Good morning! Here is your news briefing for Monday July 26, 2021
1.) THE DAILY SIGNAL
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2.) THE EPOCH TIMES
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3.) DAYBREAK
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4.) THE SUNBURN
Sunburn — The morning read of what’s hot in Florida politics — 7.26.21
Happy Monday.
If you are gobbling up Olympics coverage — and chances are you’re not — you already know that Team USA had a pretty good weekend.
U.S. swimmer Chase Kalisz notched the nation’s first (and second) gold medal of the games. The 27-year-old landed the top spot in the men’s 400-meter individual medley. It was, of course, a major personal accomplishment for Kalisz, who had to settle for silver five years ago.
Sarasota is celebrating, too, after Riverview High School alumna Emma Weyant scored the silver in the women’s 400-meter individual medley final, coming in just seven-tenths of a second behind Japan’s Yui Ohashi.
It wasn’t all sunshine and rainbows, though.
The U.S. men’s basketball team suffered another embarrassing L in their Olympic opener against France. Yes, the team with Kevin Durant, Damian Lillard, Bam Adebayo, Draymond Green and other stars lost to … France. Can they pull it together already or is this just something that happens every fourth Olympics? Should we start watching EuroLeague?
And then there’s the women’s gymnastics squad. It’s usually the highlight of the quadrennial games (it still is, honestly) but Team Russia finished the qualifying round in the top spot. Thankfully the results don’t carry over to the finals, so there’s still a chance.
It was a bad weekend in North Florida, too.
The Capital Press Corps took a couple of blows, too. The South Florida Sun-Sentinel snagged Steve Bousquet away from the Tallahassee Democrat to take over for Rosemary O’Hara as the paper’s editorial page editor. And The Associated Press’ Bobby Caina Calvan announced he was leaving the Sunshine State. Jason Delgado and Renzo Downey will miss him.
Here’s to many good weekends wherever life takes him.
Worse yet, UF Health Jacksonville CEO Leon Haley, who took a leading role in the city’s COVID-19 response, died in a tragic watercraft accident while vacationing in South Florida. Our condolences to his family.
Need a palate cleanser? We do, too. Florida man to the rescue.
The world’s worst superhero popped up in Pensacola got an early start on his weekend. He sauntered into O’Riley’s Uptown Tavern on Thursday and — as he’s wont to do — showed off his gun, accidentally shot himself then carted himself to the hospital. Ta-da!
But nobody had a better weekend than Zach Taylor, a 63-year-old plumber from Ambrose, Georgia. who won the annual Hemingway Look-Alike Contest in Key West. It’s the Florida man (or Georgia man) equivalent of winning an Elvis Look-Alike Contest in Las Vegas. Our condolences to David “Bat” Masterson of Daytona Beach, who was a six-toed cat’s paw away from the W.
— SITUATIONAL AWARENESS —
—@MicheleforFL: You (know) what my favorite thing in social media has become — is to see @michelletodd like, RT or comment. She’s a miracle and testament to God’s grace. God is amazing!
—@atrupar: (Donald) Trump says the only reason he made Mark Milley chairman of the Joint Chiefs is because John Kelly and (Jim) Mattis, both of whom worked for him, didn’t like him — so he decided to do the opposite of what they wanted
—@RepKinzinger: Today, I was asked to serve on the bipartisan January 6th Select Committee, and I humbly accepted. When duty calls, I will always answer.
—@SenPizzo: Nobody’s pushing the vaccine to compromise your rights, or hamper your happy hour — there’s no microchip, shedding or quackery. No one in the ICU likes “I told you so” while you’re waiting for a lung transplant. Many of us care about you, even if you hate us. Get vaccinated.
—@Deggans: We’re to the point that newspapers are begging people to get vaccinated. Sigh.
—@NewsGuyGreg: IF this lawsuit is successful — as similar suits so far are in other states — can FL DEO even administer these retroactive benefits? I’m dealing with people waiting MONTHS for benefits and claim issues to be cleared up.
Tweet, tweet:
—@JimRosicaFL: A reminder that we’ve always been up against it. From all sides. I think the difference is, social media intensifies it now.
Tweet, tweet:
—@JenLux: Legitimately cried a little watching an 18-year old win the first-ever gold in taekwondo this morning. Admittedly it’s the only taekwondo match I’ve ever watched … she was awesome
— DAYS UNTIL —
The NBA Draft — 2; ‘Jungle Cruise’ premieres — 4; ‘The Suicide Squad’ premieres — 11; Canada will open its border to fully vaccinated Americans — 14; ‘Marvel’s What If …?’ premieres on Disney+ — 16; Florida Behavioral Health Association’s Annual Conference (BHCon) begins — 23; St. Petersburg Primary Election — 29; Boise vs. UCF — 38; Disney’s ‘Shang Chi and The Legend of The Ten Rings’ premieres — 39; Notre Dame at FSU — 41; NFL regular season begins — 45; Bucs home opener — 45; California Gov. Gavin Newsom’s recall election — 50; Broadway’s full-capacity reopening — 50; Alabama at UF — 54; Dolphins home opener — 55; Jaguars home opener — 55; 2022 Legislative Session interim committee meetings begin — 56; ‘The Many Saints of Newark’ premieres (rescheduled) — 60; ‘Dune’ premieres — 67; Walt Disney World’s 50th anniversary party starts — 67; MLB regular season ends — 69; ‘No Time to Die’ premieres (rescheduled) — 74; Florida Chamber Future of Florida Forum begins — 92; World Series Game 1 — 93; Florida TaxWatch’s Annual Meeting begins — 93; Georgia at UF — 96; St. Petersburg Municipal Elections — 99; Florida’s 20th Congressional District primary — 99; Disney’s ‘Eternals’ premieres — 103; ‘Disney Very Merriest After Hours’ will debut — 105; Miami at FSU — 110; ‘Top Gun: Maverick’ rescheduled premiere — 116; FSU vs. UF — 124; Steven Spielberg’s ‘West Side Story’ premieres — 137; ‘Spider-Man Far From Home’ sequel premieres — 144; NFL season ends — 167; 2022 Legislative Session starts — 169; Florida’s 20th Congressional District election — 169; NFL playoffs begin — 173; Super Bowl LVI — 202; ‘Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness’ premieres — 242; ‘Thor: Love and Thunder’ premieres — 284; ‘Platinum Jubilee’ for Queen Elizabeth II — 311; “Black Panther 2” premieres — 347; San Diego Comic-Con 2022 — 359; ‘Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse’ sequel premieres — 438; “Captain Marvel 2” premieres — 473.
“Woman says consultant paid her to put name on PAC promoting Central Florida ‘ghost’ candidate” via Jason Garcia and Annie Martin of the Orlando Sentinel — Last fall, some voters in Seminole and Volusia counties received mailers promoting a mysterious, no-party candidate who had done no campaigning of her own in an important state Senate election. As it turns out, the chairperson of the political committee that paid for those mailers was a then-25-year-old community college student who knew nothing about the advertisements her committee was funding. But she had recently found out she was pregnant and was worried about money — so she agreed to let a Republican political operative put her name on the committee’s paperwork in exchange for $1,500.
“Records provide more details in sham 2020 Florida candidate probe” via the Times/Herald — Between June 15 and Nov. 15, 2020, Frank Artiles was under contract to work for veteran Republican political operative Pat Bainter for $15,000 a month, court documents show. Bainter paid Artiles $90,000 and reimbursed him for his travel, a courier service, and $4,000 for “research,” according to those documents.
>>>Just as Mickey told Tommy in “Snatch” that nobody brings Gorgeous George “unless they’re trying to say something without talking, no one hires a wannabe-gangster like Artiles unless they’re trying to do something without talking.
“Ethics panel gets tough on sham no-party candidate in 2020 Miami race” via Ana Ceballos of the Tampa Bay Times — A state ethics panel on Friday rejected a $6,500 fine against a sham no-party candidate who ran in a 2020 Miami-Dade legislative race, a rare move that was triggered by calls for stiffer penalties in a case one Commissioner called one of the “most egregious” in Florida. The Florida Commission on Ethics also found probable cause that Alexis Pedro Rodriguez filed inaccurate campaign documents with the state and accepted money from Artiles with the understanding that he would change his party affiliation from Republican to no party to qualify to run in the Senate District 37 election. Rodriguez now has the option to have a full evidentiary hearing on the ethics case or can try to renegotiate a settlement agreement with an ethics commission advocate.
— CORONA NATION —
“‘Not out of the woods’: CDC issues warning to the unvaccinated” via Michael D. Shear, Jonathan Weisman and Sheryl Gay Stolberg via The New York Times — The director of the CDC warned on Thursday that the United States was “not out of the woods yet” on the pandemic and was once again at a “pivotal point” as the highly infectious Delta variant ripped through unvaccinated communities. Just weeks after President Joe Biden threw a Fourth of July party on the South Lawn of the White House to declare independence from the virus, the director, Dr. Rochelle P. Walensky, called the now dominant variant “one of the most infectious respiratory viruses” known to scientists. The renewed sense of urgency inside the administration was aimed at tens of millions of people who have not yet been vaccinated and therefore are most likely to be infected and become sick.
“Most unvaccinated Americans don’t want shots” via Tammy Webber and Emily Swanson of The Associated Press — Most Americans who haven’t been vaccinated against COVID-19 say they are unlikely to get the shots and doubt they would work against the aggressive delta variant despite evidence they do. Among American adults who have not yet received a vaccine, 35% say they probably will not, and 45% say they definitely will not. Just 3% say they definitely will get the shots, though another 16% say they probably will. Moreover, 64% of unvaccinated Americans have little to no confidence that the shots are effective against variants.
“‘Patience has worn thin’: Frustration mounts over vaccine holdouts” via Dan Diamond and Tyler Pager of The Washington Post — Seven months after the first coronavirus shots were rolled out, vaccinated Americans are growing frustrated that tens of millions of people are still refusing to get them, endangering themselves and their communities and fueling the virus’s spread. Alabama Gov. Kay Ivey lashed out amid a surge of cases in her state, telling a reporter it’s “time to start blaming the unvaccinated folks.” The NFL this week imposed new rules that put pressure on unvaccinated players, warning their teams could face fines or be forced to forfeit games if those players were linked to outbreaks. Meanwhile, exhausted health providers say they are bracing for case spikes that are largely preventable, driven by the hyper-transmissible delta variant.
“As COVID-19 cases rise, some conservatives make surprising course correction on vaccine ahead of 2022 midterms” via Maeve Reston and Lauren Fox of CNN — Ivey‘s deliverance of hard truth followed a week of troubling COVID-19 headlines, when some other Republican Governors also redoubled their efforts to get their constituents vaccinated, including Missouri’s Mike Parson, West Virginia’s Jim Justice and Ron DeSantis. At the same time, while speaking the gospel of “personal responsibility,” many GOP Governors have resisted calls for mask mandates or future shutdowns.
— CORONA FLORIDA —
“Florida becomes COVID-19’s U.S. epicenter, reports wrong death count” via Chris Persaud of The Palm Beach Post — Florida recorded more coronavirus cases this week than California, Texas, New York and Illinois combined. The state logged 73,199 more infections in this week’s report. That’s the biggest one-week surge since Jan. 27. California, Texas, New York and Illinois altogether logged 73,116 new infections. The state took hours longer than usual on Friday to publish its weekly update to inform the public about pandemic statistics. California, Texas, New York and Illinois and Pennsylvania together logged 362 more COVID-19 fatalities in the same period, lower than Florida’s 387, the CDC’s website said. But Florida’s Friday report states it logged only 78 more deaths this week. Yet the difference between the state report’s total statewide death toll of 38,670 and the 38,388 reported the week prior is 282.
—“‘We’re exhausted’: As case numbers increase, Jacksonville homeless shelters restart 2020 COVID-19 program” via Beth Reese Cravey of The Florida Times-Union
—“COVID-19 hospitalizations double and infections surge in Sarasota-Manatee, Florida” via Brian Ries of the Sarasota Herald-Tribune
—”Tampa Bay continues to report sharp rise in COVID-19 cases” via Kelly Hayes of Florida Politics
—”Florida tops the nation in new COVID-19 cases. As they spike in its rural Big Bend, many still fear the vaccine more.” via Nada Hassanein of USA Today
—”COVID-19 in Okaloosa County has become ‘a pandemic of the unvaccinated’” via Tom McLaughlin of the Northwest Florida Daily News
—”‘Trying to live normally again’: As COVID-19 cases spike, Polk officials have been quiet” via Sara-Megan Walsh of The Lakeland Ledger
“When does Florida’s coronavirus surge become a problem for Ron DeSantis?” via Philip Bump of The Washington Post — More than 640,000 more Americans have been confirmed to have contracted the coronavirus this month. About 1 in 5 of those new infections were recorded in Florida. The spike in cases over the past month has been as dramatic as the top-line numbers would suggest. Only two states are now seeing more new cases per 100,000 residents than Florida. But since Florida’s population is three times that of those two states combined, that means a lot more cases. There are still millions of residents who haven’t been vaccinated and only 2.4 million who are known to have already had it. That’s a lot of Floridians who are still at risk.
“Federal court lifts CDC rules for Florida-based cruise ships” via The Associated Press — Pandemic restrictions on Florida-based cruise ships are no longer in place under a ruling Friday by a federal appeals court, while the CDC seeks to fight a Florida lawsuit challenging the regulations. A three-judge panel of the 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals had temporarily blocked a previous ruling last Saturday that sided with Florida officials, but the court reversed that decision on Friday. Last weekend’s temporary stay had kept the CDC regulations regarding Florida-based cruise ships in place while the CDC appeals the June decision by U.S. District Judge Steven Merryday. Those regulations can no longer be enforced but can still be used as guidelines.
“Miami-Dade opens five new COVID-19 vaccine, testing sites as cases continue to surge” via Devoun Cetoute of the Miami Herald — Miami-Dade County is escalating coronavirus prevention, opening five new mobile vaccine and testing sites as COVID-19 case numbers reach levels not seen since the height of the pandemic. With virus positivity and hospitalizations increasing along with the growing threat of new variants, especially the Delta, Miami-Dade and Nomi Health are working to expand vaccination and testing, the county said. “We are extremely concerned about this new wave of COVID cases in Miami-Dade,” Miami-Dade Mayor Daniella Levine Cava said in a statement. “The numbers are very clear: the vast majority of those who end up in the hospital due to COVID are unvaccinated.”
“COVID-19 case counts continue spiking in Brevard County, with 2,166 new cases last week” via Dave Berman of Florida Today — New state data shows that COVID-19 cases are continuing to spike in Brevard County and statewide. In Brevard County, there were 2,166 new COVID-19 cases reported for the seven-day period that ended Thursday, according to a report released late Friday by the Florida Department of Health. That’s an average of 309 new cases a day for the week of July 16-22. The weekly total compares with 1,443 new cases in Brevard a week ago, 693 two weeks ago and 495 three weeks ago. In the latest weekly report, the percentage of COVID-19 tests in Brevard that were positive for the virus was 20.3%.
