Good morning! Here is your news briefing for Thursday February 18, 2021
1.) THE DAILY SIGNAL
February 18 2021
Good morning from Washington, where we’re mourning the loss of radio giant Rush Limbaugh at the golden microphone. Our Pete Parisi has an appreciation. While New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo casts blame for a mounting COVID-19 death toll for the elderly, Fred Lucas breaks down the questions about the state’s role. On “Problematic Women,” Heritage Foundation scholar Melanie Israel previews the Biden administration’s brewing abortion battles. Plus: those Texas power outages, and Parler makes a comeback as a Twitter competitor. Twenty years ago today, NASCAR racing great Dale Earnhardt Sr., 49, dies in a last-lap crash at the 43rd Daytona 500 in Florida.
Despite a rising death toll during the pandemic, Gov. Andrew Cuomo spent much of 2020 doing a victory lap after writing a book extolling the job he did.
The Born-Alive Act simply says that a baby who survives an abortion deserves the same degree of medical care as any other newborn, write Reps. Ann Wagner and Steve Scalise.
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“I predict future happiness for Americans, if they can prevent the government from wasting the labors of the people under the pretense of taking care of them.”
Let’s face it: There’s a lot to worry about these days if you hope to protect your hard-earned savings and retire comfortably.…In 2021, the question is—what will the IRA’s, 401(k)’s, savings, pensions and retirement plans look like when the dust settles? Retirement accounts, savings accounts, and financial portfolios are at the mercy of ever-growing global turmoil and dramatic political change. The good news: Gold dramatically outperformed other safe havens in 2020 and has officially become, “the currency of last resort.” Help Protect Your Retirement with a Home Delivery Gold IRA.
“Communism has a negative reputation in the West, so lying is its only means of expanding its influence. Some politicians promote policies that are basically communist but come packaged under another name, using slogans like ‘freedom,’ ‘progress,’ and ‘the public interest.'”
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3.) DAYBREAK
Your First Look at Today’s Top Stories – Daybreak Insider
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His wife announced his death on his radio show (Fox News). John Fund looks at the rise of Limbaugh (National Review). From the Wall Street Journal editorial board: We recall how bracing the Rush Limbaugh Show was in its early days. For decades the airwaves had been governed by the Fairness Doctrine, a federal regulation requiring stations to balance “controversial” claims with “contrasting viewpoints.” The rule gave incumbent candidates and mainstream news outlets a near-monopoly on public discourse. Ronald Reagan scrapped the Fairness Doctrine in 1987. By the 1992 presidential campaign, the radio star’s first name was known across the U.S. Limbaugh, whose show ran on weekdays from noon to 3 p.m. East Coast time, was invaluable to the conservative movement in the 1990s. He would spend an hour explaining supply-side tax policy or making the case for deregulation. Millions of Americans had never heard a coherent argument against the welfare state or Roe v. Wade until they tuned in to Limbaugh’s show. He played an enormous role in popularizing conservative ideas and policies (WSJ). Conservatives quickly went public, mourning the loss (Washington Times). Shockingly, many progressives openly celebrated moments after his death was announced. Professors were some of the worst offenders (Daily Wire).
2.
Conservatives Light Up Twitter with Limbaugh Tributes
From Steve Scalise: Rush Limbaugh was an American icon who brought conservatism into the mainstream—and our country is a better place because of his profound voice. He leaves behind an incredible legacy. Please join me in praying for his family (Twitter). From Lyndsey Fifield: Some of my earliest childhood memories have Rush Limbaugh playing as a soundtrack in the car or blaring from a radio in my parent’s office. I won’t let his memory be sullied by people who never listened to anything he said except to weaponize or mock it—and neither should you (Twitter). From Ben Shapiro: RIP Rush Limbaugh, the creator of talk radio and by extension the alternative media, an indispensable and iconic conservative voice (Twitter). From Kimberly Strassel: Growing up in rural Oregon, my dad had Rush on every day at his small business, and I’d listen. That makes me a Rush “baby.” Rush inspired millions to embrace politics, and think through debates. The U.S. lost a powerful voice today. Rest in Peace, Rush (Twitter). From Katie Pavlich: Rush Limbaugh was a titan. What a devastating loss for our country. Rest in peace and thank you (Twitter). From David Harsanyi: Hard to explain how important Rush was to conservatism pre-Internet age (Twitter). From Sean Davis: Rush Limbaugh was the greatest broadcaster in history. The man created an industry from nothing and in the process taught several generations of Americans about the virtues of freedom and liberty. He was a giant, irreplaceable, a legend who made this country immeasurably better (Twitter). From Ed Morrisey: A devastating loss to our industry. And a personal loss for those of us who were fortunate enough to know him, even just a little. He went way out of his way to be a friend to me (Twitter). From Sean Spicer: The conservative movement wouldn’t have grown the way it did without Rush. Off the radio he was kind and generous in ways that will likely never be fully recognized or appreciated. 70 is way to soon. Prayers to the Limbaugh family (Twitter). From Erick Erickson: I literally would not be doing what I’m doing except for Rush Limbaugh’s insistence. I owe him so much and am so sad at his passing (Twitter). From Hugh Hewitt: RIP Rush. One of the great gentlemen of the business. When I began on AM 640 on the weekends LA in 1990, Rush was already huge —a phenomenon. He cut promos for me as he did for many broadcasters at the start of the industry. Never stopped being a professional’s professional (Twitter). From Brit Hume: RIP. More than any single person, Rush Limbaugh helped break the left’s monopoly in the media. The left is still dominant, but not to the extent it was before he came along. He waged a brave struggle against deafness and later, the cancer that killed him. He was a giant (Twitter). From the Heritage Foundation: Last year we presented Rush Limbaugh with our inaugural Titan of Conservatism Award—and we will honor the famed broadcaster by naming our new state-of-the-art studios the Rush Limbaugh Radio Studios to ensure his legacy continues to shape future generations (Twitter). From Nikki Haley: Rush Limbaugh was one of the most influential conservative voices America has ever known. His legacy and the movement he created will live on for years to come. Rest in Peace, Rush (Twitter). From Mollie Hemingway: Love you, Rush! The greatest radio man in history. An absolute master of the craft. And a brilliant hero to many. If you didn’t listen to him, or only heard him in selectively edited snippets from the hostile media, you won’t understand (Twitter). From Governor Kristi Noem: Rush Limbaugh was the conservative movement’s 5-Star General. He educated millions on what it means to be a conservative and how to fight with grace and passion for what we believe in. He will be missed (Twitter). From David Limbaugh: Im not ready to speak yet but I Im so proud of my amazing, loving brother. Thousands of you have shared how much he meant to you. My brother was the real deal. I can’t describe how sad I am but also how proud I am of my big brother. I love and adore you Rush. Thank you all (Twitter).
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3.
Governor Cuomo Accused of Threatening Lawmakers Who Don’t Back Him
From Ed Morrissey: Cuomo has begun threatening his Democratic allies to keep them from turning on him in the nursing-home scandal engulfing his administration (Hot Air). The FBI is now investigating (Fox News). From John Fund: If the liberal media were fair they would put out this is the kind of behavior they always decried in Trump. Until very recently, they’ve treated Cuomo with kid gloves (Twitter). CNN, finally, says Chris Cuomo is no longer allowed to interview his corrupt brother (Washington Examiner). One man explains how Cuomo’s New York system killed his mother (WSJ).
4.
Study Finds Link Between Social Media and Suicide Among Teen Girls
The story is an interview with Dr. Sarah Coyne, a professor and researcher. Right away, she explains “what we found was, for girls only at about age 13, if they’re starting at 2 to 3 hours of social media use a day and that increases over time, over the next 10 years, this group has the highest level of suicide risk in emerging adulthood.”
FIRE Puts Out List of Worst Colleges for Free Speech
They list ten colleges that “went out of their way to threaten student journalists, dismiss professors for protected speech, render a student homeless during a pandemic for his speech, and refuse club recognition for groups just because of their viewpoint.”
Larry Elder Dismantles the Reparations Bill at Congressional Hearing
He took advantage of his 5 minutes (plus) to show how completely able blacks are and have been for some time. He rattles off stats and facts at an amazing rate.
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Would you mind if we begin with a personal appeal?
We weren’t going to sell Girl Scout Cookies this year. It just didn’t seem fair and the ability to do the things we loved most about Girl Scout Cookies was taken away by COVID. Yet, Ella continued to ask us about selling Girl Scout Cookies. In fact, she begged us to let her sell them.
The truth is she just wanted to hold on to something normal in this abnormal school year. Ella is full Schorsch and full of goals and determination. So here we are, selling Girl Scout Cookies again.
Unfortunately, we can’t deliver them in person, so all orders have to be placed for direct shipping. And we know we’re late to the cookie game. But can you help a girl reach her goals and buy a few boxes?
It’s Girl Scout Cookie time! You know you want some. Thank you!
Situational awareness
—@SenRickScott: Rest In Peace, Rush Limbaugh. His legacy as a monumental figure in radio, iconic voice for conservatives, and devoted advocate for the First Amendment will live on. My prayers are with his family during this difficult time.
Tweet, tweet:
—@StephHayes: Remember a year ago when it would have been mildly alarming to see someone at the store with a skull gaiter pulled up to his eyeballs?
Days until
‘Nomadland’ with Frances McDormand — 1; The CW’s ‘Superman & Lois’ premieres — 5; the 2021 Conservative Political Action Conference begins — 7; Pitchers and catchers report to Spring Training, with exhibition games starting — 9; 2021 Legislative Session begins — 12; Florida TaxWatch 2021 State of the Taxpayer virtual event — 15; ‘Coming 2 America’ premieres on Amazon Prime — 15; municipal elections in Broward and south Palm Beach County — 19; ‘The Many Saints of Newark’ premieres — 22; 2021 Grammys — 24; Zack Snyder’s ‘Justice League’ premieres on HBO Max — 28; ‘Godzilla vs. Kong’ premieres — 36; MLB Opening Day — 42; ‘No Time to Die’ premieres (rescheduled) — 43; ‘Black Widow’ rescheduled premiere — 78; ‘Top Gun: Maverick’ rescheduled premiere — 134; Disney’s ‘Shang Chi and The Legend of The Ten Rings’ premieres — 143; MLB All-Star Game in Atlanta — 145; new start date for 2021 Olympics — 155; ‘Jungle Cruise’ premieres — 163; St. Petersburg Primary Election — 187; ‘A Quiet Place Part II’ rescheduled premiere — 211; ‘Dune’ premieres — 225; MLB regular season ends — 227; World Series Game 1 — 250; St. Petersburg Municipal Elections — 257; Disney’s ‘Eternals’ premieres — 260; Steven Spielberg’s ‘West Side Story’ premieres — 295; ‘Spider-Man Far From Home’ sequel premieres — 302; ‘Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness’ premieres — 400; ‘Thor: Love and Thunder’ premieres — 442; ‘Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse’ sequel premieres — 596.
Dateline Tallahassee
“Ron DeSantis defends his choice of wealthy senior community for pop-up vaccine site” via Steven Lemongello of The Orlando Sentinel — A testy DeSantis blew off criticism Wednesday that the state’s latest pop-up COVID-19 vaccine site was limited to residents of wealthy neighborhoods in Manatee County, including a senior community with family ties to a major DeSantis donor. “Anyone in Manatee [County], if they don’t want us doing it, then just tell us, and we’ll make sure that we send those doses to folks who want it,” DeSantis said in response to county commissioners who asked why the “whitest and richest” portions of the county were able to access more vaccine doses than other areas.
Assignment Editors — DeSantis will hold a news conference, 9 a.m., Mainlands Community Club House, 4320 Mainlands Boulevard, Pinellas Park. Interested media must RSVP at Christina.Schmitt@eog.myflorida.com.
Ron DeSantis is pushing back on accusations of vaccinations only going to wealthy communities tied to donors.
Republicans split on Big Tech war — A proposal to crack down on so-called censorship on social media platforms has exposed a rift among top Florida Republicans. As reported by Matt Dixon of POLITICO Florida, DeSantis and House Speaker Chris Sprowls have enthusiastically pushed for the bill, but Senate President Wilton Simpson has been more reserved. Though he believes platforms such as Facebook and Twitter “target conservatives,” he is concerned that the state Legislature doesn’t have the ability to effectively crackdown on the industry. “What I want to make sure is that we have the authority to do what we pass and to make sure it’s constitutional,” Simpson said Tuesday. “Things can sometimes sound really good … I just want to make sure when we get through the committee process, we have some very good bills.”
“Florida Democrats file rash of unemployment legislation. GOP yawns.” via Wendy Rhodes of the Palm Beach Post — A flurry of unemployment-related legislation filed by Florida Democratic lawmakers seems to be falling on deaf ears among Republican legislative leaders. Nonetheless, five bills have been filed by Democrats in the GOP-controlled state Senate and House in the past month. The bills seek a range of actions, from more than doubling the maximum weekly amount paid to those who are jobless to waiving work search requirements during a state of emergency. But Democratic state legislators say they hold little hope their measures will get much attention after the 2021 Legislative Session convenes March 2. “None,” said Rep. Anna Eskamani, an Orlando Democrat, of the number of GOP lawmakers she thinks will support her bill to raise unemployment benefits.
Senate Democrats sponsor Nikki Fried energy proposals — A pair of energy proposals pitched by Agriculture Commissioner Fried have landed sponsors in the Senate, Bruce Ritchie of POLITICO Florida reports. Democratic Sen. Janet Cruz filed a bill (SB 1360) to set up a $10 million pilot to study battery storage at emergency shelters, hospitals, wastewater treatment plants, and other “critical” facilities. Sen. Tina Polsky introduced a bill that aims to slash greenhouse gas emissions by 100% over the next 30 years. Neither bill is expected to pass through the Republican-controlled Legislature. Still, their likely failure could open up an avenue of attack if she runs against DeSantis next year.
Janet Cruz is picking up the baton on Nikki Fried’s energy proposals. Image via Colin Hackley.
“Republican lawmakers explore whether to impose caps on THC in cannabis products” via Dara Kam of The News Service of Florida — As the number of medical marijuana patients in Florida continues to skyrocket, Republican lawmakers are again exploring whether to impose caps on the level of euphoria-inducing THC in cannabis products. Chris Ferguson, director of the Florida Office of Medical Marijuana Use, told a House panel on Tuesday that the number of qualified patients in the state has “dramatically increased” over the past two years. But the House Professions and Public Health Subcommittee also heard a lengthy presentation from Harvard University biopsychology professor Bertha Madras, a marijuana critic who warned of the dangers of high-potency cannabis.
“Senate subcommittee advances school voucher reform” via Jason Delgado of Florida Politics — A Senate subcommittee advanced a sweeping proposal on Thursday that would dramatically transform Florida’s school voucher programs. The measure, SB 48, seeks to broaden school voucher eligibility and allow parents to use taxpayer-backed education savings accounts to cover private school tuition and other costs. Sponsored by Republican Sen. Manny Diaz Jr., the Senate Appropriations Subcommittee on Education advanced the proposal along a party-line vote. The 158-page bill proposes folding five voucher programs into two. The measure would transfer students receiving scholarships through the Florida Tax Credit Scholarship Program and the Hope Scholarship Program to the Family Empowerment Scholarship.
More Tally
“It will be historic in nature’: Ocoee Massacre descendants may soon receive compensation” via Jason Delgado of Florida Politics — Sen. Randolph Bracy is optimistic that Ocoee Massacre descendants will soon be compensated by the Florida Legislature. Speaking Wednesday at a news conference outside the Senate Chamber, Bracy told reporters Senate President Simpson and House Speaker Sprowls had signaled support ahead of the 2021 Legislative Session. “I believe that we’re going to be able to accomplish that this year,” Bracy said. “I have been in talks and negotiations with the Speaker and the Senate President about reparations, compensation.” Bracy, an Orlando Democrat, said descendants would likely receive scholarships, similar to the Legislature’s approach toward the Rosewood Massacre.
Randolph Bracy leads the movement to provide compensation for descendants of the Ocoee Election Day Massacre victims.
“College president search records exemption advances through second committee” via Kelly Hayes of Florida Politics — A legislative proposal that would provide a public records exemption for information about applicants seeking a state university or college presidential position advanced through its second Senate committee Wednesday morning. Sen. Jeff Brandes sponsored the bill. He presented it to the Senate Committee on Governmental Oversight and Accountability, where it passed in a 4-2 vote, splitting along party lines. The bill would create a public-records exemption for information about applicants to become university and college presidents, though information about finalists for the posts would be available.
“Senators back more money for Moffitt Cancer Center” via Kelly Hayes of Florida Politics — A bill that would send millions of additional dollars each year to Moffitt Cancer Center glided through its first committee Wednesday morning. The proposal, SB 866, sponsored by Clearwater Republican Sen. Ed Hooper, passed unanimously in the Senate Health Policy Committee. The legislation would increase the Tampa center’s share of a state cigarette tax. Under the current system, Moffitt is estimated to receive $15.6 million a year. The bill would increase Moffitt’s share of the cigarette tax from 4.4% to 7% for the next three years, and 10% after that, Hooper said. The money would otherwise go to the state’s general revenue fund.
“‘Purple Alert’ system to find missing disabled adults buzzes through first House committee” via Ryan Nicol of Florida Politics — A House panel unanimously approved a measure Wednesday that would establish a “Purple Alert” system to help find missing adults with disabilities. The House Criminal Justice & Public Safety Subcommittee signed off on the bill with a 16-0 vote. Democratic Rep. Joe Casello is sponsoring the House measure. Rep. Matt Willhite, a Wellington Democrat, is the bill’s prime co-sponsor. “I filed this legislation in the hope of saving lives,” Casello told the panel Wednesday. Specifically, the Purple Alert system covers missing adults with “a mental or cognitive disability; an intellectual disability or a developmental disability …; a brain injury; [or] another physical, mental, or emotional disability that is not related to substance abuse.”
“Proposed vehicle sales tax reduction axed due to pandemic economy” via Renzo Downey of Florida Politics — Lawmakers have scratched an effort to reduce vehicle sales taxes by $50 in light of the COVID-19 pandemic. Rep. Alex Andrade removed that portion of a larger transportation bill during a House Tourism, Infrastructure and Energy Subcommittee meeting Wednesday. The Pensacola Republican described that amendment as a fix to the bill’s “one oversight” he accidentally left in before filing the legislation. “Tax cuts of $50 per vehicle sale in a year like this are probably not recommended,” Andrade told committee members. State economists expect Florida to raise $2 billion less in general revenue over the course of the current fiscal year than the last pre-pandemic estimate.
Alex Andrade dropped a proposed vehicle tax cut, courtesy of the COVID-19 crisis. Image via Colin Hackley.
“Should Hernando elect its school superintendent? Lawmaker says yes.” via Jeffrey Solochek of The Tampa Bay Times — Hernando County voters soon could decide whether they want to elect their school superintendent rather than keep letting School Board members pick the district’s chief executive. During the county’s legislative delegation meeting Friday, Rep. Blaise Ingoglia proposed a local bill to convert the appointed position to an elected one. The delegation, which also includes Rep. Ralph Massullo and Sen. Simpson, supported the measure. Passage would mean the superintendent job would become a partisan, political post in 2026, for the first time since 1988.
“Lawmakers give backing to seat-less bikes” via News Service of Florida — Florida lawmakers moved ahead Wednesday with tweaking a law that can lead to people receiving citations for riding bicycles without seats. The House Tourism, Infrastructure & Energy Subcommittee unanimously approved a bill (HB 353) that sponsor Brett Hage, an Oxford Republican, said is needed because people in areas such as The Villages retirement community are getting ticketed for riding bikes that are designed without seats. The bill will allow riding bicycles without seats if designed by the manufacturer to be ridden that way. According to a House bill analysis, the citation for riding a bicycle without a seat carries a base fine of $15, though the total can increase to as much as $56.50 because of additional fees.
Cap reax
FHCA urges lawmakers to pass health care liability protections — The Florida Health Care Association praised the House Health & Human Services Committee on Wednesday after it voted to introduce a committee bill shielding health care providers from COVID-19 liability lawsuits. Without COVID-19 liability protections, FHCA said, predatory trial attorneys who use sue and settle tactics will divert those resources away from facilities that are still working to protect their residents and strengthen their front-line workforce. FHCA Executive Director Emmett Reed said, “Our health care heroes are deserving of the liability protections that will ensure precious resources both human and financial — remain where they should be: caring for Florida’s elderly population.”
FHCA head Emmett Reed is urging lawmakers to pass some COVID-19 liability protections.
EMPOWER Patients asks Legislature to ‘stop shady PBMs’ — A coalition representing independent and neighborhood pharmacies urged the Legislature to take up pharmacy benefit manager reforms. The call for action came ahead of a Thursday morning AHCA presentation on PBMs in the House Finance and Facilities Subcommittee. “While the Florida legislature is wrestling with a massive budget shortfall, PBM reform could save the state more than $100 million. But we get it. Taking on PBMs is not an easy task. With deep pockets, these prescription drug middlemen flex their muscles to bury the fact that they are pocketing more than $113 million in taxpayer dollars, and their lack of regulatory oversight has allowed anti-competitive behavior to fester in Florida’s Medicaid system,” said Bill Mincy of EMPOWER Patients.
Lobby regs
New and renewed lobbying registrations:
Ellyn Bogdanoff, Becker & Poliakoff: International Yacht Brokers Association
Matt Brockelman, The Southern Group: SouthEast Development Group
French Brown, Jennifer Ungru, Dean Mead: The Nemours Foundation
Doug Bruce, Doug Bruce and Associates: Association of Support Coordination Agencies
Rachel Cone, Christopher Dudley, Justin Hollis, Taylor Mejia, Sydney Ridley, David Shepp, Clark Smith, Sheela VanHoose, The Southern Group: Basik Trading, Bellini Better World Foundation, Bonnet Springs Park, Broward County, City of Palm Coast, Comtech Communications of Georgia, Edmentum, Jacksonville University, Shipwreck Park Pompano
Cesar Fernandez, Jonathan Kilman, Gerard O’Rourke, Converge Government Affairs of Florida: Aero Aggregates of North America, NetChoice
Samantha Ferrin, Greenberg Traurig: SAP Public Services
Warren Husband, Metz Husband & Daughton: Florida Harbor Pilots Association
Andrew Kalel: Criminal Conflict & Civil Regional Counsel — Region Five
Frank Ranelli: University of West Florida
Stephen Talpins: 11th Judicial Circuit State Attorney
Leg. sked
The Senate Finance and Tax Committee Meet to consider SB 50, from Sen. Joe Gruters, to expand the collection of sales taxes on goods sold online, 9 a.m., Room 110, Senate Office Building.
The Senate Rules Committee meets to consider SB 78, from Sen. Ray Rodrigues, a controversial proposal that would address the process for deducting union dues from public employees’ paychecks, 9 a.m., Room 412, Knott Building.
The House Finance and Facilities Subcommittee will receive an update from the Agency for Health Care Administration about pharmacy benefit-manager pricing in the Medicaid managed-care program, 10 a.m., Reed Hall, House Office Building.
The House Government Operations Subcommittee meets to consider HB 313, from Rep. Demi Busatta Cabrera, to give added rights to firefighters facing inquiries into accused misconduct, 10 a.m., Room 404, House Office Building.
The House PreK-12 Appropriations Subcommittee meets for a panel on Florida Education Finance Program, which funds public schools, 10 a.m., Room 212, Knott Building.
