. Mike Parson has said he will pardon the couple if they are convicted.”
VALLEY TALK — “Landmark Google-Oracle fight heads to Supreme Court without RBG,” by Steven Overly: “Google will defend itself against Oracle’s charge that it stole code to build its Android operating system before the Supreme Court on Wednesday — and Ruth Bader Ginsburg’s absence may be pivotal in a ruling that could shake up Silicon Valley’s business model.
“The case is one of the first to be heard by the now 8-member court and Ginsberg’s death likely means one less vote in Oracle’s favor, legal scholars say. It also creates the possibility the remaining justices could split and leave the tech world in limbo on a crucial issue — who controls code that underpins much of modern technology.” POLITICO
— WSJ: “House Panel Says Big Tech Wields Monopoly Power,”by Ryan Tracy: “America’s biggest technology companies have leveraged their dominance to stamp out competition and stifle innovation, according to a Democratic-led House panel, which said Congress should consider forcing the tech giants to separate their dominant online platforms from other business lines.
“The report released Tuesday from Democratic staff of the House Antitrust Subcommittee capped a 16-month inquiry into the market power of Amazon.com Inc., Facebook Inc., Alphabet Inc.’s Google and Apple Inc. Republicans issued a separate response endorsing strong antitrust enforcement targeting the companies but didn’t endorse many of the Democrats’ policy prescriptions. It also accused the companies of bias against conservative viewpoints.”
IN MEMORIAM … A FREE E-BOOK celebrating ALICE MAYHEW, the legendary Simon & Schuster editor who died earlier this year. With contributions from Jill Abramson, Taylor Branch, Steven Brill, David Brooks, Jimmy Carter, C.J. Chivers, Doris Kearns Goodwin, Walter Isaacson, William Shawcross, Amy Wilentz, Bob Woodward and dozens of others.The book
WEEKEND WEDDING — Sen. Bob Menendez (D-N.J.) and Nadine Arslanian got married Saturday in an intimate ceremony and small outdoor reception with friends and family. Pool report: “Even though they kept the celebration small due to Covid, the couple had an amazing time dancing the night away!”Pic… Another pic
BIRTHDAY OF THE DAY: Amanda Fleming, deputy director of development at Public Citizen. What she’s been reading: “‘What If Trump Refuses to Concede?’ in The Atlantic last month was terrifying. I’m really trying to remain hopeful this country can turn itself around, but all of my greatest fears were outlined in that article. I should probably read more fiction for the rest of 2020.” Playbook Q&A
BIRTHDAYS: DNC Chair Tom Perez is 59 (h/t Teresa Vilmain) …Russian President Vladimir Putin is 68 … Rep. Bill Foster (D-Ill.) is 65 … NYT’s Charlie Savage … retired Marine Corps Lt. Col. Oliver North is 77 … Katrina vanden Heuvel … Chris Krueger of Cowen … Alice Lloyd … GWU professor Sean Aday is 53 … Suz Redfearn … CNN’s Elizabeth Hartfield … Barbara Martinez … Bill Sweeney, SVP for government affairs at AARP … CNN’s Laura Ly (h/t Eric Levenson) … Stephen Jackson, director of policy at the Ripon Society … Kate Berner, VP at SKDKnickerbocker … Roll Call photographer Tom Williamsis 46 (h/t Tim Burger) … Michael Rosengart, associate at Boies Schiller Flexner … Todd Weiler …
… Tara Napier Harrison, head of corporate affairs at BP (h/t Geoff Morrell) … Arie Lipnick … Jay Korff … former Interior Deputy Secretary David Hayes … David Gellman … Jackie Murphy … Holly Arthur … Mark Orlowski, executive director and founder of the Sustainable Endowments Institute … Allison Worsham … Gavin Carson … Adam Fetcher … Brandon Hurlbut, co-founder of Boundary Stone Partners … Mike Hotchkiss, deputy spox for Princeton, the pride of the University of Missouri and a diehard St. Louis Cardinals fan (h/t Ben Chang) … Catherine Jaynes … Jim Ramsey … Rick Hutto … Jen Hengstenberg … Mary Cox … John Hedgecoth … Mike Hotchkiss … Kenneth Marcus is 54
“But I will sing of your strength; I will sing aloud of your steadfast love in the morning. For you have been to me a fortress and a refuge in the day of my distress,” (Psalm 59:16, ESV).
By Andy Swanson on Oct 06, 2020 04:54 pm
Andy Swanson: During their first 2020 debate, Cindy Axne looked into the camera and lied…both about David Young’s record and her own. Read in browser »
By Shane Vander Hart on Oct 06, 2020 01:03 pm
SBA List and its partner super PAC, Women Speak Out PAC, announced they would invest $500,000 into Iowa’s U.S. Senate race to re-elect Joni Ernst. Read in browser »
Launched in 2006, Caffeinated Thoughts reports news and shares commentary about culture, current events, faith and state and national politics from a Christian and conservative point of view.
The Trump administration announced rule changes Tuesday intended to encourage American companies who petition for workers under the H-1B visa program to look for American workers first. The Departments of Homeland Security and Labor announced rule changes that range from tightening broad language closing loopholes to adding wage protections for American workers. “It is never …
President Donald Trump has no public events on his schedule for Wednesday. The president is working from the White House while he recovers from COVID-19. Keep up with the president on Our President’s Schedule Page. President Trump’s Itinerary for 10/7/20 – note: this page will be updated during the day if events warrant All Times …
A Texas grand jury has indicted Netflix, Inc. for “lewd visual material” in the movie “Cuties,” a Texas state representative said Tuesday. Republican Texas state Rep. Matt Schaefer announced Tuesday afternoon that a grand jury for Tyler County, Texas, indicted Netflix, Inc., for “promoting material in Cuties film which depicts lewd exhibition of pubic area of a …
Director of National Intelligence John Ratcliffe on Tuesday declassified portions of two documents that show the CIA picked up intelligence regarding Hillary Clinton’s alleged approval of a campaign to link Donald Trump to Russia’s hacking efforts. Ratcliffe declassified portions of notes taken in 2016 by then-CIA Director John Brennan during a meeting with President Obama …
HIDALGO, Texas—U.S. Customs and Border Protection, Office of Field Operations (OFO) at the Hidalgo International Bridge arrested a 42-year-old woman, a U.S. citizen from Starr County, Texas after discovering $1,673,500 worth of alleged methamphetamine and heroin hidden within the vehicle she was driving. “People must realize that smuggling narcotics carries serious consequences and CBP Field …
This era of Coronavirus is both frightening and a period of great uncertainty that presents challenges for all. These challenges require flexibility and adjustments in which factions of our vulnerable populations already have a degree of difficulty balancing and often lack adequate support systems as well. We are now seeing the numbers which reveal the …
For the last many months the radical left has repeatedly told us that wearing a facial mask provides protection for people near anyone who might be carrying the disease, and this explanation by the party of Joe Biden has allowed Biden voters to scowl at us mask deniers as we went about our personal business …
The White House blocked new vaccine guidelines proposed by health officials within the Trump administration, which likely would have pushed the approval of a coronavirus vaccine past the election. The Food and Drug Administration (FDA), which is in charge of approving vaccines, proposed the guidance on Sept. 21, according to The New York Times. White …
How Dare He Recover! Trump returned to the White House yesterday and I happened to be listening to CNN. I was not surprised to hear an anchor railing against the president. We all know that the Fake News will sharply criticize Trump no matter what he does, but when he caught the virus, I was …
Most polls show Americans are favoring Democratic presidential candidate Joe Biden over President Trump. To ensure a prosperous and safe America, voters must choose Trump’s policies and not Biden’s. Polls also show that the economy and national security are the top concerns of voters. It is Trump’s policies that have led and will lead to …
Delta, already a major hurricane, is forecast to hit somewhere along the Northern Coast of the Gulf of Mexico sometime early Saturday morning and the forecast cone is centered on Lousiana. Hurricane Delta has maximum sustained winds of 115 mph making it a category 3 major hurricane. The storm is currently 120 miles southwest of …
To the unhinged Left less than a month away from Election Day, anything other than fear and panic is a “an embarrassment.” Huh? This piece in AOL/Huffington Post makes it quite clear: ‘An embarrassment’: Trump tweet angers pandemic survivors Are Democrats actually saying that courage in the face of fear “undermines pubic health messaging”? …
Happy Wednesday, dear Kruiser Morning Briefing friends. Are we all ready for some #Humpday debate fun?
Each little twist and turn on this meandering road of misery we’re traveling on during 2020 finds us happening upon unexpected things that are mostly of the unpleasant variety. Every once in a while, however, we run into something surprising and good, like Zoom happy hours.
I’m a veteran of a lot of presidential elections and I have watched a LOT of debates. I can honestly say that I have never really looked forward to many of them, and never to a vice-presidential debate. Until now.
This is going to be a vice-presidential debate like no other. I may even watch the whole thing.
Don’t forget our very own VodkaPundit Stephen Green will be doing one of his patented Drunkblogs during the debate and he agrees that this is one to look forward to.
The stakes got much, much higher once President Trump tested positive for the plague and headed to the hospital. Prior to that, the American public was only considering the fragility of Joe Biden, the candidate who’s been going to bed right after breakfast for several weeks now. Everybody has been in a dead panic about considering Kamala Harris’s worthiness to take over for Crazy Joe the Wonder Veep because we all know it’s going to happen soon if he wins.
While the president certainly still looks pretty sturdy despite his illness, Mike Pence’s “one heartbeat away” status is now a lot more on people’s minds.
This debate should have a much different tone than the first affair between Trump and Biden. Pence’s demeanor should enable him do the thing Trump couldn’t do. If Trump had just let Biden ramble rather than interrupting him, Biden would have eventually — as Stephen Green said during one of our live chats — begun debating himself. If Pence lets Harris go on and on, she will remind everyone why her own party soured on her so quickly during the Democratic primaries.
(Tom Williams/CQ Roll Call/Pool via AP)
Harris has been rather quiet since being added to the ticket. Some of that could be attributed to debate prep, but the silence has been so deafening it’s difficult not to believe that the campaign has been deliberately attempting to keep her quiet, especially after referring to the ticket as “Harris-Biden.” Harris brought a lot of baggage to the ticket, which even CNN admits:
Harris faces the ghosts of policies past
Harris entered the Democratic presidential primary as a supporter of “Medicare for All,” the national health insurance plan written and championed by her competitor Sen. Bernie Sanders of Vermont.
By the time she dropped out, in December 2019, the senator from California had rowed back her support and unveiled her own plan, which called for transitioning to a government-run program oarrisver 10 years but allowing private insurers to participate.
Now she is making the case for Biden and his proposal to beef up the Affordable Care Act and create a public option on top of it.
Harris definitely has a lot more to lose in this debate. After all, at least the Republicans like Mike Pence. There a still a lot of Democrats who aren’t fond of her.
There is also the fact that Harris’s performances during the primary debates weren’t exactly stellar. She had one good debate early, and it was because she was calling Joe Biden a racist. The rest of her debate performances ranged from lackluster to disastrous.
Yes indeed, we have a vice-presidential debate that has real importance for once. The American electorate might just be drunk enough after months of lockdowns to find its undecided voters swayed by the veep showdown.
Trump orders declassification of all documents related to “Russia Hoax” . . . President Donald Trump said Tuesday he has authorized the declassification of all intelligence documents related to what he called the “Russia hoax,” though he did not say what information he has approved for disclosure. “I have fully authorized the total Declassification of any & all documents pertaining to the single greatest political CRIME in American History, the Russia Hoax. Likewise, the Hillary Clinton Email Scandal,” Trump tweeted on Tuesday. “No redactions!” Trump has said multiple times during his presidency that he authorized declassification of Russia-related documents only to backtrack later. But with just 28 days until the election, Republicans have grown anxious that information about FBI and CIA intelligence-gathering activities related to the Trump campaign will never see the light of day. Daily Caller
Spy chief releases redacted documents . . . National Intelligence Director John Ratcliffe on Tuesday declassified documents that claim Hillary Clinton ordered “a campaign plan to stir up a scandal” by linking President Trump to Russia in 2016 — and that then-President Barack Obama knew about her possible role. But many items are redacted. New York Post
Coronavirus
Chinese Covid vaccine appears safe . . . A Chinese experimental coronavirus vaccine being developed by the Institute of Medical Biology under the Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences was shown to be safe in an early stage clinical trial, researchers said. In a Phase 1 trial of 191 healthy participants aged between 18 and 59, vaccination with the group’s experimental shot showed no severe adverse reactions, its researchers said on Tuesday in a paper posted on medRxiv preprint server ahead of peer review. The most common adverse reactions reported by the trial participants were mild pain, slight fatigue and redness, itching and swelling at the injection site. Reuters
Politics
Majority of Americans expect violence after election . . . A new poll shows a large swath of Americans harbor deep reservations about the election results weeks before Election Day and are concerned about what actions people might resort to as a consequence. The YouGov poll of 1,999 registered votersfound that nearly half – 47% – disagree with the idea that the election “is likely to be fair and honest.” And that slightly more than half – 51% – won’t “generally agree on who is the legitimately elected president of the United States.” In addition, a YouGov poll of 1,505 voters found that 56% said they expect to see “an increase in violence as a result of the election.” That question had a margin of error of 4.2 percentage points. USA Today
VP debate a chance for Pence to score points on policy . . .
The vice presidential debates are generally an afterthought to the main event, where both candidates aim to get through the night without doing any harm to their running mate. Not this time. “You add the performance on Tuesday when people got very little substantive information,” said Jeanne Zaino, professor of political science at Iona College of last week’s presidential debate, “and I think it will mean more eyes on these vice presidential candidates.” For Vice President Mike Pence, it is an opportunity to fill in some of the process and policy questions that got lost in last week’s chaotic clash between Trump and Democratic nominee Joe Biden. Washington Examiner
Biden afraid of debating Trump if he’s still positive for Covid . . .
Biden said Tuesday he and President Trump should not go ahead with next week’s presidential debate if Trump still has COVID-19.
Biden said the pair’s second scheduled faceoff should follow protocols from health officials. The former vice president said he will ultimately be guided by the Cleveland Clinic, which is overseeing health conditions for all presidential and vice presidential debates this year. The Hill
Video || Michelle Obama accuses Trump of racism in “closing argument” for Biden . . . Michelle Obama Tuesday waded into the campaign with an extended, 24-minute lecture calling President Trump racist and saying voters need to check their consciences and vote for Joe Biden “I want everyone who is still undecided to think about all those folks like me and my ancestors the millions of folks who look like me and fought and died and toiled as slaves and soldiers and laborers to help build this country,” she sad. “Racism, fear, division, these are powerful weapons. And they can destroy this nation if we don’t deal with them head on . . . Search your hearts, and your conscience, and then vote for Joe Biden like your lives depend on it.” White House Dossier
Well, at least if this is the “closing argument,” maybe that’s the last we’ll hear from her.
Seniors moving away from Trump . . . Senior voters, who comprise one of the largest voting blocs in the country, are supporting President Donald Trump at far lower rates in critical battlegrounds than four years ago, according to a slew of recent polls. In 2016, Trump’s victories in Wisconsin, Michigan and Pennsylvania were clinched by his support from voters 65+, winning them by one, four and 10 points, respectively. Now, however, polls show Trump trailing Democratic nominee Joe Biden among senior voters in all three states. Daily Caller
Trump campaign beating Democrats at voter registration in key states . . . The Republicans have cut the Democratic Party’s voter registration edge in key states, a development President Trump’s campaign views as a hidden advantage as polls show rival Joe Biden growing his lead. In Pennsylvania, the Republican Party has sliced the Democrats’ dominance with registered voters by nearly 200,000 since Election Day 2016. The Republicans also made up ground in North Carolina, reducing the Democrats’ superiority among registered voters by 243,000 compared to four years ago. In Florida, the GOP chopped the Democratic advantage by 154,000. In Iowa, the Republicans turned a nearly 15,000 voter registration deficit on March 1 into a 13,000 lead on Thursday. Washington Examiner
Voter registration also reflects enthusiasm, which is definitely in Trump’s corner. A colleague of mine just complete a cross-country drive. All the signs on lawns were for Trump.
Trump’s Covid disease entering critical phase . . . Far from having vanquished Covid-19, the outside doctors said, Mr. Trump is most likely still struggling with it and entering a pivotal phase — seven to 10 days after the onset of symptoms — in which he could rapidly take a turn for the worse. He’s 74, male and moderately obese, factors that put him at risk for severe disease. New York Times
Trump campaign video touts a glorious return to the White House . . . A triumphant Hollywood return. They weren’t going to let this go to waste. And they shouldn’t. I just hope he’ll be okay where he is now. He probably should still be in the hospital. But people are who they are. It’s not like President Trump to remain in a sickbed any longer than he feels he has to. And whether it is the wisest thing to do medically or not, it also says something about who he is.I do not think Joe Biden’s super-careful Covid approach, rarely ventruing outside of Delaware — or even his basement — beyond neighboring Pennsylvania, is going to play well in the end with Americans. White House Dossier
The cautions experts and pundits offer about safety make medical sense. But those who repeat them endlessly don’t necessarily feel the loneliness and economic desolation that also causes untold damage. And Americans are not about hiding, even if I also think some of them should be more careful and Trump should not tell people they shouldn’t fear this virus.
Democratic North Carolina Senate candidate snared in sex scandal . . . Cal Cunnignham, Democrats’ nominee for the crucial Senate race in North Carolina, is facing new scrutiny about an extramarital affair that has entirely upended the contest just four weeks before Election Day. Arlene Guzman Todd, a woman from California, confirmed that she and Cunningham had been “intimate” in July, and additional text messages between Guzman Todd and a third, unidentified individual, further describe the details of their relationship. This is the first corroboration of a physical, consensual relationship between Cunningham and Guzman Todd, though it was previously reported that they had exchanged sexually suggestive text messages. Politico
The Senate seat held by Republican Thom Tillis was viewed as in jeopardy. Now, maybe not, assuming Thom has kept his own pant on.
National Security
Pompeo: US will be a “good partner for security” with Taiwan . . . Secretary of State Mike Pompeo pledged that the United States is “a good partner” to prevent China from taking over Taiwan by force. “Our military has been very active in the region, ensuring that we have a presence so that we can ensure that there is, in fact, a capacity for a free and open Indo-Pacific,” Pompeo told the Nikkei Asian Review while traveling in Japan. “These are the kind of things one does. Whether it’s Taiwan or the challenge presented to Japan, the United States will be a good partner for security in every dimension.” Washington Examiner
International
Countries across the world turn against China . . . Three in four citizens in over a dozen first-world nations dislike the People’s Republic of China, data released Tuesday by the Pew Research Center reveal. Citizens of nations such as Japan, the United States, and France have grown increasingly skeptical of China over the past decade, with half on average reporting an unfavorable view as recently as 2018. But over the past two years, Pew’s survey data show, that figure has spiked, rising to an average of two in three disapproving in 2019, and then to three in four in 2020. This latest spike is linked to widespread discontent with how China has handled the coronavirus pandemic, which started in Wuhan before spreading to the rest of the world. Washington Free Beacon
Money
Fed chair presses Congress for more relief, warning of “tragic” scenario . . . Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell on Tuesday said Congress should err on the side of overdoing it with the next economic relief bill, saying a conservative approach could imperil a rebound from the coronavirus recession. Powell warned of a “tragic” scenario where “a long period of unnecessarily slow progress could continue to exacerbate existing disparities in our economy.” He said too little support from policymakers would “lead to a weak recovery, creating unnecessary hardship for households and businesses.” Daily Caller
Trump says he will back specific measures after initially cutting off stimulus talks . . . President Trump late Tuesday signaled he would support specific measures on stimulus checks, help for the airline industry and small business loans, hours after cutting off bipartisan talks for more coronavirus relief. “The House & Senate should IMMEDIATELY Approve 25 Billion Dollars for Airline Payroll Support, & 135 Billion Dollars for Paycheck Protection Program for Small Business. Both of these will be fully paid for with unused funds from the Cares Act. Have this money. I will sign now!” Trump tweeted Tuesday, referring to the coronavirus stimulus package passed in March. The Hill
You should also know
Prosecutors drop trespassing charges against BLM and indict McCloskeys . . . St. Louis lawyer Mark McCloskey decried a grand jury’s decision to indict him and his wife after the city declined to prosecute members of a Black Lives Matter crowd accused of trespassing on the couple’s property.
On Tuesday, McCloskey and his wife were indicted on charges of exhibiting guns and tampering with evidence in connection to a June protest in which the couple confronted Black Lives Matter protesters on their property. “What you’re witnessing here, in this case, is just an opportunity for the government—the leftist, Democrat government—of the city of St. Louis to persecute us for doing no more than exercising our Second Amendment rights,” McCloskey said in a press conference after the indictment. Washington Free Beacon
This will get thousands of gun advocates to the polls.
Facebook bans QAnon groups . . . Facebook Inc. said it would step up its crackdown on QAnon, removing more groups and pages devoted to the fast-growing conspiracy-theory movement that has thrived on social media. The move builds on Facebook’s efforts announced in August to remove QAnon pages and groups that included discussions of potential violence. The company will now ban any pages or groups dedicated to QAnon across Facebook, as well as Instagram accounts focused on QAnon content. The new policy doesn’t ban individuals from posting about the movement. Wall Street Journal
Antifa violence escalates as movement goes mainstream . . . As the movement enters the mainstream, its sympathizers are escalating the violence from throwing rocks and blocking doors to physical assaults and, for the first time, killing. The rising level of violence from the group marks a sinister evolution from minor street crime to guerrilla tactics usually reserved for revolutionaries. “The fear is that we are witnessing the beginning of something that could be more violent over time,” said Michael Kenney, a University of Pittsburgh professor who has interviewed Antifa sympathizers. Washington Times
Eddie Van Halen, RIP . . . Eddie Van Halen, the guitar virtuoso whose blinding speed, control and innovation propelled his band Van Halen into one of hard rock’s biggest groups and became elevated to the status of rock god, has died. He was 65. A person close to Van Halen’s family confirmed the rocker died Tuesday due to cancer. With his distinct solos, Eddie Van Halen fueled the ultimate California party band and helped knock disco off the charts starting in the late 1970s with his band’s self-titled debut album and then with the blockbuster record “1984,” which contains the classics “Jump,” “Panama” and “Hot for Teacher.” Associated Press
Guilty Pleasures
Surgeon general breaks lockdown rules . . . US Surgeon General Jerome Adams was reportedly slapped with a citation for violating coronavirus lockdown rules in Hawaii. Adams, who was helping out with a spike of cases on the island this summer, received the citation dated Aug 23, for congregating in a park that was closed to the public during the pandemic to prevent crowded gatherings. “Observed ADAMS in Kualoa Regional Park with two other males standing, looking at the view taking pictures,” wrote the officer who ticketed the federal official. New York Post
Wide-bodied bear named “747” crowned Alaska’s fattest . . .