“Through vaccination or infection, doctors predict Florida will hit herd immunity to COVID-19” via Catherine Hawley of Fox 13 — The coronavirus is sweeping through unvaccinated populations across the globe, and especially in Florida. Bay Area experts believe this will be the final wave of the pandemic because, after this spike, we should hit herd immunity because the majority of people will have either been vaccinated or infected. Modeling done by University of South Florida researchers shows our region could be headed for a record-breaking spike in COVID-19 cases, with a peak likely in mid-September. “The numbers that I’m seeing in terms of daily infection rates are doubling every seven days. And that’s the fastest that I’ve seen since I started doing the calculations back in July of last year,” explained Dr. Thomas Unnasch, USF College of Public Health Distinguished Professor.
“Bucs tailback Leonard Fournette won’t rule out vaccine, wants to learn more” via Joey Knight of the Tampa Bay Times — Fournette, who posted (then quickly deleted) a tweet Thursday expressing his unwillingness to receive the COVID-19 vaccine, reiterated his stance Sunday, but didn’t rule out receiving it upon learning more about its potential long-term impacts. “I don’t know too much about it,” said Fournette, who signed another one-year deal with the Bucs after a sparkling postseason in which he ran for 300 yards and had 18 receptions.
— STATEWIDE —
“Charlie Crist urges DeSantis to request federal aid for red tide” via Renzo Downey of Florida Politics — Crist is making another ask of DeSantis to request federal aid to combat Tampa Bay’s red tide outbreak. Crist wrote a letter to DeSantis urging him to request that the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration designate the outbreak a “Harmful Algal Bloom Event of National Significance” under a 2019 federal law. That designation, which Governors can request, would open the door to federal dollars to address the outbreak, impacting the environment and public health. “Red Tide is ravaging our shores — killing marine life, hurting our businesses, and threatening our way of life,” Crist said in a statement. In his letter, Crist said the local officials cleared 1,400 tons of dead marine debris from the water and coastline at an unsustainable pace for workers.
“Overhaul of Florida program to aid brain-damaged kids now in hands of powerful politician” via Carol Marbin Miller and Daniel Chang of the Miami Herald — Jimmy Patronis, whose office oversees the Birth-Related Neurological Injury Compensation Association, initiated an audit and an investigation of the program after the Miami Herald and the journalism nonprofit ProPublica published a series of stories this year showing how NICA had amassed nearly $1.5 billion in assets while frequently denying care to children it serves. Patronis, who demanded that NICA “do better” the day the series began publishing, is expected to name at least five board members to oversee the program, three to replace members who resigned last month and two new ones authorized by a law passed in the most recent legislative session.
First on #FlaPol — “Former DEP Secretary Noah Valenstein joins American Flood Coalition as senior adviser” via Jesse Scheckner of Florida Politics — Valenstein is bringing his eco-expertise to the national level as a new senior adviser to the American Flood Coalition. Valenstein, who in May resigned from his post as the state’s top environmental official after four years, joins “a growing team” at the nationwide alliance of cities, elected officials, military leaders, businesses and civic groups working on sea level rise, an AFC press note said. “We are pleased to welcome to AFC Noah Valenstein, a Florida leader I have enjoyed working with over the past years,” AFC Executive Director Melissa Roberts said in a statement.
Assignment editors — Rep. Kelly Skidmore is hosting a virtual roundtable to discuss education issues, 6 p.m. Zoom link here.
“Too many aspiring Florida teachers struggle to pass certification exams, new study says” via Leslie Postal of the Orlando Sentinel — More than half Florida’s aspiring elementary school teachers fail their professional certification exams on their first try. The 60% failure rate highlights “potential gaps” in the education offered at Florida’s teacher training programs and means too many would-be teachers face the stress and expense of retaking tests required to be public school teachers, the report from the National Council on Teacher Quality shows. Across Florida, only 40% of the students in teacher preparation programs passed all four sections on their first try, with the rates often lower for Black and Hispanic teacher candidates.
“Randy Fine calls Ben & Jerry’s West Bank boycott ‘stupid’” via Gordon Byrd of WFLA — Ben and Jerry’s announced that its ice cream would not be sold in areas it described as the “Occupied Territories,” the areas Israel captured in the Six-Day War of 1967. Activists have pushed for various boycotts of Israel. Florida passed a law prohibiting the state from buying from or investing in any business that boycotts Israel. “You boycott Israel, and we boycott you,” Fine, who wrote the law, explains. Fine says, “we have a zero-tolerance policy against these types of bigots.” But he sees the Ben & Jerry’s situation as more “stupid” than anything else; the company’s executives are hypocrites as “by their definition, (they operate) on occupied territory that we took from the Indians hundreds of years ago.”
“Florida unemployment lawsuit filed” via Greg Angel of Bay News 9 — A group of attorneys filed a lawsuit Sunday in an effort to force the State of Florida to restore $300 weekly extended federal unemployment benefits. Attorneys Scott Behren, Gautier Kitchen, and Marie Mattox are leading the suit. The suit is expected to be registered with the Clerk of Court’s Office Monday morning. The suit names several Broward County individuals as plaintiffs, who say they’ve suffered financial hardship due to the state shutting off federal benefits. The suit, however, aims to get benefits restores for all Floridians impacted. In March Congress approved $300 weekly extended federal unemployment benefits until early September.
— 2022 —
Assignment editors — Rep. Crist will attend a virtual meeting of the Democratic Women’s Club of East Broward, 6:30 p.m. Zoom link here.
“Orlando attorney and stroke survivor Coleman Watson makes bid for U.S. Senate in Florida” via Steven Lemongello of the Orlando Sentinel — When Watson was just 41, he experienced a sudden stroke, impairing his ability to speak. At 43, he’s running for the U.S. Senate. “To me, disability is a matter of perception,” Watson wrote in an email. Watson, an Orlando attorney, faces a tough battle in the Democratic primary, where high-profile candidate and U.S. Rep. Val Demings has already raised $4.6 million since entering the race in June. Watson’s campaign, meanwhile, so far had only a $2,525 loan from himself as of the June 30 second-quarter deadline.
To view Watson’s first campaign video, click on the image below:
Click just for the quote from Ben Pollara — “Florida Democrats anxious over stalled Miami congressional races” via Matt Dixon of POLITICO — Two Miami-area congressional races are likely to be some of the nation’s most expensive and competitive midterm contests. But Democrats so far are missing one thing: candidates. Then-Democratic Reps. Donna Shalala and Debbie Mucarsel-Powell lost the seats in surprise upsets in 2020. Democrats now see both races as winnable, Hillary Clinton won both districts in 2016 by double digits, and the seats tend to sway between Republican and Democratic control. But some Florida Democrats are blaming the poor recruitment drive on the party, which they say isn’t doing enough to recruit and assist strong candidates, a sign of larger problems in the nation’s biggest swing state. The unsettled field has left Florida Democrats anxious that two potential opportunities are slipping away from them.
“Florida GOP Chair Joe Gruters says he’s ‘moving forward’ after ‘false’ harassment claim” via Zac Anderson of the Sarasota Herald-Tribune — After initially saying little about sexual harassment allegations that were investigated and deemed unsubstantiated, Gruters offered a more forceful statement Friday, explicitly declaring for the first time that the allegations are false. “An independent investigation into these false allegations was conducted and cleared me of any wrongdoing,” Gruters said in a statement. “I am moving forward and focusing on my work on behalf of the great people of Florida.” Gruters was embroiled in controversy Tuesday when it came out that a sexual harassment complaint had been filed against him with the Republican Party of Florida. The RPOF later issued a statement saying it hired an independent law firm that spent three months investigating the complaint.
—”The failed political assassination of Gruters” via Peter Schorsch of Florida Politics
“After past ‘mockery,’ Florida GOP to begin new high-stakes redistricting effort” via John Kennedy of the Sarasota Herald-Tribune — The last time Florida’s ruling Republicans were tasked with redrawing the state’s political districts, a judge concluded they turned it into a “mockery” by secretly and illegally working to enhance their command of the state. Fast-forward to this summer and an even more powerful GOP-led Legislature is again getting ready to begin the once-a-decade recasting of state House, Senate and congressional boundaries. Republicans say they learned a lesson last time. Democrats, though, aren’t convinced. The Democratic committee has placed Florida among nine states it is tracking closely.
— MORE CORONA —
“Surge of COVID-19 delta variant poses new political threat to Joe Biden and his agenda” via Annie Linskey, Tyler Pager and Dan Diamond of The Washington Post — The rapid increase in coronavirus infections driven by the delta variant over the past month is turning the country’s attention back to the pandemic and threatening to subsume President Biden’s agenda, just as the White House and its allies hoped to move on from the virus and focus on promoting the administration’s other accomplishments. Inside the White House, top officials are growing increasingly anxious about the state of the pandemic and are gravely concerned about the situation spiraling out of control in some areas of the country with low vaccination rates. Biden’s team had always expected to see additional coronavirus outbreaks, but the White House assumed the increases in infections would be “mounds” and not “peaks.”
“Biden administration purchases extra Pfizer doses to prepare for possibility of children vaccine needs and booster shots” via Betsy Klein of CNN — The Biden administration purchased an additional 200 million doses of Pfizer-BioNTech’s COVID-19 vaccine to prepare for potential additional vaccine needs in the US. Despite the slowing demand for COVID-19 vaccines, the administration official said the additional shots would be needed for children under 12, pending approval from the FDA, and the possibility of booster shots for vaccinated individuals. Pfizer, Moderna and Johnson & Johnson are still conducting clinical trials to evaluate the safety and efficacy of the vaccines in children under 12.
“Why some experts recommend upgrading to N95 masks to help fight the delta variant” via Allyson Chiu of The Washington Post — The debate over masks is heating up again, with increasing calls for all Americans, regardless of coronavirus vaccination status, to return to wearing face coverings in indoor public places to help thwart the spread of the highly contagious delta variant. But some experts say the recommendations should specify the kind of masks people should be using. “Delta is so contagious that when we talk about masks, I don’t think we should just talk about masks,” Scott Gottlieb, former commissioner of the FDA, said. “I think we should be talking about high-quality masks,” such as N95 respirators. Monica Gandhi, a professor of medicine and an infectious disease expert at the University of California at San Francisco, expressed a similar sentiment: “We can’t say we’re going back to masks without discussing type of mask.”
—”Disney executives won’t attend CinemaCon in-person as delta COVID-19 variant rages in Las Vegas” via Sarah Whitten of CNBC
— CORONA ECONOMICS —
“Virus resurgence menaces economy just as rescue programs unravel” via Megan Cassella and Ben White of POLITICO — The resurgence of the coronavirus is threatening to undercut the U.S. economic recovery and upend Americans’ plans to return to work just as the sweeping social safety net that Congress built during the pandemic is unraveling. That one-two punch is sparking concern among lawmakers and economists who say that while widespread business shutdowns are unlikely, renewed fears of the virus alone can slow the economy just as it’s getting back on track. That could dampen hiring and keep some workers on the sidelines of the job market, stalling or even reversing the labor recovery. New unemployment claims jumped last week to 419,000, well above expectations and the highest since mid-May.
“The delta variant could make the American shopper go back into lockdown, BofA says” via Ayelet Sheffey of Business Insider — The American shopper emerged from lockdown to lead the recovery, but that’s now at stake. BofA economists Stephen Juneau and Anna Zhou wrote in a Friday note that the variant is likely to lead to a shift in consumer behavior going forward, citing a 351% surge in the moving average of daily cases since July 21. Accompanied by slowing vaccination rates, they said they “believe the current surge in cases could lead to a sharp pullback in services spending.”
“End of eviction moratorium puts many tenants at risk of losing their homes” via Andrew Ackerman of The Wall Street Journal — State and local governments are struggling to distribute $47 billion in federal money aimed at helping tenants who can’t pay rent because of the COVID-19 crisis, leaving many people at risk of being thrown out of their homes when an eviction moratorium expires on July 31. Meanwhile, many landlords have been squeezed because they have been unable to collect rent but remain on the hook for taxes, maintenance and other bills. Problems distributing the funds often stem from bureaucratic bottlenecks. Some states are having trouble keeping up with requests for aid. A key sticking point: verifying an applicant’s income with either last year’s tax return or two months’ worth of paycheck documentation.
— CORONA MISC. —
“Vaccine boosters are increasingly likely” via Caitlyn Owens of Axios — As the delta variant continues to drive a fourth wave of the coronavirus pandemic in the U.S., Biden officials see a booster shot among at least some vaccinated Americans as increasingly likely. Another round of shots, beginning as early as late fall, could boost the level of protection against the virus among the vaccinated and help curb its spread throughout the population. The amount of neutralizing antibodies a person has following their first two doses of Pfizer and Moderna’s coronavirus vaccines appears to drop over time, which is a very normal thing to happen with vaccines.
—“SF bars now requiring proof of vaccination” via Ginger Conejero Saab of NBC Bay Area
—“COVID-19 vaccine holdouts face restrictions in Europe as delta variant spreads” via Eric Sylvers, Sam Schechner and Ann M. Simmons of The Wall Street Journal
— PRESIDENTIAL —
“Biden attacks Donald Trump at Virginia rally, tying Terry McAuliffe’s opponent to ex-President” via Sean Sullivan and Karina Elwood of The Washington Post — President Biden on Friday launched a frontal attack on Trump at a campaign rally for McAuliffe, leading a concerted effort to tie the Democrat’s opponent in the Virginia Governor’s race to the former President. “I ran against Donald Trump, and so is Terry,” said Biden, speaking in Arlington as the sun set during his first appearance on the campaign trail since taking office. Later, he mentioned the Jan. 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol. “Saying, ‘I was told there were a lot of peaceful, wonderful people?’” Biden said incredulously. Biden’s comments amounted to some of his sharpest attacks on Trump since being sworn in.
“Day-to-day, Biden’s agenda looks rocky. But congressional Democrats say things are far rosier if you take the long view.” via Paul Kane of The Washington Post — A hallmark of Biden’s agenda on Capitol Hill is that, viewed inside a given six-day window, it usually looks like choppy waters. But take the long view, over the past six months, and things appear a bit more smooth. Biden has been slowly but steadily notching accomplishments that have solid support from voters. Over the previous six days, Biden’s push for a brand-defining bipartisan infrastructure deal, worth roughly $1 trillion, has careened back and forth between grand success and epic failure. Voting rights legislation, designated the top issue by House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, remains deadlocked in the Senate.
“‘Communism is a failed system.’ In Florida, Democrats promote Biden’s stance on Cuba.” via Kirby Wilson of the Miami Herald — Since the protests in Cuba began earlier this month, Florida Republicans have made the demonstrations a matter of urgent importance to their messaging. Not to be outdone, the Democratic Party will launch an online ad campaign next week that will highlight the President’s words and actions on Cuba. The weeklong campaign will cost “five figures” and reach nearly one million Floridians. In one of the ads, the words “communism is a universally failed system” accompany a picture of Biden.
