Good morning! Here is your news briefing for Thursday October 29, 2020
THE DAILY SIGNAL
October 29 2020
Good morning from Washington, where a Senate panel hears from the CEOS of Facebook, Twitter, and Google on why it’s OK for them to suppress news and information. Fred Lucas has big moments. Election Day is coming and eight states are enmeshed in related lawsuits, Hans von Spakovsky and Zack Smith write. On the podcast, counterterrorism expert Robin Simcox confronts an Islamist’s beheading of a teacher in France. Plus: our video report on a riot-ruined auto dealership’s insurance problem, and, on “Problematic Women,” countering progressive pipe dreams. On this date in 1901, assassin Leon Czolgosz, who fatally shot President William McKinley the month before, is executed in the electric chair in a New York prison.
“Mr. Dorsey, who the hell elected you and put you in charge of what the media are allowed to report and what the American people are allowed to hear?” Sen. Ted Cruz said to Twitter’s head.
“It’s a clear act of terrorism,” says Robin Simcox of the beheading of a teacher in France. “It’s an attempt to bring about political change essentially by cowing a certain part of the civilian population.”
When financier George Soros decided in 2014 to spend millions to fund the election of rogue prosecutors, one of his first candidates was Marilyn Mosby in Baltimore.
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Good morning,Republican senators grilled the CEOs of Facebook, Google, and Twitter over what they described as “selective censorship.”The CEOs, meanwhile, denied political censorship and argued against the stripping of Section 230 protections, saying it would stifle free speech.
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Conservatives celebrating the confirmation of Amy Coney Barrett shouldn’t believe the media line that we have a “conservative Supreme Court” or that conservative justices will form a “6–3 conservative majority.” Read more
Last week, Senator Ted Cruz averred to “Axios on HBO” regarding the scandals revolving around Hunter Biden: “I don’t think it moves a single voter.” Read more
Some benefits of playing Sudoku may include reducing anxiety and stress, and improving concentration, problem-solving skills, logical thinking, and memory.
What made a California farmer enter politics and uncover one of the biggest scandals in American political history? What did it cost him and what keeps him going? Watch on The Epoch Times website!
With the elections just around the corner, and with China coming into focus, we wanted to take a closer look at the defense policies of both Trump and Biden…
Twitter CEO Grilled by Republicans, Cheered by Democrats for Censorship
From the story: The Committee subpoenaed Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey and Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg after both platforms attempted to reduce circulation of a New York Post story on Hunter Biden’s influence peddling. Conservatives have criticized the social media platforms for alleged censorship of the Post article (National Review). From the New York Post: Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey on Wednesday falsely told senators that his company lifted a ban on users tweeting articles from The Post’s Hunter Biden exposé, despite the fact that the ban remained on one of The Post’s bombshell stories and was only lifted after he made the claim (NY Post). Ted Cruz grilled Dorsey for blocking only stories that hurt Biden (Fox News). From the Wall Street Journal: The dazed-looking Mr. Dorsey gave the impression he could not care less about his company’s abuse. Democratic Senators cheered on politicized social-media censorship and demanded the companies do more of it, giving a preview of the type of internet controls that might be coming if they control the Senate. “There’s no both sides when one side has chosen to reject truth,” said Illinois Sen. Tammy Duckworth (WSJ). CNN is joining in the censorship, refusing to run pro-Trump ads that point out Biden will raise taxes on the middle class (The Hill). From Dan Crenshaw: Biggest take away from the big tech hearings: 1) Jack Dorsey is a partisan and a hypocrite. 2) There are no liberals left in the Democrat Party. Not a single Democrat Senator defended free speech or freedom of the press today. This should terrify Americans (Twitter).
2.
New York Times’ “Anonymous” White House “Senior Official” is Low Level Staffer
Turns out, it’s Miles Taylor, not someone high within the administration as the Times led readers to believe (Red State). From Jim Geraghty: It turns out Anonymous really was (Twitter). From Byron York: On CNN, Miles Taylor, who lied about his role as anti-Trump ‘Anonymous’ NYT op-ed writer, said Trump administration has ‘Nazi-like immigration policies.’ Insists that he means that seriously (Twitter). From David Harsanyi: ..even though everything Anonymous alleged was completely unverified, even his identity, every major media outlet ran with pieces relaying his claims. Anonymous’s assertion was that a cabal of senior staffers had secretly schemed to nullify the agenda of the duly elected president of the United States simply because they disagreed with his policies. It was a clumsy attempt at sabotage (National Review). From Jeff Blehar: Miles Taylor is living Dwight Schrute’s personal dream: he got the NY Times to describe him as a “senior administration official” rather than “assistant to the regional manager,” which is more or less what he was as a mid-level functionary with zero policymaking power (Twitter). Two years, ago, CNN listed 13 people they suspected might be “anonymous.” They were wrong on all 13 (CNN). From Ari Fleischer: When I was WH spokesman, I do not believe I knew or would even recognize the chief of staff at the Department of Homeland Security, or most any agency for that matter. They weren’t in meetings with POTUS. They were not high ranking WH officials. The media got played by anonymous (Twitter). From Mollie Hemingway: No, the NYT knew exactly what it was doing. Had they named this low-level bureaucrat, nobody would have cared for a second about what he said. They used him to advance their shared narrative (Twitter).
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3.
Philadelphia Reporter: Police Told Not to Arrest Looters
From the story: Directive from @PhillyPolice executive team. Extremely frustrated officers, both patrol&commanders told me overnight they were”ordered to NOT arrest looters just disperse them” (Twitter). From Andy Ngo: The head of Philadelphia’s police department was the head of Portland’s police department until this year (Twitter). Police also found sticks of dynamite in a van last night (WPVI-TV). And the looting continued into a third day (Twitter).
4.
New York Times Attacks Washington Examiner for Suggesting Voter Fraud is Possible
From the story: the New York Times should think itself in a good position to point its finger at anyone for the spread of misinformation. My colleague Becket Adams has already delivered a magisterial swipe at the New York Times’s hypocrisy on this matter, but it is worth unpacking a little of it again. Although there has been stiff competition, it may be that the New York Times has spread more disruptive falsehoods than any other news outlet in the past four years (Washington Examiner). From Byron York: New York Times ‘blockbuster’ scoop on Trump-Russia was dead wrong. Other reports were, too. And of course, they got big picture wrong. Then tried to correct 1619 Project on the sly. And NYT has the nerve to accuse Washington Examiner of ‘misinformation’? (Twitter).
5.
Polls: 13 Point Spread from Poll to Poll
13 points separate CNN, which has Biden up 12, and Rasmussen, which has Trump up 1 (Twitter). The polls update here (RCP). Ed Morrissey questions the WaPo/ABC poll that has Biden up 17 in Wisconsin (Hot Air). Meanwhile, golfing legend Jack Nicklaus tweeted his plug to reelect Trump (Twitter).
But we’ve got a screen shot (Twitter). From Dan McLaughlin: Nonpartisan “girl power” yet again draws the wrath of progressives & liberals (Twitter). The Girl Scouts later tweeted “Earlier today, we shared a post highlighting the five women who have been appointed to the Supreme Court. It was quickly viewed as a political and partisan statement which was not our intent and we have removed the post” (Twitter). From Megyn Kelly: This is pathetic @girlscouts. It’s not “partisan” to generically congratulate the 5th woman ever to join the High Court. It’s patriotic. Taking your tweet down *is* partisan, however, and a real disappointment (Twitter). From Katie Pavlich: I thought the Girl Scouts was about female empowerment? Y’all lost your way a long time ago but this is a new low. Wow (Twitter). Dan McLaughlin looks at why progressives are so upset over Barrett (National Review).
7.
MLB Criticizes Dodgers Star for Celebrating with Team While Testing for COVID
The league was highly critical of Justin Turner as political correctness makes it impossible for them to note he and his fellow teammates are not much of a risk.
Even Celebrities Blast California’s Thanksgiving Rules
The story notes “Among the new rules are; all gatherings must include no more than three households, masks must stay on after eating and drinking and singing, chanting and shouting are “strongly discouraged.” Many of the celebs quoted in the story are more conservative than most (Newsweek). Overseas, where there is no Thanksgiving, they are threatening to bust up homes that break the rules during Christmas gatherings (Daily Mail).
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🦠 — New spike?: For the first time since COVID-19 landed on American soil, the seven-day rolling daily average for new U.S. cases of the virus reached 70,000. The record comes as hospitalizations reach midsummer peak levels and deaths continue to inch upward, a delayed indicator of the virus’ severity. With less than one week before the election, that’s not a headline the Donald Trump camp wants to see.
— Not that needle: As Trump’s campaign talks up the potential for a vaccine soon, political watchers aren’t expecting a different needle. Four years ago, Hillary Clinton supporters watched The New York Times needle in horror and Trump fans in excitement as it showed now-President Trump running away with the election in real-time. Now such measures are being ditched, a recognition of the uncertainty facing voters come election night. It’s another sign that vote-watchers might not just be in for a long night, but possibly days or even weeks of uncertainty in the presidential outcome of this election.
⚠️ — Welcome to Tampa, but a word of caution: As Trump and former Vice President Joe Biden prepare to have rare dueling rallies in Tampa, the welcome mat will be rolled out, but there are some caveats: Trump should probably avoid touting his plan to dismantle health care to a city with nearly 15% of its population uninsured. And for Biden, well, he might want to mention it.
— Hot off embargo: A Telemundo Poll measuring the state of the Latino vote in Florida finds Trump wanting, with 48% indicating support for Biden and just 43% backing Trump. Another 7% are still undecided. That’s a big deal for both campaigns as Trump seeks to capitalize on Latino votes, particularly in Cuban-rich South Florida. At the same time, Biden keeps his eye on other Hispanic demographics, such as the Puerto Rican community in Central Florida. The poll shows both candidates reaching their intended audiences, with Latinos breaking for Biden at 53% to 37% in Central Florida and tied in Southeast Florida.
— Did someone say free food?: Uber is getting creative with its Get Out the Vote efforts, offering not only discounted rides to and from polling places but free food at polls with long lines. The ride-share giant is partnering with food trucks in select Orlando and South Florida areas to provide in-line munchies, and voters can get up to half off rides to vote. The promotion runs Oct. 29-Nov. 1 and on Election Day.
🥓 — Can you tell a Trump fridge from a Biden fridge?: The New York Times wants to know. The paper published an online quiz complete with photos of well-stocked (and some not-so-well-stocked refrigerators) with the option to guess whether the contents belong to a Trump supporter or a Biden supporter. While Chobani and kale tend to give away Biden supporters and bologna turned out to be 💯 Trump, be careful with Budweiser, it might not be what you think.
Can you tell the difference between a ‘Trump’ fridge and a ‘Biden’ fridge? A new quiz tests your skill. Image via Reuters.
Situational awareness
—@RealDonaldTrump: COVID, COVID, COVID is the unified chant of the Fake News Lamestream Media. They will talk about nothing else until November 4th. when the Election will be (hopefully!) over. Then the talk will be how low the death rate is, plenty of hospital rooms, & many tests of young people.
—@DDiamond: Trump repeatedly claims that the U.S. media has a special fixation on coronavirus, which will go away postelection. But a scan of global newspapers reveals that COVID remains a top story virtually everywhere — understandably!
—@NateSilver538: There’s no sign of tightening. Also, no sign of widening. We have 34 post-debate polls, and the average change is … 0.1 points toward Trump.
—@Forecaster: It really is noteworthy (I think) that Clinton’s edge was collapsing at this point in 2016 … There’s basically no sign of that for Biden right now. His lead is holding in all the data I’m seeing.
—@DaveWeigel: How is COVID affecting the election in the Midwest? Anecdotes aren’t data but two candidates I was set to cover in the next three days canceled their events after coming in contact with infected people.
—@BethMatuga: Fundraising in #Florida means you get not one but TWO opportunities to have a panic attack, one on Thursday night & one the subsequent Tuesday
Days until
2020 General Election — 5; NBA 2020-21 training camp — 12; FITCon Policy Conference begins — 14; The Masters begins — 15; NBA draft — 19; Pixar’s “Soul” premieres — 22; College basketball season slated to begin — 27; NBA 2020-21 opening night — 34; Florida Automated Vehicles Summit — 34; the Electoral College votes — 46; “Death on the Nile” premieres — 49; “Wonder Woman 1984” rescheduled premiere — 57; Greyhound racing ends in Florida — 63; the 2021 Inauguration — 83; Super Bowl LV in Tampa — 101; “A Quiet Place Part II” rescheduled premiere — 112; “Black Widow” rescheduled premiere — 126; “No Time to Die” premieres (rescheduled) — 155; “Top Gun: Maverick” rescheduled premiere — 246; Disney’s “Shang Chi and The Legend of The Ten Rings” premieres — 253; new start date for 2021 Olympics — 267; “Jungle Cruise” premieres — 275; Disney’s “Eternals” premieres — 372; “Spider-Man Far From Home” sequel premieres — 375; Steven Spielberg’s “West Side Story” premieres — 407; “Thor: Love and Thunder” premieres — 471; “Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness” premieres — 524; “Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse” sequel premieres — 705.
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 performing 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 Wednesday, the CNN average still has Biden at 52% compared to an equally 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 meetingCNN’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 Wednesday, Biden remains at an 88 in 100 chance of winning compared to Trump, who slipped slightly to an 11 in 100 shot. FiveThirtyEight also ranked individual states by the likelihood of delivering a decisive vote for the winning candidate in the Electoral College: Pennsylvania leads with 36.7%, while Florida is now second at 9.2%. Michigan is now third with 8.9%. Other states include Wisconsin (7.4%), Arizona (6.9%), North Carolina (5.9%), Minnesota (4.2%) and Georgia (3.7%).
Less than a week away and Joe Biden still hold the lead. Image via AP.
PredictIt: As of Wednesday, the PredictIt trading market has Biden dropping a penny to $0.63 a share, with Trump holding steady at $0.41.
Real Clear Politics: As of Wednesday, the RCP average of General Election top battleground state polling has Biden leading Trump 50.6% to 43.5%. The RCP General Election polling average has Biden at +7.1 points ahead.
The Economist: As of Wednesday, their model predicts that 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 is better than 19 in 20 (97%) versus Trump with less than 1 in 20 (3%). They still give Biden a greater than 99% chance (better than 19 in 20) of winning the popular vote, with Trump at less than 1% (less than 1 in 20).
Presidential
“Donald Trump’s campaign depends on his supporters putting their health at risk” via Philip Bump of The Washington Post — At this point, nearly 70,000 people in the United States are testing positive for the novel coronavirus every day. More than 800 people are dying. In short, this is one of the most dangerous times for the country over the course of the year’s pandemic. And, increasingly, Trump is hinging his campaign on his supporters, ignoring the swelling crisis. He does so rhetorically, of course. Over and over, he has insisted that the country is “rounding the corner” on the virus, a message he has offered both as the number of new cases increases and as it fades.
Donald Trump rallies put many attendees at risk. Image via AP.
“Trump campaign shifts Florida ad spending burden to RNC” via Gregory Korte of Bloomberg — Trump’s campaign has slashed its advertising budget in Florida, relying on the Republican National Committee to carry the message there as the president’s reelection effort moves resources to the industrial northern states that carried him to victory in 2016. Since Labor Day, Trump has cut $24 million from his national ad budget, while Biden has added $197 million. Biden has outspent Trump three-to-one over that time nationally. The president’s campaign still has $350,275 budgeted to spend on ads in Florida through Election Day but has canceled $5.5 million in the final two weeks of the campaign, the data showed.
“Joe Biden makes late push to flip the Senate” via James Arkin and Christopher Cadelago of POLITICO — Biden hammered throughout the primary that he was Democrats’ best bet not only to beat Trump but flip the Senate and return his party to broader power in Washington. Now, in the final week of the election, Biden is throwinghisweightintothat pitch. In Georgia, he campaigned with Jon Ossoff and Raphael Warnock, the top Democrats running in the rapidly changing state’s dual Senate races. Meanwhile, his wife, Jill Biden, was in Maine stumping with Sara Gideon, the party’s candidate facing longtime GOP Sen. Susan Collins. And on Friday, Biden will make his first stop in Iowa since the caucuses.
“Biden vows not to make ‘false promises’ about pandemic” via The Associated Press — Biden said he’s “not running on the false promises of being able to end this pandemic by flipping a switch” but would prioritize science, while Trump used the race’s final days to keep up a whirlwind campaign schedule aimed at focusing on anything but the coronavirus. The Democratic presidential nominee tried to keep the focus on health care, arguing that a Supreme Court conservative majority stretched to 6-3 by newly confirmed Justice Amy Coney Barrett could dismantle the Barack Obama administration’s signature health law and leave millions of Americans with preexisting conditions devoid of insurance coverage.
“Biden and Barack Obama will campaign together in Michigan on Saturday, in their first in-person appearance together.” via Thomas Kaplan and Glenn Thrush of The New York Times — Former President Obama will join Biden in the crucial battleground of Michigan on Saturday for their first joint appearance on the campaign trail in 2020. In its announcement on Wednesday, the Biden campaign did not say where in Michigan the two men would be appearing, which is consistent with its pattern of leaving the precise location and times of events unannounced until the last minute. But Obama sees his role as motivating Black voters and young people, two key groups that tend to have relatively low turnout rates. Several previous events have been clustered in the Detroit area.
“Biden and Democratic Senate candidates gain in Georgia, a Monmouth poll finds.” via Michael Cooper of The New York Times — Biden’s late-in-the-race trip yesterday to Georgia, a state that has not voted for a Democrat for president since 1992, struck some members of both parties as curious. But a Monmouth University poll released Wednesday highlighted the dynamic that emboldened the campaign to make the gambit, finding that Biden had gained ground on Trump and held a small, statistically insignificant edge over the president among likely voters. Among all registered voters in Georgia, the poll found, Biden is supported by 50% and Trump by 45%. And among the voters that the pollsters categorized as likely to vote in a high-turnout election, Biden has the edge over Trump by 50% to 46%.
“Rick Scott to run Florida TV ad attacking Biden and Harris” via Alex Daugherty of the Miami Herald — Scott isn’t on the 2020 ballot. Still, voters in Florida will get a glimpse of the senator on their TV screens this weekend. Scott announced Wednesday that he would run a TV ad titled “Don’t Give Up” through his leadership PAC, Let’s Get to Work. While staring direct-to-camera, Scott, wearing his trademark Navy cap, attacks Democratic presidential nominee Biden and Kamala Harris before urging voters to support Trump. “Democrats have a radical plan for America,” Scott says in the ad, before going on to attack Biden and Harris on Medicare-for-all, the Supreme Court, guns and socialism.
“Steve Schale: Black voter turnout could rival Obama elections” via Scott Powers of Florida Politics — The numbers of Black voters casting ballots by mail or at early voting sites so far is leading Democratic strategists to suggest final Black turnout numbers could rival historic levels seen in the 2008 and 2012 elections that put Obama in the White House and kept him there for a second term. “I think it will look a lot like what Obama did in 2012,” Schale said Wednesday in a Zoom press briefing with the Democratic-allied analytics firm Hawkfish and the BlackPAC political action committee. The math is complicated. What’s more, Schale, who this year serves as chief executive of the Unite The Country PAC, cautioned that absolutely nothing occurring in 2020 voting trends has any precedent that could lead to easy assumptions.
“The election’s big twist: the racial gap between Republicans and Democrats is shrinking.” via Nate Cohn of The New York Times — American politicians have often sought to exploit the nation’s racial and ethnic divides for political gain. During the Trump era, voters are not responding as expected. According to An Upshot analysis, the gap in presidential vote preference between white and nonwhite voters has shrunk by 16 percentage points since 2016, as Biden gains among White voters, and Trump makes inroads with Black and Hispanic voters. Trump’s exploitation of resentments over immigration and race helped fuel his 2016 victory, but similar tactics this time have not had the same effect.
“After supporting Trump by one vote in 2016, a Wisconsin community reassesses” via Peter Kendall of The Washington Post — Oshkosh is a political hot spot, a city of 67,000 in one of the key counties that twice backed Obama and then helped elect Trump. It’s also a coronavirus hot spot, a place with rapidly increasing numbers of cases, hospitalizations and deaths, and health department updates warning of a “sustained uncontrolled spread that is threatening all aspects of community life.” “As Oshkosh goes, so goes Wisconsin, I think,” said David Siemers, a political-science professor at the local University of Wisconsin campus. He expects the outcome to turn on an age-old question in politics: “Are people doing better?” And like local officials, who report long lines and strong turnout in early voting, he thinks the answer will hinge on the pandemic.
“Supreme Court won’t speed a do-over on Pennsylvania’s ballot deadlines” via Adam Liptak of The New York Times — SCOTUS on Wednesday refused a plea from Pennsylvania Republicans to put their request to halt a three-day extension of the deadline for receiving absentee ballots on the fast track. The move means the Court will not consider the case, which could have yielded a major ruling on voting procedure, until after Election Day. Justice Amy Coney Barrett, who joined the court on Tuesday and might have broken an earlier deadlock in the case, did not cast a vote. The court’s brief order gave no reason for declining to expedite consideration of the case. In a separate statement, Justice Samuel Alito, joined by Justices Clarence Thomas and Neil Gorsuch, said the court may still consider the case after the election.
“Supreme Court leaves NC absentee ballot deadline at Nov. 12” via Mark Sherman and Jonathan Drew of The Associated Press — The Supreme Court will allow absentee ballots in North Carolina to be received and counted up to nine days after Election Day, in a win for Democrats. By a 5-3 vote Wednesday, the justices refused to disturb a decision by the State Board of Elections to lengthen the period from three to nine days because of the coronavirus pandemic, pushing back the deadline to Nov. 12. The board’s decision was part of a legal settlement with a union-affiliated group. Republicans had asked the high court to step in. Under the Supreme Court’s order, mailed ballots postmarked on or before Election Day must be received by 5 p.m. on Nov. 12 to be counted.
Early voters form a long line while waiting to cast their ballots at the South Regional Library polling location in Durham, N.C. Image via AP.
“Slow mail, including plunge in Philadelphia, alarms Democrats” via Todd Shields of Bloomberg — The USPS on Wednesday reported a slide in on-time service, including a steep drop in the Democratic stronghold of Philadelphia, with deadlines for mailed ballots less than a week away. In a court filing, USPS delivered 70% of First Class mail on Oct. 27 within the three-day window to be considered on-time, down 6% from previous days. On-time service in the Philadelphia area was 43%, compared with an on-time rate of roughly 80% in early October. The worsening performance follows months of alarm and litigation over slowed mail after operational changes ordered by Postmaster General Louis DeJoy. A federal judge late Tuesday ordered DeJoy to immediately expand mail delivery with extra trips and later deliveries.
“Federal judge orders USPS to lift limits on extra trips & overtime one week before election” via Tarik Minor of News4Jax — A federal judge issued a sweeping new set of orders for the United States Postal Service leadership, reversing the limits Postmaster General DeJoy imposed. The judge ordered that U.S. postal workers were to be informed of the new rules by 9 a.m. Wednesday to make sure they’re are allowed to do whatever is necessary to deliver America’s ballots on time. Al Friedman, the Florida State Association of Letter Carriers president, said USPS employees are already working long hours with a drastic increase in political mailings. “I’ve got carriers that by the time Friday comes, they’re into the 70-hour range for the week,” Friedman said.
Labor union group among top Facebook ad buyers — WorkMoney, a nonprofit connected to the U.S. labor movement, has been one of the biggest political ad buyers on Facebook in recent months. As reported by Mark Scott and Zach Montellaro of POLITICO, the group was one of the top-10 political advertisers in Florida until mid-October. According to data compiled by the New York University Ad Observatory, the committee has spent $1.5 million on Facebook ads in Florida. WorkMoney ads ask voters to fill out online polls, which request personal information like cellphone numbers, employment status and addresses. The group sends texts and other communications critical of the Trump administration’s and Congress’ pandemic response to people who sign up through the ads.
“Jeering sign-wavers. Caravans of honking trucks. Voter intimidation or free speech?” via Abigail Hauslohner of The Washington Post — Jeering sign-wavers, caravans of honking trucks flying Trump 2020 flags, and charged political rhetoric have become the increasingly common backdrop to early voting across the country, particularly in swing states like Florida and Pennsylvania. Some of the loud displays, often from Trump supporters and particularly frustrating to Democrats, have prompted local law enforcement agencies to station officers near polling places to keep the peace. In some locations, they have sparked allegations of voter intimidation and fears of tinderbox confrontations on the cusp of escalation in the run-up to Election Day next week.
New ads
Pro-Trump PAC tries to connect Biden to Chinese business deal — America First Action PAC is releasing a new ad Friday that amplifies accusations from Tony Bobulinski, a former business associate of Biden’s son. The ad title, “Blatant Lies,” is not a reference to whether Bobulinski’s accusations are factual despite their unverified status. Instead, the ad assumes Bobulinski is truthful and that Biden, his brother Jim, and his son Hunter hammered out a lucrative deal with a Chinese energy company in 2017. The PAC asserts: “Biden is not running for President to serve the American public, he’s running to enrich himself and his family. If Biden wins, China wins.”
Independence USA PAC launches two new ads in Florida — Bloomberg’s Independence USA PAC launched two other ads this week, “Like We’ve Never Seen It” and “Middle Class First.” Both TV ads will run statewide on broadcast and cable. The first highlights Trump’s continued downplaying of the virus and mishandling the pandemic. The second focuses on Biden’s record of cutting taxes as Vice President and his plan to cut taxes for the middle class if elected. “With less than a week until Election Day, we are doing everything we can to make sure voters in Florida understand the clear choice they have in this election,” Bloomberg said. “It’s either four more years of Donald Trump’s failed leadership — worsening the economy and the COVID-19 pandemic — or a fresh start with Joe Biden.”
Independence USA pushes back against socialism and communism misinformation in Spanish-language ad — Independence USA PAC launched a new Spanish-language ad, “Ellos Lo Son,” pushing back against the narrative that Biden is a Trojan horse for socialist and communist policy. The ad features Carlos Alberto Montaner, a Cuban-born anti-communist who is an ex-political prisoner and expert on the rise of socialism and communism. “Joe Biden and Kamala Harris are not socialists or communists,” he says in the ad. “I’ve spent many, many years as an exile, and I recognize perfectly those that are the friends of liberty. Here they are.” The TV ad will run in the Miami market on broadcast and cable. It is part of Mike Bloomberg’s $100 million commitment to flip Florida blue.
“545 separated children featured in Lincoln Project, People For the American Way ad, ‘Cruel’” via Renzo Downey of Florida Politics — With reports that the federal government can’t find the parents of 545 children split from their families at the southern border, a new ad from The Lincoln Project and People For the American Way are targeting Trump as intentionally cruel. Law enforcement has separated thousands of families at the U.S.-Mexico border. Court documents show the Trump administration lost track of those children’s parents, two-thirds of whom were deported to Central America. Over the tune of “Rock-a-bye Baby,” as the gears of a music box stop turning, the narrator questions what trauma those children face and what will become of them.
“Cigarette giant Reynolds American gave $80,000 in 2018 to secretive group now behind controversial constitutional amendment” via Jason Garcia of the Orlando Sentinel — Cigarette giant Reynolds American Inc. gave $80,000 in 2018 to the secretive group that now wants to make it harder to amend Florida’s constitution, according to tax records obtained by the Orlando Sentinel. The North Carolina-based Big Tobacco company, which makes Newport and Camel cigarettes and Vuse e-cigarettes, is the first known corporate contributor to Keep Our Constitution Clean Inc., the nonprofit that has spent more than $9 million in support of a proposed amendment that, if approved by voters, would require all future constitutional amendments to go through two statewide votes. The proposed amendment is No. 4 on this year’s ballot.
“Wingman PAC drops pro-Scott Franklin ad blasting Alan Cohn as tax-and-spend liberal” via Peter Schorsch of Florida Politics — A political committee supporting Franklin for Florida’s 15th Congressional District is out with a new television ad contrasting Franklin’s platform with Cohn. The ad, “Contrast” paints Cohn as a tax and spend liberal who would hurt Florida families while boosting Franklin as a small-business owner who knows how to get the economy to work. The Wingman PAC, established by a group of Franklin’s personal friends, is behind the ad. “In Florida, we’re working to get back on track, but liberal Alan Cohn would make it harder on us,” the ad begins. The ad dropped Wednesday on broadcast, cable and digital in CD 15, which includes parts of Hillsborough, Lake and Polk counties.
“Who is policing political texts in the final days of election? Wireless companies are trying” via Sarah Krouse and Emily Glazer of The Washington Post. Presidential campaigns seek to blast out millions of text messages in the days leading up to the election. Still, they are facing increasingly stringent rules from wireless carriers about those dispatches. Text messages have become a more critical tool for political campaigns that have shrinking avenues to voters. They get voters’ attention better than email and other forms of communication, campaigns and political groups say. Campaigns have cut back on door-to-door canvassing during the coronavirus pandemic, and social media platforms are stepping up efforts to limit political content.
“Uber to offer discounted rides, free food at polling places on Election Day” via Jason Delgado of Florida Politics — Uber announced several new initiatives Wednesday to support voters on Election Day. The Get Out The Vote initiative will help riders register to vote (though it’s too late to register for this election,) provide voters discounted rides to the polls, and offer free food to voters while waiting in lines on Election Day. “Uber’s unique Get Out The Vote initiative is helping people register to vote, offering discounted rides to and from the polls, and feeding people while in line to vote at their polling place,” said Uber Head of Federal Affairs Danielle Burr. “We are proud to utilize the power of our platform to help American citizens exercise their right to vote this Election Day.”
“On a St. Petersburg block, neighbors stay neighborly despite opposing signs” via Christopher Spata of the Tampa Bay Times — Outside, the neighbors smile and wave to each other and talk about dogs, which may outnumber humans on this short stretch of 49th Avenue North. The block turns heads due to how many opposing political signs fill the yards. At one end, two homes with multiple signs for one presidential candidate sit sandwiched between four houses with signs for the other guy. At the other end, a lone house flips back to the other candidate. It really is a lot of signs in a row.
Leg. campaigns
“State GOP funnels money to committees” via News Service of Florida — With less than a week before Tuesday’s General Election, the Republican Party of Florida has funneled $1 million to four political committees that had not previously raised any money, according to finance information filed Wednesday. The party sent $250,000 checks to committees such as Conservatives Standing Proudly for Common Sense, Protecting Florida’s Progress, Conservative for Florida and Unifying Leadership for Florida. The committees were registered last month with the state Division of Elections but did not have any financial activity until reporting the state party contributions Wednesday.
Money floods into Florida’s down-ballot races — A network of progressive groups is inundating Florida House races with loads of cash. Most of the money, about $12 million, has come in through Democratic super PAC Forward Majority. As reported by Matt Dixon of POLITICO Florida, the influx has put Republicans — who hold a near-insurmountable majority in the chamber — on defense. Nearly $8 million of the Forward Majority money has been used to buy TV ads in 18 House districts. The ads target Republicans for their votes on health care bills they allege would strip coverage from people with preexisting conditions.
“Florida Democrats expect a Senate battleground sweep” via Drew Wilson of Florida Politics — Florida Democrats are confident they’ll head into the 2021 Legislative Session with 19 Senators, according to a fresh polling update issued by the party’s Senate campaign arm. Republicans currently hold 23 seats in the 40-member Florida Senate. Two of those Republican-held seats are being hotly contested this cycle and internal polling teased by Florida Senate Victory indicates both are heads-up contests. The first target is Senate District 9, a Central Florida-based seat where Republican former Rep. Jason Brodeur faces Democratic labor attorney Patricia Sigman. Florida Senate Victory says its polling, conducted by GQR Polling, shows the race is tied, 42%-42%. The Senate District 39 race between GOP Rep. Ana Maria Rodriguez and Democratic Rep. Javier Fernández is also tied, 43%-43%.
“Loranne Ausley challenges ‘Republican lies’ with new TV ad” via Jason Delgado of Florida Politics —With less than a week before Election Day, Democratic Rep. Ausley released a new TV ad Tuesday addressing the “Republican lies” being told to Senate District 3 voters about her campaign. “I know you’ve heard all the Republican lies about me on TV, on radio, and in your mailbox,” she says in the 30-second ad. “My campaign never took a dime of PPP money, and in the Legislature, I fought for millions more in Hurricane Michael relief funding.”
“Scott Plakon fights back against preexisting conditions charge” via Scott Powers of Florida Politics — Rep. Plakon has joined the ranks of other Republican lawmakers defending their 2019 votes on a bill involving insurance coverage for preexisting conditions. Democratic opponents charges that their votes on Senate Bill 322 last year was actually a vote against preexisting coverage. The health insurance bill — now law — was carried by incoming Senate President Wilton Simpson. It assured coverage of preexisting conditions, not prevented it, Plakon said, using Republicans’ argument from the start for that bill. This would assure Floridians’ coverage should the U.S. Supreme Court strike down the Affordable Care Act. Plakon said he sent cease-and-desist letters to Orlando TV stations, asking them to stop running Democrat Tracey Kagan’s TV commercial blasting Plakon on health care issues.
“Spending surges in HD 110 ahead of campaign’s final stretch” via Ryan Nicol of Florida Politics — Democrat Annette Collazo and Republican Alex Rizo both set high marks in campaign spending as the race for the House District 110 seat nears its close. Collazo spent around $67,000 from Oct. 3-16, while Rizo spent around $43,000. The competitors are seeking the seat held by Republican House Speaker José Oliva, who is term-limited. Collazo’s biggest single expenditure was a $45,000 payment to the Virginia-based firm Screen Strategies Media for advertising costs. She also put money toward Facebook ads, canvassing expenses and credit card processing costs for online donations.
“Jim Mooney outraises Clint Barras in HD 120, but still trails in available cash” via Ryan Nicol of Florida Politics — Mooney is looking to turn the tide in the House District 120 money game, as he topped his Democratic opponent in fundraising for the first time since the General Election began. Mooney added just under $45,000 from Oct. 3-16. Barras raised more than $26,000. Barras has significantly boosted his fundraising capacity following the late August Primary Election. Barras was unopposed on the Democratic side, while Mooney competed in a close three-way primary to secure the GOP nomination. Once the Barras-Mooney General Election matchup was set, Barras consistently led in fundraising by tapping into out-of-state donors through online fundraising services.
Down ballot
“Miami-Dade Mayor candidates try to reach new voters in crunchtime for election” via Glenna Milberg of Local 10 — By morning in West Kendall, there were fist bumps for Steve Bovo. In the afternoon in the Gables, chants for Daniella Levine Cava. The two candidates for Miami-Dade County Mayor have just six days left to whip every possible vote for the nonpartisan position. So, Levine Cava (a progressive Democrat) and Bovo (a conservative Republican) have been working what would be their bases and reaching for the other side. It’s a county where, of the votes already in, 26% have been from people who have no party affiliation. About 42% of the votes already cast in Miami-Dade are from registered Democrats; 31% from Republicans.
Daniela Levine Cava and Steve Bovo are trying to squeeze every nonpartisan vote in the homestretch.
“Poll shows Pat Kemp poised to keep Commission position” via Janelle Irwin Taylor of Florida Politics — A new poll shows Kemp poised for victory next week over fellow incumbent Sandra Murman. A St. Pete Polls survey out Wednesday shows Democrat Kemp leading Republican Murman 46% to 41% with 14% either undecided or unwilling to indicate their preference. The two are vying for the District 6 seat, which Kemp currently holds. Murman currently represents District 1 but is leaving that seat due to term limits. Kemp’s five-point lead is well outside the poll’s 3.5% margin of error. Democrats have a significant advantage in voter registration, with 362,119 of the county’s 920,860 eligible voters, 39%, registered as Democrats.
“Poll shows James Satcher coasting into Manatee Commission seat” via Jacob Ogles of Florida Politics — Satcher heads into next Tuesday the heavy favorite in a Manatee County Commission contest. A St. Pete Polls survey commissioned by Florida Politics shows if the District 1 election were held today, about 58% of voters would pick Satcher. About 35% instead pick Democrat Dominique Shauntel Brown, while about 8% remain undecided. Pollsters included responses from 344 likely voters, all surveyed on Oct. 16. That gives the poll a 5.3% margin of error. Satcher’s edge falls well beyond that; in fact, he’s far enough beyond 50% that even accounting for a polling error, he still can’t be touched. That’s going to disappoint Democrats, who saw an opportunity to compete in the seat.
Corona Florida
“Florida adds 4,115 coronavirus cases and 66 deaths Wednesday” via Romy Ellenbogen of the Tampa Bay Times — Florida’s weekly average number of coronavirus cases increased Wednesday again, as the state logged 4,115 additional infections over a 24-hour period. According to the Florida Department of Health, Wednesday’s caseload brought the weekly average to about 3,895 coronavirus cases announced per day. Since March, there have been 790,426 total recorded infections. The state also announced 66 deaths Wednesday. Over the last seven months, 16,775 people across Florida have died from the virus. The weekly death average decreased to about 52 people announced dead per day.