In Alaska’s annual battle of heavyweights, a salmon-chomping bruin named 747 – like the jetliner – has emerged as the most fabulously fat. The bear, one of more than 2,200 brown bears roaming Alaska’s Katmai National Park and Preserve, was victorious on Tuesday after a week of frenzied online voting in what has become an international sensation: Fat Bear Week. Winner 747 was a worthy champion, the park said in a statement. “This year he really packed on the pounds, looking like he was fat enough to hibernate in July and yet continuing to eat until his belly seemed to drag along the ground by late September,” the park said. Reuters
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THE DISPATCH
The Morning Dispatch: RIP GOP?
Plus: Washington stalls on stimulus as long-term economic damage piles up.
Happy Wednesday! Quick reminder: Dispatch Live is back tonight after the vice presidential debate! Get all the details here, and we’ll “see” you in about 15 hours.
Quick Hits: Today’s Top Stories
The United States confirmed 42,663 new cases of COVID-19 yesterday per the Johns Hopkins University COVID-19 Dashboard, with 5.2 percent of the 815,610 tests reported coming back positive. An additional 697 deaths were attributed to the virus on Tuesday, bringing the pandemic’s American death toll to 210,852.
In a series of tweets, President Trump instructed Treasury Secretary Steve Mnuchin to break off coronavirus relief package negotiations with Democrats, arguing that Speaker Nancy Pelosi was “not negotiating in good faith.” Stocks tumbled following the tweets. “Immediately after I win,” Trump claimed, “we will pass a major Stimulus Bill that focuses on hardworking Americans and Small Business.”
Most members of the Joint Chiefs of Staff are quarantining after Coast Guard Adm. Charles Ray—who attended several meetings at the Pentagon late last week—tested positive for COVID-19. Top White House aide Stephen Miller also tested positive for the virus yesterday and is quarantining.
The president’s physician, Dr. Sean Conley, released a memo outlining his patient’s COVID-19 recovery, saying Trump “had a restful first night at home” and that “he reports no symptoms.”
The FDA on Tuesday released new, stricter standards that coronavirus vaccine developers must meet before applying for emergency authorization. The move all but ensures that a vaccine will not be approved before the election, leading President Trump to accuse his own FDA Commissioner of “another political hit job.”
Gov. Ron DeSantis extended Florida’s voter registration deadline by several hours on Tuesday after the state’s election website crashed Monday due to intense demand. A coalition of voting-rights groups is suing to extend the deadline by at least another two days.
Hurricane Delta—set to hit Mexico’s Yucatan Peninsula today—was upgraded to a Category 4 storm on Tuesday. It’s expected to move into the Gulf Coast and make landfall in Texas and Louisiana as a Category 3 storm late on Friday.
After a 16-month investigation into the business practices of Apple, Amazon, Google, and Facebook, Democratic House Judiciary Antitrust Subcommittee staffers released a reportrecommending comprehensive changes to antitrust laws to curb the alleged “monopoly power” of Big Tech.
The overall U.S. trade deficit topped $67 billion in August—its highest level in 14 years—the Department of Commerce reported yesterday.
Eddie Van Halen died on Tuesday at the age of 65. The leader of the Los Angeles hard-rock band Van Halen, he pushed the boundaries of what was possible with the electric guitar, popularizing the “tapping” technique and inspiring a generation of rock and metal guitar players.
Is the GOP Senate Majority Slipping Away?
Campaign strategists on both sides of the aisle awoke to a frenzy Tuesday morning: The latest CNN/SSRS poll—conducted from October 1 through October 4—showed Joe Biden with a 16-point national lead (!) over Donald Trump among likely voters, 57 percent to 41 percent. Biden led by 8 percent among registered voters in the same poll a month ago.
The fact that the CNN survey is likely an outlier is cold comfort to those working to elect Republicans up and down the ballot. One GOP strategist we talked to couldn’t help but laugh, noting that the optimistic approach is currently, “Well I’ll stipulate it’s not 17 [points], let’s just say it’s 10 to 12 [points].”
“Post debate, the bottom has been falling out,” he continued. “There is a marked difference in the president’s ballot performance between pre-debate and post-debate. I have not seen enough post-COVID polling to form a strong opinion yet, but the little that I have seen so far is across the board bad.”
Another consultant working on several GOP down-ballot races estimated Trump lost four or five percentage points nationwide in the last week alone. The president’s decision on Tuesday to break off coronavirus relief package negotiations and quadruple down on his COVID-is-no-worse-than-the-flu rhetoric is not inspiring confidence among party insiders that these numbers are turning around any time soon. And with politics as nationalized and polarized as it is, Trump could bring a lot of his fellow Republicans down with him if his collapse continues.
“The question isn’t whether the tide is going to continue to move against us,” the GOP strategist said of efforts to maintain control of the Senate. “The question is simply, how high is the water?”
The Great American Economic Recovery is Running Out of Steam
As noted above, President Trump on Tuesday instructed his administration—and by proxy, Senate Republicans—to suspend bipartisan coronavirus stimulus talks “until after the election,” claiming that Speaker Nancy Pelosi was “not negotiating in good faith” and that her $2.4 trillion proposal would bail out “poorly run, high crime, Democrat States.”
It was a bizarre development four weeks before the election. Millions of Americans remain out of work, fiscal austerity has never been a priority of Trump’s, and the idea of additional coronavirus relief is remarkably popular. By a 72-to-23 percent margin, likely voters in a Sept. 27 New York Times/Siena College poll—including 57 percent of Republicans—supported a hypothetical $2 trillion stimulus package. Further, the economy remains one of Trump’s only bright spots in the eyes of voters.
Several Republican senators, including Rand Paul and Ted Cruz, had balked in recent weeks at stimulus packages of various sizes; a bill large enough for Pelosi to accept would’ve surely had its fair share of detractors in the GOP conference. But some senators—Susan Collins and Rob Portman among them—criticized Trump’s walking away. “Waiting until after the election to reach an agreement on the next Covid-19 relief package is a huge mistake,” Collins said.
These sentiments align with Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell’s comments during a virtual conference with private-sector economists on Tuesday. Powell warned of the “tragic” consequences that may arise from Congress’ failure to pass a timely coronavirus relief bill. “At this early stage, I would argue that the risks of policy intervention are still asymmetric,” Powell said. “Too little support would lead to a weak recovery, creating unnecessary hardship. … Even if policy actions ultimately prove to be greater than needed, they will not go to waste.”
Tim Alberta emptied the reporter notebook in his latest piece for Politico: “4 Funny Feelings About 2020.” Biden is leading Trump handily, he writes, but “election forecasts aren’t worth the paper (or web space) they’re printed on,” so it’s worth plotting out some potential scenarios. First, he predicts, Trump fatigue is setting in at a very bad time for the president. “It’s impossible to quantify how tired Americans are of this presidency,” he writes. “They feel trapped inside a reality TV show and are powerless to change the channel.” This, combined with a “silent majority” against Trump and the president’s dismal polling among women, may seal Biden’s victory. One caveat: Like Sarah, Alberta anticipates that Democrats will regret betting so big on absentee voting.
In a public letter to the Pulitzer Prize Board, National Association of Scholars President Peter Wood and 20 other signatories urge the panel to revoke the prize awarded to Nikole Hannah-Jones for her lead essay in “The 1619 Project.” Hannah-Jones’ installment—like the entire Project—rests on plain factual errors, forced interpretations, and dangerous generalizations, Wood argues. And since the country’s foremost historians and The New York Times’ own fact checkers have drawn attention to those errors, Hannah-Jones and the Times have outright refused to engage in criticism or scholarly discourse. “The Pulitzer Prize Board erred in awarding a prize to Hannah-Jones’s profoundly flawed essay, and through it to a Project that, despite its worthy intentions, is disfigured by unfounded conjectures and patently false assertions.”
Wednesday’s edition of the French Press analyzes how a Justice Amy Coney Barrett might rule on the biggest issues awaiting the Supreme Court, from Roe v. Wade to gun control to religious liberty. “There is not a significant amount of jurisprudence … where she’s likely to cast the deciding vote to materially transform American law,” David writes. “At the same time, however, she does of course make it more difficult—through her sheer presence—for a hypothetical President Biden to move the court to the judicial left.”
This week’s Capitolism newsletter takes a look at the idea—popular on both the political left and right—that middle-class wages have stagnated. The real outlook for the middle class, Scott Lincicome argues, is actually much better than conventional wisdom would have you believe. Rather than stagnant income, the bigger problem is rising costs on expenses from health care to housing. “Trying to fix cost issues through income policies is like buying new pants after a year-long, Homer-In-Hell doughnut diet,” he writes. “I guess it ‘works’ for a time, but it doesn’t actually target the real problem and you’re just gonna be back at the pants store (just go with it) again next year.”
In his latest piece for the site, Jonah examines the possibility that President Trump’s COVID treatment has been dogged by “VIP Syndrome,” a phenomenon in which fabulously important people with big personalities can end up dominating the planning of their own medical treatment, sometimes to the detriment of their own health. “If you take a step back,” Jonah writes, “you could argue that not only Trump’s response to the pandemic but his whole presidency has been a case study in VIP syndrome.”
Kemberlee Kaye: “‘Stay tuned for updates on our pre-election coverage!”
Mary Chastain: “I *litrally* cannot understand the attitudes Cuomo and de Blasio have towards Jews.”
David Gerstman: “Is there a worse, more venal politician in the United States than New York Governor Andrew Cuomo right now? First he issued the infamous order sending COVID patients to nursing homes, leading to thousands of deaths. In fairness, a lot was unknown about COVID when it hit New York, and dealing it was going to involve some mistakes. But the scope of Cuomo’s mistake was huge and he should rightly be blamed for negligence and malfeasance in the nursing home deaths. If that wasn’t bad enough, Cuomo has attempted to rewrite history, lying that no such order was issued and trying to erase the record. But his deadly incompetence has now been magnified by an order he just issued targeting Orthodox Jewish institutions. Cuomo is currently the chair of the National Governors Association. It would be great if the 49 other governors let Cuomo know that his presence at the head of their organization reflects poorly on all of them and that it might be best if he resigns his position. The media will not do its job and hold Cuomo to account for his malfeasance and venality, maybe it’s time for his colleagues to hold him to account.”
Leslie Eastman: “I truly admire First Lady Melania Trump, who has been the epitome of grace and beauty under very trying circumstances. My feelings for Michelle Obama, however, are vastly different.”
Legal Insurrection Foundation is a Rhode Island tax-exempt corporation established exclusively for charitable purposes within the meaning of Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code to educate and inform the public on legal, historical, economic, academic, and cultural issues related to the Constitution, liberty, and world events.
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“My family and my company are leaving California. It’s heartbreaking. My parents moved to California four decades ago. I grew up here. For 33 of the 36 years I’ve spent on this planet, I’ve lived here…”
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RussiaGate Went Right to the Top
Breaking from The Federalist:
“Newly declassified handwritten notes from former CIA Director John Brennan show that the U.S. intelligence community knew in 2016 that Russian intelligence was actively monitoring, and potentially injecting disinformation into, Clinton’s anti-Trump collusion narrative. The intelligence concerning Russia’s knowledge of Clinton’s campaign plans was so concerning to Brennan and other national security officials that they personally informed Obama of the matter in the Oval Office in the summer of 2016. The handwritten notes from Brennan were declassified by Director of National Intelligence (DNI) John Ratcliffe and provided to Congress on Tuesday afternoon.
According to the declassified notes, Brennan and the U.S. intelligence community knew months prior to the 2016 election that the collusion smear was the result of a campaign operation hatched by the campaign of Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton.”
Want to take odds on whether Biden will have to answer a single question on this story?
Lord Save Us From the Do-Gooding CEOs
Bring back the robber barons! At least they didn’t want to save our souls like today’s woke billionaire revolutionaries.
“I now know who’ll be shot on the first day [of the revolution]: insufficiently woke CEOs. In a now-deleted tweet, Twitter’s former CEO Dick Costolo said that business leaders refusing to inject political activism into their workplaces will be ‘the first people lined up against the wall and shot in the revolution. I’ll happily provide video commentary.’ He was responding to a blogpost by Brian Armstrong, CEO of the cryptocurrency firm Coinbase, arguing that developing good products should take priority over encouraging employees to air their political grievances or dedicating one’s company to a political mission. Costolo accused Armstrong of wanting to ‘separate society from business.’
Both men’s statements say much about the current state, and perils, of American business, and how much about being a CEO has changed…
In our own day, though, business is increasingly the entity to fear—at least, businesses guided by CEOs who think it a martyr’s task to run a company; who talk incessantly about the public good, but with a censor’s spirit; who enjoy issuing public statements broadcasting their dissatisfaction with the world, while portraying moneymaking as some secret, shameful act, a plain necessity, but not the ostensible reason for going to the office; who call for a collective leap in consciousness—on their terms. All in the name of good employer-employee relations.
J. P. Morgan said, ‘I owe the public nothing,’ and was hated in his day. He looks pretty good in retrospect.”
“Tumbling Toward 1917”
It may not be the oft-trotted out comparison to Weimar Germany that best suits our tumultuous era. Helen Andrews writes in The American Conservative:
“When the Russian Revolution toppled the czar and put the Bolsheviks into power, the civilized countries of western Europe had good reason to tell themselves it could never happen to them. Russia was a barbaric country with a lopsided social structure, masses of peasants and no middle class to speak of. Their political system was a relic of the past, a time when street revolutions still happened. The rest of Europe was more modern, with constitutions and parliaments and labor unions. Any political conflict could work itself out through those proper channels. Then came the German revolution of 1918-19, and civilized Europe had to recalibrate its sense of what was possible… The uprising did not fulfill all its proponents’ hopes, in terms of ushering in a new socialist dawn, but it decisively refuted the idea that modern conditions had made revolution obsolete…
Americans [have] concluded that our prosperity, or the flexibility of our political system, or maybe just the forward march of civilization, had transformed street rebellion from a genuine threat into a safe pastime for earnest young idealists. But are we really so safe?
… During the Cold War, the joke used to be that the Soviet Union had just as much free speech as America, since it, too, guaranteed its citizens the right to stand in the middle of the town square and shout, “Down with Ronald Reagan!” The joke, of course, is that the real test of a regime’s level of freedom is usually whether you are allowed to criticize your country’s leader. However, in certain pathological conditions, the test becomes: can you praise him?”
Fashion Moment of the Week
I’m going to ignore the fact that Kamala Harris is on the front cover of Elle’s November issue, and instead, bring you this dispatch from fashion blog Wit & Whimsy. This post combines a few surprisingly-chic picks from Ann Taylor (I just snagged the puff-sleeved tee off their website) with a great Fall COVID-compatible list of activities.
Wednesday Links
Issues to watch for during tonight’s VP debate between Kamala Harris and Mike Pence. (WSJ)
On the podcast: Arthur Milikh of the Claremont Institute on the importance of defunding anti-American universities. (Radio Hour)
It’s not Amy Coney Barrett that threatens Obergefell, it’s the Constitution. (The Federalist)
If Democrats continue to entertain court packing as a real possibility, they will destroy the judiciary. (National Review)
As attorney general, Kamala Harris did not respect the First Amendment of those with whom she disagreed politically. A bad precedent if she becomes Vice President. (The Federalist)
THIS PLEASE: No matter what illness you have this winter, stay home when you’re sick! (The Federalist)
Inez Feltscher Stepman is a senior policy analyst at the Independent Women’s Forum and a senior contributor to The Federalist. She is a San Francisco Bay Area native with a BA in Philosophy from UCSD and a JD from the University of Virginia. She lives in Washington, D.C. with her husband, Jarrett Stepman, her puggle Thor, and her cat Thaddeus Kosciuszko. You can follow her on Twitter at @inezfeltscher and on Instagram (for #ootd, obvi) under the same handle. Opinions expressed on this website are her own and not those of her employers. Or her husband.
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.
Oct 07, 2020 01:00 am
What should have been a purely scientific response aimed at control and cure of a disease quickly evolved into a political-religious cult. Read More…
Oct 07, 2020 01:00 am
It was one of the most cataclysmic clashes between Islam and the West — one where the latter for once crushed and humiliated the former. Read More…
Oct 07, 2020 01:00 am
A “great president is one who puts America first,” concludes bestselling author Robert Spencer in his latest book. So much for Woodrow Wilson. Read More…
Critical thinking in an age of ‘feelings’
Oct 07, 2020 01:00 am
Feelings in and of themselves, divorced from reason and the sensitivity to contextual considerations, undermine the God-endowed dignity of the human person by diverting the mind away from truth. Read more…
Three ways Pence can win the debate
Oct 07, 2020 01:00 am
With a decisive victory on Wednesday evening, Vice President Pence will secure President Trump and himself a well deserved second term. Read more…
How to fix the debates
Oct 07, 2020 01:00 am
To avoid making the second presidential debate as embarrassing as the first one, follow these easy steps. Read more…
Finally, an accurate poll?
Oct 06, 2020 01:00 am
In an era when people lie to or hide from pollsters, and polling companies overcount Democrats, does Gallup finally have an accurate poll? Read more…
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By Joel K. Goldstein
Guest Columnist, Sabato’s Crystal Ball
Dear Readers: In advance of tonight’s vice presidential debate between Mike Pence and Kamala Harris, we are pleased to feature a debate preview from our friend Joel Goldstein, one of the nation’s leading experts on the vice presidency. Joel looks back on the history of vice presidential debates and points out some of the things we may hear tonight.Joel also will be joining us Thursday at 2 p.m. eastern for our latest episode of Sabato’s Crystal Ball: America Votes to analyze the debate and the state of the race. If you have questions you would like us to answer about the debate, specific races, or other developments in the campaign, just email us at goodpolitics@virginia.edu.
One other thing: In yesterday’s story about the political implications of statehood for the District of Columbia and Puerto Rico, there was a mistake about the current voting status of Washington, D.C. and Puerto Rico. While neither the District nor Puerto Rico has voting representation in floor votes in Congress, the District casts three electoral votes for president, while Puerto Rico has no voting power in presidential general elections.
— The Editors
KEY POINTS FROM THIS ARTICLE
— The VP debate has been a regular feature of presidential elections for the last four decades.
— The age of the presidential candidates and the president’s recent COVID-19 diagnosis could mean a bigger spotlight for tonight’s VP debate between Mike Pence and Kamala Harris.
— This represents one of the few times in the campaign, outside of VP selection and acceptance addresses, when the VP candidates take center stage.
— VP debates can often end up being about the presidential nominees themselves.
The VP debate
Tonight’s vice presidential debate will be the 11th such event in American history, but the first in which the running mates will debate in the shadow of a serious presidential illness.
Although some speculated that Vice President Mike Pence and Sen. Kamala Harris might receive more attention than have their predecessors given the ages of the two major presidential candidates (Donald Trump is 74 and Joe Biden is 77), the recent news that Trump tested positive for coronavirus and was taken to Walter Reed hospital has triggered renewed attention on presidential inability and succession.
Significantly, the most dramatic growth of the vice presidency has occurred in the years since 1976 when Jimmy Carter and Walter F. Mondale began planning Mondale’s role, a period that has been the second-longest period in American history in which the nation has not experienced an intra-term presidential succession. Yet the enhanced focus on the vice president’s “one heartbeat away” status amidst the news that Trump has contracted a potentially deadly disease shines a brighter spotlight on the vice presidential candidates as they prepare to take campaign center stage at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City. In addition to raising interest in the vice presidential debate, this unique context may also somewhat alter some normal principles that govern such events.
This short piece will provide a brief overview of the vice presidential debate and its significance as a political institution before suggesting how this year’s debate may be a little different, in part due to Trump’s illness.
How vice presidential debates differ
Although the vice presidential debates have been part of the presidential debate series since 1976 (except in 1980), they differ from the presidential debates in material ways.
Whereas presidential candidates have debated two (1984, 1988, 1996) or three times during those 11 campaigns (i.e. not including 1980, when there was one debate between Republican Ronald Reagan and Independent John Anderson and one between Reagan and Carter), there has never been more than one vice presidential debate. Not surprisingly, the vice presidential debate has always been an intermediate debate, the third of four total debates in 1976 and the second of three or usually four debates every other year.
The vice presidential debates have always been the least-watched debate of that election cycle except in 2008, when the presence of Gov. Sarah Palin as John McCain’s running mate made it the most-watched event. Whereas at least one, and often both, major party presidential candidates have engaged in debates during the primary season — depending on whether an incumbent president seeks reelection or not — the vice presidential candidates have not had that experience that year except in the unusual occasions where a running mate unsuccessfully sought that year’s presidential nomination, such as in 2004 (John Edwards), 2008 (Biden), and 2020 (Harris). Whereas presidential candidates are generally the focus of campaign attention, the vice presidential debate offers a rare post-convention moment when the vice presidential candidates take center stage. And yet even though the vice presidential candidates are on the stage, the evening’s discussion is likely to focus primarily on the national candidates who have the night off, the presidential candidates.
Vice presidential debates place the running mates center stage
Typically, the vice presidential debate is the third in a trilogy of major campaign moments for a first-time vice presidential candidate and the second of two such moments for an incumbent seeking reelection. The other events are, of course, the rollout for a new vice presidential candidate and the acceptance speech. Of the three (or two) moments, the vice presidential debate presents the one moment when the candidate must respond and interact.
Whatever one’s assessment of the value of presidential debates generally, vice presidential debates make a distinctive contribution to American governance through their impact on the vice presidency. The existence of a vice presidential debate tends to promote the quality of vice presidential candidates. Presidential nominees select a running mate with the knowledge that he or she will be the focus of campaign discussion during their 90-minute debate and the day or so before and after. No candidate wants to relive the angst that gripped McCain and his top aides as they awaited Palin’s moment in the campaign spotlight at Washington University in St. Louis on Oct. 2, 2008 as she took questions from moderator Gwen Ifill in her square off against Biden. The inevitability of a vice presidential debate provides further reason to select a running mate who is familiar with issues, thinks clearly and quickly, and communicates in a manner likely to appeal to reachable voters.
The vice presidential debate also assumes importance because it presents a unique opportunity for citizens to see the vice presidential candidates perform for a prolonged time under pressure and opposite both an opponent and prominent journalist (or more, depending on the format) with incentive, in one case, to make him or her look bad and, in the other, to press him/her on an issue. As such, the debate communicates information about a vice presidential candidate that allows citizens opportunities to assess the two tickets.
