Good morning! Here is your news briefing for Friday May 21, 2021
1.) THE DAILY SIGNAL
May 21 2021
Good morning from Washington, where notes from a phone call show the Trump administration warned the Biden administration not to create a border crisis by tampering with policies in place. Our Rachel del Guidice reports. In standing up to YouTube, comedian Steven Crowder raises serious concerns, Kara Frederick writes. On the podcast: life in Israel under terrorist attack. Plus: the left closes in on the Electoral College; the president OKs taxpayer dollars for abortion providers; and a look at Russia’s pipeline hackers. On this date in 1932, exactly five years after aviator Charles Lindbergh flies solo and nonstop across the Atlantic, fellow American Amelia Earhart is the first to repeat the feat.
If the coronavirus misinformation standard were applied consistently, Fauci’s announcement in March 2020 that “there is no reason to [walk] around with a mask” would have been struck from the platform.
The Trump administration warned the incoming Biden administration that a crisis could erupt if it ended current border security policies, according to notes of a telephone conversation.
DarkSide is part of a constellation of criminal actors—long-known in the cybersecurity world—that emanates from Russia and its former Soviet states, as well as North Korea, China, Syria, and Iran.
The Biden administration has proposed a rule to reverse the Trump administration’s pro-life policies and allow Title X activity to be conducted along abortion activity without physical and financial separation.
“In the past 10 days, we have been living in our bomb shelters,” Yael Eckstein says, adding: “Just today alone, for an hour straight, there were just rocket barrages on Israeli cities.”
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3.) DAYBREAK
Your First Look at Today’s Top Stories – Daybreak Insider
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A Ceasefire Between Israel and Hamas: Will it Last?
Katie Pavlich: The Israeli government and Hamas have agreed to a ceasefire after 11 days of the Iranian backed terrorist organization launching more than 4000 rockets at civilian targets inside the country. In response, the Israeli Defense Forces have carried out a number of military operations and airstrikes targeting Hamas leaders inside the Gaza Strip (Townhall.com). NY Times: With a cease-fire between Israel and Palestinian militants on the horizon, the Biden administration is now turning to how it can help rebuild the besieged Gaza Strip—and in turn bring pressure, through promises of financial support, on Hamas not to resume fighting (NY Times). Dennis Ross, long-time negotiator in the region: “So long as Hamas can have rockets, then the prospect of changing anything in Gaza will be very limited and any calm is basically a short term calm,” Ross said, adding that as long as Hamas posed missiles, “they will fire them into Israel” (Jerusalem Post). Poll: 72% of Israelis oppose negotiating a ceasefire with Hamas (DailyCaller).
2.
Pennsylvania Voters Take Lead in Reining in Emergency Powers of Heavy-Handed Governors
AP: Pennsylvania voters became the first in the nation to impose restrictions on a governor’s authority under an emergency disaster declaration, approving constitutional amendments sped to a statewide referendum by Republican lawmakers angry over how Democratic Gov. Tom Wolf handled the pandemic response (CBS). Wall Street Journal’s editorial: Americans nationwide are tired of endless pandemic diktats, and in Pennsylvania on Tuesday they showed it with a resounding electoral rebuke of Democratic Gov. Tom Wolf’s emergency powers (WSJ). The amendments are sure to be challenged in court: all eyes turn toward the possibility of legal challenges that could prevent the two approved constitutional amendments from becoming reality (WashEx). Gov. Wolf, for his part, does not seem to be getting the message: … Wolf has signed a renewal of the state’s disaster order related to the coronavirus pandemic. The governor announced the renewal Thursday afternoon, just two days after voters approved two measures to curb his powers in disasters (PostGazette).
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3.
President Biden: “Yes” to Russian Pipeline, “No” to Keystone XL
NBC News: The Biden administration has decided to waive sanctions against the company overseeing the construction of Russia’s Nord Stream 2 gas pipeline to Germany, despite bipartisan opposition in Congress and appeals from Eastern European governments (NBC News). Townhall: Biden signed an executive order halting the construction of the Keystone XL pipeline within hours of being sworn in as president on January 20, 2021. In doing so, he killed thousands of high-paying, union jobs (Townhall.com). Curtis Houck: Peter Doocy battles Jen Psaki over the Biden administration refusing to sanction Russians over Nord Stream 2 and having done nothing to stop the pipeline’s completion (Twitter).
4.
Biden Administration Flying Illegal Immigrants to States in the Night
Katie Pavlich: As the illegal immigration crisis on the U.S. southern border with Mexico continues, the Biden Administration is flying unaccompanied minors and family units to cities around the country in the middle of the night (Townhall.com). From WRCB: U.S. Senator Bill Hagerty said he was not aware of the flights into Chattanooga, but said, “It is time for President Biden to be transparent with Tennesseans and the American people regarding where the hundreds of thousands of migrants being resettled in the United States are being sent because they deserve to know” (WRCB). Sen. Marsha Blackburn: It is absolutely unacceptable if the Biden Administration is facilitating a mass migration under cover of darkness without any input or oversight from Tennesseans and the affected communities (Twitter).
5.
CNN’s Chris Cuomo Coached His Brother on Sexual Harassment Allegations: A Story of Power
New York Post: Journalists across the nation slammed CNN anchor Chris Cuomo for advising his brother Gov. Andrew Cuomo on how to handle sexual harassment allegations against him — and even the network’s own reporters are and “bothered” by the conduct (New York Post). From The Washington Post: Cuomo, one of the network’s top stars, joined a series of conference calls that included the Democratic governor, his top aide, his communications team, lawyers and a number of outside advisers, according to the people familiar with the conversations, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to describe the private sessions (Washington Post). From Spencer Brown: To be clear: A Democrat governor and his staff—in the midst of multiple scandals—were being advised on how to navigate the crisis from an anchor for the network that paints itself as “the world’s most trusted name in news” (Townhall.com). Oliver Darcy: Multiple CNN staffers told me they were bothered by Cuomo’s conduct and the violation of traditional journalistic standards (Twitter). Sam Stein: The Chris Cuomo story is a story of power. Any junior level staffer who moonlighted as a political adviser would see their job suspended or gone (Twitter).
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6.
Governor Kemp Places Georgia on Growing List of States Pushing Back Against Critical Race Theory
Atlanta Journal Constitution: The Republican … urged the state Board of Education to take “immediate steps to ensure that Critical Race Theory and its dangerous ideology do not take root in our state standards and curriculum” (AJC). A look at the other states that have moved in a similar direction: Earlier this month, Idaho Governor Brad Little became the first Republican governor to sign into law a bill that restricts educators from teaching a concept called critical race theory. And more could follow: Nearly a dozen states have introduced similar Republican-backed bills that would direct what students can and cannot be taught about the role of slavery in American history and the ongoing effects of racism in the U.S. today. But critics say the legislation isn’t aimed at what children are learning in the classroom (CBS). It’s a welcome backlash (NationalReview).
7.
GOP Senators Look to Guard Military from Critical Race Theory
Senator Jim Inhofe (R-OK) is among those seeking to make sure the military budget is not just another political tool. Washington Examiner: Republicans expressed alarm following examples of rank-and-file military service members being scrutinized for holding political views that differed from the Biden administration (WashEx). The Biden administration already has the wheels turning. The Secretary of the Navy’s memo, announcing a review: It is the duty of the Navy to continue making meaningful steps that promote diversity, equity, and inclusion…(DoD).
8.
Maryland School District Spent $454K of Taxpayer Money to Fund an Anti-Racist Audit
From National Review: Maryland’s largest school district spent over $454,000 for an “anti-racist system audit,” according to documents obtained by Judicial Watch, while the district’s middle school students were taught that the phrase “Make America Great Again” was an example of “covert white supremacy” that ranks just below “lynching,” hate crimes,” “the N-word” and “racial slurs” (National Review).
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9.
Pakistani Member of Parliament Calls for Nuking the State of Israel
The argument of Maulana Chitrali: “Did we make atomic bombs to show them in a museum? We don’t need missiles, atomic bombs or a huge army if they can’t be used to liberate Palestine” (FreeBeacon). Jews are being attacked in New York City (Twitter). And in Los Angeles (Newsweek).
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Sunburn — The morning read of what’s hot in Florida politics — 5.21.21
Who’s up, down, in and out — your morning tipsheet on Florida politics.
Good Friday morning.
Ella Joyce has a horse show today, so we’re getting out on the road. Here are a handful of items on my radar:
❌ — Media bias on full-display with Capitol Press Corps Rebekah Jones love: They never miss a chance to report on Jones, if it’s positive. But when someone offers a counternarrative, it’s crickets. Worse, the Tally crew was silent when ChristinaPushaw, who has often challenged Jones’ narrative, landed a job as the Governor’s press secretary. It’s not a good look.
🏼🏼 — Winners and Losers, Rounders-style: Consider this my work of art. Winners and Losers in the Special Session are easy. Tying them to gifs from Rounders, the Texas Hold ‘em movie classic with MattDamon and JohnMalkovich, not as much. Why did I do this? As I tweeted, “B/c in my club, like Teddy KGB, I will splash the pot whenever the f&ck I please.’
— Manny Diaz boasts historic school choice expansion: Speaking on the redefinED podcast with SUFS President DougTuthill, Diaz discusses how the landmark school choice bill passed this Legislative Session will normalize choice in public and private schools and touts the inclusion of education spending accounts as the next logical step in school choice expansion. But perhaps the most compelling talking point: Diaz contemplates how to remove partisanship from the school choice debate, which has typically pit opposed Dems against gung-ho Republicans.
Manny Diaz talks about the big school choice expansion on a new Stand Up For Students podcast.
— More trouble at the Tampa Bay Times is bad news for readers: With two high-profile departures and one containing claims of disproportionate pay between genders, things look even worse for the paper than they already did. And its track record snubbing Pinellas County doesn’t inspire confidence in promises to add two new reporters to beef coverage.
Days until
‘A Quiet Place Part II’ rescheduled premiere — 7; Disaster Preparedness Sales Tax Holiday begins — 7; Memorial Day — 10; Florida TaxWatch Spring Meeting and PLA Awards — 13; ‘Loki’ premieres on Disney+ — 21; Father’s Day — 30; F9 premieres in the U.S. — 35; ‘Tax Freedom Holiday’ begins — 41; ‘Top Gun: Maverick’ rescheduled premiere — 42; 4th of July — 44; ‘Black Widow’ rescheduled premiere — 49; MLB All-Star Game — 53; new start date for 2021 Olympics — 63; second season of ‘Ted Lasso’ premieres on Apple+ — 63; the NBA Draft — 69; ‘Jungle Cruise’ premieres — 71; ‘The Suicide Squad’ premieres — 77; St. Petersburg Primary Election — 95; Disney’s ‘Shang Chi and The Legend of The Ten Rings’ premieres — 105; NFL regular season begins — 111; Broadway’s full-capacity reopening — 116; ‘The Many Saints of Newark’ premieres (rescheduled) — 126; ‘Dune’ premieres — 133; MLB regular season ends — 135; ‘No Time to Die’ premieres (rescheduled) — 141; World Series Game 1 — 158; Florida’s 20th Congressional District primary — 165; St. Petersburg Municipal Elections — 165; Disney’s ‘Eternals’ premieres — 168; San Diego Comic-Con begins — 189; Steven Spielberg’s ‘West Side Story’ premieres — 203; ‘Spider-Man Far From Home’ sequel premieres — 210; NFL season ends — 233; Florida’s 20th Congressional District election — 235; NFL playoffs begin — 239; Super Bowl LVI — 268; ‘Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness’ premieres — 308; ‘Thor: Love and Thunder’ premieres — 350; “Black Panther 2” premieres — 413; ‘Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse’ sequel premieres — 504; “Captain Marvel 2” premieres — 539.
Top story
“NOAA predicts busy hurricane season” via Jason Delgado of Florida Politics — The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration expects above-average storm activity during the 2021 Atlantic Hurricane Season, the federal agency announced Thursday. This year’s forecast comes after the most active hurricane season on record and marks the sixth consecutive above-average season. While NOAA expects a milder season in 2021 than last year, forecasters predict a 60% chance of an above-average season with 13 to 20 named storms. Of the expected storms in 2021, six to 10 could become hurricanes with winds of 74 mph or higher, NOAA said. Meanwhile, three to five major hurricanes are forecast with winds 111 mph or higher. The average hurricane season, comparatively, produces 14 named storms, of which seven become hurricanes and three grow into major hurricanes.
It might be a time to start getting ready.
“Three Florida property insurers will drop a total of 50,000 policies” via Malena Carollo of the Tampa Bay Times — More than 50,000 Florida policyholders will need to find a new property insurance carrier in the coming months, just as hurricane season roars into gear. Three Florida insurers have received approval to let some of their policies expire and to cancel others, a step the state’s insurance regulator called “extraordinary.” The approvals are the latest bid to bring financial stability to Florida’s property insurance market. Florida carriers posted their worst financial performance in decades last year, with a combined $1.57 billion in underwriting losses and no quick fix on the horizon.
Statewide
“What’s wrong with Florida’s new gambling deal? Ask the one state Senator who voted against it” via Eric Glasser of 10 Tampa Bay — The gambling compact with the Seminole Tribe, approved by the Florida Legislature on Wednesday, is almost certain to face legal challenges. Some of the issues have been raised by anti-gaming groups. There was also some political pushback, including one lone state Senator who voted against it. That Senator was Jeff Brandes from St. Petersburg. “Sometimes somebody’s got to stand up and say I see it in a different way. And we could do better,” said Brandes. Brandes says the 30-year compact, which grants the Seminole Tribe exclusive control over sports betting and expands table games like craps and roulette, wasn’t necessarily the state’s best bet.
Jeff Brandes has some problems with the new Seminole Compact. Image via Colin Hackley.
“Gambling deal goes to Ron DeSantis” via The News Service of Florida — DeSantis formally received a bill that would carry out a 30-year gambling deal with the Seminole Tribe of Florida. Lawmakers held a three-day Special Session this week to pass the bill (SB 2A) and other gambling-related measures. DeSantis negotiated the deal, including allowing sports betting in Florida, with the Seminole Tribe, but the measure needed ratification from the Legislature. The deal, known as a compact, is expected to provide at least $2.5 billion to the state over the first five years. DeSantis is certain to sign the measure, but it is expected to face legal challenges.
“Florida lawmakers approved legalized sports betting. Now what?” via Lawrence Mower of the Tampa Bay Times — DeSantis and the Legislature this week approved a new deal with the Seminole Tribe that would give the Tribe exclusive rights to sports betting, including the ability to make bets from your phone anywhere within the state, for the next 30 years. The deal with the Seminole Tribe would allow you to bet from your phone if you’re physically located in Florida. Even if a judge says you can’t bet on your phone from your couch, you would still be allowed to go to a Hard Rock property or race track to place wagers. Although some states don’t allow betting on in-state college teams, Florida’s new deal allows it.
“Ashley Moody appeals after immigration ruling” via the News Service of Florida — Attorney General Moody quickly launched an appeal Wednesday after a federal judge refused to block immigration-enforcement moves by President Joe Biden’s administration. U.S. District Judge Charlene EdwardsHoneywell issued a 23-page ruling Tuesday rejecting Florida’s request for a preliminary injunction in a lawsuit that Moody filed in March against the Biden administration. The lawsuit focuses on memos issued Jan. 20 and Feb. 18 by the U.S. Department of Homeland Security and U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement about immigration enforcement, with Moody contending that the directives violate federal immigration laws and what is known as the Administrative Procedure Act.
“DeSantis’ press secretary locks Twitter account after ‘harassment & threats’” via Jason Delgado of Florida Politics — Pushaw, DeSantis’ new press secretary, locked her Twitter account on Thursday after she was harassed and threatened on the social media platform. In a Tweet she posted Thursday, the conservative journalist turned press secretary said the threats began after announcing her new gig with the DeSantis administration. Pushaw described the “waves” of harassment as “disgusting” and “deranged.” “Hopefully, it’s temporary,” Pushaw tweeted. “I have a lot of work to do & a lot to learn, so it’s better this way for now.” In a later tweet, Pushaw included a screenshot of a tweet she received that said, “your death would not be a tragedy.” Pushaw’s Twitter bio now says “temporarily locked” and references John 15:18 in the Bible.
“Report points to Medicaid expansion benefits” via The News Service of Florida — Florida could add 134,700 jobs, lower the number of uninsured residents by 852,000 and pump billions of additional federal dollars into the economy if it would expand Medicaid to low-income adults without children, according to a report released Thursday. The Commonwealth Fund released the report, which said expanding Medicaid in Florida would add 61,600 health care jobs from 2022 to 2025. It also said an expansion would lead to job increases in the construction, retail, finance and insurance sectors. State Republican leaders have long rejected expanding eligibility for Medicaid, pointing in part to concerns about potential future costs. The chances of that position changing appear to be nil, as Republicans control the House, Senate and Governor’s office.
“Proposal seeks to put strict guidelines on teaching U.S. history in Florida’s schools” via Ryan Dailey of NSF — A proposed rule that the State Board of Education will weigh aims to control the way history is taught in Florida classrooms and not allow teachers to “indoctrinate” students, as part of what state Education Commissioner Richard Corcoran called a “constant, vigilant fight.” The proposed rule seeks to put strict guidelines on teaching U.S. history. It also would require that any classroom discussion is “appropriate for the age and maturity level of the students,” and teachers facilitating discussions wouldn’t be able to “share their personal views or attempt to indoctrinate or persuade students to a particular point of view” that is inconsistent with state standards.
Richard Corcoran constantly remains vigilant against ‘indoctrination’ in Florida public schools. Image via Colin Hackley.
“Constitutional law expert says FSU presidential search violated Sunshine Law” via Drew Wilson of Florida Politics — Did the Florida State University presidential search committee violate Florida’s Government-in-the-Sunshine Laws? To constitutional law expert and former General Counsel to the Constitution Revision Commission Will Spicola, the answer is simple: “Yes.” After an hour and a half luncheon by committee members, which was closed to the public, FSU consultant Alberto Pimentel took charge, stating, “based on (his) discussion with all of you,” there seems to be “excitement” about three candidates to move forward. Within 10 seconds of listing the names, faculty member Pam Perrewé motioned to advance them for campus interviews. Her motion was immediately seconded. As one observer noted, “this happened so fast it had to have been planned in advance.”
“Florida allowing mining of state-owned wetlands has a certain smell to it” via Craig Pittman of the Florida Phoenix — This case involves a major chemical company that wants to expand its mining onto taxpayer-owned property, where it would chew up more than 700 acres of wetlands. And it’s looking like it will get a green light from the state even though it has complied with environmental regulations about as well as I have complied with the speed limit. Does that last part sound familiar? Here’s a hint: I have come to think of this mining permit as “Piney Point II: Electric Boogaloo.” You remember Piney Point, right? The big environmental crisis last month that made international headlines? The one that resulted from state regulators repeatedly giving a polluter a break despite its history of disobeying the rules?
“National, statewide officials offering up to $10K for information on intentionally-set fires in Everglades” via WFLA — Several national and statewide agencies are offering a reward for information leading to the arrest of the person(s) responsible for the fires started in the Everglades National Park. Officials with the ATF, Everglades National Park, and the Florida Department of Financial Services Bureau of Fire, Arson, & Explosives said they are offering up to $10,000 for information regarding the human-caused fires that have occurred in the wetland preserve. Numerous fires have been intentionally set in the vicinity of the main park road (State Road 9336) and adjacent roads of Everglades National Park within the last three months. These areas are easily accessed through the Homestead entrance of the park.
“Summer school 2021 in Florida will be big, and hopefully better than usual” via Jeffrey S. Solochek of the Tampa Bay Times — Schools across the Tampa Bay area and Florida plan summer programs like none other in recent memory. They’re laying the groundwork for as many as four times the usual number of students to attend, with the primary goal of helping children get back on track for the fall after losing academic ground during the pandemic. Test scores and other measures will help teachers and principals determine who most needs to enroll. Families should begin receiving invitations by the end of May. Participation is voluntary, though encouraged. After a grueling year, where learning encountered more barriers than in normal times, getting buy-in could prove difficult from students and teachers alike.
2022
“RNC, NRSC join legal fray over Florida’s contentious new election law” via Gary Fineout of POLITICO Florida — Republicans are jumping in to defend Florida’s newly adopted election law, which Democrats and an array of voting and civil rights groups are criticizing as unconstitutional. The Republican National Committee and the National Republican Senatorial Committee on Thursday filed motions to intervene in two separate federal lawsuits that have been filed in Tallahassee. RNC Chair Ronna McDaniel, using the same talking point espoused by Florida GOP officials defending the law, said in a statement that “Florida’s recent election reforms are aimed at a simple goal: making it easier to vote and harder to cheat.” Sen. Rick Scott, who is chair of the NRSC, contended that critics are lying about the effect of the law.
Ronna McDaniel is gearing up to defend Florida’s new election laws.
“Why Republicans still have the upper hand for 2022” via Rich Lowry of POLITICO — Republicans have had a brutal news cycle over the past month or so, between the ouster of Liz Cheney from leadership and now the intraparty jousting over whether to get on board a Jan. 6 commission. The overwhelming sense from the press coverage is that the party is descending into madness and civil war and is a husk of its former self, risking long-term irrelevance. There’s no denying that much of the party has been too willing to indulge, excuse, or look away from wild theories about the 2020 election and the Capitol riot, but this shouldn’t obscure the fact that the party is well-positioned to take back the House next year.
“Crystal Ball lists four Florida seats as competitive in 2022” via Jacob Ogles of Florida Politics — Sabato’s Crystal Ball, headed by the University of Virginia Center for Politics head Larry Sabato, predicts competitive races in at least four districts. The site lists the race to succeed Charlie Crist in Florida’s 13th Congressional District as a “Tossup.” That makes it one of 19 Democrat-held seats tabulated as top tier. That’s compared to two Republican-held seats ranked as coin flips. Rep. Maria Elvira Salazar gets categorized by the UVA team as the most at-risk incumbent in Florida. But Crystal ball Managing Editor Kyle Kondik notes these rankings all assume races under current lines, making the rankings purely hypothetical. The Republican Legislature will redraw all of Florida’s Congressional boundaries next year, and the addition of an additional seat in Florida means there’s no chance the lines stay put.
“The rise of the zero-issue candidate” via Philip Bump of The Washington Post — There are a lot of people who are running for office these days who seem to be hoping to parlay notoriety into political success or to parlay political success into notoriety. Caitlyn Jenner’s gubernatorial campaign in California isn’t much of a campaign at all. In New York, former mayor Rudolph Giuliani’s son Andrew Giuliani has thrown his hat into the ring for governor, combating the perception that his political résumé is rather thin by including his father’s first mayoral campaign in 1989 when Andrew was 3. Obviously, it’s not unusual for political ads, particularly introductory ones, to be a bit light on specifics. But it often seems as though the point is simply to bolster a political team rather than to implement specific proposals.
Vax stats
More than 7.65 million people were fully vaccinated against COVID-19 in Florida. Here is a breakdown, via the News Service of Florida, of fully vaccinated people by age group:
—Ages 15-24: 408,963
—Ages 25-34: 610,548
—Ages 35 to 44: 805,690
—Ages 45 to 54: 1,073,143
—Ages 55 to 64: 1,546,249
—Ages 65 to 74: 1,827,676
—Ages 75 to 84: 1,036,448
—Ages 85 and older: 342,859
Corona Florida
“Florida COVID-19 positivity rate hits lowest point in seven months, as case numbers keep dropping” via David Fleshler of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — Florida’s COVID-19 test positivity rate dropped Thursday to its lowest point since October, an encouraging sign that came as the daily number of new cases continued to decline. The positivity rate fell to 3.92%, continuing a downward trend begun in mid-April. The last time the positivity rate was lower was Oct. 10. Florida reported 2,893 new coronavirus cases on Thursday and another 76 new resident deaths linked to COVID-19. The state has now reported 2,302,489 cases since the pandemic began.
“Florida counties where Donald Trump support was heaviest have the lowest vaccination rates in the state” via Dan DeLuca, Frank Gluck, Lindsey Leake and Chris Persaud of the USA TODAY Network — Floridians of all races, ethnicities and ages who have avoided COVID-19 vaccinations live in large metropolitan areas, their suburbs, rural communities, coastal tourist enclaves, college towns and retirement destinations. But a key predictor of who will shun the shots is whether they reside in counties that strongly supported Trump in the 2020 election. And the more a county went for Trump in November, the more its vaccinations have lagged. Even when factoring for a county’s racial makeup, average age, non-English speaking population, college-educated population, overall population estimate, and income level, the analysis found that voter preference in 2020 remains a big factor in the share of a county’s residents who have been inoculated.
Florida counties with the highest support for Donald Trump have the lowest rates of vaccination. Image via AP.
Corona local
“Vaccine site at MDC North isn’t shutting down — but will be under new management” via Michelle Marchante of the Miami Herald — The federally supported vaccination site at Miami Dade College North Campus will not shut down next week after all. Instead, the site will be under new management as Miami-Dade County takes over. Miami Dade College spokesman Juan Mendieta confirmed the change. And there’s another thing new: The walk-up site will also offer drive-through vaccinations, he said. FEMA will continue administering the single-dose Johnson & Johnson vaccine and second-dose Pfizer shots at the site daily from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. through Tuesday, May 25. The site will then open again on Wednesday, May 26, but will be operated by Miami-Dade Fire Rescue, Mendieta said.
“Miami-Dade schools will make masks optional for outdoor, socially distanced activities” via Colleen Wright of the Miami Herald — Effective immediately, Miami-Dade County Public Schools is making masks optional only for outdoor, socially distanced activities. All other COVID-19 protocols will stay in place for the last two weeks of school. Looking forward to the fall, the nation’s fourth-largest school district may make masks optional for the 2021-22 school year. At Tuesday’s ad hoc medical and public health experts task force meeting, Superintendent Alberto Carvalho said he is “reasonably comfortable and confident we can announce a voluntary masking approach” for the next school year. As for summer school in six weeks, he said he’d like to reconvene the task force and review the data.
“Angry parents flood School Board meeting, want their kids’ masks off now” via Sonja Isger of The Palm Beach Post — After hours of testimony from angry parents, the Palm Beach County School Board pressed Superintendent Donald Fennoy to immediately get the message to principals and teachers that students aren’t to be punished for face mask missteps. They also cleared the way for any children and staff to unmask, regardless of distance, when outdoors. The majority, however, held the line on an indoor mask mandate through the end of this school year and into summer school. The moves came between midnight and 1 a.m. after scores of parents, most of them fed up with the district’s mask mandate, took Wednesday night’s board meeting into the wee hours as speaker after speaker demanded the requirement be abandoned immediately.
Donald Fennoy gets slammed by angry parents at a school board meeting.
“To make up for COVID-19 ‘lost learning,’ Central Florida schools invite thousands to summer school” via Leslie Postal of the Orlando Sentinel — Aware COVID-19 disrupted education this past year, Central Florida school districts will host more expansive summer school programs in 2021, hoping to give students extra doses of reading and math, alongside fun classes in art, music, business, poetry and the like. Across the region, thousands of more students than usual have been invited to summer programs that begin next month. Orange County Public Schools, for example, hopes about 37,000 youngsters attend, up from the typical 10,000. “This is a rigorous program compared to years past,” said Superintendent Barbara Jenkins. “Intended not just to recover lost learning but also to accelerate and enrich our students. On top of all that, we’re going to make sure it’s fun as we need our children to come.”
“A Tamarac commissioner’s church is under review over COVID-19 relief loan” via Lisa J. Huriash of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — The South Florida Sun-Sentinel reported last month that Commissioner Marlon Bolton’s church received more than $36,000 in federal loans to meet payroll for 12 employees, but the state says it has no record of those workers. Under Florida law, employers must provide workers’ compensation insurance for their employees, but the state says the church provided no record of having the employees, as is required, and there is no record of the church requesting an exemption. According to the Florida Department of Financial Services, a violation of worker compensation requirements could lead to fines, citations, or criminal charges. The agency’s website says it also could require a business to stop all operations until it complies with the law and pays the penalty.
“Pasco deputies entered jail with coronavirus, disobeyed mask rules, reports show” via Romy Ellenbogen of the Tampa Bay Times — Pasco County Sheriff’s Deputy Christopher Schaeffer showed up to work at the county jail on Sept. 18 despite feeling under the weather. Schaeffer worked a 12-hour shift despite still feeling unwell and having a temperature of more than 100 degrees. The day after his shift, he tested positive for COVID-19. Two deputies, Hector Perez and Roland Bennett, failed to make sure inmates were wearing masks when they were moving through populated areas of the jail in July. Deputy James Moody also failed to wear his assigned N-95 properly in September, instead wearing it below his neck with a gaiter on.