“COVID-19 is claiming more lives than official data indicates” via Mario Ariza of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — Patrick Hidalgo died on the second day of March, in his apartment, at 41 years old, after complaining to his family of waking up in the middle of the night and gasping for breath. The Miami-Dade County medical examiner attributed the death of this former Obama staffer to heart disease. His family says it was COVID-19. Hidalgo isn’t counted as a virus death in Florida, but he illustrates that the pandemic has claimed far more people than the official death count indicates. Today, official coronavirus deaths stand at 16,505 in Florida. Yet the true number of dead from the pandemic could be up to 25% higher.
“Florida changes COVID-19 data on the percent of tests coming back positive” via Ben Conarck of the Miami Herald — Before the pandemic, so-called “test positivity” was a little-known infectious disease statistic. But over the past few months, scores of concerned people have had their eyes on the data point, which measures the rate at which Florida’s COVID-19 tests come back positive and can help spot upticks in virus transmission. There are numerous ways to calculate the metric, and Florida has used a relatively rare method of filtering out residents who have already tested positive before. That, in effect, resulted in a lower rate and created a discrepancy in total testing numbers compared with other popular pandemic data trackers.
“Trio of doctors condemn Trump, Ron DeSantis COVID-19 efforts” via Scott Powers of Florida Politics — A trio of Florida physicians speaking for the Committee to Protect Medicare accused Trump and DeSantis of pursuing a herd immunity strategy and denounced it Wednesday as irresponsible, frustrating, and heartbreaking. “It’s beyond frustrating … to let our state be taken over by a preventable virus,” Dr. Bernard Ashby, a Miami cardiologist and Florida state lead for the Committee to Protect Medicare, told reporters during a Zoom press briefing. Though Trump and DeSantis both have said they are not pursuing herd immunity, some of Trump’s advisers have suggested it as a route.
Dr. Bernard Ashby of Miami is blasting Donald Trump and Ron DeSantis for their lack of coronavirus plans.
“State outlines plan to provide COVID-19 vaccine” via Christine Sexton of The News Service of Florida — State officials outlined a three-phase vaccination rollout under a draft plan Florida was required to submit to the federal government this month. When the supply of COVID-19 vaccinations becomes more plentiful, the state will enter the second phase of the plan, including county health departments opening mass vaccination clinics. Also, the Florida Department of Health and the state Division of Emergency Management “might open such clinics to ensure there is equitable distribution of the vaccine, in the same way COVID-19 testing was made available,” the report said. In the second phase, hospitals willing to partner with the state would provide vaccinations to inpatients and outpatients who seek care in emergency rooms, urgent care centers, and outpatient clinics.
Corona local
“Hundreds of students at three Miami-Dade public schools quarantined due to COVID” via David Goodhue and Colleen Wright of the Miami Herald — Hundreds of Miami-Dade high school students at Miami Senior High School and Barbara Goleman Senior High in Miami Lakes, as well as dozens of teachers at each of those schools, have been quarantined because of increased cases of COVID-19, according to the teachers union. Additionally, a teacher at Palmetto Middle School in Pinecrest told the Miami Herald that more than 200 students and 24 teachers there are quarantined for two weeks. Miami-Dade school district officials said they could not confirm the exact number of students and employees who’ve been told to quarantine because of ongoing investigations and contact tracing.
“Four Broward football games canceled due to COVID-19” via Adam Lichtenstein of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — Four Broward County football games have been canceled due to COVID-19. Cypress Bay’s season opener against Everglades and their second game against Western, as well as South Plantation vs. Nova, have been canceled, according to Broward County Public Schools spokeswoman Cathy Brennan. Boca Raton Christian vs. Pompano Beach was also canceled after a Blazers player tested positive, according to Boca Raton Christian athletic director John White. According to athletic director Jason Hively, a Nova coach tested positive for the virus, forcing that cancellation. Broward County and Palm Beach County public schools are beginning their football seasons this week after a two-month delay due to the coronavirus pandemic.
“Pinellas-Pasco public defender: Coronavirus too big a risk for trials to resume” via Kathryn Varn of the Tampa Bay Times — Hours after jury selection began Tuesday for the first criminal trial held in Pinellas County since the coronavirus appeared in Florida, Pinellas-Pasco Public Defender Bob Dillinger sounded the alarm. Conditions inside and outside the Pinellas Criminal Justice Center were too risky to hold a jury trial, he argued in an emergency petition submitted Tuesday to an appeals court. Confirmed cases of COVID-19 were rising in Pinellas. The assistant state attorney prosecuting Tuesday’s case had contacted a colleague who tested positive days after they saw each other. And the defendant was brought into the courtroom from the Pinellas County jail, where dozens of inmates have tested positive. The 2nd District Court of Appeal denied the petition Wednesday.
Pinellas-Pasco Public Defender Bob Dillinger says coronavirus makes it impossible to resume trials.
“Okaloosa health director warns county is ripe for COVID-19 outbreak” via Tom McLaughlin of the Northwest Florida Daily News — COVID-19 cases, positivity rates, and coronavirus-related hospitalizations all have been increasing for the past two weeks. In the direst message she’s delivered to county officials in months, Okaloosa Department of Health Director Dr. Karen Chapman said she no longer is urging, but prescribing “that all residents practice personal protective measures to protect yourself and others.” As of Tuesday, 6,244 COVID-19 cases have been reported in the county, and through Oct. 25, the increase in new cases for the previous week had been 369, a jump of 72 cases from the week before.
Corona nation
“Lilly announces agreement with U.S. government to supply 300,000 vials of investigational neutralizing antibody in an effort to fight COVID-19” via Eli Lilly & Co — Lilly announced today an initial agreement with the U.S. government to supply 300,000 vials of bamlanivimab 700 mg, an investigational neutralizing antibody, for $375 million. The U.S. government will accept the vials of bamlanivimab if the FDA grants it an Emergency Use Authorization. Lilly submitted a request for a EUA for bamlanivimab to treat mild to moderate COVID-19 in high-risk patients to the FDA in early October. The initial agreement is for delivery over the two months following a EUA. Also, it provides the option for the U.S. government to purchase up to an additional 650,000 vials through June 30, 2021.
Eli Lilly is seeking emergency use authorization for antibody treatment.
“Mask mandates help control the rise in coronavirus hospitalizations” via Sam Baker of Axios — Coronavirus hospitalizations are rising much more dramatically in places that don’t require people to wear a face mask, according to a new Vanderbilt University analysis. The findings reinforce what experts have been saying for months: Masks and mask mandates work. They will not vanquish the coronavirus on their own, but they help. A lot. Coronavirus hospitalizations are up across the board, both nationwide and in Tennessee. But they’re rising far more modestly in places that require masks. The Vanderbilt analysis compares Tennessee hospitals based on how many of their patients come from counties with mask requirements. In hospitals where at least 75% of patients are subject to a local mask requirement, COVID hospitalizations are at about the same level now as they were on July 1.
“Some Americans refuse to wear masks even as their hometowns become COVID-19 hot spots” via Joel Achenbach and Lori Rozsa of The Washington Post — Resistance to mask-wearing and other efforts to control the spread of the coronavirus has hardened in the final days before the presidential election, demonstrating how the pandemic has been politicized and posing a daunting challenge to the nation’s medical experts. The refusal to go along with expert health guidance has persisted even in parts of the country that see soaring caseloads and hospitalizations. This week, that was driven home when the coordinator of the White House Coronavirus Task Force, Deborah Birx, toured North Dakota, which has had more coronavirus infections per capita than any other state and over the past month has experienced a stunning surge in hospitalizations and deaths.
Many who refuse to wear masks live in areas with huge spikes in COVID-19 cases. Image via AP.
“The hidden COVID-19 health crisis: Elderly people are dying from isolation” via Suzy Khimm of NBC News — When the pandemic hit, long-term care facilities across the country shut their doors to visitors and largely kept residents to their rooms, suspending most group activities and communal meals to protect residents from COVID-19. The effort to shield elderly, frail and disabled residents from the coronavirus has created another wrenching health crisis: The confinement meant to protect the most vulnerable is also threatening their lives. While there is no comprehensive tally of older adults dying from causes linked to social isolation and confinement, the evidence is mounting that restrictions related to COVID-19 are taking a toll on their health.
Corona economics
“U.S. states face biggest cash crisis since the Great Depression” via Heather Gillers and Gunjan Banerji of The Wall Street Journal — Nationwide, the U.S. state budget shortfall from 2020 through 2022 could amount to about $434 billion, according to data from Moody’s Analytics, the economic analysis arm of Moody’s Corp. The estimates assume no additional fiscal stimulus from Washington, further coronavirus-fueled restrictions on business and travel, and extra costs for Medicaid amid high unemployment. According to the National Association of State Budget Officers, that’s greater than the 2019 K-12 education budget for every state combined, or more than twice the amount spent that year on state roads and other transportation infrastructure. Even after rainy day funds are used, Moody’s projects 46 states coming up short, with Nevada, Louisiana and Florida having the greatest gaps as a percentage of their 2019 budgets.
The U.S. is facing economic issues that rival the Great Depression. Image via AP.
“Jacksonville readies $5.3 million relief for ‘sleeping giant’ of eviction and foreclosure” via David Bauerlein of The Florida Times-Union — Duval County residents and small-business owners facing the threat of eviction or foreclosure because of lost income and paychecks during the COVID-19 pandemic will be able to apply for help from a $5.3 million program being launched by the city of Jacksonville and the Jacksonville Bar Association. The money will help confront the building financial pressure on people who have lost income during the pandemic and fell behind on paying rent, which United Way of Northeast Florida administrator Jeff Winkler has called a “one of the sleeping giants of 2021 we’re going to have to face.”
More corona
“Study suggests flu shots help people with COVID-19” via News Service of Florida — People who received flu vaccinations in the year before testing positive for the novel coronavirus were nearly 2.5 times less likely to be hospitalized for COVID-19 and more than three times less likely to be admitted to a hospital intensive care unit, according to a UF study published Wednesday in the Journal of the American Board of Family Medicine. The findings are based on a review of information from electronic health records of 2,000 patients at UF Health who tested positive for COVID-19 between March and August. More investigation is needed to confirm the findings, but if confirmed, they would boost flu vaccination efforts, said Arch G. Mainous III, the study’s senior author.
Flu vaccinations could help COVID-19 patients. Image via AP.
“Furniture, bikes and cooking supplies: What people are buying during the pandemic” via Helen Carefoot of The Washington Post — The early days of the novel coronavirus outbreak saw people stocking up on groceries, cleaning supplies and bulk items. And although spending among U.S. consumers dipped in April, it is slowly recovering, according to the U.S. Census Bureau’s Consumer Expenditure Survey. Many people are looking for items that can make their time at home more comfortable or, at the very least, palatable. “In uncertain times, there’s some comfort people can find in the physicality or realness of items they buy, because everything else can feel uncertain and undetermined,” said Elias Aboujaoude, clinical professor of psychiatry and director of the Impulse Control Disorders Clinic at Stanford University’s medical school in California.
Statewide
“State may order students back to classrooms in January” via Lisa J. Huriash of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — The state of Florida may force all students to return to school buildings in January, even as COVID-19 cases are increasing. About 37% percent of Florida students are attending school virtually this year, many because they fear they won’t be safe at school. The state is deciding whether they will continue to have that option after the current semester. Taryn Fenske, the spokeswoman for the Florida Department of Education, said a decision would be made within a few weeks about whether parents will retain the ability to keep their children at home after January, based on enrollment data from individual school districts.
D.C. matters
“‘Anonymous’ senior Trump official revealed as ex-DHS chief of staff Miles Taylor” via Orion Rummler of Axios — Taylor publicly claimed to be the author of the anonymous New York Times Op-Ed that described a “resistance” within the Trump administration working to thwart Trump’s agenda. Taylor already publicly endorsed Biden in a video funded by Republican Voters Against Trump in August, accusing the president of wanting to “exploit the Department of Homeland Security for his own political purposes and to fuel his own agenda.” The highly anticipated reveal of who wrote the 2018 op-ed comes just six days before Election Day.’
Former Department of Homeland Security chief of staff Miles Taylor announced he is behind the scathing anti-Donald Trump op-ed and book published under the pen name ‘Anonymous.’ Image via NBC News.
“FBI agents back Christopher Wray in letters to Trump, Biden and warn that firing him could ‘damage’ bureau” via Kevin Johnson and David Jackson of USA Today — FBI agents voiced their support for Wray, warning Trump and Biden that his untimely removal could “undermine stability” within the federal government’s premier law enforcement agency. The action by the FBI Agents Association, representing 14,000 active and retired agents, comes as Trump is weighing several key staff changes after the election, including the dismissal of Wray, who has served just more than three years of a 10-year term following the abrupt removal of James Comey in 2017.
Spotted — Brian Ballard on the list of New York Magazine’s “The Winners of Trump’s Washington” as one of 51 insiders who succeeded under the presidency. “Ballard’s mystique flows from the fact that his clients really do get results; one of them, GEO Group, scored a number of big contracts after signing with Ballard,” the magazine writes. “He’s a top Trump fundraiser, and Ballard’s clients are patrons of Trump properties.”
Local notes
“Western Panhandle remains under tropical storm warning as Hurricane Zeta crashes Louisiana” via Jason Delgado of Florida Politics — Hurricane Zeta made landfall over Louisiana on Wednesday, making it the latest storm to strike the region in what has been an active Atlantic Hurricane Season. Tropical-storm-like conditions are expected to impact Florida’s western Panhandle region through early Thursday. Tropical storm warnings are in effect for Escambia, Santa Rosa and Okaloosa counties. The National Hurricane Center also cautioned Gulf Coast residents of possible tornadoes and storm surge. Notably, early voting locations will be closed in several Panhandle counties as Zeta grazes the region.
After passing through Mexico, Hurricane Zeta makes landfall in Louisiana. Image via AP.
“Georgia, Florida will each get $600,000 from city for Nov. 7 game at TIAA Bank Field” via David Bauerlein of The Florida Times-Union — The University of Georgia and the University of Florida will each get $600,000 from the city of Jacksonville for playing their annual rivalry game at TIAA Bank field during this virus-disrupted football season. The total of $1.2 million to the teams won approval Tuesday from Jacksonville City Council members who said the Georgia-Florida game is a tradition the city must safeguard. “This is a tough year for everybody, but I think what we’re doing is establishing a lot of goodwill between the city of Jacksonville, the University of Florida, and the University of Georgia in trying to make things as whole as we can under the circumstances,” City Council member Ron Salem said.
“Walt Disney World layoffs slash entertainment, leaving big shows in limbo” via Matthew J. Palm of the Orlando Sentinel — Walt Disney World laid off entertainers from its highest-profile shows Tuesday night in what some described as a “bloodbath” as the scale of the layoffs rocked the Central Florida arts community. The deluge of pink slips showed the theme park has no foreseeable plans to remount marquee attractions such as “Festival of the Lion King” or “Finding Nemo: The Musical,” both of which have been dark since COVID-19 shut the parks this spring. Even the cast of the venerable “Hoop-Dee-Doo Musical Revue” dinner show, which has run since 1974, wasn’t immune from the latest round of Disney dismissals. The entertainment cuts — which number in the hundreds — are part of Disney’s 28,000 companywide layoffs in late September.
Top opinion
“‘I’m absolutely expecting him to do something weird’: How Trump could end his presidency” via Garrett M. Graff of POLITICO — What might Trump do with the final 77 days of his presidency if he loses? Conversations with presidential legal experts, Constitutional scholars and national security officials identified six areas where Trump could do real damage to the country, his successor or presidential traditions — a list informed both by his past executive actions as well as the considerations he’d face as he considered a life outside the White House for him and his family. From a last-minute resignation to guarantee himself legal immunity to destroying historic records to launching a war, there’s reason to wonder if a Trump transition might actually be the start of the wildest chapter of an already controversial presidency.
Opinions
“Facebook and Twitter deserve scrutiny, not a Senate smackdown” via Joe Nocera of Bloomberg — Until Wednesday’s Senate Commerce Committee’s hearing on Section 230 of the 1996 Communications Decency Act — which shields social media companies from legal liability for the content posted on their platforms — one could be forgiven for believing that reforming or eliminating it was worthy of serious debate. But then came Wednesday’s hearing, which featured Facebook’s, Twitter’s and Google’s CEOs as witnesses. While the legal immunity bestowed upon Big Tech by Section 230 is certainly worth grappling with, that’s not what took place at the hearing. Not even close. It is completely reasonable to reexamine Section 230, which became law before these platforms even existed. It is a policy area that deserves real congressional hearings, from which might emerge fresh ideas.
“They’re shady cowards who think you’re stupid. Dark money groups pour millions into Florida races.” via Scott Maxwell of the Orlando Sentinel — There’s a lot to loathe about politics. But I particularly loathe the scheming cowards — the people who spend gobs of money trying to tell you how to vote but are too yellow-bellied to put their own names behind it. For the most part, these are people and companies who know that, if they used their own names, they’d hurt their cause. We’re seeing these dark-money cowards scheming on a particularly intense level in the heated SD 9 race. Why? This time the group — with GOP connections — is trying to get independents to support a little-known third-party candidate. Again, why? It comes back to the same principle as before: Republicans seem to know a lot of voters simply don’t like Brodeur.
Today’s Sunrise
Despite all the official assurances about cybersecurity during the election, a Florida Man hacked the Governor.
Also, on today’s Sunrise:
— A new study from the Centers for Disease Control says the death toll from COVID-19 could be 25% higher than the official count. Our current death toll is 16,775, but this report says the real number could be as high as 21,000.
— The Florida Department of Health reports 66 more fatalities and 4,115 new cases of coronavirus Wednesday … bringing the statewide total to more than 790,000 infections.
— Just how important is Florida in the 2020 election? Both presidential candidates are campaigning here today. Biden is holding events in Broward County and Tampa. Trump will also be in Tampa for a Make America Great Again rally.
— As early voting continues in the Sunshine State, the folks at Common Cause say they’re getting about 1,000 calls a day from Florida voters looking for help casting their ballots. Representatives from Common Cause talk about voting in Florida.
—There’s lots of talk about how enthused voters are this year, but the head of BlackPAC says there’s something more. She says Black voters in Florida are angry with Trump and determined to make a change.
— Amendment 3 will remain on the ballot. The Florida Supreme Court has rejected a last-minute challenge to the amendment that would allow everyone to vote in the primaries regardless of party registration.
— And finally, a Florida woman made more than $100 returning thousands of items to Amazon over a five-year period. She thought she found a loophole in the return process; detectives call it grand theft.
“Rare, 4-foot-wide jellyfish spotted on Florida beach” via Ben Hooper of UPI — Experts said a massive 4-foot-wide jellyfish spotted by a Florida man taking a run on a beach is known as a “pink meanie.” Still, the discovery is rarer than it is dangerous. Anatoli Smirnov of Naples said he was jogging along Vanderbilt Beach in Collier County snapped a photo when he spotted what appeared to be a gigantic, 4-foot-wide jellyfish on the shoreline. Smirnov joked to WFLA-TV that he “almost got eaten by giant jellyfish” while out for his run. He said he goes running on the beach frequently but had never before seen such a large jellyfish. James Douglass, a marine biologist at Florida Gulf Coast University, said the photo depicts a jellyfish known as a “pink meanie,” but it isn’t more dangerous than its much-smaller cousins.
A huge ‘pink meanie’ jellyfish washes up in Florida. Image via UPI.
“Missing dog turns up in Florida 6 years after it was stolen from Texas family” via Christian De La Rosa of WPLG Local 10 — A San Antonio family was certain they would never see their beloved pet again, after it was stolen from their yard six years ago. The dreams of that family are coming true as the missing canine was found in South Florida. For six years, a picture of King the Chihuahua circulated social media. “I posted everywhere I could, all the animal shelters in San Antonio and surrounding areas,” said Debi Vazquez. Fast forward several years of heartbreak to Sunday, and a FaceTime call from the Humane Society of Broward County where King was surrendered. The family drove 19 hours from San Antonio to Fort Lauderdale for a reunion.
Happy birthday
Best wishes to state Reps. Melony Bell and George Moraitis, Kristen Bridges of GrayRobinson, Rivers Buford III, Anthony Pardal, and Caroline Rowland.
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Good morning. More than 75 million Americans have already voted in this year’s election—that’s already over half of the total votes counted in 2016’s election.
If you’re reading this while waiting in line to vote, here are some ideas to help pass the time (after you’ve read this newsletter, of course):
Start a game of 20 Questions among your fellow democracy-lovers
Rack up Brew referrals
When all else fails…squats
MARKETS
NASDAQ
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DJIA
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GOLD
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OIL
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*As of market close
Markets: Three days before Halloween, they’re officially spooked. U.S. stocks followed their European pals down the gutter yesterday, and the S&P had its worst one-day drop since June.
Economy: Big day today. The Commerce Department will release data on third-quarter GDP (our broadest measure of economic activity). The numbers will probably show the strongest quarterly growth on record in the U.S. However, Q3 also followed the biggest GDP drop on record, so the numbers won’t reflect a rip-roaring economy.
Facing alarming numbers of Covid-19 infections, hospitalizations, and deaths, Germany and France tightened restrictions on businesses and social life yesterday with the most dramatic measures they have taken since the spring.
The WHO said the European region accounted for almost half of the new Covid-19 cases reported last week.
The epicenter of Europe’s second wave is the epicenter of its wine culture: France. The country’s seven-day average of new daily cases jumped over 50% in the past week, and its hospitals are at risk of being overwhelmed.
There was already a curfew from 9pm to 6am in France’s larger cities.
Then yesterday, President Emmanuel Macron announced a nationwide lockdown nearly as strict as those imposed in March; people are allowed to leave their homes only for school, essential goods, and work—if their employer says it’s impossible to do the job from home.
France’s neighbor Germany also enacted a partial, month-long lockdown. German restaurants, bars, gyms, concert halls, and theaters will close starting Nov. 2.
The government will spend up to 10 billion euros (about $11.8 billion) to cover some lost sales for affected businesses.
Zoom out: Some economists say governments should pursue measured lockdown orders to prevent kneecapping the global economy like we saw in the spring. But others say a brief, strict lockdown is the best approach to getting infections under control so businesses can open back up sooner.
The moves made the Continent’s stock markets swoon
The Stoxx 600, a pan-European index, suffered its worst one-day drop since September ahead of Macron’s announcement. France’s CAC and Germany’s DAX dipped 3.7% and more than 4.4%, respectively.
Bottom line: The U.S. and Europe have resoundingly failed to hold onto the progress made over the summer against the virus. Many East Asian countries resoundingly haven’t; South Korean President Moon Jae-in said on Tuesday his country has contained the coronavirus.
Big Tech’s version of the Avengers assembled yesterday, when Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey, Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg, and Alphabet CEO Sundar Pichai faced off against a Senate panel over the widespread protections Section 230 offers their tech empires.
Quick refresher: Section 230 is a 26-word provision tucked away in a 1996 law that says internet companies cannot be held liable for the content their users post. It’s been attacked by both conservatives and liberals, and even the CEOs themselves for its imprecise language and sweeping consequences.
Here are the best soundbites from the feisty affair:
“Section 230 is the Internet’s most important law for free speech and safety.” Jack Dorsey claimed that weakening the protections offered by the law would change the fabric of the digital world.
“Congress should update the law to make sure it’s working as intended.” Zuckerberg said he supports change because more clarity around content moderation benefits everybody, including the platforms.
“Mr. Dorsey, who the hell elected you and put you in charge of what the media are allowed to report…?” Republican Senator Ted Cruz broke out the H-E-double-hockey-sticks, reprimanding Twitter for disabling the sharing of a NY Post article about Hunter Biden.
“The issue is not that these companies…are taking too many posts down. The issue is that they are leaving too many dangerous posts up.” Democratic Senator Ed Markey said tech companies could go further in limiting the spread of hate speech and misinformation.
This article is part of our weeklong series exploring state-level issues in the upcoming election.
In 2018, President Trump visited Wisconsin to break ground on what he called “the eighth wonder of the world,” a high-tech manufacturing facility for TV screens that would bring 13,000 jobs and $10 billion in investment to the swing state.
Narrator: It didn’t go as planned
Behind the project is Taiwan’s Foxconn Technology Group, famous for its role as Apple’s main manufacturing partner. But more than two years later, the grand vision has been downgraded—the facility is now set to produce less-advanced screens—and Wisconsin officials aren’t sure what they’re getting.
Foxconn was set to receive as much as $4 billion in incentives if it met certain targets. But the company has fallen short in hiring and investments. In 2019, it brought on less than a quarter of the planned 2,000+ employees.
For the second year running, Foxconn was denied incentives under the agreement. It’s renegotiating the terms with Wisconsin officials as construction continues.
Big picture: Trump was personally involved in the deal from the beginning, and for his critics, this factory is a high-profile example of campaign promises to manufacturing workers, especially in the Rust Belt, that haven’t been fulfilled.
Ah, the holidays. When you once again realize you have much less time than previously thought to shop for all of your friends and family.
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If you said London’s Heathrow, you’d have been correct…until yesterday. Heathrow said it had been overtaken by Charles de Gaulle in Paris as the busiest airport in Europe, with Amsterdam Schiphol and Frankfurt “close behind.”
What happened? We could say “the coronavirus,” but Paris, Amsterdam, and Frankfurt had to deal with that, too. Specifically, Heathrow’s bosses blamed the British government for being too slow to implement a Covid-19 testing program at the airport, while its rivals had installed testing systems.
Passenger testing is important because it allows travelers to avoid long quarantines following a trip. You can imagine more people might travel through Heathrow if they knew they could avoid quarantine.
Zoom out: No matter what airport you fly out of, you won’t have to wrestle anyone for the charging outlet. Heathrow’s passenger numbers fell 69% in the first nine months of the year; Charles De Gaulle traffic fell 67%.
Looking ahead…to recapture the European throne, Heathrow’s CEO said Britain needs to install pre-departure Covid tests and partner with the U.S. to open a “pilot airbridge to America.”
Ryan Smith, the billionaire founder of Qualtrics, acquired a majority stake in another Utah-based business yesterday for a reported $1.6 billion: the Utah Jazz.
Ryan Smith: boring name, interesting dude
While most kids get their dad’s eye color or temperament, Smith used a survey tool his father developed for academics to start Qualtrics in Provo, UT, in 2002. He took the idea and turned it into a software behemoth that over 11,000 organizations in 100 countries now use to measure customer experience.
In 2018, just before Smith was set to take Qualtrics public at a $5 billion valuation, European software giant SAP offered $8 billion to buy the company, which Smith accepted.
The Jazz are jazzed to have him: For the past three years, Smith has collaborated with the team on a first-of-its-kind philanthropic jersey patch that’s raised $25 million. And he loves Utah even more than your friend who just came back from Zion—Qualtrics is currently doubling the size of its Provo HQ.
Bottom line: Smith joins an NBA owners club with more tech billionaires than a U.S. Senate hearing: Mark Cuban, ex-Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer, Alibaba cofounder Joseph Tsai, and former AOL exec Ted Leonsis all own teams.
What are you flippin’ waiting for? We’re gonna be sad to not say flippin’ so much, but it’s the final month to invest in Flippy, the world’s first autonomous robotic kitchen assistant. It’s revolutionizing QSR, and can do the same for your portfolio. Last month to invest—go.*
Cheap thrills: A few weeks ago, we asked for your best purchases for $10 or less. Then, we sifted through hundreds of answers and selected the top responses. Check them out.
So you’ve voted…here’s a Pocket full of articles that explain how those votes will be counted and what happens next.
Horrors in this house: How does one celebrate Halloween during a pandemic? We’d love to know. Share your Halloween plans here.
Despite rising concerns about the spread of fake news, almost one in five U.S. adults mostly use social media to stay current.
But tech execs like Zuck and Dorsey are still new to the whole “controlling the global dissemination of news” thing. So, just like you wouldn’t trust someone who recently got their learner’s permit to drive your Jeep, you shouldn’t trust social media to filter your perfect cup of fresh-brewed, fact-checked news.
As we barrel roll toward the election, the news you read on social media won’t just affect your vote, but liking or sharing it could send posts spiraling into the East Australian Current that is going viral. And if the post is anything less than factual, that would be like, totally not cool, dude.
To help, the Brew’s social media expert Jamie Wilde created a step-by-step guide that walks you through how to suss out fact from fiction when looking at a social media post.
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JUDICIAL WATCH
FOX NEWS
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Thursday, October 29, 2020
Good morning and welcome to Fox News First. Here’s what you need to know as you start your day … Joe Biden’s brother Jim refuses to answer questions about family’s business dealings
Jim Biden, brother of Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden, refused to answer questions Wednesday when approached by Fox News outside a house in Maryland about claims the former vice president had knowledge about the family’s overseas business ventures.
Approached at a residence on the Eastern Shore, Jim Biden repeatedly rebuffed questions in his driveway as Fox News asked questions from a distance in the street.
“I don’t want to comment about anything,” Jim Biden said.
The questions come one day after Tony Bobulinski, a former business associate of Hunter Biden, told Fox News’ “Tucker Carlson Tonight” in an exclusive interview, the former vice president’s denials of knowledge or involvement in his son’s foreign dealings were “a blatant lie.”
Asked why he and Hunter Biden allegedly wanted to meet with Bobulinski, Jim Biden replied: “What are you talking about?”
He added: “Would you please stop bothering me?”
Bobulinski said he raised concerns in 2017 to Jim Biden about Joe Biden’s alleged ties to a possible joint venture with a Chinese energy firm.
“I remember saying, ‘How are you guys getting away with this?’ ‘Aren’t you concerned?’” he told Carlson.
He claims Jim Biden chuckled. “‘Plausible Deniability.’ He said it directly to me in a cabana at the Peninsula Hotel,” Bobulinski said.
Asked about the “plausible deniability” claim on Wednesday, Jim Biden did not answer and walked inside the home. CLICK HERE FOR MORE ON OUR TOP STORY.
In other developments:
– ‘Damning’ Hunter Biden documents mysteriously vanish in transit to Los Angeles, Tucker says
– Election 2020 polling average shows Biden leading Trump nationally with just days left
– Joe Biden stays silent on Bobulinski claims about family’s business ventures
– Biden and Trump to tangle in Tampa on Thursday
– Reporters fail to ask Joe Biden about Tony Bobulinski’s explosive claims in rare round of questions
– CNN contributors say Tony Bobulinski interview is newsworthy as network continues to ignore
Philadelphia DA threatens Trump over president’s call for poll watchers
Philadelphia’s district attorney on Wednesday warned President Trump against sending “uncertified” poll watchers to the city, telling the president in a statement, “I’ve got something for you” if any attempts are made to interfere with Election Day activities.
In a fiery statement posted on his website, District Attorney Larry Krasner likened Trump to a “lawless, power-hungry despot,” and vowed that Philadelphians “will not be cowed.”
The statement followed Trump’s response to a night of looting in Philadelphia over the police shooting of a Black man, who police claimed was charging at them with a knife. Trump called the shooting a “terrible event,” then directed attention toward his Democratic rival, Joe Biden, whom Trump accused of supporting the looters and rioters.
Krasner said that Trump’s administration supposedly poses “the greatest danger to public health and safety in modern history.” As proof, he pointed to the more than 227,000 Americans who have died from COVID-19.
His statement comes less than a week before the November election, for which Pennsylvania has become a hotly contested presidential battleground state. CLICK HERE FOR MORE.
In other developments:
– Trump: Philadelphia police shooting a ‘terrible event,’ but rioting comes from group Joe Biden ‘supports’
– Biden says ‘no excuse’ for looting in Philadelphia after Black man killed by police
– Philadelphia imposes curfew in anticipation of third night of violence after police killing
– Looters in Philadelphia ransack stores, attack reporter during second night of chaos
Bill Maher says Ruth Bader Ginsburg ‘should’ve quit’ under Obama: She didn’t ‘take the hint’
“Real Time” host Bill Maher had some harsh words for the late Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, whose death in September paved the way for the confirmation of Justice Amy Coney Barrett.
During a Monday night appearance on “Jimmy Kimmel Live,” Maher was asked about the moment when news of Ginsburg’s death broke while he was taping his show and Jimmy Kimmel expressed his amazement at how his panel was “exactly right” at predicting how events that were going to play out.
“Well, it’s not like her death was a shock,” Maher said.
“Well, it was — it was, though,” Kimmel responded.
Really? She was 100 and had cancer like a million times,” Maher shot back. “I mean, she was a great justice but she should’ve quit. … She should’ve quit.”
“You think so?” Kimmel asked.
“Of course!” Maher exclaimed. “Because then we wouldn’t have nutso!” — referring to Barrett. CLICK HERE FOR MORE.
In other developments:
– Maher warns Amy Coney Barrett like ‘Terminator’ sent to overturn Roe v. Wade
– Girl Scouts delete social media post congratulating Amy Coney Barrett on Supreme Court appointment
TODAY’S MUST-READS:
– Trump deserves 2nd term even though he’s a ‘wretched human being,’ newspaper says
– F-16s intercept plane flying too close to Trump rally in Arizona
– Supreme Court allows North Carolina to extend deadline for receiving absentee ballots to 9 days after election
– Adonis Hoffman: Big Tech Senate hearing winners and losers
– Golf legend Jack Nicklaus endorses Trump
– Oregon health official dresses as clown to announce COVID-19 death toll
THE LATEST FROM FOX BUSINESS:
– Samsung reports record sales amid questions about future
– Ford sees full-year pretax profit, posts stronger than expected quarterly earnings
– Health insurance for millennials, Gen Z, most likely to be affected by pandemic
– Marvell Technology nears deal to buy Inphi
– Bill de Blasio is trying to kill Mets sale to Steve Cohen
#The Flashback: CLICK HERE to find out what happened on “This Day in History.”
SOME PARTING WORDS
Tucker Carlson discussed how a collection of “confidential documents — from a source – related to the Biden family we believe to be authentic, real and damning” disappeared after being shipped to Los Angeles on Monday from New York City. On Tuesday, he continued, a note from the shipping company arrived saying the envelope had been opened and the documents disappeared.
“The shipping company took the matter very seriously and began a search,” he said, adding they traced the envelope from the dropoff all the way until 3:44 a.m. Tuesday morning when an employee at another facility noticed “our package was open and empty.” A search ensued, he said, going far and beyond, “but they found nothing. Those documents have vanished.”
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Fox News First was compiled by Fox News’ Jack Durschlag. Thank you for making us your first choice in the morning! We’ll see you in your inbox first thing Friday.
“The CEOs of Twitter, Facebook and Google rebuffed accusations of anti-conservative bias at a Senate hearing Wednesday and promised to aggressively defend their platforms from being used to sow chaos in next week’s election… the Trump administration has asked Congress to strip some of the protections that have generally shielded the tech companies from legal responsibility for what people post on their platforms. The proposals would make changes to a provision of a 1996 law that has been the foundation for unfettered speech on the internet. Critics in both parties say that immunity under Section 230 of the law enables the social media companies to abdicate their responsibility to impartially moderate content.” AP News
The right accuses big tech of anti-conservative bias.
“Mr. Dorsey said that Twitter’s Beijing-like blackout of the New York Post story was the result of a ‘hacked materials policy,’ but he admitted to Wisconsin Sen. Ron Johnson that he had no evidence of Russian interference or fabrication. He told Texas Sen. Ted Cruz that the policy of blocking links was ‘incorrect, and we changed it within 24 hours.’…
“Yet a Twitter representative emailed a press memo on Tuesday ahead of the hearing that seemed to boast of Twitter’s blackout. It quoted tweets by two officials at the German Marshall Fund—a Washington think-tank that advocates more political suppression on social media—praising the decision to censor the story. Does Twitter’s CEO have control over the policy? Or does the company simply want to blunt the political heat for its suppression, on false pretenses, of newsworthy information about the possible future First Family?” Editorial Board, Wall Street Journal
“Who could have guessed that Jack Dorsey wouldn’t come prepared to answer the most basic questions about why some dubious information gets banned and other dubious information remains free as a bird? It’s only the core critique of Twitter’s attempt to suppress the Hunter Biden laptop story, after all. And it’s *been* the core critique of the platform ever since they began their policy of appending advisories to propaganda pushed by certain world leaders (Trump) but not others (literally everyone else)…
“If Trump tweets nonsense about the fraudulence of mail-in ballots, they’re johnny on the spot. If the Chinese government tweets nonsense about Americans having seeded the coronavirus pandemic in Wuhan, they’ll *maybe* get around to flagging it. Eventually. After they’ve flagged some Trump tweet first and need to find someone else to flag in order to seem evenhanded…
“What’s the difference between a vicious anti-semitic lie about what was done to Europe’s Jews in World War II and a not-yet-discredited story about Joe and Hunter Biden trying to drum up business in China? Answer: Only one of those affects the Democrats’ chances of winning next week’s election, and so that’s the one that needs to be suppressed.” Allahpundit, Hot Air
“DOJ’s proposal revises Section 230(c)(2)(A) to narrow the range of removable content. This means that platforms would no longer have total discretion to remove merely ‘objectionable’ content… [In addition] For the platforms to be understood as acting in ‘good faith,’ DOJ’s definition would require them to abide by their own terms of service, refrain from restricting access to material on pretextual or deceptive grounds, apply their terms of service evenly and provide notice to anyone whose content the platform wishes to remove…
“Reforming Section 230 along the lines that the DOJ has proposed would incentivize platforms to adopt fair terms of service, apply those terms consistently and think long and hard before banning users for lawful speech. Our political discourse, and the health of our democracy, would be better because of it.” Will Chamberlain, Newsweek
Regarding proposals to repeal Section 230 entirely, “Section 230 enshrines free speech as a guiding principle online by protecting websites from being held liable for what its users post. As it stands right now, an individual can tweet something defamatory, and they would be sued, not Twitter. Without it, almost no social media company or even a news site with a comment section would be able to afford the costs of content moderation to let users post. That is, except for Facebook…
“With billions of users worldwide and a market cap approaching $800 billion, Facebook knows that between its acquisitions of Instagram and WhatsApp, it’s the dominant social media platform, significantly more than Twitter. But that will not last forever, and Zuckerberg knows it, so now is the time for Facebook to ask the government to step in with a wildly onerous and expensive regulation to crowd out any potential competitors.” Tiana Lowe, Washington Examiner
From the Left
The left calls for big tech to take further steps to remove disinformation.
