Good morning! Here is your news briefing for Monday May 3, 2021
1.) THE DAILY SIGNAL
May 3 2021
Good morning from Washington, where President Biden apparently welcomes demonization of white Americans in public schools. In Idaho, Jon Butcher writes, they’ve put a stop to the effort to divide by race. On the podcast, we take a deeper look at PragerU’s resources for parents and teachers to counter leftist propaganda in schools. Plus: the words of President Biden and Sen. Tim Scott provide a study in contrasts; advice for LeBron James; and your letters about woke corporations and sports. On this date in 1954, a unanimous Supreme Court rules in Hernandez v. Texas that the 14th Amendment applies to all racial and ethnic groups, including Hispanics, who face discrimination.
Officials at an Idaho middle school tried pressuring teachers to judge students by the color of their skin. But state lawmakers rejected this application of critical race theory.
Those who believe in unbiased education and critical thinking have a place to turn for help. These PragerU resources offer an opportunity to counter the leftist agenda permeating our schools.
Sen. Tim Scott’s demeanor was positive and upbeat. He didn’t see a glass half full, but one overflowing with possibilities if we pour in the right policies.
James should have thought long and hard before he tweeted about a police officer, “You’re next. #accountability,” implying a comparison to the officer convicted in the killing of George Floyd.
“What sports kingpins don’t understand is that people watch sports to escape from the daily pressures of life. We don’t want to be embroiled in political science,” reader Bob DeLaet writes.
About 14 separate families or groups of illegal immigrants boarded a flight Thursday at McAllen International Airport in Texas, the man in charge of border security during the Trump administration says.
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WORDS OF WISDOM
“It is not the load that breaks you down. It’s the way you carry it.”
I’m fair skinned and my skin has a lot of sun damage. For over 30 years, I’ve had an undiagnosed condition where I’ve had a lot of painful red splotches on my arms and legs. My doctors ran multiple tests and I’ve taken all kinds of medicines, but the pain never went away. However, after 45 days of taking Puritang Green Vegetable Omega-3, for the first time in my life, my red spots are gone and I am not in any pain. My wife and I also have lower blood pressure and cholesterol levels. This is the best Omega oil product we’ve used.
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3.) DAYBREAK
Your First Look at Today’s Top Stories – Daybreak Insider
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White House Now Not So Sure About Reopening Schools
From the CNN tweet: Anita Dunn, an adviser to the President, says that schools should probably reopen in September if people continue to get vaccinated, adding that it is not absolute because “it’s an unpredictable virus” (Twitter). From Mark Hemingway: Kids have been in-person at private schools all year. We know plenty about the risks. This is about teachers unions, not kids (Twitter). From Karol Markowicz: While much of grown-up America moves on, our children are trapped in the forever pandemic. She goes on to blister the dishonesty coming from many of the so-called experts (NY Post). From Tim Carney: I think the lockdowns and Trump broke millions of brains. We know solitary confinement is crazy-making. We know being too online is bad for mental health. The outdoor vaccinated masking is an insanity symptom caused by this (Twitter).
2.
Respected English Doctor Battles Effort to Let Children Change Gender
And the foreign media is actually reporting on children who are now adults and regret their decision that was condoned and acted upon by adults who should have known better (The Guardian). From Abigail Shrier: England is reckoning with the fast-tracking of youth to gender transition in a way that America is not. In America, the medical scandal of the decade is still being covered up by our legacy media (Twitter).
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3.
Proponents of Critical Race Theory Get Clobbered in Local Election
From the story out of Southlake, Texas: …the contest was not close. Candidates backed by the conservative Southlake Families PAC, which has raised more than $200,000 since last summer, won every race by about 70 percent to 30 percent, including those for two school board positions, two City Council seats and mayor. More than 9,000 voters cast ballots, three times as many as in similar contests in the past.
From the story: A big shift toward working from home is endangering hundreds of locally owned Manhattan storefronts that have been hanging on, waiting for life to return to the desolate streets of Midtown and the Financial District. The fate of these stores, and by extension the country’s two largest business hubs, will hinge in large part on how long landlords will keep offering the rent breaks that have kept many retailers afloat. Landlords themselves are under growing financial pressure as office vacancies soar and commuters and visitors stay away.
The man formerly known as Bruce recognizes “it just isn’t fair, and we have to protect girls’ sports in our schools” (Daily Caller). Meanwhile, Florida Governor Ron DeSantis says he will sign a bill banning males from competing against girls (Daily Wire).
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6.
Lubbock, Texas Declares Itself Sanctuary City for the Unborn
After approving an ordinance banning abortion within city limits.
China Continues Effort to Eradicate Christianity from their Country
And they are not alone. From the story: the Xi regime now bars children from services. In mid April, AsiaNews reported that the government shuttered a Catholic orphanage run by the Sisters of Zhaoxian in Hebei Province. The authorities gave no explanation, but the CCP likely wanted to end contact between the nuns and children, many of whom were disabled. The action also furthers the campaign to close faith organizations.
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Sunburn — The morning read of what’s hot in Florida politics — 5.3.21
Ready for post-Session? Here’s your AM rundown of people, politics and policy in the Sunshine State.
Good Monday morning.
Judging by today’s edition of Sunburn, the Special Session PR blitz has begun.
The Seminole Tribe of Florida is out with a new 60-second ad, aiming to rally support for a new gaming Compact with the state. The ad drops around two weeks before a Special Legislative Session will convene to finalize that agreement.
The new minute long-spot, titled “The Seminole Story,” highlights existing economic benefits from the current gaming structure and argues the new compact will expand those benefits.
“Amid a storm of challenge and loss, this Florida story gave rise to hope and our spirit to persevere,” the ad’s narrator begins.
“The Seminole Tribe of Florida and Hard Rock. One — a global icon for hospitality and entertainment. The other — ‘unconquered’ resilience — surviving extinction and poverty, only to create tens of thousands of jobs, billions in economic impact, and billions more for vital government services. But quietly, without fanfare, the Seminoles and Hard Rock came through big for others: fighting hunger and disease, natural disasters, all to help and serve others. Today the Seminoles, Hard Rock, and the people of Florida are prepared to do something even bigger, for the future they share and the state they love.”
Gov. Ron DeSantis has estimated that the 75-page agreement would help raise $2.5 billion in new revenue over the next five years and $6 billion through 2030. The arrangement would run for the next 30 years.
Under the deal, sports betting would be allowed on Seminole properties, including digitally through the Hard Rock Digital app. Craps and roulette options would also be available on Seminole properties.
Legal questions are surrounding the proposal. State officials, however, believe the compact fits within existing legal structures and are set to move forward with a Special Session on the compact beginning May 17.
—@Jonfavs:1. Every media outlet should follow the lead of @WITFand refuse to book election deniers 2. Good for @jaketapperand @DanaBashCNNfor being the only Sunday show that refuses to book election deniers. @CNNSotuis always a step above its competitors.
—@JoJoFromJerz: If you’re willing to believe that President (Joe) Biden is trying to cancel your meat but not willing to believe that he was the legitimate winner of the 2020 Presidential election … you’re an idiot.
—@SolNataMD: A year ago, I went to NYC to help out in a COVID unit as our local COVID numbers went down at the time. If the political message was right back then, probably I wouldn’t be admitting new COVID patients to ICU now. This really angers me. Wear a mask & get a vaccine.
Tweet, tweet:
—@FloridaState: Thank you @WiltonSimpsonand@ChrisSprowlsfor the incredible support during the Legislative Session! @FSUResearchbenefiting all Floridians will happen in the Interdisciplinary Research and Commercialization Building and students will learn in a cutting-edge @FSUBizBuilding!
Tweet, tweet:
Tweet, tweet:
Tweet, tweet:
—@JosephBHarding: Florida has an infrastructure crisis in the heart of the state. Complicated problems sometimes require simple answers. Alternative routes needed, I know, I live this.
Tweet, tweet:
Days until
Mother’s Day — 6; Florida Chamber Safety Council’s inaugural Southeastern Leadership Conference on Safety, Health and Sustainability — 7; Gambling Compact Special Session begins — 14; ‘A Quiet Place Part II’ rescheduled premiere — 25; ‘Tax Freedom Holiday’ begins — 25; Memorial Day — 28; Florida TaxWatch Spring Meeting and PLA Awards — 31; ‘Loki’ premieres on Disney+ — 39; Father’s Day — 48; F9 premieres in the U.S. — 53; ‘Top Gun: Maverick’ rescheduled premiere — 60; 4th of July — 62; ‘Black Widow’ rescheduled premiere — 67; MLB All-Star Game — 71; new start date for 2021 Olympics — 81; second season of ‘Ted Lasso’ premieres on Apple+ — 81; The NBA Draft — 87; ‘Jungle Cruise’ premieres — 89; ‘The Suicide Squad’ premieres — 95; St. Petersburg Primary Election — 113; Disney’s ‘Shang Chi and The Legend of The Ten Rings’ premieres — 123; ‘The Many Saints of Newark’ premieres (rescheduled) — 144; ‘Dune’ premieres — 151; MLB regular season ends — 153; ‘No Time to Die’ premieres (rescheduled) — 159; World Series Game 1 — 176; St. Petersburg Municipal Elections — 183; ‘Spider-Man Far From Home’ sequel premieres — 186; Disney’s ‘Eternals’ premieres — 186; San Diego Comic-Con begins — 207; Steven Spielberg’s ‘West Side Story’ premieres — 221; Super Bowl LVI — 286; ‘Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness’ premieres — 326; ‘Thor: Love and Thunder’ premieres — 368; “Black Panther 2” premieres — 431; ‘Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse’ sequel premieres — 522; “Captain Marvel 2” premieres — 557.
Top story
“Lawmakers pass $101.5B budget, adjourn Session where Ron DeSantis got a lot of what he sought” via Gray Rohrer of the Orlando Sentinel — Florida lawmakers passed a $101.5 billion budget laden with federal COVID-19 relief cash. They ended the 60-day Legislative Session Friday after sealing several political wins for Gov. DeSantis by passing nearly all of his agenda. They also passed a tax-cut bill, HB 7061, that includes a 10-day sales tax holiday for back-to-school items starting July 31 and a 10-day sales tax holiday on hurricane preparedness items starting May 28. New this year is a “freedom week” sales tax holiday July 1-7 on tickets to live music, sports, or theater events, entry to a museum or state park or festival.
On-time and on budget.: Lawmakers gave Ron DeSantis nearly everything he asked for in the 2021-2022 budget.
“‘Ron’s regime’: Florida Republicans give DeSantis what he wants” via Matt Dixon of POLITICO — Florida’s Republican-led Legislature is handing Gov. DeSantis a series of culture war victories that are leaving Democrats increasingly worried he might be unstoppable heading into a 2022 reelection and possible presidential run. The Legislature … passed “anti-riot” legislation that DeSantis called for in the aftermath of last summer’s nationwide racial justice demonstrations. It approved a bill targeting Big Tech companies for “censoring” GOP voices. State lawmakers also passed a bill that bans so-called vaccine passports, an issue DeSantis has used to highlight his hands-off pandemic response that’s endeared him to Republicans across the country.
“DeSantis scores Session wins, but court battles could loom” via Gray Rohrer of the Orlando Sentinel — Some of DeSantis’ top priorities this year — an anti-riot bill, legislation to punish Big Tech censorship and banning private companies from requiring “vaccine passports” from customers — have all been labeled unconstitutional by critics. Democrats claim HB 1, the anti-riot bill, infringes on the First Amendment right to protest; SB 7072, the Big Tech crackdown, violates the tech giants’ free speech rights, and SB 2006, the vaccine passports measure, is government overreach in a private company’s business.
“Controversial bills, a closed Capitol: How COVID-19 defined Florida’s 2021 Legislative Session” via James Call of the Tallahassee Democrat — Racing to get out of town by Friday, lawmakers spent the final week of their Legislative Session putting the finishing touches on proposals to restrict voting, overrule local laws, and regulate how social media companies operate their platforms. While lawmakers decided the fate of a slew of contentious bills to bring a pandemic-curtailed Legislative Session to a close, lobbyists, activists and watchdog groups mourned not only the death of bills, but also of “sunshine.” Pandemic protocols restricted people wanting to testify when bills were considered to increase penalties for crimes during protests, provide tax cuts and shield businesses from liability, among other things.
“DeSantis says he will sign transgender sports bill” via Kirby Wilson of the Tampa Bay Times — Gov. DeSantis said during an appearance on Fox News that he will sign a bill banning transgender females from women’s and girls’ sports. His announcement came the day after Florida Republicans rushed the measure through the Legislature by attaching it to a charter school bill. Most Democratic lawmakers, equal rights advocates and transgender Floridians oppose the ban, calling it discriminatory and unnecessary. “We’re going to protect our girls,” DeSantis said at a town hall of red-state Governors hosted by Fox’s Laura Ingraham. “I have a four-year-old daughter and a one-year-old daughter. They’re both very athletic. We want to have opportunities for our girls. They deserve an even playing field, and that’s what we’re doing.”
On Fox News, Ron DeSantis promises to sign the transgender athlete ban.
“DeSantis urged to veto vaping bill” via News Service of Florida — The American Heart Association is asking DeSantis to veto a bill (SB 1080) that would preempt local regulations aimed at ensuring vaping and tobacco products aren’t sold to underage smokers. “This bill would give the tobacco industry free (rein) to market and advertise these harmful products to our youth,” American Heart Association Florida Government Relations Director Tiffany McCaskill Henderson wrote in a letter to DeSantis. The bill also would the state’s age for legal use of tobacco and vaping products from 18 to 21. However, the state would deviate from the federal law by exempting people in the military and, therefore, violate federal law, Henderson wrote.
“Florida elections supervisors: New voting law makes it harder to request and return ballots” via Lawrence Mower of the Tampa Bay Times — Hillsborough County Supervisor of Elections Craig Latimer, a Democrat, criticized the “initial and unnecessary call for election reform” that led to the changes. He pledged to adhere to the new law but lamented that the Legislature didn’t make it easier to use secure drop boxes for Floridians voting by mail. Drop boxes can only be used during early voting hours, and they must be manned by an election office employee, which could prove costly. Dropbox locations also can’t be changed within 30 days of an election. The bill also limits the amount of time Floridians can request a vote-by-mail ballot. Instead of requesting a ballot for the next two general elections, requests can only be made for the next general election.
“Consumer data privacy bill dies, business lobbyists rejoice” via the News Service of Florida — Business lobbyists claimed victory Friday after the demise of a bill that would have given consumers more control over personal data collected by companies. The bill (HB 969), backed by House Speaker Chris Sprowls, drew heavy opposition from businesses, at least in part because it would have allowed civil lawsuits if companies collected and sold personal data after being told not to do so. Lawmakers did not pass the bill before Friday’s end of the 60-day Legislative Session. Lobbyists representing companies such as Apple, AT&T, Target, Capital One Services, Quicken Loans and Walt Disney Parks and Resorts were among 343 lobbyists registered to work on the issue.
“Florida leaders try to tame soaring property-insurance premiums with reform bill” via Jim Saunders of The News Service of Florida — Grappling with problems in the property insurance market, Florida lawmakers have passed a plan that could lead to larger rate increases for customers of the state-backed Citizens Property Insurance Corp. and steps to curb roof damage claims and lawsuits. But the bill approved on the last day of the Regular Session on Friday was not as far-reaching as a Senate proposal that would have effectively shifted more costs to many homeowners when they suffer roof damage. The Senate voted 35-5 to approve the measure, and the House followed with a 75-41 vote. The bill now goes to DeSantis. Senate Banking and Insurance Chairman Jim Boyd said everybody “had to give a little bit” in negotiations over the bill (SB 76).
To move the property insurance reform bill, Jim Boyd said everyone had to ‘give a bit.’ Image via Colin Hackley.
“Lawmakers put brakes on ‘No Fault’ auto insurance” via Jim Turner of the News Service of Florida — Florida motorists are one step closer to no longer having “no-fault” auto insurance, after lawmakers Friday approved ditching the decades-old system and its requirement of carrying personal-injury protection coverage. The House and Senate signed off on a heavily negotiated bill (SB 54) in the closing hours of the 2021 Legislative Session. If DeSantis sign the bill, the requirement for carrying so-called PIP coverage will end and motorists would need to have bodily injury coverage. “You may not like every bit of this bill, but, you know, Florida’s got to do something about their car insurance,” Rep. Matt Willhite, a Wellington Democrat, said in backing the legislation.
Epilogue 2
“Gambling deal faces legal questions” via Dara Kam of The News Service of Florida — DeSantis and the Seminole Tribe have nailed down a gambling agreement to bring sports betting to the state and rake at least $2.5 billion into state coffers within five years. But the complicated 30-year “compact” faces significant hurdles. The U.S. Department of the Interior has to authorize the deal. Experts are divided about whether the Florida Constitution requires statewide voter approval to legalize sports betting. Other lawyers believe that the proposed compact could run afoul of federal law. “Florida is a legal land mine,” said lawyer Daniel Wallach, who specializes in sports betting. Wallach warned that the compact could result in a legal quagmire because of the federal Indian Gaming Regulatory Act, which governs what activities tribes can engage in.
The new Seminole Compact will most likely face a wave of legal problems.
“Preemption parade continues as legislators strip local government of energy options” via Mary Ellen Klas of the Miami Herald — Despite warnings from opponents that the state is asking for more than it can handle, Florida legislators sent bills to the governor this week that preempted local government regulation of utilities and clean energy regulation. Each of the efforts was opposed by local governments and environmental organizations, especially those in major urban areas, which have been more aggressive than the Florida Legislature in advancing policies with sustainable energy practices. They say that local communities are better suited to make those decisions. “Clearly, the theme of the 2021 Florida Legislative Session is taking power away from Floridians and consolidating it within the Legislature,’’ said Michelle Allen of Food and Water Watch, an environmental advocacy group, on Thursday.
“Legislators strip local governments of ability to regulate home-based businesses” via Mary Ellen Klas of the Miami Herald — A bill that sent one of the strongest shudders through city and county governments because it prevents them from imposing new regulations on home-based businesses was passed Friday after the FloridaSenate narrowly approved it on a botched vote on the final day of the Legislative Session. A priority of Sprowls, SB 403 requires local governments to regulate home-based businesses the same way they approach other commercial enterprises. Critics warn that it will dismantle local zoning laws and leave neighborhoods unprotected against unwanted commercial activity unless they have a homeowners association.
Assignment editors — House Democratic Co-Leader Evan Jenne and Policy ChairRep. Fentrice Driskell will hold their weekly media availability, noon. This event will be livestreamed on The Florida Channeland available in their archives afterward. Zoom link here.
“Legislative wrap-up: What did Treasure Coast lawmakers accomplish during a ‘culture-war’ Session?” Via Joshua Solomon of TCPalm — While staunchly advancing the GOP’s initiatives, Treasure Coast lawmakers may have brought about $9 million home to their districts, about one-third of what they initially sought during what was billed as a cash-strapped year but accounted for the largest budget in Florida history, $101.5 billion. For now, some local septic-to-sewer and water-quality projects are to be funded, and money is coming from Tallahassee for autism, mental health and children of the incarcerated. Culture-war bills such as restrictions on voting and protesting were passed and supported by local lawmakers. Similarly, they supported bills such as the anti-vaccine passport bill, which prohibits private businesses from deciding whether to restrict their businesses only to people who have been vaccinated against the coronavirus.
2022
“Charlie Crist’s bid for Governor faces early threats” via Marc Caputo and Matt Dixon of POLITICO — Former Gov. Crist officially launches his comeback campaign for his old job early next week — his third bid for the office but the first as a likely underdog in what could be a crowded field. Now a Democratic congressman, Crist is the biggest name to announce his candidacy but by no means the most talked-about. Democratic insiders are buzzing more about Rep. Val Demings running, and some former Crist loyalists are planning to work for her or for Agriculture Commissioner Nikki Fried, the only state-level elected Democrat, who has been preparing for months to challenge Republican Gov. DeSantis.
Charlie Crist’s gubernatorial campaign faces an uphill battle before it even begins. Image via AP.
First in Sunburn —Nikki Fried hires finance pro Stefanie Sass for political committee — Sass will serve as Finance Director for Fried’s committee Florida Consumers First. Previously, Sass served as Southern finance director for Kamala Harris and Deputy Southeast Finance Director for Biden during the 2020 cycle, and as Sen. Bill Nelson’s finance director in 2018. She was recently senior finance adviser to the Florida Democratic Party and deputy Southeast finance director for the Presidential Inaugural Committee. She has over eight years of experience in political fundraising in Florida and throughout the South.
“Democrats express optimism at Tampa fundraiser despite GOP victories” via Margo Snipe of the Tampa Bay Times — Crist and other prominent state Democrats delivered a message of optimism about the future of the Florida Democratic Party at a fundraiser Saturday. Crist spoke just days before he is set to make a big announcement — possibly declaring for the 2022 Governor’s race — and hours after Republicans wrapped up this year’s Legislative Session by handing DeSantis a string of conservative victories. Speakers at the seventh annual Spring Fling fundraiser — an in-person and virtual event hosted by the Hillsborough County Democratic Party at The Sail Plaza, an outdoor venue — pointed toward the county party’s success electing Democrats across public office, including in several legislature seats.
“Lawsuit seeks to force DeSantis to set election to fill Alcee Hastings seat” via Antonio Fins and Wendy Rhodes of The Palm Beach Post — Claiming DeSantis’ plan is to “obfuscate, delay and deny,” a congressional aspirant filed a lawsuit Friday to force the governor to set a date to fill the vacancy left by the April 6 death of U.S. Rep. Hastings. The lawsuit was filed in federal court in West Palm Beach by Elvin Dowling, who is in a crowded field of Democrats and Republicans seeking to fill the District 20 seat that straddles Palm Beach and Broward counties. “Mr. DeSantis, call the election,” said Dowling. Pressure to fill the District 20 seat has been building, especially as Democrats hold a slim majority in the U.S. House of Representatives. The last time Florida had a congressional vacancy because of death was 32 years ago, and it was filled within three months in a special election.
“Perry Thurston kicks off congressional campaign in heart of Fort Lauderdale’s Black community” via Anthony Man of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — State Sen. Thurston showed off his longtime, deep roots in Broward County on Saturday as he formally kicked off the biggest campaign of his political career — a race for Congress. “With your help, we’re going to move into a new era, a new era that’s going to lead to Broward County being that beacon shining across the nation, saying that it is a new day, a new day in Congress and a new day in Broward County,” he said. If elected to fill the vacancy created by the April 6 death of Congressman Hastings, Thurston promised to advocate for Democratic goals in Washington, D.C.
Perry Thurston kicks off his congressional run by appealing to African Americans in Fort Lauderdale. Image via Colin Hackley.
“Democrats fear DeSantis is planning a ‘power grab’ in Broward politics” via Skyler Swisher of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — Broward County Democrats are fearful that DeSantis is planning to orchestrate a power play in local politics through a change in election law. The Legislature approved a contentious voting bill Thursday night, but one item, in particular, caught the attention of Broward County’s delegation. The legislation expands the Governor’s power to fill openings on local boards when elected officials resign to run for another office. That applies to all of Florida’s counties, but it is of particular interest to Broward because of the political dominoes falling in the scramble to fill the congressional seat that the late U.S. Rep. Hastings held.
Statewide
“DeSantis denies systemic racism exists. Critics say his state’s new voting law is a clear example.” via Summer Meza of Yahoo News — While speaking to Ingraham, DeSantis was asked about systemic racism. DeSantis’ position in the debate is obviously clear, as he called the notion of systemic racism “a bunch of horse manure.” But the timing of his comments was conspicuous, as earlier that same day, Florida’s Republican-led legislature passed new rules on voting that Black lawmakers said would make it harder for millions of voters, especially people of color, to cast ballots. DeSantis said, “of course,” he’ll sign the bill into law. “Give me a break,” DeSantis said, arguing that because “we’ve had people that have been able to succeed,” the system must be fine.
Ron DeSantis insists there is no systemic racism, but some say Florida’s new voter bill proves otherwise.
“DeSantis-Seminole gambling deal is likely to face legal pushback” via Mark Harper of The Daytona Beach News-Journal — While state lawmakers and pari-mutuel operators were praising DeSantis’ announcement late last week, lawsuits challenging the gaming compact appear inevitable, and an attorney who specializes in the industry said federal law is clear: Sports betting is not legal under the structure of the deal. Daniel Wallach, a Hallandale Beach attorney whose firm specializes in sports betting issues, said in an interview with The News-Journal this week that no other state has been approved for sports betting in the way conceived in Florida. The compact between DeSantis and the Seminole tribe allows wagers beyond the bounds of the reservations. “This part is going down, either now or later,” Wallach said.
“Florida has a new Emergency Management Director. He wants you to start preparing for hurricane season” via Caitie Switalski Muñoz of WLRN — Florida’s got a new Director of Emergency Management. Kevin Guthrie joined a Greater Hollywood Chamber of Commerce panel geared toward business owners on Friday — his first day on the job. Guthrie said he personally sits down with his insurance provider every year and encouraged business leaders that disaster preparedness starts with a conversation about insurance coverage at their home or business. “Do I have enough insurance to cover what it is that’s going on? And do I need to make some changes? You know, what’s going on with my flood insurance and so on and so forth,” he said. “It all starts with personal preparedness.”
“‘He opened opportunity.’ First Black Florida Supreme Court Judge Joseph Hatchett dies at 88” via Howard Cohen of the Miami Herald — When a young Hatchett took the Florida Bar exam in 1960, he could not stay in the Miami hotel in which the test was given because of Jim Crow regulations. Within 15 years, Hatchett would become the first African American to serve on the Florida Supreme Court. Former Florida Supreme Court Justice Hatchett died in Tallahassee on Friday, April 30, Florida Supreme Court spokesman Craig Waters said in a post Saturday morning. Hatchett was 88 and Florida’s 65th justice since statehood was granted in 1845. Hatchett was appointed to Florida’s highest court by Gov. Reubin Askew in 1975.
RIP: Joseph Hatchett was the first African American on the Florida Supreme Court, appointed by Reubin Askew in 1975.
“Benjamin Crump, ‘Black America’s attorney general’ seems to be everywhere” via The Associated Press — In less than a decade, the Florida-based attorney has become the voice for the families of Trayvon Martin, Michael Brown, Breonna Taylor and George Floyd — Black people whose deaths at the hands of police and vigilantes sparked a movement. He has won multimillion-dollar settlements in police brutality cases. He’s pushed cities to ban no-knock warrants. He has told a congressional committee that reform is needed because “it’s become painfully obvious we have two systems of justice; one for white Americans and one for Black Americans.” And he’s stood with Black farmers taking on an agribusiness giant, and families exposed to lead-contaminated water in Flint, Michigan.
Corona Florida
“Florida reports 3,841 new infections, 29 more fatalities” via Nelly Ontiveros of the Orlando Sentinel — Florida added 3,841 positive COVID-19 cases to bring the total to 2,242,778. With 29 more fatalities, the number of resident deaths now totals 35,268. With a population of about 21.5 million, about one in 10 people in the state have now been infected. That number is closer to one in 10 nationally and one in 51 worldwide. Florida’s positivity rate for April 25 to May 1 was 6.5%, lower than last week’s 7%. With 700 non-Florida resident deaths, including 2 new reported Sunday, the state’s combined total stands at 35,968. Each report includes deaths from several previous days, as it can take weeks and sometimes several months for reports to appear.
“COVID-19’s grip on Florida is loosening, numbers show” via Clayton Freeman of the Florida Times-Union — Florida showed continued signs of progress in the fight against the coronavirus pandemic as April turned into May, with vaccinations continuing and the pace of new COVID-19 cases slowing. So far, the Florida Department of Health has recorded 8.8 million residents vaccinated against COVID-19, of which more than 6.2 million have completed their vaccine series — either a single dose of the Johnson & Johnson vaccine or both doses of the two-dose Pfizer or Moderna version. Though vaccinations are continuing, their pace has slowed despite the Centers for Disease Control’s reinstatement of the Johnson & Johnson vaccine at the end of last week.
“Mass COVID-19 vaccine sites are closing. Demand is dropping. What does that mean for herd immunity?” via Kate Santich and Ryan Gillespie of the Orlando Sentinel — Three weeks ago, Janelle Dunn was counting down the hours to the arrival of the COVID-19 vaccines that her nonprofit health clinic had been pleading for since January. Now she’s struggling to literally give them away. “Demand is extremely low,” said Dunn, CEO of Sanford-based True Health, a community health center with seven Central Florida locations. “And for Johnson & Johnson, it’s basically nonexistent. I think the [vaccine’s] pause really stifled people’s desire to get it.” It has been much the same throughout Central Florida in recent days — and not only for the relaunched Johnson & Johnson vaccine, halted for 11 days over reports of rare blood clots.
COVID-19 vaccine sites are closing due to a lack of demand.
“Vaccinated Floridians don’t need to wear masks, state health advisory says” via Josh Fiallo of the Tampa Bay Times — Fully vaccinated Floridians no longer need to wear masks in public, according to a new statewide health advisory issued on Thursday. Florida Surgeon General Dr. Scott Rivkees announced the change in a public health advisory Thursday. The order states that vaccinated Floridians, who have received all necessary immunizations, no longer need to avoid social and recreational gatherings except in “limited circumstances.” The order also said some people who aren’t Florida residents but live in the state are now eligible to receive a COVID-19 vaccine. It opens the door for vaccination sites to administer COVID-19 vaccines to non-Florida residents who provide “goods and services” in the state.
“New Florida, CDC mask tips overlap but aren’t identical. Who should you look to?” via Jack Evans of the Tampa Bay Times — Federal and state agencies released new guidance on mask-wearing this week, and they broadly have the same message in common: With vaccination rates climbing, people can — if they desire — relax their usage of face coverings. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention released new guidelines first on Tuesday, citing the full or partial vaccination of more than half U.S. adults and declines in COVID-19 cases, hospitalizations and deaths. Then, Thursday night, Rivkees issued a public health advisory that de-emphasized masks in almost all public settings for vaccinated people. But differences in the announcements leave Floridians to puzzle out when they should wear masks and when they can go without.
“About 800,000 Florida seniors still aren’t vaccinated” via Bailey LeFever of the Tampa Bay Times — The start of Florida’s vaccine rollout was rocky, but seniors now can walk into their local Walgreens or Publix and get a shot or book an appointment for one. The state also had vaccinated 20,800 homebound residents as of Wednesday, many of them seniors. According to the Florida Department of Health, about 81% of Floridians 65 and older — about 3.6 million people — had received at least one dose of the vaccine by Wednesday. More than 3 million seniors were fully vaccinated. Local advocates and officials blame barriers to access and vaccine hesitancy for the less-than-full vaccination rate among Florida seniors.
“DeSantis to act on COVID-19 ‘passport’ ban” via the News Service of Florida — Gov. DeSantis on Friday formally received a bill from the Legislature that would make permanent a ban on COVID-19 vaccine “passports” and grant him the power to override local orders during health crises. The measure (SB 2006), approved by the Legislature on Thursday, would also require local emergency orders to be narrowly tailored and extended in seven-day increments for a maximum duration of 42 days. Currently, such orders can be issued initially for seven days and extended indefinitely in seven-day increments. The bill would give the Governor power to override local orders if they are determined to “unnecessarily restrict individual rights or liberties.”