“This Miami restaurant tried to do everything right during the pandemic. It still closed” via Carlos Frías of Miami.com — All Day café in downtown Miami looked like it was doing all the right things, right up until the morning it announced it was closing. It continued buying from small local producers as the pandemic made getting supplies difficult, ensuring a menu of fresh greens from Homestead farms, meat from one family ranch in Ocala, fresh eggs, premium coffee with trained baristas. But after a year of long days trying to keep the business running, with staff that kept turning over just after they’d been trained, the pressure of the business became too much, owner Camila Ramos said. She closed All Day on May 18, one day shy of its fifth anniversary. Ramos said she hasn’t figured out her next steps but has talked with the landlord about eventually reopening All Day at its same location with a different concept.
Corona nation
“The CDC’s critics are wrong. The agency was right to relax indoor masking.” via Joseph G. Allen of The Washington Post — Before the coronavirus vaccines arrived, we had few options to help slow the spread of this virus. Masks provided one of the simplest means to help slow the spread and protect yourself and others. Top-down restrictions from the CDC were absolutely needed to prevent the collapse of U.S. health systems. That’s no longer the case. To think otherwise is to ignore the unmistakable signs that the vaccines are rapidly and dramatically reducing risk for all in the United States. In fact, things are improving so quickly that the CDC’s announcement this past week on ending mask mandates that seemed so controversial will look obvious in just a few weeks.
The CDC is right to start loosening mask mandates. Image via AP.
“Anthony Fauci, 100 days into the Joe Biden administration, is finally getting to do his job” via Alice Park of Time — Fauci’s advice has been a part of every COVID-19-related decision made by the Biden Administration, beginning even before Biden took office, when the then-President-elect asked Fauci about requiring masks on all federal properties for 100 days to hold back the surge of new infections last winter. Every day since, Fauci has been asked about everything from whether the second dose of vaccines can be safely delayed, as the U.K. decided to do in January, to whether vaccines are still providing enough protection against new variants. That wasn’t the case during most of Fauci’s tenure on the White House Coronavirus Task Force under Trump. “Having been on the playing field, as it were, during both administrations,” says Fauci, ”having the ear of [this] President is manifestly totally different than what it was before.”
“Vaccine boosters could be necessary as soon as September” via Caitlin Owens of Axios — The first Americans to be vaccinated against the coronavirus could require a third “booster” shot as early as September, the CEOs of Pfizer and Moderna told Axios. “The data that I see coming, they are supporting the notion that likely there will be a need for a booster somewhere between eight and 12 months,” Pfizer CEO Albert Bourla said. That means some Americans could need a booster as soon as September or October, he added. Only time will tell how long protection from the first two vaccine doses will last, but there’s no evidence yet that it’s fading.
“New York offers $5 million lottery shot to newly vaccinated people” via Oriana Gonzalez of Axios — Andrew Cuomo announced on Thursday that anyone who gets vaccinated in one of the 10 state vaccination sites next week will receive a free lottery scratch ticket for the chance to win a grand prize of $5 million. Cuomo said New York had inoculated approximately 43% of its population but that vaccination numbers are “slowing dramatically.” The program, named “Vax & Scratch,” will only run between May 24 and May 28, and it will offer prizes from $20 to $5 million. Cuomo said that those who participate have a 1 in 9 chance of winning a cash prize. “Everybody wins,” Cuomo said. “You get the vaccine, and you win.” Cuomo called the program a “pilot” and added that the state “will make decisions from there.”
Corona economics
“U.S. jobless claims fall again as some states end federal aid” via Christopher Rugaber of The Associated Press — The number of Americans seeking unemployment aid fell last week to 444,000, a new pandemic low and a sign that the job market keeps strengthening as consumers spend freely again, viral infections drop and business restrictions ease. Thursday’s report from the Labor Department coincides with moves by nearly all the nation’s Republican governors to cut off a $300-a-week federal unemployment benefit that they and many business executives blame for discouraging the unemployed from seeking jobs. Those cutoffs will begin in June. Jobless people have received the $300 weekly benefit on top of their regular state unemployment aid.
Jobless claims drop as federal unemployment aid dries up.
“Rough recovery: One-third of Florida small businesses can’t pay their rent, study says” via Richard Bilbao of the Orlando Business Journal — More than a third of small businesses nationwide still face challenges paying their rent, said the May Rent Report. Specifically, 37% of 7,774 businesses surveyed from mid-April to mid-May said they could not afford to pay their rent in full, on time this month, representing an increase of six percentage points compared to 31% in April. About 33% of businesses in Florida don’t expect to make their May rent payments, up 1% from April. The Sunshine State ranked below the national average, but other states exceeded the average, including Michigan, Georgia, Virginia, Tennessee and New York. Two factors key behind the problem are lingering supply and inventory shortages, which led to rising supply costs and growing inflation, and customers being afraid to return to businesses.
“As COVID-19 worsens Florida eviction crisis, more Black renters’ lives upended” via Desiree Stennett of the Orlando Sentinel — Tens of thousands of people in Florida lost their jobs during the coronavirus pandemic, leaving many at risk of eviction. But renters living in predominantly Black neighborhoods were most vulnerable. The data provides the most comprehensive look at eviction the Shimberg Center has ever produced. An analysis of Orange, Osceola and Seminole counties in 2019 and 2020 shows that when Black residents are the largest racial group in a ZIP code, the eviction rate is likely to be significantly higher than in most predominantly white ZIP codes nearby. It often takes landlords just days to evict a renter. Currently, about 70% of white Floridians own homes compared with only 47% of Black residents.
More corona
“U.S. borders with Canada, Mexico to remain closed to nonessential travel through June 21” via Jayme Deerwester of USA Today — The Department of Homeland Security says the U.S. borders with Canada and Mexico will remain restricted through at least June 21, with only trade and essential travel allowed until then. The DHS confirmed the move in a tweet Thursday, but noted it is “working closely with Canada & Mexico to safely ease restrictions as conditions improve.” In conjunction with its Canadian and Mexican counterparts, the agency originally closed the U.S.’ northern and southern borders to leisure travelers in March 2020 at the start of the COVID-19 pandemic. The restrictions have been extended monthly ever since.
“What are Americans making for dinner? Reservations.” via Laura Reiley and Andrew Van Dam of The Washington Post — With nearly half of all Americans at least partially vaccinated and 100% of Americans tired of their own cooking, restaurant traffic is rocketing back. Restaurant reservations, including diners who placed themselves on waiting lists, were up 46% in April compared with April 2019, according to the review site Yelp, and up 23,000% compared with April 2020, when most Americans began staying at home during the pandemic. Yelp’s competitor OpenTable paints a similarly rosy picture. In some states, restaurant traffic has blown by pre-pandemic levels, prompting industry experts to draw parallels between now and the Roaring ‘20s, which followed the 1918 influenza pandemic, bringing boom times for restaurants and other parts of the hospitality industry.
It may be an old joke, but it becomes a lifeline for Americans aching to get out. Image via Reuters.
Presidential
“Biden’s top scientist gets OK from Senate committee” via Julia Arciga and Benjamin Din of POLITICO — The Senate Commerce Committee approved Biden Cabinet nominee Eric Lander to lead the Office of Science and Technology Policy on Thursday in a bipartisan voice vote. Lander, a top geneticist and director of the Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard, is the last of President Biden’s Cabinet awaiting confirmation. Biden has elevated the top OSTP post to a Cabinet-level position for the first time in history in a bid that demonstrates his mantra of “science is back.” The President tapped Lander to lead the office in early January, following his stint as co-chair of the Presidential Council of Advisors on Science and Technology during the Obama administration, where he briefed both then-Vice President Biden and President Barack Obama on science-related issues.
Eric Lander gets the Senate nod as Joe Biden’s top scientist. Image via AP.
Epilogue: Trump
“N.Y. Attorney General has been looking into the taxes of Trump Organization CFO for months, sources say” via Kara Scannell and Sonia Moghe of CNN — The New York Attorney General’s office has opened a criminal tax investigation into top Trump Organization officer Allen Weisselberg, increasing the legal pressure on the longtime aide to Trump, people familiar with the investigation say. The pressure on Weisselberg is mounting from two directions, with the Attorney General looking into his personal taxes, while prosecutors in the District Attorney’s office are digging into his role at the Trump Organization, his personal finances, and benefits given to his son Barry, a longtime employee of the Trump Organization. Prosecutors seek to find leverage that could sway Weisselberg into cooperating with authorities, people familiar with the investigation said, potentially raising the legal stakes for Trump and his family.
Allen Weisselberg is under the New York attorney general’s spotlight.
“Trump, even in exile, is the Republican Party’s cash cow” via Meredith McGraw and Sam Stein of POLITICO — All told, since resuming its email fundraising, the RNC account has sent 97 emails mentioning Trump, touting everything from his potential rallies, to his social media ventures, to his upcoming birthday. The messages add up to roughly 40% of all the email fundraising traffic from their campaign accounts. The RNC’s fundraising emails are just one of several data points that affirm the continued force of Trump’s gravitational pull over the entirety of the party. Fundraisers and operatives, some of whom are no fans of the former president, said GOP institutions have become increasingly reliant on Trump to help generate enthusiasm at the grassroots level, even after he left office and as he continues to question the legitimacy of the 2020 election.
“The country is on the cusp of a new era” via Kimberly Wehle of The Atlantic — Tuesday evening, New York state’s attorney general, Letitia James, announced, “We have informed the Trump Organization that … We are now actively investigating the Trump Organization in a criminal capacity.” According to The New York Times, James will be sending two of her office’s prosecutors to join the team of Cyrus Vance Jr., the Manhattan DA. With this news, Trump, those around him, and the country as a whole inch closer to the prospect that a former President could face criminal charges and possibly even prison time. The country has not been through anything like this before.
“Republican leaders’ reversal on 1/6 commission shows Trump’s lies still rule the GOP” via the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — Never in the United States have so many idolized an actual lawbreaker like Trump. A CNN poll recently found 70% of Republicans in full agreement with his gigantic lie that the 2020 election was stolen from him, and 50% of them firmly convinced that there is evidence to support his claims despite there being none. That lie is destroying America’s faith that our elections are honest and that our transfers of power are peaceful. It has entrapped a significant minority of Congress in a cesspool of subversion. To keep the faithful in the dark, Trump’s enablers think they must suppress the truth about who did what to inspire and carry out the deadly insurrection at the Capitol on Jan. 6.
“Trump attacks your family? Your wife? Your mom? No big deal in today’s GOP.” via Aaron Blake of The Washington Post — On Jan. 6, supporters of Trump broke into the Capitol to overturn the 2020 presidential election. While doing so, some of them chanted “Hang Mike Pence,” citing the vice president whose support for their plot was deemed insufficient. As they were marauding through the Capitol, Trump offered his first thoughts on the siege. He took to Twitter not to call off the dogs, but to attack Pence. It’s a tweet that, we’ve come to find out, came despite Trump apparently having been apprised of the danger Pence and others faced. Despite all of this, Pence’s brother, Rep. Greg Pence, voted against a bipartisan commission to look into what transpired that day.
“Inspired by Arizona recount, Trump loyalists push to revisit election results in communities around the country” via Amy Gardner and Rosalind S. Helderman of The Washington Post — The ramifications of Trump’s ceaseless attacks on the 2020 election are increasingly visible throughout the country: In emails, phone calls and public meetings, his supporters are questioning how their elections are administered and pressing public officials to revisit the vote count — wrongly insisting that Trump won the presidential race. The most prominent example is playing out in Arizona’s Maricopa County, where Republican state lawmakers have forced a widely pilloried audit of the 2020 vote. That recount is being touted as an inspiration by small but vocal cohorts of angry residents in communities in multiple states.
D.C. matters
“Election considerations drive GOP opposition to Jan. 6 panel” via Carl Hulse of The New York Times — Leading congressional Republicans offer multiple justifications for why they oppose an independent commission to investigate the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol by a pro-Trump mob, but there is really one overriding reason: They fear it will hurt their party’s image and hinder their attempts to regain power in next year’s midterm elections. In a closed-door luncheon this week, Mitch McConnell, the minority leader, warned fellow Republican senators that the proposed panel was not as bipartisan as it appeared. He said he believed that Democrats had partisan motives to set up the commission and would try to extend the investigation into 2022 and the midterm election season.
“Rep. Kevin McCarthy struggles to move Republicans past Trump” via Kristina Peterson and Lindsay Wise of The Wall Street Journal — When McCarthy helped engineer the ouster of Rep. Liz Cheney from House GOP leadership ranks last week, he hoped it would restore public unity among House Republicans and change the subject from Trump. It didn’t take. Instead, he hit another barrier Wednesday, when the House took up a bipartisan bill to create a commission to investigate the U.S. Capitol attack on Jan. 6 by a mob of Trump supporters. The California Republican and Trump urged GOP lawmakers to oppose the measure. But Wednesday night, 35 Republicans broke with party leaders to back the legislation, which now goes to the Senate.
Assignment editors — U.S. Rep. Lois Frankel, Sen. Lori Berman, and Palm Beach Commissioner Melissa McKinley will host a racial justice panel on the anniversary of George Floyd’s death, 1 p.m., Zoom registration here.
“Charlie Crist announces $3.5M grant to Albert Whitted Airport” via Kelly Hayes of Florida Politics — Albert Whitted Airport will receive a $3.5 million grant for airport repairs and renovations. The grant for the downtown St. Petersburg airport will be provided by the U.S. Department of Transportation and Federal Aviation Administration. The funds will be used to install a runway vertical guidance system and for runway rehabilitation. “Albert Whitted Airport contributes to (serve) our region’s air transportation needs, providing convenient and easy access to all St. Pete has to offer, while also supporting 650 jobs,” Crist said in a news release. “I’m thrilled to see this well-deserved grant be awarded to Albert Whitted that will enhance and improve our local, city-run airport, a major economic driver for the paradise we all call home.”
St. Petersburg’s much-loved Albert Whitted Airport gets some federal cash.
Local notes
“Nikki Fried announces new urban farming partnership in St. Pete” via Kelly Hayes of Florida Politics — Fried, joined by Tampa Mayor Jane Castor and St. Petersburg Mayor Rick Kriseman, announced a new urban farming partnership Thursday with two Tampa Bay organizations. The Commissioner welcomed a new partnership between St. Pete-based Brick Street Farms and Tampa’s Lykes Brothers Inc. “This will help both Tampa and St. Petersburg and the whole Tampa Bay region over and over and over again,” Fried said Thursday. “This is a perfect example of how government is helping facilitate business development, while serving the greater good in our communities.” Lykes Brothers Inc., a family-owned agribusiness, is making a significant investment into Brick Street Farms, a sustainable farming hub that houses an indoor, hydroponic farm.
Nikki Fried is touting a multimillion-dollar investment in a St. Petersburg urban farm. Image via WTSP.
“Arthenia Joyner endorses Ken Welch for St. Pete Mayor” via Janelle Irwin Taylor of Florida Politics — Former Sen. Joyner, a political and civil rights icon in the Tampa Bay area, is endorsing former Pinellas County Commissioner Welch for St. Petersburg Mayor. Joyner represented St. Pete and Tampa for 10 years in the state legislature. “Ken Welch is a man of honor, integrity, and principles, and I proudly support him for Mayor,” Joyner said. “In the many years I have known him, he has never wavered in his commitment to the St. Petersburg community, an unbreakable bond forged over three generations. That history is his foundation and inspiration for the future he is intent on building, and the values he will follow to get us there.”
“Tampa City Council moves forward on police reform. Will Jane Castor veto it?” via Charlie Frago of the Tampa Bay Times — The power struggle in Tampa over who controls police conduct flashed into the open Thursday between council members and Mayor Castor’s administration. Council members voted 5-2 to give themselves control over seven appointments to the 11-member Citizen Review Board, along with other, non-controversial changes to the volunteer advisory board. The often heated debate was largely a continuation of a fight over legislative power that the City Council and Castor have been engaged in since street protests over the murder of George Floyd by a Minneapolis police officer last May.
“Health alert issued for Longboat Key, Anna Maria Island due to red tide bloom” via WFLA — The Florida Department of Health in Manatee County is notifying the public of a red tide bloom in the county. According to DOH-Manatee, the bloom is happening near Longboat Key and Anna Maria Island. Samples collected by the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission indicate low levels of red tide. “Some people may have mild and short-lived respiratory symptoms such as eye, nose and throat irritation similar to cold symptoms. Some individuals with breathing problems, such as asthma, might experience more severe symptoms,” DOH-Manatee said in a press release. Health officials recommend people with symptoms stay away from beach areas or go inside to an air-conditioned space.
“Ethics board makes recommendations to bolster Tallahassee lobbying ordinance” via Karl Etters of the Tallahassee Democrat — Tallahassee’s Independent Ethics Board unanimously approved a series of recommendations to strengthen the city’s lobbying ordinance, chiefly defining who is a lobbyist. The board has worked to expand who would be considered a lobbyist and enact meaningful enforcement. Several of the recommendations codify language already in the city charter but also encourage certain expansions. “The major concern is defining what a lobbyist is, with regard to consultation versus lobbying. A person (may identify) themselves as a consultant when the reality seems to be that they are lobbying,” Ethics Officer Dwight Floyd said. “There are other considerations, but that’s the board’s main concern.”
“FSU asking Blueprint to ‘invest’ $20 million in tax money for football stadium project” via Karl Etters of the Tallahassee Democrat — The university, in documents submitted Monday to Blueprint, said with the investment of tax money to maintain the underlying structure, it could focus on incrementally pumping another $100 million into other renovations to improve fan experiences such as diversifying seating options. A feasibility study submitted by FSU identified some of the issues taxpayer money could fund, including replacing lighting, railing improvements, painting and rust prevention to the interior structures and guardrails, additional steps within the seating bowl, addressing field drainage and creating a central food commissary. In all, a home football game attracted 220,000 out-of-town visitors to Tallahassee, resulting in millions of dollars being pumped into the community.
“‘Loophole’ write-in candidate fined $1,000 in Clay County” via Scott Powers of Florida Politics — A write-in candidate whose last-minute filing effectively blocked Democrats and independent voters from voting in the Clay County Sheriff election last year was fined $1,000 and reprimanded by the Commission on Ethics. The action came through a stipulated finding of fact issued by the commission and signed by the defendant, Francis Bourrie of Middleburg. Essentially, the commission found that Bourrie failed to fully and correctly disclose his financial interests, as all candidates are required to do. The commission responded to a complaint filed by Palm Beach County State Attorney Dave Aronberg and former Constitution Revision Commission Board Member Sherry Plymale. They have been on a bipartisan mission to punish, prevent, or at least discourage what they call “sham” write-in candidates, people who enter contests just to close down Primary elections.
“John Miklos appointed to UCF Board of Trustees” via Scott Powers of Florida Politics — Gov. DeSantis announced the appointment of Miklos, a controversial Central Florida development consultant, to the University of Central Florida Board of Trustees Thursday. Miklos, president of Bio-Tech Consulting, drew controversy over allegations of conflicts of interest during his tenure on the St. Johns River Water Management District Governing Board, an appointment initiated by former Gov. Crist in 2010 and twice reaffirmed with reappointments by former Gov. Rick Scott. Shortly after being inaugurated to succeed Scott in early 2019, DeSantis rescinded Scott’s second reappointment of Miklos to the St. Johns River board. His removal from the St. Johns River board was part of a broad sweep DeSantis did of late Scott appointments.
“Justices back attorney’s remote work” via The News Service of Florida — The Florida Supreme Court gave the go-ahead for an attorney to practice law for a New Jersey firm while working at his Florida home. The Supreme Court unanimously approved an advisory opinion that said intellectual property attorney Thomas Restaino would not be violating a ban on the unlicensed practice of law in Florida. The Florida Bar’s Standing Committee on the Unlicensed Practice of Law proposed the advisory opinion last year after Restaino asked whether he could work remotely from Florida on issues involving federal intellectual property rights. The advisory opinion said Restaino moved from New Jersey to Florida after retiring from a job as chief intellectual property counsel with a major corporation.
“Judge to be reprimanded for trying to sway candidate” via The News Service of Florida — A Citrus County circuit judge will be publicly reprimanded by the Florida Supreme Court after an investigation into his attempt to dissuade an attorney from running against a fellow judge in last year’s elections. The Supreme Court approved a settlement that recommended Circuit Judge face a public reprimand for inappropriate conduct. The settlement, known as a stipulation, was reached by Howard and the state Judicial Qualifications Commission. An investigative panel of the commission alleged that Howard in 2019 tried to dissuade attorney Pamela Vergara from running against then-Circuit Judge George Angeliadis. Howard tried to convince Vergara to run instead against Circuit Judge Mary Hatcher, who hears cases in Marion County, another part of the circuit.
Richard Howard earns a public reprimand for trying to manipulate an election. Image via Citrus County Chronicle.
Top opinion
“Vaccine certificates could help avoid a chaotic post-pandemic world” via The Washington Post editorial board — How do we know who has been vaccinated and who has not? The CDC announcement essentially leaves the question to an honor system. But relying on trust is not very promising in this divided United States. The CDC’s paper vaccination card is not sturdy or authoritative enough. The White House has insisted that the Biden administration will not impose a federal vaccination “passport” of any kind. The solutions taking shape so far are scattershot. It looks like everyone with a door is in a position to decide who passes through. The federal government should at least develop common standards, as it does with electronic medical records. This is important for interoperability; if you get an E-ZPass in Maryland, it works in New York, and to make sure privacy protections are in place.
Opinions
“CEO: Why I’m requiring that my employees and customers be vaccinated against COVID-19” via Benny Buller of USA Today — As the COVID-19 vaccines roll out quickly across the country, businesses like mine are wrestling with the question of how to handle employees returning to the office. In making these decisions, we must keep in mind that we have responsibilities to ensure our businesses succeed and to society at large. Over the past year, many have had to shut down altogether. We have a rule that managers should call in any employee to a meeting on-site when necessary. So all employees must be vaccinated. There are moments when business leaders face the opportunity to make a significant positive difference that can have a broad impact across society. This is one of those times.
“State officials are dangerously inserting religion into Florida public schools” via Ryan D. Jayne for the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — The Legislature has passed a bill that will require a one-to-two minute moment of silence every morning at every public school in Florida, openly intended to encourage students to recite prayers in class. The requirement is being added to a provision of the law relating to the “study of the Bible and religion” in public schools. Although this year’s change eliminates the “prayer” language, it makes the activity mandatory, and the religious intent is still undeniable. DeSantis should veto this bill, but that seems unlikely. A second attack on secular schools is the Florida Department of Education’s proposal for new curriculum standards that indoctrinate children into a counterfactual version of history. It’s designed to paint a false narrative that the United States is a Christian nation.
“Coral Gables Mayor reconsiders renaming Dixie Highway for Harriett Tubman. We applaud him” via the Miami Herald editorial board — When Coral Gables Mayor Vince Lago voted against renaming a portion of Dixie Highway after Tubman in January, he called the proposal “a pure example of playing politics.” The City Commission rejected the proposal, making the City Beautiful the only local government in Miami-Dade County to reject adding Tubman’s name to 42 miles of U.S. 1, a federal and state road also called Dixie Highway. Now Lago has changed his mind and is asking the commission to reconsider. He and newly elected Commissioner Rhonda Anderson are the sponsors of a resolution that will be heard on May 25 supporting the designation of the “Harriet Tubman Highway.”
On today’s Sunrise
We’re finally getting a break from the Legislature … but not the pandemic.
Also, on today’s Sunrise:
— Florida’s death toll broke 37,000 Thursday, but the state’s positivity rate was the lowest since October
— Dr. Fauci appears in a “Fireside Chat” with U.S. Southern Command and Florida International University to offer a three-point plan for getting COVID-19 under control.
— Fauci says we need to do a better job convincing people to get vaccinated; a new report says people who live in Florida counties that voted forTrump are less likely to get a shot.
— The Biden Bucks from the American Rescue Plan is starting to go to local governments across the state … no thanks to the GOP.
— But Republicans in Tallahassee had no problem using that money to fund the largest budget in Florida history.
— An urban farm in St. Petersburg is trying to change the face of Florida agriculture with vertical farming in converted shipping containers. It’s called Brick Street Farms.
— A Central Florida Judge will have to make the trek to Tallahassee for a public reprimand because he tried to talk an attorney out of running against one of his fellow judges. That’s against their code of conduct.
— And finally, police are accusing a Florida Man of shooting at another driver because the guy threw a banana at his truck. Will he claim he was standing his ground?
Battleground Florida with Evan Donovan on News Channel 8 WFLA (NBC): Agriculture Commissioner Fried, Sen. Brandes, St. Pete Mayor Kriseman, Hillsborough Commissioners Stacy White and Kimberly Overman.
Facing South Florida with Jim DeFedeon CBS 4 in Miami: The Sunday show provides viewers with an in-depth look at politics in South Florida, along with other issues affecting the region.
Florida This Week on Tampa Bay’s WEDU: Moderator Rob Lorei hosts a roundtable featuring Brandes, Rep. Anna Eskamani, high school teacher Amy Donofrio and Sarasota Herald-Tribune political editor Zac Anderson.
In Focus with Allison Walker on Bay News 9/CF 13: A look at the history of anti-Asian racism in the United States, details its normalization in Hollywood, and discusses with Adrian Lee, president of the University of Central Florida’s Asian Pacific Coalition and a member of the Florida Diversity Council, and Pinellas County Commission Charlie Justice on what local leaders are doing to reverse the trend of discrimination.
Political Connections Bay News 9 in Tampa/St. Pete: one-on-one interviews with the candidates for Congressional District 13, State Rep. Ben Diamond and Anna Paulina Luna; a breakdown of the Gambling Compact with the Seminole Tribe and a closer look at who might challenge Sen. Marco Rubio in 2022.
Political Connections on CF 13 in Orlando: Ybeth Bruzual recaps the Legislature’s Special Session on gambling and the gaming compact with the Seminole Tribe. She speaks with Rep. Darren Soto about proposed statehood for the District of Columbia and the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico.
This Week in Jacksonville with Kent Justiceon Channel 4 WJXT: Dr. Kent Thielen, CEO of the Mayo Clinic Jacksonville; Rick Mullaney, Public Policy Institute director at Jacksonville University; Kay Ehas, Groundwork Jacksonville CEO, on the Emerald Trail project possibly funded by doubling Duval County’s Local Option Gas Tax. Also, a remembrance of Dr. Frances Bartlett Kinne (the first female university president in Florida history) with Tim Cost, president of Jacksonville University, and Dr. Timothy Snyder, dean of the College of Fine Arts at Jacksonville University.
This Week in South Florida on WPLG-Local10 News (ABC): Reps. Chip LaMarca and Nick Duran on the Gambling Compact, discussing Israeli-Palestinian conflict with local rally organizers, and a conversation with NASA Administrator Bill Nelson.
Aloe
“Tim Tebow signs with Jacksonville Jaguars as tight end” via Michael DiRocco of ESPN — Tebow‘s attempted NFL comeback has officially begun. The 2007 Heisman Trophy-winning quarterback signed his contract with the Jacksonville Jaguars on Thursday as a tight end, reuniting him with Urban Meyer, his former head coach at Florida. Tebow signed a one-year deal and was on the field Thursday for the team’s offseason program as he sets out to compete for a roster spot. Tebow joined his new team on the field wearing No. 85; quarterback Gardner Minshew has No. 15 for now and took part in a voluntary, closed workout. Tebow was adamant about being a quarterback during his previous six-year stretch in the NFL, but he apparently has had a change of heart now that Meyer is running the Jaguars.
Tim Tebow is now a Jaguar.
Happy birthday
Celebrating today are Sen. George LeMieux, James Blair, and former Speaker Tom Feeney.
___
Sunburn is authored and assembled by Peter Schorsch, Phil Ammann, Renzo Downey and Drew Wilson.
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Markets: Tech stocks helped the major US indexes break a three-day losing streak yesterday, but the S&P is still on track for its second straight weekly loss. Virgin Galactic shares rose after the space tourism company announced that its “mothership” Eve is cleared for a test flight this Saturday.
Economy: New jobless claims fell to another pandemic-era low of 444,000 last week. Relatedly, 22 states, all with GOP governors and state legislatures, will stop distributing the $300/week in extra unemployment benefits provided by the federal government beginning in June.
The humble oat has gotten a glow up from its days starring in grandma’s porridge. Yesterday, shares in Oatly, the world’s biggest oat milk maker, soared 19% in its IPO, valuing the company at a trenta-sized $12 billion.
$12 billion for…oat milk?
If CEO Toni Petersson singing, “wow, no cow” at the Super Bowl was your Oatly introduction…we regret to inform you that you were behind on this one.
Oatly’s story starts in 1994, when Swedish brothers Rickard and Bjorn Oeste began developing a milk alternative for the estimated two-thirds of people with lactose intolerance. But the company didn’t become a household name until Petersson took over as CEO in 2014, refreshing Oatly’s visual identity and reframing its marketing around oat milk’s health and environmental benefits.
Petersson focused on the US market and built buzz by infiltrating corporate watering holes, i.e. NYC coffee shops. Oatly sent its product to specialty baristas, who introduced consumers to the new milk in a perfectly frothed form you’d never be able to replicate at home.