The occasion is especially important for first-time vice presidential candidates who in many instances are little known to the public. Of the 22 major party candidates in the 11 vice presidential debates, 16 were first-time candidates, whereas only six — George H.W. Bush, 1984; Dan Quayle, 1992; Al Gore, 1996; Dick Cheney, 2004; Joe Biden, 2012; Mike Pence, 2020 — were incumbents. Newcomers to the national stage wish to make a good impression, and incumbents are generally positioning themselves for a presidential run four years later.
About a week before the Oct. 15, 1976 debate, pollster Louis Harris found that 45% of voters felt unfamiliar with Mondale and 50% felt that way about Bob Dole, Gerald Ford’s running mate that year. Prior to the vice presidential debate on Oct. 5, 1988, between 40% and 55% had no opinion of Lloyd Bentsen and Dan Quayle. In late September 2016, more than 30% said they were not sure who the Democratic or Republican vice presidential candidate was and more than 40% could not name Pence or Tim Kaine.
Not only may the vice presidential debate affect a running mate’s name recognition, but it also may affect her or his favorability rating. In 2008, Pew found that the debate improved both Biden and Palin’s net favorability, although Biden’s improved by more (and the poll also indicated that voters switched their opinions of the candidates in both positive and negative directions from before the debate to after it).
To be sure, vice presidential debates rarely swing a presidential election. Yet even if they may not move the needle much, they may move it some, and sometimes small moves may make a difference. A Gallup study in 2012 that concluded that the vice presidential debates have minimal impact on voters still found a net 4% shift towards the Republican ticket after the 1992 vice presidential debate and a 5% shift to Bush-Cheney after the 2000 debate between Dick Cheney and Joe Lieberman. Those may seem like small shifts, but in a close election, as 2000 was, changes of that magnitude, if they endure, can be decisive, especially if felt in battleground states. Cheney was widely perceived to have won the 2000 encounter, and it is certainly plausible that his performance helped convince some voters that Bush would be surrounded by experienced and thoughtful advisers. During the 1976 vice presidential debate, Bob Dole associated the Democratic Party with war by saying that the 20th century’s wars had started during Democratic administrations. A well-prepared Mondale forcefully rebuked Dole for the comment and its suggestion that World War II and Korea were partisan adventures. Following the debate, Carter increasingly referred to Mondale in speeches and argued that his choice of Mondale confirmed his ability as a decision-maker. Mondale appears to have helped Carter carry decisive states like Ohio, Pennsylvania, and Wisconsin.
Even if the vice presidential debate doesn’t dramatically change the overall race, it may affect some voters. It’s important to recall the somewhat obvious but often overlooked point that shifts in voter attitude often may occur in both directions. The partially offsetting impacts mean that the overall change, even if small, masks larger numbers of voters whose attitudes are influenced by the opportunity to see the vice presidential candidates in action.
Vice presidential debates usually focus on presidential candidates
Generally speaking, vice presidential debates are not about the candidates on the stage. They are instead about the presidential candidates. Kaine recognized four years ago a normal rule of vice presidential debates: If he found himself talking too much about Pence or himself, he was probably missing an opportunity to use his time more effectively. Of course, vice presidential candidates want to present themselves as plausible presidents and vice presidents, at least in the eyes of reachable voters. But normally, most of the discussion focuses on the two presidential candidates and the themes of their campaign. Vice presidential candidates use the debate to defend the standard-bearer on their ticket and attack his or her opponent.
Although the most-remembered and repeated moment in vice presidential and perhaps presidential debate history is Bentsen’s “You are no John Kennedy” takedown of Quayle, what is often overlooked is that Quayle did an effective job attacking the rival presidential candidates in both the 1988 and 1992 vice presidential debates. He relentlessly disparaged Michael Dukakis as a big-spending “liberal” in the days when conservatives advocated fiscal responsibility and Bill Clinton as untrustworthy. By contrast, Jack Kemp in 1996 and Lieberman four years later were criticized by some co-partisans for their unwillingness to attack sufficiently the competing presidential candidates.
The 2020 VP debate
The unique circumstances of this year’s vice presidential debate may focus an unusual amount of discussion on the two vice presidential candidates. The event will provide an important part of Harris’s introduction to the American people because she is a first-time candidate. Although some polls since her selection suggested that she enjoys higher name recognition than some of her predecessors, she is lesswell-known than Pence. Trump’s insistence on dominating the Republican stage and the campaign accommodations the Democratic ticket has made in view of the pandemic have probably given the two vice presidential candidates less than normal campaign visibility.
Yet the most powerful factors that may produce more discussion of Pence and Harris, their records and beliefs, relate to other considerations. Trump’s illness gives the Democrats more reason to focus on Pence because it has heightened awareness of Trump’s mortality and, accordingly, the possibility of presidential succession. That focuses attention on Pence and on the question whether he has leadership qualities sought in a president. Moreover, Pence has chaired the administration’s coronavirus task force and may expect those who believe the United States government has done a poor job responding to the pandemic to hold him responsible in part for that failure. Trump’s positive COVID-19 diagnosis and those of other administration and campaign personnel and Republican senators followed events at which they ignored CDC recommendations regarding precautions to protect their own health and the health of other Americans. This circumstance is likely to subject Pence to scrutiny and criticism regarding that issue. And his involvement in other Trump policies suggests that Harris may be able to attack Trump’s record through Pence.
Although presidential candidates do not typically focus on the competing vice presidential candidate, Trump has disparaged Harris to an unusual extent and in ways that some journalists and pundits have suggested are racist and sexist. He has attacked her competence, mocked her name, and argued that she is too liberal. Some have suggested that Trump’s reliance on these attacks on Harris reflect, in part, an inability to score effective attacks on Biden. Pence’s style is not to engage in the offensive rhetoric that Trump uses but some of these themes, having been aired by the standard-bearer, may arise in the vice presidential debate.
Finally, the upcoming Senate proceedings on Trump’s nomination of Amy Coney Barrett to the Supreme Court will raise a number of issues that may come up in the debate, especially given Harris’s service on the Senate Judiciary Committee and Pence’s support for the nomination. These include the possible impact of Barrett’s service on the court on health insurance coverage for individuals with preexisting conditions, the status of decisions recognizing a woman’s right to terminate a pregnancy, the ability of the Environmental Protection Agency to regulate to address climate change, and the ability of governing units to regulate gun possession and use, among other issues.
The Trump campaign shredded a CNN reporter who insisted that President Donald Trump was reckless for taking his mask off while alone, outside, and on the balcony of his home. A coronavirus-stricken Trump took to a White House balcony on Monday night following his release from Walter Reed Medical Center, took off his mask, and waved to the publi … Read more
In a state Trump won by a razor-thin margin in 2016, Michigan might be decided in a handful of counties just now emerging from months of pandemic lockdowns.
Michelle Obama continued the left’s false narrative about Black Lives Matter, saying the movement is based on ‘solidarity’ and has been ‘mostly peaceful.’
In addition to the unprecedented circumstances of lockdowns and rioting, Olivia said that panic buying due to the upcoming election is also a probable cause for the rise in background checks and sales.
Rather than renew a flawed program that benefits big business and saves jobs that should be destroyed, Congress should allow market forces to make the necessary economic adjustments.
‘Nancy Pelosi is asking for $2.4 Trillion Dollars to bailout poorly run, high crime, Democrat States, money that is in no way related to COVID-19,’ Trump said.
What makes Trump look worse before the election: trying to get a deal with no success, or pointing out that the other side doesn’t want a deal for political reasons and pulling out of talks?
Big Tech companies are censoring a video posted by a mother whose babies were refused care and left to die, claiming the content violates community guidelines.
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It’s a common misconception that false gospels are mutually exclusive. The Prosperity Gospel is often viewed as a Republican heresy while the Social Justice Gospel and liberal Christianity at large are viewed as Democrat heresies. Indeed Donald Trump has surrounded himself on multiple occasions with Prosperity preachers, including his “spiritual advisor” Paula White (Cain). And numerous theological liberals are supportive of socialism. John Pavlovitz is a prominent example of this. But these seemingly politically opposed false gospels are far from mutually exclusive.
In this video I pull out a few examples. Dr. Eric Mason, author of Woke Church, recently had a viral sermon in which he’s using the Bible to call for reparations. Eric Mason is most certainly woke, but no doubt Eric Mason is trying to get some stacks. And I speculate there is a racial divide on motivation. The woke white brigade is usually not so craven in pursuit of stacks. The white elites are the real communists. A lot of woke black preachers want to get reparations, like Mason.
On the Prosperity Gospel side the motives change also. Joel Osteen wants the stacks to keep flowing and going along with corporate America on every major social issue is one way to do that. John Gray is one of the most habitually scandal-ensnared preachers in America. He could use a little victimhood at the moment.
With victimhood, there’s money to be made. Bowing to culture is safer than living according to biblical convictions. And you can’t live by biblical convictions if you don’t have any. And without such convictions, by what standard can you to oppose a competing false gospel?
COVID-19 may take down an independent news outlet
Nobody said running a media site would be easy. We could use some help keeping this site afloat.
Colleagues have called me the worst fundraiser ever. My skills are squarely rooted on the journalistic side of running a news outlet. Paying the bills has never been my forte, but we’ve survived. We have ads on the site that help, but since the site’s inception this has been a labor of love that otherwise doesn’t bring in the level of revenue necessary to justify it.
When I left a nice, corporate career in 2017, I did so knowing I wouldn’t make nearly as much money. But what we do at NOQ Report to deliver the truth and fight the progressive mainstream media narrative that has plagued this nation is too important for me to sacrifice it for the sake of wealth. We know we’ll never make a ton of money this way, and we’re okay with that.
Things have become harder with the coronavirus lockdowns. Both ad money and donations that have kept us afloat for a while have dropped dramatically. We thought we could weather the storm, but the so-called “surge” or “2nd-wave” that mainstream media and Democrats are pushing has put our prospects in jeopardy. In short, we are now in desperate need of financial assistance.
The best way NOQ Report readers can help is to donate. Our Giving Fuel page makes it easy to donate one-time or monthly. Alternatively, you can donate through PayPal as well. We need approximately $11,500 to stay afloat for the rest of 2020, but more would be wonderful and any amount that brings us closer to our goal is greatly appreciated.
The second way to help is to become a partner. We’ve strongly considered seeking angel investors in the past but because we were paying the bills, it didn’t seem necessary. Now, we’re struggling to pay the bills. This shouldn’t be the case as our traffic the last year has been going up dramatically. June, 2018, we had 11,678 visitors. A year later in June, 2019, we were up to 116,194. In June, 2020, we had 614,192. We’re heading in the right direction and we believe we’re ready talk to patriotic investors who want to not only “get in on the action” but more importantly who want to help America hear the truth. Interested investors should contact me directly with the contact button above.
Election year or not, coronavirus lockdowns or not, anarchic riots or not, the need for truthful journalism endures. But in these times, we need as many conservative media voices as possible. Please help keep NOQ Report going.
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.
President Trump started dropping Tweet bombs all over the place Tuesday night pertaining to the Russian collusion investigation as well as Hillary Clinton’s email scandal. He said he has fully authorized total declassification of all documents without redactions that have anything to do with the two 2016 election scandals, one of which turned into a two-year investigation that wasted taxpayer money.
I have fully authorized the total Declassification of any & all documents pertaining to the single greatest political CRIME in American History, the Russia Hoax. Likewise, the Hillary Clinton Email Scandal. No redactions! https://t.co/GgnHh9GOiq
Redacted documents were released earlier, but barely told a story that we didn’t already know. The important aspects, such as who in the previous administration was involved and how the attempted disruption of the 2016 election manifested, are largely blocked from view. The President has promised to change that and offer complete transparency just in time for the November elections. As political commentator and documentary filmmaker Mike Cernovich noted, this seems like the confident Donald Trump of old.
But the President wasn’t done with one Tweet. He made several other indications that he’s planning to shake things up and expose corruption from both the previous administration as well as both campaigns he has faced over the last four years. He has focused on replying to journalist Paul Sperry’s posts from the last couple of days.
Because Mueller and his 18 Angry Democrats were illegally in on the SCAM? https://t.co/ynEAchAWPA
There are bombshells ready to be dropped. Perhaps this is what the Biden campaign feared the most and why they’ve been so adamant in their push to get people to vote early. Unfortunately, millions already have.
COVID-19 may take down an independent news outlet
Nobody said running a media site would be easy. We could use some help keeping this site afloat.
Colleagues have called me the worst fundraiser ever. My skills are squarely rooted on the journalistic side of running a news outlet. Paying the bills has never been my forte, but we’ve survived. We have ads on the site that help, but since the site’s inception this has been a labor of love that otherwise doesn’t bring in the level of revenue necessary to justify it.
When I left a nice, corporate career in 2017, I did so knowing I wouldn’t make nearly as much money. But what we do at NOQ Report to deliver the truth and fight the progressive mainstream media narrative that has plagued this nation is too important for me to sacrifice it for the sake of wealth. We know we’ll never make a ton of money this way, and we’re okay with that.
Things have become harder with the coronavirus lockdowns. Both ad money and donations that have kept us afloat for a while have dropped dramatically. We thought we could weather the storm, but the so-called “surge” or “2nd-wave” that mainstream media and Democrats are pushing has put our prospects in jeopardy. In short, we are now in desperate need of financial assistance.
The best way NOQ Report readers can help is to donate. Our Giving Fuel page makes it easy to donate one-time or monthly. Alternatively, you can donate through PayPal as well. We need approximately $11,500 to stay afloat for the rest of 2020, but more would be wonderful and any amount that brings us closer to our goal is greatly appreciated.
The second way to help is to become a partner. We’ve strongly considered seeking angel investors in the past but because we were paying the bills, it didn’t seem necessary. Now, we’re struggling to pay the bills. This shouldn’t be the case as our traffic the last year has been going up dramatically. June, 2018, we had 11,678 visitors. A year later in June, 2019, we were up to 116,194. In June, 2020, we had 614,192. We’re heading in the right direction and we believe we’re ready talk to patriotic investors who want to not only “get in on the action” but more importantly who want to help America hear the truth. Interested investors should contact me directly with the contact button above.
Election year or not, coronavirus lockdowns or not, anarchic riots or not, the need for truthful journalism endures. But in these times, we need as many conservative media voices as possible. Please help keep NOQ Report going.
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.
Cal Cunningham is in big trouble. The lieutenant colonel in the United States Army Reserve who has served on two active duty tours is the Democrats’ nominee for U.S. Senate against Republican Thom Tillis. It has been considered one of the seats the Democrats have the best chance of flipping from red to blue, but they’re now facing a major problem. Cunningham is in the midst of a major sex scandal that includes him sending lewd texts to multiple women other than his wife.
In any other election year, the race would likely be considered over. Tillis is an incumbent, and while the state is shifting purple, such a scandal for his opponent this late in the race should secure the seat for the Republicans. But this is not a normal year. COVID-19 fears have propelled record numbers of early mail-in ballots. In North Carolina, over a million ballots—about one in six voters—have been mailed out. Of those, nearly 400,000 have already been received. The 2016 Senate race was won by a more popular Republican, Richard Burr, by 267,000 votes.
Tillis is more vulnerable this year than Burr was in 2016. Mail-in ballots are believed to favor Democrats this year with most Republicans calling on voters to go to the booths in-person. Meanwhile, Democrats are pushing for ubiquitous mail-in ballots, though North Carolina has maintained their absentee ballot request rules.
According to Patrick Howley at National File, one of the women who received nude texts from Cunningham had sex with him in his family home.
BREAKING WE HAVE OBTAINED NEW Cunningham Mistress Sexts. She has Nude Photos of Cal and she had sex with him in Cal’s family homehttps://t.co/SM6pAaR4yM
Can Cunningham drop out and be replaced by another Democrat? No.
“A candidate must withdraw more than 60 days prior to the election,” general counsel Katelyn Love said in a Tuesday email sent to the Charlotte Observer by the state elections board. “After that, withdrawal is not permitted and any votes for that candidate will count for that candidate.”
Democrats may flip a Senate seat through their rabid push for everyone to vote-by-mail and to do so as early as possible. How many voters would have liked to have this information on Cal Cunningham before sending in their ballots?
COVID-19 may take down an independent news outlet
Nobody said running a media site would be easy. We could use some help keeping this site afloat.
Colleagues have called me the worst fundraiser ever. My skills are squarely rooted on the journalistic side of running a news outlet. Paying the bills has never been my forte, but we’ve survived. We have ads on the site that help, but since the site’s inception this has been a labor of love that otherwise doesn’t bring in the level of revenue necessary to justify it.
When I left a nice, corporate career in 2017, I did so knowing I wouldn’t make nearly as much money. But what we do at NOQ Report to deliver the truth and fight the progressive mainstream media narrative that has plagued this nation is too important for me to sacrifice it for the sake of wealth. We know we’ll never make a ton of money this way, and we’re okay with that.
Things have become harder with the coronavirus lockdowns. Both ad money and donations that have kept us afloat for a while have dropped dramatically. We thought we could weather the storm, but the so-called “surge” or “2nd-wave” that mainstream media and Democrats are pushing has put our prospects in jeopardy. In short, we are now in desperate need of financial assistance.
The best way NOQ Report readers can help is to donate. Our Giving Fuel page makes it easy to donate one-time or monthly. Alternatively, you can donate through PayPal as well. We need approximately $11,500 to stay afloat for the rest of 2020, but more would be wonderful and any amount that brings us closer to our goal is greatly appreciated.
The second way to help is to become a partner. We’ve strongly considered seeking angel investors in the past but because we were paying the bills, it didn’t seem necessary. Now, we’re struggling to pay the bills. This shouldn’t be the case as our traffic the last year has been going up dramatically. June, 2018, we had 11,678 visitors. A year later in June, 2019, we were up to 116,194. In June, 2020, we had 614,192. We’re heading in the right direction and we believe we’re ready talk to patriotic investors who want to not only “get in on the action” but more importantly who want to help America hear the truth. Interested investors should contact me directly with the contact button above.
Election year or not, coronavirus lockdowns or not, anarchic riots or not, the need for truthful journalism endures. But in these times, we need as many conservative media voices as possible. Please help keep NOQ Report going.
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.
Ever since President Trump brought Juanita Broaddrick to a debate in which he dismantled her rapist’s wife, the outspoken women’s advocate has been a vocal supporter. That’s why it’s no surprise that she attacked Michelle Obama on Twitter after the latter released a video attacking the President’s character.
In a 24-minute video, the former First Lady made her “closing argument” by invoking identity politics throughout. She referred to “me and my ancestors” as needing Joe Biden to be elected president in order to correct the racial divide. By essentially reinforcing the false narrative that President Trump is a racist, she made it all a personal attack despite the fact that the President has done more for minorities than his predecessor and pretty much any president since Abraham Lincoln. But Broaddrick wasn’t going to sit back and let the personal attacks go unanswered.
With all of her millions….. the one thing Michelle Obama can never buy is class.
Biden is currently ahead in most polls, though there are concerns among many on the left that his strongest demographic—African-Americans—are increasingly viewing President Trump’s job performance as positive. This is why it’s so important for Biden to have surrogates like the Obamas out there trying to solidify his lead among Black voters. However, there are problems with Biden’s own history of racism that are starting to pop up again.
Those in mainstream media have been trying to run cover for his comment when he said, “By the way, what you all know but most people don’t know, unlike the African-American community, with notable exceptions, the Latino community is an incredibly diverse community with incredibly different attitudes about different things.”
Of course, it didn’t help his narrative when he decided to double-down on his remarks. In this episode of the NOQ Report, JD talks about Biden’s long history of treating Black people differently. It has served him well over the decades as he’s been able to take a large chunk of the Black vote. In fact, his success with Black voters in South Carolina is the singular reason he was propped up ahead of Super Tuesday to take down Bernie Sanders.
None of this is new. His infamous comment that “you ain’t Black” if you don’t vote for him wasn’t the first time he’d made racially charged remarks. He’s been doing it his whole career. It’s conspicuous mainstream media generally hasn’t pressed him on comments he made in 1977 regarding de-segregation and busing:
“Unless we do something about this, my children are going to grow up in a jungle, the jungle being a racial jungle with tensions having built so high that it is going to explode at some point. We have got to make some move on this.”
Support among Black voters is steadily rising for President Trump as the need for law and order is a message that’s hitting home. Michelle Obama tried to reverse that trend. Juanita Broaddrick had the proper retort for her.
COVID-19 may take down an independent news outlet
Nobody said running a media site would be easy. We could use some help keeping this site afloat.
Colleagues have called me the worst fundraiser ever. My skills are squarely rooted on the journalistic side of running a news outlet. Paying the bills has never been my forte, but we’ve survived. We have ads on the site that help, but since the site’s inception this has been a labor of love that otherwise doesn’t bring in the level of revenue necessary to justify it.
When I left a nice, corporate career in 2017, I did so knowing I wouldn’t make nearly as much money. But what we do at NOQ Report to deliver the truth and fight the progressive mainstream media narrative that has plagued this nation is too important for me to sacrifice it for the sake of wealth. We know we’ll never make a ton of money this way, and we’re okay with that.
Things have become harder with the coronavirus lockdowns. Both ad money and donations that have kept us afloat for a while have dropped dramatically. We thought we could weather the storm, but the so-called “surge” or “2nd-wave” that mainstream media and Democrats are pushing has put our prospects in jeopardy. In short, we are now in desperate need of financial assistance.
The best way NOQ Report readers can help is to donate. Our Giving Fuel page makes it easy to donate one-time or monthly. Alternatively, you can donate through PayPal as well. We need approximately $11,500 to stay afloat for the rest of 2020, but more would be wonderful and any amount that brings us closer to our goal is greatly appreciated.
The second way to help is to become a partner. We’ve strongly considered seeking angel investors in the past but because we were paying the bills, it didn’t seem necessary. Now, we’re struggling to pay the bills. This shouldn’t be the case as our traffic the last year has been going up dramatically. June, 2018, we had 11,678 visitors. A year later in June, 2019, we were up to 116,194. In June, 2020, we had 614,192. We’re heading in the right direction and we believe we’re ready talk to patriotic investors who want to not only “get in on the action” but more importantly who want to help America hear the truth. Interested investors should contact me directly with the contact button above.
Election year or not, coronavirus lockdowns or not, anarchic riots or not, the need for truthful journalism endures. But in these times, we need as many conservative media voices as possible. Please help keep NOQ Report going.