“CDR Health and Coastal Cloud tout 2 million COVID-19 vaccines administered statewide” via Kelly Hayes of Florida Politics — CDR Health has announced the administration of 2 million COVID-19 vaccines across the state through its vaccination data management system, CDR HealthPro. In partnership with Coastal Cloud, CDR Health has supported the Florida Department of Health and FEMA in 53 counties across the state since the start of the pandemic. “We are thrilled to have reached this incredible milestone, having spent the first 90 days ramping up our capacity to vaccinate Floridians before we reached our first one million doses,” Tina Vidal-Duart, CDR Health’s CEO, said in a statement. The venture between CDR Health and Coastal Cloud has been used at FEMA sites, state-operated sites, and vaccine locations run by county or regional officials.
Corona local
“How a Miami school became a beacon for anti-vaxxers” via Patricia Mazzei of The New York Times — A fifth-grade math and science teacher peddled a bogus conspiracy theory on Wednesday to students at Centner Academy, a private school in Miami, warning them that they should not hug parents who had been vaccinated against the coronavirus for more than five seconds because they might be exposed to harmful vaccine shedding. “Hola Mami,” one student wrote in an email to her parents from school, saying that the teacher was “telling us to stay away from you guys.” Nearly a week before, the school had threatened teachers’ employment if they got a coronavirus vaccine before the end of the school year.
Miami’s Center Academy is ground zero for Florida anti-vaxxers.
“Broward schools will begin on-campus COVID-19 vaccinations Tuesday with eight-day tour” via Wells Dusenbury and Scott Travis of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — Broward County students will soon have the opportunity to get vaccinated without leaving campus. Beginning on Tuesday, the Broward County School District will offer the COVID-19 vaccine at six schools, with all of the county schools visited over an eight-day span from Tuesday through May 13. All students 16 and older are eligible to receive the vaccine, which will be administered by staff members from the state department of health in Broward County. The shots will be provided on a walk-up basis, so no appointments are necessary. Students under 18 must be accompanied by a parent to receive the Pfizer vaccine. Family members and school faculty will also be eligible to receive the vaccine.
“Palm Beach County eases COVID-19 mask mandate” via Chris Persaud of the Palm Beach Post — Palm Beach County updated its mask mandate Friday to reflect updated federal guidelines saying fully vaccinated people need not wear masks outdoors except in crowds. The order now exempts vaccinated people from having to wear a mask when outdoors “except in certain crowded settings and venues where there is a decreased ability to maintain physical distance.” The county’s move came a day after Florida dropped measures criticized for hindering undocumented people’s ability to get coronavirus vaccinations. Vaccine-seekers no longer have to prove they live in Florida to get shots after Rivkees on Thursday eliminated that requirement, which he imposed on Jan. 21 at DeSantis‘ behest.
“Vaccinations delivered to you! Health officials bring COVID-19 vaccine to workplaces” via Tom McLaughlin of the Northwest Florida Daily News — If Okaloosa County residents won’t go to the Department of Health to get vaccinated against COVID-19, the Department of Health will come to them. Agency officials announced this week that they are partnering with Health Hero Florida to provide vaccinations at individual worksites. Okaloosa County trails most of the nation in the percentage of people vaccinated for COVID-19 in almost every age category. One year later, Okaloosa tops 19,200 COVID-19 cases; CDC advises people to continue precautions. The initiative, which will be implemented across the state, was scheduled to kick off in Okaloosa County on Friday morning. The kickoff event had to be postponed. However, businesses can still begin scheduling vaccination visits immediately.
Corona nation
“White House is split over how to vaccinate the world” via Dan Diamond and Jeff Stein of The Washington Post — A high-stakes fight over drug companies’ response to the coronavirus pandemic has split the Biden administration, with activists and progressives urging the White House to back an international petition to waive the companies’ patents and some senior officials privately signaling they’re open to the idea. The debate has reignited decades-old tensions in global health, pitting such influential figures as Pope Francis, who backs the patent-waiver proposal, against philanthropist Bill Gates, who’s opposed. It has also challenged U.S. officials who have prioritized this nation’s coronavirus response but know that the virus’s continued spread and mutation overseas will eventually pose risks to Americans.
Pope Francis has inserted himself in the vaccine patent-waiver fight. Image via AP.
“TSA extends mask requirement for planes, buses and trains through mid-September” via Leslie Josephs of CNBC — Traveling this summer? Don’t forget your mask. On Friday, the Transportation Security Administration (TSA) extended a federal requirement that travelers on buses, trains, commercial flights, and at airports wear face masks. The requirement was set to expire on May 11 and will now be in effect through Sept. 13. The agency started requiring that people over the age of 2 wear masks during flights, on buses, trains and public transportation in February following an order from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. There are exemptions for some disabilities, the TSA said. Fines for refusing to follow the rules start at $250 and go up to $1,500 for repeated violations.
Corona economics
“How the U.S. won the economic recovery” via Dylan Matthews of Vox — For millions of Americans, the pandemic has been a nightmare. But many have also found that the country’s safety net actually caught them. In March 2020, Congress passed and President Donald Trump signed into law the CARES Act, which sent out no-strings-attached checks to the vast majority of Americans for the first time. The bill also dramatically increased the generosity of unemployment insurance, making many workers whole and, for some months, leaving most workers (including Holloway) with more money than they would have earned at their employer. It paused evictions and created a new near-universal child tax credit reaching the poorest families with children. Then lawmakers did it again in Dec. 2020.
Economic moves helped the U.S. succeed in the pandemic recovery.
“Pandemic Inspector General warns of oversight breakdown” via Alan Rappeport of The New York Times — A breakdown in the oversight of trillions of dollars of economic relief money spilled into public view on Friday night when the Treasury Department’s special inspector general for pandemic recovery said in a report that his powers to scrutinize funds had been curtailed this week after a decision by the Justice Department’s Office of Legal Counsel. The inspector general, Brian D. Miller, said in his quarterly report to Congress that he had been engaged in a monthslong dispute with another inspector general in the Treasury Department over who had access to information about and oversight of the Payroll Support Program and the Coronavirus Relief Fund.
More corona
“Optimism grows that cruising will return this summer at Port Canaveral, other U.S. ports” via Morgan Hines and Dave Berman of Florida Today — Cruising could restart in midsummer in American waters, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said late Wednesday in a letter to the cruise industry that USA Today obtained. That would be a long-awaited boost for Port Canaveral and the Space Coast tourism industry as a whole. “We acknowledge that cruising will never be a zero-risk activity and that the goal of the (conditional sailing order’s) phased approach is to resume passenger operations in a way that mitigates the risk of COVID-19 transmission onboard cruise ships and across port communities,” Aimee Treffiletti, head of the Maritime Unit for CDC’s COVID-19 response within its Global Mitigation Task Force for COVID-19, said in the letter.
Presidential
Choose your news …
“With 100 days behind him, Joe Biden’s challenges mount and expectations rise as COVID-19 concerns ease” via Joey Garrison of USA TODAY — From the moment he took office, Biden made combating a raging pandemic the central focus of his presidency, deploying a wartime effort to distribute vaccines and laying out attainablegoals to assure the public of progress. More than 100 days later, other challenges have moved to the forefront. Eased concerns in the USA about the pandemic have led to heightened demands from key constituencies — particularly among liberals — for major action on gun control, policing changes to curb racial discrimination, overhauling Trump’s hard-line immigration policies and more. Biden is pushing the most dramatic expansion of the federal government’s social safety net in decades.
… or …
“Country optimistic after Biden’s 1st 100 days” via Kendall Karson of ABC News — President Biden completes his first hundred days in office with a country that is more optimistic about the coming year, according to a new ABC News/Ipsos poll. Nearly two-thirds of Americans (64%) are optimistic about the country’s direction in the poll, which Ipsos conducted in partnership with ABC News using Ipsos’ KnowledgePanel. According to previous ABC News/Washington Post polls, the last time the country came close to that level of optimism about the coming year was in Dec. 2006, when 61% said they were optimistic about where the country was headed, according to previous ABC News/Washington Post polls. Shortly before the 2016 election catapulted Trump to the Oval Office, only 42% of Americans were optimistic about the future.
How’s Joe Biden doing? Depends on who you ask. Image via Getty/Pool.
“Stranded on Donald Trump Island, the GOP lets Biden play the long game” via E.J. Dionne Jr. of The Washington Post — Political realignments don’t happen easily. Bill Clinton and George W. Bush, gifted politicians in their different ways, plausibly hoped they could create coalitions that would outlast them. The achievement eluded both. Trump never had a popular majority behind him, but he was the Great Disrupter. By shattering old assumptions, he clarified the battlefield for the future. Trump sped up two trends that began gathering steam in the 1990s: the steady shift of well-educated and professional voters toward the Democratic Party, and the move of White, working-class voters to the GOP. Democrats hold the initiative, and not just because they control the presidency and narrow congressional majorities.
“Biden terminating border wall construction contracts” via Nick Niedzwaidek of POLITICO — Biden is canceling further construction of the wall along the U.S. and Mexico border, the Department of Defense announced Friday. “DoD has begun taking all necessary actions to cancel border barrier projects and to coordinate with interagency partners,” Pentagon spokesperson Jamal Brown said in a statement. In one of his first acts in office, Biden halted progress on the border wall, a signature policy of Trump, by freezing money for border wall construction projects and terminating Trump’s national emergency declaration along the border. Friday’s action is another step toward ensuring those projects do not move forward and free up that money to go to other construction projects within the military’s purview.
“Biden stocks his White House with Ivy Leaguers” via Daniel Lippman of POLITICO — Biden, a proud graduate of the University of Delaware and Syracuse Law School who has bragged about going to a “state school,” has stocked his top White House staff with nearly twice as many Ivy League graduates as the first iteration of the Trump White House, according to a POLITICO analysis. Forty-one percent of senior- or midlevel Biden White House staffers — or 82 people out of 201 aides analyzed — have Ivy League degrees. By contrast, only 21% of the comparable White House staff had such credentials under Trump, a graduate of the University of Pennsylvania’s prestigious Wharton School who boasted about his academic pedigree and often looked for Ivy Leaguers when hiring Cabinet officials.
Epilogue: Trump
“For Republicans, fealty to Trump’s election falsehood becomes defining loyalty test” via Ashley Parker and Marianna Sotomayor of The Washington Post — Nearly six months after Trump lost to Biden, rejection of the 2020 election results has increasingly become an unofficial litmus test for acceptance in the Republican Party. In January, 147 GOP lawmakers voted in support of objections to the election results, and since then, Republicans from Congress to statehouses to local party organizations have fervently embraced the falsehood. In Washington, normally chatty senators scramble to skirt the question, and internal feuding over who is to blame for the Jan. 6 insurrection has riven the House Republican leadership, with tensions between House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy and Rep. Liz Cheney, the No. 3 House Republican, spilling into public view.
Loyalty to Donald Trump’s ‘big lie’ is a litmus test for the GOP. Image via Washington Post.
“Did Trump’s actions as President cost Florida a seat in Congress and an electoral vote?” via Anthony Man of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — The hundreds of people who streamed into Florida every day for a decade brought with them, along with traffic and everything else, an increase in the state’s political clout — greater representation in Congress and in electoral votes that decide the presidency. But not as big an increase as expected. When official numbers came out from the Census Bureau on Monday, Florida was awarded one more congressional district, for a total of 28, and one more electoral vote for 30. For years, Democrats, Republicans and independent analysts were practically certain that Florida is in line for two more of each.
“Latino Republican support for Trump is still going strong in Florida” via Carmen Sesin of NBC News — Three months into Biden’s presidency, enthusiasm for his predecessor is still going strong among Latino Republicans in Florida. The South Florida-based Patriotas con Trump, or Patriots with Trump, has held multiple rallies outside Mar-a-Lago, members send messages all day in their WhatsApp group, and a smaller group of 10 meet regularly to brainstorm ways to recruit more members — and help get Republicans elected in 2022. They’re also looking ahead to 2024. “We are Republican, but what we really like is what Trump promotes,” Laureano Chileuitt, the group’s leader, said. A physician, Chileuitt practiced neurosurgery in his native Colombia until he came to the U.S. in 2001.
First in Sunburn — New Lincoln Project ad taunts Trump for ‘getting played’ by GOP ‘swamp’ creatures — The group is continuing its effort to prod Trump post-presidency, releasing a new ad goading Trump into a 2024 presidential run. The new ad, titled “Swamp Thing,” runs just over one minute long and highlights one of Trump’s major promises during his one-term presidency. “We are going to drain the swamp,” the ad begins, running a quote oft-repeated from Trump beginning with his 2016 campaign. But the video then transitions into mocking Trump, arguing some insufficiently supportive members of the GOP have regained control in Washington, D.C. “The swamp won, Donald. Mitch McConnell’s Washington consultants are making big money using your name. We don’t know if Mitch gets a cut, but what do you think, Donald?” the narrator asks.
“Elections Commission rules Wisconsin’s presidential results were properly certified for Biden” via Patrick Marley of the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel — The state Elections Commission determined Friday that Gov. Tony Evers and the Commission’s director acted properly last year when they finalized results showing Biden won the presidential election in Wisconsin. The pair of decisions rejected complaints brought by a Republican commissioner who maintained the state’s tally was improperly certified. At least one Republican on the commission sided with the commission’s three Democrats in finding the election results were handled properly.
“Rudy Giuliani search warrant resolved Justice Department dispute” via Eric Tucker and Michael Balsamo of The Associated Press — The question of whether to serve a search warrant for Giuliani’s records simmered inside the Justice Department in the waning months of the Trump administration, dividing officials in New York and Washington and remaining unresolved for a new leadership team to sort out. The new crowd dramatically resolved it this week. On Wednesday, federal agents raided the home and office of Trump’s personal attorney, collecting phones and computers as part of their probe into whether he broke U.S. lobbying laws by failing to register as a foreign agent related to his work.
Crisis
“The miracle and tragedy of the 2020 U.S. election” via Nathaniel Persily and Charles Stewart III of the Journal of Democracy — The 2020 U.S. election was both a miracle and a tragedy. It was a miracle in that election administrators, facing unprecedented challenges from a pandemic, were able to pull off a safe, secure, and professional election in which a record number of Americans turned out to vote. It was also a tragedy, though, because, despite these heroic efforts, lies about vote fraud and the performance of the system have cemented a perception among tens of millions of Americans that the election was “rigged.” This manufactured distrust has deeply damaged our democracy; the path to repairing it is not at all clear. The Capitol Insurrection of 6 January 2021 will forever constitute the image of the 2020 election.
“Capitol Police official who said to watch for ‘anti-Trump’ forces on Jan. 6 was deputy chief” via Kyle Cheney of POLITICO — The Capitol Police’s highest-ranking commander on the ground during the Jan. 6 insurrection, Eric Waldow, is the official who urged officers to watch out for anti-Trump protesters in the massive pro-Trump crowd, according to congressional and Capitol Police sources. That directive, delivered on the morning of Jan. 6 via a Capitol Police radio transmission, has alarmed lawmakers who were already worried that the leadership of the Capitol Police had failed to appreciate the gravity of the threat pro-Trump extremists posed to Congress that day. Waldow, a deputy chief and the sixth-ranking official in the Capitol Police Department, was a Jan. 6 “incident commander,” meaning he was responsible for directing officers’ movements amid the chaos.
We were warned this would happen.
“Newsmax apologizes to Dominion employee for falsely alleging he manipulated votes against Trump” via Amy B. Wang of The Washington Post — The conservative news network Newsmax has apologized to an employee of Dominion Voting Systems for baselessly alleging he had rigged the company’s voting machines and vote counts against Trump in the 2020 presidential election. In a statement Friday, Newsmax said it wanted to “clarify” its coverage of Eric Coomer, the director of product strategy and security at Dominion, who filed a defamation lawsuit against the right-wing network in December. After the election, misinformation about Coomer’s supposed role in manipulating the vote proliferated on right-wing sites, including Newsmax. Coomer said he had been forced into hiding after receiving death threats from Trump supporters, who believed Trump’s false assertion that the election had been stolen from him.
There’s a Sabatini in every Legislature — “GOP lawmaker charged with ‘knowingly’ letting rioters breach the Oregon Capitol” via Lateshia Beachum of The Washington Post — As far-right demonstrators gathered outside the Oregon Capitol in December in the hope of ending coronavirus restrictions, state Rep. Mike Nearman appeared to deliberately allow entry to two men trying to breach the building as he was leaving. Without hesitation, two rioters on Dec. 21 rushed inside the state Capitol in Salem, Oregon, held doors open, and signaled for others to come in before police arrived to cut off the security breach, according to surveillance video obtained by the Oregonian and Oregon Public Broadcasting. Prosecutors say Nearman “unlawfully and knowingly” opened the door for the far-right group “with intent to obtain a benefit or to harm another.”
“From memes to race war: How extremists use popular culture to lure recruits” via Marc Fisher of The Washington Post — The first images of “The Last Battle” seem designed to rile people on the conservative side of the culture wars: public nudity, strippers, children dressed in drag, symbols of a society supposedly in a moral free fall. Then the online video pivots to more extreme material: quick-cut scenes of attacks on White people, bogus allegations of election fraud, and a parade of pictures purporting to show “the Jewish Communist takeover.” The six-minute video, distributed on gaming platforms and social media, rapidly reveals itself as a visually arresting propaganda piece, a recruiting tool for far-right extremists that draws viewers in with “They’re coming for your guns” and “They’re opening your borders.”
D.C. matters
Magic 8-ball says “Yes” — “Will DeSantis, Marco Rubio and Rick Scott torch each other to vault from Florida to the White House?” via Douglas Mackinnon of The Hill — No matter how you slice it, only one candidate can survive the potential “Steel Cage” political death-match brewing in Florida between three Republicans: Gov. DeSantis and Sens. Rubio and Scott. It’s a highly anticipated WWE-like event of epic proportions that assumes current Florida resident Trump will not run for President in 2024. Of course, one never truly knows when it comes to Trump. There was the bizarre recent news report by Business Insider in which a Trump “adviser” declared that the former President “has lost 15 pounds since he left the White House.” One “veteran Republican strategist” told the publication: “I think there’s an extra 10% to 15% chance he runs if he lost 20 pounds.”
A steel cage match is brewing between Florida Republicans looking toward the White House.
“Rubio urges federal action for problems at two Jacksonville apartment complexes” via David Bauerlein of the Florida Times-Union — Sen. Rubio called on the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development to correct problems at two Jacksonville apartment complexes where he said mold, pests and “chronic disrepair” create unacceptable living conditions for residents. Rubio said his staff went to Eastside Terrace Apartments on April 21 and Eastside Gardens Apartments on April 22. “During these visits, my staff met with tenants of both properties, where they found systemic evidence of black mold, pest infestations, crumbling staircases, and a general state of chronic disrepair,” Rubio wrote in his letter to HUD Secretary Marcia Fudge. Rubio’s letter, which his office released Friday, also cites reports by WJXT-TV Channel 4 news about deplorable conditions at the apartments.
“Will GOP stand in Florida’s way?” via Antonio Fins, Wendy Rhodes and John Kennedy of the Palm Beach Post — Infrastructure dollars could help dredge Florida ports, complete meaningful pieces of Everglades restoration, repair worn asphalt on highways and even assist with the elder-care conundrum facing Florida families and their aging loved ones. That is if the White House and Capitol Hill Democrats can convince Republicans to get on board — which politically seems a herculean task. “Nothing’s been approved yet, so I wouldn’t count my chickens before they’ve broken out of their eggs,” said Mark Hamrick, senior economic analyst at Bankrate.com. “But even if Biden doesn’t get everything enacted that he has put out there, he is putting down markers to say these are the programs that we believe are important, and now we are on record advocating for them.”
“Matt Gaetz says he’s not going anywhere. Florida Republicans aren’t saying anything.” via Steve Contorno of the Tampa Bay Times — Gaetz hasn’t missed a floor vote in Congress since late March, when The New York Times reported that federal authorities were investigating whether the Panhandle Republican had a sexual encounter with a 17-year-old girl. He remains active on his committees, where he recently plugged an environmental bill and questioned military leaders about African conflicts. Earlier this month, he introduced legislation to rename a Niceville post office. He is tweeting. He is fundraising. And despite the questions swirling around him, he has made it clear: He isn’t going anywhere. In the meantime, a hush has fallen over Tallahassee, where Gaetz spent six years as a bombastic and outspoken lawmaker.
Matt Gaetz vows he isn’t going anywhere. Image via AP.
“How the Gaetz probe grew from sex trafficking to medical pot” via The Associated Press — When Gaetz vacationed in the Bahamas in 2018, he was joined by a doctor who donated to his campaign and a former colleague in the Florida Legislature. The Republican Congressman, Dr. Jason Pirozzolo and Halsey Beshears were united in their enjoyment of politics, fancy travel and the company of beautiful women. What began as an inquiry into sex trafficking has grown into a larger review of public corruption. Pressure on the Congressman could build in the coming weeks as Joel Greenberg faces a May 15 deadline to strike a plea deal with prosecutors. If he does, Greenberg may be pressed to cooperate with federal investigators and deliver damaging information against Gaetz. None of the people on the trip to the Bahamas has been charged with a crime.
“Israel ambassador likely to be named this week, with shortlist narrowed to two” via Jacob Kornbluh of Forward — Biden has narrowed down his list of candidates for ambassador to Israel to two candidates who have strong ties to the pro-Israel community. Robert Wexler, a former congressman from Florida, is on the shortlist for one of the high-profile diplomatic posts of the administration. The other is Tom Nides, a former official in the Bill Clinton and Barack Obama administrations. In a recent interview, Wexler said the Abraham Accords, the normalization agreements signed between Israel and the United Arab Emirates and Bahrain, and the kingmaker role Knesset Member Mansur Abbas from the United Arab List is playing in Israeli politics is a “tremendous opportunity” for the Biden administration’s envoy to play to a role. “These are fundamental game-changers that will change the dynamic of Israel for generations,” he said.
Local notes
“Miami-Dade’s Mayor was ready for a contracting fight at MIA. Then she backed off” via Douglas Hanks of the Miami Herald — Two weeks after setting up a showdown over a contracting fight, Miami-Dade Mayor Daniella Levine Cava on Friday backed off an effort to reject all bids for a $33 million construction agreement at Miami International Airport and give the losing firms a fresh shot under new criteria. Levine Cava set up a high-stakes contest on April 12 when she surprised county commissioners with a memo recommending a third competition for thestalled contract, first opened to bidders in 2016 under then-mayor Carlos Giménez. This time, Levine Cava wrote, she wanted more focus on resiliency, diversity and workplace safety.
Daniella Levine Cava stands down from a major MIA contractor battle. Image via Miami-Dade County.
“Hospital fought family of brain-damaged baby for years. The girl died. The fight raged on” via Carol Marbin Miller and Daniel Chang of the Miami Herald — Lylyauhnie Williams died on Jan. 2, 2016, the day before her fourth birthday. That would be a tragedy for any family. But for Lylyauhnie and her parents, Desiree and Robert Williams, those treasures of childhood were all but lost four years earlier, on Jan. 3, 2012, the day she was born with profound brain damage. Her birth triggered years of litigation between Lylyauhnie’s parents and the hospital where the little girl was born. The end of Lylyauhnie’s life brought one last bitter realization. In the antiseptic calculus by which courts assign a monetary value to human suffering, the death of a frail, brain-damaged child often reduces the amount in damages paid by a hospital or doctor.
“Half-cent sales-tax paying for new schools and major overhauls throughout Polk County” via Kimberly C. Moore of The Lakeland Ledger — The Polk County School Board, along with district staff, have a message for voters: “Thank you for renewing the half-cent sales tax in November 2018!” Without the 15-year tax, they say the school district could not afford to build new schools, modernize old ones and do much-needed improvements on others. The initiative passed 68% to 32%. As part of the district’s plan to keep people apprised of what the tax is paying for, on Tuesday, Assistant Superintendent for Facilities and Operations Angela Usher, along with Robert Kincart, founder and president of A-C-T Environmental & Infrastructure and a member of the Sales Tax citizens oversight committee, told the School Board what they have been able to accomplish in the past two years.
“Wetlands in peril? Requests to fill swamps jump in 5 months since state took over permitting” via Chad Gillis of the Fort Myers News-Press — More than 1,000 permits to change wetlands have been submitted to a state agency since it took over Clean Water Act powers from the federal government in December. Collier County leads the state with 161 permits to dredge and fill wetlands pending with the Florida Department of Environmental Protection through April 23. Lee County is second, with 84 permits in the same period. An analysis shows that dredge-and-fill applications are coming in at a faster rate than they were when the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency had that authority, causing some to worry that more wetlands in Florida will be lost sooner. The permit data is a good measure of how wetlands are faring since the switch.
“Pahokee’s toxic blue-green algae bloom offers unique vacuum cleanup effort” via Kimberly Miller of the Palm Beach Post — In the beginning, septic tank suckers arrived to vacuum up Pahokee Marina’s cakes of toxic algae in slow tugs like sipping hot fudge through a straw. It’s a crude method to rid water of cyanobacteria blooms — a catchall mechanism that shipped toxin-laced liquid and solids together to a plot of unused earth deep in the Everglades Agricultural Area after West Palm Beach’s wastewater treatment plant could take no more. In the days that followed the blue-green algae outbreak in Pahokee, the tenacity of a Loxahatchee fish farmer, the brawn of a dredging company, the tech of a slurry purification firm, and the might of the largest water management district in Florida would team to try to tackle the poisonous bloom.
Top opinion
“How did the pandemic begin? It’s time for a new WHO investigation.” via The Washington Post editorial board — Almost nothing is known about how the pandemic began, and the first attempt to discover the origins went nowhere. In the next few weeks, the WHO and member nations must rally anew to launch a credible investigation into how and where the pandemic got started. No one should underestimate the difficulty; it might take years. But understanding the origins of this pandemic will help immensely in preparing for another one. The recent joint WHO-China investigation found the most likely source of the coronavirus was a direct or indirect zoonotic spillover to humans.
Opinions
“Heaven help us if court upholds DeSantis’ assault on free speech in Florida” via the Miami Herald editorial board — Of all the bills rammed through by the Florida Legislature this Session — sometimes revived late at night and then quickly passed by GOP lawmakers — the most egregious remains House Bill 1. It’s Gov. DeSantis’ baby, and he has already signed it into law. The Session is about to end, but HB 1 set the stage for this year’s legislative theme: Strip power from local governments, and trample Floridians’ constitutional rights underfoot. Civil rights attorneys from a nonprofit called the Lawyers Matter Task Force, and additional plaintiffs, have already filed a lawsuit challenging the Governor’s new law, concocted to have a chilling effect on those who take to the streets to protest.
“If DeSantis truly believes in law and order, he’ll sign Florida’s hard-won police-reform bill” via the Miami Herald editorial board — Halfway through Florida’s 60-day Legislative Session, this editorial board declared lawmakers were pushing an anti-people agenda. We’re not here to retract that statement. Lawmakers did, after all, wrap up their work on Friday after passing an unnecessary “anti-riot” bill that will have a chilling effect on people’s right to protest; reversing the will of Key West voters who limited cruises at the city’s port; and banning transgender athletes from women’s sports. But a late-Session police-reform package turned out to be this Session’s biggest, and most encouraging, surprise. Remarkably, a Legislature that has taken a sharp turn to the ideological right passed anything that will increase police accountability.
“Florida’s transgender athletes’ bill, reprehensible and unnecessary, now await DeSantis’ signature” via Doug Fernandes of the Sarasota Herald-Tribune — Those wanting transparency from their Florida elected officials struck the mother lode on Wednesday night. The transparency wasn’t in the way House and Senate Republicans in the Florida Legislature rammed home a ban on transgender females from competing in girls’ and women’s sports. When you’re invited to a party, you confidently enter through the front door, in view of everyone else. But when you’re not, you crash it by slithering through a back entrance. That’s the tactic Republican lawmakers used to approve a bill before Friday’s end of the Legislative Session, fast-tracking it to the desk of DeSantis. Earlier in the Session, a stand-alone Senate transgender bill, SB 2012, seemed dead when the Senate failed to advance it to the chamber’s floor.
“A close call this time, but lawmakers have a bad attitude on openness” via Bill Cotterell of the Tallahassee Democrat — We in the news media tend to treat every proposed exemption from Florida’s open-meetings and public-records laws with a skepticism bordering on hostility, even contempt. So it was good to see the failure of a bill that would have allowed executive search committees to hide the names of people applying for the presidency of state colleges and universities. The House passed the exemption by 101-16 vote, but it failed 25-14 in the Senate — just one vote short of the two-thirds majority it needed. At least 14 new exemptions were enacted in the past Session, and eight old ones were renewed. Maybe some were worse than others, but the won-loss bottom line shows what legislators think of open government.
“Emerging from lockdown: First indoor dining brings memories — of dogs” via Gary Yordon of the Tallahassee Democrat — I attended the ribbon-cutting for Leon County’s first dog park in 1998. It was a glorious day. An endless parade of pooches, turned loose to run freely to their heart’s content. All those years forced to have their outdoor adventures be tethered to a human. But all that changed when the gate swung open at Tom Brown Park. It was clear the ceremonial trappings of speeches and a cut ribbon were nothing more than teasing to the pack of hounds. Tugging at their bonds and ready to explode, the whining and barking grew louder. They could see the open space, and they knew it was theirs.
On today’s Sunrise
The Regular Legislative Session is over, but lawmakers will be back in The Capitol in a couple of weeks for a Special Session on gambling. And the Seminole Tribe of Florida launched a new PR campaign to try to build support for the new gaming Compact between the Tribe and Florida.
Also, on today’s Sunrise:
— There are going to be some substantial changes in the Session’s aftermath. It’s going to be harder to vote by mail because the Governor will sign SB 90 … what critics call the “voter suppression” bill.
— DeSantis got what he wanted this year: the voting bill, the crackdown on protesters, and a bill to punish social media for de-platforming Trump. To Democrats like Rep. Bobby DuBose, this is the session where Florida issues took a back seat while Republicans focused on national politics.
— One of the more despicable things the Legislature did this year was to abolish the Lawton Chiles Endowment fund. We can only wonder what the late Governor would have to say about that slap in the face.
— Today on Sunrise, an audio tribute to the man we called Walkin’ Lawton … in his own words.
— And finally, a Florida Man is facing a $30,000 fine for an overgrown lawn.
What David Johnson is reading — “The strange bipartisan appeal of Ted Lasso” via Joanna Weiss of POLITICO — Massachusetts Gov. Charlie Baker delivered his annual State of the Commonwealth address at a supremely difficult moment. It was late January; the state was emerging from a surge in COVID-19 cases; the vaccine rollout was hitting early stumbles; the populace was tense. Alone in his office, barred from the usual pomp and circumstance, Baker spoke for 20 minutes about challenges and progress, safety and statistics. Then he wrapped it up by talking about television. Or, rather, one television show, Apple TV+’s “Ted Lasso.” The half-hour sports comedy, whose second season is coming in July, has become both a word-of-mouth hit and a quirky metaphor for the political world.
Ted Lasso is a bipartisan hit.
“Disney: The people have spoken on PeopleMover” via Dewayne Bevil of the Orlando Sentinel — I like the PeopleMover. Honest. But after the Magic Kingdom ride returned to service after a long absence at Walt Disney World last weekend, I see that a lot of people love them some PeopleMover. They love it with a white-hot, White Castle level of intensity. The Tomorrowland Transit Authority PeopleMover is an elevated tram ride, propelled magnetically, that glides in and out of attractions, most notably Space Mountain. I mean, I’ll get back on the ride next time I’m at the theme park … if the line is manageable. (I’ve seen waits passing the 45-minute mark since the reopening). But the attraction to this slow-moving attraction must go beyond absence, making hearts grow fonder.
