Good morning! Here is your news briefing for Friday February 19, 2021
1.) THE DAILY SIGNAL
February 19 2021
Happy Friday from Washington, where President Biden has decided to push amnesty for illegal immigrants as the pandemic-wracked economy struggles to recover. Fred Lucas rounds up the main sticking points. On the podcast, media critic Brent Bozell shares thoughts on his friend, Rush Limbaugh. Plus: liberals can’t get enough goodies; the media’s part in the Cuomo scandal; and historian Lee Edwards assesses the impact of El Rushbo. Forty years ago today, a report from the Reagan administration details the influence of “communist powers” on the armed insurgency in El Salvador.
Media Research Center’s Brent Bozell tells of the time Limbaugh responded to a young adult who wanted a free newsletter subscription, how he thwarted an animal rights auction, and more.
Liberals aim to pass a hike in the federal minimum wage to $15 an hour, taxpayer-funded bailouts to unfunded multiemployer pension plans, bailouts for poorly managed states, and more.
Entertainment Weekly overflowed with praise for Cuomo, saying: “The hero that America never realized it needed until he was on our television screens every night … has taken his talents to the page.”
These tests could transform the pandemic response and move us beyond the public health policy stalemate. Yet not one of them is available to Americans.
People rely on the media for the latest news and analysis. Topics that the media cover become matters of grave social concern. Issues that go unreported are ignored and forgotten. In the States, the media are traditionally regarded as the guardians of the truth and societies’ core values. But unfortunately, this is becoming less and less true. Many media sources and platforms are instead interested in promoting their ideology. In doing that, they ignore certain news or report news through a distorted lens.The Right On Times news portal will change that. We will bring all news sources to you, especially those often ignored by “mainstream” media. We will let you see all the stories and let you discover the truth yourself.We will deliver the truth through unbiased news.
“Marx actively rebelled against the divine. He wrote, “I long to take vengeance on the One Who rules from above. The idea of God is the keynote of a perverted civilization. It must be destroyed.”
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3.) DAYBREAK
Your First Look at Today’s Top Stories – Daybreak Insider
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And seeks to rejoin the disastrous nuclear agreement from the Obama years (AP). This follows the Iran-backed attack on U.S. forces in Iraq (National Review). From Tom Cotton: Iranian-backed forces just attacked American troops in Iraq. Instead of retaliating, what does President Biden do? Prepares to lift sanctions on the regime & begs to reopen diplomatic talks. The Iranian regime will continue to exploit @POTUS‘s weakness (Twitter). From Hugh Hewitt: Bet on it: Team Biden will recognize nine-dash line and Tehran right to nuclear weapons in exchange for carbon reductions in 2080. Kerry to Rice to Sherman triple play (Twitter).
2.
Democrats Plot to Bring Back Big Pork
From the story: According to reports, Ms. DeLauro and Senate Appropriations Chairman Patrick Leahy will soon announce that earmarks are welcome in annual spending bills. Why would Democrats risk such a move? Politico explains that House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer has reassured his party that it won’t suffer, since the effort will be “bipartisan.” Democrats are banking on spend-thirsty Republicans to provide cover.
Kroger Closes Stores Rather Than Pay More to Workers
Remember when people were happy to have a job during this pandemic? The city of Seattle passed a $4 an hour hazard pay mandate for grocery workers. Since Kroger is in the business of making a profit, they would do better shutting down stores (Washington Post). Bernie Sanders, who appears to have no understanding of how economics works, called this “the height of corporate greed” (Twitter).
5.
Senator Chuck Schumer Suddenly Down on Puerto Rico Becoming a State
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Former U.S. Rep. Donna Shalala turned 80 this week, and she celebrated with quite the party — virtually, of course.
More than forty of Shalala’s former colleagues joined a surprise Zoom birthday call to mark the milestone. Attendees included neighbors, University of Miami staff, Congressional staff, campaign staff, Clinton Global Initiative staff and many others.
The event was MC’d by United Teachers of Dade President Karla Hernandez Mats. It featured several high-profile guests, including House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, U.S. Rep. Stephanie Murphy, and former U.S. Rep. Debbie Mucarsel-Powell.
Pelosi recalled how earlier in her Congressional career, “we all knew who Donna Shalala was” and how she was always meticulously prepared for her hearings on Capitol Hill, earning broad respect from Republican and Democratic members alike.
The California Democrat said many members of Congress took it as a “high compliment” when Shalala chose to pursue a seat herself and that she was both beloved and effective as a colleague.
Donna Shalala’s birthday was quite the Zoom event.
Latino Victory Project Executive Director Mayra Macias named Shalala an “honorary Latina” for always showing up for and supporting Hispanic and Latino communities in her district, making special note of her advocacy for Venezuelans and tough stands on the Nicolás Maduro dictatorship.
Former Miami Mayor and current Florida Democratic Party Chair Manny Diaz fondly recalled working alongside Shalala when she was the University of Miami President to turn Miami into one of the “strongest brands on the planet.”
Other speakers included Rep. Kevin Chambliss, Rep. Nick Duran, Pinecrest Councilmember Anna Hockhammer, South Florida AFL-CIO President Jeffery Mitchell and Miami-Dade County Commissioner Eileen Higgins, who led the group in singing Happy Birthday.
As Shalala ate her cake, one repeated theme of the speakers is Shalala’s record of mentoring and supporting others — in academia, at the US Department of Health and Human Services, in Congress, and countless other ways.
Situational awareness
—@JulianCastro: In crises like these, members of Congress play a critical role connecting their constituents to emergency services and assistance. @tedcruz should be on the phone with federal agencies, not on a trip to Mexico.
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—@micheleforfl: I’m not stopping until there is EQUITABLE distribution for ALL FLORIDIANS. I met with @GovRonDeSantis office today and they committed to work with me to ensure more pop-up sites are coming to my district and underserved areas in the stay. I’m going to hold them to it.
—@KayleeTuck2: First bill presentation is in the books, and thrilled to say HB423 passed the Pandemics and Public Emergencies Committee by a unanimous vote. Thanks to the committee members for taking it easy on me.
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—@Mdixon55: The House has formally admonished lobbyist Jason Steele for directly implying political payback against members who voted for a vacation rental preemption bill. His comments came during committee testimony last week.
—@PatriciaMazzei: Dr. Raul Pino, the health administrator in Orlando, Fla., said that two young women “dressed up as grannies” tried to get their second coronavirus vaccine doses on Wednesday. They wore bonnets, gloves and glasses, he said: “I don’t know how they escaped the first time.”
—@GabeGutierrez: ERCOT officials just said the Texas power grid was seconds or minutes — not hours — away from catastrophic failure if rolling outages had not been imposed starting Sunday night.
—@MarcACaputo: Unwitting self-mocking villainy is the best villainy
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Days until
The CW’s ‘Superman & Lois’ premieres — 4; the 2021 Conservative Political Action Conference begins — 6; Pitchers and catchers report to Spring Training, with exhibition games starting — 8; 2021 Legislative Session begins — 11; Florida TaxWatch 2021 State of the Taxpayer virtual event — 13; ‘Coming 2 America’ premieres on Amazon Prime — 14; municipal elections in Broward and south Palm Beach County — 18; ‘The Many Saints of Newark’ premieres — 21; 2021 Grammys — 23; Zack Snyder’s ‘Justice League’ premieres on HBO Max — 27; ‘Godzilla vs. Kong’ premieres — 35; MLB Opening Day — 41; ‘No Time to Die’ premieres (rescheduled) — 42; ‘Black Widow’ rescheduled premiere — 77; ‘Top Gun: Maverick’ rescheduled premiere — 133; Disney’s ‘Shang Chi and The Legend of The Ten Rings’ premieres — 142; MLB All-Star Game in Atlanta — 144; new start date for 2021 Olympics — 154; ‘Jungle Cruise’ premieres — 162; St. Petersburg Primary Election — 186; ‘A Quiet Place Part II’ rescheduled premiere — 210; ‘Dune’ premieres — 224; MLB regular season ends — 226; World Series Game 1 — 249; St. Petersburg Municipal Elections — 256; Disney’s ‘Eternals’ premieres — 259; Steven Spielberg’s ‘West Side Story’ premieres — 294; ‘Spider-Man Far From Home’ sequel premieres — 301; ‘Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness’ premieres — 399; ‘Thor: Love and Thunder’ premieres — 441; ‘Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse’ sequel premieres — 595.
Dateline Tallahassee
“Ron DeSantis appoints Julie Brown as DBPR Secretary” via Florida Politics — DeSantis appointed Brown as the next Secretary of the Department of Business and Professional Regulation. DeSantis said he was “confident she will do a great job in our continued fight to cut red tape and ease regulation on our businesses and hardworking Floridians.” Brown’s appointment to lead DBPR comes a month after former Secretary Halsey Beshears announced he would step down, citing personal health issues. His last day was Jan. 29. “As Secretary, I will work to build on the Governor’s foundation to implement meaningful occupational licensing reform, as well with business leaders and business owners during Florida’s economic recovery,” she said.
Former PSC member Julie Brown gets a new gig in Tallahassee.
“‘This is about common sense’: Wilton Simpson says anti-riot legislation isn’t politically motivated” via Jason Delgado of Florida Politics — Senate President Simpson on Thursday disputed the notion that DeSantis‘ prized anti-riot bill is somehow politically motivated. The measure, proposed by Republican Rep. Juan Fernandez-Barquin of Miami-Dade, would intensify legal penalties against rioters, vandals, and looters. “I am really not sure how that became political at all,” Simpson said. “If you attack a law enforcement officer, there should be substantial penalties. If you destroy private property, there should be a substantial penalty for that. I think we should all be able to agree on those things.” Simpson described the anti-riot bill as “common sense.”
“Simpson proposes west coast M-CORES route” via Renzo Downey of Florida Politics — Simpson suggested a possible toll road route along Florida’s west coast to minimize its environmental impact. The Multi-use Corridors of Regional Economic Significance (M-CORES) was one of the priorities of Simpson’s predecessor. Environmental activists have consistently opposed the possible toll read expansion. Simpson leveled with the plans’ critics Thursday, calling environmental concerns legitimate. But the current situation, with the Suncoast Parkway terminating in Citrus Country, should be improved. “You certainly should not build a major highway and dead-end it into a rural county,” the Trilby Republican said. “I believe there has to be some way to bring that rural road to I-10 without disturbing the environment or doing as little damage as possible.”
Simpson says committee chairs will decide THC cap’s fate — Simpson said committee chairs would have the final say on whether to hear bills to cap THC concentration in medical cannabis. THC cap legislation has been supported in the House for the past couple of Legislative Sessions but didn’t get traction in the Senate. As reported by Arek Sarkissian of POLITICO Florida, Simpson said he is “not engaging in these bills” this year and would defer to the chairs. He added, “But I do think there’s a lot of support in the Senate for that type of bill.”
Wilton Simpson staying on the sidelines when it comes to THC caps. Image via Colin Hackley.
“Constitution Revision Commission repeal redux clears final Senate committee” via Kelly Hayes of Florida Politics — Sen. Jeff Brandes’ proposal to eliminate Florida’s Constitution Revision Commission (SJR 204) was approved in a 12-3 vote by the Senate Rules Committee and now heads to the Senate floor. The resolution would ask voters to abolish the 37-member commission, one of Florida’s five methods to amend the state constitution. The commission, created in 1968, meets every 20 years to make changes to the Florida Constitution.
“Joe Gruters’ e-fairness plan goes back to revenue neutral” via Renzo Downey of Florida Politics — A Senate panel has advanced a bill to enforce online sales taxes with the promise of using the bonus funds to lower taxes. Sarasota Republican Sen. Joe Gruters told the Senate Commerce and Tax Committee that his bill (SB 50) could generate $1.3 billion in currently uncollected sales taxes at the state and local level. He also vowed to make the bill revenue-neutral by offering tax relief somewhere yet to be determined. However, enforcing online sales is not a tax increase. The legislation merely moves the onus from shoppers to businesses and better ensures taxes owed are taxes paid.
Florida League of Cities thanks Senate for advancing ‘e-fairness’ — FLC applauded the Senate Finance and Tax Committee for voting in favor of a bill that would require online retailers to collect and remit sales tax to the state. The organization said, “Florida’s 411 municipalities thrive when their local businesses thrive, and this bill would finally put small businesses on a level playing field with out-of-state retailers who don’t contribute anything to the betterment of our communities. Florida’s local businesses sponsor Little League teams, have a vested interest in improving their community, and help pay for the infrastructure that ensures these retail items get delivered.” State budget experts estimate the bill would increase local sales tax collections by $229.5 million in the next fiscal year and $253.7 million in subsequent years.
Florida TaxWatch backs ‘e-fairness’ bill — Nonpartisan watchdog Florida TaxWatch is backing Gruters’ bill to require out-of-state vendors to collect sales tax for online purchases. In comments delivered to the Senate Finance and Tax Committee, FTW president and CEO Dominic Calabro said the proposal “remedies a long-standing problem that hinders state and local tax collections and currently places Florida businesses at a competitive disadvantage.” FTW estimates the lack of online sales tax enforcement “costs the Florida state government $1.080 billion annually and an additional loss to local governments of $254 million annually.” SB 50 cleared the Finance and Tax Committee and now heads to the Appropriations Committee.
“Lawmakers back POW-MIA bracelet memorial” via News Service of Florida — The Senate Rules Committee and the House Government Operations Subcommittee unanimously approved bills (SB 416 and HB 163) that would authorize a POW-MIA veterans bracelet memorial that would be built near an already-existing Vietnam War memorial across the street from the state Capitol. The bracelet memorial would be funded by the Vietnam Veterans of America Big Bend Chapter 96 in Tallahassee. The bills, sponsored by Sen. Danny Burgess and Rep. Mike Giallombardo, would direct the state Department of Management Services to consider recommendations from the Vietnam Veterans of America and the Florida Historical Commission in making decisions about the memorial’s design and placement.
Mike Giallombardo and Danny Burgess are considering a POW-MIA memorial at The Capitol.
“Chris Sprowls hopes to move COVID-19 liability proposal to Senate first week of Session” via Jason Degado of Florida Politics — Speaking at a Thursday media availability, Sprowls suggested business liability protections would likely be the first proposal sent to the upper chamber. Proponents contend the legal protections are needed to fend off frivolous, cash-grabbing lawsuits. They also suggest the protections can reassure weary business owners operating amid the COVID-19 pandemic. Sprowls wants to get legislation to the Governor as soon as possible to help COVID-ravaged individuals. However, critics, including Democrats and interest groups such as AARP, warn the proposals offer near blanket immunity.
Tally 2
“Cocktails to-go bill clears House panel” via Scott Powers of Florida Politics — The Florida Legislature is showing a thirst for cocktails to go, as a bill to make them permanently allowed in Florida easily cleared a House panel Thursday, two days after a similar measure drew cheers in a Senate committee. Republican Rep. Josie Tomkow’s HB 329 drew no opposition in the House Regulatory Reform Subcommittee. However, a couple of concerns were raised by members who said they were supporting now but wanted to see changes before the bill might hit the House floor. Republican Rep. Scott Plakon expressed discomfort for the prospect that restaurants might be able to send to-go orders that include hard liquor. Democratic Rep. Dan Daley also raised concerns about “the whole distilled spirit bottle concept.”
Josie Tomkow wants to help Floridians get their drink on.
“Money boosted for concealed weapons background checks” via News Service of Florida — Lawmakers shifted $4.34 million on Thursday to cover a projected deficit caused by an uptick in people applying for concealed-weapons licenses. Without comment, the Joint Legislative Budget Commission, made up of House and Senate members, approved the funding request from the Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services’ Division of Licensing, which oversees permitting for concealed weapons. “The Division of Licensing has experienced the largest call volume of concealed weapons license applications in the program history, with over 203,000 background checks billed by the Florida Department of Law Enforcement in the first six months of the current fiscal year,” said Thomas Poucher, the department’s director of the Office of Policy and Budget.
“Superintendents weigh in on ‘missing students’” via The News Service of Florida — Tying tangible experience to troubling data, five school superintendents addressed a House panel Thursday, with some asking for “more teeth” in a law to help find students who have gone unaccounted for this school year. State economists estimate that 87,811 fewer students have enrolled in public schools than were predicted for the 2020-2021 academic year. The superintendents tried to give the House PreK-12 Appropriations Subcommittee a clearer picture. Miami-Dade County Superintendent AlbertoCarvalho said 10,006 fewer students than expected enrolled in his district’s schools, of which 78% either moved out of state, moved to another county, or enrolled in private schools.
“Can Florida’s broken workforce aid program be fixed? Lawmakers aren’t sure.” via Kirby Wilson of the Tampa Bay Times — In a dimly lit basement committee room at the Florida Capitol this week, lawmakers had one big question for the officials in charge of Florida’s workforce development program. Who exactly benefits from the web of bureaucracy Florida has set up to route hundreds of millions of federal dollars to people looking for jobs? After three presentations by some of the people in charge of the program, skeptics on the House Education and Employment committee never got the answer they were looking for. “It’s very concerning to me when y’all are getting paid to get people jobs, and you can’t tell us who you got jobs for,” said Rep. Chris Latvala. “There’s no transparency, there’s no accountability, at least from my perspective.”
Chris Latvala wants to know exactly what jobs are being filled by the state’s workforce program. Image via Colin Hackley.
“Lawmakers trying to squash Key West voters’ wishes, but forget one thing” via Craig Pittman of the Florida Phoenix — You hear a lot around Presidents Day and other patriotic holidays about how great democracy is and how important voting is. But in Florida, when a vote doesn’t go the way big corporations like, our Legislature is ever eager to squash the voters’ wishes. Sometimes, though, in their rush to crank up the steamroller for a good squashing, our legislators do something particularly boneheaded. A good example is what’s going on right now with Key West and cruise ships.
Lobby regs
New and renewed lobbying registrations:
Slater Bayliss, Christopher Chaney, Stephen Shiver, Sarah Suskey, Jeffrey Woodburn, The Advocacy Group at Cardenas Partners: Sentry Insurance Company
Michael Corcoran, Matt Blair, Jacqueline Corcoran, Ralph Criss, Andrea Tovar, Corcoran Partners: Orange Station at The Edge, PropLogix/Orange Data Systems
Jorge Chamizo, Gary Guzzo, Floridian Partners: Talitrix
Scott Dick, SKD Consulting Group: United Faculty Miami Dade College
Jennifer Dritt: Florida Council Against Sexual Violence
Douglas Holder, The Legis Group: Suncoast Communities Blood Bank
Nick Iarossi, Andrew Ketchel, Capital City Consulting: Bonefish and Tarpon Trust
Carlos McDonald: Guardianship Program of Dade County
James McFaddin, Paul Mitchell, The Southern Group: Prominence Health Plan, Prominence Health Plan
Theresa Prichard: Florida Council Against Sexual Violence
Bill Rubin, Erica Chanti, Heather Turnbull, Rubin Turnbull & Associates: Restoration Association of Florida
“Court rejects challenge to armed school ‘guardians’” via Jim Saunders of News Service of Florida — Three years after a mass shooting at Parkland’s Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School led lawmakers to pass a major school-safety bill, an appeals court Thursday rejected a challenge to allowing armed “guardians” on campuses. A three-judge panel of the 1st District Court of Appeal upheld a Duval County circuit judge’s ruling that lawmakers had authorized guardians — who are not law-enforcement officers — to carry guns to bolster school safety. Attorneys for three Duval County students and the League of Women Voters of Florida argued that allowing guardians to be armed violates a state law that has long prohibited people, except law enforcement officers, from carrying guns on campuses.
A legal challenge to armed school guardians was struck down.
“Challenge to Florida mask mandate heads to state Supreme Court” via Jim Saunders of News Service of Florida — After months of legal wrangling across Florida about mask requirements during the COVID-19 pandemic, a challenge to a Palm Beach County mask mandate has gone to the state Supreme Court. Opponents of the mandate have filed a notice that is a first step in asking the Supreme Court to consider arguments that the Palm Beach County mandate is unconstitutional, according to documents posted Thursday on the Supreme Court website. While justices do not have to take up the case, it could test challenges to mask requirements in the state. For example, the 1st District Court of Appeal heard arguments in November in a challenge to an Alachua County mask requirement, though it has not issued a ruling.
“Students must return to school for testing, even if they’ve been learning at home” via Lisa J. Huriash of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — Florida wants all students in grades 3 and up to show up in person for standardized tests this spring — regardless of whether their parents have kept them at home for COVID-19. State Education Commissioner Richard Corcoran signed an order this week requiring the tests. The order said the tests are more important than ever because many struggling students are learning at home and falling behind. A spokeswoman for the Florida Department of Education did not respond to questions about penalties for school districts that don’t comply or the risk of violating social distancing guidelines from the CDC.