The House Regulatory Reform Subcommittee meets to consider HB 329, from Rep. Josie Tomkow, to allow restaurants to sell or deliver alcoholic beverages to go if accompanied by food, 10 a.m., Morris Hall, House Office Building.
The Legislative Budget Commission meets to consider a request for an added $4.34 million for processing background checks, facing a surge concealed-weapons license request, 1 p.m., Room 212, Knott Building.
Statewide
“DeSantis administration pushes for ‘job growth’ money” via Jim Turner of The News Service of Florida — As state lawmakers face a revenue shortfall amid the COVID-19 pandemic, DeSantis’ administration says a request for $50 million for business incentives wouldn’t have that large of an impact on the upcoming budget. Adam Callaway, director of strategic business development at the Department of Economic Opportunity, said the Job Growth Grant Fund program’s request includes money carried over from the 2019-2020 fiscal year. That means only about half the request involves new money. “As a precaution, and because of the uncertainty of 2020, the remaining $24.4 million appropriated for that year was held in reserve through 2021,” Callaway told members of the House Infrastructure & Tourism Appropriations Subcommittee.
Ron DeSantis says $50 million for job growth programs is no budget buster. Image via Colin Hackley.
“CA$H COWS: Tavistock, Disney and others save millions through tax break meant to help Florida farmers” via Jason Garcia of the Orlando Sentinel — At the Drive Shack golfing center in Lake Nona, golf balls struck from the three-story driving range roll to a stop not far from a few small cows grazing on a patch of pastureland and palmetto scrub. The Drive Shack cows are just one tiny piece of a much larger strategy that saved Tavistock about $10 million in property taxes last year — thanks to an agricultural tax break created 60 years ago to save Florida farmers from urban sprawl. The Lake Nona developer has plenty of company. Entities connected to Mattamy Homes saved an estimated $7.1 million last year. Walt Disney World and various Disney subsidiaries saved approximately $5.8 million.
Jimmy Patronis shares Super Bowl winnings with Tallahassee firefighters — CFO Patronis delivered Kansas City’s famous Jack Stack Barbeque to Fire Station 1 in Tallahassee. This BBQ delivery comes after Missouri State Treasurer Scott Fitzpatrick made good on the Super Bowl wager he made with Patronis, who bet on the Buccaneers. “Since the pandemic began nearly a year ago, our first responders have been on the front lines fighting for Floridians and I wanted to take this opportunity to reward their heroic efforts and provide them with a delicious BBQ lunch from Kansas City,” said Patronis, who doubles as State Fire Marshal. “A huge congratulations and thank you to Tom Brady, Gronk and the entire Buccaneers team for winning Super Bowl LV. This is just another reason that Florida is for winners!”
What Kevin Cate is reading — “Influential Broward Democrat sees Charlie Crist and Val Demings as the way for a party to win 2022 Governor and Senate races” via Anthony Man of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — Democrats could win the 2022 contests for Florida Governor and U.S. Senate, Broward Mayor Steve Geller believes, with U.S. Reps. Crist and Demings as the party’s two candidates. Geller thinks both are likely to run next year — but doesn’t know which one will run for which office. In effect, running as a Democratic ticket at the top of the ballot, Geller said he thinks the pairing would be a winning combination. Both Crist and Demings are thinking about running statewide in 2022. They’re not the only Democratic candidates for the top two jobs next year, but they have an enormous advantage over other potential hopefuls in Geller’s view.
Val Demings and Charlie Crist could be Democrats who help turn some statewide races blue.
First on #FlaPol — “Clint Pate enters race to succeed Brad Drake in HD 5” via Drew Wilson of Florida Politics — Pate on Wednesday entered the race for House District 5, setting up a potential three-way Republican primary for the open seat. Pate, a Graceville Republican, is the third candidate to throw his hat in the ring to succeed Rep. Brad Drake, who is term-limited and cannot run for reelection in 2022. He joins Vance Coley of Marianna and Shane Abbott of DeFuniak Springs in the race for HD 5, which covers all of Holmes, Jackson, Walton, and Washington counties and part of Bay County.
“‘Worker bee’ Ryan Wiggins defends The Lincoln Project from ‘vendettas’” via Scott Powers of Florida Politics — Wiggins blasted critics of The Lincoln Project for pursuing petty vendettas that have nothing to do with the people she says are fueling the Never Trump organization and the movement she says is behind it. “You are reading about selfishness and deceit on a level that is both horrifying and heartbreaking to the team of worker bees who have done and continue to do the work behind the scenes,” Wiggins declared in a tweet. Wiggins is a Republican political strategist from Pensacola specializing in crisis communications through her Full Contact Strategies firm.
Corona Florida
“Florida reports 7,342 new COVID-19 cases and 157 more deaths” via David Fleshler of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — Florida reported 7,342 new coronavirus cases on Wednesday and another 157 new resident deaths linked to COVID-19. The state has now reported 1,844,627 cases since the pandemic began. The seven-day average for new cases has been declining since January 8. Public health experts say the virus is considered under control when the COVID-19 test positivity rate is under 5%. But since Oct. 29, Florida has exceeded 5% in its widely publicized calculation. The state reported a daily positivity rate of 6.42% on Wednesday, down from 6.61% the day before. This method of calculating positivity counts new infections only, but also counts repeat negative tests, which skews the figure downward.
Florida sees 7K+ COVID-19 cases, a slight uptick.
“Coronavirus continues widespread transmission, says Florida health official” via C.T. Bowen of the Tampa Bay Times — While the number of COVID-19 cases continues its descent in Hillsborough County, the infection rate still indicates “active and widespread community transmission continuing,” said Dr. Douglas Holt, director of the state Health Department for Hillsborough County, during his biweekly briefing with commissioners on Wednesday. Holt’s comments came before the latest data release showed 517 new cases in Hillsborough County over the prior 24 hours, bringing the total caseload to 107,513. The county has an estimated 200,000 residents who are 65 and older. More than 110,000 residents have received vaccinations as of Feb. 12, about 30 percent of which were done by private providers. About half those residents have received both doses of the vaccine.
“DeSantis denounces new CDC school guidelines” via Jake Stofan of WFLA — The CDC has released new guidance for reopening schools amid the pandemic, but with its schools already open, Florida doesn’t intend to follow it. DeSantis called the new guidance a disgrace and said it is based on politics, not science. New CDC guidance establishes four designations for school reopening based on case rates over the past seven days. Of Florida’s 67 counties, all but Franklin County fall into the red category, which recommends fully virtual middle and high school learning. “That is a disgrace. That is not science,” said DeSantis. DeSantis denounced the CDC guidelines saying special interests are being put ahead of science.
“Manatee Commissioner Vanessa Baugh made VIP list for COVID-19 vaccines. She put herself on it” via Jessica de Leon and Ryan Callihan of The Bradenton Herald — While she organized an exclusive pop-up vaccination site in Lakewood Ranch, Baugh created a VIP list of residents she wanted vaccinated. The list included her former neighbors, the master-planned Lakewood Ranch community developer, the developer’s father, and herself. Emails show Baugh played an integral role in organizing the state-run COVID-19 vaccination site that will provide 3,000 shots for residents in two of Manatee County’s wealthiest ZIP codes as part of the three-day event that began Wednesday morning. Baugh instructed county staff to pull only residents who had listed the ZIP codes 34202 and 34211 on their registration.
Vanessa Baugh was charged with creating a VIP list of Manatee vaccinations. She added herself.
Corona local
“Hillsborough reports 500 new COVID-19 cases, rising positivity rate in single-day spike” via Kelly Hayes of Florida Politics — Hillsborough County confirmed 513 new cases of COVID-19 on Tuesday, according to the latest Florida Department of Health data released Wednesday afternoon. The new report shows a subtle spike in the county’s daily case numbers, which came in at 335 Monday and 245 on Sunday. It also coincides with a rising positivity rate that may be the first indicators of Super Bowl LV’s impact on the area. Tuesday’s positivity rate came in at 8.18%, up from the past couple of days, which reported rates of 7%. Despite the gradual rise, the county still remains under 10%, the threshold that indicates mass community spread. The county also saw nine new deaths and four additional hospitalizations in the latest report.
Is it a surprise? Hillsborough sees a spike in new COVID-19 cases, right after the Super Bowl. Image via WFTS.
“Miami’s Jackson on cusp of expanding COVID vaccine to include some of those 55 and up” via Ben Conarck of the Miami Herald — After more than a month of frenzied online lotteries and ad hoc partnerships with faith leaders, Miami’s public hospital has finally seen a slackening of demand among people 65 and older for the two federally-authorized COVID vaccines. That’s led to internal conversations at Jackson Health System about whether it’s time to shift the focus to those 55 and older who have underlying medical conditions that put them at risk for severe COVID-19 — a bucket of people already eligible under DeSantis’ late December executive order on vaccines, but who have struggled to find appointment slots. Jackson Health has already been vaccinating that age bracket of existing patients but hasn’t yet opened the appointments up to the public.
Corona nation
“COVID-19 cases are dropping fast. Why?” via Derek Thompson of The Atlantic — One month ago, the CDC published the results of more than 20 pandemic forecasting models. Most projected that COVID-19 cases would continue to grow through February, or at least plateau. Instead, COVID-19 is in retreat in America. New daily cases have plunged, and hospitalizations are down almost 50% in the past month. What’s behind the change? Americans’ good behavior in the past month has tag-teamed with (mostly) warming weather across the Northern Hemisphere to slow the pandemic’s growth; at the same time, partial immunity and vaccines have reduced the number of viable bodies that would allow the coronavirus to thrive. But the full story is a bit more complex.
COVID cases are dropping across the country. The reason is complex. Image via The Wall Street Journal.
“CDC advisers weigh second-shot delay to quicken vaccine uptake” via Anna Edney of Bloomberg — U.S. public health advisers are weighing recommendations for extending the interval between the first and second doses of COVID-19 vaccines, a potential strategy for quickly getting protection to more people amid the spread of new variants. According to a person familiar with the discussions, a working group of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices has debated the idea. It hasn’t been decided if the full committee will take up the issue and provide official guidance, the person said. Jose Romero, chairman of the committee and Arkansas Health Secretary, declined to comment because the deliberations are confidential.
“A next-generation coronavirus vaccine is in the works, but initial funding was denied” via David Heath of USA Today — Drew Weissman realized a year ago that even if the COVID-19 vaccines then in progress were eventually approved, it might not be enough. When Weissman, discoverer of the mRNA science behind two of the current vaccines, and a team of fellow scientists took a proposal for a more versatile COVID-19 vaccine to the National Institutes of Health for funding last May, they left empty-handed. The group had proposed research on vaccines to protect against any variant of the virus, known as a universal or pan vaccine. Weissman says their hands were tied by negative scores from the independent scientists asked to review the grant proposal.
“The CDC pledges a nearly $200 million ‘down payment’ for tracking virus variants, as lawmakers push for billions.” via Noah Weiland and Carl Zimmer of The New York Times — As lawmakers push for billions of dollars to fund the nation’s efforts to track coronavirus variants, the Biden administration announced on Wednesday a new effort to ramp up this work, pledging nearly $200 million to better identify the emerging threats. Calling it a “down payment,” the White House said that the investment would result in a significant increase in the number of positive virus samples that labs could sequence. The program is the administration’s most significant effort to date to address the looming danger of more contagious variants of the virus. A concerning variant first identified in Britain has infected at least 1,277 people in 42 states, although scientists suspect the true number is vastly higher.
“U.S. govt seizes over 10M phony N95 masks in COVID-19 probe” via Colleen Long of The Associated Press — Federal agents have seized more than 10 million fake 3M brand N95 masks in recent weeks, the result of an ongoing investigation into counterfeits sold in at least five states to hospitals, medical facilities and government agencies. The most recent seizures occurred Wednesday when Homeland Security agents intercepted hundreds of thousands of counterfeit 3M masks in an East Coast warehouse set to be distributed, officials said. Investigators also notified about 6,000 potential victims in at least 12 states, including hospitals, medical facilities and others who may have unknowingly purchased knockoffs, urging them to stop using the medical-grade masks.
A wave of bogus N95 masks has hit the U.S. Image via AP.
“Thousands of service members saying no to COVID-19 vaccine” via The Associated Press — By the thousands, U.S. service members are refusing or putting off the COVID-19 vaccine as frustrated commanders scramble to knock down internet rumors and find the right pitch that will persuade troops to get the shot. Some Army units are seeing as few as one-third agree to the vaccine. Military leaders searching for answers believe they have identified one potential convincer: an imminent deployment. Navy sailors on ships heading out to sea last week, for example, were choosing to take the shot at rates exceeding 80% to 90%. Air Force Maj. Gen. Jeff Taliaferro, vice director of operations for the Joint Staff, told Congress on Wednesday that “very early data” suggests that just up to two-thirds of the service members offered the vaccine have accepted.
“Andrew Cuomo’s nursing home problem is getting worse” via Philip Bump of The Washington Post — There are three parts to the political crisis surrounding Gov. Cuomo. The most immediate was the report on Wednesday that he’d threatened a Democratic state assemblyman, Ron Kim of Queens. That the state withheld a full tally of the number of deaths from nursing home residents is the second component of the crisis surrounding Cuomo and, ultimately, perhaps the most important one. The third component of the crisis was a March advisory from the state mandating that nursing homes accept residents discharged from hospitals even if they had tested positive for the virus. Cuomo went so far as to compare his order about nursing home readmissions to what Florida was doing at the time.
“From city halls, the plea for COVID-19 aid is bipartisan” via Bill Barrow of The Associated Press — The economic fallout from the coronavirus pandemic has squeezed many city budgets and prompted mayors and local leaders to look to Washington for help. But Republicans in Washington have stood in the way of sending federal aid to cities, leaving local leaders and public employee unions worried they’ll get shortchanged as Congress negotiates the next COVID-19 response package. The GOP posture comes with political risks. In rejecting a bill with help for lower governments, Republican lawmakers may soon find themselves voting against high-profile allies.
Corona economics
“U.S. retail sales rose strongly on stimulus in January” via Harriet Torry of The Wall Street Journal — U.S. shoppers boosted spending by 5.3% in January, the first monthly increase in four months, buoyed by stimulus payments that many households received in the most recent virus-relief package. Last month, consumers spent more in several areas, with furniture and electronics posting double-digit month-over-month gains, the Commerce Department said on Wednesday in its latest retail sales report. Receipts at bars and restaurants also increased 6.9% from December. January’s sales gain was significantly higher than economists expected. Forecasters surveyed by The Wall Street Journal estimated that retail sales — a measure of spending at stores, vehicle dealerships, restaurants and online — increased a seasonally adjusted 1.2% in January from a month earlier.
“The perils of prolonged unemployment” via Erica Pandey of Axios — Nearly 4 million Americans have been unemployed for 27 weeks or longer — trapped in a vicious cycle that makes it harder to get back to work. Long-term unemployment during a pandemic is a double whammy. Millions are experiencing food and housing insecurity and lack health care when they need it most. “The troubling amount of long-term unemployment and its continuing rise is dangerous for the U.S. labor market,” says Nick Bunker, an economist at the jobs site Indeed. “A fast labor market recovery will help alleviate these concerns, but that bounce back is still a ways away and dependent on controlling the coronavirus.”
Long-term unemployment has an effect on physical and mental health. Image via Bloomberg.
“Millions of jobs probably aren’t coming back, even after the pandemic ends” via Heather Long of The Washington Post — Millions of jobs that have been shortchanged or wiped out entirely by the coronavirus pandemic are unlikely to come back, economists warn, setting up a massive need for career changes and retraining in the United States. The coronavirus pandemic has triggered permanent shifts in how and where people work. Businesses are planning for a future where more people work from home, traveling less for business, or replacing workers with robots. All of these modifications mean many workers will not be able to do the same job they did before the pandemic, even after much of the U.S. population gets vaccinated against the deadly virus.
“Cities have permanently lost 400,000 jobs during COVID-19 pandemic as many shift to suburbs” via Paul Davidson of USA Today — It’s not just people who are fleeing cities for suburbs during the pandemic. So are jobs. The pandemic has wiped out about 400,000 jobs in large urban areas, with about 175,000 of the positions shifting to the suburbs and smaller cities, according to estimates by payroll processor Gusto based on an analysis of the 100,000 or so small businesses it serves. Many Americans have moved, temporarily or permanently, from big cities to less densely populated suburban and rural areas during the outbreak, largely to reduce the risk of contagion.
More corona
“Health officials say the coronavirus will likely become endemic in the next several years. What does that mean?” via Adrianna Rodriguez of USA Today — Even as cases continue to decline and more Americans receive their vaccines, the coronavirus isn’t likely to go away anytime soon, health officials say. Dr. Anthony Fauci dismissed the idea that COVID-19 would be eradicated in the next several years at a webinar hosted by think tank Chatham House in November. “We need to plan that this is something we may need to maintain control over chronically. It may be something that becomes endemic, that we have to just be careful about,” he said. The four common cold coronaviruses, which are considered cousins of SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes COVID-19, are considered endemic in most parts of the world, including the U.S.
Anthony Fauci says COVID-19 will be a nagging problem for some time. Image via AP.
“COVID-19 could have a long-term impact on the brain. We need more research.” via Serena S. Spudich and David A. Hafler of The Washington Post — Understandably, the world has focused so much attention on the high mortality of COVID-19 in older populations. This has led to a more sanguine approach to precautions such as mask-wearing and social distancing among many who don’t consider themselves at high risk from the virus. Thankfully, most people who contract COVID-19 do survive the acute illness. But there might be consequences of infection that we did not originally predict. Many patients in our clinics complain months after recovering from the disease of difficulty with concentration, finding words and completing complicated tasks.
“Poll: Teachers who are back in the classroom are comfortable with it” via Marisa Fernandez of Axios — Most teachers and school staff who are back in the classroom feel comfortable with the return to in-person classes, according to recent polling from the American Federation of Teachers. Teachers who are still fully remote said they weren’t comfortable with the idea of a return to the classroom — but the teachers who have returned seem to think it’s gone just fine. The poll surveyed a representative sample of 800 AFT members, including 600 teachers and 200 other paraprofessionals and school-related personnel earlier this month. Few schools have returned to full-time in-person instruction.
Most teachers are comfortable going back to class.
“AAA survey finds COVID-19 still discouraging Floridians to travel” via Susan Giles Wantuck of WUSF — A survey said Floridians are still reluctant to travel, almost one year into the coronavirus pandemic. The top three reasons people gave for avoiding travel are fear of getting sick, fear of the coronavirus variants, and the number of COVID-19 cases. AAA says more than 68% of Floridians canceled travel plans in 2020. “Most people feel comfortable driving in their vehicle; like you said, about 70% are uncomfortable flying, and about half are leery about staying in a hotel. You know, more than half are uncomfortable traveling right now,” AAA spokesman Mark Jenkins said.
Presidential
“Joe Biden on ‘short leash’ as administration rethinks China relations” via Ana Swanson of The New York Times — Biden administration officials have tried to project a tough line on China in their first weeks in office, depicting the authoritarian government as an economic and security challenge to the United States that requires a far more strategic and calculated approach than that of the Trump administration. They have also tried to send a message: While the administration will be staffed by many familiar faces from the Obama administration, China policy will not revert to what it was a decade ago. These early efforts have not concealed the enormous challenge Biden faces in trying to formulate a strategy to deal with China when any relations with Beijing are treated as thoroughly toxic in Washington.
Joe Biden will be taking a careful, calculated approach to China. Image via AP.
“Stay or go? Biden, long a critic of Afghan deployments, faces a deadline” via Helene Cooper, Eric Schmitt and David E. Sanger of The New York Times — The previous two Presidents of the United States declared they wanted to pull all American troops out of Afghanistan, and they both decided in the end that they could not do it. Now Biden is facing the same issue, with a deadline less than three months away. The Pentagon, uncertain what the new commander in chief will do, is preparing variations on a plan to stay, a plan to leave, and a plan to withdraw very, very slowly. The current deadline is May 1, keeping with a much-violated peace agreement that calls for the complete withdrawal of the remaining 2,500 American forces.
“Biden to tap new labor board top cop, rescind Donald Trump apprenticeship program” via Rebecca Rainey of POLITICO — Biden will nominate Jennifer Abruzzo, an attorney with the Communications Workers of America, to become the federal labor board’s top cop, the White House said Wednesday. Abruzzo, a former deputy general counsel at the National Labor Relations Board, would replace Trump-appointed General Counsel Peter Robb, who was ousted by Biden last month in a rare executive power exercise over the labor board. But she will have to get through a Senate confirmation process that could be bruising. Ahead of a meeting with labor officials Wednesday afternoon, the White House said Biden would also revoke former President Trump’s executive order creating an industry-led apprenticeship program.
Epilogue: Trump
“The overwhelming lesson of the Trump era: Republicans often rebuke Trump when they have latitude” via Aaron Blake of The Washington Post — The Senate played host to a historic vote on Saturday, with seven members of Trump’s party voting to convict him in his second impeachment trial. One thing that won’t surprise anyone who has paid attention to Trump’s tenure: A disproportionate number of the votes came from retiring Republicans. Two of the seven who voted to convict Trump, Sens. Richard Burr and Patrick J. Toomey, had already said they wouldn’t seek reelection. Sen. Rob Portman issued one of the strongest denunciations of Trump among those who cited the alleged unconstitutionality of the proceedings in voting to acquit. Those are three of the toughest verdicts on Trump’s conduct, all from swing states and all from retiring Republicans.
“Stumbles, clashes and egos: Behind the scenes with Trump’s legal team” via Maggie Haberman and Michael S. Schmidt of The New York Times — Trump’s hastily assembled legal team, a mashup of political hands, a personal injury lawyer, a former prosecutor and a longtime defense lawyer, most of whom did not particularly like or trust one another, clashed, stumbled and regrouped throughout the impeachment proceeding under the watchful and sometimes wrathful eye of its client. The result was an airplane held together with duct tape as it tried to land. Several lawyers who had represented him in his past impeachment clarified they would not be involved this time. Other high-end white-collar defense lawyers were afraid to work for him because of the political backlash and fears that Trump would refuse to pay his legal bills.
Donald Trump’s latest legal team was hastily assembled and chaotic. Image via AP.
“Rudy Giuliani not currently representing Trump ‘in any legal matters,’ adviser says” via Jim Acosta and Paul LeBlanc of CNN — Trump’s longtime personal attorney, Giuliani, is “not currently representing President Trump in any legal matters,” senior Trump adviser Jason Miller told CNN on Tuesday. The former New York City Mayor was the face of Trump’s failed bid to overturn the presidential election results, but his legal work with the former President dates back years. In a tweet, Miller said that Giuliani remained an “ally and a friend” and is not representing Trump only because there are no pending cases in which he’s involved. Trump had signaled frustration with Giuliani last month after becoming the first President in U.S. history to be impeached twice. He told his staff to stop paying Giuliani’s legal fees.
“Promotions for female generals were delayed over fears of Trump’s reaction” via Eric Schmitt and Helene Cooper of The New York Times — Last fall, the Pentagon’s most senior leaders agreed that two top generals should be promoted to elite four-star commands. For then-Defense Secretary Mark Esper and Gen. Mark Milley, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, the tricky part was that both of the accomplished officers were women. Esper and General Milley worried that if they even raised their names, Gen. Jacqueline D. Van Ovost of the Air Force and Lt. Gen. Laura J. Richardson of the Army, the Trump White House would replace them with their own candidates before leaving.