Happy birthday
Belated best wishes to Adam Giery of The Strategos Group, as well as Keaton Alexander, Justin Caporale, John Finotti of Tucker/Hall, and Steve Seibert. Celebrating today is Donovan Brown, as well as Samantha Ferrin of Greenberg Traurig, William Lewis, former Rep. Ritch Workman, and the great Tom Scherberger.
___
Sunburn is authored and assembled by Peter Schorsch, Phil Ammann, Renzo Downey and Drew Wilson.
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Good morning. Lots of exciting things happening in the Brew universe this week, starting with a referral contest that’ll go toward a very worthy cause. See the details below.
Markets: It’s the first trading day in May, and if stocks continue to do what they’ve been doing all year…your 401(k) will be happy. Our stock spotlight is Apple, only because it’s been all over the news recently.
Economy: On Meet the Press, Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen played down the threat of inflation due to the Biden administration’s Hulk-level spending plans. “I don’t believe that inflation will be an issue, but if it becomes an issue, we have tools to address it.”
There’s the “stocks only go up” crowd…and then there’s Berkshire Hathaway CEO Warren Buffett and his longtime business partner Charlie Munger. The two investing icons, 90 and 97 years old respectively, pushed back on some of the hottest trends in investing during the company’s annual shareholder meeting Saturday.
A few hot takes…
Bitcoin: “Of course I hate the bitcoin success,” Munger said, citing the cryptocurrency’s use for criminal enterprises. “I think I should say modestly that the whole damn development is disgusting and contrary to the interests of civilization.”
Robinhood: Buffett said Robinhood’s platform for retail investors was “taking advantage of the gambling instincts of society, and it isn’t admirable. It creates its own reality for a while, and nobody tells you when the clock is going to strike 12 and it all turns to pumpkins and mice.”
SPACs: “It’s a killer,” Buffett said about the rise of special purpose acquisition companies. Buffett said SPACs have made it even harder for Berkshire to strike a deal at an attractive price. “Frankly we’re not competitive with that. It won’t go on forever.”
Dogecoin: Jk, no one asked about dogecoin, but they should have.
What else happened at the meeting?
Buffett admitted to a few mistakes, including selling some Apple stock. Buffett called Apple an “extraordinary business,” and it still remains the company’s largest stock holding. He also addressed the healthcare venture he tried to start with JPMorgan and Amazon that folded this year. “We were fighting a tapeworm in the American economy and the tapeworm won,” Buffett said.
As for his decision to pull out of the airline sector early in the pandemic, Buffett is perfectly comfortable with that.
Big picture
With its commitment to value investing, Berkshire Hathaway believes a “slow and steady” approach will prove the best option in the long run. But since the start of the pandemic, the S&P 500 has doubled up Berkshire Hathway’s stock gain, raising concerns that Buffett and Co. are out of touch with the new, tech-driven economy.
Does Apple have an illegal monopoly over app distribution?
Good question—a hugely consequential trial exploring just that is starting today between Epic Games and Apple.
The backstory: Last August, Fortnite maker Epic Games allowed users to pay for in-app purchases directly, violating Apple’s App Store rules. Turns out, the whole thing was an elaborate plan meant to poke the $2 trillion bear. Epic knew Apple would boot Fortnite off its App Store (which it did), and then Epic hit Apple and Google with lawsuits and unleashed a 1984-style hype video.
Epic’s argument: Because the App Store is the only way iOS users can access apps, Apple has a monopoly over app distribution and uses that power to unfairly extract $$$ from developers through fees.
Apple’s argument: Our phone, our rules. Don’t like ’em? You can always go to Google’s Android, or play Fortnite on PlayStation or Xbox. No monopoly here.
Looking ahead…Epic CEO Tim Sweeney, one of the all-star witnesses, will kick off testimony today.
Saturday was National Decision Day, the deadline for most high school seniors to decide where they’ll be heading to college in the fall. But before they head to campus, they’ll need to add one more thing to the packing list: Over 100 US colleges and universities will require students to be vaccinated against Covid-19.
The list of schools adopting the policy has been growing quickly among private institutions and even some public universities, including the 33 campuses in the California State University and University of California systems and Rutgers in NJ.
Can they do that? Universities, like some employers, are allowed to require immunizations. BUT, and this is a big but, because the three US vaccines were all given Emergency Use Authorization by the FDA as opposed to full approval, there’s no legal precedent on whether they can be mandated.
Bottom line: University officials want to make this a Covid-free semester. More than 660,000 cases since the start of the pandemic were linked to college campuses.
Herman Miller is throwing the doors open on their Spring Sale, the barn-burning, semi-annual affair where they price their extremely sweet home and WFH wares at 15% off and ship them to you for free.
And yes, that includes their iconic, cult-fave, ergonomic chair extraordinaire, the Aeron, in addition to their portfolio of award-winning office seating.
It’s not all about the Aeron, though: This sale is the holy grail at the end of the Great Furniture Trail. Covering classics like the Eames Lounge Chair and almost every category Herman Miller offers, you’ll be able to score top quality (and top cool) dream pieces that are sure to spruce up your home andyour home office.
Hop to, readers, cuz Herman Miller doesn’t do this often: Get 15% off and free shipping on select furniture, lighting, and accessories when you click this lil’ blue link.
Stat: At LL Bean, pants with buttons and zippers are now outselling pants with drawstrings or elastic waistbands, per the WSJ. You really can find economic indicators everywhere…
Quote: “It’s as if there’s an invisible UFO parked in our skies, sucking the air out of our lungs. An air raid of a kind we’ve never known.”
Author Arundhati Roy wrote hauntingly about India’s Covid-19 crisis in the Guardian.
Read: On a lighter note, the Pokémon card market is nuts right now. (Motherboard)
Economic data: The April jobs report will drop on Friday. The most bullish economists think the US could have added upwards of 1 million new jobs last month.
Earnings: There’s an earnings report for everyone this week, whether you’re interested in vaccines (Moderna, Pfizer, CVS), travel (Hilton, Booking Holdings, Expedia, Uber), or pandemic-boosted businesses (Etsy, PayPal, Roku, Square, Peloton).
Holidays: There are an unusual amount of holidays this week, some serious and some…less so. Today is World Press Freedom Day, Wednesday is Cinco de Mayo, Mother’s Day is next Sunday, and May the Fourth, aka Star Wars Day, is on Tuesday.
Everything else:
Foreign ministers from G7 countries will meet this week. At the top of the agenda are climate finance and girls’ education.
The second leg of soccer’s Champions League semifinals are on Tues. and Wed.
Elon Musk is hosting SNL Saturday night. Got any sketch ideas?
WHAT ELSE IS BREWING
Verizon is close to selling Yahoo and AOL to private equity firm Apollo Global Management.
The four astronauts on SpaceX’s Crew-1 mission successfully splashed down to Earth early Sunday morning.
Baidu became the first company to roll out a commercial driverless taxi service in China.
The Manchester United vs. Liverpool Premier League match was postponed after some supporters broke into Man U’s stadium protesting the Glazer family’s ownership of the club.
BREW’S BETS
When it comes to sources we trust, the masterminds at Harvard are certainly up there… so when they say that at least 20% of your portfolio should be invested in a mix of alternative assets, we’re inclined to listen. Meet Masterworks, your passport to the contemporary art market, where prices crushed S&P returns by 174% from 1995–2020. The Brew Crew can skip their 20,000 person waitlist before May 5th.*
Define “sustainability”: Harder than it seems, right? In an event this week, Retail Brew will unpack how retailers define sustainable practices and which sustainability methods will shape the future of retail in a post-Covid world. Register here.
While sending out MacBooks for referrals is always fun, ahead of Mother’s Day we’ve decided to put our giveaway efforts toward more pressing issues.
When you share the Brew this week, we’ll donate money to the National Diaper Bank Network, which facilitates a system of more than 200 community-based diaper banks to collect and distribute diapers to families in need.
Why did we pick this particular cause?
1 in 3 American families struggle with diaper need, and government programs like food stamps do not provide funding for diapers.
In 2014, the poorest 20% of Americans with infants and toddlers spent almost 14% of their after-tax income on diapers.
Infants can require up to 12 diapers per day, costing $70–$80 per month.
How it works: We’ll donate $1 to the National Diaper Bank Network each time you refer someone to the Brew through Sunday.
Let’s get those numbers into the tens of thousands. Start here.
[Scott is] one of just three Black Republicans in all of Congress, is the lead Republican in the Senate on police reform and was responsible for drafting the Justice Act, the GOP’s [failed] police reform bill. Meanwhile, Democrats’ bill, the more expansive George Floyd Justice in Policing Act, passed the House but was not taken up by the then-Republican Senate.
…
Scott noted that the provisions both bills have in common are the foundation for compromise legislation — federal funding incentives for departments that ban chokeholds, more grants for body cameras, federally criminalizing lynching, and creating a use-of-force database in the Justice Department in order to document and study how police officers use force.
…
The issue of qualified immunity has been a sticking point in negotiations. Qualified immunity refers to legal protections for police officers. Instead of weakening qualified immunity for individual officers, Scott has proposed allowing civil suits to be brought against departments.
All votes are anonymous. This poll closes at: 9:00 PST
YESTERDAY’S POLLDo you approve of labor unions?
Yes
54%
No
37%
Unsure
9%
346 votes, 113 comments
Context: Labor protest rallies worldwide on May Day.
BEST COMMENTS
“Yes – Labor laws in the US already underserve employees via “right to work” mandates, which are about anything other than an employees “right” to work. Unions give employees the necessary leverage when negotiating contract terms, health benefits, and workplace safety protocols, to name just a few important line items that create happy and productive workplaces.”
“No – I can see unions may have been useful decades ago, but in this age of instant social media and Glassdoor-type websites, working con…”
“Unsure – I have been a member of a union most of my life. When they first came into existence in this …”
How much influence did teachers’ unions have on CDC school reopening guidelines?
While the CDC was preparing to declare that all schools could provide in-person learning regardless of the degree of community spread of coronavirus, AFT senior director for health issues K…
Full summaries, images, and headlines for subscribers only.
Why was the return to Earth of four American astronauts particularly notable?
The astronauts of the Crew-2 mission felt the pull of Earth’s gravity for the first time in six months as their Crew Dragon spaceship tore through the atmosphere early Sunday. This was…
Full summaries, images, and headlines for subscribers only.
Don’t scroll past. Support credible news for everyone.
Why are English soccer fans protesting American ownership of their club?
The match was initially delayed by the Premier League as police worked to clear protesters off the pitch and elsewhere at Old Trafford, Manchester United’s 111…
Full summaries, images, and headlines for subscribers only.
“The premise and headline of the article below have been changed to reflect the corrected information.”
NBC – May 1, 2021 – On the story that Rudy Giuliani had received a “defensive briefing” from the FBI in 2019 that he was the target of a Russian disinformation campaign with regards to Hunter Biden’s laptop.
Biden Administration Serving Union Interests, Not Workers
With news that Hillary Clinton thinks withdrawing U.S. troops from Afghanistan is a bad idea, the Fourth Estate is caught between a rock and a hard place. On the one hand, the media wants to bolster Joe Biden’s actions, on the other, Clinton was the anointed one before her stunning 2016 defeat. The cognitive dissonance taking place among the activist media is almost Orwellian in its scope.
Former New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani claims his lawyer was told by the U.S. Attorney’s Office in Manhattan that during the 2019 impeachment trial, the FBI was tapping his and President Trump’s iCloud chats. Stay tuned on Liberty Nation for more on this story within the hour.
Keith Kellogg, the former chief of staff for the National Security Council under President Donald Trump said that Biden’s Climate Czar John Kerry repeatedly undermined the administration’s foreign policy with Iran. “He was basically countering every message we were putting out there and trying to push them into some type of negotiation,” Kellogg stated.
Biden Goes Woke, Will the Country Go Broke? – LN Radio Videocast
Something political to ponder as you enjoy your morning coffee.
Juror 52 in the Derek Chauvin trial may have just given cause for a retrial. He said, “We gotta get out there and get into these avenues, get into these rooms to try to spark some change. Jury duty is one of those things – jury duty, voting. All of those things we gotta do.” A social media post he made in August last year stated “Get your knee off our necks,” as he was pictured in a BLM shirt. This does not jibe with what he said during the jury selection process.
It’s no accident the US has the better vaccine technology and will for some time to come. But, like our other advantages over China, it won’t matter if we don’t use it.
New federal government research shows that many common factoids on retirement income adequacy are just plain wrong. And federal agencies are finally starting to recognize the problem.
The Constitution promotes consensus as an alternative to simple majoritarianism in at least four ways, two of which were hypothesized by James Madison and two by moderate nationalists at the Constitutional Convention.
“U.S. health regulators pledged again Thursday to try to ban menthol cigarettes… The FDA said it aims to propose regulations banning the flavor in the coming year and declined to speculate on when the rule would be finalized.” AP News
From the Right
The right opposes banning menthol cigarettes, arguing that the ban is arbitrary and will disproportionately impact Afrian American consumers.
“The problem with this sort of targeted ban is that it primarily appears to be a half measure. If the FDA is admitting that smoking is dangerous enough to warrant federal intervention, why would they openly endorse an idea clearly designed to primarily benefit one race over the others? Why not just ban tobacco entirely?…
“A better idea is to simply continue public education efforts regarding the dangers of smoking. Smoking rates in this country have plummeted over the past few decades, though the habit never seems to go away entirely. And enacting a ban that only affects menthol-flavored products isn’t going to accomplish much of anything as far as I can see. People with a bad nicotine addiction will just switch over to regular brands, even if they don’t enjoy them as much.” Jazz Shaw, Hot Air
“Smoking cigarettes, like all kinds of risky personal habits (skydiving, power tools, driving a car, eating red meat, etc.) is a personal choice that harms only the person making that choice. This is not true for alcohol, which no one is talking about banning. What I mean is this… If forced to make a choice between banning cigarettes or alcohol, I would easily choose alcohol because unlike alcohol, no amount of smoking will ever result in someone driving erratically, beating their wife, or losing everything they own…
“After decades and decades of public health campaigns, including a warning right on the package that says cigarettes will kill you, we all know the risks. So now it’s time to treat every American – black and white alike – as informed adults capable of making our own decisions about the risks we wish to take when it comes to our own personal idea of what ‘quality of life’ means.” John Nolte, Breitbart
“The Washington Post notes that the Biden administration is specifically targeting menthols because ‘African Americans have been disproportionately harmed’ by them — which, once you strip out the jargon, is simply another way of saying that the Biden administration is targeting menthols because African Americans disproportionately like menthols… I’ll happily admit that I didn’t have ‘ban something black people like because they like it too much’ on my Anti-Racist Bingo card…
“The legal scholar Michelle Alexander has argued to great progressive fanfare that the War on Drugs was designed deliberately as ‘a contemporary system of racial control—relegating millions to a permanent second-class status.’ If this is true, one must ask how opening up a new, explicitly African-American front in that war is going to help…
“One does not need to share Michelle Alexander’s presumptions in order to believe that we should be reducing, not increasing, the number of instances in which the citizenry comes into contact with the police.” Charles C. W. Cooke, National Review
“As is so often the case with elite efforts to restrict access to harmful but legal products, there is a heavy dose of inter-class contempt on display. Cigarette bans are unlikely to affect, be felt, or even be seen by the people trying to drive these products underground. Cigarette smoking is most prevalent among adults at or below the poverty level and among those with less than a high-school education…
“By contrast, tobacco products without flavors (which are favored by whites) and cigars (which remain popular among classes and interests that are more visible to lawmakers) are subject to no additional restrictions. Why? What could be charitably characterized as well-meaning overprotectiveness could just as easily be denounced as condescending and discriminatory favoritism.” Noah Rothman, Commentary Magazine
From the Left
The left generally supports banning menthol cigarettes, arguing that doing so would save lives and advance racial justice.
“In 2009, Congress gave the FDA authority to ban all other flavors in cigarettes, which it did in order to make these dangerous products less attractive to new smokers. But Congress stalled on menthols and asked for more study. The FDA did more research and found that menthol, which is similar to mint, is the most insidious of all flavors…
“Like candy and fruit flavorings, menthol masks the unpleasant taste of tobacco. Unlike those other flavors, however, menthol cigarettes have anesthetic properties that mask the abrasiveness of tobacco smoke and induce users to inhale more deeply, increasing their exposure to the harmful chemicals in the smoke…
“The ACLU and other civil rights groups sent a letter Monday to U.S. Health and Human Services Secretary Xavier Becerra and acting FDA Commissioner Janet Woodcock arguing against a menthol ban, claiming that it would perpetuate overpolicing in Black communities. But the FDA ban would not criminalize possession of menthol cigarettes, just remove them from the market. Local police do not enforce federal food and drug regulations.” Editorial Board, Los Angeles Times
“There were 387,000 premature deaths attributed to menthol cigarettes between 1980 and 2018, the FDA says, along with 3 million life-years lost and 10.1 million new smokers. Based on data from other countries, the agency believes a menthol ban would lead to 923,000 smokers quitting within the first 17 months of the ban. The convenience stores that rely on tobacco sales will feel the impact, but the human cost of smoking is greater than a drop in revenue at the local Wawa. We knew this decades ago, and it’s time to correct a tragic mistake.” Editorial Board, Star-Ledger
The Chair of Maryland’s Legislative Black Caucus writes, “Since the 1950s, Big Tobacco has marketed menthol-flavored products to the Black community using Black-dominated media. It has cultivated Black celebrity endorsers to hook users, deflecting criticism of their practices by making financial contributions to prominent, Black-run organizations. Today, about 90 percent of adult Black smokers choose menthol cigarettes, a rate more than double that of White smokers…
“Tobacco companies have spent billions of dollars over the past 70 years to hook our communities on flavored products, reaping billions more in profits from our addiction. If we are serious about addressing systemic racial inequalities in our state, we must put public health ahead of profit by removing all flavored tobacco products, including menthol cigarettes, from the market once and for all.” Darryl Barnes, Washington Post
“Some prominent civil rights activists have strenuously objected to menthol cigarette bans, concerned that a ban would spawn a black market for menthol-flavored tobacco products and increase overly aggressive policing in Black neighborhoods. [Al] Sharpton, who opposes a menthol ban, points to tobacco as a common theme in recent conflicts between citizens and police that have led to African American deaths…
“Detractors have noted that Sharpton’s civil rights group, the National Action Network, has held events sponsored by R.J. Reynolds, which makes Newport cigarettes…
“‘People are looking for reasons to discredit the National Action Network. Yes, [Reynolds] has given us money, I don’t even know how much, but Facebook gives us money and I came out against Mark Zuckerberg. You ask the anti-menthol advocates if they’re for decriminalizing marijuana. And if they say yes, then how do they explain their inconsistency? You can’t have it both ways,’ Sharpton said. ‘Our position has been that it would be inconsistent to decriminalize marijuana but criminalize menthol cigarettes, it’s just that simple.’” Laura Reiley, Washington Post
A libertarian’s take
“If a ban is implemented, illicit market entrepreneurs would still have ready access to both cigarettes and menthol flavoring. No offense to ‘Spud’ Hughes [who invented menthol cigarettes], but it doesn’t take a genius to figure out how to combine the two. His patent application spelled out the process in just a few sentences. Unless the federal government attempts to turn menthol itself into a controlled substance, there will surely be many small-time sellers of menthol cigarettes meeting the demand of the millions of Americans who smoke them…“As Jonathan Haggerty and Arthur Rizer, previously of the R Street Institute, noted in 2019, this presents a dilemma. ‘Enforcing a menthol ban—even just against dealers—would increase black communities’ exposure to police. The alternative is to implement a ban and hope for lax enforcement, which amounts to little more than signaling.’” Jacob Grier, Reason
Smart Brevity™ count: 846 words … 3 minutes. Edited by Zachary Basu.
🕹️ Axios Gaming, covering the business and culture of video games, launches today. Sign up here.
1 big thing: Pandemic stunts first jobs
Illustration: Aïda Amer/Axios
American jobs are starting to come back, but youth unemployment is still high and many young people are postponing college, Axios’ Erica Pandey writes.
Why it matters: Young people across the country are falling behind because of the pandemic, and they will feel the consequences of these months of pain long after the pandemic is over.
Young workers disproportionately lost their jobs as industries in which they’re overrepresented, such as hospitality and retail, were hit hard during the pandemic.
Many young people who aren’t already in the workforce are delaying education because they don’t want to spend the money on remote school, or because their families aren’t able to afford it. And many others have graduated but can’t find their first jobs.
Berkshire Hathaway chairman and CEO Warren Buffett and vice chairman Charlie Munger speak at Saturday’s annual meeting in L.A. Screengrab: Yahoo Finance via Reuters
Warren Buffett warned this weekend that trading app Robinhood has “become a very significant part of the casino aspect, the casino group, that has joined into the stock market in the last year,” CNBC reports.
“American corporations have turned out to be a wonderful place for people to put their money and save, but they also make terrific gambling chips,” said the 90-year-old “Oracle of Omaha.”
🎃 🐭 “Pumpkins and mice” … “The gambling impulse is very strong in people worldwide,” Buffett added, according to Bloomberg. “And it creates its own reality for a while — and nobody tells you when the clock’s going to strike 12 and it all turns to pumpkins and mice.”
3. The shot resisters
About 56%of U.S. adults have received at least one shot of COVID vaccine, suggesting that we’re getting very close to the end of the “vaccine eager” population, Axios Vitals author Caitlin Owens writes.
🗞️ How it’s playing … Today’s N.Y. Times lead story: “Reaching ‘Herd Immunity’ Is Unlikely in the U.S., Experts Now Believe.”
4. Suspected smuggler capsizes off San Diego
Debris is littered yesterday along the shoreline off Cabrillo Monument in San Diego. Photo: Sandy Huffaker/Getty Images
A packed boat being used in a suspected human smuggling operation broke apart in powerful surf off Point Loma, along the rocky San Diego coast, killing three people and hospitalizing 27 others, AP reports.
Border Patrol agents went to hospitals to interview survivors.
The context: “Human and drug smugglers increasingly turned to the Pacific Ocean in recent years as the Trump administration tightened border infrastructure on land,” The San Diego Union-Tribune reported.
5. Biden formula for dominating Dems
Bruce Mehlmanof Mehlman Castagnetti Rosen & Thomas is out with one of his famous slide decks, including this graphic of President Biden’s sky-high popularity with Democrats.
“He’s winning over progressives with policy and moderates with language and style,” Bruce tells me.
A federal court in Oakland today will begin hearing Epic Games’ antitrust suit against Apple — a case that could radically reshape the way iPhone apps and services are sold, Axios’ Ina Fried writes.
Why it matters: Fortnite maker Epic Games is asking the court to invalidate the entire business model behind the iOS ecosystem, seeking to bar Apple from requiring developers to use its in-app purchases for digital goods and services.
What to watch: The star-studded trial is expected to feature live testimony from Apple CEO Tim Cook, Epic CEO Tim Sweeney, and top Apple executives Phil Schiller and Craig Federighi.
In order to win, Epic has to convince the judge that Apple has a monopoly with its App Store.
Apple argues that the relevant market isn’t iOS, but rather all the different options players have for games, of which it is just one player.
Most drivers of electric cars are wealthy, and most electric vehicles are luxury models, Amy Harder writes for Axios in her monthly “Harder Line” column.
Why it matters: To effectively combat climate change, the opposite needs to happen. Electric cars need to become affordable and broadly appealing, so the masses can and want to buy them.
Of 11 battery electric vehicles introduced in the U.S. from 2018 to 2020, eight are luxury vehicles.
The average starting price of an electric car has increased over the past eight years, despite battery costs plummeting. The average price in 2012 was about $39,000. Last year, it was $52,000.
The Biden administration is proposing to invest $174 billion into electric vehicles and related charging equipment, including giving consumers point-of-sale rebates to buy American-made electric vehicles.
This is key to attracting lower-income buyers. Although the lifetime cost of owning an electric car can be lower than its gasoline counterpart, the sticker price is higher.
Amy Harder, an Axios alumnus, is vice president of publishing atBreakthrough Energy, a network of investment vehicles, philanthropic programs and policy advocacy.
8. Dubai is the new Casablanca
Dubai Marina at sunset last month. Photo: Giuseppe Cacace/AFP via Getty Images
Dubai, in the United Arab Emirates, has no quarantine and few entry restrictions, making it a magnet for executives conducting international business in person, The Wall Street Journal reports (subscription).
Why it matters: “[N]ormal is the big attraction. … Americans generally aren’t allowed into the European Union … New arrivals in the U.K. must quarantine for 10 days. Travelers from most of Europe, China, South Africa and Brazil are banned from the U.S. Business travel … to China, most of east Asia and Australia remains near-impossible.”
9. Furious fans storm pitch
Manchester United’s Premier League soccer game against Liverpool was postponed after 200 hooligans broke into Old Trafford stadium to protest owners’ decision to join the failed European Super League.
“It is the first time a Premier League match has been postponed because of fan protests,” per BBC.
Clubs that planned the Super League have been in damage control, offering apologies and statements of regret, while fans long frustrated with billionaire owners call for wholesale changes. Go deeper.
By 2023, Rome’s ancient Colosseum will once again have a floor with a gladiator’s view, after a construction project costing 18.5 million euros ($22 million), Italy’s Ministry of Culture said.
The stage — original to the first-century amphitheater — existed until the 1800s, when it was removed for archaeological digs. Go deeper.
Low immunization levels among police officers threatens not just their own health, but also the safety of people they’re responsible for guarding, monitoring and patrolling, experts say.
The Biden administration intends to focus more on capturing the carbon emissions of natural gas plants and industrial manufacturing facilities than from coal-fired power, a top Energy Department official said.
President Joe Biden’s clean energy goals will get a massive boost from a lithium mine sitting above a prehistoric volcano on the northern edge of Nevada that received final federal permitting approval at the end of the Trump administration.
COVID-19 cases and hospitalizations in the United States are declining, a sign that the vaccination campaign is succeeding and the spring surge has ended.
Puerto Rican boxer Félix Verdejo turned himself in to federal agents Sunday night to face charges just hours after authorities identified the body of a dead woman as his 27-year-old pregnant lover, officials said.
A federal judge ordered police in Columbus, Ohio, to stop using force, including tear gas, pepper spray, and rubber bullets, against nonviolent protesters, saying law enforcement officers ran “amok” during demonstrations over the death of George Floyd in Minneapolis.
Three people died and 27 others were rescued Sunday morning after a boat suspected of smuggling people from Tijuana, Mexico, north to San Diego, California, capsized, according to local law enforcement.
A U.S. Air Force pararescueman earned a medal for heroism after he treated seven of his fellow service members who were hit by a blast while in Afghanistan in 2019.
Three people, including the shooter, were killed in what was apparently a targeted shooting at the Oneida Casino in Green Bay, according to new reports.
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18.) ASSOCIATED PRESS
May 3, 2021
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AP Morning Wire
Good morning from Johannesburg. Here’s the news to start the week.
President Joe Biden’s call for authorizing Medicare to negotiate lower prescription drug prices has energized Democrats on a politically popular idea they’ve been pushing for nearly 20 years, but they still lack a clear path to enact legislation. A packed boat in a suspected human smuggling operation capsized and broke apart in powerful surf along the rocky San Diego coast, killing three people and injuring more than two dozen others. Russia is turning to multiple Chinese firms to manufacture the Sputnik V coronavirus vaccine in an effort to speed up production as demand soars for its shot. And take a look at the narrow footbridge suspended across a river canyon in northern Portugal which has just opened and claims to be the world’s longest. It’s not for the faint-hearted!
Also this morning:
Tokyo Olympic Games needs 500 nurses, but they are busy with COVID-19
WASHINGTON (AP) — President Joe Biden’s call for authorizing Medicare to negotiate lower prescription drug prices has energized Democrats on a politically popular idea they’ve been pushing for nearly 20 years only to encounter frustration. But they…Read More
TAIPEI, Taiwan (AP) — Russia is turning to multiple Chinese firms to manufacture the Sputnik V coronavirus vaccine in an effort to speed up production as demand soars for its shot. Russia has announced three deals totaling 260 million doses with Ch…Read More
SAN DIEGO (AP) — A packed boat being used in a suspected human smuggling operation capsized Sunday and broke apart in powerful surf along the rocky San Diego coast, killing three people and injuring more than two dozen others, authorities said. Lif…Read More
NEW DELHI (AP) — Preliminary voting trends released by India’s electoral body on Sunday indicate Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s Hindu nationalist party failed to make gains in four recent state elections, a sign his political strength may be slippi…Read More
AROUCA, Portugal (AP) — It’s probably best if you gird yourself before you look down from the Arouca Bridge. The narrow footbridge suspended across a river canyon in northern Portugal claims to be the world’s longest pedestrian bridge and was offic…Read More
HONOLULU (AP) — A doctor and a team of neonatal medical professionals were in the right place at the right time — helping a Utah woman deliver her baby onboard an hourslong fl…Read More
MADRID (AP) — Residents in Madrid, one of Europe’s worst-hit regions in the pandemic, are voting Tuesday for a new regional assembly in an election that tests the depths of re…Read More
TOKYO (AP) — Some nurses in Japan are incensed at a request from Tokyo Olympic organizers to have 500 of them dispatched to help out with the games. They say they’re already n…Read More
KELLY, Wyo. (AP) — Watch out, Jackson Hole News & Guide, there’s a new kid in town. Well, maybe not in town, but in the town of Kelly. An 11-year-old’s newspaper is catchi…Read More
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Mark Twain
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Good morning, Chicago. Illinois public health officials on Sunday reported 1,860 new confirmed and probable cases of COVID-19 and 27 additional deaths. There were 44,678 doses of the COVID-19 vaccine administered Saturday. Illinois’ seven-day average for COVID-19 vaccinations fell again to 83,239 Sunday, as Gov. J.B. Pritzker said the state is continuing to try to reach those who haven’t yet gotten a shot.
Meanwhile, in a joint investigation, Tribune reporter Cecilia Reyes and Better Government Association reporter Madison Hopkins found 42 fatal fires in a six-year period where city officials had been warned about fire safety issues ahead of time. On May 12, the Tribune and the BGA will host a virtual event that takes a deeper look at the accountability issues raised by the investigation. Here’s how to register for free tickets.
Here’s more coronavirus news and other top stories you need to know to start your day.
A 57-year-old motorist apparently angered by “yuppies with dogs” allegedly yelled anti-Asian comments before slamming into a group of friends enjoying a birthday picnic, seriously injuring a woman in Logan Square, witnesses and officials said.
Two years into a federal corruption investigation that has led to charges against more than half a dozen current and former Democratic state lawmakers and precipitated the downfall of longtime House Speaker Michael Madigan, legislators are scrambling to strengthen Illinois’ government ethics laws.
Like most everything involving the class of 2021, their proms and graduations this spring will be shaped by the pandemic. Some will prohibit dancing and eating. Many will be outside, with more than a dozen Chicago schools planning hourlong, mini-proms at Soldier Field. But after enduring more than a year of pandemic-related cancellations, in-person proms and graduations are finally giving the class of 2021 and their families reasons to celebrate.
With Chicago’s capacity restrictions loosening, couples hope for larger weddings. But they’ll have to navigate tricky vaccination questions first.
The Bears’ bold move to trade up in the NFL draft and select Justin Fields already has energized a fan base that was frustrated by the team’s never-ending search for a quality quarterback. The former Ohio State standout checks all the boxes for future NFL stardom, but will he be up to the challenge that so many Bears quarterbacks have failed to meet?