“Trucking takes on lawsuit abuse in Florida” via Eric Miller of Transport Topics News — For years, Florida owned a spot on the American Tort Reform Foundation’s “Judicial Hellholes” list. That could soon be changing as the Florida Trucking Association and its business allies take on lawsuit abuse in the state’s courts. In January, the state trucking association held a closed-door lawsuit abuse forum for guidance from some of its members on how to spur reform in the courts and seek legislation to rid the court system of unfair rules and processes. The group also is teaming with other groups to change various state laws and court procedures when the Legislature comes back in session in March. They include legislation giving motor carriers and the business community protection from liability from COVID-19 employee lawsuits.
“VISIT FLORIDA tries to speed up tourism return to normalcy” via Jim Turner of News Service of Florida — Tourism-marketing leaders have set a goal of beating a projection that the vital leisure and hospitality industries won’t return to normal until 2024. VISIT FLORIDA President and CEO Dana Young on Thursday called the effort “a big one” for an agency that has “faced many challenges. The state agency released estimates Monday indicating the state handled 86.714 million travelers in 2020, down 34% from the previous year and the lowest number in a decade. Last month, Amy Baker, coordinator of the Legislature’s Office of Economic & Demographic Research, said while tourism numbers show expected improvements during the coming year, it might not be until 2024 before normalcy returns to the hospitality and leisure industries.
2022
“Ivanka Trump will not run against Marco Rubio for one of Florida’s Senate seats.” via Maggie Haberman of The New York Times — Ivanka Trump will not run for the U.S. Senate from Florida in 2022, according to people close to her as well as an aide to U.S. Sen. Rubio, who holds the seat. Since the final days of Donald Trump’s term in office, speculation has been growing that his eldest daughter might try to run for statewide office in Florida, where she and her family have moved permanently. Such a bid would involve a primary challenge to a sitting Republican senator, Rubio, and a competitive general election. “Marco did speak with Ivanka a few weeks ago,” said Nick Iacovella, a spokesman for Rubio. “Ivanka offered her support for Marco’s reelection. They had a great talk.”
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“Stephanie Murphy’s team registers web domain with statewide appeal” via Jacob Ogles of Florida Politics — A new domain for Murphy’s campaign website may hint at ambitions to seek statewide office. Visitors to StephanieMurphyforCongress.com now get immediately redirected to StephanieMurphyFL.com. That’s a subtle change many visitors won’t notice. But it’s a significant one considering the Winter Park Democrat frequently comes up on lists of potential contenders for Senator or Governor in Florida in 2022. The website change is fairly recent. According to WhoIs records, the domain StephanieMurphyFL.com was registered on Jan. 28, and the last update to the domain status came on Feb. 2.
“Charlie Crist considers run for Governor” via Dave Elias of NBC 2 — Crist is seriously considering running against Republican Gov. DeSantis. “Well, I may. … It’s something I’m giving serious consideration to. A lot of friends have urged me to do it next year,” he said. Crist called it a big decision and explained that he is listening and will likely decide in the Spring one way or another. That could mean running against Nikki Fried first in a primary if she decides to run. “Well, I’m not running, if I do run for Governor, to run against anyone per se,” Crist said. “I would run for Governor of Florida again; if I do, I would run for Florida.”
Corona Florida
“DeSantis omits data on child COVID rates as he touts decision to open schools” via Tony Pipitone of NBC 6 Miami — This week, DeSantis twice misled the public about how Florida stacks up to other states when it comes to infection rates among school-age children. During comments Monday lambasting Democrats for, he claimed, putting teachers’ unions “ahead of the well-being of our children,” he said Florida is “34th out of 50 states and DC for COVID-19 cases on a per capita basis for children.” That is not true unless — as the Governor did — you ignore more than 50,000 children over the age of 14 who contracted the virus. The Governor compounded his misstatement of the data Tuesday in a tweet to his more than 717,000 followers.
When it comes to COVID-19 and opening schools, Ron DeSantis may be guilty of the sin of omission.
With the help of connections, several Florida groups appear to get special treatment in securing vaccine doses” via Michael Moline of the Florida Phoenix — As Florida residents rush to try to get vaccines, some well-connected political and business figures are securing front-of-the-line doses for their communities, raising questions about what appears to be special treatment. A fresh example cropped up on Wednesday, when DeSantis appeared in Manatee County to open a vaccine “point of distribution,” or pod, at the affluent Lakewood Ranch, developed by prominent business owner Rex Jensen. Showing up at the news conference was former Senate President Bill Galvano. DeSantis bristled when reporters asked why the vaccines weren’t targeted to less privileged neighborhoods.
“DeSantis says it’s not his call on how pop-up COVID-19 vaccine sites dole out shots” via Richard Tribou and Steven Lemongello of the Orlando Sentinel — DeSantis showed up at another pop-up vaccine site but shrugged off questions about who gets vaccinated after drawing heavy criticism over a similar site he visited Wednesday. “We don’t dictate how it’s done. We do not say they can’t invite people from outside,” he said Thursday. The questions stemmed from a report in the Bradenton Herald about a site in Manatee County’s Lakewood Ranch that allowed influential people from outside the area to receive vaccines. Defending the Manatee County choice, DeSantis on Wednesday suggested the state might choose to send its vaccines elsewhere if those in the county didn’t appreciate it.
Corona local
“South Florida crosses 700K COVID-19 cases as daily death toll spikes again” via Ryan Nicol of Florida Politics — South Florida has now seen more than 700,000 infected with COVID-19, as the regional death toll remains at a relative high. The tri-county area crosses that mark on a day where just 1,833 cases were reported. That’s fairly low for the region and does show that cases are on a downswing overall. One problem area is Palm Beach County, which has seen its case positivity rate rise week-to-week. That number sits at 7% over the previous seven days. The week prior, from Feb. 4-10, it was down to 6.4%. Overall, cases are still trending downward in Palm Beach County. Miami-Dade and Broward counties have seen total cases and the positivity rate drop from week-to-week.
“DeSantis touts 2M senior vaccinations at Pinellas Park pop-up site” via Jacob Ogles of Florida Politics — DeSantis fielded questions Thursday morning about how the state chooses pop-up sites for vaccines. But unlike at a combative news conference Wednesday, the Republican Governor stayed on message and promised to get shots in the arms of every senior who wants one in the coming weeks. “Trends are good across Florida,” DeSantis said. “Our hospital census continues to drop in patients with COVID. We’re far below where we were in the summer.” Now, the state has vaccinated roughly 42% of all seniors in the state, he said. He also claimed Florida health officials believe they recently vaccinated their 2 millionth senior.
Ron DeSantis heads to Pinellas Park to tout 2M senior vaccinations.
“Pfizer confirms massive new operations hub in Tampa” via Ashley Gurbal Kritzer of the Tampa Bay Business Journal — Pharmaceutical giant Pfizer has confirmed plans to open an operations center in Tampa — one that will include finance, human resources, digital and sourcing employees. The Business Journal first reported Pfizer had signed a lease for 105,000 square feet in office building Heights Union on Jan. 27. The Tampa-Hillsborough Economic Development Council issued a news release Thursday confirming the location. The EDC did not confirm the number of jobs Pfizer’s new location will create. In commercial real estate circles, the deal is rumored to represent up to 600 jobs. Heights Union was developed in a joint venture of Tampa’s SoHo Capital and Atlanta-based TPA Ventures.
“Thousands of Miami and Broward students have left the public schools amid the pandemic” via David Goodhue of the Miami Herald — House Speaker Sprowls said last week that nearly 90,000 public school students in Florida are “missing,” meaning they haven’t shown up for class either in person or online during this school year. Nearly 20,000 of these children are missing from Miami-Dade and Broward school districts, the largest districts in the state and the fourth- and sixth-largest districts in the country. With schools’ funding based, in part, on the number of students attending a school, a significant reduction in students could lead to major budget cutbacks for public schools. However, school officials say the majority of these students are not “missing.” Most either transferred, are being home-schooled, or moved during the pandemic.
“Michele Rayner-Goolsby blasts DeSantis over Manatee vaccine inequality” via Jacob Ogles of Florida Politics — Goolsbyblasted DeSantis after he announced a boost in vaccines for Manatee County, but not for any of her constituents. “Gov. DeSantis has made a choice to prioritize affluent neighborhoods in Manatee County over our underserved populations knowing the numbers are criminally low when it comes to equitable distribution of this vaccine,” the St. Petersburg Democrat said. According to the most recent census estimates, within Manatee County, 28.1% of the residents are older than 65. Meanwhile, 86% of county residents are White, 9.3% are Black, and 16.9% are Hispanic. But of the 43,405 individuals vaccinated so far in the county, 71.6% are White. Just 1.8% are Black, and 2.5% Hispanic.
Michele Rayner-Goolsby will not have any of Ron DeSantis’ vaccine shenanigans in Manatee.
“Manatee Commissioner Vanessa Baugh created vaccine priority list that included herself and donor” via Zac Anderson of the Herald-Tribune — Baugh was criticized by fellow Commissioners Thursday for creating a priority list of people to get the COVID-19 vaccine at a clinic in Lakewood Ranch, a list that included Baugh and prominent developer RexJensen, inviting more concerns of favoritism in vaccine distribution. Baugh’s email raises the question of whether she abused her power to benefit herself, friends and a political donor. Jensen is the president and CEO of Lakewood Ranch developer Schroeder-Manatee Ranch, which has donated to Baugh and DeSantis.
Corona nation
“A mass-casualty event every day” via The Washington Post — The post created a sweeping interactive map outlining the deadly effects of the COVID-19 crisis through the 10 different lenses — coroners, hospitals, day cares, cemeteries, mortuaries, Hospice nurses, priests and parents as well as the reservation the pandemic creates ad the new prevalence of the virtual funeral. Taken as a whole, the series paints a tragic picture of a pandemic run wild and the chaos that ensued on three of the deadliest days in the deadliest month of the crisis. It includes interviews and photos to capture the stories of the people and places closest to the lives lost.
“The government can — and should — send high-quality masks to every American” via Ranu S. Dhillon, Abraar Karan, David Beier and Devabhaktuni Srikrishna of The Washington Post — As more-contagious variants of the coronavirus spread, the CDC is urging people to wear better masks, or to double up on the ones they have. The Joe Biden administration is reportedly considering sending masks to all Americans, reviving a proposal that the Trump administration quashed last year. Several members of Congress are pushing that option, too, and specifically calling for high-caliber masks that better protect against small virus-carrying particles not reliably captured by cloth masks. This proposal echoes what we and others have been advocating over the past several months. Getting “hi-fi” masks to the general public to wear when indoors and among crowds is even more urgent now with the new, more transmissible variants.
Why can’t America just give masks to everyone? Image via AP.
“American life expectancy fell by 1 year in the first half of 2020” via Marisa Fernandez of Axios — The coronavirus pandemic drove life expectancy in the U.S. to its lowest level since 2006, according to new preliminary data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Racial disparities in life expectancy also 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. Overall, American life expectancy was about 78 years in the first half of 2020. In 2019, it was roughly 79 years.
“Is it safe to open schools? Yes, but …” via Laura Meckler, Karin Brulliard and Brittany Shammas of The Washington Post — For months, school districts throughout the country have struggled with whether and how to reopen buildings that, in some cases, have been shuttered for nearly a year. Going back is frightening for many teachers and parents, especially with coronavirus rates remaining at high levels and new variants of the virus emerging. And yet, the negative consequences of all-remote learning are significant, too. In a review of the science, the CDC found in-person schooling has not been associated with substantial transmission in the wider community. Multiple studies found transmission rates inside schools are similar to, or lower than, levels in the community when mitigation steps are in place.
Corona economics
“U.S. jobless claims rise to 861,000 as layoffs stay high” via The Associated Press — The number of Americans applying for unemployment aid rose last week to 861,000, evidence that layoffs remain painfully high despite a steady drop in the number of confirmed viral infections. Applications from laid-off workers rose 13,000 from the previous week, which was revised sharply higher, the Labor Department said Thursday. Before the virus erupted in the United States last March, weekly applications for unemployment benefits had never topped 700,000, even during the Great Recession of 2008-2009.
The latest unemployment numbers show a disturbing trend. Image via AP.
“Florida jobless claims drop below 19K last week” via News Service of Florida — Florida drew an estimated 18,982 first-time unemployment claims last week. The U.S. Department of Labor estimate for the week ending Feb. 13 represented the lowest total for a single week since the coronavirus pandemic began. The federal agency initially estimated Florida received 17,621 new jobless applications during the week that ended Feb. 6. However, the agency revised that total to 21,710 in the numbers released Thursday. Florida has paid out nearly $22.5 billion in state and federal unemployment assistance to 2.28 million applicants with the pandemic hammering businesses since March 15. In December, Florida’s unemployment rate stood at 6.1%, with a January rate slated to be released on March 15.
More corona
“Jabil gets FDA approval for U.S.-made face masks” via Lauren Coffey of the Tampa Bay Business Journal — The FDA approved Jabil’s PPE on Thursday. The health care and technology manufacturer worked with Massachusetts-based subsidiary NP Medical Inc. to create the product. The PPE was made in a factory in Memphis and can now be distributed across the globe. The approval comes at a particularly good time for the company — Biden recently enacted a mask mandate on all federal property, along with planes, trains and buses. Jabil officials stated it would leverage its relationships with local and state governments to meet the now-increased mask demand.
St. Petersburg’s Jabil gets the OK to start producing masks. Image via Jabil.
“Young Florida women dressed as grannies to get coronavirus vaccine — and it may have worked” via Adrienne Cutway of Click Orlando — With bonnets on their heads and bespectacled faces, two young women pretended to be seniors so they could get the coronavirus vaccine, and it seems their rouse may have actually worked at least one time. Dr.Pino from the Florida Department of Health in Orange County said the pair were busted when they tried to get their second shot on Wednesday at the Orange County Convention Center. He’s not sure how or even if the two young women were able to get their first doses, but when they showed up Wednesday to complete the series, they presented a valid vaccination card. The Orange County Sheriff’s Office said one of the women was 34 and the other was 44.
Presidential
“U.S. reverts to targeted immigration enforcement under Joe Biden” via Ben Fox of The Associated Press — Immigration enforcement in the U.S. would be more targeted under Biden than under his predecessor, with authorities directed to focus on people in the country illegally who pose a threat, according to guidelines released Thursday. The guidelines set a new course for U.S. Customs and Immigration Enforcement, which drew fierce criticism under Trump to arrest and remove anyone in the country illegally regardless of criminal history or community ties. Under Biden, ICE would primarily apprehend and remove people who threaten national security, commit crimes designated as “aggravated” felonies, or recently crossed the border.
Joe Biden’s immigration policy will be narrower, more targeted. Image via AP.
“Biden’s immigration bill lands on the Hill facing bleak odds” via Laura Barrón-López, Heather Caygle and Anita Kumar of POLITICO — Congressional Democrats unveiled Biden’s expansive immigration reform bill Thursday, which would provide an eight-year pathway to citizenship for 11 million undocumented immigrants. But it already faces dim prospects for becoming law with such narrow Democratic majorities in both chambers. Few on and off the Hill think it can pass a 50-50 Senate. “This bill was not designed to get to 60,” said a person close to the White House who was briefed on the bill. “There’s no pathway to 60.” White House officials wouldn’t say if Biden is considering passing immigration reform elements through a second budget reconciliation process later this year or if they are already talking to lawmakers about passing smaller items.
Biden tells Governors minimum wage hike isn’t happening — Biden told a group of Mayors and Governors last week that his minimum wage hike would likely be defeated, Natasha Korecki and Christopher Cadelago of POLITICO report. “I really want this in there, but it just doesn’t look like we can do it because of reconciliation,” Biden told the group. “I’m not going to give up. But right now, we have to prepare for this not making it.” The comments suggest Biden is unwilling to ram the hike, included in the $1.9 trillion COVID-19 relief package, through Congress.
“Amid winter storm, Biden seeks to showcase competence but avoids grand gestures” via The Washington Post — President Biden has quickly approved states of emergency in Texas and Oklahoma and is reviewing one for Louisiana. He has spoken with the Governors of seven states hit hard by cold and snow. His administration has coordinated supplies and assistance. Biden so far has tried to showcase a competent and by-the-books government, rather than make more-dramatic gestures. Biden is being briefed on the weather emergencies several times a day, the White House says. So far, Biden has not opted for higher-profile gestures such as visiting the stricken areas, making public comments, or seizing on the electrical failures to push his infrastructure plan.
Epilogue: Trump
“Nikki Haley’s defense of her nuanced Donald Trump criticism, and the nuance it misses” via The Washington Post — Last week, Haley was featured in an extensive POLITICO profile in which she seemed to take inordinate care to distance herself from Trump. In a new Wall Street Journal op-ed, she argues the media simply won’t let Republicans offer a nuanced review of the Trump era, instead demanding that they firmly land in the “Always Trump” or “Never Trump” camp. This call for allowing nuance, though, itself glosses over lots of nuance. And Haley’s op-ed is a case in point when it comes to why the media is so critical of how she and other occasional Trump critics talk about his tenure.
There’s just no room for nuance in the Donald Trump era.
“Trump ramps up efforts to retain control of the Republican Party by attacking Mitch McConnell” via S.V. Date of HuffPost — After lying low for nearly a month after leaving office, Trump is ramping up a return to relevancy that will involve renewed fundraising and continuing attacks on a new nemesis: Senate GOP Leader McConnell. Trump has not been collecting money for his Save America leadership committee since Jan. 6. Still, a website that will permit him to tap into his lucrative small-donor list will be up and running within days, said a Republican familiar with his plans. Trump is fixated on pressuring Senate Republicans to replace McConnell. “Because it’s smart,” the Republican source said. “It shows that Trump is still the leader of the new party and is pushing out the leaders of the old party.”
“Manhattan D.A. recruits top prosecutor for Trump inquiry” via William K. Rashbaum, Ben Protess and Jonah E. Bromwich of The New York Times — As the Manhattan District Attorney’s Office steps up the criminal investigation of Trump, it has reached outside its ranks to enlist Mark F. Pomerantz, a prominent former federal prosecutor, to help scrutinize financial dealings at the former President’s company, according to several people with knowledge of the matter. The investigation is focused on the possible tax and bank-related fraud, including whether the Trump Organization misled its lenders or local tax authorities about the value of his properties to obtain loans and tax benefits. Trump has maintained he did nothing improper and has long railed against the inquiry, calling it a politically motivated “witch hunt.”
D.C. matters
“‘Recipe for disaster’: Democrat fears mount over immigration overhaul” via Sabrina Rodriguez and Marc Caputo of POLITICO — Democrats in Texas and other states where immigration has been a lightning rod issue are growing increasingly uneasy the White House is walking into a political buzzsaw in its zeal to unwind hard-line Trump administration policies. Biden has not yet implemented expansive policy changes. The vast majority of migrants arriving at the U.S.-Mexico border are still being turned away. But the softer rhetoric and modest changes announced so far by the Biden administration — such as admitting some migrants who have waited in Mexico for months and announcing he would halt deportations — raise the prospects of a new influx of migrants entering the country.
“Ted Cruz’s Cancun trip: Family texts detail his political blunder” via Shane Goldmacher and Nicholas Fandos of The New York Times — Photos of Cruz and his wife, Heidi, boarding the flight ricocheted quickly across social media and left both his political allies and rivals aghast at a tropical trip as a disaster unfolded at home. The blowback only intensified after Cruz released a statement saying he had flown to Mexico “to be a good dad” and accompany his daughters and their friends; he noted he was flying back Thursday afternoon, though he did not disclose how long he had originally intended to stay. Text messages sent from Ms. Cruz to friends and Houston neighbors revealed a hastily planned trip. Their house was “FREEZING,” as Ms. Cruz put it — and she proposed a getaway until Sunday.
It’s simply not a good look for Ted Cruz.
“Bob Dole, Republicans’ 1996 presidential nominee, has advanced lung cancer.” via Maggie Astor of The New York Times — Dole said in a statement: “My first treatment will begin on Monday. While I certainly have some hurdles ahead, I also know that I join millions of Americans who face significant health challenges of their own.” He has faced health challenges for decades, starting with a battlefield injury during World War II, in which he served as an Army second lieutenant. He was hit by machine-gun fire, which almost killed him and permanently limited his use of his right arm. He went on to support the Americans with Disabilities Act, passed in 1990. He later pushed for the United States to join the United Nations Convention on the Rights of Persons With Disabilities.
