Good morning! Here is your news briefing for Thursday February 4, 2021
1.) THE DAILY SIGNAL
February 4 2021
Good morning from Washington, where many liberals are in denial about the nation’s vulnerability to voter fraud. States should take preventative measures, Heritage Foundation scholar Hans von Spakovsky writes. A new congresswoman from Texas tells “Problematic Women” how she hopes to make a difference. Plus: debating the survival of girls sports; the push to protect the Capitol from the people; and that talk of another “civil war.” On this date in 2004, Harvard sophomore Mark Zuckerberg launches a little something called Facebook, the social media site originally built to connect Harvard students.
“Girls like me lose championships, podium spots, advancement opportunities, and the recognition we deserve because we’re forced to compete against biological males in our races,” says Selina Soule.
Rep. Van Duyne discusses how she worked with Immigration and Customs Enforcement as a Texas mayor, and why she wants to prioritize voter integrity and reopening the economy.
Sen. Paul asks Miguel Cardona whether it bothered him that “girls are being pushed out” of their own sports, adding that allowing biological males would “completely destroy girls athletics.”
If freedom is discarded to achieve equality of outcome, we no longer live in an America defined by the Declaration of Independence. We live in an America defined by tribalism.
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“Anyone who stops learning is old, whether at twenty or eighty. Anyone who keeps learning stays young. The greatest thing in life is to keep your mind young.”
Let’s face it: There’s a lot to worry about these days if you hope to protect your hard-earned savings and retire comfortably.…In 2021, the question is—what will the IRA’s, 401(k)’s, savings, pensions and retirement plans look like 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 outperformed other safe havens in 2020 and has officially become, “the currency of last resort.” Help Protect Your Retirement with a Home Delivery Gold IRA.
“When men play God, presently they behave like devils.” – Edmund Burke, philosopher”
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3.) DAYBREAK
Your First Look at Today’s Top Stories – Daybreak Insider
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Climate Czar John Kerry Defends Use of Private Jet
From the story: President Biden’s recently appointed climate czar, John Kerry, took a private jet to Iceland in 2019 to receive the Arctic Circle award for climate leadership. The incident had not been previously reported in the American press. Kerry defended his high-pollution ride at the time, calling it “the only choice for somebody like me who is traveling the world to win this battle” in an interview obtained by Fox News. The incident had not been previously reported in the American press. “But, what I’m doing, almost full time,” he continued, “is working to win the battle on climate change, and in the end, if I offset and contribute my life to do this, I’m not going to be put on the defensive” (Fox News). From Brit Hume: Kerry explanation condensed: I’m so important to the climate that I have to flyprivate (Twitter).
2.
ACLU Backs Men Competing Against Women
The ACLU fired off a series of tweets that redefines science to fit the feelings of men who want to be women (Twitter). From Christina Sommers: ACLU is so broken (Twitter). From Abigail Shrier: FACT: Not one of these @ACLU ‘facts’ is a fact (Twitter). From David Harsanyi: I don’t really care what people call themselves or believe, until they start compelling others to engage in their role playing, destroying scholarship chances of hard-working young women (Twitter).
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3.
AOC Was Never in Building During Breach
Despite her claim that rioters entered her office, forcing her to hide (Red State). From the Daily Wire: AOC said Wednesday the RedState report on her whereabouts during the Capitol breach was “manipulative.” “This is the latest manipulative take on the right,” she wrote. “They are manipulating the fact that most people don’t know the layout the Capitol complex. We were all on the Capitol complex – the attack wasn’t just on the dome. The bombs Trump supporters planted surrounded our offices too” (Daily Wire). From The Federalist: The hashtag “#AlexandriaOcasioSmollett” became a top trend on Twitter Wednesday as users connected the dots to find that the New York congresswoman wasn’t in the Capitol building during her “near-death experience” (The Federalist).
4.
Senate Democrat Urges Biden to Reconsider Killing Keystone Pipeline
Senator John Tester of Montana knows well the damage it is doing to high paying jobs. Tester said the pipeline “has the potential to support thousands of good-paying jobs, increase tax revenue into local communities, and support a safer, more efficient alternative to transporting fossil fuel by truck or railroad” (Washington Times). Environmental groups, on the other hand, see the XL shutdown as just the beginning of their attack on pipelines (Daily Wire).
5.
Parler Board Fires CEO
From the story: “On January 29, 2021, the Parler board controlled by Rebekah Mercer decided to immediately terminate my position as CEO of Parler. I did not participate in this decision,” Matze wrote. “I understand that those who now control the company have made some communications to employees and other third parties that have unfortunately created confusion and prompted me to make this public statement.”
Down 44 percent in the US and 30 percent globally in the past three weeks (Daily Mail). Meanwhile, a story clams the CDC hasn’t identified any incident of the vaccine causing a death (ABC News).
7.
Poll Reveals California Governor Under Water
Gavin Newsom, once popular, now has just 46 percent approval in the state as fewer than a third see him as doing a good job handling the pandemic.
Elon Musk: Brain Chip Implants Could Start This Year
From the story: Tesla and SpaceX CEO Elon Musk says his brain-computer interface startup Neuralink could kick off human trials as early as this year “if things go well.” The San Francisco Bay Area-based start-up co-founded by Musk in 2016 is aiming to implant a computer interface in the human brain to help treat neurological conditions like Alzhemier’s, dementia and spinal cord injuries. In the long-term, the company is looking to achieve a degree of symbiosis between humans and artificial intelligence.
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There’s a lot of research on how successful campaigns managed to win. For failed campaigns, not so much — until now.
Meer Research and Ozean Media released a joint study exploring the attitudes of candidates who fell short. It includes candidates at the local, state, judicial and federal levels in Florida.
Unsurprisingly, many losing candidates say was the most difficult aspect of campaigning. A plurality listed it as their biggest self-identified personal and campaign weakness. When asked to rank campaign functions on a dual scale of difficulty and importance, fundraising ranked highest for both.
A new study looks at a rarely examined part of politics: why candidates lose.
Notably, only a handful of unsuccessful campaigns said they had hired fundraising consultants or fundraising staff.
Also near the top were regrets for not launching the campaign earlier, though the sentiment was often linked back to fundraising.
“I didn’t realize how much time fundraising would take — I should have started much earlier,” one respondent said.
Candidates also gave their opinion on what they thought would have tipped the scales in their favor. Television and canvassing got the most mentions, and both were perceived to be the most effective and most difficult means of campaign outreach.
The perceived most effective was word-of-mouth and unpaid social media. The perceived least effective? Local newspaper advertising.
Losing candidates also had little esteem for pollsters. On average, respondents’ perceptions rank polling as the least effective and least important aspect of their campaign.
The majority of those polled weren’t sore losers — two-thirds said they planned to run for office again and a whopping 85% said they enjoyed the process of running for elected office. When asked to describe their general experience running for elected office in a few words, 54% of respondents spoke of their campaign experience in positive terms.
For Our Future Florida and Alianza for Progress are hosting an online panel Thursday night to inform Central Florida residents about President Joe Biden’s “American Rescue Plan.”
The plan is a $1.9 trillion package to confront the coronavirus pandemic. It includes about $400 billion for virus control measures such as vaccination sites and sequencing for new strains of the virus.
It would also send a $1,400 direct stimulus payment to most Americans, temporarily raise unemployment benefits, and extend the moratorium on evictions and foreclosures to September.
The panel includes For Our Future Florida Central Florida director David Bonilla, Tampa Bay director Bernice Laurdedan and Alianza for Progress political director Ruben Lebron.
They will discuss the impacts of the pandemic on central Florida, the components of Biden’s Rescue Plan, and what community members can do to take action.
The event begins at 6 p.m. Community members can sign up to view the panel on Facebook.
In other notes:
🤦♂ — America’s flawed democracy: The Economist Intelligence Unit’s Democracy Index for 2020 kept the United States listed as a “flawed democracy” despite unprecedented turnout in the presidential election that could have otherwise shifted the country to “full democracy.” Holding the U.S. back, the analysis found, was former President Donald Trump’s failure to accept the election results and the hordes of Trump supporters who bought into his lie. But the U.S. is not alone. Government lockdowns imposed due to the COVID-19 pandemic caused a majority of countries to be downgraded, even if their populations supported government mandates that eroded democratic freedom. That includes France, which was downgraded from “full democracy” to “flawed democracy.”
🏾 — Gulfport Mayor puts politics over race: After my column published Tuesday highlighting a Gulfport City Council member’s complacency with her husband’s casual, unabashed racism, Mayor SamHenderson did what no elected official should: Use his platform to condemn not racism, but dirty politics. The dirty politics he referenced didn’t exist, but even if it had, Henderson’s response was dead wrong. So we fixed it for him with this suggested public statement. “It was brought to my attention that a member of this body’s spouse formerly used a racial slur in an interview with media. I want the residents of Gulfport to know that this language has no place in our town or anywhere. I condemn his words in the strongest possible way and call on ChristineBrown and her husband to publicly apologize.” Much better.
Situational awareness
—@SecretaryPete: I’m honored to serve as Secretary of Transportation and help build the kind of infrastructure that creates jobs, empowers all, and keeps travelers & workers safe. It’s time to get to work.
—@marcorubio: Reporting that a politician believes in/flirts with conspiracy theories is legit, but the attention they get should be proportional to their ability to influence actual public policy. Don’t make them famous; help them raise money or elevate conspiracy theories
—@RepTedDeutch: Proud to reintroduce the Luke & Alex School Safety Act w/ @MarioDB@RepStephMurphy@RepRutherfordFL. In honor of Luke, Alex, and the 15 other lives lost in the Stoneman Douglas tragedy, this bill will help make schools safer. Now, not after another tragedy, is the time to act.
Tweet, tweet:
—@JeffreyBrandes: While legislators may carry the torch of criminal justice reform, that torch is fueled by mothers, sisters, and daughters who passionately advocate for second chances and powerful reforms that will promote public safety and allow the State to show grace to their loved ones.
—@CarlosGSmith: Thank you to the Florida Commission on Human Relations for recognizing that anti-LGBTQ discrimination IS sex discrimination and sex discrimination is illegal under the Florida Civil Rights Act! What a complete and unequivocal victory for our community.
Tweet, tweet:
—@Mdixon55: Senate budget chief @kellistargel said yesterday entities in the base budget (those getting recurring tax dollars) will this year be getting a survey to determine if they should stay in the base budget. Way to find $ w/a $2.7b pandemic budget gap.
—@cam_joseph: Source tells me that roughly half the House GOP conference gave Marjorie Taylor Greene a standing ovation after she rose to speak a few min ago
—@ericawerner: “This will be the first time I can recall we’ve spent $1.9 trillion based on one party’s view of things” Lindsey Graham says. (Pretty much exactly the size of the GOP tax cut)
—@equalityfl: WE. WON. The FL Commission on Human Relations has said that all LGBTQ Floridians, from the Panhandle to Key West, will be protected from discrimination under civil rights law — fully implementing the Supreme Court’s ruling. VICTORY for justice and equality. Love wins.
—@JohnMorganEsq: I’d like one example of a case where the brave front line workers could be sued for a COVID related claim. Just one. There are none.
Tweet, tweet:
Days until
Super Bowl LV in Tampa — 3; Daytona 500 — 10; Dr. Aaron Weiner webinar on mental health in the workplace — 14; ‘Nomadland’ with Frances McDormand — 16; The CW’s ‘Superman & Lois’ premieres — 19; the 2021 Conservative Political Action Conference begins — 21; Pitchers and catchers report to Spring Training, with exhibition games starting — 23; 2021 Legislative Session begins — 26; ‘Coming 2 America’ premieres on Amazon Prime — 30; ‘The Many Saints of Newark’ premieres — 36; 2021 Grammys — 38; Zack Snyder’s ‘Justice League’ premieres on HBO Max — 42; ‘Godzilla vs. Kong’ premieres — 50; MLB Opening Day — 56; ‘No Time to Die’ premieres (rescheduled) — 57; Children’s Gasparilla — 65; Seminole Hard Rock Gasparilla Pirate Fest — 72; ‘Black Widow’ rescheduled premiere — 92; ‘Top Gun: Maverick’ rescheduled premiere — 148; Disney’s ‘Shang Chi and The Legend of The Ten Rings’ premieres — 157; new start date for 2021 Olympics — 170; ‘Jungle Cruise’ premieres — 177; St. Petersburg Primary Election — 201; ‘A Quiet Place Part II’ rescheduled premiere — 225; ‘Dune’ premieres — 240; St. Petersburg Municipal Elections — 271; Disney’s ‘Eternals’ premieres — 274; Steven Spielberg’s ‘West Side Story’ premieres — 308; ‘Spider-Man Far From Home’ sequel premieres — 316; ‘Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness’ premieres — 414; ‘Thor: Love and Thunder’ premieres — 456; ‘Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse’ sequel premieres — 610.
Dateline Tallahassee
“Ron DeSantis: Others could follow Florida on bill defending ‘wrong-think’ and online speech” via Renzo Downey of Florida Politics — DeSantis said he believes his proposed anti-censorship legislation could inspire other states to follow suit. On Tuesday morning, DeSantis threw his support behind legislation to reel in what he described as Silicon Valley’s “monopoly of communications platforms” and censorship of conservatives. During a speech in Texas last month, the Governor called that effort one of his legislative priorities for the coming Legislative Session after tech companies moved to bury Parler, a favorite platform of the alt-right, following the attack on the U.S. Capitol. DeSantis outlined a bill to defend data privacy and people’s social media accounts.
Ron DeSantis defends ‘wrong-think,’ blasting Big Tech for its ‘monopoly’ on communication platforms. Image via Colin Hackley.
“Jimmy Patronis says ‘no-fault’ repeal could raise auto insurance rates” via Drew Wilson of Florida Politics — The Senate is considering a bill that would replace Florida’s no-fault auto insurance system with a bodily injury system, but Patronis said it could raise rates on “those that can least afford it.” The bill, sponsored by Republican Sen. Danny Burgess, would eliminate personal injury protection coverage in favor of bodily injury liability coverage. The current system requires drivers to carry a $10,000 personal injury protection policy. The coverage pays out regardless of who is at fault. Meanwhile, bodily injury coverage would pay up to $25,000 for a crash-related injury or death or up to $50,000 for injury or death in a crash involving two or more people. Unlike PIP, it doesn’t pay out immediately.
“Florida Forever funding could be cut in half” via Steve Newborn of WUSF — Some of the state’s primary environmental programs are on the chopping block, including Florida Forever, a key fund to acquire conservation land. DeSantis’ proposed budget includes $50 million for the preservation program, half what it received last year. Florida Forever is a trust fund paid for by real estate taxes. Voters in 2014 approved a constitutional amendment directing at least one-third of those taxes to go to land and water conservation. The Rural and Family Lands Protection program, which pays farmers and ranchers not to develop their land, received no money in the Governor’s proposed budget. Florida’s Communities Trust, which goes to community-based parks, open space and greenways, is also set to get zero dollars.
“School voucher reform bill clears Senate Education Committee” via Jason Delgado of Florida Politics — The Senate Education Committee advanced a sweeping proposal on Thursday that further promotes Florida’s school choice options. The measure, SB 48, passed along a party-line 6-4 vote. Sen. Manny Diaz Jr., a South Florida Republican, is the bill sponsor. The bill moves next to the Appropriations Subcommittee on Education. The 158-page bill would transfer students receiving scholarships through the Florida Tax Credit Scholarship Program and the Hope Scholarship Program to the Family Empowerment Scholarship. The bill also would merge the McKay Scholarship Program for Students with Disabilities and the Gardiner Scholarship Program. Together, they would create the McKay-Gardiner Scholarship Program.
“Perry Thurston questions school board member’s defense of SB 48” via redefinED — Following Osceola County School Board member Jon Arguello’s testimony in favor of SB 48, Sen. Thurston questioned him on points he made. Thurston: “ … is your school board not in a position to provide the protection and the education for the students in Osceola County to learn and strive?” Arguello: “Public schools are not set up to address every student’s particular need. They are set up to educate the community [as] a whole, the best way they can. Sometimes the best way they can is by allowing that parent a different option which will in some of these cases challenge someone’s child more, or in some cases will provide them with services they cannot get in a regular trad class setting.”
AFP-FL cheers Senate advance of school choice bill — Americans for Prosperity-Florida lauded the Senate Education Committee for approving Diaz’s bill to streamline the state’s school choice scholarship options. “Lawmakers moved us a step closer to giving Florida students the tools and resources they need to unleash their potential,” AFP-FL State Director Skylar Zander said. “Florida students and families have been entrepreneurial in establishing new education methods with learning pods, micro-schools, and more that accommodate for the learning disruptions from the pandemic. This bill will continue to enable families to bring bottom-up solutions and create an experience that works better for students.” The bill now heads to the Appropriations Subcommittee on Education.
“Proposal would allow parents to retain kids amid ‘COVID slide’” via News Service of Florida — Amid fears that a “COVID slide” will hamper Florida pupils’ learning gains, the Senate Education Committee on Wednesday signed off on a proposal to allow parents to retain K-8 students in their current grade level for the next school year. The committee unanimously approved the proposal (SB 200), which would require parents to submit a written request to district school superintendents to keep students in their current grade. “With the COVID-19 pandemic, we’ve all seen how school districts and students have all been pushed into uncharted territory this year. The overwhelming majority of our elementary and middle-school students have had some difficulty with the online learning model,” said Sen. Lori Berman, a Delray Beach Democrat who sponsored the bill.
Bill could cut prison time for ill, elderly inmates — Lawmakers of both parties are backing a bill that would make more inmates eligible for sentencing reductions. As reported by Giulia Heyward of POLITICO Florida, SB 232 by Sen. Jeff Brandes would repeal the state’s current conditional medical release program and replace it with a conditional aging inmate release program. Currently, the CMR program only allows “permanently incapacitated” and “terminally ill” prisoners to be released early. Brandes’ bill would also create a review process for juvenile offenders. The Senate Criminal Justice Committee passed the bill with a unanimous vote.
“‘Flexing of muscles’: Florida GOP pushes conservative bills fresh off election victories” via Ana Ceballos and Kirby Wilson of The Miami Herald — Amid a pandemic, dozens of people traveled to and gathered inside a Florida House committee room last week to protest a bill that DeSantis and Republican leaders say is necessary to clamp down on violent protests. It was a heated two-hour meeting. About 70 speakers lambasted the bill, which many of them said is an unnecessary attempt to squelch their right to assemble peaceably. “This bill is not only absurd and unsafe, but I find it deeply disturbing that in the height of a pandemic, this is one of the first bills that y’all are hearing,” said Alyssa Ackbar, a representative for the March For Our Lives Florida chapter and opponent of the measure, House Bill 1.
“Matt Willhite joins Ed Hooper push to increase home pool safety regulations” via Ryan Nicol of Florida Politics — Willhite has joined Republican Sen. Hooper to require additional safety measures for home pools. A two-year-old boy’s tragic drowning death spurred the push. The “Kacen’s Cause Act” is named after Kacen Howard, who died in 2017. One Day before Kacen’s third birthday, he opened a sliding-glass door while an adult wasn’t looking. After getting through a defective fence meant to protect the pool area, Kacen fell into the water and drowned. Kacen’s death has led his parents to advocate for stronger safety laws. State law requires home pools to have at least one safety measure present. That could include a pool cover, a fence surrounding the pool, or devices that prevent access to doors leading to the pool.
“Lauren Book seeks to strengthen vaccination requirements for licensed day cares” via Ryan Nicol of Florida Politics — Sen. Book, a Plantation Democrat, is proposing legislation that would require licensed day care centers to ensure a minimum share of children receives recommended vaccinations to retain their license. The legislation tasks the Department of Children and Families with determining where to set that minimum standard. Book’s bill adds to existing law, stating that all minimum requirements “shall include a minimum percentage of all children enrolled in the child care facility who must have received immunizations.” Anti-vaccination opponents have gone after Book in the past over her push to require vaccinations for public school students. That 2020 measure failed.
“House members inspect DeSantis’ budget and pandemic spending” via Renzo Downey of Florida Politics — House members scrutinized DeSantis‘ budget proposal and application of federal pandemic aid Wednesday, probing deeper than Senators did the day prior. The Governor’s policy and budget director, Chris Spencer, detailed the proposed $96.6 billion budget and $78.8 billion in federal pandemic relief during a House Appropriations Committee meeting, after giving the same presentation to Senators on Tuesday. While mainly Democrats questioned Spencer during the Senate committee meeting Tuesday, Republicans joined the minority in prying the Governor’s policy director for details.
“Supreme Court grand jury praises David Silvers’ mental health bill” via Peter Schorsch of Florida Politics — The 20th statewide Florida Supreme Court grand jury recently released a report outlining how to address the mental health epidemic plaguing Florida’s students. In response to the 2018 shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School, the report critically examines how mental health is being addressed and applauds the passage of a bill sponsored by Rep. Silvers for taking proactive steps toward doing so. As of a 2016 study by the National Alliance of Mental Illness, more than 841,000 Floridians are living with a serious mental illness. More than 20% of them are children. And that was before COVID-19 disrupted daily life and everyday routines.
A grand jury from Florida’s highest court gives thumbs-up on David Silvers’ mental health bill.
“COVID-19 business liability bill reaches final House committee stop” via Renzo Downey of Florida Politics — A bill creating COVID-19 liability protections for businesses is one step away from going to a vote in the House. The House Pandemics and Public Emergencies Committee voted 11-6, along party lines, Wednesday to advance that legislation to its third and final committee. The bill, carried by Dover Republican Rep. Lawrence McClure, would shield Florida businesses, nonprofits, schools and religious institutions from frivolous COVID-19 related lawsuits. The bill’s retroactive protections apply to organizations who make a “good faith effort” to follow federal, state and local health guidelines. Republicans have declared the proposal a priority for the upcoming Legislative Session.
“Bill nixing newspaper notice requirement clears first committee” via Drew Wilson of Florida Politics — A bill that would allow public notices to skip newspapers and be posted directly on government websites got the green light from the House Civil Justice & Property Rights Subcommittee on Thursday. Current law requires state government and local government entities, such as sheriff’s departments and tax collector offices, to purchase newspaper advertising to let the public know about important deadlines, code changes or events. HB 35 would nix the requirement. Instead, governmental agencies would need to buy an ad once a year in a publication “delivered to all residents and property owners throughout the government’s jurisdiction.”
Stronger Safer Florida Coalition lauds DeSantis’ budget — A nonpartisan coalition of Florida businesses, consumer and environmental groups praised DeSantis’ budget proposal for including resiliency spending. “As Florida continues to face various climate-change-related issues, prioritizing such initiatives is critical to the long-term future of our state,” the organization said in a statement. “In the ‘Florida Leads’ budget, Gov. DeSantis establishes the Resiliency Florida program, which will provide $1 billion over four years in grants to curb the effects of sea-level rise, severe storm events and localized flooding. The program will fuel various initiatives around the state, protecting both coastal and inland communities.”
Leg. sked
The Senate Agriculture Committee meets to consider SB 526, from Sen. Gayle Harrell, to require broader disclosure of information about animal-cremation services, 8:30 a.m., Room 110, Senate Office Building.
The Senate Governmental Oversight and Accountability Committee meets to consider SB 84, from Chair Ray Rodrigues, to require new state employees to enroll in a 401(k)-style retirement plan, rather than being eligible for traditional pensions, 8:30 a.m., Room 37, Senate Office Building.
The Senate Health Policy Committee meets to consider several issues, including a constitutional amendment (SJR 340), from Sen. Diaz, requiring two-thirds votes of the House and Senate before a single-payer system could be enacted, 8:30 a.m., Room 412, Knott Building.
The House Children, Families & Seniors Subcommittee meets for a panel discussion on children’s mental health emergencies, 9 a.m., Room 212, Knott Building.
The House Environment, Agriculture & Flooding Subcommittee will receive updates on plans to deal with flooding and sea-level rise, 9 a.m., Room 404, House Office Building.
The House Higher Education Appropriations Subcommittee will receive an update on DeSantis’ proposed budget, 9 a.m., Morris Hall, House Office Building.
The House Justice Appropriations Subcommittee will receive an update on a Florida Department of Corrections plan to use 8.5-hour work shifts in state prisons, 9 a.m., Reed Hall, House Office Building.
The Senate Select Committee on Pandemic Preparedness and Response will receive updates from the state Agency for Health Care Administration and the Florida Health Care Association, 11:30 a.m., Room 412, Knott Building.
The House Early Learning & Elementary Education Subcommittee meets to consider HB 3, from Rep. Dana Trabulsy, to create a program to deliver free books to elementary-school students identified as struggling readers, noon, Room 212, Knott Building.
The House Local Administration & Veterans Affairs Subcommittee meets to consider HB 59, from Rep. Stan McClain, seeking to make a series of changes in growth management, requiring local governments to include private property-rights in their comprehensive plans, noon, Room 404, House Office Building.
The Joint Committee on Public Counsel Oversight meets to interview candidates to succeed J.R. Kelly as state public counsel, 2 p.m., Room 110, Senate Office Building.
The Joint Legislative Auditing Committee meets to consider several issues, including an audit of the Department of the Lottery, 2 p.m., Room 412, Knott Building.
Statewide
“Red-light camera fee fight sent to Supreme Court” via The News Service of Florida — Pointing to “questions that may have sweeping implications for dozens of municipal traffic enforcement regimes across Florida,” a federal appeals court is asking the Florida Supreme Court to help resolve a challenge to fees that red-light camera companies can charge motorists. The potential class-action lawsuit stems from a $7.90 fee that motorist Steven Pincus faced after a camera operated by American Traffic Solutions captured him running a red light in North Miami Beach. The company, a major player in the red-light camera industry, added the fee when Pincus used a credit card to pay a $158 penalty for running the red light, according to a panel of the 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals.
“Rebekah Jones civil lawsuit moved to federal court” via News Service of Florida — A civil lawsuit filed by former Florida Department of Health data analyst Jones alleging that state law-enforcement agents violated her rights has been moved from Leon County circuit court to U.S. District Court in Tallahassee. The lawsuit, filed in December, contends that FDLE agents violated Jones’ First Amendment rights and due-process rights and conducted an unlawful search and seizure when they searched her home and hauled away computer equipment on Dec. 7. The FDLE searched after an investigation allegedly linked her home address to a Nov. 10 message sent on an internal Department of Health multi-user account. Jones has contended she did not send the message.
Rebekah Jones’ lawsuit gets bumped up. Image via CNN.
“Big Tech companies big earners for state” via Dara Kam of News Service of Florida — DeSantis and Republican legislative leaders on Tuesday laid out a plan to punish Facebook, Apple, Amazon, Google and Twitter for blacklisting users or putting gags on social media posts. According to the State Board of Administration, the five tech behemoths are huge earners for Florida’s investment portfolio. The board manages Florida’s pension plan as well as investments for more than two dozen other accounts. The companies reaped $3.1 billion for the state last year. The state’s investment in the big five — known colloquially as FAAAT — was just shy of $8 billion.
“‘Grim Reaper’ opens committee to cut DeSantis’ political tenure short” via Jacob Ogles of Florida Politics — An attorney who made headlines roaming Florida’s beaches in grim reaper robes just turned his political sickle toward DeSantis. Daniel Uhlfelder, a Santa Rosa Beach attorney, just launched the political committee Remove Ron. The entity will raise funds to “hold Ron DeSantis accountable for his failures as Governor of Florida.” A launch video titled “Reaper” shows a video of Uhlfelder as he notoriously stalked Florida’s hottest tourist traps to stress the public health risk of the coronavirus pandemic. A narrator suggests the real target for that media-savvy campaign was, in fact, DeSantis’ political career.
“New COVID-19 cases dive to numbers not seen in two months” via Jane Musgrave of The Palm Beach Post — The number of new COVID-19 cases logged Wednesday again plunged to levels not seen since November as deaths continued to mount, according to the daily update from the Florida Department of Health. The 6,979 new people diagnosed is the second-lowest number since Nov. 30. The lowest number came on Monday when 5,730 new cases were reported. However, the 203 deaths reported statewide are more than the average of 179 that were tallied during the past two weeks. DeSantis said the disease appears to be on the wane.
“Most recent White House coronavirus report shows slight improvements in Florida” via Adrienne Cutway of ClickOrlando — The most recent White House coronavirus report shows Florida has seen some slight improvements recently. However, the Sunshine State still has a way to go before the pandemic is considered under control. The report, dated Sunday, was released Tuesday afternoon. It provides an overview of the current situation regarding case totals, hospitalizations, personal protective equipment supplies, positivity rate and more. According to those figures, Florida is 22nd in the nation for new COVID-19 cases with 324 per 100,00 people. That’s down 11 percentage points from the previous week. The state’s positivity rate is also down 1.2 percentage points for a new total of 10.9%, but that’s still higher than the national average.