— “DNC launches ad promoting Biden support for Cuban liberty” via Kelly Hayes of Florida Politics
— EPILOGUE: TRUMP —
“Trump is relentless in election fabrications” via The Associated Press — In mid-May, partisan investigators hired by Arizona state lawmakers backed off their allegation that the state’s most populous county had destroyed its 2020 election database. Confronted with proof that the data still existed, they admitted everything was there. Two months later, the tale lives on. At an event Saturday, Trump presented the debunked allegation as a key piece of evidence that the state’s electoral votes were stolen from him in 2020. It was one of a number of fabricated and familiar stories Trump told the crowd in his relentless effort to deny the well-established legitimacy of his defeat at the hands of Biden. He spoke of untold thousands of dead people voting; no such phenomenon surfaced in postelection audits. He alleged 168,000 Arizona ballots were fraudulent; there is no support for that.
“Mar-a-Lago primary: Trump wields power with endorsements, but some in GOP fear midterm damage” via Janet Hookstaff of The Los Angeles Times — Trump, again upending American political norms, is moving to remake Congress and the Republican Party in his own image. Since leaving the White House, he has issued a spate of endorsements of House and Senate candidates for next year’s crucial midterm election, including an array of political outsiders, conspiracy theorists, and others who break the traditional mold. Targeting one of his most prominent Republican critics, Rep. Liz Cheney, Trump plans to meet this week at his New Jersey golf club with Wyoming Republicans who are running against her. His goal: to endorse one, clear the field of others and set up a head-to-head contest.
“Why I’m sure Trump will run for President in 2024” via Michael Wolff of The New York Times — To write three books in four years about Trump has been an immersion into his obsessions and fixations. This is why I know the obvious: Trump will run for President again. It is an existential predicament: He can’t be Trump without a claim on the presidency. He can’t hold the attention and devotion of the Republican Party if he is not both once and future king. In 2022, with his draw, the Republicans, he is certain, will retake the House with his chosen slate of candidates. And indeed, this actually might be true.
— CRISIS —
“Unlikely partners Nancy Pelosi and Liz Cheney team up for Jan. 6 probe” via Lisa Mascaro of The Associated Press — When Pelosi raised a glass to Cheney, it was the most unlikely of toasts. Democratic lawmakers and the Republican congresswoman were gathered in the House speaker’s office as the group prepared for the first session of the committee investigating the Jan. 6 insurrection at the Capitol. Pelosi spoke of the “solemn responsibility” before them and raised her water glass to Cheney, a daughter of the former Vice President and the sole Republican in the room. “Let us salute Liz for her courage,” she said, according to a person familiar with the gathering who spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss the private meeting.
“Jan. 6 select committee will include former CIA inspector general found to have retaliated against whistleblower” via Jenna McLaughlin of Yahoo! News — As the House select committee investigating the Jan. 6 riot prepares to get underway next week, it will include former CIA Inspector General David Buckley in the role of staff director. However, the selection of Buckley to serve in that capacity could come back to haunt the Democrats on the committee who selected him. A previously unpublished 2019 report compiled by the Department of Homeland Security’s watchdog office showed that investigators urged the CIA to take action against Buckley for his alleged retaliation against a whistleblower, a conclusion that would likely be troubling to potential witnesses who might testify in the Jan. 6 inquiry.
“‘Some are still suffering’: Months after Capitol riot, police who fought the mob contend with physical, psychological pain” via Peter Hermann of The Washington Post — More than six months after Police Sgt. Aquilino Gonell battled the mob that stormed the Capitol, he remains hobbled, a hand scarred, a shoulder aching, recovering from surgery to an injured foot that swelled so large it no longer fit his shoe. The 42-year-old Capitol Police officer and Army reservist, who is also seeing a therapist, said bouts of anxiety returned after his battle on American soil in the Jan. 6 riot. “I can be fine now and see or hear something, and next thing I get tears and get emotional,” said Gonell, who was hurt when rioters tried to yank away his ballistic shield. “I tried to be strong,” he said of the months following the riot. But once he retreated to a quiet space at his home in Virginia, away from his wife and 9-year-old son: “I completely broke down.”
“Dating app trips up another Capitol riot suspect, one accused of hitting police with whip” via María Luisa Paúl of The Washington Post — The phrase “all is fair in love and war” took on a new meaning Friday, when a Texas man was arrested after boasting to a match in a dating app about participating in the Jan. 6 riot “from the very beginning.” Andrew Taake of Houston was charged with assaulting police and storming the Capitol building. His arrest follows a monthslong investigation spurred by a tip and a FedEx delivery driver who confirmed his identity to the FBI. Taake made his initial court appearance in the Southern District of Texas. His public defender did not immediately respond to a request for comment. Similar to another arrested rioter, it all started with a conversation on Bumble, a dating app. The unnamed Bumble user asked if he had been “near all the action.”
— D.C. MATTERS —
“‘Critical to the Panhandle’: Rick Scott says defense plan prioritizes Tyndall, F-35s” via Jim Thompson of the Northwest Florida Daily News — Scott says the U.S. Senate Armed Services Committee’s proposed military spending and policy bill for the upcoming fiscal year prioritizes “the next-generation technology and capability of Florida’s F-35 squadrons, which are critical to Tyndall Air Force Base and Florida’s Panhandle communities.” Scott made the claim in a Thursday news release from his office marking the committee’s approval of a $778 billion defense spending proposal for the new fiscal year beginning Oct. 1. Scott, a Republican, notes the committee-approved spending plan is “a $25 billion increase over President Joe Biden‘s inadequate budget request.”
“Matt Gaetz case takes bizarre tabloid turn” via Marc Caputo of POLITICO — A sugar daddy website linked to the sex-trafficking investigation of Gaetz publicly weighed in on the scandal, saying the lawmaker has never been registered on the site in search of young women. The unusual move by the website SeekingArrangement puts some distance between Gaetz and the accusation against him. The site had been caught up in the Gaetz case because it had reportedly been used by the GOP lawmaker and another key player in the case to connect with an underage girl for sex.
— LOCAL NOTES —
Rep. Michele Rayner-Goolsby endorses Ken Welch for St. Pete Mayor — “Welch is the leader that St. Petersburg families can count on to fight for them and with them. That’s because Ken’s story is the story of so many families in our community. He’s a third-generation St. Pete resident, who’s worked hard all his life to get where he is,” Rayner said. “Ken’s integrity and track record in service to our community speak for itself.” “Michele’s endorsement means the world to me,” Welch responded. “Her passion for St. Pete, the Sunshine State, and the country is the true embodiment of the current and future generations of leadership — she’s a proven trailblazer.”
To watch Rayner’s endorsement, click on the image below:
Video Player
“Search for bodies concludes at Surfside condo collapse site” via David Fischer and Terry Spencer of The Associated Press — Firefighters on Friday declared the end of their search for bodies at the site of a collapsed Florida condo building, concluding a month of painstaking work removing layers of dangerous debris that were once piled several stories high. The June 24 collapse at the oceanside Champlain Towers South killed 97 people, with at least one more missing person yet to be identified. The site has been mostly swept flat, and the rubble moved to a Miami warehouse. Although forensic scientists are still at work, including examining the debris at the warehouse, there are no more bodies to be found where the building once stood.
“Condo law, insurance, oversight, engineering. Surfside collapse could change a lot” via Joey Flechas and Douglas Hanks of the Miami Herald — The ripples of the collapse of Champlain Towers South in Surfside have only begun to move from the center of a disaster that has taken weeks to triage. Families endured the waiting to confirm the loss of their loved ones so they can properly mourn the dozens of people lost. Search crews painstakingly pursued any sign of life, until it became clear they would only be recovering the dead. Investigators began a long process of studying a literal mountain of physical evidence to understand how this could have happened.
“Residents of Coral Gables building given 72 hours to vacate over structural concerns” via Bobeth Yates of CBS Miami — A Coral Gables building is being evacuated as a result of structural concerns. Notices were placed at the front entrance to let residents know they have until Monday to get out. The president of the homeowners association at 730 Coral Way said they have been working with an engineer to fix whatever structural concerns the city has. “The engineer recommended that we do three things. The first one is to install these shoring poles. The second one is to empty the pool and the pool deck,” said the association president.
“Pasco Sheriff’s Office letter targets residents for ‘increased accountability’” via Kathleen McGrory of the Tampa Bay Times — It starts like an offer of admission from a prestigious university. “We are pleased to inform you that you have been selected …” it says. But the four-page letter from the Pasco Sheriff’s Office goes on to tell recipients they will be facing enhanced police scrutiny under the agency’s controversial intelligence program. The Sheriff’s Office creates lists of people it considers likely to break the law based on criminal histories, social networks and other unspecified intelligence. The agency sends deputies to their homes repeatedly. National policing experts drew comparisons to child abuse and surveillance that could be expected under an authoritarian regime.
“Red tide uptick spurs respiratory warning at Tampa Bay beaches” via The Associated Press — People may experience respiratory problems because of a persistent bloom of toxic red tide off Florida’s Gulf Coast, the National Weather Service said Friday. The service issued a “beach hazards statement” affecting the oceanfront and bayside shores in Pinellas County from 11:30 a.m. Friday through at least 10 p.m. Saturday. Symptoms include coughing, sneezing and watery eyes. “People with asthma, emphysema, or any chronic lung disease may be more sensitive,” the NWS statement said. “Irritation may vary by beach and throughout the day.” Red tide occurs naturally in the Gulf of Mexico but can be made worse by the presence of nutrients such as nitrogen, which is often found in fertilizers.
“Estuary programs blame Piney Point for worsening red tide conditions” via Jesse Mendoza of the Sarasota Herald-Tribune — Local experts link wastewater releases from the former Piney Point fertilizer plant in northern Manatee County to an ongoing red tide bloom that has devastated marine life. During a public forum on Friday, Tampa Bay Estuary Program Director Ed Sherwood and David Tomasko, who heads the Sarasota Bay program, both attributed the severity of the region’s red tide to the 215 million gallons of wastewater dumped from Piney Point in April. The incident accounts for about 200 tons of nitrogen pumped into Tampa Bay in just 10 days. Sherwood said the bay typically gets that much nitrogen over the course of an entire year.
“J.T. Burnette Trial Day 8: FBI agent Sweets recounts when Scott Maddox became ‘wise to us’” via Jeff Burlew of the Tallahassee Democrat — “Mike Sweet,” the long-haired undercover FBI agent who posed as a former illegal drug dealer turned legit medical marijuana entrepreneur, wrapped his testimony in the Burnette extortion trial. Sweet finished his testimony Friday under direct questioning by federal prosecutors before one of Burnette’s defense attorneys, Greg Kehoe, cross-examined him for hours. It was the eighth day of testimony in the trial and the second day on the stand for the man nicknamed “Sweets.” Late in the day, Kehoe focused on a trip in early December 2016 that Burnette and one of his two co-defendants, then-City Commissioner Scott Maddox, made to Las Vegas. The two flew out on a private plane arranged by the FBI and spent a couple of days partying and talking business with Sweet and four other undercover FBI agents.
“Hundreds watch Polk County forum on Critical Race Theory” via Kimberly C. Moore of The Lakeland Ledger — About two dozen people gathered in an east Lakeland church Thursday night, with about 300 others watching online, to hear a discussion about Critical Race Theory, its history and how it doesn’t pertain to Polk County Public Schools. They also learned about the new Florida Department of Education rule that prohibits teaching in public schools CRT, including the concept “that racism is not merely the product of prejudice, but that racism is embedded in American society and its legal systems in order to uphold the supremacy of white persons.”
“Santa Rosa public meetings hijacked by personal laments” via the Pensacola News Journal editorial board — What is becoming of local government in Santa Rosa County? County Commission meetings have devolved into rabid complaint sessions where the basic business of county government has been hijacked by a small number of residents who express almost no knowledge, concern or interest in Santa Rosa. The County Administrator, Dan Schebler, is resigning after months of the meeting chaos punctuated by a manufactured attempt to oust him on dishonest grounds by one County Commissioner. And the rest of the Commission recently voted 4-1 to ignore the votes of their own zoning board to allow the clear-cutting of trees in new developments and reduce the protection of wetlands, two issues that are overwhelmingly against the wishes of most citizens in the county.
“Delray Beach Police Officer accused of setting his SUV on fire turned himself in” via WPBF — A Delray Beach Police Officer wanted for arson and perjury turned himself in at the Palm Beach County Jail Saturday night. Dallas Richardson reported his 2017 Chevy Tahoe stolen on March 29, 2020. Earlier that day, a Palm Beach County Sheriff’s Office deputy found the SUV engulfed in flames on Lake Ida Road near Military Trail. The license plate and vehicle identification number had been removed. An arson investigator evaluated the scene and concluded that an accelerant was used to set the car on fire. Delray Beach police spokesperson Ted White said the investigator noticed multiple inconsistencies after interviewing Richardson twice.
Rest in peace — “UF Health Jacksonville CEO dies: Dr. Leon Haley Jr. led area’s COVID-19 response” via Beth Reese Cravy of The Florida Times-Union — Dr. Haley Jr., CEO of UF Health Jacksonville since 2018 and leader of the local medical community’s COVID-19 response, died Saturday. “It is with great sadness that we confirm the death of UF Health Jacksonville CEO Leon L. Haley Jr. Dr. Haley was a strong, inspirational leader and beloved son, father, friend and colleague,” according to a hospital statement. “We do not have specific details of his passing at this time. We ask that you respect the privacy of Dr. Haley’s family, friends and colleagues at UF Health,” according to the statement.
— TOP OPINION —
“Vaccinated America has had enough” via David Frum of The Atlantic — Maybe some unvaccinated people have trouble getting time off work to deal with side effects, maybe they are disorganized, maybe they are just irrationally anxious. But there’s no getting around the truth that some considerable number of unvaccinated people are also behaving willfully and spitefully. Reading about the fates of people who refused the vaccine is sorrowful. But as summer camp and travel plans are disrupted, many in the vaccinated majority must be thinking: Yes, I’m very sorry that so many of the unvaccinated are suffering the consequences of their bad decisions. I’m also very sorry that the responsible rest of us are suffering the consequences of their bad decisions.
— OPINIONS —
“China is stepping up its deception and denial in investigations of COVID-19” via The Washington Post editorial board — In proposing a Phase 2 investigation into the pandemic origins on July 16, the director-general of the WHO, Dr. Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, attempted to navigate a fraught and contested topic. Then, China slammed the door in his face. China has refused to allow further investigation into these and other unresolved questions, while pointing instead to potential virus origins beyond its borders, and spreading disinformation that it came from a U.S. military laboratory.
“Anti-vaxxers deserve blame for Florida’s ‘pandemic of the unvaccinated’” via Fred Grimm of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — COVID-19 admissions rose 57% statewide, thanks to the 52% of Floridians not fully vaccinated. A similar phenomenon has surged through other states afflicted with “vaccine hesitancy.” CDC Director Walensky reported, “We are seeing outbreaks of cases in parts of the country that have low vaccination coverage because unvaccinated people are at risk and communities that are fully vaccinated are generally faring well,” she said. Biden despaired that “the only pandemic we have is among the unvaccinated.”
“Another missed opportunity for meaningful juvenile justice reform in Florida” via Tachana Joseph-Marc of The Florida Times-Union — Despite bipartisan support in the Legislature, DeSantis vetoed two bills, SB 274 and SB 166, that would’ve fostered much-needed changes to Florida’s juvenile justice system. SB 274 aimed to expunge the records of justice-involved youth who have completed a diversion program for any offense, and SB 166 would’ve ensured that those expunctions are exempt from public records and only available for specified purposes to some criminal justice agencies. The Governor’s veto denies thousands of youths the opportunity to move forward without a label that can potentially taint the quality of their lives for years, if not their whole lives.