“Watching Trump go down” via Olivia Nuzzi of New York Magazine — Mayor Marty Small positioned himself before a local TV camera, the casino right over his shoulder. Growing up, he said, he’d attended WrestleMania IV and WrestleMania V, events the Trump Plaza sponsored in 1988 and 1989, just before its financial decline. Small had been hyping the demolition for weeks, even distributing on social media a flyer that looked more like a movie poster than a news release, with the casino decorated by a flaming stick of dynamite and a ribbon of caution tape. The casino was still, and then it wasn’t. One side fell first, sending the rest into a slinky motion, until it was melted into pieces.
“Rush Limbaugh created the politics that Trump used to win the White House” via Philip Bump of The Washington Post — Limbaugh was Trump before Trump. In fact, Limbaugh helped create Trump’s pathway to the presidency, whether the former President ever recognized it or not. Limbaugh’s show went national in 1988, back when Trump was just a real estate developer. His approach to politics was a now-familiar one, littered with sweeping disparagements of his political opponents, unfettered by any traditional sense of propriety. When Limbaugh had a television show in the early 1990s, his executive producer was a fellow named Roger Ailes. Ailes went on to be the founder of Fox News. But you don’t have to take our word for it. After Republicans won the House for the first time in decades in the 1994 midterms, Limbaugh’s influence was explicitly acknowledged.
Rush Limbaugh opened the door for President Donald Trump.
“Marco Rubio backs Haitian American lawyer for Miami U.S. Attorney. But candidate field is growing” via Jay Weaver of the Miami Herald — Although the Republican Party lost the presidency and the power to pick U.S. attorneys, Rubio still can wield considerable influence over the selection of the next top federal prosecutor in South Florida. In a key move, sources close to Rubio say, the Senator has privately signaled support for a Haitian American lawyer considered the Biden administration’s front-runner — Markenzy Lapointe, a Black Miami lawyer and Marine veteran who once worked in the U.S. Attorney’s Office. But Lapointe isn’t the only candidate to emerge. Among them are former South Florida federal prosecutors Jacqueline Arango, Andres Rivero and David Buckner, along with Palm Beach County State Attorney Dave Aronberg.
Markenzy Lapointe is Joe Biden’s leading candidate for the top federal prosecutor in South Florida. Image via Attorney at Law Magazine.
Crisis
“Judge refuses to ban Capitol riot suspect from Twitter and Facebook” via Josh Gerstein of POLITICO — A federal magistrate judge has turned down prosecutors’ effort to block a man accused of participating in the Capitol riot from using Twitter and Facebook, but ordered him to end his involvement with a business he founded that the Justice Department says promotes and glorifies violent protests. The defendant, John Sullivan of Utah, has maintained that he attends raucous demonstrations as a journalist, sharing videos through his Insurgence USA website and social media platforms. Sullivan’s defense attorney even filed invoices with the court showing that CNN and NBC each paid Sullivan’s firm $35,000 last month for rights to video he filmed of chaotic scenes outside and inside the Capitol.
Self-described activist John Sullivan, who filmed the raid on The Capitol, is now in federal custody.
Local notes
“FBI, other agencies issue warnings after Oldsmar water system attack” via Malena Carollo of The Tampa Bay Times — An advisory published by several federal agencies offered new insights on how an attacker might have accessed a system that allowed them to potentially contaminate Oldsmar’s water supply. The advisory detailed an unnamed water supply agency that was hit by a cyberattack, the attack date, and details that match what was publicly disclosed about the Oldsmar incident. The FBI authored it, the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and the Multi-State Information Sharing & Analysis Center. Earlier this month, an attacker significantly increased levels of lye in the Oldsmar water treatment system remotely.
“‘My daughter’s legacy’: Fred Guttenberg promotes scholarship program to honor Jaime Guttenberg” via Ryan Nicol of Florida Politics — Guttenberg, who lost his daughter, Jaime, in the 2018 Parkland shooting, is urging high school students to apply to a scholarship program launched in Jaime’s honor. Guttenberg launched that effort last year through his 501(c)(3) organization, Orange Ribbons For Jaime. Applications will be open through March 15 for this year’s set of scholarships. “Her life was about helping other kids, especially those who had special needs or who were bullied, because she just thought it was wrong,” Guttenberg said of his daughter in a talk with Florida Politics. While Guttenberg has been a vocal activist pushing for increased gun regulations following the deadly 2018 shooting, he says promoting Jaime’s scholarship program is his long-term priority.
Fred Guttenberg is promoting a scholarship in memory of his daughter, Jamie.
“Court backs health department in attorney fees fight” via News Service of Florida — A divided appeals court said Wednesday the Florida Department of Health does not need to pay the legal fees of a company that successfully challenged the agency over a rule related to medical-marijuana licenses. In a 2-1 decision, a panel of the 1st District Court of Appeal overturned a 2019 ruling by Administrative Law Judge Garnett Chisenhall that said the department should pay $50,000 in attorney fees and $3,828 in costs to Louis Del Favero Orchids, Inc. Chisenhall’s ruling came after another administrative law judge, R. Bruce McKibben, said the department did not properly carry out a 2017 state law that gave preference to the citrus industry for as many as two medical-marijuana licenses.
“Brevard Commissioners mocked a journalist. Now, one official says they’re getting threats.” via Bianca Padro Ocasio of the Miami Herald — The Brevard County Commission has drawn national ire since drafting a resolution mocking an editorial page journalist that passed unanimously last week — an action a commissioner now claims has prompted threats from political fanatics. The document in question targeted Isadora Rangel, the former opinion writer at the Gannett-owned Florida Today newspaper who recently joined the Miami Herald’s editorial board. In an emailed statement to the Herald, Commissioner Bryan Lober said that what prompted the resolution was years of “highly partisan treatment” from Florida Today, including claims that the attacks against him from the newspaper were malicious. Lober did not respond when asked for evidence that showed a link between the threats and media attention from the resolution.
“‘Shockingly exorbitant’: Advisors to ex-Orange appraiser Rick Singh sued over severance deals” via Stephen Hudak of the Orlando Sentinel — Three former high-ranking advisers to Singh got “golden parachute” deals from the ousted Orange County property appraiser before he left office that could net them a combined $318,000 from taxpayers, according to a lawsuit filed by Singh’s successor, Amy Mercado. Singh signed the special agreements, which Mercado’s suit seeks to invalidate, on Sept. 30, about six weeks after Mercado trounced him in the Democratic primary. Mercado said she learned about the unusual severance arrangements after reorganizing the Property Appraiser’s Office and eliminating high-paying posts.
“Miami offers cash, guidance to help landlords protect affordable housing from climate change” via Alex Harris of the Miami Herald — In Miami-Dade County, the most expensive metro area in the nation, the people least equipped to handle the twin threats of strengthening hurricanes and rising sea levels are residents of the slim stock of affordable housing. A new program — Keep Safe Miami — is designed to offer a carrot to the people in power to actually do something about it: landlords. The program centers around an online tool that informs owners of multifamily buildings of the risks they face and possible solutions, as well as tips on where to find federal and state grants and loans to pay for it. That could include anything from elevating an air conditioner to installing impact windows to raising the entire building.
“Election 2021: What you need to know in Tequesta, Juno Beach” via Julius Whigham II of The Palm Beach Post — Two candidates seeking political office for the first time will face each other in the race to fill the Tequesta village council seat being vacated by retiring Mayor Abby Brennan. Harrison Vaughn, a risk management consultant, will face Molly Young, an owner representative for private clients in the commercial real estate development and construction industry, for Tequesta Council Seat 2 in the March 9 municipal election. The seat currently is held by Brennan, who announced that she would retire at the end of her term in April. It is the only race on the ballot for Tequesta as Vice Mayor Kyle Stone secured another term in Council Seat 4 when no candidates filed to run against him.
“Former Florida DBPR lawyer gets 7 1/2 years in prison for child porn” via Jeff Burlew of The Tallahassee Democrat — A former attorney for the Florida Department of Business and Professional Regulation was sentenced to 90 months in federal prison on child pornography charges. David Wayne Aring was sentenced Tuesday at the U.S. Courthouse in Tallahassee. He earlier pleaded guilty to receipt of child pornography. Investigators found thousands of files of child pornography, some depicting the victimization of infants and toddlers. His desktop computer contained thousands of additional images, which he downloaded through peer-to-peer file sharing.
“Palm Bay is a new ‘superstar city’” via Jennifer A. Kingson of Axios — As the pandemic prompts people to move from pricey superstar cities to mid-tier ones where life is cheaper and easier, traditional powerhouses are being upstaged by smaller places on economic vitality. Palm City enters the Milken Institute’s annual ranking of big metropolitan areas with the best regional economies at No. 2, behind Provo, Utah. Large cities in the Intermountain West and South are outperforming many areas on the coasts, mainly due to higher levels of short-term job growth and more affordable housing, Milken said. This seismic shift can be a boon to the smaller cities that prosper — attracting more companies, capital and citizens — but can also have deleterious effects on the qualities people cherish about them, like affordability and middle-class values.
Palm Bay is tops for economic growth, putting it among those with the best regional economies.
What Anthony Pedicini is reading — “Knight Parade, another Gasparilla event, also canceling this year” via Sharon Kennedy Wynne of The Tampa Bay Times — The Gasparilla-season nighttime party that marches down the streets of Ybor City, known as the Krewe of Sant’ Yago Illuminated Knight Parade, announced on Wednesday that it is canceling its annual event because of coronavirus concerns. The announcement comes one day after the Gasparilla Parade of Pirates and the Children’s Parade scratched plans for April parades and said they would wait until next year. The Krewe of the Knights of Sant’ Yago, named after Saint James, Spain’s patron saint, has been crowning a king and holding a parade in Ybor since 1972. It was started by some of the historic district’s leading business owners, including Cesar Gonzmart, the Columbia restaurant owner. It was founded to honor Ybor City’s Latin heritage and diverse culture.
Top opinion
What Mike Waltz is reading — “Pull the U.S. from the 2022 Beijing Olympics” via Ellen Bork of The Bulwark — The Biden administration has signaled that, like the Trump administration before it, it will take a tough line on China. The differences between the Biden administration and the Trump administration on China, senior officials have suggested, are likely to be differences of style, not substance. With the opening ceremony less than a year away, the administration says it has no plans to support boycotting or moving the Games despite China’s grotesque human rights abuses at home and economic and military aggression abroad. Sending American athletes and officials to the Olympic Games in Beijing next year would render incoherent U.S. efforts to contest Beijing’s abuses at home and assertiveness abroad.
Opinions
“NASA’s success is critical to our nation’s future” via Marco Rubio for Florida Today — On Feb. 18, NASA’s Perseverance rover and Mars Helicopter complete their 203-day voyage from Cape Canaveral to the surface of Mars, where the probes will search for potential traces of past life and scout out future routes to explore the Red Planet. It’s the latest in over 60 years of accomplishments for NASA, a decades-running source of pride and unity for our nation. Space exploration has created tens of thousands of jobs in Florida alone. It has spawned entire new sectors of advanced manufacturing, generating amazing technological innovations in our state. Today, the responsibility falls on the Biden administration and Congress to make sure NASA and our commercial space industry have the resources and opportunities they need.
“DeSantis’ unchecked hubris on display again” via Joe Henderson of Florida Politics — Seniors who live in Manatee County’s Lakewood Ranch community will receive 3,000 additional doses of the Moderna vaccine to protect against COVID-19. Good for them. Naturally, DeSantis went there Wednesday to announce the deal. But he should have had an answer ready because reporters were certain to ask why two wealthy ZIP codes got the vaccine before less-affluent parts of the county. If he did have that ready answer, I doubt he would have said, well, this. “If Manatee County doesn’t like us doing this, we are totally fine doing this in counties that want it,” DeSantis said.
“Jared Moskowitz reached across Florida’s deep political divide. That’s all too rare” via the Miami Herald editorial board — When Moskowitz steps down in April from his job as the head of Florida’s Division of Emergency Management, the state will lose a political rarity. As the lone Democrat running a state agency, Moskowitz has demonstrated that it’s still possible to work across party lines. As the state’s COVID vaccine logistics chief, he has navigated the political landscape with a Republican Governor, a Republican-controlled Legislature and Trump hovering overhead. In these political times, that deserves a medal. His sense of bipartisanship also deserves to be emulated — starting in the Governor’s Mansion.
“Florida’s leaders must fight for the ‘For the People Act’” via Anna Eskamani for Florida Politics — Last fall, our state was a hotbed of fights over voter suppression and intimidation — from reports of threats and disinformation aimed at voters of color, to a lawsuit filed when our online registration system crashed and deadlines weren’t extended, to last-minute confusion sowed by state officials over ballot drop boxes. It is time to do something about it — for Florida and every state where people want to vote, and others with entrenched power are trying to stop them. And very soon, we will have a window of opportunity at the national level with the For the People Act.
“Jacksonville ignores its problems, but spends lavishly on political campaigns” via Nate Monroe of The Florida Times-Union — Campaigns for Jacksonville mayor since 2015 have raised and spent more than $15 million, much of it from a relatively small and familiar group of wealthy powerbrokers, with the trend lines pointing toward even more expensive city races in the future. The $15 million is only a partial accounting of the tremendous sums spent on races for only a single City Hall office. It doesn’t include spending by the state and local political parties on behalf of candidates, which is considerable, nor does it account for more obscure political spending that routinely takes place but is harder to track.
“COVID-19 makes canceling Gasparilla a sensible move” via The Tampa Bay Times editorial board — Who could blame Ye Mystic Krewe for canceling the annual Gasparilla parade? The Krewe acknowledged that holding an event that can attract hundreds of thousands of people during a pandemic outweighed the benefits. We could all use a good party, the fun distraction provided by fake pirates, and a raucous parade. But COVID-19 remains an unwanted guest, and giving the virus a target-rich environment full of revelers jammed elbow-to-elbow wasn’t worth the risk. On Tuesday, they called off the event until next year. They couldn’t envision a way to control the usually huge crowd’s size or keep people safely distanced.
On today’s Sunrise
Gov. DeSantis faces accusations of using vaccination sites to reward his political donors. He just presided over the opening of a new pod serving the whitest and wealthiest areas in Manatee County. The Governor was offended when local officials asked why he chose that site.
Also, on today’s Sunrise:
— DeSantis’ response drew a stern rebuke South Florida Rep. Debbie Wasserman Shultz.
— Agriculture Commissioner Fried also piled on … calling the Governor’s actions troubling and potentially illegal.
— There’s a problem with Florida’s vaccine supply. DeSantis says we’re short because of the winter storm.
— A research professor at the University of Florida warns that we need to pay more attention to the U.K. variant of COVID 19 because there’s more in Florida than any other state … and it’s nastier than the original.
— A Senate committee approves a bill exempting presidential searches at public universities from the Sunshine Law. The bill’s sponsor says they might as well because universities have already found a way around it.
— There’s a ruckus over free speech on campus. Things got mighty tense in the House Post-Secondary Education and Lifelong Learning Subcommittee.
— And finally, two Florida Men tried to get out of wearing a mask by claiming to be federal agents. Then they got to meet a real one.
“Jaguars switching back to teal as primary home jersey color” via John Reid of The Florida Times-Union — For their first 16 years as a franchise, teal was the Jaguars’ primary color for their home jerseys until they changed to black during Week 4 of the 2012 season. The Jaguars announced Wednesday they are returning to teal as their primary color for the start of the Urban Meyer era this upcoming season. The switch came after the Jaguars posted a series of cryptic tweets before announcing if they get 21,000 retweets to make teal primary, they would make it happen. Making the switch to teal as our primary uniform color allows us to celebrate that history while kicking off a new era of Jaguars football.”
Blast from the past: The Jaguars will be returning to their classic teal uniforms. Image via Jacksonville Jaguars.
“Retailers trade Fifth Ave. for Worth Ave. as Palm Beach scene thrives with Americans heading South” via Lauren Thomas of CNBC — Retailers, restaurants and other business owners want to be where the people are. And people are moving to South Florida in droves. Some are taking a temporary retreat during the COVID-19 pandemic, away from the cold weather up North. Others are making a longer-term change, and businesses are following by committing to decadeslong leases. At Rosemary Square, an outdoor shopping mall situated close to downtown West Palm Beach, a West Elm furniture store and Urban Outfitters are slated to open in the coming months. They’ll be joined by a slew of new eateries, including a recently opened, local fast-casual taco shop, health-driven chain True Food Kitchen and the hip plant-based restaurant Planta.
Happy birthday
Best wishes to the First Lady of Education, Anne Corcoran; WFSU’s Lynn Hatter; WPLG’s Glenna Milberg and Rep. Jenna Persons.
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Good morning. If today’s newsletter were a suitcase you were bringing on a flight, it might weigh over 50 lbs and you’d have to take out your credit card to pay a fee. It’s really quite stuffed.
Economy: Dry January did not extend beyond alcohol. Retail sales rose 5.3% last month, the first positive reading in three months and the largest bump in seven. Analysts credit the second round of stimulus checks for the surprising, good news.
Crypto: With stocks not providing much in the way of excitement recently, we might as well talk about bitcoin again, which continued its push past $52,000 yesterday.
Remember in January when every other word uttered in English was “GameStop”? Get ready for another round at noon today, when the main characters of the saga will have their buns sufficiently warmed by the House Committee on Financial Services.
The backstory: GameStop was the story a few weeks ago after a legion of fanatical retail investors mobilized on Reddit to launch a short squeeze that sent GameStop shares rocketing higher and forced hedge funds to seek emergency bailouts. The stock has since succumbed to gravity, trading at around $45 a share, down from $483 at its peak.
Today, lawmakers will ask questions of the alleged rabble-rousers. Among them, Robinhood CEO Vlad Tenev, Reddit CEO Steve Huffman, Citadel CEO Ken Griffin, Melvin Capital founder Gabe Plotkin, and the now-infamous trader Keith “Roaring Kitty” Gill.
What can you expect?
In a statement, committee head Rep. Maxine Waters said the hearing will take aim at the hedge fund industry’s “long history of predatory conduct,” as well as unpack Robinhood’s decision to halt trading of GameStop and other meme stocks when interest from individual traders was at its peak. One more phrase to watch on your hearing bingo card: payment for order flow (PFOF).
PFOF involves rerouting trades carried out on one platform to a third party to execute for a small fee. Robinhood makes the majority of its revenue this way, and some critics argue that’s not in the best interest of its customers.
Even the cult hero Roaring Kitty is under scrutiny for his social media posts that helped spark retail interest in GameStop. Though the 34-year-old former MassMutual advisor maintains his posts were meant to be educational only, he hasn’t backed away from his commitment to GameStop. “I’m as bullish as I’ve ever been,” he said in a statement.
Zoom out: The chances of specific regulations resulting from this far-ranging hearing are slim. But the committee stands ready to peel back the layers of a system they feel is set up to hurt the amateur investor.
+ For more on the hearing: We wrote everything you need to know about the 5 guys you’ll hear from later today.
Yesterday, Kathryn Rogers, wife of talk radio personality Rush Limbaugh, announced on Limbaugh’s radio show that he had died of complications from lung cancer.
We didn’t know Limbaugh personally, but we’d guess he preferred his right foot over his left. He rose to prominence during the presidency of Republican Ronald Reagan, whom he adored, and he detested former President Barack Obama, a Democrat. Limbaugh supported former President Trump throughout his presidency, and Trump honored him with the Presidential Medal of Freedom, the US’ highest civilian honor.
Limbaugh was often criticized for making sexist, homophobic, and racist comments, as well as for spreading falsehoods about Obama’s Affordable Care Act and Covid-19.
Zoom out: Limbaugh pioneered a highly successful genre of lowbrow outrage radio, beginning during the Republican revolution of Reagan’s time in office and lasting through the Trump years. Limbaugh earned $85 million/year and his show was the most-listened-to US radio talk show in 2020, with more than 20 million monthly listeners.
Texas’s energy crisis that began last weekend continued to drag through Wednesday. As of last night, 2.7 million homes in the state were still without power in frigid temperatures. Businesses from semiconductor makers to retailers have paused operations. How could something like this happen?
The answer is unsatisfying: We don’t 100% know yet. Experts need to analyze what exactly went wrong with Texas’s power grid when the storm hit, but we know a few factors contributed to the widespread shutoffs:
The sheer scale of the storm. All 254 of Texas’s counties were under a winter storm warning at the same time.
It takes more energy to keep homes warm when it’s cold than it does to keep them cool when it’s hot—and Texas’s energy system is geared toward A/C.
Texas had not taken “winterization measures” to protect its electric grid from freezing weather.
There’s a lot more competition for limited supplies of natural gas in the winter.
Zoom out: The outages have led to criticism of Texas’s energy grid, which is (mostly) independent from the rest of the US. If it were connected to other states, they could conceivably lend Texas their extra power.
When it comes to protecting your home, you probably shouldn’t depend on dinky security signs or having the local fire department on speed dial.
What you need is comprehensive, personalized home security you can count on—not kinda hope and pray on.
With SimpliSafe, you can customize your entire security system online, have it shipped straight to your door, and set it all up yourself in under an hour.
Forget schmoozing at the firehouse pancake breakfast. SimpliSafe’s home security expertsmonitor your home 24/7 and dispatch police, fire, or medical professionals the second danger is detected.
PCMag and CNET have named SimpliSafe “Editor’s Choice,” and US News & World Report even named it “best overall home security of 2021.”
In other words, if there were an awards show for home security, SimpliSafe would be walking away with the Golden Padlock.
We’re trying out a new segment called “Key Performance Indicators” with 1 quote, 1 stat, and 1 read, a format pioneered by our younger sibling, Emerging Tech Brew. Let us know what you think!
Quote: “You had Madonna and Sean Penn walking in, Barbra Streisand and Don Johnson, Muhammad Ali would be there, Oprah sitting with Donald ringside…It was a special time. I’m sorry to see it go.”—Bernie Dillion, who decades ago was the events manager for the former Trump Plaza casino in Atlantic City, shared some memories with the AP as the building was demolished yesterday. See above.
Stat: As of last week, the CDC recorded 165 flu-related hospitalizations since October. During the 2019–2020 flu season, about 400,000 people were hospitalized with the flu and 22,000 people died. “Flu has been essentially nonexistent,” infectious disease expert Dr. William Schaffner told NPR.
But they’re not ending up where you might think. US Postal Service data shows that San Fran residents are indeed leaving the city in droves—for other Bay Area counties including Alameda, San Mateo, and Marin.
Big picture: Much hay has been made of a supposed mass migration away from ultra-expensive San Francisco, where the coronavirus knocked out perks like nightlife, restaurants, and amusement park-like corporate campuses.
But the new data challenges the idea that business-friendly, high-quality-of-life spots such as Denver and Austin are getting all the ex-San Franciscans. Those two cities were in the top 20 post-SF locations, but waaay behind places just a quick drive from the Embarcadero, like Sonoma County.
Bottom line: One economist told the SF Chronicle the data could suggest a “silver lining” for the city’s recovery; it may be easier to lure residents back from Marin than Miami.
Tuesday, our pals in business writing at Recode dropped the first episode in the newest season of Land of the Giants, their podcast series about Silicon Valley’s tech beasts. Past seasons have covered Amazon and Netflix; now, reporters Shirin Gaffary and Alex Kantrowitz are tackling Google. Why?
Shirin: “The idea with the series was to chronicle the rise of all the major tech giants. And it worked out well because Google is facing these three antitrust lawsuits, and it’s also at a crossroads about what it wants its next chapter to be, as it pushes beyond search. We’re going to get into the moonshots of Google and what its next big thing is going to be if it evolves beyond being primarily a search company.”