Three Chicago restaurants were named first-time recipients of Michelin stars Thursday, and four restaurants dropped off the esteemed list after a turbulent year for the restaurant industry.
The three restaurants picking up stars all opened since Michelin last handed out honors in September 2019. The four losing their status have all closed during the last year.
For more than half a century, anyone in Illinois who wanted to own a gun needed to first apply for a special state identification card.
But now the state’s top court is being asked to decide whether the Firearm Owner’s Identification cards — popularly called FOID cards — are a necessary safeguard or a violation of the U.S. Constitution. Andrew Sullender has the story…
Some families, educators and experts are arguing the past 13 months weren’t a loss at all — and a debate is growing over how best to support students moving forward.
While smaller sites can cost less to run, it can be exceedingly expensive, on a per-shot basis, to vaccinate those in more rural or underserved areas of the country.
The Illinois attorney general’s appeal of a downstate judge’s ruling sets up a battle over whether the state can require residents to hold an ID card in order to own a firearm.
Despite zero financial literacy education growing up, Uptown resident Jeff Badu, a licensed CPA, became a millionaire before age 30. Now he wants to give back.
The longtime artistic director, whose stage credits include the landmark “August: Osage County,” is set to direct a movie about a real-life White House correspondent.
Welcome to The Hill’s Morning Report. Today is Monday. Hello May! And happy Asian American and Pacific Islander Heritage Month! 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 this morning: 577,045.
As of this morning, 44.3 percent of the U.S. population has received at least one dose of a COVID-19 vaccine and 31.6 percent are fully vaccinated, according to the Bloomberg News global vaccine tracker.
President Biden and his team are playing a long legislative game, albeit with a short time frame.
As weekend television talk shows revealed, the president’s efforts are at the starting point to secure another $4 trillion in spending for infrastructure and expanded government benefits, plus tax hikes, in perhaps two or more mammoth measures by the fall.
Front and center for the West Wing: selling details to the American people in key states, using television, radio and podcast interviews, ad campaigns, appearances by officials, and special outreach briefings organized for sub-sub-constituencies who back Democratic policies.
The president today will be in Yorktown, Va., talking about how his infrastructure and jobs plan would help schools. Later this week, he’ll be in New Orleans, a city that supported his presidential bid, but in a state, Louisiana, that voted 58 percent for former President Trump.
The Hill: Louisiana Sen. Bill Cassidy (R), a conservative who leads a Senate group’s efforts to reach a compromise with Democrats on infrastructure, told “Fox News Sunday” that lawmakers in each party remain at odds over billions of dollars in spending for various projects.
White House officials played defense on Sunday, advocating for Biden’s plans in the face of GOP opposition, while also suggesting that the president is pleased with behind-the-scenes “progress” he perceives in discussions with some senators. Biden and his advisers will continue to talk with those senators who are seeking a compromise, including Sen. Shelley Moore Capito (R-W.Va.), according to the White House. Capito has said she is upbeat about conversations so far and Biden says he hopes to meet with her (CNN and The Wall Street Journal).
Upshot: Biden allies say they’re seeking bipartisanship by a Memorial Day deadline, but the president has made no specific public commitments about accepting GOP recommendations.
The Senate is not in Washington this week. Biden plans to sit down at the White House on May 12 with the Democratic and Republican leaders from the House and Senate.
The Hill: Bipartisanship? Biden wants it “if that is possible,” said White House messaging senior adviser Anita Dunn.
Biden’s aides and surrogates sidestepped questions on Sunday about legislative timetables, any decisions about how reconciliation will be used, how many bills Congress will ultimately consider for Biden’s American Jobs Plan and for the $1.8 trillion American Families Plan, and how the White House envisions offsetting proposed tax hikes when powerful corporate and investor stakeholders say they will work to scuttle the plans Biden has unveiled.
Sen. Susan Collins (R-Maine), a centrist who favors a stripped-down, compromise infrastructure measure that would cost less than a third of what Biden’s is seeking with his $2.3 trillion proposal, said on Sunday that the president could get some GOP support if he reached for the scissors.
“Well, at this point, I think now that the Republicans have put forth a reasonable offer, it’s up to the president to do a counteroffer to us,” Collins said, pointing to a $4 trillion investment sought by the president (The Hill).
“That’s the amount that we spent to win World War II,” Collins continued on CNN’s “State of the Union.”
“So this is an enormous package when you take both the traditional core infrastructure parts and the huge expansion of social programs that the president is advocating.”
The Hill: GOP lawmakers hammer Biden on infrastructure while the administration defends its spending plan.
The Hill: Sunday shows – Biden economic agenda dominates.
More in Congress: Rep. Charlie Crist (D-Fla.) will announce on Tuesday morning that he’s running for governor for a third time in a crowded field, according to multiple news outlets (Florida Politics.com). The former governor, once a Republican, lost a Senate race in 2010 to Sen. Marco Rubio (R-Fla.) after dropping out of the GOP primary to run as an independent. … Can Rep. Liz Cheney (R-Wyo.) keep her position as House Republican Conference chair, or perhaps even her House seat, while battling Trump ahead of midterm contests that mean everything to her GOP colleagues? (The Hill). … “This is not a done deal,” says one House Democrat while advocating a narrow legislative pathway that could be bipartisan to lower prescription drug costs amid heavy opposition by the powerful pharmaceutical industry (The Associated Press). … Tax filing day is May 17. The Hill’s Naomi Jagoda lends a hand with five things you need to know about the coronavirus relief laws and how they impact tax liabilities. … The House will not return to pre-pandemic operations until more lawmakers have been fully vaccinated, according to Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) (The Hill).
At Emergent, we make things you never thought you’d need. A treatment to counteract an opioid overdose. Protection from anthrax, smallpox and botulism. And now, we’re in the fight against COVID-19. Learn more.
LEADING THE DAY
CORONAVIRUS: As the United States works to get more Americans vaccinated, particularly those who are hard to reach due to where they live or those reluctant to accept COVID-19 vaccines, the administration is working to stamp out sources of misinformation.
Experts and trusted influencers are working to dispel concerns that cause people to feel hesitant, while also trying to turn back waves of myths and misinformation (The Hill).
Here’s reporting that includes examples of how challenging this task is:
The New York Times: Faith, freedom, fear: Rural America’s COVID-19 vaccine skeptics, and The Mercury News: Artists, barbers help defy vaccine myths for people of color.
State and local governments are experimenting with offering incentives and privileges for residents to get vaccinated against COVID-19. Last week, West Virginia said it would give those aged 16 to 35 who get the vaccine a $100 savings bond, and Connecticut launched #CTDrinksOnUs, a program offering a free drink to those who prove their vaccination. Public health and psychology experts said as long as the incentives are reasonable, it could be successful, reports The Hill’s Justine Coleman.
Ten million children could be vaccinated against COVID-19 before the fall if the Pfizer drug is approved for safe use in children, predicted former Food and Drug Administration Commissioner Scott Gottlieb (CBS “Face the Nation” transcript and The Hill).
In New Jersey, Gov. Phil Murphy (D) today is promising a “major announcement” on easing restrictions imposed in the Garden State due to COVID-19. Murphy said on Twitter on Sunday that because COVID-19 metrics are “decisively trending in the right direction,” his 1 p.m. announcement will deal with “easing restrictions and ramping up our vaccinations” (The Associated Press).
In Colorado, Gov. Jared Polis (D) on Sunday extended a statewide mask mandate for another 30 days, but loosened face covering requirements for groups of people who are vaccinated against COVID-19. Under the new executive order, people gathering inside in groups of 10 or more are no longer required to wear masks if at least 80 percent of the group is vaccinated. People must show proof of vaccination, but the order does not elaborate on what proof is considered acceptable (The Associated Press).
In Iowa, state authorities are refusing nearly three-quarters of the vaccine doses available to the state from the federal government because demand for the shots remains weak. The Iowa Department of Public Health and Safety said on Saturday that the state asked the federal government to withhold 71 percent of the 105,300 vaccine doses that were available for the week of May 10. This is the second week in a row the state has asked the federal government to hold back part of its allocation of vaccine doses (The Des Moines Register and The Associated Press).
COVID-19 ABROAD:The Associated Press: Indian court urges government action as hospitals cry for help.
The Associated Press: The White House says U.S. Trade Representative Katherine Tai will begin talks with the World Trade Organization this week about ways to overcome intellectual property issues that are keeping critically needed COVID-19 vaccines from being more widely distributed in poorer countries, including in India.
The United States is considering lifting vaccine patents with the World Trade Organization to boost distribution amid the crisis in India (The Washington Post).
The Associated Press: India’s Prime Minister Narendra Modi failed to make gains in four recent state elections, according to preliminary voting trends released Sunday by the independent Election Commission, indicating his Hindu nationalist party’s political strength may be slipping as the country struggles to contain an unprecedented surge in coronavirus cases.
POLITICS: Texas GOP: Susan Wright, whose husband Ron Wright in February became the first sitting member of Congress to die after being diagnosed with COVID-19, was the top vote-getter on Saturday in a crowded field of 23 candidates vying to represent the state’s 6th Congressional District (Reuters). Susan Wright and Jake Ellzey will face each other in a runoff in the race for the district. Wright had 19.2 percent of the votes cast, according to an Associated Press tally, while Ellzey had 13.8 percent (The Hill).
The Hill: The Democratic National Committee raised $15.4 million in Biden’s first 100 days.
Trump’s brand of populism and enthusiasm for America’s culture wars sparked serious debate among members of his party, The Hill’s Alexander Bolton reports. Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas) is joined by Sen. Josh Hawley (R-Mo.) in the new conservative war on corporate America. Republicans are in search of leadership from Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) and House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.), who represent different visions for the party. There is a sense from some GOP lawmakers that the 2024 White House nominee is likely to come from outside Washington, and they think a governor might be the ticket.
The New York Times: Biden’s expansive infrastructure plan hits close to home for McConnell.
ADMINISTRATION: The United States on Sunday immediately denied a report by Iranian state-run television that some kind of deal had been reached for the Islamic Republic to release U.S. and British prisoners in exchange for Tehran receiving billions of dollars. Biden’s chief of staff Ron Klain told CBS’s “Face the Nation” that “unfortunately, that report is untrue. There is no agreement to release these four Americans.”
“We’re working very hard to get them released,” Klain said. “We raise this with Iran and our interlocutors all the time, but so far there’s no agreement.”
Tehran holds four known Americans now in prison: Baquer and Siamak Namazi, environmentalist Morad Tahbaz and Iranian-American businessman Emad Shargi. Iran long has been accused of holding those with Western ties prisoners to be later used as bargaining chips in negotiations. Despite the American denials, there have been signs that a deal on prisoners may be in the works based on Iranian officials’ remarks in recent weeks (The Associated Press).
> On immigration, Biden’s first 100 days in office have exposed him to criticism from the right and left, both for the Trump administration policies he’s nixed as well as those he’s retained. While Biden immediately rescinded Trump’s Muslim ban and froze construction of the wall, he’s also dizzied spectators by going back and forth on whether to raise the cap on refugees allowed into the United States this year and has been relying heavily on a Trump-era law that allows swift deportation of migrants. Biden is now pushing lawmakers on both sides of the aisle to pass reforms. The Hill’s Rebecca Beitsch and Rafael Bernal report the slow pace of change has created a disconnect between Biden officials, many of whom were immigration advocates before joining the administration, and the advocacy community, which has sometimes reacted with disbelief at Biden’s perceived foot-dragging on immigration.
The Associated Press: The United States today announced it will begin this week reuniting four families separated at the Mexican border during the Trump administration, expanding the reunification efforts in weeks to come. Parents will return to the United States on humanitarian parole while authorities consider other longer-term forms of legal status, said Michelle Brane, executive director of the administration’s Family Reunification Task Force. The children are already in this country.
Biden’s decision to freeze funding for the wall along the southern border is not sitting well with Republican lawmakers. Upon taking office, Biden quickly followed through on campaign promises to stop building the wall, which was one of Trump’s most notable policies. Republicans say Biden’s freeze is illegal given that Congress appropriated $1.3 billion for the wall in December. The Government Accountability Office is investigating the claim, The Hill’s Niv Elis reports.
China’s debt trap diplomacy, by Brahma Chellaney, opinion contributor, The Hill. https://bit.ly/2SgOxkl
The numbers tell a different story about the police killing of minors, by Conor Friedersdorf, analysis, The Atlantic. https://bit.ly/2QMuz0s
A MESSAGE FROM EMERGENT BIOSOLUTIONS
At Emergent, we make things you never thought you’d need. A treatment to counteract an opioid overdose. Protection from anthrax, smallpox and botulism. And now, we’re in the fight against COVID-19. Learn more.
WHERE AND WHEN
The House meets at 10 a.m. on Tuesday. Members return to legislative work on May 11.
TheSenate will hold a pro forma session at 12:45 p.m.
The president will receive the President’s Daily Brief at 8 a.m. Biden and first lady Jill Biden will travel to Yorktown, Va., to visit an elementary school. They will leave for Chesapeake, Va., to visit Tidewater Community College’s HVAC workshop. They will both speak about the president’s investment plans for the economy, jobs and education at 1:30 p.m. before returning to the White House at 4 p.m.
Vice President Harris will ceremonially swear in Bill Nelson as NASA administrator at 9:50 a.m. Harris will repeat the swearing-in at 1:30 p.m for Samantha Power as administrator of the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID).
Secretary of State Antony Blinken is traveling in London today through Wednesday to attend the G-7 foreign and development ministers’ meeting.
👉 INVITATION: Join The Hill’s Virtually Live event Wednesday during sessions that begin at 12:30 p.m., “Future of Healthcare: Bold Bets in Health.” Some of the experts featured: U.S. Surgeon General Vivek Murthy; Anthony Fauci, director, National Institutes of Allergy and Infectious Diseases; Dr. Katrina Armstrong, Massachusetts General Hospital department of medicine; Sen. Debbie Stabenow (D-Mich.) and chairwoman of the Finance Committee Subcommittee on Health; and Rep. Brett Guthrie (R-Ky.), ranking member of the Energy and Commerce Subcommittee on Health. Information is HERE.
> INTERNATIONAL: North Korea warned on Sunday that the United States will face a grave situation if it continues to pursue its “hostile policy” toward Pyongyang’s nuclear program. The statement, attributed to Kwon Jong Gun, head of the Foreign Ministry’s department of U.S. affairs, was released as the Biden administration is set to unveil a new strategy to deal with Pyongyang. The statement said Biden made a “big blunder” when he called North Korea’s and Iran’s nuclear programs a security threat during his speech last week to Congress. Biden said he would work with allies to address the threats with “diplomacy and stern deterrence” (NPR). The White House says it is open to diplomacy with North Korea and leader Jim Jong Un. The president’s spokeswoman said the U.S. goal is complete denuclearization of the Korean Peninsula. … Israel on Sunday observed a day of mourning following the deaths by crowd stampede of 45 people during a Jewish religious festival. Six of the dead were Americans. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has promised an investigation (Reuters). … In Afghanistan, a fuel tanker fire killed seven people and injured 14 on Sunday in Kabul, which suffered a blackout because of the inferno (The Hill and The Associated Press).
➔ SUPREME COURT: As justices approach the end of the high court’s term, Justice Stephen Breyer‘s possible retirement remains a topic of speculation, reports The Hill’s John Kruzel. Court watchers are musing that Breyer, 83, who was nominated by former President Clinton (pictured below in 1994) may announce his departure in late June to clear the way for Biden and Senate Democrats to seat his replacement ahead of the court’s next term.
➔ECONOMY & HOUSING: Is this country heading for another housing bubble? The Hill’s Sylvan Lane unpacks the answer to that question, and points out that home prices are rising at the fastest rate since the days just before the 2007-2008 financial crisis. Buyers go to great lengths these days to be able to purchase homes during a period of high prices and low inventory (and a pandemic).
➔ STATE WATCH: The Hill’s Reid Wilson explains how states that are now flush with cash and debating how to spend surpluses were in considerably more dire fiscal circumstances just a year ago. … Lubbock, Texas, voters on Saturday by a large majority agreed to create the largest “sanctuary city for the unborn” in the Lone Star State, which could prompt a lawsuit over what opponents say is an unconstitutional ban on abortion. The vote occurred less than a year after Planned Parenthood opened a clinic in Lubbock. It is unclear when the ordinance will go into effect (The Texas Tribune). … There have been few tangible repercussions among the five states that have recently passed anti-transgender laws. It’s a contrast from North Carolina’s experience in 2016 while limiting bathroom use (The Associated Press). … In Washington, D.C., a stately National Christmas Tree near the Ellipse developed a fungus and was removed, just nine years after being planted. A replacement will go in the ground in the fall (The Washington Post).
➔ ANTITRUST: An antitrust trial between Epic Games and Apple, which kicks off today in California federal court, is expected to be closely watched in Washington as lawmakers and regulators crack down on the market power of Silicon Valley giants. Epic Games is suing Apple over allegations of anti-competitive behavior. Congress is weighing legislative action to revamp antitrust laws at a time when federal and state-led antitrust lawsuits are pending against other tech giants, including Facebook and Google (The Hill).
THE CLOSER
And finally … 🚀 Off the coast of Panama City, Fla., in the placid waters of the Gulf of Mexico at night (seen below), astronauts from a SpaceX Crew Dragon Resilience capsule splashed down on Sunday after safely returning through Earth’s atmosphere from the International Space Station. Aboard were NASA astronauts Mike Hopkins, Shannon Walker and Victor Glover, and Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency astronaut Soichi Noguchi. They had been in space for six months.
The private transport to and from the space station was a breakthrough for NASA and Elon Musk’s SpaceX, becoming the first of what the space agency calls an operational mission (The New York Times).
In the meantime, NASA and the Jet Propulsion Laboratory’s unmanned Perseverance rover and Integrity, the 4-pound baby helicopter, remain busy on Mars (NPR).
“The Ingenuity technology demonstration has been a resounding success,” associate administrator for the NASA Science Mission Directorate Thomas Zurbuchen said in a statement Friday. Ingenuity will therefore get more assignments.
The objective of the rover is to examine rocks and soil found on the planet that could indicate if previous life existed there 3.5 billion years ago. The mission will take two Earth years, which comes out to a single year on Mars.
Catch up on some of the best images sent from Mars HERE.
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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This morning, Rep. Liz Cheney (R-Wyo.) slammed former President Trump for continuing his false claims that he, in fact, won the 2020 presidential election. https://bit.ly/3ufeuPF
Trump’s statement this morning: “The Fraudulent Presidential Election of 2020 will be, from this day forth, known as THE BIG LIE!” Btw, that’s not an excerpt. That was the full statement.https://bit.ly/3ej16Vb
Cheney’s reaction: “The 2020 presidential election was not stolen. Anyone who claims it was is spreading THE BIG LIE, turning their back on the rule of law, and poisoning our democratic system.” https://bit.ly/3ukxFHG
Back story — Cheney is public enemy No. 1 in Trump world: “The Wyoming congresswoman has found herself at the center of a political storm within the Republican Party after she voted in favor of impeaching Trump following the deadly Jan. 6 Capitol riot. Shortly after her vote, the Wyoming GOP voted to censure her and several ardent Trump allies in Congress called for her to be removed from power as House Republican Conference Chair. Trump has vowed to endorse any Republican primary candidate who runs against Cheney in the upcoming 2022 midterm elections.”
It’s Monday — welcome back!. I’m Cate Martel with a quick recap of the morning and what’s coming up. Send comments, story ideas and events for our radar to cmartel@thehill.com — and follow along on Twitter @CateMartel and Facebook.
Did someone forward this to you? Want your own copy? Sign up here to receive The Hill’s 12:30 Report in your inbox daily: http://bit.ly/2kjMNnn
A MESSAGE FROM EXXONMOBIL
An idea to help decarbonize heavy industrial areas
ExxonMobil is introducing an idea for carbon capture and storage that has the potential to effectively decarbonize the Houston Ship Channel. That’s big – like taking 20 million cars off the road. Learn more at EnergyFactor.com
Via The Hill’s Niall Stanage, “It’s a strange time for the relationship between Republicans and big business. Important figures in a party that usually toes the pro-business line are instead throwing jabs at the corporate world. The critics include several potential 2024 presidential contenders.” https://bit.ly/33azRpg
For example — Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas) told The Hill: “If you look at the CEOs of the Fortune 100, there are very, very few who you could even plausibly characterize as right of center. They are almost uniformly Democrat. And they have made the decision to enlist their companies in the political agenda of today’s Democratic Party, which is controlled right now by the radical left.”
And Sen. Marco Rubio (R-Fla.) told The Hill: “For the past several years, I have been making the case that far too many American companies were prioritizing short-term financial windfalls at the expense of America’s families, communities and national security. More and more people are coming around to that viewpoint, both in the Republican Party and around the country.”
Why this matters (!): “Their barbs will not be well-received in boardrooms or the Chamber of Commerce. Democrats will roll their eyes and allege opportunism. But an anti-elite GOP base that grew even more populist during former President Trump’s time in the White House could reward the pugnacious tone.”
Via The Hill’s Alexander Bolton, “Republicans wrestling over the future of the party are debating whether to embrace the culture wars that helped former President Trump cement his popularity with the GOP base.” https://bit.ly/3389mAX
The timing is important: “The internal rift, which involves congressional leaders and potential 2024 presidential contenders, comes as Republicans have struggled to dent President Biden’s popularity and as they plot their strategy to win back the House and Senate in the 2022 midterms.”
The debate within the party: “[Some] in the GOP are eager to double down on Trump’s brand of populism, [but] others argue the party needs to return to its roots.”
I.e.: “Strong on national security, low taxes, limited government, limited regulation and in the broadest sense of the word, pro-business,” according to Republican strategist Vin Weber.
Via The New York Times’s Apoorva Mandavilli, “Early in the pandemic, when vaccines for the coronavirus were still just a glimmer on the horizon, the term ‘herd immunity’ came to signify the endgame: the point when enough Americans would be protected from the virus so we could be rid of the pathogen and reclaim our lives.” https://nyti.ms/3nFBwww
Where we stand: “Now, more than half of adults in the United States have been inoculated with at least one dose of a vaccine. But daily vaccination rates are slipping, and there is widespread consensus among scientists and public health experts that the herd immunity threshold is not attainable — at least not in the foreseeable future, and perhaps not ever.”
What does that mean for us?: Don’t expect a big abrupt end to the pandemic. Instead, the coronavirus will be a manageable threat going forward. ^My interpretation: Sort of like the flu.
Why reaching herd immunity is hard and what this means for the next few years: https://nyti.ms/3nFBwww
Via The Hill’s Sylvan Lane, “The staggering rise of U.S. home prices is forcing thousands of aspiring buyers into grueling, often risky bidding wars, raising questions about whether the torrid housing market could be in a bubble.”
Why the housing market is pretty nuts these days: “For nearly a year, the combination of low mortgage rates, a flood federal stimulus, lockdowns and teleworking — all sparked by the coronavirus pandemic — has fueled a rapid increase in demand for houses.”
Who this is especially a problem for: Entry-level housing buyers. How so: https://bit.ly/3edNryD
A MESSAGE FROM EXXONMOBIL
An idea to help decarbonize heavy industrial areas
ExxonMobil is introducing an idea for carbon capture and storage that has the potential to effectively decarbonize the Houston Ship Channel. That’s big – like taking 20 million cars off the road. Learn more at EnergyFactor.com
The House and Senate are out. President Biden is in Virginia today. Vice President Harris is in Washington, D.C.
8 a.m. EDT: President Biden received the President’s Daily Brief.
8:40 a.m. EDT: President Biden and first lady Jill Biden left for Newport News, Va.
9:50 a.m. EDT: Vice President Harris ceremonially swore in Bill Nelson as NASA administrator.
10:30 a.m. EDT: President Biden and first lady Jill Biden visit Yorktown Elementary School in Virginia.
1:05 p.m. EDT: President Biden and first lady Jill Biden visit an HVAC workshop at Tidewater Community College in Norfolk, Va.
1:30 p.m. EDT: Vice President Harris ceremonially swears in Samantha Power as ambassador to the United States Agency for International Development (USAID.)
4 p.m. EDT: President Biden and first lady Jill Biden return to the White House.
WHAT TO WATCH:
1:30 p.m. EDT: President Biden delivers remarks at Tidewater Community College in Norfolk, Va. Livestream: https://bit.ly/2Si22QN
The Supreme Court hears oral argument Tuesday in a case that will determine whether a 2018 law gave prisoners a chance to reduce unfairly long sentences for possessing the smallest amounts of crack cocaine. Read more…
Supporters of fundamentally changing how the U.S. military handles allegations of sexual assault and other major crimes say they now have the votes to make their proposal, which the president supports, the law of the land. Read more…
OPINION — Election changes last year and the postelection reaction to them have spawned confusion and a raft of self-defeating policy proposals in states across the country. But there are commonsense reforms that our election system still needs. Read more…
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The Pentagon has begun the process of canceling contracts for border wall construction that used funds diverted from other Defense Department accounts by the Trump administration. Read more…
President Biden’s first joint session address witnessed a cellphone interruption, a historic elbow-bump and Ted Cruz struggling to keep his eyes open. Meanwhile, Derek Kilmer recalled an early internship lesson and Jen Psaki was spooked by Lincoln’s ghost. All that and more in last week’s Congressional Hits and Misses. Watch here…
Last week on Capitol Hill, as captured by CQ Roll Call’s photojournalists, saw two female leaders seated behind a U.S. president at a joint session address for the first time ever. It also featured a pink supermoon, a 51-foot joint on the Mall and representatives of the George Floyd family meeting with lawmakers. Read more…
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25.) POLITICO PLAYBOOK
POLITICO Playbook: Is Liz Cheney about to get the boot?
Presented by
DRIVING THE DAY
Here’s a little something to brighten (or perhaps darken) your Monday morning. Check out MICHAEL FLYNN botching the Pledge of Allegiance at a “Bikers for Trump” rally at the HonkyTonk Saloon in Ladson, S.C., on Sunday. He was in the Palmetto State to vouch for QAnon/election conspiracist LIN WOOD, who’s mounting a bid for state GOP chair. The video … The Post and Courier write-up of the event … ICYMI: Marc Caputo on Wood’s bid for the early-state chairmanship
CHOOSE YOUR NEWS — Over the weekend, WaPo published a story that the Biden White House is serious about negotiating with Republicans on infrastructure and genuinely open to compromise. Today, our Anita Kumar, after speaking with a half-dozen current and former Biden advisers and lawmakers, writes that President JOE BIDEN “may be willing to give up the reputation,cultivated over decades, as a dealmaking lawmaker if he can be a transformative president who pushes through a once-in-a-generation investment in infrastructure and social programs.”
It’s possible both are true: that the White House will make a concerted effort to strike a bipartisan deal, even if it means making concessions on the $2.3 trillion package — and cut bait quickly if it doesn’t happen.
MORE HEADLINES BELOW: Biden eyes two finalists for ambassador to Israel, with an announcement expected this week … Women (over 55) get New York Gov. ANDREW CUOMO’S back … CAITLYN JENNER takes a controversial stand.
DECODING THE LATEST MCCARTHY-CHENEY DRAMA — If you want a snapshot of how Trumpified the House Republican Conference is almost six months after the president was booted from the White House, look no further than this quote in The Hill over the weekend: “If a prerequisite for leading our conference is continuing to lie to our voters, then Liz is not the best fit,” Rep. ANTHONY GONZALEZ (R-Ohio) told the publication. “Liz isn’t going to lie to people.”
Process that for a minute. A House Republican — granted, one who voted for impeachment — suggesting that his colleagues may notwant Rep. LIZ CHENEY (R-Wyo.) in leadership because she won’t lie! (Insert brain-exploding emoji here.)
IS LIZ OUT OF A LEADERSHIP JOB? Honestly, we don’t know yet. But what is clear right now is that there is a coordinated effort by KEVIN MCCARTHY to box her out. The Republican leader is signaling that if anyone wants to try to force another vote to oust her from the post, he’s not planning to defend her anymore. McCarthy has been refusing to appear with Cheney at press conferences for months and, according to our sources, recently declined to give her a moderating role at the GOP retreat in Orlando, even as he allowed others in leadership to head up panels.
It’s also notable that one of McCarthy’s new besties in Congress, Republican Study Committee Chair JIM BANKS (R-Ind.),who has conference chair ambitions of his own,went on record over the weekend criticizing her.
SO WHAT’S MCCARTHY’S BEEF? The leader has suggested that Cheney’s jabs at DONALD TRUMP are a distraction and accused her of not focusing on policy. That’s ironic because policy seems to be what Cheney talks about most. It’s only when reporters ask her about Trump that she says what she always has: that the party should move on from him. Also, McCarthy has done plenty on his own to stoke the controversy, including dodging questions about whether she should be in leadership and openly tagging her as selfish.
There’s also this question: If Republicans want to focus on retaking the House, is it smart politics to basically invite an intra-party blow-up — one that reminds swing voters that the party increasingly won’t tolerate anyone who doesn’t pledge allegiance to Trump? That’s what Cheney types would ask.
ONE UNSPOKEN DYNAMIC FOR YOUR RADAR: Several of the 10 Republicans who voted to impeach Trump have been advised that if they keep their heads down, leaders like McCarthy will be more likely to help them with fundraising and campaigning. That probably explains why most of them have gone quiet in recent weeks. Cheney, as the No. 3 House Republican, can’t do that. Nor does it appear she wants to.
IF CHENEY GOES, WHO WOULD REPLACE HER? Like we said and have written previously in this space, Banks wants the job someday. He’s been using his RSC position to build a shadow messaging operation, countering Cheney’s job as conference chair. But Banks is also a white man when there are two before him already. And some Republicans would no doubt want a woman to step forward.
BIDEN’S MONDAY — The president will receive the President’s Daily Brief at 8 a.m. He and first lady JILL BIDEN will leave the White House at 8:40 a.m. for Newport News, Va., arriving at 9:45 a.m. They’ll visit Yorktown Elementary School at 10:30 a.m. and depart Newport News at 11:35 a.m., arriving in Chesapeake, Va., at 11:55 a.m. They’ll visit an HVAC workshop at Tidewater Community College at 1:05 p.m. and deliver remarks at the school at 1:30 p.m. Then they’ll leave from Chesapeake at 2:30 p.m., stopping in Norfolk before reaching the White House at 4 p.m.
— VP KAMALA HARRIS will ceremonially swear in BILL NELSON as NASA administrator at 9:50 a.m. and SAMANTHA POWER as USAID administrator at 1:30 p.m. in the Eisenhower Executive Office Building.
THE WEEK AHEAD — Biden will speak Tuesday about the pandemic response and vaccination campaign. On Wednesday, he’ll speak about the American Rescue Plan implementation. He’ll hit the road again Thursday, heading to Lake Charles, La., and New Orleans to talk water infrastructure and jobs, including a tour of the Carrollton Water Plant. On Friday, Biden will speak about the economy and go to Camp David for the weekend.
THE SENATE and THE HOUSE are out all week.
PLAYBOOK READS
THE WHITE HOUSE
LEDE OF THE DAY — “How the A.T.F., Key to Biden’s Gun Plan, Became an N.R.A. ‘Whipping Boy,’” by NYT’s Glenn Thrush, Danny Hakim and Mike McIntire: “If there was one moment that summed up the current state of the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, it was when the floor at the agency’s gun-tracing center caved in a couple of years ago under the weight of paper.
“The accident was not entirely accidental.