“Publix, Winn-Dixie, Walmart to give COVID-19 vaccines in Florida as federal program launches” via Austin Fuller, Jeff Weiner, and Steven Lemongello of The Orlando Sentinel — A trifecta of Florida’s most-ubiquitous retailers will be the state’s initial distributors of coronavirus vaccines offered through the Federal Retail Pharmacy Program when it launches next week. The CDC confirmed Publix and Winn-Dixie locations in Florida would receive vaccine doses through the new federal program, joining Walmart, which had announced Tuesday that its locations in the Sunshine State would be part of the Biden administration initiative’s rollout. According to the White House, some participating pharmacies will begin administering doses through the program on Feb. 11. Questions remain about how the program will be administered, including which locations of each chain in Florida will be offering doses and when.
The federal vaccine program expands to include three major Florida retailers. Image via AP.
“For Publix’s next vaccine sign-up, you won’t need to wake up before dawn” via Lisa J. Huriash of The Orlando Sentinel — The hundreds of thousands of people who crushed the Publix website Wednesday and left without a vaccine appointment can sleep in a bit later when they try again Friday. “After listening to customer feedback, we’ve moved back the start time of the next event by one hour,” the Publix website reads. The new start time will be 7 a.m. Friday’s sign-up is for appointments available next Monday through Thursday. An appointment is required, and only seniors age 65 and older who can show proof of Florida residency can book a spot. Publix spokeswoman Maria Brous said 41,000 appointments were booked Wednesday morning, and “we can confirm that we had hundreds of thousands of customers online.”
“Vern Buchanan urges DeSantis to vaccinate hospice workers” via Jacob Ogles of Florida Politics — Front-line health care workers were the first in Florida to receive COVID-19 vaccines. But Rep. Buchanan said many hospice workers were left out. The Sarasota Republican on Wednesday sent a letter to DeSantis demanding these providers be included in vaccine distribution. Buchanan’s note explains that unlike nurses working in hospitals or doctor’s offices, caregivers in hospice facilities don’t all have a singular place of employment. That means there’s also an increased risk of exposure to the coronavirus. DeSantis has prioritized vaccinating nursing home residents and staff, but many hospice workers in those environments don’t fall into those categories.
“DeSantis opens vaccine site in Pahokee, after complaints that low-income areas were left out” via David Fleshler of The South Florida Sun-Sentinel — DeSantis came to a poor town on the shores of Lake Okeechobee Wednesday to open a new COVID-19 vaccination center, after complaints that the state’s vaccine distribution system neglected western Palm Beach County. About 500 vaccinations for seniors can be done at a temporary center that opened at Anquan Boldin Stadium in Pahokee, one of the Glades region’s low-income communities along the southeastern shore of the lake. The stadium was named for the star NFL wide receiver from Pahokee, who joined DeSantis at the event.
Ron DeSantis responds to criticism of his vaccination program by opening a site in rural western Palm Beach County. Image via WINK.
“Walmart to give COVID-19 vaccines at Florida pharmacies under Joe Biden retail distribution program” via the Orlando Sentinel — The Biden administration next week will begin shipping COVID-19 vaccine doses directly to well-known retailers across the country, in a broad partnership the White House billed Tuesday as a crucial expansion of the nation’s vaccination effort. Walmart and Sam’s Club pharmacies will be administering vaccines through the Federal Retail Pharmacy Program at pharmacies in 22 states, including Florida, Walmart U.S. Vice President of Health and Wellness Operations Amanda Jenkins wrote on the company’s website. The vaccinations are expected to start late next week, and those eligible will be able to make an appointment at walmart.com/COVIDvaccine.
Corona local
“COVID-19 cases continue on a downward trend in South Florida” via Ryan Nicol of Florida Politics — COVID-19 cases are continuing a gradual decline in South Florida, as the region recorded just 2,269 new cases in Wednesday’s Department of Health report. That’s after Monday’s report saw only 2,468 new cases. Those two numbers are among the lowest since the calendar changed, as South Florida’s tri-county area mostly experienced a virus resurgence following the Christmas and New Year holidays. Now, those new case marks appear to be on the decline. The case positivity rate is also on a downward trajectory, as that number now sits below 8% in Miami-Dade, Broward and Palm Beach counties.
South Florida COVID-19 seems to be easing up. Image via MPRNews.
“More than 1,000 vaccine doses were damaged in South Florida and state calls for audit” via Michelle Marchante of The Miami Herald — More than 1,000 COVID-19 vaccine doses were damaged last week in Palm Beach County, according to the Florida Department of Health. Now, the state is calling for an audit of the Health Care District of Palm Beach County to determine what’s going on. According to the Florida Department of Health, all vaccination providers must store and handle COVID-19 vaccines under the conditions outlined in the CDC Vaccine Storage and Handling Toolkit. Two hundred thirty-two vials of the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine spoiled because the power supply of the refrigerator they were in was accidentally turned off. The Pfizer vaccine needs to be kept extremely cold, minus 70 degrees Celsius. That’s colder than winter in Antarctica.
“Vaccines pouring back into Palm Beach County after Publix snafu” via Jane Musgrave of the Palm Beach Post — A week after Palm Beach County commissioners blasted DeSantis for shutting off the county’s supply of coronavirus vaccines, it appears the spigot has been turned back on. In addition to the 5,000 doses sent to the county health department this week, another 4,000 were delivered to its separate tax-financed health care district after commissioners complained that all of the county’s vaccines were diverted to Publix. Another 6,000 are to be dispatched so vaccination sites can be set up in communities and other areas convenient to seniors, said Commissioner Melissa McKinlay.
“COVID-19 rocks West Palm Beach’s Gunster law firm following two partner deaths from disease” via Alexandra Clough of The Palm Beach Post — During a recent two-month period, two partners at the venerable Gunster law firm in West Palm Beach have died from the coronavirus, stunning the legal and charitable communities and prompting a wave of fresh grief for the pandemic-weary county. In November, the disease claimed the life of Edward Tancer, a partner at the West Palm Beach-based firm and the former general counsel at Florida Power & Light. Then in January, former managing partner Donald Beuttenmuller, Jr., who battled the virus for nearly two months, succumbed to COVID-19.
“Polk County’s disabled feeling ‘forgotten’ by Florida’s COVID-19 vaccine rollout” via Sara-Megan Walsh of The Ledger — Paul Caretta said he’d been isolated in his Lakeland home for nearly a year to avoid catching COVID-19. The 56-year-old said he hoped his medical conditions would place him at the front of the line for a vaccine. Caretta said he’d been diagnosed with Lou Gehrig’s disease, also known as amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, a neurological condition that causes progressive muscle weakness. He also has COPD, pulmonary fibrosis. He uses a wheelchair and depends on a ventilator to breathe. “There’s nothing; there’s no information,” he said. “I feel completely forgotten by the state and local government.”
“Send more vaccines to hospitals rather than entities like Publix, Lee Health’s elected board says in letter to Gov. DeSantis” via Frank Gluck of the Fort Myers News-Press — DeSantis’ COVID-19 vaccine distribution policies that shifted doses away from hospitals to other entities including Publixare putting health care workers at risk, Lee Health’s elected Board of Directors wrote. Only about half the hospital system’s employees have been vaccinated. Lee Health and 26 other hospitals received new doses Monday, but not for health care workers. This “serious public health concern” has created a “significant vulnerability” in the hospital system’s ability to treat and prevent the spread of the virus, the 10-member board said.
Lee Health’s board urges Ron DeSantis to give vaccine precedence to hospitals over grocery stores.
“Ron Bergeron development company to lay off 64 workers; state projects fall off during COVID-19” via David Lyons of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — Citing COVID-19 and a decline in public projects, a land development company headed by venerable Broward entrepreneur “Alligator Ron” Bergeron will lay off 64 workers between March and April, he confirmed Tuesday. “Bergeron has thoughtfully and carefully been managing through these unprecedented challenges as a direct result of both COVID-19 and its impact on operations, as well as other ongoing declining business concerns,” the company said in three layoff notices filed Jan. 27 with the state Department of Economic Opportunity. The company, Bergeron Land Development Inc., said it intends to lay off 26 workers each in Indiantown and Venice and another dozen people in Longwood, all locations where projects are about to be completed.
Corona nation
“Anthony Fauci’s plea: Skip the Super Bowl parties” via Axios — The Biden administration would really prefer that people “lay low” on Super Bowl Sunday. It is the first national event that features multifamily gatherings since New Year’s, and it comes alongside growing concerns about the COVID-19 variants. “You don’t want parties with people that you haven’t had much contact with,” Fauci told NBC’s “Today” show. “Every time we do have something like this, there always is a spike.” The CDC is giving the same guidance. It recommends avoiding nonessential travel and indoor gatherings with people who don’t live in the same household.
Can the Super Bowl parties, says Anthony Fauci. Image via AP.
“Young and middle-aged adults responsible for most COVID-19 spread” via Caitlin Owens of Axios — The coronavirus pandemic in the U.S. has been chiefly driven by young and middle-aged people while killing mostly older people. Adults aged 20-49 were responsible for the vast majority of virus transmission last year, even after schools reopened in the fall, according to a new study published in Science. The U.S. vaccination effort is racing to keep up with the spread of new, more transmissible variants of the virus. Millions more Americans could be infected before a substantial portion of the population is vaccinated, making transmission patterns deeply relevant. The notion that non-vulnerable people can go about their normal lives, while vulnerable people self-isolate, has not borne out in the U.S.
Corona economics
“American warns 13,000 employees of furloughs as airlines prepare to lose federal aid next month” via Leslie Josephs of CNBC — American Airlines on Wednesday said it would send furlough notices this week to about 13,000 employees as the second round of federal payroll aid is set to expire next month, and travel demand remains in tatters. “The vaccine is not being distributed as quickly as any of us believed, and new restrictions on international travel that require customers to have a negative COVID-19 test have dampened demand,” American’s CEO Doug Parker and President Robert Isom wrote in a note to staff. Rival United Airlines last Friday sent similar furlough warnings to 14,000 staff members.
Thousands of American Airlines employees could be getting pink slips, as COVID-19 devastates travel.
“Cruise industry recovery likely to be long haul” via The News Service of Florida — “Significant” passenger cruise operations might not return to Florida waters for another year or longer as fallout from the COVID-19 pandemic continues, according to a port-industry lobbying group. Michael Rubin, Florida Ports Council vice president of governmental affairs, told members of the Senate Transportation Committee on Tuesday that cruise lines are working to meet an “onerous” list of requirements from the federal CDC and simply hope to have some vessels operating at half capacity this summer. Rubin said cruise lines plan to bring crew members back early to meet quarantine requirements, but issues have not been settled about passengers getting on and off ships while visiting foreign ports.
More corona
“Cruise fanatics eagerly volunteer to test virus protocols aboard ships” via Fran Golden of Bloomberg — Since February 2020, when an outbreak on the Diamond Princess led to at least 700 positive COVID-19 cases and 12 deaths among passengers and crew, the cruise industry has been unable to prove that it can keep its customers safe. Royal Caribbean’s call for volunteers in November received 100,000 signatures in the first week. An additional 150,000 have jumped on board since then, all of them willing and eager to stare down the coronavirus for the chance to get back out on the water. These so-called test cruises are one in a series of requirements from the CDC before lines can resume commercial operations, an activity the agency has designated a “ very high level of COVID-19” risk. Companies that succeed can get back to sailing.
Royal Caribbean is looking for volunteers to test COVID-19 protocols.
“What’s the difference between KN95 and KF94 masks?” via Liza Corsillo of The Strategist — Keeping track of which masks (and how many) we should wear to protect ourselves and the people around us from COVID-19 is a dizzying task, especially now that several new, more-contagious variants are circulating in the United States. We know that N95 masks are still the best at filtering potentially infectious particles, but due to shortages, N95s should still be reserved for medical professionals who need them most. Because of this, more and more people are turning to two other popular mask types, KN95 and KF94, since they both come very close to the level of filtration found in an N95 mask. But what’s the difference between the two? And which one is better?
Presidential
“White House’s Jen Psaki makes clear Space Force has full support of Biden administration” via Jacob Ogles of Florida Politics — Psaki made clear on Wednesday the U.S. Space Force has the full support of Biden. “They absolutely have the full support of the Biden administration,” she said. ”We are not revisiting the decision to have a Space Force.” The comments came a day after Psaki received significant flak from lawmakers in states with a significant space industry, including Florida. Psaki on Tuesday responded to a question on the military branch by saying, “Wow. Space force. It’s the plane of today,” a reference to a question earlier in the week about a new paint job for Air Force One. Reporters pressed the issue on Wednesday, asking if Biden supported the continuing existence of the Space Force.
Space Force gets full backing from the Joe Biden administration. Image via AP.
“Biden brother’s role in Florida law firm complicates White House ethics message” via Annie Linskey of The Washington Post — Shortly after his brother won the presidency, Frank Biden, who works for a Florida law firm called Berman Law Group, spoke to a local television station about his tight connection with Joe Biden. “We’ve all always been close,” Frank Biden told WPBF, saying he had talked to the President-elect just the day before, for his birthday. “But we’re closer now.” Viewers could hardly miss Frank Biden’s employer since he was wearing a black T-shirt emblazoned with a “TBT” logo, his firm’s shorthand for “The Berman Team.” And in Frank’s case, the shirt also spelled out another meaning for TBT: “The Biden Team.”
“Biden blue comes to the White House” via Diana Budds of Curbed — The Bidens don’t have immediate plans to bring in an interior decorator. We do know that Biden’s personal taste steers toward the conventional; no one can really argue against it, but no one will really be that enthusiastic about it, either. He feels most comfortable in the middle of the road. Biden’s personal residences are furnished with traditional pieces, classic elements, and hints of personability, such as a recurring signature color across many of his homes and offices. In the private quarters, historic preservation takes a back seat to the First Family’s lifestyle. Practically anything can change in these rooms.
Epilogue: Trump
“‘I would leave my House seat; I would leave my home’ to defend Donald Trump in Senate trial, Rep. Matt Gaetz says” via Felicia Sonmez of The Washington Post — Trump has named Bruce L. Castor Jr. and David Schoen as his defense lawyers in next week’s Senate impeachment trial. But on Wednesday, Rep. Gaetz said that he would leap at the chance to be part of the former President’s defense team and would be willing to leave his House seat, and even his home, to do so. Gaetz, one of the former President’s most vocal allies on Capitol Hill, remarked in an interview with Trump’s former chief strategist, Stephen Bannon, on the “War Room: Pandemic” podcast. Gaetz told Bannon that he and other unnamed House members asked the House Ethics Committee whether they could defend Trump during the Senate trial.
Matt Gaetz is standing by to do battle for Donald Trump. Image via AP.
“Trump aides made a late request to Team Biden to extend their parental leave. They said no.” via Daniel Lippman of POLITICO — Several ex-Trump political officials who lost their parental leave when Biden was sworn into office. It’s a byproduct of the field they’re in: Their boss may have been the one let go, but his departure has meant that they, too, lose their jobs and benefits. Still, they argue that the Biden administration should have honored their leave by keeping them on payroll until the end of it, a request that the Biden transition did not grant. An official noted anonymously that political appointees “do not enjoy the promise of federal employment past the end of the administration in which they choose to serve.” Experts on parental leave policy say that these Trump officials’ cases show the holes that still exist in the social safety net.
“Pentagon clears out advisory boards to oust last-minute Trump picks” via Nancy A. Youssef of The Wall Street Journal — Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin dismissed hundreds of members of the Pentagon’s policy advisory boards Monday, ousting last-minute Trump administration nominees as well as officials appointed by previous administrations. By removing members, effective Feb. 16, Austin avoided selectively firing those appointed by the Trump administration. The defense chief also ordered a review of at least 42 boards to be completed by June, defense officials said. “Advisory boards have and will continue to provide an important role in shaping public policy within [the Department of Defense],” Austin wrote in a memo to the Pentagon’s leadership. “That said, our stewardship responsibilities require that we continually assess to ensure each advisory committee provides appropriate value today.”
Lloyd Austin is ready to clean house.
“Can Trump legally live at Mar-a-Lago? Palm Beach to weigh argument from neighbors who want him to go away.” via Skylar Swisher of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — It’s a legal question that has hung over Mar-a-Lago for over a year: Does a 1993 agreement mean that former President Trump can’t live at his Palm Beach estate? Trump converted the historic mansion into a social club and signed an agreement that limited how many days club members could stay overnight in guest suites. Trump’s lawyer at the time indicated that Trump wouldn’t live there as part of the deal. Palm Beachers — not enthusiastic about the prospect of their exclusive island turning into a MAGA oasis — have seized on that to argue Trump can’t legally live at Mar-a-Lago.
D.C. matters
“Rick Scott calls on D.C. law firm to refund $6M made from repping ‘dangerous dictator’ Nicolás Maduro” via A.G. Gancarski of Florida Politics — U.S. Sen. Scott castigated a Washington law firm working for the Venezuelan government in sharp terms, calling for a refund of the $6 million paid out via Petróleos de Venezuela, a former state-owned Venezuelan oil company. “Your choice to represent a dangerous dictator who is against everything this country was built on has consequences, and I urge you to be transparent as to your actions on behalf of the regime, return these funds, and rethink working for Maduro or other murderous regimes in the future,” Scott wrote to Miami Democratic donor Marcia Wiss’ law firm, Wiss & Partners. Wiss told The Associated Press that her firm only offered “legal services” and did not lobby for the Maduro government.
Rick Scott demands a refund from Venezuela. Image via AP.
“Charlie Crist applauds Biden administration for Puerto Rico relief” via Kelly Hayes of Florida Politics — Crist is applauding Biden’s move to release $1.3 billion in aid to Puerto Rico to protect against future climate disasters, calling the funds “long overdue.” The House member is also praising the President’s work to ease Trump administration restrictions on $4.9 billion in aid approved by Congress to help the island rebuild after Hurricanes Maria and Irma. With the Biden administration’s move, Puerto Rico is slated to receive more than $6 billion in federal funds to help prepare the U.S. territory for future hurricanes and other disasters. The money assigned by the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development would be used for infrastructure projects and economic development, among other things.
“Crist leaves door open to challenging DeSantis for Florida Governor” via Julia Manchester of The Hill — Crist on Sunday would not rule out a run against DeSantis, saying he was open to considering a bid for the Governor’s mansion in Tallahassee. Crist previously served as the Sunshine State’s Governor from 2007 to 2011. Crist unsuccessfully challenged Republican Gov. Scott in the state’s 2014 gubernatorial election. Despite the gubernatorial bid discussion, the congressman said his top priority at the moment was dealing with the ongoing coronavirus pandemic. Crist hit DeSantis over his handling of the coronavirus pandemic, specifically the Sunshine State’s vaccine rollout.
Poll shows bipartisan support for clean energy policy — A new survey from conservative clean energy group Citizens for Responsible Energy Solutions found nearly two-thirds of Americans, including 59% of Republicans, back increased government support for clean energy. The polling also finds 52% of voters support an “all of the above” energy approach that would include fossil fuels. Support for that approach is higher among Republicans (61%) and independents (51%), while less than half (45%) of Democrats support such an approach. The CRES survey reveals strong support for several climate policies across partisan lines, including clean energy tax credits, planting more trees to store carbon dioxide, financial incentives for farmers to engage in sustainable practices that store carbon in soils, and federal funding to build electric car chargers.
Crisis
“House Dems move to yoke GOP to QAnon” via Ally Mutnick of POLITICO — House Democrats are preparing to center their strategy for the far-off midterm elections on a simple, aggressive message: Republicans are the party of QAnon. Making an unusually early move to protect their narrow majority, House Democrats’ campaign arm Tuesday launched its first TV ad campaign, spotlighting supporters of the fringe conspiracy theory. It is the first step in a larger plan, orchestrated by the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee’s new chair, Sean Patrick Maloney of New York, to exploit the growing friction between Trump hard-liners and establishment Republicans in the GOP base.
Congressional Democrats are looking to paint all Republicans with the QAnon brush. Image via AP.
“People died at The Capitol. Will rioters be charged with murder?” via Shaila Dewan of The New York Times — Since news of the first death during The Capitol riot on Jan. 6 broke, lawmakers, television personalities, and countless regular people on social media have been saying that the rioters have blood on their hands. The law does provide a way to hold people accountable for deaths they did not directly cause, like that of Ashli Babbitt, who was shot and killed by a Capitol Police officer while attempting to enter a restricted area. But the felony murder rule, as it is called, is a limited provision that has raised a host of legal and moral questions about complicity and fairness. In its broadest terms, the felony murder rule holds a person who commits a crime responsible for any deaths that result.
“Canada declares the Proud Boys a terrorist group” via Amanda Coletta of The Washington Post — Canada declared the Proud Boys a terrorist entity, adding the far-right group to a list that includes al-Qaida, ISIS and al-Shabab to crack down on “ideologically motivated violent extremism,” described by the country’s public safety minister as the “most significant threat to domestic security.” Public Safety Minister Bill Blair’s announcement came less than a month after Proud Boys allegedly joined the violent mob that stormed the U.S. Capitol after attending a rally by Trump in the hope of overturning the presidential election. Five people, including a Capitol Police officer, died in that attack.
“Proud Boys and Black Lives Matter activists clashed in a Florida suburb. Only one side was charged.” via Tim Craig of The Washington Post — When Black Lives Matter activists started marching through New Port Richey last summer — shouting slogans through bullhorns demanding racial justice — it took only a few days for the Proud Boys and other counterprotesters to show up and confront them. Burly groups of mostly White men encircled the demonstrators. They revved motorcycles while yelling threats, obscenities and support for the police and Trump, at times using their own bullhorns. Amid fears that the confrontations could lead to clashes or shootings, police started enforcing the town’s rarely used noise ordinance. But only the Black Lives Matter protesters were cited.
Proud Boys and Black Lives Matter protesters clash in Pasco County. Only one side was punished.
“Gunman who killed FBI agents in Florida identified” via Sarah Blaskey, Charles Rabin and Jay Weaver of The Miami Herald — The gunman who mowed down five FBI agents at the door of his Sunrise apartment has been identified as David Lee Huber, a 55-year-old who until Tuesday’s outburst of violence seems to have lived a largely innocuous life. According to public records, he ran a computer consulting business, had a pilot’s license, was married for 16 years before divorcing in 2016. His only known previous encounters with the legal system were confined to traffic tickets and an eviction in Colorado. He doesn’t seem to have had any footprint on social media. The FBI, still investigating one of the bloodiest days in agency history, has not yet formally named Huber as the gunman but is expected to do so.
“Who were the FBI agents killed in Florida? Both had history of pursuing child-porn cases” via Aaron Leibowitz, David Ovalle and Jay Weaver of the Miami Herald — The two FBI agents fatally shot while serving a warrant Tuesday morning in Sunrise were Daniel Alfin and Laura Schwartzenberger, both of whom had a distinguished history of investigating child pornography and sexual exploitation cases in South Florida. FBI Director Christopher Wray identified the two in a statement on Tuesday. “Every day, FBI special agents put themselves in harm’s way to keep the American people safe. Special Agent Alfin and Special Agent Schwartzenberger exemplified heroism today in defense of their country. The FBI will always honor their ultimate sacrifice and will be forever grateful for their bravery,” Wray said in the statement.
“FBI Director Christopher Wray visits with slain agents’ families in South Florida” via Jay Weaver, Charles Rabin and David Ovalle of the Miami Herald — One day after a gunman fatally shot two FBI agents, the Bureau’s director, met Wednesday with members of their families along with fellow agents who worked on their child-porn task force during the deadly execution of a search warrant. Wray also visited the crime scene where a suspect opened fire on a squad of agents Tuesday morning as they approached the front door of his Sunrise apartment to serve the search warrant for alleged possession of child pornography, law enforcement sources told the Miami Herald. The FBI director also met with U.S. Attorney Ariana Fajardo Orshan and other federal authorities. An FBI spokesman in South Florida declined to comment on Wray’s visit.
“FBI still searching for evidence at scene of deadly Sunrise raid” via Madeleine Wright and Ian Margol of WPLG — Police were still guarding the entrance of a gated community in Sunrise on Wednesday afternoon, a day after the execution of a search warrant there turned deadly, with two FBI special agents killed in the line of duty and another three wounded. The crime scene from that shooting is still active, hours after the suspect was confirmed dead, with sources saying he killed himself. Local 10 News has learned Huber was waiting for the agents, watching them through his Ring video doorbell — and opened fire the moment they breached the door.
Local notes
“Miami-Dade Republican primary voters support Florida Medicaid expansion, poll finds” via David Smiley of the Miami Herald — Despite GOP lawmakers’ opposition to expanding Medicaid, a recent poll has found that a clear majority of Florida voters — including Republicans in Miami-Dade County — support broadening the state’s government-run health care program providing coverage for low-income families. The poll, a survey of 600 conducted last month by The Tyson Group, found that 76% of registered voters in the state support a more expansive Medicaid program, compared to 13% against. In Miami-Dade County — home to more Obamacare marketplace enrollees than any other county in the U.S. — a separate query of 100 likely Republican primary voters found support for Medicaid expansion far ahead of the opposition, by a margin of 69% to 25%.
“Central Florida municipal elections include Bobby Olszewski’s run in Winter Garden” via Scott Powers of Florida Politics — Former Rep. Olszewski has qualified to run for his old seat on the Winter Garden Commission, setting up a marquee battle with incumbent Commissioner Mark Maciel among the municipal elections slated for March 9 around greater Orlando. Olszewski, a businessman who represented House District 44 in 2017 and ’18 and Maciel, a businessman and retired Air Force veteran, are battling for the District 3 seat on the Winter Garden Commission. The pair match up in one of three Winter Garden Commission elections contested in March, along with elections for Winter Park Mayor and two Ocoee City Commission seats.
Bobby Olszewski is looking to get back his old Winter Garden Commission seat.
“NAS Pensacola holds first base-wide active shooter training since Dec. 6, 2019, shooting” via Annie Blanks of the Pensacola News Journal — On a chilly, sunny February morning, shots from a fake gun rang out in the halls of the main medical building at Naval Air Station Pensacola. Sailors donning fake bloody bandages came stumbling out of the building screaming, as sirens from naval police units blared in the distance. An announcement came over the base’s “Giant Voice” intercom system: “Exercise! Exercise! Exercise! Active shooter. Take cover.” It was just a drill. A necessary one, the start of a two-week, all-base comprehensive crisis training that will prepare the base for active shooters, hostage situations, terrorist alerts and other disasters.
Top opinion
“Vaccines reveal DeSantis’ fatal leadership flaw: His lack of humility” via the Orlando Sentinel editorial board — During an appearance at The Villages Monday to promote vaccines, DeSantis took swipes at “lockdown states” like California and New York, blamed Biden’s young administration for politicizing vaccines and acted as if Florida (DeSantis) had made no mistakes. Florida’s Governor was his usual self: Petulant, defensive, unapologetic and political. It again put on full display his key defect as a leader: A lack of humility. No reasonable person could expect DeSantis or any other Governor to handle either the pandemic or the distribution of millions of vaccines flawlessly. There’s no template to follow and mistakes will be made. But DeSantis refuses to concede that he’s made mistakes. He won’t even admit to making course corrections.
Opinions
“Publix, with its partisan pay-to-play moves, has more than a seditious heiress to atone for” via Fabiola Santiago for The Miami Herald — It’s getting tougher, if not downright impossible, to walk into a Publix store in Florida without feeling repulsed by the company’s partisan politics. The powers that be have turned grocery shopping at the popular chain into a necessary chore that feels oh so slimy. It’s not just about the titillating revelation that the Publix-generated wealth of a seditious heiress funded the Trump rally that turned into a deadly attempt at a coup d’état that put our democracy to the test. Amid calls for a boycott, corporate Publix is trying to distance the supermarket chain from the heiress who funded the Capitol riot to the tune of $300,000.
“Do you feel like the last one on Earth social distancing?” via Stephanie Hayes for The Tampa Bay Times — No one is doing this perfectly. Who could possibly do a pandemic perfectly? Each day is a web of choices. We just got through the holiday COVID-19 spike, and now we are staring down the Big Game. Experts are worried about unchecked parties in homes and bars more than the event itself. Seeing the swarms at parties lately and watching the virus mutate, it feels like we’re going to do this forever. Like trying to do the right thing is pointless, hopeless, and other adjectives that end in “less.” Maybe you have that feeling. Like you’re the last one turning down events while you wait for the vaccine.
“U.S. Agriculture is funded by the public. Shouldn’t it serve the public good?” via Martin Lemos of The Counter — If you get your news from USDA economic reports, 2020 was a great year. But that is the story as told through statistical averages and industry data sets. That version of the story leaves out last year’s supply chain disruptions and extending food lines, rendering invisible the overworked, stressed and threatened lives of vulnerable communities in the fields, the factories, and in our neighborhoods. We can point to bright spots of caregiving and sustenance that result from a community-supported agricultural system. We need a USDA that honors our interest in participating in our future and truly represents the farming communities it often praises.