Alex: “I think that Google is subtly the most powerful of all the tech giants. It’s the thing that sorts through a huge chunk of online video, with YouTube. It’s the browser we use with Chrome. It’s the mobile operating system for most of the people who are logging on the internet with smartphones with Android…anywhere you go across the internet, you see Google.”
Google will pay News Corp., the owner of the WSJ and other global outlets, to use its journalism in the US, UK, and Australia.
Facebook, for its part, will restrict the sharing of news content in Australia.
The US charged three North Korean programmers with a hacking spree that targeted more than $1.3 billion.
Federal agents have seized more than 10 million counterfeit N95 masks in recent weeks.
Maersk, the world’s largest container shipping company, said it will launch the world’s first carbon neutral cargo ship in 2023.
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Sticking the landing: Tune into NASA’s YouTube channel at 2:15pm ET to watch the Perseverance rover land on Mars. Had to read that sentence again after we typed it…so cool. Here’s how it will go down.
Rated PG for Personal Growth: Get some help finding self-help resources with this “I want to learn how to…” directory.
Clever logos: Try finding the hidden images in 40 brand logos.
This is your final warning: The deadline to submit your entry for our two-week-long Friday Puzzle is noon ET today. Take a look at the puzzle and enter for a chance to be featured in the Brew.
No matter how crazy the GameStop saga gets, there’s always a news story or three that’s even crazier. Three of these bizarre headlines are real; the other we made up. Can you spot the fake?
“Pigs can play video games with their snouts, scientists find”
“GM CEO Mary Barra agrees to debate battery tech with Elon Musk on Clubhouse”
“World’s longest hockey game played in deep freeze in Alberta”
“Florida man steals rings from one girlfriend to propose to another”
ANSWER
Unfortunately, Mary Barra isn’t debating Elon Musk.
At a CNN town hall Tuesday night, Biden ruled out canceling $50,000 of federal student loan debt per borrower, saying he is more comfortable forgiving debt of $10,000 per borrower. White House officials said Wednesday that Biden’s reference to writing off $10,000 of loan forgiveness was not meant as a descriptor for executive action but to reflect his endorsement of achieving that goal through legislation.
…
Roughly 45 million Americans owe approximately $1.6 trillion in federal student loans. Canceling $10,000 of student loan debt would completely wipe out the debts of more than 15 million borrowers whose current balances are less than or equal to that amount, according to the most recently available federal data as of Sept. 30.
…
Some Democrats have said that billions spent on widespread loan forgiveness could be better spent elsewhere or should at least be targeted to borrowers with the most need. “The sums involved in loan-forgiveness proposals under discussion would exceed cumulative spending on many of the nation’s major anti-poverty programs over the last several decades,” [said an Obama administration Treasury official].
All votes are anonymous. This poll closes at: 9:00 PST
YESTERDAY’S POLLDo you support revoking citizenship for people accused of terrorism?
Yes
58%
No
26%
Unsure
16%
351 votes, 153 comments
BEST COMMENTS“Yes – Yes, but only if they’re actually convicted. Accusations aren’t a good enough reason.”
“No – Privileges can be taken from a person as punishment, but revoking citizenship is an extreme punishment that makes a person unable to be rehabilitated to the world. Where does one go if citizenship is taken away? We don’t even attempt this with the most heinous murderers and soon it could be suggested as a remedy for all sorts of crimes. It is an unworkable punishment.”
“Unsure – It makes sense to deny citizenship to foreign terrorists, but what about domestic terrorists born in America? And if terrorists had their citizenship revoked, could they be tried and convicted by the U.S.?”
Donald Trump, freshly acquitted in the recent Senate trial, is back in the news and doing interviews. Speaking to Newsmax TV’s Greg Kelly, he said it is too soon to tell if he will run again in 2024, but averred that “I’m the only guy who gets impeached, and my numbers go up.” He also discussed his plans for a social media comeback, hinting that as well as talking to numerous platforms, that there is “also the other option of building your own site.”
Facebook has pulled news feeds from its Australian platform in response to a proposed law that would force the social media giant to pay for the content that appears. Australian politicos are calling it an “assault” against the country. This argument will be coming to the U.S. soon enough, and perhaps the decision to pull content was a warning shot to American lawmakers that the company would follow through on its threats.
Honey, Fire Up the Coal Stove, Our Clean Energy Is Frozen
Radio host and American icon Rush Limbaugh has passed away aged 70 after his battle with lung cancer. As Liberty Nation’s Tim Donner writes, he was more than just a voice on the air, but “in many ways, the custodian of the conservative movement.”
China has been discussing what would happen if they curbed the supply of rare earth materials to the United States. In reports that were almost certainly being used to create pressure, the Ministry of Industry wondered aloud whether America would be able to build F-35 fighter jets if the minerals suddenly became unavailable.
Texas Governor Greg Abbot has ordered energy companies in the snowbound state to stop out-of-state exports of natural gas temporarily. Almost two million Texans are facing power outages at present.
Back to the 1970s as Commodities Supercycle Sparks Inflation
Something political to ponder as you enjoy your morning coffee.
You can’t con an honest man, so the saying goes. And similarly, you can’t threaten a man with strong convictions. China has decided that President Biden is ripe for the picking and is resorting to bullying tactics in an ongoing power struggle. After Biden’s ludicrous answers at the recent CNN town hall, it seems Beijing is tightening the screws by reminding him that the CCP controls 80% of all rare-earth minerals and could choose to stop the supply any time they wish. It’s almost as if the Chinese party leaders are saying: Nice country you have there, Joe, be a shame if something happened to it.
Despite the major changes in the monetary policy facts over the past few months, Jerome Powell sees no reason to change his earlier commitment to an ultra-easy US monetary policy for the next few years.
That the Joe Biden administration is in the process of discarding the Donald Trump fair access rule does not bode well for a policy-driven strengthening of US economic performance, in the capital market and many others.
“New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo’s top aide [Melissa DeRosa] told Democratic lawmakers that the administration took months to release data revealing how many people living at nursing homes died of COVID-19 because officials ‘froze’ over worries the information was ‘going to be used against us.’… In recent weeks, a court order and state attorney general report has forced the state to acknowledge the nursing home resident death toll is nearly 15,000, when it previously reported 8,500 — a number that excluded residents who died after being taken to hospitals.” AP News
“New York state Assemblyman Ron Kim accused Gov. Andrew Cuomo Wednesday of threatening to ‘destroy’ Kim’s career in retaliation for Kim criticizing Cuomo’s handling of Covid-19 in nursing homes.” Forbes
Many on both sides condemn Cuomo and call on the New York legislature to take action:
“The Cuomo administration apparently feared legal jeopardy — and federal persecution, if not prosecution — over the data so, at best, it slow-walked releasing it to avoid that fight. To be clear, that doesn’t necessarily mean the administration would have faced legitimate legal jeopardy over the data, but the reasoning is still, at best, an inadequate justification for a failure to be accountable and transparent about public-health data during a public-health emergency, regardless of the consequences. And DeRosa’s explanation wasn’t even a public justification — or a public apology — but offered in private to a small group of Democratic lawmakers who had been forced to defend the administration.” Chas Danner and Matt Stieb, New York Magazine
“There were nursing homes in New York at the start of the pandemic that were trying to refuse reentry to residents who tested positive for the novel coronavirus. It was Andrew Cuomo, acting under the extraordinary executive emergency powers granted to him by the state [legislature] that ordered all of the homes to accept returning residents and forbade them from requiring a negative COVID test as part of the process. Cuomo also threatened non-compliant nursing homes with crippling fines or the loss of their license to operate. So while some of the nursing homes were clearly failing to take all possible precautions, even the ones who were trying to do the right thing were forbidden from doing so.” Jazz Shaw, Hot Air
“If the Cuomo administration failed to provide accurate information to the US Department of Justice as part of a DOJ inquiry — an allegation the Cuomo administration has denied — the DOJ would have jurisdiction to investigate any false or misleading statements made in the course of those communications… New York State also has an inspector general’s office that has a mandate to ensure that ‘State officials and employees meet the highest standards of integrity, efficiency, and accountability.’…
“Finally, the New York State legislature has oversight authority of the executive branch, and some legislators have proposed conducting an investigation, including issuing subpoenas and convening hearings, into the matter. Legislators have also proposed taking steps to strip Gov. Cuomo of some of the emergency powers that were extended to him for the purpose of responding to the pandemic… If New Yorkers want transparency and accountability from this administration, our public integrity systems provide the tools to make that happen. If we want New York to be a governmental integrity leader instead of a corruption leader, we should use those tools.” Jennifer Rodgers, CNN
“Stripping Cuomo of his emergency powers is politically doable, and the public would benefit. That would put the state Legislature back in charge, ensuring that whatever actions are taken to fight COVID are more balanced and reasonable than what Cuomo did. It’s hard to imagine that lawmakers would vote to shutter churches, destroy businesses and close down schools in their own districts. They’d have to answer to their angry neighbors and constituents…
“Even when governors behave more honorably than Cuomo, prolonged emergency powers are a bad idea. After all, if government by one person produced wiser decisions than government by the people’s elected lawmakers, we’d opt for autocratic government all the time. Why choose it during crises?” Betsy McCaughey, New York Post
Other opinions below.
From the Left
“Burying the casualty information constructed two liability shields: one for a health care industry that dumped millions into New York Democratic Party coffers, and another for Cuomo himself. It deprived [NY State Assemblyman Ron] Kim and other legislators of real-time data buttressing their arguments to halt the corporate immunity law (which was being replicated by other states and by Republicans in Congress). It also shielded the governor from political blowback for both his mismanagement of the crisis and his fealty to donors…
“CNN’s Chris Cuomo is reminding us why conflicts of interest poison the news… As the coronavirus spread around the country, Andrew Cuomo turned in more than 10 appearances on ‘Cuomo Prime Time.’… In late June, the host explained to his brother the journalistic rationale for breaking with industry ethics. ‘Me having you on the show is an unusual thing. We’ve never really done it. But this was an unusual time,’ said Chris Cuomo, who then proceeded to praise the governor’s work on coronavirus… But in ‘unusual times,’ principles of journalism merit even more rigorous adherence, not an expedient suspension…
“To what extent has ‘Cuomo Prime Time’ covered the undercount scandal in recent weeks? Not one bit… [The show] brands itself as a locus of chest-beating integrity and righteousness. Yet the asymmetrical coverage of his brother — over-the-top praise when the governor is up; silence when he’s down — is indistinct from the model that CNN (quite rightly) accused conservative media outlets, including Fox News, of following vis-à-vis the Trump administration.” Erik Wemple, Washington Post
“The undeserved hype around Cuomo reflects the dangerous way in which style has triumphed over substance in politics. It also reflects the way in which, when it comes to leadership, we reward charisma and confidence over competence. Cuomo-mania may have died down, but I wouldn’t imagine that the current bad press will have a lasting effect on Cuomo’s career. The thing about guys like him is that they always fail up. Still, I do hope that if we’ve learned one leadership lesson from Cuomo it’s that we desperately need to rethink what a real leader looks like.” Arwa Mahdawi, The Guardian
From the Right
“New York was the primary source of new infections across the United States… The New York Times reported last year that the New York variant was responsible for 70 percent of covid-19 cases in Texas, 78 percent of cases in Wisconsin, 80 percent in Alaska, 84 percent in Arizona and 100 percent in Louisiana…
“Stonewalling the Justice Department is bad enough, but Cuomo did something even worse: His administration provided inaccurate data to public health officials in real time, at the beginning of the crisis, when government scientists were desperately trying to figure out how the virus was spreading, who was most vulnerable and how to stop it… This was more than just a coverup. It impeded our public health response…
“New York lawmakers are talking about revoking Cuomo’s pandemic emergency powers. That’s a start. But imagine if Trump had done what Cuomo did? We’d have a third impeachment on our hands. Cuomo’s actions certainly merit his removal from office — not just for the coverup, but for the actions he took that impeded our national response to the worst pandemic in American history.” Marc A. Thiessen, Washington Post
“Cuomo’s policy failures are not confined to nursing homes. His capricious policies on business and restaurant closures, unmoored from public-health data, have destroyed small businesses statewide and wiped out New York City restaurants. The December restaurant reclosure was made at the same time that New York officials released data indicating that during the September–November period in which restaurants were open, restaurants and bars accounted for only 1.43 percent of Covid-19 cases. Transmission in homes and at social events account for nearly 74 percent of cases…
“And the New York Times noted that the metrics Cuomo had said would guide his decisions on business reopening were worse when he announced New York City restaurants could reopen for indoor dining on February 14 than when he closed them in December…
“Cuomo has eagerly criticized other state governors’ pandemic responses. ‘You played politics with this virus and you lost,’ he chided. ‘Look at the numbers.’ He had particular censure for Florida governor Ron DeSantis. In fact, New York has the nation’s second-most Covid-19 deaths per million population, just behind New Jersey—and nearly twice as much as Florida. It turns out that it was Cuomo who was playing politics.” Joel Zinberg, City Journal
❄️ Wishing safety to the more than 1 million Americans waking up without power. (Worst hit: Texas, Mississippi, Louisiana, Oregon, Kentucky.)
Today’s Smart Brevity™ count: 1,172 words … 4½ minutes.
💉 Axios today debuts a Get Smart video short course series on vaccines. Axios journalists show how vaccines work and how they’re tested. Get your free dose here.
🔭 Driving the day: NASA expects to receive confirmation of a rover’s landing on Mars around 3:55 p.m. EST.Latest update. … Full coverage in Axios PM.
1 big thing: America’s can’t-do spirit
Illustration: Aïda Amer/Axios
The Texas power failure is the latest in a series of disasters that will be harder to fix — or prevent from happening again — because Americans are retreating to partisan and cultural corners instead of trying to solve problems.
From COVID to the election fallout to the utter collapse of Texas’ electric grid, America is no longer showing the rest of the world how to conquer its biggest challenges, Axios managing editors David Nather and Scott Rosenberg write.
Instead, there’s always another uncivil war to be fought — even when democracy, global health and now climate change are on the line.
Why it matters: Between extreme weather events, a pandemic and an attack on democracy itself, America has been pummeled with the kinds of existential disasters that usually come along once every 100 years.
Texas has never been prepared for extreme winter — or, really, any winter. But now the consequences of its decisions, especially its independent power grid, have become inescapable. So what were the first instincts of the partisan warriors as millions of Texans waited in freezing, dark houses?
Gov. Greg Abbott (R) singled out the loss of wind and solar power, and argued that “the Green New Deal would be a deadly deal for the United States of America” — even though breakdowns in thermal sources of energy, especially natural gas, were a bigger factor, The Texas Tribune reports.
The pandemic drove life expectancy in the U.S. to its lowest level since 2006, Axios’ Marisa Fernandez writes from preliminary CDC data.
U.S. life expectancy was about 78 years in the first half of 2020. In 2019, it was roughly 79 years. (An asterisk: The preliminary data don’t account for seasonal fluctuations in the death rate, and more people die in winter.)
Men can expect to live an average of 75 years, compared to 81 years for women. Both lost about a year off of their life expectancy in the first months of the pandemic.
It’s the largest drop since World War II, the N.Y. Times reports.
Between the lines: Racial disparities in life expectancy widened in the first half of 2020. White Americans now live an average of six years longer than Black Americans, up from about a four-year difference in 2019.
Deadly weather will be hitting the U.S. more often, experts said as Texas and other states battled winter storms that blew past the worst-case planning of utilities, governments and millions of shivering citizens, AP reports.
Why it matters: This week’s storms fit a pattern of worsening extremes under climate change. Local, state and federal officials have failed to do nearly enough to prepare for greater and more dangerous weather.
At least two dozen people have died this week, including from fire or carbon monoxide poisoning while struggling to stay warm in their homes.
In Houston, Gallery Furniture owner Jim “Mattress Mack” McIngvale opened his main store as a shelter. People sat around dining room tables in the showroom, rested at fancy desks, reclined in big chairs and tried out the beds. Go deeper.
4. Our weekly map: Cases fall in 44 states
The pace of new coronavirus infections continued to plummet over the past week, Sam Baker and Andrew Witherspoon report.
Why it matters: This sustained drop is unambiguously good news. If the U.S. can keep it going, this progress will save lives, make it easier to safely reopen schools and businesses, and minimize the threat from variants.
The U.S. averaged roughly 82,000 new cases per day over the past week — a 24% drop from the week before. Cases have been falling at about that pace for weeks.
This is the first time since early November that the U.S. has averaged fewer than 100,000 cases per day.
Regulators and the DOJ are looking into whether anything unlawful happened in the wild trading days when GameStop stock surged as much as 2,000% before falling back, Axios markets reporter Courtenay Brown writes.
The House Financial Services Committee joins the scrutiny today with a noon hearing chaired by Rep. Maxine Waters (D-Calif..)
Sticking points for lawmakers include payments for directing trades to the likes of Citadel Securities, the length of trade settlements, market manipulation (on and off Reddit), and the rise of platforms that make it easy to trade.
When the Australian government told tech platforms they had to start paying publishers for the headlines and links that fill their users’ posts, Google caved but Facebook walked, Axios Media Trends anchor Sara Fischer writes.
Why it matters: These companies’ moves yesterday — as Google struck a deal with News Corp. to evade Australia’s forthcoming rules, while Facebook essentially barred news content there — could shape how news companies are compensated for their work online for years to come.
The impact of Rush Limbaugh — the “Doctor of Democracy,” with “talent on loan from God,” as he put it — on the radio industry can’t be overstated, Axios Media Trends expert Sara Fischer tells me:
Limbaugh, who died yesterday at 70 after a battle with lung cancer, for many years was the nation’s most listened-to radio broadcaster, with his “Excellence in Broadcasting” show drawing up to 15 million listeners per week.
The success of his show, after debuting nationally in 1988, paved the way for other conservative hosts — Glenn Beck, Sean Hannity, Mark Levin — leading to the conservative radio revolution of the 1990s and early 2000s.
Ushering in many tactics now popular on the right, Limbaugh pushed the notion that the mainstream press — “the drive-by media,” as he put it — was biased against conservatives.
Limbaugh called women “feminazis,” a term now widely used by internet trolls, and was an early promoter of baseless conspiracies.
Go deeper: Even if you didn’t listen, you lived in Rush’s media world, AP’s David Bauder writes.
8. States make it easier to clear criminal records
Illustration: Sarah Grillo/Axios
Michigan is poised to enact the nation’s most lenient “expungement” law, loosening the criteria for having a crime erased from one’s record — and other states may soon follow suit, Axios Cities mayor Jennifer A. Kingson writes.
Why it matters: In cities like Detroit, where a third of residents have felony or misdemeanor convictions that make it harder to get a job or rent a house, expungement paves the way to a higher income, better life prospects, and the joy of enhanced dignity.
9. First look: Nickelodeon unveils Lakota character
Photo: Nickelodeon
Nickelodeon today unveils Charles Little Bull — a role-model grad student in his twenties who wears his long hair in two braids — on “The Casagrandes,” Axios race and justice reporter Russell Contreras writes.
Why it matters: The character’s debut reflects Native American advocates’ heightened campaigning to champion more positive, high-profile representation in media and news coverage.
The Trump Plaza casino — where movie stars, athletes and rock stars partied, and a future president honed his instincts for hype — was imploded yesterday after falling into such disrepair that chunks began peeling off.
The Plaza marketed itself as “the center of it all.” (AP)
Black and Latino Americans were hit harder than Whites, reflecting the racial disparities of the pandemic. Overall, it was the biggest decline since World War II.
In a Zoom interview from his district office in Charleston, West Virginia, U.S. Sen. Joe Manchin, a Mountain State Democrat, said his deference to the decision of the Senate parliamentarian is no different than his position on the filibuster.
Even with the Democrats’ trifecta control of Washington in both chambers of Congress and the White House, every piece of the Democratic agenda faces one key question: What does Joe Manchin think of it?
After four years locked in an uncomfortable embrace, leading Republicans and Beltway conservatives are beginning their quest to distance themselves and the GOP from former President Donald Trump, who shows no sign of going anywhere.
Senate Democrats are split on new legislation that could force tech companies to censor online ads in the hopes of curbing misinformation and fraudulent claims. The bill is part of an effort to reform legal protections for online platforms such as Facebook and Google, which carry a majority of the ads online.
A Democratic New York assemblyman claims Gov. Andrew Cuomo threatened his career after he criticized the governor’s handling of the coronavirus pandemic.
The Biden administration and a top Democrat in Congress are moving to repurpose billions of dollars for the Trump administration’s border wall to other means of achieving the same goal of deterring illegal migration.
The White House and left-wing Democrats are likely heading for blows after President Biden appeared to close the door on several top progressive demands, threatening to splinter the party.
Former President Donald Trump was mostly disciplined in interviews Wednesday, heaping praise on the late conservative radio icon Rush Limbaugh while keeping tight-lipped about his plans.
Chris Cuomo is not allowed to interview his brother, New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo, CNN said, claiming that appearances the governor made on his show in 2020 were an exception to the outlet’s normal rule.
The FBI and the Brooklyn federal prosecutor’s office have opened an investigation into New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo’s handling of nursing home death data during the coronavirus pandemic, according to multiple reports.
The New York City Police Department is searching for a man after a 52-year-old woman was shoved to the ground in a possible racially charged attack in Flushing, Queens on Tuesday.
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AP MORNING WIRE
Good morning. In today’s AP Morning Wire:
Climate Change: US needs to brace itself for more deadly storms.
US life expectancy drops a year in pandemic, most since WWII.
The Horror: Witnesses recall massacre in Ethiopian holy city.
Killings surge in Syrian camp housing Islamic State families.
TAMER FAKAHANY DEPUTY DIRECTOR – GLOBAL NEWS COORDINATION, LONDON
The Rundown
AP PHOTO/DAVID J. PHILLIP
Climate change: US needs to brace itself for more deadly storms, experts say; Power outages linger for millions as another icy storm looms
Deadly weather will be battering the United States more often and America needs to get better at dealing with it, experts said as Texas and other states battled winter storms that blew past the worst-case planning of utilities and governments, leaving millions to shiver.
The crisis sounded an alarm for power systems throughout the country to plan for severe conditions even beyond historical trends. Experts say a lot needs to be done to prepare better for the future storms sure to come.
The Storm & Fallout: Millions of Americans endured another frigid day without electricity or heat after the deadly winter storm. The situation put pressure on utility crews to restore power before another blast of snow and ice sowed more chaos. Nearly 3.4 million customers around the U.S. were still without electricity, and some also had no water service, Paul J. Weber in Austin and Jill Bleed in Little Rock report.
Texas officials ordered 7 million people to boil tap water before drinking it following days of record low temperatures that damaged infrastructure and froze pipes. That’s a quarter of the population of the nation’s second-largest state. The latest storm was certain to complicate recovery efforts, especially in states unaccustomed to such weather.
US life expectancy drops a year in pandemic, most since WWII; How will we know we’ve reached ‘herd immunity?’
Life expectancy in the United States has dropped a staggering one year during the first half of 2020 as the pandemic caused its first surge of deaths, health officials say.
“This is a huge decline,” the CDC said. “You have to go back to World War II, the 1940s, to find a decline like this.”
Other health experts say it shows the profound impact of COVID-19, not just on deaths directly due to infection but also from heart disease, cancer and other conditions.