“‘Who the hell elected you, Mr. Dorsey?’ Republican Senator Ted Cruz of Texas asked the Twitter boss. Twitter, he claimed, had censored the New York Post’s article about the emails in Hunter Biden’s laptop, while ‘gleefully’ allowing the New York Times story about Trump’s taxes to be posted unimpeded. “Why do you persist in behaving like a Democratic super Pac?’ ‘You almost always censor — block content, fact check, or label content — of conservatives,’ said Mike Lee, Republican from Utah. ‘But I don’t see the suppression of high-profile liberals. How about Obama? Planned Parenthood? Emily’s list?’…
“There are reasonable answers to these questions… Liberals don’t get fact-checked as much as Trump because his tweets are often not just untrue but, when the subject is Covid-19, genuinely harmful. And while Dorsey said it was a mistake for Twitter to have blocked the New York Post story — and the decision was reversed within 24 hours — the real reason, as Zuckerberg explained, was that the FBI had warned the social media companies to be on the lookout for a ‘hack and leak’ operation close to the election.” Joe Nocera, Bloomberg
“On the whole, data shows that conservative content thrives on social media. Conservative pundits like Dan Bongino and Ben Shapiro consistently rank among the most shared news sources on Facebook… And despite all the hoopla about Twitter’s alleged censoring of Trump, the president still uses the platform every day to reach tens of millions more followers than Joe Biden does…
“Republican senators asked why tech companies haven’t fact-checked high-profile Democratic leaders like Biden as much as they have Trump, but they ignored the very obvious answer: that Trump, unlike Biden, has more frequently promoted false and misleading statements on social media. If Biden were to attack mail-in voting or the basic science behind Covid-19, as Trump has, he would likely face the same kind of moderation.” Shirin Ghaffary, Vox
“Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act gives social media companies the power to filter, block, and remove information that is ‘obscene, lewd, lascivious, filthy, excessively violent, harassing, or otherwise objectionable’ without risk of legal liability. Congress knew that federal agencies didn’t have the resources to tackle all online dreck, so it secured a legal shield for online platforms to do the work…
“If the Trump proposal [to limit Section 230] were law, tech companies could risk liability for removing ads targeted at Black users that spread lies. Twitter likely would do nothing in the face of destructive falsehoods like ‘you cannot vote if someone in your household has committed a crime.’…
“The Senate hearing and the Trump proposal are obvious attempts to suppress private speech. The First Amendment stands as a check against government censorship. It doesn’t restrict private entities, which themselves have free speech rights… Governmental threats that stop tech companies from combating disinformation are far more dangerous to our constitutional values than social-media companies engaging in content moderation.” Danielle Keats Citron and Spencer Overton, Slate
“The Federal Trade Commission should publish guidance that clarifies the blurry line between content hosting and content creation… Platforms should include reporting functionality that makes it easier to hold people accountable for their speech on online platforms. For instance, platforms could enable people to report election misinformation directly to an election monitoring organization or to a state attorney general’s office…
“[Finally], platforms should provide better data for studying online expression… [These] reforms will not solve all of the problems of online expression, but they will deter and punish some of the most harmful activity, provide more clarity on liability for users and platforms, and give us more data to inform future product design and policy development.” Matt Perault, Slate
📊 What we’re watching: Record third-quarter GDP numbers are expected later this morning.
Shortly after, you’ll get a Thought Bubble special from Axios experts.
1 big thing: Cases at all-time high ahead of Election Day
In the final week before Election Day, new coronavirus infections have soared to an all-time high — virtually guaranteeing that the pandemic will be the most prominent issue in America as voters choose the next president, Axios health care editor Sam Baker and visual journalist Andrew Witherspoon report.
The big picture: Cases are surging and local hospitals are straining at the very moment that voters are choosing between President Trump, who continues to insist that the pandemic is almost over, and Joe Biden, who has made the crisis a centerpiece of his campaign.
“We’re turning the corner,” Trump said Tuesday night in West Salem, Wis. “We’re rounding — like this racetrack. Look at this, it’s perfect. We’re rounding the curve. We will vanquish the virus.”
Joe Biden said yesterday in Wilmington: “Even if I win, it’s going to take a lot of hard work to end this pandemic. I’m not running on the false promise of being able to end this pandemic by flipping a switch. … We will start on Day 1 doing the right things. We’ll let science drive our decisions.”
The virus gained strength over the past week in 41 states, including nearly every important battleground states:
Wisconsinreported new single-day records for cases, hospitalizations and deaths — all in the same day.
New infections were up 16% in Arizona, 21% in Florida, 22% in Ohio, 23% in Wisconsin, 25% in Michigan and 33% in Pennsylvania.
The bottom line: This will almost certainly get worse before it gets better. The virus is expected to spread more easily as colder weather causes people to move their socializing indoors.
In the campaign’s final few days, Joe Biden is spending tens of millions of dollars on online ads featuring swing-state workers, with a special emphasis on Pennsylvania, Axios’ Alexi McCammond reports.
Why it matters: Biden is betting that COVID is on the ballot, amplifying stories about the realities and hardships of those affected by the pandemic.
The Pennsylvania ads feature frontline workers, small-business owners, teachers, farmers, veterans, seniors, union workers and football players.
Through Friday, Biden will have three ads in rotation on the YouTube homepage masthead as a national component of the closing ad campaign.
Snapshots: A college football player in Arizona talks in one ad about the struggles of missing out on practice during the pandemic.
In Florida, seniors who are concerned about catching the virus and keeping their business afloat talk about how life has changed for them.
A veteranfrom Iowa talks about his experience working directly with Biden in the past.
Philadelphia Mayor Jim Kenney imposed a 9 p.m. citywide curfew, and Police Commissioner Danielle Outlaw pledged to release 911 calls and body-worn camera footage of the police shooting of Walter Wallace Jr., The Inquirer reports.
Above: Protesters tossed what authorities believe was blood. Go deeper.
Below: Cleaning up at a looted Walmart.
5. Biden’s China plan
Illustration: Sarah Grillo/Axios. Photo: Drew Angerer/Getty Images
Joe Biden is planning to confront China across the globe, embracing some of President Trump’s goals but rejecting his means, Axios’ Hans Nichols reports.
Why it matters: Trump sees China mainly through a trade and coronavirus lens. Biden views the relationship as a contest that will determine the international order for generations.
“There’s a technology competition, a military competition, an economic competition, an ideological competition and a diplomatic competition,” said Ely Rattner, a Biden China adviser.
What we’re watching: Biden has called President Xi Jinping a “thug” and his campaign has accused China of “genocide” of Uighurs in Xinjiang, a term that the Trump administration has not deployed.
The N.Y. Times’ Nate Cohn: “There were a lot of polls Wednesday … Was there a single state poll that qualified as good news for the president? Maybe the Ipsos poll showing him down only a point in Arizona? Otherwise, I don’t think so.”
Spotted yesterday at a Trump rally at Phoenix Goodyear Airport in Goodyear (Maricopa County), Ariz.
Joe Biden attends a coronavirus briefing yesterday at The Queen Theater in Wilmington, Del.
👀 The Economist’s endorsement: “Why it has to be Joe Biden”
Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-N.Y.) told Vanity Fair’s Michelle Ruiz how time as a bartender and waitress helped her to realize that the U.S. isn’t “good enough right now” — and why “we have to be better”:
“The main reason why I feel comfortable saying that the ACA has failed is because it failed me and it failed everyone that I worked with in a restaurant,” she says. She would take wads of cash tips to doctor appointments. “You try buying insurance off of Obamacare,” she tells me, a line meant for her out-of-touch colleagues. …
As a bartender, she did buy a plan, paying $200 per month, she says, for the “privilege” of an $8,000 deductible. … The first time she saw a doctor or dentist in years was when she became a congresswoman.
Spotify is getting slammed for allowing Joe Rogan, one of the world’s most popular podcasters, to host far-right conspiracy theorist Alex Jones, Axios’ Sara Fischer writes.
Why it matters: The company, which still distributes mostly music, will encounter more of these jams as it expands its podcast business.
Internal emails leaked to BuzzFeed News show that Spotify’s general counsel has defended the company’s decision to allow Rogan to host Jones.
“We are not going to ban specific individuals from being guests on other people’s shows, as the episode/show complies with our content policies,” a memo said. “Spotify has always been a place for creative expressions.”
When Jones disputed the effectiveness of vaccines, Rogan pushed back and asked his producers to pull up the articles he referenced for more context.
Esquire’s Kate Storey goes inside election night at The Associated Press, which has called America’s elections since 1848:
Stephen Ohlemacher, the agency’s election-decision editor: “In the simplest terms, we declare a winner once we come to the conclusion that the trailing candidate will not catch the leader.”
Ohlemacher willbring a sleeping bag and a change of clothes to the D.C. bureau. He said that this Sunday, he’ll rest:
That is the day when we set time away. I tell my team: “I don’t want you to look at it. I don’t want you to think about it. I want you to take that Sunday and just chill and do whatever it is that makes you happy in this world, and just relax.” We’ll come back on Monday and worry about it then.
President Trump is promising a fast recovery and holding mass rallies, while Joe Biden is calling Trump reckless and sticking to a limited campaign schedule.
By Anne Gearan, Amy B Wang and John Wagner ● Read more »
SAN DIEGO — Top U.S. border officials expect cartels to build more tunnels from Mexico to the United States and increasingly rely on drones for surveillance operations as the 400 miles of new border wall make it harder to smuggle people and drugs into the country.
A series of activist groups plan to swarm the streets of Washington, D.C., on Election Day, in anticipation that President Trump gets results that he does not accept.
Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden’s brother refused to answer questions after he was approached by a reporter outside a house in Maryland about allegations that the former vice president was aware of family members’ business deals overseas.
CNN host Chris Cuomo took issue with former Homeland Security Department official Miles Taylor not only for lying about an anonymous 2018 op-ed he wrote in the New York Times, but doing so on CNN, a cable news network that employs him as a contributor.
President Trump faced off against Kamala Harris in Arizona Wednesday, delivering an appeal to Hispanic voters and his conservative base while confronting headwinds that could make him the first Republican presidential candidate for decades to lose the state.
Veteran journalist Carl Bernstein said a handful of Senate Republicans have told him they fear President Trump’s response to the election results if he loses and believe he may take drastic measures to hold on to the White House.
A Senate committee has reportedly verified all of the materials that it reviewed so far from Tony Bobulinksi, the former business partner of Hunter Biden who has accused the Biden family of being “compromised.”
Arkansas Republican Sen. Tom Cotton slammed Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey Wednesday on the tech giant’s own platform after Dorsey sent out a tweet asking how his company could earn more users’ trust.
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Oct 29, 2020
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AP MORNING WIRE
Good morning. In today’s AP Morning Wire:
Biden shuns ‘false promises’ of fast virus fix; Campaigns woo Florida.
Europe, US face new shutdowns amid surge; India passes 8M cases.
Looking for America: In Mississippi, love in the time of coronavirus.
Philadelphia police pledge better response after Black man’s death.
TAMER FAKAHANY DEPUTY DIRECTOR – GLOBAL NEWS COORDINATION, LONDON
The Rundown
AP PHOTO/EVAN VUCCI
Biden shuns ‘false promises’ of fast virus fix; Trump, Biden campaigns to woo last-minute voters in Florida
Biden said he is “not running on the false promises of being able to end this pandemic by flipping a switch” but will prioritize science if elected. He said Trump’s handling of the pandemic is an “insult” to its victims. The U.S. has seen over 227,000 confirmed virus deaths.
Trump kept up a whirlwind schedule of rallies with supporters focusing on economic growth and other achievements he claims for his first four years.
The candidates will appear in Tampa hours apart, visiting an area known for its rapid residential growth and status as an ever-changing, hard-fought battleground during presidential elections.
Both nominees are focusing on encouraging voters to turn out on polling day. More than 73 million Americans have already voted, either by absentee or by mail.
Trump Apocalypse: The president is painting an apocalyptic portrait of American life if Biden gets elected. Trump claims that if the Democrat takes over, the suburbs wouldn’t be the suburbs anymore, the economy would slump into its worst depression ever and police departments would cease to exist. Even the elderly would be left to manage without heat or air conditioning, he claims. Campaign rhetoric often becomes heated and hyperbolic as candidates scrap for every last advantage. Experts say instilling fear in one’s opponent is usually the primary motivating factor behind it, Darlene Superville reports.
Get the Vote Out: In the best of times, it’s a massive logistical challenge to get millions out to vote. In 2020, the difficulty has been dramatically compounded: by fear of the virus, by confusion over mail-in ballots, by palpable anxiety over the bitter divisions in the country. As early voting has surged dramatically, advocates have been mobilizing in myriad ways, from volunteer letter-writers to block associations to national movements, from college marching bands to lone violinists, from fleets of minivans to bicycle parades to horseback rides to the polls in Indian Country, Jocelyn Noveck and Claire Galofaro report.
Outstanding Ballots: Millions of mail ballots have yet to be returned in key battleground states just days before the election. That’s according to data collected by the AP. Officials warn that time is running out for voters who want to avoid a polling place on Tuesday Nov. 3. AP research shows that at least 35 million mail ballots had been returned or accepted as of early Wednesday. But millions more remain outstanding in Pennsylvania, Florida and other states, Christina A. Cassidy reports.
Lawsuits: The nation is careening toward Election Day in what is believed to be the most litigated race in American history. Even seemingly mundane issues like where poll watchers can stand are turning into legal disputes. Lawsuits by the hundreds already have been filed as both Democrats and Republicans try to settle in court a process that is usually determined by citizens simply casting ballots, Alana Durkin Richer reports.
Florida Battleground County: Republicans and Democrats have invested heavily in wooing voters in Jacksonville, one of Florida’s largest metropolitan areas. Barack Obama twice lost Duval County and Hillary Clinton did too. But when a Democratic gubernatorial candidate won the county two years ago, it energized Democrats hoping to make political strides in a place emerging from its Confederate heritage to become a battleground within the Florida battleground, Bobby Caina Calvan reports.
Iran Analysis: Top officials in the Islamic Republic may say the U.S. election doesn’t matter, but nearly everyone else there seems to be holding their breath. The race for the White House could mean another four years of Trump’s “maximum pressure” campaign of crippling sanctions. Or it could bring Biden, who has raised the possibility of the U.S. returning to Iran’s 2015 nuclear deal with world powers, Jon Gambrell reports from Dubai.
Immigration Asylum:Trump’s vast reshaping of U.S. immigration policy may be most widely felt in his undoing of asylum. With immigration laws temporarily suspended at the border during the pandemic, people who enter the U.S. illegally are immediately expelled without even a piece of paper, generally with no chance to plead for protection from persecution. Facing no consequences, migrants coming from Mexico and Central America are more determined to keep trying until they succeed, Elliot Spagat reports.
AP PHOTO/DANIEL COLE
Europe, US face new round of shutdowns amid virus surge; India’s cases surpass 8 million, second worst behind US
Switzerland, Italy, Bulgaria and Greece have closed or otherwise clamped down again on nightspots and imposed other restrictions such as curfews and mandatory mask-wearing. Madrid and other parts of Spain banned all but essential travel in and out of their regions.
Even before the pandemic, many central European countries faced a tragic shortage of medical personnel due to years of underfunding in their public health sectors and an exodus of doctors and nurses to better paying jobs in Western Europe, Karel Janicek in the Czech Republic and Vanessa Gera in Poland report.
In the U.S., where practically every state is seeing a rise in cases, hard-hit Wisconsin has been reduced to pleading with people to stay home, after an order the governor issued in the spring was overturned by the courts. Illinois’ governor banned indoor dining and drinking in Chicago this week. Other states are also considering reimposing restrictions.
India’s Spiraling Cases: The world’s second most populous nation now has a confirmed coronavirus caseload that has surpassed 8 million as concerns grew over a major Hindu festival season and winter setting in. India’s trajectory is moving toward the worst-hit country, the United States, which has over 8.8 million cases, Ashok Sharma reports from New Delhi.
Australia Travel Ban: The country has sought to prevent new cases from reaching its shores by banning most residents from leaving in the first place. The ban creates a heartbreaking burden on a multicultural population, where around half the country was born overseas or has an immigrant parent. With Australia becoming one of the most successful countries in containing the spread of the virus, some are questioning how long the ban can be justified, Rod McGuirk reports.
This is a love story. But it’s also a story of coronavirus, who it strikes, and a big quiet house outside of Jackson, Mississippi, writes Tim Sullivan.
And it’s a look at the people who take COVID-19 seriously, the people who don’t, and how that divide can break uncomfortably along racial lines.
Mike Bishop is furious over the thought that anyone could believe coronavirus is a hoax.
The Police Commissioner pledged to release the video evidence once the department shares it with the victim’s family and lamented that her department lacks a mental health unit or a consistent way to coordinate police calls with specialists. The mayor says he’s asked the National Guard to be deployed after two nights of unrest.
Election Fallout: The shooting of another Black man has brought the fraught issues of policing and systemic racism back to the fore of the presidential election. Donald Trump and Joe Biden are calibrating how to address the same questions that engulfed American cities — and the presidential campaign — earlier this year as they negotiate the 2020 end game with markedly different responses, Claudia Lauer, Aamer Madhani and Robert Bumsted report.
Vietnam’s state media say landslides set off by Typhoon Molave have killed at least 19 people and left 45 others missing in the country’s central region. The casualties from the landslides bring the death toll to at least 35 with about 59 missing, including 14 crew members from two fishing boats that sank as the typhoon approached. Rescuers were digging for survivors and crews were trying to open a road into a village cut off by damage. Officials say Molave was the worst typhoon to hit the country in 20 years.
A fast-moving Hurricane Zeta barrelled northeast this morning after ripping through Louisiana and Mississippi where storm-weary residents were advised to stay indoors overnight while officials assessed the havoc the storm had wrought. The storm killed at least one person, a 55-year-old man who a Louisiana coroner said was electrocuted by a downed power line in New Orleans, and officials said life-threatening conditions would last into today.
Asian shares declined and U.S. futures were higher after the S&P 500 slid 3.5% overnight for its biggest drop since June. The selling in U.S. markets followed broad declines in Europe as markets shuddered over surging coronavirus cases that are bringing fresh pandemic shutdown measures. Shares fell in Tokyo, Hong Kong and Sydney.
The lights may go out for all 1,800 residents in Itta Bena, Mississippi, a small impoverished town in the Mississippi Delta. Because of its long-standing debt with a wholesale electrical provider, the city faces complete disconnection on Dec. 1. As of August, Itta Bena owed more than $800,000. The news is devastating for the community, where 40% of people live below the poverty line and 90% are Black.
According to investigators, Anthony Steven Guevara of Collier County logged onto the Florida Department of State website and changed DeSantis’ address to a home in West Palm Beach.
Good morning, Chicago. On Wednesday, Illinois health officials also announced 6,110 newly confirmed cases of COVID-19 statewide, the second-highest daily cases count since the pandemic began after a count of 6,161 last Saturday.
Meanwhile, on Wednesday night, Dr. Anthony Fauci — the nation’s top infectious disease expert —participated in a virtual Chicago talk about the coronavirus. Here’s what he had to say about a vaccine timeline, what it’s like being insulted by Trump and more.
Here’s more coronavirus news and other top stories you need to know to start your day.
A day after indicating she would try to talk Gov. J.B. Pritzker out of tightening coronavirus-related restrictions in Chicago, Mayor Lori Lightfoot said Wednesday she had met with the governor and won’t try to block his order to ban indoor bar and dining service in the city.
“We had a very frank and productive conversation with the governor and his team and my team as well. We explored a lot of issues and we came out of that discussion really committed to making sure that we work hard together,” Lightfoot said.
Pritzker tied COVID-19 cases to restaurants and bars in Kane, DuPage counties. But health departments paint a vague picture of the data.
Thursday is the deadline for your local election authority to receive your application for a mail-in ballot, although for weeks officials have been encouraging voters to send them in sooner. Don’t expect to get yours in on time? Don’t fret. You still have options.
Many are feeling extra and unusual stressors during this time, and people of color shoulder additional burdens. Mental health experts are concerned that the stress and isolation created by the COVID-19 pandemic is adding mental health challenges.
What happens if a student takes off their mask in a pod? What if someone in their pod has a medical mask exemption? What are the health and safety protocols for students who need help eating or using the restroom?
On the deadline for students in preschool and special education cluster programs to decide whether they will return to in-person learning next quarter, parents and educators sought details and advocated for their children at the Chicago Board of Education meeting Wednesday.
For the first time in nearly two decades, a full moon will be spotted in the Chicago sky on All Hallows’ Eve, according to experts. It will also be a blue moon, an occurrence that happens when there are two full moons in one calendar month.
The city of Waukegan on Wednesday released six videos that captured the moments immediately before and after an officer in the northern suburb fatally shot 19-year-old Marcellis Stinnette last week.
However, the officer who fired the shots — which also wounded Stinnette’s girlfriend, 20-year-old Tafara Williams — did not activate his bodyworn camera before opening fire. Sam Charles has the story…
However, the officer who fired the shots — which also wounded Stinnette’s girlfriend, 20-year-old Tafara Williams — did not activate his bodyworn camera before opening fire.
The automated calls from the vice presidential nominee were just one voice helping Foxx begin her closing argument after a Democratic alderman backed her Republican opponent.
About two dozen special education and preschool parents and teachers spoke in opposition to CPS’ back-to-school plan at Wednesday’s virtual monthly school board meeting.
Did her attendance signal a political detente with one of her most vocal City Council critics? “I’m going anywhere where we’re creating jobs and opportunity for the residents of our city,” the mayor responded.
About a dozen of Jackson’s mask-wearing family members gathered and took pictures and selfies with the freshly dried mural located near 75th Place and Ashland Avenue.
Welcome to The Hill’s Morning Report. It is Thursday! Five days until Election Day. 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 each morning this week: Monday, 225,230; Tuesday, 225,735; Wednesday, 226,722; Thursday, 227,700.
President Trump and former Vice President Joe Biden are parachuting back into Tampa, Fla., today and will each return to Wisconsin on Friday, determined to leave nothing to chance during the final days of the nail-biting 2020 hunt for 270 electoral votes (The Hill).
Trump is unlikely to win a second term without winning the Sunshine State, a richly diverse mix of peninsula and panhandle that he put in his column with a margin of just 113,000 votes four years ago. Polls suggest he has the barest whisper of a lead against the former vice president in a state with 29 electoral votes.
Biden also will campaign today in heavily Democratic Broward County in South Florida, considered key to his chances to capture the “half-percent state.” The former vice president was there on Oct. 13, and former President Obama stumped for the Democratic ticket in Central and South Florida in the past few days, working to increase turnout among young and minority voters.
Trump will rally supporters in Fayetteville, N.C., this evening, returning to another toss-up state he desperately wants to win. Cumberland County is considered the bellwether in North Carolina for the president’s ambitions to lock up 15 electoral votes (Citizen Times).
Friday will see the two candidates jetting around the Midwest. In addition to Wisconsin, Trump is scheduled to return to Michigan and Minnesota, and Biden will make his third visit to the Badger State and dash into Iowa to try to expand his map. On Saturday, Biden will also return to Michigan, where he leads Trump in polls and will be accompanied by Obama (The Hill).
The Hill: No one gets under Trump’s skin like the 44th president.
Trump’s campaign team is concerned that a combination of shifting demographics, an anti-Trump upswell in some Midwestern suburbs and the impact of COVID-19 in parts of the Rust Belt have altered the political landscape compared with 2016. Biden has not let a day go by without hammering Trump over his response to the pandemic, gaining traction with college educated and minority voters in battleground states where infections have been soaring.
Wisconsin officials and public health experts say the state is in serious trouble with the coronavirus. The state has seen an average of 4,221 cases per day over the past week, an increase of 46 percent from earlier this month. Hospitals are buckling under the strain of packed ICUs and exhausted clinicians and staff.
A recent Marquette University poll found that only 40 percent of likely voters in Wisconsin approve of Trump’s handling of the pandemic while 57 percent say they are very worried or somewhat worried about contracting COVID-19 (Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel).
During a campaign stop in Flint, Mich., on Wednesday, Vice President Pence reminded supporters that the state will “play an outsized role in deciding this election, make no mistake about it.” When the crowd started chanting “Vote for Trump,” the vice president said, “We just got to make sure Michigan comes through.”
In Michigan over the past week, there have been an average of 2,334 cases of coronavirus infections each day, an increase of 83 percent from the average recorded just two weeks ago.
Poll watch: Biden maintains a 5-point lead over Trump in Wisconsin, according to a poll of likely voters conducted by Marquette Law School (The Hill).
Biden — whose campaign travel schedule has been described by some as prudently measured during a pandemic and others as too Delaware-rooted — spent part of Wednesday talking remotely to health experts about COVID-19, to local interviewers in Florida and Nevada, and to Oprah Winfrey during a Zoom event to encourage people to vote in Pennsylvania, Michigan, Minnesota and Ohio (Deadline).
The Hill: Campaigning on Wednesday in GOP territory in Arizona, the president promised swift economic recovery and boasted the country is making headway against the virus. “We will deliver record prosperity, epic job growth, and a safe vaccine is coming very quickly,” Trump told supporters in Bullhead City. “We are rounding the turn regardless, you know that.”
Unprecedented turnout: More than 16 million voters who did not cast a ballot in 2016 have already voted this year, a sign that record-high enthusiasm in November’s elections will lead to an unprecedented turnout across the country. Already this year, more than 4 million people between the ages of 18 and 29 have cast ballots, suggesting the surge is partly fueled by younger voters who have been targets of turnout operations funded by Democratic groups, and by minorities who are motivated to turn out in large numbers (The Hill).
More than 76 million Americans have already voted, according to the U.S. Elections Project, representing nearly 56 percent of the 2016 turnout.
NPR: Election officials on Wednesday urged voters to use alternatives other than the U.S. mail to return ballots, noting that in many states, it is now too late to mail absentee ballots and be confident of receipt on time. They encourage voters to deliver their ballots by hand to appropriate elections offices or to cast ballots in person by Nov. 3. Absentee ballots must be received on Election Day in more than two dozen states, including a handful of key swing states such as Arizona, Florida, Georgia, Michigan and Wisconsin.
The Supreme Court late Wednesday declined to block lower court rulings that allow six extra days for accepting ballots sent by mail in North Carolina. The justices left the later deadline in place, a victory for Democrats in a presidential battleground state (NBC News). … Justices also refused a plea from Pennsylvania Republicans that the court decide before Election Day whether the state can continue counting absentee ballots for three days after Nov. 3. Justice Amy Coney Barrett did not participate in either decision (The New York Times).
Check your registration status, explore voting options in your state and get access to the latest, official information from election authorities in our Voting Information Center on Facebook and Instagram.
MORE POLITICS: While Trump and Biden make their closing pitches to voters, Vice President Pence is using his campaign swings to boost support for vulnerable Republican senators up for reelection next week.
As The Hill’s Brett Samuels reports, Pence is campaigning alongside three GOP senators who sit on the Senate Judiciary Committee: Sens. Lindsey Graham (S.C.), who chairs the panel, Thom Tillis (N.C.) and Joni Ernst (Iowa), using the recent confirmation of Barrett to help them in the waning days.
The stops overlap with key presidential battlegrounds, but aides view it as an opportunity to boost senators who lost valuable time on the campaign trail in recent weeks to attend hearings in Washington to further Barrett’s nomination.
While the White House looks to shore up the situations for Tillis and Ernst, and the terrain across the nation for Senate Republicans is rough, the GOP is seeing glimpses of good news in the upper Midwest as John James in Michigan and former Rep. Jason Lewis (R-Minn.) are within striking distance of incumbent Sens. Gary Peters (D-Mich.) and Tina Smith (D-Minn.), respectively.
While the vast majority of focus has been trained on GOP incumbents, the pair of Democrats are showing renewed vulnerabilities only days away from Nov. 3, as The Hill’s Alexander Bolton writes.
The Hill: Democrats seek wave to bolster House majority.
The Hill: Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.): Battle for Senate “a 50-50 proposition.”
The New York Times: The 2020 campaign is the most expensive ever (by a lot).
Politico: Sen. Rick Scott (R-Fla.), potential 2024 candidate, opens wallet for Trump in Florida.
> Lone Star revamp?: Texas Republicans tell The Hill that even if Trump wins next week, the party has to rethink its direction as Democrats make inroads in Texas districts, particularly in suburban areas that have seen eye-popping growth during the past decade.
The Morning Report’s Al Weaver, reporting from Bulverde, Texas, says that while Trump is expected to win “ugly” in Texas next week (as Dave Carney, a top adviser to Texas Gov. Greg Abbott (R), put it), the coming years represent a make-or-break stretch for the Texas GOP to get its act together, party leaders say, with the Democrats expected to flip more U.S. House and state House seats next week.
“The party’s got some work to do, and the reason they’ve got work to do is when you win the national championship every year — year after year after year — you get complacent,” former Texas Gov. Rick Perry (R) told The Hill in an interview.
“I think the Republican Party in Texas over the last 1- years … got complacent,” Perry continued, taking some responsibility for the situation, as he was governor from 2000 to 2014. “You didn’t build the structure that you need. You didn’t go recruit the bench that you need to continue to be a strong team.”
> Ballots present choices beyond candidates: Billionaires write checks to get voters’ attention on ballot initiatives. Nineteen donors in six states paid $1 million or more (Bloomberg Law).
> Election night: Television projections of election winners and losers soon after polls close is a modern construct, not an expectation that all ballots are scanned, tallied and certified on Election Day. Elections experts are worried that Trump’s insistence on results on Nov. 3 is a ploy to disenfranchise voters, and they were surprised and disturbed when Justice Brett Kavanaugh referred to states that “want to be able to definitively announce the results of the election on election night” (The Hill). In fact, no state definitively announces results immediately after polls close, and each state by law complies with deadlines by which they must certify their election results, varying from a day to two days after Election Day to weeks later in December (Ballotpedia list). Political scientists and election law experts counsel patience this year, pointing out that presidential election results were in suspense in 2000 until Dec. 12 and in 2004 until the morning after election night because of a close outcome in Ohio.
The Hill: Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.), interviewed on MSNBC on Wednesday, said the president should accept the election results “like a man” instead of attempting to sow doubt about the outcome when all ballots are not counted on election night.
Anonymous footnote: Back in September 2018, an unidentified Washington opinion writer inside the Trump administration caused a media stir with a New York Times piece in which the person, cast as a “senior official,” claimed to be part of a “resistance” to the president inside the government, working to “thwart parts of his agenda and his worst inclinations.” The federal employee remained hidden (some would say forgotten), even after enterprising publishing agents turned the political intrigue into a book deal (The Washington Post). “We took a meeting with a senior Trump official not sure about the meeting’s purpose, and when they informed us they were Anonymous, our jaws hit the floor,” one of the wheeler-dealer agents gushed in 2019. Fast forward to Wednesday, and the “senior official” turns out to be farther down the anonymity ladder than imagined, sparking outrage from Trump supporters and shrugs from those who bought into the suspense. The official turned out to be former Department of Homeland Security chief of staff Miles Taylor, who endorsed Biden this summer and previously denied writing either the opinion article or the book, titled “A Warning.”
IN FOCUS/SHARP TAKES
CORONAVIRUS: Bad and getting worse … The United States and Europe face new rounds of shutdowns and restrictions amid frightening surges of COVID-19 infections and rising hospitalizations in nearly all states (The Associated Press). “I’m just coming from a place with ventilators and people are just going to an indoor restaurant,” said David Letzer, an infectious diseases specialist who doubles as chairman of the Wisconsin Medical Society’s COVID-19 task force. “Those are the things that are frustrating and take their toll.”
European nations moved to reimplement lockdowns amid grim coronavirus case numbers and to prevent hospitals from being overrun with COVID-19 patients needing intensive care. More than 2 million new confirmed coronavirus cases have been reported globally in the past week, the shortest time ever for such an increase, and 46 percent of those were in Europe, The Associated Press reported.
French President Emmanuel Macron announced a partial nationwide shutdown would be implemented starting Friday. The lockdown will be reexamined every 15 days, with schools remaining open. In Germany, Chancellor Angela Merkel made a similar move, instituting an emergency month long lockdown that shutters restaurants, gyms and theaters (Reuters).
Walt Disney World on Wednesday laid off 720 actors and singers as the theme park has not resumed live shows and entertainment due to the COVID-19 pandemic. The news comes weeks after Walt Disney Co. announced that it was laying off 28,000 people at theme parks in Florida and California (The Associated Press).
The NFL is planning on capping capacity at Super Bowl LV at 20 percent, with roughly 13,000 to 15,000 fans expected at Raymond James Stadium in Tampa, Fla. According to ESPN’s Adam Schefter, fans will be in pods 6 feet apart and masks will be mandatory (ESPN). …The University of Wisconsin was forced to cancel Saturday’s football game against the University of Nebraska due to an outbreak of COVID-19 cases, with Wisconsin reporting 12 cases, including head coach Paul Chryst, on Wednesday. The game will go down as a “no contest” (ESPN).
****
➔ CONGRESS: Chief executives of Silicon Valley’s most influential tech companies took on partisan complaints at a high-profile hearing on Wednesday, facing concerns that content moderation decisions have become a campaign issue.
At a Senate Commerce Committee hearing purportedly to discuss a federal statute that provides a liability shield for internet companies for content posted on their sites by third parties and lets them make “good faith” efforts to moderate content, GOP lawmakers instead used the opportunity to question company heads about perceived political bias. Twitter’s Jack Dorsey, Facebook’s Mark Zuckerberg and Google’s Sundar Pichai all faced questions on the latter topic, with Committee Chairman Roger Wicker (R-Miss.) setting the tone for the GOP as he spent his opening round of questions needling Dorsey about his company’s decisions on when to label tweets.
As The Hill’s Chris Mills Rodrigo writes, Wicker questioned why Twitter has attached labels to the president’s tweets instead of those by Iran’s Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. As Dorsey noted, unlike Trump, some of Khamenei’s tweets have been removed.
Dorsey also acknowledged that Twitter mishandled a recent New York Post story about Hunter Biden with dubious sourcing. Twitter initially prevented the spread of the article on its platform, sparking particularly harsh criticism from conservatives.
“Who the hell elected you and put you in charge of what the media are allowed to report and what the American people are allowed to hear?” Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas) asked Dorsey in a heated back and forth (The Hill).
The Associated Press: Social media CEOs rebuff bias claims, vow to defend election.
The Wall Street Journal: Pelosi says details of coronavirus package could change after election.
Roll Call: Little time, big differences threaten lame-duck spending deals.
“Not Trump” is not enough to govern, by Karl Rove, columnist, The Wall Street Journal. https://on.wsj.com/3mCPJIZ
How far might Trump go? by Thomas B. Edsall, columnist, The New York Times. https://nyti.ms/37QCOic
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The House is out of Washington until after the election. Pelosi will be interviewed in the noon hour on Bloomberg TV’s “Balance of Power.”
The Senate will return to work on Nov. 9.
The president will campaign at 1:35 p.m. in Tampa, Fla., and in Fayetteville, N.C., at 6:30 p.m., accompanied by first lady Melania Trump. They return to the White House tonight.
The vice president will campaign in Des Moines, Iowa, at 1:30 p.m. and in Reno, Nev., at 5 p.m.
Secretary of State Mike Pompeo visited Malé, Maldives, where he announced plans to open a U.S. Embassy in Malé and met with President Ibrahim Mohamed Solih and Foreign Minister Abdulla Shaheed. The secretary wraps up his Asia travels in Jakarta, Indonesia, where he met with President Joko Widodo and Foreign Minister Retno Marsudi.
Economic indicator: The Bureau of Economic Analysis report at 8:30 a.m. on gross domestic product in the third quarter is expected to shatter records seen since the end of World War II. Economists, however, suggest the impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic and rolling business lockdowns meant an aberration of sorts for growth during a bounce-back quarter.