“Orlando is jealous of Tampa Bay, center of the sports universe” via Mike Bianchi for The Orlando Sentinel — As a longtime Orlandoan, avid sports fan and veteran sports columnist, I have a serious case of Tampa Bay envy. Tampa Bay is hosting its own Tom Brady and the Buccaneers in the Super Bowl. Tampa Bay has the Lightning, who are the reigning Stanley Cup champions. Tampa Bay has the Rays, who advanced to the World Series before losing to the Dodgers in six games. Meanwhile, in Orlando, we have a fading, injury-cursed NBA team — and we can’t even keep Josh Heupel.
On today’s Sunrise
Florida Surgeon General Scott Rivkees is launching an investigation into reports that more than 1,000 COVID-19 vaccine doses were damaged last week in Palm Beach County. DeSantis wants to know how it happened.
Also, on today’s Sunrise:
DeSantis said that in Pahokee, while announcing a new pod to provide vaccinations for people who live far from Palm Beach County’s urban centers. But the credit goes to former FSU and NFL player Anquan Bolden … who comes from the Glades.
— And since he had an NFL all-star by his side, the Governor couldn’t resist talking about this weekend’s Super Bowl in Tampa.
— Students and faculty at the University of Florida speak out against the effort to force everyone to return to campus for in-person classes. They say UF leaders are downplaying the threat of COVID-19 and putting lives at risk because they’re afraid of budget cuts from Tallahassee.
— A Senate committee approves a bill that would give the corrections department the authority to release older inmates who face serious medical problems.
— Two Democrats discuss filing bills to kill M-CORES, the multibillion-dollar project to build three new toll roads through some of the last undeveloped areas of the state.
— And finally, a Florida Man (and state lawmaker) says he got his mask in his mouth, so there’s no room for his foot.
“Marco Rubio says defense will win Super Bowl for Tampa Bay Buccaneers” via A.G. Gancarski of Florida Politics — Defense wins championships, and the Senior Senator from Florida told a national radio audience that he thinks it will make the difference in Sunday’s Super Bowl at Raymond James Stadium. Sen. Rubio believes the NFC Champion Tampa Bay Buccaneers will win the game, but not necessarily because of firepower on the ball’s offensive side. “The loss of their tackle for Kansas City is going to be a real problem for them,” Rubio said, referring to Eric Fisher, the bookend lineman who will miss Super Bowl LV.
“Tom Brady vs. Patrick Mahomes is one of the greatest Super Bowl QB matchups ever. We ranked all 55.” via Scott Allen and Neil Greenberg of The Washington Post — Sunday marks the first time the winning quarterbacks from the previous two Super Bowls have squared off. Furthermore, it features a matchup between the greatest quarterback of all-time in Brady and the only player who could conceivably challenge him for that title if Mahomes continues at his current career trajectory. On the other hand, this matchup might one day look different with the benefit of hindsight. Mahomes and Brady weren’t even the top two passers in their respective conferences this season, with Mahomes ranking second in the AFC in passer rating and Brady fifth in the NFC.
Tom Brady vs. Patrick Mahomes is a battle for the ages. Image via CNN.
“Crist, Kathy Castor wager against Kansas City House members for Super Bowl LV” via Kelly Hayes of Florida Politics — Crist and Castor made a friendly wager with Kansas City Reps. Emanuel Cleaver and Sharice Davids on the outcome of Super Bowl LV Wednesday morning. The deal, if the Tampa Bay Buccaneers take the title, Cleaver and Davids must provide Kansas City’s world-famous barbecue. If the Kansas City Chiefs wins, the Tampa members will provide local Latin guava pastries, flan and Cuban sandwiches. The losing pair will also have to wear the opposing team’s masks on the House floor when Congress returns for session. This year’s Super Bowl will be the first in NFL history where the host city has its team in the game, with Tampa hosting the Buccaneers.
“Disney World at 50: After the Super Bowl, ‘I’m going to Disney World’ again and again and again” via DeWayne Bevil of The Orlando Sentinel — It’s Super Bowl week, the time of the year when all professional football players want to look into the camera and say “I’m going to Disney World.” In theory, it would be a short trip this year as the big game is being played at Tampa’s Raymond James Stadium, about 75 miles from Magic Kingdom. The elapsed time between Walt Disney World’s opening in 1971 and the first “I’m going to Disney World” moment is less than 16 years. So, the “I’m going to Disney World” campaign has had staying power. Michael Eisner, The Walt Disney Co. CEO at the time, wrote in a book that the campaign was prompted by a suggestion from his wife, Jane Breckenridge.
“Super Bowl commercials often feature the host area, but no such luck this year” via Paul Guzzo of the Tampa Bay Times — Clydesdales won’t befriend dalmatians during this year’s Super Bowl, nor will polar bears chug soda. Budweiser and Coca-Cola are among the brands that, for a mix of COVID-19 related reasons, will not advertise during the television broadcast of the big game played in Tampa on Sunday. This is a double whammy for the Tampa Bay area. Like the rest of the world, Tampa Bay will miss out on some of the enjoyment brought by commercials filmed specifically for the Super Bowl. Still, area residents also missed out on being a part of the productions and their economic windfall. Super Bowl Sunday usually includes commercials that feature the game’s host area as a backdrop.
Super Bowl host cities usually get the benefit of being a backdrop for commercials. Not this time. Image via AP.
“Budweiser’s Sit-Out Super Bowl LV campaign more effective than any big game ad in last five years” via Kelly Hayes of Florida Politics — Budweiser’s Sit-Out Super Bowl campaign has been the most effective Super Bowl ad in the last five years. The Sit-Out campaign was made to announce that the beer company would not run an ad at the Super Bowl for the first time in almost four decades to allocate the airtime funds to promote awareness and education around COVID-19 vaccines. And, its efforts were successful. An analysis found that seven out of 10 Americans had a more favorable view of the Anheuser-Busch InBev brand after watching “Bigger Picture,” 79% higher than the average U.S. ad.
“Native American group plans Super Bowl protest of Kansas City Chiefs” via Tony Marrero of the Tampa Bay Times — The Kansas City Chiefs will arrive in Tampa this week as defending Super Bowl champs and the bearers of a divisive name. Ahead of the kickoff for Super Bowl 55 on Sunday, a local group plans to stage a protest at Raymond James Stadium to urge the team to ditch the “Chiefs” moniker out of respect for Native American people. The St. Petersburg-based Florida Indigenous Rights and Environmental Equality, or FIREE, wants to call attention to how hurtful the team’s name is to indigenous people who see their culture and spirituality appropriated and caricatured by fans who wear headdresses and war paint and swing their arms in an Arrowhead Chop, said group co-founder Alicia Norris.
Super Bowl ads
Amazon:
Bud Light:
Robinhood:
Squarespace:
Happy birthday
Celebrating today are Dan Barrow of Veterans Florida, Dan Berger and former Sen. Dwight Bullard.
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Good morning. Yesterday, two Connecticut lawmakers proposed making pizza the state’s official food. We all know Frank Pepe’s is the GOAT, but pepperoni-for-pepperoni does CT actually have the best pizza in the country? Hmmm….
In other news, don’t write newsletters when you’re hungry.
Stimulus: President Biden said he’d be open to narrowing eligibility for $1,400 direct payments as part of his broader relief proposal, but he’s not backing down from that check size.
Covid: New Jersey is allowing more capacity at indoor facilities and lifting a curfew on indoor dining. And California and New York announced plans to open mass vaccination sites at sports arenas, including Yankee Stadium on Friday.
Let’s all just soak in that image for a second before moving on.
Okay, ready.
Yesterday, Jazz Pharmaceuticals announced a $7.2 billion acquisition of GW Pharmaceuticals, a company whose product Epidiolex (a treatment for children with severe epilepsy) was the first cannabinoid to secure FDA approval. Cannabinoid = drug derived from cannabis.
The tie-up is especially notable because pharmaceutical-grade cannabis products tend to have an easier time with regulators than recreational products like the cannabis-laced stroopwafels and cotton candy you can get in states where pot is legal.
It’s one sign of broader momentum in cannabis
Cannabis stocks have been on a roll since President Biden’s election, and bulls have high hopes that his administration will soften the US’ harsh cannabis laws. Pot stocks surged even further this week after three Democratic senators, including Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, pledged to prioritize marijuana reform in the current Congress.
The ETFMG Alternative Harvest exchange-traded fund, which tracks cannabis companies, gained almost 10% yesterday alone.
Biden himself has opposed complete legalization, and that’s key because, without federal legalization, pot businesses will stay barred from accessing the federally insured banking system.
The Beltway scoop: Schumer has favored legalization in the past, but the cause could gain momentum now that his party holds a majority in the Senate. Owen Bennett, an analyst at financial services firm Jefferies, wrote in a note to clients that he expects legislation in the not-too-distant future that allows pot businesses to 1) use federally insured banks 2) list on US exchanges and 3) access capital markets.
Like Commissioner Gordon beaming the Bat-Signal into the night sky, Italy’s president is calling on his own Dark Knight, economist Mario Draghi, to save the country from its deepest economic crisis since WWII.
The enormous task ahead requires less repelling and Krav Maga and more relationship-building and inspired policymaking, which is great news for a guy with Draghi’s experience.
As president of theEuropean Central Bank during the continent’s debt crisis, Draghi famously vowed in 2012 to do “whatever it takes” to save the euro. And he’s widely respected among Europe’s financial elite for doing just that.
The Italian stock market rose yesterday following the news that Draghi would take charge.
Zoom out: Italy’s economy shrank almost 9% last year because of the pandemic, but even before Covid-19, growth was disappointing and national debt was escalating.
Looking ahead…if Draghi is able to corral lawmakers into forming a new government, he’ll have $240 billion in EU economic recovery funds to play with.
MIT graduate student Anubhav Guha turned $500 into more than $200,000 in less than three weeks trading options on GameStop. Other amateur traders paid off their student loans with their $GME earnings.
But as the biggest finance story of 2021 continues to shake out, we’re starting to learn that many bigger, institutional players also cleaned up on the epic rally in meme stocks.
While Reddit forums were murmuring about GameStop, asset manager Fidelity was snapping up 10% of the retailer’s total outstanding shares. Those holdings would have been worth over $2 billion at the end of January had it not sold off portions during GameStop’s rise.
Private equity group Silver Lake and hedge fund Mudrick Capital also both notched $100+ million gains on AMC, another Reddit favorite.
But the real winners have been market makers
Market makers provide the plumbing for US financial markets, carrying out trades on behalf of online brokerages like Robinhood. And the more people trade, the more money they make. More than 93 billion shares changed hands last week, including a daily record 24.4 billion on Wednesday, per the FT.
Bottom line: Reddit traders were rewarded for their early faith in GameStop…but so were many of the pros.
Bad IT can be a horrorshow. If you’re a small or medium-sized company, you literally can’t afford to be worrying about your IT infrastructure at all hours of the day.
We’ve got a lightning bolt of an answer for your IT needs: Electric.
Electric has helped over 400 small and medium-sized businesses upgrade their IT strategies. They’re setting the new standard for IT, and they’re doing it in ways that make sense for your small(er) biz, from reducing your costs by up to 70% to lightning-fast helpdesk support.
Electric wants to show you what they can do. Right now, if you’re an IT decision-maker at a US-based company with 15-250 employees, they’ll give you an Eero 6 home wi-fi system for free if you take a meeting with them.
Startups have raised an alphabet soup of new rounds in the past few days. Here are some interesting disruptors newly flush with cash.
Wine recs: Vivino, a wine recommendation app for people who don’t know a Pinot Gris from a Pinot Noir, closed a $155 million Series D. Its user base has nearly doubled in the last three years to 50 million as more people endeavor to identify wines beyond their color schemes.
Grocery delivery: Imagine a more organic-focused version of Instacart and you get Good Eggs. It’s an e-commerce service that delivers everything from groceries to meal prep kits, all from local sources. It’s using the $100 million it recently raised to expand in Southern California.
Preschool software: Former Shark Tank contestant Brightwheel’s latest $55 million raise values it at $600 million. Brightwheel provides software for preschools and daycares to communicate with parents, and grew its business last year despite most child care centers shutting their doors for a period.
Both Sacha Baron Cohen and Netflix had a Wednesday morning for the ages—Netflix nabbed a jaw-dropping 42 Golden Globe nominations, while SBC picked up noms for his roles in both Amazon Studios’s Borat: Subsequent Moviefilm and Netflix’s The Trial of the Chicago 7.
To put Netflix’s haul in a deep focus shot, 42 nominations = 35% of the total, and 3x more than any other studio or network in either the TV or film categories.
David Fincher’s Mank and The Crown, both released on Netflix, earned the most nominations in either category, with six each.
Zoom out (lol): Netflix’s recognition reflects 1) its evolution in original content since the 2013 release of House of Cards, its first original series, and 2) a new Hollywood landscape dominated by streaming. Amazon and Hulu tied for the second-most nominations.
Wondering how Succession got snubbed? The pandemic threw a wrench in many shows’ production schedules, so TV favorites including the Roy family and The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel didn’t have an eligible season. As for the I May Destroy You snub…we have no explanation.
Super Bowl parties are a fantastic tradition—you get showered with compliments on your eggplant dip, everyone gives their hot take on the halftime show, and, if we’re lucky, there’s a thrilling football game to top it all off.
This year, the pandemic pretty much sacked Super Bowl parties. Many of us will be watching the big game solo, or with our relatively small pod crews, who we love…but it’s not the same as the typical queso-soaked bash. So to make a distanced Super Bowl a bit more fun, we’ve spun up some articles and guides to help get you through Game Day feeling a bit less lonely.
Calling everyone who enjoys coffee, winning competitions, and money. is giving you the chance to . Even two runners-up could win $15,000 and $10,000. Test your Creamer flavor-creating skills .*
The stock market has been a little less crazy this week…but not the news cycle. Three of these headlines are real, and one we made up. Can you spot the fake?
“Nissan Altima makes a prominent appearance in Volkswagen Super Bowl commercial after creative agency mixup”
“Six arrested after changing Hollywood sign to ‘Hollyboob'”
“US toddler to release debut album recorded in the womb”
“Scientists have taught spinach to send emails and it could warn us about climate change”
ANSWER
A Nissan Altima didn’t actually sneak into a VW commercial.
Democrats unveiled a measure this week to drop Greene from the House Education and Labor Committee and the House Budget Committee over concerns that she had amplified conspiracy theories and endorsed political violence, detailed in recent reports on her social-media activity. Texas Rep. Brian Babin on Tuesday proposed an amendment to the resolution that would replace Greene’s name with Omar’s.
…
“We’re really trying to say, look, if it’s good for the goose, it’s good for the gander, but maybe what should happen is we let Republicans take care of our own, and you Democrats take care of your own,” he continued, “and when someone is elected — and by the way, most of these statements were known when [Greene] was running, and she won overwhelmingly.”
…
Omar, who represents Minnesota’s 5th Congressional District and is one of the first Muslim women elected to Congress, faced criticism shortly after she took office in 2019 over her tweets about Israel. Several Republicans and Democrats condemned her statements as anti-Semitic. Omar apologized and said that her intentions were “never to offend my constituents or Jewish Americans as a whole.”
Prosecutors are asking for an arrest warrant to be issued against Kyle Rittenhouse after he allegedly failed to register a change of address. Rittenhouse, who is charged with killing two men at the Kenosha riots in August, was released on a $2 million bond. Attorney for the accused, John Pierce, claims that he was told when filing the initial paperwork that he “‘absolutely should not’ provide the address of the Rittenhouse Safe House on the form, but to instead provide his home address in Antioch, Illinois.”
Senate Power Sharing Deal: Dems Get the Power, GOP Gets… What?
In response to Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez’s recent claim that her life was in danger during the January 6 Capitol riots, Rep. Nancy Mace pointed out that her “office is 2 doors down” from AOC’s. Mace said, “Insurrectionists never stormed our hallway. Egregious doesn’t even begin to cover it. Is there nothing MSM (mainstream media) won’t politicize?” When the internet denizens began meming about this, the New York Representative sent a message to her supporters asking them to flag any posts that questioned her. Big Tech has embraced this censorious move wholeheartedly and has begun removing accounts.
Rep. Maxine Waters (D-CA) said President Trump should be charged with “premeditated murder” over his role in the Jan. 6 Capitol riot.
The CEO of Parler, John Matze, has been fired by his own board. He writes that he was not involved in the decision and that he had faced “constant resistance” to his efforts to make free speech a model for the platform.
John Kerry, President Biden’s new climate Czar, is under fire for flying in his private jet to Iceland in 2019 to receive an environmental award. He responded that private jet travel was the “only choice for somebody like me.”
Survey Says: The People Don’t Want Another Impeachment
Something political to ponder as you enjoy your morning coffee.
Representative Liz Cheney survived a vote by fellow Republicans that would have seen her stripped of the House GOP Conference Chair. She touted this as a “resounding” acknowledgment of the party’s unity. However, recent polling suggests that GOP supporters favor Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene by more than 30 points. The two congresswomen have become focal points for the heart of the party and each more polarizing in their own ways.
The coronavirus pandemic has caused untold loss and social-emotional harm for many students. Now is the time for overly cautious districts to begin course-correcting.
The consequences of low fertility today will echo through Americans’ increasingly empty homes for decades to come, leaving millions more people isolated and adrift from wider society as they age.
The hermit kingdom is reeling from sanctions, natural disasters, famine, and the COVID-19 pandemic. And since life in North Korea looks likely to get even worse in the months ahead, the regime is doubling down on its efforts to prevent the flow of outside information into the country.
Darrell West explains how artificial intelligence (AI) will affect the economy in the coming decades, and he explores many policy questions that lawmakers will need to consider as AI transforms society.
“Myanmar police have filed charges against ousted leader Aung San Suu Kyi for illegally importing communications equipment… The move followed a military coup on Monday and the detention of Nobel Peace laureate Suu Kyi and other civilian politicians. The takeover cut short Myanmar’s long transition to democracy and drew condemnation from the United States and other Western countries.” Reuters
Both sides condemn the coup:
“The world’s governments should make clear to the junta that its actions are illegitimate and doomed to fail. Civilians detained this week, including Suu Kyi, should be freed and the elected parliament allowed to convene. The U.S. has sounded the right notes so far. It should coordinate with allies in Europe and Asia to aim sanctions at junta leaders and military-linked enterprises. Myanmar’s typically circumspect neighbors should underscore that they’ll deplore any violent crackdown on protesters. China might see an opportunity to gain influence at the expense of the U.S., but it should recognize that anger, instability and economic stagnation in Myanmar don’t serve its long-term interests.” Editorial Board, Bloomberg
“Myanmar may seem far away and of little consequence to America. But it has been a symbol of the continuing global competition between democracy and authoritarianism, and remains a geopolitically important nation. The coup and current crisis cannot be ignored by the United States, even if Washington’s options for influencing what happens in Naypyidaw remain limited. At a minimum, it demands a clear and unified front by America, Europe, and Asia’s democracies, with a willingness to isolate the new regime, provide aid for any refugees, and confront those nations that abet Myanmar’s descent into illiberalism.” Michael Auslin, National Review
Other opinions below.
From the Right
“The Myanmar government, led by Nobel Peace Prize winner Aung San Suu Kyi, is no shining beacon of tolerance and freedom. They have oppressed the Muslim minority Rohingyas to the point that the International Criminal Court has brought a charge of genocide against her government. She denies the Royingya’s have been targeted and has even defended the military’s brutality…
“There is little doubt that the military has violently cracked down on the million and a half Rohingyas in Myanmar. Estimates range from 7,000 to 20,000 Rohingyas murdered by the military and the police with nearly a million fleeing the country to Bangladesh. But Suu Kyi remains enormously popular in Myanmar with the majority Buddist population. That doesn’t make the genocide right, but removing her is not up to any nation, and certainly not the military junta that now controls the country.” Rick Moran, PJ Media
Many argue that “The West has used market access as a carrot to urge Burma’s military rulers to cede power to Ms. Suu Kyi. Yet the extent that a power transition actually occurred was exaggerated. A return to economically isolating the country of 54 million on China’s southern border could hurt the Burmese people and play into Beijing’s hands…
“The top U.S. priority in Asia is limiting Beijing’s ability to control independent states like Burma, which is strategically situated in the Indo-Pacific. China is holding back from condemning the coup, likely in hopes of making diplomatic inroads with a military government… Burma poses difficult dilemmas on democracy and human rights. Yet U.S. ability to engage will be reduced if Burma falls further into China’s orbit. The American response to the coup must take into account the strategic landscape in Asia. That will require realistic diplomacy, not only moral denunciation.” Editorial Board, Wall Street Journal
Others, however, argue that “The argument that we cannot be too tough on Burma because that will give room for the Chinese to consolidate its relationship with the military leadership is complete nonsense. Beijing’s relationship with Burma already far outstrips Washington’s. This same logic vis-à-vis competition with China is what led the U.S. to normalizing relations in the first place. It did not work. The U.S. should now look to re-impose sanctions lifted or waived over the last decade. We lifted faster and more broadly than reforms on the ground in Burma justified. The ‘coup’ bears out this judgment.” James Jay Carafano, Fox News
Others still posit that “As unfortunate as the subversion of Myanmar’s fleeting democracy is, the Biden administration’s options for rectifying it are quite limited. The coup in Naypyitaw is an apt example of how even the most powerful country on the planet can often find itself powerless when it comes to the internal politics of other states… Visa bans and asset freezes via the Global Magnitsky Act are at the top of the list, but many of Myanmar’s generals—including Min Aung Hlaing, Myanmar’s commander in chief—are already subjected to those penalties for their inhumane crackdown on the Rohingya population…
“Economic sanctions, too, are hardly a magic bullet… The junta spent decades under Washington’s boot, learning to maintain their own power and wealth while Myanmar’s population sunk to the depths of depression and poverty. Going back to those times wouldn’t be a shock to the generals, but rather a return to the status-quo ante… even the United States doesn’t have all the answers—nor should it pretend it can dictate Myanmar’s politics.” Daniel R. DePetris, Newsweek
From the Left
“First, the US should work multilaterally to build support for advancing a global arms embargo and the referral of the situation in Myanmar to the International Criminal Court. If the US can build wide support for these actions, it will be much more difficult politically for China or Russia to veto these proposals at the UN Security Council…
“Second, the US should also immediately sanction Myanmar Economic Corporation and Myanmar Economic Holdings, the two massive military controlled conglomerates that usually through international joint ventures own and run well over 100 companies that work in construction, manufacturing, telecommunications, insurance, banking, gem extraction and tourism sectors…
“And third, the international community should redirect funds that were being spent on helping the government with political and economic reforms to provide support for nongovernmental organizations that can offer humanitarian assistance across the border to the estimated 200,000 internally displaced persons who have fled the human rights abuses of the military as well as to the some 1 million Myanmar refugees in neighboring countries.” Jared Genser, CNN
“[Aung San Suu Kyi] destroyed her reputation in the West by defending the military’s genocidal campaign against the Rohingya minority in 2017. But animosity between her and military leaders remained high, in part because of her efforts to change the constitution to eliminate the generals’ privileged status. Aung San Suu Kyi’s failings do not mean that Myanmar’s limited democracy is not worth saving; on the contrary, success by the armed forces in reestablishing a full dictatorship would be a disaster for the cause of freedom in Southeast Asia and a boon for China…
“Mr. Biden and his national security team have pledged to reestablish U.S. leadership on vital multilateral issues. This is an opportunity to show they can deliver.” Editorial Board, Washington Post
“But some advocates warned that too much international pressure on Myanmar, especially if linked to the Rohingya, might create the unintended consequence of angering the Myanmarese military and provoking a backlash — one they might take out on the Rohingya. ‘I’m just echoing the voices of the Rohingya that I know and I’ve spoken to do, who fear they are going to be number one, front and center, of the Burma military showing its power,’ [Mabrur Ahmed, founder and director of a UK-based human rights group] said.” Jen Kirby, Vox
“The idolization of Suu Kyi is a textbook example of the dangers of reducing global political figures, who have their own interests and agendas, into one-dimensional heroes or villains… In 2016, when the anti-Rohingya campaign began, it appeared that the Obama administration’s backing for Suu Kyi’s government, after having played a key role in getting her released, made the U.S. reluctant to criticize it too strongly…
“Myanmar was seen as one of the few unambiguous human rights wins for Obama, whose notable foreign policy wins, from the Iran nuclear deal to the normalization of relations with Cuba, generally involved finding areas of mutual interest with authoritarian regimes rather than transforming them. As [Samantha] Power recalls, Myanmar was viewed as a ‘rare bright spot’ of democratic progress… the coup feels like the end of whatever lofty hopes American policymakers had left about their ability to cajole or induce autocratic countries to become full-fledged democracies.” Joshua Keating, Slate
A libertarian’s take
“The situation in Burma, like so many other conflicts and controversies around the world, isn’t Washington’s problem to solve… Naypyitaw matters to America mostly as a geopolitical battleground with the People’s Republic of China, but Burma’s geographic position, on China’s southern border, gives Beijing an enormous advantage. The humanitarian concerns are real, but there is little Washington can do to rescue a nation that has spent the last 58 years under full or partial military rule. Both India and Japan, with much greater economic investment than America in Burma, are better positioned to compete commercially, and in turn battle for political influence…“The return to military rule is a tragedy. The consequences could be truly catastrophic if conflict between the Tatmadaw and various ethnic groups flares anew. However, rather than confront Burma, a former British colony, Washington should back allies and friends as they take the lead.” Doug Bandow, American Conservative
President Biden meets yesterday with Vice President Harris, Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer and other Democratic senators. Photo: Stefani Reynolds/Pool via Getty Images
President Biden told Republican senators he has “an open door and an open mind” on his $1.9 billion coronavirus plan. But he already has the votes, and overwhelming support in the country.
Why it matters: Well, power matters. And Biden holds all of it.
Get used to this. Democrats are gleeful as they watch the media fixate on family feuds inside the GOP, while Biden pushes out executive orders and pushes through this bill on his terms.
Biden embraces the reality that the two numbers that matter most to his presidency are coronavirus cases falling and economic growth rising.
Steve Ricchetti, counselor to the president and longtime Biden confidant, was in the Oval this week for meetings with Republican and Democratic senators, and told me that the president “reaffirmed and deepened his explanation and commitment on the numbers and the substance” of the full package.
Ricchetti said Biden made it clear that he welcomes “fine-tuning or amendments or recommendations,” but “underscored that he’s committed to his plan and to the elements he outlined” — and to moving quickly.
What we’re watching: Ricchetti said the president wants to have “a bipartisan and unifying dialogue in the country,” including conversations he’s already had with mayors and local elected officials, “so that this isn’t just about a dialogue with senators and members of Congress. It is a dialogue with the country.”
Ricchetti said Biden treated a GOP counterproposal “with an open mind and with respect. He was also honest … in underscoring why he proposed what he did — that he was committed to every one of the elements in his package.”
The bottom line: Democrats will dismiss any whining about Biden’s stimulus as D.C. noise or Republican hypocrisy. They’ll be right on both fronts.
Never has a company been so popular, and also so hated, Axios’ Felix Salmon writes.
Why it matters: We’re at a key inflection point in the Robinhood saga that’s likely to determine whether having a snazzy app with name recognition is all you really need to overcome internal weaknesses.
Robinhood is loved not only by the trading newbies who are downloading the app at a record pace, but also by Wall Street investors who have recently sunk $3.4 billion into the company.
It’s true: “If you’re not paying for it, you’re not the customer — you’re the product.” Robinhood makes its money by directing its customers’ trades to high-frequency traders on Wall Street.
The overwhelming majority of Robinhood’s revenue comes from options trades — ultra-risky trading where individual investors almost never make money.
The bottom line: Expect Robinhood CEO Vlad Tenev to face tough questions when he appears on Capitol Hill for hearings into stock volatility later this month. But don’t expect Robinhood’s investors to care.
So far, none of Robinhood’s scandals have curtailed its growth.
House Republican Leader Kevin McCarthy got a standing ovation last night after House GOP Conference Chair Liz Cheney triumphed in a 145-61 secret-ballot vote to stay in leadership, Axios’ Alayna Treene reports from Capitol Hill.
Why it matters: House Republican leaders believe that the worm has turned and their conference is united again.
What’s next: House Republicans will be forced to go on the record today in a vote on whether conspiracist Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R) is stripped of committee assignments.
An Axios-SurveyMonkey poll, which popped last night in Sneak Peek, found Greene is far more popular among Republicans than Cheney, a sign that Trumpism is thriving in the GOP, Margaret Talev reports.