EXPLAINER: How will we know we’ve reached herd immunity? Health officials around the world are racing to vaccinate people — but what qualifies as “enough” is still an open question. The goal is to get to “herd immunity,” when enough people are protected from a virus, either from vaccination or a past infection. That makes it hard for the virus to jump from person to person. Many experts say at least 70% of a population needs to be protected. Candice Choi and Aniruddha Ghosal report.
More from Around the World:
South African President Cyril Ramaphosa was among the first in his country to receive a vaccination, effectively joining an observational study as the Johnson & Johnson vaccine is not yet authorized for general use anywhere in the world.
The European Union, under heavy pressure to ramp up vaccination efforts, approved contracts for 300 million additional doses of Moderna’s vaccine and 200 million more from Pfizer. The EU is also funding more research to successfully hunt down variants and counter them.
U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres sharply criticized the “wildly uneven and unfair” distribution of vaccines, saying 10 countries have administered 75% of vaccinations.
Pope Francis presided over a pandemic Ash Wednesday service, with reduced participation of the faithful and a revised rite to reduce the chances of infection as the virus keeps spreading through Italy.
Dutch lawmakers are set to debate hastily drawn up legislation underpinning the country’s coronavirus curfew after a judge ordered it scrapped earlier this week.
Exclusive: Witnesses recall the horror of a massacre in an Ethiopian holy city during the ongoing Tigray conflict
Bodies with gunshot wounds lay in the streets for days in Ethiopia’s holiest city.
At night, residents listened in horror as hyenas fed on the corpses of people they knew. But they were forbidden from burying their dead by invading Eritrean soldiers.
As Ethiopia’s Tigray region slowly resumes telephone service after three months of conflict, the deacon and other witnesses gave the AP a detailed account of what might be its deadliest massacre, when some 800 people are believed to have been killed in a single weekend in late November.
The atrocities of the Tigray conflict have occurred in the shadows. Ethiopian Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed, who won the Nobel Peace Prize in 2019 for making peace with neighboring Eritrea, announced the fighting as the world focused on the U.S. election.
He accused Tigray’s regional forces, whose leaders dominated Ethiopia for nearly three decades before he took office, of attacking the Ethiopian military. Tigray’s leaders called it self-defense after months of tensions.
While the world clamors for access to Tigray to investigate suspected atrocities on all sides and deliver aid to millions of hungry people, the prime minister has rejected outside “interference.” He declared victory in late November and said no civilian had been killed. His government denies the presence of thousands of soldiers from Eritrea, long an enemy of the Tigray leaders.
“Al-Hol will be the womb that will give birth to new generations of extremists,” a Syrian researcher who focuses on jihadi groups says of the sprawling camp in northeastern Syria housing families of the Islamic State group.
Deaths have stacked up: a policeman shot dead with a pistol equipped with a silencer, a local official gunned down, his son wounded, an Iraqi man beheaded. In total, 20 men and women were killed last month in the camp.
Syrian Kurdish officials who run the camp say they struggle to keep it under control. The jump in violence has heightened calls for countries to repatriate citizens languishing in the camp.
Al-Hol houses the wives, widows, children and other family members of IS militants _ more than 80% of its 62,000 residents are women and children. The majority are Iraqis and Syrians, but it includes 10,000 people from 57 other countries, housed in a highly secured separate area known as the Annex. Many of them remain die-hard IS supporters.
Those repatriations have slowed dramatically because of the pandemic. If left there, the thousands of children in the camp risk being radicalized, local and U.N. officials have starkly warned.
It has been nearly two years since the U.S.-led coalition captured the last sliver of territory held by the Islamic State group, ending their self-declared caliphate that covered large parts of Iraq and Syria.
Since then, remaining IS militants have gone underground in the Syrian-Iraqi border region, continuing an insurgency. and IS sleeper cells keep striking Syrian government troops, the Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces and civilian administrators.
The first Mexican shelter reached by migrants after trekking through the Guatemalan jungle has hosted nearly 1,500 migrants already this year compared to 3,000 all of last year, even though it has halved its dormitory capacity due to the pandemic. Latin America’s migrants are on the move again. After a year of pandemic-induced paralysis, those in contact with migrants believe the flow north could return to the high levels seen in late 2018 and early 2019. The difference is that it’s happening during a pandemic.
Australia’s government has condemned Facebook over its shocking move to prevent Australians from sharing news that also blocked some government communications and commercial pages. Australian officials say Facebook retaliated after the House of Representatives passed a law that would make Facebook and Google pay for Australian journalism. The legislation needs to be passed by the Senate before it becomes law. Google and Facebook fear Australia’s proposed law will become an expensive precedent other countries will follow. Google had threatened retaliation, too, but that threat is fading after it made deals with News Corp. and other Australian publishers.
Rush Limbaugh, the talk radio host who became the voice of American conservatism, has died at 70 a year after announcing he had lung cancer. With his three-hour weekday radio show broadcast on nearly 600 stations across the U.S., and a massive audience of millions, Limbaugh’s bombastic, bellicose right-wing rants shaped the national political conversation, swaying the opinions of Republicans and the direction of the party. Donald Trump had awarded him the Presidential Medal of Freedom, the nation’s highest civilian honor.
A NASA rover is hurtling toward a landing on Mars in the riskiest step yet in an epic quest to bring back rocks that could answer whether life ever existed on the Red Planet. The six-wheeled vehicle, called Perseverance, will be visiting a planet long known as a death trap for incoming spacecraft. Ground controllers will be watching nervously this afternoon as the rover makes its descent. If it succeeds, it will be the third visit to Mars this month. Two spacecraft from the UAE and China swung into orbit around the planet on successive days last week.
Meanwhile, between the heavy snow and extreme ice, Chicago-area homeowners should keep an eye out: it’s ice dam season. Here’s what it is, how it forms and what you can do about it.
Here’s more coronavirus news and other top stories you need to know to start your day.
The number came to light as Lightfoot seeks City Council approval to transfer about $65 million in unspent federal COVID-19 money into the 2021 budget, after the Biden administration waived Federal Emergency Management Agency local funding matches and extended the deadline to spend federal dollars until the end of the year.
Gov. J.B. Pritzker on Wednesday delivered a staunch defense of his handling of the COVID-19 pandemic and a rebuke to Republicans who fought his graduated-rate income tax in a budget address that proposed $1 billion in cuts to business tax breaks backed by the GOP and its allies.
5 takeaways from Pritzker’s Illinois budget proposal
Statues of Presidents George Washington, Abraham Lincoln and William McKinley, as well as the Italian explorer Christopher Columbus, were among the 41 public statues and other commemorative markers identified on a list from Mayor Lori Lightfoot’s administration on Wednesday for further review as part of “a racial healing and historical reckoning project” started last summer.
The Chicago White Sox got a taste of the postseason in 2020. They want more. A lot more.
Pitchers and catchers reported to camp Wednesday in Glendale, Ariz. It’s Tony La Russa’s first spring training as a manager since 2011, when he led the St. Louis Cardinals to a World Series title. And most of the lineup returns from last season, when the Sox made the playoffs for the first time since 2008.
Paul Sullivan column: Tony La Russa’s return to the Chicago White Sox couldn’t have started much worse. But if he guides them to a World Series title, all will be forgiven.
Noted attorney Kathleen Zellner and her husband, Robert, sold their four-bedroom, Georgian-style mansion in unincorporated Wheaton for $1.75 million. Zellner has represented high-profile clients and specialized in wrongful conviction cases. She has won the freedom of several men who were convicted of murder, and in 2018, she appeared on Netflix’s true crime documentary show “Making a Murderer,” which focused on her client Steven Avery. Take a look inside the 7,396-square-foot house.
They were drawn to each other by their love for dogs.
Sarah Manos, a 27-year-old high school teacher, owned Daisy and Kirby, mixes of the Shih Tzu and Bichon Frise breeds. Mathew Berry, a 28-year-old driver for a medical transportation company, had a German shepherd named Zip.
They met on a dating app, and it seemed like a perfect match, but their relationship soon turned hellish, Manos says in a lawsuit filed Wednesday against Berry in Cook County circuit court. In it, she says that, over the next two and a half months, Berry tortured and killed her dogs as he became increasingly controlling and jealous and threatened violence. Frank Main has the story…
Mayor Lori Lightfoot is confronting the “hard truths of Chicago’s racial history,” launching a public process to review the fate of 41 statues and other monuments, including some of former presidents Abraham Lincoln, George Washington, Ulysses S. Grant and William McKinley.
A pilot program quietly launched in Belmont Cragin last weekend is expected to be expanded to other West Side and South Side communities hit hard by the virus.
In a pre-recorded speech from the Illinois State Fairgrounds in Springfield, Pritzker focused first on the impact of the pandemic on the state’s businesses and the “tiny joys” it’s taken away from residents.
Alva Besst was driving near Halsted and 31st Street when someone fired shots and gunfire went through the back window of his vehicle, striking him in the head.
One of the main criticisms of the film “Judas and the Black Messiah” is the cast and crew’s alleged lack of involvement in assisting Fred Hampton Jr. in securing the funds to save his father’s childhood home.
Kids Off The Block, a Roseland nonprofit, is lauded for giving to youth and families in need — food, clothing or refuge from the streets in the founder’s own home.
Prosecutors said the victim had been seated in the car for about five minutes when someone opened the driver’s door, pressed the muzzle of a handgun to the side of the victim’s face and said, “Don’t you f—ing move.”
Welcome to The Hill’s Morning Report. Today is Thursday! We get you up to speed on the most important developments in politics and policy, plus trends to watch. Alexis Simendinger and Al Weaver are the co-creators. Readers can find us on Twitter @asimendinger and @alweaver22. Please recommend the Morning Report to friends and let us know what you think. CLICK HERE to subscribe!
Total U.S. coronavirus deaths reported each morning this week: Monday, 486,106; Tuesday, 486,325; Wednesday, 488,081; Thursday, 490,540.
President Biden and Democratic lawmakers have choreographed a legislative battle to “crush” the coronavirus, as Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) likes to say, and to pour nearly $2 trillion into an economy that will turn on whether hundreds of millions of effective vaccine doses make it into Americans’ arms.
The Federal Reserve repeated in minutes of its January meeting released on Wednesday that fiscal and monetary policy in a pandemic cannot by themselves throttle a pathogen. It will take ample supplies of vaccines and herd immunity to return to the “before” times. Vaccines, masks and social distancing, mixed with aid from Congress, could improve the economic outlook, according to the nation’s central bank (The Washington Post).
Ahead is a fast-moving legislative timeline as the House returns to Washington next week eager to adopt by the end of February a relief blueprint that mirrors the president’s plan. Racing to get ahead of expiring unemployment relief programs, Democrats hope to clear a mammoth bill by mid-March in the Senate without losing a single Democratic vote. Easier said than done.
Bloomberg News: Democrats put the Biden stimulus on a 10-day fast track for a House vote.
As The Hill’s Niv Elis reports, Republicans in Congress have misgivings about Biden’s approach: too big, too wasteful, too scattershot and too partisan. They insist that funding enacted as part of earlier COVID-19 response measures has not yet been tapped out.
The details of the House legislation revealed to lawmakers and the public in the next two weeks will expose rifts within the Democratic ranks and ripe political targets for Republican opponents.
The Hill: Biden faces backlash from the left about his rejection, during a Tuesday town hall discussion in Wisconsin, of a pitch from the audience to erase up to $50,000 in college loan debt acquired by students and their parents.
“I will not make that happen,” Biden said.
He repeated his support for up to $10,000 in debt relief per borrower but said he worried that a higher total forgiven through executive action would disproportionately aid the well-off and potentially violate the law. There is no consensus about a level of debt relief a president could impose using executive fiat and without Congress. Most analysts believe such executive action would stir controversy and land immediately in court (CNBC).
Another ongoing fight: proposed federal aid to cities and states (The Associated Press).
Republicans are also drafting messages this month noting that voters in both parties are eager to reopen schools, particularly for students in lower grades. They say Biden and Democrats are beholden to teachers unions and are taking their cues from teachers, administrators and other school personnel who want to be vaccinated before states revive in-person instruction during the COVID-19 crisis (The Hill and The Washington Post).
More Biden actions:The president and congressional Democrats are poised today to unveil an immigration bill that includes an eight-year pathway to citizenship for the estimated 11 million people living in the United States without legal status (The Associated Press). …The president and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu spoke on Wednesday for the first time since the inauguration about the continuation of peace agreements, the Iranian threat and the challenges in the Middle East, according to a statement released in Israel. Nearly a month of silence raised concerns in Israel about a frostier relationship between the two allies. Biden held off calling Netanyahu, in part, because he first wanted to speak with key European allies as he weighs his next steps with Iran, according to a senior administration official (The Associated Press). … The White House says it is open to a bipartisan study of proposed reparations to Black Americans for slavery (The Associated Press). Congress is weighing how to approach the issue and a House committee debated a bill on Wednesday that would direct more than a dozen experts to examine how the U.S. government supported slavery from 1619 to 1865 and created laws that discriminated against formerly enslaved people and their descendants (USA Today). Supporters of reparations legislation have more work to do. The House measure, sponsored by Rep. Sheila Jackson Lee (D-Texas) has 162 co-sponsors while the Senate bill, sponsored by Sen. Cory Booker (D-N.J.), has 17. No Republicans have backed the effort.
LEADING THE DAY
POLITICS: Rush Limbaugh, 70 (pictured below in January 2020 days after a lung cancer diagnosis), the scion of conservative talk radio who was one of the most influential figures on the right of the last 30 years, died on Wednesday in Palm Beach, Fla.
Limbaugh’s death was announced by his wife, who appeared at the top of his radio show on Wednesday and told listeners that the host had died early Wednesday morning. His hold over audiences that numbered in the millions and his famously sharp-edged patter made his show a destination for aspiring Republican political candidates, including former President Trump (Fox News).
The Hill’s Niall Stanage writes in his latest memo that Limbaugh invented the template for conservative talk radio, having delighted millions of listeners all-the-while appalling millions of others for more than three decades before his death. Along the way, he could be seen as a cause, symptom and beneficiary of America’s deepening divisions during that time that made him a conservative institution.
Limbaugh’s death also brought Trump into public view for one of the first times since he became a former president last month. Trump appeared on Fox News, Newsmax and One America News Network for a series of interviews about Limbaugh’s legacy, his first public comments since leaving office.
“He is a legend. He really is. There aren’t too many legends around. But he is a legend,” Trump told “Outnumbered.” “And those people who listen to him every day, it was like a religious experience for a lot of people.”
Trump also returned to his false claim that he won the November election, saying that Limbaugh agreed (The Hill).
The Hill: Trump “won’t say yet” if he intends to run in 2024.
Fox News: Trump hails Limbaugh on “Hannity’: “They all respected Rush.”
The Hill: Trump faces legal troubles despite Senate acquittal.
Trump’s reemergence on the cable news scene comes amid a simmering feud with Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.). The former president has grown hellbent on making life as difficult as possible for the Kentucky Republican.
Trump’s political apparatus, fueled by $60 million in a super PAC and a grassroots fundraising ability unmatched on the right, is vowing to go aggressively after GOP lawmakers in primaries in the wake of the back-and-forth between the two most prominent GOP figures. One question that Trump and his allies will surely ask GOP candidates who want the former president’s endorsement: Who really won the 2020 presidential election?
As The Hill’s Jonathan Easley writes, sources indicate that Trump was prepared to give McConnell a pass after he gave a blistering post-impeachment floor speech saying the ex-president was “practically and morally” responsible for the deadly Jan. 6 riots at the Capitol. The straw that broke the camel’s back, however, was McConnell’s op-ed in The Wall Street Journal, setting the stage for Trump’s insult-laden response on Tuesday night that included a threat of primaries for Senate candidates.
“Our goal is to win back the House and Senate,” said Jason Miller, a senior adviser to Trump. “We’ll be looking at open seats, Democratic-held seats, and maybe there are places where we look for upgrades and more MAGA-friendly voices. I have no idea why McConnell decided to lash out at the president this way, but when you do, you can expect to get hit back.”
Josh Kraushaar: McConnell’s cynical play was his only option.
The Washington Post: Trump-McConnell clash threatens to settle into a cold war as GOP eyes midterms.
Politico: 9/11 commissioners warn Democrats: 1/6 commission won’t be easy.
> PAC problems: The Lincoln Project, the group formed a little more than a year ago by a band of anti-Trump Republicans, is facing calls to shut down amid allegations of a toxic and abusive culture at the organization.
So far, two former top officials at the organization have backed the idea of shuttering the group, including one of its co-founders, George Conway, who stepped away from the project last summer.
“Just shut it down already.… It’s over,”Kurt Bardella, who left his role as a senior adviser for the Lincoln Project last week, tweeted on Tuesday (The Hill).
The Hill: Senate Democrats unveil health care proposal with a public option.
The New York Times: New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo (D) faces a revolt from his own party as legislators move to strip him of his pandemic powers.
The New York Times: Texas state Democrats see an opening in the GOP oversight of the state’s electricity grid. “Now it’s coming back to bite them.”
IN FOCUS/SHARP TAKES
CORONAVIRUS: Locally, the news is getting better as COVID-19 cases continue to fall across the Washington, D.C. region, including dropping case positivity rates and numbers unseen in three months.
According to The Washington Post, Washington, D.C., Maryland and Virginia have reported a seven-day average of 3,819 new cases, a total not seen in the area since November, with test positivity rates dropping below five percent in the district and Maryland.
On Wednesday, Washington, D.C., reported only 49 new infections and has a seven-day average of 121 new cases, also the lowest figures since November.
The Wall Street Journal: U.S. life expectancy fell in first half of 2020 as COVID-19 deaths surged.
> Vaccines: Maj. Gen. Jeff Taliaferro, vice director for operations at the Pentagon, said on Wednesday that roughly a third of service members have declined to receive the coronavirus vaccine.
“I think our initial look — and this is of course very early data — is acceptance rates are somewhere in the two-thirds territory, and of course it varies by different groups,”
Vaccines have not been mandated for members of the military, and the Department of Defense has not yet disclosed how many service members have been vaccinated. In early February, Military Times reported that the DoD has made it a policy to not report branch affiliations of those who have received the vaccine (The Hill).
ESPN: Many top NBA players are hesitant when asked to help promote coronavirus vaccines.
The Hill: Three-quarters of Americans confident COVID-19 vaccines will be available by end of summer: poll.
The Hill: U.S. govt seizes roughly 10M phony N95 masks in COVID-19 probe.
> International: More than two months after the United States began its vaccination effort, Japan launched a campaign of its own on Wednesday as questions mount over whether the nation will be able to vaccinate enough people in time for the Summer Olympics in Tokyo.
Japan delayed its disbursement of shots because it asked Pfizer to conduct trials to include Japanese people in an effort to convince the nation to receive the vaccine (The Associated Press).
The Washington Post: The United Kingdom got approval to infect healthy volunteers in world’s first coronavirus “challenge trial.”
OPINION
COVID-19 pork or more shots? by Terry L. Anderson and Richard Sousa, opinion contributors, The Hill. https://bit.ly/3dkUFk3
The moral case for remaining in Afghanistan, by Ronald E. Neumann, opinion contributor, The Hill. https://bit.ly/3dkUSUn
WHERE AND WHEN
The House meets at 12:30 p.m. for a pro forma session and returns to legislative work on Tuesday. The Financial Services Committee at noon today will question witnesses during what could be a lively oversight hearing focused on recent investor trading activities involving GameStop, Robinhood and social media (The Hill). … Pelosi will hold her weekly press conference at 10:45 a.m.
TheSenate convenes Friday at 10:15 a.m. for a pro forma session. No votes are scheduled this week.
The president and Vice President Harris receive the President’s Daily Brief at 9:45 a.m. and participate in a COVID-19 briefing with advisers at 10:30 a.m. Harris at 11:15 a.m. will convene a virtual roundtable with Sen. Patty Murray (Wash.), Sen. Catherine Cortez Masto (Nev.), Rep. Rosa DeLauro (Conn.), Rep. Barbara Lee (Calif.), all Democrats, together with women leaders from advocacy organizations to discuss the proposed American Rescue Plan.
The White House press briefing is scheduled for 12:30 p.m.
Economic indicator: The Labor Department will report at 8:30 a.m. on filings for unemployment benefits during the week ending Feb. 13. Analysts expect to see a drop since last week, but a continued high level of layoffs.
👉 The Hill’s senior correspondent Amie Parnes and co-author Jonathan Allen of NBC News have written a political book to follow their 2017 best-seller, “Shattered.” Biden’s roller-coaster 2020 campaign and nail-biting victory against a crowded primary field and then former President Trump are revealed with deep reporting, analysis and new anecdotes in “Lucky,” which is in bookstores March 2 and available for pre-order with Penguin Random House HERE and on Amazon HERE.
👉 INVITATION to The Hill’s Virtually Live event: TODAY at 1 p.m., “Prioritizing the Patient.” Rep. Robin Kelly (D-Ill.), vice chairwoman of the House Energy and Commerce Committee and chairwoman of the Congressional Black Caucus Health Braintrust; Rep. Larry Bucshon (R-Ind.); former Del. Donna Christensen (D-Virgin Islands), board chairwoman of Consumers for Quality Care; and a panel of experts will convene for a discussion about moving the needle on quality, affordable healthcare and addressing inequities amid the COVID-19 pandemic. RSVP HERE.
➔ POWER GRID WOES: More than 30 deaths have been blamed on the winter weather while nearly 3.4 million customers around the country are still without electricity this morning, and some also lost water service (The Associated Press). … The widespread failure in Texas and, to a lesser extent, Oklahoma and Louisiana in the face of a winter cold snap shines a light on what some see as the derelict state of America’s power infrastructure. What has sent Texas reeling is not an engineering problem, nor is it the frozen wind turbines blamed by prominent Republicans (wind is responsible for a fraction of the state’s power). It is a financial structure for power generation that offers no incentives to power plant operators to prepare for winter, reports The Washington Post’s Will Englund, who covers energy. Experts point out that similar failures and outages occurred (and were studied) just a decade ago, and outages in recent months have cost lives. … The Hill’s environmental and energy reporting team lines up at least five things to know about the Lone Star grid debacle HERE.
➔ STICK THE LANDING: The U.S. rover named Perseverance is set to arrive today on Mars during the first leg in a decade long U.S.-European project to bring rocks from the red planet back to Earth to be examined for evidence of microscopic life. NASA anticipates touchdown at approximately 3:55 p.m. EST (Space.com). CBS News explains how to watch the landing.
➔ SPORTS: Chelsea Clinton and Jenna Bush Hager joined an investment group and are now backing Washington Spirit soccer. The group also includes Olympic gymnast Dominique Dawes and former U.S. World Cup goalkeeper Briana Scurry (The Wall Street Journal).
➔ NEWS MEDIA & TECH: The United States is under pressure to allow newspapers to bargain with tech platforms over the distribution of their content as Australia weighs a proposal that would force the Silicon Valley giants to pay publishers for content. Legislation that gained bipartisan support last year is expected to be reintroduced, but media advocates say it may not adequately curb concerns raised by the market power of companies such as Facebook and Google (The Hill). … Today Facebook “unfriended” Australia and news pages went dark in a test for global publishing. Australians were not happy at the escalation (Reuters). … News Corp. and Google announced on Wednesday that they reached a global partnership in which News Corp. will sell content for Google’s News Showcase (MarketWatch). … TheBaltimore Sun, owned by the Tribune Publishing Company, will be acquired by the Sunlight for All Institute, a new nonprofit organization created by Montgomery County, Md., businessman Stewart Bainum Jr. (Patch).
