Good morning! Here is your news briefing for Monday February 15, 2021
1.) THE DAILY SIGNAL
Feb 15, 2021
Happy Presidents Day from Washington, where the left hopes to win a $15-an-hour minimum wage. That could mean the end for a favorite local business of yours, Virginia Allen reports. Can legal gun possession make a difference in a bad situation? Check out the video a Daily Signal reader sent to Amy Swearer. Plus: a psychiatrist challenges the rush to “transition”; Reagan’s appeal to young Americans; media madness for Maxine; and your letters on COVID-19 and schools. Sixty years ago today, all 18 members of the U.S. figure skating team perish when their plane crashes in Belgium, killing all 72 aboard, on the way to the world championships in Prague.
If Stuart Hornsby had to pay all his employees $15 an hour, staff hours likely would have to be cut, some employees would be laid off, and his prices would have to increase significantly.
When professors must write “diversity statements” and hire, promote, and fire on the basis of race, the model is not the U.S. Constitution, but something out of contemporary China.
Children “have been very seriously damaged” in receiving treatment at the United Kingdom’s premier gender identity facility, a former psychiatrist there says in a bombshell interview.
As a president, but more importantly as a person, Reagan’s sense of purpose illustrated an abiding, fundamental, and optimistic faith in the American dream.
We have good reason to believe that most defensive gun uses never are reported to law enforcement, much less are picked up and publicized by a media outlet.
“The fact that the left refuses to open schools to in-person learning is the largest impediment to the next generation’s progress and wealth building,” writes Kathy Vanderford of Fountain Inn, S.C.
Senate Minority Leader McConnell says the riot was a “foreseeable consequence of the growing crescendo of false statements, conspiracy theories, and reckless hyperbole” from Trump after his election loss.
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2.) THE EPOCH TIMES
FEBRUARY 15, 2021 READ IN BROWSER
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3.) DAYBREAK
4.) THE SUNBURN
Good Monday morning. Most of the other morning tout sheets are off today for Presidents Day, but not Sunburn. We’ll save our vacation time for Michelle‘s upcoming 40th birthday.
For the upcoming edition of INFLUENCE Magazine, we would like to feature the folks we call “Capitol Cornerstones.”
These are the institutional, unsung lobbyists or association executives (sorry, no members or staff) who have been around for years.
They’re not rising stars. But they ain’t retiring anytime soon, either.
Bottom line: they know how the system works.
I’d really like to highlight individuals who don’t always get the attention they deserve.
If you can think of someone we should feature, please let me know by Friday, Feb. 19. Your nomination is confidential unless otherwise stated. If you have contact information you can share, that would be helpful.
Just one other note:
— Don’t forget about our winners and losers: Each week, esteemed columnist JoeHenderson puts together the winners and losers of the week in Florida politics. They are relevant snapshots of the week’s federal, state and local news with an eye toward what made a person, action, organization or a business that week’s star, or its ultimate flub. This week’s edition includes an in-depth analysis of Hillsborough County’s failed vaccine rollout as well as insight into why Education Commissioner RichardCorcoran has cause for celebratory drinks. Read more here, and don’t forget to check out the column each Sunday.
Situational awareness
—@TimFullerton: CDC reports nearly 4.5 million doses administered over the last two days. Each day was a single-day record on its own. This is major progress.
—@AlexTDaugherty: Also, this is a politically noteworthy vote for [Marco] Rubio. He and RonJohnson of WI are the 2 GOP Senators on the ballot in ’22 who voted to acquit [Donald] Trump. Rubio has also faced rumbles of a pro-Trump primary challenge
Tweet, tweet:
—@MaryEllenKlas: In 30 years covering Tallahassee, the #Parkland bill ranks as one of the best demonstrations of legislative responsiveness and leadership. Credit to @BillGalvano @Book4Senate @JaredEMoskowitzKevin Radar and willingness to negotiate by @joenegronfl @richardcorcoran @WiltonSimpson
—@PatriciaMazzei: I know the rest of the country doesn’t want to hear this, but it’s so hot, Miami basically skipped the spring
—@Rosebwong: I’m really excited about president’s day because it means Valentine’s Day is over
Tweet, tweet:
Days until
Dr. Aaron Weiner webinar on mental health in the workplace — 3; ‘Nomadland’ with Frances McDormand — 4; The CW’s ‘Superman & Lois’ premieres — 8; the 2021 Conservative Political Action Conference begins — 10; Pitchers and catchers report to Spring Training, with exhibition games starting — 12; 2021 Legislative Session begins — 15; ‘Coming 2 America’ premieres on Amazon Prime — 18; ‘The Many Saints of Newark’ premieres — 25; 2021 Grammys — 27; Zack Snyder’s ‘Justice League’ premieres on HBO Max — 31; ‘Godzilla vs. Kong’ premieres — 39; MLB Opening Day — 45; ‘No Time to Die’ premieres (rescheduled) — 46; Children’s Gasparilla — 54; Seminole Hard Rock Gasparilla Pirate Fest — 61; ‘Black Widow’ rescheduled premiere — 81; ‘Top Gun: Maverick’ rescheduled premiere — 137; Disney’s ‘Shang Chi and The Legend of The Ten Rings’ premieres — 146; new start date for 2021 Olympics — 158; ‘Jungle Cruise’ premieres — 166; St. Petersburg Primary Election — 190; ‘A Quiet Place Part II’ rescheduled premiere — 214; ‘Dune’ premieres — 228; St. Petersburg Municipal Elections — 260; Disney’s ‘Eternals’ premieres — 263; Steven Spielberg’s ‘West Side Story’ premieres — 298; ‘Spider-Man Far From Home’ sequel premieres — 305; ‘Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness’ premieres — 403; ‘Thor: Love and Thunder’ premieres — 445; ‘Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse’ sequel premieres — 599.
Dateline Tallahassee
“House to take up health care liability shield” via The News Service of Florida — After the Senate started moving forward with the controversial issue Wednesday, a House committee next week will take up a bill that would help shield nursing homes, hospitals and physicians from coronavirus-related lawsuits. According to a House calendar, the House Health & Human Services Committee is slated next Wednesday to consider the bill’s House version. The Senate Judiciary Committee on Wednesday in a 6-4, party-line vote approved its version, which has some key differences from the House bill. Since the onset of the pandemic last year, health care providers have been calling for protections from COVID-19-related lawsuits.
“Lawmakers open debate over staffing in nursing homes” via Bailey LeFever of The Tampa Bay Times — Even if some facilities don’t plan to use them, personal care attendants could become a permanent fixture in Florida’s long-term care system under two bills proposed for the upcoming Legislative Session. Senate Bill 1132 and House Bill 485 would allow the attendants to work for four months, providing they complete eight hours of training. After that, they would be required to pass a certified nursing assistant exam to continue working in their facilities. The bills were introduced by Sen. Aaron Bean and Rep. Sam Garrison. While making the program permanent could help ease the staffing shortage, experts argue it may lower nursing homes’ quality of care to dangerous levels.
Sam Garrison and Aaron Bean are working to make personal care attendants a permanent fixture in nursing homes.
“Secret search bill and trade secrets back before Legislature” via Mark Lane of The Daytona Beach News-Journal — The Florida Legislature will set up shop in a few weeks and we know what that means new proposals for circumventing the state’s public records and sunshine laws! My personal favorite is the plan to lower the Cone of Silence over searches for university presidents. Bills pushing this idea have been popping up since 2013 and as recently as last Session. The latest version is a bill filed by Jeff Brandes, chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee, that would allow the vetting and ranking of university presidential candidates could go ahead in secret and keep the identities of applicants confidential until 21 days before their interviews with a search committee or a meeting to decide on hiring. More than enough time to make sure everything is a done deal ahead of time.
“Ardian Zika files bill to bolster K-12 civics education” via Jason Delgado of Florida Politics — Rep. Zika on Thursday filed a bill that would “enhance” K-12 civics education in Florida, the Florida House announced. The proposal, HB 5, instructs the Florida Department of Education to create a “Portraits in Patriotism” video library. The library would house the personal stories of diverse “civic-minded” individuals and use them for instruction. Zika, a Republican, represents Land O’ Lakes. “As an American who began my journey as an immigrant, I’m a product of America’s exceptionalism,” Zika said in the announcement. The proposal, also known as the Portraits in Patriotism Act, requires the curriculum to be incorporated into regular school work.
Ardian Zika wants ‘Portraits in Patriotism’ in public schools.
“‘People should come first’: Allison Tant carries family’s legacy into Florida House” via James Call of The Tallahassee Democrat — Tant arrived at the Capitol this year with a strong sense of the purpose of government, she said. She’s a millionaire, with a reported net worth of $9 million, but her humble beginnings reflect her policy interests. The stories her parents told continue to resonate in Tant when she thinks about government and how she evaluates proposals. In an election night phone call, after her victory with 57% of the vote, Tant took a breath and laid out a legislative agenda to “mend holes” in the social safety net: Protecting funding for health and human services and fixing the state’s troubled unemployment compensation system.
Leg. sked
Happening today — Sens. Perry Thurston and Loranne Ausley will hold an online news conference to release a report about billionaires’ growing wealth while Florida faces budget problems. Groups attending include the Florida Alliance for Retired Americans, the Black Women’s Roundtable and the Florida Center for Fiscal and Economic Policy, 9:45 a.m. Zoom link here. Meeting ID: 84471929777. Code: 110915.
Happening today — House Minority Co-leader Evan Jenne holds an online media availability, joined by Reps. Joe Casello and Christine Hunschofsky, 12:30 p.m. Zoom link here.
Legislative committee meetings
The Senate Select Committee on Pandemic Preparedness and Response will receive an update from the Florida Department of Education, noon, Room 412, Knott Building.
The House Health Care Appropriations Subcommittee will receive updates from Agency for Health Care Administration on graduate medical education programs, supplemental payment programs and more, 1:30 p.m., Room 404, House Office Building.
The House Public Integrity & Elections Committee will receive updates on research institutions and foreign donations to public entities, 1:30 p.m., Reed Hall, House Office Building.
The Senate Judiciary Committee meets to consider SB 54, from Sen. Danny Burgess, to end Florida’s no-fault auto insurance system, 2:30 p.m., Room 412, Knott Building.
The Senate Commerce and Tourism Committee meets to consider SB 72, from Sen. Brandes, to shield businesses from coronavirus-related lawsuits, 3:30 p.m., Room 110, Senate Office Building.
The Senate Environment and Natural Resources Committee meets to consider SB 514, from Sen. Ray Rodrigues, to create a Statewide Office of Resiliency on sea-level rise and other issues, 3:30 p.m., Room 37, Senate Office Building.
The House Appropriations Committee will hear an update from Ben Watkins, director of the Division of Bond Finance and matters that influence bond ratings, 4 p.m., Room 212, Knott Building.
The House Ways & Means Committee will workshop issues on remote commerce, 4 p.m., Morris Hall, House Office Building.
Statewide
“Florida schools will resume state testing, in person. Some say no way.” via Jeffrey Solochek of the Tampa Bay Times — The state’s edict has sparked interest in the testing opt-out movement, which has a small but loyal following in Florida. Cindy Hamilton, who co-founded Florida’s Opt-Out Network in Orlando nearly a decade ago, said her group has been “swamped” with information requests in recent weeks, as school districts have begun alerting families in-person testing is scheduled for April and May. Many have questions about the rules over refusing to take the tests. State and school officials promote the idea that students must sit for the end-of-course exams and Florida Standards Assessments. They often tell parents it’s against the law to opt out.
Florida is resuming in-school testing, but not all parents are on board.
“Reefer madness in Florida” via Christine Jordan Sexton of News Service of Florida — Get ready for reefer madness on Wednesday, Feb. 18. That’s when members of the state’s two physician licensing boards begin working on the practice standards Florida-licensed physicians must follow when ordering smokable medical marijuana for their qualified patients. The Board of Medicine and the Board of Osteopathic Medicine are required to have the rules adopted by July 1. As members of the boards, meeting collectively as the Joint Committee on Medical Marijuana, begin working on rules laying out when smoking is acceptable, they will be reviewing the findings of a new state report that shows smoking medical marijuana is popular among patients who qualify.
Corona Florida
“Florida adds 96 coronavirus deaths, 5,000-plus cases Sunday” via Romy Ellenbogen of The Tampa Bay Times — Florida added 5,436 coronavirus cases on Sunday, bringing the weekly average of cases down. Since March, 1,827,373 coronavirus cases have been identified across Florida. An average of about 7,056 cases are announced per day, based on the weekly average. Just under 100,000 tests were processed Saturday, resulting in a single-day positivity rate of 6.97 percent. The state also announced 96 additional deaths from the virus, making the number of people dead statewide 29,275. The weekly death average decreased slightly to about 159 people reported dead per day.
“Long-term care COVID-19 deaths top 10,000” via Jim Saunders of The News Service of Florida — With an additional 59 deaths reported Friday, total long-term care deaths reached 10,034 — with the vast majority involving residents of nursing homes and assisted living facilities. State leaders have worried since the early days of the pandemic about the threat of COVID-19 to long-term care residents, who are particularly vulnerable to the disease because of advanced ages and underlying health conditions. According to a report released by the state Department of Health, long-term care facilities were linked to about 35% of the 28,565 deaths of Floridians from COVID-19. In all, 28 counties have had more than 100 long-term care deaths, with Palm Beach County topping the list with 974 deaths and Miami-Dade County next with 964.
COVID-19 deaths in long-term facilities are reaching alarming numbers. Image via AP.
“As COVID variants spread, Florida slow to release details” via Kate Santich of the Orlando Sentinel — Since Jan. 7 — one week after a COVID variant first found in the United Kingdom was detected in Martin County — the Florida Department of Health has ignored repeated inquiries for timely information on which other counties had confirmed the presence of the strain. It made a single disclosure, showing variant cases through Feb. 1, but did not publish the information on the state’s COVID-19 dashboard, and it has not updated the data since. Reported cases of the mutation have spiraled from 147 to 347 as of Friday. And the lack of transparency has continued without explanation, despite ongoing updates from the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, which has reported state-by-state totals for much of the nation.
“Ron DeSantis warns ‘lockdowner’ Joe Biden not to ‘target Florida’” via A.G. Gancarski of Florida Politics — Florida’s Governor continued this weekend to rail against a potential travel ban floated by the Biden White House, calling the President a “lockdowner” looking to target the Sunshine State. “Biden is a lockdowner. His advisers are lockdowners. Lockdowns don’t work,” said DeSantis, who went on to make a vow to the administration and its allies. “We’re not turning back, and they will not be able to get away with targeting Florida.” The Governor says the travel ban trial balloon was tantamount to a “political attack against Florida” intended to “punish a state that is doing it better than what his experts have recommended.
Ron DeSantis shrugs off COVID-19 variants. Image via Colin Hackley.
“CDC school guidance may have little effect in Florida” via CBS Miami staff reports — New guidelines from the CDC about reopening schools during the coronavirus pandemic might not change anything in Florida, as state Education Commissioner Corcoran is urging districts to “stay the course.” As debate rages over how to reopen schools in various cities and states across the country, the CDC issued guidance Friday that includes mitigation strategies, indicators of COVID-19 transmission and testing for coronavirus in schools. Before the guidelines were published Friday, Corcoran released a prepared statement mostly focused on reiterating that Florida ordered schools to offer in-person instruction in July.
“Data needed for Florida redistricting delayed by COVID-19” via The News Service of Florida — Blaming coronavirus-related delays, the U.S. Census Bureau announced Friday that data Florida lawmakers will use to redraw legislative and congressional boundaries won’t be delivered until September. The bureau had planned to start providing census data to states on Friday and complete the rollout by March 31. In a blog post, James Whitehorne, chief of the bureau’s Redistricting and Voting Rights Data Office, wrote that COVID-19 delays had pushed back the timeline. The data is now expected to be released to all states at one time before Sept. 30. Florida House Speaker Chris Sprowls and Senate President Simpson have not assigned lawmakers to fill redistricting committees.
This is ridiculous reporting — “Florida is a COVID-19 nightmare — Even for vaccinated people” via Francisco Alvarado of The Daily Beast — As extra-contagious mutations of the coronavirus gather strength like a hurricane churning off the Atlantic coast, Floridians see no sign of respite. While they have yet to issue formal guidance on congregating by vaccinated people, state and national health experts have assured the general public that the vaccines are effective even, if perhaps less so, against the variants surging nationwide. But in a state with a long history of pandemic recklessness and where mask mandates are nonexistent, vaccinated Floridians don’t want to risk getting infected by going out in public. Here, getting a shot offers little more than a modicum of relief.
“More than 1 million Floridians fully vaccinated against COVID-19” via Chris Persaud of The Palm Beach Post — More than 1 million people in Florida and almost 100,000 in Palm Beach County have now received both doses of the COVID-19 vaccine. Florida health officials reported Saturday that 1,028,315 people statewide and 95,783 in Palm Beach County had both the two-dose coronavirus shots. Statewide figures include 19,816 immunized out-of-state residents, about 2% of the total. So far, 4.8% of Florida’s residents and 6.5% of Palm Beach County’s have been inoculated. Nationwide, about 3.7% of Americans have been fully vaccinated. Florida’s vaccine reports show its efforts to immunize its oldest residents is falling behind.
“Publix will expand vaccine sign-ups starting next week” via Lisa J. Huriash of The South Florida Sun-Sentinel — With a new infusion of COVID-19 vaccines, Publix is increasing the chances for people to book an appointment. Instead of just Wednesdays and Fridays, Publix will add Monday sign-ups starting next week. Publix this week nearly doubled the number of counties where it’s distributing the vaccine in Florida, expanding to 593 stores in 41 of the state’s 67 counties. On Friday, those spots went quickly. More than 27,000 appointments were made in less than two hours, said Publix spokeswoman Maria Brous. The Publix supply is part of the Federal Retail Pharmacy Program, which supplies vaccines and the allocation distributed through the state of Florida.
Corona local
“Tallahassee Mayor condemns crowds at local bars, Leon Health hiring staff” via Casey Chapter of The Tallahassee Democrat — Tallahassee Mayor John Dailey, who also participated in Friday’s webinar, pointed to the crowds at local bars and restaurants as “a huge frustration” for city officials. “It’s not appropriate right now,” Dailey said. “These are super-spreader events. I encourage everyone to step up to the plate and be those community partners.” Blackburn said local cases are disproportionately in the 18-24 age range, currently making up 36% of local cases, according to Florida Department of Health data. This has been a consistent trend in local COVID-19 case statistics since universities opened for the fall 2020 semester. About 81% of local deaths caused by the virus have been people aged 65 and older.
“Lakeland receives additional $787K to aid renters, homeowners” via Sara-Megan Walsh of The Lakeland Ledger — Lakeland officials will vote Monday on how to best spend more than $787,000 in federal relief funds to help those residents feeling the financial impact of the COVID pandemic. The city received a second infusion of $787,276 to assistant residents through the U.S. Housing and Urban Development’s Community Block Development Grant program in September, according to Annie Gibson, the city’s Housing Program Supervisor. “HUD is recommending we concentrate on foreclosures associated with rental assistance and with the vaccine distribution,” she said. The city’s proposed plan calls for approximately one-third, or $262,276, to go toward the city’s Emergency Rental Relief Program.
Corona nation
“Average new U.S. virus cases below 100K for 1st time in months” via Sudhin Thanawala and Kate Brumback of The Associated Press — Average daily new coronavirus cases in the United States dipped below 100,000 in recent days for the first time in months. Still, experts cautioned Sunday that infections remain high and precautions to slow the pandemic must stay in place. The seven-day rolling average of new infections was well above 200,000 for much of December and went to roughly 250,000 in January, according to data kept by Johns Hopkins University, as the pandemic came roaring back after it had been tamed in some places over the summer. That average dropped below 100,000 on Friday for the first time since Nov. 4. It stayed below 100,000 on Saturday.
“A new study identifies seven U.S. virus variants with the same worrying mutation.” via The New York Times — In a new study, a team of researchers reported seven growing lineages of the coronavirus, spotted in states across the country. All of them have evolved a mutation in the same genetic letter. It’s not clear yet whether this shared mutation makes the variants more contagious, but because it appears in a gene that influences how the virus enters human cells, the scientists are highly suspicious. It’s difficult to answer even basic questions about how prevalent the new variants are in the United States because the country sequences genomes from less than 1% of coronavirus test samples.
“Anthony Fauci sees ‘sobering’ data on South Africa variant” via Grace Hauck and John Bacon of USA Today — Data on the South Africa variant of the coronavirus is “sobering,” and current vaccines are less effective against it than the original virus or U.K. variant, Dr. Fauci said Sunday. Fauci, speaking on NBC’s “Meet the Press,” said less is known about the South African variant than the U.K. version, which has proved to be more transmissible than the original version of the virus. “But we do know that it (South Africa variant) evades the protection from some of the monoclonal antibodies, and it diminishes somewhat the capability and the effectiveness of the vaccine to block it,” Fauci said. Fauci said there was “still some cushion left,” so that current vaccines do provide some protection against it.
Anthony Fauci is warning about the COVID-19 South African variant.
What Helen Ferre is reading — “Cover-up claims engulf Andrew Cuomo as scandal over nursing home deaths grows” via Shannon Young and Anna Gronewold of POLITICO — When Gov. Cuomo’s top aide told Democratic lawmakers this week why the administration slow-walked information on nursing home deaths, she appeared to be trying to dispel smoldering rumors of a cover-up. Instead, the aide, Melissa DeRosa, threw gasoline on a fire that by Friday had enveloped Cuomo’s legacy of effective leadership during the COVID-19 crisis, something he hoped to parlay into a fourth term next year. Republicans demanded Cuomo’s impeachment. There were calls for his top staffers to resign. And members of the governor’s own party began to turn on him, publicly and forcefully.
What Richard Corcoran is reading — “Rhode Island kept its schools open. This is what happened.” via Susan Dominus of The New York Times — Gov. Gina Raimondo of Rhode Island “Every day that a child is out of school,” she said, “is a problem for that child.” As bad as the numbers were in Rhode Island, she was about to bear down on a conviction she had held since the spring: Schools must remain open for in-person learning. Raimondo, who has two children in private school, has said that she sees school openings as a matter of equity. The preponderance of evidence suggested that schools could be safe for reopening, provided mitigation measures were in place. Administrators and teachers alike came to recognize that they might have to generate new systems on the fly no matter how much they trained.
Every day out of school is a problem for the child, says Gina Raimondo.
“Oxford-AstraZeneca begins a vaccine trial for children. It’s the youngest group yet to be tested.” via Kim Bellware of The Washington Post — Oxford University announced it started testing its coronavirus vaccine in children as young as 6 in a move that expands coronavirus vaccine trials to the youngest age group yet. The Oxford trial will include 300 child volunteers ages 6 to 17, with 240 of them receiving the vaccine codeveloped with drugmaker AstraZeneca; the remaining participants will receive a control meningitis vaccine that has been proved safe in children but is expected to mimic side effects of a COVID-19 shot, the university said in a statement. Before the Oxford-AstraZeneca trial, testing had not included children younger than 12. Three other companies, Pfizer, Moderna and Janssen, have announced plans to start trials for younger children this spring.
More Corona
“Virus variant first detected in the U.K. has been deadlier, study confirms” via Miriam Berger of The Washington Post — Scientists had already determined that the variant of the novel coronavirus first detected in the fall in the United Kingdom was probably 30 to 70% more transmissible than the typical version of the virus causing COVID-19. Based on preliminary data, they also knew that the variant appeared to be relatively more deadly for the growing number of people catching it. U.K. scientists now say the variant is probably 30 to 70% more deadly, based on a follow-up study by the government released Friday that assessed a larger sample size of COVID-19 patients and also found a higher rate of hospitalization.
“The body is far from helpless against coronavirus variants” via Katherine Wu of The Atlantic — The immune system is comprehensive, capable of dueling with just about every microbe it meets. It’s archival, ace at memorizing the details of its victories and defeats. It might be complicated, but it is also, simply put, cool as hell. But the immune system is not doomed to be discombobulated by a never-ending barrage of shape-shifting variants. For every trick the virus plays, the immune system arguably has an equally impressive one. Vaccines remain an essential ally, armoring the body before it encounters the virus. And although the variants have opened up gaps in that chain mail, the pliancy built into our bodies can at least buy time to repair them.
The body is amazingly resilient when it comes to dealing with virus variants. Image via Reuters.
“Scientists said claims about China creating the coronavirus were misleading. They went viral anyway.” via Craig Timberg of The Washington Post — Scientists from Johns Hopkins, Columbia and other leading American universities moved with rare speed when a Chinese virologist, Li-Meng Yan, published an explosive paper in September claiming that China had created the deadly coronavirus in a research lab. The paper, the American scientists concluded, was deeply flawed. And a new online journal from MIT Press, created specifically to vet claims related to SARS-CoV-2, reported Yan’s claims were “at times baseless and are not supported by the data” 10 days after she posted them. But in an age when anyone can publish anything online with a few clicks, this response was not fast enough to keep Yan’s disputed allegations from going viral, reaching an audience in the millions on social media and Fox News.
Presidential
“White House aide resigns after threatening reporter” via The Associated Press — White House Deputy Press Secretary T.J. Ducklo has resigned, the day after he was suspended for issuing a sexist and profane threat to a journalist seeking to cover his relationship with another reporter. Ducklo had been put on a weeklong suspension without pay on Friday after a report surfaced in Vanity Fair outlining his sexist threats against a female journalist to try to suppress a story about his relationship, telling her, “I will destroy you.” The journalist sought to report on his relationship with a political reporter who had previously covered the Biden campaign and transition. Ducklo said he was “devastated to have embarrassed and disappointed my White House colleagues and President Biden.”
After threatening a reporter, T.J. Ducklo is out. Image via AP.