Crisis
“For Black aides on Capitol Hill, Jan. 6 brought particular trauma” via Luke Broadwater of The New York Times — Jabir McKnight woke up on the morning of Jan. 6 with an uneasy feeling. The day before had been great: He and another congressional staff member had celebrated Founders Day for their historically Black fraternity, Kappa Alpha Psi. But as McKnight walked that Wednesday to Capitol Hill, where he had always felt safe, images of White supremacist violence in Charleston, South Carolina, and Charlottesville, Virginia, began to race through his head. Hours before the violent pro-Trump mob rampaged through the halls of Congress, McKnight recalled, he could not shake the sense that something very bad was about to happen.
“Police suggest keeping Capitol fence for months” via Michael Balsamo of The Associated Press — U.S. Capitol Police officials told congressional leaders the razor-wire topped fencing around the Capitol should remain in place until September as law enforcement continues to track threats against lawmakers. The threats range in specificity and credibility, but they include online chatter about extremist groups potentially returning to Washington and the Capitol in the coming weeks. But despite the recommendation, it is unclear how long the fence will remain surrounding The Capitol grounds, with dozens of lawmakers growing tired of it and an increased push in Congress for it to come down.
We may have to get used to this for a while. Image via AP.
“After Capitol riots, billionaire’s scholars’ confront their benefactor” via Kate Kelly of The New York Times — The private equity billionaire Stephen A. Schwarzman has spent many years financing educational programs, from his old high school to the Ivy League. But the Blackstone CEO’s largesse hasn’t always bought goodwill: There was swift opposition to his proposal to put his name on Abington Senior High School in Pennsylvania, and his close ties to Trump contributed to opposition to having his name on a campus center he funded at Yale. And now, some participants in the Schwarzman Scholars program are speaking out against their benefactor. They say he is failing to live up to his own values and harming the program’s reputation by not cutting off money to lawmakers who opposed certifying President Biden’s electoral victory.
Local notes
“Two former Delray officials in hot water after Inspector General’s report” via Mike Diamond of The Palm Beach Post — The county Office of Inspector General (OIG) has concluded that former Neighborhood and Community Services (NCS) administrators Michael Coleman and Jamael Stewart mismanaged a grant program and awarded funds to groups with whom they had a personal interest. The OIG, in a 36-page report, cited them for failing to follow city policies in distributing grant funds to neighborhood organizations from 2015 to 2018. OIG John Carey found that required applications were never submitted or reviewed by a committee appointed by the city manager as required by city policy. Coleman and Stewart were also cited for failing “to avoid conflicts of interest between their personal interests and the city’s interests in dealing with certain organizations seeking grant funds.”
“Legal fight over Disney’s Saratoga Springs Resort project deepens” via Gabrielle Russon of the Orlando Sentinel — The ill-fated renovation of Disney World’s Saratoga Springs Resort has led to a flurry of lawsuits from subcontractors claiming they haven’t been paid and a countersuit by Disney itself. In the nearly eight months since the legal fight began between Validus Construction Services and Disney, at least seven subcontractors, including one last week, have sued Validus, claiming they are owed a total of $1.58 million in payments, according to Orange Circuit Court documents. “Subcontractors live on small margins, and cash-flow is critical to the life or death of a small company caught between competing giants such as Disney and Validus,” said construction attorney Kevin Kelly, who represents Orlando-based GTM Painting.
The renovation of Disney’s Saratoga Springs has become a legal nightmare.
“Panama City Beach seeks state funding for new list of potential projects” via Nathan Cobb of the Panama City News Herald — During a City Council meeting, Mayor Mark Sheldon and the rest of the council approved a list of items for the city’s lobbying team to present to the Legislature in hopes of getting additional funding. “This agenda is aggressive, and we’re asking for a lot of things, but we’re going to fight hard. It’s what we do,” Sheldon said. “There’s a lot of things there, but we’ve never wavered from the fact that we need to do road work, (and) we need more expansion of roads.” The approved list includes pursuing funds to expand Panama City Beach Parkway; develop a training tower for Panama City Beach Fire Rescue, and further developing Phillip Griffitts Sr. Parkway.
“Hillsborough State Attorney files new fraud charges against former animal charity CEO” via Kelly Hayes of Florida Politics — The Hillsborough County State Attorney’s Office has filed six new felony fraud charges against Albert Adams, the former CEO of the nonprofit animal charity Soaring Paws. Investigators from the Florida Chief Financial Officer’s Office and prosecutors from the Hillsborough County State Attorney’s Office found that Adams had signed up for a pet insurance policy and sought false reimbursements for pets’ medical expenses. The pet insurance provider, Healthy Paws, discovered the fraudulent claims and contacted law enforcement. Now, Adams is being charged on one count of organized fraud less than $20,000 and five counts of false statements supporting an insurance claim less than $20,000. Each charge is a third-degree felony.
“Blue Jays to play 1st 2 home stands at spring site in Dunedin” via The Associated Press — The Toronto Blue Jays will play their first two homestands of the season at their spring training facility in Dunedin because of Canadian government restrictions during the pandemic. The team said Thursday it has been planning different scenarios for home games and had hoped to see improvements in public health. The Blue Jays cited the “ongoing Canada-U.S. border closure” in making the “difficult decision.” The team added in its statement that it ”hopes of a return to play at Rogers Centre as soon as possible.” The TD Ballpark in Dunedin seats about 8,500 fans and had a major renovation in 2019-20. The Blue Jays will limit capacity to 15%.
Top opinion
“Too many Florida lawmakers engage in political theater instead of actually governing” via Mac Stipanovich for the Tampa Bay Times — Political theater is supplanting public policy as the vocation of too many of our elected officials. Governing effectively and legislating wisely are hard work, while headline-grabbing news conferences, filing purely performative legislation, and writing indignant letters certain to be ignored by the recipients but equally certain to be widely reported on by the press are easy pickings. The hard road, always less traveled, is becoming almost deserted in this moment of decadence in American democracy. This preference for sizzle over substance is bipartisan: politicians in both parties like a dog and pony show. But Republicans have taken politics as theater to an entirely new level in the Trump era.
Opinions
“Marjorie Taylor Greene exposes social media problem” via Fred Guttenberg and Igor Volsky for Florida Politics — Major social media platforms like Facebook and Twitter have long tolerated and even profited from inflammatory and dangerous rhetoric. These companies established a mechanism through which Taylor Greene and too many others have been able to grow an audience, recruit new adherents, and build a level of power and influence that represents a real danger to our democracy. The truth is until our country grapples with the ways in which the current social media environment incentivizes the loudest and most outrageous speech — speech that often puts all Americans and especially marginalized communities in physical danger — we will not be able to solve the problem that Taylor Greene represents.
“The media tries to divide Republicans” via Nikki Haley for The Wall Street Journal — Where does the Republican Party go from here? The party that abolished slavery, won the right to vote for women, and beat Soviet communism must continue to be strong and principled to move America forward. But the liberal media doesn’t care about that. It wants to stoke a nonstop Republican civil war. The media playbook starts with the demand for everyone to pick sides about Trump — either love or hate everything about him. The moment anyone on the right offers the slightest criticism of the 45th President, the media goes berserk: Republicans are trying to have it both ways! It’s a calculated strategy to pit conservatives against one another.
On today’s Sunrise
Florida’s death toll from COVID-19 is just short of 30,000. We’ll pass that milestone when the daily casualty count is released today.
Also, on today’s Sunrise:
— Another day, another vaccine “feel good” story. Gov. DeSantis was back on FOX and Friends Thursday to participate in the vaccination of a World War II veteran in Pinellas County.
— The Governor says there will be a big increase in vaccine shipments next week … but this week’s shipment of the Moderna vaccine is still stuck in Memphis because of the severe winter storm.
— DeSantis used a series of executive orders during the COVID-19 crisis, giving him total authority over the state’s response. The House Speaker and the Senate President say they’re fine with that because they agree with the Governor … but they also believe it’s time to set guidelines on these extended emergency orders. They’re worried about future Governors.
— A bill requiring Floridians to pay the sales tax on online purchases is one step closer to law after clearing the Senate Finance and Tax Committee. Lawmakers seem to agree on the bill’s need, but they haven’t agreed on what to do with the new revenue — estimated at more than $1 billion.
— Across the street from the state Capitol is a memorial honoring Floridians who died in the Vietnam War; it may have company soon. The Senate Rules Committee approves a bill creating the POW-MIA Vietnam Veterans Bracelet Memorial.
— And finally, a Florida Man has a whole new take on grave robbing. Deputies say he burglarized 10 houses while the residents were attending funerals.
podcastED: redefinED’s executive editor Matt Ladner speaks with longtime education choice advocate Chad Aldis, vice president for Ohio policy and advocacy at the Thomas B. Fordham Institute, who previously served as executive director of School Choice Ohio and was Ohio State director for StudentsFirst.
REGULATED from hosts Christian Bax and Tony Glover: Groundbreaking strategist Sam Chapman shares his thoughts on the future of psilocybin in the United States, Oregon’s role as a drug reform pioneer and more. Chapman was the campaign manager for the successful Yes on Measure 109 campaign in 2020, which allows the manufacture, delivery and administration of psilocybin in Oregon. He is now leading the Healing Advocacy Fund, a nonprofit supporting the implementation of Oregon’s psilocybin therapy program through education and advocacy.
Tallahassee Business Podcast from the Tallahassee Chamber presented by 223 Agency: Board member and local legislative advocate Sha’Ron James shares her passion for making Tallahassee more collaborative to improve the community. James chairs the Chamber’s Community and Prosperity committee, where they are focused on carving out a role for the business community to develop solutions for the entire region’s success.
The New Abnormal from host Rick Wilson and Molly Jong-Fast: The Senate’s impeachment vote was tough to swallow, with 43 Republicans voting to acquit Trump for the insurrection done in his name by people waving his flag. Even more gag-worthy was McConnell’s speech afterward — blaming Trump for the wannabe coup minutes after voting to let him off. “The most galling statements for me were the ones from the Mitch McConnells and the Rob Portmans and the Marco Rubios after they voted to acquit Donald Trump, basically saying, ‘Well, you know, the whole coup thing was kind of bad, and I wish you wouldn’t have tried to do it. And I wish a cop wouldn’t have died. And you know, he made some bad choices. But you know, I had no choice,’” Bulwark writer-at-large Tim Miller tells Jong-Fast.
The Yard Sign with host Jonathan Torres: Brock Mikosky, Andrew Cherry, Anibal Cabrera and Torres talk impeachments for all, digital exile, Biden versus DeSantis and Super shenanigans.
Weekend TV
Facing South Florida with Jim DeFedeon CBS 4 in Miami: The Sunday show provides viewers with an in-depth look at politics in South Florida, along with other issues affecting the region.
Florida This Week on Tampa Bay’s WEDU: Moderator Rob Lorei hosts a roundtable featuring U.S. Rep. Val Demings, political consultant April Schiff and Pasco County Supervisor of Elections Brian Corley.
In Focus with Allison Walker-Torres on Bay News 9: A discussion of African American female trailblazers in politics, including Vice President Kamala Harris’s election. Joining Walker-Torres to discuss are Demings; Rep. Fentrice Driskel; and African American Chamber of Commerce President Tanisha Nunn Gary.
Political Connections Bay News 9 in Tampa/St. Pete: A one-on-one interview with the new Florida Democratic Party Chair Diaz; a look at how Republican Senators are navigating being in the minority in Congress.
Political Connections on CF 13 in Orlando: Senior Policy Adviser on the White House COVID-19 Response team Dr. Cameron Webb, will discuss vaccine distribution, access in minority communities, travel restrictions and the impact of the virus; in honor of Black History Month, an examination of discrimination in voting and politics.
This Week in South Florida on WPLG-Local10 News (ABC): Sen. Manny Diaz Jr., Rep. Evan Jenne, Infectious Disease Specialist at the FIU College of Medicine Dr. Aileen Marty.
Aloe
“Touchdown! NASA’s Perseverance rover lands on Mars to begin hunt for signs of ancient life” via Mike Wall of Space — The car-sized Perseverance, the most advanced robot ever sent to the Red Planet, aced its “seven minutes of terror” touchdown Thursday afternoon, alighting gently on an ancient lake bed inside the 28-mile-wide Jezero Crater shortly before 4 p.m. After a series of instrument and hardware checkouts, Perseverance will start doing what it crossed interplanetary space to do: hunt for signs of ancient Mars life, collect and cache rock samples for a future return to Earth and demonstrate some shiny new exploration technologies. “I don’t think we’ve had a mission that is going to contribute so much to both science and technology,” NASA Acting Administrator Steve Jurczyk said. “It’s going to be truly amazing.”
“Seven minutes of terror’: Getting Perseverance to Mars was the easy part. Now the real work begins.
“Projections and nighttime lighting on Spaceship Earth, Tower of Terror, and Tree of Life previewed for 50th anniversary of Walt Disney World” via Tom Corless of WDWNT — With the full preview coming tomorrow on Good Morning America, Walt Disney World has released a teaser for the nighttime looks that the other park icons will display during the 50th-anniversary festivities. As we already knew, vibrant new lighting is coming to Spaceship Earth at EPCOT. It looks like projections may bring the Tower of Terror to life in golden hues, much like Cinderella Castle will look at both day and night during the celebration. The Tree of Life at Disney’s Animal Kingdom also looks like it will get some new projections to complement the Tree of Life Awakenings.
Happy birthday
Happy birthday to our friend Michael Williams of the Florida Chamber Foundation; Brian McManus, Chief of Staff at the Department of Economic Opportunity; Arek Sarkissian; Andy Abboud, Ryan Boyett, and Emily Mahoney of the Tampa Bay Times.
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Good morning. More than 70% of the continental US was covered in snow yesterday, according to the National Weather Service. The only states without snow cover: Florida, South Carolina, and Georgia. And we assume Hawaii, too, but you just never know these days.
Economy: Jobless claims rose to 861,000, their highest level in four weeks. This number has remained stubbornly high for nearly a year.
Markets: If you’ve been keeping track of the 10-year yields in the Markets graphic, you’ve probably noticed that they’ve been going up a lot recently. Some analysts are worried that higher yields (which make bonds more attractive to investors) could threaten the party in stock prices.
Crypto: The first bitcoin exchange-traded fund in North America had an über-successful launch yesterday in Toronto.
Billionaires, tech executives, and a YouTuber walk into a government hearing.
The punchline is less funny than you’d hope. Yesterday’s virtual hearing, called by the House Financial Services Committee to better understand the astonishing surge in GameStop shares a few weeks ago, resembled a 9–3 football game in the rain—lots of defense and not particularly fun to watch.
Still, it was perhaps the most high-profile discussion of an important development we’ve been charting for years: the growing influence of individual investors and social media in the stock market. And there were some interesting takeaways.
Tenev takes the heat: Many questions from lawmakers were directed at Vlad Tenev, CEO of Robinhood. The company limited trading of certain stocks and has been criticized for “gamifying” investing at the expense of the inexperienced investor.
Tenev apologized for the pause in trading but otherwise defended his firm’s business model, which includes the controversial practice of “payment for order flow” (PFOF).
Tenev and Ken Griffin, the billionaire founder of Citadel, both said that PFOF allows for innovation in the industry, such as the no-commission trades pioneered by Robinhood.
Roaring Kitty still loves GameStop: In his opening statement, Keith “Roaring Kitty” Gill, the trader who is credited with sparking major interest in the retailer, said, “In short, I like the stock.”
When asked about new regulations to protect individual investors, Gill said he didn’t think any new rules were needed, just “increased transparency.”
He also delivered the best line of the event (in our opinion) when he declared, “I am not a cat,” in reference to the viral video.
Best of the rest:
Reddit’s CEO said investment advice on the platform is “probably among the best.”
Lawmakers argued among themselves whether the hearing was “political theater” or “serious oversight.”
Griffin denied conspiracy theories that Citadel and Robinhood colluded to limit trading in GameStop.
Bottom line: Hedge fund manager Gabe Plotkin summed up the entire episode best when he said that his industry will have to adapt to the rise of the retail investor.
Two Business Casual podcast episodes about GameStop. The guests are: 1) Jannick Malling, cofounder and co-CEO of investing social network Public and 2) Neal Freyman, who edits this newsletter every day and has been told he has a “podcast voice.”
As the US copes with winter weather, another storm is brewing 10,000 miles away over how to divide revenue among news publishers and Big Tech. A proposed law is winding through Australia’s Parliament that would require social platforms like Facebook and Google to make revenue-sharing agreements with publishers.
Both platforms are against the law—but made opposite tactical moves this week.
Google threw proponents a bone, striking agreements with Australian publishers, while Facebook threw a stick, blocking news sharing on its services in Australia.
Their argument: Forcing platforms to pay for news would threaten the open internet. Tim Berners-Lee, the inventor of the World Wide Web, said the law would indeed compromise his invention.
Publishers’ POV: Over the course of the digital revolution, platforms have eaten publishers’ lunch, and dinner, and post-dinner snack. Google accounts for 53% of online advertising revenue in Australia, while Facebook eats up another 23%, per the country’s treasurer.
Zoom out: However things shake out in Australia, the idea of making platforms share $$$ with publishers is gaining traction elsewhere, including the EU and the UK.
Three major retailers announced changes on the labor front yesterday.
Walmart is raising wages for 425,000 store associates following a successful holiday season. Depending on location, wages will bump up to $13–$19/hour.
With the increase, almost half of Walmart’s US employees will earn $15/hour or more. But Walmart’s $11/hour starting wage won’t budge for now, even though competitors including Amazon, Target, and Costco have increased theirs to $15.
Kroger is closing some Seattle stores due to a new ordinance requiring $4/hour hazard pay for frontline grocery workers. Kroger had “hero pay” when the pandemic began, then switched to one-time bonuses of up to $400.
Kroger is also closing two stores in California, where a handful of cities have passed similar measures. California’s grocer association is fighting the rules.
McDonald’s is linking executive VP bonuses to diversity targets. The fast food chain wants to improve representation in senior leadership to 45% women and 35% minorities by 2025.
These days, there’s a lot of hype around day trading. But sometimes, identifying and committing to a good old fashioned long-term strategy is one of the best ways to build wealth.
Running back our new section with one quote, one stat, and one read.
Quote: “Seconds and minutes”—Texas officials said the state was this close to an uncontrolled blackout, a worst-case scenario where households could have lost power for months. Early on Monday morning, grid operators made the decision to intentionally cut power to prevent the system from being completely overwhelmed.
Stat: Tanger Outlets said traffic was about 90% of last year’s levels in Q4. And in January, traffic at its US shopping centers was more than 99% of last year’s levels .
Read: The NHL has a huge problem—its goalies are too big. (The Atlantic)
At around 4pm ET yesterday, NASA’s most sophisticated rover yet, Perseverance, landed on Mars. It will spend at least one Mars year—687 Earth days—searching for signs of ancient life on the red planet.
It has a friend waiting: NASA’s Curiosity rover, which landed on Mars in 2012. Perseverance will have to explain GameStop, Clubhouse, and Matthew McConnaghey’s career turnaround.
JetBlue and American started jointly selling flight tickets yesterday; their partnership, first announced in July, is still being investigated by the DOJ and state attorneys general.
Twitter is fighting with the Indian government over free speech and blocked accounts.
Second City, Chicago’s famous comedy theater, was sold to private equity group ZMC.
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BREW’S BETS
For Texas: Learn about the energy crisis from Emerging Tech Brew writer Ryan Duffy’s Twitter thread, then look through this Google doc or this Instagram post for ways to help.
Follow Friday: TikToker alex.ivanchak creates celebrity portraits out of Rubik’s cubes. It’s really cool.
Free film: You can watch The Trial of the Chicago 7 on Netflix’s YouTube channel, this weekend only.
Last Friday, we unleashed the most epic Friday Puzzle in the history of Fridays—and puzzles. We asked readers to fill out an 8×8 grid with company names, such that the companies’ market values, when added together, were the greatest possible combination. Our winner: Drew Howerton with a market cap of $9.762 trillion. That LGAM square is clever.
We won’t leave you without a puzzle to do today. What same three letters fit into the following blanks in the same order to form five words?
1. E _ _ _ P
2. _ _ _ C K
3. S _ _ _ S H
4. L I _ _ _ D
5. T E _ _ _ L A
While Texas Republicans were quick to pounce on renewable energy and to blame frozen wind turbines, the natural gas, nuclear and coal plants that provide most of the state’s energy also struggled to operate during the storm. Policy observers blamed the power system failure on the legislators and state agencies who they say did not properly heed the warnings of previous storms.