“The gun lobby, led by the National Rifle Association, has for years systematically blocked plans to modernize the agency’s paper-based weapons-tracing system with a searchable database. As a result, records of gun sales going back decades are stored in boxes stacked seven high, waiting to be processed, against every wall.
‘We had a lady pushing a cart, and the floor just gave way,’ recalled TYSON J. ARNOLD, who runs the tracing center, tapping the new, steel-braced deck with his shoe.
“Now the long-suffering A.T.F. (somehow the ‘explosives’ never made it into the abbreviation) is at the center of President Biden’s plans to push back at what he has called ‘the international embarrassment’ of gun violence in America.”
CHALLENGES LOOM OVER NEXT IRAN DEAL — “Biden faces GOP handcuffs and Dem skeptics on Iran Deal 2.0,” by Andrew Desiderio: “While Biden administration officials are holding indirect talks with the Iranians in Vienna, Republicans are discussing strategies to make it harder for Biden to reenter the nuclear agreement, most likely by using legislative tools tied to the sanctions Trump put in place. Many in the GOP are determined to smother any Biden-led comeback for the Iran deal — especially absent a more comprehensive pact that addresses Iran’s support for terrorism and other malign actions.
“And the White House’s growing set of challenges in shaping any Iran Deal 2.0 go beyond the GOP: Democrats want the president to resist the urge to seek a broader set of concessions from Tehran, saying it will sink U.S. chances of reentering the agreement.”
CONGRESS
DEPT. OF PROBABLY NOT HAPPENING — “Senate Democrats agonize over voting rights strategy,”by Burgess Everett and Marianne LeVine: “Senate Democrats made a major commitment to muscle through Speaker NANCY PELOSI’S ethics and voting reform bill. Yet many say they have no idea how to pass it and wonder what exactly the end game is for a signature Democratic priority.
“Democrats are preparing to kick off a sensitive internal debate over the issue this month as the Senate Rules Committee takes up the sprawling House package. But no Republicans support it, Sen. JOE MANCHIN (D-W.Va.) hasn’t signed on and at least a half-dozen Democrats have issues with the bill, according to senators and aides. That’s not to mention the constraints of the filibuster in a 50-50 Senate.
“What’s at stake is not only the party’s promise on a key issue, but also potentially the future Democratic majorities. Many in the party privately worry that frontline Democrats, like Warnock or House Democrats vulnerable to redistricting, could lose their seats if Congress doesn’t send a federal election and ethics bill to Biden’s desk by this summer.”
PADILLA PROVING PROGRESSIVISM — “With 2022 election already looming, Alex Padilla burnishes progressive credentials,” by L.A. Times’ Jennifer Haberkon: “Simmering beneath the surface of virtually everything [Sen. ALEX] PADILLA does these days is perhaps the greatest urgency of all: just three months into a job he was appointed to by Gov. Gavin Newsom, California’s first Latino senator has only 18 months to convince voters that he should keep it.
“One of his first challenges is to introduce himself to the millions of Californians who are his constituents and will eventually determine whether he gets his own full term. A second is to quiet the skepticism among some California progressives that he isn’t liberal enough — or assertive enough — for the job. … His strategy: Be everywhere and display unapologetic progressivism.”
AMERICA AND THE WORLD
COVETED GIG — “Israel ambassador likely to be named this week, with shortlist narrowed to two,” The Forward: “TOM NIDES, a former official in the Clinton and Obama administrations; and ROBERT WEXLER, a former congressman from Florida, are both on the short list for one of the high-profile diplomatic posts of the administration, sources close to the White House said.”
MILLEY’S WARNING — “U.S. general: Afghan forces could face ‘bad possible outcomes,’”AP: “Gen. MARK MILLEY described the Afghan military and police as ‘reasonably well equipped, reasonably well trained, reasonably well led.’ He cited Afghan troops’ years of experience against a resilient insurgency, but he declined to say they are fully ready to stand up to the Taliban without direct international backing during a potential Taliban offensive.”
HILLARY’S WARNING—“Clinton warns of potential ‘huge consequences’ from Afghanistan withdrawal,” N.Y. Post: “HILLARY CLINTON on Sunday warned that the US could face ‘huge consequences’ from President Biden’s decision to pull all US troops out of Afghanistan. The former secretary of state was asked on CNN what she thought of Biden’s move to withdraw troops from Afghanistan by Sept. 11, the 20th anniversary of the 9/11 terror attacks.
“‘It’s one thing to pull out troops that have been supporting security in Afghanistan, supporting the Afghan military, leaving it pretty much to fend for itself, but we can’t afford to walk away from the consequences of that decision,’ she said. While acknowledging that the decision was a ‘difficult’ one, Clinton noted the potential for ‘two huge consequences’ — a Taliban-controlled Afghan government and subsequent ‘huge refugee outflow.’ There could be ‘a largely Taliban-run government at some point in the not-too-distant future’ in Afghanistan, said Clinton, the 2016 Democratic candidate for president.”
BEYOND THE BELTWAY
CUOMO’S SUPPORT GROUP — “Andrew Cuomo’s Loudest Supporters: ‘Women for Governor Cuomo,’” WSJ:“Some of the women have urged followers in the private group to call state officials, respond to Mr. Cuomo’s accusers and rivals on Twitter, attend rallies and contribute thousands of dollars for pro-Cuomo advertising. Those include banners flown over New York beaches and a billboard ad on a highway in Albany. Others have attacked on social media the former Cuomo aides who have accused him of sexual harassment.
“Some members said in the group that they were flooding an official hotline that was set up for tipsters by lawyers working for the state Assembly impeachment committee and leaving positive messages about the governor. … While the women press on different fronts, many of them have talked, planned and relayed their activities in the Facebook group that started after Mr. Cuomo began facing calls for his resignation earlier this year.”
DESANTIS TARGETS TWITTER, FACEBOOK — “Florida bill would fine social media platforms for banning politicians — with exemption for Disney,” The Verge: “Florida is on the verge of passing legislation that would fine social media companies like Twitter and Facebook that ‘knowingly de-platform’ political candidates. The bill was first proposed in February by Gov. RON DESANTIS, a supporter of former President Trump, although Florida Republicans insist the bill has nothing to do with the former president, a famous denizen of social media who was banned earlier this year by major platforms.”
JENNER’S STAND — “‘It just isn’t fair’: Caitlyn Jenner opposes transgender girls participating in women’s sports,”CBS: “Jenner, who has filed paperwork to run for governor in California as a Republican, said it was a ‘question of fairness’ in an interview with TMZ on Saturday. ‘That’s why I oppose biological boys who are trans competing in girls’ sports in school,’ Jenner said. ‘It just isn’t fair. And we have to protect girls’ sports in our schools.’
“Jenner took to Twitter later on Saturday to reiterate her stance, saying she was ‘clear about where I stand.’” The TMZ video
POLITICS ROUNDUP
BATTLEGROUND TEXAS? NOT SO MUCH — “For Democrats, Another Bad Election Night in Texas,” NYT: “Democrats hoping for some encouraging signs in Texas did not find any on Saturday in a special election to fill a vacant congressional seat. Instead, they found themselves locked out of a runoff that will now see two Republicans battle for the seat in northern Texas. … Democrats who needed a strong turnout to be competitive did not get one. They were hoping for signs of weakness in the Republican brand because of the state’s disastrous response to the brutal winter storm in February or any signs of weariness with Mr. Trump, but they did not see that, either.”
AND THIS — “In South Texas, Hispanic Republicans Try to Cement the Party’s Gains,”NYT: “Hispanic Republicans, especially women, have become something of political rock stars in South Texas after voters in the Rio Grande Valley shocked leaders in both parties in November by swinging sharply toward the G.O.P. Here in McAllen, one of the region’s largest cities, Mr. Trump received nearly double the number of votes he did four years earlier; in the Rio Grande Valley over all, President Biden won by just 15 percentage points, a steep slide from Clinton’s 39-point margin in 2016.
“That conservative surge — and the liberal decline — has buoyed the Republican Party’s hopes about its ability to draw Hispanic voters into what has long been an overwhelmingly white political coalition and to challenge Democrats in heavily Latino regions across the country. Now party officials, including [GREG] ABBOTT, the governor, have flocked to the Rio Grande Valley in a kind of pilgrimage, eager to meet the people who helped Republicans rapidly gain ground in a longtime Democratic stronghold.”
LOYALTY, LOYALTY, LOYALTY — “For Republicans, fealty to Trump’s election falsehood becomes defining loyalty test,”WaPo: “Local officials, too, are facing censure and threats — in states from Iowa to Michigan to Missouri — for publicly accepting the election results. … The issue also could reverberate through the 2022 midterms and the 2024 election, with Trump already slamming Republicans who did not resist the election results. For Republicans, fealty to the falsehood could pull the party further to the right during the primaries, providing challenges during the general election when wooing more moderate voters is crucial. And for Democrats, the continued existence of the claim threatens to undermine Biden’s agenda.”
This is an actual quote from a Trump backer quoted in the story: “I speak for many people in that Trump has never actually been wrong, and so we’ve learned to trust when he says something, that he’s not just going to spew something out there that’s wrong and not verified.”
ANDREW YANG, MEDIA JUGGERNAUT — Ben Smith’s NYT latest: “This time, the media is taking him seriously — and indeed, is trying, with mixed results, to avoid some of what journalists see as the mistakes in covering Donald Trump. … [T]he local media is wrestling with how to avoid allowing coverage of one candidate to eclipse the rest of the field, even if Mr. Yang is ‘not in the same ideological universe as Donald Trump,’ said JERE HESTER, the editor in chief of the nonprofit news organization The City. …
“And while the coverage of Mr. Yang has been mixed, there is no question he is dominating, getting about twice as much written coverage as his nearest rival, according to the magazine City Limits, and regularly leading broadcast news outlets.”
SPOTTED: John McCarthy, Olivia Nuzzi, Hilary Rosen, Liz Johnson and Tammy Haddad (belatedly) celebrating Kaitlan Collins’ 29th birthday Saturday at Cafe Milano. Pic (h/t and photo credit: Ryan)
FIRST IN PLAYBOOK — Former Sen. Doug Jones (D-Ala.) and Cissy Jackson are joining Arent Fox’s government relations and government enforcement and white collar groups as counsel. Jackson previously was counsel and national security adviser for Jones.
— Parker Poling will lead Rep. Ashley Hinson’s (R-Iowa) “Kitchen Cabinet” in D.C. She previously was executive director of the NRCC.
— WHITE HOUSE ARRIVAL LOUNGE: Rio Hart is now special assistant to the domestic policy adviser. He most recently was director of research for the Obama Foundation.
— Kaitlin Fahey, Paul Kohnstamm and Leah Israel, all longtime aides to Sen. Tammy Duckworth (D-Ill.), are launching Magnify Strategies and will be working with Duckworth’s reelect and “other statewide political campaigns, national political coalitions and organizations, trade associations and companies with Illinois ties.” Fahey previously was chief of staff for Duckworth, Kohnstamm was administrative director, and Israel was a senior adviser and longtime chief fundraiser.
— JC Sandberg will join the American Clean Power Association as chief advocacy officer. He most recently has led global government affairs and policy at GE Renewable Energy.
— Mia Ives-Rublee is joining the Center for American Progress as director of the Disability Justice Initiative. She’s a longtime advocate and expert who worked on several Democratic campaigns in the 2020 cycle.
— Kindred Motes has launched a social impact and comms consultancy practice, where he’ll oversee initiatives for clients including USAID, the Global Project Against Hate and Extremism, the James W. Foley Legacy Foundation and I-MAK. He previously was senior officer for comms and strategic engagement at the Wallace Global Fund.
TRANSITIONS — Steven Smith is now a senior director at the Herald Group. He previously was national press secretary for the House Republican Conference. … Stefan Smith has joined the ACLU as its first deputy chief digital engagement officer. He previously was online engagement director for Pete Buttigieg’s presidential campaign and senior adviser for Jay-Z and Van Jones’ Reform Alliance. …
… Charli Huddleston is now comms director for Eric Schmitt’s Missouri Senate campaign. She most recently was comms director for Rep. Jodey Arrington (R-Texas), and is a Trump campaign and House Oversight alum. … David Fonseca is joining Facebook’s public policy external affairs team. He most recently was deputy director of government affairs at the American Center for Law & Justice, and is a Marco Rubio and Jeb Bush alum.
ENGAGED —Graph Massara, POLITICO night editor, and Saoirse O’Neill, an agricultural ecologist, shared their engagement over the weekend. The couple met as undergrads at the University of California, Berkeley, and have moved from the Bay Area to D.C., and back, over their six years together. They now live on a small fruit farm in California’s wine country.
WEEKEND WEDDINGS — Alexandra DeSanctis, a staff writer at National Review, and Nicholas Marr, who works at the Federalist Society, got married Saturday at the Basilica of the Sacred Heart on Notre Dame’s campus. They met at Notre Dame.
— Bob Salera, founder of Landslide LLC and an NRCC and NRSC alum, and Jennie Allison, program manager at the Center for Regional Economic Competitiveness, got married Saturday night in Old Town. SPOTTED: NRCC staff/alums Camille Gallo, Lauren Hutchinson, Jon Reedy, Matt Wall, Katie Martin, Daniel Chiasson and Chris Pack. Pic
HAPPY BIRTHDAY: Sens. Jim Risch (R-Idaho) and Ron Wyden (D-Ore.) … NBC/MSNBC’s Willie Geist … White House national climate adviser Gina McCarthy … Caroline Critchfield Hunter of Stand Together (5-0)… Ben Ginsberg of Jones Day … Scott Kamins of Kamins Consulting … Harris Media’s Vince Harris … former Sen. David Vitter (R-La.) (6-0) … POLITICO’s Matt Friedman, Anna Stubbs, David Nicks and Julia Busby … Chip Rogers of the American Hotel and Lodging Association … SKDKnickerbocker’s Stephen Krupin … Holly Turner … Greg Clugston … Linda Kenyon … Vic Goetz of Rep. Brad Schneider’s (D-Ill.) office (3-0) … Katie Farrar … Irene Rosenfeld … Mikhail Prokhorov … Rob Astorino … Booz Allen Hamilton’s Stephen Labaton … Andy Miga … Brendan McPhillips … Democratic strategist Max Burns … Seth Flaxman of Democracy Works … Chris Bodenner … Andrew Nagorski … The App Association’s Chelsea Thomas … Susan Steinmetz … Ella Yates … Julia Convertini … Lindsey Kolb … Caitlin Peruccio … Sam Azzarelli of Firehouse Strategies … GPS Impact’s Roy Temple … Tim Mulvey … Alliance Group’s Rob Jones … Stephanie Logan … Paul Kangas … Steele Burrow … Jason Killian Meath … Cliff Maloney … American Forest and Paper Association’s Michael Blume
Send Playbookers tips to playbook@politico.com. Playbook couldn’t happen without our editor Mike Zapler and producers Allie Bice, Eli Okun and Garrett Ross.
By Shane Vander Hart on May 03, 2021 04:15 am
On the eve of his 100th day in office last week, President Joe Biden gave his first joint address to Congress. There is a lot I could focus on with his speech.
For instance, I could point out the price tag that would accompany his priorities ($6 TRILLION). I could write that his speech reflected a far-left wish list instead of the unifying moderate he supposedly campaigned as (not that I believed that). I could also highlight that he doesn’t have the numbers in Congress to accomplish most of the agenda he outlined (and for that, I’m thankful). He also took credit for the COVID-19 vaccine when the Trump administration did most, if not all, of the legwork for that.
I am alarmed by his American Families Plan. He talked about how 12 years of public education is no longer enough to compete in the 21st century. Then he said, “That’s why the American Families Plan guarantees four additional years of public education for every person in America – starting as early as we can.”
Two of the four years is his plan is a free community college for every kid that graduates high school. I don’t think every student needs a four-year degree and could benefit from vocational training at a community college. All three of my kids attended a local community college, my daughters to complete general education before finishing their degrees (which has kept college debt to a minimum), and my son completed EMT training. I think it’s great that many high school students can earn high school and community college credit at the same time. We can’t afford it, and, frankly, federal involvement in higher education has contributed to driving costs up.
Neal McClusky with the CATO Institute tweeted this yesterday, and I agree.
That, however, isn’t the two years I’m most concerned about.
Biden continued, “We add two years of universal high-quality preschool for every three and four year-old in America. The research shows that when a young child goes to school—not day care—they are far more likely to graduate from high school and go on to college.”
He wants public educators to have your children from age three or four to 19 or 20. Think about that.
The most crucial years for parents to connect with their children are the first five years, and Biden thinks we should send them off to public school at three years old.
Setting aside the ideological, leftist dumpster fires that public schools are increasingly becoming, the “high-quality” approach to preschool means what? Generally, developmentally inappropriate and stressful for these kids. Yes, let’s have an academically rigorous preschool! (On second thought, let’s not.)
Also, will this eventually become compulsory? Churches used to fill the void for preschool, but they’ve taken a hit when public education entered into this realm.
Then Biden moves on to pushing daycare.
“We guarantee that low-to-middle-income families will pay no more than seven percent of their income for high-quality care for children up to the age of five,” he said. “The most hard-pressed working families won’t have to spend a dime.”
Now, I understand some families have to have daycare with single-parent families and families who need to have both parents working to make ends meet. I sympathize with that to a point (I was a youth pastor, youth pastors are notoriously underpaid, and I worked two jobs, so my wife could stay home with the kids, it was hard, but we made it work).
Wouldn’t it be less expensive to find ways to incentivize having a parent stay at home? With tax brackets, the cost of going to work, daycare, etc., some families have found they don’t end up making that much more. Some mothers (or fathers – I’ll be equal opportunity here) would rather only have one parent work and one to be home full-time with the kids.
Biden said, “No one should have to choose between a job and paycheck or taking care of themselves and a loved one – a parent, spouse, or child.”
Yes, sometimes we do need to choose. It’s not always a necessity; sometimes, it is just a matter of priorities.
There are a couple of ideas that President Biden has that could have merit. Paid family and medical leave is one proposal, but it depends on how they want to get there. Are they going to mandate employers pay for it? Are they going to create a new entitlement? Or will his plan allow families to access Social Security?
Biden talked about increasing the child tax credit. I agree with this. I also like the Cassidy-Siema Paid Family Leave Plan that allows parents to front-load their child tax credit when they have a baby or adopt.
Those are proposals that could help families AND have bipartisan support.
In terms of economic help, the best thing that Congress and President Biden can do to help families is to support a family-friendly tax policy by cutting individual tax rates and making them permanent, especially for the lower and middle brackets, and further increase the child tax credit. Then focus on a budget-neutral Paid Family Leave plan that doesn’t kill jobs.
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 then travel to Virginia where he will visit an elementary school and a community college. President Biden’s Itinerary for 5/3/21: All Times EDT 8:00 AM Receive daily briefing – Oval Office9:00 AM Depart White House en route to Newport News, Va …
The Left is hard at work promoting the climate change humbug. This article crushes the lies and reveals the truth behind the fib of a 97% consensus among scientists. Much of what follows comes from Marc Morano’s amazing research on the subject. His research is detailed in a book that …
http://www.creativeclearance.com/guidelines.html#D2 Does it seem like you’re living in a cartoon when you watch the news these days? People everywhere are pretending that a virus that is 99.86% non-lethal is the greatest crisis facing America. Pardon me, but I think full-blown Communism is the biggest threat facing America, and the people …
In this installment of the weekly conversation, PF Whalen and Parker Beauregard of The Blue State Conservative resurrect six recent, explosive scandals that deserve answers and the Democrats’ new favorite buzzword: Accountability. Parker: Both the news cycle and cancel culture, in their insatiable desire to create new hysterias and villains, …
Chris Salcedo interviews A.F. Branco on Newsmax discussing the Biden address to congress, James Le Bron, Rudy Giuliani raid, and Wokeness.Video. Full Interview See all of Branco’s toons HERE
This won’t be news to most of you, but the so-called “fact-checkers” can’t be trusted. However, recently Congressman Thomas Massie (R-Kentucky) exposed the profit motive of one of the projects of factcheck.org, that being the COVID-19 Vaccination Project which purports to be some independent “fact-checkers” exposing false claims on the …
On Saturday, Jim Acosta was trending on Twitter for something he said on air earlier in the day. Specifically, he blasted Fox News calling it a “bulls*** factory” spreading lies. You can see the video of his comments below. Saving this pic.twitter.com/YHIVcvcUG0 — Acyn (@Acyn) May 1, 2021 It’s very …
C’mon man, give me five days! Are you serious, man? President Joe Biden made this comment as he was addressing supporters in Georgia on Thursday. Biden made the comment in response to a small group of hecklers who were calling for abolishing ICE and the end of the use of …
Happy Monday, dear Kruiser Morning Briefing friends. The right spinach dip can be an aphrodisiac.
I sincerely hope that all of your weekends were as good as mine, which was blessed with tacos and beer.
We’ve been hearing a lot from the hacks in the mainstream media about a post-Trump battle for the soul of the Republican party. This battle is yet another MSM fabrication. As I am fond of saying, any time two Republicans have lunch together D.C. and order something different the MSM writes about a “Republican Civil War.”
Here at the Briefing we all know that there is no battle at all. It’s Trump’s party now and, as I’ve written more than once, if it’s going to survive this Biden horror, it needs to stay that way. Going back to pre-Trump business as usual will guarantee that the Democrats will stay in power forever. Or at least until they kill the Republic. The GOP types who decided to be vocal about hating Donald Trump have been marginalized and are getting pushed more towards the party’s fringe every day.
Perhaps the most reviled of the GOP squishes is Willard “Mittens” Romney, aka the man who made everyone who voted for him in 2012 regret it. Romney is the worst of the Republicans who have decided that they would rather be fawned over by the commies at The New York Times than be true to their constituents.
Mittens had a tough time whilst visiting the home folk over the weekend, which Rick wrote about:
Not surprisingly, Senator Mitt Romney was continuously booed by Republican delegates in Utah to the state convention for his vote to impeach Donald Trump and his constant and pointed criticism of the former president while he was in office.
It got pretty rough for Romney. The Salt Lake Tribune reported that Romney had little to say in response.
“Aren’t you embarrassed?” said Romney trying to deflect the chorus of catcalls that greeted him as he took the stage.
Yeah bozo, we’re all embarrassed by you.
GOP members in the House were dumb enough to keep Liz Cheney in her leadership position but Rebecca Downs at Townhall writes that there may be some buyer’s remorse setting in there:
Rep. Liz Cheney (R-WY), who is the chair of the House Republican Conference and the third-highest ranking Republican in the U.S. House, has found herself in the news quite a bit lately. Matt reported last week that she said she thinks she may even run for president in 2024, after being particularly vocal in impeaching Trump the second time around, while she continues to trash him to this day. Well, Republican leaders have had enough of her, and may even be willing to push her out, according to Axios.
On Saturday, Jonathan Swan, Glen Johnson and Alayna Treene reported, “Scoop: GOP leaders threaten Cheney ouster.” Honestly, it sounds like House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy (R-CA) and Minority Whip Steve Scalise (R-LA), the highest and second-highest ranking Republicans in the House, respectively, have been fed up with her for some time.
Honestly, anyone with egregious Bush taint on them shouldn’t even be in the party, let alone in leadership.
The bad news kept on coming for the GOP squishes over the weekend. There was a special election in Texas on Saturday and the Never Trump candidate who Adam Kinzinger campaigned for finished in 9th place and couldn’t even get 3% of the vote.
The Never Trump squishes are delusional, but they may be getting around to understanding that the party is never going to be filled with their ilk again, and they’re circling the wagons:
It would be wonderful if the GOP would start shedding some of this dead, untrustworthy weight. It’s tough to knock off incumbents but if Trump keeps his promise to campaign for their primary opponents the odds get significantly better.
Seriously though, can I get my Romney 2012 vote back?
PJ Media senior columnist and associate editor Stephen Kruiser is a professional stand-up comic, writer, and recovering political activist who edits and writes PJ’s Morning Briefing, aka The Greatest Political Newsletter in America. His latest book, Straight Outta Feelings, is a humorous exploration of how the 2016 election made him enjoy politics more than he ever had before. When not being a reclusive writer, Kruiser has had the honor of entertaining U.S. troops all over the world. Follow on: Gab, Parler, MeWe
‘Big government is back’: Biden’s unprecedented actions empower labor unions . . . President Biden’s promotion of an all-out federal alliance with labor unions and of whole-of-government mobilizations on fronts from racial justice to climate change is testing America’s appetite for an activist administration. Mr. Biden established a Cabinet-level task force to plan a federal strategy to empower unions — not simply promote the right to join one. His Justice Department launched investigations to root out racism in the Minneapolis and Louisville police departments. He embarked on a massive spending agenda that expanded federal safety net programs and seeks to add government benefits for college, child care, health care and paid sick leave. The activist approach to governing imbues Mr. Biden’s union agenda. Washington Times
Politics
Biden, Republicans Set Talks Over Competing Infrastructure Plans . . . Lawmakers and administration officials signaled on Sunday that they expected negotiations over an infrastructure package to ramp up this week, as Republicans and President Biden work to see if a bipartisan agreement is within reach. White House chief of staff Ron Klain said that Mr. Biden had invited Sen. Shelley Moore Capito of West Virginia, one of the lead GOP negotiators on the infrastructure package, and others to meet this week. “We’re going to work with Republicans. We’re going to find common ground,” Mr. Klain said on CBS. Republicans said they wanted to see that Mr. Biden was willing to make some concessions to prove his willingness to work across the aisle. Wall Street Journal
GOP wrestles with role of culture wars in party’s future . . . Republicans wrestling over the future of the party are debating whether to embrace the culture wars that helped former President Trump cement his popularity with the GOP base. The internal rift, which involves congressional leaders and potential 2024 presidential contenders, comes as Republicans have struggled to dent President Biden’s popularity and as they plot their strategy to win back the House and Senate in the 2022 midterms. While some in the GOP are eager to double down on Trump’s brand of populism, others argue the party needs to return to its roots. The Hill
Biden wants to expand money-losing Amtrak with $80B taxpayer infusion . . . Amtrak loses billions of dollars. It’s trains arrive late. It’s way too expensive and adds to the deficit. So of course, President Biden, who bragged about riding it to Washington every day to work from Wilmington, Delaware when he was in the Senate, wants more of it. One reason we hadn’t heard before: Climate change! Less people in cars. You can pretty much justify anything today by saying it will help stop climate change. White House Dossier
Cruz, Rubio ramp up criticisms of big business . . . Important figures in the GOP that usually toes the pro-business line are instead throwing jabs at the corporate world. An anti-elite GOP base that grew even more populist during former President Trump’s time in the White House could reward the pugnacious tone. Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas), in a phone interview for this column, ramped up his rhetoric, lambasting major corporations for what he sees as a leftward drift in executive suites. “If you look at the CEOs of the Fortune 100, there are very, very few who you could even plausibly characterize as right of center,” Cruz said. Sen. Marco Rubio (R-Fla.) said in an email: “. . . Far too many American companies were prioritizing short-term financial windfalls at the expense of America’s families, communities and national security. Republicans, and conservatives generally, are grappling with unusual dynamics eddying back and forth between the white working-class element of their support and wealthy, corporate America. The Hill
DCCC Chair Spent Big on Travel as He Urged Constituents to ‘Stay Home’ . . . As Rep. Sean Patrick Maloney suspended in-person campaign efforts and told constituents to stay home to fight coronavirus, the New York Democrat disclosed spending tens of thousands of dollars to travel the state, prompting ethics concerns. Maloney—who leads the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee—halted his campaign’s in-person signature-collecting push in March 2020. Days later, he urged constituents to “stay home” and “stop spreading this virus.” Over the next nine months, however, he spent nearly $29,000 on “ground transportation” and “automobile expenses,” financial disclosures show. The disbursements included nearly $20,000 in lease and insurance payments, more than $3,600 in collision repairs, nearly $2,200 in gas, more than $2,100 in rental car fees, and nearly $500 for a satellite radio subscription. Washington Free Beacon
National Security
US base in Afghanistan hit by rocket fire as troops begin withdrawal . . . US forces returned fire over the weekend after rockets hit a key air base in Kandahar, Afghanistan, while America’s top general on Sunday warned of “bad possible outcomes” in the country after all US and NATO troops complete their withdrawal. The stark comments from Gen. Mark A. Milley, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, came just hours after US troops in Afghanistan conducted a precision strike against enemy forces planning fresh attacks on Kandahar. The Pentagon seems virtually certain that the insurgent group is behind the assault. Taliban officials over the weekend again threatened to attack American forces still in Afghanistan past May 1, the original withdrawal deadline laid out in a deal between former President Donald Trump and the Taliban early in 2020. Washington Times
Organized Crime Is Still Hurting Americans . . . It’s no coincidence that, over the past year, the alarming surge in violent crime across America has coincided with the nationwide campaign to defund the police and the left’s demonization of law enforcement. Much of the violent crime infecting America’s cities today is connected to drugs, which enter our country courtesy of cartels south of the border. Once the drugs enter America, the mob are the top-level distributors, regulating distribution on the streets through the local gangs, which give the mob bosses a cut of the earnings. Meth, fentanyl, cocaine, heroin — these drugs are corrupting our society and having a devastating effect on the nation. Gingrich360
Coronavirus
Next Generation of Covid-19 Vaccines Could Be Pill or Spray . . . The next generation of Covid-19 vaccines in development could come as a pill or a nasal spray and be easier to store and transport than the current handful of shots that form the backbone of the world-wide vaccination effort. These newer vaccines, from U.S. government labs and companies including Sanofi SA, Altimmune Inc. and Gritstone Oncology Inc., also have the potential to provide longer-lasting immune responses and be more potent against newer and multiple viral variants, possibly helping to head off future pandemics, the companies say. Wall Street Journal
Bernie Sanders calls for US drug companies to surrender IP rights for vaccines . . . Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders called for prominent US drug companies to surrender their intellectual property rights to “allow other countries” to produce and distribute vaccinations more expediently. Maintaining intellectual property rights is “morally objectionable” because “rich countries” maintain stockpiles of the shots, while those in “poor countries” cannot keep up, Sanders said on Sunday. Washington Examiner
Brilliant. Commie Bernie wants to ensure that no US made vaccine will be produced in the future.
International
Putin is blackmailing US taxpayer-funded Radio Liberty . . . Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty is under assault by Russian President Vladimir Putin.
Through his agencies and obedient courts, he is blackmailing the media organization funded by U.S. taxpayers, issuing fines and threats of criminal prosecutions unless Radio Liberty agrees to play by his rules. Because of the actions already taken by the Kremlin, RFE/RL is facing a defining choice: whether to keep its news bureau staff in Moscow or to reduce its presence in Putin’s Russia. Under Putin’s blackmail, the broadcaster’s choice is that it can either label its programs as produced by “foreign agents” and that individual Radio Liberty Russian and even Ukrainian reporters have to declare themselves as “foreign agents,” or it can do most of its Russian coverage from abroad as it had done during the Cold War.Washington Examiner
UK tools up against China’s intel gathering . . . The UK has realized it is going to need more than James Bond to counter Chinese influence and espionage. Beijing’s massive state-backed effort to infiltrate British companies and research institutions in the race to develop key technologies is mostly not the stuff of traditional spying. And Britain has realized that its response needs to go well beyond the intelligence services. Matthew Henderson, a former U.K. ambassador to China and now an associate fellow at the Council on Geostrategy, says the great majority of the information gathering carried out by China in the UK “is done in open sight” at institutions such as R&D-intensive companies handling sensitive innovations such as graphene, encryption systems and hypersonic tech. “They’re doing what they can do because we’ve made it so easy for them.” Politico
US businesses and research institutions are also widely targeted by Chinese espionage.