THE CLOSER
And finally … It’s Thursday, which means it’s time for this week’s Morning Report Quiz! Ripped from the headlines, today’s puzzle explores news nuggets that are no more than a few days old.
Email your responses to asimendinger@thehill.com and/or aweaver@thehill.com, and please add “Quiz” to subject lines. Winners who submit correct answers will enjoy a flash of newsletter fame on Friday.
Texans are suffering through rolling blackouts. What or who do they blame?
Winter
Greg Abbott
Wind turbines
All of the above
Who did Trump describe on Tuesday as “a dour, sullen, and unsmiling political hack”?
Nancy Pelosi
Mike Pence
Mitch McConnell
Hillary Clinton
President Biden returned from a weekend at Camp David on Monday wearing a new baseball cap given to him by his grandchildren. What does it say on the back?
“46”
“Irish”
“POTUS”
“Pop”
Meghan is pregnant and Philip is in the hospital. We’re talking about ___ this week?
The Morning Report is created by journalists Alexis Simendinger and Al Weaver. We want to hear from you! Email: asimendinger@thehill.com and aweaver@thehill.com. We invite you to share The Hill’s reporting and newsletters, and encourage others to SUBSCRIBE!
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POLITICO Playbook: Biden-blessed immigration bill drops today — but even he’s not sold
Presented by Facebook
DRIVING THE DAY
SCOOP:House Minority Whip STEVE SCALISE (R-La.) made the pilgrimage to Mar-a-Lago on Tuesday to meet with the King of the GOP while fundraising in the area. The trip by the No. 2 House Republican comes weeks after Minority Leader KEVIN MCCARTHY’S sit-down with DONALD TRUMP there last month, and it shows Scalise’s loyalty to the departed president is unshaken. Unlike McCarthy, who called for Trump’s censure after Jan. 6 then moved to patch things up, Scalise, a longtime Trump supporter, never endorsed a formal rebuke of the ex-president.Tweet this
The trip underscores that the top two House Republicans are now hitching their wagons to Trump, even as Senate Minority Leader MITCH MCCONNELL and LIZ CHENEY (R-Wyo.), the No. 3 House Republican, have ditched him.
Scalise, a gregarious and well-liked member of the GOP leadership team, has long harbored ambitions to be speaker someday. If Republicans retake the House and McCarthy for whatever reason can’t wrangle the votes to win the post, Scalise will almost surely be waiting in the wings to take a shot.
In the meantime, Scalise is leading a charge to pressure President JOE BIDEN to reopen schools. He’s hosting a call with grassroots organizations today to push for the return of full-time in-person education. Republicans see the schools issue — and the Biden administration’s lowering of expectations for reopening — as an opportunity to put Democrats on their heels. Expect to hear more from Scalise and the fuller House GOP on this soon.
BIDEN IMMIGRATION BILL DROPS — ANITA KUMAR emails with the latest details: “Democrats, led by Sen. Bob Menendez (D-N.J.), and Rep. Linda Sánchez (D-Calif.) will release a long-awaited Biden-backed sweeping immigration bill this morning. It would provide an eight-year path to citizenship for undocumented immigrants, raise the current per-country caps for visas and change the word ‘alien’ to ‘noncitizen’ in U.S. law, among other proposals, according to an administration official.
“But White House officials were having trouble Wednesday convincing advocates and even reporters that it could garner the support of at least 10 Republicans in the Senate. Behind the scenes, the White House has accepted that it will need to break the bill up into pieces. It endorsed a plan to back separate bills for Dreamers, those with Temporary Protected Status and essential workers on a call with advocates Wednesday, according to a person familiar with the call.
“On a separate 30-minute conference call with reporters later, though, administration officials wouldn’t acknowledge the piecemeal approach, the potential lack of Republican support or the possibility of immigration being part of the budget reconciliation process. They also wouldn’t release the bill’s text or provide an updated fact sheet from what the White House released on Biden’s first day in office. That led one reporter to ask why they were holding the call.
“Eventually, an administration official acknowledged that Biden knows the legislation may not end up looking like the bill that will be introduced Thursday.” Related:“‘Recipe for disaster’: Dem fears mount over immigration overhaul,”by Sabrina Rodríguez and Marc Caputo
BIDEN’S ‘BIG SWING’ AT INFRASTRUCTURE — WaPo’s Erica Werner, Jeff Stein and Dino Grandoni set the stage for the president’s next big legislative push after Covid relief. If you thought $1.9 trillion was a big chunk of change …
“Senior Democratic officials have discussed proposing as much as $3 trillion in new spending as part of what they envision as a wide-ranging jobs and infrastructure package that would be the foundation of Biden’s ‘Build Back Better’ program, according to three people granted anonymity to share details of private deliberations. That would come on top of Biden’s $1.9 trillion relief plan, as well as the $4 trillion in stimulus measures under former president Donald Trump. Aides cautioned that the spending figures were highly preliminary and subject to change.
“But unlike under Trump, when multiple efforts to address infrastructure faltered before getting off the ground, Biden is expected to take a big swing at the issue and package together funding for expanded broadband networks, bridge and road repairs as well as technology that reduces greenhouse gasses in a sprawling bill that threatens to enlarge to encompass multiple other issues as well.”
REPUBLICAN-ON-REPUBLICAN WARFARE IN 2022 — James Arkin, Andrew Desiderio and Alex Isenstadt take an early look at how the Trump-McConnell feud could hurt the party’s chances of retaking the Senate.
Two key passages from the piece:
1)“Following Trump’s call for Republicans to move on from McConnell, POLITICO on Wednesday reached out to all 16 Republican senators running for reelection in 2022 to ask if they supported the Kentuckian as majority leader. Only two responded.”
2)“The Trump-McConnell spat is already trickling down to 2022 races. Former Rep. Mark Walker, who was the first Republican to enter the open North Carolina Senate race, said he disagreed with retiring GOP Sen. Richard Burr’s vote to convict Trump and called McConnell’s speech criticizing Trump ‘unnecessary.’ ‘I think that whether he likes it or not, former President Trump is going to be very impactful on at least Senate races — maybe House races as well — for 2022,’ Walker said in an interview.”
BIDEN’S THURSDAY — The president and VP KAMALA HARRIS will receive the President’s Daily Brief at 9:45 a.m. and a Covid-19 briefing at 10:30 a.m. Harris will lead a virtual roundtable with members of Congress and female advocacy organization leaders at 11:15 a.m. to talk Covid relief and women in the economy.
— Biden’s trip to a Pfizer vaccine manufacturing plant in Michigan has been postponed to Friday.
— Press secretary JEN PSAKI will brief at 12:30 p.m.
PLAYBOOK READS
CONGRESS
TWO CAN PLAY THIS GAME — McConnell railroaded Democrats to install a generation of conservative judges, his signature accomplishment of the Trump years. Now, Democrats are prepared to play some hardball of their own,Marianne LeVine reports: “The policy that incoming Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Dick Durbin (D-Ill.) is pursuing would make no change to the so-called ‘blue slip’ process that Republicans changed in 2017 to yank home-state senators’ power to block former President Donald Trump’s circuit court picks.
“While Democrats criticized Republicans for scrapping blue slips for Trump, they’re now signaling that after four years of bruising judicial confirmation battles, they’re not going to reinstate the obscure tradition they had defended.”
INSURRECTION IMPACT — “For Black Aides on Capitol Hill, Jan. 6 Brought Particular Trauma,”NYT: “Only a small percentage of congressional aides are Black. Since the attack, Mr. McKnight and others who were in nearby offices in the Capitol complex that day have been talking among themselves about how close the violence came to them, what it means to experience such a virulent expression of racism in what is supposed to be a citadel of liberty, and the suspicion they now feel toward other aides, members of Congress and random people they encounter as they go about their business on Capitol Hill.”
TAKING STOCK OF DIFI—LAT’s Mark Barabak: “The slow, sad fade is not simply a function of Feinstein’s age — she is 87 — but also the fact that times and the political world have changed and Feinstein, whether unwilling or unable, has failed to change along with them. …
“Today, Feinstein is a subject of scorn, considered by many a relic who is well past her prime, who refuses to yield to someone younger, more vibrant, more politically pugnacious and more reflective of California’s kaleidoscopic racial and ethnic diversity. History, with its long view, is likely to be much kinder.”
IOWA ON THE ROPES — “It might just be game over for the Iowa caucus,”by David Siders and Elena Schneider:“For years, Iowa and New Hampshire have successfully defended their one-two position from states eager to jump ahead. But the combination of Iowa’s botched 2020 caucus and increasing diversity in the Democratic Party’s ranks has made the whiteness of Iowa and New Hampshire all the more conspicuous, putting the two states on their heels and throwing the 2024 calendar into turmoil.”
PANDEMIC
TRACKER: The U.S. reported 2,336 Covid-19 deaths and 66,000 new coronavirus cases Wednesday. (Keep in mind numbers may be low this week because of weather.)
MEGATREND — “A Grim Measure of Covid’s Toll: Life Expectancy Drops Sharply in U.S.,”NYT: “Thursday’s data gives the first full picture of the pandemic’s effect on American life spans, which dropped to 77.8 years from 78.8 years in 2019. It also showed a deepening of racial and ethnic disparities: Life expectancy of the Black population declined by 2.7 years in the first half of 2020, slicing away 20 years of gains. The life expectancy gap between Black and white Americans, which had been narrowing, is now at six years, the widest it has been since 1998.”
“‘Gov. Cuomo called me directly on Thursday to threaten my career if I did not cover up for Melissa [DeRosa] and what she said. He tried to pressure me to issue a statement, and it was a very traumatizing experience,’ Kim said. Cuomo proceeded to tell the assemblyman that ‘we’re in this business together and we don’t cross certain lines and he said I hadn’t seen his wrath and that he can destroy me,’ according to Kim.”
MEDIAWATCH
GAME, SET, MATCH — “Sean Hannity’s private plane and the Wake Forest tennis team: A morality fable,”Salon: “Publicly available records … raise abundant questions about Hannity’s own use of his private jet in support of his son’s tennis career at Wake Forest University, and his relationship with the team’s star coach, Tony Bresky. According to NCAA and sports law experts, the timeline of those events exhibits an unusual and at times suspicious level of engagement between Hannity and Bresky, including but not limited to the school’s frequent use of Hannity’s plane.
“Facts of that relationship also appear to have triggered a previously unreported federal grand jury investigation — which has been closed without indictments, to be clear — into events surrounding the recruitment of Hannity’s son, specifically the striking fact that Bresky purchased a luxury home next door to one bought by Hannity, according to documents obtained by Salon and a person familiar with the case. Hannity, through his lawyer, Charles Harder, and Bresky, through Wake Forest, both denied ever being aware of any such federal investigation.”
GOOGLE PONIES UP FOR NEWS—LAT: “Rupert Murdoch’s News Corp. has reached an agreement with Google Inc. for the tech giant to pay for digital distribution of the publishing company’s news articles. The landmark deal, announced Wednesday, comes after a 14-year-plus campaign by Murdoch and his lieutenant, News Corp. Chief Executive Robert Thomson, for Google and other technology giants to compensate publishers for the use of their journalism. …
“Facebook took a different path. On Wednesday, Facebook announced it would restrict users and publishers in Australia from sharing news articles on its platform, blaming the proposed Australian law for the policy change.”
AMERICA AND THE WORLD
— “Biden on ‘Short Leash’ as Administration Rethinks China Relations,”NYT: “The Biden administration has argued that by being more strategic in how it addresses China, it will ultimately be more effective than the Trump administration. It has laid out an ambitious task as it looks to not only crack down on China for what it sees as unfair trade practices but also develop a national strategy that helps build up America’s economic position to better counter Chinese competition.”
REPORTERS CAN STOP ASKING PSAKI — “Biden speaks with Netanyahu after delay raised questions,”CNN: “‘It was a good conversation,’ Biden told reporters in the Oval Office shortly after the call ended, without elaborating. In a post on Twitter, Netanyahu said he had spoken with Biden for roughly an hour in ‘friendly and warm’ terms, affirming the US-Israel alliance and discussing issues related to Iran, regional diplomacy and the coronavirus pandemic.”
NEW SERIES — POLITICO is launching Recovery Lab, a new reported series designed to highlight the smartest ideas emerging across the country for combating the Covid-19 pandemic and the shocks it has sent through our economy and society, from massive job losses to school closures to the growing digital divide. Inspired by the idea that the states are 50 laboratories of democracy and policy, each edition of Recovery Lab will be a deep dive into a challenge posed by the pandemic. Here are highlights from the first edition:
A NEW CNN LINEUP— “CNN Overhauls Daytime, With New Anchors in Morning, Afternoon Slots,” Variety: “The WarnerMedia cable-news outlet intends to move early-afternoon anchor Brianna Keilar to co-host ‘New Day’ with John Berman, pair morning host Alisyn Camerota with Victor Blackwell in the 2 p.m. to 4 p.m. slot previously led by Brooke Baldwin and feature Ana Cabrera at 1 p.m. weekdays.” Release
MATT WUERKER VIDEO: How to score a 10 out of 10 on Room Rater(Coulda asked Ryan and Eugene.)
PARSCALE IS BACK — In a sign that Trump is reengaging in politics, his ex-campaign manager BRAD PARSCALE visited Mar-a-Lago on Tuesday, as Fox News reported. A source close to the former president said that Parscale, after being effectively fired by Trump last summer, is back in the inner circle and will be very involved in Trump’s post-presidential political moves.
FIRST IN PLAYBOOK — The Lincoln Project is forming a “transition advisory committee” to provide “full support and cooperation” for its internal investigation into the John Weaver matter and “any systemic workplace culture issues,” according to an internal memo obtained by Daniel Lippman. The committee will be chaired by Lincoln Project senior adviser Tara Setmayer with executive director Fred Wellman as the vice chair. After questions about how much money Lincoln Project founders made off the project, it will also conduct a “Stewardship Report” for donors to see how their money was spent. The memo
“The episode will feature a special Kellyoke performance by Clarkson and her musical director Jason Halbert, requested by the First Lady and performed in the East Room of the White House. During the interview, Dr. Biden will reveal what inspired her Kellyoke song choice. The two will discuss Dr. Biden’s continued commitment to education, military families, cancer research and bringing the country together, and they’ll both take questions from the show’s live virtual audience.”
WE BEG TO DIFFER WITH THIS HEADLINE — “Politics Is Seeping Into Our Daily Life and Ruining Everything,”Reason: “Our political affiliations, researchers say, obstruct friendships, influence our purchases, affect the positions we take on seemingly apolitical matters, and limit our job choices. As a result, many people are poorer, lonelier, and less healthy than they would otherwise be.” The new paper
FIRST IN PLAYBOOK — Phil Bartel is joining FlexPoint Media as principal and VP. He most recently was deputy director for the NRSC’s IE unit in the 2018 and 2020 cycles, and is a Dan Sullivan and Scott Walker alum.
— Andi Pringle and Julie Norton are launching Mosaic Communications, a new woman-owned, full-service strategic and media consulting firm with the staff comprising members of the BIPOC or LGBTQIA communities. Pringle currently is political and strategic campaigns director for March On. Norton previously was a partner at Trippi, Norton, Rossmeissl Campaigns. Chris Smith and Roosevelt Holmes will also be VPs.
TRANSITIONS — Patricio Gonzalez is now a senior investigator for the Senate Finance Dems. He previously was adviser for oversight and investigations to Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer. … Diana Castaneda is now comms director at BOLD PAC. She previously was comms director for Candace Valenzuela’s congressional campaign in Texas. … Katarina DeFilippo and Scott Harris are joining the Aerospace Industries Association’s legislative affairs team as managers. DeFilippo previously was legislative assistant for Rep. Ron Estes (R-Kan.). Harris previously was legislative correspondent/aide for Rep. Terri Sewell (D-Ala.). …
… Amanda Loughran is now VP of public affairs at GCI Health. She previously was associate director of health campaigns and advocacy at APCO Worldwide. … J Strategies is launching a D.C. office with Julie Miner serving as managing partner and CEO, Minda Conroe as managing director, Ashlee Casper-Palmieri as SVP and Adam Morey as VP and media relations director. … Lisa Grove will be CIO for Violet Power, a U.S. solar manufacturing startup. She currently is a partner at ALG Research.
HAPPY BIRTHDAY: Reps. Brett Guthrie (R-Ky.), Steve Womack (R-Ark.) and Jared Huffman (D-Calif.) … former Sen. John Warner (R-Va.) (94) … Ben Wofford … Keith Urbahn … James Hohmann … NPR’s Rachel Martin … former Illinois Gov. Bruce Rauner (65) … John DiStaso … Denise Dunckel … Bill Bertles … Kiara Pesante Haughton … former Rep. Eliot Engel (D-N.Y.) … POLITICO’s Amy Oh and Meli Duarte … Lebanese President Michel Aoun … Al Quinlan … Marc Lampkin … Abby Blunt … Lucien Zeigler … Virginia state Del. Mark Sickles … Stacey Gardner … CBS News’ Rebecca Kaplan … Angela Chiappetta … Zac Cockrell
Billy Sunday Pro-Baseball Player comes out … as a Christian evangelist! – preached to 100 million & pioneered radio evangelism – American Minute with Bill Federer
Born during the Civil War in a log cabin in Iowa, his father, who was a Union Army soldier, died of pneumonia when Billy was a month old.
He wrote in his autobiography, “I never saw my father.”
During his childhood, there were ten deaths among his relatives. Poverty led his mother to send him and his siblings to the Soldier’s Orphans Home.
At age 15, Billy Sunday struck out on his own, working several jobs before playing baseball.
His career took off when he was recruited by A.G. Spalding, owner of the White Stockings and founder of Spalding Sporting Goods Company.
Billy Sunday became one of the most popular athletes in the nation.
While leaving a Chicago saloon with some other players in 1886, he heard a group of gospel singers on the street from the Pacific Garden Mission.
Attracted by the hymns, as they were the same ones his mother used to sing, Billy Sunday went closer to listen.
He attended services at the mission and experienced a conversion, becoming an evangelical Christian.
Billy began attending YMCA meetings and quit drinking.
That same year, he went to Jefferson Park Presbyterian Church where he was introduced to Helen Amelia “Nell” Thompson.
Her father disapproved, considering baseball players “transient ne’er-do-wells who were unstable and destined to be misfits once they were too old to play.”
Her father eventually relented, gave his blessing, and Billy and Nell were married September 5, 1888.
Nell encouraged Billy, who was naturally shy, to begin speaking.
She went on to organize all of his evangelistic meetings, with him admitting to “never yet gone contrary to Mrs. Sunday’s advice.”
Billy Sunday gave up making $5,000 a year as a professional baseball player to working at the YMCA (Young Men’s Christian Association) for $75 a month.
On FEBRUARY 17, 1889, a national sensation occurred when Billy Sunday came out as a Christian evangelist, preaching his first sermon in Chicago. The local press reported in sports’ terms:
“Center fielder Billy Sunday made a three-base hit at Farwell Hall last night. There is no other way to express the success of his first appearance as an evangelist in Chicago. His audience was made up of about 500 men who didn’t know much about his talents as a preacher but could remember his galloping to second base with his cap in hand.”
During the next 46 years, till his death November 6, 1935, over 100 million people heard Billy Sunday preach.
His preaching carried on the revival tradition of:
Scotland revivals beginning in the 1730s;
First Great Awakening preaching of George Whitefield;
Second Great Awakening camp meetings;
pre-Civil War preaching of Charles Finney;
1857 New York City’s Noontime Businessmen Prayer Meeting Revival led by Jeremiah Lanphier;
post-Civil War evangelist D.L. Moody; and
Welsh revivals at the turn of the last century.
Sunday proclaimed in Des Moines, Iowa, November 3, 1914:
“When may a revival be expected? When the wickedness of the wicked grieves and distresses the Christian …
What a spell the devil seems to cast over the church today! …
If the church was down on her face in prayer they would be more concerned with the fellow outside. The church has degenerated into a third-rate amusement joint …
… It is as much the duty of the church to awaken … men and women of this city as it is the duty of the fire department to arouse when the call sounds.
What would you think of the fire department of Des Moines if it slept while the town burned? You would condemn them and I will condemn you if you sleep and let men and women go to hell …”
Sunday added:
“Christians have lost the spirit of prayer … Religion needs a baptism of horse sense …
If you go to a farmer and say … God will give you crops only when it pleases him and it is no use for you plow your ground … That is all wrong …
Revival may be expected when Christian people confess and ask forgiveness for their sins … Break up your fallow ground … Stand up and let people know you stand for Jesus Christ …
When may a revival he expected? …
When … ministers … thought they would die unless a revival would come to awaken their people, their students, their deacons, and their Sunday school workers, unless they would fall down on their faces and renounce the world and the works and deceits of the devil …
A revival … returns the church from her backsliding and … causes the conversion of man and women; and it always includes the conviction of sin … A revival helps to bring the unsaved to Jesus Christ.”
Billy Sunday preached on prayer:
“The man who truly prays ‘Thy kingdom come’ cannot pass a saloon and not ask himself the question, ‘What can I do to get rid of that thing that is blighting the lives of thousands of young men, that is wrecking homes, and that is dragging men and women down to hell?’
You cannot pray ‘Thy kingdom come,’ and then rush to the polls and vote for the thing that is preventing that kingdom from coming.
You cannot pray ‘Thy kingdom come’ and then go and do the things that make the devil laugh.
For the man who truly prays ‘Thy kingdom come’ it would be impossible to have one kind of religion on his knees and another when he behind the counter; it would be impossible to have one kind of religion in the pew and another in politics.
When a man truly prays ‘Thy kingdom come’ he means it in everything or in nothing.”
Billy Sunday’s preaching against alcohol led to the passage of the 18th Amendment. He stated:
“I am the sworn, eternal, uncompromising enemy of the Liquor Traffic. I ask no quarter and I give none.
I have drawn the sword in defense of God, home, wife, children and native land, and I will never sheathe it until the undertaker pumps me full of embalming fluid, and if my wife is alive, I think I shall call her to my beside and say:
‘Nell, when I am dead, send for the butcher and skin me, and have my hide tanned and made into drum heads, and hire men to go up and down the land and beat the drums and say, ‘My husband, “Bill” Sunday still lives and gives the whiskey gang a run for its money.'”
In 1910, Billy Sunday preached a historic revival in Joplin, Missouri, a mining town known for hotels, women of the night, gambling and saloons.
Rev. Frank Neff of the Independence Avenue Methodist Episcopal Church in Kansas City, and president of the Ministers Alliance of Joplin, told reporters:
“We expect a great clean up in the city, but it will be in the nature of a religious awakening which will result in a permanent clean up and will come from a sincere desire of the people.”
>
During Joplin’s “Fifty Days of Sunday,” Billy Sunday explained:
“A revival is the conviction of sin.
Inside the church there must be a spiritual revival before it gets outside.”
In his animated style, Billy Sunday said:
“Temptation is the devil looking through the keyhole. Yielding is opening the door and inviting him in.”
Billy Sunday warned not to remove the Bible from public schools:
“Rivers of America will run with blood filled to their banks before we will submit to them taking the Bible out of our schools.”
One cannot but wonder what Billy Sunday would think of news reports of modern-day LGBTQ agenda, abortion and school shootings?
Perhaps more important than a national conversation on guns, he would call for a national inquiry into what killer kids are being taught in public schools.
Could it be that thoughts precede actions?
That the confusion being programmed into students minds might have some bearing on their behavior?
With computers there is hardware and software.