…
Experts said Texas’ decision not to require equipment upgrades to better withstand extreme winter temperatures, and choice to operate mostly isolated from other grids in the U.S. left power system unprepared for the winter crisis. It is possible to “winterize” [energy infrastructure], experts said, through practices like insulating pipelines. These upgrades help prevent major interruptions in other states with cold weather.
…
[Texas climate scientists] Katharine Hayhoe and Dev Niyogi acknowledged there’s uncertainty about the connection between climate change and cold air outbreaks from the Arctic. However, they emphasize there is higher certainty that other extreme weather events such as drought, flooding and heat waves are due to a warming climate.
All votes are anonymous. This poll closes at: 9:00 PST
YESTERDAY’S POLLHow much student debt should the government cancel per borrower?
Up to $10k
17%
Up to $50k
28%
$0
55%
595 votes, 374 comments
BEST COMMENTS“Up to $10k – I think only undergraduate debt should be cancelled, and the majority of people who accrued larger amounts of undergraduate debt are not destitute and have support networks they can use. In contrast, many of the smaller borrowers who would have their debt significantly reduced or wiped out by $10,000 forgiveness are severely struggling financially. Even speaking as someone with $30,000 in undergrad debt ($60,000 between me and my spouse), this feels more equitable and targeted.”
“Up to $50k – If student loans are/were supposed to be an investment, why are interest rates locked? Why is over half the amount I owe interest? I have almost 9% interest, which when I got the loans was great, but now it would be considered criminal. The interest in my mortgage is lower. I can’t even refinance them at today’s student loan rates. ”
“$0 – The problem isn’t the debt. The problem lies in the rising costs that the government has provided to Higher Education through its various loan programs. We have all made our choices and it’s time that we’re all responsible for them. I have been paying my student loans back. For others who chose to spend huge sums of money without any prospects of an ROI – that is on them. ”
With the assistance of the Federal Emergency Management Agency, the state of Texas has begun the process of distributing more than 700,000 liters of bottled water to Texans besieged by a historic winter storm. About half the population of the state is now under a boil water advisory.
Even After Impeachment, Teflon Don Is Still on Top
With virtuous glee, the Fourth Estate is rushing to predict the demise of Senator Ted Cruz’s political career because he escorted his children to Cancun while Texas faced a snowy fate. Despite being gone roughly a day, the media is determined to derail his presidential hopes four years in advance. Where was this outrage when numerous Democrats were caught not only engaging in questionable behavior but also violating regulations that they themselves imposed on the populace?
In the wake of the massive pro-Trump demonstration on January 6, a Capitol Hill security review will be undertaken, led by Lt. General Russel Honoré (Ret.). Picked by Speaker Pelosi to head up the effort, Honoré is widely known as a Trump-hater who has posted several explicitly-worded anti-Trump and anti-Republican comments on social media.
On February 18, Imaad Zuberi was sentenced to 12 years in prison on several charges including tax evasion and campaign finance violations. Allegedly, Zuberi made illegal campaign contributions to Joe Biden and Senator Lindsey Graham (R-SC).
Senator Mitt Romney (R-UT), in a statement explaining his vote to convict former President Donald Trump at the latter’s impeachment trial, claims that “[t]he division in America will only begin to heal” when every senator affirms that Joe Biden legitimately won the 2020 election.
Something political to ponder as you enjoy your morning coffee.
Media organizations that refused to call out the many Democrats who flouted their own COVID rules are now demanding Texas Republican Senator Ted Cruz’s head on a plate over his decision to head to Cancun as his fellow Texans endured the onslaught of a massive winter storm. There’s no getting away from the fact that, in terms of the optics, Cruz made a monumental error in judgment, but how many Texans, given the opportunity and financial wherewithal, would not also have skipped town for the pristine sands of a Cancun beach? How many journalists would not have done the very same thing? How, exactly, would it have benefited Texans, had the senator canceled his plans and remained in the state?
Derek Scissors, Dan Blumenthal, and Linda Zhang | American Enterprise Institute
Once vaccination at home is well along, the Joe Biden administration can subsidize international distribution of American vaccines. In addition to humanitarian motives, there is also an important foreign policy opportunity.
Few policymakers seem to be anticipating a world with higher inflation, higher interest rates, and greater fiscal challenges for Washington. Yet the pandemic and the tsunami of money being spent to fight it should encourage lawmakers to think harder about this possibility.
“The Biden administration on Thursday rescinded former president Donald Trump’s restoration of U.N. sanctions on Iran… Biden has said the United States wants to rejoin the [Iran deal] and the State Department said Thursday the U.S. would accept an invitation from the European Union to attend a meeting of the participants in the original agreement — Britain, France, Germany, Russia, China and Iran.” AP News
“A rocket attack at a U.S.-led military base in Kurdish northern Iraq on Monday killed a civilian contractor and wounded five other people including a U.S. service member… A group calling itself Saraya Awliya al-Dam claimed responsibility for the attack on the U.S.-led base, saying it targeted the ‘American occupation’ in Iraq.” Reuters
“The Iranian government denied it ordered the attack, and it is certainly possible AAH was freelancing, but it doesn’t matter, said [Washington Institute for Near East Policy scholar Michael] Knights. Iran has influence over its proxies, and it could choose to restrain them. The attack showed that Iranian leaders, at the very least, are sitting on their hands… The Biden team claims to have learned from Obama-era mistakes. With Iran, that means pursuing diplomacy without turning a blind eye to the IRGC’s mischief in Iraq, Syria, Lebanon, Yemen and elsewhere… If Iranian proxies feel they can attack U.S. troops without consequence, it won’t be long before the next and more deadly strike. That could spark the very escalation and conflict the Biden administration is rightly trying to avoid.” Josh Rogin, Washington Post
“This is a key test of the Biden administration: If the United States reacts with words alone, the Biden administration will show the Iranians that such attacks are cost-free. The only lesson that Iran’s leaders will learn from such a response is that the Biden administration’s desire to return to nuclear diplomacy will permit Iran to put American lives at risk whenever it wishes…
“The Biden administration should instead adopt a policy of deterrence, warning Iran that it will be held accountable directly… The United States has a multitude of military options, some of which would clearly signal to Iran that we have no wish to escalate into a larger conflict — but that we insist the Iranian regime stop trying to kill Americans — or else. That’s the message the Biden administration should be sending this week.” Elliott Abrams, National Review
Other opinions below.
From the Right
“Since President Joe Biden took office, Iran’s regional proxies have been busy. This month alone, Houthi rebels in Yemen claimed credit for a drone attack against Saudi Arabia’s Abha airport; one of the most prominent critics of Hezbollah, the journalist Lokman Slim, was found murdered in his car in Lebanon; and in Iraqi Kurdistan, a front group for one of the country’s most deadly Shiite militias claimed credit for a series of rocket attacks in and around Erbil… At the very least, Biden should halt any efforts to rejoin the 2015 nuclear deal so long as Iran’s proxies are running wild.” Eli Lake, Bloomberg“The Iranians, plainly, are seeking to send a message to the new U.S. administration. The message is ‘don’t mess with us—we’re crazier than you are.’ This preliminary communication is not meant to lead toward conflict. On the contrary, it is happening precisely because the Iranian regime believes that the current U.S. administration wishes to avoid conflict. The escalation is background music intended to produce the right mood of trepidation on the U.S. side, so that when talks begin in earnest in the period ahead regarding a return to the 2015 Iran nuclear deal (JCPOA) and the ending of U.S. pressure on Iran, the Americans will be more amenable to a swift signing off…“The Iranians think this will work because they look back at the 2014–2015 period. That was the year when Iranian proxy assistance to the murderous Assad regime reached its height. It was the year when the Houthi bid for power was launched, and the Shiite Islamists took the Yemeni capital, Sana’a. And it was the year in which the JCPOA was signed, and sanctions lifted… [Tehran] thinks it is dealing with Obama 2.0. It remains to be seen if Iran is right.” Jonathan Spyer, Newsweek“Both Washington and Tehran will claim victory when a ‘new’ deal is concluded… The Biden administration will lobby hard with the media, expecting them to regurgitate the virtues of a ‘new and improved JCPOA,’ much as the Obama team did in 2015… So, how can the American people independently assess whether the rhetoric in defense of the deal is convincing? Here is the litmus test…
“We will know that there are no significant changes in the ‘new’ JCPOA if the sunset provisions allowing Iran to have an industrial-size nuclear program in 10 years remains in place. We will know it is more smoke and mirrors if inspections are still not allowed at military facilities where weaponization is likely to occur. Our skepticism should rise if inspectors are not allowed 24/7 access to declared and undeclared nuclear sites, and all inspections will end in 10 years. Then we can judge whether the agreement has been simply repackaged for political consumption with the same flawed product inside or is something with substantive changes.” Eric R. Mandel, The Hill
Regarding American troops in the Middle East, “If Biden is sincere that he is not merely going to return to the status quo of the Obama administration and will base his foreign policy on what’s best for the American people, orders to withdraw from Afghanistan, Iraq, and Syria should closely follow the conclusion of Biden’s review.” Daniel Davis, The Federalist
From the Left
“BBC reported that Iranian President Hassan Rouhani said that he is ready to return to compliance, as long as the U.S. and the other signatories lift sanctions, on whatever terms or schedule that Biden wants. ‘If Americans take one step, we will take one step,’ Rouhani said. ‘If the Americans take all the steps at once, we will take all the steps at once. If they want to do it gradually, fine. If they want a group of actions, fine.’…
“So a path to a solution seems clear: The Europeans devise a formula by which the U.S. and Iran do what they need to do simultaneously, step by step, with the EU and the International Atomic Energy Agency verifying each step… This will be the first test of the Biden team’s aptitude for this business. Really, it shouldn’t be that hard.” Fred Kaplan, Slate
“Last week, we fielded a unique survey of scholars with expertise in the Middle East… The vast majority speak regional languages, have spent significant time in the Middle East, and have dedicated their professional lives to the rigorous study of the region and its politics. Within three days, 521 scholars had consented and responded… The United States returning to the Iran nuclear agreement (the JCPOA) as it’s currently written would make it less likely that Iran would get a nuclear weapon within the next decade — that’s what 75 percent of our survey respondents say…
“Perhaps unsurprisingly, the scholars overwhelmingly oppose either military action against Iran or a continuation of the Trump administration’s ‘maximum pressure’ policy. The primary divide was over tactics: Sixty-seven percent say the U.S. immediately returning to the JCPOA before addressing other issues would better serve U.S. interests, while 23 percent prefer first negotiating a grand bargain including ballistic missiles and regional policies in alignment with allies such as Israel, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates.” Marc Lynch and Shibley Telhami, Washington Post
Regarding American troops in Afghanistan,“The repeated failure to hold the Taliban accountable for their continued violation of the terms of their agreement with the United States, including their unkept promise to break ties with al Qaeda and other terrorist networks, has set Afghanistan on a path that could lead to state collapse… President Biden is rightly reviewing the US-Taliban agreement, which it must consider as part of broader strategic calculation to not only push for a real peace process, but to prevent a reckless withdrawal that leads to state collapse, a civil war, and the revival of a global terrorist haven…
“With the US-Taliban agreement, President Biden inherited a rapid troop drawdown that is not based on conditions. The US should now re-assert meaningful conditions and place its commitments on hold if they are not met… As several former US diplomats have proposed, both the Taliban and the Afghan government should agree to an independent, third party mediator to help work through complex and divisive issues in order to support and reach a political settlement. In the meantime, the United Nations, for its part, should not lift sanctions on the Taliban until it meets basic human rights obligations.” Madeleine K. Albright and Rector Federica Mogherini, CNN
Today’s Smart Brevity™ count: 980 words … 4 minutes.
1 big thing: Limiting climate catastrophe
Jorge Sanhueza-Lyon stands on his kitchen counter to warm his feet over his gas stove in Austin. Photo: Ashley Landis/AP
From stronger storms to Arctic warming to California fires, rising carbon levels mean there’s no escaping global warming. Now, we’re plunged into a new world of managing the fallout, Axios Generate author Ben Geman writes.
Why it matters: Texas and some other parts of the U.S. need to update their grids for extreme heat and cold. But the needs go far beyond power to building codes and workplace regulations.
Rutgers climate scientist Robert Kopp tells Axios that the pandemic and the Texas crisis show that the competence of public institutions is a predictor of the “severity” of transcendent disasters.
He’s among the authors of a 2018 federal report that laid out the climate-related health and economic risks facing different parts of the country.
“[R]ising temperatures, sea level rise, and changes in extreme events are expected to increasingly disrupt and damage critical infrastructure and property,” along with labor productivity, the report says.
Scientists are still analyzing the nexus between this week’s polar vortex and climate change. But Princeton energy expert Jesse Jenkins writes in a New York Times op-ed: “[W]e do know that climate change increases the frequency of extreme heat waves, droughts, wildfires, rain and coastal flooding.”
“Those extreme events test our systems to the breaking point, as they have in Texas this week,” he writes.
What’s next: Texas Gov. Greg Abbott announced yesterday that he’ll ask the legislature to require Texas’ power system to be winterized — a basic step that it didn’t take before this week’s disaster.
The bottom line: As important as adaptation strategies are, climate experts say they’re not a replacement for the need to cut emissions.
Three new missions that just arrived at Mars — including the latest U.S. rover that landed yesterday — will help paint a brand new picture of the Red Planet, Axios Space author Miriam Kramer reports.
Why it matters: Scientists think that Mars was once a relatively warm and habitable world. The missions from China, UAE and the U.S. will help researchers get a more holistic view of what the planet was like billions of years ago.
NASA’s Perseverance rover will hunt for any signs of past life — including microbial life — in what was once a lake billions of years ago.
“Percy,” as some call it, is the culmination of decades of NASA work, including an instrument that can convert atmospheric carbon dioxide to oxygen — something we might want to do if humans land there someday.
Above: In the first image back from Mars, the rover sees its shadow.
In contrast to dwindling confidence of U.S. consumers, CEOs haven’t felt as good about the economic outlook in 17 years, Axios Markets editor Dion Rabouin writes.
The Conference Board’s quarterly reading of CEO confidence rose to its highest since the first quarter of 2004:
82% of CEOs expect economic conditions to improve over the next six months, up from 63% last quarter.
Between the lines: Execs tells us vaccine optimism is a huge part of this.
4. Quote du jour: “I’m not a cat”
Screenshot: CNBC
Keith Gill — the investor known on YouTube as “Roaring Kitty,” who helped fuel the GameStop rebellion — at a House Financial Services hearing that was carried live on CNBC for four hours yesterday:
“A few things I am not: I’m not a cat. I am not an institutional investor. Nor am I a hedge fund. … I’m just an individual whose investment in GameStop, and posts on social media, were based on my own research and analysis.”
The U.S. supply of coronavirus vaccines is expected to significantly expand over the next few months, with more than enough doses available to vaccinate all U.S. adults before the end of July, Axios’ Caitlin Owens writes from a Bloomberg analysis.
Why it matters: If manufacturing goes according to plan, the intense competition for shots will end relatively soon, and attention will turn instead to increasing vaccine uptake.
The U.S. is currently administering 1.6 million doses a day. Enough vaccine should eventually become available to boost that figure to 4.5 million.
People who haven’t been able to secure appointments for a coronavirus vaccine are turning to Facebook groups and other online forums to find cancelled slots and figure out where to go, Axios’ Ashley Gold writes.
Why it matters: These ad-hoc online communities have helped people get vaccinated and kept some doses from going to waste. But they also underscore the confusion and frustration of the U.S. vaccine rollout.
Facebook pages and Reddit threads are emerging all over the country, filled with posts from people seeking vaccines or providing info about appointments.
The potential for scams and misinformation is high, despite people’s best intentions to help one another.
Ted Cruz at the Cancún airport. Photo: MEGA/GC Images via Getty Images
Sen. Ted Cruz outside his Houston home, after rushing back from Cancún when social media exploded with derision over his decision to take a pre-spring break while his state froze (via MSNBC):
The plan had been to stay through the weekend with the family. … [T]he last week’s been tough on a lot of folks. Our girls, when they got the news that school was cancelled this week, they said: ‘Look, why don’t we take a trip? Let’s go somewhere where it’s not so cold.’ …
[T]his had been a tough week, and it’s been a tough year for kids — kids all across the state of Texas. And so, we were trying to be good parents and said, ‘OK we’ll do it.’ And so we booked the flight. You know, I have to admit, I started having second thoughts almost the moment I sat down on the plane.
The next round of congressional redistricting is shaping up to be a mess, beset by even more complications and lawsuits than usual, Axios’ Stef Kight reports.
Why it matters: This process will likely help Republicans pick up seats in the House in 2022. Beyond that, though, the pandemic and the Trump administration’s handling of the Census have made this round of redistricting especially fraught — and states will be locked into the results for a decade.
Huge states with diversifying and expanding populations — including Texas, Florida and North Carolina — will likely feel some of the most significant impacts.
Hybrid-electric aircraft will soon kick off a new era of cleaner air travel, just as the pioneering Toyota Prius heralded the start of the electric car movement 20 years ago, Axios Navigate author Joann Muller writes.
Why it matters: Replacing small regional planes that run on fossil fuels would help reduce CO2 emissions and make air travel easier and cheaper for residents of smaller cities not served by major airlines.
A blue jay eyes a food competitor coming in for a landing on a hanging peanut-wreath bird feeder in freezing Lincoln, Neb. — where correspondent Justin Green says the balmy mid-20s mean patio beers.
Once partners together in a bid to reshape the federal judiciary and build a conservative Supreme Court majority, former President Donald Trump and Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell are now in a battle for control of the Republican Party.
Natural gas and coal plants, more than half of the power that tripped offline during Texas’s energy crisis this week, faltered because they weren’t equipped to operate in the rare deep freeze the state experienced.
Sen. Bernie Sanders has never been closer to achieving a $15 an hour federal minimum wage, with the Senate possibly voting on a budget reconciliation bill in the coming weeks.
The Republican Party, currently embroiled in a public civil war between former President Donald Trump and Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, will attempt to show a united front out west this weekend, when the California faction meets to discuss wresting back the governor’s mansion.
President Biden will use his virtual address to the annual Munich Security Conference to denounce Russian efforts to undermine democracy in the United States, according to a senior administration official.
Legislation that requires full in-person learning in North Carolina public schools for the remainder of the school year is on its way to Gov. Roy Cooper.
President Biden’s nominee to lead the State Department’s democracy and human rights division worked in her youth on a research project that accused “the Israel lobby” of manipulating American policy.
After hours of debate and a walkout by House Democrats, the South Carolina House approved a fetal heartbeat bill that would ban most abortions in the state.
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18.) ASSOCIATED PRESS
February 19, 2021
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AP MORNING WIRE
Good morning. Tamer Fakahany is on vacation today. In his absence, we are serving up a daily briefing on what our readers consider the best of the AP news report this morning.
AUSTIN, Texas (AP) — Many of the millions of Texans who lost power for days after a deadly winter blast overwhelmed the electric grid now have it back, but the crisis was far from over in parts of……Read More
WASHINGTON (AP) — The Biden administration says it’s ready to join talks with Iran and world powers to discuss a return to the 2015 nuclear deal, in a sharp repudiation of former President Donald… …Read More
The United States is back in the Paris climate accord, just 107 days after it left. While Friday’s return is heavily symbolic, world leaders say they expect America to prove its seriousness… …Read More
For years, Facebook has been in a defensive crouch amid a slew of privacy scandals, antitrust lawsuits and charges that it was letting hate speech and extremism destroy democracy. Early Thursday,… …Read More
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) — A NASA rover streaked through the orange Martian sky and landed on the planet Thursday, accomplishing the riskiest step yet in an epic quest to bring back rocks that… …Read More
DALLAS (AP) — Texas Sen. Ted Cruz said his family vacation to Mexico was “obviously a mistake” as he returned stateside Thursday following an uproar over his disappearance du…Read More
WASHINGTON (AP) — Joe Biden will make his first big appearance on the global stage as president on Friday, offering Group of Seven allies and other foreign leaders a glimpse …Read More
WASHINGTON (AP) — Lawmakers in Washington are digging into the GameStop saga at a congressional hearing. The episode has been portrayed as a victory of the little guy over Wa…Read More
ANCHORAGE, Alaska (AP) — An Alaska woman had the scare of a lifetime when using an outhouse in the backcountry and she was attacked by a bear, from below. “I got out there an…Read More
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Good morning, Chicago. Illinois health officials on Thursday announced 1,966 new confirmed and probable cases of COVID-19 and 72 additional fatalities. The 7-day rolling daily average of administered vaccine doses is 61,132, with 73,091 doses given on Wednesday.