“On Parkland anniversary, Biden calls for tougher gun laws” via The Associated Press — Sorrow reverberated across the country Sunday as Americans, including Biden, joined a Florida community in remembering the 17 lives lost three years ago in the Parkland school shooting massacre. “In seconds, the lives of dozens of families, and the life of an American community, were changed forever,” Biden said in a statement released Sunday. The president used the occasion to call on Congress to strengthen gun laws, including background checks on all gun sales and banning assault weapons. There was no time to wait, the president said. “We owe it to all those we’ve lost and to all those left behind to grieve to make a change. The time to act is now.”
“Biden to sign executive order reestablishing White House faith office” via Jack Jenkins and Adelle M. Banks of Religion News — Biden is expected to sign an executive order on Sunday reestablishing the White House Office of Faith-Based and Neighborhood Partnerships, undoing Trump’s efforts to reshape an agency that went largely unstaffed for most of his tenure. Biden echoed his recent remarks to the National Prayer Breakfast, bemoaning widespread physical and economic suffering due to the coronavirus pandemic, racism and climate change. Biden is expected to appoint Melissa Rogers, a First Amendment lawyer and senior fellow at the Brookings Institution to oversee the office.
“Biden has started erasing Donald Trump’s legacy. Now the hard part starts.” via Annie Linskey of The Washington Post — Biden launched his administration with nearly 50 executive actions, variously described in the media as “a barrage,” “a blitz,” and “a burst.” However, if the sheer number of orders struck the public, the team that spent more than six months planning them struggled with the opposite problem: resisting the temptation to craft even more orders and reverse larger chunks of Trump’s agenda. But now that Biden has undone the most easily reversible Trump policies, the hard part begins. While liberals are pushing Biden to do more, goals such as expanding health care and strengthening gun control would probably require new laws, which are much harder to enact.
“Impeachment over, Biden agenda faces GOP seeking to unify in opposition” via Alex Leary of The Wall Street Journal — The reality for President Biden is that in pursuing priorities from pandemic relief to measures to address climate change and infrastructure renewal, he will have a difficult time achieving the bipartisanship the Senate showed in the trial that failed to convict Trump. By the Sunday morning after the impeachment trial, it was clear that one cause will be to rally in opposition to Biden’s agenda, and the GOP’s most strident voices were already signaling that fight. “My goal is to win in 2022 to stop the most radical agenda I’ve seen coming out of the Democratic presidency of Joe Biden,” said Sen. Lindsey Graham on Fox News.
Epilogue: Trump
“Donald Trump acquitted of inciting insurrection, even as bipartisan majority votes ‘guilty’” via Nicholas Fandos of The New York Times — Under the watch of National Guard troops still patrolling the historic building, a bipartisan majority cast votes to find Trump guilty of the House’s single charge of “incitement of insurrection.” They included seven Republicans, more members of a President’s Party than have ever returned an adverse verdict in an impeachment trial. But with most of Trump’s party coalescing around him, the 57-to-43 tally fell 10 votes short of the two-thirds majority needed to convict and allow the Senate to move to disqualify him from holding future office. The verdict brought an abrupt end to the fourth presidential impeachment trial in American history and the only one in which the accused had left office before being tried.
A majority in the Senate found Donald Trump guilty. Just not enough to ban him from running. Image via AP.
“Late-night talks and a moment of chaos: Inside the Democrats’ eleventh-hour decision to forgo impeachment witnesses” via Mike DeBonis and Tom Hamburger of The Washington Post — The debate among the House impeachment managers raged through the night, as the hours and then minutes ticked down early Saturday before what was widely expected to be the final day of Trump’s Senate trial. After weeks of bending to political pressure to ensure a speedy proceeding, some on the House team wanted to make one final, furious push to demand a more intensive investigation, to call witnesses to talk about Trump’s behavior before, during and after the mob attack on the Capitol on Jan. 6.
“Mitch McConnell, denouncing Trump after voting to acquit, says his hands were tied” via Carl Huse and Nicholas Fandos of The New York Times — Sen. McConnell said he believed that Trump was undeniably guilty of a “disgraceful dereliction of duty” on Jan. 6, when he incited and then failed to do anything to halt a deadly assault on the Capitol. There’s no question — none — that Trump is practically and morally responsible for provoking the events of the day,” McConnell declared. But minutes before he spoke, when it came time for the most powerful Republican in Washington to hold Trump to account on the charge of causing the riot, McConnell said his hands were tied. It could not be done, he argued. He voted to acquit.
“Marco Rubio and Rick Scott vote to acquit Trump over role in Capitol riot” via Alex Daugherty of The Miami Herald — Florida’s two senators voted to acquit Trump on Saturday, as Scott and Rubio stood with a twice-impeached President who continues to exert immense influence over the Republican Party. Five weeks after a pro-Trump mob bent on overturning the results of the 2020 election entered the Senate chamber with weapons and zip ties, forcing Rubio, Scott and their colleagues to evacuate, the two senators declared that any effort to convict Trump for inciting an insurrection was unconstitutional. Before the trial began Tuesday, Rubio and Scott were clear on how they would rule as jurors, with Rubio calling the trial “stupid.”
“As impeachment ends, federal inquiry looms as reminder of Trump’s role in riot” via Alan Feuer and Nicole Hong of The New York Times — The acquittal of Trump at his second impeachment trial will hardly be the last or decisive word on his level of culpability in the assault on the Capitol last month. While the Justice Department officials examining the rash of crimes committed during the riot have signaled that they do not plan to make Trump a focus of the investigation, the volumes of evidence they are compiling may eventually give a clearer and possibly more damning picture of his role in the attack. Case files in the investigation have offered signs that many of the rioters believed, as impeachment managers have said, that they were answering Trump’s call on Jan. 6.
Donald Trump’s role in The Capitol riot is still under federal investigation. Image via AP.
“New York prosecutors investigating Trump’s Manhattan properties” via Corinne Ramey and Emily Glazer of The Wall Street Journal — New York prosecutors are investigating financial dealings around some of Trump’s signature Manhattan properties, extending the known range of the criminal probe of the former President and his company, according to people familiar with the matter. The people said Manhattan prosecutors are examining loans Trump took out on his flagship Fifth Avenue building, Trump Tower; 40 Wall St., an art deco skyscraper in New York City’s Financial District; Trump International Hotel and Tower, a hotel and condominium building at Columbus Circle; and Trump Plaza, an apartment building on Manhattan’s East Side. All of the loans under scrutiny were made to Trump by subsidiaries of Ladder Capital Corp., a New York City-based real estate investment trust.
D.C. matters
“Florida GOP House members decry Biden-proposed travel restrictions” via Kelly Hayes of Florida Politics — Several GOP U.S. House members have penned a letter to Biden, urging him not to impose domestic travel restrictions on the Sunshine State in response to COVID-19 concerns. Naples Rep. Byron Donalds led the House members in writing the President in response to a report from the Miami Herald that found travel restrictions were being considered as a result of a COVID-19 variant surging across the state. The White House issued the following statement, saying: “To be clear, there have been no decisions made around additional public health measures for domestic travel safety.”
“GOP freshmen of color eyeing Dem-dominated minority caucuses” via Melanie Zanona and Sarah Ferris of POLITICO — Freshman Rep. Donalds wants to pull off something Washington has never seen: Membership in both the liberal Congressional Black Caucus and the ultraconservative House Freedom Caucus. Donalds said both groups are a natural fit for someone like himself. And he isn’t afraid to defy norms in a Congress where being a lawmaker of color has historically meant belonging to the Democratic Party. Donalds is among several freshman GOP lawmakers considering joining a racial minority caucus such as the CBC this year, looking to add Republican voices to tight-knit congressional groups that Democrats have historically dominated.
Byron Donalds looks to join minority caucuses on both sides of the aisle. Image via Colin Hackley.
“‘Obamacare’ sign-ups reopen Monday as Democrats push for more aid” via The Associated Press — HealthCare.gov’s market for subsidized health plans reopens Monday for a special three-month sign-up window as the Democratic-led Congress pushes a boost in financial help that could cut premiums by double digits. During the coronavirus pandemic, this enrollment period is an early test of Biden’s strategy to use the Affordable Care Act as a springboard toward health coverage for all. Advancing on a parallel track, the new COVID-19 relief bill from House Democrats would offer a generous, though temporary, increase in subsidies for people covered by the law known as “Obamacare.”
“Fundraiser: Palm Beach is new mecca for GOP” via Christine Stapleton of the Palm Beach Post — Blair Brandt was home in Palm Beach when a mob of Trump supporters stormed The Capitol building during the early afternoon of Jan. 6. He did not consider how the insurrection would impact his new political consulting and fundraising business for conservative donors and candidates. Still, the riot has impacted his clients — donors and corporations he advises on political strategy and giving. The question is how and when donors will support a fractured Republican Party as well as conservative candidates and causes in the aftermath of the insurrection. And as he listens to clients, donors, and prospective candidates alike, the focus is all about flipping control of Congress in the 2022 midterm elections.
Crisis
“One legacy of impeachment: The most complete account so far of Jan. 6” via Peter Baker and Sabrina Tavernise of The New York Times — Though Trump escaped conviction, the Senate impeachment trial has served at least one purpose: It stitched together the most comprehensive and chilling account to date of last month’s deadly assault on the Capitol, ensuring that the former President’s name will be inextricably associated with a violent attempt to subvert the peaceful transfer of power, the first in American history. In the new details it revealed and the methodical, minute-by-minute assembly of known facts it presented, the trial proved revelatory for many Americans and even for some who lived through the events. What was also striking after it was all over was how many questions remained unanswered on issues like the mob’s financing and leadership.
The impeachment trial gave the most thorough account of The Capitol riot yet. Image via AP.
“The decline of Proud Boys: what does the future hold for far-right group?” via Jason Wilson of Yahoo! News — During the Trump era, the far-right Proud Boys rode high, enjoying presidential support, recruiting thousands of men, and, as the self-nominated nemesis of leftist Antifa activists, participating in a string of violent street altercations around the country. Law enforcement agencies have connected at least 10 Capitol arrestees with the Proud Boys in criminal complaints and affidavits. Those charged include leaders like the Florida combat veteran and conspiracy theorist Joe Biggs and Washington state’s Ethan Nordean, whose prominence rose in the group after being caught on film attacking an anti-fascist during a 2018 riot in downtown Portland, Oregon.
“Among some Florida Republicans, hope that Ivanka Trump will challenge Rubio” via William March of The Tampa Bay Times — It’s a tantalizing prospect for some Republicans and Democrats as well: Would Trump run for the Senate against Republican Rubio? For hard-line Trump supporters, it could be a vindication of a man they view as a martyr and a chance to carry on the Trump wave, possibly producing another future President. For Democrats, it would represent the fracturing of the Republican Party, many of whose leaders want to wean the GOP from Trump but are afraid to say so openly. For everyone else, it would be a contest between a mediagenic celebrity versus a prominent senator once seen as the future of his party, but now with some political wounds.
Florida Republicans are pinning their hopes on Ivanka Trump’s potential Senate run. Image via AP.
“NRCC will ‘absolutely’ support Republicans who backed impeachment, finance chair says” via Shia Kapos of POLITICO — Rep. Darin LaHood, a vocal ally of Trump, said Thursday that the campaign arm of House Republicans won’t seek to punish members of the conference who supported impeaching the former President. The Illinois Republican was named finance chair of the National Republican Congressional Committee on Wednesday, just as the organization unveiled its strategy for retaking the House after the party made a surprisingly strong showing in the 2020 election. Capturing the chamber in 2022, LaHood said in a phone interview, is a prize worth more than threatening to starve fellow Republicans of precious campaign cash.
“Personnel note: Scott announces Matt Moon as NRSC’s Deputy Executive Director” via Jacob Ogles of Florida Politics — Another alumnus from U.S. Sen. Scott’s past campaigns has come on board with the National Republican Senatorial Committee. “I’m thrilled to announce Matt Moon as deputy executive director of the NRSC for the 2022 cycle,” said Scott, who this year chairs the campaign arm for Senate Republicans. Moon’s prior work includes serving as communications director for Scott’s 2014 reelection campaign for Florida Governor. He also worked as a senior adviser to U.S. Sen. Ron Johnson of Wisconsin and as deputy research director for the Republican National Committee. He recently served as vice president for advocacy at Business Roundtable, where he lobbied for the tax cuts signed by Trump in 2017.
“David Jolly and Charlie Crist could face off again, this time for Governor” via Adam Smith of St. Pete Catalyst — A lot of political dominoes are teetering in Pinellas County as U.S. Rep. Crist considers running for governor. But the fellow who held that seat before Crist says his eyes are squarely on the Governor’s Mansion and not his old south Pinellas seat. “I’m building out an infrastructure to run for governor of the state of Florida as an independent candidate in the next cycle, and Charlie’s decision doesn’t change that whatsoever,” said former Republican U.S. Rep. Jolly. Jolly and Crist are on parallel and intertwined paths. Crist unsuccessfully ran for U.S. Senate as an independent candidate, and Jolly is now preparing for an independent run against Crist for Governor.
Happening Wednesday:
“Jason Holloway rolls out first round of endorsements ahead of HD 67 run” via Janelle Irwin Taylor of Florida Politics — The same day former Darryl Rouson legislative aide Holloway filed to run for Florida House District 67 in 2022, he rolled out a trove of endorsements from current and former elected officials in Pinellas County. Holloway is seeking the mid-Pinellas seat currently held by Rep. Chris Latvala, who is not seeking reelection because of term limits. Both Holloway and Latvala are Republicans. The endorsements include Florida GOP Chair and Sen. Joe Gruters, former Rep. Larry Ahern and his wife, Maureen Ahern, former St. Petersburg Mayor Rick Baker and St. Petersburg City Council member Robert Blackmon, all Republicans.
“Andrew Gillum’s political committee reports its January spending four days late” via Jacob Ogles of Florida Politics — A political committee chaired by Gillum failed to report any financial activity in 2021. The state informed Forward Florida that beginning Sunday, the committee will begin racking up $500-a-day fines. Officials with the political committee say they filed the report Sunday afternoon, which should stop the accruing of further fines. The report showed the committee had two expenditures, including $13,500 in quarterly software costs with NGP Van and $719 in legal fees with the law firm Perkins Coie. Bureau of Election Records chief Kristi Reid Willis sent a letter to Gillum after the committee missed a Wednesday filing deadline. “Even if you end up filing your report late, we cannot waive the statutory fines,” the letter reads.
Local notes
“Three years after the Stoneman Douglas shooting, Stand With Parkland isn’t done fighting for school safety” via Ryan Nicol of Florida Politics — Sunday marks the third anniversary of the attack where Tony Montalto‘s daughter, Gina, was killed at Stoneman Douglas High School. But with more than 1,000 days elapsing since that tragic attack, Montalto is still working to fix the problems leading up to that day, as well as look forward to new potential threats. “We’re seeing more schools throughout the nation begin to open,” Montalto said of the ongoing trek toward normalcy amid the COVID-19 pandemic. “We need to be on the lookout for kids that are stressed and get them the help they need.” Montalto is concerned one of those students could add to the nation’s heartbreaking list of school shootings.
Tony Montalto is working to address the cause of the Parkland shooting. Image via AP.
“Daniella Levine Cava fires airport company targeted for poor working conditions” via Douglas Hanks and Taylor Dolven of The Miami Herald — Levine Cava on Friday dismissed a large airport vendor accused of poor working conditions, delivering a major win to labor leaders in her first big break with the prior administration. Levine Cava informed Eulen America that its contract at Miami International Airport would terminate on Aug. 12, exercising her power as the chief administrator overseeing vendors across the Miami-Dade government, including at county-owned airports. She announced the decision in a memo to the County Commission, which ratifies MIA contracts. The company provides ramp, cargo, cleaning and baggage-handling services to American, MIA’s largest carrier, and Delta.
“Orlando Mayor Buddy Dyer remarries in private ceremony, he announces on social media” via Cristóbal Reyes of The Orlando Sentinel — Dyer announced Saturday on social media that he married girlfriend Susan Galloway, to the glee and surprise of political and community leaders. Attending the outdoor ceremony was a small group of relatives both virtually and in person, the Mayor said in a post to his Facebook page. The news sparked immediate congratulations from constituents and local business and political leaders to Dyer and his now-wife, many of whom referring to her as “First Lady Susie.” “Congratulations to both, and enjoy a very special Valentine’s Day!” Orlando Police Chief Orlando Rolón said in a tweet replying to the announcement.
“Tampa Bay Transit Authority board defends its purpose as it faces possible dissolution” via Veronica Brezina-Smith of The Tampa Bay Business Journal — The Tampa Bay Area Regional Transit Authority plans to connect with delegates and share a unified message while trying to stop a bill that could disband the organization. TBARTA held an emergency legislative subcommittee meeting on Friday morning to discuss Senate Bill 1130 that Sen. Brandes filed earlier this week. The bill would ultimately disband TBARTA by 2022 and delegate the assets, projects and funds to appropriate stakeholders. Brandes said he believes local transit agencies and municipalities can successfully take on projects rather than TBARTA and push them forward.
Not what you’re thinking — “Maskless Manatee Commissioner found at topless bar” via Chris Anderson of The Sarasota Herald-Tribune — Manatee County commissioner James Satcher used to hang out in strip joint parking lots. That’s right, he did, only it’s not as sleazy as it sounds. Satcher’s ministry, which is called Acts of Love, goes to such establishments to save strippers’ souls from the “devil’s clutches,” as he told a group of parishioners last summer in a sermon posted on Facebook. Satcher sent his fellow commissioners an email this week telling them that he will now be going maskless at meetings. Satcher, it seems, is asking that people respect his personal decision, no matter how inconsiderate it is, even though he and his ministry do not appear to be respecting the decisions others make.
Matt Willhite seeks changes at Port of Palm Beach — Willhite, a Wellington Democrat, is looking to update the port’s charter eliminating certain bond requirements for the board of commissioners, allowing for annual pay adjustments and other technical changes. “Thousands of people rely on the Port of Palm Beach for work, making it one of Palm Beach County’s largest employers,” Willhite said. “The Port exports 100% of the raw sugar that is produced in the Glades area and has been an asset to our neighbors in the Caribbean, especially when they have needed resources after natural disasters such as hurricanes. The Port of Palm Beach has been an asset to Palm Beach County for decades, and it is crucial that we do what we can to ensure the Port’s success.”
“With a seat at the table, Jennifer Andreu brings a fresh perspective to Plantation” via Carol Brzozowski of Florida Politics — Addressing how she felt becoming the first Black elected to the Plantation City Council in November, Andreu calls it “an honor and a privilege, and I don’t take that lightly.” However, she says, she is taken aback that in the year 2021, it is the first time for many municipalities that a Black person is elected to a position where they get a seat at the table of making decisions that impact their communities. Andreu has held many jobs in her career in education, from schoolteacher to principal. She’s directed administrative efforts in the areas of business, personnel, and federal and state compliance.
“Nick Sortal: Longtime journalist turned Plantation city maverick” via Carol Brzozowski of Florida Politics — If Plantation Council member Sortalhas his way, the Broward County city will move from a strong mayor to a city-manager form of government. As the city’s population approaches 100,000, putting it among the 30 largest in Florida, Sortal believes it’s time. “The city was formed in 1953,” he says. “We’ve never even had a charter review. We still have only ‘him’ language. We finally got a charter review committee in 2018. We reviewed the charter but didn’t get it on the ballot for 2020 because of COVID.
Nick Sortal is a journalist-turned-maverick.
“More Cubans are floating their way to South Florida’s shores” via Eileen Kelley and Austen Erblat of The South Florida Sun-Sentinel — In a busy start to 2021, the Coast Guard has seen many more Cubans venturing across the Florida Straits on their way toward South Florida. The latest instances of Cubans saved at sea came this week when the Coast Guard found three survivors who were marooned on a desolate island while trying to reach the U.S. Over the last four months, the Coast Guard had stopped 58 Cubans before they reached Florida, marking an uptick in the number of at-sea interceptions. It’s only February, just a few months into the fiscal year, and that number exceeds the 49 Cubans who were stopped at sea during a 12-month period the previous fiscal year.
Top opinion
“What if we never reach herd immunity?” via Sarah Zhang of The Atlantic — For COVID-19, the herd-immunity threshold is estimated to be between 60 and 90%. In the U.S., the countdown to when enough people are vaccinated to reach herd immunity has already begun. But what if we still can’t get the logs wet enough? Several signs now point to a future in which the transmission of this virus cannot be contained through herd immunity. COVID-19 will likely continue to circulate, evolve, and reinfect. In that case, the goal of vaccination needs to be different. Even if herd immunity remains theoretically within reach, 15% of Americans say they will never get a COVID-19 vaccine, making that threshold all the harder to hit.
Opinions & analysis
“‘A moment of truth’? After years of Donald Trump’s lies, amplified by MAGA media, that proved impossible for most Republicans” via Margaret Sullivan of The Washington Post — The words spoken on the Senate floor over the past few days were almost innumerable. But the ones that stayed with me through the second impeachment trial of Trump were among the very first ones uttered. “Democracy needs a ground to stand upon, and that ground is the truth,” lead House impeachment manager Jamie Raskin said in his opening statement, quoting his father, the political activist Marcus Raskin. This Senate trial would not be a contest among lawyers, or between political parties, said the Maryland Democrat, who led the prosecuting team trying to make the case that the 45th President had incited the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol.
“The 2023 Jacksonville mayoral race is already unprecedented, and costly” via Nate Monroe of The Florida Times-Union — JAX Chamber President Daniel Davis raised $1.3 million in January for a political committee he controls, an unprecedented sum more than two years out from a 2023 Jacksonville mayoral race Davis has not yet formally announced a campaign for but is certain to join. The contributions come from a broad swath of establishment Republican donors, civic leaders and business owners, many of whom backed current and term-limited Mayor Lenny Curry. Davis isn’t saying anything about a campaign for the moment, but he doesn’t have to: Money talks, and so does just about everyone else in town, that Davis was gearing up to run and bagging huge contributions was a poorly kept secret.
Aloe
“Daughter of Lombardi Trophy-maker wants Tom Brady apology” via Joseph Wilkinson of The New York Daily News — The daughter of the silversmith who made the original Vince Lombardi Trophy is upset that Brady threw this year’s version from a boat days after winning his record seventh Super Bowl. “It just upset me that this trophy was disgraced and disrespected by being thrown as if it was a real football,” Lorraine Grohs of Fort Myers told local TV affiliate WFTX. While celebrating the Bucs’ Super Bowl 55 championship during a boat parade Wednesday in downtown Tampa, Brady threw the trophy from his boat over to another boat on the Hillsborough River, where it was caught by tight end Cameron Brate. The pass was complete, just like 21 of Brady’s 29 throws during Tampa Bay’s 31-9 win last Sunday against Kansas City at Raymond James Stadium.
Tweet, tweet:
“Zack Snyder cut Justice League movie trailer brings fresh look at new villains” via Jennifer Bisset and Sean Buckley — Snyder‘s version of Justice League is almost here, and we’ve been gifted with a new trailer for the HBO Max original, which hits on March 18. The extensive new trailer offers much to dissect. It features more of Cyborg, as well as a new score, and this time it’s not in black and white. Snyder had a reported $70 million budget to improve the visual effects, add new scenes with more characters like new supervillain Darkseid, and pay for the fresh Junkie XL score. The main difference between the streaming and the theatrical versions might just be the added violence and profanity.
What Richard Reeves is reading — “Can New Orleans celebrate Mardi Gras without reckless abandon?” via Dan Levin of The New York Times — One year into a global pandemic that has upended daily life and devastated service and tourism industries that could take years to recover, cities like New Orleans have grappled with how to salvage annual celebrations that draw thousands of visitors. Last year, Bourbon Street became a hot spot for the coronavirus, and experts said Mardi Gras may have accelerated the spread. New Orleans and the entire state of Louisiana have struggled to contain the virus, with a recent surge finally leveling off over the past couple of weeks. City officials announced a sweeping crackdown that included shuttering all bars for the final weekend and through Fat Tuesday.
Happy birthday
Best wishes to Audrey Bridges of the Florida Association of Health Plans, former Rep. Mark Danish, and state Rep. Bobby DuBose. Belated birthday wishes to R.J. Myers, Amber Stoner Nunnally and Cari Roth.
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Good morning. Many of you are getting hit with some truly nasty weather (especially in Texas), so we hope everyone’s staying warm and safe this Presidents Day. Here’s a binge rec while you’re riding this out: Search Party on HBO Max.
Government: The Senate voted to acquit former President Trump on a charge of inciting a mob to attack the Capitol. 57 senators voted in favor of conviction, 10 shy of what was required to convict.
Crypto: The US stock market is closed today for Presidents Day, but the bitcoin store is open and it is busy. The cryptocurrency is closing in on $50,000 after hitting more record highs this weekend (bitcoin doesn’t have specific “trading hours” like stocks).
Things Walgreens can cure: nasty hangovers, the fungus growing on your pinky toe, and just maybe…slow vaccine rollouts.
Last Thursday, the federal government began shipping 1 million Covid-19 vaccines to retail chains across the country, including Walmart, CVS, Walgreens, and Kroger, as part of the Federal Retail Pharmacy Program.
6,500 pharmacies will get the doses to start, but the goal is to eventually hit 40,000 locations.
Why it makes sense
Retail pharmacies are already experts at filling prescriptions and administering flu shots, which means they can pivot to Covid vaccines without too much trouble. And given their sprawling, nationwide footprints, drugstore chains are already some of the most accessible healthcare providers for many Americans.
CVS and Walgreens have 19,000 stores combined in the US. Publix + Kroger + Rite Aid have 11,000, per the WSJ.
But the real power player in vaccine distribution is—no surprise here—Walmart, which will receive 20% of all doses sent to pharmacies by the government. That’s in part because the majority of its stores are located in areas with limited healthcare resources, which the government is trying to target under this pharmacy program.
Could this be a biz opportunity?
Despite everyone worrying about germs for the past year, the pandemic actually didn’t help drugstore chains the way it did bad Netflix shows. People came to stores less frequently, and when they did come, it was for consumer goods products that aren’t as profitable as services like photo printing.
CVS, Rite Aid, and Walgreens hope that administering vaccines will lead to higher foot traffic and sales, because why not chug a 5-Hour Energy after you get your Covid shot to keep the good vibes rolling?