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 Harvard Law Review has published a proposal for supposedly enhancing a better democracy than that which the Federal (not really) government now oversees. The proposal has no official name but is born, it would appear, from the same milieu as the French Revolution i.e, power to the people—that is, the mob. Harvard Review proposes what effectively amounts to a national state led by mob leaders in Washington.
This would come about, as per the proposal, by a congressional majority vote of dividing the District of Columbia into 127 neighborhoods which in turn (by congressional majority vote) would become 127 states. Each state would, of course, have two Senators and a single representative. Each state would be approximately 320 acres.
This new arrangement would give the magnificent morons in the current national capital control of everyone else from sea to shining sea. Government of and by New York City law and California morality. America the Beautiful. A modern French Revolution. Heads would roll. A Robespierre delight.
This proposal really is a result of something that conservatives and Republicans (not always the same) have brought upon themselves. Without a rally to reclaim history from the Eric Foner revisionists, this is the American future. Total rule from Washington. There truly will be an “exceptionalism.”
That “bringing” is the constant promotion that the United States is not a Union of States, but an amalgamation of states created magically in 1776. This is the Eric Foner nonsense that is peddled, whereby States have no sovereign rights. They may abide in the union only as long as they behave. And if they don’t behave, they will stay anyway under any number of so-called civil rights laws.
The belief seems to be that the states upon ratification of the Constitution, years after 1776, surrendered their sovereignty to a national (federal) government. This white flag yielding federalism to nationalism meant that states would end up being no more than what county governments are in relation to their appropriate state.
And now these conservatives claim that the people are protected by the Electoral College; that is, they claim that the reason the founders put it in was to protect the small states, or population, from the large ones. Nonsense! It was in there because sovereign states were supposed to vote and not a national conglomeration of people. The people weren’t voting for or against Hillary. The states were supposedly doing so.
This Harvard proposal, it claims, is to fix America’s “broken democracy.”
Every state in the union is supposed to be guaranteed a republican form of government, not a democratic form.
The State of Texas claims the right to divide it into five states as part of the agreements which brought it into the union. It might be more than of passing interest if the current fool’s errand of the Democrats persists. That is, adding more states which would lean heavily as Democrat ones: Puerto Rico and the District of Columbia, specifically. Any of the other states (at least constitutionally) could begin to peel off just as West Virginia did — though West Virginia never got legislative authority required under the constitution.
These additions to the “former union” would be “Republican” states, or as we now say “red states.” Now if the Harvard plan (as opposed to the New Jersey Plan or the Virginia Plan—remember those?) ever took root–and either might, considering the madness running the political circles in our “nation’s” capital–the battle would be on for the “red” states to divide in a frenzy. Counties, and even precincts, would become states.
But what about the broken republic(s)? For example, why are Virginians begging for their God-given (not government-given) rights to keep and bear arms from the state of Virginia?
Why is it that babies who are guaranteed life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness while lying “comfortably” in a hamper waiting to get their brains crushed, should beg, if they could talk, for the state of Virginia to do them no harm?
Governing foreseen by the Founders, except for foreign-born Hamilton nationalists, was to be local. It was to be from the sovereign states they were part of. Nullification was righteous and proper. Secession was righteous and proper. Theirs was a republic of republics; republics comprised of sovereign governments.
But the Grand Army of the Potomac proved via the sword that the Founders ratified nationalism, not federalism.
Now that great sanctuary of brilliance, Harvard Law School, manned by modern Jacobins sees a new “age of reason.” A land where 127 oligarchs created in Washington D.C. will be the U.S. “Committee of Public Safety.”
With this measure, the SCOTUS can be “packed” to the hilt. And with former sovereign state governments now no more than state, county governments i.e. nullification and secession “disallowed,” such a packed court can run roughshod over Article 4, section 3 of the U.S, Constitution:
“New states may be admitted by the Congress into this union, but no new states shall be formed or erected within the jurisdiction of any other state; nor any state be formed by the junction of two or more states, or parts of states, without the consent of the legislatures of the states concerned as well as of the Congress.”
Then, a true democracy run by Washington with Harvard Law school on retainer will be the new “most powerful country in the world.”
Even Robespierre thought such kinds of “democracy were a good idea until one day when he found himself on his knees with his hands behind his back, and a huge blade of steel racing toward his neck. One might say that this was his attempt to “head off” the mob.
Hail to The Crimson– and the Eric Foners—and The Deep State. All foolishness is carried out by fools.
Since weeks before its release in the United States, we’ve called for boycotts of Netflix over their pedophile fodder flick, “Cuties.” Now, it seems possible that they will face worse punishment than a mass exodus of their subscribers. A Texas grand jury has indicted the company over the film.
Netflix, Inc. indicted by grand jury in Tyler Co., Tx for promoting material in Cuties film which depicts lewd exhibition of pubic area of a clothed or partially clothed child who was younger than 18 yrs of age which appeals to the prurient interest in sex #Cuties#txlegepic.twitter.com/UJ1hY8XJ2l
According to the indictment, Netflix, Inc. did “knowingly promote visual material which depicts the lewd exhibition of the genitals or pubic area of a clothed or partially clothed child who was younger than 18 years of age at the time the visual material was created, which appeals to the pruriest interest in sex, and has no serious literary, artistic, political, or scientific value, to wit: by issuing or selling or providing or delivering or distributing or disseminating or transmitting or publishing or exhibiting or presenting or advertising the film titled Cuties, also known as Mignonnes, or offering or agreeing to issue, sell, provide, deliver, distribute, disseminate, transmit, publish, exhibit, present, or advertise said film, and the promotion of said film was authorized or recklessly tolerated by a high managerial agent of Netflix, Inc., namely, Wilmot Reed Hastings Jr. or Theodore Anthony Sarandos Jr., acting in behalf of Netflix, Inc. and within the scope of the agent’s office or employment at Netflix, Inc.”
It’s noteworthy that the indictment names the two co-CEO’s for Netflix and nobody else. It’s an indication that the grand jury is cognizant that content decisions at this scale ultimately fall on the leaders of the company, deflating the possibility that lesser agents of the company can be used as scapegoats should this turn into convictions.
Tyler County has handed down an indictment against Netflix for “promotion of lewd visual material depicting child”. The charge stems from the release of the “Cuties” documentary, which was released back on September 9, followed an 11-year-old who followed a dance crew.
The documentary sparked controversy with its depiction of young girls. Texas Senator Ted Cruz called for a criminal investigation into the film earlier this month, calling it a “pornographic film.”
Sadly, the damage has already been done. Pedophiles across the world have taken “Cuties” and used it as sexual fodder to engage in their disgusting practices. Hopefully, this will turn into arrests and jail time for the co-CEOs at Netflix.
COVID-19 may take down an independent news outlet
Nobody said running a media site would be easy. We could use some help keeping this site afloat.
Colleagues have called me the worst fundraiser ever. My skills are squarely rooted on the journalistic side of running a news outlet. Paying the bills has never been my forte, but we’ve survived. We have ads on the site that help, but since the site’s inception this has been a labor of love that otherwise doesn’t bring in the level of revenue necessary to justify it.
When I left a nice, corporate career in 2017, I did so knowing I wouldn’t make nearly as much money. But what we do at NOQ Report to deliver the truth and fight the progressive mainstream media narrative that has plagued this nation is too important for me to sacrifice it for the sake of wealth. We know we’ll never make a ton of money this way, and we’re okay with that.
Things have become harder with the coronavirus lockdowns. Both ad money and donations that have kept us afloat for a while have dropped dramatically. We thought we could weather the storm, but the so-called “surge” or “2nd-wave” that mainstream media and Democrats are pushing has put our prospects in jeopardy. In short, we are now in desperate need of financial assistance.
The best way NOQ Report readers can help is to donate. Our Giving Fuel page makes it easy to donate one-time or monthly. Alternatively, you can donate through PayPal as well. We need approximately $11,500 to stay afloat for the rest of 2020, but more would be wonderful and any amount that brings us closer to our goal is greatly appreciated.
The second way to help is to become a partner. We’ve strongly considered seeking angel investors in the past but because we were paying the bills, it didn’t seem necessary. Now, we’re struggling to pay the bills. This shouldn’t be the case as our traffic the last year has been going up dramatically. June, 2018, we had 11,678 visitors. A year later in June, 2019, we were up to 116,194. In June, 2020, we had 614,192. We’re heading in the right direction and we believe we’re ready talk to patriotic investors who want to not only “get in on the action” but more importantly who want to help America hear the truth. Interested investors should contact me directly with the contact button above.
Election year or not, coronavirus lockdowns or not, anarchic riots or not, the need for truthful journalism endures. But in these times, we need as many conservative media voices as possible. Please help keep NOQ Report going.
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.
Antifa in Portland is nothing new. Many Americans heard of them for the first time this year. Still more Americans haven’t heard of them at all despite essentially destroying a major United States city over the past four months. Mainstream media may still be pretending they’re mostly peaceful protesters spawned spontaneously after the George Floyd killing, but this resurfaced video by Andy Ngo tells a very different story.
During a Portland city hall meeting about sanctuary city status in 2017, Antifa came out in force and explained to Mayor Ted Wheeler that they were ready for insurrection. A man who identified himself as Jeff Singer took the mic in full Antifa garb and lambasted Wheeler over police violence.
If you still think Antifa and Black Lives Matter haven’t been planning these riots for years, then you probably get all of your news from mainstream media. Watch the reporting from people like Andy Ngo and Elijah Schaffer to learn the truth.
COVID-19 may take down an independent news outlet
Nobody said running a media site would be easy. We could use some help keeping this site afloat.
Colleagues have called me the worst fundraiser ever. My skills are squarely rooted on the journalistic side of running a news outlet. Paying the bills has never been my forte, but we’ve survived. We have ads on the site that help, but since the site’s inception this has been a labor of love that otherwise doesn’t bring in the level of revenue necessary to justify it.
When I left a nice, corporate career in 2017, I did so knowing I wouldn’t make nearly as much money. But what we do at NOQ Report to deliver the truth and fight the progressive mainstream media narrative that has plagued this nation is too important for me to sacrifice it for the sake of wealth. We know we’ll never make a ton of money this way, and we’re okay with that.
Things have become harder with the coronavirus lockdowns. Both ad money and donations that have kept us afloat for a while have dropped dramatically. We thought we could weather the storm, but the so-called “surge” or “2nd-wave” that mainstream media and Democrats are pushing has put our prospects in jeopardy. In short, we are now in desperate need of financial assistance.
The best way NOQ Report readers can help is to donate. Our Giving Fuel page makes it easy to donate one-time or monthly. Alternatively, you can donate through PayPal as well. We need approximately $11,500 to stay afloat for the rest of 2020, but more would be wonderful and any amount that brings us closer to our goal is greatly appreciated.
The second way to help is to become a partner. We’ve strongly considered seeking angel investors in the past but because we were paying the bills, it didn’t seem necessary. Now, we’re struggling to pay the bills. This shouldn’t be the case as our traffic the last year has been going up dramatically. June, 2018, we had 11,678 visitors. A year later in June, 2019, we were up to 116,194. In June, 2020, we had 614,192. We’re heading in the right direction and we believe we’re ready talk to patriotic investors who want to not only “get in on the action” but more importantly who want to help America hear the truth. Interested investors should contact me directly with the contact button above.
Election year or not, coronavirus lockdowns or not, anarchic riots or not, the need for truthful journalism endures. But in these times, we need as many conservative media voices as possible. Please help keep NOQ Report going.
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 isn’t common for an “October surprise” to blindside both sides of the political aisle, but that’s pretty much what happened with President Trump catching the coronavirus. Both sides prepared for the possibility, yet they seemed to still be completely caught off guard when it actually happened. Now, Democrats and mainstream media are trying to use it as an example of the President’s irresponsibility and the Trump campaign is using it as a sign of both strength and hope. Which side is going to win this particular battle?
Any other year, I’d say the GOP has the clear upper hand. After all, this is the United States of America, the land of the free and the home of the brave. But it’s also 2020, and that means too many Americans are giving up their freedom by living in fear. But here’s the thing. At our core, we are still a brave and generally optimistic people. That means we WANT to see a bright future. We WANT the “new normal” to be very much like the good ol’ days (you remember 2019, right?) when we could work and play and go about our business without fears of a disease with an extremely high recovery rate for those who are not elderly.
As Joe Biden’s campaign highlighted in a short ad they posted on social media yesterday, this comes down to a question of masks. Do we vote to reelect a president who is willing to take his mask off even after beating COVID-19 or do we vote in a new president who has embraced mask mandates to the extreme? By their ad, we can tell the Democrats are banking on mask mandates being popular.
On the surface, it makes sense for Democrats to go down this route. First and foremost, it’s the route they’ve been touting for months. Second, the President contracted the disease while personally minimizing his own mask-wearing. Third—and this point cannot be ignored—a majority of Americans want some sort of government-prompted protection from COVID-19, whether that means more mandates or even more lockdowns. That’s what the polling is showing today, at least.
They need us to live in fear. It’s not like Team Biden had a choice in the matter this late in the game; once they went down the road of fearmongering, they left themselves no potential to reverse their direction before election day. They’ve been banking on fear and the President testing positive gave them what they thought was an opportunity. Mainstream media has been bellyaching on their behalf ever since.
Once we dig beneath the surface, we see why this is not a great strategy for Joe Biden. First and foremost, they’ve been repeating the same basic coronavirus rhetoric for months and Americans have grown fatigued by the ubiquitous COVID-19 nannies everywhere. Second, the President got COVID-19 and beat it quickly. Take from that what you will, but many Americans will perceive this as a sign of strength, both physically as well as with his current stance of fighting back against Draconian mandates.
I will be leaving the great Walter Reed Medical Center today at 6:30 P.M. Feeling really good! Don’t be afraid of Covid. Don’t let it dominate your life. We have developed, under the Trump Administration, some really great drugs & knowledge. I feel better than I did 20 years ago!
Flu season is coming up! Many people every year, sometimes over 100,000, and despite the Vaccine, die from the Flu. Are we going to close down our Country? No, we have learned to live with it, just like we are learning to live with Covid, in most populations far less lethal!!!
As for the third reason Democrats have embraced their role as mask-nannies, the polls, there are two reasons why they’re making a mistake. The first is obvious: Polls suck. It’s been several years since polls were accurate in any way in American politics. But even if we call this a healthcare poll rather than a political poll, there’s another aspect that we’re seeing unfold before our eyes. As I mentioned before, we are generally optimistic people who want to face situations with courage. Now that the President has inadvertently made himself the ultimate example of both by getting and subsequently beating COVID-19, many who have lived the last seven months in fear have an example to follow. No, that doesn’t mean we can expect a mass reduction in mask-usage. But the President has made himself a shining example of a future without masks, without social distancing, without lockdowns, and most importantly without fear.
Democrats are scrambling to take advantage of the President catching COVID-19 by labeling him as irresponsible. But it’s backfiring. Americans are latching onto President Trump’s courage and hopefulness instead of the despair Democrats are peddling.
As we should.
COVID-19 may take down an independent news outlet
Nobody said running a media site would be easy. We could use some help keeping this site afloat.
Colleagues have called me the worst fundraiser ever. My skills are squarely rooted on the journalistic side of running a news outlet. Paying the bills has never been my forte, but we’ve survived. We have ads on the site that help, but since the site’s inception this has been a labor of love that otherwise doesn’t bring in the level of revenue necessary to justify it.
When I left a nice, corporate career in 2017, I did so knowing I wouldn’t make nearly as much money. But what we do at NOQ Report to deliver the truth and fight the progressive mainstream media narrative that has plagued this nation is too important for me to sacrifice it for the sake of wealth. We know we’ll never make a ton of money this way, and we’re okay with that.
Things have become harder with the coronavirus lockdowns. Both ad money and donations that have kept us afloat for a while have dropped dramatically. We thought we could weather the storm, but the so-called “surge” or “2nd-wave” that mainstream media and Democrats are pushing has put our prospects in jeopardy. In short, we are now in desperate need of financial assistance.
The best way NOQ Report readers can help is to donate. Our Giving Fuel page makes it easy to donate one-time or monthly. Alternatively, you can donate through PayPal as well. We need approximately $11,500 to stay afloat for the rest of 2020, but more would be wonderful and any amount that brings us closer to our goal is greatly appreciated.
The second way to help is to become a partner. We’ve strongly considered seeking angel investors in the past but because we were paying the bills, it didn’t seem necessary. Now, we’re struggling to pay the bills. This shouldn’t be the case as our traffic the last year has been going up dramatically. June, 2018, we had 11,678 visitors. A year later in June, 2019, we were up to 116,194. In June, 2020, we had 614,192. We’re heading in the right direction and we believe we’re ready talk to patriotic investors who want to not only “get in on the action” but more importantly who want to help America hear the truth. Interested investors should contact me directly with the contact button above.
Election year or not, coronavirus lockdowns or not, anarchic riots or not, the need for truthful journalism endures. But in these times, we need as many conservative media voices as possible. Please help keep NOQ Report going.
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by Gary Bauer: Don’t Be Afraid
When President Trump left Walter Reed Medical Center yesterday evening to return to the White House, the media were grumpy about his apparent recovery. Trump later released a video urging Americans to be careful, but added, “Don’t let [coronavirus] dominate you. Don’t be afraid of it.”Then the left lost its collective mind. Journalists and commentators described the president’s message as “heartless,” “callous,” “cruel,” “destructive,” “disrespectful,” “outrageous” and “insulting.”CNN’s Wolf Blitzer declared, “Everyone should be afraid of COVID.” And Jim Acosta spoke for the vast majority of his colleagues when he said, “This is the virus returning to the White House.”Well, the best test of whether the president’s message was the wrong thing to say is to simply say the opposite. The left is suggesting that the president should have said, “Be careful and be afraid. Let the virus dominate your life.”
Does anyone think that is the correct way for the leader of the free world to conduct himself? Does anyone think that is an appropriate message? Of course not.
Can you imagine how today’s media would react to Franklin Delano Roosevelt’s famous declaration, “The only thing we have to fear is fear itself”?
The left’s reaction is very telling. They want you to be afraid.
My old friend and colleague Bill Bennett asked people yesterday to reflect back on what became the signature moment of inspiration after 9/11. It was when Todd Beamer rallied his fellow Americans on Flight 93 to fight back against the jihadists in control of the plane. Beamer led the charge down the aisle, saying, “Let’s Roll!”
Bennett said today that the left wants us to roll up in the fetal position with our hands over our heads, wishing for the virus to just go away.
“Let’s Roll!” was possible because of a vote that took place on that plane. There were some who wanted to take a Biden-like approach to the crisis they were facing. They voted to stay in their seats because they didn’t want to risk being stabbed like at least one passenger and flight attendant had been. They were hoping for the best.
But the guy who prevailed was the passenger on the plane with the spirit of Donald Trump who knew that free men and women must stand up in the face of danger, not shrink from it. Todd Beamer wasn’t afraid. This virus won’t defeat us, and we shouldn’t act like it already has.
Our Future
This debate is actually a marker for a larger debate about the role of America. It is another explanation for why the left hates the president so much.
For the past 30 years, the political left and its cultural allies have been content, if not eager, to manage America’s decline. Many of them believed that America was never great, and virtually all of them were unwilling to make the hard decisions that could make us great in the future.
Trump came along and rejected their entire worldview. He unapologetically defended America, declaring that we have been great from our very beginning and that our best days are still ahead.
His campaign themes were “Make America Great Again” and “America First.” These are more than mere slogans. They were value statements shared by tens of millions of Americans. And Trump’s election upset all the left’s plans of hoping we would continue to sleepwalk into their future.
Fast forward to today. The president wanted to reopen the schools. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said it was safe to do so. The left and its teacher union allies said, “We can’t do that. Children will die.” In the schools that listened to the president and the CDC, I am not aware of any recorded deaths.
Small businesses all over America wanted to reopen. If they didn’t, their owners would be financially destroyed, employees would lose their jobs and families would be crushed. The left has fought against reopening in every state and they have stopped it in states they control.
The president said we need to get America back to work again. States that are reopening have fewer deaths than progressive states like New York and cities like New York City, which is still essentially locked down.
The left didn’t want baseball, basketball or football to come back. They tried to stop college sports from returning. The president used the bully pulpit and got the Big Ten to reverse course. Again, the president’s position, not the left’s, reflected the science, which tells us that young people are not at significant risk from this disease.
There are tremendous differences between Trump and Biden on taxes, law and order, the sanctity of life and America’s role in the world.
But perhaps the most important difference of all is that Joe Biden represents fear, paralysis and weakness. No country can thrive on those traits.
Donald Trump represents strength, optimism and courage. A country like America must have leaders with those traits. As one columnist so aptly put it, this an election between fear and freedom.
A Dangerous World
We have a nuclear-armed North Korea. Iran is on its way toward developing nuclear weapons. Chinese communists have infiltrated our college campuses and even law enforcement. And their spying and espionage got progressively worse during the Obama/Biden years. (Here, here and here.) Under President Trump and Vice President Pence we are rooting them out.
Joe Biden has not indicated in anything he is saying or doing that he has what it takes to steer this ship through these dangerous waters.
Biden and the left want your church closed. They want your schools closed. They want your business closed. They want every aspect of your life shut down over a virus whose mortality rate is headed toward what we typically see in a bad flu season.
The World Health Organization now estimates that 10% of the global population has been infected with COVID-19. That would be 750 million people. There are just over 1 million confirmed COVID deaths worldwide, which would equate to a death rate of 0.13%.
That is comparable to the 2018 flu season and significantly less than the death rates of flu pandemics that hit during the 1950s and 1960s.
He Said What?!
Joe Biden’s mouth is getting him in trouble again.
During an event in Florida last month, Biden tried to express his appreciation for those who kept working during the pandemic. He said, “The reason I was able to stay sequestered in my home is because some black woman was able to stack the grocery shelf.” Why does Biden always imagine black Americans doing menial labor?
It reminded people of Biden’s “you ain’t black” remark or his comment about poor kids being just as talented as white kids. He seems to have an unfortunate habit of referring to minorities with stereotypes.
Speaking in Florida yesterday, Biden said, “Wouldn’t it be an irony — the irony of all ironies — if on Election Eve, it turned out that Haitians deliver the coup de grace in this election?”
There’s a lot of irony in Biden’s statement, not the least of which is the fact that Haiti has experienced a lot of coups over the years.
Biden also made his remark while the president was still at Walter Reed. For those not familiar with French, “coup de grace” means a “death blow” or the final shot to kill a wounded animal.