Meanwhile, are you wondering if you should be wearing two masks instead of one? Or if everyone will be able to get a vaccine by April? Here are answers to your Illinois coronavirus questions.
And, you may have noticed all the snow outside — so has the internet. Here are some of the best tweets about the “mountains of snow” in Chicago.
Here’s more coronavirus news and other top stories you need to know to start your day.
Thousands of COVID-19 vaccination appointments in Chicago must be rescheduled as the city on Thursday evening still awaited delayed shipments stemming from a winter storm that pummeled the Midwest this week, according to the Chicago Department of Public Health.
The city’s public health Commissioner Dr. Allison Arwady said Tuesday that the snowfall interrupted the arrival of truckloads of vaccine doses, which typically come in the beginning of the week from facilities in Kentucky and Tennessee, but they shouldn’t take longer than a few days to arrive. By Thursday evening, CDPH spokesman Andrew Buchanan wrote in a statement, no Moderna doses have arrived in Chicago this week, while Pfizer vaccines were canceled Monday and sent Tuesday and Wednesday in “limited numbers.”
‘In 22 minutes, everything was full’: Thousands of Chicagoans receive COVID-19 vaccine at UIC arena as dentistry, nursing and medical students pitch in
A half-century after he was first sworn into the Illinois House from Chicago’s Southwest Side, Michael Madigan announced his resignation Thursday, a little more than a month after he was deposed by fellow Democrats as the nation’s longest-serving statehouse speaker.
In a statement, the embattled 78-year-old lawmaker, ensnarled in a federal corruption investigation, lashed out at his critics as he sought to defend his actions during his 36-year reign as House speaker.
Editorial: Michael Madigan exits the Illinois stageIllinois health officials on Thursday announced 1,966 new confirmed and probable cases of COVID-19 and 72 additional fatalities
The scathing inspector general report on how Chicago police handled the George Floyd protests last spring drew sharp responses from across the city Thursday.
Shortly after Joseph Ferguson’s report was released, saying the department’s response was marked by “confusion and lack of coordination” that risked the safety of both police and citizens, activists who took part in the protests said they weren’t surprised.
When the pandemic subsides and people resume flying en masse again, there may be a new way to get from downtown Chicago to O’Hare International Airport: by helicopter. Blade, a New York-based “urban air mobility” provider, announced Thursday it has partnered with the downtown heliport Vertiport Chicago to launch air taxi service by as early as this summer.
Home beer delivery could become a fixture in Illinois thanks to legislation to be proposed Friday. Breweries have been able to deliver beer to your doorstep since last March to help stem the economic fallout of the COVID-19 pandemic, but the legislation would make the ability to deliver beer permanent. It would also allow breweries to use third-party services such as Uber Eats or DoorDash to get their beers directly to consumers. Here are the details.
Welcome to The Hill’s Morning Report. Today is Friday! 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; Friday, 493,098.
Disaster politics led headlines on Thursday as Republican Sen. Ted Cruz (Texas) tried to deny he abandoned his frigid state for R&R in sunny Mexico, while New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo (D) faced accusations on all sides that he failed seniors who died during the pandemic.
Cruz, the most recent political target, has been under siege after he fled the Lone Star State, where many continue to be buried by the storm. Back in Houston on Thursday less than 24 hours after departing for Cancun, the senator admitted his travel was tone deaf.
“It was obviously a mistake. In hindsight, I wouldn’t have done it,” Cruz told reporters. He initially said he was “trying to be a dad” by accompanying his daughters across the border to a balmy resort. “From the moment I sat on the plane, I began really second guessing that decision and saying, `look, I know why we’re doing this but I’ve also got responsibilities. … I needed to be here,’ and that’s why I came back” (ABC News).
The winter storms that slammed Texas and other southern states could have an outsize effect on the political scene, as The Hill’s Reid Wilson writes. Cruz is not alone in inviting criticism for failure to assist citizens he represents. He will not face voters until 2024, either for reelection or as a potential contender for the Republican presidential nomination.
Texas Gov. Greg Abbott (R) remains under fire, including for misleadingly placing blame on renewable energy sources that represent only a portion of Texas’s power portfolio. President Biden called the governor Thursday night to offer federal assistance during the emergency. The Lone Star fallout — financial, medical and political — will be felt long after the snows melt. Abbott is expected to seek a third term in the governor’s mansion in 2022.
“If Texas mishandles the snowfall, which is likely because they have so little snow experience, it could cause [Republicans] to lose some races in 2022,” said Dick Simpson, a Texas native who teaches political science at the University of Illinois at Chicago.
The Hill’s Jonathan Easley reports on the pounding Cruz has taken from all sides over the past 36 hours, which has been heavy from progressives. In an ad to be heard on 147 Texas radio stations, the No Excuses PAC quickly targeted “Cancun Cruz” (The Hill).
Politico: Top Texas Republicans on the ropes after tone-deaf storm response.
The New York Times: Family text messages reveal Cruz’s political blunder. …The senator had been acutely aware of the possible crisis in advance. In a radio interview on Monday, he said the state could see up to 100 deaths this week. “So don’t risk it,” he said. “Keep your family safe and just stay home and hug your kids.”
While the left hits Cruz, the right has trained its attention on Cuomo. Some Washington Republican operatives insisted on Thursday that Cruz critics sought a distraction from the more ominous troubles in Albany.
The governor is caught in a serious controversy about his administration’s handling of deaths of seniors in nursing homes during the coronavirus pandemic. Fatalities of the elderly and decisions tied to an undercount of deaths are under scrutiny by the FBI and by federal prosecutors in Brooklyn, who have reportedly opened an investigation (The Hill).
The governor, who basked in the political limelight of crisis command during his public briefings and in a book he released last year, admitted some responsibility in his administration’s withholding of data, a problem officially reported on Jan. 30 by the Democratic New York attorney general.
State lawmakers want to strip Cuomo of emergency executive powers that grant him control over nearly every aspect of his state’s coronavirus response. Cuomo is responding by hurling insults at critics, including fellow Democrats. During a Wednesday press briefing, he alleged corruption by Democratic state Assemblyman Ron Kim, who was among several state lawmakers to accuse Cuomo of “obstruction of justice” in a letter published by the New York Post.
New York Mayor Bill de Blasio (D), who has often tangled with the governor, on Thursday weighed in during an interview to say Cuomo’s “bullying is nothing new” (NBC News).
Just weeks ago, Cuomo’s name was floated as a potential candidate to be attorney general. The governor said in 2019 he planned to seek reelection for a fourth term in 2022.
New York Post: State Assembly Republicans are moving to form an impeachment commission “to gather facts and evidence” surrounding the governor’s “handling and subsequent cover-up of the COVID-19 crisis in nursing homes,” they announced Thursday.
House Minority Whip Steve Scalise (R-La.) has used TV interviews and taken to Twitter during the last month to assert Cuomo’s culpability in the nursing home deaths while accusing him of a “coverup.” Scalise is trying to pressure the new Biden administration while casting Cuomo as another “radical left” member of the Democratic Party. It’s part of the House Republican strategy to climb out of the minority after next year’s midterms.
More in politics: Ivanka Trump will not challenge Florida Republican Sen. Marco Rubio in a primary next year, she told him several weeks ago (The Associated Press). … Follow the money, including contributions from Republican donors who are caught in a battle between MAGA adherents and Trump’s GOP detractors, who warn the party must return to its “roots” (The Hill).
LEADING THE DAY
ADMINISTRATION: Biden’s immigration plan, unveiled by Democrats on Thursday, was greeted with immediate pushback from some quarters, underscoring why the White House may be willing to move separate bills to attract bipartisan support for an overhaul. The reform plan provides an eight-year path to citizenship for most of the 11 million undocumented immigrants already living, working and studying in the United States (The Hill and The New York Times).
Pelosi embraced a strategy of moving pieces of the plan through the House on separate votes (The Hill).
Politico: Biden privately tells governors that a $15 per hour federal minimum wage hike is unlikely to clear Congress.
> Saudi Arabia: Biden (pictured in 2011 in the Saudi capital) wants to change the U.S. approach to the Saudis adopted by his predecessor, who granted the House of Saud a prominent role in U.S.-Middle East policy (The Hill and The New York Times). Former President Trump liked the idea that the Kingdom bought U.S. weapons worth hundreds of billions of dollars and he offered cover for Saudi Arabia’s bloody civil war with Yemen. He also favored Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, 35, the heir apparent to King Salman bin Abdulaziz Al-Saud. The Biden administration has made its intentions clear, using the word “recalibrate” with a focus on the king (CNBC and CNN).
As early as next week, the new administration will release a long-awaited, declassified U.S. intelligence report, which concludes the crown prince ordered the killing of journalist Jamal Khashoggi in 2018. The report is expected to further erode U.S.-Saudi relations (The Washington Post).
The Associated Press: Biden administration repudiates Trump on Iran and on Thursday signaled U.S. readiness for talks with Tehran about a return to a nuclear deal.
MORE IN CONGRESS: Members of the House Financial Services Committee sparred Thursday over what, if anything, Congress should do in response to the recent GameStop trading frenzy and the technology platforms that fueled the rapid rise — and sudden spiral — in stock valuations. Lawmakers disagreed over whether stock trading applications such as Robinhood need to be better regulated following a Reddit-orchestrated short squeeze on struggling companies in January. Democrats believe the GameStop episode exposes risks faced by amateur stock market traders (The Hill).
CNBC: Congress questions Robinhood, Roaring Kitty and hedge funds over GameStop frenzy.
> Commission on the Jan. 6 Capitol riots: The independent 9/11-style commission that will investigate the Jan. 6 insurrection on Capitol Hill should have subpoena power, Pelosi says (The Hill). Such a panel has not been appointed, its mandate remains broadly described and without a timeline, and appropriations for its work have not been enacted.
> Former Senate GOP leader Robert Dole, 97, the 1996 Republican presidential nominee, announced he will begin treatment Monday for late-stage lung cancer. “While I certainly have some hurdles ahead, I also know that I join millions of Americans who face significant health challenges of their own,” he said on Thursday (NBC News).
IN FOCUS/SHARP TAKES
CORONAVIRUS: Anthony Fauci, the head of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, said on Thursday that an updated vaccine to deal with a number of COVID-19 variants “likely will take several months,” with officials cautioning the public to remain stringent against the virus (MSNBC).
Despite the spread of the variants, the foremost infectious diseases specialist in the U.S. pointed to positive news emerging from studies, which show that the shots by Pfizer and Moderna are both effective against the emerging strains out of South Africa and Brazil, albeit less effective than against the main COVID-19 strain.
“So if we roll out the vaccine … and get as many people vaccinated as quickly as we possibly can while we maintain the public health measures, we should be in good stead,” Fauci said (CNN).
The Washington Post: The Pfizer and Moderna vaccines have shown reduced effectiveness against the South African variant of the coronavirus, according to new studies. This worries experts, and the drugmakers are trying to develop a booster shot or updated vaccine, which could take months.
NBC News: The United States will send $2 billion to a global vaccine program to fight COVID-19 and in the next two years, send another $2 billion to a World Health Organization-backed program called COVAX that supports access to vaccines for 92 countries.
The Wall Street Journal: Behind America’s botched vaccination rollout: Fragmented communication, misallocated supply.
The New York Times: Short of vaccine, states find hidden stashes in their own backyards.
Elsewhere on the vaccination front, Pfizer and vaccine partner BioNTech kicked off a new study across nine countries to test the efficacy and safety of their COVID-19 shot in pregnant women.
The first round of volunteers in what is expected to be a 4,000-subject study have already received their first shots, according to the companies. Women from the U.S., Canada, Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Mozambique, South Africa, Spain and Great Britain are being enrolled in the study.
“Pregnant women have an increased risk of complications and developing severe COVID-19,” said William Gruber, head of vaccine clinical research and development at Pfizer, in a statement. “It is critical that we develop a vaccine that is safe and effective [for them]” (The Associated Press).
Bloomberg: Ivy League schools cancel all spring sports.
OPINION
Our students fell way behind this year. It’s time to start talking summer school, by Catherine Rampell, columnist, The Washington Post. https://wapo.st/37uA0Gu
Trump smears don’t diminish McConnell, by Karl Rove, columnist, The Wall Street Journal. https://on.wsj.com/3axM6kj
WHERE AND WHEN
The House meets on Monday at 11:30 a.m. for a pro forma session and returns to legislative work on Tuesday.
TheSenate convenes at 10:15 a.m. for a pro forma session. No votes are scheduled this week.
The president will receive the President’s Daily Brief at 8 a.m. Biden will participate in a 9 a.m. virtual meeting from the White House to talk with Group of Seven leaders. From the East Room, he will address the Munich Security Conference in a virtual speech about the importance of transatlantic alliances. The president will travel to Kalamazoo, Mich., to tour a Pfizer manufacturing site at 2:25 p.m. and meet with the workers who are producing COVID-19 vaccine doses. He will speak at 3:10 p.m. and return to Washington.
Vice President Harris and husband Doug Emhoff will fly to Los Angeles, where they will remain over the weekend with no public schedule.
The White House press briefing by the COVID-19 response team is scheduled at 11:45 a.m.
Economic indicator: The National Association of Realtors at 10 a.m. will report on existing home sales in January.
👉 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.
➔ SPACE: NASA’s “Perseverance” rover landed without mishap on the surface of Mars on Thursday and sent live pictures back to Earth immediately. The Jet Propulsion Laboratory team responsible for the mission cheered loudly, leaped to their feet and high-fived as the rover navigated safely to its dusty target inside a crater on the Red Planet. “Dare Mighty Things” was the message on the wall behind them. Perseverance is looking for microscopic evidence of ancient life on Mars and will leave specially prepared samples on the planet for future scientists to locate. “I don’t think we’ve had a mission that is going to contribute so much to both science and technology,” NASA acting Administrator Steve Jurczyk said this week. “It’s going to be truly amazing” (Space.com).
➔ SENTENCED: Two journalists in Belarus — Katsiaryna Bakhvalava, 27, and Daria Chultsova, 23 — were convicted and sentenced to two years in prison Thursday after they covered a protest against authoritarian President Alexander Lukashenko. The journalists who work for the Polish-funded Belsat TV channel were arrested three months ago in their Minsk apartment in the midst of a livestream of a demonstration in the nation’s capital city (The Associated Press).
➔ FREED: U.S. journalist Bilal Abdul Kareem, a native of Mount Vernon, N.Y., was released on Thursday by an al Qaeda linked group in Syria six months after his capture. He has lived in Syria since 2012, reporting on the Syrian government military campaigns against areas in opposition hands (ABC News).
➔ COURTS: The Supreme Court in the United Kingdom today dealt a major blow to Uber and its business model by unanimously declaring its drivers are “workers” and are not self-employed. The ruling stems from a lawsuit by two drivers who said they were “workers” and should receive employment benefits, such as paid holidays and minimum wage. Uber shares were down nearly three percent this morning in financial markets (The Associated Press).
THE CLOSER
And finally … 👏👏👏 Congratulations to this week’s Morning Report Quiz winners!
Here’s who aced our puzzle about headlines (and trivia) of note: Lesa Davis, Eric Truax, Jack Barshay, Judy Kulczycki, Jeanne Field, Stewart Baker, Donna Minter, Terry Pflaumer, Cheryl Gibson, Rich Papeika, Tom Hess, Joel M. Shaw, Sara Hall Phillips, Luke Charpentier, Norm Roberts, Andrew Celwyn, William Chittam, Daniel McLellan, Rocky Macy, Jeff Gelski, John van Santen, Robert Craig, Richard E. Baznik, Donna Nackers, Candi Cee, Daniel Bachhuber, Mary Anne McEnery, Karen Chabot, Lou Tisler, Chuck Schoenenberger, Patrick Kavanagh, Ki Harvey, Mary Frances Trucco, Harvey Salinger, Rich Davis, Pam Manges, Rachel A. Tyree, Lisa Love, John Donato, Leon Burzynski, Joe Erdmann, Luther Berg, Elizabeth Murphy, Sandy Walters, Victoria Gasaway and Sharon Banitt.
They knew that irate Texans are blaming winter weather, Republican Gov. Greg Abbott and wind turbines (among a roundup of favorite targets) for their woes with rolling blackouts. Thus, the correct answer was “all of the above.”
Former President Trump, who had been uncharacteristically silent since Jan. 20, on Tuesday skewered Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) in a statement, calling him “a dour, sullen, and unsmiling political hack.”
Biden’s new baseball cap, a gift from his grandchildren, says “Pop” on the back.
We referred to members of the British royal family, specifically the Duchess of Sussex and the 99-year-old Duke of Edinburgh, when we noted news that Meghan is pregnant and Philip is in the hospital.
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: Reince reemerges as Cruz crashes
Presented by Facebook
DRIVING THE DAY
SCOOP: REINCE PRIEBUS has been calling key GOP officials and operatives in Wisconsin the past week and signaling he’s seriously exploring a bid for governor of his home state in 2022, two sources with knowledge of the calls told Playbook. Priebus’ biggest selling point presumably would be the support of former President DONALD TRUMP — the two patched things up after Priebus was fired by the president back in 2017. Former Wisconsin GOP Lt. Gov. REBECCA KLEEFISCH is widely expected to run and is seen as a potential Republican front-runner, but Priebus would be formidable in a primary with Trump’s support. Incumbent Democratic Gov. TONY EVERS is likely to seek a second term.
THE RETURN OF THE WASHINGTON SCANDAL— There is something refreshingly normal about the TED CRUZ scandal.
The drama of Cruz returning from sunny Mexico — chastened and apologetic for fleeing Texas while 3 million of his constituents remained without power — was a kind of throwback to an era when politicians could be embarrassed.
The Trump years were dominated by one figure defined by his inability to be shamed and supporters defined by their unwillingness to be outraged by his behavior.
A lot of observers wondered if the age of political scandal was dead — if partisans on both sides were so defined by hatred of their rival political tribe that they would let their own leaders get away with just about anything.
And then a bearded man appearing to be Cruz was photographed with a roller bag at the United counter at Houston’s George Bush Intercontinental Airport ready to board a plane to Cancun.
The best and worst of the internet was activated: Twitter sleuths fired up their airline apps and learned Cruz seemed to be on an upgrade list for the flight. The bearded man appeared to be wearing the same gray “Come and get it” mask Cruz favors. (The mask celebrates the Texas revolution against Mexico.) The Houston police leaked that they escorted Cruz through the airport.
In the pictures that flooded social media, one could detect Cruz’s growing alarm. He clutched his phone with a look of worry in an airport lounge and again on board the plane in coach (he didn’t get the upgrade). He later confirmed what was suggested by the photos: He was closely following the growing storm of criticism in real time.
He was dubbed Flyin’ Cruz by many and the catchier “Fled Cruz” by Fox, which had a surprisingly keen interest in dunking on Cruz for much of Thursday.
After an overnight silence, Cruz seemed to blame the trip on his two daughters, 10 and 12, who he said in a statement just wanted a respite from the cold. He hinted, without outright saying, that his plan was only to drop them off in Cancun and return right away.
Bad idea. The spin backfired.
He was hounded by reporters and photographers from the moment he pulled up to the Cancun Airport in a white SUV and Ritz-Carlton escort until he landed back at the Houston airport where protesters held up signs dragging him (“24 dead Ted!”). At his home, more protesters had camped out with their own signs (“TWO SUITCASES FOR ONE NIGHT?” “Did your kids also make you COMMIT TREASON?”).
He dropped the phony excuse and went with mostly contrition, admitting that he was planning on staying until the weekend. “Really from the moment I sat on the plane, I began really second-guessing that decision, and saying, ‘Look, I know why we’re doing this, but I’ve also got responsibilities,’” he told one reporter. “And it had been my intention to be able to work remotely, to be on the phone, to be on the internet, to be on Zoom, to be engaged, but I needed to be here and that’s why I came back.”
The tabloid outrage of the social media mobs had the intended effect: Cruz proved that the capacity for embarrassment still exists in American politics.
MORE:
— The NYT sparked a national conversation about the safety of group chats with this explosive story about Heidi Cruz, Ted’s wife, organizing the trip with neighborhood friends over text. But Shane Goldmacher and Nicholas Fandos really stick in the shiv with this graf:
“Mr. Cruz has long rankled members of both parties as a self-promoter since his arrival on Capitol Hill in 2013. Later that year, he became the leading actor in the drama that forced a government shutdown over the Affordable Care Act, and in 2016, Senator Lindsey Graham, Republican of South Carolina, famously joked during a speech, ‘If you killed Ted Cruz on the floor of the Senate, and the trial was in the Senate, nobody would convict you.’”
— The video of two police officers escorting Cruz off the plane in Houston.