Biden-Harris campaign events: Biden will campaign in Broward County and Tampa, Fla. Harris will participate in a voter mobilization event this evening, followed by a virtual finance event. The senator will also join a rally hosted by Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) to support proposals for a living wage.
👉 INVITATION TODAY to The Hill’s Virtually Live event about “America’s Agenda: Infrastructure” at 1 p.m. EDT, with Reps. Rodney Davis (R-Ill.), Sam Graves (R-Mo.) and Del. Eleanor Holmes Norton (D-D.C.). Information and registration HERE.
➔ ALASKA ENVIRONMENT: Trump will open up more than half of Alaska’s Tongass National Forest to logging and other forms of development, according to a notice posted by the government on Wednesday, stripping protections that had safeguarded one of the world’s largest intact temperate rainforests for nearly two decades. Because of the decision, it is legal beginning today for logging companies to build roads and cut and remove timber throughout more than 9.3 million acres of forest (The Washington Post).
➔ URBAN UNREST – POLICING: Philadelphia was under curfew last night following the police killing of Walter Wallace Jr., a 27-year-old Black man, whose death incited heated protests, break-ins and vandalism over two days in parts of the City of Brotherly Love (Philadelphia Inquirer).
➔ HURRICANE ZETA made landfall on Wednesday and killed one man in southeast Louisiana. This morning, Zeta is heading northeast after being downgraded to a tropical storm. It’s the fifth named storm to strike Louisiana this year and initially brought 110 mph winds and heavy rain when it arrived as a Category 2 hurricane (The Associated Press).
THE CLOSER
And finally … It’s Thursday, which means it’s time for this week’s Morning Report Quiz! Struck by rhetoric we heard on the campaign trail in this final campaign week, we’re eager for some smart guesses about ghosts of former U.S. presidents and American history. No multiple choice this week … just send your answers (and in the correct order)!
1. Which candidate said this while in Pennsylvania on Monday? “You know we’re the party of Abraham Lincoln, a lot of people don’t know that. The great Abraham Lincoln, a man that I’ve always competed against.”
2. Which candidate told Nevada voters this week, “Let’s honor the ancestors, when this year we celebrated the 100th anniversary of the 19th Amendment. … Let’s also, you know, always remember history and facts: Black women couldn’t vote until 1965.”
3. Which surrogate for a candidate told Florida voters on Monday, “I’ve sat in the Oval Office with both of the men who are running for president, and they’re very different people.”
4. Which candidate said this while campaigning in Georgia on Wednesday? “FDR longed to live an independent life, a life that wasn’t defined by his illness. … It was the lessons he learned here that he used to lift a nation.”
5. Which candidate told South Carolinians on Tuesday, “Trump has signed the largest investment in our national defense since the days of Ronald Reagan.”
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POLITICO PLAYBOOK
NEW: Pelosi leaves the Covid relief blame on Trump’s doorstep
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DRIVING THE DAY
ELECTION DAY IS5 DAYS away, and both the House and Senate are back home, so there’s little reason to be hopeful for progress on a Covid relief deal.
AND THIS MORNING, we have a brand new letter Speaker NANCY PELOSI sent to Treasury Secretary STEVEN MNUCHIN.PELOSI lists all the areas that remain unsolved in the negotiation — and they happen to be precisely the areas where Washington’s Most Eager Man has not been terribly eager to send PELOSI counter-offers. The new Pelosi letter to Mnuchin
PELOSI: “[A]s the coronavirus surges and the stock market plummets, we are still awaiting the Trump Administration’s promised responses on multiple items of critical importance.”
THE AREAS where MNUCHIN still owes PELOSI language or responses include: testing, tracing and treatment, state and local funding, schools, child care, earned income and child tax credits, unemployment insurance, OSHA and liability.
IN OTHER WORDS, PELOSI is suggesting MNUCHIN and the administration owe her answers on nearly every contentious issue in the Covid relief package. So — no, the two sides are nowhere close. Not at all. And it doesn’t appear that they have been close throughout the nearly 100 days of talks thus far.
WHY DOES THIS MATTER 5 DAYS before ELECTION DAY? Most people in Congress agree the economy needs another stimulus bill, but lawmakers disagree on the shape and size. And PELOSI’S letter illustrates that the administration still owes her a ton of answers. If there’s any chance of getting something in the lame duck, there’s a long way to go.
BEN WHITEon the country’s economic outlook with new GDP numbers out this morning: “Trump, who has repeatedly mentioned that he would get this big GDP number right before the election, will almost certainly brag about how it is the best in history. And it almost certainly will be. But it will also follow the equally historic 31 percent decline in the second quarter.
“Because the third quarter started from such a low base, even an increase slightly larger than the 31 percent decline would not return economic activity to where it was at the end of the first quarter.”
THE STOCK MARKET has been absolutely rocked the last few days, which analysts say is due to a rising number of coronavirus cases, and the fact that Washington has not come to a stimulus deal after more than 100 days of trying. WaPo’s Jeff Stein on the market turbulence
MILES TAYLOR is Anonymous. Depending on whom you believe, he was either a top official at DHS who had a major hand in policies that separated parents from their kids, or he was a zero who barely had face time with the secretary — or some combination of the two. Here’s some of the general reaction to his announcement.
— CNN’S @joshcampbell: “I asked Miles Taylor back on August 17 if he was ‘Anonymous.’ Rather than declining to comment, he said: ‘No. Sorry to disappoint. You weren’t the first though today!’”
— NBC’S @jacobsoboroff: “Miles Taylor was a critical part of the team that decided to separated thousands of migrant kids from their parents, resulting in lifelong psychological trauma. He would like you to believe otherwise.”
— AXIOS’ @jonathanvswan: “Turns out the NYT oped page gave an enormous ‘Resistance’ platform to a staffer whose agency green-lit the Trump administration’s most hardline immigration moves, including family separation, during his tenure. … I also didn’t realize the definition of ‘senior administration official’ could be *this* expansive. Wasn’t even an agency chief of staff at the time the op-ed ran.”
BREAKING OVERNIGHT … AP/PARIS: “French police: 2 dead in knife attack near church in Nice”: “French anti-terrorism prosecutors are investigating a knife attack at a church in the Mediterranean city of Nice that killed two people and injured several. The prosecutor’s office and national police said that an investigation was opened into an attack with a terrorist connection after Thursday’s stabbing. The exact motive of the attack was unclear but comes as France is under high alert for terrorist acts amid tensions over the publication of caricatures of the Muslim prophet Muhammad and after two other recent attacks.”
TEXAS IS NOW A REAL THING …
— NYT’S JONATHAN MARTIN in Brownsville: “Texas Is a Tossup. So Why Won’t Trump or Biden Campaign There?”: “They may be on opposite sides of the partisan divide, but Texas Republicans and Democrats alike believe the long-awaited moment has arrived: The state is a true presidential battleground, and either candidate could prevail next week.
“Although a Democrat has not carried Texas since 1976, recent public and private polls suggest a highly competitive race, with some surveys showing Mr. Biden up narrowly and others showing Mr. Trump enjoying a small lead.
“Yet even as leading figures in both parties urge their respective presidential nominees to take Texas seriously, the campaigns are still reluctant to spend precious remaining time and money there. Neither Mr. Trump nor Mr. Biden is expected to appear in the state before the election, the president has not spent a cent on television commercials, and until this week Mr. Biden had resisted advertising in Texas’ two largest markets, Houston and Dallas-Fort Worth.
“Though the state isn’t essential to a Biden victory, Democrats have been more aggressive here. Mr. Biden is dispatching his running mate, Senator Kamala Harris, to Texas on Friday, and Democrats have also planned a multicity bus tour across the state. A pair of Democratic billionaires, Dustin Moskovitz and Michael R. Bloomberg, have separately poured money into the state at the 11th hour. …
“Recent polls, soaring early vote participation in the state’s most populous counties, and more than 50 interviews with Texans in three pivotal regions point to an increasingly competitive race because of a spike in turnout by an electorate that is diverse, loathes the president and makes a mockery of his pistols-and-petroleum stereotype of the state.”
“That change could come this year instead. The presidential race has tightened to become nearly neck-and-neck. The state has led the country in early voting, and more than 8 million Texans have cast ballots, more than 90 percent of the overall number who voted in 2016. Some experts project that turnout could hit 12 million by Election Day. …
“The political evolution in Texas has been sped up not just by demographic changes that have been underway for years, but also by the repelling power of President Trump and the burst of liberal activism he has inspired. In the four years since the last presidential election, at least 2 million people have moved to Texas, many of them Democrats from places like California, Florida, New York and Illinois. An estimated 800,000 young Latino Americans have turned 18, and a wave of immigrants became naturalized citizens. More than 3 million Texans have newly registered to vote.”
QUITE THE MOMENT from Wednesday night’s JON OSSOFF/SEN. DAVID PERDUE debate, in which OSSOFF calls PERDUE a crook. 1:12 video
THE SUPREME COURT STARTS REVVING ITS ENGINE, via ZACH MONTELLARO and JOSH GERSTEIN: “The Supreme Court left the status quo intact in a pair of swing-state election cases on Wednesday, turning aside Republicans who aimed to block a ballot-receipt extension in North Carolina and declining to expedite a Republican challenge to the Pennsylvania deadline, while leaving the option of weighing in on that case after Election Day.”
TRUMP’S CLOSING MESSAGE … HOLLY OTTERBEIN in Philadelphia: “Trump stokes suburban fears after Philadelphia shooting”: “Donald Trump is making a last-ditch effort to rattle the suburbs. In the wake of civil unrest sparked by a fatal police shooting here Monday, the president returned to fear-mongering about big-city chaos and violence, leaning hard on law-and-order rhetoric in the hopes of winning back the suburban voters who have deserted him.
“Less than 24 hours after law enforcement officials fatally shot Walter Wallace Jr., a 27-year-old Black man who was carrying a knife and reportedly suffered from mental illness, the president’s campaign responded by announcing it was airing a national TV ad. The spot falsely accused Joe Biden of ‘refusing to strongly condemn violence’ across the country after similar incidents.
“By Wednesday, Trump, who is trailing Biden by 4 to 5 percentage points in Pennsylvania, cast the blame squarely on Democratic Philadelphia Mayor Jim Kenney: ‘It’s a terrible thing, what I’m witnessing is terrible, and frankly that the mayor or whoever it is that’s allowing people to riot and loot and not stop them is also just a horrible thing. I saw the event, everybody did — it was on television, it was a terrible event, I guess that’s being looked at very strongly.’ ‘You can’t let that go on. Again — a Democrat-run state, a Democrat-run city, Philadelphia,’ he said, adding that Biden ‘doesn’t want to condemn them.’”
THE BATTLE FOR FLORIDA … AP: “Trump, Biden to appeal to last-minute voters in Florida,” by Zeke Miller, Aamer Madhani and Tamara Lush with a Tampa, Fla., dateline: “President Donald Trump and Democratic rival Joe Biden are set to chase votes in Florida, a state all but essential to the Republican’s pathway to another term as both nominees turn their focus to encouraging voters to turn out on Election Day.
“More than 73 million Americans have already voted, absentee or by mail, and Trump and Biden are trying to energize the millions more who will vote in person on Tuesday. While the Election Day vote traditionally favors Republicans and early votes tend toward Democrats, the coronavirus pandemic, which has killed more than 227,000 Americans, has injected new uncertainty about the makeup of the electorate.”
TRUTH TALK — “Why Trump needs to suppress the vote to win,” by David Siders and Zach Montellaro: “Donald Trump won the presidency with 46 percent of the popular vote. His approval rating, according to Gallup, has never hit 50 percent. He remains under 50 percent in national polling averages.
“The president’s inability to capture a majority of support sheds light on his extraordinary attempts to limit the number of votes cast across the battleground state map — a massive campaign-within-a-campaign to maximize Trump’s chances of winning a contest in which he’s all but certain to earn less than 50 percent of the vote.
“In Philadelphia, his campaign is videotaping voters as they return ballots. In Nevada, it’s suing to force elections officials in Nevada’s Democratic-heavy Clark County to more rigorously examine ballot signatures for discrepancies that could disqualify them. The Trump campaign has sued to prevent the expanded use of ballot drop boxes in Ohio, sought to shoot down an attempt to expand absentee ballot access in New Hampshire and tried to intervene against a lawsuit brought by members of the Navajo Nation in Arizona which sought to allow ballots received from reservations after Election Day because of mail delays. And that’s just a few of its efforts.
“Never before in modern presidential politics has a candidate been so reliant on wide-scale efforts to depress the vote as Trump.” POLITICO
TRUMP’S THURSDAY — The president will depart Doral, Fla., at noon and travel to Tampa. He will deliver a campaign speech at 1:35 p.m. Afterward, he and first lady Melania Trump will travel to Pope Field, N.C. They will participate in a troop engagement at 5:15 p.m. in Fort Bragg, N.C. They will depart for Fayetteville, N.C., at 5:50 p.m. Trump will give a campaign speech at 6:30 p.m. Afterward, they will return to Washington and return to the White House at 10 p.m.
— VP MIKE PENCE will leave Washington at 12:35 p.m. and travel to Des Moines, Iowa. He will deliver a campaign speech at 2:10 p.m. CDT. Pence will depart at 3:30 p.m. en route to Reno, Nev. He will deliver another campaign speech at 5 p.m. He will spend the night in Reno.
— IVANKA TRUMP is going to Blue Bell and Waymart, Pa., today.
ON THE TRAIL — JOE BIDEN will travel to speak at a drive-in event in Broward County, Fla., in the afternoon. Later, he’ll deliver remarks at a drive-in event in Tampa. Sen. KAMALA HARRIS (D-Calif.)will participate in a virtual rally at 5 p.m. focused on Black Greek letter organizations. She will attend a virtual fundraiser. Harris will participate in a virtual climate rally hosted by Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) at 8 p.m.
PLAYBOOK READS
DAN DIAMOND SCOOP — “‘Helping the president’: HHS official sought to rebrand coronavirus campaign”: “The Trump appointee who steered a $300 million taxpayer-funded ad campaign to ‘defeat despair’ about the coronavirus privately pitched a different theme last month: ‘Helping the President will Help the Country.’
“That proposal, which came in a meeting between Trump administration officials and campaign contractors, is among documents obtained by the House Oversight Committee that further illustrate how political considerations shaped the massive campaign as officials rushed to get public service announcements on the air before Election Day. The committee shared the documents with POLITICO, which first detailed the campaign in a series of reports last month.
“For instance, contractors vetted at least 274 potential celebrity contributors for their stances on gay rights, gun control and the 2016 election before allowing them to participate in the campaign. One promised public service announcement, which would have also featured infectious disease expert Anthony Fauci, was nixed because the celebrity who was set to participate with Fauci had been critical of President Donald Trump, according to documents.
“The official overseeing the campaign — Michael Caputo, who Trump personally tapped as the health department’s top spokesperson — also sought to overrule the career civil servants assigned to the campaign, directly urging contractors to rush production of ads with celebrities like Trump-supporting actor Antonio Sabato, Jr.” POLITICO
AD WARS — “Facebook missteps stoke fears of long political ad blackout online,” by Elena Schneider and Zach Montellaro: “When Facebook and Google announced plans to ban new political ads around the end of the election, they left one key thing out of the new policies: an end date.
“Now, as Facebook’s pre-election blackout on new ads begins and a total post-election freeze on Google and Facebook ads looms, digital strategists in both parties are worried that ads on the biggest digital platforms may never come back — or, at the very least, they’ll be down so long that they paralyze campaigns in major races set to stretch beyond Nov. 3.
“Those fears spiked in recent days after Facebook’s blackout started Tuesday with the social media giant taking down ads that groups in both parties said had been pre-approved. A day and a half later, many groups said they are still struggling to resolve these inconsistencies with the companies’ advertising reps.
“Democrats, in particular, are concerned that the undefined timeline for restarting online ads could hamper efforts to raise money and voter awareness around potential Senate runoffs in Georgia and Mississippi in January. Others noted that the policies will make it more difficult for campaigns to raise legal funds for recounts.” POLITICO
IN MEMORIAM — “A Life of Fellowship: Nick Owens (1974–2020)”: “Legendary Washington connector and advisor, champion of American business owners, proud Mississippian, Nicholas N. Owens succumbed to cancer in Washington, DC on October 24, 2020, surrounded by loved ones. He was 45. …
“In 2009, Nick leveraged his professional expertise to launch his own enterprise: Magnolia Strategy Partners, LLC … Following the election, Nick joined President Trump’s Transition Team as an Economic — Business Issues Advisor. … In 2020, Nick was appointed to serve as the Co-Chair for the COVID-19 Legal and Government Affairs Task Force.”
SPOTTED at a Zoom party Wednesday night for Bob Bauer and Jack Goldsmith’s new book, “After Trump: Reconstructing the Presidency” ($14.44 on Amazon), hosted by Kevin Sheekey and Howard Wolfson: Patti Harris, Steve Benjamin, Manny Diaz, Michael Beschloss, Josh Mendelsohn, Joe Crowley, Jef Pollock, Joel Johnson, Mike Feldman, Sam Sheekey, Craig Minassian, Liz Robbins, Jason Schechter, Ty Trippet, Henry Schuster, Hilary Rosen, Dan Glickman, Jake Siewert, Galia Slayen, Heather Podesta, Melissa Moss, Mary Schapiro, Kelly Ayotte, Stephanie Cutter, Max Stier, Gary Ginsberg, Tammy Haddad, Mike Allen, Rachel Nagler, Susie Buffett, Rick Davis and Athena Jones.
SPOTTED on a Tom Ridge DHS alumni Zoom call Wednesday night: Tom Ridge, CFPB Director Kathy Kraninger, acting USAID Administrator John Barsa, James McCament, Ed Cash, Duncan Campbell, Joe Rozek, Andy Maner, Stewart Verdery, Dan Kaniewski, Joe Whitley, Libby Elliott, George Bamford, Chuck McQueary, Matt Bettenhausen, Josh Filler, Janet Hale, Kim Palmese, Pam Turner, Rich Cooper, Bob Liscouski, Sally Canfield, Marie Vachon, Joe Gerdes, Jim Olson, Ellen Howe, Genevieve Hartley, John Herr, Ross Ashley and Donald Tighe.
FIRST IN PLAYBOOK — Niki Christoff is launching Christoff & Co., a boutique comms consultancy. She previously was an SVP at Salesforce, and is an Uber and Google alum.
TRANSITIONS — Cody Sanders is now policy coordination manager at the National Security Council. He previously was director of proclamations and messages at the White House. … Bob Voltmann is now CEO of the National Independent Automobile Dealers Association. He previously was the longtime president and CEO of the Transportation Intermediaries Association.
WELCOME TO THE WORLD — Will Ritter, co-founder of Poolhouse, and Kelli Ritter, a Mitt Romney alum, recently welcomed Benjamin Robert Ritter. He joins big brother Calvin. Pic
BIRTHDAY OF THE DAY: Natalie Jones Hallahan, SVP for external affairs and diplomatic engagement at the Meridian International Center. How she’s celebrating: “I’ll start my day with a sunrise run to the Lincoln Memorial, bake a cake with my 5-year-old girl Eleanor and enjoy a rooftop dinner with Patrick and a few dear friends at Rose’s Luxury.” Playbook Q&A
BIRTHDAYS: Rep. Marcia Fudge (D-Ohio) is 68 … David Remnick, editor of The New Yorker, is 62 … Kate Bedingfield and Seth Schuster of the Biden campaign, which is celebrating with a virtual dance party … Jim Messina is 51 … Phoebe Kilgour (h/ts Teresa Vilmain) … former acting A.G. Matt Whitaker is 51 … CNN’s Laura Jarrett and David Siegel … WaPo White House editor Dave Clarke … Tony Sayegh (h/t Brian Morgenstern) … Bloomberg Opinion’s Robert George … Washington Examiner’s Jamie McIntyre … Geoff Turley … POLITICO’s Steve Heuser and Cam Debro … Isabelle James … former Interior Secretary Dirk Kempthorne is 69 … Mike Saccone … Washingtonian’s Mimi Montgomery … Steve Smith, deputy chief comms officer at the ACLU … Kat Timpf, host of “Sincerely Kat” on Fox Nation … Bob Stevenson … Ryan Akira Quinn, Swing Left political director, is 26 (h/t Tori Taylor) … Noah Dion …
… Nelson Cunningham, president and co-founder of McLarty Associates …WSJ editorial writer Kate Bachelder Odell … Mercedes LeGrand (h/t Ed Cash) … Bill Jaffee, press secretary for Sen. Pat Toomey (R-Pa.) … Justin McCartney, press secretary for Rep. Jennifer Wexton (D-Va.), is 24 … Nick Yaeger … Coby King is 6-0 … former Sen. Connie Mack III (R-Fla.) is 8-0 … Safi Majid … Andy Weitz, Aon’s chief marketing officer … Deloitte’s Jon Pool … Max Yoeli … Leigh Helfenbein … Susan Mercandetti … Daisy Letendre … Sonia Colin-Reed … Diana D’Abruzzo … Peter Albrecht, SVP at AL Media Strategy … Aaron Jacobs … WSJ’s Samantha Zeldin … Kerry Hannon (h/t Jon Haber) … Gary Gould … Nick Powell … Michael Slaby … Jeff Hillery … Yangyang Cheng … Mark Olingy … Rachel Barinbaum … Steve Lynch … Sophie Bauer … Dimitri Simes … former Liberian President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf is 82
The Great Depression ended the Golden Age of the Weimar Republic, causing massive unemployment in Germany, as the U.S. was the largest purchaser of Germany’s industrial products.
The resulting homelessness and starvation allowed Adolf Hitler’s National Socialists to organize militant protests, riots, and ultimately seize power.
The Great Depression caused Japan’s exports to plummet.
This ended the prosperity and freedom of Japan’s Taishō Democracy, allowing Emperor Hirohito to seize power with his militaristic Shōwa government.
In America, the Great Depression left an estimated 15 million Americans unemployed.
The “Roaring Twenties” abruptly ended with a rapid contraction of credit, causing nearly half of all banks to fail.
This occurred despite the existence of the Federal Reserve which was created with promises that it would prevent such financial panics.
Democrat Secretary of State William Jennings Bryan had stated (Hearst’s Magazine, Nov 1923):
“The Federal Reserve Bank that should have been the farmer’s greatest protection has become his greatest foe.”
The President at the start of the Great Depression was Herbert Hoover, who had only been in office seven months.
Herbert Hoover had previously coordinated the feeding of millions who were starving in Europe and Russia after World War I.
When the Mississippi River flooded in 1927, Herbert Hoover orchestrated the relief of over 630,000 people who were affected, 200,000 of which were African American.
During the Great Depression, President Herbert Hoover led a drive to mobilize church affiliated organizations and private relief agencies, October 18, 1931:
“Time and again the American people have demonstrated a spiritual quality of generosity …
This is the occasion when we must arouse that idealism, that spirit, from which there can be no failure in this primary obligation of every man to his neighbor …”
Hoover continued:
“Our country and the world are today involved in more than a financial crisis …
This great complex, which we call American life, is builded and can alone survive upon the translation into individual action of that fundamental philosophy announced by the Savior nineteen centuries ago …
… Our national suffering today is from failure to observe these primary yet inexorable laws of human relationship … Modern society cannot survive with the defense of Cain, ‘Am I my brother’s keeper?'”
Herbert Hoover told the National Drive Committee for Voluntary Relief Agencies, September 15, 1932:
“Our tasks are definite … that we maintain the spiritual impulses in our people for generous giving … in the spirit that each is his brother’s keeper …
Many a family today is carrying a neighbor family over the trough of this depression not alone with material aid but with that encouragement which maintains courage and faith.”
President Hoover stated at the Gridiron Club, April 27, 1931:
“If, by the grace of God, we have passed the worst of this storm, the future months will be easy.
If we shall be called upon to endure more of this period, we must gird ourselves for even greater effort.
If we can maintain this courage and resolution we shall have written this new chapter in national life in terms to which our whole idealism has aspired.
May God grant to us the spirit and strength to carry through to the end.”
Herbert Hoover stated at Valley Forge, May 30, 1931:
“If those few thousand men endured that long winter of privation … held their countrymen to the faith, and by that holding held fast the freedom of America, what right have we to be of little faith?”
Many economists hold that Herbert Hoover’s efforts would have eventually resulted in a recovery, had it not been for insider political resistance and sabotage.
Hoover’s Democrat political opponents favored big government intervention and dependency, which may have actually extended the duration of the depression.
President Hoover warned October 31, 1932, of the long-term damage that would occur if big government collectivist proposals, such as FDR’s New Deal, were implemented:
“To enter upon a series of deep changes, to embark upon this inchoate new deal which has been propounded in this campaign would be to undermine and destroy our American system …
No man who has not occupied my position in Washington can fully realize the constant battle which must be carried on against incompetence, corruption, tyranny of government expanded into business activities …
Free speech does not live many hours after free industry and free commerce die.”
The Great Depression affected countries around the globe, including:
Australia,
Canada,
Chile,
France,
Germany,
Great Britain,
Greece,
Italy,
Latin America,
Netherlands,
New Zealand,
Portugal,
South Africa,
Soviet Union,
Sweden, and
Thailand.
The Great Depression saw an unprecedented involvement of government in relief activities.
In examining whether or not government should be involved in caring for the poor, an important biblical teaching is often overlooked.
The Bible gives commands to five main categories:
private individuals,
families,
employees & employers,
churches,
government.
Private individuals and church ministries have a biblical mandate to care of the poor, the widows, and the needy.
This is called “charity.”
Private individuals and church-related ministries have started: hospitals, medical clinics, caring for maimed soldiers, prisoners, unwed mothers, orphans, widows, shut-ins, homeless, juvenile delinquents, immigrants.
They provided voluntarily-funded charitable social services such as soup kitchens, feeding of the poor, welfare, and benevolence.
In contrast, biblical commands to families are mostly relational, such as “husbands love your wives,” and “children obey your parents.”
Charity is not a biblical command to employees and employers, who are instructed, “doing honest work with his own hands”; and “do not hold back wages.”
There is NO biblical command for the government to be involved in redistribution of wealth.
Government is only commanded to protect the innocent and punish evildoers.
James Madison wrote:
“Charity is no part of the legislative duty of the government.”
The Life of Colonel David Crockett (1884) by Edward Sylvester Ellis, recorded Tennessee Congressman Davy Crockett’s address to Congress after a request was made for public money to be dispensed to the needy.
In a speech titled “Not Yours to Give,” Crockett stated:
“Congress has not the power to appropriate this money as an act of charity. Every member on this floor knows it …
… I will give one week’s pay to the object, and if every member of Congress will do the same, it will amount to more than the bill asks …
… We have the right as individuals, to give away as much of our own money as we please in charity;
but as members of Congress we have no right to appropriate a dollar of the public money.”
Democrat President Grover Cleveland opposed Federal welfare, vetoing of the Texas Seed Bill in 1887:
“I do not believe that the power … of the general government ought to be extended to the relief of individual suffering …
Tendency to disregard the limited mission of this power … should … be steadfastly resisted …
Charity of our countrymen can always be relied upon to relieve their fellow-citizens in misfortune. This has been repeatedly demonstrated …
Federal aid in such cases encourages the expectation of paternal care on the part of the government and weakens the sturdiness of our national character,
while it prevents … among our people of that kindly sentiment … which strengthens the bonds of a common brotherhood.”
Just because something needs to be done does not mean it is the government’s job to do it.
President Coolidge stated May 15, 1926:
“The Federal Government ought to resist the tendency to be loaded up with duties …
It does not follow that because something ought to be done the national government ought to do it.”
Politicians confuse commands to private individuals and the church with commands to the government, mistakenly thinking the government should enact elaborate programs to care for the poor.
In the first century, early church members sold their property and brought the money to the feet of the Apostles for the church to distribute to the poor.
They did not bring the money to the feet of Pontius Pilate for the Roman government to redistribute.
During the Great Depression, New Deal programs were a significant step in the government usurping the church’s role of caring for the poor.
President Gerald Ford stated in Rockford, IL, March 11, 1976:
“People say … why don’t you expand that program, why don’t you spend more Federal money?…
I don’t think they have understood one of the fundamentals …
I look them in the eye and I say,
‘Do you realize that a government big enough to give us everything we want is a government big enough to take from us everything we have?'”
The problem created when the government gets involved in redistributing wealth is, politicians and government employees want to keep their jobs. Collectively, this is referred to as the deep-state.
They are tempted to take away funds from their political opponents and funnel them as benefits to those who can help them stay employed and in power.
The recipient of government benefits has their attitude change from one of gratitude for the giver’s generosity to impersonal demand for a debt owed.
When a crisis occurs, individuals and church ministries try to help people through it.
Ambitious politicians, though, look at crises as opportunities to usurp power and implement overbearing government programs.
Former White House Chief of Staff, Rahm Emanuel stated in a Wall Street Journal interview, November 19, 2008:
“You never want a serious crisis to go to waste. And what I mean by that, it’s an opportunity to do things that you think you could not before.”
Hillary Clinton answered the European Parliament March 6, 2009, when asked about a crisis:
“I’m actually excited by this … I’m well aware we are not yet through this economic crisis …
The Chief of Staff for President Obama is an old friend of mine and my husband’s, who was in the White House when Bill was there, and he said, you know, ‘never waste a good crisis.’
And when it comes to an economic crisis, don’t waste it.”
The Cloward-Piven Strategy, outlined in 1966 by Columbia University professors Richard Cloward and Frances Fox Pivens, called for overloading the welfare system to cause an economic crisis that would give an excuse for the government to usurp control to restore order, setting up a socialist system.
David Horowitz summarized this:
“The strategy of forcing political change through orchestrated crisis.
The ‘Cloward-Piven Strategy’ seeks to hasten the fall of capitalism by overloading the government bureaucracy with a flood of impossible demands, thus pushing society into crisis and economic collapse.”
An editorial cartoon appeared in the Chicago Tribune, April 21, 1934, depicting a communist writing on a large board:
“Plan of Action for U.S. — SPEND! SPEND! SPEND! under the guise of recovery —
BUST the government —
BLAME the capitalists for the failure —
JUNK the constitution and DECLARE A DICTATORSHIP.”
To the side, it added: “It worked in Russia!”
In 1998, there was a 60 Minutes report on globalist currency manipulator George Soros:
“Of all the financial titans and philanthropists of the 20-century, none are more complex and mysterious than George Soros …
He amassed billions through ruthless business decisions only to turn around and give away most of his fortune to advance his own personal philosophy …
He could destabilize a government by buying and selling its currency.”
Socialist thinker Friedrich Engels wrote (London: W.O. Henderson, The Life of Friedrich Engels, 1976; Outlines of a Critique of Political Economy, 1844):
“Every new crisis must be more serious and more universal than the last …
Every fresh slump must ruin more small capitalists and increase the workers who live only by their labor.
This will increase the number of the unemployed and this is the main problem that worries economists. In the end commercial crises will lead to a social revolution.”
Richard Nixon gave an address titled “The Meaning of Communism to Americans,” August 21, 1960:
“Marx and Engels had nothing but sneers for the idea that there are ‘eternal truths, such as freedom, justice, etc., that are common to all states of society’ …
There is only one rule: smash the existing ‘bourgeois’ economic and legal order and leave the rest to the ‘spontaneous class organization of the proletariat (working class)’.”
During the Great Depression, President Roosevelt issue dozens of unprecedented Executive Orders creating large numbers of new Federal agencies.
Enormous power was consolidated in Washington, D.C., usurping control over vast areas of American life.
Franklin D. Roosevelt issued Executive Order 6102 authorizing the Federal Government to confiscated all the gold in the country, making it a crime for a private citizen to own gold.
FDR began issuing Social Security Numbers.
Though the Federal Government specifically promised that the numbers would never be used for identification purposes or tracking citizens, they have nevertheless become just that.
Military hero Eddie Rickenbacker addressed the Chicago Economic Club, April 1961:
“By some queer twist of language, the modern liberals are those who ceaselessly strive to pile up the power of government …
The evil of liberalism is its emphasis on material things and its disdain for the spiritual and moral resources that we call liberty.
The liberal would sweep aside the constitutional restraints upon government in a blind rush to supply food, clothes, houses and financial security from birth to death, from the cradle to the grave for everybody.”
Despite his big government policies, Democrat President Franklin D. Roosevelt consistently referred to the Bible.
He stated on the 400th Anniversary of the Printing of the English Bible, October 6, 1935:
“We cannot read the history of our rise and development as a Nation, without reckoning with the place the Bible has occupied in shaping the advances of the Republic.
Its teaching, as has been wisely suggested, is ploughed into the very heart of the race.
Where we have been truest and most consistent in obeying its precepts we have attained the greatest measure of contentment and prosperity.”
In his Christmas Message, December 24, 1933, FDR stated:
“This year marks a greater national understanding of the significance in our modern lives of the teachings of Him whose birth we celebrate.
To more and more of us the words ‘Thou shalt love thy neighbor as thyself’ have taken on a meaning that is showing itself and proving itself in our purposes and daily lives.
May the practice of that high ideal grow in us all in the year to come.
I give you and send you one and all, old and young, a Merry Christmas and a truly Happy New Year. And so, for now and for always ‘God Bless Us Every One.'”
President Franklin D. Roosevelt stated in his First Inaugural Address, March 4, 1933:
“The only thing we have to fear is fear itself …
We face our common difficulties. They concern, thank God, only material things …
Where there is no vision the people perish (Pr. 29:18) … We face arduous days that lie before us … with … old and precious moral values …
In this dedication of a nation we humbly ask the blessing of God. May He protect each and every one of us!”
“The Lord is my light and my salvation; whom shall I fear? The Lord is the stronghold of my life; of whom shall I be afraid?” (Psalm 27:1, ESV).
By Shane Vander Hart on Oct 29, 2020 03:04 am
Joni Ernst, David Young, Kim Reynolds and Chuck Grassley emphasize the consequential nature of the election at a rally in Bondurant, Iowa. Read in browser »
By Caffeinated Thoughts on Oct 29, 2020 12:00 am
President Donald Trump, U.S. Senator Joni Ernst win and Republican U.S. House candidates lead in 2020 Iowa Youth Straw Poll. Read in browser »
By Caffeinated Thoughts on Oct 28, 2020 03:07 pm
AARP Iowa condemned ads produced by Democrats that targets State Sen. Mariannette Miller-Meeks, former U.S. Rep. David Young, and U.S. Senator Joni Ernst. Read in browser »
By Donald Bohlken on Oct 28, 2020 11:19 am
Donald Boehlken: Theresa Greenfield said Blacks and Black women in Iowa have a six times higher mortality rate than anyone else, this is false. Read in browser »
By James Broughel on Oct 28, 2020 08:24 am
James Broughel: Fighting the pandemic and supporting an economic recovery are two birds that can be killed with the same stone. Regulatory reform is that stone. 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.
President Donald Trump and First Lady Melania Trump hold a rally in Florida then travel to North Carolina where they will participate in an engagement event with members of the military and hold a campaign rally. Keep up with the president on Our President’s Schedule Page. President Trump’s Itinerary for 10/29/20 – note: this page …
The Senate Republican Conference on Wednesday released the first of a five-part documentary series, which it intends to use to take back the messaging around the government’s coronavirus response effort. The documentary, entitled “The Invisible Enemy,” gives viewers an inside look at how Senate Republicans responded to the coronavirus outbreak. Produced by the Senate Republican …
People gathered at strip malls in northern Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, on Wednesday morning to board up buildings and to clean up the aftermath of looting that occurred late Tuesday night. Law enforcement officials were unable to control large crowds of people looting a Walmart and Five Below before going across the street to ransack a Dollar …
The New York Times faced a wave of criticism Wednesday for hyping former “Anonymous” author Miles Taylor, a former Homeland Security staffer, as a “senior” Trump administration official. Taylor, who revealed his identity Wednesday, wasn’t even an agency chief of staff at the time he wrote the op-ed. “I also didn’t realize the definition of …
President Donald Trump holds a Make America Great Again rally in Goodyear, Arizona, Wednesday. This is the second of two rallies for the day. The president is scheduled to speak at 2:45 p.m. MST (5:45 p.m. EDT.) Live Stream of President Trump’s Rally in Goodyear, Arizona 10-28-2020 See all of Trump’s rallies HERE. Content created …
Apple has ramped up the development of its own search engine technology as antitrust U.S. and European Union regulators scrutinize Google, according to a Financial Times report. The Silicon Valley tech giant has subtly started the transition away from its reliance on the Google search engine, The Financial Times reported. Apple’s latest software update iOS …
The Great Red Wave Rising What Blue Wave? Have you noticed how loud and shrill Fake News has become in these last days before the election? The polls are screaming Biden’s ahead, Trump’s way behind. The polls were wrong in 2016 and are wrong in 2020. We have a new factor, the “shy” Trump voter …
Elections, as everyone now says, have consequences. But they can’t change the laws of physics. That matters, even in this hypertrophied political season, because one of the policy choices in play this election is whether or not to embrace a Green New Deal or one of its variants. But the Green New Deal has at …
Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey said Wednesday that under Twitter’s policy, Holocaust denials are not considered misinformation. Dorsey and other technology executives spoke Wednesday on their moderation practices before the Senate Committee on Commerce, Science and Transportation following Twitter’s decision to suspend the New York Post from its platform for sharing a story on Hunter Biden. …
The Department of Justice announced Wednesday charges against eight individuals for acting as agents of the People’s Republic of China while taking part in an illegal Chinese law enforcement operation known as Fox Hunt here in the United States. Five of these individuals were arrested across the country this morning. The rest are believed to …
The Babylon Bee could avoid the punitive scrutiny of our Big Tech overlords if the site would just follow the lead of Senate Republicans. The Babylon Bee is a conservative Christian satire site that has – in the eyes of Silicon Valley censors – committed the unforgivable sin: It’s too effective and too funny. The …
President Donald Trump holds a Make America Great Again rally in Bullhead City, Arizona, Wednesday. This is the first of two rallies for the day. The president is scheduled to speak at 12:00 p.m. MST (3 p.m. EDT.) Live Stream of President Trump’s Rally in Bullhead, Arizona 10-28-2020 See all of Trump’s rallies HERE. Content …
Happy Thursday, dear Kruiser Morning Briefing friends. Vinyl is overrated.