All three of those companies are either transforming their businesses or restructuring to stiff-arm increased competition from the likes of Amazon.
Zoom out: The US has administered more than 50 million doses to more than 11% of the country’s population. We’re averaging more than 1.6 million shots/day.
It’s a complete coincidence, but all these quotes happen to start with “we.”
“We will take action to end our epidemic of gun violence and make our schools and communities safer.”
President Biden pledged to enact stricter gun laws on the third anniversary of the mass shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, FL, that killed 17.
“We still have 100,000 cases a day. We still have somewhere between 1,500 and 3,500 deaths per day. And yet we see some communities relaxing some of their mitigation strategies. We are nowhere out of the woods.”
CDC Director Rochelle Walensky said on Face the Nation that it’s too early to remove mask mandates, like states such as Iowa and Montana have done.
“We are not afraid.”
Volkswagen CEO Herbert Diess told a German newspaper that he’s not worried about competition from Apple, which is reportedly working on releasing an electric car by 2024.
“We live in a society where honor is a distant memory.”
Jared Leto’s Joker alludes to the popular meme in the first full-length trailer for Zack Snyder’s Justice League. The four-hour supercut is arriving on HBO Max and in theaters on March 18.
When TikTok’s “For You” page ran dry, many homebound singles switched to dating apps to work their thumb muscles in a different direction. Downloads of the eight most popular dating apps increased 7.4% annually in Q4, and time spent using them rose 13.4%, according to the WSJ.
Big picture: Downloads and time spent on dating apps have been rising since the pandemic hit in the spring of 2020. But the same conditions that juiced usage statistics also led to monetization challenges—users were less likely to splurge on premium features if the prospect of an in-person date remained slim.
But dating execs are optimistic for the post-pandemic future. “As lockdowns ease and mobility increases, people do turn to our apps,” Match Group CEO Sharmistha Dubey told the WSJ.
Bumble stock popped 63% in its trading debut last week.
Bottom line: If you’re looking for a pickup line that’s about 96% effective, talk about vaccination. Between September and December of last year, Tinder reported a 258% increase in vaccine mentions.
Your favorite sock peeps are on a comfort mission bigger than just feet.
Bombas doesn’t only make those super soft socks with extra arch support, stay-up tech, and seam-free freedom for your feet.
They’ve taken their prowess in a new, slightly-upward direction—releasing a new line of underwear so comfortable you might forget you’re wearing ‘em.
But what feels better than their soft, cool-to-the-touch cotton is that every sock or undie you buy will be matched 1:1 and donated to the homeless community—designed specifically with their needs in mind.
Back in 2012, the FAA anticipated 30,000 drones operating by 2020. But, like the current temperature in Texas, that was wayyyyy too low. According to data from the government, there are at least 1,746,248 registered drones in the US, and likely many more unregistered ones.
What are they being used for?
That’s a question we don’t have enough space to answer in this newsletter. Luckily, Emerging Tech Brew created an in-depth guide outlining what the proliferation of drones means for farmers, emergency responders, the military, and a bunch of other industries and professions.
One potential use case: Boston-based LEK Consulting predicts that drones could account for 30% of same-day package deliveries by 2040. That sound you hear is Amazon’s drool hitting the floor.
Bottom line: The drone age is upon us, according to Emerging Tech Brew writer Ryan Duffy. “Commercial drones will eventually be integrated into our everyday lives.”
GameStop hearing: Tickets for this one might be tougher to get than Phish’s NYE shows at Madison Square Garden. This Thursday, the House will hold a hearing on GameStop’s wild stock fluctuations, and here’s just part of the guest list: Robinhood CEO Vlad Tenev, Keith Gill (aka “Roaring Kitty” on YouTube), Citadel founder Ken Griffin, and Melvin Capital Management CEO Gabe Plotkin.
Earnings: The season to report Q4 financials is winding down, but Walmart is up on Thursday and a few hospitality names (Hilton, Marriott) will also reveal the pandemic’s effects on their business.
Economy: We’ll get a pulse check on the booming residential real estate industry with housing data for January. Monthly retail sales numbers also drop on Wednesday.
Tuesday is Mardis Gras (or this year, “Yardi Gras”). The next day is Ash Wednesday.
On Thursday, NASA’s Perseverance rover will try to land on Mars.
Speaking of Mars…about a week after the United Arab Emirates spacecraft “Hope” entered a stable orbit around the planet, we have the first image from the mission to survey Elon’s intergalactic BFF.
United Arab Emirates Space Agency/AFP via Getty Images
WHAT ELSE IS BREWING
New York Stock Exchange President Stacey Cunningham pushed back on comparisons between the stock market and gambling. “The markets are not a casino,” she told Axios.
Texas’s power grid is being strained by the ice-cold temperatures in the state.
New Zealand has put Auckland, its largest city, into lockdown after three members of a family tested positive for Covid-19.
A strong earthquake (7.3 magnitude) off the coast of Japan left households without power and injured hundreds. In more Japan news, health officials there approved Pfizer’s Covid-19 vaccine.
An Israeli study found a 94% drop in symptomatic coronavirus cases among 600,000 people who received Pfizer’s vaccine.
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BREW’S BETS
Contest reminder: Our Friday Puzzle lasts the entire week, and we’re giving a shout out to the winner this Friday. Check out the puzzle and enter to win.
Distance to Mars: With the Red Planet in the news, experience just how far away it is from us.
Longtime readers know we always ask this question on days like today: Washington’s Birthday (Presidents Day) is one of nine holidays during which the US stock market closes. Can you name the other eight?
ANSWER
New Years Day, MLK Jr. Day, Good Friday, Memorial Day, Independence Day, Labor Day, Thanksgiving, Christmas
“Today, I am calling on Congress to enact commonsense gun law reforms, including requiring background checks on all gun sales, banning assault weapons and high-capacity magazines, and eliminating immunity for gun manufacturers who knowingly put weapons of war on our streets,” [Biden said].
…
High-level members of the Biden administration met with gun control advocacy groups last week to discuss reforms to gun laws, the Wall Street Journal reported. Parents of Parkland [high school shooting] survivors were at the meeting, according to the Journal. The president, however, has not pushed out an executive action to address gun control legislation.
…
In 2019, Biden said he would institute a buyback program to get assault weapons “off the street.” “Right now, there is no legal way to deny them the right if they legally purchased them, but we can in fact make a major effort to get them off the street and out of the possession of people.”
All votes are anonymous. This poll closes at: 9:00 PST
YESTERDAY’S POLLDo you believe the stock market is fair to all investors?
Yes
9%
No
83%
Unsure
8%
335 votes, 167 comments
BEST COMMENTS“Yes – Fair with reference to outcome, or fair with reference to opportunity? Obviously, the market yields unfair outcomes to certain investors, but the rules that govern what any one investor can do apply to everyone equally. Life itself isn’t fair. Unfairness isn’t a property that is unique to the stock market.”
“No – High frequency trading, more leverage and political connections. Wall street gets bailed out. Average Americans don’t. Lowest earning Americans aren’t even invested but still get hurt by crashes.”
“No – Most individuals are coached to put their money in, leave it alone, and ride out any fluctuations. They have no ability to trade in real time. The big money is made off those fluctuations. There is an elite class that knows what’s coming and makes a fortune off that information. There is a middle class that can react quickly to observed changes that can also do very well. Retirement and other long term investors are used and just get enough return to keep them in the game.”
Senator Lindsey Graham (R-SC) suggests that after the Democrat-led effort to convict President Trump, all options are on the table. He said, “We’ve opened Pandora’s Box to future presidents. And if you use this model, I don’t know how Kamala Harris doesn’t get impeached if the Republicans take over the House.” Partisan prosecutions may soon be the order of the day, especially if House Democrats continue to try and ban Trump from holding office in the future.
Microsoft and Google are set to go head-to-head in a battle to push America to adopt the proposed Australian system of paying news vendors for their content when searched online. Microsoft says it is an important step in ensuring the spread of ideas, whereas Google claims its competitor is trying to do the company serious damage. Google has already threatened to pull its service from Australia.
Iran-Backed Houthi Militia Gets a Pass From Biden Admin
A number of “homegrown” COVID mutations (seven so far) have been identified by researchers. These newly discovered strains will raise serious questions regarding the efficacy of the presently available vaccines.
The Minneapolis City Council has voted unanimously to spend an additional $6.4 million on recruiting new police officers in the wake of a rise in violent crime. This volte-face comes after the same council had voted (also unanimously) to cut the police budget by $8 million back in December.
Sen. Bill Cassidy (R-LA) wrote an op-ed explaining his decision to vote for the conviction of President Trump. He says that “Rather than defending the Constitution, President Trump was actively subverting the peaceful transfer of power.”
Donald Trump’s Acquittal: A Less Than Teachable Moment
Something political to ponder as you enjoy your morning coffee.
President Biden used the third anniversary of the Parkland school shooting to call for immediate gun control measures including universal background checks and magazine limits. However, the measures he calls for are already in place in locations where gun crime is soaring. In South L.A. there has been a 700% increase in gun violence this year despite already having some of the strictest gun control measures in the country. Is this a case of wanting to say the right words rather than find the right policy?
🍒 Happy Presidents’ Day! (For the federal government, still Washington’s Birthday).
Today’s Smart Brevity™ count: 945 words … < 4 minutes.
🎧 In the season finale of the Axios podcast series “How It Happened,” which dropped today, Jonathan Swan takes us inside secure rooms at the Capitol and White House. Listen on @ApplePodcasts or your favorite app.
1 big thing: Audio takes off during pandemic
Illustration: Sarah Grillo/Axios
Every big media and tech company is scrambling to claim a piece of an audio boom spurred by mass adoption of smart devices and wireless headphones, Axios Media Trends author Sara Fisher writes.
Recent appearances by Mark Zuckerberg, Elon Musk and celebrities on Clubhouse are causing a download explosion.
Facebook is reportedly in the early stages of building a Clubhouse rival. (N.Y. Times)
Twitter last month launched Spaces, which lets thousands of people listen in on conversations between Twitter users.
For the first time, wireless headphone and earbud shipments surpassed wired headphones and earbuds last year.
Nearly 40% of the U.S. population uses voice assistants, per eMarketer.
Roughly a quarter of the adult population owns a smart speaker.
Dr. Anthony Fauci, 80, told Axios managing editor Margaret Talev on “Axios on HBO” that he feared COVID could get him, particularly during the Trump administration “when I was going to the White House every day, when the White House was sort of a super-spreader location.”
“I think you’d have to be oblivious not to consider the fact that if you get infected, that you are already in a category of someone who has a high risk of having a serious outcome,” Fauci said. “I didn’t fixate on that. But it was in the back of my mind, because I had to be out there.”
Margaret Talev: “You might have a lot of time to read the Urban Dictionary since you’re trying to cure a pandemic and all. But there is actually a term in dating now called ‘Fauci-ing’ someone. Do you know what that means?”
Fauci: “No, what does it mean?”
Talev: “It means cutting off a relationship if you don’t think that that other person is serious enough about social distancing and taking the pandemic seriously.”
3. Vice President Harris: “We’ve got to figure out a way”
Photo: “Axios on HBO”
Vice President Harris told me during a backstage conversation for “Axios on HBO” that she constantly pushes her team on COVID: “Can we do more? Where is there capacity to do more?”
“We’ve got to figure out a way — that has to be our standard,” she said. “Our standard has to be: ‘Everything is possible, but we’re going to have to work like heck to get it done.'”
Asked what her signature issue will be, Harris said with laughter: “Making sure Joe Biden is a success.”
I reminded her the trademark question of the late New York Mayor Ed Koch: “How’m I doin’? “
“It’s three weeks in,” Harris replied with a laugh. “Give me a break!”
I asked if her predecessor, former Vice President Mike Pence, had left her a note.
She said he had, but left the details as a cliffhanger.
I’m told that Pence left the note in the Vice President’s West Wing office. It was Midwestern friendly: He said it had been the honor of a lifetime to serve in the job — and wished Harris success.
Cyrus Beschloss — founder of The Generation Lab, which polls young people for media, business and government — took this photo at 12:03 p.m. Saturday “during a rain-jog to absorb the scene” during the impeachment trial, he told me.
This was during the recess, while an agreement on (not having) witnesses was being negotiated.
His dad tweeted it: “United States Capitol this morning, photographed by son @cyrusbeschloss. No, it’s not East Berlin.”
And one more …
AP moved this today in conjunction with President Biden’s first presidential visit to Camp David:
In July 1981, President Reagan, then 70, and Vice President George H.W. Bush, then 57, go horseback riding at Camp David.
5. Puerto Rico governor has 51st star in his eyes
Photo: “Axios on HBO”
In San Juan, Puerto Rico Gov. Pedro Pierluisi told Alexi McCammond for “Axios on HBO” that “Congress is morally obligated to respond” to the island’s recent vote for statehood. He said he expects a House bill to be introduced next month.
Why it matters: Statehood, discussed for decades, is more likely than ever, with Democrats controlling Congress and President Biden supporting it.
Go deeper … “Puerto Rico statehood: What you need to know,” by Orion Rummler.
6. NYSE president: “The markets are not a casino”
Photo: “Axios on HBO”
On “Axios on HBO,” New York Stock Exchange president Stacey Cunningham told Dan Primack — author of Axios Pro Rata and host of our afternoon “Re:Cap” podcast — that she won’t compare investing to gambling:
The markets are not a casino. They are highly regulated and they’re highly overseen … We are running a market that provides opportunities for investors to come in, invest in the companies they believe in … and then share in that wealth creation.
Yellowed pages of an old jail log with a dozen signatures by the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. are going up for auction — a previously unknown reminder of the civil-rights leader’s confinement in Birmingham, AP’s Jay Reeves writes:
Arrested in 1963 for leading a march against segregation, King was kept in solitary confinement, where he wrote “Letter From Birmingham Jail.” When it was smuggled out, it stirred the world.
Meanwhile, items were arriving at the jail for King — a special delivery letter, then a Western Union telegram, then another and another. A jailer logged each item in a bound ledger book, which King then signed.
The pages were reportedly saved by an employee at the old jail, which was demolished in 1986.
The pages also bear the signature of King friend and aide Ralph Abernathy, who was arrested during the same march as King.
“Lincoln’s Mentors: The Education of a Leader” — out Feb. 2, by Chapel Hill constitutional scholar Michael Gerhardt — has a vital lesson for anyone who’s trying to succeed, or trying to help others succeed.
The book’s big idea is that Lincoln, for all his gifts, was intentional about seeking out mentors who could help him master oratory, speechwriting, party politics, campaigning, conventions, executive power, managing a cabinet.
This is a twist on the advice Axios CEO Jim VandeHei gives our colleagues: Successful people are surprisingly willing to tell you what they know, and are usually flattered to be asked. So ask!
Professor Gerhardt writes:
The giant figure of Lincoln seated in the iconic monument … captures the myth of Lincoln sitting alone, nearly godlike … head and shoulders above the fray. That is not how Lincoln learned to lead.
The morning’s most important stories, curated by Post editors.
Sen. Lindsey O. Graham (R-S.C.) had harsh words for his GOP colleagues — including Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell — who rebuked former president Donald Trump. (Bloomberg News)
Republicans continued to diverge Sunday on what the future of their party should be, with a chasm widening between those who want nothing to do with the former president and those who openly embrace him.
On his first day in office, President Biden signed an order that revoked the permit for the construction of the Keystone XL pipeline. Now House Republicans are practically salivating at the chance to use Biden’s move as a 2022 campaign cudgel against Democrats.
President Biden’s aggressive goal to completely decarbonize the power sector in the next 15 years brings him directly in conflict with natural gas, the resource that has largely driven U.S. emissions reductions to date.
When the threat of pandemic forced New Jersey’s economy to shut down, Glenn McCarthy, longtime manager of Klee’s Bar & Grill in Seaside Heights, worked with his staff to follow restrictions.
Candidate Joe Biden appealed to voters as a deal-minded moderate and experienced Washington hand. While many of the now-president’s nominees and appointments so far have been seasoned Beltway pros, others have raised eyebrows.
The Minneapolis City Council unanimously approved $6.4 million in funding to hire dozens of police officers despite some council members and advocates in the city calling to defund the police department.
“It raises questions about where the rest of the money ultimately went,” said Brendan Fischer with the nonpartisan Campaign Legal Center in Washington. “Generally speaking, you’d expect to see a major super PAC spend a majority or more of their money on advertisements, and that’s not what happened here.”
Sen. Lindsey Graham said Vice President Kamala Harris could be the next target of impeachment if Republicans take back control of the House of Representatives during the 2022 midterm election.
The Georgia State Election Board announced 35 cases of election law violations to the state’s attorney general and local district attorneys for criminal prosecution.
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18.) ASSOCIATED PRESS
Feb 15, 2021
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AP MORNING WIRE
Good morning. In today’s AP Morning Wire:
Bipartisan support grows for Capitol riot inquiry after Trump acquittal.
Anatomy of a conspiracy: With COVID-19 China took leading role.
Coronavirus may never go away but could change to mild annoyance.
English football at breaking point over abuse on social media.
TAMER FAKAHANY DEPUTY DIRECTOR – GLOBAL NEWS COORDINATION, LONDON
The Rundown
SENATE TV VIA AP
Bipartisan support grows for Capitol riot inquiry after Trump acquittal; Impeachment isn’t the final legal word for ex-president; Two impeachment trials, two escape hatches
After former President Donald Trump was acquitted in his historic second Senate impeachment trial, bipartisan support appeared to be growing for an independent Sept. 11-style commission into the deadly insurrection that took place at the U.S. Capitol.
Investigations into the riot were already planned, with Senate hearings scheduled later this month in the Senate Rules Committee. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi has asked retired Army Lt. Gen. Russel Honoré to lead an immediate review of the Capitol’s security process.
The Legal Ramifications: Trump’s acquittal may not be the final legal word on whether he’s to blame for the Capitol riot. The next step could be the courts. Trump is now a private citizen and is stripped of his protection from legal liability that the presidency gave him. The insurrection is just one of the legal cases shadowing Trump in the months after he was voted out of office. He also faces legal exposure in Georgia over an alleged pressure campaign on state election officials, and in Manhattan over hush-money payments and business deals, Colleen Long reports.
Two Impeachments: Trump’s first impeachment trial centered on a phone call that Americans never heard with the leader of a country far away, Ukraine. His second was far different. It centered on the rage, violence and anguish of one day in Washington itself. It happened in the very halls that were under attack by the Trump supporters he was accused of inciting. Nevertheless, the Senate acquitted him, falling short of the two-thirds majority needed to convict him. Together the two impeachment trials Trump faced illustrated his ability to escape consequences for actions that even many Republicans denounced.
This time the case did not hang on a whistleblower in the bowels of the national security bureaucracy. This was an impeachment driven by what people saw happen and by Trump’s voluminous public rhetoric, heard that day, for weeks before, and after — until Twitter exiled him and he let his lawyers and supporters do the talking while the trial played out. Calvin Woodward’s sweeping piece for the ages is worthy of your time.
Analysis: The second Trump impeachment trial laid bare the deep imperfections in the Constitution’s only process for holding a president accountable for “high crimes and misdemeanors.” The proceedings packed an emotional punch and served as history’s first accounting of the Jan. 6 riots on the U.S. Capitol. But the results were never really in doubt, AP Washington Bureau Chief Julie Pace writes.
What’s Next for Trump? He’s preparing for the next phase of his post-presidency life, feeling emboldened by the trial’s outcome and expected to reemerge from a self-imposed hibernation. And he’s eyeing ways to reassert his power. Trump remains popular among the GOP base, but many Republicans in Washington have cooled to him. After being barred from Twitter, he lacks the social media bullhorn that fueled his political rise. And he’s confronting a Republican Party deeply divided over the legacy of his jarring final days in office, Jill Colvin reports.
GOP Future: If one thing was crystal clear after events unfolded in the last week, the Republican Party still mainly belongs to Trump. The GOP privately flirted with purging the norm-shattering former president after he incited a deadly riot at the Capitol last month. But in the end, only seven of 50 Senate Republicans voted to convict Trump. Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell savaged the former president in a post-vote speech. McConnell said Trump was “practically and morally responsible for provoking the events” that led to the insurrection. But he, like the vast majority of his caucus, declared Trump “not guilty.” Steve Peoples reports.
Biden White House: The end of the trial opens a new chapter for his successor in the White House. President Joe Biden and his aides had avoided addressing the trial over the past week and focused aggressively on their own agenda. But privately, aides worried that a lengthy trial would bog down the Senate and slow progress on Biden’s virus relief bill. Alexandra Jaffe and Jonathan Lemire report.
EXPLAINER: Why impeachment evidence tested TV’s standards. Explicit language you almost never hear on broadcast television was aired, particularly when House managers showed an arresting 13-minute film of rioters descending on the Capitol. David Bauder reports.
AP ILLUSTRATION/PETER HAMLIN
Exclusive: Anatomy of a conspiracy — with COVID-19 China, the US, Russia and Iran took leading role with disinformation
As rhetoric from leading U.S. Republicans intensified, China went on the offensive, launching what may be its first truly global digital disinformation campaign, Erica Kinetz reports from Brussels.
China used its growing presence on Twitter and Facebook to seed and spread disinformation that coursed through tens of thousands of accounts with hundreds of millions of followers in dozens of languages.
The rumors began almost as soon as the disease itself. Claims that a foreign adversary had unleashed a bioweapon emerged at the fringes of Chinese social media the same day China first reported the outbreak of a mysterious virus.
“Watch out for Americans!” a Weibo user wrote on Dec. 31, 2019. Today, a year after the World Health Organization warned of an epidemic of COVID-19 misinformation, that conspiracy theory lives on, pushed by Chinese officials eager to cast doubt on the origins of a pandemic that has claimed more than 2 million lives globally.
From Beijing and Washington to Moscow and Tehran, political leaders and allied media effectively functioned as superspreaders, using their stature to amplify politically expedient conspiracies already in circulation. But it was China — not Russia – that took the lead in spreading foreign disinformation about COVID-19’s origins, as it came under attack for its early handling of the outbreak.
Superspreaders behind Top COVID-19 conspiracy theories. The AP identified the people behind these explosive claims and analyzed how these narratives were exploited by governments around the world. From genial U.S. midwestern professors to anonymous social media posters to Iran’s Supreme Leader, when it comes to false claims about the origins of the coronavirus, these are the superspreaders, David Klepper, Farnoush Armiri, and Beatrice Dupuy report.
Coronavirus may never go away but could change into mild annoyance; Average new US virus cases below 100,000 for first time in months; Some Europeans choosy about which vaccines they want
When will it stop? Will it ever go away? What if it never goes away? Daily questions the world over regarding the coronavirus pandemic.
One possibility is that the disease continues to persist for a long time but in a much milder form, like a common cold, Aniruddha Ghosal and Christina Larson report.
Scientists don’t yet have data to understand how it could evolve over five or 10 years or longer. Dr. T. Jacob John was at the helm of India’s efforts to tackle polio and HIV/AIDS. He predicts that the virus will someday become “another animal in the zoo,” joining many other infectious diseases that humanity has learned to live with.
U.S. Surge: Average daily new coronavirus cases in the United States dipped below 100,000 in recent days for the first time in months, but experts cautioned that infections remain high and precautions to slow the pandemic must remain in place. The seven-day rolling average of new infections was well above 200,000 for much of December and went to roughly 250,000 in January, as the pandemic came roaring back after it had been tamed in some places over the summer, Sudhin Thanawala and Kate Brumback report.
Vaccine Tussle: Many Europeans are desperate for a coronavirus vaccine. But not just any vaccine. As AstraZeneca vaccines are rolling out to European Union nations this month, joining the Pfizer and Moderna shots already available, some people are balking at being offered a vaccine that they perceive as second-best.
Poland has begun vaccinating teachers with the AstraZeneca vaccine, but some had misgivings about its efficacy. It’s a concern that some professional groups are also voicing in Italy and Spain, even though AstraZeneca says its vaccine offers high levels of protection against severe disease. And the health minister of Cyprus warns that opting for one vaccine over another risks delaying inoculations. Vanessa Gera in Warsaw and Nicole Winfield in Rome report.
Israel Fake News: The government is blaming online misinformation for a sudden slowdown in the vaccination campaign, after the country surged ahead in the race to inoculate its population. Israel’s Health Ministry has spearheaded the vaccination efforts, and is now employing both warnings and incentives to persuade reluctant holdouts to get immunized. It has beefed up a digital task force to counter what it calls fake news about the vaccines. Local governments are turning to DJs and offer free food to lure people to vaccination centers. Isaac Scharf and Ilan Ben Zion report from Jerusalem.
More from Around the World:
New Zealand’s largest city of Auckland began a three-day lockdown following the discovery of three unexplained cases in the community. Officials say they’ve found no evidence it has spread further, raising hopes the restrictions might be short-lived.
The Philippine government’s approval of the reopening of movie theaters, video game arcades and other leisure businesses shut since last year has been postponed at least another two weeks after mayors feared new infections.
Japan has formally approved its first vaccine and says it will start nationwide inoculations within days, but months behind the U.S. and many other countries.
Lebanon has administered its first jabs of the vaccine, with an intensive care unit physician and a well-known 93-year-old comedian becoming the first to receive Pfizer-BioNTech doses.
Zimbabwe has received its first COVID-19 vaccines with the arrival of 200,000 Sinopharm doses from China. It is one of China’s first shipments of vaccines to Africa, after deliveries to Egypt and Equatorial Guinea.
The U.K. government says it has reached its goal of giving at least one vaccine shot to the most vulnerable people in the country,. Some 15 million people, or 22% of the U.K. population, have received their first shot or were offered one.
Dubai International Airport says the pandemic pushed passenger traffic down by an unprecedented 70% in 2020, compared to the previous year. Still, the key east-west transit hub held onto its title as the world’s busiest for international travel.
POOL VIA AP/ALEX PANTLING
Social Media Abuse
English football is at breaking point over rampant abuse on social media
The beautiful game has long had an ugly underbelly and one of its modern manifestations has become endemic.