“For 27 years, Florida Democrats have done a great job helping Republicans get elected” via the Miami Herald editorial board — Florida Democrats can’t stop losing. Florida might still be considered a “purple” state, but Democrats’ inability to pull off more than one statewide win in almost a decade tells a different story. While Republicans have been forcefully pushing an agenda full of red-meat issues that appeal to their growing base, Florida’s Democrats are playing catch-up, crying foul every time DeSantis ignores the COVID-19 pandemic or signs an egregious law in a made-for-Fox-News ceremony. Unless Democrats get their act together, we will see worse legislation every year.
“Pretrial hearings in Parkland shooting case must remain open” via the South Florida Sun-Sentinel editorial board — The case of State vs. Nikolas Cruz is approaching a trial date, and it’s increasingly clear that the community will be forced to relive a horror that never should have happened. As traumatic as that will be, especially for the Parkland shooting survivors, it would be worse if pretrial proceedings were completely closed to the news media and, by extension, to the public, as Cruz’s attorneys are seeking. Cruz faces 17 counts of first-degree murder for the shooting rampage at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School. Legal experts anticipate that it could take up to a year to try the case.
— ON TODAY’S SUNRISE —
Florida’s Department of Health has disturbing news about COVID-19: The number of new cases went up by 60% last week, but don’t worry. DeSantis says those counts don’t count.
Also on today’s Sunrise:
— The number of fatalities was also up by almost 44%. Those numbers do count.
— Yet, DeSantis is still pursuing his strategy of downplaying the threat and inviting tourists to come on down because Florida is open for business. Except, of course, for those 38,670 Floridians who have been killed by COVID-19.
— So, how do you encourage people to get vaccinated? FAMU President Larry Robinson is making a video appeal to students who are returning to campus. Just in case that doesn’t work, FAMU will also be giving away a million dollars’ worth of merchandise for staff and students who get the shot.
— In the aftermath of the Surfside tragedy, Agriculture Commissioner Nikki Fried wants the Legislature to update condo regs and create a statewide commission to hear complaints.
— Florida’s Chief Financial Officer gets down to the business of reforming NICO (the Birth-Related Neurological Injury Compensation Association). His appointment to the new board is a good sign.
— And finally, two Florida Men: One is going to the federal pen for child pornography; the other went to the hospital after showing off with a gun.
To listen, click on the image below:
— OLYMPICS —
“Silver for Sarasota! Emma Weyant finishes second in 400 IM final” via the Sarasota Herald-Tribune — Weyant is bringing home some hardware from Tokyo. The Sarasota native won the silver medal in the women’s 400-meter individual medley final at the Olympics, setting a personal best by finishing in 4:32.76. The 19-year-old American finished behind Japan’s Ohashi, who ran away with the gold. Weyant made up ground in the breast-stroke, pulling away for a comfortable second-place finish. “This is crazier than anything I could have dreamed of,” Weyant said on NBC after the race.
“Miami sailor Pedro Pascual off to strong start after first three races at Tokyo Olympics” via Michelle Kaufman of the Miami Herald — Pascual got off to a promising start at the Tokyo Olympics on Sunday, coming in ninth place overall through the first three of 12 races in the RS:X sailboard class. Pascual had a career-best day of Olympic racing, finishing sixth, 12th and seventh in his three races. He finished 28th in the 2016 Rio Olympics and said he learned from the experience. “Well, being transparent, at my first Olympics I wasn’t sleeping. I was too excited,” Pascual, 25, said. “I was 20 years old. And that definitely took a toll on me. This time around, I know what to expect. I’ve experienced these feelings before and I’m just looking forward to racing.”
“U.S. swimmers win six medals in their best Olympic start ever” via Laine Higgins of The Wall Street Journal — Team USA swimmers on Sunday raced to their best-ever start at an Olympics, winning medals in every event of the first finals session, including the first U.S. gold medal of the games in any sport. Team USA’s six medals, one gold, two silver and three bronze, are the most it’s ever won on the first day of the Olympic swimming finals. It’s even more impressive considering that before 1984, countries could send three swimmers per event instead of two, allowing possible podium sweeps. The team made the podium in events in which it wasn’t supposed to medal, said U.S. men’s team assistant coach Jack Bauerle. “It’s obviously a really proud moment,” he said. “I can’t really feel anything, I’m so happy.”
“Caeleb Dressel isn’t just the next Michael Phelps. He might be even better.” via Josh Planos of FiveThirtyEight — Dressel has been dubbed the “next American Aquaman” and “heir to Michael Phelps.” With the former king of the pool retired and Olympic swimming set to start Saturday, the 24-year-old Floridian is ready to take on those mantles. In a number of disciplines, the 6-foot-2 Dressel is the fastest swimmer on the planet entering the 2020 Tokyo Olympics. Oddsmakers are aware: He is favored in all three of his individual events, with Pinnacle and DraftKings giving him implied odds of greater than 90% in the 50-meter freestyle and 100-meter butterfly, events that he holds world records in.
“Positive virus tests knock Jon Rahm, Bryson DeChambeau out of Olympics” via The Associated Press — Positive COVID-19 tests knocked Rahm and DeChambeau out of the Olympic golf tournament Sunday, in a pair of surprises that reinforced the tenuous nature of holding a massive sports event during a pandemic. Word of Rahm’s positive test came from the Spanish Olympic committee about four hours after USA Golf delivered the same news about DeChambeau. They are among the best-known of the some 11,000 athletes descending on Japan for the 17-day sports festival at which negative COVID-19 tests, but not vaccinations, are required to participate.
“This may be the lowest-rated Olympics ever. NBC shouldn’t sweat it” via Frank Pallotta of CNN — The Summer Olympics, one of the most-watched events worldwide, officially kicks off in Tokyo this weekend. After being delayed a year because of the pandemic, NBC hopes pent-up demand will drive sports fans to their TVs, laptops, and phones to tune in. But traditional TV viewership of this year’s games faces a set of challenges that could land the Tokyo Olympics in a ratings hole. “This is probably going to be the lowest-rated Summer Olympics of all time,” said Patrick Crakes, a former Fox Sports executive turned media consultant. “They can’t avoid the increased media fractionalization that’s enabling everyone to spend more time with all sorts of content.” The good news for NBC is it doesn’t need to rely exclusively on old-fashioned TV ratings to make money on the Olympics.
— ALOE —
What David Johnson is reading — “Thank God for Ted Lasso, the man America needs right now” via Alyssa Rosenberg of The Washington Post — When the Apple TV Plus comedy about an American college football coach moving to England to head a Premier League soccer team debuted last summer as the pandemic raged, it gave viewers the empathetic, uproarious company they badly needed. While that accident of timing certainly helped make “Ted Lasso” a cultural phenomenon, the specific nature of the show’s kindness is as important as its fundamental decency. Men in pop culture just don’t seem to be doing very well right now. But Lasso, both the show and the character, represents something different: a boundless faith that men in general, and in particular the men he coaches, can be “the best versions of themselves on and off the field.”
“Man running on water inside ‘bubble’ for charity washes up on Florida beach” via Fox 35 — The Flagler County Sheriff’s Office said a strange vessel washed ashore on Saturday morning. It turned out to be a Central Florida man who was ‘walking on water’ for charity. “I will show people anything you want to do, do it. Don’t listen to anyone. Chase your dreams.” Reza Baluchi says he is no stranger to the water. He calls his floating contraption his bubble. But his bubble washed ashore in Flagler County early Saturday morning. “My goal is to not only raise money for homeless people, raise money for the Coast Guard, raise money for the police department, raise money for the fire department. They are in public service, they do it for safety and they help other people.”
— HAPPY BIRTHDAY —
Happy birthday to former House Speaker Steve Crisafulli, state Rep. Richard Stark, Carol Bowen of the Associated Builders and Contractors, Pete Murray, and Jason Steele. Belated happy 40th birthday to Melissa Francisco Dempsey. Belated best wishes to Dave Shepp of The Southern Group.
___
Sunburn is authored and assembled by Peter Schorsch, Phil Ammann, Renzo Downey and Drew Wilson.
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Happy Monday! Smart Brevity™ count: 1,480 words … 5½ minutes. Edited by Zachary Basu.
The graph above shows the wrong kind of “flattening the curve.”
- The COVID vaccination rate tailed off, and Anthony Fauci warned on CNN’s State of the Union: “We’re going in the wrong direction.”
It’s in everyone’s interest to persuade the unvaccinated to get the jab, rather than shame them. Chris Christie said it exactly right yesterday on ABC’s “This Week”:
- “What they don’t want is to be indoctrinated — they’re willing to be vaccinated,” the former New Jersey governor said. “And so let’s be smart about this.”
- “I think that one of the places where our leaders have fallen down is they’re not explaining it,” Christie added. “They’re just saying: Get vaccinated. … [T]hese folks do not respond to being ordered to do those things.”
Christie said he had a “very smart guy” visit him who said: “I don’t want the government telling me what I have to do.”
- “It’s a libertarian type of response,” Christie said. “I sat with this guy and I walked him through the facts, and then he said: ‘OK, I’m going to go get vaccinated.’ That’s what we need to be doing.”
There are lots of reasons the vaccinated need to worry more about the unvaccinated, Axios health care editor Tina Reed writes:
- Breakthrough infections — infections in vaccinated people — are still rare, and few are life-threatening. But COVID’s continued circulation makes them more probable, and helps give rise to new variants.
Some experts fear the COVID rebound could slow economic growth.
- In a note to investors, Bank of America economists Stephen Junaeu and Anna Zhou say Delta is expected to shift consumer behavior, including a “sharp pullback in services spending,” Insider reported.
President Biden speaks Friday in Arlington, Va., for gubernatorial candidate Terry McAuliffe. Photo: Evelyn Hockstein/Reuters
Joel Benenson, who led polling for President Obama, tells me liberal Democrats are endangering the House majority in next year’s midterms by trying to load too much onto President Biden’s spending packages.
- Why it matters: Benenson has years of data showing that the more lawmakers add to a massive piece of legislation, the less likely that swing voters will swallow it. And, as Benenson put it: “You gotta win the middle to win.”
Lemme tell you a secret: You know someone who agrees with Joel Benenson? President Biden.
- I’m told Biden firmly believes that politically, the country lives in the middle. He’ll resist pressure from the party’s muscular left to add elements to his proposals that could sink them.
Benenson did polling on infrastructure in 2019 in six crucial states: Colorado, Florida, Iowa, North Carolina, Pennsylvania and Texas.
- The takeaway: Overwhelming majorities, of all political stripes, support infrastructure spending. Support is strongest the closer it’s connected to their lives — Benenson is big on broadband and clean water, both in the Biden plan.
Deputy SecState Wendy Sherman and her delegation meet her Chinese counterpart today in Tianjin. Photo: China’s CCTV via AP
China came out swinging at face-to-face talks with Deputy Secretary of State Wendy Sherman, blaming the U.S. for a “stalemate” in relations and calling on America to change “its highly misguided mindset and dangerous policy,” AP reports from Tianjin, China.
- Why it matters: Sherman, America’s No. 2 diplomat, is the highest-ranking U.S. official to visit China since President Biden took office. The world’s two largest economies are at odds over a host of issues, including technology, cybersecurity and human rights.
Axios between the lines: China continues to lecture Washington, like in Alaska in March, testing Biden’s mettle.
Clearly synchronized: Also this week, Secretary of State Blinken travels to India, and Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin becomes the first member of Biden’s Cabinet to visit Southeast Asia.
- Austin, in a keynote speech in Singapore tomorrow and in meetings in Vietnam and the Philippines, “will call out aggressive Chinese behavior in the South China Sea,” Reuters reports.
Axios’ Ina Fried reports from Tokyo: I’m at Ariake Gymnastics Centre, site of the men’s gymnastics final.
- This a temporary venue — explaining the unfinished wood seats, which make this look like the world’s biggest and most complicated IKEA set.
📷 In photos: Day 3 highlights … Axios Olympics Dashboard.
Illustration: Brendan Lynch/Axios
The Biden administration’s push to increase competition in the technology industry could be on a collision course with a formidable obstacle: the courts, Axios’ Kim Hart writes in her “Tech Agenda” column.
- Why it matters: Regulatory-agency actions — whether adopting new rules or bringing enforcement cases against companies — are almost always challenged and litigated in the courts.
As president, Donald Trump appointed 226 federal judges, leaving a huge mark on the judicial system, particularly appellate courts. Conservative judges across the country tend to take a narrower view of antitrust law focused on proving “consumer harm” to justify antitrust enforcement.
What’s happening: Proponents of taking antitrust measures against Big Tech were dealt a huge blow last month when a federal district judge dismissed the FTC’s December complaint against Facebook.
- That ruling has made progressives push harder for Congress to enact stronger antitrust rules while giving additional clarity and authority to the key agencies — the FCC, DOJ and FTC.
Americans are deeply divided over how transgender athletes should compete in Tokyo, with no option coming close to a consensus, Oriana González writes from an Axios/Momentive poll.
- While 39% of people say transgender athletes should compete against others of the gender they were assigned at birth, 20% say they should compete against others of the gender with which they identify.
- 14% say trans athletes shouldn’t be allowed to compete at all, and 23% say they don’t know.
The big picture: This year’s Games include at least 142 athletes who are publicly part of the LGBTQ community — “more than have participated at all other Summer Games combined,” Axios’ Jeff Tracy reports.
Our thought bubble, from Axios’ Ina Fried: Polling is one way of assessing how people feel, but not all issues boil down to how things poll. Many people see this as a matter of fundamental human rights.
“Companies that have been locked out of their computer networks by hackers are now getting sued by consumers and workers claiming they were hurt by lax cybersecurity,” the WashPost’s Gerrit De Vynck reports.
- Why it matters: “Cybersecurity lapses at major companies have led to class-action lawsuits and settlements in the hundreds of millions of dollars.”
Don Jr. and Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis top a poll — provided first to Axios — gauging the popularity of seven key GOP figures.
Tony Fabrizio of Fabrizio, Lee & Associates, who was pollster on both of Donald Trump’s presidential campaigns, concludes:
We found Mitch McConnell’s image has significantly improved since February, while Kevin McCarthy’s has remained consistent but positive. Liz Cheney is incredibly unpopular, while Matt Gaetz and Marjorie Taylor Greene have positive images but are largely undefined and driven by the far right of the party. Ron DeSantis and Donald Trump Jr. are well-known and very well-liked by most Republicans, doing best among President Trump’s biggest supporters.
Between the lines: Don Jr. is the Trump child with the strongest connection to the base, and the most political promise should he ever decide to run. And the results reaffirm Ron DeSantis’ rise as an early 2024 front-runner should Trump decide not to run.
President Biden will highlight the bipartisan roots of the Americans with Disabilities Act when he holds a Rose Garden event today with Vice President Harris to mark the law’s 31st anniversary.
- Biden, a co-sponsor of the bill as a senator, will say that the ADA was a Democratic bill signed into law by a Republican president, George H.W. Bush, who was surrounded by both Democrats and Republicans.