Instead of focusing on banning guns, maybe it would be more important to focus on banning the corrupted software children are being programmed with — secular-atheistic-transgenderism which teaches there is no right or no wrong?
Abraham Lincoln, when presented with a Bible by a Colored Delegation from Baltimore, stated September 7, 1864:
“In regard to this Great Book, I have but to say, it is the best gift God has given to men … But for it we could not know right from wrong.”
Billy Sunday inspired famous tent evangelists and revival preachers, such as Billy Graham, T.L. Osborne, Aimee Semple McPherson, Oral Roberts, Jimmy Swaggart, James Robison, Pat Robertson, Robert Schuller, Luis Palau, Reinhard Bonnke, Franklin Graham, and many more.
Billy Sunday spoke in city after city across America where tens of thousands heard him in month long meetings.
Huge wooden auditoriums, called Billy Sunday Tabernacles, were built to accommodate the crowds.
The Billy Sunday Tabernacle in Winona was the largest auditorium in northern Indiana for many years, seating 7,500.
A Billy Sunday museum is on the campus of Grace College and Seminary in Winona Lake, Indiana.
Billy Sunday was a pioneer in gospel radio broadcasting, which later birthed conservative talk radio.
Other early gospel broadcasting preachers included:
Paul Rader – pastor of Moody Church in Chicago;
Charles Fuller – founder of Fuller Theological Seminary;
Aimee Semple McPherson – founder of the Foursquare Church;
William Ward Ayer – pastor of Calvary Baptist Church in Manhattan;
Walter A. Maier – The Lutheran Hour;
Donald Grey Barnhouse – The Bible Study Hour;
“Fighting Bob” Shuler;
Father Charles Coughlin.
Religious radio stations were initially unregulated.
Sometimes their powerful signals overlapped sports and other broadcasts, and occasionally they aired programing critical of politicians.
This resulted in government regulating radio in 1926 by the FRC (Federal Radio Commission), which became the FCC in 1934.
In typical fashion, after the government began licensing, it began regulating, then revoking licenses, as it did to the popular radio broadcaster “Fighting Bob” Shuler in 1934, who was a national folk hero for exposing government corruption.
Teaching that salvation was through faith in Jesus Christ, not in organized religion, Billy Sunday explained that churches were fine so far as they were “in the world, but all wrong when the world is in them,” adding:
“You can go to hell just as fast from the church door as from the grog shop or bawdy house,”
and
“Going to church doesn’t make you a Christian any more than going to a garage makes you an automobile.”
He assured believers of God’s forgiveness:
“The devil says I’m out, but the Lord says I’m safe.”
He challenged:
“Live so that when the final summons comes you will leave something more behind you than an epitaph on a tombstone.”
Billy Sunday stated:
“I never see a man or a woman or boy or girl but I do not think that God has a plan for them …
He will use each of us to His glory if we will only let Him.”
“For I am sure that neither death nor life, nor angels nor rulers, nor things present nor things to come, nor powers, nor height nor depth, nor anything else in all creation, will be able to separate us from the love of God in Christ Jesus our Lord,” (Romans 8:38-39, ESV).
By Shane Vander Hart on Feb 17, 2021 12:42 pm
Conservative radio pioneer Rush Limbaugh passed away on Wednesday after a long battle with Stage IV lung cancer. He was 70-years-old.
Rush was a formative voice for me after becoming interested in politics at the start of the Clinton Administration.
I wish I could say I cut my teeth on conservative thought by reading William Buckley or Russell Kirk. Nope, I was a student of the Limbaugh Institute for Conservative Thought.
I was a dittohead. I would listen anytime I had the radio on in the afternoon. Rush was the first conservative pundit I heard or read. I purchased his first two books, The Way Things Ought to Be published in 1992 and See I Told You So, published in 1993.
With the repeal of the Fairness Doctrine, all of us who have had a conservative radio talk show stood on his shoulders. He was the first. He set the standard.
Unfortunately, I never had the opportunity to meet him. A fun highlight of mine and one of my “claims to fame” was when he referenced my interview with Rick Santorum in 2011 on his show. The interview didn’t get noticed until after Santorum won the Iowa Caucus in 2012 and became controversial because of his comments about birth control.
Listen below:
He, of course, complained about the quality of the audio. Santorum and I met in a coffee shop in the East Village of Des Moines, and it was pretty loud.
While I listened less in recent years and disagreed with him about Donald Trump, I am thankful for his contribution to conservatism and conservative media. I don’t see any conservative pundit having the amount of influence as he did. He’s one of a kind, and he will be missed.
Launched in 2006, Caffeinated Thoughts reports news and shares commentary about culture, current events, faith and state and national politics from a Christian and conservative point of view.
Summary: President Joe Biden will receive his daily briefing on Thursday, then attend a Coronavirus briefing. There is nothing else on his schedule. President Biden’s Itinerary for 2/18/21: All Times EST 9:45 AM Receive daily briefing – Oval Office10:20 AM Recieve a Coronavirus briefing – Oval Office White House Briefing Schedule 12:30 PM Press Briefing …
It is with sincere condolences that I extend my thoughts and prayers to the Limbaugh Family on the passing of Rush Limbaugh early morning on February 17, 2021. As they are family it almost seems intrusive to say that we all feel a stinging loss, but the fact is this. We do. If you are …
Icon, Legend, Leader….we have lost a part of our history. The Conservative movement is credited by most to President Ronald Reagan but many will say that it was the impact of Rush Limbaugh and his outreach to 20-30 million followers that is really the leader of the Movement. In a world of liberal media, it …
“A specter is haunting Europe, the specter of Communism“. When Karl Marx, with his hate of Capitalism, introduced his Communist Manifesto, he predicted that Communism would dominate all of Europe and would defeat Capitalism. The poverty that Europe was living under in 1848, and the jealousy and anger that those not benefiting from the promised …
Cuomo Lied, People Died. New York’s tyrannical Governor Andrew Cuomo is reaping what he sowed. Finally, politicians from both parties are standing up to condemn Cuomo’s actions during the plannedemic and beyond. Cuomo sentenced nursing home residents to their deaths by sending covid patients into New York’s care centers. Then the spotlight loving Governor had …
Conservative radio legend Rush Limbaugh died Wednesday morning from complications due to his battle with lung cancer. Kathryn Limbaugh, Rush’s wife made the announcement on his radio show Wednesday saying that he had passed earlier in the morning. For long-time listeners, I would only have to say “mega-dittos” and all the compliments given during the …
Around $14.3 million worth of narcotics and several weapons have been seized since the start of February at an Arizona port where officials also arrested a man wanted for murder, Customs and Border Protection announced Tuesday. Officials seized 440 pounds of methamphetamine, 385,000 tablets of fentanyl, 84 pounds of heroin and almost 13 pounds of …
White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki and Deputy National Security Advisor Anne Neuberger hold a briefing Wednesday. The briefing is scheduled to begin at 12:30 p.m. EST. Content created by Conservative Daily News and some content syndicated through CDN is available for re-publication without charge under the Creative Commons license. Visit our syndication page for details and …
Vice President Kamala Harris repeatedly avoided saying that teachers can safely go back to school without vaccines, though the head of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) has said that vaccines are not required for teachers to return to school. “The CDC has said that it is not a prerequisite for teachers to …
While moderates are already experiencing regret over having chosen Biden-Harris or Harris-Biden, now the extreme left is reeling in full-on voter-remorse after President Biden told them that a major plank of the progressive platform won’t happen. During a CNN town hall Tuesday that mostly felt like a scripted political event Biden was asked what he …
Perhaps the website Dictionary.com best captures the meaning of the term ‘common sense,’ which they define as: “sound practical judgment that is independent of specialized knowledge, training, or the like.” A solid assessment of a not-so-easily-defined expression. Therefore, if we use sound practical judgment in examining the accusations and behaviors of our friends on the …
Happy Thursday, dear Kruiser Morning Briefing friends. I’m still in search of a life changing paella.
Yesterday I happened to open my laptop to begin the day’s work routine just as the news of Rush Limbaugh’s passing was hitting. Yeah, he’s been sick for a year and we all knew it was bad, but I don’t think any conservatives wanted to wrap our heads around the fact that he might one day not be there. It was a big shock despite the fact that we knew it was coming.
Rush Limbaugh has loomed so large for so long over the American conservative political landscape that he gave off that immortal vibe.
Rush’s death was a blow to conservatives at a time when we’re still numb from whatever the hell went on last November. Given that Rush often felt like the glue that was holding conservatives together during the rough patches, many might feel that this is a critical blow. No doubt the people on the other side are hoping it is.
It’s not, of course, precisely because of the legacy that Rush leaves behind. As has been noted by every person in conservative media since yesterday, we have a platform because of Rush Limbaugh. It’s so much more than just that though. Rush could have easily been the detached godfather of conservative media, and we would all be giving him props for that. But almost everyone on this side has a personal story about how Rush inspired or or motivated them.
A great example of that is the memorial post that Victoria wrote yesterday calling Rush her “Radio Dad.”
But he was my radio dad.
As a young dumb kid out of college, coming up in the media world of radio and TV, Rush gave me a reason to hope that I would be able to make a place in the then dying world of AM radio, a medium into which I had fallen madly in love.
If you had been able to talk to almost everyone in conservative media you’d have heard stories like that from each person.
Rush’s appeal obviously reached far beyond just the media people he would inspire. President Trump’s statement yesterday summed it up well:
“The great Rush Limbaugh has passed away to a better place, free from physical pain and hostility,” Trump said in a statement received by PJ Media. “His honor, courage, strength, and loyalty will never be replaced. Rush was a patriot, a defender of Liberty, and someone who believed in all of the greatness our Country stands for. Rush was a friend to myself and millions of Americans—a guiding light with the ability to see the truth and paint vivid pictures over the airwaves. Melania and I express our deepest condolences to his wonderful wife, Kathryn, his family, and all of his dedicated fans. He will be missed greatly.”
My personal anecdote about Rush isn’t one of inspiration, it’s one of pure entertainment. I fell accidentally into this gig, after all. I wasn’t out to be a radio guy or a pundit. I was just a comedian who dabbled in political activism in the background. I also wasn’t a big consumer of talk radio. The only time I did listen regularly was when my daughter was a baby and I took time off the road to freelance write and take care of her. We would listen to Rush every morning. When his theme song would come on she’d smile and start rocking side to side in her high chair.
The thing that I enjoyed most about the show was Rush’s sense of humor, which I don’t think gets talked about enough even by fans of his. Naturally, that’s what I would focus on. When Al Gore announced his run for the 2000 election he did part of it in Spanish. With that Tennessee drawl of his, the español was predictably tragic. I remember Rush playing the clip with the intro to Ricky Martin’s Livin’ la Vida Loca playing in the background and it was HILARIOUS. As I remember it, he kept playing it just for laughs for a week or two.
That’s what I’ll remember. Not only did Rush Limbaugh do what he did at a sustained level of excellence for decades, he also made it obvious that he was having fun doing it and that fun was passed on to his listeners.
That’s one helluva legacy.
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Quick Hits: Today’s Top Stories
The Justice Department charged three North Korean hackers on Wednesday with conspiracy to commit computer fraud and conspiracy to commit wire and bank fraud for their alleged attempts to steal more than $1.3 billion from banks and businesses around the world. “North Korea’s operatives, using keyboards rather than masks and guns, are the world’s leading 21st-century nation-state bank robbers,” said Assistant Attorney General for National Security John Demers.
The Albany Times-Union reports that New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo’s administration is being investigated by the FBI and U.S. attorney’s office for its alleged mishandling of COVID-19 nursing home deaths. Democratic New York Assemblyman Ron Kim told CNN yesterday that Cuomo called him last week and told him “he can destroy me.”
President Biden on Wednesday spoke with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu for the first time since assuming office last month. According to a White House readout of the call, the two discussed Iran, normalized relations between Israel and Arab and Muslim countries, and the Israeli-Palestinian peace process.
Rush Limbaugh, the groundbreaking and controversial conservative talk-radio host who dominated the industry for decades, died on Wednesday at the age of 70 after a battle with lung cancer.
The United States confirmed 71,235 new cases of COVID-19 yesterday per the Johns Hopkins University COVID-19 Dashboard, with 5.4 percent of the 1,061,463 tests reported coming back positive. An additional 2,520 deaths were attributed to the virus on Wednesday, bringing the pandemic’s American death toll to 490,447. According to the COVID Tracking Project, 63,398 Americans are currently hospitalized with COVID-19. According to the Centers for Disease Control, 1,061,463 COVID-19 vaccine doses were administered yesterday, bringing the nationwide total to 56,281,827.
Republican Leaders Back January 6 Commission
Half of Republicans believe that Antifa was behind the January 6 assault on the U.S. Capitol, according to a poll conducted by the American Enterprise Institute’s Survey Center on American Life. Twenty-eight percent of independents believe the same. The same survey found that 66 percent of Republicans believe Joe Biden’s victory in the 2020 presidential election was not legitimate; nearly 1 in 4 independents hold a similar view. Other polling has produced similar results.
These views are mistaken. And their perpetuation portends growing instability in an already polarized and volatile electorate. What’s to be done?
One obvious step currently being discussed on Capitol Hill: a bipartisan, independent commission to investigate, report, and publicize the truth about January 6 and the events that led to it. But the very partisanship and polarization that such an authoritative investigation would potentially blunt might keep such a commission from becoming a reality at all.
In the aftermath of the acquittal of Donald Trump last weekend, discussion about an independent commission ramped up on both sides of Capitol Hill. Some Republicans are adamantly opposed. For this group, the assault, the impeachment, and the trial are something they survived—both literally and politically. The sooner it’s behind them, the better.
Other Republicans, including many who voted against impeaching or convicting the president, favor establishing a commission as an instrument of fact-finding and, perhaps, a means of making clear to their constituents what happened in the election and at the Capitol.
Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell has kept almost entirely mum on the issue of a bipartisan fact-finding mission—his office did not respond to a request for comment. But sources familiar with his thinking say he is open to one provided it’s truly bipartisan and truly independent. Rep. Liz Cheney, the third-ranking Republican in the House, strongly favors establishing a commission. “It needs to have subpoena power, should be made up of retired officials from both parties— should look at the 2020 Presidential election, the efforts to challenge the election between November 4 and January 6, the certification and counting of state electoral votes, the ‘Save America’ Rally, and the ensuing insurrection against the United States of America,” she tells The Dispatch. “Legislation should also compel federal agencies including DOJ to cooperate to the maximum extent allowed by law.”
And in a statement provided to The Dispatch, Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy reiterated his earlier support for such an investigation. “Republicans put forward a proposal for a fact-finding commission over one month ago,” he said. “It is our responsibility to understand the security and intelligence breakdowns that led to the riots on January 6 so that we can better protect this institution and the men and women working inside it. A commission should follow the guidance of Tom Kean and Lee Hamilton to be ‘both independent and bipartisan’, and to preserve that integrity it must be evenly split between both parties.”
An assumption underlies all of this: The election wasn’t rigged, and Trump supporters assaulted the Capitol. With a small number of voluble exceptions—Reps. Matt Gaetz, Mo Brooks, their fellow Freedom Caucus members, and Sen. Ron Johnson— few Republicans in Congress actually buy the conspiracies the president pushed and, in many cases, they themselves amplified. In the most optimistic interpretation, a bipartisan commission would provide the kind of cover they could use to disclaim their earlier pronouncements.
Earlier this week, as Republicans who favor a commission discussed privately how best to bring one about, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi unilaterally declared that she would be forming one, potentially blunting momentum on the Republican side. Sources tell The Dispatch she did not consult Republican leaders in either chamber before moving forward with her announcement, which she made in a letter she sent only to Democratic colleagues. (Politico later reported, sourcing Democrats, that Pelosi “is conferring with fellow senior Democrats on the proposal before seeking GOP input.”)
This move prompted GOP lawmakers to wonder aloud whether she really wants a bipartisan commission at all. “I think she’d rather have the issue,” said one GOP representative who favors a commission.
With former President Trump’s behavior leading up to the January 6 riots coming under intense scrutiny in recent days, some Republicans have sought to deflect by accusing Pelosi of not adequately preparing the Capitol for the mob Trump whipped up. “Here’s what I want to know,” Sen. Lindsey Graham said on Fox News last week. “What did Nancy Pelosi know and when did she know it?” That might be dramatic, and Graham has earned the skepticism he often gets these days about his motives. But there are real questions.
The Washington Post reported last month that an FBI office in Virginia had “issued an explicit warning” on January 5 “warning that extremists were preparing to travel to Washington to commit violence.” Former U.S. Capitol Police Chief Steven Sund—who resigned after the attack—said last month he had talked to then-House Sergeant-at-Arms Paul Irving about having a National Guard presence at the Capitol, only to be turned down, reportedly over concerns of “optics.” Several leading Republicans wrote to Pelosi earlier this week pressing her on these and other questions.
Beyond Pelosi and inadequate security ahead of the attack, questions remain about Donald Trump’s behavior on and ahead of January 6. There have been numerous reports that Trump was pleased with the assault on the Capitol, the most compelling of which emerged over the weekend and, at least momentarily, looked like it might lead to witnesses being called in Trump’s impeachment trial. GOP Rep. Jaime Herrera Beutler released a statement about a discussion she’d had with Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy, in which McCarthy shared details of a conversation he’d had with Trump the afternoon of January 6. According to her account, when McCarthy told Trump to put out a statement asking the rioters to stand down, Trump falsely claimed Antifa was responsible for storming the Capitol. McCarthy responded by pointing out that Trump’s own supporters were conducting the assault. Trump reportedly replied: “Well, Kevin, I guess these people are more upset about the election than you are.”
The public hasn’t gotten detailed accounts from top Trump aides who watched the carnage alongside the president that day, including Keith Kellogg, Mark Meadows, Kayleigh McEnany, and others. Why did Trump repeatedly attack Mike Pence, even as news reports indicated he was being threatened by rioters and might be in danger? And what about the White House’s involvement in planning the rally and the decision to urge rallygoers to march to the Capitol? “At the turn of the year, Mr. Trump decided to join the rally himself, and the event effectively became a White House production, with several people close to the administration and the Trump campaign joining the team,” according to the New York Times.
There are also persistent questions about the conspiracy theories about the vote, amplified by the former president and his team. (Those conspiracies continue. In a conversation yesterday on Fox News after the death of Rush Limbaugh, Trump once again suggested that the election had been stolen.) We know about some of those efforts, including Trump’s call to Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger, a Republican, urging Georgia’s top election official to find the requisite number of votes required to declare Trump the state’s winner. What was Trump’s role in trying to overturn results elsewhere? Were there similar calls to Arizona’s Republican governor, Doug Ducey?
Congress passed on the opportunity to explore these issues and many others when it declined, on a bipartisan basis, to hold hearings and call witnesses during the impeachment proceedings. Establishing a serious commission, designed to uncover the truth about this ugly episode and empowered to conduct a real investigation, would be a helpful step to make up for those misjudgments.
Power Outages Sweep Across the Lone Star State
More than 1 million Texans are still without power due to a winter storm that has blanketed large swaths of the southern United States this week; at least 24 have died because of the fallout. The deployment and administration of coronavirus vaccines has been significantly slowed, and up to 7 million residents are being told to boil any tap water before drinking it as water treatment plants across the state struggle to remain open.
While Texas politicians continue to point fingers about who is to blame for the outages, millions are going to extremes to weather the weather, often without electricity, water, or heat.
After his power went out on Monday, Austin resident Brian Stiles went to stay at a friend’s house, where he has been staying ever since. “I woke up and I could see my breath,” he told The Dispatch. Driving to his apartment on Tuesday to check on whether his power had been restored, Stiles passed the grocery store, where he saw people lined up for half a mile just to buy food. He also reported there being “quite a few people just sitting in their cars” in his apartment complex’s open air garage.
Jenny Heath, who hails from Dallas, said she began minimizing her electricity usage after her electricity provider began charging astronomical prices because of the shortage. “We don’t have anything plugged in,” Heath told The Dispatch on Wednesday. “We don’t have lights on. We’re just trying to conserve just so we don’t get charged outrageous amounts.” She said her brother, who lives in Lewisville, Texas, has not had electricity or water since Monday at 1 a.m.
Houston resident Dr. Lauren Walker said she has spent the week bouncing between her house and a friend’s place because of unpredictable power outages. “We did finally get it back yesterday for a couple of hours, and we lost it again,” she said Wednesday afternoon. “But I came back home today and it just got restored again. So I am hoping that it lasts.” She said she turned off her water because her exterior pipes are frozen.
“The first night was really hard psychologically, just because there was a lot more unknown and it was the first night,” Walker said. On Tuesday evening, she was able to sleep on the floor in the living room next to her friend’s gas fireplace. “It kind of feels like you’re camping,” she said—minus the fun.
Countless are in even direr straits. The Garcia family in Killeen, for example, is having to ration oxygen tanks for their infant son who was born several weeks premature. Angel, the mother, tearfully recounted having to burn her daughter’s wooden blocks for warmth. “A lot of people don’t know the severity of what’s going on. People are tearing down their fences to burn,” she said. “We started burning my daughter’s little wooden blocks because it was just too cold.”
As Texas residents continue to suffer through the now days-long ordeal, Texas politicians are working overtime to apportion blame for the predicament.
“The energy capital of North America cannot provide enough energy to warm and power people’s homes,” former congressman and presidential aspirant Beto O’Rourke told MSNBC. “We are nearing a failed state in Texas. And it has nothing to do with God or natural disasters. It has everything to do with those in positions of public trust who have failed us.”
Texas Gov. Greg Abbott, meanwhile, is arguing that this week demonstrates the endemic failures of renewable energy. “This shows how the Green New Deal would be a deadly deal for the United States of America,” Abbott told Fox News host Sean Hannity on Tuesday. “Our wind and our solar got shut down, and they were collectively more than 10 percent of our power grid. And that thrust Texas into a situation where it was lacking power on a statewide basis. … It just shows that fossil fuel is necessary.”
Texas Rep. Dan Crenshaw also laid into renewable energy for this week’s outages. “West Texas, where most of the wind energy is focused, had wind turbines that had to be de-iced. The little energy that power regulators planned on wind to supply was now gone,” he tweeted Tuesday afternoon. “This is what happens when you force the grid to rely in part on wind as a power source. When weather conditions get bad as they did this week, intermittent renewable energy like wind isn’t there when you need it.”
Alec Dent, The Dispatch’s lead fact checker, dug into the data on Texas’ electrical grid, and found that some claims about the situation—including from Fox News’ Tucker Carlson—greatly exaggerate the role wind turbines play in powering the state.
“According to the Electric Reliability Council of Texas—which manages 90 percent of the state’s electricity—in 2020 wind provided 22.8 percent of the energy use in Texas, with natural gas providing 45.5 percent, coal providing 17.9 percent, and nuclear providing 10.9 percent. ERCOT labels the other 2.9 percent of energy sources in 2020 as ‘other.’”
“The wind turbines are not to blame solely,” Bruce Bullock—director of the Maguire Energy Institute at Southern Methodist University—told The Dispatch. “About half of them did ice up and weren’t able to be in use, but we don’t plan on a lot of wind energy in the winter down here because the wind just doesn’t blow that much. It was a contributor to the problem, but a relatively minor contributor.”
The Electric Reliability Council of Texas (ERCOT)—which ordered rolling blackouts overnight Sunday to minimize widespread outages—said Wednesday that around 45 gigawatts remained offline: 18 of the missing gigawatts stemmed from renewable resources like wind, while 28 came from thermal sources like natural gas, nuclear energy, and coal.
