Good morning! Here is your news briefing for Thursday January 21, 2021
1.) THE DAILY SIGNAL
January 21 2021
Good morning from Washington, where President Joe Biden is beginning his first full day in office as congressional Democrats flex the muscles of their narrow majority. The new president’s axing of a patriotism-in-schools program is not a good start, Mike Gonzalez writes. Neither is media collusion with tech giants to stifle free speech, Jarrett Stepman opines. On the podcast, Heritage Foundation education expert Lindsey Burke analyzes results of a survey of parents and school board members. Plus: Congress’ urgent duty to uphold the Constitution, and images from a nontraditional Inauguration Day. A year ago today, officials confirm that a Washington state man has the first known U.S. case of COVID-19.
CNN’s Oliver Darcy writes that news outlets such as One America News Network, Newsmax, and Fox News Channel should have their plugs pulled by cable companies for “disseminating disinformation.”
Eighty percent of school board members don’t believe that schools should teach children in kindergarten and elementary school about sexual activity, sexual orientation, and gender identity issues.
While exercising its impeachment powers may be constitutional, the House’s vote to impeach a president with less than a week left in office seemed to be about using the Constitution as a tool for revenge.
D.C. streets weren’t lined with citizens celebrating American democracy, but guarded by about 25,000 National Guard troops, plus local police and federal law enforcement.
The latest caravans likely are coming because they are hearing that President Biden plans to deport fewer of them and because relatives have encouraged them to make the risky journey.
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Uncertainty is leading at the polls as our political discourse has become a partisan charade that threatens to send economic growth into an historic tailspin…In 2021, the question is – what will the IRA’s, 401(k)’s, savings, pensions and retirement plans look when the dust settles? Retirement accounts, savings accounts, and financial portfolios are at the mercy of ever-growing global turmoil and dramatic political change. The good news: Gold dramatically outperforms other safe havens in 2021 and has officially become, “the currency of last resort.” Help Election-Proof Your Retirement with a Home Delivery Gold IRA.
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3.) DAYBREAK
Your First Look at Today’s Top Stories – Daybreak Insider
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From the story: Congressional Republicans applauded Biden’s promise to unify the divided country, though while they appeared eager to support Biden’s calls to “lower the temperature,” some remain skeptical. “I look forward to working with the Biden administration when we can find common ground for the good of Montanans,” Sen. Steve Daines, R-Mont., said in a statement Wednesday. “But I will also vigorously work against their agenda when I think it will harm our great state” (Fox News). From the Wall Street Journal: Mr. Biden struck many good notes in an Inaugural Address that will be remembered more for its moment following the Capitol riot than for its words. The speech had a personal flavor with touches of his Catholicism, such as quoting St. Augustine and praying for the dead. In this and in other personal manners, the new President is refreshingly unwoke. The overall theme was “unity,” which he called “our path forward.” His best note on that point was a call to “start afresh” and listen to one another. “Politics doesn’t have to be a raging fire,” he said. “Disagreement should not lead to disunion” (WSJ). From ADF President Michael Farris: “On this Inauguration Day, we join with millions of our fellow Americans who are praying for the 46th president of the United States, Joe Biden. Many challenges lie ahead, and we pray for the president’s health and safety as he governs this great nation. While we are gravely concerned about his campaign positions, we pray that, as president, he would have a change of heart and protect everyone’s God-given freedoms and the sanctity of life from conception until natural death. To millions of Americans, these freedoms are precious, and protecting them is essential to a free and flourishing society” (ADF). From The Federalist: Federalist Senior Editor Chris Bedford said on Fox News on Wednesday that President Joe Biden might have talked a good unity game in his inauguration speech, but actions speak otherwise. “I don’t hold out very much hope that Democrats are as interested in unity as the message has been today,” Bedford said as Democrats cheered massive tech companies implementing a progressive purge of opposition voices in recent weeks (The Federalist).
2.
Biden Commits to Rejoining Disastrous Paris Climate Agreement
The New York Times, which is giddy, describes it this way: President Joseph R. Biden Jr. on Wednesday recommitted the United States to the Paris climate agreement, the international accord designed to avert catastrophic global warming, and ordered federal agencies to start reviewing and reinstating more than 100 environmental regulations that were weakened or rolled back by former President Donald J. Trump. The moves represent a first step in healing one of the deepest rifts between the United States and the rest of the world after Mr. Trump defiantly rejected the Paris pact and seemed to relish his administration’s push to weaken or undo major domestic climate policies (NY Times). From Noah Rothman: This back and forth could be settled by submitting this as a treaty to the Senate for ratification. That’s is typically what you do with international “agreements” that you take the time to write down (Twitter).
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3.
Biden Shuts Down Keystone, Kills 11,000 Jobs
What a way to start his presidency (Fox Business). Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said he was “disappointed” but realizes this is part of what progressives demand in the name of climate change (NY Post). From the Wall Street Journal: Mr. Biden is sending an early signal that the climate panic will trump nearly everything else in his Administration. The unstated but operative message from the Keystone kill is that he will use regulation and permitting to do the dirty work (WSJ).
4.
New White House Press Secretary: Still Going Through with Impeachment Trial
And there goes the unity (Washington Times). From Alan Dershowitz: When the Constitution was written, several states allowed impeachment of former officials. The Framers could easily have included that provision, but they didn’t. They also explicitly chose to prohibit the British practice of trial by legislature—excepting only impeachment—and “bill of attainder,” any punitive legislative act against a specific person. The courts have held that the punishments prohibited by the Bill of Attainder Clause include disqualification from holding office. Moreover, the Constitution requires the chief justice to preside “when the president of the United States is tried” (WSJ).
Baltimore Mayor Lifts Some Dining Restrictions: But You Can Only Eat for an Hour
Restaurants are still restricted to 25% capacity inside, 50% outside (Fox Baltimore). From Ellie Bufkin: Ah, good everyone will leave promptly after an hour and then gather with others in private homes where the spread is actually coming from. You don’t get MORE infectious the longer you sit. Where is he getting this stuff? (Twitter).
7.
Oregon Dems Working on Law to Force All Cops to Have Four-Year Degrees
It would apply to “every police officer, correction officer, probation and parole officer, reserve officer and regulatory specialist within the state” (Police Tribune). This would be particularly hard on blacks (Census).
8.
Germany to Place Covid Rule Breakers in Camps
Of all countries, you’d think Germany would know better. From the disturbing story: …the eastern state of Saxony has confirmed plans to hold quarantine-flouters in a fenced-off section of a refugee camp set to be build next week. The regional state claimed that the facility will only be used for people who have repeatedly flouted lockdown rules around self-isolation. Baden-Württemberg in south-west Germany will use two hospital rooms to detain repeat offenders, who will be guarded by police. In Brandenburg, authorities will detain a section of a refugees centre, while Schleswig-Holstein will use an area within a juvenile detention centre.
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Good Thursday morning. I was so caught up with Inaugural festivities that I did not have time to write a topper for today’s ‘burn, so I turned it over to Joe Henderson, who offers a non-Inaugural take:
But no, the Governor said the problem is that demand for the vaccine has outstripped supply. As someone who has repeatedly tried (and failed) to get an appointment through Hillsborough County’s vaccination registration site, I can say the Governor seems to have a point.
Who the heck is responsible for vaccines in Florida? Your guess is as good as ours. Image via AP.
As of Tuesday, the 10-county Tampa Bay area had no unfilled appointments for the vaccine. I’ve heard many tales from fellow travelers eligible for the drug who can’t get a place in line.
DeSantis said federal help is “not necessary in Florida. All we need is more vaccine.”
Let’s think this through, though.
The problem seems to center on inept federal vaccine distribution to the states. Counties look to the state for answers, and the state looks to the feds. I don’t know if you’ve noticed, but the person who WAS in charge of the federal government until noon Wednesday just moved back to Florida.
I mean, that guy might have considered taking personal charge of the federal response. Instead, he spent most of the last several weeks on the golf course and rambling about a stolen election. I heard he and DeSantis are friends, but I don’t know if that’s still good information.
Anyway, that guy is out of the picture now (YAY!). I heard Biden wants to be the President of everyone in America, not just the people who voted for him. Records show that more Floridians voted for the other guy instead of Biden, so this might be a good time to put that promise to the test.
Before flatly offering up a GOP sound bite about “FEMA camps,” a better approach would be to call Washington and get some details about this idea. If FEMA and the National Guard are a quicker delivery service, what would be wrong with that?
It couldn’t be much worse than what we have.
If it turns out that some FEMA person tells DeSantis that Wawa will take over for Publix as a vaccination site, OK, that would be a problem. But if the Guard trucks roll in with cases and cases of vaccines, would the Governor complain that those are “blue” trucks?
Of course not.
This thing is an unholy mess, and not just in Florida. So we’re clear, I completely blame the previous administration for an unfathomably dismal response.
However, I also understand that the nation hasn’t been through anything like this in our lifetimes. Mistakes were going to be made.
This isn’t about who gets the credit or even who is in charge.
DeSantis wants to focus first on Florida’s large population of seniors, of which I am one. So, focus already. Find out the details of Biden’s plan — if they exist beyond an idea at this point. Then move ahead accordingly.
The automated voice took our information and said we’d get a call when the site was ready and had room for us.
A few hours later, I did get that call. My wife and I have an appointment.
Things are looking up, and it didn’t take FEMA!
However, find out the details anyway. It couldn’t hurt.
Situational awareness
—@JonathanChait: “Have a good life” was Sam’s line to Diane when Shelly Long left “Cheers.” It worked really well in the sitcom format. Not so sure about the presidential farewell format.
—@Poniewozik: Flying down on Air Force One like someone trying to empty out the tank on the rental car before it’s due at noon
Tweet, tweet:
—@MeridithMcgraw: “It was uncertain if he would leave one after bucking other transition traditions, but [Donald] Trump was personally encouraged to by people around him like Leader [KEVIN] MCCARTHY, I was told.
—@VoiceofD: I know he has a few more hours, but it feels like Donald Trump’s presidency ended when his Twitter account was taken away.
—@HamiltonMusical: Welcome to the sequel.
—@MegKinnardAP: On a call with reporters just now, @WhipClyburn says ex-President Bush told him he’s ‘the savior’ because of his role in helping Biden win the Democratic nomination. [Jim] Clyburn says Bush went on to call Biden ‘the only one who could have defeated the incumbent President.
—@MarcoRubio: May God bless @JoeBiden with health, strength & wisdom as he leads our nation at this moment of great & unprecedented challenges.
Tweet, tweet:
—@POTUS: Folks — This will be the account for my official duties as President. At 12:01 p.m. on January 20th, it will become @POTUS. Until then, I’ll be using @JoeBiden. And while you’re here, follow @FLOTUSBiden @SenKamalaHarris @SecondGentleman and @Transition46.
Tweet, tweet:
Tweet, tweet:
—@KyleGriffin1: The White House press secretary did not attack a single reporter during her first briefing.
—@DavidEBiddle: Now that that’s over, it’s time to lay the groundwork to reelect Marco Rubio, Ron DeSantis, Ashley Moody, Jimmy Patronis, Chuck Clemons, Jennifer Bradley and our GOP legislators, and find a competent person to lead the Dept of Ag. 2022 starts now
—@Aronberg: Let us never take our democracy for granted ever again.
Days until
Florida Chamber Economic Outlook and Job Solution Summit begins — 7; Super Bowl LV in Tampa — 17; Daytona 500 — 24; “Nomadland” with Frances McDormand — 30; 2021 Legislative Session begins — 40; “Coming 2 America” premieres on Amazon Prime — 44; “The Many Saints of Newark” premieres — 50; 2021 Grammys — 52; ‘Godzilla vs. Kong’ premieres — 64; “No Time to Die” premieres (rescheduled) — 71; Children’s Gasparilla — 79; Seminole Hard Rock Gasparilla Pirate Fest — 86; “A Quiet Place Part II” rescheduled premiere — 91; “Black Widow” rescheduled premiere — 106; “Top Gun: Maverick” rescheduled premiere — 162; Disney’s “Shang Chi and The Legend of The Ten Rings” premieres — 170; new start date for 2021 Olympics — 183; “Jungle Cruise” premieres — 190; St. Petersburg Primary Election — 216; “Dune” premieres — 254; St. Petersburg Municipal Elections — 286; Disney’s “Eternals” premieres — 288; “Spider-Man Far From Home” sequel premieres — 330; Steven Spielberg’s “West Side Story” premieres — 323; “Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness” premieres — 428; “Thor: Love and Thunder” premieres — 470; “Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse” sequel premieres — 624.
46
“Joe Biden takes the helm, appeals for unity to take on crises” via Jonathan Lemire, Zeke Miller and Alexandra Jaffe of The Associated Press — Denouncing a national “uncivil war,” Biden took the oath at a U.S. Capitol that had been battered by an insurrectionist siege just two weeks earlier. Then, taking his place in the White House Oval Office, he plunged into a stack of executive actions that began to undo the heart of his polarizing predecessor’s agenda on matters from the deadly pandemic to climate change. Biden never mentioned his predecessor, who defied tradition and left town ahead of the ceremony, but his speech was an implicit rebuke of Trump. The new president denounced “lies told for power and for profit” and was blunt about the challenges ahead.
Joe Biden is in; now there is work to do. Image via AP.
“Biden calls on nation to ‘start afresh’ at inauguration as 46th President” via Catherine Lucey and Ken Thomas of The Wall Street Journal — Declaring “democracy has prevailed,” Biden implored the public to stand together in the face of division and crisis. Before a crowd that included family and former presidents, but not former PresidentTrump, he said: “We must end this uncivil war that pits red against blue. Or rural versus urban, conservative versus liberal. We can do this if we open our souls instead of hardening our hearts.” Kamala Harris was sworn in by Supreme Court Justice Sonia Sotomayor, making history as the first female vice president. The first Black woman and first of Indian descent nominated on a major party’s ticket, she becomes the highest-ranking woman ever in the presidential line of succession.
Now, here are a few notes from the Inaugural:
— Read the whole thing: Now-President Biden delivered an approximately 20-minute speech Wednesday after taking his oath as the 46th President of the United States. It called for unity while promising forward progress, all without directly mentioning his predecessor or specifically criticizing the policies of the previous four years. Read his speech in its entirety here.
🤵 — Check out Biden’s Oval Office digs: Biden’s new office now includes images of American leaders and icons, including a massive portrait of Franklin D. Roosevelt across from his Resolute Desk. Its inclusion is appropriate considering FDR also served at a time with significant crises. Take a look here.
🧤 — Bernie’s mittens: You know that iconic photo of Bernie Sanders at the inauguration looking less than enthused, well it has a story. His mittens, which he often wore on the campaign trail, are made in Vermont, Sanders’ home state. A teacher made them using repurposed wool from sweaters and then lined them with fleece. Meanwhile, there’s now an inauguration Bernie bobblehead, because, why not?
“GOP Senators praise Biden’s inauguration speech” via Jordain Carney of The Hill — Biden “struck the right themes of unity, a call for us to come together to stop viewing one another as adversaries but rather as fellow Americans,” said Maine Republican Sen. Susan Collins, who previously served with Biden when he was a Senator. Alaska Republican Sen. Lisa Murkowski said the inauguration ceremony was “very well done.” Utah Republican Sen. Mitt Romney called Biden’s remarks “very strong.” Biden used his inauguration speech to urge unity after a tumultuous four years capped off by the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol when a mob of Trump supporters breached security as now-former Vice President Mike Pence and members of Congress were ratifying Biden’s electoral victory.
“Poet Amanda Gorman has star turn reading ‘The Hill We Climb’ at Biden inauguration” via Julie Bykowicz of The Wall Street Journal — Gorman brought former Presidents, lawmakers and dignitaries to their feet as she read a poem that aimed to inspire after the Jan. 6 siege of the U.S. Capitol. She delivered it standing outside that very building. “We’ve seen a force that would shatter our nation rather than share it, would destroy our country if it meant delaying democracy,” she read. “And this effort very nearly succeeded. But while democracy can be periodically delayed, it can never be permanently defeated.” The 22-year-old from Los Angeles is the first National Youth Poet Laureate and the youngest poet to read at a presidential inauguration. Her mother watched from the socially distant, masked audience. She said she approached the task very deliberately, first reviewing speeches given by abolitionist Frederick Douglass and President Abraham Lincoln and others who have spoken at divisive times.
Poet Amanda Gorman takes a star turn at the 59th Presidential Inauguration. Image via AP.
“Subdued Inauguration Day lacks usual crowds due to COVID-19 pandemic” via Julie Bykowicz and Sabrina Siddiqui of The Wall Street Journal — Inauguration Day unfolded like no other before it as tens of thousands of troops guarded the nation’s capital and Americans watched the scaled-down events on computers and televisions. The twin emergencies of a coronavirus pandemic and security concerns about civil unrest after the Jan. 6 siege of the U.S. Capitol held the usual crowds at bay. The day featured a mix of traditional ceremony and distinctly 2021 adaptations. Military bands played, and entertainers Lady Gaga, Jennifer Lopez and Garth Brooks sang American classics. Biden gave his inaugural address while looking out at a National Mall crowded not with cheering throngs, but with flags memorializing the 400,000 Americans who have died of COVID-19.
“Michelle Obama attends Inauguration Day in a take on the monochrome trend” via Claudia Miller of Footwear News — Obama wore a standout monochromatic look for the occasion. Her streamlined ensemble from Black designer Sergio Hudson layered a fuchsia top with coordinating wide-leg trousers and a cut-hem coat. As for footwear, Michelle tapped Stuart Weitzman for its signature Vernell stretch suede boots; similar designs retail for $595 on the American designer’s website. You can’t forget about her memorable looks from both of Barack Obama’s inaugurations. For her husband’s first swearing-in, Michelle layered an Isabel Toledo dress and coat with a Nina Ricci cardigan, and J. Crew leather gloves, topped off with Jimmy Choo heels. In 2013 the then-First Lady stunned in a Thome Brown jacket dress with Reed Krakoff leather suede boots.
New admin
— Biden’s commitment to respect: Shortly after taking the oath of office, Biden had a clear message for his staff: be nice or lose your job. “If you’re ever working with me and I hear you treated another colleague with disrespect, talk down to someone, I promise you I will fire you on the spot,” Biden said when swearing in his White House staff Wednesday night. “Everybody is entitled to be treated with decency and dignity.” Biden’s words are a stark contrast to his predecessor whose time in office was punctuated with myriad insults.
Joe Biden tells staff: ‘Be nice or be gone.’
“Biden team fears rocky transition may have revealed only ‘tip of the iceberg’” via Tyler Pager, Alice Miranda Ollstein, Caitlin Emma and Eric Geller of POLITICO — Biden’s transition team had no illusions about the chaos they were inheriting from Trump. They expected a disorganized government and mismanaged agencies, many of them hollowed out and ignored over the past four years. Hours before they assume office, however, there is a fear among Biden’s team that the roadblocks they encountered during the chaotic transition shielded them from understanding the full scope of the problems at various agencies, and that the state of the executive branch is far worse than they understood, “the tip of the iceberg” as one senior transition aide put it.
“‘Really quite shocking’: Inside the ugly transition at the Pentagon” via Lara Seligman and Bryan Bender of POLITICO — The Pentagon blocked members of Biden’s incoming administration from gaining access to critical information about current operations, including the troop drawdown in Afghanistan, upcoming special operations missions in Africa and the COVID-19 vaccine distribution program, according to new details provided by transition and defense officials. The effort to obstruct the Biden team, led by senior White House appointees at the Pentagon, is unprecedented in modern presidential transitions and will hobble the new administration on key national security matters as it takes over positions in the Defense Department, the officials said.
“Biden targets Donald Trump’s legacy with first-day executive actions” via Eric Bradner and Betsy Klein of CNN — Biden is finalizing 17 executive moves just hours after his inauguration Wednesday, moving faster and more aggressively to dismantle his predecessor’s legacy than any other modern president. Biden is signing a flurry of executive orders, memorandums and directives to agencies, his first steps to address the coronavirus pandemic and undo some of Trump’s signature policies. “There’s no time to start like today,” Biden told reporters in the Oval Office as he began signing a stack of orders and memorandums. With the stroke of a pen, Biden has halted funding for the construction of Trump’s border wall, reversed his travel ban targeting largely Muslim countries and embraced progressive policies on the environment and diversity that Trump spent four years blocking.
“Biden rejoins the Paris climate accord in first move to tackle global warming” via Emma Newberger of CNBC — Biden signed an executive order to rejoin the U.S. into the Paris climate agreement, his first major action to tackle global warming as he brings the largest team of climate change experts ever into the White House. The Biden administration also intends to cancel the permit for the construction of the Keystone XL pipeline from Canada to the U.S. and sign additional orders in the coming days to reverse several of Trump’s actions weakening environmental protections. Biden vows to move quickly on climate change action, and his inclusion of scientists throughout the government marks the beginning of a major policy reversal following four years of the Trump administration’s weakening of climate rules in favor of fossil fuel producers.
“Work on Keystone XL pipeline halted as Biden revokes permit” via WFLA — Construction on the long-disputed Keystone XL oil pipeline halted Wednesday as Biden decided to revoke its permit. Biden’s Day One plans included moving to revoke a presidential permit for the pipeline. The premier of the oil-rich Canadian province of Alberta called it an “insult” and said the federal Canadian government should impose trade sanctions if it is not reversed. The 1,700-mile (2,735-kilometer) pipeline was planned to carry roughly 800,000 barrels of oil a day from Alberta to the Texas Gulf Coast, passing through Montana, South Dakota, Nebraska, Kansas and Oklahoma. Keystone XL President Richard Prior said over 1,000 jobs, the majority unionized, will be eliminated in the coming weeks.
Day One: Joe Biden issues a wave of executive orders undoing several from Donald Trump. Image via AP.
“Avril Haines confirmed as Director of National Intelligence” via Ursula Perano of Axios — Avril Haines was quickly confirmed by the Senate on Wednesday as the Director of National Intelligence (DNI) in a vote of 84-10. Haines is the first of Biden’s nominees to receive a full Senate confirmation and will be the first woman to serve as DNI. She’s previously served as CIA deputy director from 2013 to 2015 and deputy national security adviser from 2015 to 2017. The confirmation came just hours after Democrats took back the majority in the Senate. Secretary of the Treasury nominee Janet Yellen is expected to be another priority for confirmations, with much of the responsibilities for COVID-19 economic stimulus falling on the Treasury.
Tweet, tweet:
“Controversial head of Voice of America resigns hours after President Joe Biden takes office” via Paul Farhi of The Washington Post — Michael Pack, a Trump appointee, resigned on Wednesday, bringing an end to a short and tumultuous tenure. Pack quit a few hours after Biden took office and less than eight months into his three-year term as chief executive of the U.S. Agency for Global Media. The government agency oversees VOA, Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, the Office of Cuba Broadcasting and other networks that produce and distribute news to millions of people in countries whose governments suppress independent reporting. He said that his resignation came at Biden’s request. During the presidential campaign, Biden’s staff had signaled that he would replace Pack if Biden won election.
“Florida Emergency Director Jared Moskowitz will not get FEMA post” via WLRN staff reports — After speculation that Florida emergency-management chief Moskowitz could be a candidate for the post, Biden tapped a New York official to serve as administrator of the Federal Emergency Management Agency. Biden’s transition team announced Friday that Deanne Criswell, commissioner of the New York City Emergency Management Department, has been selected to lead FEMA. Moskowitz, a Democrat, was a state House member before DeSantis appointed him to lead the state Division of Emergency Management.
“Interior Department names Everglades advocate, and Keys native, to top post” via Jenny Staletovich of WLRN — The U.S. Department of Interior named a longtime Everglades advocate and Florida Keys native to a top position Wednesday. Shannon Estenoz, who directed the department’s Everglades restoration work under the Obama administration, will become the principal deputy assistant secretary overseeing the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and the National Park Service. Estenoz had been a chief operating officer for the Everglades Foundation. Estenoz comes back to a dramatically different department after four years under Trump, run by secretaries with ties to the oil and gas industry and accused of conflicts of interest.
Keys native Shannon Estenoz gets a top post in the Interior Department. Image via Twitter.
“Biden spokeswoman promises ‘truth and transparency’ ” via Ledyard King, Joey Garrison, Maureen Groppe, Courtney Subramanian, Christal Hayes and Bart Jansen of USA TODAY — Biden’s press secretary began her first briefing on Thursday with a pledge of openness. Spokeswoman Jen Psaki said Biden asked her to “bring truth and transparency back to the briefing room.” … “Rebuilding trust with the American people will be central to our focus in the press office and in the White House every single day,” she said from the lectern in the White House briefing room. That doesn’t mean administration officials and the media will share the same views, she said. But, she said, they have the common goal of “sharing accurate information” with the public.
Epilogue: Trump
“Trump departs vowing, ‘We will be back in some form’” via Maggie Haberman of The New York Times — Trump left Washington aboard Air Force One for a final time on Wednesday, the iconic plane creeping along the runway so the liftoff was timed to the closing strains of Frank Sinatra’s “My Way.” In many ways, Trump’s last hours as President were a bookend to the kickoff of his presidential campaign in June 2015. As he did then, he tossed aside prepared remarks that aides had helped draft and spoke off the cuff, having them take down teleprompters they had set up. As he did then, he spent hours focused on the visual aspects of the scene where he would speak at the end of a calamitous final three months that capped a tumultuous term. Before departing for Florida, Trump laid down a marker about his future, telling the roughly 300 supporters who greeted him on the windy tarmac that they had not seen the last of him.
Donald Trump promises to return ‘in some form.’ Image via AP.
“Trump’s ‘unwell’ appearance sparks chatter among Americans” via Allison Schonter of Pop Culture — Americans across the country watching the morning’s events live from home expressed worry over the President’s health, claiming that he appeared “unwell” as he boarded Air Force One and later delivered his final address at a farewell ceremony at Joint Base Andrews. After arriving 35 minutes late, the President delivered a speech. While the President’s remarks sparked some controversy online, many people instead focused on Trump’s health. Many Americans watching Trump’s final morning as the President noted that he appeared to have lost weight in his final days in the office, others stating that he looked tired and stressed.
“Trump leaves parting Oval Office letter Joe Biden” via Nick Niedzwiadek of POLITICO — After four years of shattering precedent inside the White House, Trump took part in one final presidential tradition on his way out of office Wednesday: leaving a letter for his successor inside the Oval Office. Trump spokesperson Judd Deere confirmed the President had written a letter to Biden and left it for him in the Oval Office’s Resolute Desk. The Trump White House did not divulge the contents of what Trump left for Biden to read. Biden said he, too, would keep the note under wraps until he had a moment to connect with Trump. “The President wrote a very generous letter,“ Biden said. “Because it was private, I will not talk about it until I talk to him, but it was generous.“
“Trump ends where he began, fighting release of tax returns” via David Yaffe-Bellany of Bloomberg — Trump’s lawyers made a preemptive move to stop congressional Democrats from obtaining his tax returns as Biden takes power, asking a judge for an Inauguration Day hearing in a case that could threaten the secrecy of his closely guarded financial information. The Democrats in the last Congress ran out of time in their efforts to enforce a subpoena demanding that the Treasury Department turn over Trump’s tax information, but the new Congress could reissue the subpoena in the coming days. At noon on Wednesday, Biden took control of the White House, making it possible that the Justice Department could reverse its position in the case and simply hand over the records.
“In Trump’s pardons, disdain for accountability” via Eric Lipton and Kenneth P. Vogel The New York Times — Randy “Duke” Cunningham maintained a “bribe menu” on his congressional office stationery that featured different levels of payments he required from military contractors if they wanted his help to win corresponding levels of federal contracts. As Mayor of Detroit, Kwame M. Kilpatrick turned City Hall into what prosecutors called “a private profit machine,” taking bribes, fixing municipal contracts and even using hundreds of thousands of dollars from a city civic fund to spend on friends and family, as well as campaign expenses. Robin Hayes, a former member of Congress serving as chairman of the North Carolina Republican Party, pleaded guilty to lying to F.B.I. agents.
“Can Trump really issue secret pardons for himself and his family?” via Tommy Christopher of Mediaite — Trump and his family were not among the 143 11th-hour pardons issued shortly after midnight on Trump’s last day in office, leading many to fret that he could still issue secret “pocket pardons” that only come to light when recipients are charged with crimes. MSNBC host and Congress Nerd Lawrence O’Donnell wrote, “Don’t trust the list. Trump doesn’t have to reveal the names of anyone he pardons.” Former Nixon White House Counsel John Dean raised the possibility as well. Former Acting Solicitor General Neal Katyal threw some cold water on the idea, writing “I think secret pardons are constitutionally dubious … But here it doesn’t matter, even if Trump tried secret pardons, Biden could make them public the next day.”
“Among Floridians granted clemency by Trump: rich elites, rappers, an elderly pot dealer” via David Ovalle of the Miami Herald — In all, the Trump doled out over 100 pardons and commutations Among those Floridians who did get pardons: rapper Lil Wayne, the former Miami Beach resident and international hip-hop star who pleaded guilty last month to a federal weapons charge. Abel Holtz, the philanthropist and banker whose name is featured on a downtown Miami street, a children’s hospital at Jackson Memorial and a tennis center in Miami Beach. Robert “Bob” Zangrillo, a prominent Miami developer who was charged in the infamous Varsity Blues scandal. Todd Farha, William Kale, Thaddeus Bereday, Paul Behrens and Peter Clay, who are former executives with Tampa’s WellCare Health Care. They were convicted of Medicare fraud in 2013.
“How FSU legend Deion Sanders helped secure a pardon from Trump for rapper Lil Wayne” via Jim Henry of The Tallahassee Democrat — Lil Wayne owes a debt of gratitude to Trump. And to Sanders, too. Sanders, the former Florida State All-American and first-year football coach at Jackson State, was cited for his support in Trump’s pardon of the rapper early Wednesday. Lil Wayne was among the 143 pardons and commuted sentences issued in the President’s final hours in office Wednesday morning. Wayne faced up to 10 years in prison after he was arrested in Miami in 2019 with a handgun and drugs. He also pleaded guilty last month to possessing a firearm as a formerly felon. Wayne faced up to 10 years in prison after he was arrested in Miami in 2019 with a handgun and drugs. He also pleaded guilty last month to possessing a firearm as a formerly felon.
“Pardon for former Google engineer who stole trade secrets” via The Associated Press — Trump pardoned a former Google engineer who was sentenced to prison last year for stealing trade secrets from the tech giant related to robotic vehicles. Anthony Levandowski left Google in early 2016 where he worked in the autonomous vehicle division to start his own company called Otto. That company was acquired by Uber for $680 million as the ride-hailing venture pursued its own autonomous vehicle division. Before leaving, Levandowski downloaded a trove of Google’s self-driving car technology, leading eventually to 33 counts of intellectual property theft against him. He pleaded guilty to one count and was sentenced to 18 months in prison last summer.
Former Google engineer Anthony Levandowski was among the 150 eleventh-hour presidential pardons. Image via AP.
“Trump extended Secret Service protection to his adult children as he left office” via Carol D. Leonnig and Nick Miroff of The Washington Post — In the days before he left office, Trump instructed that his family get the best security available in the world for the next six months, at no cost, the protection of the U.S. Secret Service. According to three people briefed on the plan, Trump issued a directive to extend post-presidency Secret Service protection to his four adult children and two of their spouses, who were not automatically entitled to receive it. Trump also directed that three key aides leaving the government to continue receiving protection for six months: former treasury secretary Steven Mnuchin, former chief of staff Mark Meadows and former national security adviser Robert C. O’Brien.
“‘Trumplicans’ greet Trump in South Florida after snub of Biden inauguration” via David Smiley and Martin Vassolo of the Miami Herald — Trump, in the company of his family, touched down at Palm Beach International Airport at 10:54 a.m. Wednesday in Air Force One, becoming only the fourth President in the history of the United States to skip the swearing-in of his successor. Without taking questions from reporters at the airport, the Trumps entered their motorcade, which proceeded to crawl slowly down Southern Boulevard, giving the outgoing President time to wave and give double thumbs-ups to cheering crowds grouped at various points along his route. By 11:49 a.m., when Biden took his oath of office, Trump had already arrived home at Mar-a-Lago, his private Palm Beach club and residence.
“Few Trump supporters turn out at Capitol” via The News Service of Florida — Only about 10 supporters of Trump waved signs to motorists outside Florida’s Capitol as Biden was sworn into office in Washington, D.C. With law-enforcement officers visible atop the Florida Capitol and the nearby Leon County Courthouse, the handful of Trump backers maintained their unsubstantiated belief about election fraud in the 2020 election as motorists occasionally honked in agreement or shouted disparaging remarks. “We just feel there were a lot of improprieties during the election. We just don’t feel like our votes were heard,” said Earl Austin, who with his wife, Suzanne, held signs outside the Capitol. “We just feel like, right now, we know it’s over probably, but it’s so these things do not occur ever again.”
“Inauguration sows doubt among QAnon conspiracy theorists” via Michael Kunzelman, Amanda Seitz, David Klepper of The Associated Press — For years, legions of QAnon conspiracy theory adherents encouraged one another to “trust the plan” as they waited for the day when Trump would orchestrate mass arrests, military tribunals and executions of his Satan-worshipping, child-sacrificing enemies. Keeping the faith wasn’t easy when Inauguration Day didn’t usher in “The Storm,” the apocalyptic reckoning that they have believed was coming for prominent Democrats and Trump’s “deep state” foes. QAnon followers grappled with anger, confusion and disappointment Wednesday as Biden was sworn into office. Some believers found a way to twist the conspiracy theory’s convoluted narrative to fit their belief that Biden’s victory was an illusion and that Trump would secure a second term in office.
“The world will never forget Trump’s trips abroad” via Jennifer Hassan and Ruby Mellen of The Washington Post — Even among the many norm-shattering, unpredictable moments that marked Trump’s tenure, his approach to foreign travel and high-level diplomacy stood out. Trump broke with tradition by visiting Saudi Arabia for his first foreign stop as President, rather than one of the United States’ neighbors, Canada or Mexico. After Saudi Arabia, Trump passed through Israel, where he became the first sitting U.S. President to visit the Western Wall and was welcomed warmly by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. The following year, Trump found himself at odds with other world leaders at a meeting of the Group of Seven countries in Quebec City. An iconic image from the summit, seeming to make visible the tensions, went viral.
Well, there’s that — “Sales of U.S. Constitution topped 1 million during Trump years” via Hillel Italie of The Associated Press — At the National Constitution Center, in Philadelphia, they like to joke that what’s bad for the country is often good for the organization. “Web traffic is through the roof,” says the nonprofit’s CEO and President, Jeffrey Rosen. “We had more than 400,000 visitors to our site in the days following Jan. 6,” when supporters of Trump rampaged in the U.S. Capitol. “Our previous record was around 160,000.” More than 1 million copies of the Constitution in various editions have sold since Trump took office, compared to around 600,000 during the second term of President Barack Obama. The spike began in 2016 when Trump became the Republican candidate for President: Sales more than doubled from the year before.
Donald Trump helped boost sales of the U.S. Constitution. Image via AP.
“A politician in Trump-loving Hialeah has left the Republican Party. Here’s why” via Aaron Liebowitz of The Miami Herald — Paul Hernandez, a Hialeah city councilman for the past decade, said he changed his voter registration from Republican to Democrat just hours after he watched a mob of Trump supporters storm the U.S. Capitol. City and county leaders in Miami-Dade serve in nonpartisan roles. But a defection from the Republican Party is notable in conservative Hialeah, where Hernandez is now the only registered Democrat representing the city at any level of government. The replies were mostly supportive, including from local Democrats like Miami-Dade County Mayor Daniella Levine Cava. Hernandez had supported Levine Cava’s Republican opponent, former county commissioner and Hialeah local Steve Bovo, in the November mayoral race.
Corona Florida
“Seniors’ vaccine hopes are crushed as more than 250,000 rush for Publix sign-up” via Lisa J. Huriash of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — A quarter of a million people jammed the supermarket chain’s website all at once Wednesday, but only 24,402 appointment slots were up for grabs — and they were gone in less than two hours statewide. Seniors say trying to get the vaccine has been a nightmare: It’s been a test of their stamina as they get repeatedly shut out of appointments through various sign-up sites. They can expect more of the same for many weeks, experts say. The rising infection rate and death toll and a new variant of the virus are contributing to the angst.
Ron DeSantis’ expansion of the Publix vaccination effort results in a flood of seniors ready to get their shots.
“More than 40,000 Floridians overdue for second coronavirus shots” via Allison Ross of The Tampa Bay Times — More than 40,000 people in Florida have not gotten their second shots of a coronavirus vaccine within the recommended time frame to do so, raising questions about why that may be happening. Both of the coronavirus vaccines approved for use in the United States require two doses per person to be fully effective, with Pfizer-BioNTech recommending a second dose after three weeks and Moderna vaccine doses scheduled four weeks apart. More than 1 million people in Florida have received at least one dose of a COVID-19 vaccine, according to state data from Tuesday. Of those, about 100,000 came back for their second shots and another 44,000 were listed in state data as overdue for second doses.
Corona local
“Miami-Dade County crosses 350K COVID-19 cases, Palm Beach nears 100K” via Ryan Nicol of Florida Politics — South Florida recorded more than 4,000 new COVID-19 cases, with one major county crossing a major milestone and another county nearing one. Miami-Dade County added another 2,287 cases in Wednesday’s report. That puts Florida’s most populous county at about 350,000 total COVID-19 cases since the pandemic began. Two counties to the north in Palm Beach, another 687 cases were recorded Wednesday. Palm Beach has now tallied 99,379 total cases, putting the 100,000-case mark in reach by Thursday or Friday. Palm Beach also saw its daily positivity rate rise for the fourth straight day. That number sat above 10% in Wednesday’s report. While the positivity rate in Palm Beach is still down week-to-week, that trend won’t last long if this increase continues.
Miami-Dade passes a major COVID-19 milestone.