Virus-Hit Russia Reports 25 Percent Death Increase in January-March . . . Russia’s state statistical service says the number of deaths nationwide in the first three months of 2021 was more than 25 percent higher than the same period a year ago, and it reported thousands more deaths due to COVID-19 in March than tallied by the country’s coronavirus task force. More than 583,000 people died in January-March of this year in Russia, compared with 460,000 for those same months in 2020, the Rosstat agency said in a report issued Friday. The agency did not provide an explanation for the sharply higher death toll, but critics have suggested that Russian officials underplay the severity of the pandemic in the country. Epoch Times
Money
Hundreds of millions in PPP loans went to CCP-backed firms, as U.S. small businesses went under . . . US Small Business Administration and Treasury Department have awarded at least $200 million, but as much as $420 million, to Chinese Communist Party-linked businesses by way of the Paycheck Protection Program, intended to assist U.S. small businesses that were devastated by the coronavirus pandemic, widely believed to have originated in China. A report from the Horizon Advisory strategic consulting group illustrates how negligible congressional oversight allowed at least 125 Chinese firms to “take advantage of the international disaster” by benefitting “directly from US investment and relief measures.” The PPP program, while in many ways a success, was also rife with fraud, much of which likely remains undetected. The report also observes: “Many U.S. small businesses that did not receive funding have closed up shop or permanently shrunk their work force.” Just the News
States now flush with cash after depths of pandemic . . . Congress approved hundreds of billions more for state and local governments to pay for and recover from the pandemic that has killed more than 500,000 people in America. In states across the country, legislators now face an embarrassment of riches, funded by a booming stock market, rising wages for those at the upper end of the economic stratosphere. The trends are clear: Minnesota, which once faced a $1.3 billion deficit, now expects a $1.6 billion surplus. Michigan budget figures earlier this year showed a $2.5 billion surplus. Connecticut’s surplus was estimated at $70 million in January, and $130 million by March. Colorado’s surplus stands north of $5 billion. Rhode Island will have an extra $44 million to play with. The Hill
You should also know
NYT, WashPo retract stories on Giuliani, Russian disinfo . . . The New York Times and The Washington Post retracted stories over the weekend claiming Rudolph W. Giuliani, the personal attorney to former President Trump, had been warned by the FBI that he was a target of Russian disinformation leading up to the 2020 election. The two papers issued corrections over the weekend for stories that claimed Mr. Giuliani was made aware he was a target for Russian disinformation. He was allegedly digging up dirt on then-candidate Joe Biden for Mr. Trump. Federal agents raided the former New York City mayor’s apartment raided on Wednesday, having executed a search warrant to take all electronic items. They refused however to take hard drives belonging to Hunter Biden. Washington Times
Caitlyn Jenner Says Biological Males Shouldn’t Compete In Girls’ Sports . . . Caitlyn Jenner said Saturday that biological males should not be allowed to compete in girls’ sports because “it just isn’t fair.” “This is a question of fairness. That’s why I oppose biological boys who are trans competing in girls sports in school. It just isn’t fair, and we have to protect girls sports in our schools,” Jenner, who won a gold medal in the decathlon at the 1976 Olympic Games, explained to TMZ. Jenner explained in a tweet, “It’s an issue of fairness and we need to protect girls’ sports in our schools.” Daily Caller
Guilty Pleasures
Dems Propose Fighting Obesity By Switching To Communism . . . Many are concerned with Americans’ record high obesity rates, which were made even worse by the pandemic and the lockdowns. But Joe Biden and the Democrats have a plan to fight against obesity: switching to communism, where there will be no food at all. Americans will no longer be able to gorge themselves on hundreds of food options in their city, as there will be one food option: the bread line, which will usually have no bread. “If we really want to get Americans skinny — and I mean really skinny — we need to switch to communism right away,” said Joe Biden in a speech Friday. “Have you seen some of those pictures from the Soviet Union? We’re talking some really serious weight loss here.”
“It’s my recommendation that we move to communism immediately for best results.” Health experts say that switching from capitalism to communism can help people lose up to 50% of their body weight almost right away as the government is unable to efficiently distribute goods and resources as the free market does. The move to communism will also address overcrowding and population growth. Satire. For now. Babylon Bee
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Happy Monday! Important lesson that one of your Morning Dispatchers learned the hard way over the weekend: Vaccines may be over 90 percent effective at preventing COVID-19 infection, but they are 0 percent effective at preventing debilitating sunburn.
Quick Hits: Today’s Top Stories
The Biden administration on Friday moved to restrict travel from India due to the country’s skyrocketing number of new COVID-19 cases and the presence of new variants. The policy goes into effect tomorrow and prohibits most people from entering the United States if they’ve been to India within the past 14 days. U.S. citizens and their families, legal permanent residents of the United States, and a few other groups are exempted.
Two Republicans will advance to a runoff after outpacing 21 other candidates on Saturday in the special election to replace Rep. Ron Wright in Texas’ 6th congressional district. Susan Wright—the late congressman’s widow—emerged as the top contender with 19 percent of the vote, followed by state Rep. Jake Ellzey at 14 percent.
At least three people died and dozens others were injured when a boat authorities say was attempting to illegally smuggle migrants into the United States crashed into a reef near San Diego and broke apart.
The Department of Defense announced Friday it is “canceling all border barrier construction projects paid for with funds originally intended for other military missions and functions,” a widely expected move partially undoing former President Donald Trump’s decision to divert to border wall construction billions of dollars originally appropriated for the military.
The Taliban on Saturday warned the U.S. and NATO of “counteraction” against “occupying forces” in Afghanistan as the May 1 deadline to withdraw forces originally negotiated with the Trump administration came and went. The Biden administration has begun to draw down the last few thousand troops deployed in the region but is not expected to complete that process until late summer.
Axios reported Sunday that President Biden, national security adviser Jake Sullivan, and CIA Director Bill Burns met with Israeli spy chief Yossi Cohen at the White House on Friday, with Biden telling Cohen that the U.S. is not yet close to returning to the Iran Deal.
Newsmax—conspiracy-friendly, far-right media company—apologized Friday afternoon to an employee of Dominion Voting Systems for amplifying baseless claims that he was involved in rigging the 2020 election. In a statement, the company backtracked on claims about Dr. Eric Coomer, writing: “Newsmax would like to clarify its coverage of Dr. Coomer and note that while Newsmax initially covered claims by President Trump’s lawyers, supporters and others that Dr. Coomer played a role in manipulating Dominion voting machines, Dominion voting software, and the final vote counts in the 2020 presidential election, Newsmax subsequently found no evidence that such allegations were true. Many of the states whose results were contested by the Trump campaign after the November 2020 election have conducted extensive recounts and audits, and each of these states certified the results as legal and final.”
Democratic Rep. Cheri Bustos of Illinois, who served as House Democrats’ campaign chair during the 2020 cycle, announced Friday she will retire from Congress after her current term.
Medina Spirit beat out its competitors by a half-length in the 147th Kentucky Derby on Saturday, giving jockey John Velazquez his fourth win at Churchill Downs and trainer Bob Baffert his seventh, a new record.
The United States confirmed 31,050 new cases of COVID-19 yesterday per the Johns Hopkins University COVID-19 Dashboard, with 2.8 percent of the 2,127,998 tests reported coming back positive. An additional 316 deaths were attributed to the virus on Sunday, bringing the pandemic’s American death toll to 577,035. According to the Centers for Disease Control, 36,304 Americans are currently hospitalized with COVID-19. Meanwhile, 2,127,998 COVID-19 vaccine doses were administered yesterday, with 147,047,012 Americans having now received at least one dose.
Giuliani’s Home, Office Raided by FBI
When we got this little newsletter off the ground in October 2019, one of the earliest stories we tackled was the bizarre and seedy affair of Rudy Giuliani and his associates’ misadventures in Ukraine. Some of these had been part of then-President Trump’s impeachment-inducing efforts to dig up dirt on Joe Biden, while others appeared to be simple schemes to turn a quick buck in the corruption-beleaguered nation.
That month, the New York Times reported New York federal prosecutors had launched an investigation into Giuliani, focusing on potential violations of campaign finance laws. But it had been a while since anyone had heard much about that investigation—until last Wednesday morning, when FBI agents suddenly executed search warrants at the former mayor’s New York home and office, seizing cell phones and computers.
Allies of Trump’s erstwhile personal lawyer immediately denounced the raid as political retribution from President Biden and the Democrats in his administration. The investigation was launched during the Trump years, but Wednesday’s raid would have required Justice Department sign-off, given that many of a lawyer’s communications are protected by attorney-client privilege.
“In banana republics, in Castro’s Cuba, in many parts of the world, when a candidate loses for president, they go after the candidate, they go after his lawyers, they go after his friends,” attorney Alan Dershowitz said Sunday. “That’s happening in America now. They’re going after Rudy Giuliani.”
“It’s very, very unfair,” Trump himself told Fox Business on Thursday. “It is so terrible when you see things that are going on in our country with the corruption and the problems and then they go after Rudy Giuliani.”
Ten years ago this past weekend, SEAL Team Six executed an intricate plan to kill Osama bin Laden in Abbottabad, Pakistan. Garrett Graff has put together an incredibly comprehensive oral history of the raid—and the decision leading up to it—for Politico, featuring quotes from Adm. William McRaven, Leon Panetta, John Brennan, and many others. “We had looked at the possibility that somebody would come out from the third floor, possibly with an RPG, and try to hit the helicopters,” McRaven remembers. “I had had a number of discussions with the great warrant officer who was flying the helicopter—at one point, in one of the rehearsals, he said, ‘Look, sir, unless I am dead, I’ll be able to get this helicopter on the ground safely.’”
You may or may not be familiar with the name John Swartzwelder, but you’re definitely familiar with his work. Though he left the show nearly two decades ago, he’s written more episodes of The Simpsons than anybody else. Notoriously reclusive, just a handful of pictures of the 72-year-old can be found online, and he’s never done an interview about his work—until this week, when he agreed to speak with Mike Sacks of The New Yorker. “I’ve always thought Season 3 was our best individual season,” he said. “By Season 3 we had learned how to grind out first-class ‘Simpsons’ episodes with surprising regularity, we had developed a big cast of characters to work with, we hadn’t even come close to running out of story lines, and the staff hadn’t been worn down by overwork yet.”
Reason’s Matt Welch is out with a lengthy essay for the magazine diving into the immortal debate over what the goal of public policy should be: equality of opportunity, or equality of outcome. Most Democratic politicians, he argues, are situated firmly in the latter camp—but many of the pandemic-era policies being pushed by their party will only exacerbate existing disparities between classes, races, and genders. “On February 12,” Welch writes, “Vice President Harris took to the pages of The Washington Post to sound the alarm about a clear and present crisis. ‘About 2.5 million women have lost their jobs or dropped out of the workforce during the pandemic,’ she lamented. … But the vice president gave only passing reference to the single biggest factor keeping mothers of minor children out of the labor force: the ongoing closure of, and uncertainty surrounding, public schools. And like economic restrictions, school closures are jarringly partisan.”
David’s Sunday French Press focuses on the role of prophesy in Pentecostal Christianity. “Many, many prophets predicted Trump would win. He lost. And while virtually no prophets predicted the coronavirus catastrophe, many of them predicted a quick end to the pandemic. They were wrong,” David writes. “Too many Christian leaders reject accountability. Too many Christian believers seek the voices that tell them what they want to hear and despise those who dissent.”
On the latest episode of Advisory Opinions, David and Sarah discuss Justice Stephen Breyer’s controversial pronunciation of the word “amicus,” Justice Brett Kavanaugh’s Second Amendment jurisprudence, and Justice Neil Gorsuch’s majority opinion in Niz-Chavez v. Garland. Plus, they chat about Supreme Court oral arguments for a First Amendment lawsuit involving a high school cheerleader.
In his Friday G-File, Jonah riffs on the idea floated in some quarters that Biden is the anti-Reagan, and that the era of big government is here to stay. And in the newsletter’s second section, he isn’t done with the Matt Gaetz/Joel Greenberg/Roger Stone saga quite yet.
This weekend’s Ruminantis less ruminant-y than usual, as the Greek chorus that has silently watched Jonah during these recordings for the last few episodes finally speaks up. That group includes Ryan, the newest addition to The Dispatch; Guy, noted Mark Steyn impersonator; and Nick, Jonah’s long-suffering research assistant. In this imitation of a kinda-crude FM radio show, the four talk about the latest Gaetzian nonsense, Biden’s address to Congress, and Chez Goldberg’s interesting history with Newt Gingrich.
In his Monday column, Chris Stirewalt laments the nadir of conservatism as both parties abandon it. “Its success was so towering 25 years ago that Democratic President Bill Clinton embraced smaller government, free trade, welfare reform and fiscal discipline,” he writes. “Conservatism’s failure now is so abject that not only has a new Democratic president repudiated those concepts in his first address to Congress, but the Republican Party that for decades made itself synonymous with the conservative movement also increasingly rejects its core tenets.”
Friday’s edition of Vital Interests, looking at the 10th anniversary of the raid on Osama bin Laden’s compound, is available on the website this morning. “For America, bin Laden’s death brought about a collective sigh of relief. The master terrorist responsible for the most devastating attack on U.S. soil in decades was dead,” Joscelyn writes. “A decade later, however, we can say this with certainty: Al-Qaeda is alive.”
Let Us Know
A Manchester United v. Liverpool game was postponed over the weekend after a horde of angry United fans stormed the pitch to protest the team’s owners and their (since reversed) decision to form a “Super League.”
What decision by a sports executive could get you riled up enough to (peacefully—three Manchester police officers were allegedly injured here) storm the field in protest? (Correct answer: Rob Manfred’s stupid new rule automatically putting runners on second base in extra innings.)
Kemberlee Kaye: “Happy 5th Insurrectionversy, Mary. We love you!”
Mary Chastain: “It’s been a great five years! Thank you to Bill for hiring me! It can’t be easy to deal with a libertarian day in and day out. He seriously is the best boss. I also have the greatest coworkers. Not only are they awesome, but I learn so much from reading their posts. Thank you to everyone who takes the time to read my articles. It makes everything worth it. Here’s to the next five years!”
Fuzzy Slippers: “Happy 5-year LI anniversary to our very own Mary! She’s a rock star.”
Leslie Eastman: “I enjoyed being away from California for 2 glorious and fun-filled weeks. I came back to find that state officials are as crazed, deluded, and dangerous as when I left. I really should ask Professor Jacobson for hazard pay if I continue as Legal Insurrection’s California correspondent. In a move to create “safer prisons,” California plans early release of 76,000 prisoners
Stacey Matthews: “As it turns out, Vice President Harris agrees with Sen. Tim Scott’s claim that America is ‘not a racist country.’ Oddly enough, however, there were no derogatory and racist names trending for her on Twitter Thursday as there were for Scott.”
Vijeta Uniyal: “This week I sat down with Kasim Hafeez of the Christians United for Israel (CUFI). The half-hour podcast revolved around Israel-India bilateral relations, anti-Israel activism, and “Indians For Israel,” a pro-Israel initiative that I founded in 2013.”
David Gerstman: “Last week Mary Chastain blogged about a Washington Post story that portrayed President Joe Biden as “very Catholic,” but bishops who take issue with his support for abortion as “right-wing.” But if abortion is forbidden by the Church, doesn’t that mean that the president rejects one of its tenets? How does that correlate with him being “very” Catholic. Plus, Mary asked in her sub-headline, “So are those bishops still “right-wing” when they speak out against gun violence and push for just immigration laws?” Her point being that the Post’s religion writer was critiquing Catholic belief not on its own terms, but on her personal, (or perhaps, institutional) subjective political judgments. If she approves of Catholic belief that’s “very” Catholic, but if she disagrees with it then it’s “right-wing.” The arrogance is astounding. And BTW, wish Mary a happy fifth blogiversary at Legal Insurrection.”
Legal Insurrection Foundation is a Rhode Island tax-exempt corporation established exclusively for charitable purposes within the meaning of Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code to educate and inform the public on legal, historical, economic, academic, and cultural issues related to the Constitution, liberty, and world events.
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Will the Pandemic Be Over Sooner Than We Think?
In an op-ed for the New York Times, a professor at the University of Maryland writes how a mathematical concept explains why the COVID-19 pandemic might be over sooner than we think. The Daily Mail summarizes the findings from Dr. Zoë McLaren:“The concept of exponential growth and decay as applied to the coronavirus pandemic had already been explained in an article in March in Design News – a publication for the engineering community.
‘No virus can grow at an exponential rate forever. Virus growth is bounded by available resources, such as uninfected hosts, transmission medium, nutrients, water, etc. Still, the initial exponential growth of viruses do increase at an alarming rate,’ the outlet reported.
‘Fortunately, this type of infectious growth rate doesn’t continue infinitum. As the growth rate peaks and begins to fall, the curve changes from an exponential one to a normal distribution or bell curve … as the growth pattern begins to decrease.’
McLaren wrote that ‘reaching herd immunity is a key goal.’
‘It drives cases toward zero by slowing the spread of the virus through a combination of vaccination and infection-acquired immunity to maintain exponential decay — even as society resumes normal activities,’ she wrote.”
One thing that has become clear over the last year is that science is now downstream from politics. Over the weekend, it was first reported in the New York Post thanks to a FOIA request that the largest teachers union, the American Federation of Teachers, lobbied the CDC and suggested language for guidelines on reopening schools. From the Post:
“The lobbying paid off. In at least two instances, language “suggestions” offered by the union were adopted nearly verbatim into the final text of the CDC document.
With the CDC preparing to write that schools could provide in-person instruction regardless of community spread of the virus, Trautner argued for the inclusion of a line reading “In the event of high community-transmission results from a new variant of SARS-CoV-2, a new update of these guidelines may be necessary.” That language appeared on page 22 of the final CDC guidance.
The AFT also demanded special remote work concessions for teachers “who have documented high-risk conditions or who are at increased risk for … COVID-19,” and that similar arrangements should extend to “staff who have a household member” with similar risks. A lengthy provision for that made it into the text of the final guidance.
… The close communication between the union and the feds came despite repeated assurances from CDC and Biden officials that the medical guidelines would “follow the science” and be free of political interference.“I can assure you that this is free from political meddling,” Walensky said when the guidance was released.
The AFT and its affiliates have long been one of the most reliable and deep pocketed donor constituencies of the Democratic party, dropping almost $20 million to elect party members during the 2020 election cycle, according to the Center for Responsive Politics.
The union defended its role in shaping federal COVID policy.”
While many remain hopeful about the end of the pandemic, whether we get back to normal still seems to be in the hands of those with political power.
Biden Administration Denies Permit to Rolling Thunder
For the first time in 32 years, American Veterans (AMVETS) has been denied a permit for its annual “Rolling Thunder” ride through DC on Memorial Day weekend. Thousands of bikers, many of them veterans, come through the area and it’s always amazing to see (and hear) their displays of patriotism. Rolling Thunder‘s “mission is to educate, facilitate, and never forget by means of a demonstration for service members that were abandoned after the Vietnam War.” This year, however, the Pentagon issued a statement on why the permit to demonstrate has been denied:
“Unfortunately, the department has disapproved AMVETS permit request. The department took into careful consideration all aspects of AMVETS request, to include the current Health Protection Condition status on the Pentagon Reservation; substantial community transmission of COVID-19 in Arlington County, Virginia; number of Americans fully vaccinated across the nation; nature of this event with its decreased ability to maintain physical distance; and large crowds in one location for an extended period of time. This event draws national attention and participation; therefore the risk of exposure from participants from other communities extends well beyond the National Capital Region.
If COVID-19 conditions permit, the department would gladly consider supporting a future event request from AMVETS, potentially as soon as this Labor Day weekend.”
PJ Media notes, “The permit denial is actually a revocation, and it comes as much of the rest of the capital is reopening.”
The Pentagon previously approved the permit in March.
Girl, You Have Bigger Problems
If you’ve read Girl, Wash Your Face by Rachel Hollis or have just been following the latest drama, you might enjoy this piece by Kylee Zempel at The Federalist:
“Self-help author, self-described media mogul, and self-proclaimed Christian Rachel Hollis is in a bit of a PR mess this week after wading into some bad social media optics and then doubling down, but contrary to what the race-baiters and even Hollis herself think, racial insensitivity isn’t her biggest problem.
Things went south when the New York Times stepped in to smear her as a privileged racist and say, “Girl, Wash Your Timeline,” a twist on the title of Hollis’s best-selling book “Girl, Wash Your Face.” Specifically, the Times highlighted a TikTok the 38-year-old writer had posted. In the video, Hollis conveyed how, in a recent live stream, she had mentioned her housekeeper who comes twice a week and “cleans the toilets,” which resulted in one commenter saying Hollis was “unrelatable” and “privileged AF.”
…
For her allegedly racist rant, Hollis has lost about 100,000 Instagram followers, according to the Times. And she’s had to rethink and reschedule some of her upcoming events, even issuing an apology online after first reportedly blaming her “team” for taking so long to address the issue.
“I’m so deeply sorry for the things I said in my recent posts and the hurt I have caused in the past few days,” Hollis announced in her self-flogging Instagram post, confessing her racism and privilege. But while Hollis tries to recover from the charges of co-opting black terms, when is she going to apologize for co-opting Christianity?”
What I’m Reading This Week
This week I’m reading the novel The Good Sister by Sally Hepworth. From the description:
“Fern Castle works in her local library. She has dinner with her twin sister Rose three nights a week. And she avoids crowds, bright lights and loud noises as much as possible. Fern has a carefully structured life and disrupting her routine can be…dangerous.
When Rose discovers that she cannot get pregnant, Fern sees her chance to pay her sister back for everything Rose has done for her. Fern can have a baby for Rose. She just needs to find a father. Simple.
Fern’s mission will shake the foundations of the life she has carefully built for herself and stir up dark secrets from the past, in this quirky, rich and shocking story of what families keep hidden.”
A Case of the Mondays
Very Good Boy thwarts smuggling of over 100 pounds of fentanyl and meth at border checkpoint (US Customs and Border Patrol)
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May 03, 2021 01:00 am
The COVID Passport is the doorway to fascism in your lifetime, on your doorstep, and there may be no turning back once it happens. Read More…
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The Kentucky Derby is refusing to cave to the woke mob.Despite pushback from people who claim the state song of Kentucky is racially insensitive, the song will be played prior to the 147th running of the Kentucky Derby at the historic Churchill Downs horse racing track on Saturday.What are the details?The Kentucky state so … Read more
Sunny Hostin of “The View” tore into Americans who’ve indicated they won’t get the COVID-19 vaccine by saying we should “shun” them — and the co-host specifically called out “white evangelicals” and “Republicans.”What are the details?Hostin on Monday’s program decried the “politicization” of the vaccine controversy, calling out f … Read more
A quick-thinking driver sprayed gasoline at would-be carjackers in an incident that has gone viral on social media. The incident was said to have taken place in Chile, according to a recent report from … Read more
Teachers unions held poor, brown, and black children’s futures hostage, and Democrats made taxpayers pay the ransom. It’s likely the children will never recover.
One side of the argument about having more children certainly has the support of careful and compelling scientific data. The other side has only hysteria.
Nearly 70 years since the U.S. Supreme Court overturned the racist ‘separate but equal’ doctrine, woke school leaders in Madison have done the unthinkable.
The corporate media really wants you to believe Biden is on the sidelines of the culture wars. To believe that, you would have to ignore everything Biden is actually doing.
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40.) REUTERS
The Reuters Daily Briefing
Monday, May 3, 2021
by Robert MacMillan
Hello
Here’s what you need to know.
India’s COVID-19 cases near 20 million, what’s in store for Berkshire Hathaway shareholders, and Epic Games will see Apple in court
Today’s biggest stories
Members of a family wait to be transported by the U.S. Border Patrol after crossing the Rio Grande river into the United States. April 27, 2021. REUTERS/Go Nakamura
U.S.
The United States will reunite four migrant families separated at the U.S.-Mexico border during the Trump administration through an emergency process known as “humanitarian parole.” Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas said they would be “the first of many.”
Four people were killed and more than two dozen injured on Sunday when a boat suspected of attempting to smuggle migrants into California broke apart off the San Diego coast. The boat had been pummeled to pieces by the surf by the time rescue boats arrived.
The three largest U.S. drug distributors, accused of helping fuel the opioid crisis, will defend themselves in a trial in West Virginia against charges that they ignored signs that their drugs were being diverted to illegal channels, flooding the state with hundreds of millions of highly addictive pills.
A Texas Republican backed by former President Donald Trump advanced to a runoff election to fill a House of Representatives vacancy left by the death of her husband. The outcome may deprive Democrats of their best shot at winning a Republican-held House seat this year.
A woman stands in front of a closed gate of a vaccination center, Mumbai, India, May 3, 2021. REUTERS/Francis Mascarenhas
WORLD
India is nearing 20 million COVID-19 cases and medical experts say actual numbers may be five to 10 times higher than the official tally. Hospitals are at capacity, medical oxygen supplies have run short and morgues and crematoriums have been swamped by the sick and the dead.
There are some things on which New Zealand and China “do not, cannot, and will not agree,” but those differences do not need to define their relationship, said Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern, in a speech that some see as a confirmation of the country’s friendlier or more neutral stance toward its top trading partner.
G7 foreign ministers meet in person in London for the first time since the pandemic began. Britain, which holds the group’s rotating presidency, sees the meeting as a chance to reassert the West’s influence and address coronavirus recovery, climate change and how to deal with China and Russia.
Pandemic travel restrictions kept rhino poachers at bay in South Africa, but they have returned with the easing of those limits in November, wildlife parks say. An official with the WWF conservation organization said there have been “serious numbers” of poaching incidents in the past few months, but declined to say how many had occurred.
BUSINESS
“We have been reducing our position in Berkshire for a number of years because it appears that we can make more money than he can.” That’s the read on Warren Buffett from one investor, highlighting challenges facing Berkshire Hathaway shareholders in determining how the conglomerate and its revered chief executive will handle a thicket of post-pandemic challenges.
“Fortnite” maker Epic Games faces quite the battle against Apple in an antitrust trial starting today, but win or lose, Epic may have accomplished a major goal: Drawing Apple squarely into the debate over whether and how massive technology companies should be regulated.
Verizon might have found a taker for its media assets, which it declared nearly worthless with a $4.6 billion writedown in 2018. Apollo Global Management is close to buying them in a deal that could be valued close to $5 billion.
Intel will focus less on stock buybacks, its chief executive says. Pat Gelsinger’s comment came during a “60 Minutes” interview in response to a question comparing how much Intel has spent on repurchases compared to its investment in research and development.
Quote of the day
“Passions are running high in football but there are ways to protest and make your voice heard without hurting or endangering others.”
Ancient Maya cave reveals mysterious painted hand prints
The prints, in red and black and likely made by the hands of adolescents, are more than 1,200 years old and located in a cave near the northern tip of Mexico’s Yucatan peninsula.
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(WVEC) — PORTSMOUTH, Va. — It sounds almost too good to be true, but it’s the real deal: free gasoline for your car. Portsmouth’s Grove Church is behind the massive…Read more…
(KROC) — ROCHESTER, Minnesota — A Rochester woman has been charged with stealing a large amount of money from her church. Twelve felony theft counts have been filed in Olmsted…Read more…
(FOX NEWS) — At age 18, Kathy Ireland was a lonely up-and-coming model living in an old French apartment at the end of a dark hallway nicknamed “the dungeon” with…Read more…
Members of the clergy in one Ohio county, representing Baptist, Pentecostal, Lutheran, Methodist and independent congregations, have written to county officials warning of their “no confidence” in elections vendor Dominion…. Read more…
Joe Biden has been accused of manipulating the results of the 2020 U.S. Census, which missed its deadline by months because of the COVID-19 pandemic, for political gain. A letter… Read more…
I read about a psychologist named William Moulton Marston who polled 3,000 people, asking them this: “What have you to live for?” He was surprised to find that the majority… Read more…
If I truly believed that the world we see reported to us by America’s big media “truth tellers” every day, I would indeed be most miserable. The Daily Mail photo… Read more…
(THE BLAZE) – Two professors at Roosevelt University in Illinois, who also serve on the school board for a local high school, were caught on a hot mic recently gloating… Read more…
(ZEROHEDGE) – India’s super-wealthy have been in a panic to flee the country’s exploding COVID-19 crisis – taking private jets to London before the UK adds their country to its… Read more…
[Editor’s note: This story originally was published by Real Clear Investigations.] By John Murawski Real Clear Investigations As recently as last summer, few people… Read more…
Note: Send Email to the Editor to [email protected] President (and I use the term loosely) Biden seems to be taking the U.S. down a path to socialism by vastly expanding… Read more…
(CBN) – The same studio that brought you much-loved animated features like Toy Story, The Incredibles, Finding Nemo, and Cars, is now casting for its first transgender character. Screenrant reports… Read more…
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47.) ABC
May 2, 2021 – Having trouble viewing this email? Open it in your browser.
Morning Rundown
Boat accident off San Diego coast leaves 4 dead, nearly 2 dozen hospitalized: At least four people died after a crowded “smuggling vessel” hit a reef and capsized off the coast of San Diego on Sunday morning, officials said. The incident took place around 9:56 a.m. local time, when a call came in from a commercial vessel that reported there was another boat in trouble near Point Loma leading into San Diego Bay, according to Rick Romero of the San Diego Lifeguard Services. The initial report said there was just one person aboard the distressed ship. However, rescuers said there were as many as 30 people involved. James Gartland, the lifeguard chief for the city of San Diego, said the vessel hit a reef and broke. “There are people in the water drowning, getting sucked by currents, people on shore,” Romero told reporters at a news conference. Seven people were in the water, and two had drowned, according to Romero. The remainder of the passengers were taken to area hospitals with conditions ranging from “hypothermia and injuries from the vessel breaking,” Romero said. Weather conditions, which caused the boat to break apart, also hindered the rescue efforts, according to a source with knowledge of the investigation. There were 7-foot swells, low clouds and some rain. Divers could not go in the water because the weather was so bad, the source told ABC News. The U.S. Customs and Border Protection is investigating the crash since it took place in federal waters.
Biden administration ‘proud’ of India aid effort, White House national security adviser says: As India continues to grapple with a new surge of coronavirus cases hovering around 400,000 in a single day, White House national security adviser Jake Sullivan said on ABC’s “This Week” Sunday that despite bipartisan criticism of their response, the Biden administration is “proud” of their aid efforts so far. “In a crisis of this speed and ferocity, we always wish we could move faster and do more,” Sullivan told “This Week” co-anchor Martha Raddatz. “We’re proud of what we’ve done so far, which has included multiple plane loads — and we’re talking very large military plane loads of supplies — including oxygen, including diverting raw materials for vaccines, including therapeutics that can help save lives, and we are continuing to work to source additional critical materials to move them as fast as we can,” Sullivan said. He added that the U.S. was concerned about the variants and spread of the virus, as well as “all of the secondary effects that emerge as this pandemic rages out of control in India.” President Joe Biden spoke with India’s prime minister this past week and “briefly discussed” the issue of waiving intellectual property rights for COVID-related products, vaccines and therapeutics, according to senior administration officials. Sullivan said the administration is hopeful there will be movement on the issues in the near future. “We believe that the pharmaceutical companies should be supplying at scale and at cost to the entire world so that there is no barrier to everyone getting vaccinated. Our ambassador, Katherine Tai, our U.S. trade representative, is engaged in intensive consultations at the WTO, to work through this issue, and we should have a way forward in the coming days,” Sullivan said. Click here to learn how you can help India amid the COVID-19 surge that’s devastating the country.