4. Weekly map … Seeing green: Cases fall all over the country
New coronavirus infections slowed by nearly 16% over the past week, continuing a trend of rapid improvement, Axios’ Sam Baker and Andrew Witherspoon write.
Why it matters: The U.S. still has a ton of coronavirus, and there’s still the potential for dark days ahead. But this is progress, and the improvement is significant. If this trend keeps going, the country will be in a far better and safer position as vaccines continue to roll out.
Nationwide, the U.S. is averaging about 139,000 new cases per day — a 16% improvement over last week, which was a 16% improvement over the week before.
The number of new hospitalizations was also down last week, by just over 26%.
And deaths fell by about 6%, to an average of 3,097 deaths per day.
Between the lines: 139,000 cases and 3,000 deaths per day is still a very bad pandemic, but at least the numbers are headed in the right direction.
The U.S. is back at about the same caseload we were experiencing shortly before Thanksgiving.
The number of new daily cases fell over the past week in 42 states, and held steady in the remaining eight states. No state got worse.
What we’re watching: Experts warn that a more contagious variant of the virus is quickly becoming the dominant strain within the U.S.
5. New this morning: Klobuchar introduces sweeping antitrust bill
Illustration: Eniola Odetunde/Axios
Sen. Amy Klobuchar (D-Minn.) will be out today with a plan for how Congress could update antitrust laws to give enforcers better odds and more ammunition for taking on Big Tech, Ashley Gold and Margaret Harding McGill write.
Why it matters: Klobuchar will lead the Senate Judiciary antitrust panel, putting her in position to take the lead on rewriting competition laws.
What’s next: Her new bill aligns with proposals from House Democrats and some populist Republicans, upping the chances she can get it passed.
GameStop and “meme” stocks have been getting the eyeballs. But cannabis has been the market’s real standout in 2021, because of renewed expectations of U.S. legalization, Dion Rabouin writes in Axios Markets.
Many have doubled in less than a month.
Why it matters: Pot stocks have been volatile over the past year, but have boomed since Joe Biden was elected president, and could see a run similar to 2018 following Canada’s decision to fully legalize.
Detainees stand behind bars at an immigration detention center in Bangkok in 2019. Photo: Romeo Gacad/AFP via Getty Images
A Freedom House report catalogues 608 incidents of cross-border coercion — detentions, assaults, unlawful deportations and suspected assassinations — by authoritarian countries against dissidents and exiles since 2014.
Freedom House president Mike Abramowitz and director of research Nate Schenkkan write in the WashPost: “The incidents … are only the tip of the iceberg; every assassination, every rendition, every detention creates a ripple effect in a diaspora community, silencing far more than just the individual.”
Photo illustration: Brendan Lynch/Axios. Photo: Ramsey County Sheriff’s Office via Getty Images
Security plans for next month’s trial of former Minneapolis officer Derek Chauvin, charged with second-degree murder in the death of George Floyd, are sparking a fight, Torey Van Oot and Nick Halter report in Axios Twin Cities.
Gov. Tim Walz (D) wants the legislature to pass a $35 million fund that local governments can use for emergency and security costs, including the trial.
Some Republicans don’t want the rest of the state to help Minneapolis.
10. 📷 Parting shot: Inauguration, sunrise to sunset, in one photo
Stephen Wilkes was in a crane for 15 hours on Inauguration Day, from 5:30 a.m. to 8:30 p.m., to capture this “Day to Night” photo for National Geographic.
Wilkes shot 1,500 frames and used about 50 individual images for the final image.
As National Geographic’s Sydney Combs put it: “For the past 12 years, Wilkes has perfected the art of taking the same picture over and over again — except no two images are ever the same.”
Wilkes believes he caught President Trump leaving Washington on Marine One on the right-hand, cloudy side of the frame.
The photographer hopes people see this “as an image of HOPE.”
See a side-by-sidewith an image Wilkes took of President Obama’s 2013 inauguration.
The House Republican leader condemned past comments by Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-Ga.) but accused Democrats of a “partisan power grab” as they advanced a measure that would strip Greene of her committee assignments.
House Republican Conference Chairwoman Liz Cheney refused to apologize for voting to impeach former President Donald Trump. Embattled freshman and staunch Trump supporter Marjorie Taylor Greene got a standing ovation from some GOP lawmakers for battling Democratic efforts to strip the Republican Georgia congresswoman from two committees.
A campaign autopsy by former President Donald Trump’s chief pollster showed then-Vice President Mike Pence held an advantage over current Vice President Kamala Harris with swing-state voters, as well as over Trump and now-President Biden.
Maricopa County refuses to turn over elections equipment and ballots from the November general election to the Arizona Senate, escalating a fight between the dueling government bodies over election integrity oversight.
Prosecutors sought the arrest of 18-year-old Kyle Rittenhouse, who is accused of killing two people, after the teenager allegedly violated the terms of his bond.
In 2018, Walmart launched Live Better U, a program designed to meet associates where they are on their educational journey by focusing on degree completion with supportive elements like free student coaching and career pathways for graduates.
Fox Business host Lou Dobbs berated former President Donald Trump’s impeachment defense lawyer David Schoen for allowing Trump to participate in the impeachment process.
Parler CEO John Matze said he has been fired by the board of the social media company, which has not been running since the deadly siege against the Capitol last month.
The city of San Francisco is suing its own school system to force education leaders to produce a reopening plan after the district neglected to do so, according to its plans released Wednesday.
Nikki Haley hired a heavy-hitter political operative to run her new political action committee, another signal the former ambassador is eyeing a potential 2024 presidential bid.
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18.) ASSOCIATED PRESS
Feb 4, 2021
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AP MORNING WIRE
Good morning. In today’s AP Morning Wire:
Sitting on billions, US Catholic dioceses amassed taxpayer virus aid.
Defend or rebuke? House GOP faces vote over far-right Rep. Greene.
Myanmar charges Suu Kyi, blocks Facebook; Resistance grows to coup.
Afghan hopes for a better future are crushed by conflict, crime and chaos.
TAMER FAKAHANY DEPUTY DIRECTOR – GLOBAL NEWS COORDINATION, LONDON
The Rundown
AP PHOTO/ASHLEY LANDIS
Exclusive: Sitting on billions, US Catholic dioceses amassed taxpayer pandemic aid; Study finds Astra-Zeneca vaccine may reduce virus transmission
An AP investigation has found that scores of Roman Catholic dioceses in the U.S. had more than $10 billion in cash and other readily available funds when they received at least $1.5 billion from the federal government’s small business emergency relief program.
Overall, Catholic Church recipients were perhaps the paycheck program’s biggest beneficiaries. Church officials say they needed government relief to pay staff because donations from the faithful slowed when churches were ordered to close.
Vaccine-Virus Transmission: A new study may help answer answer one of the major questions about the campaign to suppress the outbreak. Researchers from Oxford University say AstraZeneca’s vaccine does more than protect people from falling seriously ill — it also has the potential to reduce transmission of the virus. The study also suggested that a single dose of the formula provides a high level of protection for 12 weeks, which may vindicate the British government’s controversial strategy of delaying the second shot so that more people can be quickly given a first dose. Until now, the recommended time between the two doses has been four weeks. Danica Kirka and Lauran Neergaard report.
Britain Hard-Hit Borough:In parts of east London, the pandemic has hit much harder than most places in the U.K. The borough of Redbridge in the outer reaches of the capital had the nation’s second-worst infection rate in January. While case rates have come down, leaders say the borough is still “in the eye of the storm.” Officials say the area’s dense housing, high levels of poverty and large number of workers in public-facing jobs combine to make it more vulnerable. Many of the lower-income essential workers are ethnic minorities, who are among the most at-risk but also hardest to persuade to take up the vaccine, Sylvia Hui reports.
Czech 1M: The Czech Republic has reached 1 million confirmed cases. It is by far the smallest of the 21 countries to surpass the milestone, with the U.S. leading the global table with more than 26 million With a population of 10.7 million, the country has registered 16,683 deaths. Nearly 6,000 people are hospitalized while just over 1,000 are in intensive care, putting the health system under increasing pressure, Karel Janicek reports from Prague. The country was spared the worst of the pandemic in the spring only to see its health care system near collapse in the fall and again in January after the coalition government repeatedly let down pandemic guards despite warnings by experts.
France ICU: The ICU ward at the biggest hospital in southern France is facing a constant, steady flow of virus patients. A 16-year-old was brought in this week, its youngest patient to date. Staff at the La Timone Hospital’s ICU ward in Marseille say they’re just about managing, but the situation could worsen any day. France has lost more than 77,000 lives to the virus. Daniel Cole reports.
The vote today will determine whether Greene is stripped of her committee assignments. Democrats issued an ultimatum earlier in the week, telling House Republicans to do so now — or they would. Alan Fram, Brian Slodysko and Kevin Freking report.
But House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy ruled out taking action and instead accused Democrats of a “partisan power grab.”
House Republicans blocked an effort by conservative hardliners to oust the No. 3 House Republican, Rep. Liz Cheney, R-Wyo., from her leadership role. Cheney, a daughter of former Vice President Dick Cheney, had enraged Trump supporters by voting to impeach him over the riot at the U.S. Capitol.
In sticking by both women, McCarthy was attempting to placate both traditional conservatives and populists, like Greene, who emulate Trump.
Biden Economy: President Joe Biden encouraged Democratic lawmakers to “act fast” on his $1.9 trillion COVID-19 rescue plan but also signaled he’s open to changes, including limiting the proposed $1,400 direct payments to Americans with lower income levels. That could draw Republican support. Biden told lawmakers that he’s “not married” to an absolute number for the overall American Rescue Package, but wants them to “go big” on pandemic relief and “restore the soul of the country,” Lisa Mascaro and Josh Boak report.
Selling the Plan to the Public: While Biden has been gathering with senators and working the phones to push for a giant relief package, his team is increasingly focused on selling the plan directly to voters. His administration has done 60-plus interviews with national TV and radio shows. There have been spots on local TV news and briefings last week with more than 50 groups that ranged from General Motors to Meals on Wheels. One of the main goals is to stop people from getting bogged down in the tangle of partisan deal-making and start convincing them that every penny being proposed is needed.
Refugee Admissions: The Biden administration is preparing to notify Congress and others that it will dramatically increase U.S. admissions of refugees. Biden plans to announce this week that he will increase the cap on the number of refugees allowed into the United States to more than eight times the level at which the Trump administration left it. Donald Trump had drastically reduced that cap to only 15,000 before he left office. Matthew Lee and Julie Watson report.
National Prayer Breakfast: Biden is expected to address the prayer breakfast today, a Washington tradition that calls on political combatants to set aside their differences for one morning. The breakfast has sparked controversy in the past, particularly when Trump used last year’s installment to slam his political opponents and question their faith. Some liberals have viewed the event warily because of the conservative faith-based group that is behind it. But the breakfast will give the nation’s second Catholic president a chance to talk about his vision of faith, Elana Schor and Will Weissert report.
AP PHOTO
Myanmar charges Suu Kyi, giving legal basis to detain her; Military junta blocks Facebook as resistance grows to coup
The move came as resistance to the new government appeared to be growing, seemingly boosted by the treatment of Suu Kyi, who is believed to be under house arrest in the capital.
Medical Workers: Across Myanmar they have begun a civil disobedience protest against the coup, wearing red ribbons and declaring they won’t work for the military government. The army takeover could not have come at a worse time for a country battling a rise in COVID-19 cases with an inadequate and poorly funded health system. One doctor in Yangon said, “We want to show the world we are totally against military dictatorship and we want our elected government and leader back.” Victoria Milko reports.
“We are afraid when we get in our car, go to the office, when we are near our home, in the mosque. Life has become hell.”
That’s how one Kabul resident, afraid his children might be killed in the streets before he got home from work in the evening, describes day-to-day in the Afghan capital now.
Finally, he couldn’t take it anymore, and a month ago he sent his four children to live with his parents in his home village.
Frequent bombings have everyone on edge. It’s not just dramatic attacks like one that killed dozens at a university last year. There has also been a string of targeted killings that often kill or wound bystanders.
Crime has increased. In broad daylight, armed men rob stores, people in parks and cars stuck in traffic. Kidnappings for ransom have increased.
Despite the billions of dollars spent in Afghanistan since the 2001 ouster of the Taliban, more than 72 percent of the country’s 32 million people live below the poverty level, which is a daily wage of less than $1.90.
Lawlessness has accelerated in the past few years as gangs and militias grow bolder and poverty worsens.
Local TV reported recently that in the past 100 days, more than 177 people in Kabul were killed and 360 wounded in suicide attacks, bomb blasts and crimes, a figure police officials confirmed to the AP was accurate.
A prison sentence for Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny and a sweeping crackdown on protesters demanding his release reflect the Kremlin’s determination to fend off threats to its political monopoly at any cost. Russia has seen mass protests before, but the current wave of demonstrations has spread across Russia’s vast expanse, unlike previous protests that centered on Moscow. In response, Russian authorities have threatened tough penalties for people who attend, peeling protesters off from the crowds and arresting them violently, putting opposition leaders under house arrest and using state media to try to discredit the demonstrators.
Lebanon’s investigation into last August’s devastating Beirut port blast has ground to a halt. The reason is the same political and confessional rivalries that thwarted past attempts to uncover the truth in major crimes. The country’s ruling political factions, in power for decades, have enormous influence over the courts and are accused of thwarting any accountability. Political leaders have been publicly critical of the investigating judge. Dozens of victims’ family members gathered at the judge’s home this week, urging him to resume the probe, but many fear he has caved to pressure. One man whose brother was killed in the blast, said in reference to politicians: “This should not be like every time.”
A white Ohio police officer has been charged with murder following the December shooting death of 47-year-old Andre Hill, a Black man. Columbus Police Officer Adam Coy was indicted by a Franklin County grand jury following an investigation by the Ohio Attorney General’s office. Police bodycam footage showed Hill emerging from a garage and holding up a cellphone in his left hand seconds before he was fatally shot by Coy. Coy also faces charges for failing to use his body camera and for failing to tell the other officer he believed Hill presented a danger. Coy’s attorney says his client will plead not guilty.
It took just one tweet from Rihanna to anger the Indian government and supporters of Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s party. The pop star tweeted a link to a news story on the farmer protests that have gripped India. Now, senior officials, Indian celebrities and even India’s foreign ministry are urging Indians to unite and denounce outsiders trying to divide the country. Tens of thousands of farmers have been protesting for more than two months against new agriculture laws they say will devastate their earnings. The protests are posing a major challenge for Modi who has billed the laws as necessary to modernize Indian farming.
The state’s decision to send doses to hospitals for people under 65 and at risk is the result of the many who emailed and called elected officials emphasizing their vulnerability while healthy seniors are getting the shots, according to state Rep. Carlos Guillermo Smith, D-Orlando.
Meanwhile, Illinois is reaching out to gig and self-employed workers who may be eligible for another 11 weeks of unemployment benefits — but there’s now more paperwork involved.
Also, forecasters are saying that Chicago is in for the worst cold snap in two years, with arctic winds predicted to move in on Thursday. Follow along here for the latest news.
Here’s more coronavirus news and other top stories you need to know to start your day.
Illinois is diverting 97,000 coronavirus vaccine doses away from a federal partnership with pharmacies that is overseeing vaccinations in nursing homes and making those shots available to people 65 and older, and front-line essential workers, state health officials said Wednesday.
Gov. J.B. Pritzker and officials in other states have criticized the federal partnership with Walgreens and CVS for moving too slowly in vaccinating residents and staff at nursing homes and other long-term care facilities nationwide.
Chicago Public Schools late Wednesday announced another delay in the resumption of in-person classes after failing again to reach a school reopening agreement with the Chicago Teachers Union. Remote learning will continue Thursday, CPS said. With Friday a preplanned nonattendance day, that gives the sides a few more days if needed to avoid a strike by CTU.
Prosecutors are seeking an arrest warrant and higher bond for Kyle Rittenhouse, alleging he failed to inform the Wisconsin courts of where he is living as he awaits trial for shooting three people, two of them fatally, during August protests in Kenosha.
The motion filed Wednesday asks a Kenosha County judge to add $200,000 on top of the $2 million the 18-year-old’s lawyers posted to free him in November. Rittenhouse lived in far north suburban Antioch at the time of the shootings but has lived at an undisclosed location since his release.
The number 13 is Long Grove’s unlucky number. Its historic covered bridge was hit for the 13th time on Monday, when a driver tried to cross the one-way bridge with his company’s 2016 Ford box truck.
The Robert Parker Coffin Road Bridge was built by the Joliet Bridge and Iron Company in 1906 and is one of the two remaining bridges of its kind in the Chicago area.
Chicago Restaurant Week is back, albeit with a few pandemic-related tweaks: It will be cheaper for restaurants to participate and more expensive for diners to eat; it will incorporate pick-up and delivery for the first time, and, oh yes, don’t forget masks and social distancing. Here are the dates and other important details.
Despite ubiquitous signs reminding CTA passengers to wear masks, not everyone is on board with rules to wear face coverings — and it’s not uncommon to see several riders without them.
That’s why bus and train operators are applauding the new federal mask requirement for travelers on public transportation and airplanes — but also wondering what good it does without strict enforcement. Stefano Esposito has the story…
With a federal review complete, Mayor Lori Lightfoot said, “Chicago is now officially the home of the presidential center for our country’s first Black president.”
“We wish that everyone would comply with the president’s order, but we know that’s not how it’s going to work,” said Keith Hill, president of the union that represents bus employees.
Cardinal Blase Cupich met with Pope Francis last week, which has led to speculation about a possible new role at the Vatican, according to a Catholic News Agency report.
Christopher Mosley, 29, was charged with being an armed habitual criminal after a gun was allegedly found in his vehicle during a traffic stop Tuesday.
“It’s my job to keep everybody in the room talking to each other. That’s as much as I’m gonna be able to do. To move the conversations forward on both sides,” Ald. Michelle Harris told the Sun-Times.
The Puerto Rican Agenda on Wednesday put forward a four-point vaccination and education model it hopes the city will follow to improve the vaccination rollout in Latino communities.
Welcome to The Hill’s Morning Report. It is Thursday! We get you up to speed on the most important developments in politics and policy, plus trends to watch. Alexis Simendinger and Al Weaver are the co-creators. Readers can find us on Twitter @asimendinger and @alweaver22. Please recommend the Morning Report to friends and let us know what you think. CLICK HERE to subscribe!
Total U.S. coronavirus deaths reported each morning this week: Monday, 441,324; Tuesday, 443,355; Wednesday, 446,885; Thursday, 450,797.
Wednesday began for House Republicans with deep divisions over Rep. Liz Cheney of Wyoming, who voted last month to impeach former President Trump, and Georgia newcomer Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, whose conspiratorial declarations include her insistence that victory was stolen from Trump in November.
Cheney easily retained her No. 3 post in leadership after a secret vote by conference colleagues, and House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.) chose not to discipline Greene. House Democrats today will vote to remove the Georgia congresswoman from all committee assignments as punishment for what Sen. Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) agreed this week are “loony lies.”
The Associated Press: Defend or rebuke? House GOP faces difficult vote over Greene.
Cheney, a mainstream conservative and daughter of former Vice President Dick Cheney, forcefully swatted away a challenge to her standing as conference chair. Taking aim at her were House Freedom Caucus Chairman Andy Biggs (R-Ariz.) and Rep. Matt Rosendale (R-Ariz.). The vote of 145 to 61 ended a four-hour marathon meeting during which Cheney (pictured above) explained but would not apologize for her statement that Trump on Jan. 6 betrayed his oath as president and should be impeached.
McCarthy, who yearns to be Speaker if Republicans can win the House majority next year, spoke of unity while defending the only woman on his leadership team.
“Trust me. You elected me leader. Let me lead … Trust me with the team that I’ve put together,” McCarthy said, according to two sources familiar with his remarks. The California Republican reminded colleagues that while Republicans lost the White House, they managed to gain strength in the House as a result of 2020 contests.
“None of you lost your seats with this leadership team,” he said pointing to the room.
One GOP member told the Morning Report that Wednesday’s meeting represented a major moment for the embattled GOP leader, describing his closing address as the “best speech I have heard McCarthy give.”
“It means a lot for McCarthy. Shows how he’s going to lead — trying to pull people together to form a governing coalition,” the lawmaker said. “He pushed Greene to renounce her crazy stuff and single handedly saved Cheney.”
The Washington Post: McCarthy moves to keep House GOP intact, with protection for Cheney, Greene.
Politico: Cheney to keep her leadership position after tense GOP meeting.
A House GOP aide told the Morning Report: “It’s an important moment for the party. …You saw which side won. It wasn’t Donald Trump’s side, and it wasn’t close.”
McCarthy (pictured below), who has both assailed and praised Trump and recently met with him in Florida to seek his backing for House Republican candidates next year, chose not to take action against the Georgia congresswoman, who predicted before last month’s Capitol riots that Trump supporters would make Jan. 6 “our 1776 moment.”
PolitiFact: What Greene has said about conspiracy theories.
Despite McCarthy’s interventions to try to stave off proposals for expulsion, censure and other consequences, House Democrats today plan to vote to take away Greene’s committee involvement, The Hill’s Juliegrace Brufke and Scott Wong detail. Fewer than a dozen House Republicans are expected to vote with the Democrats, a GOP lawmaker predicted (The Hill).
The Hill: Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) blasts McCarthy for “cowardly” response: Her staff refers to him as “McCarthy (Q-CA).”
> COVID-19 relief: President Biden tried to tamp down worries among Democratic lawmakers that he might cave to a group of Republican senators when he advised them on Wednesday to “go big” with a $1.9 trillion COVID-19 relief bill. But he said he’s willing to reduce or target income eligibility for his proposed $1,400 relief checks, a concession that might attract some Republican support (The Associated Press and The Hill).
“I’m not going to start my administration by breaking a promise to the American people,” he said in the Oval Office on Wednesday.
Nonetheless, as The Hill’s Alexander Bolton writes, Biden’s ambitious push to raise the federal minimum wage to $15 per hour could run afoul of Elizabeth MacDonough, the Senate parliamentarian, who has final say about what policy provisions are germane and can be included in a measure that clears the Senate with a simple majority under budget reconciliation rules.
MacDonough is a Democratic appointee, but in the past she has taken a strict approach to requirements that can shield legislation from needing at least 60 votes in the Senate to move ahead. Her judgment about procedure and provisions could shape Biden’s relief agenda.
Politico: Democrats’ push to increase minimum wage to $15 an hour runs into roadblocks.
The Hill: Senate Majority Leader Charles Schumer (D-N.Y.) vows Democrats are “united” after meeting with Biden.
CNBC: American warns 13,000 employees of furloughs as airlines prepare to lose federal aid next month.
More in Congress: The Democratic and Republicans leaders of the Senate agreed to an organizing resolution for the 50-50 upper chamber, a deal that took weeks to iron out (The Hill). … The House on Wednesday voted 218 to 212 to adopt a budget resolution that would allow Congress to pass a $1.9 trillion COVID-19 relief bill without Republican support. Two Democrats, Reps. Ed Case (Hawaii) and Jared Golden (Maine), voted against the measure (The Hill). … Democratic senators will hold a marathon session known as a vote-a-rama beginning on Thursday, the first for the Senate in four years (The Hill).
LEADING THE DAY
CORONAVIRUS: More good news emerged on the vaccine front on Wednesday, with a new study suggesting that the shot produced by AztraZenaca and Oxford University may reduce the transmission of the virus, potentially a major breakthrough as case totals stabilize in the U.S.
According to researchers at Oxford, volunteers in the British study were regularly given nasal swabs to detect COVID-19 in an attempt to determine whether it could still be transmitted. The swabs that came back positive showed a 67 percent drop among those who were vaccinated.
“That’s got to have a really beneficial effect on transmission,” Oxford lead researcher Sarah Gilbert told the New York Academy of Sciences on Wednesday (The Associated Press).
Adding to the positive developments, the study also showed that a single dose of the AstraZeneca shot offers strong protection from the virus for three months. The news lends credence to the British government’s plan to delay giving second doses of the vaccine for up to 12 weeks. The initial recommendation was to give a second dose four weeks later.
Meanwhile, daily case counts continued to fall. The U.S. reported 117,000 new positive cases on Wednesday, the fourth day in a row that less than 125,000 cases were reported. The seven-day rolling average sits at 136,000, the lowest mark since Nov. 12 (The Washington Post).
The Hill: Coronavirus infections, hospitalizations falling, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).
> School reopenings?: CDC Director Rochelle Walensky said on Wednesday that vaccinating teachers is not a prerequisite for safely reopening schools, arguing that social distancing and mask-wearing make it possible for in-person teaching to return across the country.
“Vaccination of teachers is not a prerequisite for safe reopening of schools,” Walensky said during a press briefing, noting that is that case even though a CDC advisory committee has put teachers in the “1B” category for getting vaccines — the second priority group for vaccination.
“I also want to be clear that there is increasing data to suggest that schools can safely reopen and that … safe reopening does not suggest that teachers need to be vaccinated in order to reopen safely,” she said.
The comments come amid a heated back-and-forth between parents and teachers, with some teachers unions calling for instructors to be vaccinated before they return to in-person teaching.
The Associated Press: San Francisco sues its own school district to reopen classes.
ADMINISTRATION: Top Senate Republicans said Wednesday that votes on Biden’s Cabinet picks will likely sit on a shelf until after the Trump impeachment trial, which begins next week and has no set timeline.
Republicans, now in the minority, are pointing to the Senate schedule to explain the holdup, arguing that Democrats chose to take up a budget resolution, which will eat up the Senate’s schedule this week (The Hill).
Sen. John Thune of South Dakota, a member of Republican leadership, said there might be time on Monday to vote on a Cabinet nominee, and he mentioned Tom Vilsack, Biden’s choice to lead the Agriculture Department. Vilsack, a former Iowa governor, was Agriculture secretary for eight years in the Obama administration and has bipartisan backing to return to a job he knows well.
“I think most of our members feel like until impeachment is done, other business probably shouldn’t get done now,” Thune added.
Meanwhile, the United States has been without a Senate-confirmed attorney general since Dec. 23. The nomination of Merrick Garland, a federal appellate judge and Biden’s choice to lead the Justice Department, is expected to be in limbo for several more weeks (The Hill). Republican senators in 2016 blocked his nomination to the Supreme Court for nearly a year, refusing to meet with him or hold a confirmation hearing during an election year.
Three days ago, former Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) held sway over the panel and refused Democrats’ request to convene Garland’s confirmation hearing Monday under incoming Chairman Sen. Dick Durbin (D-Ill.) (The Hill).
“Democrats do not get to score political points in an unprecedented act of political theater on one hand while also trying to claim the mantle of good government on the other,” Graham told Durbin, referring to Trump’s second impeachment trial (MSNBC).
The situation changed a bit on Wednesday when Senate leaders in both parties finally reached an agreement about the operational rules of the 50-50 Senate, a delayed deal that spells out Democrats’ majority control, including in committees. But Garland may still have to wait because Durbin needs the consent of committee Republicans to waive rules requiring that the panel’s hearings be announced and advertised a week in advance.
The Senate is scheduled to be in recess the week of Feb. 15, which means that Garland may not win confirmation until the last week of February, more than one month after Biden’s inauguration. Durbin said such a vacancy could pose a threat to national security. “It’s the last major element of our national security team. I think it should be a high priority,” he said.
USA Today: Garland, 68, if confirmed, faces a dual burden of reclaiming Justice’s independence from the White House while resetting the department’s law enforcement mission.
Reuters: Biden to pursue nuclear arms control, seeks to engage China, U.S. ambassador to the United Nations says.
The New York Times analysis, David Sanger: Biden demands Russia and Myanmar reverse course but years of sanctions fatigue and a decline in American influence may make it difficult for the president to deliver on promises.
OPINION
Selling the stock market short, by Kevin Haeberle, opinion contributor, The Hill. https://bit.ly/3je3xZG
TheSenate convenes at 10 a.m. The Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee will hold a confirmation hearing at 10 a.m. for Boston Mayor Marty Walsh (D) to be secretary of Labor.
The president and Vice President Harris will receive the President’s Daily Brief at 9:30 a.m. Biden is set to virtually address the Washington-based National Prayer Breakfast. They will visit the State Department and speak with Secretary Antony Blinken and with employees and foreign service officers to thank them for their continued service. Biden will make remarks at 2:45 p.m. and return to the White House.
The White House daily press briefing is scheduled at 11:30 a.m.
Economic indicator: The Labor Department will report at 8:30 a.m. on claims for unemployment benefits during the week ending Jan. 30. The filings for jobless benefits are expected to remain high.
White House Council of Economic Advisers member Jared Bernstein speaks at 9 a.m. as part of The Washington Post’s virtual “New Government: First 100 Days” series. Registration is HERE.