Since then, Oatly’s been keeping some A-list company. It raised money last year at a $2 billion valuation from names including Blackstone, Oprah, Natalie Portman, and Howard Schultz (whose former company, Starbucks, recently began using Oatly nationwide). Oatly’s expanded to new products, including yogurt and ice cream, and now sells in 60k stores and 32k coffee shops worldwide.
The alternative milk market is steaming up
And plenty of brands are scrambling for a spot on the menu. In the oat department alone, Oatly’s got competition from Califia Farms, Chobani, Planet Oat, Pacific, and Danone’s legacy alternative milk brands, Alpro and Silk.
But oat milk is still second fiddle to almond milk. And a gander through your local grocery store’s dairy aisle will show you that companies are juicing every nut, grain, seed, and bean that can (even loosely) mimic the “real” thing.
Bottom line: Oatly and other alternative milk brands seized on consumer demand for more environmentally friendly and healthy products. Their bet is paying off.
Robinhood wants to clear up any hard feelings left over from January and yesterday announced that it’s rolling out a feature that allows users to access exclusive “IPO shares.” It touts this new service as another step in its mission to increase regular folks’ access to the stock market.
How IPO shares work: Big Wall Street banks and high-net-worth individuals are often able to buy shares of a company that’s going public before they hit an exchange like Robinhood. And once those stocks do hit an exchange, regular investors can miss out on early gains. Companies popped an average of 36% on their first day of trading in 2020, per Dealogic.
The guinea pig: Figs, a maker of medical scrubs, became the first company to offer IPO shares on Robinhood when it went public yesterday, reserving 1% of its 22.5 million shares for Robinhood users.
Zoom out: SoFi, the fintech company that keeps asking if it can refinance your student loans, announced it would offer IPO shares in March. The main difference between SoFi’s and Robinhood’s offerings is that SoFi will be underwriting IPOs, while Robinhood is simply partnering with investment banks.
If you can’t find us this weekend, check the 2.4-acre floating Little Island, which opens today on New York City’s west side. Check the 687-seat amphitheater. Check everything else:
A packed schedule of 500 events from June 15 through September
$6 million worth of poles that surround the island to prevent people from falling into the Hudson River below
Ticketed entry
The $260 million park was mostly funded by Barry Diller, a billionaire media mogul who has been working on the project since 2013.
Diller is protective of Little Island, promising that it will never host a wedding: “The island is not for rent!” his wife, designer Diane von Furstenburg, told the WSJ.
Diller also promised to cover programming and upkeep for at least the next 10 years, so his family foundation could end up spending an estimated $380 million in total.
Big picture: The Little Island is one of several projects transforming the far west side of Manhattan. The relocation of the Whitney Museum in 2015, the High Line park, and an expansion of Big Tech companies’ offices have dramatically changed the area in the last decade.
For the millions of people suffering from anxiety, depression, or mental distress, chances are the drugs their doctor is prescribing will not do the trick.
See, many of the current treatments for mental health disorders are ineffective, as 50%–66% of patients on antidepressants never make a full recovery.
Psilocybin mushrooms (also known as “magic mushrooms”) and other psychedelic compounds like LSD and MDMA have the potential to go mainstream, creating what could become a $100 billion market.
When you invest in Ei.Ventures, you’re funding treatments that have the potential to actually work. In fact, early research studies have shown that psychedelic therapies may help in a variety of mental health indications.
Stat: Luxury gym operator Equinox said new membership sales in NYC increased 55% the week following the CDC’s relaxation of mask requirements. Equinox no longer requires its members to wear masks while exercising, but still insists on mirror selfies post-workout.
Quote: “Technological advances also offer new possibilities to central banks—including the Fed.”
Fed Chair Jerome Powell said that his organization will explore issuing a central bank digital currency (CBDC), which rivals including China are actively developing. The Fed will release a report this summer on the viability of CBDCs.
Read: A thought-provoking letter from the founder of ByteDance about why he’s stepping down as CEO. (ByteDance)
Morning Brew’s series commemorating the 100th anniversary of the Tulsa Race Massacre rolls on with even more fresh perspectives on the current state of Black finance.
On our podcast, Business Casual, Jarrid Tingle told us about his VC firm’s efforts to help close the funding gap to female and minority founders. Listen here.
Then, read this first-person essay from Sandrine Maurice, a public finance banker in SF who describes her experience working as a Black woman in the finance industry.
QUIZ
Francis Scialabba
The feeling of getting a 5/5 on the Brew’s Weekly News Quiz has been compared to finding a song you love and listening to it 8,000 times.
Morgan Stanley shuffled its leadership and gave more clarity on who will succeed CEO James Gorman. Execs Ted Pick and Andy Saperstein are looking like strong contenders.
The Biden administration outlined its plan to collect an additional $700 billion in revenue over the next decade from tax avoiders.
JPMorgan is launching a new healthcare initiative just months after it shut down its previous healthcare venture with Amazon and Berkshire Hathaway.
Josh Harris is stepping down from his day-to-day role as managing director of Apollo Global Management, the private equity firm he cofounded.
Snap unveiled fourth-gen Spectacles and said it has more than 500 million monthly active users.
The US government seized 68 big cats from the animal park featured on Netflix’s Tiger King.
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Play a game: It’s called Terms and Conditions, and it’s absolutely chaotic.
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This puzzle is simple: Try to decipher the clues below, which contain a key number and the first letters of words.
Ex. 24 H in a D = 24 hours in a day
64 S on C
16 C in a G
12 S of the Z
90 D in a R A
206 B in a B
220 Y in a F
ANSWER
64 squares on a chessboard
16 cups in a gallon
12 signs of the Zodiac
90 degrees in a right angle
206 bones in the body
220 yards in a furlong
✳︎ A Note From Instacart
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With some ballots still to be counted, Philadelphia District Attorney Larry Krasner was winning by nearly 50,000 votes out of about 160,000 votes cast. In addition to upholding his campaign pledge not to prosecute low-level crimes, Mr. Krasner ran on his record of lowering the number of people in the city’s jail by more than 30%.
…
In his campaign, Mr. Krasner argued that a 40% increase in homicides last year had nothing to do with his policies, pointing to cities with more traditional prosecutors that had experienced similar trends during the pandemic. That approach won him approval from voters but also a significant amount of criticism, particularly from former prosecutors.
…
As in his first campaign, Mr. Krasner won significant support from Black voters in the northern and western parts of the city. Those neighborhoods have been the most affected by gun violence, and were places where his opponent, Carlos Vega, a former homicide prosecutor fired by Mr. Krasner in 2018, had hoped to make inroads.
All votes are anonymous. This poll closes at: 9:00 PST
YESTERDAY’S POLLShould descendants of the Tulsa massacre get reparation payments?
No
62%
Yes
31%
Unsure
7%
534 votes, 167 comments
Context: Tulsa, OK debates whether to pay reparations to descendents of 1921 massacre.
HIGHLIGHTED COMMENTS
“No – Civil claims, however cruel, are subject to a statute of limitations. In this case, parties are long dead and their descendents are not liable for their actions. To force payment from others shifts the burden to the tax payer for crimes their ancestors likely were not directly involved in.”
“Yes – I’d usually vote no on something like this BUT… either A) the city was a willful participant or B) the city was negligent in it…”
“No – I am a Native American descendant and many Native American were massacred in American history…”
The memo, sent by Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas, instructs U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement to terminate the contract with the Irwin County Detention Center…
Full summaries, images, and headlines for subscribers only.
Why has President Biden asked that climate risk be factored into government budgets?
Banking, housing and agriculture regulators are among those who will be asked to use climate risk in their supervision of major industries, including the lending of fe…
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The left-wing media are losing their minds over the opposition to a proposed Jan. 6 commission expressed by many GOP lawmakers. With each new account, the events of that day in Washington are portrayed with less and less accuracy. Perhaps these so-called journalists are desperately trying to make everyone forget that they very blatantly lied about the death of US Capitol Police officer Brian Sicknick, who, they claimed, had his head bashed in with a fire extinguisher. In fact, Sicknick passed away the following day after suffering two strokes related to a pre-existing medical condition. He sustained no visible injuries on Jan. 6, according to a medical examiner’s report.
The Great Reset of U.S. Public Policy – Swamponomics
Something political to ponder as you enjoy your morning coffee.
So bad is the situation at the southern U.S. border that Kamala Harris – whose job it is to manage the problem – has apparently been stunned into silence for more than 50 days. Prices are rising and nobody wants to return to work because they are effectively being paid by the government to stay home. Washington, D.C. is hemorrhaging money, but there is little tangible evidence that these billions of dollars are being wisely spent. The Middle East is in flames and Americans are fleeing blue states in record numbers. Where are we going and why are we in this handbasket?
Scott Winship and Nick Gillespie | “The Reason Interview with Nick Gillespie”
Americans have a reputation for being cockeyed optimists, but we’re suckers when it comes to “declension narratives” about the fallen state of our world.
The Joe Biden administration’s reversals of three Donald Trump–era Medicaid decisions signal that a wholesale change in direction is now underway. While some legal wrangling is likely (and may be protracted), the previous administration’s imprint on the program is certain to fade with time.
Tobias Peter and Edward J. Pinto | American Banker
The Federal Reserve’s easy credit policies are creating a growing housing affordability crisis for lower-income families, which are increasingly crowded out of the home buying market, putting homeownership out of reach for millions.
“Israel and Hamas agreed to a cease-fire Thursday, halting a bruising 11-day war that caused widespread destruction in the Gaza Strip, brought life in much of Israel to a standstill and left more than 200 people dead.” AP News
From the Right
The right supports Israel, and criticizes Democrats for pushing for a premature ceasefire before Israel accomplished its military objectives.
“Hamas, Hezbollah and Iran saw that Democratic support for Israel in the U.S. has declined. We credited President Biden this week with not trying to dictate Israel’s security decisions, but he soon bent rhetorically to his party’s left, saying Wednesday he ‘expected a significant deescalation today.’…
“The progressives who are increasingly driving Democratic social and economic policy want to drive Mideast policy as well. Rep. Rashida Tlaib, whom President Biden praised on a Michigan trip this week, accused fellow Democrats of ‘taking orders from Netanyahu’ the day before. Sen. Bernie Sanders is trying to block a U.S. arms sale to Israel…
“Wavering American support could increase the risk of military clashes, as regional actors perceive that the Jewish State is militarily constrained when attacked. Israeli leaders have at least partly priced in the erosion of bipartisan backing in the U.S. This could lead it to lean more on China or Russia, which would not be good for the U.S. or Mideast peace.” Editorial Board, Wall Street Journal
“To protect itself and deter future strikes, the Jewish state needed to inflict a sufficient price for Hamas’ unilateral attacks — and drastically weaken, if not eliminate, its ability to attack again. Even after firing some 4,000 rockets these past 11 days, Hamas and its allies have a stash of 30,000 rockets and mortar rounds, Israeli intelligence believes…
“We expect Netanyahu stuck to the line he drew after rejecting Biden’s request Wednesday, ‘to continue this operation until its goal is achieved: to bring the quiet and security back’ to Israel’s citizens…
“But it’s still tough for Jerusalem to say no to Washington for long, even as (as Jonathan Schanzer notes) Team Biden is cozying up to Iran (which supplies Hamas with money and weapons), pooh-poohing the Abraham Accords and resuming hundreds of millions in aid to the West Bank and Gaza. If Biden truly backs Israel’s right to self-defense, he should quit appeasing the forces bent on Israel’s destruction.” Editorial Board, New York Post
“According to the IDF, many of Hamas’ rockets have misfired, so the Palestinian terrorist group may be responsible for many of the deaths in the Gaza Strip. Israel has claimed that Hamas misfired 350 rockets in the first 3 days, killing innocent civilians in Gaza. Before Israel sends precision-strike rockets, it first warns occupants of the targeted building, allowing people time to leave before destroying buildings that allegedly house Hamas weapons and intelligence. Hamas gives no such warnings to Israeli targets…
“While the ceasefire may give grounds for hope that the conflict is drawing to a close, the key issue is not whether or not Israel will back down but how high a cost is Hamas willing pay to keep attacking Israel. Will Hamas decide that it has lost enough military bases and terrorist allies, and decide to stop the attacks? Or will the terrorist group continue to violate international law, thinking that the world will support its attacks against Israel?” Tyler O’Neil, PJ Media
“Very glad there is a ceasefire. I genuinely don’t know what the right course of action is long-term, but as I keep saying: until you figure out Gaza, you won’t get a final deal on two states. And everybody just saw why.” Seth Mandel, Twitter
From the Left
The left criticizes Israel and argues that greater rights for Palestinians are the only way to achieve long-lasting peace.
“[Earlier this week] a clinic run by Médecins Sans Frontières (Doctors Without Borders), providing trauma and burn treatment to victims of the recent fighting in the Gaza Strip, announced it had been struck by an Israeli aerial bombardment…
“Since virtually no one, including journalists and human rights observers, has been allowed access to Gaza from Israel or Egypt since the fighting began and borders were sealed, the onus is on Israel to provide sufficient evidence that the clinic was a legitimate target…
“Importantly, even if Hamas was using the medical clinic to conduct military operations, Israel must still meet certain conditions prior to any attack. Under international law, protection of medical centers ends ‘only after a due warning has been given, naming, in all appropriate cases, a reasonable time limit and after such warning has remained unheeded.’ MSF has stated it didn’t receive any prior warning about last week’s strikes… Israel cannot continually destroy Gaza’s health care infrastructure and remain unaccountable.” Ahmed Twaij, NBC News Think
“The Israeli occupation of the West Bank is, by every definition, apartheid: two legal systems for two ethnic groups. If a Jew and an Arab commit the exact same crime in the West Bank, the Jew will face a civil court; the Arab, a military court…
“The only thing that can bring about Palestinian liberation is if the cost of the occupation begins to outweigh its benefits to Israel… [To end the Israeli-Palestinian conflict] coercion could take the form of consumer boycott[s] of Israeli goods, corporate boycotts of Israeli technology, and sanctions by Israel’s main trade partners and political supporters, the United States and the European Union. An apartheid state will not willingly change itself.” Raphael Mimoun, Washington Post
Others posit that “Economic boycotts of any significance will not happen. Israel’s economy is too strong, diversified and advanced… Israel’s per capita GDP dwarfs that of its neighbors: it is 14 times that of Egypt, eight times that of Iran, nearly six times that of Lebanon, and nearly double that of Saudi Arabia. Israel has built an industrial and information-age economy that excels in highly sophisticated arenas such as artificial intelligence, computer-aided design, aviation and biotechnology…
“While the rocket attacks are unnerving and terrifying to civilians, they do not inflict much damage on the country. Israel’s ferocious and effective security services, aided by the construction of a wall along the West Bank and the creation of the Iron Dome air-defense system, have virtually eliminated fatalities from terrorism… In short, Israel doesn’t have any practical reasons to make a deal with the Palestinians…
“But the country remains a liberal democracy. It was founded by people who believed deeply that their new country should embody not just nationalism but also justice and morality. There are many in Israel who argue passionately that it can find a way for Israel to have security and Palestinians to have dignity. The only hope — and right now it looks remote — is that those forces will gain strength and one day lead the country to give the Palestinians a state of their own.” Fareed Zakaria, Washington Post
😎 Happy Friday!Smart Brevity™ count: 1,179 words … 4½ minutes. Edited by Zachary Basu.
1 big thing: The techlash is a bust
After three and a half years, the U.S. backlash against tech’s biggest firms has failed to dent or daunt them, Axios managing editor Scott Rosenberg writes from the Bay Area.
Why it matters: Today, Google, Apple, Amazon and Facebook are massively richer, more powerful and more determined to push their products and services deeper into our lives than they were in January 2018, when Axios first used the term “techlash.”
The companies have run a gauntlet of public and government criticism:
Their CEOs have regularly trooped or Zoomed to Capitol Hill, with Mark Zuckerberg alone appearing half a dozen times for countless hours of “I’ll get back to you on that”s.
They’ve been sued as monopolists by the Justice Department and coalitions of states (Google), and by the FTC (Facebook) and EU.
Some have had to pay record fines.
They’ve infuriated politicians on both sides of the U.S. partisan divide — conservatives believe they’ve been censored, and progressives believe social media promotes misinformation.
But so far, the assault has barely scratched these companies’ gleaming confidence.
They’re barreling ahead with acquisitions and new projects as if all the investigations and lawsuits weren’t happening.
Congress has yet to go down the avenue of legislation tech firms most fear — changing Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act, which made today’s internet possible by protecting online providers from liability for user-contributed content.
The Biden administration has appointed some tough critics of tech power, and hostility to tech is bipartisan.
But the parties diagnose the problem differently, and getting any legislation passed in a bitterly and evenly divided Congress is still a long shot.
What’s next: It’s not that tech leaders don’t see any threats on the horizon — they live by the slogan popularized by Intel’s Andy Grove, “Only the paranoid survive.” But their fears lie in different directions than those mapped by techlash critiques.
What keeps tech CEOs awake at night:
Where can we find new growth?
Are we losing the kids?
Are we losing our employees?
Will the next platform shift disrupt us?
The bottom line: Antitrust lawsuits could still bite, and new legislation could still win approval. But right now the tech giants still have way more to fear from one another than from anyone else.
On a horse cart loaded with belongings, Palestinians return today to their home in the town of Beit Hanoun, northern Gaza Strip. Photo: Khalil Hamra/AP
The ceasefire has held for 12+ hours, but people in Israel worry that they’ll be back to a conflict in several months, Axios from Tel Aviv author Barak Ravid tells me.
Israel doesn’t have a stable government that can make a meaningful change in policy.
The Israeli middle class — in Tel Aviv and surrounding cities — felt the conflict in a much more direct way than in the past.
This wasn’t the first time Hamas fired on Tel Aviv. But this time, the number of rockets was massive. Millions of Israelis felt it directly, and realized how those who live in southern Israel, close to Gaza, have felt over the last 15 years.
For many Israelis, the most shocking thing was the violence between Jews and Arabs inside Israel.
It surfaced hatred among part of the Arab minority against the state that people didn’t think existed. And it exposed deep racism among part of the Jewish population toward Arabs.
This wound will take a long time to heal.
What to watch: Secretary of State Blinken will travel to Israel and the Palestinian Authority in the coming days, his first trip to the region.
The visit will focus on stabilizing the ceasefire and discussing humanitarian relief and reconstruction in Gaza, where over 200 Palestinians have been killed and thousands have seen their homes decimated.
🗞️ How it’s playing …
3. “Axios on HBO”: Climate carpool
Coming Sunday on “Axios on HBO”: White House national climate adviser Gina McCarthy takes me for a spin in a Chevy Bolt — part of the growing U.S. government fleet of electric vehicles.
No karaoke, but she said she was totally up for a car chase.
Catch our conversationSunday at 6 p.m. on HBO and HBO Max.
4. Dating apps add vax badge
Image: Hinge
The White House is teaming up with nine of the largest dating sites to offer badges and other perks to those who have gotten their COVID-19 vaccine, Axios’ Ina Fried reports.
Between the lines: According to research from OkCupid, people who are vaccinated or plan to get vaccinated receive 14% more matches than people who don’t plan to get the shot.
The prospect of downtown business districts turning into modern ghost towns is looking much less likely than in the early days of lockdown, Axios business editor Kate Marino writes.
In a KPMG survey last August, 69% of CEOs said they planned to downsize office space. This March, just 17% said they’ll be downsizing.
Tech companies led the remote-work revolution at the start of the pandemic. Now, many are making investments in physical offices.
While demand for office space is shrinking, that’s likely to be partly offset by a higher average amount of space allocated to each person.
The industry calls it “office de-densification,” Katie Vaz, managing director at real estate asset manager Clarion Partners, tells Axios.
Employees saw their personal space shrink dramatically for decades:
Offices had an average of 325 square feet per employee in 1990 — and 196 feet in 2020, according to commercial real estate company JLL.
The killing of George Floyd one year ago didn’t just lead to the massive Black Lives Matter protests in the U.S., Axios’ Ivana Saric writes. It inspired demonstrations against the ravages of racism and police brutality in other countries, too:
In Australia, protestshighlighted the targeting of Aboriginal Australians by police. More than 29% of prisoners in Australia are Aboriginal, despite only comprising about 3% of the total population.
In France, the government set up a platform to record discriminatory police stops and banned chokeholds as a police tactic — only to reverse the decision after protests from the country’s powerful police unions.
In the U.K., Prime Minister Boris Johnson vowed to create a commission to study all “aspects of inequality” in British society, though the resulting report was slammed by activists for downplaying the role of systemic racism.
The big picture: The movement raised people’s awareness of the problems, but hit roadblocks when it came to structural change.
The Justice Department under former President Trump secretly obtained the 2017 phone and email records of CNN Pentagon correspondent Barbara Starr, CNN reports.
“CNN strongly condemns the secret collection of any aspect of a journalist’s correspondence, which is clearly protected by the First Amendment,” said CNN President Jeff Zucker. “We are asking for an immediate meeting with the Justice Department for an explanation.”
Snapchat unveileda new version of its 3D glasses called Spectacles, giving it a big boost in the race to deliver augmented reality (AR) devices to consumers, Axios Media Trends expert Sara Fischer writes.
The glasses have four built-in microphones, two stereo speakers and built-in touchpad controls that make it easy to send pictures and videos using augmented reality to friends.
But the Spectacles aren’t for sale, yet. And with a battery life of just 30 minutes, they’re not quite ready for mass market consumption either.
The U.S. Chamber of Commerce is calling on the federal government to do more to fight ransomware, as businesses continue to be hit with financially motivated attacks, Axios’ Ina Fried reports.
Bloomberg reported yesterday that CNA Financial quietly paid $40 million in March to regain control of their systems after a ransomware attack.
Twitter announced yesterday it will accept and review all public applications for verification, giving far more people the opportunity to secure that exclusive blue check, Axios’ Sara Fischer writes.
Twitter says it recognizes that making this process so public could be risky, as users could fake requirements they see online. But it says it’s hired up to make sure every application is reviewed by a human.
Hard-right Israeli politicians lambasted the agreement ending 11 days of violence and Hamas warned of hands “on the trigger” amid a dire humanitarian situation in Gaza.
By Shira Rubin, Michael E. Miller and Steve Hendrix ● Read more »
The White House communications shop has mostly had it easy with President Joe Biden’s penchant for generating unwanted headlines with his loose lips in unscripted moments. But that could soon change.
Even as Israel worked toward a ceasefire with Hamas after nearly a dozen days of violence, the Democratic Party is rapidly changing in its approach to foreign policy and Middle East diplomacy while President Joe Biden is a throwback to another era seeking to adapt.
Two police officers charged in connection to the death of George Robinson, a black man in Mississippi who died after a violent arrest in 2019, are off scot-free after a ruling by a Hinds County judge Thursday.
Justice Department leaders plan to meet with reporters to discuss a recent flurry of notices about secret records seizures during the Trump administration that has prompted alarm in the media industry.
Sports commentator Stephen A. Smith lamented “white privilege” as the reason the NFL’s Jacksonville Jaguars signed former Heisman Trophy winner Tim Tebow to a contract.
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18.) ASSOCIATED PRESS
March 19, 2021
View in browser
AP Morning Wire
Good morning. Here is today’s selection of top stories from The Associated Press at this hour to begin the U.S. day.
GAZA CITY, Gaza Strip (AP) — Palestinians rallied by the thousands early Friday after a cease-fire took effect in the latest Gaza war, with many viewing it as costly but clear victory for the Islamic militant group Hamas over a far more powerful…Read More
The diplomatic flurry was over and Israel’s Benjamin Netanyahu was on the phone telling President Joe Biden that it appeared the furious fighting between Israel and Hamas was about to end. But Biden remained wary even after the afternoon phone c…Read More
TOKYO (AP) — As she struggled to breathe, Shizue Akita had to wait more than six hours while paramedics searched for a hospital in Osaka that would treat her worsening COVID-19. When she finally got to one that wasn’t overwhelmed with other pati…Read More
WASHINGTON (AP) — In the early days of the pandemic, New Jersey Rep. Tom Malinowski scolded those looking to capitalize on the once-in-a-century health crisis. “This is not the time for anybody to be profiting off of selling ventilators, vaccin…Read More
NEW YORK (AP) — For Harry, returning to London to attend Prince Philip’s funeral last month meant once more facing a place where he felt trapped and hunted by cameras. It would be a test of his ability to cope with the anxiety that was bubbling …Read More
BOSTON (AP) — A highly contagious disease originating far from America’s shores triggers deadly outbreaks that spread rapidly, infecting the masses. Shots are available, but a…Read More
FNIDEQ, Morocco (AP) — They are desperate teenagers and jobless men. They come from Morocco’s coastal towns, its mountainous east or even farther away — from sub-Saharan Afric…Read More
WASHINGTON (AP) — Negotiations between the White House and Senate Republicans over President Joe Biden’s $2.3 trillion infrastructure plan are hitting a crucial stage ahead …Read More
WASHINGTON (AP) — The Trump administration Justice Department secretly obtained the 2017 phone records of a CNN correspondent, the network said Thursday in revealing the exist…Read More
“There are only two forces that can carry light to all the corners of the globe … the sun in the heavens and The Associated Press down here.”
Mark Twain
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Good morning, Chicago. Illinois public health officials reported 1,542 new probable and confirmed cases of COVID-19 yesterday and 42 deaths. There were 89,832 doses of the vaccine administered Wednesday, and the seven-day rolling average of daily doses is 65,998.
Meanwhile, a study came out this morning that shows many early COVID-19 patients ended up returning to the hospital within a few months for additional care. Read more about the study from the Tribune’s Madeline Buckley.
Also, after a long and stressful school year for students of all ages, graduation season is finally here. If you want to honor your graduate with a specialized notice in the Tribune, here’s how to submit it.
— Nicole Stock, audience editor
Here’s more coronavirus news and other top stories you need to know to start your day.
Mayor Lori Lightfoot on Thursday marked 24 months since her inauguration as the city’s first Black woman and openly gay mayor — a period during which she’s had to steer the nation’s third-largest city through the turbulence of a deadly pandemic, historic unrest that has rockedthe city’s economy and endemic gun violence. While the mayor has scored her share of political victories, she’s also grappled with a revolving door of top advisers, public relations nightmares and an array of unfulfilled campaign promises.
Lightfoot shrugs off backlash over granting interviews to only reporters of color, calls racial makeup of City Hall press corps ‘an embarrassment’
A Tribune analysis of federal vaccination data shows that in Glencoe’s predominant ZIP code, roughly 1 in every 6 residents was given their first dose from Chicago’s vaccine supply during the rollout’s earliest phases.
Residents of other affluent suburbs also had luck finding shots in the city between December 2020 and mid-April, a period when eligibility rules were still in play, people were desperate to find appointments and city officials were promising to steer doses to the hardest-hit neighborhoods.
Lake Michigan is easing up — after swallowing shorelines, flooding coasts and breaking records — and just in time for beach season.
Levels have lowered from record highs as part of an overall Great Lakes downswing. The receding water has been welcomed by some beach towns and lakefront parks that weathered destruction in recent years. A group of Great Lakes officials estimated at least $500 million of damage in cities last year.
The majority owner and chief executive officer of suburban Pollyanna Brewing is “no longer involved in any capacity with the management or operations” of the company as Pollyanna seeks to “take the needed actions to make craft beer more inclusive” under its new leadership, the brewery said Wednesday.
The news came after an announcement from Cicerone Certification Program that it suspended an employee accused by an anonymous person on Instagram of propositioning a series of women at a brewery following a certification exam. No allegations against Pollyanna Brewing have surfaced on the Instagram posts as of Thursday.
Downtown Chicago’s five largest hotels are expected to be back in business within the next month, more than a year after three of those properties went dark because of the COVID-19 pandemic. The huge hotels are expected to gradually hire back hundreds of employees each as hotel reservations increase.
Verndell Smith’s motto was, “Stop shooting and start dancing.”
It’s why he opened the Ultimate Threat Dance Organization, to get kids off the streets.
Late Wednesday morning, Smith was walking near his studio in Park Manor when the driver of a silver SUV pulled into the parking lot and opened fire in the 7400 block of South King Drive, hitting Smith several times. Paramedics took him to the hospital, where he was pronounced dead, police said. David Struett has the full story…
Tying execs’ pay to diversity goals. Making grants for home down payments. Offering advice to minority-owned businesses. Making Juneteenth a company holiday. That’s some of what Chicago’s largest corporations have done.
Pay-to-play politics, an uneasy nuclear and green energy coalition led to a flawed 2016 clean energy law. Now, lawmakers are running out of time to fix it. An Inside Climate News | Sun-Times special report.
In a 5-3 vote, the board passed a motion finding Officer Clauzell Gause not guilty of making a false statement about his use of force and restoring him to his position.
For William Crawl, 71st Street served as an anchor and safe haven in a life fraught by mental illness. But he was killed there Wednesday night when he was caught in the middle of a gun fight.