— In Cruz’s defense, the situation in Texas was much improved Thursday, though the big concern went from power outages to water safety, per the AP: “In Texas on Thursday, about 325,000 homes and businesses remained without power, down from about 3 million a day earlier, though utility officials said limited rolling blackouts were still possible.”
— Also in Cruz’s defense,The Texas Tribune notes that Cruz and his Texas colleague JOHN CORNYN had requested and received a federal disaster declaration, which is the main thing a senator is good for at this stage (though other electeds are doing a lot more).
— The Daily Mail gives the aborted Cruz vacation the full Daily Mail treatment, including a 59-photo montage, which connoisseurs of the site know is at the high end for celebrity scandals that the British tabloid covers. The Mail also notes with characteristic understatement, Ted Cruz “was on the list of standby passengers for an upgrade to business class — Heidi was not.”
— Finally, in D.C., cider bar Anxo unveiled a “Cruz in Cancun” drink that you can order here, though we don’t recommend it because the tequila/coconut rum/creme de banane/lime/cinnamon mashup sounds ghastly.
BIDEN’S FRIDAY — The president will receive the President’s Daily Brief at 8 a.m. and take part in the virtual G-7 meeting at 9 a.m. He’ll speak to the virtual Munich Security Conference at 11:15 a.m. from the East Room. Then he’ll leave the White House at 11:55 a.m. for Kalamazoo, Mich., arriving at 1:45 p.m. He’ll tour the Pfizer manufacturing plant and meet with workers at 2:25 p.m. before delivering remarks at 3:10 p.m. Then it’s wheels up at 3:50 p.m. He’ll arrive back at the White House at 5:40 p.m.
— VP KAMALA HARRIS and second gentleman DOUG EMHOFF will head to Los Angeles for the weekend, with nothing on the public schedule.
— The White House Covid-19 response team and public health officials will brief at 11:45 a.m. Press secretary JEN PSAKI will gaggle aboard Air Force One.
PLAYBOOK READS
JOIN US! Democrats held the House in November but lost seats when they were expected to gain them — leaving the party little cushion to pass Biden’s agenda. Rep. SEAN PATRICK MALONEY (D-N.Y.), the DCCC chair, joins RACHAEL and EUGENE on Wednesday at noon to discuss his plans for protecting Democrats’ slim majority in 2022, lessons learned from the last campaign and the continued fallout from the Jan. 6 attack. Register here
THE WHITE HOUSE
NEWS BERNIE WON’T LIKE — “Biden privately tells governors: Minimum wage hike likely isn’t happening,” by Natasha Korecki and Christopher Cadelago: “When Joe Biden met with a group of mayors and governors last week he bluntly told them to get ready for a legislative defeat: his proposed minimum wage hike was unlikely to happen, he said, at least in the near term. …
“The comments, which were confirmed by two other people familiar with the conversation, were the furthest Biden has gone in conceding the coming axing of the $15-an-hour minimum wage provision from his first major legislative package. And they suggest that the president is more inclined to manage the fallout of it not being included than to pursue long-shot, political-capital consuming efforts to fight for its insertion.”
CONGRESS
THE MITTENS ARE OFF — “Gavel in hand, Bernie Sanders lays out an unabashedly liberal economic agenda,” WaPo: “As the new chairman of the Senate Budget Committee, Sanders has already played a key role in advancing President Biden’s $1.9 trillion pandemic relief package, and he is now scheduling high-profile hearings on some of the nation’s most pressing challenges.
“For the first, set for Thursday, Sanders has summoned the chief executives of some of America’s best-known companies to testify about the wages they pay their employees — speaking alongside some of their own front-line workers.”
CANCEL CULTURE EVERYWHERE — “GOP’s Thune says Trump allies engaging in ‘cancel culture,’”AP: “U.S. Sen. John Thune is criticizing Republican activists and party leaders for engaging in ‘cancel culture’ by rushing to censure GOP senators who found former President Donald Trump guilty of inciting an insurrection.
“In his first interview since he voted to acquit Trump, the Senate’s No. 2 Republican on Thursday defended fellow Republicans who sided with Democrats on the ‘vote of conscience’ and warned against shutting out dissenting voices in the party.”
PANDEMIC
TRACKER: The U.S. reported 2,616 Covid-19 deaths and 67,000 new coronavirus cases Thursday.
A GLOBAL CAMPAIGN — “U.S. and Novavax Will Aid Global Vaccination Campaign,” NYT: “An international effort to expedite the manufacturing and distribution of coronavirus vaccines around the globe got a lift on Thursday on two fronts: White House officials said the Biden administration would make good on a U.S. promise to donate $4 billion to the campaign over two years, and the pharmaceutical company Novavax pledged to eventually donate 1.1 billion doses of its vaccine.”
“President Biden will make his announcement on Friday during a virtual meeting with other leaders from the Group of 7, where he is also expected to call on other countries to step up their contributions. The $4 billion was approved last year by a Democratic-led House and Republican led-Senate when President Donald J. Trump was in office.”
A FRESH START —“Biden Administration Formally Offers to Restart Nuclear Talks With Iran,” NYT: “The United States took a major step on Thursday toward restoring the Iran nuclear deal that the Trump administration abandoned, offering to join European nations in what would be the first substantial diplomacy with Tehran in more than four years, Biden administration officials said.
“In a series of moves intended to make good on one of President Biden’s most significant campaign promises, the administration also backed away from a Trump administration effort to restore United Nations sanctions on Iran. That effort had divided Washington from its European allies.”
— BEHIND THE SCENES: “Biden aides debate how, or if, to save original Iran deal,”by Nahal Toosi: “President Joe Biden has repeatedly said that the United States will rejoin the original Iran nuclear deal if Tehran resumes complying with the terms of the agreement, with the goal of laying the groundwork for an even stronger follow-up non-proliferation pact.
“But inside the Biden administration, debates have churned among top aides over whether this is the best path or whether to take other, potentially more complicated, routes that may sidestep the original deal.”
NEW DEVELOPMENTS — “Release of intelligence report on Khashoggi killing could push already strained U.S.-Saudi relations to new lows,” WaPo: “Facing court cases and its own promises of transparency, the Biden administration is about to release a long-sought U.S. intelligence report concluding that Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman ordered the 2018 killing of journalist Jamal Khashoggi. … The report, an unclassified summary of findings across the intelligence community produced by the Office of the Director of National Intelligence (ODNI), will be made public as early as next week, according to people familiar with the matter.”
POLITICS ROUNDUP
2022 WATCH — “MAGA crashes into moderates in train-wreck Senate race,”by Holly Otterbein: “Pennsylvania Republican Sen. Pat Toomey isn’t running for reelection in 2022. But his vote to convict former President Donald Trump is already rocking the race to succeed him.
“County parties have censured Toomey, prompting backlash from centrists and even some Trump supporters who think the efforts will hurt the GOP in upcoming elections. Former Rep. Ryan Costello, a moderate Republican eyeing a bid for the Senate, has publicly come to Toomey’s defense in the wake of his vote. Ex-Trump aides, in turn, are making plans to torpedo Costello before he announces a campaign.”
— “Malcolm Kenyatta is running for Senate in Pennsylvania,” Philadelphia Inquirer: “Malcolm Kenyatta, a state representative and progressive activist from Philadelphia, officially launched a campaign for U.S. Senate on Thursday, casting himself as a champion of working people who would make history as Pennsylvania’s first Black and first openly gay senator. …
“He’s also entering the race with some significant backers. The American Federation of Teachers, the Philadelphia Federation of Teachers, and the Working Families Party all issued endorsements to coincide with his announcement. ‘Malcolm is one of the most dynamic voices for progressive values in politics today,’ Randi Weingarten, president of the national teachers’ union, said in a statement.
RESTARTING THE MONEY ENGINE —“Emhoff to join Harrison for new chair’s first DNC fundraiser,”by Elena Schneider: DNC Chair Jaime Harrison “will host the virtual event on March 3, featuring Sens. Cory Booker and Amy Klobuchar alongside Second Gentleman Doug Emhoff. Ticket prices for the event range from $36,500 for hosts to $100 for young professionals and seniors.
“The DNC closed out the 2020 election cycle with about $75 million in the bank — an enormous sum for a once-beleaguered committee that was nearly broke at the end of the previous presidential election. That total nearly kept pace with the Republican National Committee, which had more than $80 million banked at the end of 2020.”
TOP-ED — “A New-Media Showdown in Australia,”by NYT’s Kara Swisher: “In the face-off this week between the news media and social media in Australia, I think I am on Rupert Murdoch’s side for once. Unless I am on Mark Zuckerberg’s. It is an awful choice.”
TRUMP CARD
TOP COP CALLED IN —“Manhattan D.A. Recruits Top Prosecutor for Trump Inquiry,” NYT: “As the Manhattan district attorney’s office steps up the criminal investigation of Donald J. Trump, it has reached outside its ranks to enlist a prominent former federal prosecutor to help scrutinize financial dealings at the former president’s company, according to several people with knowledge of the matter.
“The former prosecutor, Mark F. Pomerantz, has deep experience investigating and defending white-collar and organized crime cases, bolstering the team under District Attorney Cyrus R. Vance Jr. that is examining Mr. Trump and his family business, the Trump Organization.”
TV TONIGHT — PBS’ “Washington Week,” guest-moderated by Weijia Jiang: Yasmeen Abutaleb, Anna Palmer, Ayesha Rascoe and Ed O’Keefe.
SUNDAY SO FAR …
ABC
“This Week”: White House press secretary Jen Psaki … Rep. Steve Scalise (R-La.). Panel: Chris Christie, Rahm Emanuel, Leah Wright Rigueur and Margaret Hoover.
FOX
“Fox News Sunday”: Anthony Fauci … Bill Gates. Panel: Josh Holmes, Kristen Soltis Anderson and Mo Elleithee.
Gray TV
“Full Court Press”: Sen. Chris Van Hollen (D-Md.) … Rep. Michael McCaul (R-Texas).
MSNBC
“The Sunday Show”: Rep. Joyce Beatty (D-Ohio) … Rep. Sheila Jackson Lee (D-Texas) … Rep. Bennie Thompson (D-Miss.).
NBC
“Meet the Press”: Anthony Fauci. Panel: Cornell Belcher, Pat McCrory, Susan Page and Kristen Welker.
CNN
“Inside Politics”: Rep. Ro Khanna (D-Calif.). Panel: Jeff Zeleny, Laura Barrón-López, Jonathan Martin, Paul Begala and Barbara Comstock.
CBS
“Face the Nation”: Houston Mayor Sylvester Turner … Scott Gottlieb.
PLAYBOOKERS
A STYLISH SECOND STEPDAUGHTER — “Ella Emhoff Discusses Her NYFW Debut With Proenza Schouler’s Jack McCollough and Lazaro Hernandez,” Vogue: “Ella Emhoff appeared in her first NYFW collection. Signed to IMG Models, Emhoff has appeared in magazines in the past, but her work for Proenza Schouler’s Jack McCollough and Lazaro Hernandez marks her first fashion show—albeit virtual—and her first appearance on an official Fashion Week calendar.”
“Gray, the former Bernie Sanders spokeswoman, even admits to some admiration for Republicans. Not their policies, of course, but their willingness to battle. Even if they lose, she says, ‘they gain points for fighting.’ Democrats, meanwhile ‘feel like, if they fight for something and lose, it will confirm their status as losers, and so they’re not willing to try.’ ‘I don’t have a better way to put this,’ Gray says, ‘but Democrats have what feels like big loser energy.’”
I LEFT MY APT. IN SAN FRANCISCO — “Kamala Harris Is Selling Her San Francisco Apartment,”WSJ: “The property had been on the market for just over a week asking $799,000, according to listings website Zillow. Listing agent Anne Herrera of Sotheby’s International Realty confirmed that the property was in contract but didn’t comment further.”
MEDIAWATCH — Noam Levey is joining Kaiser Health News’ Washington office. He previously was a national health care reporter for the L.A. Times. Talking Biz News
— Elizabeth Koh is joining the Boston Globe’s investigations desk. She previously was a reporter covering Samsung for the WSJ based in Seoul.
TRUMP ALUMNI — Mallory Blount is now press secretary for Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp. She most recently was director of specialty media at the White House, and is a Treasury and HUD alum.
TRANSITIONS — Jennifer Kaufmann is joining Triple P as U.S. head of public policy. She previously was an SVP at Mercury. … Brian Boyle is now a partner at McDermott Will & Emery. He previously was an associate at DLA Piper. … Cassie Ann Kiggen will be chief comms officer for the University of Georgia’s College of Agriculture & Environmental Sciences. She currently is comms director for the National Venture Capital Association.
HAPPY BIRTHDAY: Reps. Carolyn Maloney (D-N.Y.) and Raúl Grijalva (D-Ariz.) … VOA’s Daria Dieguts … Alexis Covey-Brandt … Andrew Ross Sorkin … Tamara Hinton … Howard Stringer … Gary Andres … John Stanton … Sean Conner … Andy Abboud … Chris Faulkner … John Gentzel … Justin Rouse … Kevin Bishop (5-0) … Judy Kurtz … Tucker Warren … Brandon Ver Velde … POLITICO’s Jen Plesniak … Katharine Zaleski … John J. Miller … Joshua Schank … Nick Solheim … Samantha Zalaznick … Ben Khouri (3-0) … Capital One’s Joe Vidulich (35) … Chase Kroll … AEI’s Jason Bertsch … Kaitlyn Martin … Julie Terrell Radford … Stewart McLaurin, president of the White House Historical Association … Molly Weaver … Olga Ramirez Kornacki, director of the House-Radio TV Gallery … Rachel Green Horn, who just started at the Filecoin Foundation … Sandeep Hulsandra … Jill Lawrence … Nicola Nelson … Fox News’ Louis Tartaglia … Tony Iommi
“I could have no freedom in the thought of any other circumstances or business in life:
All my desire was the conversion of the heathen, and all my hope was in God: God does not suffer me to please or comfort myself with hopes of seeing friends, returning to my dear acquaintance, and enjoying worldly comforts.”
David Brainerd died of tuberculosis at the age of 29 in 1747.
Though only converting a small number, his life story was written down and published in 1749 by Jonathan Edwards, the future President of Princeton, titled “An Account of the Life of the Late Reverend Mr. David Brainerd.”
It was read by millions and inspired many to become missionaries, including William Carey.
When Carey heard reports of Captain Cook discovering the Hawaiian Islands in 1778, Carey decided to dedicate his life to world missions, traveling from England to India in 1793.
Carey wrote:
“Expect great things from God, Attempt great things for God.”
William Carey’s life inspired many others.
In the early 1800s, a Second Great Awakening Revival swept America.
In 1806, five Williams College students met by the Hoosic River in Massachusetts near a grove of trees to discuss how to reach the world with the Gospel.
Suddenly a thunderstorm poured down torrential rain and the students hid next to a haystack till it passed.
While there, they prayed and committed themselves to world missions.
The book Williamstown and Williams College by Arthur Latham Perry (1904) recorded:
“The brevity of the shower, the strangeness of the place of refuge, and the peculiarity of their topic of prayer and conference all took hold of their imaginations and their memories.”
The Haystack Prayer Meeting led to the founding of the American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions, which in the next 50 years sent out 1,250 missionaries to India, China, Hawaii, southeast Asian countries.
In 150 years, it sent out 5,000 to mission fields around the world.
Missionaries established schools, hospitals and translated the Bible into indigenous languages, even creating written languages.
The first missionary sent out by the American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions was Adoniram Judson, born in Massachusetts, August 9, 1788.
At age 16, Judson began attending a college founded in 1764 by Baptist ministers, the College of Rhode Island & Providence Plantations (Brown University).
While there, he became friends with a skeptic and deist student named Jacob Eames.
Eames was a fan of the godless French philosophies which emerged after the French Revolution and swept America’s college campuses, capturing the naive minds of impressionable students.
Eames convinced Judson to abandon his parent’s Christian faith and become a skeptic.
In 1804, after graduating valedictorian of his class at age 19, Judson opened a small school and wrote grammar and math textbooks.
While traveling to New York City in 1808, Judson stayed at a little inn.
He was annoyed and not able to get any sleep because the groans of a dying man in a neighboring room kept him awake all night.
Nevertheless, Judson ignored the cries, as his heart had become hardened by his skeptical college friend, Jacob Eames.
The next morning, when checking out, Judson inquired of the innkeeper who the man was who had died in the night.
He was petrified when he heard it was none other than Jacob Eames, his college friend.
This rude awakening led Adoniram Judson to reaffirm his Christian faith.
He would go on to become one of America’s first foreign missionaries and the first significant missionary to Burma – modern day Myanmar.
Adoniram Judson fell in love with Ann Hasseltine, also known as Nancy.
Adoniram wrote to Ann’s father:
“I have now to ask whether you can consent to part with your daughter early next spring, to see her no more in this world;
whether you can consent to her departure for a heathen land, and her subjection to the hardships and sufferings of a missionary life;
whether you can consent to her exposure to the dangers of the ocean; to the fatal influence of the southern climate of India; to every kind of want and distress; to degradation, insult, persecution, and perhaps a violent death? …”
He continued:
“Can you consent to all this for the sake of Him who left his heavenly home, and died for her and for you; for the sake of perishing immortal souls; for the sake of Zion and the glory of God?
Can you consent to all this in hope of soon meeting your daughter in the world of glory, with a crown of righteousness brightened by the acclamations of praise which shall redound to her Savior from heathens saved, through her means, from eternal woe and despair?”
At age 23, Adoniram, and his wife Ann, age 22, sailed from New England on FEBRUARY 19, 1812, for Calcutta, India.
Another missionary who sailed with the Judsons was Luther Rice.
In India, they all met English Baptist missionary William Carey.
The Judsons and Luther Rice switched from Congregationalist to Baptist, which jeopardized their financial support.
They were forced to leave India by the British East India Company, as it wanted favorable trade relations with the local authorities, who were non-Christian. If the Company was perceived as supporting missionaries, it could diminish their profits.
The Judsons sailed for Rangoon, Burma, and Luther Rise returned to America.
Rice dedicated himself to raise money for missions, which led to the establishment of the Southern Baptist Convention.
Rice helped start numerous Baptist seminaries and universities, including The George Washington University in Washington, DC, in 1821, where the main administration building is named Luther Rice Hall.
Brown University awarded him an honorary doctorate.
In Burma, Adoniram and Ann Judson translated Bible Scriptures, preached in Burmese, and started schools.
When war broke out between the British and Burma, Burmese officers burst into the Judson’s home.
They threw Adoniram on the ground in front of his pregnant wife and tied him up with torture thongs.
Accusing him of being a spy for the British, they dragged him away and threw him into the infamous Ava death prison.
After 12 months, Judson was marched with other prisoners, ill and barefoot, to a primitive village near Mandalay.
All but one of the other prisoners died.
While Adoniram was in prison, his wife Ann was alone as the only western woman in the entire country.
She lived in a tiny shack outside the gate and brought him meager food, as the prison did not feed him.
Ann continually lobbied the authorities for his release.
After 20 months of brutal treatment, being in irons and even suspended by his mangled feet, Adoniram was finally released.
The British then pressed him into serving as an interpreter between the British and Burmese, where he gained respect from both sides.
Adoniram Judson compiled an English-Burmese Dictionary and translated the Bible.
Then, in 1826, Adoniram Judson’s wife, Ann, died.
Adoniram sank into severe depression.
Later, he was joined by missionaries George Boardman and his wife, Sarah.
One of the first Christian converts was from the Karen people, a man named Ko Tha Byu.
He had been a murderer with a diabolical temper. After being captured, he was sold into slavery. Adoniram Judson and George Boardman began witnessing to him, teaching him to read and write.
Ko Tha Byu converted to Christianity and was baptized on May 16, 1828. For the rest of his life he was a tireless evangelist to the Karen people.
The Karen people had been a hunted minority scattered in the jungles.
Astonishingly, their ancient Karen people beliefs were that there was an all-powerful Creator of heaven and earth who made a man, then took one of the man’s ribs and formed a woman.
The Karen people believed that as a result of temptation by a devil, the man and woman fell, but there was a promise that someday a messiah would come to their rescue.
The Karen people lived in expectation of a prophecy that white foreigners would bring them a sacred white parchment roll instructing them on the way to heaven.
Ko Tha Byu was put into the ministry by Adoniram Judson.
With Ko Tha Byn’s help, from 1828-1840, membership in the Karen Baptist Church grew to 1,270.
Ko Tha Byu served as the first native Burmese pastor, refounding the church at Rangoon.
A mission worker described him: “Ko Tha Byu was an ignorant (uneducated) man; yet he did more good than all of us, for God was with him.”