“Eviction window extended to 30 days for month-to-month renters as moratorium continues” via Rene Rodriguez of the Miami Herald — The Miami-Dade Board of County Commissioners voted unanimously to extend the window of notification for evictions of month-to-month tenants to 30 days on Wednesday morning. The vote helps thousands of the county’s most economically vulnerable residents, who will now have two more weeks to relocate in case of an eviction. Previously, renters whose leases had expired and never renewed, or were renting an apartment based on a verbal agreement with the landlord, could be legally notified they had to vacate the premises in 15 days. About 10 people spoke in favor of the legislation during the commission meeting. The City of Miami already requires a 30-day eviction window for month-to-month tenants.
“Palm Beach County schools postpone decision on start date after criticism” via Lois K. Solomon of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — Parents and students made it clear on Wednesday night: They don’t want a shortened summer after this pandemic school year. Hearing the frustration, the Palm Beach County School Board postponed a vote to start school on Aug. 10, the earliest date allowed by the state, for the next two years. The proposal would have shortened the upcoming summer vacation from the traditional 10 weeks to seven weeks. That’s because school started and will end three weeks later this year due to COVID-19. Palm Beach County has been starting on Aug. 10 or close to it for many years. The board will revisit the calendar on Feb. 3.
“State-run vaccination clinic to open at Tampa’s University Mall” via Fox 13 staff reports — The Florida Department of Health and Florida Division of Emergency Management announced Wednesday it will open a new state-run COVID-19 vaccination site in Hillsborough County. The state says the site will offer 1,600 doses of the Pfizer vaccine for free, by appointment only, at the University Mall, 2200 E. Fowler Ave., Tampa, FL 33612. The site will be open seven days a week from 8 a.m. — 4 p.m. and will offer the vaccine to all individuals 65 years of age and older, as well as front-line health care workers. The state did not specify a start date for the vaccination site.
“Estero Council warns of rising COVID-19 cases; staff says one-year wait for new Corkscrew Road traffic light” via Thaddeus Mast of the Naples Daily News — COVID-19 cases are on the rise in Estero, and during a Wednesday public meeting, village councilors asked residents to stay safe. Confirmed COVID-19 cases jumped from 967 on Dec. 1 to 1,732 on Jan. 20, according to the Florida Department of Health. Lee County gave the village $550,000 in CARES Act federal funding to spend on COVID-19 related efforts, said Marilyn Edwards, a spokeswoman for the village. The Village Council voted to distribute 110,000 masks to all residents, employees and volunteers in Estero and tested 1,545 people for COVID-19 before Thanksgiving. The village gave 5,000 personal protection equipment packages to residents and gave 300 hand sanitizers to local businesses. Equipment used to support remote meetings, such as cameras and microphones, also were upgraded.
Corona nation
“Biden urges action on the pandemic, saying he will ask Americans to wear masks for 100 days” via Katie Glueck and Thomas Kaplan of The New York Times — Biden pressed Congress and the nation to confront the worsening pandemic with urgency, as he also addressed the fallout from Trump’s final turbulent days in office. Biden’s remarks came as part of a wide-ranging joint interview on CNN in which he and Vice President-elect Harris defended their cabinet appointments, alluded to covert Republican outreach to Biden and offered some of their most detailed remarks since winning the election about the next steps the country must take to battle the coronavirus crisis. Biden said that on his first day as President, he would ask Americans to wear masks for 100 days. “Not forever. 100 days. And I think we’ll see a significant reduction,” he said.
Joe Biden is urging Americans to wear masks for 100 days. Image via AP.
“Biden’s COVID-19 fight meets a big test: Red-state politics” via Joanne Kenan and Rachel Roubein of POLITICO — Biden has promised to unite the states to vanquish the coronavirus. And he may have a narrow opening as increasingly contagious forms of COVID-19 spread. Even more patients will crowd hospitals as the more-transmissible variants take hold. More will die. The U.S. death toll passed 400,000 Tuesday; incoming White House chief of staff Ron Klain has bluntly pointed out that it will likely top a half-million within weeks. Biden’s plan to encourage better masking, social distancing, testing and contact tracing could gain traction with governors whose states are overwhelmed. About a dozen red-state governors have vowed to defy any effort to mandate statewide face coverings, saying it should remain a personal choice or up to local communities.
“How to distribute 100 million vaccine doses in 100 days” via Thomas J. Bollyky, Jennifer B. Nuzzo and Prasith Baccam of The New York Times — Biden has an ambitious plan: to administer 100 million doses of the coronavirus vaccine in his first 100 days in office. 16.5 million shots have made their way into the arms of Americans, an average of 447,000 doses per day. Biden’s goal of more than doubling this rate can be achieved if the United States implements a vaccination campaign that treats COVID-19 more like an act of bioterrorism and less like the seasonal flu. While the United States does not currently have enough vaccine to inoculate all 331 million Americans, supply is far from the only obstacle to ending the pandemic. Only 46% of the 36 million doses distributed to states so far have been administered.
“Amazon offers to help Biden administration with vaccinations” via Spencer Soper and Matt Day of Bloomberg — Amazon.com Inc. is offering to help the Biden administration accelerate the distribution of COVID-19 vaccines, including to its own employees. In a letter dated Wednesday, Dave Clark, the incoming chief executive officer of Amazon’s retail unit, offered his congratulations to Biden and Harris. He reiterated a request Amazon made to the CDC last month asking that front-line workers among the company’s more than 800,000 U.S. employees receive vaccines at the “earliest appropriate time.” Even as much of Amazon’s white-collar corporate workforce at its Seattle headquarters and other offices toil from home, the company’s warehouses, cloud-computing data centers and Whole Foods Market stores have stayed open through the pandemic.
Amazon is lending a big hand in the vaccination effort.
“Moderna on track to make 100 million vaccine doses by end of March, CEO says” via Peter Loftus of The Wall Street Journal — Moderna’s leader said the drugmaker is on track to produce enough doses of its new COVID-19 vaccine to help meet Biden’s goal to administer 100 million vaccine doses in the first 100 days after he takes office on Wednesday. Chief Executive Stéphane Bancel said Tuesday that Moderna plans to deliver 100 million doses of its shot, which requires two doses per person, for use in the U.S. by the end of March, with additional doses to follow. Pfizer and its partner BioNTech SE also are supplying doses of their vaccine to the U.S. “I think from a supply standpoint from industry, we are well on track to deliver to the President’s goal,” Bancel said.
“Pfizer-BioNTech shot likely to foil mutant, new study shows” via Naomi Kresge and Janice Kew of Bloomberg — Pfizer Inc. and BioNTech SE built the case that their COVID-19 vaccine will protect against the new variant of the coronavirus that emerged in the U.K. with results of another lab trial. Like previous work out of the University of Texas Medical Branch, the results published on Wednesday showed that antibodies in the blood of people who had been vaccinated were able to neutralize a version of the mutant virus that was created in the lab. The study was published on preprint server BioRxiv before peer review. Unlike the earlier study, which focused on one crucial mutation, the new research tested all 10 mutations.
Corona economics
“Wall Street hits records as hopes build for more stimulus” via Stan Choe, Damian J. Troise and Alex Veiga of The Associated Press — Wall Street marked the dawn of Biden’s administration with stocks rallying to record highs as hopes build that new leadership in Washington will mean more support for the struggling U.S. economy. The S&P 500 rose 1.4%, topping its previous all-time high set earlier this month. The Dow Jones Industrial Average, Nasdaq composite and Russell 2000 index of smaller companies also notched record highs. Biden has a flurry of executive actions at the ready. Of primary interest to the stock market, he has also pitched a plan to pump $1.9 trillion more into the struggling economy, hoping to act quickly as his Democratic Party takes control of the White House and both houses of Congress.
More corona
“WHO sees record global death toll, but some signs cases are declining.” via Nick Cumming-Bruce of The New York Times — The global death toll from COVID-19 hit a record in the last week at the same time as the number of new cases declined, the WHO reported on Wednesday. The United Nations health agency said 93,000 people died in the week ending Jan. 17, a record and a 9% rise over the previous week, bringing the total global death toll from the pandemic to more than 2 million people. Deaths rose in all of the WHO’s six regional groups, it said in its latest weekly bulletin, but the Americas fared the worst, with a 15% rise in deaths in the past week. Led by the United States, where over 400,000 people have died, and Brazil, with more than 200,000 deaths, the Americas account for close to half the total number of people lost to the virus since the start of the pandemic.
D.C. matters
“Chuck Schumer becomes Majority Leader as 3 Democrats sworn in” via Steven T. Dennis of Bloomberg — Schumer became the Senate’s majority leader on Wednesday as three new Democratic Senators were sworn in just hours after Biden and Harris took their oaths of office. Former California Secretary of State Alex Padilla and newly-elected Georgia Senators Jon Ossoff and Raphael Warnock were given the oath by Harris shortly after the Senate was called into session, creating a rare 50-50 split between Democrats and Republicans.
Kamala Harris’ first task: Swearing-in three new Senators, giving Democrats a slim majority. Image via AP.
“Marco Rubio invokes Richard Nixon, floats Trump pardon” via A.G. Gancarski of Florida Politics — Rubio staunchly opposes a second Senate impeachment trial of former President Trump and suggested the endgame Wednesday of disgraced President Nixon as a model. “I get it, hold the President accountable. Here’s the thing I would say. When Richard Nixon left office, Gerald Ford pardoned him. Now it was very controversial. It probably cost him the election, OK, and a lot of people ripped him apart. But I think years into the future, we all acknowledge that was the right decision because it was in the right interest of our country to move beyond that period of time,” Rubio said.
First in Sunburn — For Our Future Florida urges Rubio to support ‘American Recovery Plan’ — On the first day of the Biden presidency, For Our Future Florida called on Rubio to back Biden’s “American Recovery Plan,” which includes funding for a national vaccination strategy and direct payments to Americans, among other things. “The reasons to pass this package are as long as the unemployment lines in Florida. The vaccination rollout so far has been a disaster, both nationally under Trump and here in Florida under Gov. Ron DeSantis. Getting this country back on track begins with getting this virus under control. Now is the time for Republicans like Sen. Marco Rubio to drop their partisanship and come together for the country and help pass this rescue package,” For Our Future FL communications director Blake Williams said.
“Mario Díaz-Balart says he’ll work with Biden administration on immigration reform, pathway to citizenship” via Ryan Nicol of Florida Politics — Republican Rep. Díaz-Balart, a longtime proponent of a path to citizenship for undocumented immigrants, says he’s once again open to working on that issue with Biden. Díaz-Balart described goals for a larger immigration reform package in a Wednesday statement released as Biden was being sworn in as the nation’s 46th President. “While I have not seen details of President Biden’s proposal, immigration reform has been a top legislative priority for me in Congress,” Díaz-Balart said. Biden has proposed an eight-year-long pathway to citizenship as part of his immigration plan. Undocumented immigrants in the country as of Jan. 1 would be able to begin a five-year process to achieve temporary legal status if they qualify.
Mario Diaz-Balart is open to working with Joe Biden on immigration reform. Image via CQ Roll Call.
“Army falsely denied Michael Flynn’s brother was involved in key part of military response to Capitol riot” via Dan Lamothe, Paul Sonne, Carol D. Leonnig and Aaron C. Davis of The Washington Post — The Army falsely denied for days that Lt. Gen. Charles A. Flynn, the brother of disgraced former national security adviser Flynn, was involved in a key meeting during its heavily scrutinized response to the deadly assault on the U.S. Capitol. Charles Flynn confirmed in a statement issued to The Washington Post on Wednesday that he was in the room for a tense Jan. 6 phone call during which the Capitol Police and D.C. officials pleaded with the Pentagon to dispatch the National Guard urgently, but top Army officials expressed concern about having the Guard at the Capitol. Flynn left the room before the meeting was over, anticipating that then-Army Secretary Ryan McCarthy, who was in another meeting, would soon take action to deploy more guard members, he said.
Dateline Tallahassee
“House starts moving on protest bill” via The News Service of Florida — The House Criminal Justice & Public Safety Subcommittee is slated Jan. 27 to take up the bill (HB 1), sponsored by Miami-Dade County Republican Juan Alfonso Fernandez-Barquin. The bill, along with an identical Senate proposal (SB 484), would create a host of new crimes, crack down on protests and make it difficult for local government officials to trim spending on law enforcement. The legislation, in part, would create a new offense of “mob intimidation” when three or more people act “with a common intent, to compel or induce, or attempt to compel or induce, another person by force, or threat of force, to do any act or to assume or abandon a particular viewpoint.”
Juan Alfonso Fernandez-Barquin is moving on a protest crackdown bill.
“Poll: As Legislative Session looms, Florida’s mostly GOP leadership might be out of step with voters” via Michael Moline of the Florida Phoenix — A statewide survey of Florida voters, conducted following the attack by Trump supporters on the U.S. Capitol, suggests a distinct lack of support for DeSantis’ push to ramp up criminal penalties for what he considers “disorderly” protests. Asked to rate their support for “protecting our constitutional right to free assembly and free speech by legally protesting without fear of criminal charges,” 90% considered it important, with 71% saying it is “very important.” Seventy-one percent of Democrats and 74% of Republicans deemed the issue a top priority, according to EMC Research, a data analytics and political research firm.
“Senate committee to take up COVID-19 liability protections for businesses” via Jason Delgado of Florida Politics — The Florida Senate will streamline legislation on Monday that would provide COVID-19 liability protections for businesses. The Senate Judiciary Committee plans to take up SB 72 at 2:30 p.m. in the Knott Building, Room 412, on Monday. The Senate’s apparent urgency is in near lockstep with the rapid pace taken by the House on HB 7, a bill also seeking COVID-19 liability protections. SB 72 and HB 7 seek to exclusively protect churches, schools and businesses from “frivolous” COVID-19 related lawsuits. Both bills notably omit protections for health care providers such as nursing homes and employees. By design, the measures would make winning lawsuits a greater challenge for plaintiffs.
“House panel to review spending by state-backed nonprofits” via News Service of Florida — The House State Affairs Committee has set aside an hour Tuesday to discuss how to oversee taxpayer money provided to nonprofit organizations and quasi-public entities, an issue spurred a year ago after it became public that Tiffany Carr, the former long-serving chief executive officer of the Florida Coalition Against Domestic Violence, drew $7.5 million in compensation over three years. The Department of Children and Families for more than a decade had a sole-source contract, enshrined in Florida law, that made FCADV a pass-through for millions of dollars meant for the state’s 42 domestic violence shelters. In November, House Speaker Chris Sprowls advised his members of the need to continue review efforts.
“Proposal again targets constitution revision panel” via News Service of Florida — The Governmental Oversight and Accountability Committee on Jan. 27 will take up a proposal (SJR 204) by Sen. Jeff Brandes that would put the abolishment of the CRC before voters in 2022. The 37-member commission meets every 20 years with a unique power to place proposed constitutional amendments on the ballot. Most of its members are appointed by the Governor and legislative leaders. The commission, however, drew bipartisan criticism in 2018 because it “bundled” together unrelated issues in single ballot measures, such as linking a ban on offshore oil drilling with a ban on vaping in workplaces. The Senate, in a 35-4 vote, backed a 2019 proposal to eliminate the commission, but the measure failed to advance in the House.
“B.K. Roberts’ name removal from FSU Law is priority for Tallahassee-area legislators” via James Call of The Tallahassee Democrat — Leon County lawmakers will consider a local bill to allow Roberts‘ name to be stripped from the main building of Florida State University’s law school. The COVID-19 crisis and the closing of the Leon County Courthouse amid threats of violence this weekend have caused the annual pre-session meeting of local lawmakers and constituents to be held online next week. State Sen. Loranne Ausley will chair the meeting. Attending will be state Reps. Jason Shoaf, Ramon Alexander and Allison Tant. Legislation under review includes a bill on Roberts, a late Florida Supreme Court justice. The building name issue was one of many rallying cries for protesters this past summer.
Renaming Florida State University’s law school building, named after Chief Justice B.K. Roberts, is becoming a leading priority for lawmakers. Image via Florida Memory.
“Proposal takes aim at attorney fees, roof costs” via News Service of Florida — Rep. Bob Rommel filed a proposal (HB 305) that would, in part, limit plaintiffs’ attorney fees in some property-insurance lawsuits by restricting what are known as “contingency risk multipliers.” Under the bill, contingency risk multipliers could only be awarded “in a rare and exceptional circumstance with evidence that competent counsel could not be retained in a reasonable manner.” The bill also would allow insurers to use what is described as a “roof surface reimbursement schedule.” Under the proposal, reimbursements could vary based on ages and types of roofs. For example, insurers would be required to provide full replacement coverage for roofs less than 10 years old. But they would be allowed to provide less coverage for other roofs.
Legislative delegation meetings — The Palm Beach County legislative delegation — Sens. Lori Berman, Gayle Harrell, Tina Polsky and Bobby Powell; Reps. Kelly Skidmore, Matt Willhite, Mike Caruso, John Snyder, David Silvers, Joe Casello, Rick Roth, Omari Hardy and Emily Slosberg — will hold a joint meeting with the Palm Beach County League of Cities and the Palm Beach County School Board, League meeting at 9 a.m., School Board meeting at 10:45 a.m., Port of Palm Beach, 1 East 11th St., Riviera Beach. The Baker County delegation — Sen. Jennifer Bradley and Rep. Chuck Brannan — will meet, 10 a.m., Baker County Commission Room, 55 North Third St., Macclenny. The Indian River County delegation — Sen. Debbie Mayfield and Rep. Erin Grall — will hold an online meeting, 11 a.m. The Gadsden County delegation — Sen. Ausley and Rep. Ramon Alexander — will meet, 5 p.m., Gadsden County Commission Chamber, 9-B East Jefferson St., Quincy. The Santa Rosa County delegation — Sen. Doug Broxson; Reps. Alex Andrade and Jayer Williamson — will meet, 5:30 p.m. Central time, Santa Rosa County Administration Building, 6495 Caroline St., Milton.
Statewide
Appointed — Dev Motwani to the Florida Housing Finance Corporation Board of Directors; Jeff Condello and Bill Christy to the University of Central Florida Board of Trustees.
“Ex-CEO of charter school firm fights conviction” via Jim Saunders of The News Service of Florida — A state appeals court will hear arguments in a challenge to the conviction of a former charter-school management company CEO who was sentenced to 20 years in prison for racketeering and fraud involving schools in various parts of Florida. Marcus May, whose company Newpoint Education Partners operated 15 schools in six counties, is asking the 1st District Court of Appeal to overturn his 2018 conviction in Escambia County. The appeal raises a series of issues, including arguing that an expert witness was improperly prevented from testifying and that a prosecutor made inflammatory and inappropriate comments. Among other things, May’s attorneys pointed to descriptions of May’s lifestyle and the prosecutor’s use of the term “kickbacks” in describing the alleged illegal conduct.
Local notes
“What a Biden administration could mean for Tallahassee and Leon County” via Karl Etters and CD Davidson-Hiers of the Tallahassee Democrat — In interviews with the Tallahassee Democrat, local leaders expressed excitement about a new vision and new priorities relating to the economy, infrastructure, education and the fight against the coronavirus pandemic. Mayor John Dailey said he looked forward to a focus on unity at the federal level and, after Biden said COVID-19 was his No. 1 priority, working to curb the deadly virus. Biden’s focus on the coronavirus is also top of mind for City Commissioner Dianne Williams-Cox, who is supportive of the expansion of Medicaid and the Affordable Care Act as a way to extend more health care options to people who have or may contract the virus.
“A few miles from Mar-a-Lago, White supremacists set up headquarters” via Brittany Wallman, Megan O’Matz and Mario Ariza of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — As the drumbeat of White supremacists grew louder in America, three men quietly formed a new extremist group, planting their flag in Palm Beach County. The Sovereign American Project, based in West Palm Beach, began recruiting in August. It envisions an America separated, as in the days of segregation. Described by one supporter as “political nerds,” their rhetoric is cerebral, like a treatise on sociology. But the dark undertone is clear: They hope to undo racial integration and allow White, conservative people to live apart. Whites, the group’s website says, are genetically superior in “civilization building” and “should always have the majority of power and influence in the nations founded and built by our European ancestors.”
“Pensacola man arrested in Capitol siege grew more agitated over summer” via Emma Kennedy of the Pensacola News Journal — Social media accounts that appear to be owned by Jesus Rivera, the Pensacola man arrested Wednesday for his alleged part in the recent riot at the U.S. Capitol building, show he had steadily become more vocal about pro-Trump viewpoints since July when he started a page called Chicano Patriot. He often would be seen wearing a “Latinos for Trump” hat and talking about his military service. As that page gained traction he developed a business with another Pensacola man, Scott Brumfield, in September called We the People 1776. The two would frequently post videos about patriotism and their views on subjects like the Black Lives Matter movement and the Democratic Party, in addition to supporting Trump.
Jesus Rivera of Pensacola become more aggressive on social media, leading to his arrest for his role in the Capitol riot.
“Elon Musk’s tunnel crusade sparks new talk of a possible rail tunnel under Fort Lauderdale’s New River” via Chris Perkins of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — It’s all far from a serious plan. But an intriguing flurry of Twitter posts between Musk, founder of Tesla and SpaceX and one of the world’s wealthiest men, and South Florida leaders has speculation swirling online. Behind the exchange is a push by Miami to lure high tech workers newly freed from their Silicon Valley offices into a world of remote jobs. When Miami Mayor Francis Suarez tweeted an invitation to Musk to city hall to discuss “solutions for the benefit of our future,” Musk’s reply was anything but a brushoff. The idea of building tunnels beneath cities isn’t a pipe dream for Musk, whose business The Boring Company is already digging a tunnel under Las Vegas.
“Peter Thiel bought an $18 million island estate in Miami that was once featured on MTV’s ‘The Real World’” via Becky Peterson of Business Insider — Thiel purchased the Real World house, and a similar house on the lot next door, in September through an anonymized LLC called Atlantic View Holdings, property records show. The property was previously owned by Jacques Nasser, the former president and CEO of Ford. Thiel isn’t listed on the deed, but his new address was revealed in an email exchange with Miami Mayor Suarez, which Business Insider obtained through a public records request. Suarez and Thiel ate lunch together at the Real World house on January 13.
“Cape Coral City Council appoints John Gunter as new Mayor after Joe Coviello’s death” via David Dorsey of the Fort Myers News-Press — Gunter, the Cape Coral city council member for District 1 and the Mayor Pro Tem, became the new Mayor of one of the nation’s fastest-growing cities Wednesday night following a vote by his peers. Cape Coral Mayor Coviello died Jan. 13 at the age of 65. Gunter left Coviello’s seat empty for the meeting. “I know that Mayor Coviello is here in spirit,” Gunter said as they got going, a day after Coviello’s funeral and a day after DeSantis ordered the state Capitol flag to fly at half-staff in Coviello’s honor. The seven council members could have chosen to hold a special election or appoint a replacement for Coviello, according to the city charter.
Cape Coral Commissioner John Gunter is sworn in as Mayor, replacing Joe Coviello, who died Jan. 13. Image via Cape Coral Breeze.
First in Sunburn — “Ken Welch lands baker’s dozen of endorsements for St. Pete Mayor” via Janelle Irwin Taylor of Florida Politics — Welch is already lining up endorsements for his bid for St. Petersburg Mayor. The former Pinellas County Commissioner announced 13 endorsements from current and former elected officials in the region on Wednesday, just days after he filed to run. His endorsers include an all-star cast of Pinellas County politicos such as Congressman Charlie Crist; former Commission colleagues Pat Gerard, CharlieJustice, JanetLong and KarenSeel and former Commissioner BobStewart; Welch’s successor on the Commission ReneFlowers; St. Pete City Council members Lisa Wheeler-Bowman and DeborahFiggs-Sanders and former City Councilmembers CharlieGerdes and ConnieKone; former Congressman JimDavis; and former Public Defender BobDillinger.
Congrats — “Ron Christaldi named managing partner at Shumaker Loop & Kendrick” via Luke Torrance of The Tampa Bay Business Journal — Christaldi will take over as the new managing partner for Shumaker Loop & Kendrick LLP’s Tampa office, the law firm confirmed this week. Christaldi will take over for Mark Catchur, whose three-year term expired at the end of last year. “He is the hardest working, most empathetic and kindest individual I’ve worked with,” Christaldi said of Catchur. “He is still around and I told him I will draw upon his wisdom.” Christaldi is a longtime member of the Tampa Bay community and has been with Shumaker for almost 14 years. Before joining the firm in 2007, he spent a decade working for de la Parte and Gilbert PA.
Top opinion
“Obituary for a failed presidency” via Susan B. Glasser of The New Yorker — In the end, Trump was everything his haters feared — a chaos candidate, in the prescient words of one of his 2016 rivals, who became a chaos President. An American demagogue, he embraced division and racial discord, railed against a “deep state” within his own government, praised autocrats and attacked allies, politicized the administration of justice, monetized the presidency for himself and his children, and presided over a tumultuous, turnover-ridden administration via impulsive tweets. He leaves office with the lowest average approval ratings in modern history. Defeated by Biden in the 2020 election by seven million votes, Trump became the first incumbent seeking reelection to see his party lose the White House, Senate, and the House since Herbert Hoover, in 1932.
Opinions
“A President replaced. A nation redeemed.” via Dana Milbank of The Washington Post — Biden’s inauguration Wednesday was more than a transfer of power. In ways symbolic and substantive, it was the redemption of a nation. Inauguration Day in the capital city dawned to fierce winds as if Nature herself were sweeping away the pestilence, financial misery, political violence and lies. The winds carried Trump away on Air Force One three hours before Biden took the oath of office — the first time an outgoing President refused to attend his successor’s inauguration since the disgraced Andrew Johnson demurred 152 years ago. Former Vice President Pence, a target of the Trump-incited mob on Jan. 6, declined to participate in this last stroking of a narcissist. Breaking with Trump, he attended the inauguration.
“An incompetent authoritarian is still a catastrophe” via Adam Serwer of The Atlantic — So what if he was bad at it? The five years of the Trump era — which began with his descent down the gilded escalator in Trump Tower in 2015 and are ending with a massive military presence in the nation’s capital to protect the transfer of power to his successor — brought a sustained assault on self-government. This assault was most often futile, almost always buffoonish, and, as the conversion of the seat of the federal government into an armed fortress demonstrates, unquestionably real. Believing that Trump’s departure proves his harmlessness is akin to arguing that getting shot in the leg is inconsequential because the wound will not kill you. Even nonfatal gunshot wounds do terrible things to the human body.
“A sermon in America’s civic religion” via David A. Graham of The Atlantic — Midway through Biden’s first speech as President today, he said something that, in any other inaugural address, would have seemed so unobjectionable as to be pointless. “What are the common objects we as Americans love, that define us as Americans?” Biden said. “I think we know. Opportunity, security, liberty, dignity, respect, honor, and, yes, the truth.” In 2021, however, that wasn’t just a throwaway line: It drew an ovation from the limited crowd at the event. Biden’s speech was well-wrought, but it offered nothing unusual, nothing surprising, nothing especially memorable. Paradoxically, that was the source of its power. But these statements feel less rote today, two weeks after Trump-incited violent insurrectionists stormed the same Capitol, seeking to overturn Biden’s election.
“Exhale, Florida. Biden’s COVID-19 and immigration policies are good for us” via Fabiola Santiago of the Miami Herald — The state won’t have to wait long after today’s historic inauguration to benefit from Biden’s policies. Biden has promised to urgently take action to stem the unfettered spread of COVID-19 and to deliver immigration reform and relief. Biden’s “whole-of-society” plan will mobilize resources in the public and private sector — and give a centralized emergency vaccine management role to FEMA. Setting up a centralized command post is exactly what a President is supposed to do when managing a national emergency. On Day One, Biden is also expected to deliver to Congress an immigration reform plan he wants to pass that will positively affect hundreds of thousands of people living in Florida under uncertain status.
On today’s Sunrise
Republicans in control of Florida’s state government are dealing with a new reality in Washington: Trump is out; Biden is in.
Also, on today’s Sunrise:
— Trump skipped the inauguration ceremonies and delivered farewell remarks to the crowd before leaving the White House.
— Trump spent his last moments as President in Palm Beach County, waving to his new neighbors from inside an armored Escalade after making the final flight on Air Force One.
— Florida Democrats didn’t have much to celebrate after the election because they lost seats in both Congress and the state Legislature, but they are happy now that Biden was sworn in.
— The new chair of the Florida Democratic Party is vowing to come up with some way to make his party relevant again.
— But, for the moment, Democrats like Sen. Gary Farmer of Broward are smiling. Or is that more like a grin?
— Coronavirus doesn’t care who’s in charge; it just keeps on killing. Florida added 145 fatalities and almost 12,000 new cases of COVID-19 on Wednesday. The virus has infected more than 1,600,000 Floridians since the pandemic began.
— And finally, a Florida Man who went to jail for trying to free the horses.
Good morning. Not many people can upstage Lady Gaga, J.Lo, or a new president. But 22-year-old poet Amanda Gorman managed to steal the show at the inauguration with her transfixing poem, “The Hill We Climb.”
Here’s an excerpt:
Let the globe, if nothing else, say this is true: That even as we grieved, we grew That even as we hurt, we hoped That even as we tired, we tried That we’ll forever be tied together, victorious Not because we will never again know defeat but because we will never again sow division
MARKETS
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DOW
31,188.38
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GOLD
1,871.90
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10-YR
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OIL
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*As of market close
Markets: New president, same bull market. Stocks closed at record highs yesterday following a wave of strong earnings reports and new, pro-stimulus leadership in Washington. In fact, the Dow and the S&P posted their best Inauguration Day performance since Reagan began his second term in 1985.
Government: Democrats officially took control of the Senate after three new Democratic senators, Raphael Warnock, Jon Ossoff, and Alex Padilla, were sworn in.
Just before noon, former Vice President Joe Biden shaved the “former” and “Vice” off that title when he was sworn in as the 46th President of the US.
Former Senator Kamala Harris made history as the first-ever woman, African American, and South Asian American to become VP.
After the ceremony, Biden got right to work. And like Hogwarts or a cow’s stomach, his first day was segmented into four parts.
No. 1: Containing Covid
In an executive order, Biden mandated mask-wearing and physical distancing in federal buildings, on federal land, and by all federal employees.
He also halted former President Trump’s efforts to leave the World Health Organization.
No. 2: Containing the economic fallout from Covid
Biden extended a federal moratorium on evictions and asked the relevant agencies to do the same for foreclosures on federally guaranteed mortgages. Americans with student loan debt also won’t owe principal or interest through the end of September.
Some in Biden’s Democratic Party want him to erase up to $50,000 per person in student debt, but Biden’s team has maintained a goal of canceling up to $10,000.
Biden also froze last-minute regulations enacted by Trump so that his administration can evaluate whether they’ll keep them.
No. 3: Reversing Trump’s policies on immigration
Biden ordered an end to construction of the border wall while the administration studies its legal status and called on Congress to defend the “Dreamers” program for undocumented Americans, a program Trump targeted.
Biden also ended the travel ban targeting Muslim-majority countries.
Biden’s broader immigration platform involves creating a path to citizenship for an estimated 11 million people.
No. 4: Combating climate change
Biden signed a letter indicating that the US will rejoin the Paris Agreement, which Trump had pulled out of. He also took action on other environmental efforts by 1) overturning softer standards on emissions 2) imposing a moratorium on oil and gas leases in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge and 3) revoking a permit for the Keystone XL pipeline.
Looking ahead…we see push notifications in your future. White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki said there would be more proclamations over the next 10 days.
Become president. Just before noon yesterday, the @POTUS, @VP, @FLOTUS, @PressSec, and @WhiteHouse accounts changed hands to the Biden administration, while the old accounts from Trump’s time in office began the process of being publicly archived.
One twist: The new administration isn’t inheriting any followers from 45. Each account listed above was reset to zero yesterday, a departure from how Twitter handled the transition from Obama to Trump in 2017.
Because the new administration will have to rebuild these accounts’ followings from scratch, the Biden team isn’t happy. The new president’s digital director Rob Flaherty called Twitter’s handling of the transition “profoundly insufficient.”
Still, they’re off to a strong start. As of last night, the @POTUS account was already up to 3.5 million followers, @VP was sitting at 6.5 million, and the first-ever @SecondGentleman account for Douglas Emhoff, Harris’s husband, had attracted around 840K.
Zoom out: Biden will almost certainly use Twitter more conventionally than Trump. But the platform is likely to remain a critical tool for communicating government priorities, as it’s become for other global leaders.
The best and brightest bizzes are turning to Electric for the best and brightest IT support.
Electric IT not only raises the IT bar with lightning-fast tech support, proactive security standardization, and IT cost savings upwards of 70%—they’ll straight up send you a Bose Solo 5 Soundbar just for taking a meeting with them to discuss your IT needs.
SOUNDS PRETTY SWEET, RIGHT?! (Sorry, that’s the Bose talking).
President Biden is facing so many challenges on the homefront, it’s easy to forget the one that lies 7,000 miles away.
But yesterday, China proved again why it’s the top geopolitical thorn for the US, when it placed sanctions on former Secretary of State Mike Pompeo and 27 other Americans.
On Tuesday, Pompeo declared that China was committing “genocide” against minority Muslim groups in the Xinjiang region, one of a series of moves the Trump administration made in its last few days to rankle Beijing.
Biden’s team will also take a hard line on China:
During his Senate confirmation hearing Tuesday, Secretary of State nominee Antony Blinken said he agreed with the “genocide” label and argued that the US should restrict business ties with the Xinjiang region.
Treasury Secretary nominee Janet Yellen said China is “clearly our most important strategic competitor.”
And Biden plans to keep Trump’s tariffs for now.
Zoom out: While Biden has pledged to play bad cop with China, he will probably try to do it with a group of allies by his side, rather than adopt Trump’s “go it alone” approach.
Americans know how to put on an inauguration. We also know how to scrub a countertop.
So says consumer goods giant Procter & Gamble, which raised its annual sales forecast for the second time yesterday. P&G owns brands like Bounty, Tide, and Dawn, which all grew in popularity as everyone became more germ-conscious during the pandemic.
The stats, via P&G:
Cleaning and sanitizing has increased 30% compared to pre-Covid levels
Dishwasher cycles: +15%
Air freshener spraying: +20%
In-home paper towel usage: +15%
It all amounted to organic sales growth of 8% last quarter to $19.8 billion.
Will the cleaning boom last? P&G thinks so. It cited strong growth in China, which has been far more successful than the US in containing the pandemic, as evidence that less coronavirus does not necessarily mean lower demand for its products.
But P&G stock stayed flat after its announcement, meaning that investors are skeptical we’ll be sanitizing 40x/day post-pandemic.
WHAT ELSE IS BREWING
Amazon sent a letter to President Biden saying it’s prepared to use its infrastructure and relationships to help with Covid-19 vaccine efforts.
Morgan Stanley’s profits rose 51% last quarter, and CEO James Gorman sounded a bullish tone on future growth prospects for the bank.
Alibaba stock gained more than 5% after cofounder Jack Ma appeared in a 50-second video, his first public sighting in 2.5 months.
It’s all happening curbside. Customers are “clicking and collecting” curbside and in-store 78% more than they were pre-pandemic. So getting to know these consumers is more crucial than ever. Sailthru’s got the info on four types of Pickup Personas right here.*
Work playlist ideas: Sort through all the Spotify playlists posted to r/spotify using this site.
More inaugural poetry: In 1961, Robert Frost became the first poet to recite a work at an inauguration (JFK’s), but it did not go according to plan. Amanda Gorman’s went a lot better.
This week’s crop of headlines might be the most bizarre we’ve ever assembled. Three are from real news stories, but one is just too weird to be true. Can you spot the fake?
“Joe Exotic, with limo waiting outside prison, fails to get Trump pardon”
“1st preserved dinosaur butthole is ‘perfect’ and ‘unique,’ paleontologist says”
“‘Most Lived In’ home in America welcomes its 100th family in the last 10 years”
“Dublin priest says he ‘bored’ two armed burglars out of his home”
ANSWER
There is no official “Most Lived In” house in America. We made that one up.
Some of the executive actions undo significant actions from Donald Trump’s administration, including halting the travel ban from Muslim-majority countries, and ending the declaration of a national emergency used to justify funding construction of a wall on the US-Mexico border. He also signed an order allowing the United States to rejoin the Paris climate agreement and end the Trump administration’s efforts to exclude undocumented immigrants from the census data used to determine how many seats in Congress each state gets.
…
In other moves, Biden also revoked the permit granted for the controversial Keystone XL pipeline and instructed all executive agencies to review executive actions that were “damaging to the environment, [or] unsupported by the best available science.” Biden also ordered all executive branch employees to sign an ethics pledge and placed limits on their ability to lobby the government while he is in office.
…
The president also moved quickly to address Covid-19, signing orders to mandate mask wearing and social distancing in federal buildings and lands and to create a position of a Covid-19 response coordinator. It’s not unusual for an incoming president to take executive action immediately after being sworn into office, a move meant to show the nation that the newly inaugurated president is getting to work.
The Constitution gives the president broad clemency powers over federal offenses, including the authority to pardon crimes and commute sentences. Trump has spent the final days of his presidency fixated on his power to issue pardons, meeting with advisors to hash out who should be on his list. Trump granted pardons to 73 people and commuted the sentences of 70 others.
…
Bannon — Trump’s former White House chief strategist who was in charge of the final months of his 2016 presidential campaign — was indicted in August along with three others on wire fraud and money laundering conspiracy charges. Among the others pardoned are rapper and music executive Lil Wayne, rapper Kodak Black, Trump fundraiser Elliott Broidy, and former Detroit Mayor Kwame Kilpatrick.
…
Lil Wayne, a Trump supporter whose real name is Dwayne Michael Carter Jr., pleaded guilty in December to a federal weapons charge after he carried a handgun from California to Florida on his private jet. “A pardon for Mr. Carter is consistent with the views of many jurists — including Supreme Court Justice Amy Coney Barrett — that prosecuting a non-violent citizen for merely possessing a firearm violates the Second Amendment to the U.S. Constitution,” the artist’s lawyer Howard Srebnick said in a statement.
The former civil servant, Anchan Preelert, was sentenced to 87 years, but her prison term was cut in half because she agreed to plead guilty. The onetime civil servant’s crime was to share audio clips on social media that were deemed critical of Thailand’s monarchy. It was the longest sentence yet for violating Thailand’s notoriously tough lèse-majesté law, which makes it a crime to defame senior members of the royal family, according to the group Thai Lawyers for Human Rights.