Death threats. Racist abuse. Sexist slurs. And social media accounts allowed to stay active even after spreading bile.
“Your inaction has created the belief in the minds of the anonymous perpetrators that they are beyond reach,” read the letter whose signatories included officials from the English Football Association, the Premier League, Women’s Super League and the organizations representing players, managers and referees.
But the platforms that allow clubs and players to engage with fans — and monetize sponsorships — can also be used as a force for good.
Manchester United and England striker Marcus Rashford showed just that by using Twitter in particular in the last year to campaign against child poverty. He utilized his ever-growing following of more than 4 million to pressure the government into providing free school meals during the pandemic.
But Arsenal manager Mikel Arteta has accounts that he doesn’t log onto himself anymore because of the vitriol.
And, it’s why players still take a knee before kickoff, as they have done since June as part of the Black Lives Matter campaign.
Myanmar’s military leaders have extended their detention of deposed leader Aung San Suu Kyi, whose remand was set to expire and whose freedom is a key demand of the crowds of people continuing to protest this month’s military coup. A lawyer for Suu Kyi said she will now be remanded until Feb. 17. Her detention is likely to further inflame tensions between the military, which seized power in a Feb. 1 coup, and the protesters who have taken to the streets of cities across the nation seeking the return of the government they elected. Protesters continued to gather across Myanmar following a night in which authorities cut the country’s internet access and increased the security presence in major cities.
Joe Biden spent his first weekend as president at Camp David, the historic retreat for U.S. leaders. It’s been used by every president since Franklin Delano Roosevelt first went there in 1943 as a personal hideaway. It’s also been the site of major diplomatic negotiations and policy discussions. The camp’s relaxed atmosphere is said to lend itself to the relationship-building that’s so central to diplomacy. Over the years, presidents have made additions to suit their tastes, including adding a heated swimming pool, putting green and basketball court. During his visit this weekend, Biden played Mario Kart with one of his granddaughters.
Former Argentine President Carlos Menem has died at age 90. Menem delivered short-lived economic stability and forged close ties with the U.S. in the 1990s even as he navigated scandal and enjoyed a flamboyant lifestyle. The dapper lawyer from one of Argentina’s poorest provinces was often dismissed by critics as a playboy. He steered Argentina toward a free-market model that was once envied by neighbors and favored by investors. Menem’s accomplishments, however, coincided with growing unemployment, economic inequality and foreign debt.
The Duke and Duchess of Sussex are expecting their second child. A spokesperson for the couple said that Archie is going to be a big brother and they are overjoyed. Prince Harry and American actress Meghan Markle married at Windsor Castle in May 2018. Their son Archie was born a year later. In early 2020, Meghan and Harry announced they were quitting royal duties and moving to North America, citing what they said were the unbearable intrusions and racist attitudes of the British media. They recently bought a house in Santa Barbara, California. In November, Meghan revealed that she had a miscarriage in July 2020.
The Florida Department of Environmental Protection has proposed a consent order that encompasses years of slow leaks, gushing spills, equipment failures and oversight lapses.
Meanwhile, get ready for more cold. Forecasters said a winter storm warning was expected to go into effect early this morning, with 8 to 12 inches of snow possible. Follow along for updates here.
Here’s more coronavirus news and other top stories you need to know to start your day.
As cases of COVID-19 variants are increasingly detected in Illinois, Rush University Medical Center is launching an advanced molecular laboratory to study and monitor the spread of these new coronavirus strains in Chicago. The Chicago Department of Public Health awarded Rush a $3.5 million contract to create the lab, which is expected to be fully operational next month, university officials said.
Scientists there plan to work with the city health department and other local medical centers to identify these emerging variants, determining which strains are transmitting quickest and tracking them as they spread.
Gov. J.B. Pritzker long warned that without his graduated-rate income tax, which voters rejected in November, Illinois would be left with only two options to address its chronic budget problems: raising income taxes or double digit across-the-board spending cuts.
As the dust settles from the latest battle between Mayor Lori Lightfoot and the Chicago Teachers Union, the city’s elementary schools may have reopened to in-person learning but no clear winners have emerged. Lightfoot avoided a second CTU strike within two years, but still went to the brink with a powerful force in Chicago politics.
Southwest Airlines, seizing an opportunity to move in as other airlines scaled back, began flying out of O’Hare International Airport on Sunday. The number of flights scheduled to pass through the airport this month has plunged to less than half last year’s level as the COVID-19 pandemic continues to devastate air travel.
Southwest has been credited with spurring a drop in fares when it enters a market, and early data suggest fares are down on the handful of routes where Southwest will compete with O’Hare’s biggest carriers. Here’s what it could mean for airfares in Chicago.
Baseball trading cards are booming during the pandemic, with record sales of vintage cards, skyrocketing prices for new cards and an influx of collectors — old and new. Some industry analysts see pandemic stay-at-home boredom as fueling a resurgence of interest, as parents rediscover the hobby and share it with their children.
“The Black Church,” a two-part documentary premiering Tuesday, shines a light on the role of the church in Black America’s journey from slavery through the present-day rise of white supremacy.
Prominent Chicago luminaries like Oprah Winfrey, Jesse Jackson and Jeremiah Wright were interviewed for the PBS series. Maudlyne Ihejirika has the story…
The countywide forecast calls for 8 to 12 inches, but even higher amounts are possible in some areas. It comes on the heels of a frigid weekend that saw workers from various organizations out and about, checking on homeless individuals and offering blankets, food and other help.
There are now 414,301 people fully vaccinated against the coronavirus since inoculations began mid-December, according to the Illinois Department of Public Health.
An officer went to investigate what he thought was a stranded motorist near the airport’s international terminal. He found a woman inside the car in labor, about to give birth.
The battle over whether to keep a minimum wage hike in President Biden’s relief package is heating up, with key players on both sides of the issue digging in for the fight.
The debate is threatening to create deep divisions among Democrats as they move forward with an economic rescue package without GOP support.
Here are the main players to watch on the minimum wage fight.
Republicans are digging in on their efforts to paint President Biden as soft on China, laying the groundwork for a midterm elections attack line and shoring up positions for the 2024 presidential contest.
President Biden called on Congress to pass “commonsense gun law reforms” on Sunday in a message marking the third anniversary of the shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Fla.
Democratic members of Congress said on Sunday that the acquittal of former President Trump at the conclusion of his second impeachment trial one day earlier had been a foregone conclusion.
Cassidy has faced backlash since he voted – along with six other Republicans and every Democrat – to convict Trump, but he says he did so because the former president “is guilty” of inciting the rioters at the Capitol and “clearly intended to prevent a peaceful transfer of power.”
The State Bar of Georgia is investigating whether Lin Wood, the pro-Trump attorney who made some of the wildest claims about fraud in the 2020 election, has committed professional violations, according to a disciplinary complaint Wood posted to his Telegram account.
“The biggest winner of this whole impeachment trial is Lara Trump,” Graham said on “Fox News Sunday.” “My dear friend Richard Burr, who I like and have been friends to a long time, just made Lara Trump almost the certain nominee for the Senate seat in North Carolina to replace him if she runs, and I certainly will be behind her because she represents the future of the Republican Party.”
OPINION | As quickly as it rose to its perch as a media darling, the Lincoln Project (LP) is crashing down swiftly to its fitting end. And it has no one to blame but itself.
OPINION | This Valentine’s Day marks three years since my son Alex, age 14, was one of the 17 innocent victims that was senselessly murdered during the Parkland school massacre. In the blink of just three minutes and 44 seconds, my life, along with so many others’, was changed forever by a horrific, yet preventable, mass murder.
By Christiaan Triebert, Ben Decker, Derek Watkins, Arielle Ray and Stella Cooper
At least six people who had provided security for Roger Stone entered the Capitol during the Jan. 6 attack, according to a New York Times investigation.
A crop of Republicans has launched early campaigns across the country by hewing to former President Donald Trump’s political and policy legacy, betting that his enduring popularity with the GOP base can help propel them into office.
For months, President Biden has been urging schools to reopen, and promised that guidelines from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention would help them do so safely.
TOKYO (Reuters) – Nissan Motor Co Ltd said on Monday it is not in talks with Apple Inc, following a report that the iPhone maker approached the Japanese company in recent months about a tie-up for its autonomous car project.
POLITICO Playbook: The Biden presidency starts today
Presented by Facebook
DRIVING THE DAY
JOE BIDENhas been president for 26 days, but today is the unofficial start of his presidency.
It’s the first day of the post-Trump era.
Biden’s November and December transition period was dominated by DONALD TRUMP, who refused to concede the election, delayed the formal transition process and instructed non-cooperation from his aides.
Biden’s pre-inaugural January was dominated by Trump, who incited a mob of supporters to sack the Capitol and was impeached by the House.
Biden’s first weeks in office in late January and February were dominated by Trump, who at the White House was the target of dozens of Biden executive actions meant to reverse his policies on immigration, climate, health care and several other areas, and in Congress was the subject of the Senate trial.
Trump was kicked off social media but continued to drive an attention-hogging debate within the Republican Party that dragged on for weeks.
Even the general election, a referendum on Trump’s failed response to the pandemic, was also dominated by Trump rather than the more low-key Biden.
Fittingly, on Presidents Day, Biden, who returns to the White House from Camp David this afternoon, finally gets to be president. On Tuesday he’ll be in Wisconsin for a CNN town hall, where he will no doubt make the case for his Covid relief bill. On Thursday he’ll do the same in Michigan while touring one of Pfizer’s vaccine manufacturing plants. On Friday, Biden will Zoom into a virtual meeting of the G-7 and the Munich Security Conference, where he has been a regular guest for years. (The conference is to Biden what Burning Man is to tech moguls.)
The key clips from the morning papers are filled with takes on what the post-Trump era means for the White House.
The WSJ notesthat the end of the Trump trial “sets the stage for his successor to pursue his agenda with a Congress no longer encumbered by the wrenching task of accounting for the storming of the Capitol on Jan. 6.”
The NYT adds, “Without the spectacle of a constitutional clash, the new president ‘takes center stage now in a way that the first few weeks didn’t allow,’ said Jennifer Palmieri, who served as communications director for President Barack Obama. She said the end of the trial means that ‘2021 can finally start.’”
The WaPo warns, “now that Biden has undone the most easily reversible Trump policies, the hard part begins.”
But Biden will now be the central focus in American politics in a way that he never has and in a way that his White House staff, who are mostly veterans of his Trump-focused campaign, have never had to deal with. What happens when they won’t have Trump to kick around anymore?
There are three dynamics to watch as they navigate this new political-media era:
The GOP: Does the party become less defined by its divisions over Trump and unify around opposition to Biden’s agenda? (The political dynamics of Biden’s Covid bill, which has no Republican support in Congress, suggest the answer is yes.)
The media: Does the Biden White House encounter a much more aggressive press corps than it was accustomed to during the Trump-dominated campaign that catches them off-guard? (The TJ Ducklo episode suggests the answer is yes.)
Biden: Does a solo-act Biden retain his relatively high approval rating (54%) and leverage it to pass his agenda now that the deeply unpopular Trump is off center stage? (Only time will tell!)
BIDEN’S MONDAY — The president will depart Camp David in the afternoon and arrive back at the White House at 3:10 p.m.
PLAYBOOK READS
PHOTO OF THE DAY: While in office, Trump tried to repaint Air Force One red, white and blue. Like a lot of his worst ideas, that never happened, but he did have a model of the plane that he kept in the Oval Office and that often appeared in official photos with world leaders. He apparently really liked the souvenir, because instead of leaving it behind for Biden, Trump packed it up and brought it down to Mar-a-Lago, where it’s now prominently displayed on a coffee table in the lobby.
SIGN UP! — With Trump’s second impeachment over, Democrats in Congress will shift their focus to Biden’s agenda, from Covid-19 relief to the vaccine rollout and more. Join RACHAEL on Tuesday at 9 a.m. for a live conversation with Assistant House Speaker KATHERINE CLARK (D-Mass.) on the most pressing legislative priorities and her approach to getting things done as the fourth highest-ranking member of the House. Register here
PRESIDENTS DAY CLICKER — “Time for a new Uncle Sam?”by Matt Wuerker: “The nation is in the midst of a reckoning with representation and our national symbology. … It got us thinking: How can we make Uncle Sam more up to date? Is it as simple as a wardrobe change—or does something bolder need to be done to match the moment? We hit the streets to test the idea.”
TOP-ED — SEN. BILL CASSIDY (R-La.) in THE ADVOCATE: “I voted to convict former President Trump because he is guilty”: “I have no illusions that this is a popular decision. I made this decision because Americans should not be fed lies about ‘massive election fraud.’ Police should not be left to the mercy of a mob. Mobs should not be inflamed to disrupt the peaceful transfer of power. I took an oath to support and defend the Constitution, and I take that oath seriously. This was, is, and will remain my commitment to you.”
ABC: “Trump impeachment lawyer Michael van der Veen’s home vandalized”: “Vandals targeted the home of one of former President Donald Trump’s impeachment lawyers, spray-painting the word ‘TRAITOR’ in red on his driveway in suburban Philadelphia, police said. The vandalism occurred around 8 p.m. on Friday at attorney Michael van der Veen’s residence in West Whiteland Township, Pennsylvania.”
THE NEW DEM DARLINGS — “Dems buzz about breakout stars of Trump’s impeachment,”by Holly Otterbein: “Rep. Madeleine Dean is being talked about as a potential candidate for the open Senate seat in Pennsylvania in 2022, a top priority for the party. Democratic strategists are speculating that Rep. Joaquin Castro, relatively well-known before the impeachment trial, further distinguished himself as an impeachment manager, advancing talk of a statewide bid in Texas. And an ex-Jeb Bush aide went so far as to say that Colorado Rep. Joe Neguse gave his ‘2004 convention speech.’”
THE WHITE HOUSE
WAPO: “Ambassador sweepstakes underway as figures jockey for plum posts”: “[C]onsiderable donor agitation is being directed at Katie Petrelius, Biden’s campaign finance director who is now at the White House Personnel Office … Biden is expected to place a premium on prior diplomatic or government service in choosing many ambassadors, further reducing the number of posts that could go to donors, according to two people who helped organize campaign events for Biden.”
CONGRESS
CHANNELING MITCH MCCONNELL — GEORGE WILL in WAPO: “Now begins McConnell’s project to shrink Trump’s GOP influence”: “He has his eyes on the prize: 2022, perhaps the most crucial nonpresidential election year in U.S. history. It might determine whether the Republican Party can be a plausible participant in the healthy oscillations of a temperate two-party system.”
THIS WEEK: CHINA TAKES CENTER STAGE IN GAMESTOP HEARINGS — We hear that several Republicans on the House Financial Services Committee have raised concerns about possible manipulation by Chinese actors in regard to the inflating of GameStop stocks through the trading app Robinhood and a slew of Reddit day traders. Expect to hear from China hawks, who will question specifically whether any role was played by Chinese conglomerate Tencent, which owns a piece of Reddit, as well as 38% of another trading app, the Chinese company Moomoo, one of Robinhood’s biggest competitors.
“The proposals have revived some of the civil liberties concerns that arose after the creation of the department as a large, internal security bureaucracy with a broad mandate. And the possibility of the department scrutinizing Americans has added to the unease because providing homeland security is less controversial when the threats are foreign.”
POLITICS ROUNDUP
2022 WATCH — “Lara Trump for North Carolina Senate Seat? Trump’s Trial Is Renewing Talk,”NYT: “One senior Republican official with knowledge of her plans said that the Jan. 6 riot soured her desire to seek office, but that she would decide over the next few months whether to run as part of a coordinated Trump family comeback. … First, however, there is the question of her residence. Ms. Trump currently lives with her husband, Eric, and their children in the northern suburbs of New York City and would have to move back.”
PRETTY STRIKING FOR THE GOP — “Support for Third U.S. Political Party at High Point,”Gallup: “Sixty-two percent of U.S. adults say the ‘parties do such a poor job representing the American people that a third party is needed’ … Independents are usually much more likely than Republicans or Democrats to favor a third political party, but in the current poll, Republicans are nearly as likely as independents to hold this view, 63% to 70%. That represents a dramatic shift for Republicans since last September when 40% favored a third party.”
PANDEMIC
TRACKER: The U.S. reported 1,363 Covid-19 deaths and 72,000 new coronavirus cases Sunday.
FOR YOUR RADAR — “Batch of homegrown coronavirus mutations seen in U.S.,”CNN: “Researchers said Sunday they have identified a batch of similar troubling mutations in coronavirus samples circulating in the United States. … The mutations all affect the same stretch of the spike protein — the knob-like extension on the outside of the virus that it uses to dock onto the cells it infects, the researchers wrote in a pre-print report. It’s not peer reviewed yet, but researchers are rushing such findings online to share them quickly with other experts.” The report
THE BURNING QUESTION — “Why Administering Covid-19 Shots Is So Hard,”WSJ: “Getting them from the freezer and into arms is another journey, complicated by the special handling the doses require but also because of cumbersome data-management systems. Sites must take precautions to ensure that they don’t contribute to the spread of the virus, measures that can slow down administration of shots.”
TURNING THE PAGE — “Judge tosses Page defamation suit against Verizon company,”AP: “A Delaware judge has dismissed a defamation lawsuit filed by former Donald Trump campaign operative Carter Page against the media company that includes Yahoo! and AOL and that formerly owned HuffPost.
“The judge ruled last week that Page had failed to demonstrate that articles written about his connection to an FBI investigation into suspected Russian interference in the 2016 presidential campaign were defamatory or untrue.”
BEN SMITH COLUMN — “Postcard From Peru: Why the Morality Plays Inside The Times Won’t Stop,”NYT: “The Times’s singular status has left its leaders, in a period of high-profile firings and departures, vainly insisting that the exits reflect the normal, confidential and complex workings of human resources. …
“I think it’s a sign that The Times’s unique position in American news may not be tenable. This intense attention, combined with a thriving digital subscription business that makes the company more beholden to the views of left-leaning subscribers, may yet push it into a narrower and more left-wing political lane as a kind of American version of The Guardian — the opposite of its stated, broader strategy. One modest and early sign that The Times may be focusing a bit: A spokeswoman told me that it won’t restart the Journeys program next year.”
PLAYBOOKERS
IN MEMORIAM — “James Ridgeway, Hard-Hitting Investigative Journalist, Dies at 84,”NYT: “In a career that spanned six decades, Mr. Ridgeway wrote for The New Republic as a staff member and as a contributor to The New York Times, The Nation, The New York Review of Books, Ramparts, Hard Times and Mother Jones. He was the Washington correspondent of The Village Voice for 30 years; wrote, co-wrote or edited 20 books on national or foreign affairs; and wrote, produced and directed several documentaries.
“His targets were legion: Detroit automakers concealing unsafe car designs, the strutting Ku Klux Klan and neo-Nazis, universities profiteering from government weapons research, unanswered questions on the Sept. 11 attacks, the shabbiness of the sex industry, and 1992 presidential candidates who were caught on film preening when they thought nobody was watching. … His longest and most fervent crusade was his last: a decade-long effort, in what might otherwise have been his retirement years, against solitary confinement.”
CONWAY FAMILY UPDATE — Claudia appeared on the season premiere of American Idol on Sunday night. “My mother is Kellyanne Conway,” she announced to an audience that may not be as clued into the details of the Conway family drama as our readers. “She worked for Donald Trump. And my dad is George Conway. He’s a lawyer. He worked against Donald Trump.” Stay tuned — the teenager made it to the next round.
WORTH A LISTEN —On his latest podcast, BILL CLINTON reprises a 2019 speech on the evolution of the presidency. Whatever you think of the ex-president, this is Clinton at the heights of his explainer-in-chief powers, weaving together history and his own personal experiences to offer, as Pulitzer Prize-winning historian David Blight notes in the episode, “a reminder of what the future of the institution of the presidency can still be.”
SPOTTED flying over Palm Beach on Sunday afternoon: a banner reading “WE LOVE YOU PREZ TRUMP ❤️ HAPPY VALENTINES DAY! MP.” (No, we don’t know who MP is.) Pic (The banner appears to be a response to a recent one that said, “CONVICT TRUMP AND LOCK HIM UP.”)
SPOTTED at a virtual ceremony Sunday where Robin Roberts received the inaugural Brig. Gen. Charles E. McGee Unity Award from the Friends of the National World War II Memorial: Joint Chiefs of Staff Chair Gen. Mark Milley, Lt. Col. George Hardy, Michael Strahan, Jason Wright, Marv Levy, Jeraldine Lehman, John Stankey and John McCaskill.
FIRST IN PLAYBOOK — DONALD TRUMP JR. will be speaking at the Conservative Political Action Conference this year, where he’ll be introduced by girlfriend KIMBERLY GUILFOYLE. The appearance, which our Gabby Orr and Daniel Lippman recently hinted at, makes him the first member of the Trump family to confirm his role in the lineup for the Feb. 25-28 event. The annual confab is run by lobbyist MATT SCHLAPP (Comcast, Verizon, Walmart), who has recently taken to Twitter to spread the false 2020 election claim “that there was widespread illegal voting due to unsolicited reckless unsecured mail in voting” and that if “we had voted normally and legally” Trump, who lost by 7 million votes, would have won. In addition to Don Jr., Schlapp said recently he’d like to book Trump’s impeachment lawyer.
TRANSITION — Mark McLaurin is joining the 1833 Group as SVP for campaigns, expanding the Chicago-based Democratic consulting firm’s East Coast presence. He previously was political director at the SEIU.
WELCOME TO THE WORLD — Torrie Matous, chief of staff for the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board, and Kyle Matous, senior director of U.S. government relations at Bono’s ONE Campaign, and their dog Bennett welcomed Charles Miller Matous on Thursday at Sibley Hospital. Pic
HAPPY BIRTHDAY: Rep. Kathleen Rice (D-N.Y.) … retired Adm. Jim Stavridis … State’s Francisco Bencosme … Mercury’s Jen Wlach … Ben Purdy … TPM’s Josh Marshall … Fox Business’ David Asman … WSJ’s Amanda Lilly … Jonathan Salant … Carrie Sheffield … RJC’s Alex Siegel … Beth Solomon … Bobby Panzenbeck … Jason Thielman … Art Spiegelman … Clare Flannery … Kerry Feehery … Michael Curto … Walmart’s John Bisio … Amy Clark … Andrea Bitely … S-3 Group’s Sarah Dolan Schneider … Grace Lloyd … CARE’s Paige Moody Erickson … Conor Oberst
First President’s Day: George Washington’s Birthday – American Minute with Bill Fede
Presidents’ Day is actually Washington’s birthday, recognized by an Act of Congress for government offices in Washington, D.C., in 1879, and for all federal offices in 1885.
In 1971, the Uniform Monday Holiday Act to create more three day weekends moved the observance of Washington’s birthday to the third Monday in February.
As Abraham Lincoln was also born in February, so many States include him in the observance, and still other States include all the Presidents.
George Washington was born FEBRUARY 22, 1732.
He was:
unanimously chosen as the Army’s Commander-in-Chief;
unanimously chosen as President of the Constitutional Convention;
unanimously chosen as the first U.S. President;
unanimously re-elected to a second term.
George Washington was an Anglican, and, after the Revolution, an Episcopalian.
George’s great-great-grandfather, Rev. Lawrence Washington, was an Anglican minister who taught at Oxford.
Lawrence and his wife, Amphyllis Twigen, had a son named John.
When the the Puritans won the English Civil War in 1651, Anglican ministers were demoted. Lawrence was reduced to being an assistant minister – a vicar – at an impoverished parish in Essex, England.
It was during this time that John Washington, George Washington’s great-grandfather, apprenticed as a merchant in London.
He sailed as second officer on a ship to the Colony of Virginia to purchase tobacco.
In 1657, when a storm partially sank their vessel in the Potomac River, John swam ashore.
While the ship was being repaired, John stayed at the home of a planter Colonel Nathaniel Pope, and fell in love with his daughter, Anne. John never returned to England.
John and Anne married, and her father gave them 700 acres in Westmoreland County.
John Washington became a successful planter and a member of the Virginia House of Burgesses.
He was a militia leader during Nathaniel Bacon’s Rebellion against Governor William Berkeley in 1676.
A local Anglican church was renamed “Washington” in honor of John Washington.
When John died, he left to the church a tablet of the Ten Commandments. His Will stated:
“In the Name of God, Amen. I, John Washington, of Washington Parish, in the County of Westmoreland, in Virginia, gentleman, being of good and perfect memory, thanks be unto Almighty God for it,
and calling to remembrance the uncertain state of this transitory life, that all flesh must yield unto death, do make, constitute, and ordain this my last will and testament …
… First, being heartily sorry, from the bottom of my heart, for my sins past, most humbly desiring forgiveness of the same from the Almighty God, my Savior and Redeemer, in whom and by the merits of Jesus Christ, I trust and believe assuredly to be saved, and to have full remission and forgiveness of all my sins,
and that my soul with my body at the general resurrection shall rise again with joy.”
The oldest of John Washington’s sons was Lawrence, the grandfather of George Washington.
Lawrence married Mildred Warner, the daughter of Col. Augustine Warner, Jr., an ancestor of Queen Elizabeth II.
Lawrence and Mildred had three children, the second being Augustine, who would become George Washington’s father.
When Lawrence died in 1698, Mildred married George Gale and moved back to England with her children.
When Mildred died, a relative in America petitioned to get custody of her children, including Augustine, and they were returned to Virginia in 1704.
Augustine Washington served as a vestryman in the Anglican Truro Parish.
He and his wife Jane Butler had two sons live to adulthood, Lawrence and Augustine Jr.
Both Lawrence and Augustine, Jr., went back to England to study at the prestigious Appleby Grammar School.
Jane died in 1729.
Augustine married Mary Ball in 1731, and together they had 6 children, with the oldest, George Washington, being born February 22, 1732.
Augustine died in 1743 when George was only 11-years-old.
George hand copies the Rules of Civility and Decent Behaviour in Company and Conversation, 1744, which included Rule #110:
“Labor to keep alive in your breast that little spark of celestial fire called conscience.”