On Wednesday, the CEOs from Twitter, Facebook, and Google were sort of brought before the Senate Committee on Commerce, Science and Transportation for virtual hearing to discuss the companies’ fascist speech police tendencies. There’s a lot of bad faith behavior on the part of all three this election season and the Republicans on the committee raised some very legitimate concerns.
The three CEOs — Twitter’s Jack Dorsey, Facebook’s Mark Zuckerberg, and Google’s Sundar Pichai — all appeared before the committee voluntarily. That’s probably because they feel largely untouchable at the moment. They’re no doubt hoping that Crazy Joe the Wonder Veep gets elected and the Democrats take over the Senate, Should that happen, the very behavior that prompted yesterday’s hearing will be rewarded by the Dems.
Megan wrote yesterday that the Democrats on the committee would actually prefer that Big Tech get even more heavy-handed with their censorship ways. They’re all sitting around hoping that they have the opportunity to plunge us into a dystopian nightmare.
Shadowbanning is the worst because it’s stealth censorship that they’re hoping they don’t get caught doing.
The best part of the hearing was the verbal you-know-what-whuppin’ that Sen. Ted Cruz gave Jack Dorsey, which Megan also wrote about:
Facebook and Twitter were caught limiting the reach of the article, which prompted a Senate inquiry. Ted Cruz came out swinging, calling Twitter “the biggest threat to free and fair elections” facing America today. He also set Jack Dorsey’s overlong beard on fire with this blistering observation about the power of Twitter to police speech in America.
“Mr. Dorsey, who the hell elected you and put you in charge of what the media are allowed to report and what the American people are allowed to hear, and why do you persist in behaving as a Democratic super PAC, silencing the views to the contrary of your political beliefs?” Cruz asked in one of the more heated exchanges of the hearing.
There’s video of the full exchange in Megan’s post and it’s quite entertaining.
Dorsey’s justifications for Twitter’s alleged policies are painfully inadequate. He insists that the platform has fair, uniform rules but in reality they are arbitrary and biased.
Cruz’s remarks were harsh and necessary but will anything really be done? VodkaPundit, Bryan, and I were discussing this during our VIP Gold Live Chat on Wednesday. Cruz accused Dorsey of lying under oath to the Senate. Bryan said that he’d like to see something actually done about that rather than Dorsey merely getting an upbraiding on, of all places, Twitter.
Thus far, only the Twitter upbraiding has happened.
The damage has already been done for this election. Cruz is right, however, about the threat that Twitter poses. Personally, I think Google is the bigger problem in the long run. Something has to be done, and it has to be more than the occasional dog-and-pony show hearing, which we’ve had a few of now.
It’s a sad state of affairs when a small government guy like me is calling for federal intervention but Big Tech is drunk with power and wielding it in an egregiously unfair manner. Somebody has to thwart it.
US economy expands at record 33.1% rate in third quarter . . . The U.S. economy bounced back with a record yet temporary surge of growth in the third quarter as businesses reopened and stimulus cash powered consumer spending, reversing much of the collapse stemming from coronavirus-enforced lockdowns. Just as the second-quarter plunge in output was the biggest in seven decades of data, so too was the third-quarter rebound: Gross domestic product grew 7.4%, a quarterly gain that equals an annualized pace of 33.1%, the Commerce Department’s initial estimate showed Thursday. The figure topped economists’ estimates for a 32% increase, which was already well above forecasts three months ago for an 18% gain. Personal spending fueled the surge in growth, climbing an annualized 40.7%, also a record, while business investment and housing also posted strong increases. Bloomberg
Coronavirus
US reports record high cases over past week . . .
The United States has reported record-high cases over the past week, while hospitalization rates climbed. The rolling average of new cases confirmed each day hit an all-time high at more than 70,000, according to Johns Hopkins University data To date, the U.S. has confirmed more than 8.8 million cases. The latest surge has pummeled the Midwest, where test positivity rates have sometimes exceeded 30%. Surges in the Dakotas have been the most acute, with South Dakota’s average test positive rate now at 43.4% and North Dakota’s at 11%. Washington Examiner
No vaccine until January . . . A vaccine to help control the coronavirus outbreak isn’t likely to be available in the U.S. until January, if then, according to Anthony Fauci, the nation’s top infectious-disease doctor. President Donald Trump, pharmaceutical industry leaders and some public-health officials had said previously that an immunization to prevent Covid-19 could be available before the Nov. 3 election. That date has been consistently pushed back, however, as clinical studies — which are running at unprecedented speed — started to hit a few hurdles. Bloomberg
Trump administration to ensure vaccine is free . . . Seniors and people in private health-insurance plans are among those who won’t be charged for getting a coronavirus vaccine under a Trump administration rule designed to ensure that as many people as possible get vaccinated once a shot becomes available. Medicare will cover the cost of administering the vaccine for seniors under a plan released Wednesday. Wall Street Journal
Germany and France impose month-long lockdowns . . . Germany and France will clamp down on movement for at least a month, coming close to the stringent lockdowns in the spring as Europe seeks to regain control of the rapid spread of the coronavirus. The European Union’s two biggest economies will shutter bars, restaurants and non-essential services, while allowing schools and most businesses to operate. Bloomberg
Politics
Former DHS chief of staff Miles Taylor reveals he is “Anonymous” Trump critic . . . The ex-chief of staff to former Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen and Acting Secretary Chad Wolf revealed today that he is the “anonymous” author who boasted of a “resistance” movement inside the administration against President Trump. What’s more, he lied repeatedly telling CNN that he was not Anonymous. White House Dossier
How frightening to have the second-ranking person at DHS admit he is part of a “resistance” movement against the elected president. Is there any thought of charging him with treason?
Shipment of “damning” Biden documents vanishes . . . A shipment of “damning” documents linked to Hunter Biden and his father mysteriously disappeared in transit to Los Angeles, Fox News host Tucker Carlson revealed on his show Wednesday night. “There is always a lot going on that we don’t have time to get to on the air,” the “Tucker Carlson Tonight” host told his audience, “but there is something specific going on behind the screens that we did feel like we should tell you about. “On Monday of this week, we received from a source a collection of confidential documents related to the Biden family,” Carlson went on. “We believe they are authentic, they’re real and they’re damning.” Fox News
Cruz rips Twitter CEO over Hunter Biden stories . . . Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, ripped into Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey during a hearing with tech titans on Wednesday, accusing him and his social media platform of improperly censoring reporting that reflected poorly on Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden, asking at point, “Who the hell elected you?” Dorsey said this was due to a policy regarding hacked materials, because the stories were based on emails from Hunter Biden’s purported laptop. Cruz noted that a New York Times article about President Trump’s tax returns did not face the same treatment, even though the materials appeared to be leaked illegally. Fox News
Joe Biden says Hunter is the “smartest guy I know” . . . Joe Biden told Oprah Winfrey that his son Hunter ‘is the smartest guy I know’ during a Zoom event. The Democratic nominee made a surprise appearance Wednesday on a virtual get-out-the-vote event hosted by Winfrey that focused on voters in Pennsylvania, Michigan, Minnesota and Ohio. Joe Biden’s youngest son has spent months under intense scrutiny over his business dealings in foreign countries, and was plunged into yet another scandal last week when photos and emails from his laptop were leaked to the New York Post. Daily Mail
Democratic senator says Trump judges can’t sit “peaceably” . . . Sen. Chris Coons is calling for sweeping federal court reform following Justice Amy Coney Barrett’s confirmation to the U.S. Supreme Court, saying there are “hundreds” of President Trump-appointed judges in the lower courts who are too right-leaning to be “allowed to sit peaceably.” Mr. Coons, Delaware Democrat and member of the Senate Judiciary Committee, said Democrats need to have “a wide-open conversation about how we rebalance our courts.” Washington Times
Liberal self-righteousness has finally gotten to the point where societal and political norms can be changed in the name of “social justice.” This is the beginning of Leninism in the United States.
Poll: Democrats like Cuba more than Israel . . . A new poll indicates Democrats look more favorably upon Cuba than they do Israel. According to a YouGov poll released Monday, 39 percent of Democratic-leaning respondents have a favorable opinion of Cuba, compared with a 36 percent favorability rating for Israel. Washington Free Beacon
Supreme Court deals blow to Trump by allowing late ballots in PA, NC . . . The U.S. Supreme Court on Wednesday dealt setbacks to Republicans by allowing extended deadlines for receiving mail-in ballots in next Tuesday’s election in Pennsylvania and North Carolina, states pivotal to President Donald Trump’s re-election chances.
The action by the justices – with their new colleague Amy Coney Barrett remaining on the sidelines – means a Sept. 17 ruling by Pennsylvania’s top court allowing mail-in ballots that are postmarked by Election Day and received up to three days later to be counted will remain in place for now. Reuters
Trump supporters left in freezing cold after Omaha rally . . . Hundreds of President Donald Trump’s supporters were left in the freezing cold for hours after a rally at an airfield in Omaha, Nebraska, on Tuesday night, with some walking around 3 miles to waiting buses and others being taken away in ambulances. Seven people were taken to hospitals suffering from a variety of conditions, and a total of 30 were “contacted” for medical reasons, the Omaha Police Department said in a statement. Daily Caller
Fighter jets escort plane away from Trump . . . U.S. fighter jets escorted a plane flying in restricted airspace near President Donald Trump’s rally in Bullhead City, Arizona, on Wednesday in an overhead event that briefly distracted the president and the crowd. The North American Aerospace Defense Command tweeted that it sent two F-16s to investigate “a general aviation aircraft that was not in communication” with air-traffic controllers as it neared Bullhead City. “The violating aircraft was non-responsive to initial intercept procedures, but established radio communications after NORAD aircraft deployed signal flares,” the agency noted. “The aircraft was escorted out of the restricted area by the NORAD aircraft without further incident.” Arizona Republic
Jack Nicklaus voting for Trump . . . Legendary golfer Jack Nicklaus posted a statement to Twitter on Wednesday night urging people to vote and detailing why he cast his ballot for President Donald Trump. In Nicklaus’ view, Trump has “delivered on his promises” and “worked for the average person,” while being “more diverse than any President I have seen and has tried to help people from all walks of life – equally.” Nicklaus also believes that “Trump’s policies will bring the American Dream to many families across the nation.” USA Today
Cunningham lead over Tillis in NC shrinks after sex scandal . . . With one week until the election, polling shows North Carolina’s closely watched Senate race tightening. In early October, the RealClearPolitics average of polling in the race showed Democrat Cal Cunningham leading incumbent Sen. Thom Tillis (R) by five to six percentage points. That’s dropped to 1.8 points on average in the final days of the campaign. Cunningham has admitted to an extramarital affair. CBS 17 Raleigh
National Security
North Korea gained leverage under Trump . . . While Donald Trump boasts of having prevented war and exchanged “beautiful letters” with Kim, the U.S. president has not wrested a single significant commitment from the North to roll back its weapons of mass destruction programme, according to Seoul officials and analysts. Pyongyang embarked on an unprecedented series of weapons tests in 2017, declaring itself a nuclear power after undertaking its biggest nuclear blast and longest-range intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM) launches. After months of tightening sanctions and trading threats, Trump then became the first sitting U.S. president to meet with a North Korean leader at a summit in Singapore in 2018. Reuters
The president’s North Korea policy has been an utter failure. You don’t kill tyrants with love.
Trump border wall forces smugglers to dig expensive tunnels and launch drones . . . Top U.S. border officials expect cartels to build more tunnels from Mexico to the United States and increasingly rely on drones for surveillance operations as the 400 miles of new border wall makes it harder to smuggle people and drugs into the country. Transnational criminal organizations have long used tunnels and drones at the southwest border, but senior Border Patrol officials across the country are bracing for more activity as new 30-foot-tall barrier wall goes up in areas that have long been easy for criminals to cross. Washington Examiner
International
Three dead as woman beheaded in France . . . A knife-wielding attacker shouting “Allahu Akbar” beheaded a woman and killed two other people in a suspected terrorist act at a church in the French city of Nice on Thursday, while a gunman was shot dead by police in a separate incident. Within hours of the Nice attack, police killed a man who had threatened passersby with a handgun in Montfavet, near the southern French city of Avignon. He was also shouting “Allahu Akbar” (God is greatest. Reuters
Money
Pelosi lists areas of disagreement on stimulus . . . U.S. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi told Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin in a letter Thursday that she’s still awaiting the administration’s response on a raft of outstanding issues blocking a deal on a fiscal-stimulus package. In a letter Thursday posted on her official website, Pelosi listed seven major areas of disagreement: a national virus testing-and-tracing program; funding for state and local governments; school safety measures; child-care funding; tax credits for working families; unemployment insurance; and workplace protections and liability issues. Bloomberg
You should also know
Rioters hurl fireworks at police in second might of DC protests . . . Rioters on Wednesday night hurled fireworks at police in Washington DC and smashed shop windows during a second night of protests over death of black man who died fleeing officers. Karon Hylton, 20, died Monday after crashing into a car while being chased on a Revel scooter by police in DC. Police there say Hylton died after they saw him riding without a helmet last Friday. But the dad-of-one’s friend said: ‘They hit him in the back of his scooter and pushed him into the oncoming car.’ Footage from the city Wednesday also appeared to show some looters stealing an ATM machine from a Walgreens. Daily Mail
Girl Scouts delete tweet congratulating Amy Coney Barrett . . .The official Twitter account of the Girl Scouts of America deleted posts Wednesday on Twitter and Facebook that congratulated Justice Amy Coney Barrett for becoming the 5th woman to sit on the United States Supreme Court. Barrett was confirmed by the U.S. Senate in a 52-48 vote Monday night, and she took her seat Tuesday after being sworn in by Chief Justice John Roberts. “Congratulations Amy Coney Barrett on becoming the 5th woman appointed to to the Supreme Court since its inception in 1789,” the organization wrote Wednesday in a since-deleted tweet that include an image of all five women who have served on the court. Daily Caller
Personally, I think their cookies are overpriced.
Brain chip allows paralyzed men to use computer with their minds . . . It may be the size of a paperclip, but this tiny brain implant has brought life back to men suffering with upper limb paralysis. California-based Synchron, a neurovascular bioelectronics medicine company, announced its Stentrode brain computer interface (BCI) has allowed patients to carry out tasks on a computer just by using their mind. Using the implant, patients achieved an average click accuracy of 92 percent and 93 percent and typing speeds of 14 and 20 characters per minute – without lifting a finger. Daily Mail
Guilty Pleasures
Carma: Man kills Las Vegas biker from car and then dies after falling our the window . . . About 7:20 a.m., Michelle Weissman was pedaling down a bike lane on Hollywood Boulevard, near Sahara Avenue, greeting a pair of pedestrians she’d encountered, according to Metro Police. Rodrigo Cruz, 22, and his passenger — identified in reports as Giovanni Medina Barajas, 20 — were heading home when the younger man hit Weissman off her bike, police said. Weissman, 55, died at the scene, as did Medina Barajas, who had fallen out of the van with the momentum of the strike, police said. Las Vegas Sun
Nice to see some immediate divine justice.
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THE DISPATCH
The Morning Dispatch: Big Tech in the Crosshairs
Plus, a California ballot measure that will determine the future of the gig economy.
Happy Thursday! Remember Saturday? Not too long ago, right? That’s the length of time between now and Election Day. (Incidentally, it’s also the length of time you have left to sign up for our post-election virtual event!)
Quick Hits: Today’s Top Stories
The U.S. Supreme Court will not hear the Pennsylvania GOP’s appeal of the Pennsylvania Supreme Court’s Oct. 19 decision allowing ballots to be counted if they are received up to three days after Nov. 3, even if there is no postmark or the postmark is illegible. Justice Samuel Alito penned a separate statement suggesting that the Supreme Court could rule on the case after the election. The Supreme Court also declined to block an extension of North Carolina’s ballot return deadline. Justice Amy Coney Barret did not partake in either decision because “she has not had time to fully review the parties’ filings.”
The Center for Responsive Politics projects that this election cycle—including races in the House, Senate and the White House—will cost a record $14 billion, which would double the previous record set in 2016.
Germany and France announced new lockdown measures on Wednesday to combat the resurgence of COVID-19 cases and deaths. France’s one-month national lockdown will begin Friday, and will require people to stay indoors while nonessential businesses—including bars and restaurants—remain closed. Germany will require bars, gyms, concert halls, restaurants, and theaters to close down for one month beginning on Monday.
With less than a week until Election Day, 73.3 million Americans have already voted through in-person early voting and by mail-in ballots. Early voting numbers have now reached 53 percent of the total 2016 voter turnout, indicating record high voter participation in 2020.
A Wall Street Journal investigation revealed a key source for ex-British spy Christopher Steele’s dossier investigating connections between the Trump campaign and Russia: Olga Galkina, a disgruntled employee of global tech firm XBT Holding SA, who hoped to implicate her former employer by feeding Steele information.
Regeneron Pharmaceuticals announced positive clinical trial data related to its antibody cocktail therapy for COVID-19. Patients who received the therapy prior to hospitalization were 57 percent less likely to need medical care later. Regulators are evaluating whether to grant the treatment an emergency use authorization. Regeneron said earlier this month, however, that it currently only has about 50,000 doses of the treatment available.
The United States confirmed 81,062 new cases of COVID-19 yesterday per the Johns Hopkins University COVID-19 Dashboard, with 7.7 percent of the 1,052,874 tests reported coming back positive. An additional 1,060 deaths were attributed to the virus on Wednesday, bringing the pandemic’s American death toll to 227,673. According to the COVID Tracking Project, 45,045 Americans are currently hospitalized with COVID-19.
Last week, Twitter announced, via CEO tweet thread, that it was banning all political advertising on the platform; the site will not allow ads promoting either candidates or issues after November 22. “A political message earns reach when people decide to follow an account or retweet,” CEO Jack Dorsey said. “Paying for reach removes that decision, forcing highly optimized and targeted political messages on people. We believe this decision should not be compromised by money.”
The move came just weeks after Facebook made waves by neglecting to take down a Trump campaign ad that made some dubious claims about Joe Biden and his involvement in Ukraine. The ad was also running on MSNBC, Fox News, ABC, CBS, YouTube, and Twitter, but Facebook specifically rebuffed the Biden campaign’s request to take it down. “Our approach is grounded in Facebook’s fundamental belief in free expression, respect for the democratic process, and the belief that, in mature democracies with a free press, political speech is already arguably the most scrutinized speech there is,” Katie Harbath, Facebook’s public policy director for global elections, told the Biden campaign in a letter obtained by the New York Times. Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg gave a speech the following week arguing that while tumultuous times can create calls to “pull back on free expression,” he believes we must continue to stand for it.
Snap back to the present, and the differences between the two companies aren’t nearly as stark—at least in the immediate term. Back in September, Facebook announced it would remove attempts at voter suppression from its platform, attach labels to candidate posts declaring premature victory, and block new political and issue ads during the final week of the campaign. The company (along with Google) will also block all political ads indefinitely after the polls close on Election Day. (A reminder: The Dispatch is a partner in Facebook’s fact-checking program.)
The novelist Wallace Stegner famously said California “is like the rest of America, only more so.” Not one to be outdone by the federal government, then, the Golden State is on the verge of radically undermining the gig economy—and possibly bringing two of America’s most iconic tech companies to their knees in the process.
Last Thursday, a California appeals court agreed with an earlier lower court decision mandating that Uber and Lyft treat their drivers as employees and not contractors, entitling them to benefits like overtime and medical insurance. The ruling stemmed from a 2019 law passed by the state legislature, Assembly Bill 5, which established much stricter standards for how companies could classify workers as contractors. Rideshare companies aren’t the only entities to oppose AB5: Freelance journalists, the California Trucking Association, and the Recording Academy rely on “gig” work. The law has also been criticized for its numerous cutouts. Architects, for example, were free to classify themselves as contractors, but not landscape architects. Gov. Gavin Newsom signed an amendment to the law exempting musicians last month.
Uber and Lyft were on the verge of shutting down all California operations in August due to AB5, but an appeals court granted a stay hours before the original ruling was set to be enforced. Tuesday’s election could render the entire drama moot.
One of the 13 ballot measures Californians will decide on November 3 is Proposition 22, officially called “Exempts App-Based Transportation and Delivery Companies from Providing Employee Benefits to Certain Drivers.” A 50-percent-plus-one vote for the proposition would entitle drivers to 120 percent of the minimum wage for driving hours, along with some medical benefits and other worker compensation, and classify app-based drivers as contractors. Any amendment of the measure would require a seven-eighths vote in the state legislature.
With the election less than a week away, polling indicates a surprise twist: The racial gap is shrinking. The New York Times compiled a series of national polls showing that—despite historic trends and the Democratic Party’s staunch support of the Black Lives Matter movement—the president is picking up Black and Hispanic voters. Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden, on the other hand, has regained many of the white working class voters in Northern states who were lost to Trump in 2016. “The president’s strength among nonwhite voters represents an increasingly vital element of his possible path to re-election,” Nate Cohn writes. “It helps him counter a serious weakness among older white voters in the pivotal state of Florida and in other Sun Belt battlegrounds, including Nevada, which Mrs. Clinton carried four years ago.”
In a world swimming with hot takes about Hunter Biden and Tony Bobulinski, Ross Douthat wrote a reasonable one. “Bobulinski’s story and the email evidence both suggest that Joe Biden took at least enough interest in his son’s dealings to have a meeting during the Trump presidency with his business partners,” Douthat argues. “This isn’t proof that he partnered with Hunter or profited in any way, but it seems like evidence that he wasn’t particularly worried about keeping his son’s sketchy salesmanship at arm’s length. That seems like information worth knowing: not a scandal on a par with some of Trump’s, not a front-page bold-type screaming headline, but something that belongs in the pages of a newspaper, because it’s interesting news.”
“By my calculation, there are at the very least 11 trillion reasons to worry about Democratic presidential contender Joe Biden,” writes Nick Gillespie for Reason Magazine. The Democrats are more likely than not to take the Senate and hold the House of Representatives, giving Biden the unchecked freedom to follow through with some of his more radical—and expensive—campaign promises. All in all, Gillespie argues, these programs would “add up to a mind-blowing total of $11 trillion in new federal spending over the coming decade,” not to mention strain “a wide range of libertarian concerns about things such as individual autonomy, free speech, school choice, and gun rights.”
Something Fun
If you’re in need of some perspective, spend a few minutes exploring this 2.5 gigapixel image of the Orion constellation stunningly captured by astrophotographer Matt Harbison. It took him five years to capture and stitch together the 2,508 individual pictures, and you can get lost in each of them.
In the latest Dispatch Podcast, Sarah and the guys discuss presidential candidates’ closing messages and rally schedules, ongoing election litigation, and whether Mitch McConnell is the real winner of the Trump years.
Trump’s 220 judicial appointments since he took office—including three Supreme Court justices—may very well be the crowning achievement of his presidency. But he couldn’t have stacked the courts with conservatives without the Federalist Society, the Heritage Foundation, and the Republican Party’s most ardent institutionalist: Mitch McConnell. “McConnell didn’t want Trump to become president,” writes Jonah in Wednesday’s G-File (🔒). “But grownups adjust to reality when they don’t get what they want. That’s what McConnell did. He said ‘No’ to Trump when he could, and when he thought he should. You can defensibly complain that he should have and could have done it more. But at a moment when Gaetzian childishness is the reigning definition of ideological purity, I am grateful for what few grownups are left in the room.”
Though Vladimir Putin has expressly avoided using the term “alliance” to describe Russia’s relationship with China, it’s no big secret that the countries are cozying up to one another, Thomas Joscelyn notes in his latest Vital Interestsnewsletter (🔒). “It may be the case that ‘alliance’ implies certain military commitments that go beyond how the Kremlin and Beijing currently view their dealings. Or, they may want to leave some ambiguity, avoiding terms that crystallize the situation for policymakers around the globe,” he writes. “Either way, there is little doubt that their ‘strategic partnership’ has already led to an alliance, of sorts, between the Russian and Chinese militaries.”
William Jacobson: “SCOTUS again denies relief 4-4 in Pennsylvania late ballot case, Barrett doesn’t participate in decision – Roberts joins liberals again in denying relief from PA Supreme Court ruling allowing ballots, even without valid postmarks, to be counted if received three days after Election Day. But as the dissent notes, the issue doesn’t go away. If Pennsylvania makes the electoral college difference, and if the vote is close and late ballots matter, expect legal mayhem as everyone awaits the Supreme Court decision challenging those ballots.“
Kemberlee Kaye: “Honey Pot. This is going to be fun.”
Mary Chastain: “Guess what! Twitter has no ‘misleading information’ policy for Holocaust denial. The platform monitors for ‘fake news,’ except when it comes to a horrendous crime in human history.”
Fuzzy Slippers: “Democrats have to Democrat. Jill Biden’s bizarre-o world “decency is on the ballot” tweet is a crystal clear example of the way Democrats (and some Republicans) operate. We are supposed to accept that Joe Biden is “decent” even though we know all about his predatory hair-sniffing, handsy groping of little girls and of the wives of lower level officials; about his being up to his ears in graft, influence peddling, and corruption; about his short fuse that causes him to hurl insults at potential voters (“fat,” “lying dog-faced pony soldier”); and about his racist tendencies–Obama is great because he’s surprisingly “clean” and “well-spoken”; if you don’t vote for me, “you ain’t black”; regaling audiences with tales of little black children playing with his leg hair; and on and on. If decency is indeed on the ballot, the Harris-Biden ticket wouldn’t get a single vote.”
Leslie Eastman: “I was thrilled to do the annual Halloween show on Canto Talk on Wednesday. Silvio Canto, Jr., and I covered Halloween, COVID19, and the current state of the election…with lots of positive news for Trump supporters.”
Vijeta Uniyal: “Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan on Monday called for a boycott of French goods over the country’s response to the beheading of a teacher who showed Mohammad caricatures from the Charlie Hebdo magazine to his class. Many Muslim countries joint Turkey’s Erdogan in outrage over French government’s clampdown on Islamist organizations following the incident.”
David Gerstman: “Remember a few weeks ago when there was a news report that the Proud Boys were sending threatening messages to voters? Then it turned out that the group sending the threat was an Iranian disinformation campaign. But the anti-Trump grifters known as the Lincoln Project fell for it.”
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“Anonymous” No More
The author of the infamous “Anonymous” 2018 New York Times op-ed identified as “a senior Trump White House official” who claimed to be part of “The Resistance” revealed himself on Wednesday as Miles Taylor, a former staffer in the Department of Homeland Security.
While the New York Times led on its readers to believe “Anonymous” was a close advisor to President Trump, it turns out he was a no-name agency deputy with no access to the president. Out of 64 names listed as “Leadership” on DHS’ website on September 5, 2018, the day the Anonymous op-ed was published, not a single one was Miles Taylor. As Axios’ Jonathan Swan put it, the New York Times’ decision to grant him anonymity is nothing short of “embarrassing.”
President Trump said he has “never even heard of him,” and called the situation another New York Times “scam.”
Predictably, Taylor joined CNN as a contributor in September after selling out to Google, although the network claimed it was unaware that Taylor was behind the anonymous op-ed. In August, Taylor was asked directly by CNN’s Anderson Cooper whether he was Anonymous, to which he replied, “I wear a mask for two things, Anderson: Halloween and pandemics. So, no.” (The clip is worth watching for yourself.)
After landing his CNN contract despite lying on the network, he also decided to make a ploy for the ultimate prize: an Instagram influencer!
What a doozy.
Big Tech Takes the Stand
After two weeks of locking out the New York Post from its own Twitter account, Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey appeared before a Senate committee yesterday, along with the CEOs of Facebook and Google. Some highlights, courtesy of The Federalist:
The best moment came in the form of Jack Dorsey saying the New York Post can log back into its Twitter account, delete the original offending tweet, and then “tweet the exact same material from the exact same article” because the company updated its policies so the tweet is no longer in violation of its privacy terms.
As the Daily Caller’s Greg Price put it, “So even though the story no longer violates their rules, the NY Post can’t have their account back unless they delete their original tweet to teach them a lesson about running unflattering stories about Jack’s preferred candidate.”
Philly Protests and Violent Riots Rage On
Following the shooting death of death of Walter Wallace Jr. by police, protests and violent riots raged on for a third consecutive night in Philadelphia.
“The first round of riots began on Monday night after police shot and killed Walter Wallace Jr., a black man, for advancing toward them while holding a knife despite officer orders to drop the weapon,” reports The Federalist. “The incident, which was captured on video, sparked riots throughout the city leaving at least 30 police officers injured.”
FOX29 Philly reported police officers were “ordered to NOT arrest looters just disperse them,” leaving them to believe that leaves “no deterrent to stop looting.” (Correct.) President Trump offered to send in the National Guard, but they weren’t allowed to enter “unless authorities in the Pennsylvania city asked for assistance.”
FOX29 also reported that the city “plans on releasing body camera footage and 911 audio in the near future from the deadly police shooting.” While all lethal force incidents must be investigated, rioting and looting is unacceptable and won’t be stopped until Democrat government officials finally enforce a zero-tolerance policy.
Kelsey Bolar is a senior policy analyst at Independent Women’s Forum and a contributor to The Federalist. She is also the Thursday editor of BRIGHT, and the 2017 Tony Blankley Chair at The Steamboat Institute. She lives in Washington, DC, with her husband, daughter, and Australian Shepherd, Utah.
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 29, 2020 01:00 am
Is President Trump a self-styled authoritarian? No, but the people accusing him of being one just might be themselves. Read More…
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By Kyle Kondik
Managing Editor, Sabato’s Crystal Ball
Dear Readers: Join us today at 2 p.m. for our Sabato’s Crystal Ball: America Votes webinar. In addition to breaking down the election with just days to go, we’ll be joined by Scott Tranter of Decision Desk HQ, a site that will be independently reporting results Tuesday night. Scott will give us some tips about what to watch for on Election Night — and beyond.
We are releasing this week’s episode a little differently as a way to address some persistent audio issues from previous episodes. Instead of livestreaming the webinar, we will be posting it directly to our YouTube channel at 2 p.m. eastern. Just visit our YouTube channel, UVACFP, then (or whenever you want), and look for Episode 11 of the Sabato’s Crystal Ball: America Votes webinar. The direct link will also be available on the Center for Politics’ Twitter account (@center4politics) at around 2 p.m. Thursday.
In addition to our own update on the election, we’re pleased to once again welcome Chaz Nuttycombe for an analysis of state legislative races across the country. While we do not issue our own ratings in these races, Chaz follows them very closely. For more information on some of this cycle’s other state-level races, check out Senior Columnist Louis Jacobson’s recent Crystal Ball pieces on state Supreme Court contests and state ballot issues.
— The Editors
KEY POINTS FROM THIS ARTICLE
— Georgia’s two Senate races move to Toss-up.
— They may be the only two races we leave in Toss-up when we release our final election picks on Monday.
— The concept of Occam’s Razor — the idea that the simplest explanation is sometimes the likeliest explanation — might be a useful framework to use when assessing the presidential race.
Table 1: Crystal Ball Senate rating changes
Senator
Old Rating
New Rating
Kelly Loeffler (R-GA)
Leans Republican
Toss-up
David Perdue (R-GA)
Leans Republican
Toss-up
Map 1: Crystal Ball Senate ratings
Georgia and the Senate
Per Crystal Ball tradition, we are going to release our final ratings for the 2020 election on Monday. That includes picking all of the Toss-ups.
Well, perhaps not quite all of them.
Today we’re shifting both of Georgia’s Senate elections from Leans Republican to Toss-up.
One of these races, the special election, is virtually guaranteed to go to a runoff because it is an all-party jungle primary with multiple candidates from both parties, so there will in all likelihood be no winner next week. It’s become very clear that Democratic frontrunner Raphael Warnock will finish with the most votes, and there is still a competitive race for what would be the Republican slot in the runoff between Sen. Kelly Loeffler (R-GA) and Rep. Doug Collins (R, GA-9). Warnock has been inching up in polls and consolidating the Democratic vote, but he seems very unlikely to reach 50% given the number of candidates.
So that special election contest will stay a Toss-up at least through the election, when we will reevaluate it.
The regular Georgia Senate race, between Sen. David Perdue (R-GA) and 2017 GA-6 special election nominee Jon Ossoff (D), very well could go to a runoff if neither Perdue nor Ossoff gets over 50%. There is a Libertarian candidate on the ballot, too, which might prevent either from making it across the finish line.
The Perdue-Ossoff race has been very close in polling and has attracted a ton of outside investment. Democratic presidential candidate Joe Biden made a campaign stop in Georgia on Tuesday, a nod both to the close presidential race there but also to the important pair of Senate contests.
We have kept the race as Leans Republican effectively because of our general belief that the runoff could act as a backstop for Perdue: Republicans often have a turnout edge in such races in Georgia. But we really can’t rule out Ossoff winning on Election Day — or winning the runoff depending on the circumstances. The 270toWin polling average has Perdue and Ossoff effectively tied, with Ossoff holding a nominal 47.4%-46.6% edge. At this point, we think it’s likelier that both Perdue and Ossoff finish a little shy of that magic 50% mark, although we may lean the race on Monday if we get a clear indication one way or the other over the weekend that Perdue or Ossoff is likelier to win outright.
The Georgia runoff(s) will take place on Tuesday, Jan. 5.
Our Senate ratings now show 50 Senate seats at least leaning to the Democrats, at least 47 leaning to the Republicans, and three Toss-ups: the North Carolina race between Sen. Thom Tillis (R) and former state Sen. Cal Cunningham (D), as well as the two Georgia contests. A lot of uncertainty remains: Our decision last week to make Sen. Joni Ernst (R-IA) a small underdog in her race raised eyebrows on both sides, and Sens. Martha McSally (R-AZ) and Susan Collins (R-ME) are down but not necessarily out. Meanwhile, Democrats are still fighting to spring an upset in right-of-center states Alaska, Kansas, Montana, South Carolina, and Texas.
Overall, Democrats are favored to win the Senate, but their odds of winning the White House are better.
Democrats remain huge favorites to hold the House and are very likely to net seats, perhaps making double-digit gains. We will lean all of our House Toss-ups on Monday.
The presidential
Our Electoral College ratings remain 290 electoral votes at least leaning to Joe Biden, 163 at least leaning to Donald Trump, and 85 Toss-ups.
Map 2: Crystal Ball Electoral College ratings
The good news for Trump is that it’s not hard to imagine him winning all the Toss-ups. All of those states (plus the single electoral vote in Maine’s 2nd Congressional District) are very close in polling.
Florida, which many will be relying on as a Rosetta Stone for the national results given what should be a quick vote count on Tuesday night, seems immune to national trends, turning in close elections seemingly every cycle despite wildly different national political conditions. For five straight cycles, from 2010-2018, the state has featured either a gubernatorial race (2010, 2014, and 2018) or presidential race (2012 and 2016) decided by margins no larger than 1.2 percentage points. (Crystal Ball Guest Columnist Lakshya Jain had a great piece in yesterday’s issue about how Florida is so “inelastic” in its voting).
About the only thing we can interpret from the state’s huge early and mail-in vote tallies is that it should be close again. The same is true for those other Toss-ups.
But the difficulty for Trump, and the advantage for Biden, is that the former vice president’s leads in Arizona, Michigan, Nebraska’s 2nd Congressional District, Pennsylvania, and Wisconsin still seem solid, if not always sizeable (as is particularly the case in Arizona). Even if Trump wins all the Toss-ups, he still would need another 22 electoral votes from this group to get to 270 electoral votes. We’ll be looking for late trends in all of these places. One can find surveys showing Trump tied or even a little ahead in these states, but the bulk of the data points to Biden.
A Trump victory next Tuesday would confound analysts once again, and it likely would entail a polling error even more significant than 2016, unless late surveys released over the weekend and early next week pick up on a late Trump trend (as some did in 2016). We also expect to see reports on Election Day of huge Trump support at polling places, which may be 1. A bad omen for Biden or 2. Simply a reflection of more Republicans opting to vote on the day of the election than in advance compared to Democrats. If you’re nervous about the election, on either side, we’d advise you to find something else to do on Tuesday during the day besides following the news. There will be a lot of smoke, but it won’t necessarily be evidence of real fires. (Of course one of the things you should do on Tuesday is vote if you haven’t already.)