…
Thailand has seen a spike in lèse-majesté cases since late last year, after more than two years during which Section 112 of the criminal code, which applies to criticism of top royals, was not enforced, according to Thai legal groups. The three-year pause came at the behest of King Maha Vajiralongkorn Bodindradebayavarangkun, who wanted such prosecutions halted, according to Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-ocha.
…
But that was before a protest movement surged last year, targeting both the king and the prime minister. [Protesters in Thailand] have demanded scrutiny of the palace’s finances, as the king’s lavish lifestyle has contrasted sharply with the economic pain caused by the pandemic. And they have campaigned for the removal of Mr. Prayuth, a former army general who took power in a 2014 coup, promising to protect the royal family from ill-defined threats.
Joe Biden, the second-ever Catholic U.S. president, was greeted on his Inauguration Day with contrasting messages from his church: A warm blessing from Pope Francis — and a statement by the president of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops saying that Biden “will advance moral evils,” including contraception, abortion and same-sex marriage. Within hours, Cardinal Blase J. Cupich, the archbishop of Chicago and an ally of Francis, issued a sharp rebuke to [Los Angeles Archbishop José Gomez, president of the USCCB] and his supporters in putting together the statement.
…
USCCB statements about previous presidential elections and inaugurations took a more positive and collaborative tone. Biden’s Catholic image has angered many U.S. bishops, who last year created a special committee in response to the reality of a Catholic U.S. president who supports abortion rights and same-sex marriage.
…
“Under your leadership, may the American people continue to draw strength from the lofty political, ethical and religious values that have inspired the nation since its founding,” [Pope Francis said in a Wednesday message to Biden]. Like Biden, Francis focuses on Catholicism’s broad call for the disenfranchised and suffering, and less on Catholic doctrine about topics such as abortion, gender identity and sexuality.
Many [of the 17 executive actions Mr. Biden signed on his first day in office], including his action on student debt and an extension on eviction and foreclosure moratoriums, are aimed at relieving Americans from economic burdens worsened by the coronavirus pandemic. As recently as last week, Mr. Biden has thrown his support behind Congressional action to cancel $10,000 of federal student debt per borrower, but some of his more progressive Democratic colleagues say that’s not enough.
…
Last year federal student loan debt reached an all-time high, nearing $1.6 trillion among more than 40 million Americans, according to the Federal Reserve Bank of New York. On average, student loan borrowers owe between $200 and $299 every month; about one in every five borrowers is in default, according to the U.S. Department of Education.
…
Prior to Mr. Biden’s executive action, payments were scheduled to resume at the end of January. In its 2020 annual report, [the Department of Education under Betsy DeVos] said it expects loan servicers and the federal government will “face a heavy burden in ‘converting’ millions of borrowers to active repayment.” Some of those borrowers, the report warns, will become delinquent.
Even as President Joe Biden called for unity, Antifa and Black Lives Matter groups merged in Portland to attack the local Democrat HQ, burn cars, and vandalize stores. None of the major outlets seems to think this attack on a political institution is worthy of coverage. A search through the legacy media websites reveals little or no word of this “attack on democracy.”
As Joe Biden was inaugurated as president on Jan. 20, MSNBC host Nicole Wallace decried the “extraordinary damage” caused by a “culture of disinformation” on “undeniable truths” and positioned the Biden administration as the “new team… poised to take that on.” Astonishingly, Wallace added, “it would be my policy that a Republican must assert the truth before they’re allowed to share any other views.” It seems ideological purity tests are making a comeback.
Inauguration Lockdown – On Scene Report – LNTV – WATCH NOW!
President Joe Biden has signed 17 Executive Orders in his effort to roll back as much of the Trump era as possible on his first day in office. The orders include suspending money for the wall and re-engaging with the WHO.
Three Democrats Senators were sworn in on Wednesday, marking the first time since 2014 that the party has held an effective majority in the Senate. This majority will be all-important as President Biden attempts to push his legislative agenda through as fast as possible.
Former Presidents Bush, Clinton, and Obama released a video message in which they discussed the peaceful transfer of power. It should be noted that it is easy to keep the peace when you have 25,000 troops and no actual civilians on the scene.
Media Winds Up for a Wild Romance With the Biden Administration
Something political to ponder as you enjoy your morning coffee.
The first White House press briefing was a softball affair. New press secretary Jan Psaki came across as clear and professional but was not challenged with any difficult questions. The media pool, which has for four years played a combative role, refused to push for any details on the significant Executive Orders signed yesterday.
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8.) FOX NEWS
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Thursday, January 21, 2021
Good morning and welcome to Fox News First. Here’s what you need to know as you start your day …
Biden administration imposes 100-day ‘pause’ on deportations of illegal immigrants
The Biden administration on Wednesday issued a 100-day “pause” on deportations of illegal immigrants — a dramatic move that caps a slew of immigration-related moves on President Biden’s first day in office.
Acting Department Homeland Security Secretary David Pekoske signed a memorandum to review immigration enforcement policies. Part of that includes a 100-day pause, beginning Friday, of “certain noncitizens ordered deported.”
“The pause will allow DHS to ensure that its resources are dedicated to responding to the most pressing challenges that the United States faces, including immediate operational challenges at the southwest border in the midst of the most serious global public health crisis in a century,” DHS said in a statement.
Biden had promised to implement a 100-day moratorium during the 2020 campaign, and the order from DHS fulfills that promise. It would apply to any noncitizen with a final order of removal with very limited exceptions.
The move, which means many illegal immigrants with criminal convictions and charges will not be deported in that timeframe, caps a slew of immigration moves by the new president, reversing many of the policies of former President Trump. CLICK HERE FOR MORE ON OUR TOP STORY.
In other developments:
– Marco Rubio rejects Biden immigration bill, calls it ‘blanket amnesty’- Biden reversing travel ban for Muslim countries ‘very disappointing’: Chad Wolf
– Texas Border Patrol stations see 193% increase in illegal border crossings since last year
– Mexico calls on Biden to fix immigration status of Mexican nationals
– Texas attorney general pledges to ‘fight’ Biden administration ‘illegal actions’
– Biden to reverse Trump travel ban, halt wall, strengthen DACA in slew of immigration orders
Portland rioters damage ICE building; police declare ‘unlawful assembly
‘Police declared an unlawful assembly Wednesday night in Portland, Ore., after about 150 rioters caused damage to a federal immigration facility in the city, according to the authorities.
The unrest near the ICE (Immigration and Customs Enforcement) building was declared after rioters started throwing rocks and eggs, and vandalizing the building, located in the city’s south waterfront neighborhood, Portland police Sgt. Kevin Allen said in a 10 p.m. update.
Earlier in the day, Antifa rioters voiced dissatisfaction with President Joe Biden and clashed with city police.
“We have observed property damage to the building,” the Portland Police Bureau wrote on Twitter later. “Anyone who is involved in criminal behavior including: vandalism and graffitting is subject to arrest or citation.”
Allen said individuals were seen carrying pepper ball guns, electronic control weapons (similar to stun guns) — shields and rocks. He added that federal law enforcement used “crowd-control munitions.” CLICK HERE FOR MORE.
In other developments:
– Seattle protesters oppose Biden and police, vandalize buildings, cause other damage: reports
– BLM protesters arrested, cited with blocking Seattle freeway on MLK Day
– On Biden’s Inauguration Day, cities big and small prepared for potential unrest
Trump hints at political comeback as he departs White House
With a possible eye toward a potential comeback in four years, outgoing President Trump told supporters that “we will be back in some form.”
Trump, speaking Wednesday morning at a farewell rally at Joint Base Andrews in Maryland before boarding Air Force One for the last time as president on a flight home to Florida, told a crowd of family, friends, aides and supporters that “I will always fight for you” and that “we will see you soon.
“Sixteen hours earlier, in his final video as president that was chock-full of his populist themes, Trump emphasized that, “I want you to know that the movement we started is only just beginning” and he added that “the best is yet to come.”Trump refused to concede his election defeat at the hands of incoming President Joe Biden, and on Wednesday he became the first president to skip the inauguration of his successor in a century and a half.
Trump has repeatedly vowed to play an influential role in the party going forward, threatening to back primary challenges to Republicans up for reelection in 2022 who didn’t support his unsuccessful push to upend his election defeat to Biden. Trump was also flirting with a 2024 presidential run to try and win back the White House. CLICK HERE FOR MORE.
In other developments:
– Trump gets warm Florida greeting from supporters after arriving from DC
– Ex-Obama adviser calls Trump supporters an ‘issue of Homeland Security’- Melania Trump’s Mar-a-Lago outfit criticized online after couple exited Air Force One
– Trump leaves letter for Biden before departing White House
TODAY’S MUST-READS:
– Pelosi says Trump could be ‘accessory to murder’ in connection with Capitol riot
– Georgia voters enraged after Democrats promise of ‘$2,000 checks’ becomes $1,400- Biden to new administration staffers: Be nice to others or ‘I will fire you on the spot’
– Tucker Carlson: Joe Biden declares war on ‘White supremacy.’ What does he mean by that?
– $730M Powerball jackpot won in Maryland
– Bernie Sanders’ mittens trend on Inauguration Day, Twitter reacts: ‘We want to keep warm’
THE LATEST FROM FOX BUSINESS:
– Departing US FCC chair warns of threats to telecoms from China
– NY Gov. Cuomo proposes highest tax rates in US without $15B in federal aid- BlackRock to add bitcoin as eligible investment to two funds
– Twitter locks China’s US embassy account for Xinjiang-related tweet
– Mercedes unveils electric compact SUV in bid to outdo Tesla
– How to grow your wealth ‘exponentially’ and prepare for retirement
#The Flashback:CLICK HERE to find out what happened on “This Day in History.”
SOME PARTING WORDS
Sean Hannity disputed President Joe Biden’s inaugural address on Fox News’ “Hannity” on Wednesday night, saying the new president’s words belied his calls for unity.”Joe predictably meandered his way through what is a unremarkable, totally forgettable, even pre-rehearsed set of remarks,” Hannity said. “The main theme of the speech – unity – after four years of outright lying, conspiracy theories, witch hunts, one hoax after another, vitriol, non-stop hysteria, two impeachments – including one that is unconstitutionally ongoing – Biden’s hollow calls for unity are both laughable and completely disingenuous.”
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At this fraught juncture in our national existence, the incoming president must convince a mistrustful public that he recognizes the new threats to freedom loose in our country.
The right is skeptical of Biden’s call for unity but hopeful that he will make an effort to reach out to Republicans.
“On substance, Biden is not going to pursue a consensus, bipartisan agenda, but a progressive one. That is his right. He’s a Democrat who has always been in the center of gravity of his party, which has steadily moved left over the decades. He’s not going to act on the more extravagant demands of the left of his party—ending the filibuster, adding new states—both as a matter of temperament and because he lacks the votes in the Senate to do it. But almost everything he does unilaterally or pushes legislatively will inherently be anathema to the GOP…
“All that said, President Biden can do his part to lower the temperature of our politics, and raise the tone, simply by not stirring the pot every day the way Donald Trump did and by honoring the norms his predecessor cast aside. This won’t be transformative, but there actually might [be] some unity around the proposition that it will be a welcome change.” Rich Lowry, Politico
“My first reaction: what a relief to have a president who talks like a normal human being. I didn’t vote for the guy, but I’m grateful to hear a presidential speech that doesn’t make me mad — mad, either because I’m angry at the president for what he said or how he said it, or mad with the president at the people or thing he was attacking…
“The TV people covering it were startlingly enthusiastic about all of this. I say ‘startlingly’ because I didn’t expect that they would allow their feelings to show quite like this. But they did. This rubbed me the wrong way, not because I’m shocked to discover that journalists are liberal, but because it made me think that this is how press coverage of the Biden administration is likely to be, at least at the beginning: fawning and filled with relief that Orange Man Bad is gone.” Rod Dreher, American Conservative
“Within seconds of its conclusion, Biden’s speech was being hailed as a masterpiece. Even the normally level-headed Chris Wallace of Fox News called it the best inaugural address he had ever heard. I somehow doubt this. Biden’s remarks were an indifferently delivered hodgepodge of decontextualized Lincoln quotes, Hallmark wisdom, and jargon…
“This is not an indictment of Biden or his speechwriters, but of the audience to which the remarks were directed. To compare what we heard on Wednesday with Kennedy’s inauguration speech (‘Ask not what your country can do for you — ask what you can do for your country’) is either dishonest or idiotic… The best adjective for describing his speech was ‘normal,’ both in the sense that it was neither an abject failure nor a masterpiece of rhetoric and, more important, because it was delivered in accordance with all the norms upon which we have come to expect.” Matthew Walther, The Week
“According to Biden, we are a ‘great nation’ and a ‘good people.’ But we also oppress minorities with an ever-rising fervor. ‘Growing inequity’ is among the greatest challenges facing the country, according to Biden, along with the ‘sting of systemic racism’ and encroaching ‘white supremacy.’ Only now are we confronting ‘a cry for racial justice, some four hundred years in the making.’…
“One might have thought that more than 50 years of civil rights legislation; the banishing of Jim Crow segregation; the ubiquity of racial preferences throughout corporate America, higher education, and government; trillions of dollars of tax dollars attempting to close the academic achievement gap; and the election of black politicians by white voting districts would have reduced inequity, not increased it. But to Biden’s speechwriters, steeped in academic victimology, racial inequity is always with us, requiring constant remediation from government.” Heather Mac Donald, City Journal
“Mr. Biden is right that there is a difference between ‘truth’ and ‘lies,’ and too much political discourse is strewn with falsehoods. But that fault rests with partisans on all sides. Most political differences aren’t between truth and lies. They are debates about the tradeoffs between core principles like freedom and equality, or over the best means to achieve good ends…
“We heard too little in Mr. Biden’s speech to reassure conservatives now being purged and ostracized that he will call off the emboldened progressive censors. If his pursuit of social justice becomes a drive to blame every inequity in American life on racism, he will divide more than unite. If he insists that those who disagree on climate change are ‘deniers’ who care nothing for the planet, he will alienate millions… The test of Mr. Biden’s unity pledge will be in how he governs. We’ll give him the benefit of the doubt, which is what every new American President deserves.” Editorial Board, Wall Street Journal
From the Left
The left praises Biden’s speech but cautions that compromise requires good faith efforts on both sides.
“Of course, the incendiary vulgarity of the past four years set the bar so low that anything more than a monster truck exhibition might have seemed artful. But the polished oratory interspersed with performances — Lady Gaga, Jennifer Lopez and Garth Brooks delivering rousing versions of patriotic songs and religious hymns — elevated the proceedings, in just the right way. For a president who vows to raise the level of political discourse in the nation, it all came across as tone-perfect.” Peter Marks, Washington Post“Biden did not shrink from the unpleasant facts of the moment; he embraced them. ‘We must reject the culture,’ he said, ‘in which facts themselves are manipulated and even manufactured.’ He did not say Trump’s name; he did not need to. The contrast was all there. Unlike his predecessor, Biden began his tenure by levelling with the American people…“He spoke of a ‘winter of peril,’ as well as one of ‘significant possibilities,’ that awaits America, and bluntly said what Trump never could: that as many Americans have now died in the pandemic as in all of the Second World War, and that we must mourn them. He spoke of the threat of ‘white supremacy’—surely a first in an Inaugural Address—and also pledged to vanquish this new ‘domestic terrorism.’ He spoke of jobs lost and racial injustice. This, after the past four years, is something new and important in and of itself—a strategy of truth-telling, not truth-denying. The road to reconciliation, if there is such a road, must run through it.” Susan B. Glasser, New Yorker“Biden’s unity project has to begin with a demand he makes of the Republican Party: They have to accept the legitimacy of his victory, period. That’s the first step toward unity. Anyone who continues pandering to the deranged elements of their base with bogus conspiracy theories about fraud should simply be disqualified from any role in the coming policy debates. If Sen. Josh Hawley has something to say about Biden’s tax plan, the only response should be, ‘When Hawley acknowledges that Biden is the legitimate president, then we’ll consider what he thinks about the capital gains tax. But not before.’…“Unity sometimes means excluding those who won’t agree to respect basic ground rules. You wouldn’t play basketball with someone who throws the ball over the fence as soon as the other team makes a basket; the game won’t work unless you tell him that if he does that, he won’t be allowed to play… If you don’t agree to the rules, you don’t get to participate.” Paul Waldman, Washington Post“[Biden] launched his primary campaign by declaring that Donald Trump’s presidency was the first time in U.S. history that our nation had ‘walked away from’ its egalitarian ideals. He insisted that Americans ‘can’t forget what happened in Charlottesville,’ even as he invited them to forget the disenfranchisement of free Black men in the 1820s, the collapse of Reconstruction a half-century later, the unraveling of shared prosperity in the 1970s, and every other time the moral arc of the American republic had bent toward injustice. Against the darkness of Trump’s reign, Biden offered the blinding light of patriotic amnesia. Against the sweeping reform programs of his primary rivals, he presented poll-tested half-measures as badges of electability…“And yet: He also assembled a platform more progressive than any in the Democratic Party’s modern history. And his policy commitments only grew more sweeping as the COVID pandemic grew more devastating. By November, Biden was at once the candidate of a ‘return to normalcy’ and that of a multitrillion-dollar green-energy transition. He was a candidate who insisted that America’s sitting president — whom roughly 40 percent of the public revered — was an embodiment of every value that the nation must reject and that America’s divisions weren’t as deep as they appeared. Biden’s inaugural was riddled with such contradictions. But it also put them to productive use.” Eric Levitz, New York Magazine
“Biden’s challenge continues to be that his two main promises — to restore traditions and comity after Donald Trump’s divisiveness and lawlessness, and to try to enact an aggressive liberal policy agenda — don’t fit naturally together. His inaugural address met that conflict head on…
“Biden was inviting everyone, including Trump supporters, to unite in rejecting Trumpism, without insisting that unity required agreement with Democrats on specific policy questions. At the same time, he essentially invoked Trump’s mob to give himself and the slim Democratic majorities in Congress license to work towards their policy goals, no matter how controversial, without violating the underlying unity… I doubt that Biden’s speech will go down in history as one of the greatest, but it was solid and well delivered.” Jonathan Bernstein, Bloomberg
🧤 Good Thursday morning. Today’s Smart Brevity™ count: 1,470 words … 5½ minutes.
1 big thing … Biden-Harris, Day 1: What mattered most
The Axios experts help you sort significance from symbolism. Here are the six Day 1 actions by President Biden that matter most:
Today, on his first full day, Biden translates his promise of a stronger federal response to the pandemic into action — starting with 10 executive orders and other directives, Caitlin Owens writes. Biden’s executive actions direct federal agencies to boost supply chains — including by using the Defense Production Act. Go deeper.
Biden’s executive orders on climate change, including rejoining the Paris Agreement and reinstating a raft of environmental regulations, are forcing Washington’s biggest business lobbying groups to the table in a new way, Amy Harder and Ben Geman tell me. The U.S. Chamber of Commerce and American Petroleum Institute say they support Biden’s plan to regulate methane emissions from oil and gas wells. Go deeper.
Biden instructed the EPA and the Transportation Department to re-establish stricter fuel efficiency mandates, which President Trump had weakened. Joann Muller says this is part of a broader agenda that calls for widespread adoption of electric vehicles.
Biden’s move to freeze student loan repayments through September — and the suggestion he’ll swiftly place consumer champion Rohit Chopra in charge of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau — puts lenders on notice that their actions will be scrutinized.
Big cities rejoice at Biden’s actions on immigration, Jennifer A. Kingson tells me: Revoking Trump’s executive order that excluded undocumented immigrants from the census and congressional apportionment has huge implications for the nation’s big urban centers, which fear that a bungled and incomplete census could lead to a massive loss of federal representation.
Tech companies applauded the president’s action on DACA, as well as his rescission of an executive order that limited diversity training at companies that do business with the federal government, Ina Fried reports from S.F.
2. 💰 The Biden market
Investors made clear what companies they think will be winners and which will be losers in President Biden’s economy, Dion Rabouin writes in Axios Markets:
They sold gun makers, pot purveyors, private prison operators and payday lenders.
They bought gambling, gaming, beer stocks and Big Tech.
What we’re watching: Additional Biden economic orders could include a campaign proposal to provide $15,000 in tax credits to first-time homebuyers, according to Jaret Seiberg of Cowen Washington Research Group.
Our thought bubble: Such a policy would pour gasoline on the already blazing housing market, as record-low mortgage rates have already brought down the monthly cost of homeownership significantly.
For first-time buyers who only need to put down 3% on a conventional mortgage, $15,000 would provide the down payment to purchase a $500,000 home.
Sign up for Dion Rabouin’s daily Axios Markets newsletter.
3. “Off the rails”: The siege
Photo illustration: Aïda Amer/Axios. Photos: Mandel Ngan/AFP via Getty Images
The astonishing vivid reporting in Episode 8 of “Off the rails,” the Jonathan Swan and Zachary Basu series on President Trump’s final days, takes you, like a movie, inside the Capitol and West Wing during the riot: Senators huddle in prayer, snap at each other. A top Trump aide packs up in disgust.
The morning after the deadly riots, Trump showed no remorse as he interacted with his dwindling staff at the White House. By now, he was fixating on the perceived disloyalty of Republicans he had believed would do anything for him.
But the president’s closest aides understood that his first recorded address released at 4:18 p.m. on Jan. 6, in which Trump told the mob he loved them, was inadequate. Jared Kushner began working on a new draft of what would ultimately become an official Oval Office address at 7:10 p.m. on Jan. 7.
Before Trump gave that speech, the White House made a request to Twitter and Facebook to unlock the president’s banned accounts for the purpose of putting out his written press release condemning violence.
The White House also asked the social media companies to temporarily unlock the accounts to distribute video of the speech — finally condemning the attack on the Capitol and requesting no further violence.
Trump’s staff wanted to use this peace offering to build leverage to get the accounts permanently unlocked. It didn’t work. Twitter and Facebook denied that request, too.
Yesterday, after a blast of pardons, Trump departed the White House at 8:20 a.m.
The departure was in keeping with Trump’s bitter final months. There was no coffee and cake welcome to his successor in the days before, and he would not attend Biden’s inauguration. Trump did not once publicly mention Biden’s name. Finally, he climbed on board Air Force One for the last time, back to Florida. The reign of President Trump was over.
👀 Read the full episodein the Axios stream: It’s true fly-on-the-wall history — one long-motion scene takes you fleeing with senators through the Capitol.
Read the rest of the “Off the Rails” episodes here.
4. Pic du jour
Photo: Presidential Inaugural Committee via Getty Images
Former Presidents Bill Clinton, George W. Bush and Barack Obama came together in a video for the Presidential Inaugural Committee’s primetime special, “Celebrating America.”
Clinton urgedAmericans to get off their “high horses” and reach out to friends and neighbors with whom they may have differences.
Bush addressed President Biden: “Your success is our country’s success.”
Obama said: “We can have fierce disagreements and yet recognize each other’s common humanity and that, as Americans, we have more in common than what separates us.”
5. Our weekly map: New cases down amid fears through spring
The pace of new coronavirus infections fell significantly over the past week, but the virus is still out of control, and a more contagious variant is gaining ground, Axios’ Sam Baker and Andrew Witherspoon report.
The U.S. averaged roughly 198,000 new cases per day in the final week of the Trump administration — a 19% drop from the week before, but still a ton of cases.
The number of new daily cases fell in 44 states, compared to the previous week. South Carolina and Virginia were the only states whose outbreaks got worse over the past week.
Hospitalizations are holding steady. Roughly 123,000 people are in the hospital today for COVID-19 infections.
Experts say a more contagious variant of the coronavirus will soon become the dominant strain in the U.S., allowing the virus to spread even more easily.
As the winter surge peaks, “we may see 3-4 weeks of declines in new cases, but then new variant will take over,” former FDA Commissioner Scott Gottlieb tweeted.
“It’ll double in prevalence about every week. It’ll change the game and could mean we have persistent high infection through spring until we vaccinate enough people.”
Trust in traditional media has declined to an all-time low, and many news professionals are trying to do something about it, Axios’ Felix Salmon writes.
For the first time ever, fewer than half of all Americans trust traditional media, according to data from Edelman’s annual Trust Barometer, shared exclusively with Axios. Trust in social media has hit an all-time low of 27%.
🥊 When Edelman re-polled Americans after the election, the figures had deteriorated even further, with 57% of Democrats trusting the media — and only 18% of Republicans.
61% of Trump voters say they trust their employer’s CEO. That compares to just 28% who trust government leaders, and a mere 21% who trust journalists.
The bottom line: CEOs have long advocated upgrades to America’s physical infrastructure. Now they have a chance to use the trust they’ve built up to help rebuild our civic infrastructure.
Tech employees are on high alert about their own personal safety as their employers roll out policies to ban or limit the reach of far-right extremists angry over former President Trump’s defeat, Ashley Gold writes.
One employee at a major tech firm told Axios they were told to remove their name from a quote about a particular deplatforming decision for their own safety, and received threatening messages on LinkedIn about the change.
Some Twitter employees made their accounts private and hid their employer from their online profiles to avoid attention from Trump supporters.
In pro-Trump online communities, vague threats about a reckoning coming for Big Tech companies are circulating widely, as they have been for some time.
In President Biden’s Oval Office, a bust of Cesar Chavez, the labor leader and civil rights activist, is nestled among an array of framed family photos displayed on a desk behind the new president, AP reports.
Also added as part of the Biden makeover: sculptures of two civil rights icons, the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and Rosa Parks.
One carryover from President Trump: Biden is also using the Resolute Desk.
9. 🗞️ Living history
10. 1 smile to go: 23-year-old phenom
Amanda Gorman, 23, the country’s first National Youth Poet Laureate, referenced everything from scripture to “Hamilton” — and echoed JFK and MLK — in a performance at the Biden-Harris swearing-in that captivated America.
In less than 24 hours, the L.A. resident went from under 100,000 Twitter followers @TheAmandaGorman to 1.1 million.
She went from 206,000 Instagram followers to 2.2 million.
A pair of books Gorman has coming in September hit No. 1 and No. 2 on Amazon.
With urgency and assertion, AP’s Hillel Italie writes, Gorman began “The Hill We Climb,” by asking: “Where can we find light / In this never-ending shade?”
We, the successors of a country and a time,
Where a skinny black girl,
Descended from slaves and raised by a single mother,
Can dream of becoming president,
Only to find herself reciting for one.
Gorman helped inspire — along with Vice President Harris — the Twitter hashtag “#BlackGirlMagic.”
Joe Biden promised to undo much of his predecessor’s legacy and restore what he refers to as “the soul of America” by proving that the past four years represented an aberration rather than an enduring rift in the national fabric.
By Toluse Olorunnipa and Annie Linskey ● Read more »
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17.) THE WASHINGTON EXAMINER
18.) ASSOCIATED PRESS
Jan 21, 2021
View in Browser
AP MORNING WIRE
Good morning. In today’s AP Morning Wire:
President Biden takes the helm, appeals for unity to take on crises.
World hopes for renewed US cooperation to fight global issues.
Some COVID-19 mutations may dampen vaccine effectiveness.
Inaugural poet Amanda Gorman: ‘Even as we grieved, we grew.’
TAMER FAKAHANY DEPUTY DIRECTOR – GLOBAL NEWS COORDINATION, LONDON
The Rundown
AP PHOTO/ALEX BRANDON
President Biden takes the helm, appeals for unity to take on crises; Vice President Harris: A new chapter opens in US politics
In a time of tumult and a confluence of crises, Joe Biden was sworn in as the 46th president of the United States, declaring that “democracy has prevailed” and summoning American resilience and unity to confront the deeply divided nation’s historic and cataclysmic woes.
Denouncing a national “uncivil war,” Biden took the oath, calling for unity, at a U.S. Capitol that had been battered by an insurrectionist siege just two weeks earlier, Jonathan Lemire, Zeke Miller and Alexandra Jaffe report.
Then, taking his place in the White House Oval Office, he plunged into a stack of executive actions that began to undo the heart of his polarizing predecessor’s agenda on matters from the deadly pandemic to climate change.
AP will be closely watching the first full day of the Biden administration to see what it pushes forward on the coronavirus front. Biden takes office as the virus continues to surge and as states complain they are running out of vaccine doses.
What steps does the nascent administration take to bring it under control and ensure a better distribution and administration of the vaccine? You can follow all those developments here.
BREAKING: Dr. Anthony Fauci says President Biden will today order the U.S. to support projects to deploy COVID-19 vaccines, diagnostics and therapeutics to people in need around the world. Fauci also says Washington will cease reducing U.S. staff counts at the World Health Organization and will pay its financial obligations to it.
Kamala Harris: Vice President Kamala Harris broke the barrier that has kept men at the top of American power for more than two centuries. The former California senator became the first female vice president in the nation’s history, as well as the first Black woman and first person of South Asian descent to hold the position. She later cast the moment as one that embodied “American aspiration” as she addressed the nation for the first time as vice president near the Lincoln Memorial. She praised Americans as “undaunted in our belief that we shall overcome.” Kathleen Ronyane and Alexandra Jaffe report.
Analysis: Biden appealed to Americans to move past their deep divisions. He cast unity as the only path out of the challenges facing the nation, which include a spiraling pandemic, economic uncertainty, racial tensions, deep partisanship and a growing divide over truth versus lies. He spoke from the same steps of the U.S. Capitol that were overrun by violent rioters just two weeks ago. He called on Americans to end “this uncivil war.” His words felt less like rhetorical flourishes and more like an urgent appeal to stabilize a country reeling from multiple crises, AP Washington Bureau Chief Julie Pace writes.
The Scene: Washington couldn’t turn the page quickly enough from Donald Trump to Joe Biden. Trump’s voice faded from the capital he had animated and antagonized since 2017 as he flew to Florida, with his last trip on Air Force One tuned in to Biden’s inauguration on television. And quite suddenly, at least for the moment, the old ways were back: reverence of custom, rituals dating back two centuries, scenes of grace, calls for unity. Four years after Trump’s dark portrayal of “American carnage,” Biden set out his intent on the same platform of the flag-bedecked Capitol to write “an American story of hope,” Calvin Woodward writes.
The Uneasy Transition: When it gazes into the mirror, the United States does not generally see a land of process and procedure. It sees what it has wanted to see since the beginning — a place of action and results and volume. The bold, splashy storylines that Americans crave, and have used to construct their nation, don’t always play well with repetition and routine, Ted Anthony writes. But the inauguration showed just how important continuity can be in American life, even these days.
Racial Injustice: Biden issued a strong repudiation of white supremacy and domestic terrorism seen on the rise under Donald Trump. Compared with his immediate predecessors, three of whom attended the inauguration, Biden is the first president to directly address the ills of white supremacy in an inaugural speech. Biden delivered his address where an insurrectionist mob, including people espousing racist and anti-Semitic views, tried and failed to stop Congress from certifying his Electoral College victory, Kat Stafford and Aaron Morrison report.
Post-Truth: Biden declared truth and democracy are under attack in America and pledged to usher the post-truth era out of U.S. politics. He didn’t mention Donald Trump by name, but Biden’s words were a clear rebuke of his predecessor. It was Trump who persuaded millions of Americans to believe in his reality, which included falsehoods about issues such as the virus and election fraud. Biden said Americans need to defend truth and defeat lies. It’s a difficult message to push in a bitterly divided nation where about one-third of Americans remain skeptical about the outcome of the election, Deb Riechmann reports.
Who’s in Charge: The Biden and Trump administrations swapped out senior leadership of the federal government in a ritualized end to a historically rough presidential election. Biden’s inauguration put acting heads in charge of federal agencies pending Senate approval of his permanent picks for the jobs, Ellen Knickmeyer reports.
Republicans; For the first time in more than a decade, Republicans are waking up to a Washington where Democrats control the White House and Congress, adjusting to an era of diminished power, deep uncertainty and internal feuding. At the heart of the Republican reckoning lies a fundamental question with no clear answer: Without Trump, what does the modern-day Republican Party stand for? Republicans have just begun to decide whether to continue down the road of Trump’s norm-shattering populism or return to the party’s conservative roots, Steve Peoples reports.
QAnon: The inauguration has sown a mixture of anger, confusion and disappointment among believers in the baseless QAnon conspiracy theory. On social media, Trump’s departure from the White House prompted a crisis of faith among QAnon supporters. Many believed that Trump would be orchestrating mass arrests, military tribunals and executions of his Satan-worshipping, child-sacrificing enemies, Michael Kunzelman, Amanda Seitz and David Klepper report.
Inauguration Celebrities: Stars ranging from Lady Gaga to Bruce Springsteen capped a star-studded inauguration. A day of celebration for the new administration ended late last night with Katy Perry belting out “Firework” on the steps of the Lincoln Memorial as pyrotechnics lit up the night sky around Washington.
Hours earlier, Gaga belted out the national anthem in a very Gaga way with flamboyance, fashion and passion. She was followed by Jennifer Lopez, dressed all in white, who threw a line of Spanish into her medley of “This Land is Your Land” and “America the Beautiful,” and Garth Brooks, who hugged former presidents after performing “Amazing Grace.” Jocelyn Noveck reports.
World hopes for renewed cooperation with US under Biden to battle crises; Biden faces a more confident China after US chaos
After a turbulent four years in which international norms, alliances and agreements were trampled on under the ”America First” focus of the Trump administration, world leaders welcomed President Biden into their ranks.
Many also expressed hope Biden would right U.S. democracy two weeks after rioters stormed the Capitol, shaking the faith of those fighting for democracy in their own countries.
Governments targeted and sanctioned under Trump embraced the chance for a fresh start with Biden, while some heads of state who lauded Trump’s blend of nationalism and populism were more restrained in their expectations.
But with the chance to repair frayed alliances and work together on global problems, relief rather than consternation was the most prevalent feeling.
China Analysis: President Biden faces a determined Chinese leadership that could be more emboldened by America’s troubles at home. The disarray in the U.S., from the rampant pandemic to the riot at the Capitol, gives China’s ruling Communist Party a boost in its long-running quest for what it calls national rejuvenation. That is a bid to return the country to what it sees as its rightful place as a major nation.
For Biden, that could make it even more difficult to manage the increasingly contentious relationship between the world’s rising power and its established one. The stakes are high for both countries and for the rest of the world, AP’s News Director for Greater China, Ken Moritsugu, reports from Beijing.
AP PHOTO/LYNNE SLADKY
Some global COVID-19 mutations may dampen vaccine effectiveness; US states reporting shortages of vaccine amid surge
Scientists are reporting troubling signs that some recent mutations of the coronavirus may modestly curb the effectiveness of two current vaccines.
It was led by Rockefeller University, with scientists from the National Institutes of Health.
They found that antibodies made by vaccinated people were less able to block versions of the virus with certain mutations. Researchers say the best way to prevent more mutations is to prevent new cases.
U.S. Vaccine: The push to inoculate Americans against the coronavirus is hitting a roadblock: A number of states are reporting they are running out of vaccine. Tens of thousands of people who managed to get appointments for a first dose are seeing them canceled. About half of the 31 million doses distributed have been administered so far. Only about 2 million people have received the two doses needed for maximum virus protection, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Michael Hill and Jennifer Peltz report.
Vaccine Van: More potential COVID-19 vaccines to fight the pandemic still are being tested, and some researchers in the U.S. are driving mobile labs into neighborhoods to recruit diverse volunteers. With scarce supplies of the Pfizer and Moderna shots, proving whether additional vaccines work is critical. So is ensuring they’re tested in communities of color that are hard-hit by the coronavirus yet have questions about vaccination, Lauran Neergaard and Joseph B. Frederick report.
U.K. Cathedral Vaccinations: David Halls isn’t a doctor, nurse or ambulance driver, but he wanted to contribute in the fight against COVID-19. So he did what does best: He sat down beside Salisbury Cathedral’s historic organ and began to play. The 800-year-old cathedral in southwestern England has been turned into a mass vaccination center as the U.K. races to inoculate 50 million people. And the 58-year-old organist entertains his neighbors with Bach, Handel and even a little Rodgers & Hammerstein as they shuffle through the nave to get their shots, Danica Kirka and Jo Kearney report.
The poem’s very title, “The Hill We Climb,” suggested both labor and transcendence.
“We did not feel prepared to be the heirs
Of such a terrifying hour.
But within it we’ve found the power
To author a new chapter,
To offer hope and laughter to ourselves.”
It was an extraordinary task for Gorman, the youngest by far of the poets who have read at presidential inaugurations since Kennedy invited Robert Frost in 1961, with other predecessors including Maya Angelou and Elizabeth Alexander.
She had completed a little more than half of “The Hill We Climb” before Jan. 6 and the siege of the U.S. Capitol by supporters of Donald Trump,
“That day gave me a second wave of energy to finish the poem,” Gorman told the AP. She had said that she would not mention Jan. 6 specifically, but her reference was unmistakable:
“We’ve seen a force that would shatter our nation rather than share it,
Would destroy our country if it meant delaying democracy.
Construction on the long disputed Keystone XL oil pipeline has been halted as President Biden revoked its permit. The 1,700-mile pipeline was planned to carry roughly 800,000 barrels of oil a day from Alberta to the Texas Gulf Coast, passing through Montana, South Dakota, Nebraska, Kansas and Oklahoma. The Canadian company says the project has been suspended and over 1,000 jobs will be eliminated in the coming weeks. Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says that “we are disappointed but acknowledge the President’s decision to fulfil his election campaign promise on Keystone XL.”
A Mexican newspaper has published details of new testimony by a cooperating witness that directly implicates the army in the disappearance of 43 college students in a 2014 incident that continues to haunt Mexico. The newspaper Reforma said that a gang member identified only as “Juan” alleges that soldiers held and interrogated some of the students before turning them over to a drug gang. He says the students’ bodies were then either burned at a local crematorium or dissolved in caustic solutions and dumped down drains.
Piles of plush carpets line the floors of a shopping center in northern Iraq hosting traders from neighboring Iran. They hope the spangle of their ornate handicrafts might offer a lifeline out of poverty. In their own country, the economy is in tatters amid crippling U.S.-led sanctions. At least 24 businesses from 15 Iranian cities set up shop this week in the city of Dohuk in the Kurdish-run northern region of Iraq. From Sanandaj to Bijar, they brought luxurious carpets. From Isfahan, Yazd and Hamadan, precious gems, copper and pottery.