School system replaced parking operator who was indicted with one that’s in arrears to the city and repeatedly has been cited for violations. It also bounced 2 checks to City Hall.
Nearly a year ago, before he became the Great Lake Jumper, Dan O’Conor was just a guy with a hangover and a need to clear his mind, like a lot of us then, really.
More than 125 stations will be power-washed and repainted. Some will get upgraded lighting and benches. Concrete will be repaired and some signs will be replaced. It’s all part of an accelerated “Refresh & Renew” program.
Welcome to The Hill’s Morning Report. It is Friday! We get you up to speed on the most important developments in politics and policy, plus trends to watch. Alexis Simendinger and Al Weaver are the co-creators. Readers can find us on Twitter @asimendinger and @alweaver22. Please recommend the Morning Report to friends and let us know what you think. CLICK HERE to subscribe!
Total U.S. coronavirus deaths reported each morning this week: Monday, 585,970; Tuesday, 586,359; Wednesday, 587,219; Thursday, 587,874. Friday, 588,539.
A cease-fire took effect between Israel and Hamas hours after Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s Security Cabinet approved a unilateral halt to an 11-day military operation in the Gaza Strip. The decision came after heavy private pressure from President Biden and international allies to halt the offensive (The Associated Press).
A senior Hamas official earlier confirmed the 2 a.m. start to a cease-fire mediated by Egypt. Netanyahu’s office announced that his security cabinet had voted to accept the Egyptian truce proposal, but cautioned “that the reality on the ground will determine the continuation of the campaign” (The New York Times and The Hill).
Biden, who spoke six times with Netanyahu over 11 days, on Thursday appeared in the East Room after the Mideast announcement to praise what he called a “mutual unconditional” cease-fire. “I believe the Palestinians and Israelis equally deserve to live safely and securely,” he said during brief remarks, “and to enjoy equal measures of freedom, prosperity and democracy.” The president did not respond to questions about whether he thought the truce would hold.
He said he promised Israel full U.S. support to replenish its Iron Dome defense system (The Washington Post). Secretary of State Antony Blinken plans to visit the region in the coming days “to discuss recovery efforts and working together to build better futures for Israelis and Palestinians.” the State Department said (The Hill).
U.S. officials this week were in close consultation with Egyptian counterparts, who served as intermediaries because Israel’s government and Hamas do not directly engage with one another, to urge a de-escalation during a second week of violence in Gaza.
The Associated Press: Biden’s long pattern with Israel: public support, private scolds.
Cease-fires in the past between Israel and Hamas have not always held up, The New York Times reports. Hamas and Israel have been engaged in some form of conflict since the Palestinian group was founded in the 1980s. Even if the fighting pauses, its underlying causes remain: the battle over land rights in Jerusalem and the West Bank, religious tensions in the Old City of Jerusalem and the absence of a peace process to resolve the conflict. Gaza remains under a punishing blockade by Israel and Egypt.
The toll this month was heavy. The Israeli aerial and artillery campaign killed more than 230 people in Gaza, many of them civilians and including children, and badly damaged the impoverished territory’s infrastructure, including the fresh water and sewer systems, the electrical grid, hospitals, schools and roads, according to The New York Times. The primary target has been Hamas’s extensive network of tunnels for moving fighters and munitions, and Israel has also sought to kill Hamas leaders and fighters. More than 4,000 rockets have been fired at Israel from Gaza since May 10, killing 12 people, mostly civilians.
Netanyahu and other Israeli officials had insisted at the outset of the current conflict that the bombardment of Gaza would continue as long as it took to safeguard Israeli security.
In Congress, Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) worked this week to try to disapprove a $735 million U.S. arms sale to Israel. The Senate appeared likely to block his resolution, The Hill’s Jordain Carney reports.
During the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, the United States and other countries have seen a worrisome rise in antisemitic attacks online and during political protests (The Hill).
> Building back?: The White House today is expected to resume talks with a group of GOP senators who seek a smaller, more traditional infrastructure measure. The White House has described detailed discussions that began last week as constructive, but Senate Republicans have not substantially budged off their initial $568 billion infrastructure proposal despite talk of a bipartisan compromise after Biden’s presentation of a $2.3 trillion infrastructure plan, a centerpiece of his summer agenda. Democrats may lack the votes to pass it through Congress on their own, making a compromise with Republicans a more attractive option (The Associated Press).
> Paycheck Protection Program runs dry May 31: Millions of applicants are seeking money from the scant handful of lenders still making the government-backed loans through the end of May. Hundreds of thousands of people are stuck in limbo, waiting to find out if their approved loans — some of which have been stalled for months because of errors or glitches — will be funded. Lenders are overwhelmed, and borrowers are panicking. “There’s a lot of angry, scared people who were really counting on this program and are afraid of being shut out,” said Toby Scammell, the chief executive of Womply, a loan facilitator that has nearly 1.6 million applications awaiting funding (The New York Times).
A MESSAGE FROM FACEBOOK
The internet has changed a lot since 1996 — internet regulations should too
– Protecting people’s privacy
– Enabling safe and easy data portability between platforms
– Preventing election interference
– Reforming Section 230
LEADING THE DAY
CONGRESS: More than four months later, the Jan. 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol continues to reverberate across the Republican Party as members remain unable to shake the deadly event and its aftermath.
Fresh off the GOP’s ousting of Rep. Liz Cheney (R-Wyo.) from her perch in leadership, Republicans have been confronted with the possibility of a Jan. 6 commission, which passed the House on Wednesday with 35 GOP votes and will be taken up by the Senate in the coming weeks.
Even if Senate Republicans kill a potential commission, probes by House and Senate committees continue on, with reports set to start arriving in early June, ensuring that the topic remains front-and-center for the party to confront.
The Hill: GOP leader’s Jan. 6 call to Trump draws scrutiny in commission fight.
Across the aisle, Democratic lawmakers are indicating there isn’t much more they can or will do to investigate the actions surrounding Jan. 6 if the commission is shot down, with only five or six Senate Republicans expected to vote for setting up a commission. Democrats need to peel off 10 Senate GOP members to pass the bill.
As The Hill’s Alexander Bolton reports, Democrats do not want to suck up committee time and attention with a lengthy committee investigation that is likely to become mired in partisan politics when they have so much other work on their plates. Members prefer to keep their committees focused on legislation, nominees and oversight.
Senate Majority Leader Charles Schumer (D-N.Y.) on Thursday fast-tracked the Jan. 6 legislation, making it readily available to bring to the floor. According to the New York Democrat, a vote will take place “very soon,” though it likely will not happen until senators return from the Memorial Day recess (The Hill).
The Hill: House narrowly approves Capitol security bill over GOP opposition.
Politico: Democrats debate whether to go it alone on Jan. 6 investigation.
The Wall Street Journal: House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.) struggles to move Republicans past Trump.
> Rep. Tom Malinowski (D-N.J.), a former lobbyist and diplomat, in 2020 chased stock profits in medical and tech companies tied to the ongoing pandemic response. The trades were one slice of a stock buying and selling spree by the congressman last year that he did not properly disclose under the law, worth as much as $3.2 million, according to Business Insider and Associated Press. The congressman faces two complaints filed with the Office of Government Ethics and told the AP on Thursday that his failure to file required reports has been remedied and was “a mistake that I own 100 percent.”
CORONAVIRUS: First lady Jill Biden, accompanied by the National Institute of Health’s Anthony Fauci, toured the Children’s National Hospital vaccination clinic in Washington, D.C., on Thursday to encourage the inoculation against COVID-19 of children 12 years old and up. She hailed the director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases as an “American hero” (The Hill).
A distinct geographic pattern has emerged one month after every adult in the United States became eligible for a COVID-19 vaccine: The highest vaccination rates are concentrated in the Northeast, while the lowest ones are mostly in the South. This pattern of gaps worries U.S. health experts (The Associated Press).
The Food and Drug Administration this week said it now permits longer refrigerator storage for Pfizer-BioNTech vaccines at lower temperatures, a change that helps physicians store and administer Pfizer doses from their offices at stable refrigerator temperatures (The Hill).
Japan on Thursday approved use of AstraZeneca and Moderna vaccines, but the regulatory approval came more than a year after the pandemic began as Japan seeks to speed up its slow-moving vaccine campaign (Reuters). … The city of Osaka is under medical duress as the coronavirus surges, overwhelming hospitals. Some Japanese see Osaka as a harbinger of what could happen to the rest of Japan if the crisis worsens at a time when officials — and the world — are focused on the summer Olympics in Tokyo (The Associated Press).
Europe reports a 60 percent drop in new coronavirus infections over the past month, the World Health Organization said Thursday, which is upbeat news as the continent plans to reopen its borders. Still, “this progress is fragile,” a top agency official cautioned (The New York Times).
The Eiffel Tower in Paris will reopen to visitors on July 16. Visitor numbers will be limited to 10,000 a day to meet distancing requirements, fewer than half of their pre-COVID-19 levels, operator Sete told AFP.
POLITICS: A new autopsy conducted by House Democrats into their disappointing 2020 performance suggests that former President Trump played a key role in boosting turnout among Republicans that was unexpected by pollsters or his political opponents.
However, as Niall Stanage explores in his latest memo, that result raises another question: What happens next year in the 2022 midterms — the first election since 2014 that is not entirely dominated by Trump? The autopsy suggests this could be to their advantage, perhaps reducing the number of infrequent voters turning out to back the GOP.
However, swing-state Republicans and those in competitive districts could also see a boost as they might not have to answer for every inflammatory remark (or tweet) by the former president — something that has been a staple of GOP life since the 2016 campaign.
The Hill: House Democrats’ campaign arm pulls in $12.2 million in April, topping GOP counterpart.
The Washington Post: Since leaving office, Trump has charged the Secret Service more than $40,000 to use space at Mar-a-Lago.
> Primary watch: Primary election contests are filling up across the country as both Democrats and Republicans face huge fields of prospective nominees.
It’s been a decade since the Tea Party movement cost the Republican establishment control of its primary process, and The Hill’s Reid Wilson examines multiple questions. Namely, are Democrats moving in the same lawless direction? And why have so many candidates decided to run this time around?
OPINIONS
Despite costs, Biden’s family leave proposal would be a big help for small businesses, by Gene Marks, opinion contributor, The Hill. https://bit.ly/3u6HI2e
Great inflation expectations won’t save the Fed, by Joseph C. Sternberg, columnist, The Wall Street Journal. https://on.wsj.com/3oBisjn
A MESSAGE FROM FACEBOOK
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.
The House meets at 9 a.m. in a pro forma session. Lawmakers resume legislative work in the Capitol next month.
TheSenate will convene Monday at 3 p.m. to resume consideration of the Endless Frontier Act.
The president will receive the President’s Daily Brief at 9 a.m. Biden will host South Korean President Moon Jae-in at the White House beginning at 12:35 p.m. Biden at 1 p.m. will award the Medal of Honor to Army Col. Ralph Puckett, with Moon, Vice PresidentHarris, Jill Biden and Doug Emhoff in attendance. The two leaders will hold a bilateral meeting at 2:15 p.m., an expanded meeting at 3:15 p.m.. They will hold a joint press conference at 5 p.m. in the East Room. Harris will hold a separate meeting with Moon at 10 a.m. in her ceremonial office.
Blinken will participate in Biden’s White House meetings and press conference with Moon.
The White House press briefing is scheduled for noon. The White House coronavirus response team will brief reporters at 11 a.m.
Economic indicator: The National Association of Realtors at 10 a.m. will report existing home sales in April.
➔ ECONOMY: Jobless claims for the week ending May 15 fell to 444,000, setting another pandemic-era low, according to a Labor Department report released on Thursday. The steady decline of jobless claims is an encouraging sign for the U.S. economy amid intense debate over why many businesses have reported trouble hiring new workers (The Hill). …The administration would like to devise a way to keep paying expanded unemployment benefits to an estimated 3.6 million Americans who stand to lose them soon in Republican-led states, but Labor Department officials have come to believe that the law does not allow them to do so. Americans in at least 22 states including Arizona, Ohio and Texas are set to see their payments fall by $300 each week — or be wiped out entirely — as GOP governors try to force people back to work in response to a potential national labor shortage (The Washington Post). … Restaurant traffic is rocketing back in the United States. Dining reservations were up 46 percent in April compared with April 2019, according to the review site Yelp (and up 23,000 percent compared with April 2020 when most Americans began staying at home during the pandemic). Yelp’s competitor OpenTable paints a similarly rosy picture. In some states, restaurant traffic has blown by pre-pandemic levels, prompting industry experts to draw parallels between now and the Roaring ‘20s” (The Washington Post).
➔ STATE WATCH: Nevada legislators are considering a sweeping bill to implement the health coverage public option, the most ambitious health care reform in a legislature this year. Supporters say it would drive down costs, and it may also spur innovation in other blue states looking to expand on the Affordable Care Act (The Hill).
➔ ROYALS: An investigation launched by the BBC revealed Thursday that Martin Bashir, a then-BBC journalist, used “deceitful behavior” to nab the famous interview with Princess Diana in 1995. The probe, which was conducted by Lord Dyson, a retired senior judge, found that Bashir’s actions constituted a “serious breach” of the BBC’s guidelines. The investigation was launched following complaints by Charles Spencer (Diana’s brother) that Bashir convinced the late princess to do the sitdown via nefarious means. During the interview, Diana — who was still married to Prince Charles at the time — made waves when she said that “there were three of us in this marriage” — pointing to Charles’s affair with Camilla Parker-Bowles, his current wife (The Associated Press). Prince William and Prince Harry condemned the actions of the BBC at the time, but offered thanks to Dyson for his work (The Hill).
THE CLOSER
And finally … 👏👏👏 A standing ovation for this week’s Morning Report Quiz winners!
Here’s who knew a whole lot about nothing and aced our quiz about the greatest show ever made, Seinfeld (yes, the Morning Report is biased): Nate Brand, John Donato, Patrick Kavanagh, Ki Harvey, Renee D’Argento, Lesa Davis, Mike Roberts, Pam Manges and Mark Roeddiger.
They correctly answered that of the characters listed, Susan Ross, George Costanza’s long-running girlfriend-turned-fiancé appeared most often (29 times).
The voice for then-New York Yankees owner George Steinbrenner was done by Seinfeld creator and social maven Larry David. The owner was always shown from behind, allowing David to mockingly voice him.
The oft-used “show about nothing” line was coined by George Costanza, who did so when he and Jerry were pitching a show to NBC in Season 4.
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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According to a Washington Post report yesterday, CNN anchor Chris Cuomo helped his brother, New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo (D) with how to handle his sexual harassment allegations.
How so, from the Post report: “[Chris] Cuomo, one of the network’s top stars, joined a series of conference calls that included the Democratic governor, his top aide, his communications team, lawyers and a number of outside advisers … The cable news anchor encouraged his brother to take a defiant position and not to resign from the governor’s office, the people said. At one point, he used the phrase ‘cancel culture’ as a reason to hold firm in the face of the allegations, two people present on one call said.” The full story: https://wapo.st/3wlZ78w
Some context to why this is not ok: Columbia Journalism School professor and New Yorker staff writer Nicholas Lemann explained, “If you are actively advising a politician in trouble while being an on-air host on a news network, that’s not okay.”
It’s Friday! 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.
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A MESSAGE FROM FACEBOOK
The internet has changed a lot since 1996 — internet regulations should too
It’s looking unlikely that the bipartisan independent commission to investigate the Jan. 6 U.S. Capitol attacks will pass in the Senate, so Democrats are starting to look into other options. https://bit.ly/3oFkAqy
What key Democratic chairman do not want: Their own committee investigations
An alternative Democrats are considering: Setting up a select committee, similar to the House Select Committee on Benghazi.
The difference: A select committee would be controlled by Democrats instead of the bipartisan committee that Senate Republicans are likely to vote down.
Why Republicans are against the bill to create the bipartisan commission: They want the scope of the investigation to include all political violence, not just Jan. 6. I.e.: Republicans want to downplay the Capitol siege.
Via CNN’s Amir Tal, Andrew Carey and Angela Dewan, “Israel and the Palestinian militant group Hamas have agreed to a ceasefire, after more than a week of conflict left hundreds dead, most of them Palestinians. The truce signals an end to the immediate bloodshed, but will likely leave both sides further apart than ever.” https://cnn.it/3v9LI3j
The extent of the bloodshed: “Israeli airstrikes killed 232 Palestinians, including 65 children, according to the Hamas-run health ministry there. At least 12 people in Israel, including two children, have been killed by Palestinian militant fire from Gaza, according to the IDF and Israel’s emergency service.”
WATCH THE CELEBRATIONS AFTER THE CEASEFIRE TOOK EFFECT:
Biden said in brief remarks, “We have held intensive high-level discussions hour by hour, literally … with an aim of avoiding the sort of prolonged conflict we have seen in previous years when hostilities have broken out … I believe the Palestinians and Israelis equally deserve to live in safety and security … My administration will continue our quiet and relentless diplomacy toward that end. I believe we have a genuine opportunity to make progress and I am committed to working toward it.” Context to Biden’s remarks: https://bit.ly/3415SR8
Via The Washington Post’s David A. Fahrenthold and Josh Dawsey, “Former president Donald Trump charged the Secret Service more than $40,000 this spring for rooms that Trump’s own protective detail used while guarding him at his Mar-a-Lago Club, according to federal spending records.” https://wapo.st/342e4kb
How??: “The records show that Trump’s club charged the Secret Service $396.15 every night starting Jan. 20, the day he left the White House and moved full-time into his Palm Beach, Fla., club.”
Via The Hill’s Niall Stanage, Democrats are torn over whether former President Trump’s absence helps or hurts the party. https://bit.ly/2RClYxN
Dems’ new reasoning for their congressional losses: “Democrats have a new explanation for why they performed poorly in congressional races in last November’s election, even as President Biden swept into the White House. A large part of the answer is: Trump.”
Why: “A post-election ‘autopsy’ by the House Democrats’ campaign arm, the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee (DCCC), suggests that then-President Trump juiced Republican turnout in a way that neither pollsters nor his political opponents predicted.”
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.
My blood pressure is so high from finding these photos and videos for you. I think I’m going to turn my attention to the happy animal closing video now…
TIDBIT — SOME MIGHT SAY I’M A BIT DRAMATIC ON THE CICADA SITUATION. I, HOWEVER, THINK MY FEARS ARE WARRANTED:
An unnamed family member, who has been enjoying my misery over the cicadas, flagged this Reuters article for me today.
‘Guess who’s coming to dinner? Virginia chef serves up tasty cicada tacos’
Here’s the link if you’re so inclined: Though I’ll warn you, it does include a photo of the horrendous concept for a snack: https://reut.rs/3wqUKJA
The House is in. The Senate is out. President Biden and Vice President Harris are in Washington, D.C.
9 a.m. EDT: President Biden received the President’s Daily Brief.
10 a.m. EDT: Vice President Harris met with South Korean President Moon Jae-in.
12:35 p.m. EDT: President Biden welcomes South Korean President Moon Jae-in to the White House.
2:15 p.m. EDT: President Biden participates in a bilateral meeting with South Korean President Moon Jae-in.
WHAT TO WATCH:
11 a.m. EDT: The White House COVID Response Team held a press briefing. Livestream: https://bit.ly/3oDjkE9
Noon: White House press secretary Jen Psaki is holding a press conference. Livestream: https://bit.ly/3hJTugy
1 p.m. EDT: President Biden awards the Medal of honor to Army Colonel Ralph Puckett in the East Room of the White House. Livestream: https://bit.ly/344DYng
5 p.m. EDT: President Biden and South Korean President Moon Jae-in hold a joint press conference. Livestream: https://bit.ly/3hJTNrI
NOW FOR THE FUN STUFF…:
Today is National Pizza Party Day. Though I would argue that any day can be Pizza Party Day if you try hard enough.
And for weekend planning purposes, tomorrow is National Vanilla Pudding Day and Sunday is National Taffy Day.
Writer Laura Bassett tweeted, “Just walked past a woman in Manhattan cradling four ferrets as she walked down the street. No leashes, no bag, just a pile of loose ferrets.” https://bit.ly/3oASfBw
Is anyone else wondering about the logistics of holding four, unleashed ferrets?
And to get your weekend off on the right foot, here are two dogs who are just a lot of talk: https://bit.ly/3f5JhJi
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Neither House Majority Whip James E. Clyburn nor Kentucky Rep. Harold Rogers will have to pay a $5,000 fine for allegedly skipping security screening at the House chamber after both prevailed in their appeals before the Ethics Committee. Read more…
The House passed a $1.9 billion spending bill Thursday that Democrats hoped would pay for bills incurred since the Jan. 6 insurrection, bolster the Capitol’s police force and improve the complex’s security. The Senate will likely rewrite the bill amid objections from Republicans and at least one top Democrat. Read more…
Sen. Patrick J. Toomey, one of the Republicans negotiating with President Joe Biden on infrastructure, took aim Thursday at the inclusion of housing in the president’s roughly $2 trillion infrastructure proposal. “People certainly need housing, but housing is not infrastructure,” he said. Read more…
Click here to subscribe to Fintech Beat for the latest market and regulatory developmentsin finance and financial technology.
Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders said at a hearing Thursday that the federal government could help boost the number of practicing physicians in the United States, especially in medically underserved areas. “We don’t necessarily need more dermatologists on Park Avenue in New York City,” he said. Read more…
History professor Jennifer L. Holland talks to host Jason Dick on the latest Political Theater podcast about the politics of abortion rights, which are in focus after the Supreme Court announced it will hear a challenge to a new Mississippi law that severely restricts the procedure. Listen here…
In a fiery and no-holds-barred conversation on the Equal Time podcast, host Mary C. Curtis speaks with former RNC Chairman Michael Steele on the future of the GOP and why he cannot defend the current state of his party to Black voters. Listen here…
OPINION — In recent weeks, Republicans have criticized President Joe Biden’s American Jobs Plan by claiming that its focus is not on traditional infrastructure. That’s true. And that’s exactly the point, Illinois Rep. Mike Quigley writes. Read more…
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25.) POLITICO PLAYBOOK
POLITICO Playbook: W.H. gives Whoopi the VIP treatment — but snubs Meghan McCain
Presented by
DRIVING THE DAY
TGIF, Playbookers. We have a juicy item today featuring MEGHAN MCCAIN, WHOOPI GOLDBERG and CEDRIC RICHMOND. But first a look at the major storylines as we head into the weekend. …
INFRASTRUCTURE — The dominant issue in D.C. this spring has been overshadowed this week by violence in Israel and jockeying over a proposed Jan. 6 commission. But look for the focus to shift back today when GOP senators meet with White House officials includingsenior adviser STEVE RICCHETTI and head of legislative affairs LOUISA TERRELL.
The AP reports that the current mood heading into today’s talks is pretty pessimistic, at least inside the West Wing, and that Democrats are getting antsy about the negotiations going much longer.
The key passage: “The lead Republican negotiator Sen. SHELLEY MOORE CAPITO of West Virginia was encouraged by the talks and expected the White House to be back in touch by week’s end, her office said. But there was some dismay at the White House that the Republican counteroffer did not substantially alter the party’s original $568 billion proposal, leaving it far short of the White House’s plan, according to an administration official not authorized to speak publicly about the private conversations.
“The White House’s hopes for a bipartisan deal on infrastructure have cooled but they have not abandoned the effort, the official said.”
THE CEASE-FIRE — POLITICO foreign affairs correspondent Nahal Toosi has a deeply reported story on the lessons Team Biden heeded from the last two major conflagrations in Israel — both during the Obama years — to help orchestrate a shorter war in Gaza. “According to three people familiar with the current situation, [the] playbook included U.S. officials working primarily behind the scenes on the diplomatic front, especially at the start; blocking moves by the U.N. Security Council, including demands for a ceasefire; and relying on other players in the region, in particular Egypt, to do the heavy lifting on truce negotiations.”
THE JAN. 6 COMMISSION CLASH — The NYT’s Carl Hulse cuts to the heart of why the bipartisan deal for a Jan. 6 commission fell apart: “[T]here is really one overriding reason: [Republicans] fear it will hurt their party’s image and hinder their attempts to regain power in next year’s midterm elections.”
TRUMP ORG TROUBLES — Former federal prosecutor Renato Mariottihas a useful primer in POLITICO Magazine making sense of the big DONALD TRUMP news of the week: that New York A.G. TISH JAMES now considers her office’s investigation of the Trump Organization to be a criminal, not just civil, matter. “Wednesday’s announcement didn’t materially change the liability Trump faces,” he writes, “given that the DA’s office already had a criminal investigation underway. But James’ recent moves (including her decision to publicly join the criminal probe) are a sign that the evidence amassed by prosecutors is substantial and will likely result in charges. James wouldn’t rush to embrace a weak case. That should make Trump very concerned.”
MEGHAN MCCAIN SNUBBED — It’s a tale of two “View” hosts.
With a vast number of Republicans still not vaccinated, you’d think the White House would accept all the help it can get from celebrities and influencers who speak to that demographic. But when McCain, the conservative co-host of ABC’s daytime ratings-driver “The View,” personally reached out to offer her help, she got crickets in response.
Yet her co-hostGoldberg was treated to a private briefing with the White House to go over vaccination messaging and talking points for the show.
McCain, we’re told, didn’t hear back from the White House after offering to get vaccinated on air alongside her brother JIMMY MCCAIN. She wanted to be in sync with the Biden administration on its vaccination efforts before airing such a segment.
McCain “just wanted to help with messaging and encouraging Republicans to get it, and the show wanted it too,” said a “View” insider. The apparent snub was all the more notable because McCain’s mother, CINDY MCCAIN, is being vetted to be an ambassador for the Biden administration to the U.N. World Food Programme after her endorsement of JOE BIDEN in the general election.
“They should have given all of ‘The View’ hosts this training, not just Whoopi,” the insider said.
The White House at one time was coordinating with “The View” to have McCain and Goldberg vaccinated on air, with a senior administration official joining them. But it fell through due to scheduling issues on the White House’s end.
Nevertheless, Goldberg was briefed and McCain was not. A White House source said it was due to the fact that McCain was not eligible at the time to be vaccinated, but that was not relayed to McCain.
A BROADER ISSUE: We’ve heard from other celebrity wranglers that after much back and forth with the Office of Public Engagement, led by Richmond, the White House also dropped the ball on another offer to brief 30 to 40 celebrities for a vaccination push. These celebrities included JASON ALEXANDER, OMAR MILLER from “Ballers” and others who represented demographics still reluctant to get vaccinated like older white men, Latinos and African Americans.
On the whole, the White House has been focused on educating community leaders like doctors and religious leaders over celebrities because polling shows that these groups are shown to have a greater impact than celebrities. But officials also pointed out that the administration has engaged with a number of celebrities on the matter, from JENNIFER GARNER and KIM KARDASHIAN to GEORGE LOPEZ and TYRA BANKS.
Richmond, for his part, has told D.C. insiders trying to connect with him that he’s overwhelmed with the amount of requests coming into his office. He’s said he has a skeleton staff because background checks are still being completed. Other White House officials have complained about what they call a sluggish background check process, too.
“[Richmond] said he’s just sitting at his computer all day answering emails,” said one person who was struggling to get in touch with him and, like others we’ve spoken to, complained that the White House is inaccessible.
In a statement, Richmond responded, “We’re very engaged with the covid team on [vaccine hesitancy], and we’re very proud of it.” Complaints about his lack of availability are “news to me,” he added. A White House official said it’s staffing up at a brisk pace compared to past administrations at this point.
DONORS ARE PEEVED, TOO: We’ve also heard griping from donors who expect more glad-handing from the White House.
“They’re not even doing the normal stuff like inviting donors to briefings,” said one major Democratic donor. “Typically, they’d reach out to you to see, ‘What are you interested in? Are you interested in serving the administration?’ And there are a lot of jobs.”
Instead the administration reached out through an email listserv to inquire about political positions, this person said.
“People are very disappointed right now,” the donor said. “Most people aren’t looking for anything but a thank you. And that hasn’t happened.”
Covid protocols might be part of the issue. Typically, donors would be invited to events at the White House like Greek Independence Day or St. Patrick’s Day as a way to keep them engaged and feeling like insiders.
“Are they going to do Christmas parties this year?” the donor asked.
FIRST IN PLAYBOOK — We’re told NICK OFFERMAN, aka RON SWANSON of “Parks and Recreation,” will appear before the House Energy and Commerce Committee Wednesday to urge Americans (particularly Republican men) to get vaccinated.