There is certainly an organic enthusiasm to Trump’s campaign, given his punishing rally schedule and big crowds — although we do wonder whether the president is undermining himself in some ways by hosting huge rallies in the midst of a current coronavirus spike. That the pandemic remains front and center so close to the election is surely not what the Trump campaign would have wanted, given the public’s generally negative feelings about the president’s handling of the pandemic.
As we assess the election, we keep coming back to this: After the election is over, what outcome would be easier to explain: a Biden victory, or a Trump victory? This is a riff on Occam’s Razor, the concept that in many instances, the simplest explanation for something is the best explanation.
If Trump were to lose, there would be a relatively simple explanation for why that happened.
Trump was elected despite getting fewer votes than his opponent in 2016, and he has rarely if ever demonstrated an ability to expand his support. Trump was reliant in 2016 on late deciders and voters who held an unfavorable view of both candidates, meaning that he had at least some soft support. His opponent this time, Joe Biden, is less polarizing and more popular than his 2016 opponent, Hillary Clinton, and there has been a generally pro-Democratic political environment ever since Trump got elected, as measured by surveys such as the House generic ballot (a good catch-all for the political state of the country) and the November election results in 2017, 2018, and 2019, which generally reflected the reality of a pro-Democratic environment. Trump probably was no better than 50-50 to win reelection prior to the onset of a deadly pandemic that caused damage to the economy, a situation one would not expect to help an incumbent president, particularly one who was already weak.
Trump losing, given these factors, would not be surprising, and would be easy to explain.
Meanwhile, the ingredients that would go into a Trump victory — likely involving massive polling error, essentially all the most competitive states breaking in favor of the trailing candidate, and a huge turnout in favor of a broadly unpopular incumbent president presiding over a difficult time for the country — would be harder to explain. Those ingredients would make some sense in the context of what we saw in 2016, but this environment is harder for the president, even as an incumbent. He was set up better as an outsider against a weaker opponent who was carrying the mantle of a party, the Democrats, trying to win a third straight term in office.
That doesn’t mean Trump can’t win, but when one accounts for all the factors, it would seem harder to explain after the fact than Biden winning.
We’ll release our final picks on Monday. It may be that our minds change by then, and that we can more easily come up with an explanation for why Trump instead of Biden should be favored. But as of now, our ratings continue to lean to Biden.
By Chaz Nuttycombe
Guest Columnist, Sabato’s Crystal Ball
KEY POINTS FROM THIS ARTICLE
— Democrats have gained massive ground in their battle for state legislatures since an overview in early May.
— There will likely be a Democratic net gain in state legislative chambers, breaking a few Republican trifectas and creating a new Democratic trifecta.
— The continuing electoral realignment between rural and suburban areas is present in state legislative races, as most Democratic flips are in the suburbs and most Republican flips are in rural areas.
The battle for the statehouses
Nearly half a year ago, the condition of the state legislatures didn’t look too bad for Republicans: They were at least slight favorites in most of their competitive chambers, they were favored to have a national net gain in single-member districts in state Houses and Assemblies, and they were only at a slight disadvantage in state Senates. Things seemed pretty balanced in the legislatures.
However, this balance was not lasting. Since our assessment of the state legislatures in the Crystal Ball in early May, the environment has shifted dramatically in the Democrats’ favor. After our initial analysis of state legislative fundraising in competitive districts in July, we found that Democrats have been wiping the floor with their competition in most states. As Election Day approaches, the money gap is only increasing.
In our forecast of 5,240 single-member state legislative districts across the country, Democrats are currently favored to have a net gain of 40 seats in state Senate seats and a net gain of 70 seats in state House/Assembly seats. This number is likely to expand in Democrats’ favor in our final ratings as we eliminate our remaining Toss-up ratings in state legislative districts.
Of these 5,240 districts, about 20% are competitive, 32% are uncontested and 48% are considered safe. Most of the districts that are favored to flip toward the Democrats are in suburban areas, while most districts favored to flip toward the Republicans are in rural areas.
Let’s take a look at places where it’s possible for one party or the other to create a so-called “trifecta,” where one party controls the governorship and both houses of the state legislature.
Map 1: Trifecta opportunities
Note: States in blue represent Democratic chances to create trifectas; states in red represent Republican chances to create trifectas; North Carolina is shaded in both colors because both sides could create a trifecta.
Due to the lack of competition in the gubernatorial races of New Hampshire and Vermont, a Democratic trifecta is no longer feasible in these states. While there are now fewer opportunities for Democrats to create trifectas in state governments, the three remaining trifecta opportunities in the states of Minnesota, North Carolina, and Pennsylvania have increased in likelihood thanks to changes in our state legislative forecast.
Meanwhile, Republicans have seen an increase in their odds of creating trifectas in the states of Alaska and Montana. Since our update in May, we have shifted our ratings of both the Alaska House and Montana gubernatorial races from Toss-up to Tilt Republican. However, the likelihood of a Republican trifecta in North Carolina has plummeted, as has the opportunity to create a trifecta in New Hampshire due to our latest forecast update that moves the rating of the state House to Safe Democratic.
Map 2: Trifecta breakup opportunities
Note: States in blue represent Democratic opportunities to break Republican trifectas.
Democrats have five opportunities to break Republican trifectas in the states of Arizona, Iowa, Texas, Missouri, and even West Virginia. Unfortunately for Republicans, there are now zero opportunities for breaking up Democratic trifectas. Until last week, the Republicans might have stood a chance of breaking a trifecta in Maine; however, due to the chamber becoming Safe Democratic in our ratings, that opportunity has come and gone.
Since our overview of trifecta breakup opportunities in our Oct.18 update, Democrats have improved their odds of breaking Republican trifectas in the states of Arizona, Iowa, Texas and West Virginia, as we have changed our ratings in at least one competitive chamber in each state since then. Missouri is included because Democrats have a chance to win the state’s governorship.
The most notable of these changes is in the Texas House of Representatives; the Holy Grail for Democrats in their quest to flip state legislative chambers. Texas, which is projected to gain three U.S. House seats in the next House reapportionment. Republicans have gerrymandered the U.S. House maps there since winning control of the state legislature (Democrats were known for gerrymanders there before then). If Democrats can flip the lower chamber, they would have a seat at the table for drawing Texas’ U.S. House map, which would aid them in their fight for control of the House over the course of the next decade. The chamber was moved from Tilt Republican to Toss-up in our ratings on Monday.
Table 1: CNalysis state legislative chamber ratings
As our chamber ratings suggest, Democrats are slightly favored to break Republican trifectas in the states of Arizona and Iowa, and are moderately favored to create a Democratic trifecta in Minnesota. They’re also slightly favored to flip the Michigan House, which would help incumbent Gov. Gretchen Whitmer (D) legislate.
Republicans are favored to flip the Alaska House due to the collapse of the majority coalition in the chamber, which consisted of Democrats, Independents, and a few Republicans. However, it’s not impossible that a new coalition could assemble after the election, just like in early 2019 after Republicans had beaten the previous coalition in the midterm.
CNalysis will be releasing our final overview of state legislatures on Nov. 2 on our home page. This includes eliminating all of our remaining Toss-ups (both chambers and districts) and putting them into a Tilt column.
You’ll also be able to view the final odds of the creation and dissolution of supermajorities in state legislative chambers here, by clicking the menu in the bottom left and selecting “HC Odds” or “SC Odds”. The two biggest supermajorities to watch will be the likely breakup of the Republican supermajorities in the Kansas legislature, which would prevent a Republican gerrymander in Kansas thanks to Gov. Laura Kelly (D)’s veto, and in the New York state Senate, where Democrats are favored to create a supermajority: if they succeed, they can override Gov. Andrew Cuomo (D)’s veto and pass more progressive legislation than he’d prefer.
CNalysis will also be live mapping the results of state legislative districts and chambers thanks to an army of volunteers. If you would like to keep up with the competitive districts that are being flipped or held by a party, you should keep this page open starting on election night.
Chaz Nuttycombe is director of the election forecasting group CNalysis.com. Follow him on Twitter @ChazNuttycombe.
Welcome to the World, Albie!
The Center for Politics’ family got a little bigger last Wednesday (Oct. 21) with the birth of Albert “Albie” Walker Kondik, the son of Crystal Ball Managing Editor Kyle Kondik and his wife, Lottie Walker. His proud parents are still deciphering the exact meaning of his various cries and coos but are choosing to interpret them as “Politics is a Good Thing.”
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The district attorney in Philadelphia issued a fiery statement warning President Donald Trump about supporting uncertified poll watchers for the election. Larry Krasner issued the statement on … Read more
If The New York Times was willing to lie about its anonymous source for their high-profile information operation, imagine the lies they’re willing to tell about all the other anonymous sources they use.
In her recent Vogue essay, model Emily Ratajkowski signals her most progressive beliefs, only to find herself wrestling with the pesky reality that is biology.
The ‘most important contributor’ to the Russia collusion hoax dossier has been identified by the Wall Street Journal as a disgruntled Russian public relations executive with a reported drinking problem.
I didn’t vote for Donald Trump in 2016, but this year, only an act of God could stop me from doing so. In 2016, Trump had no track record. But now he does, and it’s amazing.
The reality is that anyone who demands ‘evidence’ — itself a term invented by slaveowners to assert dominion over oppressed minorities — hates this country and the Constitution I swore an oath to defend.
Colleges are scrambling to avoid following new Title IX regulations requiring them to respect due process rights for those accused of sexual assault — rights to which Joe Biden has promised a ‘quick end’ if he is elected.
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by Tony Perkins: On Monday night, over 30 police were injured amid rioting in Philadelphia. Rioters threw bricks, yanked at police barriers, torched police cars, and looted businesses. A truck intentionally plowed into a 56-year-old female sergeant, who remains hospitalized with a broken leg. The site of Independence Hall, and the birthplace of America’s republic, endured a second night of rioting and looting that turned even more violent as looters shot each other.
It started after city police shot and killed a black man who charged at them with a knife and did not respond to multiple instructions to put the weapon down. Last night on Washington Watch, I interviewed Ken Blackwell, FRC’s Senior Fellow for Human Rights and Constitutional Governance, who was formerly the mayor of Cincinnati. He said the death of the man, Walter Wallace, “is being properly investigated with all due transparency.”
From my law enforcement background, I do know that officers tend to revert to their training in high-pressure situations. These officers did try to disengage before firing what appeared to me to be an excessive number of rounds. But I’ll wait and see what the investigation yields.
The mob hit the streets within hours, waiting for no investigation. And it seems they were less interested in justice — that was a mere pretext — than in violence. “There was no reason to loot and to destroy property in the name of seeking justice,” chided Blackwell. He said based on the videos millions have now seen, “it was not folks seeking justice. Most of those folks were seeking a pair of Nike’s.”
You’re probably having flashbacks to the summer, when protests all around the country turned into violent, late-night confrontations with police. It didn’t help that liberal city governments encouraged the violence, either explicitly or through failing to quash it early. Federal troops had to respond to ongoing violence in Portland and Washington, D.C. Minneapolis neighborhoods organized community watches after the city council voted to defund the police force. Seattle law enforcement surrendered city hall to the armed insurrectionists, who set up their own “autonomous zone.” Demoralized, the vast majority of Atlanta cops called in sick.
Well, the summer protests never really died away; the news media just got tired of covering them. Blackwell explained there are organizations using disinformation and what he called “designer chaos” to foment disruption. By their own admission, he said, their objective is “collapsing our civilization and our sense of community in our major cities.”
Somewhere along the way, we lost the common notion that law and order benefit everyone in America; they keep everyone safe. But now, said Blackwell, “the New York Times and their 1619 Project have basically said that America is systemically racist. And the only thing that will fix it is its complete collapse and starting all over again, which is just pure nonsense.”
The silver lining amid the fresh chaos is that it helps remind us about what’s at stake in this election. You may not like the president’s tweets or combative personal style. But the alternative is to grant political power to the ideology that is terrorizing our streets and wrecking our cities. The Left has made it clear they will violently impose their agenda and their beliefs, and no dissent will be tolerated. We’ve got to take a stand for truth, for justice, and for our American way of life.
Ken Blackwell argues in video below that most rioters in Philly weren’t seeking justice, they were seeking new Nikes.
—————————- Tony Perkins‘s Washington Update is written with the aid of FRC Action senior writers. Tony Perkins and Ken Blackwell are both contributors to the ARRA News Service.
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by Bill Donohue: As we know, there is no marriage, family, or reproductive issue that Joe Biden is on the same page with the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops (USCCB). What has gotten by most observers, however, is his support for gender theory, a fictional construct that argues if a male considers himself to be a female, he is. Pope Francis has condemned this crazed idea as “demonic.”
Thanks to CNSNews, we learned that the Biden campaign’s website is flagging their candidate’s pledge to allow boys to compete against girls in girls’ sports. To qualify, all the boys have to do is say they are a girl, and bingo—they can compete. This is considered equality, even though it puts real girls in an unequal position.
Allowing boys who self-identify as a girl to crash girls’ athletics—and to use the same locker room and shower facilities—is not a side issue for Catholic Joe. No, his website says he will act on this pledge on “his first day in office.” Too bad he never told the country what a pressing issue this is for him.
More bad luck for the Biden camp. On October 27, 2020, Bishop Michael C. Barber, S.J., of Oakland, chairman of the USCCB’s Committee on Catholic Education, and Bishop David A. Konderla of Tulsa, chairman of the Subcommittee for the Protection and Defense of Marriage, wrote a letter to members of Congress supporting the Protection of Women and Girls in Sports Act of 2020.
This bill affirms the right of boys and girls to compete exclusively against those of their own sex, providing no allowance for the sexually confused. It would stop entities that receive federal funds under Title IX from “permitting male students to participate in athletic programs designated for women and girls.”
The bishops note that while transgender students should not be harassed, their condition is one of “gender identity discordance.” It must be said, they stressed, that allowing boys to join a girls’ athletic team would be “a loss for basic fairness and the spirit of Title IX.”
Thus, the Biden campaign is once again out of step with the bishops.
We at the Catholic League have only one question: Why would Catholic Joe want to fight so hard for a cause the Holy Father labels “demonic”?
—————————– Bill Donohue (@CatholicLeague) is a sociologist and president of the Catholic League.
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by Mike Huckabee: NOTE: Because the following story relates to the Biden “family business” scandal, it should be mentioned once again that this is NOT Russian disinformation.
Tucker Carlson had an exclusive interview Tuesday night with former Biden business associate Tony Bobulinski, who was recruited by the Bidens to “do the math” and structure their deals. He said he has to come forward out of his patriotic duty, having nothing to gain except to salvage his own good name, as he’s being tarred, ridiculously, as an agent of “Russian disinformation.”
One might ask, “Well, why is he going on FOX NEWS to do this?” The answer: Virtually everyone else is ignoring this story. Where else is he going to go?
As Tucker said, “Never in American history have more power centers in this country aligned to kill a legitimate news story in the days before an election.” He hinted at “an extraordinary attempt” made Monday night to to interfere with FOX News’ reporting of the Biden story and said details would be coming.
The main point Tucker wanted to make with the Bobulinski interview is that this scandal is not about Hunter Biden, but about JOE Biden, the Democrat who might be elected President of the United States in a matter of days. “Joe Biden,” Tucker said, “had direct personal involvement with his family’s business dealings in Communist China, and likely in other countries as well.”
And it’s true. Joe Biden denies he ever even spoke to his son about those foreign deals, but we know without a doubt that he is lying. There’s plenty of evidence documenting this.
Tucker’s interview with Bobulinski took place in a Los Angeles hotel room on Tuesday afternoon.
As the story unfolds, Bobulinski received a proposal on Christmas Eve 2015 from English businessman James Gilliar in a text saying, “There will be a deal between one of the most prominent families from US and them constructed by me.” This was the deal involving Chinese energy company CEFC. A lot of work had apparently been done during 2015 to put this deal together, and it was moving forward. “One of the most prominent families” was the Biden family — not Hunter or James, but the “entire family legacy,” meaning, OF COURSE, Vice President Joe Biden.
Moving forward to 2017, Bobulinski was asked by Rob Walker, who was a partner in the Biden-connected investment firm Rosemont Seneca and had been working to develop the CEFC deal, to “sit down with their father [Joe Biden], just to meet him and, at a high level, discuss the Biden family and how they approached things.” He added that Walker was involved in the family’s participation with the Chinese in Sinohawk and was a self-described “proxy” for the Biden family around the world.
Bobulinski and Joe Biden met very late on May 2, 2017, in Los Angeles in a dark bar (which struck him as surreptitious) at the Beverly Hilton during the Milken Conference, which he described as “one of the top three conferences in the world for anybody that’s a global investor or developing different humanitarian causes and a variety of things.” Hunter and James had carved out a time for them to talk not so much in detail about business, but just about his own background and what he could bring to the table. “…They were sort of wining and dining me,” he said, “and presenting the strength of the Biden family, to get me more engaged [to] take on the CEO role and develop Sinohawk, both in the United States and around the world, in partnership with CEFC.”
“There was no other reason for me to be in that bar,” he said, “meeting Joe Biden, than to discuss what I was doing with his family’s name in the Chinese CEFC.
This was direct involvement in the “family business” on the part of Joe Biden –- so it was a blatant lie that he never discussed it with Hunter.
Recall that Bobulinski attended the last debate between Biden and President Trump. He told Tucker that when Biden was still denying his involvement during the debate, he almost stood up and yelled, “Liar!” He stressed that he had just been “brought in to run this company,” was personally “irrelevant,” and had “been exposed to all of this fact” and believes “the American people should see this fact.” He’s got dates, times, meetings, and many emails generated not by him, but by others within the business. “The FBI can interview THEM,” he said.
“But I was shocked,” he continued, “that not only is the media [not] discussing this, but they’re going to the other extreme –- they’re dismissing it as ‘Russian disinformation’…it’s just absurd.”
He’d much prefer the Biden family present these facts, but they obviously won’t, and when he told Rob Walker he would do it, Walker told him, “Tony. You’re just gonna bury all of us man.”
As he described it to Tucker, his initial meeting with Joe Biden was mostly an introduction, more about themselves personally than about the business. Biden thanked him for his military service. It was sort of a get-to-know-you thing, and an inducement by Hunter and James for Bobulinski to get involved in the family business.
“They were putting their entire family legacy on the line,” he said. “They knew exactly what they were doing. They were dealing with a Chinese-owned enterprise run by Chairman Ye, CEFC, that had strong financial support and political support from the Chinese Communist Party…That’s not my own words; it’s how they presented it to me and read me in on it.”
He said Hunter Biden seemed quite proud that he had this relationship with Chairman Ye and could get deals like this done around the world.
Bobulinski also talked about the now-familiar email from James Gilliar to him about “how the equity from the enterprise would be divvied up.” It’s “crystal clear” to him that “the big guy” who was supposed to get 10 percent (held by “H,” Hunter) is Joe Biden. Importantly, the final document that was drawn up hides Joe Biden’s 10 percent participation within his brother James’ share.
He said he’d anticipated that Joe Biden might run for President in the future and thought this kind of foreign involvement –- especially with the Chinese –- might be a political risk. When he asked James something like, “How are you getting away with this?” or “Aren’t you concerned…?,” James just chuckled and said two words.
In related news, Hunter Biden served as the attorney defending an executive of CEFC (cozy) who was being investigated for spying for the CCP. There’s an audio recording from Hunter’s laptop in which he says, “I have another NEW YORK TIMES reporter calling about my representation of Patrick Ho — the [bleeping] spy-chief of China.” So we know Hunter was well aware of how murky the water was in which he swam.
Tags:Mike Huckabee, Bobulinski Interview, Digs Deeper, Corrupt “Biden Inc.”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 Dr. Walter E. Williams: President Donald Trump is not the first president to be hated by a large segment of the American population. In more recent times, there was considerable hate for President Ronald Reagan. Even though the Democratic Speaker of the House Tip O’Neill and Reagan were polar opposites in their politics, they could be friends Once, when Reagan confronted O’Neill about nasty things that he said about him in a newspaper, O’Neill replied, “That’s just politics, after 6 o’clock we’re buddies — we’re friends.” Politics today has become something not seen in our history. The true tragedy is that many Americans have bought into the hate, destructiveness and plain nastiness and are seemingly ignorant or uncaring about its long-term consequences for our nation.
Democrats say that if they win the presidency, they would increase the size of the U.S. Supreme Court by appointing justices who would do their bidding — packing the court. One wonders whether they think that a future Republican president would simply ignore what they have done. I doubt it. A future Republican president would resort to the same tactic and appoint justices that would do his bidding. The U.S. Supreme Court would become no less than a super-legislature, subject to the will of politicians.
Last June, the U.S. House of Representatives passed a bill in favor of D.C. statehood. The measure was dead on arrival at the Republican-controlled Senate. But should Joe Biden win the presidency and bring with him majorities in the House and Senate, he would make statehood for D.C. — and Puerto Rico — a political priority. That would give the Democrats four more seats in the U.S. Senate, therefore guaranteeing them a solid majority. But would Republicans accept that without a response? What about splitting up strong Republican states, such as Oklahoma, Kansas, Nebraska, Wyoming, Utah and Idaho. For example, create a West Oklahoma and East Oklahoma or a North Utah and South Utah. That would give the Republicans four additional senators thereby offsetting the new Democratic senators.
You say, “Williams, dividing up states to get greater representation in the House of Representatives and the Senate would violate the Constitution.” The fact of the matter is that making Washington, D.C., a state would violate the Constitution. Article I, Section 8, clause 17 of the U.S. Constitution provides explicitly for a national capital that would not be part of a state nor treated as a state, but rather a jurisdiction under the exclusive authority of Congress, a neutral “district” in which representatives of all the states could meet on an equal footing to conduct the nation’s business.
So, far as dividing up states, Article IV of our Constitution, in part, says, “but no new State 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.”
By the way, in 1863, President Abraham Lincoln, who claimed that he was fighting against secession, violated the U.S. Constitution when he proclaimed the admission of West Virginia into the Union. The Virginia state legislature did not vote to support West Virginia’s secession from Virginia.
The bottom-line question is whether our nation can survive the divisions that we see today. Too many people want to blame it all on Trump. How much blame can be put on Trump for the riots, looting and, as Axios estimated, the close to $2 billion in losses from property destruction? What about the murder and shooting of civilians and law enforcement officers? What about the tearing down of monuments, not only those of Confederate generals but of Abraham Lincoln, Christopher Columbus, Thomas Jefferson, George Washington and abolitionist Frederick Douglass?
Perhaps the most tragic aspect of today’s division is that much of it is a byproduct of our education system where young people are taught to hate our nation’s founders and founding principles. However, it is these principles, though practiced imperfectly, that have created the freest and richest nation in mankind’s history. The question is if our nation can survive the widespread anti-Trump hate.
—————- Dr. Walter Williams (@WE_Williams) is an American economist, social commentator, and author of over 150 publications. He has a Ph.D. and M.A. in Economics from the UCLA and B.A. in economics from California State University. He also holds a Doctor of Humane Letters from Virginia Union University and Grove City College, Doctor of Laws from Washington and Jefferson College. He has served on the faculty of George Mason University in Fairfax, Virginia, as John M. Olin Distinguished Professor of Economics, since 1980. Visit his website: WalterEWilliams.com and view a list of other articles and works.
Tags:Walter Williams, commentary, Is Getting Trump, Worth ItTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
by Paul Jacob: On Election Day, “the Empire hopes to strike back,” writes Daniel McCarthy for The Spectator. “Joe Biden personifies the foreign policy of endless war that Democrats and neoconservatives pursued for 25 years, from the end of the Cold War until the election of Donald Trump in 2016.”
McCarthy argues that “Biden’s overall record is one of foreign policy interventionism,” but Biden’s Senate voting record is iffy-fifty: Biden “voted for the Iraq War, but he also voted against the 2007 surge.” He voted for the 1999 Serbian war, which destabilized relations with Russia, allowing the rise of Putin. But Biden voted against 1991’s Persian Gulf adventure which set the stage for post-Cold War American megalomania.
Nevertheless, McCarthy argues that “Joe Biden is an archetypal liberal interventionist of the post-Cold War variety. He understands war in the same terms as domestic policy: as an occasion to expand the power wielded by experts in Washington, whose moral and rational qualifications are beyond question — no matter how disastrous the consequences of their policies.”
Such a plausible case. War is certainly government “activism.”
McCarthy has spotted a real problem in “progressive liberalism,” and understands the “peer pressure” that so oppressively rules in the corridors of power. But he misses — perhaps merely for reasons of space — the sheer institutional power of the Deep State. It holds the secrets, it controls vast amounts of money, its immensity overpowers rational thought.
It is the government we cannot get to; it is the government that tried to “get” Trump.
This is Common Sense. I’m Paul Jacob.
———————– Paul Jacob (@Common_Sense_PJ) is author of Common Sense which provides daily commentary about the issues impacting America and about the citizens who are doing something about them. He is also President of the Liberty Initiative Fund (LIFe) as well as Citizens in Charge Foundation. Jacob is a contributing author on the ARRA News Service.
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by Stephen Moore: Why is the stock market so high? I get asked this riddle every day.
The standard answers we hear these days are that the market is anticipating another $2 trillion Donald Trump-Nancy Pelosi stimulus bill (either before or right after the election) and investors are craving another drink from the federal firehose. Deficit spending has apparently become the crack cocaine for investors.
Economists at the Federal Reserve Bank, UBS, Bank of America and Goldman Sachs also tell us that a President Joe Biden would be bullish for the markets because he will deluge the economy with even more deficit spending in the trillions of dollars. UBS even says that a Democratic clean sweep would be “moderately bullish” for stocks. And people actually pay economists for such lame-brained analyses. The historical evidence shows the market does best with divided control of Washington and worst when Democrats run everything.
More importantly, government spending stimulus bills have never worked anywhere, anytime, at any amount. They are NEGATIVE for the economy, and the increased government spending in the end only crowds out private spending, investment and profits. Just look at the Obama years and the anemic growth rates for four years of “stimulus.”
The unavoidable truth is that debts must be paid for now or with interest later — and the taxes to pay for the spending will assuredly punish investors, and hard. For example, a major feature of the Biden tax plan is to raise the corporate income tax from 21% to 28% and to raise the capital gains tax from roughly 24% to 40%.
These are direct taxes on stock ownership. If the government takes a larger share of corporate profits, then, by definition, the shareholders get a smaller share. This should get capitalized into the value of shares of stock. Right now, under the current tax code, a shareholder has an after-tax rate of return of about 60% on the stock, with the other 40% going to government taxes. Under the Biden tax plan, the after-tax return on the stock falls to about 48% for the shareholder, with 52% snatched away by the government.
Someone please explain to me how this scheme RAISES stock values.
To be honest, I don’t have a good explanation for why the market has been so dizzyingly high, except for the fact that the economy is doing MUCH better than anyone expected during the pandemic.
But here is another explanation. Perhaps the market’s collective wisdom knows something about this crazy election that pollsters and political pundits aren’t seeing. Maybe the market is making a bet that President Donald Trump will defy the odds and win. Right now, the betting odds have him at 40%.
Don’t forget that the unexpected Trump win four years ago caused a massive market rally hours after he was declared the winner — a rally that lasted three years. Maybe investors don’t want to be caught surprised a second time. The only sure bet is that if Trump loses and Democrats sweep, the rally in the stock market and the real economy will come to a screeching halt.
——————- Stephen Moore is a senior fellow at the Heritage Foundation and an economic consultant with FreedomWorks. He is the co-author of “Trumponomics: Inside the America First Plan to Revive the American Economy.” H/T Rasmussen Reports.
Tags:Stephen Moore, Is the Stock Market, Telling Us, That Trump Will Win?To share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
Army Gen. Gustave Perna testifies on his
nomination to be chief operating officer of
Project WarpSpeed before the Senate
Armed Services Committee on June 18, 2020.
by Fred Lucas: The chief operating officer of Operation Warp Speed, the federal government’s project to develop a COVID-19 vaccine, said Tuesday he thinks about his own family in giving his assurances that any such vaccine will be safe.
“Nobody in this organization, in this task force, is going to allow a vaccine to go out to the American people that is not safe and effective,” Army Gen. Gustave Perna said in a Heritage Foundation virtual event. “It would just be shameful if we get a vaccine out to the American people, and people don’t take it because there is doubt or concern.”Perna said he had 100% confidence the vaccine will be safe.
“We will make sure that we will follow the science to that end. We will not distribute vaccines that are not determined safe and effective. You can take my word for that,” the general said.
Perna was joined for the event by Dr. Matthew Hepburn, head of vaccine development for Operation Warp Speed, who said the team acknowledges and appreciates the public’s concern.
“This is why we don’t cut corners. This is why we maintain the highest ethical, quality, and regulatory standards, and that we are transparent throughout the process so we can create a sense of confidence, so that what we know is being communicated publicly so that people can make the decision about these vaccines,” Hepburn said.
He said that after getting the vaccine, people will be checked on for two years.
The chief operating officer of Operation Warp Speed, the federal government’s project to develop a COVID-19 vaccine, said Tuesday he thinks about his own family in giving his assurances that any such vaccine will be safe.
“Nobody in this organization, in this task force, is going to allow a vaccine to go out to the American people that is not safe and effective,” Army Gen. Gustave Perna said in a Heritage Foundation virtual event. “It would just be shameful if we get a vaccine out to the American people, and people don’t take it because there is doubt or concern.”
Perna said he had 100% confidence the vaccine will be safe.
The left is actively working to undermine the integrity of our elections. Read the plan to stop them now. Learn more now >>
“We will make sure that we will follow the science to that end. We will not distribute vaccines that are not determined safe and effective. You can take my word for that,” the general said.
Perna was joined for the event by Dr. Matthew Hepburn, head of vaccine development for Operation Warp Speed, who said the team acknowledges and appreciates the public’s concern.
“This is why we don’t cut corners. This is why we maintain the highest ethical, quality, and regulatory standards, and that we are transparent throughout the process so we can create a sense of confidence, so that what we know is being communicated publicly so that people can make the decision about these vaccines,” Hepburn said.
“Ultimately, though, we are not only saying we are looking at these vaccines in the short term for clinical trials, but as part of the regulatory process, the Food and Drug Administration is providing guidance in terms of how will we follow these people out for the longer term,” Hepburn said. “That, like for any other vaccine, we are meeting that highest standard.”
To date, the disease has been responsible for the deaths of more than 226,000 Americans. The pandemic led to shutting down the U.S. economy and massive government spending.
Health and Human Services Secretary Alex Azar said the vaccine should be ready by January.
President Donald Trump announced Operation Warp Speed in May.
The operation is aimed at delivering 300 million doses of COVID-19 vaccine by January. Congress allocated $10 billion to the effort.
It’s a joint effort of the Department of Defense and the Department of Health and Human Services. The Defense Department is focused on assistance with logistics, contracting, and supply chain management.
Trump called on Perna to be the chief operating officer of the effort when the general was just six months away from retirement. He leads the effort along with Dr. Moncef Slaoui, the chief scientific adviser.
In response to a question, Perna said that a possible change in administrations in January should not disrupt the work Operation Warp Speed is doing.
The general explained that the government will be relying heavily on the private sector for distribution and delivery of the vaccine to customers, with participation from Walmart, CVS, Walgreens, and other retailers that have pharmacies.
“Let’s assume we have quantities of vaccine ready to go upon FDA approval. What is next? It goes without saying that it will be the distribution of vaccines across all of America to include territories, and major cities, large metropolitan areas,” Perna said.
It’s just a herculean task on its own. We thought through the process through as many courses of action, but at the end of the day, I’ve made the decision that we were going to utilize the commercial industry that was most capable of implementing this task. There were three large companies, all capable, playing a role in vaccine distribution, as well as therapeutic distribution.The clinical trials are large scale, which has allowed the process to move so quickly, but the government and its pharmaceutical partners still need additional volunteers, Hepburn said.
“These are not small clinical trials. In a typical product development, you may see a vaccine trial of, let’s say, 5,000 volunteers, or maybe 8,000 volunteers. Our standard has been 30,000 volunteers in our clinical trials,” he said.
He added that another trial has had almost 40,000.
“What that shows you is that, for me, over 60,000 Americans have decided to say, ‘I will volunteer … I’m going to do my part in fighting this pandemic,’” Hepburn said, adding that still other trials “need another many thousands of volunteers for each one.”
———————— Fred Lucas is chief national affairs correspondent for The Daily Signal
Tags:Fred Lucas, The Daily Signal, COVID-19, Vaccine, Will Be Safe, Operation Warp Speed, Leaders VowTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
by Mario Murillo Ministries: “This towering American spirit has prevailed over every challenge, and lifted us to the summit of human endeavor. And yet despite all of our greatness as a nation, everything we have achieved is now in danger.” –Donald J. Trump
Was Trump exaggerating when he said that Biden has put everything America has achieved in danger? I would give almost anything for that not to be true. Tragically, it is utterly true. It is painfully true. It is undeniably true.How can it be possible that if we do not stop Joe Biden, it means the end of America as we know it? And let’s be very clear about one thing: The only way you stop Biden is by voting for Trump. Everything else helps elect Biden, and by default, helps destroy this great nation.Many Christians love to say wispy things like, “The church must stay out of politics.” Or they say, “We shouldn’t choose sides.” But since Trump is God’s rescue plan for America, if you refuse to vote for him, you have chosen a side—a very dark side. In my view, you are choosing against God.Think about it. How can Trump’s personality flaws hold a candle to the blatant evil of the Democrat Party? Were you there when the former Planned Parenthood worker described standing in abject horror as she watched an abortion live on screen? A fully formed fetus is fighting with all of its might to get away from the suction device. The doctor finally catches the fetus and exclaims, “Beam me up, Scotty.”How can you sit idly by, and allow such callous murder as this to go on? Thousands of years ago, God foresaw suction abortion and commanded us, “Deliver those who are drawn toward death, and rescue those who are being led to the slaughter. If you say, “Surely we did not know this,” does not He who weighs the hearts consider it? He who keeps your soul, does He not know it? And will He not render to each man according to his deeds?” (Proverbs 24:11-12)
And how can the Democrat Party dare to judge anything in our past history, when they are advancing the most barbaric atrocities in our history? They say we are guilty and must pay for our past sins, even as they practice the greatest sin we have ever committed.
And you, my undecided Christian—how will you explain to God that you had the power to vote and end this holocaust, but you couldn’t get past Trump’s personality? And, by the way, the abortion holocaust will surely rain down the judgment of God on America, just as it did on Nazi Germany.
Then there is Antifa and Black Lives Matter. They are the armed militia of the Democrat Party. We know this because during their entire reign of terror, the Democrats—who control the cities where they loot and burn—have made no move to stop them. All mayors Lightfoot of Chicago and Jenny Durkan of Seattle said was “keep them away from my house.” Choosing, instead, to let innocent Americans, trapped in these neighborhoods, live in terror.
President Trump said, “During their convention, Joe Biden and his supporters remained completely silent about the rioters and criminals spreading mayhem in Democrat-run cities. They never even mentioned it during their entire convention. Never once mentioned. In the face of left-wing anarchy and mayhem in Minneapolis, Chicago and other cities, Joe Biden’s campaign did not condemn it. They donated to it. At least 13 members of Joe Biden’s campaign staff donated to a fund to bail out vandals, arsonists, anarchists, looters and rioters from jail.”
Don’t try to salve your conscience by thinking you are helpless to do anything about this. Trump will restore law and order once he has the mandate of reelection. You simply can’t say that you want mob rule in our streets ended, unless you vote for Trump.
Democrats despise America and will run it into the ground, just as their mayors and governors are allowing rioters to run their states and cities down into smoldering ruins. Their convention proved it. This begs the question, “How can we put them in charge of America?” President Trump put it this way: “At the Democrat National Convention, Joe Biden and his party repeatedly assailed America as a land of racial, economic and social injustice. So tonight, I ask you a simple question: How can the Democrat Party ask to lead our country when it spends so much time tearing down our country?”
If, somehow, I have still not gotten through to you, let me finish with this: Joe Biden is a Trojan horse. He is a hollowed out wooden soul that will do anything and everything that the radical Socialist wing of the Democrat Party tells him to do.
Again, President Trump said, “Joe Biden’s campaign has even published a 110-page policy platform, you can’t get away from this. Coauthored with far-left senator, crazy Bernie Sanders. The Biden/ Bernie Manifesto calls for suspending all removals of illegal aliens, implementing nationwide catch and release and providing illegal aliens with free, taxpayer-funded lawyers.
“Make no mistake, if you give power to Joe Biden, the radical left will defund police departments all across America. They will pass federal legislation to reduce law enforcement nationwide. They will make every city look like Democrat-run Portland, Oregon. No one will be safe in a Biden America.”
This is a message to those who support Mario Murillo’s message to America.
