The Morning Dispatch: Hope for Our Allies in Afghanistan

Plus: The Democratic two-step on infrastructure.

A former interpreter for French forcesattends a demonstration at the Shahr-e Naw Park in Kabul. Afghan translators with NATO forces fear deadly violence will only increase ahead of a looming deadline for the alliance’s planned withdrawal. (Photo by Zakeria Hasimi/AFP/Getty Images.)

Happy Friday! Today’s TMD got put to bed a little later than usual because the Cubs were on the West Coast throwing a combined no-hitter and somebody didn’t want to multitask.

Quick Hits: Today’s Top Stories

  • After weeks of deliberations, President Joe Biden announced that he and a bipartisan group of senators came to terms on an infrastructure package that includes approximately $600 billion in new spending on roads, bridges, airports, railways, and broadband, among other provisions. Hours later, however, Biden said he wouldn’t sign the bill unless Congress also sends him a much bigger “human infrastructure” package, which would likely go through the reconciliation process and receive only Democratic support.
  • Nearly a month after Senate Republicans blocked the creation of a bipartisan, independent commission to study the events surrounding the attacks of January 6, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi announced she was creating a select committee under which ongoing congressional investigations into that day will be consolidated. It’s unclear whom Pelosi will appoint to head the committee, and whether Republicans will choose to participate in it.
  • Centers for Disease Control Director Dr. Rochelle Walensky on Thursday signed another extension of the nationwide eviction moratorium, pushing its expiration date back one “final” time from June 30 to July 31. The agency first implemented a freeze on evictions last September to “prevent the further spread of COVID-19.”
  • A large condo building outside Miami partially collapsed early Thursday morning, likely killing dozens of residents. Rescuers have thus far pulled about 40 people from the wreckage, but at least 99 remain unaccounted for. President Biden approved Florida’s emergency declaration last night, authorizing FEMA and the Department of Homeland Security to assist with the situation. Local authorities say it is too early to know the cause of the collapse.
  • The United States confirmed 12,944 new cases of COVID-19 yesterday per the Johns Hopkins University COVID-19 Dashboard, with 2.5 percent of the 510,639 tests reported coming back positive. An additional 345 deaths were attributed to the virus on Thursday, bringing the pandemic’s American death toll to 603,178. According to the CDC, 12,329 Americans are currently hospitalized with COVID-19. Meanwhile, 815,152 COVID-19 vaccine doses were administered yesterday, with 178,331,677 Americans having now received at least one dose.

Afghanistan Allies See Hope

When President Biden announced his plan a few months ago to withdraw the remaining U.S. troops from Afghanistan by September 11 this year, many predicted it wouldn’t be long before the Taliban went on the offensive and toppled the Afghan government. As we wrote earlier this month, it’s already begun.

People of good faith can come to different conclusions as to whether it was time for the United States to leave the region. It’s been 20 years, and the mission had certainly shifted from the time American troops first deployed. The Trump administration struck a “peace deal” with the Taliban in early 2020 that—had the former president won reelection—would have removed U.S. troops from the region even sooner.

What a growing group of bipartisan lawmakers finds unacceptable, however, is abandoning the thousands of Afghani interpreters, drivers, and engineers who aided the U.S. military over the years and whose safety will be in jeopardy once American forces are gone. “The threat here is death, quite frankly,” Ali Noorani, president of the National Immigration Forum, told The Dispatch.

Yesterday, the Biden administration indicated it is working to relocate those Afghan allies and their families to an unspecified destination—possibly Guam—while their visas allowing them entry into the United States are processed. “We’ve already begun the process,” Biden told reporters yesterday. “Those who helped us are not going to be left behind.”

In the last year, 18,000 Afghani citizens have applied to the Special Immigrant Visa (SIV) program through their connection to the United States military, but the average wait time for admittance into the U.S. through the SIV program is 790 days—at least 10 times longer than American troops will remain in Afghanistan.

Infrastructure Negotiations: One Step Forward, Two Steps Back?

After weeks of back and forth, President Biden announced Thursday that he and a bipartisan group of senators had finally reached a deal on an infrastructure package. The agreement—which would allocate approximately $579 billion in new money toward the nation’s roads, bridges, airports, and other physical infrastructure—was hammered out by five Democratic and five Republican senators, and for many represents a welcome respite from the bitter partisanship that has come to define American politics. But the framework is far from the finish line and may be scuttled before it gets there: Biden later told reporters he will not sign the legislation into law unless Congress (read: Democrats) also sends him a hefty “human infrastructure” package, likely through the reconciliation process.