Former IOC vice president Dick Pound says the Tokyo Olympics can go ahead without fans. Pound says: “The question is — is this a ‘must-have’ or ‘nice-to-have.’ It’s nice to have spectators. But it’s not a must-have,” Pound also said there’s a ”very, very good chance” the Olympics will open on July 23. This comes as recent polls in Japan show 80% of the public believe the Olympics should not happen with virus cases surging — or will not happen. It’s critical for the IOC to get the event on television — with or without fans.
Meanwhile, a number of Chicago-area health systems expect, within days, to begin inviting patients ages 65 and older to make appointments to get COVID-19 vaccines. Here’s how Illinois seniors can sign up.
Here’s more coronavirus news and other top stories you need to know to start your day.
As Joe Biden was sworn in as the 46th president of the United States, supporters across Chicagoland celebrated. Many focused on the historical moment of Kamala Harris’ swearing in to office, making her the first woman and first woman of color to become vice president.
Dahleen Glanton column: Wearing pearls in honor of Kamala Harris, my mother and hope for a new day
John Kass column: Biden calls for an end to ‘uncivil war,’ but will he defend free speech?
President Joe Biden moved swiftly to dismantle Donald Trump’s legacy on his first day in office, signing a series of executive actions that reverse course on immigration, climate change, racial equity and the handling of the coronavirus pandemic.
With the stroke of a pen, Biden ordered a halt to the construction of Trump’s U.S.-Mexico border wall, ended the ban on travel from some Muslim-majority countries, declared his intent to rejoin the Paris Climate Accord and the World Health Organization and revoked the approval of the Keystone XL oil pipeline, aides said.
Chicago Teachers Union members have until Saturday to vote on a collective action to defy Chicago Public Schools and refuse to report to school buildings starting Monday, continuing remote learning for as long as they have access to their online platforms.
Earlier this week, reports that the bill would provide an eight-year path to citizenship to millions without legal status raised the hopes of immigrants who had lived the last four years trying to survive a Donald Trump presidency centered on anti-immigrant rhetoric. In Chicago, although there’s some optimism about the legislation’s prospects, community leaders and immigration advocates are urging people to remain skeptical and continue mobilizing to ensure that Biden’s promise of sweeping immigration change is kept.
President Joe Biden has given the Oval Office a slight makeover. He revealed the new décor Wednesday as he invited reporters into his new office to watch him sign a series of executive orders hours after he took office. Take a look inside.
A series of tremendously pent up, therapeutic and near simultaneous sighs of relief escaped the lungs of Chicagoans Wednesday as they watched the inaugurations of President Joe Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris.
“I closed my eyes, took a sigh of relief and just wiped my temple and thought, ‘He is gone. It’s over. It’s ended,’” said Baron Rush, 55, who watched from his home just south of Bronzeville. Mitch Dudek has the story…
“Our caucus has a very deep bench of people who love this state,” Welch said ahead of his official announcement on Thursday. “In many ways, it’s a diverse caucus. I think this is reflective of that diversity.”
Inspector General Joe Ferguson said his investigation, one of three into the raid of Anjanette Young’s home, may look at “actions conducted by, through or on behalf of CPD, COPA, the Law Department, and the Mayor’s Office.”
The youngest poet to speak at an inauguration, Gorman delivered her poem “The Hill We Climb,” which touched on the themes of unity and healing Biden and others alluded to in their own speeches during the inauguration.
The former “Empire” actor’s defense team wants former CPD Supt. Eddie Johnson to testify. But the judge says it’s unlikely the former top cop will take the stand.
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Total U.S. coronavirus deaths reported each morning this week: Monday, 397,600; Tuesday, 399,003; Wednesday, 401,730; Thursday, 406,162.
A masked President Biden got to work on Wednesday afternoon with his presidential pen and a stack of executive actions just hours after asking Americans to “end this uncivil war” in what he called “a broken land.”
The 46th president — backed by history-making Vice President Harris, who administered oaths of office on Wednesday to Democratic senators whose runoff victories helped shift the Senate’s sway — said they are committed to national healing even as the inaugural ceremony eliminated celebratory throngs because of unprecedented security precautions following a deadly Capitol attack waged by right-wing rioters.
Biden appeared in the Oval Office at the Resolute Desk eight hours after former President Trump and Melania Trump departed the White House to begin a new chapter as Florida residents. In the space of an afternoon, the most famous office in the world underwent a mini-makeover, decorated with a rug and draperies familiar from the years of former President Clinton, a new assemblage of Biden family photographs and curated art representing progressive American icons, including busts of Cesar Chavez and Martin Luther King Jr. (The Washington Post).
Biden told reporters that Trump left him “a very generous letter,” the contents of which he said he would not divulge because he had not spoken to his predecessor. Trump did not mention Biden’s name on Wednesday as he departed the nation’s capital and it remains unclear if the White House will arrange a call between Biden and Trump.
The new president used his clout to lean into the colossal challenges facing the nation, including a raging pandemic, a ravaged economy, racial inequities and significant political discord. His first acts were intended to draw stark contrasts with Trump’s policies and to deliver down payments on some of the promises he made to 81 million Americans who voted for change in November.
The New York Times: On day one, Biden moved to undo Trump’s legacy. The president’s assertive use of executive authority was intended to be a hefty and visible down payment on one of his primary goals as president: to “reverse the gravest damages” done to the country by Trump, the Times’s Michael Shear wrote.
“We’ll press forward with speed and urgency, for we have much to do in this winter of peril and significant possibilities,” Biden said during his address. “Much to repair. Much to restore. Much to heal. Much to build, and much to gain.”
The Hill: During his first two weeks in office, Biden expects to sign a pile of executive orders on climate, health care and immigration to start. On Wednesday after being sworn in, he took 15 executive actions and two directives.
White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki says the president will “soon” meet with lawmakers to discuss the details of the administration’s proposed $1.9 trillion coronavirus rescue package (Reuters).
“The package wasn’t designed with the $1.9 trillion as a starting point. It was designed with the components that were necessary to give people the relief that they needed,” she told reporters during her first official turn as Biden’s White House spokesperson.
As The Hill’s Morgan Chalfant and Jonathan Easley write, Biden’s opening moves on Wednesday represent what he talked about throughout his 18-month campaign: a direct repudiation of the Trump years. Among his first unilateral actions, Biden halted construction of the Keystone XL pipeline and of the wall along the southern border mere hours after taking the oath. The president also reversed the Trump era limits on travel of individuals from certain majority-Muslim countries and a ban on transgender individuals serving openly in the military.
Biden also began the process of re-engaging with both the World Health Organization (WHO) and the Paris agreement on climate change, all the while freezing regulations issued by the Trump administration in the past 60 days.
Niall Stanage: The Memo: Biden strives for common ground after Trump turmoil.
The Associated Press: Smooth Psaki shows new tone in first Biden press briefing.
With Wednesday in the rearview mirror, Biden is focused on an ambitious 100-day agenda dominated by the coronavirus. Biden warned that dark days are ahead for the pandemic’s painful impacts. In February, the president says he will present Congress with longer-range legislative proposals to investments in infrastructure, research and development and clean energy.
Previous presidents, determined to act swiftly before national goodwill ebbed, were in similar positions during past crises.
“We had a one month, a hundred days and a one year [plan],” Rahm Emanuel, who served two Democratic presidents, told The Hill’s Reid Wilson. He was Obama’s first White House chief of staff during the financial crisis. “I guarantee you [chief of staff Ron Klain is] thinking a month in, a hundred days in and one year in.”
“Lincoln had the Civil War. Wilson had the Spanish flu. Roosevelt had the Great Depression. Kennedy had the Cold War. Johnson had civil and racial unrest,” Emanuel added. “Biden, D, all of the above.”
The Hill: Biden recommits the United States to the Paris climate accord.
The Hill: Biden enters debt fight on Capitol Hill.
National cooperation and comity, the president said at the Capitol, is required to contain the coronavirus pandemic, restore prosperity, halt human-caused climate change and mend deep divisions that were laid bare over the last four years.
“To overcome these challenges, to restore the soul and secure the future of America requires so much more than words. It requires the most elusive of all things in a democracy: unity,” Biden said (The Hill).
“We can see each other, not as adversaries, but as neighbors. We can treat each other with dignity and respect,” he said. “We can join forces, stop the shouting and lower the temperature. For without unity there is no peace. Only bitterness and fury. No progress, only exhausting outrage. No nation, only a state of chaos.”
The Associated Press: Inaugural address text HERE.
The Hill: Biden repudiates white supremacy and calls for racial justice.
The Washington Post: In his speech, Biden targeted an insidious foe: falsehoods, purposeful misinformation and the spread of incendiary conspiracy theories.
“Recent weeks and months have taught us a painful lesson,” the president said. “There is truth and there are lies, lies told for power and for profit. And each of us has a duty and responsibility, as citizens, as Americans, and especially as leaders, leaders who have pledged to honor our Constitution and protect our nation, to defend the truth and defeat the lies.”
The Hill: GOP senators praise Biden’s address. “I thought it was what we needed,” said Sen. Lisa Murkowski (R-Alaska), who recently grew so agitated about Trump’s incitement of the Capitol rioters that she said his continued influence over the Republican Party could force her to leave it.
The Hill: Biden speaks to those who didn’t vote for him to urge Americans to join together.
The Hill: Biden’s inauguration was marked by hope and fear. “As long as we’re focused on getting people back to work, and getting the vaccine out quickly — if he’ll come out with that — I think we can all get on board and move forward,” said Rep. Richard Hudson (R-N.C.). “If he comes out with a lot of far-left policies, we won’t be able to support him and it’ll be unfortunate.”
👉 One of the inspiring standouts on Wednesday’s program was 22-year-old Amanda Gorman (pictured below), America’s first youth poet laureate, who wowed many with a powerful poem she wrote for the occasion, “The Hill We Climb.” Text is HERE and listen HERE.
FORMER ADMINISTRATION: Minutes before officially handing over power on Wednesday, Trump revealed one final pardon to Albert Pirro, the ex-husband of Fox News host Jeanine Pirro to cap off the work of his administration and the more than 140 pardons and commutations he issued.
As The Hill’s John Kruzel writes, the pardon of Albert Pirro — who was convicted of tax fraud but previously worked with the 45th president on real estate deals — was an encapsulation of Trump’s use of the pardon, which he extended to a number of individuals who had a personal connection to the former White House team.
The previous administration listed who had pushed for the pardon or commutation, which included a number of individuals who received clemency only after refusing to cooperate with investigators looking into Trump’s potentially criminal wrongdoing.
The Hill: Sen. Mitt Romney (R-Utah) said the Founding Fathers didn’t intend for presidential pardons to be used for “cronies.”
> COVID-19: Former Vice PresidentMike Pence on Wednesday delivered a comprehensive report to Biden detailing the work of the White House coronavirus task force as the 46th president is set to reshape aspects of the government’s pandemic response.
According to The Hill’s Brett Samuels, the 140-page report outlines the former administration’s pandemic response dating back to when China first reported a cluster of pneumonia cases. However, it does not address any of the myriad controversies that surrounded the Trump administration’s pandemic response and in some cases hindered the U.S.’s ability to get the virus under control. It focuses, instead, on the administration’s work to produce personal protective equipment and vaccines.
NBC News: Surgeon General Jerome Adams says he was asked to resign by the Biden administration.
The Washington Post: “Have a good life”: Trump leaves for Florida in low-key farewell.
****
More Congress & Politics: One member of Biden’s Cabinet was confirmed on day one. The Senate on Wednesday night confirmed the first of Biden’s nominees. Avril Haines sailed through the upper chamber by a vote of 84 to 10 and began work as director of national intelligence.
Haines’s confirmation took place after Sen. Tom Cotton (R-Ark.) lifted a hold on a quick vote (The Washington Post). Haines, the first woman to become national intelligence director, previously served as deputy national security adviser and as deputy director of the CIA during the Obama administration.
Who voted no?: Republican Sens. Marsha Blackburn (Tenn.), Mike Braun (Ind.), Ted Cruz (Texas), Joni Ernst (Iowa), Bill Hagerty (Tenn.), Josh Hawley (Mo.), Mike Lee (Utah), Roger Marshall (Kan.), Rand Paul (Ky.) and Jim Risch (Idaho).
As The Hill’s Jordain Carney notes, the single confirmation is the smallest number of Cabinet picks to get through the Senate on the first day of a new administration. Four years ago, Republicans were upset when Democrats allowed only two Cabinet picks to be confirmed on Trump’s first day in office.
Sen. Rob Portman (R-Ohio) indicated that Janet Yellen (Treasury Department) and Antony Blinken (State Department) could join the ranks of confirmed Cabinet members by the end of the week. The Senate Finance Committee is set to vote on Yellen’s nomination on Friday (The Hill).
The House is also set to vote today on a waiver to allow Lloyd Austin to serve as Defense secretary despite not meeting the requirement of a seven-year cooling off period for former military officials.
The upper chamber also saw a big change on Wednesday as Sen. Charles Schumer (D-N.Y.) took over as majority leader, becoming the first Jewish senator to hold the position (The Hill). Additionally, three new Democratic senators were sworn in on Wednesday evening by Harris in her new role as vice president: Georgia’s Raphael Warnock and Jon Ossoff, who won their runoffs on Jan. 5, and Alex Padilla of California, appointed to fill Harris’s Senate term (The Hill).
The Hill: Schumer and Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) trade places, but icy relationship holds.
Politico: Democrats poised to rebuff McConnell’s filibuster demands.
Biden charged the people of this republic with fixing it. So the people need to grow up, by George F. Will, columnist, The Washington Post. https://wapo.st/2KyKgW9
Biden’s “bold” immigration plan: It didn’t take long for him to drop the Mr. Moderate schtick, by Robert Verbruggen, policy writer, National Review. https://bit.ly/3bZEIiQ
Why Joe Biden should not shy away from the full power of the presidency, by Eric Posner, opinion contributor, The New York Times. https://nyti.ms/3c6CCNQ
WHERE AND WHEN
The House meets at 2 p.m.
TheSenate will convene at noon. The Commerce, Science and Transportation Committee at 10 a.m. will hold a confirmation hearing for Pete Buttigieg to be secretary of Transportation.
President Biden, first lady Jill Biden, Vice President Harris and second gentleman Doug Emhoff will watch the virtual Presidential Inaugural Prayer Service hosted by the Washington National Cathedral at 10 a.m. The president and vice president will receive the President’s Daily Brief at 12:45 p.m. Biden will deliver remarks on COVID-19 and sign executive actions at 2 p.m. Biden and Harris will receive a briefing from members of the administration’s COVID-19 team at 2:25 p.m.
Psaki will hold a White House press briefing at 4 p.m.
National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases Director Anthony Fauci leads a U.S. delegation during a meeting of the Geneva-based WHO this week (CNBC). Fauci, who is the medical adviser to Biden’s pandemic response team, will tell the global health group’s executive board that “the United States stands ready to work in partnership and solidarity to support the international COVID-19 response, mitigate its impact on the world, strengthen our institutions, advance epidemic preparedness for the future, and improve the health and wellbeing of all people throughout the world.” (The White House released advanced text of his remarks.)
Economic indicator: The Labor Department will report on claims for unemployment benefits filed during the week ending Jan. 16.
➔ CORONAVIRUS: Biden on Wednesday began his administration’s efforts to combat COVID-19 by modeling appropriate precautions using an executive order to require people on federal property, including on federal transport, to wear face coverings and to practice social distancing for the next 100 days. He also steered the United States back into the World Health Organization to reverse the Trump administration’s withdrawal last year from the global health group (The Hill). “We have a long way to go,” Biden said from the Oval Office on Wednesday evening as he began to sign a stack of orders in front of the press corps. The president today will order agencies to use the Defense Production Act in the fight against COVID-19 (The Hill).
The Wall Street Journal: Biden’s COVID-19 vaccine plan: How he intends to speed up distribution by enlisting more community vaccination sites, mobile units and pharmacies. His pledge is 100 vaccine inoculations in 100 days and he’s proposing that Congress approve $20 billion on a national vaccination program.
> Vaccines: Shortages of COVID-19 vaccines are forcing some states to cancel appointments with those eligible to be inoculated. Reasons for the scarce supplies are unclear, but new shipments from the government go out every week, and both federal gatekeepers and the vaccine manufacturers have said there are large quantities in the pipeline (The Associated Press). … Amazon offered to assist the Biden administration with vaccine distribution (NBC News). … At least 16,000 doses of COVID-19 vaccines were ruined by temperature fluctuations in Maine and Michigan (The Washington Post). … Drug makers Pfizer and BioNTech say their COVID-19 vaccines are likely to be effective against the highly transmissible variant of the coronavirus identified in the United Kingdom (The Hill). … Unions, which fought to get their members near the top of eligibility lists for vaccinations, are poised to defend members who refuse employer mandates to be inoculated against COVID-19 (The Hill).
> Infections: Rep. Raul Ruiz (D-Calif.) announced he tested positive for COVID-19 on Tuesday and is working in self-isolation (Palm Springs Desert Sun). He is the most recent lawmaker to disclose a coronavirus infection after sheltering in the Capitol with mask-less colleagues for hours during the mob riot on Jan. 6.
➔ INTERNATIONAL: Psaki told reporters on Wednesday that Biden will begin his calls with foreign leaders on Friday, starting with Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau. She added that the first round of calls will be with “partners and allies,” indicating there are no immediate plans to speak with Russian President Vladimir Putin (The Hill). … Heads of state and government leaders extended their good wishes to the 46th president on Wednesday to kick off ties with the new administration. … In Israel, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu lauded his “warm personal friendship” with Biden in a 34-second message of congratulations. … French President Emmanuel Macrontweeted his well wishes to Biden and Harris, adding “Welcome back to the Paris Agreement!” … Prime Minister Boris Johnson of the United Kingdom said that he looks forward to working with Biden on issues such as climate change and COVID-19. However, his reign as prime minister was panned by his predecessor, Theresa May, who accused Johnson of “abandoning” Great Britain’s leadership role during the Trump presidency (The Associated Press) … Queen Elizabeth II sent Biden a private congratulatory message. Biden is the 14th U.S. president to serve during her reign, which began in 1952 (CNN).
THE CLOSER
And finally … It’s Thursday, which means it’s time for this week’s Morning Report Quiz! Inspired by the transfer of power to the 46th president, we’re eager for some smart guesses about inaugurations.
Email your responses to asimendinger@thehill.com and/or aweaver@thehill.com, and please add “Quiz” to subject lines. Winners who submit correct answers will enjoy some richly deserved newsletter fame on Friday.
The Capitol has not always been the setting for inaugurations. What other location(s) were backdrop(s) for the oath of office?
The White House
Federal Hall in New York City
Congress Hall in Philadelphia
All of the above
A departing president is not required to attend the swearing-in ceremony of a successor. Who was the first outgoing president to ride with his successor to the Capitol to participate in the inauguration?
Abraham Lincoln
Andrew Jackson
Herbert Hoover
Bill Clinton
While taking the oath of office, Vice President Harris relied on two Bibles, including one previously owned by ___________.
Thurgood Marshall
Rosa Parks
Martin Luther King Jr.
John Lewis
Which president was sworn in a second time because the chief justice bungled the administration of the initial oath of office during the ceremony at the Capitol?
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25.) POLITICO PLAYBOOK
POLITICO Playbook: Democrats caught flat-footed by total control of Washington
Presented by
DRIVING THE DAY
The Democratic takeover of the White House and Congress is complete. But the truth is that the party was caught flat-footed by it: Almost no one expected JON OSSOFF and RAPHAEL WARNOCK to both win in Georgia — let alone planned for how they’d run Washington if it happened.
The lack of preparation is now causing confusion among congressional Democratsabout how they should exercise their newfound power in the critical early days of the administration.
Conventional wisdom is that presidents have a small window of opportunity to make their mark with a big legislative achievement or, best case, two. Timing is critical, as is sequencing. But beyond a desire to address the pandemic — unquestionably Biden’s first priority — Democrats seem to be all over the place on what their legislative game plan looks like.
Our Democratic sources say Biden’s two top targets will be a Covid package and a massive infrastructure bill paired with clean energy policies, a nod to climate advocates. But Democrats are also talking about criminal justice and policing reform as well as good governance proposals to clean up elections.
Contrary to two years ago, when the party took the House and leaders articulated a plan for a series of major votes on guns and equality in the first few weeks of the year, no clear agenda has been presented to them byPresident JOE BIDEN, according to interviews with a half-dozen senior Democrats on Wednesday night.
In fact, Democrats aren’t even on the same page about how to get Biden’s $1.9 trillion Covid package through Congress. Before Biden was sworn in, aides had been hashing out plans to use the fast-track “reconciliation” process to try to jam it through on a party-line vote. But now Democrats are pressing pause because Biden is, as one person called it, “bipartisan-curious” — i.e. he wants to try to win over Republicans first, to the chagrin of many senior Democrats eager to move quickly. (Biden aides reached out to moderate GOP Sen. LISA MURKOWSKI of Alaska this week, and Democratic Sen. JOE MANCHIN of West Virginia says he hopes to talk to them over the weekend.)
Meanwhile, a third idea is percolating in the House: passing a narrower proposal of $1,400 stimulus checks and vaccine-distribution assistance to provide quick relief and notch a win — or, if all else fails, demonstrate to Biden that the GOP isn’t going to play nice. That idea, however, is running into resistance in the Senate. (Heather Caygle, Sarah Ferris and Caitlin Emma have more here.)
The lack of clarity extends to immigration. Many Democrats privately concede that the massive immigration bill Biden introduced on Day One was mostly symbolic — a gesture to advocates that’s unlikely to come to fruition. But on the Senate floor Wednesday, CHUCK SCHUMER — who helped write and pass a sweeping immigration bill in 2013 — said doing so again was a “very high priority” and “one of the most important things a Democratic Congress can do.”
On top of all this, the Senate will soon have to conduct an impeachment trial of DONALD TRUMP (see our scoop on that below), and Schumer and MITCH MCCONNELL are still at loggerheads over a Senate power-sharing agreement that is sucking up time and could delay confirmations.
For now, the frustration is contained to a handful of top lawmakers and aides trying to come up with a path forward. But we shall see how long they can keep a lid on it.
A THREE-DAY IMPEACHMENT TRIAL? We knew Democrats and Republicans were ready to turn the page on Trump ASAP — we just didn’t realize how quickly. We’ve heard from multiple Hill sources that lawmakers have privately discussed the possibility of a three-day impeachment trial for Trump, which would be the fastest of any such procedure for a president. (Past presidential impeachments have ranged from as short as 21 days to as long as 83.) Of course, Trump is an EX-president, so …
To be clear: Talks about parameters for the trial between Schumer and McConnell are ongoing and closely held; nothing’s been decided.But even the suggestion of that time frame underscores how much senators want to dispense with the matter. They also point out that there isn’t exactly a complex set of facts to sort through; anyone watching TV lately would know the gist. “This one is cut and dry,” one person told us. “It’s not like Ukraine where you had to get into how this person is connected to that person.”
One complication is Trump. Will he want witnesses? They’ll have to give him due process if he does.
THE FIRST CABINET MEMBER — “Senate confirms Biden’s pick for national intelligence director,”by Andrew Desiderio and Burgess Everett: “Avril Haines, Biden’s pick to serve as director of national intelligence, was confirmed by an 84-10 vote … Sen. Tom Cotton (R-Ark.) cleared the way for a vote earlier Wednesday after initially resisting speedy confirmation of her nomination. …
“Sen. Josh Hawley (R-Mo.) … said he would hold up quick confirmation of Homeland Security nominee Alejandro Mayorkas. It’s unclear if Mayorkas can even get out of committee in its current formation, according to a Republican senator. And there are multiple GOP holds on bringing him directly to the floor, not just Hawley, the senator said.”
WaPo’s SMK has a good roundup of Biden’s first day in office.
And the newspaper’s Ashley Parkergets a tour of Biden’s Oval Office.
POLITICO announced its new White House team this morning: Playbook’s own Eugene Daniels, Laura Barrón-López, Natasha Bertrand, Chris Cadelago, Natasha Korecki, Anita Kumar, Tyler Pager and Alex Thompson, led by editors Sam Stein and Emily Cadei. Staff note from Blake Hounshell and Carrie Budoff Brown
BIDEN’S THURSDAY — The president, first lady Jill Biden, VP Kamala Harris and second gentleman Doug Emhoff will watch the virtual presidential inaugural prayer service at 10 a.m. in the Blue Room. Biden and Harris will receive the President’s Daily Brief at 12:45 p.m. At 2 p.m., Biden will speak about pandemic response and sign executive orders and other actions in the State Dining Room, with Harris attending. They’ll be briefed at 2:25 p.m. by members of their Covid-19 team.
— PRESS SECRETARY JEN PSAKI will brief at 4 p.m.
PLAYBOOK READS
DON’T MISS IT: The Playbook team will sit down with CEDRIC RICHMOND, the White House senior adviser and director of the Office of Public Engagement, today at 1:30 p.m. ET. We’ll discuss Biden’s top legislative priorities and news of the day with Richmond.Register here
BIDEN SETS STANDARD FOR PROFESSIONAL BEHAVIOR: “I’m not joking when I say this: If you ever work with me and I hear you treat another colleague with disrespect, talk down to someone, I will fire you on the spot. No ifs, ands or buts.” (Serious question on our minds this morning: Does this standard apply to how mid-level press aides treat reporters?)
CORONAVIRUS TRACKER: The U.S. reported 4,409 Covid-19 deaths and 186,000 new coronavirus cases Wednesday.
— Today marks one year since the first confirmed coronavirus case in the U.S. AP
— Biden signed an executive order Wednesday creating a national standard of mask wearing in federal buildings and during interstate travel. The Independent
— At least 14.3 MILLION people have been vaccinated. WaPo
REFLECTING ON INAUGURATION DAY —“Where Biden stood, reminders of a failed insurrection,”AP: “On the very spot where President Joe Biden delivered his inaugural address, an insurrectionist mob had tried — and failed — to overturn his election just two weeks before. Nearby, at the West Terrace doors, a Capitol police officer was brutally assaulted with a flagpole in one of the siege’s most chaotic moments. …
“And from the podium, the starkest sight of all: a National Mall mostly empty, dotted with troops, the usual crowd of spectators replaced by a silent field of American flags.”
ICYMI: Biden pal Sen. CHRIS COONStold our Alex Thompson on Wednesday that the newly minted president “is planning to run again” in 2024. Biden will be 82 on Inauguration Day 2025. “He is up for the challenge,” Coons said.
PROMISE KEPT? — CNNlooks at how one of Biden’s promises — to make his Cabinet “look like the country” — has fared now that nominees are in the process of getting confirmed.
WHAT’S NEXT? — “Trump leaves behind diminished GOP,” by Elena Schneider: “Three of the big power centers that drove the GOP’s last successful midterm campaign are no longer the same forces in party politics now, with Republicans out of the White House and in the minority in both chambers of Congress. The Koch network of megadonors and big-spending outside groups has stepped back its partisan political campaigning, while the U.S. Chamber of Commerce not only shrunk its spending but made a bipartisan shift.
“Others, like the National Rifle Association, [have] been consumed by internal strife. The advocacy group announced last week it would be filing for bankruptcy. In their place, power and cash consolidated around Trump and the GOP’s Senate and House leadership in recent years.”
DISINFORMATION PERSISTS — “‘They Have Not Legitimately Won’: Pro-Trump Media Keeps the Disinformation Flowing,” NYT: “Forgoing any appeals for healing or reflection, right-wing media organizations that spread former President Donald J. Trump’s distortions about the 2020 election continued on Wednesday to push conspiracy theories about large-scale fraud, with some predicting more political conflict in the months ahead.”
KNOWING KAMALA HARRIS — The San Francisco Chronicle has a seven-part podcast with Joe Garofoli and Tal Kopan going deep into the new VP’s life and career, to which they added a new bonus episode this week. Listen here
SNEAK PEEK — Time’s post-inauguration cover featuring a story by Charlotte Alter on “how the quest for unity will be President Joe Biden’s defining test.”
PLAYBOOKERS
FIRST IN PLAYBOOK — NYT White House correspondent Katie Rogers, a key chronicler of Melania Trump’s tenure, will be writing a book about Jill Biden’s first year as first lady. Rogers is repped by Javelin’s Matt Latimer, and her book will be published by Crown.
JIM JORDAN ON PARDONS: At the inauguration we caught up with Rep. Jim Jordan (R-Ohio) while we waited for Biden to take the oath of office. Jordan mentioned he had recently talked to Trump about pardons, and we had the following exchange:
Playbook: “Don’t you find some of these pardons an abuse of power?”
Jordan: “No, the pardon power is broad and the Constitution is pretty clear that the president can pardon who he thinks is worthy of a pardon.”
Playbook: “If Biden were to pardon his son tomorrow, how would you feel about that?”
Jordan: “The president’s pardon power is pretty broad — we’ve had hearings on that — so that’s up to Joe Biden.”
Playbook: “You wouldn’t criticize Joe Biden if he pardoned his son tomorrow?
Jordan: “I don’t know, I haven’t even thought about it. My guess is the country would have a problem with that.”
Playbook: “I find that very hard to believe. These pardons seem like a gross abuse of power to a lot of ethics experts.”
Jordan: “They have to take their issue up with the Constitution. Because the Constitution is pretty clear.”
Playbook: “Do you want presidents just willy-nilly pardoning aides who are charged with defrauding —”
Jordan: “Again, the president has that broad authority. At some point, soon-to-be-President Biden will be able to pardon who he thinks is worthy of a pardon. That’s just the way the Constitution is.”
SPICER UPDATE: Since we reported that SEAN SPICER, the former Trump press secretary turned Newsmax host, has applied to be a member of the White House Correspondents’ Association, reaction has come mostly from the left. ERIC SCHULTZ, a senior adviser to Barack Obama, called it “a terribly consequential decision pending before WHCA” that “will be a major test if they prize truth over all else — or they will reward the pioneer of using the WH podium for disinformation.”
On Wednesday, Spicer was spotted at Trump’s farewell speech at Andrews Air Force Base, which is exactly the kind of event a WHCA member would cover. The problem? He was there as a guest of the president, not as a member of the press corps. That’s a distinction that may matter to the WHCA.
A KENNEDY BACK IN THE WHITE HOUSE? The late TED KENNEDY’S 53-year-old son, former Rhode Island Rep. PATRICK KENNEDY, has launched a full-on campaign to head the White House’s Office of National Drug Control Policy. Kennedy, a mental health advocate who served on a Trump commission charged with tackling drug addiction, wrote a cover letter on his website: “To whom it may concern in the Biden-Harris transition team.” It cites his own struggles with addiction and experience with the National Institute of Mental Health. Here’s the thing: Biden officials tell our ace reporter TYLER PAGER that he hates when candidates openly lobby for jobs. At the same time, another official said, “Biden really liked Teddy.”
Kennedy tells Tara he’s been in talks with the transition team, but “I’m trying to put my aspirations for the administration on hold, kind of be patient, because we’ve got a five-alarm fire” with Covid.
SPOTTED AT THE LINCOLN, per the White House pool: Harris and the new second gentleman dancing to “Lovely Day” and holding hands during Wednesday night’s celebration. TOM HANKS and JOHN LEGEND were also in attendance. Harris was seen clapping her hands while KATY PERRY sang “Firework” steps away from where Martin Luther King delivered his “I Have a Dream” speech.
FIRST IN PLAYBOOK — Liz Allen, a partner at Glover Park Group who took a leave of absence to run communications for Harris during the general election, is returning to the firm, which is now known as Finsbury Glover Hering.
— Julia Nesheiwat is now a commissioner for the U.S. Arctic Research Commission (serving a four-year term) and will focus on climate, energy, the environment and national security. She most recently was the homeland security adviser in the White House and has served in multiple administrations.
TRANSITIONS — Sandeep Prasanna is now an attorney-adviser at DOJ’s Office of Legislative Affairs. He previously was subcommittee director for intelligence and counterterrorism on the House Homeland Security Committee. … Rep. David Valadao (R-Calif.) is adding several former top Interior Department staffers: Amanda Hall as legislative director, Faith Vander Voort as comms director and Hannah Cooke as scheduler and financial administrator. …
… Carlos Sanchez, Aaron Trujillo and Monica Garcia are joining Sen. Ben Ray Luján’s (D-N.M.) office. Sanchez will be COS, Trujillo will be deputy COS and Garcia will be comms director.… Eli Mansour is now comms director for Rep. Diana Harshbarger (R-Tenn.). He most recently was deputy press secretary at the Department of Education.
HAPPY BIRTHDAY: Sen. Kevin Cramer … Eric Holder … Gary Locke … CNNers Sam Feist and Matt Hoye … Getty photographer Win McNamee (of “Via Getty” pic fame) … esteemed journalist Matt Cooper … Chris Donovan … POLITICO Europe’s Helen Collis … Campbell Spencer, celebrating with a Zoom birthday toast with friends (h/t Kristen Thomaselli) … Loren DeJonge Schulman (h/t Ben Chang)
His daughter, Rhena, became a medical technician and married an American doctor, David C. Miller, who was serving at the African hospital — Albert Schweitzer Hospital.
Albert Schweitzer joined Albert Einstein in warning the world of the dangers in developing nuclear weapons.
In 1952, Dr. Schweitzer was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize. He used the prize money to build a leper colony.
Schweitzer embraced a pro-life philosophy, explaining:
“For months on end, I lived in a continual state of mental agitation.
Without the least success I concentrated — even during my daily work at the hospital — on the real nature of the affirmation of life and of ethics …
I was wandering about in a thicket where no path was to be found. I was pushing against an iron door that would not yield.
…
In that mental state, I had to take a long journey up the river …
Lost in thought, I sat on deck of the barge, struggling to find the elementary and universal concept of the ethical that I had not discovered in any philosophy.
I covered sheet after sheet with disconnected sentences merely to concentrate on the problem.
Two days passed.
Late on the third day, at the very moment when, at sunset, we were making our way through a herd of hippopotamuses, there flashed upon my mind, unforeseen and unsought, the phrase:
‘Ehrfurcht vor dem Leben’ (‘Reverence for Life’).
The iron door had yielded. The path in the thicket had become visible.”
Schweitzer’s words stand in contrast to utilitarian cultures and political party platforms advocating euthanasia, organ harvesting, honor-killings, and abortion,
At the beginning of World War II, The New York Times reported October 10, 1933, on the utilitarian views of socialized medicine in Germany:
“NAZI PLAN TO KILL INCURABLES … The Ministry of Justice … explaining the (National Socialist Workers Party) … intentions to authorize physicians to end the sufferings of the incurable patient …
The Catholic newspaper Germania hastened to observe: ‘The Catholic faith binds the conscience of its followers not to accept this method’ …
In Lutheran circles, too, life is regarded as something that God alone can take …
Euthanasia … has become a widely discussed word in the (Third) Reich … No life still valuable to the State will be wantonly destroyed.”
In contrast to this utilitarian view, Dr. Schweitzer stated:
“Ethics is nothing other than Reverence for Life.
Reverence for Life affords me my fundamental principle of morality, namely, that good consists in maintaining, assisting and enhancing life, and to destroy, to harm or to hinder life is evil.”
In declaring National Sanctity of Human Life Day, President Trump stated January 22, 2018:
“Reverence for every human life, one of the values for which our Founding Fathers fought, defines the character of our Nation. Today, it moves us to promote the health of pregnant mothers and their unborn children.”
Schweitzer’s attitude was in agreement with the Hippocratic Oath, which, up until recent times, was taken by all medical practitioners:
“I swear … I will use those dietary regimens which will benefit my patients according to my greatest ability and judgement, and I will do no harm or injustice to them.
I will not give a lethal drug to anyone if I am asked, nor will I advise such a plan; and similarly I will not give a woman a pessary to cause an abortion.
In purity and according to divine law will I carry out my life and my art.”
Dr. Albert Schweitzer wrote in Indian Thought and Its Development (1935):
“The laying down of the commandment to not kill and to not damage is one of the greatest events in the spiritual history of mankind.”
Dr. Albert Schweitzer wrote in his autobiography Out of My Life and Thought: An Autobiography (1931):
“The world-view based on reverence for life is, through the religious character of its ethic of active love and through its fervor, essentially akin to that of Christianity …
What Christianity needs is to be filled with the spirit of Jesus Christ, to become living, intense, a religion of love which it was meant to be.
Since I myself am deeply devoted to Christianity, I seek to serve it with fidelity and truth.
I hope that the thought which has resulted in this simple, ethical-religious idea — reverence for life — may help to bring Christianity and thought closer to each other.”
Schweitzer’s life has been portrayed in numerous documentaries and films, including the 2009 movie Albert Schweitzer-A Life for Africa, starring Jeroen Krabbé.
Many groups work to raise awareness of crimes against life, and endeavor to protect it.
VOICE OF THE MARTYRS documents crimes committed against Christian minorities in Egypt, Iraq, Iran, Syria, Pakistan, Turkey, Palestine, Uzbekistan, South Sudan, Ivory Coast, Tanzania, Indonesia, and Nigeria.
INTERNATIONAL SOCIETY FOR HUMAN RIGHTS reported that 80 per cent of all acts of religious discrimination in the world today are directed at Christians.
CENTRE FOR THE STUDY OF GLOBAL CHRISTIANITY estimated that every years 100,000 Christians, 11 every hour, die because of their faith.
PEW RESEARCH CENTER reported in 2012 that Christians faced discrimination in 139 countries, nearly 3/4s of the nations in the world.
THE GLOBAL WAR ON CHRISTIANS (Random House) author John Allen stated that followers of Jesus are “indisputably … the most persecuted religious body on the planet.”
CHRISTIANOPHOBIA:
A FAITH UNDER ATTACK (Eerdmans) author Rupert Shortt reported from Nigeria to the Far East, Christians are targets of violent human rights abuses and intimidation: “in a vast belt of land from Morocco to Pakistan there is scarcely a single country in which Christians can worship entirely without harassment.”
OPEN DOORS USA estimated 100 million Christians are persecuted globally each year, mostly from Islamic extremism. Open Doors president David Curry “Tactics used by the Islamic State are being adopted and used in Africa.”