👉 INVITATIONS to The Hill’s Virtually Live events:
✓ Tuesday, Feb. 9, at 1 p.m., “Complex Generics & the Prescription Drug Landscape.” Reps. Peter Welch (D-Vt.) and Brett Guthrie (R-Ky.) and the Food and Drug Administration’s Sally Choe talk with The Hill’s Steve Clemons about how complex generic medical alternatives can impact and potentially enhance the American health care system. RSVP HERE.
✓ Thursday, Feb. 11, at 1 p.m., “COVID-19 & the Opioid Epidemic.” Sens. Sheldon Whitehouse (D-R.I.) and Rob Portman (R-Ohio) and Rep. David McKinley (R-W.V.) and a panel of experts will discuss how the coronavirus pandemic has exacerbated the opioid epidemic and the path to saving lives. RSVP HERE.
It’s been 25 years since comprehensive internet regulations were passed.
But a lot has changed since 1996. We support updated regulations to set clear guidelines for protecting people’s privacy, enabling safe and easy data portability between platforms and more.
➔ COURTS: A Supreme Court ruling Wednesday in a multimillion-dollar dispute over a collection of religious artworks will make it harder for some lawsuits to be tried in U.S. courts over claims that property was taken from Jews during the Nazi era. The justices sided with Germany in a dispute involving the heirs of Jewish art dealers and the 1935 sale of a collection of medieval Christian artwork called the Guelph Treasure. The collection, called the Welfenschatz in German, is said to be worth at least $250 million (The Associated Press).
➔ INTERNATIONAL: Canada on Wednesday declared that the Proud Boys are a terrorist entity, pointing to their role in the attack on the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6. Canadian Public Safety Minister Bill Blair indicated that the riot was the tipping point for the decision. “Their intent and their escalation toward violence became quite clear,” Blair said (The Associated Press). … In Myanmar, police formally charged Aung San Suu Kyi and key allies on Wednesday, alleging that the longtime Burmese politician and leader possessed walkie-talkies that were obtained illegally. The military detained her as part of a coup d’état launched on Monday (The Associated Press).
➔ STATE WATCH: California Gov. Gavin Newsom’s (D) team is preparing for a potential recall election as his rivals gather signatures at a brisk pace (The Hill).
➔ ENTERTAINMENT: In the world of movies, television and music, nominees for the 78th annual Golden Globe Awards, announced on Wednesday, include plenty of veteran stars and standout newcomers. The Associated Press has the complete list. … Hosts Tina Fey and Amy Poehler are tasked with giving the Feb. 28 show, airing on NBC, a wry vibe from two coasts (Variety and The Hill). … The GameStop and Reddit stock market events have already been optioned for movies by Netflix and MGM (Deadline and The Verge). … Robinhood wants to repair its brand identity in the financial world after a headline-grabbing trading brouhaha, which has sparked interest among congressional investigators and the Securities and Exchange Commission (crisis communication of choice: a Super Bowl ad) (CNBC and The Hill). … And speaking of the Super Bowl, Canadian artist The Weeknd will entertain on the world’s biggest stage during the halftime show. The Weeknd, whose real name is Abel Tesfaye, has won three Grammy Awards, five American Music Awards and nine Billboard Music Awards (NBC Sports). Sunday’s NFL version of the national anthem will be a duet performed by artists Jazmine Sullivan and Eric Church, preceded by a performance of “America the Beautiful” by Grammy Award-winning artist H.E.R. (Gabriella Sarmiento Wilson) (NBC Sports).
And finally … It’s Thursday, which means it’s time for this week’s Morning Report Quiz! Female lawmakers are much in the news because of things they’ve said (as in, outspoken or out of line?).
Can you correctly match these House members with their statements?
1. Marjorie Taylor Greene
2. Liz Cheney
3. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez
4. Marcia Fudge
5. Speaker Pelosi
A. “I am happy to work with Republicans on this issue where there’s common ground, but you [Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas)] almost had me murdered 3 weeks ago so you can sit this one out. … Happy to work w/ almost any other GOP that aren’t trying to get me killed. In the meantime if you want to help, you can resign.”
B. “This war on our second amendment is going to continue and must be fought. I am told that Nancy Pelosi tells Hillary Clinton several times a month that ‘we need another school shooting’ in order to persuade the public to want strict gun control.”
C. “The enemy is within the House.”
D. “The President of the United States summoned this mob, assembled the mob, and lit the flame of this attack. Everything that followed was his doing. None of this would have happened without the President. The President could have immediately and forcefully intervened to stop the violence. He did not. There has never been a greater betrayal by a President of the United States of his office and his oath to the Constitution. I will vote to impeach the President.”
E. “Those who are bent on choosing [the late Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg’s] successor have no decency. They have no honor. They have no integrity. … They want to take away our healthcare. They don’t want to help people who are in trouble. They don’t care about people who are unemployed. All they want to do is win. But what do they win? What have they won for this Nation? They just want to benefit themselves. … They are a disgrace to this Nation.”
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Senators will determine not only the political fate of Donald Trump in his second impeachment trial but also whether or not to weaken their own congressional power to rein in presidential misconduct. If that happens, it could undermine the reason the founders gave Congress the impeachment power in the first place. Read More…
Safety is just one of many factors people weigh as they decide to run for office. A few campaign operatives involved in congressional races said safety concerns have come up in recent conversations with potential candidates, but none of the operatives believed the security risks would deter potential candidates from running. Read More…
House Republicans voted 145-61 Wednesday night to keep Conference Chair Liz Cheney in her role as the No. 3 GOP leader in the chamber, fighting back an effort from those who were unhappy with her impeachment vote and criticism of former President Donald Trump. Read More…
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OPINION — What is the Republican Party in 2021? It’s easier to say what it’s not. It’s clear the GOP is not a stickler for democracy or the Constitution, and we can be pretty sure the party isn’t too keen on accountability. The Grand Old Party is going to have to come up with new slogans and principles. It won’t be pretty. Read More…
The Democrat-led House is expected to vote Thursday to strip Georgia Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene of her committee assignments, but House Republicans are floundering on whether quick action needs to be taken to remove Greene from her committee posts following reports on a string of outlandish comments. Read More…
GOP senators began arming themselves with amendments to slow work on a budget resolution Democrats need to produce a filibuster-free pandemic aid package. Republicans filed more than 400 amendments by Wednesday evening as they protested Democrats’ decision to use budget reconciliation to skirt GOP opposition. Read More…
The Senate broke out of limbo Wednesday, adopting a power-sharing resolution that allows for committees to organize and Democrats to take the gavels after a month of tenuous and divided control. The resolution was adopted by unanimous consent Wednesday evening. Read More…
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25.) POLITICO PLAYBOOK
POLITICO Playbook: Takeaways from a head-spinning night in Republican politics
Presented by
DRIVING THE DAY
If you’re trying to figure out the direction of the Republican Party after Wednesday’s circus of a five-hour (!) House GOP Conference meeting, good luck. One hour, Republicans were rallying around — and literally standing to applaud — the QAnon congresswoman. The next, they voted to protect the avatar of the Republican establishment from DONALD TRUMP cronies itching to boot her from leadership.
A day that was supposed to be clarifying was anything but. Yet many House Republicans emerged feeling more confident about their political fortunes — a bit of a mystery to us. Here are our takeaways from Wednesday’s soap opera:
1) Trump allies stumbled on Capitol Hill; LIZ CHENEY got her swagger back. All that talk about kicking the third-ranking House Republican out of leadership was, it turns out, just that: talk. House Republicans voted overwhelmingly to allow Cheney to keep her position — despite weeks of attacks from Trump backers who were determined to punish her for voting to impeach the ex-president.
That doesn’t mean Cheney’s in the clear. Despite their rather embarrassing defeat, Trump’s enforcers said they’re not done with her. “Tonight Liz Cheney was fighting on her home turf — Washington D.C. And if Washington won’t hold her accountable for her failed leadership, Wyoming will,” Rep. MATT GAETZ (R-Fla.), who trolled Cheney in her home state last week, said in a statement.
2) Republican lawmakers are more anti-Trump than you think. For years, they’ve talked smack behind Trump’s back as they praised him publicly in order to appease the base. Wednesday night put those private versus public sentiments in particularly stark relief: 145 Republicans backed Cheney for her job, while only 61 did not — even as most refused to defend her. What gives? The vote was by secret ballot, so lawmakers could bash Cheney in public but support her in private — i.e. when it actually mattered — without fear of repercussion.
3) KEVIN MCCARTHYgambles on GOP unity. The minority leader started the day floating a peace accord with Democrats that would remove MARJORIE TAYLOR GREENE from one of her two committees. He was, unsurprisingly, rebuffed — then went all in for Greene. After a bit of throat clearing denouncing some of Greene’s past rhetoric, McCarthy effectively rallied his conference to her defense. “Never before in the history of Congress have we allowed the other party to dictate our committees,” he said, a reference to Democrats vowing to remove Greene from her committee posts if Republicans refused to. “If they come after her, they’ll come after someone else next.”
WaPo’s Mike Debonis put a fine point on it on Twitter, musing about McCarthy’s calculation: “@GOPLeader made the politically obvious choice: Keep the tent big, even if it’s messy inside. With majority just out of grasp, best to keep both the @mtgreene & @Liz_Cheney wings in the fold, even if it means a 2-yr high-wire act.” But will it all come crashing down?
4) Many Republicans now plan to give Greene a chance. She received a standing ovation at the conference meeting after she disavowed many of her previous beliefs. She told a story about a dark point in her life when she apparently turned to QAnon, according to a person in the room. She said that was a mistake, walked back suggestions that 9/11 and school shootings were a hoax and apologized for how her past statements were affecting them all. After she spoke, even Rep. TOM REED (R-N.Y.), a leader of moderate Republicans, stood up to thank her for sharing her story and indicated he’d give her a chance.
We’re told other Republicans who may have been inclined to vote with Democrats to remove Greene in a floor vote set for today are now reconsidering. McCarthy may have successfully rallied the conference, ensuring Cheney got to keep her job and persuading many of them to give Greene another chance.
5)But the QAnon headache is still throbbing. There are still questions whether Greene’s words were sincere, and her past controversial statements were still emerging Wednesday night. She has also refused to disavow her old beliefs publicly or to apologize to Democrats for endorsing violence against them. On Wednesday, she started fundraising off the Democrats’ move against her.
In the meantime, GOP lawmakers will be forced to do what many hoped to avoid: Go on record on Greene. Today’s floor vote will allow adversaries to tag them as a traitor to Trump, who adores Greene, or a protector of a rabid conspiracy theorist. While the GOP was meeting Wednesday, Speaker NANCY PELOSI sent a press release that referred to her GOP counterpart as “McCarthy (Q-CA).”
The GOP, after Wednesday night, will have to get used to this.
BIDEN’S THURSDAY — President JOE BIDEN and VP KAMALA HARRIS will receive the President’s Daily Brief at 9:30 a.m. They’ll leave the White House at 1:15 p.m. for the State Department, where they’ll speak with staff and meet with Secretary ANTONY BLINKEN. Biden will deliver remarks at 2:45 p.m., and arrive back at the White House at 3:25 p.m.
— Press secretary JEN PSAKI will brief at 11:30 a.m.
PLAYBOOK READS
THE WHITE HOUSE
PRIORITY NO. 1 — “‘We have to act fast, we have to act big’: Biden hits gas on Covid relief,”by Natasha Korecki and Tyler Pager: “Inside the White House, there is a belief that so much of Biden’s agenda is tied to the success of the Covid relief package — the most vital of which is containing the spread of coronavirus — that inaction would cripple the presidency and delay would endanger it. They also view the bill as critical to resolving some of the thornier issues they’ve confronted in their short time in office, including school reopenings, which would be accelerated with a massive resource infusion if the relief bill were to pass.
“And so, on Wednesday, Biden got more directly involved in the process than he had been at any time prior.”
— “Biden to Welcome More Refugees, but Far From All Will Get In,” NYT: “President Biden’s expected announcement on Thursday that he intends to allow more refugees into the United States this year will bring him face to face with a policy barrier left by his predecessor: a gutted resettlement system unable to quickly process the tens of thousands of desperate people whom Mr. Biden would like to let in.
“Stripped of personnel and weakened by the coronavirus, the government’s refugee program is simply not equipped to welcome a flood of foreigners fleeing disaster, officials and experts said.”
— “In Biden’s White House, surprise visits with staff replace late night tweets and unscheduled phone calls,” by Anita Kumar: “Since he moved in two weeks ago, Joe Biden has taken to strolling around the White House. He’s popped into the press offices.He’s walked to the East Wing to visit the military office, which handles everything from food service to presidential transportation. And on the day the Senate confirmed his secretary of State, he stopped by the office of Antony Blinken’s wife, White House Cabinet Secretary Evan Ryan, to congratulate their family.
“Biden has long relished engaging in person — with aides, policy experts, local officials, members of Congress, everyday Americans, you name it — and being sworn in as president hasn’t changed that, according to four people familiar with how he operates. If anything, his desire to visit with staff has only increased as coronavirus precautions have curtailed White House visits and travel around the country.”
— “Shell-shocked and angry: Inside the Capitol Police force a month after the deadly attack,” CNN: “In a sign of how contentious things have become, this week an effort by union officials to schedule a ‘vote of no confidence’ against the department’s top three leaders triggered a round of recriminations from officers who criticized the timing of the move, claiming it was inappropriate and overshadowed the memorial services this week for their slain colleague, Brian Sicknick, whose remains lay in honor at the Capitol this week.”
— “Justice Department Unveils Further Charges in Capitol Riot,”NYT: “Ethan Nordean, the self-described ‘sergeant of arms’ of the Seattle chapter of the Proud Boys, was arrested on Wednesday morning, federal prosecutors said. He had been under investigation for more than a week after prosecutors named him in court papers as a chief organizer of a mob of about 100 other members of the group that marched through Washington on Jan. 6, ending at the Capitol building.
“Separately, Nicholas DeCarlo, a 30-year-old Texas man, and Nicholas Ochs, a founder of Hawaii’s chapter of the Proud Boys, were charged with conspiring with one another and unnamed co-conspirators to stop the certification of Mr. Biden’s Electoral College win as part of last month’s riot at the Capitol, according to the indictment.”
“The procedural trick that shrinks the vote hurdle from 60 to 51 is often described as ‘a powerful budget tool.’ But reconciliation is also painful to wield. The first agonizing step: enduring a barrage of amendments from Republicans, who have promised to inflict maximal political pain on Democrats during an unbridled evening of ‘vote-a-rama’ on Thursday.”
SCOTUS WATCH
DEEP DIVE — “Reintroducing Sonia Sotomayor,”New York magazine: “Sotomayor is also poised to take over [Ruth Bader] Ginsburg’s role as the functional minority leader. … On a Court that runs on seniority, [Stephen] Breyer’s move would anoint Sotomayor as the most senior justice in what is usually, in the most heated cases, the resistance — the true heir to Ginsburg and, before her, John Paul Stevens and Thurgood Marshall. This would make Sotomayor the commander of the losers, at least in the short term.”
“Are his days at CNN numbered, or will he stay on at least through the end of his current contract, which has about a year left on it? Staffers apparently won’t have to wait much longer to hear from Zucker with an answer to that question. … [I]nsiders are now more inclined to believe that he isn’t going anywhere anytime soon.”
PLAYBOOKERS
DEPT. OF NICKNAMES: Trump may be gone, but the era of political nicknames isn’t. This was a big week for bestowing new monikers on powerful people in Washington. Sen. Brian Schatz cheekily called his colleague Joe Manchin — a swing vote on Covid relief who Democrats are treating like royalty — “Your Highness” when he passed him in the hallway this week. Meanwhile, Senate Republican aides have started to call powerful White House chief of staff Ron Klain,“Prime Minister Klain.” On Wednesday night, Bill Kristol dubbed Kevin McCarthy “Kevin McQarthy” after the House minority leader backed down from sanctioning Greene.
We checked with the White House to see if they had any nicknames for Mitch McConnell and a senior official responded, “If anyone here called Sen. McConnell anything other than Sen. McConnell, the president would have that person fired.”
STAFFING UP — David Bonine is now deputy assistant secretary for Senate legislative affairs at the State Department. He most recently was legislative director for Sen. Chris Murphy (D-Conn.), and is a Jim Webb and Robert Byrd alum. … The National Endowment for the Humanities announced Kelsey Coates as chief of staff and Adriana Usmayo Macedonio as White House liaison and chairman’s strategic scheduler.
FIRST IN PLAYBOOK — Jenn Ridder is joining Precision Strategies as a managing director, overseeing the mobilization and campaign management practice. She most recently was national states director for the Biden campaign, and is a Steve Bullock and Jared Polis alum.
— Rebecca Pearcey and Michael Trujillo are joining Bryson Gillette’s political leadership team. Pearcey previously was political director and senior adviser for Sen. Elizabeth Warren’s presidential campaign. Trujillo is a veteran Democratic strategist.
— TRUMP ALUMNI: John Ullyot is now managing partner at Brighton Strategy Group. He most recently was deputy assistant to the president and senior director for strategic communications at the National Security Council.
PENCE ALUMNI — Jon Thompson is joining the National Federation of Independent Business as comms director. He most recently was campaign comms director for former VP Mike Pence and comms director for the Republican Governors Association. … Sara (Edwards) Sylvester is now director of scheduling for Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas). She most recently was executive assistant to former Pence.
SANDERS STAFF SHAKEUP, via Holly Otterbein:Misty Rebik, Sen. Bernie Sanders’ former Iowa state director and executive director of his campaign committee, is taking over as COS. Ari Rabin-Havt, Sanders’ 2020 deputy campaign manager who previously worked in his Senate office, will be legislative director. Bill Dauster, former deputy COS for former Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, will be chief counsel for the Budget Committee. Lori Kearns is moving to a new position as staff director for the Senate HELP Primary Health and Retirement Security Subcommittee, which Sanders chairs. Caryn Compton and Keane Bhatt are on their way out, with Matt Duss also expected to leave for a position at the State Department.
TRANSITIONS — Justin Barasky is joining Left Hook as a partner. He previously was a senior adviser at the DSCC. Amy Gooden has also been promoted to partner at Left Hook. … Nicole Reeves is now deputy scheduler/assistant for Sen. Josh Hawley (R-Mo.). She most recently was a confidential assistant for OMB. … Ben Hagen is joining Brex as its first chief information security officer. He previously was cybersecurity manager for the Biden campaign. … Anna Atanaszov is now head of press at the Hungarian Embassy. She previously was deputy chief of press for Hungarian Foreign Minister Péter Szijjártó.
WEDDING — Kevin Robillard, a senior political reporter at HuffPost, and Lindy Stevens, an associate at Varela Lee Metz & Guarino, got married in their backyard in D.C. on Tuesday. Pic
HAPPY BIRTHDAY: Hunter Biden … Fed Chair Jerome Powell …Dan Quayle … Reps. Sanford Bishop (D-Ga.) and Michael Guest (R-Miss.) … Nicolle Wallace … CNN’s Shimon Prokupecz … POLITICO’s Annie Rees … Gabrielle Bluestone … L.A. Mayor Eric Garcetti … former VA Secretary Jim Nicholson … Jovanni Ortiz, comms lead at the Center for Employment Opportunities … E&E’s Michael Soraghan … retired Adm. Dennis Blair … Alice Cooper
By Kelvey Vander Hart on Feb 03, 2021 08:27 am
Kelvey Vander Hart: Education should be about what is best for the students, not defending a monopolized system and pushing a one-size-fits-all solution. Read in browser »
Launched in 2006, Caffeinated Thoughts reports news and shares commentary about culture, current events, faith and state and national politics from a Christian and conservative point of view.
President Joe Biden will receive his daily briefing Thursday morning. In the afternoon, the president will travel to the U.S. Department of State where he will speak with staff and then have a meeting with Secretary of State Antony Blinken. Keep an Eye on the president at Our President’s Schedule Page. President Biden’s Itinerary for …
Parler’s board of directors, headed by Rebekah Mercer, fired CEO John Matze from the company last week. “On January 29, 2021, the Parler board controlled by Rebekah Mercer decided to immediately terminate my position as CEO of Parler. I did not participate in this decision,” Matze wrote in a memo to employees. “I understand that …
A top adviser for New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo lashed out Wednesday at a group of House Republicans after they called on the Justice Department to subpoena the Democrat following the release of a report that found that the state undercounted coronavirus deaths among nursing home patients. Seven Republicans from New York, led by Rep. …
YUMA, Ariz. – Yuma Sector Border Patrol agents arrested a group of 11 Iranian citizens who illegally crossed the border into the United States Monday evening. At approximately 6 p.m., BP agents encountered the group near San Luis, Arizona, on a bridge near County 21st Street and the Salinity Canal. Agents determined the group had …
Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen sought and received an ethics waiver before she called a meeting between top federal regulators to discuss market volatility surrounding GameStop and other so-called meme stocks, according to Reuters. Yellen’s move to obtain an ethics waiver followed reports that she received more than $800,000 in speaking fees from Citadel, a hedge …
In a recent article, one Vanity Fair writer decided to address white supremacy and how it is no longer about just being white. Tarisai Ngangura wrote the piece that appeared online on Tuesday where she tied conservatives, white supremacists, Trump supporters, the Proud Boys, and Christians together into one group. The point of the article …
Among our country’s many ailments is the spread of fake news. As Beth McMurtie argues in a recent article in The Chronicle of Higher Education, “disinformation and propaganda are flourishing,” with people increasingly in “politically polarized media ecosystems.” Fortunately, there are doctors in the house. Specifically, universities are full of professors with doctorates in education, …
I admit being involved in prayer chains, whether begun at church or through an email or via Facebook or Twitter or Instagram. Prayer is very powerful, but some people who really need it don’t have access to it. That idea of a higher power, above the government, above a king, is the real beginning of …
As the radical left wears itself out tearing down statutes and memorials of American history that Democrats don’t approve of or are offended by, and after renaming schools that formerly had the names of presidents or other notable peoples’ names on them, now these radical fools on the left are trying to prevent any physical …
Over the past couple of days, new allegations of the Biden administration rigging the mainstream media are gaining traction. Fox News reported that Spectator USA editor Amber Athey shared she has never seen anything like it. Press Secretary Jen Psaki is being accused of screening press questions ahead of press briefings. The Daily Beast reports …
Israel’s energy minister predicted Tuesday that Iran is six months away from making the fissile material necessary to build a nuclear weapon, according to Reuters. “In terms of enrichment, they (Iranians) are in a situation of breaking out in around half a year if they do everything required,” said Yuval Steinitz, Israel’s energy minister, adding …
White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki holds a 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.
House Democrats are preparing to force a vote on Thursday that would strip Georgia Republican Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene from her committee assignments unless House Republican leadership does so first. House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer said on Wednesday that he spoke with House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy, suggesting that he was leaning towards not removing …
President Joe Biden’s pick for Education Department secretary said Wednesday that schools have a responsibility to let boys participate in girls sports if they identify as transgender. Miguel Cardona, the current Connecticut education commissioner, said it would be his “responsibility and privilege to make sure that we are following the civil rights of all students, …
The National Labor Relations Board withdrew two complaints that alleged union-employer collusion and which were pursued by the board’s previous leadership. Under the leadership of newly appointed Acting General Counsel Peter Sung Ohr, the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) withdrew two workers’ rights complaints, which alleged employers and labor unions colluded to force unionization. President …
Happy Thursday, dear Kruiser Morning Briefing friends. Anyone know where I can get a used submarine in good condition?
The Republican party’s Biden era adjustment period is a bit all over the place, to put it mildly. We knew that there would be more than a few adjustments to be made after Donald Trump left Washington for the sunshine of Florida, but it’s turned out that there are more than that.
Naturally, most of the party drama involves D.C. Republicans. Too much time inside the Beltway infects even the best people with a severe case of the drama queens, so that’s to be expected. Even the ones you want to like eventually end up not being able to get out of their own way while trying to knock someone else over trying to get to a camera. Expect the worst, and the Beltway Republicans will never disappoint you.
Most of my conservative friends and colleagues prefer not dwell on this hot mess too much and dream of better days, like 2024. I’m not a big fan of getting too far ahead of ourselves like that, and I’ll be writing a column about that in the next day or two. Still, it’s a useful coping mechanism for many and fleshing out a partial plan is never a completely bad idea.
Whenever the hopes for 2024 are discussed, the name of Gov. Ron DeSantis of Florida comes up a lot. There are a lot of Trump supporters who would like to see him return and run again. Among those people, DeSantis seems to be the favorite to run if Trump doesn’t decide to put himself through that again.
It’s easy to understand why DeSantis would be so popular with conservative Republicans who aren’t in the mood for the GOP to backslide and start capitulating to the Democrats all the time. He doesn’t do much of that.
OK, any of that.
Throughout this plague, DeSantis has heeded his own instincts rather than react to the shrieking of the Democrats and their hysterical flying monkeys in the media.
That’s precisely what the Republican party needs — leaders who don’t fall for the false promise of respect from the mainstream media. It was bad enough before Trump won in 2016. The MSM hacks would dangle carrots for witless Republicans. If the Republicans in question did what they were told — like back stab other Republicans — they’d be treated slightly less awfully in the press. As soon as their service was no longer required, it was back to crap treatment as usual.
All of the biased media malpractice was more veiled and coy before Trump made everyone involved rip off their masks and expose themselves for the cancer that they are. That the insidiousness of their ways is now a fully known commodity and there are still so many Republicans who want to play into their hands is rather disturbing to those of us who found Trump’s media battles such a refreshing change of pace. Decades of watching Republicans like Mitt Romney and George W. Bush gleefully submit to being whipping boys for the MSM had left us searching for reasons to stick with the party.
Trump changed all that. If the GOP wants most of those 74 million votes Trump got last year to stick around it better not fall in line behind squishes who are saying, “Thank you sir, may I have another?” while being embarrassed by the likes of CNN.
Speaking of media, we saw social media wield real bias and power in the 2020 election, and all of it for the Democrats. To date, the only pushback Republicans in Congress have managed has centered around strong finger-wagging during sham hearings.
A new proposal expected to be filed Tuesday would prohibit companies from suspending the account of a political candidate and be subject to a fine of $100,000 for each day the account of a statewide candidate is blocked, or $10,000 a day for other office seekers.
The proposal would also allow consumers to sue if they have been treated unfairly and would authorize the state attorney general to take on the country’s largest tech companies because of anti-competitive practices. Social media companies would be required to reveal how they became aware of any content they censor.
That might not be a complete fix, but it’s more concrete than anything the D.C. GOPers have attempted.
Ignore the mainstream hacks, push back legally against the social media barons when possible. If only DeSantis could impress that attitude upon his fellow Republicans. Some are getting the vibe — South Dakota Gov. Kristi Noem comes to mind — but a lot more need to get with the program or the GOP will be relegated to a double masked Democrat mandate hell forever.
Biden defies economists, boosts Dems with $1,400 checks demand . . . President Biden held firm Wednesday on his demand for direct payments of up to $1,400 to millions of Americans in any coronavirus package, bolstering Democrats’ negotiating hand on Capitol Hill but defying economists who said the cash isn’t the best way to stimulate the economy. The payments, with a $15-an-hour federal minimum wage and a $350 billion bailout fund for states and localities facing their own budget squeezes, have become the top flashpoints as Democrats rush to approve the president’s $1.9 trillion relief package. Washington Times
Coronavirus
World faces around 4,000 COVID variants as Britain explores mixed vaccine shots . . . The world faces around 4,000 variants of the virus that causes COVID-19, prompting a race to improve vaccines, Britain said on Thursday, as researchers began to explore mixing doses of the Pfizer and AstraZeneca shots in a world first. Thousands of variants have been documented as the virus mutates, including the so-called British, South African and Brazilian variants which appear to spread more swiftly than others. Reuters
Teachers Don’t Need CCP Virus Vaccine For Schools to Safely Reopen: CDC . . . Dr. Rochelle Walensky told reporters on Wednesday that teachers don’t have to be vaccinated against the CCP virus in order for schools to safely reopen. “I also want to be clear that there is increasing data to suggest that schools can safely reopen and that safe reopening does not suggest that teachers need to be vaccinated in order to reopen safely,” Walensky said during a briefing by top health officials from the Biden administration on efforts to speed up vaccinations for COVID-19, the disease caused by the CCP (Chinese Communist Party) virus. The Epoch Times
Cutting, bribing, stealing: Some people are getting COVID-19 vaccines before it’s their turn . . . Bribing doctors. Circulating vaccination appointment codes. Chartering planes and impersonating essential workers. More than a month since the U.S. first began administering COVID-19 vaccines, many people who were not supposed to be first in line have received vaccinations. Anecdotal reports suggest some people have deliberately leveraged widespread vulnerabilities in the distribution process to acquire vaccine. Others were just in the right place at the right time.
Shortages bring out the worst in people. Expect more of such behavior if we allow socialism to take root in America.