And while speaking to a group of children Biden also said this: “I want to see these beautiful young ladies, I want to see them dancing when they’re four years older, too.” No comment.
This Just In…
President Trump has directed White House negotiators to immediately suspend talks with congressional Democrats over an economic stimulus package because Democrats are not negotiating in good faith. The president said the negotiations will continue after he is reelected.
In the meantime, he urged Senate Republicans to devote 100% of their time to ensuring the confirmation of Judge Amy Coney Barrett to the Supreme Court.
———————– Gary Bauer (@GaryLBauer) is a conservative family values advocate and serves as president of American Values and chairman of the Campaign for Working Families
Tags:Gary Bauer, Don’t Be Afraid, Our Future, A Dangerous WorldTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
by Bill Donohue: Orthodox Jewish neighborhoods in New York are witnessing a spike in coronavirus infections, and the response by New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo is to shut down all churches, synagogues and schools—private, religious, and public—in an attempt to quell the spread of the disease. The authoritarian language he invoked to justify this extraordinary measure was chilling.
“We know religious institutions have been a problem,” he said. He then took direct aim at synagogues. “If you’re not willing to live with these rules [banning mass gatherings], then I’m going to close the synagogues.” He also said he would deploy the police to enforce his edict. If there are too many people entering a house of worship, he said, “the state police officer is down the block, and he will come help you.”
There are two major problems with Cuomo’s order: his authority to execute it is in serious doubt and his decision to blanket Catholic churches and schools—where there are no problems—is discriminatory.
Last June, after violent mobs went on a rampage attacking innocent people, destroying property, looting, and tying up traffic in an illegal demonstration, neither New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio nor Gov. Cuomo did anything to stop it. The police were told to stand down and both men expressed sympathy with the thugs. Obviously, social distancing was summarily ignored.
Their duplicity did not go unnoticed. On June 26, U.S. District Judge Gary Sharpe issued a preliminary injunction saying de Blasio and Cuomo exceeded their authority. By allowing the protests, he said, they were “encouraging what they knew was a flagrant disregard of the outdoor limits and social distancing rules.” In doing so, they “sent a clear message that mass protests are deserving of preferential treatment.” Neither de Blasio nor Cuomo challenged the judge’s ruling.
Cuomo showed his contempt for Catholic churches and schools when he subjected them to his order. There is no spike in coronavirus in any Catholic church or school in the Archdiocese of New York or the Diocese of Brooklyn. Why is he penalizing Catholic institutions, which are not a problem, but is allowing commercial establishments in these same neighborhoods to conduct business as usual?
The New York State Catholic Conference, speaking for the two dioceses, is right to condemn Cuomo’s “broad-brush approach.” Catholic schools in New York, which have spent millions to ensure a safe environment, “have rightly been held up as a model of safety,” earning considerable media applause. Why, then, are Catholic institutions being burdened because of the “inferior protocols at non-Catholic schools”? This is “a profound injustice” to the Catholic community.
Why is Cuomo doing this? Here’s my perspective.
On March 25, Cuomo ordered still recovering coronavirus patients to be sent to nursing homes. It led to over 4,300 deaths (before he rescinded his directive). Dr. Daniel Choi of Hofstra University’s School of Medicine branded his decision “a death sentence.”
When this happened in March, I told our staff that Cuomo, having been burned in the press for his “death sentence,” would seek to compensate for his initial incompetence by shutting down New York indefinitely. He could not risk screwing up New York on the backend of the pandemic after screwing it up at the beginning.
The man is a wreck. His politicization of Covid-19 is a national disgrace. Now Catholics are being asked to pay the price for his delinquency.
————————— Bill Donohue (@CatholicLeague) is a sociologist and president of the Catholic League.
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by Stephen Moore: One thing we learned from the debate in Cleveland last Tuesday, when Trump wasn’t interrupting, is that Joe Biden makes up numbers on the fly. There was a lot of fibbing going on. Consider this exchange between the two candidates:
BIDEN: We handed (Trump) a booming economy. He blew it. He blew it.
TRUMP: It wasn’t booming.
WALLACE: Sir, wait. Is it fair to say he blew it when … there was record low unemployment before COVID?
BIDEN: Yeah. Yeah, because what he did, even before COVID, manufacturing went in the hole. Manufacturing went in the hole.
He went on to say that President Barack Obama created manufacturing jobs, but they fell under President Donald Trump.
The claim that Trump “blew it” when he became president is quite a claim given that the unemployment rate, the poverty rate, the interest rate and the inflation rate hit all-time lows in 2019, according to the Census Bureau and the Department of Labor. Employment, wages, median incomes and wealth hit an all-time high. Median households saw a $6,400 gain in real income in three years under Trump, compared with the approximately $4,000 increase made in eight years under Obama and Biden. As one who served as an economic adviser for Trump, I can say definitively that these were exactly the results from our tax cuts, deregulation efforts and pro-America energy policies. They worked like a charm. One of our proudest results was the surge in blue-collar employment under Trump.
Here are the numbers for the eight years of Obama’s presidency and the first three years under Trump (prepandemic):
Manufacturing
Obama: -192,000
Trump: 475,000
Mining
Obama: -112,000
Trump: 63,000
Construction
Obama: 280,000
Trump: 746,000
Yes, under the early months of the pandemic, when government-imposed shutdowns ground industrial production to a virtual halt, the factories were bolted shut. That would have happened if Abraham Lincoln, George Washington, Mother Teresa or Hillary Clinton were president during this public health crisis. What matters is the status of blue-collar jobs before the pandemic and since the economy has started to reopen.
Since the shutdowns ended, blue-collar jobs have been surging back. Several hundred thousand manufacturing jobs have come back, and many factories and construction sites now have “for hire” signs in the windows.
Biden is right that we still need to get hundreds of thousands of these high-paying blue-collar jobs back in Ohio, Pennsylvania, Michigan, Wisconsin and New Jersey, among other states. Trump wants to do that by continuing to cut taxes and promote American energy production. Biden wants to do it by raising taxes by $4 trillion. Americans will have to decide which approach will work better.
————————- Stephen Moore, (@StephenMoore) is a senior fellow at the Heritage Foundation and an economic consultant with Freedom Works. He is the co-author of “Fueling Freedom: Exposing the Mad War on Energy.” Moore encouraged the ARRA News Service editor at SamSphere Chicago 2008 to blog his articles. His article was in Rasmussen Reports
Tags:Stephen Moore, Steve Moore, Rasmussen Reports, Just Who Is, the Real. Blue-Collar President?To share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
by Patrick Buchanan: Trump has four weeks to turn it around. And his task, while easy to describe, is not so easy to accomplish. He needs to persuade undecided and soft Biden voters that Joe is simply not up to the job of president.
What a difference a week can make.
Saturday, Sept. 26, was among the best days of the Trump presidency, or so some of us thought watching the president introduce in the Rose Garden his sterling candidate for Ruth Bader Ginsburg’s seat on the Supreme Court.
The academic and professional credentials of Amy Coney Barrett, 48, a U.S. appeals court judge, were superb. Moreover, she was a devout Catholic and mother of seven, two of whom were adoptees from Haiti.
From every standpoint, a 10-strike for Donald Trump.
Ahead was the Tuesday debate, the first of three with Joe Biden, and the long-awaited opportunity to expose Sleepy Joe’s visible loss of mental and verbal acuity in the four years since he was vice president.
Sunday, however, The New York Times detonated a bomb directly beneath the Trump campaign. Declaring that it had Trump’s tax returns, the Times story blared:
“Donald J. Trump paid $750 in federal income taxes the year he won the presidency. In his first year in the White House, he paid another $750. He had paid no income taxes at all in 10 of the previous 15 years — largely because he reported losing much more money than he made.”
Far from being a billionaire, the Times said, Trump was mired in debt with hundreds off millions of dollars in loans coming due in 2021.
Suddenly, Trump was on the defensive. And in the Cleveland debate, he began a series of accusations and insults that lasted 90 minutes. The debate was widely declared the worst in U.S. presidential history.
Moderator Chris Wallace and the media agreed that the descent into chaos was caused by the endless interruptions of Trump.
Believing he accomplished what he had come to do, Trump headed out for the friendly country of Minnesota’s Iron Range. On the return trip on Air Force One, Hope Hicks, feeling unwell, was quarantined.
She later tested positive for COVID-19.
At 1 a.m. Friday, came word came that both the president and first lady had tested positive. By evening, Marine One was transporting Trump from the White House to Walter Reed hospital in Bethesda.
Saturday came the doctors’ report that the president was doing well, followed by chief of staff Mark Meadows’ backgrounder suggesting that Trump’s situation had been more serious than the country knew.
Came then news that some of Trump’s guests at the Rose Garden ceremony had tested positive: campaign manager Bill Stepien, Governor Chris Christie of his debate prep team, Kellyanne Conway, and Sens. Mike Lee of Utah and Thom Tillis of North Carolina, both of the Senate Judiciary Committee that will vote on Judge Barrett.
Sunday, with a crowd in front of Walter Reed loudly cheering for him, Trump commandeered an SUV and ordered it to drive by his followers so he could wave to them. In the front seat of the SUV, in masks and protective gear, were Trump’s Secret Service agents.
The cumulative impact of these 10 days has been distracting at best and dreadful at worst. And the pressure from Trump, to get back to the White House and the campaign, suggests this is his take as well.
The coronavirus and how he has handled it, the contraction of COVID-19 and how Trump got infected, his prior mockery of masks and ridicule of many who wear them, the specter of thousands of maskless Trumpsters at MAGA rallies — all are now the stuff of front-page news and back-page commentary.
The nation tends to respond sympathetically when the president faces a life-threatening situation. It did so to Ike’s heart attack in 1955, and to Reagan after he was shot at the Washington Hilton by John Hinckley and then had colon cancer surgery early in his second term.
But Trump may have forfeited some of that sympathy by his mocking the wearing of masks.
On the weekend after the Trump-Biden debate, a Wall Street Journal poll found that Trump had fallen 14 points behind Biden, and, in an average of national polls, Biden now led him by 8 points.
Trump has four weeks to turn it around. And his task, while easy to describe, is not so easy to accomplish. He needs to persuade undecided and soft Biden voters that Joe is simply not up to the job of president.
Assuming he is well enough to campaign as he used to, Trump has to convince the country that Joe Biden is too big a risk to take. He has two more debates to do what he failed to do in the first debate.
Wednesday will be Mike Pence’s opportunity, in his debate with Kamala Harris, to show that Trump made the right call in choosing him.
He can pay back the favor by exposing the radicalism of the people and policies Joe Biden would bring with him into the White House.
———————— Patrick Buchanan (@PatrickBuchanan) is currently a blogger, conservative columnist, political analyst, chairman of The American Cause foundation and an editor of The American Conservative. He has been a senior adviser to three Presidents, a two-time candidate for the Republican presidential nomination, and was the presidential nominee of the Reform Party in 2000.
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When it comes to corruption and foreign influence, few families can match the Bidens. by Douglas Andrews: When we look at the cover of Peter Schweizer’s 2018 book, Secret Empires: How the American Political Class Hides Corruption and Enriches Family and Friends, the first thing we notice is the size of Joe Biden’s mug. It’s huge, nearly twice the size of the one belonging to Barack Obama, the guy who 10 years earlier yanked him off the political scrap heap and made him vice president.Clearly, Schweizer was trying to tell us something, in the same way that food manufacturers tell us which of their products’ ingredients are most abundant by the order they appear on a food label. And what he was trying to tell us is this: Joe Biden and his family have greatly enriched themselves at our nation’s expense.This enrichment is what Schweizer dedicates chapter two of his book to – specifically, the link between then-VP Biden’s role in U.S.-China policy and a deal with the Chinese government orchestrated by his son Hunter’s investment firm, Rosemont Seneca Partners. According to Schweizer, Biden was negotiating some very sensitive issues with Chinese President Xi Jinping on an official visit in December 2013 — issues such as trade, technology transfer, and its muscle-flexing over disputed territories in the surrounding China Sea.Biden got rolled. He played kissy-face with the ChiComs rather than forcefully representing our nation’s interests. But Xi and company made sure Joe and Hunter (and, disturbingly, Hunter’s young daughter Finnegan) felt like royalty. As Schweizer tells it, “Shortly after they return to the U.S., Hunter Biden’s firm receives a $1 billion private equity deal from the Chinese government. Not from an American business in China; from the Chinese government itself. It later gets increased to $1.5 billion. We have no way of knowing how much Rosemont made on the deal because there are no disclosure requirements.”
Three thoughts here: First, this sounds a lot like bribery. At the very least, it’s influence-peddling. Second, Schweizer hasn’t been sued for libel, which would seem to speak to the veracity of his reporting. Third, American journalism is dead, its “practitioners” are merely progressive political activists, and their work on behalf of Joe Biden should be reported as an in-kind campaign contribution.
How many voters know of the Biden family’s extensive engagement with and its vulnerability to the government of our nation’s foremost foe? Precious few, thanks to our corruptly incurious media. But a group of Senate Republicans has been trying to get the word out.
According to a report released two weeks ago by the joint Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs and Finance Committees, “Hunter Biden has extensive connections to Chinese businesses and Chinese foreign nationals that are linked to the Communist government. Those contacts bore financial fruit when his father was vice president and after he left office.”
Ben Weingarten provides additional analysis, writing, “[Joe] Biden helped make Communist China strong — again, while his family directly profited from it when he was in office — cultivating a relationship with Xi Jinping. The Obama-Biden administration was remarkably soft on China over its most grievous provocations, whether in terms of the catastrophic Office of Personnel Management hack, the militarization of the South China Sea, or its flouting of U.S. capital market regulations with impunity, gaining the imprimatur of the administration after lobbying Biden to ink a memorandum of understanding effectively normalizing its cheating.”
The Senate report is 87 pages long, and most of it concerns the Biden Crime Family’s quid-pro-quotidian adventures in Ukraine. You remember: the adventures with an utterly corrupt energy company called Burisma; the adventures that wound up getting President Donald Trump impeached instead of Joe Biden imprisoned.
The report’s conclusion, though, ties it all together regarding China: “The records acquired by the Committees show consistent, significant and extensive financial connections among and between Hunter Biden, James Biden, Sara Biden … and Chinese nationals connected to the Communist regime and [People’s Liberation Army] as well as other foreign nationals with questionable backgrounds. These connections and the vast amount of money transferred among and between them don’t just raise conflicts of interest concerns, they raise criminal financial, counterintelligence and extortion concerns. The Committees will continue to evaluate the evidence in their possession.”
The clock is ticking toward Election Day, and Xi Jinping is paying close attention. Because if Biden wins, Xi wins.
————————– Douglas Andrews writes for the Patriot Post
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by Kerby Anderson: Yesterday I talked about the Trump Administration’s decision to cancel federal training sessions on Critical Race Theory. Heather MacDonald argues that this first step should be followed by “removing identity politics from federal operations” in the sciences. The goal is to create a more “diverse” scientific workforce.
Those of us who took undergraduate courses in math and science already felt that the scientific landscape was fairly diverse because we were taking courses taught by TAs from other countries whose first language was not English. Often the challenge was not the scientific concepts but merely trying to understand them.
Unfortunately, the federal science bureaucracies are not talking about that kind of diversity. They want more diversity of minorities and women. But it doesn’t stop there. The NIH, for example, “would fund student researchers who were or had been homeless, who were or had been in foster care, who had been eligible for free school lunches, or who had received WIC payments as a child or mother.” The first time I heard Heather MacDonald talk about this on another radio program, the radio interviewer asked what having been homeless has to do with doing scientific research.
The National Science Foundation is doling out millions of dollars for a program to combat bias in the STEM fields. Heather MacDonald argues that the problem is the academic skills gap.
The average black math SAT score is more than a standard deviation below the average Asian math score and nearly a standard deviation below the average white score. The ultimate solution is to do better STEM teaching in the public schools, not trying to implement “woke science.”
——————– Kerby Anderson@KerbyAnderson) is an author, lecturer, visiting professor and radio host and contributor on nationally syndicated Point of View and the “Probe” radio programs.
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by Daniel Greenfield: The media shot back at public disgust with Cuties, a Netflix film, with sneers about QAnon.
Dismissing objections to Cuties, a movie sexualizing young girls that would have been illegal to film in this country, as a right-wing conspiracy sums up a poisoned marketplace of ideas in which nothing is so unacceptable that it can’t be normalized by associating it with the other side.
Not even pedophilia.
The normalization of pedophilia is usually accompanied by references to QAnon, as if only conspiracy theorists could possibly object to the sexual exploitation and abuse of children.
The release of Cuties comes as California, where Netflix’s headquarters and that of the entertainment and tech industry that it intersects, is located, turned SB-145 into law.
Unlike a lot of California bills which have dramatic names, SB-145 carries a bland tag: “Sex Offenders: Registration.” Its digest curtly states, “This bill would exempt from mandatory registration under the act a person convicted of certain offenses involving minors if the person is not more than 10 years older than the minor.”
A 24-year-old year-old sexually abusing a 14-year-old would qualify.
“This bill has no application to anyone under the age of 14,” Senator Wiener assured.
Count your blessings.
The bill, introduced by Senator Scott Wiener, who represents San Francisco in the State Senate, was passed by its Democratic majority, while the media sympathetically presented it as fighting anti-gay discrimination, and Weiner, as being targeted by QAnon harassment.
It’s not just fictional pedophilia that can be normalized through ideological tribalism.
SB-145 passed the California State Senate by 41 to 25, and Governor Newsom signed it into law even while massive wildfires were turning the skies of San Francisco an ominous red.
Modern leftists, like members of any fundamentalist faith, are capable of seeing a message in a firestorm, but only the one that accords with their theology in which sexually abusing children is a step forward for civil rights, while failing to set up enough solar panels is a grave sin.
“Mother Earth is angry. She’s telling us — whether – she’s telling us with hurricanes on the Gulf Coast, fires in the West, whatever it is, that climate crisis is real and has an impact,” House Speaker Nancy Pelosi told MSNBC while playing oracle to her imaginary goddess.
Democrats can hear Mother Earth, they can’t however hear the cries of abused children.
Normalizing pedophilia is the inevitable outcome of the leftist shift from individual rights to identity politics. Children are only protected from abuse by the vestiges of a criminal justice system that is being dismantled by leftists because it oppresses those groups who disproportionately engage in criminal behavior. In a worldview in which criminals are victims and victims are criminals, the rights of pedophiles are more morally compelling than their victims.
Children are not an oppressed group and their rights are often sacrificed to the demands of identity politics, whether it’s Somali Muslims engaging in female genital mutilation in Minnesotta, a bill tackling the question was opposed by Ilhan Omar, or chemically castrating young boys to make them identify as girls, there are always collective issues of identity politics, the assertion of some oppressed group’s rights, that are more important than the bodies and lives of children.
When ideas are more compelling than people, then people are sacrificed to ideas. And a society that is increasingly uninterested in the old family structures is sacrificing children to its ideas.
Modern Molochs have many ideas for saving the world by passing children through the flames.
Environmentalists insist that people shouldn’t have children to save the planet. Feminists argue that people should abort children for gender equality. Activists who claim that there is no gender are tinkering with children to demonstrate their ideas. Critical race theorists are indoctrinating children with their poisonously racist ideas in kindergarten. Why not throw in a little pedophilia?
Two parallel moral systems are inhabiting the same country, the vice of one is the virtue of the other, and only one of those moral systems is shocked and horrified by the abuse of children.
After the United States attempted to extradite filmmaker Roman Polanski for drugging and raping a 13-year-old girl, an army of famous celebrities signed a Free Roman Polanski petition.
The list included everyone from Martin Scorcese, Meryl Streep, Emma Thompson, Natalie Portman, Harrison Ford, and, obviously, Harvey Weinstein, with the sexual predator calling Polanski’s rape a “so-called crime”.
“In Roman Polanski case, is it Hollywood vs. Middle America?” the Los Angeles Times asked.
That’s the Cuties situation again. And Hollywood has a way of winning these fights. Roman Polanski may have successfully avoided extradition from France to America, but Harvey Weinstein has spent the better part of the year fighting extradition from New York to LA.
Due to the pandemic, the extradition hearing has been delayed until December.
And by the time Harvey gets shipped over to Los Angeles, California Democrats may find a way to change the law to make it more accommodating toward these so-called crimes.
Culture is more compelling than law. It’s why Harvey Weinstein was able to get away with it for so long. Rape might be on the books as a crime, but in an environment in which no one thinks it’s a crime, no one will report it, and hardly anyone one will enforce the laws if they do.
And the entertainment industry is at least as abusive toward children as it is to women.
Netflix, with a market cap in the neighborhood of $200 billion and 200 million subscribers, has far more power than any mere studio, and Cuties is a test of that power in the same way that Harvey Weinstein tested his power. After a certain number, money becomes meaningless. The degeneracy of absolute power comes from powerful men pushing their appetites to the limit.
And there’s no place where the ruling elite push their power to the limit as much as California.
The average person, even perhaps the average Netflix subscriber, may be disgusted by Cuties, but a brief history of the entertainment industry and the nation’s morals shows that Americans have been adapting their tastes and tolerances to those of their entertainers for 70 years.
Not the other way around.
Complaints like “Shut up and sing” or “Don’t preach to us” are hollow protests when pitted against the power of someone like Netflix CEO Reed Hastings or Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos.
We live in Hollywood’s world where marriage, family, and religion are on the decline.
Mere law, as California showed us, won’t stop the normalization of pedophilia, and public revulsion won’t either. Is there reason to think that the same cultural machine that convinced a majority of the country to support men showering with young girls will fail for the first time?
In 2016, a majority of Americans opposed the idea. By 2017, a slim majority supported it, and by 2019, a majority were in favor of a law that would force transgender bathroom use.
That’s the rate of speed at which these battles are fought and lost these days. The Bostock decision, in which Gorsuch and Roberts joined the leftists in inverting the meaning of sex, was inevitable if you were paying attention to the polling, not in rural Arkansas, but in New York, D.C. and San Francisco, and the major cities that act as incubators for the ruling class.
(And if you want conservative judges, try looking in rural Arkansas, not the Ivy League.)
How fast can actual pedophilia be normalized? We may find out sooner than we think.
America is undergoing a catastrophic clash between two incompatible moral systems, one of which, as Yeats wrote, lacks conviction, while the other is full of passionate intensity. Both moral systems are highly detailed ways of explaining the world and the place of human beings in it.
But only one of them believes that what we do as individuals, apart from the group, matters.
Only one finds value in the existence of a child, not as a prop for an idea, but as a person.