Adoniram Judson died in April 12, 1850.
His life’s work resulted in Burma having 100 churches, 123 ministers and over 8,000 baptized Christians.
The leader of the Myanmar Evangelical Fellowship stated in 1993:
“Today, there are 6 million Christians in Myanmar, and every one of us trace our spiritual heritage to one man – the Reverend Adoniram Judson.”
Each July, Baptist churches in Myanmar celebrate “Judson Day.”
In the United States, no less than 36 Baptist churches are named after Adoniram Judson, as well as Judson University in Illinois and the town of Judsonia, Arkansas.
His wife, Ann Judson, is the namesake of Judson College in Alabama, as well as a dormitory at Maranatha Baptist University.
At Brown University there is a house named after Adoniram Judson, owned by Christian Union.
During World War II, a U.S. Liberty Ship was stationed in the Philippines named the SS Adoniram Judson.
Surviving 56 air raid attacks day and night for six days, the ship’s captain said “It was miraculous that the bombs did not hit the ship.”
Expressing his conviction, Adoniram Judson wrote:
“How do Christians discharge this trust committed to them?
They let three fourths of the world sleep the sleep of death, ignorant of the simple truth that a Savior died for them.”
By Shane Vander Hart on Feb 18, 2021 01:46 pm
Late Wednesday night, Cancun started trending on Twitter. Thinking perhaps there was some natural disaster or weird weather event I looked. It appeared that U.S. Senator Ted Cruz, R-Texas, and his family were caught on camera boarding a flight to Cancun.
That is all well and good, but the problem is that the state of Texas is under a state of emergency after a rare winter storm has left millions in the state without electricity, heat, or water.
I went to bed knowing that the pictures were of him because of the mask he was wearing that was identical to one he was wearing in other photos and it looked like him. I then saw a picture of his wife Heidi.
In my mind, however, this still wasn’t confirmed because I didn’t know when or where these photos were taken. As far as I know, they could have been taken some time ago, like over Christmas.
This morning it was confirmed, it was Cruz, he was in Cancun. His office issued a statement saying it was a preplanned trip and that he just flew down overnight to get his family settled. He always planned to return the next day, they said.
First, it’s horrible optics anyway, even for one night. Yes, he could have stayed in touch with state and local officials, technology is great that way, but it just looks bad. Elected officials don’t go on vacation when their state is in a crisis, they just don’t. You cancel your plans or at least let your family go on without you. I’m sure Heidi Cruz is quite capable of making sure the family is settled.
Second, now there is a report that a United Airlines employee confirmed that Cruz changed his flight this morning and that it was originally supposed to return on Saturday. So now it looks like he received blowback and public pressure and decided to return home early, but his office lied and said that was his plan all along. If this is indeed accurate are going beyond bad optics to lying to constituents.
Third, Cruz released a statement that makes me question the original statement from his office.
“This has been an infuriating week for Texas. The greatest state in the greatest country in the world has been without power. We have food lines, gas lines, and people sleeping at the neighbors’ houses. Our homes are freezing and our lights are out. Like millions of Texans, our family lost heat and power too,” he said.
“With school cancelled for the week, our girls asked to take a trip with friends. Wanting to be a good dad, I flew down with them last night and am flying back this afternoon. My staff and I are in constant communication with state and local leaders to get to the bottom of what happened in Texas. We want our power back, our water on, and our homes warm. My team and I will continue using all our resources to keep Texans informed and safe,” Cruz added.
Was this trip pre-planned or was it spontaneous? Also, his girls asked to take a trip with friends? So he’s basically blaming his daughters. Good parents sometimes have to say no to such requests.
The statement, and I can’t believe his office thought this was a good idea, makes him look colossally out of touch. My biggest problem is the untruthful information intended to spin what was a poor decision on his part.
Bad optics one can recover from, lying to the public makes that much, much harder to do.
This was a horrible decision, horrible response, and Cruz should have known better.
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 and participate in a Munich security conference on Friday. He will then tour a Pfizer plant in Michigan. There is nothing else on his schedule. President Biden’s Itinerary for 2/19/21: All Times EST 8:00 AM Receive daily briefing – Oval Office11:15 AM Attend Munich Conference remotely …
The Lancet COVID-19 Commission, which is working with the United Nations and the World Health Organization to investigate the coronavirus outbreak, is chaired by a Columbia professor who has called the U.S. a “threat” to global peace, while praising China. Jeffrey Sachs, a former UN adviser, has met with WHO and UN officials as part …
NASA has scheduled a post-landing briefing Thursday to discuss what they have learned since Perseverance touched down on Mars. The rover touched down on the red planet just before 4 p.m. EST Thursday afternoon. The briefing is scheduled to begin at 5:30 p.m. EST. Content created by Conservative Daily News and some content syndicated through CDN …
Lincoln Project co-founder Rick Wilson paid off the mortgage for his Florida home only days after the New York Times reported on sexual misconduct allegations against co-founder John Weaver, public records show. The terms of Wilson’s mortgage were satisfied on February 5, only a few weeks after journalist Ryan Girdusky described Weaver’s allegedly predatory behavior …
Don’t believe me? Well, let’s take a look under the hood- “Upper Eschalanace™” Members of our ruling political classes are yapping about burgeoning fantasies about a second civil war, culminating with visions about sparring with parts of their own subject populations. Because of the shock wave of recent conflicts culminating in the Capitol riot (we are …
NASA’s Perseverance Rover successfully landed on Mars after a less than 10-minute descent from space that began just before 4 p.m. EST Thursday. Hello, world. My first look at my forever home. #CountdownToMars pic.twitter.com/dkM9jE9I6X— NASA’s Perseverance Mars Rover (@NASAPersevere) February 18, 2021 In a post-landing briefing, NASA shared a “you are here” map showing the …
Critics of congressional earmarks say they will be abused to leverage power and secure votes while others argue they will allow for increased regulation overspending by the executive branch. Supporters of earmarks want them back for power, as they’re used by leadership to control who gets the funds, Citizens Against Government Waste (CAGW) President Tom …
Many members of Congress remain outraged at the Trump protestors who charged into the Capitol on January 6. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi recently declared, “We must get to the truth of how this happened… Our next step will be to establish an outside, independent 9/11-type Commission to investigate and report on the facts and causes.” …
Republican South Carolina Sen. Tim Scott said Wednesday that he thinks former President Donald Trump remains “the most powerful political figure on either side.” “I still believe that President Trump is the most powerful political figure on either side, the news loves President Trump or they hate President Trump which gives him plenty of coverage,” …
The Republican National Committee announced their plan Wednesday to start a committee dedicated to ensuring election integrity, Fox News reported. The new committee plans to work alongside state governments and election stakeholders, the RNC told Fox News. The committee will push for election reforms including a voter ID requirement and having poll watchers count every …
I have a dream that my four little children will one day live in a nation where they will not be judged by the color of their skin but by the content of their character. – Dr. Martin Luther King More than half a century since Dr. King uttered that famous line, it remains one …
Republican Colorado Rep. Lauren Boebert came under fire Thursday over firearms displayed in the background of her online call. Photographs of the new congresswoman from a Committee on Natural Resources live stream show her sitting in front of what appears to be several unsecured weapons stored on a shelf. Boebert, who represents Colorado’s 5th congressional …
Since it is difficult to measure extremism as groups move to encrypted platforms during the coronavirus pandemic, the Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC) wants you to send it more money to track the bad guys. At least that is the encrypted message implied with the latest “hate map.” The group reportedly has a $527.8 million …
On Wednesday, Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-NY) continued to advocate for student debt forgiveness. She was upset because of recent statements by President Joe Biden that he would only support $10,000 in student debt forgiveness. He argued that he does not believe he has the ability to act on his own, while AOC and other supporters …
Donald Trump is an unusual individual and may not be easy to like, especially by his sworn enemies: big-government Democrats. I had always thought of him as just an attention-getter because of his television show, which I never watched. Maybe there was never any particular affection for Donald Trump due to his type-A personality, but …
President Biden has not backed down from his $1.9 trillion COVID-19 spending proposal, and House Democrats are pushing full steam ahead on making his vision a legislative reality. But a top budget watchdog just warned that the budget-busting legislation, which costs roughly $13,260 per federal taxpayer, is full of spending that has nothing to do …
The FBI and a U.S. attorney in New York are investigating Democratic Gov. Andrew Cuomo and his administration over their handling of data on coronavirus cases in state nursing home facilities, according to multiple reports. Prosecutors have issued subpoenas in the investigation, which is in its early stages, two sources familiar with the matter told …
Yesterday, an American icon passed away. Despite the despicable, disgusting, abhorrent, and bigoted language coming from many on the Left, I am choosing to remember Rush Limbaugh as a one-of-a-kind trailblazer who got to see the fruits of his labor. Rush’s rise gave way to people like Andrew Breitbart, Ben Shapiro, et. al. But, if …
Plus: New data on the South Africa COVID variant’s effect on vaccines, and Congress tackles the GameStop affair.
The Dispatch Staff
7 min ago
Happy Friday! In case you missed the best news of the week, pitchers and catchers have officially reported to spring training. ⚾
Oh, and new Dispatcher Ryan Brown wrote his first solo TMD item today. He joins us from NBC’s Meet the Press. Welcome him aboard!
Quick Hits: Today’s Top Stories
After traveling nearly 300 million miles over the past six months, NASA’s Perseverance rover successfully touched down on Mars Thursday afternoon. The rover now begins its two-year mission to search for life on the planet and collect samples.
South Carolina Gov. Henry McMaster on Thursday signed into law a bill prohibiting doctors from performing an abortion if a fetal heartbeat is detected, unless the pregnancy threatens the mother’s life or she was the victim of rape or incest. Less than an hour after the bill became law, Planned Parenthood and the Greenville Women’s Clinic filed a lawsuit in an effort to prevent it from going into effect.
The amount of debt held globally reached an all-time high of $281 trillion at the end of 2020, according to the Institute of International Finance. Global debt is now about 355 percent of global GDP.
U.S. life expectancy dropped by one full year—78.8 to 77.8—from 2019 to the first six months of 2020, according to a new report from the Centers for Disease Control. It fell more for men than women, and more for Black and Hispanic Americans than white ones.
The Biden administration is pledging $4 billion to global COVID-19 vaccine efforts—$2 billion now, $2 billion over the next two years—through the COVAX initiative, which aims to vaccinate the populations of low- and middle-income countries.
The State Department said yesterday that the United States would be willing to meet with Iranian and European Union officials in the coming weeks to jumpstart talks regarding Iran’s nuclear program. Iran, however, hasn’t yet agreed to participate.
Initial jobless claims increased by 13,000 week-over-week to 861,000 last week, the Labor Department reported on Thursday. About 18.3 million people were on some form of unemployment insurance during the week ending January 30, compared with 2.1 million people during the comparable week in 2020.
The United States confirmed 68,813 new cases of COVID-19 yesterday per the Johns Hopkins University COVID-19 Dashboard, with 5.1 percent of the 1,455,940 tests reported coming back positive. An additional 2,552 deaths were attributed to the virus on Thursday, bringing the pandemic’s American death toll to 492,999. According to the COVID Tracking Project, 62,300 Americans are currently hospitalized with COVID-19. According to the Centers for Disease Control, 1,455,940 COVID-19 vaccine doses were administered yesterday, bringing the nationwide total to 57,737,767.
New York Democrats Move to Revoke Cuomo’s Pandemic Powers
It’s been a rough week for New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo. Just as news broke of the FBI and U.S. attorney’s probe into the Cuomo administration’s mishandling of COVID-19 nursing home deaths, the New York Times confirmed that the New York State Senate would vote on a bill to revoke his unilateral emergency powers. Republicans in the State Assembly introduced a resolution on Thursday to begin Cuomo’s impeachment process.
But as more information emerges about Cuomo’s pandemic response, some lawmakers are now arguing that the three-term governor’s cover-up could constitute a criminal abuse of power. New York Democratic Assemblyman Ron Kim told CNN Wednesday that Cuomo called him last week in an effort to strongarm him into covering for Melissa DeRosa, a top Cuomo aide who confessed to withholding the nursing home death toll to avoid scrutiny by federal prosecutors.
“He tried to pressure me to issue a statement, and it was a very traumatizing experience,” Kim recounted. According to Kim, Cuomo then said “we’re in this business together and we don’t cross certain lines.”
“He said I hadn’t seen his wrath and that he can destroy me.”
A spokesman for Cuomo disputed Kim’s characterization of the call, saying it was “calm” and that the governor never threatened to “destroy” him.
A group of New York Assembly Democrats—including Assemblyman Kim—circulated a letter on Tuesday demanding that the governor be stripped of his unilateral pandemic emergency powers, which were granted in March of last year and are set to expire at the end of April. “It is now unambiguously clear that this governor has engaged in an intentional obstruction of justice, as outlined in Title 18, Chapter 73 of the United States Code,” nine Democratic Assembly members wrote.
Even with coronavirus case numbers continuing to drop, the South African strain’s arrival in America has provided new cause for concern as the COVID-19 pandemic enters its second year. This week, both Pfizer and Moderna released new lab data confirming what has long been feared about the variant: It is at least somewhat resistant to the antibodies produced by both companies’ vaccines.
On its face, that’s a devastating headline—after all, these vaccines are our escape boat out of pandemic purgatory. But it’s important to emphasize that the data do notindicate the vaccines are ineffectual against the new variant—or even that they’re necessarily less effective at all when it comes to the primary public-health goal of keeping people from getting seriously sick.
“This is not good news,” Dr. Paul Offit, a virologist at the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia and authority on vaccines, told The Dispatch. “The question is, how bad of news is it?”
Both companies ran similar trials involving pseudoviruses with spike proteins matching the South Africa variant’s (known in technical parlance as the B.1.351 spike), and both summarized their findings in Wednesday evening letters to the New England Journal of Medicine. In Pfizer’s case, when the “standard” U.S. form of the coronavirus and the variant were introduced to serum samples from vaccinated patients, “neutralization of the B.1.351-spike virus was weaker by approximately two thirds.” Moderna reported similar reductions in effectiveness.
Those findings sound dire, and it’s natural to wonder whether public health experts who continue to urge vaccine optimism are whistling past the graveyard. But as we’ve noted in the past, things get murkier when it comes to assessing a vaccine’s efficacy in the human body. After all, killing a virus solution in a test tube and preventing illness are not identical aims.
Remember that whole GameStop thing? It feels like an eternity ago now, but it’s actually only been three weeks! If you want to brush up on the details you can read our January 28 and January 29 newsletters, but here’s a quick refresher: A bunch of retail investors organized on Reddit, executed a short squeeze on GameStop and a handful of other “meme stocks,” and drove their prices remarkably and unsustainably high for a few days before they crashed back down to Earth. A number of top hedge funds took a pretty significant hit in the process, and a few trading platforms—most notably Robinhood—restricted users’ ability to buy some of the stocks, infuriating customers and lawmakers alike.
Yesterday, the House Financial Services Committee held what will likely be the first of a series of hearings looking into the phenomenon.
In his opening statement, Robinhood CEO Vlad Tenev apologized for the way his company handled the volatility of the market in late January. “Despite the unprecedented market conditions in January, at the end of the day, what happened is unacceptable to us,” he told lawmakers. “To our customers, I’m sorry and I apologize. Please know that we are doing everything we can to make sure this won’t happen again.”
Still, Tenev looked to dispel rumors that had popped up in recent weeks, chiefly that the company halted trading on GameStop to provide cover for larger institutional investors. “I want to be clear,” he wrote in his opening statement before delving into the complex relationship between the broker, clearing broker, and clearinghouse in any given financial transaction. “The action we took was for one reason and one reason only: to allow us to continue to meet our regulatory deposit requirements.”
Back in November, we wrote to you about Ethiopia being on the verge of civil war. Internet and telephone service has been blocked in the country’s Tigray region for much of the past few months, and journalists have been barred from entering. But the Associated Press’s Cara Anna has a heartrending story on a massacre that took place in Axum, a holy city where Ethiopian Orthodox believe the Ark of the Covenant resides. A deacon who spoke with the Associated Press believes some 800 people were killed over one weekend in late November. “Bodies with gunshot wounds lay in the streets for days in Ethiopia’s holiest city,” Anna writes. “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 the invading Eritrean soldiers.”
Several days after the second impeachment trial of former President Trump came to a close, Sen. Mitt Romney entered a statement into the congressional record, which is worth reading in full. “There is a thin line that separates our democratic republic from an autocracy: it is a free and fair election and the peaceful transfer of power that follows it. President Trump attempted to breach that line, again. What he attempted is what was most feared by the Founders. It is the reason they invested Congress with the power to impeach,” Romney writes. “Throughout history, only one thing has been able to unite a divided nation: great leaders—leaders like Churchill who inspired a fearful nation; leaders like Lincoln who mustered the national will to save the Union; and leaders like Reagan who raised our spirits from suffocating malaise. Leaders like these also have been essential in our churches and universities and businesses and charities, and just as importantly, in our homes. With our nation so divided, so vulnerable to economic distress or to civil violence or even to foreign adversaries, the need for leadership that unites and uplifts, that calls on our better angels, is as great as we have ever known. The corollary is that the failure of leaders to unite, to speak truth, to place duty above self, is as dangerous as we have ever known.”
Thursday’s French Press (🔒) looks at the life and legacy of Rush Limbaugh, who died this week after a battle with lung cancer. David didn’t listen to Rush for most of his career, but he did in the early 1990s and again after 2016. The differences were stark. “I felt that something was changing—he seemed to be losing the ‘happy’ aspect of the happy warrior,” David writes. “America is more prosperous than it was when Rush launched his career. It’s more free. Crime is down from its highs. Abortion is down. Divorce is down. Protections for individual liberty are more robust than they’ve been in decades. But tribalism is worse. Polarization is more profound. In such a circumstance, the ideas that helped improve our republic have taken a back seat to the attitudes that help us confront our opponents. The ideology is malleable. The confrontation is mandatory. That’s the migration Rush made. That’s a migration millions made. Rush was a symbol of a generation’s despair.”
In yesterday’s Vital Interests newsletter (🔒), Thomas Joscelyn zeroes in on this week’s rocket attack on a U.S. military base in Erbil, Iraq—and how the Biden administration will respond. “It doesn’t appear that any Americans were killed, but that outcome easily could have been different,” he writes. “The Biden administration will have to determine its course in Iraq sooner rather than later. A more deadly attack could force the issue.”
On yesterday’s episode of Advisory Opinions, Sarah and David break down the latest in a series of free speech lawsuits on college campuses, talk nondelegation doctrine, assess the likelihood that President Trump actually faces criminal prosecution, and reflect on Rush Limbaugh’s role in creating the Republican Party of today.
Mary Chastain: “Remember when I said Cuomo is a sociopath? Assemblyman Ron Kim provided more evidence. Cuomo called Kim and threatened to destroy him if he didn’t stop criticizing the governor. He said he would end Kim and that Kim has not even felt his wrath yet. Well, meet the FBI’s wrath, Cuomo. It is investigating the nursing home deaths. Tick tock, Cuomo.”
Leslie Eastman: “No matter where former President Donald Trump is buried, that ground will be special to Americans across this nation. Hopefully, however, he will be around a long time and have the last laugh on all those suffering from Trump Derangement Syndrome.”
David Gerstman: “Samantha Mandeles blogged that on a recent Democratic Socialists of America Zoom call, anti-Israel activist Marc Lamont Hill said, that “Black Lives Matter, very explicitly is talking about the dismantling of the Zionist project.” Hill, a Temple University professor and Steve Charles Chair in Media Cities and Solutions, whatever that is, claims to be a scholar of the Middle East. But his understanding of the Middle East is limited to Palestinian propaganda, not the product of rigorous scholarly research. Nonetheless the Middle East Studies Association invited Hill to deliver the keynote address at its annual meeting in November 2019. Unsurprisingly, Hill called on the attendees to join the BDS movement and “If MESA must fall for Palestinians to be free, let MESA fall!” Hill’s prominence and popularity isn’t just worrying because of how it normalizes antisemitism, because it’s also a sign of the failure of the academic world to police itself.”
Stacey Matthews: “Country music legend Dolly Parton continues to be a national treasure. In response to a bill in the Tennessee state legislature that would authorize a statue of her to be erected and displayed on state Capitol grounds, Parton said in a statement that ‘Given all that is going on in the world, I don’t think putting me on a pedestal is appropriate at this time.’ She did note that she wouldn’t be opposed to one at some point later on down the line, saying that ‘several years from now or perhaps after I’m gone if you still feel like I deserve it, then I’m certain I will stand proud in our great State Capitol as a grateful Tennessean.'”