George’s older half-brother Lawrence fought in the British navy under Admiral Edward Vernon, who had captured Porto Bello, Panama, from Spain in 1739.
When Lawrence returned to Virginia in 1742, he named his farm after his navy Admiral — Mount Vernon.
Lawrence married Anne Fairfax.
Her father, Col. William Fairfax, had been Collector of Customs in Barbados, and Chief Justice and Governor of the Bahamas, as well as a first cousin of Thomas Fairfax, who was the largest land owner in America with five million acres.
Lawrence arranged for George, at age 15, to begin a career in the British navy as a cabin boy, but his mother, Mary Ball Washington, refused.
George complied with his mother’s wishes and returned home.
In 1748, the 16-year-old George Washington was employed by Thomas Fairfax to survey the western area of his vast estate.
In 1751, Lawrence Washington contracted tuberculosis.
In hopes that a change of climate would help him recover, doctors recommended he travel to Barbados, where his father-in-law had been Collector of Customs.
He brought along his 17-year-old half-brother George.
This was the only time that George left the American continent.
In Barbados, George contracted smallpox, but recovered. This providentially inoculated George so that he was immune during the Revolutionary War, where it is estimated that more soldiers died of smallpox than in battle.
Lawrence died in 1752 and his Mount Vernon estate eventually was inherited by George, making him one of the youngest and largest landowners in Virginia.
George became vestryman in Truro Parish, and was godfather in baptism to several nephews and a niece.
From 1753-1758, George served in the French and Indian War.
He was a colonel under General Edward Braddock, Commander of the British forces in America.
George miraculously survived the Battle of Monongehela in 1755.Braddock was killed, leaving George in command.
On July 18, 1755, Washington wrote from Fort Cumberland to his brother, John A. Washington:
“By the All-Powerful Dispensations of Providence, I have been protected beyond all human probability or expectation; for I had four bullets through my coat, and two horses shot under me, yet escaped unhurt, although death was leveling my companions on every side of me!”
Colonel Washington wrote to Fort Loudoun, April 17, 1758:
“The last Assembly … provided for a chaplain to our regiment. On this subject I had often without any success applied to Governor Dinwiddie. I now flatter myself, that your honor will be pleased to appoint a sober, serious man for this duty. Common decency, Sir, in a camp calls for the services of a divine.”
In 1759, George fell in love Martha “Patsy” Dandridge Custis, a 26-year-old widow and mother with two children, John “Jacky” Parke Custis and Martha “Patsy” Parke Custis.
Martha had inherited five plantations totaling 17,500 acres.
Martha’s daughter Patsy died at age 16 of an epileptic seizure in 1773, while George held her in his arms. He wrote:
“The sweet, innocent girl entered into a more happy and peaceful abode than she had met in the afflicted path she had hitherto trod.”
In 1775, after the Battle of Bunker Hill, George Washington was commissioned as the General of the Continental Army.
He wrote to Martha, June 18, 1775:
“My Dearest … It has been determined in Congress, that the whole army raised for the defense of the American cause shall be put under my care, and that it is necessary for me to proceed immediately to Boston to take up command of it.
You may believe me, my dear Patsy, when I assure you, in the most solemn manner that, so far from seeking this appointment, I have used every endeavor in my power to avoid it …
But as it has been a kind of Destiny, that has thrown me upon this service, I shall hope that my undertaking it is designed to answer some good purpose …
I shall rely, therefore, confidently on that Providence which has heretofore preserved and been bountiful to me, not doubting but that I shall return safely to you in the fall.”
On July 4, 1775, General Washington ordered:
“The General … requires … observance of those articles of war … which forbid profane cursing, swearing and drunkenness; And … requires … punctual attendance of Divine Services.”
On October 2, 1775, General George Washington issued the order:
“Any … soldier who shall hereafter be detected playing at toss-up, pitch, and hustle, or any other games of chance … shall without delay be confined and punished …
The General does not mean by the above to discourage sports of exercise or recreation, he only means to discountenance and punish gaming.”
On February 26, 1776, General Washington issued the orders:
“All … soldiers are positively forbid playing at cards and other games of chance. At this time of public distress men may find enough to do in the service of their God and their country, without abandoning themselves to vice and immorality.”
Washington acknowledged God throughout the Revolution, as he wrote on May 15, 1776:
“The Continental Congress having ordered Friday the 17th instant to be observed as a day of fasting, humiliation, and prayer, humbly to supplicate the mercy of Almighty God,
that it would please Him to pardon all our manifold sins and transgressions, and to prosper the arms of the United Colonies, and finally establish the peace and freedom of America upon a solid and lasting foundation;
the General commands all officers and soldiers to pay strict obedience to the orders of the Continental Congress;
that, by their unfeigned and pious observance of their religious duties, they may incline the Lord and Giver of victory to prosper our arms.”
On July 2, 1776, from his Head Quarters in New York, General Washington issued his General Orders:
“The time is now near at hand which must probably determine whether Americans are to be freemen or slaves; whether they are to have any property they can call their own;
whether their houses and farms are to be pillaged and destroyed, and themselves consigned to a state of wretchedness from which no human efforts will deliver them.
The fate of unborn millions will now depend, under God, on the courage and conduct of this army.
Our cruel and unrelenting enemy leaves us no choice but a brave resistance, or the most abject submission. We have, therefore to resolve to conquer or die …”
He continued:
“Our own country’s honor calls upon us for a vigorous and manly exertion, and if we now shamefully fail, we shall become infamous to the whole world.
Let us rely upon the goodness of the cause, and the aid of the Supreme Being in whose hands victory is, to animate and encourage us to great and noble actions.”
When the Declaration of Independence was written, a copy was rushed out to Washington, who was fortifying New York City.
He had it read to his troops, then ordered chaplains placed in each regiment, stating July 9, 1776:
“The General hopes and trusts, that every officer and man, will endeavour so to live, and act, as becomes a Christian Soldier, defending the dearest Rights and Liberties of his country.”
As recorded in The Writings of George Washington (March 10, 1778, 11:83-84, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1934), George Washington ordered:
“At a General Court Marshall … Lieutt. Enslin of Colo. Malcom’s Regiment tried for attempting to commit sodomy, with John Monhort a soldier…and do sentence him to be dismiss’d the service with Infamy.
His Excellency the Commander-in-Chief approves the sentence and with Abhorrence and Detestation of such Infamous Crimes orders Liett. Enslin to be drummed out of Camp tomorrow morning by all the Drummers and Fifers in the Army never to return.”
General Washington wrote at Valley Forge, May 2, 1778:
“To the distinguished character of Patriot, it should be our highest Glory to laud the more distinguished Character of Christian.”
To the Delaware Indian Chiefs who brought three youths to be trained in American schools, General Washington stated, May 12, 1779:
“You do well to wish to learn our arts and ways of life, and above all, the religion of Jesus Christ.”
The tremendous victory at the Battle of Yorktown, October 19, 1781, securing America’s independence, was personally bittersweet for Washington, as his wife’s son, John Parke Custis, who had been an aide-de-camp, died there of camp fever, November 5, 1781.
Though never having children of his own, George agreed to adopt John Parke Custis’ two young children as his own: Eleanor “Nelly” Parke Custis and George Washington Parke Custis, whose daughter, Mary Anna, married Robert E. Lee.
When the Articles of Confederation proved inadequate for the new nation George Washington agreed to preside over the Constitutional Convention in 1787.
He opened the Constitutional Convention with the line:
“The event is in the hand of God.”
In 1789, he was sworn in as the first President of the United States.
President Washington thanked God for the Constitution, October 3, 1789:
“Whereas it is the duty of all nations to acknowledge the Providence of Almighty God …
I do recommend … rendering unto Him our sincere and humble thanks, for … the favorable interpositions of His Providence … we experienced in the course and conclusion of the late war … for the peaceable and rational manner in which we have been enabled to establish constitutions of government.”
On August 15, 1787, in a letter from Philadelphia to the Marquis de Lafayette, Washington wrote:
“I am not less ardent in my wish that you may succeed in your plan of toleration in religious matters.
Being no bigot myself to any mode of worship, I am disposed to indulge the professors of Christianity in the church with that road to Heaven which to them shall seem the most direct, plainest and easiest, and the least liable to exception.”
Washington sent a letters to the Jewish Congregation in Newport, Rhode Island, and in Savannah, Georgia, stating:
“May the same wonder-working Deity, who long since delivered the Hebrews from their Egyptian oppressors, planted them in a promised land, whose providential agency has lately been conspicuous in establishing these United States as an independent nation, still continue to water them with the dews of heaven.”
In 1794, during the Whiskey Rebellion, Washington became the only sitting President, as Commander-in-Chief, to lead the United States Army into the field.
Washington chose only to served two terms as President, leaving an example which every succeeding President follow till Franklin Roosevelt, necessitating the 22nd Amendment.
Washington continually had toothaches. By the time of his Inauguration, he had only one tooth.
Several dentists made make-shift dentures for him.
Washington had slaves from inheritance, marriage, and purchase, as did almost half of the founders.
As the influence of Baptists, Methodists and Quakers spread, many founders abandoned slavery — similar to today, how more and more pro-abortion supporters are becoming pro-life.
Washington freed his mulatto man William:
“And to my Mulatto man William (calling himself William Lee) I give immediate freedom … I allow him an annuity of thirty dollars during his natural life…& this I give him as a testimony of my sense of his attachment to me, and for his faithful services during the Revolutionary War.”
In his Will, Washington freed the rest of his slaves upon his wife Martha’s death. Martha freed them the year after Washington died.
In his Will, George also made provision that elderly and sick slaves were to be supported by his estate in perpetuity.
On May 10, 1786, George Washington wrote from to Marquis de Lafayette:
“Your late purchase of an estate in the colony of Cayenne, with a view of emancipating the slaves on it, is a generous and noble proof of your humanity …
Would to God a like spirit would diffuse itself generally into the minds of the people of this country.”
As the early country took shape, partisan politics became increasingly vicious, with Washington even being the victim of ungracious attacks.
He warned how ambitious politicians would be tempted to use crises as opportunities to usurp power.
In his Farewell Address, 1796, Washington warned of those who would usurp power and rule through executive orders:
“Disorders and miseries, which result, gradually incline the minds of men to seek security and repose in the absolute power of an Individual … (who) turns this disposition to the purposes of his own elevation, on the ruins of Public Liberty …
The spirit of encroachment tends to consolidate the powers of all the departments in one, and thus to create, whatever the form of government, a real despotism …
Let there be no change by usurpation; for though this, in one instance, may be the instrument of good, it is the customary weapon by which free governments are destroyed.
The precedent (of usurpation) must always greatly overbalance in permanent evil any partial or transient benefit which the use can at any time yield.”
Earlier, in 1783, the American-born painter Benjamin West was in England painting the portrait of King George III.
When the King asked what General Washington planned to do now that he had won the war.
West replied:
“They say he will return to his farm.”
King George exclaimed:
“If he does that, he will be the greatest man in the world.”
Poet Robert Frost once wrote:
“I often say of George Washington that he was one of the few men in the whole history of the worlds who was not carried away by power.”
Charles Francis Adams, the grandson of John Adams, wrote:
“More than all, and above all, Washington was master of himself. If there be one quality more than another in his character which may exercise a useful control over the men of the present hour, it is the total disregard of self when in the most elevated positions for influence and example.”
George Washington added a warning in his Farewell Address, 1796:
“Of all the dispositions and habits which lead to political prosperity, Religion and Morality are indispensable supports.
In vain would that man claim the tribute of Patriotism, who should labor to subvert these great Pillars of human happiness.”
Summary: President Joe Biden will hang out at Camp David this weekend. For those counting golf course days, he won’t be swinging a club, but this is his 5th day kicking his feet up while away from the White House since taking office. P.S. Supposedly there is like 4 or 5 national crises going on …
Many Americans today continue to talk past each other in their discussions of justice. Progressives often see conservatives as insensitive and lacking compassion for the poor and oppressed. They march and protest in the streets for justice and view conservatives’ lack of protest as signs of their racism and privilege. Meanwhile, many conservatives cannot understand …
The second impeachment of President Donald J. Trump finally concluded yesterday with no conviction. The Democrats are 0-2 in impeachment as the former president was acquitted in both instances. As lawmakers closed their dramatic arguments for and against, some are left wondering; how much did the trial cost taxpayers? How much did it cost Trump? …
In this installment of our weekly conversation, PF Whalen and Parker Beauregard of The Blue State Conservative take notice of the many examples of the Biden administration and other Democrats canceling people of color and with disabilities. Is Team Biden – as Hillary put it – racist, sexist, homophobic, xenophobic, and Islamophobic? Parker: To borrow …
A Democratic state senator in New York called for a full investigation into New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo’s handling of data on coronavirus cases in nursing homes, saying that he and his administration “knowingly chose to lie” about the spread of the virus in those facilities. Jessica Ramos, who represents a district in Queens, said …
Happy Monday, dear Kruiser Morning Briefing friends. Going forward, the dress code will be strictly enforced.
I hope everyone had a romantic impeachment weekend.
What a fun one that was, huh? Perhaps the most bizarre aspect of the end of Impeachment 2, TDS Boogaloo is that there are so many Democrats in the country who actually thought it was going to work. I wasn’t much of a participant on social media over the weekend but I did keep an eye on it all once the impeachment trial wrapped up. The nonstop meltdowns from Dems who really believed that they were going to get all of the Senate Republicans to join in their mass delusion and convict Trump were positively Schadenfreudilicious to watch.
American leftists are so insulated in their ideological bubbles that they believe the fantastical false narratives that are constantly being belched forth from the likes of CNN and the editorial board of The Washington Post. That’s why they thought they had a real shot at permanently barring ORANGE MAN BAD from joining in any future reindeer games.
Here’s a tissue, emo little Dems, now run along and wipe your noses while the adults are speaking.
An unintended consequence of this latest impeachment charade was to make it very clear which Republicans can’t be trusted. Sure, we knew about Romney and Murkowski, but the trial flushed a couple more out of the squish bushes. So, thank you, Democrats, for being unable to control your toddler urges. You’ve done your opponents a great service.
Two of the GOP stalwarts of the Trump era — Mitch McConnell and Lindsey Graham — took divergent paths after the Senate trial wrapped. Both were completely transformed during Trump’s time in office, continually surprising conservatives who previously hadn’t been fans of either.
There had been rumors for a couple of weeks that we’d lost McConnell but they were just that. He made it official with his remarks after the trial, which I wrote about on Sunday:
Let me begin with the second thing first: “They did this because they had been fed wild falsehoods by the most powerful man on Earth — because he was angry he’d lost an election.” With one sentence, the man formerly known as “Cocaine Mitch” has signaled that he’s decided to throw every devoted Trump supporter who still has questions about the myriad irregularities in last year’s election under the bus.
It’s perfectly acceptable to question some of Trump’s post-election rhetoric but the broad brush stroke McConnell uses here paints every one of us who is legitimately concerned about our election processes going forward as a kook. Worse yet, it’s rhetoric that is straight out of the Democratic National Committee’s Sacred Book of Talking Points. Just like that, the highest-ranking Republican in the United States Senate told almost 75 million members of his own party to go straight to hell.
While McConnell’s work in helping Trump to overhaul the judiciary is greatly appreciated, it doesn’t excuse his reversion to his 2015 self.
That guy was useless.
Thankfully, Lindsey Graham doesn’t appear to be in the mood to join McConnell and shed the spine that he grew while Trump was president.
In the wake of the Democrats’ second failed attempt to impeach and remove President Trump, Lindsey Graham, in an appearance of Fox News Sunday, said that Democrats have now opened Pandora’s Box, and that by the standard they’ve set, Kamala Harris has met their requirement for impeachment.
“The trial record was a complete joke,” Senator Graham said. “Hearsay on top of hearsay, and we’ve opened Pandora’s Box for future presidents and if you use this model, I don’t know how Kamala Harris doesn’t get impeached if Republicans take over the House because she actually bailed out rioters, and more of the rioters went back to the streets and broke somebody’s head open, so we’ve opened Pandora’s Box here, and I’m sad for the country.”
How refreshing: a Republican who understands that Democrats are the opposition, not fellow Republicans.
Honestly, if I had been given a choice as to which one of these two senators I could choose to fight from the minority with, I’d have picked Graham. As I wrote in my column, though, it is rough to lose McConnell because he just spent four years showing us how good he can be.
There is a lot of work to be done in the next couple of years. Conservatives won’t accomplish much if the primary objective is to play nice.
We’re gonna miss you, Mitch. Enjoy your brunches with Chuck Schumer.
Fun Fact
Is Gluttony Still One of the Seven Deadlies? Asking for Me.
Acquitted again by Senate, Trump still a powerful force in Republican politics . . . It is still Donald Trump’s Republican Party – at least for now. The vote by 43 of the 50 Republican senators to acquit Trump on the charge of inciting last month’s deadly riot at the U.S. Capitol, with only seven voting for conviction, highlights just how powerful a grip he has on the party he remade in his image over the past five years. The former president, who has largely stayed out of sight at his Florida home since leaving the White House on Jan. 20, commands fervent loyalty among his supporters, forcing most Republican politicians to pledge their fealty and fear his wrath. Reuters
Pro-Trump Candidates Launch Early Senate, Governor Bids . . . A crop of Republicans has launched early campaigns across the country by hewing to former President Donald Trump’s political and policy legacy, betting that his enduring popularity with the GOP base can help propel them into office. Josh Mandel is running for Senate in Ohio, dubs himself “President Trump’s number one ally in Ohio.” Former Rep. Mark Walker, who is running for Senate in North Carolina, boasts that while in office he earned “the high praise of President Trump and Vice President Pence.” Other pro-Trump Republicans have announced races for governor in Democratic-leaning states such as Virginia, where state Sen. Amanda Chase has dubbed herself “Trump in heels” for this year’s contest, and GOP strongholds such as Arkansas, where former White House press secretary Sarah Sanders has already earned Mr. Trump’s endorsement for the 2022 race. Wall Street Journal
Lawyer says his home, family ‘under siege’ as retaliation for representing Trump in trial . . . Michael van der Veen, one of the lawyers who defended former President Donald Trump successfully in the Senate impeachment trial, said after the verdict Saturday that his family, home and law practice are “under siege” due to his representation of Mr. Trump. “My home was attacked. I’d rather not go into it because it would encourage other people to do it more, but you know, I’ve had nearly 100 death threats,” he told reporters. “My home was attacked last night — windows broken, spray paint, really bad words spray-painted everywhere.” Among the vandalism, someone spray-painted the word “traitor” on the driveway of his Philadelphia home. Washington Times
Hospitals face severe shortages as pandemic grinds forward . . . Hospitals around the country say their supplies of crucial medical supplies including personal protective equipment (PPE) are lower than ever as demand for different items has soared to an all-time high. Data detailing usage rates of PPE and other supplies analyzed by Premier, a company that consults for health care systems, revealed that usage of supplies for COVID-19 testing and treatment has reached the highest rate seen since the pandemic began last year. The data, gathered between May 2020 through January 2021, was supplied by 50 health care systems across the nation that are representative of the company’s larger population of clients. The Hill
Politics
Biden finds a few Trump moves he’ll keep . . .
President Biden is aggressively rolling back the agenda of his predecessor, Donald Trump. But that doesn’t mean a few things won’t survive. Biden is keeping the U.S. Space Force, which was established under Trump, as well as the Artemis spaceflight program. He’s not rolling back the new trade deal with Canada and Mexico, which was signed into law by Trump early last year and replaced a trade pact that Biden supported as a U.S. senator. See Biden’s other moves in The Hill
Biden Pulls 65 Pending Trump Executive Orders . . . President Biden has pulled 65 pending Trump administration executive orders, many of which deal with key national security and immigration matters. Several of the withdrawals strike down orders that would protect American jobs by tightening immigration restrictions and eliminate proposed oversight regulations on how China-backed Confucius Institutes operate on campus. The Biden administration selectively cut the orders, as some pending Trump administration actions remain under review. Withdrawals take sledgehammer to immigration agenda. Biden withdrew one Department of Homeland Security regulation that would bar foreign nationals with deportation orders from working. Washington Free Beacon
House Dems hire ex-gang member to top campaign post . . . The House Democrats’ campaign arm has hired an ex-gangster turned high-profile criminal-justice advocate for a top leadership position. The Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee, headed by Hudson Valley area Rep. Sean Patrick Maloney, tapped Dyjuan Tatro as a senior advisor for diversity and inclusion. Tatro is known for appearing in the 2019 PBS documentary series “College Behind Bars,” about a group of inmates trying to earn their degrees through New York state’s Bard Prison Initiative. Through the program, Tatro got a bachelor’s degree while serving a six year-sentence for racketeering conspiracy. New York Post
Biden Resurrects Faith-Based White House Office To Combat Racism, Political Polarization . . . President Joe Biden on Sunday ordered the recreation of a White House office intended to promote partnerships between religious and secular groups to address several key issues. The White House Office of Faith-Based and Neighborhood Partnerships will seek to address the coronavirus pandemic, combat systemic racism, increase opportunity, advance global humanitarian work and strengthen pluralism, according to Biden’s executive order. Daily Caller
Biden’s Deputy Press Secretary Resigns Following News of Alleged Intimidation of Politico Reporter . . . White House deputy press secretary TJ Ducklo resigned Saturday after a story surfaced accusing him of demeaning and intimidating a Politico reporter. Ducklo reportedly tried to kill a story, which has since become public, about his relationship with Axios reporter Alexi McCammond, who previously covered Biden’s campaign. He “lashed out” at Politico reporter Tara Palmeri in January 2021 for pursuing the story, threatening to “destroy” her if she published the news, according to a Friday report from Vanity Fair. Daily Caller
WH lawyers tell Meena Harris to stop using aunt Kamala to build brand: report . . . Vice President Kamala Harris’ social-media-influencer niece has long used her aunt’s fame to boost her own personal brand — but now that Harris has entered the White House, aides have become increasingly concerned about the ethical implications of the promotional pattern, according to a report.”. . . Behavior needs to change,” a White House official said of the niece Harris, whose ventures have reportedly become a sensitive issue in the newly formed Biden-Harris White House. Fox News
Georgia refers 35 cases of election law violations for criminal prosecution . . . The Georgia State Election Board announced 35 cases of election law violations to the state’s attorney general and local district attorneys for criminal prosecution. “Election fraud is not tolerated in Georgia. When there is evidence of it, the people responsible face prosecution,” said Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger. “Georgia has multiple safeguards in place that allow our team of investigators to discover fraudulent voting. They worked to catch the wrongdoing in these cases, and they maintain the security of Georgia elections.” Washington Examiner
Biden plans to focus on COVID-19 in first G7 meeting . . . President Biden will join leaders of the Group of Seven (G7) nations this Friday for a virtual summit focused on the global response to COVID-19 and efforts to build back world economies, a White House statement said Sunday. At the U.K.-hosted virtual gathering Biden will “focus on a global response to the COVID-19 pandemic.” Other discussions with leaders at the summit will focus on economic recovery from the pandemic, which left millions out of work in the U.S. alone, as well as the G7’s economic stance towards China, which the president has vowed to hold accountable for acts of economic espionage and other disputed trade issues. The Hill
Senator Graham joins calls for 9/11-style panel to examine Capitol riot . . . Sen. Lindsey Graham, told Fox News on Sunday that he is in favor of a 9/11-style commission to examine key details that contributed to last month’s deadly riot at the Capitol, just a day after former President Trump was acquitted at his second impeachment trial. Graham said that a 9/11-type commission could help ensure that a similar event doesn’t happen again in the U.S. More investigations into the riot have already been planned, with Senate hearings scheduled later this month in the Senate Rules Committee. “I’d like to know, did the Capitol Hill police inform the House sergeant at arms and the Senate sergeant at arms the day before the attack that they needed more troops?.” Fox News
National Security
Iran says it will end snap IAEA inspections if nuclear deal terms not met . . . Iran said on Monday it will block snap inspections by the U.N. nuclear watchdog from next week if other parties to the 2015 nuclear deal do not fulfil their obligations, a challenge to President Biden’s hope of reviving the accord. “If others do not fulfil their obligations by Feb. 21, the government is obliged to suspend the voluntary implementation of the Additional Protocol,” Foreign Ministry spokesman Saeed Khatibzadeh said. “… All these steps are reversible if the other party changes its path and honours its obligations,” he said, alluding to the United States. Reuters
Pentagon wants autonomous ships, choppers and jets . . . From pilotless jets engaging in dogfights to huge undersea vessels ferrying troops, the Pentagon is pushing to increase the U.S. military’s use of automation. Defense officials seek to counter American adversaries’ technological advances. That progress — highlighted in cockpits managed primarily by computers, totally autonomous helicopters and automated aerial-refueling tankers — is likely to show up in future civilian aircraft, advanced air-traffic-control systems and a range of drone applications. Skeptics worry automated systems sometimes reflect software developers’ desire to incorporate new capabilities without full testing. Fox Business
Secret Service arrests woman with loaded gun near White House, claims carrying letter for Biden . . . The Secret Service on Saturday arrested a 66-year-old woman on charges that she was carrying a loaded near the White House, Fox News has confirmed. Police said the woman had the loaded gun in her car, which was parked near the White House. They said she claimed to be carrying a letter for President Joe Biden. The woman was also accompanied by a man who was carrying a BB gun, police said. Fox News
International
White House refuses to say whether Israel remains an important US ally . . . The White House Friday sidestepped a question on whether Israel and Saudi Arabia are “important allies” of the United States. After a back-and-forth with reporters during the daily White House briefing about President Biden’s failure so far to speak with Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu, White House press secretary Jen Psaki was asked whether administration still consider the Saudis and the Israelis important allies?” Psaki was “circling back and forth” alluding to some internal interagency processes where national security policy is formulated not being completed White House Dossier
Having bummed around in the halls of government bureaucracy for 47 years, Joe still hasn’t decided whether Israel is friend or foe.