WORLD MAGAZINE reported: “Of the 50 countries most hostile to Christians, Kenya rose on the list more than any other country, jumping to No. 19 … Sudan (No. 6) and Eritrea (No. 9) … Nigeria moved into the top 10 for the first time ever … where more than 2,400 people died for their faith in specific, targeted attacks … The Wall Street Journal reported Boko Haram now controls a swath of land the size of Belgium.”
After reading these tragic reports, one is challenged by a sermon of Dr. Albert Schweitzer, January 6, 1905:
“Our Christianity — yours and mine — has become a falsehood and a disgrace, if the crimes are not atoned for in the very place where they were instigated …
For every person who committed an atrocity … someone must step in to help in Jesus’ name;
for every person who robbed, someone must bring a replacement; for everyone who cursed, someone must bless …”
He continued:
“When you speak about missions, let this be your message:
We must make atonement for all the terrible crimes we read of in the newspapers.
We must make atonement for the still worse ones, which we do not read about in the papers, crimes that are shrouded in the silence of the jungle night.”
After his wife died, Dr. Albert Schweitzer continued to work in Africa till he died at the age of 90.
Overcoming innumerable difficulties, he once wrote:
“One day, in my despair, I threw myself into a chair in the consulting room and groaned out:
‘What a blockhead I was to come out here to doctor savages like these!’ …
Whereupon his native assistant quietly remarked:
‘Yes, Doctor, here on earth you are a great blockhead, but not in heaven.'”
Dr. Albert Schweitzer wrote:
“I don’t know what your destiny will be, but one thing I do know:
the only ones among you who will be really happy are those who have sought and found how to serve.”
President Joe Biden will watch a virtual Presidential Inauguration Prayer Service then receive his daily briefing. Later, the president will deliver remarks on the COVID-19 response and sign more executive orders before receiving a briefing from the COVID-19 team. Keep up with the president on Our President’s Schedule Page. President Biden’s Itinerary for 1/21/21 – …
President Joe Biden had been in the White House for just a few hours when he began putting America last with the stroke of a pen. Biden signed a total of 17 executive orders that appeared to be solely focused on undoing the America First policies enacted under former President Donald Trump. Open Borders Biden …
Press Secretary Jen Psaki dodged a question Wednesday night on President Joe Biden’s abortion policy by telling reporters that Biden is “a devout Catholic.” EWTN reporter Owen Jensen asked Psaki about “two big concerns for pro-life America” during the first press conference of the Biden White House Wednesday evening: the Hyde Amendment, which bans the …
The Senate overwhelmingly confirmed Avril Haines, President Joe Biden’s director of national intelligence, on Wednesday evening. Haines was confirmed 84-10, and is the first Biden Cabinet nominee to be confirmed, the Washington Post reported. The vote came one day after Haines’ hearing before the Senate Intelligence Committee and was in limbo much of Wednesday due …
Amazon offered to help the Biden administration on Wednesday, shortly after President Joe Biden was sworn into office, with efforts to distribute the coronavirus vaccine, a proposal that the tech giant had not submitted to the Trump administration in the month since the vaccine was approved for public use. “As you being your work leading …
As D.C. has been ‘locked-down’ and guarded by an army of 25,000 National Guard troops, the traditional inaugural balls have been replaced with a star-studded event hosted by Tom Hanks and replete with adulation. The 90-minute show will start at 8:30 p.m. EST and include performances by Justin Timberlake, Jon Bon Jovi, Bruce Springsteen, and …
White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki holds a press briefing Wednesday. Content created by Conservative Daily News and some content syndicated through CDN is available for re-publication without charge under the Creative Commons license. Visit our syndication page for details and requirements.
President Joe Biden signs several executive orders and other presidential actions during an Oval Office session Wednesday. The event is scheduled to begin at 5:15 p.m. EST. Content created by Conservative Daily News and some content syndicated through CDN is available for re-publication without charge under the Creative Commons license. Visit our syndication page for details and …
Wyoming state Sen. Anthony Bouchard announced a primary challenge to Rep. Liz Cheney on Wednesday after her vote to impeach former President Donald Trump last week. “Liz Cheney’s longtime opposition to President Trump and her most recent vote for Impeachment shows just how out-of-touch she is with Wyoming,” Bouchard said in his announcement, calling for …
President Joe Biden’s accuser Tara Reade weighed in on the former vice president’s ascension to the highest office in the land Wednesday, calling Biden’s inauguration “unspeakably hard to watch.” “Coming forward about being sexually harassed and assaulted in 1993 when I was Joe Biden’s staffer was excruciating on so many levels,” Reade told the Daily …
President-elect Joe Biden announced on Wednesday that he would cancel a permit critical to the construction of the Keystone XL pipeline. The move marks the second time that a Democratic administration has effectively killed the $8 billion project. While environmental and conservation groups praised the move, TC Energy, the company behind the pipeline’s construction, argued …
Why is Washington, D.C. completely locked down by National Guard patrols carrying loaded weapons on the eve of the Biden inauguration, while the Trump inauguration in 2017 was open to the public for all to see and to attend? On inauguration day in 2017 there were many protests permitted against Trump, and at least one …
President-elect Joe Biden will order the Justice Department to review a Trump administration rule that banned prosecutors from issuing settlement agreements that allowed defendants to pay outside special interest groups instead of their victims or the government. Former Attorney General Jeff Sessions put an end to the Obama-era practice in a 2017 memo, according to …
The default settings to sponsor inauguration flags sends money to the Presidential Inaugural Committee’s partners — including the Planned Parenthood of America, the nation’s largest abortion provider. The Presidential Inaugural Committee installed an “extensive public art display” that includes 191,500 flags on the National Mall in Washington, D.C. Americans may symbolically sponsor flags by donating …
President Joe Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris participate in a military pass in review on Wednesday. The event is scheduled to begin at 1:40 p.m. EST. Content created by Conservative Daily News and some content syndicated through CDN is available for re-publication without charge under the Creative Commons license. Visit our syndication page for details and …
Media outlets and news personalities have made a number of major mistakes throughout the time that President Donald Trump has served in the White House. Publications such as the New York Times, CNN, and Politico inaccurately portrayed conversations, the state of the president’s finances, his dealings with Russia (or lack thereof), and a variety of …
President Donald Trump spoke briefly with reporters upon leaving the White House at the end of his term. Content created by Conservative Daily News and some content syndicated through CDN is available for re-publication without charge under the Creative Commons license. Visit our syndication page for details and requirements.
The President-Elect and The Vice President-Elect are Sworn In as the 46th President of the United States and 49th Vice President of the United States, and The President-Elect Delivers an Inaugural Address. Content created by Conservative Daily News and some content syndicated through CDN is available for re-publication without charge under the Creative Commons license. Visit …
President Donald Trump and First Lady Melania Trump participate in a departure ceremony Wednesday morning. Content created by Conservative Daily News and some content syndicated through CDN is available for re-publication without charge under the Creative Commons license. Visit our syndication page for details and requirements.
Happy Thursday, dear Kruiser Morning Briefing friends. The lemon-blueberry muffins will be ready shortly.
I don’t know about any of you, but I had a great time yesterday. It’s amazing what some extended quality time away from the television and the infernal internet can do for one’s spirits.
Also, I got rid of about ten pounds of hair.
We appear to have made it through yesterday and we’re all just fine. For the moment. Now that it’s here, we have to figure out how we’re going to weather the Harris-Biden administration with Joe Biden as president. Priority One: making sure that Joe Biden stays healthy.
We’ve joked for a long time about maybe doing office pools to pick the date that Kamala would officially become president. I originally didn’t think that Joe would make it to the beginning of March. I’m revising that opinion now.
We were all convinced that the grand Democratic plan was to just get Ol’ Gropes into office, then manufacture some sort of COVID related event that would make him step aside for health reasons. As I have repeatedly warned, it’s Doctor Jill everyone has to worry about. I think even the Dem higher-ups underestimated her. She’s probably pumping Joe with enough supplements and healthy food to keep him around as the prop president a lot longer than anyone planned. She’s definitely trying to ruin the plans of the Dem Illuminati and the ambitions of the new vice-president.
Maybe that’s not a bad thing.
Yeah, as we saw on his first day, Puppet President Joe can do a lot of damage to the United States in a very short time. We’ll be dizzy from executive orders before the weekend gets here.
The Democrats, however, are the “be careful what you wish for” party. Whenever the Democrat who sane people like us think we want gone finally is, there is a ninety-nine percent chance that his or her replacement will be even worse. Seriously, those people have a never ending supply of awful gushing forth from wherever they’re spawned.
California is about to find that out the hard way with Kamala Harris’s replacement in the Senate, Alex Padilla. The slate of Democrats that Gavin Newsom was considering to serve out her term was a real rogue’s gallery of progressivism. The choices were worse, more worse, and worst.
Kamala Harris is obviously being groomed by the media to soon take over for Biden. She’s gone from being the woman even the Democrats couldn’t stand during the primaries to one that the MSM can’t stop fawning over. The repacking of Joe Biden has been bad enough, but the PR work they’re doing for Harris will have you avoiding all news before and after meal times.
For example:
She wears pants like every corporate woman in America. And sneakers, which a lot of those women also do when walking to their chosen mode of transportation for the trip home from work. But now it’s a “style.”
No, it’s just pants.
By the way, that’s from the New York Post, a news organization that usually doesn’t get all Trapper Keeper school girl gushy over Democrats. Imagine four years of that from the other New York paper.
I don’t want to die soon, but I honestly don’t think that my liver can survive a nasally Harris presidency. I know I’ve been writing that I’m not in much of a unity mood but I think I’ve found something a lot of us can get behind: hoping and praying that President Biden stays healthy.
Try keto, Joe. It’s a life changer.
Can Nobel Prizes Be Revoked?
Everything Isn’t Awful
These calls from Dave Portnoy telling business owners they’ll be receiving help from the Barstool Fund are heartbreaking (it shouldn’t be this way) and heartwarming at the same time. I’ll probably feature one a week here.
Joe Biden and Kamala Harris sworn in on Capitol Hill . . .
Joe Biden and Kamala Harris were sworn in Wednesday as the president and vice president of the United States, with the new commander-in-chief calling for an end to America’s “uncivil war” in a historically subdued ceremony. Biden, the 46th president in the nation’s history, was sworn in just before noon by Supreme Court Justice John Roberts on an heirloom family Bible dating back more than a century, shortly after Harris was sworn in by Justice Sonia Sotomayor. In a brief inaugural address, Biden called on Americans to give more weight to the ties that bind them together than the differences that would pull them apart. New York Post
Trump leaves White House for last time, promises to be back ‘in some form’ . . . President Trump left office Wednesday vowing to return to the spotlight soon “in some form,” while the Senate’s new Democratic majority prepared to begin an impeachment trial next week to bar him from ever holding office again. Snubbing the presidential inauguration of Joe Biden, the first time in 152 years that a departing president has deliberately done so, Mr. Trump instead received a warm send-off from a few hundred supporters at Joint Base Andrews in Maryland. “Goodbye, we love you,” Mr. Trump said at a rally-style departure ceremony complete with a red carpet and 21-gun salute. “We will be back in some form. Have a good life, we will see you soon. Washington Times
The Republican future starts now . . . President Joe Biden’s inauguration marks not only a new administration’s beginning but also a new chapter for the loyal opposition. The GOP lost the White House while picking up U.S. House seats, holding half the Senate, and adding to its numbers in state legislative chambers. These conflicting outcomes leave Republicans facing the difficult task of cementing blue-collar Trump voters into their ranks while regaining strength in the suburbs and making inroads with an increasingly diverse electorate. To rebuild, Republicans must decide what their party stands for. The way forward begins with clarifying what the GOP’s answers should be to the nation’s challenges, with an eye to the 2022 elections. Wall Street Journal
Biden to use wartime powers in coronavirus fight . . . President Biden will issue an executive order on Thursday directing agencies to use the Defense Production Act (DPA) and other powers to speed up the manufacturing of testing and vaccine supplies and other items needed to fight COVID-19. Biden administration officials signaled they would be more aggressive than the previous administration in invoking the DPA, which allows the federal government to force companies to increase production of critical supplies during national emergencies. The Hill
Politics
Biden inaugurated, rolls back Trump policies on wall, climate, health, Muslims . . . U.S. President Joe Biden signed 15 executive actions shortly after being sworn on Wednesday, undoing policies put in place by his Republican predecessor, Donald Trump, and making his first moves on the pandemic and climate change. Biden said there was “no time to waste” in issuing the executive orders, memorandums and directives.“Some of the executive actions I’m going to be signing today are going to help change the course of the COVID crisis, we’re going to combat climate change in a way that we haven’t done so far and advance racial equity and support other underserved communities” said Biden. “These are just all starting points”. Reuters
Biden’s Chief Of Staff orders all executive agencies to freeze Trump’s ‘midnight regulations’ immediately . . . Ron Klain, President Joe Biden’s chief of staff, directed every executive agency Wednesday to halt any pending regulations installed by the Trump administration and outlined a review process for each in turn. “The President has asked me to communicate to each of you his plan for managing the Federal regulatory process at the outset of his Administration,” he wrote in a memo distributed Wednesday afternoon.” Daily Caller
Biden adds preferred pronouns dropdown to White House contact form . . . President Biden’s administration has already made some modifications to the White House’s online contact form.
The form gives users the option to list their preferred pronouns, with possible responses including “she/her,” “he/him,” “they/them,” “other,” and “prefer not to share.” The website also offers expanded options of user prefixes, with “Mx.,” “other (please specify),” and “none” listed alongside the more conventional “Mr.,” “Ms.,” “Mrs.,” and “Dr.” The change was celebrated by the Gay & Lesbian Alliance Against Defamation, which said that the move represents a step toward inclusivity. Washington Examiner
First things first.
DHS halts deportations for 100-days . . . Acting Homeland Security Secretary David Pekoske announced a 100-day pause on some deportations late Wednesday, moving to carry out one of President Biden’s most prominent campaign promises. The halt is to take effect Friday. Security experts have warned that the pause could exacerbate the border situation by inviting a new surge of migrants eager to take advantage of more lax enforcement if they can get to the interior of the US. Washington Times
Joe Biden revokes Keystone XL permit, halts Arctic refuge leasing . . . President Biden on Wednesday signed a sweeping executive order that revokes a key permit for the controversial Keystone XL pipeline, halts oil and gas leasing at a wildlife refuge in Alaska and carries out several other environmental actions.
This deals a devastating blow to the approximately 1,200-mile-pipeline that carried oil from Canada to the U.S. and that was opposed by several environmental and indigenous groups. The action reverses a decision on a project championed by President Trump, who first issued a permit allowing it to cross the border during the first months of his presidency. The Hill
President Biden gender equality order rankles religious conservatives . . . Joe Biden on Wednesday announced an executive order confirming religious conservatives’ fears that he will undo Trump-era exemptions to gender identity nondiscrimination laws. The order, released in a blast of 17 directives aimed at undoing former President Donald Trump’s policies, requires all entities under federal control to forgo discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation and gender identity. Referencing the landmark Supreme Court decision Bostock v. Clayton County, which interpreted Title VII of the Civil Rights Act to protect gay and transgender people in the workplace, Biden’s team said his executive order would enforce that ruling on the government. Washington Examiner
Labor Pick Paid Biden-Linked Firm Tens of Thousands Prior to Nomination . . . Months before President Joe Biden tapped Boston mayor Marty Walsh to head the Department of Labor, Walsh began using campaign funds to make large payments to the D.C. consulting firm founded by top Biden adviser Anita Dunn. Walsh’s campaign first paid Dunn’s firm, Democratic communications giant SKDKnickerbocker, $18,000 in early September in “consulting” fees. Just one day after receiving Walsh’s payment, Dunn—who led Biden’s presidential campaign and serves as SKDK’s managing director—joined the Biden transition team as one of four national co-chairs. Washington Free Beacon
Schumer becomes new Senate majority leader . . . Senator Schumer has achieved his long-held dream of becoming Senate majority leader after three new Democrats were sworn into the Senate by Vice President Kamala Harris on Wednesday following President Biden’s inauguration. The victories by Sens. Jon Ossoff and Raphael Warnock in Georgia earlier this month create a 50-50 party split in the upper chamber and give Democrats the majority because Vice President-elect Kamala Harris is the tie-breaking vote. After falling short in 2016 and again in November, Schumer has finally ousted his nemesis, Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.), who raised tens of millions of dollars himself to stave off the Democratic takeover. The Hill
Ex-Obama advisor calls Trump supporters an ‘issue of Homeland Security’ . . . An Obama-era deputy national security adviser painted Trump supporters as an “issue of Homeland Security” and called for government and Big Tech to regulate information on social media in a televised interview Wednesday afternoon. “It’s going to take many years to detox the disinformation, the lies, the hate that has been spread,” Ben Rhodes said. “A whole segment of the American population has been radicalized over what’s happened the last four years, and by the fact that Donald Trump is no longer there – they can no longer see Donald Trump representing their grievances in the highest office. He said the result would be “a lot of work” for national security officials. Fox News
Totalitarian regime is coming to town near you.
Trump gets warm FL greeting from supporters after arriving from DC . . . Former President Trump received a warm greeting from supporters in South Florida on Wednesday morning as he made his way to his Mar-a-Lago resort after leaving the White House for the last time as the commander-in-chief.
Fans waved flags and held up signs and cell phones in West Palm Beach as they cheered Trump’s return to the state, where he plans to spend his immediate post-presidency. Trump waved back to the crowd as his motorcade slowly made its way through the streets after Air Force One touched down in the Sunshine State. Fox News
Lindsey Graham: ‘If you want erase Trump from the [Republican] party, you will get erased . . . Republican South Carolina Sen. Lindsey Graham said Wednesday that it would be grave error to try to “erase” former President Donald Trump from the Republican Party because of the support he still enjoys within it. “I hope people in our party understand the party itself. If you’re wanting to erase Donald Trump from the party, you’re going to get erased,” Graham told Fox News just hours after the inauguration Wednesday of President Joe Biden. “Most Republicans like his policies.” Daily Caller
National Security
Left-wing violence explodes over Biden inauguration . . . Police declared an unlawful assembly Wednesday night in Portland, Ore., after about 150 rioters caused damage to a federal immigration facility in the city. The unrest near the ICE (Immigration and Customs Enforcement) building was declared after rioters started throwing rocks and eggs, and vandalizing the building, located in the city’s south waterfront neighborhood. Video clips show people holding banners that read: “We are ungovernable” and “We don’t want Biden – We want revenge!” for “Police Murders,” “Imperialist Wars” and “Fascist Massacres.” Fox News
International
China sanctions Pompeo, senior Trump officials as Biden takes office . . . The Chinese government announced sanctions on former secretary of state Mike Pompeo, former national security adviser Robert O’Brien, and over 20 other figures from the Trump administration as they left office Wednesday. The Chinese foreign ministry released a statement on Wednesday citing policy actions taken by the outgoing administration as motivation for the sanctions. “Over the past few years, some anti-China politicians in the United States, out of their selfish political interests and prejudice and hatred against China … have planned, promoted, and executed a series of crazy moves which have gravely interfered in China’s internal affairs, undermined China’s interests, offended the Chinese people, and seriously disrupted China-U.S. relations,” the announcement reads. Washington Free Beacon
Twitter locks account of US embassy in China over its defense of policy toward Muslim Uighur . . . Twitter has locked the account of China’s U.S. embassy for a tweet that defended China’s policy towards Muslim Uighurs in Xinjiang, which the U.S. social media platform said violated its stand against “dehumanizing” people. China’s Foreign Ministry said on Thursday that it was confused by the move and that it was the embassy’s responsibility to call out disinformation and clarify the truth.
The Chinese Embassy account, @ChineseEmbinUS, posted a tweet this month that said that Uighur women had been emancipated and were no longer “baby-making machines”, citing a study reported by state-backed newspaper China Daily. Reuters
Suicide bombs rock central Baghdad, 6 dead . . . Twin suicide bombings hit Iraq’s capital Thursday killing at least six people and wounding at least 25 others, police and state TV said. Three police officials said two explosions hit a commercial center in central Baghdad. Iraqi state television reported they were suicide bombings. Many of the wounded were in serious condition and there was property damage. The police officials spoke on condition of anonymity in line with regulations. The bombings are the first in years to target Baghdad’s bustling commercial area. They come amid heightened political tensions as Iraq looks to have early elections in October. Washington Times
Crippled by sanctions, Iran traders seek lifeline in Iraq . . . Piles of plush carpets line the floors of a northern Iraq shopping center hosting traders from neighboring Iran who hope the spangle of their ornate handicrafts might offer a lifeline out of poverty.
In their own country, the economy is in tatters amid crippling U.S. sanctions. “Our money is so devalued, so when we come to this side — apart from the cultural exchange that we share — from a financial perspective it’s more profitable for us,” said Iranian Ramiyar Parwiz, the organizer of the exhibition who is originally from Sanandaj. “The money we receive … whether in dollars or dinars has a higher value on our side and it’s worth a lot.” Associated Press
Money
Restaurants Get Sales Lift From Latest Stimulus Checks . . . Restaurants chains say they are getting a sales bump from the latest round of stimulus money going to households, but spending patterns from the first batch of checks earlier in the pandemic suggest the lift can fade quickly. McDonald’s owners, Checkers, TGI Fridays and others report January boost. The roughly $900 billion coronavirus aid package signed into law last month provided a second round of stimulus payments––$600 per adult and $600 a child. While the amounts are lower than the $1,200 and $500 delivered last spring, they are having an impact, at least short-term, according to some restaurant executives and industry data. Wall Street Journal
Starbucks, Microsoft to help Washington’s vaccine distribution . . . Washington is working with private companies based in the state to help accelerate its coronavirus vaccine distribution plan. On Monday, Gov. Jay Inslee announced the statewide public-private partnership — which includes Costco, Starbucks and Microsoft — called the Washington State Vaccine Command and Coordination Center. The partnership will be led by the state’s Department of Health and all participating organizations will work together to develop a framework to deliver vaccines in Washington “as effectively and efficiently as possible,” Inslee’s office said in a Medium post on Monday. Fox Business
Bitcoin added by BlackRock to two funds as eligible investment . . . Blackrock is adding bitcoin futures as an eligible investment to two funds, a company filing showed, in a move to bring the world of cryptocurrency to its clients. The world’s largest asset manager said it could use bitcoin derivatives for its funds BlackRock Strategic Income Opportunities and BlackRock Global Allocation Fund Inc. The funds will invest only in cash-settled bitcoin futures traded on commodity exchanges registered with the Commodity Futures Trading Commission, the company said in a filing to the Securities and Exchange Commission on Wednesday. Fox Business
You should also know
Court blocks Obamacare transgender surgery mandate . . . A federal court blocked an Obamacare mandate that would compel doctors to perform gender reassignment surgery. An order of Catholic nuns challenged the mandate under the Religious Freedom Restoration Act, arguing that it forces doctors to violate their consciences and medical judgment. A North Dakota district court judge ruled on Tuesday that nuns and other religious health care providers were harmed by the law. “Absent an injunction, they will either be ‘forced to violate their sincerely held religious beliefs’ by performing and covering gender-transition procedures ‘or to incur severe monetary penalties for refusing to comply,'” District Court Judge Peter D. Welte wrote. Washington Free Beacon
Teachers told to locate themselves on ‘oppression matrix’ during a diversity training . . . A public school in Missouri reportedly held a diversity training program for teachers who were told to identify themselves on an “oppression spectrum,” and then watched a video of “George Floyd’s last words.” Cherokee Middle School, which is part of the Springfield Public Schools, reportedly held the training for teachers, which began with a “land acknowledgment” that recognized the “Native and Indigenous Peoples whose land we currently gather on.” “In doing social justice work, it is important we acknowledge the dark history and violence against Native and Indigenous People across the world,” the document reportedly said. Daily Caller
QAnon in crisis as day of reckoning fails to materialize . . . For three years, adherents of the sprawling QAnon conspiracy theory awaited a so-called Great Awakening, scouring anonymous web postings from a shadowy “Q” figure and parsing statements by former U.S. President Donald Trump, whom they believed to be their champion. On Wednesday, they grappled with a harsh reality check: Trump had left office with no mass arrests of the supposed cabal of elites, especially Democrats, he was ostensibly fighting. Instead, Democratic President Joseph Biden was sworn into office, leaving legions of QAnon faithful struggling to make sense of what had transpired. Reuters
Feds closed Michael Flynn leakiInvestigation, found no wrongdoing by Obama-era officials . . . Federal prosecutors quietly closed an investigation into a leak of sensitive information regarding Michael Flynn’s phone calls with a Russian diplomat. The investigators reportedly found no evidence of wrongdoing on the part of Obama administration officials. The investigation, codenamed Operation Echo, centered on a leak to Washington Post columnist David Ignatius, who reported on Jan. 12, 2017 that Flynn spoke by phone to Russian ambassador Sergey Kislyak. The column set in motion a series of events that eventually led to Flynn pleading guilty in the special counsel’s investigation. Daily Caller
Of course, the feds didn’t find any wrongdoing by Obama-era officials. Ignatius is CIA’s go-to “journalist,” when the spooks need something leaked to the press.
Guilty Pleasures
Man ‘lived in Chicago airport in secret for 3 months’ – as COVID made him ‘too scared’ to fly home . . . A 36-year-old man lived undetected in a secure section of Chicago’s O’Hare International Airport for three months because he was “too scared” to go home due to COVID-19, US prosecutors say. Aditya Singh is charged with felony criminal trespass to a restricted area of an airport and misdemeanour theft. He arrived in Chicago on a flight from Los Angeles on 19 October. Mr Singh, who survived on food from other passengers, is unemployed and lives in the city of Orange, California. Cook County Judge Susana Ortiz reacted with surprise when a prosecutor set out the allegations. She reportedly told the court: “So if I understand you correctly, you’re telling me that an unauthorised non-employee individual was allegedly living within a secure part of the O’Hare airport terminal from 19 October 2020 to 16 January 2021 and was not detected? I want to understand you correctly.” Sky News
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Happy Thursday! Nineteen hours in, and Kamala Harris still hasn’t staged a coup and made herself president. Was PatriotEagleNews.usa lying to us??
Quick Hits: Today’s Top Stories
Joe Biden and Kamala Harris on Wednesday were officially sworn in as the 46th president and 49th vice president in American history, respectively.
New Sens. Jon Ossoff, Raphael Warnock, and Alex Padilla were also sworn in on Wednesday, giving Democrats narrow control of Congress’ upper chamber. Sen. Chuck Schumer was elevated to Senate Majority Leader, while Sen. Mitch McConnell became Senate Minority Leader.
The Senate confirmed Avril Haines, Biden’s nominee to serve as director of national intelligence, in an 84 to 10 vote on Wednesday. Additional nominees are expected to be confirmed in the coming days as Sens. Schumer and McConnell come to a power-sharing agreement. The Biden administration on Wednesday announced dozens of acting Cabinet officials who will serve in the interim.
President Biden signed nearly 20 executive orders after being sworn in Wednesday, reversing many of the regulatory actions President Trump had taken during his four years in office. Biden’s orders began the process of re-entering the United States into the World Health Organization and Paris Climate Accord, undid President Trump’s travel ban on several Muslim-majority and African countries, and rescinded the Keystone XL pipeline’s permit, among other things.
Acting DHS Secretary David Pekoske announced Wednesday night the agency will be pausing most deportations for 100 days, effective January 22, to “ensure we have a fair and effective immigration enforcement system focused on protecting national security, border security, and public safety.” The change in policy does not apply to individuals arriving in the U.S. after November 1, 2020, or those engaged in a suspected act of terrorism.
President Biden fired National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) General Counsel Peter Robb on Wednesday night, after asking him to resign earlier in the day. Robb—who was opposed by labor unions across the country—was appointed to the Senate-confirmed role by Trump in 2017, and had 10 months remaining in his term. Michael Pack, Trump’s appointee to lead the U.S. Agency for Global Media, resigned Wednesday at Biden’s request, as did Surgeon General Jerome Adams.
Dozens of far-left agitators took to the streets in Portland, Oregon and Seattle, Washington last night, smashing windows and vandalizing buildings—including a local Democratic Party headquarters and an Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) facility. Many of the rioters carried signs arguing Biden and the Democrats were not progressive enough.
The United States confirmed 188,052 new cases of COVID-19 yesterday per the Johns Hopkins University COVID-19 Dashboard, with 10.7 percent of the 1,762,168 tests reported coming back positive. An additional 4,448 deaths were attributed to the virus on Wednesday, bringing the pandemic’s American death toll to 406,001. According to the COVID Tracking Project, 122,700 Americans are currently hospitalized with COVID-19. According to the Centers for Disease Control, 35,990,150 COVID-19 vaccine doses have been distributed nationwide, and 16,525,281 have been administered.
Biden Stays on Message
American presidents rarely have an opportunity to reach a bigger—and more open-minded—audience than they do on the very first day of their term. Sure, tens of millions tune in to the State of the Union address, and presidents are known to displace primetime broadcasts to address the nation in moments of crisis. But the inaugural address sets the tone for it all.
There were frills: Lady Gaga and Jennifer Lopez performed patriotic anthems, 23-year-old poet laureate Amanda Gorman was a show-stopper, Sen. Amy Klobuchar emceed. But in his 20-minute speech on the steps of the Capitol yesterday, President Joe Biden hit the same notes that President-elect Joe Biden hit last week, and the same notes that candidate Joe Biden hit in the months before that: The United States is better than what we’ve all lived through these past four years, and healing is possible if we remember that we’re Americans first and partisans second.
Biden’s team published an endless stream of policy papers detailing his priorities on his website over the past two years. But this unity message was always the bread and butter of the former vice president’s campaign—in both the primary and general elections. And as naïve as that may sound in our cynical age, it seems increasingly clear that Biden genuinely believes it.
“I know speaking of unity can sound to some like a foolish fantasy. I know the forces that divide us are deep and they are real,” he acknowledged. “But I also know they are not new.”
“Our history has been a constant struggle between the American ideal that we are all created equal and the harsh, ugly reality that racism, nativism, fear, and demonization have long torn us apart,” Biden said. “Through the Civil War, the Great Depression, World War, 9/11; through struggle, sacrifice, and setbacks; our better angels have always prevailed. In each of these moments, enough of us came together to carry all of us forward.”
It didn’t take long for Biden’s call for civil disagreement to be put to the test. Just hours after being sworn in as the nation’s 46th president on Wednesday, he signed 17 executive orders, proclamations, and memoranda—much more than the typical one to two on Inauguration Day itself—many of which aim to reverse the Trump administration’s policy approach to climate change, immigration, and the COVID-19 pandemic.
In keeping with his prioritization of pandemic related policy initiatives, Biden reversed Trump’s decision to leave the World Health Organization and appointed Dr. Anthony Fauci to head its U.S. Delegation. He also reestablished the National Security team responsible for global health—which Trump had disbanded—and enacted a mask and social distancing mandate that will take effect in all federal buildings and on federal property nationwide.
Congressional Republicans are likely to balk (at least on process) at Biden’s immigration-related executive orders, namely his refortification of the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) program and order mandating inclusion of noncitizens in the U.S. Census. Biden also signed executive orders halting construction of the U.S-Mexico border wall and reversing the Trump administration’s travel ban on a number of Muslim-majority and African countries.
Other orders are mere extensions of pandemic-related policy initiatives that were designed to ease economic distress amid this year’s drastic surge in unemployment. For example, Biden signed an extension of the Trump administration’s student debt relief program—originally set to expire January 31—through September 30, and asked the Centers for Disease Control to extend its federal eviction moratorium through the end of March.
It’s a longstanding tradition among presidents (though maybe it shouldn’t be!) to issue a series of politically toxic pardons and commutations on your way out the door. Bill Clinton let tax evader Marc Rich off the hook on his last day in office, and on January 17, 2017, Barack Obama commuted the sentences of Army whistleblower Chelsea Manning and Fuerzas Armadas de Liberación Nacional Puertorriqueña (FALN) leader Oscar López Rivera.
Donald Trump followed their lead. In the waning hours of his presidency, he issued 73 pardons and 70 commutations, extending full pardons to political strategist and ally Steve Bannon and former Trump campaign fundraiser Elliott Broidy. The wave of clemency did not, however, include preemptive pardons for the outgoing president, his family members, or his personal attorney Rudy Giuliani.
As political reporters (present company included!) waited impatiently Tuesday night for the final list of long-anticipated 11th hour pardons, debates reportedly waged within the White House over whether to grant clemency to Bannon—one of the Trump campaign’s top advisers in 2016. Bannon’s possible involvement in the January 6 riots, some aides argued, would further implicate the former president as he prepares to enter his second Senate impeachment trial.
But Trump ultimately opted to grant a full pardon to Bannon, who pleaded not guilty to charges that he defrauded political donors who supported his “We Build The Wall” 501(c)(4) that told donors their money would go toward building a wall at the Southern border. The White House’s justification for the pardon was more vague: “Prosecutors pursued Mr. Bannon with charges related to fraud stemming from his involvement in a political project,” it read. “Mr. Bannon has been an important leader in the conservative movement and is known for his political acumen.”
Both in the U.S. and around the world, the coronavirus is continuing to pick up speed, spreading faster now than at any previous point in the pandemic. The ongoing deployment of effective vaccines may have allowed us to remain relatively unpanicked about this state of affairs, but there’s another potential downside beyond the obvious: That much rampant transmission provides ample opportunity for the virus to mutate. In this piece for The Atlantic, Sarah Zhang breaks down how three different strains of the virus have recently emerged, having apparently independently arrived at some of the same mutations—suggesting that “they confer an evolutionary advantage to the virus.”
Writing at National Review, Andrew McCarthy has some harsh words for Trump’s last-minute use of a pardon power that “has devolved from an obsolescence to an embarrassment in our constitutional system.” Few, if any, of the pardons, McCarthy argues, served any broader purpose. “The clemency list is as run-of-the-mill as these things go: the usual array of cronies, corrupt politicians and their shady financial backers, and panders (President Trump likes rappers!),” he writes. “What you won’t find are clemency grants that make you say, ‘Well, that certainly is in the national interest,’ or even, ‘Now here’s a case where the justice system reached an unjust result—I’m glad the president had the power to correct it.’”
Joe Biden has assumed office at one of the darkest moments in United States history, when a global pandemic has taken the lives of more than 400,000 Americans and rampant polarization continues to test our nation’s character. Did his inaugural address meet the moment? Was his call for unity too idealistic? On Wednesday’s Inauguration Day episode of the Dispatch Podcast, our hosts discuss Biden’s Day 1 executive orders and the once and future Republican Party before breaking down Wednesday’s inauguration ceremony, speech and all.
In his latest French Press(🔒), David writes that Joe Biden has a Reaganesque task before him: Attempting to bring healing to a nation in the grip of both a tangible and an intangible malaise in the forms of our coronavirus pandemic and our shattered sense of national unity. How history will judge him will depend on how successful he is at leading the nation to transcend both.
Meanwhile, Jonah offers the new president some advice in his midweek G-File (🔒): If he’s casting about for figures to model his term in office after, he could do worse than Dwight D. Eisenhower. “While Eisenhower was a great frustration to anti-communists like William F. Buckley, he was an existential obsession for the more extreme figures on the conspiratorial right,” Jonah writes. “This Cold War version of QAnon-ism was a great gift to Ike politically. It let Ike and his supporters cast his opponents on the right as delusional crackpots.”
In his latest Capitolism newsletter (🔒), Scott Lincicome took a deep dive into what the top-down federal approach to vaccine distribution got right—and, just as importantly, how it frequently stepped on its own feet thanks to regulatory inflexibility and cumbersome interference in medical market distribution and supply chains.
Man, we put out a lot of newsletters yesterday! If you want to learn more about the foreign policy moves Trump’s Secretary of State Mike Pompeo took against China on his way out the door—and how the Biden administration is likely to follow them up—you’ll want to give Thomas Joscelyn’s latest Vital Interests(🔒) a read.
Kemberlee Kaye:“Your daily reminder not to give up. Exodus 14:13-14.”
Mary Chastain: “We have baseball next month.”
Fuzzy Slippers: “Wait, what? That irredeemable RAACIST and “white supremecist” Donald Trump pardoned rappers Lil Wayne and Kodak Black? From Rolling Stone: “Bradford Cohen, the attorney for both rappers, confirmed to Rolling Stone that both were granted clemency. ‘President Trump and his administration have been tireless advocates on behalf of the African-American community,’ Cohen tells Rolling Stone. ‘These pardons are a perfect example of this administration following up on its reforms and commitments.’ .” File under “Things You Won’t See On CNN” for a thousand, Alex.”
Leslie Eastman: “Needless to say, I took a hard pass on all Inauguration news. Instead, I was a guest on Canto Talk, where we discussed how we go forward from the installation of the new administration. Dawn Wildman, the Director of Coalition for Policy Reform and longtime California Citizen activist, joined us and had many interesting perspectives to share.”
Stacey Matthews: “One of the most unintentionally hilarious Twitter trends on Inauguration Day was a group of women tweeting about how failed 2016 Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton had supposedly shown “dignity and class through the last four years and into today.” Umm, no.”
David Gerstman: “Among the accomplishments that President Trump emphasized was his renegotiation of NAFTA. NAFTA – the North American Free Trade Agreement – was one of the major foreign policy achievements of the Clinton administration and it had wide bipartisan support. (Ross Perot, who ran in 92 and 96 opposed it.) It’s an important reminder that Trump didn’t run against Obama’s record. He ran against the consensus of the past 25 or so years. Whatever benefits NAFTA brought, it came with costs that too many of the political elite were willing to overlook. Until the political class takes stock of itself and acknowledges that there are always costs and that some people get left behind, there will be people like Donald Trump (or Bernie Sanders) who will find support for their ideas.”
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President Joseph R. Biden, He/Him
And just like that, America witnessed a peaceful transfer of power, with former President Donald J. Trump bowing out with little fanfare, and President Joseph R. Biden, he/him, being sworn in as the 46th President of the United States.
In refusing to attend the swearing in ceremony, Trump joined the short list of presidents who skipped their successors’ inaugurations. Typically, I’m all for Trump’s bucking of norms, but transferring power before the American public—and the world—is one tradition I still value. The good news is, according to Biden, Trump left him a “very generous” letter in the Oval Office.