Biden, who’ll be joined at the event by lawmakers of both parties, will note that more than three decades later, leaders from across the aisle are standing together again because the ADA is a product of passion and compassion — not partisanship.
Bob Moses — a civil rights activist who was shot at and endured beatings and jail while leading Black voter registration drives during the 1960s, and later helped minority education in math — died at 86 in Florida, Axios’ Russell Contreras, an AP alumnus, writes in this AP obit.
- Moses worked to dismantle segregation as the Mississippi field director of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee, and was central to the 1964 “Freedom Summer,” in which hundreds of students went to the South to register voters.
The press-shy Moses, born in Harlem, started his “second chapter in civil rights work” in 1982 by founding the Algebra Project, including a curriculum Moses developed to help struggling students succeed in math.
- Former President Obama tweeted: “Bob Moses was a hero of mine. His quiet confidence helped shape the civil rights movement, and he inspired generations of young people looking to make a difference.”
📬 Thanks for starting your week with us! Please invite your friends, family, colleagues to sign up here for Axios AM and Axios PM.
14.) THE WASHINGTON FREE BEACON
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15.) THE WASHINGTON POST MORNING HEADLINES
16.) THE WASHINGTON TIMES
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17.) THE WASHINGTON EXAMINER
18.) ASSOCIATED PRESS
19.) FORT MYERS (FLORIDA) NEWS-PRESS
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20.) CHICAGO TRIBUNE
21.) CHICAGO SUNTIMES
22.) THE HILL MORNING REPORT
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23.) THE HILL 12:30 REPORT
24.) ROLL CALL
Morning Headlines
Rep. Adam Kinzinger on Sunday announced he had accepted Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s appointment to the select committee investigating the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol. Kinzinger and Rep. Liz Cheney are the only Republicans on the panel and were the only two Republicans who voted to establish the panel. Read more…
Coming up with last-minute offsets for pricey legislation is often compared unfavorably with the game of whack-a-mole — and that’s exactly what bipartisan infrastructure negotiators were playing as they tried to iron out a $579 billion package that could be ready by early this week. Read more…
Experts weigh in on risky Wuhan study that Fauci, Paul debated
Several experts say Anthony Fauci was correct when he described an experiment funded by the National Institutes of Health in Wuhan, China, as not being “gain of function” research. But the reason is unlikely to reassure Americans concerned about the lab’s risky work. Read more…
Conservatives riled up over registering women for draft
Conservatives are expressing outrage about a pending Senate National Defense Authorization Act that would require women to register for the draft, and two defense hawks opposed the Pentagon bill in the Armed Services Committee over the issue. Read more…
Watch: ‘Favorite time during the week’ — Congressional Hits and Misses
“A lot of legends begin in bars in Alaska,” Sen. Dan Sullivan boasts on the Senate floor in the latest Congressional Hits and Misses, while Rep. Sean Casten stakes his claim on a “hot FERC summer” and Tom Brady possibly identifies with the presidential election. Read more…
Photos of the week ending July 23, 2021
CQ Roll Call’s photojournalists’ lenses were focused on a typical July in D.C., which is a time for hot dogs, thunderstorms, protests and, of course, the race to finish congressional business before the August recess. Read more…
CQ Roll Call is a part of FiscalNote, the leading technology innovator at the intersection of global business and government. Copyright 2021 CQ Roll Call. All rights reserved Privacy | Safely unsubscribe now.
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25.) POLITICO PLAYBOOK
POLITICO Playbook: What BIF and Bennifer have in common
DRIVING THE DAY
Earlier this year, two of the most unlikely pairings in America started on a journey that we here at Playbook have been watching closely: Bennifer and BIF.
JENNIFER LOPEZ and BEN AFFLECK’s first clandestine meetings were reported in the spring. Around that same time, some Republican senators began quietly meeting with their Democratic colleagues to discuss infrastructure. Both reunions were so improbable that they needed to be shrouded in secrecy lest they fall apart under the glare of public scrutiny.
In the end, Bennifer went public before BIF. The couple made it “Instagram official” Saturday, but we’re still waiting to see the full details of the bipartisan infrastructure framework.
There’s still no legislative text or CBO score (the rough equivalent of “IG official” for a bill). The bipartisan group has blown past every deadline, but they promised last week that Monday was the big day.
Here’s what we know about whether BIF will have its celebratory Bennifer-on-a-yacht moment today:
— Sen. MARK WARNER (D-Va.) was optimistic Sunday: “We’re down to the last couple of items, and I think you’re going to see a bill Monday afternoon.”
— Sen. ROB PORTMAN (R-Ohio) said that the bipartisan group was “about 90% of the way there” to a final agreement. He added, “We have one issue outstanding and we’re not getting much response from the Democrats on it. It’s about mass transit.”
— But a Dem source close to the talks said Sunday there was much more than just transit to hammer out. “On Sunday night, Democratic negotiators, including the White House, sent the Republicans a global offer to finish every major open item,” they emailed Playbook. “The major unresolved issues include: highways/bridges, water funding, broadband, Davis-Bacon, using unspent Covid [money] as [a] payfor, infrastructure bank and transit.” (A reminder, per the WSJ: Davis-Bacon is “a requirement that contractors on federally funded projects can’t pay their employees anything less than the locally ‘prevailing wage’ for their services.”)
— Democrats in the Senate and White House are pushing to have all these issues settled today. If that happens, Senate Majority Leader CHUCK SCHUMER can call a new vote whenever he wants. But it’s a one-shot deal: If the vote fails (again), he’d have to file cloture (again) and wait the required two days before the Senate can vote on it.
— BUT, BUT, BUT: A GOP source familiar with the negotiations sent us this warning late Sunday: “Republicans have made fair and reasonable offers to increase transit funding above the percentage increases that highway and safety programs received. This is on top of the unprecedented $69 billion in Covid spending on transit over the past 18 months, $39 billion of which remains unspent. These are historic increases. Unless Democrats show more flexibility, this deal is unlikely to happen.”
As we’ve often said, it’s foolish to bet against a deal. These infrastructure negotiations have been declared dead too many times, and, like the phoenix tattooed on Affleck’s back, they always rise from the ashes.
When we teased a senior White House official Sunday night that it was amazing that Bennifer became official before BIF did, they retorted, “True, but we’ve been waiting since the original Bennifer for infrastructure.”
Good Monday morning. Thanks for reading Playbook. Drop us a line: Rachael Bade, Eugene Daniels, Ryan Lizza, Tara Palmeri.
WORTH THE FOLLOW: White House Covid-19 data director CYRUS SHAHPAR, @cyrusshahpar46. He recently pointed us to this new CDC interactive on county-level vaccination coverage and Covid cases, which tells the story — bright red on the map — of vaccine hesitancy and surging delta infections at a glance.
JOE BIDEN’S MONDAY:
— 10 a.m.: The president will receive the President’s Daily Brief.
— 11:10 a.m.: Biden and VP KAMALA HARRIS will speak in the Rose Garden to commemorate the 31st anniversary of the Americans with Disabilities Act.
— 2 p.m.: Biden will hold a bilateral meeting with Iraqi PM MUSTAFA AL-KADHIMI in the Oval Office.
Press secretary JEN PSAKI will brief at 12:30 p.m.
THE SENATE will meet at 3 p.m. to take up TODD KIM’s nomination as an assistant A.G., with a cloture vote at 5:30 p.m.
THE HOUSE will meet at noon, with votes postponed until 6:30 p.m.
BIDEN’S WEEK AHEAD:
— Tuesday: The president will address the Intelligence Community workforce and leadership in a visit to the Office of the Director of National Intelligence.
— Wednesday: Biden will head to Lower Macungie Township, Pa., to speak about manufacturing, jobs and buying American.
PLAYBOOK READS
INFRASTRUCTURE YEAR
WILL IT HAPPEN? — CNN’s John Harwood sees BIF’s success or failure as a “test of will” of “decisive players to act on their convictions when political cross-winds grow fiercest.”
A POSSIBLE HURDLE FOR RECONCILIATION — “Biden says ‘remains to be seen’ if immigration measure part of wider budget bill,” Reuters: “Biden on Sunday said he remained adamant about the need to create a pathway for U.S. citizenship for so-called Dreamer immigrants, but it ‘remains to be seen’ if that will be part of a $3.5 trillion budget measure.”
— “Second House Democrat Insists on Immigration Path in Budget Bill,” by Bloomberg’s Sophia Cai and Steven Dennis: “Democrat LOU CORREA of California … joins Representative CHUY GARCIA of Illinois, who earlier insisted any budget deal must include a path to citizenship for unauthorized immigrants.”
POLITICS ROUNDUP
FLASHING SIREN FOR DEMS — “‘Death by 1,000 cuts’: Dems face mounting crisis over GOP voting laws,” by Maya King, David Siders and Daniel Lippman with an Atlanta dateline: “Interviews with more than three dozen Democratic elected officials, party operatives and voting rights activists across the country reveal growing concern — bordering on alarm — about the potential impact in 2022 of the raft of new laws passed by Republican legislatures, particularly in some of the nation’s most competitive battleground states. …
“Democratic efforts to model midterm turnout under the new laws remain in their infancy. But even without a sophisticated understanding of the practical effect, there is widespread fear that the party isn’t doing enough to counter these efforts, or preparing for an election conducted under, in some instances, a dramatically different set of rules governing voter access.”
CRITICAL RACE THEORY MAKES AN IMPACT — “‘People are scared’: Democrats lose ground on school equity plans,” by Maggie Severns: “Democrat-leaning or politically moderate suburbanites interviewed by POLITICO in six states, all but one of which were won by Biden … are up in arms over their school systems’ new equity initiatives, which they argue are costly and divisive, encouraging students to group themselves by race and take pro-activist stances. Proponents of the initiatives say they are a long-overdue step toward getting rid of systemic racism in the school system. …
“Democrats appear to be underestimating parents’ anger in places where critical race theory is top of mind. Objections to new equity plans are not the sole province of conservatives but extend to many moderate and independent voters … Parents who are showing up to school board meetings and have helped launch a spate of recall elections say they are angry about a host of issues, including what they see as a myopic focus on diversity at school boards, ongoing frustration over a year of closed schools and school lesson plans that they say are becoming too progressive, too fast.”
TOP-ED — “‘Law and Order’ has Worked for the GOP Before. This Crime Boom Might be Different,” by Joshua Zeitz for POLITICO Mag: “It’s true that crime might function as a mechanism to motivate the conservative base. But to move voters from the Democratic to the Republican column, it will need to capture the independent voters who swung from [DONALD] TRUMP to Biden in the last election. And here the historical analogy breaks down.”
MANCHIN IN THE MIDDLE — “Manchin weighs another term as his influence peaks,” by Burgess Everett: “JOE MANCHIN strongly signaled in 2018 that his brutal reelection campaign that year was his last. Now, as he marshals the entire Senate in his centrist direction, he’s not so sure he’ll call it quits. The West Virginia Democrat is steadily padding his campaign coffers, raising $1.6 million in the first six months this year and sitting on nearly $4 million for a potential race that wouldn’t occur for three years. His colleagues say he’s not acting like a senator in his last term …
“Manchin now says Washington has ‘accomplished more than we have for the 10 years I’ve been here.’ ‘You never know. You don’t know. There’s always a chance, absolutely,’ Manchin said in an interview. When it comes to a potential reelection campaign alongside a presidential race in 2024, Manchin said: ‘You better be prepared, that’s all I can say. And I’m being prepared.’”
THE WHITE HOUSE
POLITICAL JARGON WATCH — “White House Shifts Messaging on Inflation as Republicans Attack,” by Bloomberg’s Nancy Cook: “Out: wonky words like ‘transitory’ and complicated statistical explanations for price indicators. In: plain-language explanations from the president himself, who sought in remarks last week to acknowledge ordinary Americans’ jitters about higher costs — for items ranging from housing, food and gas to lumber and used cars — while reassuring them that the increases will fade in time.”
STEADY AS SHE JOES — “Analysis: Joe Biden’s approval rating simply hasn’t moved in six months,” by CNN’s Harry Enten: “The lack of a topsy turvy first few months has translated to Biden’s approval rating. It’s been the most stable for any president since the end of World War II.”
SPORTS BLINK — “Jill Biden brings a dose of normalcy to Olympic Games amid a pandemic,” by CNN’s Kate Bennett in Tokyo: “Like many moms of Olympians past, she overdid it all just slightly — the cheering, the clapping, the swag, the euphoric pride, the tortured facial expressions over a missed goal or tight pass, a lap of swimming that came down to the wire. There weren’t arena-wide chants of ‘U-S-A! U-S-A!’ but seated essentially by herself, there was Biden with a lone whoop and a cheer. She was doing it louder and harder than she might have if she weren’t the only physically present support system, a parent for all 613 of America’s Olympians.”
CONGRESS
GEARING UP FOR A SHOWDOWN — “Jan. 6 select committee to open investigation amid political chaos and controversy,” by WaPo’s Karoun Demirjian: “It’s unclear when a roster [for the House select committee] may be finalized, and Democrats running the committee have yet to articulate specific plans or timelines for their investigation. Nevertheless, on Tuesday, four police officers — two from the Capitol’s protection squad and two from D.C. police — are set to provide the first public testimony before the select committee.”
— “Liz Cheney’s role on Jan. 6 committee grows after GOP pulls participation,” by NBC’s Leigh Ann Caldwell, Garrett Haake and Haley Talbot
— “Rep. Adam Kinzinger agrees to join panel investigating January insurrection at the Capitol,” by Chicago Tribune’s Rick Pearson
COVID IN CONGRESS — NBC’s Leigh Ann Caldwell (@LACaldwellDC): “.@RepClayHiggins confirms that he’s contracted COVID for a second time. While he’s encouraged vaccines, he has refused to say if he’s vaccinated and in April said he has natural immunity from his last time with COVID.” (Note: It’s unclear if Higgins was previously diagnosed with Covid by a medical professional, but he believes that he had it in January 2020.) Higgins’ announcement
FLIP-FLOP — “Nancy Mace Called Herself a ‘New Voice’ for the G.O.P. Then She Pivoted,” by NYT’s Catie Edmondson in Mount Pleasant, S.C. … The Atlantic’s Elaine Godfrey with a similar story last week
POLICY CORNER
BUBBLING OVER — “‘No justification’: Fed pressed to stop pumping cash into booming markets,” by Victoria Guida: “[T]he Fed is still pumping billions into the economy. Why? That’s what a growing number of lawmakers, investors and even some Fed officials themselves are demanding to know. They are warning that the central bank’s vast purchases of government bonds and mortgage-backed securities are feeding financial bubbles in the housing, stock and even cryptocurrency markets, and stoking higher consumer prices, with little apparent benefit to ordinary Americans. …
“Fed policymakers, who will gather this week for a closely watched meeting on their next steps, are now grappling with how and when to start slowing their bond buys, which amount to a staggering $120 billion a month. The question has touched off a heated debate within the central bank itself.”