A religion with a personal God makes personal morality innate and inescapable. But the secular religion of the wokes has no god, no personal morality and no sins except the social kind. A religion that encompasses the universe can be localized in the confines of the human soul, but the social religion of leftists is enmeshed with charts and graphs about the social status of all.
Their messianism of the collective liberation of all has no room for individual rights or morals. Decadence isn’t a sin, it’s revolutionary. Liberation requires the destruction of the old mores, and, even when practiced on a child, sweeps away the old repressive order with its false ideas about sexual morality and replaces it with the creative destruction of the endless revolution.
That’s why prominent figures in the German, French, and British Left openly endorsed pedohphilia in the seventies, only to have the awkward fact swept under the rug afterward.
The Left is not a mere ideology. It is a belief system with its supernatural elements, like Mother Nature, with redemption, damnation, and a crusade whose value system is being perpetuated through government institutions, schools and universities, and through the entertainment industry that has become the common culture of a country whose people have little in common.
It’s not enough to cancel Netflix, turn off the NFL, or skip the latest movie. We must restore the soul of a nation, its values, purpose, and meaning that popular culture displaced and replaced.
Or we will find out that what’s coming up next is a thing worse than we can even imagine.
—————————- Daniel Greenfield (@Sultanknish) is Shillman Journalism Fellow at the David Horowitz Freedom Center and an investigative journalist and writer focusing on radical Left and Islamic terrorism.
Tags:Daniel Greenfield, Sacrificing Children, to Identity PoliticsTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
by Fred Lucas: President Donald Trump returned to the White House on Monday evening after being discharged from a military hospital where he was treated for COVID-19 for three days. Within an hour, the president released a video in which he urged Americans not to let the disease “dominate your lives.”
After disembarking Marine One, the helicopter that flew him back, Trump climbed stairs to a White House balcony where he took off a mask, saluted as the aircraft lifted off, waved, and gave a thumbs-up.
The president had walked out of Walter Reed National Military Medical Center wearing a mask at 6:42 p.m., giving a thumbs-up to cameras outside the facility in Bethesda, Maryland.
As Trump strolled to the armored sport utility vehicle that took him to Marine One outside the hospital, a reporter shouted to ask whether he is a “super spreader” of the disease caused by the new coronavirus. After reaching the SUV, the president turned and gave another thumbs-up and fist pump.
The helicopter was wheels up at 6:46 p.m., according to the press pool report, and landed at the White House at 6:57.
Just before 8 p.m., the president tweeted out a new video from the White House, in which he thanked his caregivers at Walter Reed, touted advances in drugs and treatment, and urged Americans not to let COVID-19 “dominate your lives.”
“We’re the greatest country in the world. We’re going back, we’re going back to work, we’re going to be out front,” Trump said, adding:
As your leader, I had to do that. I knew there’s danger to it, but I had to do it. I stood out front. I led. Nobody that’s a leader would not do what I did. And I know there’s a risk, there’s a danger, but that’s OK. And now I’m better, and maybe I’m immune, I don’t know. But don’t let it dominate your lives. Get out there, be careful.And the vaccines are coming momentarily,” Trump added.
The helicopter ride from Walter Reed took about 10 minutes before touchdown on the South Lawn of the White House.
After getting out, Trump waved and walked up the South Portico steps, where he turned, buttoned his suit jacket, and gave a long salute. He said a few words, but the press pool reported that the words were inaudible.
The president announced in a tweet early Friday that he and first lady Melania Trump had tested positive for COVID-19, the disease that has killed more than 200,000 Americans since spreading around the world from Wuhan, China.
Since Trump tested positive Thursday night for COVID-19, several high-level White House staffers, among them press secretary Kayleigh McEnany, also have tested positive.
At 74 and somewhat overweight, Trump is in a high risk category. However, his symptoms reportedly were moderate.
,br> “Feeling really good! Don’t be afraid of Covid. Don’t let it dominate your life,” Trump tweeted earlier Monday. “We have developed, under the Trump Administration, some really great drugs & knowledge. I feel better than I did 20 years ago!”
I will be leaving the great Walter Reed Medical Center today at 6:30 P.M. Feeling really good! Don’t be afraid of Covid. Don’t let it dominate your life. We have developed, under the Trump Administration, some really great drugs & knowledge. I feel better than I did 20 years ago!
On Sunday, a masked Trump left the hospital briefly for a short motorcade in his SUV to wave to supporters gathered outside since Friday.
It is reported that the Media is upset because I got into a secure vehicle to say thank you to the many fans and supporters who were standing outside of the hospital for many hours, and even days, to pay their respect to their President. If I didn’t do it, Media would say RUDE!!!
The White House said the president’s doctors advised him to check into the hospital “out of an abundance of caution.”
Dr. Sean Conley, the president’s physician, said earlier Monday that Trump had “exceeded all standard hospital discharge criteria.”
“The team and I agree that all our evaluations—and, most importantly, his clinical status—support the president’s safe return home, where he’ll be surrounded by world-class medical care 24/7,” Conley said.
Doctors reportedly put the president on eight different medications, including remdesivir, which is among the most common antiviral drugs given to COVID-19 patients; monoclonal, an antibody “cocktail” of several drugs; the steroid dexamethasone; famotidine, widely known by the brand name Pepcid; vitamin D; melatonin, a naturally occurring hormone with antioxidant, anti-inflammatory properties; and aspirin; and zinc.
The first lady also tweeted Monday.
“I am feeling good & will continue to rest at home. Thank you to medical staff & caretakers everywhere, & my continued prayers for those who are ill or have a family member impacted by the virus,” she wrote on Twitter.
My family is grateful for all of the prayers & support! I am feeling good & will continue to rest at home. Thank you to medical staff & caretakers everywhere, & my continued prayers for those who are ill or have a family member impacted by the virus.
Tags:Fred Lucas, The Daily Signal, Trump Returns, White House, After 3-Day Hospitalization, COVID-19To share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
Whether these journalists know it or not, in the American mind they are already retired before they have even retired.
Victor Davis Hanson
by Victor Davis Hanson: In the second presidential election debate between President Barack Obama and Republican presidential nominee Mitt Romney on October 16, 2012, CNN moderator Candy Crowley sensed that Obama, coming off a dismal initial September 26 debate, was again floundering.
Romney was driving home the valid point that the Obama Administration had inadequately prepared the American mission in Benghazi for likely terrorist attacks. And such laxity resulted in a horrific attack and the deaths of four Americans, including the U.S. ambassador.
Yet in the wake of the attacks, Team Obama denied that the killing of four Americans was indeed an act of terror. Instead, it fed the public a transparently but politically correct false narrative of a spontaneous riot in reaction to a video posted by a purported right-wing Egyptian residing on American soil.
Yet in the debate, Obama retorted: “The day after the attack, governor, I stood in the Rose Garden and I told the American people and the world that we are going to find out exactly what happened. That this was an act of terror and I also said that we’re going to hunt down those who committed this crime.”
Romney pounced: “You said in the Rose Garden the day after the attack it was an act of terror? It was not a spontaneous demonstration—is that what you’re saying? I want to make sure we get that for the record because it took the president 14 days before he called the attack in Benghazi an act of terror.”
Romney was correct. Obama took two weeks before he eventually jettisoned his administration’s concocted “spontaneous demonstrations” party line that his subordinates—Susan Rice in particular, to her eternal embarrassment—had been peddling to the American people.
Yet in the debate, Obama flailed with a weak, “Get the transcript.” In truth, Obama in his comments after the attack had simply offered, “No acts of terror will ever shake the resolve of this great nation, alter that character, or eclipse the light of the values that we stand for”—a deliberate effort not to name Benghazi specifically in the context of a terrorist act.
Obama did not, as he was finally forced to do two weeks later, tie specifically the Benghazi deaths to the premeditated attacks of radical Islamic terrorists. No matter. Moderator Crowley jumped in with her instant fact-check: “He did, in fact, sir. So, let me—let me call it an act of terror.”
Obama was delighted for the reprieve and wagged with delight at the coming out of his debate partner, “Can you say that a little louder, Candy?” On cue, she obsequiously complied, “He did call it an act of terror.”
In other words, Crowley became a real-time, partisan fact-checker, rather than a moderator—but of a peculiar sort that did not fully assume her new role until Obama himself was desperate for a bailout.
Crowley’s crazy logic apparently was that Obama really had meant Benghazi when he deliberately talked only in vague terms about generic acts of terror shortly after the attack, but then for the next two weeks nonetheless had allowed his subordinates to float the trial balloon of an alternate reality video, before giving it up when the evidence made peddling that fiction impossible.
For much of the debate, Crowley had further tried to massage a comeback for Obama after his disastrous first outing. She cut Romney off far more frequently than she did Obama. She alone had picked the townhall questioners.
And the questions they posed were mostly asymmetrical, such as the following one addressed to Romney: “I do attribute much of America’s economic and international problems to the failings and missteps of the Bush Administration. Since both of you are Republicans, I fear the return to the policies of those years should you win this election. What is the biggest difference between you and George W. Bush, and how do you differentiate yourself from George W. Bush?”
In the debate’s aftermath, Obama supporters crowed; Romney sulked that Crowley had hijacked the debate. And Crowley was never asked to moderate anything important again.
CNN offered various defenses. But, in fact, Crowley’s career more or less ended that night and two years later she went into retirement, her finale forever a reminder of what not to do as a debate moderator and an example of media bias.
Why Not Lose Nobly?
Something similar occurred with Fox News moderator Chris Wallace in the first debate between Donald Trump and Joe Biden.
Like Crowley, he lost control of the debate. And similarly, much of the crosstalk grew out of Wallace’s asymmetrical “prove you are not guilty” questioning.
Wallace’s gotcha technique was to spur the candidates with a “scandal” question to rev them up, and then after two minutes, abruptly and vainly try to cut them off—as if to spur and whip a bronco and then demand on command that the infuriated horse stop his obnoxious bucking.
Trump, in the manner of Mitt Romney in 2012, was the more frequent debate interrupter, furious likewise about the similar imbalance of both the questions and the moderator’s call for order. For much of the night, Wallace grimaced as he asked Biden to explain a few misdemeanors while demanding Trump defend his presumed felonies.
And Wallace seemed stunned that Trump did not conduct himself as Romney had in 2012 with Crowley—like a philosophical pilot muttering “such is life,” as his sabotaged and powerless plane nose-dived into the oblivion below.
Financial scandals? Wallace zeroed in on the Trump tax returns, the media scandal du jour—without a word about Hunter Biden’s also breaking story of pocketing $3.5 million from the wife of the ex-mayor of Moscow even as his father was vice president. Could he not have at least mentioned such “Russian collusion”?
Race? It was not surprising that Wallace did not ask Biden why he has a habitual habit of denigrating blacks, with his riffs like “you ain’t’ black,” “junkie,” and the Corn Pop yarns. Instead, Wallace went back decades to an obscure Biden “predator” quote and then did not press Biden much when he simply stonewalled.
When Wallace, learning and forgetting nothing, turned to Trump on race, he dug up his own old 2016 debate question. And again, Wallace deliberately edited the Charlottesville quote by truncating Trump’s explicit condemnation of white supremacists and Klansmen. Wallace, for the nth time, was trying to force Trump to confess that he condemns white supremacists, in always a new way different from the various times Trump had done so in the past—reminding us that Wallace’s aim was not to find the answer but to continue to raise the question.
One might suggest Wallace was going the full “when did you stop beating your wife” routine—except our corrupt media had already ruined that old trope, by actually previously suggesting in June 2018 that the first lady may have been tardy in returning to work after an operation, in order to hide bruises from her abusive presidential husband.
When Wallace turned on Trump on the matter of honoring the verdict of the election, he honed in again on Trump’s past worries and statements about voter fraud and irregularities endangering the sanctity of the voter.
Fine. But the obvious parallel question to Biden was to ask what he was doing in the Oval Office when, in January 2017, the Obama Administration plotted to take out the national security advisor designate? If Wallace was worried about honoring the protocols of elections and transfer of power, then surely he might have asked Biden why, on his vice-presidential watch, were the FBI, Justice Department, and CIA weaponized and used to spread the fraudulent Steele dossier (paid for by Hillary Clinton and now known to have been mostly fantasies, cooked up by the huckster Steele drawing on a Russian operative working at the liberal Brookings Institution), to destroy a campaign, a transition, and a president?
Instead, silence.
But if Romney chattered in crosstalk as Crowley indulged Obama, Trump, as his way, thundered at Wallace’s similar indulgence of Biden. A miffed Romney went out quietly, an enraged Trump roared and stayed put.
Outfoxed.
The other day at a press conference, another Fox reporter, White House correspondent John Roberts, let loose with yet another demand that Trump condemn white supremacy—the domestic twin to the monotonous Russian collusion hoax questioning.
Roberts insisted that Trump provide a “definitive and unambiguous” denunciation for the thousandth time, as if observers were ignorant that continually asking the same question after receiving answers deemed unwelcome is not about discovering the truth, but virtue-signaling the smearing, as in, “Will you finally assert that you are not now and never have been a Communist?”
The more Trump hammers Putin—more sanctions, deadly weapons sent to Ukraine, Russian mercenaries killed in Syria, beefed-up NATO and Pentagon budgets, cheap U.S. oil crashing Russia’s main source of revenue, damning the German-Russian pipeline, getting out of ossified missile treaties, and the more Trump is exonerated by the inspector general, congressional inquiries, and the Mueller report—the more he is accused of Putin collusion.
So too, the more Trump denies he is a white supremacist, and the more his economic agenda is geared to offering minorities economic empowerment, fair drug sentencing, inner-city charter schools and help for black colleges, the more virulent the supremacist questioning. The obvious psychological diagnosis is that those who once canonized Obama’s Russian reset or said nothing as Biden talked down to and insulted blacks, the more they project these pathologies onto Trump.
Roberts droned on like a North Korean reeducation camp inquisitor, rephrasing ad nauseam the same demand for a false confession. In answering, White House Press Secretary Kayleigh McEnaney blew him out of the water. Unlike Roberts, she came equipped with all sorts of citations not just noting Trump’s prior denunciations of supremacists, but by doing so in such detail to reveal Roberts’ own obsessions.
Afterward, there were natural social media push backs against Roberts, and in response he melted down on live TV, snapping, “For all of you on Twitter who are hammering me for asking the question, I don’t care. Stop deflecting. Stop blaming the media. I’m tired of it.” Was that the news?
A crusading journalist grows tired of that tiny pushback? Roberts apparently is unable to endure a fraction of the bothersome questioning of motives that he so doggedly has imputed to others. Roberts is a distinguished journalist. But he will now be mostly remembered for his press conference puerile petulance and later meltdown. His hysterias reflect only agendas, not a desire for truth. He likes hitting others but has a glass jaw. And he offers a reminder to us that the beltway gotcha media is narcissistic, adolescent, and incestuous. Who could trust such people to report the news dispassionately?
Media Medical Madness
When Trump was diagnosed with COVID-19, the media went berserk with all sorts of unhinged themes: did not Trump deserve the infection due to his recklessness (as if the 210,000 dead or CNN’s Chris Cuomo earned by their recklessness their infections, too?) Would not the virus make Trump now eat crow? Would he step down? Would he bow out of the debate? Was the confirmation hearing for Amy Coney Barrett over before it could even begin?
Amid that hysteria, what was Wallace’s post facto reaction to his moderator’s role at the debate?
He blamed Trump alone for the melee, never reexamined his own asymmetrical questioning, and seemed incapable of self-examination of his Crowley-like passive-aggressive performance.
Just hours after Trump had tested positive for COVID-19, a now-Dr. Wallace went on a tear, diagnosing about why and how Trump was infected—without any iota of information about the severity of the infection, its prognosis, or how exactly a number of officials, many at the Amy Coney Barrett open-air White House reception, seem likewise later to have become sickened, masks or no masks.
In animated tones (“Wear the damn mask!”) an increasingly flustered Wallace variously blamed, in unhinged Don Lemon-fashion, Trump’s infection on his own laxity in not always wearing a mask. He insinuated that the White House might not be forthcoming with accurate news. He castigated White House advisor Scott Atlas as incompetent on grounds he lacked a specialization in epidemiology.
In other words, with no information, no facts, and no expertise, Dr. Wallace was now judge, jury, and executioner pontificating about why the president was singularly culpable for his own medical fate—apparently unlike the similarly infected millions worldwide, and the thousands of local, state, and federal government officials who have been sickened, including many senators and over a dozen congressional representatives. Did they all meet their fates because, on occasion, they brought it on themselves by not wearing a mask? Or were they without masks because they saw Trump sometimes on TV without one?
When, after a poor public performance that has lasting consequences, a marquee journalist hits the airways to perform an encore performance of errors, to meltdown childishly, to replay his prior blunders in self-interested fashion, and to protest the unfairness of his self-created debacle, and by his continued obsessions proves that indeed his critics are correct that he is obsessed, then he has gone the full Crowley—with all that such a fate entails.
Whether these journalists know it or not, in the American mind they are already retired before they have even retired.
———————— Victor Davis Hanson (@VDHanson) is a senior fellow, classicist and historian and Illie Anderson Senior Fellow at the Hoover Institution where many of his articles are found; his focus is classics and military history. He has been a visiting professor at Hillsdale College since 2004. Hanson was awarded the National Humanities Medal in 2007 by President George W. Bush. H/T American Greatness.
Tags:Victor Davis Hanson, The Full CrowleyTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
by Kurt Schlichter: So, Donald Trump has the Wuhan pangolin virus, and of course he does because it’s 2020 and how could he not have it?
With this year, you take the most random scenario, you multiply it by 10, gobble a handful of the brown acid, and just go with it, and even then the whole thing spins even more out of control than you ever imagined.
Now the question is what this all means for the campaign.
I bet it helps Trump.
Joe Biden’s got to be worried. Well, Grandpa Badfinger‘s handlers have to be worried. That crusty crustacean is probably still napping, trying to sleep off the hangover from all the Namenda and crank they pumped into him last Tuesday to keep him upright for an hour and a half.
In any case, change is frightening, and this changes the nature of the campaign. No one, including the Geppettos who pull Bidennochio’s strings, know what’s going to happen. Their Chauncey Gardner victory plan has been disrupted, and it’s not like they’ve got the most flexible candidate.
Suddenly, Biden is not the only one who is going to try and do a presidential run from his house. And all the advantages Biden had of being able to hide and not being the center of attention suddenly vanish.
And all the problems associated with being in the spotlight vanish for Trump.
While people who aren’t sissies enjoy Trump’s two-fisted, take-no-prisoners style, Trump fatigue is a real thing. He can be exhausting to the weak and squishy who sadly make up a substantial part of the electorate. This diagnosis gives him a chance to pull back, to chill a bit, and when he does that his approval tends to rise as his achievements speak for themselves.
Up until now, Donald Trump had been running a center-of-attention campaign, talking to the press all the time, doing tons of events and generally being in our faces while Gropey J was being in his basement.
Joe Biden has been happy to be out of the spotlight, since direct light is hardly flattering. He (and his controllers) would prefer to have him sitting in his Barcalounger, slurping his mush and staring at his stories.
But now Trump has options and does not have to be the focus every day, giving his soft supporters a respite from his restless energy. He couldn’t stop doing press and rally events before without drawing scrutiny, but now he can. Ditto dodging the next debate – he can do it if he wants, or not do it if he wants, with no fallout. He can still talk to the press if he feels like it, he’ll just have to be in a plastic bubble. But if he doesn’t want to, he doesn’t have to, and then you have a press with no one to talk to, so maybe the pressure grows on Joe to fill the void. And when Joe fills a void, it’s like when Nadler fills his trousers.
There are a couple of other intangibles. The first is this is yet another moment where the Democrat left comes off the leash and starts saying out loud all the things they were only supposed to say under their breath. Their dancing around hoping that Donald Trump will die, and that his wife will die too, is repellent to normal human beings. Since normal human beings are not a key liberal demographic, they probably don’t understand what psychos they sound like.
The Democrats had to put the message out to their legions to stop rioting because that was freaking out the squares, and then stop trashing Amy Coney Barrett for liking Jesus and not being a barren, whiny, feminist shrew, because that was also freaking out the squares, and now publicly cheering on the death of the president and his wife will further freak out the squares. And there are a lot more squares voting than edgy elitists who think being avant garde means tweeting about how they hope Trump dies.
Further, Trump’s going to get sympathy from normal people. The big question for the next two weeks is going to be “How is Donald Trump doing?” not “What did Donald Trump do now?” Him being sick also makes it harder for the lib media to drop their daily bombshell on him. How can you pick on this poor sick guy? But as Trump well knows, the big story is now going to be his condition. Within a few minutes of his diagnostic tweet, everyone had forgotten about Proud Boys, taxes, and all the other “This will totally get Trump!” nonsense.
Congratulations, Donald Trump, you now control the news cycle even more than usual.
He’s going to get the best medical care in the world; he’s going to be just fine, and after burning up a couple of weeks in the White House he’s going to close the election with a barnstorming tour across the United States the likes of which we haven’t yet seen which will highlight his potency and contrast it with Oldfinger’s decrepitude. It will be a comeback tour and it will be fresh. All the rallies and things could’ve gotten old, but there will be double the attention on them now in the last couple weeks because he’s the underdog, he’s come back from beating the disease, and also because we haven’t seen him at a rally every day. Trump the showman has to know that.
Trump is going to triumph over this disease like he triumphed over the disastrous Obama economy and our garbage establishment’s track record of failure. This will show his strength and position him for a comeback since he’s now the plucky underdog.
Joe Biden’s handler’s better be worried. Their plan just got disrupted, and Donald Trump has once again seized the initiative.
———————– Kurt Schlichter (@KurtSchlichter) is a Los Angeles trial lawyer, a veteran with a masters in Strategic Studies from the United States Army War College, and a former stand-up comic.
Tags:Kurt Schlichter, The COVID Chaos, Is a Net Plus, for Trump’s CampaignTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
by NRA-ILA: Since the death of Associate U.S. Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg in mid-September, the more vociferous elements of the radical left have called for a total transformation of the high court should the Democratic Party capture the presidency and the U.S. Senate in November.
These extreme voices have called for an end to the Senate filibuster in order to enable a purely partisan court-packing scheme that would secure a left-wing majority on the Supreme Court.
The strategy amounts to a tacit admission of what many have long suspected – that the plan’s proponents view the federal judiciary as another legislative branch of government that is key to ratifying unconstitutional measures, rather than an independent body tasked with acting as the arbiter and defender of the U.S. Constitution.
When given the chance to reject this fanatical plan, Democratic presidential candidate Joe Biden has demurred.