Princess Charlotte is all smiles for 6th birthday in new photo taken by Duchess Kate: A new photo of Princess Charlotte, the middle child of Prince William and Kate, the Duchess of Cambridge, was released Saturday for Charlotte’s sixth birthday on May 2. The photo of a smiling Charlotte was taken by Kate this weekend in Norfolk, England, where the Cambridges have a country home, Anmer Hall, according to Kensington Palace. Charlotte’s sixth birthday came just a few days after Prince William and Kate celebrated their 10th wedding anniversary. The couple celebrated publicly by sharing a home movie showing Charlotte playing with her siblings, Prince George and Prince Louis, outside in Norfolk. The Cambridges have made it a tradition to release a new photo of each child on their birthday. The photos are often taken by Kate, an avid photographer. Kate snapped a photo of Prince Louis on a bicycle that was released in April for his third birthday, as well as the photo of Prince George that was released last year for his seventh birthday.
5-year-old girl adorably wants to be a doctor just like her dad: Isabella Farmer is only 5 years old, but she already knows what she wants to be when she grows up. “A doctor,” she told “GMA.” “I want to help people feel better.” Fortunately, she can learn from her dad, Tony Farmer, a hospitalist at Centra Bedford Memorial Hospital in Lynchburg, Virginia. Farmer has been on the front lines during the pandemic and said it has been a challenging time to be a doctor, where “information [was] constantly changing. Even what to wear, I mean, that was constantly changing for the first few weeks,” he said. He was also affected by the separation of families as his hospital restricted visitors for those recovering from COVID-19. “We didn’t have families coming in to see loved ones, and that was very challenging, too.” But what kept him going was playing with Isabella during his time away from the hospital and watching her budding love of medicine. “She’s interested in the bacteria, looking at the microscope, finding new little things like that,” Farmer said. “It’s just an exciting thing, the young mind and the exploration and the mystery that is there, and the fascination. So it kind of inspires me.”
GMA Must-Watch
This morning on “GMA,” Melissa Garcia breaks down some of the hottest trends of 2021, including joyful dressing and how to rock “dad” pants. Plus, Mj Rodriguez joins us to talk about the final season of “Pose” and the role her character plays in the emotional farewell. And we tap an expert shopper who knows how to find all the best — and sometimes secret — deals when you shop. All this and more only on “GMA.”
Today we’re taking a look at some of the issues still hampering the national vaccination effort, the cultural wars playing out in local elections in Texas and what might happen when the U.S. leaves Afghanistan.
While more than 200 million Covid-19 vaccine doses have been administered since President Joe Biden was inaugurated, demographic data on who has gotten shots remains largely incomplete.
However recent studies suggest that those hardest hit by Covid-19, including Black and Hispanic Americans, are still lagging in getting vaccinated.
“I wish the Biden administration had made more progress that we could boast about, but I’m not surprised that inequalities haven’t been erased in the first 100 days,” said Manuel Pastor, a sociology professor who is director of the Equity Research Institute at the University of Southern California.
Clergy and grassroots organizations have been key to getting those communities direct access to the vaccines, but advocates say barriers remain.
Meantime, vaccination distribution has also been hampered by simple waste. CVS and Walgreens, two national pharmacy chains that the federal government entrusted to inoculate people, have wasted hundreds of thousands of Covid vaccine doses, CDC data shows.
Nine months after officials in an affluent Dallas suburb introduced a proposal to combat racial and cultural intolerance in schools, voters delivered a resounding victory — about 70 percent of the vote— to a slate of school board and City Council candidates who opposed the plan. And in a hotly contested special election to fill a North Texas congressional seat, Republicans Susan Wright and state Rep. Jake Ellzey will advance to a runoff, NBC News projects.
The president and his allies feel they have a limited window of time to hammer out a potential deal with Republicans on Biden’s $2.25 trillion infrastructure proposal before members start focusing on the midterm elections.
The Biden family reunification task force estimates that more than 1,000 migrant families separated under Trump still need to be reunited. “We are happy that the first four families will be reunified this week, but this is only the beginning of a very long process involving more than 5,500 children,” said a lawyer with the American Civil Liberties Union.
You can now pre-order Apple products for 2021, including the AirTag tracking device, Apple TV 4K, iPad Pro and iMac.
One inspiring thing
Alex Trebek passed away in 2020 from pancreatic cancer but his legacy of giving and legendary role as the host of “Jeopardy!” continues to inspire those who knew him best.
His widow, Jean Trebek, discussed how she is continuing her late husband’s work in philanthropy with NBC News’ Savannah Guthrie as part of the network’s Inspiring America special this weekend.
From NBC’s Chuck Todd, Mark Murray and Carrie Dann
FIRST READ: Biden weighs going big on infrastructure — or going bipartisan
Go big or go bipartisan?
When President Biden first faced this question earlier this year regarding his Covid relief plan, he decided to go big, opting for his $1.9 trillion package over the Senate GOP’s offer of $600 billion.
(Notably, those 10 Senate Republicans never made another counteroffer to split the difference between the two proposals.)
AP Photo/Elaine Thompson
Now Biden is confronting the exact same question over his $2 trillion-plus infrastructure/jobs plan versus the Senate GOP’s counteroffer of nearly $568 billion. But this time, it appears the bipartisan negotiations are much more serious than they were back in January.
On Thursday night, Sen. Shelley Moore Capito, R-W.V., said she had a “constructive” call with Biden over the GOP’s proposal. And on “Meet the Press” yesterday, Sen. Rob Portman, R-Ohio,agreed that the prospects for a bipartisan compromise on infrastructure are more promising than they were on Covid relief.
“I think it’s going to be a better opportunity. And frankly, if the White House is going to work with us, this is a deal we can do. Infrastructure has always been bipartisan,” Portman said.
But the answers to these three questions will determine whether Biden goes big or bipartisan.
One, how do you pay for it? Or do you even pay for it?
Democrats want to pay for their infrastructure/jobs package by raising the corporate tax rate, while Republicans oppose that and have instead proposed user fees and finding other savings.
Two, how quickly do Republicans come to the negotiating table? Or do they drag their feet?
Mindful of how Senate Republicans stalled on Obamacare in 2009, the Biden White House “wants to see counteroffers to Biden’s $2.25 trillion infrastructure plan by the middle of this month, and if progress isn’t being made by Memorial Day, officials will reassess their strategy of trying to build bipartisan support, said a person familiar with the negotiations,” NBC’s Sahil Kapur and Shannon Pettypiece report.
And three, what does Sen. Joe Manchin, D-W.V., want? Does he demand regular order and insist that good-faith compromise is still possible?
Or is he eventually OK with Democrats going big and alone – as long as the bill is good for West Virginia?
Of course, there’s one additional question if Democrats and Republicans are able to come together on a slimmed-down infrastructure package: Do Democrats then use reconciliation to pass all the other stuff they currently want from their infrastructure package – like on climate, on elder care and on corporate taxes?
Two Republicans advance to runoff in TX-6
In this past weekend’s free-for-all special congressional election in TX-6, the Top 2 finishers were both Republicans, resulting in Democrats getting shut out of a runoff in a district that Donald Trump carried by just 3 points in 2020.
Republican Susan Wright – the widow of Rep. Ron Wright, R-Texas, who passed away in February, creating this vacancy – got 19.2 percent of the vote, and fellow Republican Jake Ellzey got 13.8 percent.
Wright and Ellzey will compete in a runoff that will be set after last weekend’s vote gets certified.
Democrat Jana Lynn Sanchez got 13.4 percent of the vote, finishing behind Ellzey by a mere 354 votes.
In fact, had Sanchez received the 1,000 votes that the seventh-place finishing Democrat in this field of 23 candidates got, she would have more than qualified for the runoff.
So as the Cook Political Report’s Dave Wasserman notes, Democrats’ failure to make the runoff was both a story about poor Dem turnout and the party not picking one candidate for its voters to get behind.
Wasserman adds, however: “But strategically, they were right not to throw away millions: TX Rs will get to redraw it before 2022, so it doesn’t matter for the majority.”
Data Download: The numbers you need to know today
More than 19 percent: The share of the vote won by GOP frontrunner Susan Wright during Saturday’s special election in Texas, which saw two Republicans advance to a runoff.
32,575,434: The number of confirmed cases of coronavirus in the United States, per the most recent data from NBC News and health officials. (That’s 30,701 more than Friday morning.)
581,211: The number of deaths in the United States from the virus so far, per the most recent data from NBC News. (That’s 1,815 more than yesterday morning.)
245,591,469: The number of vaccine doses administered in the U.S.
29.1 percent: The share of Americans who are fully vaccinated
TWEET OF THE DAY: Romney gets booed in Utah
ICYMI: What ELSE is happening in the world?
The Biden administration will reunite four migrant families this week that were separated by the Trump administration.
Some Florida Republicans are worried that curbing mail voting could hurt their own turnout.
Denying the 2020 election results is swiftly becoming a GOP loyalty test.
The group powering Hispanic gains in Florida? Hispanic women.
As the rate of new COVID-19 cases slows down in the U.S., India is hitting grim new peaks. Also, a boat believed to be filled with migrants capsized and broke apart near San Diego. All that and all that matters in today’s Eye Opener. Your world in 90 seconds.
Meet the crew of the world’s first all-civilian space mission
The iconic Launch Pad 39A will help take four Americans — a billionaire, a childhood cancer survivor, a science instructor and an engineer — into orbit.
Can Afghan women hang onto hard-won freedoms after U.S. withdrawal?
Many fear the Taliban will sweep back to power with U.S. forces gone, but Afghan women have suffered to gain basic rights, and they won’t give them up easily.
Police in Florida are investigating an elementary school principal who was filmed last month hitting a 6-year-old student with a wooden paddle. David Begnaud has the details.
Plus: Woke CIA ads, Zillow’s antitrust woes, and more…
Continued coronavirus restrictions aren’t commensurate to risk. With the COVID-19 vaccine now widely available in the U.S., nearly any adult who wants to protect himself can, while anyone who doesn’t get vaccinated is making a choice to face heightened risk. And despite slowing vaccination rates, we’re still seeing encouraging signs. For instance, “Los Angeles County public health authorities on Sunday reported no new deaths related to COVID-19,” the Los Angeles Timesnotes, and the single-day infection rate in New York state dropped below 1.5 percent on Saturday. Overall, “42 states and D.C. report[ed] lower caseloads for the past two weeks,” The Washington Post reported last Friday.
Yet some authorities continue to impose strict rules on not just public spaces but private events, too.
Take Washington, D.C., which announced last week that “with the increased vaccination of DC residents and essential workers, and continued cooperation with the District’s public health measures and guidance, several restrictions may be further loosened this spring.” Yet the District’s rules remain weird and seemingly arbitrary.
In D.C., up to 250 people may attend weddings “and special non-recurring events” if venues are not at more than 25 percent capacity.
However, wedding guests must remain seated at all times. It doesn’t matter if events are indoors or outdoors, if people are vaccinated, if they’re wearing masks, or what other individual circumstances pertain—”standing and dancing receptions are not allowed” and “attendees and guests must remain seated and socially distanced from each other or other household groups.”
This is just one of many D.C. restrictions that seems to be based on superstition more than science and makes little sense from a public health perspective.
In general, the city forbids private indoor gatherings of more than 10 people and private outdoor gatherings of more than 50 people. Yet it will also allow up to 25 people at a time on guided indoor tours of museums. So, gathering inside a home with a dozen close friends or family members whose vaccination status you know is not OK, but being in close proximity to more than two dozen strangers on a museum tour is?
Meanwhile, up to 250 people (not including staff) are permitted at “regional business meetings and conventions” and up to 500 people at concert and entertainment venues, so long as these spaces are not over 25 percent capacity.
D.C. and other U.S. cities pale in comparison to Canadian craziness right now, however. In Canada, scientists and doctors are preaching that vaccinations are not enough, nor are provinces’ partial lockdowns and business restrictions.
“A maximum infection suppression strategy implemented early in the epidemic to reduce COVID cases to as low a level as possible, and then stamp out outbreaks as they arise, would have saved tens of thousands of Canadian lives. This approach, with some modifications, remains the best strategy right now,” they write in an open letter published in Maclean’s.
FREE MINDS
The CIA is banking on trendy progressive rhetoric to recruit a new generation of spies and snoops:
Real estate listing site Zillow could face extermination at the hands of an antitrust lawsuit.Politicoexplains:
Real estate startup REX has asked a federal court to force Zillow and its subsidiary Trulia to stop separating homes for sale into two groups — those listed by brokers who belong to the National Association of Realtors and those listed by others. But contractual restrictions require Zillow to segregate the listings, the company said.
“REX’s proposed injunction creates a substantial risk that Zillow’s online platforms would lose access to listings data in markets across the country,” Zillow said in court documents, adding that that “runs the risk that Zillow could lose access to the data entirely, irreparably damaging its business.”
Texas added two seats to bring its number of members to 38 and its electoral vote tally to 40. And five states — Colorado, Florida, Montana, North Carolina and Oregon — saw smaller gains, all adding one seat each.
And what the census giveth, it also taketh away. On the other side of the ledger seven states each lost one seat and one electoral vote.
• Politicians in the Texas city of Lubbock “voted Saturday to ban abortions within city limits and allow residents to sue abortion providers and anyone else who assists a person obtain abortion services.”
• “Despite their professed goals, Democrats’ pandemic policies have widened disparities between races, classes, and genders,” writesReason‘s Matt Welch.
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recorded 182,874 wasted doses as of late March, three months into the country’s effort to vaccinate the masses against the coronavirus. CVS was responsible for nearly half, and Walgreens was responsible for 21 percent, or nearly 128,500 wasted shots combined
• Columbus, Ohio, police get a rebuke from a federal judge, whose new order commands them “to stop using force including tear gas, pepper spray and rubber bullets against nonviolent protesters,” NPR reports. “Judge Algenon Marbley of the Southern District of Ohio described the actions of the Columbus police as ‘the sad tale of officers, clothed with the awesome power of the state, run amok.’ “
Elizabeth Nolan Brown is a senior editor at Reason, where she writes regularly on the intersections of sex, speech, tech, crime, politics, panic, and civil liberties. She is also co-founder of the libertarian feminist group Feminists for Liberty.
Since starting at Reason in 2014, Brown has won multiple awards for her writing on the U.S. government’s war on sex. Brown’s writing has also appeared in The New York Times, Los Angeles Times, The Daily Beast, Buzzfeed, Playboy, Fox News, Politico, The Week, and numerous other publications. You can follow her on Twitter @ENBrown.
Reason is the magazine of “free minds and free markets,” offering a refreshing alternative to the left-wing and right-wing echo chambers for independent-minded readers who love liberty.
What a week for Nate Silvester, the Idaho police officer who mocked LeBron James on TikTok. Idaho citizens — actually, it turns out ONE citizen — didn’t find it as funny as we did. I had assumed Silve … MORE
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55.) REALCLEARPOLITICS MORNING NOTE
05/03/2021
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Carl Cannon’s Morning Note
Good Friend Fritz; an Alum’s Concerns; Rein Man
By Carl M. Cannon on May 03, 2021 09:30 am
Good morning, it’s Monday, May 3, 2021. Over the weekend, Illinois Rep. Cheri Bustos became the latest swing district Democrat to announce her impending retirement. Then, Texas Democrats in a district southwest of Fort Worth splintered their vote, thereby botching any chance they had of picking up a House seat in a special election.
In non-political news, a horse named Medina Spirit won the Kentucky Derby, a record seventh time trainer Bob Baffert has won the “Run for the Roses.” Baffert’s horse won in 2020, too, and with the same rider — John Velazquez — who was in the winner’s circle on Saturday. This was the fourth Derby win for Johnny V.
In a moment, I’ll have a brief word on another famous jockey who won the famed race 35 years ago today. First, I’d direct you to our front page, which aggregates, as it does each day, an array of columns and stories spanning the political spectrum. We also offer a complement of original material from RCP’s reporters and contributors, including the following:
* * *
In Memory of “Fritz” Mondale — a Political Giant & Loyal Friend. Les Francis shares a few stories about the man he worked for and with.
An Open Letter to Swarthmore President Valerie Smith. As an alum, Peter Berkowitz considers Smith’s comments on the Derek Chauvin verdict, including her stated support for the “frank conversations” she says are needed in providing a liberal education.
The Archaic Rule Threatening Health Care Readiness. At RealClearPolicy, Brian Balfour takes aim at certificate-of-need laws that restrict medical facilities’ expansion of equipment and services.
China/Russia Military Spending Surpasses U.S. At RealClearDefense, Sen. Jim Inhofe warns that President Biden’s budget will only put America further behind its top adversaries.
Jan. 6, Camus, and the Problem With Rebellions. Also at RCD, Bill Bray turns to the French philosopher to put the Capitol assault in perspective.
Fantasy vs. Realism in Two Climate Plans. At RealClearEnergy, Heather Reams compares Joe Biden’s proposal to halve U.S. emissions by 2030 with the Growing Climate Solutions Act, which has bipartisan sponsors in Congress.
Exposing “White Privilege” at the University of Texas-Arlington. At RealClearEducation, Tom Lindsay considers a new curriculum requirement.
What We’ve Learned From Iran’s “Saltmen” Mummies. RealClearScience editor Ross Pomeroy examines studies of the remains of men who worked at the Chehrabad salt mine, dating to various times between the 6th century B.C. and the 6th century A.D.
* * *
On this day 1986, race rider Bill Shoemaker steered a rangy cold named Ferdinand to victory in the Kentucky Derby. Already a Hall of Famer, “The Shoe” was 54 years old. He was an inspiration for many reasons besides his age. For one thing, he was diminutive even for a jockey. As turf writer Terry Conway noted, “At 4 feet 11 inches tall and 98 pounds, it didn’t look like Bill Shoemaker could muscle a few sacks of groceries, let alone control a head-strong thoroughbred a dozen times his weight.”
But long before the phrase “horse whisperer” entered the lexicon, Shoe had a way of gently coaxing top performance from his mounts. “Horses would run for him, and I’ve always wanted to know why,” Hall of Famer Eddie Arcaro once told Sports Illustrated. “Shoe got them to run without pushing them. He takes such light hold of a horse that he could probably ride with silk threads for reins.”
There was adversity, too, which is common for jockeys. Not just the injuries in frightful spills that Johnny Velazquez and almost all the top riders have experienced, but also misjudging the finish line in the Kentucky Derby. Shoemaker did this twice, if you can believe that, and when he stood up in the irons prematurely while aboard Gallant Man in 1957, it cost him and the horse the victory.
He rode competitively for the last time on Feb. 3, 1990, while aboard 7-year-old Patchy Groundfog in an afternoon turf race that Santa Anita Park had billed as “The Legend’s Last Ride.” The legend and his mount were the crowd’s sentimental betting favorites that day, and even eminent race caller Trevor Denman set aside his normal impartiality and exhorted the rider with a “C’mon, Shoe!” as the horse took the lead at the top of the stretch.
As I wrote in this space a few years ago, Patchy Groundfog faded to finish fourth that day. But Bill Shoemaker was not the kind of person to just fade away. In retirement, he became a trainer, and was pursuing this vocation on April 8, 1991, when, while driving on a deserted stretch of highway he lost control of his Ford Bronco, which plunged down an embankment. The crash left Shoemaker paralyzed from the neck down.
He resumed training horses in a supervisory role less than six months later, sharing his wisdom from a wheelchair. He retired from training on Nov. 3, 1997, having won $3.7 million in earnings, and died in his sleep at home in San Marino, Calif., on Oct. 12, 2003.
Shoe left us with the memories of his many remarkable rides, his consummate professionalism, and these inspiring words: “I never gave up,” he told writer Ron Flatter. “A few times I didn’t think I was going to make it. But I never quit.”
On April 23rd, the 72nd anniversary of the People’s Liberation Army Navy (PLAN), China launched three major warships simultaneously at the naval base in Sanya, Hainan Island.
The widely shared view among some pundits of international politics is that Vladimir Putin was planning to launch a wide scale military operation against Ukraine in spring of 2021.
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62.) 1440 DAILY DIGEST
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Good morning. It’s Monday, May 3, and we’re covering progress in vaccinations, a lawsuit that could reshape the app industry, and much more. Have feedback? Let us know at hello@join1440.com.
More than 100 million Americans have been fully vaccinated against the coronavirus, health officials announced over the weekend, representing about 40% of adults in the country. About 56% of adults have received at least one vaccination dose. More than 240 million doses have been administered overall in the US, representing about one-fifth of the global total.
The symbolic milestone comes as the pace of vaccinations in the US begins to slow. Surveys suggest vaccine hesitancy is trending downward, though about one-in-five Americans say they will not get vaccinated or will only do so if required. Experts have largely abandoned the goal of herd immunity, which would require about 70%-80% of the population to be inoculated (or higher in the presence of more transmissible variants).
In the US, the rolling average of new cases fell below 50,000 for the first time in seven months (see data), with the case incidence having fallen by almost 30% since mid-April. The death toll continues to gradually decline; the country is averaging around 675 reported COVID-19 deaths per day, with a total of 577,045.
Overseas, cases and deaths continue to surge in India, where new cases passed 400,000 reported in a 24-hour period Saturday—significantly exceeding the single-day record of any country during the pandemic. Health officials have blamed both a new variant of the virus and widespread religious and political gatherings held in recent months.
An Epic Battle
A long-anticipated antitrust case between Apple and Epic Games begins today, in a legal battle with the potential to reshape the multibillion-dollar app industry.
At issue is whether Apple’s App Store policies are anticompetitive, arguing Apple uses its iPhone market power to dominate a secondary market (app downloads). The company, which has two-thirds of the US smartphone market, requires all financial transactions made by user-downloaded apps to be processed by Apple—from which it takes up to a 30% cut. Epic, the maker of the hugely popular Fortnite video game, encouraged users to purchase virtual currency directly, circumventing Apple’s payment system and violating its policies. Apple booted the game from the App Store in August, to which Epic responded with a lawsuit.
A number of high-profile witnesses are expected to appear, including Apple CEO Tim Cook and Epic CEO Tim Sweeney. See an overview of the issue—including a similar case against Google—here.
Formal Withdrawal Begins
US and NATO troops stationed in Afghanistan formally began the withdrawal phase over the weekend, a process that is expected to last through the summer and officially end Sept. 11. Roughly 3,000 US troops and 7,000 coalition troops remain in the country, along with a reported 18,000 Pentagon-employed contractors. The exit has been framed as nonconditional—meaning ongoing attacks by the Taliban against the Afghan government won’t delay the withdrawal.
Many have questioned the ability of the Afghan National Army to provide security against the Taliban absent international forces. Despite assurances by Afghan officials, Taliban forces have established themselves across most of the country. Afghan forces control an estimated one-third of the country’s districts, with the Taliban controlling about 10%, and nearly half—areas that include a total of roughly 14 million people—currently contested.
Direct mail is one of the most effective channels to drive leads, upsell customers, and handle transactions. It’s just. so. slow.
Companies routinely spend months slogging through dozens of steps just to send out a single direct mail campaign. And the inherent complexity of producing, printing, mailing, and trying to track results (not to mention vendor management) can make it seem like there’s no alternative.
>Medina Spirit wins 147th Kentucky Derby, giving its trainer Bob Baffert a record seventh Kentucky Derby victory (More) | Seattle Kraken officially become NHL’s 32nd team after paying $650M franchise fee (More) | The2021 NFL draft wraps; see picks and grades for all teams (More)
>Disneyland reopens to California residents in limited numbers after being closed 13 months due to COVID-19 (More) | Grammy Awards to eliminate secret nomination committees after protest by music artist The Weeknd (More)
>Olympia Dukakis, actress best known for her Academy Award-winning performance in “Moonstruck,” dies at 89 (More) | “Star Trek” and “The A-Team” actor Nathan Jung dies at 74 (More) | Former NASCAR driver Eric McClure dies at 42 (More)
Science & Technology
>SpaceX capsule departs the International Space Station and successfully returns with four astronauts in the Gulf of Mexico (More) | Watch the splashdown here (More)
>MIT researchers demonstrate how to use a conventional smartphone flashlight as a virus sensor (More)
>NASA’s Ingenuity helicopter to shift from technology demonstration to aerial reconnaissance; the Mars copter will move on to scouting locations for the Curiosity rover (More)
Business & Markets
>Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway sees quarterly operating income increase 20% over last year; company has $145B in cash (More) | Berkshire Hathaway’s annual meeting, informally known as the “Woodstock of capitalism,” held over the weekend (More)
>US consumer spending increases 4.2% in March; personal incomes rise at fastest monthly level ever to $4.2T (More)
>Apple charged with antitrust breach by European Commission over App Store pricing practices (More) | Eurozone falls back into recession as economy shrinks 0.6% in Q1 (More)
>US State Department denies reports it’s considering a prisoner swap with Iran; Iranian media sources reported Biden administration agreed to release four prisoners and $7B in frozen assets in exchange for four jailed Americans (More)
>At least three killed, 27 injured after boat suspected in human smuggling operation breaks apart offshore from San Diego (More)
>Letter from former associate of Rep. Matt Gaetz (R, FL-1) to political operative Roger Stone surfaces; letter reportedly includes an attempt to buy presidential pardons and implicates Gaetz in underage sex crimes (More) | Gaetz has repeatedly denied all charges (More)
Technologically, sending an email is way more complicated than sending a letter. So if we can send 700,000+ emails with a click, why does it take months to turn around a direct mail campaign?
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Historybook: Philosopher Niccolo Machiavelli born (1469); Boxer Sugar Ray Robinson born (1921); Musician James Brown born (1933); Margaret Mitchell wins Pulitzer for “Gone with the Wind” (1937); First bulk spam email is sent (1978).
“Life’s under no obligation to give us what we expect.”
– Margaret Mitchell
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63.) AMERICAN INSTITUTE FOR ECONOMIC RESEARCH
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May 3, 2021
Lockdowns are No Substitute for Focused Protection
By Paul E. Alexander | The most vulnerable groups in the US, which have been least able to afford the lockdowns and school closures, have been devastated by unscientific ineffective policies and have been hardest hit by Covid-19.
Biden’s Agenda of “Democratic” Paternalism and Planning
By Richard M. Ebeling | “If we look at Biden’s ‘dream’ of the size, scope and intrusiveness of government over and into the personal, social and economic affairs of the citizenry, the Chinese autocrat has won, already. Joe Biden and Xi Jinping…
By Ethan Yang | “This fintech crackdown could be emblematic of China’s authoritarian growing pains and it remains to be seen if they will even be able to balance economic progress with political control. This move will certainly have consequences…
By Robert E. Wright | To effectively ban menthol cigarettes, the FDA will have to ban tobacco entirely, something it has admitted is not in its power to do. Or it would have to destroy the environments in which mint grows naturally throughout the…
By Jeffrey A. Tucker | It’s impossible to know precisely what the future portends for all these unprecedented policy shocks over the last year, from money supply and spending bonanzas to lockdowns to sky-high debt accumulation. But because a thing…
When Politicians Say Fair Tax, They Only Mean More Tax
By James R. Harrigan & Antony Davies | “So what exactly is anyone’s ‘fair share?’ That’s a hard question, and it’s made harder still when people tasked with answering it do everything they can to avoid answering it. As long as this continues,…
Edward C. Harwood fought for sound money when few Americans seemed to care. He was the original gold standard man before that became cool. Now he is honored in this beautiful sewn silk tie in the richest possible color and greatest detail.
The red is not just red; it is darker and deeper, more distinctive and suggestive of seriousness of purpose.
The Harwood coin is carefully sewn (not stamped). Sporting this, others might miss that you are secretly supporting the revolution for freedom and sound money, but you will know, and that is what matters.
The lockdowns in response to the Covid-19 pandemic have taught many lessons. One is that politicians either don’t understand, or care, about maintaining the integrity of the wellspring of prosperity: private commerce, rooted in individual liberty and private property rights. A second is that an enshrined, protected and inviolable right—a human right—to private commercial dealing, on whatever scale or basis it may take, can no longer be overlooked.
If there is a palliative to be retrieved from the economic and social wreckage of tyrannical Covid-19 policies at home and/or abroad, it is this: the purposeful reversal of the political erosion of private property rights and the right of livelihood. And that turnabout should take the form of a long overdue, formal appanage: a primary and inalienable Human Right to Commerce.
On the menu today: Joe Biden’s on-again, off-again opposition to COVID-related travel bans; why some things that were long-thought unthinkable are sometimes quite possible; and a faulty argument that will not die.
Apparently Travel Bans Are Okay Now
A lot of people in politics operate under the principle, “Any idea proposed by your side is wrong, reckless, and represents your warped values, while any idea proposed by my side is right, wise, and needed, regardless of whether they are the same idea.”
On January 31, 2020, the Trump administration announced that foreign nationals who had traveled to China within the past two weeks would be barred from entering the U.S.
Why Facebook supports updated internet regulations
2021 is the 25th anniversary of the Telecommunications Act of 1996, the last major update to internet regulation. It’s time for an update to set clear rules for addressing today’s toughest challenges.See how we’re taking action on key issues and why we support updated internet regulations.Learn More
CNN: “Throughout her memoir – the third book Warren has written as a politician – she reflects on the role her gender played in her presidential campaign.”
“While she never directly blames sexism for losing the nomination, it’s a theme that comes up again and again in anecdotes of her life that are intertwined with decisions she’s made or views she has on issues.”
Inside Elections: “In 2017 and 2018, special elections were the talk of the political town. The race for Georgia’s 6th District, a traditionally Republican seat that Trump carried by just a point, attracted tens of millions of dollars in donor money and countless hours of news coverage. It also jump-started the career of an unknown Democrat named Jon Ossoff, now the youngest member of the U.S. Senate. But it wasn’t just Georgia. Specials in Pennsylvania, Montana, even Kansas and South Carolina were treated as major political events.”
“By contrast, the Texas 6th race was a sleepy affair from a national perspective. The field of 23 candidates raised less than $3 million combined by April 11 — a tenth of what Ossoff alone raised in that 2017 race. Turnout in Texas was just 16%, a drop from 68% last November. Turnout in Georgia’s 6th also dropped from 2016 to 2017, but from 76% to a still-rocking 58%, and in the 2017 Montana special from 74% to 54%.”
Rep. Liz Cheney (R-WY) shot back at former President Trump over his claims that the 2020 election was stolen.
Said Cheney: “The 2020 presidential election was not stolen. Anyone who claims it was is spreading THE BIG LIE, turning their back on the rule of law, and poisoning our democratic system.”
Former Vice President Mike Pence and several other potential 2024 presidential candidates are descending upon Texas next week to thank donors to the 2020 campaign here and to help raise money to flip the U.S House next year, the Texas Tribune reports.
The group includes Pence, Chris Christie, Tom Cotton, Ron DeSantis, Mike Pompeo, Marco Rubio, Tim Scott and Rick Scott.
Roll Call: “Seven House Democrats survived the 2020 election even as President Donald Trump was carrying their districts.”
“It would stand to reason that they might break with the party more often than other Democrats, and they are. And yet, they are voting with the party on average 95.6 percent of the time.”
“Then take the 19 Democrats in the Blue Dog Coalition…as a group, the Blue Dogs are sticking with fellow Democrats on 97.5 percent of party unity votes so far this year.”