—————————-
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by Tony Perkins: Americans have learned a lot about Amy Coney Barrett in four weeks. They know about the family’s chinchilla, which parent does the laundry, and whether the Notre Dame alum hates warm puppies (she doesn’t). But they’ve also come to know more important things: she loves her country, its Constitution, and she’ll stand on her faith no matter how many Democrats try to shame her for it. In the end, that’s what Americans will remember. And in this next chapter of the Supreme Court, that’s what they’ll respect.
Today with Chief Justice Roberts, the mother of seven raised her hand, with another on the Bible, and took the judicial oath of office. After years of dreaming about this moment, she couldn’t have known that her time would come at such a pivotal moment: her country in one of its darkest years, a hurting people on the verge of a bitter election. But maybe Barrett’s confirmation — a symbol of young, honest, humble hope — is what our nation needs: a woman at one of the highest pinnacles of government who’s still inspired by the good of America.
“I love the Constitution,” Barrett said again, at her White House swearing in, “and the democratic republic it establishes. And I will devote myself to preserving it.” Senator Joni Ernst (R-Iowa), like a lot of conservatives, watched the president’s nominee hold her own through the process with pride. “Marsha Blackburn and I have had the most wonderful conversations about how great it is that President Trump made this nomination — a strong woman of faith, a mom, [who is] obviously extremely successful and bright in her career. It really does give women something to aspire to.” Maybe now, she said, conservative women will start to realize that they “don’t have to march in lockstep with what the liberals believe in idea of a woman should be. And I think it’s important for us to recognize that we can be conservative, and we can be strong, and we can set that example for others.”
But unfortunately, while the American people have warmed-up to the newest justice, the same can’t be said of Senate Democrats. In a pathetic display, they marched, one by one, to podiums or Twitter accounts and bashed the confirmation. On the floor of the Senate, Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) even dared to call it “one of the darkest days in the 231-year history of the United States Senate.” Why? Because his chamber confirmed an accomplished woman who wants to uphold the law? What a sad commentary on the state of the Democratic Party.
This is a justice whose first speech after her swearing in was to say that she understood her place. “The confirmation process has made ever clear to me one of the fundamental differences between the federal judiciary and the United States Senate,” Barrett insisted. “It is the job of a senator to pursue her policy preferences… It is the job of a judge to resist her policy preferences. Federal judges don’t face election. Thus, they have no basis for claiming that their preferences reflect those of the people.” Those sentiments aren’t just a win for Republicans — they’re a win for every American who cares about the Constitution. But then, maybe that’s the problem. Democrats don’t. They’re terrified of the rule of law because it stands in the way of every radical thing they want to accomplish.
So instead of celebrating the confirmation, they warned of “consequences,” like Senator Richard Blumenthal (D-Conn.), or uttered profanity like Senator Mazie Hirono (D-Hawaii). Or you say outrageous things, like Senator Schumer, who apparently didn’t sense the irony when he thundered that “generations yet unborn will suffer the consequences of this nomination.” He’s right about one thing. Generations will be affected, to be sure — but under a justice who reads no right to abortion in the shadows of the Constitution, they will not suffer.
Piling on the Senator Chris Coons (D-Del.) even threatened to upend the lower courts. “Hundreds” of judges, he warned, shouldn’t “be allowed to sit peaceably without our re-examining the process, the results, and the consequences.” The bottom line, Senator Josh Hawley (R-Mo.) fired back, is “they want to rig American democracy. Overturn the results of the last two elections. That’s their agenda. [Joe Biden], of course, [is] going to give into it. He doesn’t have the guts to say it.” Of course, David Harsanyi points out:
“When you’re under the impression that the system exists solely to facilitate your partisan agenda, something will seem ‘broken’ every time you lose. When Barack Obama was unable to pass his agenda after 2010, the system suffered from ‘dysfunction.’ … But now that Democrats are in the Senate minority, employing the very same tools to slow the president, we must ‘fix’ the Electoral College, the Senate, and, most recently, the Supreme Court.'”As Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) said, regardless of what the Left does or says, Barrett’s confirmation should have been a happy night for our country. But it’s also a clear reminder of what’s at stake in seven days: a republic and a Constitution, if we can keep them.
Tags:Tony Perkins, Amy Reigns SupremeTo 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 J. Buchanan: Major media are either denouncing the allegations as unproven or ignoring the story, the motive for which is apparent. Journalistic duty be damned. We have to get rid of Trump. And anything that jeopardizes that highest of goals should be buried until after Election Day.
If Joe Biden loses on Nov. 3, public interest in whether his son Hunter exploited the family name to rake in millions of dollars from foreign donors will likely fade away.
It will not matter, and no one will care.
But if Joe Biden wins the presidency, a prediction: By the Ides of March 2021, there will be an independent counsel or special prosecutor named to investigate the Biden family fortunes and how they were amassed.
Why is such an investigation a near certainty in a Biden era?
First, there is a 50-year tradition in America of an antagonistic media and political enemies pulling down presidents they oppose.
Watergate was the prototype — a political bugging of the sort that J. Edgar Hoover used to do as a courtesy for presidents.
Yet, the petty crime and White House cover-up was blown up by a hostile Congress, media and special prosecutor’s office to bring down a president who had just won 49 states and 60% of the nation.
In 1984, Ronald Reagan won a 49-state landslide. But when he lost the Senate in 1986, Washington, D.C., sought to break his presidency and bring him down for sending aid to anti-Communist Contras in Nicaragua. Reagan narrowly escaped to go on and win the Cold War for the West.
An investigation by an independent counsel of President Bill Clinton’s Arkansas land deal metastasized into a sex scandal about which the president perjured himself. This led to his impeachment by a Republican House.
Even before he became president, Donald Trump was the target of an FBI probe. That evolved into the Mueller investigation, which took years to conclude that Trump hadn’t colluded with Vladimir Putin in the 2016 election.
Yet, serious damage was done to Trump’s presidency. And despite the failure of the Mueller investigation to find a smoking gun, Nancy Pelosi’s House impeached the president for a phone call in which he suggested to the president of Ukraine that he might cooperate in a U.S. investigation of what Joe and Hunter Biden were up to in his country.
So it is that America has become a country where if you lose the presidential election, the fallback position is to impeach the victor.
The Third Worldization of American politics is well-advanced.
Yet, the cliche remains true: Where there’s smoke, there’s fire.
And Hunter Biden’s business and investment career is like a California wildfire where the smoke can be seen in Colorado.
Consider. While Vice President Joe Biden was President Obama’s point man on cleaning up corruption in Ukraine, son Hunter, with zero experience in the oil and gas industry, was suddenly offered a seat on the board of Burisma Holdings, a corrupt gas company in Ukraine, at $83,000 a month.
In 2013, Hunter accompanied his father to Beijing.
During his stay, Hunter apparently peeled off to arrange for $1.5 billion in Chinese funds to be transferred to an investment fund in which he was an advisor. So claims Trump.
According to a Senate report, in 2014, the widow of the mayor of Moscow transferred $3.5 million to an investment company started by Hunter Biden. Hunter’s lawyer denies it.
Comes now word that Hunter was in business with a Chinese company in 2017 and may have taken in $5 million, while stiffing his partner Tony Bobulinski.
Bobulinski, a former naval officer, claims that Hunter sought to leverage the Biden family name, and that he, Hunter and Joe Biden’s brother Jim were involved in a project to raise cash from the Chinese. Moreover, the former vice president was a silent partner, the “big guy” in the operation whose name was never to be mentioned.
Bobulinski said he met with Joe Biden for an hour to discuss it.
The Biden campaign calls this Russian misinformation.
Bottom line, says Joe Biden:
I have never received a dollar in foreign money. I never used my office or influence to advance my son’s business with foreign entities. I never spoke to my son about any of his dealings in Ukraine, Russia, China or anywhere else.
Major media are either denouncing the allegations as unproven or ignoring the story, the motive for which is apparent. Journalistic duty be damned. We have to get rid of Trump. And anything that jeopardizes that highest of goals should be buried until after Election Day.
However, if Joe Biden is elected, the incentive to cover for him and for Hunter vanishes. The old journalistic enthusiasm for the hunt to bring down another president will reappear, and more information will come spilling out.
And as the claims and counterclaims, and allegations and counterallegations collide, pressure will build for Biden’s Department of Justice to bring in an independent counsel to investigate and separate what is true from what is false and what is unethical from what is criminal.
If Biden wins, son Hunter is going to have an exciting spring
——————— 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.
Tags:Patrick Buchanan, conservative, commentary, A Biden Family, Special Prosecutor, in 2021To share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
Like it or not, Trump hit on a great truth that no country can write off its vast industrial interior, destroy its borders, or prefer managed decline over renewal, and meanwhile call itself moral. by Victor Davis Hanson: What was, is, and will be the Trump agenda?Against all odds, what elected Trump in 2016 was a recalibration of American foreign and domestic policy—and the art of politicking itself.Doctrine and Policy
In foreign affairs, the United States would no longer adhere to every aspect of the 75-year-old postwar order it created—given the world now bore little resemblance to the world of 1945.Prior bipartisan foreign policy had often ossified to the point of enhancing the power of our enemies, weakening our complacent friends, and terribly damaging our own power. When Trump entered office, ISIS was proving that it was hardly a “JV” organization. North Korea was recklessly testing missiles and bragging of its nuclear-tipped rockets pointed at our West Coast.Israel and the moderate Arab regimes were ostracized as part of the insane Obama empowerment of theocratic Iran and its quest for a radical crescent encompassing Syria, Lebanon, Hezbollah, and Hamas.
Russian reset was an utter failure. Unhinged, we were hectoring Vladimir Putin on human rights while agreeing to dismantle missile defense in Europe, if he would just please behave for a bit, and give Obama space during his 2012 reelection bid. The Asian pivot was laughable. Our friendly and hostile trading partners praised the Obama Administration in direct proportion to their manipulation of it.
In the 1950s, it was understandable that the United States would spend blood and treasure abroad to resurrect the destroyed economies after World War II and contain Soviet Communism. Its policy of allowing recovering allies to run up huge trade deficits to reenter the world community was seen both as desirable and affordable, as was putting down Communist insurrections the world over to contain the Soviet Union.
Western Europe, Japan, Taiwan, and South Korea became powerhouses, often with wide open, one-sided access to U.S. markets.
China would never have achieved its 40-year stunning ascendence had America applied to Chinese trade the same mercantilism that China applied to the United States.
By 2016, it was clear that a host of world and international trade and development organizations took for granted U.S. moral and financial support, while assuming wide open entrance for all into the U.S. market.
The result of the globalist project was the destruction of much of the American interior’s manufacturing and assembly industries. Those whose labor could not be so easily xeroxed—Silicon Valley, Wall Street, banking and insurance, big law, the media, entertainment, professional sports, and large research universities—saw their markets expand to 7 billion consumers. Coastal elites got rich. Interior deplorables and clingers were said to have deserved their fate by not going to college or failing to learn how to code.
They were lectured that not even a magic wand could save their jobs, or, in the words of Lawrence Summers, former Harvard president and the architect of President Obama’s team of economic advisers, they deserved their unfortunate fates, which in our meritocracy matched their meager abilities. “One of the challenges in our society is that the truth is a kind of disequalizer,” Summers reportedly once said. “One of the reasons that inequality has probably gone up in our society is that people are being treated closer to the way that they’re supposed to be treated.”.
Into that comfortable matrix of easing into decline, Trump stormed in. He damned globalists as elites who cared more about abstractions abroad than unfairness and the poor at home right under their noses.
To restore U.S. primacy, he greenlighted gas and oil production. When the United States became the largest producer of both, much of the world changed. The Middle East no longer had a political stranglehold over U.S. foreign policy. Russia, and illiberal regimes like Iran, lost hundreds of billions in carbon income. American consumers and industry enjoyed the cheapest energy prices in the Westernized world.
And the elite dismissed all that as too damaging to the planet.
Tax reform and deregulation lured back to U.S. shores offshored money and opened up trillions of dollars for investment that had been inert—the owners of which had been understandably worried by the redistributionist rhetoric and policies of the increasingly leftwing second-term Obama Administration and its recalibration of the Democratic Party.
Closing the border with Mexico slowly tapered off the once-endless supplies of cheap imported labor. For the first time in a half-century, the American worker was courted by needy employers who paid record entry-level wages, as unemployment fell to near historic peacetime lows.
Minority youth were no longer begging employers for a chance of a job, but rather were being begged by them to come to work. Ancient fights over unions and minimum wages faded as an increasingly wealthy America saw middle-class income soar for the first time in years as employers paid whatever was necessary to land American workers.
Trump stopped most optional military interventions that did not pencil out in a cost-benefit advantage for the United States— or for regional stability. Instead, don’t-tread-on-me realism bombed ISIS out of existence and took out the terrorist Iranian mastermind Qasem Soleimani, or threatened Kim Jong-un with massive retaliation if he dared launch a missile toward the United States.
At no time did Trump think he should remove Bashar al-Assad and try to create a Western democracy in Syria, or invade and overthrow the Iranian regime—as opposed to slowly strangle them with sanctions, new alliances, and military deterrence. There was no desire to return to spend money or lives in Libya or Iraq to establish or reboot democratic institutions.
There were two final pillars of the new Trump foreign policy. One was to talk honestly to allies about investing in their own defense as promised. Most not only counted on U.S. protection but often loudly seemed to resent their ensuing dependence by opportunistically ankle-biting the United States for its global policeman role.
Western Europe and Asia, and especially Germany and Japan, were told that if Russia and China really were existential threats, then such front-line states had to commensurately invest in their own defense first—at least if they to expected 19-year-olds from rural Michigan or northern Florida to fly over to their defense.
Unpredictability was seen as safer deterrence in a dangerous world than predictable and ossified policy.
So, against all advice, Trump called China to account for its commercial cheating and insidious infiltration into Western banking, corporate, media, entertainment, and academic institutions. He cut off aid to Palestinians who refused to recognize Israel, moved the U.S. embassy to Jerusalem, reminded the Assad regime that it would never recover the Golan Heights to launch another war on Israel, encouraged the moderate Arab world to ally with Israel to protect against revolutionary Shiite Iran, and reminded Canada and Mexico that one reason why they had small militaries, and growing economies, was their proximity to the United States—and thus such magnanimity should be reciprocated with symmetry rather than seen as naïveté that explained its continuance.
Class, Not Race
The second pillar of Trumpism was a shift in Republican orthodoxy to reemphasize class differences and in radically different ways.
No longer was there talk of privatizing Social Security, institutionalizing free (but not fair) trade, or following international commercial accords against the interest of an increasingly hollowed out American middle class. Deregulation and cuts in corporate taxes galvanized the economy and indeed profits “trickled down” to the hoi polloi. But such necessary free-market reforms were not the be-all and end-all of Republican orthodoxy, which was now readjusted to be more in the interest of the factory worker, not just the Wall Street investor.
Closing the border cut off the easy supply of cheap labor for corporations. Only that way would wages of entry-level and largely minority workers rise. More radially, Trumpism did not see the middle classes as spent, addicted, eroding and doomed, much less as deplorables, clingers, irredeemables, dregs, and chumps as the coastal elites increasingly liked to smear them. And Trump certainly did not see poor whites, without much influence, as privileged, and thus in need of making atonement for supposed sins of the past or the present.
One reason why Trump is libeled as a racist is that he saw through the white elite con of blaming those without advantage for bias and prejudice, in order to win psychological exemption for the elite’s own near-monopoly on blue-chip university admissions, corporate, media and academic old-boy access and cultural influence.
Bull-in-the-China-Shopism
Aside from fundamental changes in foreign and democratic policy, and renewed emphasis on class instead of race, Trumpism changed the political dialectic.
Of course, Trump could be crude, even at times bullying and profane. But much of his braggadocio and vulgarity were designed as chemotherapy to kill the cancer of the administrative state and the lock-hold on permanent government by the revolving-door, bipartisan coastal elite.
The reasons why Trump just days after his inauguration faced a failed impeachment, or calls for his removal by the 25th Amendment, or even talk of a military coup, or the Steele dossier hoax that led to a $40 million, 22-month effort by progressives to destroy his presidency, his person and his family, were manifold. But one cause surely was that Trump was orphaned from the hard-Left Democratic Party and the Republican establishment and seemed either to welcome the ostracism or not be fully cognizant of the cost that it entailed.
True, Trump may have defined presidential comportment down with his “sleepy,” “crooked,” “lying,” and “low-energy” epithets and with his crowds cheering to “lock her up.” But then again, what was so moral in the past about mellifluously assuring Americans they would lose neither their doctor nor their health plan—to the amusement of the likes of Jonathan Gruber who knew all along that they would? Or ramming through the Iran Deal by bypassing the treaty duties of the U.S. Senate, while deluding the country with a “know-nothing” media echo chamber? If we learned anything from the Obama years, supposedly “scandal-free” presidents might do anything from weaponizing the IRS and siccing the FBI on opponents to dismantling viable allied missile defense to leverage foreign leaders to aid their reelection campaigns—and then call all that moral, with a chorus of media assent.
When a man takes on the role of the gunslinger arriving in the town to clean up the mess, one must expect that his methods and comportment will offend his supporters as much as they terrified his adversaries, all the more so as he succeeds and thus the beneficiaries see an end on the horizon to their embarrassing need to have called in the unorthodox to do what their own polite conventionality should have done, but choose not (or did not have the courage) to do.
The Fate of Trumpism
We can sense the viability of Trumpism by the current lack of coherent attacks on its principles and achievements. Would a President Mitt Romney demand that the U.S. embassy now leave Jerusalem? Would a President Nikki Haley cease the new containment of China? Would a President Marco Rubio return to the Bush-Obama coaxing of NATO partners to please, pretty please pay up what they had promised?Or alternatively, would a President Joe Biden warn the Arab countries to cease their “destabilizing” new partnership with Israel?
Would he jawbone them to return the autocratic Palestinians to front and center of the Middle East “peace” plan? Would a President Biden begin dismantling 400 miles of border wall and return to open borders?
At home, Biden most certainly would raise taxes, restore cumbersome regulations, strangle the fossil fuel industry, and return to identity politics pandering. But after the 2017-20 Trump boom, he would do so without any expectation that the economy would grow or the country would heal or the world would suddenly cool down and the seas cease to rise.
Biden knows that under Obama a natural recovery stagnated, a uniter president ignited the country with his team of racial arsonists, and the government wasted billions of dollars in green boondoggles even as a hamstrung private sector did far more than Washington to expand the use of solar energy and electric cars.
And what about the NeverTrumper—always wrong that Trump would not be nominated or not be elected or be destroyed by “Russian collusion”? At the end of Trump, whether in 2020 and 2024, would they resurrect the Weekly Standard or return to the Sunday talk shows? Would the legions of handlers, operatives and advisors return to recalibrate all the party Senate and House races along the lines of a Mitt Romney or John McCain orthodoxy? Would the NeverTrump Phoenix arise to save the Republican Party from the ashes of Trumpism—on the principle that deplorables would always support RINO candidates, but RINOS would bolt the minute a deplorable candidate appeared. Could a Jeff Flake or a Ben Sasse or a John Kasich candidacy shatter the Blue Wall?
Probably not at all. Elite Republicanism would fail because the white working classes would return either to political hibernation in the swing states or rejoin the Democratic Party. Growing minority support would vanish because blacks and Latinos would see platitudinous and pandering Republicans as far more injurious to their futures than was a crudely talking, Queens-accented populist Trump.
Trumpism did not dismantle Republican conservatism. It simply enhanced conservative appeal by closing the border, confronting China, demanding fair trade, avoiding optional military expeditions, emphasizing the concerns of the working class, and redefining presidential behavior as boisterously honoring promises rather than mellifluously reneging on them.
Whatever Trump’s fate, the NeverTrump faction will not succeed in rebuilding a new-old Republican Party under the Bush-McCain-Romney paradigm. Biden and his leftist masters would not be able to lower minority unemployment to Trump levels. Neither would they declare an end to containing China and claim such past confrontation was an unnecessary provocation.
Like it or not, Trump hit on a great truth that no leader can write off his country’s vast industrial interior, destroy his nation’s borders, willingly cede global leadership to a Communist dictatorship, manipulate intelligence agencies to destroy political opponents, prefer to manage decline rather than to seek renewal, and meanwhile, as he did all that, call himself moral and presidential.
————————- 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, Trumpism, Then, Now, in the FutureTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
ARRA News Service: The Departments of Justice and Homeland Security announced publication of a final rule this week aimed at barring certain criminal aliens from claiming asylum in the United States. The rule would go into effect in late November.
Under the proposed rule, aliens convicted of the following crimes would be ineligible for asylum:
Alien harboring and smuggling.
Convictions of crimes in furtherance of criminal street gangs.
Convictions of driving while impaired and causing death or serious bodily harm.
Second or subsequent convictions of driving while impaired, regardless of whether it caused death or serious bodily harm.
Conviction of a crime that involves conduct amounting to a crime of stalking; or a crime of child abuse, child neglect, or child abandonment; or that involves conduct amounting to a domestic assault or battery offense.
Any felony conviction at the State, local, or Federal level.
Asylum claims have increased dramatically in recent years, and the backlog of pending asylum cases stood at around 350,000 according to a June 2020 USCIS report. Recent border surges and increases in asylum applications (most of which are ultimately denied) have increased pressure on the federal government to secure the border and protect the public.
In response to this pressure, the Trump Administration has repeatedly requested that Congress make changes to tighten asylum laws to prevent illegal border crossers from using loopholes in the asylum process to stay and work in the U.S. The administration has also implemented policies to deter frivolous asylum claims.
People who claim credible fear and asylum are eligible for work permits pending resolution of their claims. But these claims can take years to work their way through the legal system and has driven recent border surges.
Existing federal law allows the government to expand the bars to asylum eligibility.
———————- H/T NumbersUSA for sharing DOJ, DHS Aim to Restrict Asylum for Criminal Aliens.
Tags:DOJ, DHS, Aim to Restrict Asylum, for Criminal Aliens, NumbersUSATo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
President Donald Trump awards the Medal of Honor to
Army Staff Sgt. Ronald J. Shurer II for actions in Afghanistan,
in the East Room of the White House. (Oct. 1, 2018)
by Richard Sisk: Ron Shurer’s life was remembered Tuesday as a many-chaptered love story of selfless giving — to his wife and family; to his faith; to those who battled with him against cancer; and to his country in the Secret Service, and as a soldier who earned the Medal of Honor.
“We are gathered today during unprecedented times to celebrate an unprecedented man … my husband, my best friend, our hero,” Shurer’s wife Miranda said at the funeral mass that preceded the full honors burial for Shurer at Arlington National Cemetery.
Romance was not exactly a strong suit for her combat medic husband during their courtship, she said at services at the Church of the Nativity in Burke, Virginia.
“I was telling the boys [Cameron, 12, and Tyler, 9] the other day about how Ron gave me a great big teddy bear during our first Christmas together. Sometimes he would use that teddy bear to practice checking for wounds and calling in a helicopter evac. That was pretty adorable,” she said.
What he may have lacked on the romantic side, he made up for in substance, Miranda said of her husband, who died of cancer May 14 at age 41.
“He wanted to make a difference in the world and he studied hard because he wanted to be ready to do everything possible to help his teammates. He was the kind of person who gave 100% of himself, and that’s what I wanted in a future husband,” she said. “He was funny and smart and fun to be around, and he pushed hard every day to be the best version of himself.”
The best version was all that members of Special Forces Operational Detachment Alpha 3336 ever saw in Shurer, said Sgt. Maj. Matt Williams, who also earned the Medal of Honor for his actions with Shurer in the Battle of Shok Valley on April 6, 2008, in Afghanistan’s Nuristan province.
Shurer “was a mentor first, and then a teammate and then a friend. He took me in and kind of showed me the ropes. He didn’t treat me as the new guy,” Williams said.
He joked of how they would work out together: “He was gonna make me fast and I was gonna make him big. We failed at both.”
“I was there that day and I saw what he did,” Williams said of the Shok Valley firefight. “Ron was the type of guy who would do anything for anybody and he always put himself last.”
In the battle, then-Staff Sgt. Shurer repeatedly exposed himself to fire to tend to the wounded, lowering several down a cliffside while shielding them with his own body, according to his Medal citation. At one point, an enemy round passed through his helmet and lodged in his arm.
“Having ensured the safety of the wounded, Staff Sergeant Shurer then regained control of his commando squad and rejoined the fight,” the citation said. “He continued to lead his troops and emplace security elements until it was time to move to the evacuation landing zone for the helicopter.”
In 2009, Shurer left the Army and joined the Secret Service, becoming part of the counter-assault team at the White House to protect the president. Even after he was diagnosed with cancer in 2017, Shurer continued to report to the White House when his treatments would allow.
At the funeral mass, Father Bob Cilinski said that Shurer invited him as a guest to the White house ceremony where he received the Medal of Honor from President Donald Trump on Oct. 1, 2018.
“I’ve known you for a couple of years. You’ve never shared that story [of the battle]” Cilinski said he later told Shurer. “Ron, where did you find the strength in that moment of such danger and terror?”
Cilinski said Shurer told him he said a prayer: “Dear God, watch over Miranda and my family and give me the strength to help others.”
“He lived out that call to love knowing and believing that you sacrifice for love,” Cilinski said.
Shurer’s son, Cameron, came to the front of the church for a reading from St. Paul that summed up his father’s understanding of the meaning of love:
“Love is patient, love is kind. It does not envy, it does not boast, it is not proud. It does not dishonor others, it is not self-seeking, it is not easily angered, it keeps no record of wrongs.”
Tags:Richard Sisk, Military.com, Unprecedented Man, Medal of Honor Recipient, Ron Shurer, Laid to Rest, at ArlingtonTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
by Irina Slav: Crude oil price fell further after the Energy Information Administration reported an inventory increase of 4.3 million barrels for the week to October 23.
This compares with a decline of 1 million barrels for the previous week, which helped prop up prices for a short while before concerns about demand prevailed once again amid surging Covid-19 cases in Europe and the United States.
At 492.4 million barrels, crude oil inventories are 9 percent above the five-year average for this time of the year, when demand declines for seasonal reasons, so more builds are to be expected.
Yet the biggest factor contributing to inventory movements right now remains the coronavirus, which is again infecting record numbers of people in the United States: the seven-day average of newly diagnosed cases for last week hit 70,000.
Against this worrying background, the EIA also reported a surprising inventory decline in gasoline inventories for the reporting period. At 900,000 barrels, the decline compared with an increase of 1.9 million barrels for the prior week.
Gasoline production last week averaged 9.1 million bpd, which compared with 8.9 million bpd a week earlier.
Distillate fuel inventories shed 4.5 million barrels in the week to October 23. This compares with a draw of 3.8 million barrels for the previous week. That draw followed an even heftier one for the first week of October in a rare good sign about distillate fuels.
Distillate fuel production last week averaged 4.1 million bpd, which was almost unchanged on the previous week.
Prices have been on the decline this week, pressured by the combined weight of a grim demand outlook and, yesterday, by the unexpectedly large oil inventory build reported by the American Petroleum Institute.
Some good news came from OPEC+, which is reportedly mulling over a delay in the next relaxation of production cuts, but at the same time, Libya said it plans to boost production to 1 million bpd, which largely offset the positive effect of the OPEC+ news.
At the time of writing, Brent crude traded at $39.11 a barrel, with West Texas Intermediate at $37.28 a barrel, both down by over 5 percent from opening.
——————— Irina Slav is a writer for Oilprice.com.
Tags:Irina Slav, Oil Price, Crude Inventory, Build Forces, Oil Prices LowerTo 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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Morning Rundown
Trump, Biden condemn violence in Philadelphia: In response to the civil unrest in Philadelphia following the death of Walter Wallace Jr., a Black man who was gunned down by police earlier this week, President Donald Trump and former vice president Joe Biden condemned the violence at their campaign stops on Wednesday. “It’s a terrible thing,” said Trump in Las Vegas. “What I’m witnessing is terrible, and frankly, that the mayor or whoever it is that’s allowing people to riot and loot and not stop them is also just a horrible thing.” Biden called the protests “totally legitimate” and “reasonable,” but said “there’s no excuse for looting.” Hundreds have gathered in Philadelphia in protest of Wallace’s death, but some devolved into widespread looting, vandalism and violence that left 53 officers injured. Walter Wallace Sr. called for calm and asked violent protesters to “stop the chaos” in the wake of his son’s death. On Monday, Wallace’s family called police to intervene as he was experiencing a mental health emergency. His mother, Cathy Wallace, said officers were unable to help her son the first two times that they came to her home, and when they returned for a third time, they ended up shooting him multiple times after he stepped toward two officers with a knife. “I was telling the police to stop, ‘Don’t shoot my son,’” said Cathy Wallace. “They paid me no mind and they just shot him.” The family’s attorney, Shaka Johnson, said the episode is just the latest example of how law enforcement officials are ill-equipped to deal with mentally ill people.
Twitter, Facebook CEOs grilled on moderating content: Top executives from Twitter, Facebook and Google faced a grilling from lawmakers Wednesday about how they moderate content on their platforms amid concerns about censorship and misinformation in the run-up to the election. Lawmakers questioned Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg, Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey and Google CEO Sundar Pichai about whether changes should be made to Section 230 of the Communication Decency Act, which shields tech companies from legal liability for content posted by third parties to their platforms. The law, GOP senators have said, allows platforms to stifle conservative free speech. “For too long, social media platforms have hidden behind Section 230 protections to censor content that deviates from their beliefs,” said Sen. Roger Wicker, R-Miss., chairman of the Senate Commerce, Science and Transportation Committee. “My concern is that these platforms have become powerful arbiters of what is true and what content users can access.” All three CEOs have implemented content moderation decisions that have been controversial with Republicans. Some of President Donald Trump’s tweets, including one that claimed without evidence that voting by mail would lead to fraudulent election outcomes, have been moderated. While Zuckerberg signaled a willingness to work with Congress in modifying laws and regulations, he said he does not believe tech companies should be independently making decisions about content moderation. During the hearing, Dorsey said, “Removing Section 230 will remove speech from the internet.”
City lawmakers pass CAREN Act to criminalize phony 911 calls based on race: San Francisco leaders voted to crack down on so-called “Karens” who use 911 calls to discriminate against minorities. On Tuesday, the San Francisco Board of Supervisors unanimously passed the Caution Against Racially and Exploitative Non-Emergencies, or CAREN Act, which amends the city’s police code and allows anyone harmed by such calls to sue. The passing of the new bill, which was named after the slang term given to people who make the baseless calls, means violators will be liable in court to general damages of at least $1,000 plus costs and attorney’s fees, and punitive damages. “Rather than calling the police or law enforcement on your neighbor, or someone who you think doesn’t look like they should be your neighbor, try talking to them and getting to know them,” said Supervisor Shamann Walton, who introduced the bill in July.
Cheerleader gets welcome home parade, returns to field after double leg amputation: Sarah Frei, a 17-year-old girl who had both of her legs amputated after being hit in an alleged drunk driving accident, received an emotional hero’s welcome home from the hospital. Sarah, who suffered a spinal cord injury and underwent 20 surgeries after the accident, maintained a positive outlook about her situation to the awe of her parents and doctors. “She wanted to work very hard every day,” said Dr. Venessa Lee, who worked with Sarah during grueling physical therapy sessions. “She never complained.” Sarah’s determination to overcome the odds has inspired thousands of people following her journey on social media with the hashtag #SarahStrong. When the teen left the hospital after three months, she was welcomed home with a police-escorted parade led by her family, friends and high school classmates. Just one day later, Sarah, a cheerleader and high school senior, was able to join her teammates on the field for the last home football game of the season.
GMA Must-Watch
This morning on “GMA,” Jamie Lynn Spears performs a reimagined version of the “Zoey 101” theme song, “Follow Me (Zoey 101).” Plus, we’re just days away from Halloween, and we’ll take a look at some of the scariest homes across the country and are joined by the owner of one incredible house in California. And Tory Johnson has some great deals from small businesses on products that will keep you comfortable this fall, including skin care products and comfy clothes. All this and more only on “GMA.”
With just five days to go before Election Day, the Supreme Court weighed in on ballot counting in two battleground states. Hurricane Zeta hammered New Orleans and is heading toward Alabama. And three people are dead after a possible terror attack inside a French church.
Here’s what we’re watching this Thursday morning.
One battleground state, two rallies — and dueling versions of reality
President Donald Trump and vice presidential nominee Sen. Kamala Harris held rallies 30 miles apart in the battleground state of Arizona on Wednesday.
But voters could be forgiven for thinking they were running in two different universes, writes NBC News national political reporter Sahil Kapur.
In Trump’s world, the coronavirus crisis is exaggerated and the biggest danger to the country is a threat of socialism or communism.
In the Biden-Harris world, the pandemic is an overarching issue that is crushing middle-class pocketbooks and the country is on a knife’s edge between a return to normalcy and a march to authoritarianism.
Symbolic of the two attitudes, Trump’s rally featured supporters packed in, many of them elbow to elbow and maskless, while Harris held a drive-in event that was sparse and heavily socially distanced, with attendees covering their faces even when nobody was near them.
With just five days to go before Election Day, the two campaigns are in a final sprint as more than 66 million mail-in and early in-person ballots have already been cast.
In Houston, voters are turning out in record numbers. Experts say the surge in voter participation will almost certainly benefit Democrats in the state and are wondering if it could be thekey to flipping Texas from red to blue.
Meantime, in the critical state of Florida, Biden holds a slight 4-point lead over Trump, fueled by his standing among seniors and independents,according to the final NBC News/Marist poll in the state before Tuesday’s election. Our latestInto America podcast digs into the impact the Black male vote could have in the Sunshine State.
Supreme Court won’t block mail ballots in North Carolina that arrive up to six days after Election Day
The Supreme Court late Wednesday declined to block lower court rulings that allow six extra days for accepting ballots sent by mail in North Carolina, a victory for Democrats in a presidential battleground state.
Earlier in the day, in a defeat for Republicans, the court declined to take another look, on a fast track, at the issue of late arriving mail ballots in Pennsylvania, another tight race, leaving intact a lower court ruling that said the state must count ballots that arrive up to three days after the election.
The vote was 5-3, and newly confirmed Justice Amy Coney Barrettdidn’t take part in either case. The court cited the same reason in both cases, saying she did not participate in the decision “because of the need for a prompt resolution and because she has not had time to fully review the parties’ filings.”
The Supreme Court has been busy ahead of Election Day. It made rulings about mail-in ballots in two battleground states Wednesday. (Photo: Gerry Broome / AP file)
Top Trump health official warns of ‘draconian measures’ if America doesn’t mask up
The Trump administration’s Covid-19 testing czar warned Wednesday that local governments may be forced to impose “draconian measures” if Americans don’t start taking safety precautions seriously and thecoronaviruscrisis worsens.
“We still can control this” by wearing masks, social distancing and being careful around the holidays, Brett Giroir, the assistant secretary of health, said on NBC’s “Today” show.
“But if we don’t do those things, it may force local officials or government officials in the states to have more draconian measures because cases will go up if we don’t make a change.”
Those changes may have to be implemented sooner than later as Covid-19 continues to spread across the U.S. at the fastest rate since the start of the pandemic.
The U.S. reported 80,662 coronavirus cases on Wednesday, setting another new record high for daily cases.
It is the first time the U.S. has recorded more than 80,000 cases in one day, topping the previous high of 79,303 cases last Friday. More than 228,000 peoplein the U.S. have died of Covid-19, according to NBC News’ latest count.
Chancellor Angela Merkel said German officials have agreed to a four-week shutdown of restaurants, bars, cinemas, theaters and other leisure facilities in a bid to curb a sharp rise in coronavirus infections.
“We must act, and now, to avoid an acute national health emergency,” Merkel said.
Wall Street plungedon Wednesday amid the soaring coronavirus infection rates and fears of a new round of restrictive measures.
‘Please don’t shoot my son’: Man killed by Philadelphia police had mental health problems, family says
Relatives of Walter Wallace Jr. say he suffered from mental illness and was struggling with “another one of his episodes” Monday when two Philadelphia police officers responding to a call from his family shot and killed him.
Family members said they called 911 to request an ambulance and had hoped for Wallace to receive medical intervention but that police arrived first.
The state of Wallace’s mental health — and how familiar police were with his history — has sparked questions about officers’ response at the scene and their use of lethal force.
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Plus
At least three people have been killed and others injured in a suspected terrorist attack at a French church on Thursday.
Hurricane Zeta hammered New Orleansas a powerful Category 2 storm and is now roaring toward Alabama.
“Anonymous” no more: Former DHS “senior official in the Trump administration” Miles Taylor revealed he was the writer of the scathing New York Times Trump op-ed.
If you’re looking for anair purifier, here are some good options.
One civic thing
Whatever the outcome, after all the hand-wringing, the biggest winner this year may be voters.
With predictions of record voter turnout already, people are enduring long lines and epic wait times to exercise their civic duty — and right — as Americans.
“If you want to have your voice, you have to do your duty and vote,” one determined voter lined up on a rainy afternoon in New York City told NBC News’ Harry Smith.
So if you haven’t already, get out there and do your duty!
If you have any comments — likes, dislikes — send me an email at: petra@nbcuni.com
If you’re a fan, please forward it to your family and friends. They can sign-up here.