Consider the following exchange between moderator Chris Wallace and the former vice president during the September 29 presidential debate:
Wallace: One final question for you, Mr. Vice President, if Senate Republicans — we were originally talking about the Supreme Court here — if Senate Republicans, go ahead and confirm justice Barrett, there has been talk about ending the filibuster, or even packing the court, adding to the nine justices there. You call this a distraction by the president, but in fact it wasn’t brought up by the President, it was brought up by some of your Democratic colleagues in Congress. So my question to you as you have refused in the past to talk about it: Are you willing to tell the American people tonight, whether or not you will support either ending the filibuster or packing the court?
Biden: Whatever position I take on that, that’ll become the issue — the issue is, the American people should speak. You should go out and vote. We’re in voting now, vote and let your senators know how strongly you feel. Vote now, in fact let people know it is your senators. I’m not going to answer the question.
Following Biden’s refusal to answer, Wallace did not press the candidate but instead moved on to another topic. An ABC News/Washington Post poll conducted in September showed that Americans oppose increasing the size of the high court by a 22-point margin.
Given Biden’s steadfast refusal to state his position on such a monumental policy measure, it is rational for concerned citizens to conclude the worst.
It was a narrow 5-4 U.S. Supreme Court decision that concluded in District of Columbia v. Heller that the Second Amendment protects an individual right to keep and bear arms. A similarly narrow 5-4 majority also incorporated that right to the states in McDonald v. Chicago. Even with a majority of justices that recognize the proper individual rights interpretation of the Second Amendment, the narrow majority has proven reluctant to vindicate this right when presented with the opportunity.
Second Amendment supporters cannot afford to permit a President Biden and Democrat-controlled Senate to pack the U.S. Supreme Court with anti-gun justices. Especially when leading anti-gun politicians have made clear their intent to not only curtail any future pro-Second Amendment rulings, but to overturn Heller outright.
On September 25, 2015, leading Democratic luminary Hillary Clinton attended a private fundraiser in Greenwich Village, New York City where she told those gathered, “the Supreme Court is wrong on the Second Amendment. And I am going to make that case every chance I get.” Shedding further light on what she meant, while speaking at a Democratic candidate forum on February 3, 2016, Clinton told the audience that in considering potential Supreme Court nominees, “I do have a litmus test, I have a bunch of litmus tests, because the next president could get as many as three appointments.”
Biden responded in part, “If I were on the court I wouldn’t have made the same ruling. OK, that’s number one.”
As District Attorney of San Francisco, Democratic Vice Presidential candidate Sen. Kamala Harris (D-Calif.) signed on to an amicus curiae brief in Heller that argued the Second Amendment does not protect an individual right to keep and bear arms. In 2009, Justice Ginsburg has noted that a “future, wiser Court” could overturn Heller.
Given the fervor with which these Democratic Party leaders have opposed Heller, there is every reason to believe that any court-packing scheme would involve installing a solid anti-Second Amendment majority to the U.S. Supreme Court that would work to eliminate recognition of the individual right to keep and bear arms. NRA members and gun rights activists must work to inform their family, friends, neighbors, and other freedom-minded individuals about the dangers a Biden presidency poses to the U.S. Supreme Court and the Second Amendment.
——————– H/T NRA-ILA
Tags:NRA-ILA, Joe Biden’s Debate Performance, Shows SCOTUS, 2nd Amendment, 2020 BallotTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
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October 7, 2020 – Having trouble viewing this email? Open it in your browser.
Morning Rundown
Trump changes course on coronavirus relief talks: After saying he would call off talks with House Democrats on passing a new stimulus package until after the November election, President Donald Trump changed course and urged Congress to approve coronavirus relief measures. In a series of late night tweets on Tuesday, Trump said, “If I am sent a Stand Alone Bill for Stimulus Checks ($1,200), they will go out to our great people IMMEDIATELY. I am ready to sign right now. Are you listening Nancy?” He also asked for the House and Senate to approve $25 billion for airline support and $135 billion for the Paycheck Protection Program. Hours before his change of heart, Trump accused House Speaker Nancy Pelosi in a series of tweets of asking for $2.4 trillion to “bailout [sic] poorly run, high crime, Democrat states, money that is in no way related to COVID-19,” adding that “a major Stimulus Bill” will come “immediately after I win.” Trump also urged Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell to focus his attention on approving his Supreme Court nominee, Amy Coney Barrett. In response, Pelosi slammed the White House for ignoring an “urgent warning” from Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell that more stimulus was needed to boost the economy. Some aviation industry leaders, who had been pleading for more aid to save jobs, also expressed their “disappointment” after the president called to end negotiations earlier in the day. This all comes as the administration is dealing with a coronavirus outbreak. Currently, 23 White House staffers have tested positive for the disease, and the Pentagon’s top military leaders are also quarantining.
COVID-19 looms over Pence, Harris vice presidential debate: Vice President Mike Pence and Sen. Kamala Harris are gearing up for their first and only debate tonight in Salt Lake City. The Trump administration’s handling of the COVID-19 pandemic is likely to be a central topic, as the White House is currently dealing with a cluster of COVID-19 cases following the news of Trump’s positive diagnosis. Safety precautions at the debate itself will likely also be a topic, as the issue has been a source of contention between the two camps. It’s been decided that Pence and Harris will be seated 12 feet and 3 inches away from each other and from the debate moderator. Despite the Pence campaign’s objection, the Commission of Presidential Debates said there would be plexiglass to separate the candidates. Pence, who tested negative for COVID-19 on Monday, was present at the Rose Garden ceremony on Sept. 26 with at least 11 of the attendees that have since tested positive for COVID-19. He was also in the Oval Office with Trump the morning of his debate, just days before the president tested positive. ABC News will have special primetime coverage of the first and only vice presidential debate between Sen. Kamala Harris and Vice President Mike Pence at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City. Coverage begins on ABC News Live at 7 p.m. Network coverage begins at 8 p.m. with a one-hour special, “Pence vs. Harris: The Vice Presidential Debate – A Special Edition of 20/20.” And the debate begins at 9 p.m.
Legendary guitarist Eddie Van Halen dies at 65:Eddie Van Halen, one of the most influential rock guitarists of his era, died Tuesday at 65 years old after a battle with cancer. In a heartbreaking tweet, his son and Van Halen bass player, Wolfgang Van Halen, wrote, “I can’t believe I’m having to write this, but my father, Edward Lodewijk Van Halen, has lost his long and arduous battle with cancer this morning. He was the best father I could ever ask for.” He added, “My heart is broken and I don’t think I’ll ever fully recover from this loss.” Eddie Van Halen and his brother, Alex, moved to the U.S. from the Netherlands in 1962 and co-founded the band that became Van Halen in the early 1970s. The legendary guitarist co-wrote every original song that Van Halen recorded, including classics like “Dance the Night Away,” “Unchained,” “Panama” and “Jump.” He is also famous for having played the guitar solo in Michael Jackson’s hit, “Beat It,” which topped the Billboard Hot 100 for three weeks. Eddie Van Halen is survived by his wife, publicist Janie Liszewski, and his son, whom he shared with his first wife, actress Valerie Bertinelli.
This teen’s reaction to making the cheer squad will make you smile: The moment 14-year-old Kayla Kosmalski learned that she made her high school’s junior varsity cheerleading squad is one she — and you — will never forget. “Last year when we toured the high school she was so excited to learn there was a no-cut freshman team,” Kayla’s mom, Amy Kosmalski, told “GMA.” But due to COVID-19, that team was cut along with some spots on varsity and JV, which meant that Kayla, who has Down syndrome, would have to compete with 36 others for 20 positions. “We worked together all weekend because she wanted this so much,” her mom said. In the end, the hard work paid off and her mom shared the heartwarming video of her receiving the good news on Facebook. “I was so happy I cried,” Kayla told “GMA.” “I couldn’t believe it.” Since her mom posted the video, the teen has received hundreds of supportive comments. “Whether or not she earned a spot on the team or not I know she was leaving everything on that field,” her mother said.
GMA Must-Watch
This morning on “GMA,” Jason Wang from the iconic New York City-based restaurants Xi’An Famous Foods will talk about his debut cookbook that shows readers how to make authentic Chinese cuisine at home. Plus, Fareed Zakaria joins us to discuss his new book, “Ten Lessons for a Post-Pandemic World” and the possible upside of the pandemic. And newlyweds Niecy Nash and Jessica Betts celebrate their recent nuptials, and share the song Betts wrote and performed at their wedding. All this and more only on “GMA.”
President Donald Trump took to Twitter last night and reversed course on Covid-19 relief measures. Stephen Miller is the latest top White House aide to test positive for coronavirus. And the vice presidential candidates have a pre-debate debate about plexiglass at tonight’s event.
Here’s what we’re watching this Wednesday morning
Trump reverses course on Covid-19 relief, dangling out $1,200 stimulus checks
President Donald Trump reversed courseTuesday night and urged Congress to approve a series of coronavirus relief measures, including a new round of $1,200 stimulus checks for Americans.
“If I am sent a Stand Alone Bill for Stimulus Checks ($1,200), they will go out to our great people IMMEDIATELY. I am ready to sign right now. Are you listening Nancy?” Trump tweetedTuesday night.
Earlier in the day Trump abruptly ended stimulus talks between top Democrats and Republicans, putting off efforts to shore up the pandemic-battered economy until after the election.
“I have instructed my representatives to stop negotiating until after the election when, immediately after I win, we will pass a major Stimulus Bill,” Trump wrote on Twitterearlier Tuesday.
“A long period of unnecessarily slow progress could continue to exacerbate existing disparities in our economy. That would be tragic,” Powell told the National Association for Business Economics.
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., said in a statement that Trump “showed his true colors” in announcing an end to negotiations and that it demonstrated his “contempt” for everyday Americans.
Trump’s presidential rival, Joe Biden, said: “Make no mistake: If you are out of work, if your business is closed, if your child’s school is shut down, if you are seeing layoffs in your community, Donald Trump decided today that none of that — none of it — matters to him,” Biden said.
As President Trump continues to downplay coronavirus, likening it to the seasonal flu on Tuesday, more of his confidants continue to fall ill.
Stephen Miller, a senior policy aide to Trump, is the latest member of the White House staff to test positive for Covid-19.
Miller, one of the chief architects of Trump’s immigration policies, announced Tuesday that he had tested positive for coronavirus and is now quarantining.
Seven of the eight members of theJoint Chiefs of Staff are also quarantining after they attended a classified meeting in a Pentagon room called “the tank” on Friday with a Coast Guard admiral who has since tested positive for Covid-19, three defense officials said.
It’s hard to keep track of all the people in Trump’s orbit who have tested positive for coronavirus at this point, but we’re trying. See our tracker here.
Stephen Miller, who as one of the president’s speechwriters has helped shape his “America First” agenda, has tested positive for Covid-19. (Photo: Anna Moneymaker / Pool via Getty Images file)
Trump compares Covid-19 to flu. Fauci and others say he’s flat wrong.
Dr. Anthony Fauciand other medical expertsare trying to set the record straight and are contradicting Trump’s false claim that Covid-19 is as deadly as the flu.
“You don’t get a pandemic that kills a million people, and it isn’t even over yet, within influenza,” Fauci, the government’s top infectious diseases expert, said Tuesday in an interview with NBC News’ Kate Snow.
To many Americans still reeling from the loss of loved ones to coronavirus, Trump declaring “Don’t be afraid of Covid,” upon his release from Walter Reed has come across as boastful and insensitive.
“I think he exists in this bubble and doesn’t understand, or doesn’t want to understand, how bad this is,” said Brian Gonzalez, a New Yorker whose father, Jose Hector Gonzalez, died at 58 due to complications from Covid-19.
“As president, he has the best medical care you can find, and I think he’s under the impression that everybody gets the same kind of medical treatment,” Gonzalez said. “It is very frustrating that he cannot seem to empathize with anybody.”
In a sweeping speech in Gettysburg, Pa., the site of the turning point in the U.S. Civil War, Biden compared that period of history to the politically fractured country the U.S. has become, and hit Trump — without naming him — for how he’s handled the pandemic.
“Let’s end the politics and follow the science. Wearing a mask is not a political statement. It’s a scientific recommendation. Social distancing isn’t a political statement. It’s a scientific recommendation,” Biden said.
“The pandemic isn’t a red or blue state issue,” he added. “It affects us all and can take anyone’s life. It’s a virus. It’s not a political weapon.”
Vice President Mike Pence and Sen. Kamala Harris, D-Calif., will take the stage for the vice presidential debate in Salt Lake City, Utah, this evening.
The two sides have been sparring pre-debate over the use of a plexiglass barrieron the debate stage as an extra health precaution since more than a dozen people tied to Trump have since tested positive for the virus, though Pence has reported multiple negative test results.
Trump gets special Covid-19 drugs under “compassionate use” protocols. Is that ethical? J. Russell Teagarden asks in an opinion piece.
Live BETTER
We could all use a bit of comfort food these days. Ina Garten gives grilled cheese and tomato soup some simple, but genius, upgrades that are worth trying.
Legendary guitarist Eddie Van Halen, whose band helped define the rock genre from the late 1970s through much of the 1980s, died Tuesday following a bout with cancer. He was 65.
His son Wolf Van Halen wrote that he was “the best father I could ever ask for” on Twitter.
Tributes to the guitar virtuoso poured in from his rock contemporaries such as Aerosmith, who called him a “legend” and KISS frontman Gene Simmons who called him a “Guitar God.”
If you have any comments — likes, dislikes — send me an email at: petra@nbcuni.com
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Thanks, Petra Cahill
NBC FIRST READ
From NBC’s Chuck Todd, Mark Murray, Carrie Dann and Melissa Holzberg
FIRST READ: Pence’s tough task: He has to defend Trump’s actions over the past week
President Trump hasn’t exactly made tonight’s vice-presidential debate easy for Mike Pence.
Photo by ROBYN BECK/AFP via Getty Images
The vice president will have to defend:
Why the president heldnon-socially distant and largely mask-less events at the White House – with indoor activities – from which several attendees apparently got infected by the coronavirus.
Why Trump, after being hospitalized at Walter Reed, jumped into a hermetically sealed SUVwith Secret Service agents to wave to supporters.
Why the president, after returning to the White House, took off his mask in public, despite still being potentially contagious.
Why Trump instructed Americans NOT to be afraid of the coronavirus, and why he compared it again to the flu.
And why the president – over Twitter – scuttled any chance for another coronavirus aid package before the election.
None of these is easy for Pence to answer, especially for a vice president who just happens to head the White House’s coronavirus task force.
You could have made the case that, after last week’s presidential debate, Pence HAD a lower bar to clear for tonight’s debate: Just by not interrupting and hurling insults, the vice president was going to improve on Trump’s Sept. 29 performance.
You also could have argued that expectations for Democratic vice-presidential nominee Kamala Harris were way too high. (We remember the last VP debate, back in 2004, when the super-lawyer Dem was SUPPOSED to best the low-key sitting vice president, but it didn’t turn out that way.)
But after the past week, it’s Pence who has the higher degree of difficulty.
All that said, the Washington Post makes a smart point: Pence sure has a lot more practice defending Trump than Kamala Harris has of defending Joe Biden’s decades in American politics.
Panic walks in
As for Trump scuttling the chances for another coronavirus relief package before the election, that creates a problem for GOP senators and members of Congress.
Trump owns it; you really can’t blame both sides.
So we saw Sen. Susan Collins, R-Maine, who’s facing the challenge of her political life, call it all “a huge mistake.”
“Waiting until after the election to reach an agreement on the next Covid-19 relief package is a huge mistake,” Collins said in a statement on Tuesday, per NBC’s Julie Tsirkin. “I have already been in touch with the Secretary of the Treasury, one of the chief negotiators, and with several of my Senate colleagues.”
And Collins’ criticism comes a day after Sen. John Cornyn, R-Texas, who’s facing his own competitive Senate race, said Trump “let his guard down” in fighting in the coronavirus.
DATA DOWNLOAD: The numbers you need to know today
7,532,697: The number of confirmed cases of coronavirus in the United States, per the most recent data from NBC News and health officials. (That’s 37,486 more than yesterday morning.)
212,070: The number of deaths in the United States from the virus so far. (That’s 646 more than yesterday morning.)
109.65 million: The number of coronavirus tests that have been administered in the United States so far, according to researchers at The COVID Tracking Project.
Seven out of eight: The members of the Joint Chiefs of Staff who are quarantining after meeting with an admiral who tested positive for Covid.
More than $100,000: How much Trump’s stay at the hospital would have likely cost for someone who is NOT president, according to a New York Times analysis.
$1,200: The amount of new stimulus checks for Americans that the president now says he supports, just hours after saying on Twitter that he was halting stimulus negotiations until “after I win.”
400 points: How much the Dow dropped yesterday after Trump said he was calling off stimulus talks.
2020 VISION: Everybody wants some (Plexiglass)
Before the vice-presidential debate tonight, Vice President Mike Pence and Democratic VP nominee Kamala Harris already debated over the need for plexiglass barriers separating them.
And in their first sparring match, Harris seems to have won.
The Harris camp fought for the glass barrier given President Trump’s Covid-19 diagnosis – and CDC guidelines state one of the ways to make workplaces and public spaces safer is barriers. But the Pence team argued that it was an unnecessary precaution, because Pence was not a “close contact” to Trump when he was contagious and there’s already about 12 feet separating the two candidates.
Earlier this week, Pence spokesperson Katie Miller, who tested positive for Covid-19 in May and whose husband, Stephen Miller, tested positive yesterday, mocked Harris for the decision:
“If Sen. Harris wants to use a fortress around herself, have at it,” Miller said.
As of this morning, plexiglass had already been installed by both desks where the candidates will be tonight, and the Pence team won’t object to them.
On the campaign trail today: Mike Pence and Kamala Harris debate beginning at 9:00 pm ET at the University of Utah.
TWEET OF THE DAY: You really got me
AD WATCH from Ben Kamisar
In yesterday’s Ad Watch, we told you about how the Biden campaign is using Kamala Harris in a new Spanish-language ad to help him shore up support from Latino voters. That got us wondering: Ahead of the vice-presidential debate, how are both campaigns utilizing their running mates in TV ads?
It turns out, there’s a big difference in strategy.
The Biden campaign released a handful of ads on Tuesday that center on Harris — one about a young, Black girl deriving confidence from seeing Harris being tapped as Biden’s vice presidential pick; another featuring Harris talking about the campaign’s message; and the Spanish-language spot from yesterday.
But the Trump campaign is barely using Mike Pence in any of the ads captured by Advertising Analytics over the last seven days. One or two feature a brief glimpse of the vice president, but he doesn’t take center stage in any of the television ads that ran over the last week.
Pence gave Trump a huge boost in 2016, helping him reassure religious conservatives and unite a party that was hesitant to get on board with Trump. But now that the Republican Party has been remade in Trump’s image, Pence is taking a significant back seat on the airwaves ahead of his only debate.
THE LID: Why can’t this be love?
Don’t miss the pod from yesterday, when we looked at how the North Carolina Senate race may have changed a whole not (or maybe not?) after a wild weekend.
The New York Times writes that top Justice Department officials were a “driving force” in Trump’s family separation policy.
We know a bit more now about Amy Coney Barrett’s participation in the group “People of Praise.”
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Eye Opener
President Trump’s senior adviser Stephen Miller is the latest in the White House to test positive for COVID-19 amid a recent outbreak. Also, President Trump suddenly called off talks for pandemic relief aid Tuesday, then appeared to reverse his decision. All that and all that matters in today’s Eye Opener. Your world in 90 seconds.
As newsrooms shut down across the country, good governance takes a hit and partisanship worsens. It’s more important than ever to find ways to preserve local journalism.
By Michael Hendrix Governing October 7, 2020
Join the Manhattan Institute tomorrow for a two-part discussion on how the decline in local journalism affects the health of local democracy, and the steps local media organizations are taking to develop sustainable business practices in the modern media landscape.
Heather Mac Donald and Glenn Loury are fearless and independent thinkers on topics from police brutality to academic freedom. On October 6, these scholars discussed where they agree and where they differ in their understanding of this critical and divisive moment in America. This event was held as part of our new Policing and Public Safety Initiative.
On October 5, Commissioner William Bratton spoke with Rafael Mangual as part of our new Policing and Public Safety Initiative and first annual George L. Kelling Lecture. Introductory remarks were delivered by Reihan Salam and Catherine Coles.
In an interview from 2016, Brian Anderson and the late criminologist and Manhattan Institute fellow George Kelling discuss the history of policing in Milwaukee and more.
For 30 years, the Manhattan Institute has pioneered policing innovations—most notably the theory of “broken windows” as an element of a community policing strategy—that have improved both safety and quality of life across American cities. Now, MI will expand upon this work with the launch of a new initiative on policing and public safety.
For a discussion of debts, fiscal policy, and the future of financial markets in the aftermath of today’s crises, please join us tomorrow for an expert panel featuring John Cochrane of the Hoover Institution, Raghuram Rajan of Chicago Booth, and Simon Johnson of MIT Sloan, moderated by Allison Schrager of the Manhattan Institute.
Amid a respiratory-disease pandemic, the state’s leaders are bizarrely banking on legalizing marijuana.
By Steven Malanga City Journal Online October 6, 2020
ECONOMY & FINANCE
Photo: Matt Winkelmeyer/Getty Images for Vanity Fair
Worse than the CEO who tends only to his company’s profits is the one who tends to your innermost thoughts.
By Ronald W. Dworkin City Journal Online October 6, 2020
America is increasingly polarized around elections, but as James R. Copland explains, the unelected control much of the government apparatus that affects our lives. In this timely new book, The Unelected, Copland discusses how unelected actors have assumed control of the American republic―and where we need to go to chart a corrective course.
For 20 years, the Alexander Hamilton Award Dinner has been the Manhattan Institute’s signature event. We look forward each year to gathering with our generous donors and friends to celebrate MI’s core values and the individuals who work to advance them. While we are disappointed that we will not be together in-person this year, we hope that you will join us at 5 p.m. EDT on October 20, 2020 for our virtual Hamilton Award Dinner.
As before, the dinner will feature remarks from our chairman, Paul E. Singer; our president, Reihan Salam; and our three distinguished honorees: Leonard Leo and Eugene Meyer of the Federalist Society, and Daniel S. Loeb, investor and philanthropist.
Civil society efforts continue to be critical—even life-saving—forces in communities all over the country. This is why the Manhattan Institute’s Tocqueville Project is committed to hosting our annual Civil Society Awards as a virtual event this fall. While we are unable to celebrate our truly inspirational 2020 awardees in person, we hope that you will be able to join us online at 5 p.m. EDT on Thursday, October 29, 2020, to recognize them.