HILL OVERSIGHT IS DEAD, LONG LIVE HILL OVERSIGHT — This week’s vote on a bipartisan commission to investigate the Jan. 6 insurrection exposed some serious rifts on the Hill — rifts that could get even wider as the bill heads to the Senate. On today’s episode of “Playbook Deep Dive,” POLITICO’s MARIANNE LEVINE and RACHAEL BADE dig into the dynamics playing out among congressional leadership, from Senate Minority Leader MITCH MCCONNELL’S 2022 calculations to House Minority Leader KEVIN MCCARTHY’S quest to become speaker. One big question it all raises: Is Hill oversight dead?Listen and subscribe here
BIDEN’S FRIDAY — The president will receive the President’s Daily Brief at 9 a.m. He’ll welcome South Korean President MOON JAE-IN at 12:35 p.m. At 1 p.m., Biden will award the Medal of Honor to Army Col. RALPH PUCKETT. Then the rest of the afternoon is all with Moon: bilateral meeting at 2:15 p.m., expanded bilateral meeting at 3:15 p.m. and press conference at 5 p.m.
— VP KAMALA HARRIS will host Moon for a bilateral meeting at 10 a.m.
— The White House Covid-19 response team and public health officials will brief at 11 a.m. Press secretary JEN PSAKI will brief at noon.
THE HOUSE will meet at 9 a.m. THE SENATE is out.
PLAYBOOK READS
THE WHITE HOUSE
BIDEN TALKS TO BROOKS —NYT columnist David Brooks interviews Biden about why the lifelong moderate is going big, bold and progressive: “The values that drive him have been utterly consistent over the decades, and the policies he is proposing now are similar to those he’s been championing for decades. It’s the scale that is gigantically different. …
“‘We’re kind of at a place where the rest of the world is beginning to look to China,’ Biden said. ‘The most devastating comment made after I was elected — it wasn’t so much about me — but it was by the Irish taoiseach’ — prime minister — ‘saying that “Well, America can’t lead. They can’t even get their arms around Covid.”’”
DEADLINES ARE MEANT TO BE BROKEN — “White House backs off May 25 police reform deadline,” CNN: “‘We are in close touch and we certainly defer to the expectations of the key negotiators,’ White House press secretary Jen Psaki said Thursday when pressed on the timeline, citing positive feedback on the ongoing conversations from South Carolina Republican Sen. TIM SCOTT and New Jersey Democratic Sen. CORY BOOKER.
“Talks between both parties in the House and Senate are ongoing. But the House entered a work period after their votes on Thursday and won’t return to Washington until June, making passage all but impossible ahead of the President’s deadline next week.”
INFRASTRUCTURE YEAR — “Biden’s bank-shot strategy to win GOP support for his infrastructure bill,”by Christopher Cadelago and Natasha Korecki: “Over the past few weeks, senior White House officials, Cabinet members, and President Joe Biden himself have held dozens of calls or meetings with local Republican leaders to talk roads, bridges, and modern infrastructure investments. Much of the outreach has been done in private … But in conversations with more than a dozen local officials familiar with the White House’s efforts — including those on the receiving end of the outreach — a few themes emerge. Chief among them is that the White House wants local GOP mayors and governors to convince their Republican representatives in Congress of the need to back the president’s proposals.
“The local leaders described a White House strategy that attempts to harness the outrage these leaders feel over the infrastructure crises they’re facing and Congress’ sluggish response to it. In the calls and meetings, the White House has tiptoed around how to pay for their $2.3 trillion plan, avoiding discussions about the tax hike proposals unpopular with Republicans. In some of the conversations, administration officials conveyed that they understood that discussions over revenue raisers could imperil a bipartisan package.”
CONGRESS
HERE COMES THE FILIBUSTER — “Filibuster brawl amps up with GOP opposition to Jan. 6 panel,”by Burgess Everett: “After more than four months of letting their power to obstruct lie unused in the Senate, the 50-member Senate GOP is ready to mount a filibuster of House-passed legislation creating an independent cross-aisle panel to investigate the Jan. 6 insurrection. If Republicans follow through and block the bill, they will spark a long-building fight over the filibuster’s very existence.
“The filibuster has spent months lurking in the background of the Senate’s daily business, but the battle over the chamber’s 60-vote threshold will erupt as soon as next week.”
POLITICS ROUNDUP
REPLACING ROY BLUNT — “Missouri Senate race shapes into battle between controversial firebrands and GOP officials,”by James Arkin and Melanie Zanona: “The more than half-dozen Republicans eyeing the state’s open Senate seat include, on the one hand, traditional candidates like a sitting state official and four members of the congressional delegation who are considering whether to make the leap to statewide politics. On the other hand, there is a disgraced former governor who resigned his post halfway through his term, and a lawyer who became a celebrity on the right after brandishing a rifle at Black Lives Matter protesters, for which local prosecutors slapped him with felony charges.
“It all sets up a messy and character-filled primary that the party will need to survive with enough unity — and electability — to keep retiring Sen. ROY BLUNT’S seat in the GOP column next November.”
GOOD NEWS FOR DEMOCRATS — “Don’t Sleep on Asian American Voters,” The Atlantic: “Even amid soaring participation from all major racial groups, Asian Americans increased their turnout by more than any other cohort, according to recently released studies by the Census Bureau and Catalist, a Democratic voter-targeting firm. In fact, no major demographic group in recent decades has increased its turnout from one election to the next as much as Asian Americans did from 2016 to 2020, the census found; not even Black voters grew that much from 2004 through to Obama’s first election four years later.”
“The cable news anchor encouraged his brother to take a defiant position and not to resign from the governor’s office, the people said. At one point, he used the phrase ‘cancel culture’ as a reason to hold firm in the face of the allegations, two people present on one call said.” Cuomo apologized on his show Thursday evening. The clip
NOT ONLY WAPO REPORTERS — “Trump administration secretly obtained CNN reporter’s phone and email records,”CNN: “The Justice Department informed CNN Pentagon correspondent BARBARA STARR, in a May 13 letter, that prosecutors had obtained her phone and email records covering two months, between June 1, 2017 to July 31, 2017. The letter listed phone numbers for Starr’s Pentagon extension, the CNN Pentagon booth phone number and her home and cell phones, as well as Starr’s work and personal email accounts.
“It is unclear when the investigation was opened, whether it happened under Attorney General JEFF SESSIONS or Attorney General WILLIAM BARR, and what the Trump administration was looking for in Starr’s records. The Justice Department confirmed the records were sought through the courts last year but provided no further explanation or context.”
SPEAKING OF CANCEL CULTURE — “An interview with Emily Wilder, recent Stanford grad fired from AP job over criticisms of Israel,” SF Gate: “EMILY WILDER, a journalist and 2020 graduate of Stanford University, started a new job as an Associated Press news associate based in Maricopa County, Arizona, on May 3. Two weeks later, she was unceremoniously fired by the news outlet after conservatives resurfaced old social media posts that drew attention from Republicans as prominent as Arkansas Sen. TOM COTTON. In Wilder’s eyes, her firing is the latest example of right-wing cancel culture.”
TV TONIGHT — PBS’ “Washington Week” with Yamiche Alcindor: Andrea Mitchell, Rachel Scott, Asma Khalid and Jeff Zeleny.
SUNDAY SO FAR …
Gray TV
“Full Court Press”: House Minority Whip Steve Scalise (R-La.) … Rep. Pramila Jayapal (D-Wash.).
FOX
“Fox News Sunday”: Sen. Roy Blunt (R-Mo.) … Rep. Adam Kinzinger (R-Ill.). Panel: Guy Benson, Julie Pace and Charles Lane. Power Player: Virginia Ali.
CBS
“Face the Nation”: Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) … Scott Gottlieb … Robert Gates … Katherine Rowe … retired Lt. Gen. Russel Honoré.
ABC
“This Week”: Sen. Susan Collins (R-Maine). Panel: Rahm Emanuel, Sarah Isgur, Donna Brazile and George Will.
MSNBC
“The Sunday Show”: Rep. Madeleine Dean (D-Pa.) … Stuart Stevens … Rep. Maxine Waters (D-Calif.) … St. Paul, Minn., Mayor Melvin Carter.
CNN
“Inside Politics”: Panel: Karoun Demirjian, Rachael Bade, Jeff Zeleny and Vivian Salama.
PLAYBOOKERS
SPOTTED: Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg and Labor Secretary Marty Walsh grabbing dinner at Bluejacket. … Newt and Callista Gingrich in first class on a flight from DCA to Atlanta on Thursday morning. (Callista boarded early, Newt was late, and she called out to him to get on the plane, according to our tipster.) … Michael Grimm at Porterhouse.
ARE YOU AN INTROVERT OR AN EXTROVERT? —Arthur Brooks (wish him a happy birthday) has a fun piece in The Atlantic that all types of personalities should be able to relate to. Cooped up at home the past year, extroverts were naturally unhappier during the pandemic, he writes — but the mood of introverts actually improved. “[T]he temporary shift has … created a kind of social-science field experiment, highlighting all the ways in which introverts and extroverts can learn from each other. If we take the lessons to heart, we can all benefit.”
BOOK CLUB — Vox’s Alex Ward is writing “Power Play,” a look at the first year of Biden’s foreign policy, for Portfolio Books. Announcement
WHITE HOUSE ARRIVAL LOUNGE — Emily Voorde is now an associate director at the Office of Public Engagement. She previously was Chasten Buttigieg’s body woman on Pete Buttigieg’s presidential campaign.
TRUMP ALUMNI — Caitlin Thompson Groves is now a senior account executive at Pinkston. She previously was deputy assistant HUD secretary for public affairs.
TRANSITIONS — Courtney Veatch is joining the Alzheimer’s Association as associate director of federal affairs. She previously was counsel at DHS, and is a Marco Rubio and Neal Dunn alum. … David Peyman is now of counsel in DLA Piper’s international trade practice. He previously was deputy assistant secretary of State for counter threat finance and sanctions. … Maci Morin is now a broadband program specialist at the National Telecommunications and Information Administration. She previously was a program coordinator at the National Association of Regional Councils. …
… Elizabeth Thorp is now a VP at Sunshine Sachs in D.C. She previously was president of her own PR firm, EDT Communications. … The Phoenix-based consulting and grassroots advocacy firm Camelback Strategy Group is opening a new D.C. office led by Matthew Pagano, who’s moving up to become national VP. He previously was Arizona director at the RNC.
HAPPY BIRTHDAY: Arthur Brooks … Vox’s Rebecca Leber … Abigail P. Gage … Jeffrey Toobin … Mike Podhorzer … Brent Del Monte of BGR … IMF’s Ross Rattanasena … Mary Ann Gomez Orta of the Congressional Hispanic Leadership Institute … NRSC’s Katharine Cooksey … Matt Appenfeller … Mike Viqueira … Mosheh Oinounou … Gillian Reagan … Rachel Phelps Bayens … Brandon Pollak … Erika Gutierrez Sheridan … Wally Hsueh … Bully Pulpit’s Cody Shankman and Julia Debo … former Sen. Al Franken (D-Minn.) (7-0) … CNBC’s Steve Liesman … Time’s Jeffrey Kluger … Deb Riechmann … former Sen. George LeMieux (R-Fla.) … former Rep. Tom Feeney (R-Fla.)
Send Playbookers tips to playbook@politico.com. Playbook couldn’t happen without our editor Mike Zapler, deputy editor Zack Stanton and producers Allie Bice, Eli Okun and Garrett Ross.
“Who shall separate us from the love of Christ? Shall tribulation, or distress, or persecution, or famine, or nakedness, or danger, or sword?” (Romans 8:35, ESV).
66% of GOP, 41% of IND, and 20% of DEM Say Confidence in Dr. Fauci has DecreasedOnly 26.4% of Voters Looking to the CDC/Federal Government in Determining When They Consider the COVID-19 Pandemic OverNew National Poll from Convention of States Action and The Trafalgar Group Convention of States Action, in …
Not that long ago, Joe Biden accused Republican governors in states like Texas and Mississippi of exhibiting “Neaderthal thinking” for ending their mask mandates. Not to be outdone, CDC Director Rochelle Walensky warned of “impending doom” vis-a-vis yet another Covid spike. Fauci et al made similar proclamations. As it turns …
Massive government spending has decreased the value of the American dollar and triggered increased consumer prices, which economic experts said will only get worse. “Over the past few months, we have seen an inflation rate that is much higher than where we’ve become accustomed to,” Heritage Foundation research fellow Joel …
In many of our schools, young, impressionable children are no longer being taught to feel good about being Americans. Their schools’ teachers, who traditionally embody socially approved values, are teaching them to be ashamed of being Americans. Spreading out from the schools that teach our teachers, this ideology is being inculcated into our …
Summary: President Joe Biden will receive his daily briefing Friday then he will meet with and hold a joint press conference with President Moon Jae-in of South Korea. President Biden’s Itinerary for 5/21/21: All Times EDT 9:00 AM Receive daily briefing – Oval Office12:35 PM Welcome President Moon Jae-in – …
The federal government has broken the bank with an astounding $6+ trillion in (ostensibly) pandemic-related spending to date, and President Biden wants to spend trillions more. Unfortunately, many Republicans in Congress have been too inconsistent on this issue to protest this spending binge in any meaningful way. But one of …
The Center for American Liberty in conjunction with the Dhillon Law Group, Inc. and on behalf of the client Your American Flag Store sent a letter to PayPal demanding the company release by May 26, 2021 upwards of $35,000 that is being held by an unjustifiable, arbitrary hold.Click here to view and download …
Last week, the United States Centers for Disease Control (CDC) updated its guidance on mask-wearing, with director Rochelle Walensky announcing there to be effectively no need for those who have already been administered the COVID-19 vaccine to wear masks in public. This comparatively recent development sluggishly comes on the heels …
The White House Council of Economic Advisers, which has pushed for a higher minimum wage, unveiled several unpaid internship job openings Wednesday. The Council of Economic Advisers (CEA) posted the unpaid internships, which are for graduate and undergraduate students qualified in assisting the office with analyzing economic data, on its …
A federal judge ruled Wednesday that students of the opposite biological sex must be allowed to share shower spaces and dorms at a Christian college in Missouri. Judge Roseann Ketchmark of the District Court of Western Missouri ruled against the College of the Ozarks, a Christian college which had sued …
Like the Black Vote, the Democrats have had a stranglehold on Jewish Voters for decades. Why? Why do Jewish voters continue to back politicians who are openly deserting Israel and the alliance we have had with them since their creation as a recognized country in 1948. There has to be …
The main Black Lives Matter group has issued a statement in support of Hamas terrorists that are responsible for rockets being fired into Israel. The statement was made via Twitter on Monday. The group said that they stand in solidarity with Palestinians and would advocate for Palestinian liberation. It is …
In 2015, Hawaii made history, becoming the first US state to mandate a full transition to renewable energy. The legislation, signed into law by Gov. David Ige, mandated that state utilities generate 100 percent of electricity sales from renewable fuels by 2045. Green energy publications noted that the move positioned …
White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki holds a briefing today. The briefing is scheduled to start at 12:30 p.m. EDT. Content created by Conservative Daily News is available for re-publication without charge under the Creative Commons license. Visit our syndication page for details.
President Biden Delivers Remarks and Signs the COVID-19 Hate Crimes Act Into Law The event is scheduled to start at 2:00 p.m. EDT. Content created by Conservative Daily News is available for re-publication without charge under the Creative Commons license. Visit our syndication page for details.
Happy Friday, dear Kruiser Morning Briefing friends. Try the swordfish.
One of the more remarkable aspects of Donald Trump’s presidency was that he got the American left to finally realize that Russia is bad. We all remember The Lightbringer mocking Mitt Romney for saying that Russia was a threat. What was weird was that Romney’s claim was one of the few things he ever got right.
The Democrats were also Team Soviet during the Cold War.
When Trump defeated Granny Maojackets in 2016 the Dems and their media mouthpieces needed a scapegoat and Russia suddenly became the bad guy. Trump’s presidency was then hampered by a sham investigation into nonexistent “Russian collusion.”
Is Joe Biden a Russian asset? If he isn’t, Old Joe needs another cognitive test to make sure he knows he’s supposed to be playing for our side.
Joe Biden handed Russian President Vladimir Putin an 8 billion-euro gift when he grandly waived sanctions on the company that’s building the Nord Stream 2 pipeline. Those sanctions, imposed by Congress in 2019, pretty much sounded the death knell for the project, which would have doubled the Russian capacity to sell natural gas to western and northern Europe. Work on the project was hampered by companies not wanting to be sanctioned by the U.S. for building the pipeline.
Enter Joe Biden with a lifeline for Putin — and the monopolistic Russian energy companies building the project. Putin had staked a lot of prestige on finishing the pipeline. Thank God for Joe Biden, right Vlad?
The formerly Russia-obsessed mainstream media has now lost all curiosity about any possible buddy-buddy action between the president and Moscow. Maybe the hacks are exhausted from the three years they spent writing all of that fiction during Trump’s time in office. The pandemic was the only thing distracted them from the non-story. All of my liberal friends in the entertainment industry were still yammering on about it until Trump left office.
American political journalists were irresponsible, gushing schoolgirls for the eight years that Obama was in office. It was difficult to imagine them ever being worse.
Well, here we are.
Journalists must all have sore necks from looking the other way during these early months of the Biden era. They’ve taken the lack of curiosity they had during the Obama years and put it on steroids. When they are forced to report something, they just make stuff up.
Biden’s foreign policy is an unmitigated disaster thus far. It’s only going to get worse. This would be a great time for some real journalism to make a comeback but those days are gone forever. This administration has no incentive to ever do anything well because all of Biden’s handlers know that the MSM will either ignore or run interference for their never ending series of train wrecks.
The only people being honest are those of us in conservative media and the Democrats are forever trying to marginalize us or shut us down. It’s beyond Orwellian. We’re not going anywhere though.
Oh, and we’ve always known that Russia is bad.
Everything Isn’t Awful
Size Doesn’t Matter But for the Heart Size as Whale Calf Found to Have Been Adopted by Dolphin Mom 🐬
Dolphins adopting other species’ babies isn’t unheard of, but it’s rare to record the phenomenon with such a significant difference in species size! https://t.co/LkMqkm1P5Z
— Good News Network (@goodnewsnetwork) May 20, 2021
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
Israel accepts an Egyptian-brokered ceasefire. IDF holds back a Hamas “finale strike” . . . The security cabinet voted on Thursday, May 20, to accept a ceasefire in its 11-day operation to combat a Hamas and Islamic Jihad rocket blitz from Gaza. An Egyptian source said the two sides had agreed in principle to a mutual halt in hostilities, but details had yet to be worked out. The ministers were unanimous in their decision after a detailed briefing on the proposal and the state of play. Egyptian led the effort to broker a ceasefire. Israel’ national security adviser Meir Ben Shabbat received from Egypt the proposal to restore calm 12 days after Hamas launched a fresh round of rocket fire, starting with Jerusalem. DEBKAfile
Biden grabs credit from Egypt for Israel-Hamas ceasefire . . .
Netanyahu ignored Biden for days as the president begged him to stop bombing Hamas in Gaza. After, finally, Egypt brokered a ceasefire, Biden claimed credit. From a piece Keith wrote for Fox News: President Biden sought to take credit for a cease-fire Thursday between Israel and Hamas, despite credible reports that it was Egypt that brokered the peace. Biden, who spoke at the White House, included a sentence in his remarks commending Egyptian officials for their “critical role” in ending the fighting. But he repeatedly emphasized the intensive work he said was done by his own administration. White House Dossier
The Revolution Comes for Israel: What makes this war different—and disturbing . . . Israel has battled Hamas four times since the terror organization seized control of the Gaza Strip in 2007. Each battle unfolds the same way: Hamas launches rockets at Israel’s civilian population, Israel bombs Hamas targets, and the fighting continues until terrorist infrastructure is sufficiently degraded so that the rocket fire stops for a few years. Israelis call it “mowing the lawn.” The last major clash was in 2014. In its origins, order of battle, and strategy and tactics, Operation Guardian of the Walls, which began May 10, resembles these previous flareups. But this time, everything is different. The region has changed. In 2014 the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action legitimized the nuclear program of Israel’s archenemy Iran. Its adoption and America’s withdrawal from the agreement in 2018, realigned the Middle East along the axis of Iranian power. The result was an Arab-Israel détente formalized in the 2020 Abraham Accords. From a regional perspective, the Palestinian cause is less important than Iran’s ambitions. Israel has changed. Washington Free Beacon
Politics
Americans Don’t Like Kamala Harris . . . Democrats have a problem that doesn’t appear to have an easy fix. That problem? Americans don’t like Vice President Kamala Harris. This personal distaste is reminiscent of that of Hillary Clinton, whose unlikability far exceeds any likability. In a recent YouGov poll, Harris finds herself under water by nearly 10 percentage points, with 49% of Americans having an unfavorable view of the president-in-waiting. Patriot Post
Oh, no! Who would have thought? What a bunch of racists.
Biden Admin Hollows Out Trump-Era COVID Protections at the Border . . . The Biden administration is preparing to gut COVID-19 safety restrictions on illegal immigrants and asylum seekers and essentially reverse the Trump administration’s pandemic health protections without public notice, according to documents circulating within U.S. Customs and Border Protection. While the Trump administration took a hardline approach to turning away immigrants to avoid “a serious danger of introduction of [a communicable] disease,” at the start of the COVID-19 pandemic, Customs and Border Protection is now quietly walking much of that guidance back. A May memo authored by senior staff at CBP, emphasizes the ability of “customs officers [to] determine [who] should be allowed into the United States.” Washington Free Beacon
Biden flying illegal immigrant minors into Tennessee in the dead of night . . . The Biden administration is sending illegal immigrant minors into Tennessee. It’s unclear where else illegal immigrants are being seeded throughout the country. Lawmakers from Tennessee are sounding the alarm after reports that the Biden administration has been flying unaccompanied minors into the state in the middle of the night without their knowledge. The White House is transporting migrants into an airport in Chattanooga from where they are bused to cities within the Southeast. White House Dossier
Trump slams ‘weak’ Republicans who don’t want to talk about Arizona audit . . . Former President Trump on Thursday slammed “weak” Republicans who don’t want to talk about the audit of the 2020 election results in Maricopa County, Ariz. During a sit-down interview with One America News Network (OANN), Trump reiterated his unsupported claims of election fraud. The former president told OANN reporter Chanel Rion that Republican voters want to know “what’s going on in Arizona.” “That’s all people ask me. They say ‘what’s going on in Arizona?’ They want to talk about the election fraud. The weak Republicans don’t want to talk about it,” Trump said. “ The Hill
Here Are The 35 Republicans Who Voted For The January 6 Commission . . . Thirty-five House Republicans voted in favor of a commission to investigate the Jan. 6 Capitol riot, despite the opposition of party leadership. The 35 Republicans, including former Conference Chairwoman Liz Cheney and Freshman Class President Stephanie Bice, joined all 217 present Democrats in supporting the legislation. Daily Caller
Democrats, GOP face crowded primaries as party leaders lose control . . . Dozens of candidates are entering races for seats in critical states across the country as both Democrats and Republicans confront the prospect of crowded primary fields ahead of next year’s midterm elections. In years past, party leaders have stepped in to anoint a favored candidate, bestowing the title of presumptive nominee on a contender who appeared straight from central casting. But this year, the democratization of both fundraising and the ability to communicate with voters has robbed each side of much of their power to influence primary voters. The result has been a mad dash to enter the races that will decide which party controls the Senate in the next Congress. The Hill
National Security
US seeing wave of ‘textbook anti-Semitism’ amid Israel-Gaza tensions . . . From New York and California to Illinois and Utah, the recent conflict between Israel and Gaza has generated a disturbing backlash against American Jews – who have found themselves the targets of death threats, hate speech and violent physical attacks. “Stop telling me this is about Israel and Gaza,” said a New Yorker who was confronted by a pro-Palestinian mob on his way to synagogue this week. “My people are being targeted across the United States in broad daylight. This is textbook anti-Semitism, and we will continue to live in danger until the public starts to recognize it for what it is.” His remarks were a common refrain rippling across U.S. Jewish communities in recent days. Here’s a look at some recent incidents throughout the country. Fox News
ICE picking up 75% fewer criminal illegal aliens . . . Get ready for crimes committed by those in the country who already have a record of bad behavior, as the Biden administration stops targeting them. No doubt, the “police reform” President Biden also supports will make it even easier for these people to commit crimes against Americans. Rules imposed by President Joe Biden to reduce arrests and deportations of undocumented immigrants have slashed the targeting of criminal illegal immigrants by ICE agents 75%, greatly endangering communities they are released in, according to law enforcement and immigration officials. White House Dossier
Pipeline ransom attack exposes risk of digitizing US infrastructure . . . Motorists on the US east coast have learnt to bear up when problems hit their most important fuel artery, the Colonial pipeline. Drivers queued at petrol stations because hackers had infected the pipeline’s information technology systems with ransomware, forcing its owner to stop the flow of 2.5m barrels a day of petroleum products. The attack exposed how a push to digitize critical infrastructure has created new opportunities for cyber criminals, putting at risk essential goods and services such as energy, water and healthcare. Digitization has enabled industrial companies and utilities to increase efficiency with greater oversight and control of their sprawling operations, which in the case of the Colonial pipeline extends 5,500 miles through a network branching from Texas to New Jersey. Financial Times
Moonlight Maze cyber attack on US networks by Russia in late 1990s should have been a wake up call to build security into the IT networks. It wasn’t. The internet was designed for maximum access, which minimized security. Everyone scrambles now to add security, as an afterthought, a difficult task.
If the recent cyber attack on Colonial pipeline by “Russia-based” hackers doesn’t serve as a wake-up call to start thinking seriously about securing our networks – especially now that the precedent for incentivizing criminal behavior has been set, by paying ransom – we can expect a cyber Pearl Harbor. The Russians developed a certain doctrinal concept, which I described in my upcoming book “Putin’s Playbook.” Here’s how they characterize it: “It doesn’t take much for the entire system to collapse, if you strike at the right spot.”
US special ops investing in new technology as warfare evolves . . . The U.S. Special Operations Command (SOCOM) is investing in new technology as warfare evolves, Gen. Richard Clarke said earlier this week. The SOCOM commander specifically mentioned cyberthreats, including the Colonial Pipeline hack that led to a significant gas shortage in areas across the East Coast after a Russian ransomware group called DarkSide attacked the company’s software, as well as global threats from China and Russian disinformation campaigns. Fox Business
UFOs – The Next National Security Threat . . . Here’s what Newt had to say during his most recent Inner Circle Live Event in which he answers a question about the recent developments with UFOs.
I had a long talk today with Bob Walker, who I served with in Congress and who was a one-time chairman of the Science and Technology Committee. I found the 60 Minutes piece on UFOs very compelling, so I wanted to know his take. The two most likely explanations are either that the Chinese or the Russians have developed a technology that is generations ahead of us. I don’t think it’s very likely, and certainly some of the things that these unidentified flying objects are doing are so extraordinary that it’s kind of hard to believe they’d have that kind of technology without us knowing. I would not rule out the possibility that these are visitors from another planet. Gingrich360
Coronavirus
Psaki won’t say if evidence disproves COVID Wuhan lab leak theory . . . White House press secretary Jen Psaki would not say Thursday whether the Biden administration has seen evidence that COVID-19 did not leak from a lab in the Chinese city of Wuhan. Psaki chided Fox News correspondent Peter Doocy after he put the question to her. “. . . there needs to be an independent, transparent investigation and that needs to happen with the cooperation and data provided from the Chinese government,” Psaki continued. “We don’t have enough information at this point to make an assessment.” New York Post
Expecting the Chinese to provide accurate and complete data is stupid or naive, or both. To have ‘enough’ information, you have to dig for it, Jen. Tell CIA to task its HUMINT sources in China.
Oh, wait, “The Agency” let its informants in China get rounded up and executed by the CCP, after their identities were compromised. Guess, we have to reach out to Hunter to work his sources in Bejing.
Marjorie Taylor Greene shreds warning letter received after violating face mask requirement . . . Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene shared a video showing her shredding what the congresswoman said was a warning she received from House Speaker Nancy Pelosi for not wearing a face mask on the House floor. Ms. Greene, Georgia Republican, appeared maskless on the House floor in violation of chamber rules for the second time in as many days. “You can’t discriminate against people simply because they won’t wear a mask, and today I refused to wear a mask on the House floor . . .” Ms. Greene said in the video while displaying a letter she claimed to have received from the California Democrat. Washington Times
International
Putin warns Russia’s enemies will have ‘teeth knocked out’ . . . The Russian President warned on Thursday that those who attack the country will “have their teeth knocked out.” Vladimir Putin was speaking at a government meeting when he made the strong comment saying Russia’s enemies were looking to clip its wings every time the nation grew stronger. He didn’t name the country’s adversaries explicitly, but it comes at a time of difficult relations with the West. Putin said that “everyone wants to bite us somewhere or to bite off something from us. But they — those who are going to do it — should know that we will knock out their teeth so that they cannot bite.” “It is obvious, and the key to this is the development of our armed forces. Euronews
Putin is signaling, ahead of the summit with Biden – who called him a killer, meaning it as an insult, but for the ex-KGB operative it’s a complement” – who is in the position of strength.