Vijeta Uniyal: “President Joe Biden’s administration will pay more than $200 million to the World Health Organization (WHO), reversing another decision made by the outgoing Trump White House. Secretary of State Antony Blinken announced on Wednesday, describing the move as “fulfilling” of U.S. “financial obligations” to the United Nations health body.”
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A Massachusetts public high school football coach was fired from his job last month after complaining to school district officials as well as parents about the left-wing curriculum in his daughter’s middle school class, according to a … Read more
Texas’s Overreliance on Green Energy Has Devastating Effects
As Texas faces devastating blackouts during a brutally cold winter, many across the country attempt to discern who or what is to blame, and what changes need be implemented in order to prevent another tragedy such as this from occurring again. It appears that at least part of the blame falls on the state’s overreliance on unstable green energy, particularly wind and solar.
“There are misleading reports asserting the blackouts were caused by large numbers of natural gas and coal plants failing or freezing. Here’s what really happened: the vast majority of our fossil fuel power plants continued running smoothly, just as they do in far colder climates across the world. Power plant infrastructure is designed for cold weather and rarely freezes, unlike wind turbines that must be specially outfitted to handle extreme cold.”
Daniel Turner likewise walked through the math, proving the impact of the instability of green energy, particularly wind, on an unprepared power grid.
“The difference is wind. So serious is this percentage of the electric grid coming from unreliable wind power that more than two years ago, the Chair of Texas Public Utility Commission called lack of dependable electricity reserves “very scary.” Yet, Texans still saw three coal plants removed completely from the equation, even as a back-up, a safety net.”
It’s heartbreaking to witness the tragic effects of politicians prioritizing the desire for green energy over the safety of their population.
Maxine Waters Explores Economic Overhaul
Yesterday, the House Financial Services Committee, led by Rep. Maxine Waters, held a virtual hearing entitled “Game Stopped?” looking into January’s Reddit-driven rapid rise and fall of GameStop’s stock. The hearingsincluded testimony from Redditor Keith Gill, Reddit CEO Steve Huffman, Robinhood CEO Vlad Tenev, hedge fund managers Gabriel Plotkin and Ken Griffin.
However, the hearings’ explorative nature and ostensible desire to defend “the little guy” belied a far more cynical cause. The left clearly wants to enact sweeping regulations disguised as reforms onto the market, using the controversy surrounding Reddit to enact their policy wishes.
Maxine Waters, in her own press release announcing these hearings, said as much:
“We must examine the market in general and how it has been manipulated by hedge funds and their financial partners to benefit themselves while others pay the price.”
Party Preaching Tolerance Celebrate Death of Political Rival
The days following the death of radio host and conservative icon Rush Limbaugh have demonstrated the fracture in this country. While those on the right mourn, some on the left have taken to social media, newspapers, and tv to celebrate his passing and mock his legacy in a disgusting display of partisan hatred.
Jordan Davidson pulled a plethora of cruel tweets in The Federalist, including posts by politicians, college professors, journalists, musicians, and actors:
“Just minutes after the news of Limbaugh’s death broke, “Rest in Piss,” “Good Riddance,” and “Rot in Hell” all started trending on Twitter as multiple activists, journalists, professors, politicians, and others expressed their ill will towards him, offering his family nearly no time to mourn in peace.
“It’s easy to make fun of Rush Limbaugh right now, but it’s important to remember that he also brought a lot of people a lot of joy by dying,” TV writer Mike Drucker wrote.
Joseph A. Wulfsohn walks through some of the worst offenders across tv and print media for Fox News:
“Rush Limbaugh, the relentlessly provocative voice of conservative America who dominated talk radio for more than three decades with shooting-gallery attacks on liberals, Democrats, feminists, environmentalists and other moving targets, died on Wednesday,” the Times similarly wrote.
Additionally, the Times bashed Limbaugh on its homepage, writing that he “pushed talk radio to the right with misogynistic and racist language and conspiracy theories.”
NBC News wrote, “The Presidential Medal of Freedom honoree outraged critics with his long history of sexist, homophobic and racist remarks” and accused Limbaugh of “inflaming the partisan divide.”
What to Watch – Rocknrolla
How did an exciting, funny gangster film, with a cast including Idris Elba, Gerard Butler, Tom Hardy, Thandie Newton, Tom Wilkinson, and Mark Strong, fly under the radar? Rocknrolla follows interconnected players in London’s criminal underworld, as a Russian gangster’s search for stolen money and a British crime boss’s tenuous grasp on power.
The film is often derided as a pale imitation of Guy Ritchie’s earlier surprise hit Lock, Stock, and Two Smoking Barrels. However, Rocknrolla more than holds its own against Richie’s previous film, telling a tighter, clearer story with stronger characters and better writing.
The dialogue and characters are supremely memorable, backed up by likable and engaging performances. Despite the unfeasibility, I’m still naively hoping for the sequel teased at the movie’s end.
Paulina Enck is an intern at the Federalist and current student at Georgetown University in the School of Foreign Service. Follow her on Twitter at @itspaulinaenck
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Feb 19, 2021 01:00 am
Yes, they were feverishly working on a vaccine. But why were they not as frantically looking for a cure or treatment? And why were they continuous knocking down every possible treatment that was suggested? Read More…
Feb 19, 2021 01:00 am
In today’s political trench warfare, the term far-right and its ideological parameters have been unreasonably stretched to fit a Democrat narrative. Read More…
Feb 19, 2021 01:00 am
More and more people, including in the areas of media and social change, are branding their own images, often in ways greatly at odds with reality. Read More…
Feb 19, 2021 01:00 am
Today, we in the U.S. and the UK, are in the midst of self-proclaimed moralists who seek to erase the memories of those with whom they disagree, and to impose their view of the past and the present. Read More…
Cuomo’s tarnished halo
Feb 19, 2021 01:00 am
Governor Andrew Cuomo’s fall from grace with those who once worshipped him has been and deserved. Read more…
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Leftist media seeks to obfuscate the difference on this issue between the two political parties to protect Democrats and teachers’ unions. It won’t work.
While it may not be as good as being there, the exhibition and the accompanying catalog help us to eagerly look forward to when we can go back to Spain.
By abusing the powers of federal regulators, Operation Choke Point 2.0 would stifle the bipartisanship, unity, and healing President Biden claims to desire.
Heralded as a serious effort at ‘equity’ and ‘inclusion,’ Madison’s Police Civilian Oversight Board openly states that white people need not apply and are not welcome.
For once, conservatives are saying we should follow Europe. School boards should listen to the rest of the civilized world and return American kids to school.
Citing climate change for Texas’s current weather or casting the Green New Deal as a realistic response to such weather is completely unscientific and unhelpful.
The physical contact created with God through worship is vital to following him and cannot be met through virtual means. For those who are not at high risk from COVID, it’s time.
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Morning Rundown
Power restored to some in Texas, but many still remain without: After a week of harsh winter weather in Texas, power was restored to parts of the state on Thursday, but hundreds of thousands of customers still remain in the dark. White House Deputy National Security Adviser Liz Sherwood-Randall said it’s likely that customers will continue to experience rolling power outages as officials work to restore power across the state. Many hospitals in the Lone Star State are facing additional stress. According to Lori Upton, vice president of the Southeast Texas Regional Advisory Council, hospitals already contending with COVID-19 patients are now helping people whose supplemental oxygen tanks have run out, or those whose home medical equipment require electricity and must now seek power in emergency departments. As of Wednesday, about 800 people were being held in emergency departments for oxygen or electricity for their equipment, she said. Because of the crippling winter weather that has left millions without electricity or heat, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, whose daughter lives in Houston, proposed that the House Energy and Commerce Committee conduct an investigation. Watch Good Morning America at 7 a.m. for the latest on the winter storm.
Asian American woman hospitalized after assault outside NYC bakery: The daughter of an Asian American woman is demanding answers after her mother was shoved to the ground while in line at a New York City bakery earlier this week. On Tuesday, Maggie Kayla Cheng’s 52-year-old mother was standing in line outside a bakery in Queens, when a man, identified by police as Patrick Mateo, allegedly began arguing with her and pushed her to the ground. The woman hit her head on a metal newspaper stand and suffered an injury to the forehead. She was taken to NewYork-Presbyterian Queens hospital where she required five stitches. Mateo was apprehended Thursday morning, and charged with assault and harassment, officials told ABC News. But while Cheng claimed the attack was racially motivated on social media, Mateo was not charged with a hate crime. “I am heart broken and devastated,” Cheng wrote on Facebook. “He shoved her with such force that she hit her head on the concrete and passed out on the floor.” This is just the latest in a string of violent attacks against Asian Americans across the country. And the assault against Cheng’s mother was one of three known attacks in New York City on Tuesday alone. Many say the uptick of crimes against Asian Americans is due to the pandemic. “The pandemic’s racism has created a climate where hate is given license,” said Russell Jeung, co-founder of Stop Asian American Pacific Islander Hate. “The string of attacks are just horrific.”
NASA’s Perseverance successfully touches down on Mars: After a nerve-wracking seven-minute descent, NASA’s Perseverance rover successfully touched down on Mars on Thursday afternoon as part of one of the agency’s most ambitious deep-space missions to search for signs of ancient life on the red planet. “What an amazing day,” Steve Jurczyk, NASA’s acting administrator, said shortly after the landing was confirmed. “The work through all the adversity and all the challenges that go with landing a rover on Mars, plus the challenges of COVID … just an amazing accomplishment.” Within minutes of landing, the rover, nicknamed “Percy,” sent its first image back to Earth. Its landing on Thursday was the culmination of more than a decade of work, and only about 50% of all previous Mars landing attempts have succeeded, according to NASA. The six-wheeled rover will roam Mars for 687 Earth days and its mission is to search for signs of ancient microbial life on Mars. Moreover, it will collect data on the planet’s geology and climate — paving the way for eventual human exploration.
Couple gets engaged in NICU where daughter has spent the past 10 months: Love was in the air at a neonatal intensive care unit in New York when Teon Kennedy proposed to his girlfriend and the mother of their newborn daughter. Last week, Kennedy popped the question in the NICU to his then-girlfriend, Martine Drouillard. In April, Drouillard was hospitalized after she was diagnosed with severe preeclampsia. Doctors quickly performed an emergency cesarean section, and Drouillard delivered her daughter, Morgan, 25 weeks early. She weighed just 1 pound and 2 ounces. “She was really, really small,” Kennedy told “GMA.” “She was roughly the [size of the] palm of my hand.” For the past 10 months, Kennedy and Drouillard have spent time in the NICU with Morgan, who has also undergone multiple surgeries and more than one dozen blood transfusions. Because of Morgan’s early arrival, it threw off Kennedy’s plans to propose to Drouillard during her baby shower. So he decided to pop the question two days before Valentine’s Day with the help of hospital staff and their daughter, who was dressed in a shirt that read, “Mommy, will you marry daddy?” The couple hasn’t set a wedding date yet and want to make sure that Morgan is out of the NICU.
GMA Must-Watch
This morning on “GMA,” you’ll meet our Pet of the Week, Tyga, a 7-year-old Mini Australian Shepherd who is not just his owner Elaine’s best friend, but her lifeline. Plus, Janai Norman sat down and talked with Cherie Jones, the author of our “GMA” Book Club pick, “How the One-Armed Sister Sweeps Her House.” And actress Amanda Seyfried joins us live to talk about her role in the new movie, “Mank.” All this and more only on “GMA.”
President Joe Biden steps up his bid to re-engage with the world. Plus Texans are still suffering in a devastating winter storm but that didn’t stop their senator from taking a quick trip to the sunny Mexican coast.
Here is what’s happening this Friday morning.
Biden begins to recast U.S. role on world stage
The U.S. officially rejoins the Paris climate agreement today with President Joe Biden expected to emphasize the move when he takes part in a virtual meeting with G-7 leaders this morning.
Officials involved in the administration’s climate agenda said America’s key message is that the Paris Agreement remains intact, having endured without other countries’ following the U.S. out the door.
Biden will also focus on the global pandemic response after his administration pledged up to $4 billion to a global Covid-19 vaccine program aimed at assisting developing countries. The announcement came as his administration said it was ready to hold talks with other world powers and Iran to discuss Tehran’s nuclear program.
The series of moves, rolling back several of Trump’s foreign policy decisions, highlights Biden’s starkly different approach to global affairs.
Texans still freeze as Cruz cuts Cancún vacation short
While power has been restored for millions of Texans who had been without it in the bitter cold, the nightmare of the devastating winter storm isn’t over. Millions still lack safe water at home, and residents looking for basic essentials said they arrived to stores with bare shelves and long lines.
When firefighters arrived at a fire at a San Antonio-area apartment building Thursday, their efforts were hampered by frozen hydrants. Crews had to shuttle in water to control the blaze, leaving dozens of residents displaced.
The bone-chilling temperatures have also left the state’s homeless seeking refuge. Advocates are searching for vulnerable members of the population to help them find shelter.
The current plight of Texans forced Senator Ted Cruz to cut his family vacation to Cancún short, arriving back to his Houston home Thursday night. Cruz faced wide-spread backlash after pictures on social media late Wednesday showed him and his family at an airport gate with luggage and boarding a plane.
Rush Limbaugh will be remembered for a few enduring insults and a shameful history of bullying, cultural critic Sam Thielman writes in an opinion piece.
“It was obviously a mistake, and in hindsight I wouldn’t have done it,”
— Senator Ted Cruz, R-Texas, told reporters Thursday after he was widely panned for taking a family vacation to Cancún as millions of Texans suffered without heat, water or power.
One fun thing
NASA scientists let out a huge sigh of relief after the Mars rover successfully touched down on the red planet Thursday. Perseverance is now set to begin a two-year mission to roam the Martian surface in search for signs of ancient microbial life.
Watch the nail-bighting moments leading up to the landing known as, “7-minutes of terror.”
I’m filling in for Petra Cahill while she takes the week off. If you have any comments — likes, dislikes — send me an email at: yasmine.salam@nbcuni.com
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Good morning. It’s Friday, Feb. 19, and we’re covering a stellar success for NASA, a cancer diagnosis for Bob Dole, and much more. Have feedback? Let us know at hello@join1440.com.
NASA’s Perseverance rover successfully landed on the Martian surface yesterday. The landing followed seven comfortable months of interplanetary travel followed by seven final minutes of anxiety, which included deceleration from 12,000 mph and a descent via a 70-foot parachute (more here).
For at least the next 687 days—one Martian year—Perseverance will focus on four objectives. The first two involve searching for environments conducive to, and signatures of, past life in the planet’s Jezero Crater, believed to have been an ancient lake. The rover will also collect soil and rock samples, and test oxygen production in the Martian atmosphere for use in future crewed missions. It will also test a foldable helicopter, in what will be the first controlled flight on another planet.
Watch the reaction from NASA engineers as the rover signaled touchdown.
Bob Dole Cancer Diagnosis
Former Kansas senator and presidential candidate Bob Dole (R) revealed yesterday he has been diagnosed with stage 4 lung cancer. The 97-year-old Dole said he would begin receiving treatment Monday.
Dole began his career in federal politics in 1961, serving in the US House of Representatives before being elected to the Senate in 1969. He served as Senate Minority Leader for eight years—and Majority Leader for less than one year—before announcing his candidacy for president in 1996. Dole ultimately lost to former President Bill Clinton in an election where third-party candidate Ross Perot took more than 8% of the vote. Emblematic of a political era where dealmaking and compromise were favored, Dole went on to help launch the Bipartisan Policy Center in 2007.
Stage 4 cancers are metastatic, meaning it has spread from its origin point to different parts of the body—see the different stages here.
Massacre in Ethiopia
Government-backed forces allegedly killed hundreds in a massacre at Ethiopia’s Church of St. Mary of Zion in November, according to witness accounts provided to The Associated Press. The church sits in the city of Axum in the northern region of Tigray, where the government has carried out a bloody, monthslong offensive to root out separatist elements.
Fighting in the region began months ago after Tigray officials held their own elections last fall, a move viewed as the latest step in a gradual push toward regional autonomy (see overview). Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed—winner of the 2019 Nobel Peace Prize—sent in troops to quell opposition, reportedly with support from Eritrean forces. Since then, communication out of Tigray has been nearly nonexistent, though thousands are believed to have been killed.
St. Mary of Zion is considered one of Ethiopia’s holiest sites—tradition says it holds Christianity’s Ark of the Covenant.
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It’s easy to get data on digital marketing, but when it comes to direct mail, benchmarking is no simple task. From attribution models, to costs, to workflow there’s just not a lot of info out there on direct mail as a marketing channel.
>Japan names Seiko Hashimoto, renowned female athlete and politician, as president of the Tokyo 2020 Olympics committee after prior chief resigned following sexist remarks (More)
>Malia Obama to join writing team on Donald Glover’s first Amazon series; Glover signed a multiyear, eight-figure deal with Amazon (More) | U-Roy, pioneering Jamaican reggae and dancehall artist, dies at 78 (More)
>LeBron James, Kevin Durant named captains of 2021 NBA All-Star Game (March 7, 8 pm ET, TNT); see rosters(More) | Ivy League cancels spring sports season due to COVID-19; was first Division I conference to cancel fall sports in 2020(More)
From our partners: For just $1 today, make 2021 your best year yet. Try Dollar Flight Club for just $1 if you sign up in the next 48 hours. Their 1 million members save up to 90% on round-trip flights. Think: Hawaii from $109, Greece from $247, or Costa Rica from $167 on airlines with flexible change policies. For the next 48 hours, you can sign up for just $1. Get it while it’s hot!
Science & Technology
>US life expectancy fell by roughly one year in the first half of 2020, largely attributable to the pandemic(More) | US reports 493,098 total COVID-19 deaths, with 2,558 yesterday; averages down 40% from mid-January (More) | At least 41 million people have received at least one vaccine dose; see state-by-state data (More)
>Three quantum devices linked in a network for the first time, a key step toward demonstrating the possibility of a quantum internet (More)
>Black-footed ferret cloned; marks the first successful cloning of an endangered species in the US (More)
Business & Markets
>US stock markets slide (S&P 500 -0.4%, Dow -0.4%, Nasdaq -0.7%) as initial unemployment claims climb to 861,000 filed during the previous week, a 10% increase over last week (More)
>CEO of Robinhood, hedge fund managers, and Reddit traders grilled by House Financial Services Committee on GameStop’s trading (More)
>Shares of Walmart slide 6% after missing earnings expectations despite 69% growth in e-commerce sales in 2020; company to boost wages for 425,000 workers to an average hourly wage of $15 (More)
Politics & World Affairs
>House Democrats unveil White House-backed immigration bill that includes eight-year path citizenship for undocumented immigrants already in the country; passage is uncertain, with Democrats holding slim majorities in the House and Senate (More)
>Ivanka Trumpends speculation over 2022 primary challenge against incumbent Sen. Marco Rubio (R), says she will support his reelection (More)
>US formally rejoins Paris Climate Agreement; Biden administration expected to announce emissions-cutting targets before Earth Day in April (More)
WEEKEND READS
Ordinary Voices of Slavery
Atlantic | Clint Smith. Drawn from the 1930s Federal Writers’ Project, powerful narratives of everyday slavery from those who survived it. (Read, $$)
Editor’s note: Explore many of the original documents, courtesy of the Library of Congress.
A $100B Question
Atomic Bulletin | Elisabeth Eaves. A fascinating look at America’s nuclear missile silos—and why they’ve become more about the social safety net than defense strategy. (Read)
The Gangster and the Gypsy King
BBC | Darragh MacIntyre. In June, heavyweight champion Tyson Fury thanked Daniel Kinahan for his role in brokering fights. The problem? Kinahan is one of Ireland’s most notorious mob bosses. (Read)
‘It’s a Miracle I Came Out Alive’
ELLE | Marjon Carlos. Singer FKA Twigs gets personal about her relationship with actor Shia LaBeouf, whom she is suing for domestic abuse. (Read)
Clickbait: UK man offered vaccine after government miscalculates him as 2 inches tall.
Historybook: Thomas Edison gets patent for the phonograph (1878); HBD musician Smokey Robinson (1940); Battle of Iwo Jima begins (1945); HBD actress Millie Bobby Brown (2004); RIP “To Kill a Mockingbird” author Harper Lee (2016).
“You never really understand a person until you consider things from his point of view.”
– Atticus Finch, protagonist in Harper Lee’s “To Kill a Mockingbird”
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Companies in Britain have been tasking law firms to craft “no jab, no job” contracts that would bar prospective employees from being hired unless they have been vaccinated against the Chinese coronavirus.
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