No-nonsense Nigerian woman to make history as head of WTO . . . Three months after the Trump administration rejected her, former Nigerian finance minister Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala is set to receive unanimous backing on Monday to become the first woman and first African director-general of the World Trade Organization. A self-declared “doer” with a track record of taking on seemingly intractable problems, Okonjo-Iweala will have her work cut out for her at the trade body. As director-general, a position that wields limited formal power, Okonjo-Iweala, 66, will need to broker international trade talks in the face of persistent U.S.-China conflict; respond to pressure to reform trade rules; and counter protectionism heightened by the COVID-19 pandemic. Reuters
Myanmar blacks out internet and stations soldiers on streets . . . Myanmar’s military regime ordered internet providers to shut off service for eight hours on Monday morning and deployed troops and army vehicles on to the streets, raising fears of an imminent crackdown on a popular resistance movement against the coup.
Many banks were shut in Yangon, the biggest city, as employees joined a general strike called by civil servants and others against General Min Aung Hlaing’s junta. The internet was shut down after the junta floated a punitive cyber security law that would, once implemented, give authorities sweeping powers to censor online activity. In the first week after the coup it also ordered telecoms companies to block temporarily access to Facebook, Twitter and Instagram, and issued an order banning the use of VPNs. Financial Times
Money
Wine tariffs are crushing US importers . . . Wine sellers struggling to survive the pandemic are now also getting slammed by Uncle Sam’s fight with the European Union over aircraft subsidies. Mom-and-pop wine importers are facing hundreds of thousands of dollars in added expenses this year due to ever-increasing US tariffs slapped on wines imported from Europe. It’s forcing these businesses to cut pay and staff — and raise prices on customers. New York Post
You should also know
Biden Calls on Congress to Restrict Gun Ownership . . . President Biden on Feb. 14 urged Congress to strengthen existing laws concerning gun ownership on the third anniversary of the mass shooting at a high school in Parkland, Florida. Biden said in a statement “ We will take action to end our epidemic of gun violence and make our schools and communities safer. Today, I am calling on Congress to enact commonsense gun law reforms, including requiring background checks on all gun sales, banning assault weapons and high-capacity magazines, and eliminating immunity for gun manufacturers who knowingly put weapons of war on our streets.” Epoch Times
Minneapolis push to defund police backfires after residents complain of increase in crime . . . Minneapolis on Friday backtracked on its original push to defund the city’s police department in the wake of George Floyd’s police custody death after residents begged the city to hire more officers, citing longer response times and increased violent crime. The City Council on Friday voted unanimously to approve $6.4 million in additional funding that police had requested. Fox News
What did they think was going to happen?
Hate Crimes Against Asian Americans Reportedly Increased During COVID . . . Violent hate crimes against Asian Americans have risen since the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic last March. Reports of violent crimes against Asian Americans have become more common since the start of the pandemic in March. Activists and experts have recorded that 2,808 anti-Asian hate incidents had taken place between March 19 and Dec. 31, 2020. Police data revealed that 24 anti-Asian hate crimes occurred between Jan 1 and Nov. 29, 2020. That’s eight times higher than the number of reported hate crimes throughout the same period in 2019, according to The Asian American Bar Association Of New York. Daily Caller
New DC Gun Dealer Sees Business Boom After Overcoming City Roadblocks . . . A man who had to hire a lobbyist to help him navigate regulatory hurdles to become the first and only licensed Washington, D.C., gun dealer in nearly a year is now seeing business boom. Shawn Poulin, the owner of D.C. Security Associates said he had to spend thousands of dollars on a lobbyist to help navigate the city’s complex rules and regulations on firearms businesses. After pushing through the roadblocks and being approved to open in January, Poulin said his store has seen between 15 and 20 handgun transfers per day. Washington Free Beacon
Guilty Pleasures
Dog inherits $5 million . . . A Tennessee dog is living the comfortable life after inheriting $5 million from her late owner, who stipulated in his will that his money should go to his pet. Lulu, an 8-year-old border collie, was named in the will of owner Bill Dorris, a Nashville businessman who died late last year at age 84. Martha Burton, 88, a neighbor who often cared for Lulu while Dorris was away, was named as the canine’s caretaker in Dorris’ will, which states Burton will be reimbursed for “reasonable” monthly expenses. “I don’t really know what to think about it to tell you the truth. He just really loved the dog,” Burton told WTVF-TV. Burton said she is perfectly happy to act as Lulu’s caretaker. “She’s a good girl,” she said. UPI
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Quick Hits: Today’s Top Stories
The Senate voted over the weekend to acquit Donald Trump on impeachment charges of inciting rioters to storm the U.S. Capitol. Fifty-seven senators voted to convict the former president—including Republican Sens. Richard Burr, Bill Cassidy, Susan Collins, Lisa Murkowski, Mitt Romney, Ben Sasse, and Pat Toomey—falling ten votes short of the two-thirds threshold.
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention on Friday issued step-by-step guidelines for schools to return to in-person learning. The guidelines—which are not binding for schools—do not stipulate teachers need to be vaccinated prior to schools reopening, but do recommend schools continue virtual or hybrid approaches until community spread falls below specific levels.
Mario Draghi, former head of the European Central Bank, was sworn in as Italy’s prime minister over the weekend after the previous government—headed by Giuseppe Conte—collapsed last month.
The United States confirmed 66,490 new cases of COVID-19 yesterday per the Johns Hopkins University COVID-19 Dashboard, with 4.8 percent of the 1,392,266 tests reported coming back positive. An additional 1,165 deaths were attributed to the virus on Sunday, bringing the pandemic’s American death toll to 485,332. According to the COVID Tracking Project, 67,023 Americans are currently hospitalized with COVID-19. According to the Centers for Disease Control, 2,242,472 COVID-19 vaccine doses were administered yesterday, bringing the nationwide total to 52,884,356.
Senate Republicans Deem Trump Not Guilty
There were some unexpected last-minute twists and turns, but Donald Trump’s second impeachment trial concluded on Saturday afternoon in the manner most political observers expected: A narrow acquittal, with only a smattering of Republicans breaking ranks.
With all 100 senators present and voting, the House impeachment managers needed 67 votes to convict the former president and bar him from holding public office. They got 57: all 50 Democrats and seven Republicans. Sens. Richard Burr, Bill Cassidy, Susan Collins, Lisa Murkowski, Mitt Romney, Ben Sasse, and Pat Toomey took the plunge.
Much transpired in the trial since we were last in your inbox on Friday morning. Later that day, Trump’s defense team presented their case, using fewer than three of the 16 hours allotted to them. “The article of impeachment now before the Senate is an unjust and blatantly unconstitutional act of political vengeance,” Michael van der Veen told senators. “No thinking person could seriously believe that the president’s January 6 speech on the Ellipse was in any way an incitement to violence or insurrection. … Far from promoting insurrection against the United States, the president’s remarks explicitly encouraged those in attendance to exercise their rights peacefully and patriotically.”
The defense relied heavily on whataboutism, presenting a series of videos that attempted to equate prominent Democrats’ behavior in recent years with Trump’s actions and rhetoric leading up to the January 6 attack on the Capitol. One showed a handful of Democratic members of Congress—including the House’s lead impeachment manager, Rep. Jamie Raskin—objecting to the electoral vote count in 2017. Another featured examples of Democrats—including Rep. Maxine Waters and Joe Biden—deploying incendiary language. Another was literally nine minutes of sentence fragments from Democratic politicians that included the word “fight.”
Making what amounted to a First Amendment defense, Bruce Castor told the jurors the trial was about something far bigger than Trump: “Constitutional cancel culture.”
“It is about silencing and banning the speech the majority does not agree with,” Castor said. “It is about canceling 75 million Trump voters and criminalizing political viewpoints. That is what this trial is really about.”
After a brief question and answer period—during which Trump’s defense team deflected rather than elucidate what actions the former president took to stop the violence on January 6—the Senate adjourned for the day, barreling toward a Saturday afternoon acquittal.
A wrench was thrown in the process Friday night, however, when Rep. Jaime Herrera Beutler—a Republican from Washington who voted to impeach President Trump last month—released a statement shedding additional light on Trump’s actions during the riot..
When [Minority Leader Kevin] McCarthy finally reached the president on January 6 and asked him to publicly and forcefully call off the riot, the president initially repeated the falsehood that it was antifa that had breached the Capitol. McCarthy refuted that and told the president that these were Trump supporters. That’s when, according to McCarthy, the president said: ‘Well, Kevin, I guess these people are more upset about the election than you are.’
The statement—which was based on conversations McCarthy had relayed to Rep. Herrera Beutler—painted an even more damning picture of Trump’s negligence. It was evidence, albeit secondhand, that the former president was not only aware of the violence taking place at the other end of Pennsylvania Avenue, he approved of it.
The revelation threw the Senate into chaos. The two sides had a tacit understanding going into the trial that neither would call witnesses, allowing the proceedings to come to a hasty conclusion. But Herrera Beutler’s remarks were essentially a plea to have senators call her to testify, and the upper chamber reversed course Saturday morning, voting 55 to 45 to expand the scope of the trial and subpoena witnesses who could provide more information about Trump’s actions and state of mind on January 6.
The desire to obtain additional facts was short lived. Just hours after that Saturday morning vote, Senate Democrats backtracked and came to a deal with their Republican counterparts, most of whom had no desire to go down the witness path: Read Herrera Beutler’s statement into the record as evidence, and move to wrap the trial that afternoon.
Raskin defended the decision on Meet the Press yesterday. “We could have had a thousand witnesses, but that could not have overcome the kinds of silly arguments that people like McConnell and [Sen. Shelly Moore] Capito were hanging their hats on,” he said. Rep. Joe Neguse, another impeachment manager, told CBS News that “witnesses that were not friendly to the prosecution were not going to comply voluntarily, which meant that we were going to be litigating subpoenas for months, and potentially years.”
Herrera Beutler, through a spokesman, said she would have testified under oath if asked.
There will undoubtedly be additional hearings that aim to get closer to the full truth of what exactly happened on January 6. But both parties over the weekend had an opportunity to start that process in earnest. Instead, in a bipartisan fashion, they opted to take the politically expedient path.
The vote itself played out about as most political prognosticators predicted, but that doesn’t render what transpired any less historic. Just over a year ago, Sen. Mitt Romney became the first senator in American history to vote to convict a president of his or her own party. On Saturday, he did the same again, accompanied by six others.
“On election night 2014, I promised Nebraskans I’d always vote my conscience even if it was against the partisan stream,” Sen. Ben Sasse wrote in a statement announcing his decision. “I cannot go back on my word, and Congress cannot lower our standards on such a grave matter, simply because it is politically convenient.”
Sen. Lisa Murkowski, who is up for reelection in two years, said that Trump failed to uphold his oath of office. “If months of lies, organizing a rally of supporters in an effort to thwart the work of Congress, encouraging a crowd to march on the Capitol, and then taking no meaningful action to stop the violence once it began is not worthy of impeachment, conviction, and disqualification from holding office in the United States,” she added, “I cannot imagine what is.”
Sen. Bill Cassidy was especially blunt: “Our Constitution and our country is more important than any one person. I voted to convict President Trump because he is guilty.”
The majority of the Republican conference that voted to acquit Trump did so under the claim that the trial itself was unconstitutional, a premise highly disputed by conservative and liberal constitutional scholars alike. “The real purpose of this trial was to tar and feather not just the rioters, but anyone who supported the former president and any senator who refuses to vote to convict,” Sen. Marco Rubio said. “I voted to acquit former President Trump because I will not allow my anger over the criminal attack of January 6th nor the political intimidation from the left to lead me into supporting a dangerous constitutional precedent.”
Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell tried to split the difference. Despite floating multiple times in recent weeks that he was open to convicting Trump, raising the possibility that the senate’s top Republican could change the dynamics of the vote by bringing others with him, McConnell gave top cover to Republicans worried about incurring the wrath of Trump supporters in the GOP—and Trump himself. But shortly after voting to acquit Trump using the same shaky constitutional argument, McConnell took to the Senate floor and lit into the former president.
“Former President Trump’s actions preceding the riot were a disgraceful dereliction of duty,” the Kentucky Republican said. “There is no question that President Trump is practically and morally responsible for provoking the events of that day. The people who stormed this building believed they were acting on the wishes and instructions of their President. And their having that belief was a foreseeable consequence of the growing crescendo of false statements, conspiracy theories, and reckless hyperbole which the defeated President kept shouting into the largest megaphone on planet Earth.”
“Many politicians sometimes make overheated comments or use metaphors that unhinged listeners might take literally,” McConnell continued. “This was different. This was an intensifying crescendo of conspiracy theories, orchestrated by an outgoing president who seemed determined to either overturn the voters’ decision or else torch our institutions on the way out.”
The most shocking part of McConnell’s speech came toward the end: “We have a criminal justice system in this country. We have civil litigation. And former presidents are not immune from being held accountable by either one.”
In a rare phone interview with Politico Saturday night, McConnell put a stake in the ground opposing any future effort from the former president and his allies to primary Republicans he deems insufficiently MAGA. “My goal is, in every way possible, to have nominees representing the Republican Party who can win in November,” McConnell said. “Some of them may be people the former president likes. Some of them may not be. The only thing I care about is electability.”
But Trump may have other plans. Having kept relatively quiet since leaving office, the former president released a lengthy statement following his acquittal on Saturday.
“Our historic, patriotic and beautiful movement to Make America Great Again has only just begun,” he said. “In the months ahead I have much to share with you, and I look forward to continuing our incredible journey together to achieve American greatness for all of our people.”
“We have so much work ahead of us, and soon we will emerge with a vision for a bright, radiant, and limitless American future.”
Worth Your Time
How to parse the CDC’s latest guidelines on how and when to reopen K-12 schools? Dr. Emily Oster, a Brown University economics professor, believes they will keep too many schools closed for too long. “The new guidelines for the spring are a start, but keeping them in place for the fall will likely mean we cannot open all schools,” Oster—who has been maintaining the COVID-19 School Response Dashboard—writes in The New York Times. “This would be a tragedy for children.”
From 1936 to 1938, the Federal Writers’ Project—a New Deal program—paid out-of-work writers to travel around the country and produce city and state guides and histories. Some were tasked with collecting and compiling oral histories from the last few thousand survivors of U.S. slavery. In a piece for The Atlantic, Clint Smith explores some of those recollections, and why—even though they aren’t “famous accounts of extraordinary people”—they’re still so important to read. “While many of these narratives vividly portray the horror of slavery—of families separated, of backs beaten, of bones crushed,” Smith writes, “embedded within them are stories of enslaved people dancing together on Saturday evenings as respite from their work; of people falling in love, creating pockets of time to see each other when the threat of violence momentarily ceased; of children skipping rocks in a creek or playing hide-and-seek amid towering oak trees, finding moments when the movement of their bodies was not governed by anything other than their own sense of wonder. These small moments—the sort that freedom allows us to take for granted—have stayed with me.”
Today is President’s Day, and Yuval Levin marked the occasion by lamenting the “sorry state of Congress.” The conclusion of this weekend’s impeachment trial, Levin argues, is just the latest development in a years-long abdication of authority by the legislative branch. “We are in a moment analogous in some respects to the mid 1970s, when modern conservative constitutionalism was born, except that at that point the most urgent problem was a misunderstanding of the proper role of the courts, and today it’s a misunderstanding of the proper role of Congress,” he writes. “The next phase of conservative constitutionalism will require a similar set of efforts … but aimed at recovering an understanding of Congress’s proper role, the sources of its legitimacy, its value to our society, and how it needs to change to be worthy of all that. It is time for an era of congressionalism in our constitutional thought.”
In a deeply reported Sunday French Press, David dives into the the forces that kept a litany of sexual assault and rape allegations against Christian apologist leader Ravi Zacharias from surfacing. Zacharias, who abused women in the U.S. and abroad for more than a decade, weaponized intimidation and marginalization to silence inquiring voices within his own congregation. “Christian ministries are populated by leadership teams who derive not just their paychecks but also their own public reputations from their affiliation with the famous founder. They’re admired in part because the founder is admired,” David writes. “They have influence in part because the founder has influence. When the founder fails, they lose more than a paycheck. There is powerful personal incentive to circle the wagons and to defend the ministry, even when that defense destroys lives.”
On this weekend’s Ruminant podcast, Jonah takes a quick break from jaunting around Austin, Texas with his daughter (where it is currently 20 degrees) to make amends for his missing Friday G-File. During the respite, Jonah muses about the Lincoln Project, conservative conspiracy theories surrounding January 6, and last week’s impeachment trial.
Liesl Hickey, partner at Ascent Media and co-founder of N2 America, joined Sarah and Steve on Friday’s Dispatch Podcast to discuss how students and parents are suffering under the constraints of remote learning. “If we’re going to follow the science, and we’re going to follow the data like they’ve talked about over and over, I think it’s pretty clear,” Hickey says. “It’s safe for kids to be back in school. I think the guidelines that they’re putting out are nonsensical.”
For a special Friday Mop-Up (🔒), Sarah was joined by newly minted Dispatch contributing editor Chris Stirewalt to talk about the 2020 election, his time at Fox News, and the future of the Republican Party. Chris’ million dollar question for the GOP: “Can they pick a way through this in such a fashion that they repudiate the worst degradations to the Republic from Trump, but not in a way that permanently alienates them from that 20 percent of America? Because they need that 20 percent of America to have a winning coalition.”
Let Us Know
What do you think the outcome of the impeachment trial says about the Republican Party? Does the GOP officially belong to Trump? Or is a harder break from the former president on the horizon?
Those senators with presidential aspirations. You failed the test, he will be your ruin and your hypocrisy will find you out. Good job. We need and want leadership.
Kemberlee Kaye:“For over a year our youngest daughter has been asking why it doesn’t snow here (in Houston), especially since most winter kids books are snow-centric. Haven’t said anything in the event things changed, but it’s snowing now and I can’t wait for her to wake up to a snow-covered lawn.”
Mary Chastain: “It’s awful in Oklahoma. Please stay off the roads. Please. We have another snowstorm coming on Tuesday and Wednesday.”
Leslie Eastman: “While everyone has been distracted with Impeachment 2, there were intriguing developments related to the quest for the origin of the coronavirus. Just a few days ago, we reported that the World Health Organization (WHO) dropped its investigation into the origin of the coronavirus pandemic, declaring it did not originate in a Chinese laboratory. WHO is now backtracking on this dismissal.”
David Gerstman: “Mike LaChance blogged that the Iranian-backed Houthi rebels in Yemen rewarded the understanding shown them by the Biden administration – which delisted them as a foreign terrorist organization – with a rocket attack on a civilian airport in Saudi Arabia. Showing forbearance to Iran and its terrorist allies is likely to be a feature not a bug of the Biden administration. Don’t be surprised if the next four years is marked by increased Iranian aggression in the Middle East.”
Legal Insurrection Foundation is a Rhode Island tax-exempt corporation established exclusively for charitable purposes within the meaning of Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code to educate and inform the public on legal, historical, economic, academic, and cultural issues related to the Constitution, liberty, and world events.
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“This week, Virginia Heffernan, a columnist for the Los Angeles Times, unleashed the most perverse column in recent memory. The title: ‘What can you do about the Trumpites next door?…’”
The History of George Washington’s Birthday… Or Presidents’ Day?
It’s a short BRIGHT today, but we wanted to give you the important news (and sales) from the weekend. But first, a little history. The U.S. federal holiday is Washington’s Birthday, though many refer to it as Presidents’ Day. Mt. Vernon, George Washington’s home, gets to the bottom of it:
“George Washington was a humble man who did not enjoy flashy celebrations. During his lifetime, Washington paid little attention to his own birthday, and often “celebrated” it by responding to letters or attending to matters at Mount Vernon.However, national celebration of his birthday began while he was alive and continued after his death. While his birthday is still recognized to this day, the parameters around it changed in the late 20th century, when it unofficially became known as “Presidents’ Day”.
…
Today the nation typically combines Washington’s Birthday with Presidents’ Day, celebrating both days on the third Monday in February. However, Presidents’ Day is not the official name of the holiday.
While the name “Presidents’ Day” was proposed for this Monday holiday in 1951, the U.S. government never officially changed the name. In the 1980s, thanks to advertising campaigns for holiday sales, the term became popularized and largely accepted.”
Speaking of Presidents’ Day Sales
Of course, Amazon has a wide selection of stuff on sale — from cozy blankets to Instapots. Unfortunately, you won’t find any Cara Dune stuff.
Gap has a ton of stuff at 50% off and an extra 10% off with he code FORYOU.
ModCloth is offering 30% off sale items. (Confession: sometimes I just go there and search for “dachshund” — I have two dresses, a pair of shoes, and a sweatshirt so far 😬)
Nordstrom Rack has an additional 25% off clearance items.
If you’re in Texas or anywhere else experiencing this winter storm, you might want to take advantage of The North Face‘s Winter Sale of 30% off select styles.
Also, check out Target‘s 20% off all clothing and remember no one will judge you for buying Valentine’s Day candy that’s now on sale.
Weekend Reads
Senate Acquits Trump For Second Time, Just One Year After First Impeachment Attempt (The Federalist)
Exclusive–Melania Trump Office Says Former First Lady’s Future Initiatives Will Be Done with ‘Quality and Passion’ (Breitbart)
Alex Trebek Wardrobe Donated To Homeless Organization For Job Interviews (Deadline)
White House lawyers tell Meena Harris to stop using aunt Kamala to build brand (New York Post)
Bernie Sanders optimistic about $15 minimum wage — but Manchin, Sinema stand in way (Fox News)
New Biden K-12 Plan Will Cancel Sports For Nearly 83 Percent Of Counties (The Federalist)
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Note: By using some of the links above, Bright may be compensated through the Amazon Affiliate program and Magic Links. However, none of this content is sponsored and all opinions are our own.
An anti-police march attended by Black Lives Matter members in New York City descended into violence Friday night. About 100 protesters attended the “F*** 12” march in Midtown Manhattan. According to the Salt Lake Tribune, “F*** 12” and “F12 … Read more
The United HealthCare presentation claims several ‘clinical benefits for consumers and physician relationships based on race.’ Survey respondents weren’t so sure.
The study seeking ‘therapeutics to treat gender dysphoria’ could be used to help transgender people regain satisfaction with their natural bodies. LGBT activists don’t want that.
We need a full, thorough, and independent investigation with subpoenas to Department of Health Commissioner Howard Zucker, the governor’s staff, and the governor himself.
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The former president’s acquittal on charges of inciting a deadly attack on the Capitol left Democrats and Republicans deeply divided on Sunday.
After the verdict, a fractured Republican party was battling over the way forward, with some senators who voted to convict facing a swift backlash in their home states.
The head of the CDC said it is “absolutely” too soon to lift mask mandates, citing daily COVID-19 case numbers that despite recent declines remain more than double the levels seen last summer.
Protesters in Myanmar kept up demands for the release of ousted leader Aung San Suu Kyi and an end to military rule though crowds were smaller after the junta deployed armored vehicles and more soldiers on the streets.
Indian opposition politicians and activists condemned the arrest of 22-year-old climate activist Disha Ravi accused of helping to edit and distribute a document by Swedish environmental activist Greta Thunberg that promoted farmer protests.
Argentina’s flamboyant former President Carlos Menem died on Sunday at age 90 after battling long-term health problems, the country’s current President Alberto Fernandez announced in a tweet.
Syria’s army said the country’s air defenses had intercepted “Israeli aggression” over the capital, Damascus, in the latest stepped-up bombing of Iranian targets inside the country over the last two months.
BUSINESS
Three months after the Trump administration rejected her, former Nigerian finance minister Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala is set to become the first woman and first African director-general of the World Trade Organization.
Elon Musk said that he supports major holders of the meme-based digital currency Dogecoin selling most of their coins, adding that he felt too much concentration in Dogecoin was the “real issue.”
Bitcoin stalled just short of the $50,000 mark and other cryptocurrencies slipped, as investors took profit from a record-breaking rally that is being driven by a worldwide shift in investor and public attitudes.
The Bank of Italy said a set of experimental indicators it created from the content of millions of tweets accurately tracked consumer mood on price, offering scope for a powerful new monetary policy tool.
It’s good to get excited about progress, especially in California where efforts to recall Governor Gavin Newsom are going well. But the notion that’s being spread out there right now, even by conservatives, that we have enough signatures is misinformation. To realistically have a chance of triggering a recall election, we need another 400,000 signatures at the very least.
We covered this before, but JD and Tammy discussed it further on the latest episode of Conservative Playbook. In this episode, they discussed the reality that Newsom and his cronies are going to do everything they can to invalidate signatures. Some progressive groups are putting out petitions to be signed, but only in batches with leftist proposals in tow. They’re even promoting the notion that Newsom’s magic number has already been reached, reinforcing the false notion that there’s no need to push harder. As I noted in a previous article, the need to push now is even greater than it was before.
Perhaps the most infuriating thing about all of this is that now Newsom and his cronies are going for stricter signature verifications on petitions. This comes after the 2020 election where so many states, including California, made signature verification a non-factor. They hampered the ability to find fraudulent ballots by curtailing efforts to compare signatures. Now, all of a sudden, they’ve become huge fans of signature verification.
Newsom’s failed policies have become legendary as California suffers tremendously through his first term as governor. His draconian lockdowns due to Covid-19 have proved to be disastrous, not just because the economy has been decimated but also because based on recent numbers, the lockdowns have been an absolute failure in curtailing the spread of the coronavirus.
Then, there’s the statement by police officer Adam Garcia. His speech before the China City Council last week explained how Newsom’s policies surrounding criminal justice have made the state far less safe than it needs to be.
“If Gavin Newsome remains in office, ladies and gentlemen, California is on the clock and our time is running out,” Garcia said. “I truly believe if we lose this recall effort, we will lose California. Gavin Newsome has played politics with the lives of Californians long enough, and he must be stopped. We must protect the people of California.”
WATCH: “Newsom has failed California” — California police officer urges city council to sign recall against California democrat governor. pic.twitter.com/kQEcefiyrs
It’s crunch time. Don’t listen to anyone who says Newsom’s recall is happening. As of now, it’s not. We’re on target; we need 400,000-500,000 more signatures to cover for invalidated petitions. There are four weeks left and the team behind the recall efforts have been averaging about 100,000 new signatures per week. Instead of getting complacent, we need to hit the gas and make this happen.