Politics
Biden Asia Czar’s Holdings May Present Conflict of Interest . . . President Biden’s Asia czar owns part of a “shadow lobbying firm” that gives strategic advice to corporations doing business in Asia, a position that ethics experts say could create conflicts of interest.
Kurt Campbell is the founder and former CEO of the Asia Group, a strategic consultancy firm based in Washington, D.C., and Hong Kong. He spent the past eight years running the group and is still listed as the owner of the Asia Group’s investment bank arm. The Asia Group provides businesses with advice on government policy and business, including advice on investment opportunities in China’s Belt & Road Initiative, a global infrastructure project by the Chinese government that has been deemed a security threat by U.S. officials. Washington Free Beacon
Biden’s Pentagon makes effects of climate change central to military planning . . . Rising sea levels on both coasts threaten key U.S. military installations. Famines, droughts and wildfires abroad disrupt volatile societies and could spark wars that draw in U.S. forces and put American lives in danger. In the Arctic, melting sea ice could open a theater for conflict between the U.S. and Russia, and military planners say the targeting of an enemy’s energy or water supply will be an increasingly effective battle tactic. Across the armed forces, climate change and its ripple effects are taking center stage in the Biden administration’s Pentagon. Washington Times
Pentagon chief orders militarywide ‘stand-down’ to tackle elusive issue of extremism . . . Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin on Wednesday ordered a U.S. militarywide “stand-down” to address extremism in the ranks, an issue that has long stumped Pentagon leaders but came to the forefront after the Jan. 6 breach of the U.S. Capitol. The Defense Department is still scant on details on Austin’s decision, which came after he met with Joint Chiefs of Staff Chairman Gen. Mark Milley and the service secretaries and chiefs on Wednesday morning. Leaders are expected to hold “needed discussions” with subordinates about extremism in the next 60 days, top department spokesperson John Kirby told reporters at the Pentagon. The Hill
Republicans rally to keep Cheney in power . . . The establishment wing of the GOP won a rare and dramatic victory Wednesday night when Rep. Liz Cheney beat back an attempt by Donald Trump’s staunchest allies to knock her from power as retribution for voting to impeach the former president just three weeks earlier. The 145-61 vote in favor of keeping Cheney in leadership, conducted by secret ballot, followed a marathon closed-door “family discussion” in the basement of the Capitol Visitor Center, where dozens of House Republicans lined up to voice their frustrations with the Wyoming representative, the most powerful GOP woman in Congress, and called for her removal as conference chair, a role that entails leading the party’s messaging efforts. The Hill
Taylor Greene apologizes to GOP colleagues — and gets standing ovation . . . Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-Ga.) apologized for her past controversial remarks and embrace of the QAnon conspiracy theory during a heated closed-door House GOP conference meeting — and received a standing ovation at one point from a number of her colleagues. Greene told her colleagues that she made a mistake by being curious about “Q” and said she told her children she learned a lesson about what to put on social media, according to two sources in the room. The Hill
Biden DOJ drops Trump suit against Yale over bias against Asian-Americans . . . The Biden Justice Department told a federal judge Wednesday it is dropping a lawsuit against Yale University that was brought by the Trump administration alleging the school discriminates against Asian-American and White students in admissions. The filing in U.S. District Court in Connecticut said the Biden administration has moved for a “voluntary dismissal of this action.” NBC News first reported the action. White House Dossier
So much for students who sacrifice their social life and work their butts off to get into college. President Biden thinks you have the wrong skin color.
Mike Pence opens ‘Office of the Former Vice President’ in Virginia . . . Former Vice President Mike Pence opened a transition office in northern Virginia, his team announced on Wednesday.
The “Office of the Former Vice President,” located in Arlington, will handle statements, scheduling requests, and other official business for both Pence and his wife, Karen. Washington Examiner
Ben Carson Launches Conservative Think Tank . . . Former Housing and Urban Development Secretary Ben Carson announced Wednesday that he has launched a nonprofit think tank named the American Cornerstone Institute (ACI). The institute, according to its website, pursues “commonsense solutions to America’s most pressing issues, while ensuring our country stands firm in support of our founding principles.” “The ACI is dedicated to promoting and preserving individual and religious liberty . . . and developing methods to decrease the federal government’s role in society and to improve efficiency to best serve ALL our nation’s citizens,” the institute’s mission statement reads, pledging to be “a voice for reason and civility” in a nation that is “increasingly devoid of common sense.” The Epoch Times
Well said. The government could definitely benefit from some common sense.
Nikki Haley expands political operation with hiring of experienced operative . . . Nikki Haley hired a heavy-hitter political operative to run her new political action committee, another signal the former ambassador is eyeing a potential 2024 presidential bid. Betsy Ankney, political director for the National Republican Senatorial Committee during the 2020 election cycle, was tapped for the post of executive director at Stand For America PAC, where she will lead Haley’s efforts to help the GOP win back majorities in the House and Senate in 2022. Bringing on a strategist with Ankney’s expertise and campaign know-how suggests Haley has bigger plans for her PAC over the next two years than simply cutting checks to endorsed candidates. Washington Examiner
Climate Czar Kerry flew a private jet to receive an environmental award in Iceland . . . President Biden’s recently appointed climate czar, John Kerry, took a private jet to Iceland in 2019 to receive the Arctic Circle award for climate leadership. Kerry defended his high-pollution ride at the time, calling it “the only choice for somebody like me who is traveling the world to win this battle” in an interview obtained by Fox News. White House Dossier
Cannot make this stuff up. The limousine liberal has become the private jet progressive.
National Security
ODNI warns China’s spying on Americans’ health, DNA pose ‘serious risks’ . . . The Office of the Director of National Intelligence is warning of China’s collection of health care data and DNA of Americans, warning that the efforts pose “serious risks” to the privacy of Americans and to U.S. economic and national security.
The National Counterintelligence and Security Center within ODNI this week warned that the People’s Republic of China has collected large health care data, including genomic data (DNA) sets from the U.S. and nations around the globe “through both legal and illegal means.” Fox News
The CCP already has our social security numbers and other vital information from the OPM hack. Adding health/DNA info to the stolen OPM data-set will help Chicoms to do some serious damage to Americans.
‘New Start’: Biden moves ahead with U.S.-Russia nuclear treaty extension despite GOP complaints . . . The Biden administration formally moved ahead Wednesday with a five-year extension of the fast-expiring nuclear arms control treaty with Russia by five years, despite outcry from critics who say the move ignores China’s emergence as a major nuclear power and cedes leverage to Moscow over future negotiations. Secretary of State Antony Blinken brushed aside such criticism Wednesday, defending the decision to extend the New START Treaty ahead of Friday’s expiration date. New START is one of the last major military pacts still standing between the U.S. and Russia, after the Trump administration pulled out of two other accords dealing with shorter-range nuclear weapons and surveillance overflight rights. Washington Times
This is maddening. The reason why Trump nixed the INF and the Open Skies Treaties with his ‘secret spy handler’ Putin is because the Russians have been cheating on these treaties and using some collected secrets to augment their war fighting doctrine and targeting capabilities against it’s ‘main adversary,’ the United States. Here we are again, gazing into Putin’s eyes.
International
Canada designates Proud Boys a terrorist group . . . Canada labeled the Proud Boys a terrorist group Wednesday, increasing international pressure on the self-proclaimed “Western chauvinist” organization. The far-right group has gained a broader platform in recent years with its vocal backing of former President Trump, engagement in street fights and Trump telling the group to “stand back and stand by” when he was asked to condemn white supremacy, a remark the group interpreted as a sign of support. The group’s notoriety skyrocketed following the alleged involvement of some of its members in the Jan. 6 riot at the U.S. Capitol. The Hill
Money
Pfizer expects $15 billion in COVID vaccine sales in 2021 . . . The coronavirus pandemic is really paying off for Pfizer, which expects to rake in about $15 billion from its coronavirus vaccine this year — about a quarter of its entire projected 2021 revenue. The drugmaker said its groundbreaking COVID-19 vaccine is already on track to be its top product this year after it became the first to be cleared for emergency use in the US in December. The staggering number was revealed Tuesday in a financial forecast from the Manhattan-based drugmaker, which said its revenue for the year would range between $59 billion and $61 billion. New York Post
Google parent Alphabet’s stock spikes thanks to record ad revenue . . . Alphabet’s stock price surged Wednesday after the Google parent said it ended 2020 with a bang. Shares in the Silicon Valley titan rose as much as 8.7 percent to $2,086.99 in early trading following a fourth-quarter earnings report that showed a strong comeback in Alphabet’s advertising business — even as it faces severe antitrust scrutiny. The tech conglomerate’s revenues climbed about 23 percent to nearly $57 billion from October through December, driven by a roughly 22 percent jump in ad sales, which totaled about $46 billion for the quarter. New York Post
In the meantime, Google demonetizes and de-platforms scores of small businesses and individuals whose political views and free expression it doesn’t like.
Elizabeth Warren’s wealth tax will weaken the economy and ‘kill jobs,’ Larry Kudlow warns . . . Larry Kudlow, former top economic adviser to Donald Trump, warned on Wednesday that Massachusetts Sen. Elizabeth Warren’s proposed wealth tax will weaken the economy and “kill jobs.” “It’s going to mean higher taxes for everybody and it’s going to weaken the economy and going to kill jobs, no question about it,” Kudlow told “Mornings with Maria.” Warren, D-Mass., plans to reignite calls for a wealth tax targeting the nation’s richest individuals and families. Fox Business
You should also know
Parler CEO John Matze says he’s been fired by board . . . Parler has terminated CEO John Matze, according to a memo Matze sent to staffers that has been obtained by Fox News. “On January 29, 2021, the Parler board controlled by Rebekah Mercer decided to immediately terminate my position as CEO of Parler. I did not participate in this decision,” Matze wrote. “I understand that those who now control the company have made some communications to employees and other third parties that have unfortunately created confusion and prompted me to make this public statement. Fox News
North Carolina’s First Black Lt. Gov. Leads Fight Against Radical Curriculum . . . North Carolina’s newly elected Republican lieutenant governor is leading the fight against a statewide social studies curriculum that would weave critical race theory into history lessons beginning in kindergarten. Mark Robinson, the first African American to hold his position, has been an outspoken critic of the new curriculum standards, which he says were created because of the board of education’s political agenda rather than to educate students. The curriculum would require second graders to learn “how various indigenous, religious, gender, and racial groups advocate for freedom and equality,” while fourth graders would learn how “revolution, reform, and resistance” shaped North Carolina. Washington Free Beacon
Report: Campus Anti-Semitism Skyrockets Even During Remote Learning . . . Anti-Semitic incidents on American college campuses are rising at “alarming rates” and have migrated to online spaces as students have moved to remote learning due to the coronavirus pandemic, according to a new report obtained by the Washington Free Beacon. At least 2,000 anti-Semitic incidents in total have been recorded since 2017—and include swastikas being spray painted on a Jewish professor’s office, a campus performer inviting students to sing a song endorsing anti-Semitism, and scores of students being harassed for being Jewish and having pro-Israel views. Washington Free Beacon
Guilty Pleasures
Forget Myanmar: Here Are 12 Other Countries Biden Must Invade NOW . . . With an establishment Democrat now in office, the American war machine is booting up for 4 years of doing what it does best: invading random countries, baby! Already, the media is trying to drum up support for military action in Myanmar because of some coup or something. Lame. Here are 12 other countries that would be much more worth our time to invade:
Greenland: Time to finish what Trump started. Afghanistan again: We have a ton of experience invading Afghanistan so we’d probably be really good at it. Australia: They have the best licorice there, and we need it. Seriously–have you ever had it? INVADE! Canada: They gave us Seth Rogen. Time to MAKE THEM PAY. California: Obvious reasons.
How Can I Cut My Own Hair—and Make It Look Good? . . . Trimming hair at home—be it yours, your partner’s or your squirming child’s—can easily result in disaster. Here, expert advice on how to masterfully shear the whole family. Wall Street Journal
I thought some of you may appreciate this how-to article. My 15 year-old daughter has been cutting Keith’s hair during the Wuhan pandemic and I wish we had read this article earlier. 😉
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Happy Thursday! Two of your Morning Dispatchers spent seven hours in N95 masks yesterday, and we now have an even greater appreciation for all of our readers who work in health care. Thank you for all you do!
Quick Hits: Today’s Top Stories
The Justice Department on Wednesday dropped a lawsuit filed by the Trump administration that alleged Yale University illegally discriminated against Asian-American and white undergraduate applicants.
Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer and Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell finally came to an agreement on an organizing resolution that will dictate how the two parties share power in a 50-50 Senate. The resolution easily passed the chamber, allowing Democrats to officially take control of committees.
Two days after raiding a series of democratically-elected leaders’ homes, Myanmar’s military has formally charged the country’s leader—Aung San Suu Kyi—with illegally importing walkie-talkie radios. The minor infraction gives the armed forces legal grounds to keep Suu Kyi in detention.
The Biden administration has paused the Trump administration’s plan to draw down the number of U.S. troops stationed in Germany, according to Air Force Gen. Tod Wolters. Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin, Wolters said, is “in the process of conducting a very very thorough review” of the plan.
Secretary of State Antony Blinken announced Wednesday the United States officially reached an agreement with Russia on a five-year extension of the New START nuclear arms control treaty.
House Republicans last night voted overwhelmingly in favor of Rep. Liz Cheney keeping her spot in conference leadership in spite of her vote to impeach President Trump last month. The final tally was 145–61–1.
Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy made clear Wednesday he would not remove Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene from her congressional committees in response to her many past offensive and outlandish comments, which have come under renewed scrutiny in recent days. Instead, the full House will now vote today on a resolution to do so, which is expected to pass.
The Canadian government on Wednesday designated the Proud Boys a terrorist organization. Public Safety Canada—an agency responsible for national security—described the group as “a neo-fascist organization that engages in political violence” and espouses “misogynistic, Islamophobic, anti-Semitic, anti-immigrant, and/or white supremacist ideologies and associate with white supremacist groups.”
The United States confirmed 123,071 new cases of COVID-19 yesterday per the Johns Hopkins University COVID-19 Dashboard, with 8.5 percent of the 1,442,998 tests reported coming back positive. An additional 3,936 deaths were attributed to the virus on Wednesday, bringing the pandemic’s American death toll to 450,680. According to the COVID Tracking Project, 91,440 Americans are currently hospitalized with COVID-19. According to the Centers for Disease Control, 1,097,394 COVID-19 vaccine doses were administered yesterday, bringing the nationwide total to 33,878,254.
A Triumph for Cheney
Rep. Matt Gaetz and his House Freedom Caucus pals must have never watched The Wire. If they had, they’d know that if “you come at the king, you best not miss.”
As we wrote to you yesterday, a group of Republicans had been plotting for weeks to oust Rep. Liz Cheney from her House leadership position, citing her vote to impeach President Trump last month as justification. Reps. Gaetz, Jim Jordan, and others began circulating a petition declaring the Wyoming Republican had “brought the Conference into disrepute and produced discord.”
At one point, leaders of the effort claimed more than 107 of their colleagues would support removing Cheney if given the opportunity on a secret ballot. As recently as yesterday afternoon, Gaetz expressed confidence that he’d secured the requisite votes to sack Cheney as House Republican conference chair. His only concern was that “the establishment is going to find a way to kick the question, avoid a vote.”
Well, the House Republican Conference met for more than four hours yesterday. And not only did they not avoid a vote—Cheney herself was the one who demanded it. The result? The Trump wing of the party’s effort to flex their muscle backfired spectacularly: Support for Cheney on the secret ballot was reaffirmed, 145-61, with one member abstaining.
“We just had a very good conference,” Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy said, flanked by Cheney and Minority Whip Steve Scalise. “The number one thing that happened in this conference was unity. People were able to air their differences.”
Many members approached the meeting well aware its implications were far broader than who occupies the number three position in the conference. “I don’t think this is about Liz Cheney. She took a vote of her conscience,” Rep. Jaime Herrera Beutler—who also voted to impeach Trump—told The Dispatch. “This is about the direction of our party, and whether or not we’re going to be a minority who’s dedicated to just one person, or we’re going to be a united Republican majority. That’s what we’re talking about.”
According to a source in the room, Cheney made a similar point in her opening remarks. “I think it is truly important that we not become the party that outlaws conscience,” she said. “Several members have asked me to apologize for the vote, they’ve asked my colleagues who also voted to impeach to apologize for the vote. I owe you honesty, I owe you the truth, I cannot do that. It was a vote of conscience. It was a vote of principle—a principle on which I stand and still believe. Some people have said I should apologize for my statement or for the timing or for the content of it, and I tell you again, I cannot do that. I believe that my oath, I believe that all of our oaths, is more important than politics or partisanship or political pressure.”
Plenty of members lined up at the microphones to air their grievances with Cheney, but still more rose to her defense, including Reps. Adam Kinzinger, Cathy McMorris Rodgers, Dan Crenshaw, and, ultimately, McCarthy himself, who sources say made an impassioned plea with the conference at the end of the meeting to keep the current leadership team together. “You elected me leader,” he said, according to Punchbowl News. “Let me lead.”
Cheney’s win was also a striking defeat for former President Donald Trump, who had been calling House Republicans in the days leading up to the vote, urging them to cashier Cheney. The former president’s efforts to oust Cheney began well before her vote to impeach. “We got to get rid of the weak congresspeople, the ones that aren’t any good, the Liz Cheneys of the world,” Trump said during his speech to the rally on the mall, shortly before members of the crowd attacked the Capitol. “We got to get rid of them. We got to get rid of them.” Trump’s sons and advisers pushed hard—in public and private—for her removal, with Sean Hannity leading Trump’s media cheerleaders calling for her dismissal.
If McCarthy, who met with Trump at Mar-a-Lago last week, defied the former president on Cheney, he no doubt pleased Trump when he announced yesterday afternoon he would not be moving to strip Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, a Trump favorite, of both her committee assignments, opting instead to make House Democrats do it in a vote scheduled for later today. He had proposed a deal with Democratic Majority Leader Steny Hoyer earlier in the day that would move Greene from the Education and Labor Committee to the Small Business Committee, but Hoyer rebuffed it, saying “there is no alternative to holding a floor vote on the resolution to remove Rep. Greene from her committee assignments.”
Allowing Democrats to take the lead here will provide the GOP ample fodder for their “cancel culture” line of attack and potentially set the stage for a future Republican majority to boot a controversial lawmaker like Rep. Ilhan Omar off her committees. But it also forces most GOP members to take what will be a very tough vote defending the freshman from Georgia.
“Past comments from and endorsed by Marjorie Taylor Greene on school shootings, political violence, and anti-Semitic conspiracy theories do not represent the values or beliefs of the House Republican Conference. I condemn those comments unequivocally,” McCarthy said Wednesday afternoon. “I understand that Marjorie’s comments have caused deep wounds to many and as a result, I offered Majority Leader Hoyer a path to lower the temperature and address these concerns. Instead of coming together to do that, the Democrats are choosing to raise the temperature by taking the unprecedented step to further their partisan power grab regarding the committee assignments of the other party.”
McCarthy told reporters last night that Greene spoke at the conference meeting yesterday, and both apologized for and denounced all of her previous comments and social media activity. “She said she was wrong,” McCarthy said. “She has reached out in other ways and forms.”
But some Republicans won’t be fully satisfied until Greene says so publicly, which she once again refused to do last night when prompted. “I want to see more public statements along the lines of what we had privately,” Crenshaw told The Dispatch, though he added that Democrats removing Greene from committees is a “terrible” precedent to set. “I want to see very clear denunciations of everything that’s been said.”
Pressed by reporters, McCarthy eventually came to the same conclusion. “I think it would be helpful if you could hear exactly what she told all of us,” he said, adding that she will be held to a higher standard going forward. “Now that you’re a member of Congress, now it’s a responsibility of our conference to hold people accountable.”
They may be waiting for a while: Earlier in the day Wednesday, a defiant Greene said she has no plans to publicly apologize.
The Cheney and Greene moves yesterday don’t paint a tidy picture about the trajectory of the GOP. In all likelihood, McCarthy—almost singularly focused on becoming House Speaker after the 2022 elections—is endeavoring to keep the party tent as big as possible, and figure out the details later. But the divisions within the conference are deep, and they aren’t going away anytime soon—McCarthy’s happy talk about unity notwithstanding.
What Wednesday did reveal, however, is the relative strength of the GOP’s various factions. Only 10 House Republicans voted to impeach President Trump last month; on a secret ballot, 145 supported Cheney’s right to do so. A staggering 139 House members objected to the electoral results in at least one state on January 6; on a secret ballot, “only” 61 wanted to boot Cheney for her vote of conscience.
Conservatives concerned with the direction of the GOP in recent years may take solace in these discrepancies. As we’ve written repeatedly, the majority of Republican lawmakers here in Washington are far less Trumpy personally than they would ever let on. But on a political level, the public persona is the one that matters: It’s what voters see, how narratives are shaped, and how decisions are made.
At some point, elected Republicans may once again feel comfortable speaking their whole mind. But not yet. Expect things to revert to normal when the cameras are back on today during the vote to punish Greene.
After all, according to a new Axios/SurveyMonkey poll, Greene is significantly more popular with GOP voters than Cheney is, +10 net favorability to -28.
The Kremlin Cracks Down
A Russian court sentenced Vladimir Putin critic Alexei Navalny to 32 months in prison on Tuesday, sparking outrage from the international community and fueling growing anti-Kremlin sentiment among the Russian people.
For Navalny and his allies, Tuesday’s court order was expected. “This is what he wanted to happen,” said Heather Conley, the director of the Europe, Russia, and Eurasia Program at the Center for Strategic and International Studies. “This was part of … confronting the Kremlin [and] part of the strategy by returning to Russia.” Russian authorities, Conley added, have in the past avoided jailing Navalny to avoid making him a martyr.
Navalny delivered a defiant speech before the court on Tuesday in which he maintained his innocence and criticized Vladimir Putin—whom he called a “thieving little man”—for poisoning him with the nerve agent Novichok last year. (Putin denies he ordered the hit, but public reporting has cast that denial in doubt.)
Putin has “never participated in any debates or campaigned in an election,” Navalny said from inside a glass cage, where he was kept for the entire hearing. “Murder is the only way he knows how to fight. He’ll go down in history as nothing but a poisoner.”
Navalny’s detention is ostensibly due to a parole violation dating back to his 2014 conviction on extortion charges—a conviction that the European Court of Human Rights determined was politically motivated. A Russian Federal Penitentiary Service officer told Navalny on Tuesday they were unable to locate him late last year for their required parole check-ins. Navalny, of course, was in Germany, receiving treatment after being poisoned.
Navalny said he provided the Penitentiary Service with his updated location: “What more could I have done?”
The opposition leader also made use of his speaking time to make some broader political arguments, railing against the horrible conditions many Russians have been subjected to under Putin’s leadership. “We’ve got 20 million people living below the poverty line,” he said. “We have tens of millions of people living without the slightest prospects for the future. Life is bearable in Moscow, but travel 100 kilometers in any direction and everything’s a mess.”
“That message is what has brought out the protesters,” Conley said. “This is a population that has not seen their salaries increase since 2011. … The Russian people are seeing a real decline in living standards, without any hope that this will change.”
Navalny’s prison sentence will likely fracture the relationship between the Kremlin and the White House even further. President Biden mentioned Navalny’s case during his first phone call with Putin last month, and Secretary of State Antony Blinken demanded the opposition leader’s immediate release following Tuesday’s hearing.
But Russian officials have brushed aside Western leaders’ concerns as unauthorized interference in domestic affairs. “It’s not just interference in internal affairs of a sovereign state,” Russian Foreign Ministry spokesperson Maria Zakharov said on Facebook. “It’s laying bare the unsightly and illegal role of the collective West in attempts to constrain Russia.”
Now that Navalny is behind bars, it remains to be seen whether pro-democracy protesters can sustain their grassroots momentum in his absence. “When he is sent [to prison] without electronics and communication, will this network be able to sustain and build on his work without his charismatic voice?” Conley asked. But the size and geographic scope of these protests suggests that this movement has some staying power: “When you go out to protest in minus 60 Fahrenheit, that means you are committed.”
Roughly 6,000 Russian protesters were detained on Sunday, according to OVD-Info, a law enforcement tracking site. The demonstrations are not just centered in highly populated metro areas like St. Petersburg and Moscow, either—they have cropped up all across the massive country.
The demographic makeup of the movement is also telling. “These are young people,” Conley said. “These are people that have never protested before—the middle class—that’s usually been the last to go out. This is something different.”
Worth Your Time
In Kevin Williamson’s latest for National Review, he ponders a new demographic trend: Are people relocating to different states based on a shared political conviction? And is this form of self-sorting a good thing for the country? “That we cannot bear the thought of living in the same communities as people who do not share our politics doesn’t seem to me to indicate anything healthy about our national culture,” Williamson writes. “Part of me thinks this is a terrible trend for the country. Another part of me thinks St. George, Utah, is awfully nice this time of year.”
BREAK: @MattGaetz tells #WarRoomPandemic he would be willing to resign his Congressional seat in order to defend President Donald Trump in the upcoming impeachment trial. https://t.co/bCRtEnmC0P
Toeing the Company Line
Yesterday’s Dispatch Podcast was one for the books. It starts with a discussion of how the Biden White House has handled coronavirus relief negotiations thus far, and builds to a crescendo with a contentious discussion of House Republicans. How has Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy handled the fracturing of his conference? Are we all paying too much attention to Marjorie Taylor Greene? Stick around for a more uplifting discussion of the United Kingdom’s decision to welcome refugees from Hong Kong.
Scott draws on the wisdom of economist Dr. Thomas Sowell in this week’s Capitolism newsletter (🔒), analyzing the tradeoffs that come with raising the federal minimum wage to $15 an hour. Despite new reports from left-leaning economists claiming that minimum wage increases are “essentially costless” to workers, there is a cost—and it’s typically borne by other workers and small businesses. “Minimum wages are also a lousy way to fight inequality,” he writes, “given that wage hikes tend to hurt smaller businesses more than bigger ones, and that owners of minimum wage-intensive firms are typically not the super-rich but instead the merely-well-off.”
A progressive group aligned with Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez is reportedly looking to primary moderate Democratic senators like Joe Manchin and Kyrsten Sinema from the left. “This is what psephologists call ‘a very stupid idea,’” Jonah writes in his Midweek G-File (🔒).
Let Us Know
What do you think happens to the Republican Party? Will all the various factions continue to be able to coexist? Which one wins out?
Stacey Matthews: “So apparently the Biden administration’s way of bringing about unity and healing was to deny parental leave/benefits to out-going expectant Trump officials.”
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“For four years, we were informed by our establishment media that President Donald Trump’s behavior was ‘not normal.’ The abnormality of Trump’s behavior became…”
Democrats Go It Alone
After campaigning on bipartisanship and unity, Democrats decided to go it alone and pass a $1.9 trillion Covid relief bill without Republican support. Last night the House of Representatives voted 218-212 to approve a budget resolution, kicking off a special legislative process called reconciliation that would allow Democrats to pass President Joe Biden’s coronavirus stimulus package with just a simple majority in both chambers. (If you want more on how they can do this, here’s a good explainer on the reconciliation process.)
On Monday, ten Senate Republicans released a $618 billion counterproposal to President Biden’s $1.9 trillion package in hopes of finding some common ground. Biden met with Republicans to discuss their plan, which includes relatively similar proposals for vaccine aid and small businesses. But after hearing them out, Biden appears willing and able to now ram through a package three times the size that includes more stimulus checks, unemployment benefits, and state and local aid. Here’s more on the differences between the two plans.
While Republicans now have few tools to work with, The Hill reports that Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., “intends to make Democrats take politically uncomfortable votes.”
“We’ll be getting senators on the record about whether taxpayers should fund checks for illegal immigrants … whether Democrats should raise taxes on small businesses in the midst of this historic crisis … and whether generous federal funding should pour into school districts where the unions refuse to let schools open,” McConnell said.
FWIW, the nonpartisan CBO projected Monday that the U.S. economy will bounce back to its pre-pandemic size by the middle of the year without any emergency stimulus. Of course, many Americans are hurting and need targeted, temporary relief, but it appears in the long-term, our economy will recover without bankrupting ourselves.
Uighur Atrocities
A sickening report by the BBC details more of the horror that thousands, if not millions of Uyghur women are being subjected to inside the Chinese “reeducation” camps.
“Tursunay Ziawudun, who fled Xinjiang after her release and is now in the US, said women were removed from the cells “every night” and raped by one or more masked Chinese men. She said she was tortured and later gang-raped on three occasions, each time by two or three men. … The BBC also interviewed a Kazakh woman from Xinjiang who was detained for 18 months in the camp system, who said she was forced to strip Uighur women naked and handcuff them, before leaving them alone with Chinese men. Afterwards, she cleaned the rooms, she said.