UNEXPECTED CLIMATE OBSTRUCTIONISTS — “Toyota Led on Clean Cars. Now Critics Say It Works to Delay Them,” by NYT’s Hiroko Tabuchi: “Toyota, one of the world’s largest automakers, has quietly become the industry’s strongest voice opposing an all-out transition to electric vehicles — which proponents say is critical to fighting climate change. … Even as other automakers have embraced electric cars, Toyota bet its future on the development of hydrogen fuel cells — a costlier technology that has fallen far behind electric batteries — with greater use of hybrids in the near term. That means a rapid shift from gasoline to electric on the roads could be devastating for the company’s market share and bottom line.”
PANDEMIC
LONG-TERM DISASTER — “The Delta Variant Is the Symptom of a Bigger Threat: Vaccine Refusal,” by NYT’s Apoorva Mandavilli: “America is one of the few countries with enough vaccines at its disposal to protect every resident — and yet it has the highest rates of vaccine hesitance or refusal of any nation except Russia. … Delta is by no means the wickedest variant out there. Gamma and Lambda are waiting in the wings, and who knows what frightful versions are already flourishing undetected in the far corners of the world, perhaps even here in America.
“Every infected person, anywhere in the world, offers the coronavirus another opportunity to morph into a new variant. The more infections there are globally, the more likely new variants will arise. The United States will be vulnerable to every one of them until it can immunize millions of people who now refuse to get the vaccine, are still persuadable but hesitant, or have not yet gained access. The unvaccinated will set the country on fire over and over again.”
IN STATE CAPITALS — “As coronavirus surges, GOP lawmakers are moving to limit public health powers,” by WaPo’s Frances Stead Sellers and Isaac Stanley-Becker
THE VIEW FROM 1600 PENN — Ron Klain (@WHCOS): “Vaccinations picking back up — about 790k in past 24 hours per @CDCgov report. Might be the biggest 24-hour period since early July. Thanks to everyone involved.”
THE TREATMENT PUZZLE — “Covid-19 Pill Race Heats Up as Japanese Firm Vies With Pfizer, Merck,” by WSJ’s Peter Landers: “Shionogi starts human trials for a once-a-day drug designed to neutralize the coronavirus in less than a week”
AMERICA AND THE WORLD
PULLOUT FALLOUT — “U.S. prepared to continue airstrikes against Taliban, top commander says,” by WaPo’s Alex Horton in Kabul: “Marine Gen. KENNETH ‘FRANK’ MCKENZIE, head of U.S. Central Command … reiterated that U.S. airstrikes in support of Afghan forces will cease Aug. 31, when President Biden has said the mission will end and the U.S. withdrawal will be complete. … But McKenzie stopped short of saying he was certain the United States would not strike Taliban targets in support of embattled Afghan troops.”
— “Afghanistan curfew imposed as Taliban militants advance,” BBC
DANCE OF THE SUPERPOWERS — “U.S., China Head Into First Talks in Months Still Trading Blows,” Bloomberg: “Deputy Secretary of State WENDY SHERMAN, the U.S.’s No. 2 diplomat, is set to meet Foreign Minister WANG YI on Monday in Tianjin, about 60 miles east of the capital Beijing. … Sherman intends to raise concerns about human rights in places such as Hong Kong and Xinjiang while seeking to reassure Beijing that the U.S. isn’t building an anti-China coalition.”
MEDIAWATCH
THROUGH THE LOOKING GLASS — “Disinformation for Hire, a Shadow Industry, Is Quietly Booming,” by NYT’s Max Fisher: “Back-alley firms meddle in elections and promote falsehoods on behalf of clients who can claim deniability, escalating our era of unreality.”
BEYOND THE BELTWAY
2022 WATCH — “Republicans are desperate for Gov. Chris Sununu to run for Senate. What’s stopping him?” by NBC’s Henry Gomez in Alton, N.H.: “‘Everyone’s just kind of wondering,’ [Gov. CHRIS] SUNUNU said of his decision. ‘And I am, too.’ … [H]ow does he, a relative moderate who at times has criticized Trump, fit into a party where accommodating the former president and his grievances — and, if you’re a senator, facing daily questions about Trump — is often required? Can Chris Sununu go to Washington and still be Chris Sununu? … Sununu has said that he could wait until winter [to decide]. In interviews with NBC News … he sounded torn.”
— “Pa. Republicans see a big opportunity in 2022. But some are worried their candidates might blow it,” by Philly Inquirer’s Jonathan Tamari
— “In Broward, Charlie Crist rips Gov. Ron DeSantis over Florida’s COVID spike: ‘We don’t have leadership,’” by South Florida Sun Sentinel’s Anthony Man
DESSERT
FUN STORY — “What Joe Biden’s 1988 White House Rivals Think of Him Now,” by N.Y. Mag’s Gabriel Debenedetti: “If he called you tomorrow for advice, what would you tell him to do? [DICK] GEPHARDT: ‘Just keep doing what you’re doing.’ [MICHAEL] DUKAKIS: ‘We have to start getting ready for next year’s elections. Stay at it, but get very serious about precinct-based grassroots organization all over the country.’ [GARY] HART: ‘I’d just say to him I want to be helpful any way I can. He does, on top of everything else, have to be bolder on climate change.’”
PLAYBOOKERS
IN MEMORIAM — “‘May his light continue to guide us’: Civil rights leader Bob Moses dies at 86,” by Mississippi Today’s Kayleigh Skinner and Bobby Harrison: “Moses, a New York native, was a field secretary for SNCC in Mississippi. He also served as co-director of the Council of Federated Organizations … Through his work with both of these organizations, Moses was instrumental in the Mississippi Freedom Summer …
“In response to the state Democratic Party denying access to Black Mississippians, Moses, along with Fannie Lou Hamer, Ella Baker and others created [the] Mississippi Freedom Democratic Party. … In addition to his civil rights work, Moses taught math to students in Tanzania from 1969 to 1976. In 1982, Moses went on to found The Algebra Project. … In 2000, Moses was honored by both the Mississippi House and Senate, whose members in past years had passed laws that he fought to overturn denying voting rights and other basic rights to African Americans.”
MEDIA MOVE — Grace Segers is now a staff writer for The New Republic, covering Congress and politics. She previously was a political reporter at CBS.
FIRST IN PLAYBOOK — Anheuser-Busch is adding David Caruolo as senior director of federal government affairs. He most recently was a policy adviser for Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse (D-R.I.). Teresa Skala is also moving up to be director of federal government affairs.
TRANSITIONS — Robert Byrne is now senior strategist at Break Something Inc. He’s an alum of LGBTQ Victory Fund, Bernie Sanders and numerous progressive races. … Former Rep. Dennis Ross (R-Fla.) is joining College to Congress as interim CEO. … Brad Kennedy is now national finance director for Sen. Raphael Warnock (D-Ga.). He most recently was national finance director for Sen. Ed Markey (D-Mass.) during his primary, and is a DNC alum. …
… Katie Parrish is now senior comms officer at the McKnight Foundation. She previously was deputy comms director at Public Citizen. … Ross Pilotte is now SVP at The Permitting Institute. He most recently was a senior policy adviser at the Federal Permitting Improvement Steering Council. … Alisa La is joining McDonald’s as a manager for multicultural stakeholder engagement. She most recently was special assistant to Speaker Nancy Pelosi, and is a Hillary for America alum.
ENGAGED — Reece Marsden, director of absentee and early voting for the RNC, and Bethany Berntson, director of scheduling and operations for Rep. Kelly Armstrong (R-N.D.), got engaged Saturday at a riverside spot in Great Falls Park. They met in Ohio while working on the Trump reelection campaign. Pic
HAPPY BIRTHDAY: Rep. Markwayne Mullin (R-Okla.) … Thomas Tsaveras … Molly Conway … Amber McCloskey … Maura Corbett of Glen Echo Group … Erin Gloria Ryan … ABC’s Dan Harris (5-0) … Patrick Gaspard … Bill Raines … Nick Muzin of Stonington Global … Namrata Kolachalam … Mike McConnell … RSLC’s Andrew Romeo (28) … Benjamin Hong … Elsa Hoffacker … Sonny Bunch … State’s Richard Buangan … Allison Dong of Sen. Mike Braun’s (R-Ind.) office … Kerri Briggs … David Mayorga … Lia Seremetis … Shakila Khalje … Don Neal … Karen Besserman … PJ McCann … Emily Kane of Sen. Maggie Hassan’s (D-N.H.) office … Oscar Goodman … Chad Jones … Michael Zachariades … Michael Leffel … Libby Burmaster … Julie Anbender … Scott Sforza of Scott Sforza & Associates … Andrew Gillum … POLITICO’s Lara Costello … New Zealand PM Jacinda Ardern … former Rep. Martha Roby (R-Ala.)
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.
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26.) AMERICAN MINUTE
27.) CAFFEINATED THOUGHTS
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28.) CONSERVATIVE DAILY NEWS
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29.) PJ MEDIA
30.) WHITE HOUSE DOSSIER
31.) THE DISPATCH
The Morning Dispatch: January 6 Committee Gets Rolling
Nancy Pelosi and Kevin McCarthy clash over the inclusion of GOP members who voted not to certify Joe Biden’s 2020 win.
The Dispatch Staff | 3 min ago | 3 |
Happy Monday! We may not have gotten the Kanye West album we were promised on Friday, but we did get Ted Lasso Season 2 and the Olympics. Two out of three ain’t bad.
Quick Hits: Today’s Top Stories
- The Department of Justice wrote a letter to GOP Rep. Lee Zeldin over the weekend announcing it will not be conducting a civil investigation into the handling of nursing home coronavirus cases by New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo. The department also will not investigate fellow Democratic Govs. Gretchen Whitmer and Tom Wolf for similar policies.
- In response to the Biden administration’s recent warning to companies about doing business in Hong Kong, the Chinese Communist Party sanctioned seven people, including former Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross and Carolyn Bartholomew, chair of the U.S.-China Economic and Security Review Commission.
- At least 113 people in western India are dead following landslides and flooding sparked by heavy monsoon rains. Officials say about 100 people remain missing.
- House Speaker Nancy Pelosi announced Sunday she was appointing GOP Rep. Adam Kinzinger to serve on the January 6 Select Committee, a position Kinzinger said he would accept. The committee is now made up of seven Democrats and two Republicans after Pelosi blocked two of Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy’s five appointees, leading McCarthy to withdraw the remaining three.
- The Tokyo Olympics kicked off in earnest over the weekend, with China jumping out to an early lead in the overall medal count—15 total so far—while the U.S. paces the field in gold medals with seven. Nearly 30 sports are in action today.
Partisanship Roils January 6 Select Committee
It’s been a few weeks since we last provided an update on the status of the January 6 select committee. But in anticipation of the new committee’s first hearing tomorrow, we figured it was worth checking back in.
When Senate Republicans used the legislative filibuster to block legislation establishing a truly bipartisan January 6 commission back in May, it appeared to scupper the already tenuous path toward an investigation both Republicans and Democrats could get behind. Following that vote, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi moved forward with her Plan B: establishing a 13-member select committee that she argued was necessary to “investigate and report on the facts and the causes of the attack.”
While the membership of the select committee was guaranteed to be more partisan than the proposed commission—the former would split power equally between Republicans and Democrats, the latter would ensure a 60 percent Democratic majority—Pelosi nevertheless offered House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy the opportunity to select five Republicans for the panel. After a few weeks of deliberations, McCarthy decided to play ball, announcing his picks on July 19: Reps. Jim Banks of Indiana, Rodney Davis of Illinois, Kelly Armstrong of North Dakota, Troy Nehls of Texas, and Jim Jordan of Ohio.
Of these Republicans, three—Nehls, Jordan, and Banks—supported objections to the election results in January, and two—Jordan and Banks—backed Texas’ lawsuit contesting the election results in four battleground states.
McCarthy claimed his picks were intended to “make sure you get the best people on the committee.”
“You’ve got a mix from the entire conference, from people who objected, people who didn’t object,” he told reporters. “You’ve got people who authored the commission. … So, you’ve got a microcosm of the conference.”
On some level, McCarthy had a point. If the goal of the committee was to reach a consensus about the events leading up to the attack on the Capitol, it would require a degree of buy-in from representatives across the political spectrum. But Banks quickly gave away the game in a statement last week, making clear he had his own motives for accepting the position.
“We need leaders [on the committee] who will force Democrats and the media to answer questions so far ignored. Among them, why was the Capitol unprepared and vulnerable to attack on January 6?” he wrote. “If Democrats were serious about investigating political violence, this committee would be studying not only the January 6 riot at the Capitol, but also the hundreds of violent political riots last summer when many more innocent Americans and law enforcement officers were attacked.”
“Make no mistake, Nancy Pelosi created this committee solely to malign conservatives and to justify the Left’s authoritarian agenda,” the statement continued.
Pelosi showed less enthusiasm about expanding the scope of the investigation in this manner, issuing a press release announcing that she would block Banks and Jordan from serving on the committee. “With respect for the integrity of the investigation, with an insistence on the truth and with concern about statements made and actions taken by these Members, I must reject [these] recommendations,” she said.
Worth Your Time
- In a piece for National Review, friend of The Dispatch Thomas Koenig argues that political tribalism goes against the principles of the American Founding. “Binding ourselves so tightly to our in-group and growing so hate-filled toward the ‘other side’ necessarily runs counter to our Founding principles—to what made us exceptional,” he writes. “Why? Because to some significant degree, tribalism is necessarily anti-reason, anti-intellectual. Our in-group is so just and the out-group so despicable that only knee-jerk condemnation of ‘them’ and support for ‘us’ will suffice. That sort of thinking walls us off from independently reasoning our way through political issues, and it is part and parcel of the intolerance, warring, and group loyalties and antagonisms that dominated the pages of human history prior to the Revolution.”
- For its Inheritance Project, The Atlantic got Mississippi-born sportswriter Wright Thompson to pen a retrospective on the murder of Emmett Till—and everything we still don’t know about it—just days before Till would have turned 80 years old. Thompson’s piece centers on the barn where a band of white men tortured and killed the 14-year-old Till—a barn that an unsuspecting Jeff Andrews bought in 1992. “The barn’s existence conjures a complex set of reactions: It is a mourning bench for Black Americans, an unwelcome mirror for white Americans. It both repels and demands attention,” Thompson writes. “I called Jeff Andrews a month or two after my first visit to the barn and asked if I could come back and talk. I explained that I felt compelled to do this story because one of the central conflicts for white Mississippians is whether to shine a bright light on the past or—‘—move on?’ he said, finishing my thought. That remains a fraught and divisive question for white Mississippians. Should you dig deep enough that you might come to hate a place you also love?”
- In the New York Times, American Enterprise Institute fellow Michael Strain argues against $4 trillion in new federal spending. “Economists can’t say for sure whether the inflationary pressures caused by this spending would push the economy into a damaging inflationary period,” he writes. “Regardless, it would increase the risk of a policy mistake by the Federal Reserve. In the face of another multi-trillion-dollar spending package and consistently disquieting monthly inflation numbers, the Fed might feel it had fallen behind the curve and attempt to withdraw some support for the economy, decreasing or eliminating asset purchases or raising interest rates. But the Fed may not have the necessary precision to slow the economy without putting it into reverse. Prematurely ending the expansion would hurt low-wage workers and low-income households the most, threatening to leave them out of the recovery.”