Kamala Harris made history as the first woman and Black and South Asian Vice President in American history, and was escorted by Capitol Hill Police Officer Eugene Goodman, who heroically led rioters away from Senate chambers.
During his first speech as president, Biden emphasized truth, racial justice, and unity, promising once again to be “a president for all Americans,” and to “fight as hard for those who did not support me as for those who did.”
“We must end this uncivil war that pits red against blue, rural versus urban, conservative versus liberal,” he said. “We can do this if we open our souls instead of hardening our hearts. If we show a little tolerance and humility. If we’re willing to stand in the other person’s shoes just for a moment.”
I couldn’t appreciate these sentiments more. But should we buy it? In order to really unite the country, Trump voters need more than nice rhetoric. As my colleague Tammy Bruce put it, “It’s time to work to genuinely bring Americans together to condemn this shameful and craven effort at destroying people with whom you disagree.”
Unity Via Executive Orders
Republicans are waking up to the sad reality that much of the Trump administration’s accomplishments were delivered in the form of Executive Orders. This quite literally means they can be undone overnight. Poof! The Post Millennial rounded up the 17 executive orders Biden signed from the Oval Office on Wednesday, which include:
Mask mandate in federal buildings and all federal property
Rejoin the China-controlled World Health Organization (WHO)
Reserve and “fortify” the Obama-era DACA program
Allow non-citizens to be counted in the census
Repeal Trump travel ban from countries that harbor terrorists
Reverse Trump’s ban on the use of critical race theory indoctrination and tax-payer funding of it in federal agencies and for companies that contract with the federal government.
Scrub Trump’s 1776 Commission, which was designed to teach Americans to have pride in their nation (read the report the Biden administration tried to disappear here)
Rejoin the Paris Climate Accords, reintroduce vehicle emissions standards and stop leases for oil and natural gas in the Arctic
Revoke the permit for the Keystone XL pipeline
Extend eviction and foreclosure moratorium
Allow borrowers of education loans to not pay either interest or principle to the end of September, 2021Allow borrowers of education loans to not pay either interest or principle to the end of September 2021
If you think that was a lot, MORE ARE COMING. The Hill reports we can expect as many as 53 executive items over the next 10 days. As for the first 100 days? Lord, have mercy. But unity!
In addition to all those listed above, within two hours, the Biden administration threw Israel, America’s closest friend and ally in the Middle East, under the bus by renaming the U.S. Ambassador to Israel’s Twitter account to “US Ambassador to Israel, the West Bank and Gaza.” Shortly after doing so, however, the Biden administration reversed course and changed it back.
Inauguration Day Fashion
Melania Trump bowed out of the White House in a classy Audrey Hepburn–esque all-black ensemble. According to The New York Post, the outfit consisted of a Chanel jacket, a Dolce and Gabbana dress and five-inch Christian Louboutin stilettos. Her purse, a crocodile Birkin bag from Hermès, is reportedly worth upward of $50,000. Two hours later, she arrived to Palm Beach in a spectacular 70’s inspired frock that critics hated, but I loved. It’s really too bad that the most beautiful first lady ever—and an immigrant to the United States, no less—won’t be remembered for being the fashion icon she is and was. Not to mention, all the work she did for children, the opioid epidemic and more.
Purple was an apparent theme among the inauguration’s high-ranking female attendees, including Kamala Harris, Michelle Obama, Hillary Clinton and Elizabeth Warren. Marie Claire claims this was no coincidence. The color, the magazine noted, “represents bipartisanship: the literal mix of red, for the Republican party, and blue, for the Democratic party.” Notably, Hillary Clinton wore purple in her 2016 confession speech. Of that decision, she wrote in her book “What Happened,” “The morning after the election, Bill and I both wore purple. It was a nod to bipartisanship (blue plus red equals purple).”
Notable ensembles from the inaugural ceremony included Michelle Obama, who wore a magenta-colored jacket with a matching turtleneck sweater and high-waste, wide-leg pants. She completed the look with a gold belt, black leather gloves, and of course, a mask.
Vice President Kamala Harris chose purple designs from Christopher John Rogers and Sergio Hudson—”two Black, American designers,” writes Marie Claire, “plus her signature pearls, which are an ode to her Alpha Kappa Alpha sisterhood, and have inspired girls and women across the country to put on their own pearls in solidarity and celebration.” The color was reportedly picked as a nod to Shirley Chisholm, the first African-American woman to run for president.
First Lady “Dr.” Jill Biden’s inaugural outfit was my least favorite of the bunch—a sparkly blue tweed coat and dress created by emerging American designer Alexandra O’Neill, founder of the label Markarian. Of course Refinery29 and the likes praised the ensemble, but I found the look too “Disney Princess” for my taste.
George W. Bush was spotted rocking one of my favorite brands, Rhoback, a Charlottesville small business started by my friends. He was sporting the patriotic Old Glory mask, which you can purchase here! 🇺🇸
And finally, I’d be remiss if I failed to highlight Bernie Sanders’s inaugural fashion. Cozy Vermont chic!
Thursday Links
Podcast Rec: I love this mix of guests: Ben Domenech, Krystal Ball, Saagar Enjeti, and Ryan Grim join The Megyn Kelly Show to talk Biden’s first 100 days.
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.
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Jan 21, 2021 01:00 am
We all know in our hearts that a well functioning society should reward intelligence and hard work. But that’s certainly not what’s happening in health care. Read More…
Jan 21, 2021 01:00 am
As usual the Irtanian people are suffering because the mullahs need to come up with bitcoin. Read More…
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Joe Biden’s quest for legitimacy
Jan 21, 2021 01:00 am
His inaugural was classic, rich, and utterly conventional, a useful thing for someone the voters think might just be in office illegitimately. Read more…
The ruling class against Trump
Jan 21, 2021 01:00 am
Looking back at the hate, the lies, and even criminal actions directed at Trump, one might ask, what was his crime? Read more…
Bill Sammon and Chris Stirewalt out at Fox News
Jan 20, 2021 01:00 am
Two executives involved in the early call of Arizona for Joe Biden on Election Night, angering many conservatives, are no longer employed at the cable network whose ratings took a subsequent nosedive. Read more…
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Fox News host Chris Wallace earned the ire of many on social media, and another Fox host, after he praised the inauguration speech by President Joe Biden on Wednesday at the U.S. Capitol. Wallace made his comments during the cable network’s coverage of Inauguration Day after Biden’s speech. “I think it was a great speech. I’ve been listening to … Read more
Biden and The New York Times don’t need to agree with the conservative agenda to foster some sense of unity. They merely need to dispense with the notion that dissenters from cultural leftism are necessarily bigots.
I didn’t walk out of my classes or forsake my responsibilities as an act of defiant protest. I will perform my daily duties to the best of my ability, as a sign of commitment to the values I hold dear.
The 46th president’s address lacked American gusto, but no amount of presidential enthusiasm could have accomplished what Biden set out to do Wednesday: unify a deeply divided country.
The Republican Party of today remains the Republican Party of Trump. Another impeachment won’t change that, no matter how hard beltway Republicans might try.
While Lee deems church services dangerous, ‘school sponsored sporting events and activities’ are specifically permitted in the order and there is no mention of further governor guidelines for them.
The Transom is a daily email newsletter written by publisher of The Federalist Ben Domenech for political and media insiders, which arrives in your inbox each morning, collecting news, notes, and thoughts from around the web.
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40.) REUTERS
The Reuters Daily Briefing
Thursday, January 21, 2021
by Linda Noakes and Farouq Suleiman
Good morning, .
Heres what you need to know.
‘America is back’
Joe Biden got to work undoing Donald Trump’s policies hours after being sworn in, signing 15 executive actions and making his first moves on the pandemic, immigration and climate change.
Further executive orders today will direct that disaster funds be used to reopen schools and willrequire people to wear masks on planes and buses.
World leaders have welcomed Biden in a series of messages with a common tone: ‘The United States is back’, ‘America is back’, and ‘Today is a good day for democracy.’
Meanwhile, QAnon followersare facing a harsh reality check: Trump has left office with no mass arrests or other victories against the supposed cabal of Satan-worshipping pedophile cannibal elites, especially Democrats, he was ostensibly fighting.
Investors got their Biden bounce on, with world stocks racking up record highs on hopes of major U.S. stimulus to cushion the coronavirus’s economic damage.
Today’s biggest stories
The pandemic
The World Health Organization plans to approve several vaccines from Western and Chinese manufacturers in coming weeks and months, a document shows, as it aims for rapid rollouts in poorer countries.
Africa’s coronavirus case fatality rate stands at 2.5%, higher than the global level of 2.2%, a trend that is alarming experts, the head of the continent’s disease control body said on Thursday.
A third pandemic lockdown appears to be having little impact on rates of COVID-19 in England, researchers warned, with prevalence of the disease “very high” and “no evidence of decline” in the first 10 days of renewed restrictions.
Moscow will relax some restrictions from Friday, including fully reopening colleges and specialist education institutions, the mayor of the Russian capital said. The number of daily new cases has started to fall in Russia, which launched a voluntary vaccination program with the Russian-made Sputnik V vaccine last month.
World news
Twitter has locked the account of China’s U.S. embassy for a tweet that defended China’s policy towards Muslim Uighurs in Xinjiang, which the social media platform said violated its stand against “dehumanizing” people.
Vietnam’s ruling Communist Party gathers for a congress next week that will help shape the country’s global role for the next five years, selecting new leaders and setting policy as tensions bubble with Beijing and Joe Biden settles in at the White House.
Britain is resisting an EU demand that it grant full diplomatic status to the bloc’s ambassador in London, causing a row between the recently divorced parties that spilled out into the open.
A twin suicide bombing killed at least 23 people and wounded more than 50 in a Baghdad market on Thursday, the first such attack in years, security and medical sources said.
Business News
U.S. Treasury Secretary-designate Janet Yellen’s comments defending President Joe Biden’s $1.9 trillion coronavirus spending plan reflect a steady shift in economists’ thinking about the mountains of government debt across the developed world.
China more than doubled its construction of new wind and solar power plants in 2020 from a year earlier, government data showed, reflecting Beijing’s pledge to cut fossil fuel dependence and bring carbon emissions to a peak within a decade.
Feed fight: Tightening global supplies of basic foodstuffs and disruptions to shipping caused by the coronavirus pandemic are driving up the cost of rice, the most important staple food for billions of people worldwide.
Billionaire Jack Ma’s 50-second video reappearance has done little to resolve Alibaba Group’s troubled relationship with regulators that is making some investors hesitate about owning the Chinese e-commerce giant’s stock.
From Breakingviews – Corona Capital: Planes, Hotels, Banks
Norwegian Air Shuttle just found a reserve parachute, Upscale Chinese hotelier Zhejiang New Century is looking to check out of equity markets just two years after its initial public offering, and the descriptions “pleasant surprise” and “European bank” are not often conjoined. Read concise views on the pandemics financial fallout from Breakingviews columnists across the globe.
Quote of the day
“To restore the soul and to secure the future of America requires more than words. It requires that most elusive of things in a democracy: Unity.”
President-elect Joe Biden, Jill Biden, Vice President-elect Kamala Harris and Doug Emhoff, arrive at the steps of the U.S. Capitol ahead of the inauguration of President Joe Biden in Washington, DC, U.S. January 20, 2021.
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Yesterday, we introduced the concept of using a “Writ of Quo Warranto” as a final a potentially definitive play against Joe Biden. We remain hopeful but we do not want to give anyone false hope. If it happens, it happens. Perhaps it’s already happening now. Perhaps the Trump team looked at it and decided against it. Or, perhaps they simply don’t know about it. Outside of sharing the concept with others, especially those who can act on it, we should move forward with an assumption that Joe Biden will be president for a while.
Hope for the best, plan for the worst. That plan means establishing the “resistance.” The left had their version for four years with limited success. Sure, they thought they were being successful with their false reports, Antifa riots, Russian hoaxes, leaks, and whatever else they did to subvert the Trump administration, but at the end of the day they failed. Without COVID-19 and massive voter fraud, President Trump would have been reelected in a landslide.
In today’s episode of NOQ Report, we went over this and continued on to discuss the reasons we should engage in a very different type of resistance. As noted on “based underground,” we must be smarter than they were in their four years of failure:
Sharing the truth, as noted in the article above, is a good place to start. But let’s face it. We had the truth on our side regarding voter fraud and we were unable to get that truth to stick. Judges wouldn’t hear the evidence. Mainstream media ignored it. Big Tech suppressed it. Democrats and their crony Establishment Republicans spoke out against the evidence. The truth was demolished. It was a bloodbath.
So while we should definitely get the truth out there, we need to take advantage of more aggressive and proactive moves as part of our resistance to Joe Biden and the Democrats. First and foremost, we must organize locally. The Tea Party did this very well, but it did enough other things poorly enough that they never took full advantage over mobilizing the masses in person. With COVID-19 protocols still in place, it will be even harder to get together in person, but it must be done.
Then, there’s the need to get more people to not only pay attention to their local, city, and state politicians, but to potentially run themselves. We all know someone who would make a great leader. Unfortunately, many who have the integrity and smarts to do well in government choose to do something more productive in the real world.
I discussed the emergence from hiatus for the American Conservative Movement. Lastly the reality that as conservatives, we are about to be persecuted more and more in America must be understood. People need to plan for what lies ahead. If that means making changes now, so be it.
We should not mimic the left’s version of “The Resistance.” It failed. Without COVID-19 and massive fraud, their efforts would have been wasted. We need our resistance to Joe Biden and Democrats to be much more effective.
COVID-19 lockdowns are taking down an independent news outlet
Nobody said running a media site would be easy. We could use some help keeping this site afloat.
Colleagues have called me the worst fundraiser ever. My skills are squarely rooted on the journalistic side of running a news outlet. Paying the bills has never been my forte, but we’ve survived. We have ads on the site that help, but since the site’s inception this has been a labor of love that otherwise doesn’t bring in the level of revenue necessary to justify it.
When I left a nice, corporate career in 2017, I did so knowing I wouldn’t make nearly as much money. But what we do at NOQ Report to deliver the truth and fight the progressive mainstream media narrative that has plagued this nation is too important for me to sacrifice it for the sake of wealth. We know we’ll never make a ton of money this way, and we’re okay with that.
Things have become harder with the coronavirus lockdowns. Both ad money and donations that have kept us afloat for a while have dropped dramatically. We thought we could weather the storm, but the resurgence of lockdowns that mainstream media and Democrats are pushing has put our prospects in jeopardy. In short, we are now in desperate need of financial assistance.
The best way NOQ Report readers can help is to donate. Our Giving Fuel page makes it easy to donate one-time or monthly. Alternatively, you can donate through PayPal as well. We need approximately $17,300 to stay afloat through March when we hope the economy will be more open, but more would be wonderful and any amount that brings us closer to our goal is greatly appreciated.
The second way to help is to become a partner. We’ve strongly considered seeking angel investors in the past but because we were paying the bills, it didn’t seem necessary. Now, we’re struggling to pay the bills. This shouldn’t be the case as our traffic the last year has been going up dramatically. June, 2018, we had 11,678 visitors. A year later in June, 2019, we were up to 116,194. In June, 2020, we had 614,192. In November, 2020, we hit 1.2 million visitors.
We’re heading in the right direction and we believe we’re ready talk to patriotic investors who want to not only “get in on the action” but more importantly who want to help America hear the truth. Interested investors should contact me directly with the contact button above.
As the world spirals towards radical progressivism, the need for truthful journalism has never been greater. But in these times, we need as many conservative media voices as possible. Please help keep NOQ Report going.
Join fellow patriots as we form a grassroots movement to advance the cause of conservatism. The coronavirus crisis has prompted many, even some conservatives, to promote authoritarianism. It’s understandable to some extent now, but it must not be allowed to embed itself in American life. We currently have 11,000+ patriots with us in a very short time. If you are interested, please join us to receive updates.
I understand why so many heartbroken conservatives boycotted the virtual inauguration this morning. But, I wanted to see exactly who would be there for future reference. So, I woke up early this morning and watched the inaugural which began a little before 6 a.m. Hawaii time. C-SPAN definitely caught on camera the usual suspects. Mike Pence was there. Mitch McConnell and Elaine Chao were there. Kevin McCarthy was there. Even good old Ted Cruz who talked up a great storm caved in and attended. All three of President Trump’s Supreme Court nominees were there. Amy, Brett and Neil. But reliable Clarence Thomas and Samuel Alito who had been mistreated and voted against by Joe Biden when he was Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman understandably had better things to do today. They didn’t really miss anything though because the whole event was just about as exciting as trying to watch the grass grow in January in Washington DC.
But not everybody felt the same. Amy Klobuchar from the state that gave us the George Floyd riots looked like she was about to have a self-induced act of verbal auto-eroticism at the podium. But at least she dressed more reasonably than did Lady Gaga. And she spoke only English in comparison to Jennifer Lopez. After John Roberts and Joe Biden sleep-walked through the oath of office, our putative 46th president said a few totally forgettable words nothing like the inspiration of JFK which I personally watched on television with my 6th grade class in Sedalia, Missouri 60 years ago today.
Yes, I am actually old enough to remember when Democrats were not a total lost cause as they are today. I also remember when Republicans were not just Democrats with an [R] after their name. Harry Truman had been a haberdasher in Independence, Missouri, not far from where I was that day in 1961, who was not a rich man. Kennedy on the other hand was from a wealthy Massachusetts family but had been a World War II hero in the South Pacific. It’s rather hard to tell what distinction Biden has other than somehow surviving both Scranton and Wilmington.
But, it’s only going to be a short while anyway because that weird old dude with Robinette as his middle name is only a placeholder for our 47th president who is much more the soup du jour, who somehow equates Jamaican ancestry and family from India with being an African-American. One of the reasons she didn’t win the primary for the Democrat nomination herself was that real African-Americans in California realize how they got a raw deal from her when she was that state’s Attorney General.
But I don’t want to digress too much on the background of our newly-inaugurated President and Vice President. What is a lot more important is what they are going to do with the awesome responsibilities they have now inherited.
GASLIGHTING
I won’t dwell on this because it can be said very succinctly. For the last year, conservatives have all been totally manipulated by a plan-demic, orchestrated riots which were ignored by the U.S. Justice Department in the Deep State, election fraud which then-candidate Biden admitted in a Freudian slip during a debate, unconstitutional mail-in ballots and foreign intervention which was swept under the rug by the Deep State operatives in the intelligence community. All that was topped off by a false flag intrusion into the U.S. Capitol during the joint session of Congress on January 6th which has successfully diverted all attention toward malicious false accusations against President Trump.
Honestly, we could have survived all of that when you consider the overwhelming enthusiasm for Donald Trump who drew hundreds of thousands of people whereas Joe and Kamala could barely round up half a dozen at a time. However, what we didn’t anticipate was that every part of our government in all three branches would deliberately refuse to do their constitutional duties to follow the constitutional process. Finally, that was topped off with the military occupation and lockdown of our nation’s capital for this virtual inauguration, which accomplished two things.
First, it was meant as a message that the Democrats controlled the military even before the transfer of power and was intended to intimidate us from expressing peaceful and patriotic opposition. Second, it was an excuse for so few people being there for the inauguration. If they let everybody come freely, there would have been more supporting President Trump than there would have been who came to watch the circus sideshow on the Capitol steps. Remember, it’s all about optics. Truth and reality are irrelevant to the new regime. It’s perception that matters more to them than metaphysical facts.
CONSERVATIVES ARE MORE COHESIVE WHEN WE ARE THE PATRIOTIC OPPOSITION
Nobody I know is saying what we are being accused of saying. Patriotic Christians have never claimed that God would intervene to keep President Trump in office. I have written repeatedly that God can do anything but what He will actually do depends on His Sovereign Will and not on what we hope He will do. This time, He is giving us what we deserve rather than what we hoped for. Conservatives let ourselves be played as fools by Marxists, both foreign and domestic. Now we have to regroup and determine how to move forward from here.
I’ve been advised to go about this silently and with due stealth. But I prefer the commitment of Dietrich Bonhoeffer who stood up against Hitler and the Nazis. “Silence in the face of evil is itself evil: God will not hold us guiltless. Not to speak is to speak. Not to act is to act.” This cost the German Pastor his life but he realized his ultimate accountability was to God and not to man.
I remember during the eight years of Obama’s evil reign when conservatives stood up against the onslaught on our traditional and family values. But somehow, when Donald Trump began reversing Obama’s betrayals, we quit standing together. It’s easy sometimes when you have a high-profile spokesman such as President Trump has been during his term in office. Republicans were so much at each other’s throats that they were unable to focus on the common foe.
We might as well admit it. Our enemies are much more adept at psychological warfare than we are. We’re more like the quarterback who makes a predictable pass on every play or the running back who insists on trying to go right up the middle every time. We seem to think that our cause is just and that that means it’s okay for the other team to know our signals and memorize our playbook. But that’s why they are able to cause so many fumbles and interceptions.
NAÏVETÉ
In plain language, we need to just quit trusting everybody that we think is on our side because many of them are not. Just look at the various members of the Administration, the Congress and the Supreme Court. We put them where they are, at least indirectly, and thought that they represented our values and would act accordingly to preserve them. We were just flat-out wrong about that. They are fallen human beings just as we all are. Since Adam and Eve partook of the fruit of the Tree of the Knowledge of Good and Evil, we as their descendants are responsible for our own actions and cannot blame them upon anyone else. Adam blamed Eve and Eve blamed the serpent. While accurate, each of us is still responsible for what we do or do not do. That’s what choice is really all about.
It’s going to be very difficult to reclaim our country which we have temporarily lost control of. All the forces of evil are arrayed against us. At this point in time, the GOP is beyond salvaging. Perhaps Donald Trump as a private citizen and ex-president will found a new conservative party. Perhaps he will also establish another conservative broadcast network and/or social media platform. He could even run again in 2024 unless the Congress unconstitutionally impeaches him after the expiration of his term to prevent precisely that.
But while we still love, respect, appreciate and thank Donald Trump for all he has done, we must not put all our eggs in one basket. We need to regroup and consider a third party because both Democrats and Republicans are on the same side with each other and against We the People. Even though we know the next elections will be rigged, we still need to have spokespersons with a larger public following who can help us get the word out. It’s difficult to come up with very many names at this early juncture.
Just as I have been saying here in Deep Blue Hawaii for several election cycles, we just don’t have any dependable conservative standard-bearers. Right now, I personally don’t really trust anybody inside the DC Beltway. But while Missouri’s Senior Senator Roy Blunt was there on the platform kissing Biden’s a**, the Show Me State, which gave us President Harry Truman, has Junior Senator Josh Hawley who is being persecuted and is having his civil rights violated because he has stood firm on conservative principles and his constitutional oath. We need other principled people such as Nikki Haley and Allen West to begin immediately helping prepare for our next national elections, including the midterms in 2022.
SHORT-TERM URGENCIES
However, we have to deal immediately with pressing foreign threats. Enemies such as China, Iran and Russia are not only at our doorstep, they are already within our homeland. So is the specter of Sharia law which has co-opted Joe Biden as well as Hillary Clinton. POTUS 46 will definitely promote many Muslims in his administration who advocate criminalizing all criticism of Islam contrary to our 1st Amendment to the U.S. Constitution. This should come as no surprise as you already hear many of his nominees, including those recycled from the Obama-Biden era, who want to ostracize conservatives not only from government but completely from society. It isn’t paranoia when they really are out to get you.
Before I leave you with my previous article written shortly before our recent presidential election, regarding the threat posed by the Biden-Harris Administration to American national security, there is one other crucial factor to address right now.
BIDEN AS PLACEHOLDER
The most serious problem with the man who just sat down officially at that big desk in the Oval Office for the first time today is that he does not think for himself or rely upon his own judgment. He is just a puppet for many ultra-leftists who put him there as the conduit through which all things flow to accomplish their nefarious purposes. He may or may not still be President for the State of the Union next month. But you can safely wager he won’t be there for the SOTU in 2022. It will be 47th President Kamala Harris who will tell you how she has managed to totally turn the American dream into an absolute nightmare.
Keep in mind that all of this is still being primarily engineered through the person and entourage of our 44th President Barack Obama, who just left his annual golfing vacation in Hawaii to help crown “King Joey the Temporary” for America and the world to see.
IMMEDIATE THREATS
I admonish you to keep your eyes and ears open. Never give up your conservative principles. Keep your heart with the America which our Founders bestowed upon us. But, be circumspect and look beyond our borders. Beijing and Tehran are already beginning to taunt our new Commander-in-Chief.
As he grows increasingly feeble in mind and body, we are faced with a no-win situation. If he resigns or is removed under the 25th Amendment, then we get Kamala which was the Marxist intention all along. After her would come Nancy Pelosi. So the order of succession is not in our favor. The chances of a post-inauguration SCOTUS remedy are less than that of a snowball here in Honolulu.
So, please read this. It needs to get to decision-makers in this new administration, both civilian and military. I hope it doesn’t take another Pearl Harbor or 9/11 to get their attention. Prevention is always preferable to retaliation. But cozying up to the CCP or re-establishing the JCPOA would be an unmitigated disaster.
Then we will deal with being the patriotic opposition as events unfold. One step at a time.
COVID-19 lockdowns are taking down an independent news outlet
Nobody said running a media site would be easy. We could use some help keeping this site afloat.
Colleagues have called me the worst fundraiser ever. My skills are squarely rooted on the journalistic side of running a news outlet. Paying the bills has never been my forte, but we’ve survived. We have ads on the site that help, but since the site’s inception this has been a labor of love that otherwise doesn’t bring in the level of revenue necessary to justify it.
When I left a nice, corporate career in 2017, I did so knowing I wouldn’t make nearly as much money. But what we do at NOQ Report to deliver the truth and fight the progressive mainstream media narrative that has plagued this nation is too important for me to sacrifice it for the sake of wealth. We know we’ll never make a ton of money this way, and we’re okay with that.
Things have become harder with the coronavirus lockdowns. Both ad money and donations that have kept us afloat for a while have dropped dramatically. We thought we could weather the storm, but the resurgence of lockdowns that mainstream media and Democrats are pushing has put our prospects in jeopardy. In short, we are now in desperate need of financial assistance.
The best way NOQ Report readers can help is to donate. Our Giving Fuel page makes it easy to donate one-time or monthly. Alternatively, you can donate through PayPal as well. We need approximately $17,300 to stay afloat through March when we hope the economy will be more open, but more would be wonderful and any amount that brings us closer to our goal is greatly appreciated.
The second way to help is to become a partner. We’ve strongly considered seeking angel investors in the past but because we were paying the bills, it didn’t seem necessary. Now, we’re struggling to pay the bills. This shouldn’t be the case as our traffic the last year has been going up dramatically. June, 2018, we had 11,678 visitors. A year later in June, 2019, we were up to 116,194. In June, 2020, we had 614,192. In November, 2020, we hit 1.2 million visitors.
We’re heading in the right direction and we believe we’re ready talk to patriotic investors who want to not only “get in on the action” but more importantly who want to help America hear the truth. Interested investors should contact me directly with the contact button above.
As the world spirals towards radical progressivism, the need for truthful journalism has never been greater. But in these times, we need as many conservative media voices as possible. Please help keep NOQ Report going.
Join fellow patriots as we form a grassroots movement to advance the cause of conservatism. The coronavirus crisis has prompted many, even some conservatives, to promote authoritarianism. It’s understandable to some extent now, but it must not be allowed to embed itself in American life. We currently have 11,000+ patriots with us in a very short time. If you are interested, please join us to receive updates.
As President Joe Biden took office Jan. 20 with calls for unity, his allies in the mainstream media are beating the drum for squashing political dissent, large or small, and keeping it from being heard by the American people.
Article by Jarrett Stepman originally published at Daily Signal.
It’s amazing how “Resist”—once the proud motto of progressive activists—has instantly been turned on its head with the changing political winds.
It seems that “resistance” is now “insurrection,” to be smashed by any means necessary. And these calls are being led not just by liberal activists, but also by journalists, people who should be expected to be champions of free speech.
MSNBC host Nicolle Wallace suggested, without irony, that perhaps more needs to be done by tech companies to suppress news outlets that peddle content that—and here she was quoting New York Times columnist Thomas Friedman—“divides and enrages” over “more authoritative news sources.”
“If we can protect against counterfeit dollar bills, we should be able to protect against fake news that we now know has the potential to kill people,” Wallace said.
.@NicolleDWallace calls for the permanent expulsion and punishment for any and all forms of conservative media that run counter to her political views. She says Republicans should be BANNED from speaking unless they first speak “the truth.”
Oliver Darcy, a journalist at CNN, wrote in a column that news outlets such as One America News Network, Newsmax, and the Fox News Channel should have their plugs pulled by cable companies for “disseminating disinformation about the November election results to audiences of millions.”
Calls to effectively silence media competitors is seemingly becoming commonplace at CNN.
“We are going to have to figure out the OANN and Newsmax problem,” Alex Stamos, a former chief security officer at Facebook, told CNN’s Brian Stelter on Sunday. “These companies have freedom of speech, but I’m not sure we need Verizon, AT&T, Comcast, and such bringing them into tens of millions of homes.”
Perhaps it shouldn’t be surprising to see a big tech executive call for suppressing speech. After all, a cabal of social media companies effectively erased then-President Donald Trump from their platforms after the Jan. 6 rioting at the Capitol.
Not only that, but they effectively shut down Parler, a Twitter alternative, for what they said was a violation of their terms of service. That may be so, but it’s hard not to see these actions as a heavy-handed attempt to crush even the slightest opposition to their control of the messages the American people can see and hear.
As I wrote at the time, the Jan. 6 violence at the Capitol is being used as an excuse to call for muzzling political opposition and to label all supporters of Trump—and right-leaning Americans in general—as a danger to the republic.
It’s bad enough to see powerful companies use such methods, but it’s even more disconcerting to see journalists cheerleading them on.
And some in the media weren’t just calling for private companies to eradicate conservative speech.
Washington Post columnist Max Boot—another CNN commentator—not only echoed those calls for cable companies to shut down speech he doesn’t like, he floated the idea of using government power to do it.
“CNN (where I’m a global affairs analyst) notes that the United Kingdom doesn’t have its own version of Fox News, because it has a government regulator that metes out hefty fines to broadcasters that violate minimal standards of impartiality and accuracy,” Boot wrote. “The United States hasn’t had that since the Federal Communications Commission stopped enforcing the ‘fairness’ doctrine in the 1980s. As president, Biden needs to reinvigorate the FCC. Or else the terrorism we saw on Jan. 6 may be only the beginning, rather than the end, of the plot against America.”
The so-called “fairness” doctrine that Boot is suggesting is a throwback to the last time Democrats held control of both Congress and the executive branch after the election of President Barack Obama in 2008.
The Reagan administration, as Boot wrote, ended the Fairness Doctrine in the 1980s, paving the way to the explosion of conservative talk radio.
Clearly, there was a huge audience waiting to hear a different message than what the mainstream media were delivering. To the left, that was intolerable.
After Obama’s election, left-wing commentators and political leaders made an aggressive push for the FCC to effectively silence talk radio, a medium that conservatives continue to dominate.
The Fairness Doctrine, a relic of the New Deal era, forced radio stations to give equal airtime to both sides of the political spectrum. There might have been some justification for the law when radio was the primary medium of mass communication, but from the very beginning, the Fairness Doctrine was used as a stealthy way to suppress political dissent.
It was particularly telling that those calling for a return to the Fairness Doctrine wanted it to apply specifically to talk radio, and not, say, the media the left dominated.
And what would giving “equal time” to views even look like in 2021?
The progressive elite’s idea of political balance is giving some airtime to nominal “conservatives” like Boot and his fellow Washington Post columnist Jennifer Rubin, who use most of their time telling their readers why conservatives and Republicans are bad.
When Democrats tried to revive the Fairness Doctrine in 2008, the naked attempt to neuter conservative talk radio was as thinly veiled as the “robe” worn by the fabled emperor with no clothes. The movement fizzled out as conservatives were roused to oppose it, and Democrats were crushed in the 2010 midterm elections, in which they lost 63 House seats and six in the Senate.
That effort to muzzle speech failed more than a decade ago, but would a renewed and more ruthless attempt to silence critics really be a surprise? The media landscape has changed since 2008, with social media and other online platforms becoming even more dominant.
The result of this is that many media gatekeepers feel even more threatened by their loss of control of the “narrative” and their waning credibility in the eyes of many Americans.
This time, it might not just be conservative talk radio on the chopping block, but all other forms of right-leaning or generally anti-establishment media, too.
It’s a disturbing, albeit predictable, trend unlikely to bring more unity to a deeply divided nation.
COVID-19 lockdowns are taking down an independent news outlet
Nobody said running a media site would be easy. We could use some help keeping this site afloat.
Colleagues have called me the worst fundraiser ever. My skills are squarely rooted on the journalistic side of running a news outlet. Paying the bills has never been my forte, but we’ve survived. We have ads on the site that help, but since the site’s inception this has been a labor of love that otherwise doesn’t bring in the level of revenue necessary to justify it.
When I left a nice, corporate career in 2017, I did so knowing I wouldn’t make nearly as much money. But what we do at NOQ Report to deliver the truth and fight the progressive mainstream media narrative that has plagued this nation is too important for me to sacrifice it for the sake of wealth. We know we’ll never make a ton of money this way, and we’re okay with that.
Things have become harder with the coronavirus lockdowns. Both ad money and donations that have kept us afloat for a while have dropped dramatically. We thought we could weather the storm, but the resurgence of lockdowns that mainstream media and Democrats are pushing has put our prospects in jeopardy. In short, we are now in desperate need of financial assistance.
The best way NOQ Report readers can help is to donate. Our Giving Fuel page makes it easy to donate one-time or monthly. Alternatively, you can donate through PayPal as well. We need approximately $17,300 to stay afloat through March when we hope the economy will be more open, but more would be wonderful and any amount that brings us closer to our goal is greatly appreciated.
The second way to help is to become a partner. We’ve strongly considered seeking angel investors in the past but because we were paying the bills, it didn’t seem necessary. Now, we’re struggling to pay the bills. This shouldn’t be the case as our traffic the last year has been going up dramatically. June, 2018, we had 11,678 visitors. A year later in June, 2019, we were up to 116,194. In June, 2020, we had 614,192. In November, 2020, we hit 1.2 million visitors.
We’re heading in the right direction and we believe we’re ready talk to patriotic investors who want to not only “get in on the action” but more importantly who want to help America hear the truth. Interested investors should contact me directly with the contact button above.
As the world spirals towards radical progressivism, the need for truthful journalism has never been greater. But in these times, we need as many conservative media voices as possible. Please help keep NOQ Report going.
Join fellow patriots as we form a grassroots movement to advance the cause of conservatism. The coronavirus crisis has prompted many, even some conservatives, to promote authoritarianism. It’s understandable to some extent now, but it must not be allowed to embed itself in American life. We currently have 11,000+ patriots with us in a very short time. If you are interested, please join us to receive updates.
The formation of a totalitarian state is just about complete in America as the most powerful public and private sector actors unify behind the idea that actions to stamp out dissent can be justified, according to several experts on modern totalitarian ideologies.
Article by Petr Svab originally published at The Epoch Times.
While many have warned about the rise of fascism or socialism in “the land of the free,” the ideas have largely been vague or fragmented, focusing on individual events or actors. Recent events, however, indicate that seemingly unconnected pieces of the oppression puzzle are fitting together to form a comprehensive system, according to Michael Rectenwald, a retired liberal arts professor at New York University.
But many Americans, it appears, have been caught off guard or aren’t even aware of the newly forming regime, as the idea of elected officials, government bureaucrats, large corporations, the establishment academia, think tanks and nonprofits, the legacy media, and even seemingly grassroot movements all working in concert toward some evil purpose seems preposterous. Is a large portion of the country in on a conspiracy?
The reality now emerges that no massive conspiracy was in fact needed—merely an ideological alignment and some informal coordination, Rectenwald argues.
Despite the lack of formal overarching organization, the American socialist regime is indeed totalitarian, as the root of its ideology requires politically motivated coercion, he told The Epoch Times. The power of the regime is not yet absolute but it’s becoming increasingly effective as it erodes the values, checks, and balances against tyranny established by traditional beliefs and enshrined in the American founding.
The effects can be seen throughout society. Americans, regardless of their income, demographics, or social stature are being fired from jobs, getting stripped of access to basic services such as banking and social media, or having their businesses crippled for voicing political opinions and belonging to a designated political underclass. Access to sources of information unsanctioned by the regime is becoming increasingly difficult. Some figures of power and influence are sketching the next step, labelling large segments of society as “extremists” and potential terrorists who need to be “deprogrammed.”
While the onset of the regime appears tied to events of recent years—the presidency of Donald Trump, the CCP (Chinese Communist Party) virus pandemic, the Capitol intrusion of Jan. 6—its roots go back decades.
Is It Really Totalitarian?
Totalitarian regimes are commonly understood as constituting a government headed by a dictator that regiments the economy, censors the media, and quells dissent by force. That is not the case in America but it’s also a misunderstanding of how such regimes function, literature on totalitarianism indicates.
To claim power, the regimes don’t initially need to control every aspect of society through government.
Adolf Hitler, leader of the National Socialist Workers Party in Nazi Germany, used various means to control the economy, including gaining compliance of industry leaders voluntarily, through intimidation, or through replacing the executives with party loyalists.
Similarly, the regime rearing its head in America relies on corporate executives to implement its agenda voluntarily but also through intimidation by online brigades of activists and journalists who take initiative to launch negative PR campaigns and boycotts to progress their preferred societal structure.
Also, Hitler initially didn’t control the spread of information via government censorship but rather through his brigades of street thugs, the “brown shirts,” who would intimidate and physically prevent his opponents from speaking publicly.
The tactic parallels the often successful efforts to “cancel” and “shut down” public speakers by activists and violent actors, such as Antifa.
Dissenting media in America haven’t been silenced by the government directly as of yet. But they are stymied in other ways.
In the digital age, media largely rely on reaching and growing their audience through social media and web search engines, which are dominated by Facebook and Google. Both companies have in place mechanisms to crack down on dissenting media.
Google gives preference in its search results to sources it deems “authoritative.” Search results indicate the company tends to consider media ideologically close to it to be more authoritative. Such media can then produce hit pieces on their competitors, giving Google justification to slash the “authoritativeness” of the dissenters.