Thanks, Petra Cahill
NBC FIRST READ
From NBC’s Chuck Todd, Mark Murray, Carrie Dann and Melissa Holzberg
FIRST READ: Trump’s job rating could tell us a lot about his ballot performance
President Trump’s ballot number in our new NBC News/Marist poll of Florida is 47 percent – versus 51 percent for Joe Biden (a result that’s within the poll’s margin of error).
Trump’s job-approval rating in the battleground is also 47 percent, per the poll.
And that brings up something important to watch on Election Night: There’s historically been a direct correlation between a sitting president’s job rating and his ballot position.
REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst
In 1984, Gallup’s national October poll had Ronald Reagan’s job rating at 58 percent; he got 58.8 percent of the vote in that election.
In 1992, the late October national NBC/WSJ poll had George H.W. Bush’s rating at 36 percent; he got 37.4 percent of the vote.
In 1996, the October NBC/WSJ poll had Bill Clinton’s approval at 56 percent; he got 49.2 percent in that three-way race.
In 2004, the late October NBC/WSJ poll had George W. Bush’s approval at 49 percent; he got 50.7 percent of the vote.
And in 2012, the October NBC/WSJ poll had Barack Obama’s approval at 49 percent; he got 51.1 percent of the vote.
President Trump? His job rating in our most recent national NBC/WSJ poll was 44 percent.
So in a mostly two-way presidential election – with an expected minimal third-party vote – the winning percentage in battleground states will likely be 49 percent or higher.
Which means in states like Florida and elsewhere, Trump will need to overperform his current job rating to win.
DATA DOWNLOAD: The numbers you need to know today
8,933,176: The number of confirmed cases of coronavirus in the United States, per the most recent data from NBC News and health officials. (That’s 73,812 more than yesterday morning.)
228,860: The number of deaths in the United States from the virus so far. (That’s 908 more than yesterday morning.)
139.51 million: The number of coronavirus tests that have been administered in the United States so far, according to researchers at The COVID Tracking Project.
45,045: The number of people currently hospitalized for Covid-19 in the U.S., per the Covid Tracking Project.
72,151,154: The number of people who have voted early, either by mail or in person, according to NBC and TargetSmart.
52 percent to 46 percent: Trump’s edge with Latinos in Florida, per our latest NBC/Marist poll.
53 percent to 46 percent: Biden’s edge with seniors in the Sunshine State, according to the same poll.
12 points: Biden’s national lead, according to a new CNN poll.
2020 VISION: Florida Men
On the campaign trail today: Today the action moves to Florida: Joe Biden stumps in Coconut Creek, Fla. (which is north of Miami) and Tampa… President Trump also hits Tampa before going to Fayetteville, N.C… Mike Pence is in Iowa and Nevada… And Kamala Harris participates in a livestream with Bernie Sanders.
2020 VISION: Raising Arizona
NBC’s Vaughn Hillyard reports from Arizona on Wednesday night:
Since Democrats selected Joe Biden as their presumptive nominee in the spring, Biden has held a consistent advantage in polling in Arizona. But more troubling for Trump is the demographics that have flipped against him: Independent voters, suburban voters and seniors. In the state where Barry Goldwater birthed modern-day conservatism into the GOP and John McCain held reign as the state’s western, independent voice, Arizona could be the state that clinches a Biden victory and rejects the Republican Party under the helm of Trump. In mid-October, Biden campaign manager Jen O’Malley Dillon called her shot: “I know we’re going to win Arizona.” And that’s why the president’s final-week efforts today are notable: He is visiting rural Arizona, which makes up less than one-quarter of the state’s population. His first stop [yesterday] afternoon was in Bullhead City, a community in Mohave County, which voted for Trump over Hillary Clinton in 2016 by a 52 percent margin. But Clinton lost Arizona by just 3.5 percent. And now, Democrats hold a 75,000 early ballot advantage over the GOP less than a week before Election Day.
TWEET OF THE DAY: ‘You got one minute, Martha!’
AD WATCH from Ben Kamisar
Today’s Ad Watch takes a look at the closing messages to Black voters from the two presidential campaigns.
In a new Joe Biden ad — which started running Wednesday in key swing states like Michigan, Florida, Wisconsin and Ohio — the Democrat looks directly into the camera to say “Black lives matter, period. I’m not afraid to say it.” He then goes on to describe how he’d tackle systemic racism in America, outlining his plans on things like health care, minority business investment and criminal justice reform.
Trump dropped a spot of his own targeting Black voters on Tuesday, which has aired in states like Georgia, Michigan, North Carolina, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin. The Republican’s mashes up Biden’s controversial comments during the decades-old crime bill debates before a narrator concludes: “We know who Joe Biden is talking about, us. Don’t let him become president.” Outside of the “stand-by-your-ad” line and one photo of Trump with a racially diverse group, there’s no mention of the president.
These two closing ads have starkly different messages: Biden is asking Black voters to vote for him; Trump is asking Black voters not to vote for Biden.
THE LID: Radar detector
Don’t miss the pod from yesterday, when we looked at one of the projects NBC is doing to ensure that we’re catching under-the-radar voters.
ICYMI: What ELSE is happening in the world?
The Supreme Court will not block the counting of mail ballots that arrive up to six days after Election Day in North Carolina. (The court also punted on a similar issue in Pennsylvania in another victory for Democrats.)
Plus: Trump’s best work was done by others, how that Carrier deal is looking four years later, and more…
Data released Thursday morning show that the U.S. economy has experienced record-breaking growth during the past three months, but also reveal that the country has a long way to go to get out of the hole created by the COVID-19 pandemic.
The Department of Commerce’s preliminary estimate of third-quarter gross domestic product growth, the last major economic report to be released before the presidential election on Nov. 3, estimates that the economy grew by 33.1 percent from July through September. That comes after a stunning 31.4 percent contraction in the previous three months—during which much of the country was paralyzed by coronavirus-related economic shutdowns.
Both those figures are a bit misleading. Because the federal government reports GDP figures in “annualized” terms, outlier quarterly numbers end up being exaggerated. “What actually happened was that activity in April–June was 9% lower than in January–March, which in turn was about 1% lower than in October–December of 2019,” explains Barron’s. “To be clear, the coronavirus contraction was catastrophic and without precedent in its combination of speed or severity. But it wasn’t equivalent to losing a third of the economy for months at a time.”
Sponsor Content
The same thing is happening in reverse now. There’s no doubt that the economy has bounced back as lockdowns have lifted and businesses have reopened in recent months, but the data does not indicate a full recovery.
Economists for JPMorgan, an investment bank, note that the economy remains about 3 percent smaller than it was at the end of last year. And while the unemployment rate is falling after hitting a peak of 14.7 percent earlier this year, there are millions of Americans still out of work due to the pandemic.
Important to keep in mind for this morning’s GDP release … even if Q3 bounce matches estimates, we’ll still be down 4% from end of 2019 … for context, even at lowest level, GDP only sank by 3.98% at depths of GFC @biancoresearch@bloomberg@USCBO@CommerceGovpic.twitter.com/VSUUSwpaLO
Thursday’s report will serve as fodder for both President Donald Trump and former Vice President Joe Biden as they make their closing pitches to voters in the presidential campaign’s final week.
Trump has been talking for weeks about “turning the corner” in the fight against COVID-19, and will likely use Thursday’s grandiose topline number to press that case. Biden will be able to point to the fact that, even after such a strong quarter of growth, the economy remains smaller than it was earlier this year.
Kevin D. Williamson, National Review‘s libertarian-sympathizing curmudgeon, interrogates the case for reelecting Trump and finds it wanting. The best parts of the Trump administration, for conservatives, have been the things the president has had the least to do with, he argues:
Trump’s principal success has been as a rubber stamp to the very “establishment” at which Trump and his admirers like to sneer. In the matter of judges, that establishment is instantiated by the Heritage Foundation — which simply gave Trump a list of good judicial candidates, while Trump, always happy to let someone else do his homework for him, has stuck with it. …
Trump signed off on a tax plan that has some good elements, but the so-called Trump tax cuts were largely the work of Mr. Establishment, Paul Ryan — and they ran contrary to the personal preferences and rhetoric of the president, who spent much of the campaign bellyaching about Wall Street fat cats not paying as much in taxes as he thinks they should. Trump’s regulatory reform efforts have been designed and implemented by Bushies such as Neomi Rao (now a federal judge) and her former deputies.
Which is to say, the Trump administration has succeeded most where Trump has the least to do with it. The nat-pops may turn up their noses at “Conservative Inc.” but that is who has delivered such benefits as we have received from the Trump administration. All Peter Navarro and the rest of those crackpots has done is bankrupt a lot of farmers and drive up the expenses of beer brewers and manufacturers.
Patriotism, Williamson concludes, means not merely voting for “one pack of jackals because it looks a little less hungry and vicious than the other pack of jackals,” but demanding “that the free and self-governing men and women of this struggling republic deserve better than what is on offer.”
Four years later, how are things working out? The Washington Posttakes a look:
This year alone, Indiana employers have sent more jobs to Mexico, China, India and other foreign countries than were saved at Carrier. Without headlines or presidential notice, at least 17 companies — names like Vibracoustic, Molnlycke Health Care, Allura, Altex, Stanley Black & Decker, Dometic, Johnson Controls and Horizon Terra — have closed plants or otherwise reduced employment in Indiana and moved jobs abroad, according to U.S. Department of Labor filings.
As I wrote back in January 2017, it wasn’t a lack of presidential attention that was driving Carrier to relocate jobs to other countries—it was onerous and expensive regulations. “Those same regulations could push other companies to do the same—the ‘deal’ that saved those 1,000 [Carrier] jobs in Indianapolis did nothing to make life easier for other, similar businesses.” Indeed, it seems they have.
ELECTION 2020
Are dead people going to swing the election by voting with mail-in ballots? Probably not.
Our new paper uses administrative data from WA to evaluate the popular claim that dead people’s ballots are fraudulently cast at high rates in vote-by-mail elections. We find that this type of fraud is extremely rare (thread)https://t.co/GBW6hKUhkMpic.twitter.com/P3O505ywhY
• The Girl Scouts of America tweeted—and then quickly deleted—a supposedly anodyne statement congratulating Amy Coney Barrett on her Supreme Court confirmation. Of course, now right-wingers want to cancel the Girl Scouts for caving to silly left-wing criticism of an inoffensive tweet, because there is no bottom to the ridiculousness of the culture wars.
• What if Russia had beaten America to the Moon? Ronald D. Moore, the creator of the mid-2000s Battlestar Galactica reboot, has a new show exploring that reality.
Eric Boehm is a reporter for Reason. He lives in Arlington, Virginia, but will never consider himself a southerner. He writes about state government, pensions, licensing, regulations, civil liberties, and anything else that strikes him in the moment. Previously, he was a national regulatory reporter for Watchdog.org and was bureau chief of the (now-defunct) Pennsylvania Independent in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania.
His work has appeared in TheWall Street Journal, National Review Online, The Freeman Magazine, The Philadelphia Inquirer, The American Spectator, The Washington Examiner, The Daily Signal, FoxNews.com, and elsewhere. He received a bachelor’s degree from Fairfield University in 2009. You can follow her on Twitter @EricBoehm87.
Reason is the magazine of “free minds and free markets,” offering a refreshing alternative to the left-wing and right-wing echo chambers for independent-minded readers who love liberty.
Civil society efforts continue to be critical—even life-saving—forces in communities all over the country. We hope that you will join us online tonight at 5 p.m. EDT, to recognize this year’s Civil Society Award winners.
In regions of eastern Pennsylvania, the Kennedy Democrats of 1960 are today’s Trump Republicans—a voting bloc that could largely determine this year’s election.
By Charles F. McElwee City Journal Online October 28, 2020
“Local journalism is part of the lifeblood of democracy; it holds public officials accountable and draws citizens into an understanding of their communities and debate about their direction.”
By Howard Husock Current October 28, 2020
On October 20, we honored three extraordinary individuals during our first virtual Alexander Hamilton Awards: Leonard Leo and Eugene Meyer of the Federalist Society, and Daniel S. Loeb, investor and philanthropist. The event also featured remarks from our chairman, Paul E. Singer; our president, Reihan Salam; and other distinguished guests.
Casey Mulligan joins Allison Schrager to discuss his time on President Trump’s Council of Economic Advisors and the administration’s record on issues such as health care, the economy, immigration, and more. Mulligan’s new book is You’re Hired!: Untold Successes and Failures of a Populist President.
2020 severely tested the governing abilities of our leaders. On October 16, we hosted a discussion moderated by Andy Smarick on practical wisdom and its role in governing today, with philosophy professor Jennifer Frey, science policy director Tony Mills, and education specialist Jocelyn Pickford.
On October 15, we hosted a panel of black police executives and experts speaking to how history, culture, and looming racial tension shaped their experiences on the force.
Manhattan Institute is a think tank whose mission is to develop and disseminate new ideas that foster greater economic choice and individual responsibility.
52 Vanderbilt Ave. New York, NY 10017
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REALCLEARPOLITICS MORNING NOTE
10/29/2020
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Carl Cannon’s Morning Note
Biden and PA; Ivanka’s Pragmatism; an Immigrant’s Devotion
By Carl M. Cannon on Oct 29, 2020 08:59 am
Good morning, it’s Thursday, Oct. 29, 2020. “The sun has risen bright and clear,” a German immigrant named Carl Schurz wrote to his wife, Margarethe, on this date in 1855, “and the view spread out before me presents so cheerful and sweet a picture that I am distinctly encouraged to hope we shall be very happy here.”
Schurz was writing from Watertown, Wis., where he and his family would prosper. But as far as being “very happy,” Carl Schurz was not the kind of person who could be content while other people were in bondage. Although he had escaped the civic unrest then roiling Europe, he found himself called to enter politics here. His career would take him to Washington and Spain, to Civil War battlefields, and later to the U.S. Senate and a Cabinet position in Washington — and, ultimately, into the New York publishing business.
Astute readers of my morning essays may recall this man: I’ve written about him before. But at this point in the political season, we’re busy at RCP, so I’ll ask your indulgence while I reprise Carl Schurz’s story, which is particularly fitting this week: Five years to the day after writing that letter to his wife, the man penned another missive to Margarethe, this one from the campaign trail.
I’ll explore what he wrote in that letter, and this immigrant’s remarkable journey, in a moment. First I’d point you to RealClearPolitics’ front page, which presents our poll averages, videos, breaking news stories, and aggregated opinion pieces spanning the political spectrum. We also offer original material from our own reporters and contributors, including the following:
* * *
Biden’s Expanded-Map Strategy Carries Risk in Pennsylvania. Susan Crabtree examines the campaign’s strategy in the Keystone State, which Hillary Clinton lost and where polling shows the Democratic nominee with a narrow lead.
The Pragmatism and New Populism of Ivanka Trump. Phil Wegmann interviewed the First Daughter and White House adviser about her evolving politics.
Mail Vote Challenges Are Likely; Will States Be Ready? Former California Secretary of State Bill Jones worries that a flood of mail-in ballots will swamp election offices — and courts.
Will Limbaugh and His Loyalists Celebrate One Last Win? John P. McCormick wonders whether the radio icon’s disclosure last week that he is dying will spark a voting surge among his listeners for GOP candidates.
The Most 2020 Ending for 2020: President Mike Pence. At RealClearPolicy, Dan Backer lays out one scenario that could result from an electoral vote tie.
Republican Self-Government Versus Judicial Supremacy. In the latest 1776 Series essay, Greg Weiner challenges the widespread consensus that courts should have the final say in defining the meaning of the Constitution.
Protecting Religion’s Place in the Public Square. At RealClearReligion, Ismail Royer argues that government should not be allowed to duck judicial review of its actions for violating people’s constitutional rights, as occurred recently in Georgia.
Is Wind a Cheap and Dependable Energy Source? The U.K. Intends to Find Out. Writing in RealClearEnergy, Rupert Darwall critiques Boris Johnson’s gamble.
Our Better (AI) Angels. At RealClearDefense, John Reid considers the application of artificial intelligence decision-making to the battlefield.
Three Ways to Make Artificial Gravity in Space. RealClearScience editor Ross Pomeroy highlights known methods and breakthroughs in the offing.
* * *
As a college student in Bonn, Carl Schurz joined the fighting in a democratic revolution sweeping Europe in 1848. Crushed in the streets by Prussian troops, and branded enemies of the state who would be imprisoned or executed, these “Forty-Eighters,” as they came to be known, dispersed as best they could. Schurz escaped to Switzerland, then worked at a newspaper in Paris and taught school in England before leaving for the nation that beckoned from across the sea. As he told his brother-in-law, if he could not “be the citizen of a free Germany,” he would “be a citizen of free America.”
He landed in New York in 1852 before making his way to Philadelphia. From there he headed west, to Chicago and then Milwaukee in the autumn of 1855. Finally, he alighted in Watertown, a new burg being settled by Germans, before sending for his family.
Both he and Margarethe would make their marks in the new country. The Schurzes became prosperous farmers, while she started the first kindergarten in the United States. But her husband’s passion was politics — specifically the politics of liberation — and he immersed himself in the formation of a new entity that would alter the governmental equation in this country. That organization was the Republican Party.
Carl Schurz campaigned in 1856 for John C. Fremont, the GOP’s first presidential candidate. Undaunted by Fremont’s defeat, he was heavily involved four years later. After initially supporting William H. Seward as the party standard-bearer, Schurz enthusiastically embraced the man chosen as the new anti-slavery party’s nominee.
“I shall carry into this struggle all the zeal and ardor and enthusiasm of which my nature is capable,” Schurz wrote to Abraham Lincoln. “The same disinterested motives that led me and my friends to support Gov. Seward in the Convention, will animate and urge us on in our work for you, and wherever my voice is heard and my influence extends, you may count upon hosts of true and devoted friends.”
Schurz lived up to that promise. On this date in 1860, with the election only a week away, he wrote his wife a letter that reminds contemporary Americans worried by the state of our self-governance that politics has never been, as the saying goes, a game of beanbag.
It seems that some 200 members of a Republican group called the Wide-Awakes gathered to hear Schurz speak at a pro-Lincoln rally. The Wide-Awakes, who existed throughout the Midwest, were all-male groups that weren’t above the occasional brawl. The tipoff that this rally might not end amicably is that the boys had assembled a few nights beforehand at a place called Rieber’s Saloon.
There they were set upon by an equivalent group of Democratic Party rowdies headed by a man named Emil Rothe. Many knuckles were bloodied in this encounter — noses, too. But punches aren’t bullets, and when Rothe was captured by the Wide-Awakes, they decided to let him go, thereby enhancing the Republicans’ reputation for charity.
“By this incident,” Schurz wrote to his wife, “the Wide-Awakes have gained great respect, and since then nothing more has been heard about any kind of disturbance. But it is said that even the Democrats — that is, the decent ones — were so angered by the conduct of their fellows that many of them have come over to the Republican Party.”
Schurz never stopped caring about his political party or its cause. After Lincoln’s election, he was sent by the new president to Spain as an ambassador. In March 1862, Schurz made a personal appeal to Lincoln to come home and fight in the Union Army. He didn’t feel he could avoid combat, he told his commander-in-chief, while his adopted nation was “fighting for its life.”
Pleasantly surprised by this request, and in need of generals who would engage the enemy, Lincoln appointed the 33-year-old immigrant a brigadier general. In the ranks of the officer corps, Schurz would find several other Forty-Eighters. He himself would command troops at Manassas, Chancellorsville, and Gettysburg.
After Lincoln’s assassination, Schurz was sent as an emissary to the South by President Andrew Johnson. Afterward, he returned to the Midwest, this time to St. Louis, where he became a newspaper editor and then a U.S. senator from Missouri. Disillusioned by the Reconstruction policies of President Grant, Schurz briefly helped form the Liberal Republican Party, but re-entered the fold after the election of Rutherford B. Hayes, who named him secretary of the interior.
Four years earlier, Schurz had given his adopted country an evocative phrase, one that is occasionally shortened in a way that alters, and trivializes, its meaning. “My country, right or wrong,” he said in a Feb. 29, 1872, Senate floor speech. But it’s the second part of his quote that carries the moral weight and defines America at its best: “If right, to be kept right,” he added. “And if wrong, to be set right.”
National Security experts discussed worrisome scenarios of post-election disruption in the aftermath of the presidential election November 3rd at a recent Center for Security Policy election seminar.
Michael Anton, Former Trump national security official and author of The Stakes: America at the Point of No Return joined Center for Security Policy experts J. Michael Waller and Kyle Shideler to discuss.
The 2020 election is about many issues, but one crucial one is the status of America’s intelligence apparatus. Do our intel agencies serve the American people — or their own interests and lefty agendas?
President Trump wants reform. Judging by their fevered activism of late, pro-Biden ex-spies hope a new administration will permit them to return to business as usual.
While there are myriad uncertainties about the outcome of next week’s presidential election, one thing is certain. The winner will have as Job One contending with the threat posed by the Chinese Communist Party to our national security, the U.S. economy and, in all likelihood, our public health.
It is equally clear that Xi Jingping’s dictatorship recognizes how high the stakes are in our elections for China. The extent of its intervention in our national decision is the subject of a frightening new film available for free on YouTube by Chinese expatriate Simone Gao and called “The American Republic vs. the CCP.” It documents, for example, how Beijing has even weaponized big data-collecting apps like TikTok to influence voters in this country.
We have never faced a bigger threat than Communist China. Our next Commander-in-Chief must understand that. So must American voters.
This is Frank Gaffney.
SOPHIE MANN, Fast Filer for Just the News, Former Bartley Fellow at the Wall Street Journal:
A history of Iranian arms embargoes
Analyzing the relationship between Iran and Venezuela
Reasons why George believes President Trump will be elected
Joe Biden’s alienation of a large percentage of the American electorate
New revelations in the Hunter Biden story
DIANA WEST, Nationally syndicated columnist, Blogs at Dianawest.net, Author of Death of the Grown Up, American Betrayal, and Red Thread: A Search for Ideological Drivers Inside the Anti-Trump Conspiracy:
The role of the US news media in the presidential election
The media’s lack of reporting on the Hunter Biden laptop story
SE HOON KIM, Committee on the Present Danger: China Captive Nations Coalition:
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WERE YOU FORWARDED THIS EDITION OF THE HOT AIR DAILY?
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AMERICAN INSTITUTE FOR ECONOMIC RESEARCH
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October 29, 2020
Does Anyone Trust the Fed?
By Thomas L. Hogan | In August, the Federal Reserve introduced its new monetary policy strategy of Average Inflation Targeting. This measure was expected to increase price inflation in the short run by raising the public’s expectations of higher…
FinCEN and Fed Proposal Means Less Privacy, More Exclusion
By J.P. Koning | “It could very well be that the benefits of reducing the threshold from $3,000 to $250 exceed the costs, defined as the sum of the administrative expenses, lost privacy, and increased financial exclusion. But all of these costs…
By Ethan Yang | “Tamny’s book is essential not just because it provides insightful commentary on important political issues but because it provides a timeless lesson. This is that a country, a government, and a society cannot sustain itself on a…
Do the Disease Eradicators Make an Elementary Logical…
By Jeffrey A. Tucker | I’ve rarely seen it put so bluntly as I have in the video posted below, in an interview with epidemiologist Paul Elliott. However, I have begun to suspect that this error has crept into the thinking of the lockdowners over…
No One Is Required to Join the ‘Herd’ In Search of Immunity
By John Tamny | “Freedom is always the answer, including freedom to not join the herd. Unknown is why this bothers so many on the left, not to mention why what’s timeless bothers them. It seems they enjoy forcing their values on others, and more…
Why So Gullible About Government in the Face of Covid-19?
By Donald J. Boudreaux | At my blog, Café Hayek, I recently posted several entries in opposition to the Covid-19 lockdowns specifically, and, more generally, to Covid-caused hysteria. These posts sparked negative reaction in the comments section…
Edward C. Harwood fought for sound money when few Americans seemed to care. He was the original gold standard man before that became cool. Now he is honored in this beautiful sewn silk tie in the richest possible color and greatest detail.
The red is not just red; it is darker and deeper, more distinctive and suggestive of seriousness of purpose.
The Harwood coin is carefully sewn (not stamped). Sporting this, others might miss that you are secretly supporting the revolution for freedom and sound money, but you will know, and that is what matters.
A common narrative of the post-World War II economists was that the State is indispensable for guiding investment and fostering innovation. The truth is that the enriched modern economy was not a product of State coercion. The Great Enrichment, that is, came from human ingenuity emancipated from the bottom up, not human ingenuity directed from the top down.
On the menu today: The op-ed page of the New York Times made the deliberate decision to hoodwink America about the identity of “Anonymous”; the sense of guilt that pervades legacy media — a very apt label; and wondering whether or not we will even see long lines on Election Day with early voting being so massive so far.
Anonymous . . . Turned Out to Be a Guy Who Was Pretty Anonymous
“Anonymous,” the unnamed Trump administration official who claimed in an infamous New York Times op-ed that he was secretly trying to “thwart” Trump’s policies, turned out to be . . . Miles Taylor, a former policy adviser and deputy chief of staff to Secretary of Homeland Security Kirstjen Nielson, and eventually chief of staff in the department, although not until after the op-ed was published.
This revelation shouldn’t be a huge deal, and yet it feels like it just broke something important. It feels like the editors of the New York Times chose to play a massive prank on us. They watched the fervent Washington speculation that it was Mike Pence, James Mattis, Jared Kushner … READ MORE
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Former Liberty University president Jerry Falwell Jr. announced that he had filed a lawsuit against the school, claiming that it had “needlessly injured and damaged his reputation” after his resignation earlier this year, Axios reports.
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“A Florida judge who heads Duval County’s vote-counting board has donated repeatedly to President Trump’s re-election campaign and other Republican efforts, and his home is covered in signs supporting Trump, despite rules requiring judges like him refrain from donations or public support,” USA Today reports.
“The outlook for about a dozen competitive Senate contests remains closely tied to President Trump’s standing in the final days of the race, with polls indicating few people plan to split their vote between a Democrat and a Republican,” the Wall Street Journal reports.
“In most of the states where polls show Mr. Trump leading, they also show the GOP senate candidate leading. Likewise, where polls show former Vice President Joe Biden in front, they show the Democratic Senate candidate in front. In only a handful of states does ticket splitting look to potentially be a deciding factor.”
“Bill Bledsoe, the third-party candidate in the hotly contested Senate race between GOP Sen. Lindsey Graham and Democrat Jaime Harrison, has a message for South Carolinians: Don’t vote for me,” Politico reports.
“Harrison’s campaign and several Democratic outside groups opposing Graham have elevated Bledsoe in TV ads this month, an effort to siphon off conservative voters who may be dissatisfied with Graham, potentially boosting Harrison’s chances against the three-term senator in the deep red state. It’s not an unusual tactic to elevate third-party candidates in tight races, where just a few percentage points could make the difference, and public polling this month has shown the race to be highly competitive.”
“But the effort in South Carolina has come after Bledsoe suspended his campaign on Oct. 1 — too late to be removed from the ballot — and endorsed Graham.”
“Senior advisers and allies of Joe Biden have been bombarded with emails, texts and phone calls from Democrats looking for jobs in a potential Biden administration as the jockeying for key positions shifts into high gear ahead of the election,” the Wall Street Journal reports.
“Mr. Biden, long superstitious about elections, has so far avoided making detailed plans about who will serve in his administration if he wins, leading to a waterfall of speculation, but little concrete information about what his cabinet and administration might look like. A Biden transition official said he isn’t making any personnel decisions pre-election.”
The British Labour Party has suspended its former leader Jeremy Corbyn after he said antisemitism in the party was “overstated” following a damning report from the equality watchdog, The Guardian reports.
The move is likely to ignite a civil war in the party between the leader, Keir Starmer, and Corbyn-supporting MPs.
Hackers stole $2.3 million from the Wisconsin Republican party’s account meant to help reelect President Trump in the key battleground state, the AP reports.
Republican Party Chairman Andrew Hitt said the hackers “were able to manipulate invoices from four vendors who were being paid to send out direct mail for Trump’s reelection efforts and to provide pro-Trump material such as hats that could be handed out to supporters. Invoices were altered so when the party paid them, the money went to the hackers instead of the vendors.”
“President Trump’s campaign in the crucial battleground of Pennsylvania is pursuing a three-pronged strategy that would effectively suppress mail-in votes in the state, moving to stop the counting of absentee votes before Election Day, pushing to limit how late mail-in ballots can be accepted and intimidating Pennsylvanians trying to vote early,” the New York Times reports.
Eliza Griswald: In Pennsylvania, Republicans may only need to stall to win.
Cook Political Report: “Democrats remain the clear favorites to take back the Senate with just days to go until Election Day. A lack of tightening in the presidential race as President Trump continues to be a drag downballot is set to doom many Republican incumbents. At this point, many GOP strategists just hope to keep their losses to a minimum and prevent a blue tidal wave.”
“Shortly after joining the White House as President Trump’s pandemic adviser, Dr. Scott Atlas launched a quiet effort that seemed counterintuitive to some of his colleagues — encouraging officials to limit Covid-19 testing mainly to people experiencing symptoms,” CNN reports.
“Their push to de-emphasize tests coincided with a dramatic drop in testing across Florida, even as the country was careening toward a fall coronavirus surge. A CNN analysis of the Florida state official numbers, aggregated by the Covid Tracking Project, shows that testing dropped off at the end of July and early August, with a peak seven-day average over 90,000 tests per day on July 18. Six weeks later, in early September, the seven-day average dropped by nearly half, with fewer than 48,000 tests per day, and hovered between there and 60,000 during the fall.”
“The economy grew at a record pace in the third quarter, the Commerce Department reported Thursday, recovering a good chunk of pandemic losses but still below where it ended 2019,” the Wall Street Journal reports.
“Forecasters expect the economy to expand through the fourth quarter, though more slowly, amid a pandemic still disrupting lives and commerce as the virus infects tens of thousands of people a day. Analysts project the economy will end 2020 smaller than a year earlier, but grow in 2021.”
New York Times: “Already, there are signs that the recovery is losing steam.”
Max Boot: “‘We had to destroy the village in order to save it.’ That famous, if probably apocryphal, quote from the Vietnam War describes how I feel about the Republican Party. We have to destroy the party in order to save it.”
“As a lifelong Republican until Nov. 9, 2016 — and as a foreign policy adviser to three Republican presidential candidates — it gives me no joy to write those words. It’s true that the party had long-standing problems — conspiracy-mongering, racism, hostility toward science — that Donald Trump was able to exploit. But he has also exacerbated all of those maladies, just as he made the coronavirus outbreak much worse than it needed to be.”
Authored by Raul Ilargi Meijer via The Automatic Earth blog, Try 2021 Had a little email exchange with Dave Collum this week. We go way back, more than two weeks even. It’s been a while though, Twitter cut me off from Dave’s tweets ages…
Authored by Ivan Pentchoukov via The Epoch Times, A collection of confidential documents related to the Biden family mysteriously vanished from an envelope sent to Fox News host Tucker Carlson , the host said on Wednesday night. Carlson’s…
Update (1850ET): More criticism of the NYT’s characterization of Taylor’s status as a “senior” administration official is rolling in. There were 64 names listed as “Leadership” on DHS’ website on September 5, 2018 – the day the Anonymous…
Update (1412 ET): It’s clear that Twitter’s Jack Dorsey has perhaps unintentionally acknowledged that Twitter’s unofficial moderating system is based simply on whoever shows the most outrage. In response to questioning from Sen. Rick…
Authored by Martin Jay via The Strategic Culture Foundation, CNN is arguably the most corrupt, tainted and unethical news organisation on the planet. It’s also the most successful. Those two sentences shouldn’t really sit comfortably…
An asteroid measuring 300 meters across is gaining speed as it tacks towards Earth – and could be on a collision path with the planet by 2068, experts at the University of Hawaii Institute for Astronomy revealed on Tuesday. Astronomers…
It’s NOT bitcoin. It’s NOT 5G. It’s NOT cannabis. But it could be bigger than all of those. This tech is fresh out of a secretive lab in Boston, and early investors are funneling as much money as they can into it. You could be looking down the barrel of 5,000% profits or MORE. Free alert explains…
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President Trump held two massive rallies in Arizona on Wednesday with just 6 days until Election Day. The President invited a few young YouTube stars… Read more…
This was outrageous. It is well know that FOX Business Network host Kennedy is an anti-Trumper. She’s not shy about it. On Thursday she took… Read more…
Tucker Carlson told his audience on Wednesday night that on Monday his team received a collection of confidential and damning documents related to the Biden… Read more…
President Trump continues to hold strong support from the Black community. 31% of black voters say they will vote for President Trump in latest poll…. Read more…
The US Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA) released its initial estimates for GDP growth in the 3rd Quarter and the result crushed all previous records!… Read more…
According to The Daily Caller the Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee has successfully verified ALL MATERIALS reviewed so far from former Biden Family… Read more…
Maurice Davis is the Vice President of the city council in Flint, Michigan. He is a lifelong Democrat. And he is backing President Trump. Over… Read more…
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Hoover Fellows Ayaan Hirsi Ali and Peter Berkowitz discuss the final report recently issued by the US State Department’s Commission on Unalienable Rights, of which Berkowitz was the commission secretary.
In traditional presidential campaigns, the two major parties offer contrasting ideas and policies. The Democratic and Republican candidates barnstorm the nation to make their cases. Not this year.
The publication of Crosswinds: The Way of Saudi Arabia has been a long time coming. Fouad Ajami’s intimate portrait of Saudi society and politics, drawing on his visits to the kingdom in the 1990s and early 2000s, was finished in 2010. The manuscript was submitted to Hoover Institution Press that year, and in the coming months it would be edited and typeset.
Japan seeks to work with like-minded partners to prevent malign actors from disturbing peace, prosperity, and stability in the Indo-Pacific region, explained Tarō Kōno, the island country’s current minister for administrative reform and regulatory reform in a virtual conversation with Fouad and Ajami Senior Fellow H. R. McMaster.
The Hoover Institution’s project on China’s Global Sharp Power, chaired by Senior Fellow Larry Diamond and managed by Research Fellow Glenn Tiffert, cohosted a virtual conference about how the People’s Republic of China’s advancements in artificial intelligence (AI) are used to repress its population and support authoritarian modes of governance across the world.
California’s Proposition 18 on this year’s ballot is like those television commercials that may be clever but where, in the end, you fail to see the point or even remember the product being advertised. It would amend the California constitution to allow seventeen-year-olds who would turn eighteen by the time of the next general election to vote in primaries or special elections.
When it comes to America’s achievement trends, the bad news keeps coming. As we previously saw at the fourth grade and eighth grade levels, the just-released 2019 twelfth grade results in math and reading were mostly flat or down across the board, as well, with particularly sharp declines for our lowest-performing students in reading.
Or, talking your book on surveys. Political Polarization and Expected Economic Outcomes by Olivier Coibion, Yuriy Gorodnichenko, and Michael Weber is a fascinating working paper on the election.
In this video interview, Dr. Joel Kettner, formerly the Manitoba government’s chief public health officer, presents some striking statistics and commentary.
Prime Minister Scheer? Co-blogger Scott Sumner, over at his own blog, themoneyillusion, writes: Other countries generally elect their president by majority vote (although a few “ceremonial” presidents are picked by an EC, as in India).
Hoover Institution fellow Morris Fiorina says we are in an extended age of “unstable majorities” because neither the Republican Party nor the Democratic Party is popular enough to get and hold enduring legislative power. The result is a historically rare period in which control of the White House and each house of Congress regularly flips back and forth between the two parties.
US Air Force Chief of Staff, Gen. Charles Q. Brown and Michael Auslin discussed Accelerate Change or Lose on Capital Conversations on October 28, 2020.
Hoover Institution fellow Niall Ferguson talks about censorship by Big Tech as well as what should be done. Can and should we create a First Amendment for cyberspace?
Hoover Institution fellow Niall Ferguson talks about the U.S. presidential election, Donald Trump’s policies on China, the record $34.5 billion initial public offering of Jack Ma’s Ant Group Co., and the dollar’s state as a reserve currency.
Opinions vary significantly over what will happen in Tuesday’s election, and the surprise of 2016 is a big reason why. In normal circumstances, the relative stability of the polls and the race’s trajectory might make this election easier to predict. Yet while most looking at the polls and betting odds would probably rather be Biden than Trump in this final week of the campaign, there is plenty of reason to at least maintain some humility, regardless of which side you believe will prevail.
The Hatch Center-the policy arm of the Orrin G. Hatch Foundation has released Commonsense Solutions to Our Civics Crisis, a nonpartisan report that establishes strong links between poor civic education and a number of ills plaguing our democracy, including depressed voter turnout, low trust in institutions, and decreasing faith in the free market. To reverse these trends, the report calls on policymakers across all levels of government to devote increased state and federal resources to address the civics crisis. In doing so, it outlines a policy blueprint to recenter civics at the heart of America’s public-school system.
The Air Force has an inadequate understanding of China as a potential adversary, service Chief of Staff Gen. Charles Q. Brown Jr. warned Oct. 28.
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.