This is why Nancy Pelosi is so effective as Speaker.
Former President Donald Trump was filmed at Mar-a-Lago ranting about the unofficial election audit being conducted by Republicans in Arizona, and insisting that they’ll be “finding votes” in other states to prove he won the 2020 election.
Said Trump: “Let’s see what they find, I wouldn’t be surprised if they found thousands and thousands and thousands of votes. So we’re going to watch that very close to the end after that we’ll watch Pennsylvania and you watch Georgia and you’re going to watch Michigan and Wisconsin and you’re watching New Hampshire, they found a lot of votes up in New Hampshire, a lot of votes up in New Hampshire just now, you saw that?”
He added: “Because this was a rigged election, everybody knows it and we’re going to be watching it very closely but start off by you just take a look, it’s on closed circuit…”
Axios: “Around 10% of Americans aren’t very eager to get the vaccine, but they’re not really hesitant either — they’re just waiting to get it until they get around to it, according to new Harris polling.”
Adam Liptak: “Justice Clarence Thomas, who once went a decade without asking a question from the Supreme Court bench, is about to complete a term in which he was an active participant in every single argument.”
Virginia Mercury: “An AR-15 brandished during a virtual candidate forum. A flood of mysterious attack mailers. A candidate’s unabashed love of hot dogs.”
“The contest to become the Republican candidate for governor is entering its final week, and the race remains just as unusual as when it started.”
Meanwhile, Medium Buying reports that the two former business executives–Pete Snyder and Glenn Youngkin have dominated the spending: out of more than $4.6 million in TV and radio spending on the Republican side, Glenn Youngkin has spent $2.2 million and Pete Snyder has spent $1.85 million.
A new University of Texas/Texas Tribune poll finds that immigration and border security topped the legislative priorities list for 36% of voters, COVID-19, the energy system/grid, and the economy/jobs, together were the top priorities of 32%.
In February, COVID-19 was the top concern, with immigration and border security in second place.
This suggests Democratic momentum in the Sun Belt may be stalled if the Biden administration doesn’t find answers on the border.
First Read: “When President Biden first faced this question earlier this year regarding his Covid-19 relief plan, he decided to go big, opting for his $1.9 trillion package over the Senate GOP’s offer of $600 billion. (Notably, those 10 Senate Republicans never made another counteroffer to split the difference between the two proposals.)”
“Now Biden is confronting the exact same question over his $2 trillion-plus infrastructure/jobs plan versus the Senate GOP’s counteroffer of nearly $568 billion. But this time, it appears the bipartisan negotiations are much more serious than they were back in January.”
Derek Thompson: “One in four Americans says they don’t plan to take the COVID-19 vaccine, and about half of Republicans under 50 say they won’t get a vaccine. This partisan vaccine gap is already playing out in the real world. The average number of daily shots has declined 20 percent in the past two weeks, largely because states with larger Trump vote shares are falling off the pace.”
“What are they thinking, these vaccine-hesitant, vaccine-resistant, and COVID-apathetic? I wanted to know. So I posted an invitation on Twitter for anybody who wasn’t planning to get vaccinated to email me and explain why.”
Kansas Senate President Ty Masterson (R) condemned the “deranged rantings” of Rep. Mark Samsel (R), caught on video talking to high school students about religion, sex and suicide, the Kansas City Star reports.
“In videos taken by students and shared with The Star, Samsel is seen talking about lesbians, suicide, sex, masturbation, God and the Bible. He tells students they have permission to kick one person ‘in the balls’ and another video shows him standing over a student on the ground, asking, ‘Did it hurt?’”
An additional video shows Samsel calling Masterson “the devil.”
New York Times: “He is not as well known as wealthy liberal patrons like George Soros or Tom Steyer. His political activism is channeled through a daisy chain of opaque organizations that mask the ultimate recipients of his money. But the Swiss billionaire Hansjörg Wyss has quietly become one of the most important donors to left-leaning advocacy groups and an increasingly influential force among Democrats.”
“Newly obtained tax filings show that Mr. Wyss’s foundations donated $208 million from 2016 through early last year to three nonprofit funds that doled out money to a wide array of groups that backed progressive causes and helped Democrats in their efforts to win the White House and control of Congress last year.”
“Britain goes to the polls on Thursday in a set of local and regional elections that will take the political temperature in Britain and include a number of dramatic showdowns,” Politico reports.
“From a Scottish parliament election that could make or break the drive for Scottish independence, to a by-election in northern England that could compound the woes of the opposition Labour Party, there will be a number of flashpoints that define the political narrative ahead of the next general election in 2023 or 2024.”
“The number of seats up for grabs, at more than 5,000, is unprecedented.”
Sir Richard Dearlove, the former head of MI6, told LBC that the novel coronavirus was more likely to have escaped from a lab than to have come from an animal.
He said aspects of the virus “point in the direction of it being somewhat tailored” though he warned this may never be proven.
“The European Commission on Monday proposed easing restrictions on non-essential travel for visitors who have been fully vaccinated against COVID-19,” Axios reports.
“The recommendation could be adopted by the European Union’s 27 member states as early as May 5, paving the way for the return of summer travel to one of the world’s most popular tourism destinations.”
Most voters view domestic terrorism as a greater danger to America than foreign threats, and don’t have much confidence that President Biden can cope with the threat.
Thirty-nine percent (39%) of Likely U.S. Voters think the country is heading in the right direction, according to a new Rasmussen Reports national telephone and online survey for the week ending April 29, 2021.
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Dear President Smith, Thank you for your “Reflections on Yesterday’s Verdict,” which you sent to Swarthmore students, alumni, faculty, and staff on April 21 and posted on the college’s website.
In their dueling speeches last week, President Joe Biden and Republican Sen. Tim Scott agreed on a few things while disagreeing on many. The headlines after Biden spoke to Congress, and Scott responded for Republicans, were mostly about expensive new government programs and racism.
Bob Slavin was a force of nature, a world-famous education researcher who was also far more than that. A policy advocate (see for example his recent proposal for a post-Covid “Marshall plan” for schools, which strikes me as akin to what Biden is now proposing) and a major “doer” in his own right. Best known of course for the “Success for All” reading program, now more than three decades old.
Behavioral scientist Katy Milkman of the Wharton School at the University of Pennsylvania talks about her book How to Change with EconTalk host Russ Roberts. What can we learn from research in psychology and behavioral economics about breaking the habits we want to change? Is that research reliable? And should Russ Roberts accept being overweight or keep working at finding the thinner man trying to get out?
The Superintendent of the Catholic Schools Office of the Archdiocese of Boston, Thomas Carroll, joins Paul E. Peterson to discuss how Catholic schools in Massachusetts have responded and adapted to the Covid-19 pandemic, and how they’ve remained open while many public schools operated remotely.
During the week in which this column was drafted, renewed fighting, replete with atrocities, spread in Darfur; in Mozambique, Islamist fanatics continued to kill fellow Muslims; in Chad, the ethno-religious conflict worsened; the Chinese government continued to torture Uighurs; the Taliban welcomed the prospect of an American withdrawal with fresh attacks; and deadly eruptions pocked the Middle East.
interview with Niall Ferguson via Sean Carroll’s Mindscape Podcast
Hoover Institution fellow Niall Ferguson talks about his book, Doom: The Politics of Catastrophe and the global culture as a complex system, and what it means for our ability to respond to crisis.
Hoover Institution fellow Stephen Kotkin discusses China’s challenges as they seek to become a market economy, but with the essence of a socialist system struggling with political, economic, social and cultural rights and interests.
A former U.S. ambassador to Russia called Russian President Vladimir Putin a “coward” after police in Moscow arrested opposition leader Alexei Navalny’s lawyer.
[Subscription Required] After 100 days in office, President Biden has changed the tone and direction of U.S. foreign policy, but shied away from big new initiatives or direct confrontation with adversaries as he seeks to focus on challenges at home.
Large employers are increasingly supportive of government intervention when it comes to tackling the rising cost of healthcare for their workers, according to a survey released Thursday from the Kaiser Family Foundation and Purchaser Business Group on Health.
Vladimir Putin’s troop buildup along the border with Ukraine this spring garnered considerable international attention — which might have been his main objective. Less noticed has been a series of incremental escalations by Chinese forces in the Taiwan Strait and South China Sea.
The opinions expressed in this publication are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the opinions of the Hoover Institution or Stanford University.
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71.) DAILY INTELLIGENCE BRIEF
Daily Intelligence Brief.
Good morning, it’s May 3, 2021. On this day in history, American author Margaret Mitchell won a Pulitzer Prize for Gone with the Wind (1937); Japan’s post-war constitution went into effect, stripping Emperor Hirohito of all but symbolic power and outlawing Japan’s right to make war (1947); Margaret Thatcher was elected the first female British prime minister (1979).
LEADERSHIP AND LESSONS LEARNED
The Leader (Part 2)
Self-awareness is fundamental to understanding one’s abilities. Leaders should know their strengths and weaknesses — what they do or do not know, what they are or are not skilled at, and what is in their span of control. Even though they should be self-aware, not all leaders are.
Leaders vary in their proficiency levels in attributes and competencies and their preparation for each situation. Leaders require self-awareness if they are to accurately assess their own experience and competence, as well as earn the trust of those they influence.
Being self-aware means seeing oneself as viewed by others and understanding the levels of influence one is likely to have with followers. Awareness allows one to adjust one’s leadership actions in the moment and know what areas to improve for the future.
Leaders have different responsibilities and authorities that can vary with duty positions and missions.
Authority to lead is either formally derived from rank or position, or is informal, such as when influencing peers or partners.
Formal authority allows use of commitment and compliance through the methods of influence.
Informal authority primarily relies on obtaining commitment from others.
Solid, self-aware leaders find a delicate blend and balance between formal and informal authority regularly.
TOP STORIES
Mogadishu Has Erupted in Violence Over a Constitutional Coup
Somali President Mohamed Abdullah Mohamed has been accused of making an unconstitutional power grab. Mohamed chose not to hold presidential parliamentary elections and followed up by signing a law to extend his own term another two years.
Rival units in Mogadishu have been battling security forces loyal to the president. The political disagreement and breakdown of United Nations-mediated negotiations have pushed tensions to the brink.
According to theNew York Times, gunfire erupted in the Capitol last week as clan divisions battled the military. Powerful clans have been responsible for the conflict faced in Somalia since the government collapsed in 1991.
Adding to the tensions, there is concern the military could also splinter into armed clan groups if troops decide to place their loyalty to their clans above their duty to the central government.
The U.S. and other Western allies have condemned the actions of the president, calling it a “constitutional coup.” The West has delivered a firm reprimand to Mohamed.
ATP assessment: The “constitutional coup” by expired Somali President Mohamed has defied the will of the U.S., the African Union and the UN. In response, the West will likely try to use diplomatic pressure to force Mohamed to reverse his extended two-year term.
With opposition elements wishing to dispose of him, as well as a lack of support and backing by Western entities, Mohamed will likely lead his country into another civil war.
The infighting and division of African Union troops could open the door for terror group Al Shabaab to regain territory strongholds in Mogadishu and possibly set up for a hostile takeover of the government.
Adding to the threat, ISIS-Somalia could likely use a civil war scenario to conduct attacks against Western troops to grab some worldwide exposure for ISIS.
Our Nation’s Oldest Medal of Honor Recipient Has Died
On April 6, Medal of Honor Recipient Charles H. Coolidge passed away peacefully at the age of 99. He was surrounded by his family at his namesake heritage center, the Charles H. Coolidge National Medal of Honor Heritage Center in Chattanooga, Tennessee.
According to theMilitary Times, Coolidge was born on August 4, 1921. He was drafted into the military in 1942 and assigned to Company M of the 3rd Battalion, 141st Infantry Regiment, 36th Division.
In North Africa and Italy, Sgt. Coolidge saw action with the 36th Infantry and then transferred to France in 1944.
Later that year, Coolidge was given “alarmingly green troops,” who were sent to replace men killed or wounded in France. The majority of the new arrivals had never seen combat.
Despite the lack of experience, “his unit was nevertheless ordered to hold off the German forces threatening to attack the right flank of the division’s Third Battalion, 141st Infantry, which was massing with two other battalions outside the tiny town of Belmont-sur-Buttant,” stated the New York Times.
On October 24, 1944, the young Coolidge and approximately 30 soldiers under his command were desperately outnumbered and swarmed by German troops supported by tanks. Coolidge attempted “to bluff the Germans by a show of assurance and boldness (and) called upon them to surrender, whereupon the enemy opened fire,” according to his citation.
This firefight was the first for many of his men and, despite the odds, they continued fighting. Over four days and repeated assaults by the “numerically superior enemy,” they prevailed.
Our thoughts and prayers go out to Coolidge’s family and friends. We are truly grateful for his service.
ATP comment: This story was first brought to our attention when we were working on the U.S. southern border last week. The 36th Infantry Division of the Texas National Guard facilitated ATP’s humanitarian mission on the border. Charles Coolidge is an alum of this acclaimed unit and his spirit lives on. We were absolutely impressed with the incredible troops as they stand boldly and compassionately guarding our border.
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74.) NOT THE BEE
Not the Bee Daily Newsletter
May 3, 2021
Sad: THIS is what had to happen in order for Oregon’s Health Authority to change their masking rules for outdoor sports
Okay, so here’s the headline for this story:
Just an FYI: A 21-ton Chinese rocket kinda sorta accidentally went into orbit and it’s going to come down… nobody knows where. Carry on.
The Chinese Long March-5B Y2 rocket last week successfully placed the first module of a Chinese space station into low-earth orbit. Unfortunately, it also placed itself into lower-earth orbit without any means to maintain that orbit or to de-orbit in a controlled manner.
Emails show teachers union flexed its muscles and influenced the CDC on school reopenings.
It’s science, it’s just not science science.
A picture is worth a thousand words
Hmm:
Another church in Canada has been forcibly closed for defying lockdown orders. Read the pastor’s epic response.
Trinity Bible Chapel in Ontario has refused to close, despite more than $40 million in fines and harassment of its members. Months ago, the church published a statement explaining why they believe this defiance honors Christ.
Holy cow did Alyssa Milano just get NUKED by this lady explaining how wokies treat black people
This was a carpet bombing of epic proportions right here:
Check out how much money Big Tech made every single minute last quarter
There’s securing the bag and then there’s securing the bag.
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The Kremlin accused Washington on Friday of fuelling tension with “unfriendly actions” after the U.S. embassy in Moscow said it was cutting staff and stopping processing visas for most Russians.
The New York Times, Washington Post and NBC News all issued retractions Saturday for their coverage of Rudy Giuliani following a raid of his Manhattan apartment by the FBI.
With demand for Big Pharma’s mRNA injections falling “particularly among the young and among minorities,” the Biden regime should be telling people “they can go back to normal” if they “get vaccinated,” so says Ben Shapiro.
One striking feature of US military involvement in West Africa is the absence of an observable strategic vision for a desired end state. Nominally, US presence in the region’s multilayered conflicts revolves around building “security cooperation” with state partners to improve counterterrorism capabilities, ostensibly providing protection to communities that states cannot. Concurrently, the US military is typically the prime diplomatic entity for high-level bilateral engagements.
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Welcome to the Monday edition of Internet Insider, where we dissect the weekend online. Today:
Woman charged with hate crime after video shows her being racist toward Black Amazon driver
‘Heyo, the person who sent you this wants you to know’ about this TikTok meme
Britney Spears takes over the ‘It’s Gonna Be May’ meme thanks to her fans
BREAK THE INTERNET
Woman charged with hate crime after video shows her being racist toward Black Amazon driver
An Amazon worker described as a “whistleblower” by WFSB exclusively told the outlet that he found a noose at a jobsite. Five additional ropes—that could be interpreted as nooses—were also reportedly found at the location. While the worker says that managers reached out to him regarding the incident and that police are now constantly patrolling the jobsite, the local NAACP is demanding both “a full investigation into the matter leading to criminal prosecution” and “every available measure be put in place to ensure the safety of all workers at the site.” Amazon confirmed with the Daily Dot that a criminal investigation is underway.
Meanwhile, a Black Amazon worker in California was subjected to a woman’s racist verbal attack as the woman’s boyfriend allegedly blocked the delivery vehicle so that he couldn’t leave. The woman has reportedly since been charged with battery, false imprisonment, and several hate crimes. The driver is thankful the incident was recorded by a bystander and revealed that, presumably due to his skin color, he was concerned he was going to be the one to end up in handcuffs once the police arrived. “What constantly was running through my mind was, you know, it could be me in handcuffs instead of her,” he told KRON4. “If there wasn’t a video, it wasn’t being recorded, she probably could’ve gotten away with saying this.”
Make your life easier with a mask subscription for the kids
Keeping a mask on your kids’ faces is about as easy as teaching a cat to fetch. That said, at least if you stock disposable masks you don’t have to lose it when their cloth masks vanish for the 57th time. Armbrust’s child-sized mask subscription will keep your household stocked and save you 30% off the cost at the same time. And with blue, pink, and orange to choose from, you can be sure they’ll never be bored with this now-crucial daily accessory.
‘Heyo, the person who sent you this wants you to know’ about this TikTok meme
If you’re an avid TikTok user, you’ve probably seen countless videos parodying TikTok influencer Bria (aka @briaalanaa), who’s best known for her signature “Heyo, the person who sent you this wants you to know” introduction and “No cap, facts, no printer, copy, no paste” sign-off. One of her videos has become one of the biggest memes on the platform right now thanks to Bria’s baby-voiced greeting and her friend’s nearly incomprehensible speech.
The video blew up after Sam (aka @_samueladrian_) uploaded a TikTok poking fun of Bria and her friend’s voices. Bria’s video now has 8.6 million views, and Sam’s has 17.1 million.
Since Sam’s video, there have been a number of TikToks imitating Bria and her friend. From small creators to Doja Cat, many have posted their renditions of Bria’s “heyo” and “facts, no cap” catchphrases as well as her friend’s mumbling. Many of the videos have morphed the trend into a simple “heyo” with some barking noises.
Bria’s “heyo” videos are what many consider “cringe” but are otherwise harmless. As she put it in an Instagram Live hashing it out with Sam—who told the Daily Dot he has since been banned from posting on both his main and secondary account—she makes videos with the intention to “uplift other people.” However, as anyone who’s been on the internet will tell you, this type of content often begets cringe culture, or the habit of teasing people online for posting seemingly embarrassing things. Cringe culture often straddles the line of bullying and comedy, as Vox’s Rebecca Jennings writes, and it can either spurn creators or launch their online careers. This trend exemplifies that balance, as people are piling on Bria in the comments while also giving her more exposure.
Ultimately, Bria’s following outnumbers Sam’s by a longshot—with her 2.2 million dwarfing his 500,000—and it’s not uncommon for smaller creators to poke fun at trends set by more popular ones (punching up is the rule of comedy, after all). And it appears that that following has given Sam a disadvantage in this beef—he has faced major consequences for starting the trend, despite many others joining in, with his TikTok accounts currently in timeout.
Regardless of the criticism, the trend hasn’t deterred Bria from continuing to make her usual content. Despite seeming initially hurt by the trend, she now appears to be taking the joke in stride, which is probably for the best since the parodies don’t appear to be letting up.
Britney Spears takes over the ‘It’s Gonna Be May’ meme thanks to her fans
Around this time each year, social media users typically flock to the internet to share an image or GIF of Justin Timberlake from his *NSYNC days, captioned “It’s Gonna Be May.” The meme is a riff off of the band’s popular 2000 song, “It’s Gonna be Me,” in which Timberlake sings the word “me,” pronouncing it as “May.”
But the singer faced backlash after it was revealed in the New York Times’ Framing Britney Spears documentary that Timberlake played a role in the misogyny Britney Spears endured after the two called it quits.
Several Twitter users are now saying “Bye, Bye, Bye” to his ritual meme.
“I made this to replace the stupid ‘gonna be may’ meme – you’re welcome world,” wrote @CrappyFumes in a viral tweet. The Twitter user swapped the old meme for an image of Spears from her “Oops!…I Did It Again” video.
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Incredibly, attorneys general from 12 states — all run by anti-human Democrats, of course — are demanding that Big Tech silence and ban anyone who posts reports of vaccine injuries, side effects or deaths.
The purpose of this outrageous demand is to cover up the deaths and injuries caused by covid vaccines so that more vaccine victims can be coerced into taking the deadly shots out of ignorance. The less they know, the more likely people are to line up and get vaccinated.
This means Democrat-controlled states are actively conspiring with Big Tech to commit a vaccine holocaust against humanity. They’re doing it on purpose, and they aren’t even pretending not to anymore.
P.S. My Situation Update podcast for today should be appearing very soon on the HRR channel on Brighteon.com. It covers the vaccine holocaust in more detail, including the truth of how vaccinated people are now making healthy people sick. Watch for this new podcast here: https://www.brighteon.com/channels/hrreport
Food supply 101: How to make healthy dried banana chips
Banana chips are a sweet and tasty snack, but store-bought variants may contain too much sugar or other ingredients and harmful preservatives. To ensure that your banana chips are tasty and good …
Jumping worms are wreaking havoc in 15 US states
Jumping worms are wreaking havoc in the ecosystems and garden soils of at least 15 U.S. states. Also known as crazy worms, Alabama jumpers and snake worms, they violently thrash when handled and …
The tangy, peppery superfood: 7 Reasons to eat more arugula
Arugula is a green leafy vegetable used in salads, pizza and other popular dishes. The bitter vegetable, also known as garden rocket or roquette, is a staple in Mediterranean cuisine and widely …
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82.) SEAN HANNITY
May 3, 2021
Latest News
BIDEN REBUKED: Two Dem Senators Say President Needs ‘More Action’ to Solve Border Disaster
Two border-state Senators from the Democratic Party say the Biden Administration […]
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We’ve put together a daily digest of your Patriots content, as well as other great Daily Caller content, curated by what is trending on our site and what is most important in the day’s news. We hope you enjoy.
Ashli Babbitt was the 35-year old Trump supporter from California who was shot dead by a U.S. Capitol Police officer during the January 6 riots. Babbitt was unarmed when she was killed. She marched to the Capitol with a crowd after the giant rally, held to draw attention to alleged 2020 election fraud. The officer’s […]
Most say there is “no way” they would let their young child be a test subject for Covid-19 vaccine safety in children. That’s according to the latest unscientific poll at SharylAttkisson.com. Ninety-seven percent (97%) of the over 2,000 respondents said no to allowing their young child to be a Covid-19 vaccine test subject. Two percent […]
United Health Services, a for-profit hospital operator, is giving back $188 million in federal relief aid after recording $209 million in profit during the first quarter of 2021. That’s according to a report in Becker’s Hospital Review. The Pennsylvania-based company announced that its $3 billion gross revenue for the first quarter of 2021 increased 6.5% […]
My last batch of signed books is now available. The timing couldn’t be better. Give to somebody you care about in these uncertain times. Information is power. Find out what’s behind the death of the news, and who’s behind big tech censorship. There’s hope.
“It is error alone which needs the support of government. Truth can stand by itself. Subject opinion to coercion: whom will you make your inquisitors?” —Thomas Jefferson (1781)
Will Witt wants to see what students at Florida International University think about cancel culture. Is anyone offended by Mr. Potato Head or Aunt Jemima syrup?
Thomas Sowell explains how the continuous erosion of moral values we’re seeing will eventually lead to America’s downfall if we don’t get back to our moral roots.
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In today’s news, Apple and the publisher of Fortnite head to court. Thunderstorms and lightning are making for a very (very) frightening start to May. And, USA TODAY debuts a new documentary.
Good morning and welcome to the first Monday in May. As the country wakes up, it’s Lindsay with the news you need to know.
First, trending this morning:
⚓️ Tragedy off the coast: At least 3 are dead and 27 hospitalized after a boat capsized off the coast of San Diego. It’s part of a suspected smuggling operation, authorities say.
🏛 Capitol riots: In an exclusive interview, Sen. Joe Manchin tells USA TODAY’s Ledyard King that Donald Trump “called me all the time.” The West Virginia Democrat also said he was ready “to stay and fight” during Capitol riots.
🏈 Let’s grade the NFL draft: From Jaguars to Jets, Bears to Broncos, USA TODAY’s Nate Davis has his red pen out and is rating the team classes of 2021.
🏠 They’re taking over HGTV: College sweethearts and DIY TV stars Ben and Erin Napier give readers an inside look at their new ‘Home Town Takeover.’
Funeral to be held for Andrew Brown Jr. in North Carolina
Rev. Al Sharpton will deliver the eulogy at Monday’s funeral for Andrew Brown Jr., who was killed by sheriff’s deputies serving search and arrest warrants at his Elizabeth City home on April 21. Brown, a Black man, was shot five times, including once fatally in the back of his head, according to an autopsy commissioned by his family. Protesters have taken to the streets after a judge ruled against the release of body camera footage from the shooting.
Weather to watch: Threat of flash flooding, drastic temperature changes across US
Part of the Southern Plains, the Ohio Valley, central Appalachians and the middle to lower Mississippi Valley will be under threat of severe thunderstorms and flash flooding Monday and Tuesday as a storm that soaked previously dry regions of Texas over the weekend moves slowly northeast. Rain and strong storms made their way across Louisiana, Arkansas, Mississippi and southern Missouri Sunday evening as the storm made its way through the area. A second weather threat is expected to develop over the Rockies into Monday, delivering wet snow to the higher elevations of Colorado and Wyoming and rain to parts of the northern and central Plains, the National Weather Service said. The fast-moving system will then head toward the Midwest, where cities like Omaha, Nebraska, and Minneapolis will experience temperature dips of up to 15 degrees below the norm for early May.
More ways to dive into the news:
🎥 Watch: USA TODAY debuts a 22-minute documentary, ‘Boots on the Ground’: An inside look at the exhausted Black community in Minneapolis after George Floyd.
🎧 Listen: On today’s 5 Things podcast, activists fight for police reform. You can listen to the podcast every day on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or on your smart speaker.
A legal showdown between Apple and Fortnite publisher Epic Games gets underway Monday in federal court in Oakland, California. The lawsuit stems from Epic’s move last August to allow players of its mobile games to directly pay for downloads and bypass the Apple App Store and Google Play store . Epic said it was effectively giving players a discount because Apple and Google each take a 30% cut of most purchases made in their online stores. Apple and Google then pulled “Fortnite” from their stores, leading Epic to sue both companies, charging that their app stores are anti-competitive and monopolistic. The trial is expected to last four weeks.
WNBA star Breanna Stewart proposes to Marta Xargay of the Phoenix Mercury
New York City is heading back to work
About 80,000 New York municipal employees who have been working remotely during the pandemic will return to their offices starting Monday. “We’re going to make it safe, but we need our city workers back in their offices where they can do the most to help their fellow New Yorkers, and it’s also going to send a powerful message about this city moving forward,” mayor Bill De Blasio said, promising strict safety measures.
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96.) JAMIE DUPREE
97.) US NEWS & WORLD REPORT
98.) NEWSMAX
Breaking News from Newsmax.com
Latest on Arizona recount?6:30am to 9am ET Watch Wake Up America with Rob Finnerty to get the latest info from Phoenix on Newsmax TV via Directv 349, Xfinity 1115, Dish 216, Uverse 1220, Fios 615, Optimum 102, Mediacom 277, Spectrum, Cox, Suddenlink, WOW!, or on FREE OTT via Roku, YouTube, Xumo, Pluto, Apple TV, more! Find all channels: More Info Here
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99.) MARK LEVIN
April 30, 2021
Posted on
On Friday’s Mark Levin Show, There’s a serious question as to whether the Biden Administration manipulated the census numbers to mitigate the negative fallout of Democrats losing seats in the house based on population. Nancy Pelosi claims she’s not concerned that the latest census will eliminate Democrat house seats after the recent growth in Latinos because of immigration. No society can withstand mass migration; this is a concept that even Democrats once agreed with. For more than 50 years the Democrats have been deceiving the public about the elimination of immigration quotas from any one particular region of the globe. Cesar Chavez a prominent Democrat and agriculture labor leader vehemently opposed illegal immigration because of the detriment it had on Americans of Hispanic heritage. Then, Biden is stopping military veterans from meeting up in the pentagon parking due to COVID but allows thousands to cram into border facilities that are only designed to house hundreds at. Later, LatCrit is a theory that the U.S. has never belonged to White Europeans but instead to indigenous people and no White person can dictate that. Afterward, Oprah Winfrey’s book calls for a strengthened sense of self-worth while she supports people that call most Americans racist. Finally, former Mayor Rudy Giuliani joins the show to reveal the truth behind the aggressive unconstitutional harassment and breach of his Attorney-Client privilege.
The podcast for this show can be streamed or downloaded from the Audio Rewind page.
Image used with permission of Getty Images / Justin Sullivan
100.) WOLF DAILY
Wolf Daily Newsletter
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In a crazy turn of events, FBI agents involved in the raid of Rudy Giuliani, refused to take the hard drives from Hunter Biden’s laptop that were in Giuliani’s possession.
Let us not forget how President Trump was ridiculed for banning travel during his presidency, only for Biden to be praised. Its pathetic and a clear double standard in the way our leaders present themselves and their addenda’s.
Police responding to reports of a kidnapping said on Friday they had found more than 90 people crammed into a two-story suburban Houston home and suspected it was being used in a human smuggling operation.
The families will be allowed to enter the United States through an emergency process known as “humanitarian parole,” Michelle Brane, “In these cases that we’re talking about this week, the children are in the United States and the parents are coming to join them,” Brane said.
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Just like a Democrat to steal from children who want a better education. How could any rational, decent American identify with this criminal, racist party?
This vile pit viper is the poster girl for the party of evil, the democrats. This is real Nazism. What we need to track is any Republican Senators that ultimately confirm the nomination.
“FBI combed through NSA’s trove of Americans’ communications WITHOUT a warrant in its search for ‘racially motivated violent extremists’ when it was already warned the practice was unconstitutional.” The first question that springs to …
Facebook Twitter Google+ For 30 days, I will report daily the terrorist attacks, the crimes, the butcheries of Ramadan Bombathon 2021. I have followed and report Ramadan Bombathon for 8 years. It has always amazed me to see that no mainstream …
Facebook Twitter Google+ Red states are leading the charge in the fight against the BDS Movement and anti-Semitism. All because of the herculean efforts of the pro-Israel lobbying organization Christians United for Israel. Christians United for …
If you’re trying to find institutional racism, look no further than Critical Race Theory, Black conservative commentator Candace Owens says. In Sunday night tweet, Owens said the race-based theory being taught in public schools nationwide…
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What are they hiding? Why is the swamp/media complex so terrified of Rudy Giuliani? In this episode, I discuss the explosive details of the effort to cover up the biggest scandal in American history.
Black Lives Matter Releases Absurd Updated Set of Demands
Black Lives Matter has updated their list of demands, which now includes convicting former President Donald Trump for his actions preceding the January 6 capitol riot, among other miscellaneous madness.
New Report Proves Gov. Cuomo’s Nursing Home Coverup Was Worse Than We Thought
At the center of New York’s coronavirus disaster is Gov. Andrew Cuomo’s now infamous “March 25 advisory” forcing nursing homes to take coronavirus patients. On paper it would seem that mixing coronavirus patients with the demographic of people most susceptible to the virus is a terrible idea – and that was tragically proven in the months that followed.
Illegals Crossing Rio Grande Valley Say They’re Crossing Because of Biden
Joe Biden and Kamala Harris want us to believe two things; that there’s no crisis on the border – and that whatever is happening there is Donald Trump’s fault.