The Chinese men ‘would pay money to have their pick of the prettiest young inmates,’ she said.”
As former Secretary of State Mike Pompeo put it after releasing a determination that China’s atrocities against the Uyghurs and other minorities in Xinjiang amount to genocide, and crimes against humanity, “If the Chinese Communist Party is allowed to commit genocide and crimes against humanity against its own people, imagine what it will be emboldened to do to the free world, in the not-so-distant future.”
MTG Apologizes
From The Hill: “Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-Ga.) apologized for her past controversial remarks and embrace of the QAnon conspiracy theory during a heated closed-door House GOP conference meeting — and received a standing ovation at one point from a number of her colleagues.
Greene told her colleagues that she made a mistake by being curious about ‘Q’ and said she told her children she learned a lesson about what to put on social media, according to two sources in the room.
She also denied that she knew what Jewish space lasers were and defended her comments that past school shootings were staged by stating that she had personal experience with a school shooting.
She received a standing ovation from some members of the caucus at the conclusion of her remarks.
The House will vote Thursday on removing Greene from the House Budget and Education panels, where she was placed by Republicans.”
Personally, I am all for stripping Greene of her House committee assignments, even despite her reversal and apology. However, along those lines, Minnesota Democratic Rep. Ilhan Omar also must go.
You’re Not Enough!
Y’all know I’m a big fan of Allie Beth Stuckey and recommend her podcast, “Relatable,” often, so I wanted to invite you to a virtual book event I’m hosting with her on February 11 at 1:00 p.m. ET! We will be discussing Allie’s new book, “You’re Not Enough (And That’s Okay): Escaping the Toxic Culture of Self-Love,” a must-read on the repercussions of falling into the toxic culture that “you are enough.” Sign up here to join us. I couldn’t recommend Allie’s book more!
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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2020’s Crossover Districts
Only a handful of House Democrats and Republicans represent turf won by the other party’s presidential nominee
By J. Miles Coleman
Associate Editor, Sabato’s Crystal Ball
KEY POINTS FROM THIS ARTICLE
— 16 members of the House hold districts that voted for the other party’s presidential nominee in 2020.
— Many Biden-district Republicans are from racially diverse areas, and they often came out on the winning end of rematches.
— Democrats held several Trump seats in both blue collar and suburban areas.
— Overall, the trend of ticket-splitting is on the decline — just a decade ago, it was common to see dozens of crossover districts.
Dwindling — but decisive — crossover districts
In a year where a historic presidential race dominated headlines, one of the biggest surprises of the 2020 election cycle was the House. Democrats, who controlled the chamber, were widely expected to gain seats. Instead, Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D, CA-12) lost several members of her caucus and came perilously close to losing her majority altogether.
Across the board, Republicans ran better than expected in key districts, even flipping some that now-President Biden carried. By the same token, Democrats owe their narrow majority to a handful of members who held on in seats that Donald Trump carried. So these “crossover districts” — seats that voted for one party’s presidential nominee but elected a House member of the other party — played a key role in determining the majority.
Though the official presidential breakdowns for some states are still being crunched, it appears that, all told, the 2020 election featured 16 crossover districts, listed in Table 1.
Table 1: Crossover districts in 2020
Notes: * Valadao lost in 2018 but came back in 2020 ** Garcia was first elected in a May 2020 special election.In some ways, Table 1’s roster speaks to how House Republicans overperformed expectations. Six of the nine Republican members who sit in Biden districts were not in office at the beginning of 2020. By contrast, the seven Trump-district Democrats all had at least one full term under their belts — or in the cases of Reps. Cheri Bustos (D, IL-17), Matt Cartwright (D, PA-8), and Ron Kind (D, WI-3), are veteran members of the caucus. On average, the Republicans ran further ahead of Trump in their districts (11.0%) than the Democrats did in theirs over Biden (6.9%).
Several Republicans won rematches
Geographically, California stands out on Table 1, as it has four districts that voted for Biden but sent Republicans to Congress. This quartet has certainly exhibited some electoral whiplash over the past several cycles: They were all in Republican hands prior to the 2018 midterms, flipped blue that year, but reverted back to the GOP. Last April, the Crystal Ball looked at how Democrats were probably overexposed in the Golden State after the anti-Trump 2018 cycle — they secured a 46-7 advantage in the state’s 53-member delegation, which was cut to a still-lofty 42-11 in 2020.
After the midterms, Washington Post opinion writer Henry Olsen noted that, for House Republicans who had just lost power, studying 2018’s gubernatorial results may offer a path back to the majority. Specifically, Democrats flipped several House districts that voted simultaneously for Republican gubernatorial candidates that year. In California, both CA-39 and CA-48, which include parts of the historically GOP but racially diverse Orange County, fell into that category — they both voted against now-Gov. Gavin Newsom (D-CA). In the former, now-Rep. Young Kim (R, CA-39) ran more than 20 percentage points ahead of Trump in many precincts, while now-Rep. Michelle Steel (R, CA-48) also overperformed him slightly but consistently throughout her district. Kim won a rematch against then-Rep. Gil Cisneros, while Steel defeated then-Rep. Harley Rouda. Rouda, a Democrat who seems intent on running again, is a strong candidate in his own right, but his clear 7% margin of victory in 2018 may have been inflated by his controversial opponent that year.
Going farther north in California, Republicans had other bright spots in the state. In May 2020, Republican Mike Garcia won a special election to replace former Democratic Rep. Katie Hill in CA-25, a district that sits atop the Los Angeles metro area. Garcia, a Hispanic Republican with a background as a Navy pilot, seemed like an ideal fit for an area which is home to several defense facilities. Garcia beat former state Rep. Christy Smith by a surprisingly strong 55%-45% in May and held on by just 333 votes in the November rematch, even as Biden carried the district by just over 10%.
The final Biden-district Republican in California is Rep. David Valadao (R, CA-21), who reclaimed a heavily Hispanic seat in the state’s Central Valley. Valadao first won his district in 2012, then held it until being upset by Democratic businessman T.J. Cox in 2018. Once in office, Cox struggled to make a positive impression on voters, as his image was weighed down by multiple ethics complaints. In a rematch where the challenger seemed more like an incumbent, Valadao reversed 2018’s result. CA-21 is a notoriously low-turnout area — in recent cycles, it’s typically cast the fewest raw votes of any California district — which can make for some electoral volatility, though this dynamic may have benefitted Valadao, as he was more of a local household name.
Florida and Texas have one first-term Biden-district Republican apiece. In the Miami area, Rep. Ileana Ros-Lehtinen (R, FL-27), the first Latina ever elected to Congress and a beloved figure in south Florida, retired in 2018, after nearly 30 years in office. In a district that Hillary Clinton won 58%-38% two years earlier, former Health and Human Services Secretary Donna Shalala (D, FL-27) won the seat by a seemingly underwhelming 52%-46% against journalist Maria Elvira Salazar. Despite the presidential topline, the area has a large Cuban-American population — a bloc that retains Republican proclivities down the ballot. While Trump made especially large inroads with Cubans in 2020, he improved throughout the entire area. Biden narrowly carried FL-27 but Shalala proved to be a weak candidate — as the area’s representative, she wasn’t even fluent in Spanish. In what’s becoming a common thread with Biden-district Republicans, Salazar won in a rematch.
Rep. Beth Van Duyne (R, TX-24) was the only non-incumbent Republican to hold an open seat that Biden carried. TX-24, which straddles Dallas and Fort Worth, was the sole Trump-to-Biden district in the state. Van Duyne’s win fit into a larger picture of Democratic down-ballot underperformance in Texas — though they eyed control of the state House, Democrats gained almost no ground in the legislature.
In Omaha, the Crystal Balltouched on Rep. Don Bacon’s (R, NE-2) overperformance shortly after the November election. Essentially, like Garcia, he seemed to fit his district especially well — and he also won in what was a rematch. In a race where Democrats had trouble uniting, Bacon snagged some visible cross-party endorsements.
In 2018, the blue wave crashed so hard in the House that only three Republicans remained in districts that Hillary Clinton carried. Rep. Will Hurd (R, TX-23) retired in 2020 — and his district, with its contrarian tendencies, flipped to Trump — but Reps. John Katko (R, NY-24) and Brian Fitzpatrick (R, PA-1) are still in office. Katko represents an Upstate New York seat centered on Syracuse and ran 19.2% ahead of his presidential nominee — the greatest gap of any member on Table 1. Fitzpatrick, who comes from a political family and frames himself as a pragmatist, has a district anchored in the swingy Bucks County, northeast of Philadelphia. He ran a similar 19% ahead of Trump (Map 1).
Map 1: PA-1 in 2020
Democrats retain working class areas, and some suburbs
Pennsylvania was the only state to have members from opposite parties on Table 1. Aside from Fitzpatrick, Rep. Matt Cartwright (D, PA-8) was reelected. With a political base in Scranton, he represents President Biden’s native district and won by 4%. Though he ran 8% better than Biden, Cartwright’s low single-digit margin seemed a bit underwhelming — several weeks before the election, the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee pulled ads from his district, which seemed to signal their confidence in his race. Still, northeastern Pennsylvania skews whiter, is home to relatively few college graduates, and has been described to us by a state source as a “…genuinely populist” area. In other words, the Trumpian demographics of the area mean that even popular Democrats, such as Gov. Tom Wolf, have lost ground there recently.
Democrats retained three other districts that could be characterized as demographically similar to PA-8. Rep. Cheri Bustos (D, IL-17) chaired the DCCC for the 2020 cycle — on paper, her profile as a heartland Democrat from a Trump district made her an ideal member to recruit and train candidates, but she faced criticism throughout her tenure. Instead of adding to their majority, House Democrats ultimately lost about a dozen seats with Bustos at the helm, and she herself only pulled out a narrow 52%-48% win at home (she cleared 60% in her previous two races). In fact, Bustos did better as a challenger, when she originally won in 2012, than as a seasoned incumbent in 2020. To be fair, some of that was probably due to western Illinois’ overall reddening.
In an adjacent district to the north, Rep. Ron Kind (D, WI-3) is the longest-serving member on Table 1 but had the closest result of his career. It was surprising that Trump carried Kind’s western Wisconsin seat in 2016, but WI-3 got slightly redder last year. Republicans invested in this race but their candidate, retired Navy SEAL Derrick Van Orden, faced some bizarre headlines during the final stretch of the campaign. Kind ran ahead of Biden throughout the district, but there was still a lot more red than usual on his map (Map 2).
Map 2: WI-3 in 2020
The last predominantly working-class district that Democrats held was in northern Maine. First-term Rep. Jared Golden (D, ME-2) was reelected while his district gave Trump its electoral vote. A Marine Corps veteran who tried to cut out an independent profile during his term, Golden originally won in 2018 because of the state’s then-novel ranked-choice voting system. Golden appeared to be in a much stronger position for his second time around: he routinely led by double-digits in polls, and by the end of the cycle, it seemed the district had fallen off the board. He won by 6%, but there was some impressive ticket-splitting throughout his geographically vast district. Trump carried the city of Caribou, Sen. Susan Collins’ (R-ME) hometown, by 14% — down the ballot, they gave their GOP senator 71% but supported Golden 52%-48%.
The final three Trump-district Democrats are all second-term members in seats that are, to some degree or another, suburban. House Democrats hold 10 of New Jersey’s dozen House seats, but their only Trump-seat member is Rep. Andy Kim (D, NJ-3). Kim’s district is an odd combination of Burlington County, a blue county in the Philadelphia media market, and Ocean County, which is GOP turf that sits on the Atlantic coast. This tug-of-war led to a presidential result that was about tied. Kim was a strong fundraiser and ran against an opponent who faced carpetbagging accusations — Republican David Richter was originally running in the adjacent NJ-2, but was muscled out of the primary after then-Democratic Rep. Jeff Van Drew (R, NJ-2) changed parties.
In Michigan, Rep. Elissa Slotkin (D, MI-8) ran as a “Midwestern Democrat” and urged other members of her party to run active campaigns, despite then-candidate Biden’s rosy poll numbers. Slotkin holds a seat that runs from the state capital, Lansing, to the Detroit exurbs. Towards the end of the campaign, she scored a viral debate exchange where she shut down her opponent, Paul Junge, on healthcare.
Rep. Cindy Axne (D, IA-3) was the sole Trump-district Democrat to face, and prevail in, a rematch from 2018. Her district is nestled in Iowa’s southwestern corner and is the most urban of the state’s four districts — nearly 70% of its votes come from Des Moines’ Polk County and the neighboring Dallas County, the fastest-growing county in the state. Biden lost all of Iowa’s districts, but he came the closest in IA-3, coming within 600 votes of Trump there. While Axne matched the margin Biden got between the Polk and Dallas pair, she won by running more than five percentage points better than him throughout the rest of the district.
House races are moving closer to presidential outcomes
While the districts covered in this article represent a diverse cross-section of the House, after previous presidential elections, we’d have much larger samples to be sorting through. Indeed, over the last decade, House results have become increasingly correlated with presidential races. Since the 2000 election, the number of crossover districts has dwindled from 86 to 16 (Table 2).
Table 2: Number of crossover districts in presidential elections since 2000
In the first decade of the century, the number of crossover districts didn’t even seem dependent on the presidential environment. In 2000, with an infamously close presidential election, 86 districts had split outcomes, which was on par with the 83 from 2008, a Democratic wave year. During that span, the number of Democrats in Republican-won seats stayed about constant, in the 40s. Many of these districts were in the South and stayed blue because of their ancestral loyalties, popular incumbents, or both. In 2010, Democrats lost many of those seats in an anti-Obama midterm. Since then, Republicans have won more crossover districts in presidential election years.
Perhaps we’ll see more crossover districts in 2024 — especially if it’s an open-seat race, like 2016. But for now, to the disappointment of political junkies who love to study mixed results, the trend suggests more straight-ticket voting.
By Theodore S. Arrington
Guest Columnist, Sabato’s Crystal Ball
KEY POINTS FROM THIS ARTICLE
— For the entire period from 1972 to 2020 there is little partisan bias in the seat/vote relationship, but this overall pattern obscures substantial bias from decade to decade.
— In the 1970s and 1980s there was a substantial bias favoring the Democrats; in the 1990s the relationship was a very small bias favoring the Democrats; in the 2000s and 2010s there was a noticeable bias favoring the Republicans.
— The 2020 election had a proportional outcome, as the Democratic candidates received 51% of the votes and 51% of the seats. This reduction in the Republican bias in 2020 may be the result in part of mid-decade redistricting in several states favoring the Democrats.
Votes received vs. seats won in the House
Redistricting for the U.S. House of Representatives is not a unified process as is the case for most national legislatures, but the result of the cumulative actions in the states that have more than one representative. Nevertheless, it is useful to look at the entire House to see how the decisions in the states combine to form a fair or biased playing field for the parties.
One commonly used method for analyzing the partisan nature of the redistricting process is the seats/votes relationship, which I discuss in more detail elsewhere. For this analysis simple least squares regression is used to relate the percentage of the two-party votes that the Democrats received to the percentage of the seats they won. The Pearson’s R2 tells us how strongly the allocation of seats is related to the votes received by each party. The slope of the regression line is called the swing ratio, and tells us how responsive the system is to changes in the vote. One can determine partisan bias by simply solving the regression equation for the situation in which the Democrats received 50% of the votes. At that level they should also receive about 50% of the seats if the playing field is level.
Determining the percentage of the two-party votes received by Democratic candidates for the House requires attention to two questions. The first question is how to count elections in states that have majority vote requirements with run-off elections after November (e.g., Louisiana), and elections in which all the candidates in the November general election are in the same party as a result of a jungle-primary system (e.g., California). If the candidates in the final election are both in the same party, I counted the contest as unopposed for that party. If there was a runoff after November, I combined the vote of each party’s candidates in the November election.
A second question is what to do with these unopposed contests. I define an opposed contest as one in which there was both a Republican and a Democratic candidate in the November election on the ballot. If the vote in unopposed contests is included, the total for the party that had the most unopposed candidates is inflated, because their opponents would have received at least some votes. If the vote of the unopposed candidates is excluded, the vote of the party with the most unopposed candidates is understated because unopposed candidates would undoubtedly receive a substantial majority of the votes if they were opposed.
One way to deal with this problem is to substitute the vote of some other set of candidates in districts where the Congressional candidate is unopposed. But on a nation-wide basis the only office available for that job is the presidency, and that is only available in half the congressional elections. There was variation in presidential and congressional voting as shown by Barry C. Burden and David C. Kimball, although this is increasingly less true. Votes for U.S. Senate or Governor could be substituted into unopposed races, but this also has problems. Voters typically know more about candidates for these offices, only about 33 or 34 of the states have a Senate election in any year, and most governors now have four-year terms.
My solution is to estimate the vote that each party would receive in unopposed contests and add this to the vote in the opposed races. The formulas for the adjustment of the vote for each party is:
d = x + amv + bm(1 – v)
r = y + bmv + am(1 – v)
Where:
d = estimate of Democratic vote
r = estimate of Republican vote
x = vote for all opposed Democratic candidates
y = vote for all opposed Republican candidates
a = number of unopposed Democratic candidates
b = number of unopposed Republican candidates
m = mean number of votes cast for both Republican and Democratic candidates in opposed contests
v = proportion of the vote that unopposed candidates would have received if they had been in an opposed contest
The two-party voter turnout in unopposed districts is assumed to be equal to the mean turnout in opposed contests — a reasonable assumption as Robert Huckfeldt et al. report. This is designated as “m” in the formula.
Gary C. Jacobson estimates the percentage of the vote that we would expect unopposed candidates would have received, on average, if they had been opposed (v in the formula) at 71% with a standard deviation of 10%. His analysis is based on the support that congressional candidates received in the election following or preceding the one in which he or she was not opposed.
With this calculation I derived the percentage of the two-party vote that the Democrats would have received if all contests were opposed in recent elections. These figures deviate little from total vote without this adjustment. For example, in 2020 the unadjusted total including the votes for unopposed candidates was 51.55% Democratic, the total only for opposed candidates was 50.64% Democratic, while the adjusted vote was 51.09% Democratic. Over the years I have collected the data from a variety of reliable sources, most commonly the Clerk of the U.S. House. The data for 2016 to 2020 come from the Cook Political Report.
This remarkably close congressional election can be compared to the unremarkably decisive victory by the Democratic candidate for president. Former Vice President Joe Biden received 52.2% of the national popular two-party vote, or over seven million more votes than President Donald Trump. The drop-off of voters from the presidential to the congressional vote is about average. There were 155,507,229 votes cast for president, but only 152,898,796 votes for congressional candidates (adjusted totals).
The logical place to start the analysis is with the 1972 election, which is the beginning of the first redistricting cycle after the U.S. Supreme Court required congressional districts to be one-person-one-vote. In the period from 1972 to 2020, only in 1996 and 2012 did the party that received the most adjusted votes fail to receive the most seats in the House. In 1996 the Democrats received 50.02% of the two-party vote (adjusted), but failed to retake the House from the GOP. In 2012, the Democrats received 50.6% of the two-party vote, but again failed to retake the House.
Given the power of incumbency, the “out” party may need to get well over 50% of the two-party vote to take over the house even if there is no gerrymandering. The Republicans received 54.5% of the two-party vote in 1994 to take over the House, and the Democrats took it back in 2006 with 53.9%. The Republicans took it back again in 2010 with 52.9%, but lost it again in 2018 when the Democrats received 53.4% of the vote.
Table 1 shows the number of unopposed contests for both parties in each election since 1972. In general, the party with the most momentum going into the election period had the largest number of unopposed contests, as one would expect. The number of unopposed Democrats went down as the Republicans first became competitive in the South and then became dominant there. The number of unopposed Republicans had been going up over time mainly as a result of those same changes in the South, but has tapered off in this last decade. Indeed, the number of unopposed Republicans was historically low in 2018 and 2020.
Table 1: Uncontested House races, 1972-2020
Note: *Includes seats in California in which the November final election featured two candidates of the same party.
The pattern of unopposed elections in 2020 dramatically shows the geographic weaknesses of the two parties. Of the 18 unopposed Democrats, seven were in California and four in Massachusetts. No other state had more than one unopposed Democrat. Seven of the eight unopposed Republicans were in the formerly Confederate states, the other one was South Dakota at-large.
Table 2 shows the correlation, slope, and bias figures for the entire period and for each redistricting cycle. Figure 1 shows a scatterplot of this relationship during the entire period from 1972 to 2020, while Figure 2 shows the relationship during the 2012 to 2020 period. The Pearson correlations indicate that the allocation of seats is consistently related to the votes cast. For this entire period the swing ratio has been appropriately at or above 1.0, indicating adequate response to changes in the vote. Over the entire period, the system has had little partisan bias — a Republican advantage of only 0.3%, which is perhaps an additional one seat if the vote were evenly split. However, in the 1970s and 1980s the Democrats had a sizeable advantage, while in more recent elections this advantage has shifted from a very slight Democratic bias in the 90s, then a Republican advantage starting in 2002. Thus the overall fairness statistics disguise substantial variation over several different redistricting cycles.
Table 2: Correlation, slope, and bias of House races
Note: *There was substantial and consequential mid-decade redistricting in Pennsylvania, Florida, Virginia, and North Carolina during this decade.
Figure 1: Scatterplot of Democratic percentage of the two-party adjusted vote to Democratic percentage of the seats in the House won 1972-2020
Figure 2: Figure 2: Scatterplot of Democratic percentage of the two-party adjusted vote to Democratic percentage of the seats in the House won 2012-2020
Now that we have a complete set of elections for the last decade (2012-2020), the continued recent Republican advantage is clear. If the vote were evenly split, the Democrats would be getting only 47.1% of the seats on average (205 seats out of 435). This pretty well describes what has been happening during this decade. In 2012, the Democrats received 50.6% of the votes (adjusted), but only 46.2% of the seats. In 2014 the Democratic percentage of the adjusted votes declined to 47.6%, and they won only 43.2% of the seats. In 2016 the Democrats did slightly better with 49.2% of the votes, but still won only 44.6% of the seats. In 2018, however, the Democratic candidates received 53.5% of the votes and won 235 seats (54%). Some mid-decade redistricting (Virginia, Pennsylvania, Florida, and North Carolina) may have affected the overall pattern for the current cycle, and certainly affected the relationship in 2020. In this regard, it is interesting that the seat/vote relationship in 2020 could not be closer to proportional with the Democrats getting 51% of the seats and 51% of the votes.
The more recent Republican advantage may be due, in part, to the requirements of the Voting Rights Act (VRA) to create majority-minority districts, thus artificially packing the most reliable Democratic voters in a few districts. The high point of this requirement, however, was in the 90s, when there was almost no partisan bias. Thus the VRA is not inconsistent with unbiased redistricting or even a pattern that has a small Democratic bias. To some extent, the bias may derive from the way in which Democratic and Republican voters are concentrated geographically, and not with the implementation of the Voting Rights Act per se as pointed out by Gary C. Jacobson and Sam Hirsch. It is clear, however, that one cause of the bias in this most recent cycle must be gerrymandering in several large states by Republican state legislatures and governors in the redistricting cycle following the 2010 census.
Theodore S. Arrington is Emeritus Professor of Political Science at the University of North Carolina at Charlotte. He has been an expert witness in over 40 voting rights cases in the United States and Canada, and his commentary is frequently cited in the press. This article is a follow-up to his post-2018 analysis.
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A new U.K.-based study has found that the majority of people who were previously infected with COVID-19 have very high levels of antibodies for six months or more following an initial infection, possibly protecting them from a second infection for that time period. What are the details? On Wednesday, Reuters reported that Naomi Allen, professor … Read more
Church leaders now must make a choice: Either condemn Joe Biden’s pro-abortion governance or become complicit in the president’s scandalous support of abortion.
Giving more power, especially over American citizens, to such people is a greater threat to our constitutional government than the idiot rioters who attacked the Capitol.
The city government of Philadelphia has been corrupt for a long time, but at least they used to get things done. Now, they can’t even meet that low bar.
Biden claims to be a strong advocate for paid paternity and maternity leave, including in federal agencies. Apparently not for federal employees who worked under a Republican.
Far more Democrats would be kicked from their committees than would Republicans under the new precedent set with Democrats’ resolution on Marjorie Taylor Greene.
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Morning Rundown
New vaccine hope as February marks 1 year of living with COVID-19 in US: This time last year, the U.S. was preparing for a possible pandemic, with nearly a dozen confirmed COVID-19 cases nationwide and cases in China topping 20,000. Today, the U.S. total has exploded to more than 26 million cases, accounting for about a quarter of all global cases, according to Johns Hopkins University. It’s been a challenging year marked by tragic loss, economic strain and even emerging variants of COVID-19, but new hope may be on the horizon as more COVID-19 vaccines are developed. On Wednesday, a preprint of a new study in The Lancet by University of Oxford researchers expressed confidence that their COVID-19 vaccine with British-Swedish pharmaceutical giant AstraZeneca works well and offers 76% protection from a single dose for three months — 82% protection with two doses. While it’s the first study to document evidence that any COVID-19 vaccine can reduce transmission of the virus, many European countries, including Switzerland, are still skeptical of it and the limited information about safety, efficacy and quality. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration has also said it wants to see the results from a large, ongoing trial before authorizing it. This week, the Department of Health and Human Services found the number of Americans who’ve received a first vaccine dose reached 27.1 million, surpassing the number of total COVID-19 cases in the country to date. Click here to read about what you shouldn’t do with your COVID-19 vaccination cards.
Clinicians fear NFL’s concussion settlement program discriminates against Black players: Seventy percent of NFL players are Black, but a new lawsuit filed by two Black former players claims that when it comes to being compensated for head injuries suffered while playing football, they are held to a different standard. In an investigation first reported by ABC News, former defensive lineman Kevin Henry, who played for eight seasons for the Pittsburgh Steelers, along with another former player, is suing the NFL after he was denied compensation twice for the head injuries he sustained on the field. In 2017, a neurologist determined Henry was suffering from “mild dementia.” When Henry submitted a claim to the NFL concussion settlement program, which compensates eligible former players suffering from the effects of head injuries, his claim was rejected and asserted his doctor “used inappropriate norms.” Two years later, Henry was rejected a second time when a neurologist said he did not qualify for it after using an NFL-recommended formula that took into account age, gender and race — a controversial practice known as “race norming” to help doctors make better diagnoses. But by using race to make assumptions about a patient’s background, critics say it’s not an accurate tool. The NFL has repeatedly dismissed the lawsuit as “entirely misguided,” but a group of neurologists who work with the NFL said that factoring for race is required and if it wasn’t followed, there would be “multiple inquiries levied at them.” Read more about this story here.
Women make history in Golden Globes director category: The nominations for the 2021 Golden Globes are in and three female directors just made history. For the first time, more than one woman was nominated in the best director category: Emerald Fennell for “Promising Young Woman,” Regina King for “One Night in Miami” and Chloe Zhao for “Nomadland.” Zhao also becomes the first woman of Asian descent to be nominated in the category. These women also outnumber the men in the category. The historic nominations come six years after director Ava DuVernay was nominated for “Selma” in 2015, and join previous nominees including Kathryn Bigelow, Jane Campion and Sofia Coppola. Barbra Streisand was the only woman to ever win the category for “Yentl” in 1984. Read the full list of 2021 Golden Globes nominees here.
Working mother of 4 passes bar exam after studying for 9 years: When Evelyn Uba of California first migrated to the U.S. from Nigeria in 1983, she dreamed of one day finishing law school and becoming a lawyer. Now, after nearly a decade of hard work, that dream came true last month when she passed her state’s bar exam. “I had so many reasons to give up but I knew I just had to keep pushing,” Uba told “GMA.” “I felt so relieved.” At 18, Uba left her home of Igboland, Nigeria, to start college in America. She was faced with several financial difficulties when her father suffered a stroke soon after, and took a prolonged pause two decades later to get married and start a family. In 2005, she resumed studying law and graduated in 2011. Since then, she’s been on a mission to pass the exam. “I took the exam more than 10 times,” she said. “But giving up certainly wasn’t in my dictionary.” Last month, she finally got the results she had been working hard for. Now a licensed attorney, Uba says she hopes to inspire others to keep pushing even when times get hard. “It might not be easy but you just have to keep going and never feel sorry for yourself,” she said.
GMA Must-Watch
This morning on “GMA,” Chef Nancie Greene joins us from Tampa to share two different types of wings to represent the teams in the Super Bowl. She’ll also share smart cooking hacks to make the snacks Super Bowl Sunday ready! And we are celebrating Black History Month with great deals all from Black-owned businesses. Plus, we’re surprising one hardworking nurse from Tampa with tickets to the Super Bowl and a special message from Gronk! All this and more only on “GMA.”
The Republican Party is in the midst of some serious soul-searching as it contemplates its post-Trump future. The Biden administration weighs sending masks to every American and a look at the Golden Globe nominations.