Biden must not meet with Putin. He has already given many gifts to Putin – signed the START treaty, waived sanctions on Russia’s pipeline, while canceling Keystone XL, initiated US troops’ withdrawal from Afghanistan, is relentlessly degrading US military.
What is there to meet about? Russia will not help the US with the Iran problem or terrorism problem, as many “experts” hope it will. Is Biden planning to convince Putin not to withdraw from the Open Skies Treaty that Russia was cheating on, to collect intelligence on US critical infrastructure targets to enable its wartime doctrine? That would be equally dumb.
American Cold War Adviser Asks ‘Gentleman’ Vladimir Putin for Russian Citizenship . . . An American historian who advised the former President Ronald Reagan about the Soviet Union in the final years of the Cold War, has appealed to Vladimir Putin to grant her Russian citizenship. Suzanne Massie, 90, is a Russia expert who schooled the late Republican president about the country and its people during his dealings with the last Soviet leader, Mikhail Gorbachev. Newsweek
Useful idiot.
Newsweek has been peddling Russian propaganda of late. BTW, the New York Post story titled ‘Pentagon reportedly running secret army of 60,000 around the world,’ which I linked to a couple days ago, originally came from Newsweek. The story is Russian “active measure,” another form Moscow’s special intelligence tradecraft that I discuss in my book. It was pointed to me by my friend and mentor, a former very senior intelligence and national security official. After a very thorough second look, I agreed with my mentor. (Thank you, KD!) My apologies for that.
Money
Consumer Prices Outpace Americans’ Wage Growth As Inflation Surges . . . Massive government spending has decreased the value of the American dollar and triggered increased consumer prices, which economic experts said will only get worse. Americans will continue to see higher prices across the board, from food and gasoline to home appliances and cars, as the federal government continues to propose more stimulus into the economy without an adequate plan to pay for it. Even if the government doesn’t pass legislation increasing taxes, higher prices ultimately amount to an “inflation tax,” some of the experts said. “Over the past few months, we have seen an inflation rate that is much higher than where we’ve become accustomed to,” Heritage Foundation research fellow Joel Griffith told the Daily Caller News Foundation Daily Caller
Janet Yellen makes an idiot of Pete Buttigieg . . . Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen just made a punk out of Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg. Yellen called on the business community Tuesday to help foot the bill for President Joe Biden’s more than $4 trillion American Jobs Plan and American Families Plan, which include every wish list item proposed by the Democratic Party going back nearly 50 years. This is an interesting development, considering Buttigieg claimed last week the White House’s “infrastructure” plan “is paid for. Washington Examiner
Bidenomics on hold? Poor economic reports raise caution flags for massive spending plans . . . Market economists warn of weakened recovery and rising prices, even as Fed chairman counsels calm. As problems for President Biden multiply at home and abroad, Bidenomics — the massive public spending that drives the president’s economic and domestic agenda — suddenly faces especially strong headwinds, as bad reports on jobs and inflation have raised giant yellow caution flags. The month of April produced an unexpectedly disappointing jobs report, followed by a sharp rise in inflation — at the grocery store and the gas pump — that is being felt alike in homes across the nation and in the financial markets, which were sent into a frenzy by the numbers. And Americans continue to line up for (expensive) gas all along the East Coast ahead of Memorial Day. Just the News
You should also know
Food Supply Chains Are Stretched as Americans Head Back to Restaurants . . . Americans are returning to restaurants, bars and other dining places as Covid-19 restrictions come down, adding new strains in food supply chains.
Suppliers and logistics providers say distributors are facing shortages of everyday products like chicken parts, as well as difficulty in finding workers and surging transportation costs as companies effectively try to reverse the big changes in food services that came as coronavirus lockdowns spread across the U.S. last year. “Over the last six weeks, we have seen the market come roaring back faster than anybody would have anticipated,” said Mark Allen, chief executive of the International Foodservice Distributors Association. “Everybody is trying to turn it on immediately and the capacity might not be there.” Wall Street Journal
CNN’S View of Rioters Depends on Its Politics . . . CNN aired an anti-Republican prime-time special on May 16, titled “A Radical Rebellion: The Transformation of the GOP.” Host Fareed Zakaria lamented how “An American president incited an angry mob to attack the U.S. Capitol.” Zakaria decree the GOP as “a band of ideological warriors with apocalyptic visions that fuel the end of days, see opponents as traitors and devils, and believes that all methods are sanctioned in its battle to save civilization and itself.” Just five days prior, CNN’s Zakaria explained away Hamas’ launching hundreds of missiles at Israeli cities. They “have to” kill innocent people to get attention, he says. “What the Palestinians have to—I mean, they’re frustrated. They’re trying to get—uh—get some kind of attention.” Speaking of cognitive dissonance, on the same Sunday night Zakaria was decrying Capitol rioters, CNN aired an episode of “United Shades of America” that celebrated the leftist protesters of Portland. Daily Signal
Guilty Pleasures
Maine Police Chief Loses License After Faking Report To Avoid Meeting . . . A former Maine police chief wanted to skip out of a public meeting so badly that it cost him his career. A law enforcement oversight board has decided to revoke the license of former Fryeburg Police Chief Joshua Potvin after an investigation found Potvin, who had been chief for six years, invented a suspicious person report so he could ditch a Fryeburg Board of Selectmen meeting in February 2020.
The Maine Criminal Justice Academy decision said Potvin engaged in a multi-step fraud that began with texting one of his officers and asking her to call him out of the meeting. Potvin then drove his cruiser to the Fryeburg Fairgrounds. Potvin then used the computer in his cruiser to create a false entry in the department dispatch system that said he drove there in response to a report of a suspicious person. He also entered a fairground employee’s license plate number into the entry. The academy voted in February to take away Potvin’s license. HuffPost
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Quick Hits: Today’s Top Stories
Israel and Hamas have agreed to a ceasefire after a violent 11 days. Both Israel and Hamas confirmed the agreement in statements. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu added in his statement that “the reality on the ground … will determine the future of the operation.”
The House passed a $1.9 billion emergency spending bill to beef up security around the Capitol building. The bill was passed by only one vote, with some members of “the squad” of progressive Democrats voting no because it would give more money to police. The funding is a response to the January 6 attacks on the Capitol.
President Joe Biden signed the COVID-19 Hate Crimes Act into law yesterday, which aims to curb violence and hate crimes against Asian-Americans.
The Biden Administration announced ICE will no longer use two Department of Homeland Security facilities in Georgia and Massachusetts after reports of abuse at the facilities. A whistleblower reported that doctors at the Irwin County Detention Center were performing unwanted hysterectomies and other unauthorized medical procedures.
Secretary of State Anthony Blinken sat down with Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov on Wednesday in anticipation of a meeting with the two country’s leaders later in the summer. This was the first meeting between high-level U.S. and Russian officials during the Biden administration. A State Department official said the meeting was “constructive.”
The United States confirmed 29,511 new cases of COVID-19 yesterday per the Johns Hopkins University COVID-19 Dashboard, with 3.4 percent of the 879,984 tests reported coming back positive. An additional 664 deaths were attributed to the virus on Thursday, bringing the pandemic’s American death toll to 588,531. According to the Centers for Disease Control, 25,948 Americans are currently hospitalized with COVID-19. Meanwhile, 2,107,077 COVID-19 vaccine doses were administered yesterday, with 160,177,820 Americans having now received at least one dose.
Biden Lifts Sanctions on Russian Gas Pipeline Company
Back in February, we wrote to you about the resumption of construction on Russia’s Nord Stream 2 gas pipeline—and the Biden administration’s apparent indifference despite overwhelming bipartisan support for halting the project. On Thursday, the White House officially notified Congress of plans to waive sanctions on Nord Stream 2 AG, the German company overseeing the undertaking, and its CEO (and friend of President Vladimir Putin) Matthias Warnig.
As first reported by Axios on Tuesday, the removal of congressionally mandated sanctions by the U.S. government could allow for the pipeline’s completion by early summer, connecting Russian natural gas to Central and Western Europe by way of Germany. In addition to the waivers, the report also named eight new Russian companies and ships involved in the conduit’s construction to be sanctioned. But with 95 percent of the pipeline already completed, lawmakers fear that the addition of new entities—without the inclusion of the involved German parties—will lend the Kremlin a foreign policy win.
Putin has long eyed the project as an inroad into Europe, with aims to foster greater dependence on the Russian energy sector in the traditionally “tough on Russia” countries of the EU. In addition, the 750-mile pipeline bypasses Ukraine, through which Russian gas has traditionally flowed to the economic and strategic advantage of U.S. allies in Kyiv.
To curb Moscow’s influence, former President Donald Trump signed a law in 2019 threatening companies involved in the pipeline’s construction with sanctions. Several companies temporarily suspended their work in fear of retaliation from the White House. And in January 2021, a bipartisan group of lawmakers authorized sanctions on any entity that “provided services for the testing, inspection or certification” of the pipeline. Despite both measures, construction resumed February 6, and the conduit is nearly complete.
This Biden administration’s decision to lift sanctions on pipeline construction appears to be in deference to Germany, which has a vested economic interest in Nord Stream 2’s completion. But the move also directly contradicts a statement Secretary Blinken made during his confirmation hearing opposing construction of the pipeline. “The president-elect strongly agrees with you that Nord Stream 2 is a bad idea,” Blinken said, adding: “I am determined to do whatever we can to prevent [its] completion.”
Earlier this week, we filled you in on how, in the wake of the Centers for Disease Control’s latest guidance that vaccinated people need not wear masks, many states that had still been enforcing mask mandates moved to lift them. A few Republican-led states, however, are using the new guidance to go farther: not simply removing state-wide mask mandates, but forbidding cities and even schools from implementing their own mask requirements at all.
On Tuesday, Texas Gov. Greg Abbott, a Republican, issued an executive order prohibiting any government entities, including school districts, from requiring masks. And on Thursday, Iowa GOP Gov. Kim Reynolds signed an education bill with a similar provision into law. While the Texas order won’t be enforced until June 4—after the end of the school year for most state public schools—Iowa’s new law went into effect immediately, leaving districts scrambling to adjust.
“The state of Iowa is putting parents back in control of their child’s education and taking greater steps to protect the rights of all Iowans to make their own health care decisions,” Reynolds said in a statement. “I am proud to be a governor of a state that values personal responsibility and individual liberties.”
Last week, the interim director of the Iowa Department of Public Health encouraged schools to drop their mandates—although she also acknowledged that “some parents may want their child to continue to wear a cloth face covering for reasons that make sense for their family or that child’s individual health situation.”
We know, you’ve heard a lot about the Brood X cicada situation on the East Coast. So much that you might even be tired of hearing about it. But we promise, this interactive graphic from the Washington Post that walks you through the life of one of these cicadas is worth checking out. (Make sure the sound is on!)
You may not have seen this coming, but Miami is slowly becoming a sort of second Silicon Valley. This is no accident; Mayor of Miami Francis Suarez wants it to be seen as a place for the free market to explode. In this piece for Reason, Daniel Raisbeck talked to Mayor Suarez, but also to Latin American immigrants, who are, he writes, the true drivers of the economy in Miami: “Miami’s ascendance in the 21st Century hinges on whether it can continue to fulfill its role as the greatest city in Latin America that just happens to be located in the United States.”
On Thursday’s Advisory Opinions, Sarah and David go deep on abortion case law, Justice Elena Kagan’s spicy dissent in Edwards v. Vannoy, and a UNC Chapel Hill tenure dispute.
Jonah’s Remnant episode this morning starts off with further ruminations on his midweek column on Israel and antisemitism, then reads from a Commentary piece on the anti-capitalist tendencies of medieval antisemites and the antisemitic tendencies of more modern communists.
Leslie Eastman: “If you are looking for a Drudge alternative, I strongly recommend Rantingly.com, which offers a great assortment of links from a variety of sources….including Legal Insurrection. I have been a follower now since late last year. The story selections are excellent, as is the lack of drama and distortions in the presentation. It is outstanding.”
Stacey Matthews: “What a surprise. CNN’s Chris Cuomo will not face punishment from the network after it was revealed Thursday that he advised his brother and NY Gov. Andrew Cuomo on how to handle the numerous sexual harassment and assault allegations against him. To state for the record once again, CNN is not a news organization.”
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Partisan January 6th Commission Passed in the House
On Wednesday, the House of Representatives voted to create an allegedly bipartisan commission investigating the January 6th riots involving the storming of the Capitol, in order to prevent such acts from occurring again. The bill had surprising bipartisan support, passing 252 to 175, although many Republicans spoke out against the commission.
In order to pass in the Senate, currently split 50-50 between Democrats and Republicans, the bill would need 60 votes. With vocal opposition from Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, who claimed the commission is “slanted and unbalanced,” it may be difficult for Democrats to find 10 Republicans willing to support their endeavor. Donald Trump likewise expressed his objection to the legislation.
The bipartisan nature of the commission is somewhat in question. Marisa Schultz explained the complexity in Fox News, writing,
“The bipartisan agreement met one major Republican demand by including an equal number of members from each party, and it requires majority approval to issue subpoenas. But it did not meet another condition that McCarthy and some other Republicans wanted: to investigate other political violence, such as Antifa riots, in addition to the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol.”
If the commission is truly concerned about domestic terrorism, what possible reason would they have to object to investigating the riots from this summer alongside the Capitol riot? Unless this commission is not actually about preventing violence, but rather political posturing. The Wall Street Journal Editorial Board explores this question.
Howard Kurtz further looked into the politicization for Fox News, writing
“Whatever the merits of an independent probe, which President Joe Biden also backed this week, it’s pretty clear the ultimate target would be Trump, not to mention the Republicans who voted not to certify some of the Electoral College results. And it’s true that a Senate committee is already digging into the matter, and federal prosecutors have charged more than 400 people in the attack.
Since it was pro-Trump supporters who stormed the building, it’s in the Democrats’ interest to keep talking about it until … oh, 2022 and beyond. The arguments are illuminating.”
Pro-Palestinian Mob’s Potential Hate Crime in LA
On Tuesday night, a violent pro-Palestine mob allegedly attacked Jewish diners, as was shown in a social media video. This triggered an LAPD investigation into whether or not the attack constitutes an anti-Semitic hate crime. LA Mayor Eric Garcetti took to Twitter to condemn the assault, saying, “L.A. is a city of belonging, not of hate. There is simply no place for anti-Semitism, discrimination, or prejudice of any kind in Los Angeles. And we will never tolerate bigotry and violence in our communities.” As violence continues to rage in Israel, we must not allow hatred to infect the discourse at home.
What to Watch – Friday Night Lights
Family, football, coming of age, and community in small town Texas are center stage in the astonishing sports drama tv series Friday Night Lights, based on the novel and film of the same name. With phenomenal characters and grounded storylines, Friday Night Lights is an endlessly watchable and rewatchable series.
I know I am definitely not the first person to recommend this show to you; despite not garnering great viewership when on air, the show gained a powerful following through word-of-mouth on streaming services. It’s currently available on Hulu and Peacock, and it’s a can’t miss.
The show effectively balances heavy drama and a feel-good vibe that only sports movies truly can accomplish. The narrative, characters, and world are so well-drawn that even if you’ve seen the show in its entirety, returning is a comforting and satisfying experience.
My family could not have more disparate tastes, to the point where it can be quite challenging to find something we all like, and we watched this show together and each adored it. It transcends every genre it could fall into – from sports drama to a teen show – by telling honest stories about likable and flawed people.
Paulina Enck is an intern at the Federalist and current student at Georgetown University in the School of Foreign Service. Follow her on Twitter at @itspaulinaenck
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May 21, 2021 01:00 am
Our politicians, doctors, and scientists say one thing on Monday with great conviction and sincerity, and by Wednesday they are saying the exact opposite with equal fervor. Read More…
May 21, 2021 01:00 am
Elected officials with law degrees must be held to high standards — people trust them not to lie about the law, let alone the facts. Read More…
It’s possible that Biden faked a basic task
May 20, 2021 01:00 am
Nothing seems real about the Biden presidency, so when a video seemingly catches Biden faking a basic life task, we shouldn’t be surprised. Read more…
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“Precious cargo” indeed.Within the harrowing account of a U.S. Army trainee going AWOL from Fort Jackson, South Carolina, and hijacking a school bus full of child … Read more
Florida authorities are hailing two civilians as heroes after the two jumped into action to assist a deputy who was under attack during a recent traffic stop. What are the details? Volusia County Sheriff’s Deputy Anthony Zimmerer pulled over a vehicle after it reportedly cut across all lanes of traffic earlier this week. … Read more
Former FBI Director Louis Freeh gave $100,000 to a trust for the grandchildren of President Joe Biden, according to newly surfaced emails. The financial contribution to Biden’s family allegedly happened in 2016, when Biden was vice president. The ex … Read more
Entering office, Biden was set up nicely for a smooth glide toward nearly effortless success. Instead, in just a few months, things are going downhill fast.
With David Zaslov leading the new Warner-Discovery entity, it remains to be seen if this merger means pricey cable-style bundles or ‘a la carte’ streaming.
Despite the public seeing lobbyists as ethical swamp dwellers with too much power, they still wield considerable influence in U.S. legislatures. Texas is no exception.
If senior military commanders are truly incapable of performing their duties to uphold discipline and justice, maybe they shouldn’t be senior military commanders.
The Transom is a daily email newsletter written by publisher of The Federalist Ben Domenech for political and media insiders, which arrives in your inbox each morning, collecting news, notes, and thoughts from around the web.
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40.) REUTERS
The Reuters Daily Briefing
Friday, May 21, 2021
by Linda Noakes
Hello
Here’s what you need to know.
Celebrations as Israel-Hamas fighting halts, inside the race to find a COVID-19 treatment pill, and Prince William’s astonishing rebuke after BBC cover-up
Today’s biggest stories
A Palestinian woman is kissed by her son after returning to their destroyed house following the Israel-Hamas truce, in Beit Hanoun in the northern Gaza Strip, May 21, 2021. REUTERS/Mohammed Salem
MIDDLE EAST
An Egyptian-mediated truce between Israel and Hamas took hold after the worst violence in years, with U.S. President Joe Biden pledging to salvage the devastated Gaza Strip and the United Nations urging renewed Israeli-Palestinian dialogue.
When the fighting halted, the celebrations began. Unable last week to celebrate Eid al-Fitr, the joyous Muslim feast marking the end of Ramadan, many Gazans took to the street at 2 a.m. as the ceasefire started.
Official tolls showing the number of deaths directly or indirectly attributed to the COVID-19 pandemic are likely to be a “significant undercount” and 6-8 million people may have died so far, the World Health Organization says. The U.N. agency officially estimates that around 3.4 million people have died directly as a result of the pandemic.
Drugmakers are racing to produce the first antiviral pill to treat COVID-19, similar to how Tamiflu fights influenza. But after more than a year of the pandemic – and the development of a number of effective vaccines – there is still no easy-to-administer treatment proven to be effective.
A new type of coronavirus believed to have originated in dogs was detected among patients hospitalised with pneumonia in 2017-2018, and may be the eighth unique coronavirus known to cause disease in humans if it is confirmed as a pathogen, a study says.
FILE PHOTO: Britain’s Prince William and Catherine, Duchess of Cambridge, visit Base25 to mark mental health awareness week in Wolverhampton, Britain, May 13, 2021. REUTERS/Molly Darlington/Pool
The U.S. Treasury Department offered to accept a global minimum corporate tax of at least 15% during international negotiations, a rate significantly below its proposed 21% minimum for U.S. multinational firms.
U.S. officials rushed to defend Amazon’s business practices in India after Reuters reported in February that the company had favored certain sellers on its website and bypassed local law that requires foreign e-commerce companies to treat all vendors equally, documents show.
Apple Chief Executive Tim Cook will take the witness stand today to defend the App Store, a booming part of the iPhone maker’s business that ‘Fortnite’ maker Epic Games says is a monopoly that Apple abuses.
Quote of the day
“Weekend headline risk could prompt another bout of extended wealth destruction for the weekend warriors”
Meet ‘Sunshine’ – born to a mother in a COVID coma
Hungarian mother Szilvia Bedo-Nagy only found out she had given birth to baby daughter Napsugar when she was brought out of an induced coma more than a month later, having tested positive for COVID-19 and contracted pneumonia.
Eurovision fans stranded in their home countries due to the pandemic are reaching out to friends and online communities to celebrate the event, known for its kitsch pop songs and flamboyant costumes.
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Vice President Harris was appointed to lead the Biden administration’s efforts on the border crisis, but it’s been 56 days and she hasn’t been to the border once.
So one GOP representative introduced a clever bill that just might work to convince Harris to step up to the plate and do her job. … Read more…
Multiple Democratic lawmakers – including AOC, Bernie Sanders and Rashida Tlaib – are endorsing policies to minimize Israel’s ability to fight back against attackers.
But they’re ignoring who started the conflict. … Read more…
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47.) ABC
May 21, 2021 – Having trouble viewing this email? Open it in your browser.
Morning Rundown
Rapid school reopenings may have led to thousands of COVID-19 cases, hundreds of deaths in Texas: An analysis from economists and public policy experts from the University of Kentucky reported that the rapid reopening of schools in Texas may have contributed to thousands of COVID-19 cases and hundreds of deaths. The study, called “School Reopening, Mobility and COVID-19 Spread: Evidence from Texas” — which has not been peer reviewed — used a statistical model to estimate that roughly 43,000 people contracted COVID-19 and possibly 800 people died in Texas two months after schools reopened statewide, when virus transmission already was high. During the 2020 fall semester, all Texas school districts reopened for in-person learning at different points at near-full capacity. The study estimates that over 90% of school districts in the Lone Star State opened fully in-person, compared to 42% nationally. Now, as schools across the U.S. end the school year and look forward to the next, health experts are urging school districts to be “smart” and “weigh the pros and cons” with reopening in the fall. They’re also urging everyone who’s eligible to get a vaccine to help lower community rates of infection. Currently, about 40% of Texans have been vaccinated, according to state data, but the vast majority of children have not. Those numbers are expected to change with the Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine being recently authorized for children ages 12 to 15.
Here’s what to expect for hurricane season 2021: 2020 was a record-breaking hurricane season with 30 named storms and some being “the most active” on record in the Atlantic Ocean. Now, as hurricane season approaches, forecasters are saying this year’s storms likely won’t surpass 2020’s historic level of activity. In this year’s hurricane outlook from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, forecasters predict a 60% chance of an above-normal 2021 hurricane season, which could consist of 13 to 20 named storms with winds of 39 mph or greater. Six to 10 could become hurricanes with winds of at least 74 mph. Three to five of those hurricanes could become Category 3, 4 or 5 storms with winds of 111 mph or higher, NOAA forecasted with 70% confidence. Experts say that the effects of climate change may be a contributing factor in the behavior of recent hurricane seasons, as well as rising sea levels, which make coastal communities more vulnerable to the storm surge.
Biden signs anti-Asian hate crime bill, marking ‘significant break’ in partisanship: President Joe Biden on Thursday signed into law the COVID-19 Hate Crimes Act that passed through Congress in an increasingly rare show of bipartisanship. The bill — which passed in the House of Representatives on Tuesday with a 364-62 vote after the Senate passed the bill last month — will direct the Justice Department to designate a point person to assist with expedited review of COVID-19 hate crimes and make grants available to help local law enforcement improve reporting of bias-driven incidents. Since the pandemic began, more than 6,600 hate incidents against the AAPI community have been reported, according to a report this month from Stop AAPI Hate, a national coalition addressing anti-Asian racism. Democrats have argued the rise in crimes against Asian Americans is linked to former President Donald Trump’s branding of COVID-19 as the “China virus,” among other names, but Vice President Kamala Harris, the first woman and person of Asian descent to hold the office, said the violence is nothing new. Among the past violent incidents against Asian Americans includes the death of 17-year-old Maggie Long. In 2017, her death in a house fire was ruled as a homicide, but on Thursday the Denver Federal Bureau of Investigation announced they are reopening the case and investigating it as a hate crime. “This bill brings us one step closer to stopping hate, not only for Asian Americans, but for all Americans,” Harris said. Click here to read about how one Asian American woman who survived a horrific attack in New York in March is recovering and helping other victims of anti-Asian violence.
Professor puts crib in office to support graduate student with infant daughter: A professor at Massachusetts Institute of Technology is earning praise for the unique way he is helping with work-life balance for a student mom. Troy Littleton, who runs a research lab at the college, put a travel crib in his lab’s office to help one of his graduate students, Karen Cunningham, who is the mom of 10-month-old Katie. “It’s really useful,” Cunningham said. “I can put Katie down and just go do something quick, and I can see her and talk to her and she can nap in there. It’s great.” Littleton shared a photo of the crib on Twitter, and it quickly went viral, sparking a conversation on the struggles working mothers face and how to support them. Over the past 15 months of the pandemic, more than 2 million women have left the workforce, with many citing child care demands as the primary reason, data shows. The National Women’s Law Center also reported that women are returning to the workforce at a slower rate than men. But for Cunningham, she appreciates people such as Littleton who support working moms. “What Troy’s been doing in creating a really supportive and inclusive lab, I think that does make a really big difference, and it’s great to have an example of that,” she said.
GMA Must-Watch
This morning on “GMA,” Taraji P. Henson joins us live to talk about a new mental health initiative. And for this week’s “Binge This,” we have music, TV and book recommendations to celebrate AAPI Heritage Month. Plus, don’t miss our live interview with Patton Oswalt, who will be talking about his new Marvel series, “M.O.D.O.K.” We will also reveal our Pet of the Week. All this and more only on “GMA.”
On the good news front, the ceasefire between Israel and Hamas seems to be holding. This morning we dig into reaction from the region and the diplomacy that made it happen. Plus the latest revelations from Prince Harry and a surprising American finalist in the Eurovision Song Contest.
A bilateral cease-fire seemed to be holding early Friday after Israel and Hamas agreed to halt nearly two weeks of fighting that left hundreds dead and parts of the impoverished Gaza Strip reduced to rubble.
In both Israel and Gaza, there was a sense of joy and relief that the fighting was at least over for now. The more than 10 days of aerial attacks killed at least 243 Palestinians in Gaza and 12 Israelis, according to officials on both sides.
The White House cast the cease-fire announcement Thursday as a victory for what it had dubbed “quiet, intensive diplomacy” led by President Joe Biden. We take a closer look at how Biden handled his first major foreign policy crisis here.
And while the intense fighting and animosity between Israel and Hamas we saw during the conflict wasn’t new, the level of pro-Palestinian support in the U.S. was. We take a closer look at the diverse movement calling for the end of U.S. aid to Israel here.
“I was so angry with what happened to her, and the fact that there was no justice at all,” Prince Harry said of his mother as he once again opened up about his mental health to Oprah Winfrey in a new interview released on Friday. The latest royal revelations come on the heels of an independent report Thursday that said the former BBC reporter Martin Bashir used “deceitful” tactics to secure his own bombshell interview with Harry’s mother, Princess Diana, in 1995. Prince William said the lies presented to his mother by Bashir contributed to her “fear, paranoia and isolation” prior to her death.
An enormous chunk of ice bigger than Rhode Island has broken off an Antarctic ice shelf, according to the European Space Agency. The floating mass covers more than 1,600 square miles, making it the largest iceberg in the world.
Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, D-N.Y., said she still thinks about the “extraordinarily traumatizing event” that took place at the Capitol on Jan. 6 and how it impacted herself and other politicians.
The animals were seized from “Tiger King Park,” run by Jeffrey and Lauren Lowe, who were featured in the Netflix docuseries of the same name, after allegations of neglect.
A Dutch oven is a versatile kitchen tool that can be used for everything from roasting chicken to baking bread. Here’s how to shop for the best Dutch oven.
One fun thing
Tiny San Marino got a big dose of star power Thursday as U.S. rapper Flo Rida helped the city state qualify for the grand final of the 65th Eurovision Song Contest.
The American rapper told The Associated Press he was enjoying the Eurovision vibe as San Marino reached the final for just the third time.
“I love the energy, you know, to be up there,” the rapper said. “I mean, it’s just amazing, man. The whole set up, it’s like over the top.”
From NBC’s Chuck Todd, Mark Murray and Carrie Dann
FIRST READ: For Biden, foreign policy has taken a backseat to domestic affairs – even after violence in the Middle East
It’s been a big foreign-policy week for Joe Biden’s young presidency – escalating violence in Gaza, Thursday’s announced cease-fire and now Friday’s White House meeting with South Korea’s president.
But maybe the biggest takeaway from NBC News’ reporting on Biden’s handling of the rocket and missile launches in the Middle East is how much of it was centered on his desire to return back to domestic issues.
“To accomplish that, Biden chose not to publicly lay bare disagreements with his Israeli counterpart, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, although the two have their differences. He said little publicly about the issue and entertained few questions about the topic. During a trip to Michigan this week, Biden even joked about running over a reporter who wanted to ask him a question about Israel. And he backed Netanyahu’s assault on Gaza to an extent that surprised some fellow Democrats and angered others.”