Presented Without Comment
REPORT: Kanye West now living in Atlanta stadium until he finishes Donda album, has studio space, living quarters and personal chef
Toeing the Company Line
- In Friday’s Uphill, Harvest spoke with Democratic Rep. Abigail Spanberger about her moderate streak and willingness to buck party leadership, as well as the direction she hopes the party moves leading into 2022. “We are now the majority party. We now have the responsibility of actually governing,” she told The Dispatch. “I find it just so surprising that instead of saying, this is what we’re doing, and these are the policies we’re for—that it’s sometimes easier to just be reductive down to a slogan.”
- Echelon Insights co-founder Patrick Ruffini dropped by Friday’s Dispatch Podcast to chat with Sarah and Chris about his firm’s efforts to find the political center of gravity in the United States. Could either party run the table for years with a few tweaks to their platform? Why are moderate Democrats outperforming progressives? And why are educated voters drifting left while less educated ones are drifting right?
- David’s Sunday French Press focuses on a dispute within McLean Bible Church, where a group of congregants are upset with what they see as Pastor David Blatt’s embrace of wokeness. But “on the core issues of American racism,” David argues, “Platt is biblically and historically right, and it’s his detractors who are biblically and historically wrong.”
Reporting by Declan Garvey (@declanpgarvey), Andrew Egger (@EggerDC), 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).
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32.) LEGAL INSURRECTION
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48.) NBC MORNING RUNDOWN
Monday, July 26, 2021
Good morning, NBC News readers.
In the wake of the recent Surfside condo tragedy, this morning we’re taking a closer look at the record of the Miami safety board tasked with keeping buildings safe. Plus, we have the latest on the medal race at the Tokyo Olympics and a pair of 13-year-old skateboarding phenomenons.
Here’s what we’re watching this Monday morning.
Less than a month after the Surfside tragedy, it remains unclear what caused the massive condo building to fall and kill at least 97 people.
The disaster has brought increased scrutiny to the structural soundness of buildings across Florida — and the U.S. — and to the work municipalities perform to keep buildings safe.
In Miami-Dade County, with a population topping 2.7 million, the Unsafe Structures Board is central to that effort — a last line of defense against risky buildings.
But an NBC News investigation found that from 2010 to 2021, the safety board overrode building officials’ recommendations to bring properties up to code almost twice as often as it ruled in favor of them.
Read the full story from NBC News’ senior financial reporter Gretchen Morgenson here.
Monday’s top stories By The Associated Press | Read more By Allan Smith | Read more The Jan. 6 Capitol riot has forced the sprawling network of Washington trade associations, which represent everything from hedge fund managers to dentists, to reconsider who is eligible for their campaign cash. Meantime, when the committee investigating the riots begins Tuesday, it will feature GOP Rep. Adam Kinzinger, an outspoken Trump critic. By Dan De Luce and Saphora Smith | Read more Thousands of Afghans who are eligible for a U.S. evacuation out of the country now face one final life-and-death hurdle — getting to Kabul without being captured or killed by the Taliban. OPINION By Alicia Kennedy | Read more The writer and chef rejected the idea that the world could be comprehended in an easy way, his life and death can’t be either, Kennedy writes in an opinion piece. By Cyrus Farivar | Read more Even in cities like San Francisco, where homelessness remains a major challenge and office vacancy is relatively high, commercial buildings are not being converted into housing because developers, property owners and city officials aren’t convinced the swap makes financial sense in the long run. BETTER By Today | Read more Here’s your shot! Three American Olympians share a workout that will tone your legs, arms and core.
Want to receive the Morning Rundown in your inbox? Sign up here.
Also in the news …
The best beach reads to pick up this summer, according to Goodreads.
One fun thing While it’s officially called “women’s” street skateboarding, teens are blazing the trail for the new Olympic sport.
A pair of 13-year-olds won gold and silver, while a mature 16-year-old took home the bronze for their amazing skateboarding skills.
Read the story here.
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49.) NBC FIRST READ
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55.) REALCLEARPOLITICS MORNING NOTE
56.) REALCLEARPOLITICS TODAY
57.) CENTER FOR SECURITY POLICY
58.) BERNARD GOLDBERG
59.) SARA A. CARTER
60.) TWITCHY
61.) HOT AIR
62.) 1440 DAILY DIGEST
No images? Click here Good morning. It’s Monday, July 26, and we’re covering the Olympics opening weekend, western wildfires, and much more. Have feedback? Let us know at hello@join1440.com. First time reading? Sign up here. NEED TO KNOWSlow Start in TokyoThe 2020 Olympics got into full swing in Tokyo over the weekend, with swimmer Chase Kalisz picking up the first gold medal for the US after winning the 400-meter individual medley. The US swim team added five more medals (two silver, three bronze) on day two, a strong performance in the program’s first Olympics without record-setting medalist Michael Phelps since 1996. The wins in the pool compensated for an otherwise slow start by the Americans, who did not medal on day one of the Summer Games for the first time since 1972. Punctuating the weekend was a loss by the men’s basketball team to France, its first Olympic defeat since 2004. There were some bright spots. The women’s soccer team bounced back from a loss against Sweden, pounding New Zealand 6-1 and likely clinching a place in the quarterfinals. Separately, 18-year-old Anastasija Zolotic became the first American to claim gold in women’s taekwondo (the celebration is worth watching). China leads the medal count as of this writing (track here). See the full schedule of events here. Western Fires Grow More than 2,200 emergency responders continue to battle Oregon’s Bootleg Fire, now the third-largest wildfire in the state’s history. The blaze has consumed almost 410,000 acres in the Fremont–Winema National Forest, about one-fifth of the forest’s total 2.2 million acres. Believed to have been sparked by a July 6 lightning strike, the fire is 46% contained as of this morning. Meanwhile, roughly 200 miles to the south, California’s Dixie Fire destroyed at least a dozen homes and forced hundreds to evacuate across towns in northern California. The fire is currently the state’s largest, having burned more than 193,000 acres (20% containment). More than 85 large wildfires are burning at the moment, having consumed 1.4 million acres across a dozen states. See a list of total acreage burned annually over the past four decades here. Protests in IranAs many as eight people have died amid protests in southwest Iran, according to reports from international aid groups. The violence came as security forces cracked down on demonstrations in the southwestern oil-producing region of Khuzestan. One of the wealthiest of the country’s 31 provinces, the area has suffered under severe drought conditions since March. While being home to roughly 80% of the country’s onshore oil reserves, much of the region is involved in the hard-hit agriculture industry (see background). The anti-government protests accuse the Iranian regime of mismanaging water supplies while being slow to respond to the crisis. Government officials counter the shortages are due to seasonal rainfall that is more than 50% below the historical average. The unrest is expected to be one of the first challenges faced by incoming President Ebrahim Raisi. In partnership with InsideTrackerSTART INSIDEThe road to a longer, healthier life starts inside. And that’s what InsideTracker is all about. Founded by leading scientists in aging, genetics, and biometric data, InsideTracker is an ultra-personalized health performance platform like no other. But how do they do it? First, InsideTracker uses its patented algorithm to analyze your body’s data and provide you with a clear picture of what’s going on inside of you. Then they offer you science-backed recommendations for positive diet and lifestyle changes. Finally, they’ll give you a concrete action plan and track your progress toward reaching your goals every day, every step of the way. For a limited time, 1440 subscribers receive 25% off the entire InsideTracker store when you sign up! Please support our sponsors! IN THE KNOWSports, Entertainment, & Culture> Baseball’s Cleveland Indians to change their name to the Guardians following 2021 season (More) | Social media reacts to name change (More) > Civil rights activist and math educator Bob Moses, best known for work during 1964 Freedom Summer, dies at 86 (More) | Jackie Mason, former rabbi turned comic and Emmy winner, dies at 93 (More) > Check out best TV and film reveals from San Diego Comic-Con, which was virtual for a second straight year (More) | Celeb chefs Mario Batali and Joe Bastianich settle sexual harassment suit with former employees for $600K (More) Science & Technology> Nobel Prize-winning physicist Steven Weinberg dies at age 88; Weinberg helped develop a model that unified the electromagnetic and weak forces, two of the four fundamental forces of the universe (More) | What is the Standard Model of the universe? (More) > Researchers show swarms of tiny robots with minimal autonomy can act together to carry out complex actions (More) > Study finds junk DNA—sections of genetic material that appear to have no purpose—may play a role in the aging of certain cells (More) Business & MarketsBrought to you by The Ascent > US stock markets up Friday (S&P 500 +1.0%, Dow +0.7%, Nasdaq +1.0%); all three indices reach fresh record highs as Dow passes 35,000 for first time (More) > Electric vehicle maker Rivian raises $2.5B in financing led by Amazon’s Climate Pledge Fund, Ford, and others; company has raised $10.5B (More) > Shares of American Express up Friday as credit card giant beats expectations; June cardmember spending exceeded pre-pandemic levels (More) From our partners: Bring in a $200 bonus, simply for spending $500 in your first three months with this card. Pair that with 0% intro APR on purchases for your first 15 months and unlimited 1.5% cash back. For no annual fee, check out this card. Politics & World Affairs> US braces for a heat wave bringing five to 10 degrees above average across most of the country; heat expected to last through most of the week (More) > Seven-day average of US COVID-19 cases surpasses 50,000 per day; deaths, a lagging indicator, hover around 270 per day (More) | Previous reports suggest the majority of severe cases and deaths are from those who are unvaccinated (More) > House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D, CA-12) appoints Rep. Adam Kinzinger (R, IL-16) to panel probing the Jan. 6 storming of the US Capitol (More) POWERED BY SCIENCEIn partnership with InsideTracker InsideTracker helps you discover your genetic potential through personalized, focused recommendations based on your own unique body. InsideTracker products have helped thousands of people improve their lives by making good decisions from the inside out, using personalized recommendations for nutrition, supplements, and lifestyle. And for a limited time, 1440 subscribers save 25% off the entire InsideTracker store so you can choose the best plan for you! Please support our sponsors! ETCETERAPhoto of bear cub who survived Oregon wildfire goes viral. An Olympic robot nails free throws. Study suggests crows understand the concept of zero. Archaeologists discover an ancient Egyptian warship. Analysis reveals the last meal of a mummified bog body. We’re becoming obsessed with cephalopods—check out a rare encounter with a Joubin’s squid. Meet Truffles, the cat who isn’t ashamed to wear glasses. Clickbait: Passing helicopter rescues man harassed by bear. Historybook: US Postal Service is established (1775); the Federal Bureau of Investigation is founded (1908); HBD Sir Mick Jagger (1943); HBD actress Dame Helen Mirren (1945); RIP former Argentine first lady Eva Perón (1952). “The trick in life is learning how to deal with it.” – Dame Helen Mirren Enjoy reading? Forward this email to a friend.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. Interested in advertising to smart readers like you? Apply here! |
63.) AMERICAN INSTITUTE FOR ECONOMIC RESEARCH
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72.) FOUNDATION FOR ECONOMIC EDUCATION
73.) POPULIST PRESS
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INSIDER: Biden Could Soon Be FORCED To Resign
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Trump dropped the hammer on the entire scheme!
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DOJ Just Received Criminal Referral On Fauci
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IN DEPTH:
- JD Vance Blames The ‘Childless Left’ For The Decline Of The American Family 9 hours
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- China: 30 World Leaders – Not Xi Jinping – Got Chinese-Made Coronavirus Vaccines 11 hours
- A Defense of Patriotism in Sports 11 hours
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- U.S. Gymnastics Team Skips Opening Ceremony – OutKick 11 hours
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- Fulton County, GA Gave Auditors Too Small A Venue To Function, Now Objections Filed To Prevent Move To Bigger… 1 day
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74.) THE POST MILLENIAL
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81.) THE WESTERN JOURNAL
82.) CNN
Monday 07.26.21 As the new school year approaches, administrators are dealing with serious teacher shortages. Some schools are even bringing in international teachers to round out their staff. Here’s what else you need to know to Get Up to Speed and On With Your Day. Commuters ride a street car in San Francisco. Officials in the San Francisco area are recommending that residents wear masks again indoors in public places regardless of vaccination status. Coronavirus
People in the US who aren’t fully vaccinated should avoid bars or restaurants because of the increased risk of contracting Covid-19, a CNN medical analyst says. The advice, which mirrors the same advice we were getting about a year ago, is another sign of the US’ pandemic backslide. Dr. Anthony Fauci said yesterday the country is “going in the wrong direction” as vaccination rates fall and models project a worst-case scenario of 4,000 deaths a day if things don’t improve. The vaccine divide is a political one: Polling shows many Americans in conservative states remain deeply skeptical of the vaccine and many say they’ll never get one. However, more conservative leaders are joining the calls to get vaccinated as the Delta variant rips through vulnerable communities.
Capitol riot
A growing number of Republicans want House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy and GOP leadership to punish Reps. Liz Cheney and Adam Kinzinger for accepting a position from House Speaker Nancy Pelosi to serve on the select committee investigating the January 6 insurrection. Many seemed content to let Cheney serve on the committee without much of a fight, but things got more complicated when Pelosi announced yesterday that Kinzinger had also accepted her invitation. McCarthy and other House GOP members could strip Cheney and Kinzinger of their other committee assignments, but it’s not clear if McCarthy wants to fight that fight. He and Pelosi already locked horns last week when she rejected two of his chosen committee appointees. The GOP leader withdrew all five of his picks in response. Infrastructure
A group of senators held a flurry of meetings over the weekend in hopes of getting a viable bipartisan infrastructure bill done today. The key is making sure key Democrats feel like their issues are represented, like Sen. Tom Carper, who has concerns over lack of funding for water projects, while appeasing as many Republicans as possible — who are generally grumbling over the cost. The bipartisan effort is one part of a two-track strategy to advance the White House’s sweeping economic agenda, as Democrats lay the groundwork to advance a $3.5 trillion package expanding the social safety net. Wildfires
At least 86 active wildfires have charred nearly 1.5 million acres across the US, mostly in western states. About 3 million people are under excessive heat warnings in parts of Montana, Oregon and Idaho, but most warnings will end by Tuesday and monsoon rains could soon provide relief in some of the drought-stricken areas. Some of the larger blazes are exhibiting what is called “extreme fire behavior.” These ultra-hot areas essentially create their own weather, complete with alarming rotational patterns, wafting smoke and pyrocumulus clouds. These clouds and haze patterns can travel long distances, and in the case of the western wildfires, have even made it as far as New York City. Tunisia
Tunisia is in turmoil after President Kais Saied dismissed Prime Minister Hichem Mechichi, ousted the rest of the government and froze the activities of parliament. The drastic move came after a day of protests against the government following a spike in Covid-19 cases and growing anger over chronic political dysfunction and economic malaise. Critics and opposition leaders say Saied’s actions amount to a coup, while Saied says what he did was supported by Tunisia’s constitution. Tens of thousands of his supporters crowded the streets in the capital city of Tunis and in other cities to celebrate the decision. This upheaval poses the biggest challenge to the North African nation since the 2011 revolution that triggered the Arab Spring and ousted an autocracy in favor of democratic rule. Paid Partner Content Sundays are for the Dogs
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Two days after lighting the cauldron at the Opening Ceremony, tennis star Naomi Osaka handily won her first match on Sunday. Meanwhile, Kimia Alizadeh, an Iranian taekwondo athlete competing for the Refugee Olympic Team, made her mark by defeating two-time UK Olympic gold medalist Jade Jones.