Here is what we’re watching this Thursday morning.
So what does the GOP stand for? They are trying to figure that out.
Riven by infighting, Republicans are torn over how aggressively to confront the rise of far-right extremism and the influence of former President Donald Trump in their ranks.
Those two colliding controversies are pushing the GOP into separate camps and forcing their leaders to pick sides, with high stakes for the party’s future, write NBC News’ Sahil Kapur and Jonathan Allen.
The issues came to a head during a House Republican Conference meeting Wednesday evening.
Liz Cheney, the third-highest-ranking Republican in the House, held onto her leadership positiondespite an uproar over her vote to impeach Trump.
In a secret ballot, House Republicans voted 145-61 in favor of keeping Cheney in party leadership — the lopsided vote possibly signaling a hidden disenchantment with the former president in the House GOP ranks.
But House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif., also sidestepped the other controversy over Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, who has faced criticism for embracing conspiracy theories and calls for political violence.
The Covid-19Response Team is evaluating the logistics of mailing out millions of face coverings, but no decision has been made, and the proposal hasn’t yet reached President Joe Biden for final approval, a White House official said.
In other Covid-19 developments:
The coronavirus has likely undergone thousands of changes. But this particular mutationhas scientists concerned.
Mississippi’s vaccination push has a race gap, as Black residents face shortages, long drives.
From NBC’s Chuck Todd, Mark Murray, Carrie Dann and Melissa Holzberg
FIRST READ: House Republicans pick their battle — and it’s not against Greene
Less than a month after a violent insurrection at the Capitol, after a Capitol policeman and others died in it, and after Donald Trump and a majority of congressional Republicans attempted to overturn the election results, the House GOP made its choice clear last night.
It held a secret-ballot vote on whether Rep. Liz Cheney, R-Wyo., should keep her job (which she survived by a 145-61 margin), but it refused to do the same with Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Ga.
That’s all you need to know.
Photo by ANDREW CABALLERO-REYNOLDS/AFP via Getty Images
Accountability for someone who voted to impeach Trump for inciting the insurrection at the Capitol, versus no accountability for another who’s reportedly supported calls for violence against Democrats, who has championed conspiracy theories, and who’s held anti-Semitic views.
(Greene, per NBC’s Capitol Hill team, told House Republicans behind closed doors that she no longer believes in QAnon and believes school shootings happened, but she has not said this publicly.)
And had the Cheney vote NOT been on a secret ballot, the result on her fate might have been far different.
TWEET OF THE DAY: The trend line is clear
Consequences and precedents
There’s a consequence to the House GOP refusal to take action against Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene: Democrats are going to do it for them.
And that vote later this afternoon – over whether to remove her from the House Education and Budget committees – is going to dominate the political news today.
But it also establishes a potentially dangerous precedent: The majority party is going to take away committee assignments from a member of the minority party that it sees as being extremist.
What happens the next time the GOP is in charge of the House?
Democrats will tell you they had no choice: Republicans refused to hold their own member accountable.
But congressional history tells us that when one party takes action, the other party will soon follow.
Data Download: The numbers you need to know today
61: The number of GOP House members who voted to oust Liz Cheney from her leadership position in last night’s secret-ballot vote.
218-212: The House vote on a budget bill that would allow Senate Democrats to pass Covid relief with a simple majority through reconciliation.
$50,000: The latest proposed income cutoff for individuals who could receive a $1,400 stimulus check, according to the most recent Democratic plan.
$573 million: How much McKinsey has agreed to pay in a settlement over its role in the opioid crisis.
26,670,550: The number of confirmed cases of coronavirus in the United States, per the most recent data from NBC News and health officials. (That’s 124,948 more than yesterday morning.)
452,664: The number of deaths in the United States from the virus so far. (That’s 3,983 more than yesterday morning.)
91,440: The number of people currently hospitalized from Covid-19 in the United States.
316.93 million: The number of coronavirus tests that have been administered in the United States so far, according to researchers at The COVID Tracking Project.
84: The number of days left for Biden to reach his 100-day vaccination goals.
Biden’s day
At 2:45 pm ET, President Biden gives a speech at the State Department… White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki briefs reporters at 11:30 am ET
Meet the nine Biden Cabinet picks who’ve yet to get a confirmation hearing
Nine of President Biden’s Cabinet nominees haven’t received Senate confirmation hearings yet. But now that the Senate has passed a power sharing agreement, that will likely change fast.
The organizing resolution, which passed by unanimous consent on Wednesday, officially hands the committee chair gavels to Democrats. It’s likely we’ll see quick movement on at least one of Biden’s nominees: Merrick Garland.
While committees are now composed equally of members of both parties, if a bill or nominee is stuck in a full committee, the majority leader or minority leader can make a motion to discharge the bill or nominee to the Senate floor. If that motion passes, the bill or nominee will receive a full Senate vote.
Essentially: Republicans will have a hard time holding up any of Biden’s Cabinet nominees if Democrats vote together.
Here are the nominees who have YET to get a hearing as of this morning:
Merrick Garland (Attorney General)
Xavier Becerra (HHS)
Deb Haaland (Interior)
Miguel Cardona (Education)
Marty Walsh (Labor)
Michael Regan (EPA)
Isabel Guzman (SBA)
Neera Tanden (OMB)
Katherine Tai (U.S. Trade Rep.)
BIDEN CABINET WATCH
State: Tony Blinken (confirmed)
Treasury: Janet Yellen (confirmed)
Defense: Ret. Gen. Lloyd Austin (confirmed)
Attorney General: Merrick Garland
Homeland Security: Alejandro Mayorkas (confirmed)
HHS: Xavier Becerra
Agriculture: Tom Vilsack
Transportation: Pete Buttigieg (confirmed)
Energy: Jennifer Granholm
Interior: Deb Haaland
Education: Miguel Cardona
Commerce: Gina Raimondo
Labor: Marty Walsh
HUD: Marcia Fudge
Veterans Affairs: Denis McDonough
UN Ambassador: Linda Thomas-Greenfield
Director of National Intelligence: Avril Haines (confirmed)
EPA: Michael Regan
SBA: Isabel Guzman
OMB Director: Neera Tanden
US Trade Representative: Katherine Tai
ICYMI: What ELSE is happening in the world?
The Biden administration is looking at a plan that would deliver masks to every American.
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55.) REALCLEARPOLITICS MORNING NOTE
02/04/2021
Share:
Carl Cannon’s Morning Note
The Guard and COVID; Hiding Biden; Literary Mentors
By Carl M. Cannon on Feb 04, 2021 08:52 am
Good morning, it’s Thursday, Feb. 4, 2021. Whether we look ahead on this date or to the past, the fourth day of the second month has no shortage of significance. Republicans and Democrats will wrestle over the COVID stimulus bill today (while the House GOP recovers from a marathon session grappling over its own divisive issues — and members). In the rearview mirror, we see some of the highs and lows of the American story: the creation of the USO in 1941; the start of the Patty Hearst kidnapping drama; and the launching of Facebook by Mark Zuckerberg and his Harvard chums. The impact of that last development is still being felt — and debated.
With that, I’ll direct you to our front page, which aggregates, as it does each day, an array of columns and stories spanning the political spectrum. This morning’s lineup includes Janell Ross (Time), Steve Coll (The New Yorker), and Jane Stannus (The Spectator). We also offer a complement of original material from RCP’s reporters and contributors, including the following:
* * *
Pelosi Backs COVID Testing of Troops Protecting Capitol. Susan Crabtree and Phil Wegmann examine the latest hot potato in Washington: whether Guard forces were (and are) adequately protected against the virus.
Hiding Biden: First Impeachment Set Stage for His 2020 Win. Mark Hemingway of RealClearInvestigations reports how Democrats designed the proceedings not just to target the president but to protect their potential nominee.
Education Nominee’s Hearing Left More Questions Than Answers. At RealClearPolicy, Frederick M. Hess and RJ Martin lament that little effort was made to clarify Miguel Cardona’s views on contentious issues.
What If the Coronavirus Had Spread Without Detection? RealClearMarkets editor John Tamny offers this thought experiment.
Report on Drug Price Increases Misses the Mark. At RealClearHealth, William Smith argues that the Institute for Clinical and Economic Review cherry-picked its examples to reach a preordained conclusion.
Debunking Postmodernism’s Dim View of Science. Ross Pomeroy spotlights the work of Steven Novella.
I Flunked the Random House Typing Test, But Everything Turned Out Okay. At RealClearBooks, Sean Desmond reflects on all he’s learned from various mentors, including writers and editors encountered during his years in the publishing industry.
Good morning. it’s Thursday, Feb. 4. A new study suggests, at least for one COVID-19 vaccine, delaying the time between doses may help slow transmission of the virus more quickly. Have feedback? Let us know at hello@join1440.com.
A COVID-19 vaccine developed by AstraZeneca and Oxford University can protect against the coronavirus while significantly slowing transmission after just one shot, according to new research. A study of the two-shot regimen in the United Kingdom showed 76% effectiveness at preventing COVID-19 out to three months after the first shot, while reducing symptomatic spread by 67%.
Officials said the results justify the UK’s decision to delay the second dose for many recipients by up to 12 weeks. With limited vaccine supplies, the strategy is meant to provide initial benefits to a greater number of people in the hopes early immunity will blunt the spread of the virus.
The AstraZeneca drug is not yet approved in the US, and officials have said the new results can’t be generalized to the currently available vaccines from Moderna and Pfizer/BioNTech, which rely on separate technologies.
Meanwhile, new cases of COVID-19 continue to fall in the US, down 45% since mid-January. While testing has dropped by about a quarter, the test positivity rate—the percentage of tests returning as positive—has fallen from near 14% to around 8% over the same timeframe (see data). Roughly 90,000 patients are currently hospitalized with COVID-19, down from 130,000 three weeks ago.
The US has reported 450,797 total COVID-19 deaths, with 3,796 new deaths yesterday. Almost 34 million vaccine doses have been administered in the country, with 6.4 million people receiving their second shot.
Illegal Walkie-Talkies
Deposed Myanmar leader Aung San Suu Kyi was accused yesterday of illegally importing walkie-talkies into the country. Critics called the allegations “comically trivial” in light of the country’s recent military coup, and fabricated as justification for detaining Suu Kyi. Ousted President Win Myint was similarly accused of violating COVID-19 restrictions during campaign events last year. Both will reportedly be remanded until Feb. 15, pending investigations into the charges.
A Nobel Peace Prize winner and daughter of the country’s modern founder, Suu Kyi has effectively led the country since 2016. Her pro-democracy party won more than 80% of parliamentary seats in November elections, prompting claims of widespread voting fraud from the military.
Reports say the new military leadership has blocked Facebook, as public resistance and calls for civil disobedience have grown.
Marjorie Taylor Greene
The House of Representatives appears set to vote today to strip Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R, GA-14) of her committee assignments. The move follows revelations the freshman lawmaker had endorsed a slew of fringe theories before being elected in November. Some have argued the reprimand—driven by the opposing party for already public comments—would set a dangerous precedent.
The practical impact of the vote (assuming it passes) is marginal; Greene, one of 435 members, would retain voting rights but be sidelined from the legislative process. However, the issue has become symbolic of the larger tension within the Republican Party between establishment and more populist factions. Greene—who reportedly apologized to colleagues for the past remarks last night—turned the push into a fundraising effort, netting a reported $160K in a single day.
The GOP establishment scored a victory last night, rallying support for Rep. Liz Cheney (R, WY-at large), who rankled many with her vote to impeach former President Trump. Casting secret ballots, the caucus voted 145-61 for Cheney to retain her leadership position.
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Whether you’re leveling up your analytical skills for work, prepping for a career change, or want to learn how to program ASAP, Brilliant’s bite-size lessons and engaging puzzles will guide you all the way from curiosity to mastery.
>Netflix tops all studios in Golden Globe nominations with 42 including six apiece for “Mank” and “The Crown” (More) | See full list of nominations for 78th Golden Globes (Feb. 28, 8pm ET, NBC) (More)
>US Justice Department drops lawsuit brought by Trump administration that accused Yale University of discriminating against white and Asian American applicants(More)
>Morgan Wallen, country star whose album has topped Billboard’s country chart for past three weeks, removed from more than 400 radio station playlists after video emerges of Wallen using racial slur(More)
>Researchers show the sensors in the Apple Watch can be used to provide real-time monitoring of symptoms and health of Parkinson’s patients (More)
>New software toolkit allows scientists to leverage advanced machine learning to predict and optimize chemical reactions, without heavy expertise in AI development (More)
>New sediment analysis suggests the Arctic Ocean was completely cut off from the world’s oceans during recent glacial periods, with the basin filled with fresh water (More)
Business & Markets
> Consulting giant McKinsey reaches $573M settlement related to marketing advice to OxyContin maker Purdue Pharma and other opioid epidemic players (More)
>GameStop and other “meme stocks” bounce back up Wednesday after Tuesday free falls (More) | NYC-based hedge fund netted $700M in GameStop trade (More)
>John Matze, CEO of social media platform Parler, terminated by its board (More)
Politics & World Affairs
>Senate leaders reach agreement on an organizing resolution to guide procedures in the body until the current session ends in 2022; control of committees and assignments for new senators had been delayed by negotiations (More)
>Columbus, Ohio, police officer indicted for December shooting of unarmed Black man during a nonemergency call (More) | Background on the shooting of 47-year-old Andre Hill (More)
>Brian Sicknick, US Capitol Police officer killed in the Jan. 6 Capitol siege, becomes the fifth person to lay in honor in the US Capitol Rotunda (More)
IN-DEPTH
The Real Rosa Parks
Shondaland | Urana McCauley, Liz Dwyer. (From 2019) McCauley, the great niece of Rosa Parks, tells the real history of the civil rights icon—and tries to put the caricature of a quiet, tired seamstress to rest. (Read)
Before the Next One
Bloomberg Businessweek | Robert Langreth. A future deadly pandemic is almost a near certainty, with the only questions being what and when. Here are five steps society must take to prepare for the inevitable. (Read)
Times they are a-changing. Never before has it felt so important to know how to code … or at least to understand it.
Luckily, our friends at Brilliant create bite-size lessons and engaging puzzles to further our understanding of programming, algorithms, mathematical problem-solving, and so much more. And as a 1440 reader, you can sign up for Brilliant today for 20% off an annual subscription. But act fast, only the first 200 of you are eligible!
From our partners: Finally, hassle-free car insurance that’s suited for the digital age. This company offers better coverage at lower prices, and it’s all accessible right on your phone. Check your price now. #Ad
Historybook: George Washington elected first president of the US (1789); Aviation innovator Charles Lindbergh born (1902); Rosa Parks born (1913); RIP pianist and entertainer Liberace (1987); Facebook is founded (2004).
“Each person must live their life as a model for others.”
– Rosa Parks
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63.) AMERICAN INSTITUTE FOR ECONOMIC RESEARCH
64.) NATIONAL REVIEW
65.) POLITICAL WIRE
66.) RASMUSSEN REPORTS
67.) ZEROHEDGE
THE DURDEN DISPATCH
YOU CAN’T READ EVERYTHING ON ZEROHEDGE. HERE’S WHAT YOU MISSED
Authored by David Sacks via Persuasion.Community, As the apex predators of capitalism, hedge funds are accustomed to raking in billions by driving companies into the ground and feasting on the carcasses. So there was widespread satisfaction…
UPDATE : Douglass Braff reports that Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez hit back at claims she lied about her experience during the pro-Trump Capitol riots. This is the latest manipulative take on the right. They are manipulating the fact…
Authored by Tom Ozimek via The Epoch Times, The longest-serving woman in Congress, Rep. Marcy Kaptur (D-Ohio), told The Hill in a recent interview that she struggles with a growing sense of alienation within the Democratic party as she…
A San Francisco artist who mocked Twitter ‘blue check’ elitism was forced to put a disclaimer on a satirical website, which encouraged ‘thought leaders, athletes and famous actors’ to apply for a blue “Verified Badge Crest” on the exterior…
Authored by Jezzamine Wolk via CampusReform.org, Amid a nationwide movement to remove statues, symbols, and words in the name of inclusion, Campus Reform rounded up recent examples of words that have been banned on college campuses. 1.
Surveying the wreckage of WallStreetBets raid on the silver markets – which thankfully for many on both sides of the trade – never got as out of hand as the heavily-shorted stock malarkey, offers a few insights into just what happened…
Zero Hedge, P.O. Box 721, Mahwah, NJ 07430, United States
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Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene brutally owned Rep. Ilhan Omar on Wednesday by reminding her that marrying your brother is illegal in Minnesota. Rep. Greene was… Read more…
GOP lawmakers reportedly gave Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene a standing ovation Wednesday night at the Republican Conference meeting. This was reportedly after Marjorie apologized for… Read more…
Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin Biden’s Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin ordered military-wide stand-downs pausing regular activity to “address white nationalism” in the ranks and rid… Read more…
Senator Rand Paul raised some serious concerns over transgender women competing with other women in sports, arguing how it will completely destroy girls’ athletics. Paul… Read more…
John Matze Parler CEO John Matze said he was terminated by the board of the social media platform. “I did not participate in this decision”… Read more…
Illegal aliens and their allies blocked traffic outside the offices of New Jersey Democrat Senators Bob Menendez and Cory Booker for several hours on Wednesday…. Read more…
After nearly a month since his death there is no evidence Capitol Police Officer Brian Sicknick died from blunt force to the head on January… Read more…
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We focus on fraud allegations with the appearance of statistical rigor. Trump and allies used statistics to claim some election facts would be unlikely if there had been no fraud. The claims fail either because sometimes the “fact” is inaccurate or it is accurate but not surprising. For example, a viral anonymous report claimed Dominion machines added 5.6% to Biden’s vote share. But, we show that the purported Dominion effect disappears as soon as we control for 2016 results, or make any number of other sensible design choices.
Can Congress impeach an ex-president? Did Trump commit incitement to riot? Panelists discussing these issues include Berkeley Law professor John Yoo; National Review contributing editor and former federal prosecutor Andrew C. McCarthy; and NYU and University of Chicago professor of law Richard A. Epstein. This Berkeley Law School event will be a live taping for Uncommon Knowledge with Peter Robinson, and we invite you to join us for this rare recording that is open to the public.
A politically realistic public option would have significant impacts on America’s future fiscal condition. These impacts would be exacerbated by the kinds of economic shocks, such as recessions, that our country has seen on a fairly regular basis.
US President Joe Biden’s administration has made forging a common approach with its allies to China and Russia a pillar of its foreign policy. The prospect that former European Central Bank president Mario Draghi will join the European Union’s core leadership could go a long way toward achieving that.
Hoover Institution fellow John Yoo breaks down the political landscape in the state as Democrat Governor Gavin Newsom’s approval numbers sink, and the recall efforts heat up in California.
Despite writing more than 50 books on economics, race, and history, there’s a good chance Thomas Sowell is the national treasure you’ve never heard of.
With the launch of the Afghan Serials Collection, the Hoover Institution Library & Archives hosts the largest single collection of digitized publications from Afghanistan. To date more than 850,000 pages have been digitized and are now available online.
New research, available here and as a working paper released by the National Bureau of Economic Research, sheds light on the extent and potential consequences of suspension of household debt payments (debt forbearance on such loans as mortgages and autos) during the COVID-19 pandemic in the U.S. The related provisions of the CARES Act, originally set to expire in mid-February, have been extended through the end of March–a ticking time bomb for the aggregate economy.
Lawyers for former President Donald Trump filed a 14-page brief Tuesday that previews two main arguments we can expect to hear when the Senate impeachment trial kicks off next week.
Come for an important discussion on what changes may be needed in America’s institutions in order to preserve our Democracy.
The opinions expressed in this publication are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the opinions of the Hoover Institution or Stanford University.
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71.) DAILY INTELLIGENCE BRIEF
Daily Intelligence Brief.
Good morning. It’s Thursday, February 4, 2021. On this day in history in 1974 Patty Hearst was kidnapped and in 2004 the world was introduced to Facebook.
TOP STORIES:
Kroger Closes Two Stores Following City Order for Higher Pay
In California, two Kroger stores closed their doors following a city order mandating a four dollar an hour wage increase for employees.
The two stores in question are in Long Beach, California, where the City Council passed an order for any grocery store more than 300 employees nationwide, or fifteen employees at their store must increase their employees’ wage by four dollars per hour.
In response to the decision, Kroger said, “We are truly saddened that our associates and customers will ultimately be the real victims of these forced closures because of the city council’s actions. The irreparable harm that will come to employees and local citizens is a direct result of the City of Long Beach’s attempt to pick winners and losers, (and it) is deeply unfortunate.”
Facebook Bans 2nd Amendment Group: No Reason Offered Following Ban
According to a report from the Washington Free Beacon, Facebook banned a 2nd Amendment Group on the platform, providing no reason for its decision.
The report reads, “A top Virginia gun-rights group was booted from Facebook without explanation on Tuesday, a move the tech giant confirmed but refused to explain.”
“Philip Van Cleave, president of the Virginia Citizens Defense League, told the Washington Free Beacon that the group’s page disappeared without explanation. The company said the decision to remove the page is final—but did not provide further details.”
Last month, GoDaddy removed AR15.com, the world’s largest online firearm community, from its hosting services, claiming to have identified content promoting violence on its platform which it says the website did not remove.
Parler Board Terminates John Matze as CEO
In a memo sent to Fox News, Parler CEO John Matze provided an update on his role with the company.
Matze wrote, “On January 29, 2021, the Parler board controlled by Rebekah Mercer decided to immediately terminate my position as CEO of Parler. I did not participate in this decision. I understand that those who now control the company have made some communications to employees and other third parties that have unfortunately created confusion and prompted me to make this public statement.”
Matze continued, “Over the past few months, I’ve met constant resistance to my product vision, my strong belief in free speech and my view of how the Parler site should be managed. For example, I advocated for more product stability and what I believe is a more effective approach to content moderation.”
“I have worked endless hours and fought constant battles to get the Parler site running but at this point, the future of Parler is no longer in my hands,” he continued. “I want to thank the Parler employees, the people on Parler and Parler supporters for their tireless work and devotion to the company. They are an amazing group of diverse, hardworking and talented individuals and I have the utmost respect for them. Many of them have become my second family.”
DAILY PERSPECTIVE ON COVID-19
Since the Outbreak Started
As of Wednesday, February 4, 2021, 16,878,558 people in the U.S. have recovered from coronavirus. Also, the U.S. reports 27,134,394 COVID-19 cases, with 461,287 deaths.
Daily Numbers
For Wednesday, February 4, 2021, the U.S. reports 98,151 cases, with 3,356 deaths.
WHAT THIS MEANS FOR US AS AMERICANS
Kroger’s choice to close two locations because of the mandatory wage increase shows how some grocery store chains cannot sustain a pay increase of that level. An agenda item for the Biden Administration is to raise the minimum wage to fifteen dollars an hour. Democrats in Congress are currently working on passing the Raise the Wage Act, which would make the minimum wage fifteen an hour by 2025. If other cities follow Long Beach’s City Council’s example, Americans will likely see other stores shut down, unable to afford the wage increase for employees. In addition, such a policy would likely provide fewer lower, and entry-level job opportunities.
Facebook banning a 2nd Amendment group indicates that the social media platform is censoring some views about the Constitutional right to own a firearm. With Facebook’s pattern of targeting conservative-themed content, Americans should expect to see more gun groups on Facebook get removed. Facebook continues its pattern of banning material that promotes a conservative view. On January 7, 2021, Facebook permanently banned President Donald Trump from its platform. On January 11, 2021, Facebook removed all “Stop the Steal” groups on the platform. Facebook’s behavior shows it is continuing to censor many conservative views, while allowing liberal views to have a more significant presence on its website. Such behavior also indicates Facebook continues to act like a publisher, not a free forum for ideas in the public domain.
Parler CEO John Matze’s departure indicates an uncertain future for the alternative social media company. Matze was viewed as the face and voice of Parler. Additionally, Matze losing his role as CEO could come amid pressure from Amazon, Google, and Apple, who blacklisted Parler earlier last month, rendering it temporarily inoperable.
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.
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Will the GameStop Saga Result in New Financial Regulations?
Led by Biden’s new Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen, the federal government may seek to use the much-covered GameStop saga as cover to force through new financial regulations.
“Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen has announced she will be meeting with the heads of the Securities and Exchange Commission, the Federal Reserve board, the New York Fed and the Commodities Futures Trading Commission to discuss ‘whether recent activities are consistent with investor protection and fair and efficient markets,’” CNBC reports. “The meeting could take place as early as Thursday.”
Yet it’s hard to see any possible justification for this approach. There’s no evidence that anyone involved in the Reddit group that bought into GameStop and outwitted short-sellers did anything illegal.
“There is no indication yet that the Reddit crowd was engaged in coordinated actions or disseminated false and misleading information,” one financial legal expert said, pushing back on the pro-regulation narrative. “Those are not the elements of a traditional market manipulation case. There was certainly a lot of decentralized chatter, but it would be difficult to call that market manipulation.”
Some meme-happy GameStoppers may ultimately get left holding the bag and take huge losses, but they are adults who knew what risks they were taking. It’d be an indefensible act of paternalism for the feds to use this as an excuse to interfere and stop people from investing as they see fit.
Of course, don’t expect regulation-happy bureaucrats to consider these facts or take no for an answer.
Jobless Claims Remain High as 800,000 More Americans File for Unemployment
Economic recovery is on the horizon, but jobless claims—a proxy for layoffs—remain stubbornly high, a new Thursday report shows.
“Figures released Thursday by the Labor Department show that 779,000 Americans filed first-time jobless claims in the week ended Jan. 30,” Fox Business reports. “The number has been stubbornly high for months, hovering around four times the pre-crisis level, although it’s well below the peak of almost 7 million that was reached when stay-at-home orders were first issued in March.”
There could be a few reasons for the high number of people on the unemployment rolls over the last year. First and foremost, state and local COVID-19 restrictions and lockdowns continue to make many people’s employment illegal. Secondly, expanded and ultra-generous unemployment benefits, meant to help the unemployed, directly inventize and prolong unemployment.
Here’s hoping the numbers start trending in the right direction soon.
Data of the Day: Progressives love to say it’s time for “the rich” to “pay their fair share.” But a new data analysis shows that in 2018, the top 1% paid over 40% of federal income taxes.
You don’t always have time to read a full in-depth article. Thankfully, FEE Fellow Patrick Carroll is here to give you the key takeaways from one highlighted article each day.
A new paper from the National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER) has found significant correlations between lockdowns and economic outcomes across counties in California. Jon Miltimore highlights the findings in his latest article on FEE.org.
“The results (of our research) suggest that local implementation and enforcement of lockdown restrictions and voluntary behavioral responses as reactions to the perceived local COVID-19 spread both played a role,” the economists state, “but enforcement of mandatory restrictions may have had a larger impact on sales losses.”
Yet while we know that lockdowns have been far more detrimental to the economy than voluntary distancing, most of the media continues to push the narrative that the downturn has been caused by “the pandemic.”
This distinction may seem subtle, but it has drastic consequences. Rather than laying the blame on politicians where it properly belongs, the media’s obfuscation of the facts has led people to believe that the economy would be just as bad without the lockdowns.
But there is some pushback to Jon’s position. In a recent Washington Post article, journalist Andrew Vann Dam contests the idea that the government is primarily responsible. He argues that voluntary distancing was creating an economic downturn even without the lockdowns, and that jobs data between red states and blue states don’t paint a clear picture.
But these arguments don’t work. The first is a non sequitur, and the second neglects to examine the far more important dichotomy between open states and closed states.
Thus, while there has been some contention on this matter, the NBER paper’s point stands. The command economy we find ourselves in is the primary source of our economic woes.
So maybe we should stop letting politicians get away with blaming all our problems on “the pandemic.”
The first kind of lockdown is the one experienced by the “lockdown elite.” More akin to a romanticized inconvenience, this kind of lockdown is characterized by working remotely, chatting on Zoom calls and ordering Uber Eats.
The second kind of lockdown, as experienced by much of the working class, is something else altogether.
The Harlem Hellfighters: The Incredible Story Behind the Most Decorated US Regiment in WWI
by Lawrence W. Reed
Despite mistreatment from the US Army, the Harlem Hellfighters never lost an inch of ground. The enemy never captured a single of their number. They suffered the highest casualty rate of any US regiment. None deserted.
The grateful French bestowed their highest military honor, the Croix de Guerre, upon the entire regiment.
In Defense of Hedge Funds and Short Selling: GameStop, Reddit, and Robinhood
by Kel Kelly
“Short selling has no obvious value to the American economy,” Tucker Carlson declared following the Robinhood/GameStop fallout. “Short selling hurts companies, obviously; it hurts its investors, its employees, ultimately it hurts our country itself.”
Like most political statements today, this is a mere assertion with no basis in fact.
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