Those of us who covered Biden when he chaired the Senate Foreign Relations Committee – or when he ran for president in 2007-2008 – might be surprised how little foreign affairs has steered his early president.
But amid a pandemic and big pushes on infrastructure and jobs, Biden’s MAIN focus so far has been on domestic issues.
Not international ones.
Virginia Dems make their pitch to voters
Frontrunner Terry McAuliffe emerged relatively unscathed from the third debate less than three weeks before the June 8 Democratic primary in Virginia’s gubernatorial race, with more attacks aimed at GOP nominee Glenn Youngkin than the former Dem governor.
But the debate allowed each of the five Democrats running for governor to make their pitch why they – and not their opponents – are the best candidate to face off against Youngkin in the fall.
Here was McAuliffe: “I’m here because the leadership of the Black Caucus of Virginia came to me and said, ‘Terry, no one leaned in more for the Black and brown community than you did’… We need experience now to lead us outta this very tough crisis. I did it before. I’ll do it again. And I have big, bold plans.”
Here was former Del. Jennifer Carroll Foy: “So the Republican Governors Association is attacking me because they are worried, and they should be. They know that I am the most electable in this race because I will out-inspire and outwork the Republicans in November. I flipped a Republican district while pregnant with twins and being out-spent and out-endorsed.”
Here was state Sen. Jennifer McClellan: “We don’t have to choose between a new perspective and experience, because I bring both. I bring the experience of someone whose parents lived through the tyranny of Jim Crow, during the Depression. And I came to the General Assembly as a 32-year-old Black woman from the most Democratic district in the state, operating in a body that was most white, Republican men over 50.”
Here was Lt. Gov. Justin Fairfax: “I believe the experience that we’ve had over the last four years– being part of the most progressive administration in the history of the Commonwealth of Virginia– is something that has really resonated with millions of voters around the commonwealth. I have been proud of the work that I’ve done to break the ties to expand Medicaid.”
And here was Del. Lee Carter: “Are people who are struggling to pay the rent because the Amazon deal jacked up the price of their housing gonna be excited to vote for any of the four candidates that supported it? Of course, they’re not… I’m the only candidate in this Democratic primary who’s never taken a single dime from fossil fuel corporations, who’s never taken a single dime from big banks.”
Youngkin fires back
Meanwhile, Youngkin released a statement responding to the debate, in which he knocked McAuliffe and invoked Carroll Foy in the process.
“It was abundantly clear … that Terry McAuliffe is just another all-talk, no-action career politician desperately clinging to power. The only thing ‘big and bold’ about him is his long list of failures and willingness to say anything regardless of the truth. I wholeheartedly agree with what Jennifer Carroll Foy said: we need to elect a new kind of leader, not recycle the same old policies and politicians of the past.”
Data Download: The numbers you need to know today
14: The combined number of times Terry McAuliffe said the names “Youngkin,” “Trump” or “Biden” at Thursday’s debate.
3: The combined number of times the four other Dem candidates – in total – said those names.
33,219,226: The number of confirmed cases of coronavirus in the United States, per the most recent data from NBC News and health officials. (That’s 28,241 more than yesterday morning.)
592,505: The number of deaths in the United States from the virus so far, per the most recent data from NBC News. (That’s 627 more than yesterday morning.)
279,397,250: The number of vaccine doses administered in the U.S.
35.2 percent: The share of Americans who are fully vaccinated.
TWEET OF THE DAY: A hefty bill
ICYMI: What ELSE is happening in the world?
Some of NBC’s top reporters take a look inside Biden’s strategy on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.
Politico reports that Biden is reaching out to local GOP officials as he tries to win support for his infrastructure bill.
Prosecutors say that Rudy Giuliani’s legal profession does not shield him from having his electronics seized.
The Senate may vote next week on the January 6 commission — but it looks likely to run into a filibuster.
Biden has signed an anti-Asian hate crimes bill into law.
The Arizona secretary of state says Maricopa County should replace voting machines turned over to an audit contractor because of concerns about election integrity.
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After 11 bloody days, Israel and Hamas agree to a cease-fire. Also, a wildfire in Santa Barbara is threatening homes and other structures. All that and all that matters in today’s Eye Opener. Your world in 90 seconds.
Check-in systems for some airlines are back online after an outage Friday morning. The technical issue with a global reservation system grounded flights and passengers at airports. Mola Lenghi reports from New York’s La Guardia Airport. Kris Van Cleave also joins “CBS This Morning” with what this means for travelers.
Plus: Trump administration spied on CNN reporter, the right’s wrong turn on economic liberty, and more…
Biden tax plan would cull financial data on masses of law-abiding, tax-compliant Americans. In the name of catching tax dodgers, the Biden administration is seeking serious snooping rights to oversee all American bank accounts and payment apps. “Instead of promising a chicken in every pot, Biden’s plan promises an auditor at every kitchen table,” commented Sen. Chuck Grassley (R–Iowa).
Under President Joe Biden’s proposal, 87,000 new IRS employees would be hired and everyone could expect more scrutiny of the flow of money to and from their financial accounts.
As it stands now, the government gets alerted to most income when the payer reports it to the IRS. If someone comes into money and the payer doesn’t report it to the IRS, the person paid is supposed to report this income—no matter how small—but it’s difficult for the IRS to know if they do not do so. Estimates suggest that “opaque” income sources have a misreporting rate of 55 percent.
Biden would change this, putting thousands of new IRS agents in charge of monitoring how much money goes into and out of individual bank accounts and payment service providers (like Paypal and Venmo) each year and investigating people whose cash flow doesn’t match what they report as income.
It’s how the administration proposes paying for the massive new spending measures in Biden’s American Families Plan. The schemes “would raise $700 billion in additional tax revenue over the next decade,” according to the American Families Plan Tax Compliance Agenda.
The administration talks about this increased IRS scrutiny as if it would only affect extremely wealthy tax scofflaws. But the extremely wealthy know they get extra IRS scrutiny and already have all sorts of tricks for shielding income from taxes and from regulators’ view.
Rather, it’s the folks who sometimes get paid “under the table” for informal gig work—babysitting, house cleaning, a stray manual labor job here and there, sex work, fixing a few cars, peddling homemade baked goods, occasional music gigs, selling things on eBay or Etsy, and so on—who probably aren’t likely to have elaborate schemes for hiding a little stray income from their checking accounts and payment apps.
Maybe the IRS wouldn’t investigate those who only bring in a relatively small amount of untaxed money—but maybe they would. After all, those 87,000 new employees can’t all be catching wily millionaires and billionaires.
The bottom line is that the IRS would have an unprecedented ability to at least target even the tiniest bits of unreported income.
“Account flows don’t actually represent income and deductions, so the government wouldn’t be able to match these reports with tax returns as it does with W-2s,” notesTheWall Street Journal. “The report says the information would give the government enough of a window into transactions to target audits more effectively where there are large discrepancies and that tax evaders would change their behavior because they know what information the government has.”
Biden’s report pledges that “audit rates will not rise relative to recent years for those with less than $400,000 in actual income.” Yet even if this pledge is kept, the IRS would still have a vast new mandate to spy on all sorts of U.S. financial accounts.
The plan would ultimately pull in data on masses of law-abiding, tax-compliant Americans, as Tax Policy Center Senior Fellow Steve Rosenthal pointed out in the Journal:
Although administration officials talk about going after wealthy tax dodgers with their expanded staffing, the bank reporting proposal wouldn’t do much to them, he said. That is because the highest-earning Americans are employing more sophisticated tax-dodging techniques than just declining to declare all their income.
The bank-reporting rules are designed to get a different group of people altogether—business owners who inflate their deductions and don’t report all their income.
“This is a political call by the Biden administration: Let’s not tell those guys, small-business guys, what we’re doing,” Mr. Rosenthal said.
The Biden administration calls this equal-opportunity spying equity.
“Third party information reporting is already provided on…wage, pension, and unemployment income,” states the American Families Plan Tax Compliance Agenda. “The President’s proposal would help make tax administration more equitable by subjecting financial flows…to third-party reporting as well.”
“The President’s proposal leverages the information that financial institutions already know about the accounts that they house,” the report states. “Financial institutions would add information about total account outflows and inflows to existing reporting on bank accounts,” giving the IRS “an additional lens into previously unreported income streams.”
All banks, brokerages, and other financial institutions would be required to report “gross inflows and outflows on all business and personal accounts from financial institutions, including bank, loan, and investment accounts.” The regime “would also cover foreign financial institutions and crypto asset exchanges and custodians,” and “reports would also be required from payment services providers so that businesses cannot shift out of traditional financial institutions to other kinds of platforms and avoid making their income visible to the IRS,” it says.
The report states that there would be “exceptions for accounts below a low de minimis gross flow threshold,” but not what that threshold would be. A footnote to this part simply states that “the proposal preserves significant flexibility for the Secretary and the IRS to design the new reporting requirements in the way that will be most effective for tax compliance efforts.”
FREE MINDS
Trump administration spied on CNN reporter. “The Trump administration secretly sought and obtained the 2017 phone and email records of a CNN correspondent,” the news agency reports.
The Justice Department informed CNN Pentagon correspondent Barbara Starr, in a May 13 letter, that prosecutors had obtained her phone and email records covering two months, between June 1, 2017 to July 31, 2017. The letter listed phone numbers for Starr’s Pentagon extension, the CNN Pentagon booth phone number and her home and cell phones, as well as Starr’s work and personal email accounts.
It is unclear when the investigation was opened, whether it happened under Attorney General Jeff Sessions or Attorney General William Barr, and what the Trump administration was looking for in Starr’s records. The Justice Department confirmed the records were sought through the courts last year but provided no further explanation or context.
FREE MARKETS
You can’t have political liberty without economic liberty…
• “Washington is rushing to regulate crypto. It’s a mess,” explainsProtocol.
• “Calling a classmate a racist slur on Snapchat is offensive,” but “it’s also protected speech,” Reason‘s Scott Shackford points out, in the face of a teen being arrested for a racist social media post.
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.
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55.) REALCLEARPOLITICS MORNING NOTE
05/21/2021
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Carl Cannon’s Morning Note
Gaza Aftermath; Charles Evans Hughes; Quote of the Week
By Carl M. Cannon on May 21, 2021 08:20 am
Good morning, it’s Friday, May 21, 2021, the day of the week when I reprise quotations intended to be uplifting or educational. Today’s comes from Amelia Earhart, who on this date in 1932 became the first woman to fly solo across the Atlantic Ocean.
Starting in Newfoundland a day earlier, Earhart had hoped to land in Paris, but fate and lousy weather brought her red Lockheed Vega to a cow pasture on a family farm outside Derry in Northern Ireland. When a laborer at the Gallagher farm asked her where she had come from, Earhart said simply, “America.”
“My curiosity got the better of me after a minute or two and I went up to the plane as well,” Mrs. Gallagher recalled later. “Standing beside it was a tousled-headed girl in trousers and leather coat. She didn’t seem at all excited.”
Movie-star-handsome aviator Charles Lindbergh had flown the first solo transatlantic flight in 1927, but when an equally charismatic and photogenic “aviatrix” did it five years later, the world was enthralled.
“Women must try to do things as men have tried,” Earhart noted in a 1937 letter to her husband, George Putnam. “They do get more glory than men for comparable feats. But, also, women get more notoriety when they crash.” It was a fateful and prophetic observation for a pilot whose disappearance that same year remains a source of eternal fascination. But it’s not the Amelia Earhart line I have in mind this morning. That will come in a moment. First, I’d point you to RCP’s front page, which presents our poll averages, videos, breaking news stories, and aggregated opinion pieces spanning the political spectrum. We also offer original material from our own reporters, columnists, and contributors:
* * *
Israel Faces Hard Problems After the Gaza Fighting. Charles Lipson explains why the political outcome of the conflict may be far different from the military outcome.
Where Is the Charles Evans Hughes of 2021? John Maxwell Hamilton and Bruce Sanford hold out Hughes as an example for both Democrats and Republicans: a principled man who narrowly lost to Woodrow Wilson in 1916, led the Supreme Court and held other high positions with distinction.
Why China Could Vanquish the U.S. in New Space Race. Brandon J. Weichert outlines Beijing’s ambitious plans, and the risks faced if America greets them with a shrug.
Will Biden’s Carter Impression Lead to Reagan 2.0? At RealClearPolicy, Brad Lips sees the potential for history to repeat itself.
States Must Team Up to Compete With California. At RealClearMarkets, Paul Watkins advises implementing cross-state regulatory harmonization to offer businesses an environment larger — and more appealing — than the Golden State’s.
Russian Aggression in the Baltics Will Not Look Like Crimea. At RealClearDefense, Sarah White writes that the development of a domestic air defense system in Latvia, Lithuania, or Estonia would make Putin think twice before launching an attack.
What Climate Science Tells Us, and What It Doesn’t. At RealClearEnergy, Rupert Darwall reviews Steven E. Koonin’s new book, “Unsettled.”
* * *
The letter quoted above was written to Amelia Earhart’s husband the day before her last flight. She wasn’t trying to assure him she’d return safely — she conceded she didn’t know that — but she explained that she was heading into danger because flying was her passion and because she felt obliged to other women to follow her heart.
“Please know that I am aware of the hazards,” she wrote. “I want to do it because I want to do it. Women must try to do things as men have tried. When they fail, their failure must be a challenge to others.”
House Democrats have moved to squash an effort to impose additional sanctions on the terrorist organization Hamas, yet another reflection of not only an anti-Israel sentiment but a pro-Hamas orientation among a vocal Democrat faction.
The Biden administration has succumbed to pressure within the Democratic Party, and has formally moved to open a gap with Israel and take a more neutral position in the Hamas-Israel conflict.
Condemnation came swiftly from local politicians and Jewish groups. It was one of several area incidents that have occurred in recent days that appeared to be targeting Jews.
Israel and Hamas, the designated terrorist group that has fired over 4,000 rockets indiscriminately at populated areas in the Jewish State, have agreed to a cease-fire.
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62.) 1440 DAILY DIGEST
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Good morning. It’s Friday, May 21, and we’re covering a truce in Israel, the outlook for the Atlantic hurricane season, and more. Have feedback? Let us know at hello@join1440.com.
Israel and Hamas approved a cease-fire yesterday to end an 11-day-long conflict that left at least 232 Palestinians and 12 Israelis dead. The truce, mediated by Egypt, went into effect yesterday at 7 pm ET.
Despite the agreement, each side differed on the terms of the truce. Israeli officials said it was a mutual cease-fire with a commitment to discuss issues related to the Gaza Strip—the Hamas-ruled Palestinian territory surrounded by Israel (see map)—at a later date. Hamas officials said it included policy concessions around policing Jerusalem’s Al-Aqsa Mosque and the looming possible removal of a number of Palestinian families from their Jerusalem homes. Both issues acted as catalysts for the recent violence.
International aid groups have warned of a humanitarian crisis in Gaza, including a lack of access to clean water and medicine.
Royal Deceit
A British reporter who led a historic 1995 interview with Princess Diana used deceitful tactics to score the sit-down, an investigation concluded yesterday. The probe found BBC journalist Martin Bashir faked documents to gain access to Diana, enabling him to persuade her to record the interview.
Watched by 23 million people—almost 40% of the United Kingdom at the time—the interview was one of the most candid ever given by a member of the royal family and rocked Buckingham Palace. Commenting on her marriage, Diana famously quipped “there were three of us” (w/video)—a reference to Prince Charles’ affair with Camilla Parker-Bowles. Diana and Charles began the divorce process a month after the episode aired. Bashir and BBC have since apologized for the tactics.
The interview has since drawn parallels to a March Oprah interview with Prince Harry and Meghan Markle.
Hurricane Season Returns
The Gulf Coast and the eastern United States are likely due for another above-average Atlantic hurricane season, according to a forecast from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Agency released yesterday.
The upcoming year is expected to see anywhere from 13 to 20 named storms—those with wind speeds above 39 mph—with six to 10 expected to develop into hurricanes. Of those, between three and five are likely to develop into Category 3 hurricanes or stronger. Warmer than average sea temperatures fuel the activity; hurricanes generally require the ocean water temperature to be above 80 degrees to a depth of 150 feet.
The season is not expected to match last year’s historic barrage of hurricanes. It was the most active year on record, with 30 named storms and seven Category 3 or stronger systems causing more than $50B in damage. Eleven storms made landfall in the US, breaking the 1916 record of nine.
The season officially starts June 1.
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IN THE KNOW
Sports, Entertainment, & Culture
>Roger Hawkins, drummer from legendary Muscle Shoals Rhythm Section, dies at 75 after an extended illness (More)
>Lego debuts “Everyone is Awesome!” its first LGBTQ playset for Pride Month (More) | “Hocus Pocus 2” confirmed with original stars Sarah Jessica Parker and Bette Midler for fall 2022 on Disney+ (More)
>Tim Tebow, Heisman winner and former NFL quarterback, signs one-year deal with Jacksonville Jaguars to play tight end (More) | Seven medical professionals charged with homicide in death of Argentine soccer legend Diego Maradona (More)
Science & Technology
>Eighth zoonotic coronavirus possibly identified, the first to jump from dogs to humans; different from SARS-CoV-2, researchers say the virus is unlikely to cause severe illness (More)
>Conservationist Jane Goodall wins the 2021 Templeton Prize; the prestigious award honors a living person working at the intersection of science and spirituality (More)
>World’s largest iceberg breaks from Antarctic ice shelf; dubbed A-76, the iceberg is roughly 1,600 square miles (More)
Business & Markets
>US stock markets up (S&P 500 +1.1%, Dow +0.6%, Nasdaq +1.8%) on strong jobs report (More)
>An estimated 444,000 Americans filed initial unemployment claims last week, a new pandemic-era low (More)
>Shares of Snap(Snapchat) soar 6%; company now has more than 500 million active users (More) | Robinhood, the no-fee online trading giant, to allow users to buy shares at initial public offering, a practice typically reserved for hedge funds and Wall Street firms (More)
From our partners: Go a level deeper with business and investing news. The Daily Upside newsletter delivers quality insights on the most important stories in business. And no, we aren’t talking about dogecoin. Sign up for free here.
Politics & World Affairs
>Average COVID-19 cases in the US fall to 29,000 per day, the lowest in 11 months; daily deaths averaging 550 per day, bringing the total to 588,539 (More) | Almost 61% of US adults have received at least one vaccine shot (More)
>President Joe Biden signs bill to expedite review of attacks on Asian American and Pacific Islanders during the pandemic (More) | House narrowly passes $1.9B Capitol security bill in a 213-212 vote after progressive members defect (More)
>Antigovernment protests in Colombia stretch into their fourth week; demonstrations started over a controversial tax bill, evolving to focus on income inequality, youth unemployment, and police violence (More, $$, Reuters)
IN-DEPTH
Cancel Envy
The Bulwark | Sonny Bunch. An innocuous Amazon glitch reveals how both the left and the right are convinced they are victims of censorship, with their echo chambers amplifying the claims. (Read)
Solving the Mystery of Dyatlov Pass
New Yorker | Douglas Preston. New evidence sheds light on one of Russia’s most enduring mysteries—the fate of nine hikers who died under uncertain circumstances in 1959. (Read, $$)
Harper High
This American Life | Staff. (2013) An intimate look at Harper High School in Chicago’s Englewood neighborhood that may change how you think about the complexities of gang violence and inner-city education. (Listen)
*From the archives of 1440 staff favorites. Check for another next Friday!
Sleep First, Think Second
Quanta | Veronique Greenwood. A new study of hydras—simple, brainless ocean-dwellers—suggests sleep evolved before brains. (Read)
Graze Mowing is on a mission to change the commercial landscaping industry through machine learning, computer vision, a seasoned team of robotics experts, and a nifty autonomous electric mower (check it out here).
And it’s no coincidence that the market they’re tackling is a huge one. Commercial landscaping in the US is a $100B industry, riddled with high labor costs and fuel expenses—and therefore low margins. Learn about Graze Mowing’s existing $19M in preorders from leading country clubs and landscapers, and take a look at their investment opportunity today.
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Historybook: American Red Cross is founded (1881); Amelia Earhart is first woman to fly solo across the Atlantic (1932); RIP social worker Jane Addams (1935); HBD actor Mr. T (1952); Rapper Notorious B.I.G. born (1972).
“It is far easier to start something than it is to finish it.”
– Amelia Earhart
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Why 1440? The printing press was invented in the year 1440, spreading knowledge to the masses and changing the course of history. Guess what else? There are 1,440 minutes in a day and every one is precious. That’s why we scour hundreds of sources every day to provide a concise, comprehensive, and objective view of what’s happening in the world. Reader feedback is a gift—shoot us a note at hello@join1440.com.
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63.) AMERICAN INSTITUTE FOR ECONOMIC RESEARCH
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May 21, 2021
Running Out of Patience for the CDC
By Ethan Yang | “Ultimately, the point of life is not about avoiding diseases and meeting arbitrary standards of health. Society has its necessary functions and its priorities that exist regardless of the recommendation of public health experts.
The Extent of the Market is Limited By the Imagination…
By Art Carden | “The regulatory state substitutes the knowledge and beliefs of regulators for the knowledge and beliefs of entrepreneurs and innovators. This means entrepreneurs and innovators have to divide their time between actually developing…
Fauci: “It’s a Manifestation of Your Honesty to Say,…
By Micha Gartz | “Both Fauci and the CDC’s lack of transparency and honest communication during Covid will be remembered and will undermine public support in future pandemic responses. Perhaps if Dr. Fauci had spent less time indulging his desire…
By S. Stanley Young & Warren Kindzierski | “The burden to society will worsen as the EPA continues down a slippery slope. Americans need to be aware that the science used at the EPA for setting air quality regulation is skewed, expensive, and of…
By Jordan Schachtel | “Team Biden was able to pull the plug on Covid Mania so swiftly because they have the ability to control the federal bureaucracy, in addition to having the support of the power brokers in D.C. and a cheerleading corporate press.
By Aleksandra Przegalinska | Peter C. Earle, senior fellow at AIER joins Aleksandra Przegalinska for a conversation on the unknowns of bitcoin, crypto currency and blockchain technologies in the modern era.
It’s the small things that we use daily in life that reveal our loyalties. This is precisely why we made an AIER coffee mug. It suggests stability, dignity, and determination. It has personalized a matte-finish exterior with a shiny lip and interior. It has a 17-oz capacity and a flat handle for comfort. It says everything it needs to say!
This volume places an emphasis on presenting the great conservative and libertarian thinkers who participated in the Philadelphia Society meetings from 1965 to 1980. These thinkers asked questions that are still relevant today: What is the role of tradition in society? How important is individual liberty? What is the correct balance between freedom and tradition? Can “ordered liberty” be best achieved by the free enterprise system or should order and common values be promoted by government? What does it mean to be a conservative? Should libertarians and conservatives be allies? The transcriptions in this volume address these questions and more.
On the menu today: a soup-to-nuts indictment of the Cuomo brothers, anti-Semitic violence in the streets of America’s biggest cities, a familiar face returns to the NFL, and a counterargument on those flying objects that are not yet identified.
The Worst Governor of This Century, and the Worst Anchor on Television
As I’ve noted, you’d have to look far and wide to find a publication that has covered and discussed New York governor Andrew Cuomo as thoroughly, skeptically, critically, and even furiously as National Review. The past year and a half has been a period of spectacular upheaval in American life, but somewhere in the top-five revelations is the fact that the governor most praised and celebrated by the national media during the pandemic was probably the very worst among them.
Cuomo enacted a policy from late March to May 2020 forcing nursing homes to accept coronavirus-positive patients after they were discharged from hospitals, causing the virus to spread like wildfire among elderly … READ MORE
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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.
Reuters: “Nearly four months after the U.S. Capitol attack, just one of more than 440 people charged has pleaded guilty, a sign of tough conditions set by prosecutors for plea deals and resistance by defense lawyers to their demands.”
“Lawyers for more than a dozen defendants said plea talks so far have foundered because prosecutors demanded their clients turn over social media data, cell phones and other evidence, while also pushing for prison sentences they would not accept.”
Iowa Gov. Kim Reynolds (R) signed a law that will withhold state grants and contracts from local governments or businesses that require customers to prove they have received the COVID-19 vaccine, the Des Moines Register reports.
CNN: “There’s little doubt the 2016 election was stressful. Now a team in North Carolina say they have evidence the tumultuous campaign may have affected people’s hearts.”
“Their study of 2,500 people living in the swing state of North Carolina shows an uptick in cases of irregular heart rates in October and November of 2016, as voters were inundated with attack ads.”
Sen. Ted Cruz (R-TX) is facing backlash after he claimed that new military promotional videos are promoting a “woke, emasculated military,” The Hill reports.
“Cruz made the remark on Twitter, sharing a video displaying an apparent Russian military advertisement showing images of men with shaved heads doing push-ups and jumping out of a plane.”
“The video then cuts to an animated story of U.S. Army Cpl. Emma Malonelord discussing her mothers’ wedding, marching for LGBTQ rights and joining the military.”
Said Sen. Tammy Duckworth (D-IL): “Holy crap. Perhaps a U.S. Senator shouldn’t suggest that the Russian military is better than the American military that protected him from an insurrection he helped foment?”
The former daughter-in-law of Trump Organization CFO Allen Weisselberg told CNN that he will flip on former President Donald Trump amid a criminal investigation into his taxes.
She also says she has hard evidence that Trump paid for her kids’ tuition.
“Andrew Giuliani is embracing his familiar last name and ties to former President Donald Trump as he begins his Republican campaign for governor of New York, hoping those connections make him a national presence in the state race,” Bloomberg reports.
Said Giuliani: “They are a part of who I am, right? I mean I worked for four years for President Trump and I am my father’s son.”
He added: “That’s one advantage that I’ll truly be able to bring to this race: We’ll be able to make this a national race and truly be able to fundraise not just in the 62 counties of New York, but in the 50 states of America.”
If you’re a Republican running for governor in New York, making it a national race is the exact opposite strategy you should embrace.
“The U.S. will accept a global minimum corporate tax rate as low as 15% in international negotiations, below the 21% level it has been seeking for U.S.-based companies’ foreign income,” the Wall Street Journal reports.
“The move could make it easier to reach the multilateral agreement that Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen has been seeking, but an agreement at 15% would raise less revenue for governments. And, depending on where the U.S. sets its policies, a 15% minimum tax on companies headquartered outside the U.S. could give those businesses an advantage over those based in the U.S.”
Rep. Matt Gaetz (R-FL) is running a radio ad in Arizona ahead of an “America First Rally” on Friday.
From the ad: “Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene and I are holding a rally to defend President Donald Trump in the elections audit. The Biden DOJ is trying to stop the Arizona audit. We demand accountability.”
“The true death toll of the coronavirus pandemic could be much higher than the official figure of 3.4 million people, a World Health Organization official said Friday, estimating that the global loss of life could be as high as 8 million,” the Washington Post reports.
Former House Speaker Paul Ryan (R-WI) headlines a fundraiser Monday for Rep. Adam Kinzinger, Politico reports.
“It’s a decisive move against ex-President Donald Trump, who has set his sights on Republicans who voted to impeach him. Kinzinger is one of 10 Republicans who joined Democrats to impeach Trump for his role in the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol.”
“The Illinois Republican has continued to carry the anti-Trump mantle and it’s no surprise that Ryan would back Kinzinger. Ryan, who’s had a long-running feud with Trump, criticized Republicans who wouldn’t certify the Electoral College results that validated Joe Biden’s election as president.”
U.S. House candidate Anthony Bouchard (R) told the Casper Star-Tribune he had a relationship with and impregnated a 14-year-old girl when he was 18, hours after he disclosed the relationship in a Facebook Live video to his supporters.
Said Bouchard: “So, bottom line, it’s a story when I was young, two teenagers, girl gets pregnant. You’ve heard those stories before. She was a little younger than me, so it’s like the Romeo and Juliet story.”
Bouchard is challenging Rep. Liz Cheney (R-WY) in a Republican primary.
“As the first rocket fire was exchanged between Israel and Hamas, President Joe Biden settled on a strategy. And as he had throughout the 2020 campaign, Biden adhered to it despite mounting criticism from Republicans and even his own Democratic Party,” NBC News reports.
“His approach was stylistically muted and substantively more hard-line than some of his allies had expected. It was driven by a singular goal: to end the violence as soon as possible so he could train his focus back onto his domestic agenda.”
“To accomplish that, Biden chose not to publicly lay bare disagreements with his Israeli counterpart, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, although the two have their differences. He said little publicly about the issue and entertained few questions about the topic.”
Renato Mariotti: “Wednesday’s announcement didn’t materially change the liability Trump faces given that the DA’s office already had a criminal investigation underway. But James’ recent moves (including her decision to publicly join the criminal probe) are a sign that the evidence amassed by prosecutors is substantial and will likely result in charges. James wouldn’t rush to embrace a weak case. That should make Trump very concerned.”