Facebook employs third-party fact checkers who have the discretion to label content as “false” and thus reduce the audience on its platform. Virtually all the fact checkers focused on American content are ideologically aligned with Facebook.
Attempts to set up alternative social media have run into yet more fundamental obstacles, as demonstrated by Parler, whose mobile app was terminated by Google and Apple, while the company was kicked off Amazon’s servers.
To the degree that a totalitarian regime requires a police state, there’s no law in America targeting dissenters explicitly. But there are troubling signs of selective, politically motivated enforcement. Signs go back to the IRS’s targeting of Tea Party groups or the difference in treatment received by former Trump adviser Lt. Gen Michael Flynn and former FBI deputy Director Andrew McCabe—both allegedly lying to investigators but only one getting prosecuted. The situation may get still worse as the restrictions tied to the CCP virus see broad swaths of ordinary human behavior being considered “illegal,” opening the door to nearly universal political targeting.
“I think the means by which a police state is being set up is the demonization of Trump supporters and the likely use of medical passports to institute the effective equivalent of social credit scores,” Rectenwald said.
While loyalty to the government and to a specific political party plays a major role, it’s the allegiance to the ideological root of totalitarianism that gives it its foot soldiers, literature on the subject indicates.
Totalitarian Ideology
The element “that holds totalitarianism together as a composite of intellectual elements” is the ambition of fundamentally reimagining society—“the intention to create a ‘New Man,’” explained author Richard Shorten in “Modernism and Totalitarianism: Rethinking the Intellectual Sources of Nazism and Stalinism, 1945 to the Present.”
Various ideologies have framed the ambition differently, based on what they posited as the key to the transformation.
Karl Marx, co-author of the Communist Manifesto, viewed the control of the economy as primary, describing socialism as “socialized man, the associated producers, rationally regulating their interchange with Nature, bringing it under their common control, instead of being ruled by it as by the blind forces of Nature,” in his Das Kapital.
Adolf Hitler, leader of the National Socialist Workers Party in Nazi Germany, viewed race as primary. People would become “socialized”—that is transformed and perfected—by removing Jews and other supposedly “lesser” races from society, he claimed.
The most dominant among the current ideologies stem from the so-called “critical theories,” where the perfected society is defined by “equity,” meaning elimination of differences in outcomes for people in demographic categories deemed historically marginalized. The goal is to be achieved by eliminating the ever-present “white supremacy,” however the ideologues currently define it.
While such ideologies commonly prescribe collectivism, calling for national or even international unification behind their agenda, they are elitist and dictatorial in practice as they find mankind never “woke” enough to follow their agenda voluntarily.
In Marx’s prophecies, the revolution was supposed to occur spontaneously. Yet it never did, leading Vladimir Lenin, the first head of the Soviet Union, to conclude that the revolution will need leadership after all.
“The idea is that you have some enlightened party … who understand the problem of the proletariat better than the proletariat does and is going to shepherd them through the revolution that they need to have for the greater good,” explained James Lindsay, author of “Cynical Theories: How Activist Scholarship Made Everything about Race, Gender, and Identity—and Why This Harms Everybody.”
Elements of this intellectual foundation can be found in ideologies of many current political forces, from neo-nazis and anarcho-communists, through to progressives and to some extent even neoliberals and neoconservatives, Lindsay acknowledged.
“This is why you see so many people today saying that the only possible answers are a full return to classical liberalism or a complete rejection of liberalism entirely as fatally disposed to create progressivism, neoliberalism, etc.,” he said.
That’s not to say these ideologies are openly advocating totalitarianism but rather that they inevitably lead to it.
The roadmap could be summarized as follows:
There’s something fundamentally and intolerably wrong with current reality
There’s a plan to fix it requiring a whole society buy-in
People opposing the plan need to be educated about the plan so they accept it
People who resist the persuasion need to be reeducated, even against their will
People who won’t accept the plan no matter what need to be removed from society.
“I think that’s the general thrust,” Lindsay said. “We can make the world the way we want it to be if we all just get on the same page and same project. It’s a disaster, frankly.”
Points four and five now appear to be in progress.
Former Facebook executive Alex Stamos recently labeled the widespread questioning of the 2020 election results as “violent extremism,” which social media companies should eradicate the same way they countered online recruitment content from the ISIS terrorist group.
The “core issue,” he said, is that “we have given a lot of leeway, both in traditional media and on social media, to people to have a very broad range of political views” and this has led to the emergence of “more and more radical” alternative media like OAN and Newsmax.
Stamos then mused about how to reform Americans who’ve tuned in to the dissenters.
“How do you bring those people back into the mainstream of fact-based reporting and try to get us all back into the same consensus reality?” he asked in a CNN interview.
“And can you? Is that possible?” CNN host Brian Stelter added.
The logic goes as follows: Trump claimed the election was stolen through fraud and other illegalities. That has not been proven in court and is thus false. People who stormed the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6 and managed to break inside and disrupt the electoral vote counting did so because they believed the election was stolen. Therefore, anybody who questions the legitimacy of the election results is an extremist and potentially a terrorist.
With tens of thousands of troops assembled to guard the inauguration of President-elect Joe Biden, Rep. Steve Cohen (D-Tenn.) recently told CNN that all guard members who voted for Trump belong to a “suspect group” that “might want to do something,” alluding to past leaders of other countries who were “killed by their own people.”
Former FBI Director James Comey recently said the Republican party needs to be “burned down or changed.”
“They want a one party state,” commented conservative filmmaker Dinesh D’Souza in a recent podcast. “That is not to say they don’t want an opposition. They want a token opposition. They want Republicans where they get to say what kind of Republican is ok.”
Just as Marx blamed the ills of the world on capitalists and Hitler on Jews, the current regime tends to blame various permutations of “white supremacy.”
“Expel the Republican members of Congress who incited the white supremacist attempted coup,” said Rep. Cori Bush (D-Mo.) in a recent tweet, garnering some 300,000 likes.
She was referring to the Republican lawmakers who raised objections on Jan. 6 to election results in Arizona and Pennsylvania. Their objections were voted down.
“Can U.S. Spy Agencies Stop White Terror?” Daily Beast’s Jeff Stein asked in a recent headline, concluding that a call for “secret police” to sniff out “extremist” Americans “may well get renewed attention.”
Under the regime, allegations of election fraud—de facto questioning the legitimacy of the leader—have become incitement of terrorism. YouTube (owned by Google), Facebook, and Twitter have either banned content that claims the election was rigged or are furnishing it with warning labels. Twitter chief executive Jack Dorsey was recently recorded as saying that banning the president’s account was just the beginning.
The approach closely mirrors that of the Chinese communist regime, which commonly targets dissidents for “subverting” the state or “spreading rumors.”
What’s the Alternative?
If calls for radically reorganizing the world are inherently totalitarian, how is the world to avoid them? The question appears to be its own answer. If totalitarianism inherently requires allegiance to its ideology, it can’t exist in a society with a lack of such allegiance.
The United States were founded on the idea that individual rights are God-given and unalienable. The idea, rooted in traditional beliefs that human morality is of divine origin, stands a bulwark against any attempt to assail people’s rights even for their own good.
“If you’re not a believer in actual God, you can posit a God’s ideal on the matter … We have to posit some arbiter who’s above and beyond our own prejudices and biases in order to ensure these kinds of rights. … Because otherwise you have this infinitely malleable situation in which people with power and coercive potential can eliminate and rationalize the elimination of rights willy-nilly,” Rectenwald said.
COVID-19 lockdowns are taking down an independent news outlet
Nobody said running a media site would be easy. We could use some help keeping this site afloat.
Colleagues have called me the worst fundraiser ever. My skills are squarely rooted on the journalistic side of running a news outlet. Paying the bills has never been my forte, but we’ve survived. We have ads on the site that help, but since the site’s inception this has been a labor of love that otherwise doesn’t bring in the level of revenue necessary to justify it.
When I left a nice, corporate career in 2017, I did so knowing I wouldn’t make nearly as much money. But what we do at NOQ Report to deliver the truth and fight the progressive mainstream media narrative that has plagued this nation is too important for me to sacrifice it for the sake of wealth. We know we’ll never make a ton of money this way, and we’re okay with that.
Things have become harder with the coronavirus lockdowns. Both ad money and donations that have kept us afloat for a while have dropped dramatically. We thought we could weather the storm, but the resurgence of lockdowns that mainstream media and Democrats are pushing has put our prospects in jeopardy. In short, we are now in desperate need of financial assistance.
The best way NOQ Report readers can help is to donate. Our Giving Fuel page makes it easy to donate one-time or monthly. Alternatively, you can donate through PayPal as well. We need approximately $17,300 to stay afloat through March when we hope the economy will be more open, but more would be wonderful and any amount that brings us closer to our goal is greatly appreciated.
The second way to help is to become a partner. We’ve strongly considered seeking angel investors in the past but because we were paying the bills, it didn’t seem necessary. Now, we’re struggling to pay the bills. This shouldn’t be the case as our traffic the last year has been going up dramatically. June, 2018, we had 11,678 visitors. A year later in June, 2019, we were up to 116,194. In June, 2020, we had 614,192. In November, 2020, we hit 1.2 million visitors.
We’re heading in the right direction and we believe we’re ready talk to patriotic investors who want to not only “get in on the action” but more importantly who want to help America hear the truth. Interested investors should contact me directly with the contact button above.
As the world spirals towards radical progressivism, the need for truthful journalism has never been greater. But in these times, we need as many conservative media voices as possible. Please help keep NOQ Report going.
Join fellow patriots as we form a grassroots movement to advance the cause of conservatism. The coronavirus crisis has prompted many, even some conservatives, to promote authoritarianism. It’s understandable to some extent now, but it must not be allowed to embed itself in American life. We currently have 11,000+ patriots with us in a very short time. If you are interested, please join us to receive updates.
The Biden Regency has assumed power over the United States. Trump exits with a whimper while the Biden Regency unveils multiple first-day executive orders that undermine America’s sovereignty. With Joe Biden’s obvious dementia and malleable policy proposals, there is clear reason to believe that Joe Biden will not actually be the one running the United States of America, despite having title. CCP propaganda outlets vocalized their celebration of Trump’s exits.
Every Presidential candidate, in this era, has a slew of day-one promises. Joe Biden appears to have set the tone from day one with executive action. He signed 17 executive orders. Here is a list below.
Majority of these undermine American sovereignty. Rejoining the Paris Accord sends hundreds of millions of dollars overseas, so that we can pay for other countries to build green energy. America will rejoin the World Health Organization which proved in 2020 to be a Chinese puppet, the reason the Trump Administration left. And of course, the Democrats dream of irreversibly changing the voting demographics of this country with illegal immigration comes steps closer to full realization. The cultural impact is there as well. The end of the 1776 Commission, Trump’s effort to combat Critical Race Theory, means woke ideology will become policy.
The biggest benefactor of this is China. One of the Trump administration’s final acts was to label the Chinese extermination of the Uighurs as genocide. It will be interesting to see how long the US government maintains this position. But for the Chinese, they have a President who is bought and paid for. The Hunter Biden escapades overseas in Ukraine and especially China show how compromised this regency already is. When I said, we were living in Star Wars land, prior Big Tech’s execution of Order 66, that includes the notion of a Phantom Menace. Many have speculated that a Biden Regency will be a third term of the Obama Presidency or that Kamala Harris or perhaps Nancy Pelosi will be pulling the strings. But Xi Jinping is the Phantom Menace that the Biden Regency will ultimately benefit.
America is the last thing preventing China from asserting itself as the dominant world power. The world’s largest population paired with a quickly modernizing economy means that America’s days were numbered if unable to combat the rise of China before their numerical advantage becomes insurmountable. It requires America have a more aggressive posture and repair its culture from that which has fueled this declining state. But already the Biden Regency is quick to feed America’s decline with pagan prayers, open borders immigration policy, and supporting China’s geopolitical agenda with the WHO and the Paris Accords. America is China’s vassal not because we were beaten in battle but because we aren’t going to stand in the way.
COVID-19 lockdowns are taking down an independent news outlet
Nobody said running a media site would be easy. We could use some help keeping this site afloat.
Colleagues have called me the worst fundraiser ever. My skills are squarely rooted on the journalistic side of running a news outlet. Paying the bills has never been my forte, but we’ve survived. We have ads on the site that help, but since the site’s inception this has been a labor of love that otherwise doesn’t bring in the level of revenue necessary to justify it.
When I left a nice, corporate career in 2017, I did so knowing I wouldn’t make nearly as much money. But what we do at NOQ Report to deliver the truth and fight the progressive mainstream media narrative that has plagued this nation is too important for me to sacrifice it for the sake of wealth. We know we’ll never make a ton of money this way, and we’re okay with that.
Things have become harder with the coronavirus lockdowns. Both ad money and donations that have kept us afloat for a while have dropped dramatically. We thought we could weather the storm, but the resurgence of lockdowns that mainstream media and Democrats are pushing has put our prospects in jeopardy. In short, we are now in desperate need of financial assistance.
The best way NOQ Report readers can help is to donate. Our Giving Fuel page makes it easy to donate one-time or monthly. Alternatively, you can donate through PayPal as well. We need approximately $17,300 to stay afloat through March when we hope the economy will be more open, but more would be wonderful and any amount that brings us closer to our goal is greatly appreciated.
The second way to help is to become a partner. We’ve strongly considered seeking angel investors in the past but because we were paying the bills, it didn’t seem necessary. Now, we’re struggling to pay the bills. This shouldn’t be the case as our traffic the last year has been going up dramatically. June, 2018, we had 11,678 visitors. A year later in June, 2019, we were up to 116,194. In June, 2020, we had 614,192. In November, 2020, we hit 1.2 million visitors.
We’re heading in the right direction and we believe we’re ready talk to patriotic investors who want to not only “get in on the action” but more importantly who want to help America hear the truth. Interested investors should contact me directly with the contact button above.
As the world spirals towards radical progressivism, the need for truthful journalism has never been greater. But in these times, we need as many conservative media voices as possible. Please help keep NOQ Report going.
Join fellow patriots as we form a grassroots movement to advance the cause of conservatism. The coronavirus crisis has prompted many, even some conservatives, to promote authoritarianism. It’s understandable to some extent now, but it must not be allowed to embed itself in American life. We currently have 11,000+ patriots with us in a very short time. If you are interested, please join us to receive updates.
This day, long-dreaded by conservatives across the United States, is here and nearly over. It’s Inauguration Day as I write this but the ideas we’re about to discuss should be evergreen for the next four years. If you’re a patriot who opposes the Neo-Marxist ideology that was spreading before Joe Biden became president, an ideology that is already showing signs of strengthening in the first few hours of his administration, then you’re probably loaded with emotion right now.
The time is now to channel it, and “now” means today regardless of what day it is. Whatever your emotion is, whether anger or fear or a resolute hope that we can fight what is coming and what is already here, we need to channel it into action. The left laid down a roadmap for how to be the “resistance” against President Trump. We need to take that roadmap and toss it out the window.
From Macbeth:
Tomorrow, and tomorrow, and tomorrow
Creeps in this petty pace from day to day
To the last syllable of recorded time.
It’s nihilism that drove both Shakespeare’s titular character and the radical progressives who established the left’s narrative throughout President Trump’s time in office. They operated from an unhealthy perspective that drained the nation and themselves. But it didn’t work. President Trump didn’t lose because of their resistance. His administration was hampered by it, certainly, but the election was lost in spite of the “resistance” and their unhinged tactics.
Now, we’re seeing many on social media claiming to be ready to become the same type of “resistance” to a Biden administration that we saw from the left during the Trump administration. Please stop. Please do not look at the results of this election and think they were effective. They failed miserably on most levels and were little more than a nuisance. Without COVID-19 and massive voter fraud, the “resistance” would have been viewed in retrospect as a complete failure following a Trump landslide. So why would conservatives now want to start a variation of the same losing effort?
The answer is a combination of low discernment, emotional responses to the finalized results of the stolen election, and the id-factor. On that last note, let’s face it. Playing the role of “resistance” fighter attacking everything the Biden administration puts forward sounds like fun. We watched four years of conniving, scheming, and foot-stomping from the left and now we get our turn at it. But we MUST avoid this and similar tactics. Unless we’re ready to launch another virus into the wild, cheat massively in future elections, and destroy this nation the way the left tried to do, then we need to focus on being aggressive while still taking the high road.
The reason the “resistance” had to act out the way they did is because reality never matched their narrative. Things were good, so they had to pretend like things were bad in order to justify their opposition to President Trump and his policies. We have a much easier path to resistance because the proposed policies from the Biden administration are nearly all disastrous. The left had to manufacture Trump failures. Biden’s administration will manufacture their own failures without our help.
So, what do we do? How do we save this country without forming a right-wing version of Antifa or planting moles in the White House? We do so by watching and reporting. We will have the truth on our side, so there’s no need to manufacture failure. The economy is going to stagnate, and then tank. The military is going to be hampered, then decimated by cuts. Wars are likely to break out and the Biden administration is going to insert our troops into them. Abortion “rights” will be expanded while the valid rights of pre-born humans will be extinguished. The Second Amendment is going to take a beating from multiple fronts.
All of these things are going to happen, not because we do anything to force them but because the left’s ideology driving policies are bound to fail. We’re not talking about the many bad policies under the Obama administration. Those were terrible with the obvious pinnacle of failure being Obamacare. But the Biden administration is tripling down on everything bad the Obama administration wanted and they’re adding more failure to the mix.
Be aggressive, but be patient. Let things play out. And as they fail, get more aggressive. Mainstream media and Big Tech will do everything they can to cover up Biden administration failures just as they did everything they could to manufacture failures from the Trump administration. We must be the provocateurs of truth in the same way the “resistance” to President Trump were the provocateurs of lies.
For four years we watched the left lie about all of the “failures” of the Trump administration. Patriots moving forward must watch for the real-world failures of the Biden administration, then get the word out to the sheep.
COVID-19 lockdowns are taking down an independent news outlet
Nobody said running a media site would be easy. We could use some help keeping this site afloat.
Colleagues have called me the worst fundraiser ever. My skills are squarely rooted on the journalistic side of running a news outlet. Paying the bills has never been my forte, but we’ve survived. We have ads on the site that help, but since the site’s inception this has been a labor of love that otherwise doesn’t bring in the level of revenue necessary to justify it.
When I left a nice, corporate career in 2017, I did so knowing I wouldn’t make nearly as much money. But what we do at NOQ Report to deliver the truth and fight the progressive mainstream media narrative that has plagued this nation is too important for me to sacrifice it for the sake of wealth. We know we’ll never make a ton of money this way, and we’re okay with that.
Things have become harder with the coronavirus lockdowns. Both ad money and donations that have kept us afloat for a while have dropped dramatically. We thought we could weather the storm, but the resurgence of lockdowns that mainstream media and Democrats are pushing has put our prospects in jeopardy. In short, we are now in desperate need of financial assistance.
The best way NOQ Report readers can help is to donate. Our Giving Fuel page makes it easy to donate one-time or monthly. Alternatively, you can donate through PayPal as well. We need approximately $17,300 to stay afloat through March when we hope the economy will be more open, but more would be wonderful and any amount that brings us closer to our goal is greatly appreciated.
The second way to help is to become a partner. We’ve strongly considered seeking angel investors in the past but because we were paying the bills, it didn’t seem necessary. Now, we’re struggling to pay the bills. This shouldn’t be the case as our traffic the last year has been going up dramatically. June, 2018, we had 11,678 visitors. A year later in June, 2019, we were up to 116,194. In June, 2020, we had 614,192. In November, 2020, we hit 1.2 million visitors.
We’re heading in the right direction and we believe we’re ready talk to patriotic investors who want to not only “get in on the action” but more importantly who want to help America hear the truth. Interested investors should contact me directly with the contact button above.
As the world spirals towards radical progressivism, the need for truthful journalism has never been greater. But in these times, we need as many conservative media voices as possible. Please help keep NOQ Report going.
Join fellow patriots as we form a grassroots movement to advance the cause of conservatism. The coronavirus crisis has prompted many, even some conservatives, to promote authoritarianism. It’s understandable to some extent now, but it must not be allowed to embed itself in American life. We currently have 11,000+ patriots with us in a very short time. If you are interested, please join us to receive updates.
When a group is built on the precepts of nihilism and anarchy, anyone in the political class is the enemy. This is why for the last few months NOQ Report has refrained from calling Antifa an “anti-Trump” organization. They’re anti-America, and that means whoever the ruling party is in their area, state, or nation, that party is the enemy.
Antifa moved today to express their hatred for the new party representatives of the nation. With Democrats in charge of the city, state, and now federal government, Antifa’s anger is being turned towards them. According to Townhall, they went after the Democratic Party Headquarters in Portland:
Antifa thugs vandalized a Democratic Party of Oregon’s office in Portland on Wednesday. Townhall’s Julio Rosas was on the ground and captured the chaos.
Members of the far-left group can be seen spray painting obscene political messages like “ACAB” and “Fu** Biden” on the outside of the building before other members shatter the office’s windows.
On the ground in Portland, Ore. for @townhallcom. A group of Antifa marchers just attacked the city’s Democratic Party office. They broke windows and spray painted the building.
During the first presidential debate, Joe Biden claimed “Antifa is an idea, not an organization.” Maybe the Democrats can sue the idea of Antifa for damages.
The violence was not just focused on the building. They were caught on camera attacking police officers and causing general mischief. As Andy Ngo and others reported via Twitter:
To those gathered near the Democratic Party of Oregon Portland Headquarters: Members of this group
have been observed damaging the building. Anyone who is involved in criminal behavior including: vandalism and graffittiing is subject to arrest or citation.
Portland: Watch shocking footage of #antifa smashing up the Democratic Party of Oregon headquarters. They bring weapons while their comrades use umbrellas to block surveillance video. Video by @Julio_Rosas11. #PortlandRiotspic.twitter.com/KdNNRgIEV0
The Democratic Party Of Oregon building was vandalized moments go by an Antifa group in Portland Oregon. The group gathered at Revolution Hall and blocked roads off as they made their way towards the building pic.twitter.com/joDxZ30yA0
Portland: A truck owned by antifa militant Davis Beeman was pulled over by police. The masked antifa members are being searched. #PortlandRiotspic.twitter.com/JEyATtbQd1
Will Democrats finally realize that anarchy and rioting is perpetrated by radical leftists? They spent a summer ignoring it while pouncing on the Capitol riots. Domestic terrorism labels should not be relegated to one side or the other.
COVID-19 lockdowns are taking down an independent news outlet
Nobody said running a media site would be easy. We could use some help keeping this site afloat.
Colleagues have called me the worst fundraiser ever. My skills are squarely rooted on the journalistic side of running a news outlet. Paying the bills has never been my forte, but we’ve survived. We have ads on the site that help, but since the site’s inception this has been a labor of love that otherwise doesn’t bring in the level of revenue necessary to justify it.
When I left a nice, corporate career in 2017, I did so knowing I wouldn’t make nearly as much money. But what we do at NOQ Report to deliver the truth and fight the progressive mainstream media narrative that has plagued this nation is too important for me to sacrifice it for the sake of wealth. We know we’ll never make a ton of money this way, and we’re okay with that.
Things have become harder with the coronavirus lockdowns. Both ad money and donations that have kept us afloat for a while have dropped dramatically. We thought we could weather the storm, but the resurgence of lockdowns that mainstream media and Democrats are pushing has put our prospects in jeopardy. In short, we are now in desperate need of financial assistance.
The best way NOQ Report readers can help is to donate. Our Giving Fuel page makes it easy to donate one-time or monthly. Alternatively, you can donate through PayPal as well. We need approximately $17,300 to stay afloat through March when we hope the economy will be more open, but more would be wonderful and any amount that brings us closer to our goal is greatly appreciated.
The second way to help is to become a partner. We’ve strongly considered seeking angel investors in the past but because we were paying the bills, it didn’t seem necessary. Now, we’re struggling to pay the bills. This shouldn’t be the case as our traffic the last year has been going up dramatically. June, 2018, we had 11,678 visitors. A year later in June, 2019, we were up to 116,194. In June, 2020, we had 614,192. In November, 2020, we hit 1.2 million visitors.
We’re heading in the right direction and we believe we’re ready talk to patriotic investors who want to not only “get in on the action” but more importantly who want to help America hear the truth. Interested investors should contact me directly with the contact button above.
As the world spirals towards radical progressivism, the need for truthful journalism has never been greater. But in these times, we need as many conservative media voices as possible. Please help keep NOQ Report going.
Join fellow patriots as we form a grassroots movement to advance the cause of conservatism. The coronavirus crisis has prompted many, even some conservatives, to promote authoritarianism. It’s understandable to some extent now, but it must not be allowed to embed itself in American life. We currently have 11,000+ patriots with us in a very short time. If you are interested, please join us to receive updates.
The incoming Biden administration has announced a series of executive actions that open the door for instituting the quasi-Marxist critical theory across the federal government. President Joe Biden would sign documents to “launch a whole-of-government initiative to advance racial equity,” his transition team said in a Jan. 20 release.
Article by Petr Svab originally published at The Epoch Times.
Equity means equality of outcome, a concept tied to the critical theories that slice up society into identity groups based on race, gender, sexual proclivities, and others, while positing which groups are oppressed and which are the oppressors, similarly to how Marxism labels people as oppressors or the oppressed based on class.
“The president-elect will sign an Executive Order beginning the work of embedding equity across federal policymaking and rooting out systemic racism and other barriers to opportunity from federal programs and institutions,” the release said.
“The Executive Order will define equity as the consistent and systematic fair, just, and impartial treatment of all individuals, including individuals who belong to underserved communities, such as Black, Latino, Indigenous and Native American persons, Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders, and other persons of color; LGBTQ+ persons; people with disabilities; religious minorities, persons who live in rural areas; and persons otherwise affected by persistent poverty or inequality.”
While the release talks about fair treatment of all, the proposals indicate some people will be more equal than others based on whether their demographics fit the administration’s profile of “historically underserved and marginalized.”
Biden will direct all federal agencies “to undertake a baseline review of the state of equity within their agency and deliver an action plan within 200 days to address unequal barriers to opportunity in agency policies and programs.”
The Office of Management and Budget will be tasked with “working to more equitably allocate federal resources to empower and invest in communities of color and other underserved communities.”
The administration also wants to improve access to government benefits and services, “for example, by reducing language access barriers” and having agencies “engage with communities who have been historically underrepresented, underserved, and harmed by federal policies.”
The administration wants to look into new ways to check whether its policies “advance equity.”
Biden will also reverse the September executive order of then-President Donald Trump that banned federal agencies, contractors, subcontractors, and grantees from instructing their employees to follow the tenets of the critical theories.
Trump’s order cited the work of Christopher Rufo, director of the Discovery Institute’s Center on Wealth and Poverty, who has been waging a “one-man war” against critical race theory in American government. Rufo has repeatedly warned of the intrusion of the ideology into civil society after obtaining documents showing the theory being pushed in various institutions.
In a Jan. 20 release, Rufo called the theory a “grave threat to the American way of life” that “traffics in the pernicious concepts of race essentialism, race stereotyping, and race-based segregation—all under a false pursuit of ‘social justice.’”
The theories produced an industry of consultants and speakers who get hired by corporations and government agencies to train their employees on themes such as “implicit bias” and “white privilege.”
Trump’s order said the concepts of the theory are “divisive” and lead to “race and sex stereotyping and scapegoating.”
Biden’s release said such trainings are “important and needed.”
Rufo said the trainings “advance the ideology through cult-like indoctrination, intimidation, and harassment.”
He announced in his January release a coalition of law firms and legal foundations called “Stop Critical Race Theory,” saying it has already filled three lawsuits with the goal of having the Supreme Court rule that programs based on the theory violate the 1964 Civil Rights Act and the Constitution.
“When we are victorious in the courts, it will have an immediate ripple effect through every school, government agency, and private employer in the nation. We will effectively abolish critical race theory programs from American life,” he said.
COVID-19 lockdowns are taking down an independent news outlet
Nobody said running a media site would be easy. We could use some help keeping this site afloat.
Colleagues have called me the worst fundraiser ever. My skills are squarely rooted on the journalistic side of running a news outlet. Paying the bills has never been my forte, but we’ve survived. We have ads on the site that help, but since the site’s inception this has been a labor of love that otherwise doesn’t bring in the level of revenue necessary to justify it.
When I left a nice, corporate career in 2017, I did so knowing I wouldn’t make nearly as much money. But what we do at NOQ Report to deliver the truth and fight the progressive mainstream media narrative that has plagued this nation is too important for me to sacrifice it for the sake of wealth. We know we’ll never make a ton of money this way, and we’re okay with that.
Things have become harder with the coronavirus lockdowns. Both ad money and donations that have kept us afloat for a while have dropped dramatically. We thought we could weather the storm, but the resurgence of lockdowns that mainstream media and Democrats are pushing has put our prospects in jeopardy. In short, we are now in desperate need of financial assistance.
The best way NOQ Report readers can help is to donate. Our Giving Fuel page makes it easy to donate one-time or monthly. Alternatively, you can donate through PayPal as well. We need approximately $17,300 to stay afloat through March when we hope the economy will be more open, but more would be wonderful and any amount that brings us closer to our goal is greatly appreciated.
The second way to help is to become a partner. We’ve strongly considered seeking angel investors in the past but because we were paying the bills, it didn’t seem necessary. Now, we’re struggling to pay the bills. This shouldn’t be the case as our traffic the last year has been going up dramatically. June, 2018, we had 11,678 visitors. A year later in June, 2019, we were up to 116,194. In June, 2020, we had 614,192. In November, 2020, we hit 1.2 million visitors.
We’re heading in the right direction and we believe we’re ready talk to patriotic investors who want to not only “get in on the action” but more importantly who want to help America hear the truth. Interested investors should contact me directly with the contact button above.
As the world spirals towards radical progressivism, the need for truthful journalism has never been greater. But in these times, we need as many conservative media voices as possible. Please help keep NOQ Report going.
Join fellow patriots as we form a grassroots movement to advance the cause of conservatism. The coronavirus crisis has prompted many, even some conservatives, to promote authoritarianism. It’s understandable to some extent now, but it must not be allowed to embed itself in American life. We currently have 11,000+ patriots with us in a very short time. If you are interested, please join us to receive updates.
Congresswoman Liz Cheney has taken a ton of heat since betraying both President Trump and her Republican base in Wyoming by proudly voting to impeach him. She’s drawn complaints from across the GOP spectrum, including calls by over 100 fellow Republican Representatives who want her to step down from her leadership role as the third-ranking Republican in the House.
Now, as a Biden administration takes over, she’s already facing at least two primary challengers. According to American Greatness:
Two Wyoming Republicans have filed papers to challenge House Republican Conference Chair Rep. Liz Cheney (R-Wy.) in the 2022 primaries following her vote to impeach former President Donald Trump.
Wyoming State Sen. Anthony Bouchard and Rep. and business owner Marissa Selvig both filed statements of candidacy in the 2022 primary election on Wednesday.
Bouchard announced his candidacy on social media with a link to his website:
“Wyoming was President Trump’s best state both times he ran. That’s because Wyoming voters are strong conservatives who want our leaders to stand up for America, defend our freedoms, fight for our way of life and always put working people first as President Trump did. Liz Cheney’s long-time opposition to President Trump and her most recent vote for Impeachment shows just how out-of-touch she is with Wyoming. Wyoming taxpayers need a voice in Congress who will stand up to Nancy Pelosi and the Democrats, and not give them cover. That’s why I’m running for Congress.”
Selvig made a video to announce her candidacy:
Can Liz Cheney leverage her name recognition to overcome her dedication to The Swamp and the Deep State, or will more conservative primary candidates be able to defeat her in a year-and-a-half?
The office of Surgeon General is a non-political military role that is normally considered to be outside of regime change protocols. It has been decades since a Surgeon General stepped down during a presidential transition when Vice Admiral Julius B. Richmond stepped down on President Ronald Reagan’s first Inauguration Day. In that scenario, he was not pushed out but asked to stay on. He declined.
Joe Biden’s administration pushed former Surgeon General Jerome Adams out the door before the new president was officially inaugurated.
I’ve been asked by the Biden team to step down as Surgeon General. Its been the honor of my life to serve this Nation, and I will do all I can to ensure everyone has an equal opportunity to achieve and maintain health. See my full statement at: https://t.co/pCkbpealt8
There are many roles in the president’s cabinet that make sense to immediately replace with an incoming administration. The office of Surgeon General is not one of them. In fact, the office is generally considered to be stable enough to allow for other contentious transitions to take place before tackling the non-political Surgeon General role.
Biden apparently felt differently. The administration’s desires to “cleanse” the White House of anything that had President Trump’s stamp on it has prompted the first Black man to lose his job under a Biden administration, and it technically happened before Biden was even President. Nevertheless, Adams left with class. In a Facebook post, he highlighted his achievements and promoted a patriotic stance towards America:
Thank you for the opportunity to serve this great Nation, as this has been the honor of my life. Three years and five months ago, I was confirmed as just the 20th United States Surgeon General – and only the second ever African American male to serve in that role.
My tenure started with three category 5 hurricanes barreling down on our citizens. I immediately deployed to witness the devastation first hand, and to lead our Public Health Service Officers as we helped with the response. I saw the best of our Nation coming together in the worse of times, to help those who’d lost everything.
I then turned my attention to the opioid epidemic, encouraging more people to carry Naloxone by issuing the first Surgeon General’s advisory in over a decade. Working across government and with amazing advocacy organizations on the ground- many led by parents who had lost their own children to opioid overdose- we were able to increase Naloxone availability nationwide by over 400%, and save countless lives. This is perhaps my proudest achievement, as my family has been personally impacted my substance misuse, and I firmly believe stigma remains one of our biggest killers and barriers to health.
Being a parent of school age children myself, I saw the need to issue subsequent advisories warning of the dangers of youth e-cigarette and youth marijuana use- a combination which merged into the deadly EVALI outbreak our Nation faced. Despite any opinions about adult use of these products, I hope Americans can agree that we must all work together to prevent youth initiation and use.
In 2019, I issued the first Surgeon Generals report in over 30 years on smoking cessation, highlighting the groups still most impacted by smoking, and the science behind what we know works to help them quit. We have made tremendous progress, but far too many- including those with mental health issues, our tribal citizens, and the LGBTQ community, haven’t shared equally in cessation successes.
And of course there was COVID19. In the face of a once in a century pandemic, I sought to communicate the rapidly evolving science on this deadly adversary, and arm people with the knowledge and tools they needed to stay safe. I wasn’t always right- because no one was, and this virus continues to humble all of us- but I was always sincere in my efforts to speak to every day Americans, and address the terrible health inequities this virus exposed.
My team also put out historic Surgeon General’s Calls to Action on Hypertension Control, Maternal Health, and Suicide Prevention. We did this because even in midst of a deadly pandemic, hundreds of thousands of people are killed by these other health risks every year. For example, more people died from uncontrolled high blood pressure in 2020 than from Covid-19. We mustn’t forget about all the other harms Americans face every day, or the many opportunities we have to improve health, and build more resilient communities. And we mustn’t forget that diseases and health risks rarely impact all communities equally.
That’s why these Calls to Action specifically mention the groups disparately impacted, and talk about the need to study and address aggravating factors like bias.
Finally, I released a completely novel type of Surgeon Generals report- a report on Community Health and Economic Prosperity. It emphasizes the links between the health of our communities and the health of our economies. It is unique in that it makes the business case for why we all should care about and invest in the vital conditions that create opportunities and healthier communities.
During my tenure I have visited with people from all across America. And despite all that you may read on social media or see on tv, I can assure you that from Alaska to Alabama, from Maine to Montana, and from California to the Carolinas, Americans mostly want the same thing. They want a fair shot at being their best and healthiest self, and to be able to support the health and well being of their families.
And speaking of families, I want to thank those of you who supported me and my family- my wife who is undergoing cancer treatment, my brother who is struggling to overcome addiction, my mother who suffered a stroke earlier this year, and my kids who sacrificed time with their dad so that he could serve this Nation. And thanks to those of you who have become part of my family- the United States Public Health Service Commissioned Corps, my dedicated support staff in the Office of the Surgeon General, the amazing colleagues and friends I’ve met across government, and the many people across this great Nation who constantly pray for my wife and kids, and ask about my dog Bella.
I hope in 2021 and beyond, we can focus more on what unites us, and rise above what divides us. Because Americans working together can overcome any obstacle or adversary. I stand at the ready to help in our mutual quest for recovery, resilience, and health, and thank you from the bottom of my heart, for the opportunity to serve.
Your Humble Servant,
VADM Jerome Adams
20th U.S. Surgeon General
Surgeons General are almost never transitioned out immediately, but the Biden administration couldn’t wait to get rid of any remnant of Vice Admiral Jerome Adams. This wasn’t about merit. It’s about Biden’s bitterness.
COVID-19 lockdowns are taking down an independent news outlet
Nobody said running a media site would be easy. We could use some help keeping this site afloat.
Colleagues have called me the worst fundraiser ever. My skills are squarely rooted on the journalistic side of running a news outlet. Paying the bills has never been my forte, but we’ve survived. We have ads on the site that help, but since the site’s inception this has been a labor of love that otherwise doesn’t bring in the level of revenue necessary to justify it.
When I left a nice, corporate career in 2017, I did so knowing I wouldn’t make nearly as much money. But what we do at NOQ Report to deliver the truth and fight the progressive mainstream media narrative that has plagued this nation is too important for me to sacrifice it for the sake of wealth. We know we’ll never make a ton of money this way, and we’re okay with that.
Things have become harder with the coronavirus lockdowns. Both ad money and donations that have kept us afloat for a while have dropped dramatically. We thought we could weather the storm, but the resurgence of lockdowns that mainstream media and Democrats are pushing has put our prospects in jeopardy. In short, we are now in desperate need of financial assistance.
The best way NOQ Report readers can help is to donate. Our Giving Fuel page makes it easy to donate one-time or monthly. Alternatively, you can donate through PayPal as well. We need approximately $17,300 to stay afloat through March when we hope the economy will be more open, but more would be wonderful and any amount that brings us closer to our goal is greatly appreciated.