62% That’s how many women in the UK military have experienced bullying, sexual harassment and discrimination during their career, according to a landmark parliamentary report. Brought to you by CNN Underscored The best alarm clocks to use instead of your phone We spent a whole month putting 15 top-rated alarm clocks to the test, letting them ring (and snooze) to find the best of the best. In the end, four clocks rose to the top. Sugar fix 5 THINGS You are receiving this newsletter because you’re subscribed to 5 Things.
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83.) THE DAILY CALLER
84.) POWERLINE
Daily Digest |
- Americans Are Getting Pessimistic…
- Vaccine Passports: Why?
- The mark of Klain
- Animatronic short circuit (3)
- CRB: Criminal negligence
Americans Are Getting Pessimistic…
Posted: 25 Jul 2021 03:29 PM PDT (John Hinderaker)…which shows that they are paying attention. A just-released ABC News/Ipsos poll finds that most Americans are now gloomy about our prospects for the coming year:
ABC News attributes the drop in optimism largely to the Indian covid variant, which has caused renewed concern about coronaviruses. Perhaps that is a factor, but I think the rapidly rising cost of living, with the prospect of more inflation to come, is a bigger one. The reality is that our country’s main problems are getting worse, not better. There are several good reasons to be pessimistic about the near future. Obviously, much could change between now and November 2022. A war could break out; Joe Biden could die or his disability could be acknowledged via the 25th Amendment. But as things stand now, the three biggest issues in next year’s election will be: 1) the cost of living; 2) crime; and 3) critical race theory. All three of those issues represent areas where the U.S. has gone rapidly downhill over the last year, and where the Democrats’ policies are patently making things worse. In general, pessimism in any country is a bad thing. But when that pessimism is objectively justified and can lead to a change in policy direction, it can only be welcome.
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Vaccine Passports: Why?
Posted: 25 Jul 2021 01:54 PM PDT (John Hinderaker)A number of countries are instituting, or proposing to institute, “vaccine passport” systems. This means, basically, that no one will be allowed to go out in public, or to enter most public places, without carrying a certificate of vaccination. Understandably, requiring everyone to have “papers” to engage in normal daily activities rubs many the wrong way. Thus, protests have broken out in several countries. Via the Epoch Times:
This is a huge crowd in Trafalgar Square. Note the big Trump flag, and also the fact that the crowd sings “You’ll Never Walk Alone.”
France24 describes the protests in that country, attributing them for the most part to anti-vaccine conspiracy theories:
I suppose that might be true, but it seems more likely that most who oppose vaccine passports would make a blindingly obvious point: the vaccines either work reliably against covid (in particular the Indian variant, which is driving the current hysteria) or they don’t. If they do, those who have been vaccinated have no complaint against those who choose not to follow suit. They can go about in public safely, without any danger from the unvaccinated. On the other hand, if the vaccines do not reliably protect against covid, those who think the risks of vaccination outweigh the benefits have a point, and government has no business forcing them to undergo medical treatment against their will. When it comes to anti-covid hysteria, Australia is a special case. That country has been locked down for a long time, its government apparently believing that the kind of blockade that keeps out illegal immigrants will also keep out a virus. I am highly skeptical that this strategy will work, as is Robert Elliott, writing in the Telegraph: “Here in Australia, this childish reliance on lockdowns will eventually end in tears.”
With the exception of President Trump’s Operation Warp Speed, the global response to the Wuhan epidemic strikes me as a primer in what not to do–it has imposed maximum damage for minimum benefit. Vaccine passports, where they are implemented, will be one more stage in this exercise in futility. For what it is worth, I doubt that we will see renewed shutdowns or vaccine passports in the U.S. Not because our public health establishment is any smarter than those in Europe and Asia, but because I don’t think our people will stand for it, and 2022 is already shaping up as a tough year for the Democrats.
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The mark of Klain
Posted: 25 Jul 2021 08:26 AM PDT (Scott Johnson)Matt Continetti takes us behind the curtain in his column “The mark of Klain.” The column is worth reading in its entirety. However, he buries a nugget that belies the farcically self-proclaimed most ethical administration in history in re: the return of the swamp. I found this of particular interest:
Read the whole thing here.
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Animatronic short circuit (3)
Posted: 25 Jul 2021 05:24 AM PDT (Scott Johnson)When Joe Biden returned to the White House after his CNN town hall this past Wednesday, Daily Caller White House correspondent Shelby Talott followed up on one of the comments Biden had made. According to Biden at the town hall, Republicans are “lying” about Democratic support of the movement to defund the police. Talcott asked Biden to clarify his comment. Biden noted he never said there is no one in the party who is anti-police: “I said that is not the Democratic Party’s position. I’m the Democratic Party. I am president. So is the Speaker of the House [Nancy Pelosi] and so is the Majority Leader [Chuck Schumer]. We are not defunding the police.” Talcott pressed the question a bit further. Biden responded, shall we say, weirdly.
Biden’s train of thought is not readily apparent. In the Daily Caller’s straight news account, Taloctt speculated that Biden was alluding to a QAnon conspiracy theory. Naomi Lin expands on the explanation in the Washington Examiner story “Biden cites QAnon conspiracy theory to deny Democrats want to defund police.” The explanation does not render Biden’s response any less weird. However, attributing it to an animatronic short circuit may be unduly generous.
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CRB: Criminal negligence
Posted: 25 Jul 2021 05:18 AM PDT (Scott Johnson)Merrily we roll along into our fourth preview of the new (Summer) issue of the Claremont Review of Books. It is CRB senior editor Bill Voegeli’s long essay/review “Criminal Negligence.” Reviewing the galley of the new issue to select pieces for Power Line readers last week, I thought the essay might be too long for convenient reading online. On second thought, however, I concluded it makes for perfect weekend reading on a subject that could not be more more timely or important. Like everything Bill writes, I highly recommend it.
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85.) THE POLITICAL INSIDER – WAKE UP EDITION
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90.) CONSERVATIVE TRIBUNE
91.) USA TODAY
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92.) THE DAILY BEAST
93.) JUST THE NEWS
ust The News: Daily Newsletter
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94.) SHARYL ATTKISSON
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97.) US NEWS & WORLD REPORT
98.) NEWSMAX
Breaking News from Newsmax.com |
Inventor of mRNA Vaccines on Newsmax! 8:30am ET Robert Malone, MD, the inventor of messengerRNA vaccines, the technology used for COVID vaccines, speaks out on Newsmax’s ‘Wake Up America’ with Rob Finnerty. Dr. Malone argues “we do not know all the risks yet!” Watch this on Newsmax – Go Here Now *** Trump to Newsmax: Woke Is ‘Losers’ Philosophy’ Special: Millions to Be Hit Hard by the U.S. Scheme to Confiscate Your Savings Durham Report Will Probably Be Made Public
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99.) MARK LEVIN
July 23, 2021
On Friday’s Mark Levin Show, The left has eviscerated the local police under the canard of systemically racist policing and we now see the consequences of their poor choices. In Democrat-run cities they are now prisoners of their own systemic marxism. It’s the Democrat Party that is systemically racist, and it has been since its inception but this isn’t reported in the news or taught in classrooms. The New York Times, and the media overall, have embraced every single Marxist movement in America, are destroying the 1st Amendment. It is the media that has given voice to mass-murderers like Stalin and Castro. Then, the abolish-ICE Democrats scored a win with a $4 billion cut to ICE’s budget. This will flood communities with low-skilled labor which will only hurt the most economically vulnerable. This attack on the police and law enforcement has sparked a surge in violent crime across the country. Citizens must overwhelm the system by civilly suing ANTIFA, BLM, and even police officers suing the criminals if their agencies abdicate that responsibility. Later, the DOJ has refused to investigate the New York, Pennsylvania, and New Jersey nursing home scandals. Thousands of deaths will not be investigated here, but the DOJ is all hands on deck in their investigation of the January 6th riots.
THIS IS FROM:
Right Scoop
#AbolishICE Democrats cut 4 BILLION from ICE budget that targets removing illegals
Washington Times
Ballooning number of ‘gotaways’ poses public safety, national security risk
Reuters
Exclusive-‘QAnon Shaman’ in plea negotiations after mental health diagnosis -lawyer
Biz Pac Review
At least two Jan 6 attorneys describe brutal conditions and ‘beatdowns’ allegedly by jail guards
The podcast for this show can be streamed or downloaded from the Audio Rewind page.
Image used with permission of Getty Images / Scott Pierson
100.) WOLF DAILY
101.) THE GELLER REPORT
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102.) CNS
103.) DAN BONGINO
104.) INDEPENDENT SENTINEL
Anti-lockdown and mask mandates rage throughout Europe and AustraliaThousands and thousands of protests raged throughout major cities this weekend — Dublin, Paris, Rome, Athens, Verona, and Sydney among others, over the return of mask mandates and lockdowns which… | |
Philadelphia has highest murder rate of large citiesUnder the prosecutorial leadership of Soros-funded DA, Larry Krasner, Philadelphia now has the highest murder rate in the country among large cities. It has gone from dangerous to Hellhole. Philadelphia… | |
Bernstein: Trump’s a “war criminal” representing “delusional madness”Veteran reporter Carl Bernstein accused former President Donald Trump of being a “war criminal.” Bernstein joined CNN’s Brian Stelter for Sunday’s broadcast of “Reliable Sources.” He claimed Trump represented “a kind of delusional… | |
AZ Republican State Senator booed off the stage at rally with TrumpArizona State Senator Michelle Ugenti-Rita recently voted with Democrats and one other Republican to kill State Senator Kelly Townsend’s voter integrity bill, SB1241. The bill had 34 safety precautions in… | |
Fauci & CCP claim COV came from nature–without any evidenceA top Wuhan Institute of Virology scientist, a member of the Chinese Communist Party, cited a scientific paper claiming the Wuhan virus from China originated in nature, not from a lab… | |
Fauci’s in talks with CDC to put vaccinated people back in masksFederal health authorities may recommend masks for the fully vaccinated. Dr. Fauci said the measure is “under active consideration,” and he is “part of the discussion.” Infectious diseases bureaucrat and… | |
LAA holds 10-state rally to #FreePoliticalPrisonersLAA is holding a ten-state rally to #FreePoliticalPrisoners. This is a small first step for a new organization called look ahead America. These rallies are small and include people who… | |
CDC revokes test that can’t differentiate COV from the fluNevada GOP Chairwoman Amy Tarkanian reported on Twitter that the CDC has revoked the emergency use authorization of the RT-PCR tests introduced in February 2020. The test can’t differentiate between… | |
Pelosi chooses Republican ‘anti-Trump supporters’ for 1-6 committeeFake Republican Trump hater added to Pelosi’s 1-6 kangaroo committee. This committee is to Trump voters what Russiagate was to Donald Trump. Adam Kinzinger, who is posing as a Republican,… | |
US Women’s Soccer wants more $$$ because they’re better than the menThe U.S. women’s national soccer team now admits they are paid the same as the men’s national team, but they claim it’s not equal because they “have to work more… | |
Pfizer’s vaccine immunity wanes after 6 monthsAs experts collect data on COVID-19 vaccines protections, Pfizer, Moderna, and Johnson&Johnson have all found evidence that suggests their vaccines continue to provide substantial protection for up to six months. Pfizer… | |
CCP’s Huawei hires Hillary’s money launderer Tony PodestaPresident Donald Trump’s executive order of May 2019 banned U.S. companies from working with or buying telecommunications equipment from companies deemed a national security risk. It was used to stop Huawei,… | |
Biden tells small crowd-ignore hecklers -it’s not a Trump rally. That’s true! He has big crowdsBiden was about two minutes into his remarks at an Arlington rally for Virginia Democratic gubernatorial candidate Terry McAuliffe when a group of people began yelling “Stop Line 3!” referring… | |
Cuomo’s Campaign Got $200,000 From a Donor Given $62 Million in NY COVID $Cuomo’s Campaign Got $200,000 From a Donor Who Was Paid $62 Million in NY COVID $ A New York Post analysis of Andrew Cuomo’s campaign filings reveals that individuals tied to… | |
Alex Murdaugh’s 9-1-1 call released in double murder – “It’s bad”Newly released 911 audio reveals a sobbing Alex Murdaugh breathlessly telling police his wife and son had been shot and killed. Murdaugh, a high-profile attorney in South Carolina, told dispatchers… | |
Trump’s powerful speech in Arizona“WE WILL MAKE AMERICA GREAT AGAIN!” This is a Powerful speech by President Trump in Arizona at a Trump student’s rally. The only major network covering his speech was Newsmax.… | |
Biden heckled as he’s trashing the Right [Justice?]Joe Biden was in the middle of a fundraiser for Terry McCauliffe, who is campaigning to be Virginia governor when a heckler began shouting at the president. Biden was railing… | |
Doctor’s fake heartbreaking tale-“I’m sorry…it’s too late” to get vaccinated‘I’m sorry, but it’s too late’ – unvaccinated patients beg for shot; new infections nearly tripled in two weeks, according to an Alabama doctor spreading misinformation since there are 0… | |
Donald Trump’s great response to Cleveland Indians destroying their nameThe Cleveland Indians have announced they will become the Guardians next year to appease a gaggle of Karens who aren’t Indians, aren’t actually offended, and who don’t watch baseball. ~… | |
Burgess Owens discusses the march of Marxism and two-tiered justiceFootball hero Rep. Burgess Owens explains that what we are seeing with our new two-tiered justice system is the march of Marxism. They start with chaos and then they take… | |
Shocking Democrat bill will allow HHS to censor social mediaDemocrats, never letting a crisis go to waste, are seizing on the criticisms of Facebook allowing ‘misinformation’ to pass a bill to police the Internet. They are proposing ab bill… | |
Yellen warns Congress to go into more debt ASAPTreasury Secretary Janet Yellen is working hand-in-glove with Democrats to make sure they stay in power in perpetuity. She warned Congress on Friday that if they don’t raise the debt… | |
Senate Dems adding $$ $ for Dreamers, essential illegals, TPS, to get citizenshipSenate Democrats plan to add funding for “Dreamers” and border security to their budget bill, Axios reported Friday. The Democrats are looking at adding $10 billion to their $3.5 trillion… | |
2 good Samaritans save officer in 3rd attack on police in 12 weeks in FredericksburgJoshua Duggins, 31, was beating up a Fredericksburg police officer when two good Samaritans stopped him and held him for arrest. This is the third such attack on a police… | |
Did Biden get the ‘sucking blood’ of kids quote from Q or Silicone Valley?By now, you heard about Joe Biden answering a question about Democrats defunding the police by saying, do Republicans suck the blood out of children. The Post Millennial put forward… |
105.) DC CLOTHESLINE
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106.) ARTICLE V LEGISLATORS’ CAUCUS
107.) THE INTERCEPT
108.) SONS OF LIBERTY
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109.) STARS & STRIPES
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