Now is not the time to pop champagne corks and celebrate Gavin Newsom’s recall. There are still a whole lot of valid signatures necessary to trigger a recall and Newsom’s team is doing everything they can to invalidate the ones we have. Keep pushing!
COVID-19 lockdowns are taking down an independent news outlet
Nobody said running a media site would be easy. We could use some help keeping this site afloat.
Colleagues have called me the worst fundraiser ever. My skills are squarely rooted on the journalistic side of running a news outlet. Paying the bills has never been my forte, but we’ve survived. We have ads on the site that help, but since the site’s inception this has been a labor of love that otherwise doesn’t bring in the level of revenue necessary to justify it.
When I left a nice, corporate career in 2017, I did so knowing I wouldn’t make nearly as much money. But what we do at NOQ Report to deliver the truth and fight the progressive mainstream media narrative that has plagued this nation is too important for me to sacrifice it for the sake of wealth. We know we’ll never make a ton of money this way, and we’re okay with that.
Things have become harder with the coronavirus lockdowns. Both ad money and donations that have kept us afloat for a while have dropped dramatically. We thought we could weather the storm, but the resurgence of lockdowns that mainstream media and Democrats are pushing has put our prospects in jeopardy. In short, we are now in desperate need of financial assistance.
The best way NOQ Report readers can help is to donate. Our Giving Fuel page makes it easy to donate one-time or monthly. Alternatively, you can donate through PayPal as well. We need approximately $17,300 to stay afloat through March when we hope the economy will be more open, but more would be wonderful and any amount that brings us closer to our goal is greatly appreciated.
The second way to help is to become a partner. We’ve strongly considered seeking angel investors in the past but because we were paying the bills, it didn’t seem necessary. Now, we’re struggling to pay the bills. This shouldn’t be the case as our traffic the last year has been going up dramatically. June, 2018, we had 11,678 visitors. A year later in June, 2019, we were up to 116,194. In June, 2020, we had 614,192. In November, 2020, we hit 1.2 million visitors.
We’re heading in the right direction and we believe we’re ready talk to patriotic investors who want to not only “get in on the action” but more importantly who want to help America hear the truth. Interested investors should contact me directly with the contact button above.
As the world spirals towards radical progressivism, the need for truthful journalism has never been greater. But in these times, we need as many conservative media voices as possible. Please help keep NOQ Report going.
Join fellow patriots as we form a grassroots movement to advance the cause of conservatism. The coronavirus crisis has prompted many, even some conservatives, to promote authoritarianism. It’s understandable to some extent now, but it must not be allowed to embed itself in American life. We currently have 11,000+ patriots with us in a very short time. If you are interested, please join us to receive updates.
On Jan. 29, the German parliament ratified the implementation of Agenda ID2020, the next phase of the global Mark of the Beast rollout being ushered in on the back of the Wuhan coronavirus (COVID-19) “pandemic.”
This centralized general electronic data collection program will profile every citizen in Germany and grant access to every government agency, police department, and three-letter agency, as well as to the private sector.
Up to 200 points of information, and possibly more as time goes on, will be included in the program. These include people’s bank accounts, shopping habits, health records, including vaccination records, political inclinations, and probably even dating habits.
If the government can use it against you, Germany wants to house it in the Agenda ID2020 database, which was designed by none other than billionaire eugenicist Bill Gates as part of his “vaccination package.”
Backed by the Rockefeller Foundation, Accenture, the World Economic Forum (WEF), and the Global Alliance for Vaccines and Immunization (GAVI), the program aims to inject every human being with microchips that can be remote-accessed using 5G and subsequent 6G technologies.
The program’s private partners include many Big Pharma names such as Johnson & Johnson (J&J), GlaxoSmithKline (GSK), Merck & Co., and of course the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation.
According to Peter Koenig, writing for Global Research (Canada), ID2020 is shaping up to be “vaccine-implanted” and “remote-accessible by EM-geared computers, robots or algorithms.”
“The adoption of Agenda ID2020 still has to be approved by the German Federal Council, but there is little chance the Council will reject it,” Koenig explains.
Switzerland’s Agenda ID2020 mark of the beast to be voted on in early March
In nearby Switzerland, voters will have the chance on Mar. 7 to approve that country’s version of Agenda ID2020, an all-electronic identification system that will link “everything to everything of each individual citizen.”
Should the measure pass, the Swiss government plans to outsource management of the program to the private sector, meaning drug companies, big banks, and insurance companies will be buying and selling people’s private data for profit.
In the future, the program will likely include an implantable chip with built-in radiofrequency (RF) transmitters that will be used to track people, as well as manage their finances and allot them payment credits for the work they do so they can continue to buy and sell.
Early trials of such technology have already taken place in remote villages of Bangladesh, where poor people were injected with microchips under the guise of being “vaccinated.”
This is exactly the type of thing that Bill Gates and other genocidal maniacs want to see implemented around the world. Every person will eventually have to be ID-chipped and “vaccinated,” and the 5G / 6G systems being installed on every church rooftop and corner lamppost will be used to program and control this global herd of new world order beings.
All of this is for the purpose of keeping people “safe” against Chinese germs, of course. There is simply no other way to keep the “virus” at bay, the elite insist.
“With an electromagnetic field and with 5G / 6G EM-waves allowing inputs and access of data in your body – the control of each individual is almost complete,” Koenig warns. “The ‘almost’ refers to the planned access to your brainwaves.”
“This is supposed to be happening through a Brain Computer Interface (BCI), called Neurolink – developed by Elon Musk. It presents an interface of electronic waves with the human brain which, by then, will have been converted into an electromagnetic field (EMF), so that it can receive digital commands that will influence our behavior, or can be turned off – RIP – as maybe is most convenient for the Global Cabal.”
More of the latest news about the Wuhan coronavirus (COVID-19) vaccine scam can be found at Pandemic.news.
COVID-19 lockdowns are taking down an independent news outlet
Nobody said running a media site would be easy. We could use some help keeping this site afloat.
Colleagues have called me the worst fundraiser ever. My skills are squarely rooted on the journalistic side of running a news outlet. Paying the bills has never been my forte, but we’ve survived. We have ads on the site that help, but since the site’s inception this has been a labor of love that otherwise doesn’t bring in the level of revenue necessary to justify it.
When I left a nice, corporate career in 2017, I did so knowing I wouldn’t make nearly as much money. But what we do at NOQ Report to deliver the truth and fight the progressive mainstream media narrative that has plagued this nation is too important for me to sacrifice it for the sake of wealth. We know we’ll never make a ton of money this way, and we’re okay with that.
Things have become harder with the coronavirus lockdowns. Both ad money and donations that have kept us afloat for a while have dropped dramatically. We thought we could weather the storm, but the resurgence of lockdowns that mainstream media and Democrats are pushing has put our prospects in jeopardy. In short, we are now in desperate need of financial assistance.
The best way NOQ Report readers can help is to donate. Our Giving Fuel page makes it easy to donate one-time or monthly. Alternatively, you can donate through PayPal as well. We need approximately $17,300 to stay afloat through March when we hope the economy will be more open, but more would be wonderful and any amount that brings us closer to our goal is greatly appreciated.
The second way to help is to become a partner. We’ve strongly considered seeking angel investors in the past but because we were paying the bills, it didn’t seem necessary. Now, we’re struggling to pay the bills. This shouldn’t be the case as our traffic the last year has been going up dramatically. June, 2018, we had 11,678 visitors. A year later in June, 2019, we were up to 116,194. In June, 2020, we had 614,192. In November, 2020, we hit 1.2 million visitors.
We’re heading in the right direction and we believe we’re ready talk to patriotic investors who want to not only “get in on the action” but more importantly who want to help America hear the truth. Interested investors should contact me directly with the contact button above.
As the world spirals towards radical progressivism, the need for truthful journalism has never been greater. But in these times, we need as many conservative media voices as possible. Please help keep NOQ Report going.
Join fellow patriots as we form a grassroots movement to advance the cause of conservatism. The coronavirus crisis has prompted many, even some conservatives, to promote authoritarianism. It’s understandable to some extent now, but it must not be allowed to embed itself in American life. We currently have 11,000+ patriots with us in a very short time. If you are interested, please join us to receive updates.
When Patreon started canceling conservatives a couple of years ago, many prominent free-speech advocates said they wanted to form an alternative. One guy, Dave Rubin, did. He and his team put together Locals and we quickly adopted it as a venue through which we could post our videos, podcasts, and articles.
There’s a challenge. The platform is strong, but we are limited in our ability to publish our content there. Until we get to 1000 members, we cannot post anything over an hour long or 2 GB in size. On top of that, we’re limited to 30 uploads per month. Unfortunately, that limitation means we cannot post most of our content there because we publish 2-5 shows per day and half of them are bigger than the size limitation.
We don’t hold that against Locals. They have a business to run and it’s very likely many have used them as a backup dumping ground for their work. They unwisely put their eggs in the YouTube or Facebook baskets while using Locals, Brighteon, Rumble, and/or BitChute as a backup. This is a poor practice in my humble opinion as it rewards the people who hate us (YouTube and Facebook) while taking up resources on the free speech alternatives.
At NOQ Report and Freedom First Network, we do not promote Facebook or YouTube. If anything, we use those anti-American platforms as our dumping grounds and backups as long as they’ll have us, which likely won’t be much longer. We’ve had multiple strikes from both, but since they’re not our primary content venues we aren’t too concerned about when they’re going to ban us. It will happen. It’s just a matter of time.
If you want to support us, please help by signing up for Locals and following us to help us get over the 1000 member threshold. It’s free. You’ll find excellent creators there on top of us, so I encourage you to become members of anyone else you like as well. It’s not a competition. We just want to be able to put our content on the site and start promoting it heavily. Until we have full access, there’s simply no reason for us to promote it like we do with other channels.
The Locals platform is excellent. We are eagerly pressing to get to the 1000-member threshold so we can put all of our content there. Dave Rubin’s team has built something special.
COVID-19 lockdowns are taking down an independent news outlet
Nobody said running a media site would be easy. We could use some help keeping this site afloat.
Colleagues have called me the worst fundraiser ever. My skills are squarely rooted on the journalistic side of running a news outlet. Paying the bills has never been my forte, but we’ve survived. We have ads on the site that help, but since the site’s inception this has been a labor of love that otherwise doesn’t bring in the level of revenue necessary to justify it.
When I left a nice, corporate career in 2017, I did so knowing I wouldn’t make nearly as much money. But what we do at NOQ Report to deliver the truth and fight the progressive mainstream media narrative that has plagued this nation is too important for me to sacrifice it for the sake of wealth. We know we’ll never make a ton of money this way, and we’re okay with that.
Things have become harder with the coronavirus lockdowns. Both ad money and donations that have kept us afloat for a while have dropped dramatically. We thought we could weather the storm, but the resurgence of lockdowns that mainstream media and Democrats are pushing has put our prospects in jeopardy. In short, we are now in desperate need of financial assistance.
The best way NOQ Report readers can help is to donate. Our Giving Fuel page makes it easy to donate one-time or monthly. Alternatively, you can donate through PayPal as well. We need approximately $17,300 to stay afloat through March when we hope the economy will be more open, but more would be wonderful and any amount that brings us closer to our goal is greatly appreciated.
The second way to help is to become a partner. We’ve strongly considered seeking angel investors in the past but because we were paying the bills, it didn’t seem necessary. Now, we’re struggling to pay the bills. This shouldn’t be the case as our traffic the last year has been going up dramatically. June, 2018, we had 11,678 visitors. A year later in June, 2019, we were up to 116,194. In June, 2020, we had 614,192. In November, 2020, we hit 1.2 million visitors.
We’re heading in the right direction and we believe we’re ready talk to patriotic investors who want to not only “get in on the action” but more importantly who want to help America hear the truth. Interested investors should contact me directly with the contact button above.
As the world spirals towards radical progressivism, the need for truthful journalism has never been greater. But in these times, we need as many conservative media voices as possible. Please help keep NOQ Report going.
Join fellow patriots as we form a grassroots movement to advance the cause of conservatism. The coronavirus crisis has prompted many, even some conservatives, to promote authoritarianism. It’s understandable to some extent now, but it must not be allowed to embed itself in American life. We currently have 11,000+ patriots with us in a very short time. If you are interested, please join us to receive updates.
As far as I am concerned, the Republican Party no longer deserves my support. For years, I have fought against “RINOs” as hard as I’ve fought against Democrats because at the end of the day, they’re the same thing. They’re The Swamp. They’re the Uniparty Establishment that pretends to bicker among themselves but invariably agrees to the same failed policies that got us into the various messes we’ve been in since Ronald Reagan left office.
We enjoyed a partial reprieve during President Trump’s first term in the White House. He was not able to drain The Swamp, but he kept The Swamp at bay and took out chunks of their power, if only temporarily. Now that Joe Biden is in office, The Swamp is resurging to its previous form. But things are actually worse than a simple return to the status quo. After four years of Trump, The Swamp is no longer complacent. They’ve seen that their power can be affected if the right person is in the White House so they’re trying to prevent that from happening again. And Mitch McConnell is leading the charge.
I’m not one who gives up easily. Since 2010, I’ve fought to bring about changes in the GOP. I started the American Conservative Movement in hopes that it would fight the onslaught of the Establishment within the GOP, but I quickly shelved it because the Tea Party formed at the same time with more momentum. It was never about personal glory; as long as someone was fighting the good fight, I had no problem being a member of another group rather than a leader in my own group. As the line goes in Pink Floyd’s Wish You Were Here, “did you exchange a walk on part in the war for a lead role in a cage”?
It’s time to face the facts. The GOP may be too far gone to be salvaged. They were able to easily crush the Tea Party in the aftermath of the 2016 election, but most conservatives weren’t too worried because MAGA had essentially replaced it. Two things allowed this to happen: MAGA complacency and the flaws found in disparate Tea Party factions. Now, we have to decide whether to try to fix the GOP or leave it to McConnell and his cronies for now as we play the long game.
To me, it seems apparent that the GOP will not be fixed as long as Mitch McConnell is leading it. The problem lawmakers face is that McConnell may be destroying his own reputation among the conservative base, but he still wields tremendous power over the electoral futures of Republican candidates. His control over various PACs and localized kingmakers means crossing him can be career suicide for both current and future GOP candidates. Some estimates I’ve seen put his fingers in nearly a quarter of the GOP megadonors’ pockets. As long as he controls the GOP purse strings, he controls the electoral narrative.
We are going to relaunch the American Conservative Movement in the coming weeks. We had made the decision last summer to suspend it temporarily so we could focus our efforts on reelecting President Trump and other conservative Republicans. Because its initial revival last year was so close to the election, it could not yield results in time. We need this organization to be playing the long game, but the 2020 election was too crucial for us to spend our efforts building for the years to come. We were needed in the here and now, so we put the ACM on hold.
The GOP has to make a choice. If the greater party structure is going to fall in line with McConnell’s false brand of conservatism, then there’s nothing the Tea Party or the ACM or anyone else can do to fix it from within. And as much as we’d love to look at a new party, the only way that can be successful is if Donald Trump puts all of his weight behind it. If he’s going to try to fix the GOP, as seems to be the case, then the best way we can support him is to leave the GOP altogether until he fixes it. That may sound counterintuitive, but stay with me on it…
Assuming Donald Trump is forming a new faction within the GOP, our support must come in the form of embracing his efforts from the outside. The Republican Establishment will not feel the pressure from us as long as we’re still registered as Republicans. They definitely will not feel the heat as long as our dollars are still flowing to the party and its affiliated PACs. If Donald Trump puts together an official organization, then that will deserve our support. In the meantime, we need to put our time and treasure into outside conservative efforts.
We need to make our voices heard on this issue. That means we need to actively oppose whoever and whatever McConnell supports. Even though the election is just over three months behind us, primary season is already getting started. McConnell will embrace the Establishment Republican candidates he can control, which means we must put all of our support behind conservative candidates who oppose his efforts. As Todd Starnes Tweeted:
Trump supporters are the predominant voice in the Republican Party. They should start acting like it and stop electing leaders who are RINOs.
There is no longer a single GOP. There are McConnellite Establishment Republicans and there are conservatives. The two must remain separate until one of them is abolished. I will not be a Republican under Mitch McConnell.
COVID-19 lockdowns are taking down an independent news outlet
Nobody said running a media site would be easy. We could use some help keeping this site afloat.
Colleagues have called me the worst fundraiser ever. My skills are squarely rooted on the journalistic side of running a news outlet. Paying the bills has never been my forte, but we’ve survived. We have ads on the site that help, but since the site’s inception this has been a labor of love that otherwise doesn’t bring in the level of revenue necessary to justify it.
When I left a nice, corporate career in 2017, I did so knowing I wouldn’t make nearly as much money. But what we do at NOQ Report to deliver the truth and fight the progressive mainstream media narrative that has plagued this nation is too important for me to sacrifice it for the sake of wealth. We know we’ll never make a ton of money this way, and we’re okay with that.
Things have become harder with the coronavirus lockdowns. Both ad money and donations that have kept us afloat for a while have dropped dramatically. We thought we could weather the storm, but the resurgence of lockdowns that mainstream media and Democrats are pushing has put our prospects in jeopardy. In short, we are now in desperate need of financial assistance.
The best way NOQ Report readers can help is to donate. Our Giving Fuel page makes it easy to donate one-time or monthly. Alternatively, you can donate through PayPal as well. We need approximately $17,300 to stay afloat through March when we hope the economy will be more open, but more would be wonderful and any amount that brings us closer to our goal is greatly appreciated.
The second way to help is to become a partner. We’ve strongly considered seeking angel investors in the past but because we were paying the bills, it didn’t seem necessary. Now, we’re struggling to pay the bills. This shouldn’t be the case as our traffic the last year has been going up dramatically. June, 2018, we had 11,678 visitors. A year later in June, 2019, we were up to 116,194. In June, 2020, we had 614,192. In November, 2020, we hit 1.2 million visitors.
We’re heading in the right direction and we believe we’re ready talk to patriotic investors who want to not only “get in on the action” but more importantly who want to help America hear the truth. Interested investors should contact me directly with the contact button above.
As the world spirals towards radical progressivism, the need for truthful journalism has never been greater. But in these times, we need as many conservative media voices as possible. Please help keep NOQ Report going.
Join fellow patriots as we form a grassroots movement to advance the cause of conservatism. The coronavirus crisis has prompted many, even some conservatives, to promote authoritarianism. It’s understandable to some extent now, but it must not be allowed to embed itself in American life. We currently have 11,000+ patriots with us in a very short time. If you are interested, please join us to receive updates.
Joe Biden on Saturday used the third anniversary of the mass shooting at a high school in Parkland, Florida, for his expected call for further restrictions on gun ownership. Unlike many of the actions Biden has taken to date, he indicated he would appeal to Congress for help, not use executive orders for a change.
“The Parkland students and so many other young people across the country who have experienced gun violence are carrying forward the history of the American journey,” he said in a statement. “It is a history written by young people in each generation who challenged prevailing dogma to demand a simple truth: We can do better. And we will.”
He added: “This administration will not wait for the next mass shooting to heed that call. We will take action to end our epidemic of gun violence and make our schools and communities safer. Today, I am calling on Congress to enact commonsense gun law reforms, including requiring background checks on all gun sales, banning assault weapons and high-capacity magazines, and eliminating immunity for gun manufacturers who knowingly put weapons of war on our streets.”
In the afternoon of Feb. 14, 2018, a man identified by authorities as Nikolas Cruz, now 22, walked into Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland and opened fire with an AR-15 rifle. The shooting left 17 dead, including 14 students. Cruz, who is currently awaiting trial, could face the death penalty.
After the shooting, a number of Parkland students and parents began agitating for stricter gun control laws, arguing that Cruz shouldn’t have been able to obtain a gun. But others pointed to failures by law enforcement, including safety officer Scot Peterson, who has pleaded not guilty to criminal charges for not entering the school building to confront Cruz, and have urged restraint on enacting new measures.
White House press secretary Jen Psaki told reporters later that the administration is ready to move on the “ambitious plan” Biden laid out during the campaign – one that called on “confiscation” of guns.
Biden said on his campaign website that he will “defeat” the National Rifle Association. Among his proposed actions are: repealing the Protection of Lawful Commerce in Arms Act, which protects gun manufacturers from some lawsuits; banning so-called assault weapons, as Congress did for 10 years in 1994; and forcing people either to give up certain guns and magazines or register them with the federal government.
The NRA’s lobbying arm has fired back at Biden, saying he wants to ban “America’s most popular class of centerfire rifles, as well on the factory-spec magazines for most of the defensive pistols sold in the U.S.”
“Just as when Joe Biden unsuccessfully pursued gun control as Barack Obama’s vice president, your NRA is fully prepared to oppose whatever plans he may have to ‘defeat’ America’s largest and oldest civil rights organization and the fundamental liberties it protects,” it stated in a recent blog post.
Gun-control advocacy groups are pushing both executive orders and legislative packages they believe will help lead to fewer deaths by gunfire.
While Democrats control both chambers of Congress in addition to the White House, they require some Republican support in the Senate to pass new legislation.
COVID-19 lockdowns are taking down an independent news outlet
Nobody said running a media site would be easy. We could use some help keeping this site afloat.
Colleagues have called me the worst fundraiser ever. My skills are squarely rooted on the journalistic side of running a news outlet. Paying the bills has never been my forte, but we’ve survived. We have ads on the site that help, but since the site’s inception this has been a labor of love that otherwise doesn’t bring in the level of revenue necessary to justify it.
When I left a nice, corporate career in 2017, I did so knowing I wouldn’t make nearly as much money. But what we do at NOQ Report to deliver the truth and fight the progressive mainstream media narrative that has plagued this nation is too important for me to sacrifice it for the sake of wealth. We know we’ll never make a ton of money this way, and we’re okay with that.
Things have become harder with the coronavirus lockdowns. Both ad money and donations that have kept us afloat for a while have dropped dramatically. We thought we could weather the storm, but the resurgence of lockdowns that mainstream media and Democrats are pushing has put our prospects in jeopardy. In short, we are now in desperate need of financial assistance.
The best way NOQ Report readers can help is to donate. Our Giving Fuel page makes it easy to donate one-time or monthly. Alternatively, you can donate through PayPal as well. We need approximately $17,300 to stay afloat through March when we hope the economy will be more open, but more would be wonderful and any amount that brings us closer to our goal is greatly appreciated.
The second way to help is to become a partner. We’ve strongly considered seeking angel investors in the past but because we were paying the bills, it didn’t seem necessary. Now, we’re struggling to pay the bills. This shouldn’t be the case as our traffic the last year has been going up dramatically. June, 2018, we had 11,678 visitors. A year later in June, 2019, we were up to 116,194. In June, 2020, we had 614,192. In November, 2020, we hit 1.2 million visitors.
We’re heading in the right direction and we believe we’re ready talk to patriotic investors who want to not only “get in on the action” but more importantly who want to help America hear the truth. Interested investors should contact me directly with the contact button above.
As the world spirals towards radical progressivism, the need for truthful journalism has never been greater. But in these times, we need as many conservative media voices as possible. Please help keep NOQ Report going.
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47.) ABC
February 15, 2021 – Having trouble viewing this email? Open it in your browser.
Morning Rundown
Lawmakers call for 9/11-style commission to investigate Capitol attack: A little over a month after insurrectionists incited a riot at the Capitol on Jan. 6, former President Donald Trump’s second impeachment trial came to an end on Saturday afternoon, with Trump being acquitted for his alleged role of inciting the deadly event. Fifty-seven senators voted to convict him, including seven GOP senators, but it wasn’t enough to reach the super majority threshold needed to find him guilty. In response to the news, Trump continued to call it the “greatest witch hunt” in U.S. history. Despite the acquittal, lead House Impeachment Manager Jamie Raskin, D-Md., praised Congress and the House managers who worked with him and argued that the Jan. 6 riot was Trump’s final attempt to overturn the presidential election. They claimed he was no innocent bystander, but rather, an insider and the instigator, playing videos of how bad the riot was and how it could have been much worse. Now lawmakers who voted to convict the former president, including Republican senators who crossed party lines and voted with Democrats, are calling for a 9/11-style commission to investigate the Capitol attack. “There should be a complete investigation about what happened on Jan. 6,” said Sen. Bill Cassidy, R-La., who voted to convict Trump, told ABC News’ “This Week.” “[Trump] should be held accountable.”
UK’s robust new quarantine rules start Monday as Oxford begins vaccine study on children: In an effort to see if children have a good immune response to Oxford University’s COVID-19 vaccine, the National Institute for Health Research and AstraZeneca started a vaccine study to include children — some as young as 6. Oxford said in a press release that 300 volunteers will be enrolled in the study — 240 of them will receive the ChAdOx1 nCoV-19 vaccine and the remainder a control meningitis vaccine, “which has been shown to be safe in children but is expected to produce similar reactions, such as a sore arm.” This comes as the U.K.’s new “robust” quarantine rules are implemented today, in which travelers from so-called “red-list” countries, including South Africa, Brazil and Portugal, will be forced to quarantine inside government designated hotels as an effort to help slow the spread of COVID-19. “With the emergence of new variants, we must go further,” Health and Social Care Secretary Matt Hancock said. “The rules coming into force today will bolster the quarantine system and provide another layer of security against new variants at the border.” Travelers who breach these new rules could face hefty fines or even prison sentences.
Prince Harry, Duchess Meghan expecting 2nd child: Archie, the son of Prince Harry and Meghan, the Duke and Duchess of Sussex, is going to be a big brother. On Valentine’s Day, Harry and Meghan announced that they are expecting their second child. “The Duke and Duchess of Sussex are overjoyed,” said a spokesperson for Harry and Meghan. The Sussexes shared the news of the pregnancy by also releasing a photo of Meghan resting her head on Harry’s lap. The couple’s second child will be the fifth grandchild for Prince Charles and the 10th great-grandchild for Queen Elizabeth. The baby is expected to be born in California, where Harry, Meghan and Archie moved in early 2020 after Harry and Meghan stepped down as senior working members for Britain’s royal family.