The second way to help is to become a partner. We’ve strongly considered seeking angel investors in the past but because we were paying the bills, it didn’t seem necessary. Now, we’re struggling to pay the bills. This shouldn’t be the case as our traffic the last year has been going up dramatically. June, 2018, we had 11,678 visitors. A year later in June, 2019, we were up to 116,194. In June, 2020, we had 614,192. In November, 2020, we hit 1.2 million visitors.
We’re heading in the right direction and we believe we’re ready talk to patriotic investors who want to not only “get in on the action” but more importantly who want to help America hear the truth. Interested investors should contact me directly with the contact button above.
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47.) ABC
January 21, 2021 – Having trouble viewing this email? Open it in your browser.
Morning Rundown
Biden, Harris head to work after inauguration: A new era began in Washington, D.C., yesterday as Joe Biden became the 46th president of the United States and Kamala Harris was sworn in as the first woman vice president. In an inauguration ceremony that was without the traditional large crowds due to the coronavirus pandemic, Biden took the oath of office and delivered a hopeful inaugural address focused on unity. “My whole soul is in this: bringing America together, uniting our people, uniting our nation,” said Biden, who also extended an olive branch to Americans who didn’t support him. “I give you my word, I will always level with you … I’ll defend America,” he added. Following Biden’s and Harris’ swearing-in ceremony, the newly anointed leaders visited Arlington National Cemetery with former U.S. presidents for a wreath-laying ceremony at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier and festivities continued with an inaugural parade. While the day was filled with cheer, Biden and Harris immediately got to work, ticking off items on their agenda. In her first official acts as vice president, Harris administered oaths of office to three new senators, giving Democrats control of the Senate. Biden also kicked off his 10-day blitz of signing 17 executive orders reversing some of Trump’s policies on immigration, the environment and more. The day ended with a primetime event filled with A-list performances.
Amazon tells President Biden it ‘stands ready to assist’ his ambitious vaccine goals: In an effort to help with President Joe Biden’s ambitious COVID-19 vaccination efforts, Amazon sent a letter to the newly inaugurated president offering to use its vast resources to assist on that front. “Amazon stands ready to assist you in reaching your goal of vaccinating 100 million Americans in the first 100 days of your administration,” the letter, signed by Amazon Worldwide Consumer CEO Dave Clark, said. “We are prepared to move quickly once vaccines are available,” he said. Meanwhile, U.S. Surgeon General Jerome Adams resigned from his post Wednesday — one year since the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention confirmed the first case of COVID-19 in the United States — at the request of Biden, who nominated former Surgeon General Vivek Murthy back to the position and as a senior adviser in the COVID-19 response. With coronavirus cases still on the rise across the country, Dr. Rochelle Walensky, the nation’s CDC director, called for optimism and adherence to science in her first message to the American people Wednesday. “Better, healthier days lie ahead. But to get there, COVID-19 testing, surveillance, and vaccination must accelerate rapidly,” she said. Watch Good Morning America at 7 a.m. for an interview with Dr. Anthony Fauci, the nation’s top infectious disease expert.
Biden Cabinet picks feature record number of women and women of color: While Kamala Harris made history Wednesday as the first woman, Black and Asian American woman to serve as vice president of the United States, she’ll soon be joined by a similarly record-breaking Cabinet. Among President Joe Biden’s nominations for Cabinet and Cabinet-level positions are 12 women, including eight women of color. His nominees include Rep. Deb Haaland, D-N.M., one of the first Native American women elected to Congress in 2018, who has been nominated to lead the Department of Interior, and Rep. Marcia Fudge, D-Ohio, the former chair of the Congressional Black Caucus, who has been nominated to serve as secretary of Housing and Urban Development. If all 12 women are confirmed, it would shatter former President Bill Clinton’s record of nine women serving concurrently, which happened during his second term. “These women will bring diverse lived experiences and perspectives to the work that they do,” said Kelly Dittmar, director of research at Rutgers University’s Center of American Women and Politics. “They’re heading agencies that will set the terms and agenda for the next four years.”
Officer who fended off Capitol mob escorts Kamala Harris to inauguration: Exactly two weeks after Capitol Police officer Eugene Goodman faced off against a violent mob of Donald Trump’s supporters, Goodman walked alongside Vice President Kamala Harris and her husband, second gentleman Doug Emhoff, into the 59th presidential inauguration ceremony. The Capitol Police officer was also made an honorary Deputy Sergeant at Arms for Inauguration Day, aiding in the peaceful transfer of power that those protesters had resisted. His heroic efforts on Jan. 6, in which he led the angry mob on a chase to divert them away from the unguarded Senate chambers, were also awarded with the Congressional Gold Medal for “his bravery and quick thinking” last week. “Officer Eugene Goodman was the only thing standing between the mob and the United States Senate,” said Rep. Charlie Crist of Florida, who introduced a bill in Goodman’s honor. “I shudder to think what might have happened had it not been for Officer Goodman’s fast thinking and commitment to his duty and his country.”
GMA Must-Watch
This morning on “GMA,” Amanda Gorman, who made history as the youngest poet to read at a presidential inauguration, will join Robin Roberts for a live one-on-one. Plus, don’t miss kids across the country sharing their letters to President Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris about their hopes for the future of our country. And we profile the new pets of the White House as Champ and Major, a rescue dog, move in with the first family. All this and more only on “GMA.”
After an Inauguration Day like no other, the newly sworn in Biden administration is getting down to business.
Here is what we’re watching this Thursday morning.
Biden’s Day 2 agenda: Tackle Covid-19
On his second day in office, President Joe Biden will sign 10 executive orders to ramp up Covid-19 vaccinations, expand testing and reopen schools as he outlines a detailed plan to tackle the pandemic.
Biden has set an ambitious goal of giving 100 million shots in 100 days — ramping up the pace from the nearly17 million shots the Trump administration recorded in a little over a month.
Administration officials think they have the supply and resources to meet the goal, but they said they will need funding from Congress to expand vaccinations to the wider population, increase testing and help schools reopen.
Biden hit the ground running on Wednesday, issuing more than a dozen executive orders and memorandums in his first hours in office, undoing many of the hallmarks of former President Donald Trump’s tenure and beginning to make his own mark on how the U.S. will respond to its multiple crises.
Promising “truth and transparency,” the new White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki said the Biden administration will return to daily press briefings as well as regular briefings with health officials on the coronavirus pandemic.
Asked by NBC News’ White House correspondent Peter Alexander how thenew administration planned to combat disinformation, Psaki said one way was to share “accurate information and truth and data. And sharing information even when it is hard to hear.”
To that end, a major theme of Biden’s inauguration was a call for national unity. But Biden is going to have to convince GOP leaders to come along for the ride.
Crowds, gone. Masks, on. The outgoing president absent for the first time in over 150 years. The parade route, lined with soldiers instead of spectators.
But it happened, nonetheless, which may be the only thing that matters at a moment when America’s democratic institutions have been tested, NBC News’ Alex Seitz-Wald writes.
“Democracy is precious. Democracy is fragile,” the new president saidat the start of his inaugural address. “And at this hour, my friends, democracy has prevailed.”
Biden’s call for unity is different from all the others — and could actually work, John Carlson, associate director of religious studies at Arizona State University, writes in an opinion piece.
Listen up
In the latest episode of our Into America podcast, host Trymaine Lee sits down with Erroll Southers, a former federal agent and an expert in homegrown extremism, about the steps Biden needs to take to tackle white extremism.
Live BETTER
Mask up, America, is the message from Biden. Could 100 days of mask-wearing change the course of the pandemic in the U.S.? Health experts say, yes.
Shopping
Customize your work from home station with one of these top-rated lap desks that cost $40 or less.
One inspiring thing
Amanda Gorman all but stole the show on Inauguration Day as she performed her original poem, “The Hill We Climb.”
At 22 years old, the youngest inaugural poet ever captivated the nation with her poetry and her poise.
From NBC’s Chuck Todd, Mark Murray, Carrie Dann and Melissa Holzberg
FIRST READ: For Biden, now comes the hard part
Presidential victory? Check.
Inauguration complete? Yup.
Now comes the harder part: governing – especially during a deadly and economically damaging pandemic.
Photo by Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images
Today, on his first full day in office, President Joe Biden will sign 10 executive orders as his new administration releases its national strategy to combat the coronavirus.
That strategy includes:
launching a national vaccine campaign (getting doses to communities and high-risk populations that need them, as well as opening up venues to deliver the vaccine to Americans);
reducing the spread of the virus (requiring and promoting mask wearing, expanding testing);
exercising the Defense Production Act and increasing FEMA’s response to the virus;
beginning a national strategy of reopening schools;
establishing a COVID health equity task force;
and restoring the United States’ partnership with the world (rejoining the WHO).
This is what almost every day for the new Biden administration has to be: Covid, Covid, Covid.
Even as the new president has to respond to other events and actions, like the Chinese government slapping sanctions Wednesday on departing Trump officials such as former Secretary of State Mike Pompeo and former National Security Adviser Robert O’Brien.
What Biden’s “unity” message really means
When you re-read Biden’s inaugural address from yesterday, his call for unity was NOT about achieving bipartisan 100-0 votes in the Senate.
Or Republicans suddenly endorsing long-standing Democratic policies.
Or Democrats abandoning their own policy goals.
Rather, he defined unity as dialing down the temperature of American politics and policy disagreements – so the country doesn’t return to what happened on Jan. 6.
“Let’s begin to listen to one another again. Hear one another, see one another, show respect to one another.”
“Politics does not have to be a raging fire destroying everything in its path. Every disagreement does not have to be a cause for total war.”
That’s what Biden meant by unity – keeping policy disagreements as policy disagreements, and not as war.
Biden’s first full day on the job
At 10:00 am ET, President Biden and Vice President Harris watch a virtual inaugural prayer service… At 12:45 pm ET, they receive the President’s Daily Brief… Biden delivers his remarks on COVID at 2:00 pm ET… And White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki holds a press briefing at 4:00 pm ET.
Data Download: The numbers you need to know today
24,555,709: The number of confirmed cases of coronavirus in the United States, per the most recent data from NBC News and health officials. (That’s 183,404 more than yesterday morning.)
407,345: The number of deaths in the United States from the virus so far. (That’s 4,431 more than yesterday morning.)
122,700: The number of people currently hospitalized with coronavirus
287.52 million: The number of coronavirus tests that have been administered in the United States so far, according to researchers at The COVID Tracking Project.
100 million: How many vaccine shots the Biden administration is pledging to give in 100 days.
More than $400 million: How much Biden wants for pandemic response in the $1.9 trillion stimulus package.
More than 250 points: How much the Dow Jones Industrial Average jumped yesterday, with markets reacting positively to Biden’s inauguration and the promise of more economic Covid relief
100 days: How long DHS will halt deportations as the new Biden administration reviews department policies.
22: The age of Amanda Gorman, the young poet laureate whose read her work “The Hill We Climb” at the inauguration
3: The number of Democratic senators sworn in yesterday by Vice President Kamala Harris
TWEET OF THE DAY: Magic Mike Memoli
One confirmation down, many more to go
President Biden will start his first full day as president with one confirmation for his Cabinet.
On Wednesday night, the Senate confirmed Avril Haines to be the Director of National Intelligence by an 84 to 10 vote. Haines is the first woman to lead the U.S. intelligence community.
The 10 votes “nay” votes were: Blackburn (TN), Braun (IN), Cruz (TX), Ernst (IA), Hagerty (TN), Hawley (MO), Lee (UT), Marshall (KS), Paul (KY) and Risch (ID).
But Haines being the sole confirmation on Jan. 20 leaves Biden in a tough spot. Former President Trump had two secretaries confirmed on Inauguration Day; Barack Obama started his first full day in 2009 with six confirmed secretaries; and George W. Bush had seven confirmations on Jan. 20, 2001.
The Senate will gavel back into session at noon ET today.
THE LID: Thomas Jefferson, relatable area man?
Don’t miss the pod from yesterday, when we looked at how this inauguration compared with some in the past.
ICYMI: What ELSE is happening in the world?
NBC’s Alex Seitz-Wald writes that inauguration during this era meant “most of the pomp stripped away by the necessity of circumstance.”
What does “unity” mean to Republicans? Critics say they mostly mean moving on from the Trump era without accountability.
Biden set to work signing executive orders yesterday afternoon. Here’s what was in them.
Here are the changes Biden has made to the décor in the Oval Office — and what they symbolize.
A National Labor Relations Board general counsel refused to resign between administrations. Biden fired him.
Kamala Harris won’t move into the VP’s residence right away as it undergoes repairs.
Some QAnon followers are losing faith after yesterday’s inauguration went off without disruption. (Many of the Proud Boys are disillusioned with Trump, too.)
Michael Flynn’s brother was involved in one of the calls in which some Army leaders resisted the deployment of the National Guard to the Capitol on January 6. The Army denied it for days.
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Plus: Columbia University neuroscientist defends heroin use, Cuomo plan would still criminalize growing or delivering marijuana, and more…
Since being inaugurated as president late yesterday morning, Joe Biden has been busy dismantling Donald Trump’s executive orders. So far, the Biden administration has already undone several Trump-era immigration policies (including Trump’s moratorium on immigrants from certain African and/or predominantly Muslim countries), Trump’s 1776 Commission, and his ban on diversity training.
GOODBYE TRAVEL BANS AND CENSUS CHANGES
In one executive order issued yesterday, Biden revoked Trump’s March 2017, September 2017, April 2018, and January 2020 immigration and travel orders and instructed the secretary of state to tell all embassies and consulates “to resume visa processing in a manner consistent with the revocation of the Executive Order and Proclamations specified.”
“There is no real doubt that Biden has the power to reverse the travel bans by executive action alone,” writes Volokh Conspiracy blogger Ilya Somin. “If you buy the Trump Administration’s position on their legal status, they were decisions entirely left to the discretion of the president, which means a new president can repeal them any time he wants to, and for almost any reason….If you believe, as I and other critics do, that the travel bans were unconstitutional, it is even more clear Biden has the authority to repeal them. Indeed, in that event, he would have a legal duty to do so.”
In another order, Biden revoked Trump’s July 2019 order requiring census takers to collect citizenship info and Trump’s July 2020 order excluding undocumented immigrants from congressional apportionment counts based on census data.
‘REMAIN IN MEXICO’ AND MORE POLICIES SUSPENDED BY DHS
Notice of more immigration policy changes came via the Department of Homeland Security (DHS). In a Wednesday memo, Acting DHS Secretary David Pekoske instructed Customs and Border Protection (CBP), Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), and U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services to “conduct a review of policies and practices concerning immigration enforcement” and also announced new interim policies, “including a 100-day pause on certain removals.”
DHS will still focus on apprehending and deporting people crossing the border illegally and anyone deemed to be a potential threat to national security or public safety, the memo stresses. The 100-day pause on deportations does not apply to immigrants “engaged in [or] suspected of terrorism or espionage, or [who] otherwise poses a danger to the national security,” people who were “not physically present in the United States before November 1, 2020,” immigrants who “voluntarily agreed to waive any rights to remain in the United States,” or anyone else the acting director of ICE determines can be removed.
DHS also announced on Wednesday that it would suspend Migrant Protection Protocols (MPP) program enrollments. “The Trump administration’s controversial ‘remain in Mexico’ policy requir[ed] asylum seekers trying to enter the U.S. from the southern border to wait in Mexico for American court hearings,” notes NPR. “The program has led to roughly 60,000 migrants getting sent back across the border since MPP was first implemented in January 2019.”
As of January 21, DHS “will cease adding individuals into the program,” the department said in a short statement. “However, current COVID-19 non-essential travel restrictions, both at the border and in the region, remain in place at this time. All current MPP participants should remain where they are, pending further official information from U.S. government officials.”
Some of Biden’s actions simply undo executive overreach by the Trump administration and can be applauded. In one such order, Biden disbanded Trump’s “1776 Commission” on “patriotic education.”
Other new Biden orders and memorandums are murkier. In an “Executive Order On Advancing Racial Equity and Support for Underserved Communities Through the Federal Government,” Biden revoked Trump’s September 2020 order (titled “Combating Race and Sex Stereotyping”) banning certain types of diversity training for government employees, contractors, or grant recipients—then added a new diversity working groups, commissions, and protocols that maybe feel like social justice and keeps government bureaucrats busy but fails to produce meaningful or tangible results.
I haven’t had time yet to go through all of Biden’s new actions (which you can find here). But it’s clear, as Reason‘s Christian Britschgi commented yesterday, that “if you were hoping President Joe Biden might break from former President Donald Trump’s broad view of executive authority,” you shouldn’t hold your breath.
FREE MINDS
“I am now entering my fifth year as a regular heroin user,” writes Columbia University neuroscience professor Carl Hart. “I do not have a drug-use problem.”
Hart’s new book—Drug Use for Grown-Ups: Chasing Liberty in the Land of Fear—”is not a book promoting drug use, nor is it a ‘how to’ book,” he writes in an author’s note at the start. Rather, it relies on “personal anecdotes and scientific research…to dispel drug myths and to illustrate the many potential benefits of responsible drug use.”
Hear Hart talk to Reason‘s Nick Gillespie about it here.
FREE MARKETS
New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo finally released the full details of his marijuana legalization plan.
People would still be criminalized for growing their own cannabis, and delivery services would not be allowed.
Civil rights groups say no to a new war on terror. The American Civil Liberties Union, Amnesty International USA, Freedom Network USA, Human Rights Watch, the National Women’s Law Center, the Presbyterian Church, The Human Trafficking Legal Center, The Sentencing Project, and 127 other groups are asking Biden and congressional Democrats not to expand domestic terror laws. “We are concerned that a new federal domestic terrorism statute or list would adversely impact civil rights and — as our nation’s long and disturbing history of targeting Black Activists, Muslims, Arabs, and movements for social and racial justice has shown — this new authority could be used to expand racial profiling or be wielded to surveil and investigate communities of color and political opponents in the name of national security,” they write.
The letter also points out that “The Justice Department (DOJ), including the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), has over 50 terrorism-related statutes it can use to investigate and prosecute criminal conduct, including white supremacist violence, as well as dozens of other federal statutes relating to hate crimes, organized crime, and violent crimes. The failure to confront and hold accountable white nationalist violence is not a question of not having appropriate tools to employ, but a failure to use those on hand.”
“The letter is necessary because Biden and his administration came into the White House already planning to focus on domestic terrorism, and one possibility the transition team was mulling over is the Confronting Threats of Domestic Terrorism Act, H.R. 4192, which was introduced in 2019 by Rep. Adam Schiff (D–Calif.),” writesReason‘s Scott Shackford.
QUICK HITS
• John Brennan warns that the Trump “insurgency” is made up of “religious authoritarians, fascists, bigots, racists, nativists, even libertarians.“
.@JohnBrennan: Biden intel community “are moving in laser-like fashion to try to uncover as much as they can about” the pro-Trump “insurgency” that harbors “religious extremists, authoritarians, fascists, bigots, racists, nativists, even libertarians” pic.twitter.com/SjVXWhPhR8
• In South Korea, which has the world’s lowest birthrate, “pro-natalist policies have attempted to solve the problem by attributing the cause of low birthrates to women and pressuring them to give birth,” Ewha Womans University professor Sunhye Kim told NBC News. However, NBC reports, “the public is increasingly pushing back against such policies, she said.”
Elizabeth Nolan Brown is a senior editor at Reason, where she writes regularly on the intersections of sex, speech, tech, crime, politics, panic, and civil liberties. She is also co-founder of the libertarian feminist group Feminists for Liberty.
Since starting at Reason in 2014, Brown has won multiple awards for her writing on the U.S. government’s war on sex. Brown’s writing has also appeared in The New York Times, Los Angeles Times, The Daily Beast, Buzzfeed, Playboy, Fox News, Politico, The Week, and numerous other publications. You can follow her on Twitter @ENBrown.
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.
The rapid development of Covid-19 vaccines has accentuated the need for investment in foundational research.
By M. Anthony Mills and Mark P. Mills
National Review Online January 21, 2021
Cloaked in an appeal to unity, President Biden’s inaugural speech hit all the expected themes of racial resentment and blame.
Heather Mac Donald
City Journal Online January 20, 2021
Data based on employees on payroll suggests we are mostly working the same amount of hours as we did before the pandemic. But there is some variation across industries.
By Allison Schrager
Economics21 January 21, 2021
PODCAST
Photos: passigatti/iStock (left) and Samuel Corum/Getty Images (right)
On the latest 10 Blocks podcast, William Voegeli joined Brian Anderson to discuss the history of the mid-century exodus of whites out of cities and political reactions to the Capitol riot.
On January 26, join Michael Hendrix for a panel discussion on the promises and goals of Opportunity Zones, their efficacy thus far, and what the future will look like under a new administration.
On January 27, join City Journal editor Brian Anderson as he moderates a panel of longtime City Journal contributors—Nicole Gelinas, Heather Mac Donald, Steven Malanga, and Fred Siegel—commemorating the magazine’s 30th anniversary and taking a look at what the future might hold.
Manhattan Institute is a think tank whose mission is to develop and disseminate new ideas that foster greater economic choice and individual responsibility.
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One of the first orders of business for the Biden administration is a robust COVID relief package. Robustier than any COVID relief package before. If the robust package were a bust, it would be Dol … MORE
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55.) REALCLEARPOLITICS MORNING NOTE
01/21/2021
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Carl Cannon’s Morning Note
Biden’s In; Ghost Town; Trump’s Next Act?
By Carl M. Cannon on Jan 21, 2021 08:52 am
Good morning, it’s Thursday, Jan. 21, 2021, and we have a new president. Some of my readers, Republicans mainly, miss Donald Trump already. Political independents among you are skeptical that Joe Biden and the Capitol Hill Democrats have too much spending and social engineering in mind: You are concerned, but perhaps also hopeful. Meanwhile, my liberal pals are waking up with happy hangovers, the famous words of Jerry Ford reverberating in their seltzer glasses: “My fellow Americans, our long national nightmare is over.”
Except that it isn’t. Not this time. Whatever your politics, we are all facing a viral pandemic that — despite the advent of an effective vaccine — has claimed 406,000 lives. State officials, local health authorities, and hospitals are in a race against death as they try to get those live-saving shots into people’s arms.
Nor have our partisan battles ended. A year ago today, the first impeachment effort against President Trump kicked into gear. Although he beat the rap on a party-line vote, a second Trump trial awaits the Senate even though Trump has vacated the White House for his Mar-a-Lago enclave. In other words, the “unity” stressed on Inauguration Day by President Biden remains elusive. On that note, I’d point you to RCP’s 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, columnists, and contributors, including the following:
* * *
Biden Makes Impassioned Plea for Unity. I wrote this recap of the new president’s inaugural address.
Inauguration in a Ghost Town. Philip Wegmann contrasts the scene in Washington yesterday with the one four years ago, when anti-Trump protesters made their presence felt — all too literally in Phil’s case.
Pence’s Final COVID Report Slams China, Lauds Progress. Phil also highlights the details the outgoing administration panel left for their successors.
Trump Leaves the National Stage — or Has He? Susan Crabtree reports on the 45th president’s departure, and possible next act.
Schools Spend Millions on “Snake Oil” to Fight COVID. RealClearScience editor Ross Pomeroy spotlights expenditures for air purifier ionization devices that have been shown to be ineffective in combating the coronavirus.
Countering China’s Oil-Driven Ventures in the Middle East. At RealClearEnergy, Jakob Puckett maps out a new U.S. strategy in the region.
Conservative Nationalism and U.S. Foreign Policy. In the latest 1776 Series essay, Colin Dueck contends that a foreign policy prioritizing America’s own interests above others is fully within the American mainstream.
America Urgently Needs Civic Renewal. At RealClearBooks, Edwin C. Hagenstein sees a silver lining in the assault on the U.S. Capitol.
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62.) 1440 DAILY DIGEST
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Good morning. It’s Thursday, Jan. 21, and we’re covering a new presidency, coronavirus vaccines and variants, and much more. Have feedback? Let us know at hello@join1440.com.
Joe Biden was inaugurated as the 46th president of the United States yesterday, with Kamala Harris becoming the first woman, person of color, and person of South Asian descent to be inaugurated as vice president. Despite numerous threats entering the day, the ceremony was free of incidents, with a heavy National Guard presence around the US Capitol and the National Mall closed to the public. Watch Biden’s inaugural address here.
Eugene Goodman, a Capitol Police officer that single-handedly diverted crowds from occupied Senate chambers during the Jan. 6 Capitol assault, escorted Harris. Biden and Harris followed the swearing in with a wreath laying ceremony at Arlington National Cemetery. See photos of the day here.
Former Vice President Mike Pence attended the event in the stead of former President Trump, who held a send-off ceremony (watch here) at Joint Base Andrews before heading to Florida. Trump left Biden a letter—continuing a tradition started by Ronald Reagan—though the contents have not been divulged.
National Youth Poet Laureate Amanda Gorman, 22, became the youngest person to deliver a poem during an inauguration with her “The Hill We Climb.” Watch the recitation and read the transcript here.
Biden is just the second Catholic to become US president, after John F. Kennedy—he took his oath of office on a massive family bible.
Vaccines Versus Variants
Pharmaceutical giant Pfizer and its German partner BioNTech published results yesterday demonstrating their COVID-19 vaccine is equally effective against a highly transmissible variant of the coronavirus that first emerged in the United Kingdom in December. Experts have suggested the variant may become the dominant strain in the US by March.
Scientists have observed thousands of mutations as the SARS-CoV-2 virus spread around the world (see visualization), with most strains emerging and quickly fading. There is no evidence the UK strain—or others that have recently emerged in Brazil, South Africa, or elsewhere—is more deadly than current variants.
Researchers have identified eight key mutations on the spike protein of the UK strain that likely help the virus attach more efficiently to cells, increasing the chances of infection. See a visualization and overview here. In related news, Dr. Anthony Fauci announced Biden administration plans to rejoin the World Health Organization.
The US has reported 406,147 total COVID-19 deaths as of this morning, with 4,377 deaths yesterday. In positive news, average daily new cases in the US have fallen for nine straight days (see data). The US has distributed almost 36 million vaccine doses, while administering roughly 16.5 million doses.
Markets (Continue To) Roar
US stock markets hit all-time highs across the board yesterday, jumping on strong quarterly reports from key companies and the prospects of additional economic stimulus.
The Nasdaq rose 2% to a record 13,457, followed by the S&P 500, which climbed 1.4% to a new high of 3,852. The Dow broke its record set two weeks ago, rising 0.8% to 31,188. Netflix led top performers, gaining 17% after beating global new subscriber estimates by more than 2 million—while passing 200 million total subscribers worldwide—and said it expected to breakeven on a cash flow basis by the end of the year.
The performance continues an upward surge that comes despite an economy struggling with the effects of the pandemic. The Dow ended 2020 at an all-time high, having risen 7.3% on the year, followed by the S&P 500 gaining 16% in the same period. Meanwhile, the tech-heavy Nasdaq—fueled by Microsoft, Amazon, Apple, Alphabet (Google), and Facebook—jumped a whopping 44%.
Know someone who needs smart, objective news? Introduce us.
These cold isolated days, we’re inside our homes most of the time. So why not commit to learning a cool thing or two? Carpe diem, or rather, carpe stre-am.
>Amanda Gorman’s books “Change Sings” and “The Hill We Climb” hit No. 1 and No. 2 spots on Amazon bestseller list just hours after delivering the inaugural poem yesterday(More)
>Sir Elton John, Ed Sheeran among more than 100 creatives critical of Brexit deal, saying the agreement would restrict performers’ travel within European Union(More)
>Philip Rivers, eight-time NFL Pro Bowl quarterback, retires after 17-year career(More) | Sarah Thomas to become the first woman in NFL history to officiate a Super Bowl(More)
Accomplish your fitness goals with Vuori’s Kore Shorts. They’re the one short for every sport (but don’t worry, you can comfortably wear them on the couch as well). Great for yoga, training, running, and chilling, the Kore is the versatile short you’ll soon find you needed. Check out Vuori today for 20% off your first order. #Ad
Science & Technology
>Mystery of why cats love catnip solved; nepetalactol, a chemical in the plant and related species triggers the feline opioid reward system while also protecting against mosquitoes (More)
>Evidence grows that many severe and long-lasting symptoms of COVID-19 are driven by autoimmunity, a condition where the immune system turns against the body (More) | How do autoimmune diseases work? (More)
>Australian lungfish sets record for the longest animal genome ever sequenced, at 43 million base pairs, or 14 times longer than the human genome (More)
Business & Markets
>United Airlines reports $1.9B loss in Q4; expects Q1 revenues to decrease 65%-70% over last year (More) | Consumer goods giant Procter & Gamble quarterly revenues rise 8% on higher consumption of cleaning and household products (More)
>Amazon sends letter to President Biden offering to assist with COVID-19 vaccination efforts (More)
>Anthony Levandowski, former Google engineer who received 18-month jail sentence for stealing trade secrets, receives pardon from President Trump (More)
Politics & World Affairs
>President Biden signs 15 executive orders on first day, including rejoining the Paris Climate Accord (More) | Senate reaches 50-50 split, with effective Democratic majority, as three new Senators sworn in (More) | Senate leaders yet to agree on rules (More) | Director of National Intelligence Avril Haines becomes first Biden nominee approved (More)
>China sanctions 28 US officials following US determination China is committing genocide against its minority Uighur Muslim population; list includes former Secretary of State Mike Pompeo and other top Trump administration officials (More)
>Video investigation of Russian President Vladimir Putin’s alleged Black Sea palace released by jailed dissident Alexei Navalny; reaches 20 million views within 24 hours of release (More) | See clips here (More)
IN-DEPTH
Hunting One of the World’s Most Wanted Fugitives
GQ | Joshua Hammer. Charged for his role in the Rwandan genocide—in particular, importing hundreds of thousands of machetes for use in attacks on ethnic Tutsis—businessman Félicien Kabuga vanished for 26 years. Investigators finally caught Kabuga last year in a Paris suburb. (Read)
The Datafied Generation
MIT Press Reader | Veronica Barassi. In the era of big data, artificial intelligence, and wearable technologies, children born these days will effectively have their data tracked from cradle to grave. (Read)
CuriosityStream offers fascinating documentaries on space, botany, and so much more. If you can’t decide what to watch, just try out their new feature—On Now—to watch a continuous stream of the latest and greatest documentaries. Start streaming today for 40% off with code 1440!
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Historybook: Louis XVI of France is executed by guillotine (1793); Fashion designer Christian Dior born (1905); HBD golf great Jack Nicklaus (1940); Founding father of American cinema Cecil B. DeMille dies (1959); First Women’s March sees large-scale protests in more than 160 countries (2017).
“Focus on remedies, not faults.”
– Jack Nicklaus
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Why 1440? The printing press was invented in the year 1440, spreading knowledge to the masses and changing the course of history. Guess what else? There are 1,440 minutes in a day and every one is precious. That’s why we scour hundreds of sources every day to provide a concise, comprehensive, and objective view of what’s happening in the world. Reader feedback is a gift—shoot us a note at hello@join1440.com.
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On the menu today, Joe Biden gets to work enacting a leftist agenda with some window dressing on the pandemic; contemplating what it would have taken for Donald Trump to overcome his character flaws; and Antifa in Portland declares they “don’t want Biden, they want revenge.”
Biden Begins by Rejoining WHO and Climate-Change Accords and Stopping Border Fence Construction
The voters elected Joe Biden and more or less gave him three basic instructions: First, don’t act like Donald Trump; second, end the pandemic; third, get our economy back to where it was before the pandemic.
Everything else on the Biden agenda was the usual laundry list of promises to Democratic Party interest groups, the kind of proposals that Hillary Clinton touted with great enthusiasm.
On his first day, President Biden did take some steps on the pandemic front. He signed an executive order requiring the wearing of masks on federal property and calling for a “100 Days Masking Challenge,” encouraging Americans to wear masks. (It is fair to wonder how much those who aren’t wearing masks now will be persuaded by an executive order.) He returned the … READ MORE
Joe Biden signed 3 executive orders within hours of being sworn into office. None of Biden’s executive orders actually help Americans or put America first…. Read more…
Alan Greenspan, 20-yr head of the US Fed, reveals Washington’s nasty trick to confiscate the savings of unsuspecting Americans. Here’s How to Prepare Read more…
Antifa terrorists in Portland smashed out windows of the headquarters of the Democrat Party in Oregon. Antifa sprayed ‘F*ck Biden’ on the buidling. WATCH: Portland:… Read more…
78-year-old Joe Biden hobbled over to the White House after he was sworn into office on Wednesday. Virtually no one showed up to see senile… Read more…
Former CIA Director John Brennan, the man who weaponized the CIA to target Hillary Clinton’s political opposition, appeared on MSNBC Wednesday to outline Joe Biden… Read more…
Joe Biden’s transition office issued a statement Wednesday morning on executive actions Biden will take after being sworn in as president to reverse policies of… Read more…
Democrats and the media have decided that you, an American citizen with free speech rights, may not question the outcome of the 2020 election. They… Read more…
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China Sanctions Top Trump Administration Officials
On Wednesday, January 20, 2021, the Chinese government put sanctions on multiple former Trump Administration officials. In a press release, the Chinese Foreign Ministry of Affairs wrote, “Over the past few years, some anti-China politicians in the United States, out of their selfish political interests and prejudice and hatred against China and showing no regard for the interests of the Chinese and American people, have planned, promoted and executed a series of crazy moves which have gravely interfered in China’s internal affairs, undermined China’s interests, offended the Chinese people, and seriously disrupted China-U.S. relations.”
Some of the officials China sanctioned are former National Security Adviser John Bolton, former National Security Adviser Robert O’Brien, former Trade Adviser Peter Navarro, former U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations Kelly Craft, former HHS Secretary Alex Azar, and former Secretary of State Mike Pompeo.
China also said that those who have been sanctioned are not welcome in China, Macau, Hong Kong, or do business in any of the mentioned locations. Further, China said that the same rules apply to the families who were sanctioned.
President Joe Biden Reverses Multiple Executive Orders Under Trump
On Wednesday, January 20, 2021, Joe Biden was sworn in as the 46th President of the United States. Biden, 78, is the oldest president to take office in U.S. history. The Biden Administration is reversing multiple executive orders signed by his predecessor, Donald J. Trump.
The executive orders the Biden Administration is reversing are:
The ban on travel from Syria, Iraq, Iran, Yemen, Sudan, Libya, Somalia, and Eritrea, Nigeria, Myanmar, Kyrgyzstan, and Tanzania
Halting construction for the Wall of the U.S Southern border with Mexico
Ending the Keystone Pipeline XL
DAILY RUMOR:
Are Celebrities Giving Away $5,000 to Fans Who Interact On Their Facebook Pages?
For the last week, multiple Facebook pages with celebrity names have posted statuses about giving away $5,000 to audience members who interact with their page and do something they are told to do. However, the Facebook pages do not belong to celebrities and have 5-10 people or fewer. The Facebook pages are popping up in groups all over the platform, and some of the statuses are going viral.
DIB analysts looked into the claims from these Facebook pages, identifying them as scams. Also, the DIB did not find any celebrity page that is verified on Facebook offering $5,000 to its audience members.
DAILY PERSPECTIVE ON COVID-19
Since the Outbreak Started
As of Wednesday, January 20, 2021, 14,935,834 people in the U.S. have recovered from coronavirus. Also, the U.S. reports 24,967,952 COVID-19 cases, with 415,038 deaths.
Daily Numbers
For Wednesday, January 20, 2021, the U.S. reports 157,931 COVID-19 cases, with 3,516 deaths.
WHAT THIS MEANS FOR US AS AMERICANS
As previously reported in multiple DIBs, the CCP has put sanctions on multiple U.S. officials. However, the Chinese Communist Party’s sanctioning of former Trump Administration Officials is an escalation and shows China’s desire to target those who helped push back against China’s aggression even with them out of office. The Biden Administration’s policy on China is not clear at this time. However, if Biden’s cabinet maintains a similar approach with the CCP, then Americans will continue to see a back and forth between China and the United States.
With Biden’s reversal on Trump’s travel ban, the State Department will begin visa applications once again for the previously banned countries. With tensions high between the U.S. and the Islamic Republic of Iran, the lifting of the travel ban could make it easier for radical Shia preachers in the U.S. to travel back and forth between countries, spreading propaganda and extremist content in America. Radical Shia sheikhs have a history of traveling to Qom, Iran and coming back to the U.S. to spread their extremist ideology, which was much more difficult for them to do in the Trump Administration. Analysts identified multiple videos recorded during the Obama Administration, showing American born sheikhs in the U.S. in Qom, Iran, the heart of Shia extremist scholarship in the Middle East.
In addition, lifting the travel ban could make it easier for Iran to bring in operatives on student visas to target U.S. infrastructure and technology like the CCP does. In 2018, the Justice Department charged nine with conducting massive cyber theft campaigns on behalf of the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps. The nine Iranians breached computer systems in 144 different U.S. universities.
Ending the Keystone Pipeline XL, which is still under construction, will eliminate thousands of jobs for Americans. Further, the Biden Administration’s cancelling of the pipeline is an indication that his administration will likely not be supportive of major oil/gas production efforts in the United States. Biden’s policies against oil/gas will likely lead to higher prices at the pump just as President Obama’s policies did.
The Daily Intelligence Brief, The DIB as we call it, is curated by a hard working team with a diverse background of experience including government intelligence, investigative journalism, high-risk missionary work and marketing.
This team has more than 68 years of combined experience in the intelligence community, 35 years of combined experience in combat and high-risk areas, and have visited more than 65 countries. We have more than 22 years of investigative reporting and marketing experience. Daily, we scour and verify more than 600 social media sites using more than 200 analytic tools in the process. Leveraging the tools and methods available to us, we uncover facts and provide analysis that would take an average person years of networking and research to uncover. We are doing it for you every 24 hours.
From All Things Possible, the Victor Marx Group and Echo Analytics Group, we aim to provide you with a daily intelligence brief collected from trusted sources and analysts.
Sources for the DIB include local and national media outlets, state and government websites, proprietary sources, in addition to social media networks. State reporting of COVID-19 deaths includes probable cases and probable deaths from COVID-19, in accordance with each state’s guidelines.
Thank you for joining us today. Be safe, be healthy and