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
10/07/2020
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Carl Cannon’s Morning Note
‘Smoking Gun’; Trump Comeback? Birthing Cornell; Bob Worsley’s ‘Horseshoe Virus’
By Carl M. Cannon on Oct 07, 2020 08:45 am
Good morning, it’s Wednesday, Oct. 7, 2020. On this date 152 years ago, Cornell University first opened its doors to students on the bucolic campus overlooking the waters of one of upstate New York’s picturesque Finger Lakes.
Officially chartered by state law soon after the Civil War ended — only two weeks after Abraham Lincoln’s assassination — Cornell was made possible by Lincoln’s signing of the 1862 Land-Grant College Act. That legislation enabled states to take possession of unused federal lands to establish colleges and universities. Its principle sponsor, Justin Morrill of Vermont, was one of the founders of the Republican Party and a man so esteemed by his colleagues that by the time he died while in office in 1898s, his colleagues respectfully referred to him as “Father of the Senate.”
So why was the Ivy League school in Ithaca, N.Y., named Cornell and not Morrill? I’ll explain in a moment. First, though, let me 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:
* * *
Fingerprints on Russiagate “Smoking Gun” Are Ignored. J. Peder Zane laments the ho-hum attitude taken toward evidence showing the Clinton campaign stoked the Trump-Russia narrative.
Trump’s COVID Diagnosis Can Propel Him to Victory. Wayne Avrashow sees the potential for comeback story.
How Conservatives Plan to Censor Themselves. Robert H. Bork Jr. writes that GOP efforts to control online speech via antitrust and other actions, if successful, will backfire.
Democrats’ Stance on Police Reform Threatens National Security. Tony Shaffer and Bernie Kerik warn that defunding local police agencies would result in the loss of counterterrorism units that have thwarted an untold number of attacks.
Personal Option vs. Public Option. In RealClearHealth, Dean Clancy advocates a set of sensible reforms including expansion of Health Savings Accounts and greater access to workplace Health Reimbursement Arrangements.
WHO Needs a Makeover Only the U.S. Can Provide. In RealClearPolicy, Philip Stevens cautions that loss of U.S. funding would make it tougher for the organization to resist politicization, including China’s usurpation of American influence.
Trump’s Environmental Progress. In RealClearEnergy, Mary Neumayr spotlights a list of accomplishments for which the president receives little or no credit.
On the Peculiar Character of American “Racism.” In the latest 1776 Series essay for RealClear’s American Civics portal, David Azerrad argues that the concept of systemic racism is a direct challenge to the American order.
* * *
The only Ivy League school that began as a land-grant college, Cornell welcomed its first 412 students to classes on Oct. 7, 1868. Its earliest benefactor, other than Sen. Morrill and President Lincoln, was a Bronx-born entrepreneur named Ezra Cornell. Born into a Quaker family that disavowed him over his mixed marriage (he wed a Methodist), Cornell was poor for much of his life — until he co-founded Western Union.
Late into middle age, he entered politics, and was serving as a Republican state senator in Albany when the legislature voted to create a new college in Ithaca. Cornell’s role in passing the enabling legislation was the opposite of a politician enriching himself by using inside information: Ezra Cornell helped New York establish one of the first land-grant schools by donating $500,000 for seed money and then deeding land he controlled to the college — resulting in a $5 million endowment.
Naming it after him seemed small recompense.
That pioneer class I mentioned was all male and all white. This being upstate New York, however, a hotbed of both abolition and women’s suffrage, the face of the student body was destined to change. It didn’t take very long. The first black student, William Bowler of Haiti, arrived on campus in 1869. The following year, Kanaye Nagasawa of Japan became Cornell’s first Asian student.
At the same time, the school began offering foreign language instruction in Japanese and Chinese. The 1870 school year was also when the first woman, Jennie Spencer, enrolled. Finding the lack of living accommodations for women too inconvenient, she dropped out. But other women followed in her footsteps, coed dorms were built, and by 1873 Emma Sheffield Eastman became the college’s first female graduate.
This was Ezra Cornell’s own vision, one he expressed in writing — for posterity’s sake — to someone he wasn’t trying to spin for political purposes. It was actually someone quite close to his heart: his 4-year-old granddaughter, Eunice Cornell.
“I want to have girls educated in the university as well as boys, so that they may have the same opportunity to become wise and useful to society that the boys have,” he wrote to his eldest grandchild on Feb. 17, 1867. “I want you to keep this letter until you grow up to be a woman and want to go to a good school where you can have a good opportunity to learn, so you can show it to the President and Faculty of the University to let them know that it is the wish of your Grand Pa, that girls as well as boys should be educated at the Cornell University.”
In a two hour long speech on Friday, French President Emmanuel Macron proposed a new bill to combat what he described as “Islamic separatism,” arguing that the failure of Muslim immigrants to assimilate to French values was a French failure.
The proposed legislation formalized several previous statements Macron has made regarding assimilation of Muslim immigrants and included stricter examination of homeschooling and religious school curriculum for schools soliciting government funds, and seeks an end to the importation of foreign imams to lead mosques and schools.
As part of the Trump Administration’s tough strategy toward the Chinese Communist Party, Secretary of State Pompeo is meeting with America’s strongest allies and partner in the region, the Center’s senior analyst for strategy tells Arabic-language TV.
Pompeo is working with Japan, Australia, and India to “contain Chinese Communist imperialism,” Dr J. Michael Waller told Alhurra, the US government’s Arabic-language news channel to audiences in the Middle East.
Former Vice President Joe Biden’s closing pitch – one sure to be amplified tonight by Sen. Kamala Harris during her debate with incumbent Vice President Mike Pence – is that the Democratic ticket will end America’s divisions.
Unfortunately, recently declassified information suggests that the catalyst for much of the country’s present hyper-partisanship was engineered by the party’s previous presidential standard-bearer: Hillary Clinton. In the summer of 2016, with help from allies like then-CIA Director John Brennan – and, evidently, the knowledge of President Obama and Mr. Biden – Mrs. Clinton set in motion the highly polarizing hoax that Donald Trump and his campaign team were colluding with the Russians.
Mr. Trump tweeted last night that he was going to declassify “all” the relevant documents, with “no redactions.” We’ll see what happens on that front. In the meantime, more bitter fractiousness seems in prospect, not less.
This is Frank Gaffney.
FRED FLEITZ, President and CEO Center for Security Policy, Former CIA analyst, Former Chief of Staff for Amb. John Bolton in the State Dept., Author of The Coming North Korea Nuclear Nightmare: What Trump Must to Reverse Obama’s Strategic Patience (2018):
New developments involving Hillary Clinton and Russian intelligence
Disinformation by the Senate Intelligence Committee
National Security issues for the upcoming presidential election
HANS VON SPAKOVSKY, Manager, Election Law Reform Initiative and Senior Legal Fellow Meese Center for Legal and Judicial Studies at the Heritage Foundation, Former Member of the Federal Election Commission:
The current state of voting fraud in the United States
The upcoming hearing for Amy Coney Barrett
KEVIN FREEMAN, Senior Fellow at the Center for Security Policy, Host of Economic War Room on TheBlaze TV, Author of “Game Plan” and “Secret Weapon”:
How to prepare for the violence that has impacted US cities
The upcoming IPO of Ant Technology Group
BEN WEINGARTEN, Founder and CEO of ChangeUp Media LLC, Senior Contributor at The Federalist, Senior Fellow at the London Center for Policy Research:
Allegations of voter fraud in Ilhan Omar’s district
Joe Bidens’s relations with China while he was Vice President
Below is a sneak peek of this content! Donald Trump didn’t have to be a likeable nominee in 2016; he was running against Hillary Clinton. This year is different. That’s the topic of my Off the Cuff audio commentary this week. You can listen to it by clicking on the… 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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AMERICAN INSTITUTE FOR ECONOMIC RESEARCH
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October 7, 2020
Why is the United States Trying to Shut Down Huawei?
By John Tamny | “Really, where did conservatives and/or Republicans ever get the idea that we’re improved the more that our politicians weaken our competitors? And since national security is regularly bruited as the excuse for nascent…
The Constitutional Reckoning of State Lockdown Orders
By Ethan Yang | “There is no doubt that the governors across the country have gone off the constitutional deep end in response to Covid-19, exercising powers that are not only unprecedented but unproven. These cases, notably in Michigan and…
By Joakim Book | “The remedy for this self-imposed economic harakiri, this desperate and destructive attempt at self-harm that is governments’ pandemic response, is exactly that: end it. Abolish. Abandon. Cease and desist. Have governments get out…
By Stacey Rudin | “We should celebrate people like Scott Atlas who are willing to take the unpopular, minority view – maybe we can learn from them. We should pay careful attention once we know their opponents will not only sling mud, but will not…
AIER Hosts Top Epidemiologists, Authors of the Great…
By AIER Staff | The crisis of the policy response to Covid-19 drew AIER’s close attention from late January 2020 and following. The hosting of this crucial meeting was in the interest of backing the best science, promoting essential human rights…
By Donald J. Boudreaux | “Too many people over the past six months have taken leave of their senses. We, our children, and our grandchildren will long live with the consequences of this foolish panic – consequences that almost surely will inflict…
“It’s a seemingly impossible task to select the best of Ludwig von Mises (1881-1973) whose teaching and writing career spanned six decades and whose literary output includes several mighty and timeless treatises on political economy. They were not written in isolation from the real and often horrifying events of the 20th century; they were heavily informed by the brilliance and tragedy of his life experiences – including as a refugee forced to flee his home in Vienna – in battling every form of totalitarianism
On the menu today: a big preview of tonight’s much-higher-stakes-than-usual debate between Vice President Mike Pence and Senator Kamala Harris, and a rather absurd criticism of Amy Coney Barrett.
Pence. Harris. The Veep Debate Is Tonight
Tonight at 9 p.m. Eastern is the vice-presidential debate, and almost every four years, the media hype the event with “most vice-presidential debates don’t amount to much, but this year, this one really matters!” And for once, it appears true. The president appears to be recovering from his coronavirus infection well, but we never know for certain whether a president will serve a full term. And Joe Biden turns 78 shortly after the election. Either Mike Pence or Kamala Harris could well end up taking the oath of office before January 20, 2025.
Virginia senator Tim Kaine was the Democratic vice-presidential nominee in 2016. I mention this because many people, including those who follow politics, periodically forget this fact. It was the wildest, craziest, most unpredictable, and most surprising presidential race in U.S. history, and somehow, it’s as if the … READ MORE
A property sale gave Sally the resources to support charities long-term. Instead of writing checks, she opened a DonorsTrust donor-advised fund to accomplish this goal. How can DonorsTrust help you? It’s the smart, tax-advantaged, and private way to give.
President Trump hasn’t exactly made tonight’s vice-presidential debate easy for Mike Pence, First Read notes.
The vice president will have to defend:
Why the president held non-socially distant and largely mask-less events at the White House – with indoor activities – from which several attendees apparently got infected by the coronavirus.
Why Trump, after being hospitalized at Walter Reed, jumped into a hermetically sealed SUV with Secret Service agents to wave to supporters.
Why the president, after returning to the White House, took off his mask in public, despite still being potentially contagious.
Why Trump instructed Americans NOT to be afraid of the coronavirus, and why he compared it again to the flu.
And why the president – over Twitter – scuttled any chance for another coronavirus aid package before the election.
None of these is easy for Pence to answer, especially a vice president who just happens to head the White House’s coronavirus task force.
New York Times: “An event on Sept. 26 in the Rose Garden, after which a number of officials including President Trump tested positive for the virus, violated the city’s mandates limiting the size of gatherings and requiring masks. Because the White House is on federal property, however, it is exempt from such rules. Guests at the event may well have ventured into the city, but the White House has refused to comply with a municipal request for help with contact tracing. The city had its highest number of positive cases on Monday — 105 — since June, though city officials say it would take several days to determine any trend.”
“At least one testing site in Washington reported that those seeking a test doubled to 600 on Monday as residents responded with concern to the cases stemming from the White House and Capitol Hill.”
The new FiveThirtyEight House forecast shows Democrats have a 93% chance to maintain control of the House of Representatives after the November elections.
White House officials believe President Trump was already infected with the novel coronavirus at the event for Judge Amy Coney Barrett on Saturday, September 26, Jake Tapper reports.
But they will not say when Trump last tested negative, raising questions as to whether he was tested at all between infection and the first presidential debate on Tuesday, September 29.
“A federal appeals court ruled Wednesday that Manhattan’s district attorney can enforce his subpoena for President Trump’s tax returns, rejecting a bid by Trump’s lawyers to kill the request and potentially setting up another showdown at the Supreme Court,” the Washington Post reports.
“Though the district attorney has agreed not to enforce his subpoena immediately while Trump asks the high court to hear his case again, the ruling marks another blow for the president, who has fought for more than a year to shield his financial records from investigators, and follows separate, jarring revelations about the enormity of his debt.”
Daily Beast: “Increasingly convinced that President Trump’s election chances are grim, top Republican donors, lobbyists, and operatives are directing their attention to the Senate in hopes of keeping a majority in the chamber and, with it, a check on a future President Joe Biden.”
“Top GOP money men said that efforts to shift resources to Republicans running for the Senate have been happening for weeks, as Trump’s chances have not improved—indeed, worsened—and as the party’s candidates have been dramatically outraised.”
Said one GOP operative: “There is no discussion among donors about giving money to the president. The discussion among donors, bundlers and check writers is about the Senate seats.”
The White House denied Wednesday that President Trump worked in the Oval Office on Tuesday while still suffering from coronavirus, despite an assertion otherwise from by White House economic adviser Larry Kudlow, Axios reports.
The Supreme Court cleared the way Tuesday night for ranked-choice voting to be used in Maine, delivering a blow to Republican challengers, CNN reports.
Cook Political Report: “Ultimately, this race has earned a more competitive rating — underscoring just how fast the GOP majority is slipping away if they have to defend turf like this, and also how much Trump’s numbers have fallen across the board. We are moving South Carolina from Lean Republican to Toss Up.”
Bloomberg: “The medical staff has traced the White House cases to the Sept. 26 Rose Garden ceremony for Trump to announce Amy Coney Barrett as his pick to fill a Supreme Court vacancy.”
Sen. Susan Collins (R-ME) went after Sara Gideon (D) in a Politico interview and accused the State House speaker of “defaming my reputation and attacking my integrity.”
Said Collins: “She will say or do anything to try to win. This race is built on a foundation of falsehoods. And trying to convince the people of Maine that somehow I am no longer the same person.”
A forthcoming film adaptation of former Rep. Katie Hill’s (D-CA) memoir was the target of online criticism Wednesday morning from anonymous members of “Katie’s former staff” posting from her old congressional Twitter account, Politico reports.
The posters wrote a 10-part Twitter thread that Hill’s story “is also one of workplace abuse and harassment.” Hill “can be both a victim and perpetrator,” they wrote, arguing that she “is not a hero for women.”
“President Trump, quarantined with COVID-19 in the White House residence and reportedly badgering staff to let him return to the Oval Office, was unusually active on Twitter late into Tuesday night, tweeting and retweeting dozens of times about Hillary Clinton and Russia, even moving markets by ending coronavirus stimulus negotiations — before apparently reversing himself hours later,” The Week reports.
Michelle Goldberg: “The president’s Twitter feed is always nuts but right now it really seems like he’s suffering some sort of psychological implosion.”
Charlie Sykes: “Trump’s Twitter feed is extra-deranged tonight. Theories?”
“While Supreme Court nominee Amy Coney Barrett has faced questions about how her Catholic faith might influence her jurisprudence, she has not spoken publicly about her involvement in People of Praise, a small Christian group founded in the 1970s and based in South Bend, Ind,” the Washington Post reports.
“Barrett, a federal appellate judge, has disclosed serving on the board of a network of private Christian schools affiliated with the group. The organization, however, has declined to confirm that she is a member. In recent years, it removed from its website editions of a People of Praise magazine — first those that included her name and photograph and then all archives of the magazine itself.”
“A 2010 People of Praise directory states that she held the title of ‘handmaid,’ a leadership position for women in the community.”
“President Trump pulled the plug on ongoing bipartisan coronavirus relief talks in an abrupt move that jolted Wall Street and surprised lawmakers of both parties, but hours later called on Congress to approve a bill providing another direct check to many Americans,” the Wall Street Journal reports.
Late last night, Trump urged both houses of Congress to “IMMEDIATELY” revive a lapsed loan program for small businesses and to approve funds for airlines and another round of stimulus checks.
New York Times: “It remained unclear if his tweets reflected a willingness to restart negotiations.”
Washington Post: “First, he says he won’t pursue a package until after election. Then he demands Congress immediately pass bills.”
Washington Post: “A GOP group working to elect Senate Republicans conducted polling over the weekend in four states — Colorado, Georgia, Montana and North Carolina — as Trump was hospitalized. The president’s numbers dropped ‘significantly’ in every state, falling by about five points in all four.”
Said one operative: “The president is in real trouble.”
Politico: “Joe Biden’s selection of Harris has excited Democrats. She’s helped him raise money at a record clip. She is Biden’s highest-profile surrogate to swing-state cities like Milwaukee, Detroit and Philadelphia, with a particular focus on courting voters of color, including African Americans and Latinos.”
“Harris appears solo and alongside Biden in TV ads, a rarity for a VP contender, and stars in digital videos pumped out by the campaign. She’s become the 77-year-old nominee’s emissary to pop culture, making appearances with musical icons, sitting for podcasts geared toward non-political audiences and drawing millions of views for brief videos of her stepping off the plane in Converse Chuck Taylor sneakers. The verdict: Harris, with a few exceptions, has hit her marks.”
On November 5, 2020, Washington may make its ugliest move yet. It could lay the groundwork for outlawing cash. For some, it means tremendous prosperity. For others… the pain will be severe. Click here to learn the exact steps to take between now and the end of the month…
Authored by Sundance via the Conservative Treehouse Last night, President Donald Trump transmitted an epic tweet-storm seemingly targeted toward all officials within the executive branch; and the intelligence apparatus writ large: One…
Director of National Intelligence John Ratcliffe on Tuesday declassified several documents, including handwritten notes from former CIA John Brennan after he briefed former President Obama on an alleged plot by Hillary Clinton to tie…
Authored by ‘sundance’ via The Burning Platform blog, With 30-days left before the election perhaps it’s worthwhile remembering what all of this opposition is about… Something 99% of American voters do not quite understand. Congress…
A group of 21 scholars have published a letter on the website of the National Association of Scholars, calling for the Pulitzer Prize Board to strip the New York Times ‘ Nikole Hannah-Jones of her 2020 prize for her article series, the…
…who targeted the president? “I always trust my gut,” begins AmericanThinker.com’s Sally Zelikovsky, “litigators and trial attorneys tend to do that.” When things don’t make sense or add up but you don’t have a smoking gun, you start…
Update (1730ET): CNN and NYT have just reported that a 4th White House press aide has tested positive for COVID-19. That individual is at least the 32nd person to test positive in the White House outbreak (which right now doesn’t include…
There’s plenty of growth in store for biotech. For one, the sector is still one of the safest, most recession-proof investments around. Two, an aging population will demand new, aggressive treatments to treat a myriad of issues. And three, with COVID-19 treatments desperately needed, biotech has taken center stage. Click Here to Download the FREE Report…
The Department of Justice is holding a virtual press conference on a matter of national security. FBI Director Chris Wray and Assistant Attorney General John… Read more…
Under the direction of communist Mayor Bill DeBlasio New York Police rounded up Jews on Monday night during Sukkot holiday. The New York Jews were… Read more…
Former staffers for disgraced Democrat Congresswoman Katie Hill took over her old government Twitter account late Tuesday night. Hill’s former employees used the account to… Read more…
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For all the excitement about corporate “stakeholders” and “purpose-driven” firms, the new mode of capitalism is simply a repackaging of the old. Successful companies will continue to focus on the value of their shares over the long term, while avoiding the risks of wading into areas where they don’t belong.
The 3rd day of The Rise of Digital Authoritarianism: China, AI, & Human Rights Conference featured a keynote address by Mike Brown, Director, Defense Innovation Unit, and a panel discussion on “China as an Emerging Global AI Superpower.”
Three things I hate getting in the mail: reminders that I’m overdue to see the dentist, my accountant’s annual January missive gently chastising me to get my pay stubs and receipts in order, and California’s Official Voter Information Guide.
On Sept 22, the White House put out an “Executive Order on Combating Race and Sex Stereotyping.” Media coverage has been curiously spotty. Reading the primary source is revealing.
Hoover Institution fellow Victor Davis Hanson discusses the merits of Caesar, Hannibal, Napoleon, Suleiman, Themistocles, Bolivar, Epaminondas, and many more who may or may not deserve their reputations as battlefield geniuses.
Hoover Institution fellow John Yoo discusses the new revelations and declassified documents in the false FISA warrant, Russian collusion, Crossfire Hurricane, etc. and who might be involved in creating the false information to attack and overturn the 2016 election.
Hoover Institution fellow Jack Goldsmith discusses what happens when the president is seriously ill? What happens when the president is incapacitated? And what happens when a presidential candidate falls seriously ill—after people have already started voting?
It’s increasingly likely the election will be a referendum on Coronavirus and its after-effects, which means Trump’s new tack is a risky, but necessary, one.
There was a simplicity to the Cold War. Free peoples, and those who aspired to that status, were threatened by communism, a totalitarian ideology aggressively propagated by the Soviet Union, an expansionist empire. The Cold War also was a “forever war”: No one knew when it would end.
President Trump is still grousing about losing the popular vote by 3 million to Hillary Clinton in 2016, but that doesn’t mean he’s doing anything about it this time around.
The last time Deyanira Hooper’s son Jeremy took California’s state assessment, he was 15 points from meeting proficiency standards. But when schools closed last spring, his live instruction from a teacher dropped to 20 minutes every three days.
Two Supreme Court justices’ renewed attack on the court’s same-sex marriage ruling — arguing that it falsely brands religious opponents as bigots — might suggest that the 2015 decision is in jeopardy. But several legal commentators say the ruling is less likely to be overturned than to be narrowed, along with other decisions on LGBT rights, to exempt public officials and private citizens with religious objections.
The COVID-19 pandemic and recent climate disasters have hammered home the reality that nations are powerless to confront today’s global challenges alone. These crises require unifying national leadership and global collaboration rooted in a recognition of the science.
The opinions expressed in this publication are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the opinions of the Hoover Institution or Stanford University.
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