5-year-old with cystic fibrosis asks for stickers and cards as he fights COVID-19: Five-year-old Noah Schneider of Yuba City, California, is requesting people send him stickers and notes of encouragement as he battles COVID-19. Noah, who was born with cystic fibrosis — a life-threatening disease that damages the lungs, digestive system and other organs — tested positive for the virus on Dec. 30. He was admitted to Sutter Medical Center Children’s Center, where he’s received medical support for the past three years. “He is an amazing little fighter,” said DeeDee Rodigo, a child life specialist at Sutter. Since being admitted to Sutter, Noah has received antiviral drug treatments, convalescent plasma treatments and has been placed on a ventilator. During his time there, his mom, Haley Schneider, said that receiving mail with stickers has lifted his spirits. “He loves getting them. He asks almost every day, ‘Did I get a package?’” said Haley. Now, Noah’s hoping that more people send snail mail with stickers his way. Click here to learn how you can send mail to Noah.
GMA Must-Watch
This morning on “GMA,” Awkwafina will join us to talk about her new Disney+ film, “Raya and the Last Dragon,” the first to feature a Southeast Asian Disney princess. And Kevin James will talk about his new Netflix series, “The Crew.” Plus, award-winning podcast host Zibby Owens is out with her new book, “Moms Don’t Have Time To: A Quarantine Anthology,” which includes essays from authors about life during quarantine. And don’t miss our interview with NBA legend Michael Jordan and NASCAR star Bubba Wallace, whose 23XI Racing made its Daytona 500 debut on Sunday. All this and more only on “GMA.”
Happy Presidents Day! Today we are looking at the effects of remote learning and what lies ahead for former President Donald Trump — and the GOP — after his Senate acquittal.
Here is what we’re watching this Monday morning.
Remote students are more stressed than their peers in the classroom, study shows
As debates rage across the country over whether schools should teach online or in person, students have experienced both the pros and cons of remote learning—feeling safer at home but also being worn down by online classes.
There’s no question that the pandemic has been hard on children, whether or not their schools have reopened. A flood of research in recent months has found alarming spikes in depression and anxiety among children and their parents. Multiple studies have found that students — especially those with disabilities and from low-income families — are learning less than they should.
But a new study from NBC News and Challenge Success, a nonprofit affiliated with the Stanford Graduate School of Education, is one of the first to shed light on the differences between students whose classes have been exclusively online and those who’ve been able to attend in person at least one day per week.
The survey of more than 10,000 students in 12 U.S. high schools found that students who’d spent time in the classroom reported lower rates of stress and worry than their online peers.
The report comes after the CDC unveiled its roadmap for reopening the nation’s schools Friday. Here’s how teachers responded.
All this week, make sure to tune in to “NBC Nightly News with Lester Holt” and the “TODAY” show for more on “Kids Under Pressure,” a series examining the impact of the pandemic on children.
However, the decision by most GOP senators to acquit Trump in the 57-43 vote on a charge of incitement of insurrection demonstrates the deep hesitation among Republicans to disown the former president or his brand of politics. This comes despite Trump’s role in the deadly Jan. 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol in a failed attempt by his supporters to overturn his defeat in the election. For now, Trumpism is here to stay.
Meanwhile the rapid acquittal allows President Joe Biden to move ahead on the promises that got him elected: a Covid-19 relief bill and an infrastructure package.
Ivanka Trump and Jared Kushner refused salaries while working in the White House. But that didn’t stop the couple from making millions during their stint in Washington, Jordan Libowitz, communications director for Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington, writes in an opinion piece.
“Human happiness and moral duty are inseparably connected.”
— George Washington wrote in a letter addressed to the Protestant Episcopal Church, the new name of the American branch of the Anglican Church, on Aug 19, 1789. Today the nation celebrates his birthday.
One fun thing
Love still manages to find a way during the Covid-19 pandemic. Listen to how couples across the U.S. found love during a time when human interaction has been severely limited.
From NBC’s Chuck Todd, Mark Murray, Carrie Dann and Melissa Holzberg
FIRST READ: Acquittal means Trump will loom large in upcoming electoral contests
In the end, just seven out of 50 Republican senators – 14 percent – voted to convict Donald Trump of inciting the Jan. 6 riot at the Capitol, leading to his acquittal in his second impeachment trial and once again demonstrating his powerful hold over the GOP.
It all but guarantees that Trump – and Trumpism – will be a dominant force in the next round of political races, both in determining GOP nominees and in providing potential fodder for Democrats in general election contests.
REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst/File Photo
In this year’s Virginia’s gubernatorial contest, will the pro-Trump Amanda Chase win the GOP nomination? (As of now, Virginian Republicans are slated to pick their nominee at a convention instead of a primary.) And how will memories of Trump play in the November election, especially in the electorally crucial Northern Virginia suburbs?
After retiring Sen. Richard Burr, R-N.C., voted to convict Trump (and now faces a censure vote), is Trump daughter-in-law Lara Trumpreally going to run in next year’s North Carolina Senate contest to fill Burr’s seat? “My friend Richard Burr just made Lara Trump almost the certain nominee for the Senate seat in North Carolina to replace him if she runs,” Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., said yesterday.
Do Liz Cheney of Wyoming and Lisa Murkowski of Alaska survive GOP primaries in these two red states?
Which GOP candidate has the edge to replace retiring Sen Rob Portman, R-Ohio, in the Buckeye State? (Is it the pro-Trump Josh Mandel?) And do Democrats have a chance of making Ohio, where Joe Biden lost by 8 points, competitive?
Who will Republicans choose as their nominee in the Pennsylvania Senate race to fill retiring Sen. Pat Toomey’s, R-Pa., seat? (Toomey, like Burr, voted to convict.)
In Georgia, will Trump’s revenge against sitting Republican Gov. Brian Kemp pay off? Or will it backfire in a state where the GOP has now lost a presidential contest, plus two Senate seats. (In 2022, it’s incredibly likely we’ll see a Dem ticket of Raphael Warnock and Stacey Abrams.)
In Michigan, who comes out on top in the GOP primary for the right to take on Dem Gov. Gretchen Whitmer?
Who wins the gubernatorial contest in Maine? (The pro-Trump Paul LePage is back!)
And don’t forget about next year’s gubernatorial race in Wisconsin, where almost every statewide general-election contest gets decided by the narrowest of margins.
Here’s something to remember about Trump’s role in these upcoming contests: He no longer has a Twitter account, he holds no office of power, he remains in potential legal jeopardy, and he’s forever associated with a deeply unpopular event.
But here’s something else to remember: Midterm elections TYPICALLY are heavily dependent on attitudes about the SITTING president. And we still have more than 600 days until Election Day 2022.
TWEET OF THE DAY: Passing the 5th Avenue test
Data Download: The numbers you need to know today
One out of seven: The number of Senate Republicans who voted to find Trump guilty in the impeachment trial who are expected to be on the ballot in 2022.
58 percent: The share of Americans who say Trump should have been convicted, per a new ABC poll.
27,756,993: The number of confirmed cases of coronavirus in the United States, per the most recent data from NBC News and health officials. (That’s 248,723 more than Friday morning.)
487,295: The number of deaths in the United States from the virus so far, per the most recent data from NBC News. (That’s 10,055 more than Friday morning.)
67,023: The number of people currently hospitalized with coronavirus in the United States.
335.0 million: The number of coronavirus tests that have been administered in the United States so far, according to researchers at The COVID Tracking Project.
52,884,356: Total vaccine doses administered in the U.S.
14,077,440: People fully vaccinated
73: The number of days left for Biden to reach his 100-day vaccination goal.
A status update on Biden’s Cabinet
Heading into his fourth full week in office, here’s an update on President Joe Biden’s Cabinet team:
Nominee with pending confirmation hearings (1)
Attorney General nominee Merrick Garland (Feb. 22 and 23)
Nominees with pending confirmation votes (9)
Gina Raimondo (Commerce)
Jennifer Granholm (Energy)
Linda Thomas-Greenfield (U.N. Ambassador)
Marcia Fudge (HUD)
Thomas Vilsack (Agriculture)
Miguel Cardona (Education)
Marty Walsh (Labor)
Michael Regan (EPA)
Neera Tanden (OMB)
Nominees who haven’t had confirmation hearings (3)
Xavier Becerra (HHS)
Deb Haaland (Interior)
Katherina Tai (U.S. Trade Rep.)
Confirmed nominees (7)
Tony Blinken (State)
Janet Yellen (Treasury)
Lloyd Austin (Defense)
Alejandro Mayorkas (DHS)
Pete Buttigieg (Transportation)
Avril Haines (DNI)
Denis McDonough (Veterans Affairs)
ICYMI: What ELSE is happening in the world?
Jamie Raskin told one of us that, although Trump was acquitted in the Senate, he was found guilty “in the court of public opinion and the court of history.”
Democrats are defending their last-minute call not to bring witnesses in the impeachment trial.
Some GOP leaders outside of DC are pushing for Biden’s big coronavirus relief package.
White House deputy press secretary TJ Ducklo is out after revelations that he threatened and harassed a female reporter.
How special is the U.S.-U.K. “special relationship” these days?
The CDC is defending its recommendations for school reopenings.
Donald Trump was acquitted of another impeachment on Saturday. Also, the sky was blue. If it rained near you, that rain was most likely wet. Joe Biden probably sat in the oval office waiting for Ba … MORE
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55.) REALCLEARPOLITICS MORNING NOTE
02/15/2021
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Carl Cannon’s Morning Note
Drawing Lines; the Hashtag Mob; RCP Takeaway
By Carl M. Cannon on Feb 15, 2021 08:42 am
Good morning, it’s Monday, Feb. 15, 2021. The second impeachment trial of Donald J. Trump ended up the same as the first — with an acquittal — although this time seven Republicans joined a unanimous Democratic caucus instead of just one. Viewed as a geometric progression, it suggests Trump wouldn’t survive a third impeachment. Let’s hope it doesn’t come to that.
Speaking of which: Today is a federal holiday, Presidents Day. Once upon a time, this nation celebrated George Washington’s birthday on Feb. 22. Abraham Lincoln (Feb. 12) was added to the mix in the 19th and 20th century, primarily as a state holiday, although not in the Deep South. Making things more generic was a function of The Uniform Holiday Act of 1968, which stipulated that a number of federal holidays would always be marked — with a day off — on Mondays. It was passed with Republican and Democratic Party support, backed by organized labor as well as business groups.
The few naysayers were historic purists, and there has never been a critical mass of those. President Lyndon Baines Johnson had a message for them anyway: “Come on, y’all — think how happy this will make school kids!” I paraphrase, perhaps too liberally. Here is what LBJ actually said upon signing the bill:
“This will mean a great deal to our families and our children. It will enable families who live some distance apart to spend more time together. Americans will be able to travel farther and see more of this beautiful land of ours. They will be able to participate in a wider range of recreational and cultural activities.”
And with that, I’ll steer you to RCP’s front page, which presents our poll averages, videos, breaking news stories, and aggregated opinion columns spanning the political spectrum. Today’s edition features pieces by Rep. Tom McClintock on the social and economic costs of extended lockdowns (Washington Examiner), Charisse Jones on the deleterious mental health effects of social isolation (USA Today), Ben Smith with an explainer on the ongoing drama within the New York Times (NYT), and the Rev. William Barber, who casts the fight for a $15 minimum wage as a matter of racial justice (In These Times.) We also offer original material from our own reporters, columnists, and contributors this morning, including the following:
* * *
Gerrymandering Is Not an Existential Threat to Democrats. Bill Scher reminds his party that lines drawn in one year can’t anticipate demographic shifts and reversed political winds in future years.
The Mob Came for Gina Carano With Hashtags & Hate. Frank Miele considers the implications of the latest example of cancel culture.
RCP Takeaway. In the latest podcast episode, Mollie Hemingway joins Andy Walworth, Tom Bevan and me in discussing impeachment, Bruce Springsteen, and Andrew Cuomo.
PA Suburbs Signal a National “Eds-and-Meds” Realignment. Charles F. McElwee examines demographic trends in Wyomissing, near Reading, that could be cause for concern among Republicans elsewhere.
How Biden Can Build on the Abraham Accords. Peter Berkowitz explains how last summer’s breakthrough provides a chance to “shrink” the conflict in the Middle East and incrementally improve Palestinian lives while preserving Israeli security.
I Will Take on Wall Street to Protect Alaska. Gov. Mike Dunleavy warns that environmental pressures are redirecting energy investment away from his state and toward foreign producers that pollute more.
Pushing “Equity” Under the Guise of “Unity.” Mike Gonzalez writes that President Biden’s declared interest in fostering national harmony has been undercut by his executive orders.
A Data-Based View of Legalized Cannabis Use. Eric Spitz spotlights numbers that he believes will overcome generations of scaremongering.
Biden’s Budgetary Choice. At RealClearPolicy, James C. Capretta urges the president to consider how the federal government will ever pay back, or even service, its accumulated (and skyrocketing) debt.
Biden’s Offshore Oil & Gas Pause Undercuts Emissions Progress. At RealClearEnergy, Erik Milito argues that the industry has a demonstrable track record of innovation in reducing carbon emissions.
Good morning. It’s Monday, Feb. 15, and we’re covering the conclusion of the Senate impeachment trial, the push to reopen schools, and more. Have feedback? Let us know at hello@join1440.com.
The Senate acquitted former President Donald Trump over the weekend of charges that he incited the Jan. 6 storming of the US Capitol building. The 57-43 vote fell short of the two-thirds majority needed to convict. Seven Republican senators—Sens. Bill Cassidy (LA), Richard Burr (NC), Lisa Murkowski (AK), Susan Collins (ME), Mitt Romney (UT), Ben Sasse (NE), and Pat Toomey (PA)—joined all 50 Democrats in voting to convict.
The vote came after the former president’s defense team rested their case Friday, using roughly three of their 16 allotted hours. The defense primarily relied on constitutional and free speech arguments, including a nine-minute montage (w/video) of past fiery rhetoric from Democrats—an effort to draw a parallel with a Jan. 6 speech by Trump that preceded the storming of the Capitol building.
Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY) voted to acquit, while following the decision with a speech (watch here) asserting Trump was “morally responsible” for the events of Jan. 6. McConnell said he believed the Constitution prohibited the Senate from convicting a president who had already left office.
See former President Trump’s statement following his acquittal here.
CDC Calls to Reopen Schools
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has issued a much-anticipated roadmap for reopening schools. The recommendations state that with proper mitigation measures, including face masks and social distancing, elementary schools may safely reopen regardless of the level of community transmission of the coronavirus. Middle and high schools may safely reopen except in the highest levels of viral spread. Dig into the details of the report here.
The news comes as the average of new daily cases in the US fell below 100,000 for the first time since Nov. 4 (see data). Test positivity—the share of total tests returned as positive—is just under 6%, down from nearly 14% in early January (see data).
A record 5,436 deaths were reported in the US Friday, bringing the total to 485,336, though the number of patients hospitalized with illness is just under 70,000, down 45% since mid-January (see data). More than 52 million vaccine doses have been administered—including a record 2.2 million given Saturday alone—with 14 million people receiving their second shot.
Newsom Recall
A push to recall California Gov. Gavin Newsom has collected enough signatures to potentially trigger a special election, organizers announced over the weekend. The drive surpassed the nearly 1.5 million name threshold, though the signatures must now be validated by the California secretary of state—a previous review yielded a 25% disqualification rate. Organizers have until March 17 to collect enough valid signatures.
Newsom’s critics argue the state’s COVID-19 response has been overly restrictive, and the governor drew backlash late last year for violating the measures during an upscale dinner at Napa Valley’s French Laundry. If the recall drive is successful, a special election would likely be held in May or early June.
On the other side of the country, New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo faces new allegations his administration obscured data on nursing home deaths early in the pandemic. A recent report found patients who died from COVID-19 after being taken from nursing homes to hospitals were not tallied in the state’s breakout of nursing home deaths.
Know someone who needs impartial news? Send them our way.
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>The Duke and Duchess of Sussex, Prince Harry and Meghan Markle, announce they’re expecting their second child (More)
>Justin Timberlake offers apology to Janet Jackson and Britney Spears for past mistreatment stating, “I failed”(More) | What’s going on with the #FreeBritney movement?(More)
>Michael McDowell wins his first-ever Daytona 500 after navigating past a fiery multicar wreck in the final lap(More) | Around 30,000 fans attended the race, the most for a US sporting event since the pandemic began(More)
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Science & Technology
>Stonehenge may have been built from a similar disassembled monument in ancient Wales, new study suggests (More)
>Appetite-regulating drug shows unprecedented success in reducing obesity; the study, published in the prominent New England Journal of Medicine, saw one-third of trial participants lose more than 20% of their body weight (More)
>Lemur study reveals the brain circuitry responsible for monogamous behavior in some animals varies widely from species to species; only 3%-5% of mammal species practice the behavior (More)
Business & Markets
>Group of 21 retail and pharmacy chains, including Walmart, CVS, and Walgreens, begin to administer COVID-19 vaccines under a new federal government program (More)
>Coupang—known as the “Amazon of South Korea”—files for initial public offering on the New York Stock Exchange; analysts expect company could raise $1B at near a $50B valuation (More)
>American gun manufacturer Colt, founded in 1855, acquired by Czech firearm company for $220M (More)
Politics & World Affairs
>A 7.3 magnitude earthquake strikes off the coast of Fukushima, Japan; an estimated 900,000 homes damaged, but no deaths reported (More) | See photos (More)
>Ebola outbreak declared in Guinea, with at least three people killed so far; the West African country was the origin of a 2013-16 outbreak that killed more than 11,000 people (More)
>White House Deputy Press Secretary TJ Ducklo resigns following reports he threatened a female journalist for reporting on his relationship with a separate journalist (More) | Background here (More)
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Historybook: Astronomer Galileo Galilei born (1564); Women’s rights activist Susan B. Anthony born (1820); RIP musician Nat King Cole (1965); Soviet-Afghan War ends as all Soviet troops depart Afghanistan (1989); Millions of people in 600 cities protest Iraq War (2003).
“People don’t slip. Time catches up with them.”
– Nat King Cole
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On the menu today: You can tell it’s a Monday already. Impeachment ends with a whimper, not a bang, as the Senate is gift-wrapped a bombshell witness but bizarrely chooses to skip over her; CDC director Rochelle Walensky changes her recommendations for reopening schools after meeting with teachers; and a teachers’ union representative argues that plummeting test scores are nothing to worry about.
The Failure of Impeachment, Again
At this point, the second impeachment of Donald Trump over his actions leading up to and during the January 6 Capitol Hill riot generated just about the worst possible outcome. The former president is acquitted again, his fans are outraged that he was tried again, and his foes are outraged that he was acquitted again. The capstone to the debacle arrived Saturday with an inexplicable decision by senators to not hear from any witnesses right after a majority voted to hear witnesses, ensuring that the few Republicans who stood up to Trump or voted for witnesses went out on a limb, and will now face the full wrath of Trump and his supporters, for absolutely nothing.
Chillingly powerful and heartbreakingly candid, The Dissident is an intimate portrait of a man who sacrificed everything for freedom of speech. With this cogent film, Fogel joins a cadre of dreamers across the globe who refuse to squelch the life’s work of an intrepid rebel, who, even after death, is defying those who sought to silence him forever.
News in the Trump years became a narrative drama, with each day advancing a tale of worsening political emergency, driven by subplots involving familiar casts of characters, in the manner of episodic television. It worked, but news directors and editors hit a stumbling block. If you cover everything like there’s no tomorrow, what happens when there is, in fact, a tomorrow?
This seemingly endless COVID pandemic is causing immense stress for millions of ordinary Americans. In past articles, I have discussed the fact that surveys have shown that Americans are drinking more alcohol and taking more drugs during this pandemic.
Throughout human history, our God-given liberties and freedoms have often been brutally crushed by oppressive governments, and that is still happening all over the world today. But in our time, an additional threat to our liberties and freedoms has emerged.
President Joe Biden has released a statement allowing a closer look at what his “commonsense” policy on gun laws will be, demanding, among other things, that Congress pass universal background checks and ban “assault weapons.”
Myanmar’s military coup leaders are lashing out at both world powers and the domestic public, including national media, over this month’s dramatic events there being widely dubbed a coup d’état.
Surveillance cameras already dot or blanket major cities, but it’s not necessarily easy to continuously track a person or object moving through multiple locations and cameras. Now researchers from the Indian Institute of Science are applying advanced artificial intelligence algorithms to this complex challenge, creating a software platform called Anveshak — Hindi for “investigator” — that simultaneously manages the specifics of tracking and the larger issue of working within a city’s limited computing resources.
Weather forecast models suggest the polar vortex will continue pouring Arctic air into much of the central US through Feb. 20. This means nat gas prices could rise even higher early next week as electricity demand continues to soar over the weekend as Americans crank up their thermostats and watch Netflix shows or mine Bitcoin.
Former President Trump was acquitted in an unprecedented second impeachment trial on the charge of inciting an insurrection for the Jan. 6 Capitol riot, making him the first and only president to be impeached and acquitted twice in history.
A peer-reviewed study contends the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention violated federal law by inflating Coronavirus fatality numbers. The figures were inflated by at least 1,600%, according to the Public Health Initiative of the Institute for Pure and Applied Knowledge, which published the study, titled “COVID-19 Data Collection, Comorbidity & Federal Law: A Historical Retrospective.”
Multiple reports from last month indicated that GOP senators approved of Donald Trump’s impeachment trial as a way to effectively blackmail the president into not pardoning Julian Assange.
These culture warriors are collectively making a clear statement: Personal privacy is dangerous, official secrecy is not. They seek total transparency when it comes to our personal beliefs and opinions, and oppose it for governments or tech monopolies…
We all know that this global pandemic has had devastating consequences for everyone around the globe – not only in terms of related deaths, but significantly in terms of economic devastation and the ability for people to go to work, lead “normal” lives, travel freely, enjoy the company of their friends and family, and so on.
The CIA’s brazen collaboration with dangerous extremist factions seeking to topple Damascus, and its equally brazen refusal to provide the public with any information about the extent of its involvement in Syria from the earliest stages of the violence in that nation onwards, will necessarily provide fodder for conspiracy theories.
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Germany ratifies Bill Gates agenda for global depopulation
The German parliament has now ratified “Agenda ID2020,” part of the global depopulation “Mark of the Beast” tracking system that will surveil all citizens as world governments roll out global genocide.
First you’re tracked. Then you’re whacked and stacked. The Bill Gates-endorsed system is all about making sure everyone complies with the vaccines, lockdowns and travel restrictions that now characterize the depopulation agenda.
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Welcome to the Monday edition of the Internet Insider, where we dissect the weekend online. Today:
TikToker gives husband Valentine’s gift featuring Instagram girls whose photos he liked
People are pissed after seeing TikTok of Amazon driver skidding on ice
This doctor was charged with stealing 10 doses of the COVID vaccine. A judge said he didn’t do anything wrong
BREAK THE INTERNET
TikToker gives husband Valentine’s gift featuring Instagram girls he ‘liked’
Relationships have their ups and downs. And, unfortunately, we saw more instances of downs than ups this Valentine’s Day weekend.
One TikToker shared the story of how her boyfriend bought an urn and told people she was dead so that he could get away with cheating on her. He needed a good excuse as to why “there’s still pictures of me up in our house and why there’s womanly decor.”
Another TikTok user said she gifted her husband an arrangement featuring all the Instagram girls whose pictures he’s ever liked. People found the gift to be extremely petty but nevertheless creative, with one saying the viral video made them “glad” to be single. And another woman found out her now-ex was cheating on her after noticing a woman on Facebook was wearing her engagement ring.
Let’s hope your Valentine’s weekend was spent better—and with less-villainous partners at that.
Here’s why you still need to wear a mask even if you’ve received the coronavirus vaccine
Now that several vaccines are in distribution, it may seem like we can finally start to take off our masks and get back to normal. I hate to be the bearer of bad news, but it’s actually more crucial than ever that we wear them after we get vaccinated (and that the ones we wear protect us properly). We’ll explain the reasons why and break it down for you.
‘My package could have waited’: People are pissed after seeing TikTok of Amazon driver skidding on ice
A viral TikTok video is sparking discourse about the tradeoff between worker safety and customer convenience after an Amazon driver was seen skidding on an icy road.
The footage, filmed in Texas, shows the driver struggling to control his vehicle due to wintery conditions.
While the video is presented in a humorous manner, commenters are questioning whether quickly receiving a package is worth the cost of endangering Amazon employees. “I would GLADLY receive a message saying my package was delayed due to inclement weather,” @lil_crabster_babster said. “If it’s too dangerous it’s too dangerous.”
Others noted that the footage, which has been seen more than 3.3 million times so far, should be taken seriously given that at least six people died in a 133-car pileup due to icy roads in Texas on Thursday.
Amazon has long been accused of placing profits above the wellbeing of its workers, whether in its sorting facilities or on the road. While the company has undoubtedly helped millions with its fast delivery, especially during the coronavirus pandemic, it may have come at the cost of shuttering retail shops across America and Amazon workers’ wellbeing.
This doctor was charged with stealing 10 doses of the COVID vaccine. A judge said he didn’t do anything wrong
Dr. Hasan Gokal was assisting in a county vaccination event in late December when, near the end of the day, a patient came in for a vaccine. Forced to open a new vial of vaccines to administer the dose, Gokal was left with 10 vaccine doses and no one left in line. The doses become unusable six hours after being opened, giving the Texas doctor very little time to use the vaccines.
In an interview with the New York Times, he said he asked around the vaccination site, and after finding no one in need of a shot, he began seeking eligible people in his community. He managed to use all 10 doses before they expired. In response, he was fired from his job and charged with stealing 10 vaccine doses, a misdemeanor.
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Those senators with presidential aspirations. You failed the test, he will be your ruin and your hypocrisy will find you out. Good job. We need and want leadership.
By the way, the 6:30am delivery time is so much better than 7:00am.