“Texas is just not set up for this,” said Dr. Joshua Rhodes, a research associate at the University of Texas at Austin who specializes in smart grid and the bulk electricity system. “Our grid is set up for a summer peak on August afternoons at 4 p.m., when it’s 105 degrees outside and everybody wants air conditioning. … That’s where our grid is built to shine.”
As we wrote yesterday, snow and cold weather alone typically do not sink an entire state’s electricity infrastructure. Chicago was a good 15 degrees colder than Houston last night, and its grid is holding up fine. But because such low temperatures are so rare in the Lone Star State, power companies have, for the most part, opted not to invest in “winterizing” facilities, ensuring they can continue to operate in times like these. Such processes “are not mandatory, it’s a voluntary guideline to decide to do those things,” Dan Woodfin, a senior director at ERCOT, told the Texas Tribune. “There are financial incentives to stay online, but there is no regulation at this point.”
That may be changing at some point in the not-so-distant future. “Far too many Texans are without power and heat for their homes as our state faces freezing temperatures and severe winter weather. This is unacceptable,” said Abbott, a Republican. “I will work with [the state House and Senate] to enhance Texas’ electric grid and ensure that our state never experiences power outages like this again.”
President Biden declared the situation in Texas an emergency last weekend, authorizing FEMA to “identify, mobilize, and provide at its discretion, equipment and resources necessary to alleviate the impacts of the emergency.” White House press secretary Jen Psaki said yesterday that FEMA has sent generators, blankets, and water to Texas, and “is preparing to move diesel into the state to ensure the continued availability of backup power.”
Worth Your Time
“This is where they’ll find my body,” thought a police officer and combat veteran as mobs cornered him by the entrance of the U.S. Capitol. “I don’t trust the people above me to make decisions to bring me home safe,” said another. ProPublica’s Joaquin Sapien and Joshua Kaplan spent weeks interviewing 19 current and former members of the U.S. Capitol Police to piece together the events of January 6 and uncover why the chain of command crumbled so detrimentally. “Combined,” they write, “the information makes clear how failures of leadership, communication and tactics put the lives of hundreds of officers at risk and allowed rioters to come dangerously close to realizing their threats against members of Congress.”
In Ripon, Wisconsin, the 1854 birthplace of the Republican Party, the local GOP is a microcosm of the party nationwide. Can those derogatorily labeled “RINO” (Republican In Name Only) live under the same roof as proponents of “Stop the Steal?” Or is the party schism irreversible? Looking to Ripon, Politico’s David Siders posits that reconciliation—or at least “papering over”—is possible. “In Wisconsin, there are reasons to think that at least some segment of the Republican electorate is prepared to look past Trump. They may already have been looking past him in November,” Siders writes. “Of the state’s five Republican-held House seats, the Republican running—and winning—in each district in November outperformed Trump in his district. And Republicans fared relatively well down-ballot nationwide.”
Former President Donald Trump stayed largely out of the public eye during his impeachment trial. But he re-emerged on Tuesday with a statement calling Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell a “dour, sullen, and unsmiling political hack,” among other insults. In a Wall Street Journal op-ed, Karl Rove picks apart Trump’s most acidic barbs: that McConnell lacks credibility on China because of his wife’s family’s business dealings, and that it was McConnell’s fault that the GOP lost the Georgia runoffs. “Since the Senate’s first meeting in March 1789, only a handful of leaders have demonstrated a mastery of the upper chamber that matches the bespectacled Kentuckian’s,” Rove writes. “His achievements are legion, including skillfully maneuvering Mr. Trump’s legislative accomplishments and judicial appointments through the Senate.”
Tune in to this week’s Dispatch Podcast for a discussion of Andrew Cuomo and COVID, K-12 school reopening efforts, the Senate’s acquittal of Donald Trump, Tim Alberta’s Nikki Haley piece in Politico, and their Myers Briggs test results.
In Wednesday’s G-File (🔒), Jonah reflects on the life and legacy of the sometimes brash, sometimes controversial, but always entertaining talk radio giant, Rush Limbaugh. “Limbaugh also knew what he was doing,” Jonah writes. “He was a master at floating trial balloons—performatively bold but intellectually tentative statements—to see how they would play out. If they backfired, he could say that the joke was on the losers and fools who took him either literally or out of context. If it didn’t, he’d press ahead or he’d relish the liberal tears he evoked.”
Now that former President Donald Trump’s second impeachment trial is over, Congress can get back to the fun stuff: coronavirus stimulus negotiations! Even though Biden’s “America Rescue Plan” likely has enough votes to become law through the budget reconciliation process, the bill is still facing opposition from congressional Republicans because of its $1.9 trillion price tag. In his latest Capitolism newsletter (🔒), Scott Lincicome helps us answer some basic questions: What, exactly, are we rescuing here? And does Biden’s plan risk overheating the economy by continuing to throw money even at those who haven’t been financially harmed by the pandemic?
Let Us Know
Do you favor a bipartisan, independent commission to investigate January 6 and the events that led to the assault on the Capitol? If we get one, will it help to correct the misperceptions around the legitimate winner of the election and who conducted the attacks?
The disaster of 1/6 and what’s happening in Texas both have the same root cause: the failure of imagination. Nobody could imagine these things would happen before they happened though they seem obvious now.
Supposedly (according to a re-post to Facebook – a source I discount) some retired general named Honoré is leading the task force. He referred to the 5 deaths at the Capitol as “killed in action”. Either he’s badly misinformed or, more likely, deliberately misrepresenting those deaths
Mary Chastain: “Reopening school is the issue that will unite Americans. MAJOR KUDOS to Savannah Guthrie and CNN’s John Berman for not caving and accepting the vague answers from Harris and her spokeswoman regarding reopening schools. They pressed and pressed. Berman even told the spokeswoman, ‘This isn’t a hard question. It’s yes or no.’ When she kept spinning and spitting out the usual talking points, Berman was like, ‘Well not getting an answer to that question.’ More of that, please.”
Leslie Eastman: “I am finding it hard to breathe. Listening to Rush Limbaugh beginning in 1991 is how I got started to being the independent conservative pundit I am today. Irreplaceable is the only fitting word. My son is truly a Rush baby: I dragged my big radio into the hospital room for good reception, so I could listen to Rush after I gave birth in 2001. I feel like I lost one of my best friends.”
David Gerstman: “Prof. Jacobson blogged that talk show giant Rush Limbaugh died. One of the odd things about Rush (maybe it wasn’t odd, but unusual) is that he had the respect (or qualified respect) of a number of high-profile leftists. A year ago, exactly, rocker Chrissy Hynde, lead singer of The Pretenders, paid tribute to Rush, thanking President Trump for giving the talk show host the Medal of Freedom. To be certain, Hynde had an agenda in her statement, but there was also something touching about it. Hynde wrote, “The other day when you gave that award to Rush Limbaugh, my father would have been so delighted. He loved listening to Rush, which is why I allowed my song, ‘My City Was Gone’, to be used on his radio show. My father and I didn’t always see eye-to-eye. We argued a lot.” Rush was gracious and told more of the story here. He also earned the respect of Washington Post columnist William Raspberry, who took the time to listen to Rush after calling Rush a racist and concluded, “Limbaugh’s is often (for many of us) the hated opinion, but that doesn’t, by itself, make him hateful. Having spent long years holding forth against the various orthodoxies of the age, I ought to understand the difference.” And when Raspberry passed away nearly 20 years later, Rush paid him tribute, writing, “Bill Raspberry was the last of a breed of liberal who could still be reasoned with. He was one of the last of the liberals with an open mind. I don’t say that just because way back in 1993 he admitted that he was wrong about me. We even created a term to describe it. It’s called the Raspberry Effect. But it’s a good example.” Finally, I really liked Tammy Bruce’s thread on how Rush won her over, “He approached me and everyone else as separate individual worthy of respect and with a desire to help and inspire. Regardless of the fact that I stood for everything he stood against. It was a generosity of spirit you would never see on the left. He was also a friend of Legal Insurrection, highlighting posts by Prof Jacobson and others.”
Samantha Mandeles: “Earlier this month, Jewish writer Avi Jorisch published a touching essay on the theft of his front door’s mezuzah by some anonymous anti-Semitic vandal in our nation’s capital. He asks: How do we turn instances of targeted bigotry into teaching moments for our children, without normalizing them (even as they become more and more mainstream)?”
Vijeta Uniyal: “Ignoring U.S. President Joe Biden’s proposed review of the Russian-German gas pipeline Nord Stream 2, Berlin has doubled down on its energy dependence on Moscow. On Tuesday, German Economic Minister Peter Altmaier announced Berlin’s intentions to expand energy cooperation beyond the natural gas sector. “We offer Russia a deeper cooperation” in hydrogen fuel production German Economy Minister said on Tuesday.”
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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Feb 18, 2021 01:00 am
Haley’s calculated post-election remarks about Trump, after years of working for him in the political spotlight and taking part in his election campaign, reveal her as the ultimate opportunist, Read More…
Feb 18, 2021 01:00 am
Instead of tapdancing in order to lump frigid temperatures with man-made global warming, there should be a discussion of the geopolitical ramifications of America’s energy policy. Read More…
Feb 18, 2021 01:00 am
I remember when I first “met” Rush. It was 1989, and some people at church had told me about this guy on the radio who was saying everything no one else dared to say. Read More…
Feb 18, 2021 01:00 am
We toast the amazing Rush Limbaugh, mourn his death, celebrate his Salvation, and recognize his profound impact on this nation and conservatives everywhere. Read More…
Feb 18, 2021 01:00 am
When Biden promised to transform America, the media carefully refrained from asking what he meant. The past three weeks have illuminated his meaning. Read More…
Feb 18, 2021 01:00 am
We don’t need a third party; we need a Trump policy party. The days of the “this is the way we’ve always done it” are over. Read More…
How Rush Limbaugh bridged generations
Feb 18, 2021 01:00 am
It’s hard to succinctly define the powerful place Rush Limbaugh commanded on America’s stage through radio in the past 30 years. Perhaps keeping it simple is one way. Read more…
What’s so special about the Capitol?
Feb 18, 2021 01:00 am
The politicians and media figures still having palpitations about the events on January 6 grossly overstate the Capitol’s importance to America. Read more…
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A Democratic bill introduced in the House of Representatives this year aims to create a mandatory and publicly accessible registry listing the names of gun owners, how many guns they have, and even where they keep their firearms.Additionally, the bill, H.R. 127, would ban several types of commonly used ammunition .50 caliber or greater, require gun … Read more
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Morning Rundown
Millions without power in Texas as dangerous winter weather continues: At one point, more than 2.9 million customers in Texas were without power Wednesday as dangerous winter weather conditions continued to slam the state. The winter storm brought up to 9 inches of snow to Amarillo, and freezing rain struck the cities of Austin and San Antonio. As a result, the Electric Reliability Council of Texas continued rolling blackouts to conserve power, and have asked residents to close their blinds, unplug unused appliances and wait to do laundry for a few days. Officials in Houston and the surrounding Harris County also announced a boil water advisory as many Houstonians face frozen and bursting pipes in their homes. Currently, five people have died in the city due to the storm but Houston Mayor Sylvester Turner said the number could rise once the weather passes. Many have been critical of the city’s response, including Harris County Judge Lina Hidalgo. “We’ve been hit hard by nature this week, but we can’t deny that some of this is a man-made disaster as well,” said Hidalgo. President Joe Biden approved Texas’ emergency disaster proclamation on Sunday and promised federal help. Across the South, many are still digging out from snow and ice and at least 30 people have died. The storm is now moving through the South, bringing more ice and snow to Louisiana, Arkansas, Mississippi and Tennessee. Click here to see how you can help Texas families left in the dark.
Biden pushes COVID-19 relief plan as a return to normalcy remains uncertain: As the Covid Tracking Project reported low numbers of coronavirus cases across the country since late October, the White House on Wednesday couldn’t say when a return to normalcy will happen amid the pandemic. During a White House press briefing, White House press secretary Jen Psaki said, “We want to be straight with the American people … We are not in a place where we can predict exactly when everybody will feel normal again.” She also stressed the importance of getting the COVID-19 vaccine. White House Chief Medical Adviser Dr. Anthony Fauci also estimated that a sense of normalcy will come early next year. Biden, however, is hopeful that a sense of normalcy will happen by Christmas. On Wednesday, Biden put pressure on Republicans to get on board with his nearly $2 trillion COVID relief plan. “The federal government has to chip in, make sure we get this done,” he told reporters during a meeting with labor leaders on Wednesday. Currently, no congressional Republicans have signaled support for his relief plan, despite ongoing conversations between the Biden administration and some Senate Republicans.
Rush Limbaugh, controversial conservative talk show host, dead at 70: Rush Limbaugh, a colossal figure whose unflinching brashness helped shape American conservative politics and media while his history of derogatory comments about marginalized communities turned him into one of the country’s most polarizing names, has died at 70. Limbaugh began a career in radio in 1971, and became known for his conservative opinions and views on immigration, women’s rights and race. In 1988, he launched “The Rush Limbaugh Show” and steadily remained among the most influential radio show hosts, changing the course of the industry and often being credited for saving AM radio. But his success didn’t come without controversy. In 2007, he compared Black professional football players to gang members, and then in 2015, he blamed gay marriage for a decline in Christianity. Still, his show continued for over three decades and Limbaugh was also awarded with the Presidential Medal of Freedom by former President Donald Trump. A year ago, Limbaugh announced he was fighting advanced lung cancer. He is survived by his wife, Kathryn.
Hundreds of tacos delivered to seniors amid brutal winter storm: It wasn’t Taco Tuesday, but hundreds of Houston-area seniors were able to get a warm, delicious treat on Wednesday amid the brutal winter storm thanks to Texas Relief Warriors. A group of volunteers from the nonprofit used a donation of 6,000 eggs to cook 700 breakfast tacos and distributed them Wednesday morning, according to the group’s founder Cara Adams. The donation came from owners of Pearland restaurant, Iguanas Ranas Cantina, whose owners also offered their kitchen to make the tacos. Thanks to their help, Adams and her team were able to scramble the eggs overnight and serve senior centers in the area that lost power. “We had our volunteers going door to door, going up stairs in the dark delivering tacos,” Adams told ABC News. “[The seniors] were excited and hungry for hot food. They were so grateful.”
GMA Must-Watch
This morning on “GMA,” Andra Day, star of Hulu’s “The United States vs. Billie Holiday,” joins us to talk about her role and the impact Billie Holiday had on her. She will also perform “Tigress and Tweed” from the movie. Plus, we have an exclusive first look at the new episode of “WandaVision,” which premieres on Disney+ this Friday. And Tory Johnson joins us with great deals on products to spruce up your home this winter. All this and more only on “GMA.”
Today we look at the emerging water crisis spurred by the extreme weather facing millions of Texans. Plus the Democrats’ latest push for President Biden’s Covid-19 relief bill.
Here is what we’re following this Thursday morning.
Texas water shortage adds to power crisis as new winter storm moves in
Scores of Texans were under notices to boil tap water before drinking it after days of record low temperatures that damaged infrastructure, caused blackouts and froze water pipes. And another storm is on the way.
Prominent conservative politicians and media personalities were quick to blame renewable energy for the state’s energy crisis. But experts and industry data suggest that natural gas, Texas’ dominant energy source, has provided drastically less energy than expected.
Texans have become increasingly desperate for help, seeking shelter in churches and burning furniture to generate heat. A Houston resident resorted to melting snow for water and lighting birthday candles to get some light into her home.
The storms have played a role in at least 35 deaths in eight states.
Democrats prepare for Covid relief battle as U.S. life expectancy plunges
While the American public were watching an impeachment trial, Democratic-led committees were quietly advancing President Joe Biden’s $1.9 trillion Covid-19 relief bill, hoping to deliver a bill to his desk by their self-imposed mid-March deadline.
Biden’s push for Covid-19 assistance comes as life expectancy in the U.S. experienced its biggest drop since World War II in the first half of 2020 — a staggering figure highlighting the pandemic’s toll on American lives.
Should the bill reach the Senate, Democrats will need to keep all 50 of their senators on board as they’re unlikely to get bipartisan support. The biggest intra-party fight is likely to be over the minimum wage.
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Plus
The U.S. attorney’s office in Brooklyn and the FBI have launched a preliminary investigation into New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo’s handling of Covid-19 nursing home deaths.
The discovery of signs of life on Mars would permanently change humanity’s view of its own importance, writes Seth Shostak, senior astronomer at the SETI institute, in an opinion piece.
Watch live: The NASA Perseverance rover is expected to land on Mars after a seven month journey around 5:30pm ET.
Live BETTER
Some people are considering forming “immunity bubbles,” a new twist on pandemic pods, as a safe way to interact with vaccinated peers.
Shopping
Doctors share expert tips and guidance on how to buy safe and effective hand sanitizer — a quick-to-sell-out staple since the pandemic took hold.
Tune in tonight
From the producers of Dateline: NBC’s new true-crime documentary series, “the Widower”takes viewers behind the scenes of a decade-long investigation into Thomas Randolph, an eccentric Las Vegas man accused of killing his wife Sharon.
The winter storm that has brought historic cold to Texas is also being felt by wild animals. At least 2,500 cold-stunned sea turtles have been rescued on South Padre Island, Texas, and transported to warmer facilities for critical care.
Good morning. It’s Thursday, Feb. 18, and NASA’s most advanced Martian rover is set to touch down on the red planet today. Have feedback? Let us know at hello@join1440.com.
NASA’s Perseverance rover will attempt to land on Mars today, completing a nearly seven-month trip from Earth. It will be the third spacecraft to arrive in the past two weeks; an orbiter from the United Arab Emirates and a Chinese rover both took advantage of the July 2020 launch window (see 101).
With a $2.7B price tag, the mission’s ambitious primary goal is to search for signs of former life on the red planet. The nuclear-powered rover will touch down in Mars’ 28-mile-wide Jezero Crater (take a video tour), where geological formations suggest it was once an ancient lake and thus potentially suitable for microbial life.
The vehicle has a plethora of cutting-edge tools, including a foldable helicopter. The copter marks the first-ever attempt at controlled flight on another planet and must operate in an atmosphere 99% less dense than Earth’s.
The rover is scheduled to touch down at 3:55 pm ET, but first it must survive seven minutes of terror—the critical entry, descent, and landing phase, which happens without communication from Earth. Watch the landing live here.
Rush Limbaugh Dies
Conservative radio pioneer Rush Limbaugh passed away yesterday at the age of 70 from complications arising from advanced lung cancer. His death came 13 months after his initial diagnosis and almost four months after doctors revealed the disease had become terminal.
Long considered the most influential voice in conservative talk radio, Limbaugh grew his eponymous “The Rush Limbaugh Show” into the most listened to radio program in the US. Launched in 1988—shortly after the repeal of a policy requiring equal airtime for opposing commentary on matters of public importance—the show expanded to more than 650 affiliate networks, boasting an estimated 20 million monthly listeners ($$, WSJ). Shortly after his initial diagnosis, Limbaugh was awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom by former President Donald Trump.
Listen to Limbaugh’s wife, Kathryn, make the announcement on yesterday’s show here.
Whitey Bulger Handler Released
Ex-FBI agent John “Zip” Connolly, the former handler of James “Whitey” Bulger, was granted a medical release from his 40-year prison sentence yesterday due to a terminal cancer.
The boss of Boston’s Irish American Winter Hill gang, Bulger provided info for two decades on his mafia rivals (see timeline), with Connolly as his FBI contact. In return, Bulger was effectively given carte blanche and received info on federal investigations from Connolly. The former agent was convicted of second-degree murder in 2008 for the 1982 killing of businessman John Callahan, who was shot by Winter Hill gang associates after Connolly indicated Callahan was about to implicate them in a separate murder. Connolly was also convicted on racketeering and obstruction of justice charges.
Connolly’s relationship with Bulger, who was murdered in prison in 2018, was dramatized in the 2015 film “Black Mass” and partly inspired 2006’s “The Departed.”
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The 5G rollout has begun. Apple released the iPhone 12 late last year, beginning what is likely to be a cycle of ever-increasing speeds, improved reliability, and the oft-mentioned “Internet of Things.”
>“Bridgerton” star Regé-Jean Page, inaugural poet Amanda Gorman among 100 emerging leaders named to the 2021 Time100 Next list (More) | See Time’s selection criteria (More)
>UK’s Prince Philip, 99, admitted to London hospital as a precautionary measure (More) | Arrest made in a hit-and-run accident that killed rapper Nicki Minaj’s father last week (More)
>Women’s tennis No. 3 seed Naomi Osaka beats Serena Williams, advances to the Australian Open finals (More) | Men’s tennis No. 2 seed Rafael Nadal knocked out of tourney after five-set quarterfinal loss (More)
>Google’s Waymo begins limited testing of driverless taxis in San Francisco using employee volunteers; marks the first expansion of tests outside Phoenix, Arizona (More)
>Scientists shatter record for oldest genome ever sequenced; genetic material was retrieved from a permafrost-preserved woolly mammoth tooth believed to be 1.1 million to 1.6 million years old (More)
>New engineered plastic mimics widely used high-density polyethylene, but is fully recyclable at the molecular level using closed-loop (or chemical) recycling (More)
Business & Markets
>US retail sales surge 5.3% in January, showing the first growth in four months; beats expectation of 1.2% growth (More)
>CEO of Robinhood, hedge fund managers, and Reddit traders among individuals to testify on GameStop trading today before the House Financial Services Committee (More)
>Elon Musk’s SpaceX raises $850M at $74B valuation (More) | Axiom Space raises $130M to fund production of private space stations (More)
Politics & World Affairs
>Death toll from winter storms reaches 30; more than 100 million under winter advisory today as second storm brings icy conditions to the Appalachian region and East Coast (More)
>Federal probe launched into New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo’s handling of long-term care facilities during the pandemic (More) | Seven-day average of new COVID-19 cases in the US falls to 77,000 per day, with a low of 54,000 reported Monday (More)
>Facebook to restrict Australian users’ ability to share or view news items, citing the country’s proposed News Media Bargaining Code; proposal would require Facebook pay per news link posted in users’ news feeds (More)
IN-DEPTH
The Richest Black Girl in America
Truly*Adventurous | Lauren Henley. Sarah Rector was 11 years old—in 1913, smack in the middle of Jim Crow America—when a parcel of land allotted to her in Eastern Oklahoma was found to sit on top of an oil geyser, making her an instant millionaire. Here’s what followed. (Read)
The Mother of All Squeezes
The Ringer | David Hill. After years of betting on long shot companies, self-described beach bum Mike McCaskill became obsessed with GameStop—before it was cool—and ended up cashing out $25M. (Read)
Clickbait: Tornadoes are a mere inconvenience for this Yorkie.
Historybook: RIP artist Michelangelo (1564); “The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn” published in the US (1885); Astronomer Clyde Tombaugh discovers Pluto (1930); HBD television personality Vanna White (1957); Auto racing legend Dale Earnhardt killed in crash at Daytona 500 (2001).
“You can’t let one bad moment spoil a bunch of good ones.”
– Dale Earnhardt
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The disaster of 1/6 and what’s happening in Texas both have the same root cause: the failure of imagination. Nobody could imagine these things would happen before they happened though they seem obvious now.
Supposedly (according to a re-post to Facebook – a source I discount) some retired general named Honoré is leading the task force. He referred to the 5 deaths at the Capitol as “killed in action”. Either he’s badly misinformed or, more likely, deliberately misrepresenting those deaths