Associated Press: “The lead Republican negotiator Sen. Shelley Moore Capito of West Virginia was encouraged by the talks and expected the White House to be back in touch by week’s end, her office said. But there was some dismay at the White House that the Republican counteroffer did not substantially alter the party’s original $568 billion proposal, leaving it far short of the White House’s plan.”
“The White House’s hopes for a bipartisan deal on infrastructure have cooled but they have not abandoned the effort, the official said.”
New York Times: “There is really one overriding reason: They fear it will hurt their party’s image and hinder their attempts to regain power in next year’s midterm elections.”
A majority of conservative voters say Fox News Channel is their preferred source for TV news, but Newsmax and One America News (OAN) have gained viewers in the past year.
While President Joe Biden urges Congress to spend billions of dollars for new programs, most voters don’t think government spends taxpayer money wisely and want a less active role for government.
It was inevitable that climate change warrior Greta Thunberg would be tweeting about an enormous ice slab nearly the size of Majorca, one of Spain’s Balearic Islands in the Mediterranean, calved off an Antarctic ice shelf and was spotted…
For millions of Americans, the outpouring of negative stories about Bill Gates – allegations of an improper adulterous relationship with a Microsoft employee , his stubborn insistence on standing by Jeffrey Epstein, Melinda Gates’ years-long…
A couple of months ago, we noted deputies in a North Carolina drug raid seized cocaine, psilocybin mushrooms and marijuana, money, and a Glock 19 disguised as a Nerf toy gun. We weren’t quite sure if the seizure of the pistol, made to…
This looks like bad news for the CDC and the Biden Administration, which are desperate to entice more Americans to get vaccinated before international pressure forces the president to give away the entire US stock of vaccines (Biden announced…
A new book called “Battle for the Soul: Inside the Democrats’ Campaigns to Defeat Donald Trump” by Edward-Isaac Dovere, a staff writer at the Atlantic, offers an inside look at what Barack Obama really thought about Donald Trump heading…
House Democrats’ $1.9 billion virtue-signaling bill to beef up Capitol Security was almost derailed by progressive members of their own party on Thursday, after several members of “the squad” voted “no” – while three voted “present…
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by Paul E. Peterson via Hoover Education Success Initiative | The Papers
For an entire school year, millions of students have been asked to learn mainly—if not exclusively—online. Children sit—or don’t sit—before computer screens, with glazed eyes, wandering minds, and attention distracted by background noise and music. Social isolation undermines the willingness to learn.
The Hoover Institution and the Center on U.S.-China Relations at the Asia Society hosts Toward a Democratic China:What Role Can Outsiders Play? on Monday, May 24 from 10:00 a.m. – 11:00 a.m. PDT.
The Hoover Institution Archives has acquired the personal papers of Hou Chia-chu (1928–2007), a reputed economist who is best known for his contributions to the studies of economic theory, economic history, and economic thoughts on premodern and modern China, as well as his participation in policy formulation for Taiwan’s economic development from the 1970s to the late 1990s.
In 2009, I became the first woman to negotiate a nuclear arms control deal with Russia. When Secretary of State Hillary Clinton chose me to lead the talks on the treaty that would follow START, I knew that I’d stand out for my gender in the very male world of nuclear diplomacy. But I didn’t know just how much until June 2009.
interview with Niall Ferguson via The Prof G Show with Scott Galloway
Hoover Institution fellow Niall Ferguson discusses his latest book, Doom: The Politics of Catastrophe, why “all disasters are in some sense man-made,” and what history can teach us about handling crises. Ferguson also explains the state of play around digital currencies from a geopolitical perspective.
interview with Scott W. Atlas via American Thought Leaders
Hoover Institution fellow Scott Atlas notes that the data is clear: lockdowns not only had devastating effects on much of society, but they also failed to protect the most vulnerable. “There’s a big reason why lockdowns were never recommended in prior pandemics.”
Hoover Institution fellow Victor Davis Hanson analyzes the recent conflict between the Israelis and the Palestinians, how it reflects on the foreign policy of the Biden Administration, and what the consequences may be for the future of the Middle East.
“Ideas mattered,” Louis Menand writes in his new book, explaining the rise of American culture in the years after World War II. They still do, which is why big ideas underpin a lot of this week’s recommended titles, from astrophysics and the nature of scientific celebrity (in Charles Seife’s “Hawking Hawking”) to the pandemic and historical reactions to catastrophe (in Niall Ferguson’s “Doom”).
Always assume a cyber attack will happen to your company.This advice has come from a US-based cyber security expert Amy Zegart, who said this kind of thinking would always keep businesses on their toes with a protection plan.
There is much debate about whether the patents on COVID-19 vaccines should be waived to allow low-income countries to produce doses for themselves. The Initiative on Global Markets Forum’s survey asked European and US experts to express their views on this issue and the broader challenges of vaccinating the world. Romesh Vaitilingam sums up the results of the survey.
More than half of all Americans are concerned that the COVID-19 pandemic has impacted their ability to achieve a secure retirement, according to a new poll taken by the National Institute on Retirement Security.
“All unavoided is the doom of destiny,” declares Richard III ruefully. Shakespeare’s line sets the tone for Niall Ferguson’s brilliant new book Doom, an extended essay on how human politics cope with catastrophe.
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 21, 2021. On this day in history, Clara Barton founded the American Association of the Red Cross (1881), Charles Lindbergh completed the first nonstop solo flight across the Atlantic Ocean (1927) and Amelia Earhart became the first woman to do so in 1932.
TOP STORIES
Let’s Get One Thing Straight — The Border Crisis is Not Trump’s Fault
Recently, Sen. Mitt Romney, R-Utah, challenged Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas for downplaying the border crisis and, to some extent, passing the blame on to former President Trump.
Romney is not a fan of Trump, but he has demonstrated a certain amount of objective thinking that is seriously lacking in the halls of government lately. The senator pointed out that apprehension of illegal migrants has “skyrocketed” since Biden took office, reported Fox News.
Romney confronted Mayorkas’ seeming ambivalence, “Your view is this is the way it’s going to be,” as he referenced a highly precipitous chart showing the spike in border apprehensions.
Mayorkas defended himself and his agency’s position on the situation, further infuriating Republicans by attempting to pass the blame back onto the Trump administration. He stated the administration did nothing to address the surge that started over a year ago.
The crisis has been complicated by the pandemic, making it difficult to place blame squarely on one specific cause.
However, ATP has determined that much of the migration has actually been due to the actions of the drug cartels. They are encouraging and financing the movement of massive numbers of people from Central America as a way of overwhelming our security at the border. This also distracts the U.S. Border Patrol and National Guard from preventing the illegal movement of drugs into the United States.
The World’s First Nonbinary Mayor Has Been Elected
When we think of a “nonbinary” candidate in politics, we might think that, perhaps, the person is non-partisan or maybe involved with a third party. But in 2021, we must consider the fact that “nonbinary” means something completely different.
NBC News is reporting that in Bangor, Wales, a “nonbinary” candidate was elected by the City Council. Owen Hurcum is a 23-year-old “genderqueer,” “agender” person, who chooses to use gender-neutral pronouns.
Hurcum is pictured wearing the traditional mayoral chain along with a frilly neck scarf, sheer puffy sleeves and a tuft of green hair peeking out of “their” hat.
“It is an enormous privilege to have been elected by my fellow City Council members to the office of mayor of Bangor,” Hurcum said in a statement to NBC News. “I don’t take this lightly and I will work as hard as I can in the role to give back everything to the city that has given me so much. I might only be 23, but I have a wealth of experience at local government and a fantastic team behind me, so I know we are set up to face the challenges ahead.”
Hurcum was encouraged by the fact “they” now represent nonbinary people all over the world. “They” is (sorry, this is nuts!) among a growing number of transgender and nonbinary elected officials worldwide.
In 1999 in New Zealand, Georgina Beyer was elected the first trans member of parliament. Twelve years later, Tony Briffa became Australia’s first openly intersex mayor.
In the U.S., Oklahoma State Rep. Mauree Turner became the first publicly nonbinary U.S. state representative and, before that, Danica Roem became the first openly trans person elected to a U.S. state house.
Joel Greenberg, Key Figure in Matt Gaetz Investigation, Pleads Guilty
Joel Greenberg, former Florida tax collector and fair-weather friend of Matt Gaetz, pled guilty on Monday to a slew of federal charges against him.
Greenberg is facing 33 federal charges, including sex trafficking, paying for sex with a 17-year-old girl, embezzlement of taxpayer money, identity theft and using his office to create fake IDs, according to a report in USA Today.
In an article by Politico, it was revealed, “Greenberg first met the sex-trafficking victim on a website for “sugar babies” seeking “sugar daddies,” according to the plea agreement. … Greenberg paid her explicitly for sex at least seven times after meeting her on April 24, 2017.”
This is bad news for Rep. Matt Gaetz, who is currently under investigation for related sex-trafficking allegations.
An undisclosed female staffer of Gaetz purportedly released a statement in defense of his character, “Congressman Gaetz has always been a principled and morally grounded leader. At no time has any one of us experienced or witnessed anything less than the utmost professionalism and respect. No hint of impropriety. No ounce of untruthfulness.”
It remains to be seen if Gaetz will be charged with anything. In the meantime, he seems to be taking a proactive role in an attempt to protect his political reputation by deflection and distraction. Recently, he has been making the public speaking rounds, riding on the coattails of former President Trump in hopes of garnering support from Trump’s lingering constituency.
ATP takes sex-trafficking charges very seriously. In our view, no one is immune, no matter how charismatic, wealthy or publicly beloved a person may be. That said, we still believe in due process and will hold our final judgment until the investigation is complete and the evidence has been presented.
The Daily Intelligence Brief, The DIB as we call it, is curated by a hard working team with a diverse background of experience including government intelligence, investigative journalism, high-risk missionary work and marketing.
From All Things Possible and the Victor Marx Group we aim to provide you with a daily intelligence brief collected from trusted sources and analysts.
Sources for the DIB include local and national media outlets, state and government websites, proprietary sources, in addition to social media networks. State reporting of COVID-19 deaths includes probable cases and probable deaths from COVID-19, in accordance with each state’s guidelines.
Thank you for joining us today. Be safe, be healthy and
What you’ve missed:Chicago mayor explains the racist reasoning behind her racially biased interview policy, and Palestine and Israel protestors clash in Midtown NYC.
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An online advertisement for a room opening in an Antifa housing collective and unregulated prostitution facility in Portland has gone viral after being met by a barrage of ridicule by social media users.
An advertisement for Creature’s Co-Op was posted on Facebook seeking a “secret roommate” to reside in an eight feet by eight feet corner of a living room built out of recycled doors and a shower curtain for $302 a month, including other charges. Screenshots from the advertisement were posted on Twitter last week, prompting thousands of retweets and comments ridiculing the advert’s stringent and bizarre rules.
The Twitter user who uploaded the screenshots of the advert called the housing offer an “exploitative scam nightmare” trying to take advantage of people in desperate need.
“You: ACAB [All cops are bastards], don’t be ableist, racist, homophobic, transphobic, a misogynist, etc.” reads the first rule in the advertisement. From there, the rules state the renter must be okay with the noise and sex services performed at the home. “Your walls don’t extend all the way to the ceiling so you will hear a lot of stuff,” the post reads. “[You must be] okay with SWers [sex workers], we have three in our house and frequently have loud sex noises.”
In addition to the $302 rent per month, the tenant would have to pay an additional $60 – $80 in utilities and another $15 – $20 per month for unspecified “house funds.”
Infamous Canadian anti-masking advocate Chris Sky has been arrested, according to the Toronto Police Service.
Police say that Sky––real name Saccoccia––was arrested after reports of a man threatening to shoot elected officials. The reports were received by May 19, and Sky was arrested on May 20, reports CP24.
Sky, who is known mainly for recording himself at airports and reciting his Charter rights to police officers to avoid being tested or having to use hotel quarantine facilities, allegedly attempted to drive away from police when they pulled up to his house.
Sky then turned himself in to TPS 52 Division, where he was charged criminally with three counts of uttering death threats, along with one count of assault to an officer with a weapon, and one count of dangerous operation of a conveyance.
Sky is scheduled to appear in court on Thursday.
Sky has had previous run-ins with the law as of late. In April, he was arrested by Thunder Bay Police, after speaking at a rally with hundreds of people in attendance.
Over in America we can comment on this most recent revelation in Britain without restraint.
Don’t give the BBC any pity now for finally accepting the failings of their past. They deserve the same amount of scorn now that they did in the first place with the late Princess Diana.
An independent investigation establishes that BBC Panorama journalist Martin Bashir used fake documents and lies to secure a 1995 interview with Diana. According to the transcript of the interview, Bashir pried into the most intimate aspects of Princess Diana’s life: from her mental health, trying to balance raising a family while being a royal, and the constant media pressure therein.
Bashir also prodded about Diana’s marriage and how Prince Charles was having an affair with Camilla Parker-Bowles. It’s noted that the BBC interview is infamous because Diana said there were “three of us in this marriage” before separating from Charles.
Prince William uploaded a video condemning the BBC for their failings. In a statement from his brother, Prince Harry, the same sentiment of disdain for the outlet’s failures is express.
Host of CNN’s “United Shades of America,” W. Kamau Bell, praised far-left extremist group Antifa in his latest segment and said those that are against the violent group are on the same side as Hitler and Mussolini.
“In 2020, many white Americans dealt with complicated feelings about the police for the first time,” Bell asserted. “The right-wing saw that, and they [sic] did what they do: They pulled a bait-and-switch, and returned to an old boogeyman: Antifa.”
Bell went on to slam conservatives for supporting the police instead of supporting left-wing extremist groups that he implied are fighting for “justice.”
“Images of people clad in black fighting in the streets was an easy idea to sell to people who say things like, ‘Blue Lives Matter,'” said Bell. “Ain’t nobody blue,” he added.
Despite Antifa’s long history of using fascist tactics to silence their oppression, Bell spewed a popular left-wing talking point echoing that, “Antifa is short for Anti-fascist.”
“If you’re unsure how you feel about that, picture a table: On one side of the table is Hitler and Mussolini, and on the other side is the popular [children’s] performer Raffi.”
“Which side of the table you sitting on?” he asked. “I’m with Raffi.”
Bell continued the segment by bringing on two members of Antifa from Portland, the most notable and violent Antifa group in the US. However, Bell presented the Antifa members as “charming and sensitive” then acknowledged that Antifa has a history of using violence to further their movement.
In addition to violent physical encounters, the members of Portland Antifa told Bell that they dox people who they consider to be “violent, racist, disgusting things” while “hoping they get fired, or have to find a new job.”
Isra Hirsi, daughter of far-left progressive congresswoman Ilhan Omar, has called for a communist insurrection, and now she’s stated that she’s a communist. She’s heading off to Barnard College in the fall.
Hirsi has added the communist logo to her Twitter bio, where she has been quite active bashing the police, providing material support to Antifa, and being told to go to bed by her mother.
A year ago, Hirsi suggested a revolution. To be fair, it’s a free country, with a vibrant and robust first amendment that protects her right to speech, and a social media landscape that errs on the side of advocating for leftist revolution.
But could the child of a sitting Republican legislator make an outright call for an insurrection and get away with it?
Hirsi doesn’t think black students should have to attend school if they are feeling bad about current events, which will undoubtedly go over well as she attends the prestigious Barnard College in New York City this coming school year.
Hirsi shares views in common with her mother, notably the demand to defund police and dismantle capitalism.
Omar said that “As long as our economy and political systems prioritize profit without considering who is profiting, who is being shut out, we will perpetuate this inequality. So we cannot stop at [the] criminal justice system. We must begin the work of dismantling the whole system of oppression wherever we find it.”
Like her daughter, who is a climate activist, Omar believes fully in the Green New Deal “because we know that environmental racism is real.”
The age factor is pretty well known, especially among women who seem to be reminded of their “ticking clock” from relatives, friends, or strangers at some point in their lives.
Atlanta is engaged in a very public argument about how to fight rising crime. The mayor’s approach is to barricade the doors to the public and deliberate in secret.
Last January, when China and the World Health Organization (WHO) were performing damage control for Beijing over a mysterious new coronavirus which broke out in the same town as their secretive bat coronavirus lab (with whom, unbeknownst to most at the time, a Fauci-funded NGO called EcoHealth Alliance had been working), anyone who logically suggested a link between the secretive lab and the new disease was immediately punished by Silicon Valley tech giants who protected China from those who dare speculate based on very. obvious. clues.
Based on press reports and government statements, Microsoft would help farmers with post-harvest management solutions by building a collaborative platform and capturing agriculture datasets such as crop yields, weather data, market demand and prices. In turn, this would create a farmer interface for ‘smart’ agriculture, including post-harvest management and distribution.In April, the Indian government signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) with Microsoft, allowing its local partner CropData to leverage a master database of farmers. The MoU seems to be part of the AgriStack policy initiative, which involves the roll out of ‘disruptive’ technologies and digital databases in the agricultural sector.
“It can’t happen here” is a political cliche in the United States. Regardless of your personal viewpoint, there is a vast swath of the American population who simply do not believe in the possibility of any kind of totalitarianism in the United States.
As diplomatic powers and regional players meet behind closed doors for ceasefire talks, Israel continues showering Gaza with missile fire. Israeli airstrikes have so far killed at least 230 Palestinians, including 65 children, and injured 1,710 others. The heavy bombardment has also wiped out entire residential buildings and houses, leaving 72,000 people homeless, and has destroyed media offices, schools, libraries and charities.
The arrest of a Connecticut high school student accused of posting racist comments about a Black classmate on social media is being supported by civil rights advocates, but free speech groups are calling it an unusual move by police that raises First Amendment issues.
Voters in five rural Oregon counties approved measures on Tuesday to consider joining the state of Idaho, a part of a long-shot grassroots movement to break with a state dominated by liberal voters west of the Cascade Mountains.
The best defense is a good offense. The FBI’s decade-long streak of allowing informants to commit thousands of crimes a year continues, as Dell Cameron reports for Gizmodo.
Left-wing reporter Matt Taibbi is extremely distressed by the state of modern journalism, and he is taking aim at the fake news for cozying up to the powers they ought to be holding accountable.
The Washington Free Beacon, a neocon outlet funded by pro-Israel billionaire Paul Singer that hired Fusion GPS to spy on Donald Trump in 2015, may now be spying on Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez because she dared to criticize Israel.
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Welcome to the Friday edition of Internet Insider, where we dissect the week online. Today:
The Mandela Effect of Dear Evan Hansen
How did John Mulaney become a gossip item?
Demi Lovato comes out as nonbinary—and announces new pronouns
BREAK THE INTERNET
The Mandela Effect of ‘Dear Evan Hansen’
On Tuesday, Universal released the trailer for its upcoming film adaptation of the hit Broadway musical Dear Evan Hansen. The trailer immediately sparked a debate and memes about 27-year-old Ben Platt playing the lead teenager in the film.
Platt originated the role of Evan Hansen on Broadway, so it was not surprising that he was cast in the film version. But, as many people pointed out on Twitter, he does not look like a teenager in the trailer—mostly due to hair and makeup. It’s not uncommon for 20-somethings or even 30-somethings to be cast as teenagers in TV shows and movies. Yet the debate took off online and lit up Theatre Twitter.
I’m not here to argue whether or not Platt should have been cast in the role. Instead, I want to talk about the far more interesting discussion surrounding Dear Evan Hansen: People just finding out what the plot is about.
“so many people wikipedia-ing dear evan hansen today and so many people finding out it’s not a musical about a gay kid who broke his arm lol,” @alex_abads wrote.
I lived in New York City during Dear Evan Hansen’s Broadway opening in late 2016. At the time, I was bombarded with ads for the musical everywhere I went, and I even remember walking past the theater where it was playing a few times on my way to other shows. I never ended up seeing it, but I vaguely remember it being a story about a gay teen in high school.
So did….a lot of other people, according to the many tweets about people googling the plot. “re-reading the plot to dear evan hansen and I’m not understanding why this musical was the theatre kids black panther in 2015,” @kirkxxs said on Twitter.
To find out the real plot of Dear Evan Hansen is strange. Why did so many of us think it was an entirely different story? Perhaps we can blame it on the Mandela Effect, or the way the media covered the musical. Either way, we all finally know what Dear Evan Hansenis actually about.
Since the market for CBD has exploded, the trend of products containing the hemp-derived compound went from sensible to absurd fast. Now, not only can you find products with a purpose, but you can find some rather ridiculous infusions, too (I refuse to discuss the CBD bedsheets). Anyway, here are some CBD topicals worth investing in…
In the last week, John Mulaney and wife Anna Marie Tendler’s divorcewas confirmed, he allegedly started dating actress Olivia Munn, and he did his first standup show since leaving rehab for cocaine and alcohol addiction.
It was a lot to process. And last week, all hell broke loose over on anonymous gossip account Deuxmoi, which frequently posted about Mulaney over the last year.
In a threadon the Deuxmoi subreddit, user meetmeforkisses posted about meeting Mulaney in 2019, when she was a dancer at a “high-end club” in Manhattan. She said he was respectful but was “definitely drinking and definitely never mentioned a wife.” She claims she “met and hooked up with Mulaney on more than one occasion” but “felt so awful once I found out he was married.” (We reached out for comment.)
Why this intense focus on Mulaney, a celebrity in his late thirties who’s known for a certain clean-cut look and act, who’s never been involved in any scandals, who lovingly referenced his wife in his specials? Well, that persona might be the exact reason people felt so shocked and betrayed.
Mulaney seems to have picked up a Gen Zaudience around the release of 2018 special Kid Gorgeous, which became a source of reaction memes and Tumblr posts. On TikTok, Mulaney-related trends, theories, and impressions have flourished. Being embraced by a younger “stan” generation might have made fans feel more familiar with his private life, like they know him. But haven’t the last few years proven that we should absolutely not invest all of our energy in turning comedians into idols?
Singer and actor Demi Lovato this week announced that they identify as nonbinary, sharing the news in a launch video for their new podcast 4D.
“Over the past year and a half, I’ve been doing some healing and self-reflective work,” Lovato said in Twitter video. “Through this work, I’ve had the revelation that I identify as nonbinary.”
Lovato will now use they/them pronouns, saying that this best represents the fluid nature of their gender expression and identity. Lovato already identifies as queer, discussing their sexuality in several interviews over the past couple of years.
“I don’t claim to be a spokesperson,” they explained on Twitter, adding that the first episode of their podcast would delve deeper into Lovato’s own identity and the concept of nonbinary identities in general.
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Palestinians rally after cease-fire takes effect in Gaza, President Biden’s focus turns to North Korea and more news to start your Friday.
We made it through another work week, Daily Briefing readers! Happy Friday! Thousands of Palestinians celebrated in the streets after a cease-fire between Israel and Hamas took effect. And in Washington, President Joe Biden will host his South Korean counterpart Moon Jae-in in a bid to finally denuclearize North Korea.
📺 CNN host Chris Cuomo’s discussions with the staff of his brother, New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo were “inappropriate,” the TV channel said. Chris Cuomo has apologized.
🗞️ How well have you been following the news this week? Test your knowledge with our quiz!
Here’s what’s happening today:
Palestinians celebrate after cease-fire takes effect in Gaza
Following 11 days of military confrontation, a cease-fire between Israel and Hamas militants took effect Thursday. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu announced the truce, brokered by Egyptian officials. Taher Nounou, a Hamas official, also confirmed the deal. The development followed the most recent round of violence in the region, with least 230 Palestinians and 12 Israelis killed. Palestinians celebrated by the thousands early Friday, with many viewing the truce as a costly but clear victory for the Islamic militant group Hamas over a far more powerful Israel.
Biden hosting South Korean president at the White House
President Joe Biden will host South Korean President Moon Jae-in at the White House Friday as the two leaders seek complete denuclearization of the Korean Peninsula. Biden is pushing a middle ground between the “grand bargain” approach of former President Donald Trump and Barack Obama’s “strategic patience” to halt the reclusive nation’s nuclear weapons program. Earlier this month, North Korea warned the United States will face “a very grave situation” because Biden “made a big blunder” in his recent speech by calling the country a security threat.
🔵 Princes William and Harry lambasted the BBC after a report said a reporter used “deceitful behavior,” to persuade their mother, Princess Diana, to sit for a shocking 1995 interview.
Prince William delivers a statement on Wednesday, May 20, 2021.
Screenshot courtesy of @KensingtonRoyal; USA TODAY graphic
Texas Gov. Abbott’s order banning schools, officials from requiring masks takes effect
Girl’s quick thinking during kidnap attempt gets ‘SVU’ star’s attention
Amber Bonal holds a photo of her daughter Alyssa
Pensacola News Journal photo; USA TODAY graphic
Amber Bonal, the mother of Alyssa Bonal, the Florida girl who fended off a would-be kidnapper, said the11-year-old marked the man with blue slime and thought of the NBC drama “Law & Order: SVU” when she did it.
Asian American community bands together for star-studded TV special
The Asian American community is banding together Friday in a TV special to show unity amid ongoing violent, racist incidents throughout the U.S. Artists of part-Asian descent, including R&B singer Jhené Aiko and rapper Saweetie, are set to perform during the TV special “See Us Unite for Change – The Asian American Foundation in service of the AAPI Community.” The event will air at 8 p.m. ET/PT on a series of channels including MTV, BET, VH1 and Comedy Central, as well as on Facebook Watch. Actor Ken Jeong will host the special.
Newsmakers in their own words: Jane Goodall on biodiversity loss
‘The Me You Can’t See’: Oprah, Prince Harry launch mental health series
Apple TV+ is launching a documentary series created by Oprah Winfrey and Prince Harry on Friday. “The Me You Can’t See,” will feature high profile guests, like Lady Gaga and Glenn Close, and experts to discuss living with the challenges of mental health issues. “Now more than ever, there is an immediate need to replace the shame surrounding mental health with wisdom, compassion, and honesty,” Winfrey said. Prince Harry and wife Meghan Markle opened up about their own struggles with mental health during an interview with Winfrey.
⚖ The stakes of investigations into former President Donald Trump, his business and the people in his close orbit increased this week. Here’s what we know.
📸 Photo of the day: Amazing goal caps a furious comeback in Florida 📸
May 20: Florida Panthers left wing Ryan Lomberg celebrates after scoring the game-winning goal in overtime in Game 3 of the first-round series against the Tampa Bay Lightning.
Vaccinating young people can mean an end to the pandemic, health officials and providers say. But requiring the shots threatens to provoke resistance and distrust. Read more.
Vaccines Protect Against COVID Variants, WHO Says
Current COVID-19 vaccines are effective against variants of the disease, but the variant first identified in India – which could soon become the dominant strain in Europe – is cause for concern, officials said Thursday. Read more.
Warily Weighing a Return to Normal
A shift in guidance from federal health officials has many people pondering how they’ll pivot back to a more regular life. Read more.
Schools, Camps Await More CDC Guidance
The CDC last week said that vaccinated individuals can ditch their masks and stop social distancing. But the agency hasn’t updated recommendations for schools or summer camps. Read more.
Experts Sound Alarm on World Vaccine Supply
India’s export ban on COVID-19 shots risks dragging the battle against the pandemic “back to square one” unless wealthy nations step in to plug a hole in the global vaccine-sharing scheme, health specialists said on Thursday. Read more.
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Quietly and behind the scenes, some of the smartest, wealthiest investors in the country (including Warren Buffett) are making an important shift with their money.
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The media, like the German media in the 1930s, is scrubbing, censoring and dissembling the Nazi-like pogroms against the Jews going on across the country. For years, a handful of proud Jews like myself fought against this growing hatred and …
Why does FOX continue to promote this Jew hater while banning proud Zionists like my colleagues and myself? Geraldo Rivera is a liar. He is also a longtime apologist for “Palestinian” (Islamic)terrorism. Rivera has for years used his platform on …
The Democrat party inciting these savages and now support their genocidal aspirations. American Jews who supported the Democrats will be scorned in the history books like their kapo predecessors.
The GOP attempted to secure funding for Israel’s Iron Dome as war rages. There is no question where the Democrat party of jihad stands. They are the enemy.
“This election proves that rural Oregon wants out of Oregon.” Who would want to be part of the Democrat violence (ie Portland) and depravity? I support these efforts body and soul.
A senior member of a Chinese Communist Party think tank claimed China won a biological war against the United States in 2020. But the Democrats will prosecute you if you speak of it. Like the stolen election …..
It’s a trap. Protesting election theft is not insurrection, it’s patriotism. The illegitimate administration means to criminals political opposition. These RINOs joined them – throw the bums out. PRIMARY them out on their asses.
Democrats, like Hitler’s Brownshirts, are conducting pograms against the Jews across the U.S. And the democrat media complex, like Der Stürmer, is inciting the Jew haters and providing them cover.
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‘We have a responsibility to make sure that the House of Representatives chamber is not a Petri dish for the cause of the selfishness of some.’ Read more…
‘I was able to recover the deleted databases through forensic data recovery processes. We are performing data continuity checks to ensure that the recovered databases are usable,’ cyberexpert Ben Cotton said. Read more…
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