Standing in front of the White House in a rare impromptu news conference, Biden triumphantly told reporters that “we have a deal.”

“None of us got … all that we wanted. I clearly didn’t get all I wanted. [Republicans] gave more than, I think, maybe they were inclined to give in the first place,” Biden said. “This reminds me of the days we used to get an awful lot done up at the United States Congress.”

The framework released yesterday is high-level—the legislation itself has yet to be drafted—but it is also far narrower in scope than the $2.3 trillion proposal the White House initially put forth.

“I’m pleased to see today we were able to come together on a core infrastructure package—this is not non-infrastructure items—without new taxes,” Republican Sen. Rob Portman said of the proposal. “This is roads and bridges, but also lots of other kinds of infrastructure, including broadband, our water system, and our rail system, all of which is good for the economy. This will lead to more efficiency and higher productivity, more economic growth. This is about the long term.”

In recent weeks, the biggest barrier to reaching a deal has been coming up with how to pay for new spending. Republicans opposed reversing the corporate tax cuts enacted as part of 2017’s Tax Cuts and Jobs Act, while Biden refused to budge on his pledge not to raise taxes directly on the middle class. Democratic senators balked at the possibility of indexing the gas tax to inflation or implementing fees on electric vehicles.

Worth Your Time

  • In yesterday’s TMD, we included a “Presented Without Comment” about a law signed by Gov. Ron DeSantis that “requires Florida colleges and universities to survey students about their viewpoints and beliefs.” But the tweet we included didn’t capture the full context of the legislation. We encourage you to read Jonathan Adler’s take on the bill in Reason, and Joe Cohn’s for FIRE. “The required survey is not a survey of the political beliefs of students and faculty. Rather, the survey is to measure ‘the extent to which competing ideas and perspectives are presented,’ and the extent to which ‘members of the college community, including students, faculty, and staff, feel free to express their beliefs and viewpoints on campus and in the classroom,’” Adler writes. “Might a survey include questions about respondents’ backgrounds or perspectives for cross-tab purposes? Perhaps. Such information may be useful, insofar as it could identify whether members of minority racial, ethnic, or religious groups experience the educational environment differently, but that is not the focus or requirement of the law.”
  • New York Times election analyst Nate Cohn has a great piece detailing the many ways in which Democrats’ For the People Act was a “flawed bill,” and what comes next in the party’s quest for federal election reform. “The law, known as H.R. 1 or S. 1, was full of hot-button measures—from public financing of elections to national mail voting—that were only tangentially related to safeguarding democracy, and all but ensured its failure in the Senate,” Cohn writes. “At the same time, reformers did not add provisions to tackle the most insidious and serious threat to democracy: election subversion, where partisan election officials might use their powers to overturn electoral outcomes.”

Presented Without Comment

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Last week, Joe Biden snapped at the press. This week he’s whispering at them. Image

Toeing the Company Line

  • Yesterday’s episode of The Hangover might have been the best yet—and that’s really saying something. In it, Commentary editor John Podhoretz joins Chris Stirewalt for a discussion of conservative media, and how it’s evolved over the years.
  • Live from Oklahoma (okay, maybe not “live”), Jonah has a new solo episode of TheRemnant. On it, he discusses how he would shape abortion law if he were made czar for a day, and what the separation of church and state really means in American life.
  • Sarah and David have been champing at the bit for the opportunity to break down the “Angry Cheerleader” case at the Supreme Court, and yesterday was the day. Tune in to Thursday’s Advisory Opinions for a look at not only Mahanoy Area School District v. BL, but Lange v. California as well.
  • The closure of the pro-democracy paper Apple Daily was a blow to freedom of press in Hong Kong. As Ellen Bork reports, it’s also a warning shot to global businesses.
  • One downside of the Biden-Putin summit? It’s opened the door to other Western governments to do the same. Eric Edelman and David J. Kramer critique a proposal from Germany and France to have an EU summit with the Russian leader.

Reporting by Declan Garvey (@declanpgarvey), Andrew Egger (@EggerDC), Haley Byrd Wilt (@byrdinator), Charlotte Lawson (@charlotteUVA), Ryan Brown (@RyanP_Brown), Harvest Prude (@HarvestPrude), Tripp Grebe (@tripper_grebe), Emma Rogers (@emw_96), Price St. Clair (@PriceStClair1), Jonathan Chew (@JonathanChew19), and Steve Hayes (@stephenfhayes).